It was a wild March day, and the rising wind sang in the rigging of the ships. The weather horizon, dark and brilliant, in ominous alternations showed a sky of piled-up cloud interspersed with inky patches where squalls were bursting. To leeward, the broad lagoon, stretching for a dozen miles to the tree-topped rim of reef, smoked with the haze of an impending gale. Ashore, the palms bent like grass in the succeeding gusts, and the ocean beaches reverberated with a furious surf. The great atoll of Makin, no higher than a man, no wider than a couple of furlongs, but in circumference a sinuous giant of ninety miles or more, lay like a snake on the boisterous waters of the equator and defied the sea and storm. Within the lagoon, and not far off the settlement, two ships rocked at anchor. One, the Northern Light, was a powerful topsail schooner of a hundred tons; straight bowed, low in the water, built on fine lines and yet sparred for safety, the sort of vessel that does well under plain sail, and when pressed can fly. The other, the Edelweiss, was a miniature fore and after of about twenty tons, a toy of delicacy and grace, betraying at a glance The deck of the Northern Light was empty save for the single tall figure of Gregory Cole, captain and owner, who was leaning over the rail gazing at the Edelweiss. He was a man of about thirty, his tanned, handsome face overcast and somber, his eyes, with their characteristic hunted look, fixed in an uneasy stare on his smaller neighbor. He had never known how passionately he had loved Madge Blanchard until he had lost her; until after that wild quarrel on Nonootch, when her father had called him a slaver to his face, and they had parted on either side in anger; until he had beaten up from westward to find her the month-old wife of Joe Horble. Somehow, in the course of those long, miserable months, he had never thought of her marrying; he felt so confident of that fierce love she had so often confessed for him; he had come back repentant, ashamed of the burning offense he had then taken, determined to let bygones be bygones, and to begin, if need be, a new and a more blameless way of life. It was natural for the girl to side with her father; to resent her lover's violence and temper; to show a face as cold He cursed the fate that had brought him into the same lagoon with the Edelweiss; that had laid his ship side by side with Joe's dainty schooner; that shamed and mocked him with the unceasing thought that Madge—his Madge—was aboard of her. He paced up and down the quarter-deck. He had more than a mind to get to sea, but the gloom to windward daunted him, and he ordered out the kedge instead and bade the mate strip the awnings off her. By Jove! if things grew blacker he'd house his topmasts. Then he looked again at the little Edelweiss, and tried to keep back the thought of Horble sitting there below with Madge. He had to see her. He was mad to see her. The thought of her tortured and tempted him without end. Suppose she, too, had learned that love is stronger than oneself; that the mouth can say Yes when the heart within is breaking; that she, like himself, had found the time to repent her folly? Was he the man to leave her thus; to acquiesce tamely in a decision that was doubtless already abhorrent to her; to remain with unlifted hand when she might be on fire for the sign to He jumped into the dinghy and pulled over to the schooner. Small at a distance, she seemed to shrink as he drew near her, so that when he stood up he was surprised to find his head above the rail. So this was Horble, this coarse, red-faced trader, with the pug nose, the fat hands, the faded blue eyes that met his own so sourly! "Captain Horble?" said Gregory Cole. "Glad to see you aboard," said Horble. They shook hands and sat side by side on the rail. "Where's Madge?" said Gregory. "Mrs. Horble's ashore," said the captain. "I'm afraid I can never call her anything but Madge," said Gregory, detecting the covert reproach in the other's voice. Horble was plainly ill at ease. His face turned a deeper red. He was on the edge of blurting out a disagreeable remark, and then hesitated, making an inarticulate sound in his throat. Like everybody else, he was afraid of the labor captain. "Crew's ashore, too," said Gregory, glancing about the empty deck. "There ain't no crew," muttered Horble. "Thunder!" cried Gregory. "Do you do it with electricity, or what?" "Do you mean to say she pully-hauls your damn ropes?" exclaimed Gregory. "Yes," said Horble. "What's twenty tons between the two of us?" "And cooks?" said Gregory. "And cooks," said Horble. "You don't believe in lapping your wife in luxury!" exclaimed Gregory. "Madge and I talked it over," said Horble. "I was for trading ashore, but her heart was set on the schooner. I can make twice the money this way and please her in the bargain." "I know she can sail a boat against anybody," said Gregory, wincing at the remark. Horble spat in the water and said nothing. His fat, broad back said, plainer than words: "You're an intruder! Get out!" "I believe she's aboard this very minute," said Gregory with a strange smile. "She's ashore, I tell you," said Horble sullenly. "I'll just run below and make sure," said Gregory. He slipped down the little companion way, looked about the empty cabin and peered into the semi-darkness of the only stateroom. "Madge!" he cried. "Madge!" Horble had not lied to him. There was not a soul below. But on the cabin table he saw Madge's He was roused by the sound of Horble's footsteps down the ladder. With his head leaning on his hand, he looked at the big naked feet feeling for the steps, then at the uncouth clothes as they gradually appeared, then at the fat, weak, frightened face of the man himself. He grew sick at the sight of him. Would Horble strike him? Would Horble have the grit to order him off the ship? No; the infernal coward was getting out the gin—a bottle of square-face and two glasses. "Say when," said Horble. "When," said Gregory. Horble tipped the bottle into his own glass. A second mate's grog! One could see what the fellow drank. "Here's luck," said Gregory. "Joe Horble," said Gregory, leaning both elbows on the table, "there's something you ought to know: I love Madge, and Madge loves me!" Horble gasped. "She's mine!" said Gregory. Horble helped himself to some more gin, and then slowly wiped his mouth with the back of his hand. "You're forgetting she's my wife," he said. "I'll give you a thousand pounds for her, cash and bills," said Gregory. "You can't sell white women," said Horble. "She ain't labor." "A thousand pounds!" repeated Gregory. "I won't sell my wife to no man," said Horble. The pair looked at each other. Horble's hand felt for the gin again. His speech had grown a little thick. He was angry and flustered, and a dull resentment was mantling his heavy face. "I'll go the schooner," cried Gregory. "The Northern Light as she lies there this minute, not a dollar owing on her bottom, with two hundred pounds of specie in her safe. Lock, stock, and barrel, she's yours!" Horble shook his head. "Madge ain't for sale," he said. "Please yourself," said Gregory. "You'll end by losing her for nothing." "Oh!" said Gregory. "If you choose," continued Horble in his tone of wounded reasonableness, "you can make a power of mischief between me and Madge. I don't think it comes very well from you to do it; I don't think anything that calls himself a man would do it; least of all a genelman like yourself, whom we all respeck and look up to. Captain Cole, if you've lost Madge, you know you can only blame yourself." "I don't call her lost," said Gregory. "Captain Cole," said Horble, calmly but with a quiver of his lip, "we'll take another drink and then we'll say good-by." "I'm not going till I see Madge," said Gregory. Horble began to tremble. "It's for Madge to decide," added Gregory. "Decide what?" demanded Horble in a husky stutter. "And you've the gall to say that on my ship, at my table, about my wife!" exclaimed Horble, punctuating the sentence with the possessive. "Yes," said Gregory. Horble sat awhile silent. He was obviously turning the matter over in his head. He said at last he would go on deck and take another look to windward. "There's a power of dirt to windward!" he said. Gregory, left to himself, edged closer against the bulkhead. He felt that something was about to happen, and he was in the sort of humor to never mind what. It did not even worry him to think he was unarmed. The companion way darkened with Horble's body, and the big naked feet again floundered for the steps. As they deliberately descended, Gregory changed his place, taking the corner by the lazarette door, where, at any rate, he could only be attacked in front. Horble's face plainly showed discomfiture at this move, and his right hand went hurriedly behind his back. Gregory was conscious of a belaying pin being whipped out of sight, and in an instant he was roused and tense, his nostrils vibrating with a sense of danger. The two men stared at each other, and then Horble backed into the stateroom, remarking with furtive Horble sank at the first shot, and received the second kneeling. Then he toppled backward, and lay in a twitching heap against the drawers below the bunk, groaning and coughing. Gregory, with He went on deck and cast the revolver overboard, standing at the taffrail and watching it sink. Even in the time he had been below the wind had risen; it was blowing great guns to seaward, and the lagoon itself was white and broken as far as the eye could reach. Aboard his own schooner they were busy housing the topmasts, and the yeo-heave-yeo of straining voices warned him that Cracroft was hoisting in the boats and making everything snug. Gregory leaned against the wheel and tried to think. To throw Horble's body overboard would be to accomplish nothing. The blood, the shot holes, the disordered cabin, would all betray him. To scuttle the schooner with a stick of dynamite was a better plan, but that involved returning to He studied the weather with a new and consuming anxiety. How could he manage to get out at all, or pick a course through the middle channel! It was thick with coral rocks, and in a day so overcast the keenest eye aloft would be at fault. And outside, what then? By God! it was working up to a hurricane. To run before it would be courting death. Hove to, he would be cramped for room, with three big islands on his lee. In his He looked toward the settlement and saw a crowd of natives pushing a whaleboat into the water; looked again, and saw old Maka taking his place in the stern sheets and assisting a woman in beside him. The woman! It needed no second glance to tell him it was Madge. He had never counted on her coming off in company. Fool that he was, he had taken it for granted that she would be alone. Everything, in fact, turned on her being alone. Then, with a start, he remembered his own dinghy, and how it would betray him. He had made it fast on the schooner's starboard quarter, A few minutes later and the whaler was bumping against the schooner's side. It might have been bumping against Gregory's heart, so agonizing was the suspense as he lay breathless and cramped between the coffinlike width of house and rail. "It was kind of you to bring me off, Maka," said Madge. The old Hawaiian laughed musically in denial. "No, no!" he cried. "You must come below and see the captain," said Madge. Gregory was in a cold sweat of apprehension. "Too much storm," said Maka doubtfully. "I go home now, and put rocks on the church roof." "Five minutes won't matter," said Madge. Again Gregory trembled. "More better I go home quick," said Maka. "No rocks, no roof!" The boat shoved off, the crew striking up a song. Madge seemed to remain standing at the gangway where they had left her. Gregory felt by instinct that she was gazing at the Northern Light, and that as she gazed she sighed; that she was lost in reverie and was loath to go below. "Madge!" he said in almost a whisper. "Madge!" She turned instantly, paling as she saw who confronted her. "Greg!" she cried. For a moment they stared at each other speechless. Then he leaped on the house and ran to her, she shrinking back from him as he tried to take her hands. "You must not!" she cried, as he would have kissed her. "Greg, you must not! I'm married. It's all different now." He tried to put his arms around her, but she pushed him fiercely back. Her eyes were flashing, and her bosom rose and fell. "I'm Joe's wife," she said. Then, from his face, she seemed to divine something. "What have you done to Joe?" she cried. She would have passed him, but he stopped her. "No, no!" he protested. "Let me go, or I shall call him," she broke out. "You sha'n't insult me! You sha'n't kiss me!" He was kissing her even as he held her back, He put his hand to his lip and found it bleeding. He showed her what she had done. She drew back, and regarded him with mingled pity and exultation. "Now will you let me go?" she cried. "Madge," he returned, "Joe's drunk in his berth. I made him drunk, Madge. I had to talk to you alone, and there was no other way." She was stung to the quick. Her husband's shame was hers, and it was somehow plain that Horble had been at fault before. She never thought to doubt Greg's word, though his callousness revolted her. "What is it you want to say?" she said at last in an altered voice. "To ask you to forgive me." "For what? for taking advantage of Joe's one failing?" "No; for leaving you the way I did." "I'll never do that, Greg—never, never, never!" "Your father——" "Don't try and blame my father, Greg." "Why have you come back to torture me?" she exclaimed. "You said it was forever. You cast me off, when I cried, and tried to keep you. You said I'd never see you again." "I was a fool, Madge." "Then accept the consequences, and leave me alone." "And if I can't——" She looked him squarely in the eyes. "I am Joe's wife," she said. "Madge," he said, "I am not trying to defend myself. I'm throwing myself on your mercy. I'm begging you, on my knees, for what I threw away. I——" "You've broken my heart," she said; "why should I mind if you break yours?" "Madge," he cried, "in ten minutes we can be aboard the Northern Light and under weigh; in an hour we can be outside the reef; in two, and this cursed island will sink forever behind us, and no one here will ever see us again or know whither we have gone. Let us follow the gale, and push into new seas, among new people—Tahiti, Marquesas, the Pearl Islands—where we shall win back our lost happiness, and find our love only the stronger for what we've suffered." She pointed to the windward sky. "I think I know the port we'd make," she said. For a moment she looked at him in a sort of exaltation. She seemed to hesitate no longer. Her hot hands reached for his, and he felt in her quick and tumultuous breath the first token of her surrender. Herself a child of the sea, brought up from infancy among boats and ships, her hand as true on the tiller, her sparkling eyes as keen to watch the luff of a sail as any man's, she knew as well as Gregory the hell that awaited them outside. To accept so terrible an ordeal seemed like a purification of her dishonor. If she died, she would die unstained; if she lived, it would be after such a bridal that would obliterate her tie to the sot below. Then, on the eve of her giving way, as every line in her body showed her longing, as her head drooped as though to find a resting place on the breast of the man she loved, she suddenly called up all her resolution and tore herself free. "I'm Joe's wife!" she said. Gregory faltered as he tried again to plead with her; but in his mind's eye he saw that stiffening corpse below, lying stark and bloody on the cabin floor. "You gave me to him," she burst out. "I'm his, Greg. I will not betray my husband for any man." He sat down on the rail instead, his eyes defying her. She stepped aft, and his heart stood still as she seemed on the point of descending the companion. But she had another purpose in mind. Throwing aside the gaskets, she stripped the sail covers off the mainsail and began, with practiced hands, to reef down to the third reef. Then she went forward and did the same to the forestaysail. A minute later, hardly knowing why or how, except that he was helping Madge, Gregory, like a man in a dream, was pulling with her on the halyards of both sails. The wind thundered in them as they rose; the main boom jerked violently at the sheet and lashed to and fro the width of the deck; the anchor chain fretted and sawed in the hawse hole; the whole schooner strained and creaked and shook to the keelson. Gregory, in amazement, asked Madge what she was doing. "Going to sea, Greg," she said. "Alone?" he cried. "Alone?" "Joe and I," she said. It was on his tongue to tell her Joe was dead; but, though he tried, he could not do so. It wasn't in flesh and blood to tell her he had killed her "Greg," she said, "I mean to leave you while I am brave—while I am yet able to resist—while I can still remember I am Joe's wife!" "And drown," he said. "What do I care if I do?" she returned. "What do I care for anything?" "If it's to be one or the other," he said, "I'll go myself. With my big schooner I'd have twice the chance you'd have." She put her arms round his neck and kissed him. "You sweet traitor," she said, "you'd play me false!" He protested vehemently that he would not deceive her. "Besides," she said, "I could risk myself, but I couldn't bear to risk you, Greg." He tried a last shot. The words almost strangled in his throat. "And Joe?" he said. "Have you no thought of Joe?" "Joe loves me," she said—"loves me a thousand times better than you ever did. Joe's man enough to chance death rather than lose his wife." "But I won't let you go!" said Gregory. "You can't stop me," she returned. He caught her round the body and tried to hold her, but she fought herself free. His strength was "Greg, you're ill!" she cried, as he staggered, and caught at a backstay to save himself from falling. He sat down on the house and tried to keep back a sob. Madge stooped, and looked anxiously into his face. She had known him for two years as a man of unusual sternness and self-control; obstinate, reserved, willful, and moody, yet one that gave always the impression of unflinching courage and resolution. It was inexplicable now to see him crying like a woman, his square shoulders bent and heaving, his sinewy hands opening and shutting convulsively. "You're ill," she repeated. "I'll go down and fetch you something." This pulled him together. "I'm all right, Madge," he said faintly. "I suppose it's just a touch of the old fever. See, it's passing already." She watched him in silence. Then she stepped forward, dropped down the forecastle hatchway, and reappeared with an ax. While he was wondering what she meant to do, she raised it in the air and crashed it down on the groaning anchor chain. It parted at the first blow, and the Edelweiss, now adrift, blundered broadside on to leeward. He said sullenly he wouldn't do anything of the kind. She lashed the wheel and came up to him. "I mean it, Greg," she said. "You are going to your death, Madge," he said. "Get into your boat!" she repeated. He rose, and slowly began to obey. "You may kiss me good-by, Greg," she said. She put up her face to his; their lips met. Then, with her arm around him, she half forced, half supported him to the port quarter, where his boat was slopping against the side. He wanted to resist; he wanted to cry out and tell her the truth, but a strange, leaden powerlessness benumbed him. He got into the dinghy, drew in the dripping painter she cast after him, and watched her ease the sheet and set the vessel scudding for the passage. With her black hair flying in the wind, her bare arms resting lightly on the wheel, her straight, girlish, supple figure bending with the heel of the deck, she never faltered nor looked back as the water whitened and boiled in the schooner's wake. Gregory came to himself in his own cabin. Cracroft, the mate, was bending over him with a bottle of whisky. The Malita steward was chafing his "The Edelweiss!" he gasped; "the Edelweiss!" "Went down an hour ago, sir," said Cracroft grimly. |