A Fight for Fortune - T.C. Bridges - E-Book

A Fight for Fortune E-Book

T.C. Bridges

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Beschreibung

A pair of seventeen-year-old boys leaves the house to make their way to fate in the Far Eastern seas. „It must be my hands that are at fault, then,” replied Clive. „I’ve been trying everywhere for the past three weeks, and can’t get taken on. I came down here to look up Captain Brereton, an old friend of my father’s. He’s skipper and part owner of a tramp steamer, the Sphinx. I hoped to cadge a passage to Australia, where I thought I might find a job.”

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Contents

I. THE MAN WITH THE BLACK BAG

II. ACROSS THE ROOF-TOPS

III. WHAT THE BLACK BAG HELD

IV. THE SCHOONER "BRILLIANT"

V. THE FLOATING CASTLE

VI. HOW THE BIG JUNK CAUGHT A TARTAR

VII. HERITAGE TAKES THE TILLER

VIII. WHEN THE FISH STOPPED BITING

IX. AT GRIPS WITH THE SEA-DEVIL

X. THE COMING OF THE CASTAWAY

XI. THE BATTLE FOR THE SCHOONER

XII. IN THE DEPTHS OF THE LAGOON

XIII. THE MASTER OF THE PEARL PIT

XIV. THE HUNTED SHIP

XV. KUSIMA DRIVES A HARD BARGAIN

XVI. STARK SHOWS HIS HAND

XVII. THE BATTLE IN THE BUSH

XVIII. THE TENDER MERCIES OF STARK

XIX. WHEN THE STORM BROKE

XX. THE ORDEAL BY ROPE

XXI. HOW THE TABLES WERE TURNED

XXII. THE LAST CHAPTER

I. THE MAN WITH THE BLACK BAG

“CLIVE DENHAM, what are you doing in Plymouth?”

Clive, who had been sheltering from a sharp shower under a shop awning at the corner of Dockyard Road, looked up with a startled expression upon his thin, keen face.

An alert-looking youngster of about his own age, seventeen, stood before him, with a smile twinkling in his merry blue eyes.

Clive drew a quick breath, and grasped the other’s outstretched hand.

“I might ask you the same question, Austin, old chap. You’re the last person I expected to run into down here.”

“Why? You knew we lived in Cornwall.”

“Yes, but somehow I didn’t connect Cornwall with Plymouth.”

“Machinery and mathematics are the only things you ever could connect up,” laughed Austin, cheerily. “Cornwall is only just the other side of the Hamoaze, and I’m often in Plymouth. But as for you, I thought you were up in your father’s works at Coventry.”

“My father is dead,” said Clive, quietly.

A quick expression of remorse crossed Austin’s face.

“My dear chap, I’m awfully sorry. When was it?”

“A month ago,” said Clive.

“Are you going to carry on the works?” asked Austin.

“There are no works to carry on,” replied Clive.

Then, seeing the other’s look of astonishment, he went on:

“My poor dad ruined himself with his experiments. He spent every penny on that new flying machine, and then he caught cold just before he’d finished it. He’d been overworking, and was in an awfully shaky state, and he got pneumonia, and it finished him inside a week.”

“Hard luck!” said Chesney, sympathetically. “Then you’re at a loose end?”

“Very loose,” said Clive, with a grim smile on his thin face. “I’ve got rather less than five pounds between me and the workhouse.”

“Rot, man!” retorted Austin. “A chap with a head like yours can always get a job.”

“It must be my hands that are at fault, then,” replied Clive. “I’ve been trying everywhere for the past three weeks, and can’t get taken on. I came down here to look up Captain Brereton, an old friend of my father’s. He’s skipper and part owner of a tramp steamer, the Sphinx. I hoped to cadge a passage to Australia, where I thought I might find a job.”

“Are you going?”

“Worse luck! He’s just sailed. And he won’t be back for four months or more.”

Austin gave a low whistle.

“That’s bad,” he said. “Look here, old chap, it’s nearly one. Come and feed with me, and we’ll talk things over. We’ll go and have a blow-out at the ‘Lockyer.’”

Clive hesitated. “I’m afraid–” he began.

“Afraid be blowed!” said Austin. “You’re not going to be too proud to have lunch with your old school pal. Come on, or I’ll call a taxi, and take you by force.”

A very pleasant smile lighted up Clive’s rather sad face.

“Bosh, man! I’m not proud in that way. Only my togs are hardly up to ‘Lockyer’ form.” And he glanced down at his neat but almost threadbare blue serge.

“I don’t care where we go, so long as we get a square feed,” said Austin. “I’m as hungry as a hawk, for I breakfasted at seven. The rain has stopped. Come on.”

Down around the Barbican in Plymouth lie some of the meanest streets to be found in any big town in the South of England. They are narrow, squalid, and dirty, and haunted by plenty of the bad characters who are always to be found in any big seaport.

Austin, however, seemed to know his way, and struck up through an alley which was one degree worse than the road which they had just left. The rough cobbles streamed with muddy water, the windows of the tall houses which rose on either side were many of them broken, and the holes stuffed with dirty rags. In the grey light of the raw autumn day the place had an indescribably squalid appearance.

Half-way up the alley, which rose steeply towards the main part of the town, there passed them a thin, wiry-looking man of about forty years of age. He was carrying a small black bag, and walked with a slight limp.

The boys both noticed him because he was such a contrast to the ordinary inhabitants of this part of the town. His dark tweeds were well cut, his linen was white, and his brown boots perfectly polished. In spite of his slight lameness and his quiet attire, there was something distinguished about him. He was the sort to attract attention even in a crowd.

“A service man, I’ll bet,” said Austin, glancing after him. “Navy probably.”

“I wonder what he’s doing in this beastly slum,” said Clive.

Austin shrugged his broad shoulders.

“May have got a yacht down in the Cattewater,” he said. And then, with a sudden change of tone, “Hulloa, that chap’s following him!”

Out of a dark archway had glided a most villainous-looking loafer–a squat, beetle-browed blackguard, dressed in greasy overalls and an old brown fisherman’s jersey. His cap was pulled well down over his forehead, but failed to hide as vicious a face as either of the two boys had ever set eyes on.

“I believe you’re right,” replied Clive, in a low tone. “Keep moving, Austin. Don’t let him see you’re looking at him.”

The two walked slowly on, but each keeping the tail of his eye on the loafer, who had quickened his pace, and was keeping about twenty yards behind the man with the black bag.

Austin pinched Clive’s arm.

“There’s another,” he said, in a sharp whisper. “See–coming out of that turning on the other side of the street.”

Clive glanced quickly round.

The new arrival on the scene was not quite so repulsive- looking as the first man, but appeared every bit as dangerous. He was a foreigner, and by his yellow-brown face and high cheek- bones apparently from the Far East.

He was dressed in ordinary seaman’s kit, but in spite of his rough garb and heavy boots there was something suggestive of a panther in his soft, swift step and agile movements.

As he came out of the turning he gave one quick glance at the man with the black bag, then, keeping on his own side of the street, followed the other two.

“There’s not a doubt about it,” said Austin Chesney; “both those men are after him. I don’t half like the look of it.”

“More do I,” said Clive. “I vote we turn and follow them.”

“Just what I was going to suggest,” replied Austin, quietly. And, suiting the action to the word, he turned, and the two began to walk quickly, but as quietly as possible, down hill behind the other three.

The first ruffian quickened his pace, and, catching up the lame man, passed him.

“False alarm, after all,” muttered Austin.

“Don’t you be too sure,” replied Clive.

The words were hardly out of his mouth before the foreigner broke into a sharp run, and coming up behind the lame man with surprising speed and silence, snatched the bag out of his hand, and bolted straight on down the alley as hard as he could leg.

With a cry of rage the lame man started in pursuit, and it astonished the boys to see how fast he could travel in spite of his limp.

But now the beetle-browed fellow took a hand, or rather a foot, in the game.

As the lame man came opposite he thrust out one leg and tripped him, sending him sprawling on hands and knees on the slimy cobbles. Then he darted off at top speed after his confederate.

By this time the boys were both running hard in pursuit. They did not wait to pick up the lame man, but as they dashed past Austin shouted:

“Don’t worry. We’ll get your bag back.”

The fellow who had tripped the lame man heard Austin, turned his head, saw the two boys in full chase, and redoubled his pace. At the same time he gave his accomplice a warning shout.

Austin and Clive were both pretty fast, and they gained on him hand over fist. Within fifty yards they were almost level.

Suddenly the ruffian swung round and turned on them, brandishing a sheath-knife.

“Get back!” he cried, with a horrible threat. “Get back, or I’ll do for you!”

Austin had a heavy walking-stick. Without checking at all, he ran straight at the fellow, and with a sweeping blow caught him clean across the knuckles.

A howl of pain escaped him, and the knife flew from his numbed fingers and spun tinkling across the cobbles.

“Get on, Clive, and catch the other chap,” shouted Austin. “I can tackle this beggar.”

With one glance behind him Clive sped on.

Mad with rage, the burly ruffian hurled himself at Austin, and attempted to kick him in the stomach.

It was the most foolish thing that he could possibly have done, for Austin had not been five years at a big public school and the rest of his life among Cornish mines without learning how to defend himself in any kind of rough-and-tumble.

Like a flash he stooped and seized the man’s upraised foot in both hands, and gave it a quick hoist. The natural result was that his assailant flew bodily into the air, and that the first portion of his weighty person which again reached firm ground was the back of his head.

His skull met the pavement with such a crack that he simply flattened out, and lay as limp as a rag doll. It would be a good many hours before he would take any further interest in black bags or other such important matters.

“Well done, my lad!” came a shout from behind, but Austin did not even turn his head. Leaving the ruffian where he lay, he was off as hard as he could run after Clive and the foreigner.

He was just in time to see the latter whirl to the left through an archway, and Clive, turning so sharply that he had to catch the masonry at the edge to steady himself, followed at equal speed.

The ugly thought flashed across him that the foreigner was certain to be armed, and might lie in wait round the corner, and put his knife into Clive as he came up.

He spurted for all he was worth, but when he got into the narrow court which ran up from the archway his fears were not realised.

Clive and the foreigner both had totally disappeared.

He stared round. There was not a soul in the place, and the dirty windows set in the tall walls on either hand seemed to mock him with their silence and emptiness.

II. ACROSS THE ROOF-TOPS

“CLIVE!” he shouted at the top of his voice.

To his great relief Clive’s voice answered: “Here, Austin. Second door on the right.” And there was his chum looking out of a first-floor window.

Austin did not wait to ask questions. He dashed in through the door into an empty, boarded passage, and up a steep, narrow flight of bare, dirty stairs.

Clive was now a landing higher. He looked back as Austin came clattering up.

“I’ve treed him,” he cried, breathlessly. “He’s gone right up to the top. Come along. We’ll collar him somewhere up in the attics.”

“I heard a door slam up at the top,” said Clive, quickly, as Austin joined him. “He’s trapped all right.”

“I doubt it,” answered Austin, as side by side they raced up the last flight leading to the top floor.

Here was a long passage with four doors opening out from it, two on each side. By the rotten state of the flooring, and the thick damp and mildew on the crumbling plaster of the walls, it was plain that the house had been long uninhabited.

Austin flung open the doors one by one. Three yielded at first touch, but the fourth was fastened from the inside.

“Here’s where he is,” said Clive, his thin face blazing with excitement. Austin hardly knew him for the quiet, melancholy- looking fellow whom he had met barely half an hour before. “We must burst the door in.”

“Shoulders to it,” said Austin in a quieter tone. “And look out for his knife if we get through.”

Stepping back a few paces they made a rush, and both together drove their shoulders against the door.

It was quite rotten, and under their combined weight went all to flinders, and they landed inside the room on their hands and knees in a cloud of dust and splinters.

Heedless of cuts and scratches, they were both on their feet in an instant, but the room was as bare as the other three.

“The bird’s flown,” muttered Austin.

“And there’s the door of his cage,” answered Clive, pointing to a trap-door in the low-browed, sloping roof.

There was a broken chair beneath it, and Austin was up on this in an instant, and had got both hands against the door.

To his surprise it was not fastened, and flew open easily. They found afterwards that the staple which held the bolt was rusted through.

Austin swung himself actively up, and Clive, who was thoroughly roused, followed.

“There he is!” cried Austin, in triumph.

The foreigner had slid down the slates at the back of the house, and was clambering steadily along the edge, his feet in the gutter and his body sprawled out along the sloping roof. The black bag was slung by a piece of cord around his neck, and hung across his back.

He saw the boys emerge upon the roof, and his thin lips drew back in a wolf-like snarl.

Clive glanced at the steeply sloping roof, and the great depth below the eaves. It was at least a fifty-foot drop.

“He’s done us,” he said, bitterly. “The chap’s a sailor, and we can never follow him.”

“Not follow him?” answered Austin, in surprise. “Why not?”

Then, catching the look in Clive’s face, “You stay here,” he said. “I’m accustomed to this sort of game. I’ll fix him all right.”

Young Chesney’s father was owner of a big Cornish tin-mine, and the boy had been accustomed, almost since he could walk, to clambering about the old shafts and winzes. Height had no terrors for his seasoned head, and without hesitation he pulled off his boots, and in stockinged feet let himself slide quietly down the slope of the roof until he reached the gutter.

Then, getting his feet into the narrow iron trough, he began working his way steadily along in pursuit of the thief.

Clive Denham, watching breathlessly from the mouth of the trap-door, saw the confident look on the Easterner’s face change to terror as he saw that his pursuer was as good a climber as himself, and watched him quicken his pace. The house they were in was the last but one in the row, and the gutter ran straight onwards to the end of the next roof.

What there was beyond Clive could not see. Apparently a sheer drop into some open space. What would happen when the fugitive reached the end he could not imagine.

No more, for that matter, could Austin. He saw even more plainly than Clive that there appeared no way of escape for the thief. But at the same time he was equally at a loss how to tackle him, now that he had got him cornered.

Neither of them would be able to use their hands, so all he could do would be to keep his position and wait until help came.

He looked up.

“Clive,” he cried, “go and fetch a bobby. And tell him to bring some rope. We shall have to lasso this beauty from the ridge of the roof.”

The foreigner uttered an exclamation of fury in a language unknown to Austin. It sounded rather like the spitting of an angry cat. But all the time he kept on moving slowly but steadily along the gutter.

As he neared the extreme end he suddenly quickened his pace. Why he did so Austin could not at first conceive. But he very soon understood.

Reaching the extreme corner, the foreigner turned to Austin, and made a gesture of derision, at the same time hissing out some insulting words.

Then he deliberately let himself down off the roof, and hung with his hands gripping the gutter.

For a moment Austin fancied the fellow must have gone mad. He himself, flattened out across the slates, could not see the object of the thief’s manouvre.

Clinging with his yellow, claw-like fingers to the edge of the gutter, the latter swung a moment, then his head slipped slowly over the edge, his hands let go, and he vanished from Austin’s sight.

At last Austin understood. A rain-pipe ran down at the angle of the wall, and was stapled far enough out from the brickwork to give plenty of hand-hold. Down this the agile Easterner was clambering with the ease and assurance of a monkey.

Austin felt rather like a dog that suddenly sees its bone snatched away from in front of it. But he was one of the sort who are not easily defeated. He was not going back to the lame man without his bag–if it were in any way possible to regain it.

If the downfall pipe would bear the other chap it would bear him, and it was quicker to follow him that way than to climb back into the house. Indeed, he was more than doubtful whether he could manage to return up that steep slope of smooth slates.

Austin hurried as quickly as possible to the corner, and, glancing over, saw the other nearly half-way down. Deliberately he swung off, and, gripping the pipe between his knees, followed.

Now he blessed the forethought which had caused him to take off his boots before he started. With his bare feet he got a far better grip on the pipe than was possible to the thief, and he slid down at a great rate, gaining rapidly on the other, who, active as he was, was hampered by his heavy footgear.

Even so the foreign gentleman had such a big start that it was doubtful whether he would overtake him before he reached the bottom.

Glancing down, Austin saw that the pipe ended in a yard, or garden, small but very neatly kept. There were plants in pots and a small arbour covered with creepers.

He was still quite ten feet from the ground when he realised that the other had reached the bottom. Another moment and he would be out of reach. Without stopping to think Austin let go, and came crashing down right on the thief’s head, knocking him flat and falling on top of him.

The shock almost stunned Austin, and he rolled over on the hard gravel, and lay there with all the wind knocked out of him, helpless as a baby.

The Oriental staggered to his feet. His face was absolutely fiendish. He drew his knife from the sheath at his belt, and swooped down upon Austin like a hawk stooping at its prey.

Another moment and the gleaming steel would have been buried in Austin’s side, when, with a roar like that of a small lion, a large brindled bull-terrier came galloping across the little garden, and buried a fine set of shining white teeth in the calf of the Oriental’s leg.

With a yell of pain and fright he turned and made a wild stab at the dog. But as he swung round so did the dog, and the knife- blade wasted its force on thin air.

“Ah, would ye?” came a voice which put the bull-terrier’s to shame. “Ye murtherin’ thief! I’ll tache ye to thry them sort o’ tricks! Stick Chump, is it? Begorra, I’ll carve ye into cat’s- mate before I’m through wid ye!”

And the new-comer, a burly Irishman with fiery red hair and a forty-five-inch chest, seized the Easterner by the scruff of the neck with one huge fist, and with the other snatched his knife from him, and sent it whirling over the wall into the next yard.

With a snarl the brown man twisted himself round, and buried his teeth in the other’s wrist.

A clout on the side of the head that nearly stunned him was his reward.

“Ah, ye’d dine off me, would ye, ye dirty cannibal? Begorra, I’ll give ye something to drink wid it!”

And swinging the vicious little scoundrel clean off his feet he lifted him high into the air, and, stepping across to the water-butt, deliberately dropped him into four feet of almost ice-cold rain-water.

“Steady on! You’ll drown him,” exclaimed Austin, who had got his wind back, and had struggled to his feet.

“Faith, and a good job too! If every Malay in Plymouth–aye, and in the Islands, too–was drowned ‘twould be no loss. But ye needn’t worry, mister–there’s his head stickin’ out, for all the world like a monkey’s from a cage.

“Stay where ye are till I’m ready to attend further to ye,” he continued, shaking his ponderous fist at the miserable thief, whose face was livid with cold, while his teeth were chattering like Spanish castanets. “Watch him, Chump.”

The bull-terrier uttered a thunderous growl, and took up a strategic position close under the barrel, and for the life of him Austin couldn’t help laughing at the brown man’s expression of abject terror and misery.

“And now,” said the big Irishman, turning In Austin, “I’d be mighty obliged if ye’d tell me the reason of this unexpected call ye’ve made on Terence O’Rourke. That’s my name, and yonder’s my house.”

Austin quickly put his new acquaintance in possession of the main facts of the case, and O’Rourke nodded his big head in vigorous approval.

“Begorra, young sir, ye’ve done mighty well,” he declared. “Then I’m thinking this will be what ye might call the bone o’ contention,” as he picked up the black bag, the string of which had been broken when Austin dropped on the thief.

At this moment the back door of the house burst open with a crash, and the lame man, followed closely by Clive Denham, hurried out into the little garden.

“Be jabers, but ’tis a lot o’ callers I’m getting this day!” said O’Rourke, showing a fine set of teeth in a wide and cheerful grin.

III. WHAT THE BLACK BAG HELD

“WE’VE got the bag all right, sir,” said Austin, taking it from O’Rourke, and holding it up.

Its owner literally snatched it from the boy’s hand, and, pressing a knob in the metal top, opened it and looked inside.

“They’re all right,” he said, with a deep gasp of relief. “Forgive my rudeness; but you can hardly realise what it would have meant to me if those scoundrels had got away with my pearls. I can’t tell you how grateful I am to you and your friend, and to this gentleman,” turning to O’Rourke.

The latter had been staring at the owner of the bag with a puzzled look in his china-blue eyes. All of a sudden he gave a sort of muffled bellow.

“Sure, it’s Captain Heritage!” he roared. “If it isn’t I’ll ate that bag, pearls and all.”

For a moment the lame man stared at the huge Irishman. Then a light of recognition broke upon his face.

“Terence O’Rourke!” he cried, and thrust out his hand, which was instantly swallowed in O’Rourke’s immense fist.

“And what is it you’re doing in Plymouth, captain dear?” asked O’Rourke, pump-handling vigorously.

“That’s much too big a question to be answered all in a minute,” replied Heritage, with a pleasant twinkle in his keen grey eyes. “I’ll expound later on. See here, have any of you lunched yet?”

“We were just on our way to feed, sir, when we met you,” said Austin.

“Then if you’ll be so good, you’ll all three come and lunch with me, and I’ll tell you the story of the contents of this bag. But I don’t as yet even know the names of you and your friend. Mine is John Heritage, late of His Majesty’s Navy.”

Austin introduced himself and Clive.

“Hadn’t we better hand that foreign gentleman over to the police before we do anything else?” suggested Clive, with a glance at the shivering occupant of the water-tub. Heritage hesitated.

“If I do,” he said, in a low voice, so that I the fellow should not hear, “he is sure to be committed for the assizes. And we shall all four have to appear as witnesses. I don’t know what your plans are, but long before that date I expect to be some thousands of miles away. Under the circumstances I think my only course is to let him go.”

“Faith, I’d sooner let a mad dog loose,” said O’Rourke.

“I know that it doesn’t seem right,” said Heritage, in his quiet, even tones, “but it is flatly impossible for me to remain in England a day longer than is absolutely necessary Every twenty-four hours’ delay may mean hundreds, even thousands of pounds out of my pocket.”