"Don"t mention the name, sir, don"t! It"s uncanny, sir! After that, sir, I couldn"t return. You don"t blame----"
"You"re no use at all, Bo"s"n. You might better have gone with the pirates. Where are they, by the way?"
"Gone," said the Bo"s"n, with a return of his confident tone. "Gone like the morning dew."
I looked at him in amazement as he stretched his arm toward the latticed opening and waved it toward the sea.
I remembered hearing the Skipper speak of the Bo"s"n as "that dam poetry cuss!" What a broken reed he was! The Skipper came slowly into the cave now, upholding and almost carrying the young English lad, and we turned our attention to him.
Lacelle came also from the back just then, and I asked her how Cynthia was. She answered what sounded like "No compre," which the Bo"s"n translated as meaning "No comprehendy," and I suppose he was right. I never was much of a hand at foreign languages.
The Skipper went into his niece"s room. He came back, looking very mournful. He shook his head sadly.
"She don"t move," said he. "She lays there just so."
"It"s that dam Minion," said the Bo"s"n, "begging your pardon, sir. He took her on what he called a voyage. I suppose he meant of discovery. I heard her shriek way in here, and then the two came runnin", and I believe she"s been so ever sence."
The Captain went to the window and parted the screen of leaves boldly.
He saw me start, So short a time does it take for a habit to become fixed that it seemed to me as if we must still be cautious about the strangers below.
"Oh, you needn"t be so terrible afraid!" said the Skipper. "They went out in the night. There was lots of firing. I shouldn"t wonder if something attacked "em. We heard a great whooping, and they rushed right down the hill, as if some of those ghosts was after "em. They scrambled into their boats in a mighty hurry, and we saw the flash of the powder as they fired, and then we saw two ships racing out to sea. One was running away from the other. Don"t know which, but, thank G.o.d, they"re gone!"
"Yes, thank G.o.d!" said I.
"Did that dam" ghost fellow show you the way in again?" asked the Skipper.
"No," said I.
"Did me! I"m gettin" a little tired of him. Think I"ll shoot next time he comes round."
"You might create a ghost instead of getting rid of one," said I warningly. "I don"t think I"d shoot him. He seems a very kindly disposed ghost. He has done us only favours thus far."
"That"s so," said the Skipper. "Don"t you want some rest?"
In answer I stretched myself upon the ground. Although it was early morning, there was little or no light in the cave. Seeing me lie down, the Bo"s"n said that while I took a rest he would prepare some food.
"I can go down the hill now, Mr. Jones, sir. There is nothing to fear."
I was weary in mind and body, and I turned over to lay my head upon my arm. As I did so there came a faint sound as of a footstep, and I saw Cynthia approaching. She seemed like herself. She walked with her eyes open, and advanced with confidence. I arose to my feet at once.
"Are you better?" I asked.
"S-h-h-h!" said the Skipper, his warning finger upraised.
Cynthia started at the sound of my voice, put her hand to her head, rubbed her eyes and opened them. They fell upon my face. A smile of recognition overspread her features as she raised her eyes to mine, when a shout of terror filled the chamber. It came from the Bo"s"n. The others sprang up, and with me followed with their gaze the direction of his pointed finger. We each, I think, emitted a sound of some kind, all but the English lad, who was still sleeping.
I can see the Bo"s"n now, his hair standing on end, his arms raised across his forehead. Cynthia fell back into my arms and pinioned me against the wall, for it was a sight which made the other occupants of the cave fall each one upon his face.
CHAPTER X.
THE MINION POINTS A MORAL, ALTHOUGH HE DOES NOT ADORN A TALE.
Those who have never pa.s.sed through days of wearing suspense, days of anxiety, days when water was scarce and food more so, days when, as in my case and the lad"s, we were in danger of death, and, in fact, were very near to his dread presence--I say that those who have never suffered these things can not imagine how wracked and torn one"s nerves become with a combination of such disagreeables and horrors. The scarcity of food was not a horror, but certainly the experience in the great hall had been more than disagreeable. We were weakened mentally and physically, so that it is not to be wondered at that we all showed overpowering signs of terror at the sight which now met our eyes. The pa.s.sage was dark in itself, but there stood a little way down, amid its sombre gloom, the skeleton of the Chief Justice. I had heard him tossed, a ma.s.s of bones, into the corner, and here he was, standing erect as he had been in life, come to ask me, doubtless, what I had done with that last house of which I had deprived him. You will wonder how we could discover him in that darkened interior. But he shone refulgent. He brought his light with him, as it were, and it seemed to flood his body, and glisten and scintillate from all his whitening bones. His teeth appeared to grin at us, as if he were enjoying the ghastly joke. His head waggled from side to side, and the sockets of his eyes emitted a fiendish light. His legs trembled and his toes touched the ground. They seemed to dance--a dance of death. The Skipper and the Bo"s"n had fallen p.r.o.ne upon the floor of the cave. Lacelle had shrieked and fled away, and I was left to support the form of the unconscious girl.
Suddenly the light was extinguished. I heard several sharp blows and a sobbing sigh. Then a sound as if the skeleton himself was fleeing down the corridor in terror as great of us as ours of him. There was a rattling of bones, as if again they had sunk down into an inanimate heap.
"For G.o.d"s sake, let us get out of this accursed place!" whispered the Skipper as the noise died away. The Bo"s"n raised his head and opened his eyes, as if he feared to see again the grewsome sight. The Skipper crawled along the floor and whispered in my ear a second time:
"For G.o.d"s sake, let us get away!"
"Do you think I want to stay here, Captain?" I asked.
"You"d better give me that girl," suggested the Skipper, rising. "I s"pose you don"t mind holding----"
I laid Cynthia in the Captain"s arms.
"She"s pretty solid," said he, as her senseless form pressed with all its weight against his breast. "S"pose you help me carry her inside."
Without a word I put my arms around her shoulders.
Lacelle hovered near with a candle end. It looked to me like one of those I had seen in the great hall. We carried the dear girl through the archway and into her own chamber. We placed her upon the blanket and pillow which Lacelle had got ready. As I laid her head gently down it turned to one side, the chain which I had seen slipped out of her neck band, and the serpent ring and the locket were exposed to view. The serpent"s eyes emitted two red sparks--a baleful light it seemed, but I cared little for that. Something else had caught my eye. Something pleasurable at last amid all this misery. The locket had fallen open, and encircled within its golden rim I saw a face, one that I had not often seen, it is true, yet one that I recognised. It was my own.
I motioned to the Skipper to replace the chain and ring, for I knew that Lacelle would take fright again at the sight of the strange bauble. I felt also that Cynthia would be enraged if she learned that any one had seen the face within the locket. I snapped the cover to, even as I saw it, and then the Skipper came to do what I asked of him. He stood between me and Cynthia, and bending over her, he did what he chose--I did not see what, but I saw him put his hand to his waistcoat pocket, and I felt sure that he had abstracted that dread circle of mystery.
When I returned to the cave, I found that the Bo"s"n had made a fire and was cooking some of the pork. There were no vessels to be seen, and we were for the moment safe. He and the Skipper went boldly down to the sh.o.r.e and rolled the casks up to the cave. They brought water and all the things that we had carried ash.o.r.e with us.
"It is a much better place than the open beach," said the Skipper. "We can sight all the vessels that come, and tell who are friends and who are foes."
"It is not likely," said I, "that the buccaneers will return very soon, especially as they have had a sea fight, and if they do, they do not know that we are here, or anything about this side of the cave."
"It"s a good idea to stay here for the present," said the Skipper.
"And what of ghosts and skeletons?" asked I.
"Well, the place is haunted, that I know," said the old man, "but I"d rather stay here than to risk it on the sh.o.r.e. You don"t know what"s on that sh.o.r.e or who"s comin" to meet you. I"d rather take my chances here a darn sight. Rather take "em with the spooks than with the revolutionists."
"What do you think I"ve found, sir?" said the Bo"s"n, coming in just here. "Begging your pardon for interruptin"."
"Lord knows!" said the Skipper. "Anything from a diamond as big as a hen"s egg to a coach and four. Anything"s allowable for shipwrecked mariners like ourselves."
The Bo"s"n looked sheepish and shuffled his feet about, a habit that seemed to grow on him.
"Do you remember, sir," he said, s.c.r.e.w.i.n.g up his eyes and turning his head to one side like a wise bird--"do you remember that hollow tree?"
""F course I do," said the Skipper, not waiting for me to answer; "the tree where we lay hid while those murderous vil----"
"Beggin" your pardon, sir, it was not the tree to which I was alluding Captain Schuyler, Mr. Jones, sir. It"s the tree near the stream, not on our side, but on the other side, sir--the tree where you can"t see much of a hole, sir, with branches low down, Cap"n, and big roots, Mr. Jones, sir, and----"