Under his breath, Limekiller muttered something coarse and disappointed.
"Pit-ty about the railroad," a deep voice said, from inside the store. "Klondike to Cape Horn. Excellent idea. Vi-sion. But they never built it. Pit-ty."
Limekiller shifted from one foot to another. Half, he would go back to the hotel. Half, he would go somewhere else. (They, she, no one was coming. What did it matter)? Anywhere. Where? But the problem was swiftly solved. Once again, and again without offense, the merchant took him by the arm. "Do not stand outside in the sun, sir. Do come inside the shop. In the shade. And have something cold to drink." And by this time Jack was already there. "Do you know Captain Sneed?"
Small, khaki-clad, scarlet-faced. Sitting at the counter, which was serving as an unofficial bar. "I suppose you must have often wondered," said Captain Sneed, in a quarterdeck voice, "why the Spaniard didn't settle British Hidalgo when he'd settled everywhere else round about?"
"—Well—"
"Didn't know it was here, Old Boy! Couldn't have gotten here if he did, you see. First of all," he said, drawing on the counter with his finger dipped in the water which had distilled from his glass (Tony now sliding another glass, tinkling with, could it be?—yes, it was! Ice!—over to Jack, who nodded true thanks, sipped)—"First of all, you see, coming from east to west, there's Pharaoh's Reef—quite enough to make them sheer off south in a bit of a damned hurry, don't you see. Then there's the Anne of Denmark Island's Reef, even bigger! And suppose they'd sailed south to avoid Anne of Denmark Island's Reef? Eh? What would they find, will you tell me that?"
"Carpenter's Reef. . .unless it's been moved," said Jack.
Sneed gave a great snort, went on, "Exactly! Well, then—now, even if they'd missed Pharaoh's Reef and got pahst it . . . even if they'd missed Anne of Denmark Island's Reef and got pahst it . . . even if they'd missed Carpenter's Reef and got pahst it . . . why, then there's that great long Barrier Reef, don't you see, one of the biggest in the world. (Of course, Australia's the biggest one. . . .) No. No, Old Boy. Only the British lads knew the way through the Reef, and you may be sure that they were not pahssing out the information to the Spaniard, no, ho-ho!"
Well (thought Jack, in the grateful shade of the shop), maybe so. It was an impressive thought, that, of infinite millions of coral polyps laboring and dying and depositing their stony "bones" in order to protect British Hidalgo (and, incidentally, though elsewhere, Australia) from "the Spaniard."
"Well!" Captain Sneed obliterated his watery map with a sweep of his hand. "Mustn't mind me, Old Boy. This is my own King Charles's head, if you want to know. It's just the damnable cheek of those Spaniards there, there, in Spanish Hidalgo, still claiming this blessed little land of ours as their own, when they had never even set their foot upon it!" And he blew out his scarlet face and actually said "Herrumph"—a word which Jack had often seen but never, till now, actually heard.
And then Tony Mikeloglu, who had evidently gone through all, all of this many, many times before, said, softly, "My brother-in-law's brother had just told me on the telephone from King Town—"
"Phantom relay, it has—the telephone, you know—sorry, Tony, forgive me—what does your damned crook of a kinsman tell you from King Town?"
". . .tells me that there is a rumor that the Pike Estate has finally been settled, you know."
Not again? Always . . . thought Limekiller.
But Captain Sneed said, Don't you believe it! "Oh. What? 'A rumor,' yes, well, you may believe that. Always a rumor. Why didn't the damned fellow make a proper will? Eh? For that matter, why don't you, Old Christopher?"
There was a sound more like a crackle of cellophane than anything else. Jack turned to look; there in an especially shadowy corner was a man even older, even smaller, than Captain Sneed; and exposed toothless gums as he chuckled.
"Yes, why you do not, Uncle Christopher?" asked Tony.
In the voice of a cricket who has learned to speak English with a strong Turkish accent, Uncle Christopher said that he didn't believe in wills.
"What's going to become of all your damned doubloons, then, when you go pop?" asked Captain Sneed. Uncle Christopher only smirked and shrugged. "Where have you concealed all that damned money which you accumulated all those years you used to peddle bad rum and rusty roast-beef tins round about the bush camps? Who's going to get it all, eh?"
Uncle Christopher went hickle-hickle. "I know who going get it," he said. Sh'sh, sh'sh, sh'sh . . . His shoulders, thin as a butterfly 's bones, heaved his amusement.
"Yes, but how are they going to get it? What? How are you going to take care of that? Once you're dead."
Uncle Christopher, with a concluding crackle, said, "I going do like the Indians do. . . ."
Limekiller hadn't a clue what the old man meant, but evidently Captain Sneed had. "What?" demanded Captain Sneed. "Come now, come now, you don't really believe all that, do you? You do? You do! Tush. Piffle. The smoke of all those bush camps has addled your brains. Shame on you. Dirty old pagan. Disgusting. Do you call yourself a Christian and a member of a church holding the Apostolic Succession? Stuff!"
The amiable wrangle went on. And, losing interest in it, Limekiller once again became aware of feeling ill at ease. Or . . . was it . . . could it be? . . . ill?
In came a child, a little girl; Limekiller had seen her before. She was perhaps eight years old. Where had he seen her?
"Ah," said Mikeloglu, briskly the merchant again. "Here is me best customer. She going make me rich, not true, me Betty gyel? What fah you, chaparita?"
White rice and red beans were for her, and some coconut oil in her own bottle was for her, and some tea and some chile peppers (not very much of any of these items, though) and the inevitable tin of milk. (The chief difference between small shops and large shops in St. Michael's was that the large ones had a much larger selection of tinned milk.) Tony weighed and poured, wrapped and tied. And looked at her expectantly.
She untied her handkerchief, knot by knot, and counted out the money. Dime by dime. Penny by penny. Gave them all a shy smile, left. "No fahget me when you rich, me Bet-ty gyel," Tony called after her. "Would you believe, Mr. Limekiller, she is one of the grandchildren of old Mr. Pike?"
"Then why isn't she rich already? Did the others get it all?—Oh. I forgot. Estate not settled."
Captain Sneed grunted. "Wouldn't help her even if the damned estate were settled. An outside child of an outside child. Couldn't inherit if the courts ever decide that he died intestate, and of course: no mention of her in any will . . . if there is any will . . ." An outside child. How well Jack knew that phrase by now. Marriage and giving in marriage was one thing in British Hidalgo; begetting and bearing of children, quite another thing. No necessary connection. "Do you have any children?" "Well, I has four children." Afterthought: "Ahnd t'ree oetside." Commonest thing in the world. Down here.
"What's wrong with you, Old Boy?" asked Captain Sneed. "You look quite dicky."
"Feel rotten," Limekiller muttered, suddenly aware of feeling so. "Bones all hurt."
Immediate murmurs of sympathy. And: "Oh, my. You weren't caught in that rain yesterday morning, were you?"