The ensuing days were strenuous ones for the partners, working as they
did, with a crippled force and under constant guard. Riot was in the air,
and violence on every side. By the police, whose apathy disappeared only
when an opportunity occurred of arresting the men they were supposed to
protect, they were more handicapped than helped. The appearance of a
fisherman at any point along the water-front became a sure signal for
strife.
Day by day the feeling on both sides grew stronger, till the non-union men
were cemented together in a spirit of bitterest indignation, which
materially lessened their zeal for work. Every act of violence intensified
their rage. They armed themselves, in defiance of orders, tossed restraint
to the winds, and sought the slightest opportunity of wreaking vengeance
upon their enemies. Nor were the rioters less determined. Authority, after
all, is but a hollow shell, which, once broken, is quickly disintegrated.
Fierce engagements took place, populating the hospitals. It became
necessary to guard all property in the warehouse districts, and men ceased
to venture there alone after dark.
One circumstance caused Boyd no little surprise and uneasiness--the fact
that no vigorous effort had been made to fix the blame for the striker's
death on that riotous afternoon. Surely, he reasoned, Marsh's detective
must have witnessed the killing, and must recognize the ease with which
the act could now be saddled upon him. If delay were their object, Emerson
could not understand why they did not seek to have him arrested. The
consequences might well be serious if Marsh's money were used; but, as the
days slipped past and nothing occurred, he decided that he had been
overfearful on this score, or else that the manager of the Packers' Trust
had limits beyond which he would not push his persecution.
A half-mile from Captain Peasley's ship, the rival Company tenders were
loading rapidly with union labor, and it seemed that in spite of Boyd's
plan to be first at Kalvik, Marsh's force would beat him to the ground
unless greater efforts were made. When he communicated these fears to Big
George, the fisherman suddenly became a slave-driver. He passed among his
men, cajoling, threatening, bribing, and they began to work like demons,
with the result that when the twentieth arrived he was able to announce to
his partner that the work would be finished some time during the following
morning.
The next day Emerson and Clyde drove down to the dock with Cherry in a
closed carriage, experiencing no annoyance beyond some jeers and insults
as they passed through the picket line. Boyd had barely seen them
comfortably established on board, when up the ship's gangway came
"Fingerless" Fraser radiantly attired, three heavily laden hotel porters
groaning at his back, the customary thick-waisted cigar between his teeth.
"Are you going with us?" Boyd inquired.
"Sure."
"See here. Is life one long succession of surprise parties with you?"
"Why, I've figgered on this right along."
"But the ship is jammed now. There is no room."
"Oh, I fixed that up long ago. I am going to bunk with the steward."
"Well, why in the world didn't you let us know you were coming?"
"Say, don't kid yourself. You knew I couldn't stay behind." Fraser blew a
cloud of smoke airily. "I never start anything I can't finish, I keep
telling you, and I'm going to put this deal through, now that I've got it
started." With a half-embarrassed laugh and a complete change of manner,
he laid his hand upon Boyd's shoulder, saying: "Pal, I ain't much good to
myself or anybody else, but I like you and I want to stick around. Maybe
I'll come in useful yet--you can't tell."
Emerson had never glimpsed this side of the man's nature, and it rather
surprised him.
"Of course you can come along, old man," he responded, heartily. "We're
glad to have you."
To one who has never witnessed the spring sailing of a Northern cannery-
tender, the event is well worth seeing; it is one of the curiosities of
the Seattle water-front. Not only is there the inevitable confusion
involved in the departure of an overloaded craft, but likewise there is
all the noisy excitement that attends a shipment of Oriental troops.
The Chinese maintain such a clatter as to drown the hoarse cries of the
stevedores, the complaint of the creaking tackle, and the rumble of the
winches. They scurry hither and yon like a distracted army, forever in the
way, shouting, clacking, squealing in senseless turmoil. They are timid as
to the water, and for them a voyage is at all times beset with many
alarms. It is no more possible to restrain them than to calm a frightened
herd of wild pigs, nor will they embark at all until their frenzy has run
its course and died of its own exhaustion. To discipline them according to
the seamen's standard is inadvisable, for many of them are "cutters," big,
evil, saffron-hued fellows, whose trade it is to butcher and in whose
dextrous hands a knife becomes a frightful weapon.
The Japs, ordinarily so noiseless and submissive, yield to the contagion
and add their share to the uproar. Each man carries a few pounds of
baggage in bundles or packs or valises, and these scanty belongings he
guards with shrieking solicitude.
While the pandemonium of the Orientals who gathered to board The
Bedford Castle was sufficient in itself to cause consternation, it was
as nothing to that which broke loose when the fishermen began to assemble.
To a man they were drunk, belligerent and, declamatory. A few, to be sure,
were still busy with the tag ends of the cargo, but the majority had gone
to their lodgings for their packs, and now reappeared in a state of the
wildest exuberance; for this would be their last spree of the season, and
before them lay a period of long, sleepless nights, exposure, and
unceasing labor, wherein a year's work must be crowded into three months.
They, therefore, inaugurated the change in befitting style.
On the whole, no explosive has ever been invented that is so noisy in its
effect, so furiously expansive in its action, as the fumes of cheap
whiskey. The great dock-shed soon began to reverberate to the wildest
clamor, which added to the fury of the crowd outside. The strikers, unable
to enter the building, flowed down upon the adjoining wharf, or clambered
to the roofs nearby, whence they jeered insultingly. Among them was a
newspaper photographer, bent on securing an unusual picture for his
publication, and in truth the scene from this point of view was
sufficiently novel and striking.
The decks of the big, low-lying tramp steamer were piled high with gear of
every description. A trio of stout tow-boats were blocked up amidships,
long piles of lumber rose higher than a man's head, and the roofs of the
deck-houses were jammed with fishing-boats nested, one inside the other,
like pots in a kitchen. Every available inch was crowded with cases of
gasoline, of groceries, and of the varied provisions required on an
expedition of this magnitude. Aft, on rows of hooks, were suspended the
carcasses of sheep and bullocks and hogs; there seemed to be nowhere
another foot of available room. The red water-line of the ship was already
submerged, yet notwithstanding this fact her derricks clanged noisily, her
booms swung back and forth, and her gaping hatches swallowed momentary
loads. Those fishermen who had come aboard early had settled like flies in
the rigging, whence they taunted their enemies, hurling back insult for
insult.
It was much like the departure of a gold steamer during the early famine
stages of the northward stampede, save that now there were no women, while
the confusion was immeasurably greater, and through it all might be felt a
certain strained and angry menace. All the long afternoon The Bedford
Castle lay at her moorings subjected to the customary eleventh-hour
delays. As the time dragged on, and the liquor died in the fishermen, it
became a herculean task to prevent them from issuing forth into the
street, while the crowds outside seemed possessed of a desperate
determination to force an entrance and bring the issue to a final
settlement. But across the shore end of the dock a double cordon was drawn
which hurled back the intruders at every advance.
The fishermen who remained inside the barnlike structure, unable to come
at their enemies, fought among themselves, bidding fair to wreck the
building in the extravagance of their delirium, while outside the rival
faction kept up a fire of missiles and execrations. As the hours crept
onward the tension increased, and at last Boyd turned to Captain Peasley
saying, "You'd better be ready to pull out at any minute, for if the mob
breaks in we'll never be able to hold these maniacs." He pointed to the
black swarm aloft, whence issued hoarse waves of sound. "I don't like the
look of things, a little bit."
"They are a trifle strained, to be sure," the Captain acknowledged. "I'll
stand by to cast off at your signal, so you'd better pass the word
around."
Boyd left the ship and went to the dock-office, for there still remained
one thing to be done: he could not leave without sounding a final note of
triumph for Mildred. How sweet it would be to her ears he knew full well,
yet he could not help wondering if she would feel the thrill that mastered
him at this moment. As he saw the empty spaces where had stood those
masses of freight which he had gathered at such cost, as he heard his own
men bellowing defiance at his enemies and realized that his first long
stride toward success had been taken, his heart swelled with gladness and
the breath caught momentarily in his throat. After all, he was going to
win! Out of the shimmering distance of his desire, the lady of his dreams
drew closer to him; and ere long he could lay at her feet the burden of
his travail, and then--. Oblivious to the turmoil all about, he wrote
rapidly, almost incoherently, to Mildred, transcribing the mood of mingled
tenderness and exultation which possessed him.
"Outside the building," he concluded, "there is a raging mob. They would
ruin me if they could, but they can't do it, they can't do it. We have
beaten them all, my lady. We have won!"
He was sealing his letter, when, without warning, "Fingerless" Fraser
appeared at his side, his fishlike eyes agleam, his colorless face drawn
with anxiety.
"They've come to grab you for killing that striker," he began,
breathlessly; "there's a couple of 'square-toes' on the dock now. Better
take it on the 'lam'--quick!"
"God!" So Marsh had withheld this stroke until the last moment, when the
least delay would be fatal. Boyd knew that if he were brought into court
he would have hard shift to clear himself against the mass of perjured
testimony that his rival had doubtless gathered; but even this seemed as
nothing in comparison with the main issue. For one wild instant he
considered sending George Balt on with the ship. That would be folly, no
doubt; yet plainly he could not hold The Bedford Castle and keep
together that raging army of fishermen while he fought his way through the
tedious vexations of a trial. He saw that he had under-estimated his
enemy's cunning, and he realized that, if Marsh had planned this move, he
would press his advantage to the full.
"There's two plain-clothes men," he heard Fraser running on. "I 'made' 'em
as they were talking to Peasley. You'd better 'beat' it, quick!"
"How? I couldn't get through that crowd. They know me. Listen!" Outside
the street broke into a roar at some taunt of the fishermen high up in the
rigging. "I can't run away, and if those detectives get me I'm ruined."
"Well! What's to be done?" demanded Fraser, sharply. "If you say the word,
we'll shoot it out with them, and get away on the ship before--"
"We can't do that--there are a dozen policemen in front here."
"Well, you'll have to move quick, or they'll 'cop' you, sure."
Boyd clinched his hands in desperation. "I guess they've got me," he said,
bitterly. "There's no way out."
His eyes fell upon the letter containing his boastful assurance of
victory. What a mockery!
"From what they said I don't think they know you," Fraser continued.
"Anyhow, they wanted Peasley to point you out. When they come off, maybe
you can slip 'em."
"But how?" Boyd seized eagerly upon the suggestion. "The wharf is empty--
see! I'll have to cross it in plain sight."
Through the rear door of the office that opened upon the dock proper they
beheld the great floor almost entirely clear. Save for a few tons of
freight at which Big George's men were working, it was as unobstructed as
a lawn; and, although it was nearly the size of a city block, it afforded
no more means of concealment than did the little office itself, with its
glass doors, its counter, and its long desk, at the farther end of which a
bill-clerk was poring over his task. Iron-barred windows at the front of
the room looked out upon the street; other windows and a door at the right
opened upon the driveway and railroad track, while at the rear the glass-
panelled door through which they had just been peering gave egress only to
the dock itself, up which the two officers were likely to come at any
instant. Even as Emerson, with a last desperate glance, summed up the
possible places of concealment, Fraser exclaimed, softly:
"There they are now!" and they saw at the foot of the gang-plank two men
talking with Big George. They saw Balt point the strangers carelessly to
the office, whence he had seen Boyd disappearing a few moments before, and
turn back to his stevedores; then they saw the plain-clothes men
approaching.
"Here! Gimme your coat and hat, quick!" cried Fraser in a low voice, his
eyes blazing at a sudden, thought. He stripped his own garments from his
back with feverish haste. "Put mine on. There! I'll stall for you. When
they grab me, take it on the run. Understand!"
"That won't do. Everybody knows me." Boyd cast an apprehensive glance at
the arched back of the bill-clerk, but Fraser, quick of resource in such a
situation, forced him swiftly to make the change, saying:
"Nix. It's your only 'out.' Stand here, see!" He indicated a position
beside the rear door. "I'll step out the other way where they can see me,"
he continued, pointing to the wagon-way at the right. "Savvy? When they
grab me, you beat it, and don't wait for nothing."
"But you--"
Already they could hear the footsteps of the officers.
"I'll take a chance. Good-bye."
There was no time even for a hand-shake; Fraser stepped swiftly to the
door, then strolled quietly out into the view of the two men, who an
instant later accosted him.
"Are you Mr. Boyd Emerson?"
The adventurer answered brusquely, "Yes, but I can't talk to you now."
"You are under arrest, Mr. Emerson."
Boyd waited to hear no more. The glass door swung open noiselessly under
his hand, and he stepped out just as the bill-clerk looked up from his
work, staring out through the other entrance.
"Fingerless" Fraser's voice was louder now, as if for a signal. "Arrest
me? What do you mean? Get out of my way."
"You'd better come peaceably."
Boyd heard a sharp exclamation--"Get him, Bill!" And then the sound of men
struggling. He ran, followed by a roar from the strikers, in whose full
view Fraser's encounter with the plain-clothes men was taking place. A
backward glance showed him that Fraser had drawn his pursuers to the
street. He had broken away and dodged out into the open, where the other
officers responded at a call and seized him as he apparently undertook to
break through the cordon. This diversion served an unexpected purpose. Not
only did it draw attention from Emerson's retreat, but it also gave the
mob its long-awaited opportunity. Recognizing in the officers' quarry the
supposed figure of Emerson, the hated cause of all this strife, the
strikers gave vent to a great shout of rage and triumph, and surged
forward across the wide street, carrying the police before them with
irresistible force.
In a moment it became not a question of keeping the entrance to the wharf,
but of protecting the life of the prisoner, and the policemen rallied with
their backs to the wall, their clubs working havoc with the heads that
came within striking distance.
Scarcely had Boyd reached Big George, when a wing of the besieging army
swept in through the unguarded entrance and down the dock like an
avalanche, leaving behind them the battling officers and the hungry pack
clamoring for the prisoner.
"Drop that freight, and get aboard the best way you can!" Boyd yelled at
the fishermen, and with a bound was out into the open crying to Captain
Peasley on the bridge:
"Here they come! Cast off, for God's sake!"
Instantly a wild cry of rage and defiance rose from the clotted rigging
and upper works of The Bedford Castle. Down the fishermen swarmed,
ready to over-flow the sides of the ship, but, with a sharp order to
George, Boyd ran up the gang-plank and rushed along the rail to a
commanding position in the path of his men, where, drawing his revolver,
he roared at them to keep back, threatening the first to go ashore. His
lungs were bursting from his sprint, and it was with difficulty that his
voice rose above the turmoil; but he presented such a figure of
determination that the men paused, and then the steamship whistle
interrupted opportunely, with a deafening blast.
The dozen men who had been slinging freight on the dock hastened up the
gang-plank or climbed the fenders, while the signal-man clung to the
lifting tackle, and, at the piping cry of his whistle, was swung aloft out
of the very arms of the rioters.
Above, on the flying bridge, Captain Peasley was bellowing orders; a
quartermaster was running up the iron steps to the pilot-house; on deck
the sailors were fighting their way to their posts through the ranks of
the raging fishermen and the shrieking confusion of the Orientals; the
last men aboard, with a "Heave Ho!" in unison, slid the gang-plank upward
and out of reach. The neighboring roofs, lately so black, were emptying
now, the onlookers hastening to join in the attack.
Big George alone remained upon the wharf. As he saw the rush coming he had
ordered his men to abandon their load; then he ran to the after-mooring,
and, taking slack from a deck hand, cast it off. Back up the dock he went
to the forward hawser, where, at a signal, he did the same, moving, toward
the last, without excessive hurry, as if in a spirit of bravado. The ship
was clear, and he had not cut a hawser. He had done his work; all but a
ton or two of the cargo was stowed. There was no longer cause for delay.
"Get aboard! Are you mad?" Emerson shouted, but the cry never reached him.
Back he came slowly, in front of the press, secure in his tremendous
strength, defiance in his every move, a smouldering challenge in his eyes;
and noting that gigantic frame with its square-hewn, flaming face, not one
of his enemies dared oppose him. But as he passed they yapped and snarled
and jostled at his heels, hungry to rend him and only lacking courage.
As yet the ship, although throbbing to the first pulsations of her
engines, lay snug along the piling, but gradually her stern swung off and
a wedge of clearance showed. Almost imperceptibly she drew back and rubbed
against the timbers. A fender began to squeeze and complain. The dock
planking creaked. Sixty seconds more and she would be out of arm's-reach,
and still George made no haste. Again Boyd shouted at him, and then with
one farewell glower over his shoulder the big fellow mounted a pile,
stretched his arms upward to the bulwarks, and swung himself lightly
aboard.
Even yet Emerson's anxiety was of the keenest; for, notwithstanding the
stress of these dragging moments, he had not forgotten Fraser, the
vagabond, the morally twisted rascal, to whose courage and resourcefulness
he owed so much. He strained his eyes for a glimpse of the fellow, at the
same time dreading the sight of a uniform. Would the ship never get under
way and out of hailing distance? If those officers had discovered their
mistake, they might yet have time to stop him. He vowed desperately that
he would not let them, not if he had to take The Bedford Castle to
sea with a gun at the back of her helmsman. He made his way hurriedly to
the bridge, where he hastily explained to Captain Peasley his evasion of
the officers; and here he found Cherry, her face flushed, her eyes
sparkling with excitement, but far too wise to speak to him in his present
state of mind.
A scattered shower of missiles came aboard as the strikers kept pace with
the steamer to the end of the slip, exciting the fishermen, who had again
mounted the rigging, to a simian frenzy. Oaths, insults, and jeers were
hurled back and forth; but as the big steamer gathered momentum and slid
out of her berth, they grew gradually more indistinct, until at last they
became muffled, broken, and meaningless. Even then the rival ranks
continued to volley profanely at each other, while the Captain, with hand
on the whistle-rope, blew taunting blasts; nor did the fishermen descend
from their perches until the forms on the dock had blurred together and
the city lay massed in the distance, tier upon tier, against the gorgeous
evening sky.