Part 38 (1/2)

”I'll show you the wreck,” she said. ”It lies between us and the _pa_.

It looks a very harmless place in calm weather with the sun s.h.i.+ning on the smooth sea. The tide is out, so we ought to be able to reach the wreck without swimming.”

They had come now to the edge of the ”bush,” and here Scarlett tied his horse to the bough of a tree; and with Amiria he paced the soft and sparkling sands, to which the road ran parallel.

The tide was low, as the girl had said, and the jagged rocks on which the bones of the s.h.i.+p lay stranded, stood black and prominent above the smooth water. The inner reefs were high and dry, and upon the slippery corrugations of the rocks, covered with seaweed and encrusted with sh.e.l.l-fish, the two walked; the Maori girl barefooted and agile, the Englishman heavily shod and clumsy.

Seeing the difficulty of Scarlett's advance, Amiria held out her hand to him, and so linked they approached the sea. A narrow belt of water separated them from the reef on which the wreck lay, and to cross this meant immersion.

”The tide is not as low as I thought,” said Amiria. ”At low spring-tide you can walk, almost dry-shod, to the other side.”

”I'm afraid we can't reach it without a ducking,” said Scarlett.

”But you can swim?”

Scarlett laughed. ”It's hardly good enough to ride home in wet clothes.”

He divined Amiria's meaning, but pretended otherwise.

Then she laughed, too. ”But I have a plan,” she said. Without a word more, she threw off her flax cape and dropped into the water. A few strokes and she had reached the further reef. ”It will be all right,”

she cried, ”I think I can ferry you across on a raft.”

She walked over the sharp rocks as though her feet were impervious, and clambering through a great rent in the vessel's side, she disappeared.

When next Jack caught sight of her she was perched on the top of the battered p.o.o.p, whence she called, ”I'll roll a cask over the rocks, and get you across. There's a big chest in the saloon that belongs to you.”

She disappeared again, and when Jack next saw her, she was rolling a huge barrel with difficulty towards the channel.

”It's a quarter-full of sand,” she cried, ”and when you stand it on its end it is ballasted. You'll be able to come over quite dry.”

Launching the cask, she pushed it before her as she swam, and soon clambered up beside Scarlett.

”It's bunged, I see,” said he.

”I did it with a piece of wood,” said she.

Then, booted and spurred, Jack placed himself cross-legged on the cask, and so was ferried across the intervening strip of water.

The main deck of the vessel was washed away, but the forecastle and p.o.o.p remained more or less intact. The s.h.i.+p, after settling on the rock, had broken her back, and the great timbers, where the copper sheathing and planks had been torn away, stood up like naked ribs supporting nothing.

Walking upon an acc.u.mulation of sand and debris, the Maori girl and Jack pa.s.sed from the hold to what was left of the main deck, and entered the saloon. All the gilding and glory had departed. Here a cabin door lay on the floor, there the remains of the mahogany table lay broken in a corner. A great sea-chest, bearing Scarlett's name upon its side, stood in the doorway that led to the captain's cabin. Full of sand, the box looked devoid of worth and uninviting, but Scarlett, quickly taking a piece of board, began to scoop out the sodden contents. As he stooped, a ray of sunlight pierced the shattered p.o.o.p-deck and illumined his yellow hair. Attracted by the glitter, Amiria put out her hand and stroked his head.

Jack looked up.

”Isn't that a bit familiar?” he asked.

Amiria laughed. ”Not from the girl who saved you. If I hadn't pulled you out of the water, it might seem a great thing to touch you, but I know you so well that really it doesn't matter.”

Jack buried his head in the chest. This relations.h.i.+p between preserver and preserved was new to him: he hardly knew what to make of it. But the humour of the situation dawned on him, and he laughed.

”By George, I'm at your mercy,” he said, and, standing up, with his back still towards her, he laughed again. ”You've appropriated me, just as your people appropriated the contents of this box and the rest of the wreckage. You'll have to be put in charge of the police for a little thief.” And again his laugh rang through the ruined saloon.