The Wings of the Morning - Page 12/21

The sailor went after those monkeys in a mood of relentless severity.

Thus far, the regular denizens of Rainbow Island had dwelt together in

peace and mutual goodwill, but each diminutive wou-wou must be taught

not to pull any strings he found tied promiscuously to trees or stakes.

As a preliminary essay, Jenks resolved to try force combined with

artifice. Failing complete success, he would endeavor to kill every

monkey in the place, though he had in full measure the inherent dislike

of Anglo-India to the slaying of the tree-people.

This, then, is what he did. After filling a biscuit tin with good-sized

pebbles, he donned a Dyak hat, blouse, and belt, rubbed earth over his

face and hands, and proceeded to pelt the wou-wous mercilessly. For

more than an hour he made their lives miserable, until at the mere

sight of him they fled, shrieking and gurgling like a thousand

water-bottles. Finally he constructed several Dyak scarecrows and

erected one to guard each of his alarm-guns. The device was thoroughly

effective.

Thenceforth, when some adventurous monkey--swinging with

hands or tail among the treetops in the morning search for appetizing

nut or luscious plantain--saw one of those fearsome bogies, he raised

such a hubbub that all his companions scampered hastily from the

confines of the wood to the inner fastnesses.

In contriving these same scarecrows--which, by the way, he had vaguely

intended at first to erect on the beach in order to frighten the

invaders and induce them to fire a warning volley--the sailor paid

closer heed to the spoils gathered from the fallen. One, at least, of

the belts was made of human hair, and some among its long strands could

have come only from the flaxen-haired head of a European child. This

fact, though ghastly enough, confirmed him in his theory that it was

impossible to think of temporizing with these human fiends. Unhappily

such savage virtues as they possess do not include clemency to the weak

or hospitality to defenceless strangers. There was nothing for it but a

fight to a finish, with the law of the jungle to decide the terms of

conquest.

That morning, of course, he had not been able to visit Summit Rock

until after his cautious survey of the island. Once there, however, he

noticed that the gale two nights earlier had loosened two of the

supports of his sky sign. It was not a difficult or a long job to

repair the damage. With the invaluable axe he cut several wedges and

soon made all secure.

Now, during each of the two daily examinations of the horizon which he

never omitted, he minutely scrutinized the sea between Rainbow Island

and the distant group. It was, perhaps, a needless precaution. The

Dyaks would come at night. With a favorable wind they need not set sail

until dusk, and their fleet sampans would easily cover the intervening

forty miles in five hours.

He could not be positive that they were actual inhabitants of the

islands to the south. The China Sea swarms with wandering pirates, and

the tribe whose animosity he had earned might be equally noxious to

some peaceable fishing community on the coast. Again and again he

debated the advisability of constructing a seaworthy raft and

endeavoring to make the passage. But this would be risking all on a

frightful uncertainty, and the accidental discovery of the Eagle's Nest

had given him new hope. Here he could make a determined and prolonged

stand, and in the end help must come. So he dismissed the

navigation project, and devoted himself wholly to the perfecting of the

natural fortress in the rock.

That night they finished the rope-ladder. Indeed, Jenks was determined

not to retire to rest until it was placed in situ; he did not

care to try a second time to carry Iris to that elevated perch, and it

may be remarked that thenceforth the girl, before going to sleep,

simply changed one ragged dress for another.

One of the first things he contemplated was the destruction, if

possible, of the point on the opposite cliff which commanded the ledge.

This, however, was utterly impracticable with the appliances at his

command. The top of the rock sloped slightly towards the west, and

nothing short of dynamite or regular quarrying operations would render

it untenable by hostile marksmen.

During the day his Lee-Metfords, at ninety yards' range, might be

trusted to keep the place clear of intruders. But at night--that was

the difficulty. He partially solved it by fixing two rests on the ledge

to support a rifle in exact line with the center of the enemy's

supposed position, and as a variant, on the outer rest he marked lines

which corresponded with other sections of the entire front available to

the foe.

Even then he was not satisfied. When time permitted he made many

experiments with ropes reeved through the pulley and attached to a

rifle action. He might have succeeded in his main object had not his

thoughts taken a new line. His aim was to achieve some method of

opening and closing the breech-block by means of two ropes. The

difficulty was to secure the preliminary and final lateral movement of

the lever bolt, but it suddenly occurred to him that if he could manage

to convey the impression that Iris and he had left the island, the

Dyaks would go away after a fruitless search. The existence of ropes

along the face of the rock--an essential to his mechanical

scheme--would betray their whereabouts, or at any rate excite dangerous

curiosity. So he reluctantly abandoned his original design, though not

wholly, as will be seen in due course.

In pursuance of his latest idea he sedulously removed from the foot of

the cliff all traces of the clearance effected on the ledge, and,

although he provided supports for the tarpaulin covering, he did not

adjust it. Iris and he might lie perdu there for days without

their retreat being found out. This development suggested the necessity

of hiding their surplus stores and ammunition, and what spot could be

more suitable than the cave?

So Jenks began to dig once more in the interior, laboring manfully with

pick and shovel in the locality of the fault with its vein of antimony.

It was thus that he blundered upon the second great event of his life.

Rainbow Island had given him the one thing a man prizes above all

else--a pure yet passionate love for a woman beautiful alike in body

and mind. And now it was to endow him with riches that might stir the

pulse of even a South African magnate. For the sailor, unmindful of

purpose other than providing the requisite cache, shoveling and

delving with the energy peculiar to all his actions, suddenly struck a

deep vein of almost virgin gold.

To facilitate the disposal at a distance of the disturbed debris, he

threw each shovelful on to a canvas sheet, which he subsequently

dragged among the trees in order to dislodge its contents. After doing

this four times he noticed certain metallic specks in the fifth load

which recalled the presence of the antimony. But the appearance of the

sixth cargo was so remarkable when brought out into the sunlight that

it invited closer inspection. Though his knowledge of geology was

slight--the half-forgotten gleanings of a brief course at Eton--he was

forced to believe that the specimens he handled so dubiously contained

neither copper nor iron pyrites but glittering yellow gold. Their

weight, the distribution of the metal through quartz in a transition

state between an oxide and a telluride, compelled recognition.

Somewhat excited, yet half skeptical, he returned to the excavation and

scooped out yet another collection. This time there could be no

mistake. Nature's own alchemy had fashioned a veritable ingot. There

were small lumps in the ore which would need alloy at the mint before

they could be issued as sovereigns, so free from dross were they.

Iris had gone to Venus's Bath, and would be absent for some time. Jenks

sat down on a tree-stump. He held in his hand a small bit of ore worth

perhaps twenty pounds sterling. Slowly the conjectures already pieced

together in his mind during early days on the island came back to him.

The skeleton of an Englishman lying there among the bushes near the

well; the Golgotha of the poison-filled hollow; the mining tools, both

Chinese and European; the plan on the piece of tin--ah, the piece of

tin! Mechanically the sailor produced it from the breast-pocket of his

jersey. At last the mysterious sign "32/1" revealed its

significance. Measure thirty-two feet from the mouth of the tunnel, dig

one foot in depth, and you came upon the mother-lode of this

gold-bearing rock. This, then, was the secret of the cave.

The Chinese knew the richness of the deposit, and exploited its

treasures by quarrying from the other side of the hill. But their crass

ignorance of modern science led to their undoing. The accumulation of

liberated carbonic acid gas in the workings killed them in scores. They

probably fought this unseen demon with the tenacity of their race,

until the place became accursed and banned of all living things. Yet

had they dug a little ditch, and permitted the invisible terror to flow

quietly downwards until its potency was dissipated by sea and air, they

might have mined the whole cliff with impunity.

The unfortunate unknown, J.S.--he of the whitened bones--might have

done this thing too. But he only possessed the half-knowledge of the

working miner, and whilst shunning the plague-stricken quarry, adopted

the more laborious method of making an adit to strike the deposit. He

succeeded, to perish miserably in the hour when he saw himself a

millionaire.

Was this a portent of the fate about to overtake the latest comers?

Jenks, of course, stood up. He always, stood square on his feet when

the volcano within him fired his blood.

"No, by God!" he almost shouted. "I will break the spell. I am sent

here by Providence, not to search for gold but to save a woman's life,

and if all the devils of China and Malay are in league against me I

will beat them!"

The sound of his own voice startled him. He had no notion that he was

so hysterical. Promptly his British phlegm throttled the demonstration.

He was rather ashamed of it.

What was all the fuss about? With a barrow-load of gold he could not

buy an instant's safety for Iris, not to mention himself. The language

difficulty was insuperable. Were it otherwise, the Dyaks would simply

humbug him until he revealed the source of his wealth, and then murder

him as an effective safeguard against foreign interference.

Iris! Not once since she was hurled ashore in his arms had Jenks so

long forgotten her existence. Should he tell her? They were partners in

everything appertaining to the island--why keep this marvelous

intelligence from her?

Yet was he tempted, not ignobly, but by reason of his love for her.

Once, years ago, when his arduous professional studies were distracted

by a momentary infatuation for a fair face, a woman had proved fickle

when tempted by greater wealth than he possessed. For long he was a

confirmed misogynist, to his great and lasting gain as a leader of men.

But with more equable judgment came a fixed resolution not to marry

unless his prospective bride cared only for him and not for his

position. To a Staff Corps officer, even one with a small private

income, this was no unattainable ideal. Then he met with his

débâcle in the shame and agony of the court-martial. Whilst his

soul still quivered under the lash of that terrible downfall, Iris came

into his life. He knew not what might happen if they were rescued. The

time would quickly pass until the old order was resumed, she to go back

to her position in society, he to become again a disgraced ex-officer,

apparently working out a mere existence before the mast or handing

plates in a saloon.

Would it not be a sweet defiance of adversity were he able, even under

such conditions, to win her love, and then disclose to her the

potentialities of the island? Perchance he might fail. Though rich as

Croesus he would still be under the social ban meted out to a cashiered

officer. She was a girl who could command the gift of coronets. With

restoration to her father and home, gratitude to her preserver would

assuredly remain, but, alas! love might vanish like a mirage. Then he

would act honorably. Half of the stored wealth would be hers to do as

she chose with it.

Yes, this was a possible alternative. In case of accident to himself,

and her ultimate escape, he must immediately write full details of his

discovery, and entrust the document to her, to be opened only after his

death or six months after their release.

The idea possessed him so thoroughly that he could brook no delay. He

searched for one of the note-books taken from the dead officers of the

Sirdar, and scribbled the following letter:

"DEAR MISS DEANE:

"Whether I am living or dead when you read these words, you will

know that I love you. Could I repeat that avowal a million times,

in as many varied forms, I should find no better phrase to express

the dream I have cherished since a happy fate permitted me to

snatch you from death. So I simply say, 'I love you.' I will

continue to love you whilst life lasts, and it is my dearest hope

that in the life beyond the grave I may still be able to voice my

love for you.

"But perhaps I am not destined to be loved by you. Therefore, in

the event of my death before you leave the island, I wish to give

you instructions how to find a gold mine of great value which is

hidden in the rock containing the cave. You remember the sign on

the piece of tin which we could not understand. The figure 32

denotes the utmost depth of the excavation, and the 1 signifies

that one foot below the surface, on reaching the face of the rock,

there is a rich vein of gold. The hollow on the other side of the

cliff became filled with anhydrate gas, and this stopped the

operations of the Chinese, who evidently knew of the existence of

the mine. This is all the information the experts employed by Sir

Arthur Deane will need. The facts are unquestionable.

"Assuming that I am alive, we will, of course, be co-partners in

the mine. If I am dead, I wish one-sixth share to be given to my

uncle, William Anstruther, Crossthwaite Manor, Northallerton,

Yorkshire, as a recompense for his kindness to me during my early

life. The remainder is to be yours absolutely.

"ROBERT ANSTRUTHER."

He read this remarkable document twice through to make sure that it

exactly recorded his sentiments. He even smiled sarcastically at the

endowment of the uncle who disinherited him. Then, satisfied with the

perusal, he tore out the two leaves covered by the letter and began to

devise a means of protecting it securely whilst in Iris's possession.

At that moment he looked up and saw her coming towards him across the

beach, brightly flushed after her bath, walking like a nymph clothed in

tattered garments. Perceiving that he was watching her, she waved her

hand and instinctively quickened her pace. Even now, when they were

thrown together by the exigencies of each hour, she disliked to be long

separated from him.

Instantly the scales fell from his mental vision. What! Distrust Iris!

Imagine for one second that riches or poverty, good repute or ill,

would affect that loyal heart when its virginal font was filled with

the love that once in her life comes to every true woman! Perish the

thought! What evil spirit had power to so blind his perception of all

that was strong and beautiful in her character. Brave, uncomplaining

Iris! Iris of the crystal soul! Iris, whose innocence and candor were

mirrored in her blue eyes and breathed through her dear lips! Here was

Othello acting as his own tempter, with not an Iago within a thousand

miles.

Laughing at his fantastic folly, Jenks tore the letter into little

pieces. It might have been wiser to throw the sheets into the embers of

the fire close at hand, but for the nonce he was overpowered by the

great awakening that had come to him, and he unconsciously murmured the

musical lines of Tennyson's "Maud":

"She is coming, my own, my sweet;

Were it ever so airy a tread.

My heart would hear her and beat

Were it earth in an earthy bed;

My dust would hear her and beat,

Had I lain for a century dead,

Would start and tremble under her feet,

And blossom in purple and red."

"Good gracious! Don't gaze at me in that fashion. I don't look like a

ghost, do I?" cried Iris, when near enough to note his rapt expression.

"You would not object if I called you a vision?" he inquired quietly,

averting his eyes lest they should speak more plainly than his tongue.

"Not if you meant it nicely. But I fear that 'specter' would be a more

appropriate word. V'la ma meilleure robe de sortie!"

She spread out the front widths of her skirt, and certainly the

prospect was lamentable. The dress was so patched and mended, yet so

full of fresh rents, that a respectable housemaid would hesitate before

using it to clean fire-irons.

"Is that really your best dress?" he said.

"Yes. This is my blue serge. The brown cloth did not survive the

soaking it received in salt water. After a few days it simply crumbled.

The others are muslin or cotton, and have been--er--adapted."

"There is plenty of men's clothing," he began.

"Unfortunately there isn't another island," she said, severely.

"No. I meant that it might be possible to--er--contrive some sort of

rig that will serve all purposes."

"But all my thread is gone. I have barely a needleful left."

"In that case we must fall back on our supply of hemp."

"I suppose that might be made to serve," she said. "You are never at a

loss for an expedient."

"It will be a poor one, I fear. But you can make up for it by buying

some nice gowns at Doucet's or Worth's."

She laughed delightedly. "Perhaps in his joy at my reappearance my dear

old dad may let me run riot in Paris on our way home. But that will not

last. We are fairly well off, but I cannot afford ten thousand a year

for dress alone."

"If any woman can afford such a sum for the purpose, you are at least

her equal."

Iris looked puzzled. "Is that your way of telling me that fine feathers

would make me a fine bird?" she asked.

"No. I intend my words to be understood in their ordinary sense. You

are very, very rich, Miss Deane--an extravagantly wealthy young

person."

"Of course you know you are talking nonsense. Why, only the other day

my father said--"

"Excuse me. What is the average price of a walking-dress from a leading

Paris house?"

"Thirty pounds."

"And an evening dress?"

"Oh, anything, from fifty upwards."

He picked up a few pieces of quartz from the canvas sheet.

"Here is your walking-dress," he said, handing her a lump weighing

about a pound. "With the balance in the heap there you can stagger the

best-dressed woman you meet at your first dinner in England."

"Do you mean by pelting her?" she inquired, mischievously.

"Far worse. By wearing a more expensive costume."

His manner was so earnest that he compelled seriousness. Iris took the

proffered specimen and looked at it.

"From the cave, I suppose? I thought you said antimony was not very

valuable?"

"That is not antimony. It is gold. By chance I have hit upon an

extremely rich lode of gold. At the most modest computation it is worth

hundreds of thousands of pounds. You and I are quite wealthy people,

Miss Deane."

Iris opened her blue eyes very wide at this intelligence. It took her

breath away. But her first words betokened her innate sense of fair

dealing.

"You and I! Wealthy!" she gasped. "I am so glad for your sake, but tell

me, pray, Mr. Jenks, what have I got to do with it?"

"You!" he repeated. "Are we not partners in this island? By squatter's

right, if by no better title, we own land, minerals, wood, game, and

even such weird belongings as ancient lights and fishing privileges."

"I don't see that at all. You find a gold mine, and coolly tell me that

I am a half owner of it because you dragged me out of the sea, fed me,

housed me, saved my life from pirates, and generally acted like a

devoted nursemaid in charge of a baby. Really, Mr. Jenks--"

"Really, Miss Deane, you will annoy me seriously if you say another

word. I absolutely refuse to listen to such an argument."

Her outrageously unbusiness-like utterances, treading fast on the heels

of his own melodramatic and written views concerning their property,

nettled him greatly. Each downright syllable was a sting to his

conscience, but of this Iris was blissfully unaware, else she would not

have applied caustic to the rankling wound caused by his momentary

distrust of her.

For some time they stood in silence, until the sailor commenced to

reproach himself for his rough protest. Perhaps he had hurt her

sensitive feelings. What a brute he was, to be sure! She was only a

child in ordinary affairs, and he ought to have explained things more

lucidly and with greater command over his temper. And all this time

Iris's face was dimpling with amusement, for she understood him so well

that had he threatened to kill her she would have laughed at him.

"Would you mind getting the lamp?" he said softly, surprised to catch

her expression of saucy humor.

"Oh, please may I speak?" she inquired. "I don't want to annoy you, but

I am simply dying to talk."

He had forgotten his own injunction.

"Let us first examine our mine," he said. "If you bring the lamp we can

have a good look at it."

Close scrutiny of the work already done merely confirmed the accuracy

of his first impressions. Whilst Iris held the light he opened up the

seam with a few strokes of the pick. Each few inches it broadened into

a noteworthy volcanic dyke, now yellow in its absolute purity, at times

a bluish black when fused with other metals. The additional labor

involved caused him to follow up the line of the fault. Suddenly the

flame of the lamp began to flicker in a draught. There was an

air-passage between cave and ledge.

"I am sorry," cried Jenks, desisting from further efforts, "that I have

not recently read one of Bret Harte's novels, or I would speak to you

in the language of the mining camp. But in plain Cockney, Miss Deane,

we are on to a good thing if only we can keep it."

They came back into the external glare. Iris was now so serious that

she forgot to extinguish the little lamp. She stood with outstretched

hand.

"There is a lot of money in there," she said.

"Tons of it."

"No need to quarrel about division. There is enough for both of us."

"Quite enough. We can even spare some for our friends."

He took so readily to this definition of their partnership that Iris

suddenly became frigid. Then she saw the ridiculous gleam of the tiny

wick and blew it out.

"I mean," she said, stiffly, "that if you and I do agree to go shares

we will each be very rich."

"Exactly. I applied your words to the mine alone, of course."

A slight thing will shatter a daydream. This sufficed. The sailor

resumed his task of burying the stores.

"Poor little lamp!" he thought. "When it came into the greater world

how soon it was snuffed out."

But Iris said to herself, "What a silly slip that was of mine! Enough

for both of us, indeed! Does he expect me to propose to him? I wonder

what the letter was about which he destroyed as I came back after my

bath. It must have been meant for me. Why did he write it? Why did he

tear it up?"

The hour drew near when Jenks climbed to the Summit Rock. He shouldered

axe and rifle and set forth. Iris heard him rustling upwards through

the trees. She set some water to boil for tea, and, whilst bringing a

fresh supply of fuel, passed the spot where the torn scraps of paper

littered the sand.

She was the soul of honor, for a woman, but there was never a woman yet

who could take her eyes off a written document which confronted her.

She could not help seeing that one small morsel contained her own name.

Though mutilated it had clearly read--Miss Deane."

"So it was intended for me!" she cried, throwing down her bundle

and dropping to her knees. She secured that particular slip and

examined it earnestly. Not for worlds would she pick up all the scraps

and endeavor to sort them. Yet they had a fascination for her, and at

this closer range she saw another which bore the legend--"I love you!"

Somehow the two seemed to fit together very nicely.

Yet a third carried the same words--"I love you!" They were still quite

coherent. She did not want to look any further. She did not even turn

over such of the torn pieces as had fluttered to earth face downwards.

Opening the front of her bodice she brought to light a small gold

locket containing miniatures of her father and mother. Inside this

receptacle she carefully placed the three really material portions of

the sailor's letter. When Jenks walked down the hill again he heard her

singing long before he caught sight of her, sedulously tending the

fire.

As he came near he perceived the remains of his useless document. He

stooped and gathered them up, forthwith throwing them among the glowing

logs.

"By the way, what were you writing whilst I had my bath?" inquired

Iris, demurely.

"Some information about the mine. On second thoughts, however, I saw it

was unnecessary."

"Oh, was that all?"

"Practically all."

"Then some part was impracticable?"

He glanced sharply at her, but she was merely talking at random.

"Well, you see," he explained, "one can do so little without the

requisite plant. This sort of ore requires a crushing-mill, a smelting

furnace, perhaps big tanks filled with cyanide of potassium."

"And, of course, although you can do wonders, you cannot provide all

those things, can you?"

Jenks deemed this query to be unanswerable.

They were busy again until night fell. Sitting down for a little while

before retiring to rest, they discussed, for the hundredth time, the

probabilities of speedy succor. This led them to the topic of available

supplies, and the sailor told Iris the dispositions he had made.

"Did you bury the box of books?" she asked.

"Yes, but not in the cave. They are at the foot of the cinchona over

there. Why? Do you want any?"

"I have a Bible in my room, but there was a Tennyson among the others

which I glanced at in spare moments."

The sailor thanked the darkness that concealed the deep bronze of face

and neck caused by this chance remark. He vaguely recollected the

manner in which the lines from "Maud" came to his lips after the

episode of the letter. Was it possible that he had unknowingly uttered

them aloud and Iris was now slily poking fun at him? He glowed with

embarrassment.

"It is odd that you should mention Tennyson," he managed to say calmly.

"Only today I was thinking of a favorite passage."

Iris, of course, was quite innocent this time.

"Oh, do tell me. Was it from 'Enoch Arden'?"

He gave a sigh of relief. "No. Anything but that," he answered.

"What then?"

"'Maud.'"

"Oh, 'Maud.' It is very beautiful, but I could never imagine why the

poet gave such a sad ending to an idyllic love story."

"They too often end that way. Moreover, 'Enoch Arden' is not what you

might call exhilarating."

"No. It is sad. I have often thought he had the 'Sonata Pathétique' in

his mind when he wrote it. But the note is mournful all through. There

is no promise of happiness as in 'Maud.'"

"Then it is my turn to ask questions. Why did you hit upon that poem

among so many?"

"Because it contains an exact description of our position here. Don't

you remember how the poor fellow

"'Sat often in the seaward-gazing gorge,

A shipwrecked sailor, waiting for a sail.'

"I am sure Tennyson saw our island with poetic eye, for he goes on--

"'No sail from day to day, but every day

The sunrise broken into scarlet shafts

Among the palms and ferns and precipices;

The blaze upon the waters to the east;

The blaze upon his island overhead;

The blaze upon the waters to the west;

Then the great stars that globed themselves in Heaven,

The hollower-bellowing ocean, and again

The scarlet shafts of sunrise--but no sail."

She declaimed the melodious verse with a subtle skill that amazed her

hearer. Profoundly moved, Jenks dared not trust himself to speak.

"I read the whole poem the other day," she said after a silence of some

minutes. "Sorrowful as it is, it comforted me by comparison. How

different will be our fate to his when 'another ship stays by this

isle'!"

Yet neither of them knew that one line she had recited was more

singularly applicable to their case than that which they paid heed to.

"The great stars that globed themselves in Heaven," were shining clear

and bright in the vast arch above. Resplendent amidst the throng rose

the Pleiades, the mythological seven hailed by the Greeks as an augury

of safe navigation. And the Dyaks--one of the few remaining savage

races of the world--share the superstition of the people who fashioned

all the arts and most of the sciences.

The Pleiades form the Dyak tutelary genius. Some among a bloodthirsty

and vengeful horde were even then pointing to the clustering stars that

promised quick voyage to the isle where their kinsmen had been struck

down by a white man who rescued a maid. Nevertheless, Grecian romance

and Dyak lore alike relegate the influence of the Pleiades to the sea.

Other stars are needed to foster enterprise ashore.