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Dick traveled halfway around the world to get to this particular house, and despite his pinkish-white appearance, the boy had a lot of courage. Dick saw a heavy, bloated-looking man, with a fat, flabby face and thick, black hair and eyebrows. His clothes were black, so was his tie; even his finger-nails shared in the general mourning. He looked like a funeral mute off duty.
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Contents
CHAPTER I. THE MAN IN BLACK
CHAPTER II. THE MASTER OF THE RAINBOW
CHAPTER III. THE DERELICT
CHAPTER IV. THE CASTAWAY TAKES COMMAND
CHAPTER V. THE MAN WITH THE GUN
CHAPTER VI. THE GLADE OF DEATH
CHAPTER VII. THE BARRAMUNDA
CHAPTER VIII. THE SKIPPER'S STORY
CHAPTER IX. THE EMPTY CACHE
CHAPTER X. BARSTOW'S CONDITION
CHAPTER XI. THE GAS-PIT
CHAPTER XII. DICK PLAYS A LONE HAND!
CHAPTER XIII. BURKE CALLS UP REINFORCEMENTS
CHAPTER XIV. THE ROCK PRISON
CHAPTER XV. BARRY'S BID FOR FREEDOM
CHAPTER XVI. BARRY'S DIVE FOR FREEDOM
CHAPTER XVII. CLUB AGAINST SPEAR
CHAPTER XVIII. BURKE OFFERS TERMS
CHAPTER XIX. THE STORM
CHAPTER XX. AFTER DARK
CHAPTER XXI. A GAME OF HIDE-AND-SEEK
CHAPTER XXII. FENG SHIN
CHAPTER XXIII. TERMS.TERMS
CHAPTER XXIV. THE WAVE
CHAPTER XXV. THE BLACK TRAMP
CHAPTER XXVI. CUT OFF FROM THE RAINBOW
CHAPTER XXVII. A NIGHT ATTACK
CHAPTER XXVIII. THE BRANT IS BOARDED
CHAPTER XXIX. CRIPPS PLAYS FOUL!
CHAPTER XXX. THE DEFEAT OF CRIPPS
CHAPTER XXXI. HOMEWARD BOUND
CHAPTER XXXII. THE CRUISER
CHAPTER XXXIII. BURKE'S LAST CARD
CHAPTER XXXIV. WITS WIN
CHAPTER I. THE MAN IN BLACK
“SHAKE a leg, you yellow-faced baboon! Up with it, or, by thunder, I’ll come and make you!”
The tone was worse than the words, and Dick Damer paused in the act of stepping out of the blazing Australian sunshine on to the wide, cool verandah of Warlindi, and stood with a startled expression on his pink-and-white face.
There came a bumping as of furniture being moved inside the house, and a panting sound.
“Got it up at last, have you?” snarled the same voice. “Put it down and fetch the rest. Be smart, or–
The throat that followed will not bear repeating, and Dick went rather white. For a moment he was on the point of turning tail and bolting back the way he had come.
But he had travelled half-way round the world to reach this particular house, and in spite of his spick-and-span, pink-and- white appearance, the boy had plenty of pluck.
He paused, drew a deep breath, then seized the bell-handle and gave it a nervous jerk.
There was a long pause–so long that Dick’s hand moved again towards the bell. But before he could ring a second time the door opened.
Dick saw a heavy, bloated-looking man, with a fat, flabby face and thick, black hair and eyebrows. His clothes were black, so was his tie; even his finger-nails shared in the general mourning. He looked like a funeral mute off duty.
“Who are you?” he asked, in a thick, husky voice. “What do you want?”
“I–I’m Richard Damer,” stammered Dick. “I have come to see my uncle–my uncle–Nicholas Damer.”
The other turned up his eyes with a sanctimonious expression.
“You are too late, my young friend. I regret to say that you are too late. Mr. Darner passed away last Tuesday week.”
Dick’s jaw dropped.
“Dead!” he gasped. “You don’t mean to say he is dead?”
The fat man shook his big head and sighed heavily.
“Alas, it is too true! He had been ailing for a long time, but the end came very suddenly. I was with him to the last.”
“Did–didn’t he leave any message for me?” Dick managed to ask.
The other shook his head.
“He never mentioned you. I never even knew that he had a nephew.”
“B-but he wrote to me to come out,” said Dick. “Here’s his letter. He said he would give me work, and that I could live with him.”
“I know nothing of that. He never spoke of you to me. I was his partner. Crane is my name–Wesley Crane.”
Dick could find no words. He was too staggered to speak.
Wesley Crane watched him with an odd expression in his prominent eyes.
“You’ve come from England?” he asked presently.
“Y-yes; in the Baramula. I only got in this morning.”
“Then you’re staying in Sydney?”
“I’m not staying anywhere. I left my box at the wharf, and came straight up. I–I couldn’t afford to stay at an hotel.”
Crane wagged his great head again.
“Ah, very sad! Well, I can’t ask you to stay here. This place is to be sold, and I am busy taking an inventory. But since you are my late partner’s nephew, I will do what I can for you.”
He took out a pocket-book and scribbled a few words on a leaf, which he tore out.
“Here is the address of a friend of mine who will put you up for the night. To-morrow come to my office in Water Street, and I will see what work can be found for you.”
Dick was touched.
“Thank you very much!” he said gratefully. “It is very kind of you indeed.”
Crane put out a thick, grimy hand.
“That’s all right,” he said. “Well, I’m busy now. Good-bye!”
Dick’s head was in a whirl as he tramped back down the long white road in the hot glare of the Australian sun. He was sixteen, but looked younger. That was the fault of Miss Emma Neate, the aunt who had looked after him since the death of his parents, eleven years before. She had never sent him to a boarding-school, and the result was that, though a well-grown youngster, he had precious little idea of fending for himself. He knew rather less of the world than the average boy of twelve.
Miss Neate herself was not much better, and it was pure ignorance on her part that had caused her to invest most of her money in a wildcat mining scheme. When it failed, and she was left with barely enough to live on, she had jumped at the chance offered to Dick by his Australian uncle, and sent him straight out to Sydney by the first ship.
The news of his uncle’s death had shocked Dick, but as he had never seen him, he naturally did not feel any particular grief. The one question which filled his thoughts during that long walk back to the tram-head was whether the soft-spoken Mr. Wesley Crane was the same person whom he had heard using the appalling language which had greeted his ears at his first approach to Warlindi.
It hardly seemed possible, yet there were ugly doubts in Dick’s mind. Of one thing he was quite sure. He did not like the man, and dreaded the prospect of working for him.
At last he reached the tram. By this time he was pretty well played out. He fell asleep in a corner, and woke to find the tram at rest and the conductor shaking him by the shoulder.
“All change, sonny. This here’s the terminus.”
Dick jumped up with a start. He took the address from his pocket.
“Can you tell me where this is?” he asked.
The conductor glanced at it, then at Dick.
“Bendigo Hotel, Wharf Street. Be you staying there?”
“Yes; just for the present. I was told to.”
The conductor grunted.
“‘Tain’t much of a place. Still, I suppose you knows your own business. Go straight down that street till you gets to the water’s edge, then second turn on the right.”
Dick thanked him, and walked on. The sleep had refreshed him, but he was desperately hungry. Passing a little cook-shop, he went in and asked for a sandwich. As it was being cut he put his hand in his pocket to find some money.
He drew it out, and hastily tried the other.
A cry of dismay escaped him.
“What’s the matter?” demanded the man behind the counter, in a surly tone.
“I–I’ve been robbed!” stammered Dick. “My purse is gone!”
“I’ve heard that tale afore!” remarked the other, with a sneer. “Out you gets–quick!”
This fresh misfortune fairly staggered Dick. True, the purse had only held a sovereign in gold and a little silver, but it was all he had in the world. No doubt it had been taken from him in the tram. At any rate he was now absolutely penniless. He could not even pay the few pence due on his box. Not knowing what else to do, he went straight on to the Bendigo.
This was a narrow-fronted inn standing in a dirty, noisome alley running off the wharf. Over the door was written, “John Bale, licensed to sell beer, spirits, and tobacco.” The look of the place and the smell of it made him sick, but there was no help for it. He went in.
A surly-looking, heavy-jowled man in shirt-sleeves, stood behind the bar.
He eyed Dick suspiciously.
“Who are you? What do you want?” he demanded.
“My name is Damer. Mr. Crane sent me,” answered Dick humbly enough. “He said I was to stay the night.”
“Crane? Oh, Wesley Crane?” The man’s tone became less surly. “All right. I’ll fix you up. Where’s your things?”
Dick explained, and spoke of the loss of his purse.
“More fool you to carry a purse! But don’t you worry. I’ll send across for your box. Had your dinner?”
“I’ve had nothing since breakfast,” confessed Dick. “Take some o’ them biscuits and cheese”–pointing to a basket on the counter.
“Supper’ll be ready soon.”
Dick helped himself gratefully. Then Bale showed him a room. It was a stuffy little cupboard of a place, and looked out on a filthy back-yard. His aunt’s house had been the last word in cleanliness, and the squalor made Dick shiver. He flung open the window, and sat on the edge of the bed, feeling as miserable as a lost puppy.
He had left the door ajar, and presently heard low voices somewhere across the passage. He did not pay much attention. He was too unhappy.
It was something familiar in one of the voices that roused him, and he was up like a shot, and across the room.
“Who is he, anyway?” It was Bale who spoke, and, though little more than a hoarse whisper, Dick caught the words distinctly.
“That’s no business of yours. I don’t want him here, and that’s enough for you!”
Dick’s heart began to beat quickly. Now he was certain of the second voice. It was Wesley Crane’s, and though as low-pitched as Bale’s, there was an angry note in it.
“It’s risky,” answered Bale softly. “The cops have been giving me a heap o’ trouble lately. S’pose someone seed him come in here?”
“Suppose nothing. He only landed this morning. He don’t know a soul in the town, and no one knows him. You do as I say, and I’ll make it right with you.”
At this moment someone opened the street door. There came heavy steps in the bar. Dick heard Bale jump up hastily, and quickly closed his own door.
After a bit he opened it again, and stood just inside, straining his ears. But there was no more talk. All the same he had heard enough to make him horribly uneasy. He felt instinctively that it was himself that Crane had been referring to, and began to think that the best thing he could do was to clear out at once. But the idea of wandering about Sydney at night without a penny in his pocket daunted him, and before he could make up his mind Bale stuck his head in.
“Supper’s ready!” he said gruffly. “This way!”
The dining-room matched the rest of the place, and the cloth on the table looked as though it had not been changed for a month.
“Sit down, sonny!” said Bale, as he pulled a chair up and seated himself. “Have some coffee, will ye?”
Dick thanked him.
“Milk and sugar?” asked Bale genially.
“Please!” said Dick.
The coffee was a pleasant surprise, black and strong and bitter, but far better than Dick had expected. He was thirsty, and drank nearly the whole cup, while Bale helped him to bread and a plateful of thick stew.
Dick put away two mouthfuls, then stopped and looked at his plate.
“What’s the matter? Ain’t it good?” asked Bale.
“It–it’s all right,” said Dick slowly, as he passed his hand across his forehead in a dazed fashion. “B-but I don’t feel very well.”
Bale watched him for a moment or two before replying.
“It’s a bit hot in here. You want a breath o’ fresh air.”
“That’s it,” said Dick, in a queer, thick voice. He wondered vaguely what was the matter with his tongue. It felt too big for his mouth. There was something amiss, too, with his eyes. Bale, sitting just across from him, seemed to be growing. He became as big as a giant, then shrank slowly to the size of a dwarf.
“Come along!” said Bale briskly. “Come on outside!”
As Dick rose to hie feet, Bale opened a door at the back of the room, and led the way through a dark, narrow passage.
Dick followed uncertainly. His head was spinning in a most unpleasant fashion.
There was another door at the end of the passage. As in a dream Dick saw Bale open it.
“Here ye are, sonny!” he said, and the voice seemed to come from a long way off.
As he stumbled past, Dick felt a vigorous push from behind which sent him headlong forward. He plunged into pitchy darkness, the floor gave way beneath him, and he felt himself falling. He brought up with a stunning crash, and that was the last he knew.
CHAPTER II. THE MASTER OF THE RAINBOW
DICK opened his eyes. He was still in darkness, and strange noises filled his ears. His head throbbed heavily, and for a time he was content to lie still.
Slowly he became aware that the whole place was swaying with a long, steady swing, and after a bit it came to him that he must be back in his own cabin aboard the Baramula, and that the events of the past day had been only a bad dream.
He shut his eyes tightly, and tried to sleep.
The next thing he knew a yellow light shone in his face, and, looking up, he saw bending over him a tall Chinaman in a blue blouse. His face looked as if it had been carved out of old ivory, and his left ear was missing, giving him an oddly lop- sided appearance.
“Hallo!” said Dick faintly. “Who are you? Where am I?”
The Chinaman paid no attention whatever to the question.
“Cap’n Clipps–he wantum see you.”
“Captain Clipps? Who’s he?”
“He tell you plenty soon. You come along o’ me.”
Dick sat up, which set his head swimming worse than ever. The light showed him that he had been lying on a wooden bunk in a small, low-ceiled cabin. The place was cleaner than Bale’s hotel, but the reek of stale salt water, old clothes and oilskins was thick enough to cut with a knife.
As Dick’s feet reached the door, there was a lurch which sent him flying, and if the Chinaman bad not caught him he would have pitched on his head against the opposite wall.
“Thanks!” gasped Dick, and then the Chinaman, keeping fast hold on him, led him out of the cabin and up a steep companion ladder.
A blast of fresh cold wind met him as he got his head above the hatch, and his bewildered eyes took in the fact that he was on the deck of a small sailing vessel, which was lying over to a stiff breeze, and tearing across the sea through the starlit darkness of a clear night.
Overhead he saw the loom of tall white sails, and on either side the foam-tipped waves, while astern streamed away a long wake, milk-white with gleaming phosphorescence.
The Chinaman gave him little time to take in his surroundings. He led him straight to the deck-house, and pushed him in through the open door.
Dick blinked in the bright light of a large swinging oil-lamp. The first thing he saw was a table. Behind the table sat the biggest man he had ever seen in his life–big, at least, so far as breadth went. He seemed perfectly square, and his face was huge and of a bright brick-red. Between his teeth was a long black cigar.
As Dick came in he took this out of his mouth and looked the boy up and down with a hard, penetrating stare.
“Waal, I know!” he growled contemptuously. “I always knowed Bale was a fool, but this here’s the limit! What good d’ye think you are?” he barked suddenly, in a voice that made Dick jump.
“Are ye dumb?” he continued savagely, for Dick, sick and dizzy and bewildered, had not answered.
“Can’t ye speak, ye pink-faced puppy?”
Dick flushed hotly. The insult pulled him together.
“I don’t know what you are talking about!” he answered sharply. “Where am I? How did I come aboard here?”
“Wants to know where he is!” said the big man, in a tone of bitter sarcasm. “Asks how he came aboard! Wonders why we left his nurse ashore!”
He rose suddenly to his feet, and it gave Dick a shock to see how short he was compared with his enormous breadth. With one spring he was round the table, and caught Dick by the shoulder with his gigantic hand.
“See here, my lad,” he said threateningly, sticking his great red face close up against Dick’s. “I’ll tell ye this much. You’re aboard the Rainbow, and I’m the only man in her what’s got the right to ask questions. You remember that if you value your health. I’m cap’n, an’ you’re cabin-boy, and anything else I’ve a mind to make you.”
So far from scaring him, the captain’s hectoring tone roused Dick’s spirit.
“That’s all nonsense!” he answered boldly. “I’ve been drugged and chucked on board here against my will. I demand to be put ashore!”
For a moment the captain stared as if he could not believe his ears. His red face grew redder still, his eyes looked as if they would start out of his head. Then his rage boiled over.
“Put ye ashore?” he roared. “I’ll put ye ashore!”
He picked up Dick in both hands, holding him by the neck and the slack of his coat, and swinging him up level with his head as though he had been a baby, rushed out of the cabin and across to the rail. For a horrid moment Dick was certain that the brute was going to fling him overboard.
At the last moment he changed his mind.
“Thet’s too easy!” he growled, and, spinning round, made for the companion. Without ado he pitched Dick headlong down into the darkness below.
“That’s lesson number one!” he bellowed after him. “If you expects to live to make a man, you better not ask for number two.”
As for Dick, he lay helpless and more than half stunned at the foot of the ladder. His luck had held thus far–that he had fallen on a pile of oilskins. But for that he would probably have been killed. He would certainly have broken half the bones in his body.
Next thing he knew the tall Chinaman was beside him, the lantern in his hand.
“You velly foolish,” he said reprovingly. “Chang allee same wonder boss he no kill you.”
“I don’t care whether he kills me or not!” sobbed out Dick, beside himself with pain and rage. “I’d as soon be dead as like this!”
“You no talkee that way to-mollow,” answered Chang calmly. “You sleepee one time. Feel all light to-mollow.”
He helped Dick to a bunk, gave him a blanket, and left him. Dick, aching all over and miserable beyond words, lay there feeling that no would never sleep again.
But the very violence of his emotions exhausted him, and now that the schooner was well out to sea her motion became more regular and easy. Presently he dropped off, and did not wake until daylight was streaming through the open scuttle overhead.
For some minutes he lay wondering vaguely where he was and what had happened. Then he remembered, and started up.
Overhead someone was scrubbing the deck. He heard the water swishing across the planking. His throat was burning. He crawled out, put on his coat and boots, and moved towards the ladder.
Just then Chang appeared, coming down.
“Feel all light?” he asked and though his face and voice were wooden as ever, Dick felt there was a gleam of kindness somewhere behind.
“I’m better, thanks.” he said. “Could I have a wash and some water to drink?”
“Plenty water in sea. You go topside, dlaw a bucket. Cap’n Clipps he still asleep.”
Dick went on deck. It was a beautiful morning. The breeze had fallen light, but the schooner, with topsails set, snored through the clear blue waves. No land was in sight.
The only people on deck were three Chinamen–one at the wheel, the other two busy scrubbing and cleaning.
Dick drew a pail of cool sea water, stripped to the waist, sluiced himself well, and felt fifty per cent. better. He was going to put on the same clothes again, but Chang called him below and gave him a suit of blue dungaree which was not much too big for him.
He had just finished changing when breakfast was brought in–broad, fried pork in a mess-kid, and a black liquid which bore some faint resemblance to coffee, though it smelt chiefly of molasses.
Six Chinamen, including Chang, shared the meal with Dick. They ate in absolute silence, and seemed to take no more notice of the white boy than they did of the hideous brass joss which stood at the end of the fo’c’s’le with a couple of punk-sticks burning before it.
Chang, who seemed to be cook, picked up the empty kid and bread- pan, and vanished silently. The others went on deck, leaving Dick alone.
Presently Chang came back.
“Hey, boss he want you. Talkee him one piecey. Sabee?”
Dick’s heart sank, but he comforted himself with the thought that nothing could be worse than last night, and anyhow, he was feeling more like himself again.
He found Cripps in the cabin aft. The big man surveyed him with a sardonic grin.
“Still feelin’ gay, sonny–eh?”
“Not particularly,” answered Dick.
“Thet’s right. It don’t pay for kids like you to get giving back- talk to their skipper. Savvy?”
He waited for this to sink in, then continued:
“See here, young feller, you listen to me. I ain’t altogether angry because you stuck up ter me last night. Show’s you’ve got something back o’ that pink-and-white baby face o’ yours. D’ye know anything about a ship?”
“Nothing,” confessed Dick.
“Ye don’t look as if ye knowed much about anything, and that’s the truth,” said Cripps, grinning again. “Still, ye can learn, and I’m the man to learn ye. I’m a-going to learn ye, too, whether ye likes it or not, so you make up your mind to that. We don’t keep no loafers aboard the Rainbow. Now, you mind what I say, and do what I tell ye, and this cruise’ll be all right for you. But get gay again, and I’ll make ye wish ye’d never been born!”
“I don’t seem to have much choice!” said Dick bitterly “I’ve got to make the best of it!”
Cripps glared a moment, then burst into a loud laugh.
“You got sense all right. Now go forrard and help Chang peel the spuds. You’ll learn galley work fust, and then, if you’re good, I’ll teach ye navigation. Git!”
Dick got. He felt he would a deal rather peel potatoes in Chang’s company than remain aft with the formidable Cripps.
The next few days passed quietly enough. The weather remained perfect, and the Rainbow‘s crew hardly needed to touch a rope.
They were all Chinese, and the most silent lot imaginable. They talked among themselves, but except Chang hardly any said one word to Dick.
The Rainbow herself was a beamy, powerful craft of about 120 tons. But what her job was or where she was bound Dick had not the foggiest notion. He tried to sound Chang, but all the answer he got was:
“Boss, he tell you when he get leady.”
On the fourth day the weather changed. The breeze fell light, and it turned blazing hot. It was a stinging, steamy heat which made Dick feel as if he could not breathe. The pitch grew soft in the deck seams, and the crew went about their work stripped to the waist.
About eleven in the forenoon Dick, who was sitting in the door of the galley cutting up meat for the soup, heard a sudden shout from up forward.
“Hyah! Hyah!”
Chang, who was in the galley, jumped out. At the same moment Cripps, who had been lying in a long chair under the awning aft, sprang to his feet.
“What’s up?” he bellowed. “What’s biting you, ye blamed galoot?”
He hurried forward as he spoke.
“What is it, Chang?” asked Dick eagerly.
“I tink um ship,” answered Chang, who was staring out to sea, shading his eyes with both hands from the brassy glare.
“Ship! Where?”
Chang pointed, and presently Dick caught sight of a craft of some sort which, to his inexperienced eyes, was a mere blur on the throbbing horizon.
Meantime, Cripps, up in the bows, was staring at the vessel through a pair of glasses. A little knot of Chinamen stood silently around.
Cripps lowered his glasses. There was a look of excitement in his face which Dick had never seen before.
“Port–port your hellum!” he shouted to the man at the wheel.
The Rainbow came round with her bows pointed straight for the distant vessel. At that moment a puff filled her sails and the water began to bubble under her forefoot.
“What is it, Chang?” asked Dick. “Why are we going to her?”
“I tink um leck,” answered Chang. “What call derelict.”
CHAPTER III. THE DERELICT
DICK ventured forward. Cripps was still gazing fixedly at the strange ship, which was now rising rapidly into sight.
“She’s in trouble,” Dick heard the skipper mutter. “She’s in trouble; I’ll swear to that. Ay, that’s her ensign upside down at the mizzen. Wish my eyes was better.”
He glanced round and saw Dick.
“Here you! Your eyes are better than mine. Take a hold of these glasses.”
He handed them to Dick, who, after one or two efforts, managed to focus them.
“What’s the two flags on the boom, aft?” demanded Cripps.
“One’s square,” said Dick. “It’s red and white. The other’s pointed and the same colours.”
Cripps brought his great hand down with a slap on his leg.
“Thought so!” he cried joyfully. “That means ‘in need of assistance.’ Now see if you kin see if there’s anyone aboard.”
“No, sir. I can’t see anyone. There are no boats, either.”
“Derelict–derelict! That’s what she is. An’, by gosh, there’ll be pickings!” Cripps’ great red face shone with a savage eagerness. There was a queer gleam in his eyes. He looked so different that Dick stared at him in amazement.
“Sonny,” said Cripps, “ye got eyes if ye ain’t got sense. An’ ye talk English, which these Chinks can’t do. I’ll take ye along, derned if I won’t.”
Dick did not answer, but a shiver of excitement ran through him. He was beginning to understand now. He knew what salvage meant. He realised that, if this ship had been abandoned by her crew, the Rainbow, by taking her into port, could claim a heavy sum from her owners.
Soon they were close enough to view her without glasses. She was a square-rigged ship of about a thousand tons, and stood high in the water. There was no sign of life about her, and she rolled listlessly to the long send of the slow Pacific swell.
“What did they leave her for?” growled Cripps, in a puzzled tone. “Why did they leave her? There hasn’t been no weather. Her masts is all standing.”
As Dick had no ideas on the subject he did not venture to reply. The Chinese crew were equally silent while the Rainbow, little more than drifting before a succession of cat’s-paws, slowly bore down on the derelict.
Suddenly Cripps woke up and began to roar out a succession of orders.
The crew fled to obey, and a minute or two later the schooner was lying to, head to wind. A boat was rapidly lowered, and with Cripps at the tiller, Dick in the bows, and two of the Chinks pulling, drove rapidly across the calm swells towards the derelict.
“Look!” cried Dick suddenly. “What’s that?”
A brown triangular something had suddenly cut the water between the boat and the abandoned ship.
“Gosh, it’s a shark!” said Cripps. “Ay, dozens of ’em. There’s dead folk aboard. The sharks know.”
In spite of the heat Dick shivered. In all his sheltered life he had never so much as seen a dead man.
As the dinghy drew up towards the stern of the derelict, Dick saw her name emblazoned on the taffrail. It was Kauri. Coming nearer, he suddenly caught a whiff of some powerful odour–a whiff so rank it made him almost choke.
“She–she’s afire!” he gasped.
“No, she ain’t,” cried Cripps, smiting his thigh again. “No, she ain’t. That’s not smoke. It’s gas. Ay, I’ve got it now. Carboys broke loose down below. Carboys of acid. That’s it! No wonder it drove the chaps off her.”
It was a job to board her, she was rolling so, but Cripps managed to catch a bight of rope hanging over the rail, and swung himself up.
“Here, you, Dick, you come aboard! Others stay in the boat. Sharp, now, kid, unless you want to make a meal for one o’ them long-toothed gentry!”
Dick’s heart was in his mouth as he followed, and he bruised his shins cruelly as he scrambled over the rail.
Once aboard, the reek was simply suffocating and the heat like that of a furnace.
Cripps glanced round the empty decks.
“She’s abandoned, sure,” he chuckled. “Oh, it’s a windfall–a proper windfall!”
He hurried forward to the hatch. The cover was on, but he whirled it off. The gas poured out in suffocating clouds, and he staggered back.
“Let it blow out. It’ll be all right in a minute,” he gasped. “Here, you Dick, find an axe and burst open that forward hatch!”
Dick ran into the deck-house. There were axes in a rack on the wall. He got one out, and was turning when there came a sound which startled him so that he as nearly as possible dropped his heavy weapon.
The sound was a groan, and it came from quite close at hand.
Next moment he had turned up the cloth over the table in the middle of the room, and was looking down into a pair of open eyes.
“So there’s one alive after all!” he gasped, and, getting hold of the owner of the eyes, who was lying between the table and the wall, he dragged him out into the open.
By his weight he thought he was a grown man, but when he got him into the light he saw that, though big and heavy framed, he was only seventeen or eighteen years of ago. He was a tall, finely- made young fellow in brown jeans, with the bluest eyes Dick had ever seen, curly hair of a chestnut red, and a heavy square jaw.
“What the blazes have you got there?”
Cripps’s voice made Dick start.
“A boy. He’s alive!”
Cripps swore savagely. Then his face cleared.
“It’s all right.” he said, in a tone of relief. “Only a cub of a cabin-boy. He can’t interfere with our salvage. If I thought he could I’d–” he did not finish his sentence, but Dick shivered inwardly as he realised that the captain of the Rainbow would stop at nothing which lay between him and his prey.
“Call one o’ them Chinks up, and get the chap aboard the schooner,” ordered Cripps. “Sharp now, while he’s still looney with the gas. Less he knows of all this the better.”
Dick obeyed. As he went back to the stern he saw Cripps, with a handkerchief over his face, make a bold plunge down the companion.
It was no easy job lowering Dick’s almost insensible find into the dinghy. But they did it at last, and pulled back to the schooner.
The crew of the dinghy took her straight back to the Kauri, but as Dick had had no orders to return, he stayed to look after the youngster. Chang and he between them got him below and laid him on a bunk. Chang fell his pulse and bathed his face with cold water.
“He all light pletty soon,” observed the Chinaman.
The words were hardly out of his mouth before there came a curious deep booming sound which seemed to come from everywhere at once, yet from nowhere in particular. It rose with startling suddenness, growing from a drone to a high-pitched shriek.
CHAPTER IV. THE CASTAWAY TAKES COMMAND
DICK, who had been leaning over the castaway, straightened himself with a sharp exclamation.
“What–” he began. Then his eyes fell on Chang’s face, and the expression upon it cut his question short. For the first time since he had known the man he saw stark terror writ large on the yellow man’s countenance.
Dropping everything, Chang darted for the ladder and went up it like a flash. Dick, hard at his heels, reached the deck, and for a moment stood stock still, unable to believe his eyes.
Fifteen minutes earlier, when he had left the deck, the sun had been blazing down from a cloudless sky. Now the sun was gone, swallowed by a monstrous volume of inky vapour which was sweeping up with tremendous speed The blazing heat had changed to a bitter chill.
But this was not the worst. To the southward, darkness had shut down across the ocean like a cover sliding over a hatch, and beneath it the sea was boiling under a squall of appalling fury. Dick could see the white line of foam rushing towards the schooner at the rate of an express train, while the roar of the oncoming tempest set the whole air a-tremble.
He had heard of the suddenness of these Pacific storms, but this–this was incredible, appalling.
As he stood there, helpless, not knowing what to do, the first gust caught the schooner and set her sails and spars swinging and flapping wildly.
“What can we do, Chang? What can we do?” he cried despairingly, and for the first time in his life a hideous sense of his own helplessness and ignorance overwhelmed him.
“Me not know. Me tink gettum sail down,” answered Chang.
“Then call to the men. Tell them what to do!” cried Dick.
Chang shouted to the men, but they did not move. They stood where they were, clinging to cleats or stays, paralysed with fear.
Just then Dick saw Cripps come springing up on to the deck of the Kauri. He saw him rush to the side waving his arms, evidently shouting orders. Rut the roar of the storm swamped his voice, and the next instant a veil of darkness swept over him, hiding him and the ship in a single second.
Before Dick could draw one more breath it was on the schooner, and catching her full on the beam, pressed her over until her lee gunwale was buried, and it seemed that she would instantly capsize.
“You set o’ swabs! Call yourselves sailormen? Are you going to let yourselves drown like rats in a tub?”