There was a bed in it, some rough stools which he himself had made, a table, and his various household utensils.
Under a tree in front of it were a table and a bench.
Behind was an enclosed run for his chickens.
I cannot say that he was pleased to see us.
He accepted our gifts as a right, without thanks, and grumbled a little because something or other he needed had not been brought.
He was silent and morose.
He was not interested in the news we had to give him, for the outside world was no concern of his: the only thing he cared about was his island.
He looked upon it with a jealous, proprietary right; he called it “my health resort” and he feared that the coconuts that covered it would tempt some enterprising trader.
He looked at me with suspicion. He was sombrely curious to know what I was doing in these seas.
He used words with difficulty, talking to himself rather than to us, and it was a little uncanny to hear him mumble away as though we were not there.
But he was moved when my skipper told him that an old man of his own age whom he had known for a long time was dead.
“Old Charlie dead—that’s too bad.
Old Charlie dead.”
He repeated it over and over again.
I asked him if he read.
“Not much,” he answered indifferently.
He seemed to be occupied with nothing but his food, his dogs and his chickens.
If what they tell us in books were true his long communion with nature and the sea should have taught him many subtle secrets.
It hadn’t.
He was a savage. He was nothing but a narrow, ignorant and cantankerous seafaring man.
As I looked at the wrinkled, mean old face I wondered what was the story of those three dreadful years that had made him welcome this long imprisonment.
I sought to see behind those pale blue eyes of his what secrets they were that he would carry to his grave.
And then I foresaw the end.
One day a pearl fisher would land on the island and German Harry would not be waiting for him, silent and suspicious, at the water’s edge.
He would go up to the hut and there, lying on the bed, unrecognizable, he would see all that remained of what had once been a man.
Perhaps then he would hunt high and low for the great mass of pearls that has haunted the fancy of so many adventurers.
But I do not believe he would find it: German Harry would have seen to it that none should discover the treasure, and the pearls would rot in their hiding place.
Then the pearl fisher would get back into his dinghy and the island once more be deserted of man.