The Greatest Adventures Boxed Set: Jack London Edition. Jack London

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href="#uce005cbc-0be2-54dd-94a2-d1008641af9a">Dutch Courage

       Chris Farrington: Able Seaman

       The Lost Poacher

       Typhoon Off the Coast of Japan

       The Banks of the Sacramento

       To Repel Boarders

       Bald-Face

       An Adventure in the Upper Sea

       Whose Business Is to Live

       In Yeddo Bay

       Uncollected Stories

       The Devil’s Dice Box

       The Test: A Clondyke Wooing

       Even Unto Death

       The King of Mazy May

       Pluck and Pertinacity

       A Northland Miracle

       Thanksgiving on Slav Creek

       The “Fuzziness” of Hoockla-Heen

       Up the Slide

       Chased by the Trail

       A Klondike Christmas

       A Thousand Deaths

       An Old Soldier's Story

       The Proper “Girlie”

       Their Alcove

       Housekeeping in the Klondike

       Morganson's Finish

      A Son of the Sun

       Table of Contents

      A Son of the Sun

       Table of Contents

       I

       II

       III

       IV

       V

       VI

      I

       Table of Contents

      The Willi-Waw lay in the passage between the shore-reef and the outer-reef. From the latter came the low murmur of a lazy surf, but the sheltered stretch of water, not more than a hundred yards across to the white beach of pounded coral sand, was of glass-like smoothness. Narrow as was the passage, and anchored as she was in the shoalest place that gave room to swing, the Willi-Waw’s chain rode up-and-down a clean hundred feet. Its course could be traced over the bottom of living coral. Like some monstrous snake, the rusty chain’s slack wandered over the ocean floor, crossing and recrossing itself several times and fetching up finally at the idle anchor. Big rock-cod, dun and mottled, played warily in and out of the coral. Other fish, grotesque of form and colour, were brazenly indifferent, even when a big fish-shark drifted sluggishly along and sent the rock-cod scuttling for their favourite crevices.

      On deck, for’ard, a dozen blacks pottered clumsily at scraping the teak rail. They were as inexpert at their work as so many monkeys. In fact they looked very much like monkeys of some enlarged and prehistoric type. Their eyes had in them the querulous plaintiveness of the monkey, their faces were even less symmetrical than the monkey’s, and, hairless of body, they were far more ungarmented than any monkey, for clothes they had none. Decorated they were as no monkey ever was. In holes in their ears they carried short clay pipes, rings of turtle shell, huge plugs of wood, rusty wire nails, and empty rifle cartridges. The calibre of a Winchester rifle was the smallest hole an ear bore; some of the largest holes were inches in diameter, and any single ear averaged from three to half a dozen holes. Spikes and bodkins of polished bone or petrified shell were thrust through their noses. On the chest of one hung a white doorknob, on the chest of another the handle of a china cup, on the chest of a third the brass cogwheel of an alarm clock. They chattered in queer, falsetto voices, and, combined, did no more work than a single white sailor.

      Aft, under an awning, were two white men. Each was clad in a six-penny undershirt and wrapped about the loins with a strip of cloth. Belted about the middle of each was a revolver and tobacco pouch. The sweat stood out on their skin in myriads of globules. Here and there the globules coalesced in tiny streams that dripped to the heated deck and almost immediately evaporated. The lean, dark-eyed man wiped his fingers wet with a stinging stream from his forehead and flung it from him with a weary curse. Wearily, and without hope, he gazed seaward across the outer-reef, and at the tops of the palms along the beach.

      “Eight o’clock, an’ hell don’t get hot till noon,” he complained. “Wisht to God for a breeze. Ain’t we never goin’ to get away?”

      The other man, a slender German of five and twenty, with the massive forehead of a scholar and the tumble-home chin of a degenerate, did not trouble to reply. He was busy emptying powdered quinine into a cigarette paper. Rolling what was approximately fifty grains of the drug into a tight wad, he tossed it into his mouth and gulped it down without the aid of water.

      “Wisht I had some whiskey,” the first man panted, after a fifteen-minute interval of silence.

      Another


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