Bert Wilson's Twin Cylinder Racer Part 15
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"Ponce de Leon was wrong when he looked for the elixir of life in a fountain," he thought to himself. "He should have sought for it in the sea."
Before him stretched the mighty Pacific, its crested waves glittering in the sun. Fis.h.i.+ng vessels and coasting craft flashed their white sails near the sh.o.r.e, while, far out on the horizon, he could see the trail of smoke that followed in the wake of a liner. Great billows burst into spray on the beach, and the diapason of the surf reverberated in his ears like rich organ music. He drank it all in thirstily, as though storing up inspiration for the completion of his task.
A man sitting near by looked at him with a quizzical smile, frankly interested by Bert's absorption in the scene before him. With easy good-fellows.h.i.+p, he remarked:
"You seem to be getting a lot of pleasure out of the view."
"I am," replied Bert promptly; "I can't get enough of it."
"There are plenty of people who have got enough of it," he observed drily, "your humble servant among the number."
Bert scented a story, but repressed any sign of curiosity.
"It's the infinite variety that appeals to me," he said. "The sea is full of wonders."
"And tragedies," supplemented the other.
He settled back in his chair and lighted a fresh cigar. As he struck the match, Bert noticed that his right hand was horribly scarred and disfigured. It looked as though it had been drawn through a harrow whose teeth had bitten deep. Great livid weals crossed each other on the back, and two of the fingers were gone. And Bert noted that, although his face and frame indicated that he was not more than thirty years old, his hair was snowy white.
"Of course, that's true," said Bert, reverting to the stranger's last remark; "storms and s.h.i.+pwrecks and typhoons and tidal waves are things that have to be reckoned with."
"Yes," was the reply, "but I wasn't thinking especially of these.
They're common enough and terrible enough. What I had in mind was the individual tragedies that are happening all the time, and of which not one in a hundred ever hears."
"Do you see this hair of mine?" he asked, removing his hat. "One day at noon it was as dark as yours. At three o'clock on that same day it was like this."
He paused a moment, as though battling with some fearful recollection.
"I don't know how familiar you may be with the Pacific," he resumed, "but on this coast there is every variety of monster that you can find in any other ocean, and usually of a fiercer and larger type. Nowhere do you find such man-eating sharks or such malignant devil-fish. The sharks don't come near enough to the sh.o.r.e to bother us much. But it's safe to say that within half a mile from here, there are gigantic squids, with tentacles from twelve to twenty feet long. More than one luckless swimmer, venturing out too far, has been dragged down by them, and there are instances where they have picked a man out of a fis.h.i.+ng boat. If those tentacles ever get you in their murderous grip, it's all over with you.
"Then, too, we have what is called the 'smotherer,' something like a monstrous ray, that spreads itself out over its prey and forces it down in the mud at the bottom, until it is smothered to death. It's a terror to divers, and they fear it more than they do the shark.
"But these perils are well known and can be guarded against. If I'd got into any trouble with them, it would probably have been largely my own fault. But it is the 'unexpected that happens,' and the thing that marked me for life was something not much bigger than my fist.
"Have you ever seen an abalone? No? Well, it's a kind of sh.e.l.lfish that's common on this coast. It has one sh.e.l.l and that a very beautiful one, so that it is in considerable demand. The inside of it is like mother of pearl and there are little swellings on it called 'blisters,'
that gleam with all the colors of the rainbow. It's a favorite sport here to get up 'abalone parties,' just as you fellows in the East go crabbing. Only, instead of getting after them with a net, we use a crowbar. Queer kind of fis.h.i.+ng, isn't it?"
"I should say it was," smiled Bert.
"Well, you see, it's this way. The body of the abalone is a ma.s.s of muscle that has tremendous strength. It is so powerful, that the natives of the South Sea Islands use the abalones to catch sharks with. Fact.
They fasten a chain to the abalone, and it swims out and attaches itself to the under side of a shark. Then they pull it in, and no matter how hard the shark struggles and threshes about, it has to come. The abalone would be torn to pieces before it would let go. It's the bulldog of the sh.e.l.lfish tribe, and a harpoon wouldn't hold the shark more securely.
"On the coast, here, they fasten themselves to the rocks, and as these are usually covered at high tide, you have to hunt them when the tide is low. You wade out among the rocks until you catch sight of an abalone.
Then you insert the crowbar between the sh.e.l.l and the rock. Only the enormous leverage this gives enables you to pry it off. The strongest man on earth couldn't pull it away with his bare hands.
"Usually, we went in parties, and there was a good deal of rivalry as to who would get the largest and finest sh.e.l.ls. I forgot to say that, besides the sh.e.l.ls themselves, once in a while you can find a pearl of considerable value and great beauty. This occurs so seldom, however, that it is always a red-letter day when you have such a bit of luck.
"One day, a friend had arranged to go abalone hunting with me, but just as we were getting ready to start out, a telegram called him away from town, on important business. It would have been the luckiest thing that ever happened to me if I had got a telegram too. We were both much disappointed, as on that day we were going to try a new place, where we had a 'hunch' that we would make a good haul.
"The weather was so fine and I had my mind so set upon the trip, that I determined to go it alone. The tide that day would be at low water mark at about twelve o'clock. I threw a lunch together, got out my bag and crowbar and started.
"A tramp of a couple of miles down the beach brought me to the place we had in mind. It was a desolate stretch of sh.o.r.e, with no houses in sight except an occasional fisherman's shack, and the crowds that frequented the other beaches had left this severely alone. It was this, added to the fact that an unusual number of rocks was visible at low tide, that had made us fix on it as a promising location.
"The day was bright and clear and the sea had never appeared so beautiful. Looked to me, I imagine, a good deal as it did to you just now. It has never seemed beautiful to me since.
"The tide was on the ebb, but had not yet run out fully, and I had to wait perhaps half an hour before the rocks were uncovered enough to permit me to see the abalones in their hiding places. I spent the time lying lazily on the sand with half shut eyelids, and basking in the inexpressible charm of sea and sky. I never dreamed of the horror the scene would inspire in me a little later on. There was a long swell but little surf that day, and there was nothing cruel in the way the waves danced in the sunlight and came gliding up, with an air that was almost caressing, to where I lay stretched out at perfect peace with myself and the world.
"Soon the ebb had reached its limit and there was that momentary hesitation before the tide, as though it had forgotten something and were coming back for it, began to flow in. Now was the time, if I wanted to fill the sack that I had brought along with me to hold my spoil. I remember chuckling to myself, as I looked around and saw that there was not a soul in sight. If this should prove the rich hunting ground I believed it to be, I would have first choice of the finest specimens.
"I slung the bag over my shoulder and holding the crowbar in my left hand, began to make my way out to the rocks. I had stripped off my outer clothing, and was in the swimming suit that I wore underneath. The water was deliciously refres.h.i.+ng, after the sun bath I had been enjoying, and I went leisurely along until I came to where the rocks were thickest.
The slope was very gradual, and, by the time I got among them, I was some distance from the sh.o.r.e. Then I became alert and alive, and buckled down to my work.
"My friend and I had made no mistake. The rocks were full of abalones and my bag was soon filling rapidly. I exulted in the thought of the virgin field that we too would exploit together.
"But, although the sh.e.l.ls were numerous and unusually fine in their markings, I could not find any that contained a pearl. That was the one thing necessary to make my day a perfect success. I began to hustle now, as the tide was beginning to come in strongly, and before long the rising waters would cover the rocks.
"Suddenly, I saw under the green surface a large abalone with its sh.e.l.l gaping widely. And my heart gave a jubilant leap as I saw a large pearl just within the edge of the sh.e.l.l. How I came to do such a fool thing I don't know, but, with a shout, I reached out my hand to grasp it. I slipped as I did so, and, in trying to steady myself, the crowbar flew out of my left hand and fell several feet away. And just then the sh.e.l.l began to tighten. I tried to withdraw my hand, but it was too late. That closing sh.e.l.l held it against the rock as though in an iron clamp.
"A sweat broke out all over me and icy chills chased themselves up and down my spine. I pulled with all my might, but the sh.e.l.l, as though in mockery, closed tighter. The feeling of that clammy ma.s.s of gristle and muscle against the flesh filled me with a sick loathing that, for the moment, overbore the pain of my crushed hand. So, I imagine, a man might feel in the slimy folds of a boa constrictor.
"Instinctively, I raised my other hand, as if to insert the crowbar.
Then I realized that it had fallen from my hand. I could see where it lay between two rocks, not six feet away. Six feet! It might as well have been six miles.
"I was trapped. The full horror of my situation burst upon me. I was alone, held fast by that powerful sh.e.l.l that recognized me as an enemy and would never relax of its own accord. _And the tide was coming in._
"In a fury of rage and terror, I struck at the abalone with my left hand while with all my strength I tried to tear away my right. But I could have as soon succeeded in pulling it from beneath a triphammer. There were gaping rents in the flesh opened by my struggles and I could see my blood mingling with the green water.
"You have heard of bears and lynxes caught in traps who have chewed at their imprisoned leg until they left it behind them and hobbled away, maimed and bleeding, but free. I swear to you that I would have done the same with that hand of mine, if I had been able.
"I thought of a woodsman whom I knew, who had been caught by a falling tree that had crushed his foot. He knew that if he stayed there that night, the wolves would get him. His axe was within reach and he deliberately chopped off his foot. I didn't have even that chance. I was in my bathing suit and my knife was in the clothes left on the sh.o.r.e.
"And all this time the cruel, treacherous sea was coming in and the tide was mounting higher and higher. It purled about me softly, gently, like a cat playing with a mouse. I beat at it angrily with my left hand and it seemed to laugh. It felt sure of me and could afford to be indulgent.
It was already above my waist and my knowledge of the coast told me that when it reached the flood it would be ten feet deep at the place where I stood.
"I looked wildly around, in the hope of seeing some one on the sh.o.r.e.
But it was absolutely deserted. A little while before, I had been gloating over the fact that I was alone and could have a monopoly of the hunting. Now I would have given all I had in the world for the sight of a human face. I shouted until I was hoa.r.s.e, but no one came. Far out at sea, I could glimpse dimly the sails of a vessel. I waved my free hand desperately, but I knew at the time that it was futile. I was a mere speck to any one on board, and even if they trained strong gla.s.ses on me they would have thought it nothing but the frolicsome antics of a bather.
"Now the water was up to my armpits. The thought came to me that if I should keep perfectly quiet, the abalone might think his danger gone and loosen his grip. But, though I nearly went crazy with the terrible strain of keeping still, when every impulse was to leap and yell, the cunning creature never relaxed that murderous clutch.
"Then I lost all control of myself. It wasn't the thought of death itself. I could, I think, have steeled myself to that. But it was the horrible mode of death. To be young and strong and twenty, and to die there, slowly and inexorably, while six feet away was a certain means of rescue!
"The water had reached my neck. My overstrung nerves gave way. I tugged wildly at my bleeding hand. I raved and wept. I think I must have grown delirious. I dimly remember babbling to the iron bar that I could see lying there so serenely in the transparent water. I coaxed it, wheedled it, cajoled it, begged it to come to me, and, when it refused, I cursed it. The waves were breaking over me and I was choking. The spray was in my eyes and ears. I thought I heard a shouting, the sound of oars. Then a great blackness settled down upon me and I knew nothing more.
"When next I came to consciousness, I was in a hospital, where I had been for two months with brain fever. They had had to take off two fingers, and barely saved the rest of the hand. They wouldn't let me see a mirror until they had prepared me for the change in my appearance.
"I learned then the story of my rescue. A party had come around a bend of the sh.o.r.e when I was at my last gasp. They caught sight of my hand just above the water. They made for me at once and tried to pull me into the boat. Then they saw my plight, and, with a marlinspike, pried the abalone loose. They tell me that my bleeding fingers had stiffened around the pearl, and they could scarcely get it away from me. They asked me afterward if I cared to see it, but I hated it so bitterly that I refused to look at it. It had been bought at too high a price.
"And now," he concluded, "do you wonder that I dread that sleek and crawling monster that I call the sea?"
Bert Wilson's Twin Cylinder Racer Part 15
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Bert Wilson's Twin Cylinder Racer Part 15 summary
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