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<h2> CHAPTER SIX </h2>
<p>Heyst was astounded. Looking all round, as if to take the whole room to
witness of this outrage, he became aware of Wang materialized in the
doorway. The intrusion was as surprising as anything could be, in view of
the strict regularity with which Wang made himself visible. Heyst was
tempted to laugh at first. This practical comment on his affirmation that
nothing could break in on them relieved the strain of his feelings. He was
a little vexed, too. The Chinaman preserved a profound silence.</p>
<p>"What do you want?" asked Heyst sternly.</p>
<p>"Boat out there," said the Chinaman.</p>
<p>"Where? What do you mean? Boat adrift in the straits?"</p>
<p>Some subtle change in Wang's bearing suggested his being out of breath;
but he did not pant, and his voice was steady.</p>
<p>"No—row."</p>
<p>It was Heyst now who was startled and raised his voice.</p>
<p>"Malay man, eh?"</p>
<p>Wang made a slight negative movement with his head.</p>
<p>"Do you hear, Lena?" Heyst called out. "Wang says there is a boat in sight—somewhere
near apparently. Where's that boat Wang?"</p>
<p>"Round the point," said Wang, leaping into Malay unexpectedly, and in a
loud voice. "White men three."</p>
<p>"So close as that?" exclaimed Heyst, moving out on the veranda followed by
Wang. "White men? Impossible!"</p>
<p>Over the clearing the shadows were already lengthening. The sun hung low;
a ruddy glare lay on the burnt black patch in front of the bungalow, and
slanted on the ground between the straight, tall, mast-like trees soaring
a hundred feet or more without a branch. The growth of bushes cut off all
view of the jetty from the veranda. Far away to the right Wang's hut, or
rather its dark roof of mats, could be seen above the bamboo fence which
insured the privacy of the Alfuro woman. The Chinaman looked that way
swiftly. Heyst paused, and then stepped back a pace into the room.</p>
<p>"White men, Lena, apparently. What are you doing?"</p>
<p>"I am just bathing my eyes a little," the girl's voice said from the inner
room.</p>
<p>"Oh, yes; all right!"</p>
<p>"Do you want me?"</p>
<p>"No. You had better—I am going down to the jetty. Yes, you had
better stay in. What an extraordinary thing!"</p>
<p>It was so extraordinary that nobody could possibly appreciate how
extraordinary it was but himself. His mind was full of mere exclamations,
while his feet were carrying him in the direction of the jetty. He
followed the line of the rails, escorted by Wang.</p>
<p>"Where were you when you first saw the boat?" he asked over his shoulder.</p>
<p>Wang explained in Malay that he had gone to the shore end of the wharf, to
get a few lumps of coal from the big heap, when, happening to raise his
eyes from the ground, he saw the boat—a white man boat, not a canoe.
He had good eyes. He had seen the boat, with the men at the oars; and here
Wang made a particular gesture over his eyes, as if his vision had
received a blow. He had turned at once and run to the house to report.</p>
<p>"No mistake, eh?" said Heyst, moving on. At the very outer edge of the
belt he stopped short. Wang halted behind him on the path, till the voice
of Number One called him sharply forward into the open. He obeyed.</p>
<p>"Where's that boat?" asked Heyst forcibly. "I say—where is it?"</p>
<p>Nothing whatever was to be seen between the point and the jetty. The
stretch of Diamond Bay was like a piece of purple shadow, lustrous and
empty, while beyond the land, the open sea lay blue and opaque under the
sun. Heyst's eyes swept all over the offing till they met, far off, the
dark cone of the volcano, with its faint plume of smoke broadening and
vanishing everlastingly at the top, without altering its shape in the
glowing transparency of the evening.</p>
<p>"The fellow has been dreaming," he muttered to himself.</p>
<p>He looked hard at the Chinaman. Wang seemed turned into stone. Suddenly,
as if he had received a shock, he started, flung his arm out with a
pointing forefinger, and made guttural noises to the effect that there,
there, there, he had seen a boat.</p>
<p>It was very uncanny. Heyst thought of some strange hallucination. Unlikely
enough; but that a boat with three men in it should have sunk between the
point and the jetty, suddenly, like a stone, without leaving as much on
the surface as a floating oar, was still more unlikely. The theory of a
phantom boat would have been more credible than that.</p>
<p>"Confound it!" he muttered to himself.</p>
<p>He was unpleasantly affected by this mystery; but now a simple explanation
occurred to him. He stepped hastily out on the wharf. The boat, if it had
existed and had retreated, could perhaps be seen from the far end of the
long jetty.</p>
<p>Nothing was to be seen. Heyst let his eyes roam idly over the sea. He was
so absorbed in his perplexity that a hollow sound, as of somebody tumbling
about in a boat, with a clatter of oars and spars, failed to make him move
for a moment. When his mind seized its meaning, he had no difficulty in
locating the sound. It had come from below—under the jetty!</p>
<p>He ran back for a dozen yards or so, and then looked over. His sight
plunged straight into the stern-sheets of a big boat, the greater part of
which was hidden from him by the planking of the jetty. His eyes fell on
the thin back of a man doubled up over the tiller in a queer,
uncomfortable attitude of drooping sorrow. Another man, more directly
below Heyst, sprawled on his back from gunwale to gunwale, half off the
after thwart, his head lower than his feet. This second man glared wildly
upward, and struggled to raise himself, but to all appearance was much too
drunk to succeed. The visible part of the boat contained also a flat,
leather trunk, on which the first man's long legs were tucked up
nervelessly. A large earthenware jug, with its wide mouth uncorked, rolled
out on the bottom-boards from under the sprawling man.</p>
<p>Heyst had never been so much astonished in his life. He stared dumbly at
the strange boat's crew. From the first he was positive that these men
were not sailors. They wore the white drill-suit of tropical civilization;
but their apparition in a boat Heyst could not connect with anything
plausible. The civilization of the tropics could have had nothing to do
with it. It was more like those myths, current in Polynesia, of amazing
strangers, who arrive at an island, gods or demons, bringing good or evil
to the innocence of the inhabitants—gifts of unknown things, words
never heard before.</p>
<p>Heyst noticed a cork helmet floating alongside the boat, evidently fallen
from the head of the man doubled over the tiller, who displayed a dark,
bony poll. An oar, too, had been knocked overboard, probably by the
sprawling man, who was still struggling, between the thwarts. By this time
Heyst regarded the visitation no longer with surprise, but with the
sustained attention demanded by a difficult problem. With one foot poised
on the string-piece, and leaning on his raised knee, he was taking in
everything. The sprawling man rolled off the thwart, collapsed, and, most
unexpectedly, got on his feet. He swayed dizzily, spreading his arms out
and uttered faintly a hoarse, dreamy "Hallo!" His upturned face was
swollen, red, peeling all over the nose and cheeks. His stare was
irrational. Heyst perceived stains of dried blood all over the front of
his dirty white coat, and also on one sleeve.</p>
<p>"What's the matter? Are you wounded?"</p>
<p>The other glanced down, reeled—one of his feet was inside a large
pith hat—and, recovering himself, let out a dismal, grating sound in
the manner of a grim laugh.</p>
<p>"Blood—not mine. Thirst's the matter. Exhausted's the matter. Done
up. Drink, man! Give us water!"</p>
<p>Thirst was in the very tone of his words, alternating a broken croak and a
faint, throaty rustle which just reached Heyst's ears. The man in the boat
raised his hands to be helped up on the jetty, whispering:</p>
<p>"I tried. I am too weak. I tumbled down."</p>
<p>Wang was coming along the jetty slowly, with intent, straining eyes.</p>
<p>"Run back and bring a crowbar here. There's one lying by the coal-heap,"
Heyst shouted to him.</p>
<p>The man standing in the boat sat down on the thwart behind him. A horrible
coughing laugh came through his swollen lips.</p>
<p>"Crowbar? What's that for?" he mumbled, and his head dropped on his chest
mournfully.</p>
<p>Meantime, Heyst, as if he had forgotten the boat, started kicking hard at
a large brass tap projecting above the planks. To accommodate ships that
came for coal and happened to need water as well, a stream had been tapped
in the interior and an iron pipe led along the jetty. It terminated with a
curved end almost exactly where the strangers' boat had been driven
between the piles; but the tap was set fast.</p>
<p>"Hurry up!" Heyst yelled to the Chinaman, who was running with the crowbar
in his hand.</p>
<p>Heyst snatched it from him and, obtaining a leverage against the
string-piece, wrung the stiff tap round with a mighty jerk. "I hope that
pipe hasn't got choked!" he muttered to himself anxiously.</p>
<p>It hadn't; but it did not yield a strong gush. The sound of a thin stream,
partly breaking on the gunwale of the boat and partly splashing alongside,
became at once audible. It was greeted by a cry of inarticulate and savage
joy. Heyst knelt on the string-piece and peered down. The man who had
spoken was already holding his open mouth under the bright trickle. Water
ran over his eyelids and over his nose, gurgled down his throat, flowed
over his chin. Then some obstruction in the pipe gave way, and a sudden
thick jet broke on his face. In a moment his shoulders were soaked, the
front of his coat inundated; he streamed and dripped; water ran into his
pockets, down his legs, into his shoes; but he had clutched the end of the
pipe, and, hanging on with both hands, swallowed, spluttered, choked,
snorted with the noises of a swimmer. Suddenly a curious dull roar reached
Heyst's ears. Something hairy and black flew from under the jetty. A
dishevelled head, coming on like a cannonball, took the man at the pipe in
flank, with enough force to tear his grip loose and fling him headlong
into the stern-sheets. He fell upon the folded legs of the man at the
tiller, who, roused by the commotion in the boat, was sitting up, silent,
rigid, and very much like a corpse. His eyes were but two black patches,
and his teeth glistened with a death's head grin between his retracted
lips, no thicker than blackish parchment glued over the gums.</p>
<p>From him Heyst's eyes wandered to the creature who had replaced the first
man at the end of the water-pipe. Enormous brown paws clutched it
savagely; the wild, big head hung back, and in a face covered with a wet
mass of hair there gaped crookedly a wide mouth full of fangs. The water
filled it, welled up in hoarse coughs, ran down on each side of the jaws
and down the hairy throat, soaked the black pelt of the enormous chest,
naked under a torn check shirt, heaving convulsively with a play of
massive muscles carved in red mahogany.</p>
<p>As soon as the first man had recovered the breath knocked out of him by
the irresistible charge, a scream of mad cursing issued from the
stern-sheets. With a rigid, angular crooking of the elbow, the man at the
tiller put his hand back to his hip.</p>
<p>"Don't shoot him, sir!" yelled the first man. "Wait! Let me have that
tiller. I will teach him to shove himself in front of a caballero!"</p>
<p>Martin Ricardo flourished the heavy piece of wood, leaped forward with
astonishing vigour, and brought it down on Pedro's head with a crash that
resounded all over the quiet sweep of Black Diamond Bay. A crimson patch
appeared on the matted hair, red veins appeared in the water flowing all
over his face, and it dripped in rosy drops off his head. But the man hung
on. Not till a second furious blow descended did the hairy paws let go
their grip and the squirming body sink limply. Before it could touch the
bottom-boards, a tremendous kick in the ribs from Ricardo's foot shifted
it forward out of sight, whence came the noise of a heavy thud, a clatter
of spars, and a pitiful grunt. Ricardo stooped to look under the jetty.</p>
<p>"Aha, dog! This will teach you to keep back where you belong, you
murdering brute, you slaughtering savage, you! You infidel, you robber of
churches! Next time I will rip you open from neck to heel, you
carrion-eater! Esclavo!"</p>
<p>He backed a little and straightened himself up.</p>
<p>"I don't mean it really," he remarked to Heyst, whose steady eyes met his
from above. He ran aft briskly.</p>
<p>"Come along, sir. It's your turn. I oughtn't to have drunk first. 'S
truth, I forgot myself! A gentleman like you will overlook that, I know."
As he made these apologies, Ricardo extended his hand. "Let me steady you,
sir."</p>
<p>Slowly Mr. Jones unfolded himself in all his slenderness, rocked,
staggered, and caught Ricardo's shoulder. His henchman assisted him to the
pipe, which went on gushing a clear stream of water, sparkling exceedingly
against the black piles and the gloom under the jetty.</p>
<p>"Catch hold, sir," Ricardo advised solicitously. "All right?"</p>
<p>He stepped back, and, while Mr. Jones revelled in the abundance of water,
he addressed himself to Heyst with a sort of justificatory speech, the
tone of which, reflecting his feelings, partook of purring and spitting.
They had been thirty hours tugging at the oars, he explained, and they had
been more than forty hours without water, except that the night before
they had licked the dew off the gunwales.</p>
<p>Ricardo did not explain to Heyst how it happened. At that precise moment
he had no explanation ready for the man on the wharf, who, he guessed,
must be wondering much more at the presence of his visitors than at their
plight.</p>
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