Part 44 (2/2)
The men stared at each other with hostile eyes, but the accusation had come so suddenly and with such boldness as to rob Marsh of words. Emerson went on in the same level voice: ”I broke through in spite of you, and I'm on the job. If you want to cry quits, I'm willing; but, by G.o.d! I won't be balked, and if any of your hired marshals try to take me before I put up my catch I'll put you away. Understand?”
Willis Marsh recoiled involuntarily before the sudden ferocity that blazed up in the speaker's face. ”You are insane,” he cried.
”Am I?” Emerson laughed, harshly. ”Well, I'm just crazy enough to do what I say. I don't think you're the kind that wants hand-to-hand trouble, so let's each attend to his own affair. I'm doing well, thank you, and I think I can get along better if yon don't come back here until I send for you. Something might fall on you.”
Marsh's full, red lips went pallid with rage as he said ”Then it is to be war, eh?”
”Suit yourself.” Boyd pointed to the sh.o.r.e. ”Your boatman is waiting for you.”
As Marsh made his way to the water's edge he stumbled like a blind man; his lips were bleeding where his small, sharp teeth had bitten them, and he panted like an hysterical woman.
During the next fortnight the sailing-s.h.i.+ps began to a.s.semble, standing in under a great spread of canvas to berth close alongside the two steams.h.i.+ps; for, once the ice had moved north, there was no further obstacle to their coming, and the harbor was soon livened with puffing tugs, unwieldy lighters, and fleets of smaller vessels. Where, but a short time before, the brooding silence had been undisturbed save for the plaint of wolf-dogs and the lazy voices of natives, a noisy army was now at work.
The bustle of a great preparation arose; languid smoke-wreaths began to unfurl above the stacks of the canneries; the stamp and clank of tin- machines re-echoed; hammer and saw maintained a never-ceasing hubbub. Down at the new plant scows were being launched while yet the pitch was warm on their seams; buildings were rising rapidly, and a crew had gone up the river to get out a raft of piles.
On the morning after the arrival of the last s.h.i.+p, Emerson and his companions were treated to a genuine surprise. Cherry had come down to the site as usual--she could not let a day go by without visiting the place-- and Clyde, after a tardy breakfast, had just come ash.o.r.e. They were watching Big George direct the launching of a scow, when all of a sudden they heard a familiar voice behind them cry, cheerfully:
”h.e.l.lo, white folks! Here we are, all together again.”
They turned to behold a villanous-looking man beaming benignly upon them.
He was dirty, his clothes were in rags, and through a riotous bristle of beard that hid his thin features a mangy patch showed on either cheek. It was undeniably ”Fingerless” Fraser, but how changed, how altered from that radiant flower of indolence they had known! He was pallid, emaciated, and bedraggled; his att.i.tude showed hunger and abuse, and his bony joints seemed about to pierce through their tattered covering. As they stood speechless with amazement, he made his identification complete by protruding his tongue from the corner of his mouth and gravely closing one eye in a wink of exceeding wisdom.
”Fraser!” they cried in chorus, then fell upon him noisily, shaking his grimy hands and slapping his back until he coughed weakly. Summoned by their shouts, Big George broke in upon the incoherent greeting, and at sight of his late comrade began to laugh hoa.r.s.ely.
”Glad to see you, old man!” he cried, ”but how did you get here?”
Fraser drew himself up with injured dignity, then spoke in dramatic accents. ”I worked my way!” He showed the whites of his eyes, tragically.
”You look like you'd walked in from Kansas,” George declared.
”Yes, sir, I _worked! Me!”_
”How? Where?”
”On that b.l.o.o.d.y wind-jammer.” He stretched a long arm toward the harbor in a theatrical gesture.
”But the police?” queried Boyd.
”Oh, I squared them easy. It's you they want. Yes, sir, I _worked_.”
Again he scanned their faces anxiously. ”I'm a scullery-maid.”
”What?”
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