A Sun of the Sun by Jack London

sixty thousand dollars’ worth out of his hide. I hope he is at home.”

“Then I hope he is, too,” Grief said, with an appreciative smile. “You got

the description of his island from Bau-Oti, I suppose?”

“Yes, as pretty well everybody else has. The trouble is that Bau-Oti can’t

give latitude or longitude. Says they sailed a long way from the Gilberts—

that’s all he knows. I wonder what became of him.”

“I saw him a year ago on the beach at Tahiti. Said he was thinking about

shipping for a cruise through the Paumotus. Well, here we are, getting

close in. Heave the lead, Jackie-Jackie. Stand by to let go, Mr. Snow.

According to Bau-Oti, anchorage three hundred yards off the west shore in

nine fathoms, coral patches to the southeast. There are the patches. What

do you get, Jackie?”

“Nine fadom.”

“Let go, Mr. Snow.”

The Uncle Toby swung to her chain, headsails ran down, and the Kanaka

crew sprang to fore and main-halyards and sheets.

IV

The whaleboat laid alongside the small, coral-stone landing-pier, and

David Grief and his mate stepped ashore.

“You’d think the place deserted,” Grief said, as they walked up a sanded

path to the bungalow. “But I smell a smell that I’ve often smelled.

Something doing, or my nose is a liar. The lagoon is carpeted with shell.

They’re rotting the meat out not a thousand miles away. Get that whiff?”

Like no bungalow in the tropics was this bungalow of Swithin Hall. Of

mission architecture, when they had entered through the unlatched screen

door they found decoration and furniture of the same mission style. The

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81

floor of the big living-room was covered

with the finest Samoan mats. There were

couches, window seats, cozy corners,

and a billiard table. A sewing table, and

a sewing-basket, spilling over with sheer

linen in the French embroidery of which

stuck a needle, tokened a woman’s

presence. By screen and veranda the

blinding sunshine was subdued to a

cool, dim radiance. The sheen of pearl

push-buttons caught Grief’s eye.

“Storage batteries, by George, run by the

windmill!” he exclaimed as he pressed

the buttons. “And concealed lighting!”

Hidden bowls glowed, and the room was

filled with diffused golden light. Many

shelves of books lined the walls. Grief

fell to running over their titles. A fairly

well-read man himself, for a seaadventurer,

he glimpsed a wideness of

range and catholicity of taste that were

beyond him. Old friends he met, and others that he had heard of but never

read. There were complete sets of Tolstoy, Turgenieff, and Gorky,— of

Cooper and Mark Twain; of Hugo, and Zola, and Sue; and of Flaubert, De

Maupassant, and Paul de Koch. He glanced curiously at the pages of

Metchnikoff, Weininger, and Schopenhauer, and wonderingly at those of

Ellis, Lydston, Krafft-Ebbing, and Forel. Woodruff’s Expansion of Races

was in his hands when Snow returned from further exploration of the

house.

“Enamelled bath-tub, separate room for a shower, and a sitz-bath!” he

exclaimed. “Fitted up for a king! And I reckon some of my money went to

pay for it. The place must be occupied. I found fresh-opened butter and

milk tins in the pantry, and fresh turtle-meat hanging up. I’m going to see

what else I can find.”

Grief, too, departed, through a door that led out of the opposite end of the

living-room. He found himself in a self-evident woman’s bedroom. Across

it, he peered through a wire-mesh door into a screened and darkened

sleeping porch. On a couch lay a woman asleep. In the soft light she

seemed remarkably beautiful in a dark Spanish way. By her side, opened

and face downward, a novel lay on a chair. From the colour in her cheeks,

Grief concluded that she had not been long in the tropics. After the one

glimpse he stole softly back, in time to see Snow entering the living- room

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82

through the other door. By the naked arm he was clutching an age-

wrinkled black who grinned in fear and made signs of dumbness.

“I found him snoozing in a little kennel out back,” the mate said. “He’s the

cook, I suppose. Can’t get a word out of him. What did you find?”

“A sleeping princess. S-sh! There’s somebody now.”

“If it’s Hall,” Snow muttered, clenching his fist.

Grief shook his head. “No rough-house. There’s a woman here. And if it is

Hall, before we go I’ll maneuver a chance for you to get action.”

The door opened, and a large, heavily built man entered. In his belt was a

heavy, long-barrelled Colt’s. One quick, anxious look he gave them, then

his face wreathed in a genial smile and his hand was extended.

“Welcome, strangers. But if you don’t mind my asking, how, by all that’s

sacred, did you ever manage to find my island?”

“Because we were out of our course,” Grief answered, shaking hands.

“My name’s Hall, Swithin Hall,” the other said, turning to shake Snow’s

hand. “And I don’t mind telling you that you’re the first visitors I’ve ever

had.”

“And this is your secret island that’s had all the beaches talking for years?”

Grief answered. “Well, I know the formula now for finding it.”

“How’s that?” Hall asked quickly.

“Smash your chronometer, get mixed up with a hurricane, and then keep

your eyes open for cocoanuts rising out of the sea.”

“And what is your name?” Hall asked, after he had laughed perfunctorily.

“Anstey—Phil Anstey,” Grief answered promptly. “Bound on the Uncle

Toby from the Gilberts to New Guinea, and trying to find my longitude.

This is my mate, Mr. Gray, a better navigator than I, but who has lost his

goat just the same to the chronometer.”

Grief did not know his reason for lying, but he had felt the prompting and

succumbed to it. He vaguely divined that something was wrong, but could

not place his finger on it. Swithin Hall was a fat, round-faced man, with a

laughing lip and laughter-wrinkles in the corners of his eyes. But Grief, in

his early youth, had learned how deceptive this type could prove, as well

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83

as the deceptiveness of blue eyes that screened the surface with fun and

hid what went on behind.

“What are you doing with my cook?—lost yours and trying to shanghai

him?” Hall was saying. “You’d better let him go, if you’re going to have

any supper. My wife’s here, and she’ll be glad to meet you—dinner, she

calls it, and calls me down for misnaming it, but I’m old fashioned. My

folks always ate dinner in the middle of the day. Can’t get over early

training. Don’t you want to wash up? I do. Look at me. I’ve been working

like a dog—out with the diving crew—shell, you know. But of course you

smelt it.”

V

Snow pleaded charge of the schooner, and went on board. In addition to

his repugnance at breaking salt with the man who had robbed him, it was

necessary for him to impress the inviolableness of Grief’s lies on the

Kanaka crew. By eleven o’clock Grief came on board, to find his mate

waiting up for him.

“There’s something doing on Swithin Hall’s island,” Grief said, shaking his

head. “I can’t make out what it is, but I get the feel of it. What does

Swithin Hall look like?”

Snow shook his head.

“That man ashore there never bought the books on the shelves,” Grief

declared with conviction. “Nor did he ever go in for concealed lighting.

He’s got a surface flow of suavity, but he’s rough as a hoof-rasp

underneath. He’s an oily bluff. And the bunch he’s got with him—Watson

and Gorman their names are; they came in after you left—real sea-dogs,

middle-aged, marred and battered, tough as rusty wrought-iron nails and

twice as dangerous; real ugly customers, with guns in their belts, who

don’t strike me as just the right sort to be on such comradely terms with

Swithin Hall. And the woman! She’s a lady. I mean it. She knows a whole

lot of South America, and of China, too. I’m sure she’s Spanish, though her

English is natural. She’s travelled. We talked bull-fights. She’s seen them

in Guyaquil, in Mexico, in Seville. She knows a lot about sealskins.

“Now here’s what bothers me. She knows music. I asked her if she played.

And he’s fixed that place up like a palace. That being so, why hasn’t he a

piano for her? Another thing: she’s quick and lively and he watches her

whenever she talks. He’s on pins and needles, and continually breaking in

and leading the conversation. Say, did you ever hear that Swithin Hall was

married?”

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84

“Bless me, I don’t know,” the mate replied. “Never entered my head to

think about it.”

“He introduced her as Mrs. Hall. And Watson and Gorman call him Hall.

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