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"It's all right," said Jarrow. "They want to put me aboard for a talk."
"You can't come alongside," warned Trask. "We'll shoot if you attempt to come close," and he put his hand to his hip pocket and pulled out his silver cigarette case, taking care that the sun hit the upper edge.
"But they want to put me back aboard for a talk about how things stand," insisted Jarrow. "You'll let me come, won't ye?"
"Not with that gang," said Trask. "Let 'em take you ash.o.r.e, and get up the beach. Then I'll come for you with the long boat."
Jarrow made some suggestion to Peth, but the mate shook his head.
"He says I come aboard now, this way, or not at all," said Jarrow.
"You better let me tell you how the land lays."
"n.o.body gets aboard here until Captain Dinshaw is brought back,"
said Trask. "And I'll take one man of the crew. The rest of 'em can stay here and starve for all I care. It's their own funeral. They had no business deserting the schooner."
"But I'm master, and that's my schooner, and I'm to say what's to be done," said Jarrow. "If you try to do that, it's piracy. I can't help it if the men refuse duty. All I can do is the best I can for the safety of my pa.s.sengers, and if you don't let me do that, I wash my hands of ye."
"You'll find your schooner in Manila," declared Trask. "I've told you how to go about getting aboard."
"I can't do what they won't let me," whined Jarrow.
"What do they want?" demanded Trask.
The boat now had no way on her, and had swung broadside to the schooner, about a hundred yards off.
"They want a bonus," said Jarrow.
"What sort of bonus?"
"Extra wages to work the schooner back to Manila."
"We won't have 'em work the schooner back to Manila at any price."
"You can't git back yourself, Mr. Trask. Can't git out of this place. It's dangerous. You'll lose her."
"We'd rather take the chance of losing the schooner than have that cut-throat crew back here, I'll tell you that. They've made their bed, now they can sleep in it."
"Be I goin' to lose all I got out of this?" wailed Jarrow. "If you'll let 'em put me aboard, it'll come out all right."
"They can have the island. We don't want it," said Trask.
"There ain't no gold," said Peth.
"I know it," said Trask. "Could have told you in fifteen minutes, if you hadn't wanted to cheat Dinshaw out of it."
"We wouldn't a-come if we'd knowed this was a sell," said Peth.
"Weren't you paid to come?"
"He ain't got no gun," yelled Doc. "The island is full o' gold, cap'n. Yo' got to cook it an'----"
Trask turned to see the steward waving his hands at the rail, and ran toward him in rage, telling him to be still.
"Don' you lay han's on me!" yelled Doc, backing away to where Shanghai Tom stood. Behind the pair was Marjorie.
"So you're in with 'em, eh?" sneered Trask.
"I'm in fo' mahse'f!" declared Doc, lowering his head and regarding Trask from under his brows. He put his hand in his pocket. "Keep away, w'ite man, or I'll do yo'all hurt!"
Trask walked straight for the steward, who pulled out a pistol.
"My gun!" cried Trask, stopping. Marjorie uttered a cry of dismay as she saw the steward raise his hand.
"I can shoot," warned Doc. "Come on! Come on!" he yelled, waving his hand to the dinghy. "I got 'em!"
Trask heard the splash of oars, and saw out of the corner of his eye that the boat was coming ahead swiftly. He was about to hurl himself at the steward when he saw Shanghai Tom reach over Doc's shoulder and grasp the weapon. Doc turned to resist the cook, but Tom bent him sidewise, wrenched the pistol from his hand so that it fell to the deck, and lifted Doc against the bulwark. Then catching the steward's legs, he threw him over, head first, into the sea.
"Good for you!" shouted Trask, and leaping forward, grabbed up his revolver and aimed it at the boat. "Stop!" he shouted. "Stop this minute or I'll fire!"
The rowers looked over their shoulders, and seeing that Trask had them covered, backed water furiously despite the shouts of Peth to go on.
Doc came up blowing, and began to swim toward the dinghy without further ado. Jarrow now yelled to the rowers to keep backing, and when Peth roared at him to "shut his head," the captain, taking advantage of the confusion, stood up and leaped into the water and began swimming to the schooner quite as fast as Doc swam away from it.
"Let me aboard!" cried Jarrow.
"All right," said Trask. "Come on!" and he came, with an awkward, splas.h.i.+ng, overhand stroke, like some queer fish with one curved fin out of the water.
The rowers stopped backing and watched the two swimmers, as if not sure just what to do. Peth seemed inclined to wait and see how things turned out before making for sh.o.r.e. He evidently had abandoned any desire he had to get aboard the schooner by force.
Jarrow came floundering along, and managed to reach up and grasp the stern of the long boat, when he pulled himself up and climbed in. He stood dripping, das.h.i.+ng the water out of his eyes, and regarded the dinghy.
"Get out!" he bawled, shaking his fist. "Ye can go to the devil, the whole lot of ye!"
Peth made no reply, but spoke to the rowers, and the dinghy turned slowly and headed for the island, but waited for Doc to get alongside, when they helped him aboard, and made off rapidly.
"Them blastered scoundrels!" raged Jarrow, as he rubbed his hands down over his s.h.i.+rt to squeeze out the water. "I lost my hat."
"Better come aboard, captain," said Trask. "Have you a gun?"
"I wish I had," declared Jarrow, wrathfully. "I'd a-let daylight through that fool of a Peth! See the game they run on me ash.o.r.e?"
"We did," said Locke. "You were lucky to get away."
"By the Mighty Nelson!" declared Jarrow, as he clambered over the side and hurled a shower of water around him like a halo as he landed on the bone-white deck. "I never did see such a pa.s.sel o'
fools! Plumb bugs on gold! They think 'cause there ain't any we're to put a young fortune in their hands! I'll have the coast guard on 'em, that's what, and land every man of 'em in Bilibid for life!"
"Then you're for getting out?" asked Trask.