A Sun of the Sun by Jack London

Makes my flesh creep. He’s a regular Finn.”

“What’s that?” Mulhall inquired.

“Bosses the weather—that’s what the natives believe, at any rate. Ask Tai-

Hotauri there. Hey, Tai-Hotauri ! what you think old Parlay do along

weather?”

“Just the same one big weather devil,” came the Kanaka’s answer. “I

know. He want big blow, he make big blow. He want no wind, no wind

come.”

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“A regular old Warlock,” said Mulhall.

“No good luck them pearl,” Tai-Hotauri blurted out, rolling his head

ominously. “He say he sell. Plenty schooner come. Then he make big

hurricane, everybody finish, you see. All native men say so.”

“It’s hurricane season now,” Captain Warfield laughed morosely. “They’re

not far wrong. It’s making for something right now, and I’d feel better if

the Malahini was a thousand miles away from here.”

“He is a bit mad,” Grief concluded. “I’ve tried to get his point of view.

It’s—well, it’s mixed. For eighteen years he’d centred everything on

Armande. Half the time he believes she’s still alive, not yet come back

from France. That’s one of the reasons he held on to the pearls. And all the

time he hates white men. He never forgets they killed her, though a great

deal of the time he forgets she’s dead. Hello! Where’s your wind?”

The sails bellied emptily overhead, and Captain Warfield grunted his

disgust. Intolerable as the heat had been, in the absence of wind it was

almost overpowering. The sweat oozed out on all their faces, and now one,

and again another, drew deep breaths, involuntarily questing for more air.

“Here she comes again—an eight point haul! Boom-tackles across! jump!”

The Kanakas sprang to the captain’s orders, and for five minutes the

schooner laid directly into the passage and even gained on the current.

Again the breeze fell flat, then puffed from the old quarter, compelling a

shift back of sheets and tackles.

“Here comes the Nuhiva,” Grief said. “She’s got her engine on. Look at her

skim.”

“All ready?” the captain asked the engineer, a Portuguese half-caste,

whose head and shoulders protruded from the small hatch just for’ard of

the cabin, and who wiped the sweat from his face with a bunch of greasy

waste.

“Sure,” he replied.

“Then let her go.”

The engineer disappeared into his den, and a moment later the exhaust

muffler coughed and spluttered overside. But the schooner could not hold

her lead. The little cutter made three feet to her two and was quickly

alongside and forging ahead. Only natives were on her deck, and the man

steering waved his hand in derisive greeting and farewell.

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133

“That’s Narii Herring,” Grief told Mulhall. “The big fellow at the wheel—

the nerviest and most conscienceless scoundrel in the Paumotus.”

Five minutes later a cry of joy from their own Kanakas centred all eyes on

the Nuhiva. Her engine had broken down and they were overtaking her.

The Malahini’s sailors sprang into the rigging and jeered as they went by;

the little cutter heeled over by the wind with a bone in her teeth, going

backward on the tide.

“Some engine that of ours,” Grief approved, as the lagoon opened before

them and the course was changed across it to the anchorage.

Captain Warfield was visibly cheered, though he merely grunted, “It’ll pay

for itself, never fear.”

The Malahini ran well into the centre of the little fleet ere she found

swinging room to anchor.

“There’s Isaacs on the Dolly,” Grief observed, with a hand wave of

greeting. “And Peter Gee’s on the Roberta. Couldn’t keep him away from a

pearl sale like this. And there’s Francini on the Cactus. They’re all here, all

the buyers. Old Parlay will surely get a price.”

“They haven’t repaired the engine yet,” Captain Warfield grumbled

gleefully.

He was looking across the lagoon to where the Nuhiva’s sails showed

through the sparse cocoanuts.

II

The house of Parlay was a big two-story frame affair, built of California

lumber, with a galvanized iron roof. So disproportionate was it to the

slender ring of the atoll that it showed out upon the sand-strip and above it

like some monstrous excrescence. They of the Malahini paid the courtesy

visit ashore immediately after anchoring. Other captains and buyers were

in the big room examining the pearls that were to be auctioned next day.

Paumotan servants, natives of Hikihoho, and relatives of the owner,

moved about dispensing whiskey and absinthe. And through the curious

company moved Parlay himself, cackling and sneering, the withered

wreck of what had once been a tall and powerful man. His eyes were deep

sunken and feverish, his cheeks fallen in and cavernous. The hair of his

head seemed to have come out in patches, and his mustache and imperial

had shed in the same lopsided way.

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“Jove!” Mulhall muttered under his breath. “A long-legged Napoleon the

Third, but burnt out, baked, and fire-crackled. And mangy! No wonder he

crooks his head to one side. He’s got to keep the balance.”

“Goin’ to have a blow,” was the old man’s greeting to Grief. “You must

think a lot of pearls to come a day like this.”

“They’re worth going to inferno for,” Grief laughed genially back, running

his eyes over the surface of the table covered by the display.

“Other men have already made that journey for them,” old Parlay cackled.

“See this one!” He pointed to a large, perfect pearl the size of a small

walnut that lay apart on a piece of chamois. “They offered me sixty

thousand francs for it in Tahiti. They’ll bid as much and more for it to-

morrow, if they aren’t blown away. Well, that pearl, it was found by my

cousin, my cousin by marriage. He was a native, you see. Also, he was a

thief. He hid it. It was mine. His cousin, who was also my cousin—we’re

all related here—killed him for it and fled away in a cutter to Noo-Nau. I

pursued, but the chief of Noo-Nau had killed him for it before I got there.

Oh, yes, there are many dead men represented on the table there. Have a

drink, Captain. Your face is not familiar. You are new in the islands?”

“It’s Captain Robinson of the Roberta,” Grief said, introducing them.

In the meantime Mulhall had shaken hands with Peter Gee.

“I never fancied there were so many pearls in the world,” Mulhall said.

“Nor have I ever seen so many together at one time,” Peter Gee admitted.

“What ought they to be worth?”

“Fifty or sixty thousand pounds—and that’s to us buyers. In Paris—” He

shrugged his shoulders and lifted his eyebrows at the incommunicableness

of the sun.

Mulhall wiped the sweat from his eyes. All were sweating profusely and

breathing hard. There was no ice in the drink that was served, and whiskey

and absinthe went down lukewarm.

“Yes, yes,” Parlay was cackling. “Many dead men lie on the table there. I

know those pearls, all of them. You see those three! Perfectly matched,

aren’t they? A diver from Easter Island got them for me inside a week.

Next week a shark got him; took his arm off and blood poison did the

business. And that big baroque there—nothing much—if I’m offered

twenty francs for it to-morrow I’ll be in luck; it came out of twenty-two

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135

fathoms of water. The man was from Raratonga. He broke all diving

records. He got it out of twenty-two fathoms. I saw him. And he burst his

lungs at the same time, or got the ‘bends,’ for he died in two hours. He died

screaming. They could hear him for miles. He was the most powerful

native I ever saw. Half a dozen of my divers have died of the bends. And

more men will die, more men will die.”

“Oh, hush your croaking, Parlay,” chided one of the captains. “It ain’t

going to blow.”

“If I was a strong man, I couldn’t get up hook and get out fast enough,” the

old man retorted in the falsetto of age. “Not if I was a strong man with the

taste for wine yet in my mouth. But not you. You’ll all stay. I wouldn’t

advise you if I thought you’d go. You can’t drive buzzards away from the

carrion. Have another drink, my brave sailormen. Well, well, what men

will dare for a few little oyster drops! There they are, the beauties!

Auction to-morrow, at ten sharp. Old Parlays selling out, and the buzzards

are gathering—old Parlay who was a stronger man in his day than any of

them and who will see most of them dead yet.”

“If he isn’t a vile old beast!” the supercargo of the Malahini whispered to

Peter Gee.

“What if she does blow?” said the captain of the Dolly. “Hikihoho’s never

been swept.”

“The more reason she will be, then,” Captain Warfield answered back. “I

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