CHAPTER I
THE OLD SEA-DOG AT THE ADMIRAL BENBOW
Squire Trelawney, Dr. Livesey, and
the rest of these gentlemen, having asked me to write
down the whole particulars about Treasure Island, from
the beginning to the end, keeping nothing back but
the bearings of the island, and that only because
there is still treasure not yet lifted, I take up
my pen in the year of grace 17 , and go
back to the time when my father kept the “Admiral
Benbow” inn, and the brown old seaman, with the
sabre-cut, first took up his lodging under our roof.
I remember him as if it were yesterday,
as he came plodding to the inn-door, his sea-chest
following behind him in a hand-barrow; a tall, strong,
heavy, nut-brown man; his tarry pigtail falling over
the shoulders of his soiled blue coat; his hands ragged
and scarred, with black, broken nails; and the sabre-cut
across one cheek, a dirty, livid white. I remember
him looking round the cove and whistling to himself
as he did so, and then breaking out in that old sea-song
that he sang so often afterwards:
“Fifteen men on the dead man’s
chest
Yo-ho-ho, and a bottle
of rum!”
in the high, old tottering voice that
seemed to have been tuned and broken at the capstan
bars. Then he rapped on the door with a bit of
stick like a handspike that he carried, and when my
father appeared, called roughly for a glass of rum.
This, when it was brought to him, he drank slowly,
like a connoisseur, lingering on the taste, and still
looking about him at the cliffs and up at our signboard.
“This is a handy cove,”
says he, at length; “and a pleasant sittyated
grog-shop. Much company, mate?”
My father told him no very
little company, the more was the pity.
“Well, then,” said he,
“this is the berth for me. Here you,
matey,” he cried to the man who trundled the
barrow; “bring up alongside and help up my chest.
I’ll stay here a bit,” he continued.
“I’m a plain man; rum and bacon and eggs
is what I want, and that head up there for to watch
ships off. What you mought call me?
You mought call me captain. Oh, I see what you’re
at there;” and he threw down three
or four gold pieces on the threshold. “You
can tell me when I’ve worked through that,”
says he, looking as fierce as a commander.
And, indeed, bad as his clothes were,
and coarsely as he spoke, he had none of the appearance
of a man who sailed before the mast; but seemed like
a mate or skipper, accustomed to be obeyed or to strike.
The man who came with the barrow told us the mail
had set him down the morning before at the “Royal
George”; that he had inquired what inns there
were along the coast, and hearing ours well spoken
of, I suppose, and described as lonely, had chosen
it from the others for his place of residence.
And that was all we could learn of our guest.
He was a very silent man by custom.
All day he hung round the cove, or upon the cliffs,
with a brass telescope; all evening he sat in a corner
of the parlour next the fire, and drank rum and water
very strong. Mostly he would not speak when spoken
to; only look up sudden and fierce, and blow through
his nose like a fog-horn; and we and the people who
came about our house soon learned to let him be.
Every day, when he came back from his stroll, he would
ask if any seafaring men had gone by along the road.
At first we thought it was the want of company of his
own kind that made him ask this question; but at last
we began to see he was desirous to avoid them.
When a seaman put up at the “Admiral Benbow”
(as now and then some did, making by the coast road
for Bristol), he would look in at him through the
curtained door before he entered the parlour; and he
was always sure to be as silent as a mouse when any
such was present. For me, at least, there was
no secret about the matter; for I was, in a way, a
sharer in his alarms. He had taken me aside one
day, and promised me a silver fourpenny on the first
of every month if I would only keep my “weather-eye
open for a seafaring man with one leg,” and let
him know the moment he appeared. Often enough,
when the first of the month came round, and I applied
to him for my wage, he would only blow through his
nose at me, and stare me down; but before the week
was out he was sure to think better of it, bring me
my fourpenny-piece, and repeat his orders to look
out for “the seafaring man with one leg.”
How that personage haunted my dreams,
I need scarcely tell you. On stormy nights, when
the wind shook the four corners of the house, and the
surf roared along the cove and up the cliffs, I would
see him in a thousand forms, and with a thousand diabolical
expressions. Now the leg would be cut off at
the knee, now at the hip; now he was a monstrous kind
of a creature who had never had but the one leg, and
that in the middle of his body. To see him leap
and run and pursue me over hedge and ditch was the
worst of nightmares. And altogether I paid pretty
dear for my monthly fourpenny-piece, in the shape
of these abominable fancies.
But though I was so terrified by the
idea of the seafaring man with one leg, I was far
less afraid of the captain himself than anybody else
who knew him. There were nights when he took
a deal more rum and water than his head would carry;
and then he would sometimes sit and sing his wicked
old wild sea-songs, minding nobody; but sometimes he
would call for glasses round, and force all the trembling
company to listen to his stories or bear a chorus
to his singing. Often I have heard the house
shaking with “Yo-ho-ho, and a bottle of rum”;
all the neighbours joining in for dear life, with
the fear of death upon them, and each singing louder
than the other, to avoid remark. For in these
fits he was the most overriding companion ever known;
he would slap his hand on the table, for silence all
round; he would fly up in a passion of anger at a question,
or sometimes because none was put, and so he judged
the company was not following his story. Nor
would he allow any one to leave the inn till he had
drunk himself sleepy and reeled off to bed.
His stories were what frightened people
worst of all. Dreadful stories they were; about
hanging, and walking the plank, and storms at sea,
and the Dry Tortugas, and wild deeds and places on
the Spanish Main. By his own account he must
have lived his life among some of the wickedest men
that God ever allowed upon the sea; and the language
in which he told these stories shocked our plain country
people almost as much as the crimes that he described.
My father was always saying the inn would be ruined,
for people would soon cease coming there to be tyrannised
over and put down, and sent shivering to their beds;
but I really believe his presence did us good.
People were frightened at the time, but on looking
back they rather liked it; it was a fine excitement
in a quiet country life; and there was even a party
of the younger men who pretended to admire him, calling
him a “true sea-dog,” and a “real
old salt,” and suchlike names, and saying there
was the sort of man that made England terrible at
sea.
In one way, indeed, he bade fair to
ruin us; for he kept on staying week after week, and
at last month after month, so that all the money had
been long exhausted, and still my father never plucked
up the heart to insist on having more. If ever
he mentioned it, the captain blew through his nose
so loudly that you might say he roared, and stared
my poor father out of the room. I have seen him
wringing his hands after such a rebuff, and I am sure
the annoyance and the terror he lived in must have
greatly hastened his early and unhappy death.
All the time he lived with us the
captain made no change whatever in his dress but to
buy some stockings from a hawker. One of the cocks
of his hat having fallen down, he let it hang from
that day forth, though it was a great annoyance when
it blew. I remember the appearance of his coat,
which he patched himself up-stairs in his room, and
which, before the end, was nothing but patches.
He never wrote or received a letter, and he never
spoke with any but the neighbours, and with these,
for the most part, only when drunk on rum. The
great sea-chest none of us had ever seen open.
He was only once crossed, and that
was towards the end, when my poor father was far gone
in a decline that took him off. Dr. Livesey came
late one afternoon to see the patient, took a bit
of dinner from my mother, and went into the parlour
to smoke a pipe until his horse should come down from
the hamlet, for we had no stabling at the old “Benbow.”
I followed him in, and I remember observing the contrast
the neat, bright doctor, with his powder as white
as snow, and his bright black eyes and pleasant manners,
made with the coltish country folk, and above all,
with that filthy, heavy, bleared scarecrow of a pirate
of ours, sitting far gone in rum, with his arms on
the table. Suddenly he the captain,
that is began to pipe up his eternal song:
“Fifteen men on the dead man’s
chest
Yo-ho-ho, and a bottle
of rum!
Drink and the devil had done for
the rest
Yo-ho-ho, and a bottle
of rum!”
At first I had supposed “the
dead man’s chest” to be that identical
big box of his up-stairs in the front room, and the
thought had been mingled in my nightmares with that
of the one-legged seafaring man. But by this
time we had all long ceased to pay any particular notice
to the song; it was new, that night, to nobody but
Dr. Livesey, and on him I observed it did not produce
an agreeable effect, for he looked up for a moment
quite angrily before he went on with his talk to old
Taylor, the gardener, on a new cure for the rheumatics.
In the meantime, the captain gradually brightened
up at his own music, and at last flapped his hand upon
the table before him in a way we all knew to mean silence.
The voices stopped at once, all but Dr. Livesey’s;
he went on as before, speaking clear and kind, and
drawing briskly at his pipe between every word or
two. The captain glared at him for a while, flapped
his hand again, glared still harder, and at last broke
out with a villainous, low oath: “Silence,
there, between decks!”
“Were you addressing me, sir?”
says the doctor; and when the ruffian had told him,
with another oath, that this was so, “I have
only one thing to say to you, sir,” replies
the doctor, “that if you keep on drinking rum,
the world will soon be quit of a very dirty scoundrel!”
The old fellow’s fury was awful.
He sprang to his feet, drew and opened a sailor’s
clasp-knife, and, balancing it open on the palm of
his hand, threatened to pin the doctor to the wall.
The doctor never so much as moved.
He spoke to him, as before, over his shoulder, and
in the same tone of voice; rather high, so that all
the room might hear, but perfectly calm and steady
“If you do not put that knife
this instant in your pocket, I promise, upon my honour,
you shall hang at next assizes.”
Then followed a battle of looks between
them; but the captain soon knuckled under, put up
his weapon, and resumed his seat, grumbling like a
beaten dog.
“And now, sir,” continued
the doctor, “since I now know there’s such
a fellow in my district, you may count I’ll
have an eye upon you day and night. I’m
not a doctor only; I’m a magistrate; and if I
catch a breath of complaint against you, if it’s
only for a piece of incivility like to-night’s,
I’ll take effectual means to have you hunted
down and routed out of this. Let that suffice.”
Soon after Dr. Livesey’s horse
came to the door, and he rode away; but the captain
held his peace that evening, and for many evenings
to come.
CHAPTER II
BLACK DOG APPEARS AND DISAPPEARS
It was not very long after this that
there occurred the first of the mysterious events
that rid us at last of the captain, though not, as
you will see, of his affairs. It was a bitter
cold winter, with long, hard frosts and heavy gales;
and it was plain from the first that my poor father
was little likely to see the spring. He sank daily,
and my mother and I had all the inn upon our hands,
and were kept busy enough, without paying much regard
to our unpleasant guest.
It was one January morning, very early a
pinching, frosty morning the cove all grey
with hoar-frost, the ripple lapping softly on the stones,
the sun still low and only touching the hill-tops and
shining far to seaward. The captain had risen
earlier than usual, and set out down the beach, his
cutlass swinging under the broad skirts of the old
blue coat, his brass telescope under his arm, his
hat tilted back upon his head. I remember his
breath hanging like smoke in his wake as he strode
off, and the last sound I heard of him, as he turned
the big rock, was a loud snort of indignation, as
though his mind was still running upon Dr. Livesey.
Well, mother was up-stairs with father;
and I was laying the breakfast-table against the captain’s
return, when the parlour door opened, and a man stepped
in on whom I had never set my eyes before. He
was a pale, tallowy creature, wanting two fingers of
the left hand; and, though he wore a cutlass, he did
not look much like a fighter. I had always my
eye open for seafaring men, with one leg or two, and
I remember this one puzzled me. He was not sailorly,
and yet he had a smack of the sea about him too.
I asked him what was for his service,
and he said he would take rum; but as I was going
out of the room to fetch it he sat down upon a table
and motioned me to draw near. I paused where
I was with my napkin in my hand.
“Come here, sonny,” says he. “Come
nearer here.”
I took a step nearer.
“Is this here table for my mate Bill?”
he asked, with a kind of leer.
I told him I did not know his mate
Bill; and this was for a person who stayed in our
house, whom we called the captain.
“Well,” said he, “my
mate Bill would be called the captain, as like as
not. He has a cut on one cheek, and a mighty pleasant
way with him, particularly in drink, has my mate Bill.
We’ll put it, for argument like, that your captain
has a cut on one cheek and we’ll put
it, if you like, that that cheek’s the right
one. Ah, well! I told you. Now, is my
mate Bill in this here house?”
I told him he was out walking.
“Which way, sonny? Which way is he gone?”
And when I had pointed out the rock,
and told him how the captain was likely to return,
and how soon, and answered a few other questions, “Ah,”
said he, “this’ll be as good as drink to
my mate Bill.”
The expression of his face as he said
these words was not at all pleasant, and I had my
own reasons for thinking that the stranger was mistaken,
even supposing he meant what he said. But it was
no affair of mine, I thought; and, besides, it was
difficult to know what to do. The stranger kept
hanging about just inside the inn door, peering round
the corner like a cat waiting for a mouse. Once
I stepped out myself into the road, but he immediately
called me back, and, as I did not obey quick enough
for his fancy, a most horrible change came over his
tallowy face, and he ordered me in, with an oath that
made me jump. As soon as I was back again he
returned to his former manner, half-fawning, half-sneering,
patted me on the shoulder, told me I was a good boy,
and he had taken quite a fancy to me. “I
have a son of my own,” said he, “as like
you as two blocks, and he’s all the pride of
my ’art. But the great thing for boys is
discipline, sonny discipline. Now,
if you had sailed along of Bill, you wouldn’t
have stood there to be spoke to twice not
you. That was never Bill’s way, nor the
way of sich as sailed with him. And
here, sure enough, is my mate Bill, with a spy-glass
under his arm, bless his old ’art, to be sure.
You and me’ll just go back into the parlour,
sonny, and get behind the door, and we’ll give
Bill a little surprise bless his ’art,
I say again.”
So saying, the stranger backed along
with me into the parlour, and put me behind him in
the corner, so that we were both hidden by the open
door. I was very uneasy and alarmed, as you may
fancy, and it rather added to my fears to observe
that the stranger was certainly frightened himself.
He cleared the hilt of his cutlass and loosened the
blade in the sheath; and all the time we were waiting
there he kept swallowing as if he felt what we used
to call a lump in the throat.
At last in strode the captain, slammed
the door behind him, without looking to the right
or left, and marched straight across the room to where
his breakfast awaited him.
“Bill,” said the stranger,
in a voice that I thought he had tried to make bold
and big.
The captain spun round on his heel
and fronted us; all the brown had gone out of his
face, and even his nose was blue; he had the look of
a man who sees a ghost, or the Evil One, or something
worse, if anything can be; and, upon my word, I felt
sorry to see him, all in a moment, turn so old and
sick.
“Come, Bill, you know me; you
know an old shipmate, Bill, surely,” said the
stranger.
The captain gave a sort of gasp.
“Black Dog!” said he.
“And who else?” returned
the other, getting more at his ease. “Black
Dog as ever was, come for to see his old shipmate
Billy, at the ’Admiral Benbow’ inn.
Ah, Bill, Bill, we have seen a sight of times, us two,
since I lost them two talons,” holding up his
mutilated hand.
“Now, look here,” said
the captain; “you’ve run me down; here
I am; well, then, speak up: what is it?”
“That’s you, Bill,”
returned Black Dog, “you’re in the right
of it, Billy. I’ll have a glass of rum
from this dear child here, as I’ve took such
a liking to; and we’ll sit down, if you please,
and talk square, like old shipmates.”
When I returned with the rum, they
were already seated on either side of the captain’s
breakfast-table Black Dog next to the door,
and sitting sideways, so as to have one eye on his
old shipmate, and one, as I thought, on his retreat.
He bade me go, and leave the door
wide open. “None of your keyholes for me,
sonny,” he said; and I left them together, and
retired into the bar.
For a long time, though I certainly
did my best to listen, I could hear nothing but a
low gabbling; but at last the voices began to grow
higher, and I could pick up a word or two, mostly
oaths, from the captain.
“No, no, no, no; and an end
of it!” he cried once. And again, “If
it comes to swinging, swing all, say I.”
Then all of a sudden there was a tremendous
explosion of oaths and other noises the
chair and table went over in a lump, a clash of steel
followed, and then a cry of pain, and the next instant
I saw Black Dog in full flight, and the captain hotly
pursuing, both with drawn cutlasses, and the former
streaming blood from the left shoulder. Just at
the door the captain aimed at the fugitive one last
tremendous cut, which would certainly have split him
to the chine had it not been intercepted by our big
signboard of Admiral Benbow. You may see the notch
on the lower side of the frame to this day.
That blow was the last of the battle.
Once out upon the road, Black Dog, in spite of his
wound, showed a wonderful clean pair of heels, and
disappeared over the edge of the hill in half a minute.
The captain, for his part, stood staring at the signboard
like a bewildered man. Then he passed his hand
over his eyes several times, and at last turned back
into the house.
“Jim,” says he, “rum;”
and as he spoke he reeled a little, and caught himself
with one hand against the wall.
“Are you hurt?” cried I.
“Rum,” he repeated. “I must
get away from here. Rum! rum!”
I ran to fetch it; but I was quite
unsteadied by all that had fallen out, and I broke
one glass and fouled the tap, and while I was still
getting in my own way, I heard a loud fall in the
parlour, and, running in, beheld the captain lying
full-length upon the floor. At the same instant
my mother, alarmed by the cries and fighting, came
running down-stairs to help me. Between us we
raised his head. He was breathing very loud and
hard; but his eyes were closed, and his face a horrible
colour.
“Dear, deary me,” cried
my mother, “what a disgrace upon the house!
And your poor father sick!”
In the meantime, we had no idea what
to do to help the captain, nor any other thought but
that he had got his death-hurt in the scuffle with
the stranger. I got the rum, to be sure, and
tried to put it down his throat; but his teeth were
tightly shut, and his jaws as strong as iron.
It was a happy relief for us when the door opened
and Doctor Livesey came in, on his visit to my father.
“Oh, doctor,” we cried,
“what shall we do? Where is he wounded?”
“Wounded? A fiddle-stick’s
end!” said the doctor. “No more wounded
than you or I. The man has had a stroke, as I warned
him. Now, Mrs. Hawkins, just you run up-stairs
to your husband, and tell him, if possible, nothing
about it. For my part, I must do my best to save
this fellow’s trebly worthless life; and Jim
here will get me a basin.”
When I got back with the basin, the
doctor had already ripped up the captain’s sleeve,
and exposed his great sinewy arm. It was tattooed
in several places. “Here’s luck,”
“A fair wind,” and “Billy Bones his
fancy,” were very neatly and clearly executed
on the forearm; and up near the shoulder there was
a sketch of a gallows and a man hanging from it done,
as I thought, with great spirit.
“Prophetic,” said the
doctor, touching this picture with his finger.
“And now, Master Billy Bones, if that be your
name, we’ll have a look at the colour of your
blood. Jim,” he said, “are you
afraid of blood?”
“No, sir,” said I.
“Well, then,” said he,
“you hold the basin;” and with that he
took his lancet and opened a vein.
A great deal of blood was taken before
the captain opened his eyes and looked mistily about
him. First he recognised the doctor with an unmistakable
frown; then his glance fell upon me, and he looked
relieved. But suddenly his colour changed, and
he tried to raise himself, crying
“Where’s Black Dog?”
“There is no Black Dog here,”
said the doctor, “except what you have on your
own back. You have been drinking rum; you have
had a stroke, precisely as I told you; and I have
just, very much against my own will, dragged you head-foremost
out of the grave. Now, Mr. Bones ”
“That’s not my name,” he interrupted.
“Much I care,” returned
the doctor. “It’s the name of a buccaneer
of my acquaintance, and I call you by it for the sake
of shortness, and what I have to say to you is this:
one glass of rum won’t kill you, but if you
take one you’ll take another and another, and
I stake my wig if you don’t break off short,
you’ll die do you understand that? die,
and go to your own place, like the man in the Bible.
Come, now, make an effort. I’ll help you
to your bed for once.”
Between us, with much trouble, we
managed to hoist him up-stairs, and laid him on his
bed, where his head fell back on the pillow, as if
he were almost fainting.
“Now, mind you,” said
the doctor, “I clear my conscience the
name of rum for you is death.”
And with that he went off to see my
father, taking me with him by the arm.
“This is nothing,” he
said, as soon as he had closed the door. “I
have drawn blood enough to keep him quiet a while;
he should lie for a week where he is that
is the best thing for him and you; but another stroke
would settle him.”
CHAPTER III
THE BLACK SPOT
About noon I stopped at the captain’s
door with some cooling drinks and medicines.
He was lying very much as we had left him, only a little
higher, and he seemed both weak and excited.
“Jim,” he said, “you’re
the only one here that’s worth anything; and
you know I’ve been always good to you.
Never a month but I’ve given you a silver fourpenny
for yourself. And now you see, mate, I’m
pretty low, and deserted by all; and, Jim, you’ll
bring me one noggin of rum, now, won’t you,
matey?”
“The doctor ” I began.
But he broke in cursing the doctor,
in a feeble voice, but heartily. “Doctors
is all swabs,” he said; “and that doctor
there, why, what do he know about seafaring men?
I been in places hot as pitch, and mates dropping
round with Yellow Jack, and the blessed land a-heaving
like the sea with earthquakes what do the
doctor know of lands like that? and I lived
on rum, I tell you. It’s been meat and drink,
and man and wife, to me; and if I’m not to have
my rum now I’m a poor old hulk on a lee-shore,
my blood’ll be on you, Jim, and that doctor swab;”
and he ran on again for a while with curses.
“Look, Jim, how my fingers fidges,” he
continued, in the pleading tone. “I can’t
keep ’em still, not I. I haven’t had a
drop this blessed day. That doctor’s a fool,
I tell you. If I don’t have a drain o’
rum, Jim, I’ll have the horrors; I seen some
on ’em already. I seen old Flint in the
corner there, behind you; as plain as print, I seen
him; and if I get the horrors, I’m a man that
has lived rough, and I’ll raise Cain. Your
doctor hisself said one glass wouldn’t hurt
me. I’ll give you a golden guinea for a
noggin, Jim.”
He was growing more and more excited,
and this alarmed me for my father, who was very low
that day, and needed quiet; besides, I was re-assured
by the doctor’s words, now quoted to me, and
rather offended by the offer of a bribe.
“I want none of your money,”
said I, “but what you owe my father. I’ll
get you one glass and no more.”
When I brought it to him, he seized
it greedily, and drank it out.
“Ay, ay,” said he, “that’s
some better, sure enough. And now, matey, did
that doctor say how long I was to lie here in this
old berth?”
“A week at least,” said I.
“Thunder!” he cried.
“A week! I can’t do that: they’d
have the black spot on me by then. The lubbers
is going about to get the wind of me this blessed
moment; lubbers as couldn’t keep what they got,
and want to nail what is another’s. Is
that seamanly behaviour, now, I want to know?
But I’m a saving soul. I never wasted good
money of mine; nor lost it neither; and I’ll
trick ’em again. I’m not afraid on
’em. I’ll shake out another reef,
matey, and daddle ’em again.”
As he was thus speaking, he had risen
from bed with great difficulty, holding to my shoulder
with a grip that almost made me cry out, and moving
his legs like so much dead weight. His words,
spirited as they were in meaning, contrasted sadly
with the weakness of the voice in which they were
uttered. He paused when he had got into a sitting
position on the edge.
“That doctor’s done me,”
he murmured. “My ears is singing. Lay
me back.”
Before I could do much to help him
he had fallen back again to his former place, where
he lay for a while silent.
“Jim,” he said, at length,
“you saw that seafaring man to-day?”
“Black Dog?” I asked.
“Ah! Black Dog,”
says he. “He’s a bad ’un;
but there’s worse that put him on. Now,
if I can’t get away nohow, and they tip me the
black spot, mind you, it’s my old sea-chest
they’re after; you get on a horse you
can, can’t you? Well, then, you get on a
horse, and go to well, yes, I will! to
that eternal doctor swab, and tell him to pipe all
hands magistrates and sich and
he’ll lay ’em aboard at the ’Admiral
Benbow’ all old Flint’s crew,
man and boy, all on ’em that’s left.
I was first mate, I was old Flint’s
first mate, and I’m the only one as knows the
place. He gave it me to Savannah, when he lay
a-dying, like as if I was to now, you see. But
you won’t peach unless they get the black spot
on me, or unless you see that Black Dog again, or a
seafaring man with one leg, Jim him above
all.”
“But what is the black spot, captain?”
I asked.
“That’s a summons, mate.
I’ll tell you if they get that. But you
keep your weather-eye open, Jim, and I’ll share
with you equals, upon my honour.”
He wandered a little longer, his voice
growing weaker; but soon after I had given him his
medicine, which he took like a child, with the remark,
“If ever a seaman wanted drugs, it’s me,”
he fell at last into a heavy, swoon-like sleep, in
which I left him. What I should have done had
all gone well I do not know. Probably I should
have told the whole story to the doctor; for I was
in mortal fear lest the captain should repent of his
confessions and make an end of me. But as things
fell out, my poor father died quite suddenly that
evening, which put all other matters on one side.
Our natural distress, the visits of the neighbours,
the arranging of the funeral, and all the work of
the inn to be carried on in the meanwhile, kept me
so busy that I had scarcely time to think of the captain,
far less to be afraid of him.
He got down-stairs next morning, to
be sure, and had his meals as usual, though he ate
little, and had more, I am afraid, than his usual supply
of rum, for he helped himself out of the bar, scowling
and blowing through his nose, and no one dared to
cross him. On the night before the funeral he
was as drunk as ever; and it was shocking, in that
house of mourning, to hear him singing away at his
ugly old sea-song; but, weak as he was, we were all
in fear of death for him, and the doctor was suddenly
taken up with a case many miles away, and was never
near the house after my father’s death.
I have said the captain was weak; and indeed he seemed
rather to grow weaker than regain his strength.
He clambered up- and down-stairs, and went from the
parlour to the bar and back again, and sometimes put
his nose out of doors to smell the sea, holding on
to the walls as he went for support, and breathing
hard and fast like a man on a steep mountain.
He never particularly addressed me, and it is my belief
he had as good as forgotten his confidences; but his
temper was more flighty, and, allowing for his bodily
weakness, more violent than ever. He had an alarming
way now when he was drunk of drawing his cutlass and
laying it bare before him on the table. But, with
all that, he minded people less, and seemed shut up
in his own thoughts and rather wandering. Once,
for instance, to our extreme wonder, he piped up to
a different air, a kind of country love-song, that
he must have learned in his youth before he had begun
to follow the sea.
So things passed until, the day after
the funeral, and about three o’clock of a bitter,
foggy, frosty afternoon, I was standing at the door
for a moment, full of sad thoughts about my father,
when I saw some one drawing slowly near along the
road. He was plainly blind, for he tapped before
him with a stick, and wore a great green shade over
his eyes and nose; and he was hunched, as if with
age or weakness, and wore a huge old tattered sea-cloak
with a hood, that made him appear positively deformed.
I never saw in my life a more dreadful-looking figure.
He stopped a little from the inn, and, raising his
voice in an odd sing-song, addressed the air in front
of him:
“Will any kind friend inform
a blind man, who has lost the precious sight of his
eyes in the gracious defence of his native country,
England, and God bless King George! where
or in what part of this country he may now be?”
“You are at the ‘Admiral
Benbow,’ Black Hill Cove, my good man,”
said I.
“I hear a voice,” said
he “a young voice. Will you give
me your hand, my kind young friend, and lead me in?”
I held out my hand, and the horrible,
soft-spoken, eyeless creature gripped it in a moment
like a vice. I was so much startled that I struggled
to withdraw; but the blind man pulled me close up to
him with a single action of his arm.
“Now, boy,” he said, “take me in
to the captain.”
“Sir,” said I, “upon my word I dare
not.”
“Oh,” he sneered, “that’s
it! Take me in straight, or I’ll break your
arm.”
And he gave it, as he spoke, a wrench that made me
cry out.
“Sir,” said I, “it
is for yourself I mean. The captain is not what
he used to be. He sits with a drawn cutlass.
Another gentleman ”
“Come, now, march,” interrupted
he; and I never heard a voice so cruel, and cold,
and ugly as that blind man’s. It cowed me
more than the pain; and I began to obey him at once,
walking straight in at the door and towards the parlour,
where our sick old buccaneer was sitting, dazed with
rum. The blind man clung close to me, holding
me in one iron fist, and leaning almost more of his
weight on me than I could carry. “Lead me
straight up to him, and when I’m in view, cry
out, ’Here’s a friend for you, Bill.’
If you don’t, I’ll do this;” and
with that he gave me a twitch that I thought would
have made me faint. Between this and that, I
was so utterly terrified of the blind beggar that I
forgot my terror of the captain, and as I opened the
parlour door, cried out the words he had ordered in
a trembling voice.
The poor captain raised his eyes,
and at one look the rum went out of him, and left
him staring sober. The expression of his face
was not so much of terror as of mortal sickness.
He made a movement to rise, but I do not believe he
had enough force left in his body.
“Now, Bill, sit where you are,”
said the beggar. “If I can’t see,
I can hear a finger stirring. Business is business.
Hold out your left hand. Boy, take his
left hand by the wrist, and bring it near to my right.”
We both obeyed him to the letter,
and I saw him pass something from the hollow of the
hand that held his stick into the palm of the captain’s,
which closed upon it instantly.
“And now that’s done,”
said the blind man; and at the words he suddenly left
hold of me, and, with incredible accuracy and nimbleness,
skipped out of the parlour and into the road, where,
as I still stood motionless, I could hear his stick
go tap-tap-tapping into the distance.
It was some time before either I or
the captain seemed to gather our senses; but at length,
and about at the same moment, I released his wrist,
which I was still holding, and he drew in his hand
and looked sharply into the palm.
“Ten o’clock!” he
cried. “Six hours. We’ll do them
yet;” and he sprang to his feet.
Even as he did so, he reeled, put
his hand to his throat, stood swaying for a moment,
and then, with a peculiar sound, fell from his whole
height face-foremost to the floor.
I ran to him at once, calling to my
mother. But haste was all in vain. The captain
had been struck dead by thundering apoplexy. It
is a curious thing to understand, for I had certainly
never liked the man, though of late I had begun to
pity him, but as soon as I saw that he was dead I
burst into a flood of tears. It was the second
death I had known, and the sorrow of the first was
still fresh in my heart.
CHAPTER IV
THE SEA CHEST
I lost no time, of course, in telling
my mother all that I knew, and perhaps should have
told her long before, and we saw ourselves at once
in a difficult and dangerous position. Some of
the man’s money if he had any was
certainly due to us; but it was not likely that our
captain’s shipmates, above all the two specimens
seen by me, Black Dog and the blind beggar, would
be inclined to give up their booty in payment of the
dead man’s debts. The captain’s order
to mount at once and ride for Doctor Livesey would
have left my mother alone and unprotected, which was
not to be thought of. Indeed, it seemed impossible
for either of us to remain much longer in the house:
the fall of coals in the kitchen-grate, the very ticking
of the clock, filled us with alarms. The neighbourhood,
to our ears, seemed haunted by approaching footsteps;
and what between the dead body of the captain on the
parlour floor, and the thought of that detestable
blind beggar hovering near at hand, and ready to return,
there were moments when, as the saying goes, I jumped
in my skin for terror. Something must speedily
be resolved upon; and it occurred to us at last to
go forth together and seek help in the neighbouring
hamlet. No sooner said than done. Bare-headed
as we were, we ran out at once in the gathering evening
and the frosty fog.
The hamlet lay not many hundred yards
away, though out of view, on the other side of the
next cove; and what greatly encouraged me, it was in
an opposite direction from that whence the blind man
had made his appearance, and whither he had presumably
returned. We were not many minutes on the road,
though we sometimes stopped to lay hold of each other
and hearken. But there was no unusual sound nothing
but the low wash of the ripple and the croaking of
the crows in the wood.
It was already candle-light when we
reached the hamlet, and I shall never forget how much
I was cheered to see the yellow shine in doors and
windows; but that, as it proved, was the best of the
help we were likely to get in that quarter. For you
would have thought men would have been ashamed of
themselves no soul would consent to return
with us to the “Admiral Benbow.”
The more we told of our troubles, the more man,
woman, and child they clung to the shelter
of their houses. The name of Captain Flint, though
it was strange to me, was well enough known to some
there, and carried a great weight of terror.
Some of the men who had been to field-work on the
far side of the “Admiral Benbow” remembered,
besides, to have seen several strangers on the road,
and, taking them to be smugglers, to have bolted away;
and one at least had seen a little lugger in what
we called Kitt’s Hole. For that matter,
any one who was a comrade of the captain’s was
enough to frighten them to death. And the short
and the long of the matter was, that while we could
get several who were willing enough to ride to Dr.
Livesey’s, which lay in another direction, not
one would help us to defend the inn.
They say cowardice is infectious;
but then argument is, on the other hand, a great emboldener;
and so when each had said his say, my mother made
them a speech. She would not, she declared, lose
money that belonged to her fatherless boy; “if
none of the rest of you dare,” she said, “Jim
and I dare. Back we will go, the way we came,
and small thanks to you big, hulking, chicken-hearted
men. We’ll have that chest open, if we die
for it. And I’ll thank you for that bag,
Mrs. Crossley, to bring back our lawful money in.”
Of course, I said I would go with
my mother; and of course they all cried out at our
foolhardiness; but even then not a man would go along
with us. All they would do was to give me a loaded
pistol, lest we were attacked; and to promise to have
horses ready saddled, in case we were pursued on our
return; while one lad was to ride forward to the doctor’s
in search of armed assistance.
My heart was beating finely when we
two set forth in the cold night upon this dangerous
venture. A full moon was beginning to rise, and
peered redly through the upper edges of the fog, and
this increased our haste, for it was plain, before
we came forth again, that all would be as bright as
day, and our departure exposed to the eyes of any watchers.
We slipped along the hedges, noiseless and swift,
nor did we see or hear anything to increase our terrors,
till, to our huge relief, the door of the “Admiral
Benbow” had closed behind us.
I slipped the bolt at once, and we
stood and panted for a moment in the dark, alone in
the house with the dead captain’s body.
Then my mother got a candle in the bar, and, holding
each other’s hands, we advanced into the parlour.
He lay as we had left him, on his back, with his eyes
open, and one arm stretched out.
“Draw down the blind, Jim,”
whispered my mother; “they might come and watch
outside. And now,” said she, when I had
done so, “we have to get the key off that;
and who’s to touch it, I should like to know!”
and she gave a kind of sob as she said the words.
I went down on my knees at once.
On the floor close to his hand there was a little
round of paper, blackened on the one side. I could
not doubt that this was the black spot; and
taking it up, I found written on the other side, in
a very good, clear hand, this short message: “You
have till ten to-night.”
“He had till ten, mother,”
said I; and just as I said it our old clock began
striking. This sudden noise startled us shockingly;
but the news was good, for it was only six.
“Now, Jim,” she said, “that key.”
I felt in his pockets, one after another.
A few small coins, a thimble, and some thread and
big needles, a piece of pigtail tobacco bitten away
at the end, his gully with the crooked handle, a pocket
compass, and a tinder-box, were all that they contained,
and I began to despair.
“Perhaps it’s round his neck,” suggested
my mother.
Overcoming a strong repugnance, I
tore open his shirt at the neck, and there, sure enough,
hanging to a bit of tarry string, which I cut with
his own gully, we found the key. At this triumph
we were filled with hope, and hurried upstairs, without
delay, to the little room where he had slept so long,
and where his box had stood since the day of his arrival.
It was like any other seaman’s
chest on the outside, the initial “B.”
burned on the top of it with a hot iron, and the corners
somewhat smashed and broken as by long, rough usage.
“Give me the key,” said
my mother; and though the lock was very stiff, she
had turned it and thrown back the lid in a twinkling.
A strong smell of tobacco and tar
rose from the interior, but nothing was to be seen
on the top except a suit of very good clothes, carefully
brushed and folded. They had never been worn,
my mother said. Under that, the miscellany began a
quadrant, a tin cannikin, several sticks of tobacco,
two brace of very handsome pistols, a piece of bar
silver, an old Spanish watch and some other trinkets
of little value and mostly of foreign make, a pair
of compasses mounted with brass, and five or six curious
West Indian shells. It has often set me thinking
since that he should have carried about these shells
with him in his wandering, guilty, and hunted life.
In the meantime, we had found nothing
of any value but the silver and the trinkets, and
neither of these were in our way. Underneath there
was an old boat-cloak, whitened with sea-salt on many
a harbour-bar. My mother pulled it up with impatience,
and there lay before us, the last things in the chest,
a bundle tied up in oilcloth, and looking like papers,
and a canvas bag, that gave forth, at a touch, the
jingle of gold.
“I’ll show these rogues
that I’m an honest woman,” said my mother.
“I’ll have my dues, and not a farthing
over. Hold Mrs. Crossley’s bag.”
And she began to count over the amount of the captain’s
score from the sailor’s bag into the one that
I was holding.
It was a long, difficult business,
for the coins were of all countries and sizes doubloons,
and louis-d’ors, and guineas, and pieces
of eight, and I know not what besides, all shaken
together at random. The guineas, too, were about
the scarcest, and it was with these only that my mother
knew how to make her count.
When we were about half-way through
I suddenly put my hand upon her arm; for I had heard
in the silent, frosty air, a sound that brought my
heart into my mouth the tap-tapping of
the blind man’s stick upon the frozen road.
It drew nearer and nearer, while we sat holding our
breath. Then it struck sharp on the inn-door,
and then we could hear the handle being turned, and
the bolt rattling as the wretched being tried to enter;
and then there was a long time of silence both within
and without. At last the tapping recommenced,
and, to our indescribable joy and gratitude, died
slowly away again until it ceased to be heard.
“Mother,” said I, “take
the whole and let’s be going;” for I was
sure the bolted door must have seemed suspicious,
and would bring the whole hornets’ nest about
our ears; though how thankful I was that I had bolted
it, none could tell who had never met that terrible
blind man.
But my mother, frightened as she was,
would not consent to take a fraction more than was
due to her, and was obstinately unwilling to be content
with less. It was not yet seven, she said, by
a long way; she knew her rights and she would have
them; and she was still arguing with me, when a little
low whistle sounded a good way off upon the hill.
That was enough, and more than enough, for both of
us.
“I’ll take what I have,” she said,
jumping to her feet.
“And I’ll take this to
square the count,” said I, picking up the oilskin
packet.
Next moment we were both groping down-stairs,
leaving the candle by the empty chest; and the next
we had opened the door and were in full retreat.
We had not started a moment too soon. The fog
was rapidly dispersing; already the moon shone quite
clear on the high ground on either side; and it was
only in the exact bottom of the dell and round the
tavern-door that a thin veil still hung unbroken to
conceal the first steps of our escape. Far less
than half-way to the hamlet, very little beyond the
bottom of the hill, we must come forth into the moonlight.
Nor was this all, for the sound of several footsteps
running came already to our ears, and as we looked
back in their direction, a light tossing to and fro,
and still rapidly advancing, showed that one of the
new-comers carried a lantern.
“My dear,” said my mother
suddenly, “take the money and run on. I
am going to faint.”
This was certainly the end for both
of us, I thought. How I cursed the cowardice
of the neighbours; how I blamed my poor mother for
her honesty and her greed, for her past foolhardiness
and present weakness! We were just at the little
bridge, by good fortune; and I helped her, tottering
as she was, to the edge of the bank, where, sure enough,
she gave a sigh and fell on my shoulder. I do
not know how I found the strength to do it at all,
and I am afraid it was roughly done; but I managed
to drag her down the bank and a little way under the
arch. Farther I could not move her, for the bridge
was too low to let me do more than crawl below it.
So there we had to stay my mother almost
entirely exposed, and both of us within earshot of
the inn.
CHAPTER V
THE LAST OF THE BLIND MAN
My curiosity, in a sense, was stronger
than my fear; for I could not remain where I was,
but crept back to the bank again, whence, sheltering
my head behind a bush of broom, I might command the
road before our door. I was scarcely in position
ere my enemies began to arrive, seven or eight of
them, running hard, their feet beating out of time
along the road, and the man with the lantern some
paces in front. Three men ran together, hand
in hand; and I made out, even through the mist, that
the middle man of this trio was the blind beggar.
The next moment his voice showed me that I was right.
“Down with the door!” he cried.
“Ay, ay, sir!” answered
two or three; and a rush was made upon the “Admiral
Benbow,” the lantern-bearer following; and then
I could see them pause, and hear speeches passed in
a lower key, as if they were surprised to find the
door open. But the pause was brief, for the blind
man again issued his commands. His voice sounded
louder and higher, as if he were afire with eagerness
and rage.
“In, in, in!” he shouted,
and cursed them for their delay.
Four or five of them obeyed at once,
two remaining on the road with the formidable beggar.
There was a pause, then a cry of surprise, and then
a voice shouting from the house
“Bill’s dead!”
But the blind man swore at them again for their delay.
“Search him, some of you shirking
lubbers, and the rest of you aloft and get the chest,”
he cried.
I could hear their feet rattling up
our old stairs, so that the house must have shook
with it. Promptly afterwards, fresh sounds of
astonishment arose; the window of the captain’s
room was thrown open with a slam and a jingle of broken
glass; and a man leaned out into the moonlight, head
and shoulders, and addressed the blind beggar on the
road below him.
“Pew,” he cried, “they’ve
been before us. Someone’s turned the chest
out alow and aloft.”
“Is it there?” roared Pew.
“The money’s there.”
The blind man cursed the money.
“Flint’s fist, I mean,” he cried.
“We don’t see it here nohow,” returned
the man.
“Here, you below there, is it on Bill?”
cried the blind man again.
At that, another fellow, probably
him who had remained below to search the captain’s
body, came to the door of the inn. “Bill’s
been overhauled a’ready,” said he; “nothin’
left.”
“It’s these people of
the inn it’s that boy. I wish
I had put his eyes out!” cried the blind man,
Pew. “They were here no time ago they
had the door bolted when I tried it. Scatter,
lads, and find ’em.”
“Sure enough, they left their
glim here,” said the fellow from the window.
“Scatter and find ’em!
Rout the house out!” reiterated Pew, striking
with his stick upon the road.
Then there followed a great to-do
through all our old inn, heavy feet pounding to and
fro, furniture thrown over, doors kicked in, until
the very rocks re-echoed, and the men came out again,
one after another, on the road, and declared that
we were nowhere to be found. And just then the
same whistle that had alarmed my mother and myself
over the dead captain’s money was once more
clearly audible through the night, but this time twice
repeated. I had thought it to be the blind man’s
trumpet, so to speak, summoning his crew to the assault;
but I now found that it was a signal from the hillside
towards the hamlet, and, from its effect upon the
buccaneers, a signal to warn them of approaching danger.
“There’s Dirk again,”
said one. “Twice! We’ll have
to budge, mates.”
“Budge, you skulk!” cried
Pew. “Dirk was a fool and a coward from
the first you wouldn’t mind him.
They must be close by; they can’t be far; you
have your hands on it. Scatter and look for them,
dogs. Oh, shiver my soul,” he cried, “if
I had eyes!”
This appeal seemed to produce some
effect, for two of the fellows began to look here
and there among the lumber, but half-heartedly, I thought,
and with half an eye to their own danger all the time,
while the rest stood irresolute on the road.
“You have your hands on thousands,
you fools, and you hang a leg! You’d be
as rich as kings if you could find it, and you know
it’s here, and you stand there malingering.
There wasn’t one of you dared face Bill, and
I did it a blind man! And I’m
to lose my chance for you! I’m to be a poor,
crawling beggar, sponging for rum, when I might be
rolling in a coach! If you had the pluck of a
weevil in a biscuit you would catch them still.”
“Hang it, Pew, we’ve got the doubloons!”
grumbled one.
“They might have hid the blessed
thing,” said another. “Take the Georges,
Pew, and don’t stand here squalling.”
Squalling was the word for it, Pew’s
anger rose so high at these objections; till at last,
his passion completely taking the upper hand, he struck
at them right and left in his blindness, and his stick
sounded heavily on more than one.
These, in their turn, cursed back
at the blind miscreant, threatened him in horrid terms,
and tried in vain to catch the stick and wrest it from
his grasp.
This quarrel was the saving of us;
for while it was still raging, another sound came
from the top of the hill on the side of the hamlet the
tramp of horses galloping. Almost at the same
time a pistol-shot, flash and report, came from the
hedge-side. And that was plainly the last signal
of danger; for the buccaneers turned at once and ran,
separating in every direction, one seaward along the
cove, one slant across the hill, and so on, so that
in half a minute not a sign of them remained but Pew.
Him they had deserted, whether in sheer panic, or out
of revenge for his ill words and blows, I know not;
but there he remained behind, tapping up and down
the road in a frenzy, and groping and calling for
his comrades. Finally he took the wrong turn,
and ran a few steps past me, towards the hamlet, crying
“Johnny, Black Dog, Dirk,”
and other names, “you won’t leave old Pew,
mates not old Pew!”
Just then the noise of horses topped
the rise, and four or five riders came in sight in
the moonlight, and swept at full gallop down the slope.
At this Pew saw his error, turned
with a scream, and ran straight for the ditch, into
which he rolled. But he was on his feet again
in a second, and made another dash, now utterly bewildered,
right under the nearest of the coming horses.
The rider tried to save him, but in
vain. Down went Pew with a cry that rang high
into the night; and the four hoofs trampled and spurned
him and passed by. He fell on his side, then
gently collapsed upon his face, and moved no more.
I leapt to my feet and hailed the
riders. They were pulling up, at any rate, horrified
at the accident; and I soon saw what they were.
One, tailing out behind the rest, was a lad that had
gone from the hamlet to Dr. Livesey’s; the rest
were revenue officers, whom he had met by the way,
and with whom he had had the intelligence to return
at once. Some news of the lugger in Kitt’s
Hole had found its way to Supervisor Dance, and set
him forth that night in our direction, and to that
circumstance my mother and I owed our preservation
from death.
Pew was dead, stone dead. As
for my mother, when we had carried her up to the hamlet,
a little cold water and salts and that soon brought
her back again, and she was none the worse for her
terror, though she still continued to deplore the
balance of the money. In the meantime, the supervisor
rode on, as fast as he could, to Kitt’s Hole;
but his men had to dismount and grope down the dingle,
leading, and sometimes supporting, their horses, and
in continual fear of ambushes; so it was no great
matter for surprise that when they got down to the
Hole the lugger was already under way, though still
close in. He hailed her. A voice replied,
telling him to keep out of the moonlight, or he would
get some lead in him, and at the same time a bullet
whistled close by his arm. Soon after, the lugger
doubled the point and disappeared. Mr. Dance stood
there, as he said, “like a fish out of water,”
and all he could do was to despatch a man to B
to warn the cutter. “And that,” said
he, “is just about as good as nothing.
They’ve got off clean, and there’s an end.
Only,” he added, “I’m glad I trod
on Master Pew’s corns;” for by this time
he had heard my story.
I went back with him to the “Admiral
Benbow,” and you cannot imagine a house in such
a state of smash; the very clock had been thrown down
by these fellows in their furious hunt after my mother
and myself, and though nothing had been actually taken
away except the captain’s money-bag and a little
silver from the till, I could see at once that we
were ruined. Mr. Dance could make nothing of the
scene.
“They got the money, you say?
Well, then, Hawkins, what in fortune were they after;
more money, I suppose?”
“No, sir; not money, I think,”
replied I. “In fact, sir, I believe I have
the thing in my breast-pocket; and, to tell you the
truth, I should like to get it put in safety.”
“To be sure, boy; quite right,”
said he. “I’ll take it, if you like.”
“I thought, perhaps, Dr. Livesey ”
I began.
“Perfectly right,” he
interrupted, very cheerily, “perfectly right a
gentleman and a magistrate. And, now I come to
think of it, I might as well ride round there myself
and report to him or squire. Master Pew’s
dead, when all’s done; not that I regret it,
but he’s dead, you see, and people will make
it out against an officer of His Majesty’s revenue,
if make it out they can. Now, I’ll tell
you, Hawkins: if you like, I’ll take you
along.”
I thanked him heartily for the offer,
and we walked back to the hamlet where the horses
were. By the time I had told mother of my purpose
they were all in the saddle.
“Dogger,” said Mr. Dance,
“you have a good horse; take up this lad behind
you.”
As soon as I was mounted, holding
on to Dogger’s belt, the supervisor gave the
word, and the party struck out at a bouncing trot on
the road to Dr. Livesey’s house.
CHAPTER VI
THE CAPTAINS PAPERS
We rode hard all the way, till we
drew up before Dr. Livesey’s door. The
house was all dark to the front.
Mr. Dance told me to jump down and
knock, and Dogger gave me a stirrup to descend by.
The door was opened almost at once by the maid.
“Is Dr. Livesey in?” I asked.
No, she said; he had come home in
the afternoon, but had gone up to the Hall to dine
and pass the evening with the squire.
“So there we go, boys,” said Mr. Dance.
This time, as the distance was short,
I did not mount, but ran with Dogger’s stirrup-leather
to the lodge gates, and up the long, leafless, moonlit
avenue to where the white line of the Hall buildings
looked on either hand on great old gardens. Here
Mr. Dance dismounted, and, taking me along with him,
was admitted at a word into the house.
The servant led us down a matted passage,
and showed us at the end into a great library, all
lined with book-cases and busts upon the top of them,
where the squire and Dr. Livesey sat, pipe in hand,
on either side of a bright fire.
I had never seen the squire so near
at hand. He was a tall man, over six feet high,
and broad in proportion, and he had a bluff, rough-and-ready
face, all roughened and reddened and lined in his long
travels. His eyebrows were very black, and moved
readily, and this gave him a look of some temper not
bad, you would say, but quick and high.
“Come in, Mr. Dance,”
says he, very stately and condescending.
“Good-evening, Dance,”
says the doctor, with a nod. “And good-evening
to you, friend Jim. What good wind brings you
here?”
The supervisor stood up straight and
stiff, and told his story like a lesson; and you should
have seen how the two gentlemen leaned forward and
looked at each other, and forgot to smoke in their
surprise and interest. When they heard how my
mother went back to the inn, Dr. Livesey fairly slapped
his thigh, and the squire cried, “Bravo!”
and broke his long pipe against the grate. Long
before it was done, Mr. Trelawney (that, you will
remember, was the squire’s name) had got up from
his seat, and was striding about the room, and the
doctor, as if to hear the better, had taken off his
powdered wig, and sat there, looking very strange indeed
with his own close-cropped black poll.
At last Mr. Dance finished the story.
“Mr. Dance,” said the
squire, “you are a very noble fellow. And
as for riding down that black, atrocious miscreant,
I regard it as an act of virtue, sir, like stamping
on a cockroach. This lad Hawkins is a trump, I
perceive. Hawkins, will you ring that bell?
Mr. Dance must have some ale.”
“And so, Jim,” said the
doctor, “you have the thing that they were after,
have you?”
“Here it is, sir,” said
I, and gave him the oilskin packet.
The doctor looked it all over, as
if his fingers were itching to open it; but, instead
of doing that, he put it quietly in the pocket of his
coat.
“Squire,” said he, “when
Dance has had his ale he must, of course, be off on
His Majesty’s service; but I mean to keep Jim
Hawkins here to sleep at my house, and, with your
permission, I propose we should have up the cold pie,
and let him sup.”
“As you will, Livesey,”
said the squire; “Hawkins has earned better than
cold pie.”
So a big pigeon-pie was brought in
and put on a side-table, and I made a hearty supper,
for I was as hungry as a hawk, while Mr. Dance was
further complimented and at last dismissed.
“And now, squire,” said the doctor.
“And now, Livesey,” said the squire, in
the same breath.
“One at a time, one at a time,”
laughed Dr. Livesey. “You have heard
of this Flint, I suppose?”
“Heard of him!” cried
the squire. “Heard of him, you say!
He was the bloodthirstiest buccaneer that sailed.
Blackbeard was a child to Flint. The Spaniards
were so prodigiously afraid of him, that I tell you,
sir, I was sometimes proud he was an Englishman.
I’ve seen his top-sails with these eyes, off
Trinidad, and the cowardly son of a rum-puncheon that
I sailed with put back put back, sir, into
Port-of-Spain.”
“Well, I’ve heard of him
myself, in England,” said the doctor. “But
the point is, had he money?”
“Money!” cried the squire.
“Have you heard the story? What were these
villains after but money? What do they care for
but money? For what would they risk their rascal
carcases but money?”
“That we shall soon know,”
replied the doctor. “But you are so confoundedly
hot-headed and exclamatory that I cannot get a word
in. What I want to know is this: Supposing
that I have here in my pocket some clue to where Flint
buried his treasure, will that treasure amount to much?”
“Amount, sir!” cried the
squire. “It will amount to this: if
we have the clue you talk about, I fit out a ship
in Bristol dock, and take you and Hawkins here along,
and I’ll have that treasure if I search a year.”
“Very well,” said the
doctor. “Now, then, if Jim is agreeable,
we’ll open the packet;” and he laid it
before him on the table.
The bundle was sewn together, and
the doctor had to get out his instrument-case, and
cut the stitches with his medical scissors. It
contained two things a book and a sealed
paper.
“First of all we’ll try the book,”
observed the doctor.
The squire and I were both peering
over his shoulder as he opened it, for Dr. Livesey
had kindly motioned me to come round from the side-table,
where I had been eating, to enjoy the sport of the
search. On the first page there were only some
scraps of writing, such as a man with a pen in his
hand might make for idleness or practice. One
was the same as the tattoo-mark, “Billy Bones
his fancy;” then there was “Mr. W. Bones,
mate.” “No more rum.” “Off
Palm Key he got itt;” and some other snatches,
mostly single words and unintelligible. I could
not help wondering who it was that had “got
itt,” and what “itt” was that he
got. A knife in his back as like as not.
“Not much instruction there,”
said Dr. Livesey, as he passed on.
The next ten or twelve pages were
filled with a curious series of entries. There
was a date at one end of the line and at the other
a sum of money, as in common account-books; but instead
of explanatory writing, only a varying number of crosses
between the two. On the 12th of June, 1745, for
instance, a sum of seventy pounds had plainly become
due to some one, and there was nothing but six crosses
to explain the cause. In a few cases, to be sure,
the name of a place would be added, as “Offe
Caraccas;” or a mere entry of latitude and longitude,
as “62° 17’ 20”, 19° 2’
40".”
The record lasted over nearly twenty
years, the amount of the separate entries growing
larger as time went on, and at the end a grand total
had been made out after five or six wrong additions,
and these words appended, “Bones his pile.”
“I can’t make head or
tail of this,” said Dr. Livesey. “The
thing is as clear as noonday,” cried the squire.
“This is the black-hearted hound’s account-book.
These crosses stand for the names of ships or towns
that they sank or plundered. The sums are the
scoundrel’s share, and where he feared an ambiguity,
you see he added something clearer. ’Offe
Caraccas,’ now; you see, here was some unhappy
vessel boarded off that coast. God help the poor
souls that manned her coral long ago.”
“Right!” said the doctor.
“See what it is to be a traveller. Right!
And the amounts increase, you see, as he rose in rank.”
There was little else in the volume
but a few bearings of places noted in the blank leaves
towards the end, and a table for reducing French,
English, and Spanish moneys to a common value.
“Thrifty man!” cried the
doctor. “He wasn’t the one to be cheated.”
“And now,” said the squire, “for
the other.”
The paper had been sealed in several
places with a thimble by way of seal; the very thimble,
perhaps, that I had found in the captain’s pocket.
The doctor opened the seals with great care, and there
fell out the map of an island, with latitude and longitude,
soundings, names of hills, and bays and inlets, and
every particular that would be needed to bring a ship
to a safe anchorage upon its shores. It was about
nine miles long and five across, shaped, you might
say, like a fat dragon standing up, and had two fine
land-locked harbours, and a hill in the centre part
marked “The Spy-glass.” There were
several additions of a later date; but, above all,
three crosses of red ink two on the north
part of the island, one in the south-west, and, beside
this last, in the same red ink, and in a small, neat
hand, very different from the captain’s tottery
characters, these words: “Bulk of treasure
here.”
Over on the back the same hand had
written this further information:
“Tall tree, Spy-glass shoulder,
bearing a point to the N. of N.N.E.
“Skeleton Island E.S.E. and
by E.
“Ten feet.
“The bar silver is in the
north cache; you can find it by the trend
of the east hummock, ten fathoms
south of the black crag with the
face on it.
“The arms are easy found,
in the sand hill, N. point of north inlet
cape, bearing E. and a quarter N.
J. F.”
That was all; but brief as it was,
and, to me, incomprehensible, it filled the squire
and Dr. Livesey with delight.
“Livesey,” said the squire,
“you will give up this wretched practice at
once. To-morrow I start for Bristol. In three
weeks’ time three weeks! two
weeks ten days we’ll have
the best ship, sir, and the choicest crew in England.
Hawkins shall come as cabin-boy. You’ll
make a famous cabin-boy, Hawkins. You, Livesey,
are ship’s doctor; I am admiral. We’ll
take Redruth, Joyce, and Hunter. We’ll have
favourable winds, a quick passage, and not the least
difficulty in finding the spot, and money to eat to
roll in to play duck-and-drake with ever
after.”
“Trelawney,” said the
doctor, “I’ll go with you; and, I’ll
go bail for it, so will Jim, and be a credit to the
undertaking. There’s only one man I’m
afraid of.”
“And who’s that?” cried the squire.
“Name the dog, sir!”
“You,” replied the doctor;
“for you cannot hold your tongue. We are
not the only men who know of this paper. These
fellows who attacked the inn to-night bold,
desperate blades, for sure and the rest
who stayed aboard that lugger, and more, I dare say,
not far off, are, one and all, through thick and thin,
bound that they’ll get that money. We must
none of us go alone till we get to sea. Jim and
I shall stick together in the meanwhile; you’ll
take Joyce and Hunter when you ride to Bristol, and,
from first to last, not one of us must breathe a word
of what we’ve found.”
“Livesey,” returned the
squire, “you are always in the right of it.
I’ll be as silent as the grave.”