CHAPTER I
NARRATIVE CONTINUED BY THE DOCTOR HOW
THE SHIP WAS ABANDONED
It was about half-past one three
bells in the sea phrase that the two boats
went ashore from the Hispaniola. The captain,
the squire, and I were talking matters over in the
cabin. Had there been a breath of wind we should
have fallen on the six mutineers who were left aboard
with us, slipped our cable, and away to sea.
But the wind was wanting; and, to complete our helplessness,
down came Hunter with the news that Jim Hawkins had
slipped into a boat and was gone ashore with the rest.
It never occurred to us to doubt Jim
Hawkins; but we were alarmed for his safety.
With the men in the temper they were in, it seemed
an even chance if we should see the lad again.
We ran on deck. The pitch was bubbling in the
seams; the nasty stench of the place turned me sick;
if ever a man smelt fever and dysentery, it was in
that abominable anchorage. The six scoundrels
were sitting grumbling under a sail in the forecastle;
ashore we could see the gigs made fast, and a man
sitting in each, hard by where the river runs in.
One of them was whistling “Lillibullero.”
Waiting was a strain; and it was decided
that Hunter and I should go ashore with the jolly-boat,
in quest of information.
The gigs had leaned to their right;
but Hunter and I pulled straight in, in the direction
of the stockade upon the chart. The two who were
left guarding their boats seemed in a bustle at our
appearance; “Lillibullero” stopped off,
and I could see the pair discussing what they ought
to do. Had they gone and told Silver, all might
have turned out differently; but they had their orders,
I suppose, and decided to sit quietly where they were
and hark back again to “Lillibullero.”
There was a slight bend in the coast,
and I steered so as to put it between us; even before
we landed we had thus lost sight of the gigs.
I jumped out, and came as near running as I durst,
with a big silk handkerchief under my hat for coolness’
sake, and a brace of pistols ready primed for safety.
I had not gone a hundred yards when
I came on the stockade.
This was how it was: a spring
of clear water rose almost at the top of a knoll.
Well, on the knoll, and enclosing the spring, they
had clapped a stout log-house, fit to hold two-score
people on a pinch, and loopholed for musketry on every
side. All round this they had cleared a wide space,
and then the thing was completed by a paling six feet
high, without door or opening, too strong to pull
down without time and labour, and too open to shelter
the besiegers. The people in the log-house had
them in every way; they stood quiet in shelter and
shot the others like partridges. All they wanted
was a good watch and food; for, short of a complete
surprise, they might have held the place against a
regiment.
What particularly took my fancy was
the spring. For, though we had a good enough
place of it in the cabin of the Hispaniola,
with plenty of arms and ammunition, and things to
eat, and excellent wines, there had been one thing
overlooked we had no water. I was thinking
this over, when there came ringing over the island
the cry of a man at the point of death. I was
not new to violent death I have served his
Royal Highness the Duke of Cumberland, and got a wound
myself at Fontenoy but I know my pulse
went dot and carry one. “Jim Hawkins is
gone” was my first thought.
It is something to have been an old
soldier, but more still to have been a doctor.
There is no time to dilly-dally in our work. And
so now I made up my mind instantly, and with no time
lost returned to the shore, and jumped on board the
jolly-boat.
By good fortune Hunter pulled a good
oar. We made the water fly; and the boat was
soon alongside, and I aboard the schooner.
I found them all shaken, as was natural.
The squire was sitting down, as white as a sheet,
thinking of the harm he had led us to, the good soul!
and one of the six forecastle hands was little better.
“There’s a man,”
says Captain Smollett, nodding towards him, “new
to this work. He came nigh-hand fainting, doctor,
when he heard the cry. Another touch of the rudder
and that man would join us.”
I told my plan to the captain, and
between us we settled on the details of its accomplishment.
We put old Redruth in the gallery
between the cabin and the forecastle, with three or
four loaded muskets and a mattress for protection.
Hunter brought the boat round under the stern-port,
and Joyce and I set to work loading her with powder-tins,
muskets, bags of biscuits, kegs of pork, a cask of
cognac, and my invaluable medicine-chest.
In the meantime the squire and the
captain stayed on deck, and the latter hailed the
coxswain, who was the principal man aboard.
“Mr. Hands,” he said,
“here are two of us with a brace of pistols each.
If any one of you six make a signal of any description,
that man’s dead.”
They were a good deal taken aback;
and, after a little consultation, one and all tumbled
down the fore companion, thinking, no doubt, to take
us on the rear. But when they saw Redruth waiting
for them in the sparred gallery, they went about-ship
at once, and a head popped out again on deck.
“Down, dog!” cries the captain.
And the head popped back again; and
we heard no more, for the time, of these six very
faint-hearted seamen.
By this time, tumbling things in as
they came, we had the jolly-boat loaded as much as
we dared. Joyce and I got out through the stern-port,
and we made for shore again, as fast as oars could
take us.
This second trip fairly aroused the
watchers along shore. “Lillibullero”
was dropped again; and just before we lost sight of
them behind the little point, one of them whipped
ashore and disappeared. I had half a mind to
change my plan and destroy their boats, but I feared
that Silver and the others might be close at hand,
and all might very well be lost by trying for too
much.
We had soon touched land in the same
place as before, and set to provision the block-house.
All three made the first journey, heavily laden, and
tossed our stores over the palisade. Then, leaving
Joyce to guard them one man, to be sure,
but with half a dozen muskets Hunter and
I returned to the jolly-boat, and loaded ourselves
once more. So we proceeded without pausing to
take breath, till the whole cargo was bestowed, when
the two servants took up their positions in the block-house,
and I, with all my power, sculled back to the Hispaniola.
That we should have risked a second
boat-load seems more daring than it really was.
They had the advantage of numbers, of course, but we
had the advantage of arms. Not one of the men
ashore had a musket, and before they could get within
range for pistol-shooting, we flattered ourselves
we should be able to give a good account of a half-dozen
at least.
The squire was waiting for me at the
stern window, all his faintness gone from him.
He caught the painter and made it fast, and we fell
to loading the boat for our very lives. Pork,
powder, and biscuit was the cargo, with only a musket
and a cutlass apiece for the squire and me and Redruth
and the captain. The rest of the arms and powder
we dropped overboard in two fathoms and a half of
water, so that we could see the bright steel shining
far below us in the sun, on the clean sandy bottom.
By this time the tide was beginning
to ebb, and the ship was swinging round to her anchor.
Voices were heard faintly halloaing in the direction
of the two gigs; and though this reassured us for Joyce
and Hunter, who were well to the eastward, it warned
our party to be off.
Redruth retreated from his place in
the gallery, and dropped into the boat, which we then
brought round to the ship’s counter, to be handier
for Captain Smollett.
“Now, men,” said he, “do you hear
me?”
There was no answer from the forecastle.
“It’s to you, Abraham Gray it’s
to you I am speaking.”
Still no reply.
“Gray,” resumed Mr. Smollett,
a little louder, “I am leaving this ship, and
I order you to follow your captain. I know you
are a good man at bottom, and I daresay not one of
the lot of you’s as bad as he makes out.
I have my watch here in my hand; I give you thirty
seconds to join me in.”
There was a pause.
“Come, my fine fellow,”
continued the captain, “don’t hang so long
in stays. I’m risking my life, and the
lives of these good gentlemen, every second.”
There was a sudden scuffle, a sound
of blows, and out burst Abraham Gray with a knife-cut
on the side of the cheek, and came running to the
captain, like a dog to the whistle.
“I’m with you, sir,” said he.
And the next moment he and the captain
had dropped aboard of us, and we had shoved off and
given way.
We were clear out of the ship; but
not yet ashore in our stockade.
CHAPTER II
NARRATIVE CONTINUED BY THE DOCTOR THE
JOLLY-BOAT’S LAST TRIP
This fifth trip was quite different
from any of the others. In the first place, the
little gallipot of a boat that we were in was gravely
overloaded. Five grown men, and three of them Trelawney,
Redruth, and the captain over six feet
high, was already more than she was meant to carry.
Add to that the powder, pork, and bread-bags.
The gunwale was lipping astern. Several times
we shipped a little water, and my breeches and the
tails of my coat were all soaking wet before we had
gone a hundred yards.
The captain made us trim the boat,
and we got her to lie a little more evenly. All
the same, we were afraid to breathe.
In the second place, the ebb was now
making a strong rippling current running
westward through the basin, and then south’ard
and seaward down the straits by which we had entered
in the morning. Even the ripples were a danger
to our overloaded craft; but the worst of it was that
we were swept out of our true course, and away from
our proper landing-place behind the point. If
we let the current have its way we should come ashore
beside the gigs, where the pirates might appear at
any moment.
“I cannot keep her head for
the stockade, sir,” said I to the captain.
I was steering, while he and Redruth, two fresh men,
were at the oars. “The tide keeps washing
her down. Could you pull a little stronger?”
“Not without swamping the boat,”
said he. “You must bear up, sir, if you
please bear up till you see you’re
gaining.”
I tried, and found by experiment that
the tide kept sweeping us westward until I had laid
her head due east, or just about right angles to the
way we ought to go.
“We’ll never get ashore at this rate,”
said I.
“If it’s the only course
that we can lie, sir, we must even lie it,”
returned the captain. “We must keep upstream.
You see, sir,” he went on, “if once we
dropped to leeward of the landing-place, it’s
hard to say where we should get ashore, besides the
chance of being boarded by the gigs; whereas, the
way we go the current must slacken, and then we can
dodge back along the shore.”
“The current’s less a’ready,
sir,” said the man Gray, who was sitting in
the foresheets; “you can ease her off a bit.”
“Thank you, my man,” said
I, quite as if nothing had happened: for we had
all quietly made up our minds to treat him like one
of ourselves.
Suddenly the captain spoke up again,
and I thought his voice was a little changed.
“The gun!” said he.
“I have thought of that,”
said I, for I made sure he was thinking of a bombardment
of the fort. “They could never get the gun
ashore, and if they did, they could never haul it
through the woods.”
“Look astern, doctor,” replied the captain.
We had entirely forgotten the long
nine; and there, to our horror, were the five rogues
busy about her, getting off her jacket, as they called
the stout tarpaulin cover under which she sailed.
Not only that, but it flashed into my mind at the
same moment that the round-shot and the powder for
the gun had been left behind, and a stroke with an
axe would put it all into the possession of the evil
ones aboard.
“Israel was Flint’s gunner,” said
Gray hoarsely.
At any risk, we put the boat’s
head direct for the landing-place. By this time
we had got so far out of the run of the current that
we kept steerage way even at our necessarily gentle
rate of rowing, and I could keep her steady for the
goal. But the worst of it was, that with the
course I now held, we turned our broadside instead
of our stern to the Hispaniola, and offered
a target like a barn-door.
I could hear, as well as see, that
brandy-faced rascal, Israel Hands, plumping down a
round-shot on the deck.
“Who’s the best shot?” asked the
captain.
“Mr. Trelawney, out and away,” said I.
“Mr. Trelawney, will you please
pick me off one of these men, sir? Hands, if
possible,” said the captain.
Trelawney was as cool as steel. He looked to
the priming of his gun.
“Now,” cried the captain,
“easy with that gun, sir, or you’ll swamp
the boat. All hands stand by to trim her when
he aims.”
The squire raised his gun, the rowing
ceased, and we leaned over to the other side to keep
the balance, and all was so nicely contrived that we
did not ship a drop.
They had the gun, by this time, slewed
round upon the swivel, and Hands, who was at the muzzle
with the rammer, was, in consequence, the most exposed.
However, we had no luck; for just as Trelawney fired,
down he stooped, the ball whistled over him, and it
was one of the other four who fell.
The cry he gave was echoed, not only
by his companions on board, but by a great number
of voices from the shore, and looking in that direction
I saw the other pirates trooping out from among the
trees and tumbling into their places in the boats.
“Here come the gigs, sir,” said I.
“Give way then,” cried
the captain. “We mustn’t mind if we
swamp her now. If we can’t get ashore,
all’s up.”
“Only one of the gigs is being
manned, sir,” I added, “the crew of the
other most likely going round by shore to cut us off.”
“They’ll have a hot run,
sir,” returned the captain. “Jack
ashore, you know. It’s not them I mind;
it’s the round-shot. Carpet bowls!
My lady’s maid couldn’t miss. Tell
us, squire, when you see the match, and we’ll
hold water.”
In the meanwhile we had been making
headway at a good pace for a boat so overloaded, and
we had shipped but little water in the process.
We were now close in; thirty or forty strokes and
we should beach her; for the ebb had already disclosed
a narrow belt of sand below the clustering trees.
The gig was no longer to be feared; the little point
had already concealed it from our eyes. The ebb-tide,
which had so cruelly delayed us, was now making reparation,
and delaying our assailants. The one source of
danger was the gun.
“If I durst,” said the
captain, “I’d stop and pick off another
man.”
But it was plain that they meant nothing
should delay their shot. They had never so much
as looked at their fallen comrade, though he was not
dead, and I could see him trying to crawl away.
“Ready!” cried the squire.
“Hold!” cried the captain, quick as an
echo.
And he and Redruth backed with a great
heave that sent her stern bodily under water.
The report fell in at the same instant of time.
This was the first that Jim heard, the sound of the
squire’s shot not having reached him. Where
the ball passed, not one of us precisely knew; but
I fancy it must have been over our heads, and that
the wind of it may have contributed to our disaster.
At any rate, the boat sank by the
stern, quite gently, in three feet of water, leaving
the captain and myself, facing each other, on our feet.
The other three took complete headers, and came up
again, drenched and bubbling.
So far there was no great harm.
No lives were lost, and we could wade ashore in safety.
But there were all our stores at the bottom, and, to
make things worse, only two guns out of five remained
in a state for service. Mine I had snatched from
my knees and held over my head, by a sort of instinct.
As for the captain, he had carried his over his shoulder
by a bandoleer, and, like a wise man, lock uppermost.
The other three had gone down with the boat.
To add to our concern, we heard voices
already drawing near us in the woods along shore;
and we had not only the danger of being cut off from
the stockade in our half-crippled state, but the fear
before us whether, if Hunter and Joyce were attacked
by half a dozen, they would have the sense and conduct
to stand firm. Hunter was steady, that we knew;
Joyce was a doubtful case a pleasant, polite
man for a valet, and to brush one’s clothes,
but not entirely fitted for a man of war.
With all this in our minds, we waded
ashore as fast as we could, leaving behind us the
poor jolly-boat, and a good half of all our powder
and provisions.
CHAPTER III
NARRATIVE CONTINUED BY THE DOCTOR END
OF THE FIRST DAY’S FIGHTING
We made our best speed across the
strip of wood that now divided us from the stockade;
and at every step we took the voices of the buccaneers
rang nearer. Soon we could hear their footfalls
as they ran, and the cracking of the branches as they
breasted across a bit of thicket.
I began to see we should have a brush
for it in earnest, and looked to my priming.
“Captain,” said I, “Trelawney
is the dead shot. Give him your gun; his own
is useless.”
They exchanged guns, and Trelawney,
silent and cool as he had been since the beginning
of the bustle, hung a moment on his heel to see that
all was fit for service. At the same time, observing
Gray to be unarmed, I handed him my cutlass.
It did all our hearts good to see him spit in his
hand, knit his brows, and make the blade sing through
the air. It was plain from every line of his
body that our new hand was worth his salt.
Forty paces farther we came to the
edge of the wood and saw the stockade in front of
us. We struck the enclosure about the middle of
the south side, and, almost at the same time, seven
mutineers Job Anderson, the boatswain,
at their head appeared in full cry at the
south-western corner.
They paused, as if taken aback; and
before they recovered, not only the squire and I,
but Hunter and Joyce from the block-house, had time
to fire. The four shots came in rather a scattering
volley; but they did the business: one of the
enemy actually fell, and the rest, without hesitation,
turned and plunged into the trees.
After reloading, we walked down the
outside of the palisade to see to the fallen enemy.
He was stone dead shot through the heart.
We began to rejoice over our good
success, when just at that moment a pistol cracked
in the bush, a ball whistled close past my ear, and
poor Tom Redruth stumbled and fell his length on the
ground. Both the squire and I returned the shot;
but as we had nothing to aim at, it is probable we
only wasted powder. Then we reloaded, and turned
our attention to poor Tom.
The captain and Gray were already
examining him; and I saw with half an eye that all
was over.
I believe the readiness of our return
volley had scattered the mutineers once more, for
we were suffered without further molestation to get
the poor old gamekeeper hoisted over the stockade,
and carried, groaning and bleeding, into the log-house.
Poor old fellow, he had not uttered
one word of surprise, complaint, fear, or even acquiescence,
from the very beginning of our troubles till now,
when we had laid him down in the log-house to die.
He had lain like a Trojan behind his mattress in the
gallery; he had followed every order silently, doggedly,
and well; he was the oldest of our party by a score
of years; and now, sullen, old, serviceable servant,
it was he that was to die.
The squire dropped down beside him
on his knees and kissed his hand, crying like a child.
“Be I going, doctor?” he asked.
“Tom, my man,” said I, “you’re
going home.”
“I wish I had had a lick at them with the gun
first,” he replied.
“Tom,” said the squire, “say you
forgive me, won’t you?”
“Would that be respectful like,
from me to you, squire?” was the answer.
“Howsoever, so be it amen!”
After a little while of silence, he
said he thought somebody might read a prayer.
“It’s the custom, sir,” he added
apologetically. And not long after, without another
word, he passed away.
In the meantime the captain, whom
I had observed to be wonderfully swollen about the
chest and pockets, had turned out a great many various
stores the British colours, a Bible, a coil
of stoutish rope, pen, ink, the log-book, and pounds
of tobacco. He had found a longish fir-tree lying
felled and cleared in the enclosure, and, with the
help of Hunter, he had set it up at the corner of
the log-house where the trunks crossed and made an
angle. Then, climbing on the roof, he had with
his own hand bent and run up the colours.
This seemed mightily to relieve him.
He re-entered the log-house, and set about counting
up the stores, as if nothing else existed. But
he had an eye on Tom’s passage for all that;
and as soon as all was over, came forward with another
flag, and reverently spread it on the body.
“Don’t you take on, sir,”
he said, shaking the squire’s hand. “All’s
well with him; no fear for a hand that’s been
shot down in his duty to captain and owner. It
mayn’t be good divinity, but it’s a fact.”
Then he pulled me aside.
“Dr. Livesey,” he said,
“in how many weeks do you and squire expect the
consort?”
I told him it was a question, not
of weeks, but of months; that if we were not back
by the end of August, Blandly was to send to find us;
but neither sooner nor later. “You can
calculate for yourself,” I said.
“Why, yes,” returned the
captain, scratching his head, “and making a
large allowance, sir, for all the gifts of Providence,
I should say we were pretty close hauled.”
“How do you mean?” I asked.
“It’s a pity, sir, we
lost that second load. That’s what I mean,”
replied the captain. “As for powder and
shot, we’ll do. But the rations are short,
very short so short, Doctor Livesey, that
we’re perhaps as well without that extra mouth.”
And he pointed to the dead body under the flag.
Just then, with a roar and a whistle,
a round-shot passed high above the roof of the log-house
and plumped far beyond us in the wood.
“Oho!” said the captain.
“Blaze away! You’ve little enough
powder already, my lads.”
At the second trial, the aim was better,
and the ball descended inside the stockade, scattering
a cloud of sand, but doing no further damage.
“Captain,” said the squire,
“the house is quite invisible from the ship.
It must be the flag they are aiming at. Would
it not be wiser to take it in?”
“Strike my colours!” cried
the captain. “No, sir, not I;” and,
as soon as he had said the words I think we all agreed
with him. For it was not only a piece of stout,
seamanly, good feeling; it was good policy besides,
and showed our enemies that we despised their cannonade.
All through the evening they kept
thundering away. Ball after ball flew over or
fell short, or kicked up the sand in the enclosure;
but they had to fire so high that the shot fell dead
and buried itself in the soft sand. We had no
ricochet to fear; and though one popped in through
the roof of the log-house, and out again through the
floor, we soon got used to that sort of horse-play,
and minded it no more than cricket.
“There is one thing good about
all this,” observed the captain: “the
wood in front of us is likely clear. The ebb
has made a good while; our stores should be uncovered.
Volunteers to go and bring in pork!”
Gray and Hunter were the first to
come forward. Well armed, they stole out of the
stockade; but it proved a fruitless mission. The
mutineers were bolder than we fancied, or they put
more trust in Israel’s gunnery. For four
or five of them were busy carrying off our stores,
and wading out with them to one of the gigs that lay
close by, pulling an oar or so to hold her steady
against the current. Silver was in the stern-sheets
in command; and every man of them was now provided
with a musket from some secret magazine of their own.
The captain sat down to his log, and
here is the beginning of the entry:
“Alexander Smollett, master;
David Livesey, ship’s doctor; Abraham Gray,
carpenter’s mate; John Trelawney, owner; John
Hunter and Richard Joyce, owner’s servants,
landsmen being all that is left faithful
of the ship’s company with stores
for ten days at short rations, came ashore this day,
and flew British colours on the log-house in Treasure
Island. Thomas Redruth, owner’s servant,
landsman, shot by the mutineers; James Hawkins, cabin-boy ”
And at the same time I was wondering
over poor Jim Hawkins’s fate.
A hail on the land side.
“Somebody hailing us,” said Hunter, who
was on guard.
“Doctor! squire! captain! Hullo, Hunter,
is that you?” came the cries.
And I ran to the door in time to see
Jim Hawkins, safe and sound, come climbing over the
stockade.
CHAPTER IV
NARRATIVE RESUMED BY JIM HAWKINS THE
GARRISON IN THE STOCKADE
As soon as Ben Gunn saw the colours
he came to a halt, stopped me by the arm, and sat
down.
“Now,” said he, “there’s your
friends, sure enough.”
“Far more likely it’s the mutineers,”
I answered.
“That!” he cried.
“Why, in a place like this, where nobody puts
in but gen’lemen of fortune, Silver would fly
the Jolly Roger, you don’t make no doubt of
that. No; that’s your friends. There’s
been blows, too, and I reckon your friends has had
the best of it; and here they are ashore in the old
stockade, as was made years and years ago by Flint.
Ah, he was the man to have a headpiece, was Flint!
Barring rum, his match were never seen. He were
afraid of none, not he; on’y Silver Silver
was that genteel.”
“Well,” said I, “that
may be so, and so be it; all the more reason that I
should hurry on and join my friends.”
“Nay, mate,” returned
Ben, “not you. You’re a good boy,
or I’m mistook: but you’re on’y
a boy, all told. Now, Ben Gunn is fly. Rum
wouldn’t bring me there, where you’re
going not rum wouldn’t, till I see
your born gen’leman, and gets it on his word
of honour. And you won’t forget my words:
’A precious sight (that’s what you’ll
say), a precious sight more confidence’ and
then nips him.”
And he pinched me the third time with
the same air of cleverness.
“And when Ben Gunn is wanted,
you know where to find him, Jim. Just wheer you
found him to-day. And him that comes is to have
a white thing in his hand: and he’s to
come alone. O, and you’ll say this:
‘Ben Gunn,’ says you, ‘has reasons
of his own.’”
“Well,” said I, “I
believe I understand. You have something to propose,
and you wish to see the squire or the doctor; and you’re
to be found where I found you. Is that all?”
“And when? says you,”
he added. “Why, from about noon observation
to about six bells.”
“Good,” said I, “and now may I go?”
“You won’t forget?”
he inquired anxiously. “Precious sight,
and reasons of his own, says you. Reasons of
his own; that’s the mainstay; as between man
and man. Well, then” still holding
me “I reckon you can go, Jim.
And, Jim, if you was to see Silver, you wouldn’t
go for to sell Ben Gunn? wild horses wouldn’t
draw it from you? No, says you. And if them
pirates camp ashore, Jim, what would you say but there’d
be widders in the morning?”
Here he was interrupted by a loud
report, and a cannon-ball came tearing through the
trees and pitched in the sand, not a hundred yards
from where we two were talking. The next moment
each of us had taken to his heels in a different direction.
For a good hour to come frequent reports
shook the island, and balls kept crashing through
the woods. I moved from hiding-place to hiding-place,
always pursued, or so it seemed to me, by these terrifying
missiles. But towards the end of the bombardment,
though still I durst not venture in the direction
of the stockade, where the balls fell oftenest, I had
begun, in a manner, to pluck up my heart again; and
after a long detour to the east, crept down among
the shoreside trees.
The sun had just set, the sea-breeze
was rustling and tumbling in the woods, and ruffling
the grey surface of the anchorage; the tide, too, was
far out, and great tracts of sand lay uncovered; the
air, after the heat of the day, chilled me through
my jacket.
The Hispaniola still lay where
she had anchored; but, sure enough, there was the
Jolly Roger the black flag of piracy flying
from her peak. Even as I looked, there came another
red flash and another report, that sent the echoes
clattering, and one more round-shot whistled through
the air. It was the last of the cannonade.
I lay for some time, watching the
bustle which succeeded the attack. Men were demolishing
something with axes on the beach near the stockade;
the poor jolly-boat, I afterwards discovered.
Away, near the mouth of the river, a great fire was
glowing among the trees, and between that point and
the ship one of the gigs kept coming and going, the
men, whom I had seen so gloomy, shouting at the oars
like children. But there was a sound in their
voices which suggested rum.
At length I thought I might return
towards the stockade. I was pretty far down on
the low, sandy spit that encloses the anchorage to
the east, and is joined at half-water to Skeleton
Island; and now, as I rose to my feet, I saw, some
distance further down the spit, and rising from among
low bushes, an isolated rock, pretty high, and peculiarly
white in colour. It occurred to me that this
might be the white rock of which Ben Gunn had spoken,
and that some day or other a boat might be wanted,
and I should know where to look for one.
Then I skirted among the woods until
I had regained the rear, or shoreward side, of the
stockade, and was soon warmly welcomed by the faithful
party.
I had soon told my story, and began
to look about me. The log-house was made of unsquared
trunks of pine roof, walls, and floor.
The latter stood in several places as much as a foot
or a foot and a half above the surface of the sand.
There was a porch at the door, and under this porch
the little spring welled up into an artificial basin
of a rather odd kind no other than a great
ship’s kettle of iron, with the bottom knocked
out, and sunk “to her bearings,” as the
captain said, among the sand.
Little had been left beside the framework
of the house; but in one corner there was a stone
slab laid down by way of hearth, and an old rusty iron
basket to contain the fire.
The slopes of the knoll and all the
inside of the stockade had been cleared of timber
to build the house, and we could see by the stumps
what a fine and lofty grove had been destroyed.
Most of the soil had been washed away or buried in
drift after the removal of the trees; only where the
streamlet ran down from the kettle a thick bed of moss
and some ferns and little creeping bushes were still
green among the sand. Very close around the stockade too
close for defence, they said the wood still
flourished high and dense, all of fir on the land side,
but towards the sea with a large admixture of live-oaks.
The cold evening breeze, of which
I have spoken, whistled through every chink of the
rude building, and sprinkled the floor with a continual
rain of fine sand. There was sand in our eyes,
sand in our teeth, sand in our suppers, sand dancing
in the spring at the bottom of the kettle, for all
the world like porridge beginning to boil. Our
chimney was a square hole in the roof; it was but
a little part of the smoke that found its way out,
and the rest eddied about the house, and kept us coughing
and piping the eye.
Add to this that Gray, the new man,
had his face tied up in a bandage for a cut he had
got in breaking away from the mutineers; and that poor
old Tom Redruth, still unburied, lay along the wall,
stiff and stark under the Union Jack.
If we had been allowed to sit idle,
we should all have fallen in the blues, but Captain
Smollett was never the man for that. All hands
were called up before him, and he divided us into
watches. The doctor, and Gray, and I, for one;
the squire, Hunter, and Joyce upon the other.
Tired as we all were, two were sent out for firewood;
two more were set to dig a grave for Redruth; the
doctor was named cook; I was put sentry at the door;
and the captain himself went from one to another, keeping
up our spirits and lending a hand wherever it was
wanted.
From time to time the doctor came
to the door for a little air and to rest his eyes,
which were almost smoked out of his head; and whenever
he did so, he had a word for me.
“That man Smollett,” he
said once, “is a better man than I am. And
when I say that it means a deal, Jim.”
Another time he came and was silent
for a while. Then he put his head on one side,
and looked at me.
“Is this Ben Gunn a man?” he asked.
“I do not know, sir,” said I. “I
am not very sure whether he’s sane.”
“If there’s any doubt
about the matter, he is,” returned the doctor.
“A man who has been three years biting his nails
on a desert island, Jim, can’t expect to appear
as sane as you or me. It doesn’t lie in
human nature. Was it cheese you said he had a
fancy for?”
“Yes, sir, cheese,” I answered.
“Well, Jim,” says he,
“just see the good that comes of being dainty
in your food. You’ve seen my snuff-box,
haven’t you? And you never saw me take
snuff; the reason being that in my snuff-box I carry
a piece of Parmesan cheese a cheese made
in Italy, very nutritious. Well, that’s
for Ben Gunn!”
Before supper was eaten we buried
old Tom in the sand, and stood round him for a while
bareheaded in the breeze. A good deal of firewood
had been got in, but not enough for the captain’s
fancy; and he shook his head over it, and told us
we “must get back to this to-morrow rather livelier.”
Then, when we had eaten our pork, and each had a good
stiff glass of brandy grog, the three chiefs got together
in a corner to discuss our prospects.
It appears they were at their wits’
end what to do, the stores being so low that we must
have been starved into surrender long before help came.
But our best hope, it was decided, was to kill off
the buccaneers until they either hauled down their
flag or ran away with the Hispaniola.
From nineteen they were already reduced to fifteen,
two others were wounded, and one, at least the
man shot beside the gun severely wounded,
if he were not dead. Every time we had a crack
at them, we were to take it, saving our own lives,
with the extremest care. And, besides that, we
had two able allies rum and the climate.
As for the first, though we were about
half a mile away, we could hear them roaring and singing
late into the night; and as for the second, the doctor
staked his wig that, camped where they were in the
marsh, and unprovided with remedies, the half of them
would be on their backs before a week.
“So,” he added, “if
we are not all shot down first they’ll be glad
to be packing in the schooner. It’s always
a ship, and they can get to buccaneering again, I
suppose.”
“First ship that ever I lost,” said Captain
Smollett.
I was dead tired, as you may fancy;
and when I got to sleep, which was not till after
a great deal of tossing, I slept like a log of wood.
The rest had long been up, and had
already breakfasted and increased the pile of firewood
by about half as much again, when I was awakened by
a bustle and the sound of voices.
“Flag of truce!” I heard
some one say; and then, immediately after, with a
cry of surprise, “Silver himself!”
And at that up I jumped, and, rubbing
my eyes, ran to a loophole in the wall.
CHAPTER V
SILVER’S EMBASSY
Sure enough, there were two men just
outside the stockade, one of them waving a white cloth;
the other, no less a person than Silver himself, standing
placidly by.
It was still quite early, and the
coldest morning that I think I ever was abroad in;
a chill that pierced into the marrow. The sky
was bright and cloudless overhead, and the tops of
the trees shone rosily in the sun. But where
Silver stood with his lieutenant all was still in shadow,
and they waded knee-deep in a low, white vapour, that
had crawled during the night out of the morass.
The chill and the vapour taken together told a poor
tale of the island. It was plainly a damp, feverish,
unhealthy spot.
“Keep indoors, men,” said
the captain. “Ten to one this is a trick.”
Then he hailed the buccaneer.
“Who goes? Stand, or we fire.”
“Flag of truce,” cried Silver.
The captain was in the porch, keeping
himself carefully out of the way of a treacherous
shot should any be intended. He turned and spoke
to us:
“Doctor’s watch on the
look-out. Dr. Livesey take the north side, if
you please; Jim, the east; Gray, west. The watch
below, all hands to load muskets. Lively, men,
and careful.”
And then he turned again to the mutineers.
“And what do you want with your flag of truce?”
he cried.
This time it was the other man who replied.
“Cap’n Silver, sir, to come on board and
make terms,” he shouted.
“Cap’n Silver! Don’t
know him. Who’s he?” cried the captain.
And we could hear him adding to himself: “Cap’n,
is it? My heart, and here’s promotion!”
Long John answered for himself.
“Me, sir. These poor lads
have chosen me cap’n, after your desertion,
sir” laying a particular emphasis
upon the word “desertion.” “We’re
willing to submit, if we can come to terms, and no
bones about it. All I ask is your word, Cap’n
Smollett, to let me safe and sound out of this here
stockade, and one minute to get out o’ shot before
a gun is fired.”
“My man,” said Captain
Smollett, “I have not the slightest desire to
talk to you. If you wish to talk to me, you can
come, that’s all. If there’s any
treachery, it’ll be on your side, and the Lord
help you.”
“That’s enough, cap’n,”
shouted Long John cheerily. “A word from
you’s enough. I know a gentleman, and you
may lay to that.”
We could see the man who carried the
flag of truce attempting to hold Silver back.
Nor was that wonderful, seeing how cavalier had been
the captain’s answer. But Silver laughed
at him aloud, and slapped him on the back, as if the
idea of alarm had been absurd. Then he advanced
to the stockade, threw over his crutch, got a leg
up, and with great vigour and skill succeeded in surmounting
the fence and dropping safely to the other side.
I will confess that I was far too
much taken up with what was going on to be of the
slightest use as sentry; indeed, I had already deserted
my eastern loophole, and crept up behind the captain,
who had now seated himself on the threshold, with
his elbows on his knees, his head in his hands, and
his eyes fixed on the water, as it bubbled out of the
old iron kettle in the sand. He was whistling
to himself, “Come, Lasses and Lads.”
Silver had terrible hard work getting
up the knoll. What with the steepness of the
incline, the thick tree-stumps, and the soft sand,
he and his crutch were as helpless as a ship in stays.
But he stuck to it like a man in silence, and at last
arrived before the captain, whom he saluted in the
handsomest style. He was tricked out in his best;
an immense blue coat, thick with brass buttons, hung
as low as to his knees, and a fine laced hat was set
on the back of his head.
“Here you are, my man,”
said the captain, raising his head. “You
had better sit down.”
“You ain’t a-going to
let me inside, cap’n?” complained Long
John. “It’s a main cold morning,
to be sure, sir, to sit outside upon the sand.”
“Why, Silver,” said the
captain, “if you had pleased to be an honest
man, you might have been sitting in your galley.
It’s your own doing. You’re either
my ship’s cook and then you were treated
handsome or Cap’n Silver, a common
mutineer and pirate, and then you can go hang!”
“Well, well, cap’n,”
returned the sea cook, sitting down as he was bidden
on the sand, “you’ll have to give me a
hand up again, that’s all. A sweet pretty
place you have of it here. Ah, there’s
Jim! The top of the morning to you, Jim. Doctor,
here’s my service. Why, there you all are
together like a happy family, in a manner of speaking.”
“If you have anything to say,
my man, better say it,” said the captain.
“Right you were, Cap’n
Smollett,” replied Silver. “Dooty
is dooty, to be sure. Well, now, you look here,
that was a good lay of yours last night. I don’t
deny it was a good lay. Some of you pretty handy
with a handspike-end. And I’ll not deny
neither but what some of my people was shook maybe
all was shook; maybe I was shook myself; maybe that’s
why I’m here for terms. But you mark me,
cap’n, it won’t do twice, by thunder!
We’ll have to do sentry-go, and ease off a point
or so on the rum. Maybe you think we were all
a sheet in the wind’s eye. But I’ll
tell you I was sober; I was on’y dog-tired; and
if I’d awoke a second sooner I’d a-caught
you at the act, I would. He wasn’t dead
when I got round to him, not he.”
“Well?” says Captain Smollett, as cool
as can be.
All that Silver said was a riddle
to him, but you would never have guessed it from his
tone. As for me, I began to have an inkling.
Ben Gunn’s last words came back to my mind.
I began to suppose that he had paid the buccaneers
a visit, while they all lay drunk together round their
fire, and I reckoned up with glee that we had only
fourteen enemies to deal with.
“Well, here it is,” said
Silver. “We want that treasure and we’ll
have it that’s our point! You
would just as soon save your lives, I reckon; and
that’s yours. You have a chart, haven’t
you?”
“That’s as may be,” replied the
captain.
“Oh, well, you have, I know
that,” returned Long John. “You needn’t
be so husky with a man; there ain’t a particle
of service in that, and you may lay to it. What
I mean is, we want your chart. Now, I never meant
you no harm, myself.”
“That won’t do with me,
my man,” interrupted the captain. “We
know exactly what you meant to do, and we don’t
care; for now, you see, you can’t do it.”
And the captain looked at him calmly,
and proceeded to fill a pipe.
“If Abe Gray ” Silver
broke out.
“Avast there!” cried Mr.
Smollett. “Gray told me nothing, and I asked
him nothing; and what’s more, I would see you
and him and this whole island blown clean out of the
water into blazes first. So there’s my mind
for you, my man, on that.”
This little whiff of temper seemed
to cool Silver down. He had been growing nettled
before, but now he pulled himself together.
“Like enough,” said he.
“I would set no limits to what gentlemen might
consider ship-shape, or might not, as the case were.
And, seein’ as how you are about to take a pipe,
cap’n, I’ll make so free as do likewise.”
And he filled a pipe and lighted it;
and the two men sat silently smoking for quite a while,
now looking each other in the face, now stopping their
tobacco, now leaning forward to spit. It was as
good as the play to see them.
“Now,” resumed Silver,
“here it is. You give us the chart to get
the treasure by, and drop shooting poor seamen, and
stoving of their heads in while asleep. You do
that, and we’ll offer you a choice. Either
you come aboard along of us, once the treasure shipped,
and then I’ll give you my affy-davy, upon my
word of honour, to clap you somewhere safe ashore.
Or, if that ain’t to your fancy, some of my
hands being rough, and having old scores, on account
of hazing, then you can stay here, you can. We’ll
divide stores with you, man for man; and I’ll
give my affy-davy, as before, to speak the first ship
I sight, and send ’em here to pick you up.
Now you’ll own that’s talking. Handsomer
you couldn’t look to get, not you. And
I hope” raising his voice “that
all hands in this here block-house will overhaul my
words, for what is spoke to one is spoke to all.”
Captain Smollett rose from his seat,
and knocked out the ashes of his pipe in the palm
of his left hand.
“Is that all?” he asked.
“Every last word, by thunder!”
answered John. “Refuse that, and you’ve
seen the last of me but musket-balls.”
“Very good,” said the
captain. “Now you’ll hear me.
If you’ll come up one by one, unarmed, I’ll
engage to clap you all in irons, and take you home
to a fair trial in England. If you won’t,
my name is Alexander Smollett, I’ve flown my
sovereign’s colours, and I’ll see you all
to Davy Jones. You can’t find the treasure.
You can’t sail the ship there’s
not a man among you fit to sail the ship. You
can’t fight us Gray, there, got away
from five of you. Your ship’s in irons,
Master Silver; you’re on a lee shore, and so
you’ll find. I stand here and tell you so;
and they’re the last good words you’ll
get from me; for, in the name of heaven, I’ll
put a bullet in your back when next I meet you.
Tramp, my lad. Bundle out of this, please, hand
over hand, and double quick.”
Silver’s face was a picture;
his eyes started in his head with wrath. He shook
the fire out of his pipe.
“Give me a hand up!” he cried.
“Not I,” returned the captain.
“Who’ll give me a hand up?” he roared.
Not a man among us moved. Growling
the foulest imprecations, he crawled along the sand
till he got hold of the porch and could hoist himself
again upon his crutch. Then he spat into the spring.
“There!” he cried, “that’s
what I think of ye. Before an hour’s out,
I’ll stove in your old block-house like a rum-puncheon.
Laugh, by thunder, laugh! Before an hour’s
out, ye’ll laugh upon the other side. Them
that die’ll be the lucky ones.”
And with a dreadful oath he stumbled
off, ploughed down the sand, was helped across the
stockade, after four or five failures, by the man with
the flag of truce, and disappeared in an instant afterwards
among the trees.
CHAPTER VI
THE ATTACK
As soon as Silver disappeared, the
captain, who had been closely watching him, turned
towards the interior of the house, and found not a
man of us at his post but Gray. It was the first
time we had ever seen him angry.
“Quarters!” he roared.
And then, as we all slunk back to our places, “Gray,”
he said, “I’ll put your name in the log;
you’ve stood by your duty like a seaman. Mr.
Trelawney, I’m surprised at you, sir. Doctor,
I thought you had worn the king’s coat!
If that was how you served at Fontenoy, sir, you’d
have been better in your berth.”
The doctor’s watch were all
back at their loopholes, the rest were busy loading
the spare muskets, and every one with a red face, you
may be certain, and a flea in his ear, as the saying
is.
The captain looked on for a while
in silence. Then he spoke.
“My lads,” said he, “I’ve
given Silver a broadside. I pitched it in red-hot
on purpose; and before the hour’s out, as he
said, we shall be boarded. We’re outnumbered,
I needn’t tell you that, but we fight in shelter;
and, a minute ago, I should have said we fought with
discipline. I’ve no manner of doubt that
we can drub them, if you choose.”
Then he went the rounds, and saw,
as he said, that all was clear.
On the two short sides of the house,
east and west, there were only two loopholes; on the
south side, where the porch was, two again; and on
the north side, five. There was a round score
of muskets for the seven of us; the firewood had been
built into four piles tables, you might
say one about the middle of each side,
and on each of these tables some ammunition and four
loaded muskets were laid ready to the hand of the
defenders. In the middle, the cutlasses lay ranged.
“Toss out the fire,” said
the captain; “the chill is past, and we mustn’t
have smoke in our eyes.”
The iron fire-basket was carried bodily
out by Mr. Trelawney, and the embers smothered among
sand.
“Hawkins hasn’t had his
breakfast. Hawkins, help yourself, and back
to your post to eat it,” continued Captain Smollett.
“Lively, now, my lad; you’ll want it before
you’ve done. Hunter, serve out a round
of brandy to all hands.”
And while this was going on, the captain
completed, in his own mind, the plan of the defence.
“Doctor, you will take the door,”
he resumed. “See and don’t expose
yourself; keep within, and fire through the porch. Hunter,
take the east side, there. Joyce, you stand
by the west, my man. Mr. Trelawney, you are the
best shot you and Gray will take this long
north side, with the five loopholes; it’s there
the danger is. If they can get up to it, and
fire in upon us through our own ports, things would
begin to look dirty. Hawkins, neither you
nor I are much account at the shooting; we’ll
stand by to load and bear a hand.”
As the captain had said, the chill
was past. As soon as the sun had climbed above
our girdle of trees, it fell with all its force upon
the clearing, and drank up the vapours at a draught.
Soon the sand was baking, and the resin melting in
the logs of the block-house. Jackets and coats
were flung aside; shirts thrown open at the neck, and
rolled up to the shoulders; and we stood there, each
at his post, in a fever of heat and anxiety.
An hour passed away.
“Hang them!” said the
captain. “This is as dull as the doldrums. Gray,
whistle for a wind.”
And just at that moment came the first
news of the attack.
“If you please, sir,”
said Joyce, “if I see any one am I to fire?”
“I told you so!” cried the captain.
“Thank you, sir,” returned Joyce, with
the same quiet civility.
Nothing followed for a time; but the
remark had set us all on the alert, straining ears
and eyes the musketeers with their pieces
balanced in their hands, the captain out in the middle
of the block-house, with his mouth very tight and
a frown on his face.
So some seconds passed, till suddenly
Joyce whipped up his musket and fired. The report
had scarcely died away ere it was repeated and repeated
from without in a scattering volley, shot behind shot,
like a string of geese, from every side of the enclosure.
Several bullets struck the log-house, but not one
entered; and, as the smoke cleared away and vanished,
the stockade and the woods around it looked as quiet
and empty as before. Not a bough waved, not the
gleam of a musket-barrel betrayed the presence of
our foes.
“Did you hit your man?” asked the captain.
“No, sir,” replied Joyce. “I
believe not, sir.”
“Next best thing to tell the
truth,” muttered Captain Smollett. “Load
his gun, Hawkins. How many should you say there
were on your side, doctor?”
“I know precisely,” said
Dr. Livesey. “Three shots were fired on
this side. I saw the three flashes two
close together one farther to the west.”
“Three!” repeated the
captain. “And how many on yours, Mr. Trelawney?”
But this was not so easily answered.
There had come many from the north seven,
by the squire’s computation; eight or nine, according
to Gray. From the east and west only a single
shot had been fired. It was plain, therefore,
that the attack would be developed from the north,
and that on the other three sides we were only to
be annoyed by a show of hostilities. But Captain
Smollett made no change in his arrangement. If
the mutineers succeeded in crossing the stockade, he
argued, they would take possession of any unprotected
loophole, and shoot us down like rats in our own stronghold.
Nor had we much time left to us for
thought. Suddenly, with a loud huzza, a little
cloud of pirates leaped from the woods on the north
side, and ran straight on the stockade. At the
same moment the fire was once more opened from the
woods, and a rifle-ball sang through the doorway, and
knocked the doctor’s musket into bits.
The boarders swarmed over the fence
like monkeys, Squire and Gray fired again, and yet
again; three men fell, one forwards into the enclosure,
two back on the outside. But of these, one was
evidently more frightened than hurt, for he was on
his feet again in a crack, and instantly disappeared
among the trees.
Two had bit the dust, one had fled,
four had made good their footing inside our defences;
while from the shelter of the woods seven or eight
men, each evidently supplied with several muskets,
kept up a hot, though useless, fire on the log-house.
The four who had boarded made straight
before them for the building, shouting as they ran,
and the men among the trees shouted back to encourage
them. Several shots were fired; but, such was
the hurry of the marksmen, that not one appeared to
have taken effect. In a moment, the four pirates
had swarmed up the mound and were upon us.
The head of Job Anderson, the boatswain,
appeared at the middle loophole.
“At ’em, all hands all
hands!” he roared, in a voice of thunder.
At the same moment another pirate
grasped Hunter’s musket by the muzzle, wrenched
it from his hands, plucked it through the loophole,
and, with one stunning blow, laid the poor fellow
senseless on the floor. Meanwhile a third, running
unharmed all round the house, appeared suddenly in
the doorway, and fell with his cutlass on the doctor.
Our position was utterly reversed.
A moment since we were firing, under cover, at an
exposed enemy; now it was we who lay uncovered, and
could not return a blow.
The log-house was full of smoke, to
which we owed our comparative safety. Cries and
confusion, the flashes and reports of pistol-shots,
and one loud groan, rang in my ears.
“Out, lads, out, and fight ’em
in the open! Cutlasses!” cried the captain.
I snatched a cutlass from the pile,
and some one, at the same time snatching another,
gave me a cut across the knuckles which I hardly felt.
I dashed out of the door into the clear sunlight.
Some one was close behind, I knew not whom. Right
in front, the doctor was pursuing his assailant down
the hill, and, just as my eyes fell upon him, beat
down his guard, and sent him sprawling on his back,
with a great slash across the face.
“Round the house, lads! round
the house!” cried the captain; and even in the
hurly-burly I perceived a change in his voice.
Mechanically I obeyed, turned eastwards,
and, with my cutlass raised, ran round the corner
of the house. Next moment I was face to face with
Anderson. He roared aloud, and his hanger went
up above his head, flashing in the sunlight.
I had not time to be afraid, but, as the blow still
hung impending, leaped in a trice upon one side, and
missing my foot in the soft sand, rolled headlong
down the slope.
When I had first sallied from the
door, the other mutineers had been already swarming
up the palisade to make an end of us. One man,
in a red night-cap, with his cutlass in his mouth,
had even got upon the top and thrown a leg across.
Well, so short had been the interval, that when I
found my feet again all was in the same posture, the
fellow with the red night-cap still half-way over,
another still just showing his head above the top
of the stockade. And yet, in this breath of time,
the fight was over, and the victory was ours.
Gray, following close behind me, had
cut down the big boatswain ere he had time to recover
from his lost blow. Another had been shot at a
loophole in the very act of firing into the house,
and now lay in agony, the pistol still smoking in
his hand. A third, as I had seen, the doctor
disposed of at a blow. Of the four who had scaled
the palisade, one only remained unaccounted for, and
he, having left his cutlass on the field, was now
clambering out again with the fear of death upon him.
“Fire fire from the
house!” cried the doctor. “And you,
lads, back into cover.”
But his words were unheeded, no shot
was fired, and the last boarder made good his escape,
and disappeared with the rest into the wood. In
three seconds nothing remained of the attacking party
but the five who had fallen, four on the inside, and
one on the outside, of the palisade.
The doctor and Gray and I ran full
speed for shelter. The survivors would soon be
back where they had left their muskets, and at any
moment the fire might recommence.
The house was by this time somewhat
cleared of smoke, and we saw at a glance the price
we had paid for victory. Hunter lay beside his
loophole, stunned; Joyce by his, shot through the
head, never to move again; while right in the centre,
the squire was supporting the captain, one as pale
as the other.
“The captain’s wounded,” said Mr.
Trelawney.
“Have they run?” asked Mr. Smollett.
“All that could, you may be
bound,” returned the doctor; “but there’s
five of them will never run again.”
“Five!” cried the captain.
“Come, that’s better. Five against
three leaves us four to nine. That’s better
odds than we had at starting. We were seven to
nineteen then, or thought we were, and that’s
as bad to bear."