El Diablo

Chapter 15

CHAPTER X

SALVAGE

d.i.c.kie Lang was nonplussed. Her best bet was thrown into the discard.

Her pride and independence had been at stake. For her most valued possessions, she had risked her all, and "stood pat" on the turn-up at the devil-island. Her cards were all on the table. Now she had lost.

Leaning against the sagging rail she watched the _Curlew_ draw alongside the float. Her slender fingers gripped the hand-rail and the sharp splinters bit into her hands. But what was that to the pain which gnawed at her heart? She hadn"t made good. The taste of failure was a new and strange sensation. She had made her fight, done her best. But it wasn"t good enough. But why was it necessary to take the little _Petrel_? Was Diablo to beat her as it had beaten others? No, she must buck up. She was Bill Lang"s daughter.

"It"s all in the game," she exclaimed to Gregory. "As I told you, the sea plays no favorites."

Before the young man could answer, she had turned from him to meet the men who were climbing from the incoming vessel.

"h.e.l.lo, boys. Tough luck. But we can"t help it. Tell me what happened.

Make it short. I"ve got a lot to do."

The fishermen grouped themselves about her as the quivering figure of a little Mexican lunged through the circle and began to speak:

"_Dios, Senorita_, it was very bad," he quavered. "We were lying close to sh.o.r.e. The fog was everywhere. We could not see. And the anchor, it would not hold. I was at the chain as you say I must when I hear a boat coming. _Jesus de mi alma_, but she is coming fast. I can not leave as we are drifting and I say to Pedro that he make a noise with the whistle. But he does not get a chance. As he jumped for the engine-house a big boat she come right out of the fog and before we can move, she smash us all to h.e.l.l. I fall into the water with Pedro and loose the dory. For a time we drift. Then we are picked up by _Senor_ Jones."

"Did the _Petrel_ sink right away?" d.i.c.kie interrupted.

Another man crowded forward and answered the question.

"She didn"t sink at all, miss. She wasn"t far from the sh.o.r.e and she drifted in with the tide that was settin" in strong. Then she piled up on the rocks. She"s layin" there now, high and dry on the beach."

"Didn"t the boat that smashed them, lay to?" volleyed the girl.

Again the Mexican began to speak excitedly: "_Sangre de Christo_, no,"

he chattered, "The boat, she was very big, _Senorita_, and she did not stop."

"Nonsense, Manuel. You were crazy with fright. Don"t talk like a fool.

Go home and go to bed. When you"ve had a good sleep, I"ll talk with you again."

Stung into action by Jones"s statement that the hull of the _Petrel_ was still on the beach, she turned suddenly to the wharf.

"Tom Howard," she called sharply. When a voice answered, she ordered: "Fill up the _Pelican_ with oil and stock her with grub. You can get it from Swanson. Throw in a couple of deep-sea hooks and a lot of good hauser. Mind it"s new. Be ready to pull out in an hour." She turned again to the men before her. "Jones, I want you to get the _Curlew_ ready. We may need two boats to pull her off. You know where they went ash.o.r.e. Take Johnson and Rasmussen with you. We"ve got to move lively. A boat won"t hang together long out there."

"Rasmussen"s sick. How about Pete Carlin? He was with me coming over."

"Don"t want him, Jones. Got to have men who know the game round Diablo in a fog. Take Sorenson."

The fisherman nodded and lumbered up the gangway followed by others.

d.i.c.kie Lang jammed her hands deep down into her pockets and shrugged her shoulders as she turned to Gregory.

"If it isn"t one thing, it"s another," she said quietly. "Can you beat it? Manuel saying he was run down? He was scared to death. I don"t believe a thing touched him. He just went to sleep and drifted in on the rocks and made up that story to save his job. Well, we"ll know when I see the hull."

Gregory listened, scarcely hearing the girl"s words. At her announcement of going to the island he began to make tentative plans to accompany her. There might be a lot he could do. And she sure needed help. He wondered if he could offer his a.s.sistance without again antagonizing her.

"I"d like to go with you," he said bluntly. "I don"t know much about the sea yet, but maybe I can do some of the strong-arm stuff and learn something. Besides, I want to have a look at Diablo."

d.i.c.kie regarded him approvingly.

"How about the cannery?" she asked. "My boats will go on fishing just the same."

"McCoy can take care of things all right until I get back. I"ll learn a lot more over there than sticking around here."

"You"re the boss of that," she replied. Then she added as an afterthought. "I"d be glad to have you."

As they walked to the wharf Gregory encountered McCoy and explained the situation.

"So I"m going out there," he concluded. "While I"m away it"s up to you."

McCoy, he noticed, did not enthuse over the idea.

"Diablo"s a dangerous place to be fooling around at this time of the year," he said.

"If she can take the risk, I surely can," Gregory answered promptly.

"You"re needed here," objected McCoy. "Everything"s new and there"s liable to be something come up I don"t know about."

"Then do the best you can. I"ll back you up. You know a lot more about it anyway than I do."

McCoy lapsed into silence while Gregory hurried away to make ready for the trip. When they were ready to shove off, McCoy watched the two boats slide out into the fog with conflicting emotions. d.i.c.k knew how to take care of herself all right. She could handle a boat in bad weather with the best of them. But, was that good enough? He reflected suddenly that Bill Lang _had_ been the best of them. And it was on just such a day as this that Bill Lang had met his death on Diablo with Gregory"s father.

Leaning against the dripping rail, he cursed the circ.u.mstances which prevented his being at the girl"s side if anything went wrong. He liked the boss or he would have told him to look for another man. And Gregory"s banking on him, tied him up. His inability to join the expedition gave to another the chance which should have been his. Torn by anxiety for the girl"s welfare and another emotion he was slower in a.n.a.lyzing, he listened to the faint gulping of the _Pelican"s_ exhaust until it was no longer audible.

The sun rose sullenly from a fog-spotted sea and glared wrathfully at the wreaths of low-lying mist which obscured his vision of the saw-toothed peaks of El Diablo. Under the warmth of his gaze, the white-fleeced clouds wavered, shifting about uncertainly. As if loath to leave the devil-island they had guarded throughout the long night, they contracted slowly, n.i.g.g.ardly exposing a line of rugged cliffs which shone bleak and gray in the strengthening light of early morning.

"It"s breaking up at last. Look!"

d.i.c.kie Lang pointed to the dark blot on the horizon.

"Can"t. If I take my eyes from this needle for a second the boat"ll run all over the ocean."

Gregory continued to stare at the compa.s.s while the girl smiled at his earnestness.

"Tom will take her now," she said, nodding to Howard to relieve him at the wheel. Then she added: "You"ve done fine. We"ve been going all night on dead reckoning and we"re not far off."

Gregory surrendered the wheel with a sigh of relief and followed the direction of the girl"s extended arm.

"That"s Diablo," she announced. "I"m mighty glad the fog is shifting.

Wouldn"t have needed to have started so early if we had known. But that"s the fun of the sea. You never know. There is no use trying to make it in there in a fog," she added. "It is bad enough when you can see."

While she talked with Johnson concerning the location of the wreck, Gregory found time to note the towering cliffs which rose precipitously from the blue-green sea. Somewhere along that rock-crusted coast, he reflected bitterly, Diablo had claimed another of the Lang boats only a few months ago. Somewhere among the white-crested rocks his father and Bill Lang had met their death. He wondered where, but did not ask.

Perhaps the girl would speak of it.

For some time he watched the mist-clouds flee before the brightening rays of the rising sun. Then he noticed that d.i.c.kie was standing by his side. Her eyes too were held by the rugged coast.

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