The Mucker eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 467 pages of information about The Mucker.
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The Mucker eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 467 pages of information about The Mucker.

Billy Byrne saw them from where he worked in the vicinity of the cabin.  When they were not looking he scowled maliciously at them.  They were the personal representatives of authority, and Billy hated authority in whatever guise it might be visited upon him.  He hated law and order and discipline.

“I’d like to meet one of dem guys on Green Street some night,” he thought.

He saw them enter the captain’s cabin with the skipper, and then he saw Mr. Divine join them.  Billy noted the haste displayed by the four and it set him to wondering.  The scrap of conversation between Divine and Simms that he had overheard returned to him.  He wanted to hear more, and as Billy was not handicapped by any overly refined notions of the ethics which frown upon eavesdropping he lost no time in transferring the scene of his labors to a point sufficiently close to one of the cabin ports to permit him to note what took place within.

What the mucker beard of that conversation made him prick up his ears.  He saw that something after his own heart was doing—­something crooked, and he wondered that so pusillanimous a thing as Divine could have a hand in it.  It almost changed his estimate of the passenger of the Halfmoon.

The meeting broke up so suddenly that Billy had to drop to his knees to escape the observation of those within the cabin.  As it was, Theriere, who had started to leave a second before the others, caught a fleeting glimpse of a face that quickly had been withdrawn from the cabin skylight as though its owner were fearful of detection.

Without a word to his companions the Frenchman left the cabin, but once outside he bounded up the companionway to the deck with the speed of a squirrel.  Nor was he an instant too soon, for as he emerged from below he saw the figure of a man disappearing forward.

“Hey there, you!” he cried.  “Come back here.”

The mucker turned, a sulky scowl upon his lowering countenance, and the second officer saw that it was the fellow who had given Ward such a trimming the first day out.

“Oh, it’s you is it, Byrne?” he said in a not unpleasant tone.  “Come to my quarters a moment, I want to speak with you,” and so saying he wheeled about and retraced his way below, the seaman at his heels.

“My man,” said Theriere, once the two were behind the closed door of the officer’s cabin, “I needn’t ask how much you overheard of the conversation in the captain’s cabin.  If you hadn’t overheard a great deal more than you should you wouldn’t have been so keen to escape detection just now.  What I wanted to say to you is this.  Keep a close tongue in your head and stick by me in what’s going to happen in the next few days.  This bunch,” he jerked his thumb in the direction of the captain’s cabin, “are fixing their necks for halters, an’ I for one don’t intend to poke my head through any noose of another man’s making.  There’s more in this thing if it’s handled right, and handled without too many men in on the whack-up than we can get out of it if that man Divine has to be counted in.  I’ve a plan of my own, an’ it won’t take but three or four of us to put it across.

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Project Gutenberg
The Mucker from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.