The officer who led the strong boat’s
crew to the rescue, guided by some of Captain Armstrong’s
men who had escaped weeks before and after terrible
privations at last found help, drew back and signed
to his followers.
It was enough. Hats were doffed,
and a strange silence reigned in the gloomy chamber
as Humphrey knelt there holding the dead hand in his
till he was touched upon the shoulder, and looking
up slowly, half-stunned by the event, it was to meet
the pale, drawn face of Bart.
“Do they know, captain?” he whispered,
meaningly.
For a few moments Humphrey did not
realise the import of his question, till he turned
and gazed down once more upon the stern, handsome face
fixing rigidly in death.
“No,” he said quickly,
as he drew a handkerchief from his breast and softly
spread it over the face of the dead. “It
is our secret ours alone.”
“Hah!” sighed Bart, and
he drew back for a moment, and then gave Humphrey
an imploring look before advancing once more, going
down upon his knee, and taking and kissing the cold
hand lying across the motionless breast.
“Captain Humphrey Armstrong,
I think!” said the officer of the rescue party.
“Yes,” said Humphrey, in a dreamy way.
“We were just in time, it seems.”
“Yes,” said Humphrey, with a dazed look.
“I’m glad you are safe, sir; and this
is ”
He had not finished his sentence when
one of Black Mazzard’s men yelled out
“The Commodore our captain sir!”
“Once,” said Humphrey,
roused by the ruffian’s words, and gazing sharply
round; “but one who spared my life, sir, and
with this poor fellow here defended me from that dead
scoundrel and his gang!”
As he spoke he spurned the body of
Black Mazzard, who had hardly stirred since he received
Bart’s bullet.
“I am at your service, Captain
Armstrong,” said the officer, “and will
take my instructions from you.”
“For the wretches taken in arms,
sir, I have nothing to say; but for this poor wounded
fellow I ask proper help and protection. I will
be answerable for him.”
Bart looked at him quickly and reeled
slightly as he limped to his side.
“Thank ye, captain,” he
said. “I ought to hate you, but she loved
you, and that’s enough for me. If I don’t
see you again, sir God bless you and good-bye!”
“But we shall see each other
again, Bart, and I hope here, quick!”
he cried, “help here; the poor fellow is fainting
from loss of blood!”
Bart was borne off to be tended by
the surgeon, and Humphrey Armstrong stood gazing down
at the motionless form at his feet.
He did not speak for some minutes,
and all around respected his sorrow by standing aloof;
but he turned at last to the officer
“I ask honourable burial, sir,
for the dead dead to save my life.”
The officer bowed gravely, and then
turned away to give a few short, sharp orders to his
men, who signed to their prisoners.
These were rapidly marched down to
the boats, two and two, till it came to the turn of
Dinny, who stood with Mrs Greenheys clinging to him,
trembling with dread.
“Now, my fine fellow,”
said the warrant officer who had the prisoners in
charge; “this way.”
“Sure, and ye’ll let me
have a wurrud wid the captain first?”
“No nonsense. Come along!”
“Sure, an’ he’d
like to shpake to me wan wurrud,” said Dinny.
“Wouldn’t ye, sor!”
Humphrey, who was standing with his
arms folded, wrapped in thought, looked up sharply
on hearing the familiar tones of the Irishman’s
voice.
“There, what did I tell ye,
sor?” he cried. “Sure, an’
I’m not a buccaneer by trade only
a prishner.”
Humphrey strode up, for Mrs Greenheys
had run to him with clasped hands.
“I’d take it kindly of
ye, sor, if ye’d explain me position to
these gintlemen that I’m not an inimy,
but a friend.”
“Yes,” said Humphrey,
turning to the officer in command; “a very good
friend to me, sir, and one who would be glad to serve
the king.”
“Or anny wan else who behave dacently to him.”
“Let him tend his companion,”
said Humphrey. “He is a good nurse for
a wounded man.”
Mistress Greenheys caught Humphrey’s hand and
kissed it.
“But she would have betrayed
us,” he said to himself, as he looked down into
the little woman’s tearful face; “still,
it was for the sake of the man she loved.”
That night, covered with the English
flag, which she had so often defied, the so-called
Commodore Junk was borne to the resting-place selected
by Humphrey Armstrong.
It was a solemn scene as the roughly-made
bier was borne by lantern-light through the dark arcade
of the forest, and the sailors looked up wonderingly
at the strange aspect of the mouldering old pile.
But their wonder increased as they
entered the gloomy temple, and the yellow light of
their lanterns fell upon the flag-draped coffin in
the centre, and the weird-looking figures seated round.
Side by side with the remains of her
brother, Mary Dell was laid and then draped with the
same flag, spread by Humphrey Armstrong’s hands,
the picture exciting the wonder of the officer in command,
to whom it all seemed mysterious and strange.
Greater wonder than all, though, was that Humphrey
Armstrong, lately a prisoner of the famous buccaneer
who had been laid to rest, should display such deep
emotion as he slowly left the spot.
As he stepped outside volleys were
fired by the men, and as the reports of the pieces
rumbled through the antique building, and echoed in
the cavernous cenote, the reverberation loosened some
portion of the roof over the vast reservoir; an avalanche
of stone falling with a reverberating hollow splash,
and a great bird flew out and disappeared in the darkness
overhead.
Three days later, laden with the valuable
plunder amassed by the buccaneers, and a vast amount
consigned to the flames in pursuance of the orders
to thoroughly destroy the hornets’-nest, the
rescue ship set sail, in company with the buccaneer’s
fast schooner, the prize Humphrey Armstrong once longed
to take into Dartmouth Harbour. But the sight
of the warship’s consort only gave him pain
now as he lay in his berth or reclined helplessly
on deck, suffering from the serious fever which supervened.
“It’s a curious whim,”
said the captain of the ship to his lieutenant.
“One would have thought he’d rather have
had a couple of decent sailors to tend him, and not
those two fellows, who must have been regular pirates
in their time.”
But it was so. Humphrey Armstrong
was not content without Bart or Dinny at his side
all through his severe illness, which lasted till they
were nearing home.
During the voyage he learned by degrees
the whole history of the escape of the relics of his
crew, consequent upon the division in the camp and
the chaotic state of discipline which obtained among
the buccaneers during the latter days. He heard
more, too, of their struggles to reach a port, and
of the rescue which had been planned and successfully
carried out.
One evening as Humphrey Armstrong
sat on deck wondering to himself that he could be
so changed as to look with distaste upon the western
shores of England, gilded by the evening sun, he became
conscious of another presence close behind, and looking
sharply round it was to see the haggard, worn face
of Bart as he stood there, bent and terribly changed
by mental suffering, and his wounds.
As he saw Humphrey Armstrong gaze
wonderingly at him he raised one hand and pointed
to the dimly-seen cliff line, ruddy in the western
glow.
“Home, sir,” he cried, hoarsely.
“Yes, Bart, home,” said Humphrey, gloomily.
“What are you going to do!”
“You know best, sir. Prison, or the rope!”
Humphrey started sadly, and held out
his hand, which the rough fellow, after a momentary
hesitation, took.
“Bart, my lad,” said Humphrey,
“why not take the old cottage and settle down
to your former life! I should like it if you’d
do this thing. Will you!”
“Will I!” said the poor
fellow in suffocating tones. “God bless
you, sir! You’ve made me happier than
I ever hoped to be again.”
“Take it or buy it, Bart, as
soon as you reach home. I wish it done, only
it is to be kept unchanged, as we two keep her secret.”
A fortnight had passed, during which
period Humphrey Armstrong had kept himself quite in
seclusion, when in obedience to a stern resolve he
journeyed slowly up to town.
He had good excuse for his dilatory
ways, being still far from strong; but now he was
bound on the task of performing what he told himself
was his duty that of going straight to
Lady Jenny Wildersey, confessing every thing in an
open, manly way, and begging her to set him free from
the engagement he had made.
“I could not marry such a woman
now,” he said to himself again and again; “she
would drive me mad!”
It was a hard struggle, but he was
determined to carry it through, and one morning he
crossed the Park and the Mall, and made his way straight
into Saint James’s Square.
Everything looked the same, except
himself, for he was bronzed and worn, and his countenance
displayed a scar. But he was as brightly dressed
as on the day he called to say fare well, for he had
had to attend at the admiral’s to give an account
of his proceedings, and had found, to his surprise,
that not only was the loss of his ship condoned by
the complete rooting out of the buccaneers, but he
had been promoted, and was shortly to engage in another
expedition, this time to the East.
Saint James’s Square looked
just as of old, and the same servant opened to his
hasty knock and met him with a smile.
He had come without sending notice,
and he had made no inquiry since his landing, telling
himself that it was better so; and now, strung up for
his painful task, he strode into the great marble-paved
hall.
“Ask Lady Jenny if she will
see me a private interview,” he said
to the ponderous old butler who came forward as the
footman closed the door.
“Lady Jenny, sir? The
countess is at the lakes with his lordship.”
“The countess! I said Lady Jenny.”
“Yes, sir,” said the old
butler with a smile. “We always speak of
her young ladyship now as the countess.”
“The countess! Why, you don’t mean ”
“Yes, sir; she was married to
the Earl of Winterleyton a year ago, sir. His
lordship’s town house is a hundred and ten Queen
Square, and Hallybury, Bassenthwaite, sir.”
“Oh!” said Humphrey, calmly;
“I have been to the West Indies, and had not
heard the news.”
He nodded good-humouredly to the old
butler, and went off across the square.
“Now, it’s my belief,”
said the old butler, “that he’s another
on ’em as her young ladyship was always a-leading
on!”
“Thank Heaven!” said Humphrey,
with a sigh of relief; and he went and behaved like
an Englishman, for he walked straight to his club,
ordered his dinner, and for the first time for months
thoroughly enjoyed it; while as he sat afterwards
over the remains of his bottle of fine old Carbonell
port a wine that was likely to restore some
of the lost blood to his veins he filled
his glass slowly, thought of his next expedition,
and that it with its earnest work would be the best
remedy for a mind diseased, and made up his mind that
if he could persuade him to leave his newly-made wife
he would have Dinny for one of his men.
“And old Bart, too, if he will
serve,” he said half aloud. Then two or
three times over, as a pretty, powdered-and-painted
image, all silk and gewgaws and flowers, filled his
imagination, “What a release! Thank Heaven!”
At last there was but one glass left
in the bottle, and raising the handled basket in which
it reclined, he carefully poured it out, and held
it up, seeming to see in the candle-lit, ruby rays
a torrid land, a sun-browned face, and two dark, imploring
eyes gazing into his till they grew dewy, and all
around him seemed to be blurred and dim. He was
almost alone in the great club-room, for the various
diners had risen and gone, and for the time being
the long, gloomy place seemed to be the old prison
chamber, with its stone altar and great carven idol
gazing stolidly down upon him as he said softly:
“Mary Dell! True woman! I shall
never love again!”
He drained the glass to the memory
of Commodore Junk, and, stubborn Englishman to the
last, he kept his word.