Adventure by Jack London

skins and savage countenances, their huge ear-plugs and carved and

glistening nose-rings. Sheldon tottered to his feet at last, and

half-fell into the steamer-chair. Oppressive as the heat had been,

it was now even more oppressive. It was difficult to breathe. He

panted for air. The faces and naked arms of the house-boys were

beaded with sweat.

“Marster,” one of them ventured, “big fella wind he come, strong

fella too much.”

Sheldon nodded his head but did not look. Much as he had loved

Hughie Drummond, his death, and the funeral it entailed, seemed an

intolerable burden to add to what he was already sinking under. He

had a feeling–nay, it was a certitude–that all he had to do was

to shut his eyes and let go, and that he would die, sink into

immensity of rest. He knew it; it was very simple. All he had to

do was close his eyes and let go; for he had reached the stage

where he lived by will alone. His weary body seemed torn by the

oncoming pangs of dissolution. He was a fool to hang on. He had

died a score of deaths already, and what was the use of prolonging

it to two-score deaths before he really died. Not only was he not

afraid to die, but he desired to die. His weary flesh and weary

spirit desired it, and why should the flame of him not go utterly

out?

But his mind that could will life or death, still pulsed on. He

saw the two whale-boats land on the beach, and the sick, on

stretchers or pick-a-back, groaning and wailing, go by in

lugubrious procession. He saw the wind making on the clouded

horizon, and thought of the sick in the hospital. Here was

something waiting his hand to be done, and it was not in his nature

to lie down and sleep, or die, when any task remained undone.

The boss-boys were called and given their orders to rope down the

hospital with its two additions. He remembered the spare anchor-

chain, new and black-painted, that hung under the house suspended

from the floor-beams, and ordered it to be used on the hospital as

well. Other boys brought the coffin, a grotesque patchwork of

packing-cases, and under his directions they laid Hughie Drummond

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15

in it. Half a dozen boys carried it down the beach, while he rode

on the back of another, his arms around the black’s neck, one hand

clutching a prayer-book.

While he read the service, the blacks gazed apprehensively at the

dark line on the water, above which rolled and tumbled the racing

clouds. The first breath of the wind, faint and silken, tonic with

life, fanned through his dry-baked body as he finished reading.

Then came the second breath of the wind, an angry gust, as the

shovels worked rapidly, filling in the sand. So heavy was the gust

that Sheldon, still on his feet, seized hold of his man-horse to

escape being blown away. The Jessie was blotted out, and a strange

ominous sound arose as multitudinous wavelets struck foaming on the

beach. It was like the bubbling of some colossal cauldron. From

all about could be heard the dull thudding of falling cocoanuts.

The tall, delicate-trunked trees twisted and snapped about like

whip-lashes. The air seemed filled with their flying leaves, any

one of which, stem-on could brain a man. Then came the rain, a

deluge, a straight, horizontal sheet that poured along like a

river, defying gravitation. The black, with Sheldon mounted on

him, plunged ahead into the thick of it, stooping far forward and

low to the ground to avoid being toppled over backward.

“‘He’s sleeping out and far to-night,'” Sheldon quoted, as he

thought of the dead man in the sand and the rainwater trickling

down upon the cold clay.

So they fought their way back up the beach. The other blacks

caught hold of the man-horse and pulled and tugged. There were

among them those whose fondest desire was to drag the rider in the

sand and spring upon him and mash him into repulsive nothingness.

But the automatic pistol in his belt with its rattling, quick-

dealing death, and the automatic, death-defying spirit in the man

himself, made them refrain and buckle down to the task of hauling

him to safety through the storm.

Wet through and exhausted, he was nevertheless surprised at the

ease with which he got into a change of clothing. Though he was

fearfully weak, he found himself actually feeling better. The

disease had spent itself, and the mend had begun.

“Now if I don’t get the fever,” he said aloud, and at the same

moment resolved to go to taking quinine as soon as he was strong

enough to dare.

He crawled out on the veranda. The rain had ceased, but the wind,

which had dwindled to a half-gale, was increasing. A big sea had

sprung up, and the mile-long breakers, curling up to the over-fall

two hundred yards from shore, were crashing on the beach. The

Jessie was plunging madly to two anchors, and every second or third

sea broke clear over her bow. Two flags were stiffly undulating

from the halyards like squares of flexible sheet-iron. One was

blue, the other red. He knew their meaning in the Berande private

code–“What are your instructions? Shall I attempt to land boat?”

Tacked on the wall, between the signal locker and the billiard

rules, was the code itself, by which he verified the signal before

making answer. On the flagstaff gaff a boy hoisted a white flag

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16

over a red, which stood for–“Run to Neal Island for shelter.”

That Captain Oleson had been expecting this signal was apparent by

the celerity with which the shackles were knocked out of both

anchor-chains. He slipped his anchors, leaving them buoyed to be

picked up in better weather. The Jessie swung off under her full

staysail, then the foresail, double-reefed, was run up. She was

away like a racehorse, clearing Balesuna Shoal with half a cable-

length to spare. Just before she rounded the point she was

swallowed up in a terrific squall that far out-blew the first.

All that night, while squall after squall smote Berande, uprooting

trees, overthrowing copra-sheds, and rocking the house on its tall

piles, Sheldon slept. He was unaware of the commotion. He never

wakened. Nor did he change his position or dream. He awoke, a new

man. Furthermore, he was hungry. It was over a week since food

had passed his lips. He drank a glass of condensed cream, thinned

with water, and by ten o’clock he dared to take a cup of beef-tea.

He was cheered, also, by the situation in the hospital. Despite

the storm there had been but one death, and there was only one

fresh case, while half a dozen boys crawled weakly away to the

barracks. He wondered if it was the wind that was blowing the

disease away and cleansing the pestilential land.

By eleven a messenger arrived from Balesuna village, dispatched by

Seelee. The Jessie had gone ashore half-way between the village

and Neal Island. It was not till nightfall that two of the crew

arrived, reporting the drowning of Captain Oleson and of the one

remaining boy. As for the Jessie, from what they told him Sheldon

could not but conclude that she was a total loss. Further to

hearten him, he was taken by a shivering fit. In half an hour he

was burning up. And he knew that at least another day must pass

before he could undertake even the smallest dose of quinine. He

crawled under a heap of blankets, and a little later found himself

laughing aloud. He had surely reached the limit of disaster.

Barring earthquake or tidal-wave, the worst had already befallen

him. The Flibberty-Gibbet was certainly safe in Mboli Pass. Since

nothing worse could happen, things simply had to mend. So it was,

shivering under his blankets, that he laughed, until the house-

boys, with heads together, marvelled at the devils that were in

him.

CHAPTER IV–JOAN LACKLAND

By the second day of the northwester, Sheldon was in collapse from

his fever. It had taken an unfair advantage of his weak state, and

though it was only ordinary malarial fever, in forty-eight hours it

had run him as low as ten days of fever would have done when he was

in condition. But the dysentery had been swept away from Berande.

A score of convalescents lingered in the hospital, but they were

improving hourly. There had been but one more death–that of the

man whose brother had wailed over him instead of brushing the flies

away.

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17

On the morning of the fourth day of his fever, Sheldon lay on the

veranda, gazing dimly out over the raging ocean. The wind was

falling, but a mighty sea was still thundering in on Berande beach,

the flying spray reaching in as far as the flagstaff mounds, the

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