<SPAN name="chap09"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER IX </h3>
<h4>
CONCERNING A LONG DRINK
</h4>
<p>The weather continued magnificent. The barometer on the chart-house
wall was high and steady, the sea like a sheet of painted glass. On
board the <i>Naomi</i> the perfect luxury, the admirable efficiency of the
service might have led one to fancy oneself at Cowes but for the
boundless expanse of the Pacific surrounding us. The sun-burnt faces,
the natty white caps and the spotless white drill of the crew, the
brass-work polished until the blaze of the fierce sun upon it made the
eyes ache, the long chairs set out invitingly under the striped deck
awnings—it all brought back Regatta Week to me so vividly that I
sometimes imagined one had only to look over the ship's side to see the
boats setting down the visitors at the Squadron steps.</p>
<p>There were deck quoits, shuffleboard and various other ship's games for
our amusement. But it was too hot for violent exercise. The men
rigged up a huge canvas bath, contrived out of a mainsail, in the bows
forward, and here, each morning before breakfast, Garth, Custrin and I
used to disport ourselves like young seals in their tank at the Zoo.
For the rest, the day passed very pleasantly with a little gossip, a
little music, a little bridge. We three men, following a custom which
Garth had established, took our trick at the wheel and when Custrin had
finished his watch, Marjorie reported for duty and proved herself the
best helmsman of us all.</p>
<p>As a matter of fact, I had no time to be bored. I spent many hours in
the chart-house with Garth and Lawless settling the details of our
contemplated expedition. There was, in truth, much to plot out and
arrange. The captain was more emphatic than ever against the idea of
anybody beyond us three being let into the secret of the treasure-hunt.
In fact, as our discussions proceeded, he showed himself increasingly
reluctant to grant us as long as a week on the island.</p>
<p>"It's asking too much, Sir Alexander," he said, shaking his red head,
"to expect the crew to remain cooped up in the yacht in sight of green
land and not a man allowed ashore. I might hold 'em in hand for a
couple of days; but after that it will be difficult, very difficult, as
well you and the major here must know!"</p>
<p>It was Garth, with his quick business mind, who made the suggestion
which solved the problem. Raising his head from the chart which he had
been studying while Lawless, in an aggrieved tone, was presenting his
case, he said:—</p>
<p>"I've got it. You can maroon us!"</p>
<p>"Maroon you?" repeated the captain in a puzzled voice.</p>
<p>"Aye! Dump us ashore and then take the yacht to Alcedo!"</p>
<p>Alcedo, he explained to us with chart and "Sailing Directions," was an
islet lying some ninety miles west of Cock Island, a small, uninhabited
rock, the home of seabirds of all kinds.</p>
<p>"You can get some shooting," Sir Alexander added, "and, if the 'Sailing
Directions' speak true, good fishing. There's a fair landing on the
north face, it says here, and a run ashore will do the men all the good
in the world. You won't have above two or three days at the most at
the rock before it will be time to put about and sail back and fetch us
off!"</p>
<p>Lawless raised various objections, all of which did him the greatest
credit. He didn't like leaving us. Suppose something happened to the
<i>Naomi</i>? But Garth swept all objections aside. Then Lawless played
his last trump.</p>
<p>"And what about Miss Garth?" he queried. "How will she like leaving
you ashore on an uninhabited island? Or do you propose to take her
with you?"</p>
<p>Garth rubbed his nose rather sheepishly.</p>
<p>"H'm," he mused. Then, "Okewood," he remarked, "this will be a little
difficult. How about taking Marjie ashore at Cock Island with us?"</p>
<p>But I promptly negatived this idea.</p>
<p>"Out of the question," I retorted. "We're going to rough it, Sir
Alexander. And it will be no life for your daughter. Why, we aren't
even taking a servant!"</p>
<p>Garth jibbed at that. It would be bad enough leaving Marjie, he
grumbled, and how he would face her he didn't know. But he must have
his man with him. He must have Carstairs. In that I was inclined to
support him. I had taken a fancy to Carstairs. I liked his honest,
sensible face; he knew Garth and his ways; besides, he seemed a
knowledgeable sort of chap and I had an idea that his experience with
the sappers in the war might prove uncommonly useful when we pitched
our little camp. It was ultimately decided that Carstairs should
accompany us.</p>
<p>Then Garth suggested that we should take Custrin as well.</p>
<p>"Capital fellow, the doctor," he remarked, "what the Americans call a
good mixer. I like Custrin. And he'll be useful, you know, Okewood,
in the case of snake-bite or anything like that, eh?"</p>
<p>Now, as I have explained, I hadn't particularly cottoned to Custrin.
Since that first night out he had made famous progress with Marjorie
and while Garth and I were sweltering in the hold, assembling equipment
and supplies for our expedition, she and the doctor had sat for hours
at the piano in the saloon. I have always tried to be honest with
myself and I may as well admit that I was envious of Custrin's
delightfully easy manner. He was never gauche or sheepish with
Marjorie and I knew what a boor she had set me down in her estimation.</p>
<p>So I demurred from the proposal of Sir Alexander. The party was big
enough, I urged; to add another mouth would mean seriously increasing
the amount of supplies we should have to take with us.</p>
<p>"But Custrin's a first-class geologist as well," pleaded the baronet,
"and his knowledge should prove most valuable in our quest!"</p>
<p>I felt a very unpleasant suspicion dawn within me. Was it possible
that Garth had told Custrin about the grave on the island and the clue
that lay in my letter-case?</p>
<p>"Have you told Custrin about the treasure?" I asked bluntly.</p>
<p>Garth looked decidedly uncomfortable.</p>
<p>"The doctor's a most reliable fellow and highly recommended, very
highly recommended to me. You can see his references if you wish,
major. He is quite one of us, you know, and I did not think there was
any harm.... Really, I think he'd be a distinct asset. Besides, he'll
be horribly disappointed now if we don't take him!"</p>
<p>Then, of course, I knew that Garth had told Custrin the whole story and
had definitely promised him into the bargain that he should join our
party. I remembered now that the two had been in the smoke-room alone
together for an hour or more after lunch. I breathed a little prayer
of thanksgiving that in my almost wholly Irish nature a little store,
an isolated stronghold, as it were, of caution, legacy of some unknown
ancestor, was included. Throughout my career in the Secret Service I
have made it a practice, when disclosure is necessary, to disclose only
as much as is absolutely essential to the business in hand. My brother
Francis, probably the greatest secret agent our country has ever had,
gave me this tip.</p>
<p>Accordingly, I had told Garth nothing of El Cojo, the man of mystery,
of his appearance at Adams's hut or of the Vice-Consul's warning.
Apart altogether from this cautious instinct of mine, I knew next to
nothing of this romantic cut-throat, and until I did I had no intention
of jeopardising my chances of sailing with Garth by alarming the owner
of the <i>Naomi</i>. I now realised that everything I might have told Garth
about El Cojo, the baronet would have inevitably passed on to the
doctor.</p>
<p>As for Custrin, I had nothing whatever against him. But he was a
stranger—and in our job, if we don't necessarily "'eave 'arf a brick"
at the stranger, we are exceedingly cold to him. Custrin was a
perfectly civil, unassuming Englishman; but in my career I have refused
confidence to many a fellow-countryman far more patently trustworthy
than he. His rather mixed upbringing would, for one thing, have
prompted me to wariness and Garth's ready confidence in him really
rather horrified me. I was quite determined not to have him on the
island with me and I said so as frankly as possible. On that, with
rather an ill-grace, Garth capitulated.</p>
<p>The <i>Naomi</i> carried a small camp equipment with two light and portable
Armstrong huts in sections. There was a fold-up camp bedstead for
Garth, while I had my battered old Wolseley valise and my flea-bag from
France. In addition to our provisions, such as biscuits, tinned food
of all kinds, groceries and a suitable stock of drinks including a case
of soda-water, we added, as general stores, some electric torches, a
couple of ship's lamps and a good supply of candles, a large picnic
basket, some mosquito netting, a medicine chest, a couple of axes, and
two spades and two picks which Lawless extracted from the stokehold.
There were kitchen utensils for Carstairs, who, it appeared, was an
excellent cook. Garth had a pair of shot-guns and a Winchester and the
three of us had an automatic pistol apiece. This constituted our
armoury. I thought of those "volcanic peaks" of which the "Sailing
Directions" spoke and sighed for a box of gun-cotton, a tube of primers
and some lengths of fuse such as we used to carry with the battery in
France. But well-equipped as she was, the <i>Naomi</i> did not run to H.E.</p>
<p>This happened on our third day out of Rodriguez. At dinner that
evening the captain announced that, if all went well, we ought to sight
Cock Island about dawn two days hence.</p>
<p class="noindent" ALIGN="center">
<SPAN STYLE="letter-spacing: 4em">*****</SPAN><br/></p>
<p>In the chart-house that evening Custrin pleaded with me to reconsider
my decision not to take him ashore with us. I told him as nicely as
possible that all our arrangements were made and could not now be
altered. He then asked me to let him see the message. Now I had not
shown this to Garth (nor to anybody else except Bard) nor had I
vouchsafed to our host any information whatever on the subject. I was
still very largely in the dark as to its meaning and I was appreciative
of Garth's tact in not pressing me on the subject. So I told Custrin
that I was still working on the message and was not showing it to
anybody just then.</p>
<p>"I'm sorry," he said at once, "I didn't mean to be tactless, Okewood.
But I'm a pretty fair hand at languages, French or Spanish or Dutch or
German and that kind of thing, you know. I thought I might be useful.
Or perhaps it's in cipher?"</p>
<p>Custrin's affectation of nonchalance was very well done. But I have
had so much of this kind of spell-binding tried on me in my time that I
detected without difficulty a little note of anxiety in his voice. A
very inquisitive young man, was my mental note. But aloud I said:—</p>
<p>"Thanks for the offer, doctor. I'll bear it in mind. When I think two
heads are better than one on this thing I'll let you know!"</p>
<p>That was straight enough, one would have thought. But he was a
persistent beggar, was Custrin. I'm dashed if he didn't get Garth to
tackle me. Our worthy host's rather elephantine attempts at diplomacy,
however, were not difficult to counter and I had my way about keeping
the message to myself without, I think, offending his <i>amour propre</i>.
I should have dismissed the incident from my mind but for a strange and
rather disquietening event which took place the following night.</p>
<p>I had gone below, preparatory to turning in, after another disastrous
encounter with Marjorie. When I came off the bridge after taking my
turn at the wheel, I found her standing alone at the rail. Since our
little passage at arms the first night out, while she had not
ostensibly avoided me, she had not given me the opportunity of another
<i>tête-à-tête</i>. Her father, it appeared, had told her that she could
not go ashore with us on Cock Island and she wanted me, as leader of
the expedition, to intercede with him.</p>
<p>We were going to rough it on the island and a woman would have been
impossible. And so I told her. I also thought it quite likely that
the surf-bar mentioned by Adams (one always finds something of the sort
round isolated islets like this) would make landing dangerous and we
should be lucky, I surmised, if we escaped with nothing worse than a
good soaking.</p>
<p>Marjorie was at first pleading, then indignant and at last angry.
There was a good deal of the plethoric temperament of her father in the
toss of her head with which, in disgust at my obstinacy, she turned and
left me on the deck. And I, feeling the criminal every man feels when
he has displeased a charming girl, slunk below to my bunk.</p>
<p>I had changed into pyjamas when Custrin, who had the cabin next to
mine, put his head in the door.</p>
<p>"I'm just going up to get a 'peg,'" he said. "You look as though you
could do with one yourself. Shall I bring you one down?"</p>
<p>A drink was emphatically what I needed in the frame of mind in which I
found myself, so I gratefully accepted his offer.</p>
<p>"And make it a stiff one!" I called out after him. Then Carstairs, who
had been working like a Trojan all the evening, packing, oiling guns
and greasing boots, fetched me away to the little sort of pantry-place
at the end of the flat which was his especial domain, to consult me
about the clothes I was taking. When I got back to my cabin my drink
in a long glass stood on the chest of drawers. There was no sign of
Custrin.</p>
<p>Carstairs, in shirt and trousers, was simply dripping with
perspiration. He looked absolutely all in.</p>
<p>"Here," I said, "you seem to be more in need of a 'peg' than I am,
Carstairs. Suppose you take hold of that glass and show what you can
do with it!"</p>
<p>The offer was scarcely in accordance with the discipline of the <i>Naomi</i>
and Carstairs glanced cautiously up and down the corridor before he
seized the glass and with a whispered "Here's luck, sir!" drained it.</p>
<p class="noindent" ALIGN="center">
<SPAN STYLE="letter-spacing: 4em">*****</SPAN><br/></p>
<p>I don't know how long I had been asleep when I awoke with the
impression that my cabin door had opened. Then I remembered, with a
flash, that on going to lock it as usual before getting into my bunk I
had found the key to be missing. I had searched the floor of the cabin
and the corridor for it in vain. Carstairs had turned in and I was
loath to disturb him after his heavy day.</p>
<p>There was no moon on this night and my cabin was quite dark. The
<i>Naomi</i> trembled to the thump of the propeller and at the wash-basin
some fitting or other rattled a merry little jig. Otherwise, all was
still. I was about to turn over on my side and go to sleep again when
a slight noise caught my ear. My hand flashed instantly to the
electric switch and the cabin was flooded with light.</p>
<p>Custrin stood in the doorway. He was in his pyjamas, bare-footed. His
eyes were closed and one hand rested on the chest of drawers just
inside the door. He was muttering to himself. As I sprang out of my
bunk he turned round and, still muttering, made his own way back to his
room next door.</p>
<p>I dashed after him. The corridor was quite dark and by the time I had
found the switch in Custrin's cabin, the doctor was in his berth, to
all intents and purposes sleeping peacefully.</p>
<p>"Trust all men; but cut the pack!" is a favourite saying of my brother
Francis. With that document in my possession I had no desire to be
disturbed by surprise visitors, even though they walked in their sleep.
I now blamed myself for my slackness in not making Carstairs find the
key of my door. I went straight off to his bunk.</p>
<p>Carstairs was asleep on his back, snoring merrily. I tapped on the
side of the bunk and finding that this failed to awaken him, shook him
by the arm. He never budged. The snoring stopped; but he slept on.</p>
<p>I shook him violently again. Never had I seen a man sleep like this!
I put my two hands under his shoulders, raised him up and jerked him to
and fro. But he remained a dead weight in my grip, sunk in deep sleep.</p>
<p>There was a step in the corridor outside. I put my head out. Mackay,
the engineer, was there on his way to his bunk.</p>
<p>"Hsst!" I whispered. "Mackay, what do you make of this? I can't wake
Carstairs...."</p>
<p>Mackay thrust his grizzled head into the cabin. He bent down over the
sleeping man and sniffed audibly.</p>
<p>"The man's drunk!" he remarked casually.</p>
<p>My conscience smote me. But then I reflected. Could one "peg" have
reduced the model Carstairs to this state? Unless, of course, he had
already been drinking that evening. I had detected no signs of it
about him....</p>
<p>"I wonder if I should fetch the doctor...." I began.</p>
<p>"Hoots!" broke in the engineer, "let the man bide. He's a gude lad
but, mon, he'll have a sore heid to-morrow! I'm thinkin' Sir Alec wull
gie him all the doctorin' he wants!"</p>
<p>"After all," said I, "I don't think we need disturb the doctor!"</p>
<p>Custrin's curiosity about the message, the inexplicable disappearance
of my key, the drink the doctor had prepared for me which I had given
to Carstairs and the servant's drunken stupor, Custrin's visit to my
cabin.... my mind sprang from rung to rung in this ladder of curious
happenings. What had John Bard told me about El Cojo's gang?.... "a
tremendous organisation with an immense network of spies as widespread
and efficient as the Mafia of Italy!"</p>
<p>My hand went instinctively to the inside pocket of my pyjamas, a pocket
with a button-up flap specially designed, which has rendered me good
service in sleeping-cars and cabins half round the world. I felt
beneath my fingers the crackle of the oilskin in its flannel cover.</p>
<p>I held my secret still guarded. I congratulated myself on my firmness
in refusing to let this persistent Master Custrin accompany the
expedition. But we had not yet reached the island. I must be
watchful, watchful....</p>
<p class="noindent" ALIGN="center">
<SPAN STYLE="letter-spacing: 4em">*****</SPAN><br/></p>
<p>Half an hour later, as I sat on the edge of my bunk smoking a
cigarette, there came a tap at the door. Garth, looking strangely big
and unwieldy in his pyjamas, stood outside.</p>
<p>"Come up at once!" he whispered. "Don't trouble to dress. There's no
one about!"</p>
<p>He glided away. When I emerged on deck the eastern sky was streaked
with light. Lawless was on the bridge, Garth at his side.</p>
<p>Silently the captain pointed to the horizon. Away on the port bow a
faint grey blur rested lightly on the straight edge of the ocean like a
wisp of mist on a lake at dawn.</p>
<p>"Cock Island!" said the skipper.</p>
<br/><br/><br/>
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