RED RINGAN.
Once at Edinburgh College I had read
the Latin tale of Apuleius, and the beginning stuck
in my memory: “Thraciam ex negotio petebam” “I
was starting off for Thrace on business.”
That was my case now. I was about to plunge into
a wild world for no more startling causes than that
I was a trader who wanted to save my pocket. It
is to those who seek only peace and a quiet life that
adventures fall; the homely merchant, jogging with
his pack train, finds the enchanted forest and the
sleeping princess; and Saul, busily searching for his
father’s asses, stumbles upon a kingdom.
“What seek ye with Ringan?”
Mercer asked, when we had sat down inside with locked
doors.
“The man’s name is Ninian
Campbell,” I said, somewhat puzzled.
“Well, it’s the same thing.
What did they teach you at Lesmahagow if ye don’t
know that Ringan is the Scots for Ninian? Lord
bless me, laddie, don’t tell me ye’ve
never heard of Red Ringan?”
To be sure I had; I had heard of little
else for a twelvemonth. In every tavern in Virginia,
when men talked of the Free Companions, it was the
name of Red Ringan that came first to their tongues.
I had been too occupied by my own affairs to listen
just then to fireside tales, but I could not help
hearing of this man’s exploits. He was a
kind of leader of the buccaneers, and by all accounts
no miscreant like Cosh, but a mirthful fellow, striking
hard when need be, but at other times merciful and
jovial. Now I set little store by your pirate
heroes. They are for lads and silly girls and
sots in an ale-house, and a merchant can have no kindness
for those who are the foes of his trade. So when
I heard that the man I sought was this notorious buccaneer
I showed my alarm by dropping my jaw.
Mercer laughed. “I’ll
not conceal from you that you take a certain risk
in going to Ringan. Ye need not tell me your business,
but it should be a grave one to take you down to the
Carolina keys. There’s time to draw back,
if ye want; but you’ve brought me the master
word, and I’m bound to set you on the road.
Just one word to ye, Mr. Garvald. Keep a stout
face whatever you see, for Ringan has a weakness for
a bold man. Be here the morn at sunrise, and
if ye’re wise bring no weapon. I’ll
see to the boat and the provisioning.”
I was at the water-side next day at
cock-crow, while the mist was still low on the river.
Mercer was busy putting food and a keg of water into
a light sloop, and a tall Indian was aboard redding
out the sails. My travels had given me some knowledge
of the red tribes, and I spoke a little of their language,
but this man was of a type not often seen in the Virginian
lowlands. He was very tall, with a skin clear
and polished like bronze, and, unlike the ordinary
savage, his breast was unmarked, and his hair unadorned.
He was naked to the waist, and below wore long leather
breeches, dyed red, and fringed with squirrels’
tails. In his wampum belt were stuck a brace of
knives and a tomahawk. It seemed he knew me,
for as I approached he stood up to his full height
and put his hands on his forehead. “Brother,”
he said, and his grave eyes looked steadily into mine.
Then I remembered. Some months
before I had been riding back the road from Green
Springs, and in a dark, woody place had come across
an Indian sore beset by three of the white scum which
infested the river-side. What the quarrel was
I know not, but I liked little the villainous look
of the three, and I liked much the clean, lithe figure
of their opponent. So I rode my horse among them,
and laid on to them with the butt of my whip.
They had their knives out, but I managed to disarm
the one who attacked me, and my horse upset a second,
while the Indian, who had no weapon but a stave, cracked
the head of the last. I got nothing worse than
a black eye, but the man I had rescued bled from some
ugly cuts which I had much ado stanching. He shook
hands with me gravely when I had done, and vanished
into the thicket. He was a Seneca Indian, and
I wondered what one of that house was doing in the
Tidewater.
Mercer told me his name. “Shalah
will take you to the man you ken. Do whatever
he tells you, Mr. Garvald, for this is a job in which
you’re nothing but a bairn.” We pushed
off, the Indian taking the oars, and in five minutes
James Town was lost in the haze.
On the Surrey shore we picked up a
breeze, and with the ebbing tide made good speed down
the estuary. Shalah the Indian had the tiller,
and I sat luxuriously in the bows, smoking my cob
pipe, and wondering what the next week held in store
for me. The night before I had had qualms about
the whole business, but the air of morning has a trick
of firing my blood, and I believe I had forgotten
the errand which was taking me to the Carolina shores.
It was enough that I was going into a new land and
new company. Last night I had thought with disfavour
of Red Ringan the buccaneer; that morning I thought
only of Ninian Campbell, with whom I had forgathered
on a Glasgow landing.
My own thoughts kept me silent, and
the Indian never opened his mouth. Like a statue
he crouched by the tiller, with his sombre eyes looking
to the sea. That night, when we had rounded Cape
Henry in fine weather, we ran the sloop into a little
bay below a headland, and made camp for the night
beside a stream of cold water. Next morning it
blew hard from the north, and in a driving rain we
crept down the Carolina coast. One incident of
the day I remember. I took in a reef or two, and
adjusted the sheets, for this was a game I knew and
loved. The Indian watched me closely, and made
a sign to me to take the helm. He had guessed
that I knew more than himself about the handling of
a boat in wind, and since we were in an open sea,
where his guidance was not needed, he preferred to
trust the thing to me. I liked the trait in him,
for I take it to be a mark of a wise man that he knows
what he can do, and is not ashamed to admit what he
cannot.
That evening we had a cold bed; but
the storm blew out in the night, and the next day
the sun was as hot as summer, and the wind a point
to the east. Shalah once again was steersman,
for we were inside some very ugly reefs, which I took
to be the beginning of the Carolina keys. On
shore forests straggled down to the sea, so that sometimes
they almost had their feet in the surf; but now and
then would come an open, grassy space running far
inland. These were, the great savannahs where
herds of wild cattle and deer roamed, and where the
Free Companions came to fill their larders. It
was a wilder land than the Tidewater, for only once
did we see a human dwelling. Far remote on the
savannahs I could pick out twirls of smoke rising
into the blue weather, the signs of Indian hunting
fires. Shalah began now to look for landmarks,
and to take bearings of a sort. Among the maze
of creeks and shallow bays which opened on the land
side it needed an Indian to pick out a track.
The sun had all but set when, with
a grunt of satisfaction, he swung round the tiller
and headed shorewards. Before me in the twilight
I saw only a wooded bluff which, as we approached,
divided itself into two. Presently a channel
appeared, a narrow thing about as broad as a cable’s
length, into which the wind carried us. Here it
was very dark, the high sides with their gloomy trees
showing at the top a thin line of reddening sky.
Shalah hugged the starboard shore, and as the screen
of the forest caught the wind it weakened and weakened
till it died away, and we moved only with the ingoing
tide. I had never been in so eery a place.
It was full of the sharp smell of pine trees, and as
I sniffed the air I caught the savour of wood smoke.
Men were somewhere ahead of us in the gloom.
Shalah ran the sloop into a little
creek so overgrown with vines that we had to lie flat
on the thwarts to enter. Then, putting his mouth
to my ear, he spoke for the first time since we had
left James Town. “It is hard to approach
the Master, and my brother must follow me close as
the panther follows the deer. Where Shalah puts
his foot let my brother put his also. Come.”
He stepped from the boat to the hill-side,
and with incredible speed and stillness began to ascend.
His long, soft strides were made without noise or
effort, whether the ground were moss, or a tangle of
vines, or loose stones, or the trunks of fallen trees,
I had prided myself on my hill-craft, but beside the
Indian I was a blundering child, I might have made
shift to travel as fast, but it was the silence of
his progress that staggered me, I plunged, and slipped,
and sprawled, and my heart was bursting before the
ascent ceased, and we stole to the left along the
hill shoulder.
Presently came a gap in the trees,
and I looked down in the last greyness of dusk on
a strange and beautiful sight. The channel led
to a landlocked pool, maybe a mile around, and this
was as full of shipping as a town’s harbour.
The water was but a pit of darkness, but I could make
out the masts rising into the half light, and I counted
more than twenty vessels in that port. No light
was shown, and the whole place was quiet as a grave.
We entered a wood of small hemlocks,
and I felt rather than saw the ground slope in front
of us. About two hundred feet above the water
the glen of a little stream shaped itself into a flat
cup, which was invisible from below, and girdled on
three sides by dark forest. Here we walked more
freely, till we came to the lip of the cup, and there,
not twenty paces below me, I saw a wonderful sight.
The hollow was lit with the glow of a dozen fires,
round which men clustered. Some were busy boucanning
meat for ship’s food, some were cooking supper,
some sprawled in idleness, and smoked or diced.
The night had now grown very black around us, and
we were well protected, for the men in the glow had
their eyes dazed, and could not spy into the darkness.
We came very close above them, so that I could hear
their talk. The smell of roasting meat pricked
my hunger, and I realized that the salt air had given
me a noble thirst. They were common seamen from
the pirate vessels, and, as far as I could judge,
they had no officer among them. I remarked their
fierce, dark faces, and the long knives with which
they slashed and trimmed the flesh for their boucanning.
Shalah touched my hand, and I followed
him into the wood. We climbed again, and from
the tinkle of the stream on my left I judged that we
were ascending to a higher shelf in the glen.
The Indian moved very carefully, as noiseless as the
flight of an owl, and I marvelled at the gift.
In after days I was to become something of a woodsman,
and track as swiftly and silently as any man of my
upbringing. But I never mastered the Indian art
by which the foot descending in the darkness on something
that will crackle checks before the noise is made.
I could do it by day, when I could see what was on
the ground, but in the dark the thing was beyond me.
It is an instinct like a wild thing’s, and possible
only to those who have gone all their days light-shod
in the forest.
Suddenly the slope and the trees ceased,
and a new glare burst on our eyes. This second
shelf was smaller than the first, and as I blinked
at the light I saw that it held about a score of men.
Torches made of pine boughs dipped in tar blazed at
the four corners of the assembly, and in the middle
on a boulder a man was sitting. He was speaking
loudly, and with passion, but I could not make him
out. Once more Shalah put his mouth to my ear,
with a swift motion like a snake, and whispered, “The
Master.”
We crawled flat on our bellies round
the edge of the cup. The trees had gone, and
the only cover was the long grass and the low sumach
bushes. We moved a foot at a time, and once the
Indian turned in his tracks and crawled to the left
almost into the open. My sense of smell, as sharp
almost as a dog’s, told me that horses were picketed
in the grass in front of us. Our road took us
within, hearing of the speaker, and though I dared
not raise my head, I could hear the soft Highland voice
of my friend. He seemed now to be speaking humorously,
for a laugh came from the hearers.
Once at the crossing of a little brook,
I pulled a stone into the water, and we instantly
lay as still as death. But men preoccupied with
their own concerns do not keep anxious watch, and our
precautions were needless. Presently we had come
to the far side of the shelf abreast of the boulder
on which he sat who seemed to be the chief figure.
Now I could raise my head, and what I saw made my
eyes dazzle.
Red Ringan sat on a stone with a naked
cutlass across his knees. In front stood a man,
the most evil-looking figure that I had ever beheld.
He was short but very sturdily built, and wore a fine
laced coat not made for him, which hung to his knees,
and was stretched tight at the armpits. He had
a heavy pale face, without hair on it. His teeth
had gone, all but two buck-teeth which stuck out at
each corner of his mouth, giving him the look of a
tusker. I could see his lips moving uneasily
in the glare of the pine boughs, and his eyes darted
about the company as if seeking countenance.
Ringan was speaking very gravely,
with his eyes shining like sword points. The
others were every make and manner of fellow, from
well-shaped and well-clad gentlemen to loutish seamen
in leather jerkins. Some of the faces were stained
dark with passion and crime, some had the air of wild
boys, and some the hard sobriety of traders.
But one and all were held by the dancing eyes of the
man that spoke.
“What is the judgment,”
he was saying, “of the Free Companions?
By the old custom of the Western Seas I call upon
you, gentlemen all, for your decision.”
Then I gathered that the evil-faced
fellow had offended against some one of their lawless
laws, and was on his trial.
No one spoke for a moment, and then
one grizzled seaman raised his hand, “The dice
must judge,” he said. “He must throw
for his life against the six.”
Another exclaimed against this.
“Old wives’ folly,” he cried, with
an oath. “Let Cosh go his ways, and swear
to amend them. The Brethren of the Coast cannot
be too nice in these little matters. We are not
pursy justices or mooning girls.”
But he had no support. The verdict
was for the dice, and a seaman brought Ringan a little
ivory box, which he held out to the prisoner.
The latter took it with shaking hand, as if he did
not know how to use it.
“You will cast thrice,”
said Ringan. “Two even throws, and you are
free.”
The man fumbled a little and then cast. It fell
a four.
A second time he threw, and the dice lay five.
In that wild place, in the black heart
of night, the terror of the thing fell on my soul.
The savage faces, the deadly purpose in Ringan’s
eyes, the fumbling miscreant before him, were all heavy
with horror. I had no doubt that Cosh was worthy
of death, but this cold and merciless treatment froze
my reason. I watched with starting eyes the last
throw, and I could not hear Ringan declare it.
But I saw by the look on Cosh’s face what it
had been.
“It is your privilege to choose
your manner of death and to name your successor,”
I heard Ringan say.
But Cosh did not need the invitation.
Now that his case was desperate, the courage in him
revived. He was fully armed, and in a second he
had drawn a knife and leaped for Ringan’s throat.
Perhaps he expected it, perhaps he
had learned the art of the wild beast so that his
body was answerable to his swiftest wish. I do
not know, but I saw Cosh’s knife crash on the
stone and splinter, while Ringan stood by his side.
“You have answered my question,”
he said quietly. “Draw your cutlass, man.
You have maybe one chance in ten thousand for your
life.”
I shut my eyes as I heard the steel
clash. Then very soon came silence. I looked
again, and saw Ringan wiping his blade on a bunch of
grass, and a body lying before him.
He was speaking speaking,
I suppose, about the successor to the dead man, whom
two negroes had promptly removed. Suddenly at
my shoulder Shalah gave the hoot of an owl, followed
at a second’s interval by a second and a third.
I suppose it was some signal agreed with Ringan, but
at the time I thought the man had gone mad.
I was not very sane myself. What
I had seen had sent a cold grue through me, for
I had never before seen a man die violently, and the
circumstances of the place and hour made the thing
a thousandfold more awful. I had a black fright
on me at that whole company of merciless men, and
especially at Ringan, whose word was law to them.
Now the worst effect of fear is that it obscures good
judgment, and makes a man in desperation do deeds
of a foolhardiness from which at other times he would
shrink. All I remembered in that moment was that
I had to reach Ringan, and that Mercer had told me
that the safest plan was to show a bold front.
I never remembered that I had also been bidden to follow
Shalah, nor did I reflect that a secret conclave of
pirates was no occasion to choose for my meeting.
With a sudden impulse I forced myself to my feet,
and stalked, or rather shambled, into the light.
“Ninian,” I cried, “Ninian
Campbell! I’m here to claim your promise.”
The whole company turned on me, and
I was gripped by a dozen hands and flung on the ground.
Ringan came forward to look, but there was no recognition
in his eyes. Some one cried out, “A spy!”
and there was a fierce murmur of voices, which were
meaningless to me, for fear had got me again, and
I had neither ears nor voice. Dimly it seemed
that he gave some order, and I was trussed up with
ropes. Then I was conscious of being carried
out of the glare of torches into the cool darkness.
Presently I was laid in some kind of log-house, carpeted
with fir boughs, for the needles tickled my face.
Bit by bit my senses came back to
me, and I caught hold of my vagrant courage.
A big negro in seaman’s clothes
with a scarlet sash round his middle was squatted
on the floor watching me by the light of a ship’s
lantern. He had a friendly, foolish face, and
I remember yet how he rolled his eyeballs.
“I won’t run away,”
I said, “so you might slacken these ropes and
let me breathe easy.”
Apparently he was an accommodating
gaoler, for he did as I wished.
“And give me a drink,”
I said, “for my tongue’s like a stick.”
He mixed me a pannikin of rum and
water. Perhaps he hocussed it, or maybe ’twas
only the effect of spirits on a weary body; but three
minutes after I had drunk I was in a heavy sleep.