Angel Island by Inez Haynes Gillmore (book recommendations for young adults .txt) 📕
In brief, men were always divided in their own minds in regard to RalphAddington. They knew that, constantly, he broke every canon
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vines, his forehead pressed against the cool leaves. “But it is right,”
he added as one arguing fiercely with himself. “It is right. There’s no
other way.”
“I feel like a white slaver,” said Pete. He was unshaven and the black
shadow of his beard contrasted sharply with the white set look in his
face. “It’s hell to live, isn’t it? But the worst of it is, we must
live.”
“Time’s up.” Frank breathed these words on the long gust of his outgoing
breath. “Now, don’t go to pieces. Remember, it must be done.”
One behind the other, they crawled through the narrow tunnel that they
had cut into the underbrush - found the trail.
“Let’s swim across the lake,” Honey suggested; “I’m losing my nerve.”
“Good idea,” Billy said. They plunged into the water. Fifteen minutes
later, they emerged on the other side, cool, composed, ready for
anything.
The long trip back to the camp was taken almost in silence. Once in a
while, a mechanical “That’s a new bird, isn’t it?” came from Billy and,
a perfunctory “Look at that color,” from Pete. Frank walked ahead. He
towered above the others. He kept his eyes to the front. Ralph followed.
At intervals, he pulled himself up and peered into the sky or dropped
and tried to pierce the untranslatable distance; all this with the
quiet, furtive, prowling movements of some predatory beast. Next came
Honey, whistling under his breath and all the time whistling the same
tune. Billy and Pete, walking side by side, tailed the procession. At
times, those two caught themselves at the beginning of shuddering fits,
but always by a supreme effort they managed to calm themselves.
They came finally to the point where the jungle-trail joined the
sand-trail.
“There isn’t one in sight,” said Frank.
“They may have flown home,” Honey said doubtfully.
“They’re in the Clubhouse,” said Ralph. And he burst suddenly into a
long, wild cry of triumph. The cry was taken up in a faint shrill echo.
From the distance came shrieks - women’s voices - smothered.
“By God, we’ve got them,” said Frank again.
And then a strange thing happened. Pete Murphy crooked his elbow up to
his face and burst into hysterical weeping.
All this time, the men were moving swiftly towards the Clubhouse. As
they approached, the sound inside grew in volume from a hum of terrified
whisperings accented by drumming wings, to a pandemonium of cries and
sobs and wails.
“They’ll make a rush when we open the door, remember,” Ralph reminded
them. His eyes gleamed like a cat’s.
“Yes, but we can handle them,” said Frank. “There isn’t much nerve left
in them by this time.”
“I say, boys, I can’t stand this,” burst out Billy. “Open the door and
let them out.”
Billy’s words brought murmured echoes of approval from Pete and Honey.
“You’ve got to stand it,” Frank said in a tone of command. He surveyed
his mutinous crew with a stern look of authority.
“I can’t do it,” Honey admitted.
“I feel sick,” Pete groaned.
Just then emerged from the pandemonium within another sound, curt and
sharp-cut, the crash against the door of something heavy.
“That door won’t stand much of that,” Frank warned. “They’ll get out
before we know it.”
The look of irresolution went like a flash from Billy’s face, from
Honey’s, from Pete’s. The look of the hunter took its place, keen,
alert, determined, cruel.
“Keep close behind me,” Frank ordered.
“When I open the door, push in as quick as you can. They’ll try to rush
out.”
Inside the vibrant drumming kept up. Mixed with it came screams more
sharp with terror. There came another crash.
Frank pounded on the door. “Stand back! he called in a quiet tone of
authority as if the girls could understand. He fitted the key to the
lock, turned it, pulled the door open, leaped over the two broken chairs
on the threshold. The others followed, crowding close.
The rush that they had expected did not come.
Apparently at the first touch on the door, the, girls had retreated to
the farthest corner. They stood huddled there, gathered behind Julia.
They stood close together, swaying, half-supporting each other, their
pinions drooped and trailing, their eyes staring black with horror out
of their white faces.
Julia, a little in front, stood at defiance. Her wings, as though
animated by a gentle voltage of electricity, kept lifting with a low
purring whirr. Halfway they struck the ceiling and dropped dead. The
tiny silvery-white feathers near her shoulders rose like fur on a cat’s
back. One hand was clenched; the other grasped a chair. Her face was not
terrified; neither was it white. It glowed with rage, as if a fire had
been built in an alabaster vase.
All about on the floor, on chairs, over shelves lay the gauds that had
lured them to their capture. Of them all, Julia alone showed no change.
Below the scarlet draperies swathing Chiquita’s voluptuous outlines
appeared the gold stockings and the high-heeled gold slippers which she
had tried on her beautiful Andalusian feet. Necklaces swung from her
throat; bracelets covered her arms; rings crowded her fingers. Lulu had
thrown about her leafy costume an evening cape of brilliant blue brocade
trimmed with ermine. On her head glittered a boudoir-cap of web lace
studded with iridescent mock jewels. Over her mail of seaweed, Clara
wore a mandarin’s coat - yellow, with a decoration of tiny mirrors. Her
hair was studded with jeweled hairpins, combs; a jeweled band, a jeweled
aigrette. Peachy had put on a pink chiffon evening gown hobbled in the
skirt, one shoulder-length, shining black glove, a long chain of
fire-opals. Out of this emerged with an astonishing effect of contrast
her gleaming pearly shoulders and her, lustrous blue wings.
An instant the two armies stood staring at each other - at close terms
for the first time. Then, with one tremendous sweep of her arm, Julia
threw something over their heads out the open door. It flashed through
the sunlight like a rainbow rocket, tore the surface of the sea in a
dazzle of sparks and colors.
“There goes five hundred thousand dollars,” said Honey as the Wilmington
“Blue” found its last resting-place. “Shut the door, Pete.”
With another tremendous sweep of her magnificent arm, Julia lifted the
chair, swung it about her head as if it were a whip, rushed - not
running or flying, but with a movement that was both - upon the five
men. Her companions seized anything that was near. Lulu wrenched a shelf
from its fastenings.
The men closed in upon them.
Twenty minutes later, silence had fallen on the Clubhouse, a silence
that was broken only by panted breathing. The five men stood resting.
The five girls stood, tied to the walls, their hands pinioned in front
of them. At intervals, one or the other of them would call in an
agonized tone to Julia. And always she answered with words that
reassured and calmed.
The room looked as if it had housed a cyclone. The furniture lay in
splinters; the feminine loot lay on the floor, trampled and torn.
“I’d like to sit down,” Ralph admitted. It was the first remark that any
one of the men had made. “Lucky they can’t understand me. I’d hate them
to know it, but I’m as weak as a cat.”
“No sitting down, yet,” Frank commanded, still in his inflexible tones
of a disciplinarian. “Open the door, Pete - get some air in here!” He
knelt before a sea-chest which filled one corner of the room, unlocked
it, lifted the cover. The sunlight glittered on the contents.
“My God, I can’t,” said Billy.
“I feel like a murderer,” said Pete.
“You’ve got to,” Frank said in a tone, growing more peremptory with each
word. “Now.”
“That’s right,” said Ralph. “If we don’t do it now, we’ll never do it.’
Frank handed each man a pair of shears.
“I sharpened them myself,” he said briefly.
Heads over their shoulders, the girls watched.
Did intuition shout a warning to them? As with one accord, a long wail
arose from them, swelled to despairing volume, ascended to desperate
heights.
“Now!” Frank ordered.
They had thought the girls securely tied.
Clara fought like a leopardess, scratching and biting.
Lulu struggled like a caged eagle, hysteria mounting in her all the time
until the room was filled with her moans.
Peachy beat herself against the wall like a maniac. She shrieked without
cessation. One scream stopped suddenly in the middle - Ralph had struck
her on the forehead. For the rest of the shearing session she lay over a
chair, limp and silent.
Chiquita, curiously enough, resisted not at all. She only swayed and
shrugged, a look of a strange cunning in her long, deep, thick-lashed
eyes. But of them all, she was the only one who attempted to comfort;
she talked incessantly.
Julia did not move or speak. But at the first touch of the cold steel on
her bare shoulders, she fainted in Billy’s arms.
An hour later the men emerged from the Clubhouse.
“I’m all in,” Honey muttered. “And I don’t care who knows it. I’m going
for a swim.” Head down, he staggered away from the group and zigzagged
over the beach.
“I guess I’ll go back to the camp for a smoke,” Frank said. “I never
realized before that I had nerves.” Frank was white, and he shook at
intervals. But some strange spirit, compounded equally of a sense of
victory and of defeat, flashed in his eyes.
“I’m going off for a tramp.” Pete was sunken as well as ashen; he looked
dead. “Do you suppose they’ll hurt themselves pulling against those
ropes?” he asked tonelessly.
“Let them struggle for a while,” Ralph advised. Like the rest of them,
Ralph was exhausted-looking and pale. But at intervals he swaggered and
glowed. With his strange, new air of triumph and his white teeth
glittering through his dark mustache, he was more than ever like some
huge predatory cat. “Serves them right! They’ve taken it out of us for
three months.”
Billy did not speak, but he swayed as he followed Frank. He fell on his
bed when they reached the camp. He lay there all night motionless,
staring at the ceiling.
There was a tiny spot of blood on one hand.
VA.
Dawn on Angel Island.
A gigantic rose bloomed at the horizon-line; half its satin petals lay
on the iron sea, half on the granite sky. The gold-green morning star
was fading slowly. From the island came a confusion of bird-calls.
Addington emerged from the Clubhouse. Without looking about him, he
staggered down the path to the Camp. The fire was still burning. The
other men lay beside it, moveless, asleep with their clothes on. They
waked as his footsteps drew near. Livid with fatigue, their eyelids
dropping in spite of their efforts, they jerked upright.
“How are they?” Billy asked.
“The turn has come,” Ralph answered briefly. As he spoke he crumpled
slowly into a heap beside the fire. “They’re going to live.”
The others did not speak; they waited.
“Julia did it. She had dozed off. Suddenly in the middle of the night,
she sat upright. She was as white as marble but there was a light back
of her face. And with all that wonderful hair falling down - she looked
like an angel. She called to them one by
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