On arriving at Rhodes, Wilkinson and
Edgar rowed ashore as soon as the anchor was dropped,
and called upon the Turkish governor. They were
received with much honour, and the governor was delighted
to hear the news, which they were the first to bring,
that the French had abandoned the siege of Acre and
were retreating in all haste to Egypt. He gave
orders for a salute to be fired at once in honour of
this great success, and then asked Wilkinson what
he could do for him, assuring him that he would put
all the resources of the island at his disposal.
Edgar, as interpreter, assured the governor that they
had no occasion to avail themselves largely of the
offer, but that, in consequence of the amount of ammunition
expended in the siege they were short of both powder,
ball, and musketry ammunition, and would be very much
obliged for as large a supply as he could spare them.
He gave orders at once for the issue to him of as
much as they required. Edgar then went on:
“The object of our coming here,
sir, is to endeavour to check the piracy that is now
being carried on among the islands. Numerous complaints
have reached Sir Sidney Smith from Turkish, British,
and Greek merchants; ships are constantly missing,
and there is no doubt that they have been captured
and scuttled, and their crews massacred.”
“Your ship is a small one for
such a purpose,” the governor said, for from
the divan on which he was sitting he commanded a view
of the port.
“I hope that she is large enough,”
Edgar replied; “she is heavily armed for her
size, and she is a fast sailer. Sir Sidney Smith
had no larger vessel at his disposal, as he needs
the two men-of-war and the small frigate for watching
the Egyptian coast, and, indeed, had he been able
to send a larger craft, it would not have been so well
suited for the purpose, for the pirates would hardly
have ventured to attack her. We shall, after
we have put out to sea, disguise the brig and rig her
as a merchantman in order to tempt them out.
We shall not do it until we are well away, for the
pirates may have friends here who might send them
information. We shall head for the south, and
shall give out that we are to rejoin our commander
off Alexandria, as we have only come round here to
give you news of the retreat of the French. We
shall be glad if you will furnish us with two men
having a thorough knowledge of the islands, and of
the spots where the piratical craft are most likely
to harbour. They must be trusty men who will
not open their lips here as to our designs.”
“I can find you two such men,”
the governor said. “They both used to be
captains of craft that traded among the islands, but
now own several vessels; some of these have disappeared,
and they are continually coming up here and pestering
us with their complaints, though I have told them
again and again that I can do nothing in the matter;
I know that they would very gladly go with you in
order to aid in the punishment of the pirates.”
Such indeed turned out to be the case.
Edgar had a long talk with them, and learned from
them the spots where it was supposed that the pirates
had their rendezvous, as many vessels whose course
had lain near them had disappeared. He asked
them to go into the town and gather what further information
they could from men whose craft had been chased but
had succeeded in getting away, and told them to be
at the landing-place after dark so that their passage
to the ship would be unnoticed, for they agreed with
him that undoubtedly many of the pirates had agents
at Rhodes and other important ports, and that intelligence
was carried by small, quick-sailing craft, to the
pirates, of vessels likely to be valuable prizes.
An abundant supply of ammunition was taken off to the
brig in the course of the afternoon, and the supply
of fresh provisions replenished.
The two young officers dined with
the governor, who had a large party in their honour,
including many of the military authorities. The
next morning they started at six, and held their course
south until they were sure that the brig could no
longer be seen even from the highest point on the
island, and at four bells in the afternoon changed
their course, and, sailing between Scarpanto and Carso,
headed north and passed before nightfall between Slazida
and Placa. The crew had been busy painting
a broad yellow line round the brig, in slackening
the rigging, and giving the vessel the appearance
of a slovenly merchant brig. They had learned
from the Turks that although undoubtedly acts of piracy
took place in the Western Archipelago, these were
comparatively isolated acts committed upon small vessels
becalmed near one or other of the islands, the attacks
being made in boats, but that it was among the numerous
islands lying off the coast of Asia Minor between Nicaria
and Samos on the north, and Serrest and Piscopia on
the south, that piracy was most frequent.
As a rule, they said, vessels coming
down from the Dardanelles kept well west of Mitylene
and Chios, rounded Naxos and Syra and bore south
to Santorin before shaping their course east,
if bound for Syria, so as to avoid the dangerous neighbourhood.
To begin with, they advised that the course should
be laid so as to pass a short distance east of Astropalaia.
This, they said, had long been one of the headquarters
of piracy. It had, before the war began, been
several times attacked by Turkish or European ships
of war, the craft found there burnt, and the coast
villages destroyed; but since then it was believed
that it had again become the headquarters of pirates
from some of the other islands, as its position was
a favourable one for attack, lying in the direct lines
of traffic between both Constantinople and Greece and
the eastern trades with Rhodes, Cyprus, Syria, or
Egypt.
The night was fine, with a gentle
breeze. A sharp look-out was kept for two groups
of tiny islands that were scarce more than rocks, that
had to be passed before nearing Astropalaia.
The breeze died away at daybreak, and left the vessel
becalmed at a distance of some six miles from the
island.
“We could not be better placed,”
one of the Turks said. “You see the group
of islands at the mouth of that bay; they are called
the Pirate Rocks, and in the old days every one of
those rocks was the stronghold of a pirate ship.
Thirty years ago four Turkish frigates caught eighteen
piratical craft lying at anchor behind their shelter,
and destroyed every one of them, but it was not long
before others took their places.”
“If there were a good wind blowing,
Edgar, I should like nothing better than to sail right
in there,” Wilkinson said, “but in this
light breeze those fellows would run away from us
with their big sails and their sweeps.”
“If there are any of them in
there now,” one of the Turks remarked as Wilkinson
closely surveyed the islets through his glass, “most
likely they have made you out before this. I
only hope there will not be too many of them.”
“The more the merrier!”
Wilkinson laughed as Edgar translated this. “With
ten guns and sixty blue-jackets we ought to be able
to beat off any number of the scoundrels. Ask
him how many guns these fellows generally mount?”
The Turk shook his head.
“They are of all sizes; some
are only row-boats, without guns at all, and carrying
perhaps not more than a dozen men. Two will row,
and the rest lie down in the bottom. They will
have some fruit, perhaps, piled up in the stern, and
as they row up to a small craft at anchor or becalmed,
there are no suspicions of their real character until
they get close alongside. Then they leap up,
and carry the vessel before the crew have time to
arm themselves. If she is very small and useless
to them, they will take out everything of value, fasten
the prisoners down below, and scuttle her; if she
is larger, they will tow her into some little bay
and take out the cargo in boats at their leisure, cut
the throats of the prisoners, alter the appearance
of the ship so that she cannot be recognized, engage
a dozen more hands, and set up on a larger scale.
“Some of the craft are used
as fishing-boats when times are quiet and there are
ships of war about, while the larger ones may go into
trade. Some of the smaller craft will carry a
couple of guns, the larger ones eight or ten, but
these are generally much smaller than yours, though
sometimes they are armed with cannon taken from prizes;
but, as a rule, they do not trust at all to their
guns. They do not wish to draw attention by their
sound to what is going on, and they either attack at
night and carry their prey by boarding, or, if it be
in the day, the crew are sent below, the guns hidden,
and they have so peaceful an aspect that it is only
when they change their course suddenly, when within
a few hundred yards, that any alarm is excited, and
they are alongside before a trader can load his guns,
and, as they are crowded with men, carry her before
any serious resistance can be offered.”
At Rhodes they had taken on board
a dozen bucket-loads of earth. The night before,
some of these had been emptied into a large tub, which
was then filled up with water and stirred briskly,
after which the sailors had gone aloft and wetted
the sails with muddy water, rendering their appearance
dingy in the extreme. Here and there white patches
had been left, which gave the sails the appearance
of being old and recently mended, and with the yards
set at different angles and slackened rigging, the
Tigress would not have been recognized as the
smart craft that had, twenty-four hours before, sailed
from Rhodes. The sailors were all in high glee.
After the hard work they had had at Acre they looked
upon this as a holiday, and entered with the greatest
zest into the work of disguising the ship.
“Now, lads, you must sit down,”
Wilkinson said, “and only five or six heads
must be shown above the bulwarks. They doubtless
have some good glasses taken from the ships they have
captured, and if they saw that we had an unusually
strong crew they might smell a rat.”
It was now a dead calm, the sails
hung idly down, and the brig lay almost motionless
on a waveless sea.
“I am pretty sure that I can
make out the upper spars of two or three craft behind
that long, low islet, Wilkinson,” Edgar said
after, for the twentieth time, gazing long and earnestly
through his telescope.
“I fancied so two or three times,
Edgar, but I am by no means sure that it is not fancy.
I felt more sure of it at first than I do now, for
there is a slight mist rising from the water.
If they don’t come out to us by the afternoon
we will go in and have a look at them. We have
got half a dozen sweeps on board, and with those and
the boats we could work her in in a couple of hours.”
“I hope we sha’n’t
have to do that,” Edgar replied. “They
would guess what we were at once, and would be scattering
in all directions. We might pick up one or two,
the rest would get off and carry news of us to all
the islands round.”
“Perhaps you are right,”
Wilkinson agreed. “It would certainly be
unfortunate to begin by giving them a scare.”
“Besides,” Edgar went
on, “if the calm holds till night, they may come
out and try to take us by surprise.”
The day passed very slowly. The
heat was great, and the men picked out spots on the
deck where the sails threw a shade, and dosed off to
sleep. They had, long before, made every preparation;
the cutlasses had been ground, the boarding-pikes
sharpened, and the pistols loaded and primed.
Piles of shot lay by the side of the guns, and it needed
only to fetch up the powder cartridges from the magazine
to be ready for action. The marines had cleaned
and loaded all the muskets, and placed them in the
racks. At two o’clock, after dinner had
been eaten, Wilkinson said to the boatswain:
“The starboard-watch can sling
their hammocks and turn in if they like. If these
fellows mean to come out and attack us, they will hardly
do it before it becomes dark; perhaps not until two
or three o’clock in the morning, and as we shall
have to be watchful, there is no occasion for both
watches to stay on deck now. The port watch shall
go off from two bells till eight; as they take the
first watch they will be all the brighter for a snooze
beforehand.”
“I wish the beggars would come
out and have done with it,” he went on to Edgar,
as the boatswain turned away and blew his whistle.
“I think I may as well go down, as it is your
watch on deck. Have me roused when they change
at two bells if I don’t wake of my own accord.”
Contrary to their usual custom in
a calm, the earnest desire of all on board was that
it should continue, for should a breeze spring up they
would be forced to sail away, and the pirates might
not pursue them. As soon as it got dark, Wilkinson
told the boatswain that it would be as well that a
song should be started occasionally, but that not more
than five or six men were to join in chorus.
If, as they came out, they heard a dead silence they
might think it unnatural, and it was quite possible
that a boat would come on ahead of them to try and
make out what they really were. In the intervals
between the songs silence reigned, and all on deck
listened intently.
About nine o’clock Edgar exclaimed: “I
can hear oars!”
“So can I,” Wilkinson
replied, after listening for a minute. “I
don’t think that they are sweeps. No, it
is a boat rowed by either two or four men-four,
I think.”
In a minute or two they were satisfied
that it was but a boat. The order was given for
another song, after which three or four men were to
talk and the rest to sit down below the bulwarks and
to keep silence. The two Turks took their places
near the officers. From the speed at which the
boat was approaching it was certain that she was not
deeply laden, and there was no fear, therefore, of
a surprise being attempted. She passed within
twenty yards of the tafrail, and they could make out
that she was an ordinary fisherman’s boat.
There was a pile of nets in the stern, and four men
were standing up rowing.
“I wish we could get a little
wind!” one of them called out.
“We wish so, too,” one
of the Turks answered. “We have been lying
becalmed all day.”
“Bound for Constantinople, I
suppose?” came from the boat.
“No, for Smyrna. We are
bringing a cargo from Ancona, and shall load up at
Smyrna with fruit.”
With a Turkish good-night the men
rowed on, and the singer forward at once began another
song. For a quarter of an hour they could hear
the sound of the oars growing fainter and fainter,
then it ceased.
“They have rowed straight on
till they think they are out of hearing,” Wilkinson
said. “Now they will make a circuit and
go back to their friends with the news. There
is no doubt we are in luck if we get a brush with
them the first night after our arrival on our cruising
ground.”
About three o’clock in the morning
a confused sound could be heard. In two or three
minutes every man was at his post.
“There are only two, or at most
three of them,” Edgar said, in a tone of disappointment,
“and I doubt whether they are not big rowing-boats.
The strokes are too quick for either sweeps or for
boats towing. What a beastly nuisance! I
suppose when these fellows took back the report, that
though we were a good-sized brig we did not seem to
have many hands, they thought that it was not worth
while to tow out a big craft when row-boats would
do. They think that with twelve or fifteen hands
in each boat, and the advantage of surprise, they
would be able to overpower us at once.”
“The surprise will be the other
way,” Wilkinson said angrily. “We
shall send them all three to the bottom at the first
broadside.”
“I don’t think I should
do that, Wilkinson; for, if you do, there is an end
of our chance of capturing any of their larger craft.”
“Of course I see that; that
is the annoying part of the business. What do
you propose, then?”
“I should say that the best
plan would be, not to hail them until they get close
on board, then for a man forward to give a sudden shout,
as if he had been asleep on his watch and had only
just heard them. Then they will come tumbling
on board, thinking that the ship is already theirs.
We might divide our men, and keep them half forward
and half aft. The moment they all get on board,
rush down upon them. Tell off six men, with orders
to jump down into their boats as soon as they can,
and to push them off, so as to cut off their retreat.
The boats will be very useful to us, for we can tow
the brig in with them. The people in there will
think that she has been captured, and we shall get
right in the middle of them before they find out that
they have caught a tartar.”
“By Jove, that is a first-rate idea!”
To their surprise, the men were at
once called away from their guns and divided into
two parties. Edgar and the boatswain commanded
that gathered forward, Wilkinson and the gunner that
aft. Nine men were told off for the capture of
the boats, for, as Edgar pointed out, when the pirates
found that they were caught in a trap, a good many
of them might leap overboard and try to get into the
boats, and it might need fully three men to keep them
off.
“Now, lads, you understand,”
Wilkinson said, as the parties were about to take
up their places, “you must crouch down and keep
yourselves perfectly quiet until the word is given;
it is important to get them all on board. When
they see no one on deck they will think that the one
or two men who might be on the watch have run below.
You can use your pistols freely when the fighting
once begins. When the fellows find that they
are trapped, they are likely enough to fight hard,
and I don’t want to lose any men. Keep
your cutlasses in readiness, but trust principally
to your boarding-pikes.”
The boats were but four or five hundred
yards away when the crew of the Tigress took
up their position. A minute later one of the men
in the bow shouted suddenly:
“There are boats coming!-quick,
on deck!-pirates! pirates!”
Then four or five men down in the
forecastle also shouted, ran up on deck, and then,
with cries of alarm, ran below again, and then, but
quietly this time, joined their comrades, who were
crouching as closely together as possible forward
of the bitts. There was a roar of voices from
the boats. They could hear the oars plied desperately;
then closely following this came three bumps against
the side of the brig, and, clambering up the chains,
the pirates poured tumultuously upon the deck, breaking
into a shout of triumph as they met with no resistance.
There was a pause of astonishment as the guns were
seen; then their leader shouted that these could be
but dummies, intended to run out and frighten people
in the daytime.
“Down below, men!” one
shouted; “finish with them first; it will be
time to talk afterwards.”
One of the Turks, who spoke a little
French, crouching by the side of Wilkinson, translated
his words. Some of the pirates rushed towards
the forecastle, others aft to the cabins, where they
would find the officers. Then some figures crawled
out from below the tarpaulins that were loosely thrown
over the guns, looked over the rail, and then sprang
down into the boats, which were entirely deserted.
As they did so there was a shout from Wilkinson; it
was answered by Edgar, and then five-and-twenty seamen
sprang up from each end of the vessel, and with a
tremendous cheer flung themselves upon the pirates.
Taken completely by surprise, and somewhat outnumbered,
many of these were cut down or run through by the
pikes before anything like serious resistance could
be offered; then, headed by their leaders, they fought
with the desperation of cornered animals.
All of them carried pistols as well
as yataghans. Some few of them ran to the side,
and with yells of fury leaped overboard to recapture
the boats. Pistols cracked on both sides, cutlass
and yataghan clashed together; but the British shouts
rose high over the yells of the pirates. In three
minutes the fighting was virtually over, the greater
portion of the pirates lay dead on the deck; a few
had jumped overboard, and the rest, throwing down
their arms, fell on their knees and cried for mercy.
“That will do, men-that
will do!” Wilkinson shouted; “scoundrels
as they are, we cannot kill them in cold blood.
Get some lengths of rope, boatswain, and tie them
hand and foot.”
The men who had leapt into the water
and swam towards the boats did not attempt to climb
in when they saw three sailors in each, standing with
cutlass and pistol ready to oppose them, and they swam
back towards the brig. A rope was thrown to them,
and they were permitted to climb up one by one, being
bound and laid by their comrades as they gained the
deck. None of the sailors had been killed, though
several had received ugly gashes.
“Now, boatswain, put the starboard
watch into the boats; lower the two ship’s boats
also-we will get as many oars to work as
possible till daylight.”
Each of the captured boats rowed six
oars, and thirty men were soon at work towing the
vessel towards the bay. The port watch then set
to work to clear the deck. The dead were all
thrown overboard; the others were unbound, made to
strip off their jackets, then bound again and carried
down to the hold, the hatchway being closed on them.
They found that most of the survivors were Greeks,
the Turks having to a man fallen fighting.
“These mixed crews are worst
of all,” one of the Turks said. “The
Turkish pirates are bad enough, and so are the Greeks-there
is little to choose between them; but it is only the
worst desperadoes who will consort together.
You did wrong to spare a man.”
“We could not kill them when
they threw down their arms,” Wilkinson said.
“We will hand them over to your authorities,
either at Smyrna or at Rhodes. They will make
short work of them, I fancy.”
As soon as the first gleam of dawn
appeared in the sky the boats were called alongside.
Those of the Tigress were hoisted up, and the
men in the others were given the jackets of the prisoners,
some having turbans and some the Greek headgear.
These garments had also been stripped from the dead
before the bodies were thrown overboard, and were laid
in a heap in readiness for those on deck to put on
when they approached the bay. When it became
daylight they were not more than a mile and a half
from the islands. The men in the boats had been
warned not to row too regularly; and those on board
had already put on their disguises. As they passed
between two of the islets exclamations of satisfaction
burst from Wilkinson and Edgar, for six vessels were
anchored behind the largest of these. The brig’s
head was turned towards them, and as they approached
shouts of welcome and exultation could be heard from
their crews.
The craft were of various sizes, two
of them were not above thirty tons burden, and each
carried two light guns, the others were from fifty
to a hundred and fifty tons, and carried from six
to twelve guns. The Tigress was within
about four hundred yards of the line when the helm
was put down, as if to take her in between two of the
largest craft. Then Wilkinson, who, with Edgar,
were both in the Turkish disguises, waved his hand
for the men in the boats to come alongside. As
they did so there was a shout of surprise from the
crew of the nearest vessel, for there was no mistaking
the sailors’ white trousers for the baggy integuments
of the Turks. At the same moment the port-holes
opened, the guns were run out, and before the last
man had gained the deck, the ten guns poured in their
broadsides.
By Wilkinson’s orders three
on each side were trained on the craft nearest to
them, the remaining two on each broadside being aimed
at the vessels next to these. The guns had all
been double-shotted, and at the same moment the broadsides
were fired the ensign was run up to the peak.
A wild hubbub of shouts of astonishment, fury, and
alarm rose from the pirate ships, and were re-echoed
by numbers of men belonging to their crews, clustered
on the shore, to see the prize brought in. Some
ran to their guns and began to load them, others jumped
into their boats or sprang overboard and swam towards
the shore. As fast as the guns on board the Tigress
could be loaded the fire was kept up, the forward
ones sweeping the deck of the craft nearest to them
with grape, while the others sent round-shot into
those farther away.
It was but for a short time that the
pirates thought of fighting; their light guns were
no match for the heavy metal of those on board the
brig, and in a quarter of an hour after the first
shot was fired the largest of their craft had been
sunk, and the other five were entirely deserted.
The boats were manned, the brig’s head was first
pulled round until her broadside bore on the shore,
then the anchor was dropped, and the guns on the port
side opened with grape upon the pirates on shore, and
at five or six houses that were perched high on the
rock. Leaving the boatswain in charge, Wilkinson
and Edgar both took their places in the boats and
rowed from ship to ship. All were found empty,
and as they agreed that only two of the largest were
worth taking away, the other three were burned.
When they were fairly on fire the
boats returned to the brig. Not a pirate was
to be seen on the island, though they were sure that
although numbers of them had been killed, there must
still be fully two hundred of them there, but they
must either have hidden among rocks or made their
way down to the seaward face. As several boatloads
might have rowed away to other islets, it was decided
to take a landing party of five-and-thirty men on
shore, for as their operations would be covered by
the guns of the brig, there was little probability
of the pirates attempting to attack them. As
soon as they landed, the sailors, led by the two midshipmen,
climbed rapidly up the hill, and without a shot being
fired approached the houses on the top. From these
a heavy musketry fire suddenly broke out. The
men would have rushed forward at once, but Wilkinson
called out to them to throw themselves down behind
shelter, and as they did so a shell flew overhead,
struck the largest of the houses and exploded.
Shot followed shot rapidly, the fire
of the pirates ceased, then Wilkinson gave the word,
and the sailors leapt up and with a cheer rushed forward.
Save for a few women the houses were entirely deserted,
but some fifty men were seen running down the seaward
face. A couple of volleys were poured into these,
and then, placing a dozen of the men on guard, the
midshipmen entered the houses. The shells had
worked great damage. Over a score of men lay
dead within them, and as many others wounded.
The women had been in the cellars, and they were glad
to find that none of them had been hurt. These
cellars were very extensive, each house having one.
Several of them were crammed with goods of all sorts,
evidently the proceeds of prizes, and of such varied
description that they judged that each house formed
a storehouse to one vessel, as otherwise the more
valuable goods would have been collected together,
instead of sails, ship-gear, bales of valuable silks
and embroideries from Constantinople, Broussa, Smyrna,
Chios, Alexandria, and Syria being mixed promiscuously
together.
Here too were a quantity of European
manufactures, showing that it was not only native
craft that had suffered from their depredations.
There were numbers of barrels of Greek wine, puncheons
of rum, cases of bottled wines of different kinds
evidently taken from English ships, great quantities
of Smyrna figs, and of currants, Egyptian dates, and
sacks of flour.
“This will bring us in a nice
lot of prize-money, Blagrove,” Wilkinson said,
after they had roughly examined the contents of the
great subterranean storehouses. Presently a still
larger find was made. There was, close to the
houses, what appeared to be a well. One of the
sailors let down a bucket, and hauling it up found,
to his surprise, that it was salt water. The
well was deep, but certainly not deep enough to reach
down to the sea level, and he carried the bucket to
Wilkinson and pointed out where he had got the water
from.
“There is something curious
about this,” the latter said. “Lower
me down in the bucket, lads.” As he descended
he saw that the well was an ancient one, and probably
at one time had been carried very much lower than
at present. In some places the masonry had fallen
in. At one of these points there was an opening
cut into the rock. He called to those above to
hoist him up again, and procuring a lamp at one of
the houses, he and Edgar descended together.
Entering the passage they found that it widened into
a great chamber some forty feet square and thirty high,
which was literally crammed with goods.
“I should never have given the
fellows credit for having taken the trouble to cut
out such a place as this,” Wilkinson said.
“I have no doubt that it is
ancient work,” Edgar remarked. “I
should say that at some time, perhaps when the Genoese
were masters here, a castle may have stood above,
and this was cut either as a storehouse or as a place
of confinement for prisoners, or one where the garrison
might hide themselves, with provisions enough to last
for a long time, in case the place was captured.
The pirates may have discovered it in going down to
see if the well could be cleared out, and saw that
it would make a splendid place of concealment.”
“But how about the salt water, Edgar?”
“I should say that they cemented
the bottom or rammed it with clay to make it water-tight,
and that as fresh water was scarce they brought up
sea water, so that anyone who happened to look down
would see that there was water in it. If, as
was probable, it would be the Turks who captured the
place, they would, when they found that it was salt,
not trouble their heads further about the matter.
Possibly even these pirates may know nothing of the
existence of this store, which may have lain here
since the last time the Turks broke up this nest of
pirates, and who, you may be sure, left none of them
alive to tell the tale. Well, this is a find.”
A thorough search was now made of
the island, but it was found that the whole of the
pirates had made their escape in boats. These
had rowed away from the seaward face of the island,
so that they were unseen by those on board the brig.
Before taking any step to carry away the goods, the
other islets were all visited and found to be deserted.
Five or six more magazines of spoil were discovered.
These were emptied of their most valuable contents,
and the houses all burned to the ground. This
operation took two days, and it required six more to
transfer the contents of the cellars and great store
cavern to the brig. Boats had come off on the
first day of their arrival from various villages in
the bay, conveying one or more of the principal inhabitants,
who assured Wilkinson that they had no connection
whatever with the pirates, and that they were extremely
glad that their nest had been destroyed.
Wilkinson had little doubt that, although
they might not have been concerned in the deeds committed
by these men, they must have been in constant communication
with them, and have supplied them with fruit and fresh
meat and vegetables. However, he told them that
he should report their assurances to the Turkish authorities,
who would, when they had a ship of war available,
doubtless send down and inquire into the whole circumstances,
an intimation which caused them considerable alarm,
as they had no doubt that, if no worse befell them,
they would be made to pay heavy fines.
“The only way that you have
to show your earnestness in the matter,” Wilkinson
said, “is to organize yourselves. You have
no doubt plenty of boats, and the first time that
a pirate comes in here row out from all your villages,
attack and burn it, and don’t leave a man alive
to tell the tale. In that way the pirates will
very soon learn that they’d better choose some
other spot for their rendezvous, and the authorities
will be well content with your conduct.”
The amount of spoil taken was so great
that the Tigress, when she set sail again,
was nearly a foot deeper in the water than when she
entered the bay. The prisoners had been the subject
of much discussion. It was agreed that they were
probably no worse than their comrades who had escaped,
and they did not like the thought of handing them over
to be executed. They were, therefore, on the
third day after the arrival of the brig, brought up
on deck. Three dozen lashes were administered
to each, then they were given one of the boats in
which they had attacked the ship, and told to go.