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"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 a.s.sure 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, hoa.r.s.ely: "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 antic.i.p.ates 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 G.o.d! 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 un.o.bserved, 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 h.e.l.l herself and don' care a d.a.m.n, but it ain't right for little baby to go to h.e.l.l too."