Following the rain a dense mist shut out sea and sky.
Dave could only drift at the will of the waves. He had it in mind to construct some kind of oars, but he did not know the distance or even the direction of land.
The day grew well on into the afternoon. Dave had removed the door of the locker. He had also gathered into the boat the longest pieces of driftwood he could find. Fortunately he had discovered in the locker several pieces of fine tarred rope, which would prove a great help in making the oars. He was laying out his work when a curious flapping noise made him look up. He sprang to his feet. Pouncing down upon him were four immense birds. They were not eagles, but fully twice as large as any eagle he had ever seen.
They attacked Dave in unison. One clawed into his left arm while another gave him a severe blow with one of its wings, swooped down upon the exposed reed basket, seized it, and flew away with it. Dave s.n.a.t.c.hed up a piece of driftwood.
He shouted to frighten the birds, swinging his weapon among them vigorously. One he disabled and it fell into the water and floated out of sight, the other two he finally beat off.
The loss of the provision basket troubled Dave severely. He sank breathless into the boat, his face and hands badly scratched and bleeding.
The next instant, to the infinite surprise of Dave Fearless, a gruff voice sounded through the mist:
"Ahoy there! What"s the rumpus?"
CHAPTER XIV
STRANGE COMPANIONS
Dave knew at once that his shouts at the large birds must have attracted the attention of the person who was now hailing him.
"Ahoy, yourself!" he cried, starting to his feet and peering expectantly through the mist in the direction from which the challenge had come.
In a few moments the outline of a yawl somewhat larger than the one Dave was in loomed up in the near distance. A man was seated in its bow, while two others rowed the boat.
They came alongside. All three looked haggard and worn out. In the bottom of their boat lay a broken demijohn. They reminded Dave of sailors he had often seen on shipboard getting over a debauch.
"Why," said the man in the bow, staring in amazement at Dave, "if it isn"t young Fearless, the diver!"
"I remember you, Mr. Daley," responded Dave, recognizing the speaker as one of the crew of the _Raven_. Dave had a dim memory, too, of having seen Daley"s two companions with Captain Nesik"s crew.
Daley drew the two yawls close together with a boathook, and he and Dave were face to face.
"Young Fearless of the _Swallow_," he kept saying, in a marveling tone.
"And in this fix. Why, where did you ever come from?"
"Where did you, Mr. Daley?" inquired Dave directly. "Mine is a pretty long story--suppose you tell yours first?"
"Huh, that won"t take much time," muttered Daley, with a savage kick at the fragments of the demijohn. "We stole all that gold from you.
Little good did it do us. Captain Nesik and the Hankers, after they marooned you fellows, made a landing and divided up the gold into boxes.
They put them on the _Swallow_. Well, when the _Swallow_ parted from the _Raven_ in a cyclone, she went down--gold, men aboard, and all."
"And the _Raven_?" inquired Dave.
"She drove on the rocks and has been disabled ever since. It would take a big steamer to pull her into service again," explained Daley. "After she got into that fix Nesik decided to desert her. They made a camp on land on the west island of those you know about."
"What about the natives?" inquired Dave.
"They seemed to have all gone back to the main island except a few.
These hung around and spied on us; most of them Nesik shot. He landed lots of provender and rum from the _Raven_. For a week Nesik let the men have their fill. He and the Hankers and that p.a.w.nbroker fellow----"
"Gerstein?" suggested Dave.
"Yes, Gerstein," nodded Daley. "Well, those four took the longboat which was saved from the wreck and went scouting, they called it. They went away and returned for several days. One day they came back on foot without the longboat, and said that it and Gerstein had gone down in a quicksand. The men began to grow restive after another week. They couldn"t understand what Nesik was lying idle for. They wondered what made him and Cal Vixen the diver and the Hankers so contented to just squat down and loaf. The men got cross when Nesik cut down grub rations. A deputation waited on him."
"What was the result?" inquired Dave, with great interest.
"Nesik told them to do what they liked and go where they liked. Said he was going to take his chances, waiting for a ship to come along. Result was, one by one the small craft of the _Raven_ were stolen. We nabbed this boat one night and put to sea. We were bound to make some kind of a try to get away from those islands."
"Have you any idea where we are now?" inquired Dave.
"Sure, I have," answered Daley. "We"re in one of those tidal channels that run around the Windjammers" Island so freely. That"s a queer thing about these diggings. A fellow can row miles and drift back to the islands. Those channels are regular whirlpools in a storm."
"And what are you thinking of doing now?" asked Dave.
"Getting back to land of course. We wouldn"t run across a ship in a hundred years on this out-of-the-way route. We can never hope to row thousands of miles to a continent coast. No--provender being gone, and especially the rum, we don"t feel quite as bold as we did when we started out," confessed Daley, with a dejected air.
"No," put in one of his companions lazily, "we"ll go back and take pot-luck with what"s left of the _Raven_ crowd."
"If they"ll have us," put in his companion. "Looked to me all along as if for some purpose or other Nesik wanted to get rid of us."
"You"re right there, mate," declared Daley. "I"ve thought that, too, many a time. Maybe he and his cronies calculated there would be more grub around with fewer mouths to feed."
Dave thought over all the men had said. He fancied that he guessed out the reason why Nesik was so willing to have his men leave him. He knew that he would be asked to give information in return for what he had received. Dave tried to decide how far he dared to trust the three castaways.
"Now then," just as he expected, Daley spoke, "we"ve told you our story.
How about yours? That"s a _Raven_ boat there you"re in. How did you get it?"
"I found it drifting loose a few hours ago," said Dave.
"That"s likely enough," said Daley suspiciously, "but where was you waiting for such things to drift around loose?"
"I was floating on a piece of driftwood," explained Dave. "You know you people marooned us on the island."
"I didn"t," declared Daley; "that was Nesik"s work."
"You helped," said Dave, "and you"ve had nothing but bad luck since.
Now, Mr. Daley, I"m going to tell you something. You think the _Swallow_ was lost in the cyclone."
"Know it. Men, gold, and all."
"No," said Dave, watching his man closely to note the effect of his disclosures. "The _Swallow_ was not lost at all."
Daley stared hard and incredulously at Dave.