Read The Max Brand Megapack Online
Authors: Max Brand,Frederick Faust
Tags: #old west, #outlaw, #gunslinger, #Western, #cowboy
“Help me to the captain’s cabin,” he said. “He’s afther bein’ sick.”
CHAPTER 8
And the four of them went aft carrying McTee’s body. On the promenade they passed Kate Malone. She shrank against the rail, her eyes blank and her face white.
“He’s dead!” she cried.
“He’s just beginnin’ to live,” said Harrigan.
The captain was muttering faintly as they laid him on the bunk in his room. “Now get out,” commanded Harrigan. “I will be alone with him when he wakes up. I have something to whisper in his ear.”
“Is it safe?” said the first mate to the chief engineer, gesturing with his weapon.
Harrigan snatched it away and waved it like a club above his head.
“Get out, or I’ll bash your skull in.”
His face was hideous, cut and blood-stained, starved with the long hunger and lighted with the victory. They slunk from the cabin, backing out as if they expected him to rush them. Harrigan locked the door and started to tend the captain. He washed McTee to the waist, cleansed the cut places carefully, and covered them with narrow strips of adhesive tape which he found in a small medicine chest. As the heavier breathing of the captain indicated that he was about to recover his senses, Harrigan performed the same services for himself. It was slow work, for now that the stimulus of action was gone, his weakness grew on him in recurrent waves. Finally a sound made him turn to see McTee propping himself up on the bunk with one elbow; his eyes, unconfused and steady, looked brightly out at Harrigan.
“You beat me?”
“It was the swing of the deck that rolled you over and broke your grip. I’ve stayed to tell you that.”
“Chances or no chances, you beat me.”
“Man, you’d have busted my back if it hadn’t been for that buck of the ship. When your hand came away, it took the skin with it.”
“And that’s why you didn’t finish me?”
“Aye.”
“You’ll never have the chance again.”
“I want no chances; I want no help except my own strength as it was before you withered me with your hellfire.”
“When we stand up again, I’ll kill you, Harrigan.”
“When we stand up again, I’ll break you, Black McTee—like a rotten stick.”
“Lie down here,” said the captain, rising quickly. “You’re sick.”
He forced Harrigan onto the bunk and stretched him out at full length. The Irishman clenched his hands and fought against the sleep which crept over his senses.
“There’s fire in my brain,” muttered Harrigan, “an’ it’s trying to burn its way out.”
McTee dipped a towel in cool water.
“I kept the rest of them away,” went on the Irishman. “When you woke up, I wanted you to hear why I didn’t finish you.”
He raised his shaking hands and gripped at the air.
“Ah-h! When me ould silf is back, I’ll shtand up to ye. Tis a promise, McTee. Black McTee, Black McTee—I’ll make ye Red McTee—red as the palms av me hands.”
McTee tied the cold, wet towel around Harrigan’s forehead.
“I’ll kill you by inches, Harrigan. You’ll read hell in my eyes before your end. Drink this!”
He raised Harrigan’s almost lifeless head and forced the neck of a whisky bottle between his teeth.
“Ah-h!” said Harrigan, blinking and coughing after the strong liquor had burned its way down his throat. “The feel av your throat under me thumbs was sweeter than the touch av a colleen’s hand, McTee! I’m dead for shlape!”
And instantly his eyes closed; his breathing was deep and sonorous. The captain watched him for a long moment, then sat down and laying a hand on the sleeping man’s wrist, he counted the pulse carefully. It was irregular and feeble.
“Time is all he needs,” muttered McTee to himself, and he sat staring before him, dreaming. “A fool can live well,” he was thinking, “but it takes a great man to die well. Harrigan will make a fine death.” In the meantime the big Irishman slept heavily, and Black McTee tended him well, keeping the towel cool and wet about his forehead. The pulse was gaining rapidly in strength and regularity; sleep seemed to act upon Harrigan as food acts upon a starved man. At times he smiled, and McTee could guess at the dream which caused it. He was dreaming of killing McTee, and McTee sat by and understood, and smiled with deep content. He, also, was tasting his thoughts of the battle-to-be when, without any warning rap, the door swung open and the burly form of Bos’n Masters appeared.
“The first mate—” he began.
“Did you knock?”
“I’ve got no time to waste, the first mate—”
McTee rose. In the frank, bold eyes of the bos’n he read the open revolt, and understood. He had been beaten in open battle; his crew felt that they were liberated by the victory of their champion.
“Who told you to enter without knocking?” he broke in.
“I don’t need telling,” said the dauntless bos’n. “The first mate’s drunk an’—”
The heavy fist of McTee landed on Masters’s mouth and hurled him in a heap into the corner of the cabin. The captain seized him by the nape of the neck and jerked him back to his feet, blinking and gasping, thoroughly subdued.
“Get out and come in as you should.”
The bos’n fled. A moment later a timid knock came at the door and McTee bade him enter. He stepped in, cap in hand, his eyes on the floor.
“The first mate’s drunk, sir, an’ runnin’ amuck with the ship. He’s at the wheel an’ he won’t leave it. We’ve nearly scraped one reef already. You know this ain’t any open sea, sir. There’s green water everywhere.”
“Go up and give the fool my orders. Tell the second officer to take the wheel.”
The bos’n retreated, but he returned within a few moments.
“He won’t leave the wheel,” he reported. “He said you could take your orders to the devil, sir.”
“I’ll tie him to the deck and skin him alive,” said McTee calmly. “Stay here and watch Harrigan while I—”
He was jerked from his feet and hurled across the room, crashing against the cabin wall. When his senses returned, he was sitting on the floor staring stupidly into the white face of the bos’n, who was in a similar posture. Harrigan, who had been flung from the bunk, staggered to his feet.
“What the deuce is up?” asked the Irishman.
A chorus of piercing yells rose in answer from the deck outside.
“The end of the
Mary Rogers
,” said McTee. “Stay with me, Harrigan.”
He caught the latter by the arm and dragged him out onto the deck. The hull of the ship at the bow must have been literally ripped away by the impact against the reef; already the deck sloped sharply to the bows.
McTee raised a voice that rang like a trumpet over the clamor as he gave his orders to clear away the boats. If he had been a moment earlier, he might have succeeded in getting at least one of them safely launched, but now the
Mary Rogers
was settling to her doom with a speed which made the crew senseless with terror. A half-gale which promised to swell soon into a veritable hurricane seemed to be lifting the freighter by the heel and driving her nose into the sea. The quick settling twilight of the tropics made the waters doubly cold and dark.
Not till the bows of the
Mary Rogers
were deep below the waves and her propeller humming loudly in the air did the captain desist from his efforts to bring order out of the panic of the crew. Half a dozen men, with the Chinaman at their head, had cut one boat from its davits, but plunging into it before it fairly struck the water, they tipped it far to one side. It filled instantly and sank, leaving its occupants struggling on the surface. The Chinaman, who apparently could not swim, gave up the struggle at once. He threw his clutching hands high above his head and went down; his scream was the first death cry of the wreck of the
Mary Rogers
.
McTee, with Harrigan at his heels, rushed for the second lifeboat. Under the directions of the captain, pointed and emphasized by blows of his fist, the boat was swung safely from the davits and lowered to the sea. The instant that it rode the waves, bouncing up and down on the choppy surface, the crew began leaping in, the drunken mate being the first overside.
The lifeboat was loaded from stem to stern, and only Harrigan, McTee, and half a dozen more remained on the ship when the boat swung a dozen feet away from the
Mary Rogers
and with the next wave was picked up and smashed against the freighter. Its side went in like a matchbox pressed by a strong thumb, and it zigzagged quickly below the surface. The yells of the swimmers rose in a long wail. McTee caught Harrigan by the shoulder and shouted in his ear: “Stay close and do what I do.”
“Miss Malone!” yelled Harrigan in answer, and pointed.
She stood by the after-cabin, clinging to the rail with one hand while she attempted to adjust a life preserver with the other. The
Mary Rogers
lurched forward, a long slide that buried half of the ship under the sea. A giant wave towered above the side and licked the wheelhouse away.
“Let her go!” roared McTee. “Save ourselves and let her go.”
It was a matter of seconds now before the last of the
Mary Rogers
should disappear. They clambered up to the after-cabin.
“For the love av God, McTee, she’s a woman!”
The Irishman struggled up the deck toward the girl, but the captain caught him and held him fast.
“There’s one chance,” shouted Black McTee, and he pointed to the litter of the wrecked wheelhouse which tossed on the waves. “Overboard and make for a big timber.”
But the eyes of Harrigan held on the form of the girl. They could only make out the shadow of her form with her hair blowing wildly on the wind. Then as swift as the sway of a bird’s wing, a mass of black water tossed over the side of the
Mary Rogers
. When it was gone, the shadowy figure of the girl had disappeared with it.
“Now!” thundered McTee.
“Aye,” said Harrigan.
CHAPTER 9
They climbed the rail. Plainly Harrigan had made them delay too long, for now they had not time to swim beyond the reach of the swirl that would form when the ship went down. The
Mary Rogers
lurched to her grave as they sprang from the rail. A wave caught them and washed them beyond the grip of the whirlpool; another wave swung them back, and the waters sucked them down. Such was the force of that downward pull that it seemed to Harrigan as if a weight were attached to either foot. He drew a great, gasping breath before his head went under and then struck out with all his might.
When his lungs seemed bursting with the labor, he whirled to the surface again and drew another gasping breath. The storm had torn a rift in the clouds and through it looked the moon as if some god were peering through the curtain of mist to watch the havoc he was working. By this light Harrigan saw that he was being drawn down in a narrowing circle. Straight before him loomed a black fragment of the wreckage. He tried to swing to one side, but the current of the water bore him on. He received a heavy blow on the head and his senses went out like a snuffed light.
When consciousness returned, there was a sharp pain in both head and right shoulder, for it was on his shoulder that McTee had fastened his grip. The captain sprawled on a great timber, clutching it with both legs and one arm. With the free hand he held Harrigan. All this the Irishman saw by the haggard moonlight. Then they were pitched high up on the crest of a wave. As Harrigan grappled the timber with arms and legs, it turned over and over and then pitched down through empty space. The wind had literally cut away the top of the wave. He went down, submerged, and then rose to a giddy height again. As he caught a great breath of air, he saw that McTee was no longer on the timber.
A shout reached him, the sound being cut off in the middle by the noise of the wind and waves. He saw McTee a dozen feet away, swimming furiously. He came almost close enough to touch the timber with his hands, and then a twist of the wave separated them. Harrigan worked down the timber until he reached the end of the stanchion which was nearest Black McTee. All that time the captain was struggling, but could not draw closer. The wood was drifting before the wind faster than he could swim.
When he reached the end of the timber, Harrigan wound his long arms tightly around it and let his legs draw out on the water. McTee, seeing the purpose of the maneuver, redoubled his efforts. On a wave crest the storm swept Harrigan still farther away; then they dropped into a hollow and instantly he felt a mighty grip fall on his ankle. They pitched up again with the surge of a wave so sharp and sudden that what with his own weight and the tugging burden of McTee behind him, Harrigan felt as if his arms would be torn from their sockets. He kept his hold by a mighty effort, and the tremendous grip of McTee held fast on his ankle until they dropped once more into a hollow. Then the captain jerked himself hand over hand up the body of Harrigan until he reached the timber. They lay panting and exhausted on the stanchion, embracing it with arms and legs.
Sometimes the wind sent the timber with its human freight lunging through a towering wave; and several times the force of the storm caught them and whirled them over and over. When they rose to a wave crest, they struggled bitterly for life; when they fell into the trough, they drew long breaths and freshened their holds.
Save once when Harrigan reached out his hand and set it upon that of Black McTee. The captain met the grip, and by the wild moonlight they stared into each other’s faces. That handshake almost cost them their lives, for the next moment the full breath of the storm caught them and wrenched furiously at their bodies. Yet neither of them regretted the handclasp, for all its cost. If they died now, it would be as brothers. They had at least escaped from the greatest of all horrors, a lonely death.
It seemed as if the storm acknowledged the strength of their determination. It fell away as suddenly as it had risen. A heavy ground swell still ran, but without the wind to roughen the surface and sharpen the crests, the big timber rode safely through the sea. The storm clouds were dropping back in a widening circle beneath the moon when, as they heaved up on the top of a wave, Harrigan suddenly pointed straight ahead and shouted hoarsely. On the horizon squatted a black shadow, darker than any cloud.