Adventure by Jack London

glanced carelessly over them, he was keenly taking stock. The new

men were all armed with modern rifles. Ah, he had thought so.

There were fifteen of them, undoubtedly the Lunga runaways. In

addition, a dozen old Sniders were in the hands of the original

crowd. The rest were armed with spears, clubs, bows and arrows,

and long-handled tomahawks. Beyond, drawn up on the beach, he

could see the big war-canoes, with high and fantastically carved

bows and sterns, ornamented with scrolls and bands of white cowrie

shells. These were the men who had killed his trader, Oscar, at

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Ugi.

“What name you walk about this place?” he demanded.

At the same time he stole a glance seaward to where the Flibberty-

Gibbet reflected herself in the glassy calm of the sea. Not a soul

was visible under her awnings, and he saw the whale-boat was

missing from alongside. The Tahitians had evidently gone shooting

fish up the Balesuna. He was all alone in his high place above

this trouble, while his world slumbered peacefully under the

breathless tropic noon.

Nobody replied, and he repeated his demand, more of mastery in his

voice this time, and a hint of growing anger. The blacks moved

uneasily, like a herd of cattle, at the sound of his voice. But

not one spoke. All eyes, however, were staring at him in certitude

of expectancy. Something was about to happen, and they were

waiting for it, waiting with the unanimous, unstable mob-mind for

the one of them who would make the first action that would

precipitate all of them into a common action. Sheldon looked for

this one, for such was the one to fear. Directly beneath him he

caught sight of the muzzle of a rifle, barely projecting between

two black bodies, that was slowly elevating toward him. It was

held at the hip by a man in the second row.

“What name you?” Sheldon suddenly shouted, pointing directly at the

man who held the gun, who startled and lowered the muzzle.

Sheldon still held the whip hand, and he intended to keep it.

“Clear out, all you fella boys,” he ordered. “Clear out and walk

along salt water. Savvee!”

“Me talk,” spoke up a fat and filthy savage whose hairy chest was

caked with the unwashed dirt of years.

“Oh, is that you, Telepasse?” the white man queried genially. “You

tell ‘m boys clear out, and you stop and talk along me.”

“Him good fella boy,” was the reply. “Him stop along.”

“Well, what do you want?” Sheldon asked, striving to hide under

assumed carelessness the weakness of concession.

“That fella boy belong along me.” The old chief pointed out

Gogoomy, whom Sheldon recognized.

“White Mary belong you too much no good,” Telepasse went on. “Bang

‘m head belong Gogoomy. Gogoomy all the same chief. Bimeby me

finish, Gogoomy big fella chief. White Mary bang ‘m head. No

good. You pay me plenty tobacco, plenty powder, plenty calico.”

“You old scoundrel,” was Sheldon’s comment. An hour before, he had

been chuckling over Joan’s recital of the episode, and here, an

hour later, was Telepasse himself come to collect damages.

“Gogoomy,” Sheldon ordered, “what name you walk about here? You

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get along quarters plenty quick.”

“Me stop,” was the defiant answer.

“White Mary b’long you bang ‘m head,” old Telepasse began again.

“My word, plenty big fella trouble you no pay.”

“You talk along boys,” Sheldon said, with increasing irritation.

“You tell ‘m get to hell along beach. Then I talk with you.”

Sheldon felt a slight vibration of the veranda, and knew that Joan

had come out and was standing by his side. But he did not dare

glance at her. There were too many rifles down below there, and

rifles had a way of going off from the hip.

Again the veranda vibrated with her moving weight, and he knew that

Joan had gone into the house. A minute later she was back beside

him. He had never seen her smoke, and it struck him as peculiar

that she should be smoking now. Then he guessed the reason. With

a quick glance, he noted the hand at her side, and in it the

familiar, paper-wrapped dynamite. He noted, also, the end of fuse,

split properly, into which had been inserted the head of a wax

match.

“Telepasse, you old reprobate, tell ‘m boys clear out along beach.

My word, I no gammon along you.”

“Me no gammon,” said the chief. “Me want ‘m pay white Mary bang ‘m

head b’long Gogoomy.”

“I’ll come down there and bang ‘m head b’long you,” Sheldon

replied, leaning toward the railing as if about to leap over.

An angry murmur arose, and the blacks surged restlessly. The

muzzles of many guns were rising from the hips. Joan was pressing

the lighted end of the cigarette to the fuse. A Snider went off

with the roar of a bomb-gun, and Sheldon heard a pane of window-

glass crash behind him. At the same moment Joan flung the

dynamite, the fuse hissing and spluttering, into the thick of the

blacks. They scattered back in too great haste to do any more

shooting. Satan, aroused by the one shot, was snarling and panting

to be let out. Joan heard, and ran to let him out; and thereat the

tragedy was averted, and the comedy began.

Rifles and spears were dropped or flung aside in a wild scramble

for the protection of the cocoanut palms. Satan multiplied

himself. Never had he been free to tear and rend such a quantity

of black flesh before, and he bit and snapped and rushed the flying

legs till the last pair were above his head. All were treed except

Telepasse, who was too old and fat, and he lay prone and without

movement where he had fallen; while Satan, with too great a heart

to worry an enemy that did not move, dashed frantically from tree

to tree, barking and springing at those who clung on lowest down.

“I fancy you need a lesson or two in inserting fuses,” Sheldon

remarked dryly.

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Joan’s eyes were scornful.

“There was no detonator on it,” she said. “Besides, the detonator

is not yet manufactured that will explode that charge. It’s only a

bottle of chlorodyne.”

She put her fingers into her mouth, and Sheldon winced as he saw

her blow, like a boy, a sharp, imperious whistle–the call she

always used for her sailors, and that always made him wince.

“They’re gone up the Balesuna, shooting fish,” he explained. “But

there comes Oleson with his boat’s-crew. He’s an old war-horse

when he gets started. See him banging the boys. They don’t pull

fast enough for him.”

“And now what’s to be done?” she asked. “You’ve treed your game,

but you can’t keep it treed.”

“No; but I can teach them a lesson.”

Sheldon walked over to the big bell.

“It is all right,” he replied to her gesture of protest. “My boys

are practically all bushmen, while these chaps are salt-water men,

and there’s no love lost between them. You watch the fun.”

He rang a general call, and by the time the two hundred labourers

trooped into the compound Satan was once more penned in the living-

room, complaining to high heaven at his abominable treatment. The

plantation hands were dancing war-dances around the base of every

tree and filling the air with abuse and vituperation of their

hereditary enemies. The skipper of the Flibberty-Gibbet arrived in

the thick of it, in the first throes of oncoming fever, staggering

as he walked, and shivering so severely that he could scarcely hold

the rifle he carried. His face was ghastly blue, his teeth clicked

and chattered, and the violent sunshine through which he walked

could not warm him.

“I’ll s-s-sit down, and k-k-keep a guard on ’em,” he chattered.

“D-d-dash it all, I always g-get f-fever when there’s any

excitement. W-w-wh-what are you going to do?”

“Gather up the guns first of all.”

Under Sheldon’s direction the house-boys and gang-bosses collected

the scattered arms and piled them in a heap on the veranda. The

modern rifles, stolen from Lunga, Sheldon set aside; the Sniders he

smashed into fragments; the pile of spears, clubs, and tomahawks he

presented to Joan.

“A really unique addition to your collection,” he smiled; “picked

up right on the battlefield.”

Down on the beach he built a bonfire out of the contents of the

canoes, his blacks smashing, breaking, and looting everything they

laid hands on. The canoes themselves, splintered and broken,

filled with sand and coral-boulders, were towed out to ten fathoms

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of water and sunk.

“Ten fathoms will be deep enough for them to work in,” Sheldon

said, as they walked back to the compound.

Here a Saturnalia had broken loose. The war-songs and dances were

more unrestrained, and, from abuse, the plantation blacks had

turned to pelting their helpless foes with pieces of wood, handfuls

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