Angel Island - Page 15/136

Sorting what Honey Smith called the "ship-duffle" was one prolonged

adventure. At first they made little progress; for all five of them

gathered over each important find, chattering like girls. Each man

followed the bent of his individual instinct for acquisitiveness. Frank

Merrill picked out books, paper, writing materials of every sort. Ralph

Addington ran to clothes. The habit of the man with whom it is a

business policy to appear well-dressed maintained itself; even in their

Eveless Eden, he presented a certain tailored smartness. Billy Fairfax

selected kitchen utensils and tools. Later, he came across a box filled

with tennis rackets, nets, and balls. The rackets' strings had snapped

and the balls were dead. He began immediately to restring the rackets,

to make new balls from twine, to lay out a court. Like true soldiers of

fortune, Honey Smith and Pete Murphy made no special collection; they

looted for mere loot's sake.

One day, in the midst of one of their raids, Honey Smith yelled a

surprised and triumphant, "By jiminy!" The others showed no signs, of

interest. Honey was an alarmist; the treasure of the moment might prove

to be a Japanese print or a corkscrew. But as nobody stirred or spoke,

he called, "The Wilmington 'Blue'!"

These words carried their inevitable magic. His companions dropped

everything; they swarmed about him.

Honey held on his palm what, in the brilliant sunlight looked like a

globe of blue fire, a fire that emitted rainbows instead of sparks.

He passed it from hand to hand. It seemed a miracle that the fingers

which touched it did not burst into flame. For a moment the five men

might have been five children.

"Well," said Pete Murphy, "according to all fiction precedent, the rest

of us ought to get together immediately, if not a little sooner, and

murder you, Honey."

"Go as far as you like," said Honey, dropping the stone into the pocket

of his flannel shirt. "Only if anybody really gets peeved about this

junk of carbon, I'll give it to him."

For a while life flowed wonderful. The men labored with a joy-in-work at

which they themselves marveled. Their out-of-doors existence showed its

effects in a condition of glowing health. Honey Smith changed first to a

brilliant red, then to a uniform coffee brown, and last to a shining

bronze which was the mixture of both these colors. Pete Murphy grew one

crop of freckles, then another and still another until Honey offered to

"excavate" his features. Ralph Addington developed a rich, subcutaneous,

golden-umber glow which made him seem, in connection with an occasional

unconventionality of costume, more than ever like the schoolgirl's idea

of an artist. Billy Fairfax's blond hair bleached to flaxen. His

complexion deepened in tone to a permanent pink. This, in contrast with

the deep clear blue of his eyes, gave him a kind of out-of-doors

comeliness. But Frank Merrill was the surprise of them all. He not only

grew handsomer, he grew younger; a magnificent, towering, copper-colored

monolith of a man, whose gray eyes were as clear as mountain springs,

whose white teeth turned his smile to a flash of light. Constantly they

patrolled the beach, pairs of them, studying the ocean for sight of a

distant sail, selecting at intervals a new spot on which at night to

start fires, or by day to erect signals. They bubbled with spirits. They

laughed and talked without cessation. The condition which Ralph

Addington had deplored, the absence of women, made first for social

relaxation, for psychological rest.