An hour before sunset, Jude, on the lookout, gave the alarm. “Sellers’s getting ready to come off,” she cried. Satan’s head appeared at the cabin hatch. “Sure?” “The boat’s alongside the Juan full of dagoes, and Sellers and Cleary’s gettin’ in.” “Where did you stick that bottle of nose-paint?” “Starboard forward locker.” “One minute.” In a minute the head reappeared and an arm holding the rum bottle. “Now, mind you, I’m drunk,” said Satan, “fightin’ drunk, not to be disturbed on no account. They can call again tomorrow morning.” He smashed the rum bottle on the deck. “Leave the pieces lyin’.” He vanished. Jude looked at Ratcliffe and grinned. “Rub your nose and pretend to be cryin’,” came a voice from below. “What for should I be cryin’?” answered Jude. “God A’mighty! I’ll show you if I get on deck! A smash of crockery came from below that made the housekeeper spring to the cabin skylight. “Quit foolin’,” cried she. “I’m willin’ to rub the damn nose off my head, but stop smashin’ the plates—what have you broke?” Another plate went. “I’m rubbin’.” “Here they are!” cried Ratcliffe. Jude’s nose did not seem to want any rubbing, nor her face. Descended from generations of crockery worshipers and careful housewives, instinctively hating Cleary, Sellers, Cark, and all their belongings, feeling with perfect illogic that they had been done out of the treasure by the “skelentons” somehow through Cark, she was convincing. Satan with rare art had worked her up to the part. She was not crying: her mind was raging above tears. “Hullo, Kid!” cried Sellers, as the boat ground alongside and a filthy ruffian with a handkerchief twisted round his head clawed on with a boathook. “What’s the matter, Kid? What’s up with you? Where’s Satan?” “Who’re you kiddin’?” cried Jude, as Sellers came aboard, followed by Cleary. “Where the hull are your fenders? Comin’ cuttin’ the paint off, you and your skullintons! Where’s Satan? He’s down below drunk as Billy be damn and cuttin’ the lights out of the ship.” “He’s been at the eyewash I was tellin’ you of,” said “Well, drunk or sober, he’s got to bail up,” said Sellers. “It’s my belief he’s been spoofin’ us all along.” “Spoofin’ who?” cried Jude. “Cark an’ me.” “Cark an’ you—that old leather face an’ you! Satan been spoofin’ you—pair of yeggmen! Satan’s straight, the on’y straight man in Havana! Get off this ship! Come in the mornin’ if you want to try an’ rob him. Off with you now!” “Why,” cried Sellers, half-laughing, half-angry, “what’s the matter with the kid? What’s gingerin’ you up?” The answer came from another smashed plate below. Jude made one spring for a deck-mop standing handy, twirled it so that the water sprayed from it in a rainbow, and brought it to the charge. Cleary slipped over the rail. “Off with you!” cried Jude. “Put down that mop!” cried Sellers, now suddenly furious. “Put down that mop, you braying little bitch! Go’n get inter your petticoats! You ain’t a boy! I never b’lieved it, not for the last six months, an’ now I know. You’ve give yourself away proper. Why, look at you, as round as a tub—you’re a wumman!” Ratcliffe looked on horrified. Jude, flushed and bright-eyed, had somehow revealed her sex. In her excitement she looked for a moment almost beautiful. Her tongue had done the rest. The smashing of the plates had “Put down that mop!” Jude from rose color had turned awfully white; then with the Élan and dash of a gamecock she charged. The wet swab hit the ruffian full in his flat face, and he fell on the deck with a bang. In a second he was up and scrambling over the rail. Again she charged, the swab meeting him this time full on his stem and sending him over into the boat like a bag of oats. A slush tub, fortunately half-full, and marked by her prescient mind, was her next weapon. The contents caught Cleary full in the face, and as the boat made off, the oars, all at sixes and sevens, wildly rowing, she pursued it with the battery of her tongue till it was out of range. Then she broke down and cried, sniffed, with her arm hiding her face, and then flushed, like a thing of shame dived below. Ratcliffe knew. Her sex proclaimed aloud by the shameless Sellers was as a garment stripped off her publicly. On the very first day Satan had stated her case and she didn’t mind, though he, Ratcliffe, had been a stranger; but it was different now, somehow. It was as if the end of her boyhood had come. Sellers would no doubt proclaim the fact in Havana. He heard voices from below. “I don’t care if I’d killed him! Wish’t I had! Lea’ me alone—for two cents I’d go drown myself! Look at “Never you mind; I’ll get you some more.” “I’m not wanting more. Them plates were mother’s—much you care! I’ve gone as careful as walking on eggs with them, and now they’re broke an’ the old Delf’ ones left. If you must be breaking and cutting up, couldn’t you a broke the cracked ones? An’ where’s the sense in breaking them anyhow?” “Waal, I reckoned it’d liven you up hearin’ the crockery goin’.” “Liven me up! Makes me believe you have been getting at the rum to hear you talk. Where’s the sense in all your doings,—ship stinking of drink and all the crockery broke, and what’s the use?” “I’ll show you after dark. I tell you I want to get away from those thugs, and if I hadn’t headed them off pretendin’ to be drunk they’d have gone through me.” “Well, they’ll go through you right enough tomorrow morning.” “No, they won’t.” “Which way?” “I’ll be gone.” “Gone! Why, first click of the windlass and they’ll be aboard us.” “You leave it to me.” “Well, I wish we’d have went before you broke them plates.” “Oh, cuss the plates!” Silence for a moment, at the end of which Satan’s head and bust appeared at the cabin hatch. He winked at Ratcliffe, and pointed backward with his thumb and down below, as if indicating the domestic trouble. “There’s no sign of them swabs comin’ off again?” asked he. “No,” said Ratcliffe. “They seem to have had enough of it.” The rum bottle had broken fairly in two without splinters. “You might heave the bottle over, like a good one,” said Satan. “I can’t show on deck for fear of those shrimps seein’ me. It’ll be dark in an hour, and then I’ll be up. You can wait for your supper till we get away?” “Oh, yes,” said Ratcliffe; “I’m in no hurry.” |