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Chapter VII

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From now on Williams spent most of his time away from the settlement. On a lonely wooded plateau, on the western side of the island, he set to work to clear a plot of land and to build a cabin. Through the cold months of July, August, and September, he left the house each morning before the others were awake, returning at dusk. Mills respected his silence, and Martin, after one or two rebuffs, ceased to question him. In early October he announced that he was leaving for his new home, and, with Mills to help him, he carried his belongings over the ridge and down to the distant clearing where his cabin stood.

Though small, the cabin was strong and neatly built, with walls of split pandanus logs, set side by side. The floor alone was of plank, and the few articles of furniture had been put together with a craftsman’s skill. Mills had not seen the place before. He glanced around admiringly.

“Ye’ve a snug little harbour here, Jack,” he said as he set down his burden. “All Bristol-fashion, too! So ye’re bound to live alone?”

“Aye.”

Mills shrugged his shoulders. “I’ve no cause to meddle, but if it’s Hutia ye’re still pinin’ for, why don’t ye take her and be damned to the Indians?”

“I’ve no wish to stir up trouble. Christian’s been fair with us. I’ll do what I can to be fair in my turn. I’ll try living alone away from the sight of her, but I’m not sayin’ how this’ll end. Thank ’ee for the lift, John,” he added. “Tell the lads I’ll come over when there’s work for the forge.”

The shadows were long in the clearing, for it was late afternoon. Grass was already beginning to hide the ashes about the blackened stumps. As he sat on the doorstep of his house, the slope of the ground to the west gave Williams a view of the sea above the tree-tops. Snow-white terns, in pairs, sailed back and forth overhead. It was their mating season and they were pursuing one another, swooping and tumbling in aerial play. No wind was astir; the air, saturated with moisture, was difficult to breathe. Williams rose, cursing the heat, went to the small cookhouse behind his cabin, and kindled a fire to prepare his evening meal. At last the sun set angrily, behind masses of banked-up clouds, dull crimson and violet. It was not a night for sleep. The blacksmith was on foot before dawn, and the first grey of morning found him crossing the ridge, on his way to Christian’s house.

Alexander Smith wakened at the same hour. Like Williams, he had tossed and cursed the heat all night, between snatches of fitful sleep. He opened the door, rubbed his eyes with his knuckles, stretched his arms wide, and yawned.

The moon, nearly at the full, was still up, though veiled by clouds in the west. The big red rooster in the purau tree flapped his wings, crowed, and regarded the ground with down-stretched neck and deep, explosive cackles. With a prodigious noise of wings, he left his perch and landed with a heavy thump. One after the other, the hens followed, and each in turn was ravished as she touched the ground. The last hen shook herself angrily, the cock made a final sidewise step with lowered wing, and glanced up at his master as if to say: “Well, that’s over with! Now for breakfast!” Smith grinned.

The fowls followed him in a compact little flock to the cookhouse, where the coconut-grater stood. Seating himself astride the three-legged stool to which the grater of pearl shell was lashed, he began to scrape out the coconut meat, a crinkled, snowy shower that soon filled his wooden bowl.

He stopped once to fill his own mouth, and chuckled, as he munched, at the impatience of the fowls, standing in a wistful circle about the bowl. He rose, calling, as the natives did, in a high-pitched, ringing cry, and while the fowls came running with outstretched wings he scattered grated coconut this way and that.

Hearing the familiar call, the pigs in their sty under the banyan tree burst into eager grunts. “Mai! Mai! Mai!” responded Smith, gruntingly, and strolled across to empty the half of his coconut into their trough. He had the seaman’s love of rural things.

It was now broad daylight. Balhadi came to the door, greeted her husband with a smile, and went to the cookhouse to prepare his breakfast. Smith stripped off his shirt and dipped a large calabashful from the water barrel for his morning wash. After scrubbing his face vigorously with a bit of tapa, he made the morning round of his plants. A fenced enclosure, of about half an acre, surrounded his house, and he derived keen pleasure from the garden he had laid out inside, with its stone-bordered paths and beds of flowering shrubs. Spring was coming on fast. He walked slowly, stooping often to examine the new growth or to inhale the perfume of some waxen flower. Now and again, as he straightened his back, he paused to glance at his newly completed house. Young was not a strong man, nor clever with his hands, and Smith had put up the building almost alone. He still derived from the sight of his handiwork a deep and inarticulate satisfaction. It was a shipshape job—stoutly built, weatherproof, and sightly, with its bright new thatch. The Indians said that such thatching would last ten years.

Balhadi was calling him to eat. She was a short, strongly made woman, wholesome and still youthful, with a firm, good-humoured face. Smith felt a real affection for her, expressed in robust fashion. He pulled her down to his knee, gave her a resounding kiss, and fell to on his breakfast. Ten minutes later he shouldered his axe and strode away to his morning’s work in the bush.

“Alex! Alex O!”

Tetahiti was hailing him from the path. He and Smith were good friends, and both loved fishing. “I came to fetch you,” said the native. “Can you leave your work till noon? There is wind on the way, but the morning will be calm. I have discovered where the albacore sleep.”

Smith nodded, and stood his axe against the fence. He followed Tetahiti down the path that led to Bounty Bay. They passed Mills’s house, and McCoy’s, and halted at the dwelling of the natives, not far from the landing place. The men had gone to their work in the bush; Smith chaffed with Moetua while his companion fetched the lines. Hutia was nowhere to be seen.

“Look,” said Tetahiti, “we’ve octopus for bait. I speared two last night.”

The sea was fairly calm in the cove, sheltered from the westerly swell. The native selected a dozen longish stones, weighing three or four pounds each, and tossed them into the smaller of the two canoes. They were soon outside the breakers and paddling to the northwest, while Tetahiti glanced back frequently to get his bearings from the land. At a distance of about a mile, he gave the word to cease paddling.

“This is the place,” he said, as the canoe lost way and floated idly on the long, glassy swell. “I have been studying the birds for many days; this is where the fish cease to feed on the surface, and go down to sleep in the depths.”

Each man had a ball of line two hundred fathoms or more in length. One end was tied to the outrigger boom; to the other, running out from the centre of the ball, the hook was attached. They now baited their hooks and made fast their sinkers, with a hitch that permitted the stones to be released by a sharp jerk.

“Let us try at one hundred fathoms,” said Tetahiti.

Smith lowered his sinker over the side and allowed the line to run out for a long time, until a knot appeared. He pulled sharply and felt the hitch unroll and the release of the sinker’s weight. Then, moving his line up and down gently, to attract the attention of the fish six hundred feet below, he settled himself to wait.

The sun was well up by now, but the horizon to the north was ominous. There was not the faintest breath of wind; even at this early hour the heat was oppressive.

“We shall have a storm,” remarked the native. “The moon will be full to-night.”

Smith nodded. “Christian thinks so, too.”

“Your ears are opened,” said Tetahiti. “You are beginning to speak our tongue like one of us!”

“I have learned much from you. What day is this—what night, I mean?”

“Maitu. To-night will be hotu, when the moon rises as the sun sets.”

Smith shook his head, admiringly. “I can never remember. We whites have only the names of the seven days of our week to learn. Your people must learn the twenty-eight nights of the moon!”

“Yes, and more; I will teach you the sayings concerning maitu: ‘A night for planting taro and bamboo; an auspicious night for love-making. Crabs and crayfish shed their shells on this night; albacore are the fish at sea. Large-eyed children and children with red hair are born on this night.’ ... Mau!”

He shouted the last word suddenly as he struck to set the hook and allowed his line to run hissing over the gunwale. Smith watched eagerly, admiring the skill with which Tetahiti handled the heavy fish. Next moment it was his turn to shout. For a full half-hour the two men sweated in silence as they played their fish. Smith’s was the first to weaken. It lay alongside the canoe, half dead from its own exertions—a huge burnished creature of the tunny kind. Holding his tight line with one hand, Tetahiti seized the catch by the tail while Smith clenched his fingers in the gills. A word, a heave in unison, and the albacore lay gasping in the bilges—a magnificent fish of a hundred pounds or more. Smith clubbed it to death before lending Tetahiti a hand.

The sea grew lumpy and confused as they paddled back to the cove. A swell from the north was now rolling into Bounty Bay, making their landing a difficult one. Minarii was awaiting them on the shingle. He helped them pull the canoe up into the shade.

“You come none too soon,” he said. “The sea is making up fast. You are weary; let me carry your fish.”

He fastened the tails of the albacore together, hoisted the burden of more than two hundredweight to one shoulder, and led the way up the steep path.

It was nearly noon. The workers had returned from the bush, and smoke went up from the cookhouses of the little settlement. Minarii set down his burden at the native house, and made a sign to his man Hu to cut up the fish. The women gathered about, exclaiming at sight of the catch. There was neither buying nor selling among the Polynesians. When fish was caught, it was shared out equally among all members of the community, high and low alike, a custom already firmly rooted on Pitcairn.

“I will carry Brown’s share to him,” said Minarii. Hu and Te Moa slung the remaining shares between them on a pole, and walked up the path, followed by Smith. McCoy’s Mary stood before her house. She was great with child and had trouble in stooping to take up the cut of fish dropped on the grass at her feet.

“Hey, Will!” called Smith. “Here’s a bit of fish for ’ee.”

McCoy and Quintal appeared in the doorway. “Thank ’ee, Alex, ye’re a lucky loon. Albacore!”

“Aye,” put in Quintal. “Next best to a collop of beef!”

After a stop at the house of Mills, Smith dismissed the two natives at his own door and went on to Christian’s house, Balhadi accompanying him. She carried a gift of a taro pudding, done up in fresh green leaves.

“For Maimiti,” she explained. “This may tempt her to eat.”

“When does she expect her child?”

“Her time is very close—to-day or to-morrow, I think.”

Christian met them at the door and Balhadi carried the fish and her pudding to the cookhouse.

“A fine albacore, Smith!”

“I reckon he’d go a hundredweight, sir!” said Smith with a fisherman’s pride. “And Tetahiti got one might have been his twin brother. All hands’ll have a feed of ’em.”

“Stop to dine with us.”

“I hate to bother ye, sir, at a time like this.”

Christian shook his head. “No, no! Jenny’s here, and Nanai, to lend a hand. They’ll make a little feast of it, with your girl. They’re funny creatures, brown or white; birth and death are what they love. Come in.”

“Thank ’ee, sir. I’ve a cut of fish for Jack; I’ll just hang it up in the shade.”

“He left not ten minutes gone. Come in and rest before we dine. They’ll be giving us some of your fish. Do you like it raw, in the Indian style?”

“Aye, sir, that I do!”

“And I, when prepared with their sauce of coconut. We think of the Indians as savages, yet we have much to learn from them.”

“I don’t know what we’d do without ’em, here. We’d get no fish without the men to teach us how to catch ’em, and as for the girls, I reckon we’d starve but for them!”

They were sitting by the table in Christian’s room, for Maimiti could no longer climb the ladder to the apartment upstairs, and the dining room was set aside for her use. The two men were silent for a time while the chronometer beside them ticked loudly and steadily. Christian glanced at its dial, which registered the hour in Greenwich, and the sight set his thoughts to wandering back through the past—to his boyhood in Cumberland and on the Isle of Man, to his early days at sea.

“Had that old timekeeper a voice,” he remarked, “it could tell us a rare tale! It was Captain Cook’s shipmate on two voyages, traveling thousands of leagues over seas little known even now. It began life in London; now it will end its days on Pitcairn’s Island.”

Smith nodded. “Like me, sir!” he said.

“Were you born in London? I took you for a countryman.”

“Aye, Mr. Christian; born there and reared in a foundling’s home. I’m under false colors here. My real name is John Adams; the lads used to call me ‘Reckless Jack.’ I got into a bit of trouble and thought best to sign on as Alexander Smith.”

Christian nodded, and asked after a brief pause: “Tell me, Smith, are you contented here?”

“That I am, sir! My folk were countrymen, till my dad was fool enough to try his fortune in London. It’s in my blood. Happy? If ye was all to leave, and give me the chance, I’d stop here with my old woman to end my days.”

Christian smiled. “I am glad, since I fetched you here. It would be curious, were we able to look ahead twenty years. There will be broad plantations, new houses, and children—many of them—I hope.”

“And yours’ll be the first-born, sir!”

Jenny appeared in the doorway, carrying a platter of fish. She smiled at the two men, and beckoned Balhadi in to help set the table. An hour later Smith rose to take his leave.

“Ask Williams to come down to the cove this afternoon,” said Christian. “We shall need all hands to get the boats up out of reach of the sea.”

A heavy swell from the north was bombarding the cliffs as Smith made his way over the ridge. The heat was sultry, though the sky was now completely overcast, and he knew that the wind could not be far off. Williams met him at the cottage door.

“Come in, Alex. Set ye down. What’s that—fish? A monster he must have been, eh? Here, let me hang it up; Puss has smelt it already.”

The blacksmith’s cat, a fine tabby whose sleekness proved her master’s care, was mewing eagerly, and Williams paused to cut off a small piece for her.

“She’s spoiled,” he remarked. “D’ye think she’d look at a rat? But I hate rusty tools and scrawny living things.”

As they entered the cottage, Smith observed, on the floor close to the bed, a round comb of bamboo, such as the women used. Next moment, out of the corner of his eye, he saw Williams kick it hastily under the bed. He glanced about the neat little dwelling appreciatively.

“Ye’ve the best-built house of the lot,” he said, “and the prettiest to look at. Aye, it’s small, but all the better for that.”

“What d’ye think of the weather, Alex?” Williams asked.

“It’ll be blowing a gale by night. I’d best be getting back. Mr. Christian wants all hands at Bounty Bay. He’s afeared for the boats.”

The blacksmith nodded. “I’ll come along with ye,” he said.

The wind was making up from the northwest, with heavy squalls of rain, and before the two men reached the cove it hauled to the north, blowing with ever-increasing force.

It was late afternoon when the people began to straggle back, up the steep path to the settlement. The boats and the two canoes had been conveyed to the very foot of the bluff, far above where they were usually kept, and it seemed that no wave, no matter how great, could reach them there.

But at nightfall the gale blew at hurricane force. The deep roar of the wind and the thunder of breaking seas increased as the night wore on. The rocky foundations of the island trembled before the onslaught of wind and wave. There was little sleep for anyone, and there were moments when it seemed that only a miracle could preserve the houses from being carried away. Daybreak came at last.

Toward seven o’clock Smith went trudging up the path to Christian’s house. The wind was abating, he thought, though the coconut palms along the path still bent low to the gusts, their fronds streaming like banners in the gale. Smith glanced up apprehensively from time to time as a heavy nut came whacking to the ground. Once, in a place where the path was somewhat exposed, he staggered and leaned to windward to keep his feet. Each time a great comber burst at the foot of the cliffs, he felt the ground tremble underfoot. At last he reached Christian’s house.

The sliding shutters on the weather side were closed, but the door was open in the lee. Smith found Christian in the room, with Jenny and Taurua.

“Balhadi is with her,” Christian said, drawing the newcomer aside and raising his voice to make it heard. “The pains have begun. What of the boats?”

“Gone, sir, all but the large cutter,” replied Smith regretfully. “The sea’s higher’n ye’d believe! All was snug an hour back. Then a roarin’ great sea came in and carried away both canoes and the small cutter. And when the wind had cleared the air of spray, we looked out, sir, and the old Bounty was gone!”

Christian paced the floor nervously for a minute or two, stopping once to listen at the door of the other room. Then, halting suddenly, he addressed Taurua: “Go in to her, you and Jenny; say that I am going down to the landing place and shall not be long.” He turned to Smith. “Come, there is nothing I can do here at such a time.”

They found Young and a group of men and women at the verge of the bluffs, crouching to escape the full force of the wind while they watched with fascinated eyes the towering seas that ran into Bounty Bay. Speech was impossible, but Young took Christian’s arm and pointed out to where the blackened hulk of the ship had lain wedged among the rocks. No trace of her remained.

The waves were breaking high among the undergrowth at the foot of the path, and during the brief lulls, when the spray was blown ashore, Christian saw that the cove was a mass of floating rubbish and uprooted trees, and that avalanches had left raw streaks of earth where the sea had undermined the steep slopes toward Ship-Landing Point.

The gale was abating when at last the three men turned to make their way back to Christian’s house. At the door they heard faintly, between gusts of wind, the wail of a newborn child. The door of the other room opened, and Jenny and Taurua came in, with the smiles of women who have assisted at a happy delivery. Balhadi appeared behind them. She beckoned to Christian.

“É tamaroa!” she said. “A man-child!”

As she closed the door behind him, Christian saw Maimiti on a couch covered with many folds of tapa; and close beside her, swathed to the eyes in the same soft native cloth, an infant who stirred and wailed from time to time. Maimiti looked pale and worn, but in her eyes there was an expression of deep happiness. Balhadi pulled back the tapa that muffled the baby’s face.

“Look!” she said proudly. “Was ever a handsomer boy? And auspiciously born! You know our proverb: ‘Born in the hurricane, the child shall live in peace.’ ”

Young smiled when Christian came out of the room. “It is fitting that your child should be our first-born,” he remarked, as he held out his hand. “What shall you name him?”

“Nothing to remind me of England,” replied Christian. “Smith, Balhadi has proven herself a true friend to-day. You shall be the child’s godfather. Give him a name.”

The seaman grinned and scratched his head. “Ye’ll have naught to remind ’ee of England? I have it, sir. Ye might name him for the day, if ye know what day it is.”

The father smiled grimly as he consulted his calendar. “It’s a good suggestion, Smith. The day is Thursday, and the month October. Thursday October Christian he shall be!” He glanced out through the doorway. “Here come the others; set out the benches.”

The other mutineers and their women were approaching the house. One after another, the men shook Christian’s hand, while the women filed in to seat themselves on the floor by Maimiti’s couch. When the benches were full, Christian raised his voice above the roar of the wind.

“There’s a question that calls for a show of hands. Shall we issue an extra grog ration to-day, and drink it here and now?”

Every hand went up, but McCoy asked anxiously: “How much ha’ we left, sir?”

Christian drew a small, worn book from his pocket and turned the pages. “Fifty-three gallons.”

McCoy shook his head gloomily. “A scant four months’ supply!”

When the glasses were full, the men toasted the child in the next room:—

“A long life to him, sir!”

“May he be as good a man as his father!”

McCoy was the last to drink. He watched the filling of his glass with deep interest, and sniffed at the rum luxuriously before he took a sip.

“I’ll nae drink it clean caup out,” he said apologetically, and then, as he held the glass aloft, “Tae our first bairn! I’ve run ’ee a close race, sir. My Mary’ll hae her babe within the week!”

Men Against the Sea – Book Set

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