The Skipper took the gla.s.s from Cynthia and rested it on one of the strong vines which twisted across the window of the cave.
"Two boats are pushing into the stream," the Skipper informed us. "Did you ever see such a fiendish looking lot of ruffians?"
"Do let me see, Uncle. This is the most delightful thing that I ever experienced."
"G.o.d grant that we can keep her in that frame of mind!" I whispered to the Skipper.
He gave me a look full of anxiety as he handed to Cynthia the eagerly desired gla.s.s.
"They are pulling up against the current. Now they"ll come to our bathing place for water," said Cynthia. "Oh, how I wish I had some!"
"If they find our provisions we"re done for," whispered the Skipper in my ear. But, as Providence willed, the men did not disembark upon our side of the stream, or rather the side where we had made our camp, but upon the other, or right bank, if the right bank of a stream is the same as that of a river, the one on your right when you are looking toward its mouth. They hauled their boats up on the shelving beach, and then the man in the stern stood up and gave orders. We could hear him now. He spoke in a singularly musical voice, in a sort of broken English. The others called him Mauresco, as near as we could understand.
It seems incredible that but a few years before the time when I was cast away the United States Government, and the other reputable nations of the earth as well, were paying yearly tribute to the Dey of Algiers. And although peace had been declared in the year 1805, it was a hollow one so far as the roaming bands of pirates were concerned. Many of them made their refuge on the Isle of Pines, and were so strongly intrenched there that it seemed that no one had ever thought of trying to dislodge them.
Vessels started from American ports hoping to arrive at their destinations in spite of these maurauders, and that Captain Schuyler had not been annoyed by them in his southern voyages argues in favour of his luck, and not of his prudence.
The Skipper looked again.
"Those ain"t empty casks," he said. He talked slowly, moving the gla.s.s about as he followed the movements of the landing party. "See how that one thumped down on the beach. I believe I heard it. Bet a red herring to a sperm whale there"s something in those casks!"
"Good Santo Domingo or Jamaica rum, probably," said I.
"Maybe, in some of "em."
I wish that I could describe the strange appearance of those lawless men as they surrounded the casks and rolled them up on the beach. I thought it strange that blue, yellow, green, and purple predominated. There was also the shade which my wife calls pink, but of a rich or darker colour, red or crimson, there was none to be seen. I discovered the reason of this, however, when the third boat put her nose against the beach.
"Those fellows mean to make a night of it," said the Skipper. "Call me a soldier if they don"t."
"Oh, I am so thirsty!" said Cynthia again. She stood leaning against the wall of the cavern close to the opening, peering down, more, I thought, upon the water glancing below than at the strangers. I have been reading of late a very pretty tale written by a gentleman of the name of Irving, and as I read of that wonderful palace of the Moors called the Alhambra, and of the lattice work across the windows from which the court beauties gazed forth, themselves unseen, my mind ran back over fifty years, and I saw Cynthia again, as I saw her that morning, a fairer, sweeter beauty, looking down from her latticed window, than any houri who ever graced the court of Boabdil of Grenada.
"Don"t worry about water, Cynthy, child," said the Skipper. "Sorry you"re thirsty, but they"ll go away presently, and then you can have all you want. If they would only go off a little way, we could make a dash for the boats and row to Floridy."
"Begging your pardon, sir, you forget the schooner, sir," said the Bo"s"n.
"Seem to have a good many men for the size of the schooner." The Skipper remarked this as the boats were pushing into the stream. "I don"t believe they are all crew." And one could see that they were not. The crew were well-fed-looking ruffians, dressed in picturesque fashion after the manner somewhat of their masters, but there were six or eight of the men in the boats who had little clothing, and that of the simplest sort. They looked sad and downcast, and one could see that they must be prisoners, even without discovering the ropes or heavy cords which tied their wrists to the rowlocks where they were seated. They gazed anxiously at the sh.o.r.e, as if they would be glad to rest for a while upon the sweet green gra.s.s.
"How can they live so far off!" said Cynthia, gazing down at the piratical crew in wonder.
"Far off from where?" I asked.
"Why, from Belleville, of course."
For the moment I had forgotten that Belleville was the axis of the earth.
"I wish to G.o.d they were nearer Belleville and farther from us at this moment!" said I fiercely.
"I wish that fool girl had never come away from Belleville at all,"
whispered the Skipper to me. He shook his head anxiously as he stood gazing at Cynthia with a puzzled expression, as if to say, "What will become of her?"
I could not withdraw my eyes from those strange men. From the moment my eye fell upon the one they called Mauresco I hated him with a deadly hatred, and yet I think I never looked upon so comely a man. Tall, well formed, with shoulders like an athlete, you did not take him for a large man, and yet after looking at others and turning again to him he seemed like a giant. After letting your gaze rest on him for a time, and then turning to the others again, they looked like pigmies, their heads contracted, their colour faded, their eyes small and dull. What there was in this man to so fascinate every one with whom he came in contact I do not know. I never got very near to him but on one occasion, and then but for the s.p.a.ce of a few tragic moments, but I found that he left behind him wherever he pa.s.sed a memory that would not die. Mauresco was the finest of his boat"s crew, as far as we could see. His coat, of some greenish colour, was thrown aside, and his fine white shirt was apparently his only covering above the waist. He wore trunk hose and half boots. Upon his head was the broad straw hat of the tropics, and around his waist was a wide green sash, in which were stuck two or three knives. Some pistols lay on the seats in the bows. I suppose that the men had disburdened themselves of these because of the heat of the day.
In each boat there seemed to be a leader, or captain, who was dressed much as was Mauresco. The costumes of the sailor men were a modification of his.
"He"s very handsome," said Cynthia, her eyes glued to the gla.s.s.
"For G.o.d"s sake, don"t speak so loud!" said I.
"He looks like that picture of the Moor we have at home, Uncle. His voice is very sweet. I don"t believe he would do us any harm. Now suppose we throw ourselves upon his mercy, and----"
"Fool!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed the Skipper, and, s.n.a.t.c.hing the gla.s.s, he turned his back upon her. "If you speak a loud word," he whispered fiercely, "I"ll throw you off the cliff."
"I don"t see how that would save my life," whispered Cynthia to me; but her Uncle"s rough words and tones had the desired effect, and we spoke no more aloud.
From the second boat there stepped a young boy of perhaps fourteen years. He had, I thought, a dazed, cowed look. The leader in the second boat was a bluff, red-faced Englishman. He limped and was awkward in his movements, and I saw that he had a wooden leg. He got over the ground, however, as fast as most of the men, and his strength and power even with this drawback made him seem uncanny. He whistled and sang by s.n.a.t.c.hes in a fine barytone voice, which would not have disgraced a concert stage. When this man was not whistling and singing, he was laughing and swearing, which proved a diversion, if not an agreeable one.
As soon as the young man stood up in the boat, he looked anxiously at the burly man.
"After you, my lord," said the burly man, bowing low. "I am nothing but plain Jonas--Captain Jonas, at your service. It"s so long since we had a real lord among us that we don"t quite know how to treat him.--Mauresco, rise up and greet my lord."
The man we now knew as Mauresco half arose and said in his musical voice, as he smiled and showed his handsome teeth:
"I salute you, Lord George."
The boy had a rope round his wrist, which trailed after him as he walked.
"Let me remove that darby, my lord," said Mauresco.
He drew a crooked cimetar from his belt and rose into a sitting posture.
The boy looked shrinkingly at the knife and advanced, trembling and pale.
"Oh, come, come! Have courage, my lad!" said Mauresco. He cut the rope and the boy was free.
"Am I to be left upon this island?" asked the boy, looking at Mauresco anxiously.
"And why should we leave Lord George Trevelyan upon this island? To wander to the interior, and tell King Christophe that this is one of our stopping places?"
"How am I to be killed, then? Am I to be made to walk out upon that dreadful plank?" The boy shuddered, as if he had lately witnessed that dread execution. "Tell me my fate, Captain. I can bear it, only tell me."
"No, no! We have another plan for you, Lord George. We will take you back to the coast of England. We will stand in near the estate of your mother, the countess, some late evening. Then you shall write her a letter asking the ransom that I shall dictate, unless, indeed, the Admiral of the Red demands more."
"You mistake my position," said the boy. "My mother is not a rich woman, even though she has a t.i.tle. She is not a countess, she----"
"But your brother is a lord."
"Yes, but I am not. I have no money in my own right, and never shall have. If I had, I would promise it all to you if you would take me home or to any civilized land."
"Lady Trevelyan could raise the money, and then----"
"She could raise next to nothing, Captain. The estates have been enc.u.mbered for years. She is trying to pay off the indebtedness before my brother comes of age; she----"