Chapter I
When David was eighteen he heard from some of the Outpost fishermen that his great-uncle Uriah, the rich king of Rockbound, wanted a fisherman. Here was his opportunity; for weeks, in fact, ever since old Gershom Born had talked with him, he had wondered how he would get up courage to face the old man and tell him what he knew. In his yellow dory he set out from Big Outpost one morning of early summer. The sea was apparently oil-smooth, but a ground swell always runs among these outer islands, and the flood tide was against him. He tugged hard at the splintered spruce oars, which had seen two yearsā service on the Grand Banks, lifting his elbows at the finish of his stroke in a manner peculiar to the Outposters. With slack water he gave himself a spell and drifted idly for a little, a yellow speck on an immense floor of blue.
He looked up at the sky half-conscious of his insignificance in the universe above him; then, feeling cold water about his feet, reflected that only a half inch of leaky spruce marked him off from the watery world below, where shadowy albercore dodged in and out between streamers of waving kelp. The Outposts and Rockbound, now almost equidistant, were dimmed and softened by summer mists. As he sat there resting, his oars half drawn in through the thole pins, he looked at first glance like a hundred other young fishermen along the coast. He was barefoot and clad only in a pair of ragged brown trousers and a faded blue buttonless shirt that fell open at the neck to reveal a bronzed and hairy chest. His hands that clutched the oars were calloused and split, and scarred with marks of salt-water boils and burns from running hand line or halliard. Sly but kind gray eyes shone out through narrow slits overhung with thick eyebrows; a hawkās nose gave his face a touch of fierceness; his head was crowned with a thick brown mop of uncombed hair. He was not unhandsome, and when he smiled the corners of his mouth twitched and drooped.
Though he looked it not, he was a man of destinyāin small things, it is true, yet in relation to the universe all things upon this earth are smallāand this voyage in his yellow dory, a voyage of destiny, less spectacular than Jasonās but requiring none the less courage and resolution. For Jason had with him forty heroes and had but to meet a dragon, while David was alone and had to meet Uriah. As he floated idly there and looked up at the pale smoky sky and across the shining turquoise floor, he was conscious of the throb of the great deep below him and felt himself in the grip of Destiny of āsome strange consequence yet hanging in the starsā that he could not understand. Why not let Fate decide for him whether he should row on to Rockbound or return to the Outposts? he thought. He was a Jung himself, but a poor Jung, a gearless, homeless Jung; how dare he face and make demands of Uriah, the rich king of Rockbound, who had wealth in boats and land, and lofts piled high with herring nets and tubs of trawl? He was on a line between a clump of lofty spruces on the Metatogan Main and Lubeck Island Light. Let Fate decide! He pulled in his oars, let them rest from gunwale to gunwale, and for fifteen minutes watched his landmarks. The beginning of the ebb and a faint draught of offshore wind were setting him toward Rockbound. Fate had decided! Out went his oars, and he gave way.
When his stem bumped against the logs of Uriahās launch he sprang out and drew his dory up a littleāhe dared not draw her too far without invitationāand made fast the painter to a spike. The ebb was running fast now, and she would be high and dry in half an hour. Heart in his throat, his bare feet took the long strides from log to log, and he reached the door of the great fish house just as Uriah, a terrifying figure, waddled out, his yellow oilskins spotted with blood and glistening with sequins of herring scales.
āAnā what might ye be wantinā?ā said the old man, the king of Rockbound.
āI wants fur to be yur sharesman,ā answered David.
āUs works here on Rockbound.ā
āI knows how to work.ā
āKnows how to work anā brung up on de Outposts!ā jeered Uriah. āUs has half a dayās work done āfore de Outposters rub de sleep out oā dere eyes, aināt it!ā
āI knows how to work,ā repeated the boy stubbornly.
āWhereās yur gear anā clothes at?ā
āIāse got all my gear anā clothes on me,ā said David, grinning down at his buttonless shirt, ragged trousers, and bare, horny feet, ābut I owns yon dory: I salvaged her from de sea anā beat de man what tried to steal her from me.ā
Uriahās eyes showed a glint of interest.
āYou aināt got no place for to live on dis island; no one wonāt take in a tramp like you.ā
āYes I is.ā
āHowās dat?ā
āI owns one tentā oā dis island tārough my grandfader old Edward Jung, same as you owns yur shares.ā
The boy stood trembling inwardly and with shaking knees, yet looking the old tyrant boldly in the eyes.
āWhoās bin stuffinā ye wid dat foolishness?ā
āIt aināt no foolishness, itās true. Old Gershom Born, de keeper oā Barren Island Light anā de wisest man in all dese islands, tole me lasā time he was on de Outposts; anā says he, if yur great-uncle Ury refuse ye, go before lawyer Kingsford in Liscomb anā claim yur right. Yes, he did.ā
Uriah grunted and glowered. Old Gershom Bornās name was one to be conjured with. He read fat law books and wrote deed, will, and mortgage for the islanders as fair as the grandest lawyer. Moreover, the king knew in his heart that the boy was right.
āWhat ye do wid land?ā Uriah had been growing tall timothy and fat cabbages on Davidās piece for ten years free of charge and was loath to give it up.
āLive on it, farm it same as youse do. Dat house where Mudder diedās mine too,ā said David, grown bolder, and he pointed to a tumbledown cottage which Uriah used as a storeroom for lobster pots.
The king looked scornfully at the landless serf; David stood in the presence of Goliath.
āIāse got de same rights as Anapest anā de Krauses.ā Like many kingdoms, Uriahās was not whole and perfect, but troubled by invaders.
āMaybe you is got some rights, maybe you isnāt, but ye canāt be no sharesman wid me.ā
āDen Iāll squat on my land anā live in my house and fish offshore in my dory.ā David had gone over all the possibilities of this conversation many times before.
āYou, wid nair a line or net to git bait.ā
āI got a line anā I kin pick up squid anā caplin on de beach.ā
āAnā where will ye land yur boat? Ye canāt use my launch.ā
āIāll land on de sand beach in Souāwest Cove anā haul my dory out.ā
āOne summer storm will make kindlinā wood oā your dory.ā
āDen I kin land on de Krausesā launch. Anapest will let me. Anyhow, yur sharesman or no, I sticks and stays.ā
The old fox saw he was beaten, and he liked the fight in the boy: after all, he was a Jung, though a beggarly one.
āI wouldnāt take ye for no sharesman, ācause ye couldnāt hold up yur end wid my boys.ā
āGive me a montās trial,ā said David. āIf I canāt ketch fish fur fish anā haul net fur net wid Martin, Casper, Joseph, Iāll go back to de Outposts anā ask fur no wages.ā
āDone,ā snapped the crafty Uriah, who saw a chance of keeping the land and of getting a monthās work for nothing. āYou take Phoebe tomorrow, far boat on de launch; sheās stood idle since we lost Mark. Haul out yur dory on de launch.ā
Thus was the first battle with the old king won, and thus the disguised prince set foot upon his own dominion.
David turned from the old man and walked up the pathway to his motherās house, that was well-nigh a ruin. The doorstep gaped from the sill, the sagging back door hung by one hinge of leather, the kitchen was half full of lobster pots, and as these had been pushed rudely against the walls, plaster and lathing were broken. Big slabs had fallen from the ceiling. The kitchen stove was yellow with rust, and the pipe entered the chimney at a rakish angle. There was no furniture save a long sofa, on which, he remembered, Richard Covey had slept out many a drunken spree, and a handmade chair the old folk had brought from Sanford. To most people this dilapidated house would have been only a source of heartbreak; to David, who had nothing, it was a potential palace. It was his own, his first possession, he should live there, and his gray eyes twinkled and the corners of his mouth drooped as familiar objects awakened some half-forgotten childish memory.
First, two rooms must be cleared for kitchen and bedroom. He worked his way around to the dining-room door and began lugging lobster pots into parlour and front hallway. A front door and reception room would be superfluous to him for many a day. When kitchen and small room opening off it were freed of pots and trawl tubs, he descended into the damp cellar, and there, groping in a jungle of broken fishing gear, found a handleless shovel and the stub of an old broom. The dark cobwebbed cellar seemed a source of wealth that he would explore at leisure. Smiling fondly at his treasure trove, he returned upstairs, and clearing up plaster and dirt with shovel and broom, threw the dƩbris out into the yard. From the stove he dug out the matted ashes and found among them a black twisted fork. More property! His eyes gleamed again with pleasure in his possession, then darkened as the fork reminded him that he had nothing to eat and no source of supplies. He ran down to the shore and returned with an armful of gray driftwood.
Evening was coming, and, after the work about his house and the long row from the Outposts, he was hungry. He looked across the fields toward Anapestās sombre house, where a lamp glowed yellow in the kitchen window. There was something friendly and inviting in that blotch of light. Dare he? He must not let Uriah beat him, and he could not live forever by hitching up his belt. There was nothing else for it; he must beg bread of someone; later he would show them he could repay and earn his keep. From the tribe of the Krauses, who like himself had established a foothold on Rockbound through Anapestās inheritance of a tenth share from old Edward, who had died intestate, he had had no sign of welcome nor even awareness of his existence, though every soul on Rockbound had known of his arrival ten minutes after he had landed. Krauses and Jungs were immemorial enemies: they grunted at one another but seldom spoke, sent their children to spy into rival fish pens, and lived in a tense atmosphere of envy and mutual ill-will. Uriah had never forgiven old Edward for dying without a will, nor Anapest for marrying Joshua Kraus, nor the Krauses generally for having invaded his kingdom, which, he felt, would have been perfect and complete without them. As Uriah was king of all the Rockbound Jungs, so Anapest was empress of the Krauses. She ruled a smaller kingdom but was none the less imperious; no fleet of nets was set, nor did any Kraus boat set off from the Rock without her sanction.
Still, David felt, as he stared at the yellow light, that there was more hope of obtaining bread from Anapest than from Uriah. He crossed the fields and knocked humbly at her kitchen door. Anapest, her thick black dress girt in at the waist with a manās belt, was bustling about the stove.
āCome in,ā she called harshly, and Davidās bare feet scraped the rough splinters of the kitchen floor.
āIām yur nephew David Jung from de Outposts.ā
Anapest looked the vagrant over, her quick dark eyes taking in torn shirt, frayed trousers, and bare feet. Her heart softened toward him at once; still, she guessed he had come to be Uriahās sharesman, and his lot was thrown in with the enemy. Christian, Nicholas, and Melcher, sons and henchmen, ate greedily at the kitchen table and did not so much as throw a glance in his direction.
āHowās all de folks on de Outposts?ā
āAll right.ā
āWhat you doinā here?ā
āUriahās sharesman.ā
āUryās sharesman. Ha! a lot yeāll have fur yur summerās work when Joe anā Casper has figured expenses.ā
āBeginninā Iāse āll take what dey gives me; someday Iāse āll take what I wants. I donāt expect no mercy, but Iām hungry anā I come to ask some bread off ye.ā
āSit ye down anā fill yur belly. Arter all, yur my brudderās son, if ye is Uryās sharesman.ā
David sat down meekly at the kitchen table, for he was even more fearful of Anapest than Uriah. The Kraus boys looked up and grunted at him; any stranger was to them a potential enemy, and this stranger had allied himself with a hostile clan. Anapest was a grand cook and fed her men well. There was a steaming fish chowder made from a fresh-caught haddock mixed with onions, sliced potatoes, and fried pork scraps; there were fried herring roes and new potatoes in their rosy jackets, showing mealy where the broken skin turned back; there were high piles of thick white bread and mugs of hot tea. David made hay while the sun shone.
āIāse sorry to beg,ā he said after the edge was taken off his hunger, ābut Iāse āll have to git de scatterinā loaf oā bread off ye, Aunt Anapest. Iāse āll pay when I gits my first montās share; Iāse got naught, but yeāll lose naught tārough me.ā
āWhy donāt ye beg yur bread off Ury?ā asked Christian brutally.
āI canāt. Heās too hard.ā
āDen, if ye gets no bread ye canāt stay on Rockbound,ā remarked Melcher hopefully.
āYes, I kin! I stays, I sticks, if I has to dig up de roots oā de field. I kin live on fish anā mussels anā an odd checkerback. Man, youāse donāt know what I bin a-used to livinā on. I stays anā lives in my mudderās house.ā
āDeyās haunts dere,ā said Christian, āwhatāll twitch de clothes off ye nights.ā
āHaunts or no haunts, I stays. I aināt skeered oā no haunts. Why, on de Outposts I lived next house to de ghost catcher.ā
āWhat, Johnny Publicover?ā
āAy, Johnny Publicover, de same what ketched de fierce Sanford ghost,ā said David between mouthfuls. He had caught the Krausesā interest for a moment and must make the most of his chance and eat enough to keep him alive for the next two or three days. Then fortune would throw something in his way, he would have fish, at any rate.
āYeāll have a hard go wid no bread,ā said Nicholas.
āAnd he wonāt go wid no bread,ā shouted Anapest, empress of all the Krauses, stamping her foot. āWhat ye talkinā so fur, ye great lumps, to yur own cousin? Has his house anā land done ye air a good? Isnāt Ury gettinā free grass anā cabbages off dat land fur dese ten years? Bread yeāll have, boy; tāree big loaves a week, if ye kin live on dat.ā
āDat I kin,ā said David rising, āanā my tāanks to ye, Aunt Anapest. Yeāll find me in de years to come no grudginā neighbour.ā
Then, tucking one of Anapestās great loaves under his arm, he went back to his own house, and in the darkness built up a fire of driftwood in the rusty stove and sat down before it to plan and dream. Though he had neither lantern nor candle, the fire cast a fitful glow on the rough floor and made a glimmer of light in the room. The summer fog, pushed northward by the inshore breeze, had enveloped the island and, with its damp blanket, intensified the darkness of a moonless night. The hateful, ill-smelling careys, who love such nights, squeaked and gibbered around the house, and he heard an occasional whir of nighthawksā wings. The gray driftwood cracked sharp in the stove, and there was some strange rustling among the lobster pots in the hallway. But though David knew that the footless nigger of Rockbound was abroad on such nights, he sat unmoved by the stove and stirred only to feed the fire with a fresh stick. He was used to loneliness, and fog had no terror for him. Though he knew it not, as he sat there reviewing the past, he had great capital wealth in the fact that nothing to be faced in the future could be worse than what he had endured in the past. Starting from zero, the meanest acquired possession would connote a worth out of all proportion to its intrinsic value.
He could not recall his father, lost at sea when he was but two years of age. His mother had died of consumption in the bedroom that opened off the dining room. Certainly her pale ghost would not haunt him! He remembered going often into her room, where she had raised a limp hand to stroke his head and look at him with pity. Her hand, he remembered, was so transparent that the bones shone through. His stepfather had been a bad one. After his mother had married Richard Covey, Uriahās loud-mouthed sharesman, they had had nothing but misfortune. Richard Covey was a luckless man: he had gone fishing on the wrong days; when the nets of others were white with meshed herring, his had but a scattering of fish; sportive albacores slit great rents in his fleets while the fleets of others were untouched; the seas rolled his lobster pots into the dog holes, a tangled chaos of broken lath and twisted head rope. David thought of what he had suffered under Richard Coveyās rough hand: scarce a day had he been free from welts on his legs and lumps on his head as big as a sea urchin.
At seven he was taken in the boat and assigned duties beyond his strength. He was useful to the man, for his sharp young eyes could pick up net or trawl buoys, white with a stripe of scarlet, far quicker than the rum-bleared eyes of his stepfather. He had learned to endure cold, fog, and blows, and to sag on a hand line to the maximum of his little strength. It was hard work when the cod ran heavy and they fished with two snoods, for when he hooked a pair he could not draw them over the gunwale, and this brought upon him blows and curses. When they sailed, Richard Covey held t...