Cherry Malotte, coming down to the cannery on her daily visit, saw Willis
Marsh and Mr. Wayland leaving it. Wondering, she hurried into the main
building in search of Boyd. The place was as busy as when she had left it
on the afternoon before, and she saw that the men had been at work all
night; many of them were sprawled in corners, where they had sunk from
weariness, snatching a moment's rest before the boss kicked them back to
their posts. The Chinese hands were stoically performing their tasks,
their yellow faces haggard with the strain; at the butchering-tables
yesterday's crew was still slitting, slashing, hacking at the pile of fish
that never seemed to grow less. Some of them were giving up, staggering
away to their bunks, while others with more vitality had stood so long in
the slime and salt drip that their feet had swelled, and it had become
necessary to cut off their shoes.
Boyd was standing in the door of the office. In a few words he told her of
Mr. Wayland's threat.
"Do you think he can injure the company?" she inquired, anxiously.
"I haven't a doubt of it. He can work very serious harm, at least."
"Tell me--why did he turn against you so suddenly? What made Miss Wayland
angry with you?"
"I--I would rather not"
"Why? I'm your partner, and I ought to be told, You and George and I will
have to work together closer than ever now. Don't let's begin by
concealing anything."
"Well, perhaps you had better know the whole thing," said Boyd, slowly.
"Mildred does not like you; her father's mind has been poisoned by Marsh.
It seems they resent our friendship; they believe--all sorts of things."
"So I am the cause of your trouble, after all."
"They blame me equally--more than you. It seems that Marsh made an inquiry
into your--well, your life history--and he babbled all the gossip he heard
to them. Of course they believed it, not knowing you as I do, and they
misunderstood our friendship. But I can explain, and I shall, to Mildred.
Then I shall prove Marsh a liar. Perhaps I can show Mr. Wayland that he
was in the wrong. It's our only hope."
"What did Marsh say about me?" asked the girl.
She was pale to the lips.
"He said a lot of things that at any other time I would have made him
swallow on the spot. But it's only a pleasure deferred. With your help,
I'll do it in their presence. I don't like to tell you this, but the truth
is vital to us all, and I want to arm myself."
Cherry was silent.
"You may leave it to me," he said, gently. "I will see that Marsh sets you
right."
"There is nothing to set right," said the girl, wearily. "Marsh told the
truth, I dare say."
"The truth! My God! You don't know what you're saying!"
"Yes, I do." She returned his look of shocked horror with half-hearted
defiance. "You must have known who I am. Fraser knew, and he must have
told you. You knew I had followed the mining camps, you knew I had lived
by my wits. You must have known what people thought of me. I cast my lot
in with the people of this country, and I had to match my wits with those
of every man I met. Sometimes I won, sometimes I did not. You know the
North."
"I didn't know," he said, slowly. "I never thought--I wouldn't allow
myself to think--"
"Why not? It is nothing to you. You have lived, and so have I. I made
mistakes--what girl doesn't who has to fight her way alone? But my past is
my own; it concerns nobody but me." She saw the change in his face, and
her reckless spirit rose. "Oh, I've shocked you! You think all women
should be like Miss Wayland. Have you ever stopped to think that even you
are not the same man you were when you came fresh from college? You know
the world now; you have tasted its wickedness. Would you change your
knowledge for your earlier innocence? You know you would not, and you have
no right to judge me by a separate code. What difference does it make who
I am or what I have done? I didn't ask your record when I gave you the
chance to win Miss Wayland, and neither you nor she have any right to
challenge mine."
"I agree with you in that."
"I came away from the mining camps because of wagging tongues--because I
was forever misjudged. Whatever I may have been, I have at least played
fair with that girl; it hurts me now to be accused by her. I saw your love
for her, and I never tried to rob her. Oh, don't look as if I couldn't
have done differently if I had tried. I could have injured her very easily
if I had been the sort she thinks me. But I helped you in every way I
could. I made sacrifices, I did things she would never have done."
She stopped on the verge of tears. Boyd felt the justice of her words. He
could not forget the unselfish devotion and loyalty she had shown
throughout his long struggle. For the hundredth time there came to him the
memory of her services in the matter of Hilliard's loan, and the thought
caused him unspeakable distress.
"Why--did you do all this?" he asked.
"Don't you know?" Cherry gazed at him with a faint smile.
Then, for the first time, the whole truth burst upon him. The surprise of
it almost deprived him of speech, and he stammered:
"No, I--I--" Then he fell silent.
"What little I did, I did because I love you," said the girl, in a tired
voice. "You may as well know, for it makes no difference now."
"I--I am sorry," he said, gripped by a strong emotion that made him go hot
and cold. "I have been a fool."
"No, you were merely wrapped up in your own affairs. You see, I had been
living my own life, and was fairly contented till you came; then
everything changed. For a long time I hoped you might grow to love me as I
loved you, but I found it was no use. When I saw you so honest and
unselfish in your devotion to that other girl, I thought it was my chance
to do something unselfish in my turn. It was hard--but I did my best. I
think I must love you in the same way you love her, Boyd, for there is
nothing in all the world I would not do to make you happy. That's all
there is to the poor little story, and it won't make any difference now,
except that you and I can't go on as we have done; I shall never have the
courage to come back after this. You will win Miss Wayland yet, and attain
your heart's desire. I am only sorry that I have made it harder for you--
that I cannot help you any further. But I cannot. There is but one thing
more I can do--"
"I want no more sacrifice!" he cried, roughly. "I've been blind. I've
taken too much from you already."
The girl stood for a moment with her eyes turned toward the river. Then
she said:
"I must think. I--I want to go away. Good-bye."
"Good-bye," he returned, and stood watching her as she hurried away, half
suspecting the tears that were trembling amid her lashes.
It was not until supper-time that Boyd saw "Fingerless" Fraser, and
questioned him about his quest for an heiress.
"Nothing doing in the heiress business," replied the adventurer. "I
couldn't stand the exposure."
"They were cold, eh?"
"Yep! They weathered me out."
"Did you really meet any of those people?"
"Sure! I met 'em all, but I didn't catch their names. I 'made' one before
I'd gone a mile--tall, slim party, with cracked ice in her voice."
Boyd looked up quickly. "Did you introduce yourself?"
"As Chancy De Benville, that's all. How is that for a drawing-room
monaker? She fell for the name all right, but there must have been
something phony about the clothes. That's the trouble with this park
harness; if I'd wore my 'soup and fish' and my two-gallon hat, I'd have
passed for a gentleman sure. I'm strong for those evening togs. I see
another one later; a little Maduro colored skirt with a fat nose."
"Miss Berry."
"I'm glad to meet her. I officed her out of a rowboat and told her I was
Mr. Yonkers of New York. We was breezing along on the bit till Clyde broke
it up. He called me Fraser, and it was cold in a minute. Fraser is a cheap
name, anyhow; I'm sorry I took it."
"Do you mean to say it isn't your real name?" asked his companion, in
genuine bewilderment.
"Naw! Switzer is what I was born with. Say it slow and it sounds like an
air brake, don't it? I never won a bet as long as I packed it around, and
Fraser hasn't got it beat by more than a lip."
"Well!" Boyd breathed deeply. "You are the limit."
"Speaking of clothes, I notice you are dressed up like a fruit salad. What
is it? The yacht!"
"Yes."
"You'd better hurry; she sails at high tide."
"Sails!"
"Alton told me so, and said that he was going along."
"Thank Heaven for that, anyhow, but--I don't understand about the other."
Boyd voiced the question that was foremost in his mind.
"Did you know Cherry in the 'upper country'?"
"Nope."
"She said you did."
"She said that?"
"Yes. She thought you had told me who she was."
"Hell! She might have known I'd never crack. It's her own business, and--
I've got troubles enough with this cannery on my hands."
"I wish you had told me," said Emerson.
"Why? There's no use of rehearsing the dog-eared dope. Nobody can live the
past over again, and who wants to repeat the present? It's only the future
that's worth while. I guess her future is just as good as anybody's."
"What she told me came as a shock."
"Fingerless" Fraser grunted. "I don't know why. For my part, I can't stand
for an ingenue. If ever I get married, Cherry's the sort for me. I'm out
of the kindergarten myself, and I'd hate to spend my life cutting paper
figures for my wife. No, sir! If I ever seize a frill, I want her to know
as much as me; then she won't tear away with the first dark-eyed diamond
broker that stops in front of my place to crank up his whizz-buggy. You
never heard of a wise woman breaking up her own home, did you? It's the
pink-faced dolls from the seminary that fall for Bertie the Beautiful
Cloak Model."
Fraser whittled himself a toothpick as he went on:
"A feller in my line of business don't gather much useful information, but
he certainly gets Jerry to the female question in all its dips, angles,
and spurs. Cherry Malotte is the squarest girl I ever saw, and while she
may have been crowded at the turn, she'll finish true. It takes a
thoroughbred to do that, and the guy that gets her will win his Derby.
Now, those fillies on the yacht, for instance, warm up fine, but you can't
tell how they'll run."
"We're not talking of marriage," said Boyd, as he rose. When he had gone
out, Fraser ruminated aloud:
"Maybe not! I ain't very bright, and we may have been talking about the
weather. However, if you're after that wild-flower dame with the cold-
storage talk instead of Cherry Malotte, why, I hope you get her. There's
no accounting for tastes. I certainly did my best to send you along this
morning." Turning to the Jap steward, he remarked, sagely: "My boy, always
remember one thing--if you can't boost, don't knock."
Wayne Wayland was by no means sure that Boyd would not make good his
threat to visit the yacht that evening, and in any case he wished to be
prepared. A scene before the other passengers of The Grande Dame
was not to be thought of. Besides, if the young man were roughly handled,
it would make him a martyr in Mildred's eyes. He talked over the matter
with Marsh, who suggested that the sightseers should dine ashore and spend
the evening with him at the plant. With only Mildred and her father left
on the yacht, there would be no possibility of scandal, even if Emerson
were mad enough to force an interview.
"And what is more," declared Mr. Wayland, "I shall give orders to clear on
the high tide. That fellow is a menace, and the sooner Mildred is away
from him the better. You shall go with us, my boy."
But when he went to Mildred, to explain the nature of his arrangements, he
found her in a furious temper.
"Why did you announce my engagement to Mr. Marsh?" she demanded, angrily.
"The whole ship is talking about it. By what right did you do that?"
"I did it for your own sake," said the old man. "This whelp, Emerson, has
made a fool of you and of me long enough. There must be an end to it."
"But I don't love Willis Marsh!" she cried. "You forget I am of age."
"Nonsense! Willis is a fine fellow, he loves you, and he is the best
business man for his years I have ever known. If it were not for this
foolish boy-and-girl affair, you would return his love. He suits me, and--
well, I have put my foot down, so there's an end of it."
"Do you intend to force me to marry him?"
Mr. Wayland recognized the danger-signal.
"Absurd! Take all the time you wish; you'll come around all right. That
reprobate you were engaged to defied me and defended that woman."
He told of his stormy interview with Boyd, concluding: "It is fortunate we
found him out, Mildred. I have guarded you all my life. I have lavished
everything money could buy upon you. I have built up the greatest fortune
in all the West for you. I have kept you pure and sweet and good--and to
think that such a fellow should dare--" Mr. Wayland choked with anger.
"The one thing I cannot stand in a man or a woman is immorality. I have
lived clean myself, and my son shall be as clean as I."
"Did you say that Boyd threatened to come aboard this evening?" questioned
the girl.
"Yes. But I swore that he should not."
"And still he repeated his threat?" Mildred's eyes were strangely bright.
She was smiling as if to herself.
"He did, the braggart! He had better not try it."
"Then he'll come," said Mildred.
It was twilight when Willis Marsh was rowed out to the yacht. He found Mr.
Wayland and Mildred seated in deck-chairs enjoying the golden sunset while
the old man smoked. Marsh explained that he had excused himself from his
guests to go whither his inclination led him, and drew his seat close to
Mildred, rejoicing in the fact that no one could gainsay him this
privilege. In reality, he had been drawn to The Grande Dame largely
by a lurking fear of Emerson. He was not entirely sure of the girl, and
would not feel secure until the shores of Kalvik had sunk from sight and
his rival had been left behind. But in spite of his uneasiness, it was the
happiest moment of his life. If he had failed to ruin his enemy in the
precise way he had planned, he was fairly satisfied with what he had
accomplished. He had shifted the battle to stronger shoulders, and he had
gained the woman he wanted. Moreover, he had won the unfaltering loyalty
of Wayne Wayland, the dominant figure of the West. Nothing could keep him
now from the success his ambition demanded. It added to his satisfaction
to note the group of lusty sailors at the rail. He almost wished that
Emerson would try to come aboard, that he might witness his discomfiture.
Meanwhile he did his best to be pleasant.
His complaisant enjoyment was interrupted at last by the approach of the
second officer, who announced that a lady wished to see Mr. Wayland.
"A lady?" asked the old man, in surprise.
"Yes, sir. She came alongside in a small boat, just now, with some
natives. I stopped her at the landing, but she says she must see you at
once."
"Ah! That woman again." Mr. Wayland's jaws snapped. "Tell her to begone. I
refuse to see her."
"Very well, sir!" The mate turned, but Mildred said, suddenly:
"Wait! Why don't you talk to her, father?"
"That creature? I have nothing to say to her."
"Quite right!" agreed Marsh, with a cautionary glance at the speaker. "She
is up to some trick."
"She may have something really important to say to you," urged the girl.
"No."
Mildred leaned forward, and called to the ship's officer: "Show her up. I
will see her."
"Mildred, you mustn't talk to that woman!" her father cried.
"It is very unwise," Marsh chimed in, apprehensively. "She isn't the sort
of person--"
Miss Wayland chilled him with a look and waved the mate away, then sank
back into her chair.
"I have talked with her already. I assure you she is not dangerous."
"Have your own way," Mr. Wayland grunted. "But it is bound to lead to
something unpleasant. She has probably come with a message from--that
fellow."
Willis Marsh squirmed uncomfortably in his seat. He fixed his eyes upon
the knot of men at the starboard rail; an expression of extreme alertness
came over his bland features. His feet were drawn under him, and his
fingers were clinched upon the arms of his chair. Then, with a sharp
indrawing of his breath, he leaped up and darted down the deck.
Over the side had come Cherry Malotte, accompanied by an Indian girl in
shawl and moccasins--a slim, shrinking creature who stood as if
bewildered, twisting her hands and staring about with frightened eyes.
Behind them, head and shoulders above the sailors, towered a giant copper-
hued breed with a child in his arms.
They saw that Marsh was speaking to the newcomers, but could not
distinguish his words. The Indian girl fell back as if terrified. She
cried out something in her own tongue, shook her head violently, and
pointed to her white companion. Marsh's face was livid; he shook a
quivering hand in Cherry Malotte's face. It seemed as if he would strike
her; but Constantine strode between them, scowling silently down into the
smaller man's face, his own visage saturnine and menacing. Marsh retreated
a step, chattering excitedly. Then Cherry's voice came clearly to the
listeners:
"It is too late now, Mr. Marsh. You may as well face the music."
Followed by the stares of the sailors, she came up the deck toward the old
man and his daughter, who had arisen, the Indian girl clinging to her
sleeve, the tall breed striding noiselessly behind. Willis Marsh came with
them, his white lips writhing, his face like putty. He made futile
detaining grasps at Constantine, and in the silence that suddenly
descended upon the ship, they heard him whispering.
"What is the meaning of this?" demanded Mr. Wayland.
"I heard you were about to sail, so I came out to see you before--"
Marsh broke in, hoarsely: "She's a bad woman! She has come here for
blackmail!"
"Blackmail!" cried Wayne Wayland. "I thought as much!"
"That's her game. She wants money!"
Cherry shrugged her shoulders and showed her white teeth in a smile.
"Mr. Marsh anticipates slightly. You may judge if he is right."
Marsh started to speak, but Mildred Wayland, who had been watching him
intently, was before him.
"Who sent you here, Miss?"
"No one sent me. If Mr. Marsh will stop his chatter, I can make myself
understood."
"Don't listen to her--"
Cherry turned upon him swiftly. "You've got to face it, so you may as well
keep still."
He fell silent.
"We heard that Mr. Marsh was going away with you, and I came out to ask
him for enough money to support his child while he is gone."
"His child!" Wayne Wayland turned upon his daughter's fiance with a face
of stern surprise. "Willis, tell her she is lying!"
"She's lying!" Marsh repeated, obediently; but they saw the truth in his
face.
Cherry spoke directly to Miss Wayland now. "I have supported this little
fellow and his mother for a year." She indicated the red-haired youngster
in Constantine's arms. "That is all I care to do. When you people arrived,
Mr. Marsh induced Chakawana to take the baby up-river to a fishing-camp
and stay there until you had gone. But Constantine heard that he intended
to marry you, and hearing also that he intended leaving to-night,
Constantine brought his sister back in the hope that Mr. Marsh would do
what is right. You see, he promised to marry Chakawana long before he met
you."
Mildred could have done murder at the expression she saw in Cherry's face.
This woman she had scorned had humbled her in earnest. With flashing eyes
she turned upon her father.
"Since you were so prompt in announcing my engagement, perhaps you can
deny it with equal promptness."
"Good God! What a scandal if this is true!" Wayne Wayland wiped his
forehead.
"Oh, it's true," said Cherry.
In the silence that followed the child struggled out of Constantine's arms
and stood beside his mother, the better to inspect these strangers. His
little face was grimy, his clothes, cut in the native fashion, were poor
and not very clean; yet he was more white than Aleut, and no one seeing
him could doubt his parentage. The seamen had left their posts, and were
watching with such absorption that they failed to see a skiff with a
single oarsman swing past the stern of The Grande Dame and make
fast to the landing. Still unobserved, the man mounted the companionway
swiftly.
For once in his life Wayne Wayland was too confused for definite speech.
Willis Marsh stood helpless, his plump face slack-jowled and beaded with
sweat. He could not yet grasp the completeness of his downfall, and waited
anxiously for some further sign from Mildred. It came at last in a look
that scorched him, firing him to a last effort.
"Don't believe her!" he broke out. "She is lying to protect her own
lover!" He pointed to Chakawana. "That girl is the child's mother, but its
father is Boyd Emerson!"
"Boyd Emerson was never in Kalvik until last December," said Cherry. "The
child is three years old."
"It seems I am being discussed," said a voice behind them. Emerson clove
his way through the sailors, striding directly to Marsh. "What is the
meaning of this?"
Mildred Wayland laid a fluttering hand upon her breast. "I knew he would
come," she breathed.
Constantine broke his silence for the first time, addressing Mildred
directly.
"This baby b'long Mr. Marsh. He say he goin' marry Chakawana, but he lie;
he goin' marry you because you are rich girl." He turned to Marsh. "What
for you lie, eh?" He leaned forward with a frightful scowl. "I tell you
long time ago I kill you if you don' marry my sister."
"Now I understand!" exclaimed Boyd. "It was you who stabbed him that night
in the cannery."
"Yes! Chakawana tell him what the pries' say 'bout woman what don' marry.
My sister say she go to hell herself and don' care a damn, but it ain't
right for little baby to go to hell too."
"What do you mean by that?" asked Mr. Wayland.
"The Father say if white man take Indian woman and don' marry her, she go
to hell for thousan' year--mebbe two, three thousan' year. Anyhow, she
don' never see Jesus' House. That's bad thing!" The breed shook his head
seriously. "Chakawana she's good girl, and she go to church; I give money
to the pries' too, plenty money every time, but he says that's no good--
she's got to be marry or she'll burn for always with little baby. By God!
that's make her scare', because little baby ain't do nothing to burn that
way. Mr. Marsh he say it's all damn lie, and he don't care if little baby
do go to hell. You hear that? He don't care for little baby."
Constantine's eyes were full of tears as he strove laboriously to voice
his religious teachings. He went on with growing agitation:
"Chakawana she's mighty scare' of that bad place. and she ask Mr. Marsh
again to marry her, but he beat her. That's when I try to kill him. Mebbe
Mr. Emerson ain't come so quick, Mr. Marsh go to hell himself."
Wayne Wayland turned upon Marsh.
"Why don't you say something?"
"I told you the brat isn't mine!" he cried. "If it isn't Emerson's, it's
Cherry Malotte's. They want money, but I won't be bled."
"You marry my sister?" asked Constantine.
"No!" snarled Willis Marsh. "You can all go to hell and take the child
with you--"
Without a single warning cry, the breed lunged swiftly; the others saw
something gleam in his hand. Emerson jumped for him, and the three men
went to the deck in a writhing tangle, sending the furniture spinning
before them. Mildred screamed, the sailors rushed forward, pushing her
aside and blotting out her view. The sudden violence of the assault had
frightened her nearly out of her senses. She fled to her father, striving
to hide her face against his breast, but something drew her eyes back to
the spot where the men were clinched. She heard Boyd Emerson cry to the
sailors:
"Get out of the way! I've got him!" Then saw him locked in the Indian's
arms. They had gained their feet now, and spun backward, bringing up
against the yacht's cabin with a crash of shivering glass. A knife,
wrenched from the breed's grasp, went whirling over the side into the sea.
Cherry Malotte ran forward, and at her voice the savage ceased his
struggles.
Wayne Wayland loosed his daughter's hold and thrust his way in among the
sailors, kneeling beside the man he had chosen for his son-in-law. Emerson
joined him, then rose quickly, crying:
"Is there a doctor among your party?"
"Doctor Berry! Send for Berry! He's gone ashore!" exclaimed Mr. Wayland.
"Quick! Somebody fetch Doctor Berry!" Boyd directed.
As the sailors drew apart, Mildred Wayland saw a sight that made her grow
deathly faint and close her eyes. Turning, she fled blindly into the
cabin. A few moments later Emerson found her stretched unconscious at the
head of the main stairs, with a hysterical French maid sobbing over her.