
In a quiet night on a Tahitian beach, three strangers huddle beneath a palm‑leaf thatch, shivering against a cold that feels out of place in the South Seas. Each is an English‑speaking exile, stripped of money, identity, and even a proper meal, yet each clutches a fragment of his former life—a tattered Virgil, a faded scholarship, and a lingering sense of honor. The island’s neon lamps and distant schooners cast flickering shadows, while the men’s whispered conversations reveal a shared desperation and a tentative camaraderie born of hardship.
As the tide recedes, the trio’s conversation turns to a risky scheme that could lift them from poverty. Their differing skills—one’s literary knowledge, another’s practical cunning, and a third’s quiet resolve—hint at a plan that may carry them far beyond the beach. Listeners are drawn into the moral ambiguities of survival, the lure of the exotic, and the promise that even the most downtrodden can seek redemption.
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (256K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Dianne Bean, and David Widger
Release date
1999-01-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1868–1947
An American writer and traveler, he is often remembered for his close literary partnership with his stepfather, Robert Louis Stevenson. His life ranged from California to the South Pacific, and those experiences helped shape a career built on adventure stories, essays, and memoir.
View all books
1850–1894
Best known for stories of adventure and divided selves, this Scottish writer gave the world Treasure Island, Kidnapped, and Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde. His life was as restless as his fiction, carrying him from Edinburgh to the South Pacific.
View all books