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"You bet I am! Think I want to hang around and palaver with a set of pirates that'd stick a gun in my face and tell me where I git off? Not much! What's that Doc pulled on you?"
"A gun," said Trask. "And my own. He had it all the time."
"Well, I'll be jiggered!" declared Jarrow, staring at the weapon which Trask still held in his hand. "He's a nice one!"
"A smooth article," said Trask. "He fooled me, all right. If it hadn't been for Tom----" He looked around, but Tom had disappeared into the galley.
"I'm sure the steward would have shot you," said Marjorie, who had regained her composure, and now stood beside Trask.
"Looked like it was all off to me," said Locke. "We'll have to square things with that c.h.i.n.k."
"What's this?" asked Jarrow, looking at the pan and bowl, and the sand on the deck. "Been lookin' for gold?"
"Tried some of it," said Trask.
"Find any?" asked Jarrow, with quick interest.
"No," said Trask, and Locke appeared startled, but said nothing.
"I better git into some dry duds," said Jarrow. "As soon as there's a capful of wind, we'll see what we can do about gittin' out of this hole, unless you want to go prospectin' ash.o.r.e, Mr. Trask."
"Not with those fellows there," said Trask, looking over to where the boat was making a landing far up the beach. The other two men came down to meet the boat's crew, and there was a lively conference.
"But we can't go and leave poor old Dinshaw," said Marjorie.
Jarrow looked at Trask questioningly.
"How about it?" he asked. "Are we goin' to hang around and take chances just to pick up the old un?"
"We can't leave Dinshaw," said Trask. "We've got to get him before we think of leaving."
"You can suit yerself," said Jarrow. "I'm for gittin' out. They won't hurt him. Soon's we're gone, they'll all make over for the mainland. They've got some canned meat and hard bread. They took a lot of stuff with 'em last night."
Jarrow departed for his room, leaving a wet trail behind him.
"He's all right," whispered Locke. "If we can get Dinshaw, we're fixed up to leave."
"We'll keep an eye on the captain just the same," said Trask. "I rather think he's had all he wants of Peth and the crew, even if he was going to stand in with them at one time."
"Oh, I guess he's straight enough," said Locke. "But you didn't tell him about that gold."
"He was keen about what you'd found," said Marjorie. "I suppose he didn't understand what the steward said."
Trask laughed, and leaning over to Locke, whispered: "There wasn't any gold in the sand."
"No gold?" said Locke, staring at him.
"No. The 'gold' was just some bra.s.s filings I made in the forecastle out of an old bra.s.s cleat that was hanging on a nail in my room for a clothes hook," and he took from his pocket the piece of metal and displayed the groove he had cut in it with the file.
"What the d.i.c.kens did you do that for?" asked Locke.
"To see if Doc would stand in with the crew, although I didn't expect it would result in his pulling a gun on me. I thought that if he was against us, he'd try to get back ash.o.r.e with the news.
Now if they think the island is full of gold, they'll be content to stay there and not bother us. But I didn't want to fool Jarrow. He might not be so anxious to leave, if he had what he thought to be proof that there was plenty of gold."
"Oh, I'm sorry," said Marjorie. "I'd hoped that Dinshaw's dream had come true."
"Had me going all right," said Locke.
Before long Jarrow came out, in dry clothing, smacking his lips after a drink, and lighted a long cigar.
"Now," he began, "how're we to git Looney Dinshaw back?"
"Go for him with the boat," said Trask.
"You come along?" suggested the captain.
"I'll stick by the schooner," said Trask.
"Then I'll take the cook."
"Not unless the cook wants to go of his own accord," was Trask's reply. "I'm not going to ask Tom to do anything."
"Want me to go alone?" asked the captain, in surprise.
"I suggest that you row up toward the point, and call Dinshaw down to you. You can get him easy enough, and I'll stand watch here to see that you're not headed off by the dinghy."
Jarrow said nothing to this, but went aft for his gla.s.s, and studied the group far up the beach. The sailors were gathering wood from the jungle, and making a pile about halfway between the edge of the forest and the water.
In a few minutes a curl of white smoke was rising from the pile they had laid.
"Gittin' a meal ready," was Jarrow's comment, and he went into the cabin where Shanghai Tom was setting the table.
"Doc is making a fire to melt some gold on his own account," said Trask to Locke and Marjorie. "I wish him luck. Dinshaw is still piling sand into little dunes up near the point."
CHAPTER XIV
WHAT JARROW WANTED AND WHAT HE GOT
Captain Jarrow spent an hour or two loafing about the schooner and swearing under his breath as he regarded the sh.o.r.e, where the crew was going through mysterious incantations.
But Trask understood that Doc was initiating them into the mysteries of smelting out gold from sand. To all appearances, it was utterly devoid of anything approaching gold.
Finally, after a conference with Locke and Marjorie, Trask put before the captain the matter of bringing Dinshaw back. But Jarrow was inclined to be sulky about it. He objected to having "it put up to him to bring the fool aboard," as he expressed it.
"None of us will leave the schooner under the circ.u.mstances,"