IN WHICH THE CAREER OF SIR HENRY MORGAN
IS ENDED ON ISLA DE LA TORTUGA, TO THE GREAT DELECTATION
OF MASTER BENJAMIN HORNIGOLD, HIS SOMETIME FRIEND
CHAPTER XXV
AND LAST. WHEREIN IS SEEN HOW THE
JUDGMENT OF GOD CAME UPON THE BUCCANEERS IN THE END
Before it was submerged by the great
earthquake which so tremendously overwhelmed the shores
of South America with appalling disaster nearly a
century and a half later, a great arid rock on an encircling
stretch of sandy beach resultant of untold
centuries of struggle between stone and sea thrust
itself above the waters a few miles northward of the
coast of Venezuela. The cay was barren and devoid
of any sort of life except for a single clump of bushes
that had sprung up a short distance from the huge
rock upon a little plateau sufficiently elevated to
resist the attacks of the sea, which at high tide
completely overflowed the islet except at that one
spot.
Four heavy iron staples had been driven
with great difficulty into holes drilled in the face
of the volcanic rock. To these four large chains
had been made fast. The four chains ended in
four fetters and the four fetters enclosed the ankles
and wrists of a man. The length of the four chains
had been so cunningly calculated that the arms and
legs of the man were drawn far apart, so that he resembled
a gigantic white cross against the dark surface of
the stone. A sailor would have described his
position by saying that he had been “spread-eagled”
by those who had fastened him there. Yet the
chains were not too short to allow a little freedom
of motion. He could incline to one side or to
the other, lift himself up or down a little, or even
thrust himself slightly away from the face of the
rock.
The man was in tatters, for his clothing
had been rent and torn by the violent struggles he
had made before he had been securely fastened in his
chains. He was an old man, and his long gray hair
fell on either side of his lean, fierce face in tangled
masses. A strange terror of death the
certain fate that menaced him, was upon his countenance.
He had borne himself bravely enough except for a few
craven moments, while in the presence of his captors
and judges, chief among whom had been the young Spanish
soldier and the one-eyed sailor whom he had known for
so many years. With the bravado of despair he
had looked with seeming indifference on the sufferings
of his own men that same morning. After being
submitted to the tortures of the rack, the boot, the
thumbscrew, or the wheel, in accordance with the fancy
of their relentless captors, they had been hanged
to the outer walls and he had been forced to pass
by them on his way to this hellish spot. But the
real courage of the man was gone now. His simulation
had not even been good enough to deceive his enemies,
and now even that had left him.
He was alone, so he believed, upon
the island, and all of the mortal fear slowly creeping
upon him already appeared in his awful face, clearly
exhibited by the light of the setting sun streaming
upon his left hand for he was chained facing northward,
that is, seaward. As he fancied himself the only
living thing upon that island he took little care
to conceal his emotions indeed, it was impossible
for him any longer to keep up the pretence of indifference.
His nerves were shattered, his spirit broken.
Retribution was dogging him hard. Vengeance was
close at hand at last. Besides, what mattered
it? He thought himself alone, absolutely alone.
But in that fancy he was wrong, for in the solitary
little copse of bushes of which mention has been made
there lay hidden a man an ancient sailor.
His single eye gleamed as fiercely upon the bound,
shackled prisoner as did the setting sun itself.
Old Benjamin Hornigold, who had schemed
and planned for his revenge, had insisted upon being
put ashore on the other side of the island after the
boats had rowed out of sight of the captive, that he
might steal back and, himself unseen, watch the torture
of the man who had betrayed him and wronged him so
deeply that in his diseased mind no expiation could
be too awful for the crime; that he might glut his
fierce old soul with the sight for which it had longed
since the day Harry Morgan, beholden to him as he
was for his very life and fortune, for a thousand
brave and faithful, if nefarious, services, had driven
him like a dog from his presence. Alvarado who,
being a Spaniard, could sympathize and understand
the old sailor’s lust for revenge had
readily complied with his request, and had further
promised to return for the boatswain in two days.
They calculated nicely that the already exhausted prisoner
would scarcely survive that long, and provisions and
water ample for that period had been left for the
sustenance of Hornigold alone.
Morgan, however, did not know this.
He believed his only companions to be the body of
the half-breed who had died for him as he had lived
for him, and the severed head of a newer comrade who
had not betrayed him. The body lay almost at
his feet; the head had been wedged in the sand so
that its sightless face was turned toward him in the
dreadful, lidless staring gaze of sudden death.
And those two were companions with whom he could better
have dispensed, even in his solitude.
They had said to the buccaneer, as
they fastened him to the rocks, that they would not
take his life, but that he would be left to the judgment
of God. What would that be? He thought he
knew.
He had lived long enough on the Caribbean
to know the habits of that beautiful and cruel sea.
There was a little stretch of sand at his feet and
then the water began. He estimated that the tide
had been ebbing for an hour or so when he was fastened
up and abandoned. The rock to which he had been
chained was still wet, and he noticed that the dampness
existed far above his head. The water would recede and
recede and recede until perhaps
some three hundred feet of bare sand would stretch
before him, and then it would turn and come back, back,
back. Where would it stop? How high would
it rise? Would it flood in in peaceful calm as
it was then drawing away? Would it come crashing
in heavy assault upon the sands as it generally did,
beating out his life against the rock? He could
not tell. He gazed at it intently so long as there
was light, endeavoring to decide the momentous question.
To watch it was something to do. It gave him
mental occupation, and so he stared and stared at
the slowly withdrawing water-line.
Of the two he thought he should prefer
a storm. He would be beaten to pieces, the life
battered out of him horribly in that event; but that
would be a battle, a struggle, action.
He could fight, if he could not wait and endure.
It would be a terrible death, but it would be soon
over and, therefore, he preferred it to the slow horror
of watching the approach of the waters creeping in
and up to drown him. The chief agony of his position,
however, the most terrifying feature in this dreadful
situation to which his years of crime had at last brought
him, was that he was allowed no choice. He had
always been a man of swift, prompt, bold action; self-reliant,
fearless, resolute, a master not a server; accustomed
to determine events in accordance with his own imperious
will, and wont to bring them about as he planned.
To be chained there, impotent, helpless, waiting,
indeed, the judgment of God, was a thing which it
seemed impossible for him to bear. The indecision
of it, the uncertainty of it, added to his helplessness
and made it the more appalling to him.
The judgment of God! He had never
believed in a God since his boyhood days, and he strove
to continue in his faithlessness now. He had been
a brave man, dauntless and intrepid, but cold, paralyzing
fear now gripped him by the heart. A few lingering
sparks of the manhood and courage of the past that
not even his crimes had deprived him of still remained
in his being, however, and he strove as best he might
to control the beating of his heart, to still the
trembling of his arms and legs which shook the chains
against the stone face of the rock making them ring
out in a faint metallic clinking, which was the sweetest
music that had ever pierced the eager hollow of the
ear of the silent listener and watcher concealed in
the thicket.
So long as it was light Morgan intently
watched the sea. There was a sense of companionship
in it which helped to alleviate his unutterable loneliness.
And he was a man to whom loneliness in itself was a
punishment. There were too many things in the
past that had a habit of making their presence felt
when he was alone, for him ever to desire to be solitary.
Presently the sun disappeared with the startling suddenness
of tropic latitudes, and without twilight darkness
fell over the sea and over his haggard face like a
veil. The moon had not yet risen and he could
see nothing. There were a few faint clouds on
the horizon, he had noticed, which might presage a
storm. It was very dark and very still, as calm
and peaceful a tropic night as ever shrouded the Caribbean.
Farther and farther away from him he could hear the
rustle of the receding waves as the tide went down.
Over his head twinkled the stars out of the deep darkness.
In that vast silence he seemed to
hear a voice, still and small, talking to him in a
faint whisper that yet pierced the very centre of his
being. All that it said was one word repeated
over and over again, “God God God!”
The low whisper beat into his brain and began to grow
there, rising louder and louder in its iteration until
the whole vaulted heaven throbbed with the ringing
sound of it. He listened listened it
seemed for hours until his heart burst within
him. At last he screamed and screamed, again
and again, “Yes yes! Now I know I
know!” And still the sound beat on.
He saw strange shapes in the darkness.
One that rose and rose, and grew and grew, embracing
all the others until its head seemed to touch the
stars, and ever it spoke that single word “God God God!”
He could not close his eyes, but if he had been able
to raise his hand he would have hid his face.
The wind blew softly, it was warm and tender, yet the
man shivered with cold, the sweat beaded his brow.
Then the moon sprang up as suddenly
as the sun had fallen. Her silver radiance flooded
the firmament. Light, heavenly light once more!
He was alone. The voice was still; the shadow
left him. Far away from him the white line of
the water was breaking on the silver sand. His
own cry came back to him and frightened him in the
dead silence.
Now the tide turned and came creeping
in. It had gone out slowly; it had lingered as
if reluctant to leave him; but to his distraught vision
it returned with the swiftness of a thousand white
horses tossing their wind-blown manes. The wind
died down; the clouds were dissipated. The night
was so very calm, it mocked the storm raging in his
soul. And still the silvered water came flooding
in; gently tenderly caressingly the
little waves lapped the sands. At last they lifted
the ghastly head of young Teach he’d
be damnably mouldy a hundred years hence! and
laid it at his feet.
He cursed the rising water, and bade
it stay and heedlessly it came on.
It was a tropic sea and the waters were as warm as
those of any sun-kissed ocean, but they broke upon
his knees with the coldness of eternal ice. They
rolled the heavier body of his faithful slave against
him he strove to drive it away with his
foot as he had striven to thrust aside the ghastly
head, and without avail. The two friends receded
as the waves rolled back but they came on again, and
again, and again. They had been faithful to him
in life, they remained with him in death.
Now the water broke about his waist;
now it rose to his breast. He was exhausted;
worn out. He hung silent, staring. His mind
was busy; his thought went back to that rugged Welsh
land where he had been born. He saw himself a
little boy playing in the fields that surrounded the
farmhouse of his father and mother.
He took again that long trip across
the ocean. He lived again in the hot hell of
the Caribbean. Old forms of forgotten buccaneers
clustered about him. Mansfelt, under whom he
had first become prominent himself. There on
the horizon rose the walls of a sleeping town.
With his companions he slowly crept forward through
the underbrush, slinking along like a tiger about
to spring upon its prey. The doomed town flamed
before his eyes. The shrieks of men, the prayers
of women, the piteous cries of little children came
into his ears across forty years.
Cannon roared in his ear the
crash of splintered wood, the despairing appeals for
mercy, for help, from drowning mariners, as he stood
upon a bloody deck watching the rolling of a shattered,
sinking ship. Was that water, spray from some
tossing wave, or blood, upon his hand?
The water was higher now; it was at
his neck. There were Porto Bello, Puerto Principe,
and Maracaïbo, and Chagres and Panama ah,
Panama! All the fiends of hell had been there,
and he had been their chief! They came back now
to mock him. They pointed at him, gibbered upon
him, threatened him, and laughed great
God, how they laughed!
There was pale-faced, tender-eyed
Maria Zerega who had died of the plague, and the baby,
the boy. Jamaica, too, swept into his vision.
There was his wife shrinking away from him in the very
articles of death. There was young Ebenezer Hornigold,
dancing right merrily upon the gallows together with
others of the buccaneers he had hanged.
The grim figure of the one-eyed boatswain
rose before him and leered upon him and swept the
other apparitions away. This was La Guayra yesterday.
He had been betrayed. Whose men were those?
The men hanging on the walls? And Hornigold had
done it old Ben Hornigold that
he thought so faithful.
He screamed aloud again with hate,
he called down curses upon the head of the growing
one-eyed apparition. And the water broke into
his mouth and stopped him. It called him to his
senses for a moment. His present peril overcame
the hideous recollection of the past. That water
was rising still. Great God! At last he
prayed. Lips that had only cursed shaped themselves
into futile petitions. There was a God, after
all.
The end was upon him, yet with the
old instinct of life he lifted himself upon his toes.
He raised his arms as far as the chains gave him play
and caught the chains themselves and strove to pull,
to lift, at last only to hold himself up, a rigid,
awful figure. He gained an inch or two, but his
fetters held him down. As the water supported
him he found little difficulty in maintaining the
position for a space. But he could go no higher if
the water rose an inch more that would be the end.
He could breathe only between the breaking waves now.
The body of the black was swung against
him again and again; the head of young Teach kissed
him upon the cheek; and still the water seemed to
rise, and rise, and rise. He was a dead man like
the other two, indeed he prayed to die, and yet in
fear he clung to the chains and held on. Each
moment he fancied would be his last. But he could
not let go. Oh, God! how he prayed for a storm;
that one fierce wave might batter him to pieces; but
the waters were never more calm than on that long,
still night, the sea never more peaceful than in those
awful hours.
By and by the waters fell. He
could not believe it at first. He still hung
suspended and waited with bated breath. Was he
deceived? No, the waters were surely falling.
The seconds seemed minutes to him, the minutes, hours.
At last he gained assurance. There was no doubt
but that the tide was going down. The waves had
risen far, but he had been lifted above them; now
they were falling, falling! Yes, and they were
bearing away that accursed body and that ghastly head.
He was alive still, saved for the time being.
The highest waves only touched his breast now.
Lower lower they moved away.
Reluctantly they lingered; but they fell, they fell.
To drown? That was not the judgment
of God for him then. What would it be? His
head fell forward on his breast he had fainted
in the sudden relief of his undesired salvation.
Long time he hung there and still
the tide ebbed away, carrying with it all that was
left of the only two who had loved him. He was
alone now, surely, save for that watcher in the bushes.
After a while consciousness returned to him again,
and after the first swift sense of relief there came
to him a deeper terror, for he had gone through the
horror and anguish of death and had not died.
He was alive still, but as helpless as before.
What had the Power he had mocked designed
for his end? Was he to watch that ghastly tide
come in again and rise, and rise, and rise until it
caught him by the throat and threatened to choke him,
only to release him as before? Was he to go through
that daily torture until he starved or died of thirst?
He had not had a bite to eat, a drop to drink, since
the day before.
It was morning now. On his right
hand the sun sprang from the ocean bed with the same
swiftness with which it had departed the night before.
Like the tide, it, too, rose, and rose. There
was not a cloud to temper the fierceness with which
it beat upon his head, not a breath of air to blow
across his fevered brow. The blinding rays struck
him like hammers of molten iron. He stared at
it out of his frenzied, blood-shot eyes and writhed
beneath its blazing heat. Before him the white
sand burned like smelted silver, beyond him the tremulous
ocean seemed to seethe and bubble under the furious
fire of the glowing heaven above his head a
vault of flaming topaz over a sapphire sea.
He closed his eyes, but could not
shut out the sight and then the dreams
of night came on him again. His terrors were more
real, more apparent, more appalling, because he saw
his dreaded visions in the full light of day.
By and by these faded as the others had done.
All his faculties were merged into one consuming desire
for water water. The thirst was intolerable.
Unless he could get some his brain would give way.
He was dying, dying, dying! Oh, God, he could
not die, he was not ready to die! Oh, for one
moment of time, for one drop of water God God God!
Suddenly before his eyes there arose
a figure. At first he fancied it was another
of the apparitions which had companied with him during
the awful night and morning; but this was a human
figure, an old man, bent, haggard like himself with
watching, but with a fierce mad joy in his face.
Where had he come from? Who was he? What
did he want? The figure glared upon the unhappy
man with one fiery eye, and then he lifted before
the captive’s distorted vision something what
was it a cup of water? Water God
in heaven water brimming over the cup!
It was just out of reach of his lips so
cool, so sweet, so inviting! He strained at his
chains, bent his head, thrust his lips out. He
could almost touch it not quite! He
struggled and struggled and strove to break his fetters,
but without avail. Those fetters could not be
broken by the hand of man. He could not drink ah,
God! then he lifted his blinded eyes and
searched the face of the other.
“Hornigold!” he whispered
hoarsely with his parched and stiffened lips.
“Is it thou?”
A deep voice beat into his consciousness.
“Ay. I wanted to let you
know there was water here. You must be thirsty.
You’d like a drink? So would I. There is
not enough for both of us. Who will get it?
I. Look!”
“Not all, not all!” screamed
the old captain faintly, as the other drained the
cup. “A little! A drop for me!”
“Not one drop,” answered
Hornigold, “not one drop! If you were in
hell and I held a river in my hand, you would not
get a drop! It’s gone.”
He threw the cup from him.
“I brought you to this I!
Do you recall it? You owe this to me. You
had your revenge this is mine. But
it’s not over yet. I’m watching you.
I shall not come out here again, but I’m watching
you, remember that! I can see you!”
“Hornigold, for God’s sake, have pity!”
“You know no God; you have often
boasted of it neither do I. And you never
knew pity neither do I!”
“Take that knife you bear kill me!”
“I don’t want you to die not
yet. I want you to live live a
long time, and remember!”
“Hornigold, I’ll make amends! I’ll
be your slave!”
“Ay, crawl and cringe now, you
dog! I swore that you should do it! It’s
useless to beg me for mercy. I know not that word neither
did you. There is nothing left in me but hate hate
for you. I want to see you suffer ”
“The tide! It’s coming
back. I can’t endure this heat and thirst!
It won’t drown me ”
“Live, then,” said the boatswain.
“Remember, I watch!”
He threw his glance upward, stopped
suddenly, a fierce light in that old eye of his.
“Look up,” he cried, “and
you will see! Take heart, man. I guess you
won’t have to wait for the tide, and the sun
won’t bother you long. Remember, I am watching
you!”
He turned and walked away, concealing
himself in the copse once more where he could see
and not be seen. The realization that he was watched
by one whom he could not see, one who gloated over
his miseries and sufferings and agonies, added the
last touch to the torture of the buccaneer. He
had no longer strength nor manhood, he no longer cried
out after that one last appeal to the merciless sailor.
He did not even look up in obedience to the old man’s
injunction. What was there above him, beneath
him, around him, that could add to his fear? He
prayed for death. They were the first and last
prayers that had fallen from his lips for fifty years,
those that day. Yet when death did come at last
he shrank from it with an increasing terror and horror
that made all that he had passed through seem like
a trifle.
When old Hornigold had looked up he
had seen a speck in the vaulted heaven. It was
slowly soaring around and around in vast circles, and
with each circle coming nearer and nearer to the ground.
A pair of keen and powerful eyes were aloft there
piercing the distance, looking, searching, in every
direction, until at last their glance fell upon the
figure upon the rock. The circling stopped.
There was a swift rush through the air. A black
feathered body passed between the buccaneer and the
sun, and a mighty vulture, hideous bird of the tropics,
alighted on the sands near by him.
So this was the judgment of God upon
this man! For a second his tortured heart stopped
its beating. He stared at the unclean thing, and
then he shrank back against the rock and screamed
with frantic terror. The bird moved heavily back
a little distance and stopped, peering at him.
He could see it by turning his head. He could
drive it no farther. In another moment there
was another rush through the air, another, another!
He screamed again. Still they came, until it seemed
as if the earth and the heavens were black with the
horrible birds. High in the air they had seen
the first one swooping to the earth, and with unerring
instinct, as was their habit, had turned and made
for the point from which the first had dropped downward
to the shore.
They circled themselves about him.
They sat upon the rock above him. They stared
at him with their lustful, carrion, jeweled eyes out
of their loathsome, featherless, naked heads, drawing
nearer nearer nearer. He
could do no more. His voice was gone. His
strength was gone. He closed his eyes, but the
sight was still before him. His bleeding, foamy
lips mumbled one unavailing word:
“Hornigold!”
From the copse there came no sound,
no answer. He sank forward in his chains, his
head upon his breast, convulsive shudders alone proclaiming
faltering life. Hell had no terror like to this
which he, living, suffered.
There was a weight upon his shoulder
now fierce talons sank deep into his quivering flesh.
In front of his face, before a pair of lidless eyes
that glowed like fire, a hellish, cruel beak struck
at him. A faint, low, ghastly cry trembled through
the still air.
And the resistless tide came in.
A man drove away the birds at last before they had
quite taken all, for the torn arms still hung in the
iron fetters; an old man, blind of one eye, the black
patch torn off the hideous hole that had replaced
the socket. He capered with the nimbleness of
youth before the ghastly remains of humanity still
fastened to that rock. He shouted and screamed,
and laughed and sang. The sight had been too
horrible even for him. He was mad, crazy; his
mind was gone. He had his revenge, and it had
eaten him up.
The waters dashed, about his feet
and seemed to awaken some new idea in his disordered
brain.
“What!” he cried, “the
tide is in. Up anchor, lads! We must beat
out to sea. Captain, I’ll follow you.
Harry Morgan’s way to lead old Ben
Hornigold’s to follow ha, ha! ho,
ho!”
He waded out into the water, slowly
going deeper and deeper. A wave swept him off
his feet. A hideous laugh came floating back over
the sea, and then he struck out, and out, and out
And so the judgment of God was visited
upon Sir Henry Morgan and his men at last, and as
it was writ of old:
With what measure they had meted
out, it had been measured back to them again!