The boy was pale and haggard and so
weak he could hardly stand alone, but he looked about
him with an eager grin as Tom and Jeremy helped him
toward the companion.
“Why,” he gasped, “here’s
old Job! What’s he doing up here!”
as the latter strode aft to seize his hand.
“Ay, lad,” laughed the
big mariner, a mighty relief showing in his face,
“we’re all your friends aboard here.
But how came those devils to let you off so easy?
We figured we’d have to fight to get you, and
mighty lucky to do it at that!”
The schooner had come into the wind
again and was heading westward in pursuit of the pirate,
now hidden in the murk ahead. Bob was helped to
the cabin and propped up in a bunk while his friends
hastened to get some dry clothes on him. A pull
of brandy stopped his shivering.
“I thought none of you would
ever see me alive,” he said soberly. “But,
Job, before I tell you all about it, are you sure you’ve
lost sight of Daggs’ sloop? They were worried
about your shooting, and figured the only chance they
had was to set me adrift and then get away in the
dirty weather, while you were fishing me out.
They’d never have given me up if that second
shot hadn’t mighty near gone through and through
the old Revenge.”
“The Revenge!”
said Job. “I thought I knew the cut of that
big mainsail, and she was painted black, too!
Well, their trick succeeded. Just this minute
we’d have no more chance of finding ’em
than a needle in a haystack. But it may clear
again before night, and then we’ll see!
Go ahead now and spin your yarn, my lad!”
And Bob, swigging hot tea and munching
a biscuit, began once more to tell his story.
“After we separated, and started
to run, up on the hill that night,” he said,
“I seemed to lose all my sense of direction for
a while. I was scared for one thing, I’ll
freely admit. When I saw Daggs’ face in
the torchlight leaning over us, there by the treasure
barrel, it frightened me pretty nearly out of my senses.
So I started to run, without an idea of where I was
going, and by the time I got my wits back, I couldn’t
tell just where I was, in the rain and the dark.
I seemed to be right on top of the ridge, but I had
zig-zagged several times, I remembered, and when I
tried to figure which side of the hill I should go
down, I couldn’t for the life of me decide.
Finally I said to myself, ’Here, don’t
be a fool! Which way was the wind blowing when
we set out from the shack? Aha, it was north,’
says I. ’Very well, then, this must be the
way to the cabin straight into the wind,’
And down the hill I started, bearing over to my right,
so as to come out just above the sheep-pen.”
“But ” interrupted
Jeremy, “when that storm came up the wind backed
clear round into the south ”
“I know it now,” Bob answered,
“but I didn’t then. I kept right on,
tickled that I was out of it so well, and wondering
where the rest of you had gotten to. Pretty soon
I came to some low land that I didn’t remember,
but I saw a light off ahead and to my right, and decided
that was the cabin. I blundered along through
the trees till I was quite close, and then I discovered
that the light came from a bonfire. I stopped
for a second, puzzled, for I was sure I must be near
the cabin. I wondered if the pirates had captured
it. I stole up still closer and watched the light
and presently a buccaneer walked in front of it.
“That was enough for me.
I turned and started to run. And at about the
third step I fell plump into the arms of a pirate.
You see I had walked straight toward their part of
the island by making that silly mistake.
“This fellow got a grip on my
collar, and I couldn’t break loose, though I’ll
warrant his shins are tender yet, where I kicked him.
He hauled me down to the fire, and he and three others
who were there looked me over. The one that had
caught me was a big mulatto as ugly-looking
a customer as I ever saw. And the others were
no lambs. I’ll tell you, my hearties, Daggs
has gathered up a pretty lot of rascals in this crew.
Not one of ’em but looks as if he’d knife
you for a copper farthing!
“These four by the fire wasted
no time, but went through my pockets in a hurry.
They took my pistol and were quarreling about dividing
the goldpieces I had, when the rest of the crowd began
to appear. They were all wet, and in a bad temper
for a dozen other reasons. Plenty of curses came
my way, but no one laid a hand on me, for they had
a mighty fear of Pharaoh Daggs. When he finally
came, he swore at them till they slunk around like
whipped curs.
“He was in an ugly mood that
night. Seemingly he was disappointed in the amount
of treasure they had found. Besides that, they
had come on one of their best men with his head beaten
in, and you and your father had gotten clean away.
Things looked black enough for me, I can tell you.
“Daggs and the mulatto, who
is his mate, started in to question me, after they
had grumbled awhile. They knew already how many
of you there were at the cabin, but they asked about
your guns and supplies. Of course, I didn’t
make the stronghold any weaker in the telling.
When they had all the information they thought they
could get out of me, they held a sort of council.
Some wanted to go right over before light and attack
the cabin. Others were for broaching a barrel
of rum first, and making thorough preparations.
Finally Daggs decided to put it off until they could
get some pitch and dry grass ready, so as to set fire
to the roof.
“It was nearly daylight by this
time, and they started back through the reeds toward
their sloop, leading me along with them. We travelled
half a mile or so, down a crooked black trail only
wide enough for one man at a time, and ankle deep
in the mud of the swamp. When we reached the
schooner they stuck a pair of handcuffs on me and put
me down on the ballast. In spite of the filth
and the cold I was so dog-tired that I tumbled on
the nearest pile of old chains and went to sleep.
“I woke up late in the afternoon,
and I don’t think I was ever so stiff and uncomfortable
and hungry in my life. I made my way over to the
hatch and found I could reach the combing with my
hands, so I pulled myself up, after a mighty hard
tussle. Try it some time with your hands tied!
“Most of the pirates were forward
in their bunks, but one who was keeping watch on deck
took pity on me and gave me a couple of biscuits and
a swig of water. He was more or less talkative,
besides, and from him I learned that Daggs planned
to start about midnight for your side of the island,
carrying buckets of pitch and tinder, so as to roast
you out.
“As you may imagine, this kind
of talk nearly turned me sick with fear, and right
in the midst of it Pharaoh Daggs came on deck.
“He had that empty sort of glare
in his eyes that we used to see sometimes when he
was drunk. Of course, he walked straight and even,
but as he came over toward us, with his teeth showing
and his eyes fixed on a point just above the pirate’s
shoulder, I almost yelled ‘Look out!’ If
I had, it might have cost me my life right there.
He walked along, light on his toes like a cat, till
he stood two feet from us. Then, so fast I hardly
knew what happened, he hit the other man on the chin
with his fist. That was all. The man dropped
with his head back against the rail. And Daggs
went off, chuckling to himself but not making any noise.
I don’t think he saw me at all, for his attack
was more like the work of a mad dog than of a man.
“I crept away and got below
decks as fast as might be, and there I stayed hidden
till after dark, when some of the buccaneers rousted
me out. A keg of rum had been opened in the waist,
and the liquor was going freely. Most of the
crew were already drunk, but they had the sense to
chain me by one leg to the foremast, and then made
me run back and forth between them and the barrel.
I was only too glad. No cannikin was skimped
while I was at the spigot. I looked around and
remembered some of the wild nights we had seen on
the old Revenge. And then for the first
time I realized that the deck I stood on was the same!
They’d gotten hold of the old black sloop when
she was auctioned at Charles Town, patched up her
bottom and here she was buccaneering once
more! Where the gang of cut-throats aboard her
were gathered, I don’t know, but they put Stede
Bonnet’s famous crew to shame.
“Pharaoh Daggs was somewhere
ashore with two of the crew till nearly midnight.
When he returned, the rest were lying like pigs about
the deck. He had sobered slightly enough
to remember the night’s undertaking but
it was useless to think of rousing those sots to any
sort of endeavor. He kicked one or two of them
savagely with his heavy boot, too, but it got hardly
more than a grunt from them.
“He stood there cursing for
a minute, then came over and looked at the shackle
that held me to the foremast-foot, and shook it to
make sure it was solid before he went below.
He had something done up in a cloth that he held mighty
tenderly, and he seemed in a better humor.
“I curled up on the deck and
by wrapping myself in a greatcoat which I found beside
one of the drunken pirates, succeeded in keeping reasonably
warm.
“When morning came Daggs and
his mulatto mate managed to wake most of the men and
forced them to get out and forage for wood and water,
while they themselves crossed the ridge to reconnoitre.
I think it was about two hours after sunrise when
those of us who stayed aboard the sloop saw figures
running down the hill. The buccaneers got out
boarding-pikes and picked up cutlasses, but in a moment
Daggs reached the side, out of breath with his haste.
“‘There’s a ten-gun
schooner in the northern cove!’ he cried.
’They’re landing a boat now. We haven’t
any time to lose the tide’s past full
already! Cut those moorings!’
“The hemp lines were slashed
through with cutlasses and the men, with one accord,
jumped to the push-holes. The sloop was on an
even keel and just off the bottom. A few strong
shoves started her down the creek.
“My hopes of escaping began
to go down, for there I was, still chained to the
fore-stick like a cow put out to grass. I looked
around me in desperation, for I wanted to leave you
some sign at least of my whereabouts. Then my
eye fell on a little heap of small arms that had been
thrown down near the forehatch. The pistols were
useless to me, as I had no powder, but among them
I saw the bright silver mountings of my own the
one that used to be Stede Bonnet’s.
“We were drawing near the creek
mouth, and those of the crew who were not at the poles
were busy unfurling the sails. I picked the pistol
up unobserved and waited till we were just hauling
clear of the creek. Then I threw it overside
and saw it strike in the mud. Did you find it?”
“Yes,” said Jeremy.
“That’s how we knew for certain that you’d
been captured.”
“Well,” the Delaware boy
went on, “there’s not much more to tell.
The pirates made all sail to the southwest, but after
we cleared the islands, there you were, roaring along
in our wake. Daggs thought that the Revenge
was a faster sailer than your craft, but he found he
couldn’t keep her as close to the wind on this
tack. I don’t think he wants to fight if
he can help it, but he was getting desperate this
afternoon before the weather began to thicken up.
I heard him tell the mate he’d rather come to
broadside grips than risk having you drop a shot through
the black sloop’s bottom with that bowchaser.
Then the mist started to come over, and I guess Daggs
saw his chance right away. He called the crew
aft and told them what he was going to do, and a moment
later I found myself being lowered in a boat into that
wicked sea. I thought they were trying to drown
me out of hand, till they gave me a piece of white
cloth to wave. Then I got an inkling of their
idea.
“Sure enough, no sooner was
I fairly adrift than I saw you put over in my direction,
and thinking Jeremy might be aboard, I gave him our
old signal. It worked, and here I am safe enough.
But meanwhile those devils have got off into the mist,
and it’ll be hard to follow them.”
Job sat thoughtful, pulling at his
pipe. He seemed to be cogitating some of the
points in Bob’s narrative, and the others kept
silent, unwilling to interrupt him. At length
he blew a great cloud of blue smoke toward the deck-beams
above and turning to the boy, asked, “Did Daggs
or any of the rest ever speak of the place where they
were going?”
“They never talked about it
openly,” Bob replied, “but from words
dropped now and then by the mulatto mate I figured
they were heading down for the Spanish Islands.
I don’t think they intend putting in anywhere
first, unless they land for water in one of those out
of the way inlets along the Jersey coast.”
Job nodded. “That’s
about as I thought,” he answered. “So
we’ll hold on this tack till nightfall we’re
just off the Kennebec, now and then we’ll
run sou’-sou’east before the wind, to clear
Cape Cod. Daggs if he figgers as I
would in his place won’t start to
leeward right away, for he’d rather have us
in front of him than behind. And unless I’m
much mistaken he’s in too much of a hurry to
waste time in doubling back up the coast. All
right Bob, lad, you’ll be wanting sleep now,
so we’ll leave you. On deck with you, boys!”
And tucking the blankets about the
drowsy youngster in the bunk, Job led the way to the
companion.