On the Makaloa Mat/Island Tales by Jack London

The captain suddenly sprang upon the railing of the lanai, held on

to a pillar with one hand, and again picked up the two specks of

heads through the glasses. His surprise was verified. The two

fools had veered out of the channel toward Diamond Head, and were

directly seaward of the kanaka surf. Worse, as he looked, they

were starting to come in through the kanaka surf.

He glanced down quickly to the canoe, and even as he glanced, and

as the apparently loafing members quietly arose and took their

places by the canoe for the launching, he achieved judgment.

Before the canoe could get abreast in the channel, all would be

over with the man and woman. And, granted that it could get

abreast of them, the moment it ventured into the kanaka surf it

would be swamped, and a sorry chance would the strongest swimmer of

them have of rescuing a person pounding to pulp on the bottom under

the smashes of the great bearded ones.

The captain saw the first kanaka wave, large of itself, but small

among its fellows, lift seaward behind the two speck-swimmers.

Then he saw them strike a crawl-stroke, side by side, faces

downward, full-lengths out-stretched on surface, their feet

sculling like propellers and their arms flailing in rapid over-hand

strokes, as they spurted speed to approximate the speed of the

overtaking wave, so that, when overtaken, they would become part of

the wave, and travel with it instead of being left behind it.

Thus, if they were coolly skilled enough to ride outstretched on

the surface and the forward face of the crest instead of being

flung and crumpled or driven head-first to bottom, they would dash

shoreward, not propelled by their own energy, but by the energy of

the wave into which they had become incorporated.

And they did it! “SOME swimmers!” the captain of Number Nine made

announcement to himself under his breath. He continued to gaze

eagerly. The best of swimmers could hold such a wave for several

hundred feet. But could they? If they did, they would be a third

of the way through the perils they had challenged. But, not

unexpected by him, the woman failed first, her body not presenting

the larger surfaces that her husband’s did. At the end of seventy

feet she was overwhelmed, being driven downward and out of sight by

the tons of water in the over-topple. Her husband followed and

both appeared swimming beyond the wave they had lost.

The captain saw the next wave first. “If they try to body-surf on

that, good night,” he muttered; for he knew the swimmer did not

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100

live who would tackle it. Beardless itself, it was father of all

bearded ones, a mile long, rising up far out beyond where the

others rose, towering its solid bulk higher and higher till it

blotted out the horizon, and was a giant among its fellows ere its

beard began to grow as it thinned its crest to the over-curl.

But it was evident that the man and woman knew big water. No

racing stroke did they make in advance of the wave. The captain

inwardly applauded as he saw them turn and face the wave and wait

for it. It was a picture that of all on the beach he alone saw,

wonderfully distinct and vivid in the magnification of the

binoculars. The wall of the wave was truly a wall, mounting, ever

mounting, and thinning, far up, to a transparency of the colours of

the setting sun shooting athwart all the green and blue of it. The

green thinned to lighter green that merged blue even as he looked.

But it was a blue gem-brilliant with innumerable sparkle-points of

rose and gold flashed through it by the sun. On and up, to the

sprouting beard of growing crest, the colour orgy increased until

it was a kaleidoscopic effervescence of transfusing rainbows.

Against the face of the wave showed the heads of the man and woman

like two sheer specks. Specks they were, of the quick, adventuring

among the blind elemental forces, daring the titanic buffets of the

sea. The weight of the down-fall of that father of waves, even

then imminent above their heads, could stun a man or break the

fragile bones of a woman. The captain of Number Nine was

unconscious that he was holding his breath. He was oblivious of

the man. It was the woman. Did she lose her head or courage, or

misplay her muscular part for a moment, she could be hurled a

hundred feet by that giant buffet and left wrenched, helpless, and

breathless to be pulped on the coral bottom and sucked out by the

undertow to be battened on by the fish-sharks too cowardly to take

their human meat alive.

Why didn’t they dive deep, and with plenty of time, the captain

wanted to know, instead of waiting till the last tick of safety and

the first tick of peril were one? He saw the woman turn her head

and laugh to the man, and his head turn in response. Above them,

overhanging them, as they mounted the body of the wave, the beard,

creaming white, then frothing into rose and gold, tossed upward

into a spray of jewels. The crisp off-shore trade-wind caught the

beard’s fringes and blew them backward and upward yards and yards

into the air. It was then, side by side, and six feet apart, that

they dived straight under the over-curl even then disintegrating to

chaos and falling. Like insects disappearing into the convolutions

of some gorgeous gigantic orchid, so they disappeared, as beard and

crest and spray and jewels, in many tons, crashed and thundered

down just where they had disappeared the moment before, but where

they were no longer.

Beyond the wave they had gone through, they finally showed, side by

side, still six feet apart, swimming shoreward with a steady stroke

until the next wave should make them body-surf it or face and

On the Makaloa Mat/Island Tales

101

pierce it. The captain of Number Nine waved his hand to his crew

in dismissal, and sat down on the lanai railing, feeling vaguely

tired and still watching the swimmers through his glasses.

“Whoever and whatever they are,” he murmured, “they aren’t

malahinis. They simply can’t be malahinis.”

Not all days, and only on rare days, is the surf heavy at Waikiki;

and, in the days that followed, Ida and Lee Barton, much in

evidence on the beach and in the water, continued to arouse

disparaging interest in the breasts of the tourist ladies, although

the Outrigger captains ceased from worrying about them in the

water. They would watch the pair swim out and disappear in the

blue distance, and they might, or might not, chance to see them

return hours afterward. The point was that the captains did not

bother about their returning, because they knew they would return.

The reason for this was that they were not malahinis. They

belonged. In other words, or, rather, in the potent Islands-word,

they were kamaaina. Kamaaina men and women of forty remembered Lee

Barton from their childhood days, when, in truth, he had been a

malahini, though a very young specimen. Since that time, in the

course of various long stays, he had earned the kamaaina

distinction.

As for Ida Barton, young matrons of her own age (privily wondering

how she managed to keep her figure) met her with arms around and

hearty Hawaiian kisses. Grandmothers must have her to tea and

reminiscence in old gardens of forgotten houses which the tourist

never sees. Less than a week after her arrival, the aged Queen

Liliuokalani must send for her and chide her for neglect. And old

men, on cool and balmy lanais, toothlessly maundered to her about

Grandpa Captain Wilton, of before their time, but whose wild and

lusty deeds and pranks, told them by their fathers, they remembered

with gusto–Grandpa Captain Wilton, or David Wilton, or “All Hands”

as the Hawaiians of that remote day had affectionately renamed him.

All Hands, ex-Northwest trader, the godless, beach-combing,

clipper-shipless and ship-wrecked skipper who had stood on the

beach at Kailua and welcomed the very first of missionaries, off

the brig Thaddeus, in the year 1820, and who, not many years later,

made a scandalous runaway marriage with one of their daughters,

quieted down and served the Kamehamehas long and conservatively as

Minister of the Treasury and Chief of the Customs, and acted as

intercessor and mediator between the missionaries on one side and

the beach-combing crowd, the trading crowd, and the Hawaiian chiefs

on the variously shifting other side.

Nor was Lee Barton neglected. In the midst of the dinners and

lunches, the luaus (Hawaiian feasts) and poi-suppers, and swims and

dances in aloha (love) to both of them, his time and inclination

were claimed by the crowd of lively youngsters of old Kohala days

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