| PART I | ||
| CHAPTER | PAGE | |
| I | Palm Island | [1] |
| II | A Floating Caravan | [6] |
| III | Breakfast | [16] |
| IV | Pap’s Suit | [23] |
| V | The Portmanteau | [34] |
| VI | Skelton Sails | [58] |
| VII | Carquinez | [68] |
| VIII | Jude Overdoes It | [79] |
| IX | The “Juan” Sails | [96] |
| X | Cuss Words | [107] |
| XI | The Coming of Cleary | [116] |
| XII | An Honest Man | [123] |
| XIII | Problems | [130] |
| XIV | Hants and Other Things | [136] |
| XV | Under Way | [144] |
| XVI | The Steersman | [150] |
| PART II | ||
| XVII | Lone Reef | [157] |
| XVIII | The Wreck | [169] |
| XIX | Mutiny | [174] |
| XX | The Sandspit | [183] |
| XXI | Dished | [193] |
| XXII | The Crabs | [199] |
| XXIII | The Return | [206] |
| XXIV | A Bottle of Rum | [215] |
| XXV | They Fire the Fuse | [220] |
| XXVI | The Cargo | [226] |
| XXVII | Crockery Ware | [232] |
| XXVIII | Tide and Current | [238] |
| XXIX | Satan in Paradise | [243] |
| XXX | A Secret of the Sand | [253] |
| XXXI | The Go-ashore Hat | [259] |
| XXXII | Cleary! | [267] |
| XXXIII | The Fight | [272] |
| XXXIV | “I’ll Tak!” | [280] |
| PART III | ||
| XXXV | The Vanished Light | [285] |
| XXXVI | The Wedding Present | [295] |
PART I
SATAN
CHAPTER I
PALM ISLAND
The sky from sea-line to sea-line was crusted with stars, a triumphant, cloudless, tropic night-sky beneath which the Dryad rode at her anchor, lifting lazily to the swell flowing up from beyond the great Bahama bank.
She was Skelton’s boat, a six-hundred-tonner, turbine engined, rigged with everything new in the way of sea valves and patent gadgets, and she had anchored at sundown off Palm Island, a tiny spot, gull haunted, and due west of Andros.
Skelton was a Christchurch man, Bobby Ratcliffe a Brazenose, and Bobby, tonight, as he leaned on the starboard rail smoking and listening to the wash of the waves on the island beach, was thinking of Skelton, who was down below writing up his diary. Before coming on this “winter cruise to the West Indies in my yacht” Bobby did not know that Skelton kept a diary, that Skelton was so awfully Anglican, so precise, so stuffed with the convenances, that he dined in dress clothes even in a hurricane, that he had a very nasty, naggling temper, that he had prayers every Sunday morning in the cabin which the chief steward, the under stewards, and the officers off watch were expected to attend—also Bobby. Two other men were booked for the cruise, but they cried off at the last moment. If they had come, things might have been different. As it was, Bobby, to use his own language, was pretty much fed up.