
Chapter 1 THE CAVE OF TERRIBLE THINGS.
A great unrest brooded over mountain and forest;
the blue Caribbean lay hushed and glaring, as if held
in leash by a power greater than that which ordered
its daily ebb and flow.
Men moved or stood beneath the trees on the
cliffside in attitudes of supreme awe or growing
uneasiness, according to their kind: for among them
were numbered Spaniard and Briton, creole and
mulatto, Carib and octoroon, with coal-black negroes
enough to outnumber all the restae'' and it was upon
these last that profound awe sat oppressively.
Apart, followed by a hundred furtive eye, Dolores,
daughter of Red Jabez, ranged back and forth
before the mighty rock portals of the Cave of
Terrible Things, like some magnificent tigress
hedge with foes. Beyond those portals Red Jabez,
Sultan of pirates, arbiter of life and death over the
motley community, lay at grips with the grim spectre
to whom he had consigned scores far more readily
than he now yielded up his own red-stained soul.
Red Jabez was dying a death as hard as his lurid
life had been.
Beyond those rock portals none save Jabez and
Milo, the herculean Abyssinian slave, had ever
passed. Dolores, next in line, was in ignorance as
deep as her meanest slave, concerning what lay
beyond the great mass of rock which formed the
door, and which Milo alone could move. She knew,
as did every one, that the great chamber of Red
Jabez held some vast mystery; she suspected,
as did the rest, that it concealed wealth beyond
dreams; deep down in her soul she hoped that
inviolate chamber held for her the means of
emancipation; but of this hope, none knew save
herself. For Queen of Night though the white men
called her, Sultana though she was named with fear
and submission by the blacks, though her power
was second only to that of Red Jabez, and barely
less than his, a canker gnawed at the heart of
Dolores, the canker of a suspicion that her power
was but a paltry power, her freedom but a caged
freedom.
Somewhere beyond the great ocean that stretched
away before her eyes lay a world she knew nothing
of; yet since her earliest childhood her keen mind
had told her that the silk with which she was
clothed, the jewels that encrusted her dagger-hilt,
the ships whose pillage had yielded up these things,
must come from lands far distant, more desirable
than the maroon country of Jamaica. More, her
ears attuned to the whisper or roar of the sea, the sigh
or shriek of the winds, carried to her the mutterings
of men long held in leash, who now saw in their
chieftain's death the realization of their own wild
dreams of riches and release. All these things told
her that the great, strange world beyond the sea-line
was something for her to strive for; not for the
rabble who called her queen.
She paced back and forth, a splendidly lithe,
glowing creature of beauty and passion, every
movement a grace, each grace such as befitted
a royal woman conscious of mental and physical
perfection. Her hair surrounded her face and
shoulders in a lustrous, rippling cloud, though which
peeped a bare arm and breast stolen from the
goddess of beauty; her tunic of quilted Chinese silk
hung from one shoulder by a strap fashioned from
the ribbon of the Star of Persia, and fastened by the
star; her strong, slender waist was girdled with a
heavy gold cord that supported a long, thin dagger,
no toy, in a jeweled sheath; the hem of her single
garment rang with gold sequins to the movement of
her smoothly muscular knees; her high-arched feet
were protected from thorns and shells by sandals of
red leather.
As the moments passed, and no sign came from
within the cave, Dolores restrained her impatience
with increasing difficulty. The men scattered around
were not of such stuff; they felt the impending crisis
settle heavily upon them, and white and black alike
drew together for the comfort of close touch. From
time to time a hardier spirit uttered his thoughts
aloud, yet always with a glance of uncertainty
toward Dolores. They had reason to glance that way;
for every man had tasted of the queen's justice,
which rarely erred on the side of mildness; many
of them had experienced her terrible competence
to carry out a sentence in person. Of them all, not
one but knew that in Dolores he owned as queen
a woman who need yield nothing of prowess to
any man: her knife was as swift, her round wrist
as strong, her blazing violet-black eyes as sure as
any among them. Not a man could ever forget the
offending slave whom she had thrashed with her
own hands, disdaining assistance, until the wretch
tore loose and fled screaming to the cliff to pitch
headlong into the shark-infested sea; nor could they
forget her unhesitating dive and terrific struggle to
recover him and her completion of the interrupted
punishment when she had brought him back.
To be continue...

