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A Sun of the Sun by Jack London

The first warning was the firing of rifles from the peninsula, where Brown

and his two Raiateans signalled the retreat and followed the besiegers

through the jungle to the beach. From the eyrie on the face of the rock

Grief could see nothing for another hour, when the Rattler appeared,

making for the passage. As before, the captive Fuatino men towed in the

whaleboat. Mauriri, under direction of Grief, called down instructions to

them as they passed slowly beneath. By Grief’s side lay several bundles of

dynamite sticks, well-lashed together and with extremely short fuses.

The deck of the Rattler was populous. For’ard, rifle in hand, among the

Raiatean sailors, stood a desperado whom Mauriri announced was Raoul’s

brother. Aft, by the helmsman, stood another. Attached to him, tied waist

to waist, with slack, was Mataara, the old Queen. On the other side of the

helmsman, his arm in a sling, was Captain Glass. Amidships, as before,

was Raoul, and with him, lashed waist to waist, was Naumoo.

“Good morning, Mister David Grief,” Raoul called up.

“And yet I warned you that only in double irons would you leave the

island,” Grief murmured down with a sad inflection.

“You can’t kill all your people I have on board,” was the answer.

The schooner, moving slowly, jerk by jerk, as the men pulled in the

whaleboat, was almost directly beneath. The rowers, without ceasing,

slacked on their oars, and were immediately threatened with the rifle of

the man who stood for’ard.

“Throw, Big Brother!” Naumoo called up in the Fuatino tongue. “I am

filled with sorrow and am willed to die. His knife is ready with which to

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cut the rope, but I shall hold him tight. Be not afraid, Big Brother. Throw,

and throw straight, and good-bye.”

Grief hesitated, then lowered the fire-stick which he had been blowing

bright.

“Throw!” the Goat Man urged.

Still Grief hesitated.

“If they get to sea, Big Brother, Naumoo dies just the same. And there are

all the others. What is her life against the many?”

“If you drop any dynamite, or fire a single shot, we’ll kill all on board,”

Raoul cried up to them. “I’ve got you, David Grief. You can’t kill these

people, and I can. Shut up, you!”

This last was addressed to Naumoo, who was calling up in her native

tongue and whom Raoul seized by the neck with one hand to choke to

silence. In turn, she locked both arms about him and looked up

beseechingly to Grief.

“Throw it, Mr. Grief, and be damned to them,” Captain Glass rumbled in

his deep voice. “They’re bloody murderers, and the cabin’s full of them.”

The desperado who was fastened to the old Queen swung half about to

menace Captain Glass with his rifle, when Tehaa, from his position farther

along the Rock, pulled trigger on him. The rifle dropped from the man’s

hand, and on his face was an expression of intense surprise as his legs

crumpled under him and he sank down on deck, dragging the Queen with

him.

“Port! Hard a port!” Grief cried.

Captain Glass and the Kanaka whirled the wheel over, and the bow of the

Rattler headed in for the Rock. Amidships Raoul still struggled with

Naumoo. His brother ran from for’ard to his aid, being missed by the

fusillade of quick shots from Tehaa and the Goat Man. As Raoul’s brother

placed the muzzle of his rifle to Naumoo’s side Grief touched the fire-stick

to the match-head in the split end of the fuse. Even as with both hands he

tossed the big bundle of dynamite, the rifle went off, and Naumoo’s fall to

the deck was simultaneous with the fall of the dynamite. This time the fuse

was short enough. The explosion occurred at the instant the deck was

reached, and that portion of the Rattler, along with Raoul, his brother, and

Naumoo, forever disappeared.

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60

The schooner’s side was shattered, and she began immediately to settle.

For’ard, every Raiatean sailor dived overboard. Captain Glass met the first

man springing up the companionway from the cabin, with a kick full in the

face, but was overborne and trampled on by the rush. Following the

desperadoes came the Huahine women, and as they went overboard, the

Rattler sank on an even keel close to the base of the Rock. Her cross-trees

still stuck out when she reached bottom.

Looking down, Grief could see all that occurred beneath the surface. He

saw Mataara, a fathom deep, unfasten herself from the dead pirate and

swim upward. As her head emerged she saw Captain Glass, who could not

swim, sinking several yards away. The Queen, old woman that she was,

but an islander, turned over, swam down to him, and held him up as she

struck out for the unsubmerged cross-trees.

Five heads, blond and brown, were mingled with the dark heads of

Polynesia that dotted the surface. Grief, rifle in hand, watched for a chance

to shoot. The Goat Man, after a minute, was successful, and they saw the

body of one man sink sluggishly. But to the Raiatean sailors, big and

brawny, half fish, was the vengeance given. Swimming swiftly, they

singled out the blond heads and the brown. Those from above watched the

four surviving desperadoes, clutched and locked, dragged far down

beneath and drowned like curs.

In ten minutes everything was over. The Huahine women, laughing and

giggling, were holding on to the sides of the whaleboat which had done

the towing. The Raiatean sailors, waiting for orders, were about the crosstree

to which Captain Glass and Mataara clung.

“The poor old Rattler,” Captain Glass lamented.

“Nothing of the sort,” Grief answered. “In a week we’ll have her raised,

new timbers amidships, and we’ll be on our way.” And to the Queen,

“How is it with you, Sister?”

“Naumoo is gone, and Motauri, Brother, but Fuatino is ours again. The

day is young. Word shall be sent to all my people in the high places with

the goats. And to-night, once again, and as never before, we shall feast and

rejoice in the Big House.”

“She’s been needing new timbers abaft the beam there for years,” quoth

Captain Glass. “But the chronometers will be out of commission for the

rest of the cruise.”

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The Jokers of New Gibbon

(First published in The Saturday Evening Post, v. 184, November 19, 1911:

18-19, 65-66)

I

“I’m almost afraid to take you in to New Gibbon,” David Grief said. “It

wasn’t until you and the British gave me a free hand and let the place alone

that any results were accomplished.”

Wallenstein, the German Resident Commissioner from Bougainville,

poured himself a long Scotch and soda and smiled.

“We take off our hats to you, Mr. Grief,” he said in perfectly good

English. “What you have done on the devil island is a miracle. And we

shall continue not to interfere. It is a devil island, and old Koho is the big

chief devil of them all. We never could bring him to terms. He is a liar,

and he is no fool. He is a black Napoleon, a head-hunting, man-eating

Talleyrand. I remember six years ago, when I landed there in the British

cruiser. The niggers cleared out for the bush, of course, but we found

several who couldn’t get away. One was his latest wife. She had been hung

up by one arm in the sun for two days and nights. We cut her down, but

she died just the same. And staked out in the fresh running water, up to

their necks, were three more women. All their bones were broken and their

joints crushed. The process is supposed to make them tender for the

eating. They were still alive. Their vitality was remarkable. One woman,

the oldest, lingered nearly ten days. Well, that was a sample of Koho’s

diet. No wonder he’s a wild beast. How you ever pacified him is our

everlasting puzzlement.”

“I wouldn’t call him exactly pacified,” Grief answered. “Though he comes

in once in a while and eats out of the hand.”

“That’s more than we accomplished with our cruisers. Neither the German

nor the English ever laid eyes on him. You were the first.”

“No; McTavish was the first,” Grief disclaimed.

“Ah, yes, I remember him—the little, dried-up Scotchman.” Wallenstein

sipped his whiskey. “He’s called the Trouble-mender, isn’t he?”

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Grief nodded.

“And they say the screw you pay him is bigger than mine or the British

Resident’s?”

“I’m afraid it is,” Grief admitted. “You see, and no offence, he’s really

worth it. He spends his time wherever the trouble is. He is a wizard. He’s

the one who got me my lodgment on New Gibbon. He’s down on Malaita

now, starting a plantation for me.”

“The first?”

“There’s not even a trading station on all Malaita. The recruiters still use

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