Transcribed from the 1919 Mills & Boon edition by David Price, email
ccx074@pglaf.org





THE HOUSE OF PRIDE


Contents:

The House of Pride
Koolau the Leper
Good-bye, Jack
Aloha Oe
Chun Ah Chun
The Sheriff of Kona
Jack London




THE HOUSE OF PRIDE


Percival Ford wondered why he had come.  He did not dance.  He did not
care much for army people.  Yet he knew them all--gliding and revolving
there on the broad _lanai_ of the Seaside, the officers in their fresh-
starched uniforms of white, the civilians in white and black, and the
women bare of shoulders and arms.  After two years in Honolulu the
Twentieth was departing to its new station in Alaska, and Percival Ford,
as one of the big men of the Islands, could not help knowing the officers
and their women.

But between knowing and liking was a vast gulf.  The army women
frightened him just a little.  They were in ways quite different from the
women he liked best--the elderly women, the spinsters and the
bespectacled maidens, and the very serious women of all ages whom he met
on church and library and kindergarten committees, who came meekly to him
for contributions and advice.  He ruled those women by virtue of his
superior mentality, his great wealth, and the high place he occupied in
the commercial baronage of Hawaii.  And he was not afraid of them in the
least.  Sex, with them, was not obtrusive.  Yes, that was it.  There was
in them something else, or more, than the assertive grossness of life.  He
was fastidious; he acknowledged that to himself; and these army women,
with their bare shoulders and naked arms, their straight-looking eyes,
their vitality and challenging femaleness, jarred upon his sensibilities.

Nor did he get on better with the army men, who took life lightly,
drinking and smoking and swearing their way through life and asserting
the essential grossness of flesh no less shamelessly than their women.  He
was always uncomfortable in the company of the army men.  They seemed
uncomfortable, too.  And he felt, always, that they were laughing at him
up their sleeves, or pitying him, or tolerating him.  Then, too, they
seemed, by mere contiguity, to emphasize a lack in him, to call attention
to that in them which he did not possess and which he thanked God he did
not possess.  Faugh!  They were like their women!

In fact, Percival Ford was no more a woman's man than he was a man's man.
A glance at him told the reason.  He had a good constitution, never was
on intimate terms with sickness, nor even mild disorders; but he lacked
vitality.  His was a negative organism.  No blood with a ferment in it
could have nourished and shaped that long and narrow face, those thin
lips, lean cheeks, and the small, sharp eyes.  The thatch of hair, dust-
coloured, straight and sparse, advertised the niggard soil, as did the
nose, thin, delicately modelled, and just hinting the suggestion of a
beak.  His meagre blood had denied him much of life, and permitted him to
be an extremist in one thing only, which thing was righteousness.  Over
right conduct he pondered and agonized, and that he should do right was
as necessary to his nature as loving and being loved were necessary to
commoner clay.

He was sitting under the algaroba trees between the _lanai_ and the
beach.  His eyes wandered over the dancers and he turned his head away
and gazed seaward across the mellow-sounding surf to the Southern Cross
burning low on the horizon.  He was irritated by the bare shoulders and
arms of the women.  If he had a daughter he would never permit it, never.
But his hypothesis was the sheerest abstraction.  The thought process had
been accompanied by no inner vision of that daughter.  He did not see a
daughter with arms and shoulders.  Instead, he smiled at the remote
contingency of marriage.  He was thirty-five, and, having had no personal
experience of love, he looked upon it, not as mythical, but as bestial.
Anybody could marry.  The Japanese and Chinese coolies, toiling on the
sugar plantations and in the rice-fields, married.  They invariably
married at the first opportunity.  It was because they were so low in the
scale of life.  There was nothing else for them to do.  They were like
the army men and women.  But for him there were other and higher things.
He was different from them--from all of them.  He was proud of how he
happened to be.  He had come of no petty love-match.  He had come of
lofty conception of duty and of devotion to a cause.  His father had not
married for love.  Love was a madness that had never perturbed Isaac
Ford.  When he answered the call to go to the heathen with the message of
life, he had had no thought and no desire for marriage.  In this they
were alike, his father and he.  But the Board of Missions was economical.
With New England thrift it weighed and measured and decided that married
missionaries were less expensive per capita and more efficacious.  So the
Board commanded Isaac Ford to marry.  Furthermore, it furnished him with
a wife, another zealous soul with no thought of marriage, intent only on
doing the Lord's work among the heathen.  They saw each other for the
first time in Boston.  The Board brought them together, arranged
everything, and by the end of the week they were married and started on
the long voyage around the Horn.

Percival Ford was proud that he had come of such a union.  He had been
born high, and he thought of himself as a spiritual aristocrat.  And he
was proud of his father.  It was a passion with him.  The erect, austere
figure of Isaac Ford had burned itself upon his pride.  On his desk was a
miniature of that soldier of the Lord.  In his bedroom hung the portrait
of Isaac Ford, painted at the time when he had served under the Monarchy
as prime minister.  Not that Isaac Ford had coveted place and worldly
wealth, but that, as prime minister, and, later, as banker, he had been
of greater service to the missionary cause.  The German crowd, and the
English crowd, and all the rest of the trading crowd, had sneered at
Isaac Ford as a commercial soul-saver; but he, his son, knew different.
When the natives, emerging abruptly from their feudal system, with no
conception of the nature and significance of property in land, were
letting their broad acres slip through their fingers, it was Isaac Ford
who had stepped in between the trading crowd and its prey and taken
possession of fat, vast holdings.  Small wonder the trading crowd did not
like his memory.  But he had never looked upon his enormous wealth as his
own.  He had considered himself God's steward.  Out of the revenues he
had built schools, and hospitals, and churches.  Nor was it his fault
that sugar, after the slump, had paid forty per cent; that the bank he
founded had prospered into a railroad; and that, among other things,
fifty thousand acres of Oahu pasture land, which he had bought for a
dollar an acre, grew eight tons of sugar to the acre every eighteen
months.  No, in all truth, Isaac Ford was an heroic figure, fit, so
Percival Ford thought privately, to stand beside the statue of Kamehameha
I. in front of the Judiciary Building.  Isaac Ford was gone, but he, his
son, carried on the good work at least as inflexibly if not as
masterfully.

He turned his eyes back to the _lanai_.  What was the difference, he
asked himself, between the shameless, grass-girdled _hula_ dances and the
decollete dances of the women of his own race?  Was there an essential
difference? or was it a matter of degree?

As he pondered the problem a hand rested on his shoulder.

"Hello, Ford, what are you doing here?  Isn't this a bit festive?"

"I try to be lenient, Dr. Kennedy, even as I look on," Percival Ford
answered gravely.  "Won't you sit down?"

Dr. Kennedy sat down, clapping his palms sharply.  A white-clad Japanese
servant answered swiftly.

Scotch and soda was Kennedy's order; then, turning to the other, he
said:--

"Of course, I don't ask you."

"But I will take something," Ford said firmly.  The doctor's eyes showed
surprise, and the servant waited.  "Boy, a lemonade, please."

The doctor laughed at it heartily, as a joke on himself, and glanced at
the musicians under the _hau_ tree.

"Why, it's the Aloha Orchestra," he said.  "I thought they were with the
Hawaiian Hotel on Tuesday nights.  Some rumpus, I guess."

His eyes paused for a moment, and dwelt upon the one who was playing a
guitar and singing a Hawaiian song to the accompaniment of all the
instruments.

His face became grave as he looked at the singer, and it was still grave
as he turned it to his companion.

"Look here, Ford, isn't it time you let up on Joe Garland?  I understand
you are in opposition to the Promotion Committee's sending him to the
States on this surf-board proposition, and I've been wanting to speak to
you about it.  I should have thought you'd be glad to get him out of the
country.  It would be a good way to end your persecution of him."

"Persecution?"  Percival Ford's eyebrows lifted interrogatively.

"Call it by any name you please," Kennedy went on.  "You've hounded that
poor devil for years.  It's not his fault.  Even you will admit that."

"Not his fault?"  Percival Ford's thin lips drew tightly together for the
moment.  "Joe Garland is dissolute and idle.  He has always been a
wastrel, a profligate."

"But that's no reason you should keep on after him the way you do.  I've
watched you from the beginning.  The first thing you did when you
returned from college and found him working on the plantation as outside
_luna_ was to fire him--you with your millions, and he with his sixty
dollars a month."

"Not the first thing," Percival Ford said judicially, in a tone he was
accustomed to use in committee meetings.  "I gave him his warning.  The
superintendent said he was a capable _luna_.  I had no objection to him
on that ground.  It was what he did outside working hours.  He undid my
work faster than I could build it up.  Of what use were the Sunday
schools, the night schools, and the sewing classes, when in the evenings
there was Joe Garland with his infernal and eternal tum-tumming of guitar
and _ukulele_, his strong drink, and his _hula_ dancing?  After I warned
him, I came upon him--I shall never forget it--came upon him, down at the
cabins.  It was evening.  I could hear the _hula_ songs before I saw the
scene.  And when I did see it, there were the girls, shameless in the
moonlight and dancing--the girls upon whom I had worked to teach clean
living and right conduct.  And there were three girls there, I remember,
just graduated from the mission school.  Of course I discharged Joe
Garland.  I know it was the same at Hilo.  People said I went out of my
way when I persuaded Mason and Fitch to discharge him.  But it was the
missionaries who requested me to do so.  He was undoing their work by his
reprehensible example."

"Afterwards, when he got on the railroad, your railroad, he was
discharged without cause," Kennedy challenged.

"Not so," was the quick answer.  "I had him into my private office and
talked with him for half an hour."

"You discharged him for inefficiency?"

"For immoral living, if you please."

Dr. Kennedy laughed with a grating sound.  "Who the devil gave it to you
to be judge and jury?  Does landlordism give you control of the immortal
souls of those that toil for you?  I have been your physician.  Am I to
expect tomorrow your ukase that I give up Scotch and soda or your
patronage?  Bah!  Ford, you take life too seriously.  Besides, when Joe
got into that smuggling scrape (he wasn't in your employ, either), and he
sent word to you, asked you to pay his fine, you left him to do his six
months' hard labour on the reef.  Don't forget, you left Joe Garland in
the lurch that time.  You threw him down, hard; and yet I remember the
first day you came to school--we boarded, you were only a day scholar--you
had to be initiated.  Three times under in the swimming tank--you
remember, it was the regular dose every new boy got.  And you held back.
You denied that you _could_ swim.  You were frightened, hysterical--"

"Yes, I know," Percival Ford said slowly.  "I was frightened.  And it was
a lie, for I could swim . . . And I was frightened."

"And you remember who fought for you? who lied for you harder than you
could lie, and swore he knew you couldn't swim?  Who jumped into the tank
and pulled you out after the first under and was nearly drowned for it by
the other boys, who had discovered by that time that you _could_ swim?"

"Of course I know," the other rejoined coldly.  "But a generous act as a
boy does not excuse a lifetime of wrong living."

"He has never done wrong to you?--personally and directly, I mean?"

"No," was Percival Ford's answer.  "That is what makes my position
impregnable.  I have no personal spite against him.  He is bad, that is
all.  His life is bad--"

"Which is another way of saying that he does not agree with you in the
way life should be lived," the doctor interrupted.

"Have it that way.  It is immaterial.  He is an idler--"

"With reason," was the interruption, "considering the jobs out of which
you have knocked him."

"He is immoral--"

"Oh, hold on now, Ford.  Don't go harping on that.  You are pure New
England stock.  Joe Garland is half Kanaka.  Your blood is thin.  His is
warm.  Life is one thing to you, another thing to him.  He laughs and
sings and dances through life, genial, unselfish, childlike, everybody's
friend.  You go through life like a perambulating prayer-wheel, a friend
of nobody but the righteous, and the righteous are those who agree with
you as to what is right.  And after all, who shall say?  You live like an
anchorite.  Joe Garland lives like a good fellow.  Who has extracted the
most from life?  We are paid to live, you know.  When the wages are too
meagre we throw up the job, which is the cause, believe me, of all
rational suicide.  Joe Garland would starve to death on the wages you get
from life.  You see, he is made differently.  So would you starve on his
wages, which are singing, and love--"

"Lust, if you will pardon me," was the interruption.

Dr. Kennedy smiled.

"Love, to you, is a word of four letters and a definition which you have
extracted from the dictionary.  But love, real love, dewy and palpitant
and tender, you do not know.  If God made you and me, and men and women,
believe me He made love, too.  But to come back.  It's about time you
quit hounding Joe Garland.  It is not worthy of you, and it is cowardly.
The thing for you to do is to reach out and lend him a hand."

"Why I, any more than you?" the other demanded.  "Why don't you reach him
a hand?"

"I have.  I'm reaching him a hand now.  I'm trying to get you not to down
the Promotion Committee's proposition of sending him away.  I got him the
job at Hilo with Mason and Fitch.  I've got him half a dozen jobs, out of
every one of which you drove him.  But never mind that.  Don't forget one
thing--and a little frankness won't hurt you--it is not fair play to
saddle another fault on Joe Garland; and you know that you, least of all,
are the man to do it.  Why, man, it's not good taste.  It's positively
indecent."

"Now I don't follow you," Percival Ford answered.  "You're up in the air
with some obscure scientific theory of heredity and personal
irresponsibility.  But how any theory can hold Joe Garland irresponsible
for his wrongdoings and at the same time hold me personally responsible
for them--more responsible than any one else, including Joe Garland--is
beyond me."

"It's a matter of delicacy, I suppose, or of taste, that prevents you
from following me," Dr. Kennedy snapped out.  "It's all very well, for
the sake of society, tacitly to ignore some things, but you do more than
tacitly ignore."

"What is it, pray, that I tacitly ignore!"

Dr. Kennedy was angry.  A deeper red than that of constitutional Scotch
and soda suffused his face, as he answered:

"Your father's son."

"Now just what do you mean?"

"Damn it, man, you can't ask me to be plainer spoken than that.  But if
you will, all right--Isaac Ford's son--Joe Garland--your brother."

Percival Ford sat quietly, an annoyed and shocked expression on his face.
Kennedy looked at him curiously, then, as the slow minutes dragged by,
became embarrassed and frightened.

"My God!" he cried finally, "you don't mean to tell me that you didn't
know!"

As in answer, Percival Ford's cheeks turned slowly grey.

"It's a ghastly joke," he said; "a ghastly joke."

The doctor had got himself in hand.

"Everybody knows it," he said.  "I thought you knew it.  And since you
don't know it, it's time you did, and I'm glad of the chance of setting
you straight.  Joe Garland and you are brothers--half-brothers."

"It's a lie," Ford cried.  "You don't mean it.  Joe Garland's mother was
Eliza Kunilio."  (Dr. Kennedy nodded.)  "I remember her well, with her
duck pond and _taro_ patch.  His father was Joseph Garland, the beach-
comber."  (Dr. Kennedy shook his head.)  "He died only two or three years
ago.  He used to get drunk.  There's where Joe got his dissoluteness.
There's the heredity for you."

"And nobody told you," Kennedy said wonderingly, after a pause.

"Dr. Kennedy, you have said something terrible, which I cannot allow to
pass.  You must either prove or, or . . . "

"Prove it yourself.  Turn around and look at him.  You've got him in
profile.  Look at his nose.  That's Isaac Ford's.  Yours is a thin
edition of it.  That's right.  Look.  The lines are fuller, but they are
all there."

Percival Ford looked at the Kanaka half-breed who played under the _hau_
tree, and it seemed, as by some illumination, that he was gazing on a
wraith of himself.  Feature after feature flashed up an unmistakable
resemblance.  Or, rather, it was he who was the wraith of that other full-
muscled and generously moulded man.  And his features, and that other
man's features, were all reminiscent of Isaac Ford.  And nobody had told
him.  Every line of Isaac Ford's face he knew.  Miniatures, portraits,
and photographs of his father were passing in review through his mind,
and here and there, over and again, in the face before him, he caught
resemblances and vague hints of likeness.  It was devil's work that could
reproduce the austere features of Isaac Ford in the loose and sensuous
features before him.  Once, the man turned, and for one flashing instant
it seemed to Percival Ford that he saw his father, dead and gone, peering
at him out of the face of Joe Garland.

"It's nothing at all," he could faintly hear Dr. Kennedy saying, "They
were all mixed up in the old days.  You know that.  You've seen it all
your life.  Sailors married queens and begat princesses and all the rest
of it.  It was the usual thing in the Islands."

"But not with my father," Percival Ford interrupted.

"There you are."  Kennedy shrugged his shoulders.  "Cosmic sap and smoke
of life.  Old Isaac Ford was straitlaced and all the rest, and I know
there's no explaining it, least of all to himself.  He understood it no
more than you do.  Smoke of life, that's all.  And don't forget one
thing, Ford.  There was a dab of unruly blood in old Isaac Ford, and Joe
Garland inherited it--all of it, smoke of life and cosmic sap; while you
inherited all of old Isaac's ascetic blood.  And just because your blood
is cold, well-ordered, and well-disciplined, is no reason that you should
frown upon Joe Garland.  When Joe Garland undoes the work you do,
remember that it is only old Isaac Ford on both sides, undoing with one
hand what he does with the other.  You are Isaac Ford's right hand, let
us say; Joe Garland is his left hand."

Percival Ford made no answer, and in the silence Dr. Kennedy finished his
forgotten Scotch and soda.  From across the grounds an automobile hooted
imperatively.

"There's the machine," Dr. Kennedy said, rising.  "I've got to run.  I'm
sorry I've shaken you up, and at the same time I'm glad.  And know one
thing, Isaac Ford's dab of unruly blood was remarkably small, and Joe
Garland got it all.  And one other thing.  If your father's left hand
offend you, don't smite it off.  Besides, Joe is all right.  Frankly, if
I could choose between you and him to live with me on a desert isle, I'd
choose Joe."

Little bare-legged children ran about him, playing, on the grass; but
Percival Ford did not see them.  He was gazing steadily at the singer
under the _hau_ tree.  He even changed his position once, to get closer.
The clerk of the Seaside went by, limping with age and dragging his
reluctant feet.  He had lived forty years on the Islands.  Percival Ford
beckoned to him, and the clerk came respectfully, and wondering that he
should be noticed by Percival Ford.

"John," Ford said, "I want you to give me some information.  Won't you
sit down?"

The clerk sat down awkwardly, stunned by the unexpected honour.  He
blinked at the other and mumbled, "Yes, sir, thank you."

"John, who is Joe Garland?"

The clerk stared at him, blinked, cleared his throat, and said nothing.

"Go on," Percival Ford commanded.

"Who is he?"

"You're joking me, sir," the other managed to articulate.

"I spoke to you seriously."

The clerk recoiled from him.

"You don't mean to say you don't know?" he questioned, his question in
itself the answer.

"I want to know."

"Why, he's--" John broke off and looked about him helplessly.  "Hadn't
you better ask somebody else?  Everybody thought you knew.  We always
thought . . . "

"Yes, go ahead."

"We always thought that that was why you had it in for him."

Photographs and miniatures of Isaac Ford were trooping through his son's
brain, and ghosts of Isaac Ford seemed in the air about hint "I wish you
good night, sir," he could hear the clerk saying, and he saw him
beginning to limp away.

"John," he called abruptly.

John came back and stood near him, blinking and nervously moistening his
lips.

"You haven't told me yet, you know."

"Oh, about Joe Garland?"

"Yes, about Joe Garland.  Who is he?"

"He's your brother, sir, if I say it who shouldn't."

"Thank you, John.  Good night."

"And you didn't know?" the old man queried, content to linger, now that
the crucial point was past.

"Thank you, John.  Good night," was the response.

"Yes, sir, thank you, sir.  I think it's going to rain.  Good night,
sir."

Out of the clear sky, filled only with stars and moonlight, fell a rain
so fine and attenuated as to resemble a vapour spray.  Nobody minded it;
the children played on, running bare-legged over the grass and leaping
into the sand; and in a few minutes it was gone.  In the south-east,
Diamond Head, a black blot, sharply defined, silhouetted its crater-form
against the stars.  At sleepy intervals the surf flung its foam across
the sands to the grass, and far out could be seen the black specks of
swimmers under the moon.  The voices of the singers, singing a waltz,
died away; and in the silence, from somewhere under the trees, arose the
laugh of a woman that was a love-cry.  It startled Percival Ford, and it
reminded him of Dr. Kennedy's phrase.  Down by the outrigger canoes,
where they lay hauled out on the sand, he saw men and women, Kanakas,
reclining languorously, like lotus-eaters, the women in white _holokus_;
and against one such _holoku_ he saw the dark head of the steersman of
the canoe resting upon the woman's shoulder.  Farther down, where the
strip of sand widened at the entrance to the lagoon, he saw a man and
woman walking side by side.  As they drew near the light _lanai_, he saw
the woman's hand go down to her waist and disengage a girdling arm.  And
as they passed him, Percival Ford nodded to a captain he knew, and to a
major's daughter.  Smoke of life, that was it, an ample phrase.  And
again, from under the dark algaroba tree arose the laugh of a woman that
was a love-cry; and past his chair, on the way to bed, a bare-legged
youngster was led by a chiding Japanese nurse-maid.  The voices of the
singers broke softly and meltingly into an Hawaiian love-song, and
officers and women, with encircling arms, were gliding and whirling on
the _lanai_; and once again the woman laughed under the algaroba trees.

And Percival Ford knew only disapproval of it all.  He was irritated by
the love-laugh of the woman, by the steersman with pillowed head on the
white _holoku_, by the couples that walked on the beach, by the officers
and women that danced, and by the voices of the singers singing of love,
and his brother singing there with them under the _hau_ tree.  The woman
that laughed especially irritated him.  A curious train of thought was
aroused.  He was Isaac Ford's son, and what had happened with Isaac Ford
might happen with him.  He felt in his cheeks the faint heat of a blush
at the thought, and experienced a poignant sense of shame.  He was
appalled by what was in his blood.  It was like learning suddenly that
his father had been a leper and that his own blood might bear the taint
of that dread disease.  Isaac Ford, the austere soldier of the Lord--the
old hypocrite!  What difference between him and any beach-comber?  The
house of pride that Percival Ford had builded was tumbling about his
ears.

The hours passed, the army people laughed and danced, the native
orchestra played on, and Percival Ford wrestled with the abrupt and
overwhelming problem that had been thrust upon him.  He prayed quietly,
his elbow on the table, his head bowed upon his hand, with all the
appearance of any tired onlooker.  Between the dances the army men and
women and the civilians fluttered up to him and buzzed conventionally,
and when they went back to the _lanai_ he took up his wrestling where he
had left it off.

He began to patch together his shattered ideal of Isaac Ford, and for
cement he used a cunning and subtle logic.  It was of the sort that is
compounded in the brain laboratories of egotists, and it worked.  It was
incontrovertible that his father had been made of finer clay than those
about him; but still, old Isaac had been only in the process of becoming,
while he, Percival Ford, had become.  As proof of it, he rehabilitated
his father and at the same time exalted himself.  His lean little ego
waxed to colossal proportions.  He was great enough to forgive.  He
glowed at the thought of it.  Isaac Ford had been great, but he was
greater, for he could forgive Isaac Ford and even restore him to the holy
place in his memory, though the place was not quite so holy as it had
been.  Also, he applauded Isaac Ford for having ignored the outcome of
his one step aside.  Very well, he, too, would ignore it.

The dance was breaking up.  The orchestra had finished "Aloha Oe" and was
preparing to go home.  Percival Ford clapped his hands for the Japanese
servant.

"You tell that man I want to see him," he said, pointing out Joe Garland.
"Tell him to come here, now."

Joe Garland approached and halted respectfully several paces away,
nervously fingering the guitar which he still carried.  The other did not
ask him to sit down.

"You are my brother," he said.

"Why, everybody knows that," was the reply, in tones of wonderment.

"Yes, so I understand," Percival Ford said dryly.  "But I did not know it
till this evening."

The half-brother waited uncomfortably in the silence that followed,
during which Percival Ford coolly considered his next utterance.

"You remember that first time I came to school and the boys ducked me?"
he asked.  "Why did you take my part?"

The half-brother smiled bashfully.

"Because you knew?"

"Yes, that was why."

"But I didn't know," Percival Ford said in the same dry fashion.

"Yes," the other said.

Another silence fell.  Servants were beginning to put out the lights on
the _lanai_.

"You know . . . now," the half-brother said simply.

Percival Ford frowned.  Then he looked the other over with a considering
eye.

"How much will you take to leave the Islands and never come back?" he
demanded.

"And never come back?" Joe Garland faltered.  "It is the only land I
know.  Other lands are cold.  I do not know other lands.  I have many
friends here.  In other lands there would not be one voice to say,
'_Aloha_, Joe, my boy.'"

"I said never to come back," Percival Ford reiterated.  "The _Alameda_
sails tomorrow for San Francisco."

Joe Garland was bewildered.

"But why?" he asked.  "You know now that we are brothers."

"That is why," was the retort.  "As you said yourself, everybody knows.  I
will make it worth your while."

All awkwardness and embarrassment disappeared from Joe Garland.  Birth
and station were bridged and reversed.

"You want me to go?" he demanded.

"I want you to go and never come back," Percival Ford answered.

And in that moment, flashing and fleeting, it was given him to see his
brother tower above him like a mountain, and to feel himself dwindle and
dwarf to microscopic insignificance.  But it is not well for one to see
himself truly, nor can one so see himself for long and live; and only for
that flashing moment did Percival Ford see himself and his brother in
true perspective.  The next moment he was mastered by his meagre and
insatiable ego.

"As I said, I will make it worth your while.  You will not suffer.  I
will pay you well."

"All right," Joe Garland said.  "I'll go."

He started to turn away.

"Joe," the other called.  "You see my lawyer tomorrow morning.  Five
hundred down and two hundred a month as long as you stay away."

"You are very kind," Joe Garland answered softly.  "You are too kind.  And
anyway, I guess I don't want your money.  I go tomorrow on the
_Alameda_."

He walked away, but did not say good-bye.

Percival Ford clapped his hands.

"Boy," he said to the Japanese, "a lemonade."

And over the lemonade he smiled long and contentedly to himself.




KOOLAU THE LEPER


"Because we are sick they take away our liberty.  We have obeyed the law.
We have done no wrong.  And yet they would put us in prison.  Molokai is
a prison.  That you know.  Niuli, there, his sister was sent to Molokai
seven years ago.  He has not seen her since.  Nor will he ever see her.
She must stay there until she dies.  This is not her will.  It is not
Niuli's will.  It is the will of the white men who rule the land.  And
who are these white men?

"We know.  We have it from our fathers and our fathers' fathers.  They
came like lambs, speaking softly.  Well might they speak softly, for we
were many and strong, and all the islands were ours.  As I say, they
spoke softly.  They were of two kinds.  The one kind asked our
permission, our gracious permission, to preach to us the word of God.  The
other kind asked our permission, our gracious permission, to trade with
us.  That was the beginning.  Today all the islands are theirs, all the
land, all the cattle--everything is theirs.  They that preached the word
of God and they that preached the word of Rum have fore-gathered and
become great chiefs.  They live like kings in houses of many rooms, with
multitudes of servants to care for them.  They who had nothing have
everything, and if you, or I, or any Kanaka be hungry, they sneer and
say, 'Well, why don't you work?  There are the plantations.'"

Koolau paused.  He raised one hand, and with gnarled and twisted fingers
lifted up the blazing wreath of hibiscus that crowned his black hair.  The
moonlight bathed the scene in silver.  It was a night of peace, though
those who sat about him and listened had all the seeming of
battle-wrecks.  Their faces were leonine.  Here a space yawned in a face
where should have been a nose, and there an arm-stump showed where a hand
had rotted off.  They were men and women beyond the pale, the thirty of
them, for upon them had been placed the mark of the beast.

They sat, flower-garlanded, in the perfumed, luminous night, and their
lips made uncouth noises and their throats rasped approval of Koolau's
speech.  They were creatures who once had been men and women.  But they
were men and women no longer.  They were monsters--in face and form
grotesque caricatures of everything human.  They were hideously maimed
and distorted, and had the seeming of creatures that had been racked in
millenniums of hell.  Their hands, when they possessed them, were like
harpy claws.  Their faces were the misfits and slips, crushed and bruised
by some mad god at play in the machinery of life.  Here and there were
features which the mad god had smeared half away, and one woman wept
scalding tears from twin pits of horror, where her eyes once had been.
Some were in pain and groaned from their chests.  Others coughed, making
sounds like the tearing of tissue.  Two were idiots, more like huge apes
marred in the making, until even an ape were an angel.  They mowed and
gibbered in the moonlight, under crowns of drooping, golden blossoms.
One, whose bloated ear-lobe flapped like a fan upon his shoulder, caught
up a gorgeous flower of orange and scarlet and with it decorated the
monstrous ear that flip-flapped with his every movement.

And over these things Koolau was king.  And this was his kingdom,--a
flower-throttled gorge, with beetling cliffs and crags, from which
floated the blattings of wild goats.  On three sides the grim walls rose,
festooned in fantastic draperies of tropic vegetation and pierced by cave-
entrances--the rocky lairs of Koolau's subjects.  On the fourth side the
earth fell away into a tremendous abyss, and, far below, could be seen
the summits of lesser peaks and crags, at whose bases foamed and rumbled
the Pacific surge.  In fine weather a boat could land on the rocky beach
that marked the entrance of Kalalau Valley, but the weather must be very
fine.  And a cool-headed mountaineer might climb from the beach to the
head of Kalalau Valley, to this pocket among the peaks where Koolau
ruled; but such a mountaineer must be very cool of head, and he must know
the wild-goat trails as well.  The marvel was that the mass of human
wreckage that constituted Koolau's people should have been able to drag
its helpless misery over the giddy goat-trails to this inaccessible spot.

"Brothers," Koolau began.

But one of the mowing, apelike travesties emitted a wild shriek of
madness, and Koolau waited while the shrill cachination was tossed back
and forth among the rocky walls and echoed distantly through the
pulseless night.

"Brothers, is it not strange?  Ours was the land, and behold, the land is
not ours.  What did these preachers of the word of God and the word of
Rum give us for the land?  Have you received one dollar, as much as one
dollar, any one of you, for the land?  Yet it is theirs, and in return
they tell us we can go to work on the land, their land, and that what we
produce by our toil shall be theirs.  Yet in the old days we did not have
to work.  Also, when we are sick, they take away our freedom."

"Who brought the sickness, Koolau?" demanded Kiloliana, a lean and wiry
man with a face so like a laughing faun's that one might expect to see
the cloven hoofs under him.  They were cloven, it was true, but the
cleavages were great ulcers and livid putrefactions.  Yet this was
Kiloliana, the most daring climber of them all, the man who knew every
goat-trail and who had led Koolau and his wretched followers into the
recesses of Kalalau.

"Ay, well questioned," Koolau answered.  "Because we would not work the
miles of sugar-cane where once our horses pastured, they brought the
Chinese slaves from overseas.  And with them came the Chinese
sickness--that which we suffer from and because of which they would
imprison us on Molokai.  We were born on Kauai.  We have been to the
other islands, some here and some there, to Oahu, to Maui, to Hawaii, to
Honolulu.  Yet always did we come back to Kauai.  Why did we come back?
There must be a reason.  Because we love Kauai.  We were born here.  Here
we have lived.  And here shall we die--unless--unless--there be weak
hearts amongst us.  Such we do not want.  They are fit for Molokai.  And
if there be such, let them not remain.  Tomorrow the soldiers land on the
shore.  Let the weak hearts go down to them.  They will be sent swiftly
to Molokai.  As for us, we shall stay and fight.  But know that we will
not die.  We have rifles.  You know the narrow trails where men must
creep, one by one.  I, alone, Koolau, who was once a cowboy on Niihau,
can hold the trail against a thousand men.  Here is Kapalei, who was once
a judge over men and a man with honour, but who is now a hunted rat, like
you and me.  Hear him.  He is wise."

Kapalei arose.  Once he had been a judge.  He had gone to college at
Punahou.  He had sat at meat with lords and chiefs and the high
representatives of alien powers who protected the interests of traders
and missionaries.  Such had been Kapalei.  But now, as Koolau had said,
he was a hunted rat, a creature outside the law, sunk so deep in the mire
of human horror that he was above the law as well as beneath it.  His
face was featureless, save for gaping orifices and for the lidless eyes
that burned under hairless brows.

"Let us not make trouble," he began.  "We ask to be left alone.  But if
they do not leave us alone, then is the trouble theirs and the penalty.
My fingers are gone, as you see."  He held up his stumps of hands that
all might see.  "Yet have I the joint of one thumb left, and it can pull
a trigger as firmly as did its lost neighbour in the old days.  We love
Kauai.  Let us live here, or die here, but do not let us go to the prison
of Molokai.  The sickness is not ours.  We have not sinned.  The men who
preached the word of God and the word of Rum brought the sickness with
the coolie slaves who work the stolen land.  I have been a judge.  I know
the law and the justice, and I say to you it is unjust to steal a man's
land, to make that man sick with the Chinese sickness, and then to put
that man in prison for life."

"Life is short, and the days are filled with pain," said Koolau.  "Let us
drink and dance and be happy as we can."

From one of the rocky lairs calabashes were produced and passed round.
The calabashes were filled with the fierce distillation of the root of
the _ti_-plant; and as the liquid fire coursed through them and mounted
to their brains, they forgot that they had once been men and women, for
they were men and women once more.  The woman who wept scalding tears
from open eye-pits was indeed a woman apulse with life as she plucked the
strings of an _ukulele_ and lifted her voice in a barbaric love-call such
as might have come from the dark forest-depths of the primeval world.  The
air tingled with her cry, softly imperious and seductive.  Upon a mat,
timing his rhythm to the woman's song Kiloliana danced.  It was
unmistakable.  Love danced in all his movements, and, next, dancing with
him on the mat, was a woman whose heavy hips and generous breast gave the
lie to her disease-corroded face.  It was a dance of the living dead, for
in their disintegrating bodies life still loved and longed.  Ever the
woman whose sightless eyes ran scalding tears chanted her love-cry, ever
the dancers of love danced in the warm night, and ever the calabashes
went around till in all their brains were maggots crawling of memory and
desire.  And with the woman on the mat danced a slender maid whose face
was beautiful and unmarred, but whose twisted arms that rose and fell
marked the disease's ravage.  And the two idiots, gibbering and mouthing
strange noises, danced apart, grotesque, fantastic, travestying love as
they themselves had been travestied by life.

But the woman's love-cry broke midway, the calabashes were lowered, and
the dancers ceased, as all gazed into the abyss above the sea, where a
rocket flared like a wan phantom through the moonlit air.

"It is the soldiers," said Koolau.  "Tomorrow there will be fighting.  It
is well to sleep and be prepared."

The lepers obeyed, crawling away to their lairs in the cliff, until only
Koolau remained, sitting motionless in the moonlight, his rifle across
his knees, as he gazed far down to the boats landing on the beach.

The far head of Kalalau Valley had been well chosen as a refuge.  Except
Kiloliana, who knew back-trails up the precipitous walls, no man could
win to the gorge save by advancing across a knife-edged ridge.  This
passage was a hundred yards in length.  At best, it was a scant twelve
inches wide.  On either side yawned the abyss.  A slip, and to right or
left the man would fall to his death.  But once across he would find
himself in an earthly paradise.  A sea of vegetation laved the landscape,
pouring its green billows from wall to wall, dripping from the cliff-lips
in great vine-masses, and flinging a spray of ferns and air-plants in to
the multitudinous crevices.  During the many months of Koolau's rule, he
and his followers had fought with this vegetable sea.  The choking
jungle, with its riot of blossoms, had been driven back from the bananas,
oranges, and mangoes that grew wild.  In little clearings grew the wild
arrowroot; on stone terraces, filled with soil scrapings, were the _taro_
patches and the melons; and in every open space where the sunshine
penetrated were _papaia_ trees burdened with their golden fruit.

Koolau had been driven to this refuge from the lower valley by the beach.
And if he were driven from it in turn, he knew of gorges among the
jumbled peaks of the inner fastnesses where he could lead his subjects
and live.  And now he lay with his rifle beside him, peering down through
a tangled screen of foliage at the soldiers on the beach.  He noted that
they had large guns with them, from which the sunshine flashed as from
mirrors.  The knife-edged passage lay directly before him.  Crawling
upward along the trail that led to it he could see tiny specks of men.  He
knew they were not the soldiers, but the police.  When they failed, then
the soldiers would enter the game.

He affectionately rubbed a twisted hand along his rifle barrel and made
sure that the sights were clean.  He had learned to shoot as a
wild-cattle hunter on Niihau, and on that island his skill as a marksman
was unforgotten.  As the toiling specks of men grew nearer and larger, he
estimated the range, judged the deflection of the wind that swept at
right angles across the line of fire, and calculated the chances of
overshooting marks that were so far below his level.  But he did not
shoot.  Not until they reached the beginning of the passage did he make
his presence known.  He did not disclose himself, but spoke from the
thicket.

"What do you want?" he demanded.

"We want Koolau, the leper," answered the man who led the native police,
himself a blue-eyed American.

"You must go back," Koolau said.

He knew the man, a deputy sheriff, for it was by him that he had been
harried out of Niihau, across Kauai, to Kalalau Valley, and out of the
valley to the gorge.

"Who are you?" the sheriff asked.

"I am Koolau, the leper," was the reply.

"Then come out.  We want you.  Dead or alive, there is a thousand dollars
on your head.  You cannot escape."

Koolau laughed aloud in the thicket.

"Come out!" the sheriff commanded, and was answered by silence.

He conferred with the police, and Koolau saw that they were preparing to
rush him.

"Koolau," the sheriff called.  "Koolau, I am coming across to get you."

"Then look first and well about you at the sun and sea and sky, for it
will be the last time you behold them."

"That's all right, Koolau," the sheriff said soothingly.  "I know you're
a dead shot.  But you won't shoot me.  I have never done you any wrong."

Koolau grunted in the thicket.

"I say, you know, I've never done you any wrong, have I?" the sheriff
persisted.

"You do me wrong when you try to put me in prison," was the reply.  "And
you do me wrong when you try for the thousand dollars on my head.  If you
will live, stay where you are."

"I've got to come across and get you.  I'm sorry.  But it is my duty."

"You will die before you get across."

The sheriff was no coward.  Yet was he undecided.  He gazed into the gulf
on either side and ran his eyes along the knife-edge he must travel.  Then
he made up his mind.

"Koolau," he called.

But the thicket remained silent.

"Koolau, don't shoot.  I am coming."

The sheriff turned, gave some orders to the police, then started on his
perilous way.  He advanced slowly.  It was like walking a tight rope.  He
had nothing to lean upon but the air.  The lava rock crumbled under his
feet, and on either side the dislodged fragments pitched downward through
the depths.  The sun blazed upon him, and his face was wet with sweat.
Still he advanced, until the halfway point was reached.

"Stop!" Koolau commanded from the thicket.  "One more step and I shoot."

The sheriff halted, swaying for balance as he stood poised above the
void.  His face was pale, but his eyes were determined.  He licked his
dry lips before he spoke.

"Koolau, you won't shoot me.  I know you won't."

He started once more.  The bullet whirled him half about.  On his face
was an expression of querulous surprise as he reeled to the fall.  He
tried to save himself by throwing his body across the knife-edge; but at
that moment he knew death.  The next moment the knife-edge was vacant.
Then came the rush, five policemen, in single file, with superb
steadiness, running along the knife-edge.  At the same instant the rest
of the posse opened fire on the thicket.  It was madness.  Five times
Koolau pulled the trigger, so rapidly that his shots constituted a
rattle.  Changing his position and crouching low under the bullets that
were biting and singing through the bushes, he peered out.  Four of the
police had followed the sheriff.  The fifth lay across the knife-edge
still alive.  On the farther side, no longer firing, were the surviving
police.  On the naked rock there was no hope for them.  Before they could
clamber down Koolau could have picked off the last man.  But he did not
fire, and, after a conference, one of them took off a white undershirt
and waved it as a flag.  Followed by another, he advanced along the knife-
edge to their wounded comrade.  Koolau gave no sign, but watched them
slowly withdraw and become specks as they descended into the lower
valley.

Two hours later, from another thicket, Koolau watched a body of police
trying to make the ascent from the opposite side of the valley.  He saw
the wild goats flee before them as they climbed higher and higher, until
he doubted his judgment and sent for Kiloliana, who crawled in beside
him.

"No, there is no way," said Kiloliana.

"The goats?" Koolau questioned.

"They come over from the next valley, but they cannot pass to this.  There
is no way.  Those men are not wiser than goats.  They may fall to their
deaths.  Let us watch."

"They are brave men," said Koolau.  "Let us watch."

Side by side they lay among the morning-glories, with the yellow blossoms
of the _hau_ dropping upon them from overhead, watching the motes of men
toil upward, till the thing happened, and three of them, slipping,
rolling, sliding, dashed over a cliff-lip and fell sheer half a thousand
feet.

Kiloliana chuckled.

"We will be bothered no more," he said.

"They have war guns," Koolau made answer.  "The soldiers have not yet
spoken."

In the drowsy afternoon, most of the lepers lay in their rock dens
asleep.  Koolau, his rifle on his knees, fresh-cleaned and ready, dozed
in the entrance to his own den.  The maid with the twisted arms lay below
in the thicket and kept watch on the knife-edge passage.  Suddenly Koolau
was startled wide awake by the sound of an explosion on the beach.  The
next instant the atmosphere was incredibly rent asunder.  The terrible
sound frightened him.  It was as if all the gods had caught the envelope
of the sky in their hands and were ripping it apart as a woman rips apart
a sheet of cotton cloth.  But it was such an immense ripping, growing
swiftly nearer.  Koolau glanced up apprehensively, as if expecting to see
the thing.  Then high up on the cliff overhead the shell burst in a
fountain of black smoke.  The rock was shattered, the fragments falling
to the foot of the cliff.

Koolau passed his hand across his sweaty brow.  He was terribly shaken.
He had had no experience with shell-fire, and this was more dreadful than
anything he had imagined.

"One," said Kapahei, suddenly bethinking himself to keep count.

A second and a third shell flew screaming over the top of the wall,
bursting beyond view.  Kapahei methodically kept the count.  The lepers
crowded into the open space before the caves.  At first they were
frightened, but as the shells continued their flight overhead the leper
folk became reassured and began to admire the spectacle.

The two idiots shrieked with delight, prancing wild antics as each air-
tormenting shell went by.  Koolau began to recover his confidence.  No
damage was being done.  Evidently they could not aim such large missiles
at such long range with the precision of a rifle.

But a change came over the situation.  The shells began to fall short.
One burst below in the thicket by the knife-edge.  Koolau remembered the
maid who lay there on watch, and ran down to see.  The smoke was still
rising from the bushes when he crawled in.  He was astounded.  The
branches were splintered and broken.  Where the girl had lain was a hole
in the ground.  The girl herself was in shattered fragments.  The shell
had burst right on her.

First peering out to make sure no soldiers were attempting the passage,
Koolau started back on the run for the caves.  All the time the shells
were moaning, whining, screaming by, and the valley was rumbling and
reverberating with the explosions.  As he came in sight of the caves, he
saw the two idiots cavorting about, clutching each other's hands with
their stumps of fingers.  Even as he ran, Koolau saw a spout of black
smoke rise from the ground, near to the idiots.  They were flung apart
bodily by the explosion.  One lay motionless, but the other was dragging
himself by his hands toward the cave.  His legs trailed out helplessly
behind him, while the blood was pouring from his body.  He seemed bathed
in blood, and as he crawled he cried like a little dog.  The rest of the
lepers, with the exception of Kapahei, had fled into the caves.

"Seventeen," said Kapahei.  "Eighteen," he added.

This last shell had fairly entered into one of the caves.  The explosion
caused the caves to empty.  But from the particular cave no one emerged.
Koolau crept in through the pungent, acrid smoke.  Four bodies,
frightfully mangled, lay about.  One of them was the sightless woman
whose tears till now had never ceased.

Outside, Koolau found his people in a panic and already beginning to
climb the goat-trail that led out of the gorge and on among the jumbled
heights and chasms.  The wounded idiot, whining feebly and dragging
himself along on the ground by his hands, was trying to follow.  But at
the first pitch of the wall his helplessness overcame him and he fell
back.

"It would be better to kill him," said Koolau to Kapahei, who still sat
in the same place.

"Twenty-two," Kapahei answered.  "Yes, it would be a wise thing to kill
him.  Twenty-three--twenty-four."

The idiot whined sharply when he saw the rifle levelled at him.  Koolau
hesitated, then lowered the gun.

"It is a hard thing to do," he said.

"You are a fool, twenty-six, twenty-seven," said Kapahei.  "Let me show
you."

He arose, and with a heavy fragment of rock in his hand, approached the
wounded thing.  As he lifted his arm to strike, a shell burst full upon
him, relieving him of the necessity of the act and at the same time
putting an end to his count.

Koolau was alone in the gorge.  He watched the last of his people drag
their crippled bodies over the brow of the height and disappear.  Then he
turned and went down to the thicket where the maid had keen killed.  The
shell-fire still continued, but he remained; for far below he could see
the soldiers climbing up.  A shell burst twenty feet away.  Flattening
himself into the earth, he heard the rush of the fragments above his
body.  A shower of hau blossoms rained upon him.  He lifted his head to
peer down the trail, and sighed.  He was very much afraid.  Bullets from
rifles would not have worried him, but this shell-fire was abominable.
Each time a shell shrieked by he shivered and crouched; but each time he
lifted his head again to watch the trail.

At last the shells ceased.  This, he reasoned, was because the soldiers
were drawing near.  They crept along the trail in single file, and he
tried to count them until he lost track.  At any rate, there were a
hundred or so of them--all come after Koolau the leper.  He felt a
fleeting prod of pride.  With war guns and rifles, police and soldiers,
they came for him, and he was only one man, a crippled wreck of a man at
that.  They offered a thousand dollars for him, dead or alive.  In all
his life he had never possessed that much money.  The thought was a
bitter one.  Kapahei had been right.  He, Koolau, had done no wrong.
Because the _haoles_ wanted labour with which to work the stolen land,
they had brought in the Chinese coolies, and with them had come the
sickness.  And now, because he had caught the sickness, he was worth a
thousand dollars--but not to himself.  It was his worthless carcass,
rotten with disease or dead from a bursting shell, that was worth all
that money.

When the soldiers reached the knife-edged passage, he was prompted to
warn them.  But his gaze fell upon the body of the murdered maid, and he
kept silent.  When six had ventured on the knife-edge, he opened fire.
Nor did he cease when the knife-edge was bare.  He emptied his magazine,
reloaded, and emptied it again.  He kept on shooting.  All his wrongs
were blazing in his brain, and he was in a fury of vengeance.  All down
the goat-trail the soldiers were firing, and though they lay flat and
sought to shelter themselves in the shallow inequalities of the surface,
they were exposed marks to him.  Bullets whistled and thudded about him,
and an occasional ricochet sang sharply through the air.  One bullet
ploughed a crease through his scalp, and a second burned across his
shoulder-blade without breaking the skin.

It was a massacre, in which one man did the killing.  The soldiers began
to retreat, helping along their wounded.  As Koolau picked them off he
became aware of the smell of burnt meat.  He glanced about him at first,
and then discovered that it was his own hands.  The heat of the rifle was
doing it.  The leprosy had destroyed most of the nerves in his hands.
Though his flesh burned and he smelled it, there was no sensation.

He lay in the thicket, smiling, until he remembered the war guns.  Without
doubt they would open upon him again, and this time upon the very thicket
from which he had inflicted the danger.  Scarcely had he changed his
position to a nook behind a small shoulder of the wall where he had noted
that no shells fell, than the bombardment recommenced.  He counted the
shells.  Sixty more were thrown into the gorge before the war-guns
ceased.  The tiny area was pitted with their explosions, until it seemed
impossible that any creature could have survived.  So the soldiers
thought, for, under the burning afternoon sun, they climbed the
goat-trail again.  And again the knife-edged passage was disputed, and
again they fell back to the beach.

For two days longer Koolau held the passage, though the soldiers
contented themselves with flinging shells into his retreat.  Then Pahau,
a leper boy, came to the top of the wall at the back of the gorge and
shouted down to him that Kiloliana, hunting goats that they might eat,
had been killed by a fall, and that the women were frightened and knew
not what to do.  Koolau called the boy down and left him with a spare gun
with which to guard the passage.  Koolau found his people disheartened.
The majority of them were too helpless to forage food for themselves
under such forbidding circumstances, and all were starving.  He selected
two women and a man who were not too far gone with the disease, and sent
them back to the gorge to bring up food and mats.  The rest he cheered
and consoled until even the weakest took a hand in building rough
shelters for themselves.

But those he had dispatched for food did not return, and he started back
for the gorge.  As he came out on the brow of the wall, half a dozen
rifles cracked.  A bullet tore through the fleshy part of his shoulder,
and his cheek was cut by a sliver of rock where a second bullet smashed
against the cliff.  In the moment that this happened, and he leaped back,
he saw that the gorge was alive with soldiers.  His own people had
betrayed him.  The shell-fire had been too terrible, and they had
preferred the prison of Molokai.

Koolau dropped back and unslung one of his heavy cartridge-belts.  Lying
among the rocks, he allowed the head and shoulders of the first soldier
to rise clearly into view before pulling trigger.  Twice this happened,
and then, after some delay, in place of a head and shoulders a white flag
was thrust above the edge of the wall.

"What do you want?" he demanded.

"I want you, if you are Koolau the leper," came the answer.

Koolau forgot where he was, forgot everything, as he lay and marvelled at
the strange persistence of these _haoles_ who would have their will
though the sky fell in.  Aye, they would have their will over all men and
all things, even though they died in getting it.  He could not but admire
them, too, what of that will in them that was stronger than life and that
bent all things to their bidding.  He was convinced of the hopelessness
of his struggle.  There was no gainsaying that terrible will of the
_haoles_.  Though he killed a thousand, yet would they rise like the
sands of the sea and come upon him, ever more and more.  They never knew
when they were beaten.  That was their fault and their virtue.  It was
where his own kind lacked.  He could see, now, how the handful of the
preachers of God and the preachers of Rum had conquered the land.  It was
because--

"Well, what have you got to say?  Will you come with me?"

It was he voice of the invisible man under the white flag.  There he was,
like any haole, driving straight toward the end determined.

"Let us talk," said Koolau.

The man's head and shoulders arose, then his whole body.  He was a smooth-
faced, blue-eyed youngster of twenty-five, slender and natty in his
captain's uniform.  He advanced until halted, then seated himself a dozen
feet away.

"You are a brave man," said Koolau wonderingly.  "I could kill you like a
fly."

"No, you couldn't," was the answer.

"Why not?"

"Because you are a man, Koolau, though a bad one.  I know your story.  You
kill fairly."

Koolau grunted, but was secretly pleased.

"What have you done with my people?" he demanded.  "The boy, the two
women, and the man?"

"They gave themselves up, as I have now come for you to do."

Koolau laughed incredulously.

"I am a free man," he announced.  "I have done no wrong.  All I ask is to
be left alone.  I have lived free, and I shall die free.  I will never
give myself up."

"Then your people are wiser than you," answered the young captain.
"Look--they are coming now."

Koolau turned and watched the remnant of his band approach.  Groaning and
sighing, a ghastly procession, it dragged its wretchedness past.  It was
given to Koolau to taste a deeper bitterness, for they hurled
imprecations and insults at him as they went by; and the panting hag who
brought up the rear halted, and with skinny, harpy-claws extended,
shaking her snarling death's head from side to side, she laid a curse
upon him.  One by one they dropped over the lip-edge and surrendered to
the hiding soldiers.

"You can go now," said Koolau to the captain.  "I will never give myself
up.  That is my last word.  Good-bye."

The captain slipped over the cliff to his soldiers.  The next moment, and
without a flag of truce, he hoisted his hat on his scabbard, and Koolau's
bullet tore through it.  That afternoon they shelled him out from the
beach, and as he retreated into the high inaccessible pockets beyond, the
soldiers followed him.

For six weeks they hunted him from pocket to pocket, over the volcanic
peaks and along the goat-trails.  When he hid in the lantana jungle, they
formed lines of beaters, and through lantana jungle and guava scrub they
drove him like a rabbit.  But ever he turned and doubled and eluded.
There was no cornering him.  When pressed too closely, his sure rifle
held them back and they carried their wounded down the goat-trails to the
beach.  There were times when they did the shooting as his brown body
showed for a moment through the underbrush.  Once, five of them caught
him on an exposed goat-trail between pockets.  They emptied their rifles
at him as he limped and climbed along his dizzy way.  Afterwards they
found bloodstains and knew that he was wounded.  At the end of six weeks
they gave up.  The soldiers and police returned to Honolulu, and Kalalau
Valley was left to him for his own, though head-hunters ventured after
him from time to time and to their own undoing.

Two years later, and for the last time, Koolau crawled into a thicket and
lay down among the _ti_-leaves and wild ginger blossoms.  Free he had
lived, and free he was dying.  A slight drizzle of rain began to fall,
and he drew a ragged blanket about the distorted wreck of his limbs.  His
body was covered with an oilskin coat.  Across his chest he laid his
Mauser rifle, lingering affectionately for a moment to wipe the dampness
from the barrel.  The hand with which he wiped had no fingers left upon
it with which to pull the trigger.

He closed his eyes, for, from the weakness in his body and the fuzzy
turmoil in his brain, he knew that his end was near.  Like a wild animal
he had crept into hiding to die.  Half-conscious, aimless and wandering,
he lived back in his life to his early manhood on Niihau.  As life faded
and the drip of the rain grew dim in his ears it seemed to him that he
was once more in the thick of the horse-breaking, with raw colts rearing
and bucking under him, his stirrups tied together beneath, or charging
madly about the breaking corral and driving the helping cowboys over the
rails.  The next instant, and with seeming naturalness, he found himself
pursuing the wild bulls of the upland pastures, roping them and leading
them down to the valleys.  Again the sweat and dust of the branding pen
stung his eyes and bit his nostrils.

All his lusty, whole-bodied youth was his, until the sharp pangs of
impending dissolution brought him back.  He lifted his monstrous hands
and gazed at them in wonder.  But how?  Why?  Why should the wholeness of
that wild youth of his change to this?  Then he remembered, and once
again, and for a moment, he was Koolau, the leper.  His eyelids fluttered
wearily down and the drip of the rain ceased in his ears.  A prolonged
trembling set up in his body.  This, too, ceased.  He half-lifted his
head, but it fell back.  Then his eyes opened, and did not close.  His
last thought was of his Mauser, and he pressed it against his chest with
his folded, fingerless hands.




GOOD-BYE, JACK


Hawaii is a queer place.  Everything socially is what I may call topsy-
turvy.  Not but what things are correct.  They are almost too much so.
But still things are sort of upside down.  The most ultra-exclusive set
there is the "Missionary Crowd."  It comes with rather a shock to learn
that in Hawaii the obscure martyrdom-seeking missionary sits at the head
of the table of the moneyed aristocracy.  But it is true.  The humble New
Englanders who came out in the third decade of the nineteenth century,
came for the lofty purpose of teaching the kanakas the true religion, the
worship of the one only genuine and undeniable God.  So well did they
succeed in this, and also in civilizing the kanaka, that by the second or
third generation he was practically extinct.  This being the fruit of the
seed of the Gospel, the fruit of the seed of the missionaries (the sons
and the grandsons) was the possession of the islands themselves,--of the
land, the ports, the town sites, and the sugar plantations:  The
missionary who came to give the bread of life remained to gobble up the
whole heathen feast.

But that is not the Hawaiian queerness I started out to tell.  Only one
cannot speak of things Hawaiian without mentioning the missionaries.
There is Jack Kersdale, the man I wanted to tell about; he came of
missionary stock.  That is, on his grandmother's side.  His grandfather
was old Benjamin Kersdale, a Yankee trader, who got his start for a
million in the old days by selling cheap whiskey and square-face gin.
There's another queer thing.  The old missionaries and old traders were
mortal enemies.  You see, their interests conflicted.  But their children
made it up by intermarrying and dividing the island between them.

Life in Hawaii is a song.  That's the way Stoddard put it in his "Hawaii
Noi":--

   "Thy life is music--Fate the notes prolong!
   Each isle a stanza, and the whole a song."

And he was right.  Flesh is golden there.  The native women are sun-ripe
Junos, the native men bronzed Apollos.  They sing, and dance, and all are
flower-bejewelled and flower-crowned.  And, outside the rigid "Missionary
Crowd," the white men yield to the climate and the sun, and no matter how
busy they may be, are prone to dance and sing and wear flowers behind
their ears and in their hair.  Jack Kersdale was one of these fellows.  He
was one of the busiest men I ever met.  He was a several-times
millionaire.  He was a sugar-king, a coffee planter, a rubber pioneer, a
cattle rancher, and a promoter of three out of every four new enterprises
launched in the islands.  He was a society man, a club man, a yachtsman,
a bachelor, and withal as handsome a man as was ever doted upon by mammas
with marriageable daughters.  Incidentally, he had finished his education
at Yale, and his head was crammed fuller with vital statistics and
scholarly information concerning Hawaii Nei than any other islander I
ever encountered.  He turned off an immense amount of work, and he sang
and danced and put flowers in his hair as immensely as any of the idlers.
He had grit, and had fought two duels--both, political--when he was no
more than a raw youth essaying his first adventures in politics.  In
fact, he played a most creditable and courageous part in the last
revolution, when the native dynasty was overthrown; and he could not have
been over sixteen at the time.  I am pointing out that he was no coward,
in order that you may appreciate what happens later on.  I've seen him in
the breaking yard at the Haleakala Ranch, conquering a four-year-old
brute that for two years had defied the pick of Von Tempsky's cow-boys.
And I must tell of one other thing.  It was down in Kona,--or up, rather,
for the Kona people scorn to live at less than a thousand feet elevation.
We were all on the _lanai_ of Doctor Goodhue's bungalow.  I was talking
with Dottie Fairchild when it happened.  A big centipede--it was seven
inches, for we measured it afterwards--fell from the rafters overhead
squarely into her coiffure.  I confess, the hideousness of it paralysed
me.  I couldn't move.  My mind refused to work.  There, within two feet
of me, the ugly venomous devil was writhing in her hair.  It threatened
at any moment to fall down upon her exposed shoulders--we had just come
out from dinner.

"What is it?" she asked, starting to raise her hand to her head.

"Don't!" I cried.  "Don't!"

"But what is it?" she insisted, growing frightened by the fright she read
in my eyes and on my stammering lips.

My exclamation attracted Kersdale's attention.  He glanced our way
carelessly, but in that glance took in everything.  He came over to us,
but without haste.

"Please don't move, Dottie," he said quietly.

He never hesitated, nor did he hurry and make a bungle of it.

"Allow me," he said.

And with one hand he caught her scarf and drew it tightly around her
shoulders so that the centipede could not fall inside her bodice.  With
the other hand--the right--he reached into her hair, caught the repulsive
abomination as near as he was able by the nape of the neck, and held it
tightly between thumb and forefinger as he withdrew it from her hair.  It
was as horrible and heroic a sight as man could wish to see.  It made my
flesh crawl.  The centipede, seven inches of squirming legs, writhed and
twisted and dashed itself about his hand, the body twining around the
fingers and the legs digging into the skin and scratching as the beast
endeavoured to free itself.  It bit him twice--I saw it--though he
assured the ladies that he was not harmed as he dropped it upon the walk
and stamped it into the gravel.  But I saw him in the surgery five
minutes afterwards, with Doctor Goodhue scarifying the wounds and
injecting permanganate of potash.  The next morning Kersdale's arm was as
big as a barrel, and it was three weeks before the swelling went down.

All of which has nothing to do with my story, but which I could not avoid
giving in order to show that Jack Kersdale was anything but a coward.  It
was the cleanest exhibition of grit I have ever seen.  He never turned a
hair.  The smile never left his lips.  And he dived with thumb and
forefinger into Dottie Fairchild's hair as gaily as if it had been a box
of salted almonds.  Yet that was the man I was destined to see stricken
with a fear a thousand times more hideous even than the fear that was
mine when I saw that writhing abomination in Dottie Fairchild's hair,
dangling over her eyes and the trap of her bodice.

I was interested in leprosy, and upon that, as upon every other island
subject, Kersdale had encyclopedic knowledge.  In fact, leprosy was one
of his hobbies.  He was an ardent defender of the settlement at Molokai,
where all the island lepers were segregated.  There was much talk and
feeling among the natives, fanned by the demagogues, concerning the
cruelties of Molokai, where men and women, not alone banished from
friends and family, were compelled to live in perpetual imprisonment
until they died.  There were no reprieves, no commutations of sentences.
"Abandon hope" was written over the portal of Molokai.

"I tell you they are happy there," Kersdale insisted.  "And they are
infinitely better off than their friends and relatives outside who have
nothing the matter with them.  The horrors of Molokai are all poppycock.
I can take you through any hospital or any slum in any of the great
cities of the world and show you a thousand times worse horrors.  The
living death!  The creatures that once were men!  Bosh!  You ought to see
those living deaths racing horses on the Fourth of July.  Some of them
own boats.  One has a gasoline launch.  They have nothing to do but have
a good time.  Food, shelter, clothes, medical attendance, everything, is
theirs.  They are the wards of the Territory.  They have a much finer
climate than Honolulu, and the scenery is magnificent.  I shouldn't mind
going down there myself for the rest of my days.  It is a lovely spot."

So Kersdale on the joyous leper.  He was not afraid of leprosy.  He said
so himself, and that there wasn't one chance in a million for him or any
other white man to catch it, though he confessed afterward that one of
his school chums, Alfred Starter, had contracted it, gone to Molokai, and
there died.

"You know, in the old days," Kersdale explained, "there was no certain
test for leprosy.  Anything unusual or abnormal was sufficient to send a
fellow to Molokai.  The result was that dozens were sent there who were
no more lepers than you or I.  But they don't make that mistake now.  The
Board of Health tests are infallible.  The funny thing is that when the
test was discovered they immediately went down to Molokai and applied it,
and they found a number who were not lepers.  These were immediately
deported.  Happy to get away?  They wailed harder at leaving the
settlement than when they left Honolulu to go to it.  Some refused to
leave, and really had to be forced out.  One of them even married a leper
woman in the last stages and then wrote pathetic letters to the Board of
Health, protesting against his expulsion on the ground that no one was so
well able as he to take care of his poor old wife."

"What is this infallible test?" I demanded.

"The bacteriological test.  There is no getting away from it.  Doctor
Hervey--he's our expert, you know--was the first man to apply it here.  He
is a wizard.  He knows more about leprosy than any living man, and if a
cure is ever discovered, he'll be that discoverer.  As for the test, it
is very simple.  They have succeeded in isolating the _bacillus leprae_
and studying it.  They know it now when they see it.  All they do is to
snip a bit of skin from the suspect and subject it to the bacteriological
test.  A man without any visible symptoms may be chock full of the
leprosy bacilli."

"Then you or I, for all we know," I suggested, "may be full of it now."

Kersdale shrugged his shoulders and laughed.

"Who can say?  It takes seven years for it to incubate.  If you have any
doubts go and see Doctor Hervey.  He'll just snip out a piece of your
skin and let you know in a jiffy."

Later on he introduced me to Dr. Hervey, who loaded me down with Board of
Health reports and pamphlets on the subject, and took me out to Kalihi,
the Honolulu receiving station, where suspects were examined and
confirmed lepers were held for deportation to Molokai.  These
deportations occurred about once a month, when, the last good-byes said,
the lepers were marched on board the little steamer, the _Noeau_, and
carried down to the settlement.

One afternoon, writing letters at the club, Jack Kersdale dropped in on
me.

"Just the man I want to see," was his greeting.  "I'll show you the
saddest aspect of the whole situation--the lepers wailing as they depart
for Molokai.  The _Noeau_ will be taking them on board in a few minutes.
But let me warn you not to let your feelings be harrowed.  Real as their
grief is, they'd wail a whole sight harder a year hence if the Board of
Health tried to take them away from Molokai.  We've just time for a
whiskey and soda.  I've a carriage outside.  It won't take us five
minutes to get down to the wharf."

To the wharf we drove.  Some forty sad wretches, amid their mats,
blankets, and luggage of various sorts, were squatting on the stringer
piece.  The Noeau had just arrived and was making fast to a lighter that
lay between her and the wharf.  A Mr. McVeigh, the superintendent of the
settlement, was overseeing the embarkation, and to him I was introduced,
also to Dr. Georges, one of the Board of Health physicians whom I had
already met at Kalihi.  The lepers were a woebegone lot.  The faces of
the majority were hideous--too horrible for me to describe.  But here and
there I noticed fairly good-looking persons, with no apparent signs of
the fell disease upon them.  One, I noticed, a little white girl, not
more than twelve, with blue eyes and golden hair.  One cheek, however,
showed the leprous bloat.  On my remarking on the sadness of her alien
situation among the brown-skinned afflicted ones, Doctor Georges
replied:--

"Oh, I don't know.  It's a happy day in her life.  She comes from Kauai.
Her father is a brute.  And now that she has developed the disease she is
going to join her mother at the settlement.  Her mother was sent down
three years ago--a very bad case."

"You can't always tell from appearances," Mr. McVeigh explained.  "That
man there, that big chap, who looks the pink of condition, with nothing
the matter with him, I happen to know has a perforating ulcer in his foot
and another in his shoulder-blade.  Then there are others--there, see
that girl's hand, the one who is smoking the cigarette.  See her twisted
fingers.  That's the anaesthetic form.  It attacks the nerves.  You could
cut her fingers off with a dull knife, or rub them off on a
nutmeg-grater, and she would not experience the slightest sensation."

"Yes, but that fine-looking woman, there," I persisted; "surely, surely,
there can't be anything the matter with her.  She is too glorious and
gorgeous altogether."

"A sad case," Mr. McVeigh answered over his shoulder, already turning
away to walk down the wharf with Kersdale.

She was a beautiful woman, and she was pure Polynesian.  From my meagre
knowledge of the race and its types I could not but conclude that she had
descended from old chief stock.  She could not have been more than twenty-
three or four.  Her lines and proportions were magnificent, and she was
just beginning to show the amplitude of the women of her race.

"It was a blow to all of us," Dr. Georges volunteered.  "She gave herself
up voluntarily, too.  No one suspected.  But somehow she had contracted
the disease.  It broke us all up, I assure you.  We've kept it out of the
papers, though.  Nobody but us and her family knows what has become of
her.  In fact, if you were to ask any man in Honolulu, he'd tell you it
was his impression that she was somewhere in Europe.  It was at her
request that we've been so quiet about it.  Poor girl, she has a lot of
pride."

"But who is she?" I asked.  "Certainly, from the way you talk about her,
she must be somebody."

"Did you ever hear of Lucy Mokunui?" he asked.

"Lucy Mokunui?" I repeated, haunted by some familiar association.  I
shook my head.  "It seems to me I've heard the name, but I've forgotten
it."

"Never heard of Lucy Mokunui!  The Hawaiian nightingale!  I beg your
pardon.  Of course you are a _malahini_, {1} and could not be expected to
know.  Well, Lucy Mokunui was the best beloved of Honolulu--of all
Hawaii, for that matter."

"You say was," I interrupted.

"And I mean it.  She is finished."  He shrugged his shoulders pityingly.
"A dozen _haoles_--I beg your pardon, white men--have lost their hearts
to her at one time or another.  And I'm not counting in the ruck.  The
dozen I refer to were _haoles_ of position and prominence."

"She could have married the son of the Chief Justice if she'd wanted to.
You think she's beautiful, eh?  But you should hear her sing.  Finest
native woman singer in Hawaii Nei.  Her throat is pure silver and melted
sunshine.  We adored her.  She toured America first with the Royal
Hawaiian Band.  After that she made two more trips on her own--concert
work."

"Oh!" I cried.  "I remember now.  I heard her two years ago at the Boston
Symphony.  So that is she.  I recognize her now."

I was oppressed by a heavy sadness.  Life was a futile thing at best.  A
short two years and this magnificent creature, at the summit of her
magnificent success, was one of the leper squad awaiting deportation to
Molokai.  Henley's lines came into my mind:--

   "The poor old tramp explains his poor old ulcers;
   Life is, I think, a blunder and a shame."

I recoiled from my own future.  If this awful fate fell to Lucy Mokunui,
what might my lot not be?--or anybody's lot?  I was thoroughly aware that
in life we are in the midst of death--but to be in the midst of living
death, to die and not be dead, to be one of that draft of creatures that
once were men, aye, and women, like Lucy Mokunui, the epitome of all
Polynesian charms, an artist as well, and well beloved of men--.  I am
afraid I must have betrayed my perturbation, for Doctor Georges hastened
to assure me that they were very happy down in the settlement.

It was all too inconceivably monstrous.  I could not bear to look at her.
A short distance away, behind a stretched rope guarded by a policeman,
were the lepers' relatives and friends.  They were not allowed to come
near.  There were no last embraces, no kisses of farewell.  They called
back and forth to one another--last messages, last words of love, last
reiterated instructions.  And those behind the rope looked with terrible
intensity.  It was the last time they would behold the faces of their
loved ones, for they were the living dead, being carted away in the
funeral ship to the graveyard of Molokai.

Doctor Georges gave the command, and the unhappy wretches dragged
themselves to their feet and under their burdens of luggage began to
stagger across the lighter and aboard the steamer.  It was the funeral
procession.  At once the wailing started from those behind the rope.  It
was blood-curdling; it was heart-rending.  I never heard such woe, and I
hope never to again.  Kersdale and McVeigh were still at the other end of
the wharf, talking earnestly--politics, of course, for both were head-
over-heels in that particular game.  When Lucy Mokunui passed me, I stole
a look at her.  She _was_ beautiful.  She was beautiful by our standards,
as well--one of those rare blossoms that occur but once in generations.
And she, of all women, was doomed to Molokai.  She straight on board, and
aft on the open deck where the lepers huddled by the rail, wailing now,
to their dear ones on shore.

The lines were cast off, and the _Noeau_ began to move away from the
wharf.  The wailing increased.  Such grief and despair!  I was just
resolving that never again would I be a witness to the sailing of the
_Noeau_, when McVeigh and Kersdale returned.  The latter's eyes were
sparkling, and his lips could not quite hide the smile of delight that
was his.  Evidently the politics they had talked had been satisfactory.
The rope had been flung aside, and the lamenting relatives now crowded
the stringer piece on either side of us.

"That's her mother," Doctor Georges whispered, indicating an old woman
next to me, who was rocking back and forth and gazing at the steamer rail
out of tear-blinded eyes.  I noticed that Lucy Mokunui was also wailing.
She stopped abruptly and gazed at Kersdale.  Then she stretched forth her
arms in that adorable, sensuous way that Olga Nethersole has of embracing
an audience.  And with arms outspread, she cried:

"Good-bye, Jack!  Good-bye!"

He heard the cry, and looked.  Never was a man overtaken by more crushing
fear.  He reeled on the stringer piece, his face went white to the roots
of his hair, and he seemed to shrink and wither away inside his clothes.
He threw up his hands and groaned, "My God!  My God!"  Then he controlled
himself by a great effort.

"Good-bye, Lucy!  Good-bye!" he called.

And he stood there on the wharf, waving his hands to her till the _Noeau_
was clear away and the faces lining her after-rail were vague and
indistinct.

"I thought you knew," said McVeigh, who had been regarding him curiously.
"You, of all men, should have known.  I thought that was why you were
here."

"I know now," Kersdale answered with immense gravity.  "Where's the
carriage?"

He walked rapidly--half-ran--to it.  I had to half-run myself to keep up
with him.

"Drive to Doctor Hervey's," he told the driver.  "Drive as fast as you
can."

He sank down in a seat, panting and gasping.  The pallor of his face had
increased.  His lips were compressed and the sweat was standing out on
his forehead and upper lip.  He seemed in some horrible agony.

"For God's sake, Martin, make those horses go!" he broke out suddenly.
"Lay the whip into them!--do you hear?--lay the whip into them!"

"They'll break, sir," the driver remonstrated.

"Let them break," Kersdale answered.  "I'll pay your fine and square you
with the police.  Put it to them.  That's right.  Faster!  Faster!"

"And I never knew, I never knew," he muttered, sinking back in the seat
and with trembling hands wiping the sweat away.

The carriage was bouncing, swaying and lurching around corners at such a
wild pace as to make conversation impossible.  Besides, there was nothing
to say.  But I could hear him muttering over and over, "And I never knew.
I never knew."




ALOHA OE


Never are there such departures as from the dock at Honolulu.  The great
transport lay with steam up, ready to pull out.  A thousand persons were
on her decks; five thousand stood on the wharf.  Up and down the long
gangway passed native princes and princesses, sugar kings and the high
officials of the Territory.  Beyond, in long lines, kept in order by the
native police, were the carriages and motor-cars of the Honolulu
aristocracy.  On the wharf the Royal Hawaiian Band played "Aloha Oe," and
when it finished, a stringed orchestra of native musicians on board the
transport took up the same sobbing strains, the native woman singer's
voice rising birdlike above the instruments and the hubbub of departure.
It was a silver reed, sounding its clear, unmistakable note in the great
diapason of farewell.

Forward, on the lower deck, the rail was lined six deep with khaki-clad
young boys, whose bronzed faces told of three years' campaigning under
the sun.  But the farewell was not for them.  Nor was it for the white-
clad captain on the lofty bridge, remote as the stars, gazing down upon
the tumult beneath him.  Nor was the farewell for the young officers
farther aft, returning from the Philippines, nor for the white-faced,
climate-ravaged women by their sides.  Just aft the gangway, on the
promenade deck, stood a score of United States Senators with their wives
and daughters--the Senatorial junketing party that for a month had been
dined and wined, surfeited with statistics and dragged up volcanic hill
and down lava dale to behold the glories and resources of Hawaii.  It was
for the junketing party that the transport had called in at Honolulu, and
it was to the junketing party that Honolulu was saying good-bye.

The Senators were garlanded and bedecked with flowers.  Senator Jeremy
Sambrooke's stout neck and portly bosom were burdened with a dozen
wreaths.  Out of this mass of bloom and blossom projected his head and
the greater portion of his freshly sunburned and perspiring face.  He
thought the flowers an abomination, and as he looked out over the
multitude on the wharf it was with a statistical eye that saw none of the
beauty, but that peered into the labour power, the factories, the
railroads, and the plantations that lay back of the multitude and which
the multitude expressed.  He saw resources and thought development, and
he was too busy with dreams of material achievement and empire to notice
his daughter at his side, talking with a young fellow in a natty summer
suit and straw hat, whose eager eyes seemed only for her and never left
her face.  Had Senator Jeremy had eyes for his daughter, he would have
seen that, in place of the young girl of fifteen he had brought to Hawaii
a short month before, he was now taking away with him a woman.

Hawaii has a ripening climate, and Dorothy Sambrooke had been exposed to
it under exceptionally ripening circumstances.  Slender, pale, with blue
eyes a trifle tired from poring over the pages of books and trying to
muddle into an understanding of life--such she had been the month before.
But now the eyes were warm instead of tired, the cheeks were touched with
the sun, and the body gave the first hint and promise of swelling lines.
During that month she had left books alone, for she had found greater joy
in reading from the book of life.  She had ridden horses, climbed
volcanoes, and learned surf swimming.  The tropics had entered into her
blood, and she was aglow with the warmth and colour and sunshine.  And
for a month she had been in the company of a man--Stephen Knight,
athlete, surf-board rider, a bronzed god of the sea who bitted the
crashing breakers, leaped upon their backs, and rode them in to shore.

Dorothy Sambrooke was unaware of the change.  Her consciousness was still
that of a young girl, and she was surprised and troubled by Steve's
conduct in this hour of saying good-bye.  She had looked upon him as her
playfellow, and for the month he had been her playfellow; but now he was
not parting like a playfellow.  He talked excitedly and disconnectedly,
or was silent, by fits and starts.  Sometimes he did not hear what she
was saying, or if he did, failed to respond in his wonted manner.  She
was perturbed by the way he looked at her.  She had not known before that
he had such blazing eyes.  There was something in his eyes that was
terrifying.  She could not face it, and her own eyes continually drooped
before it.  Yet there was something alluring about it, as well, and she
continually returned to catch a glimpse of that blazing, imperious,
yearning something that she had never seen in human eyes before.  And she
was herself strangely bewildered and excited.

The transport's huge whistle blew a deafening blast, and the
flower-crowned multitude surged closer to the side of the dock.  Dorothy
Sambrooke's fingers were pressed to her ears; and as she made a _moue_ of
distaste at the outrage of sound, she noticed again the imperious,
yearning blaze in Steve's eyes.  He was not looking at her, but at her
ears, delicately pink and transparent in the slanting rays of the
afternoon sun.  Curious and fascinated, she gazed at that strange
something in his eyes until he saw that he had been caught.  She saw his
cheeks flush darkly and heard him utter inarticulately.  He was
embarrassed, and she was aware of embarrassment herself.  Stewards were
going about nervously begging shore-going persons to be gone.  Steve put
out his hand.  When she felt the grip of the fingers that had gripped
hers a thousand times on surf-boards and lava slopes, she heard the words
of the song with a new understanding as they sobbed in the Hawaiian
woman's silver throat:

   "Ka halia ko aloha kai hiki mai,
   Ke hone ae nei i ku'u manawa,
   O oe no kan aloha
   A loko e hana nei."

Steve had taught her air and words and meaning--so she had thought, till
this instant; and in this instant of the last finger clasp and warm
contact of palms she divined for the first time the real meaning of the
song.  She scarcely saw him go, nor could she note him on the crowded
gangway, for she was deep in a memory maze, living over the four weeks
just past, rereading events in the light of revelation.

When the Senatorial party had landed, Steve had been one of the committee
of entertainment.  It was he who had given them their first exhibition of
surf riding, out at Waikiki Beach, paddling his narrow board seaward
until he became a disappearing speck, and then, suddenly reappearing,
rising like a sea-god from out of the welter of spume and churning
white--rising swiftly higher and higher, shoulders and chest and loins
and limbs, until he stood poised on the smoking crest of a mighty, mile-
long billow, his feet buried in the flying foam, hurling beach-ward with
the speed of an express train and stepping calmly ashore at their
astounded feet.  That had been her first glimpse of Steve.  He had been
the youngest man on the committee, a youth, himself, of twenty.  He had
not entertained by speechmaking, nor had he shone decoratively at
receptions.  It was in the breakers at Waikiki, in the wild cattle drive
on Manna Kea, and in the breaking yard of the Haleakala Ranch that he had
performed his share of the entertaining.

She had not cared for the interminable statistics and eternal
speechmaking of the other members of the committee.  Neither had Steve.
And it was with Steve that she had stolen away from the open-air feast at
Hamakua, and from Abe Louisson, the coffee planter, who had talked
coffee, coffee, nothing but coffee, for two mortal hours.  It was then,
as they rode among the tree ferns, that Steve had taught her the words of
"Aloha Oe," the song that had been sung to the visiting Senators at every
village, ranch, and plantation departure.

Steve and she had been much together from the first.  He had been her
playfellow.  She had taken possession of him while her father had been
occupied in taking possession of the statistics of the island territory.
She was too gentle to tyrannize over her playfellow, yet she had ruled
him abjectly, except when in canoe, or on horse or surf-board, at which
times he had taken charge and she had rendered obedience.  And now, with
this last singing of the song, as the lines were cast off and the big
transport began backing slowly out from the dock, she knew that Steve was
something more to her than playfellow.

Five thousand voices were singing "Aloha Oe,"--"_My love be with you till
we meet again_,"--and in that first moment of known love she realized
that she and Steve were being torn apart.  When would they ever meet
again?  He had taught her those words himself.  She remembered listening
as he sang them over and over under the _hau_ tree at Waikiki.  Had it
been prophecy?  And she had admired his singing, had told him that he
sang with such expression.  She laughed aloud, hysterically, at the
recollection.  With such expression!--when he had been pouring his heart
out in his voice.  She knew now, and it was too late.  Why had he not
spoken?  Then she realized that girls of her age did not marry.  But
girls of her age did marry--in Hawaii--was her instant thought.  Hawaii
had ripened her--Hawaii, where flesh is golden and where all women are
ripe and sun-kissed.

Vainly she scanned the packed multitude on the dock.  What had become of
him?  She felt she could pay any price for one more glimpse of him, and
she almost hoped that some mortal sickness would strike the lonely
captain on the bridge and delay departure.  For the first time in her
life she looked at her father with a calculating eye, and as she did she
noted with newborn fear the lines of will and determination.  It would be
terrible to oppose him.  And what chance would she have in such a
struggle?  But why had Steve not spoken?  Now it was too late.  Why had
he not spoken under the _hau_ tree at Waikiki?

And then, with a great sinking of the heart, it came to her that she knew
why.  What was it she had heard one day?  Oh, yes, it was at Mrs.
Stanton's tea, that afternoon when the ladies of the "Missionary Crowd"
had entertained the ladies of the Senatorial party.  It was Mrs.
Hodgkins, the tall blonde woman, who had asked the question.  The scene
came back to her vividly--the broad _lanai_, the tropic flowers, the
noiseless Asiatic attendants, the hum of the voices of the many women and
the question Mrs. Hodgkins had asked in the group next to her.  Mrs.
Hodgkins had been away on the mainland for years, and was evidently
inquiring after old island friends of her maiden days.  "What has become
of Susie Maydwell?" was the question she had asked.  "Oh, we never see
her any more; she married Willie Kupele," another island woman answered.
And Senator Behrend's wife laughed and wanted to know why matrimony had
affected Susie Maydwell's friendships.

"_Hapa-haole_," was the answer; "he was a half-caste, you know, and we of
the Islands have to think about our children."

Dorothy turned to her father, resolved to put it to the test.

"Papa, if Steve ever comes to the United States, mayn't he come and see
us some time?"

"Who?  Steve?"

"Yes, Stephen Knight--you know him.  You said good-bye to him not five
minutes ago.  Mayn't he, if he happens to be in the United States some
time, come and see us?"

"Certainly not," Jeremy Sambrooke answered shortly.  "Stephen Knight is a
_hapa-haole_ and you know what that means."

"Oh," Dorothy said faintly, while she felt a numb despair creep into her
heart.

Steve was not a _hapa-haole_--she knew that; but she did not know that a
quarter-strain of tropic sunshine streamed in his veins, and she knew
that that was sufficient to put him outside the marriage pale.  It was a
strange world.  There was the Honourable A. S. Cleghorn, who had married
a dusky princess of the Kamehameha blood, yet men considered it an honour
to know him, and the most exclusive women of the ultra-exclusive
"Missionary Crowd" were to be seen at his afternoon teas.  And there was
Steve.  No one had disapproved of his teaching her to ride a surf-board,
nor of his leading her by the hand through the perilous places of the
crater of Kilauea.  He could have dinner with her and her father, dance
with her, and be a member of the entertainment committee; but because
there was tropic sunshine in his veins he could not marry her.

And he didn't show it.  One had to be told to know.  And he was so good-
looking.  The picture of him limned itself on her inner vision, and
before she was aware she was pleasuring in the memory of the grace of his
magnificent body, of his splendid shoulders, of the power in him that
tossed her lightly on a horse, bore her safely through the thundering
breakers, or towed her at the end of an alpenstock up the stern lava
crest of the House of the Sun.  There was something subtler and
mysterious that she remembered, and that she was even then just beginning
to understand--the aura of the male creature that is man, all man,
masculine man.  She came to herself with a shock of shame at the thoughts
she had been thinking.  Her cheeks were dyed with the hot blood which
quickly receded and left them pale at the thought that she would never
see him again.  The stem of the transport was already out in the stream,
and the promenade deck was passing abreast of the end of the dock.

"There's Steve now," her father said.  "Wave good-bye to him, Dorothy."

Steve was looking up at her with eager eyes, and he saw in her face what
he had not seen before.  By the rush of gladness into his own face she
knew that he knew.  The air was throbbing with the song--

   My love to you.
   My love be with you till we meet again.

There was no need for speech to tell their story.  About her, passengers
were flinging their garlands to their friends on the dock.  Steve held up
his hands and his eyes pleaded.  She slipped her own garland over her
head, but it had become entangled in the string of Oriental pearls that
Mervin, an elderly sugar king, had placed around her neck when he drove
her and her father down to the steamer.

She fought with the pearls that clung to the flowers.  The transport was
moving steadily on.  Steve was already beneath her.  This was the moment.
The next moment and he would be past.  She sobbed, and Jeremy Sambrooke
glanced at her inquiringly.

"Dorothy!" he cried sharply.

She deliberately snapped the string, and, amid a shower of pearls, the
flowers fell to the waiting lover.  She gazed at him until the tears
blinded her and she buried her face on the shoulder of Jeremy Sambrooke,
who forgot his beloved statistics in wonderment at girl babies that
insisted on growing up.  The crowd sang on, the song growing fainter in
the distance, but still melting with the sensuous love-languor of Hawaii,
the words biting into her heart like acid because of their untruth.

   Aloha oe, Aloha oe, e ke onaona no ho ika lipo,
   A fond embrace, ahoi ae au, until we meet again.




CHUN AH CHUN


There was nothing striking in the appearance of Chun Ah Chun.  He was
rather undersized, as Chinese go, and the Chinese narrow shoulders and
spareness of flesh were his.  The average tourist, casually glimpsing him
on the streets of Honolulu, would have concluded that he was a
good-natured little Chinese, probably the proprietor of a prosperous
laundry or tailorshop.  In so far as good nature and prosperity went, the
judgment would be correct, though beneath the mark; for Ah Chun was as
good-natured as he was prosperous, and of the latter no man knew a tithe
the tale.  It was well known that he was enormously wealthy, but in his
case "enormous" was merely the symbol for the unknown.

Ah Chun had shrewd little eyes, black and beady and so very little that
they were like gimlet-holes.  But they were wide apart, and they
sheltered under a forehead that was patently the forehead of a thinker.
For Ah Chun had his problems, and had had them all his life.  Not that he
ever worried over them.  He was essentially a philosopher, and whether as
coolie, or multi-millionaire and master of many men, his poise of soul
was the same.  He lived always in the high equanimity of spiritual
repose, undeterred by good fortune, unruffled by ill fortune.  All things
went well with him, whether they were blows from the overseer in the cane
field or a slump in the price of sugar when he owned those cane fields
himself.  Thus, from the steadfast rock of his sure content he mastered
problems such as are given to few men to consider, much less to a Chinese
peasant.

He was precisely that--a Chinese peasant, born to labour in the fields
all his days like a beast, but fated to escape from the fields like the
prince in a fairy tale.  Ah Chun did not remember his father, a small
farmer in a district not far from Canton; nor did he remember much of his
mother, who had died when he was six.  But he did remember his respected
uncle, Ah Kow, for him had he served as a slave from his sixth year to
his twenty-fourth.  It was then that he escaped by contracting himself as
a coolie to labour for three years on the sugar plantations of Hawaii for
fifty cents a day.

Ah Chun was observant.  He perceived little details that not one man in a
thousand ever noticed.  Three years he worked in the field, at the end of
which time he knew more about cane-growing than the overseers or even the
superintendent, while the superintendent would have been astounded at the
knowledge the weazened little coolie possessed of the reduction processes
in the mill.  But Ah Chun did not study only sugar processes.  He studied
to find out how men came to be owners of sugar mills and plantations.  One
judgment he achieved early, namely, that men did not become rich from the
labour of their own hands.  He knew, for he had laboured for a score of
years himself.  The men who grew rich did so from the labour of the hands
of others.  That man was richest who had the greatest number of his
fellow creatures toiling for him.

So, when his term of contract was up, Ah Chun invested his savings in a
small importing store, going into partnership with one, Ah Yung.  The
firm ultimately became the great one of "Ah Chun and Ah Yung," which
handled anything from India silks and ginseng to guano islands and
blackbird brigs.  In the meantime, Ah Chun hired out as cook.  He was a
good cook, and in three years he was the highest-paid chef in Honolulu.
His career was assured, and he was a fool to abandon it, as Dantin, his
employer, told him; but Ah Chun knew his own mind best, and for knowing
it was called a triple-fool and given a present of fifty dollars over and
above the wages due him.

The firm of Ah Chun and Ah Yung was prospering.  There was no need for Ah
Chun longer to be a cook.  There were boom times in Hawaii.  Sugar was
being extensively planted, and labour was needed.  Ah Chun saw the
chance, and went into the labour-importing business.  He brought
thousands of Cantonese coolies into Hawaii, and his wealth began to grow.
He made investments.  His beady black eyes saw bargains where other men
saw bankruptcy.  He bought a fish-pond for a song, which later paid five
hundred per cent and was the opening wedge by which he monopolized the
fish market of Honolulu.  He did not talk for publication, nor figure in
politics, nor play at revolutions, but he forecast events more clearly
and farther ahead than did the men who engineered them.  In his mind's
eye he saw Honolulu a modern, electric-lighted city at a time when it
straggled, unkempt and sand-tormented, over a barren reef of uplifted
coral rock.  So he bought land.  He bought land from merchants who needed
ready cash, from impecunious natives, from riotous traders' sons, from
widows and orphans and the lepers deported to Molokai; and, somehow, as
the years went by, the pieces of land he had bought proved to be needed
for warehouses, or coffee buildings, or hotels.  He leased, and rented,
sold and bought, and resold again.

But there were other things as well.  He put his confidence and his money
into Parkinson, the renegade captain whom nobody would trust.  And
Parkinson sailed away on mysterious voyages in the little _Vega_.
Parkinson was taken care of until he died, and years afterward Honolulu
was astonished when the news leaked out that the Drake and Acorn guano
islands had been sold to the British Phosphate Trust for three-quarters
of a million.  Then there were the fat, lush days of King Kalakaua, when
Ah Chun paid three hundred thousand dollars for the opium licence.  If he
paid a third of a million for the drug monopoly, the investment was
nevertheless a good one, for the dividends bought him the Kalalau
Plantation, which, in turn, paid him thirty per cent for seventeen years
and was ultimately sold by him for a million and a half.

It was under the Kamehamehas, long before, that he had served his own
country as Chinese Consul--a position that was not altogether
unlucrative; and it was under Kamehameha IV that he changed his
citizenship, becoming an Hawaiian subject in order to marry Stella
Allendale, herself a subject of the brown-skinned king, though more of
Anglo-Saxon blood ran in her veins than of Polynesian.  In fact, the
random breeds in her were so attenuated that they were valued at eighths
and sixteenths.  In the latter proportions was the blood of her great-
grandmother, Paahao--the Princess Paahao, for she came of the royal line.
Stella Allendale's great-grandfather had been a Captain Blunt, an English
adventurer who took service under Kamehameha I and was made a tabu chief
himself.  Her grandfather had been a New Bedford whaling captain, while
through her own father had been introduced a remote blend of Italian and
Portuguese which had been grafted upon his own English stock.  Legally a
Hawaiian, Ah Chun's spouse was more of any one of three other
nationalities.

And into this conglomerate of the races, Ah Chun introduced the Mongolian
mixture.  Thus, his children by Mrs. Ah Chun were one thirty-second
Polynesian, one-sixteenth Italian, one sixteenth Portuguese, one-half
Chinese, and eleven thirty-seconds English and American.  It might well
be that Ah Chun would have refrained from matrimony could he have
foreseen the wonderful family that was to spring from this union.  It was
wonderful in many ways.  First, there was its size.  There were fifteen
sons and daughters, mostly daughters.  The sons had come first, three of
them, and then had followed, in unswerving sequence, a round dozen of
girls.  The blend of the race was excellent.  Not alone fruitful did it
prove, for the progeny, without exception, was healthy and without
blemish.  But the most amazing thing about the family was its beauty.  All
the girls were beautiful--delicately, ethereally beautiful.  Mamma Ah
Chun's rotund lines seemed to modify papa Ah Chun's lean angles, so that
the daughters were willowy without being lathy, round-muscled without
being chubby.  In every feature of every face were haunting reminiscences
of Asia, all manipulated over and disguised by Old England, New England,
and South of Europe.  No observer, without information, would have
guessed, the heavy Chinese strain in their veins; nor could any observer,
after being informed, fail to note immediately the Chinese traces.

As beauties, the Ah Chun girls were something new.  Nothing like them had
been seen before.  They resembled nothing so much as they resembled one
another, and yet each girl was sharply individual.  There was no
mistaking one for another.  On the other hand, Maud, who was blue-eyed
and yellow-haired, would remind one instantly of Henrietta, an olive
brunette with large, languishing dark eyes and hair that was blue-black.
The hint of resemblance that ran through them all, reconciling every
differentiation, was Ah Chun's contribution.  He had furnished the
groundwork upon which had been traced the blended patterns of the races.
He had furnished the slim-boned Chinese frame, upon which had been
builded the delicacies and subtleties of Saxon, Latin, and Polynesian
flesh.

Mrs. Ah Chun had ideas of her own to which Ah Chun gave credence, though
never permitting them expression when they conflicted with his own
philosophic calm.  She had been used all her life to living in European
fashion.  Very well.  Ah Chun gave her a European mansion.  Later, as his
sons and daughters grew able to advise, he built a bungalow, a spacious,
rambling affair, as unpretentious as it was magnificent.  Also, as time
went by, there arose a mountain house on Tantalus, to which the family
could flee when the "sick wind" blew from the south.  And at Waikiki he
built a beach residence on an extensive site so well chosen that later
on, when the United States government condemned it for fortification
purposes, an immense sum accompanied the condemnation.  In all his houses
were billiard and smoking rooms and guest rooms galore, for Ah Chun's
wonderful progeny was given to lavish entertainment.  The furnishing was
extravagantly simple.  Kings' ransoms were expended without
display--thanks to the educated tastes of the progeny.

Ah Chun had been liberal in the matter of education.  "Never mind
expense," he had argued in the old days with Parkinson when that slack
mariner could see no reason for making the _Vega_ seaworthy; "you sail
the schooner, I pay the bills."  And so with his sons and daughters.  It
had been for them to get the education and never mind the expense.
Harold, the eldest-born, had gone to Harvard and Oxford; Albert and
Charles had gone through Yale in the same classes.  And the daughters,
from the eldest down, had undergone their preparation at Mills Seminary
in California and passed on to Vassar, Wellesley, or Bryn Mawr.  Several,
having so desired, had had the finishing touches put on in Europe.  And
from all the world Ah Chun's sons and daughters returned to him to
suggest and advise in the garnishment of the chaste magnificence of his
residences.  Ah Chun himself preferred the voluptuous glitter of Oriental
display; but he was a philosopher, and he clearly saw that his children's
tastes were correct according to Western standards.

Of course, his children were not known as the Ah Chun children.  As he
had evolved from a coolie labourer to a multi-millionaire, so had his
name evolved.  Mamma Ah Chun had spelled it A'Chun, but her wiser
offspring had elided the apostrophe and spelled it Achun.  Ah Chun did
not object.  The spelling of his name interfered no whit with his comfort
nor his philosophic calm.  Besides, he was not proud.  But when his
children arose to the height of a starched shirt, a stiff collar, and a
frock coat, they did interfere with his comfort and calm.  Ah Chun would
have none of it.  He preferred the loose-flowing robes of China, and
neither could they cajole nor bully him into making the change.  They
tried both courses, and in the latter one failed especially disastrously.
They had not been to America for nothing.  They had learned the virtues
of the boycott as employed by organized labour, and he, their father,
Chun Ah Chun, they boycotted in his own house, Mamma Achun aiding and
abetting.  But Ah Chun himself, while unversed in Western culture, was
thoroughly conversant with Western labour conditions.  An extensive
employer of labour himself, he knew how to cope with its tactics.
Promptly he imposed a lockout on his rebellious progeny and erring
spouse.  He discharged his scores of servants, locked up his stables,
closed his houses, and went to live in the Royal Hawaiian Hotel, in which
enterprise he happened to be the heaviest stockholder.  The family
fluttered distractedly on visits about with friends, while Ah Chun calmly
managed his many affairs, smoked his long pipe with the tiny silver bowl,
and pondered the problem of his wonderful progeny.

This problem did not disturb his calm.  He knew in his philosopher's soul
that when it was ripe he would solve it.  In the meantime he enforced the
lesson that complacent as he might be, he was nevertheless the absolute
dictator of the Achun destinies.  The family held out for a week, then
returned, along with Ah Chun and the many servants, to occupy the
bungalow once more.  And thereafter no question was raised when Ah Chun
elected to enter his brilliant drawing-room in blue silk robe, wadded
slippers, and black silk skull-cap with red button peak, or when he chose
to draw at his slender-stemmed silver-bowled pipe among the cigarette-and
cigar-smoking officers and civilians on the broad verandas or in the
smoking room.

Ah Chun occupied a unique position in Honolulu.  Though he did not appear
in society, he was eligible anywhere.  Except among the Chinese merchants
of the city, he never went out; but he received, and he always was the
centre of his household and the head of his table.  Himself peasant, born
Chinese, he presided over an atmosphere of culture and refinement second
to none in all the islands.  Nor were there any in all the islands too
proud to cross his threshold and enjoy his hospitality.  First of all,
the Achun bungalow was of irreproachable tone.  Next, Ah Chun was a
power.  And finally, Ah Chun was a moral paragon and an honest business
man.  Despite the fact that business morality was higher than on the
mainland, Ah Chun outshone the business men of Honolulu in the scrupulous
rigidity of his honesty.  It was a saying that his word was as good as
his bond.  His signature was never needed to bind him.  He never broke
his word.  Twenty years after Hotchkiss, of Hotchkiss, Morterson Company,
died, they found among mislaid papers a memorandum of a loan of thirty
thousand dollars to Ah Chun.  It had been incurred when Ah Chun was Privy
Councillor to Kamehameha II.  In the bustle and confusion of those
heyday, money-making times, the affair had slipped Ah Chun's mind.  There
was no note, no legal claim against him, but he settled in full with the
Hotchkiss' Estate, voluntarily paying a compound interest that dwarfed
the principal.  Likewise, when he verbally guaranteed the disastrous
Kakiku Ditch Scheme, at a time when the least sanguine did not dream a
guarantee necessary--"Signed his cheque for two hundred thousand without
a quiver, gentlemen, without a quiver," was the report of the secretary
of the defunct enterprise, who had been sent on the forlorn hope of
finding out Ah Chun's intentions.  And on top of the many similar actions
that were true of his word, there was scarcely a man of repute in the
islands that at one time or another had not experienced the helping
financial hand of Ah Chun.

So it was that Honolulu watched his wonderful family grow up into a
perplexing problem and secretly sympathized with him, for it was beyond
any of them to imagine what he was going to do with it.  But Ah Chun saw
the problem more clearly than they.  No one knew as he knew the extent to
which he was an alien in his family.  His own family did not guess it.  He
saw that there was no place for him amongst this marvellous seed of his
loins, and he looked forward to his declining years and knew that he
would grow more and more alien.  He did not understand his children.
Their conversation was of things that did not interest him and about
which he knew nothing.  The culture of the West had passed him by.  He
was Asiatic to the last fibre, which meant that he was heathen.  Their
Christianity was to him so much nonsense.  But all this he would have
ignored as extraneous and irrelevant, could he have but understood the
young people themselves.  When Maud, for instance, told him that the
housekeeping bills for the month were thirty thousand--that he
understood, as he understood Albert's request for five thousand with
which to buy the schooner yacht _Muriel_ and become a member of the
Hawaiian Yacht Club.  But it was their remoter, complicated desires and
mental processes that obfuscated him.  He was not slow in learning that
the mind of each son and daughter was a secret labyrinth which he could
never hope to tread.  Always he came upon the wall that divides East from
West.  Their souls were inaccessible to him, and by the same token he
knew that his soul was inaccessible to them.

Besides, as the years came upon him, he found himself harking back more
and more to his own kind.  The reeking smells of the Chinese quarter were
spicy to him.  He sniffed them with satisfaction as he passed along the
street, for in his mind they carried him back to the narrow tortuous
alleys of Canton swarming with life and movement.  He regretted that he
had cut off his queue to please Stella Allendale in the prenuptial days,
and he seriously considered the advisability of shaving his crown and
growing a new one.  The dishes his highly paid chef concocted for him
failed to tickle his reminiscent palate in the way that the weird messes
did in the stuffy restaurant down in the Chinese quarter.  He enjoyed
vastly more a half-hour's smoke and chat with two or three Chinese chums,
than to preside at the lavish and elegant dinners for which his bungalow
was famed, where the pick of the Americans and Europeans sat at the long
table, men and women on equality, the women with jewels that blazed in
the subdued light against white necks and arms, the men in evening dress,
and all chattering and laughing over topics and witticisms that, while
they were not exactly Greek to him, did not interest him nor entertain.

But it was not merely his alienness and his growing desire to return to
his Chinese flesh-pots that constituted the problem.  There was also his
wealth.  He had looked forward to a placid old age.  He had worked hard.
His reward should have been peace and repose.  But he knew that with his
immense fortune peace and repose could not possibly be his.  Already
there were signs and omens.  He had seen similar troubles before.  There
was his old employer, Dantin, whose children had wrested from him, by due
process of law, the management of his property, having the Court appoint
guardians to administer it for him.  Ah Chun knew, and knew thoroughly
well, that had Dantin been a poor man, it would have been found that he
could quite rationally manage his own affairs.  And old Dantin had had
only three children and half a million, while he, Chun Ah Chun, had
fifteen children and no one but himself knew how many millions.

"Our daughters are beautiful women," he said to his wife, one evening.
"There are many young men.  The house is always full of young men.  My
cigar bills are very heavy.  Why are there no marriages?"

Mamma Achun shrugged her shoulders and waited.

"Women are women and men are men--it is strange there are no marriages.
Perhaps the young men do not like our daughters."

"Ah, they like them well enough," Mamma Chun answered; "but you see, they
cannot forget that you are your daughters' father."

"Yet you forgot who my father was," Ah Chun said gravely.  "All you asked
was for me to cut off my queue."

"The young men are more particular than I was, I fancy."

"What is the greatest thing in the world?" Ah Chun demanded with abrupt
irrelevance.

Mamma Achun pondered for a moment, then replied:  "God."

He nodded.  "There are gods and gods.  Some are paper, some are wood,
some are bronze.  I use a small one in the office for a paper-weight.  In
the Bishop Museum are many gods of coral rock and lava stone."

"But there is only one God," she announced decisively, stiffening her
ample frame argumentatively.

Ah Chun noted the danger signal and sheered off.

"What is greater than God, then?" he asked.  "I will tell you.  It is
money.  In my time I have had dealings with Jews and Christians,
Mohammedans and Buddhists, and with little black men from the Solomons
and New Guinea who carried their god about them, wrapped in oiled paper.
They possessed various gods, these men, but they all worshipped money.
There is that Captain Higginson.  He seems to like Henrietta."

"He will never marry her," retorted Mamma Achun.  "He will be an admiral
before he dies--"

"A rear-admiral," Ah Chun interpolated.

"Yes, I know.  That is the way they retire."

"His family in the United States is a high one.  They would not like it
if he married . . . if he did not marry an American girl."

Ah Chun knocked the ashes out of his pipe, thoughtfully refilling the
silver bowl with a tiny pleget of tobacco.  He lighted it and smoked it
out before he spoke.

"Henrietta is the oldest girl.  The day she marries I will give her three
hundred thousand dollars.  That will fetch that Captain Higginson and his
high family along with him.  Let the word go out to him.  I leave it to
you."

And Ah Chun sat and smoked on, and in the curling smoke-wreaths he saw
take shape the face and figure of Toy Shuey--Toy Shuey, the maid of all
work in his uncle's house in the Cantonese village, whose work was never
done and who received for a whole year's work one dollar.  And he saw his
youthful self arise in the curling smoke, his youthful self who had
toiled eighteen years in his uncle's field for little more.  And now he,
Ah Chun, the peasant, dowered his daughter with three hundred thousand
years of such toil.  And she was but one daughter of a dozen.  He was not
elated at the thought.  It struck him that it was a funny, whimsical
world, and he chuckled aloud and startled Mamma Achun from a revery which
he knew lay deep in the hidden crypts of her being where he had never
penetrated.

But Ah Chun's word went forth, as a whisper, and Captain Higginson forgot
his rear-admiralship and his high family and took to wife three hundred
thousand dollars and a refined and cultured girl who was one
thirty-second Polynesian, one-sixteenth Italian, one-sixteenth
Portuguese, eleven thirty-seconds English and Yankee, and one-half
Chinese.

Ah Chun's munificence had its effect.  His daughters became suddenly
eligible and desirable.  Clara was the next, but when the Secretary of
the Territory formally proposed for her, Ah Chun informed him that he
must wait his turn, that Maud was the oldest and that she must be married
first.  It was shrewd policy.  The whole family was made vitally
interested in marrying off Maud, which it did in three months, to Ned
Humphreys, the United States immigration commissioner.  Both he and Maud
complained, for the dowry was only two hundred thousand.  Ah Chun
explained that his initial generosity had been to break the ice, and that
after that his daughters could not expect otherwise than to go more
cheaply.

Clara followed Maud, and thereafter, for a space of two years; there was
a continuous round of weddings in the bungalow.  In the meantime Ah Chun
had not been idle.  Investment after investment was called in.  He sold
out his interests in a score of enterprises, and step by step, so as not
to cause a slump in the market, he disposed of his large holdings in real
estate.  Toward the last he did precipitate a slump and sold at
sacrifice.  What caused this haste were the squalls he saw already rising
above the horizon.  By the time Lucille was married, echoes of bickerings
and jealousies were already rumbling in his ears.  The air was thick with
schemes and counter-schemes to gain his favour and to prejudice him
against one or another or all but one of his sons-in-law.  All of which
was not conducive to the peace and repose he had planned for his old age.

He hastened his efforts.  For a long time he had been in correspondence
with the chief banks in Shanghai and Macao.  Every steamer for several
years had carried away drafts drawn in favour of one, Chun Ah Chun, for
deposit in those Far Eastern banks.  The drafts now became heavier.  His
two youngest daughters were not yet married.  He did not wait, but
dowered them with a hundred thousand each, which sums lay in the Bank of
Hawaii, drawing interest and awaiting their wedding day.  Albert took
over the business of the firm of Ah Chun and Ah Yung, Harold, the eldest,
having elected to take a quarter of a million and go to England to live.
Charles, the youngest, took a hundred thousand, a legal guardian, and a
course in a Keeley institute.  To Mamma Achun was given the bungalow, the
mountain House on Tantalus, and a new seaside residence in place of the
one Ah Chun sold to the government.  Also, to Mamma Achun was given half
a million in money well invested.

Ah Chun was now ready to crack the nut of the problem.  One fine morning
when the family was at breakfast--he had seen to it that all his sons-in-
law and their wives were present--he announced that he was returning to
his ancestral soil.  In a neat little homily he explained that he had
made ample provision for his family, and he laid down various maxims that
he was sure, he said, would enable them to dwell together in peace and
harmony.  Also, he gave business advice to his sons-in-law, preached the
virtues of temperate living and safe investments, and gave them the
benefit of his encyclopedic knowledge of industrial and business
conditions in Hawaii.  Then he called for his carriage, and, in the
company of the weeping Mamma Achun, was driven down to the Pacific Mail
steamer, leaving behind him a panic in the bungalow.  Captain Higginson
clamoured wildly for an injunction.  The daughters shed copious tears.
One of their husbands, an ex-Federal judge, questioned Ah Chun's sanity,
and hastened to the proper authorities to inquire into it.  He returned
with the information that Ah Chun had appeared before the commission the
day before, demanded an examination, and passed with flying colours.
There was nothing to be done, so they went down and said good-bye to the
little old man, who waved farewell from the promenade deck as the big
steamer poked her nose seaward through the coral reef.

But the little old man was not bound for Canton.  He knew his own country
too well, and the squeeze of the Mandarins, to venture into it with the
tidy bulk of wealth that remained to him.  He went to Macao.  Now Ah Chun
had long exercised the power of a king and he was as imperious as a king.
When he landed at Macao and went into the office of the biggest European
hotel to register, the clerk closed the book on him.  Chinese were not
permitted.  Ah Chun called for the manager and was treated with
contumely.  He drove away, but in two hours he was back again.  He called
the clerk and manager in, gave them a month's salary, and discharged
them.  He had made himself the owner of the hotel; and in the finest
suite he settled down during the many months the gorgeous palace in the
suburbs was building for him.  In the meantime, with the inevitable
ability that was his, he increased the earnings of his big hotel from
three per cent to thirty.

The troubles Ah Chun had flown began early.  There were sons-in-law that
made bad investments, others that played ducks and drakes with the Achun
dowries.  Ah Chun being out of it, they looked at Mamma Ah Chun and her
half million, and, looking, engendered not the best of feeling toward one
another.  Lawyers waxed fat in the striving to ascertain the construction
of trust deeds.  Suits, cross-suits, and counter-suits cluttered the
Hawaiian courts.  Nor did the police courts escape.  There were angry
encounters in which harsh words and harsher blows were struck.  There
were such things as flower pots being thrown to add emphasis to winged
words.  And suits for libel arose that dragged their way through the
courts and kept Honolulu agog with excitement over the revelations of the
witnesses.

In his palace, surrounded by all dear delights of the Orient, Ah Chun
smokes his placid pipe and listens to the turmoil overseas.  By each mail
steamer, in faultless English, typewritten on an American machine, a
letter goes from Macao to Honolulu, in which, by admirable texts and
precepts, Ah Chun advises his family to live in unity and harmony.  As
for himself, he is out of it all, and well content.  He has won to peace
and repose.  At times he chuckles and rubs his hands, and his slant
little black eyes twinkle merrily at the thought of the funny world.  For
out of all his living and philosophizing, that remains to him--the
conviction that it is a very funny world.




THE SHERIFF OF KONA


"You cannot escape liking the climate," Cudworth said, in reply to my
panegyric on the Kona coast.  "I was a young fellow, just out of college,
when I came here eighteen years ago.  I never went back, except, of
course, to visit.  And I warn you, if you have some spot dear to you on
earth, not to linger here too long, else you will find this dearer."

We had finished dinner, which had been served on the big _lanai_, the one
with a northerly _exposure_, though exposure is indeed a misnomer in so
delectable a climate.

The candles had been put out, and a slim, white-clad Japanese slipped
like a ghost through the silvery moonlight, presented us with cigars, and
faded away into the darkness of the bungalow.  I looked through a screen
of banana and lehua trees, and down across the guava scrub to the quiet
sea a thousand feet beneath.  For a week, ever since I had landed from
the tiny coasting-steamer, I had been stopping with Cudworth, and during
that time no wind had ruffled that unvexed sea.  True, there had been
breezes, but they were the gentlest zephyrs that ever blew through summer
isles.  They were not winds; they were sighs--long, balmy sighs of a
world at rest.

"A lotus land," I said.

"Where each day is like every day, and every day is a paradise of days,"
he answered.  "Nothing ever happens.  It is not too hot.  It is not too
cold.  It is always just right.  Have you noticed how the land and the
sea breathe turn and turn about?"

Indeed, I had noticed that delicious rhythmic, breathing.  Each morning I
had watched the sea-breeze begin at the shore and slowly extend seaward
as it blew the mildest, softest whiff of ozone to the land.  It played
over the sea, just faintly darkening its surface, with here and there and
everywhere long lanes of calm, shifting, changing, drifting, according to
the capricious kisses of the breeze.  And each evening I had watched the
sea breath die away to heavenly calm, and heard the land breath softly
make its way through the coffee trees and monkey-pods.

"It is a land of perpetual calm," I said.  "Does it ever blow here?--ever
really blow?  You know what I mean."

Cudworth shook his head and pointed eastward.

"How can it blow, with a barrier like that to stop it?"

Far above towered the huge bulks of Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa, seeming to
blot out half the starry sky.  Two miles and a half above our heads they
reared their own heads, white with snow that the tropic sun had failed to
melt.

"Thirty miles away, right now, I'll wager, it is blowing forty miles an
hour."

I smiled incredulously.

Cudworth stepped to the _lanai_ telephone.  He called up, in succession,
Waimea, Kohala, and Hamakua.  Snatches of his conversation told me that
the wind was blowing:  "Rip-snorting and back-jumping, eh? . . . How
long? . . . Only a week? . . . Hello, Abe, is that you? . . . Yes, yes .
. . You _will_ plant coffee on the Hamakua coast . . . Hang your wind-
breaks!  You should see _my_ trees."

"Blowing a gale," he said to me, turning from hanging up the receiver.  "I
always have to joke Abe on his coffee.  He has five hundred acres, and
he's done marvels in wind-breaking, but how he keeps the roots in the
ground is beyond me.  Blow?  It always blows on the Hamakua side.  Kohala
reports a schooner under double reefs beating up the channel between
Hawaii and Maui, and making heavy weather of it."

"It is hard to realize," I said lamely.  "Doesn't a little whiff of it
ever eddy around somehow, and get down here?"

"Not a whiff.  Our land-breeze is absolutely of no kin, for it begins
this side of Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa.  You see, the land radiates its
heat quicker than the sea, and so, at night, the land breathes over the
sea.  In the day the land becomes warmer than the sea, and the sea
breathes over the land . . . Listen!  Here comes the land-breath now, the
mountain wind."

I could hear it coming, rustling softly through the coffee trees,
stirring the monkey-pods, and sighing through the sugar-cane.  On the
_lanai_ the hush still reigned.  Then it came, the first feel of the
mountain wind, faintly balmy, fragrant and spicy, and cool, deliciously
cool, a silken coolness, a wine-like coolness--cool as only the mountain
wind of Kona can be cool.

"Do you wonder that I lost my heart to Kona eighteen years ago?" he
demanded.  "I could never leave it now.  I think I should die.  It would
be terrible.  There was another man who loved it, even as I.  I think he
loved it more, for he was born here on the Kona coast.  He was a great
man, my best friend, my more than brother.  But he left it, and he did
not die."

"Love?" I queried.  "A woman?"

Cudworth shook his head.

"Nor will he ever come back, though his heart will be here until he
dies."

He paused and gazed down upon the beachlights of Kailua.  I smoked
silently and waited.

"He was already in love . . . with his wife.  Also, he had three
children, and he loved them.  They are in Honolulu now.  The boy is going
to college."

"Some rash act?" I questioned, after a time, impatiently.

He shook his head.  "Neither guilty of anything criminal, nor charged
with anything criminal.  He was the Sheriff of Kona."

"You choose to be paradoxical," I said.

"I suppose it does sound that way," he admitted, "and that is the perfect
hell of it."

He looked at me searchingly for a moment, and then abruptly took up the
tale.

"He was a leper.  No, he was not born with it--no one is born with it; it
came upon him.  This man--what does it matter?  Lyte Gregory was his
name.  Every _kamaina_ knows the story.  He was straight American stock,
but he was built like the chieftains of old Hawaii.  He stood six feet
three.  His stripped weight was two hundred and twenty pounds, not an
ounce of which was not clean muscle or bone.  He was the strongest man I
have ever seen.  He was an athlete and a giant.  He was a god.  He was my
friend.  And his heart and his soul were as big and as fine as his body.

"I wonder what you would do if you saw your friend, your brother, on the
slippery lip of a precipice, slipping, slipping, and you were able to do
nothing.  That was just it.  I could do nothing.  I saw it coming, and I
could do nothing.  My God, man, what could I do?  There it was, malignant
and incontestable, the mark of the thing on his brow.  No one else saw
it.  It was because I loved him so, I do believe, that I alone saw it.  I
could not credit the testimony of my senses.  It was too incredibly
horrible.  Yet there it was, on his brow, on his ears.  I had seen it,
the slight puff of the earlobes--oh, so imperceptibly slight.  I watched
it for months.  Then, next, hoping against hope, the darkening of the
skin above both eyebrows--oh, so faint, just like the dimmest touch of
sunburn.  I should have thought it sunburn but that there was a shine to
it, such an invisible shine, like a little highlight seen for a moment
and gone the next.  I tried to believe it was sunburn, only I could not.
I knew better.  No one noticed it but me.  No one ever noticed it except
Stephen Kaluna, and I did not know that till afterward.  But I saw it
coming, the whole damnable, unnamable awfulness of it; but I refused to
think about the future.  I was afraid.  I could not.  And of nights I
cried over it.

"He was my friend.  We fished sharks on Niihau together.  We hunted wild
cattle on Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa.  We broke horses and branded steers on
the Carter Ranch.  We hunted goats through Haleakala.  He taught me
diving and surfing until I was nearly as clever as he, and he was
cleverer than the average Kanaka.  I have seen him dive in fifteen
fathoms, and he could stay down two minutes.  He was an amphibian and a
mountaineer.  He could climb wherever a goat dared climb.  He was afraid
of nothing.  He was on the wrecked _Luga_, and he swam thirty miles in
thirty-six hours in a heavy sea.  He could fight his way out through
breaking combers that would batter you and me to a jelly.  He was a
great, glorious man-god.  We went through the Revolution together.  We
were both romantic loyalists.  He was shot twice and sentenced to death.
But he was too great a man for the republicans to kill.  He laughed at
them.  Later, they gave him honour and made him Sheriff of Kona.  He was
a simple man, a boy that never grew up.  His was no intricate brain
pattern.  He had no twists nor quirks in his mental processes.  He went
straight to the point, and his points were always simple.

"And he was sanguine.  Never have I known so confident a man, nor a man
so satisfied and happy.  He did not ask anything from life.  There was
nothing left to be desired.  For him life had no arrears.  He had been
paid in full, cash down, and in advance.  What more could he possibly
desire than that magnificent body, that iron constitution, that immunity
from all ordinary ills, and that lowly wholesomeness of soul?  Physically
he was perfect.  He had never been sick in his life.  He did not know
what a headache was.  When I was so afflicted he used to look at me in
wonder, and make me laugh with his clumsy attempts at sympathy.  He did
not understand such a thing as a headache.  He could not understand.
Sanguine?  No wonder.  How could he be otherwise with that tremendous
vitality and incredible health?

"Just to show you what faith he had in his glorious star, and, also, what
sanction he had for that faith.  He was a youngster at the time--I had
just met him--when he went into a poker game at Wailuku.  There was a big
German in it, Schultz his name was, and he played a brutal, domineering
game.  He had had a run of luck as well, and he was quite insufferable,
when Lyte Gregory dropped in and took a hand.  The very first hand it was
Schultz's blind.  Lyte came in, as well as the others, and Schultz raised
them out--all except Lyte.  He did not like the German's tone, and he
raised him back.  Schultz raised in turn, and in turn Lyte raised
Schultz.  So they went, back and forth.  The stakes were big.  And do you
know what Lyte held?  A pair of kings and three little clubs.  It wasn't
poker.  Lyte wasn't playing poker.  He was playing his optimism.  He
didn't know what Schultz held, but he raised and raised until he made
Schultz squeal, and Schultz held three aces all the time.  Think of it!  A
man with a pair of kings compelling three aces to see before the draw!

"Well, Schultz called for two cards.  Another German was dealing,
Schultz's friend at that.  Lyte knew then that he was up against three of
a kind.  Now what did he do?  What would you have done?  Drawn three
cards and held up the kings, of course.  Not Lyte.  He was playing
optimism.  He threw the kings away, held up the three little clubs, and
drew two cards.  He never looked at them.  He looked across at Schultz to
bet, and Schultz did bet, big.  Since he himself held three aces he knew
he had Lyte, because he played Lyte for threes, and, necessarily, they
would have to be smaller threes.  Poor Schultz!  He was perfectly correct
under the premises.  His mistake was that he thought Lyte was playing
poker.  They bet back and forth for five minutes, until Schultz's
certainty began to ooze out.  And all the time Lyte had never looked at
his two cards, and Schultz knew it.  I could see Schultz think, and
revive, and splurge with his bets again.  But the strain was too much for
him."

"'Hold on, Gregory,' he said at last.  'I've got you beaten from the
start.  I don't want any of your money.  I've got--'"

"'Never mind what you've got,' Lyte interrupted.  'You don't know what
I've got.  I guess I'll take a look.'"

"He looked, and raised the German a hundred dollars.  Then they went at
it again, back and forth and back and forth, until Schultz weakened and
called, and laid down his three aces.  Lyte faced his five cards.  They
were all black.  He had drawn two more clubs.  Do you know, he just about
broke Schultz's nerve as a poker player.  He never played in the same
form again.  He lacked confidence after that, and was a bit wobbly."

"'But how could you do it?' I asked Lyte afterwards.  'You knew he had
you beaten when he drew two cards.  Besides, you never looked at your own
draw.'"

"'I didn't have to look,' was Lyte's answer.  'I knew they were two clubs
all the time.  They just had to be two clubs.  Do you think I was going
to let that big Dutchman beat me?  It was impossible that he should beat
me.  It is not my way to be beaten.  I just have to win.  Why, I'd have
been the most surprised man in this world if they hadn't been all
clubs.'"

"That was Lyte's way, and maybe it will help you to appreciate his
colossal optimism.  As he put it he just had to succeed, to fare well, to
prosper.  And in that same incident, as in ten thousand others, he found
his sanction.  The thing was that he did succeed, did prosper.  That was
why he was afraid of nothing.  Nothing could ever happen to him.  He knew
it, because nothing had ever happened to him.  That time the _Luga_ was
lost and he swam thirty miles, he was in the water two whole nights and a
day.  And during all that terrible stretch of time he never lost hope
once, never once doubted the outcome.  He just knew he was going to make
the land.  He told me so himself, and I know it was the truth.

"Well, that is the kind of a man Lyte Gregory was.  He was of a different
race from ordinary, ailing mortals.  He was a lordly being, untouched by
common ills and misfortunes.  Whatever he wanted he got.  He won his
wife--one of the Caruthers, a little beauty--from a dozen rivals.  And
she settled down and made him the finest wife in the world.  He wanted a
boy.  He got it.  He wanted a girl and another boy.  He got them.  And
they were just right, without spot or blemish, with chests like little
barrels, and with all the inheritance of his own health and strength.

"And then it happened.  The mark of the beast was laid upon him.  I
watched it for a year.  It broke my heart.  But he did not know it, nor
did anybody else guess it except that cursed _hapa-haole_, Stephen
Kaluna.  He knew it, but I did not know that he did.  And--yes--Doc
Strowbridge knew it.  He was the federal physician, and he had developed
the leper eye.  You see, part of his business was to examine suspects and
order them to the receiving station at Honolulu.  And Stephen Kaluna had
developed the leper eye.  The disease ran strong in his family, and four
or five of his relatives were already on Molokai.

"The trouble arose over Stephen Kaluna's sister.  When she became
suspect, and before Doc Strowbridge could get hold of her, her brother
spirited her away to some hiding-place.  Lyte was Sheriff of Kona, and it
was his business to find her.

"We were all over at Hilo that night, in Ned Austin's.  Stephen Kaluna
was there when we came in, by himself, in his cups, and quarrelsome.  Lyte
was laughing over some joke--that huge, happy laugh of a giant boy.
Kaluna spat contemptuously on the floor.  Lyte noticed, so did everybody;
but he ignored the fellow.  Kaluna was looking for trouble.  He took it
as a personal grudge that Lyte was trying to apprehend his sister.  In
half a dozen ways he advertised his displeasure at Lyte's presence, but
Lyte ignored him.  I imagined Lyte was a bit sorry for him, for the
hardest duty of his office was the apprehension of lepers.  It is not a
nice thing to go in to a man's house and tear away a father, mother, or
child, who has done no wrong, and to send such a one to perpetual
banishment on Molokai.  Of course, it is necessary as a protection to
society, and Lyte, I do believe, would have been the first to apprehend
his own father did he become suspect.

"Finally, Kaluna blurted out:  'Look here, Gregory, you think you're
going to find Kalaniweo, but you're not.'

"Kalaniweo was his sister.  Lyte glanced at him when his name was called,
but he made no answer.  Kaluna was furious.  He was working himself up
all the time.

"'I'll tell you one thing,' he shouted.  'You'll be on Molokai yourself
before ever you get Kalaniweo there.  I'll tell you what you are.  You've
no right to be in the company of honest men.  You've made a terrible fuss
talking about your duty, haven't you?  You've sent many lepers to
Molokai, and knowing all the time you belonged there yourself.'

"I'd seen Lyte angry more than once, but never quite so angry as at that
moment.  Leprosy with us, you know, is not a thing to jest about.  He
made one leap across the floor, dragging Kaluna out of his chair with a
clutch on his neck.  He shook him back and forth savagely, till you could
hear the half-caste's teeth rattling.

"'What do you mean?' Lyte was demanding.  'Spit it out, man, or I'll
choke it out of you!'

"You know, in the West there is a certain phrase that a man must smile
while uttering.  So with us of the islands, only our phrase is related to
leprosy.  No matter what Kaluna was, he was no coward.  As soon as Lyte
eased the grip on his throat he answered:--

"'I'll tell you what I mean.  You are a leper yourself.'

"Lyte suddenly flung the half-caste sideways into a chair, letting him
down easily enough.  Then Lyte broke out into honest, hearty laughter.
But he laughed alone, and when he discovered it he looked around at our
faces.  I had reached his side and was trying to get him to come away,
but he took no notice of me.  He was gazing, fascinated, at Kaluna, who
was brushing at his own throat in a flurried, nervous way, as if to brush
off the contamination of the fingers that had clutched him.  The action
was unreasoned, genuine.

"Lyte looked around at us, slowly passing from face to face.

"'My God, fellows!  My God!' he said.

"He did not speak it.  It was more a hoarse whisper of fright and horror.
It was fear that fluttered in his throat, and I don't think that ever in
his life before he had known fear.

"Then his colossal optimism asserted itself, and he laughed again.

"'A good joke--whoever put it up,' he said.  'The drinks are on me.  I
had a scare for a moment.  But, fellows, don't do it again, to anybody.
It's too serious.  I tell you I died a thousand deaths in that moment.  I
thought of my wife and the kids, and . . . '

"His voice broke, and the half-caste, still throat-brushing, drew his
eyes.  He was puzzled and worried.

"'John,' he said, turning toward me.

"His jovial, rotund voice rang in my ears.  But I could not answer.  I
was swallowing hard at that moment, and besides, I knew my face didn't
look just right.

"'John,' he called again, taking a step nearer.

"He called timidly, and of all nightmares of horrors the most frightful
was to hear timidity in Lyte Gregory's voice.

"'John, John, what does it mean?' he went on, still more timidly. 'It's a
joke, isn't it?  John, here's my hand.  If I were a leper would I offer
you my hand?  Am I a leper, John?'

"He held out his hand, and what in high heaven or hell did I care?  He
was my friend.  I took his hand, though it cut me to the heart to see the
way his face brightened.

"'It was only a joke, Lyte,' I said.  'We fixed it up on you.  But you're
right.  It's too serious.  We won't do it again.'

"He did not laugh this time.  He smiled, as a man awakened from a bad
dream and still oppressed by the substance of the dream.

"'All right, then,' he said.  'Don't do it again, and I'll stand for the
drinks.  But I may as well confess that you fellows had me going south
for a moment.  Look at the way I've been sweating.'

"He sighed and wiped the sweat from his forehead as he started to step
toward the bar.

"'It is no joke,' Kaluna said abruptly.  I looked murder at him, and I
felt murder, too.  But I dared not speak or strike.  That would have
precipitated the catastrophe which I somehow had a mad hope of still
averting.

"'It is no joke,' Kaluna repeated.  'You are a leper, Lyte Gregory, and
you've no right putting your hands on honest men's flesh--on the clean
flesh of honest men.'

"Then Gregory flared up.

"'The joke has gone far enough!  Quit it!  Quit it, I say, Kaluna, or
I'll give you a beating!'

"'You undergo a bacteriological examination,' Kaluna answered, 'and then
you can beat me--to death, if you want to.  Why, man, look at yourself
there in the glass.  You can see it.  Anybody can see it.  You're
developing the lion face.  See where the skin is darkened there over your
eyes.

"Lyte peered and peered, and I saw his hands trembling.

"'I can see nothing,' he said finally, then turned on the _hapa-haole_.
'You have a black heart, Kaluna.  And I am not ashamed to say that you
have given me a scare that no man has a right to give another.  I take
you at your word.  I am going to settle this thing now.  I am going
straight to Doc Strowbridge.  And when I come back, watch out.'

"He never looked at us, but started for the door.

"'You wait here, John,' he said, waving me back from accompanying him.

"We stood around like a group of ghosts.

"'It is the truth,' Kaluna said.  'You could see it for yourselves.'

"They looked at me, and I nodded.  Harry Burnley lifted his glass to his
lips, but lowered it untasted.  He spilled half of it over the bar.  His
lips were trembling like a child that is about to cry.  Ned Austin made a
clatter in the ice-chest.  He wasn't looking for anything.  I don't think
he knew what he was doing.  Nobody spoke.  Harry Burnley's lips were
trembling harder than ever.  Suddenly, with a most horrible, malignant
expression he drove his fist into Kaluna's face.  He followed it up.  We
made no attempt to separate them.  We didn't care if he killed the half-
caste.  It was a terrible beating.  We weren't interested.  I don't even
remember when Burnley ceased and let the poor devil crawl away.  We were
all too dazed.

"Doc Strowbridge told me about it afterward.  He was working late over a
report when Lyte came into his office.  Lyte had already recovered his
optimism, and came swinging in, a trifle angry with Kaluna to be sure,
but very certain of himself.  'What could I do?' Doc asked me.  'I knew
he had it.  I had seen it coming on for months.  I couldn't answer him.  I
couldn't say yes.  I don't mind telling you I broke down and cried.  He
pleaded for the bacteriological test.  'Snip out a piece, Doc,' he said,
over and over.  'Snip out a piece of skin and make the test.'"

"The way Doc Strowbridge cried must have convinced Lyte.  The _Claudine_
was leaving next morning for Honolulu.  We caught him when he was going
aboard.  You see, he was headed for Honolulu to give himself up to the
Board of Health.  We could do nothing with him.  He had sent too many to
Molokai to hang back himself.  We argued for Japan.  But he wouldn't hear
of it.  'I've got to take my medicine, fellows,' was all he would say,
and he said it over and over.  He was obsessed with the idea.

"He wound up all his affairs from the Receiving Station at Honolulu, and
went down to Molokai.  He didn't get on well there.  The resident
physician wrote us that he was a shadow of his old self.  You see he was
grieving about his wife and the kids.  He knew we were taking care of
them, but it hurt him just the same.  After six months or so I went down
to Molokai.  I sat on one side a plate-glass window, and he on the other.
We looked at each other through the glass and talked through what might
be called a speaking tube.  But it was hopeless.  He had made up his mind
to remain.  Four mortal hours I argued.  I was exhausted at the end.  My
steamer was whistling for me, too.

"But we couldn't stand for it.  Three months later we chartered the
schooner _Halcyon_.  She was an opium smuggler, and she sailed like a
witch.  Her master was a squarehead who would do anything for money, and
we made a charter to China worth his while.  He sailed from San
Francisco, and a few days later we took out Landhouse's sloop for a
cruise.  She was only a five-ton yacht, but we slammed her fifty miles to
windward into the north-east trade.  Seasick?  I never suffered so in my
life.  Out of sight of land we picked up the _Halcyon_, and Burnley and I
went aboard.

"We ran down to Molokai, arriving about eleven at night.  The schooner
hove to and we landed through the surf in a whale-boat at Kalawao--the
place, you know, where Father Damien died.  That squarehead was game.
With a couple of revolvers strapped on him he came right along.  The
three of us crossed the peninsula to Kalaupapa, something like two miles.
Just imagine hunting in the dead of night for a man in a settlement of
over a thousand lepers.  You see, if the alarm was given, it was all off
with us.  It was strange ground, and pitch dark.  The leper's dogs came
out and bayed at us, and we stumbled around till we got lost.

"The squarehead solved it.  He led the way into the first detached house.
We shut the door after us and struck a light.  There were six lepers.  We
routed them up, and I talked in native.  What I wanted was a _kokua_.  A
_kokua_ is, literally, a helper, a native who is clean that lives in the
settlement and is paid by the Board of Health to nurse the lepers, dress
their sores, and such things.  We stayed in the house to keep track of
the inmates, while the squarehead led one of them off to find a _kokua_.
He got him, and he brought him along at the point of his revolver.  But
the _kokua_ was all right.  While the squarehead guarded the house,
Burnley and I were guided by the _kokua_ to Lyte's house.  He was all
alone.

"'I thought you fellows would come,' Lyte said.  'Don't touch me, John.
How's Ned, and Charley, and all the crowd?  Never mind, tell me
afterward.  I am ready to go now.  I've had nine months of it.  Where's
the boat?'

"We started back for the other house to pick up the squarehead.  But the
alarm had got out.  Lights were showing in the houses, and doors were
slamming.  We had agreed that there was to be no shooting unless
absolutely necessary, and when we were halted we went at it with our
fists and the butts of our revolvers.  I found myself tangled up with a
big man.  I couldn't keep him off me, though twice I smashed him fairly
in the face with my fist.  He grappled with me, and we went down, rolling
and scrambling and struggling for grips.  He was getting away with me,
when some one came running up with a lantern.  Then I saw his face.  How
shall I describe the horror of it.  It was not a face--only wasted or
wasting features--a living ravage, noseless, lipless, with one ear
swollen and distorted, hanging down to the shoulder.  I was frantic.  In
a clinch he hugged me close to him until that ear flapped in my face.
Then I guess I went insane.  It was too terrible.  I began striking him
with my revolver.  How it happened I don't know, but just as I was
getting clear he fastened upon me with his teeth.  The whole side of my
hand was in that lipless mouth.  Then I struck him with the revolver butt
squarely between the eyes, and his teeth relaxed."

Cudworth held his hand to me in the moonlight, and I could see the scars.
It looked as if it had been mangled by a dog.

"Weren't you afraid?" I asked.

"I was.  Seven years I waited.  You know, it takes that long for the
disease to incubate.  Here in Kona I waited, and it did not come.  But
there was never a day of those seven years, and never a night, that I did
not look out on . . . on all this . . . "  His voice broke as he swept
his eyes from the moon-bathed sea beneath to the snowy summits above.  "I
could not bear to think of losing it, of never again beholding Kona.
Seven years!  I stayed clean.  But that is why I am single.  I was
engaged.  I could not dare to marry while I was in doubt.  She did not
understand.  She went away to the States and married.  I have never seen
her since.

"Just at the moment I got clear of the leper policeman there was a rush
and clatter of hoofs like a cavalry charge.  It was the squarehead.  He
had been afraid of a rumpus and he had improved his time by making those
blessed lepers he was guarding saddle up four horses.  We were ready for
him.  Lyte had accounted for three _kokuas_, and between us we untangled
Burnley from a couple more.  The whole settlement was in an uproar by
that time, and as we dashed away somebody opened upon us with a
Winchester.  It must have been Jack McVeigh, the superintendent of
Molokai.

"That was a ride!  Leper horses, leper saddles, leper bridles,
pitch-black darkness, whistling bullets, and a road none of the best.  And
the squarehead's horse was a mule, and he didn't know how to ride,
either.  But we made the whaleboat, and as we shoved off through the surf
we could hear the horses coming down the hill from Kalaupapa.

"You're going to Shanghai.  You look Lyte Gregory up.  He is employed in
a German firm there.  Take him out to dinner.  Open up wine.  Give him
everything of the best, but don't let him pay for anything.  Send the
bill to me.  His wife and the kids are in Honolulu, and he needs the
money for them.  I know.  He sends most of his salary, and lives like an
anchorite.  And tell him about Kona.  There's where his heart is.  Tell
him all you can about Kona."




JACK LONDON BY HIMSELF


I was born in San Francisco in 1876.  At fifteen I was a man among men,
and if I had a spare nickel I spent it on beer instead of candy, because
I thought it was more manly to buy beer.  Now, when my years are nearly
doubled, I am out on a hunt for the boyhood which I never had, and I am
less serious than at any other time of my life.  Guess I'll find that
boyhood!  Almost the first things I realized were responsibilities.  I
have no recollection of being taught to read or write--I could do both at
the age of five--but I know that my first school was in Alameda before I
went out on a ranch with my folks and as a ranch boy worked hard from my
eighth year.

The second school were I tried to pick up a little learning was an
irregular hit or miss affair at San Mateo.  Each class sat in a separate
desk, but there were days when we did not sit at all, for the master used
to get drunk very often, and then one of the elder boys would thrash him.
To even things up, the master would then thrash the younger lads, so you
can think what sort of school it was.  There was no one belonging to me,
or associated with me in any way, who had literary tastes or ideas, the
nearest I can make to it is that my great-grandfather was a circuit
writer, a Welshman, known as "Priest" Jones in the backwoods, where his
enthusiasm led him to scatter the Gospel.

One of my earliest and strongest impressions was of the ignorance of
other people.  I had read and absorbed Washington Irving's "Alhambra"
before I was nine, but could never understand how it was that the other
ranchers knew nothing about it.  Later I concluded that this ignorance
was peculiar to the country, and felt that those who lived in cities
would not be so dense.  One day a man from the city came to the ranch.  He
wore shiny shoes and a cloth coat, and I felt that here was a good chance
for me to exchange thoughts with an enlightened mind.  From the bricks of
an old fallen chimney I had built an Alhambra of my own; towers,
terraces, and all were complete, and chalk inscriptions marked the
different sections.  Here I led the city man and questioned him about
"The Alhambra," but he was as ignorant as the man on the ranch, and then
I consoled myself with the thought that there were only two clever people
in the world--Washington Irving and myself.

My other reading-matter at that time consisted mainly of dime novels,
borrowed from the hired men, and newspapers in which the servants gloated
over the adventures of poor but virtuous shop-girls.

Through reading such stuff my mind was necessarily ridiculously
conventional, but being very lonely I read everything that came my way,
and was greatly impressed by Ouida's story "Signa," which I devoured
regularly for a couple of years.  I never knew the finish until I grew
up, for the closing chapters were missing from my copy, so I kept on
dreaming with the hero, and, like him, unable to see Nemesis, at the end.
My work on the ranch at one time was to watch the bees, and as I sat
under a tree from sunrise till late in the afternoon, waiting for the
swarming, I had plenty of time to read and dream.  Livermore Valley was
very flat, and even the hills around were then to me devoid of interest,
and the only incident to break in on my visions was when I gave the alarm
of swarming, and the ranch folks rushed out with pots, pans, and buckets
of water.  I think the opening line of "Signa" was "It was only a little
lad," yet he had dreams of becoming a great musician, and having all
Europe at his feet.  Well, I was only a little lad, too, but why could
not I become what "Signa" dreamed of being?

Life on a Californian ranch was then to me the dullest possible
existence, and every day I thought of going out beyond the sky-line to
see the world.  Even then there were whispers, promptings; my mind
inclined to things beautiful, although my environment was unbeautiful.
The hills and valleys around were eyesores and aching pits, and I never
loved them till I left them.

* * * * *

Before I was eleven I left the ranch and came to Oakland, where I spent
so much of my time in the Free Public Library, eagerly reading everything
that came to hand, that I developed the first stages of St. Vitus' dance
from lack of exercise.  Disillusions quickly followed, as I learned more
of the world.  At this time I made my living as a newsboy, selling papers
in the streets; and from then on until I was sixteen I had a thousand and
one different occupations--work and school, school and work--and so it
ran.

Then the adventure-lust was strong within me, and I left home.  I didn't
run, I just left--went out in the bay, and joined the oyster pirates.  The
days of the oyster pirates are now past, and if I had got my dues for
piracy, I would have been given five hundred years in prison.  Later, I
shipped as a sailor on a schooner, and also took a turn at salmon
fishing.  Oddly enough, my next occupation was on a fish-patrol, where I
was entrusted with the arrest of any violators of the fishing laws.
Numbers of lawless Chinese, Greeks, and Italians were at that time
engaged in illegal fishing, and many a patrolman paid his life for his
interference.  My only weapon on duty was a steel table-fork, but I felt
fearless and a man when I climbed over the side of a boat to arrest some
marauder.

Subsequently I shipped before the mast and sailed for the Japanese coast
on a seal-hunting expedition, later going to Behring Sea.  After sealing
for seven months I came back to California and took odd jobs at coal
shovelling and longshoring and also in a jute factory, where I worked
from six in the morning until seven at night.  I had planned to join the
same lot for another sealing trip the following year, but somehow I
missed them.  They sailed away on the _Mary Thomas_, which was lost with
all hands.

In my fitful school-days I had written the usual compositions, which had
been praised in the usual way, and while working in the jute mills I
still made an occasional try.  The factory occupied thirteen hours of my
day, and being young and husky, I wanted a little time for myself, so
there was little left for composition.  The San Francisco _Call_ offered
a prize for a descriptive article.  My mother urged me to try for it, and
I did, taking for my subject "Typhoon off the Coast of Japan."  Very
tired and sleepy, knowing I had to be up at half-past five, I began the
article at midnight and worked straight on until I had written two
thousand words, the limit of the article, but with my idea only half
worked out.  The next night, under the same conditions, I continued,
adding another two thousand words before I finished, and then the third
night I spent in cutting out the excess, so as to bring the article
within the conditions of the contest.  The first prize came to me, and
the second and third went to students of the Stanford and Berkeley
Universities.

My success in the San Francisco _Call_ competition seriously turned my
thoughts to writing, but my blood was still too hot for a settled
routine, so I practically deferred literature, beyond writing a little
gush for the _Call_, which that journal promptly rejected.

I tramped all through the United States, from California to Boston, and
up and down, returning to the Pacific coast by way of Canada, where I got
into jail and served a term for vagrancy, and the whole tramping
experience made me become a Socialist.  Previously I had been impressed
by the dignity of labour, and, without having read Carlyle or Kipling, I
had formulated a gospel of work which put theirs in the shade.  Work was
everything.  It was sanctification and salvation.  The pride I took in a
hard day's work well done would be inconceivable to you.  I was as
faithful a wage-slave as ever a capitalist exploited.  In short, my
joyous individualism was dominated by the orthodox bourgeois ethics.  I
had fought my way from the open west, where men bucked big and the job
hunted the man, to the congested labour centres of the eastern states,
where men were small potatoes and hunted the job for all they were worth,
and I found myself looking upon life from a new and totally different
angle.  I saw the workers in the shambles at the bottom of the Social
Pit.  I swore I would never again do a hard day's work with my body
except where absolutely compelled to, and I have been busy ever since
running away from hard bodily labour.

In my nineteenth year I returned to Oakland and started at the High
School, which ran the usual school magazine.  This publication was a
weekly--no, I guess a monthly--one, and I wrote stories for it, very
little imaginary, just recitals of my sea and tramping experiences.  I
remained there a year, doing janitor work as a means of livelihood, and
leaving eventually because the strain was more than I could bear.  At
this time my socialistic utterances had attracted considerable attention,
and I was known as the "Boy Socialist," a distinction that brought about
my arrest for street-talking.  After leaving the High School, in three
months cramming by myself, I took the three years' work for that time and
entered the University of California.  I hated to give up the hope of a
University education and worked in a laundry and with my pen to help me
keep on.  This was the only time I worked because I loved it, but the
task was too much, and when half-way through my Freshman year I had to
quit.

I worked away ironing shirts and other things in the laundry, and wrote
in all my spare time.  I tried to keep on at both, but often fell asleep
with the pen in my hand.  Then I left the laundry and wrote all the time,
and lived and dreamed again.  After three months' trial I gave up
writing, having decided that I was a failure, and left for the Klondike
to prospect for gold.  At the end of the year, owing to the outbreak of
scurvy, I was compelled to come out, and on the homeward journey of 1,900
miles in an open boat made the only notes of the trip.  It was in the
Klondike I found myself.  There nobody talks.  Everybody thinks.  You get
your true perspective.  I got mine.

While I was in the Klondike my father died, and the burden of the family
fell on my shoulders.  Times were bad in California, and I could get no
work.  While trying for it I wrote "Down the River," which was rejected.
During the wait for this rejection I wrote a twenty-thousand word serial
for a news company, which was also rejected.  Pending each rejection I
still kept on writing fresh stuff.  I did not know what an editor looked
like.  I did not know a soul who had ever published anything.  Finally a
story was accepted by a Californian magazine, for which I received five
dollars.  Soon afterwards "The Black Cat" offered me forty dollars for a
story.

Then things took a turn, and I shall probably not have to shovel coal for
a living for some time to come, although I have done it, and could do it
again.

My first book was published in 1900.  I could have made a good deal at
newspaper work; but I had sufficient sense to refuse to be a slave to
that man-killing machine, for such I held a newspaper to be to a young
man in his forming period.  Not until I was well on my feet as a magazine-
writer did I do much work for newspapers.  I am a believer in regular
work, and never wait for an inspiration.  Temperamentally I am not only
careless and irregular, but melancholy; still I have fought both down.
The discipline I had as a sailor had full effect on me.  Perhaps my old
sea days are also responsible for the regularity and limitations of my
sleep.  Five and a half hours is the precise average I allow myself, and
no circumstance has yet arisen in my life that could keep me awake when
the time comes to "turn in."

I am very fond of sport, and delight in boxing, fencing, swimming,
riding, yachting, and even kite-flying.  Although primarily of the city,
I like to be near it rather than in it.  The country, though, is the
best, the only natural life.  In my grown-up years the writers who have
influenced me most are Karl Marx in a particular, and Spencer in a
general, way.  In the days of my barren boyhood, if I had had a chance, I
would have gone in for music; now, in what are more genuinely the days of
my youth, if I had a million or two I would devote myself to writing
poetry and pamphlets.  I think the best work I have done is in the
"League of the Old Men," and parts of "The Kempton-Wace Letters."  Other
people don't like the former.  They prefer brighter and more cheerful
things.  Perhaps I shall feel like that, too, when the days of my youth
are behind me.




Footnotes:


{1}  Malahini--new-comer.