"By G.o.d, I won"t!" cried Lingard, stamping his foot.
There was a pause.
"I was like you--once," repeated Jorgenson. "Five and thirty years--never dropped anything. And what you can do is only child"s play to some jobs I have had on my hands--understand that--great man as you are, Captain Lingard of the Lightning. . . . You should have seen the Wild Rose," he added with a sudden break in his voice.
Lingard leaned over the guard-rail of the pier. Jorgenson came closer.
"I set fire to her with my own hands!" he said in a vibrating tone and very low, as if making a monstrous confession.
"Poor devil," muttered Lingard, profoundly moved by the tragic enormity of the act. "I suppose there was no way out?"
"I wasn"t going to let her rot to pieces in some Dutch port," said Jorgenson, gloomily. "Did you ever hear of Dawson?"
"Something--I don"t remember now--" muttered Lingard, who felt a chill down his back at the idea of his own vessel decaying slowly in some Dutch port. "He died--didn"t he?" he asked, absently, while he wondered whether he would have the pluck to set fire to the brig--on an emergency.
"Cut his throat on the beach below Fort Rotterdam," said Jorgenson. His gaunt figure wavered in the unsteady moonshine as though made of mist.
"Yes. He broke some trade regulation or other and talked big about law-courts and legal trials to the lieutenant of the Komet. "Certainly,"
says the hound. "Jurisdiction of Maca.s.sar, I will take your schooner there." Then coming into the roads he tows her full tilt on a ledge of rocks on the north side--smash! When she was half full of water he takes his hat off to Dawson. "There"s the sh.o.r.e," says he--"go and get your legal trial, you--Englishman--"" He lifted a long arm and shook his fist at the moon which dodged suddenly behind a cloud. "All was lost. Poor Dawson walked the streets for months barefooted and in rags. Then one day he begged a knife from some charitable soul, went down to take a last look at the wreck, and--"
"I don"t interfere with the Dutch," interrupted Lingard, impatiently. "I want Ha.s.sim to get back his own--"
"And suppose the Dutch want the things just so," returned Jorgenson.
"Anyway there is a devil in such work--drop it!"
"Look here," said Lingard, "I took these people off when they were in their last ditch. That means something. I ought not to have meddled and it would have been all over in a few hours. I must have meant something when I interfered, whether I knew it or not. I meant it then--and did not know it. Very well. I mean it now--and do know it. When you save people from death you take a share in their life. That"s how I look at it."
Jorgenson shook his head.
"Foolishness!" he cried, then asked softly in a voice that trembled with curiosity--"Where did you leave them?"
"With Belarab," breathed out Lingard. "You knew him in the old days."
"I knew him, I knew his father," burst out the other in an excited whisper. "Whom did I not know? I knew Sentot when he was King of the South Sh.o.r.e of Java and the Dutch offered a price for his head--enough to make any man"s fortune. He slept twice on board the Wild Rose when things had begun to go wrong with him. I knew him, I knew all his chiefs, the priests, the fighting men, the old regent who lost heart and went over to the Dutch, I knew--" he stammered as if the words could not come out, gave it up and sighed--"Belarab"s father escaped with me," he began again, quietly, "and joined the Padris in Sumatra. He rose to be a great leader. Belarab was a youth then. Those were the times. I ranged the coast--and laughed at the cruisers; I saw every battle fought in the Battak country--and I saw the Dutch run; I was at the taking of Singal and escaped. I was the white man who advised the chiefs of Manangkabo.
There was a lot about me in the Dutch papers at the time. They said I was a Frenchman turned Mohammedan--" he swore a great oath, and, reeling against the guard-rail, panted, muttering curses on newspapers.
"Well, Belarab has the job in hand," said Lingard, composedly. "He is the chief man on the Sh.o.r.e of Refuge. There are others, of course. He has sent messages north and south. We must have men."
"All the devils unchained," said Jorgenson. "You have done it and now--look out--look out. . . ."
"Nothing can go wrong as far as I can see," argued Lingard. "They all know what"s to be done. I"ve got them in hand. You don"t think Belarab unsafe? Do you?"
"Haven"t seen him for fifteen years--but the whole thing"s unsafe,"
growled Jorgenson.
"I tell you I"ve fixed it so that nothing can go wrong. It would be better if I had a white man over there to look after things generally.
There is a good lot of stores and arms--and Belarab would bear watching--no doubt. Are you in any want?" he added, putting his hand in his pocket.
"No, there"s plenty to eat in the house," answered Jorgenson, curtly.
"Drop it," he burst out. "It would be better for you to jump overboard at once. Look at me. I came out a boy of eighteen. I can speak English, I can speak Dutch, I can speak every cursed lingo of these islands--I remember things that would make your hair stand on end--but I have forgotten the language of my own country. I"ve traded, I"ve fought, I never broke my word to white or native. And, look at me. If it hadn"t been for the girl I would have died in a ditch ten years ago. Everything left me--youth, money, strength, hope--the very sleep. But she stuck by the wreck."
"That says a lot for her and something for you," said Lingard, cheerily.
Jorgenson shook his head.
"That"s the worst of all," he said with slow emphasis. "That"s the end. I came to them from the other side of the earth and they took me and--see what they made of me."
"What place do you belong to?" asked Lingard.
"Tromso," groaned out Jorgenson; "I will never see snow again," he sobbed out, his face in his hands.
Lingard looked at him in silence.
"Would you come with me?" he said. "As I told you, I am in want of a--"
"I would see you d.a.m.ned first!" broke out the other, savagely. "I am an old white loafer, but you don"t get me to meddle in their infernal affairs. They have a devil of their own--"
"The thing simply can"t fail. I"ve calculated every move. I"ve guarded against everything. I am no fool."
"Yes--you are. Good-night."
"Well, good-bye," said Lingard, calmly.
He stepped into his boat, and Jorgenson walked up the jetty. Lingard, clearing the yoke lines, heard him call out from a distance:
"Drop it!"
"I sail before sunrise," he shouted in answer, and went on board.
When he came up from his cabin after an uneasy night, it was dark yet. A lank figure strolled across the deck.
"Here I am," said Jorgenson, huskily. "Die there or here--all one. But, if I die there, remember the girl must eat."
Lingard was one of the few who had seen Jorgenson"s girl. She had a wrinkled brown face, a lot of tangled grey hair, a few black stumps of teeth, and had been married to him lately by an enterprising young missionary from Bukit Timah. What her appearance might have been once when Jorgenson gave for her three hundred dollars and several bra.s.s guns, it was impossible to say. All that was left of her youth was a pair of eyes, undimmed and mournful, which, when she was alone, seemed to look stonily into the past of two lives. When Jorgenson was near they followed his movements with anxious pertinacity. And now within the sarong thrown over the grey head they were dropping unseen tears while Jorgenson"s girl rocked herself to and fro, squatting alone in a corner of the dark hut.
"Don"t you worry about that," said Lingard, grasping Jorgenson"s hand.
"She shall want for nothing. All I expect you to do is to look a little after Belarab"s morals when I am away. One more trip I must make, and then we shall be ready to go ahead. I"ve foreseen every single thing.
Trust me!"
In this way did the restless shade of Captain H. C. Jorgenson recross the water of oblivion to step back into the life of men.
VI
For two years, Lingard, who had thrown himself body and soul into the great enterprise, had lived in the long intoxication of slowly preparing success. No thought of failure had crossed his mind, and no price appeared too heavy to pay for such a magnificent achievement. It was nothing less than bringing Ha.s.sim triumphantly back to that country seen once at night under the low clouds and in the incessant tumult of thunder. When at the conclusion of some long talk with Ha.s.sim, who for the twentieth time perhaps had related the story of his wrongs and his struggle, he lifted his big arm and shaking his fist above his head, shouted: "We will stir them up. We will wake up the country!" he was, without knowing it in the least, making a complete confession of the idealism hidden under the simplicity of his strength. He would wake up the country! That was the fundamental and unconscious emotion on which were engrafted his need of action, the primitive sense of what was due to justice, to grat.i.tude, to friendship, the sentimental pity for the hard lot of Immada--poor child--the proud conviction that of all the men in the world, in his world, he alone had the means and the pluck "to lift up the big end" of such an adventure.
Money was wanted and men were wanted, and he had obtained enough of both in two years from that day when, pistols in his belt and a cabbage-leaf hat on head, he had unexpectedly, and at early dawn, confronted in perfect silence that mysterious Belarab, who himself was for a moment too astounded for speech at the sight of a white face.
The sun had not yet cleared the forests of the interior, but a sky already full of light arched over a dark oval lagoon, over wide fields as yet full of shadows, that seemed slowly changing into the whiteness of the morning mist. There were huts, fences, palisades, big houses that, erected on lofty piles, were seen above the tops of cl.u.s.tered fruit trees, as if suspended in the air.