It was the morning of the third day out, somewhere about four o’clock. The moon had set, and the Sarah was lifting against a gentle head sea, boosting the foam from her bows under the light of a million stars. Satan was at the wheel, Jude below in her hammock, and Ratcliffe at the weather rail, close to Satan. He was leaning over watching the water,—gouts and lines of star-shot foam, planes of ebony blackness, and now and then, deep down, the bloom of phosphorus like the life in the heart of a black opal. “What time do you reckon we’ll strike the reef?” asked Ratcliffe. “We’re right on to it now,” replied Satan, “and if it wasn’t more’n a five-knot breeze I’d heave her to.” “You aren’t afraid of running on it?” “Lord, no! There’s no smell of it yet.” “You mean to say you could smell it?” “Waal,” said Satan, “I don’t know if it’s rightly smell or hearin’ or what, but I’d know it, even with the wind as she is. I reckon it’s maybe the water. Shoal water smells different from deep, and it’s shoal water right up from four miles to Lone. Feels different too.” “More choppy—I dunno—different. Jude would tell you the same. Pap had the sense of it too. Western ocean folks can smell ice miles off when the bergs are cruisin’ about. I reckon it’s the same thing— There’s the sun.” Right ahead, as if touched by a wizard, the stars had faded above the sea line, the sky over there looked sick, a stain on the velvety splendor of the night. A great gull passed the Sarah, flying topmast high, and now far off and as though coming through a pinhole could be heard a creaky lamentable sound,—the crying of gulls. “I’ve got the smell of her now,” said Satan. “Them gulls you’re hearin’ aren’t all of them from Lone. There’s a big spit to east’ard, and they’ll be comin’ up against the wind. Say, will you take a bet?” “What sort?” “I’ll bet you even dollars Cleary hasn’t held on same as we’ve done the last six hours. He was droppin’ astern a long way last time I sighted him. He’ll have seen the reef on the chart right ahead of him, and his navigation is no account: hasn’t no sea sense. He’ll be hove to singin’ ‘Lead, kindly light’ and listenin’ for the breakers—What you say?” “I’d rather bet on the Sarah.” “Maybe you’re right,” said Satan. The head sails showed hard now against the east, and almost before one could turn and look again the blaze had come above a band of opal-tinted mist which passed In that moment, far ahead and as if suddenly sketched by a pencil against the eastern light, they saw the naked spars of a vessel anchored in the dawn. “That’s Cark,” said Satan. “Told you we’d find him here—damn swab!” “Well, I couldn’t have believed it,” said Ratcliffe. He remembered the sailing of the Juan, presumably for Havana, and though he had sized up Sellers and Carquinez for what they were worth, still, the evidence of their duplicity, here before his eyes, came as a shock. In a moment it was blotted out by the sun, washed away in the blazing, seething ocean of light that sprang on them as if to the blast of a trumpet. Satan swung his head over his shoulders. Ratcliffe followed his gaze. The sea to westward was empty, not a sign of a sail. “Cleary’s gone,” said Ratcliffe. “Oh, he’ll be nosin’ along soon,” said Satan. “He’s sure to come close enough to see Cark’s topmasts, and then he’ll pounce.” He put the helm over, and the Sarah payed off to the north so as to round the northern spur of the reef. “That’s the wreck,” said Satan, “that line like a lump of rock.” Ratcliffe, shading his eyes, could now see the reef, long and foam-flecked, stretching from north to south, the line of rock absolutely unsuggestive of a wreck, beyond the reef the Juan’s masts and spars, and about the reef-spurs “Nothing stirring,” said Satan, as they rounded the north spur and the boom came over. “Them lowsy Spaniards are all in their bunks. Rap on the deck for Jude. Hi, Jude, y’lazy dog, show a leg! What you doin’!” “Comin’,” cried a voice, followed by the sounds of thrashing about and inquiries of the Lord to know where her clothes were. Then at the hatch appeared a face blind with sleep. She ran with Ratcliffe to get the lashings off the anchor, helped to let go the halyards, and as the anchor fell and the Sarah swung to her moorings a couple of cable lengths from and outside the Juan, down she sat on the deck like a person collapsing under a heavy load. The sight of the Juan did not seem to move her at all. Like a dormouse suddenly electrified into life and movement, the stimulus withdrawn, the mechanism ceased to act. She yawned, turned on her side, and hid her face in the crook of her arm as if to shut out the sun. Satan, whistling between his teeth, stood with his hands on the rail looking at the Juan. “They’re wakin’ up,” said he. A fellow with a red handkerchief round his head had appeared on deck. He came and looked over the side at the Sarah, then vanished. “Gone to wake Cark out of his beauty sleep,” said Satan. “Look! There’s two more of them movin’ about He turned and contemplated the prostrate figure of Jude. “There’s another sleepin’ beauty,” said he. “Ought a be married to Cark. Well they’d look in the same hammock with Sellers fannin’ the flies off them!” The figure on the deck turned on its back, stretched out its arms, yawned, and then sat up holding its knees. Youth may sneer at Age; but, anyhow, Age knows nothing of the weariness of Youth, of a morning. Satan, satisfied with the semi-resurrection, dropped below, and promptly the figure fell on its back again with arms outspread. “Get up!” said Ratcliffe. “I’m getting— Say!” “Yes.” “I—ow—yow—ain’t it awful bein’ tired?” “You’ll be all right when you’re on your feet. Get up!” “I’m getting— Say, d’you know where the fishing lines are? Starboard locker. Fetch’m up, an’ that chunk of grouper I kep’ for bait—in the tub.” “Right.” When he returned on deck she was drying her head in the sun, having soused it in a bucket of water. Then they dropped a line. Away through the diamond-clear water, thirty feet A nurse shark passed like a grisly ghost, then a shoal of sardines, then a young whip ray not bigger than a soup plate, then a mangrove schnapper that nosed the bait, swallowed it, and was hauled on board. “He’ll be enough,” said Jude. “You clean him while I get the frying pan ready. Hullo! blest if Cark’s not putting off a boat!” A boat had been dropped on the starboard side of the Juan and was rounding her stern. “That’s Sellers,” said Jude, shading her eyes. “Satan! Below there!” “Hullo!” “Sellers is coming off.” “I’ll be up in a minute.” The boat came alongside, just as it had come at Palm Island,—same boat, same crew, Sellers just the same. “Hullo, Kid!” cried Sellers. “Hullo yourself! Thought you was gone to Havana.” “Thought you was to wait for us at Pa’m Island,” said Sellers. “Hullo, Satan, that you? How about your contrac’ with us?” Satan, who had just come on deck, leaned over the rail and contemplated Sellers. Then he spoke. “God A’mighty!” said Satan. He stared at Sellers for a moment as one might stare at a prodigy. Then he broke out: “Contrac’! Holy George! What you say, contrac’? “Why ain’t you waitin’ for us at Pa’m Island?” logically responded Sellers. “If you want to know why we’re here. I’ll tell you. It was a bet I had with Cark.” “Which way?” “I bet him you’d never wait for us at Pa’m Island, but’d light out for here to raise the stuff if we went foolin’ off to Havana. Seems I was right, don’t it?” The impudence of this made Ratcliffe gasp, but left Satan quite unmoved. “S’pose we quit lyin’,” said he. “I’m willin’ to follow soot,” replied Sellers. “Well, then,” said Satan, “follow soot off to the wreck an’ get your workin’ party onto the business like hot nails. I’ll be over to help you soon’s we’ve had breakfast. You’ve no time to waste.” “How’s that?” “Cleary’s after you.” This news seemed to take the wind out of Sellers. He sat for a moment without speaking. “How do you know that?” asked he at length. “He put into Palm Island not more’n four hours after you’d gone; said you and Cark had tricked him and he was after your blood. I told him that wasn’t no concern of mine. He asked me had I seen you.” “What did you say?” “Sufferin’ Moses! You’ve put your hoof in it this time! Go on and don’t stand waggin’ your tail! What’d he say?” “Nothin’, didn’t say nothin’, but when I put out he put out after me.” “Followed you?” “Yep. I only lost him last night; but it’s ten to one he’ll drop on us. He’ll be bustin’ everywhere round here.” “He will,” said Sellers, “and then it’s half shares he’ll be wantin’, not to mention Cark’s liver. I’m sweatin’! Cark’s let that chap down cruel. I owns it. Did it against my advice. Did he have many with him?” “Reckon so. The old Natchez was full as a beehive with the toughest-lookin’ crowd.” The sight of Sellers’ face at this announcement set Jude off. She seized the fish and started off to the galley with it, while Sellers, having communed with himself for a moment, spoke: “Crooked’s a bad course to run,” said this moralist. “I’ve always told Cark so. I told you we’d no dynamite aboard,—neither we had,—but there’s a keg of powder in the hold, and Cark reckoned to sample the goods without your help. There, it’s out! You’d have had your share as long as I’d a leg to stand on, honest you would, s’far as I was concerned, and that’s all I have to say pers’nally on the matter. What I’m gettin’ at is this: If “That depends,” said Satan. “Which way?” “I’m not trustin’ you no more, not without the coin in my hand. Cark’s got to plank down something on account, if it’s no more’n a thousand dollars. If he don’t, I’ll put out for Havana and blow the gaff. You’ve overhauled the wreck?” “Yep.” “Well, you can judge what the chances are. You hop back lively as a flea and tell Cark what I’m sayin’. Gold coin and right into my fist this mornin’, or I’ll give the show away. It’s his own doin’. If he’d played straight with me, I’d have trusted him. Seein’ he’s played crooked, he’ll have to pay. One thousand dollars, or I go back to Havana and you’ll have a t’pedoboat on top of you, to say nothin’ of Cleary!” “I’ll tell him,” said Sellers. “Come over to the reef soon as you’re ready and I’ll give you word of what he says. I reckon it’ll be all right. One thousand dollars?” “Gold coin, and tell him it’ll be double after eleven o’clock.” “Oh, he won’t kick,” said Sellers. The boat shoved away. Ratcliffe remembered what Satan had said about the chart and the hidden writing in it and the high probability that the bones of the Nombre de Dios were lying elsewhere than here. More than ever did it seem to him that Satan was the spider of this web,—not a malignant “Look here!” said he. “Suppose Carquinez pays you a thousand dollars’ advance, and suppose you don’t find any treasure, will you pay him back?” “Why should I pay him back?” asked Satan. “I’ve given him the location, and that’s worth a thousand anyway.” “But you said there was nothing on the chart, that it was a fake.” “Lord! I said no such thing. I said that in my ’pinion the stuff wasn’t here; but I may be wrong. There’s Jude hollering for us to come to breakfast. Come along down and I’ll show you my meanin’.” He scarcely spoke during the meal, and when it was over he took the tobacco box from his pocket and opened the chart on the table. “Now,” said Satan, “I’ll show you what I mean by sayin’ the stuff may be here, but it’s a big sight larger maybe it isn’t. Don’t crowd me. Stand behind me on either side and keep your eyes on the chart. Well, now, there’s Lone Reef with the creek marked and the name of her, and there’s Rum Cay to the left, and there’s the latitude and longitude wrote up—all plain, isn’t it?” “Yes.” “Well, seein’ Rum Cay is given, and seein’ Lone Reef is down on all the charts and as well known as Cuba “Yes.” “Well,” said Satan, “in my opinion the chap that sank the Nombre de Dios knew of the old wreck lyin’ over there on Lone Reef and used it as a blind, for the latitude and longitude wrote there so faint that no man would bother to try to read it isn’t the latitude and longitude of Lone Reef; it’s a hundred and ten mile out. It’s the latitude and longitude of Cormorant Cay, a blasted sandbank down to s’uthard, all shoals and gulls, and that’s where the Nombre de Dios lies, in my ’pinion.” Ratcliffe whistled. “Of course I may be wrong,” said Satan, “there’s no knowin’.” “I see what you mean,” said Ratcliffe. “This chap reckoned that anyone finding or stealing the chart would take the latitude and longitude written there for granted as the latitude and longitude of Lone Reef, and not bother to examine the figures and verify them; having no cause, indeed, to do so, seeing Lone Reef is so well known and on all the charts.” “That’s how it seems to me,” said Satan. “I’m not sayin’ I’m right, but that’s how it seems to me, and if he figured that no one would trouble about readin’ and verifyin’ the latitude and longitude as given there he was “Have you seen Cormorant Cay?” “Lord, yes! It’s a lagoon sandspit, and the hooker may be in the lagoon for all I know, or under the sand for all I know, or I may be wrong all through and that may be her on the reef over there. Well, we’ve got to see; but it seems to me I’m pretty safe anyway, if I can touch Cark for that thousand.” So thought Ratcliffe. |