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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Blackbeard: Buccaneer, by Ralph D. Paine
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Blackbeard: Buccaneer
+
+Author: Ralph D. Paine
+
+Illustrator: Frank E. Schoonover
+
+Release Date: May 14, 2008 [EBook #25472]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BLACKBEARD: BUCCANEER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Robert Cicconetti, Emmy and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: THIS LEAN, STRAIGHT ROVER LOOKED THE PART OF A COMPETENT
+SOLDIER]
+
+
+
+
+BLACKBEARD BUCCANEER
+
+_By_ RALPH D. PAINE
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ _Illustrated by
+ Frank E. Schoonover_
+
+ THE PENN PUBLISHING
+ COMPANY PHILADELPHIA
+
+
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT
+ 1922 BY
+ THE PENN
+ PUBLISHING
+ COMPANY
+
+ Blackbeard: Buccaneer
+
+ Made in the U. S. A.
+
+
+
+
+Contents
+
+
+
+ I. THAT COURTEOUS PIRATE, CAPTAIN BONNET 7
+
+ II. THE MERCHANT TRADER, _PLYMOUTH ADVENTURE_ 21
+
+ III. HELD AS HOSTAGES TO BLACKBEARD 43
+
+ IV. THE CAPTIVE SEAMEN IN THE FORECASTLE 62
+
+ V. RELEASING A FEARFUL WEAPON 79
+
+ VI. THE VOYAGE OF THE LITTLE RAFT 99
+
+ VII. THE MIST OF THE CHEROKEE SWAMP 114
+
+ VIII. THE EPISODE OF THE WINDING CREEK 132
+
+ IX. BLACKBEARD'S ERRAND IS INTERRUPTED 147
+
+ X. THE SEA URCHIN AND THE CARPENTER'S MATE 161
+
+ XI. JACK JOURNEYS AFOOT 177
+
+ XII. A PRIVATE ACCOUNT TO SETTLE 189
+
+ XIII. OUR HEROES SEEK SECLUSION 203
+
+ XIV. BLACKBEARD APPEARS IN FIRE AND BRIMSTONE 217
+
+ XV. MR. PETER FORBES MOURNS HIS NEPHEW 232
+
+ XVI. NED RACKHAM'S PLANS GO MUCH AMISS 248
+
+ XVII. THE GREAT FIGHT OF CAPTAIN TEACH 260
+
+ XVIII. THE OLD BUCCANEER IS LOYAL 274
+
+ XIX. THE QUEST FOR PIRATES' GOLD 288
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ THIS LEAN, STRAIGHT ROVER LOOKED THE PART OF A COMPETENT
+ SOLDIER _Frontispiece_
+
+ THE BRAWN OF THESE LADS MADE THE PIKE A MATCH FOR A
+ PIRATE'S CUTLASS 83
+
+ THE FIRST MATE LEAPED UP WITH A HORRIBLE YELL 120
+
+ JACK ALMOST BUMPED INTO THE DUGOUT CANOE 129
+
+ THEY CAPERED AND HUGGED EACH OTHER 164
+
+ HE LOOMED LIKE THE BELIAL WHOM HE WAS SO FOND OF CLAIMING
+ AS HIS MENTOR 224
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+Blackbeard: Buccaneer
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THAT COURTEOUS PIRATE, CAPTAIN BONNET
+
+
+THE year of 1718 seems very dim and far away, but the tall lad who
+sauntered down to the harbor of Charles Town, South Carolina, on a fine,
+bright morning, was much like the youngsters of this generation. His
+clothes were quite different, it is true, and he lived in a queer, rough
+world, but he detested grammar and arithmetic and loved adventure, and
+would have made a sturdy tackle for a modern high-school football team.
+He wore a peaked straw hat of Indian weave, a linen shirt open at the
+throat, short breeches with silver buckles at the knees, and a
+flint-lock pistol hung from his leather belt.
+
+He passed by scattered houses and stores which were mere log huts
+loopholed for defense, with shutters and doors of hewn plank heavy
+enough to stop a musket ball. The unpaved lanes wandered between mud
+holes in which pigs wallowed enjoyably. Negro slaves, half-naked and
+bearing heavy burdens, jabbered the dialects of the African jungle from
+which they had been kidnapped a few months before. Yemassee Indians clad
+in tanned deer-skins bartered with the merchants and hid their hatred of
+the English. Jovial, hard-riding gentlemen galloped in from the indigo
+plantations and dismounted at the tavern to drink and gamble and fight
+duels at the smallest excuse.
+
+Young Jack Cockrell paid scant heed to these accustomed sights but
+walked as far as the wharf built of palmetto piling. The wide harbor and
+the sea that flashed beyond the outer bar were ruffled by a piping
+breeze out of the northeast. The only vessel at anchor was a heavily
+sparred brig whose bulwarks were high enough to hide the rows of cannon
+behind the closed ports.
+
+The lad gazed at the shapely brig with a lively curiosity, as if here
+was something really interesting. Presently a boat splashed into the
+water and was tied alongside the vessel while a dozen of the crew
+tumbled in to sprawl upon the thwarts and shove the oars into the
+thole-pins. An erect, graceful man in a red coat and a great beaver hat
+roared a command from the stern-sheets and the pinnace pulled in the
+direction of the wharf.
+
+"Pirates, to be sure!" said Jack Cockrell to himself, without a sign of
+alarm. "'Tis Captain Stede Bonnet and his _Royal James_. I know the
+ship. I saw her when she came in leaking last October and was careened
+on the beach at Sullivan's Island. A rich voyage this time, for the brig
+rides deep."
+
+The coast of South Carolina swarmed with pirates two hundred years ago,
+and they cared not a rap for the law. Indeed, some of these rascals
+lived on friendly terms with the people of the small settlements and
+swaggered ashore to squander the broad gold pieces and merchandise
+stolen from honest trading vessels. You must not blame the South
+Carolina colonists too harshly because they sometimes welcomed the
+visiting pirates instead of clapping them in jail. Charles Town was a
+village at the edge of a wilderness filled with hostile Indians. By sea
+it stood in fear of attack by the Spaniards of Florida and Havana. There
+were almost no crops for food and among the population were many
+runaways from England, loafers and vagabonds who hated the sight of
+work.
+
+The pirates helped them fight their enemies and did a thriving trade in
+goods that were sorely needed. Respectable citizens grumbled and one
+high official was removed in disgrace because he encouraged the pirates
+to make Charles Town their headquarters, but there was no general outcry
+unless the sea-rovers happened to molest English ships outside the
+harbor.
+
+It was Captain Stede Bonnet himself who steered the pinnace and cursed
+his sweating sailors in a deep voice which went echoing across the bay.
+He made a brave figure in his scarlet coat, with the brass guard of his
+naked cutlass winking in the sun. His boat's crew had been mustered from
+many climes and races, several strapping Englishmen, a wiry, spluttering
+little Frenchman, a swarthy Portuguese with gold rings in his ears, a
+brace of stolid Norwegians, and two or three coal black negroes from
+Barbadoes.
+
+They were well armed, every weapon burnished clean of rust and ready for
+instant use. Some wore tarnished, sea-stained finery looted from hapless
+prizes, a brocaded waistcoat, a pair of tasseled jack-boots, a plumed
+hat, a ruffled cape. The heads of several were bound around with knotted
+kerchiefs on which dark stains showed,--marks of a brawl aboard the brig
+or a fight with another ship.
+
+Soon a second boat moved away from the _Royal James_ and many people
+drifted toward the wharf to see the pirates come ashore, but they left
+plenty of room when the captain scrambled up the weedy ladder and told
+his men to follow him. Charles Town felt little dread of Stede Bonnet
+himself. He knew how to conduct himself as a gentleman and the story was
+well known,--how he had been a major in the British army and a man of
+wealth and refinement. He had left his home in Barbadoes to follow the
+trade of piracy because he couldn't get along with his wife, so the
+rumor ran. At any rate, he seemed oddly out of place among the dirty
+rogues who sailed under the black flag.
+
+He looked more the soldier than the sailor as he strode along the wharf,
+his lean, dark visage both grim and melancholy, his chin clean shaven,
+his mustachios carefully cropped. There were respectful greetings from
+the crowd of idlers and a gray-haired seaman all warped with rheumatism
+spoke up louder than the rest.
+
+"Good morrow to ye, Cap'n Bonnet! I be old Sam Griscom that sailed bos'n
+with you on a marchant voyage out of Liverpool. An' now you are a fine
+gentleman of fortune, with moidores and pieces of eight to fling at the
+gals, an' here I be, a sheer hulk on the beach."
+
+Captain Stede Bonnet halted, stared from beneath heavy brows, and a
+smile made his seamed, sun-dried face almost gentle as he replied:
+
+"It cheers me to run athwart a true old shipmate. A slant of ill
+fortune, eh, Sam Griscom? You are too old and crippled to sail in the
+_Royal James_. Here, and a blessing with the gift."
+
+The pirate skipper rammed a hand in his pocket and flung a shower of
+gold coins at the derelict seaman while the crowd cheered the generous
+deed. It was easy to guess why Stede Bonnet was something of a hero in
+Charles Town. He passed on and turned into the street. Most of his
+ruffians were at his heels but one of the younger of them delayed to pay
+his compliments to a pretty girl whose manner was sweet and shy and
+gentle. She had remained aloof from the crowd, having some errand of her
+own at the wharf, and evidently hoped to be unobserved. Jack Cockrell
+had failed to notice her, absorbed as he was in gazing his fill of
+Captain Stede Bonnet.
+
+The girl resented the young pirate's gallantry and would have fled, but
+he nimbly blocked her path. Just then Jack Cockrell happened to glance
+that way and his anger flamed hot. He was about to run after Captain
+Bonnet and beg him to interfere but the maid's distress was too urgent.
+Her blackguardly admirer was trying to slip his arm around her trim
+waist while he laughingly demanded a kiss from those fair lips. She
+evaded him and screamed for help.
+
+There were lusty townsmen among those who beheld the scene but they
+sheepishly stood in their tracks and were afraid to punish the insolent
+pirate with his dirk and pistols. He was much taller and heavier than
+Jack Cockrell, the lad of seventeen, who came of gentlefolk and was
+unused to brawls with weapons. But the youngster hesitated no more than
+an instant, although his own pistol lacked a flint and was carried for
+show.
+
+His quick eye spied a capstan bar which he snatched up as a cudgel.
+Chivalry had taught him that a man should never reckon the odds when a
+woman appealed for succor. With a headlong rush he crossed the wharf and
+swung the hickory bar. The pirate dodged the blow and whipped out his
+dirk which slithered through Jack's shirt and scratched his shoulder.
+Undismayed, he aimed a smashing blow at the pirate's wrist and the dirk
+went spinning into the water.
+
+The rascal tugged at a pistol in his belt but it was awkward work with
+his left hand and he was bewildered by this amazing attack. Before he
+could clear for action, Jack smote him on the pate and the battle ended
+then and there, for the pirate staggered back, missed his footing, and
+toppled overboard with a tremendous splash.
+
+Leaping to the edge of the wharf, Jack saw him bob to the surface and
+strike out for shore. Then the doughty young champion ran to offer his
+escort to the damsel in distress. But she had hastened to slip away from
+this hateful notoriety and he saw her at the bend of the street where
+she turned to wave him a grateful farewell.
+
+He would have hastened to overtake her but just then Captain Stede
+Bonnet came striding back in a temper so black that it terrified his own
+men. His wrath was not aimed at Jack Cockrell, for he laid a hand upon
+the lad's arm and exclaimed:
+
+"A shrewd stroke, boy, and a mettlesome spirit! You struck him swift and
+hard. 'Twould please me better if you had killed the dog."
+
+Stede Bonnet waited with folded arms until the culprit had emerged from
+the water. Jack Cockrell had punished him severely and there was no more
+fight in him. His head was reeling, the blood ran into his eyes, and he
+had swallowed much salt water. Captain Bonnet crooked a finger at him
+and he obeyed without a word. For a moment they stood face to face, the
+wretched offender trembling, the captain scowling as he said:
+
+"And so you mistook a lady for a common serving wench, Will Brant? Would
+ye have Charles Town rise and reeve the ropes about our necks? Is this
+your promise of good behavior? Learn a lesson then, poor fool."
+
+With the steel-shod butt of a pistol Stede Bonnet hit him squarely
+between the eyes. He dropped without a groan and lay stretched out as if
+dead. The captain kicked him once and carelessly shouted:
+
+"Ho, men! Toss this squire o' dames into the pinnace to await our
+return. And harkee, take warning."
+
+Jack Cockrell felt almost sorry for his fallen foeman but the other
+pirates grinned and did as they were told. It was a trifling episode.
+Resuming his stroll to the tavern, Captain Bonnet linked Jack's arm in
+his and fairly towed him along while the assorted scoundrels trooped
+behind them. It was shocking company for a lad of the most respectable
+connections but he felt greatly flattered by the distinction. The name
+of Stede Bonnet had spread terror from the Capes of the Chesapeake to
+the blue waters of the Caribbean.
+
+"And so you were unafraid of this bullying Will Brant of mine," said the
+captain, with one of his pleasant smiles. "You clipped his comb right
+handsomely. And who may ye be, my brave young sprig?"
+
+"I am John Spencer Cockrell, may it please you, sir," was the answer.
+"'Twas a small thing to do for a lady. Your pirate would have been too
+much for me in a fair set-to."
+
+"Pirate? A poor word!" objected Captain Bonnet, his accents severe but
+the bold eyes twinkling. "We are loyal servants of the King, sworn to do
+mischief to his lawful enemies,--to wit, all ships and sailors of Spain.
+For such a young gentleman adventurer as you, Master Cockrell, there is
+a berth in the _Royal James_. Will ye rendezvous at the tavern and sign
+your fist to the articles?"
+
+Jack stammered that his kinfolk would never consent, at which Captain
+Bonnet forbore to coax him but kept a grip on his arm as though they
+were chums who could not bear to be parted. Down the middle of the
+street paraded this extraordinary company, the seamen breaking into a
+song which ran:
+
+ "In Bristowe I left Poll ashore,
+ Well stored wi' togs an' gold,
+ And off I go to sea for more,
+ A-piratin' so bold.
+ An' wounded in the arm I got,
+ An' then a pretty blow;
+ Comed home I find Poll's flowed away,
+ _Yo, ho, with the rum below!_"
+
+Charles Town might be glad to get the pirates' gold but it seemed a
+timorous welcome, for the merchants peered from their doorways like
+rabbits when the hounds are loose, and nervous old gentlemen took cover
+in the near-by alleys. Stede Bonnet knew how to keep his men in hand and
+allowed only part of the company ashore at once. They were like
+hilarious children out for a lark, capering outside the tavern to the
+music of a strolling fiddler or buying horses on the spot and trying to
+ride them. When they were pitched off on their heads the mirth was
+uproarious.
+
+In a field beside the tavern some townsmen were shooting at a mark for a
+prize of a dressed bullock while a group of gentlemen from the
+plantations were intent on a cock-fight in the tap-room. Here was rare
+pastime for the frolicsome blades of the _Royal James_ and soon they
+were banging away with their pistols or betting their gold-pieces on the
+steel-gaffed birds, singing the louder as the bottle was passed. Captain
+Stede Bonnet stayed prudently sober, ready for any emergency, his
+demeanor cool and watchful while he chatted with old acquaintances.
+
+He talked often with Jack Cockrell to whom he had taken a strong fancy,
+and pressed the lad to dine with him. Jack was uneasy at being seen so
+publicly with a notorious pirate but the experience was delightful
+beyond words. The captain asked him many questions, twisting his
+mustachios and staring down from his commanding height with an air of
+friendly interest. He had found a lad after his own heart.
+
+The seamen tired of their sport and sought new diversion. Some of them
+kicked off their boots and clinched in wrestling matches for prodigal
+stakes of gold and jewels. Others found girls to dance with them or
+wandered off to buy useless trinkets in the shops. Jack Cockrell knew he
+ought to be posting home to dinner but he was tempted to accept Stede
+Bonnet's cordial bidding. Boyish friends of his hovered near and
+regarded him as a hero. No pirate captain had ever deigned to notice
+them.
+
+Alas for Jack and his puffed-up pride which was doomed to a sudden fall!
+There advanced from a better quarter of the town a florid, foppishly
+dressed gentleman of middle age who walked with a pompous gait. He was
+stout-bodied and the heat of the day oppressed him. Mopping his face
+with a lace handkerchief or fanning himself with his hat, he halted now
+and then in a shady spot. Very mindful of his rank and dignity was Mr.
+Peter Arbuthnot Forbes, sometime London barrister, at present Secretary
+to the Council of the Province.
+
+He differed from some of his neighbors in that he abominated pirates and
+would have given them short shift. A trifle near-sighted, he was quite
+close to the tavern before he espied his own nephew and ward, Jack
+Cockrell, in this shameful company of roisterers. The august uncle
+blinked, opened his mouth, and turned as red as a lobster. Indignation
+choked his speech. For his part, Jack stood dumfounded and quaking, the
+picture of a coward with a guilty conscience. He would have tried to
+steal from sight but it was too late.
+
+Captain Stede Bonnet enjoyed the tableau and several of his wicked
+sailors were mimicking the pompous strut of Mr. Peter Arbuthnot Forbes.
+Poor Jack mumbled some explanation but his irate uncle first paid his
+respects to Captain Bonnet.
+
+"Shame to you, sirrah," he cried in a voice that shook with passion. "A
+man of good birth, by all accounts, who has fallen so low as to lead
+these vile gallows-birds! And you would entice this lad of mine to
+follow your dirty trade?"
+
+Captain Bonnet doffed the great beaver hat and bowed low in mocking
+courtesy. He perceived that this fussy lawyer was not wholly a popinjay,
+for it required courage to insult a pirate to his face. The reply was
+therefore milder than expected.
+
+"Mayhap I am painted blacker than the fact, Councilor. As for this fine
+stripling who has so disgraced himself, the fault is mine. He risked his
+life to save a maid from harm. The deed won my affection."
+
+"The maids of Charles Town would need to fear no harm if more pirates
+were hanged, Captain Bonnet," roundly declared Mr. Forbes, shaking his
+gold-tipped cane at the freebooter.
+
+"'Tis fortunate for me that you lack the power, my fat and petulant
+gentleman," was the smiling response.
+
+"Laugh while you may," quoth the other. "These Provinces may soon
+proclaim joint action against such pests as you."
+
+With a shrug, the Secretary turned to his crestfallen nephew and sharply
+exclaimed:
+
+"Home with you, John Cockrell. You shall go dinnerless and be locked in
+your room."
+
+The seamen guffawed at this and Jack furiously resented their ridicule.
+He was on the point of rebellion as he hotly retorted:
+
+"I am no child to be treated thus, Uncle Peter. Didn't you hear Captain
+Bonnet report that I had proved myself a man? I trounced one of his own
+crew, a six-foot bully with a dirk and pistols."
+
+"A fig for that," rapped out Uncle Peter. "Your bully was drunk and
+helpless, I have no doubt. Will you bandy words with me?"
+
+With this his plump fingers closed on Jack's elbow which he used as a
+handle to lead him firmly and rapidly away. Behind them pranced a limber
+young negro who showed every tooth in his head. Jack heard the derisive
+laughter of the pirates who had hailed him as a hero. His cup of
+bitterness overflowed when it occurred to him that Captain Bonnet would
+despise a lad who could be led home in custody of a dandified tyrant of
+an uncle.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE MERCHANT TRADER, _PLYMOUTH ADVENTURE_
+
+
+RUBBING his ear which Mr. Peter Arbuthnot Forbes had soundly boxed
+before releasing him, Jack marched along in gloomy silence until he was
+conducted into his small, unplastered room. His uncle stalked out and
+shot the ponderous bolt behind him. Passing through the kitchen, he
+halted to scold the black cook as a lazy slattern and then sat himself
+down to a lonely meal. Jack was a problem which the finicky, middle-aged
+bachelor had been unable to solve. He had undertaken the care of the boy
+after his parents had died in the same week of a mysterious fever which
+ravaged the settlement. The uncle failed to realize how fast this
+strapping youngster was growing into manhood. He disliked punishing him
+and was usually unhappy after one of these stormy episodes.
+
+Mr. Peter Forbes pecked at his dinner with little appetite and his plump
+face was clouded. Shoving back his chair, he paced the floor in a
+fidgety manner and, at length, opened the door of Jack's room. The
+hungry prisoner was lounging upon a wooden settle, his chin in his hand,
+while he sullenly stared at the wall. Always mindful of his manners, he
+slowly rose to his feet and waited for another scolding.
+
+"I wish we might avoid such scenes as these, Jack," sadly observed Uncle
+Peter, his hot temper cooled. "No sooner do you leave my sight than some
+new mischief is afoot."
+
+"You do not understand, sir," impatiently protested the nephew. "In your
+eyes I am still the urchin who came out from England clinging to his
+dear mother's skirts. Would ye have me pass my time with girls or have
+no other friends than snuffy old Parson Throckmorton, my tutor, who
+tries to pound the Greek and Latin into my thick skull?"
+
+"He is a wise and ripened scholar who wastes his effort," was the dry
+comment. "Most of the lads of the town are coarse louts who pattern
+after their ribald elders, Jack. They will lead you into evil courses."
+
+"I shall always pray God to be a gentleman, sir," was the spirited
+response, "but I must learn to fight my own battles. Were it not for
+hardy pastimes with these other stout lads, think you I could have
+cracked the crown of a six-foot pirate?"
+
+Uncle Peter gazed at the boy before he spoke. Tanned and hard and
+muscular, this was a nephew to be proud of, a man in deeds if not in
+years, and there was unswerving honesty in the straight mouth and firm
+chin. The guardian sighed and then annoyance got the better of his
+affection as he burst out:
+
+"Perdition take all pirates! You were cozened by this hell-rake of a
+Stede Bonnet and thought it a rare pleasure! John Spencer Cockrell, own
+nephew to the Secretary of the Colony!"
+
+"I did but copy older men of fair repute," demurely answered Jack, a
+twinkle in his eye. "Graybeards of Parson Throckmorton's flock traffick
+in merchandise with the pirates and are mighty civil to them, I note."
+
+"A vile business!" cried Uncle Peter. "It was decided at the recent
+conference in Virginia that I should go to England as a delegate to lay
+before His Majesty's Government such evidence as might invoke aid in our
+campaign against the pirates. It was my intention to leave you in care
+of Parson Throckmorton, Jack, but I have now resolved to take you with
+me. And you will remain at school in England. No more of this boon
+comradeship with villains like Stede Bonnet."
+
+Poor Jack looked most unhappy at the tidings. It was not at all in
+accord with his ambitions. Here was worse punishment than he had dreamed
+his uncle could inflict. Dolefully he exclaimed:
+
+"To live in tame and stupid England, locked up in a school? Why, I am
+big enough to join the forays against the Indians, or to fight bloody
+battles against the pirates if you really mean to chastise them. But I
+cannot promise to attack Captain Bonnet. He is a friend of mine."
+
+"You shall come to see him hanged," shouted Mr. Peter Arbuthnot Forbes,
+very red in the face. "The merchant ship _Plymouth Adventure_ is
+expected soon, and you and I shall take passage in her for Merry
+England, thanking heaven to see the last of the barbarous Carolinas for
+a time."
+
+"Thank your own thanks, sir," grumbled Jack. "Captain Bonnet may be a
+pirate but he is not nearly so heartless as my own uncle. He asked me to
+dinner at the tavern. I am faint for lack of food. My stomach sticks to
+my ribs. 'Tis a great pity you were never a growing boy yourself. For a
+platter of cold meat and bread I will take my oath to chop you a pile of
+firewood as high as the kitchen."
+
+The gaoler relented and bustled out to ransack the pantry. Having
+demolished a joint and a loaf, young John Spencer Cockrell was in a mood
+much less melancholy. In fact, when he swung the axe behind the fence of
+hewn palings, he was humming the refrain of that wicked ditty: "_Yo, Ho,
+with the Rum Below!_" He was tremendously sorry that he had been
+snatched away from the engaging society of Captain Bonnet and his wild
+crew, and the future had a gloomy aspect, but even these grievances were
+forgotten when he descried, in a lane which led past the house, the
+lovely maid whose cause he had championed at the wharf.
+
+She was Dorothy, only daughter of Colonel Malcolm Stuart who commanded
+the militia forces of the Colony. Although she was the elder by two or
+three years and gave herself the airs of a young lady, Jack Cockrell
+hopelessly, secretly adored her. It was an anti-climax for a hero to be
+serving out his sentence at the wood-pile and he turned his back to the
+gate while he made the chips fly. But Dorothy had no intention of
+ignoring him. She paused with a smile so winsome that Jack's heart
+fluttered and he dropped the axe to grasp her outstretched hand. He
+squeezed it so hard that Dorothy winced as she said:
+
+"What a masterful man it is, but please don't crush my poor fingers. I
+fled from those pirates at the wharf, Jack, instead of waiting to offer
+you my most humble thanks. Will you accept them now? They come straight
+from the heart."
+
+For such a reward as this Jack would have fought a dozen pirates. Baring
+his head, he murmured bashfully:
+
+"A trifling service, Mistress Dorothy, and 'tis my devout hope that I
+may always be ready in time of need."
+
+"So?" she exclaimed, with mischief in her eyes. "I believe you would
+slay a pirate each morning before breakfast, should I ask it."
+
+"Or any other small favors like that," gallantly returned Jack.
+
+"A proper courtier," cried Dorothy. "My father will thank you when he
+returns from North Carolina. When I ventured to the wharf this morning
+it was in hopes of sighting his armed sloop."
+
+The dwelling of Mr. Peter Arbuthnot Forbes was at some distance from the
+tavern which was on the sloping ground that overlooked the harbor, among
+the spreading live-oaks and magnolias. Borne on the breeze came the
+sounds of Stede Bonnet's pirates at their revels, pistol shots, wild
+choruses, drunken yells. Jack was not disturbed although Mistress
+Dorothy moved closer and laid a hand on his arm. Presently the tumult
+ceased, abruptly, and now Jack was perplexed. It might mean a sudden
+recall to the ship. Something was in the wind. The youth and the maid
+stood listening. Jack was about to scramble to the roof of the house in
+order to gaze toward the harbor but Dorothy bade him stay with her. Her
+fair cheek had paled and she shivered with a vague apprehension.
+
+This sudden stillness was uncanny, threatening. Soon, however, a trumpet
+blew a long, shrill call to arms, and they heard one hoarse, jubilant
+huzza after another.
+
+"Have Stede Bonnet's pirates mustered to sack the town?" implored
+Dorothy.
+
+"I can speedily find out," replied her protector.
+
+"Oh, I pray you not to leave me," she tremulously besought him.
+
+"Captain Bonnet will wreak no harm on Charles Town," Jack assured her.
+"I know him too well for that. You saw what he did to the base varlet
+who annoyed you at the wharf,--felled him like an ox."
+
+"If only my father were here, to call out the troops and rout this
+rabble of sea rogues, Jack dear," was her fluttering prayer.
+
+A little after this, the tumult increased and it was drawing nearer. It
+was a martial clamor of men on the march, with the rattle of drums and a
+loud fanfare of trumpets. Mr. Peter Arbuthnot Forbes came running out of
+the house, all flustered and waving his hands, and ordered the two young
+people indoors. The servants were closing the heavy wooden shutters and
+sliding the bars across the doors.
+
+Jack slipped out into the lane and hailed a neighbor who dashed past.
+The news was babbled in fragments and Jack scurried back to blurt to his
+uncle:
+
+"An Indian raid,--the savages are within a dozen miles of Charles Town,
+laying waste the plantations,--slaying the laborers. The militia is
+called to arms but they lack a leader. Colonel Stuart is sorely missed.
+Captain Bonnet called another boat-load of his pirates ashore, and they
+march in the van to assail the Indians. May I go with them, Uncle Peter?
+Must I play the coward and the laggard?"
+
+"Nonsense, John Cockrell. These mad pirates have addled your wits. Shall
+I let you be scalped by these painted fiends of Yemassees?"
+
+"Then you will volunteer in my stead," shrewdly ventured Jack, with a
+glance at Dorothy.
+
+"Um-m. Duty and my official cares prevent," quoth the worshipful
+Secretary of the Colony, frowning and pursing his lips. Dorothy smiled
+at this and winked at Jack. Uncle Peter was rated a better lawyer than a
+valiant man of war.
+
+"Let us stand at a window," exclaimed the girl. "Ah, they come! My
+faith, but this is a brave array. And Captain Bonnet leads them well."
+
+She had never expected to praise a pirate but there was no denying that
+this lean, straight rover in the scarlet coat and great cocked hat
+looked the part of a competent and intrepid soldier. He was superbly fit
+for the task in hand. Catching sight of Jack Cockrell and Dorothy Stuart
+in the window, he saluted by raising the hilt of his cutlass and his
+melancholy visage brightened in a smile.
+
+Behind him tramped his men in column of fours, matchlocks across their
+shoulders, bright weapons swinging against their thighs as they sang all
+together and kept step to the beat of the drums.
+
+ "But ere to Execution Bay,
+ The wind these bones do blow,
+ I'll drink an' fight what's left away,
+ _Yo, ho, with the rum below_."
+
+Behind these hardy volunteers straggled as many of the militia company
+as had been able to answer the sudden call, merchants, clerks, artisans,
+and vagabonds who seemed none too eager to meet the bloodthirsty
+Yemassees. Their wives and children trailed after them to the edge of
+the town, amidst tears and loud lamentations. The contrast did not
+escape the eye of Mr. Peter Arbuthnot Forbes who reluctantly admitted:
+
+"Give the devil his due, say I. These wicked brethren of the coast go
+swaggering off of their own free will, as though it were to a frolic. I
+will remember it in their favor when they come to hang."
+
+A long roll of the drums and a lilting flourish by the pirate trumpeter
+as a farewell to Charles Town and its tavern and its girls, and the
+company passed from view. The lane was again deserted and silent and
+Jack offered to escort Dorothy Stuart to her own home. As they loitered
+across an open field, he cried in a fierce flare of rebellion:
+
+"My good uncle will drive me too far. Let him sail for old England and
+leave me to find my own career. Upon my soul, I may run away to join a
+pirate ship."
+
+Dorothy tried to look grave at this dreadful announcement but a dimple
+showed in her cheek as she replied:
+
+"My dear Jack, you can never be braver but you will be wiser some day.
+Banish such silly thoughts. You must obey your lawful guardian."
+
+"But did you see the lads in the militia company? Two or three of them I
+have whipped in fair fight. And Uncle Peter wants to keep me tucked in a
+cradle."
+
+"Softly, Jack," said she, with pretty solicitude. "Stede Bonnet has
+bewitched you utterly."
+
+The stubborn youth shook his head. This day of humiliation had been the
+last straw. He was ripe for desperate adventure. It would have made him
+happy and contented to be marching against the Indians with Stede Bonnet
+and his cut-throats, in peril of tomahawks and ambuscades.
+
+Small wonder that poor Jack Cockrell's notions of right and wrong were
+rather confused, for he lived in an age when might ruled blue water,
+when every ship was armed and merchant seamen fought to save their skins
+as well as their cargoes. English, French, Spanish, and Dutch, they
+plundered each other on the flimsiest pretexts and the pirates harried
+them all.
+
+Still sulky, Jack betook himself to the rectory next morning for his
+daily bout with his studies. Parson Throckmorton was puttering in the
+garden, a shrunken little man who wore black small-clothes, lace at his
+wrists, and a powdered wig. Opening the silver snuff-box he almost
+sneezed the wig off before he chirruped:
+
+"Ye mind me of Will Shakespeare's whining schoolboy, Master
+John,--creeping like snail unwillingly to school. A treat is in store
+for us to-day, a signal treat! We begin our Virgil. '_Arma virumque
+cano._'"
+
+"Arms and a man? I like that much of it," glowered the mutinous scholar,
+"but my uncle makes me sing a different tune."
+
+"He accepted my advice,--that you be educated in England," said the
+parson.
+
+"Then I may hold you responsible for this hellish thing?" angrily
+declaimed Jack. "Were it not for your white hairs----"
+
+He subsided and had the grace to apologize as they entered the library.
+The tutor was an impatient old gentleman and the pupil was so
+inattentive that his knuckles were sharply rapped with a ruler. A
+blunder more glaring and the ruler came down with another whack. This
+was too much for Jack who jumped up, rubbed his knuckles, and shouted:
+
+"Enough, sir. I would have you know that I all but killed a big, ugly
+pirate yesterday."
+
+"So rumor informs me," rasped Parson Throckmorton, "but you will give
+yourself no grand airs with me. Construe this passage properly or I must
+tan those leather breeches with a limber rod."
+
+This was too much for the insulted Jack who slammed down the book,
+clapped on his hat, and tramped from the room in high dudgeon. Such
+scurvy treatment as this was fairly urging him to a life of crime on the
+rolling ocean. He wandered down to the wharf and wistfully gazed at the
+lawless brig, _Royal James_, which swam at her anchorage in trim and
+graceful beauty. A few men moved briskly on deck, painting the bulwarks
+or polishing brass. Evidently Stede Bonnet had sent off word to be all
+taut and ready to hoist sail for another cruise.
+
+After a while the truant went homeward and manfully confessed to the
+quarrel with Parson Throckmorton. Uncle Peter Forbes was amazingly mild.
+There was no gusty outbreak of temper and, in fact, he had little to
+say. It was in his mind to patch up a truce with his troublesome nephew
+pending their departure for England. He even suggested that the studies
+be dropped and advised Jack to go fishing in his canoe.
+
+Several days later, Captain Bonnet and his pirates came back from their
+foray against the Indians. They were a foot-sore, weary band, the
+wounded carried in litters and several men missing. Their gay garments
+were caked with mud, the finery all tatters, and most of them were
+marked with cuts and scratches, but they pulled themselves together and
+swaggered into Charles Town as boldly as ever to the music of trumpet
+and drum. Stede Bonnet carried an arm in a sling. As he passed the
+Secretary's house he cheerily called out to Jack:
+
+"Ahoy, my young comrade! 'Twill please you to know that fair Mistress
+Dorothy Stuart may sleep in peace."
+
+"Did you scatter the savages, sir?" asked Jack, running out to shake his
+hand.
+
+"God bless ye, boy, we exterminated 'em."
+
+The gratitude of Mr. Peter Arbuthnot Forbes was stronger than his
+dislike and he came out to thank the captain in behalf of the citizens
+of Charles Town. To his excited questions the pirate replied:
+
+"There be old buccaneers from Hispaniola in my crew, may it please Your
+Excellency,--fellows who hunted the Indians in their youth,--tracked 'em
+like hounds through forest and bayou. Others served their time with the
+log-wood cutters of Yucatan. They laughed at the tricks of these
+Yemassees of the Carolinas."
+
+One of the militia company broke in to say to Mr. Forbes:
+
+"Your Honor's own plantation was saved from the torch by this doughty
+Captain Bonnet. It was there he pulled the flint arrow-head from his arm
+and was near bleeding to death."
+
+Mr. Peter Forbes could do no less than invite the pirate into the house,
+for the wounded arm had been rudely bandaged and was in sore need of
+dressing. Jack fetched a tray of cakes and wine while his uncle bawled
+at the servants who came running with soft cloths and hot water and
+healing lotions. Captain Bonnet protested that the hurt was trifling and
+carelessly explained:
+
+"My own ship's surgeon was spitted on a boarding-pike in our last action
+at sea and I have not found me another one. You show much skill and
+tenderness, sir."
+
+"The wound is deep and ragged. Hold still," commanded Mr. Peter Forbes.
+"You have been a soldier, Captain Bonnet, commended for valor on the
+fields of Europe and holding the king's commission. Why not seek pardon
+and serve with the armed forces of this province? My services in the
+matter are yours to command."
+
+Stede Bonnet frowned and bit his lip. All he said was:
+
+"You meddle with matters that concern you not, my good sir. I am a man
+able to make my own free choice."
+
+"Captain Bonnet does honor to the trade of piracy," cried the admiring
+Jack, at which his uncle declared, with a wrathful gesture:
+
+"I must remove this daft lad to England to be rid of you, Stede Bonnet.
+You have cast a wicked spell over him."
+
+"To England?" said the pirate, with a sympathetic glance at the boy. "I
+would sooner lie in gaol."
+
+"And reap your deserts," snapped Uncle Peter.
+
+"No doubt of that," frankly agreed the pirate. "And what thinks the lad
+of this sad penance?"
+
+"I hate it," was Jack's swift answer. "Will you grant our merchant ship
+safe conduct, Captain Bonnet?"
+
+"What ship, boy? You have only to name her. She will go scathless, as
+far as in my power."
+
+"The _Plymouth Adventure_," replied Jack. "It would ruin my uncle's
+temper beyond all mending to be taken by pirates."
+
+"I pledge you my word," swore Stede Bonnet. "Moreover, if trouble
+befall you by sea or land, Master Cockrell, I pray you send me tidings
+and you will have a friend in need."
+
+That night those who dwelt near the harbor heard the clank of a windlass
+as the crew of the _Royal James_ hove the cable short, and the
+melodious, deep-throated refrain of a farewell chantey floated across
+the quiet water. With the flood of the tide and a landward breeze, the
+brig stole out across the bar while the topsails were sheeted home. When
+daylight dawned, she had vanished in the empty reaches of the Atlantic.
+
+The brig sailed without Jack Cockrell. His shrewd uncle saw to that. It
+was not by accident that a constable of the town watch loitered in the
+lane by the Secretary's house. And Uncle Peter himself was careful not
+to let the lad out of his sight until the beguiling Stede Bonnet had
+left his haunts in Charles Town. Life resumed its routine next day but
+the boy's whole current of thought had been changed. He was restless,
+craving some fresh excitement and hoping that more pirates might come
+roaring to the tavern green.
+
+He found welcome diversion when the _Plymouth Adventure_, merchant
+trader, arrived from London after a famous passage of thirty-two days to
+the westward. Her master's orders were to make quick dispatch and return
+with freight and passengers direct from Charles Town. Jack was given no
+more leisure to brood over his own misfortunes. There were many errands
+to be done for Mr. Peter Forbes, besides the chests and boxes to be
+packed and stoutly corded. As was the custom, they had to supply their
+own furniture for the cabin in the ship and Jack Cockrell enjoyed the
+frequent trips aboard.
+
+He found much to interest him in the sedate, bearded Captain Jonathan
+Wellsby of the _Plymouth Adventure_, in the crew of hearty British tars
+who feared neither man nor devil, in the battery of nine-pounders, the
+stands of boarding-pikes, and the triced hammock nettings to protect the
+vessel against hand-to-hand encounters with pirates. The voyage might be
+worth while, after all. There were to be a dozen of passengers, several
+ladies among them. The most distinguished was Mr. Peter Arbuthnot
+Forbes, Secretary of the Provincial Council, who was accorded the
+greatest respect and given the largest cabin.
+
+It was an important event when the _Plymouth Adventure_ hoisted all her
+bunting on sailing day and Charles Town flocked to the harbor with
+wistful envy of the lucky people who were bound home to old England.
+There were sad faces among those left behind to endure the perils,
+hardships and loneliness of pioneers. Jack Cockrell's heart beat high
+when he saw sweet Dorothy Stuart in the throng. He tarried ashore with
+her until the boatswain's pipe trilled from the _Plymouth Adventure_ to
+summon the passengers on board. Colonel Stuart, blonde and bronzed and
+stalwart, escorted his winsome daughter and he praised Jack for his
+deed of courage, telling him:
+
+"There will soon be fewer pirates for you to trounce, I hope, my lad."
+
+"The town will be a stupid place without a visit from the jolly rovers
+now and then," honestly replied Jack, at which Colonel Stuart laughed
+and his daughter suggested:
+
+"With my brave knight in distant England, deliver me from any more
+pirates."
+
+Jack blushed and was both happy and sad when the dear maid took a flower
+from her bodice and gave it to him as a token of remembrance. He
+solemnly tucked it away in a pocket, stammered his farewells, and went
+to join his uncle who waited in the yawl at the wharf. Once on board the
+_Plymouth Adventure_, they were swept into a bustle and confusion.
+Captain Jonathan Wellsby was in haste to catch a fair wind and make his
+offing before nightfall. His sailors ran to and fro, jumping at the
+word, active and cheery. Stately and slow, the high-pooped merchant
+trader filled away on the larboard tack and pointed her lofty bowsprit
+seaward.
+
+The watches were set, ropes coiled down, and the tackles of the cannon
+overhauled. The skipper paced the after-deck, a long telescope under his
+arm, while the passengers lined the rail and gazed at the rude
+settlement that was slowly dropping below the horizon. The sea was
+tranquil and the breeze steady. The ship was clothed in canvas which
+bellied to drive her eastward with a frothing wake. Safely she left the
+outer bar astern and wallowed in the ocean swell.
+
+The afternoon sun was sinking when a sail gleamed like a bit of cloud
+against the southerly sky. Captain Wellsby held to his course and showed
+no uneasiness. Soon another sail became visible and then a third, these
+two smaller than the first. They might be honest merchantmen steering in
+company, but the skipper consulted with his mates and the spy-glass
+passed from hand to hand. The passengers were at supper in the cuddy and
+their talk and laughter came through the open skylights.
+
+Presently the boatswain piped the crew to quarters and the men moved
+quietly to their battle stations, opening the gun-ports and casting
+loose the lashings. The boys fetched paper cartridges of powder in
+buckets from the magazine and the gunners lighted the matches of tow.
+Cutlasses were buckled on and the pikes were scattered along the
+bulwarks ready to be snatched up.
+
+It was impossible to escape these three strange vessels by beating back
+to Charles Town, for the _Plymouth Adventure_ made lubberly work of it
+when thrashing to windward. She was a swift ship, however, before a fair
+wind, and Captain Wellsby resolved to run for it, hoping to edge away
+from danger if his suspicions should be confirmed.
+
+Before sunset the largest of the strange sail shifted her course as
+though to set out in chase and overhaul the deep-laden merchant trader.
+Captain Wellsby stood near the tiller, his hands clasped behind him, a
+solid, dependable figure of a British mariner. The passengers were
+crowding around him in distressful agitation but he calmly assured them
+a stern chase was a long chase and he expected to slip away under cover
+of night. So far as he was aware, no pirates, excepting Stede Bonnet,
+had been recently reported in these waters.
+
+Here Mr. Peter Forbes broke in to say that the _Plymouth Adventure_ had
+naught to fear from Captain Bonnet who had pledged his word to let her
+sail unmolested. Other passengers scoffed at the absurd notion of
+trusting a pirate's oath, but the pompous Secretary of the Council could
+not be cried down. He was a canny critic of human nature and he knew an
+honorable pirate when he met him.
+
+It was odd, but in a pinch like this the dapper, finicky Councilor Peter
+Arbuthnot Forbes displayed an unshaken courage as became a gentleman of
+his position, while young Jack Cockrell had suddenly changed his opinion
+of the fascinating trade of piracy. He had not the slightest desire to
+investigate it at any closer range. His knees were inclined to wobble
+and his stomach felt qualms. His uncle twitted him as a braggart ashore
+who sang a different tune afloat. The lad's grin was feeble as he
+retorted that he took his pirates one at a time.
+
+The largest vessel of the pursuit came up at a tremendous pace, reeling
+beneath an extraordinary spread of canvas, her spray-swept hull
+disclosing an armament of thirty guns, the decks swarming with men. She
+was no merchant ship, this was already clear, but there was still the
+hope that she might be a man-of-war or a privateer. Captain Wellsby
+looked in vain for her colors. At length he saw a flag whip from the
+spanker gaff. He laid down the glass with a profound sigh.
+
+The flag was black with a sinister device, a white blotch whose outline
+suggested a human skull.
+
+Captain Wellsby gazed again and carefully examined the two sloops which
+were acting in concert with the thirty-gun ship. It was a squadron, and
+the brave _Plymouth Adventure_ was hopelessly outmatched. To fight meant
+a slaughter with never a chance of survival.
+
+The passengers had made no great clamor until the menacing ship drew
+close enough for them to descry the dreadful pennant which showed as a
+sable blot against the evening sky. Two women fainted and others were
+seized with violent hysteria. Their shrill screams were so distressing
+that the skipper ordered them to be lugged below and shut in their
+cabins. Mr. Peter Forbes had plumped himself down upon a coil of hawser,
+as if utterly disgusted, but he implored the captain to blaze away at
+the besotted scoundrels as long as two planks held together. The
+Honorable Secretary of the Council had been too outspoken in his
+opinions of pirates to expect kindness at their hands.
+
+The sailors also expected no quarter but they sullenly crouched at the
+gun-carriages, gripping the handspikes and blowing the matches while
+they waited for the word. The pirate ship was now reaching to windward
+of the _Plymouth Adventure_, heeling over until her decks were in full
+view. Upon the poop stood a man of the most singular appearance. He was
+squat and burly and immensely broad across the shoulders. What made him
+grotesque was a growth of beard which swept almost to his waist and
+covered his face like a hairy curtain. In it were tied bright streamers
+of crimson ribbon. Evidently this fantastic monster was proud of his
+whiskers and liked to adorn them.
+
+The laced hat with a feather in it, the skirted coat of buff and blue
+which flapped around his bow-legs, and the rows of gold buttons across
+his chest were in slovenly imitation of a naval uniform. But there was
+nothing like naval discipline on those crowded decks where half the crew
+appeared to be drunk and the rest of them cursing each other.
+
+Captain Jonathan Wellsby smothered a groan and his stern mouth twitched
+as he said to his chief mate:
+
+"God's mercy on us! 'Tis none other than the bloody Edward Teach,--that
+calls himself Blackbeard! My information was that he still cruised off
+the Spanish Main and refitted his ships in the Bay of Honduras."
+
+"The madman of the sea," said the stolid mate. "A bad day for us when he
+sailed to the north'ard. He kills for the pleasure of it. Now Stede
+Bonnet loots such stuff as takes his fancy and----"
+
+"He loves to fight a king's ship for the sport of it," broke in the
+skipper, "but this murderer---- An unlucky voyage for the old _Plymouth
+Adventure_ and all hands, Mate."
+
+One of the women who had been suffered to remain on deck was close
+enough to overhear the direful news. Her hands to heaven, she wailed:
+
+"Blackbeard! Oh, my soul, we are as good as dead, or worse. Fight and
+sink him, dear captain. What shall I do? What shall I do? If I had only
+minded the dream I had the night before we sailed----"
+
+Jack Cockrell sat down beside his uncle, a limp and sorry youth for one
+who had offered to slay a six-foot pirate before breakfast to please a
+pretty maid. With a sickly grin he murmured:
+
+"This cockerel crowed too loud, Uncle Peter. Methinks I share your
+distaste for piracy."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+HELD AS HOSTAGES TO BLACKBEARD
+
+
+TO discover the pestilent Blackbeard in Carolina waters was like a
+thunderbolt from a clear sky. Captain Wellsby had felt confident that he
+could beat off the ordinary pirate craft which was apt to be smaller
+than his own stout ship. And most of these unsavory gentry were mere
+salt-water burglars who had little taste for hard fighting. The master
+of the _Plymouth Adventure_, so pious and sedate, was a brave man to
+whom the thought of surrender was intolerable. From what he knew of
+Blackbeard, it was useless to try to parley for the lives of his
+passengers. Better it was to answer with double-shotted guns than to beg
+for mercy.
+
+The British tars, stripped to the waist, turned anxious eyes to the
+skipper upon the quarter-deck while they quaffed pannikins of rum and
+water and cracked many a rough jest. They fancied death no more than
+other men, but seafaring was a perilous trade and they were toughened to
+its hazards. They were facing hopeless odds but let the master shout the
+command and they would send the souls of some of these pirates sizzling
+down to hell before the _Plymouth Adventure_ sank, a splintered hulk, in
+the smoke of her own gunpowder.
+
+Captain Wellsby delayed his decision a moment longer. Something most
+unusual had attracted his attention. A ball of smoke puffed from a port
+of Blackbeard's ship, but the round shot splashed beyond the bowsprit of
+the _Plymouth Adventure_ instead of thudding into her oaken side. This
+was a signal to heave to. It was a courtesy both unexpected and
+perplexing, because Blackbeard's habit was to let fly with all the guns
+that could bear as the summons to submit. Presently a dingy bit of cloth
+fluttered just beneath the black flag. It looked like the remains of a
+pirate's shirt which had once been white.
+
+"A signal for a truce?" muttered Captain Wellsby. "A ruse, mayhap, but
+the rogue has no need to resort to trickery."
+
+The two sloops of Blackbeard's squadron, spreading tall, square
+topsails, came driving down to windward in readiness to fire their
+bow-chasers and form in line of battle. The passengers of the _Plymouth
+Adventure_, snatching at the chance of safety, implored the skipper to
+send his men away from the guns lest a rash shot might be their ruin.
+They prayed him to respect the precious flag of truce and to ascertain
+the meaning of it. Mystified and wavering in his purpose, he told the
+mates to back the main-yard and heave the ship to.
+
+Upon his own deck Blackbeard was stamping to and fro, bellowing at his
+crew while he flourished a broadsword by way of emphasis. The hapless
+company of the _Plymouth Adventure_ shivered at the very sight of him
+and yet there was something almost ludicrous in the antics of this
+atrocious pirate, as though he were play-acting upon the stage of a
+theatre. He had tucked up the tails of his military coat because the
+wind whipped them about his bandy legs and made him stumble. The flowing
+whiskers also proved bothersome, wherefore he looped them back over his
+ears by means of the bows of crimson ribbon. This seemed to be his
+personal fashion of clearing for action.
+
+"There be pirates and pirates," critically observed Mr. Peter Forbes as
+he stared at the unpleasant Blackbeard. "This is a filthy beast, Jack,
+and he was badly brought up. He has no manners whatever."
+
+"Parson Throckmorton would take him for the devil himself," gloomily
+answered the lad.
+
+And now they saw Blackbeard raise a speaking-trumpet to his lips and
+heard the hoarse voice come down the wind with this message:
+
+"The ship ahoy! Steady as ye be, blast your eyes, or I'll lay aboard and
+butcher all hands."
+
+He turned and yelled commands to the two sloops which now rolled within
+pistol-shot. In helter-skelter style but with great speed, one boat
+after another was lowered away and filled with armed pirates. They rowed
+toward the _Plymouth Adventure_ and there were enough of them to carry
+her by boarding. In addition to this, she was directly under the guns of
+Blackbeard's powerful ship. One valorous young gentleman passenger
+whipped out a rapier and swore to perish with his face to the foe, but
+Captain Wellsby kicked him into the cabin and fastened the scuttle. This
+was no time for dramatics.
+
+"It looks that the old ruffian comes on a peaceful errand," said the
+skipper, by way of comfort. But the hysterical ladies below decks
+redoubled their screams and one substantial merchant of Charles Town
+scrambled down to hide himself among them. Mr. Peter Arbuthnot Forbes
+folded his arms and there was no sign of weakness in his pink
+countenance. His dignity still sustained him.
+
+As agile as monkeys, the mob of pirates poured over the bulwark,
+slashing through the hammock nettings, and swept forward in a compact
+mass, driving Captain Wellsby's seamen before them and penning them in
+the forecastle. Having cleared the waist of the ship, they loitered
+there until a few of them discovered the galley and pantry. They swept
+the shelves and lockers bare of food like a pack of famished wolves.
+Jack Cockrell looked at them from the poop and perceived that they were
+a gaunt, ragged lot. The skins of some were yellow like parchment, and
+fits of trembling overtook them. Something more than dissipation ailed
+them.
+
+With a body-guard of the sturdiest men, Blackbeard clambered up the
+poop ladder and, with wicked oaths, told the skipper to stand forth.
+Clean and trig and carefully dressed, Captain Jonathan Wellsby
+confronted these savage, unwashed pirates and calmly demanded to know
+their errand. It was plain to read that Blackbeard thought himself an
+imposing figure. With a smirk and a grimace he bowed clumsily to a woman
+on deck who had refused to desert her husband. He growled like a bear at
+Captain Wellsby and prodded the poor man with his cutlass as he
+thundered:
+
+"You tried my patience, shipmaster, with your cracking on sail. A little
+more and I'd ha' slit your throat. Blood an' wounds, would ye dare to
+vex Blackbeard?"
+
+Captain Wellsby faced him with unshaken composure and returned in a
+strong voice:
+
+"I beg no favors for myself but these helpless people, women amongst
+them, came on board with my assurance of safety. They have friends and
+kinsmen in Charles Town who will ransom them in gold."
+
+Blackbeard's mien was a shade less ferocious as he cried:
+
+"Gold? Can it cool a fever or heal a festering sore? A score of my men
+are down and the others are tottering ghosts. Medicines I must have. A
+foul plague on those ports of the Spanish Main which laid my fine lads
+by the heels."
+
+Jack Cockrell, who had retreated to the taffrail, decided that this
+unkempt pirate was not so absurd as he appeared. There was the strength
+of a giant in those hulking shoulders and in the long arms which bulged
+the coat-sleeves, and the man moved with a quickness which made that
+clumsy air deceptive. The beard masked his features but the eye was keen
+and roving, and he had a trick of baring his teeth in a nasty snarl. He
+uttered no more threats, however, and seemed to be anxiously awaiting
+the reply of Captain Wellsby, who said:
+
+"The few medicines and simples in my chest will not suffice your need.
+Your ships are rotten with the Spanish fever."
+
+"A ransom, shipmaster?" exclaimed the pirate. "'Twas in my mind when I
+flew a white flag for parley. I will hold some of your fine passengers
+as hostages while the others go in to rake Charles Town for medicines to
+fetch back to my fleet."
+
+"You will send my ship in?" asked the skipper.
+
+"No! This _Plymouth Adventure_ is my good prize and I will overhaul the
+cargo and sink her at my leisure. My ship will tack in to Charles Town
+bar. Then let the messengers go in the long-boat to find the store of
+medicines. Harkee, shipmaster,--two days, no longer, for their return!
+Failing this, the hostages feed the fishes. Such sport 'ud liven the
+hearts of my doleful seamen."
+
+It was a shameful bargain, thus to submit to a pirate's whim, but the
+wretched ship's company hailed it as a glad surprise. They had stood in
+the shadow of death and this was a respite and a chance of salvation.
+Captain Wellsby was heart-sick with humiliation but it was not for him
+to take into his hands the fate of all these others. Sadly he nodded
+assent. Jack Cockrell nudged his uncle and whispered:
+
+"Why doesn't he sail in with his three ships and take what he likes? The
+town lies helpless against such a force as this."
+
+"Ssh-h, be silent," was the warning. "He is a wary bird of prey and he
+fears a trap. He dare not attack the port, since he lacks knowledge of
+its defenses."
+
+Jack's cheek was rosy again and his knees had ceased to tremble. There
+was no immediate prospect of walking the plank. To be captured by
+Blackbeard was a finer adventure than strutting arm-in-arm with Captain
+Stede Bonnet. It was mournful, indeed, that Captain Wellsby should have
+to lose his ship but 'tis an ill wind that blows nobody good and the
+voyage to England, which Jack had loathed from the bottom of his heart,
+was indefinitely postponed. Such an experience as this was apt to
+discourage Uncle Peter Forbes from trying it again.
+
+There were sundry chicken-hearted passengers anxious to curry favor with
+Blackbeard, who gabbled when they should have held their tongues, and in
+this manner he learned that he had bagged the honorable Secretary of the
+Provincial Council. The bewhiskered pirate slapped his thighs and roared
+with glee.
+
+"Damme, but he looks it! Alack that my sorry need of medicines compels
+me to give quarter! Would I might swing this fat Secretary from a
+topsail yard! And a rogue of a lawyer to boot! He tempts me----"
+
+"I demand the courtesy due a hostage," exclaimed Mr. Peter Forbes.
+
+"Ho, ho, you shall be my lackey,--the chief messenger," laughed
+Blackbeard, showing his yellow teeth. "Hat in hand, begging medicines
+for me."
+
+The honorable Secretary was near apoplexy. He could only sputter and
+cough. He was to be sent as an errand boy to the people of Charles Town,
+at the brutal behest of this unspeakable knave, but refusal meant death
+and there were his fellow captives to consider. He thought of his nephew
+and was about to plead that Jack be sent along with him when Blackbeard
+demanded:
+
+"What of the boy? He takes my eye. No pursy swine of a lawyer could sire
+a lad of his brawn and inches."
+
+"I am Master Cockrell," Jack answered for himself, "and I would have you
+more courteous to my worthy uncle."
+
+It was a speech so bold that the scourge of the Spanish Main tugged at
+his whiskers with an air of comical perplexity. The headstrong Jack was
+keen enough to note that he had made an impression and he rashly added:
+
+"'Tis not long since I knocked a pirate on the head for incivility."
+
+Mr. Peter Forbes gazed aghast, with slackened jaw, expecting to see his
+mad nephew cut down by the sweep of a broadsword, but Blackbeard merely
+grinned and slapped the lad half-way across the deck with a buffet of
+his open hand. Dizzily Jack picked himself up and was furiously scolded
+by his uncle. Their lives hung by a hair and this was no time to play
+the fool. For once, however, Jack was the wiser of the two. In an
+amiable humor Blackbeard exclaimed:
+
+"And so this strapping young jackanapes knocks pirates on the head!
+There be lazy dogs among my men that well deserve it. You shall stay
+aboard, Master Cockrell, whilst the juicy lubber of a lawyer voyages
+into Charles Town. He may sweat an' strive the more if I hold you as his
+security. Zounds, I'll make a gentleman rover of ye, Jack, for I like
+your mettle."
+
+It was futile for the unhappy uncle to argue the matter. He could only
+obey the tyrant's pleasure and hope for a speedy return and the release
+of the terrified passengers. The _Plymouth Adventure_ was ordered to
+haul her course to the westward and jog under easy sail toward the
+Charles Town bar. Blackbeard was rowed off to his own ship, the
+_Revenge_, leaving his sailing-master and a prize crew. These amused
+themselves by dragging the weeping women on deck and robbing them of
+their jewels and money, but no worse violence was offered. Middle-aged
+matrons and elderly spinsters, they were neither young nor fair enough
+to be stolen as pirates' brides.
+
+The _Revenge_ and the two sloops hovered within sight of the _Plymouth
+Adventure_ and their sails gleamed phantom-like in the darkness. There
+was little sleep aboard the captured merchant trader. Some of the
+pirates amused themselves with hauling chests and boxes out of the
+cabins and spilling the contents about the deck in riotous disorder. One
+sprightly outlaw arrayed himself in a silken petticoat and flowered
+bodice and paraded as a languishing lady with false curls until the
+others pelted him with broken bottles and tar buckets. By the flare of
+torches they ransacked the ship for provisions, cordage, canvas, and
+heaped them ready to be dumped into boats.
+
+Jack Cockrell looked on until he was too drowsy to stay awake and fell
+asleep on deck, his head pillowed on his arm. Through the night the
+watches were changed to the harsh summons of the pirate sailing-master
+or his mate. Once Jack awoke when a seaman staggered into the moonlight
+with blood running down his face. He was not likely to be caught napping
+on watch again.
+
+At dawn the _Plymouth Adventure_ was astir and the _Revenge_ ran close
+aboard to watch Mr. Peter Arbuthnot Forbes and two prosperous merchants
+of Charles Town bundled into the long-boat. Blackbeard shouted bloody
+threats through his trumpet, reminding them that he would allow no more
+than two days' grace for their errand ashore. Uncle Peter was deeply
+affected as he embraced his nephew and kissed him on the cheek. Jack's
+eyes were wet and he faltered, with unsteady voice:
+
+"Forgive me, sir, for all the trouble I have made you. Never did I
+expect a parting like this."
+
+"A barbarous coast, Jack, and a hard road to old England," smiled the
+Secretary of the Council. "Have a stout heart. By God's grace I shall
+soon deliver you from these sea vermin."
+
+The boy watched the long-boat hoist sail with a grizzled, scarred old
+boatswain from the _Revenge_ at the tiller. It drove for the blue
+fairway of the channel between the frothing shoals of the bar and made
+brave headway for the harbor. Then the ships stood out to sea to go
+clear of a lee shore and the captives of the _Plymouth Adventure_
+endured the harrowing suspense with such courage as they could muster.
+Should any accident delay the return of the long-boat beyond two days,
+even head winds or foul weather, or if there was lack of medicines in
+the town, they were doomed to perish.
+
+Jack Cockrell endured it with less anguish than the other wretched
+hostages. He had the sublime confidence of youth in its own destiny and
+he had found a chum in a boyish pirate named Joseph Hawkridge who said
+he had sailed out of London as an apprentice seaman in a ketch bound to
+Jamaica. He had been taken out of his ship by Blackbeard, somewhere off
+the Azores, and compelled to enlist or walk the plank. At first he was
+made cook's scullion but because he was well-grown and active, the chief
+gunner had taken him over as a powder boy.
+
+This Joe Hawkridge was a waif of the London slums, hard and wise beyond
+his years, who had been starved and abused ever since he could remember.
+He had fled from cruel taskmasters ashore to endure the slavery of the
+sea and to be kidnapped into piracy was no worse than other things he
+had suffered. A gangling lad, with a grin on his homely face, he had
+certain instincts of manliness, of decent conduct, although he had known
+only men whose souls were black with sin. Heaven knows where he learned
+these cleaner aspirations. They were like the reflection of a star in a
+muddy pool.
+
+It was easy for Jack Cockrell to win his confidence. Few of his
+shipmates spoke kindly or showed pity for him. And their youth drew them
+together. Jack's motive was largely curiosity as soon as he discovered
+that here was one of Blackbeard's crew ready to confide in him. The two
+lads chatted in sheltered corners of the deck, between watches, or met
+more freely in the night hours. Jack shuddered at some of the tales that
+were told him but he harkened breathless and asked for more.
+
+"Yes, this Blackbeard is the very wickedest pirate that ever sailed,"
+said Joe Hawkridge in the most matter-of-fact tones. "You have found him
+merciful because he fears a mortal sickness will sweep through his
+ships."
+
+"You have curdled my blood enough for now," admitted Jack. "Tell me
+this. What do they say of Captain Stede Bonnet? He chances to be a
+friend of mine."
+
+Joe Hawkridge ceased to grin. He was startled and impressed. Real
+gentlemen like this young Cockrell always told the truth. Making certain
+that they could not be overheard, Joe whispered:
+
+"What news of Stede Bonnet? You've seen him? When? Did he cruise to the
+north'ard? Has he been seen off Charles Town?"
+
+"He came ashore not long ago, and invited me to dinner at the tavern
+with him," bragged Jack. "And he coaxed me to sign in his ship."
+
+"Yes, you'd catch his eye, Cockrell, but listen! What ship had he, and
+how many men? God strike me, but I'll not tattle it. I'm true as steel
+to Stede Bonnet. If you love me, don't breathe it here."
+
+"There is no love lost betwixt him and Blackbeard?" excitedly queried
+Jack.
+
+"Mortal foes they be, if you ask Stede Bonnet."
+
+Feeling sure he could trust this young Hawkridge, Jack informed him:
+
+"Stede Bonnet flies his pennant in a fine brig, the _Royal James_, with
+seventy lusty rovers. But what about him, Joe? Why does he hate this
+foul ogre of a Blackbeard? Did they ever sail together?"
+
+"'Twas in the Bay of Honduras. Captain Bonnet was a green hand at the
+trade but zealous to win renown at piratin'. And so he made compact with
+Blackbeard, to sail as partners. There was Stede Bonnet with a fine ship
+and his own picked crew. By treachery Blackbeard stole the vessel from
+him. Bonnet and his men were left to shift for 'emselves in a rotten old
+hulk that was like to founder in a breeze o' wind."
+
+"But they stayed afloat and took them a good ship," proudly exclaimed
+Jack, with a personal interest in the venture.
+
+"True, by what you say. D'ye see the _Revenge_ yonder, Blackbeard's tall
+cruiser? The very ship he filched from Stede Bonnet by dirty stratagem
+and broken oaths!"
+
+"Then the powder will burn when next they meet?"
+
+"As long as there's a shot in the locker, Jack. And Blackbeard's men are
+ripe for mutiny. Let 'em once sight Stede Bonnet's topsails and----"
+
+A gunner's mate broke into this interview with a cat-o'-nine-tails and
+flogged Joe Hawkridge forward to duty. He ducked and fled with a
+farewell grin at the nephew of the Secretary of the Council. Now all
+this was diverting enough to keep Jack from bemoaning his fate, but the
+other passengers counted the hours one by one and their hearts began to
+drum against their ribs. They scanned the sea and the harbor bar with
+aching eyes, for the two days were well-nigh spent and there was never a
+sign of the long-boat and the messengers with the ransom of medicines
+which should avert the sentence of death.
+
+Sunrise of the second day brought them no comfort. The sea was gray and
+the sky leaden, without the slightest stir of wind. The drifting vessels
+rolled in a swell that heaved as smooth as oil. It was a calm which
+presaged violent weather. Against her masts the yards of the _Plymouth
+Adventure_ banged with a sound like distant thunder and the idle canvas
+slatted to the thump of blocks and the thin wail of chafing cordage.
+
+Captain Jonathan Wellsby was permitted the freedom of the poop by
+Blackbeard's sailing-master who seemed a sober and competent officer.
+They were seen to confer earnestly, as though the safety of the ship
+were uppermost in their minds. Soon the pirates of the prize crew were
+ordered to stow and secure all light sail and pass extra lashings about
+the boats and batten the hatches. They worked slowly, some of them
+shaking with fever, nor could kicks and curses and the sting of the
+whistling cat make them turn to smartly. The sailing-master signaled the
+_Revenge_ to send off more hands but Blackbeard was either drunk or in
+one of his crack-brained moods. With a laugh he pulled a brace of
+pistols from his sash and blazed away at the _Plymouth Adventure._
+
+The two sloops of the pirate squadron had sagged down to leeward during
+the night and were trying to work back to their stations when the dead
+calm intervened. Their skippers had sense enough to read the weather
+signs and had begun to take in canvas. On board of the _Revenge_,
+however, there was aimless confusion, the mates making some attempt to
+prepare the ship for a heavy blow while Blackbeard defied the elements.
+His idea of arousing his men was to try potshots with his pistols as
+they crept out on the swaying spars.
+
+It was quite apparent that the sailing-master was sorely needed in the
+_Revenge_, if order was to be brought out of this chaos, but he received
+no orders to quit the _Plymouth Adventure_. He was a proper seaman, Ned
+Rackham by name, who had deserted from the Royal Navy, after being
+flogged and keel-hauled for some trifling offense. Rumor had it that he
+was able to enforce respect from Blackbeard and would stand none of his
+infernal nonsense.
+
+"In this autumn season we may catch a storm from the West Indies, Mr.
+Rackham," said Captain Wellsby. "The sea has a greasy look and this
+heavy ground swell is a portent."
+
+"The feel of it is in the air, shipmaster. There fell an evil calm like
+this come two year ago when I was wrecked in a ship-of-the-line within
+sight of Havana. Four hundred men sank with her."
+
+"If my sailors were not penned in the fo'castle----" suggested the
+merchant skipper.
+
+"None o' that," was the stern retort. "This ship is a prize to
+Blackbeard and so she stays, and you will sink or swim with her."
+
+The morning wore on and the two days of grace had passed for those
+doleful hostages in the _Plymouth Adventure_. They beheld the black flag
+hoisted to the rigging of the _Revenge_ as a signal of tragic import,
+but the bandy-legged monster with the festooned whiskers was not to
+disport himself with this wanton butchery. The sky had closed darkly
+around the becalmed ships, in sodden clouds which were suddenly obscured
+by mist and rain while the wind sighed in fitful gusts. It steadied into
+the southward and swiftly increased in force until the sea was whipped
+into foam and scud.
+
+Staunch and well-found, the _Plymouth Adventure_ went reeling off across
+the spray-swept leagues of water, showing only her reefed topsails and
+courses. The two pirate sloops vanished beyond the curtain of mist. When
+last seen, one of them was dismasted and the other was laboring in grave
+peril. The _Revenge_ loomed as a spectral shape while Blackbeard was
+endeavoring to get her running free in pursuit of the _Plymouth
+Adventure_. But slovenly, reckless seamanship had caught him unready.
+His sails were blowing to ribbons, ropes flying at loose ends, and it
+was with great difficulty that the vessel could be made to mind her
+tiller.
+
+Already the sea was rising in crested combers which broke with the noise
+of thunder and the fury of the wind was insensate. Slowly the struggling
+_Revenge_ dropped astern, yawing wildly, rolling her bulwarks under,
+splintered spars dangling from the caps. She was a crippled ship which
+would be lucky to see port again. It was to be inferred that Blackbeard
+had ceased to cut his mirthful capers on the poop and that he would have
+given bushels of doubloons to regain his sailing-master and men.
+
+In the _Plymouth Adventure_ things were in far better plight, even with
+the feeble, short-handed prize crew. Prudently snugged down in ample
+time, with extra hands at the steering tackles, they let her drive. She
+would perhaps wear clear of the coast and there was hope of survival
+unless the tempest should fairly wrench her strong timbers asunder.
+
+Lashed to the weather rigging, Captain Jonathan Wellsby wiped the brine
+from his eyes and waved his arm at the helmsman, now to ease her a
+little, again to haul up and thus thwart some ravening sea which
+threatened to stamp his ship under. Sailing-Master Ned Rackham was
+content to let the skipper con his own vessel in this great emergency.
+
+The mind of Captain Wellsby was very active and he pondered on something
+else than winning through the storm. He had been helpless while under
+the guns of the _Revenge_, with the two sloops in easy call. Now the
+situation was vastly different. He had been delivered out of
+Blackbeard's clutches. And in the forecastle were thirty British seamen
+with hearts of oak, raging to be loosed with weapons in their hands.
+Peering into the gray smother of sea and sky, Captain Jonathan Wellsby
+licked his lips hungrily as he said to himself:
+
+"Not now, but if the storm abates and we float through the night, these
+lousy picaroons shall dance to another tune."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+THE CAPTIVE SEAMEN IN THE FORECASTLE
+
+
+JACK COCKRELL was seasick. This was enough to spoil any adventure.
+Curled up under a boat, the spray pelted him and the wild motion of the
+ship sloshed him back and forth. He took no interest even in piracy. Joe
+Hawkridge, tough as whip-cord and seasoned to all kinds of weather, came
+clawing his way aft while the water streamed from his thin shirt and
+ragged breeches. The pirates of the prize crew had sought shelter
+wherever they could find it. The waist of the ship was flooded with
+breaking seas. A few of the larboard watch were huddled forward, close
+to the lofty forecastle where they were stationed as sentries over the
+imprisoned sailors of the _Plymouth Adventure_.
+
+The commotion of the wind shrieking in the rigging and the horrid crash
+of the toppling combers were enough to convince a landlubber that the
+vessel was doomed to founder. But Joe Hawkridge clapped young Jack an
+affectionate clout on the ear and bawled at him:
+
+ "For his work he's never loth,
+ An' a-pleasurin' he'll go,
+ Tho' certain sure to be popt off;
+ _Yo, ho, with the rum below!_"
+
+Jack managed to fetch a sickly smile of greeting, but had nothing to
+say. Joe snuggled down beside him and explained:
+
+"I wouldn't dare sing that song if Blackbeard's bullies could hear me.
+'Tis known as Stede Bonnet's ditty, for a fight or a frolic."
+
+"By Harry, they can roll it out. My blood tingled when they chorused it
+through Charles Town," said Jack, with signs of animation and a sparkle
+in his eye. "Tell me truly, Joe. What about this pirate sailing-master,
+Ned Rackham? He seems a different sort from your other drunken wretches.
+He is more like one of Captain Bonnet's choosing."
+
+"Gulled you, has he?" cried Joe. "I was afeard of that. And he's getting
+on the blind side of your skipper. This Cap'n Jonathan Wellsby is brave
+enough and a rare seaman, but he ne'er dealt with a smooth rogue like
+Ned Rackham. He stays sober to plot for his own advantage. He will serve
+Blackbeard only till he can trip him by the heels. Now listen well,
+Jack, seasick though ye be. You will have to warn your skipper, Captain
+Wellsby."
+
+"Warn him of what? My poor head is so addled that I can fathom no plots.
+How can Ned Rackham do us mischief while this infernal gale blows? He
+toils with might and main for the safety of the ship."
+
+"Yes, you dunce, and let a lull come," scornfully exclaimed the boyish
+pirate. "What then? A fine ship this, and well gunned. She would make a
+smackin' cruiser for Ned Rackham, eh? He hoists the Jolly Roger on his
+own account and laughs at Blackbeard."
+
+"Take our ship for his own?" faltered Jack, his wits confused. "I never
+thought of that. Why, that means getting rid of us, of the passengers
+and crew."
+
+Joe passed a hand across his throat with a grimace that said more than
+words.
+
+"He has the ship's company disarmed and helpless, Jack. And pirates
+a-plenty to work her till he recruits a stronger force. All hands of 'em
+have a surfeit of Blackbeard's bloody whims an' didoes."
+
+"And Captain Wellsby will be caught off his guard?" said Jack, shivering
+at the aspect of this new terror.
+
+"Can he do aught to prevent, unless he is bold enough to forestall it?"
+answered the shrewd young sea waif. "Better die fighting than be slain
+like squealin' rats."
+
+"Recapture the ship ere Ned Rackham casts the dice," said Jack. "But it
+means playing the hazard in the midst of this storm. How can it be done?
+A forlorn venture. It can but fail."
+
+"You are as good as dead if you don't," was Joe's sensible verdict.
+
+Jack Cockrell forgot his wretched qualms of mind and body. The trumpet
+call of duty invigorated him. He was no longer a useless lump. The color
+returned to his cheek as he crawled from under the boat and shakily
+hauled himself to his feet. Joe Hawkridge nodded approval and exhorted:
+
+"A stiff upper lip, my gallant young gentleman. Steady she goes, an' not
+too hasty. Ned Rackham is as sharp as a whetted sword. Ware ye, boy,
+lest he pick up the scent. Fetch me word, here, beneath this
+jolly-boat."
+
+Jack stole away, staggering along the high poop deck until he could
+cling to the life-line stretched along the roof of the great cabin.
+There he slumped down and feigned helplessness, banged against the
+bulwark as a dripping heap of misery or kicked aside by the pirates of
+the watch as they were relieved at the steering tackles. From
+half-closed eyes he watched Ned Rackham, a vigilant, dominant figure in
+a tarred jacket and quilted breeches and long sea-boots. Now and again
+he cupped his hands and yelled in the ear of Captain Wellsby whose beard
+was gray with brine.
+
+Jack saw that it was hopeless to get a private word with the skipper on
+deck. The clamor of the storm was too deafening. The one chance was to
+intercept him in the cabin when he went below for food and drink. Jack
+dragged himself to the after hatchway which was shoved open a trifle to
+admit air, and squeezed himself through. Before he tumbled down the
+steep staircase he turned to glance at Captain Wellsby. Unseen by Ned
+Rackham, the boy raised his hand in a furtive, beckoning gesture.
+
+The pirates had taken the main room of the after-house for their own
+use, driving the passengers and ship's officers into the small cabins or
+staterooms. The air was foul below, reeking of the bilges, and the main
+room was incredibly filthy. The pirates ate from dirty dishes, they had
+scattered food about, and they kicked off their boots to sleep on the
+floor like pigs in a sty.
+
+Several of them were seated at the long table, bottle and mug in hand,
+and the gloomy place was poorly lighted by a swinging whale-oil lamp.
+Jack Cockrell crept unnoticed into a corner and was giddy and almost
+helpless with nausea. It seemed ages before Captain Wellsby's legs
+appeared in the hatchway and he came down into the cabin, bringing a
+shower of spray with him. His kindly face was haggard and sad and he
+tottered from sheer weariness. Passing through to his own room, a scurvy
+pirate hurled refuse food at him, with a silly laugh, and others
+insulted him with the foulest epithets.
+
+He paid them no heed and they returned to their own amusements. Jack
+Cockrell aroused himself to stumble after the skipper who halted to
+grasp the lad by the shoulder and shove him headlong into the little
+room. The door was quickly bolted behind them. A lurch of the vessel
+flung Jack into the bunk but he managed to sit up, holding his head in
+his hands, while he feebly implored:
+
+"Did you note me wave my hand, sir, when I came below?"
+
+"Yes, and I followed as soon as I could," answered the master of the
+_Plymouth Adventure_. "There was the hint of secrecy in your signal,
+Jack. What's in the wind?"
+
+"I am the only passenger to win the confidence of one of Blackbeard's
+crew," explained the lad. "This Joe Hawkridge is true to us, I'll swear
+it. He is a pressed man, hating his masters. He bids me tell you that
+Ned Rackham will seize the ship for his own as soon as ever the wind
+goes down."
+
+"Um-m, is he as bold as that?" grunted the skipper, rubbing his nose
+with an air of rueful surprise. "No honor among thieves, Jack. I thought
+him loyal to Blackbeard. I have considered attempting something of my
+own when the weather permits but this news quickens me. This young imp
+o' Satan that ye call Joe,--he will side with us in a pinch?"
+
+"Aye, sir. And he knows this Ned Rackham well. There has been talk among
+the pirates of rising against Blackbeard to follow the fortunes of
+Sailing-Master Rackham. Here is the ship, as Joe says."
+
+"It has a plausible sound," said Captain Wellsby. "My intention was to
+wait, but I shall have to strike first."
+
+"Can we fight in this storm, sir, even if we manage to release our
+sailors?" asked Jack, very dismally.
+
+"Not what we can, but what we must do," growled the stubborn British
+mariner. "The shame of striking my colors rankles like a wound. God
+helping me, we shall wipe out that stain if we drown in a sinking ship.
+I talk to you as a man, Master Cockrell, for such you have proven
+yourself. And who else is there to serve me in this adventure?"
+
+"To set our sailors free, you mean, sir?" eagerly exclaimed Jack. "I
+took thought of that. There is nobody but me, neither your mates nor the
+passengers, who can pass among the pirates without suspicion. The knaves
+have humored me, hearing the tale of the pirate I knocked on the head
+and my braggart remark to Blackbeard. They have seen me about the decks
+with Joe Hawkridge as my boon comrade. 'Tis their fancy that I am likely
+to enlist."
+
+"Well said, Jack," was the skipper's compliment. "Yes, you might make
+your way for'ard without interference,--but the fo'castle hatches are
+stoutly guarded. Again, should my brave fellows find exit, they are
+weaponless, unready. Moreover, they have been crammed in that dark hole,
+drenched by the sea, cruelly bruised by the tossing of the ship, and
+weakened for lack of food and air."
+
+"Granted, sir," sighed Jack. "But if some message could be smuggled in
+to forewarn them of the enterprise,--would that brace 'em to the
+assault?"
+
+"Will ye try it, Jack?" asked the skipper, with a note of appeal in his
+hearty voice. "I know not where else to turn. You take your life in your
+hands but----"
+
+The shipmaster broke off with a grim smile. It was absurd to prate of
+life or death in such a strait as this. The boy reflected before he
+said:
+
+"If--if I fail, sir, Joe Hawkridge will try to pass a message in to the
+men. You can depend on 't."
+
+"A last resort, Jack. You vouch for him but I trust you far sooner. He
+has kept sorry company."
+
+"When is the best hour, Captain Wellsby?"
+
+"Just before nightfall when the watches will be changing. I dare not
+delay it longer than that. In darkness, my lads will be unable to find
+the foe and strike hard and quick. Nor can they rush to lay hold of the
+only weapons in their reach,--the pikes in the racks beside the masts.
+Not a pistol or cutlass amongst 'em, and they must fight with these
+wicked dogs of pirates who think naught of killing men."
+
+"Let your lusty sailors once get clear, sir," stoutly declared Jack
+Cockrell, "and they will play a merry game with those long pikes. Then I
+am to slip the message written by your hand on a bit of paper?"
+
+"That's it! I will command them to pound against the scuttle, three
+raps, for a signal of response, and you must listen for it. Then it is
+for them to stand ready, on the chance that you can slip the bar of the
+hatch or the bolts on the door."
+
+"But if they have to come out singly, sir, and the sentries are
+ready-witted, why, your men may be cut down or pistoled in their
+tracks."
+
+"I am so aware," said Captain Wellsby, his honest features glum, "but we
+cannot change the odds."
+
+He found an ink-horn and quill and laboriously wrote a few lines on a
+leaf torn from the back of a sea-stained log-book. Jack tucked it
+carefully away and thus they parted company, perhaps to meet no more in
+life. Through the waning afternoon, Jack stowed himself on deck and held
+long converse with Joe Hawkridge when they met between the keel-chocks
+of the jolly-boat. Because he shared not the skipper's feeling of
+distrust, Jack sought the active aid of his chum of a pirate lad. It was
+agreed that they should endeavor to reach the forecastle together when
+the ship's bell tolled the hour of beginning the first night watch.
+
+Joe hoped he might decoy or divert the sentries. If not, he had another
+scheme or two. A gunner's mate of the prize crew had sent him to
+overhaul the lashings of the battery of nine-pounders which were ranged
+along the waist. With several other hands Joe had made all secure,
+because the guns were apt to get adrift in such weather as this and
+plunge to and fro across the deck like maddened beasts. Now Joe
+Hawkridge had lingered, on pretext of making sure that one forward gun
+could be fired, if needs be, as a distress signal should the ship open
+her seams or strike upon a shoal.
+
+He had satisfied himself that the tompion, or wooden plug which sealed
+the muzzle was tight, and that no water had leaked through the wrapping
+of tarred canvas which protected the touch-hole. Before replacing them,
+he had made two or three trips to the deck-house amidships in which was
+the carpenter's room. Each time he tucked inside his shirt as many
+forged iron spikes, bolts, and what not as he could safely carry.
+
+Unobserved, he shoved this junk down the throat of the nine-pounder and
+wadded it fast with handfuls of oakum. He worked coolly, without haste,
+as agile as a monkey when the ship careened and the sea spurted through
+the cracks of the gun-ports. Well pleased with his task, he said to
+himself, with that grin which no peril could obliterate:
+
+"God alone knows how I can strike fire to a match and keep it alight,
+but the sky shows signs of easier weather."
+
+The fury of the storm had, indeed, diminished. It might be a respite
+before the wind hauled into another quarter and renewed its ferocious
+violence, but the air was no longer thick with the whirling smother of
+foam and spray and the straining topmasts had ceased to bend like whips.
+The ship was gallantly easing herself of the waves which broke aboard
+and the rearing billows astern were not threatening to stamp her under.
+
+It lacked almost an hour of nightfall when Jack Cockrell crept along the
+poop and halted to lean against the timbered railing by the mizzen
+shrouds. All he could think of was that Ned Rackham might seize upon
+this sudden abatement of the gale to hasten his own wicked conspiracy
+and so ruin the plan to restore the _Plymouth Adventure_ to her own
+lawful company. This menace had occurred to Captain Jonathan Wellsby who
+stood tense and rigid at the sailing-master's elbow, watching him from
+the tail of his eye.
+
+Relief o'erspread the skipper's worn features when he espied Jack
+Cockrell who stood as if waiting for orders. A nod, a meaning glance,
+and they understood each other. Striving to appear unconcerned, Jack
+moved toward the forward part of the ship. He was aquiver with
+excitement, and his breath was quick and small, but the sense of fear
+had left him. Captain Wellsby had called him a man and, by God's sweet
+grace, he would so acquit himself.
+
+The pirates were swarming out of the cabin to taste the clean air and
+limber their cramped muscles. The ship still wallowed as she ran before
+the wind and it was breakneck work to clamber about. From the topsail
+yards fluttered mere ribbons of canvas where the reefed sails had
+bellied. Ned Rackham shouted for the watch to lay aloft and cut the
+remnants clear and bend new cloths to keep her from broaching to.
+
+Jack Cockrell's heart leaped for joy. At least a dozen of the most
+active pirates would have to obey this order. This would remove them
+from the deck for a precious interval of time. He slouched aimlessly
+nearer the forecastle, stretching his neck to gaze up at the pirates as
+they footed the ratlines and squirmed over the clumsy tops. Joe
+Hawkridge joined him, as if by chance, and they wandered to the lee side
+of the forecastle. There they were screened from the sight of the
+sentries.
+
+The wooden shutters of the little windows had been spiked fast on the
+outside and Jack was at his wits' end to find by what means he might
+slip the fateful message to the captive seamen. He dared not climb upon
+the roof and seek for a crack in a hatchway. This would make him too
+conspicuous.
+
+Cautiously he stole around the massive structure and was all but washed
+overboard when he gained the windward side where the water broke in
+hissing cataracts. So great had been its force during the height of the
+storm, that one of the shutters had been splintered and almost crushed
+in. Clutching the bit of paper which was tightly rolled and wrapped in a
+square of oiled linen, Jack pushed it through a ragged crevice in the
+shutter.
+
+It was gravely doubtful whether the men would discover the message in
+the gloom of their prison. It might fall to the floor and be trampled
+unperceived. And yet Jack Cockrell could not make himself believe that
+deliverance would be thwarted. He said a prayer and waited with his ear
+against the wall of the forecastle. There he leaned through an agonized
+eternity as the slow moments passed. It was like the ordeal of a
+condemned man who hopes that a blessed reprieve may save him, in the
+last hour, from the black cap and the noose.
+
+Up aloft the pirate seamen were slashing the torn canvas with their
+dirks and casting loose the gaskets. Presently they began to come down
+to the deck, one by one. Some whispered word must have passed amongst
+them, because they drifted aft as by a common impulse although it was
+not yet the hour to change the watch. Their gunner's mate, a gigantic
+mulatto with a broken nose, went to the poop when Ned Rackham crooked
+his finger and these two stood aside, beyond earshot of Captain Wellsby,
+while they conferred with heads together.
+
+"They will strike first," Jack whispered to himself.
+
+The misty daylight had not darkened. The decks were not yet dusky with
+the shadows which Jack had hoped might enable him to approach the
+forecastle door in his brave endeavor to unbar it. The plans were all
+awry. Tears filled his eyes. And then there came to his ear a muffled
+knock against the other side of the forecastle planking.
+
+Once, twice, thrice! The signal was unmistakable. A little interval and
+it was repeated.
+
+Softly the trembling lad tiptoed to the corner of the forecastle house
+and peered around it to look for the sentries. Two of them had moved a
+few yards away to join a group which gazed aft as if expecting a
+summons from Ned Rackham on the poop. The third sentry leaned against
+the forecastle door, a cutlass at his belt. He was a long, bony man with
+a face as yellow as parchment from the Spanish fever and it was plain to
+read that there was no great strength in him.
+
+Faithful Joe Hawkridge sat astride the breech of the nine-pounder at
+which he had been so busily engaged earlier in the afternoon. He
+appeared to be an idler who merely looked on but he was watching every
+motion, and that hard, canny face of his had, for once, forgot to grin.
+Releasing a three-foot handspike from its lashing beside the
+gun-carriage, he awaited the next roll of the deck and deftly kicked
+this handy weapon. It slid toward the forecastle and Jack Cockrell
+stopped it with his foot.
+
+There was no time for hesitation. Snatching up the iron-shod handspike,
+Jack rushed straight at the forecastle door. Just then the ship lurched
+far down and he was shot headlong, like falling off the roof of a house.
+He had the momentum of a battering-ram. The sentry yelled and drew his
+cutlass with a swiftness amazing in a sick man. His footing was unsteady
+or Jack would have spitted himself on the point of the blade. As he went
+crashing full-tilt into the man the impact was terrific. They went to
+the deck together and the handspike spun out of Jack's grasp. There was
+no need to swing it on this luckless pirate for his bald head smote a
+plank with a thump which must have cracked it like an egg.
+
+Not even pausing to dart after the cutlass which had clattered from the
+lifeless fingers, Jack spun on his heel and wrenched at the heavy bar
+across the forecastle door and felt it slide from the fastenings. He
+tugged it clear and swung himself up to the roof to draw the bolts which
+secured the hatch. Rusted in their sockets, they resisted him but he
+spied a pulley-block within reach and used it as a hammer.
+
+All this was a matter of seconds only. The pirates grouped amidships had
+been waiting for Ned Rackham's word from aft and they were muddled by
+this sudden shift of action. The other sentries stared in foolish
+astonishment. The brief delay was enough to let Jack Cockrell free the
+hatch. While he toiled furiously, several pistols and a musket were
+snapped at him but the flint sparked on damp powder in the pans and only
+one ball whistled by his head.
+
+Out of the forecastle hatchway and through the door, the enraged sailors
+of the _Plymouth Adventure_ came rocketing like an explosion. They
+stumbled over each other, emerging head or feet first, blinking like
+owls in the daylight but with vision good enough to serve their purpose.
+Their goal was the nearest stand of boarding-pikes at the foot of the
+mainmast.
+
+But as they came surging on deck, they were not empty-handed. In the
+forecastle was a bricked oven for warmth in winter and for cooking
+kettles of soup. This they had torn to pieces and every man sallied
+forth with a square, flat brick in each hand and more inside his shirt.
+Those who were first to gain the deck pelted the nearest pirates with
+these ugly missiles. The air was full of hurtling bricks and the
+earliest casualty was a stout buccaneer who stopped one with his
+stomach.
+
+Driven back in yelling confusion, the pirates found their firearms
+almost useless, so drenched had the whole ship been by the battering
+seas, but they were accustomed to fighting it out with the cold steel
+and they were by no means a panicky mob. The fusillade of bricks held
+them long enough for the merchant sailors to escape from the forecastle
+and this was an advantage more precious than Captain Wellsby had hoped
+for.
+
+What the pirates required was a leader to rally them for attack. Quicker
+than it takes to tell it, Ned Rackham had raced along the poop and
+leaped to the waist at peril of breaking his neck. Agile, quick-witted,
+he bounded into the thick of it, cutlass in hand, while he shouted:
+
+"At 'em, lads! And give the dogs no quarter!"
+
+With hoarse outcry, his gallows-birds mustered compactly while those who
+had been in the cabin came scampering to join them. Curiously enough,
+Captain Jonathan Wellsby had been forgotten. He was left alone to handle
+the ship while the pirate helmsmen stood by the great tiller. To forsake
+it meant to let the vessel run wild and perhaps turn turtle in the
+swollen seas. And so the doughty skipper was, for the time, a looker-on.
+
+And now with Ned Rackham in the van, it seemed that the British sailors
+were in a parlous plight and that their sortie must fail. Craftily the
+pirates manoeuvered to drive them back into the forecastle and there
+to butcher them like sheep.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+RELEASING A FEARFUL WEAPON
+
+
+JACK COCKRELL sprawled flat upon the forecastle roof and knew not what
+to do. He could lay hands on nothing to serve as a weapon and he bade
+fair to be trapped like the sailors whose cause he had joined. With a
+feeling of despair he let his gaze rove to the scrawny figure of Joe
+Hawkridge who still bestrode the nine-pounder and took no part in the
+fray. But Joe had no comfort for him, as a gesture conveyed. It had been
+Joe's wild scheme to obtain the help of Jack and Captain Wellsby, at the
+least, and so cast loose the gun and slew it around to rake the deck and
+mow the pirates down. But the men were lacking for this heavy task, and
+the sailors of the _Plymouth Adventure_ were too intent on fighting
+against fearful odds to pay heed to Joe Hawkridge's appeals. He had even
+skulked into the galley and was ready with a little iron pot filled with
+live coals which was hidden under a bit of tarpaulin.
+
+Ned Rackham was a young man and powerful, with a long reach and a
+skilled blade. He fairly hewed his way into the ruck of the dauntless
+sailors who had no more bricks to hurl. Several pirates were disabled,
+with broken arms or bloody crowns, but the others crowded forward,
+grunting as they slashed and stabbed, and well aware that Ned Rackham
+would cut the laggards down should he detect them.
+
+At the moment when there seemed no chance of salvation for the crew of
+the _Plymouth Adventure_, Joe Hawkridge leaped from the gun and beckoned
+Jack. The grin was restored to the homely, freckled visage and the salt
+water gamin danced in jubilant excitement. Down from the forecastle roof
+tumbled Jack Cockrell and went sliding across the deck, heels over head,
+to fetch up in the scupper. Joe hauled him by the leg, close to the
+wooden carriage of the gun, and swiftly told him what was to be done.
+
+Obediently Jack began to loose the knots which secured the rope tackles
+but it was a slow task. The wet had made the hemp as hard as iron and he
+lacked a marlinspike. Joe dodged around the gun, saw the difficulty and
+sawed through one rope after another, all but the last strand or two.
+Then the lads tailed on to the breeching hawsers, which held the
+carriage from sliding on its iron rollers, and eased the strain as well
+as they could.
+
+The ponderous mass was almost free to plunge across the deck. Joe
+sweated and braced his feet against a ring-bolt while Jack Cockrell
+found a cleat. Ned Rackham's men were moving forward, cut and thrust,
+while the sailors grappled with them bare-handed and battled grimly
+like mastiffs.
+
+"The next time she rolls!" panted Joe Hawkridge as the hawser ripped the
+skin from his palms.
+
+"Aye, make ready to cut," muttered Jack.
+
+The ship heaved herself high and then listed far down to starboard. Joe
+slashed at the last strands of the tackles and yelled to Jack to let go
+the hawser. Instead of discharging the nine-pounder, they were employing
+the piece itself, and the carriage of oak and iron, as a terrible
+missile. The moment of launching it was shrewdly chosen. The pirates,
+still in compact formation as led by Ned Rackham, were directly abreast
+of this forward gun of the main deck battery. The deck inclined at a
+steep and giddy pitch. With a grinding roar the gun rolled from its
+station. It gathered impetus and lunged across the ship as an instrument
+of fell destruction. It was more to be feared than an assault of armed
+men.
+
+The warning rumble of the iron wheels as they furrowed the planking was
+heard by the pirates. They turned from their game of butchery and stood
+frozen in their tracks for a frightened instant. Then they tried to flee
+in all directions. Their tarry pigtails fairly stood on end. Well they
+knew what it meant to have a gun break adrift in a heavy sea. Two or
+three who had been badly hurt were unable to move fast enough. The gun
+crunched over them and then seemed to pursue a limping pirate, veering
+to overtake him as he fled. He was tossed against the bulwark like a
+bundle of bloody rags.
+
+The gun crashed into the stout timbers of the ship's side and they were
+splintered like match-wood. It rebounded as the deck sloped sharply in
+the next wallowing roll, and now this frenzied monster of wood and iron
+seemed fairly to run amuck. It was inspired with a sinister
+intelligence, resolved to wreak all the damage possible. The pinnace,
+the water barrels, the coamings of the cargo hatches, were smashed to
+fragments as the gun turned this way and that and went plunging in
+search of victims.
+
+[Illustration: THE BRAWN OF THESE LADS MADE THE PIKE A MATCH FOR A
+PIRATE'S CUTLASS]
+
+Left to themselves, the seamen of the _Plymouth Adventure_ would have
+risked their lives to cast ropes about the gun and moor it fast. But now
+they were quick to see that the tide had been turned in their favor. The
+pirates were demoralized. Some were in the rigging, others atop the
+bulwarks, and only the readiest and boldest, with Ned Rackham in the
+lead, had an eye to the task in hand, which was to regain possession of
+the ship.
+
+And now the boatswain of the _Plymouth Adventure_, a rosy giant of a man
+from South Devon, shouted to his comrades to follow him. They delayed
+until the runaway cannon crashed into another gun, and then they broke
+like sprinters from the mark and sped straight for the mainmast, seeking
+the rack of boarding-pikes. They ran nimbly, as men used to swaying
+decks, and compassed the distance in a few strides.
+
+Ned Rackham perceived their purpose and tried to intercept but his few
+staunch followers moved warily, expecting to see that insensate monster
+of a gun bear down upon them. The swiftest of the merchant sailors laid
+hands on the pikes and whirled to cover their shipmates, until all hands
+could be armed. Then the gun came roaring down at them but they ducked
+behind the mast or stepped watchfully aside. Men condemned to death are
+not apt to lose their wits in the face of one more peril.
+
+These pikes were ashen shafts with long steel points and the merchant
+seamen had been trained to use them. And the brawn of these lads made
+the pike a match for a pirate's cutlass. Ned Rackham bounded forward to
+swing at the broad, deep-chested boatswain. A wondrous pair of
+antagonists they were, in the prime of their youth and vigor. The
+pirate's cutlass bit clean through the pike shaft as the boatswain
+parried the blow but the apple-cheeked Devonshire man closed in and
+wrapped his arms around his foe. They went to the deck clutching for
+each other's throats and the fight trampled over them.
+
+Meanwhile Joe Hawkridge and Jack Cockrell, unwilling to twiddle their
+thumbs, had rushed aft as fast as their legs could carry them. It was a
+mutual impulse, to release such of the men passengers as might have a
+stomach for fighting and also the ship's officers. Into the doorway
+which led from the waist, the two lads dived and scurried through the
+main cabin now clear of pirates. Locked doors they smashed with a
+broadaxe found in the small-arms chest and so entered all the rooms.
+
+The women passengers were almost dead with suffering, what with the
+turbulence of the storm and the wild riot on deck. The lads pitied them
+but had no time to console. Several of the men, merchants and planters
+of some physical hardihood, begged for weapons and Joe Hawkridge bade
+them help themselves from the spare arms which the pirates had left in
+the great cabin. In another little room the boys found the mates,
+steward, surgeon, and gunner of the _Plymouth Adventure_ and you may be
+sure that they came boiling out with a raging thirst for strife.
+
+"Harkee, Jack," said Joe before they climbed to the poop deck, "if the
+pirates are driven aft, as I expect, they will make a last stand in this
+cabin house which is like a fort. These 'fenseless women must be hidden
+safe from harm. Do you coax 'em into the lazarette."
+
+This was a room on the deck below, in the very stern of the ship where
+were kept the extra sails and coils of rope and various stores. It was
+the surest shelter against harm in such stress as this. Alas, Jack's
+persuasions were vain. The frantic women were in no humor to listen, and
+so the lads bundled them through the hatch as gently as possible and
+for company gave them such male passengers as lacked strength or courage
+to join the battle.
+
+While they were thus engaged, two pirates came flying down the ladder
+from the poop deck into the main cabin. They revolved like windmills in
+a jumble of arms and legs. Close behind them, in a manner more orderly
+came Captain Jonathan Wellsby who had tossed the one and tremendously
+booted the other. They were the helmsmen whom he had replaced with his
+own officers at the steering tackles, while his first mate had been left
+in charge of handling the ship.
+
+The skipper was now free to follow his own desires and he fell upon
+those two stunned pirates in the cabin and trussed them tight with bits
+of rope. Then he reloaded with dry powder all the pistols he could find
+and made a walking arsenal of himself. The two lads who now joined him
+needed no word of command. At his heels they made for the main deck and
+the shout which arose from those British sailors, so sorely beset, was
+mightily heartening.
+
+Blazing away with his pistols, the skipper cleared a path for himself,
+the pirates being taken aback when they were attacked in the rear. And
+they were leaderless, for Ned Rackham had been dragged aside with the
+marks of the boatswain's fingers on his throat and a sheath-knife buried
+in his side. He was alive but nobody paid heed to his groans.
+
+With the skipper in the thick of it, there was no danger of being penned
+in the forecastle again. The pirates were crowded aft, step by step,
+before the play of those wicked boarding-pikes. It would be hard to
+match a sea fight like this, amid the spray and the washing seas, on a
+deck that tipsily danced and staggered, with a truant gun smashing a
+good ship to bits and the wounded screaming as they saw this horror
+thundering at them. Captain Wellsby's men were at pains to drag their
+helpless comrades to safety but the pirates were too callous and too
+hard pressed to care for aught save their own worthless skins. They
+fought like wolves but they lacked the gristle and endurance of the
+stalwart sailors. Wheezing for breath, they ceased to curse and reeled
+back in silence while the sailors huzzaed and seemed to wax the lustier.
+
+As was bound to happen, the stubborn retreat broke into a rout. It was
+every man for himself and the devil take the hindmost. The pirates fled
+for the after cabin-house, there to take cover behind the timbered walls
+and use the small port-holes for musketry fire. Thus they could find
+respite and it would be immensely difficult to dislodge them.
+
+The first mate of the _Plymouth Adventure_ and his own two helmsmen saw
+what was taking place and they were of no mind to be cut off at the
+stern of the ship. They footed it along the poop and the cabin roof as
+the pirates were scampering inside and so gained the waist and were
+with their comrades. The tiller deserted, the vessel careened into the
+trough of the sea with a portentous creaking of spars and rending of
+canvas.
+
+The mainmast had been dealt more than one splintering blow by the
+fugitive gun. This sudden strain, of a ship broached to and hurled
+almost on her beam ends, was too much for the damaged mast. It broke
+short off, a few feet above the deck, and the ragged butt ripped the
+planks asunder as it was dragged overside by the weight of the towering
+fabric of yards and canvas. One merciful circumstance befell, for the
+tangle of shrouds and sheets and halliards ensnared the ramping monster
+of a cannon and overturned it. Caught in this manner, the gun was
+dragged to the broken bulwark and there it was held with the battered
+carriage in air.
+
+The mainmast was floating alongside the ship which it belabored with
+thumps that jarred the hull. It was likely to stave in the skin of the
+vessel and Captain Wellsby shouted to his men to hack at the trailing
+cordage and send the mast clear before it did a fatal injury. A dozen
+men risked drowning at this task while the others guarded the after
+cabin lest the pirates attempt a sally. These besieged rogues were given
+an interval in which to muster their force, organize a defense, and
+break into the magazine for muskets and powder and ball.
+
+Now Captain Wellsby was no dullard and he purposed to make short work of
+these vile pirates. Otherwise his crippled ship might not survive the
+wind and weather. He conferred with his gunner who had bethought
+himself, by force of habit, to fetch from aft his powder-horn and
+several yards of match, or twisted tow, which were wrapped around his
+body, beneath the tarred jerkin.
+
+"It grieves me sore to wreck yonder goodly cabin house," said the
+skipper in his beard, "but, by Judas, we'll blow 'em out of it. Haul and
+belay your pieces, Master Gunner, and let 'em have a salvo of round
+shot."
+
+Reckless of the musket balls which began to fly among them, the sailors
+jumped for their stations at the guns. First they set aright that
+capsized nine-pounder which had wreaked so much mischief and found that
+it could be discharged, despite the broken carriage. Joe Hawkridge and
+Jack Cockrell blithely aided to swing and secure it with emergency
+tackles and Joe exclaimed, with a chuckle:
+
+"This dose is enough to surprise Blackbeard hisself. 'Tis an
+ironmonger's shop I rammed down its throat."
+
+The gun was laid on the largest cabin port-hole just as it framed the
+ugly face of a pirate with a musket while another peered over his
+shoulder. Joe shook the powder-horn into the touch-hole and the gunner
+was ready with the match which he had lighted with his own flint and
+steel. Boom, and the gun recoiled in a veil of smoke. Through the cabin
+port-hole flew a deadly shower of spikes and bolts while the framework
+around it was shattered to bits. It was a most unhealthy place for
+pirates. They forsook it instantly. And the musketry fire slackened
+elsewhere. It was to be inferred that there was painful consternation in
+the cabin.
+
+With boisterous mirth, the sailors deftly turned other guns to bear and
+were careful not to let them get adrift. The muzzles had been well
+stopped against wetting by the sea and with a little dry powder for the
+priming, most of them could be served. They could not be reloaded for
+dearth of ammunition but Captain Wellsby felt confident that one round
+would suffice.
+
+Methodically the gun-crews aimed and fired one gun after another,
+watching the chance between the seas that broke aboard. The solid round
+shot, at short range, ripped through the cabin walls and bulkheads and
+buried themselves in the frames and timbers of the ship's stern. A good
+gunner was never so happy as when he saw the white splinters fly in
+showers and these zealous sailormen forgot they were knocking their own
+ship to pieces. They were on the target, and this was good enough.
+
+The beleaguered pirates made no more pretense of firing muskets or
+defying the crew to dig them out. Their fort was an untenable position.
+At this sport of playing bowls with round shot they were bound to lose.
+Captain Wellsby sighted the last gun himself. It was a bronze culverin
+of large bore, taken as a trophy from the stranded wreck of a Spanish
+galleon. With a tremendous blast this formidable cannon spat out a
+double-shotted load and the supports of the cabin roof were torn
+asunder. The tottering beams collapsed. Half the structure fell in.
+
+It was the signal for the sailors of the _Plymouth Adventure_ to charge
+aft and finish the business. They found pirates crawling from under the
+wreckage. It was like a demolished ant-heap. In the smaller cabins and
+other rooms far aft, which were more or less intact, some of the rascals
+showed fight but they were remorselessly prodded out with pikes and
+those unwounded were hustled forward to be thrown into the forecastle.
+It was difficult to restrain the seamen from dealing them the death they
+deserved but Captain Wellsby was no sea-butcher and he hoped to turn
+them over to the colonial authorities to be hanged with due ceremony.
+
+The badly hurt were laid in the forecastle bunks where the ship's
+surgeon washed and bandaged them after he had cared for the injured men
+of his own crew. Ned Rackham was still alive, conscious and defiant,
+surviving a wound which would have been mortal in most cases. Whether he
+lived or died was a matter of small concern to Captain Wellsby but he
+ordered the surgeon to nurse him with special care.
+
+The dead pirates were flung overboard but the bodies of seven brave
+British seamen were wrapped in sailcloth to be committed to the deep on
+the morrow, with a round shot at their feet and a prayer to speed their
+souls. There were men enough to work the ship but she was in a
+situation indescribably forlorn. It was possible to patch and shore the
+cabin house and make a refuge, even to find place for the wretched women
+who were lifted unharmed out of the lazarette. But the stout ship, her
+mainmast gone by the board, the deck ravaged by that infernal catapult
+of an errant gun, the hull pounded by the floating wreckage of spars,
+would achieve a miracle should she see port again.
+
+The combat with the pirates and their overthrow had been waged in the
+last hour before the gray night closed over a somber sea. God's mercy
+had caused the wind to fall and the waves to diminish in size else the
+ship would have gone to the bottom ere dawn. Much water had washed down
+into the hold through the broken cargo hatch and the gaps where the
+runaway gun had torn other fittings away. The carpenter sounded the well
+and solemnly stared at the wetted rod by the flicker of his horn
+lantern. The ship was settling. It was his doleful surmise that she
+leaked where the pounding spars overside had started the butts. It was
+man the pumps to keep the old hooker afloat and Captain Wellsby ordered
+his weary men to sway at the brakes, watch and watch.
+
+Joe Hawkridge and Jack Cockrell, more fit for duty than the others, put
+their backs into it right heartily while the sailors droned to the
+cadence of the pump a sentimental ditty which ran on for any number of
+verses and began in this wise:
+
+ "As, lately I traveled toward Gravesend,
+ I heard a fair Damosel a Sea-man commend:
+ And as in a Tilt-boat we passed along,
+ In praise of brave Sea-men she sung this new Song,
+ _Come Tradesman or Marchant, whoever he be,
+ There's none but a Sea-man shall marry with me!_"
+
+Thus they labored all the night through, men near dead with fatigue
+whose hard fate it was to contend now with pirates and again with the
+hostile ocean. The skipper managed to stay the foremast and to bend
+steering sails so that the ship was brought into the wind where her
+motion was easier. The sky cleared before daybreak and the rosy horizon
+proclaimed a fair sunrise. How far and in what direction the _Plymouth
+Adventure_ had been blown by the storm was largely guesswork. By means
+of dead reckoning and the compass and cross-staff, Captain Wellsby hoped
+to work out a position but meanwhile he scanned the sea with a sense of
+brooding anxiety.
+
+Instead of praying for plenty of sea room, he now hoped with all his
+heart that the vessel had been set in toward the coast. She was sinking
+under his feet and would not live through the day. It was useless to
+toil at the pumps or to strive at mending the shattered upperworks. The
+men turned to the task of quitting the ship, and of saving the souls on
+board. It was a pitiful extremity and yet they displayed a dogged,
+unshaken fidelity. Only one boat had escaped destruction. The pinnace
+had been staved in by the thunderbolt of a gun and the yawl, stowed upon
+the cabin roof, was wrecked by round shot. The small jolly-boat would
+hold the women passengers and the wounded sailors, with the hands
+required to tend oars and sail.
+
+Nothing remained but to try to knock together one or more rafts. Captain
+Wellsby discussed it with his officers and it was agreed that the
+able-bodied pirates should be left to build a raft for themselves,
+taking their own wounded with them. This was more mercy than they had
+any right to expect. The strapping young Devonshire boatswain, with his
+head tied up, was for leaving the blackguards to drown in the forecastle
+but the shipmaster was too humane a man for that.
+
+It was drawing toward noon when the first mate descried land to the
+westward, a bit of low coast almost level with the sea. In the light air
+the sluggish ship moved ever so slowly, with canvas spread on the fore
+and mizzen masts. Spirits revived and life tasted passing sweet. To
+drift in the open sea upon wave-washed rafts was an expedient which all
+mariners shuddered to contemplate. It was with feelings far different
+that they now assembled spars and planks and lashed and spiked them
+together on the chance of needing rafts to ferry them ashore from a
+stranded ship.
+
+Well into the bright afternoon the _Plymouth Adventure_ was wafted
+nearer and nearer the sandy coast. Within a half mile of it a line of
+breakers frothed and tumbled on a shoal beyond which the water deepened
+again. The ship could not be steered to avoid this barrier. Her main
+deck was almost level with the sea which lapped her gently and sobbed
+through the broken bulwarks. With a slight shock she struck the shoal
+and rested there just before she was ready to founder.
+
+With disciplined haste, the jolly-boat was launched and filled with its
+human freightage. The boatswain went in charge and four seamen tugged at
+the sweeps. There were trees and clumps of bushes among the hillocks of
+sand and a tiny bight for a landing place. The bulwark was then chopped
+away so that the largest raft could be shoved into the water by means of
+tackles, rollers and handspikes. It floated buoyantly and supported as
+many as fifteen men, who did not mind in the least getting their feet
+wet. Upon a raised platform in the centre of the raft were fastened
+barrels of beef and bread and casks of fresh water.
+
+The jolly-boat could hope to make other trips between the ship and the
+shore but the prudent skipper took no chances with the weather. A sudden
+gale might pluck the _Plymouth Adventure_ from the shoal or tear her to
+fragments where she lay. Therefore most of the men, including
+passengers, were embarked on the raft. Captain Wellsby remained aboard
+with a few of his sailors and our two lads, Joe and Jack, who had not
+attempted to thrust themselves upon the crowded raft.
+
+The pirates were making a commotion in the forecastle, yammering to be
+freed, but the skipper had no intention of loosing them until all his
+people had safely abandoned ship. The jolly-boat made a landing without
+mishap and returned to the wreck as the sun went down. More stores were
+dumped into it, sacks of potatoes and onions which had been overlooked,
+bedding for the women, powder and ball for the muskets, and other things
+which it was necessary to keep dry.
+
+Captain Wellsby got rid of the rest of his men on this trip, excepting
+the gunner and carpenter, and these lingered with him as a kind of
+body-guard pending the ticklish business of releasing the imprisoned
+pirates and forsaking them to their own devices. The jolly-boat was
+laden to the gunwales and Jack Cockrell held back, saying to Joe
+Hawkridge:
+
+"Why trouble the captain to set us ashore? Let us make a raft of our
+own. The breeze holds fair to the beach and it will be a lark."
+
+"It suits me well," grinned Joe. "If we wait to go off with the master,
+and those sinful pirates see me aboard, I'll need wings to escape 'em.
+They saw me serve the gun that was filled with spikes to the muzzle.
+Aye, Jack, I will feel happier to be elsewhere when Cap'n Wellsby unbars
+the fo'castle and holds 'em back with his pistols till he can cast off
+in the jolly-boat."
+
+"Yes, the sight of you is apt to put them in a vile temper," laughingly
+agreed Jack, "and 'tis awkward for the master to bother with us. Now
+about a little raft----"
+
+"Two short spars are enough. There they lie. And the cabin hatch will do
+for a deck. Spikes for thole-pins, and oars from the pinnace. Unlace the
+bonnet of the jib for a sail."
+
+"You are a proper sailorman, Joe. A voyage by starlight to an unknown
+coast. 'Tis highly romantic."
+
+They set to work without delay. Captain Wellsby had occupations of his
+own and no more than glanced at them in passing. Jack insisted on
+carrying a water breaker and rations, he being hungry and too busy to
+pause for supper. They would make a picnic cruise of the adventure.
+Handily Joe reeved a purchase and they hauled away until their raft slid
+off the sloping deck to leeward. With a gay hurrah to Captain Wellsby,
+they paddled around the stern of the ship and through the ruffle of surf
+that marked the shoal.
+
+In the soft twilight they trimmed the sail and swung at the clumsy oars,
+while a fire blazing on the beach was a beacon to guide their course.
+After a time they rested and wiped the sweat from their faces. The
+progress of the raft was like that of a lazy snail. In the luminous
+darkness they pulled with all their strength. The wind had died to a
+calm. The sail hung idle from its yard. They heard, faint and afar, the
+deep voices of the sailors in the jolly-boat as they returned to take
+the skipper and his two companions from the ship on which a light
+burned.
+
+The lads shouted but there came no answering hail from the unseen boat.
+They were perplexed to understand how their courses could be so far
+apart. Presently the night breeze drew off the land, bringing with it
+the scent of green things growing. Joe Hawkridge stared at the fire on
+the beach and then turned to look at the spark of light on the ship. The
+raft had drifted considerably to the southward. Anxiously Joe said to
+his shipmate:
+
+"The flood o' the tide must be setting us down the coast, in some crazy
+current or other. Mayhap it runs strong through this race betwixt the
+shoal and the beach with a slant that's bad for us."
+
+"I noted it," glumly agreed Jack. "The jolly-boat passed too far away to
+please me. And this landward breeze is driving us to sea."
+
+"No sense in breaking our backs at these oars," grumbled Joe. "We go
+ahead like a crab, with a sternboard. Think ye we can swing the raft to
+fetch the ship?"
+
+"After Captain Wellsby turns the pirates loose and quits her?" scoffed
+Jack.
+
+"I am a plaguey fool," cheerfully admitted Joe Hawkridge. "'Twould be
+out of the frying-pan into the fire, with a vengeance."
+
+"And no way to signal our friends," sadly exclaimed Jack. "We forgot
+flint and steel. It looks much like another voyage."
+
+"Straight for the open sea, my bully boy," agreed Joe. "And I'd as soon
+chance it on a hen-coop."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE VOYAGE OF THE LITTLE RAFT
+
+
+THESE sturdy youngsters were not easily frightened, and Jack Cockrell,
+the landsman, was confident that wind and tide would change to send the
+little raft shoreward. So tranquil was the sea that they rode secure and
+dry upon the cabin hatch which was buoyed by the two short spars. Joe
+Hawkridge was silent with foreboding of a fate more bitter than the
+perils which they had escaped. He had seen a lone survivor of a crew of
+pirates picked off a raft in the Caribbean, a grisly phantom raving mad
+who had gnawed the flesh of his dead comrades.
+
+They drifted quietly before the land breeze, beneath a sky all jeweled
+with bright stars. The fire on the beach dimmed to a red spark and then
+vanished from their wistful ken. They could no longer see the light on
+the wreck of the _Plymouth Adventure_. Now and then the boys struggled
+with the heavy oars and rowed until exhausted but they knew they could
+be making no headway against the current which had gripped the derelict
+raft. They ate sparingly of flinty biscuit and leathery beef pickled in
+brine and stinted themselves to a few swallows of water from the wooden
+breaker or tiny cask.
+
+"Hunger and thirst are strange to ye, Jack," said young Hawkridge as
+they lay stretched side by side. "Hanged if I ever did get enough to eat
+till I boarded the _Plymouth Adventure_. Skin and bone I am. I'll not
+call this a bad cruise unless we have to chew our boot-tops. A pesky
+diet is leather. I've tried it."
+
+"Truly, Joe?" cried Jack in lugubrious accents. "We may have more heart
+when morning comes. A piping easterly breeze, such as is wont to come up
+with the sun in Charles Town, and we can steer for the coast all taut
+and cheery."
+
+"I dread the sun, Jack. For men adrift the blaze of it fries them like
+fish on a grid. A pint of water a day, no more, is the allowance. 'Twill
+torture you, but castaways can live on it. They have done it for weeks
+on end. Here's two musket balls in my pocket. I can whittle a balance
+from a bit of pine and we must weigh the bread and meat."
+
+"Two musket balls' weight of food for a meal?" protested Jack.
+
+"Not a morsel more," was the grim answer. "Granted we be not washed off
+this silly raft and drowned when a fresh breeze kicks up the sea, we may
+hold body and soul together through five or six days."
+
+"But some vessel will sight us, Joe, even if the plight is as dark as
+your melancholy fancies paint it. And I thought you a light-hearted
+mariner in danger."
+
+"The sea is a cruel master and she hath taught me prudence," was the
+reply. "A vessel sight us? I fear an empty sea so soon after the storm.
+And honest ships will be loth to venture out from port if the word sped
+that Blackbeard was cruising off Charles Town bar."
+
+Jack Cockrell forsook the attempt to wring comfort out of his hardy
+companion who refused to delude himself with vain imaginings. However,
+it is the blessed gift of youth to keep the torch of hope unquenched and
+presently they diverted themselves with chatting of their earlier
+adventures. Jack was minded of his pompous, stout-hearted uncle, Mr.
+Peter Arbuthnot Forbes, and wondered how he had fared, whether he had
+set out to return to Blackbeard's ship with the store of medicines from
+Charles Town when the great storm swooped down. Forgotten were Jack's
+hot grievances against the worthy Secretary of the Council who had
+sought to take a father's place. Piracy had lost its charm for young
+Master Cockrell and meekly would he have obeyed the mandate to go to
+school in merry England among sober, Christian folk.
+
+"Tremendous odd, I call it," exclaimed Joe Hawkridge. "Here I was a
+pirate and hating the dirty business. And my dreams were all of learnin'
+to be a gentleman ashore, to know how to read books and such. Blow me,
+Jack, we should ha' swapped berths."
+
+"If my good uncle is alive I mean to commend you to his kindness,"
+exclaimed Jack. "We must cleave together, and you shall have a skinful
+of books and school and manners."
+
+This pleased the young sea rover beyond measure and he diverted himself
+with pictures of a cleaner, kindlier world than he had ever known. In
+the small hours of the night, the twain drowsed upon their frail
+platform which floated as a speck on the shrouded ocean. The waves
+splashed over the spars as the breeze grew livelier and the piteous
+voyagers were sopping wet but the water was not chill and they slept
+through this discomfort.
+
+Jack Cockrell dreamed of walking in a green lane of Charles Town with
+lovely Dorothy Stuart. A wave slapped his face and he awoke with a
+sputtering cry of bewilderment. The eastern sky was rosy and the sea
+shimmered in the eternal beauty of a new day. Joe Hawkridge sat huddled
+against the mast, chin and knees together, his sharp eyes scanning the
+horizon. With a grin he exclaimed:
+
+"The watch ahoy! Rouse out, shipmate, and show a leg! Turn to cheerly!
+Holystone decks and wash down, ye lazy lubber."
+
+Jack groaned and scowled as he rolled over to ease his aching bones. He
+was in no mood for jesting. There was no land in sight nor the gleam of
+a sail, naught but the empty waste of the Atlantic, and the wind still
+held westerly.
+
+"Let's have the beggarly morsel you miscall breakfast, Joe, and a swig
+from the breaker. Are we bound across the main?"
+
+"Straight for London River, and the school you prate about, my bucko,"
+replied the scamp of a pirate. "Haul away on your belt and set the
+buckle tighter. 'Twill ease the cursed hunger pain that gnaws like a
+rat."
+
+They munched the pittance of salty food which made the thirst the harder
+to endure, and then watched the sun climb hot and dazzling. It was
+futile to hoist the sail and so they pulled the canvas over them as the
+heat became more intense. By noon, Jack was begging for water to lave
+his tongue but Joe Hawkridge laughed him to scorn and swore to hit him
+with an oar unless he changed his tune. Never in his life had Jack known
+the lack of food or drink and he therefore suffered cruelly.
+
+Worse than this privation was the increasing roughness of the sea. It
+was a blithesome wind, rollicking across a sparkling carpet of blue,
+with the little white clouds in flocks above, like lambs at play. But
+the raft was more and more tossed about and the waves gushed over it
+like foam on a reef. Through the day the castaways might cling to it but
+they dreaded another night in which their weary bodies could not
+possibly ward off sleep. Even though they tied themselves fast, what if
+the raft should be capsized by the heave of the mounting swell? It was
+the merest makeshift, scrambled together in haste as a ferry from the
+wreck of the _Plymouth Adventure_.
+
+No longer did Jack Cockrell bemoan his situation. Taking pattern from
+his comrade in misery, he set his teeth to await the end as became a
+true man of gentle blood. After all, drowning was easier than the slow
+torments of hunger and thirst.
+
+Every little while one of them crawled from under the canvas to look for
+a ship. It was the vigilant Joe Hawkridge who, at length, discovered
+what was very like a fleck of cloud on the ocean's rim, to the
+southward. Afraid that his vision tricked him, he displayed no emotion
+but held himself as steady as any stoic. Jack was wildly excited,
+blubbering and waving his arms about. His hard-won composure was broken
+to bits. But even though it were a ship, Joe well knew it might pass
+afar off and so miss sighting this bit of raft which drifted almost
+submerged.
+
+Slowly the semblance of a wandering fragment of cloud climbed the curve
+of the watery globe until Joe Hawkridge perceived, with a mariner's eye,
+that it was, indeed, a vessel steering in their direction.
+
+"Two masts!" said he, "and to'gallant-sails set to profit by this brave
+breeze. A brig, Jack! Had she been a ship, my heart 'ud ha' been in my
+throat. Blackbeard's _Revenge_ might be working up the coast, did she
+live through the storm."
+
+"A brig?" joyfully cried Jack. "Ah, ha, I see her two masts plainly,
+with mine own eyes. And they soar too tall for a merchant trader. Her
+sails, too,--she spreads them like great wings. Who else will it be than
+Captain Stede Bonnet in the _Royal James?_"
+
+"A shift of luck is due us, by the bones of Saint Iago," shouted Joe, in
+a thrill of glad anticipation. "Watch her closely. You saw the brig in
+Charles Town harbor. Bless God, this may well be Cap'n Stede Bonnet
+yonder, an' perchance he cruises in search of Blackbeard to square
+accounts with that vile traitor that so misused him."
+
+"A sworn friend of mine is Stede Bonnet," proudly declared Jack
+Cockrell, "and pledged to bear a hand when I am in distress. He will
+land us safe in Charles Town, Joe,--unless,--unless we choose to go
+a-piratin' with him in the _Royal James_----"
+
+Jack's voice trailed off in tones of indecision so comical that his
+comrade cried:
+
+"Not cured yet, you big numbskull? 'Cause this fine Cap'n Bonnet is a
+gentleman pirate? His neck will stretch with the rest of 'em when the
+law overtakes him. Thirteen burly lads I saw swinging in a row at
+Wapping on the Thames."
+
+"I'll not argue it," sheepishly mumbled Jack. "However, we'll find a
+safe deliverance aboard this _Royal James_."
+
+They clung to the swaying raft while the water washed over their knees
+and watched the two masts disclose themselves until they fancied they
+could not be mistaken. No other brig as powerful as this had been
+reported cruising in the waters of Virginia and the Carolinas. By a
+stroke of fortune almost incredible they had been saved at the very
+brink of death. The brig was steering straight toward them, hauled to
+take the wind abeam, and she would be up before sunset.
+
+Shading his eyes with his hand, Joe Hawkridge suddenly uttered a curse
+so fierce and wicked that it was enough to freeze the blood. He clutched
+Jack's shoulder for support as though shorn of all his strength and
+hoarsely gasped:
+
+"Not two masts but three! See it? She lifts high enough to show the
+stump of the foremast with head-sails jury rigged. 'Twas the storm made
+a brig of her!"
+
+"Then she may be Blackbeard's ship?" faltered Jack, in a whisper.
+
+"Remember when the gale first broke and we parted company?" was the
+reply. "The _Revenge_ lost her fore-topmast ere the swine could find
+their wits."
+
+"Aye, Joe, but this may be some other vessel."
+
+"She looks most damnably familiar," was the reluctant admission. "A
+great press of sail,--it fooled me into thinking her Stede Bonnet's
+brig."
+
+Gloomily they waited until the black line of the hull was visible
+whenever the raft lifted on the back of a wave. This was enough for Joe.
+He recognized the graceful shear of the flush deck which had been
+extended fore and aft to make room for a heavier main battery. Even at
+a distance, a sailor's eye could read other signs that marked this ship
+as the _Revenge_.
+
+"The devil looks after his own," angrily exclaimed Joe. "I'd ha' wagered
+my last ducat that she was whirled away to founder. Blackbeard boasts of
+his compact with Satan. I believe it's true."
+
+"Shall we pull down our mast and pray that he passes the raft as a piece
+of wreckage?" implored Jack.
+
+Mustering his wits to meet this new crisis, Joe Hawkridge cried
+impatiently:
+
+"No, no, boy! This way death is sure, and most discomfortin'. If it
+suits Blackbeard's whim to pick us up, there is a chance,--a chance, I
+say, but make one slip and he will run us through with his own hand."
+
+"We must arrange our tale of the wreck, Joe, to match without flaw.
+Quick! What have we to say?"
+
+"A task for a scholar, this," grinned the sea urchin. "If it's not well
+learned, we'll taste worse'n a flogging. Where be his prize crew of
+pirates, asketh Blackbeard. Answer me that, Jack."
+
+"The _Plymouth Adventure_ was driven upon a shoal and lost," glibly
+affirmed the other lad who had rallied to play at this hazardous game.
+"Her boats were stove up. We left the pirates building a raft for
+themselves and trusted ourselves to this poor contrivance, hoping to
+gain the coast."
+
+"Good, as far as it goes," observed the critical Joe.
+
+"And it veers close to the truth. About the ship's company? What say
+you?"
+
+"There I hang in the wind," confessed Jack. "Blackbeard would have flung
+'em overboard, I trow. Have a shot at it yourself."
+
+"Well, leave me to answer that when the time comes. That we may agree,
+suppose we say Ned Rackham needed the sailors to work the ship and so
+spared 'em. Hanged if we can make it all true as Gospel."
+
+"But if Blackbeard searches for the wreck, or if some of those pirates
+rejoin him, Joe----"
+
+"But me no more buts," snapped the sea rover. "We be jammed in a
+clove-hitch, as the seaman's lingo hath it. Take trouble as it comes
+and, ware ye, don't weaken."
+
+They stared at the oncoming ship, dreading to be rescued and even more
+fearful of being passed by. Disfigured though she was by a shattered
+foremast, the _Revenge_ made a gallant picture as she leaned to show the
+copper sheathing which flashed like gold. Her bow flung the crested seas
+aside and Joe Hawkridge muttered admiringly:
+
+"A swift vessel! She carries a bone in her teeth. A telescope can sight
+us soon. Steady the raft, Jack, whilst I wriggle up this mast of ours
+and wave my shirt."
+
+"A hard choice," sighed Jack. "Now we well know what it means to be
+betwixt the devil and the deep sea."
+
+They saw the _Revenge_ shift her course a couple of points as the sheets
+were eased off. A little way to windward of the raft, she hove to while
+a small boat was hoisted out. Curiosity prompted Blackbeard to find out
+who these castaways were and from what ship they had drifted. It
+occurred to Joe Hawkridge that he might be in quest of tidings of the
+two sloops of his squadron which no longer kept him company. Jack
+Cockrell's teeth chattered but not with cold as the boat bobbed away
+from the side of the _Revenge_. Presently Joe recognized the pirate at
+the steering oar as a petty officer who had often befriended him.
+
+This fellow's swarthy, pockmarked face crinkled in a smile as he
+flourished his broad hat and yelled:
+
+"Stab my gizzard, but here's the London 'prentice-boy a-cruisin' on his
+own adventure."
+
+"Right-o, Jesse Strawn," Joe called back. "My bark is short-handed. I
+need lively recruits. Will ye enlist?"
+
+The boat's crew laughed at this as they reached out to lay hold of the
+raft while the two lads leaped aboard. Joe Hawkridge carried it off with
+rough bravado as though glad to be among his pals again. They eyed Jack
+Cockrell with quizzical interest and he did his best to be at ease,
+permitting Joe to vouch for him as a young gentleman with a taste for
+piracy who had won Blackbeard's favor in the _Plymouth Adventure_. They
+were plied with eager questions regarding the fate of the merchant ship
+and Ned Rackham's prize crew. It was a chance to rehearse the tale as
+they had concocted it, and it seemed to hang together well enough to
+satisfy these simple rogues.
+
+In his turn, Joe Hawkridge demanded to know the gossip of the _Revenge_.
+The storm had sobered Blackbeard, it seemed, and he had displayed the
+skill of a masterly seaman in bringing them safely through. In toiling
+for their own lives, the men had forgotten their brawls and plots and
+guzzling. And the great wind had blown the ship clear of Spanish fever.
+There were no new cases and the invalids were gaining strength. Fresh
+food and sweet water were needed and the opinion was that Blackbeard now
+steered for an old rendezvous of his on the North Carolina coast where
+his sloops would meet him if they were still afloat.
+
+Jack Cockrell found his courage returning as he clambered up the side of
+the _Revenge_ and followed Joe aft to the quarter-deck. Unless they
+bungled it, there was a chance that they might escape when the pirates
+made their landing on the coast to refresh themselves and refit the
+ship. The mate on watch greeted them good-humoredly enough and bade them
+enter the cabin where the captain awaited them. Jack was all a-flutter
+again but he managed to imitate Joe's careless swagger.
+
+Blackbeard lounged at his ease in a huge chair of carven ebony which
+might have been filched from some stately East Indiaman or a ship of the
+Grand Mogul himself. He had flung off his coat and the sleeves of a
+shirt of damask silk were rolled to the elbow. Instead of the great,
+mildewed sea-boots he wore slippers of crimson leather embroidered with
+threads of gold. Gorgeous cushions, pieces of plate, costly apparel
+strewed the cabin in barbaric confusion.
+
+What the two lads gazed at, however, was this bizarre figure of a despot
+who held the power of life and death. It was one of his quieter
+interludes when he laid aside the ferocious and bombastic play-acting
+which made it hard to discover whether he was very cunning or half-mad.
+The immense beard flowed down his chest instead of being tricked out in
+gaudy ribbons. He was idly running a comb through it when his small,
+rum-reddened eyes took in the two lads in dripping clothes who were
+shoved toward him by the sentry guarding the hatch.
+
+Blackbeard let a hairy hand stray to clutch one of the pistols kept on
+the table beside him. Jack Cockrell gulped and stole a frightened glance
+at Joe Hawkridge who winked and nudged him. There was some small comfort
+in this. Spellbound, they stared at the pistol and then at the pirate's
+massive forearm on which a skull and cross-bones was pricked in India
+ink. At this moment Jack earnestly wished himself back on the raft. The
+barrel of the pistol looked as big as a blunderbuss.
+
+With a yawn, Blackbeard reached for a silver bowl of Brazil nuts,
+cracked one of them with the pistol-butt and roared for the black cabin
+boy who came running with a flask of Canary wine and a goblet. Jack
+Cockrell's sigh of relief sounded like a porpoise coming up for air. He
+was not to be shot at once. Suddenly Blackbeard exclaimed, in that
+husky, growling voice of his:
+
+"I saw you rascals through the glass before I came below. What of the
+ship I left ye in? Briefly now, and no lies."
+
+Together the lads pieced out the narrative as they had hastily prepared
+it. The vital thing was to watch lest they tell a word too much. Jack
+stumbled once or twice but his comrade covered it adroitly, and they did
+not betray themselves. The sweat trickled into their eyes but the heat
+of the cabin was excuse for this. Blackbeard studied them intently,
+munching Brazil nuts and noisily sipping his wine.
+
+"The _Plymouth Adventure_ stranded yester-eve?" said he. "Know ye the
+lay of the coast where the wreck lies? What of the shipmaster and Ned
+Rackham? Were they able to fix the shoal by reckoning?"
+
+"No, sir," readily answered Joe Hawkridge. "'Twas strange land to all
+hands."
+
+From a chest Blackbeard hauled out a dog-eared chart of parchment and
+unrolled it upon the table. The boys foresaw his intention and feared
+the worst. Presently they heard him mumble to himself:
+
+"A small wind setting from the west'ard,--twenty-four hours of drift
+for the lads' raft,--a dozen leagues, I call it."
+
+He looked up from the chart to ask:
+
+"The wreck was lodged fast in smooth water and holding together?"
+
+"Aye, but in peril of working off and sinking like an iron pot,"
+answered Joe. "For this reason the people were in haste to quit her."
+
+"Her own crew made for the beach, I have no doubt," shrewdly pursued
+Blackbeard, "but my men 'ud stay by the wreck and watch the weather ere
+they shoved off. Trust the food and drink and plunder to hold 'em."
+
+He lumbered to the hatch and called up to the mate on watch. While they
+conferred, Joe Hawkridge whispered to his perturbed companion:
+
+"He will hunt for the wreck, Jack. But unless the wind changes, he can't
+beat in to the coast with his fore-topmast gone."
+
+"A merciful delay," muttered Jack. "I worry not so much for Captain
+Wellsby and his people. They will hide themselves well inland when they
+make out the _Revenge_, but what of you and me?"
+
+"'Tis a vexing life we lead. I will say that much, Master Cockrell."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE MIST OF THE CHEROKEE SWAMP
+
+
+THE dark cloud of anxiety was lightened a trifle by the fact that
+Blackbeard displayed no ill temper toward the two young castaways.
+Having obtained such information as they chose to offer, he roughly told
+them to go forward and join the crew. Whether or no, Jack was impressed
+as a pirate and it may have amused Blackbeard to recruit by force the
+nephew of the honorable Secretary of the Provincial Council. For his
+part, Jack was grateful to be regarded no longer as a hostage under
+sentence of death. With Joe as an escort who knew the ropes, he went on
+deck and was promptly kicked off the poop by the mate.
+
+They first found food and quenched their raging thirst with water which
+had a loathsome smell. Joe reported to the chief gunner and begged the
+chance to sleep for a dozen hours on end. This was granted amiably
+enough and the pirates clustered about to ask all manner of curious
+questions, but the weary lads dragged themselves into the bows of the
+ship and curled up in a stupor. There they lay as if drugged, all
+through the night, even when the seamen trampled over them to haul the
+head-sails and tack ship.
+
+When, at last, they blinked at the morning sky, it dismayed them to find
+the breeze blowing strong out of the southeast and the _Revenge_
+standing in to the coast under easy sail. They looked aft and saw
+Blackbeard at the rail with a long glass at his eye. The whole crew was
+eager with expectation and the routine work went undone. The ship had
+been put about several hours earlier, Joe learned, and was due soon to
+sight the shore unless the reckoning was all at fault.
+
+So cleverly had Blackbeard calculated the drift of the boys' raft that a
+little later in the morning a lookout in the maintop called down:
+
+"Land, ho! Two points off the starboard bow she bears."
+
+"The maintop, ahoy!" shouted Blackbeard. "Can ye see a vessel's spars?"
+
+"'Tis too hazy inshore. But unless my eyes play me tricks, a smudge of
+smoke arises."
+
+Jack Cockrell nervously confided to Joe:
+
+"That would be Captain Wellsby's campfire on the beach."
+
+"Trust him to douse it," was the easy assurance. "I feel better. Blow
+me, but I expect to live another day."
+
+"Answer me why," begged Jack. "I am like a palsied old man."
+
+"Well, you know this bit o' coast, how low it sets above the sea.
+Despite the haze, a man aloft could see a ship's masts and yards before
+he had a glimpse of land."
+
+"Then the wreck of the _Plymouth Adventure_ has slid off the shoal and
+gone down, Joe?"
+
+"Yes, when the wind veered and stirred a surf on the shoal. She pounded
+over with the flood-tide and dropped into fifteen fathom."
+
+"Then we are saved, for now?" joyfully exclaimed Jack.
+
+"Unless we're unlucky enough to find some o' those plaguey pirates
+afloat on a raft or makin' signals from the beach."
+
+The _Revenge_ sailed shoreward until those on board could discern the
+marching lines of breakers which tumbled across the shoal. The smudge of
+smoke had vanished from the beach. The lookout man concluded that the
+haze had deceived him. Blackbeard steered as close as he dared go, with
+a sailor heaving the lead, but there was no sign of life among the
+sand-dunes and the stunted trees. And the _Plymouth Adventure_ had
+disappeared leaving no trace excepting scattered bits of floating
+wreckage.
+
+The pirate ship headed to follow the coast to the northward, on the
+chance that Ned Rackham's prize crew might have made a landing
+elsewhere. To Jack Cockrell the gift of life had been miraculously
+vouchsafed him and he felt secure for the moment. Joe's theory seemed
+plausible, that the pirates had abandoned the _Plymouth Adventure_ in
+time to avert drowning with her, and were driven away from the bight and
+the beach by Captain Wellsby's well-armed sailors.
+
+"Do they know Blackbeard's rendezvous in the North Carolina waters,
+Joe?" was the natural query. "Are they likely to make their way thither,
+knowing that honest men will slay them at sight?"
+
+"The swamps and the murderous Indians will take full toll of 'em, Jack.
+I believe we have seen the last of those rogues, but I'd rest better
+could I know for certain."
+
+"Meanwhile this mad Blackbeard may be taken in one of his savage
+frenzies and shoot me for sport," said young Master Cockrell, for whom
+existence had come to be one hazard after another.
+
+"He seems strangely tame, much like a human soul," observed Joe. "I
+ne'er beheld him like this. He plots some huge mischief, methinks."
+
+And now the ship's officers drove the men to their work but they were
+less abusive than usual. They seemed to reflect Blackbeard's milder
+humor and it was manifest that they wished to avoid the crew's
+resentment. Joe Hawkridge was puzzled and began to ferret it out among
+his friends who were trustworthy. They had their own suspicions and the
+general opinion was that Blackbeard was in great dread of encountering
+Captain Stede Bonnet in the _Royal James_. It seemed that the _Revenge_
+had spoken a disabled merchant ship just after the storm and her skipper
+reported that he had been overhauled by Stede Bonnet a few days earlier
+and the best of his cargo stolen. Blackbeard had been seized with
+violent rage but had suffered the ship to proceed on her way because of
+his own short-handed condition.
+
+With a prize crew lost in the _Plymouth Adventure_, including
+Sailing-Master Ned Rackham, and the two sloops of the squadron missing
+with all hands, the terrible Blackbeard was in poor shape to meet this
+Captain Bonnet who hated him beyond measure. As if this were not gloomy
+enough, there were men in the _Revenge_ eager to sail under Bonnet's
+flag and to mutiny if ever they sighted the _Royal James_. It behooved
+Blackbeard to press on to that lonely inlet on the North Carolina coast
+and avoid the open sea until he could prepare to fight this dangerous
+foeman.
+
+It surprised Jack Cockrell to see how quiet a pirate ship could be. The
+ruffians were bone-weary, for one thing, after the struggle to bring the
+vessel through the storm. And the scourge of tropic fever had left its
+marks. Moreover, the rum was running short because some of the casks had
+been staved in the heavy weather and Blackbeard was doling it out as
+grog with an ample dilution of water. There was no more dicing and
+brawling and tipsy choruses. Sobered against their will, some of these
+bloody-minded sinners talked repentance or shed tears over wives and
+children deserted in distant ports.
+
+The wind blew fair until the _Revenge_ approached the landmarks familiar
+to Blackbeard and found a channel which led to the wide mouth of
+Cherokee Inlet. It was a quiet roadstead sheltered from seaward by
+several small islands. The unpeopled swamp and forest fringed the shores
+but a green meadow and a margin of white sand offered a favorable place
+for landing. As the _Revenge_ slowly rounded the last wooded point, the
+tall mast of a sloop became visible. The pirates cheered and discharged
+their muskets in salute as they recognized one of the consorts which had
+been blown away in the storm.
+
+Blackbeard strutted on his quarter-deck, no longer biting his nails in
+fretful anxiety. He had donned the military coat with the glittering
+buttons and epaulets and the huge cocked hat with the feather in it. He
+noted that the sloop, which was called the _Triumph_, fairly buzzed with
+men, many more than her usual complement. No sooner had the ship let her
+anchor splash than a boat was sent over to her with the captain of the
+sloop who made haste to pay his compliments and explain his voyage. He
+was a portly, sallow man with a blustering manner and looked more like a
+bailiff or a tapster than a brine-pickled gentleman of fortune.
+
+Blackbeard hailed him cordially and invited him into the cabin. The boat
+waited alongside the _Revenge_ and the men scrambled aboard to swap
+yarns with the ship's crew. Jack Cockrell hovered near the group as
+they squatted on their heels around a tub of grog and learned that the
+_Triumph_ had rescued the crew of the other sloop just before it had
+foundered. There were a hundred men of them, in all, crowded together
+like dried herring, and part were sleeping ashore in huts of boughs and
+canvas. No wonder Blackbeard was in blither spirits. Here was a company
+to pick and choose from and so fill the depleted berth-deck of the
+_Revenge_.
+
+Finding the poop deserted, Joe Hawkridge ventured far enough to peer in
+at a cabin window. Blackbeard was at table, together with his first
+mate, the chief gunner, the acting sailing-master, and the captain of
+the sloop. They were exceeding noisy, singing most discordantly and
+laughing at indecent jests. Suddenly Blackbeard whipped two pistols from
+his sash and fired them under the table, quite at random.
+
+The first mate leaped up with a horrible yell and clapped a hand to the
+calf of his leg. Then he bolted out of the cabin, which was blue with
+smoke, and limped in search of the surgeon. Joe Hawkridge dodged aside
+but he heard the jovial Blackbeard shout, with a whoop of laughter:
+
+"Discipline, damme! If I don't kill one of you now and then, you'll
+forget who I am."
+
+Inasmuch as none of the other guests dared squeak after this episode, it
+was to be inferred that they were properly impressed.
+
+[Illustration: THE FIRST MATE LEAPED UP WITH A HORRIBLE YELL]
+
+In a little while the mate returned with his leg neatly bandaged,
+announced that it was a mere flesh wound, and sat down as though nothing
+out of the ordinary had occurred to mar the festive occasion. Through
+the rest of the day, boats were passing between the ship and the sloop
+in a convivial reunion. Supper was to be cooked on the beach in great
+iron kettles and a frolic would follow the feast. The sloop had rum
+enough to sluice all the parched gullets aboard the _Revenge_.
+
+Jack Cockrell had no desire to join this stupid revel but he was eager
+to get ashore to discover what opportunity there might be to escape. But
+the wiser Joe Hawkridge counseled patience, saying:
+
+"Wait a bit. We'd be as helpless as any babes should we take to our
+heels in this ungodly wilderness. Is there a town or plantation near
+by?"
+
+"I know not," ruefully confessed Jack. "Charles Town lies to the south,
+and Virginia to the north. There my knowledge fetches up short."
+
+"And leagues of morass to flounder through, by the look of this coast,"
+said Joe. "We be without weapons, or food, or----"
+
+"I am a hot-headed fool, I grant you that," broke in Jack. "Now bestow
+your sage advice."
+
+"You will not be allowed to go ashore, for one thing, Master Cockrell.
+Blackbeard has no notion of letting you get away from him to betray this
+rendezvous and stir the colonies to send an expedition after him.
+Steady the helm, Jack, and watch for squalls. If I can read the signs,
+there is trouble afoot. And we must seek our own advantage in the nick
+of time."
+
+"But these wild sots no longer think of mutiny and the like, Joe. They
+are content to let the morrow go hang."
+
+"S-s-s-h, 'ware the master of the sloop," cautioned Joe. "He makes for
+the gangway, the big lump of tallow."
+
+They moved away while Captain Richard Spender clumsily descended into
+his boat, his broad face flushed, his breath asthmatic. He had a piping
+voice absurd for his bulk and the two lads amused themselves with
+mimicking him as the boat pulled in the direction of the sloop. So safe
+against surprise did Blackbeard regard himself in this lonely anchorage
+that no more than a dozen men were left aboard to keep the ship through
+the night. Among these was Jack Cockrell, as his comrade had foreseen.
+It therefore happened that they remained together, for Joe had
+volunteered to join the anchor watch. In a melancholy mood the two lads
+idled upon the after deck.
+
+The sun dropped behind the dark and tangled forest and flights of herons
+came winging it home to the islets in the swamps. On the sward by the
+silver strand the throng of pirates had stilled their clamor while a
+rascal with a tenor voice held them enraptured with the haunting refrain
+of:
+
+ "Sweet Annie frae the sea-beach came,
+ Where Jockey's climbed the vessel's side:
+ Ah! wha can keep her heart at hame,
+ When Jockey's tossed aboon the tide?
+
+ "Far off 'till distant realms he gangs,
+ But I'se be true, as he ha' been;
+ And when ilk lass around him thrangs,
+ He'll think on Annie's faithful een."
+
+Forlorn Jack Cockrell had homesick thoughts and felt hopeless of loosing
+the snares which bound him. All that sustained his courage was the
+sanguine disposition of Joe Hawkridge, whose youthful soul had been so
+battered and toughened by dangers manifold on land and sea that he
+expected nothing less. Listening to the pirate's moving ballad, they sat
+and swung their legs from the ship's taffrail while their gaze idly
+roved to the green curtain of undergrowth which ran lush to the water's
+edge to the northward of the beach.
+
+It was Joe who called attention to a floating object which moved inside
+the mouth of the small, tidal creek that wandered through the marshy
+lowlands. In the shadowy light it could easily be mistaken for a log
+drifting down on the ebb of the tide. This was what the lads assumed it
+to be until they both noticed a behavior curious in a log. The long, low
+object turned athwart the current at the entrance of the creek and shot
+toward the nearest bank as though strongly propelled.
+
+Joe lifted the telescope from its case in front of the wooden
+binnacle-box and squinted long at the edge of the creek. Crude though
+the glass was, he was enabled to discern that the object was, in truth,
+a log, but evidently hollowed out. Rounded at the ends, it held two men
+whose figures so blended into the dusk that they disclosed themselves
+only when in motion.
+
+"A pirogue," said Joe, "and fashioned by Indians! What is the tribe
+hereabouts? Have ye a guess?"
+
+"Roving Yemassees, or men of the Hatteras tribe," answered Jack. "Yonder
+brace of savages will be scouts."
+
+"Aye, but there'll be no attack 'gainst this pirates' bivouac, right
+under the guns of the ships. The Indians are too wise to attempt it."
+
+"Look, Joe! Hand me the glass. Those two spies have quitted the pirogue.
+'Tis quite empty. They may lay up all night to creep closer and keep
+watch on the camp."
+
+"Right enough, by Crambo! If we could but gain yon cypress canoe, and
+steal along the coast by sail and paddle----"
+
+"'Tis the chance we prayed for," eagerly exclaimed Jack. "Dare we swim
+for it?"
+
+"Not with a boat just coming off from shore. What if we try it in the
+night and find the pirogue gone?"
+
+"We are stranded for sure, and Blackbeard will kill us."
+
+Baffled, they strained their eyes until the shore stood black in the
+starlight, but as long as the dusk lingered they fancied they could
+descry the empty pirogue. The ship's boat which presently drew alongside
+contained Blackbeard himself and Captain Dick Spender of the _Triumph_
+sloop, besides several officers of the two vessels. They withdrew into
+the cabin and there was prolonged discussion, lasting well toward
+midnight.
+
+It was a secretive session, with trusted men of the boat's crew posted
+to keep eavesdroppers away from the hatches and windows, nor was there
+any loud carousing. Some business was afoot and Jack wondered whether it
+might concern the trouble which Joe had sworn was brewing under the
+surface. A circumstance even more suspicious was that three of the
+sailors from the boat were called into the cabin. Joe Hawkridge knew
+them as fellows loyal to Blackbeard through thick and thin. Drunken
+beasts, as a rule, they were cold sober to-night.
+
+As quietly as they had come, the whole party dropped into the boat and
+returned either to the beach or to the sloop which rode at anchor two
+cable-lengths away. The _Revenge_ floated with no more activity on her
+darkened decks. The few men of the watch drowsed at their stations or
+wistfully gazed at the fires ashore and the mob of pirates who moved in
+the red glare. Jack Cockrell and Joe Hawkridge felt no desire for sleep.
+As the ship swung with the turn of the tide, they went to the side and
+leaned on the tall bulwark where they might catch the first glimpse of
+the shore with the break of day.
+
+Meanwhile they busied themselves with this wild scheme and that. Sifting
+them out, it was resolved to swim from the ship at the first
+opportunity. If they could not find the Indian pirogue, Joe would try to
+get into the pirates' camp by night and possess himself of an axe, an
+adze, a musket or two, and such food as he could smuggle out. Then, at a
+pinch, they could hide themselves a little way inland and hew out a
+pirogue of their own from a dry log. After hitting upon this plan, the
+better it seemed the more they thrashed it over.
+
+Unluckily it occurred to them so late in the night that they feared to
+attempt it then lest the dawn might overtake them while they were
+swimming. 'Twas a great pity, said Joe, that their wits had hung fire,
+like a damp flint-lock, for this was the night when the pirates would be
+the most slack and befuddled and it would be precious hard waiting
+through another day. Jack glumly agreed with this point of view.
+
+It was so near morning, however, that they lingered to scan the shore.
+Then it was observed that a pearly mist was rising from the swamp lands
+and spreading out over the water. It was almost like a fog which the
+morning breeze would dispel after a while. Rolling like smoke it hung so
+low that the topmast of the sloop rose above it although her hull was
+like the gray ghost of a vessel.
+
+"No sign of wind as yet," said Joe, holding up a wetted finger, "and
+that red sunset bespoke a calm, hot day. This odd smother o' mist may
+stay a couple of hours. Will ye venture it with me, Jack?"
+
+"Gladly! Over we go, before the watch is flogged awake by the bos'n's
+mate."
+
+They crept aft to the high stern and paid out a coil of rope until it
+trailed in the water beneath the railed gallery which overhung the huge
+rudder. Joe belayed his end securely and slid over like a flash,
+twisting the rope around one leg and letting himself down as agile as a
+monkey. Without a splash he cast himself loose and Jack followed but not
+so adroitly. When he plopped into the water the commotion was like
+tossing a barrel overboard, but nobody sounded an alarm.
+
+They clung to the rusty rudder chains and listened. The ship was all
+quiet. Then out into the mist they launched themselves, swimming almost
+submerged, dreading to hear an outcry and the spatter of musket balls.
+But the veiling mist and the uncertain light of dawn soon protected the
+fugitives. It was slow, exhausting progress, hampered as they were by
+their breeches and shoes which could not be discarded. They tried to
+keep a sense of direction, striking out for the mouth of the creek in
+which the pirogue had been moored, but the tide set them off the course
+and the only visible marks were the spars of the ship behind them and
+the sloop's topmast off to one side.
+
+[Illustration: JACK ALMOST BUMPED INTO THE DUGOUT CANOE]
+
+Jack swam more strongly and showed greater endurance because he had the
+beef and had been better nourished all his life than the scrawny young
+powder boy who was more like a lath. Now and then Jack paused to tread
+water while his shipmate clung to his shoulder and husbanded his waning
+strength, with that indomitable grin on his freckled phiz. Of one thing
+they were thankful, that the tide was bearing them farther away from the
+pirates' camp, which was now as still as though the sleepers were dead
+men.
+
+"Blood and bones, but I have swum a league a'ready," gurgled Joe during
+one of the halts.
+
+"Shut your mouth or you'll fill up to the hatch and founder," scolded
+Jack. "I see trees in the mist. The shore is scarce a pistol shot away."
+
+"I pray my keel scrapes soon," spluttered the waterlogged Hawkridge as
+he kicked himself along in a final effort.
+
+Huzza, their feet touched the soft ooze and they fell over stumps and
+rotted trunks buried under the surface. Scratched and beplastered with
+mud, they crawled out in muck which gripped them to the knees, and
+roosted like buzzards upon the butt of a prostrate live-oak.
+
+"Marooned," quoth Joe, "to be eaten by snakes and alligators."
+
+"Nonsense," snapped Master Cockrell, who had hunted deer and wild-fowl
+on the Carolina coast. "We can pick our way with care. I have seen
+pleasanter landscapes than this, but I like it better than Blackbeard's
+company."
+
+There was no disputing this statement and Joe plucked up spirit, as was
+his habit when another arduous task confronted him. Cautiously they made
+their way from one quaking patch of sedge to another or scrambled to
+their middles. There came a ridge of higher ground thick with brambles
+and knotted vines and they traversed this with less misery. A gleam of
+water among the trees and they took it to be the creek which they sought
+to find. Wary of lurking Indians, they wormed along on their stomachs
+and so came to the high swamp grass of the bank.
+
+They swam the creek and crept toward its mouth. Jack was rooting along
+like a bear when he almost bumped into the dugout canoe which had looked
+so very like a stranded log. It was tied to a tree by a line of twisted
+fibre and the rising tide had borne it well up into the marsh. Here it
+was invisible from the ship and only a miracle of good fortune had
+revealed it to the lads in that glimpse from the deck at sundown.
+
+They crawled over the gunwale and slumped in the bottom of the pirogue,
+which was larger than they expected, a clumsy yet seaworthy craft with a
+wide floor and space to crowd a dozen men. Fire had helped to hollow it
+from a giant of a cypress log, for the inner skin was charred black.
+Three roughly made paddles were discovered. This was tremendously
+important, and all they lacked was a mast and sail to be true
+navigators.
+
+Something else they presently found which was so unlooked for, so
+incredible, that they could only gape and stare at each other. Tucked in
+the bow was a seaman's jacket of tarred canvas, of the kind used in wet
+weather. Sewed to the inside of it was a pocket of leather with a
+buttoned flap. This Jack Cockrell proceeded to explore, recovering from
+his stupefaction, and fished out a wallet bound in sharkskin as was the
+habit of sailors to make for themselves in tropic waters. It contained
+nothing of value, a few scraps of paper stitched together, a bit of
+coral, a lock of yellow hair, a Spanish coin, some shreds of dried
+tobacco leaf.
+
+Carefully Jack examined the ragged sheets of paper which seemed to be a
+carelessly jotted diary of dates and events. Upon the last leaf was
+scrawled, "_Bill Saxby, His Share_," and beneath this entry such items
+as these:
+
+ "Aprl. ye 17--A Spanish shippe rich laden. 1 sack
+ Vanilla. 2 Rolls Blue Cloth of Peru. 1 Packet
+ Bezoar Stones.
+
+ "May ye 24--A Poor Shippe. 3 Bars of Silver. 1
+ Case Cordial Waters. A Golden Candle-stick. My
+ share by Lot afore ye Mast."
+
+Joe Hawkridge could neither read nor write but he had ready knowledge
+of the meaning of these entries and he cried excitedly:
+
+"Say the name again, Jack. Bill Saxby, His Share. Strike me blind, but I
+was chums with Bill when we lay off Honduras. As decent a lad as ever
+went a-piratin'! A heart of oak is Bill, hailin' from London town."
+
+"But what of the riddle?" impatiently demanded Jack. "Whence this Indian
+pirogue? And where is Bill Saxby?"
+
+"He sailed with Stede Bonnet, bless ye," answered Joe. "These two men we
+spied in the canoe last night were no Indians. _They were Cap'n Bonnet's
+men._ Indians would ha' hid the pirogue more craftily."
+
+"But they came not along the coast. Did they drop down this creek from
+somewhere inland?"
+
+"There you put me in stays," confessed Joe. "One thing I can swear. They
+were sent to look for Blackbeard's ships. And I sore mistrust they were
+caught whilst prowling near the camp. Else they would ha' come back to
+the canoe before day."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+THE EPISODE OF THE WINDING CREEK
+
+
+THE singular discovery of Bill Saxby's jacket was like a shock to drive
+all else out of their minds. Now they found that it had been thrown over
+a jug of water and a bag of beef and biscuit stowed in the bow. This
+solved one pressing problem, and they nibbled the hard ration while
+debating the situation. It was agreed that they could not honorably run
+away with the pirogue if it really belonged to Stede Bonnet's men, who
+must have come on foot along the higher ground back of the coast and
+descended the creek in the canoe stolen or purchased from Indians met by
+chance.
+
+Granted this much, it was fair to conjecture that Captain Bonnet's ship
+was in some harbor not many leagues distant and that he knew where to
+find Blackbeard's rendezvous, at Cherokee Inlet.
+
+"'Tis your job to stand by the pirogue, Jack," suggested Hawkridge, "and
+I will make a sally toward the pirates' camp afore they rouse out."
+
+"Go softly, Joe, and don't be reckless. Why not lie up till night before
+you reconnoitre?"
+
+"'Cause the mist still hangs heavy and I'm blowed if I dilly-dally if
+good Bill Saxby has come to grief."
+
+"Supposing he has, you cannot wrest him single-handed from Blackbeard's
+crew."
+
+"Well, if I can but slip a word of comfort in his ear, it'll cheer him
+mightily, unless his throat be cut by now," was the stubborn response.
+"Sit thee taut, Jack, old _camarada_, and chuck the worry. Care killed a
+cat. These rogues yonder in the camp won't _molest me_ if I walk boldly
+amongst 'em."
+
+"What if you don't return?" persisted Jack. "How long shall I wait here
+with the pirogue?"
+
+"Now what the deuce can I say to such foolish queries? If things go
+wrong with me and Bill and his mate, you will have to cruise alone or
+hop back to the _Revenge_."
+
+With a laugh and a wave of the hand, the dauntless adventurer leaped
+from the nose of the canoe, nimbly hauled himself into a tree, and then
+plunged into the gloomy swamp where he was speedily lost to view. Jack
+Cockrell settled himself to wait for he knew not what. Clouds of midges
+and mosquitoes tormented him and he ached with fatigue. Soon after
+sunrise the mist began to burn away and the mouth of the creek was no
+longer obscured by shadows. In the glare of day Jack thought it likely
+that the canoe might be detected by some pair of keen eyes aboard the
+_Revenge_.
+
+To move it far might imperil Joe Hawkridge and Bonnet's two seamen
+should they come in haste with a hue-and-cry behind them. Jack paddled
+the pirogue up the creek and soon found a safe ambuscade, a stagnant
+cove in among the dense growth, where he tied up to a gnarled root. Then
+he climbed a wide-branching oak and propped himself in a crotch from
+which he could see the open water and the two vessels at anchor. Clumps
+of taller trees cut off any view of the beach and the camp but he dared
+stray no farther from the pirogue.
+
+Tediously an hour passed and there was no sign of Joe Hawkridge. He had
+a journey of only a few hundred yards to make, and Jack began to imagine
+all kinds of misfortune that might have befallen him, such as being
+mired beyond his depth in the swamp and perishing miserably. The
+sensible conclusion was, however, that he had tarried among his
+shipmates in the camp with some shrewd purpose in mind.
+
+A little later in the morning, Jack's anxious cogitations were diverted
+by the frequent passage of boats between the _Revenge_ and the sloop
+which was anchored nearer the beach. One of these small craft was
+Blackbeard's own cock-boat, or captain's gig, which he used for errands
+in smooth water, with a couple of men to pull it. Jack was reminded of
+that secret conference in the cabin and Joe's conviction that some
+uncommon devilment was afoot. It appeared as though "Tallow Dick"
+Spender, that unwholesome master of the _Triumph_ sloop, had been chosen
+as the right bower.
+
+And now there arose a sudden and riotous noise in the camp. It was not
+the mirth and song of jolly pirates a-pleasuring ashore but the
+ferocious tumult of men in conflict and taken unawares. Perched in the
+tree, Jack Cockrell listened all agog as the sounds rose and fell with
+the breeze which swayed the long gray moss that draped the branches. He
+heard a few pistol shots and then was startled to see a spurt of flame
+dart from a gun-port of the sloop. The dull report reached him an
+instant later. He could see that the gun had been fired from the
+vessel's shoreward battery. It meant that Blackbeard was making a target
+of some part of the camp. Another gun belched its cloud of smoke.
+
+The noise died down, save for intermittent shouts and one long wail of
+anguish. Presently a boat moved out past the sloop. A dozen men tugged
+at the oars and others stood crowded in the stern-sheets. Jack caught
+the gleam of weapons and thought he recognized the squat, broad figure
+of Blackbeard himself beside the man at the steering oar. Behind this
+pinnace from the _Revenge_ trailed two other boats in tow. They passed
+in slow procession, out between the vessels. The boats which the pinnace
+towed were not empty. Instead of sitting upon the thwarts, men seemed to
+be strewn about in them as if they had been tossed over the gunwales
+like so much dunnage.
+
+Jack rubbed his eyes in amazement and watched the line of boats turn to
+follow the channel which led out of the sheltered roadstead to the sea
+beyond. When they vanished beyond a sandy island, the lad in the
+live-oak tree said to himself:
+
+"My guess is that Blackbeard has put a stopper on all talk of mutiny by
+one bold stroke. A bloody weeding-out, and in those two boats are the
+poor wretches who were taken alive. Alas, one of 'em may be Joe
+Hawkridge unless he be dead already. He talked too much of Stede Bonnet
+aboard the ship. And there were sneaking dogs in the crew who spied on
+their comrades. We saw them enter the cabin last night."
+
+There was no getting around the evidence. It fitted together all too
+well. Jack sadly reflected that, beyond a doubt, he had seen the last of
+gallant, loyal Joe Hawkridge. Left alone with the pirogue, which he
+could not paddle single-handed, it was folly to think of trying to
+escape along the coast. And to wander inland, ignorant of the country,
+was to court almost certain death. Nor could he now expect mercy from
+Blackbeard, having deserted the ship against orders and known to be a
+true friend of Captain Stede Bonnet.
+
+The most unhappy lad could no longer hold his cramped station in the
+tree and he decided to seek the canoe and find the meagre solace of a
+little food and water. He was half-way to the ground when he clutched a
+limb and halted to peer into the swamp. Something was splashing through
+the mud and grass and making a prodigious fuss about it. Then Jack heard
+two voices in grunts and maledictions. Fearing the enemy might have
+tracked him, he stood as still as a mouse in the leafage of the oak.
+
+Out of the swamp emerged a young man with a musket on his shoulder.
+Behind him came one very much older, gaunt and wrinkled, his hair as
+gray as the Spanish moss that overhung his path. They reached the edge
+of the creek and then turned down to halt where the pirogue had been
+left. At failing to find it there, they argued hotly and were much
+distressed. Jack Cockrell's fears were calmed. These were no men of
+Blackbeard's company, but good Bill Saxby and his mate. He called to
+them from his perch and they stood wondering at this voice from heaven.
+
+In a jiffy Jack had slid down and was beckoning them. They hurried as
+fast as they could pull their feet out of the muck, and were overjoyed
+to jump into the hidden canoe. There they sat and thumped Jack Cockrell
+on the head by way of affectionate greeting. The younger man had a
+chubby cheek, a dimple in his chin, and blue eyes as big and round as a
+babe's.
+
+"Bill Saxby is me," said his pleasant voice, "and a precious job had I
+to get here. Joe Hawkridge told me of you, Master Cockrell."
+
+"Where is Joe?" cried Jack, dreading to hear his own opinion confirmed.
+
+"Marooned, along with two dozen luckless lads that were trapped like
+pigeons----"
+
+"'Twas more like turtles all a-sleepin' in the sand," the old man
+croaked in rusty accents. "A few was sharp awake and they fought pretty
+whilst the rest rallied, but they got drove with their backs to the
+swamp and a deep slough. Then the sloop turned her guns on 'em and they
+struck their colors."
+
+"And Joe Hawkridge sided with his friends, of course," said Jack.
+
+"Would ye expect aught else of him?" proudly answered Bill Saxby. "He
+searched us out where we lay trussed like fowls, all bound with ropes.
+We blundered fair into the camp last night, and old Trimble Rogers here,
+his legs knotted with cramps, couldn't make a run for it. They saved us
+for Blackbeard's pleasure but he had other fish to fry."
+
+"What then?" demanded Jack.
+
+"'Twas Joe Hawkridge that ran to cut our bonds when the fight began. And
+he bade us leg it for the pirogue and carry word to you. A pledge of
+honor, he called it, to stand by his dear friend Jack, and he made us
+swear it."
+
+"Bless him for a Christian knight of a pirate," said Jack, with tears in
+his eyes. "Was he hurt, did ye happen to note?"
+
+"We hid ourselves till the prisoners were flung into the boats. I marked
+Joe as one of 'em, and he was sprightly, barring a bloody face."
+
+"Marooned, Bill Saxby?" asked Jack. "What's your judgment on that
+score? It cannot be many leagues from here, or the ship would have
+transported them instead of the boats."
+
+"These barren islands lie strung well out from the coast, Master
+Cockrell. Waterless they be, and without shelter. Blackbeard's fancy is
+to let the men die there----"
+
+"An ancient custom of buccaneers and pirates," put in old Trimble
+Rogers, with an air of grave authority. "I mind me in the year of 1687
+when I sailed in the South Sea with that great captain, Edward
+Davis,--'twas after the sack of Guayaquil when every man had a greater
+weight of gold and silver than he could lug on his back----"
+
+Bill Saxby interrupted, in a petulant manner:
+
+"Stow it, grandsire! At a better time ye can please the lad with your
+long-winded yarns,--of marching on Panama with Henry Morgan when the
+mother's milk was scarce dry on your lips."
+
+"I cruised with the best of 'em," boasted the last of the storied race
+of true buccaneers of the Spanish Main, "and now I be in this cheap
+trade of piratin'. The fortunes I gamed away, and the plate ships I
+boarded! Take warnin', boy, and salt your treasure down."
+
+"This Trimble Rogers will talk you deaf," said Bill Saxby, "but there's
+pith in his old bones and wisdom under yon hoary thatch. Cap'n Bonnet
+sent him along with me as a rare old hound to trail the swamps."
+
+In a vivid flash of remembrance, Jack Cockrell saw this salty relic of
+the Spanish Main among the crew which had disported itself on the tavern
+green at Charles Town,--the old man sitting aside with a couple of stray
+children upon his knees while his head nodded to the lilt of the fiddle.
+And again there had been a glimpse of him trudging in the column which
+had followed Stede Bonnet, with trumpet and drum, to attack the hostile
+Indians. Jack's heart warmed to Trimble Rogers and also to young Bill
+Saxby. They would find some way out of all this tribulation.
+
+"Whither lies Captain Bonnet's stout ship?" eagerly demanded Jack.
+
+"On this side the Western Ocean," smiled Saxby. "We shall waste no time
+in finding her. We had better bide where we are a few hours, eh,
+Trimble?"
+
+"Aye, and double back up the stream in the canoe to spend the night on
+dry land and push on afoot at dawn. If we wait to sight Blackbeard's
+boats come in from sea, 'twill aid us to reckon how far out they went
+and what the bearings are."
+
+"So Captain Bonnet may sail to pick off those poor seamen marooned,"
+exclaimed Jack.
+
+"He is not apt to leave 'em to bleach their bones," said Bill Saxby.
+"And when it comes to closing in with Blackbeard, they will have a
+grudge of their own."
+
+They made themselves as comfortable as possible on the bottom of the
+pirogue. Now and then Jack climbed the live-oak to look for the return
+of the boats. There was no more leisure for the pirates left in the ship
+and the sloop. Evidently Blackbeard had been alarmed by the tidings that
+two of Stede Bonnet's men had been caught spying him out and had made
+their escape in the confusion. The sloop was now listed over in shoal
+water and Bill Saxby ventured the opinion that they intended to take the
+mast out of her and put it in the _Revenge_.
+
+"Along with most of her guns, I take it," said Trimble Rogers. "What
+with losing all those men, in one way or another, this Blackbeard, as
+Cap'n Ed'ard Teach miscalls hisself, must needs abandon the sloop. The
+more the merrier, says I, when we come at close quarters."
+
+Jack asked many curious questions, by way of passing the time. The old
+man was easy to read. He had been a lawless sea rover in the days when
+there was both gold and glory in harrying Spanish towns and galleons,
+from Mexico to Peru. The real buccaneers had vanished but he was too old
+a dog to learn new tricks and he faithfully served Stede Bonnet, who had
+a spark of the chivalry and manliness which had burned so brightly in
+that idolized master, Captain Edward Davis.
+
+As for this blue-eyed smiling young Bill Saxby, he had been a small
+tradesman in London. Through no fault of his own, he was cruelly
+imprisoned for debt and, after two years, shipped to the Carolina
+plantations as no better than a slave. For all he knew, the girl wife
+and child in London had been suffered to starve. He had never heard any
+word of them. As a fugitive he had been taken aboard a pirate vessel.
+There he found kindlier treatment than honest men had ever offered him,
+and so grew somewhat reconciled to this wicked calling.
+
+On one of the occasions when Jack left these entertaining companions to
+visit his high sentry post in the tree, he surmised that all hands had
+been summoned on the vessel and lifting out her mast. He could see two
+boats plying back and forth and filled with men. He lingered because
+something else caught his interest. A little boat was putting out from
+the seaward side of the _Revenge_ and it fetched a wide circuit of the
+harbor. This brought the ship between it and the sloop so that its
+departure would be unobserved by the toiling crew.
+
+Two men were at the oars and a third sat in the stern. At a distance,
+Jack guessed they were bound to one of the nearest islands, perhaps in
+search of oysters or crabs, but after making a long sweep which carried
+the boat out of vision of the sloop and the beach, it swung toward the
+shore, a little to the northward of the mouth of the creek. The errand
+had a stealthy air. Jack Cockrell started and almost fell out of the
+tree. He had been mistaken in his fancy that Blackbeard was in the
+pinnace which had towed the prisoners out to be marooned. This was none
+other than the grotesque fiend of a pirate himself, furtively steering
+his cock-boat on some private errand of his own.
+
+As soon as he was certain of this, Jack fairly scurried down the tree,
+digging his toes in the bark like a squirrel, and tumbling head over
+heels into the pirogue. Breathing rapidly, he stuttered:
+
+"The--the devil himself,--in that little w-wherry of his,--c-coming
+inshore. He must ha' seen the canoe. He is in chase of me."
+
+"Go take a look, Bill," coolly remarked old Trimble Rogers, who was busy
+slapping at mosquitoes. "A touch o' the sun has bred a nightmare in the
+lad."
+
+Bill Saxby swarmed up the live-oak like a limber seaman with fish-hooks
+for fingers and he, too, almost lost his balance at what he saw. He
+waved a warning hand at the canoe and then put his fingers to his lips.
+Down he came in breakneck haste and urged the others to haul their craft
+farther up into the sedge. He was plucking green bushes and armfuls of
+dried grass to fling across the gunwales.
+
+Satisfied that the canoe was entirely concealed, they crouched low. The
+old man was more concerned with the pest of insects and he reached out
+to claw up the sticky mud with which he plastered his face and neck like
+a mask. This seemed to give him some relief and his comrades were glad
+to do the same. Bill Saxby was attentive to the priming of the musket,
+which he passed over to Trimble Rogers, saying:
+
+"You are the chief gunner, old hawk. But hold your fire. I'm itching to
+know what trick this Don Whiskerando is up to."
+
+"Fair enough," muttered the old man. "Cap'n Bonnet 'ud clap me in irons
+if I slew this filthy Ed'ard Teach and robbed him of that enjoyment.
+I'll pull no trigger save in our own defense."
+
+They heard the faint splash of oars. Soon the little cock-boat came
+gliding around the bend of the shore and floated into the mouth of the
+creek. Bill Saxby raised himself for a moment and ducked swiftly as he
+whispered:
+
+"He is not lookin' about but motions 'em to row on up the stream."
+
+"Then our canoe is not what he's after?" murmured Jack.
+
+"'Tis some queer game. Were he hunting us, he'd fetch along more hands
+than them two. Hush! Let him pass."
+
+The little boat came steadily on, the tide helping the oars. It sat very
+low in the water, oddly so for the weight of three men. Blackbeard,
+hunched in the stern, held a pistol in one hand while the other gripped
+the tiller. This was not in fear of danger from the shore because he
+kept his eyes on the two seamen at the oars and it was plain to see that
+the pistol was meant to menace them.
+
+The boat passed abreast of the pirogue so artfully concealed in the
+pocket of a tiny cove. The intervening distance was no more than a dozen
+yards. Old Trimble Rogers wistfully fingered the musket and lifted it to
+squint along the barrel. Never was temptation more sturdily resisted.
+Then his face, hard as iron and puckered like dried leather, broke into
+a smile. The idea pleased him immensely. They would follow Blackbeard
+and watch the chance to take him alive. He who had trapped his own men
+in camp was now neatly trapped himself, his retreat cut off. Tie a
+couple of fathom of stout cord to his whiskers and tow him along by
+land, all the way to Stede Bonnet's ship. There the worthy captain could
+bargain with him at his own terms, silently chuckled the old buccaneer.
+
+They held their breath and gazed at the fantastic scoundrel who had made
+himself the ogre among pirates. He had discarded the great hat as
+cumbersome and his tousled head was bound around with a wide strip of
+the red calico from India. Still and solid he sat, like a heathen idol,
+staring in front of him and intent on his mysterious errand. The unseen
+spectators in the pirogue scanned also the two seamen at the oars and
+felt a vague pity for them. Unmistakably they were sick with fear. It
+was conveyed by their dejected aspect, by the tinge of pallor, by the
+fixity with which they regarded the cocked pistol in Blackbeard's fist.
+Jack Cockrell knew them as abandoned villains who had boasted of many a
+bloody deed but the swarthy, pockmarked fellow had been in the boat
+which had saved the two lads from the drifting raft. This was enough to
+awaken a lively sympathy.
+
+Trimble Rogers gripped Jack's shoulder with a strength which made him
+wince and pointed a skinny finger at the boat. The fate of the two
+seamen did not trouble him greatly. Those who lived by violence should
+rightly expect to die by it. The sea was their gaming table and it was
+their ill luck if the dice were cogged. Just then Bill Saxby stifled an
+ejaculation. He, too, had discovered the freightage in the cock-boat,
+the heavy burden which made it swim so low.
+
+It rested in front of Blackbeard's knees, the top showing above the
+curve of the gunwales. It was a sea-chest, uncommonly large, built of
+some dark tropical wood and strapped with iron. Old Trimble Rogers'
+fierce eyes glittered and he licked his lips. He leaned over to whisper
+in Bill Saxby's ear the one word:
+
+"_Treasure!_"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+BLACKBEARD'S ERRAND IS INTERRUPTED
+
+
+BLACKBEARD'S deep-laden boat was rowed on past the pirogue and turned to
+follow the channel of the sluggish stream. Bill Saxby thrust aside the
+cover of grass and boughs and shoved the log canoe out of the cove. So
+crooked was the course of the creek that the boat was already out of
+sight and by stealthy paddling it was possible to pursue undetected. Old
+Trimble Rogers had forgotten his lust to slay Blackbeard. His gloating
+imagination could picture the contents of that massive sea-chest after a
+long cruise in southern waters.
+
+It was foolish to attempt to surprise Blackbeard while afloat in the
+creek. In a race of it, the handy cock-boat could pull away from the
+clumsier pirogue manned by two paddles only, for Trimble Rogers was
+needed to steer and be ready with the musket. This was their only
+firearm, which Bill Saxby had snatched up during the flight from the
+camp. At the same time he had lifted a powder-horn and bullet pouch from
+a wounded pirate.
+
+"If I do bang away and miss him," grumbled Trimble Rogers, "he's apt to
+pepper us afore I can reload."
+
+"But you forswore shootin' him," chided Bill Saxby, between strokes of
+the paddle.
+
+"Show me a great sea-chest crammed wi' treasure and I'd put a hole
+through the Grand High Panjandrum hisself," replied the ancient one.
+"Aye, Bill, there be more'n one way to skin an eel. We'll lay aboard
+this bloody blow-hard of a Cap'n Teach whilst he's a-buryin' of it. Here
+may well be where he has tucked away his other plunder. What if we bag
+the whole of it?"
+
+"One more fling, eh, Trimble, and more gold than ye lugged on your back
+from Guayaquil," grinned young Bill.
+
+They had spoken in cautious tones and now held their tongues. The
+paddles dipped with no more than a trickle of water and the canoe hugged
+the marsh. They were close to the next bend of the stream and the sound
+of the oars in the cock-boat was faintly audible. As the tallest of the
+three, the old man stood up after swathing his head in dried grass, and
+gazed across the curve of the shore. By signs he told his companions
+that Blackbeard was bound farther up the stream.
+
+They waited a little, giving their quarry time to pass beyond another
+turn of the channel. Jack Cockrell was embarked on the most entrancing
+excursion of his life. This repaid him for all he had suffered. His only
+regret was that poor Joe Hawkridge had been marooned before he could
+share this golden adventure. However, he would see that Joe received a
+handsome amount of treasure. Trimble Rogers was muttering again, and
+thus he angrily expounded a grievance:
+
+"A thief is this Cap'n Teach,--like a wild hog, all greed and bristles.
+'Tis the custom of honest buccaneers and pirates to divide the spoils by
+the strict rule,--six shares for the commander, two for the master's
+mate, and other officers accordin' to their employment, with one share
+to every seaman alike. Think ye this bloody pick-purse dealt fairly by
+his crew? In yon sea-chest be the lawful shares of all the woesome lads
+he marooned this day. An' as much more as he durst skulk away with."
+
+"Easy, now, old Fire-and-Brimstone," warned Bill, "or that temper will
+gain the upper hand. Don't spoil the show by bombardin' Blackbeard with
+that cross-eyed musket."
+
+Now here was young Master Cockrell, a gentleman and a near kinsman of a
+high official who had sworn to hang every mother's son of a pirate that
+harried Carolina waters. And yet this godly youth was eager to lay hands
+on Blackbeard's treasure so as to divide it among the pirates who had
+been robbed of it. It was a twisted sense of justice, no doubt, and a
+code of morals turned topsy-turvy, but you are entreated to think not
+too harshly of such behavior. Master Cockrell had fallen into almighty
+bad company but the friends he had made displayed fidelity and readiness
+to serve him.
+
+"How far will the chase lead us?" he inquired.
+
+"Did you men come down this same creek in the pirogue?"
+
+"Aye, in this very same mess o' pea soup and jungle," answered Bill
+Saxby. "Two miles in from the coast, at a venture, was where we stumbled
+on the canoe and tossed the Indians out of it. Beyond that the water
+spreads o'er the swamp with no fairway for a boat."
+
+Once more they paddled for a short stretch and then repeated the
+stratagem of hauling into the dense growth of the mud-flat and pausing
+until the cock-boat had steered beyond the next elbow of the stream. It
+became more and more difficult to avoid the fallen trees and other
+obstructions, but Blackbeard was threading his course like a pilot
+acquainted with this dank and somber region. The pirogue ceased to lag
+purposely but had to be urged in order to keep within striking distance.
+
+Twice they were compelled to climb out and shove clear of sunken
+entanglements or slimy shoals. But when they held themselves to listen,
+they could still hear the measured thump of oars against the pins, like
+the beat of a distant drum in the brooding silence of this melancholy
+solitude. They had struggled on for perhaps a mile and a half, in all,
+when Trimble Rogers ordered another halt. He was perplexed, like a hound
+uncertain of the scent. From the left bank of the creek, a smaller
+stream meandered blindly off into the swamp. Into which of these
+watercourses had Blackbeard continued his secret voyage?
+
+Again they listened, and more anxiously than ever. The tell-tale thump
+of the oars had ceased. The only sounds in the bayou were the trickle of
+water from the tidal pools, the wind in the tree-tops, the rat-tat-tat
+of a woodpecker, and the scream of a bob-cat. With a foolish air of
+chagrin, Trimble Rogers rubbed his hoary pate and exclaimed:
+
+"Whilst Bill and me were a-paddlin' this hollow log down-stream, we took
+no heed of a fork like this yonder. With the sun at our backs to guide
+us, we knew we was makin' easterly to fetch the coast. What say, Bill?"
+
+"Cursed if I know. Spin a coin. The treasure has slipped us."
+
+"Rot me if it has!" snarled the old man. "We'll push on as we are, in
+the bigger stream. That stinkin' ditch on my left hand looks too weedy
+and shallow to float a boat."
+
+"It makes no odds. A gamester's choice," amiably agreed Bill.
+
+They paddled with might and main, flinging caution to the winds. Jack
+Cockrell was well versed in handling one of these dugout canoes and his
+stout arms made Bill Saxby grunt and sweat to keep stroke with him. When
+the craft grounded they strove like madmen to push it clear. Trimble
+Rogers tore the water with a paddle, straining every sinew and
+condemning Blackbeard to the bottomless pit in a queer jargon of the
+Spanish, French, and English tongues. It required such a lurid
+vocabulary to give vent to his feelings. He was even more distressed
+when he sighted the clump of gum trees near by which he and Bill had
+purloined the pirogue. Beyond this the creek was impassable.
+
+"Throwed a blank! Wear ship and drive back to the fork o' the waters,"
+shouted the old man. "Hull down an' under though he be, we'll nab yon
+_picaro_, with his jolly treasure. _Rapido, camaradas! Vivo!_"
+
+To make haste was easier said than done but the sluggish current was now
+in their favor and there was no more than a half mile to traverse under
+stress of furious exertion. The heavy canoe crashed through obstacles
+which had delayed the upward journey and they knew where to avoid the
+worst of the shoals. What fretted them was the fear that Blackbeard
+might have buried the sea-chest and descended the creek while they were
+engaged in this wild-goose chase. But this seemed unlikely and,
+moreover, old Trimble Rogers was the man to nose out the marks of the
+landing-place and the trail which must have been left.
+
+Where the two streams joined, the pirogue turned and shot into the
+smaller one. To their surprise it presently widened and was like a tiny
+lagoon, with the water much clearer as if fed by springs. The view was
+less broken and there were glimpses of dry knolls in the swamp and
+verdure not so noxious and tanglesome. Along the edge of this pretty
+pond skimmed the pirogue while Trimble Rogers keenly scanned every inch
+of it for the imprint of a boat's keel. A hundred yards and the water
+again narrowed to a little creek. Impetuously the canoe swung to pass
+around a spit of land covered with a thicket of sweet bay.
+
+There, no more than a dozen feet beyond, was the captain's cock-boat
+from the _Revenge_. Its bow had been pulled out of the water which
+deepened from a shelving bank. The boat was deserted but above the
+gunwale could be seen the iron-bound lid of the massive sea-chest. Those
+in the pirogue desired to behold nothing else. They were suddenly
+diverted by a tremendous yell which came booming out of the tall grass
+where it waved breast-high on the shore of the stream. A pistol barked
+and the ball clipped a straggling lock of Trimble Rogers' gray hair.
+
+Driving his two seamen before him, Blackbeard rushed for his boat as
+fast as the bandy legs and clumsy sea-boots could carry him. In fancied
+security he had explored the nearest knoll. And now appeared this
+infernal canoe, surging full-tilt at his treasure chest.
+
+Things happened _rapido_ enough to glut even an old buccaneer. The
+consternation in the pirogue prevented any thought of checking headway
+with the paddles. This hollowed cypress log, narrow beamed and solid at
+both ends, still moved with a weighty momentum. Its astounded crew were
+otherwise occupied. Blackbeard appeared to have the advantage of them.
+Jack Cockrell ducked to the bottom of the canoe. Bill Saxby's eyes of
+baby blue were big and round as saucers as he wildly flourished his
+paddle as the only cudgel at hand.
+
+With a whoop-la, old Trimble Rogers leaped to his feet, the long musket
+at his shoulder. Before he could aim at the savage, bushy figure of
+Blackbeard, the prow of the pirogue crashed into the side of the
+cock-boat, striking it well toward the stern. The ancient freebooter
+described a somersault and smote the water with a mighty splash, musket
+and all. Blowing like a grampus, he bobbed to the top, clawing the weeds
+from his eyes but still clutching the musket. Nobody paid his misfortune
+the slightest heed.
+
+The water deepened suddenly, as has been said, where the current had
+scoured the bank. With the nose of the little boat pulled well up in the
+mud, the stern sloped almost level with the surface of the stream. The
+blunt, slanting bow of the pirogue banged into the plank gunwale and
+slid over it. The force of the blow dragged the cock-boat to one side
+and wrenched it free of the shore. It floated at the end of a tether but
+the bow of the canoe pressed the stern under and tipped it until the
+water rushed in.
+
+Listed far over, the sea-chest slid a trifle and this was enough to push
+the gunwale clear under. The boat filled and capsized, what with the
+weight of the chest and the pressure of the canoe's fore part. Down to
+the oozy bed sank Blackbeard's treasure.
+
+The arch-pirate himself came charging out of the marsh-grass in time to
+witness this lamentable disaster. His hoarse ejaculations were too
+dreadful for a Christian reader's ears. Dumfounded for an instant, he
+gathered his wits to fire another pistol at the pirogue. The ball flew
+wild, as was to be expected of a marksman in a state of mind so
+distraught. He had overlooked those two poor seamen of his who had been
+impressed to bury the treasure, after which they were presumably to be
+pistoled or knocked on the head. Dead men told no tales. Doomed
+wretches, they were quick to snatch from this confusion the precious
+hope of life.
+
+The pockmarked fellow, who was powerfully built, whirled like a cat as
+he heard Blackbeard's pistol discharged just behind him. There was no
+time to draw and cock another pistol. The seaman fairly flew at the
+pirate captain's throat. Down they toppled and vanished in the grass
+together. A moment later Blackbeard bounded to his feet, a bloody dirk
+in his hand. He had done for the poor fellow who lay groaning where he
+fell. Terrified by this, the other seaman wheeled and fled to the bank
+of the creek, seeking the pirogue as his only refuge.
+
+He leaped for it but his feet slipped in the treacherous mud and his
+impetus was checked so that he tumbled forward, striking the solid side
+of the dugout with great force. He was splashing in the water but his
+exertions were feeble. Either the collision had stunned him or he was
+unable to swim. Bill Saxby and Jack Cockrell were trying to swing the
+canoe clear of the boat and effect a landing. Trimble Rogers had rescued
+himself from the creek and was ramming a dry charge into his dripping
+musket. Blackbeard was a deadly menace and their attention was fixed on
+him.
+
+When they endeavored to lend a hand to the helpless seaman he had sunk
+beneath the surface of the roily stream. They saw him come up and turn a
+ghastly face to them, but he went down like a stone before a hand could
+clutch at him. A few bubbles and this was the end of him. Jack Cockrell
+hesitated with a brave impulse to dive in search of him although he knew
+the bottom was a tangle of rotted trees, but just then Bill Saxby yelled
+to him to follow ashore with a paddle for a weapon. The luckless seaman
+was already drowned, this was as good as certain, and Jack jumped from
+the pirogue.
+
+Blackbeard had halted his onrush and he wavered when he beheld stout
+Bill Saxby within a few strides of him and long Trimble Rogers galloping
+through the grass with his musket. Another pistol shot or two would not
+stop these three antagonists and a buffet from one of those hewn paddles
+would dash out a man's brains. The most ferocious of all pirates for
+once preferred to run away and live to fight another day. His boat
+denied him, he whirled about to plunge through the tall, matted grass.
+He was running in the direction of the dry knoll whence he had
+appeared.
+
+Infuriated by the fate of the two seamen, Trimble Rogers made a try at
+shooting him on the wing but the musket ball failed to find the mark. It
+was necessary to hunt him down for the sake of their own safety. They
+might have gone their way in the pirogue but this would have been to
+abandon the sea-chest without an effort to drag it up or fix its
+location.
+
+Now it might seem an easy matter for these pursuers, two of them young
+and active, to run down this fugitive Blackbeard, encumbered as he was
+by middle age and dissipation. They put after him boldly, with little
+fear of his pistols. In this dense cover he would have to fire at them
+haphazard and he was unlikely to tarry and wait for them. They saw him
+in glimpses as he fled from one grassy patch to another, or burst out of
+a leafy thicket, the great beard streaming over his shoulders like
+studding-sails, the red turban of calico a vivid blotch of color.
+
+Nimble as they were, however, they failed to overtake him. This was
+because he was familiar with this landscape of bog and hummock and pine
+knoll. Jack Cockrell fell into a hidden quagmire and had to be fished
+out by main strength. Bill Saxby was caught amidst the tenacious vines,
+like a bull by the horns, and old Trimble came a cropper in a patch of
+saw-tooth palmetto. They straggled to the nearest knoll after Blackbeard
+had crossed it. Then he followed a ridge which led in the direction of
+another of these dry islands.
+
+The pursuers halted to gaze from this slight elevation. There was not a
+solitary glimpse of the crimson turban. Trimble Rogers plowed through
+the prickly ash, short of wind and temper, with the musket again ready
+for action. His language was hot enough to flash the powder in the pan.
+
+"Lost him a'ready, ye lubbers, whilst I fetched up the rear?" he
+scolded. "Leave the old dog to find the trail. I be hanged if I take him
+alive for Stede Bonnet. What say, Bill? Skin and stuff him for a
+trophy----"
+
+"First catch the slippery son o' Satan," tartly answered Bill. "He hides
+away like a hare. You can track him, no doubt, Trimble, but the sun will
+be down ere long. I'll not pass the night in this cursed puddle of a
+place."
+
+Just then Jack Cockrell roved far enough to find on the knoll a small
+pit freshly dug, with a spade and pick beside it. Like excited children,
+his two comrades ran to inspect the hole which Blackbeard's seamen had
+dug ready for the treasure chest. Then they scattered to explore the
+knoll in search of signs to indicate where previous hoards might have
+been buried. Trimble Rogers scouted like a red Indian, eager to find
+traces of upturned earth, or the leaf mould disturbed, or marks of an
+axe on the pine trees as symbols of secret guidance. It was a futile
+quest, possibly because the high spring tides, when swept by easterly
+gales, had now and then crept back from the coast to cover the knoll and
+obliterate man's handiwork.
+
+Like a hunter bewitched, the gray buccaneer was absorbed in this rare
+pastime until Bill Saxby exclaimed:
+
+"Is there no wit in our addled pates? Quit this dashed folly! What of
+the treasure chest that was spilled from the boat?"
+
+"It won't take wings. Wait a bit," growled Trimble. "_Madre de Dios_,
+but there must be more of it here. This truant Cap'n Teach knew the road
+well. Did ye mark how he doubled for the knoll, like a fox to its hole?"
+
+Jack Cockrell ended the argument when he spoke up, with a shamefaced
+air:
+
+"We are three heartless men! One of the seamen is drowned, rest his
+soul, and we could not save the poor wretch. But the other fellow was
+stabbed and lies in the grass near the stream. For all we know, there
+may be life in him."
+
+"Heartless? 'Tis monstrous of us," cried Bill Saxby. "This greed for
+pirates' gold is like a poison."
+
+They hastened to retrace their steps. The wounded seaman was breathing
+his last when they reached his side. They could not have prolonged his
+life had they remained with him. Jack Cockrell stroked his damp forehead
+and murmured:
+
+"Farewell to ye, Jesse Strawn. Any message before you slip your cable?"
+
+There was a faint whisper of:
+
+"Scuppered, lad! Take warnin' and avast this cruel piratin' or you'll
+get it. A few words from the Bible 'ud ease me off."
+
+To Jack's amazement, the veteran sinner of the lot, old Trimble Rogers,
+fumbled in his breeches and withdrew a small book carefully wrapped in
+canvas. Solemnly he hooked behind his ears a pair of huge, horn-rimmed
+spectacles and knelt beside the dying pirate. In the manner of a priest
+the buccaneer intoned a chapter of Holy Writ which he appeared to know
+by rote. Then he said a prayer in a powerful broken voice. Silence
+followed. The others waited with bared heads until Trimble said:
+
+"His soul has passed. Shall we give the poor lad a decent burial?"
+
+"His grave is ready. He helped dig it himself," said Bill Saxby. "And
+may his ghost be a torment to the fiend that slew him."
+
+It seemed a fitting suggestion. In the freshly made treasure pit on the
+knoll they laid the dead pirate and used the spade to cover him. Jack
+Cockrell had a sheath knife with which he fashioned a rude cross and
+hacked on it:
+
+ JESSE STRAWN
+ A. D. 1718
+
+"Aye, his ghost will flit to plague this Cap'n Teach," said Trimble
+Rogers. "We can leave Jesse Strawn to square his own account. Now for
+the sea-chest, though I misdoubt we can fish it up."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE SEA URCHIN AND THE CARPENTER'S MATE
+
+
+FOR the sake of a treasure sordid and blood-stained, it would seem
+shabby to overlook the fate of hapless Joe Hawkridge marooned along with
+the hands of the _Revenge_ who were suspected of plotting mutiny. His
+behavior was courageous and unselfish, for he could have fled back into
+the swamp when Blackbeard's wily attack threw the camp into tumult. From
+a sense of duty he flung himself into the fray. What friends he had in
+the ship were those of the decenter sort who were tired of wanton
+brutalities and of a master who was no better than a lunatic.
+
+When the sloop opened fire with her guns, it was time to surrender.
+Unhurt save for a few scratches and a gorgeous black eye, Joe was
+dragged to the beach and thrown into a boat. Promptly the armed pinnace
+took them in tow, as arranged beforehand. Several of the prisoners had
+visited this rendezvous at Cherokee Inlet during a previous cruise and
+had some knowledge of the lay of the coast. Five or six miles out were
+certain shoals of sand scarcely lifted above high tide, so desolate that
+nothing whatever grew upon them nor was there any means of obtaining
+fresh water.
+
+"A pretty fancy,--to cast us where he can enjoy the sight of it when the
+ship sails out," said one of them who held a wounded comrade in his
+arms.
+
+"Some trading vessel may sight us in the nick o' time," hopefully
+suggested Joe. "Never say die!"
+
+"Trust most honest skippers to give the Inlet a wide berth," was the
+lugubrious reply. "This harbor was used by pirates afore Blackbeard's
+time. I was a silly 'prentice-boy, same as you, Joe, wi' Cap'n Willum
+Kidd when we lay in here to caulk his galley for the long voyage to
+Madagascar."
+
+"A poor figger of a pirate was that same Kidd," spoke up another. "He
+ne'er scuttled a ship nor fought an action. An' his treasure was all in
+my eye. What did he swing for, at Execution Dock? For crackin' the skull
+of his gunner with a wooden bucket."
+
+"They can't h'ist this Cap'n Teach to the same gibbet any too soon to
+please me, Sam," croaked a horse-faced rogue with two fingers chopped
+off. "He's gone and murdered all us men, as sure as blazes."
+
+Joe Hawkridge held his peace and wondered what had become of his
+partner, Jack Cockrell, waiting alone in the pirogue. In the infernal
+commotion at the camp, Joe had failed to note whether Bill Saxby and
+Trimble Rogers had betaken themselves off or had been among those
+killed. There was the faint hope that these trusty messengers might find
+their way back to Captain Stede Bonnet's ship and so hasten his coming.
+
+The boats crept over the burnished surface of the harbor and passed the
+nearest islands which were green and wooded. Beyond them shone the
+gently heaving sea, with the distant gleam of a patch of sandy shoal
+ringed about with a necklace of surf. It was remote enough from any
+other land to daunt the strongest swimmer. The boats kept on until they
+had rounded to leeward of this ghastly prison. There was no means of
+resistance. The captives were driven ashore by force of arms, carrying a
+few of their wounded with them.
+
+With emotions beyond the power of speech, they stared at the pinnace as
+the oars splashed on the return journey to the _Revenge_. Joe Hawkridge
+wept a little, perplexed that men could be so cruel to their own
+shipmates. And yet what could be expected of pirates debased enough to
+be Blackbeard's loyal followers? Recovering from their first stupor, the
+twenty able-bodied survivors began to ransack the strip of naked sand on
+which they had been marooned. It was no more than an acre in extent. A
+few small fish were found in a pool left by the falling tide and perhaps
+a hundred turtle eggs were uncovered during the afternoon. This merely
+postponed starvation.
+
+There was not much bickering. In the shadow of certain death, these
+outlaws of the sea seemed to have acquired a spirit of resignation which
+was akin to dignity. They had lost the game. In their own lingo, it was
+the black spot for all hands of 'em. With the coolness of night they
+revived to bathe in the surf which made their thirst less hard to bear.
+There was not much sleep. Men walked in restless circles, looking up at
+the stars, muttering to themselves, or scanning the sea which had known
+their crimes and follies.
+
+[Illustration: THEY CAPERED AND HUGGED EACH OTHER]
+
+Joe Hawkridge scooped out a bed for himself in the sand and dropped off
+to sleep by spells, with dreams of ease and quiet ashore and learning to
+be a gentleman. It was daylight when shouts startled him. The other
+derelicts were in a frenzy of agitation. They capered and hugged each
+other, and made unearthly sounds. Joe brushed the sand from his eyes and
+saw a small vessel approaching the tiny island. Her rig was made out to
+be that of a snow, which was very like a brig, the difference being in
+the larger main-topsail and the absence of a spanker or after
+steering-sail.
+
+Such trading craft as this snow came coasting down from Salem and other
+New England ports to Virginia and the Carolinas laden with molasses,
+rum, salt, cider, mackerel, woodenware, Muscavado sugar, and dried
+codfish. They bartered for return cargoes and carried no specie,
+wherefore pirates like Stede Bonnet seldom molested them excepting to
+take such stores as might be needed and sometimes actually to pay for
+them. They were the prey of miscreants of Blackbeard's stripe who
+destroyed and slew for the pleasure of it.
+
+This trim little snow was making to the southward in fancied security,
+having picked up a landfall, as the marooned pirates conjectured. No
+doubt her master had failed to receive warning that Blackbeard was in
+these waters and he was running his risk of encountering other
+marauders. He must have seen that there were people in distress on the
+tide-washed strip of sand. The snow shifted her helm and fired a gun.
+The marooned wretches could scarce credit their amazing good fortune but
+a grave, slow-spoken fellow who had been a carpenter's mate in the
+_Revenge_ thought the rejoicing premature.
+
+"When that God-fearin' skipper takes a look at us, he will sheer off and
+clap on sail, lads. For shipwrecked sailors you are a pizen lot o' mugs.
+The only blighted one of ye what's the leastwise respectable is me."
+
+Here was a terrible misgiving which clouded the bright anticipations.
+They were, indeed, an unlovely cargo for the little trading vessel to
+take on board. One of them whipped out a pair of scissors and hastily
+sawed at his unkempt whiskers while his comrades stood in line and
+waited their turn. Others discarded gaudy kerchiefs and pistol-belts, or
+kicked off Spanish jack-boots. Scraps of gold lace were also unpopular.
+But they could not get rid of scarred faces and rum-reddened noses and
+the other hall-marks of their trade.
+
+To their immense relief, the snow displayed no signs of alarm but sailed
+as close as the shoaling water permitted and dipped her colors. The
+pirates flattered themselves that they were not as frightful as the
+carpenter's mate had painted them. And this New England shipmaster was
+a merciful man who would not leave his fellow mortals to perish. They
+saw a boat lowered from the snow and into it jumped half a dozen
+sailors, soberly clad in dungaree, with round straw hats on their heads.
+With a gush of gratitude, the pirates swore to deal courteously by these
+noble merchant mariners and to repay them in whatever manner possible.
+
+Out into the murmuring surf rushed the mild-mannered rascals, eager to
+grasp the boat and haul it up. It was Joe Hawkridge, hovering in the
+background, who raised the first cry of astonishment. His voice was so
+affrighted that it quavered. Before the boat was half-way from the
+vessel, he perceived that these were no sedate seamen from the
+Massachusetts Colony, even though they were in dungaree and round straw
+hats. He was gazing at some of Ned Rackham's evil pirates whom he had
+last beheld on the shattered deck of the _Plymouth Adventure_ where they
+had been left to build a raft for themselves!
+
+The devil had looked after his own. They had floated away from the
+stranded ship and instead of landing on the beach had been rescued by
+this unfortunate snow whose crew had been disposed of in some violent
+manner. This much Joe Hawkridge comprehended, although his mind was
+awhirl. He was better off marooned. He had helped to turn the guns of
+the _Plymouth Adventure_ against these very same men when they had been
+blown out of the after cabin and the ship retaken by Captain Jonathan
+Wellsby.
+
+Whatever other plans they had in store, the first business would be to
+kill Joe Hawkridge. This was painfully obvious. He retreated still
+farther behind his companions and had a confused idea of digging into
+the sand and burying himself from view. The discovery that these were
+Blackbeard's pirates in the boat created general confusion but there was
+no fear of instant death. It was a situation excessively awkward for the
+marooned company but nevertheless open to parley and argument.
+
+By hurried agreement, the carpenter's mate, Peter Tobey by name, was
+chosen as spokesman. Before he began to talk with the men in the boat,
+Joe Hawkridge called to him in piteous accents and begged him to step
+back in rear of the crowd for a moment. Tobey shouted to the boat to
+wait outside the surf and not attempt a landing.
+
+"What's the row, Joe?" he asked, with a kindly smile. "'Tis a
+disappointment for all of us,--this tangle with Rackham's crew,--but why
+any worse for you?"
+
+"I can't tell it all, Peter, but my life is forfeit once they lay hands
+on me."
+
+"What tarradiddle is this? As I remember it in the _Revenge_, when all
+hands of us were cruisin' together, ye had no mortal enemies."
+
+"It happened in the _Plymouth Adventure_," answered Joe. "There be men
+in yon boat that 'ud delight in flayin' me alive. I swear it, Peter, by
+my mother's name. Give me up, and my blood is on your head."
+
+The boy's words carried conviction. The stolid carpenter's mate pondered
+and knitted his bushy brows.
+
+"I never did a wilful murder yet," said he. "Mallet and chisel come
+readier to my fist than a cutlass. Bide here, Joe. Let me get my
+bearings. This has the look of a ticklish matter for the lot of us. I
+shall be keepin' a weather eye lifted for squalls."
+
+In mortal fear of discovery by the men in the boat, Joe flattened
+himself behind a palmetto log which had drifted to the other side of the
+island. Here he was hidden unless the boat should make a landing. The
+carpenter's mate waded out to join his companions who were amiably
+conversing with Ned Rackham's pirates. They had all been shipmates
+either in the _Revenge_ or the _Triumph_ sloop and there was boisterous
+curiosity concerning the divers adventures while they had been apart.
+Rackham's crew had been reduced to eighteen men when they were lucky
+enough to capture the snow, it was learned. With this small company he
+dared not go pirating on his own account and so had decided to rejoin
+Blackbeard.
+
+"Is Ned Rackham aboard the snow?" asked Peter Tobey of the boat's
+coxswain.
+
+"He is all o' that, matey, though the big bos'n of the _Plymouth
+Adventure_ shoved a knife in his ribs to the hilt. He is flat in a bunk
+but he gives the orders an' it's jump at the word."
+
+"A hard man to kill," said Peter Tobey. "Take me aboard. 'Tis best I
+have speech with him. Let the people wait here on the cay. They can
+stand another hour of it."
+
+There was fierce protest among the marooned pirates but the carpenter's
+mate gruffly demanded to know if they wished to be carried into the
+harbor and turned over to Blackbeard. This gave the mob something to
+think about and they permitted the boat to pull away from them without
+much objection.
+
+"A rough joke on you lads, I call it, to be dumped on this bit o'
+purgatory," said the coxswain to Peter Tobey. "The great Cap'n Teach
+must ha' been in one of his tantrums."
+
+"It had been long brewing, as ye know," answered the carpenter's mate.
+"These men with you in the snow 'ud sooner follow Ned Rackham,
+flint-hearted though he be, than to rejoin the _Revenge_."
+
+"Not so loud," cautioned the coxswain. "We'll see which way the cat is
+going to jump. Us poor devils is sore uneasy at findin' how you were
+dealt with."
+
+"What of the master and crew of the snow?" asked Tobey. "Were they
+snuffed out? That 'ud be Rackham's way."
+
+"No, we set 'em off in a boat, within sight of the coast. Ned Rackham
+was too shrewd to bloody his hands, bein' helpless in this tub of a snow
+which could neither fight nor show her heels if she was chased."
+
+Few men as there were aboard the snow, they were smartly disciplined and
+kept things shipshape, as Peter Tobey noted when he climbed on deck. A
+few minutes later he was summoned into the small cabin. Propped up in
+the skipper's berth, Sailing-Master Ned Rackham had a pinched and
+ghastly look. He was a young man, with clean-cut, handsome features, and
+a certain refinement of manner when he cared to assume it. The rumor was
+that he was the black sheep of an English house of some distinction and
+that he had enlisted in the Royal Navy under a false name.
+
+"What is this mare's-nest, my good Tobey?" said he as the carpenter's
+mate stood diffidently fumbling with his cap. "Marooned? Twenty men of
+you on a reef of sand? Were ye naughty boys whilst I was absent?"
+
+"No more than them I could name who planned to go a-cruisin' in the
+_Plymouth Adventure_," doggedly replied Peter Tobey who resented the
+tone of sneering patronage.
+
+"Fie, fie! You talk boldly for a man in your situation. Never mind! Why
+the honor of this visit?"
+
+"To make terms, Master Rackham. If us twenty men consent to serve
+you----"
+
+"You babble of terms?" was the biting interruption. "I can leave you to
+perish on the sand, as ye no doubt deserve, or I can carry you in with
+me, when I report to Captain Teach."
+
+"But there's another choice, which hasn't escaped you," persisted the
+intrepid carpenter's mate. "Enlist us in your service and you'll have
+nigh on forty men. This snow mounts a few old swivels and you must ha'
+found muskets in her. With forty men, Master Rackham, there's no
+occasion to bow to Blackbeard's whimsies. You can h'ist the Jolly Roger
+for yourself and lay 'longside a bigger ship to take and cruise in. I've
+heard tell of a great buccaneer that started for himself in a pinnace
+and captured a galleon as tall as a church."
+
+Ned Rackham's eyes flashed. Indeed, this was what he had in mind. This
+score of recruits would make the venture worth undertaking. Men were
+essential. Given enough of them to handle the snow and a boarding party
+besides, and he would not hesitate to shift helm and bear away to sea
+again.
+
+"You will sign articles, then?" he demanded.
+
+"Aye, I can speak for all, Master Rackham. What else is there for us?
+Hold fast, I would except one man. He must be granted safe conduct, on
+your sacred honor."
+
+"His name, Tobey?"
+
+"That matters not. Pledge me first. He has no more stomach for piracy
+and will be set ashore at some port."
+
+"A pig in a poke?" cried Rackham, with an ugly smile. "If I refuse,
+what?"
+
+"You will have sulky men that may turn against you some day."
+
+"And I can leave you to rot where you are, with your nonsense of 'making
+terms,'" was the harsh rejoinder.
+
+"But you won't do that," argued Peter Tobey. "Your own fortune hangs on
+enlisting us twenty lads. You bear Blackbeard no more love than we do."
+
+Ned Rackham was making no great headway with this stubborn carpenter's
+mate who was playing strong cards of his own.
+
+"A drawn bout, Tobey," said he, with a change of front. "No more backing
+and filling. You ask a small favor. Fetch your man along, whoever he may
+be. He shall be done no harm by me."
+
+"Even though he made a mortal enemy of you, Master Rackham?"
+
+"Enough, Peter. I have many enemies and scores to settle. You have my
+assurance but I demand the lad's name."
+
+"Not without his permission," declared Tobey. "Set me ashore and I will
+confer with him."
+
+Grudgingly Rackham consented, unwilling to have a hitch in the
+negotiations. In a somber humor, the carpenter's mate returned to his
+impatient comrades on the island. They crowded about him and he briefly
+delivered the message, that they were desired to cruise under Ned
+Rackham's flag. This delighted them, as the only way out of a fatal
+dilemma. Then Tobey went over to sit down upon the palmetto log behind
+which Joe Hawkridge still sprawled like a turtle. The anxious boy poked
+up his head to say:
+
+"What cheer, Peter? A plaguey muddle you found it, I'll bet."
+
+"Worse'n that, Joe. Rackham wouldn't clinch it with his oath unless I
+told him your name. I plead with him for safe conduct."
+
+"I'd not trust his oath on a stack o' Bibles, once he set eyes on me,"
+exclaimed Joe. "As soon put my fist to my own death warrant as go aboard
+with him."
+
+"That may be," said Peter Tobey, "but you will have friends. You can't
+expect us to refuse to sail on account o' you."
+
+"Leave me here, then," cried the boy. "I'll not call it deserting me.
+Take your men aboard the snow. Tell Ned Rackham you have the fellow
+amongst 'em who implored the safe conduct. Pick out some harmless lad
+that was saucy to Rackham in the _Revenge_, a half-wit like that
+Robinson younker that was the sailing-master's own cabin boy. He was
+allus blubberin' that Rackham 'ud kill him some day."
+
+"No half-wit about you," admiringly quoth the carpenter's mate. "But,
+harkee, Joe, you will die in slow misery. Better a quick bullet from
+Rackham's pistol."
+
+"Find some way to send off a little food and water, Peter, and I will
+set tight on this desert island. And mayhap you will dance at the end
+of a rope afore I shuffle off."
+
+"A hard request, Joe," replied the puzzled Tobey. "Unless I can come off
+again with some of our own men, how can it be done? Let Rackham's crew
+suspect I am leaving a man behind and they will rout you out."
+
+"And they all love me, like a parson loves a pirate," grinned Joe. "I
+shot 'em full of spikes and bolts from a nine-pounder in the _Plymouth
+Adventure_."
+
+"I shall use my best endeavor, so help me," sighed Peter Tobey. "What
+for did I ever quit carpenterin' to go a-piratin'? 'Tis the worst basket
+of chips that ever was."
+
+"No sooner do I crawl out of one hole than I tumble into another," very
+truthfully observed Joe Hawkridge. "Insomuch as I've allus crawled out,
+you and me'll shed no more tears, Peter. There's a kick in me yet."
+
+The disconsolate carpenter's mate returned to his fellow pirates and
+bade them go off to the snow. First, however, he extracted from every
+man the solemn promise that he would not divulge the secret of Joe
+Hawkridge's presence nor reveal the fact that he had remained behind.
+They were eager to promise anything. Several of them stole over to tell
+him furtive farewells. They displayed no great emotion. The trade they
+followed was not apt to make them turn soft over such a tragic episode
+as this.
+
+When the snow was ready to take her departure, with almost forty
+seasoned pirates to seek their fortunes anew, the wind died to a calm
+and the little vessel drifted within easy vision of the sandy island
+through a long afternoon. Peter Tobey tormented himself to find some
+pretext for smuggling food and water ashore. He invented a tale of a
+precious gold snuff-box which must have fallen out of his pocket and
+begged permission to go and search for it. But Ned Rackham sent up word
+that he had no notion of being delayed by a fool's errand, should a
+breeze spring up. He was not at all anxious to linger so close to
+Cherokee Inlet whence Blackbeard might sight the spars of the snow and
+perhaps weigh anchor in the _Revenge_.
+
+Soon after dark the sails filled with a soft wind which drew the snow
+clear of the coast. Peter Tobey had been mightily busy with an empty
+cask. In it he stowed meat and biscuit and a bag of onions, stealthily
+abstracted from the storeroom while his own companions stood guard
+against surprise. This stuff was packed around two jugs of water tightly
+stoppered. Then Peter headed up the cask with professional skill and
+watched the opportunity to lower it from the vessel's bow where he was
+unseen.
+
+The wind and tide were favorable to carrying the cask in the direction
+of the little patch of sea-washed sand upon which was marooned the
+solitary young mariner, Joe Hawkridge. The carpenter's mate saw the cask
+drift past the side of the snow and roll in the silvery wake. Slowly it
+vanished in the darkness and he said to himself, in a prayer devoutly
+earnest:
+
+"That boy deserves a slant o' luck, and may the good God let him have it
+this once. Send the cask to the beach, and I vow to go a-piratin' never
+again."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+JACK JOURNEYS AFOOT
+
+
+IT is often said that a thing is not lost if you know where it is. This
+was Jack Cockrell's opinion concerning that weighty sea-chest which had
+splashed to the bottom of the sluggish stream in the heart of the
+Cherokee swamp. With young Bill Saxby and eager old Trimble Rogers he
+hastened from the grave of the pirate seaman whom they had buried on the
+knoll and fetched up at the shore where the pirogue had been left.
+Beside it floated Blackbeard's boat filled with water.
+
+Having cut two or three long poles, they sounded the depth and prodded
+in the muddy bed to find the treasure chest. It had sunk no more than
+eight feet below the surface, as the tide then stood, which was not much
+over the head of a tall man. The end of a pole struck something solid,
+after considerable poking about. It was not rough, like a sunken log,
+and further investigation with the poles convinced them that they were
+thumping the lid of the chest.
+
+"D'ye suppose you could muster breath to dive and bend a line to one o'
+the handles, Master Cockrell?" suggested Trimble Rogers. "Here's a coil
+of stout stuff in Cap'n Teach's boat what he used for a painter."
+
+"The bottom of the creek is too befouled," promptly objected Jack, "and
+I confess it daunts me to think of meeting that drownded corpse down
+there. Try it yourself, if you like."
+
+"I be needed above water to handle the musket if Blackbeard sneaks back
+to bang at us with his pistols," was the evasive reply. The mention of
+the corpse had given old Trimble a distaste for the task. To his
+petulant question, Bill Saxby protested that he couldn't swim a blessed
+stroke and he sensibly added:
+
+"What if you did get a rope's end belayed to a handle of the chest? Even
+if the strain didn't part the line, we couldn't heave away in this tipsy
+canoe. And I am blamed certain we can't drag the chest ashore lackin'
+purchase and tackles."
+
+"The smell o' treasure warps my judgment," grumpily confessed Trimble
+Rogers. "We ain't properly rigged to h'ist that chest from where she
+lays, and that's the fact."
+
+"Give us the gear and we'd have it out and cracked open as pretty as you
+please," said Bill. "Set up a couple o' spars for shears, stay 'em from
+the bank, rig double blocks, and grapplin' irons for a diver to work
+with----"
+
+"Which is exactly what Cap'n Teach will be doin' of when he finds his
+ship again," lamented the buccaneer.
+
+"He will be some time findin' his ship afoot," grimly chuckled Bill.
+"We have naught to smash his boat with, but we'll just take it along
+with us."
+
+"If we make haste to report to Captain Stede Bonnet," spoke up Jack
+Cockrell, "he may make sail in time to give Blackbeard other things to
+think on than this treasure chest. And it is my notion that the need of
+fitting the _Revenge_ for action is too urgent to spare a crew to
+attempt this errand."
+
+"We shall have it yet," cried Trimble, much consoled. "And Stede
+Bonnet'll blithely furnish the men and gear. For a mere babe, Master
+Cockrell, ye leak wisdom like a colander. Our duty is to tarry no longer
+at this mad business."
+
+"The first sound word I've heard out of the old barnacle, eh, Jack?"
+said Bill Saxby. "We must be out of this swamp by night and layin' a
+course for Cap'n Bonnet and the _Royal James_."
+
+"Whilst you empty Blackbeard's boat of water so we can tow it, let me
+make a rude chart," was Jack's happy idea. "Some mishap or other may
+overtake us ere we get the chance to seek the treasure again. And our
+own memory of this pest-hole of a swamp may trick us."
+
+Bill Saxby's tattered diary supplied a scrap of paper and Jack dug
+charred splinters from the inside of the canoe which enabled him to draw
+a charcoal sketch or map. It traced the smaller stream from the fork
+where it had branched off, the stretch in which it widened like a tiny
+lagoon or bayou, and the point of shore just beyond which the pirogue
+had unexpectedly rammed Blackbeard's boat. A cross designated the spot
+where the treasure chest had sunk in eight feet of water.
+
+The knoll and the grave of Seaman Jesse Strawn were also indicated, with
+the distance estimated in paces and the bearings set down by the
+position of the sun.
+
+"There," said Jack, well pleased with his handiwork, "and once we are
+aboard ship, I can make fair copies on parchment, one for each of us."
+
+"Thankee, lad," gratefully exclaimed Trimble Rogers who now had
+something to live for. "'Twas a fond dream o' mine, when I sailed wi'
+the great Cap'n Edward Davis in the South Sea, some day to blink at a
+chart what showed where the gold was hid."
+
+They were, indeed, recovered from the intoxication of treasure and
+recalled to realizing the obligation that was upon them. They had
+swerved from it but now they pressed forward to finish the appointed
+journey. The canoe moved down to the fork of the waters with the light
+cock-boat skittering in its wake and perhaps the unhappy Blackbeard,
+stranded in the swamp, hurled after them a volley of those curses for
+which he was renowned. Once Jack Cockrell laughed aloud, explaining to
+his laboring comrades:
+
+"Captain Teach will be combing the burrs from his grand beard when he
+boards his ship again. He may get hung by the chin in a thicket."
+
+"He's sure to spend this night in the swamp, blast him," earnestly
+observed Bill, "and the mosquitoes'll riddle his hide."
+
+"And may Jesse Strawn lose no time in hauntin' him," said Trimble
+Rogers.
+
+There was an hour of daylight to spare when they had ascended the larger
+creek as far as the canoe could be paddled. There they disembarked and
+hid the dugout and the cock-boat in the overhanging bushes where they
+could be found again in case of a forced retreat. Bill and Jack burdened
+themselves with the sack of food and the water jug while the old
+buccaneer set out in the lead as a guide. It was irksome progress for a
+time, but gradually the ground became drier and the foliage was more
+open. Dusk found them safely emerged from the great Cherokee swamp and
+in a pleasant forest of long-leaf pine with a carpet of brown needles.
+
+In fear of Indians, they dared not kindle a fire and so stretched
+themselves in their wet and muddy rags and slept like dead men. What
+awakened Jack Cockrell before sunrise was a series of groans from
+Trimble Rogers who sat with his back against a tree while he rubbed his
+legs. Ashamed at being heard, he grumpily explained:
+
+"Cord and faggot 'ud torment me no worse than this hell-begotten
+rheumatism. I be free of it in a ship but the land reeks with foul
+vapors. It hurt me cruel at Cartagena in the year of----"
+
+"But can you walk all day, in such misery as that?" anxiously
+interrupted Jack.
+
+"If not, I'll make shift to crawl," said the old sea dog.
+
+It was apparent to Jack and also to Bill Saxby that the ordeal of the
+swamp had crippled their companion whose bodily strength had been
+overtaxed. They debated whether to try to return to the coast and risk a
+voyage in the canoe but Trimble Rogers swore by all the saints in the
+calendar that he was done with the pestilent swamp. He would push on in
+spite of the rheumatism. His hardy spirit was unbroken. And so they
+resumed the march, the suffering buccaneer hobbling with the musket as a
+staff or with a strong arm supporting him.
+
+Halts were frequent and progress very slow. Now and then they had
+glimpses of the blue sea and so knew that they held the course true. It
+had been reckoned that two days would suffice to bring them to the bay
+in which Stede Bonnet's ship was anchored. By noon of this first day,
+however, it was plainly evident that Trimble Rogers was done for. He
+uttered no complaints, and withheld the groans behind his set teeth, but
+his lank body was a-tremble with pain and fatigue. Whenever he sank down
+to rest they had to raise him up and set him on his legs again before he
+could totter a little way farther.
+
+"What say, Jack, to slingin' him on a pole, neck and heels?" suggested
+Bill Saxby. "Can we make him fast with our belts?"
+
+"And choke him to death? In Charles Town I saw Captain Bonnet's pirates
+carry their wounded in litters woven of boughs."
+
+The suffering Trimble put a stop to this by shouting:
+
+"Avast wi' the maunderin' nonsense! Push on, lads, and leave this old
+hulk be. Many a goodly man have I seen drop in the jungle. What matters
+it? Speed ye to Cap'n Bonnet."
+
+"Here is one pirate that won't desert a shipmate," declared Bill Saxby.
+"And how can we push on without you, old True-Penny, to lay your nose to
+the trail? I took no heed o' the marks and landfalls."
+
+"Like a sailor ashore, mouth open and eyes shut," rasped the buccaneer
+of Hispaniola.
+
+"Methinks I might find my way in this Carolina country," ventured Jack
+Cockrell. "It would be easier for a landsman like myself than for Bill
+who is city-bred and a seaman besides."
+
+"More wisdom from the stripling," said Trimble. "Willing as I be to die
+sooner than delay ye and so vex Stede Bonnet, it 'ud please me to live
+to overhaul that sea chest of Blackbeard's."
+
+"I'll stand by this condemned old relic," amiably agreed Bill Saxby. "Do
+you request Cap'n Bonnet to send a party to salvage us, Jack."
+
+"He will take pleasure in it, Bill. Before I go let me help you find
+shelter,--dry limbs for props and a thatch of palmetto leaves."
+
+"Take no thought of us," urged Trimble. "Trust me to set this lazy oaf
+to work. Now listen, Jack, and carefully. Cap'n Bonnet's ship waits in
+the Cape Fear River, twelve leagues to the north'ard of us. You will
+find her betwixt a bay of the mainland and a big-sized island where the
+river makes in from the sea. There will be a lookout kept and I can tell
+ye where to meet a boat."
+
+With a memory as retentive as a printed page, the keen-eyed old wanderer
+described the landscape league by league, the streams and their
+direction, the hills which were prominent, the broad stretches of
+savannah or grassy meadow, the belts of pine forest, the tongues of
+swamp which had to be avoided. Jack was compelled to repeat the detailed
+instructions over and over, and he was a far more studious pupil than
+when snuffy Parson Throckmorton had rapped his knuckles and fired him
+with rebellious dreams of piracy. At length, the buccaneer was willing
+to acknowledge:
+
+"Unless an Indian drive an arrow through the lad's brisket, Bill, I can
+trust him to find our ship. Best give him the musket."
+
+"Me shoulder that carronade and trudge a dozen leagues?" objected Jack.
+"I travel light and leave the ordnance with you."
+
+They insisted on his taking more than a third of the food but he
+refused to deprive them of the water jug. There would be streams enough
+to slake his thirst. It was an affectionate parting. Bill Saxby's
+innocent blue eyes were suffused and his chubby face sorrowful at the
+thought that they might not meet again. Trimble Rogers fished out his
+battered little Bible and quoted a few verses, as appeared to be his
+habit on all solemn occasions. Jack Cockrell knew him well enough by now
+to find it not incongruous. Among this vanishing race of sea fighters
+had been many a hero of the most fervent piety. Their spirit was akin to
+that of Francis Drake who summoned his crew to prayers before he cleared
+for action.
+
+And in this wise did Master Jack Cockrell set out to bear a message from
+comrades in dire distress. Moreover, in his hands were the lives of Joe
+Hawkridge and those other marooned seamen, as he had every reason to
+believe. It was a grave responsibility to be thrust upon a raw lad in
+his teens who had been so carefully nurtured by his fretful guardian of
+an uncle, Mr. Peter Arbuthnot Forbes. Jack thought of this and said to
+himself, with a smile:
+
+"A few weeks gone, and I was locked in my room without any dinner for
+loitering with Stede Bonnet's pirates at the Charles Town tavern. My
+education has been swift since then."
+
+He was expectant of meeting no end of peril and hardship and he fought
+down a sense of dread that was not to his discredit. But it was so
+decreed that he should pass secure and unmolested. At first he went too
+fast, without husbanding his strength, and loped along like a hound
+whenever the country was clear of brushwood. This wore him down and he
+failed to watch carefully enough for his landmarks. Toward the end of
+the day he became confused because he could not discern the sea even by
+climbing a tree. But he tried to keep bearing to the northeast until the
+sun went down. Afraid of losing himself entirely and ignorant of the lay
+of the land by night, he made his bivouac in a grove of sycamore
+saplings and imagined Indians were creeping up whenever the leaves
+rustled.
+
+This fear of roaming savages troubled him next day as he wearily trudged
+through this primeval wilderness unknown to white settlers. It spurred
+him on despite his foot-sore fatigue and he was making the journey more
+rapidly than old Trimble Rogers, for all his cunning woodcraft, had been
+able to accomplish it. Almost at the end of his endurance, the plucky
+lad discerned the sheen of a broad water in the twilight and so came to
+the Cape Fear River.
+
+He had worried greatly lest he might have veered too far inland but
+there was the wooded bay and the fore-land crowned with dead pines which
+had been swept by forest fire. And out beyond it was the island, of the
+size and shape described by Trimble Rogers, making a harbor from the sea
+which rolled to the horizon rim.
+
+But no tall brig, nor any other vessel rode at anchor in this silent and
+lonely haven. Jack had been told precisely where to look for it. He had
+made no mistake. Some emergency had caused Captain Stede Bonnet to make
+sail and away.
+
+A king's ship or some other hostile force might have compelled him to
+slip his cable in haste, reflected Jack as he descended to the shore of
+the bay. It was most unlike the chivalrous Stede Bonnet to abandon two
+of his faithful seamen without an effort to succor them. Endeavoring to
+comfort himself with this surmise, the sorely disappointed boy paced the
+sand far into the night and gazed in vain for the glimmer of a fire or
+the spark of a signal lantern in a ship's rigging. He could not bear to
+think of the dark prospect should no help betide him.
+
+Some time before day he was between waking and sleeping when a queer
+delusion distracted him. Humming in his ears was the refrain of a song
+which was both familiar and hauntingly pleasant. It seemed to charm away
+his poignant anxieties, to lull him with a feeling of safety. He
+wondered if his troublesome adventures had made him light-headed. He
+moved not a muscle but listened to this phantom music and noted that it
+sounded louder and clearer instead of fading away. And still he refused
+to believe that it was anything more than a drowsy mockery.
+
+At length a vagrant breeze brought him a snatch of this enjoyable
+chorus in deeper, stronger volume and he leaped to his feet with a
+shout. It was no hallucination. Lusty seamen were singing in time to the
+beat of their oars, and Jack Cockrell knew it for the favorite song of
+Stede Bonnet's crew. He could distinguish the words as they rolled them
+out in buoyant, stentorian harmony:
+
+ "An' when my precious leg was lopt,
+ Just for a bit of fun
+ I picks it up, on t'other hopt,
+ An' rammed it in a gun.
+ 'What's that for?' cries out Ginger Dick,
+ 'What for? my jumpin' beau?
+ Why, to give the lubbers one more kick,'
+ _Yo, ho, with the rum below!_"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+A PRIVATE ACCOUNT TO SETTLE
+
+
+THE ship's boat was bound into the bay, probably to lie there for
+daybreak, and Jack Cockrell rushed down to the beach where he set up
+such a frantic hullabaloo that the sailors ceased singing and held their
+breath and their oars suspended. They had come to look for Bill Saxby
+and Trimble Rogers, but this was a strange voice. It was so odd a
+circumstance that several of them hailed the shore with questions loud
+and perplexed.
+
+"Master John Cockrell, at your service," came back the reply. "Captain
+Bonnet knows me. I am the lad that clouted a six-foot pirate of yours
+for being saucy to a maid in Charles Town."
+
+This aroused a roar of laughter and there were gusty shouts of:
+
+"Here's that same Will Brant in the boat with us. He shakes in his boots
+at the sound of ye."
+
+"What's the game, lad? Have ye taken a ship of your own to scour the
+Main?"
+
+Jack ignored this good-natured badinage and, in dignified accents, told
+them to come ashore and take him off to the _Royal James_. In this
+company he had a reputation to live up to as a man of parts and valor.
+They let the boat ground on the smooth sand and one of them lighted a
+torch of pitch-pine splinters. The fine young gentleman who had strolled
+arm-in-arm with Stede Bonnet to the tavern green was a ragged scarecrow
+and bedaubed with red clay and black mud. This aroused their sympathy
+before he told them of his escape from the _Revenge_ and his adventures
+with Bill Saxby and the crippled buccaneer. In their turn they explained
+how Captain Bonnet had sent them down the river to await the return of
+the two men who were now stranded in the wilderness two days' march
+distant.
+
+"And why did your captain shift the brig from her anchorage off the
+island?" asked Jack.
+
+This amused the boat's crew who nudged each other and were evasive until
+the master's mate who was in charge went far enough to say:
+
+"A sloop came in from the Pamlico River. Our ship sought a snugger
+harbor, d'ye see? There was some private business. We loaded the sloop
+with hogshead of sugar, and bolts of damask, and silver ingots. His
+Excellency, Governor Eden, of the North Carolina Province, turns an
+honest penny now and then."
+
+"The Governor of this Province is a partner in piracy?" cried Jack.
+
+"Brawl it not so loud, nor spill it to Cap'n Bonnet," cautioned the
+master's mate. "I confide this much to stave off your foolish questions
+when ye board the ship."
+
+There was no reason to tarry in the bay and the boat pulled out to
+follow the course of the river and return in haste to the brig _Royal
+James_ in her more secluded harbor. The news that Blackbeard was at his
+old rendezvous within easy sail to the southward eclipsed all other
+topics. And when it was learned that he had lost the two sloops of his
+squadron, there was fierce delight. Although the _Revenge_ was a larger
+vessel and more heavily manned and gunned, they were hilariously
+confident of victory. It was a burning grudge and a private quarrel, and
+fuel was added to the flame by the tidings that a score or more of
+seamen had been mercilessly marooned to perish because of their
+suspected preference for Captain Stede Bonnet.
+
+When Jack Cockrell caught sight of the shapely brig as she loomed in the
+morning haze, it seemed as though years had passed since he had
+enviously watched her pass out over the Charles Town bar. Presently he
+spied the soldierly captain on the quarter-deck, his spare figure all
+taut and erect, his chin clean-shaven, his queue powdered, his apparel
+fresh and in good taste. A ship is like her master and the watch was
+sluicing down decks or setting up the rigging which had slackened with
+the heavy dew. Jack felt ashamed to let himself be seen. This was no
+place for a ragamuffin.
+
+Captain Bonnet strode to the gangway and stared down at this bit of
+human flotsam. He was quick to recognize his boyish friend and admirer
+and ordered the men to lower a boatswain's chair and lift Master
+Cockrell aboard. Jack was, indeed, so stiffened and sore and weary that
+he had been wondering how he could climb the side of a ship.
+
+"Tut, tut, my son, bide your time," exclaimed Stede Bonnet as they met
+on deck. "Tell it later. The master's mate will enlighten me."
+
+He led the way into the cabin which was in order and simply furnished.
+One servant brewed fragrant coffee from Arabia while another made a room
+ready for the guest and fetched clean clothing from the captain's chests
+and a tub of hot water. And as soon as the grateful Master Cockrell had
+made himself presentable, he was invited to sit down at table with the
+captain and enjoy a meal of porridge and crisp English bacon and fresh
+eggs from the ship's hen-coop in the long-boat and hot crumpets and
+marmalade. And this after the pinched ration of mouldy salt-horse and
+wormy hard-bread! Captain Bonnet lighted a roll of tobacco leaves, which
+he called a _cigarro_, and puffed clouds of smoke while Master Cockrell
+cleaned every dish and lamented that his skin felt too tight to begin
+all over again.
+
+He was now in a mood to relate his strange yarn, from its outset in the
+ill-fated merchant trader, _Plymouth Adventure_. Eagerly he begged
+information concerning her people after their shipwreck, but Captain
+Bonnet had been cruising far offshore to intercept a convoy of rich
+West Indiamen from Jamaica for the old country.
+
+"I will make it my duty to set you ashore at Charles Town, Master Jack,"
+said he, "and I pray you may find your good uncle alive and still vowing
+to hang all rogues of pirates."
+
+"But I must sail with you, sir, till you have saved Joe Hawkridge and
+his shipmates and blown Blackbeard out of water."
+
+"Rest easy on that," exclaimed Stede Bonnet. "Those affairs are most
+urgent. My ship will drop down the river to-day, with the turn o' the
+tide, and heave to long enough to land a party, six men, to go in search
+of Trimble Rogers who is the apple of my eye. I shall not ask you to
+join them, but you can give directions and pen a fair map, I trow."
+
+"Gladly would I go," replied Jack, "but my poor legs wobble like your
+valiant old buccaneer's. And my feet are raw."
+
+"You have proved yourself," was the fine compliment. "I judged ye aright
+when we first met."
+
+Soon the deck above them resounded to the tramp of boots and the thump
+of sheet-blocks as the brisk seamen made ready to cast the ship free.
+She was in competent hands and so Stede Bonnet lingered below to enjoy
+talking with the youth whose manners and breeding were like his own. In
+a mood unusually confidential he confirmed Jack's earlier impressions,
+that he was a pirate with a certain code of honor which reminded one of
+Robin Hood of Sherwood Forest who robbed the rich and befriended the
+poor. Touching on his mortal quarrel with Blackbeard, he revealed how
+that traitorous ruffian had proposed a partnership while he, Stede
+Bonnet, was a novice at the trade. The plot all hatched to take Bonnet's
+fine ship, the _Revenge_, from him, Blackbeard had disclosed his hand at
+the final conference when he said, with a sarcastic grimace:
+
+"I see, my good sir, that you are not used to the cares and duties of
+commanding a vessel, so I will relieve you of 'em."
+
+As soon as Captain Bonnet had mended his fortunes and had the goodly
+brig _Royal James_ to cruise in, his ruling purpose was to regain the
+_Revenge_ from Blackbeard and at the same time wreak a proper
+punishment.
+
+"So now if we can trap this black-hearted Teach before he flits to sea,"
+said Stede Bonnet, "you will see a pretty engagement, Master Cockrell.
+But first we must find the score o' men that he marooned. It will be a
+deed of mercy, besides affording me a stronger crew."
+
+The brig was soon standing down the river while the landing party broke
+out an ample store of provisions and powder and ball, with canvas for a
+tent. The plan was for them to pitch a camp near the shore of the bay to
+which they could fetch back Trimble Rogers and Bill Saxby and there wait
+for their ship to return and take them off. They were ready to go ashore
+when Captain Bonnet's navigator ordered the main-topsail laid aback and
+the brig slowly swung into the wind. The delay was brief and no sooner
+was the boat cast off than the _Royal James_ proceeded on the voyage to
+Cherokee Inlet.
+
+Clumsy as those sailing ships of two hundred years ago appear to modern
+eyes, their lines were finely moulded under water and with a favoring
+wind they could log a fair distance in a day's run. It goes without
+saying that this tall brig was shoved along for all she was worth before
+a humming breeze that made her creak, and during the night she was
+reckoned to be a few miles to seaward of the sandy islands which
+extended like a barrier outside of Cherokee Inlet. Jack Cockrell stood a
+watch of his own, dead weary but with no thought of sleep until he could
+hear the lookout shout "Land ho!"
+
+This cry came from aloft soon after dawn. The brig moved toward the
+nearest of these exposed shoals while her officers consulted a chart
+spread upon the cabin roof. They were wary of running the ship aground
+with Blackbeard no more than a few miles distant. So bare were these
+yellow patches of sand that showed against the green water that a group
+of men on any one of them would have been easily discernible. The _Royal
+James_ coasted along outside of them under shortened sail but discovered
+nothing to indicate a party of marooned seamen.
+
+"But they must be out here somewhere," cried Jack Cockrell, in great
+distress.
+
+"They ought to be, for no trading vessel would take 'em off," replied
+the puzzled Captain Bonnet. "And if they were towed out in boats as ye
+say, Jack, these islands must ha' been where they were beached."
+
+"But you won't give up the search, sir, without another tack past those
+outermost shoals?"
+
+"Oh, we shall rake them all, but Blackbeard may have changed that
+crotchety mind of his and taken the men back to his ship."
+
+"I fear I have seen the last of my dear Joe Hawkridge," exclaimed Jack.
+
+"From what you tell me, the young scamp is not so easily disposed of,"
+smiled Captain Bonnet. "I must haul out to sea ere long. 'Tis poor
+business to let Blackbeard glimpse my spars and so take warning."
+
+This was sad news and Jack walked away to hide his quivering lip. To
+examine the islands again was a forlorn hope because already it seemed
+certain that nothing alive moved on any of them. The brig passed them
+closer than before as she made a long reach before turning out to sea.
+It was the intention to sail in to engage Blackbeard very early the next
+morning and meanwhile he would be vigilantly blockaded.
+
+Even Jack Cockrell, hopeful to the last, was compelled to agree with the
+crew of the brig that not a solitary man could be seen on these sea-girt
+cays and it seemed useless to send off a boat to explore them one by
+one. There would have been some stir or signal, even if men were too
+weak to stand. The air was clear and from the brig's masts it was
+possible to sweep every foot of sandy surface. Here was another mystery
+of the sea. It occurred to Stede Bonnet to ask:
+
+"You took it for granted they were marooned, Jack, when the boats passed
+from your sight and you were hidden in the tree in the swamp. What if a
+quicker death were dealt 'em?"
+
+"That may be, sir."
+
+The brig was leaving the coast astern. Jack moped by himself until his
+curiosity was drawn to a group of seamen upon the forecastle head who
+were talking loudly and pointing at something in the water, well ahead
+of the ship. One vowed it was a big sea-turtle asleep, another was
+willing to wager his silver-mounted pistols that it was a rum barrel,
+while a third announced that he'd stake his head on its being a mermaid
+or her husband. The after-deck brought a spy-glass to bear and perceived
+that the thing was splashing about. The tiller was shifted to bring it
+close aboard and soon Captain Bonnet exclaimed that it was, indeed, a
+merman a-cruising with a cask!
+
+Jack Cockrell scampered to the heel of the bowsprit to investigate this
+ocean prodigy. And as the cask drifted nearer he saw that Joe Hawkridge
+was clinging to it. There was no mistaking that dauntless grin and the
+mop of carroty hair. A handy seaman tossed a bight of line over his
+shoulders as he bobbed past the forefoot of the brig and he was yanked
+bodily over the bulwark like a strange species of fish. Flopping on deck
+he waved a skinny arm in greeting and then Jack Cockrell rushed at him,
+lifted him bodily, and dragged him to the cabin.
+
+"What ho, comrade!" said the dripping merman. "Blast my eyes, but I was
+sick with worry for you. I left you in that swamp----"
+
+"And I thought you dead, Joe. For the love o' heaven, tell me how you
+fared and what----"
+
+Captain Bonnet interfered to say:
+
+"I treated you more courteously than this, Jack. Let us make him
+comfortable."
+
+Accepting the rebuke, Jack bustled his amazing friend into a change of
+clothes and saw that he was well fed. Little the worse for his watery
+pilgrimage, Joe Hawkridge explained at his leisure:
+
+"Ned Rackham took the others away in the snow, as I tell ye, Cap'n
+Bonnet, and there was I in the doleful dumps. Prayers get answered and
+miracles do happen, for next day there come a-floatin' to the beach a
+cask full of grub and water. Good Peter Tobey, the carpenter's mate, had
+a hand in launchin' it, no doubt, but the Lord hisself steered the
+blessed cask. Well, while I set a-giving thanks and thinkin' one thing
+an' another, I figgered that when I'd ate all the grub and swigged the
+water, I was no further along."
+
+"And so you thought you would trust the Lord again," suggested Captain
+Bonnet.
+
+"Aye, sir, that was it. By watchin' the tides I reckoned I might drift
+to another island and so work to the coast, taking my provisions with
+me. There was some small line in the cask that Peter Tobey had wrapped
+the stores in, and I knotted a harness about the cask that I could slip
+an arm in, and off I goes when the tide sets right. But some kind of a
+dratted cross-current ketched me and I'm sailin' out to sea, I finds,
+without compass or cross-staff. Bound to get to London River, eh, Jack,
+same as we started out on the silly little raft."
+
+"Whew, this adventure was bad enough," cried Jack, "but when you saw Ned
+Rackham's pirates in the boat, and you couldn't run away,--I wonder,
+honest, Joe, you didn't die of fright."
+
+"What for? This is no trade for a nervous wight. And now for a bloody
+frolic with Blackbeard's bullies."
+
+"There is a share of his treasure for you, Joe, as soon as we can go
+find it," gleefully announced Master Cockrell. "I have the chart drawn
+all true with mine own hand. Let me get it."
+
+While the two lads pored entranced over the map of the branching creek
+and the pine-covered knoll, the crew of the _Royal James_ were
+overhauling weapons and clearing the ship for action. It disappointed
+them to lack the twenty men whom they had expected to find marooned but
+this made them no less eager for battle. Concerning Ned Rackham, there
+was no feud with him or grudge to square and he could go his way in the
+little trading snow without fear of molestation from Stede Bonnet.
+
+Under cover of night the _Royal James_ worked back to the sandy islands
+and anchored in the channel. One of her boats had ventured within sight
+of the Inlet for a stealthy reconnaissance and reported that the
+_Revenge_ was still in the harbor. Captain Bonnet was considering his
+plan of attack. He said nothing about it to Jack Cockrell and his chum,
+the merman, and they greedily listened to the gossip of the petty
+officers or thrashed out theories of their own.
+
+To sail boldly into the harbor was a ticklish risk to run as there was
+no pilot aboard who knew the inner channel and the depths of water. All
+the gunners were in favor of attempting it because they yearned to
+settle it with crashing broadsides. But the battered, hairy sea-dogs who
+had fought it out in hand-to-hand conflicts on the Caribbean were for
+leaving the brig in safe water and sending fifty men in boats to board
+the _Revenge_ at the first break of day.
+
+In the midst of the fo'castle argument, Captain Bonnet sent for Jack
+Cockrell and told him:
+
+"You are to keep out of harm's way, my young gamecock. I have undertaken
+to deliver you to your esteemed uncle with arms and legs intact, and
+your head on your shoulders."
+
+"But I am lusty enough to poke about with a pike or serve at a gun
+tackle," protested the unhappy Master Cockrell.
+
+"I expect you to obey me," was the stern mandate. "You will have
+company. This Joe Hawkridge is to stay with you."
+
+"But he is a rare hand in a fight, Captain Bonnet. You should have seen
+him in the _Plymouth Adventure_."
+
+"The boy is weak and all unstrung, though he carries it bravely, Jack.
+And Blackbeard's men would take special pains to kill him as a
+deserter."
+
+By this humane verdict the two lads were shielded from peril, as far as
+it lay within Stede Bonnet's power. They should have felt grateful to
+him but on the contrary it made them quite peevish and they sulked by
+themselves up in the bow of the ship until it was time to eat again.
+Then their gnawing appetites persuaded them to forgive their considerate
+host.
+
+The pirates moved about the deck until far into the night while the
+sparks flew from cutlass blades pressed to the whirling grindstone. Tubs
+were filled with hand-grenades and fire-pots, the deck strewn with sand,
+the magazine opened and powder passed up. Stede Bonnet was careful to
+see for himself that all things were in order. At such times he was a
+martinet of a soldier.
+
+Anxiously he watched the weather signs, as did every seasoned sailor on
+board. It bade fair to be a bright morning with an easterly air and this
+would carry the brig into the harbor with the minimum danger of
+stranding if the lead were cast often enough. Joe Hawkridge and Jack
+Cockrell were of some assistance in explaining the marks and bearings of
+the channel, and Captain Bonnet consulted them over the chart unrolled
+upon the cabin table. He had made up his mind to sail the brig in and
+risk the hazards of shoal water. When he went on deck, Jack thought of a
+topic as thrilling as this imminent duel between ships and he remarked
+with joyous excitement:
+
+"Now, Joe, as soon as ever Blackbeard gets his drubbing, we beg a boat
+and men and gear of Captain Bonnet and go up the creek to fish out the
+treasure chest and dig in the knoll."
+
+"Hook your fish before you fry 'em," replied the sagacious
+apprentice-boy. "This scrummage with the _Revenge_ will be no dancin'
+heel-and-toe. A bigger ship, more guns and men, and a Blackbeard who
+will fight like a demon when he's cornered. Crazy though he may be, he
+is the most dangerous pirate afloat."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+OUR HEROES SEEK SECLUSION
+
+
+AN hour before dawn the anchor was aweigh and the _Royal James_ drifted
+ahead like a shadow, in between the outer islands where the fairway was
+wide and safe. Her gun-ports were open and every man was alertly at his
+station. It was a silent ship excepting when an officer passed an order
+along. Joe Hawkridge began to feel more sanguine of winning against
+odds. He had never seen such iron discipline as this in the bedlam
+aboard the _Revenge_. Stede Bonnet knew how to slacken the reins and
+when to apply the curb. His men were loyal because he dealt out justice
+as well as severity.
+
+"The captain says we must go below when the action commences, Joe,"
+dismally observed Jack Cockrell.
+
+"It goes against the grain but we will not dispute him," was the sage
+reply. "We needn't be idle. You can lend a hand with the powder or pass
+the water buckets to douse the fire if she gets ablaze. And there's the
+wounded to carry into the cockpit and the blood to mop up, and----"
+
+"Enough o' that," cried Jack, getting pale about the gills. "You take it
+like a butcher!"
+
+"What else is it, you big moon-calf? Set me safe ashore in that Charles
+Town of yours, and I hope ne'er to see another weapon barring a spoon
+and a knife to cut my vittles."
+
+"There is sense in that," agreed young Master Cockrell.
+
+Smartly handled, the brig crept in as far as she dared go without more
+light by which to avoid the shallower water. The anchor was dropped to a
+short cable and buoyed ready to slip. It was estimated that the distance
+from Blackbeard's ship was somewhat more than a mile. The stars faded
+and the cloudless sky began to take on a roseate hue. The light breeze
+which had breathed like a cool zephyr through the night was dying in
+languid catspaws. Gradually the dark outline of coastal swamp and forest
+was uncurtained. And eager eyes were able to discern the yellow spars
+and blurred hull of the _Revenge_ against the gloomy background.
+
+Stede Bonnet's brig was, of course, pricked out much more sharply with
+the seaward horizon behind her. To her crew, in this hushed morning,
+there came a prolonged, shrill note that was like the call of a bird. It
+trilled with a silvery sweetness and was repeated over and over again.
+
+"A bos'n's pipe," said Captain Bonnet, a hand cupped at his ear.
+"Blackbeard has sighted us and is mustering his crew."
+
+So faint was the breeze that the command was given to man two boats and
+take a hawser from the brig to tow her through the inner channel. Before
+they were in motion, however, the pearly mist began to roll out of the
+Cherokee swamp as if a great cauldron were steaming. The weather favored
+it, heat in the air and little wind. The mist seemed also to rise from
+the water, hanging low but as thick as a summer fog. It shrouded the
+coast and Blackbeard's ship and crept out across the harbor until the
+brig was enveloped in it.
+
+"'Twas like this when we swum ashore and found the pirogue, Cap'n
+Bonnet," said Joe Hawkridge. "A curious kind o' white smother from the
+swamp."
+
+"And how long did it hang thus?" was the impatient query.
+
+"When the sun was well up, sir, it seemed to burn away like. It has the
+same look as the fever-breedin' vapors of Darien and Yucatan."
+
+Captain Bonnet called his boats back and was in an ugly humor. There was
+no towing the brig through this bothersome fog which obscured every mark
+and left a man bewildered. And instead of surprising Blackbeard
+unprepared, he would now have time to make his ship ready. However,
+Stede Bonnet was not a man to wring his hands because a well-laid scheme
+went wrong. Without delay the crew was assembled in the waist and he
+spoke to them from the break of the poop.
+
+"We shall make this weather serve our purpose, lads. Fill the boats,
+every man to his billet. The mates will see to it that the oars are
+well muffled. Silence above all things. Nimbly now."
+
+There was no need to say more. They fathomed the strategy which would
+enable them to approach Blackbeard's ship unheard and unseen and then
+swarm over her side in a ferocious onslaught. Cheerily they took stock
+of their weapons, drank a health from a tub of stiff grog, and lined up
+for Captain Bonnet's inspection. They wore clean clothes, the best they
+could find in their bags, as has always been the sailor's habit when
+going into action. The ship was left in charge of the navigator with a
+few men who were the least stalwart or experienced in such desperate
+adventures as this.
+
+Stede Bonnet went in command of the largest boat to lead the party and
+single out Blackbeard as his own particular foe. There was a large
+chance that he might not return and he therefore left instructions for
+the disposal of the brig, advising the navigator to take her to Charles
+Town and there sue for the king's pardon in behalf of those on board. He
+shook hands with Jack Cockrell and Joe Hawkridge, bade them be careful
+of their own safety, and with no more ado took his place in the boat.
+The flotilla stole away from the brig, sunburned, savage men with bright
+weapons for whom life was like a throw of the dice, and the pearly fog
+concealed them when they had passed no more than a cable-length away. So
+skilfully was the sound of the oars deadened that you would not have
+guessed that boats were moving across the harbor.
+
+"Blackbeard fights like a tiger but trust Cap'n Bonnet to outwit him,"
+said Joe Hawkridge, who stood at the brig's rail with Jack at his elbow.
+
+"It will be mighty hard waiting," was the tense reply. "We shall know
+when they find the _Revenge_. They are not apt to miss her, with a
+compass in the captain's boat."
+
+"Aye, there'll be noise enough. Plaguey queer, eh, Jack, to be a-loafin'
+with nothing to see, like your head was wrapped in a blanket. They ought
+to fetch alongside Blackbeard in a half-hour. Go turn the sand-glass in
+the cabin."
+
+They fidgeted about in aimless fashion and fell into talk with the
+navigator, or artist, as he was called, a middle-aged man who had been a
+master mariner in the slave trade. He told them a yarn or two of the
+Guinea coast but he, too, was restless and left them to stump up and
+down the deck and peer toward the shore. Jack dodged into the cabin to
+watch the sand trickle into the bottom of the glass. Never was a
+half-hour so long in passing.
+
+A yell from Joe Hawkridge recalled him to the deck. He listened but
+heard no distant pistol shots or the hoarse uproar of men in mortal
+combat. Joe raised a warning hand and told him to stand still. There
+came a faint splash. It might have been a fish leaping but Joe insisted
+that it was made by a careless oar. Jack heard it again and then fancied
+he caught the softened beat of muffled oars close at hand.
+
+"They lost the course. The fog confused 'em," said he, in great disgust.
+
+"But why come back to the ship?" demanded Joe. "They could lay and wait
+for the fog to lift a little. And I told Cap'n Bonnet to bear to the
+north'ard if in doubt and find the shore of the swamp. Then he could
+coast back to the beach and so strike the _Revenge_."
+
+"Well, here they come, Joe, and there is sure to be a good reason.
+Mayhap the fog cleared to landward and they intend to tow the brig in,
+after all."
+
+Just then the foremost boat became visible and behind it was the vague
+shape of another. The puzzled lads stared and stared and the hair
+stiffened on their scalps for sheer horror. These were not the boats
+from the _Royal James_. They were filled with Blackbeard's own pirates
+from the _Revenge_!
+
+The explanation was simple enough. Joe Hawkridge read it at a glance.
+Blackbeard was not the drunken chuckle-head that Stede Bonnet had
+assumed him to be. He, too, had taken advantage of the fog to attempt to
+carry the enemy by stealth. The wit of the one had been matched by the
+other. And the two flotillas had gone wide enough in passing to escape
+mutual discovery. In a way it was a pirates' comedy but there were two
+spectators who foresaw a personal tragedy. They fled for the cabin and
+scuttled through a small door in a bulkhead which admitted them to the
+dark hold of the ship.
+
+It was their purpose to hide in the remotest nook that could be found.
+Falling over odds and ends of cargo they burrowed like rats and stowed
+themselves behind a tier of mahogany logs which had been taken out of
+some prize or other. They were in the bottom of the ship, upon the rough
+floor covering the stone ballast. Then these frightened stowaways found
+respite to confer in tremulous whispers.
+
+"This is the very dreadfulest fix of all, Joe. I had a fair look at
+Blackbeard himself, in the stern of the boat,--red ribbons in his
+whiskers, and his sash stuck full of pistols."
+
+"That old rip isn't an easy man to mistake, Jack. Now the fat _is_ in
+the fire," replied the Hawkridge lad who, for once, appeared
+discouraged. "Cap'n Bonnet is a vast sight happier than us. He gets the
+_Revenge_ without strikin' a blow."
+
+"But Blackbeard gets _us_," wailed Master Cockrell. "And I helped to
+chase him through the swamp after we rammed the pirogue into his wherry
+and capsized the treasure chest. Do you suppose he knew me just now?"
+
+"Those little red eyes of his are passing keen. But didn't ye tell me of
+smearing your face with mud that day to fend off the mosquitoes? It may
+ha' disguised you."
+
+"A little comfort in that, Joe, but to be found in Stede Bonnet's brig
+bodes ill enough. Of a truth we be born to trouble as the sparks fly
+upward ever since we joined the pirates. What is your advice?"
+
+"To stay hid below and pray God for another shift o' fortune," piously
+answered Joe. "There is no fear of Blackbeard's rummagin' the hold at
+present. He must decide if he'll fight the _Revenge_ or give her the
+slip. And whilst him and his men are busied on deck, I can make bold to
+search for stores fit to eat. Cap'n Bonnet allus had a well-found ship.
+Blast it, Jack, my hearty, stock us up and we could lie tucked in the
+forepeak for a month o' Sundays."
+
+"But the rats and the darkness and the stinks, and to be expecting
+discovery," was Jack's dreary comment.
+
+"It would ha' looked like a parlor to me when I was on that barren cay
+and sighted Ned Rackham's rogues coming off from the snow," said the
+other stowaway. He was beginning to recuperate from the shock.
+
+They were in a mood for no more speech but sat in this rayless cavern of
+a hold and strove to hear any sounds which might indicate the course of
+events on deck. There was no hubbub of firearms nor the cries of wounded
+men. It was foolish to assume that the dozen seamen who had been left to
+keep the ship would attempt resisting Blackbeard's mob of pirates all
+primed for slaughter. When quietude seemed to reign all through the ship
+Joe Hawkridge whispered this opinion:
+
+"If his fancy was to deal with 'em later, he would pitch the lot down
+here in the hold. Failing that, Jack, he has offered 'em the chance to
+enlist. Being so few, they can't plot mischief, and he has lost the
+hands he left aboard the _Revenge_."
+
+"But I thought all this crew was true as steel to Stede Bonnet, Joe."
+
+"Many a man'll change his mind to save his life," was the reply. "And
+these lads aren't what you call Cap'n Bonnet's picked men. As for the
+navigator, Blackbeard needs him to fill Ned Rackham's berth."
+
+Soon Joe Hawkridge told Jack to stay where he was. Now was the time to
+explore the lower part of the ship. Squeezing his comrade's hand in
+farewell, Joe crawled aft to make his way to a rough bulkhead which
+walled off a storeroom built next to the cabin. The boys had passed
+through it in their headlong flight below. Here was kept the bulk of the
+ship's provisions. Joe Hawkridge had learned of the storeroom through
+helping the steward hoist out a barrel of pork.
+
+With his heart in his throat the venturesome lad groped like a blind
+man, grievously barking his shins and his knuckles, until he bumped into
+the timbers of the bulkhead. Inching himself along, he came to the small
+door which had been cut into the hold to connect with the main hatch. He
+had slipped the iron bar behind him during his flight with Jack
+Cockrell. Pulling the door ajar he wormed through into the storeroom
+which was also dark as midnight. His fingers touched what seemed to be
+a tierce of beef but he had no tools to start the head or the hoops. In
+the same manner he discovered other casks and barrels but they were
+utterly useless to him. Here was food enough, he reflected, if a man had
+teeth to gnaw through oak staves.
+
+Now and again he had to cross to the other door which led into the cabin
+passageway and press his ear against a plank to make certain against
+surprise. Up and down the dark room he blundered, refusing to admit
+himself beaten. The first bit of cheer was when his foot struck a round
+object as solid as a round shot and he picked up a small Dutch cheese.
+This renewed his courage and he ransacked the corners on hands and
+knees. Blackbeard's treasure chest was not half so precious as a side of
+salted fish which he ran down by scent, saying to himself:
+
+"With this rancid cheese and the slab o' ancient cod, ye could smell my
+course a league to wind'ard."
+
+In a crumpled sack he found a few pounds of what seemed to be wheat
+flour, by the feel and taste of it. Poor stuff as it was, dry and
+uncooked, he added it to his stock.
+
+"Rubbishy vittles," he sighed. "They may keep a man alive but he'll
+choke to death a-swallowin' of 'em."
+
+Water was the desperate necessity and it was not to be sought for in the
+storeroom. There was rum enough, the place reeked with it, but to
+thirsty throats it was so much liquid fire. Joe was resolved not to
+return to Jack Cockrell without a few pints of water if reckless
+enterprise could procure it. Was the cabin still empty? He stood for a
+long time and listened but there was not a sound beyond the door of the
+passageway. Taking his courage in both hands he pushed at the door and
+it creaked open on rusty hinges. Light as a feather he moved one foot in
+front of the other, halted, advanced another step, and so entered the
+large cabin in which Stede Bonnet had lived with a Spartan simplicity.
+
+What Joe coveted was the porous jar or water-monkey which hung suspended
+in a netting above the table. It was kept filled, he knew, in order to
+cool the tepid water from the casks. A heavenly sight it was to him to
+see the drops sweating on its rounded sides. He snatched it down and was
+about to make a swift retirement, but still spread upon the table he
+noted the chart of the Carolina and Virginia coasts which he had pored
+over with Stede Bonnet. This he delayed to roll up and tuck under one
+arm, not that he expected to employ it himself, but to make cruising
+more difficult for Blackbeard.
+
+This bit of strategy held him a moment too long. He shot a glance over
+his shoulder, alarmed by a tread on the companion ladder. Horrified he
+beheld a pair of Spanish boots with scarlet, crinkled morocco tops, and
+they encased bandy legs which were strong and thick. What saved the
+miserable young Hawkridge was that the occupant of these splendid boots
+paused half-way down the ladder to shout a profane command or two in
+those husky accents so feared by all lawful shipmen.
+
+Before that sable beard came into his field of vision the lad was in
+full stride, running like a whippet, chart under one arm, water-jar
+under the other. He checked himself to ease the door behind him just as
+the truculent captor of the _Royal James_ brig reached the foot of the
+ladder and let his gaze rove about the cabin. Sinking to the floor of
+the storeroom, Joe was afraid that for once he was about to swoon like a
+silly maid at sight of a mouse. As he had truly said, this pirating was
+no trade for a nervous man. Never mind, a miss was as good as a mile.
+Thankful for the darkness that closed around him, he slung the
+water-monkey over his shoulder in its hammock of netted cord, pushed the
+side of codfish inside his shirt, poked the chart into his boot-leg, put
+the cheese in the sack atop the flour, and was freighted for his journey
+through the hold.
+
+This he accomplished after great difficulty and had to whistle and wait
+for a response before he could be sure of Jack Cockrell's whereabouts.
+
+"What luck, Joe?" was the plaintive question. "I'd sooner starve than be
+left alone in this dungeon."
+
+"Behold the dashing 'prentice-boy with another hairbreadth escape to his
+credit," replied the hero. "Be thankful for your dinner 'cause
+Blackbeard all but made a mouthful of me."
+
+"You saw him, Joe?"
+
+"Up to the middle of him, and that was a-plenty. Don't ask me. I had a
+bad turn."
+
+"I feel sick, too," said Jack. "The smell of this vile bilge-water
+breeds a nausea, and, whew, 'tis worse than ever."
+
+"Bilge, my eye! You sniff the banquet I fetched ye. Here's a prime
+cheese that was hatched when Trimble Rogers was a pup."
+
+Jack offered a feeble apology and felt revived after a pull at the
+water-monkey. What they craved most was a spark of light, the glimmer of
+a candle to lift this appalling gloom which pressed down like a visible
+burden. With nothing to do but discuss the situation from every slant
+and angle of conjecture, it was Joe Hawkridge's theory that Stede Bonnet
+would not rest content with regaining the _Revenge_ but would come out
+to attack the brig as soon as the wind favored. His hatred of Blackbeard
+was one motive but there was a point of honor even more compelling.
+
+"He called you his guest, Jack," explained Joe, "and I never did see a
+man so jealous of his plighted word when once he swore it. He took
+obligation to set you safe in Charles Town, d'ye see? And powder smoke
+won't stop him."
+
+"Will Blackbeard tarry for a fight, Joe?"
+
+"Not to my notion. He knows well this brig is no match for the
+_Revenge_, knows it better than did Cap'n Bonnet, what with all the
+heavy metal slung aboard from the sloop. And what does Blackbeard gain
+by having this brig hammered into a cocked hat? Fate tricked him
+comically with this swappin' about of ships."
+
+"And will he linger on this coast? Oh, Joe, if he goes for a long
+cruise, what in mercy's name becomes of us two?"
+
+"A long cruise, it looks like, shipmate. In the _Revenge_ he could laugh
+at the small king's men-o'-war commissioned to hunt him down. He was
+ready to slap alongside any of 'em. Now 'tis different. As another flea
+in his ear, I stole the only chart of these waters. To the south'ard
+he'll turn, and I will bet that rampageous cheese on it."
+
+"Clear to the Bay of Honduras?" said Jack.
+
+"As far as that, at a guess. Or he may skirt the Floridas to look for
+Spanish prizes and put in at the Dry Tortugas which is a famous
+rendezvous for pirates of the Main. He will be hot to fit himself with a
+bigger ship, by capture or by some knavish trick such as he dealt Cap'n
+Bonnet."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+BLACKBEARD APPEARS IN FIRE AND BRIMSTONE
+
+
+HERE was a tragic predicament from which there was no release. Jack
+Cockrell was firmly convinced that Blackbeard must have recognized him
+that day in the swamp while Joe felt no less certain that he was marked
+for death because he had been one of the party of marooned mutineers.
+The hope of prolonging their existence by means of raiding the storeroom
+had ebbed after Joe's investigation. Such provisions as had been broken
+out of bulk were kept in lockers and pantries on deck where they were
+convenient to the galley and forecastle. It was realized also that their
+twittering nerves could not long withstand the darkness and suspense
+once the brig had put out to sea. Joe Hawkridge had nothing more to say
+about enduring it a month o' Sundays.
+
+While the brig remained at anchor they clung to the thought that Captain
+Stede Bonnet might intervene in their behalf. It did bring them a gleam
+of solace to imagine him hoisting sail on the _Revenge_ and crowding out
+to rake the brig with his formidable broadsides. And yet they were in
+doubt whether the _Revenge_ was fit to proceed at once, what with all
+the work there had been to do, rigging a new foremast, caulking leaky
+seams, repairing the other ravages of the storm.
+
+These pitiable stowaways had no means of telling one hour from another
+until, at length, they heard over their heads the faint, musical strokes
+of the ship's bell on the forecastle head. This led them to believe that
+the fog had cleared else Blackbeard would not have revealed the vessel's
+position. And lifting fog meant a breeze to sweep it away from the
+harbor.
+
+"Eight bells she strikes, the first o' the forenoon watch," said Joe.
+"We have been cooped in this black pit a matter of three hours a'ready."
+
+"No more than that?" groaned Jack. "It seems at least a week. We must
+divert ourselves in some wise. What say if I learn you a bit o' Latin?
+And you can say over such sea songs as come to mind, for me to tuck in
+my memory."
+
+"Well said, my worthy scholar. 'Tis high time we bowled ahead with my
+eddication as a proper gentleman."
+
+Jack began to conjugate _amo_, _amas_, _amat_, and the pupil droned it
+after him but the verb _to love_ recalled a black-eyed lass who had
+stolen his heart in the Azores and he veered from the Latin lesson to
+confide that sentimental passage. So Jack hammered nouns of the first
+declension into him until they grew tired of that, and then the sea waif
+played his part by reciting such fo'castle ballads as "_Neptune's Raging
+Fury_; _or The Gallant Seaman's Sufferings_," and "_Sir Walter Raleigh
+Sailing in the Lowlands_."
+
+This was better than the slow agony of waiting in silence, but Joe
+spoiled it by turning lovelorn and Jack bemourned fair Dorothy Stuart of
+Charles Town whom he would never greet again, and they sang very softly
+together a verse of "_The Maid's Lamentation_" which went like this:
+
+ "There shall be no Scarf go on my Head,
+ No Comb into my Hair,
+ No Fire burn, no Candle light
+ To shew my Beauty fair,
+ For never will I married be
+ Until the Day I die,
+ Since the Seas and the Winds
+ Has parted my Love and me."
+
+This left them really in worse spirits than before, and they drowsed off
+to sleep, and no wonder, after such a night as they had passed.
+Accustomed to broken watches, Joe Hawkridge slept uneasily with one ear
+open. Once or twice he sat up, heard Jack's steady snores, and lay down
+again. It was the ship's bell which finally brought him to, and he
+counted the strokes.
+
+"Five bells, but what watch is it?" he muttered anxiously. "How long was
+I napping? Lost track o' the time, so I have, and can't say if it's
+night or day."
+
+He sat blinking into the darkness and then had an inspiration. So
+staunch and well-kept was the brig that the deck seams were tight and no
+light filtered through. Joe left his hiding-place and groped along to
+where he thought the main hatch ought to be. Gazing upward he saw a
+gleam like a silvered line between the coaming and the edge of the
+canvas cover which was battened with iron bars. This persuaded him that
+the day had not yet faded, and he concluded that he had heard the bell
+strike either in the afternoon watch or the second dog watch of early
+evening.
+
+This he imparted to Jack, after prodding him awake. They mulled it over
+and agreed that Captain Bonnet must have found the _Revenge_ unready to
+weigh anchor or he would have engaged the brig ere this. Perhaps there
+was not breeze enough for either vessel to move. Another hour of this
+stressful tedium and they heard a sound of sharp significance. It was
+the lap-lap of water against the vessel's side. No more than the
+thickness of the planking was between them and this tinkling sea, and
+Joe exclaimed, in an agitated whisper:
+
+"A breeze o' wind! Gentle it draws, but steady, like it comes off the
+land at sundown."
+
+"The same as it did when we were blown offshore on the little raft,
+after we quitted the _Plymouth Adventure_," replied Jack.
+
+"Blackbeard will take advantage of it to make for the open sea. There be
+three things offered us, Master Cockrell, to starve or go mad in this
+blighted hold, to sally on deck and beg mercy, which means a short
+shift, or to climb out softly in the night and try to swim for it."
+
+"Swim to what, Joe?"
+
+"Swim to the bottom, most likely. But we might fetch one o' them cays or
+the coast itself if he steers close in to find smooth water. 'Tis the
+worst odds yet but I'd sooner drown than tarry in this vessel. One
+miracle was wrought when the cask came driftin' to the beach to save me,
+and who knows but the Lord can spare another one for the salvation of us
+poor lads that mean to do right and forsake piratin'."
+
+As they expected, there came soon the familiar racket of making sail and
+trimming yards and the clank of the capstan pawls. Then the anchor
+flukes scraped and banged against the bow timbers. The vessel heeled a
+little and the lapping water changed its tune to a swash-swash as the
+hull pushed it aside. The brig was alive and in motion.
+
+"She makes no more than two or three knots," observed Joe, after a
+little while. "Ye can tell by the feel of her. The wind is steady but
+small."
+
+"Then he can't go clear of the islands till long after night,"
+thankfully returned Jack.
+
+Joe made another trip to crane his neck at the main hatch. The bright
+thread of daylight had dimmed. He could scarce discern it. The lads
+occupied themselves with reckoning the distance, the hour, and the
+vessel's speed. Now that Joe had satisfied himself that the end of the
+day was near, he knew what the ship's bell meant when it was struck
+every half-hour. They would await the passing of another hour, until two
+bells of the first watch, by which time they calculated the brig should
+be in the wide, outer channel between the seaward islands.
+
+The plan was to emerge through the forepeak in the very bows of the ship
+where a scuttle was let into the deck. There they might hope to lower
+themselves to the chain stays under the bowsprit and so drop into the
+sea. They would be washed past the ship, close to her side, and into the
+wake, and there was little chance of drawing attention. True it was that
+in this hard choice they preferred to swim to the bottom if so it had to
+be.
+
+They crouched where they were hid, waiting to hear the fateful signal of
+two bells. It struck, mellow, clear, and they were about to creep in the
+direction of the forepeak. But Joe Hawkridge gripped his comrade's arm
+and held him fast. A whispered warning and they ceased to move. Behind
+them, in the after part of the ship, gleamed a lantern. It illumined the
+open door of the bulkhead which walled off the storeroom. And in this
+doorway, like a life-sized portrait, grotesque and sinister, set in a
+frame, was the figure of Blackbeard.
+
+He advanced into the hold and the cowering stowaways assumed that he had
+come to search them out. The impulse was to dash into the forepeak and
+so plunge overboard, flinging away all caution, but before their
+palsied muscles could respond, the behavior of Blackbeard held them
+irresolute and curious. He had turned his back to them and was shouting
+boisterously to others to follow him. Seven men came through the
+doorway, one after the other, hanging back with evident reluctance. It
+was impossible to discern who they were, whether officers or seamen.
+Every one carried in his arms what looked to be a tub or an iron pot.
+These they set upon the dunnage boards which covered the ballast and
+made a flooring in the hold.
+
+Blackbeard bellowed at them to squat in a circle, which they meekly did.
+He was in one of his fiendishly mirthful humors, rumpling his beard,
+strutting to and fro, laughing in senseless outbursts. At such times his
+men were most fearful for their lives. What sort of an infernal pastime
+he had now concocted was beyond the imagination of the lads who were
+concealed a dozen yards away. He was not hunting them, this much was
+plain, and it seemed wise to be quiet and avoid drawing attention to
+themselves.
+
+They saw Blackbeard ignite a torch at the lantern and poke it into one
+pot after another. Flames began to burn, blue and green and yellow, and
+lurid smoke rolled to the deck-beams overhead. Amid this glare and reek
+of combustibles, Blackbeard waved his torch and tremendously proclaimed:
+
+"Come, lads, we be all devils together, with a hell of our
+own,--brimstone fires and pitch. Now, braggarts, see how long ye can
+bear it. 'Tis a foretaste of what's in store for all hands. At this game
+I'll outlast ye, for, harkee, I sold my soul to the Old Scratch as is
+well known."
+
+[Illustration: HE LOOMED LIKE THE BELIAL WHOM HE WAS SO FOND OF CLAIMING
+AS HIS MENTOR]
+
+He stirred his infernal pots and the greasy smoke rolled upward in
+choking volume. The brimstone fumes were so vile and noxious that the
+victims of this outlandish revel soon gasped and wheezed. But they dared
+not object nor move from their places among the villainous pots.
+Blackbeard enjoyed their sufferings, taunting them as milksops and
+poltroons who could not endure even this taste of Gehenna. He himself
+appeared to be unaffected by it, lurching from one man to another,
+whacking them with the burning torch or playfully upsetting them. In the
+gaseous pall of smoke he loomed like the Belial whom he was so fond of
+claiming as his mentor.
+
+Finally one of his involuntary guests toppled over in a faint.
+Blackbeard was kind enough to haul him to the door and boot him through
+it. A second man dragged himself thither. A third found voice to
+supplicate. The witch-fires still smoked and stewed in the pots and
+Blackbeard had proved that he was the toughest demon of them all.
+
+The two stowaways watched this demented exploit in sheer wonderment. The
+fumes were not dense in their part of the hold and they could breathe,
+but they well-nigh strangled in trying to refrain from coughing. The
+fires of tar and brimstone and what not cast so much light that they
+dared not betray themselves by crawling toward the forepeak. The upright
+beams between the keelson and the deck threw black shadows over them and
+they were in no great peril of detection so long as they stayed
+motionless.
+
+Joe Hawkridge had heard gossip of this extraordinary amusement as a kind
+of initiation for hands newly joining Blackbeard's ship. He therefore
+read it that these unfortunates were some of Stede Bonnet's men who had
+been captured with the brig. They had been allowed to enlist and were
+being taught to respect their new master.
+
+Jack Cockrell had hugely admired young Joe for his ready wit and
+coolness in other crises of their mutual fortunes but now came a moment
+in which the astute sea urchin surpassed himself. It was not too much to
+say that he displayed absolute genius with the sturdy Master Cockrell to
+aid and abet him. Joe clawed in the dark until he found the sack with a
+few pounds of wheat flour in it. A quick whisper and his comrade grasped
+the great idea. They took no thought of a sequel. They would trust to
+opportunity. Hastily they rubbed the flour into their shirts and
+breeches. They covered their faces with it and lavishly sprinkled their
+hair. They looked at each other in the shadow of the beams and were
+pleased with their handiwork.
+
+Another whispered consultation and Joe possessed himself of the
+cannon-ball of a cheese while Jack grasped the side of salt-fish by the
+tail. They resembled two whitened clowns of a pantomime but in spirit
+they were as grimly serious as the menace of death could make them.
+
+Blackbeard was dancing clumsily, like a drunken bear, and deriding with
+lewd oaths the two or three tortured survivors of his brimstone
+carnival. In a high, wailing voice which rose to a shriek there was
+borne to him the words:
+
+"Ye dirked poor Jesse Strawn and left him rotting in the swamp. I was a
+true and faithful seaman, Cap'n Teach."
+
+A deeper voice boomed out, filling the hold with unearthly echoes:
+
+"I am the shade of the master mariner whom ye did foully murder off
+Matanzas and there is no rest for me ten fathom down."
+
+The apparitions flitted out of the shadow and were vaguely disclosed in
+the flickering glare from the brimstone pots. The smoke gave them a
+wavering aspect as though their shapes were unsubstantial. Blackbeard
+stood beholding them in a trance of horror. With an aimless finger he
+traced the sign of the cross and his pallid lips moved in the murmur:
+
+"_The ghost o' Jesse Strawn! For the love of God, forbear._"
+
+It was a petition as pious as ever Christian uttered. Forgotten was his
+wicked counterfeit of the nether region. Again the shrill voice wailed:
+
+"Pity poor Jesse Strawn. I'll haunt ye by land and sea, Cap'n Teach.
+Swear by the Book to let that treasure chest lie at the bottom of the
+creek else I tear your sinful soul from your body."
+
+The terrible Blackbeard was incapable of motion. Huskily he muttered:
+
+"I'll ne'er seek the chest, good Jesse Strawn, an' it please you to pass
+me by."
+
+The two spectres moved forward as the one of the deeper voice declaimed:
+
+"Doomed I was to find no rest till I overtook your ship, Ed'ard Teach.
+Each night you'll see me walk the plank from your quarter-deck."
+
+The unhappy Blackbeard gibbered something and would have fled as the
+spirits approached him. But those bandy legs tottered and before he
+could turn the awful visitants were upon him. One raised a round shot
+above his head, or so it appeared to be, and smote him full upon the
+crown. The other whirled a flat bludgeon and hit him on the jaw. With
+the smell of brimstone was mingled the pungent flavor of ripe cheese and
+salt-fish. Blackbeard measured his length, and the ghost of Jesse Strawn
+delayed an instant to dump a pot of sizzling combustibles over him.
+
+Then the spirits twain made for the cabin at top speed. Several of the
+crew had rushed down to harken to the strange disturbance. They
+scattered wildly at the first glimpse of these phantoms, being
+superstitious sailormen with many a wicked deed to answer for. It
+flashed into Joe Hawkridge's mind that all the men of the watch might be
+chased below, the hatches clapped on them, and the mastery of the brig
+secured. Blackbeard was absent for reasons best known to himself and his
+pirates lacked leadership. A brace of ghosts could put them to panic
+rout. And, no doubt, that wailing message of dead Jesse Strawn had
+carried like the cry of a banshee.
+
+The poop was deserted in the twinkling of an eye, even to the pair of
+helmsmen and the officer of the watch. Against the sky of night the
+unwelcome phantoms were wan and luminous while the groans which issued
+from them were enough to curdle the blood of the brawniest pirate. He
+who had been Jack Cockrell in mortal guise was quick to slide the cabin
+hatch closed and fasten it. For the moment they had captured the armed
+brig _Royal James_ and as ferocious a crew of rascals as ever scuttled a
+merchantman.
+
+Joe Hawkridge glided to the taffrail and peered over the stern. A boat
+was towing behind the ship. It had been left there for taking soundings
+or pulling the brig's head around while she was still in the shoaler
+waters near the coast. This was better than Joe had dared anticipate.
+Feeling his way along the rail, he found the end of the rope which was
+belayed around a wooden pin. Heaven be praised, they would not have to
+swim for it! He beckoned his comrade to say in his ear:
+
+"They will soon find their wits. It 'ud be foolish to try scaring 'em
+under hatches now that the jolly-boat floats so handy. There's hard
+cases amongst 'em that will begin shooting at us presently. Down the
+rope ye go, Jack. I'll stand by and give 'em another dose of poor Jesse
+Strawn."
+
+Over the rail flew the stouter phantom of the two and slid like a white
+streak, fetching up in the boat with a most earthly and substantial
+thump. With a farewell wail the other ghost flung a limber leg over and
+shot down so fast that his hands were scorched. To such pirates as
+beheld this instant vanishment, these disturbing spirits floated off
+into space. Jack cut the rope with his knife and the boat dropped back
+in the shining wake. They shoved out two heavy oars and fairly broke
+their hearts in pulling dead into the wind where the brig would have to
+tack to pursue them.
+
+The rattle of the oars and the discovery of the shorn rope's end must
+have convinced the pirates who ran aft that they had been tricked by
+mortal beings like themselves. A musket spat a red streak of fire.
+Blocks whined as the braces were hauled to change the brig's course. In
+the light breeze she responded awkwardly and soon hung in stays.
+Meanwhile the jolly-boat was slowly working to windward while two
+frightened lads tugged and swung until the flour turned to paste on
+their dripping faces.
+
+Before the brig began to forge ahead, the boat was invisible from her
+decks. This was evident because the spatter of musket-fire ceased. Soon
+the fugitives heard Blackbeard's harsh voice damning all hands. That
+thick skull of his had not been cracked by the impact of the solid
+cheese and he had been released from his brimstone inferno. The ghosts
+rested on their oars. They could watch the glimmering canvas of the brig
+and see what her procedure might be. Soon she filled away and forsook
+the attempt to find the boat. Blackbeard had wisdom enough to avoid
+blundering about and putting the brig aground in a chase so elusive as
+this.
+
+"Farewell, ye hairy son of Tophet," said Joe Hawkridge, waving his hand
+at the disappearing vessel. "And here's hoping I set your whiskers
+ablaze when I turned the pot over 'em."
+
+"Did you hear him swear not to touch the treasure chest, Joe? That was a
+master stroke of yours."
+
+"Aye, it was bright of me. But he thinks different now. He knows we made
+a booby of him."
+
+"But we learned one thing,--he hasn't recovered the treasure yet,"
+suggested Jack.
+
+"He is such a powerful liar that I don't know as the ghost o' Jesse
+Strawn could budge the truth out of him. However, it was comfortin' to
+hear him swear it on his marrow-bones. I fetched away the navigation
+chart, the one I poached from the cabin table. It gives us the lay o'
+the coast."
+
+"What ho and whither bound?" was Jack's question. "Here is a sail wound
+round a sprit beneath the thwarts."
+
+"The wrong wind to head for Cap'n Bonnet and the _Revenge_. This
+swag-bellied jolly-boat handles like a firkin. We had best wait for day
+and then decide the voyage."
+
+"Nothing to eat and no water, Joe. All I can find is an empty pannikin."
+
+"You're a glutton," severely exclaimed young Hawkridge. "After the
+banquet I served in the hold!"
+
+What Master Cockrell said in reply sounds as familiar and as wistful
+to-day as when he spoke it two hundred years ago.
+
+"I have had enough of wandering and strange adventures, Joe. I want to
+go home."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+MR. PETER FORBES MOURNS HIS NEPHEW
+
+
+IT seems a long time, in the course of this story, since the honorable
+Secretary of the Council, Mr. Peter Arbuthnot Forbes, was forced to sail
+in to Charles Town from the _Plymouth Adventure_ on that most
+humiliating errand of finding medicines for Blackbeard's fever-smitten
+rogues. For the sake of his own dear nephew and the other hostages
+detained on board, he had endeavored to perform his bargain and was
+returning across the bar when the threatening clouds and other portents
+of a violent storm caused the seamen to lose heart. They put about and
+drove back into the harbor for shelter in the very nick of time.
+
+These were pirates from Blackbeard's crew, it may be recalled, with his
+grizzled, scarred boatswain at the tiller. They had felt safe enough to
+swagger and ruffle it through the streets of Charles Town and to terrify
+the people. Their worthless lives were protected by the hostages who
+waited in fear and trembling. The town seethed with indignation and was
+hot with shame. There would be no more of the friendly traffic with
+pirates.
+
+It was fully believed that the wretched Blackbeard would be as good as
+his word in allowing no more than two days' grace. Therefore when Mr.
+Peter Forbes came back in the boat to inform his neighbors that he had
+been unable to reach the ship, it was sadly taken for granted that those
+helpless passengers had been put to death. Forthwith the pirates of the
+boat's crew were seized and thrown in gaol. There they lay in double
+irons until the Council met and ordered them to be tried. In accordance
+with the verdict the six seamen and the boatswain were promptly hanged
+by the neck from the same gallows at White Point hard by the town. And
+the people no longer shivered at the name of Blackbeard nor feared his
+vengeance. Their fighting blood was thoroughly aroused.
+
+Not long after this, there arrived from England a new Governor of the
+Province, a man of honor and resolution who approved what had been done.
+This Governor Johnson proceeded to organize the town for defense,
+building batteries on Sullivan's Island, recruiting the seafaring men in
+the militia, and seeking to obtain merchant vessels which could be
+employed as armed cruisers. Learning that the Governor of North Carolina
+was in a corrupt partnership with pirates, he sent messages to Virginia
+to solicit coöperation.
+
+This activity made much work for Secretary Peter Forbes who forsook his
+intention of going to England to beg the coöperation of his Majesty's
+Government against the plague of pirates. Dapper and plump and
+important as of yore, his florid face was clouded with sorrow and he
+seemed a much older man. He mourned his nephew, Jack Cockrell, as no
+more and felt as though he had lost an only son. Every angry word he had
+ever addressed the lad, every hasty punishment inflicted, hurt him
+grievously.
+
+It was a solace to talk with winsome Dorothy Stuart because hers was the
+bright optimism of youth and she held so exalted an opinion of Jack's
+strength and courage that she refused to abandon hope. And the fact that
+he had confided to her his rash intention of running away and signing as
+a pirate sooner than be transported to school in England, persuaded her
+that he might be alive.
+
+"From what you saw yourself, Mr. Forbes," said she, "when Blackbeard
+boarded the _Plymouth Adventure_ with his dreadful men, our Jack won his
+fancy."
+
+"So it appeared, Dorothy. The boy boasted of knocking a tall pirate on
+the head, and he read this monster of a pirate more shrewdly than I.
+Yes, Blackbeard took it with rough good humor. But Jack would ne'er
+consent to sail with him. 'Twas that confounded Stede Bonnet with his
+gallant air that turned the lad's head. He cast a glamor over this trade
+of murder and pillage."
+
+"Be that as it may," returned Dorothy, with a sigh and a smile, "I
+confess to a romantic admiration for this bold Captain Bonnet. He wears
+an air of mystery which is most becoming. We must not blame poor Jack."
+
+"No, no, I am done with all that," hastily exclaimed Uncle Peter. "All I
+dare hope is that when Blackbeard is captured, we may learn what fate
+befell the boy. It makes the torture worse to have him vanish without
+trace."
+
+"And yet I have faith the sea will give him back to us, Mr. Forbes. He
+will find you a chastened guardian, not so apt to box his ears."
+
+Uncle Peter was so distressed by this gentle raillery that the girl
+begged pardon and vowed that she would never again offend. It so
+happened that they were sitting together in Parson Throckmorton's garden
+a day or so after this when a friend came running in with tidings the
+most unexpected and incredible. A negro slave had come from a plantation
+a few miles inland and he bore a letter written by none other than
+Captain Jonathan Wellsby of the _Plymouth Adventure_. It narrated how he
+and the survivors of his ship had journeyed that far after weeks of
+suffering and frequent skirmishes with Indians. They were compelled to
+rest and take shelter before undertaking the last stage of the journey.
+
+Councilor Peter Forbes was magically changed. He shed his dignity and
+threw his hat in air. Clasping Miss Dorothy's slender waist, he planted
+a kiss on her damask cheek. Parson Throckmorton was ramming snuff into
+his nostrils, his wig all awry, while he sneezed trumpet blasts of
+rejoicing.
+
+"Survivors? _Kerchooh!_ God bless me, that lusty stripling will be
+amongst them,--_kerchooh_,--he can survive anything but Greek and
+Latin,--_kerchooh_,--I will spare the rod in future."
+
+"I told you so, Uncle Peter Forbes," laughed Dorothy.
+
+"Not so fast," quoth he, in a mood suddenly sobered. "Captain Wellsby
+includes no list of those in his party."
+
+"But, of course, one of them is _sure_ to be Master Jack," she insisted.
+
+"I am a selfish man and a laggard officer of the Crown," he exclaimed
+with air of great self-reproach. "There are women in that company and
+wounded men, no doubt. We must take them clothing, horses, food, a
+surgeon."
+
+He bustled off to the Governor's house to find that energetic gentleman
+absent at Sullivan's Island. Acting for him, the Secretary of the
+Council sent the town crier to summon all good citizens to the tavern
+green. In the space of an hour the men and supplies were assembled and
+with Mr. Forbes in command the band of mercy made haste to reach the
+plantation. During the march there was a buzz of anxious surmise. Was
+this one and that alive or dead? Had the hostages been slain and were
+these the sailormen of the _Plymouth Adventure_ who had been set adrift
+by Blackbeard? Councilor Forbes winced at hearing such talk as this, but
+his heart beat high nevertheless, so confident was he that he was about
+to behold his manly nephew.
+
+There was loud cheering when they came to the cleared land of the indigo
+fields and saw a tattered British ensign fluttering from the log
+stockade which enclosed the huts of the overseer and his laborers. In
+the gateway appeared the stalwart figure of Captain Wellsby in ragged
+garments and with a limping gait. Other men crowded behind him and
+responded with huzzas which were like a feeble echo. The friends from
+Charles Town rushed forward to embrace them, loudly demanding to know
+where the rest were.
+
+"We fetched the women safe through," answered Captain Wellsby whose eyes
+were sunken and the brown beard streaked with gray. "Twelve good men of
+my crew are dead, and three of the gentlemen passengers. The swamps took
+toll of some and the Indians slew the others. We were besieged a
+fortnight by the Yemassees,--a hard experience all of it, and wondrous
+luck to have escaped----"
+
+Councilor Forbes delayed while his companions entered the huts to attend
+the invalids. He struggled to ask a question but his voice was beyond
+control.
+
+"I understand," kindly spoke the shipmaster. "Your lad is not with us,
+nor can I say if he be dead or alive."
+
+"The Indians carried him off?" weakly inquired the uncle.
+
+"No, he was never seen after we abandoned ship. Your Jack and a chum of
+his from Blackbeard's crew were for making the beach on a small raft of
+their own contrivance. This was after nightfall, Councilor, and what
+with a land'ard breeze and a crotchety set of the tide amongst the
+shoals, they floated out to sea."
+
+"On a small raft," muttered Mr. Forbes, "and a vast ocean. I know of no
+ship voyaging to or from these ports which might have found them."
+
+"I was in hopes of hearing news of the lads from you," sorrowfully said
+the shipmaster. "There is the chance, tiny though it be, that they were
+sighted by some vessel bound to foreign parts, across the Western
+Ocean."
+
+The uncle shook his head in a manner profoundly dejected. There were
+duties which summoned him and he choked down his own grief, turning from
+the sympathetic mariner to minister to those in distress. Horse litters
+were soon ready for the exhausted but heroic women who had been kept
+alive by the devotion of the noble British seamen in accordance with the
+traditions of the merchant service. Those unable to walk farther were
+placed in carts. Clothed and fed, the sailors were in blithe spirits and
+talked of going to sea again as soon as they could find a ship.
+
+In the crowd which met them on the outskirts of the Charles Town
+settlement was Dorothy Stuart. She scanned the straggling column and
+then ran from one cart to another. It was impossible to convince her
+that Jack Cockrell was not there. But when she heard from Uncle Peter
+the news that Jack was missing but not surely dead, her faith burned
+anew, triumphant over fact and reason.
+
+"See how the great storm came to save him from Blackbeard," she cried,
+her hand nestling in Uncle Peter's arm. "And look how he came unscathed
+through that bloody battle with the pirates in the _Plymouth Adventure_.
+Why, a cruise on a raft is merely a frolic after all that."
+
+"I would not discourage your dear dreams, sweet maid," was the gentle
+response. "And may they be truer than my own forebodings."
+
+Charles Town was more than ever resentful when it learned from these
+poor people how the pirate sailing-master, Ned Rackham, had plotted to
+get rid of them and how mournful had been their sufferings after the
+shipwreck. The one boat left to them had been too rotten to send along
+the coast and they had plunged into a wilderness almost impassable.
+
+Meanwhile Governor Johnson, stirred by this episode, had received word
+that the province of Virginia was both ready and anxious to join in an
+expedition against Blackbeard. Governor Spottswood of Virginia would be
+outfitting such craft as he could get together in the James River while
+he awaited a reinforcement from Charles Town.
+
+The best vessel available for immediate use was a small brigantine, the
+_King George_. There was no lack of eager seamen when Councilor Forbes
+and Colonel Stuart proclaimed the muster on the tavern green. Among
+those selected were several of Captain Jonathan Wellsby's sailors who
+were primed to fight even though there was not much flesh on their
+bones. He himself was a forlorn mariner who had lost his good ship and
+found no joy in life. With a grim smile of gratitude he accepted the
+invitation to go as master of the _King George_, with Colonel Stuart as
+a sea soldier to drill the men and lead them in action.
+
+It was while they were slinging guns aboard the brigantine that some of
+the men happened to notice a small boat coming into the harbor under a
+rag of sail. At first it was taken for a fishing craft and there was no
+comment until it was quite close. Then they saw that it was a ship's
+jolly-boat much the worse for wear, with only two occupants. These were
+half-naked lads, burned black to the waist, with a queer kind of canvas
+head-gear as a protection against the sun.
+
+The boat was steered to pass under the stern of the _King George_ and
+the crew was unable to fathom if these were pirates or victims of
+another shipwreck. Captain Wellsby solved it by shouting:
+
+"Both your guesses are right! One is the pirate younker that served our
+cause in the _Plymouth Adventure_ and t'other is Master Jack Cockrell!"
+
+One of the Charles Town volunteers heard only the word _pirate_ and
+growled, with an oath:
+
+"One o' Blackbeard's spawn? We'll make precious short work of him. Hand
+me a musket and I will save trouble for the hangman."
+
+"Here, stop that," said Captain Wellsby, beckoning his own men. "You old
+_Adventure_ hands know better. Quell these lubbers. If there's to be
+hostile feeling ashore I shall take this lad aboard under my own
+protection."
+
+During this argument the sea-worn pilgrims in the jolly-boat had
+recognized the shipmaster and were joyfully yelling at him. In response
+to his gesture, they pulled down the sail and rowed to the gangway of
+the brigantine. There was no need to fear the wrath of the Charles Town
+seamen, because the _Adventure_ hands stood by as a guard while they
+explained how this young Joe Hawkridge had valiantly helped to turn the
+tide of battle against the prize crew of pirates. And there was such a
+rousing welcome for Master Cockrell that all else was forgotten. His old
+shipmates fairly mobbed him.
+
+"I will fire a gun and hoist all the bunting to signal the town," cried
+the skipper, his face shining. "And presently I'll send you to the wharf
+in my own boat, but first tell me, boys, who took you off the little
+raft and whence come you in this ship's boat?"
+
+"Blackbeard rescued us. And we borrowed the boat from him," demurely
+answered Jack, watching the effect of this bombshell of a sensation.
+
+"_Blackbeard!_" echoed the bedazed shipmaster and the others chimed it
+like a chorus.
+
+"Aye, old Buckets o' Blood hisself," grinned Joe Hawkridge. "We had him
+tamed proper when we parted company. First we chased him through a swamp
+till his tongue hung out and left him mired to the whiskers. Then for
+another lark we scared him in his own ship so he begged us on his knees
+to forbear. We learned Cap'n Ed'ard Teach his manners, eh, Jack?"
+
+This was too much for the audience which stood agape. A dozen voices at
+once implored enlightenment. With a lordly air for a youth whose costume
+was mostly one leg of his breeches, Master Cockrell reproved them to
+wit:
+
+"Captain Stede Bonnet was more courteous to our distress when we sailed
+with him. He gave us a thumping big breakfast."
+
+"Right-o," declared Joe. "'Tis our custom to spin strange yarns for
+clothes and vittles in payment."
+
+The men scampered to the galley and pantry but refused to let Captain
+Wellsby carry these rare entertainers into the cabin. Graciously they
+sketched the chief events, omitting all mention of the treasure chest,
+and Jack explained in conclusion:
+
+"And so I was stricken homesick, like an illness, and Joe had his fill
+of pirates, too. The wind was wrong to rejoin Captain Bonnet in the
+Inlet harbor after we shipped as ghosts in the jolly-boat, and we had a
+mariner's chart of the Carolina coast and----"
+
+"But what did you do for subsistence?" broke in Captain Wellsby.
+
+"Food and water?" answered Joe. "Oh, we landed when the thirst plagued
+us too bad. And there was rain to fill a bight of the sail and a
+pannikin to save it in."
+
+"And we lived on oysters mostly," said Jack, "and Joe killed a fat
+opossum with a club, and we caught some fish in a net which I knotted
+from a ball of marline that was in the boat. And we foraged for pawpaws
+and persimmons."
+
+"And whenever the breeze was fair we put to sea again," said Joe, "and
+it was a long and weary voyage, though not so many leagues on the
+chart."
+
+The captain's boat was ready and they tumbled in, two wayfarers of the
+sea who were as lean and sun-dried as the buccaneers of old Trimble
+Rogers' fond memories. Hardships had seasoned and weathered them like
+good ash staves. On the wharf was Uncle Peter Forbes and Governor
+Johnson and a concourse of townspeople drawn by the joyous signals flown
+from the brigantine. Jack looked in vain for Dorothy Stuart and was
+thankful that her welcome was deferred. Shears and a razor and
+Christian raiment would make him look less like a savage from the coast
+of Barbary.
+
+Uncle Peter wasted a vast deal of pity, thinking the castaways too weak
+and wasted to walk. Jack strode along with him, the crowd at their
+heels, and soon had the plump Councilor puffing for breath. They
+insisted on taking Joe Hawkridge with them although he was for seeking
+lodgings at the tavern. He was one of the household, declared Mr.
+Forbes, while Jack warned him to beware of impertinence lest he be
+sentenced to chop wood for the kitchen fire.
+
+The neighbors and friends, as curious as they were joyful, were barred
+from the house while the lads talked and Uncle Peter carefully made
+notes of it all. It was too much for him to realize that Jack was
+sitting there lusty and laughing and with the dutifully respectful
+manner as of yore, in spite of the man's part he had played to the hilt.
+Of all the exploits, that which most fascinated Mr. Peter Forbes was the
+chase after Blackbeard's sea-chest weighty with treasure and the
+discovery of the knoll in the Cherokee swamp where he might have buried
+other booty. Here was a picaresque romance which allured the methodical
+barrister and Councilor and he was as boyishly excited as his nephew. He
+examined the chart which Jack had copied from his rude sketch made on a
+piece of bark and this raised a question which he was quick to ask:
+
+"What of Bill Saxby and this old bloodhound of a Trimble Rogers? As
+soon as Stede Bonnet could get the _Revenge_ to sea, I have no doubt he
+sailed to Cape Fear River to get these pirate comrades of yours and the
+seamen he left to find them. Once aboard, they would urge Bonnet to
+return to Cherokee Inlet and let them go hunt the treasure."
+
+"That may be, but we can trust them to deal fair by us," replied Jack.
+
+"Possibly," was the skeptical comment. Mr. Forbes was not too ready to
+believe in honest pirates.
+
+"I'm not sure Cap'n Bonnet had a mind to bother with this treasure
+hunting," suggested Joe Hawkridge. "Leastwise, he may ha' put it off to
+an easier day. He has friends that keep him well informed, such as the
+Governor of North Carolina at Bath Town. And all this flurry against
+piratin', here and in Virginia, 'ud be apt to make Cap'n Bonnet wary of
+bein' trapped on the coast."
+
+"Joe is full of wisdom, as usual," said Master Cockrell. "And if
+Blackbeard has cruised to the Spanish Main, as we suspect, the treasure
+may lie undisturbed for a while."
+
+"Concerning Blackbeard, the evidence then in hand warranted your
+conclusions," was Uncle Peter's judicial comment, "but I have received
+later information. The rumor is, and well-founded, that he turned his
+ship and made for the Pamlico River with the intention of obtaining
+pardon from the false and greedy Governor Eden. This would baffle our
+plans against him, or so he would assume. And it would enable him to
+remain within convenient distance of his treasure."
+
+"Would this Province and Virginia respect such a pardon as that?"
+queried Jack.
+
+"Not in the case of Blackbeard," snapped the Councilor, "because we know
+it would be violated as soon as this treacherous villain could safely
+return to his piracies."
+
+"Then Joe and I will enlist in the _King George_ brigantine," cried
+Jack. "Captain Wellsby tells me she will sail for Virginia inside the
+week."
+
+Uncle Peter was about to make violent protest but he checked himself and
+his emotions were torn betwixt pride and yearning affection. He could
+not bear to let his nephew go so soon to new perils, but what right had
+he to try to shield him when the public duty called? It was idle to
+pretend that Jack was too young and tender to embark on such service as
+this. He was fitter for it than some of the other volunteers. And so the
+unhappy Uncle Peter walked the floor with his cheeks puffed out and his
+hands clasped behind him and said, with a tremulous sigh:
+
+"I swore to treat you no more as a child, Jack. 'Tis right and natural
+for you to desire to go in the _King George_ as a fighting man tried and
+true. As for Joe Hawkridge, I have acquainted the Governor with his
+merits and his pardon is assured."
+
+"Thankee, sir," returned the reformed young pirate. "A respectable life
+is what I crave, and the parson for company."
+
+"It sounds almost pleasant to me, including the parson," admitted Jack,
+"as soon as we shall have settled this matter with Blackbeard."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+NED RACKHAM'S PLANS GO MUCH AMISS
+
+
+THE armed brigantine had been out several days on the voyage to Virginia
+when a vessel was sighted hull-down. Captain Wellsby and Colonel Stuart
+decided to edge over and take a look at the stranger although they were
+not anxious to engage an enemy of heavier metal. If, however, this
+should happen to be Blackbeard in the _Revenge_ they were in no mood to
+avoid him, despite the odds. After an hour of sailing in a strong
+breeze, it was seen that this other vessel was a small merchantman which
+shifted her course as though to shake off pursuit.
+
+"They take us for a pirate," chuckled Captain Wellsby. "I have no wish
+to scare 'em, poor souls. They will feel easy as soon as we bring the
+wind abeam."
+
+He was about to give the order when Joe Hawkridge, gunner's mate, called
+to Jack Cockrell standing his watch at the helm:
+
+"Remember the snow I told ye of? Yonder is the same rig and tonnage,
+alike it as peas in a pod."
+
+Jack spoke to the shipmaster who summoned Joe to the quarter-deck. The
+boy was confident that this was the New England coasting vessel in which
+Ned Rackham and his pirates had appeared off Cherokee Inlet and had
+carried the marooned seamen from the sandy cay.
+
+"A brown patch in the big main-topsail, and the bowsprit steeved more'n
+ordinary," said Joe. "Tit for tat, Cap'n Wellsby. Your men can have the
+fun of jamming them in the fo'castle. And you won't find me or Jack
+helpin' these picaroons to break out."
+
+"No fear of that," sternly spoke the shipmaster. "They shall make their
+exit with a taut rope and a long drop when I deliver them in Virginia."
+
+It was to be gathered that the bold Ned Rackham had failed in his
+desperate enterprise of capturing a larger ship and that he was probably
+cruising up the coast in hopes of rejoining Blackbeard. The snow had too
+few guns to cope with the _King George_ brigantine which could throw a
+battering broadside. As soon as identification was certain, Captain
+Wellsby hauled to windward to hold the weather gauge and Colonel Stuart
+called the men to quarters. The _Plymouth Adventure_ hands were
+disappointed that they would be unable to pay their own grudge. They had
+no doubt that Ned Rackham would strike his colors without a battle.
+
+The _King George_ ran close enough for Captain Wellsby to shout through
+the trumpet:
+
+"The snow ahoy! Send your men aboard or I'll sink you. No tricks,
+Rackham. Lively, now."
+
+They saw the men running to cut the boat lashings and struggle to
+launch the boats from the deck. Ned Rackham, handsome and debonair,
+stared coolly at the brigantine but gave no sign that he had heard the
+ultimatum. With a shrug he walked across the poop, glanced up at the
+British ensign which flew from his main truck, and made no motion to
+pull it down.
+
+"Blow your matches, boys," roared Colonel Stuart from his station in the
+waist of the _King George_. "Five minutes' grace, no more."
+
+Captain Wellsby said to wait a little. The pirates were endeavoring to
+quit the snow. And presently Rackham appeared to change his own purpose.
+No longer ignoring the _King George_, he doffed his hat in a graceful
+flourish and bowed with a mocking obeisance. Then he strolled to the
+cabin hatch and went below, presumably to get a change of clothing or
+something of the sort. But he failed to reappear and his men were in a
+frenzy of haste, with one boat already in the water.
+
+So incensed was Colonel Stuart by the insolent refusal of Ned Rackham to
+strike his colors in token of surrender that he gave orders to fire at
+the mainmast and try to bring it down. An instant before the starboard
+battery thundered, the snow seemed to fly upwards in a tremendous
+explosion. The masts were flung out of her and the hull opened like a
+shattered basket. So violent was the shock that men were thrown to the
+deck of the _King George_ and she quivered as though her bows had
+rammed a reef. Black smoke spouted as from a crater and debris rained
+down on a boiling sea.
+
+A few survivors, scorched or half-stunned, were clinging to bits of
+wreckage and wailing for succor. Where the snow had floated was a
+discolored eddy, broken timbers, a lather of dirty foam. Captain
+Jonathan Wellsby picked himself up, rubbed a bump on his head, and gazed
+wildly at the tragic scene. Collecting his wits, he exclaimed:
+
+"That 'ud be like Ned Rackham, to blow up the ship sooner than be taken
+and hanged. More than likely he had the train all laid to the powder
+barrels."
+
+"He saved us a lot of trouble," said Colonel Stuart as he climbed to the
+poop. "A fellow of iron will and courage, this Rackham, by all accounts.
+I have conceived a respect for him."
+
+"I forgive him his sins," replied the skipper. "Now, lads, boats away,
+and fish up those dying wretches."
+
+Joe Hawkridge emitted a jubilant whoop and dived over the rail without
+waiting for a boat. He had caught a glimpse of a feeble swimmer whose
+square, solid features and bushy brows were familiar. It was Peter
+Tobey, the carpenter's mate, who had befriended him on the cay and who
+had set adrift that miraculous cask of food and water. A few strokes and
+Joe was at his side, clutching him by the neck-band and towing him
+toward the _King George_ like a faithful retriever. Ropes were flung to
+them and Joe saw his good friend safely aboard before he went up the
+side.
+
+The carpenter's mate was both burned and bruised but his hurts were not
+grievous and he was able to drag himself aft with Joe as a crutch.
+
+"My own particular prize, sir, by your gracious leave," said Joe
+Hawkridge, addressing Captain Wellsby. "This is Mr. Peter Tobey, a poor,
+faint-hearted pirate like me. May I have him to keep, sir?"
+
+"Bless me, but there will be no pirates left to hang," was the quizzical
+reply. "Master Cockrell has adopted you, and now I am ordered to be kind
+to Bill Saxby and Trimble Rogers if I meet up with 'em."
+
+"That's the whole list, sir. Ask Jack Cockrell. You can string the rest
+of the bloody pirates to the yardarm, for all we care. Do I get
+exemption for this Peter Tobey?"
+
+"What is your verdict, Colonel Stuart?" asked the captain.
+
+"I heard the tale from Hawkridge," answered the brusque but generous
+soldier. "The carpenter's mate has won my allegiance. What say you in
+your own behalf, Peter Tobey?"
+
+The blistered, singed survivor touched a hand to his forehead and
+respectfully responded:
+
+"A carpenter by trade and nature, and allus was. I never see one happy
+day a-piratin' nor did I shed the blood of any human creatur'. With a
+bench and tools, you will find me a proper handy man in Charles Town."
+
+"That clinches it," cried Colonel Stuart. "I should call it a crime to
+hang an artisan like Peter Tobey. Your prize is awarded you, Hawkridge.
+See that he is well cared for."
+
+"The first booty that ever was handed me from a sinkin' ship," said Joe.
+"Come along, Master Tobey, and roll into my bunk."
+
+"Verily I was castin' bread upon the waters when I gave that cask to the
+wind and tide," devoutly murmured the carpenter's mate as he limped
+below with his new owner.
+
+No more than a dozen other pirates were rescued alive and several of
+these expired soon after they were lifted aboard the brigantine. This
+was the only sensational incident of the coastwise voyage to the James
+River. Comfortably quartered, with no more work than was wholesome, Jack
+Cockrell and Joe Hawkridge thought it a holiday excursion after their
+previous adventures at sea.
+
+In the roadstead of the James were two men-of-war, small frigates flying
+the broad pennant of the Royal Navy. A conference was held in the cabin
+of the senior officer, to which Captain Wellsby and Colonel Stuart were
+invited. The latest advices made it seem certain that Blackbeard still
+lurked off the coast of the Carolinas. Planters had reported seeing his
+ship in Pamlico Sound and it was also learned that he had been in
+communication with the disloyal Governor Eden at Bath Town. A letter had
+been intercepted, in handwriting of the Governor's secretary, and
+addressed to Captain Teach, which included these words:
+
+"_I have sent you four of your men. They are all I can meet with about
+town. Be upon your guard._"
+
+This was readily construed to mean that Blackbeard was in haste to
+recall such of his crew as had strayed ashore. At the council of war in
+the frigate's cabin, a proclamation was read. It offered a handsome
+reward for the capture of Captain Edward Teach, dead or alive, and
+lesser rewards for other pirates.
+
+It was the decision that the two frigates were unhandy for cruising
+inshore. Therefore officers and men would be chosen from them to fill
+the complements of two sloops, light and active craft which would be
+unhampered by batteries of cannon. They would be employed for boarding
+Blackbeard's ship while the Charles Town brigantine _King George_ should
+convoy them and engage in the attack if the depth of water should
+permit. The naval officer selected to command the sloops was Lieutenant
+Maynard who went off to the _King George_ to inspect her and make a call
+of courtesy.
+
+He was especially cordial to Master Cockrell and Gunner's Mate Joe
+Hawkridge, laying aside the stiff dignity of naval rank. To his
+persuasive argument that they enter the royal service with promise of
+quick promotion, they turned a deaf ear although they were wonderfully
+taken with him. He was a gentle, soft-spoken young man with a boyish
+smile who blushed when pressed to talk of his own exploits against the
+Spanish, the Dutch, and the French in Britannia's wooden walls. His own
+questions were mostly about Blackbeard's fighting quality. Would he make
+a stand against disciplined tars who were accustomed to close in,
+hammer-and-tongs? Joe Hawkridge answered to this:
+
+"I ne'er saw him in action against a king's ship, and all his wild
+nonsense is apt to delude ye into thinkin' him a drunken play-actor. But
+you will never take him alive, so long as those bandy legs have strength
+to prop him up."
+
+"I look forward to meeting him with a deal of pleasure. It may be my
+good fortune to measure swords with him," observed Lieutenant Maynard.
+
+Joe Hawkridge was puzzled by this gentle fire-eater with the complexion
+of a girl. Nothing could have been more unlike the ramping, roaring
+pirates of Blackbeard's dirty crew who tried to terrify by their very
+appearance. After the lieutenant had returned to his frigate, Jack
+Cockrell remarked:
+
+"A most misleading man, Joe. You cannot picture him seeking the bubble
+reputation at the cannon's mouth, as Will Shakespeare saith."
+
+"Blackbeard will bite him in two," replied Joe. "He is too pretty to be
+risked in such a slaughter pen. I own up to feelin' squeamish on my own
+account, hardy pirate though I be."
+
+"This Lieutenant Maynard is welcome to measure swords with Blackbeard,"
+said Jack, "and I shall not quarrel with him for the honor. Pick me a
+pirate with a wooden leg, Joe, or one that still shakes with Spanish
+fever."
+
+"My only chance of getting out with a whole skin is to lug a sack of
+flour under one arm and play the ghost o' Jesse Strawn."
+
+Expeditiously the brigantine and the two sloops sailed out of the James
+River to head for the North Carolina coast and first rake the nooks and
+bays of Pamlico Sound. There was no intention of offering Blackbeard
+fair odds in battle. With men and vessels enough it was resolved to
+exterminate him, like ridding a house of rats or other vermin. If he had
+gone out to sea, then the pursuers would wait and watch for his return
+to his favorite haunts in these waters. There was every reason to
+believe, however, that he was concealed inshore, within easy distance of
+his friend Governor Eden.
+
+Failing to find him in Pamlico Sound, it was debated whether to cruise
+farther to the southward. Now Master Jack Cockrell and his chum had said
+nothing to the officers concerning the treasure in the Cherokee swamp.
+They felt bound in honor not to reveal it without the consent of Bill
+Saxby and old Trimble Rogers who were partners in the enterprise.
+Moreover, Lieutenant Maynard and the Virginia officers would feel bound
+to turn the treasure over to the crown or its representatives. Governor
+Eden of North Carolina would undoubtedly claim it as found within his
+territory and this meant that he would steal most of it for himself.
+
+It thrilled the lads when Colonel Stuart told them that this Provincial
+squadron would cruise as far as Cherokee Inlet before working to the
+northward again. Information had led the officers to believe that
+Blackbeard had lost many men by desertion while his ship lay at Bath
+Town and near by. They had been roving about the plantations and making
+a nuisance of themselves and seemed ready to quit their red-handed
+despot of a master. In this event he might have sought his old
+hiding-place at the Inlet sooner than risk a clash with the force which
+had been sent after him and of which he had been warned by Governor
+Eden.
+
+Lieutenant Maynard scouted in advance with the two sloops because there
+was small danger of their getting aground and they could be moved along
+with oars if the wind failed. The brigantine kept further offshore but
+within signaling distance. She was running within sight of the
+scattering barrier of low islands when Captain Wellsby summoned Joe
+Hawkridge and informed him:
+
+"You will act as pilot, Joe, once we fetch sounding on the Twelve Fathom
+Bank. The chart is faulty, as ye know, and me and my mates are in
+strange waters with a'mighty little elbow-room. You know the marks, I
+take it."
+
+"Aye, sir, I do that," answered Joe. "Then I stays aboard ship and miss
+the chance to go pokin' about with a cutlass? I'm all screwed up to
+terrible deeds, Cap'n Wellsby, after a spell o' mortal fear. And who
+takes care of Master Cockrell if he goes in a boat?"
+
+"His own lusty right arm, Joe. Avast with your melancholy. We must first
+catch this Blackbeard."
+
+Presently Joe Hawkridge footed it up the main shrouds to scan the sea
+ahead and try to get a glimpse of that sandy bit of exposed shoal on
+which he had been marooned. This would enable him to find the entrance
+to the outer channel and so con the brigantine in from seaward. While he
+shaded his eyes with his hand against the glare of the morning sun, one
+of the sloops hoisted a string of bright signal flags and fired two
+guns. The other sloop was seen to lower her topsail and wait for the
+_King George_ to come up.
+
+Joe Hawkridge climbed higher and found a perch where he could discern
+the spars of a vessel etched almost as fine as threads against the azure
+horizon. He was almost certain that the ship he saw was very close to
+that tiny cay of which he had such unhappy knowledge. Soon he was able
+to perceive that the vessel's sails were furled. This was an odd place
+for an anchorage. His conjecture was confirmed when the _King George_
+passed close to the nearest sloop and Lieutenant Maynard shouted:
+
+"Stranded hard and fast! And she is deucedly like Blackbeard's brig."
+
+Scampering to the deck, Joe Hawkridge mustered his gun's crew as Jack
+Cockrell came running up to say:
+
+"Trapped on the very islet where he cast you and the other pirates! His
+chickens have come home to roost."
+
+"Call me no pirate or I'll stretch ye with a handspike," grinned Joe.
+"'Tis a plaguey poor word in this company. Aye, Cap'n Ed'ard Teach has a
+taste of his own medicine and he will get a worse dose this day than
+ever he served me."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+THE GREAT FIGHT OF CAPTAIN TEACH
+
+
+YES, there was Blackbeard's ship hard in the sand which had gripped her
+keel while she was steering to enter the Cherokee Inlet. There was no
+pearly vapor of swamp mist out here to shroud her from attack. The air
+was clear and bright, with a robust breeze which stirred a flashing surf
+on the shoals. Under lower sails, the two sloops watchfully crept nearer
+until their crews could examine the stranded brig and read the story of
+her plight. She stood on a slant with the decks sloped toward the enemy.
+This made it impossible to use her guns with any great effect.
+
+Captain Wellsby tacked ship and kept the _King George_ well away from
+the cay, as Joe Hawkridge advised. With an ebbing tide, it was unsafe to
+venture into shallower water in order to pound Blackbeard's vessel with
+broadsides. Lieutenant Maynard came aboard in a small boat and was quite
+the dandy with his brocaded coat and ruffles and velvet small-clothes.
+One might have thought he had engaged to dance the minuet. Colonel
+Stuart met him in a spick-and-span uniform of His Majesty's Foot,
+cross-belts pipe-clayed white as snow, boots polished until they shone.
+Such gentlemen were punctilious in war two hundred years ago.
+
+"Your solid shot will not pound him much at this range, my good sir,"
+said the lieutenant. "With his hull so badly listed toward us, you can
+no more than splinter the decks while his men take shelter below."
+
+"I grant you that," regretfully replied the soldier. "And case-shot will
+not scatter to do him much harm. Shall I blaze away and demoralize the
+rascals whilst you make ready your boats?"
+
+"Toss a few rounds into the varlets, Colonel Stuart. It may keep them
+from massing on deck. One boat from your ship, if it please you, with
+twenty picked men. I shall take twenty men from each sloop as boarders."
+
+"Sixty in all?" queried the colonel. "Why not take a hundred?"
+
+"They would be tumbling over one another,--too much confusion. This is
+not a large vessel yonder. We must have room on deck to swing and cut."
+
+"I will have my men away in ten minutes, Lieutenant Maynard," crisply
+replied the blonde, raw-boned Scotsman with a finger at his hat-brim in
+courteous salute. He proceeded to call the men by name, strapping, sober
+fellows who had followed the sea amid the frequent perils of the
+merchant service. Jack Cockrell was the only landsman and he felt
+greatly honored that he should be included. Gone was his unmanly
+trepidation. Was he more worthy to live than these humble seamen who
+fought to make the ocean safer for other voyagers, who were true kinsmen
+of the Elizabethan heroes of blue water? He tarried a moment to wring
+Joe Hawkridge's hand in farewell and to tell him:
+
+"If I have ill luck in this adventure, old comrade,--do you mind
+presenting my best compliments, and--and a fond farewell to Mistress
+Dorothy Stuart?"
+
+"Strike me, Jack, stow that or you'll have me blubberin'," said Joe.
+"Bring me a lock of Cap'n Teach's whiskers as a token for my lass in
+Fayal if ever I clap eyes on her again. And you'd best take this heavy
+cutlass which I whetted a-purpose for ye. 'Twill split a pirate like
+slicin' an apple."
+
+With this useful gift in his hand, Master Cockrell swung himself into
+the boat where Colonel Stuart stood in the stern-sheets. Perhaps he,
+too, was dwelling on a fair maid named Dorothy who might be left
+fatherless before the sun climbed an hour higher. The sloops were moving
+nearer the cay under sail and oar, trailing their crowded boats behind
+them. Blackbeard had hauled two or three of his guns into such positions
+that he could open fire but the sloops crawled doggedly into the shoal
+water and so screened their boats until these were ready to cast off for
+the final dash.
+
+It was a rare sea picture, the stranded brig with canvas loose on the
+yards and ropes streaming, her listed decks a-swarm with pirates in
+outlandish, vari-colored garb, the surf playing about her in a bright
+dazzle and the gulls screaming overhead. The broad, squat figure of
+Blackbeard himself was never more conspicuous. He no longer strutted the
+quarter-deck but was all over the ship, menacing his men with his
+pistols, shifting them in groups for defense, shouldering bags of
+munitions, or heaping up the grenades and stink-pots to be lighted and
+thrown into the attacking boats.
+
+It was his humor to adorn himself more elaborately than usual. Under his
+broad hat with the great feather in it he had stuck lengths of tow
+matches which were all sputtering and burning so that he ran to and fro
+in a cloud of sparks and smoke like that Evil One whom he professed to
+admire. He realized, no doubt, that this was likely to be his last
+stand. The inferno which he was so fond of counterfeiting, fairly yawned
+at his feet.
+
+And now the sloops let go their anchors while from astern of them
+appeared the three boats of the assailants. They steered wide of each
+other to seek different parts of the pirate brig and so divide
+Blackbeard's force. The boats of Colonel Stuart and Lieutenant Maynard
+were racing for the honor of first place alongside. Blackbeard trained
+two guns on them, filled with grape and chain-shot, and one boat was
+shattered but it swam long enough for the cheering men to pull it to the
+brig and toss their grapples to the rail which was inclined quite close
+to the water. They were in the surf which broke against the ship, but
+this was a mere trifle.
+
+Most of them went up the side like cats, leaping for the chains and
+dead-eyes, slashing at the nettings, swinging by a rope's end, or
+digging their toes in a crack of a gun-port. Forward they were pouring
+over the bowsprit, vaulting like acrobats from the anchor stocks, or
+swarming up the stays. It seemed beyond belief that they could gain
+footing on the decks with Blackbeard's demons stabbing and hacking and
+shooting at them, but in such manner as this was many a great sea fight
+won in the brave days of old.
+
+Lieutenant Maynard gained his lodgment in the bows amid a swirl of
+pirates who tried to pen him in front of the forecastle house. But his
+tars of the Royal Navy were accustomed to close quarters and they
+straightway made room for themselves. Chest to chest and hand to hand
+they hewed their way toward the waist of the ship where Colonel Stuart
+raged like the braw, bonny Highlander that he was. Almost at the same
+time, the third boat had made fast under the jutting stern gallery and
+its twenty men were piling in through the cabin windows like so many
+human projectiles.
+
+In the _King George_ brigantine, Captain Jonathan Wellsby fidgeted and
+gnawed his lip, with a telescope at his eye, while he watched the
+conflict in which he could scarce distinguish friend from foe. He could
+see Blackbeard charge aft to rally his men and then whirl back to lunge
+into the mêlée where towered Colonel Stuart's tall figure. The powder
+smoke from pistols and muskets drifted in a thin blue haze. Joe
+Hawkridge was fairly shaking with nervousness as he said to the
+skipper:
+
+"There'll be no clearing the decks 'less they down that monster of a
+Cap'n Teach. And he has more lives than a cat. See you my dear crony,
+Master Jack?"
+
+"No, I cannot make him out in that mad turmoil," replied Captain
+Wellsby. "Nip and tuck, I call it, Joe."
+
+This was the opinion forced upon Lieutenant Maynard as he saw the
+engagement resolve itself into a series of bloody whirlpools, his seamen
+and the pirates intermingled. He won his way past the forecastle into
+the wider spaces of the deck, with only a few of his twenty tars on
+their feet. Colonel Stuart was hard pressed and the boarders who had
+come over the stern had as much as they could do to hold their own. Thus
+far the issue was indecisive.
+
+Jack Cockrell had kept close to the colonel, and felt amazement that he
+was still alive. His cheek was laid open, a bullet had torn his thigh,
+and a powder burn streaked his neck, but he felt these hurts not at all.
+It was a nightmare from which there seemed no escape. He saw Blackbeard
+rush at him with a raucous shout of:
+
+"The scurvy young cockerel! He will ne'er crow again."
+
+Colonel Stuart sprang between them, blades clashed, and they were swept
+apart in another wave of jostling combat. A moment later the colonel
+slipped and fell as a coal-black negro chopped at him with a broken
+cutlass. Jack Cockrell flew at him and they wrestled until a hip-lock
+threw the negro to the deck, where the colonel made him one pirate less.
+
+Formidable as these outlaws were, they lacked the stern cohesion which
+had been drilled into the sailors of the Royal Navy and likewise learned
+in the hard school of the merchant service. Very slowly the odds were
+shifting against Blackbeard's crew. It was unmistakable when Lieutenant
+Maynard cut his way through to join Colonel Stuart, while the third
+group of boarders was advancing little by little from the after quarter.
+This meant that the force was gradually uniting in spite of the furious
+efforts to scatter it.
+
+And now there came an episode which lives in history two centuries after
+that scene of carnage on the decks of the stranded brig. It has
+preserved the name of a humble lieutenant of the Royal Navy and saved it
+from the oblivion which is the common lot of most brave men who do and
+dare when duty beckons.
+
+Blackbeard was bleeding from a dozen wounds and yet his activity was
+unabated. He was like a grizzly bear at bay. His men began to believe
+that his league with Satan, of which he obscenely boasted, had made him
+invulnerable. He was all that he had proclaimed himself to be, the
+wickedest and most fearsome pirate of the Western Ocean. And all the
+while, the slender, boyish Lieutenant Maynard, sailor and gentleman, had
+one aim in mind, and that was to slay Captain Edward Teach with his own
+hand. Nor was he at all content until he had cleared a path to where the
+hairy pirate was playing havoc with his broadsword.
+
+With a loud laugh in mockery, Blackbeard snatched a loaded pistol from
+one of his men and fired at this foppish young officer who presumed to
+single him out. The ball chipped Maynard's ear and he dodged the pistol
+which was hurled at his head. It was curious to note a lull in the
+general engagement, a little interval of suspense while men regained
+their breath or tried to staunch their wounds. They were unconsciously
+awaiting the verdict of this duel between their leaders. Jack Cockrell,
+for instance, finding himself alone by some chance, leaned against a
+stanchion and heard his own blood drip--drip--on the deck.
+
+It was a fleeting respite. Blackbeard swung his sword, with the might of
+those wide shoulders behind it. The lieutenant stepped aside like
+lightning and the bright weapon whistled past his arm. Then they went at
+each other like blacksmiths, sparks flying as steel bit steel. Dexterity
+and a cool wit were a match for the pirate's untamable strength. Gory,
+snarling, Blackbeard shortened his stroke to use the point. The
+lieutenant dropped to one knee, thrust upward, and found a vital spot.
+
+Blackbeard stood staring at him with wonder in his eyes. Then those
+thick, bowed legs gave way and he toppled like a tree uprooted. He
+passed out quietly enough, with no more cursing, and in this last moment
+of sensibility his thoughts appeared to wander far to his youth as a
+brisk merchant seaman out of Bristol port, for he was heard to mutter,
+with a long sigh:
+
+"A pretty babe as ever was, Mollie, and the mortal image of its mother."
+
+To his waist the sable beard covered him like a pall and one corded arm
+was flung across his breast and it showed the design of the skull and
+cross-bones pricked in India ink. Then as if the dead leader had issued
+the command, the surviving pirates began to fling down their weapons and
+loudly cry for quarter. They need not have felt ashamed of the
+resistance they had made up to this time, but now the delirium of combat
+had slackened and Blackbeard was no more. One or two of his officers
+were alive and they knew that the game was lost. Reinforcements could be
+sent from the sloops and the brigantine as soon as they were signaled
+for. And there was no flight from a stranded ship. Blackbeard had been
+able to infuse them with his own madness. Better chance the gallows than
+no quarter.
+
+Here and there a few of the most desperate dogs of the Spanish Main who
+had followed Blackbeard's fortunes a long time, refused to surrender but
+they were either shot down or overpowered. Captain Wellsby was sending
+off two boats from the _King George_ with his surgeon, and the sloops
+were kedging in closer to the cay with the rising tide. Half the seamen
+were beyond aid and of the pirates no more than twenty were alive. Jack
+Cockrell was thankful to have come off so lightly, and he consoled
+himself with the notion that a scar across his cheek would be a manly
+memento. Colonel Stuart had been several times wounded but 'tis hard
+killing a Highlander.
+
+It was Lieutenant Maynard's duty to offer public proof that he had slain
+none other than the infamous Blackbeard, wherefore he made no protest
+when his armorer hacked off the head of the dead pirate. There was no
+feeling of chivalry due a fallen foe, valiant though his end had been.
+This horrid trophy was tied at the end of a sloop's bowsprit, to be
+displayed for the gratification of all honest sailormen who might behold
+it in port. It was not a gentle age on blue water and Captain Edward
+Teach had been the death of many helpless people during his wicked
+career.
+
+Lieutenant Maynard announced that he would take the two sloops into Bath
+Town, before proceeding to Virginia, as they were overcrowded vessels
+and the survivors of the boarding party needed proper care ashore. It
+would also afford the unscrupulous Governor Eden of North Carolina an
+opportunity to see his friend, Captain Teach, as a pirate who would
+divide no more plundered merchandise with him.
+
+The brigantine _King George_ was ready to escort them into Pamlico
+Sound, after which she would sail for Charles Town. Before the
+departure from the entrance of Cherokee Inlet, the stranded vessel was
+set afire and blazed grandly as the funeral pyre of Blackbeard's stout
+lads who would go no more a-roving.
+
+Never was a nurse more devoted than Joe Hawkridge when his comrade was
+mercifully restored to him. Jack was woefully pale and weak but in
+blithe spirits and thankful to have seen the last of Blackbeard.
+
+"Hulled in the leg and a damaged figger-head," said Joe, as he sat on
+the edge of the hero's bunk. "Triflin', I call it, when I expected to
+see you come aboard feet first wrapped in a bit o' canvas."
+
+"I don't want to talk about it, Joe. Let's find something pleasant. Ho
+for Charles Town, and the green trees and a bench in the shade."
+
+"And a tidy little vessel after a while, you and me and the Councilor
+a-pleasurin' up the coast with men and gear to fish up the treasure
+chest."
+
+"And you believe that Blackbeard never got back to the Inlet to save the
+treasure for himself?" asked Jack.
+
+"Not the way his ship was headed when she struck the shoal."
+
+The brigantine was well on her way to Charles Town when Captain Wellsby
+found that Master Cockrell could be carried into the comfortable main
+cabin to rest on a cushioned settle for an hour or two at a time. It was
+during one of these visits, when Joe Hawkridge was present, that the
+skipper remembered to say:
+
+"Here is a bit of memorandum which may entertain you lads. Lieutenant
+Maynard had Blackbeard's quarters searched before the brig was burned.
+Some valuable stuff was found, but nothing what you'd call a pirate's
+treasure."
+
+The lads looked at each other but kept their own counsel and Captain
+Wellsby went on to explain:
+
+"There was a private log, Blackbeard's own journal, with a few entries
+in it, and most of the leaves torn out. I made a copy of what could be
+read, for the late Captain Teach was a better pirate than scrivener.
+Here, Jack, you are the scholar."
+
+Jack read aloud this extract, which was about what might have been
+expected:
+
+"_Such a day! Rum all out,--our company somewhat sober. A confusion
+amongst us,--rogues a-plotting--great talk of separation. So I looked
+sharp for a prize. Took one, with a great deal of liquor on board, so
+kept the company hot, very hot. Then all things went well again._"
+
+"That sounds familiar enough to me," was Joe Hawkridge's comment. "And
+the rest of his writing will be much like it."
+
+"Not so fast," exclaimed Captain Wellsby. "Scan the next page, Jack.
+'Twill fetch you up all standing. Not that it puts gold in our pockets,
+for we know not where to search, but I swear it will make your eyes
+sparkle and your mouth water."
+
+Trying to hide his excitement, Jack saw a kind of rough inventory, and
+it ran like this:
+
+ "Where I Hid Itt This Cruse:
+
+ 1 Bag 54 Silver Barrs. 1 Bag 79 Barrs & Peaces of
+ Silver.
+
+ 1 Bag Coyned Gold. 1 Bag Dust Gold. 2 Bags Gold
+ Barrs.
+
+ 1 Bag Silver Rings & Sundry Precious Stones. 3
+ Bags Unpolyshed Stones.
+
+ 1 Silver Box set with Diamonds. 4 Golden Lockets.
+
+ Also 1 Silver Porringer--2 Gold Boxons--7 Green
+ Stones--Rubies Great & Small 67--P'cl Peaces of
+ Eight & Dollars--Also 1 Bag Lump Silver--a Small
+ Chaine--a corral Necklace--1 Bag English Crowns."
+
+Captain Jonathan Wellsby listened to this luscious recital with an air
+of mild amusement. He was of a temper too stolid and sensible to waste
+his time on random treasure hunting. Blackbeard might have chosen his
+hiding-place anywhere along hundreds of leagues of coast. He could
+understand the agitation of these two adventurous lads to whom this
+memorandum was like a magic spell. Of such was the spirit of youth.
+
+"Any more of it?" demanded Joe Hawkridge.
+
+"The next page was ripped out of the journal," answered the skipper.
+"What cruise did he mean? If it was this last one, he may have hid it on
+the Virginia or Carolina coast."
+
+Master Cockrell gave it as an excuse that he had sat up long enough and
+would return to his bunk. He was fairly bursting for a conference with
+Joe, and as soon as they were alone he exclaimed:
+
+"It may be the sea-chest! What do you think?"
+
+"A handsome clue, I call it, something to warm the cockles of your
+heart," grinned the sea urchin. "Aye, Jack, I should wager he wrote that
+down whilst he lay at anchor in Cherokee Inlet."
+
+"It seems shabby of us to keep the secret from Captain Wellsby, but
+there is an obligation on us----"
+
+"To Bill Saxby and the old sea wolf," said Joe. "We'll not forget this
+trump of a skipper when it comes to splittin' up the treasure."
+
+"I am anxious for Captain Bonnet and his crew," remarked Jack. "With
+this crusade against pirates afoot, our friends may be hanged before we
+see them again."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+THE OLD BUCCANEER IS LOYAL
+
+
+SORROW mingled with rejoicing when the _King George_ brigantine sailed
+into Charles Town harbor. The sea fight off Cherokee Inlet had taken a
+heavy toll of brave seamen and there were vacant chairs and aching
+hearts ashore, but the fiendish Blackbeard had been blotted out and
+would no more harry the coast. Small and rude as was this pioneer
+settlement, it was most fair and attractive to the eyes of young Master
+Cockrell and Joe Hawkridge. In the house of Uncle Peter Forbes they
+rested at their ease and planned sedate careers for themselves.
+
+Even the treasure ceased to be uppermost in their lively discussions. It
+could wait a while. They were no longer under the spell of its
+influence. This different world in which they now dwelt so contentedly
+made their adventures seem like shadowy figments with precious little
+romance in them. And neither lad expressed any great anxiety to go
+exploring the noisome Cherokee swamp and to challenge the ghost of
+Blackbeard.
+
+Without a sign of rebellion, Jack returned to his books and lessons in
+Parson Throckmorton's garden. The learning already acquired he began to
+pass on to Joe Hawkridge, who was a zealous pupil and determined to
+read and write and cipher without letting the grass grow under his feet.
+It was this young pirate's ambition to make a shipping merchant of
+himself, and Councilor Forbes found him employment in a warehouse where
+the planters traded their rice, resin, and indigo for the varied
+merchandise brought out from England. Jack aspired to manage his uncle's
+plantation and to acquire lands of his own and some day to sit in the
+Governor's Council.
+
+Of a Sunday morning he went to the little English church, dressed in his
+best and using a cane, for he limped from the wound in his thigh. Joe
+Hawkridge walked with him, careful to banish his grin, and sat in the
+Councilor's pew where he paid proper attention to the prayers and
+responses. This caused some gossip but the ocean waif was winning his
+way to favor by dint of industry, a shrewd wit, and his perennial good
+humor.
+
+Frequently they escorted fair Dorothy Stuart home from church. She was
+fonder than ever of stalwart Master Cockrell because the colonel had
+told her he would have been a dead man had not the lad intervened to
+save him from the stroke of a negro pirate. Alas, however, it was not
+that sentimental devotion for which the lovelorn Jack yearned, and he
+confided to Joe that his existence was blighted. This evoked no sympathy
+from the fickle Hawkridge, who was forgetting his black-eyed lass in the
+Azores and was already a slave to Dorothy Stuart. She laughed at them
+both and was their true friend, tender, and whimsical and anxious for
+their welfare. It was a valuable chapter in their education.
+
+One morning while Joe was at work in the warehouse near the harbor, he
+heard a commotion in the street and was about to run out when his
+employer came in and explained:
+
+"Two pirates captured,--just as I happened to pass. The knaves landed
+from a boat in broad daylight, unaware that Charles Town has mended its
+loose habit toward such gentry."
+
+"What will be done with 'em?" quickly asked Joe, with an unhappy
+premonition.
+
+"They were recognized as two of Stede Bonnet's old hands that used to
+resort to the tavern. Soldiers of the Governor's guard have been sent
+for to drag them to the gaol."
+
+Joe hastened out but slackened his pace to lag behind the crowd of
+idlers who were jostling the prisoners along with hoots and jeers. Yes,
+there was the tall, gaunt frame and gray head of old Trimble Rogers
+whose mien was so forbidding and masterful that the mob forbore to
+handle him too roughly, unarmed though he was. At his elbow trudged
+chubby Bill Saxby, gazing about him with those wide blue eyes in which
+was not a trace of guile. Joe realized that for him to intercede would
+make matters worse. He was a reformed pirate on probation and was known
+to have sailed with Blackbeard himself.
+
+Therefore he darted into another street and sped to find Jack Cockrell,
+who chanced to be at home. They rushed into the room where Uncle Peter
+Forbes was writing at his desk and informed him that their two staunch
+comrades had come ashore to find them and were already in custody and
+something must be done to save them from the wrath of Governor Johnson,
+who had a mortal distaste for pirates still at large. The Councilor
+calmed the perturbation by assuring them:
+
+"I have already spoken to His Excellency in behalf of these two men
+should they appear in this port. He was not wholly pleased but promised
+clemency should they offer to repent and if I gave surety for the
+pledge."
+
+"They will be ready to live as respectable as Joe," impetuously declared
+Master Cockrell. "I'll go bail on it. Bill Saxby is a tradesman by
+nature and if you will lend him enough money to set himself up as a
+linen-draper and haberdasher, Uncle Peter, he can live happily ever
+after."
+
+"And old Trimble Rogers has sailed his last cruise under the Jolly
+Roger, Councilor," put in Joe Hawkridge. "His timbers are full o' dry
+rot and he seeks a safe mooring."
+
+"There seems no end to the bad company you drag me into," quoth Uncle
+Peter. "My hat and broadcloth cloak, Jack, and let us fare to the gaol
+and see what these awkward visitors have to say. After that I will
+attend upon the Governor."
+
+In better spirits the anxious lads followed the dignified Secretary of
+the Council to the strongly built gaol on the edge of the town. In a
+very gloomy cell behind iron bars they found the luckless brace of
+pirates, shackled hand and foot. Bill Saxby took it like a placid
+philosopher but the ancient buccaneer was spitting Spanish oaths and
+condemning the hospitality of Charles Town in violent terms. He quieted
+instantly at sight of his young friends and the harsh, wrinkled visage
+fairly beamed as he shouted:
+
+"Our _camaradas_, Bill. Here they be, to haul us out of this filthy
+hole! I forgive the unmannerly folks that allus used to welcome us."
+
+They shook hands through the bars while Uncle Peter stood aside. He felt
+that his official station forbade his joining this fraternal reunion. In
+the narrow corridor he chatted with the gaoler to pass the time while
+Bill Saxby was explaining to the lads:
+
+"We was in duty bound, in a manner of speakin', to run you down as soon
+as possible and make a report. Eh, Trimble?"
+
+"Aye, Bill, to see what was to be done about the treasure. We wouldn't
+have 'em think we had run off with it. D'ye see, Master Cockrell, me and
+Bill took Cap'n Bonnet into our confidence. He is an honorable man and
+to be mentioned along with the great Cap'n Ed'ard Davis what I was
+shipmates with in the South Sea and at the sack of----"
+
+"Stow it, grandsire," cried Bill. "I don't want to linger in gaol while
+you spin that long-winded yarn. Tell the lads what they want to know."
+
+"If I weren't chained to the wall, Bill, I'd put my fist in your eye,"
+severely retorted the veteran. "As I was a-sayin', Cap'n Bonnet was all
+courtesy and allowed the treasure belonged to us and he was ready to
+help find it."
+
+"We told him we had to join up with our gentleman partner, Master
+Cockrell, and win his consent," said Bill, "afore we put our hooks on
+that blessed sea-chest."
+
+"Which is exactly how I felt about you," Jack told them and he was
+greatly touched by this proof of their unbending fidelity. "But how did
+you manage it to reach Charles Town?"
+
+"Cap'n Bonnet hove to outside the bar last night," explained Trimble
+Rogers, "and gave us a handy boat to sail in with."
+
+The wary Joe Hawkridge took alarm at this and put a finger to his lips.
+It was unwise to parade the fact that Stede Bonnet cruised so near. His
+Excellency, the Governor, was anxious that he should share the fate of
+Blackbeard. Jack Cockrell had no fear that his Uncle Peter would be a
+tale-bearer. His private honor would forbid because this interview with
+the two lads was a privileged communication. What made Jack a trifle
+anxious was the presence of the gaol keeper in the corridor. He was a
+sneaking sort of man, soft of tread and oily of speech and inclined to
+curry favor with those in authority.
+
+Councilor Peter Forbes had tactfully withdrawn this person beyond
+earshot but he began to edge toward the cell. Old Trimble Rogers tried
+to heed Joe's cautionary signal but what he meant to be a whisper was a
+hoarse rumble as he explained:
+
+"Cap'n Bonnet sends word he will be off this coast again in thirty days.
+He will come ashore hisself, to Sullivan's Island to get the answer,
+whether you are to go with us, Master Cockrell, to Cherokee Inlet."
+
+Jack glanced at the gaol keeper but he was a dozen feet away and deep in
+talk with Mr. Forbes. There was no sign that this confidence had been
+overheard. Bill Saxby scolded the buccaneer for his careless speech but
+the old man had been a freebooter too long to be easily tamed. With
+artful design, Jack led him away from this dangerous ground and
+suggested:
+
+"You are done with pirating? And will you both be ready to stay ashore
+in Charles Town after this,--this certain errand is accomplished?"
+
+"I swear it gladly and on my own Bible," answered Trimble Rogers.
+
+"Swear it for me," said Bill Saxby.
+
+Mr. Forbes interrupted and told the lads to go home and await his
+conference with Governor Johnson. It proved to be a session somewhat
+stormy but the upshot was a pardon conditioned on good behavior. The
+convincing argument was that these men had been faithful to Master
+Cockrell through thick and thin and had saved him from perishing in the
+Cherokee swamp. Moreover, it might be an inducement to others of Stede
+Bonnet's crew to surrender themselves and forsake their evil ways.
+
+No sooner were these two pirates released from gaol than they found an
+active friend in Mr. Peter Forbes. He went about it quietly, for obvious
+reasons, but he felt under great obligation to them for their goodness
+to his nephew. Just at this time one of the shop-keepers became a
+bankrupt because of unthrifty habits and too much card-playing. Through
+an agent, Peter Forbes purchased the stock of muslins and calicos, of
+brocades and taffetas, calash bonnets, satin petticoats, shoe-buckles,
+laces, and buttons. And having given his promissory notes for said
+merchandise, Bill Saxby proudly hung his own sign-board over the door.
+
+There was a flutter among the ladies. Here was a noteworthy sensation,
+to be served by an obsequious pirate with innocent blue eyes who had
+sailed the Spanish Main. A few days and it was evident that William
+Saxby, late of London, would conduct a thriving trade. He was fairly
+enraptured with his good fortune and congenial occupation and took it
+most amiably when Jack Cockrell or Joe Hawkridge sauntered in to tease
+him. He was a disgrace to Stede Bonnet, said they, and never had a
+pirate fallen to such a low estate as this.
+
+Trimble Rogers was in no situation to rant at smug William, the linen
+draper. The old sea wolf who had outlived the most glorious era of the
+storied buccaneers, had a few gold pieces tucked away in his belt and at
+first he was content to loaf about the tavern, with an audience to
+listen to his wondrous tales which ranged from Henry Morgan to the great
+Captain Edward Davis. But he had never been a sot or an idler and soon
+he found himself lending a hand to assist the landlord in this way or
+that. And when disorder occurred, a word from this gray, hawk-eyed rover
+was enough to quell the wildest roisterers from the plantations.
+
+Children strayed to the tavern green to sit upon his knee and twist
+those fierce mustachios of his, and their mothers ceased to snatch them
+away when they learned to know him better. Sometimes in his leisure
+hours he pored over his tattered little Bible with muttering lips and
+found pleasure in the Psalmist's denunciation of his enemies who were
+undoubtedly Spaniards in some other guise. He puttered about the flower
+beds with spade and rake and kept the bowling green clipped close with a
+keen sickle. In short, there was a niche for Trimble Rogers in his old
+age and he seemed well satisfied to fill it, just as Admiral Benbow
+spent his time among his posies at Deptford when he was not bombarding
+or blockading the French fleet off Dunkirk.
+
+Jack Cockrell halted for a chat while passing the tavern and these two
+shipmates retired to a quiet corner of the porch. The blind fiddler was
+plying a lively bow and a dozen boys and girls danced on the turf.
+Trimble Rogers surveyed them with a fatherly aspect as he said:
+
+"They ain't afeard of me, Jack, not one of 'em. Was ever a worn out old
+hulk laid up in a fairer berth?"
+
+"None of the sea fever left, Trimble? What about Captain Bonnet? He is
+due off the bar two days hence. My uncle frowns upon my sailing with him
+to seek the treasure. He insists that I steer clear of pirates."
+
+"And that's entirely proper, Jack. I look at things different like, now
+I be a worthy citizen. 'Tis better to fit out a little expedition of our
+own, if we can drag silly Bill out of his rubbishy shop."
+
+"Oh, he will come fast enough after a while. We are all tired of the sea
+just now," said Jack. "What about Captain Bonnet and meeting him at
+Sullivan's Island to pass the word that we must decline his courteous
+invitation?"
+
+"I shall tend to that," answered the retired buccaneer, "And from what
+gossip I glean in the tavern, Cap'n Bonnet had best steer for his home
+port of Barbadoes and quit his fancy piratin'. This fractious Governor
+has set his heart on hangin' him. And Colonel Stuart is up and about
+again and has ordered the _King George_ to fit for sea. 'Tis rumored he
+has sent messages to the north'ard for Lieutenant Maynard to sail
+another cruise in his company."
+
+"Then be sure you warn Stede Bonnet," strongly advised Jack. "I would
+not be disloyal to the Province or to mine own good uncle, but one good
+turn deserves another."
+
+Two days after this, Trimble Rogers vanished from the tavern and found
+Jack's canoe tied in a cove beyond the settled part of the town. It was
+in the evening of this same day that Jack was reading in his room by
+candle-light when a tap-tap on the window shutter startled him. He threw
+it open and dimly perceived that Dorothy Stuart stood there. Her face
+was white in the gloom and she wore a dress of some dark stuff. At her
+beckoning gesture, Jack slipped through the window and silently led her
+into the lane.
+
+"Oh, Jack, I have been so torn betwixt scruples," she softly confided.
+"And I hope I am not doing wrong. If I am disloyal to my dear father,
+may I be forgiven. But I have made myself believe that there is a
+stronger obligation."
+
+"It concerns Stede Bonnet," murmured Jack, reading the motive of this
+secret errand.
+
+"Yes, you are bound to befriend him, Jack, on your honor as a
+gentleman."
+
+"He has been warned to keep clear of Charles Town, Dorothy. Trimble
+Rogers has gone off to meet him."
+
+"But it is worse than that. The keeper of the gaol, Jason Cutter, was
+closeted with my father this morning. I heard something that was said.
+Soldiers have been sent to Sullivan's Island."
+
+"To capture Captain Bonnet?" wrathfully exclaimed Jack. "Did Colonel
+Stuart go with them? Does he know why Stede Bonnet risks putting into
+this harbor in a small boat? It is to do a deed of pure friendship and
+chivalry."
+
+"All my father understands is what the gaoler reported," replied
+Dorothy, "and the Governor acted on this evidence. No, he did not go
+with the troops but sent a major in command."
+
+"Too late for me to be of service, alas! If they take Captain Bonnet
+alive, he will most certainly hang. And Bill Saxby and Trimble Rogers
+will be embroiled in some desperate attempt to aid his escape from
+gaol."
+
+"I am a dreadful, wicked girl to be thus in league with pirates," sighed
+Mistress Dorothy, "but I confess to you, Jack dear, that it would grieve
+my heart to see this charming pirate wear a hempen halter."
+
+"My rival, is he? So I have found you out," flared Jack, pretending vast
+indignation. "Nevertheless, I shall still be true to him."
+
+"And to me, I trust," she fondly replied. "Oh, I feel so thankful that
+faithful Trimble Rogers is keeping tryst. He will hear the soldiers
+blundering about in time to make Captain Bonnet take heed and shove
+off."
+
+Jack walked home with her, very glad of the excuse, but with jealousy
+rankling in his bosom. It was not a lasting malady, however, and he had
+forgotten it next morning when he went early to the tavern to look for
+Trimble Rogers. There he found the major of the detachment at breakfast
+with an extraordinary story to tell. He had made a landing on Sullivan's
+Island after dark and deployed some of his men to patrol the beach that
+faced the ocean. The squad which remained with him had surprised a man
+lurking amongst the trees. Pursued and fired at, he had led them an
+infernal chase until they burst out upon the open beach. There they
+heard the sound of oars and voices in a boat which was making in for the
+shore. The hunted man raised his voice in one stentorian shout of:
+
+"Pull out to sea, Cap'n Bonnet. And 'ware this coast. The soldiers are
+on my heels. Old Trimble Rogers sends a fare-ye-well."
+
+The boat was wrenched about in a trice and moved away from the island,
+soon disappearing in the direction of the bar. The major's men had shot
+at it but without effect. When they had rushed to capture the fugitive
+who had shouted the warning, they found him prone upon the sand. There
+was not a scratch on him and yet he was quite dead. The prodigious
+exertion had broken his heart, ventured the major, and it had ceased to
+beat. His body would be prepared for Christian burial because of the
+esteem in which he was already held by many of the townspeople.
+
+To Jack Cockrell and Joe Hawkridge it was sad news indeed but
+tender-hearted Bill Saxby mourned like one who had lost a parent. He
+closed the shop for a day and hung black ribbons on the knob. They
+agreed that the end had come for Trimble Rogers as he would have wished
+it, giving his life in loyal service to a friend and master. And perhaps
+it was better thus than for the creeping disabilities of old age to
+overtake him.
+
+"He knew he was liable to pop off," said Bill, "with the rheumatism
+getting closer to his heart all the time. And he told me, did Trimble,
+that his share of the treasure was to go to the poor and needy of the
+town. Orphans and such was Trimble's weakness."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+THE QUEST FOR PIRATES' GOLD
+
+
+A SMALL sloop was making its leisurely way up the Carolina coast with a
+crew of a dozen men all told. The skipper was Captain Jonathan Wellsby
+who was taking this holiday cruise before sailing for England to command
+a fine new ship in the colonial trade. In the cabin were Jack Cockrell
+and Joe Hawkridge, Councilor Peter Arbuthnot Forbes, and that brisk
+young linen draper William Saxby. In the forecastle were trusty seamen
+who had sailed in the _Plymouth Adventure_. The sloop's destination was
+Cherokee Inlet and she was equipped with tackle and gear for a peculiar
+kind of fishing.
+
+For once they made a voyage without fear of pirates. Safely the sloop
+passed in by the outlying cay where the charred bones of Blackbeard's
+brig were washed by the surf. An anchorage was found in the bight where
+the _Revenge_ had tarried, close by the beach and the greensward of the
+pirates' old camp. After diligent preparation all hands manned a boat
+which pulled into the mouth of the sluggish creek. With axes to clear
+the entanglements and men enough to shove over the muddy shoals the
+boat was slowly forced up-stream and then into the smaller creek at the
+fork of the waters.
+
+Uncle Peter Forbes was as gay as a truant schoolboy. This was the lark
+of a lifetime. The two lads, however, were uneasy and depressed. To them
+this sombre region was haunted, if not by ghosts then by memories as
+unhappy. They would not have been surprised to see Blackbeard skulking
+in the tall grass, his head bound in red calico, his pistols cocked to
+ambush them. And, alas, old Trimble Rogers was not along to protect them
+with his musket. He had lived and dreamed in expectation of this quest.
+
+"We'll find no treasure, nary a penny of it," dolefully observed Joe
+Hawkridge who had actually begun to shiver.
+
+"Of course we can find the sea-chest, you ninny," scolded Jack.
+
+"Dead or alive, Cap'n Ed'ard Teach flew away with it afore now," was
+Joe's rejoinder. "He was a master one at black magic."
+
+"Don't chatter like an idiot," spoke up Uncle Peter who was wildly
+brushing the mosquitoes from a sun-blistered nose. "My faith, I cannot
+understand how you lads got out of this swamp alive. It breeds all the
+plagues of Egypt."
+
+They came to the tiny lagoon and rounded the bend beyond which the
+pirogue had capsized Blackbeard's cock-boat. There was nothing to
+indicate that any human being had visited this lonely spot since that
+sensational encounter. No trees had been cut down to serve as purchases
+for lifting the sea-chest from its oozy hiding-place. It was agreed that
+some traces would have remained if Blackbeard had been at work here
+before his death.
+
+A camp was made upon the higher ground of the knoll and the party went
+about its task with skill and deliberation. Jointed sounding rods of
+iron were screwed together and the exact position of the spot determined
+from Jack Cockrell's chart and description. But neither he nor Joe
+Hawkridge could be coaxed into lending more active assistance. They were
+afraid of disturbing the bones of the drowned seaman who had fled from
+Blackbeard's bloody dirk. Jack had seen him go down and it was not a
+pleasant recollection. And so these two heroes who had faced so many
+other perils without flinching were content to putter about
+half-heartedly and let the others exert themselves.
+
+All one day they prodded and sounded but struck only sunken logs. What
+gave them more concern than this was the discovery that the slender
+rods, sharpened to a point, could be driven through one yielding stratum
+after another of muck and ooze. Through myriad years the decaying
+vegetable matter of this rank swamp had been accumulating in these
+layers of muck. There was no telling how deep down the weight of the
+sea-chest might have caused it to settle.
+
+Mr. Peter Forbes began to lose his youthful optimism and took four men
+to go and dig in the knoll while the others continued to search for the
+chest. The wooden cross still stood above the grave of Jesse Strawn and
+the long-leaf pines murmured his requiem. Having selected at random a
+place where he thought treasure ought to be, the worthy Councilor
+wielded a shovel until he perspired rivers.
+
+"Confound it, Blackbeard must have left a scrap of paper somewhere to
+give us the proper instructions," he complained. "'Tis the custom of all
+proper pirates. Look at the trouble he has put us to."
+
+"I helped search the cabin afore the brig was set afire," replied one of
+the seamen, "and all the writin' we found was in the bit of a book with
+the leaves tore out, same as Cap'n Wellsby made a fair copy of."
+
+"That explains it," cried Uncle Peter. "I have no doubt the vile
+Blackbeard destroyed his private note of where he hid it, just to make
+the matter more difficult for us honest men."
+
+This was plausible, but it failed to solve the riddle. A day or two of
+impatient digging and the portly Secretary of the Council was almost
+wrecked in mind and body, what with insects and heat, ague and fatigue.
+The ardor of his companions had likewise slackened. The boat's crew
+swore that the condemned sea-chest must have sunk all the way to China.
+Joe Hawkridge still argued that Blackbeard had whisked it away in a
+cloud of smoke and brimstone. The unhappy Mr. Peter Forbes suggested:
+
+"What say you, lads, to dropping down to the sloop for a respite from
+this accursed swamp? There we can take comfort and discuss what is to be
+done next."
+
+Captain Jonathan Wellsby, who was a stubborn man, urged that they fish
+once more for the sunken chest before taking a rest, and this was agreed
+to. The sounding rods were plied with vigor and, at length, one of them
+drove against some solid object deep in the mud. It was more unyielding
+than a water-soaked log. The iron rod was lifted and rammed down with a
+thud which was like metal striking against metal. The explorers forgot
+the torments of the swamp. Uncle Peter Forbes was in no haste to flee
+the mosquitoes and the fever.
+
+The sailors began to rig the spars and tackle as a derrick set up on the
+bank of the creek, with grapple hooks like huge tongs to swing out over
+the water and grope in the muddy depths. Absorbed in this fascinating
+task, they were startled beyond measure to hear the _thump, thump_ of
+thole-pins sounding from somewhere below them in the swamp. It was no
+Indian pirogue. Only a ship's boat heavily manned could make that
+cadenced noise of oars. Bill Saxby bade the men be silent while he held
+a hand at his ear and harkened with taut attention. The mysterious boat,
+following the winding channel of the creek, was drawing nearer. Voices
+could be heard, a rough command, a curse, a laugh.
+
+"No honest men, I warrant," growled Captain Jonathan Wellsby, ready to
+take command by virtue of long habit. "Who else can they be but pirates,
+plague 'em. And they are betwixt us and the sea. All hands ashore and
+look to your arms. Lively now."
+
+They were bewildered and taken all aback. In this holiday excursion
+after Blackbeard's treasure the party had reckoned only with dead or
+phantom pirates. There was some confusion, while Bill Saxby bawled at
+the seamen as addle-pated lubbers. Deserting their boat, they scrambled
+to cover in the tall grass while those busy with the derrick gear rushed
+to catch up muskets and powder-horns.
+
+The strange boat was steadily forging up-stream and presently it was
+disclosed to view no more than a cable-length away. It was a pinnace
+filled with ruffianly fellows, more than a score of them. No merchant
+seamen these but brethren of the coast, freebooters who were
+gallows-ripe. Bill Saxby was quick to recognize two or three of them as
+old hands of Blackbeard's crew who must have deserted their leader in
+time to escape his fate. Presumably they had recruited others of their
+own stamp to go adventuring in the Cherokee swamp. They could have only
+one purpose. The very sight of them was enough to explain it. They were
+in quest of treasure like bloodhounds trailing a scent.
+
+Against such a force as this, discretion was the better part of valor. A
+ferocious yell burst from the pinnace and a flight of musket balls
+whistled over the heads of the fugitives who had so hastily abandoned
+their operations with the derrick and gear and the boat. Stout Bill
+Saxby and his comrades, finding concealment in the swamp, primed their
+muskets and let fly a volley at the pinnace which was an easy target. A
+pirate standing in the stern-sheets clapped a hand to his thigh and sat
+down abruptly. Another one let go his oar to dangle a bloody hand.
+
+The pinnace drifted with the tide and stranded on a weedy shoal while
+the blue powder smoke hung over it like a fog. For the moment it was a
+demoralized crew of pirates, roaring all manner of threats but at a loss
+how to proceed. The other party took advantage of this delay to beat a
+rapid retreat along the path which led to the knoll where the camp was
+pitched. Upon this higher ground they might hope to defend themselves
+against a force which outnumbered them. They ran at top speed, bending
+low, hidden from observation, avoiding the pools and bogs.
+
+The pirates were diverted from their hostile intentions as soon as they
+caught sight of the tall spars and tackle, and the boat with its
+sounding rods and other gear. With a great clamor they swarmed out of
+the pinnace and began to investigate. This gave the refugees on the
+knoll a little time to make their camp more compact, to wield the
+shovels furiously and throw up intrenchments, to cut down trees for a
+barricade, to fill the water kegs, to prepare to withstand an assault or
+a siege.
+
+The sun went down and the infatuated pirates were still exploring the
+creek, convinced that they could straightway lay hold of the treasure
+they had come to find. They kindled a fire on the bank and evidently
+intended to pass the night there. This mightily eased the minds of the
+toilers upon the knoll. Their predicament was still awkward in the
+extreme but the fear of sudden death had been lifted. And it seemed
+possible that these bothersome pirates might conclude to leave them
+alone.
+
+It went sorely against the grain, however, to be driven away from the
+precious sea-chest when it was almost within their grasp, to have to
+scuttle from this crew of scurvy pirates. Jack Cockrell was for making a
+sortie by night, gustily declaiming to his companions:
+
+"The sentries will be drunk or drowsy. I know these swine. A well-timed
+rush and we can cut 'em down and pistol the rest. Didn't they open fire
+on us from the pinnace?"
+
+"Aye, Jack, and we'll fight to save our skins," said the cool-headed
+Captain Wellsby, "but 'tis a desperate business to attack yon
+cut-throats, even by night, and there will be men of us hurt and killed.
+Blackbeard's gold is not worth it."
+
+"Right sensibly put," declared Mr. Peter Forbes. "We had best spend this
+night in felling more trees and notching logs to pile them breast high.
+If these pirates find the sea-chest, they will leave us unmolested. If
+they fail to find it, they may conclude that we have already discovered
+the treasure. In that event, they will storm the knoll and give us no
+quarter."
+
+"It would be rank folly to surrender," said stout Bill Saxby. "There be
+men in the pinnace who have no love for me nor for the two lads. 'Twas a
+shrewd suspicion of theirs that Blackbeard had played secret tricks in
+this Cherokee swamp, what with his excursions in that little cock-boat."
+
+Keeping vigilant watch, they labored far into the night until the camp
+on the knoll was a hard nut to crack, with its surrounding ditch and
+palisade of logs behind which a man could lie and shoot. Now and then it
+might have been noted that Jack Cockrell and Joe Hawkridge conferred
+with their heads together as though something private were in the wind.
+As soon as they were relieved from duty, some time before the dawn, they
+stole very softly away from the knoll and groped along the path which
+led to the creek. Curiosity and the impetuous folly of youth impelled
+them to reconnoitre the pirates' bivouac.
+
+"We may hear something worth listening to," whispered Jack, "and perhaps
+we can crawl close and steal some of their arms."
+
+"None of that," chided young Hawkridge. "I am a man of goodly station in
+Charles Town and I would go back with a whole hide."
+
+"You have grown too respectable," grumbled Jack. "Here is the chance for
+one last fling----"
+
+His words stuck in his throat. A gurgle of horrified amazement and he
+tumbled headlong into the grass with a bare, sinewy arm wrapped around
+his neck. He fought to free himself but the breath was fairly choked out
+of him. Joe Hawkridge was desperately thrashing about in the swamp,
+gasping and snorting, his cries also smothered. In a twinkling they were
+captives, their arms tightly bound behind them, the stifling grip of
+their necks unrelaxed. Weakened almost to suffocation, the two lads
+could make no lively resistance. Jack uttered one feeble shout for help
+but subsided when those strong fingers tightened the clutch on his
+windpipe.
+
+The assailants made no sound. Not a word was uttered. There were several
+of them, for the helpless prisoners were picked up bodily and lugged
+along by the head and the heels. They expected to be taken into the
+pirates' camp, believing they had been surprised and overpowered by an
+outlying sentry post. It was an old game, reflected Joe Hawkridge, to
+hold them alive as hostages. But he was vastly puzzled when these silent
+kidnappers, deftly picking their way in the darkness, took a direction
+which led them away from the bank of the creek. They had forsaken the
+trampled path and were proceeding through the trackless swamp whose
+pitfalls were avoided by a sort of sixth sense.
+
+A mile of this laborious, uncanny progress and the bearers dumped their
+burdens and paused to rest. The two lads dizzily crawled to their feet
+and peered at the shadowy figures surrounding them. They heard a
+guttural exclamation and words exchanged in a strange, harsh tongue.
+
+"Indians, blow me!" hoarsely whispered Joe, his throat sore and swollen.
+
+"Comrade ahoy!" croaked Jack. "No pirates these, but Yemassees. Do they
+save us for the torture?"
+
+"God knows. 'Tis a sorry mischance as ever was. I'd sooner meet up with
+Blackbeard's ghost. Are ye badly hurt?"
+
+"Like a man hanged by the neck, Joe, but no mortal wounds. Had we minded
+Uncle Peter we would be safe in the sloop by now. One more day of
+hunting that filthy treasure undid us."
+
+The half dozen Yemassees squatted about them, talking in low tones, and
+offered no further violence. Presumably they were waiting for daybreak,
+having conveyed their prisoners beyond all chance of rescue. The two
+lads shivered with fear and weariness. They were bruised and breathless
+and the thongs which tightly bound their wrists made their arms ache
+intolerably. Bitter was the regret at invading this baleful Cherokee
+swamp when they might have remained safe from all harm in pleasant
+Charles Town.
+
+Sadly they watched the eastern sky grow brighter while the gloom of the
+desolate swamp turned wan and gray. The Indian captors became visible,
+brown, half-naked men wearing leggings and breech-clouts of tanned
+deerskin. Two of them carried muskets. They were not made hideous by
+war-paint, as Jack Cockrell was quick to note. He said to his companion:
+
+"A hunting party, Joe. They were spying on our camp, like enough, or
+keeping watch of the pirates. No doubt they wonder why white men come to
+fight one another in the swamp."
+
+"They will wish to find out from us," was the hopeful reply. "They seem
+a deal more curious than bloodthirsty. A stout heart, say I, and we may
+weather it yet."
+
+Soon the lads were roughly prodded ahead and went stumbling and
+splashing through the marshy verdure and slippery ooze until they came
+to higher ground and easier walking. Upon this ridge they descried the
+camp of the Yemassees--huts fashioned of poles and bark and boughs, a
+freshly killed deer hanging from a tree, smoke rising from beneath a
+huge iron kettle, plump, naked children scampering in play with several
+barking dogs, the squaws shrilly scolding them. Several warriors lazily
+emerged from the huts, yawning, brushing the long black hair from their
+eyes.
+
+They moved more actively at perceiving the procession which approached
+from the swamp. Two or three ran back to the largest shelter and
+presently a big-bodied, middle-aged man strode out, his mien stern and
+dignified, his rank denoted by the elaborate fringed tunic of buckskin
+and the head-dress of heron plumes. He shouted something in a sonorous
+voice. The hunting party hastened forward, dragging the two English lads
+by the elbows and flinging them down at the feet of the chief. He stood
+with arms folded across his chest, scowling, formidable.
+
+Then he spoke a few words of broken English, to the astonishment of the
+captives. He mentioned the names of settlements on the Cape Fear River
+where, it was inferred, he had been on friendly terms with the
+colonists. His manner was not so much hostile as questioning. In Charles
+Town both Joe and Jack had learned the common phrases of the Indian
+tongue such as were used among the merchants and traders. Pieced out
+with signs and gestures, they were able to carry on a halting dialogue
+with the chief of this small band.
+
+They were able to comprehend that he hated pirates above all other men.
+He recognized the name of Blackbeard and indicated his great joy that
+this eminent scoundrel had met his just deserts. Many times the
+freebooters of the coast had hunted and slain the Indians for wanton
+sport. And perhaps the word had sped of that expedition of Captain Stede
+Bonnet out of Charles Town when he had exterminated the Yemassees who
+had set out to harry and burn the near-by plantations. The two uneasy
+lads felt that they still stood in the shadow of death unless they could
+persuade the chief that they were not pirates, that they were in no way
+to be confused with the crew of blackguards which had ascended the creek
+in the pinnace.
+
+The chief delayed his judgment. Two young men lifted the huge kettle
+from the fire. It was steaming with a savory smell of stewed meat. The
+captives were invited to join the others in spearing bits of venison
+with sharpened sticks. Chewing lustily, with a noble appetite, Joe
+Hawkridge confided:
+
+"My spirits rise, Jack. An empty belly always did make a coward of me.
+How now, my lusty cockerel? Shall we flap our wings and crow?"
+
+"Crow we must, or have our necks wrung as pirates," said Jack, gnawing a
+bone. "Which one of us shall make the first oration?"
+
+"The nephew of the Councilor, of course," cried Joe, "with his cargo of
+Greek and Latin education. Make a power of noise, Jack."
+
+And now indeed did young Master Cockrell prove that all those drudging
+hours with snuffy Parson Throckmorton had not been wasted. Standing in
+an open space, clear of the crowd, he addressed the chief in loud and
+impressive language. The gist of it was that he and his friends were the
+sworn foes of all pirates and especially anxious to rid the world of
+such vermin as those that had come into the Cherokee swamp in the great
+ship's boat and were encamped on the bank of the creek.
+
+This other peaceful party entrenched on the knoll were honest,
+law-abiding men of Charles Town who would harm no one. They had come in
+search of pirates' gold. If the chief of the Yemassees would join forces
+with them and smoke the pipe of peace, they would drive those foul
+pirates out of the Cherokee swamp. And should the gold be found, it
+would be fairly divided between the godly men of Charles Town and their
+Indian allies. To bind this bargain Master Cockrell and Master Hawkridge
+were ready to pledge their honor and their lives.
+
+It was a most eloquent effort delivered with much gesticulation. The
+Yemassee braves set in a circle and grunted approval. They liked the
+sound and fury of it. Jack hurled scraps of Homer and Virgil at them
+when at a loss for resounding periods. The chief nodded his
+understanding of such words as _pirates_ and _gold_ and actually smiled
+when Jack's pantomime depicted the death of Blackbeard on the deck of
+his ship. _Gold_ was a magic word to these Indians. It would purchase
+muskets and powder and ball, cloth and ironmongery and strong liquors
+from the white men of the settlements.
+
+The chief discussed it with his followers. During the lull Joe
+Hawkridge said, with a long sigh of relief:
+
+"My scalp itches not so much, Jack. The notion of having it twisted off
+with a dull blade vexed me. Ye did wondrous well. The mouth of Secretary
+Peter Forbes would ha' gaped wide open."
+
+"Much sound and little sense, Joe, but methinks it hit the target. I
+took care to sprinkle it with such words as yonder savage could bite
+on."
+
+"If we find no gold, the fat may be in the fire again, but it gives us
+time to draw breath."
+
+They rubbed their chafed wrists and sat on the ground while the savages
+held a long pow-wow. The chief was explaining the purport of Master
+Cockrell's impressive declamation. There was no enmity in the glances
+aimed at the English lads. It was more a matter of deliberation, of
+passing judgment on the truth or the falsity of the story. It was plain
+to read that the Yemassees desired to lay greedy hold of Blackbeard's
+gold. They were like children listening to a fairy tale. The fat little
+papooses crawled timidly near to inspect the mysterious strangers and
+scrambled away squealing with delicious terror.
+
+The hours passed and the verdict was delayed. Two young braves stole
+away into the pine woodland on some errand, at the behest of the chief.
+It was after noon when they returned. With them came a dozen Yemassee
+warriors from another hunting camp, strong, quick-footed men in light
+marching order who were armed with long bows and knives. The chief spoke
+a few words and mustered his force. All told he had more than thirty
+picked followers. The English lads were told to move with them.
+
+In single file the band flitted silently along the ridge and plunged
+into the swamp. The prisoners were closely guarded. At the slightest
+sign of treachery the long knives would slither between their ribs. This
+they well knew and their devout prayer was that their friends on the
+knoll might not commit some rash act of hostility and so ruin the
+enterprise. With heart-quaking trepidation they perceived at some
+distance the rude barricade of logs and the yellow streaks of earth
+hastily thrown up.
+
+The cautious Yemassees concealed themselves as though the swamp had
+swallowed them up. The chief made certain signs, and the lads understood
+his meaning. Jack Cockrell ripped a sleeve from his shirt and tied it to
+a stick as a flag of truce. Joe Hawkridge advanced with them, the
+stalwart chief between them, his empty hands extended in token of peace.
+The ambushed Yemassees, lying in the tall grass, were ready to let fly
+with musket balls and flights of arrows or to storm the knoll.
+
+A sailor on sentry duty gave the alarm and the lads saw a row of heads
+bob above the logs, and the gleam of weapons. Then Captain Jonathan
+Wellsby moved out into the open and was joined by Mr. Peter Forbes.
+They stood gazing at the singular spectacle, the bedraggled runaways who
+had vanished without trace, the odd flag of truce, the brawny, dignified
+savage making signs of friendship. The men in the stockade were ordered
+to lay down their arms. They came running out to cheer and wave their
+hats.
+
+Mr. Peter Forbes was torn betwixt affection and the desire to scold his
+flighty nephew. They met half-way down the slope and Jack hastened to
+explain:
+
+"Before you clap us in irons as deserters, Uncle Peter, grant a parley,
+if you please. Our lives hang by a hair."
+
+"God bless me, boy, we thought the pirates had slain you both,"
+spluttered Uncle Peter, a tear in his eye. "What means this tall
+savage?"
+
+"A noble chief of the Yemassees who used us with all courtesy," said
+Jack.
+
+Captain Wellsby had drawn Joe Hawkridge aside and was swiftly
+enlightened concerning the alliance with the Indians. Presently they
+were holding a conference, all seated together in the shade of a tree. A
+tobacco pipe of clay, with a long reed for a stem, was lighted and
+passed from hand to hand. The chief puffed solemnly with an occasional
+nod and a grunt. It was agreed, with due ceremony, that the pirates
+should be attacked in their camp and driven away. The Yemassee warriors
+would make common cause with the Englishmen. As a reward, Blackbeard's
+treasure was to be fairly divided, half and half.
+
+The chief raised his voice in a long, deep shout of summons and his band
+of fighting men emerged from their ambush in the swamp. There was no
+reason for delaying the movement against the pirates. The Yemassees were
+eager for the fray. They were about to advance through the swamp,
+cunningly hidden, while the Englishmen followed at a slower pace to
+spread out on the flanks. Just then there was heard a sudden and riotous
+commotion among the pirates at the creek. It was a mad, jubilant uproar
+as though some frenzy had seized them all. Bill Saxby leaned on his
+musket and listened for a long moment.
+
+"The rogues have fished up the sea-chest, by the din they make," said
+he. "We left that sounding rod a-stickin' in the mud. They save us the
+trouble, eh, Captain Wellsby?"
+
+The skipper laughed in his beard and floundered ahead like a bear. Jack
+Cockrell passed the word to the chief that the gold was awaiting them.
+Like shadows the Yemassees drew near the creek and then, full-lunged,
+terrific, their war-whoop echoed through the dismal Cherokee swamp.
+Nimble Jack Cockrell was not far behind them, his heart pumping as
+though it would burst.
+
+He was in time to see four lusty pirates swaying at a rope which led
+through the pulley-blocks of the spars that overhung the creek as a
+tall derrick. They were hoisting away with all their might while there
+slowly rose in air a mud-covered, befouled sea-chest all hung with weeds
+and slimy refuse. Two other pirates tailed on to a guy rope and the
+heavy chest swung toward the bank, suspended in air.
+
+At this moment the screeching chorus of the Indian war-whoop smote their
+affrighted ears, followed by the discharge of muskets. These startled
+pirates let go the tackle and the guy rope and, with one accord, leaped
+for the pinnace which floated close to the bank. The weighty sea-chest
+swinging in air came down by the run as the ropes smoked through the
+blocks. It had been swayed in far enough so that it fell not in the
+water but upon the edge of the shore between the derrick spars. The
+rusty hinges and straps were burst asunder as the treasure chest crashed
+upon a log and cracked open like an egg.
+
+Out spilled a stream of doubloons and pieces of eight, a cascade of gold
+and silver bars, of jewels flowing from the rotten bags which had
+contained them. In this extraordinary manner was the hoard of the
+departed Blackbeard brought to light. The unfortunate pirates who had
+found the spoils tarried not to gloat and rejoice. They appeared to have
+urgent business elsewhere. In hot pursuit came the ravening Yemassees,
+yelling like fiends, assisted by the reinforcements of Captain Jonathan
+Wellsby.
+
+What saved the lives of these panic-smitten pirates was the dramatic
+explosion of that great treasure chest when it fell and smashed upon the
+log. Indians and Englishmen alike forgot their intent to shoot and
+slaughter. They rushed to surround the bewitching booty, to cut capers
+like excited urchins.
+
+"Share and share," roared Captain Wellsby, shoving them headlong. "Half
+to the Yemassees and half to us. Our word is given. Stand back, ye
+lunatics, while we do the thing with order and decency."
+
+Already the pinnace was filled with cursing pirates who saw that the
+game was lost. Some of them had left their weapons in camp, others fired
+a few wild shots, but those who had any wit left were tugging at the
+oars to make for the open sea.
+
+"After 'em," roared Bill Saxby. "Follow down the creek to make sure they
+do not molest our sloop."
+
+A score of men, Indians included, jumped into the boat and pulled in
+chase, no longer on slaughter bent. The only thought in their heads was
+to despatch the errand and return to squat around the treasure chest.
+Jack Cockrell and Joe Hawkridge remained to help scoop up the coin and
+jewels and stow them in stout kegs and sacks. The stoical chief of the
+Yemassees was grinning from ear to ear as he grunted:
+
+"_Plenty gold. Good! Hurrah, boys!_"
+
+Arm-in-arm Jack Cockrell and Joe Hawkridge danced a sailor's hornpipe
+upon the splintered lid of Blackbeard's sea-chest while they sang with
+all their might:
+
+ "For his work he's never loth,
+ An' a-pleasurin' he'll go,
+ Tho' certain sure to be popt off,
+ _Yo, ho, with the rum below._"
+
+
+THE END
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+Obvious punctuation errors repaired.
+
+Page 34, "Steve" changed to "Stede" (Stede Bonnet frowned)
+
+Page 77, "than" changed to "them" (rally them for attack)
+
+Page 85, "arsensal" changed to "arsenal" (arsenal of himself)
+
+Page 306, "Yemasses" changed to "Yemassees" (The Yemassees were eager)
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Blackbeard: Buccaneer, by Ralph D. Paine
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Blackbeard: Buccaneer, by Ralph D. Paine
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Blackbeard: Buccaneer
+
+Author: Ralph D. Paine
+
+Illustrator: Frank E. Schoonover
+
+Release Date: May 14, 2008 [EBook #25472]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BLACKBEARD: BUCCANEER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Robert Cicconetti, Emmy and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+<div class='center'><a name="front" id="front"></a>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="Cover and Frontis">
+<tr><td align='left'><div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="300" height="419" alt="Cover" title="Cover" />
+</div></td><td align='left'><div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
+<img src="images/frontis.jpg" width="300" height="360" alt="THIS LEAN, STRAIGHT ROVER LOOKED THE PART OF A COMPETENT SOLDIER" title="THIS LEAN, STRAIGHT ROVER LOOKED THE PART OF A COMPETENT SOLDIER" />
+<span class="caption">THIS LEAN, STRAIGHT ROVER LOOKED THE PART OF A COMPETENT SOLDIER</span>
+</div></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<div class='bbox'><div class='bbox2'>
+<h1>BLACKBEARD<br />
+BUCCANEER</h1>
+</div><div class='bbox2'>
+<p><i>By</i> RALPH D. PAINE</p></div>
+<div class='bbox2'>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 205px;">
+<img src="images/title.jpg" width="205" height="200" alt="Title page" title="Title page" />
+</div>
+
+<div class='center'><br /><br />
+<i>Illustrated by<br />
+Frank E. Schoonover</i><br /></div></div>
+<div class='bbox2'><div class='center'>
+THE PENN PUBLISHING<br />
+COMPANY PHILADELPHIA<br />
+</div></div></div>
+
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<small>COPYRIGHT</small><br />
+<small>1922 BY</small><br />
+<small>THE PENN</small><br />
+<small>PUBLISHING</small><br />
+<small>COMPANY</small><br /></div>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 100px;">
+<img src="images/emblem.jpg" width="100" height="91" alt="Emblem" title="Emblem" />
+</div>
+<div class='center'>
+<small>Blackbeard: Buccaneer</small><br />
+<br /><br /><br /><br />
+<small>Made in the U. S. A.</small><br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>Contents</h2>
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" summary="Contents">
+<tr><td align='right'>I.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">That Courteous Pirate, Captain Bonnet</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_7">7</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>II.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Merchant Trader, <i>Plymouth Adventure</i></span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_21">21</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>III.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Held As Hostages to Blackbeard</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_43">43</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>IV.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Captive Seamen in the Forecastle</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_62">62</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>V.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Releasing a Fearful Weapon</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_79">79</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>VI.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Voyage of the Little Raft</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_99">99</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>VII.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Mist of the Cherokee Swamp</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_114">114</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>VIII.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Episode of the Winding Creek</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_132">132</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>IX.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Blackbeard's Errand is Interrupted</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_147">147</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>X.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Sea Urchin and the Carpenter's Mate</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_161">161</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XI.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Jack Journeys Afoot</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_177">177</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XII.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">A Private Account To Settle</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_189">189</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XIII.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Our Heroes Seek Seclusion</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_203">203</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XIV.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Blackbeard Appears in Fire and Brimstone</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_217">217</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XV.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Mr. Peter Forbes Mourns His Nephew</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_232">232</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XVI.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Ned Rackham's Plans Go Much Amiss</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_248">248</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XVII.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Great Fight of Captain Teach</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_260">260</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XVIII.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Old Buccaneer Is Loyal</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_274">274</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='right'>XIX.</td><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Quest for Pirates' Gold</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_288">288</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
+
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="List of Illustrations">
+<tr><td align='left'>&nbsp;</td><td align='right'>PAGE</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">This Lean, Straight Rover Looked the Part of a Competent Soldier</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#front"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The Brawn of These Lads Made the Pike a Match for a Pirate's Cutlass</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_83">83</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">The First Mate Leaped Up with a Horrible Yell</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_120">120</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">Jack Almost Bumped into the Dugout Canoe</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_129">129</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">They Capered and Hugged Each Other</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_164">164</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'><span class="smcap">He Loomed Like the Belial Whom He Was So Fond of Claiming as His Mentor</span></td><td align='right'><a href="#Page_224">224</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<img src="images/illus1.jpg" width="400" height="260" alt="On deck" title="On deck" />
+</div>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<img src="images/illus2.jpg" width="400" height="204" alt="Title" title="Title" />
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+<h2>Blackbeard: Buccaneer</h2>
+
+
+<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+<h3>THAT COURTEOUS PIRATE, CAPTAIN BONNET</h3>
+
+
+<div class='unindent'><big>T</big>HE year of 1718 seems very dim and far away,
+but the tall lad who sauntered down to the harbor
+of Charles Town, South Carolina, on a fine,
+bright morning, was much like the youngsters of this
+generation. His clothes were quite different, it is true,
+and he lived in a queer, rough world, but he detested
+grammar and arithmetic and loved adventure, and would
+have made a sturdy tackle for a modern high-school
+football team. He wore a peaked straw hat of Indian<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
+weave, a linen shirt open at the throat, short breeches
+with silver buckles at the knees, and a flint-lock pistol
+hung from his leather belt.</div>
+
+<p>He passed by scattered houses and stores which were
+mere log huts loopholed for defense, with shutters and
+doors of hewn plank heavy enough to stop a musket ball.
+The unpaved lanes wandered between mud holes in
+which pigs wallowed enjoyably. Negro slaves, half-naked
+and bearing heavy burdens, jabbered the dialects
+of the African jungle from which they had been kidnapped
+a few months before. Yemassee Indians clad
+in tanned deer-skins bartered with the merchants and
+hid their hatred of the English. Jovial, hard-riding
+gentlemen galloped in from the indigo plantations and
+dismounted at the tavern to drink and gamble and fight
+duels at the smallest excuse.</p>
+
+<p>Young Jack Cockrell paid scant heed to these accustomed
+sights but walked as far as the wharf built of
+palmetto piling. The wide harbor and the sea that
+flashed beyond the outer bar were ruffled by a piping
+breeze out of the northeast. The only vessel at anchor
+was a heavily sparred brig whose bulwarks were
+high enough to hide the rows of cannon behind the closed
+ports.</p>
+
+<p>The lad gazed at the shapely brig with a lively curiosity,
+as if here was something really interesting. Presently
+a boat splashed into the water and was tied alongside
+the vessel while a dozen of the crew tumbled in to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
+sprawl upon the thwarts and shove the oars into the
+thole-pins. An erect, graceful man in a red coat and a
+great beaver hat roared a command from the stern-sheets
+and the pinnace pulled in the direction of the
+wharf.</p>
+
+<p>"Pirates, to be sure!" said Jack Cockrell to himself,
+without a sign of alarm. "'Tis Captain Stede Bonnet
+and his <i>Royal James</i>. I know the ship. I saw her
+when she came in leaking last October and was careened
+on the beach at Sullivan's Island. A rich voyage this
+time, for the brig rides deep."</p>
+
+<p>The coast of South Carolina swarmed with pirates
+two hundred years ago, and they cared not a rap for the
+law. Indeed, some of these rascals lived on friendly
+terms with the people of the small settlements and swaggered
+ashore to squander the broad gold pieces and merchandise
+stolen from honest trading vessels. You must
+not blame the South Carolina colonists too harshly because
+they sometimes welcomed the visiting pirates instead
+of clapping them in jail. Charles Town was a
+village at the edge of a wilderness filled with hostile Indians.
+By sea it stood in fear of attack by the Spaniards
+of Florida and Havana. There were almost no crops
+for food and among the population were many runaways
+from England, loafers and vagabonds who hated
+the sight of work.</p>
+
+<p>The pirates helped them fight their enemies and did a
+thriving trade in goods that were sorely needed. Respectable<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
+citizens grumbled and one high official was
+removed in disgrace because he encouraged the pirates
+to make Charles Town their headquarters, but there was
+no general outcry unless the sea-rovers happened to
+molest English ships outside the harbor.</p>
+
+<p>It was Captain Stede Bonnet himself who steered the
+pinnace and cursed his sweating sailors in a deep voice
+which went echoing across the bay. He made a brave
+figure in his scarlet coat, with the brass guard of his
+naked cutlass winking in the sun. His boat's crew had
+been mustered from many climes and races, several
+strapping Englishmen, a wiry, spluttering little
+Frenchman, a swarthy Portuguese with gold rings in his
+ears, a brace of stolid Norwegians, and two or three
+coal black negroes from Barbadoes.</p>
+
+<p>They were well armed, every weapon burnished clean
+of rust and ready for instant use. Some wore tarnished,
+sea-stained finery looted from hapless prizes, a brocaded
+waistcoat, a pair of tasseled jack-boots, a plumed hat, a
+ruffled cape. The heads of several were bound around
+with knotted kerchiefs on which dark stains showed,&mdash;marks
+of a brawl aboard the brig or a fight with another
+ship.</p>
+
+<p>Soon a second boat moved away from the <i>Royal
+James</i> and many people drifted toward the wharf to
+see the pirates come ashore, but they left plenty of room
+when the captain scrambled up the weedy ladder and
+told his men to follow him. Charles Town felt little<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
+dread of Stede Bonnet himself. He knew how to conduct
+himself as a gentleman and the story was well
+known,&mdash;how he had been a major in the British army
+and a man of wealth and refinement. He had left his
+home in Barbadoes to follow the trade of piracy because
+he couldn't get along with his wife, so the rumor ran.
+At any rate, he seemed oddly out of place among the
+dirty rogues who sailed under the black flag.</p>
+
+<p>He looked more the soldier than the sailor as he strode
+along the wharf, his lean, dark visage both grim and
+melancholy, his chin clean shaven, his mustachios carefully
+cropped. There were respectful greetings from
+the crowd of idlers and a gray-haired seaman all warped
+with rheumatism spoke up louder than the rest.</p>
+
+<p>"Good morrow to ye, Cap'n Bonnet! I be old Sam
+Griscom that sailed bos'n with you on a marchant voyage
+out of Liverpool. An' now you are a fine gentleman
+of fortune, with moidores and pieces of eight to
+fling at the gals, an' here I be, a sheer hulk on the
+beach."</p>
+
+<p>Captain Stede Bonnet halted, stared from beneath
+heavy brows, and a smile made his seamed, sun-dried
+face almost gentle as he replied:</p>
+
+<p>"It cheers me to run athwart a true old shipmate. A
+slant of ill fortune, eh, Sam Griscom? You are too old
+and crippled to sail in the <i>Royal James</i>. Here, and a
+blessing with the gift."</p>
+
+<p>The pirate skipper rammed a hand in his pocket and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
+flung a shower of gold coins at the derelict seaman while
+the crowd cheered the generous deed. It was easy to
+guess why Stede Bonnet was something of a hero in
+Charles Town. He passed on and turned into the
+street. Most of his ruffians were at his heels but one of
+the younger of them delayed to pay his compliments to
+a pretty girl whose manner was sweet and shy and gentle.
+She had remained aloof from the crowd, having
+some errand of her own at the wharf, and evidently
+hoped to be unobserved. Jack Cockrell had failed to
+notice her, absorbed as he was in gazing his fill of Captain
+Stede Bonnet.</p>
+
+<p>The girl resented the young pirate's gallantry and
+would have fled, but he nimbly blocked her path. Just
+then Jack Cockrell happened to glance that way and his
+anger flamed hot. He was about to run after Captain
+Bonnet and beg him to interfere but the maid's distress
+was too urgent. Her blackguardly admirer was trying
+to slip his arm around her trim waist while he laughingly
+demanded a kiss from those fair lips. She evaded him
+and screamed for help.</p>
+
+<p>There were lusty townsmen among those who beheld
+the scene but they sheepishly stood in their tracks and
+were afraid to punish the insolent pirate with his dirk
+and pistols. He was much taller and heavier than Jack
+Cockrell, the lad of seventeen, who came of gentlefolk
+and was unused to brawls with weapons. But the
+youngster hesitated no more than an instant, although<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
+his own pistol lacked a flint and was carried for
+show.</p>
+
+<p>His quick eye spied a capstan bar which he snatched
+up as a cudgel. Chivalry had taught him that a man
+should never reckon the odds when a woman appealed
+for succor. With a headlong rush he crossed the wharf
+and swung the hickory bar. The pirate dodged the blow
+and whipped out his dirk which slithered through Jack's
+shirt and scratched his shoulder. Undismayed, he aimed
+a smashing blow at the pirate's wrist and the dirk went
+spinning into the water.</p>
+
+<p>The rascal tugged at a pistol in his belt but it was
+awkward work with his left hand and he was bewildered
+by this amazing attack. Before he could clear for action,
+Jack smote him on the pate and the battle ended
+then and there, for the pirate staggered back, missed his
+footing, and toppled overboard with a tremendous
+splash.</p>
+
+<p>Leaping to the edge of the wharf, Jack saw him bob
+to the surface and strike out for shore. Then the
+doughty young champion ran to offer his escort to the
+damsel in distress. But she had hastened to slip away
+from this hateful notoriety and he saw her at the bend
+of the street where she turned to wave him a grateful
+farewell.</p>
+
+<p>He would have hastened to overtake her but just then
+Captain Stede Bonnet came striding back in a temper
+so black that it terrified his own men. His wrath was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
+not aimed at Jack Cockrell, for he laid a hand upon the
+lad's arm and exclaimed:</p>
+
+<p>"A shrewd stroke, boy, and a mettlesome spirit! You
+struck him swift and hard. 'Twould please me better
+if you had killed the dog."</p>
+
+<p>Stede Bonnet waited with folded arms until the culprit
+had emerged from the water. Jack Cockrell had
+punished him severely and there was no more fight in
+him. His head was reeling, the blood ran into his eyes,
+and he had swallowed much salt water. Captain Bonnet
+crooked a finger at him and he obeyed without a
+word. For a moment they stood face to face, the
+wretched offender trembling, the captain scowling as he
+said:</p>
+
+<p>"And so you mistook a lady for a common serving
+wench, Will Brant? Would ye have Charles Town rise
+and reeve the ropes about our necks? Is this your promise
+of good behavior? Learn a lesson then, poor fool."</p>
+
+<p>With the steel-shod butt of a pistol Stede Bonnet hit
+him squarely between the eyes. He dropped without a
+groan and lay stretched out as if dead. The captain
+kicked him once and carelessly shouted:</p>
+
+<p>"Ho, men! Toss this squire o' dames into the pinnace
+to await our return. And harkee, take warning."</p>
+
+<p>Jack Cockrell felt almost sorry for his fallen foeman
+but the other pirates grinned and did as they were told.
+It was a trifling episode. Resuming his stroll to the
+tavern, Captain Bonnet linked Jack's arm in his and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
+fairly towed him along while the assorted scoundrels
+trooped behind them. It was shocking company for a
+lad of the most respectable connections but he felt
+greatly flattered by the distinction. The name of Stede
+Bonnet had spread terror from the Capes of the Chesapeake
+to the blue waters of the Caribbean.</p>
+
+<p>"And so you were unafraid of this bullying Will
+Brant of mine," said the captain, with one of his pleasant
+smiles. "You clipped his comb right handsomely.
+And who may ye be, my brave young sprig?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am John Spencer Cockrell, may it please you, sir,"
+was the answer. "'Twas a small thing to do for a lady.
+Your pirate would have been too much for me in a fair
+set-to."</p>
+
+<p>"Pirate? A poor word!" objected Captain Bonnet,
+his accents severe but the bold eyes twinkling. "We
+are loyal servants of the King, sworn to do mischief to
+his lawful enemies,&mdash;to wit, all ships and sailors of
+Spain. For such a young gentleman adventurer as you,
+Master Cockrell, there is a berth in the <i>Royal James</i>.
+Will ye rendezvous at the tavern and sign your fist to
+the articles?"</p>
+
+<p>Jack stammered that his kinfolk would never consent,
+at which Captain Bonnet forbore to coax him but kept
+a grip on his arm as though they were chums who could
+not bear to be parted. Down the middle of the street
+paraded this extraordinary company, the seamen breaking
+into a song which ran:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class='poem'>"In Bristowe I left Poll ashore,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Well stored wi' togs an' gold,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">And off I go to sea for more,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">A-piratin' so bold.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">An' wounded in the arm I got,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">An' then a pretty blow;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Comed home I find Poll's flowed away,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;"><i>Yo, ho, with the rum below!</i>"</span><br />
+</div>
+
+<p>Charles Town might be glad to get the pirates' gold
+but it seemed a timorous welcome, for the merchants
+peered from their doorways like rabbits when the hounds
+are loose, and nervous old gentlemen took cover in the
+near-by alleys. Stede Bonnet knew how to keep his men
+in hand and allowed only part of the company ashore at
+once. They were like hilarious children out for a lark,
+capering outside the tavern to the music of a strolling
+fiddler or buying horses on the spot and trying to ride
+them. When they were pitched off on their heads the
+mirth was uproarious.</p>
+
+<p>In a field beside the tavern some townsmen were
+shooting at a mark for a prize of a dressed bullock while
+a group of gentlemen from the plantations were intent
+on a cock-fight in the tap-room. Here was rare pastime
+for the frolicsome blades of the <i>Royal James</i> and soon
+they were banging away with their pistols or betting
+their gold-pieces on the steel-gaffed birds, singing the
+louder as the bottle was passed. Captain Stede Bonnet
+stayed prudently sober, ready for any emergency, his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
+demeanor cool and watchful while he chatted with old
+acquaintances.</p>
+
+<p>He talked often with Jack Cockrell to whom he had
+taken a strong fancy, and pressed the lad to dine with
+him. Jack was uneasy at being seen so publicly with a
+notorious pirate but the experience was delightful beyond
+words. The captain asked him many questions,
+twisting his mustachios and staring down from his commanding
+height with an air of friendly interest. He
+had found a lad after his own heart.</p>
+
+<p>The seamen tired of their sport and sought new diversion.
+Some of them kicked off their boots and
+clinched in wrestling matches for prodigal stakes of
+gold and jewels. Others found girls to dance with them
+or wandered off to buy useless trinkets in the shops.
+Jack Cockrell knew he ought to be posting home to
+dinner but he was tempted to accept Stede Bonnet's
+cordial bidding. Boyish friends of his hovered near and
+regarded him as a hero. No pirate captain had ever
+deigned to notice them.</p>
+
+<p>Alas for Jack and his puffed-up pride which was
+doomed to a sudden fall! There advanced from a better
+quarter of the town a florid, foppishly dressed gentleman
+of middle age who walked with a pompous gait.
+He was stout-bodied and the heat of the day oppressed
+him. Mopping his face with a lace handkerchief or
+fanning himself with his hat, he halted now and then in
+a shady spot. Very mindful of his rank and dignity<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
+was Mr. Peter Arbuthnot Forbes, sometime London
+barrister, at present Secretary to the Council of the
+Province.</p>
+
+<p>He differed from some of his neighbors in that he
+abominated pirates and would have given them short
+shift. A trifle near-sighted, he was quite close to the
+tavern before he espied his own nephew and ward, Jack
+Cockrell, in this shameful company of roisterers. The
+august uncle blinked, opened his mouth, and turned as
+red as a lobster. Indignation choked his speech. For
+his part, Jack stood dumfounded and quaking, the picture
+of a coward with a guilty conscience. He would
+have tried to steal from sight but it was too late.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Stede Bonnet enjoyed the tableau and several
+of his wicked sailors were mimicking the pompous
+strut of Mr. Peter Arbuthnot Forbes. Poor Jack
+mumbled some explanation but his irate uncle first paid
+his respects to Captain Bonnet.</p>
+
+<p>"Shame to you, sirrah," he cried in a voice that shook
+with passion. "A man of good birth, by all accounts,
+who has fallen so low as to lead these vile gallows-birds!
+And you would entice this lad of mine to follow your
+dirty trade?"</p>
+
+<p>Captain Bonnet doffed the great beaver hat and
+bowed low in mocking courtesy. He perceived that this
+fussy lawyer was not wholly a popinjay, for it required
+courage to insult a pirate to his face. The reply was
+therefore milder than expected.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Mayhap I am painted blacker than the fact, Councilor.
+As for this fine stripling who has so disgraced
+himself, the fault is mine. He risked his life to save a
+maid from harm. The deed won my affection."</p>
+
+<p>"The maids of Charles Town would need to fear no
+harm if more pirates were hanged, Captain Bonnet,"
+roundly declared Mr. Forbes, shaking his gold-tipped
+cane at the freebooter.</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis fortunate for me that you lack the power, my
+fat and petulant gentleman," was the smiling response.</p>
+
+<p>"Laugh while you may," quoth the other. "These
+Provinces may soon proclaim joint action against such
+pests as you."</p>
+
+<p>With a shrug, the Secretary turned to his crestfallen
+nephew and sharply exclaimed:</p>
+
+<p>"Home with you, John Cockrell. You shall go dinnerless
+and be locked in your room."</p>
+
+<p>The seamen guffawed at this and Jack furiously resented
+their ridicule. He was on the point of rebellion
+as he hotly retorted:</p>
+
+<p>"I am no child to be treated thus, Uncle Peter.
+Didn't you hear Captain Bonnet report that I had
+proved myself a man? I trounced one of his own crew,
+a six-foot bully with a dirk and pistols."</p>
+
+<p>"A fig for that," rapped out Uncle Peter. "Your
+bully was drunk and helpless, I have no doubt. Will
+you bandy words with me?"</p>
+
+<p>With this his plump fingers closed on Jack's elbow<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
+which he used as a handle to lead him firmly and rapidly
+away. Behind them pranced a limber young negro who
+showed every tooth in his head. Jack heard the derisive
+laughter of the pirates who had hailed him as a hero.
+His cup of bitterness overflowed when it occurred to
+him that Captain Bonnet would despise a lad who could
+be led home in custody of a dandified tyrant of an uncle.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+<h3>THE MERCHANT TRADER, <i>PLYMOUTH ADVENTURE</i></h3>
+
+
+<div class='unindent'><big>R</big>UBBING his ear which Mr. Peter Arbuthnot
+Forbes had soundly boxed before releasing him,
+Jack marched along in gloomy silence until he
+was conducted into his small, unplastered room. His
+uncle stalked out and shot the ponderous bolt behind
+him. Passing through the kitchen, he halted to scold
+the black cook as a lazy slattern and then sat himself
+down to a lonely meal. Jack was a problem which the
+finicky, middle-aged bachelor had been unable to solve.
+He had undertaken the care of the boy after his parents
+had died in the same week of a mysterious fever which
+ravaged the settlement. The uncle failed to realize how
+fast this strapping youngster was growing into manhood.
+He disliked punishing him and was usually unhappy
+after one of these stormy episodes.</div>
+
+<p>Mr. Peter Forbes pecked at his dinner with little
+appetite and his plump face was clouded. Shoving back
+his chair, he paced the floor in a fidgety manner and, at
+length, opened the door of Jack's room. The hungry
+prisoner was lounging upon a wooden settle, his chin in
+his hand, while he sullenly stared at the wall. Always<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
+mindful of his manners, he slowly rose to his feet and
+waited for another scolding.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish we might avoid such scenes as these, Jack,"
+sadly observed Uncle Peter, his hot temper cooled.
+"No sooner do you leave my sight than some new mischief
+is afoot."</p>
+
+<p>"You do not understand, sir," impatiently protested
+the nephew. "In your eyes I am still the urchin who
+came out from England clinging to his dear mother's
+skirts. Would ye have me pass my time with girls or
+have no other friends than snuffy old Parson Throckmorton,
+my tutor, who tries to pound the Greek and
+Latin into my thick skull?"</p>
+
+<p>"He is a wise and ripened scholar who wastes his
+effort," was the dry comment. "Most of the lads of the
+town are coarse louts who pattern after their ribald
+elders, Jack. They will lead you into evil courses."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall always pray God to be a gentleman, sir,"
+was the spirited response, "but I must learn to fight
+my own battles. Were it not for hardy pastimes with
+these other stout lads, think you I could have cracked the
+crown of a six-foot pirate?"</p>
+
+<p>Uncle Peter gazed at the boy before he spoke.
+Tanned and hard and muscular, this was a nephew to
+be proud of, a man in deeds if not in years, and there
+was unswerving honesty in the straight mouth and firm
+chin. The guardian sighed and then annoyance got the
+better of his affection as he burst out:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Perdition take all pirates! You were cozened by
+this hell-rake of a Stede Bonnet and thought it a rare
+pleasure! John Spencer Cockrell, own nephew to the
+Secretary of the Colony!"</p>
+
+<p>"I did but copy older men of fair repute," demurely
+answered Jack, a twinkle in his eye. "Graybeards of
+Parson Throckmorton's flock traffick in merchandise
+with the pirates and are mighty civil to them, I note."</p>
+
+<p>"A vile business!" cried Uncle Peter. "It was decided
+at the recent conference in Virginia that I should
+go to England as a delegate to lay before His Majesty's
+Government such evidence as might invoke aid in our
+campaign against the pirates. It was my intention to
+leave you in care of Parson Throckmorton, Jack, but
+I have now resolved to take you with me. And you
+will remain at school in England. No more of this boon
+comradeship with villains like Stede Bonnet."</p>
+
+<p>Poor Jack looked most unhappy at the tidings. It
+was not at all in accord with his ambitions. Here was
+worse punishment than he had dreamed his uncle could
+inflict. Dolefully he exclaimed:</p>
+
+<p>"To live in tame and stupid England, locked up in a
+school? Why, I am big enough to join the forays
+against the Indians, or to fight bloody battles against
+the pirates if you really mean to chastise them. But I
+cannot promise to attack Captain Bonnet. He is a
+friend of mine."</p>
+
+<p>"You shall come to see him hanged," shouted Mr.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
+Peter Arbuthnot Forbes, very red in the face. "The
+merchant ship <i>Plymouth Adventure</i> is expected soon,
+and you and I shall take passage in her for Merry England,
+thanking heaven to see the last of the barbarous
+Carolinas for a time."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank your own thanks, sir," grumbled Jack.
+"Captain Bonnet may be a pirate but he is not nearly
+so heartless as my own uncle. He asked me to dinner
+at the tavern. I am faint for lack of food. My stomach
+sticks to my ribs. 'Tis a great pity you were never a
+growing boy yourself. For a platter of cold meat and
+bread I will take my oath to chop you a pile of firewood
+as high as the kitchen."</p>
+
+<p>The gaoler relented and bustled out to ransack the
+pantry. Having demolished a joint and a loaf, young
+John Spencer Cockrell was in a mood much less melancholy.
+In fact, when he swung the axe behind the fence
+of hewn palings, he was humming the refrain of that
+wicked ditty: "<i>Yo, Ho, with the Rum Below!</i>" He
+was tremendously sorry that he had been snatched away
+from the engaging society of Captain Bonnet and his
+wild crew, and the future had a gloomy aspect, but even
+these grievances were forgotten when he descried, in a
+lane which led past the house, the lovely maid whose
+cause he had championed at the wharf.</p>
+
+<p>She was Dorothy, only daughter of Colonel Malcolm
+Stuart who commanded the militia forces of the Colony.
+Although she was the elder by two or three years and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
+gave herself the airs of a young lady, Jack Cockrell
+hopelessly, secretly adored her. It was an anti-climax
+for a hero to be serving out his sentence at the wood-pile
+and he turned his back to the gate while he made
+the chips fly. But Dorothy had no intention of ignoring
+him. She paused with a smile so winsome that Jack's
+heart fluttered and he dropped the axe to grasp her outstretched
+hand. He squeezed it so hard that Dorothy
+winced as she said:</p>
+
+<p>"What a masterful man it is, but please don't crush
+my poor fingers. I fled from those pirates at the wharf,
+Jack, instead of waiting to offer you my most humble
+thanks. Will you accept them now? They come
+straight from the heart."</p>
+
+<p>For such a reward as this Jack would have fought a
+dozen pirates. Baring his head, he murmured bashfully:</p>
+
+<p>"A trifling service, Mistress Dorothy, and 'tis my
+devout hope that I may always be ready in time of
+need."</p>
+
+<p>"So?" she exclaimed, with mischief in her eyes. "I
+believe you would slay a pirate each morning before
+breakfast, should I ask it."</p>
+
+<p>"Or any other small favors like that," gallantly returned
+Jack.</p>
+
+<p>"A proper courtier," cried Dorothy. "My father
+will thank you when he returns from North Carolina.
+When I ventured to the wharf this morning it was in
+hopes of sighting his armed sloop."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The dwelling of Mr. Peter Arbuthnot Forbes was at
+some distance from the tavern which was on the sloping
+ground that overlooked the harbor, among the spreading
+live-oaks and magnolias. Borne on the breeze came
+the sounds of Stede Bonnet's pirates at their revels,
+pistol shots, wild choruses, drunken yells. Jack was not
+disturbed although Mistress Dorothy moved closer and
+laid a hand on his arm. Presently the tumult ceased,
+abruptly, and now Jack was perplexed. It might mean
+a sudden recall to the ship. Something was in the wind.
+The youth and the maid stood listening. Jack was
+about to scramble to the roof of the house in order to
+gaze toward the harbor but Dorothy bade him stay with
+her. Her fair cheek had paled and she shivered with a
+vague apprehension.</p>
+
+<p>This sudden stillness was uncanny, threatening.
+Soon, however, a trumpet blew a long, shrill call to
+arms, and they heard one hoarse, jubilant huzza after
+another.</p>
+
+<p>"Have Stede Bonnet's pirates mustered to sack the
+town?" implored Dorothy.</p>
+
+<p>"I can speedily find out," replied her protector.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I pray you not to leave me," she tremulously
+besought him.</p>
+
+<p>"Captain Bonnet will wreak no harm on Charles
+Town," Jack assured her. "I know him too well for
+that. You saw what he did to the base varlet who annoyed
+you at the wharf,&mdash;felled him like an ox."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"If only my father were here, to call out the troops
+and rout this rabble of sea rogues, Jack dear," was her
+fluttering prayer.</p>
+
+<p>A little after this, the tumult increased and it was
+drawing nearer. It was a martial clamor of men on the
+march, with the rattle of drums and a loud fanfare of
+trumpets. Mr. Peter Arbuthnot Forbes came running
+out of the house, all flustered and waving his hands, and
+ordered the two young people indoors. The servants
+were closing the heavy wooden shutters and sliding the
+bars across the doors.</p>
+
+<p>Jack slipped out into the lane and hailed a neighbor
+who dashed past. The news was babbled in fragments
+and Jack scurried back to blurt to his uncle:</p>
+
+<p>"An Indian raid,&mdash;the savages are within a dozen
+miles of Charles Town, laying waste the plantations,&mdash;slaying
+the laborers. The militia is called to arms but
+they lack a leader. Colonel Stuart is sorely missed.
+Captain Bonnet called another boat-load of his pirates
+ashore, and they march in the van to assail the Indians.
+May I go with them, Uncle Peter? Must I play the
+coward and the laggard?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense, John Cockrell. These mad pirates have
+addled your wits. Shall I let you be scalped by these
+painted fiends of Yemassees?"</p>
+
+<p>"Then you will volunteer in my stead," shrewdly
+ventured Jack, with a glance at Dorothy.</p>
+
+<p>"Um-m. Duty and my official cares prevent," quoth<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
+the worshipful Secretary of the Colony, frowning and
+pursing his lips. Dorothy smiled at this and winked at
+Jack. Uncle Peter was rated a better lawyer than a
+valiant man of war.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us stand at a window," exclaimed the girl.
+"Ah, they come! My faith, but this is a brave array.
+And Captain Bonnet leads them well."</p>
+
+<p>She had never expected to praise a pirate but there
+was no denying that this lean, straight rover in the scarlet
+coat and great cocked hat looked the part of a competent
+and intrepid soldier. He was superbly fit for the
+task in hand. Catching sight of Jack Cockrell and
+Dorothy Stuart in the window, he saluted by raising the
+hilt of his cutlass and his melancholy visage brightened
+in a smile.</p>
+
+<p>Behind him tramped his men in column of fours,
+matchlocks across their shoulders, bright weapons
+swinging against their thighs as they sang all together
+and kept step to the beat of the drums.</p>
+
+<div class='poem'>"But ere to Execution Bay,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">The wind these bones do blow,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">I'll drink an' fight what's left away,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;"><i>Yo, ho, with the rum below</i>."</span><br />
+</div>
+
+<p>Behind these hardy volunteers straggled as many of
+the militia company as had been able to answer the sudden
+call, merchants, clerks, artisans, and vagabonds who
+seemed none too eager to meet the bloodthirsty<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
+Yemassees. Their wives and children trailed after them
+to the edge of the town, amidst tears and loud lamentations.
+The contrast did not escape the eye of Mr. Peter
+Arbuthnot Forbes who reluctantly admitted:</p>
+
+<p>"Give the devil his due, say I. These wicked
+brethren of the coast go swaggering off of their own
+free will, as though it were to a frolic. I will remember
+it in their favor when they come to hang."</p>
+
+<p>A long roll of the drums and a lilting flourish by the
+pirate trumpeter as a farewell to Charles Town and its
+tavern and its girls, and the company passed from view.
+The lane was again deserted and silent and Jack offered
+to escort Dorothy Stuart to her own home. As they
+loitered across an open field, he cried in a fierce flare of
+rebellion:</p>
+
+<p>"My good uncle will drive me too far. Let him sail
+for old England and leave me to find my own career.
+Upon my soul, I may run away to join a pirate ship."</p>
+
+<p>Dorothy tried to look grave at this dreadful announcement
+but a dimple showed in her cheek as she replied:</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Jack, you can never be braver but you
+will be wiser some day. Banish such silly thoughts.
+You must obey your lawful guardian."</p>
+
+<p>"But did you see the lads in the militia company?
+Two or three of them I have whipped in fair fight.
+And Uncle Peter wants to keep me tucked in a cradle."</p>
+
+<p>"Softly, Jack," said she, with pretty solicitude.
+"Stede Bonnet has bewitched you utterly."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The stubborn youth shook his head. This day of
+humiliation had been the last straw. He was ripe for
+desperate adventure. It would have made him happy
+and contented to be marching against the Indians with
+Stede Bonnet and his cut-throats, in peril of tomahawks
+and ambuscades.</p>
+
+<p>Small wonder that poor Jack Cockrell's notions of
+right and wrong were rather confused, for he lived in
+an age when might ruled blue water, when every ship
+was armed and merchant seamen fought to save their
+skins as well as their cargoes. English, French, Spanish,
+and Dutch, they plundered each other on the flimsiest
+pretexts and the pirates harried them all.</p>
+
+<p>Still sulky, Jack betook himself to the rectory next
+morning for his daily bout with his studies. Parson
+Throckmorton was puttering in the garden, a shrunken
+little man who wore black small-clothes, lace at his
+wrists, and a powdered wig. Opening the silver snuff-box
+he almost sneezed the wig off before he chirruped:</p>
+
+<p>"Ye mind me of Will Shakespeare's whining schoolboy,
+Master John,&mdash;creeping like snail unwillingly to
+school. A treat is in store for us to-day, a signal treat!
+We begin our Virgil. '<i>Arma virumque cano.</i>'"</p>
+
+<p>"Arms and a man? I like that much of it," glowered
+the mutinous scholar, "but my uncle makes me sing a
+different tune."</p>
+
+<p>"He accepted my advice,&mdash;that you be educated in
+England," said the parson.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Then I may hold you responsible for this hellish
+thing?" angrily declaimed Jack. "Were it not for your
+white hairs&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He subsided and had the grace to apologize as they
+entered the library. The tutor was an impatient old
+gentleman and the pupil was so inattentive that his
+knuckles were sharply rapped with a ruler. A blunder
+more glaring and the ruler came down with another
+whack. This was too much for Jack who jumped up,
+rubbed his knuckles, and shouted:</p>
+
+<p>"Enough, sir. I would have you know that I all but
+killed a big, ugly pirate yesterday."</p>
+
+<p>"So rumor informs me," rasped Parson Throckmorton,
+"but you will give yourself no grand airs with me.
+Construe this passage properly or I must tan those
+leather breeches with a limber rod."</p>
+
+<p>This was too much for the insulted Jack who slammed
+down the book, clapped on his hat, and tramped from
+the room in high dudgeon. Such scurvy treatment as
+this was fairly urging him to a life of crime on the rolling
+ocean. He wandered down to the wharf and wistfully
+gazed at the lawless brig, <i>Royal James</i>, which
+swam at her anchorage in trim and graceful beauty. A
+few men moved briskly on deck, painting the bulwarks
+or polishing brass. Evidently Stede Bonnet had sent
+off word to be all taut and ready to hoist sail for another
+cruise.</p>
+
+<p>After a while the truant went homeward and manfully<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
+confessed to the quarrel with Parson Throckmorton.
+Uncle Peter Forbes was amazingly mild. There
+was no gusty outbreak of temper and, in fact, he had
+little to say. It was in his mind to patch up a truce
+with his troublesome nephew pending their departure
+for England. He even suggested that the studies be
+dropped and advised Jack to go fishing in his canoe.</p>
+
+<p>Several days later, Captain Bonnet and his pirates
+came back from their foray against the Indians. They
+were a foot-sore, weary band, the wounded carried in
+litters and several men missing. Their gay garments
+were caked with mud, the finery all tatters, and most of
+them were marked with cuts and scratches, but they
+pulled themselves together and swaggered into Charles
+Town as boldly as ever to the music of trumpet and
+drum. Stede Bonnet carried an arm in a sling. As he
+passed the Secretary's house he cheerily called out to
+Jack:</p>
+
+<p>"Ahoy, my young comrade! 'Twill please you to
+know that fair Mistress Dorothy Stuart may sleep in
+peace."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you scatter the savages, sir?" asked Jack, running
+out to shake his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"God bless ye, boy, we exterminated 'em."</p>
+
+<p>The gratitude of Mr. Peter Arbuthnot Forbes was
+stronger than his dislike and he came out to thank the
+captain in behalf of the citizens of Charles Town. To
+his excited questions the pirate replied:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"There be old buccaneers from Hispaniola in
+my crew, may it please Your Excellency,&mdash;fellows who
+hunted the Indians in their youth,&mdash;tracked 'em like
+hounds through forest and bayou. Others served their
+time with the log-wood cutters of Yucatan. They
+laughed at the tricks of these Yemassees of the Carolinas."</p>
+
+<p>One of the militia company broke in to say to Mr.
+Forbes:</p>
+
+<p>"Your Honor's own plantation was saved from the
+torch by this doughty Captain Bonnet. It was there he
+pulled the flint arrow-head from his arm and was near
+bleeding to death."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Peter Forbes could do no less than invite the
+pirate into the house, for the wounded arm had been
+rudely bandaged and was in sore need of dressing. Jack
+fetched a tray of cakes and wine while his uncle bawled
+at the servants who came running with soft cloths and
+hot water and healing lotions. Captain Bonnet protested
+that the hurt was trifling and carelessly explained:</p>
+
+<p>"My own ship's surgeon was spitted on a boarding-pike
+in our last action at sea and I have not found me
+another one. You show much skill and tenderness, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"The wound is deep and ragged. Hold still," commanded
+Mr. Peter Forbes. "You have been a soldier,
+Captain Bonnet, commended for valor on the fields of
+Europe and holding the king's commission. Why not<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
+seek pardon and serve with the armed forces of this
+province? My services in the matter are yours to command."</p>
+
+<p><ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'Steve'">Stede</ins> Bonnet frowned and bit his lip. All he said
+was:</p>
+
+<p>"You meddle with matters that concern you not,
+my good sir. I am a man able to make my own free
+choice."</p>
+
+<p>"Captain Bonnet does honor to the trade of piracy,"
+cried the admiring Jack, at which his uncle declared,
+with a wrathful gesture:</p>
+
+<p>"I must remove this daft lad to England to be rid
+of you, Stede Bonnet. You have cast a wicked spell
+over him."</p>
+
+<p>"To England?" said the pirate, with a sympathetic
+glance at the boy. "I would sooner lie in gaol."</p>
+
+<p>"And reap your deserts," snapped Uncle Peter.</p>
+
+<p>"No doubt of that," frankly agreed the pirate.
+"And what thinks the lad of this sad penance?"</p>
+
+<p>"I hate it," was Jack's swift answer. "Will you
+grant our merchant ship safe conduct, Captain Bonnet?"</p>
+
+<p>"What ship, boy? You have only to name her. She
+will go scathless, as far as in my power."</p>
+
+<p>"The <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>," replied Jack. "It
+would ruin my uncle's temper beyond all mending to be
+taken by pirates."</p>
+
+<p>"I pledge you my word," swore Stede Bonnet.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
+"Moreover, if trouble befall you by sea or land, Master
+Cockrell, I pray you send me tidings and you will have
+a friend in need."</p>
+
+<p>That night those who dwelt near the harbor heard
+the clank of a windlass as the crew of the <i>Royal James</i>
+hove the cable short, and the melodious, deep-throated
+refrain of a farewell chantey floated across the quiet
+water. With the flood of the tide and a landward breeze,
+the brig stole out across the bar while the topsails were
+sheeted home. When daylight dawned, she had vanished
+in the empty reaches of the Atlantic.</p>
+
+<p>The brig sailed without Jack Cockrell. His shrewd
+uncle saw to that. It was not by accident that a constable
+of the town watch loitered in the lane by the Secretary's
+house. And Uncle Peter himself was careful
+not to let the lad out of his sight until the beguiling
+Stede Bonnet had left his haunts in Charles Town.
+Life resumed its routine next day but the boy's whole
+current of thought had been changed. He was restless,
+craving some fresh excitement and hoping that more
+pirates might come roaring to the tavern green.</p>
+
+<p>He found welcome diversion when the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>,
+merchant trader, arrived from London after a
+famous passage of thirty-two days to the westward.
+Her master's orders were to make quick dispatch and
+return with freight and passengers direct from Charles
+Town. Jack was given no more leisure to brood over
+his own misfortunes. There were many errands to be<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
+done for Mr. Peter Forbes, besides the chests and boxes
+to be packed and stoutly corded. As was the custom,
+they had to supply their own furniture for the cabin in
+the ship and Jack Cockrell enjoyed the frequent trips
+aboard.</p>
+
+<p>He found much to interest him in the sedate, bearded
+Captain Jonathan Wellsby of the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>,
+in the crew of hearty British tars who feared neither man
+nor devil, in the battery of nine-pounders, the stands of
+boarding-pikes, and the triced hammock nettings to protect
+the vessel against hand-to-hand encounters with pirates.
+The voyage might be worth while, after all.
+There were to be a dozen of passengers, several ladies
+among them. The most distinguished was Mr. Peter
+Arbuthnot Forbes, Secretary of the Provincial Council,
+who was accorded the greatest respect and given the
+largest cabin.</p>
+
+<p>It was an important event when the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>
+hoisted all her bunting on sailing day and
+Charles Town flocked to the harbor with wistful envy of
+the lucky people who were bound home to old England.
+There were sad faces among those left behind to endure
+the perils, hardships and loneliness of pioneers. Jack
+Cockrell's heart beat high when he saw sweet Dorothy
+Stuart in the throng. He tarried ashore with her until
+the boatswain's pipe trilled from the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>
+to summon the passengers on board. Colonel
+Stuart, blonde and bronzed and stalwart, escorted his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
+winsome daughter and he praised Jack for his deed of
+courage, telling him:</p>
+
+<p>"There will soon be fewer pirates for you to trounce,
+I hope, my lad."</p>
+
+<p>"The town will be a stupid place without a visit from
+the jolly rovers now and then," honestly replied Jack,
+at which Colonel Stuart laughed and his daughter suggested:</p>
+
+<p>"With my brave knight in distant England, deliver
+me from any more pirates."</p>
+
+<p>Jack blushed and was both happy and sad when the
+dear maid took a flower from her bodice and gave it to
+him as a token of remembrance. He solemnly tucked
+it away in a pocket, stammered his farewells, and went
+to join his uncle who waited in the yawl at the wharf.
+Once on board the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>, they were
+swept into a bustle and confusion. Captain Jonathan
+Wellsby was in haste to catch a fair wind and make his
+offing before nightfall. His sailors ran to and fro,
+jumping at the word, active and cheery. Stately and
+slow, the high-pooped merchant trader filled away on
+the larboard tack and pointed her lofty bowsprit seaward.</p>
+
+<p>The watches were set, ropes coiled down, and the
+tackles of the cannon overhauled. The skipper paced
+the after-deck, a long telescope under his arm, while the
+passengers lined the rail and gazed at the rude settlement
+that was slowly dropping below the horizon. The<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
+sea was tranquil and the breeze steady. The ship was
+clothed in canvas which bellied to drive her eastward
+with a frothing wake. Safely she left the outer bar
+astern and wallowed in the ocean swell.</p>
+
+<p>The afternoon sun was sinking when a sail gleamed
+like a bit of cloud against the southerly sky. Captain
+Wellsby held to his course and showed no uneasiness.
+Soon another sail became visible and then a third, these
+two smaller than the first. They might be honest merchantmen
+steering in company, but the skipper consulted
+with his mates and the spy-glass passed from hand
+to hand. The passengers were at supper in the cuddy
+and their talk and laughter came through the open skylights.</p>
+
+<p>Presently the boatswain piped the crew to quarters
+and the men moved quietly to their battle stations, opening
+the gun-ports and casting loose the lashings. The
+boys fetched paper cartridges of powder in buckets from
+the magazine and the gunners lighted the matches of
+tow. Cutlasses were buckled on and the pikes were
+scattered along the bulwarks ready to be snatched up.</p>
+
+<p>It was impossible to escape these three strange vessels
+by beating back to Charles Town, for the <i>Plymouth
+Adventure</i> made lubberly work of it when thrashing to
+windward. She was a swift ship, however, before a fair
+wind, and Captain Wellsby resolved to run for it, hoping
+to edge away from danger if his suspicions should
+be confirmed.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Before sunset the largest of the strange sail shifted
+her course as though to set out in chase and overhaul the
+deep-laden merchant trader. Captain Wellsby stood
+near the tiller, his hands clasped behind him, a solid,
+dependable figure of a British mariner. The passengers
+were crowding around him in distressful agitation but
+he calmly assured them a stern chase was a long chase
+and he expected to slip away under cover of night. So
+far as he was aware, no pirates, excepting Stede Bonnet,
+had been recently reported in these waters.</p>
+
+<p>Here Mr. Peter Forbes broke in to say that the
+<i>Plymouth Adventure</i> had naught to fear from Captain
+Bonnet who had pledged his word to let her sail unmolested.
+Other passengers scoffed at the absurd notion
+of trusting a pirate's oath, but the pompous Secretary
+of the Council could not be cried down. He was
+a canny critic of human nature and he knew an honorable
+pirate when he met him.</p>
+
+<p>It was odd, but in a pinch like this the dapper, finicky
+Councilor Peter Arbuthnot Forbes displayed an unshaken
+courage as became a gentleman of his position,
+while young Jack Cockrell had suddenly changed his
+opinion of the fascinating trade of piracy. He had not
+the slightest desire to investigate it at any closer range.
+His knees were inclined to wobble and his stomach felt
+qualms. His uncle twitted him as a braggart ashore who
+sang a different tune afloat. The lad's grin was feeble
+as he retorted that he took his pirates one at a time.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The largest vessel of the pursuit came up at a tremendous
+pace, reeling beneath an extraordinary spread
+of canvas, her spray-swept hull disclosing an armament
+of thirty guns, the decks swarming with men. She was
+no merchant ship, this was already clear, but there was
+still the hope that she might be a man-of-war or a privateer.
+Captain Wellsby looked in vain for her colors.
+At length he saw a flag whip from the spanker gaff.
+He laid down the glass with a profound sigh.</p>
+
+<p>The flag was black with a sinister device, a white
+blotch whose outline suggested a human skull.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Wellsby gazed again and carefully examined
+the two sloops which were acting in concert with the
+thirty-gun ship. It was a squadron, and the brave
+<i>Plymouth Adventure</i> was hopelessly outmatched. To
+fight meant a slaughter with never a chance of survival.</p>
+
+<p>The passengers had made no great clamor until the
+menacing ship drew close enough for them to descry the
+dreadful pennant which showed as a sable blot against
+the evening sky. Two women fainted and others were
+seized with violent hysteria. Their shrill screams were
+so distressing that the skipper ordered them to be lugged
+below and shut in their cabins. Mr. Peter Forbes had
+plumped himself down upon a coil of hawser, as if utterly
+disgusted, but he implored the captain to blaze
+away at the besotted scoundrels as long as two planks
+held together. The Honorable Secretary of the Council<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
+had been too outspoken in his opinions of pirates to expect
+kindness at their hands.</p>
+
+<p>The sailors also expected no quarter but they sullenly
+crouched at the gun-carriages, gripping the handspikes
+and blowing the matches while they waited for the word.
+The pirate ship was now reaching to windward of the
+<i>Plymouth Adventure</i>, heeling over until her decks were
+in full view. Upon the poop stood a man of the most
+singular appearance. He was squat and burly and immensely
+broad across the shoulders. What made him
+grotesque was a growth of beard which swept almost to
+his waist and covered his face like a hairy curtain. In
+it were tied bright streamers of crimson ribbon. Evidently
+this fantastic monster was proud of his whiskers
+and liked to adorn them.</p>
+
+<p>The laced hat with a feather in it, the skirted coat of
+buff and blue which flapped around his bow-legs, and
+the rows of gold buttons across his chest were in slovenly
+imitation of a naval uniform. But there was nothing
+like naval discipline on those crowded decks where half
+the crew appeared to be drunk and the rest of them
+cursing each other.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Jonathan Wellsby smothered a groan and his
+stern mouth twitched as he said to his chief mate:</p>
+
+<p>"God's mercy on us! 'Tis none other than the bloody
+Edward Teach,&mdash;that calls himself Blackbeard! My information
+was that he still cruised off the Spanish Main
+and refitted his ships in the Bay of Honduras."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"The madman of the sea," said the stolid mate. "A
+bad day for us when he sailed to the north'ard. He kills
+for the pleasure of it. Now Stede Bonnet loots such
+stuff as takes his fancy and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"He loves to fight a king's ship for the sport of it,"
+broke in the skipper, "but this murderer&mdash;&mdash; An unlucky
+voyage for the old <i>Plymouth Adventure</i> and all
+hands, Mate."</p>
+
+<p>One of the women who had been suffered to remain
+on deck was close enough to overhear the direful news.
+Her hands to heaven, she wailed:</p>
+
+<p>"Blackbeard! Oh, my soul, we are as good as dead,
+or worse. Fight and sink him, dear captain. What
+shall I do? What shall I do? If I had only minded
+the dream I had the night before we sailed&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Jack Cockrell sat down beside his uncle, a limp and
+sorry youth for one who had offered to slay a six-foot
+pirate before breakfast to please a pretty maid. With
+a sickly grin he murmured:</p>
+
+<p>"This cockerel crowed too loud, Uncle Peter. Methinks
+I share your distaste for piracy."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+<h3>HELD AS HOSTAGES TO BLACKBEARD</h3>
+
+
+<div class='unindent'><big>T</big>O discover the pestilent Blackbeard in Carolina
+waters was like a thunderbolt from a clear sky.
+Captain Wellsby had felt confident that he
+could beat off the ordinary pirate craft which was apt
+to be smaller than his own stout ship. And most of
+these unsavory gentry were mere salt-water burglars
+who had little taste for hard fighting. The master of
+the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>, so pious and sedate, was a
+brave man to whom the thought of surrender was intolerable.
+From what he knew of Blackbeard, it was useless
+to try to parley for the lives of his passengers. Better
+it was to answer with double-shotted guns than to
+beg for mercy.</div>
+
+<p>The British tars, stripped to the waist, turned anxious
+eyes to the skipper upon the quarter-deck while
+they quaffed pannikins of rum and water and cracked
+many a rough jest. They fancied death no more than
+other men, but seafaring was a perilous trade and they
+were toughened to its hazards. They were facing hopeless
+odds but let the master shout the command and they
+would send the souls of some of these pirates sizzling<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
+down to hell before the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i> sank, a
+splintered hulk, in the smoke of her own gunpowder.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Wellsby delayed his decision a moment
+longer. Something most unusual had attracted his attention.
+A ball of smoke puffed from a port of Blackbeard's
+ship, but the round shot splashed beyond the
+bowsprit of the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i> instead of thudding
+into her oaken side. This was a signal to heave to.
+It was a courtesy both unexpected and perplexing, because
+Blackbeard's habit was to let fly with all the guns
+that could bear as the summons to submit. Presently
+a dingy bit of cloth fluttered just beneath the black flag.
+It looked like the remains of a pirate's shirt which had
+once been white.</p>
+
+<p>"A signal for a truce?" muttered Captain Wellsby.
+"A ruse, mayhap, but the rogue has no need to resort to
+trickery."</p>
+
+<p>The two sloops of Blackbeard's squadron, spreading
+tall, square topsails, came driving down to windward in
+readiness to fire their bow-chasers and form in line of
+battle. The passengers of the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>,
+snatching at the chance of safety, implored the skipper
+to send his men away from the guns lest a rash shot
+might be their ruin. They prayed him to respect the
+precious flag of truce and to ascertain the meaning of it.
+Mystified and wavering in his purpose, he told the mates
+to back the main-yard and heave the ship to.</p>
+
+<p>Upon his own deck Blackbeard was stamping to and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
+fro, bellowing at his crew while he flourished a broadsword
+by way of emphasis. The hapless company of
+the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i> shivered at the very sight of
+him and yet there was something almost ludicrous in the
+antics of this atrocious pirate, as though he were play-acting
+upon the stage of a theatre. He had tucked up
+the tails of his military coat because the wind whipped
+them about his bandy legs and made him stumble. The
+flowing whiskers also proved bothersome, wherefore he
+looped them back over his ears by means of the bows
+of crimson ribbon. This seemed to be his personal
+fashion of clearing for action.</p>
+
+<p>"There be pirates and pirates," critically observed
+Mr. Peter Forbes as he stared at the unpleasant Blackbeard.
+"This is a filthy beast, Jack, and he was badly
+brought up. He has no manners whatever."</p>
+
+<p>"Parson Throckmorton would take him for the devil
+himself," gloomily answered the lad.</p>
+
+<p>And now they saw Blackbeard raise a speaking-trumpet
+to his lips and heard the hoarse voice come down the
+wind with this message:</p>
+
+<p>"The ship ahoy! Steady as ye be, blast your eyes,
+or I'll lay aboard and butcher all hands."</p>
+
+<p>He turned and yelled commands to the two sloops
+which now rolled within pistol-shot. In helter-skelter
+style but with great speed, one boat after another was
+lowered away and filled with armed pirates. They
+rowed toward the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i> and there were<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
+enough of them to carry her by boarding. In addition
+to this, she was directly under the guns of Blackbeard's
+powerful ship. One valorous young gentleman passenger
+whipped out a rapier and swore to perish with
+his face to the foe, but Captain Wellsby kicked him into
+the cabin and fastened the scuttle. This was no time
+for dramatics.</p>
+
+<p>"It looks that the old ruffian comes on a peaceful
+errand," said the skipper, by way of comfort. But the
+hysterical ladies below decks redoubled their screams
+and one substantial merchant of Charles Town scrambled
+down to hide himself among them. Mr. Peter
+Arbuthnot Forbes folded his arms and there was no
+sign of weakness in his pink countenance. His dignity
+still sustained him.</p>
+
+<p>As agile as monkeys, the mob of pirates poured over
+the bulwark, slashing through the hammock nettings,
+and swept forward in a compact mass, driving Captain
+Wellsby's seamen before them and penning them in the
+forecastle. Having cleared the waist of the ship, they
+loitered there until a few of them discovered the galley
+and pantry. They swept the shelves and lockers bare
+of food like a pack of famished wolves. Jack Cockrell
+looked at them from the poop and perceived that they
+were a gaunt, ragged lot. The skins of some were yellow
+like parchment, and fits of trembling overtook them.
+Something more than dissipation ailed them.</p>
+
+<p>With a body-guard of the sturdiest men, Blackbeard<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
+clambered up the poop ladder and, with wicked oaths,
+told the skipper to stand forth. Clean and trig and
+carefully dressed, Captain Jonathan Wellsby confronted
+these savage, unwashed pirates and calmly demanded
+to know their errand. It was plain to read
+that Blackbeard thought himself an imposing figure.
+With a smirk and a grimace he bowed clumsily to a
+woman on deck who had refused to desert her husband.
+He growled like a bear at Captain Wellsby and prodded
+the poor man with his cutlass as he thundered:</p>
+
+<p>"You tried my patience, shipmaster, with your
+cracking on sail. A little more and I'd ha' slit your
+throat. Blood an' wounds, would ye dare to vex Blackbeard?"</p>
+
+<p>Captain Wellsby faced him with unshaken composure
+and returned in a strong voice:</p>
+
+<p>"I beg no favors for myself but these helpless people,
+women amongst them, came on board with my assurance
+of safety. They have friends and kinsmen in Charles
+Town who will ransom them in gold."</p>
+
+<p>Blackbeard's mien was a shade less ferocious as he
+cried:</p>
+
+<p>"Gold? Can it cool a fever or heal a festering sore?
+A score of my men are down and the others are tottering
+ghosts. Medicines I must have. A foul plague on
+those ports of the Spanish Main which laid my fine lads
+by the heels."</p>
+
+<p>Jack Cockrell, who had retreated to the taffrail, decided<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
+that this unkempt pirate was not so absurd as he
+appeared. There was the strength of a giant in those
+hulking shoulders and in the long arms which bulged the
+coat-sleeves, and the man moved with a quickness which
+made that clumsy air deceptive. The beard masked his
+features but the eye was keen and roving, and he had a
+trick of baring his teeth in a nasty snarl. He uttered
+no more threats, however, and seemed to be anxiously
+awaiting the reply of Captain Wellsby, who said:</p>
+
+<p>"The few medicines and simples in my chest will not
+suffice your need. Your ships are rotten with the
+Spanish fever."</p>
+
+<p>"A ransom, shipmaster?" exclaimed the pirate.
+"'Twas in my mind when I flew a white flag for parley.
+I will hold some of your fine passengers as hostages
+while the others go in to rake Charles Town for medicines
+to fetch back to my fleet."</p>
+
+<p>"You will send my ship in?" asked the skipper.</p>
+
+<p>"No! This <i>Plymouth Adventure</i> is my good prize
+and I will overhaul the cargo and sink her at my leisure.
+My ship will tack in to Charles Town bar. Then let the
+messengers go in the long-boat to find the store of medicines.
+Harkee, shipmaster,&mdash;two days, no longer, for
+their return! Failing this, the hostages feed the fishes.
+Such sport 'ud liven the hearts of my doleful seamen."</p>
+
+<p>It was a shameful bargain, thus to submit to a pirate's
+whim, but the wretched ship's company hailed it as a
+glad surprise. They had stood in the shadow of death<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
+and this was a respite and a chance of salvation. Captain
+Wellsby was heart-sick with humiliation but it was
+not for him to take into his hands the fate of all these
+others. Sadly he nodded assent. Jack Cockrell nudged
+his uncle and whispered:</p>
+
+<p>"Why doesn't he sail in with his three ships and take
+what he likes? The town lies helpless against such a
+force as this."</p>
+
+<p>"Ssh-h, be silent," was the warning. "He is a wary
+bird of prey and he fears a trap. He dare not attack
+the port, since he lacks knowledge of its defenses."</p>
+
+<p>Jack's cheek was rosy again and his knees had ceased
+to tremble. There was no immediate prospect of walking
+the plank. To be captured by Blackbeard was a
+finer adventure than strutting arm-in-arm with Captain
+Stede Bonnet. It was mournful, indeed, that Captain
+Wellsby should have to lose his ship but 'tis an ill wind
+that blows nobody good and the voyage to England,
+which Jack had loathed from the bottom of his heart,
+was indefinitely postponed. Such an experience as this
+was apt to discourage Uncle Peter Forbes from trying
+it again.</p>
+
+<p>There were sundry chicken-hearted passengers anxious
+to curry favor with Blackbeard, who gabbled when
+they should have held their tongues, and in this manner
+he learned that he had bagged the honorable Secretary
+of the Provincial Council. The bewhiskered pirate
+slapped his thighs and roared with glee.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Damme, but he looks it! Alack that my sorry need
+of medicines compels me to give quarter! Would I
+might swing this fat Secretary from a topsail yard!
+And a rogue of a lawyer to boot! He tempts me&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I demand the courtesy due a hostage," exclaimed
+Mr. Peter Forbes.</p>
+
+<p>"Ho, ho, you shall be my lackey,&mdash;the chief messenger,"
+laughed Blackbeard, showing his yellow teeth.
+"Hat in hand, begging medicines for me."</p>
+
+<p>The honorable Secretary was near apoplexy. He
+could only sputter and cough. He was to be sent as
+an errand boy to the people of Charles Town, at the
+brutal behest of this unspeakable knave, but refusal
+meant death and there were his fellow captives to consider.
+He thought of his nephew and was about to
+plead that Jack be sent along with him when Blackbeard
+demanded:</p>
+
+<p>"What of the boy? He takes my eye. No pursy
+swine of a lawyer could sire a lad of his brawn and
+inches."</p>
+
+<p>"I am Master Cockrell," Jack answered for himself,
+"and I would have you more courteous to my worthy
+uncle."</p>
+
+<p>It was a speech so bold that the scourge of the Spanish
+Main tugged at his whiskers with an air of comical
+perplexity. The headstrong Jack was keen enough to
+note that he had made an impression and he rashly
+added:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"'Tis not long since I knocked a pirate on the head
+for incivility."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Peter Forbes gazed aghast, with slackened jaw,
+expecting to see his mad nephew cut down by the sweep
+of a broadsword, but Blackbeard merely grinned and
+slapped the lad half-way across the deck with a buffet of
+his open hand. Dizzily Jack picked himself up and was
+furiously scolded by his uncle. Their lives hung by a
+hair and this was no time to play the fool. For once,
+however, Jack was the wiser of the two. In an amiable
+humor Blackbeard exclaimed:</p>
+
+<p>"And so this strapping young jackanapes knocks
+pirates on the head! There be lazy dogs among my
+men that well deserve it. You shall stay aboard, Master
+Cockrell, whilst the juicy lubber of a lawyer
+voyages into Charles Town. He may sweat an' strive
+the more if I hold you as his security. Zounds, I'll
+make a gentleman rover of ye, Jack, for I like your
+mettle."</p>
+
+<p>It was futile for the unhappy uncle to argue the matter.
+He could only obey the tyrant's pleasure and hope
+for a speedy return and the release of the terrified passengers.
+The <i>Plymouth Adventure</i> was ordered to
+haul her course to the westward and jog under easy sail
+toward the Charles Town bar. Blackbeard was rowed
+off to his own ship, the <i>Revenge</i>, leaving his sailing-master
+and a prize crew. These amused themselves by
+dragging the weeping women on deck and robbing them<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
+of their jewels and money, but no worse violence was
+offered. Middle-aged matrons and elderly spinsters,
+they were neither young nor fair enough to be stolen as
+pirates' brides.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Revenge</i> and the two sloops hovered within sight
+of the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i> and their sails gleamed
+phantom-like in the darkness. There was little sleep
+aboard the captured merchant trader. Some of the
+pirates amused themselves with hauling chests and boxes
+out of the cabins and spilling the contents about the deck
+in riotous disorder. One sprightly outlaw arrayed himself
+in a silken petticoat and flowered bodice and paraded
+as a languishing lady with false curls until the
+others pelted him with broken bottles and tar buckets.
+By the flare of torches they ransacked the ship for provisions,
+cordage, canvas, and heaped them ready to be
+dumped into boats.</p>
+
+<p>Jack Cockrell looked on until he was too drowsy to
+stay awake and fell asleep on deck, his head pillowed on
+his arm. Through the night the watches were changed
+to the harsh summons of the pirate sailing-master or his
+mate. Once Jack awoke when a seaman staggered into
+the moonlight with blood running down his face. He
+was not likely to be caught napping on watch again.</p>
+
+<p>At dawn the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i> was astir and the
+<i>Revenge</i> ran close aboard to watch Mr. Peter Arbuthnot
+Forbes and two prosperous merchants of Charles
+Town bundled into the long-boat. Blackbeard shouted<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
+bloody threats through his trumpet, reminding them
+that he would allow no more than two days' grace for
+their errand ashore. Uncle Peter was deeply affected
+as he embraced his nephew and kissed him on the cheek.
+Jack's eyes were wet and he faltered, with unsteady
+voice:</p>
+
+<p>"Forgive me, sir, for all the trouble I have made you.
+Never did I expect a parting like this."</p>
+
+<p>"A barbarous coast, Jack, and a hard road to old England,"
+smiled the Secretary of the Council. "Have a
+stout heart. By God's grace I shall soon deliver you
+from these sea vermin."</p>
+
+<p>The boy watched the long-boat hoist sail with a grizzled,
+scarred old boatswain from the <i>Revenge</i> at the
+tiller. It drove for the blue fairway of the channel between
+the frothing shoals of the bar and made brave
+headway for the harbor. Then the ships stood out to
+sea to go clear of a lee shore and the captives of the
+<i>Plymouth Adventure</i> endured the harrowing suspense
+with such courage as they could muster. Should any
+accident delay the return of the long-boat beyond two
+days, even head winds or foul weather, or if there was
+lack of medicines in the town, they were doomed to
+perish.</p>
+
+<p>Jack Cockrell endured it with less anguish than the
+other wretched hostages. He had the sublime confidence
+of youth in its own destiny and he had found a
+chum in a boyish pirate named Joseph Hawkridge who<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
+said he had sailed out of London as an apprentice seaman
+in a ketch bound to Jamaica. He had been taken
+out of his ship by Blackbeard, somewhere off the Azores,
+and compelled to enlist or walk the plank. At first he
+was made cook's scullion but because he was well-grown
+and active, the chief gunner had taken him over as a
+powder boy.</p>
+
+<p>This Joe Hawkridge was a waif of the London slums,
+hard and wise beyond his years, who had been starved
+and abused ever since he could remember. He had fled
+from cruel taskmasters ashore to endure the slavery of
+the sea and to be kidnapped into piracy was no worse
+than other things he had suffered. A gangling lad, with
+a grin on his homely face, he had certain instincts of
+manliness, of decent conduct, although he had known
+only men whose souls were black with sin. Heaven
+knows where he learned these cleaner aspirations.
+They were like the reflection of a star in a muddy
+pool.</p>
+
+<p>It was easy for Jack Cockrell to win his confidence.
+Few of his shipmates spoke kindly or showed pity for
+him. And their youth drew them together. Jack's
+motive was largely curiosity as soon as he discovered
+that here was one of Blackbeard's crew ready to confide
+in him. The two lads chatted in sheltered corners of the
+deck, between watches, or met more freely in the night
+hours. Jack shuddered at some of the tales that were
+told him but he harkened breathless and asked for more.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Yes, this Blackbeard is the very wickedest pirate
+that ever sailed," said Joe Hawkridge in the most matter-of-fact
+tones. "You have found him merciful because
+he fears a mortal sickness will sweep through his
+ships."</p>
+
+<p>"You have curdled my blood enough for now," admitted
+Jack. "Tell me this. What do they say of
+Captain Stede Bonnet? He chances to be a friend of
+mine."</p>
+
+<p>Joe Hawkridge ceased to grin. He was startled and
+impressed. Real gentlemen like this young Cockrell
+always told the truth. Making certain that they could
+not be overheard, Joe whispered:</p>
+
+<p>"What news of Stede Bonnet? You've seen him?
+When? Did he cruise to the north'ard? Has he been
+seen off Charles Town?"</p>
+
+<p>"He came ashore not long ago, and invited me to dinner
+at the tavern with him," bragged Jack. "And he
+coaxed me to sign in his ship."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, you'd catch his eye, Cockrell, but listen! What
+ship had he, and how many men? God strike me, but
+I'll not tattle it. I'm true as steel to Stede Bonnet.
+If you love me, don't breathe it here."</p>
+
+<p>"There is no love lost betwixt him and Blackbeard?"
+excitedly queried Jack.</p>
+
+<p>"Mortal foes they be, if you ask Stede Bonnet."</p>
+
+<p>Feeling sure he could trust this young Hawkridge,
+Jack informed him:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Stede Bonnet flies his pennant in a fine brig, the
+<i>Royal James</i>, with seventy lusty rovers. But what
+about him, Joe? Why does he hate this foul ogre of a
+Blackbeard? Did they ever sail together?"</p>
+
+<p>"'Twas in the Bay of Honduras. Captain Bonnet
+was a green hand at the trade but zealous to win renown
+at piratin'. And so he made compact with Blackbeard,
+to sail as partners. There was Stede Bonnet with a fine
+ship and his own picked crew. By treachery Blackbeard
+stole the vessel from him. Bonnet and his men
+were left to shift for 'emselves in a rotten old hulk that
+was like to founder in a breeze o' wind."</p>
+
+<p>"But they stayed afloat and took them a good ship,"
+proudly exclaimed Jack, with a personal interest in the
+venture.</p>
+
+<p>"True, by what you say. D'ye see the <i>Revenge</i>
+yonder, Blackbeard's tall cruiser? The very ship he
+filched from Stede Bonnet by dirty stratagem and
+broken oaths!"</p>
+
+<p>"Then the powder will burn when next they meet?"</p>
+
+<p>"As long as there's a shot in the locker, Jack. And
+Blackbeard's men are ripe for mutiny. Let 'em once
+sight Stede Bonnet's topsails and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>A gunner's mate broke into this interview with a cat-o'-nine-tails
+and flogged Joe Hawkridge forward to
+duty. He ducked and fled with a farewell grin at the
+nephew of the Secretary of the Council. Now all this
+was diverting enough to keep Jack from bemoaning his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
+fate, but the other passengers counted the hours one by
+one and their hearts began to drum against their ribs.
+They scanned the sea and the harbor bar with aching
+eyes, for the two days were well-nigh spent and there
+was never a sign of the long-boat and the messengers
+with the ransom of medicines which should avert the
+sentence of death.</p>
+
+<p>Sunrise of the second day brought them no comfort.
+The sea was gray and the sky leaden, without the slightest
+stir of wind. The drifting vessels rolled in a swell
+that heaved as smooth as oil. It was a calm which presaged
+violent weather. Against her masts the yards of
+the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i> banged with a sound like distant
+thunder and the idle canvas slatted to the thump of
+blocks and the thin wail of chafing cordage.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Jonathan Wellsby was permitted the freedom
+of the poop by Blackbeard's sailing-master who
+seemed a sober and competent officer. They were seen
+to confer earnestly, as though the safety of the ship were
+uppermost in their minds. Soon the pirates of the prize
+crew were ordered to stow and secure all light sail and
+pass extra lashings about the boats and batten the
+hatches. They worked slowly, some of them shaking
+with fever, nor could kicks and curses and the sting of
+the whistling cat make them turn to smartly. The sailing-master
+signaled the <i>Revenge</i> to send off more hands
+but Blackbeard was either drunk or in one of his crack-brained
+moods. With a laugh he pulled a brace of pistols<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
+from his sash and blazed away at the <i>Plymouth
+Adventure.</i></p>
+
+<p>The two sloops of the pirate squadron had sagged
+down to leeward during the night and were trying to
+work back to their stations when the dead calm intervened.
+Their skippers had sense enough to read the
+weather signs and had begun to take in canvas. On
+board of the <i>Revenge</i>, however, there was aimless confusion,
+the mates making some attempt to prepare the
+ship for a heavy blow while Blackbeard defied the elements.
+His idea of arousing his men was to try potshots
+with his pistols as they crept out on the swaying
+spars.</p>
+
+<p>It was quite apparent that the sailing-master was
+sorely needed in the <i>Revenge</i>, if order was to be brought
+out of this chaos, but he received no orders to quit the
+<i>Plymouth Adventure</i>. He was a proper seaman, Ned
+Rackham by name, who had deserted from the Royal
+Navy, after being flogged and keel-hauled for some trifling
+offense. Rumor had it that he was able to enforce
+respect from Blackbeard and would stand none of his
+infernal nonsense.</p>
+
+<p>"In this autumn season we may catch a storm from
+the West Indies, Mr. Rackham," said Captain Wellsby.
+"The sea has a greasy look and this heavy ground swell
+is a portent."</p>
+
+<p>"The feel of it is in the air, shipmaster. There fell
+an evil calm like this come two year ago when I was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
+wrecked in a ship-of-the-line within sight of Havana.
+Four hundred men sank with her."</p>
+
+<p>"If my sailors were not penned in the fo'castle&mdash;&mdash;"
+suggested the merchant skipper.</p>
+
+<p>"None o' that," was the stern retort. "This ship is
+a prize to Blackbeard and so she stays, and you will sink
+or swim with her."</p>
+
+<p>The morning wore on and the two days of grace had
+passed for those doleful hostages in the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>.
+They beheld the black flag hoisted to the rigging
+of the <i>Revenge</i> as a signal of tragic import, but the
+bandy-legged monster with the festooned whiskers was
+not to disport himself with this wanton butchery. The
+sky had closed darkly around the becalmed ships, in
+sodden clouds which were suddenly obscured by mist
+and rain while the wind sighed in fitful gusts. It steadied
+into the southward and swiftly increased in force
+until the sea was whipped into foam and scud.</p>
+
+<p>Staunch and well-found, the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>
+went reeling off across the spray-swept leagues of water,
+showing only her reefed topsails and courses. The two
+pirate sloops vanished beyond the curtain of mist.
+When last seen, one of them was dismasted and the
+other was laboring in grave peril. The <i>Revenge</i> loomed
+as a spectral shape while Blackbeard was endeavoring to
+get her running free in pursuit of the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>.
+But slovenly, reckless seamanship had caught him
+unready. His sails were blowing to ribbons, ropes fly<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>ing
+at loose ends, and it was with great difficulty that the
+vessel could be made to mind her tiller.</p>
+
+<p>Already the sea was rising in crested combers which
+broke with the noise of thunder and the fury of the wind
+was insensate. Slowly the struggling <i>Revenge</i> dropped
+astern, yawing wildly, rolling her bulwarks under, splintered
+spars dangling from the caps. She was a crippled
+ship which would be lucky to see port again. It was to
+be inferred that Blackbeard had ceased to cut his mirthful
+capers on the poop and that he would have given
+bushels of doubloons to regain his sailing-master and
+men.</p>
+
+<p>In the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i> things were in far better
+plight, even with the feeble, short-handed prize crew.
+Prudently snugged down in ample time, with extra
+hands at the steering tackles, they let her drive. She
+would perhaps wear clear of the coast and there was
+hope of survival unless the tempest should fairly wrench
+her strong timbers asunder.</p>
+
+<p>Lashed to the weather rigging, Captain Jonathan
+Wellsby wiped the brine from his eyes and waved his
+arm at the helmsman, now to ease her a little, again to
+haul up and thus thwart some ravening sea which threatened
+to stamp his ship under. Sailing-Master Ned
+Rackham was content to let the skipper con his own vessel
+in this great emergency.</p>
+
+<p>The mind of Captain Wellsby was very active and he
+pondered on something else than winning through the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
+storm. He had been helpless while under the guns of
+the <i>Revenge</i>, with the two sloops in easy call. Now the
+situation was vastly different. He had been delivered
+out of Blackbeard's clutches. And in the forecastle
+were thirty British seamen with hearts of oak, raging to
+be loosed with weapons in their hands. Peering into
+the gray smother of sea and sky, Captain Jonathan
+Wellsby licked his lips hungrily as he said to himself:</p>
+
+<p>"Not now, but if the storm abates and we float
+through the night, these lousy picaroons shall dance to
+another tune."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+
+<h3>THE CAPTIVE SEAMEN IN THE FORECASTLE</h3>
+
+
+<div class='unindent'><big>J</big>ACK COCKRELL was seasick. This was enough
+to spoil any adventure. Curled up under a boat,
+the spray pelted him and the wild motion of the
+ship sloshed him back and forth. He took no interest
+even in piracy. Joe Hawkridge, tough as whip-cord
+and seasoned to all kinds of weather, came clawing his
+way aft while the water streamed from his thin shirt and
+ragged breeches. The pirates of the prize crew had
+sought shelter wherever they could find it. The waist
+of the ship was flooded with breaking seas. A few of
+the larboard watch were huddled forward, close to the
+lofty forecastle where they were stationed as sentries
+over the imprisoned sailors of the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>.</div>
+
+<p>The commotion of the wind shrieking in the rigging
+and the horrid crash of the toppling combers were
+enough to convince a landlubber that the vessel was
+doomed to founder. But Joe Hawkridge clapped
+young Jack an affectionate clout on the ear and bawled
+at him:</p>
+
+<div class='poem'>
+"For his work he's never loth,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">An' a-pleasurin' he'll go,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Tho' certain sure to be popt off;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;"><i>Yo, ho, with the rum below!</i>"</span><br />
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span></div>
+
+<p>Jack managed to fetch a sickly smile of greeting, but
+had nothing to say. Joe snuggled down beside him and
+explained:</p>
+
+<p>"I wouldn't dare sing that song if Blackbeard's bullies
+could hear me. 'Tis known as Stede Bonnet's ditty,
+for a fight or a frolic."</p>
+
+<p>"By Harry, they can roll it out. My blood tingled
+when they chorused it through Charles Town," said
+Jack, with signs of animation and a sparkle in his eye.
+"Tell me truly, Joe. What about this pirate sailing-master,
+Ned Rackham? He seems a different sort from
+your other drunken wretches. He is more like one of
+Captain Bonnet's choosing."</p>
+
+<p>"Gulled you, has he?" cried Joe. "I was afeard of
+that. And he's getting on the blind side of your skipper.
+This Cap'n Jonathan Wellsby is brave enough
+and a rare seaman, but he ne'er dealt with a smooth
+rogue like Ned Rackham. He stays sober to plot for
+his own advantage. He will serve Blackbeard only till
+he can trip him by the heels. Now listen well, Jack, seasick
+though ye be. You will have to warn your skipper,
+Captain Wellsby."</p>
+
+<p>"Warn him of what? My poor head is so addled
+that I can fathom no plots. How can Ned Rackham
+do us mischief while this infernal gale blows? He toils
+with might and main for the safety of the ship."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, you dunce, and let a lull come," scornfully exclaimed
+the boyish pirate. "What then? A fine ship<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
+this, and well gunned. She would make a smackin'
+cruiser for Ned Rackham, eh? He hoists the Jolly
+Roger on his own account and laughs at Blackbeard."</p>
+
+<p>"Take our ship for his own?" faltered Jack, his wits
+confused. "I never thought of that. Why, that means
+getting rid of us, of the passengers and crew."</p>
+
+<p>Joe passed a hand across his throat with a grimace
+that said more than words.</p>
+
+<p>"He has the ship's company disarmed and helpless,
+Jack. And pirates a-plenty to work her till he recruits
+a stronger force. All hands of 'em have a surfeit of
+Blackbeard's bloody whims an' didoes."</p>
+
+<p>"And Captain Wellsby will be caught off his guard?"
+said Jack, shivering at the aspect of this new terror.</p>
+
+<p>"Can he do aught to prevent, unless he is bold enough
+to forestall it?" answered the shrewd young sea
+waif. "Better die fighting than be slain like squealin'
+rats."</p>
+
+<p>"Recapture the ship ere Ned Rackham casts the
+dice," said Jack. "But it means playing the hazard in
+the midst of this storm. How can it be done? A forlorn
+venture. It can but fail."</p>
+
+<p>"You are as good as dead if you don't," was Joe's
+sensible verdict.</p>
+
+<p>Jack Cockrell forgot his wretched qualms of mind
+and body. The trumpet call of duty invigorated him.
+He was no longer a useless lump. The color returned
+to his cheek as he crawled from under the boat and shak<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>ily
+hauled himself to his feet. Joe Hawkridge nodded
+approval and exhorted:</p>
+
+<p>"A stiff upper lip, my gallant young gentleman.
+Steady she goes, an' not too hasty. Ned Rackham is
+as sharp as a whetted sword. Ware ye, boy, lest he pick
+up the scent. Fetch me word, here, beneath this jolly-boat."</p>
+
+<p>Jack stole away, staggering along the high poop deck
+until he could cling to the life-line stretched along the
+roof of the great cabin. There he slumped down and
+feigned helplessness, banged against the bulwark as a
+dripping heap of misery or kicked aside by the pirates
+of the watch as they were relieved at the steering tackles.
+From half-closed eyes he watched Ned Rackham, a
+vigilant, dominant figure in a tarred jacket and quilted
+breeches and long sea-boots. Now and again he cupped
+his hands and yelled in the ear of Captain Wellsby
+whose beard was gray with brine.</p>
+
+<p>Jack saw that it was hopeless to get a private word
+with the skipper on deck. The clamor of the storm was
+too deafening. The one chance was to intercept him in
+the cabin when he went below for food and drink. Jack
+dragged himself to the after hatchway which was
+shoved open a trifle to admit air, and squeezed himself
+through. Before he tumbled down the steep staircase he
+turned to glance at Captain Wellsby. Unseen by Ned
+Rackham, the boy raised his hand in a furtive, beckoning
+gesture.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The pirates had taken the main room of the after-house
+for their own use, driving the passengers and
+ship's officers into the small cabins or staterooms. The
+air was foul below, reeking of the bilges, and the main
+room was incredibly filthy. The pirates ate from dirty
+dishes, they had scattered food about, and they kicked
+off their boots to sleep on the floor like pigs in a
+sty.</p>
+
+<p>Several of them were seated at the long table, bottle
+and mug in hand, and the gloomy place was poorly
+lighted by a swinging whale-oil lamp. Jack Cockrell
+crept unnoticed into a corner and was giddy and almost
+helpless with nausea. It seemed ages before Captain
+Wellsby's legs appeared in the hatchway and he came
+down into the cabin, bringing a shower of spray with
+him. His kindly face was haggard and sad and he tottered
+from sheer weariness. Passing through to his own
+room, a scurvy pirate hurled refuse food at him, with a
+silly laugh, and others insulted him with the foulest epithets.</p>
+
+<p>He paid them no heed and they returned to their own
+amusements. Jack Cockrell aroused himself to stumble
+after the skipper who halted to grasp the lad by the
+shoulder and shove him headlong into the little room.
+The door was quickly bolted behind them. A lurch of
+the vessel flung Jack into the bunk but he managed to
+sit up, holding his head in his hands, while he feebly
+implored:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Did you note me wave my hand, sir, when I came
+below?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, and I followed as soon as I could," answered
+the master of the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>. "There was
+the hint of secrecy in your signal, Jack. What's in the
+wind?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am the only passenger to win the confidence of
+one of Blackbeard's crew," explained the lad. "This
+Joe Hawkridge is true to us, I'll swear it. He is a
+pressed man, hating his masters. He bids me tell you
+that Ned Rackham will seize the ship for his own as soon
+as ever the wind goes down."</p>
+
+<p>"Um-m, is he as bold as that?" grunted the skipper,
+rubbing his nose with an air of rueful surprise. "No
+honor among thieves, Jack. I thought him loyal to
+Blackbeard. I have considered attempting something
+of my own when the weather permits but this news
+quickens me. This young imp o' Satan that ye call Joe,&mdash;he
+will side with us in a pinch?"</p>
+
+<p>"Aye, sir. And he knows this Ned Rackham well.
+There has been talk among the pirates of rising against
+Blackbeard to follow the fortunes of Sailing-Master
+Rackham. Here is the ship, as Joe says."</p>
+
+<p>"It has a plausible sound," said Captain Wellsby.
+"My intention was to wait, but I shall have to strike
+first."</p>
+
+<p>"Can we fight in this storm, sir, even if we manage to
+release our sailors?" asked Jack, very dismally.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Not what we can, but what we must do," growled
+the stubborn British mariner. "The shame of striking
+my colors rankles like a wound. God helping me, we
+shall wipe out that stain if we drown in a sinking ship.
+I talk to you as a man, Master Cockrell, for such you
+have proven yourself. And who else is there to serve
+me in this adventure?"</p>
+
+<p>"To set our sailors free, you mean, sir?" eagerly exclaimed
+Jack. "I took thought of that. There is nobody
+but me, neither your mates nor the passengers,
+who can pass among the pirates without suspicion. The
+knaves have humored me, hearing the tale of the pirate
+I knocked on the head and my braggart remark to
+Blackbeard. They have seen me about the decks with
+Joe Hawkridge as my boon comrade. 'Tis their fancy
+that I am likely to enlist."</p>
+
+<p>"Well said, Jack," was the skipper's compliment.
+"Yes, you might make your way for'ard without interference,&mdash;but
+the fo'castle hatches are stoutly guarded.
+Again, should my brave fellows find exit, they are weaponless,
+unready. Moreover, they have been crammed
+in that dark hole, drenched by the sea, cruelly bruised
+by the tossing of the ship, and weakened for lack of food
+and air."</p>
+
+<p>"Granted, sir," sighed Jack. "But if some message
+could be smuggled in to forewarn them of the enterprise,&mdash;would
+that brace 'em to the assault?"</p>
+
+<p>"Will ye try it, Jack?" asked the skipper, with a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
+note of appeal in his hearty voice. "I know not where
+else to turn. You take your life in your hands but&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The shipmaster broke off with a grim smile. It was
+absurd to prate of life or death in such a strait as this.
+The boy reflected before he said:</p>
+
+<p>"If&mdash;if I fail, sir, Joe Hawkridge will try to pass a
+message in to the men. You can depend on 't."</p>
+
+<p>"A last resort, Jack. You vouch for him but I trust
+you far sooner. He has kept sorry company."</p>
+
+<p>"When is the best hour, Captain Wellsby?"</p>
+
+<p>"Just before nightfall when the watches will be
+changing. I dare not delay it longer than that. In
+darkness, my lads will be unable to find the foe and
+strike hard and quick. Nor can they rush to lay hold
+of the only weapons in their reach,&mdash;the pikes in the
+racks beside the masts. Not a pistol or cutlass amongst
+'em, and they must fight with these wicked dogs of pirates
+who think naught of killing men."</p>
+
+<p>"Let your lusty sailors once get clear, sir," stoutly
+declared Jack Cockrell, "and they will play a merry
+game with those long pikes. Then I am to slip the
+message written by your hand on a bit of paper?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's it! I will command them to pound against
+the scuttle, three raps, for a signal of response, and you
+must listen for it. Then it is for them to stand ready,
+on the chance that you can slip the bar of the hatch or
+the bolts on the door."</p>
+
+<p>"But if they have to come out singly, sir, and the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
+sentries are ready-witted, why, your men may be cut
+down or pistoled in their tracks."</p>
+
+<p>"I am so aware," said Captain Wellsby, his honest
+features glum, "but we cannot change the odds."</p>
+
+<p>He found an ink-horn and quill and laboriously wrote
+a few lines on a leaf torn from the back of a sea-stained
+log-book. Jack tucked it carefully away and thus they
+parted company, perhaps to meet no more in life.
+Through the waning afternoon, Jack stowed himself on
+deck and held long converse with Joe Hawkridge when
+they met between the keel-chocks of the jolly-boat. Because
+he shared not the skipper's feeling of distrust,
+Jack sought the active aid of his chum of a pirate lad.
+It was agreed that they should endeavor to reach the
+forecastle together when the ship's bell tolled the hour
+of beginning the first night watch.</p>
+
+<p>Joe hoped he might decoy or divert the sentries. If
+not, he had another scheme or two. A gunner's mate of
+the prize crew had sent him to overhaul the lashings of
+the battery of nine-pounders which were ranged along
+the waist. With several other hands Joe had made all
+secure, because the guns were apt to get adrift in such
+weather as this and plunge to and fro across the deck
+like maddened beasts. Now Joe Hawkridge had lingered,
+on pretext of making sure that one forward gun
+could be fired, if needs be, as a distress signal should the
+ship open her seams or strike upon a shoal.</p>
+
+<p>He had satisfied himself that the tompion, or wooden<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
+plug which sealed the muzzle was tight, and that no
+water had leaked through the wrapping of tarred canvas
+which protected the touch-hole. Before replacing them,
+he had made two or three trips to the deck-house amidships
+in which was the carpenter's room. Each time he
+tucked inside his shirt as many forged iron spikes, bolts,
+and what not as he could safely carry.</p>
+
+<p>Unobserved, he shoved this junk down the throat of
+the nine-pounder and wadded it fast with handfuls of
+oakum. He worked coolly, without haste, as agile as a
+monkey when the ship careened and the sea spurted
+through the cracks of the gun-ports. Well pleased with
+his task, he said to himself, with that grin which no peril
+could obliterate:</p>
+
+<p>"God alone knows how I can strike fire to a match
+and keep it alight, but the sky shows signs of easier
+weather."</p>
+
+<p>The fury of the storm had, indeed, diminished. It
+might be a respite before the wind hauled into another
+quarter and renewed its ferocious violence, but the air
+was no longer thick with the whirling smother of foam
+and spray and the straining topmasts had ceased to bend
+like whips. The ship was gallantly easing herself of the
+waves which broke aboard and the rearing billows astern
+were not threatening to stamp her under.</p>
+
+<p>It lacked almost an hour of nightfall when Jack Cockrell
+crept along the poop and halted to lean against the
+timbered railing by the mizzen shrouds. All he could<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
+think of was that Ned Rackham might seize upon this
+sudden abatement of the gale to hasten his own wicked
+conspiracy and so ruin the plan to restore the <i>Plymouth
+Adventure</i> to her own lawful company. This menace
+had occurred to Captain Jonathan Wellsby who stood
+tense and rigid at the sailing-master's elbow, watching
+him from the tail of his eye.</p>
+
+<p>Relief o'erspread the skipper's worn features when he
+espied Jack Cockrell who stood as if waiting for orders.
+A nod, a meaning glance, and they understood each
+other. Striving to appear unconcerned, Jack moved toward
+the forward part of the ship. He was aquiver
+with excitement, and his breath was quick and small, but
+the sense of fear had left him. Captain Wellsby had
+called him a man and, by God's sweet grace, he would so
+acquit himself.</p>
+
+<p>The pirates were swarming out of the cabin to taste
+the clean air and limber their cramped muscles. The
+ship still wallowed as she ran before the wind and it was
+breakneck work to clamber about. From the topsail
+yards fluttered mere ribbons of canvas where the reefed
+sails had bellied. Ned Rackham shouted for the watch
+to lay aloft and cut the remnants clear and bend new
+cloths to keep her from broaching to.</p>
+
+<p>Jack Cockrell's heart leaped for joy. At least a
+dozen of the most active pirates would have to obey this
+order. This would remove them from the deck for a
+precious interval of time. He slouched aimlessly nearer<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
+the forecastle, stretching his neck to gaze up at the pirates
+as they footed the ratlines and squirmed over the
+clumsy tops. Joe Hawkridge joined him, as if by
+chance, and they wandered to the lee side of the forecastle.
+There they were screened from the sight of the
+sentries.</p>
+
+<p>The wooden shutters of the little windows had been
+spiked fast on the outside and Jack was at his wits' end
+to find by what means he might slip the fateful message
+to the captive seamen. He dared not climb upon the
+roof and seek for a crack in a hatchway. This would
+make him too conspicuous.</p>
+
+<p>Cautiously he stole around the massive structure and
+was all but washed overboard when he gained the windward
+side where the water broke in hissing cataracts.
+So great had been its force during the height of the
+storm, that one of the shutters had been splintered and
+almost crushed in. Clutching the bit of paper which
+was tightly rolled and wrapped in a square of oiled
+linen, Jack pushed it through a ragged crevice in the
+shutter.</p>
+
+<p>It was gravely doubtful whether the men would discover
+the message in the gloom of their prison. It
+might fall to the floor and be trampled unperceived.
+And yet Jack Cockrell could not make himself believe
+that deliverance would be thwarted. He said a prayer
+and waited with his ear against the wall of the forecastle.
+There he leaned through an agonized eternity as the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
+slow moments passed. It was like the ordeal of a condemned
+man who hopes that a blessed reprieve may
+save him, in the last hour, from the black cap and the
+noose.</p>
+
+<p>Up aloft the pirate seamen were slashing the torn
+canvas with their dirks and casting loose the gaskets.
+Presently they began to come down to the deck, one by
+one. Some whispered word must have passed amongst
+them, because they drifted aft as by a common impulse
+although it was not yet the hour to change the watch.
+Their gunner's mate, a gigantic mulatto with a broken
+nose, went to the poop when Ned Rackham crooked his
+finger and these two stood aside, beyond earshot of Captain
+Wellsby, while they conferred with heads together.</p>
+
+<p>"They will strike first," Jack whispered to himself.</p>
+
+<p>The misty daylight had not darkened. The decks
+were not yet dusky with the shadows which Jack had
+hoped might enable him to approach the forecastle door
+in his brave endeavor to unbar it. The plans were all
+awry. Tears filled his eyes. And then there came to his
+ear a muffled knock against the other side of the forecastle
+planking.</p>
+
+<p>Once, twice, thrice! The signal was unmistakable.
+A little interval and it was repeated.</p>
+
+<p>Softly the trembling lad tiptoed to the corner of the
+forecastle house and peered around it to look for the
+sentries. Two of them had moved a few yards away to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
+join a group which gazed aft as if expecting a summons
+from Ned Rackham on the poop. The third sentry
+leaned against the forecastle door, a cutlass at his belt.
+He was a long, bony man with a face as yellow as parchment
+from the Spanish fever and it was plain to read
+that there was no great strength in him.</p>
+
+<p>Faithful Joe Hawkridge sat astride the breech of the
+nine-pounder at which he had been so busily engaged
+earlier in the afternoon. He appeared to be an idler
+who merely looked on but he was watching every motion,
+and that hard, canny face of his had, for once, forgot
+to grin. Releasing a three-foot handspike from its
+lashing beside the gun-carriage, he awaited the next roll
+of the deck and deftly kicked this handy weapon. It
+slid toward the forecastle and Jack Cockrell stopped it
+with his foot.</p>
+
+<p>There was no time for hesitation. Snatching up the
+iron-shod handspike, Jack rushed straight at the forecastle
+door. Just then the ship lurched far down and
+he was shot headlong, like falling off the roof of a house.
+He had the momentum of a battering-ram. The sentry
+yelled and drew his cutlass with a swiftness amazing in
+a sick man. His footing was unsteady or Jack would
+have spitted himself on the point of the blade. As he
+went crashing full-tilt into the man the impact was
+terrific. They went to the deck together and the handspike
+spun out of Jack's grasp. There was no need to
+swing it on this luckless pirate for his bald head smote a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
+plank with a thump which must have cracked it like an
+egg.</p>
+
+<p>Not even pausing to dart after the cutlass which had
+clattered from the lifeless fingers, Jack spun on his heel
+and wrenched at the heavy bar across the forecastle door
+and felt it slide from the fastenings. He tugged it clear
+and swung himself up to the roof to draw the bolts which
+secured the hatch. Rusted in their sockets, they resisted
+him but he spied a pulley-block within reach and used it
+as a hammer.</p>
+
+<p>All this was a matter of seconds only. The pirates
+grouped amidships had been waiting for Ned Rackham's
+word from aft and they were muddled by this sudden
+shift of action. The other sentries stared in foolish
+astonishment. The brief delay was enough to let Jack
+Cockrell free the hatch. While he toiled furiously, several
+pistols and a musket were snapped at him but the
+flint sparked on damp powder in the pans and only one
+ball whistled by his head.</p>
+
+<p>Out of the forecastle hatchway and through the door,
+the enraged sailors of the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i> came
+rocketing like an explosion. They stumbled over each
+other, emerging head or feet first, blinking like owls in
+the daylight but with vision good enough to serve their
+purpose. Their goal was the nearest stand of boarding-pikes
+at the foot of the mainmast.</p>
+
+<p>But as they came surging on deck, they were not
+empty-handed. In the forecastle was a bricked oven<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
+for warmth in winter and for cooking kettles of soup.
+This they had torn to pieces and every man sallied forth
+with a square, flat brick in each hand and more inside
+his shirt. Those who were first to gain the deck pelted
+the nearest pirates with these ugly missiles. The air was
+full of hurtling bricks and the earliest casualty was a
+stout buccaneer who stopped one with his stomach.</p>
+
+<p>Driven back in yelling confusion, the pirates found
+their firearms almost useless, so drenched had the whole
+ship been by the battering seas, but they were accustomed
+to fighting it out with the cold steel and they were
+by no means a panicky mob. The fusillade of bricks
+held them long enough for the merchant sailors to escape
+from the forecastle and this was an advantage more
+precious than Captain Wellsby had hoped for.</p>
+
+<p>What the pirates required was a leader to rally <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'than'">them</ins>
+for attack. Quicker than it takes to tell it, Ned Rackham
+had raced along the poop and leaped to the waist at
+peril of breaking his neck. Agile, quick-witted, he
+bounded into the thick of it, cutlass in hand, while he
+shouted:</p>
+
+<p>"At 'em, lads! And give the dogs no quarter!"</p>
+
+<p>With hoarse outcry, his gallows-birds mustered compactly
+while those who had been in the cabin came
+scampering to join them. Curiously enough, Captain
+Jonathan Wellsby had been forgotten. He was left
+alone to handle the ship while the pirate helmsmen stood
+by the great tiller. To forsake it meant to let the vessel<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
+run wild and perhaps turn turtle in the swollen seas.
+And so the doughty skipper was, for the time, a
+looker-on.</p>
+
+<p>And now with Ned Rackham in the van, it seemed
+that the British sailors were in a parlous plight and that
+their sortie must fail. Craftily the pirates man&#339;uvered
+to drive them back into the forecastle and there to
+butcher them like sheep.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER V</h2>
+
+<h3>RELEASING A FEARFUL WEAPON</h3>
+
+
+<div class='unindent'><big>J</big>ACK COCKRELL sprawled flat upon the
+forecastle roof and knew not what to do. He
+could lay hands on nothing to serve as a
+weapon and he bade fair to be trapped like the
+sailors whose cause he had joined. With a feeling
+of despair he let his gaze rove to the scrawny
+figure of Joe Hawkridge who still bestrode the
+nine-pounder and took no part in the fray. But Joe
+had no comfort for him, as a gesture conveyed. It had
+been Joe's wild scheme to obtain the help of Jack and
+Captain Wellsby, at the least, and so cast loose the gun
+and slew it around to rake the deck and mow the pirates
+down. But the men were lacking for this heavy task,
+and the sailors of the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i> were too intent
+on fighting against fearful odds to pay heed to Joe
+Hawkridge's appeals. He had even skulked into the
+galley and was ready with a little iron pot filled with
+live coals which was hidden under a bit of tarpaulin.</div>
+
+<p>Ned Rackham was a young man and powerful, with
+a long reach and a skilled blade. He fairly hewed his
+way into the ruck of the dauntless sailors who had no<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
+more bricks to hurl. Several pirates were disabled, with
+broken arms or bloody crowns, but the others crowded
+forward, grunting as they slashed and stabbed, and well
+aware that Ned Rackham would cut the laggards down
+should he detect them.</p>
+
+<p>At the moment when there seemed no chance of salvation
+for the crew of the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>, Joe
+Hawkridge leaped from the gun and beckoned Jack.
+The grin was restored to the homely, freckled visage
+and the salt water gamin danced in jubilant excitement.
+Down from the forecastle roof tumbled Jack Cockrell
+and went sliding across the deck, heels over head, to
+fetch up in the scupper. Joe hauled him by the leg,
+close to the wooden carriage of the gun, and swiftly told
+him what was to be done.</p>
+
+<p>Obediently Jack began to loose the knots which secured
+the rope tackles but it was a slow task. The wet
+had made the hemp as hard as iron and he lacked a marlinspike.
+Joe dodged around the gun, saw the difficulty
+and sawed through one rope after another, all but the
+last strand or two. Then the lads tailed on to the
+breeching hawsers, which held the carriage from sliding
+on its iron rollers, and eased the strain as well as they
+could.</p>
+
+<p>The ponderous mass was almost free to plunge across
+the deck. Joe sweated and braced his feet against a
+ring-bolt while Jack Cockrell found a cleat. Ned Rackham's
+men were moving forward, cut and thrust, while<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
+the sailors grappled with them bare-handed and battled
+grimly like mastiffs.</p>
+
+<p>"The next time she rolls!" panted Joe Hawkridge as
+the hawser ripped the skin from his palms.</p>
+
+<p>"Aye, make ready to cut," muttered Jack.</p>
+
+<p>The ship heaved herself high and then listed far down
+to starboard. Joe slashed at the last strands of the
+tackles and yelled to Jack to let go the hawser. Instead
+of discharging the nine-pounder, they were employing
+the piece itself, and the carriage of oak and iron, as a
+terrible missile. The moment of launching it was
+shrewdly chosen. The pirates, still in compact formation
+as led by Ned Rackham, were directly abreast of
+this forward gun of the main deck battery. The deck
+inclined at a steep and giddy pitch. With a grinding
+roar the gun rolled from its station. It gathered impetus
+and lunged across the ship as an instrument of fell
+destruction. It was more to be feared than an assault
+of armed men.</p>
+
+<p>The warning rumble of the iron wheels as they furrowed
+the planking was heard by the pirates. They
+turned from their game of butchery and stood frozen in
+their tracks for a frightened instant. Then they tried to
+flee in all directions. Their tarry pigtails fairly stood on
+end. Well they knew what it meant to have a gun break
+adrift in a heavy sea. Two or three who had been badly
+hurt were unable to move fast enough. The gun
+crunched over them and then seemed to pursue a limp<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>ing
+pirate, veering to overtake him as he fled. He was
+tossed against the bulwark like a bundle of bloody
+rags.</p>
+
+<p>The gun crashed into the stout timbers of the ship's
+side and they were splintered like match-wood. It rebounded
+as the deck sloped sharply in the next wallowing
+roll, and now this frenzied monster of wood and iron
+seemed fairly to run amuck. It was inspired with a
+sinister intelligence, resolved to wreak all the damage
+possible. The pinnace, the water barrels, the coamings
+of the cargo hatches, were smashed to fragments as the
+gun turned this way and that and went plunging in
+search of victims.</p>
+
+
+<p>Left to themselves, the seamen of the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>
+would have risked their lives to cast ropes about
+the gun and moor it fast. But now they were quick to
+see that the tide had been turned in their favor. The
+pirates were demoralized. Some were in the rigging,
+others atop the bulwarks, and only the readiest and
+boldest, with Ned Rackham in the lead, had an eye to
+the task in hand, which was to regain possession of the
+ship.</p>
+
+<p>And now the boatswain of the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>,
+a rosy giant of a man from South Devon, shouted to his
+comrades to follow him. They delayed until the runaway
+cannon crashed into another gun, and then they
+broke like sprinters from the mark and sped straight for
+the mainmast, seeking the rack of boarding-pikes.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
+They ran nimbly, as men used to swaying decks, and
+compassed the distance in a few strides.</p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/illus3.jpg" width="600" height="458" alt="THE BRAWN OF THESE LADS MADE THE PIKE A MATCH FOR A PIRATE&#39;S CUTLASS" title="THE BRAWN OF THESE LADS MADE THE PIKE A MATCH FOR A PIRATE&#39;S CUTLASS" />
+<span class="caption">THE BRAWN OF THESE LADS MADE THE PIKE A MATCH FOR A PIRATE&#39;S CUTLASS</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>Ned Rackham perceived their purpose and tried to
+intercept but his few staunch followers moved warily,
+expecting to see that insensate monster of a gun bear
+down upon them. The swiftest of the merchant sailors
+laid hands on the pikes and whirled to cover their shipmates,
+until all hands could be armed. Then the gun
+came roaring down at them but they ducked behind the
+mast or stepped watchfully aside. Men condemned to
+death are not apt to lose their wits in the face of one
+more peril.</p>
+
+<p>These pikes were ashen shafts with long steel points
+and the merchant seamen had been trained to use them.
+And the brawn of these lads made the pike a match for
+a pirate's cutlass. Ned Rackham bounded forward to
+swing at the broad, deep-chested boatswain. A wondrous
+pair of antagonists they were, in the prime of
+their youth and vigor. The pirate's cutlass bit clean
+through the pike shaft as the boatswain parried the blow
+but the apple-cheeked Devonshire man closed in and
+wrapped his arms around his foe. They went to the
+deck clutching for each other's throats and the fight
+trampled over them.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Joe Hawkridge and Jack Cockrell, unwilling
+to twiddle their thumbs, had rushed aft as fast
+as their legs could carry them. It was a mutual impulse,
+to release such of the men passengers as might<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
+have a stomach for fighting and also the ship's officers.
+Into the doorway which led from the waist, the two lads
+dived and scurried through the main cabin now clear of
+pirates. Locked doors they smashed with a broadaxe
+found in the small-arms chest and so entered all the
+rooms.</p>
+
+<p>The women passengers were almost dead with suffering,
+what with the turbulence of the storm and the wild
+riot on deck. The lads pitied them but had no time to
+console. Several of the men, merchants and planters of
+some physical hardihood, begged for weapons and Joe
+Hawkridge bade them help themselves from the spare
+arms which the pirates had left in the great cabin. In
+another little room the boys found the mates, steward,
+surgeon, and gunner of the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i> and
+you may be sure that they came boiling out with a raging
+thirst for strife.</p>
+
+<p>"Harkee, Jack," said Joe before they climbed to the
+poop deck, "if the pirates are driven aft, as I expect,
+they will make a last stand in this cabin house which is
+like a fort. These 'fenseless women must be hidden safe
+from harm. Do you coax 'em into the lazarette."</p>
+
+<p>This was a room on the deck below, in the very stern
+of the ship where were kept the extra sails and coils of
+rope and various stores. It was the surest shelter against
+harm in such stress as this. Alas, Jack's persuasions
+were vain. The frantic women were in no humor to
+listen, and so the lads bundled them through the hatch<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
+as gently as possible and for company gave them such
+male passengers as lacked strength or courage to join
+the battle.</p>
+
+<p>While they were thus engaged, two pirates came flying
+down the ladder from the poop deck into the main
+cabin. They revolved like windmills in a jumble of
+arms and legs. Close behind them, in a manner more
+orderly came Captain Jonathan Wellsby who had tossed
+the one and tremendously booted the other. They were
+the helmsmen whom he had replaced with his own officers
+at the steering tackles, while his first mate had been
+left in charge of handling the ship.</p>
+
+<p>The skipper was now free to follow his own desires
+and he fell upon those two stunned pirates in the cabin
+and trussed them tight with bits of rope. Then he reloaded
+with dry powder all the pistols he could find and
+made a walking <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'arsensal'">arsenal</ins> of himself. The two lads who
+now joined him needed no word of command. At his
+heels they made for the main deck and the shout which
+arose from those British sailors, so sorely beset, was
+mightily heartening.</p>
+
+<p>Blazing away with his pistols, the skipper cleared a
+path for himself, the pirates being taken aback when
+they were attacked in the rear. And they were leaderless,
+for Ned Rackham had been dragged aside with the
+marks of the boatswain's fingers on his throat and a
+sheath-knife buried in his side. He was alive but nobody
+paid heed to his groans.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>With the skipper in the thick of it, there was no danger
+of being penned in the forecastle again. The pirates
+were crowded aft, step by step, before the play of those
+wicked boarding-pikes. It would be hard to match a
+sea fight like this, amid the spray and the washing seas,
+on a deck that tipsily danced and staggered, with a truant
+gun smashing a good ship to bits and the wounded
+screaming as they saw this horror thundering at them.
+Captain Wellsby's men were at pains to drag their helpless
+comrades to safety but the pirates were too callous
+and too hard pressed to care for aught save their own
+worthless skins. They fought like wolves but they
+lacked the gristle and endurance of the stalwart sailors.
+Wheezing for breath, they ceased to curse and reeled
+back in silence while the sailors huzzaed and seemed to
+wax the lustier.</p>
+
+<p>As was bound to happen, the stubborn retreat broke
+into a rout. It was every man for himself and the devil
+take the hindmost. The pirates fled for the after cabin-house,
+there to take cover behind the timbered walls and
+use the small port-holes for musketry fire. Thus they
+could find respite and it would be immensely difficult to
+dislodge them.</p>
+
+<p>The first mate of the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i> and his
+own two helmsmen saw what was taking place and they
+were of no mind to be cut off at the stern of the ship.
+They footed it along the poop and the cabin roof as the
+pirates were scampering inside and so gained the waist<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
+and were with their comrades. The tiller deserted, the
+vessel careened into the trough of the sea with a portentous
+creaking of spars and rending of canvas.</p>
+
+<p>The mainmast had been dealt more than one splintering
+blow by the fugitive gun. This sudden strain, of a
+ship broached to and hurled almost on her beam ends,
+was too much for the damaged mast. It broke short off,
+a few feet above the deck, and the ragged butt ripped
+the planks asunder as it was dragged overside by the
+weight of the towering fabric of yards and canvas. One
+merciful circumstance befell, for the tangle of shrouds
+and sheets and halliards ensnared the ramping monster
+of a cannon and overturned it. Caught in this manner,
+the gun was dragged to the broken bulwark and there
+it was held with the battered carriage in air.</p>
+
+<p>The mainmast was floating alongside the ship which
+it belabored with thumps that jarred the hull. It was
+likely to stave in the skin of the vessel and Captain
+Wellsby shouted to his men to hack at the trailing cordage
+and send the mast clear before it did a fatal injury.
+A dozen men risked drowning at this task while the
+others guarded the after cabin lest the pirates attempt a
+sally. These besieged rogues were given an interval in
+which to muster their force, organize a defense, and
+break into the magazine for muskets and powder and
+ball.</p>
+
+<p>Now Captain Wellsby was no dullard and he purposed
+to make short work of these vile pirates. Other<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>wise
+his crippled ship might not survive the wind and
+weather. He conferred with his gunner who had bethought
+himself, by force of habit, to fetch from aft his
+powder-horn and several yards of match, or twisted tow,
+which were wrapped around his body, beneath the tarred
+jerkin.</p>
+
+<p>"It grieves me sore to wreck yonder goodly cabin
+house," said the skipper in his beard, "but, by Judas,
+we'll blow 'em out of it. Haul and belay your pieces,
+Master Gunner, and let 'em have a salvo of round shot."</p>
+
+<p>Reckless of the musket balls which began to fly among
+them, the sailors jumped for their stations at the guns.
+First they set aright that capsized nine-pounder which
+had wreaked so much mischief and found that it could
+be discharged, despite the broken carriage. Joe Hawkridge
+and Jack Cockrell blithely aided to swing and secure
+it with emergency tackles and Joe exclaimed, with
+a chuckle:</p>
+
+<p>"This dose is enough to surprise Blackbeard hisself.
+'Tis an ironmonger's shop I rammed down its throat."</p>
+
+<p>The gun was laid on the largest cabin port-hole just
+as it framed the ugly face of a pirate with a musket
+while another peered over his shoulder. Joe shook the
+powder-horn into the touch-hole and the gunner was
+ready with the match which he had lighted with his own
+flint and steel. Boom, and the gun recoiled in a veil of
+smoke. Through the cabin port-hole flew a deadly
+shower of spikes and bolts while the framework around<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
+it was shattered to bits. It was a most unhealthy place
+for pirates. They forsook it instantly. And the musketry
+fire slackened elsewhere. It was to be inferred
+that there was painful consternation in the cabin.</p>
+
+<p>With boisterous mirth, the sailors deftly turned other
+guns to bear and were careful not to let them get adrift.
+The muzzles had been well stopped against wetting by
+the sea and with a little dry powder for the priming,
+most of them could be served. They could not be reloaded
+for dearth of ammunition but Captain Wellsby
+felt confident that one round would suffice.</p>
+
+<p>Methodically the gun-crews aimed and fired one gun
+after another, watching the chance between the seas that
+broke aboard. The solid round shot, at short range,
+ripped through the cabin walls and bulkheads and buried
+themselves in the frames and timbers of the ship's stern.
+A good gunner was never so happy as when he saw the
+white splinters fly in showers and these zealous sailormen
+forgot they were knocking their own ship to pieces.
+They were on the target, and this was good enough.</p>
+
+<p>The beleaguered pirates made no more pretense of
+firing muskets or defying the crew to dig them out.
+Their fort was an untenable position. At this sport of
+playing bowls with round shot they were bound to lose.
+Captain Wellsby sighted the last gun himself. It was
+a bronze culverin of large bore, taken as a trophy from
+the stranded wreck of a Spanish galleon. With a tremendous
+blast this formidable cannon spat out a double-<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>shotted
+load and the supports of the cabin roof were torn
+asunder. The tottering beams collapsed. Half the
+structure fell in.</p>
+
+<p>It was the signal for the sailors of the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>
+to charge aft and finish the business. They
+found pirates crawling from under the wreckage. It
+was like a demolished ant-heap. In the smaller cabins
+and other rooms far aft, which were more or less intact,
+some of the rascals showed fight but they were remorselessly
+prodded out with pikes and those unwounded were
+hustled forward to be thrown into the forecastle. It
+was difficult to restrain the seamen from dealing them
+the death they deserved but Captain Wellsby was no
+sea-butcher and he hoped to turn them over to the
+colonial authorities to be hanged with due ceremony.</p>
+
+<p>The badly hurt were laid in the forecastle bunks
+where the ship's surgeon washed and bandaged them
+after he had cared for the injured men of his own crew.
+Ned Rackham was still alive, conscious and defiant, surviving
+a wound which would have been mortal in most
+cases. Whether he lived or died was a matter of small
+concern to Captain Wellsby but he ordered the surgeon
+to nurse him with special care.</p>
+
+<p>The dead pirates were flung overboard but the bodies
+of seven brave British seamen were wrapped in sailcloth
+to be committed to the deep on the morrow, with a
+round shot at their feet and a prayer to speed their
+souls. There were men enough to work the ship but she<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
+was in a situation indescribably forlorn. It was possible
+to patch and shore the cabin house and make a refuge,
+even to find place for the wretched women who were
+lifted unharmed out of the lazarette. But the stout ship,
+her mainmast gone by the board, the deck ravaged by
+that infernal catapult of an errant gun, the hull pounded
+by the floating wreckage of spars, would achieve a miracle
+should she see port again.</p>
+
+<p>The combat with the pirates and their overthrow had
+been waged in the last hour before the gray night closed
+over a somber sea. God's mercy had caused the wind
+to fall and the waves to diminish in size else the ship
+would have gone to the bottom ere dawn. Much water
+had washed down into the hold through the broken
+cargo hatch and the gaps where the runaway gun had
+torn other fittings away. The carpenter sounded the
+well and solemnly stared at the wetted rod by the flicker
+of his horn lantern. The ship was settling. It was his
+doleful surmise that she leaked where the pounding
+spars overside had started the butts. It was man the
+pumps to keep the old hooker afloat and Captain
+Wellsby ordered his weary men to sway at the brakes,
+watch and watch.</p>
+
+<p>Joe Hawkridge and Jack Cockrell, more fit for duty
+than the others, put their backs into it right heartily
+while the sailors droned to the cadence of the pump a
+sentimental ditty which ran on for any number of verses
+and began in this wise:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class='poem'>"As, lately I traveled toward Gravesend,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">I heard a fair Damosel a Sea-man commend:</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">And as in a Tilt-boat we passed along,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">In praise of brave Sea-men she sung this new Song,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;"><i>Come Tradesman or Marchant, whoever he be,</i></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;"><i>There's none but a Sea-man shall marry with me!</i>"</span><br />
+</div>
+
+<p>Thus they labored all the night through, men near
+dead with fatigue whose hard fate it was to contend now
+with pirates and again with the hostile ocean. The
+skipper managed to stay the foremast and to bend steering
+sails so that the ship was brought into the wind
+where her motion was easier. The sky cleared before
+daybreak and the rosy horizon proclaimed a fair sunrise.
+How far and in what direction the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>
+had been blown by the storm was largely guesswork.
+By means of dead reckoning and the compass and cross-staff,
+Captain Wellsby hoped to work out a position but
+meanwhile he scanned the sea with a sense of brooding
+anxiety.</p>
+
+<p>Instead of praying for plenty of sea room, he now
+hoped with all his heart that the vessel had been set in
+toward the coast. She was sinking under his feet and
+would not live through the day. It was useless to toil
+at the pumps or to strive at mending the shattered upperworks.
+The men turned to the task of quitting the
+ship, and of saving the souls on board. It was a pitiful
+extremity and yet they displayed a dogged, unshaken
+fidelity. Only one boat had escaped destruction. The<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
+pinnace had been staved in by the thunderbolt of a gun
+and the yawl, stowed upon the cabin roof, was wrecked
+by round shot. The small jolly-boat would hold the
+women passengers and the wounded sailors, with the
+hands required to tend oars and sail.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing remained but to try to knock together one
+or more rafts. Captain Wellsby discussed it with his
+officers and it was agreed that the able-bodied pirates
+should be left to build a raft for themselves, taking their
+own wounded with them. This was more mercy than
+they had any right to expect. The strapping young
+Devonshire boatswain, with his head tied up, was for
+leaving the blackguards to drown in the forecastle but
+the shipmaster was too humane a man for that.</p>
+
+<p>It was drawing toward noon when the first mate
+descried land to the westward, a bit of low coast almost
+level with the sea. In the light air the sluggish ship
+moved ever so slowly, with canvas spread on the fore
+and mizzen masts. Spirits revived and life tasted passing
+sweet. To drift in the open sea upon wave-washed
+rafts was an expedient which all mariners shuddered to
+contemplate. It was with feelings far different that
+they now assembled spars and planks and lashed and
+spiked them together on the chance of needing rafts to
+ferry them ashore from a stranded ship.</p>
+
+<p>Well into the bright afternoon the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>
+was wafted nearer and nearer the sandy coast.
+Within a half mile of it a line of breakers frothed and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
+tumbled on a shoal beyond which the water deepened
+again. The ship could not be steered to avoid this
+barrier. Her main deck was almost level with the sea
+which lapped her gently and sobbed through the broken
+bulwarks. With a slight shock she struck the shoal and
+rested there just before she was ready to founder.</p>
+
+<p>With disciplined haste, the jolly-boat was launched
+and filled with its human freightage. The boatswain
+went in charge and four seamen tugged at the sweeps.
+There were trees and clumps of bushes among the
+hillocks of sand and a tiny bight for a landing place.
+The bulwark was then chopped away so that the largest
+raft could be shoved into the water by means of tackles,
+rollers and handspikes. It floated buoyantly and supported
+as many as fifteen men, who did not mind
+in the least getting their feet wet. Upon a raised platform
+in the centre of the raft were fastened barrels of
+beef and bread and casks of fresh water.</p>
+
+<p>The jolly-boat could hope to make other trips between
+the ship and the shore but the prudent skipper
+took no chances with the weather. A sudden gale might
+pluck the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i> from the shoal or tear
+her to fragments where she lay. Therefore most of the
+men, including passengers, were embarked on the raft.
+Captain Wellsby remained aboard with a few of his
+sailors and our two lads, Joe and Jack, who had not attempted
+to thrust themselves upon the crowded raft.</p>
+
+<p>The pirates were making a commotion in the fore<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>castle,
+yammering to be freed, but the skipper had no
+intention of loosing them until all his people had safely
+abandoned ship. The jolly-boat made a landing without
+mishap and returned to the wreck as the sun went
+down. More stores were dumped into it, sacks
+of potatoes and onions which had been overlooked,
+bedding for the women, powder and ball for the
+muskets, and other things which it was necessary to
+keep dry.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Wellsby got rid of the rest of his men on this
+trip, excepting the gunner and carpenter, and these lingered
+with him as a kind of body-guard pending the ticklish
+business of releasing the imprisoned pirates and forsaking
+them to their own devices. The jolly-boat was
+laden to the gunwales and Jack Cockrell held back, saying
+to Joe Hawkridge:</p>
+
+<p>"Why trouble the captain to set us ashore? Let us
+make a raft of our own. The breeze holds fair to the
+beach and it will be a lark."</p>
+
+<p>"It suits me well," grinned Joe. "If we wait to go
+off with the master, and those sinful pirates see me
+aboard, I'll need wings to escape 'em. They saw me
+serve the gun that was filled with spikes to the muzzle.
+Aye, Jack, I will feel happier to be elsewhere when
+Cap'n Wellsby unbars the fo'castle and holds 'em back
+with his pistols till he can cast off in the jolly-boat."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, the sight of you is apt to put them in a vile
+temper," laughingly agreed Jack, "and 'tis awkward<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
+for the master to bother with us. Now about a little
+raft&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Two short spars are enough. There they lie. And
+the cabin hatch will do for a deck. Spikes for thole-pins,
+and oars from the pinnace. Unlace the bonnet of
+the jib for a sail."</p>
+
+<p>"You are a proper sailorman, Joe. A voyage
+by starlight to an unknown coast. 'Tis highly romantic."</p>
+
+<p>They set to work without delay. Captain Wellsby
+had occupations of his own and no more than glanced
+at them in passing. Jack insisted on carrying a water
+breaker and rations, he being hungry and too busy to
+pause for supper. They would make a picnic cruise of
+the adventure. Handily Joe reeved a purchase and they
+hauled away until their raft slid off the sloping deck to
+leeward. With a gay hurrah to Captain Wellsby, they
+paddled around the stern of the ship and through the
+ruffle of surf that marked the shoal.</p>
+
+<p>In the soft twilight they trimmed the sail and swung
+at the clumsy oars, while a fire blazing on the beach was
+a beacon to guide their course. After a time they rested
+and wiped the sweat from their faces. The progress of
+the raft was like that of a lazy snail. In the luminous
+darkness they pulled with all their strength. The wind
+had died to a calm. The sail hung idle from its yard.
+They heard, faint and afar, the deep voices of the sailors
+in the jolly-boat as they returned to take the skipper<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
+and his two companions from the ship on which a light
+burned.</p>
+
+<p>The lads shouted but there came no answering hail
+from the unseen boat. They were perplexed to understand
+how their courses could be so far apart. Presently
+the night breeze drew off the land, bringing with
+it the scent of green things growing. Joe Hawkridge
+stared at the fire on the beach and then turned to look
+at the spark of light on the ship. The raft had drifted
+considerably to the southward. Anxiously Joe said to
+his shipmate:</p>
+
+<p>"The flood o' the tide must be setting us down the
+coast, in some crazy current or other. Mayhap it runs
+strong through this race betwixt the shoal and the beach
+with a slant that's bad for us."</p>
+
+<p>"I noted it," glumly agreed Jack. "The jolly-boat
+passed too far away to please me. And this landward
+breeze is driving us to sea."</p>
+
+<p>"No sense in breaking our backs at these oars," grumbled
+Joe. "We go ahead like a crab, with a sternboard.
+Think ye we can swing the raft to fetch the
+ship?"</p>
+
+<p>"After Captain Wellsby turns the pirates loose and
+quits her?" scoffed Jack.</p>
+
+<p>"I am a plaguey fool," cheerfully admitted Joe
+Hawkridge. "'Twould be out of the frying-pan into
+the fire, with a vengeance."</p>
+
+<p>"And no way to signal our friends," sadly exclaimed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
+Jack. "We forgot flint and steel. It looks much like
+another voyage."</p>
+
+<p>"Straight for the open sea, my bully boy," agreed
+Joe. "And I'd as soon chance it on a hen-coop."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+<h3>THE VOYAGE OF THE LITTLE RAFT</h3>
+
+
+<div class='unindent'><big>T</big>HESE sturdy youngsters were not easily
+frightened, and Jack Cockrell, the landsman,
+was confident that wind and tide would change
+to send the little raft shoreward. So tranquil was the
+sea that they rode secure and dry upon the cabin hatch
+which was buoyed by the two short spars. Joe Hawkridge
+was silent with foreboding of a fate more bitter
+than the perils which they had escaped. He had seen a
+lone survivor of a crew of pirates picked off a raft in
+the Caribbean, a grisly phantom raving mad who had
+gnawed the flesh of his dead comrades.</div>
+
+<p>They drifted quietly before the land breeze, beneath
+a sky all jeweled with bright stars. The fire on the
+beach dimmed to a red spark and then vanished from
+their wistful ken. They could no longer see the light
+on the wreck of the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>. Now and
+then the boys struggled with the heavy oars and rowed
+until exhausted but they knew they could be making no
+headway against the current which had gripped the
+derelict raft. They ate sparingly of flinty biscuit and
+leathery beef pickled in brine and stinted themselves to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
+a few swallows of water from the wooden breaker or
+tiny cask.</p>
+
+<p>"Hunger and thirst are strange to ye, Jack," said
+young Hawkridge as they lay stretched side by side.
+"Hanged if I ever did get enough to eat till I boarded
+the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>. Skin and bone I am. I'll
+not call this a bad cruise unless we have to chew our
+boot-tops. A pesky diet is leather. I've tried it."</p>
+
+<p>"Truly, Joe?" cried Jack in lugubrious accents.
+"We may have more heart when morning comes. A
+piping easterly breeze, such as is wont to come up with
+the sun in Charles Town, and we can steer for the coast
+all taut and cheery."</p>
+
+<p>"I dread the sun, Jack. For men adrift the blaze
+of it fries them like fish on a grid. A pint of water a
+day, no more, is the allowance. 'Twill torture you, but
+castaways can live on it. They have done it for weeks
+on end. Here's two musket balls in my pocket. I can
+whittle a balance from a bit of pine and we must weigh
+the bread and meat."</p>
+
+<p>"Two musket balls' weight of food for a meal?" protested
+Jack.</p>
+
+<p>"Not a morsel more," was the grim answer.
+"Granted we be not washed off this silly raft and
+drowned when a fresh breeze kicks up the sea, we
+may hold body and soul together through five or six
+days."</p>
+
+<p>"But some vessel will sight us, Joe, even if the plight<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
+is as dark as your melancholy fancies paint it. And I
+thought you a light-hearted mariner in danger."</p>
+
+<p>"The sea is a cruel master and she hath taught me
+prudence," was the reply. "A vessel sight us? I fear
+an empty sea so soon after the storm. And honest ships
+will be loth to venture out from port if the word sped
+that Blackbeard was cruising off Charles Town bar."</p>
+
+<p>Jack Cockrell forsook the attempt to wring comfort
+out of his hardy companion who refused to delude himself
+with vain imaginings. However, it is the blessed
+gift of youth to keep the torch of hope unquenched and
+presently they diverted themselves with chatting of their
+earlier adventures. Jack was minded of his pompous,
+stout-hearted uncle, Mr. Peter Arbuthnot Forbes, and
+wondered how he had fared, whether he had set out to
+return to Blackbeard's ship with the store of medicines
+from Charles Town when the great storm swooped
+down. Forgotten were Jack's hot grievances against
+the worthy Secretary of the Council who had sought to
+take a father's place. Piracy had lost its charm for
+young Master Cockrell and meekly would he have
+obeyed the mandate to go to school in merry England
+among sober, Christian folk.</p>
+
+<p>"Tremendous odd, I call it," exclaimed Joe Hawkridge.
+"Here I was a pirate and hating the dirty business.
+And my dreams were all of learnin' to be a gentleman
+ashore, to know how to read books and such. Blow
+me, Jack, we should ha' swapped berths."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"If my good uncle is alive I mean to commend you
+to his kindness," exclaimed Jack. "We must cleave together,
+and you shall have a skinful of books and school
+and manners."</p>
+
+<p>This pleased the young sea rover beyond measure and
+he diverted himself with pictures of a cleaner, kindlier
+world than he had ever known. In the small hours of
+the night, the twain drowsed upon their frail platform
+which floated as a speck on the shrouded ocean. The
+waves splashed over the spars as the breeze grew livelier
+and the piteous voyagers were sopping wet but the water
+was not chill and they slept through this discomfort.</p>
+
+<p>Jack Cockrell dreamed of walking in a green lane of
+Charles Town with lovely Dorothy Stuart. A wave
+slapped his face and he awoke with a sputtering cry of
+bewilderment. The eastern sky was rosy and the sea
+shimmered in the eternal beauty of a new day. Joe
+Hawkridge sat huddled against the mast, chin and
+knees together, his sharp eyes scanning the horizon.
+With a grin he exclaimed:</p>
+
+<p>"The watch ahoy! Rouse out, shipmate, and show a
+leg! Turn to cheerly! Holystone decks and wash
+down, ye lazy lubber."</p>
+
+<p>Jack groaned and scowled as he rolled over to ease
+his aching bones. He was in no mood for jesting.
+There was no land in sight nor the gleam of a sail,
+naught but the empty waste of the Atlantic, and the
+wind still held westerly.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Let's have the beggarly morsel you miscall breakfast,
+Joe, and a swig from the breaker. Are we bound
+across the main?"</p>
+
+<p>"Straight for London River, and the school you prate
+about, my bucko," replied the scamp of a pirate.
+"Haul away on your belt and set the buckle tighter.
+'Twill ease the cursed hunger pain that gnaws like a
+rat."</p>
+
+<p>They munched the pittance of salty food which made
+the thirst the harder to endure, and then watched the
+sun climb hot and dazzling. It was futile to hoist the
+sail and so they pulled the canvas over them as the heat
+became more intense. By noon, Jack was begging for
+water to lave his tongue but Joe Hawkridge laughed
+him to scorn and swore to hit him with an oar unless he
+changed his tune. Never in his life had Jack known the
+lack of food or drink and he therefore suffered cruelly.</p>
+
+<p>Worse than this privation was the increasing roughness
+of the sea. It was a blithesome wind, rollicking
+across a sparkling carpet of blue, with the little white
+clouds in flocks above, like lambs at play. But the raft
+was more and more tossed about and the waves gushed
+over it like foam on a reef. Through the day the castaways
+might cling to it but they dreaded another night
+in which their weary bodies could not possibly ward off
+sleep. Even though they tied themselves fast, what if
+the raft should be capsized by the heave of the mounting
+swell? It was the merest makeshift, scrambled to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>gether
+in haste as a ferry from the wreck of the
+<i>Plymouth Adventure</i>.</p>
+
+<p>No longer did Jack Cockrell bemoan his situation.
+Taking pattern from his comrade in misery, he set his
+teeth to await the end as became a true man of gentle
+blood. After all, drowning was easier than the slow
+torments of hunger and thirst.</p>
+
+<p>Every little while one of them crawled from under
+the canvas to look for a ship. It was the vigilant Joe
+Hawkridge who, at length, discovered what was very
+like a fleck of cloud on the ocean's rim, to the southward.
+Afraid that his vision tricked him, he displayed no emotion
+but held himself as steady as any stoic. Jack was
+wildly excited, blubbering and waving his arms about.
+His hard-won composure was broken to bits. But even
+though it were a ship, Joe well knew it might pass afar
+off and so miss sighting this bit of raft which drifted
+almost submerged.</p>
+
+<p>Slowly the semblance of a wandering fragment of
+cloud climbed the curve of the watery globe until Joe
+Hawkridge perceived, with a mariner's eye, that it was,
+indeed, a vessel steering in their direction.</p>
+
+<p>"Two masts!" said he, "and to'gallant-sails set to
+profit by this brave breeze. A brig, Jack! Had she
+been a ship, my heart 'ud ha' been in my throat. Blackbeard's
+<i>Revenge</i> might be working up the coast, did she
+live through the storm."</p>
+
+<p>"A brig?" joyfully cried Jack. "Ah, ha, I see her<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
+two masts plainly, with mine own eyes. And they
+soar too tall for a merchant trader. Her sails, too,&mdash;she
+spreads them like great wings. Who else will it be
+than Captain Stede Bonnet in the <i>Royal James?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"A shift of luck is due us, by the bones of Saint
+Iago," shouted Joe, in a thrill of glad anticipation.
+"Watch her closely. You saw the brig in Charles Town
+harbor. Bless God, this may well be Cap'n Stede Bonnet
+yonder, an' perchance he cruises in search of Blackbeard
+to square accounts with that vile traitor that so
+misused him."</p>
+
+<p>"A sworn friend of mine is Stede Bonnet," proudly
+declared Jack Cockrell, "and pledged to bear a hand
+when I am in distress. He will land us safe in Charles
+Town, Joe,&mdash;unless,&mdash;unless we choose to go a-piratin'
+with him in the <i>Royal James</i>&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Jack's voice trailed off in tones of indecision so comical
+that his comrade cried:</p>
+
+<p>"Not cured yet, you big numbskull? 'Cause this fine
+Cap'n Bonnet is a gentleman pirate? His neck will
+stretch with the rest of 'em when the law overtakes him.
+Thirteen burly lads I saw swinging in a row at Wapping
+on the Thames."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll not argue it," sheepishly mumbled Jack.
+"However, we'll find a safe deliverance aboard this
+<i>Royal James</i>."</p>
+
+<p>They clung to the swaying raft while the water
+washed over their knees and watched the two masts dis<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>close
+themselves until they fancied they could not be
+mistaken. No other brig as powerful as this had been
+reported cruising in the waters of Virginia and the Carolinas.
+By a stroke of fortune almost incredible they
+had been saved at the very brink of death. The brig
+was steering straight toward them, hauled to take the
+wind abeam, and she would be up before sunset.</p>
+
+<p>Shading his eyes with his hand, Joe Hawkridge suddenly
+uttered a curse so fierce and wicked that it was
+enough to freeze the blood. He clutched Jack's shoulder
+for support as though shorn of all his strength and
+hoarsely gasped:</p>
+
+<p>"Not two masts but three! See it? She lifts high
+enough to show the stump of the foremast with head-sails
+jury rigged. 'Twas the storm made a brig of her!"</p>
+
+<p>"Then she may be Blackbeard's ship?" faltered Jack,
+in a whisper.</p>
+
+<p>"Remember when the gale first broke and we parted
+company?" was the reply. "The <i>Revenge</i> lost her
+fore-topmast ere the swine could find their wits."</p>
+
+<p>"Aye, Joe, but this may be some other vessel."</p>
+
+<p>"She looks most damnably familiar," was the reluctant
+admission. "A great press of sail,&mdash;it fooled
+me into thinking her Stede Bonnet's brig."</p>
+
+<p>Gloomily they waited until the black line of the hull
+was visible whenever the raft lifted on the back of a
+wave. This was enough for Joe. He recognized the
+graceful shear of the flush deck which had been ex<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>tended
+fore and aft to make room for a heavier main
+battery. Even at a distance, a sailor's eye could read
+other signs that marked this ship as the <i>Revenge</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"The devil looks after his own," angrily exclaimed
+Joe. "I'd ha' wagered my last ducat that she was
+whirled away to founder. Blackbeard boasts of his compact
+with Satan. I believe it's true."</p>
+
+<p>"Shall we pull down our mast and pray that he passes
+the raft as a piece of wreckage?" implored Jack.</p>
+
+<p>Mustering his wits to meet this new crisis, Joe Hawkridge
+cried impatiently:</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, boy! This way death is sure, and most discomfortin'.
+If it suits Blackbeard's whim to pick us up,
+there is a chance,&mdash;a chance, I say, but make one slip
+and he will run us through with his own hand."</p>
+
+<p>"We must arrange our tale of the wreck, Joe, to
+match without flaw. Quick! What have we to say?"</p>
+
+<p>"A task for a scholar, this," grinned the sea urchin.
+"If it's not well learned, we'll taste worse'n a flogging.
+Where be his prize crew of pirates, asketh Blackbeard.
+Answer me that, Jack."</p>
+
+<p>"The <i>Plymouth Adventure</i> was driven upon a shoal
+and lost," glibly affirmed the other lad who had rallied
+to play at this hazardous game. "Her boats were stove
+up. We left the pirates building a raft for themselves
+and trusted ourselves to this poor contrivance, hoping to
+gain the coast."</p>
+
+<p>"Good, as far as it goes," observed the critical Joe.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"And it veers close to the truth. About the ship's company?
+What say you?"</p>
+
+<p>"There I hang in the wind," confessed Jack.
+"Blackbeard would have flung 'em overboard, I trow.
+Have a shot at it yourself."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, leave me to answer that when the time comes.
+That we may agree, suppose we say Ned Rackham
+needed the sailors to work the ship and so spared 'em.
+Hanged if we can make it all true as Gospel."</p>
+
+<p>"But if Blackbeard searches for the wreck, or if some
+of those pirates rejoin him, Joe&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But me no more buts," snapped the sea rover.
+"We be jammed in a clove-hitch, as the seaman's lingo
+hath it. Take trouble as it comes and, ware ye, don't
+weaken."</p>
+
+<p>They stared at the oncoming ship, dreading to be rescued
+and even more fearful of being passed by. Disfigured
+though she was by a shattered foremast, the
+<i>Revenge</i> made a gallant picture as she leaned to show
+the copper sheathing which flashed like gold. Her bow
+flung the crested seas aside and Joe Hawkridge muttered
+admiringly:</p>
+
+<p>"A swift vessel! She carries a bone in her teeth. A
+telescope can sight us soon. Steady the raft, Jack,
+whilst I wriggle up this mast of ours and wave my
+shirt."</p>
+
+<p>"A hard choice," sighed Jack. "Now we well know
+what it means to be betwixt the devil and the deep sea."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>They saw the <i>Revenge</i> shift her course a couple of
+points as the sheets were eased off. A little way to
+windward of the raft, she hove to while a small boat
+was hoisted out. Curiosity prompted Blackbeard to
+find out who these castaways were and from what ship
+they had drifted. It occurred to Joe Hawkridge that
+he might be in quest of tidings of the two sloops of his
+squadron which no longer kept him company. Jack
+Cockrell's teeth chattered but not with cold as the boat
+bobbed away from the side of the <i>Revenge</i>. Presently
+Joe recognized the pirate at the steering oar as a petty
+officer who had often befriended him.</p>
+
+<p>This fellow's swarthy, pockmarked face crinkled in
+a smile as he flourished his broad hat and yelled:</p>
+
+<p>"Stab my gizzard, but here's the London 'prentice-boy
+a-cruisin' on his own adventure."</p>
+
+<p>"Right-o, Jesse Strawn," Joe called back. "My
+bark is short-handed. I need lively recruits. Will ye
+enlist?"</p>
+
+<p>The boat's crew laughed at this as they reached out
+to lay hold of the raft while the two lads leaped aboard.
+Joe Hawkridge carried it off with rough bravado as
+though glad to be among his pals again. They eyed
+Jack Cockrell with quizzical interest and he did his best
+to be at ease, permitting Joe to vouch for him as a young
+gentleman with a taste for piracy who had won Blackbeard's
+favor in the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>. They were
+plied with eager questions regarding the fate of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
+merchant ship and Ned Rackham's prize crew. It was
+a chance to rehearse the tale as they had concocted it,
+and it seemed to hang together well enough to satisfy
+these simple rogues.</p>
+
+<p>In his turn, Joe Hawkridge demanded to know the
+gossip of the <i>Revenge</i>. The storm had sobered Blackbeard,
+it seemed, and he had displayed the skill of a
+masterly seaman in bringing them safely through. In
+toiling for their own lives, the men had forgotten their
+brawls and plots and guzzling. And the great wind had
+blown the ship clear of Spanish fever. There were no
+new cases and the invalids were gaining strength.
+Fresh food and sweet water were needed and the opinion
+was that Blackbeard now steered for an old rendezvous
+of his on the North Carolina coast where his sloops
+would meet him if they were still afloat.</p>
+
+<p>Jack Cockrell found his courage returning as he
+clambered up the side of the <i>Revenge</i> and followed Joe
+aft to the quarter-deck. Unless they bungled it, there
+was a chance that they might escape when the pirates
+made their landing on the coast to refresh themselves
+and refit the ship. The mate on watch greeted them
+good-humoredly enough and bade them enter the cabin
+where the captain awaited them. Jack was all a-flutter
+again but he managed to imitate Joe's careless swagger.</p>
+
+<p>Blackbeard lounged at his ease in a huge chair of
+carven ebony which might have been filched from some
+stately East Indiaman or a ship of the Grand Mogul<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
+himself. He had flung off his coat and the sleeves of a
+shirt of damask silk were rolled to the elbow. Instead
+of the great, mildewed sea-boots he wore slippers of
+crimson leather embroidered with threads of gold.
+Gorgeous cushions, pieces of plate, costly apparel
+strewed the cabin in barbaric confusion.</p>
+
+<p>What the two lads gazed at, however, was this bizarre
+figure of a despot who held the power of life and
+death. It was one of his quieter interludes when he
+laid aside the ferocious and bombastic play-acting which
+made it hard to discover whether he was very cunning
+or half-mad. The immense beard flowed down his chest
+instead of being tricked out in gaudy ribbons. He was
+idly running a comb through it when his small, rum-reddened
+eyes took in the two lads in dripping clothes
+who were shoved toward him by the sentry guarding the
+hatch.</p>
+
+<p>Blackbeard let a hairy hand stray to clutch one of the
+pistols kept on the table beside him. Jack Cockrell
+gulped and stole a frightened glance at Joe Hawkridge
+who winked and nudged him. There was some small
+comfort in this. Spellbound, they stared at the pistol
+and then at the pirate's massive forearm on which a
+skull and cross-bones was pricked in India ink. At this
+moment Jack earnestly wished himself back on the raft.
+The barrel of the pistol looked as big as a blunderbuss.</p>
+
+<p>With a yawn, Blackbeard reached for a silver bowl
+of Brazil nuts, cracked one of them with the pistol-<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>butt
+and roared for the black cabin boy who came running
+with a flask of Canary wine and a goblet. Jack
+Cockrell's sigh of relief sounded like a porpoise coming
+up for air. He was not to be shot at once. Suddenly
+Blackbeard exclaimed, in that husky, growling voice of
+his:</p>
+
+<p>"I saw you rascals through the glass before I came
+below. What of the ship I left ye in? Briefly now, and
+no lies."</p>
+
+<p>Together the lads pieced out the narrative as they had
+hastily prepared it. The vital thing was to watch lest
+they tell a word too much. Jack stumbled once or twice
+but his comrade covered it adroitly, and they did not
+betray themselves. The sweat trickled into their eyes
+but the heat of the cabin was excuse for this. Blackbeard
+studied them intently, munching Brazil nuts and
+noisily sipping his wine.</p>
+
+<p>"The <i>Plymouth Adventure</i> stranded yester-eve?"
+said he. "Know ye the lay of the coast where the wreck
+lies? What of the shipmaster and Ned Rackham?
+Were they able to fix the shoal by reckoning?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir," readily answered Joe Hawkridge.
+"'Twas strange land to all hands."</p>
+
+<p>From a chest Blackbeard hauled out a dog-eared chart
+of parchment and unrolled it upon the table. The boys
+foresaw his intention and feared the worst. Presently
+they heard him mumble to himself:</p>
+
+<p>"A small wind setting from the west'ard,&mdash;twenty-four<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
+hours of drift for the lads' raft,&mdash;a dozen leagues,
+I call it."</p>
+
+<p>He looked up from the chart to ask:</p>
+
+<p>"The wreck was lodged fast in smooth water and
+holding together?"</p>
+
+<p>"Aye, but in peril of working off and sinking like
+an iron pot," answered Joe. "For this reason the people
+were in haste to quit her."</p>
+
+<p>"Her own crew made for the beach, I have no doubt,"
+shrewdly pursued Blackbeard, "but my men 'ud stay
+by the wreck and watch the weather ere they shoved off.
+Trust the food and drink and plunder to hold 'em."</p>
+
+<p>He lumbered to the hatch and called up to the mate
+on watch. While they conferred, Joe Hawkridge whispered
+to his perturbed companion:</p>
+
+<p>"He will hunt for the wreck, Jack. But unless the
+wind changes, he can't beat in to the coast with his fore-topmast
+gone."</p>
+
+<p>"A merciful delay," muttered Jack. "I worry not
+so much for Captain Wellsby and his people. They
+will hide themselves well inland when they make out the
+<i>Revenge</i>, but what of you and me?"</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis a vexing life we lead. I will say that much,
+Master Cockrell."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE MIST OF THE CHEROKEE SWAMP</h3>
+
+
+<div class='unindent'><big>T</big>HE dark cloud of anxiety was lightened a trifle
+by the fact that Blackbeard displayed no ill
+temper toward the two young castaways.
+Having obtained such information as they chose to offer,
+he roughly told them to go forward and join the crew.
+Whether or no, Jack was impressed as a pirate and it
+may have amused Blackbeard to recruit by force the
+nephew of the honorable Secretary of the Provincial
+Council. For his part, Jack was grateful to be regarded
+no longer as a hostage under sentence of death. With
+Joe as an escort who knew the ropes, he went on deck
+and was promptly kicked off the poop by the mate.</div>
+
+<p>They first found food and quenched their raging
+thirst with water which had a loathsome smell. Joe reported
+to the chief gunner and begged the chance to
+sleep for a dozen hours on end. This was granted amiably
+enough and the pirates clustered about to ask all
+manner of curious questions, but the weary lads dragged
+themselves into the bows of the ship and curled up in a
+stupor. There they lay as if drugged, all through the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
+night, even when the seamen trampled over them to
+haul the head-sails and tack ship.</p>
+
+<p>When, at last, they blinked at the morning sky, it
+dismayed them to find the breeze blowing strong out of
+the southeast and the <i>Revenge</i> standing in to the coast
+under easy sail. They looked aft and saw Blackbeard
+at the rail with a long glass at his eye. The whole crew
+was eager with expectation and the routine work went
+undone. The ship had been put about several hours
+earlier, Joe learned, and was due soon to sight the shore
+unless the reckoning was all at fault.</p>
+
+<p>So cleverly had Blackbeard calculated the drift of the
+boys' raft that a little later in the morning a lookout in
+the maintop called down:</p>
+
+<p>"Land, ho! Two points off the starboard bow she
+bears."</p>
+
+<p>"The maintop, ahoy!" shouted Blackbeard. "Can
+ye see a vessel's spars?"</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis too hazy inshore. But unless my eyes play me
+tricks, a smudge of smoke arises."</p>
+
+<p>Jack Cockrell nervously confided to Joe:</p>
+
+<p>"That would be Captain Wellsby's campfire on the
+beach."</p>
+
+<p>"Trust him to douse it," was the easy assurance. "I
+feel better. Blow me, but I expect to live another day."</p>
+
+<p>"Answer me why," begged Jack. "I am like a palsied
+old man."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you know this bit o' coast, how low it sets<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
+above the sea. Despite the haze, a man aloft could see
+a ship's masts and yards before he had a glimpse of
+land."</p>
+
+<p>"Then the wreck of the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i> has
+slid off the shoal and gone down, Joe?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, when the wind veered and stirred a surf on the
+shoal. She pounded over with the flood-tide and
+dropped into fifteen fathom."</p>
+
+<p>"Then we are saved, for now?" joyfully exclaimed
+Jack.</p>
+
+<p>"Unless we're unlucky enough to find some o' those
+plaguey pirates afloat on a raft or makin' signals from
+the beach."</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Revenge</i> sailed shoreward until those on board
+could discern the marching lines of breakers which tumbled
+across the shoal. The smudge of smoke had vanished
+from the beach. The lookout man concluded that
+the haze had deceived him. Blackbeard steered as close
+as he dared go, with a sailor heaving the lead, but there
+was no sign of life among the sand-dunes and the stunted
+trees. And the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i> had disappeared
+leaving no trace excepting scattered bits of floating
+wreckage.</p>
+
+<p>The pirate ship headed to follow the coast to the
+northward, on the chance that Ned Rackham's prize
+crew might have made a landing elsewhere. To Jack
+Cockrell the gift of life had been miraculously vouchsafed
+him and he felt secure for the moment. Joe's<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
+theory seemed plausible, that the pirates had abandoned
+the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i> in time to avert drowning
+with her, and were driven away from the bight and the
+beach by Captain Wellsby's well-armed sailors.</p>
+
+<p>"Do they know Blackbeard's rendezvous in the North
+Carolina waters, Joe?" was the natural query. "Are
+they likely to make their way thither, knowing that honest
+men will slay them at sight?"</p>
+
+<p>"The swamps and the murderous Indians will take
+full toll of 'em, Jack. I believe we have seen the last of
+those rogues, but I'd rest better could I know for certain."</p>
+
+<p>"Meanwhile this mad Blackbeard may be taken in
+one of his savage frenzies and shoot me for sport," said
+young Master Cockrell, for whom existence had come to
+be one hazard after another.</p>
+
+<p>"He seems strangely tame, much like a human soul,"
+observed Joe. "I ne'er beheld him like this. He plots
+some huge mischief, methinks."</p>
+
+<p>And now the ship's officers drove the men to their
+work but they were less abusive than usual. They
+seemed to reflect Blackbeard's milder humor and it was
+manifest that they wished to avoid the crew's resentment.
+Joe Hawkridge was puzzled and began to ferret
+it out among his friends who were trustworthy. They
+had their own suspicions and the general opinion was
+that Blackbeard was in great dread of encountering
+Captain Stede Bonnet in the <i>Royal James</i>. It seemed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
+that the <i>Revenge</i> had spoken a disabled merchant ship
+just after the storm and her skipper reported that he
+had been overhauled by Stede Bonnet a few days earlier
+and the best of his cargo stolen. Blackbeard had been
+seized with violent rage but had suffered the ship to proceed
+on her way because of his own short-handed condition.</p>
+
+<p>With a prize crew lost in the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>,
+including Sailing-Master Ned Rackham, and the two
+sloops of the squadron missing with all hands, the terrible
+Blackbeard was in poor shape to meet this Captain
+Bonnet who hated him beyond measure. As if this were
+not gloomy enough, there were men in the <i>Revenge</i>
+eager to sail under Bonnet's flag and to mutiny if ever
+they sighted the <i>Royal James</i>. It behooved Blackbeard
+to press on to that lonely inlet on the North Carolina
+coast and avoid the open sea until he could prepare to
+fight this dangerous foeman.</p>
+
+<p>It surprised Jack Cockrell to see how quiet a pirate
+ship could be. The ruffians were bone-weary, for one
+thing, after the struggle to bring the vessel through the
+storm. And the scourge of tropic fever had left its
+marks. Moreover, the rum was running short because
+some of the casks had been staved in the heavy weather
+and Blackbeard was doling it out as grog with an ample
+dilution of water. There was no more dicing and brawling
+and tipsy choruses. Sobered against their will, some
+of these bloody-minded sinners talked repentance or<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
+shed tears over wives and children deserted in distant
+ports.</p>
+
+<p>The wind blew fair until the <i>Revenge</i> approached the
+landmarks familiar to Blackbeard and found a channel
+which led to the wide mouth of Cherokee Inlet. It was
+a quiet roadstead sheltered from seaward by several
+small islands. The unpeopled swamp and forest fringed
+the shores but a green meadow and a margin of white
+sand offered a favorable place for landing. As the
+<i>Revenge</i> slowly rounded the last wooded point, the tall
+mast of a sloop became visible. The pirates cheered and
+discharged their muskets in salute as they recognized one
+of the consorts which had been blown away in the storm.</p>
+
+<p>Blackbeard strutted on his quarter-deck, no longer
+biting his nails in fretful anxiety. He had donned the
+military coat with the glittering buttons and epaulets
+and the huge cocked hat with the feather in it. He
+noted that the sloop, which was called the <i>Triumph</i>,
+fairly buzzed with men, many more than her usual complement.
+No sooner had the ship let her anchor splash
+than a boat was sent over to her with the captain of the
+sloop who made haste to pay his compliments and explain
+his voyage. He was a portly, sallow man with a
+blustering manner and looked more like a bailiff or a
+tapster than a brine-pickled gentleman of fortune.</p>
+
+<p>Blackbeard hailed him cordially and invited him into
+the cabin. The boat waited alongside the <i>Revenge</i> and
+the men scrambled aboard to swap yarns with the ship's<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
+crew. Jack Cockrell hovered near the group as they
+squatted on their heels around a tub of grog and learned
+that the <i>Triumph</i> had rescued the crew of the other sloop
+just before it had foundered. There were a hundred men
+of them, in all, crowded together like dried herring, and
+part were sleeping ashore in huts of boughs and canvas.
+No wonder Blackbeard was in blither spirits. Here was
+a company to pick and choose from and so fill the depleted
+berth-deck of the <i>Revenge</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Finding the poop deserted, Joe Hawkridge ventured
+far enough to peer in at a cabin window. Blackbeard
+was at table, together with his first mate, the chief
+gunner, the acting sailing-master, and the captain of the
+sloop. They were exceeding noisy, singing most discordantly
+and laughing at indecent jests. Suddenly
+Blackbeard whipped two pistols from his sash and fired
+them under the table, quite at random.</p>
+
+<p>The first mate leaped up with a horrible yell and
+clapped a hand to the calf of his leg. Then he bolted
+out of the cabin, which was blue with smoke, and limped
+in search of the surgeon. Joe Hawkridge dodged aside
+but he heard the jovial Blackbeard shout, with a whoop
+of laughter:</p>
+
+<p>"Discipline, damme! If I don't kill one of you now
+and then, you'll forget who I am."</p>
+
+<p>Inasmuch as none of the other guests dared squeak
+after this episode, it was to be inferred that they were
+properly impressed.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
+<img src="images/illus4.jpg" width="500" height="411" alt="THE FIRST MATE LEAPED UP WITH A HORRIBLE YELL" title="THE FIRST MATE LEAPED UP WITH A HORRIBLE YELL" />
+<span class="caption">THE FIRST MATE LEAPED UP WITH A HORRIBLE YELL</span>
+</div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In a little while the mate returned with his leg neatly
+bandaged, announced that it was a mere flesh wound,
+and sat down as though nothing out of the ordinary had
+occurred to mar the festive occasion. Through the rest
+of the day, boats were passing between the ship and the
+sloop in a convivial reunion. Supper was to be cooked
+on the beach in great iron kettles and a frolic would
+follow the feast. The sloop had rum enough to sluice
+all the parched gullets aboard the <i>Revenge</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Jack Cockrell had no desire to join this stupid revel
+but he was eager to get ashore to discover what opportunity
+there might be to escape. But the wiser Joe
+Hawkridge counseled patience, saying:</p>
+
+<p>"Wait a bit. We'd be as helpless as any babes should
+we take to our heels in this ungodly wilderness. Is
+there a town or plantation near by?"</p>
+
+<p>"I know not," ruefully confessed Jack. "Charles
+Town lies to the south, and Virginia to the north.
+There my knowledge fetches up short."</p>
+
+<p>"And leagues of morass to flounder through, by the
+look of this coast," said Joe. "We be without weapons,
+or food, or&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I am a hot-headed fool, I grant you that," broke in
+Jack. "Now bestow your sage advice."</p>
+
+<p>"You will not be allowed to go ashore, for one thing,
+Master Cockrell. Blackbeard has no notion of letting
+you get away from him to betray this rendezvous and
+stir the colonies to send an expedition after him. Steady<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
+the helm, Jack, and watch for squalls. If I can read the
+signs, there is trouble afoot. And we must seek our own
+advantage in the nick of time."</p>
+
+<p>"But these wild sots no longer think of mutiny and
+the like, Joe. They are content to let the morrow go
+hang."</p>
+
+<p>"S-s-s-h, 'ware the master of the sloop," cautioned
+Joe. "He makes for the gangway, the big lump of
+tallow."</p>
+
+<p>They moved away while Captain Richard Spender
+clumsily descended into his boat, his broad face flushed,
+his breath asthmatic. He had a piping voice absurd for
+his bulk and the two lads amused themselves with mimicking
+him as the boat pulled in the direction of the
+sloop. So safe against surprise did Blackbeard regard
+himself in this lonely anchorage that no more than a
+dozen men were left aboard to keep the ship through the
+night. Among these was Jack Cockrell, as his comrade
+had foreseen. It therefore happened that they remained
+together, for Joe had volunteered to join the anchor
+watch. In a melancholy mood the two lads idled upon
+the after deck.</p>
+
+<p>The sun dropped behind the dark and tangled forest
+and flights of herons came winging it home to the islets
+in the swamps. On the sward by the silver strand the
+throng of pirates had stilled their clamor while a rascal
+with a tenor voice held them enraptured with the haunting
+refrain of:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span></p>
+
+<div class='poem'>"Sweet Annie frae the sea-beach came,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Where Jockey's climbed the vessel's side:</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Ah! wha can keep her heart at hame,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">When Jockey's tossed aboon the tide?</span><br />
+<br />
+"Far off 'till distant realms he gangs,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">But I'se be true, as he ha' been;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">And when ilk lass around him thrangs,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">He'll think on Annie's faithful een."</span><br />
+</div>
+
+<p>Forlorn Jack Cockrell had homesick thoughts and
+felt hopeless of loosing the snares which bound him.
+All that sustained his courage was the sanguine disposition
+of Joe Hawkridge, whose youthful soul had been so
+battered and toughened by dangers manifold on land
+and sea that he expected nothing less. Listening to the
+pirate's moving ballad, they sat and swung their legs
+from the ship's taffrail while their gaze idly roved to the
+green curtain of undergrowth which ran lush to the
+water's edge to the northward of the beach.</p>
+
+<p>It was Joe who called attention to a floating object
+which moved inside the mouth of the small, tidal creek
+that wandered through the marshy lowlands. In the
+shadowy light it could easily be mistaken for a log drifting
+down on the ebb of the tide. This was what the lads
+assumed it to be until they both noticed a behavior curious
+in a log. The long, low object turned athwart the
+current at the entrance of the creek and shot toward the
+nearest bank as though strongly propelled.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Joe lifted the telescope from its case in front of the
+wooden binnacle-box and squinted long at the edge of
+the creek. Crude though the glass was, he was enabled
+to discern that the object was, in truth, a log, but evidently
+hollowed out. Rounded at the ends, it held two
+men whose figures so blended into the dusk that they
+disclosed themselves only when in motion.</p>
+
+<p>"A pirogue," said Joe, "and fashioned by Indians!
+What is the tribe hereabouts? Have ye a guess?"</p>
+
+<p>"Roving Yemassees, or men of the Hatteras tribe,"
+answered Jack. "Yonder brace of savages will be
+scouts."</p>
+
+<p>"Aye, but there'll be no attack 'gainst this pirates'
+bivouac, right under the guns of the ships. The Indians
+are too wise to attempt it."</p>
+
+<p>"Look, Joe! Hand me the glass. Those two spies
+have quitted the pirogue. 'Tis quite empty. They
+may lay up all night to creep closer and keep watch on
+the camp."</p>
+
+<p>"Right enough, by Crambo! If we could but gain
+yon cypress canoe, and steal along the coast by sail and
+paddle&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis the chance we prayed for," eagerly exclaimed
+Jack. "Dare we swim for it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not with a boat just coming off from shore. What
+if we try it in the night and find the pirogue gone?"</p>
+
+<p>"We are stranded for sure, and Blackbeard will
+kill us."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Baffled, they strained their eyes until the shore stood
+black in the starlight, but as long as the dusk lingered
+they fancied they could descry the empty pirogue. The
+ship's boat which presently drew alongside contained
+Blackbeard himself and Captain Dick Spender of the
+<i>Triumph</i> sloop, besides several officers of the two vessels.
+They withdrew into the cabin and there was prolonged
+discussion, lasting well toward midnight.</p>
+
+<p>It was a secretive session, with trusted men of the
+boat's crew posted to keep eavesdroppers away from the
+hatches and windows, nor was there any loud carousing.
+Some business was afoot and Jack wondered whether it
+might concern the trouble which Joe had sworn was
+brewing under the surface. A circumstance even more
+suspicious was that three of the sailors from the boat
+were called into the cabin. Joe Hawkridge knew them
+as fellows loyal to Blackbeard through thick and thin.
+Drunken beasts, as a rule, they were cold sober to-night.</p>
+
+<p>As quietly as they had come, the whole party dropped
+into the boat and returned either to the beach or to the
+sloop which rode at anchor two cable-lengths away.
+The <i>Revenge</i> floated with no more activity on her darkened
+decks. The few men of the watch drowsed at their
+stations or wistfully gazed at the fires ashore and the
+mob of pirates who moved in the red glare. Jack Cockrell
+and Joe Hawkridge felt no desire for sleep. As the
+ship swung with the turn of the tide, they went to the
+side and leaned on the tall bulwark where they might<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
+catch the first glimpse of the shore with the break of
+day.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile they busied themselves with this wild
+scheme and that. Sifting them out, it was resolved to
+swim from the ship at the first opportunity. If they
+could not find the Indian pirogue, Joe would try to get
+into the pirates' camp by night and possess himself of an
+axe, an adze, a musket or two, and such food as he could
+smuggle out. Then, at a pinch, they could hide themselves
+a little way inland and hew out a pirogue of their
+own from a dry log. After hitting upon this plan, the
+better it seemed the more they thrashed it over.</p>
+
+<p>Unluckily it occurred to them so late in the night that
+they feared to attempt it then lest the dawn might overtake
+them while they were swimming. 'Twas a great
+pity, said Joe, that their wits had hung fire, like a damp
+flint-lock, for this was the night when the pirates
+would be the most slack and befuddled and it would be
+precious hard waiting through another day. Jack
+glumly agreed with this point of view.</p>
+
+<p>It was so near morning, however, that they lingered
+to scan the shore. Then it was observed that a pearly
+mist was rising from the swamp lands and spreading out
+over the water. It was almost like a fog which the
+morning breeze would dispel after a while. Rolling like
+smoke it hung so low that the topmast of the sloop rose
+above it although her hull was like the gray ghost of a
+vessel.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"No sign of wind as yet," said Joe, holding up a
+wetted finger, "and that red sunset bespoke a calm, hot
+day. This odd smother o' mist may stay a couple of
+hours. Will ye venture it with me, Jack?"</p>
+
+<p>"Gladly! Over we go, before the watch is flogged
+awake by the bos'n's mate."</p>
+
+<p>They crept aft to the high stern and paid out a coil
+of rope until it trailed in the water beneath the railed
+gallery which overhung the huge rudder. Joe belayed
+his end securely and slid over like a flash, twisting the
+rope around one leg and letting himself down as agile
+as a monkey. Without a splash he cast himself loose
+and Jack followed but not so adroitly. When he
+plopped into the water the commotion was like tossing a
+barrel overboard, but nobody sounded an alarm.</p>
+
+<p>They clung to the rusty rudder chains and listened.
+The ship was all quiet. Then out into the mist they
+launched themselves, swimming almost submerged,
+dreading to hear an outcry and the spatter of musket
+balls. But the veiling mist and the uncertain light of
+dawn soon protected the fugitives. It was slow, exhausting
+progress, hampered as they were by their
+breeches and shoes which could not be discarded. They
+tried to keep a sense of direction, striking out for the
+mouth of the creek in which the pirogue had been
+moored, but the tide set them off the course and the only
+visible marks were the spars of the ship behind them and
+the sloop's topmast off to one side.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<p>Jack swam more strongly and showed greater endurance
+because he had the beef and had been better nourished
+all his life than the scrawny young powder boy
+who was more like a lath. Now and then Jack paused
+to tread water while his shipmate clung to his shoulder
+and husbanded his waning strength, with that indomitable
+grin on his freckled phiz. Of one thing they were
+thankful, that the tide was bearing them farther away
+from the pirates' camp, which was now as still as though
+the sleepers were dead men.</p>
+
+<p>"Blood and bones, but I have swum a league
+a'ready," gurgled Joe during one of the halts.</p>
+
+<p>"Shut your mouth or you'll fill up to the hatch and
+founder," scolded Jack. "I see trees in the mist. The
+shore is scarce a pistol shot away."</p>
+
+<p>"I pray my keel scrapes soon," spluttered the waterlogged
+Hawkridge as he kicked himself along in a final
+effort.</p>
+
+<p>Huzza, their feet touched the soft ooze and they fell
+over stumps and rotted trunks buried under the surface.
+Scratched and beplastered with mud, they crawled
+out in muck which gripped them to the knees, and
+roosted like buzzards upon the butt of a prostrate live-oak.</p>
+
+<p>"Marooned," quoth Joe, "to be eaten by snakes and
+alligators."</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense," snapped Master Cockrell, who had
+hunted deer and wild-fowl on the Carolina coast. "We<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
+can pick our way with care. I have seen pleasanter
+landscapes than this, but I like it better than Blackbeard's
+company."</p>
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 411px;">
+<img src="images/illus5.jpg" width="411" height="500" alt="JACK ALMOST BUMPED INTO THE DUGOUT CANOE" title="JACK ALMOST BUMPED INTO THE DUGOUT CANOE" />
+<span class="caption">JACK ALMOST BUMPED INTO THE DUGOUT CANOE</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>There was no disputing this statement and Joe
+plucked up spirit, as was his habit when another arduous
+task confronted him. Cautiously they made their way
+from one quaking patch of sedge to another or scrambled
+to their middles. There came a ridge of higher
+ground thick with brambles and knotted vines and they
+traversed this with less misery. A gleam of water
+among the trees and they took it to be the creek which
+they sought to find. Wary of lurking Indians, they
+wormed along on their stomachs and so came to the high
+swamp grass of the bank.</p>
+
+<p>They swam the creek and crept toward its mouth.
+Jack was rooting along like a bear when he almost
+bumped into the dugout canoe which had looked so very
+like a stranded log. It was tied to a tree by a line of
+twisted fibre and the rising tide had borne it well up into
+the marsh. Here it was invisible from the ship and only
+a miracle of good fortune had revealed it to the lads in
+that glimpse from the deck at sundown.</p>
+
+<p>They crawled over the gunwale and slumped in the
+bottom of the pirogue, which was larger than they expected,
+a clumsy yet seaworthy craft with a wide floor
+and space to crowd a dozen men. Fire had helped to
+hollow it from a giant of a cypress log, for the inner
+skin was charred black. Three roughly made paddles<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
+were discovered. This was tremendously important,
+and all they lacked was a mast and sail to be true navigators.</p>
+
+<p>Something else they presently found which was so
+unlooked for, so incredible, that they could only gape
+and stare at each other. Tucked in the bow was a seaman's
+jacket of tarred canvas, of the kind used in wet
+weather. Sewed to the inside of it was a pocket of
+leather with a buttoned flap. This Jack Cockrell proceeded
+to explore, recovering from his stupefaction, and
+fished out a wallet bound in sharkskin as was the habit
+of sailors to make for themselves in tropic waters. It
+contained nothing of value, a few scraps of paper
+stitched together, a bit of coral, a lock of yellow hair, a
+Spanish coin, some shreds of dried tobacco leaf.</p>
+
+<p>Carefully Jack examined the ragged sheets of paper
+which seemed to be a carelessly jotted diary of dates and
+events. Upon the last leaf was scrawled, "<i>Bill Saxby,
+His Share</i>," and beneath this entry such items as these:</p>
+
+<div class="hang1">"Aprl. ye 17&mdash;A Spanish shippe rich laden.
+1 sack Vanilla. 2 Rolls Blue Cloth of
+Peru. 1 Packet Bezoar Stones.<br /></div>
+
+<div class="hang1">"May ye 24&mdash;A Poor Shippe. 3 Bars of
+Silver. 1 Case Cordial Waters. A
+Golden Candle-stick. My share by Lot
+afore ye Mast."</div>
+
+<p>Joe Hawkridge could neither read nor write but he<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
+had ready knowledge of the meaning of these entries and
+he cried excitedly:</p>
+
+<p>"Say the name again, Jack. Bill Saxby, His Share.
+Strike me blind, but I was chums with Bill when we lay
+off Honduras. As decent a lad as ever went a-piratin'!
+A heart of oak is Bill, hailin' from London town."</p>
+
+<p>"But what of the riddle?" impatiently demanded
+Jack. "Whence this Indian pirogue? And where is
+Bill Saxby?"</p>
+
+<p>"He sailed with Stede Bonnet, bless ye," answered
+Joe. "These two men we spied in the canoe last night
+were no Indians. <i>They were Cap'n Bonnet's men.</i>
+Indians would ha' hid the pirogue more craftily."</p>
+
+<p>"But they came not along the coast. Did they drop
+down this creek from somewhere inland?"</p>
+
+<p>"There you put me in stays," confessed Joe. "One
+thing I can swear. They were sent to look for Blackbeard's
+ships. And I sore mistrust they were caught
+whilst prowling near the camp. Else they would ha'
+come back to the canoe before day."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE EPISODE OF THE WINDING CREEK</h3>
+
+
+<div class='unindent'><big>T</big>HE singular discovery of Bill Saxby's jacket
+was like a shock to drive all else out of their
+minds. Now they found that it had been
+thrown over a jug of water and a bag of beef and biscuit
+stowed in the bow. This solved one pressing problem,
+and they nibbled the hard ration while debating the situation.
+It was agreed that they could not honorably run
+away with the pirogue if it really belonged to Stede
+Bonnet's men, who must have come on foot along the
+higher ground back of the coast and descended the creek
+in the canoe stolen or purchased from Indians met by
+chance.</div>
+
+<p>Granted this much, it was fair to conjecture that Captain
+Bonnet's ship was in some harbor not many leagues
+distant and that he knew where to find Blackbeard's rendezvous,
+at Cherokee Inlet.</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis your job to stand by the pirogue, Jack," suggested
+Hawkridge, "and I will make a sally toward the
+pirates' camp afore they rouse out."</p>
+
+<p>"Go softly, Joe, and don't be reckless. Why not lie
+up till night before you reconnoitre?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"'Cause the mist still hangs heavy and I'm blowed if
+I dilly-dally if good Bill Saxby has come to grief."</p>
+
+<p>"Supposing he has, you cannot wrest him single-handed
+from Blackbeard's crew."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, if I can but slip a word of comfort in his ear,
+it'll cheer him mightily, unless his throat be cut by now,"
+was the stubborn response. "Sit thee taut, Jack, old
+<i>camarada</i>, and chuck the worry. Care killed a cat.
+These rogues yonder in the camp won't <i>molest me</i> if I
+walk boldly amongst 'em."</p>
+
+<p>"What if you don't return?" persisted Jack. "How
+long shall I wait here with the pirogue?"</p>
+
+<p>"Now what the deuce can I say to such foolish
+queries? If things go wrong with me and Bill and his
+mate, you will have to cruise alone or hop back to the
+<i>Revenge</i>."</p>
+
+<p>With a laugh and a wave of the hand, the dauntless
+adventurer leaped from the nose of the canoe, nimbly
+hauled himself into a tree, and then plunged into the
+gloomy swamp where he was speedily lost to view. Jack
+Cockrell settled himself to wait for he knew not what.
+Clouds of midges and mosquitoes tormented him and he
+ached with fatigue. Soon after sunrise the mist began
+to burn away and the mouth of the creek was no longer
+obscured by shadows. In the glare of day Jack thought
+it likely that the canoe might be detected by some pair
+of keen eyes aboard the <i>Revenge</i>.</p>
+
+<p>To move it far might imperil Joe Hawkridge and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
+Bonnet's two seamen should they come in haste with a
+hue-and-cry behind them. Jack paddled the pirogue
+up the creek and soon found a safe ambuscade, a stagnant
+cove in among the dense growth, where he tied up
+to a gnarled root. Then he climbed a wide-branching
+oak and propped himself in a crotch from which he could
+see the open water and the two vessels at anchor.
+Clumps of taller trees cut off any view of the beach and
+the camp but he dared stray no farther from the pirogue.</p>
+
+<p>Tediously an hour passed and there was no sign of
+Joe Hawkridge. He had a journey of only a few hundred
+yards to make, and Jack began to imagine all kinds
+of misfortune that might have befallen him, such as being
+mired beyond his depth in the swamp and perishing
+miserably. The sensible conclusion was, however, that
+he had tarried among his shipmates in the camp with
+some shrewd purpose in mind.</p>
+
+<p>A little later in the morning, Jack's anxious cogitations
+were diverted by the frequent passage of boats between
+the <i>Revenge</i> and the sloop which was anchored
+nearer the beach. One of these small craft was Blackbeard's
+own cock-boat, or captain's gig, which he used
+for errands in smooth water, with a couple of men to
+pull it. Jack was reminded of that secret conference in
+the cabin and Joe's conviction that some uncommon devilment
+was afoot. It appeared as though "Tallow
+Dick" Spender, that unwholesome master of the <i>Triumph</i>
+sloop, had been chosen as the right bower.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>And now there arose a sudden and riotous noise in the
+camp. It was not the mirth and song of jolly pirates
+a-pleasuring ashore but the ferocious tumult of men in
+conflict and taken unawares. Perched in the tree, Jack
+Cockrell listened all agog as the sounds rose and fell
+with the breeze which swayed the long gray moss that
+draped the branches. He heard a few pistol shots and
+then was startled to see a spurt of flame dart from a
+gun-port of the sloop. The dull report reached him an
+instant later. He could see that the gun had been fired
+from the vessel's shoreward battery. It meant that
+Blackbeard was making a target of some part of the
+camp. Another gun belched its cloud of smoke.</p>
+
+<p>The noise died down, save for intermittent shouts and
+one long wail of anguish. Presently a boat moved out
+past the sloop. A dozen men tugged at the oars and
+others stood crowded in the stern-sheets. Jack caught
+the gleam of weapons and thought he recognized the
+squat, broad figure of Blackbeard himself beside the
+man at the steering oar. Behind this pinnace from the
+<i>Revenge</i> trailed two other boats in tow. They passed
+in slow procession, out between the vessels. The boats
+which the pinnace towed were not empty. Instead of
+sitting upon the thwarts, men seemed to be strewn about
+in them as if they had been tossed over the gunwales like
+so much dunnage.</p>
+
+<p>Jack rubbed his eyes in amazement and watched the
+line of boats turn to follow the channel which led out of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
+the sheltered roadstead to the sea beyond. When they
+vanished beyond a sandy island, the lad in the live-oak
+tree said to himself:</p>
+
+<p>"My guess is that Blackbeard has put a stopper on
+all talk of mutiny by one bold stroke. A bloody weeding-out,
+and in those two boats are the poor wretches
+who were taken alive. Alas, one of 'em may be Joe
+Hawkridge unless he be dead already. He talked too
+much of Stede Bonnet aboard the ship. And there were
+sneaking dogs in the crew who spied on their comrades.
+We saw them enter the cabin last night."</p>
+
+<p>There was no getting around the evidence. It fitted
+together all too well. Jack sadly reflected that, beyond
+a doubt, he had seen the last of gallant, loyal Joe Hawkridge.
+Left alone with the pirogue, which he could not
+paddle single-handed, it was folly to think of trying to
+escape along the coast. And to wander inland, ignorant
+of the country, was to court almost certain death.
+Nor could he now expect mercy from Blackbeard, having
+deserted the ship against orders and known to be a
+true friend of Captain Stede Bonnet.</p>
+
+<p>The most unhappy lad could no longer hold his
+cramped station in the tree and he decided to seek the
+canoe and find the meagre solace of a little food and
+water. He was half-way to the ground when he clutched
+a limb and halted to peer into the swamp. Something
+was splashing through the mud and grass and making a
+prodigious fuss about it. Then Jack heard two voices<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
+in grunts and maledictions. Fearing the enemy might
+have tracked him, he stood as still as a mouse in the leafage
+of the oak.</p>
+
+<p>Out of the swamp emerged a young man with a musket
+on his shoulder. Behind him came one very much
+older, gaunt and wrinkled, his hair as gray as the Spanish
+moss that overhung his path. They reached the edge
+of the creek and then turned down to halt where the
+pirogue had been left. At failing to find it there, they
+argued hotly and were much distressed. Jack Cockrell's
+fears were calmed. These were no men of Blackbeard's
+company, but good Bill Saxby and his mate.
+He called to them from his perch and they stood wondering
+at this voice from heaven.</p>
+
+<p>In a jiffy Jack had slid down and was beckoning
+them. They hurried as fast as they could pull their
+feet out of the muck, and were overjoyed to jump into
+the hidden canoe. There they sat and thumped Jack
+Cockrell on the head by way of affectionate greeting.
+The younger man had a chubby cheek, a dimple in his
+chin, and blue eyes as big and round as a babe's.</p>
+
+<p>"Bill Saxby is me," said his pleasant voice, "and a
+precious job had I to get here. Joe Hawkridge told me
+of you, Master Cockrell."</p>
+
+<p>"Where is Joe?" cried Jack, dreading to hear his
+own opinion confirmed.</p>
+
+<p>"Marooned, along with two dozen luckless lads that
+were trapped like pigeons&mdash;&mdash;"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"'Twas more like turtles all a-sleepin' in the sand,"
+the old man croaked in rusty accents. "A few was
+sharp awake and they fought pretty whilst the rest rallied,
+but they got drove with their backs to the swamp
+and a deep slough. Then the sloop turned her guns on
+'em and they struck their colors."</p>
+
+<p>"And Joe Hawkridge sided with his friends, of
+course," said Jack.</p>
+
+<p>"Would ye expect aught else of him?" proudly answered
+Bill Saxby. "He searched us out where we lay
+trussed like fowls, all bound with ropes. We blundered
+fair into the camp last night, and old Trimble Rogers
+here, his legs knotted with cramps, couldn't make a run
+for it. They saved us for Blackbeard's pleasure but he
+had other fish to fry."</p>
+
+<p>"What then?" demanded Jack.</p>
+
+<p>"'Twas Joe Hawkridge that ran to cut our bonds
+when the fight began. And he bade us leg it for the
+pirogue and carry word to you. A pledge of honor, he
+called it, to stand by his dear friend Jack, and he made
+us swear it."</p>
+
+<p>"Bless him for a Christian knight of a pirate," said
+Jack, with tears in his eyes. "Was he hurt, did ye
+happen to note?"</p>
+
+<p>"We hid ourselves till the prisoners were flung into
+the boats. I marked Joe as one of 'em, and he was
+sprightly, barring a bloody face."</p>
+
+<p>"Marooned, Bill Saxby?" asked Jack. "What's<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
+your judgment on that score? It cannot be many
+leagues from here, or the ship would have transported
+them instead of the boats."</p>
+
+<p>"These barren islands lie strung well out from the
+coast, Master Cockrell. Waterless they be, and without
+shelter. Blackbeard's fancy is to let the men die
+there&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"An ancient custom of buccaneers and pirates," put
+in old Trimble Rogers, with an air of grave authority.
+"I mind me in the year of 1687 when I sailed in the
+South Sea with that great captain, Edward Davis,&mdash;'twas
+after the sack of Guayaquil when every man had a
+greater weight of gold and silver than he could lug on
+his back&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Bill Saxby interrupted, in a petulant manner:</p>
+
+<p>"Stow it, grandsire! At a better time ye can please
+the lad with your long-winded yarns,&mdash;of marching on
+Panama with Henry Morgan when the mother's milk
+was scarce dry on your lips."</p>
+
+<p>"I cruised with the best of 'em," boasted the last of
+the storied race of true buccaneers of the Spanish Main,
+"and now I be in this cheap trade of piratin'. The fortunes
+I gamed away, and the plate ships I boarded!
+Take warnin', boy, and salt your treasure down."</p>
+
+<p>"This Trimble Rogers will talk you deaf," said Bill
+Saxby, "but there's pith in his old bones and wisdom
+under yon hoary thatch. Cap'n Bonnet sent him along
+with me as a rare old hound to trail the swamps."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>In a vivid flash of remembrance, Jack Cockrell saw
+this salty relic of the Spanish Main among the crew
+which had disported itself on the tavern green at Charles
+Town,&mdash;the old man sitting aside with a couple of stray
+children upon his knees while his head nodded to the lilt
+of the fiddle. And again there had been a glimpse of
+him trudging in the column which had followed Stede
+Bonnet, with trumpet and drum, to attack the hostile
+Indians. Jack's heart warmed to Trimble Rogers and
+also to young Bill Saxby. They would find some way
+out of all this tribulation.</p>
+
+<p>"Whither lies Captain Bonnet's stout ship?" eagerly
+demanded Jack.</p>
+
+<p>"On this side the Western Ocean," smiled Saxby.
+"We shall waste no time in finding her. We had better
+bide where we are a few hours, eh, Trimble?"</p>
+
+<p>"Aye, and double back up the stream in the canoe to
+spend the night on dry land and push on afoot at dawn.
+If we wait to sight Blackbeard's boats come in from sea,
+'twill aid us to reckon how far out they went and what
+the bearings are."</p>
+
+<p>"So Captain Bonnet may sail to pick off those poor
+seamen marooned," exclaimed Jack.</p>
+
+<p>"He is not apt to leave 'em to bleach their bones,"
+said Bill Saxby. "And when it comes to closing in with
+Blackbeard, they will have a grudge of their own."</p>
+
+<p>They made themselves as comfortable as possible on
+the bottom of the pirogue. Now and then Jack climbed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
+the live-oak to look for the return of the boats. There
+was no more leisure for the pirates left in the ship and
+the sloop. Evidently Blackbeard had been alarmed by
+the tidings that two of Stede Bonnet's men had been
+caught spying him out and had made their escape in the
+confusion. The sloop was now listed over in shoal
+water and Bill Saxby ventured the opinion that they
+intended to take the mast out of her and put it in the
+<i>Revenge</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Along with most of her guns, I take it," said Trimble
+Rogers. "What with losing all those men, in one way
+or another, this Blackbeard, as Cap'n Ed'ard Teach miscalls
+hisself, must needs abandon the sloop. The more
+the merrier, says I, when we come at close quarters."</p>
+
+<p>Jack asked many curious questions, by way of passing
+the time. The old man was easy to read. He had been
+a lawless sea rover in the days when there was both gold
+and glory in harrying Spanish towns and galleons, from
+Mexico to Peru. The real buccaneers had vanished but
+he was too old a dog to learn new tricks and he faithfully
+served Stede Bonnet, who had a spark of the chivalry
+and manliness which had burned so brightly in that idolized
+master, Captain Edward Davis.</p>
+
+<p>As for this blue-eyed smiling young Bill Saxby, he
+had been a small tradesman in London. Through no
+fault of his own, he was cruelly imprisoned for debt and,
+after two years, shipped to the Carolina plantations as
+no better than a slave. For all he knew, the girl wife<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
+and child in London had been suffered to starve. He
+had never heard any word of them. As a fugitive he
+had been taken aboard a pirate vessel. There he found
+kindlier treatment than honest men had ever offered him,
+and so grew somewhat reconciled to this wicked calling.</p>
+
+<p>On one of the occasions when Jack left these entertaining
+companions to visit his high sentry post in the
+tree, he surmised that all hands had been summoned on
+the vessel and lifting out her mast. He could see two
+boats plying back and forth and filled with men. He
+lingered because something else caught his interest.
+A little boat was putting out from the seaward side of
+the <i>Revenge</i> and it fetched a wide circuit of the harbor.
+This brought the ship between it and the sloop
+so that its departure would be unobserved by the toiling
+crew.</p>
+
+<p>Two men were at the oars and a third sat in the stern.
+At a distance, Jack guessed they were bound to one of
+the nearest islands, perhaps in search of oysters or crabs,
+but after making a long sweep which carried the boat
+out of vision of the sloop and the beach, it swung toward
+the shore, a little to the northward of the mouth of the
+creek. The errand had a stealthy air. Jack Cockrell
+started and almost fell out of the tree. He had been
+mistaken in his fancy that Blackbeard was in the pinnace
+which had towed the prisoners out to be marooned.
+This was none other than the grotesque fiend of a pirate<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
+himself, furtively steering his cock-boat on some private
+errand of his own.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as he was certain of this, Jack fairly scurried
+down the tree, digging his toes in the bark like a squirrel,
+and tumbling head over heels into the pirogue. Breathing
+rapidly, he stuttered:</p>
+
+<p>"The&mdash;the devil himself,&mdash;in that little w-wherry of
+his,&mdash;c-coming inshore. He must ha' seen the canoe.
+He is in chase of me."</p>
+
+<p>"Go take a look, Bill," coolly remarked old Trimble
+Rogers, who was busy slapping at mosquitoes. "A
+touch o' the sun has bred a nightmare in the lad."</p>
+
+<p>Bill Saxby swarmed up the live-oak like a limber seaman
+with fish-hooks for fingers and he, too, almost lost
+his balance at what he saw. He waved a warning hand
+at the canoe and then put his fingers to his lips. Down
+he came in breakneck haste and urged the others to haul
+their craft farther up into the sedge. He was plucking
+green bushes and armfuls of dried grass to fling across
+the gunwales.</p>
+
+<p>Satisfied that the canoe was entirely concealed, they
+crouched low. The old man was more concerned with
+the pest of insects and he reached out to claw up the
+sticky mud with which he plastered his face and neck
+like a mask. This seemed to give him some relief and
+his comrades were glad to do the same. Bill Saxby was
+attentive to the priming of the musket, which he passed
+over to Trimble Rogers, saying:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"You are the chief gunner, old hawk. But hold your
+fire. I'm itching to know what trick this Don Whiskerando
+is up to."</p>
+
+<p>"Fair enough," muttered the old man. "Cap'n
+Bonnet 'ud clap me in irons if I slew this filthy Ed'ard
+Teach and robbed him of that enjoyment. I'll pull no
+trigger save in our own defense."</p>
+
+<p>They heard the faint splash of oars. Soon the little
+cock-boat came gliding around the bend of the shore and
+floated into the mouth of the creek. Bill Saxby raised
+himself for a moment and ducked swiftly as he whispered:</p>
+
+<p>"He is not lookin' about but motions 'em to row on
+up the stream."</p>
+
+<p>"Then our canoe is not what he's after?" murmured
+Jack.</p>
+
+<p>"'Tis some queer game. Were he hunting us, he'd
+fetch along more hands than them two. Hush! Let
+him pass."</p>
+
+<p>The little boat came steadily on, the tide helping the
+oars. It sat very low in the water, oddly so for the
+weight of three men. Blackbeard, hunched in the stern,
+held a pistol in one hand while the other gripped the
+tiller. This was not in fear of danger from the shore
+because he kept his eyes on the two seamen at the oars
+and it was plain to see that the pistol was meant to menace
+them.</p>
+
+<p>The boat passed abreast of the pirogue so artfully<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
+concealed in the pocket of a tiny cove. The intervening
+distance was no more than a dozen yards. Old Trimble
+Rogers wistfully fingered the musket and lifted it to
+squint along the barrel. Never was temptation more
+sturdily resisted. Then his face, hard as iron and puckered
+like dried leather, broke into a smile. The idea
+pleased him immensely. They would follow Blackbeard
+and watch the chance to take him alive. He who
+had trapped his own men in camp was now neatly
+trapped himself, his retreat cut off. Tie a couple of
+fathom of stout cord to his whiskers and tow him along
+by land, all the way to Stede Bonnet's ship. There the
+worthy captain could bargain with him at his own terms,
+silently chuckled the old buccaneer.</p>
+
+<p>They held their breath and gazed at the fantastic
+scoundrel who had made himself the ogre among pirates.
+He had discarded the great hat as cumbersome and his
+tousled head was bound around with a wide strip of the
+red calico from India. Still and solid he sat, like a
+heathen idol, staring in front of him and intent on his
+mysterious errand. The unseen spectators in the
+pirogue scanned also the two seamen at the oars and felt
+a vague pity for them. Unmistakably they were sick
+with fear. It was conveyed by their dejected aspect,
+by the tinge of pallor, by the fixity with which they
+regarded the cocked pistol in Blackbeard's fist. Jack
+Cockrell knew them as abandoned villains who had
+boasted of many a bloody deed but the swarthy, pock<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>marked
+fellow had been in the boat which had saved the
+two lads from the drifting raft. This was enough to
+awaken a lively sympathy.</p>
+
+<p>Trimble Rogers gripped Jack's shoulder with a
+strength which made him wince and pointed a skinny
+finger at the boat. The fate of the two seamen did not
+trouble him greatly. Those who lived by violence should
+rightly expect to die by it. The sea was their gaming
+table and it was their ill luck if the dice were cogged.
+Just then Bill Saxby stifled an ejaculation. He, too,
+had discovered the freightage in the cock-boat, the heavy
+burden which made it swim so low.</p>
+
+<p>It rested in front of Blackbeard's knees, the top showing
+above the curve of the gunwales. It was a sea-chest,
+uncommonly large, built of some dark tropical wood and
+strapped with iron. Old Trimble Rogers' fierce eyes
+glittered and he licked his lips. He leaned over to
+whisper in Bill Saxby's ear the one word:</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Treasure!</i>"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+
+<h3>BLACKBEARD'S ERRAND IS INTERRUPTED</h3>
+
+
+<div class='unindent'><big>B</big>LACKBEARD'S deep-laden boat was rowed on
+past the pirogue and turned to follow the channel
+of the sluggish stream. Bill Saxby thrust aside
+the cover of grass and boughs and shoved the log canoe
+out of the cove. So crooked was the course of the creek
+that the boat was already out of sight and by stealthy
+paddling it was possible to pursue undetected. Old
+Trimble Rogers had forgotten his lust to slay Blackbeard.
+His gloating imagination could picture the contents
+of that massive sea-chest after a long cruise in
+southern waters.</div>
+
+<p>It was foolish to attempt to surprise Blackbeard while
+afloat in the creek. In a race of it, the handy cock-boat
+could pull away from the clumsier pirogue manned by
+two paddles only, for Trimble Rogers was needed to
+steer and be ready with the musket. This was their only
+firearm, which Bill Saxby had snatched up during the
+flight from the camp. At the same time he had lifted
+a powder-horn and bullet pouch from a wounded pirate.</p>
+
+<p>"If I do bang away and miss him," grumbled Trimble
+Rogers, "he's apt to pepper us afore I can reload."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"But you forswore shootin' him," chided Bill Saxby,
+between strokes of the paddle.</p>
+
+<p>"Show me a great sea-chest crammed wi' treasure and
+I'd put a hole through the Grand High Panjandrum
+hisself," replied the ancient one. "Aye, Bill, there be
+more'n one way to skin an eel. We'll lay aboard this
+bloody blow-hard of a Cap'n Teach whilst he's a-buryin'
+of it. Here may well be where he has tucked away his
+other plunder. What if we bag the whole of it?"</p>
+
+<p>"One more fling, eh, Trimble, and more gold than ye
+lugged on your back from Guayaquil," grinned young
+Bill.</p>
+
+<p>They had spoken in cautious tones and now held their
+tongues. The paddles dipped with no more than a
+trickle of water and the canoe hugged the marsh. They
+were close to the next bend of the stream and the sound
+of the oars in the cock-boat was faintly audible. As the
+tallest of the three, the old man stood up after swathing
+his head in dried grass, and gazed across the curve of the
+shore. By signs he told his companions that Blackbeard
+was bound farther up the stream.</p>
+
+<p>They waited a little, giving their quarry time to pass
+beyond another turn of the channel. Jack Cockrell was
+embarked on the most entrancing excursion of his life.
+This repaid him for all he had suffered. His only regret
+was that poor Joe Hawkridge had been marooned
+before he could share this golden adventure. However,
+he would see that Joe received a handsome amount of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
+treasure. Trimble Rogers was muttering again, and
+thus he angrily expounded a grievance:</p>
+
+<p>"A thief is this Cap'n Teach,&mdash;like a wild hog, all
+greed and bristles. 'Tis the custom of honest buccaneers
+and pirates to divide the spoils by the strict rule,&mdash;six
+shares for the commander, two for the master's mate,
+and other officers accordin' to their employment, with
+one share to every seaman alike. Think ye this bloody
+pick-purse dealt fairly by his crew? In yon sea-chest be
+the lawful shares of all the woesome lads he marooned
+this day. An' as much more as he durst skulk away
+with."</p>
+
+<p>"Easy, now, old Fire-and-Brimstone," warned Bill,
+"or that temper will gain the upper hand. Don't spoil
+the show by bombardin' Blackbeard with that cross-eyed
+musket."</p>
+
+<p>Now here was young Master Cockrell, a gentleman
+and a near kinsman of a high official who had sworn to
+hang every mother's son of a pirate that harried Carolina
+waters. And yet this godly youth was eager to lay
+hands on Blackbeard's treasure so as to divide it among
+the pirates who had been robbed of it. It was a twisted
+sense of justice, no doubt, and a code of morals turned
+topsy-turvy, but you are entreated to think not too
+harshly of such behavior. Master Cockrell had fallen
+into almighty bad company but the friends he had made
+displayed fidelity and readiness to serve him.</p>
+
+<p>"How far will the chase lead us?" he inquired.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Did you men come down this same creek in the
+pirogue?"</p>
+
+<p>"Aye, in this very same mess o' pea soup and jungle,"
+answered Bill Saxby. "Two miles in from the coast, at
+a venture, was where we stumbled on the canoe and
+tossed the Indians out of it. Beyond that the water
+spreads o'er the swamp with no fairway for a boat."</p>
+
+<p>Once more they paddled for a short stretch and then
+repeated the stratagem of hauling into the dense growth
+of the mud-flat and pausing until the cock-boat had
+steered beyond the next elbow of the stream. It became
+more and more difficult to avoid the fallen trees and
+other obstructions, but Blackbeard was threading his
+course like a pilot acquainted with this dank and somber
+region. The pirogue ceased to lag purposely but had to
+be urged in order to keep within striking distance.</p>
+
+<p>Twice they were compelled to climb out and shove
+clear of sunken entanglements or slimy shoals. But
+when they held themselves to listen, they could still hear
+the measured thump of oars against the pins, like the
+beat of a distant drum in the brooding silence of this
+melancholy solitude. They had struggled on for perhaps
+a mile and a half, in all, when Trimble Rogers ordered
+another halt. He was perplexed, like a hound
+uncertain of the scent. From the left bank of the creek,
+a smaller stream meandered blindly off into the swamp.
+Into which of these watercourses had Blackbeard continued
+his secret voyage?<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Again they listened, and more anxiously than ever.
+The tell-tale thump of the oars had ceased. The only
+sounds in the bayou were the trickle of water from the
+tidal pools, the wind in the tree-tops, the rat-tat-tat of a
+woodpecker, and the scream of a bob-cat. With a foolish
+air of chagrin, Trimble Rogers rubbed his hoary pate
+and exclaimed:</p>
+
+<p>"Whilst Bill and me were a-paddlin' this hollow log
+down-stream, we took no heed of a fork like this yonder.
+With the sun at our backs to guide us, we knew we was
+makin' easterly to fetch the coast. What say, Bill?"</p>
+
+<p>"Cursed if I know. Spin a coin. The treasure has
+slipped us."</p>
+
+<p>"Rot me if it has!" snarled the old man. "We'll
+push on as we are, in the bigger stream. That stinkin'
+ditch on my left hand looks too weedy and shallow to
+float a boat."</p>
+
+<p>"It makes no odds. A gamester's choice," amiably
+agreed Bill.</p>
+
+<p>They paddled with might and main, flinging caution
+to the winds. Jack Cockrell was well versed in handling
+one of these dugout canoes and his stout arms made Bill
+Saxby grunt and sweat to keep stroke with him. When
+the craft grounded they strove like madmen to push it
+clear. Trimble Rogers tore the water with a paddle,
+straining every sinew and condemning Blackbeard to
+the bottomless pit in a queer jargon of the Spanish,
+French, and English tongues. It required such a lurid<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
+vocabulary to give vent to his feelings. He was even
+more distressed when he sighted the clump of gum trees
+near by which he and Bill had purloined the pirogue.
+Beyond this the creek was impassable.</p>
+
+<p>"Throwed a blank! Wear ship and drive back to the
+fork o' the waters," shouted the old man. "Hull down
+an' under though he be, we'll nab yon <i>picaro</i>, with his
+jolly treasure. <i>Rapido, camaradas! Vivo!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>To make haste was easier said than done but the sluggish
+current was now in their favor and there was no
+more than a half mile to traverse under stress of furious
+exertion. The heavy canoe crashed through obstacles
+which had delayed the upward journey and they knew
+where to avoid the worst of the shoals. What fretted
+them was the fear that Blackbeard might have buried the
+sea-chest and descended the creek while they were engaged
+in this wild-goose chase. But this seemed unlikely
+and, moreover, old Trimble Rogers was the man
+to nose out the marks of the landing-place and the trail
+which must have been left.</p>
+
+<p>Where the two streams joined, the pirogue turned
+and shot into the smaller one. To their surprise it presently
+widened and was like a tiny lagoon, with the water
+much clearer as if fed by springs. The view was less
+broken and there were glimpses of dry knolls in the
+swamp and verdure not so noxious and tanglesome.
+Along the edge of this pretty pond skimmed the pirogue
+while Trimble Rogers keenly scanned every inch of it for<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
+the imprint of a boat's keel. A hundred yards and the
+water again narrowed to a little creek. Impetuously
+the canoe swung to pass around a spit of land covered
+with a thicket of sweet bay.</p>
+
+<p>There, no more than a dozen feet beyond, was the captain's
+cock-boat from the <i>Revenge</i>. Its bow had been
+pulled out of the water which deepened from a shelving
+bank. The boat was deserted but above the gunwale
+could be seen the iron-bound lid of the massive sea-chest.
+Those in the pirogue desired to behold nothing else.
+They were suddenly diverted by a tremendous yell which
+came booming out of the tall grass where it waved
+breast-high on the shore of the stream. A pistol barked
+and the ball clipped a straggling lock of Trimble Rogers'
+gray hair.</p>
+
+<p>Driving his two seamen before him, Blackbeard
+rushed for his boat as fast as the bandy legs and clumsy
+sea-boots could carry him. In fancied security he had
+explored the nearest knoll. And now appeared this infernal
+canoe, surging full-tilt at his treasure chest.</p>
+
+<p>Things happened <i>rapido</i> enough to glut even an old
+buccaneer. The consternation in the pirogue prevented
+any thought of checking headway with the paddles.
+This hollowed cypress log, narrow beamed and solid at
+both ends, still moved with a weighty momentum. Its
+astounded crew were otherwise occupied. Blackbeard
+appeared to have the advantage of them. Jack Cockrell
+ducked to the bottom of the canoe. Bill Saxby's<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
+eyes of baby blue were big and round as saucers as he
+wildly flourished his paddle as the only cudgel at hand.</p>
+
+<p>With a whoop-la, old Trimble Rogers leaped to his
+feet, the long musket at his shoulder. Before he could
+aim at the savage, bushy figure of Blackbeard, the prow
+of the pirogue crashed into the side of the cock-boat,
+striking it well toward the stern. The ancient freebooter
+described a somersault and smote the water with a
+mighty splash, musket and all. Blowing like a grampus,
+he bobbed to the top, clawing the weeds from his eyes
+but still clutching the musket. Nobody paid his misfortune
+the slightest heed.</p>
+
+<p>The water deepened suddenly, as has been said, where
+the current had scoured the bank. With the nose of the
+little boat pulled well up in the mud, the stern sloped
+almost level with the surface of the stream. The blunt,
+slanting bow of the pirogue banged into the plank gunwale
+and slid over it. The force of the blow dragged the
+cock-boat to one side and wrenched it free of the shore.
+It floated at the end of a tether but the bow of the canoe
+pressed the stern under and tipped it until the water
+rushed in.</p>
+
+<p>Listed far over, the sea-chest slid a trifle and this was
+enough to push the gunwale clear under. The boat
+filled and capsized, what with the weight of the chest and
+the pressure of the canoe's fore part. Down to the oozy
+bed sank Blackbeard's treasure.</p>
+
+<p>The arch-pirate himself came charging out of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
+marsh-grass in time to witness this lamentable disaster.
+His hoarse ejaculations were too dreadful for a Christian
+reader's ears. Dumfounded for an instant, he gathered
+his wits to fire another pistol at the pirogue. The ball
+flew wild, as was to be expected of a marksman in a state
+of mind so distraught. He had overlooked those two
+poor seamen of his who had been impressed to bury the
+treasure, after which they were presumably to be pistoled
+or knocked on the head. Dead men told no tales.
+Doomed wretches, they were quick to snatch from this
+confusion the precious hope of life.</p>
+
+<p>The pockmarked fellow, who was powerfully built,
+whirled like a cat as he heard Blackbeard's pistol discharged
+just behind him. There was no time to draw
+and cock another pistol. The seaman fairly flew at the
+pirate captain's throat. Down they toppled and vanished
+in the grass together. A moment later Blackbeard
+bounded to his feet, a bloody dirk in his hand. He had
+done for the poor fellow who lay groaning where he fell.
+Terrified by this, the other seaman wheeled and fled to
+the bank of the creek, seeking the pirogue as his only
+refuge.</p>
+
+<p>He leaped for it but his feet slipped in the treacherous
+mud and his impetus was checked so that he tumbled
+forward, striking the solid side of the dugout with great
+force. He was splashing in the water but his exertions
+were feeble. Either the collision had stunned him or he
+was unable to swim. Bill Saxby and Jack Cockrell<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
+were trying to swing the canoe clear of the boat and
+effect a landing. Trimble Rogers had rescued himself
+from the creek and was ramming a dry charge into his
+dripping musket. Blackbeard was a deadly menace and
+their attention was fixed on him.</p>
+
+<p>When they endeavored to lend a hand to the helpless
+seaman he had sunk beneath the surface of the roily
+stream. They saw him come up and turn a ghastly face
+to them, but he went down like a stone before a hand
+could clutch at him. A few bubbles and this was the
+end of him. Jack Cockrell hesitated with a brave impulse
+to dive in search of him although he knew the bottom
+was a tangle of rotted trees, but just then Bill
+Saxby yelled to him to follow ashore with a paddle for a
+weapon. The luckless seaman was already drowned,
+this was as good as certain, and Jack jumped from the
+pirogue.</p>
+
+<p>Blackbeard had halted his onrush and he wavered
+when he beheld stout Bill Saxby within a few strides of
+him and long Trimble Rogers galloping through the
+grass with his musket. Another pistol shot or two would
+not stop these three antagonists and a buffet from one of
+those hewn paddles would dash out a man's brains. The
+most ferocious of all pirates for once preferred to run
+away and live to fight another day. His boat denied
+him, he whirled about to plunge through the tall, matted
+grass. He was running in the direction of the dry knoll
+whence he had appeared.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Infuriated by the fate of the two seamen, Trimble
+Rogers made a try at shooting him on the wing but the
+musket ball failed to find the mark. It was necessary to
+hunt him down for the sake of their own safety. They
+might have gone their way in the pirogue but this would
+have been to abandon the sea-chest without an effort to
+drag it up or fix its location.</p>
+
+<p>Now it might seem an easy matter for these pursuers,
+two of them young and active, to run down this fugitive
+Blackbeard, encumbered as he was by middle age and
+dissipation. They put after him boldly, with little fear
+of his pistols. In this dense cover he would have to fire
+at them haphazard and he was unlikely to tarry and wait
+for them. They saw him in glimpses as he fled from one
+grassy patch to another, or burst out of a leafy thicket,
+the great beard streaming over his shoulders like studding-sails,
+the red turban of calico a vivid blotch of color.</p>
+
+<p>Nimble as they were, however, they failed to overtake
+him. This was because he was familiar with this landscape
+of bog and hummock and pine knoll. Jack Cockrell
+fell into a hidden quagmire and had to be fished out
+by main strength. Bill Saxby was caught amidst the
+tenacious vines, like a bull by the horns, and old Trimble
+came a cropper in a patch of saw-tooth palmetto.
+They straggled to the nearest knoll after Blackbeard
+had crossed it. Then he followed a ridge which led in
+the direction of another of these dry islands.</p>
+
+<p>The pursuers halted to gaze from this slight elevation.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
+There was not a solitary glimpse of the crimson turban.
+Trimble Rogers plowed through the prickly ash, short
+of wind and temper, with the musket again ready for
+action. His language was hot enough to flash the powder
+in the pan.</p>
+
+<p>"Lost him a'ready, ye lubbers, whilst I fetched up the
+rear?" he scolded. "Leave the old dog to find the trail.
+I be hanged if I take him alive for Stede Bonnet. What
+say, Bill? Skin and stuff him for a trophy&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"First catch the slippery son o' Satan," tartly answered
+Bill. "He hides away like a hare. You can
+track him, no doubt, Trimble, but the sun will be down
+ere long. I'll not pass the night in this cursed puddle
+of a place."</p>
+
+<p>Just then Jack Cockrell roved far enough to find on
+the knoll a small pit freshly dug, with a spade and pick
+beside it. Like excited children, his two comrades ran
+to inspect the hole which Blackbeard's seamen had dug
+ready for the treasure chest. Then they scattered to
+explore the knoll in search of signs to indicate where
+previous hoards might have been buried. Trimble
+Rogers scouted like a red Indian, eager to find traces of
+upturned earth, or the leaf mould disturbed, or marks
+of an axe on the pine trees as symbols of secret guidance.
+It was a futile quest, possibly because the high spring
+tides, when swept by easterly gales, had now and then
+crept back from the coast to cover the knoll and obliterate
+man's handiwork.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Like a hunter bewitched, the gray buccaneer was absorbed
+in this rare pastime until Bill Saxby exclaimed:</p>
+
+<p>"Is there no wit in our addled pates? Quit this
+dashed folly! What of the treasure chest that was
+spilled from the boat?"</p>
+
+<p>"It won't take wings. Wait a bit," growled Trimble.
+"<i>Madre de Dios</i>, but there must be more of it
+here. This truant Cap'n Teach knew the road well.
+Did ye mark how he doubled for the knoll, like a fox to
+its hole?"</p>
+
+<p>Jack Cockrell ended the argument when he spoke up,
+with a shamefaced air:</p>
+
+<p>"We are three heartless men! One of the seamen is
+drowned, rest his soul, and we could not save the poor
+wretch. But the other fellow was stabbed and lies in the
+grass near the stream. For all we know, there may be
+life in him."</p>
+
+<p>"Heartless? 'Tis monstrous of us," cried Bill Saxby.
+"This greed for pirates' gold is like a poison."</p>
+
+<p>They hastened to retrace their steps. The wounded
+seaman was breathing his last when they reached his side.
+They could not have prolonged his life had they remained
+with him. Jack Cockrell stroked his damp forehead
+and murmured:</p>
+
+<p>"Farewell to ye, Jesse Strawn. Any message before
+you slip your cable?"</p>
+
+<p>There was a faint whisper of:</p>
+
+<p>"Scuppered, lad! Take warnin' and avast this cruel<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
+piratin' or you'll get it. A few words from the Bible
+'ud ease me off."</p>
+
+<p>To Jack's amazement, the veteran sinner of the lot,
+old Trimble Rogers, fumbled in his breeches and withdrew
+a small book carefully wrapped in canvas. Solemnly
+he hooked behind his ears a pair of huge, horn-rimmed
+spectacles and knelt beside the dying pirate. In
+the manner of a priest the buccaneer intoned a chapter
+of Holy Writ which he appeared to know by rote. Then
+he said a prayer in a powerful broken voice. Silence
+followed. The others waited with bared heads until
+Trimble said:</p>
+
+<p>"His soul has passed. Shall we give the poor lad a
+decent burial?"</p>
+
+<p>"His grave is ready. He helped dig it himself," said
+Bill Saxby. "And may his ghost be a torment to the
+fiend that slew him."</p>
+
+<p>It seemed a fitting suggestion. In the freshly made
+treasure pit on the knoll they laid the dead pirate and
+used the spade to cover him. Jack Cockrell had a sheath
+knife with which he fashioned a rude cross and hacked
+on it:</p>
+
+<div class='center'>
+JESSE STRAWN<br />
+A. D. 1718<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>"Aye, his ghost will flit to plague this Cap'n Teach,"
+said Trimble Rogers. "We can leave Jesse Strawn to
+square his own account. Now for the sea-chest, though
+I misdoubt we can fish it up."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER X</h2>
+
+<h3>THE SEA URCHIN AND THE CARPENTER'S MATE</h3>
+
+
+<div class='unindent'><big>F</big>OR the sake of a treasure sordid and blood-stained,
+it would seem shabby to overlook the fate
+of hapless Joe Hawkridge marooned along with
+the hands of the <i>Revenge</i> who were suspected of plotting
+mutiny. His behavior was courageous and unselfish,
+for he could have fled back into the swamp when
+Blackbeard's wily attack threw the camp into tumult.
+From a sense of duty he flung himself into the fray.
+What friends he had in the ship were those of the decenter
+sort who were tired of wanton brutalities and of
+a master who was no better than a lunatic.</div>
+
+<p>When the sloop opened fire with her guns, it was time
+to surrender. Unhurt save for a few scratches and a
+gorgeous black eye, Joe was dragged to the beach and
+thrown into a boat. Promptly the armed pinnace took
+them in tow, as arranged beforehand. Several of the
+prisoners had visited this rendezvous at Cherokee Inlet
+during a previous cruise and had some knowledge of the
+lay of the coast. Five or six miles out were certain
+shoals of sand scarcely lifted above high tide, so desolate
+that nothing whatever grew upon them nor was there
+any means of obtaining fresh water.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"A pretty fancy,&mdash;to cast us where he can enjoy the
+sight of it when the ship sails out," said one of them who
+held a wounded comrade in his arms.</p>
+
+<p>"Some trading vessel may sight us in the nick o'
+time," hopefully suggested Joe. "Never say die!"</p>
+
+<p>"Trust most honest skippers to give the Inlet a wide
+berth," was the lugubrious reply. "This harbor was
+used by pirates afore Blackbeard's time. I was a silly
+'prentice-boy, same as you, Joe, wi' Cap'n Willum Kidd
+when we lay in here to caulk his galley for the long voyage
+to Madagascar."</p>
+
+<p>"A poor figger of a pirate was that same Kidd,"
+spoke up another. "He ne'er scuttled a ship nor fought
+an action. An' his treasure was all in my eye. What
+did he swing for, at Execution Dock? For crackin' the
+skull of his gunner with a wooden bucket."</p>
+
+<p>"They can't h'ist this Cap'n Teach to the same gibbet
+any too soon to please me, Sam," croaked a horse-faced
+rogue with two fingers chopped off. "He's gone and
+murdered all us men, as sure as blazes."</p>
+
+<p>Joe Hawkridge held his peace and wondered what
+had become of his partner, Jack Cockrell, waiting alone
+in the pirogue. In the infernal commotion at the camp,
+Joe had failed to note whether Bill Saxby and Trimble
+Rogers had betaken themselves off or had been among
+those killed. There was the faint hope that these trusty
+messengers might find their way back to Captain Stede
+Bonnet's ship and so hasten his coming.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The boats crept over the burnished surface of the harbor
+and passed the nearest islands which were green and
+wooded. Beyond them shone the gently heaving sea,
+with the distant gleam of a patch of sandy shoal ringed
+about with a necklace of surf. It was remote enough
+from any other land to daunt the strongest swimmer.
+The boats kept on until they had rounded to leeward of
+this ghastly prison. There was no means of resistance.
+The captives were driven ashore by force of arms, carrying
+a few of their wounded with them.</p>
+
+<p>With emotions beyond the power of speech, they
+stared at the pinnace as the oars splashed on the return
+journey to the <i>Revenge</i>. Joe Hawkridge wept a little,
+perplexed that men could be so cruel to their own shipmates.
+And yet what could be expected of pirates debased
+enough to be Blackbeard's loyal followers? Recovering
+from their first stupor, the twenty able-bodied
+survivors began to ransack the strip of naked sand on
+which they had been marooned. It was no more than
+an acre in extent. A few small fish were found in a pool
+left by the falling tide and perhaps a hundred turtle
+eggs were uncovered during the afternoon. This merely
+postponed starvation.</p>
+
+<p>There was not much bickering. In the shadow of certain
+death, these outlaws of the sea seemed to have acquired
+a spirit of resignation which was akin to dignity.
+They had lost the game. In their own lingo, it was the
+black spot for all hands of 'em. With the coolness of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
+night they revived to bathe in the surf which made their
+thirst less hard to bear. There was not much sleep.
+Men walked in restless circles, looking up at the stars,
+muttering to themselves, or scanning the sea which had
+known their crimes and follies.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 409px;">
+<img src="images/illus6.jpg" width="409" height="500" alt="THEY CAPERED AND HUGGED EACH OTHER" title="THEY CAPERED AND HUGGED EACH OTHER" />
+<span class="caption">THEY CAPERED AND HUGGED EACH OTHER</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>Joe Hawkridge scooped out a bed for himself in the
+sand and dropped off to sleep by spells, with dreams of
+ease and quiet ashore and learning to be a gentleman.
+It was daylight when shouts startled him. The other
+derelicts were in a frenzy of agitation. They capered
+and hugged each other, and made unearthly sounds.
+Joe brushed the sand from his eyes and saw a small
+vessel approaching the tiny island. Her rig was made
+out to be that of a snow, which was very like a brig,
+the difference being in the larger main-topsail and the
+absence of a spanker or after steering-sail.</p>
+
+<p>Such trading craft as this snow came coasting down
+from Salem and other New England ports to Virginia
+and the Carolinas laden with molasses, rum, salt, cider,
+mackerel, woodenware, Muscavado sugar, and dried
+codfish. They bartered for return cargoes and carried
+no specie, wherefore pirates like Stede Bonnet seldom
+molested them excepting to take such stores as might be
+needed and sometimes actually to pay for them. They
+were the prey of miscreants of Blackbeard's stripe who
+destroyed and slew for the pleasure of it.</p>
+
+<p>This trim little snow was making to the southward in
+fancied security, having picked up a landfall, as the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
+marooned pirates conjectured. No doubt her master
+had failed to receive warning that Blackbeard was in
+these waters and he was running his risk of encountering
+other marauders. He must have seen that there were
+people in distress on the tide-washed strip of sand. The
+snow shifted her helm and fired a gun. The marooned
+wretches could scarce credit their amazing good fortune
+but a grave, slow-spoken fellow who had been a carpenter's
+mate in the <i>Revenge</i> thought the rejoicing premature.</p>
+
+<p>"When that God-fearin' skipper takes a look at us,
+he will sheer off and clap on sail, lads. For shipwrecked
+sailors you are a pizen lot o' mugs. The only blighted
+one of ye what's the leastwise respectable is me."</p>
+
+<p>Here was a terrible misgiving which clouded the
+bright anticipations. They were, indeed, an unlovely
+cargo for the little trading vessel to take on board. One
+of them whipped out a pair of scissors and hastily sawed
+at his unkempt whiskers while his comrades stood in line
+and waited their turn. Others discarded gaudy kerchiefs
+and pistol-belts, or kicked off Spanish jack-boots.
+Scraps of gold lace were also unpopular. But they
+could not get rid of scarred faces and rum-reddened
+noses and the other hall-marks of their trade.</p>
+
+<p>To their immense relief, the snow displayed no signs
+of alarm but sailed as close as the shoaling water permitted
+and dipped her colors. The pirates flattered
+themselves that they were not as frightful as the car<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>penter's
+mate had painted them. And this New England
+shipmaster was a merciful man who would not
+leave his fellow mortals to perish. They saw a boat lowered
+from the snow and into it jumped half a dozen
+sailors, soberly clad in dungaree, with round straw hats
+on their heads. With a gush of gratitude, the pirates
+swore to deal courteously by these noble merchant
+mariners and to repay them in whatever manner possible.</p>
+
+<p>Out into the murmuring surf rushed the mild-mannered
+rascals, eager to grasp the boat and haul it up.
+It was Joe Hawkridge, hovering in the background,
+who raised the first cry of astonishment. His voice was
+so affrighted that it quavered. Before the boat was
+half-way from the vessel, he perceived that these were
+no sedate seamen from the Massachusetts Colony, even
+though they were in dungaree and round straw hats.
+He was gazing at some of Ned Rackham's evil pirates
+whom he had last beheld on the shattered deck of the
+<i>Plymouth Adventure</i> where they had been left to build
+a raft for themselves!</p>
+
+<p>The devil had looked after his own. They had floated
+away from the stranded ship and instead of landing on
+the beach had been rescued by this unfortunate snow
+whose crew had been disposed of in some violent manner.
+This much Joe Hawkridge comprehended, although his
+mind was awhirl. He was better off marooned. He
+had helped to turn the guns of the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
+against these very same men when they had been blown
+out of the after cabin and the ship retaken by Captain
+Jonathan Wellsby.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever other plans they had in store, the first business
+would be to kill Joe Hawkridge. This was painfully
+obvious. He retreated still farther behind his
+companions and had a confused idea of digging into the
+sand and burying himself from view. The discovery
+that these were Blackbeard's pirates in the boat created
+general confusion but there was no fear of instant death.
+It was a situation excessively awkward for the marooned
+company but nevertheless open to parley and argument.</p>
+
+<p>By hurried agreement, the carpenter's mate, Peter
+Tobey by name, was chosen as spokesman. Before he
+began to talk with the men in the boat, Joe Hawkridge
+called to him in piteous accents and begged him to step
+back in rear of the crowd for a moment. Tobey
+shouted to the boat to wait outside the surf and not attempt
+a landing.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the row, Joe?" he asked, with a kindly
+smile. "'Tis a disappointment for all of us,&mdash;this tangle
+with Rackham's crew,&mdash;but why any worse for
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I can't tell it all, Peter, but my life is forfeit once
+they lay hands on me."</p>
+
+<p>"What tarradiddle is this? As I remember it in the
+<i>Revenge</i>, when all hands of us were cruisin' together,
+ye had no mortal enemies."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"It happened in the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>," answered
+Joe. "There be men in yon boat that 'ud delight in
+flayin' me alive. I swear it, Peter, by my mother's
+name. Give me up, and my blood is on your head."</p>
+
+<p>The boy's words carried conviction. The stolid carpenter's
+mate pondered and knitted his bushy brows.</p>
+
+<p>"I never did a wilful murder yet," said he. "Mallet
+and chisel come readier to my fist than a cutlass. Bide
+here, Joe. Let me get my bearings. This has the look
+of a ticklish matter for the lot of us. I shall be keepin' a
+weather eye lifted for squalls."</p>
+
+<p>In mortal fear of discovery by the men in the boat,
+Joe flattened himself behind a palmetto log which had
+drifted to the other side of the island. Here he was
+hidden unless the boat should make a landing. The
+carpenter's mate waded out to join his companions who
+were amiably conversing with Ned Rackham's pirates.
+They had all been shipmates either in the <i>Revenge</i> or
+the <i>Triumph</i> sloop and there was boisterous curiosity
+concerning the divers adventures while they had been
+apart. Rackham's crew had been reduced to eighteen
+men when they were lucky enough to capture the snow,
+it was learned. With this small company he dared not
+go pirating on his own account and so had decided to
+rejoin Blackbeard.</p>
+
+<p>"Is Ned Rackham aboard the snow?" asked Peter
+Tobey of the boat's coxswain.</p>
+
+<p>"He is all o' that, matey, though the big bos'n of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
+<i>Plymouth Adventure</i> shoved a knife in his ribs to the
+hilt. He is flat in a bunk but he gives the orders an'
+it's jump at the word."</p>
+
+<p>"A hard man to kill," said Peter Tobey. "Take me
+aboard. 'Tis best I have speech with him. Let the
+people wait here on the cay. They can stand another
+hour of it."</p>
+
+<p>There was fierce protest among the marooned pirates
+but the carpenter's mate gruffly demanded to know if
+they wished to be carried into the harbor and turned
+over to Blackbeard. This gave the mob something to
+think about and they permitted the boat to pull away
+from them without much objection.</p>
+
+<p>"A rough joke on you lads, I call it, to be dumped
+on this bit o' purgatory," said the coxswain to Peter
+Tobey. "The great Cap'n Teach must ha' been in one
+of his tantrums."</p>
+
+<p>"It had been long brewing, as ye know," answered
+the carpenter's mate. "These men with you in the snow
+'ud sooner follow Ned Rackham, flint-hearted though he
+be, than to rejoin the <i>Revenge</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Not so loud," cautioned the coxswain. "We'll see
+which way the cat is going to jump. Us poor devils
+is sore uneasy at findin' how you were dealt with."</p>
+
+<p>"What of the master and crew of the snow?" asked
+Tobey. "Were they snuffed out? That 'ud be Rackham's
+way."</p>
+
+<p>"No, we set 'em off in a boat, within sight of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
+coast. Ned Rackham was too shrewd to bloody his
+hands, bein' helpless in this tub of a snow which could
+neither fight nor show her heels if she was chased."</p>
+
+<p>Few men as there were aboard the snow, they were
+smartly disciplined and kept things shipshape, as Peter
+Tobey noted when he climbed on deck. A few minutes
+later he was summoned into the small cabin. Propped
+up in the skipper's berth, Sailing-Master Ned Rackham
+had a pinched and ghastly look. He was a young man,
+with clean-cut, handsome features, and a certain refinement
+of manner when he cared to assume it. The
+rumor was that he was the black sheep of an English
+house of some distinction and that he had enlisted in the
+Royal Navy under a false name.</p>
+
+<p>"What is this mare's-nest, my good Tobey?" said he
+as the carpenter's mate stood diffidently fumbling with
+his cap. "Marooned? Twenty men of you on a reef
+of sand? Were ye naughty boys whilst I was absent?"</p>
+
+<p>"No more than them I could name who planned to go
+a-cruisin' in the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>," doggedly replied
+Peter Tobey who resented the tone of sneering
+patronage.</p>
+
+<p>"Fie, fie! You talk boldly for a man in your situation.
+Never mind! Why the honor of this visit?"</p>
+
+<p>"To make terms, Master Rackham. If us twenty
+men consent to serve you&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You babble of terms?" was the biting interruption.
+"I can leave you to perish on the sand, as ye no doubt<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
+deserve, or I can carry you in with me, when I report
+to Captain Teach."</p>
+
+<p>"But there's another choice, which hasn't escaped
+you," persisted the intrepid carpenter's mate. "Enlist
+us in your service and you'll have nigh on forty men.
+This snow mounts a few old swivels and you must ha'
+found muskets in her. With forty men, Master Rackham,
+there's no occasion to bow to Blackbeard's whimsies.
+You can h'ist the Jolly Roger for yourself and lay
+'longside a bigger ship to take and cruise in. I've heard
+tell of a great buccaneer that started for himself in a
+pinnace and captured a galleon as tall as a church."</p>
+
+<p>Ned Rackham's eyes flashed. Indeed, this was what
+he had in mind. This score of recruits would make
+the venture worth undertaking. Men were essential.
+Given enough of them to handle the snow and a boarding
+party besides, and he would not hesitate to shift
+helm and bear away to sea again.</p>
+
+<p>"You will sign articles, then?" he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"Aye, I can speak for all, Master Rackham. What
+else is there for us? Hold fast, I would except one man.
+He must be granted safe conduct, on your sacred honor."</p>
+
+<p>"His name, Tobey?"</p>
+
+<p>"That matters not. Pledge me first. He has no
+more stomach for piracy and will be set ashore at some
+port."</p>
+
+<p>"A pig in a poke?" cried Rackham, with an ugly
+smile. "If I refuse, what?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"You will have sulky men that may turn against you
+some day."</p>
+
+<p>"And I can leave you to rot where you are, with your
+nonsense of 'making terms,'" was the harsh rejoinder.</p>
+
+<p>"But you won't do that," argued Peter Tobey.
+"Your own fortune hangs on enlisting us twenty lads.
+You bear Blackbeard no more love than we do."</p>
+
+<p>Ned Rackham was making no great headway with
+this stubborn carpenter's mate who was playing strong
+cards of his own.</p>
+
+<p>"A drawn bout, Tobey," said he, with a change of
+front. "No more backing and filling. You ask a small
+favor. Fetch your man along, whoever he may be. He
+shall be done no harm by me."</p>
+
+<p>"Even though he made a mortal enemy of you, Master
+Rackham?"</p>
+
+<p>"Enough, Peter. I have many enemies and scores to
+settle. You have my assurance but I demand the lad's
+name."</p>
+
+<p>"Not without his permission," declared Tobey. "Set
+me ashore and I will confer with him."</p>
+
+<p>Grudgingly Rackham consented, unwilling to have a
+hitch in the negotiations. In a somber humor, the carpenter's
+mate returned to his impatient comrades on the
+island. They crowded about him and he briefly delivered
+the message, that they were desired to cruise under
+Ned Rackham's flag. This delighted them, as the only
+way out of a fatal dilemma. Then Tobey went over to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
+sit down upon the palmetto log behind which Joe Hawkridge
+still sprawled like a turtle. The anxious boy
+poked up his head to say:</p>
+
+<p>"What cheer, Peter? A plaguey muddle you found
+it, I'll bet."</p>
+
+<p>"Worse'n that, Joe. Rackham wouldn't clinch it
+with his oath unless I told him your name. I plead with
+him for safe conduct."</p>
+
+<p>"I'd not trust his oath on a stack o' Bibles, once he
+set eyes on me," exclaimed Joe. "As soon put my fist
+to my own death warrant as go aboard with him."</p>
+
+<p>"That may be," said Peter Tobey, "but you will
+have friends. You can't expect us to refuse to sail on
+account o' you."</p>
+
+<p>"Leave me here, then," cried the boy. "I'll not call
+it deserting me. Take your men aboard the snow. Tell
+Ned Rackham you have the fellow amongst 'em who
+implored the safe conduct. Pick out some harmless lad
+that was saucy to Rackham in the <i>Revenge</i>, a half-wit
+like that Robinson younker that was the sailing-master's
+own cabin boy. He was allus blubberin' that Rackham
+'ud kill him some day."</p>
+
+<p>"No half-wit about you," admiringly quoth the
+carpenter's mate. "But, harkee, Joe, you will die in
+slow misery. Better a quick bullet from Rackham's
+pistol."</p>
+
+<p>"Find some way to send off a little food and water,
+Peter, and I will set tight on this desert island. And<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
+mayhap you will dance at the end of a rope afore I
+shuffle off."</p>
+
+<p>"A hard request, Joe," replied the puzzled Tobey.
+"Unless I can come off again with some of our own
+men, how can it be done? Let Rackham's crew suspect
+I am leaving a man behind and they will rout you out."</p>
+
+<p>"And they all love me, like a parson loves a pirate,"
+grinned Joe. "I shot 'em full of spikes and bolts from
+a nine-pounder in the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall use my best endeavor, so help me," sighed
+Peter Tobey. "What for did I ever quit carpenterin'
+to go a-piratin'? 'Tis the worst basket of chips that
+ever was."</p>
+
+<p>"No sooner do I crawl out of one hole than I tumble
+into another," very truthfully observed Joe Hawkridge.
+"Insomuch as I've allus crawled out, you and me'll
+shed no more tears, Peter. There's a kick in me yet."</p>
+
+<p>The disconsolate carpenter's mate returned to his fellow
+pirates and bade them go off to the snow. First,
+however, he extracted from every man the solemn promise
+that he would not divulge the secret of Joe Hawkridge's
+presence nor reveal the fact that he had remained
+behind. They were eager to promise anything. Several
+of them stole over to tell him furtive farewells.
+They displayed no great emotion. The trade they followed
+was not apt to make them turn soft over such a
+tragic episode as this.</p>
+
+<p>When the snow was ready to take her departure, with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
+almost forty seasoned pirates to seek their fortunes
+anew, the wind died to a calm and the little vessel drifted
+within easy vision of the sandy island through a long
+afternoon. Peter Tobey tormented himself to find some
+pretext for smuggling food and water ashore. He invented
+a tale of a precious gold snuff-box which must
+have fallen out of his pocket and begged permission to
+go and search for it. But Ned Rackham sent up word
+that he had no notion of being delayed by a fool's errand,
+should a breeze spring up. He was not at all
+anxious to linger so close to Cherokee Inlet whence
+Blackbeard might sight the spars of the snow and perhaps
+weigh anchor in the <i>Revenge</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Soon after dark the sails filled with a soft wind which
+drew the snow clear of the coast. Peter Tobey had been
+mightily busy with an empty cask. In it he stowed meat
+and biscuit and a bag of onions, stealthily abstracted
+from the storeroom while his own companions stood
+guard against surprise. This stuff was packed around
+two jugs of water tightly stoppered. Then Peter
+headed up the cask with professional skill and watched
+the opportunity to lower it from the vessel's bow where
+he was unseen.</p>
+
+<p>The wind and tide were favorable to carrying the cask
+in the direction of the little patch of sea-washed sand
+upon which was marooned the solitary young mariner,
+Joe Hawkridge. The carpenter's mate saw the cask
+drift past the side of the snow and roll in the silvery<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
+wake. Slowly it vanished in the darkness and he said
+to himself, in a prayer devoutly earnest:</p>
+
+<p>"That boy deserves a slant o' luck, and may the good
+God let him have it this once. Send the cask to the
+beach, and I vow to go a-piratin' never again."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+
+<h3>JACK JOURNEYS AFOOT</h3>
+
+
+<div class='unindent'><big>I</big>T is often said that a thing is not lost if you know
+where it is. This was Jack Cockrell's opinion concerning
+that weighty sea-chest which had splashed
+to the bottom of the sluggish stream in the heart of the
+Cherokee swamp. With young Bill Saxby and eager
+old Trimble Rogers he hastened from the grave of the
+pirate seaman whom they had buried on the knoll and
+fetched up at the shore where the pirogue had been left.
+Beside it floated Blackbeard's boat filled with water.</div>
+
+<p>Having cut two or three long poles, they sounded the
+depth and prodded in the muddy bed to find the treasure
+chest. It had sunk no more than eight feet below the
+surface, as the tide then stood, which was not much over
+the head of a tall man. The end of a pole struck something
+solid, after considerable poking about. It was
+not rough, like a sunken log, and further investigation
+with the poles convinced them that they were thumping
+the lid of the chest.</p>
+
+<p>"D'ye suppose you could muster breath to dive and
+bend a line to one o' the handles, Master Cockrell?"
+suggested Trimble Rogers. "Here's a coil of stout
+stuff in Cap'n Teach's boat what he used for a painter."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"The bottom of the creek is too befouled," promptly
+objected Jack, "and I confess it daunts me to think of
+meeting that drownded corpse down there. Try it yourself,
+if you like."</p>
+
+<p>"I be needed above water to handle the musket if
+Blackbeard sneaks back to bang at us with his pistols,"
+was the evasive reply. The mention of the corpse had
+given old Trimble a distaste for the task. To his petulant
+question, Bill Saxby protested that he couldn't
+swim a blessed stroke and he sensibly added:</p>
+
+<p>"What if you did get a rope's end belayed to a handle
+of the chest? Even if the strain didn't part the line, we
+couldn't heave away in this tipsy canoe. And I am
+blamed certain we can't drag the chest ashore lackin'
+purchase and tackles."</p>
+
+<p>"The smell o' treasure warps my judgment," grumpily
+confessed Trimble Rogers. "We ain't properly
+rigged to h'ist that chest from where she lays, and that's
+the fact."</p>
+
+<p>"Give us the gear and we'd have it out and cracked
+open as pretty as you please," said Bill. "Set up a
+couple o' spars for shears, stay 'em from the bank, rig
+double blocks, and grapplin' irons for a diver to work
+with&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Which is exactly what Cap'n Teach will be doin'
+of when he finds his ship again," lamented the buccaneer.</p>
+
+<p>"He will be some time findin' his ship afoot," grimly<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
+chuckled Bill. "We have naught to smash his boat
+with, but we'll just take it along with us."</p>
+
+<p>"If we make haste to report to Captain Stede Bonnet,"
+spoke up Jack Cockrell, "he may make sail in
+time to give Blackbeard other things to think on than
+this treasure chest. And it is my notion that the need
+of fitting the <i>Revenge</i> for action is too urgent to spare
+a crew to attempt this errand."</p>
+
+<p>"We shall have it yet," cried Trimble, much consoled.
+"And Stede Bonnet'll blithely furnish the men
+and gear. For a mere babe, Master Cockrell, ye leak
+wisdom like a colander. Our duty is to tarry no longer
+at this mad business."</p>
+
+<p>"The first sound word I've heard out of the old barnacle,
+eh, Jack?" said Bill Saxby. "We must be out
+of this swamp by night and layin' a course for Cap'n
+Bonnet and the <i>Royal James</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Whilst you empty Blackbeard's boat of water so we
+can tow it, let me make a rude chart," was Jack's happy
+idea. "Some mishap or other may overtake us ere we
+get the chance to seek the treasure again. And our own
+memory of this pest-hole of a swamp may trick us."</p>
+
+<p>Bill Saxby's tattered diary supplied a scrap of paper
+and Jack dug charred splinters from the inside of the
+canoe which enabled him to draw a charcoal sketch or
+map. It traced the smaller stream from the fork where
+it had branched off, the stretch in which it widened like
+a tiny lagoon or bayou, and the point of shore just be<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>yond
+which the pirogue had unexpectedly rammed
+Blackbeard's boat. A cross designated the spot where
+the treasure chest had sunk in eight feet of water.</p>
+
+<p>The knoll and the grave of Seaman Jesse Strawn
+were also indicated, with the distance estimated in
+paces and the bearings set down by the position of the
+sun.</p>
+
+<p>"There," said Jack, well pleased with his handiwork,
+"and once we are aboard ship, I can make fair copies
+on parchment, one for each of us."</p>
+
+<p>"Thankee, lad," gratefully exclaimed Trimble
+Rogers who now had something to live for. "'Twas a
+fond dream o' mine, when I sailed wi' the great Cap'n
+Edward Davis in the South Sea, some day to blink at a
+chart what showed where the gold was hid."</p>
+
+<p>They were, indeed, recovered from the intoxication of
+treasure and recalled to realizing the obligation that was
+upon them. They had swerved from it but now they
+pressed forward to finish the appointed journey. The
+canoe moved down to the fork of the waters with the
+light cock-boat skittering in its wake and perhaps the
+unhappy Blackbeard, stranded in the swamp, hurled
+after them a volley of those curses for which he was renowned.
+Once Jack Cockrell laughed aloud, explaining
+to his laboring comrades:</p>
+
+<p>"Captain Teach will be combing the burrs from his
+grand beard when he boards his ship again. He may
+get hung by the chin in a thicket."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"He's sure to spend this night in the swamp, blast
+him," earnestly observed Bill, "and the mosquitoes'll
+riddle his hide."</p>
+
+<p>"And may Jesse Strawn lose no time in hauntin'
+him," said Trimble Rogers.</p>
+
+<p>There was an hour of daylight to spare when they
+had ascended the larger creek as far as the canoe could
+be paddled. There they disembarked and hid the dugout
+and the cock-boat in the overhanging bushes where
+they could be found again in case of a forced retreat.
+Bill and Jack burdened themselves with the sack of food
+and the water jug while the old buccaneer set out in the
+lead as a guide. It was irksome progress for a time, but
+gradually the ground became drier and the foliage was
+more open. Dusk found them safely emerged from the
+great Cherokee swamp and in a pleasant forest of long-leaf
+pine with a carpet of brown needles.</p>
+
+<p>In fear of Indians, they dared not kindle a fire and
+so stretched themselves in their wet and muddy rags
+and slept like dead men. What awakened Jack Cockrell
+before sunrise was a series of groans from Trimble
+Rogers who sat with his back against a tree while he
+rubbed his legs. Ashamed at being heard, he grumpily
+explained:</p>
+
+<p>"Cord and faggot 'ud torment me no worse than
+this hell-begotten rheumatism. I be free of it in a ship
+but the land reeks with foul vapors. It hurt me cruel
+at Cartagena in the year of&mdash;&mdash;"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"But can you walk all day, in such misery as that?"
+anxiously interrupted Jack.</p>
+
+<p>"If not, I'll make shift to crawl," said the old sea
+dog.</p>
+
+<p>It was apparent to Jack and also to Bill Saxby that
+the ordeal of the swamp had crippled their companion
+whose bodily strength had been overtaxed. They debated
+whether to try to return to the coast and risk a
+voyage in the canoe but Trimble Rogers swore by all
+the saints in the calendar that he was done with the
+pestilent swamp. He would push on in spite of the
+rheumatism. His hardy spirit was unbroken. And so
+they resumed the march, the suffering buccaneer hobbling
+with the musket as a staff or with a strong arm
+supporting him.</p>
+
+<p>Halts were frequent and progress very slow. Now
+and then they had glimpses of the blue sea and so knew
+that they held the course true. It had been reckoned
+that two days would suffice to bring them to the bay in
+which Stede Bonnet's ship was anchored. By noon of
+this first day, however, it was plainly evident that Trimble
+Rogers was done for. He uttered no complaints,
+and withheld the groans behind his set teeth, but his
+lank body was a-tremble with pain and fatigue. Whenever
+he sank down to rest they had to raise him up and
+set him on his legs again before he could totter a little
+way farther.</p>
+
+<p>"What say, Jack, to slingin' him on a pole, neck and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
+heels?" suggested Bill Saxby. "Can we make him fast
+with our belts?"</p>
+
+<p>"And choke him to death? In Charles Town I saw
+Captain Bonnet's pirates carry their wounded in litters
+woven of boughs."</p>
+
+<p>The suffering Trimble put a stop to this by shouting:</p>
+
+<p>"Avast wi' the maunderin' nonsense! Push on, lads,
+and leave this old hulk be. Many a goodly man have I
+seen drop in the jungle. What matters it? Speed ye
+to Cap'n Bonnet."</p>
+
+<p>"Here is one pirate that won't desert a shipmate,"
+declared Bill Saxby. "And how can we push on without
+you, old True-Penny, to lay your nose to the trail?
+I took no heed o' the marks and landfalls."</p>
+
+<p>"Like a sailor ashore, mouth open and eyes shut,"
+rasped the buccaneer of Hispaniola.</p>
+
+<p>"Methinks I might find my way in this Carolina
+country," ventured Jack Cockrell. "It would be easier
+for a landsman like myself than for Bill who is city-bred
+and a seaman besides."</p>
+
+<p>"More wisdom from the stripling," said Trimble.
+"Willing as I be to die sooner than delay ye and so vex
+Stede Bonnet, it 'ud please me to live to overhaul that
+sea chest of Blackbeard's."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll stand by this condemned old relic," amiably
+agreed Bill Saxby. "Do you request Cap'n Bonnet to
+send a party to salvage us, Jack."</p>
+
+<p>"He will take pleasure in it, Bill. Before I go let<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
+me help you find shelter,&mdash;dry limbs for props and a
+thatch of palmetto leaves."</p>
+
+<p>"Take no thought of us," urged Trimble. "Trust
+me to set this lazy oaf to work. Now listen, Jack, and
+carefully. Cap'n Bonnet's ship waits in the Cape Fear
+River, twelve leagues to the north'ard of us. You will
+find her betwixt a bay of the mainland and a big-sized
+island where the river makes in from the sea. There will
+be a lookout kept and I can tell ye where to meet a
+boat."</p>
+
+<p>With a memory as retentive as a printed page, the
+keen-eyed old wanderer described the landscape league
+by league, the streams and their direction, the hills which
+were prominent, the broad stretches of savannah or
+grassy meadow, the belts of pine forest, the tongues of
+swamp which had to be avoided. Jack was compelled to
+repeat the detailed instructions over and over, and he
+was a far more studious pupil than when snuffy Parson
+Throckmorton had rapped his knuckles and fired him
+with rebellious dreams of piracy. At length, the buccaneer
+was willing to acknowledge:</p>
+
+<p>"Unless an Indian drive an arrow through the lad's
+brisket, Bill, I can trust him to find our ship. Best give
+him the musket."</p>
+
+<p>"Me shoulder that carronade and trudge a dozen
+leagues?" objected Jack. "I travel light and leave the
+ordnance with you."</p>
+
+<p>They insisted on his taking more than a third of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
+food but he refused to deprive them of the water jug.
+There would be streams enough to slake his thirst. It
+was an affectionate parting. Bill Saxby's innocent blue
+eyes were suffused and his chubby face sorrowful at the
+thought that they might not meet again. Trimble Rogers
+fished out his battered little Bible and quoted a few
+verses, as appeared to be his habit on all solemn occasions.
+Jack Cockrell knew him well enough by now to
+find it not incongruous. Among this vanishing race of
+sea fighters had been many a hero of the most fervent
+piety. Their spirit was akin to that of Francis Drake
+who summoned his crew to prayers before he cleared for
+action.</p>
+
+<p>And in this wise did Master Jack Cockrell set out
+to bear a message from comrades in dire distress.
+Moreover, in his hands were the lives of Joe Hawkridge
+and those other marooned seamen, as he had every reason
+to believe. It was a grave responsibility to be thrust
+upon a raw lad in his teens who had been so carefully
+nurtured by his fretful guardian of an uncle, Mr. Peter
+Arbuthnot Forbes. Jack thought of this and said to
+himself, with a smile:</p>
+
+<p>"A few weeks gone, and I was locked in my room
+without any dinner for loitering with Stede Bonnet's
+pirates at the Charles Town tavern. My education has
+been swift since then."</p>
+
+<p>He was expectant of meeting no end of peril and
+hardship and he fought down a sense of dread that was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
+not to his discredit. But it was so decreed that he
+should pass secure and unmolested. At first he went
+too fast, without husbanding his strength, and loped
+along like a hound whenever the country was clear of
+brushwood. This wore him down and he failed to watch
+carefully enough for his landmarks. Toward the end
+of the day he became confused because he could not discern
+the sea even by climbing a tree. But he tried to
+keep bearing to the northeast until the sun went down.
+Afraid of losing himself entirely and ignorant of the
+lay of the land by night, he made his bivouac in a grove
+of sycamore saplings and imagined Indians were creeping
+up whenever the leaves rustled.</p>
+
+<p>This fear of roaming savages troubled him next day
+as he wearily trudged through this primeval wilderness
+unknown to white settlers. It spurred him on despite
+his foot-sore fatigue and he was making the journey
+more rapidly than old Trimble Rogers, for all his cunning
+woodcraft, had been able to accomplish it. Almost
+at the end of his endurance, the plucky lad discerned
+the sheen of a broad water in the twilight and so
+came to the Cape Fear River.</p>
+
+<p>He had worried greatly lest he might have veered too
+far inland but there was the wooded bay and the fore-land
+crowned with dead pines which had been swept by
+forest fire. And out beyond it was the island, of the
+size and shape described by Trimble Rogers, making a
+harbor from the sea which rolled to the horizon rim.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>But no tall brig, nor any other vessel rode at anchor
+in this silent and lonely haven. Jack had been told precisely
+where to look for it. He had made no mistake.
+Some emergency had caused Captain Stede Bonnet to
+make sail and away.</p>
+
+<p>A king's ship or some other hostile force might have
+compelled him to slip his cable in haste, reflected Jack
+as he descended to the shore of the bay. It was most
+unlike the chivalrous Stede Bonnet to abandon two of
+his faithful seamen without an effort to succor them.
+Endeavoring to comfort himself with this surmise, the
+sorely disappointed boy paced the sand far into the night
+and gazed in vain for the glimmer of a fire or the spark
+of a signal lantern in a ship's rigging. He could not
+bear to think of the dark prospect should no help betide
+him.</p>
+
+<p>Some time before day he was between waking and
+sleeping when a queer delusion distracted him. Humming
+in his ears was the refrain of a song which was
+both familiar and hauntingly pleasant. It seemed to
+charm away his poignant anxieties, to lull him with a
+feeling of safety. He wondered if his troublesome adventures
+had made him light-headed. He moved not a
+muscle but listened to this phantom music and noted that
+it sounded louder and clearer instead of fading away.
+And still he refused to believe that it was anything more
+than a drowsy mockery.</p>
+
+<p>At length a vagrant breeze brought him a snatch of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
+this enjoyable chorus in deeper, stronger volume and he
+leaped to his feet with a shout. It was no hallucination.
+Lusty seamen were singing in time to the beat of their
+oars, and Jack Cockrell knew it for the favorite song of
+Stede Bonnet's crew. He could distinguish the words
+as they rolled them out in buoyant, stentorian harmony:</p>
+
+<div class='poem'>"An' when my precious leg was lopt,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Just for a bit of fun</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">I picks it up, on t'other hopt,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">An' rammed it in a gun.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">'What's that for?' cries out Ginger Dick,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">'What for? my jumpin' beau?</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Why, to give the lubbers one more kick,'</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;"><i>Yo, ho, with the rum below!</i>"</span><br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+
+<h3>A PRIVATE ACCOUNT TO SETTLE</h3>
+
+
+<div class='unindent'><big>T</big>HE ship's boat was bound into the bay, probably
+to lie there for daybreak, and Jack Cockrell
+rushed down to the beach where he set up
+such a frantic hullabaloo that the sailors ceased singing
+and held their breath and their oars suspended. They
+had come to look for Bill Saxby and Trimble Rogers,
+but this was a strange voice. It was so odd a circumstance
+that several of them hailed the shore with questions
+loud and perplexed.</div>
+
+<p>"Master John Cockrell, at your service," came back
+the reply. "Captain Bonnet knows me. I am the lad
+that clouted a six-foot pirate of yours for being saucy
+to a maid in Charles Town."</p>
+
+<p>This aroused a roar of laughter and there were gusty
+shouts of:</p>
+
+<p>"Here's that same Will Brant in the boat with us.
+He shakes in his boots at the sound of ye."</p>
+
+<p>"What's the game, lad? Have ye taken a ship of
+your own to scour the Main?"</p>
+
+<p>Jack ignored this good-natured badinage and, in dig<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>nified
+accents, told them to come ashore and take him
+off to the <i>Royal James</i>. In this company he had a reputation
+to live up to as a man of parts and valor. They
+let the boat ground on the smooth sand and one of them
+lighted a torch of pitch-pine splinters. The fine young
+gentleman who had strolled arm-in-arm with Stede Bonnet
+to the tavern green was a ragged scarecrow and bedaubed
+with red clay and black mud. This aroused
+their sympathy before he told them of his escape from
+the <i>Revenge</i> and his adventures with Bill Saxby and
+the crippled buccaneer. In their turn they explained
+how Captain Bonnet had sent them down the river to
+await the return of the two men who were now stranded
+in the wilderness two days' march distant.</p>
+
+<p>"And why did your captain shift the brig from her
+anchorage off the island?" asked Jack.</p>
+
+<p>This amused the boat's crew who nudged each other
+and were evasive until the master's mate who was in
+charge went far enough to say:</p>
+
+<p>"A sloop came in from the Pamlico River. Our ship
+sought a snugger harbor, d'ye see? There was some
+private business. We loaded the sloop with hogshead
+of sugar, and bolts of damask, and silver ingots. His
+Excellency, Governor Eden, of the North Carolina
+Province, turns an honest penny now and then."</p>
+
+<p>"The Governor of this Province is a partner in piracy?"
+cried Jack.</p>
+
+<p>"Brawl it not so loud, nor spill it to Cap'n Bonnet,"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
+cautioned the master's mate. "I confide this much to
+stave off your foolish questions when ye board the ship."</p>
+
+<p>There was no reason to tarry in the bay and the boat
+pulled out to follow the course of the river and return
+in haste to the brig <i>Royal James</i> in her more secluded
+harbor. The news that Blackbeard was at his old rendezvous
+within easy sail to the southward eclipsed all
+other topics. And when it was learned that he had lost
+the two sloops of his squadron, there was fierce delight.
+Although the <i>Revenge</i> was a larger vessel and more
+heavily manned and gunned, they were hilariously confident
+of victory. It was a burning grudge and a private
+quarrel, and fuel was added to the flame by the
+tidings that a score or more of seamen had been mercilessly
+marooned to perish because of their suspected
+preference for Captain Stede Bonnet.</p>
+
+<p>When Jack Cockrell caught sight of the shapely brig
+as she loomed in the morning haze, it seemed as though
+years had passed since he had enviously watched her
+pass out over the Charles Town bar. Presently he spied
+the soldierly captain on the quarter-deck, his spare
+figure all taut and erect, his chin clean-shaven, his queue
+powdered, his apparel fresh and in good taste. A ship
+is like her master and the watch was sluicing down decks
+or setting up the rigging which had slackened with the
+heavy dew. Jack felt ashamed to let himself be seen.
+This was no place for a ragamuffin.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Bonnet strode to the gangway and stared<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
+down at this bit of human flotsam. He was quick to
+recognize his boyish friend and admirer and ordered the
+men to lower a boatswain's chair and lift Master Cockrell
+aboard. Jack was, indeed, so stiffened and sore and
+weary that he had been wondering how he could climb
+the side of a ship.</p>
+
+<p>"Tut, tut, my son, bide your time," exclaimed Stede
+Bonnet as they met on deck. "Tell it later. The master's
+mate will enlighten me."</p>
+
+<p>He led the way into the cabin which was in order and
+simply furnished. One servant brewed fragrant coffee
+from Arabia while another made a room ready for the
+guest and fetched clean clothing from the captain's
+chests and a tub of hot water. And as soon as the grateful
+Master Cockrell had made himself presentable, he
+was invited to sit down at table with the captain and
+enjoy a meal of porridge and crisp English bacon and
+fresh eggs from the ship's hen-coop in the long-boat and
+hot crumpets and marmalade. And this after the
+pinched ration of mouldy salt-horse and wormy hard-bread!
+Captain Bonnet lighted a roll of tobacco leaves,
+which he called a <i>cigarro</i>, and puffed clouds of smoke
+while Master Cockrell cleaned every dish and lamented
+that his skin felt too tight to begin all over again.</p>
+
+<p>He was now in a mood to relate his strange yarn, from
+its outset in the ill-fated merchant trader, <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>.
+Eagerly he begged information concerning
+her people after their shipwreck, but Captain Bonnet<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
+had been cruising far offshore to intercept a convoy of
+rich West Indiamen from Jamaica for the old country.</p>
+
+<p>"I will make it my duty to set you ashore at Charles
+Town, Master Jack," said he, "and I pray you may
+find your good uncle alive and still vowing to hang all
+rogues of pirates."</p>
+
+<p>"But I must sail with you, sir, till you have saved
+Joe Hawkridge and his shipmates and blown Blackbeard
+out of water."</p>
+
+<p>"Rest easy on that," exclaimed Stede Bonnet.
+"Those affairs are most urgent. My ship will drop
+down the river to-day, with the turn o' the tide, and
+heave to long enough to land a party, six men, to go in
+search of Trimble Rogers who is the apple of my eye.
+I shall not ask you to join them, but you can give directions
+and pen a fair map, I trow."</p>
+
+<p>"Gladly would I go," replied Jack, "but my poor
+legs wobble like your valiant old buccaneer's. And my
+feet are raw."</p>
+
+<p>"You have proved yourself," was the fine compliment.
+"I judged ye aright when we first met."</p>
+
+<p>Soon the deck above them resounded to the tramp of
+boots and the thump of sheet-blocks as the brisk seamen
+made ready to cast the ship free. She was in competent
+hands and so Stede Bonnet lingered below to enjoy
+talking with the youth whose manners and breeding
+were like his own. In a mood unusually confidential he
+confirmed Jack's earlier impressions, that he was a pi<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>rate
+with a certain code of honor which reminded one
+of Robin Hood of Sherwood Forest who robbed the
+rich and befriended the poor. Touching on his mortal
+quarrel with Blackbeard, he revealed how that traitorous
+ruffian had proposed a partnership while he, Stede
+Bonnet, was a novice at the trade. The plot all hatched
+to take Bonnet's fine ship, the <i>Revenge</i>, from him,
+Blackbeard had disclosed his hand at the final conference
+when he said, with a sarcastic grimace:</p>
+
+<p>"I see, my good sir, that you are not used to the cares
+and duties of commanding a vessel, so I will relieve you
+of 'em."</p>
+
+<p>As soon as Captain Bonnet had mended his fortunes
+and had the goodly brig <i>Royal James</i> to cruise in, his
+ruling purpose was to regain the <i>Revenge</i> from Blackbeard
+and at the same time wreak a proper punishment.</p>
+
+<p>"So now if we can trap this black-hearted Teach before
+he flits to sea," said Stede Bonnet, "you will see a
+pretty engagement, Master Cockrell. But first we must
+find the score o' men that he marooned. It will be a
+deed of mercy, besides affording me a stronger crew."</p>
+
+<p>The brig was soon standing down the river while the
+landing party broke out an ample store of provisions
+and powder and ball, with canvas for a tent. The plan
+was for them to pitch a camp near the shore of the bay
+to which they could fetch back Trimble Rogers and Bill
+Saxby and there wait for their ship to return and take
+them off. They were ready to go ashore when Captain<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
+Bonnet's navigator ordered the main-topsail laid aback
+and the brig slowly swung into the wind. The delay
+was brief and no sooner was the boat cast off than the
+<i>Royal James</i> proceeded on the voyage to Cherokee
+Inlet.</p>
+
+<p>Clumsy as those sailing ships of two hundred years
+ago appear to modern eyes, their lines were finely
+moulded under water and with a favoring wind they
+could log a fair distance in a day's run. It goes without
+saying that this tall brig was shoved along for all
+she was worth before a humming breeze that made her
+creak, and during the night she was reckoned to be a
+few miles to seaward of the sandy islands which extended
+like a barrier outside of Cherokee Inlet. Jack
+Cockrell stood a watch of his own, dead weary but with
+no thought of sleep until he could hear the lookout shout
+"Land ho!"</p>
+
+<p>This cry came from aloft soon after dawn. The brig
+moved toward the nearest of these exposed shoals while
+her officers consulted a chart spread upon the cabin
+roof. They were wary of running the ship aground
+with Blackbeard no more than a few miles distant. So
+bare were these yellow patches of sand that showed
+against the green water that a group of men on any one
+of them would have been easily discernible. The <i>Royal
+James</i> coasted along outside of them under shortened
+sail but discovered nothing to indicate a party of marooned
+seamen.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"But they must be out here somewhere," cried Jack
+Cockrell, in great distress.</p>
+
+<p>"They ought to be, for no trading vessel would take
+'em off," replied the puzzled Captain Bonnet. "And
+if they were towed out in boats as ye say, Jack, these
+islands must ha' been where they were beached."</p>
+
+<p>"But you won't give up the search, sir, without another
+tack past those outermost shoals?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, we shall rake them all, but Blackbeard may
+have changed that crotchety mind of his and taken the
+men back to his ship."</p>
+
+<p>"I fear I have seen the last of my dear Joe Hawkridge,"
+exclaimed Jack.</p>
+
+<p>"From what you tell me, the young scamp is not so
+easily disposed of," smiled Captain Bonnet. "I must
+haul out to sea ere long. 'Tis poor business to let Blackbeard
+glimpse my spars and so take warning."</p>
+
+<p>This was sad news and Jack walked away to hide his
+quivering lip. To examine the islands again was a forlorn
+hope because already it seemed certain that nothing
+alive moved on any of them. The brig passed them
+closer than before as she made a long reach before turning
+out to sea. It was the intention to sail in to engage
+Blackbeard very early the next morning and meanwhile
+he would be vigilantly blockaded.</p>
+
+<p>Even Jack Cockrell, hopeful to the last, was compelled
+to agree with the crew of the brig that not a solitary
+man could be seen on these sea-girt cays and it<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
+seemed useless to send off a boat to explore them one
+by one. There would have been some stir or signal,
+even if men were too weak to stand. The air was
+clear and from the brig's masts it was possible to sweep
+every foot of sandy surface. Here was another
+mystery of the sea. It occurred to Stede Bonnet to
+ask:</p>
+
+<p>"You took it for granted they were marooned, Jack,
+when the boats passed from your sight and you were
+hidden in the tree in the swamp. What if a quicker
+death were dealt 'em?"</p>
+
+<p>"That may be, sir."</p>
+
+<p>The brig was leaving the coast astern. Jack moped
+by himself until his curiosity was drawn to a group of
+seamen upon the forecastle head who were talking loudly
+and pointing at something in the water, well ahead of the
+ship. One vowed it was a big sea-turtle asleep, another
+was willing to wager his silver-mounted pistols that it
+was a rum barrel, while a third announced that he'd
+stake his head on its being a mermaid or her husband.
+The after-deck brought a spy-glass to bear and perceived
+that the thing was splashing about. The tiller
+was shifted to bring it close aboard and soon Captain
+Bonnet exclaimed that it was, indeed, a merman a-cruising
+with a cask!</p>
+
+<p>Jack Cockrell scampered to the heel of the bowsprit
+to investigate this ocean prodigy. And as the cask
+drifted nearer he saw that Joe Hawkridge was clinging<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
+to it. There was no mistaking that dauntless grin and
+the mop of carroty hair. A handy seaman tossed a bight
+of line over his shoulders as he bobbed past the forefoot
+of the brig and he was yanked bodily over the bulwark
+like a strange species of fish. Flopping on deck
+he waved a skinny arm in greeting and then Jack Cockrell
+rushed at him, lifted him bodily, and dragged him
+to the cabin.</p>
+
+<p>"What ho, comrade!" said the dripping merman.
+"Blast my eyes, but I was sick with worry for you. I
+left you in that swamp&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And I thought you dead, Joe. For the love o'
+heaven, tell me how you fared and what&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Captain Bonnet interfered to say:</p>
+
+<p>"I treated you more courteously than this, Jack.
+Let us make him comfortable."</p>
+
+<p>Accepting the rebuke, Jack bustled his amazing
+friend into a change of clothes and saw that he was well
+fed. Little the worse for his watery pilgrimage, Joe
+Hawkridge explained at his leisure:</p>
+
+<p>"Ned Rackham took the others away in the snow, as
+I tell ye, Cap'n Bonnet, and there was I in the doleful
+dumps. Prayers get answered and miracles do happen,
+for next day there come a-floatin' to the beach a cask
+full of grub and water. Good Peter Tobey, the carpenter's
+mate, had a hand in launchin' it, no doubt, but
+the Lord hisself steered the blessed cask. Well, while
+I set a-giving thanks and thinkin' one thing an' another,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
+I figgered that when I'd ate all the grub and swigged
+the water, I was no further along."</p>
+
+<p>"And so you thought you would trust the Lord
+again," suggested Captain Bonnet.</p>
+
+<p>"Aye, sir, that was it. By watchin' the tides I reckoned
+I might drift to another island and so work to the
+coast, taking my provisions with me. There was some
+small line in the cask that Peter Tobey had wrapped
+the stores in, and I knotted a harness about the cask
+that I could slip an arm in, and off I goes when the tide
+sets right. But some kind of a dratted cross-current
+ketched me and I'm sailin' out to sea, I finds, without
+compass or cross-staff. Bound to get to London River,
+eh, Jack, same as we started out on the silly little raft."</p>
+
+<p>"Whew, this adventure was bad enough," cried Jack,
+"but when you saw Ned Rackham's pirates in the boat,
+and you couldn't run away,&mdash;I wonder, honest, Joe, you
+didn't die of fright."</p>
+
+<p>"What for? This is no trade for a nervous wight.
+And now for a bloody frolic with Blackbeard's bullies."</p>
+
+<p>"There is a share of his treasure for you, Joe, as soon
+as we can go find it," gleefully announced Master Cockrell.
+"I have the chart drawn all true with mine own
+hand. Let me get it."</p>
+
+<p>While the two lads pored entranced over the map of
+the branching creek and the pine-covered knoll, the crew
+of the <i>Royal James</i> were overhauling weapons and
+clearing the ship for action. It disappointed them to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
+lack the twenty men whom they had expected to find
+marooned but this made them no less eager for battle.
+Concerning Ned Rackham, there was no feud with him
+or grudge to square and he could go his way in the little
+trading snow without fear of molestation from Stede
+Bonnet.</p>
+
+<p>Under cover of night the <i>Royal James</i> worked back to
+the sandy islands and anchored in the channel. One of
+her boats had ventured within sight of the Inlet for a
+stealthy reconnaissance and reported that the <i>Revenge</i>
+was still in the harbor. Captain Bonnet was considering
+his plan of attack. He said nothing about it to Jack
+Cockrell and his chum, the merman, and they greedily
+listened to the gossip of the petty officers or thrashed out
+theories of their own.</p>
+
+<p>To sail boldly into the harbor was a ticklish risk to
+run as there was no pilot aboard who knew the inner
+channel and the depths of water. All the gunners were
+in favor of attempting it because they yearned to settle
+it with crashing broadsides. But the battered, hairy sea-dogs
+who had fought it out in hand-to-hand conflicts on
+the Caribbean were for leaving the brig in safe water and
+sending fifty men in boats to board the <i>Revenge</i> at the
+first break of day.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of the fo'castle argument, Captain Bonnet
+sent for Jack Cockrell and told him:</p>
+
+<p>"You are to keep out of harm's way, my young gamecock.
+I have undertaken to deliver you to your es<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>teemed
+uncle with arms and legs intact, and your head
+on your shoulders."</p>
+
+<p>"But I am lusty enough to poke about with a pike
+or serve at a gun tackle," protested the unhappy Master
+Cockrell.</p>
+
+<p>"I expect you to obey me," was the stern mandate.
+"You will have company. This Joe Hawkridge is to
+stay with you."</p>
+
+<p>"But he is a rare hand in a fight, Captain Bonnet.
+You should have seen him in the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"The boy is weak and all unstrung, though he carries
+it bravely, Jack. And Blackbeard's men would take
+special pains to kill him as a deserter."</p>
+
+<p>By this humane verdict the two lads were shielded
+from peril, as far as it lay within Stede Bonnet's power.
+They should have felt grateful to him but on the contrary
+it made them quite peevish and they sulked by
+themselves up in the bow of the ship until it was time
+to eat again. Then their gnawing appetites persuaded
+them to forgive their considerate host.</p>
+
+<p>The pirates moved about the deck until far into the
+night while the sparks flew from cutlass blades pressed
+to the whirling grindstone. Tubs were filled with hand-grenades
+and fire-pots, the deck strewn with sand, the
+magazine opened and powder passed up. Stede Bonnet
+was careful to see for himself that all things were in
+order. At such times he was a martinet of a soldier.</p>
+
+<p>Anxiously he watched the weather signs, as did every<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
+seasoned sailor on board. It bade fair to be a bright
+morning with an easterly air and this would carry the
+brig into the harbor with the minimum danger of stranding
+if the lead were cast often enough. Joe Hawkridge
+and Jack Cockrell were of some assistance in explaining
+the marks and bearings of the channel, and Captain
+Bonnet consulted them over the chart unrolled upon
+the cabin table. He had made up his mind to sail the
+brig in and risk the hazards of shoal water. When he
+went on deck, Jack thought of a topic as thrilling as
+this imminent duel between ships and he remarked with
+joyous excitement:</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Joe, as soon as ever Blackbeard gets his drubbing,
+we beg a boat and men and gear of Captain Bonnet
+and go up the creek to fish out the treasure chest
+and dig in the knoll."</p>
+
+<p>"Hook your fish before you fry 'em," replied the
+sagacious apprentice-boy. "This scrummage with the
+<i>Revenge</i> will be no dancin' heel-and-toe. A bigger ship,
+more guns and men, and a Blackbeard who will fight
+like a demon when he's cornered. Crazy though he may
+be, he is the most dangerous pirate afloat."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+
+<h3>OUR HEROES SEEK SECLUSION</h3>
+
+
+<div class='unindent'><big>A</big>N hour before dawn the anchor was aweigh and
+the <i>Royal James</i> drifted ahead like a shadow, in
+between the outer islands where the fairway was
+wide and safe. Her gun-ports were open and every
+man was alertly at his station. It was a silent ship excepting
+when an officer passed an order along. Joe
+Hawkridge began to feel more sanguine of winning
+against odds. He had never seen such iron discipline as
+this in the bedlam aboard the <i>Revenge</i>. Stede Bonnet
+knew how to slacken the reins and when to apply the
+curb. His men were loyal because he dealt out justice
+as well as severity.</div>
+
+<p>"The captain says we must go below when the action
+commences, Joe," dismally observed Jack Cockrell.</p>
+
+<p>"It goes against the grain but we will not dispute
+him," was the sage reply. "We needn't be idle. You
+can lend a hand with the powder or pass the water
+buckets to douse the fire if she gets ablaze. And there's
+the wounded to carry into the cockpit and the blood to
+mop up, and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Enough o' that," cried Jack, getting pale about the
+gills. "You take it like a butcher!"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"What else is it, you big moon-calf? Set me safe
+ashore in that Charles Town of yours, and I hope ne'er
+to see another weapon barring a spoon and a knife to
+cut my vittles."</p>
+
+<p>"There is sense in that," agreed young Master Cockrell.</p>
+
+<p>Smartly handled, the brig crept in as far as she dared
+go without more light by which to avoid the shallower
+water. The anchor was dropped to a short cable and
+buoyed ready to slip. It was estimated that the distance
+from Blackbeard's ship was somewhat more than
+a mile. The stars faded and the cloudless sky began to
+take on a roseate hue. The light breeze which had
+breathed like a cool zephyr through the night was dying
+in languid catspaws. Gradually the dark outline of
+coastal swamp and forest was uncurtained. And eager
+eyes were able to discern the yellow spars and blurred
+hull of the <i>Revenge</i> against the gloomy background.</p>
+
+<p>Stede Bonnet's brig was, of course, pricked out much
+more sharply with the seaward horizon behind her. To
+her crew, in this hushed morning, there came a prolonged,
+shrill note that was like the call of a bird. It
+trilled with a silvery sweetness and was repeated over
+and over again.</p>
+
+<p>"A bos'n's pipe," said Captain Bonnet, a hand cupped
+at his ear. "Blackbeard has sighted us and is mustering
+his crew."</p>
+
+<p>So faint was the breeze that the command was given<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
+to man two boats and take a hawser from the brig to tow
+her through the inner channel. Before they were in
+motion, however, the pearly mist began to roll out of the
+Cherokee swamp as if a great cauldron were steaming.
+The weather favored it, heat in the air and little wind.
+The mist seemed also to rise from the water, hanging
+low but as thick as a summer fog. It shrouded the coast
+and Blackbeard's ship and crept out across the harbor
+until the brig was enveloped in it.</p>
+
+<p>"'Twas like this when we swum ashore and found the
+pirogue, Cap'n Bonnet," said Joe Hawkridge. "A curious
+kind o' white smother from the swamp."</p>
+
+<p>"And how long did it hang thus?" was the impatient
+query.</p>
+
+<p>"When the sun was well up, sir, it seemed to burn
+away like. It has the same look as the fever-breedin'
+vapors of Darien and Yucatan."</p>
+
+<p>Captain Bonnet called his boats back and was in an
+ugly humor. There was no towing the brig through
+this bothersome fog which obscured every mark and left
+a man bewildered. And instead of surprising Blackbeard
+unprepared, he would now have time to make his
+ship ready. However, Stede Bonnet was not a man to
+wring his hands because a well-laid scheme went wrong.
+Without delay the crew was assembled in the waist and
+he spoke to them from the break of the poop.</p>
+
+<p>"We shall make this weather serve our purpose, lads.
+Fill the boats, every man to his billet. The mates will<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
+see to it that the oars are well muffled. Silence above all
+things. Nimbly now."</p>
+
+<p>There was no need to say more. They fathomed the
+strategy which would enable them to approach Blackbeard's
+ship unheard and unseen and then swarm over
+her side in a ferocious onslaught. Cheerily they took
+stock of their weapons, drank a health from a tub of stiff
+grog, and lined up for Captain Bonnet's inspection.
+They wore clean clothes, the best they could find in
+their bags, as has always been the sailor's habit when
+going into action. The ship was left in charge of
+the navigator with a few men who were the least stalwart
+or experienced in such desperate adventures as
+this.</p>
+
+<p>Stede Bonnet went in command of the largest boat to
+lead the party and single out Blackbeard as his own particular
+foe. There was a large chance that he might not
+return and he therefore left instructions for the disposal
+of the brig, advising the navigator to take her to Charles
+Town and there sue for the king's pardon in behalf of
+those on board. He shook hands with Jack Cockrell
+and Joe Hawkridge, bade them be careful of their own
+safety, and with no more ado took his place in the boat.
+The flotilla stole away from the brig, sunburned, savage
+men with bright weapons for whom life was like a throw
+of the dice, and the pearly fog concealed them when they
+had passed no more than a cable-length away. So skilfully
+was the sound of the oars deadened that you would<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
+not have guessed that boats were moving across the
+harbor.</p>
+
+<p>"Blackbeard fights like a tiger but trust Cap'n Bonnet
+to outwit him," said Joe Hawkridge, who stood at
+the brig's rail with Jack at his elbow.</p>
+
+<p>"It will be mighty hard waiting," was the tense reply.
+"We shall know when they find the <i>Revenge</i>. They
+are not apt to miss her, with a compass in the captain's
+boat."</p>
+
+<p>"Aye, there'll be noise enough. Plaguey queer, eh,
+Jack, to be a-loafin' with nothing to see, like your head
+was wrapped in a blanket. They ought to fetch alongside
+Blackbeard in a half-hour. Go turn the sand-glass
+in the cabin."</p>
+
+<p>They fidgeted about in aimless fashion and fell into
+talk with the navigator, or artist, as he was called, a
+middle-aged man who had been a master mariner in the
+slave trade. He told them a yarn or two of the Guinea
+coast but he, too, was restless and left them to stump up
+and down the deck and peer toward the shore. Jack
+dodged into the cabin to watch the sand trickle into the
+bottom of the glass. Never was a half-hour so long in
+passing.</p>
+
+<p>A yell from Joe Hawkridge recalled him to the deck.
+He listened but heard no distant pistol shots or the
+hoarse uproar of men in mortal combat. Joe raised a
+warning hand and told him to stand still. There came
+a faint splash. It might have been a fish leaping but<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
+Joe insisted that it was made by a careless oar. Jack
+heard it again and then fancied he caught the softened
+beat of muffled oars close at hand.</p>
+
+<p>"They lost the course. The fog confused 'em," said
+he, in great disgust.</p>
+
+<p>"But why come back to the ship?" demanded Joe.
+"They could lay and wait for the fog to lift a little.
+And I told Cap'n Bonnet to bear to the north'ard if in
+doubt and find the shore of the swamp. Then he could
+coast back to the beach and so strike the <i>Revenge</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, here they come, Joe, and there is sure to be a
+good reason. Mayhap the fog cleared to landward and
+they intend to tow the brig in, after all."</p>
+
+<p>Just then the foremost boat became visible and behind
+it was the vague shape of another. The puzzled lads
+stared and stared and the hair stiffened on their scalps
+for sheer horror. These were not the boats from the
+<i>Royal James</i>. They were filled with Blackbeard's own
+pirates from the <i>Revenge</i>!</p>
+
+<p>The explanation was simple enough. Joe Hawkridge
+read it at a glance. Blackbeard was not the
+drunken chuckle-head that Stede Bonnet had assumed
+him to be. He, too, had taken advantage of the fog to
+attempt to carry the enemy by stealth. The wit of the
+one had been matched by the other. And the two flotillas
+had gone wide enough in passing to escape mutual
+discovery. In a way it was a pirates' comedy but there
+were two spectators who foresaw a personal tragedy.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
+They fled for the cabin and scuttled through a small
+door in a bulkhead which admitted them to the dark hold
+of the ship.</p>
+
+<p>It was their purpose to hide in the remotest nook that
+could be found. Falling over odds and ends of cargo
+they burrowed like rats and stowed themselves behind a
+tier of mahogany logs which had been taken out of some
+prize or other. They were in the bottom of the ship,
+upon the rough floor covering the stone ballast. Then
+these frightened stowaways found respite to confer in
+tremulous whispers.</p>
+
+<p>"This is the very dreadfulest fix of all, Joe. I had a
+fair look at Blackbeard himself, in the stern of the boat,&mdash;red
+ribbons in his whiskers, and his sash stuck full of
+pistols."</p>
+
+<p>"That old rip isn't an easy man to mistake, Jack.
+Now the fat <i>is</i> in the fire," replied the Hawkridge lad
+who, for once, appeared discouraged. "Cap'n Bonnet
+is a vast sight happier than us. He gets the <i>Revenge</i>
+without strikin' a blow."</p>
+
+<p>"But Blackbeard gets <i>us</i>," wailed Master Cockrell.
+"And I helped to chase him through the swamp after we
+rammed the pirogue into his wherry and capsized the
+treasure chest. Do you suppose he knew me just now?"</p>
+
+<p>"Those little red eyes of his are passing keen. But
+didn't ye tell me of smearing your face with mud that
+day to fend off the mosquitoes? It may ha' disguised
+you."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"A little comfort in that, Joe, but to be found in
+Stede Bonnet's brig bodes ill enough. Of a truth we be
+born to trouble as the sparks fly upward ever since we
+joined the pirates. What is your advice?"</p>
+
+<p>"To stay hid below and pray God for another shift
+o' fortune," piously answered Joe. "There is no fear
+of Blackbeard's rummagin' the hold at present. He
+must decide if he'll fight the <i>Revenge</i> or give her the
+slip. And whilst him and his men are busied on deck, I
+can make bold to search for stores fit to eat. Cap'n
+Bonnet allus had a well-found ship. Blast it, Jack, my
+hearty, stock us up and we could lie tucked in the forepeak
+for a month o' Sundays."</p>
+
+<p>"But the rats and the darkness and the stinks, and to
+be expecting discovery," was Jack's dreary comment.</p>
+
+<p>"It would ha' looked like a parlor to me when I was
+on that barren cay and sighted Ned Rackham's rogues
+coming off from the snow," said the other stowaway.
+He was beginning to recuperate from the shock.</p>
+
+<p>They were in a mood for no more speech but sat in
+this rayless cavern of a hold and strove to hear any
+sounds which might indicate the course of events on
+deck. There was no hubbub of firearms nor the cries of
+wounded men. It was foolish to assume that the dozen
+seamen who had been left to keep the ship would attempt
+resisting Blackbeard's mob of pirates all primed
+for slaughter. When quietude seemed to reign all
+through the ship Joe Hawkridge whispered this opinion:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"If his fancy was to deal with 'em later, he would
+pitch the lot down here in the hold. Failing that, Jack,
+he has offered 'em the chance to enlist. Being so few,
+they can't plot mischief, and he has lost the hands he left
+aboard the <i>Revenge</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"But I thought all this crew was true as steel to Stede
+Bonnet, Joe."</p>
+
+<p>"Many a man'll change his mind to save his life," was
+the reply. "And these lads aren't what you call Cap'n
+Bonnet's picked men. As for the navigator, Blackbeard
+needs him to fill Ned Rackham's berth."</p>
+
+<p>Soon Joe Hawkridge told Jack to stay where he was.
+Now was the time to explore the lower part of the ship.
+Squeezing his comrade's hand in farewell, Joe crawled
+aft to make his way to a rough bulkhead which walled
+off a storeroom built next to the cabin. The boys had
+passed through it in their headlong flight below. Here
+was kept the bulk of the ship's provisions. Joe Hawkridge
+had learned of the storeroom through helping the
+steward hoist out a barrel of pork.</p>
+
+<p>With his heart in his throat the venturesome lad
+groped like a blind man, grievously barking his shins
+and his knuckles, until he bumped into the timbers of the
+bulkhead. Inching himself along, he came to the small
+door which had been cut into the hold to connect with
+the main hatch. He had slipped the iron bar behind
+him during his flight with Jack Cockrell. Pulling the
+door ajar he wormed through into the storeroom which<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
+was also dark as midnight. His fingers touched what
+seemed to be a tierce of beef but he had no tools to start
+the head or the hoops. In the same manner he discovered
+other casks and barrels but they were utterly useless
+to him. Here was food enough, he reflected, if a
+man had teeth to gnaw through oak staves.</p>
+
+<p>Now and again he had to cross to the other door which
+led into the cabin passageway and press his ear against
+a plank to make certain against surprise. Up and down
+the dark room he blundered, refusing to admit himself
+beaten. The first bit of cheer was when his foot struck
+a round object as solid as a round shot and he picked up
+a small Dutch cheese. This renewed his courage and he
+ransacked the corners on hands and knees. Blackbeard's
+treasure chest was not half so precious as a side of salted
+fish which he ran down by scent, saying to himself:</p>
+
+<p>"With this rancid cheese and the slab o' ancient cod,
+ye could smell my course a league to wind'ard."</p>
+
+<p>In a crumpled sack he found a few pounds of what
+seemed to be wheat flour, by the feel and taste of it.
+Poor stuff as it was, dry and uncooked, he added it to
+his stock.</p>
+
+<p>"Rubbishy vittles," he sighed. "They may keep a
+man alive but he'll choke to death a-swallowin' of 'em."</p>
+
+<p>Water was the desperate necessity and it was not to
+be sought for in the storeroom. There was rum enough,
+the place reeked with it, but to thirsty throats it was so
+much liquid fire. Joe was resolved not to return to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
+Jack Cockrell without a few pints of water if reckless
+enterprise could procure it. Was the cabin still empty?
+He stood for a long time and listened but there was not
+a sound beyond the door of the passageway. Taking
+his courage in both hands he pushed at the door and it
+creaked open on rusty hinges. Light as a feather he
+moved one foot in front of the other, halted, advanced
+another step, and so entered the large cabin in which
+Stede Bonnet had lived with a Spartan simplicity.</p>
+
+<p>What Joe coveted was the porous jar or water-monkey
+which hung suspended in a netting above the
+table. It was kept filled, he knew, in order to cool the
+tepid water from the casks. A heavenly sight it was to
+him to see the drops sweating on its rounded sides. He
+snatched it down and was about to make a swift retirement,
+but still spread upon the table he noted the chart
+of the Carolina and Virginia coasts which he had pored
+over with Stede Bonnet. This he delayed to roll up and
+tuck under one arm, not that he expected to employ it
+himself, but to make cruising more difficult for Blackbeard.</p>
+
+<p>This bit of strategy held him a moment too long. He
+shot a glance over his shoulder, alarmed by a tread on
+the companion ladder. Horrified he beheld a pair of
+Spanish boots with scarlet, crinkled morocco tops, and
+they encased bandy legs which were strong and thick.
+What saved the miserable young Hawkridge was that
+the occupant of these splendid boots paused half-way<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
+down the ladder to shout a profane command or two in
+those husky accents so feared by all lawful shipmen.</p>
+
+<p>Before that sable beard came into his field of vision
+the lad was in full stride, running like a whippet, chart
+under one arm, water-jar under the other. He checked
+himself to ease the door behind him just as the truculent
+captor of the <i>Royal James</i> brig reached the foot of the
+ladder and let his gaze rove about the cabin. Sinking
+to the floor of the storeroom, Joe was afraid that for
+once he was about to swoon like a silly maid at sight of
+a mouse. As he had truly said, this pirating was no
+trade for a nervous man. Never mind, a miss was as
+good as a mile. Thankful for the darkness that closed
+around him, he slung the water-monkey over his shoulder
+in its hammock of netted cord, pushed the side of
+codfish inside his shirt, poked the chart into his boot-leg,
+put the cheese in the sack atop the flour, and was
+freighted for his journey through the hold.</p>
+
+<p>This he accomplished after great difficulty and had to
+whistle and wait for a response before he could be sure
+of Jack Cockrell's whereabouts.</p>
+
+<p>"What luck, Joe?" was the plaintive question. "I'd
+sooner starve than be left alone in this dungeon."</p>
+
+<p>"Behold the dashing 'prentice-boy with another hairbreadth
+escape to his credit," replied the hero. "Be
+thankful for your dinner 'cause Blackbeard all but made
+a mouthful of me."</p>
+
+<p>"You saw him, Joe?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Up to the middle of him, and that was a-plenty.
+Don't ask me. I had a bad turn."</p>
+
+<p>"I feel sick, too," said Jack. "The smell of this vile
+bilge-water breeds a nausea, and, whew, 'tis worse than
+ever."</p>
+
+<p>"Bilge, my eye! You sniff the banquet I fetched ye.
+Here's a prime cheese that was hatched when Trimble
+Rogers was a pup."</p>
+
+<p>Jack offered a feeble apology and felt revived after a
+pull at the water-monkey. What they craved most was
+a spark of light, the glimmer of a candle to lift this appalling
+gloom which pressed down like a visible burden.
+With nothing to do but discuss the situation from every
+slant and angle of conjecture, it was Joe Hawkridge's
+theory that Stede Bonnet would not rest content with
+regaining the <i>Revenge</i> but would come out to attack the
+brig as soon as the wind favored. His hatred of Blackbeard
+was one motive but there was a point of honor
+even more compelling.</p>
+
+<p>"He called you his guest, Jack," explained Joe, "and
+I never did see a man so jealous of his plighted word
+when once he swore it. He took obligation to set you
+safe in Charles Town, d'ye see? And powder smoke
+won't stop him."</p>
+
+<p>"Will Blackbeard tarry for a fight, Joe?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not to my notion. He knows well this brig is no
+match for the <i>Revenge</i>, knows it better than did Cap'n
+Bonnet, what with all the heavy metal slung aboard<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
+from the sloop. And what does Blackbeard gain by
+having this brig hammered into a cocked hat? Fate
+tricked him comically with this swappin' about of ships."</p>
+
+<p>"And will he linger on this coast? Oh, Joe, if he
+goes for a long cruise, what in mercy's name becomes of
+us two?"</p>
+
+<p>"A long cruise, it looks like, shipmate. In the <i>Revenge</i>
+he could laugh at the small king's men-o'-war
+commissioned to hunt him down. He was ready to slap
+alongside any of 'em. Now 'tis different. As another
+flea in his ear, I stole the only chart of these waters.
+To the south'ard he'll turn, and I will bet that rampageous
+cheese on it."</p>
+
+<p>"Clear to the Bay of Honduras?" said Jack.</p>
+
+<p>"As far as that, at a guess. Or he may skirt the
+Floridas to look for Spanish prizes and put in at the
+Dry Tortugas which is a famous rendezvous for pirates
+of the Main. He will be hot to fit himself with a bigger
+ship, by capture or by some knavish trick such as he
+dealt Cap'n Bonnet."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+
+<h3>BLACKBEARD APPEARS IN FIRE AND BRIMSTONE</h3>
+
+
+<div class='unindent'><big>H</big>ERE was a tragic predicament from which
+there was no release. Jack Cockrell was firmly
+convinced that Blackbeard must have recognized
+him that day in the swamp while Joe felt no less
+certain that he was marked for death because he had
+been one of the party of marooned mutineers. The
+hope of prolonging their existence by means of raiding
+the storeroom had ebbed after Joe's investigation. Such
+provisions as had been broken out of bulk were kept in
+lockers and pantries on deck where they were convenient
+to the galley and forecastle. It was realized also that
+their twittering nerves could not long withstand the
+darkness and suspense once the brig had put out to sea.
+Joe Hawkridge had nothing more to say about enduring
+it a month o' Sundays.</div>
+
+<p>While the brig remained at anchor they clung to the
+thought that Captain Stede Bonnet might intervene in
+their behalf. It did bring them a gleam of solace to
+imagine him hoisting sail on the <i>Revenge</i> and crowding
+out to rake the brig with his formidable broadsides.
+And yet they were in doubt whether the <i>Revenge</i> was
+fit to proceed at once, what with all the work there had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
+been to do, rigging a new foremast, caulking leaky
+seams, repairing the other ravages of the storm.</p>
+
+<p>These pitiable stowaways had no means of telling one
+hour from another until, at length, they heard over their
+heads the faint, musical strokes of the ship's bell on the
+forecastle head. This led them to believe that the fog
+had cleared else Blackbeard would not have revealed the
+vessel's position. And lifting fog meant a breeze to
+sweep it away from the harbor.</p>
+
+<p>"Eight bells she strikes, the first o' the forenoon
+watch," said Joe. "We have been cooped in this black
+pit a matter of three hours a'ready."</p>
+
+<p>"No more than that?" groaned Jack. "It seems at
+least a week. We must divert ourselves in some wise.
+What say if I learn you a bit o' Latin? And you can
+say over such sea songs as come to mind, for me to tuck
+in my memory."</p>
+
+<p>"Well said, my worthy scholar. 'Tis high time we
+bowled ahead with my eddication as a proper gentleman."</p>
+
+<p>Jack began to conjugate <i>amo</i>, <i>amas</i>, <i>amat</i>, and the
+pupil droned it after him but the verb <i>to love</i> recalled a
+black-eyed lass who had stolen his heart in the Azores
+and he veered from the Latin lesson to confide that sentimental
+passage. So Jack hammered nouns of the first
+declension into him until they grew tired of that, and
+then the sea waif played his part by reciting such fo'castle
+ballads as "<i>Neptune's Raging Fury</i>; <i>or The Gallant<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
+Seaman's Sufferings</i>," and "<i>Sir Walter Raleigh Sailing
+in the Lowlands</i>."</p>
+
+<p>This was better than the slow agony of waiting in silence,
+but Joe spoiled it by turning lovelorn and Jack
+bemourned fair Dorothy Stuart of Charles Town whom
+he would never greet again, and they sang very softly
+together a verse of "<i>The Maid's Lamentation</i>" which
+went like this:</p>
+
+<div class='poem'>"There shall be no Scarf go on my Head,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">No Comb into my Hair,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">No Fire burn, no Candle light</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">To shew my Beauty fair,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">For never will I married be</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Until the Day I die,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Since the Seas and the Winds</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Has parted my Love and me."</span><br />
+</div>
+
+<p>This left them really in worse spirits than before, and
+they drowsed off to sleep, and no wonder, after such a
+night as they had passed. Accustomed to broken
+watches, Joe Hawkridge slept uneasily with one ear
+open. Once or twice he sat up, heard Jack's steady
+snores, and lay down again. It was the ship's bell which
+finally brought him to, and he counted the strokes.</p>
+
+<p>"Five bells, but what watch is it?" he muttered anxiously.
+"How long was I napping? Lost track o'
+the time, so I have, and can't say if it's night or day."</p>
+
+<p>He sat blinking into the darkness and then had an in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>spiration.
+So staunch and well-kept was the brig that
+the deck seams were tight and no light filtered through.
+Joe left his hiding-place and groped along to where he
+thought the main hatch ought to be. Gazing upward he
+saw a gleam like a silvered line between the coaming and
+the edge of the canvas cover which was battened with
+iron bars. This persuaded him that the day had not yet
+faded, and he concluded that he had heard the bell strike
+either in the afternoon watch or the second dog watch of
+early evening.</p>
+
+<p>This he imparted to Jack, after prodding him awake.
+They mulled it over and agreed that Captain Bonnet
+must have found the <i>Revenge</i> unready to weigh anchor
+or he would have engaged the brig ere this. Perhaps
+there was not breeze enough for either vessel to move.
+Another hour of this stressful tedium and they heard a
+sound of sharp significance. It was the lap-lap of
+water against the vessel's side. No more than the thickness
+of the planking was between them and this tinkling
+sea, and Joe exclaimed, in an agitated whisper:</p>
+
+<p>"A breeze o' wind! Gentle it draws, but steady, like
+it comes off the land at sundown."</p>
+
+<p>"The same as it did when we were blown offshore on
+the little raft, after we quitted the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>,"
+replied Jack.</p>
+
+<p>"Blackbeard will take advantage of it to make for
+the open sea. There be three things offered us, Master
+Cockrell, to starve or go mad in this blighted hold, to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
+sally on deck and beg mercy, which means a short shift,
+or to climb out softly in the night and try to swim
+for it."</p>
+
+<p>"Swim to what, Joe?"</p>
+
+<p>"Swim to the bottom, most likely. But we might
+fetch one o' them cays or the coast itself if he steers close
+in to find smooth water. 'Tis the worst odds yet but
+I'd sooner drown than tarry in this vessel. One miracle
+was wrought when the cask came driftin' to the beach to
+save me, and who knows but the Lord can spare another
+one for the salvation of us poor lads that mean to do
+right and forsake piratin'."</p>
+
+<p>As they expected, there came soon the familiar racket
+of making sail and trimming yards and the clank of the
+capstan pawls. Then the anchor flukes scraped and
+banged against the bow timbers. The vessel heeled a
+little and the lapping water changed its tune to a swash-swash
+as the hull pushed it aside. The brig was alive
+and in motion.</p>
+
+<p>"She makes no more than two or three knots," observed
+Joe, after a little while. "Ye can tell by the
+feel of her. The wind is steady but small."</p>
+
+<p>"Then he can't go clear of the islands till long after
+night," thankfully returned Jack.</p>
+
+<p>Joe made another trip to crane his neck at the main
+hatch. The bright thread of daylight had dimmed. He
+could scarce discern it. The lads occupied themselves
+with reckoning the distance, the hour, and the vessel's<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
+speed. Now that Joe had satisfied himself that the end
+of the day was near, he knew what the ship's bell meant
+when it was struck every half-hour. They would await
+the passing of another hour, until two bells of the first
+watch, by which time they calculated the brig should be
+in the wide, outer channel between the seaward islands.</p>
+
+<p>The plan was to emerge through the forepeak in the
+very bows of the ship where a scuttle was let into the
+deck. There they might hope to lower themselves to
+the chain stays under the bowsprit and so drop into the
+sea. They would be washed past the ship, close to her
+side, and into the wake, and there was little chance
+of drawing attention. True it was that in this hard
+choice they preferred to swim to the bottom if so it had
+to be.</p>
+
+<p>They crouched where they were hid, waiting to hear
+the fateful signal of two bells. It struck, mellow, clear,
+and they were about to creep in the direction of the forepeak.
+But Joe Hawkridge gripped his comrade's arm
+and held him fast. A whispered warning and they
+ceased to move. Behind them, in the after part of the
+ship, gleamed a lantern. It illumined the open door of
+the bulkhead which walled off the storeroom. And in
+this doorway, like a life-sized portrait, grotesque and
+sinister, set in a frame, was the figure of Blackbeard.</p>
+
+<p>He advanced into the hold and the cowering stowaways
+assumed that he had come to search them out.
+The impulse was to dash into the forepeak and so<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
+plunge overboard, flinging away all caution, but before
+their palsied muscles could respond, the behavior of
+Blackbeard held them irresolute and curious. He had
+turned his back to them and was shouting boisterously to
+others to follow him. Seven men came through the
+doorway, one after the other, hanging back with evident
+reluctance. It was impossible to discern who they were,
+whether officers or seamen. Every one carried in his
+arms what looked to be a tub or an iron pot. These
+they set upon the dunnage boards which covered the ballast
+and made a flooring in the hold.</p>
+
+<p>Blackbeard bellowed at them to squat in a circle, which
+they meekly did. He was in one of his fiendishly mirthful
+humors, rumpling his beard, strutting to and fro,
+laughing in senseless outbursts. At such times his men
+were most fearful for their lives. What sort of an infernal
+pastime he had now concocted was beyond the
+imagination of the lads who were concealed a dozen
+yards away. He was not hunting them, this much was
+plain, and it seemed wise to be quiet and avoid drawing
+attention to themselves.</p>
+
+<p>They saw Blackbeard ignite a torch at the lantern
+and poke it into one pot after another. Flames began
+to burn, blue and green and yellow, and lurid smoke
+rolled to the deck-beams overhead. Amid this glare
+and reek of combustibles, Blackbeard waved his torch
+and tremendously proclaimed:</p>
+
+<p>"Come, lads, we be all devils together, with a hell of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
+our own,&mdash;brimstone fires and pitch. Now, braggarts,
+see how long ye can bear it. 'Tis a foretaste of what's
+in store for all hands. At this game I'll outlast ye, for,
+harkee, I sold my soul to the Old Scratch as is well
+known."</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 407px;">
+<img src="images/illus7.jpg" width="407" height="500" alt="HE LOOMED LIKE THE BELIAL WHOM HE WAS SO FOND OF CLAIMING AS HIS MENTOR" title="HE LOOMED LIKE THE BELIAL WHOM HE WAS SO FOND OF CLAIMING AS HIS MENTOR" />
+<span class="caption">HE LOOMED LIKE THE BELIAL WHOM HE WAS SO FOND OF CLAIMING AS HIS MENTOR</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>He stirred his infernal pots and the greasy smoke
+rolled upward in choking volume. The brimstone
+fumes were so vile and noxious that the victims of
+this outlandish revel soon gasped and wheezed. But
+they dared not object nor move from their places among
+the villainous pots. Blackbeard enjoyed their sufferings,
+taunting them as milksops and poltroons who
+could not endure even this taste of Gehenna. He himself
+appeared to be unaffected by it, lurching from one
+man to another, whacking them with the burning torch
+or playfully upsetting them. In the gaseous pall of
+smoke he loomed like the Belial whom he was so fond of
+claiming as his mentor.</p>
+
+<p>Finally one of his involuntary guests toppled over in
+a faint. Blackbeard was kind enough to haul him to the
+door and boot him through it. A second man dragged
+himself thither. A third found voice to supplicate. The
+witch-fires still smoked and stewed in the pots and
+Blackbeard had proved that he was the toughest demon
+of them all.</p>
+
+<p>The two stowaways watched this demented exploit in
+sheer wonderment. The fumes were not dense in
+their part of the hold and they could breathe, but<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
+they well-nigh strangled in trying to refrain from
+coughing. The fires of tar and brimstone and what not
+cast so much light that they dared not betray themselves
+by crawling toward the forepeak. The upright beams
+between the keelson and the deck threw black shadows
+over them and they were in no great peril of detection so
+long as they stayed motionless.</p>
+
+<p>Joe Hawkridge had heard gossip of this extraordinary
+amusement as a kind of initiation for hands newly
+joining Blackbeard's ship. He therefore read it that
+these unfortunates were some of Stede Bonnet's men
+who had been captured with the brig. They had been
+allowed to enlist and were being taught to respect their
+new master.</p>
+
+<p>Jack Cockrell had hugely admired young Joe for his
+ready wit and coolness in other crises of their mutual
+fortunes but now came a moment in which the astute sea
+urchin surpassed himself. It was not too much to say
+that he displayed absolute genius with the sturdy Master
+Cockrell to aid and abet him. Joe clawed in the dark
+until he found the sack with a few pounds of wheat flour
+in it. A quick whisper and his comrade grasped the
+great idea. They took no thought of a sequel. They
+would trust to opportunity. Hastily they rubbed the
+flour into their shirts and breeches. They covered their
+faces with it and lavishly sprinkled their hair. They
+looked at each other in the shadow of the beams and
+were pleased with their handiwork.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Another whispered consultation and Joe possessed
+himself of the cannon-ball of a cheese while Jack
+grasped the side of salt-fish by the tail. They resembled
+two whitened clowns of a pantomime but in spirit
+they were as grimly serious as the menace of death could
+make them.</p>
+
+<p>Blackbeard was dancing clumsily, like a drunken
+bear, and deriding with lewd oaths the two or three tortured
+survivors of his brimstone carnival. In a high,
+wailing voice which rose to a shriek there was borne to
+him the words:</p>
+
+<p>"Ye dirked poor Jesse Strawn and left him rotting
+in the swamp. I was a true and faithful seaman, Cap'n
+Teach."</p>
+
+<p>A deeper voice boomed out, filling the hold with unearthly
+echoes:</p>
+
+<p>"I am the shade of the master mariner whom ye did
+foully murder off Matanzas and there is no rest for me
+ten fathom down."</p>
+
+<p>The apparitions flitted out of the shadow and were
+vaguely disclosed in the flickering glare from the brimstone
+pots. The smoke gave them a wavering aspect as
+though their shapes were unsubstantial. Blackbeard
+stood beholding them in a trance of horror. With an
+aimless finger he traced the sign of the cross and his
+pallid lips moved in the murmur:</p>
+
+<p>"<i>The ghost o' Jesse Strawn! For the love of God,
+forbear.</i>"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It was a petition as pious as ever Christian uttered.
+Forgotten was his wicked counterfeit of the nether region.
+Again the shrill voice wailed:</p>
+
+<p>"Pity poor Jesse Strawn. I'll haunt ye by land and
+sea, Cap'n Teach. Swear by the Book to let that treasure
+chest lie at the bottom of the creek else I tear your
+sinful soul from your body."</p>
+
+<p>The terrible Blackbeard was incapable of motion.
+Huskily he muttered:</p>
+
+<p>"I'll ne'er seek the chest, good Jesse Strawn, an' it
+please you to pass me by."</p>
+
+<p>The two spectres moved forward as the one of the
+deeper voice declaimed:</p>
+
+<p>"Doomed I was to find no rest till I overtook your
+ship, Ed'ard Teach. Each night you'll see me walk the
+plank from your quarter-deck."</p>
+
+<p>The unhappy Blackbeard gibbered something and
+would have fled as the spirits approached him. But
+those bandy legs tottered and before he could turn the
+awful visitants were upon him. One raised a round
+shot above his head, or so it appeared to be, and smote
+him full upon the crown. The other whirled a flat
+bludgeon and hit him on the jaw. With the smell of
+brimstone was mingled the pungent flavor of ripe cheese
+and salt-fish. Blackbeard measured his length, and the
+ghost of Jesse Strawn delayed an instant to dump a pot
+of sizzling combustibles over him.</p>
+
+<p>Then the spirits twain made for the cabin at top<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
+speed. Several of the crew had rushed down to harken
+to the strange disturbance. They scattered wildly at
+the first glimpse of these phantoms, being superstitious
+sailormen with many a wicked deed to answer for.
+It flashed into Joe Hawkridge's mind that all the men
+of the watch might be chased below, the hatches clapped
+on them, and the mastery of the brig secured. Blackbeard
+was absent for reasons best known to himself and
+his pirates lacked leadership. A brace of ghosts could
+put them to panic rout. And, no doubt, that wailing
+message of dead Jesse Strawn had carried like the cry
+of a banshee.</p>
+
+<p>The poop was deserted in the twinkling of an eye,
+even to the pair of helmsmen and the officer of the watch.
+Against the sky of night the unwelcome phantoms were
+wan and luminous while the groans which issued from
+them were enough to curdle the blood of the brawniest
+pirate. He who had been Jack Cockrell in mortal guise
+was quick to slide the cabin hatch closed and fasten it.
+For the moment they had captured the armed brig
+<i>Royal James</i> and as ferocious a crew of rascals as ever
+scuttled a merchantman.</p>
+
+<p>Joe Hawkridge glided to the taffrail and peered over
+the stern. A boat was towing behind the ship. It had
+been left there for taking soundings or pulling the brig's
+head around while she was still in the shoaler waters
+near the coast. This was better than Joe had dared anticipate.
+Feeling his way along the rail, he found the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
+end of the rope which was belayed around a wooden pin.
+Heaven be praised, they would not have to swim for it!
+He beckoned his comrade to say in his ear:</p>
+
+<p>"They will soon find their wits. It 'ud be foolish to
+try scaring 'em under hatches now that the jolly-boat
+floats so handy. There's hard cases amongst 'em that
+will begin shooting at us presently. Down the rope ye
+go, Jack. I'll stand by and give 'em another dose of
+poor Jesse Strawn."</p>
+
+<p>Over the rail flew the stouter phantom of the two and
+slid like a white streak, fetching up in the boat with a
+most earthly and substantial thump. With a farewell
+wail the other ghost flung a limber leg over and shot
+down so fast that his hands were scorched. To such
+pirates as beheld this instant vanishment, these disturbing
+spirits floated off into space. Jack cut the rope
+with his knife and the boat dropped back in the shining
+wake. They shoved out two heavy oars and fairly broke
+their hearts in pulling dead into the wind where the brig
+would have to tack to pursue them.</p>
+
+<p>The rattle of the oars and the discovery of the shorn
+rope's end must have convinced the pirates who ran aft
+that they had been tricked by mortal beings like themselves.
+A musket spat a red streak of fire. Blocks
+whined as the braces were hauled to change the brig's
+course. In the light breeze she responded awkwardly
+and soon hung in stays. Meanwhile the jolly-boat was
+slowly working to windward while two frightened lads<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
+tugged and swung until the flour turned to paste on
+their dripping faces.</p>
+
+<p>Before the brig began to forge ahead, the boat was invisible
+from her decks. This was evident because the
+spatter of musket-fire ceased. Soon the fugitives heard
+Blackbeard's harsh voice damning all hands. That
+thick skull of his had not been cracked by the impact of
+the solid cheese and he had been released from his brimstone
+inferno. The ghosts rested on their oars. They
+could watch the glimmering canvas of the brig and see
+what her procedure might be. Soon she filled away and
+forsook the attempt to find the boat. Blackbeard had
+wisdom enough to avoid blundering about and putting
+the brig aground in a chase so elusive as this.</p>
+
+<p>"Farewell, ye hairy son of Tophet," said Joe Hawkridge,
+waving his hand at the disappearing vessel.
+"And here's hoping I set your whiskers ablaze when I
+turned the pot over 'em."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you hear him swear not to touch the treasure
+chest, Joe? That was a master stroke of yours."</p>
+
+<p>"Aye, it was bright of me. But he thinks different
+now. He knows we made a booby of him."</p>
+
+<p>"But we learned one thing,&mdash;he hasn't recovered the
+treasure yet," suggested Jack.</p>
+
+<p>"He is such a powerful liar that I don't know as the
+ghost o' Jesse Strawn could budge the truth out of him.
+However, it was comfortin' to hear him swear it on his
+marrow-bones. I fetched away the navigation chart,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>
+the one I poached from the cabin table. It gives us the
+lay o' the coast."</p>
+
+<p>"What ho and whither bound?" was Jack's question.
+"Here is a sail wound round a sprit beneath the
+thwarts."</p>
+
+<p>"The wrong wind to head for Cap'n Bonnet and the
+<i>Revenge</i>. This swag-bellied jolly-boat handles like a
+firkin. We had best wait for day and then decide the
+voyage."</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing to eat and no water, Joe. All I can find
+is an empty pannikin."</p>
+
+<p>"You're a glutton," severely exclaimed young
+Hawkridge. "After the banquet I served in the hold!"</p>
+
+<p>What Master Cockrell said in reply sounds as familiar
+and as wistful to-day as when he spoke it two hundred
+years ago.</p>
+
+<p>"I have had enough of wandering and strange adventures,
+Joe. I want to go home."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+
+<h3>MR. PETER FORBES MOURNS HIS NEPHEW</h3>
+
+
+<div class='unindent'><big>I</big>T seems a long time, in the course of this story, since
+the honorable Secretary of the Council, Mr. Peter
+Arbuthnot Forbes, was forced to sail in to Charles
+Town from the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i> on that most humiliating
+errand of finding medicines for Blackbeard's
+fever-smitten rogues. For the sake of his own dear
+nephew and the other hostages detained on board, he
+had endeavored to perform his bargain and was returning
+across the bar when the threatening clouds and other
+portents of a violent storm caused the seamen to lose
+heart. They put about and drove back into the harbor
+for shelter in the very nick of time.</div>
+
+<p>These were pirates from Blackbeard's crew, it may
+be recalled, with his grizzled, scarred boatswain at the
+tiller. They had felt safe enough to swagger and ruffle
+it through the streets of Charles Town and to terrify the
+people. Their worthless lives were protected by the
+hostages who waited in fear and trembling. The town
+seethed with indignation and was hot with shame.
+There would be no more of the friendly traffic with pirates.</p>
+
+<p>It was fully believed that the wretched Blackbeard<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
+would be as good as his word in allowing no more than
+two days' grace. Therefore when Mr. Peter Forbes
+came back in the boat to inform his neighbors that he
+had been unable to reach the ship, it was sadly taken for
+granted that those helpless passengers had been put to
+death. Forthwith the pirates of the boat's crew were
+seized and thrown in gaol. There they lay in double
+irons until the Council met and ordered them to be tried.
+In accordance with the verdict the six seamen and the
+boatswain were promptly hanged by the neck from the
+same gallows at White Point hard by the town. And
+the people no longer shivered at the name of Blackbeard
+nor feared his vengeance. Their fighting blood was
+thoroughly aroused.</p>
+
+<p>Not long after this, there arrived from England a new
+Governor of the Province, a man of honor and resolution
+who approved what had been done. This Governor
+Johnson proceeded to organize the town for defense,
+building batteries on Sullivan's Island, recruiting the
+seafaring men in the militia, and seeking to obtain merchant
+vessels which could be employed as armed cruisers.
+Learning that the Governor of North Carolina was in
+a corrupt partnership with pirates, he sent messages to
+Virginia to solicit co&ouml;peration.</p>
+
+<p>This activity made much work for Secretary Peter
+Forbes who forsook his intention of going to England to
+beg the co&ouml;peration of his Majesty's Government
+against the plague of pirates. Dapper and plump and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
+important as of yore, his florid face was clouded with
+sorrow and he seemed a much older man. He mourned
+his nephew, Jack Cockrell, as no more and felt as
+though he had lost an only son. Every angry word he
+had ever addressed the lad, every hasty punishment inflicted,
+hurt him grievously.</p>
+
+<p>It was a solace to talk with winsome Dorothy Stuart
+because hers was the bright optimism of youth and she
+held so exalted an opinion of Jack's strength and courage
+that she refused to abandon hope. And the fact that
+he had confided to her his rash intention of running
+away and signing as a pirate sooner than be transported
+to school in England, persuaded her that he might be
+alive.</p>
+
+<p>"From what you saw yourself, Mr. Forbes," said
+she, "when Blackbeard boarded the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>
+with his dreadful men, our Jack won his fancy."</p>
+
+<p>"So it appeared, Dorothy. The boy boasted of
+knocking a tall pirate on the head, and he read this
+monster of a pirate more shrewdly than I. Yes, Blackbeard
+took it with rough good humor. But Jack would
+ne'er consent to sail with him. 'Twas that confounded
+Stede Bonnet with his gallant air that turned the lad's
+head. He cast a glamor over this trade of murder and
+pillage."</p>
+
+<p>"Be that as it may," returned Dorothy, with a sigh
+and a smile, "I confess to a romantic admiration for
+this bold Captain Bonnet. He wears an air of mystery<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
+which is most becoming. We must not blame poor
+Jack."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, I am done with all that," hastily exclaimed
+Uncle Peter. "All I dare hope is that when Blackbeard
+is captured, we may learn what fate befell the
+boy. It makes the torture worse to have him vanish
+without trace."</p>
+
+<p>"And yet I have faith the sea will give him back to
+us, Mr. Forbes. He will find you a chastened guardian,
+not so apt to box his ears."</p>
+
+<p>Uncle Peter was so distressed by this gentle raillery
+that the girl begged pardon and vowed that she would
+never again offend. It so happened that they were sitting
+together in Parson Throckmorton's garden a day
+or so after this when a friend came running in with
+tidings the most unexpected and incredible. A negro
+slave had come from a plantation a few miles inland
+and he bore a letter written by none other than Captain
+Jonathan Wellsby of the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>. It
+narrated how he and the survivors of his ship had journeyed
+that far after weeks of suffering and frequent
+skirmishes with Indians. They were compelled to rest
+and take shelter before undertaking the last stage of the
+journey.</p>
+
+<p>Councilor Peter Forbes was magically changed. He
+shed his dignity and threw his hat in air. Clasping Miss
+Dorothy's slender waist, he planted a kiss on her damask
+cheek. Parson Throckmorton was ramming snuff into<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
+his nostrils, his wig all awry, while he sneezed trumpet
+blasts of rejoicing.</p>
+
+<p>"Survivors? <i>Kerchooh!</i> God bless me, that lusty
+stripling will be amongst them,&mdash;<i>kerchooh</i>,&mdash;he can survive
+anything but Greek and Latin,&mdash;<i>kerchooh</i>,&mdash;I will
+spare the rod in future."</p>
+
+<p>"I told you so, Uncle Peter Forbes," laughed
+Dorothy.</p>
+
+<p>"Not so fast," quoth he, in a mood suddenly sobered.
+"Captain Wellsby includes no list of those in his
+party."</p>
+
+<p>"But, of course, one of them is <i>sure</i> to be Master
+Jack," she insisted.</p>
+
+<p>"I am a selfish man and a laggard officer of the
+Crown," he exclaimed with air of great self-reproach.
+"There are women in that company and wounded men,
+no doubt. We must take them clothing, horses, food, a
+surgeon."</p>
+
+<p>He bustled off to the Governor's house to find that
+energetic gentleman absent at Sullivan's Island. Acting
+for him, the Secretary of the Council sent the town
+crier to summon all good citizens to the tavern green.
+In the space of an hour the men and supplies were assembled
+and with Mr. Forbes in command the band of
+mercy made haste to reach the plantation. During the
+march there was a buzz of anxious surmise. Was this
+one and that alive or dead? Had the hostages been
+slain and were these the sailormen of the <i>Plymouth<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
+Adventure</i> who had been set adrift by Blackbeard?
+Councilor Forbes winced at hearing such talk as this,
+but his heart beat high nevertheless, so confident was he
+that he was about to behold his manly nephew.</p>
+
+<p>There was loud cheering when they came to the
+cleared land of the indigo fields and saw a tattered
+British ensign fluttering from the log stockade which
+enclosed the huts of the overseer and his laborers. In
+the gateway appeared the stalwart figure of Captain
+Wellsby in ragged garments and with a limping gait.
+Other men crowded behind him and responded with
+huzzas which were like a feeble echo. The friends from
+Charles Town rushed forward to embrace them, loudly
+demanding to know where the rest were.</p>
+
+<p>"We fetched the women safe through," answered
+Captain Wellsby whose eyes were sunken and the brown
+beard streaked with gray. "Twelve good men of my
+crew are dead, and three of the gentlemen passengers.
+The swamps took toll of some and the Indians slew the
+others. We were besieged a fortnight by the Yemassees,&mdash;a
+hard experience all of it, and wondrous luck to
+have escaped&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Councilor Forbes delayed while his companions entered
+the huts to attend the invalids. He struggled to
+ask a question but his voice was beyond control.</p>
+
+<p>"I understand," kindly spoke the shipmaster.
+"Your lad is not with us, nor can I say if he be dead
+or alive."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"The Indians carried him off?" weakly inquired the
+uncle.</p>
+
+<p>"No, he was never seen after we abandoned ship.
+Your Jack and a chum of his from Blackbeard's crew
+were for making the beach on a small raft of their own
+contrivance. This was after nightfall, Councilor, and
+what with a land'ard breeze and a crotchety set of the
+tide amongst the shoals, they floated out to sea."</p>
+
+<p>"On a small raft," muttered Mr. Forbes, "and a
+vast ocean. I know of no ship voyaging to or from
+these ports which might have found them."</p>
+
+<p>"I was in hopes of hearing news of the lads from
+you," sorrowfully said the shipmaster. "There is the
+chance, tiny though it be, that they were sighted by
+some vessel bound to foreign parts, across the Western
+Ocean."</p>
+
+<p>The uncle shook his head in a manner profoundly dejected.
+There were duties which summoned him and he
+choked down his own grief, turning from the sympathetic
+mariner to minister to those in distress. Horse
+litters were soon ready for the exhausted but heroic
+women who had been kept alive by the devotion of the
+noble British seamen in accordance with the traditions
+of the merchant service. Those unable to walk farther
+were placed in carts. Clothed and fed, the sailors were
+in blithe spirits and talked of going to sea again as soon
+as they could find a ship.</p>
+
+<p>In the crowd which met them on the outskirts of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
+Charles Town settlement was Dorothy Stuart. She
+scanned the straggling column and then ran from one
+cart to another. It was impossible to convince her that
+Jack Cockrell was not there. But when she heard from
+Uncle Peter the news that Jack was missing but not
+surely dead, her faith burned anew, triumphant over
+fact and reason.</p>
+
+<p>"See how the great storm came to save him from
+Blackbeard," she cried, her hand nestling in Uncle
+Peter's arm. "And look how he came unscathed
+through that bloody battle with the pirates in the
+<i>Plymouth Adventure</i>. Why, a cruise on a raft is merely
+a frolic after all that."</p>
+
+<p>"I would not discourage your dear dreams, sweet
+maid," was the gentle response. "And may they be
+truer than my own forebodings."</p>
+
+<p>Charles Town was more than ever resentful when it
+learned from these poor people how the pirate sailing-master,
+Ned Rackham, had plotted to get rid of them
+and how mournful had been their sufferings after the
+shipwreck. The one boat left to them had been too
+rotten to send along the coast and they had plunged into
+a wilderness almost impassable.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Governor Johnson, stirred by this episode,
+had received word that the province of Virginia was
+both ready and anxious to join in an expedition against
+Blackbeard. Governor Spottswood of Virginia would
+be outfitting such craft as he could get together in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>
+James River while he awaited a reinforcement from
+Charles Town.</p>
+
+<p>The best vessel available for immediate use was a
+small brigantine, the <i>King George</i>. There was no lack
+of eager seamen when Councilor Forbes and Colonel
+Stuart proclaimed the muster on the tavern green.
+Among those selected were several of Captain Jonathan
+Wellsby's sailors who were primed to fight even though
+there was not much flesh on their bones. He himself
+was a forlorn mariner who had lost his good ship and
+found no joy in life. With a grim smile of gratitude
+he accepted the invitation to go as master of the <i>King
+George</i>, with Colonel Stuart as a sea soldier to drill the
+men and lead them in action.</p>
+
+<p>It was while they were slinging guns aboard the
+brigantine that some of the men happened to notice a
+small boat coming into the harbor under a rag of sail.
+At first it was taken for a fishing craft and there was
+no comment until it was quite close. Then they saw
+that it was a ship's jolly-boat much the worse for wear,
+with only two occupants. These were half-naked lads,
+burned black to the waist, with a queer kind of canvas
+head-gear as a protection against the sun.</p>
+
+<p>The boat was steered to pass under the stern of the
+<i>King George</i> and the crew was unable to fathom if these
+were pirates or victims of another shipwreck. Captain
+Wellsby solved it by shouting:</p>
+
+<p>"Both your guesses are right! One is the pirate<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>
+younker that served our cause in the <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>
+and t'other is Master Jack Cockrell!"</p>
+
+<p>One of the Charles Town volunteers heard only the
+word <i>pirate</i> and growled, with an oath:</p>
+
+<p>"One o' Blackbeard's spawn? We'll make precious
+short work of him. Hand me a musket and I will save
+trouble for the hangman."</p>
+
+<p>"Here, stop that," said Captain Wellsby, beckoning
+his own men. "You old <i>Adventure</i> hands know better.
+Quell these lubbers. If there's to be hostile feeling
+ashore I shall take this lad aboard under my own protection."</p>
+
+<p>During this argument the sea-worn pilgrims in the
+jolly-boat had recognized the shipmaster and were joyfully
+yelling at him. In response to his gesture, they
+pulled down the sail and rowed to the gangway of the
+brigantine. There was no need to fear the wrath of the
+Charles Town seamen, because the <i>Adventure</i> hands
+stood by as a guard while they explained how this young
+Joe Hawkridge had valiantly helped to turn the tide of
+battle against the prize crew of pirates. And there was
+such a rousing welcome for Master Cockrell that all else
+was forgotten. His old shipmates fairly mobbed him.</p>
+
+<p>"I will fire a gun and hoist all the bunting to signal
+the town," cried the skipper, his face shining. "And
+presently I'll send you to the wharf in my own boat, but
+first tell me, boys, who took you off the little raft and
+whence come you in this ship's boat?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Blackbeard rescued us. And we borrowed the boat
+from him," demurely answered Jack, watching the effect
+of this bombshell of a sensation.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Blackbeard!</i>" echoed the bedazed shipmaster and
+the others chimed it like a chorus.</p>
+
+<p>"Aye, old Buckets o' Blood hisself," grinned Joe
+Hawkridge. "We had him tamed proper when we
+parted company. First we chased him through a swamp
+till his tongue hung out and left him mired to the whiskers.
+Then for another lark we scared him in his
+own ship so he begged us on his knees to forbear.
+We learned Cap'n Ed'ard Teach his manners, eh,
+Jack?"</p>
+
+<p>This was too much for the audience which stood
+agape. A dozen voices at once implored enlightenment.
+With a lordly air for a youth whose costume was mostly
+one leg of his breeches, Master Cockrell reproved them
+to wit:</p>
+
+<p>"Captain Stede Bonnet was more courteous to our
+distress when we sailed with him. He gave us a thumping
+big breakfast."</p>
+
+<p>"Right-o," declared Joe. "'Tis our custom to spin
+strange yarns for clothes and vittles in payment."</p>
+
+<p>The men scampered to the galley and pantry but refused
+to let Captain Wellsby carry these rare entertainers
+into the cabin. Graciously they sketched the
+chief events, omitting all mention of the treasure chest,
+and Jack explained in conclusion:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"And so I was stricken homesick, like an illness, and
+Joe had his fill of pirates, too. The wind was wrong to
+rejoin Captain Bonnet in the Inlet harbor after we
+shipped as ghosts in the jolly-boat, and we had a mariner's
+chart of the Carolina coast and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But what did you do for subsistence?" broke in
+Captain Wellsby.</p>
+
+<p>"Food and water?" answered Joe. "Oh, we landed
+when the thirst plagued us too bad. And there was
+rain to fill a bight of the sail and a pannikin to save it
+in."</p>
+
+<p>"And we lived on oysters mostly," said Jack, "and
+Joe killed a fat opossum with a club, and we caught
+some fish in a net which I knotted from a ball of marline
+that was in the boat. And we foraged for pawpaws
+and persimmons."</p>
+
+<p>"And whenever the breeze was fair we put to sea
+again," said Joe, "and it was a long and weary voyage,
+though not so many leagues on the chart."</p>
+
+<p>The captain's boat was ready and they tumbled in,
+two wayfarers of the sea who were as lean and sun-dried
+as the buccaneers of old Trimble Rogers' fond memories.
+Hardships had seasoned and weathered them like good
+ash staves. On the wharf was Uncle Peter Forbes and
+Governor Johnson and a concourse of townspeople
+drawn by the joyous signals flown from the brigantine.
+Jack looked in vain for Dorothy Stuart and was thankful
+that her welcome was deferred. Shears and a razor<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
+and Christian raiment would make him look less like a
+savage from the coast of Barbary.</p>
+
+<p>Uncle Peter wasted a vast deal of pity, thinking the
+castaways too weak and wasted to walk. Jack strode
+along with him, the crowd at their heels, and soon had
+the plump Councilor puffing for breath. They insisted
+on taking Joe Hawkridge with them although he was
+for seeking lodgings at the tavern. He was one of the
+household, declared Mr. Forbes, while Jack warned him
+to beware of impertinence lest he be sentenced to chop
+wood for the kitchen fire.</p>
+
+<p>The neighbors and friends, as curious as they were
+joyful, were barred from the house while the lads talked
+and Uncle Peter carefully made notes of it all. It was
+too much for him to realize that Jack was sitting there
+lusty and laughing and with the dutifully respectful
+manner as of yore, in spite of the man's part he had
+played to the hilt. Of all the exploits, that which most
+fascinated Mr. Peter Forbes was the chase after Blackbeard's
+sea-chest weighty with treasure and the discovery
+of the knoll in the Cherokee swamp where he might
+have buried other booty. Here was a picaresque
+romance which allured the methodical barrister and
+Councilor and he was as boyishly excited as his nephew.
+He examined the chart which Jack had copied from his
+rude sketch made on a piece of bark and this raised a
+question which he was quick to ask:</p>
+
+<p>"What of Bill Saxby and this old bloodhound of a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
+Trimble Rogers? As soon as Stede Bonnet could get
+the <i>Revenge</i> to sea, I have no doubt he sailed to Cape
+Fear River to get these pirate comrades of yours and
+the seamen he left to find them. Once aboard, they
+would urge Bonnet to return to Cherokee Inlet and let
+them go hunt the treasure."</p>
+
+<p>"That may be, but we can trust them to deal fair by
+us," replied Jack.</p>
+
+<p>"Possibly," was the skeptical comment. Mr. Forbes
+was not too ready to believe in honest pirates.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not sure Cap'n Bonnet had a mind to bother
+with this treasure hunting," suggested Joe Hawkridge.
+"Leastwise, he may ha' put it off to an easier day. He
+has friends that keep him well informed, such as the
+Governor of North Carolina at Bath Town. And all
+this flurry against piratin', here and in Virginia, 'ud be
+apt to make Cap'n Bonnet wary of bein' trapped on the
+coast."</p>
+
+<p>"Joe is full of wisdom, as usual," said Master Cockrell.
+"And if Blackbeard has cruised to the Spanish
+Main, as we suspect, the treasure may lie undisturbed
+for a while."</p>
+
+<p>"Concerning Blackbeard, the evidence then in hand
+warranted your conclusions," was Uncle Peter's judicial
+comment, "but I have received later information. The
+rumor is, and well-founded, that he turned his ship and
+made for the Pamlico River with the intention of obtaining
+pardon from the false and greedy Governor Eden.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
+This would baffle our plans against him, or so he would
+assume. And it would enable him to remain within
+convenient distance of his treasure."</p>
+
+<p>"Would this Province and Virginia respect such a
+pardon as that?" queried Jack.</p>
+
+<p>"Not in the case of Blackbeard," snapped the Councilor,
+"because we know it would be violated as soon as
+this treacherous villain could safely return to his piracies."</p>
+
+<p>"Then Joe and I will enlist in the <i>King George</i>
+brigantine," cried Jack. "Captain Wellsby tells me
+she will sail for Virginia inside the week."</p>
+
+<p>Uncle Peter was about to make violent protest but
+he checked himself and his emotions were torn betwixt
+pride and yearning affection. He could not bear to let
+his nephew go so soon to new perils, but what right had
+he to try to shield him when the public duty called? It
+was idle to pretend that Jack was too young and tender
+to embark on such service as this. He was fitter for it
+than some of the other volunteers. And so the unhappy
+Uncle Peter walked the floor with his cheeks puffed out
+and his hands clasped behind him and said, with a tremulous
+sigh:</p>
+
+<p>"I swore to treat you no more as a child, Jack. 'Tis
+right and natural for you to desire to go in the <i>King
+George</i> as a fighting man tried and true. As for Joe
+Hawkridge, I have acquainted the Governor with
+his merits and his pardon is assured."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Thankee, sir," returned the reformed young pirate.
+"A respectable life is what I crave, and the parson for
+company."</p>
+
+<p>"It sounds almost pleasant to me, including the parson,"
+admitted Jack, "as soon as we shall have settled
+this matter with Blackbeard."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+
+<h3>NED RACKHAM'S PLANS GO MUCH AMISS</h3>
+
+
+<div class='unindent'><big>T</big>HE armed brigantine had been out several days
+on the voyage to Virginia when a vessel was
+sighted hull-down. Captain Wellsby and
+Colonel Stuart decided to edge over and take a look at
+the stranger although they were not anxious to engage
+an enemy of heavier metal. If, however, this should
+happen to be Blackbeard in the <i>Revenge</i> they were in
+no mood to avoid him, despite the odds. After an hour
+of sailing in a strong breeze, it was seen that this other
+vessel was a small merchantman which shifted her course
+as though to shake off pursuit.</div>
+
+<p>"They take us for a pirate," chuckled Captain
+Wellsby. "I have no wish to scare 'em, poor souls.
+They will feel easy as soon as we bring the wind abeam."</p>
+
+<p>He was about to give the order when Joe Hawkridge,
+gunner's mate, called to Jack Cockrell standing his
+watch at the helm:</p>
+
+<p>"Remember the snow I told ye of? Yonder is the
+same rig and tonnage, alike it as peas in a pod."</p>
+
+<p>Jack spoke to the shipmaster who summoned Joe to
+the quarter-deck. The boy was confident that this was
+the New England coasting vessel in which Ned Rack<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>ham
+and his pirates had appeared off Cherokee Inlet
+and had carried the marooned seamen from the sandy
+cay.</p>
+
+<p>"A brown patch in the big main-topsail, and the bowsprit
+steeved more'n ordinary," said Joe. "Tit for tat,
+Cap'n Wellsby. Your men can have the fun of jamming
+them in the fo'castle. And you won't find me or
+Jack helpin' these picaroons to break out."</p>
+
+<p>"No fear of that," sternly spoke the shipmaster.
+"They shall make their exit with a taut rope and a long
+drop when I deliver them in Virginia."</p>
+
+<p>It was to be gathered that the bold Ned Rackham had
+failed in his desperate enterprise of capturing a larger
+ship and that he was probably cruising up the coast in
+hopes of rejoining Blackbeard. The snow had too few
+guns to cope with the <i>King George</i> brigantine which
+could throw a battering broadside. As soon as identification
+was certain, Captain Wellsby hauled to windward
+to hold the weather gauge and Colonel Stuart
+called the men to quarters. The <i>Plymouth Adventure</i>
+hands were disappointed that they would be unable to
+pay their own grudge. They had no doubt that Ned
+Rackham would strike his colors without a battle.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>King George</i> ran close enough for Captain
+Wellsby to shout through the trumpet:</p>
+
+<p>"The snow ahoy! Send your men aboard or I'll sink
+you. No tricks, Rackham. Lively, now."</p>
+
+<p>They saw the men running to cut the boat lashings<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
+and struggle to launch the boats from the deck. Ned
+Rackham, handsome and debonair, stared coolly at the
+brigantine but gave no sign that he had heard the ultimatum.
+With a shrug he walked across the poop,
+glanced up at the British ensign which flew from his
+main truck, and made no motion to pull it down.</p>
+
+<p>"Blow your matches, boys," roared Colonel Stuart
+from his station in the waist of the <i>King George</i>. "Five
+minutes' grace, no more."</p>
+
+<p>Captain Wellsby said to wait a little. The pirates
+were endeavoring to quit the snow. And presently
+Rackham appeared to change his own purpose. No
+longer ignoring the <i>King George</i>, he doffed his hat in a
+graceful flourish and bowed with a mocking obeisance.
+Then he strolled to the cabin hatch and went below,
+presumably to get a change of clothing or something
+of the sort. But he failed to reappear and his men
+were in a frenzy of haste, with one boat already in the
+water.</p>
+
+<p>So incensed was Colonel Stuart by the insolent refusal
+of Ned Rackham to strike his colors in token of
+surrender that he gave orders to fire at the mainmast
+and try to bring it down. An instant before the starboard
+battery thundered, the snow seemed to fly upwards
+in a tremendous explosion. The masts were flung
+out of her and the hull opened like a shattered basket.
+So violent was the shock that men were thrown to the
+deck of the <i>King George</i> and she quivered as though<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>
+her bows had rammed a reef. Black smoke spouted
+as from a crater and debris rained down on a boiling
+sea.</p>
+
+<p>A few survivors, scorched or half-stunned, were clinging
+to bits of wreckage and wailing for succor. Where
+the snow had floated was a discolored eddy, broken timbers,
+a lather of dirty foam. Captain Jonathan Wellsby
+picked himself up, rubbed a bump on his head, and
+gazed wildly at the tragic scene. Collecting his wits,
+he exclaimed:</p>
+
+<p>"That 'ud be like Ned Rackham, to blow up the ship
+sooner than be taken and hanged. More than likely he
+had the train all laid to the powder barrels."</p>
+
+<p>"He saved us a lot of trouble," said Colonel Stuart
+as he climbed to the poop. "A fellow of iron will and
+courage, this Rackham, by all accounts. I have conceived
+a respect for him."</p>
+
+<p>"I forgive him his sins," replied the skipper. "Now,
+lads, boats away, and fish up those dying wretches."</p>
+
+<p>Joe Hawkridge emitted a jubilant whoop and dived
+over the rail without waiting for a boat. He had caught
+a glimpse of a feeble swimmer whose square, solid features
+and bushy brows were familiar. It was Peter
+Tobey, the carpenter's mate, who had befriended him on
+the cay and who had set adrift that miraculous cask of
+food and water. A few strokes and Joe was at his side,
+clutching him by the neck-band and towing him toward
+the <i>King George</i> like a faithful retriever. Ropes were<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
+flung to them and Joe saw his good friend safely aboard
+before he went up the side.</p>
+
+<p>The carpenter's mate was both burned and bruised
+but his hurts were not grievous and he was able to drag
+himself aft with Joe as a crutch.</p>
+
+<p>"My own particular prize, sir, by your gracious
+leave," said Joe Hawkridge, addressing Captain
+Wellsby. "This is Mr. Peter Tobey, a poor, faint-hearted
+pirate like me. May I have him to keep,
+sir?"</p>
+
+<p>"Bless me, but there will be no pirates left to hang,"
+was the quizzical reply. "Master Cockrell has adopted
+you, and now I am ordered to be kind to Bill Saxby and
+Trimble Rogers if I meet up with 'em."</p>
+
+<p>"That's the whole list, sir. Ask Jack Cockrell. You
+can string the rest of the bloody pirates to the yardarm,
+for all we care. Do I get exemption for this Peter
+Tobey?"</p>
+
+<p>"What is your verdict, Colonel Stuart?" asked the
+captain.</p>
+
+<p>"I heard the tale from Hawkridge," answered the
+brusque but generous soldier. "The carpenter's mate
+has won my allegiance. What say you in your own behalf,
+Peter Tobey?"</p>
+
+<p>The blistered, singed survivor touched a hand to his
+forehead and respectfully responded:</p>
+
+<p>"A carpenter by trade and nature, and allus was. I
+never see one happy day a-piratin' nor did I shed the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>
+blood of any human creatur'. With a bench and
+tools, you will find me a proper handy man in Charles
+Town."</p>
+
+<p>"That clinches it," cried Colonel Stuart. "I should
+call it a crime to hang an artisan like Peter Tobey.
+Your prize is awarded you, Hawkridge. See that he is
+well cared for."</p>
+
+<p>"The first booty that ever was handed me from a
+sinkin' ship," said Joe. "Come along, Master Tobey,
+and roll into my bunk."</p>
+
+<p>"Verily I was castin' bread upon the waters when I
+gave that cask to the wind and tide," devoutly murmured
+the carpenter's mate as he limped below with his
+new owner.</p>
+
+<p>No more than a dozen other pirates were rescued alive
+and several of these expired soon after they were lifted
+aboard the brigantine. This was the only sensational
+incident of the coastwise voyage to the James River.
+Comfortably quartered, with no more work than was
+wholesome, Jack Cockrell and Joe Hawkridge thought
+it a holiday excursion after their previous adventures at
+sea.</p>
+
+<p>In the roadstead of the James were two men-of-war,
+small frigates flying the broad pennant of the Royal
+Navy. A conference was held in the cabin of the senior
+officer, to which Captain Wellsby and Colonel Stuart
+were invited. The latest advices made it seem certain
+that Blackbeard still lurked off the coast of the Caro<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span>linas.
+Planters had reported seeing his ship in Pamlico
+Sound and it was also learned that he had been in communication
+with the disloyal Governor Eden at Bath
+Town. A letter had been intercepted, in handwriting
+of the Governor's secretary, and addressed to Captain
+Teach, which included these words:</p>
+
+<p>"<i>I have sent you four of your men. They are all I
+can meet with about town. Be upon your guard.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>This was readily construed to mean that Blackbeard
+was in haste to recall such of his crew as had strayed
+ashore. At the council of war in the frigate's cabin, a
+proclamation was read. It offered a handsome reward
+for the capture of Captain Edward Teach, dead or alive,
+and lesser rewards for other pirates.</p>
+
+<p>It was the decision that the two frigates were unhandy
+for cruising inshore. Therefore officers and men would
+be chosen from them to fill the complements of two
+sloops, light and active craft which would be unhampered
+by batteries of cannon. They would be employed
+for boarding Blackbeard's ship while the Charles Town
+brigantine <i>King George</i> should convoy them and engage
+in the attack if the depth of water should permit.
+The naval officer selected to command the sloops was
+Lieutenant Maynard who went off to the <i>King George</i>
+to inspect her and make a call of courtesy.</p>
+
+<p>He was especially cordial to Master Cockrell and
+Gunner's Mate Joe Hawkridge, laying aside the stiff
+dignity of naval rank. To his persuasive argument that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>
+they enter the royal service with promise of quick promotion,
+they turned a deaf ear although they were wonderfully
+taken with him. He was a gentle, soft-spoken
+young man with a boyish smile who blushed when
+pressed to talk of his own exploits against the Spanish,
+the Dutch, and the French in Britannia's wooden walls.
+His own questions were mostly about Blackbeard's
+fighting quality. Would he make a stand against disciplined
+tars who were accustomed to close in, hammer-and-tongs?
+Joe Hawkridge answered to this:</p>
+
+<p>"I ne'er saw him in action against a king's ship, and
+all his wild nonsense is apt to delude ye into thinkin' him
+a drunken play-actor. But you will never take him
+alive, so long as those bandy legs have strength to prop
+him up."</p>
+
+<p>"I look forward to meeting him with a deal of pleasure.
+It may be my good fortune to measure swords
+with him," observed Lieutenant Maynard.</p>
+
+<p>Joe Hawkridge was puzzled by this gentle fire-eater
+with the complexion of a girl. Nothing could have been
+more unlike the ramping, roaring pirates of Blackbeard's
+dirty crew who tried to terrify by their very appearance.
+After the lieutenant had returned to his
+frigate, Jack Cockrell remarked:</p>
+
+<p>"A most misleading man, Joe. You cannot picture
+him seeking the bubble reputation at the cannon's
+mouth, as Will Shakespeare saith."</p>
+
+<p>"Blackbeard will bite him in two," replied Joe. "He<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>
+is too pretty to be risked in such a slaughter pen. I
+own up to feelin' squeamish on my own account, hardy
+pirate though I be."</p>
+
+<p>"This Lieutenant Maynard is welcome to measure
+swords with Blackbeard," said Jack, "and I shall not
+quarrel with him for the honor. Pick me a pirate with
+a wooden leg, Joe, or one that still shakes with Spanish
+fever."</p>
+
+<p>"My only chance of getting out with a whole skin
+is to lug a sack of flour under one arm and play the ghost
+o' Jesse Strawn."</p>
+
+<p>Expeditiously the brigantine and the two sloops sailed
+out of the James River to head for the North Carolina
+coast and first rake the nooks and bays of Pamlico
+Sound. There was no intention of offering Blackbeard
+fair odds in battle. With men and vessels enough it was
+resolved to exterminate him, like ridding a house of rats
+or other vermin. If he had gone out to sea, then the
+pursuers would wait and watch for his return to his
+favorite haunts in these waters. There was every reason
+to believe, however, that he was concealed inshore, within
+easy distance of his friend Governor Eden.</p>
+
+<p>Failing to find him in Pamlico Sound, it was debated
+whether to cruise farther to the southward. Now Master
+Jack Cockrell and his chum had said nothing to the
+officers concerning the treasure in the Cherokee swamp.
+They felt bound in honor not to reveal it without the
+consent of Bill Saxby and old Trimble Rogers who were<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>
+partners in the enterprise. Moreover, Lieutenant Maynard
+and the Virginia officers would feel bound to turn
+the treasure over to the crown or its representatives.
+Governor Eden of North Carolina would undoubtedly
+claim it as found within his territory and this meant that
+he would steal most of it for himself.</p>
+
+<p>It thrilled the lads when Colonel Stuart told them
+that this Provincial squadron would cruise as far as
+Cherokee Inlet before working to the northward again.
+Information had led the officers to believe that Blackbeard
+had lost many men by desertion while his ship lay
+at Bath Town and near by. They had been roving about
+the plantations and making a nuisance of themselves
+and seemed ready to quit their red-handed despot of a
+master. In this event he might have sought his old
+hiding-place at the Inlet sooner than risk a clash with
+the force which had been sent after him and of which
+he had been warned by Governor Eden.</p>
+
+<p>Lieutenant Maynard scouted in advance with the two
+sloops because there was small danger of their getting
+aground and they could be moved along with oars if the
+wind failed. The brigantine kept further offshore but
+within signaling distance. She was running within sight
+of the scattering barrier of low islands when Captain
+Wellsby summoned Joe Hawkridge and informed
+him:</p>
+
+<p>"You will act as pilot, Joe, once we fetch sounding
+on the Twelve Fathom Bank. The chart is faulty, as ye<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>
+know, and me and my mates are in strange waters with
+a'mighty little elbow-room. You know the marks, I
+take it."</p>
+
+<p>"Aye, sir, I do that," answered Joe. "Then I stays
+aboard ship and miss the chance to go pokin' about with
+a cutlass? I'm all screwed up to terrible deeds, Cap'n
+Wellsby, after a spell o' mortal fear. And who takes
+care of Master Cockrell if he goes in a boat?"</p>
+
+<p>"His own lusty right arm, Joe. Avast with your
+melancholy. We must first catch this Blackbeard."</p>
+
+<p>Presently Joe Hawkridge footed it up the main
+shrouds to scan the sea ahead and try to get a glimpse
+of that sandy bit of exposed shoal on which he had been
+marooned. This would enable him to find the entrance
+to the outer channel and so con the brigantine in from
+seaward. While he shaded his eyes with his hand
+against the glare of the morning sun, one of the sloops
+hoisted a string of bright signal flags and fired two guns.
+The other sloop was seen to lower her topsail and wait
+for the <i>King George</i> to come up.</p>
+
+<p>Joe Hawkridge climbed higher and found a perch
+where he could discern the spars of a vessel etched almost
+as fine as threads against the azure horizon. He
+was almost certain that the ship he saw was very close
+to that tiny cay of which he had such unhappy knowledge.
+Soon he was able to perceive that the vessel's sails
+were furled. This was an odd place for an anchorage.
+His conjecture was confirmed when the <i>King George</i><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span>
+passed close to the nearest sloop and Lieutenant Maynard
+shouted:</p>
+
+<p>"Stranded hard and fast! And she is deucedly like
+Blackbeard's brig."</p>
+
+<p>Scampering to the deck, Joe Hawkridge mustered
+his gun's crew as Jack Cockrell came running up to say:</p>
+
+<p>"Trapped on the very islet where he cast you and
+the other pirates! His chickens have come home to
+roost."</p>
+
+<p>"Call me no pirate or I'll stretch ye with a handspike,"
+grinned Joe. "'Tis a plaguey poor word in
+this company. Aye, Cap'n Ed'ard Teach has a taste
+of his own medicine and he will get a worse dose this day
+than ever he served me."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE GREAT FIGHT OF CAPTAIN TEACH</h3>
+
+
+<div class='unindent'><big>Y</big>ES, there was Blackbeard's ship hard in the sand
+which had gripped her keel while she was steering
+to enter the Cherokee Inlet. There was no
+pearly vapor of swamp mist out here to shroud her from
+attack. The air was clear and bright, with a robust
+breeze which stirred a flashing surf on the shoals. Under
+lower sails, the two sloops watchfully crept nearer
+until their crews could examine the stranded brig and
+read the story of her plight. She stood on a slant with
+the decks sloped toward the enemy. This made it impossible
+to use her guns with any great effect.</div>
+
+<p>Captain Wellsby tacked ship and kept the <i>King
+George</i> well away from the cay, as Joe Hawkridge advised.
+With an ebbing tide, it was unsafe to venture
+into shallower water in order to pound Blackbeard's
+vessel with broadsides. Lieutenant Maynard came
+aboard in a small boat and was quite the dandy with his
+brocaded coat and ruffles and velvet small-clothes. One
+might have thought he had engaged to dance the minuet.
+Colonel Stuart met him in a spick-and-span uniform of
+His Majesty's Foot, cross-belts pipe-clayed white as<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
+snow, boots polished until they shone. Such gentlemen
+were punctilious in war two hundred years ago.</p>
+
+<p>"Your solid shot will not pound him much at this
+range, my good sir," said the lieutenant. "With his
+hull so badly listed toward us, you can no more than
+splinter the decks while his men take shelter below."</p>
+
+<p>"I grant you that," regretfully replied the soldier.
+"And case-shot will not scatter to do him much harm.
+Shall I blaze away and demoralize the rascals whilst you
+make ready your boats?"</p>
+
+<p>"Toss a few rounds into the varlets, Colonel Stuart.
+It may keep them from massing on deck. One boat
+from your ship, if it please you, with twenty picked men.
+I shall take twenty men from each sloop as boarders."</p>
+
+<p>"Sixty in all?" queried the colonel. "Why not take
+a hundred?"</p>
+
+<p>"They would be tumbling over one another,&mdash;too
+much confusion. This is not a large vessel yonder. We
+must have room on deck to swing and cut."</p>
+
+<p>"I will have my men away in ten minutes, Lieutenant
+Maynard," crisply replied the blonde, raw-boned Scotsman
+with a finger at his hat-brim in courteous salute.
+He proceeded to call the men by name, strapping, sober
+fellows who had followed the sea amid the frequent
+perils of the merchant service. Jack Cockrell was the
+only landsman and he felt greatly honored that he
+should be included. Gone was his unmanly trepidation.
+Was he more worthy to live than these humble seamen<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>
+who fought to make the ocean safer for other voyagers,
+who were true kinsmen of the Elizabethan heroes of
+blue water? He tarried a moment to wring Joe Hawkridge's
+hand in farewell and to tell him:</p>
+
+<p>"If I have ill luck in this adventure, old comrade,&mdash;do
+you mind presenting my best compliments, and&mdash;and
+a fond farewell to Mistress Dorothy Stuart?"</p>
+
+<p>"Strike me, Jack, stow that or you'll have me blubberin',"
+said Joe. "Bring me a lock of Cap'n Teach's
+whiskers as a token for my lass in Fayal if ever I clap
+eyes on her again. And you'd best take this heavy cutlass
+which I whetted a-purpose for ye. 'Twill split a
+pirate like slicin' an apple."</p>
+
+<p>With this useful gift in his hand, Master Cockrell
+swung himself into the boat where Colonel Stuart stood
+in the stern-sheets. Perhaps he, too, was dwelling on a
+fair maid named Dorothy who might be left fatherless
+before the sun climbed an hour higher. The sloops were
+moving nearer the cay under sail and oar, trailing their
+crowded boats behind them. Blackbeard had hauled
+two or three of his guns into such positions that he could
+open fire but the sloops crawled doggedly into the shoal
+water and so screened their boats until these were ready
+to cast off for the final dash.</p>
+
+<p>It was a rare sea picture, the stranded brig with canvas
+loose on the yards and ropes streaming, her listed
+decks a-swarm with pirates in outlandish, vari-colored
+garb, the surf playing about her in a bright dazzle and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>
+the gulls screaming overhead. The broad, squat figure
+of Blackbeard himself was never more conspicuous. He
+no longer strutted the quarter-deck but was all over the
+ship, menacing his men with his pistols, shifting them in
+groups for defense, shouldering bags of munitions, or
+heaping up the grenades and stink-pots to be lighted
+and thrown into the attacking boats.</p>
+
+<p>It was his humor to adorn himself more elaborately
+than usual. Under his broad hat with the great feather
+in it he had stuck lengths of tow matches which were all
+sputtering and burning so that he ran to and fro in a
+cloud of sparks and smoke like that Evil One whom he
+professed to admire. He realized, no doubt, that this
+was likely to be his last stand. The inferno which he
+was so fond of counterfeiting, fairly yawned at his feet.</p>
+
+<p>And now the sloops let go their anchors while from
+astern of them appeared the three boats of the assailants.
+They steered wide of each other to seek different parts
+of the pirate brig and so divide Blackbeard's force. The
+boats of Colonel Stuart and Lieutenant Maynard were
+racing for the honor of first place alongside. Blackbeard
+trained two guns on them, filled with grape and
+chain-shot, and one boat was shattered but it swam long
+enough for the cheering men to pull it to the brig and
+toss their grapples to the rail which was inclined quite
+close to the water. They were in the surf which broke
+against the ship, but this was a mere trifle.</p>
+
+<p>Most of them went up the side like cats, leaping for<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>
+the chains and dead-eyes, slashing at the nettings, swinging
+by a rope's end, or digging their toes in a crack of a
+gun-port. Forward they were pouring over the bowsprit,
+vaulting like acrobats from the anchor stocks, or
+swarming up the stays. It seemed beyond belief that
+they could gain footing on the decks with Blackbeard's
+demons stabbing and hacking and shooting at them, but
+in such manner as this was many a great sea fight won
+in the brave days of old.</p>
+
+<p>Lieutenant Maynard gained his lodgment in the bows
+amid a swirl of pirates who tried to pen him in front of
+the forecastle house. But his tars of the Royal Navy
+were accustomed to close quarters and they straightway
+made room for themselves. Chest to chest and hand to
+hand they hewed their way toward the waist of the ship
+where Colonel Stuart raged like the braw, bonny Highlander
+that he was. Almost at the same time, the third
+boat had made fast under the jutting stern gallery and
+its twenty men were piling in through the cabin windows
+like so many human projectiles.</p>
+
+<p>In the <i>King George</i> brigantine, Captain Jonathan
+Wellsby fidgeted and gnawed his lip, with a telescope at
+his eye, while he watched the conflict in which he could
+scarce distinguish friend from foe. He could see Blackbeard
+charge aft to rally his men and then whirl back to
+lunge into the m&ecirc;l&eacute;e where towered Colonel Stuart's tall
+figure. The powder smoke from pistols and muskets
+drifted in a thin blue haze. Joe Hawkridge was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>
+fairly shaking with nervousness as he said to the skipper:</p>
+
+<p>"There'll be no clearing the decks 'less they down
+that monster of a Cap'n Teach. And he has more lives
+than a cat. See you my dear crony, Master Jack?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I cannot make him out in that mad turmoil,"
+replied Captain Wellsby. "Nip and tuck, I call it,
+Joe."</p>
+
+<p>This was the opinion forced upon Lieutenant Maynard
+as he saw the engagement resolve itself into a series
+of bloody whirlpools, his seamen and the pirates intermingled.
+He won his way past the forecastle into the
+wider spaces of the deck, with only a few of his twenty
+tars on their feet. Colonel Stuart was hard pressed and
+the boarders who had come over the stern had as much as
+they could do to hold their own. Thus far the issue was
+indecisive.</p>
+
+<p>Jack Cockrell had kept close to the colonel, and felt
+amazement that he was still alive. His cheek was laid
+open, a bullet had torn his thigh, and a powder burn
+streaked his neck, but he felt these hurts not at all. It
+was a nightmare from which there seemed no escape.
+He saw Blackbeard rush at him with a raucous shout of:</p>
+
+<p>"The scurvy young cockerel! He will ne'er crow
+again."</p>
+
+<p>Colonel Stuart sprang between them, blades clashed,
+and they were swept apart in another wave of jostling
+combat. A moment later the colonel slipped and fell<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span>
+as a coal-black negro chopped at him with a broken cutlass.
+Jack Cockrell flew at him and they wrestled until
+a hip-lock threw the negro to the deck, where the colonel
+made him one pirate less.</p>
+
+<p>Formidable as these outlaws were, they lacked the
+stern cohesion which had been drilled into the sailors of
+the Royal Navy and likewise learned in the hard school
+of the merchant service. Very slowly the odds were
+shifting against Blackbeard's crew. It was unmistakable
+when Lieutenant Maynard cut his way through to
+join Colonel Stuart, while the third group of boarders
+was advancing little by little from the after quarter.
+This meant that the force was gradually uniting in spite
+of the furious efforts to scatter it.</p>
+
+<p>And now there came an episode which lives in history
+two centuries after that scene of carnage on the decks of
+the stranded brig. It has preserved the name of a
+humble lieutenant of the Royal Navy and saved it from
+the oblivion which is the common lot of most brave men
+who do and dare when duty beckons.</p>
+
+<p>Blackbeard was bleeding from a dozen wounds and
+yet his activity was unabated. He was like a grizzly
+bear at bay. His men began to believe that his league
+with Satan, of which he obscenely boasted, had made him
+invulnerable. He was all that he had proclaimed himself
+to be, the wickedest and most fearsome pirate of the
+Western Ocean. And all the while, the slender, boyish
+Lieutenant Maynard, sailor and gentleman, had one aim<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>
+in mind, and that was to slay Captain Edward Teach
+with his own hand. Nor was he at all content until he
+had cleared a path to where the hairy pirate was playing
+havoc with his broadsword.</p>
+
+<p>With a loud laugh in mockery, Blackbeard snatched a
+loaded pistol from one of his men and fired at this foppish
+young officer who presumed to single him out. The
+ball chipped Maynard's ear and he dodged the pistol
+which was hurled at his head. It was curious to note a
+lull in the general engagement, a little interval of suspense
+while men regained their breath or tried to staunch
+their wounds. They were unconsciously awaiting the
+verdict of this duel between their leaders. Jack Cockrell,
+for instance, finding himself alone by some chance,
+leaned against a stanchion and heard his own blood drip&mdash;drip&mdash;on
+the deck.</p>
+
+<p>It was a fleeting respite. Blackbeard swung his
+sword, with the might of those wide shoulders behind it.
+The lieutenant stepped aside like lightning and the
+bright weapon whistled past his arm. Then they went
+at each other like blacksmiths, sparks flying as steel bit
+steel. Dexterity and a cool wit were a match for the
+pirate's untamable strength. Gory, snarling, Blackbeard
+shortened his stroke to use the point. The lieutenant
+dropped to one knee, thrust upward, and found a
+vital spot.</p>
+
+<p>Blackbeard stood staring at him with wonder in his
+eyes. Then those thick, bowed legs gave way and he<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>
+toppled like a tree uprooted. He passed out quietly
+enough, with no more cursing, and in this last moment
+of sensibility his thoughts appeared to wander far to his
+youth as a brisk merchant seaman out of Bristol port,
+for he was heard to mutter, with a long sigh:</p>
+
+<p>"A pretty babe as ever was, Mollie, and the mortal
+image of its mother."</p>
+
+<p>To his waist the sable beard covered him like a pall
+and one corded arm was flung across his breast and it
+showed the design of the skull and cross-bones pricked
+in India ink. Then as if the dead leader had issued the
+command, the surviving pirates began to fling down
+their weapons and loudly cry for quarter. They need
+not have felt ashamed of the resistance they had made
+up to this time, but now the delirium of combat had
+slackened and Blackbeard was no more. One or two of
+his officers were alive and they knew that the game was
+lost. Reinforcements could be sent from the sloops and
+the brigantine as soon as they were signaled for. And
+there was no flight from a stranded ship. Blackbeard
+had been able to infuse them with his own madness.
+Better chance the gallows than no quarter.</p>
+
+<p>Here and there a few of the most desperate dogs of
+the Spanish Main who had followed Blackbeard's fortunes
+a long time, refused to surrender but they were
+either shot down or overpowered. Captain Wellsby
+was sending off two boats from the <i>King George</i> with
+his surgeon, and the sloops were kedging in closer to the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
+cay with the rising tide. Half the seamen were beyond
+aid and of the pirates no more than twenty were alive.
+Jack Cockrell was thankful to have come off so lightly,
+and he consoled himself with the notion that a scar across
+his cheek would be a manly memento. Colonel Stuart
+had been several times wounded but 'tis hard killing a
+Highlander.</p>
+
+<p>It was Lieutenant Maynard's duty to offer public
+proof that he had slain none other than the infamous
+Blackbeard, wherefore he made no protest when his armorer
+hacked off the head of the dead pirate. There
+was no feeling of chivalry due a fallen foe, valiant
+though his end had been. This horrid trophy was tied
+at the end of a sloop's bowsprit, to be displayed for the
+gratification of all honest sailormen who might behold it
+in port. It was not a gentle age on blue water and
+Captain Edward Teach had been the death of many
+helpless people during his wicked career.</p>
+
+<p>Lieutenant Maynard announced that he would take
+the two sloops into Bath Town, before proceeding to
+Virginia, as they were overcrowded vessels and the survivors
+of the boarding party needed proper care ashore.
+It would also afford the unscrupulous Governor Eden
+of North Carolina an opportunity to see his friend, Captain
+Teach, as a pirate who would divide no more plundered
+merchandise with him.</p>
+
+<p>The brigantine <i>King George</i> was ready to escort them
+into Pamlico Sound, after which she would sail for<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>
+Charles Town. Before the departure from the entrance
+of Cherokee Inlet, the stranded vessel was set afire and
+blazed grandly as the funeral pyre of Blackbeard's stout
+lads who would go no more a-roving.</p>
+
+<p>Never was a nurse more devoted than Joe Hawkridge
+when his comrade was mercifully restored to him. Jack
+was woefully pale and weak but in blithe spirits and
+thankful to have seen the last of Blackbeard.</p>
+
+<p>"Hulled in the leg and a damaged figger-head," said
+Joe, as he sat on the edge of the hero's bunk. "Triflin',
+I call it, when I expected to see you come aboard feet
+first wrapped in a bit o' canvas."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't want to talk about it, Joe. Let's find something
+pleasant. Ho for Charles Town, and the green
+trees and a bench in the shade."</p>
+
+<p>"And a tidy little vessel after a while, you and me and
+the Councilor a-pleasurin' up the coast with men and
+gear to fish up the treasure chest."</p>
+
+<p>"And you believe that Blackbeard never got back to
+the Inlet to save the treasure for himself?" asked Jack.</p>
+
+<p>"Not the way his ship was headed when she struck the
+shoal."</p>
+
+<p>The brigantine was well on her way to Charles Town
+when Captain Wellsby found that Master Cockrell
+could be carried into the comfortable main cabin to rest
+on a cushioned settle for an hour or two at a time. It
+was during one of these visits, when Joe Hawkridge was
+present, that the skipper remembered to say:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Here is a bit of memorandum which may entertain
+you lads. Lieutenant Maynard had Blackbeard's quarters
+searched before the brig was burned. Some valuable
+stuff was found, but nothing what you'd call a
+pirate's treasure."</p>
+
+<p>The lads looked at each other but kept their own
+counsel and Captain Wellsby went on to explain:</p>
+
+<p>"There was a private log, Blackbeard's own journal,
+with a few entries in it, and most of the leaves torn out.
+I made a copy of what could be read, for the late Captain
+Teach was a better pirate than scrivener. Here,
+Jack, you are the scholar."</p>
+
+<p>Jack read aloud this extract, which was about what
+might have been expected:</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Such a day! Rum all out,&mdash;our company somewhat
+sober. A confusion amongst us,&mdash;rogues a-plotting&mdash;great
+talk of separation. So I looked sharp for a
+prize. Took one, with a great deal of liquor on board,
+so kept the company hot, very hot. Then all things
+went well again.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"That sounds familiar enough to me," was Joe
+Hawkridge's comment. "And the rest of his writing
+will be much like it."</p>
+
+<p>"Not so fast," exclaimed Captain Wellsby. "Scan
+the next page, Jack. 'Twill fetch you up all standing.
+Not that it puts gold in our pockets, for we know not
+where to search, but I swear it will make your eyes
+sparkle and your mouth water."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Trying to hide his excitement, Jack saw a kind of
+rough inventory, and it ran like this:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">"Where I Hid Itt This Cruse:<br />
+
+<div class='hang1'>1 Bag 54 Silver Barrs. 1 Bag 79 Barrs &amp;
+Peaces of Silver.</div>
+
+<div class='hang1'>1 Bag Coyned Gold. 1 Bag Dust Gold. 2 Bags
+Gold Barrs.</div>
+
+<div class='hang1'>1 Bag Silver Rings &amp; Sundry Precious Stones.
+3 Bags Unpolyshed Stones.</div>
+
+<div class='hang1'>1 Silver Box set with Diamonds. 4 Golden
+Lockets.</div>
+
+<div class='hang1'>Also 1 Silver Porringer&mdash;2 Gold Boxons&mdash;7
+Green Stones&mdash;Rubies Great &amp; Small 67&mdash;P'cl
+Peaces of Eight &amp; Dollars&mdash;Also 1 Bag
+Lump Silver&mdash;a Small Chaine&mdash;a corral Necklace&mdash;1
+Bag English Crowns."</div></div>
+
+<p>Captain Jonathan Wellsby listened to this luscious
+recital with an air of mild amusement. He was of a
+temper too stolid and sensible to waste his time on random
+treasure hunting. Blackbeard might have chosen
+his hiding-place anywhere along hundreds of leagues of
+coast. He could understand the agitation of these two
+adventurous lads to whom this memorandum was like a
+magic spell. Of such was the spirit of youth.</p>
+
+<p>"Any more of it?" demanded Joe Hawkridge.</p>
+
+<p>"The next page was ripped out of the journal," answered
+the skipper. "What cruise did he mean? If it
+was this last one, he may have hid it on the Virginia or
+Carolina coast."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Master Cockrell gave it as an excuse that he had sat
+up long enough and would return to his bunk. He was
+fairly bursting for a conference with Joe, and as soon as
+they were alone he exclaimed:</p>
+
+<p>"It may be the sea-chest! What do you think?"</p>
+
+<p>"A handsome clue, I call it, something to warm the
+cockles of your heart," grinned the sea urchin. "Aye,
+Jack, I should wager he wrote that down whilst he lay
+at anchor in Cherokee Inlet."</p>
+
+<p>"It seems shabby of us to keep the secret from Captain
+Wellsby, but there is an obligation on us&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"To Bill Saxby and the old sea wolf," said Joe.
+"We'll not forget this trump of a skipper when it comes
+to splittin' up the treasure."</p>
+
+<p>"I am anxious for Captain Bonnet and his crew," remarked
+Jack. "With this crusade against pirates
+afoot, our friends may be hanged before we see them
+again."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE OLD BUCCANEER IS LOYAL</h3>
+
+
+<div class='unindent'><big>S</big>ORROW mingled with rejoicing when the <i>King
+George</i> brigantine sailed into Charles Town harbor.
+The sea fight off Cherokee Inlet had taken
+a heavy toll of brave seamen and there were vacant
+chairs and aching hearts ashore, but the fiendish Blackbeard
+had been blotted out and would no more harry the
+coast. Small and rude as was this pioneer settlement,
+it was most fair and attractive to the eyes of young Master
+Cockrell and Joe Hawkridge. In the house of
+Uncle Peter Forbes they rested at their ease and
+planned sedate careers for themselves.</div>
+
+<p>Even the treasure ceased to be uppermost in their
+lively discussions. It could wait a while. They were
+no longer under the spell of its influence. This different
+world in which they now dwelt so contentedly made
+their adventures seem like shadowy figments with precious
+little romance in them. And neither lad expressed
+any great anxiety to go exploring the noisome Cherokee
+swamp and to challenge the ghost of Blackbeard.</p>
+
+<p>Without a sign of rebellion, Jack returned to his
+books and lessons in Parson Throckmorton's garden.
+The learning already acquired he began to pass on to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
+Joe Hawkridge, who was a zealous pupil and determined
+to read and write and cipher without letting the
+grass grow under his feet. It was this young pirate's
+ambition to make a shipping merchant of himself, and
+Councilor Forbes found him employment in a warehouse
+where the planters traded their rice, resin, and
+indigo for the varied merchandise brought out from
+England. Jack aspired to manage his uncle's plantation
+and to acquire lands of his own and some day to sit
+in the Governor's Council.</p>
+
+<p>Of a Sunday morning he went to the little English
+church, dressed in his best and using a cane, for he
+limped from the wound in his thigh. Joe Hawkridge
+walked with him, careful to banish his grin, and sat in
+the Councilor's pew where he paid proper attention to
+the prayers and responses. This caused some gossip
+but the ocean waif was winning his way to favor by dint
+of industry, a shrewd wit, and his perennial good humor.</p>
+
+<p>Frequently they escorted fair Dorothy Stuart home
+from church. She was fonder than ever of stalwart
+Master Cockrell because the colonel had told her he
+would have been a dead man had not the lad intervened
+to save him from the stroke of a negro pirate. Alas,
+however, it was not that sentimental devotion for which
+the lovelorn Jack yearned, and he confided to Joe that
+his existence was blighted. This evoked no sympathy
+from the fickle Hawkridge, who was forgetting his
+black-eyed lass in the Azores and was already a slave to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span>
+Dorothy Stuart. She laughed at them both and was
+their true friend, tender, and whimsical and anxious for
+their welfare. It was a valuable chapter in their education.</p>
+
+<p>One morning while Joe was at work in the warehouse
+near the harbor, he heard a commotion in the street and
+was about to run out when his employer came in and
+explained:</p>
+
+<p>"Two pirates captured,&mdash;just as I happened to pass.
+The knaves landed from a boat in broad daylight, unaware
+that Charles Town has mended its loose habit toward
+such gentry."</p>
+
+<p>"What will be done with 'em?" quickly asked Joe,
+with an unhappy premonition.</p>
+
+<p>"They were recognized as two of Stede Bonnet's old
+hands that used to resort to the tavern. Soldiers of the
+Governor's guard have been sent for to drag them to the
+gaol."</p>
+
+<p>Joe hastened out but slackened his pace to lag behind
+the crowd of idlers who were jostling the prisoners along
+with hoots and jeers. Yes, there was the tall, gaunt
+frame and gray head of old Trimble Rogers whose mien
+was so forbidding and masterful that the mob forbore
+to handle him too roughly, unarmed though he was. At
+his elbow trudged chubby Bill Saxby, gazing about him
+with those wide blue eyes in which was not a trace of
+guile. Joe realized that for him to intercede would
+make matters worse. He was a reformed pirate on<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span>
+probation and was known to have sailed with Blackbeard
+himself.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore he darted into another street and sped to
+find Jack Cockrell, who chanced to be at home. They
+rushed into the room where Uncle Peter Forbes was
+writing at his desk and informed him that their two
+staunch comrades had come ashore to find them and were
+already in custody and something must be done to save
+them from the wrath of Governor Johnson, who had a
+mortal distaste for pirates still at large. The Councilor
+calmed the perturbation by assuring them:</p>
+
+<p>"I have already spoken to His Excellency in behalf
+of these two men should they appear in this port. He
+was not wholly pleased but promised clemency should
+they offer to repent and if I gave surety for the pledge."</p>
+
+<p>"They will be ready to live as respectable as Joe,"
+impetuously declared Master Cockrell. "I'll go bail
+on it. Bill Saxby is a tradesman by nature and if you
+will lend him enough money to set himself up as a linen-draper
+and haberdasher, Uncle Peter, he can live happily
+ever after."</p>
+
+<p>"And old Trimble Rogers has sailed his last cruise
+under the Jolly Roger, Councilor," put in Joe Hawkridge.
+"His timbers are full o' dry rot and he seeks a
+safe mooring."</p>
+
+<p>"There seems no end to the bad company you drag
+me into," quoth Uncle Peter. "My hat and broadcloth
+cloak, Jack, and let us fare to the gaol and see what<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span>
+these awkward visitors have to say. After that I will
+attend upon the Governor."</p>
+
+<p>In better spirits the anxious lads followed the dignified
+Secretary of the Council to the strongly built gaol
+on the edge of the town. In a very gloomy cell behind
+iron bars they found the luckless brace of pirates, shackled
+hand and foot. Bill Saxby took it like a placid
+philosopher but the ancient buccaneer was spitting
+Spanish oaths and condemning the hospitality of
+Charles Town in violent terms. He quieted instantly
+at sight of his young friends and the harsh, wrinkled
+visage fairly beamed as he shouted:</p>
+
+<p>"Our <i>camaradas</i>, Bill. Here they be, to haul us out
+of this filthy hole! I forgive the unmannerly folks that
+allus used to welcome us."</p>
+
+<p>They shook hands through the bars while Uncle Peter
+stood aside. He felt that his official station forbade his
+joining this fraternal reunion. In the narrow corridor
+he chatted with the gaoler to pass the time while Bill
+Saxby was explaining to the lads:</p>
+
+<p>"We was in duty bound, in a manner of speakin', to
+run you down as soon as possible and make a report.
+Eh, Trimble?"</p>
+
+<p>"Aye, Bill, to see what was to be done about the treasure.
+We wouldn't have 'em think we had run off with
+it. D'ye see, Master Cockrell, me and Bill took Cap'n
+Bonnet into our confidence. He is an honorable man
+and to be mentioned along with the great Cap'n Ed'ard<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>
+Davis what I was shipmates with in the South Sea and
+at the sack of&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Stow it, grandsire," cried Bill. "I don't want to
+linger in gaol while you spin that long-winded yarn.
+Tell the lads what they want to know."</p>
+
+<p>"If I weren't chained to the wall, Bill, I'd put my fist
+in your eye," severely retorted the veteran. "As I was
+a-sayin', Cap'n Bonnet was all courtesy and allowed the
+treasure belonged to us and he was ready to help find it."</p>
+
+<p>"We told him we had to join up with our gentleman
+partner, Master Cockrell, and win his consent," said
+Bill, "afore we put our hooks on that blessed sea-chest."</p>
+
+<p>"Which is exactly how I felt about you," Jack told
+them and he was greatly touched by this proof of their
+unbending fidelity. "But how did you manage it to
+reach Charles Town?"</p>
+
+<p>"Cap'n Bonnet hove to outside the bar last night,"
+explained Trimble Rogers, "and gave us a handy boat
+to sail in with."</p>
+
+<p>The wary Joe Hawkridge took alarm at this and put
+a finger to his lips. It was unwise to parade the fact
+that Stede Bonnet cruised so near. His Excellency,
+the Governor, was anxious that he should share the fate
+of Blackbeard. Jack Cockrell had no fear that his
+Uncle Peter would be a tale-bearer. His private honor
+would forbid because this interview with the two lads
+was a privileged communication. What made Jack a
+trifle anxious was the presence of the gaol keeper in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>
+corridor. He was a sneaking sort of man, soft of tread
+and oily of speech and inclined to curry favor with those
+in authority.</p>
+
+<p>Councilor Peter Forbes had tactfully withdrawn this
+person beyond earshot but he began to edge toward the
+cell. Old Trimble Rogers tried to heed Joe's cautionary
+signal but what he meant to be a whisper was a hoarse
+rumble as he explained:</p>
+
+<p>"Cap'n Bonnet sends word he will be off this coast
+again in thirty days. He will come ashore hisself, to
+Sullivan's Island to get the answer, whether you are to
+go with us, Master Cockrell, to Cherokee Inlet."</p>
+
+<p>Jack glanced at the gaol keeper but he was a dozen
+feet away and deep in talk with Mr. Forbes. There
+was no sign that this confidence had been overheard.
+Bill Saxby scolded the buccaneer for his careless speech
+but the old man had been a freebooter too long to be
+easily tamed. With artful design, Jack led him away
+from this dangerous ground and suggested:</p>
+
+<p>"You are done with pirating? And will you both be
+ready to stay ashore in Charles Town after this,&mdash;this
+certain errand is accomplished?"</p>
+
+<p>"I swear it gladly and on my own Bible," answered
+Trimble Rogers.</p>
+
+<p>"Swear it for me," said Bill Saxby.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Forbes interrupted and told the lads to go home
+and await his conference with Governor Johnson. It
+proved to be a session somewhat stormy but the upshot<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>
+was a pardon conditioned on good behavior. The convincing
+argument was that these men had been faithful
+to Master Cockrell through thick and thin and had saved
+him from perishing in the Cherokee swamp. Moreover,
+it might be an inducement to others of Stede Bonnet's
+crew to surrender themselves and forsake their evil ways.</p>
+
+<p>No sooner were these two pirates released from gaol
+than they found an active friend in Mr. Peter Forbes.
+He went about it quietly, for obvious reasons, but he
+felt under great obligation to them for their goodness
+to his nephew. Just at this time one of the shop-keepers
+became a bankrupt because of unthrifty habits and
+too much card-playing. Through an agent, Peter
+Forbes purchased the stock of muslins and calicos, of
+brocades and taffetas, calash bonnets, satin petticoats,
+shoe-buckles, laces, and buttons. And having given his
+promissory notes for said merchandise, Bill Saxby
+proudly hung his own sign-board over the door.</p>
+
+<p>There was a flutter among the ladies. Here was a
+noteworthy sensation, to be served by an obsequious
+pirate with innocent blue eyes who had sailed the Spanish
+Main. A few days and it was evident that William
+Saxby, late of London, would conduct a thriving trade.
+He was fairly enraptured with his good fortune and
+congenial occupation and took it most amiably when
+Jack Cockrell or Joe Hawkridge sauntered in to tease
+him. He was a disgrace to Stede Bonnet, said they, and
+never had a pirate fallen to such a low estate as this.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Trimble Rogers was in no situation to rant at smug
+William, the linen draper. The old sea wolf who had
+outlived the most glorious era of the storied buccaneers,
+had a few gold pieces tucked away in his belt and at
+first he was content to loaf about the tavern, with an
+audience to listen to his wondrous tales which ranged
+from Henry Morgan to the great Captain Edward
+Davis. But he had never been a sot or an idler and
+soon he found himself lending a hand to assist the landlord
+in this way or that. And when disorder occurred,
+a word from this gray, hawk-eyed rover was enough to
+quell the wildest roisterers from the plantations.</p>
+
+<p>Children strayed to the tavern green to sit upon his
+knee and twist those fierce mustachios of his, and their
+mothers ceased to snatch them away when they learned
+to know him better. Sometimes in his leisure hours he
+pored over his tattered little Bible with muttering lips
+and found pleasure in the Psalmist's denunciation of
+his enemies who were undoubtedly Spaniards in some
+other guise. He puttered about the flower beds with
+spade and rake and kept the bowling green clipped
+close with a keen sickle. In short, there was a niche for
+Trimble Rogers in his old age and he seemed well satisfied
+to fill it, just as Admiral Benbow spent his time
+among his posies at Deptford when he was not bombarding
+or blockading the French fleet off Dunkirk.</p>
+
+<p>Jack Cockrell halted for a chat while passing the
+tavern and these two shipmates retired to a quiet corner<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span>
+of the porch. The blind fiddler was plying a lively bow
+and a dozen boys and girls danced on the turf. Trimble
+Rogers surveyed them with a fatherly aspect as he said:</p>
+
+<p>"They ain't afeard of me, Jack, not one of 'em. Was
+ever a worn out old hulk laid up in a fairer berth?"</p>
+
+<p>"None of the sea fever left, Trimble? What about
+Captain Bonnet? He is due off the bar two days hence.
+My uncle frowns upon my sailing with him to seek the
+treasure. He insists that I steer clear of pirates."</p>
+
+<p>"And that's entirely proper, Jack. I look at things
+different like, now I be a worthy citizen. 'Tis better to
+fit out a little expedition of our own, if we can drag
+silly Bill out of his rubbishy shop."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, he will come fast enough after a while. We
+are all tired of the sea just now," said Jack. "What
+about Captain Bonnet and meeting him at Sullivan's
+Island to pass the word that we must decline his courteous
+invitation?"</p>
+
+<p>"I shall tend to that," answered the retired buccaneer,
+"And from what gossip I glean in the tavern,
+Cap'n Bonnet had best steer for his home port of Barbadoes
+and quit his fancy piratin'. This fractious
+Governor has set his heart on hangin' him. And Colonel
+Stuart is up and about again and has ordered the <i>King
+George</i> to fit for sea. 'Tis rumored he has sent messages
+to the north'ard for Lieutenant Maynard to sail
+another cruise in his company."</p>
+
+<p>"Then be sure you warn Stede Bonnet," strongly ad<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span>vised
+Jack. "I would not be disloyal to the Province
+or to mine own good uncle, but one good turn deserves
+another."</p>
+
+<p>Two days after this, Trimble Rogers vanished from
+the tavern and found Jack's canoe tied in a cove beyond
+the settled part of the town. It was in the evening of
+this same day that Jack was reading in his room by candle-light
+when a tap-tap on the window shutter startled
+him. He threw it open and dimly perceived that
+Dorothy Stuart stood there. Her face was white in the
+gloom and she wore a dress of some dark stuff. At her
+beckoning gesture, Jack slipped through the window
+and silently led her into the lane.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Jack, I have been so torn betwixt scruples,"
+she softly confided. "And I hope I am not doing
+wrong. If I am disloyal to my dear father, may I be
+forgiven. But I have made myself believe that there is
+a stronger obligation."</p>
+
+<p>"It concerns Stede Bonnet," murmured Jack, reading
+the motive of this secret errand.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, you are bound to befriend him, Jack, on your
+honor as a gentleman."</p>
+
+<p>"He has been warned to keep clear of Charles Town,
+Dorothy. Trimble Rogers has gone off to meet him."</p>
+
+<p>"But it is worse than that. The keeper of the gaol,
+Jason Cutter, was closeted with my father this morning.
+I heard something that was said. Soldiers have been
+sent to Sullivan's Island."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"To capture Captain Bonnet?" wrathfully exclaimed
+Jack. "Did Colonel Stuart go with them?
+Does he know why Stede Bonnet risks putting into this
+harbor in a small boat? It is to do a deed of pure friendship
+and chivalry."</p>
+
+<p>"All my father understands is what the gaoler reported,"
+replied Dorothy, "and the Governor acted on
+this evidence. No, he did not go with the troops but
+sent a major in command."</p>
+
+<p>"Too late for me to be of service, alas! If they take
+Captain Bonnet alive, he will most certainly hang. And
+Bill Saxby and Trimble Rogers will be embroiled in
+some desperate attempt to aid his escape from gaol."</p>
+
+<p>"I am a dreadful, wicked girl to be thus in league
+with pirates," sighed Mistress Dorothy, "but I confess
+to you, Jack dear, that it would grieve my heart to see
+this charming pirate wear a hempen halter."</p>
+
+<p>"My rival, is he? So I have found you out," flared
+Jack, pretending vast indignation. "Nevertheless, I
+shall still be true to him."</p>
+
+<p>"And to me, I trust," she fondly replied. "Oh, I
+feel so thankful that faithful Trimble Rogers is keeping
+tryst. He will hear the soldiers blundering about in
+time to make Captain Bonnet take heed and shove off."</p>
+
+<p>Jack walked home with her, very glad of the excuse,
+but with jealousy rankling in his bosom. It was not a
+lasting malady, however, and he had forgotten it next
+morning when he went early to the tavern to look for<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span>
+Trimble Rogers. There he found the major of the detachment
+at breakfast with an extraordinary story to
+tell. He had made a landing on Sullivan's Island after
+dark and deployed some of his men to patrol the beach
+that faced the ocean. The squad which remained with
+him had surprised a man lurking amongst the trees.
+Pursued and fired at, he had led them an infernal chase
+until they burst out upon the open beach. There they
+heard the sound of oars and voices in a boat which was
+making in for the shore. The hunted man raised his
+voice in one stentorian shout of:</p>
+
+<p>"Pull out to sea, Cap'n Bonnet. And 'ware this
+coast. The soldiers are on my heels. Old Trimble
+Rogers sends a fare-ye-well."</p>
+
+<p>The boat was wrenched about in a trice and moved
+away from the island, soon disappearing in the direction
+of the bar. The major's men had shot at it but without
+effect. When they had rushed to capture the fugitive
+who had shouted the warning, they found him prone
+upon the sand. There was not a scratch on him and yet
+he was quite dead. The prodigious exertion had broken
+his heart, ventured the major, and it had ceased to beat.
+His body would be prepared for Christian burial because
+of the esteem in which he was already held by
+many of the townspeople.</p>
+
+<p>To Jack Cockrell and Joe Hawkridge it was sad
+news indeed but tender-hearted Bill Saxby mourned
+like one who had lost a parent. He closed the shop for<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span>
+a day and hung black ribbons on the knob. They agreed
+that the end had come for Trimble Rogers as he would
+have wished it, giving his life in loyal service to a friend
+and master. And perhaps it was better thus than for
+the creeping disabilities of old age to overtake him.</p>
+
+<p>"He knew he was liable to pop off," said Bill, "with
+the rheumatism getting closer to his heart all the time.
+And he told me, did Trimble, that his share of the treasure
+was to go to the poor and needy of the town. Orphans
+and such was Trimble's weakness."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
+
+<h3>THE QUEST FOR PIRATES' GOLD</h3>
+
+
+<div class='unindent'><big>A</big> SMALL sloop was making its leisurely way up
+the Carolina coast with a crew of a dozen men
+all told. The skipper was Captain Jonathan
+Wellsby who was taking this holiday cruise before sailing
+for England to command a fine new ship in the
+colonial trade. In the cabin were Jack Cockrell and
+Joe Hawkridge, Councilor Peter Arbuthnot Forbes,
+and that brisk young linen draper William Saxby. In
+the forecastle were trusty seamen who had sailed in the
+<i>Plymouth Adventure</i>. The sloop's destination was
+Cherokee Inlet and she was equipped with tackle and
+gear for a peculiar kind of fishing.</div>
+
+<p>For once they made a voyage without fear of pirates.
+Safely the sloop passed in by the outlying cay where
+the charred bones of Blackbeard's brig were washed by
+the surf. An anchorage was found in the bight where
+the <i>Revenge</i> had tarried, close by the beach and the
+greensward of the pirates' old camp. After diligent
+preparation all hands manned a boat which pulled into
+the mouth of the sluggish creek. With axes to clear the
+entanglements and men enough to shove over the muddy<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span>
+shoals the boat was slowly forced up-stream and then
+into the smaller creek at the fork of the waters.</p>
+
+<p>Uncle Peter Forbes was as gay as a truant schoolboy.
+This was the lark of a lifetime. The two lads,
+however, were uneasy and depressed. To them this
+sombre region was haunted, if not by ghosts then by
+memories as unhappy. They would not have been surprised
+to see Blackbeard skulking in the tall grass, his
+head bound in red calico, his pistols cocked to ambush
+them. And, alas, old Trimble Rogers was not along to
+protect them with his musket. He had lived and
+dreamed in expectation of this quest.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll find no treasure, nary a penny of it," dolefully
+observed Joe Hawkridge who had actually begun
+to shiver.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course we can find the sea-chest, you ninny,"
+scolded Jack.</p>
+
+<p>"Dead or alive, Cap'n Ed'ard Teach flew away with
+it afore now," was Joe's rejoinder. "He was a master
+one at black magic."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't chatter like an idiot," spoke up Uncle Peter
+who was wildly brushing the mosquitoes from a sun-blistered
+nose. "My faith, I cannot understand how
+you lads got out of this swamp alive. It breeds all the
+plagues of Egypt."</p>
+
+<p>They came to the tiny lagoon and rounded the bend
+beyond which the pirogue had capsized Blackbeard's
+cock-boat. There was nothing to indicate that any hu<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span>man
+being had visited this lonely spot since that sensational
+encounter. No trees had been cut down to serve
+as purchases for lifting the sea-chest from its oozy hiding-place.
+It was agreed that some traces would have
+remained if Blackbeard had been at work here before
+his death.</p>
+
+<p>A camp was made upon the higher ground of the
+knoll and the party went about its task with skill and
+deliberation. Jointed sounding rods of iron were
+screwed together and the exact position of the spot determined
+from Jack Cockrell's chart and description.
+But neither he nor Joe Hawkridge could be coaxed into
+lending more active assistance. They were afraid of
+disturbing the bones of the drowned seaman who had
+fled from Blackbeard's bloody dirk. Jack had seen him
+go down and it was not a pleasant recollection. And
+so these two heroes who had faced so many other perils
+without flinching were content to putter about half-heartedly
+and let the others exert themselves.</p>
+
+<p>All one day they prodded and sounded but struck
+only sunken logs. What gave them more concern than
+this was the discovery that the slender rods, sharpened
+to a point, could be driven through one yielding stratum
+after another of muck and ooze. Through myriad years
+the decaying vegetable matter of this rank swamp had
+been accumulating in these layers of muck. There was
+no telling how deep down the weight of the sea-chest
+might have caused it to settle.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Mr. Peter Forbes began to lose his youthful optimism
+and took four men to go and dig in the knoll while the
+others continued to search for the chest. The wooden
+cross still stood above the grave of Jesse Strawn and
+the long-leaf pines murmured his requiem. Having selected
+at random a place where he thought treasure
+ought to be, the worthy Councilor wielded a shovel until
+he perspired rivers.</p>
+
+<p>"Confound it, Blackbeard must have left a scrap of
+paper somewhere to give us the proper instructions,"
+he complained. "'Tis the custom of all proper pirates.
+Look at the trouble he has put us to."</p>
+
+<p>"I helped search the cabin afore the brig was set
+afire," replied one of the seamen, "and all the writin'
+we found was in the bit of a book with the leaves tore
+out, same as Cap'n Wellsby made a fair copy of."</p>
+
+<p>"That explains it," cried Uncle Peter. "I have no
+doubt the vile Blackbeard destroyed his private note
+of where he hid it, just to make the matter more difficult
+for us honest men."</p>
+
+<p>This was plausible, but it failed to solve the riddle.
+A day or two of impatient digging and the portly Secretary
+of the Council was almost wrecked in mind and
+body, what with insects and heat, ague and fatigue.
+The ardor of his companions had likewise slackened.
+The boat's crew swore that the condemned sea-chest
+must have sunk all the way to China. Joe Hawkridge
+still argued that Blackbeard had whisked it away in a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span>
+cloud of smoke and brimstone. The unhappy Mr. Peter
+Forbes suggested:</p>
+
+<p>"What say you, lads, to dropping down to the sloop
+for a respite from this accursed swamp? There we can
+take comfort and discuss what is to be done next."</p>
+
+<p>Captain Jonathan Wellsby, who was a stubborn man,
+urged that they fish once more for the sunken chest before
+taking a rest, and this was agreed to. The sounding
+rods were plied with vigor and, at length, one of
+them drove against some solid object deep in the mud.
+It was more unyielding than a water-soaked log. The
+iron rod was lifted and rammed down with a thud which
+was like metal striking against metal. The explorers
+forgot the torments of the swamp. Uncle Peter
+Forbes was in no haste to flee the mosquitoes and the
+fever.</p>
+
+<p>The sailors began to rig the spars and tackle as a
+derrick set up on the bank of the creek, with grapple
+hooks like huge tongs to swing out over the water and
+grope in the muddy depths. Absorbed in this fascinating
+task, they were startled beyond measure to hear
+the <i>thump, thump</i> of thole-pins sounding from somewhere
+below them in the swamp. It was no Indian
+pirogue. Only a ship's boat heavily manned could make
+that cadenced noise of oars. Bill Saxby bade the men
+be silent while he held a hand at his ear and harkened
+with taut attention. The mysterious boat, following the
+winding channel of the creek, was drawing nearer.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span>
+Voices could be heard, a rough command, a curse, a
+laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"No honest men, I warrant," growled Captain Jonathan
+Wellsby, ready to take command by virtue of long
+habit. "Who else can they be but pirates, plague 'em.
+And they are betwixt us and the sea. All hands ashore
+and look to your arms. Lively now."</p>
+
+<p>They were bewildered and taken all aback. In this
+holiday excursion after Blackbeard's treasure the party
+had reckoned only with dead or phantom pirates.
+There was some confusion, while Bill Saxby bawled at
+the seamen as addle-pated lubbers. Deserting their
+boat, they scrambled to cover in the tall grass while
+those busy with the derrick gear rushed to catch up
+muskets and powder-horns.</p>
+
+<p>The strange boat was steadily forging up-stream and
+presently it was disclosed to view no more than a cable-length
+away. It was a pinnace filled with ruffianly fellows,
+more than a score of them. No merchant seamen
+these but brethren of the coast, freebooters who were
+gallows-ripe. Bill Saxby was quick to recognize two or
+three of them as old hands of Blackbeard's crew who
+must have deserted their leader in time to escape his
+fate. Presumably they had recruited others of their
+own stamp to go adventuring in the Cherokee swamp.
+They could have only one purpose. The very sight of
+them was enough to explain it. They were in quest of
+treasure like bloodhounds trailing a scent.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Against such a force as this, discretion was the better
+part of valor. A ferocious yell burst from the pinnace
+and a flight of musket balls whistled over the heads of
+the fugitives who had so hastily abandoned their operations
+with the derrick and gear and the boat. Stout Bill
+Saxby and his comrades, finding concealment in the
+swamp, primed their muskets and let fly a volley at the
+pinnace which was an easy target. A pirate standing
+in the stern-sheets clapped a hand to his thigh and sat
+down abruptly. Another one let go his oar to dangle
+a bloody hand.</p>
+
+<p>The pinnace drifted with the tide and stranded on a
+weedy shoal while the blue powder smoke hung over it
+like a fog. For the moment it was a demoralized crew
+of pirates, roaring all manner of threats but at a loss
+how to proceed. The other party took advantage of this
+delay to beat a rapid retreat along the path which led
+to the knoll where the camp was pitched. Upon this
+higher ground they might hope to defend themselves
+against a force which outnumbered them. They ran at
+top speed, bending low, hidden from observation, avoiding
+the pools and bogs.</p>
+
+<p>The pirates were diverted from their hostile intentions
+as soon as they caught sight of the tall spars and
+tackle, and the boat with its sounding rods and other
+gear. With a great clamor they swarmed out of the
+pinnace and began to investigate. This gave the refugees
+on the knoll a little time to make their camp more<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span>
+compact, to wield the shovels furiously and throw up
+intrenchments, to cut down trees for a barricade, to fill
+the water kegs, to prepare to withstand an assault or a
+siege.</p>
+
+<p>The sun went down and the infatuated pirates were
+still exploring the creek, convinced that they could
+straightway lay hold of the treasure they had come to
+find. They kindled a fire on the bank and evidently
+intended to pass the night there. This mightily eased
+the minds of the toilers upon the knoll. Their predicament
+was still awkward in the extreme but the fear of
+sudden death had been lifted. And it seemed possible
+that these bothersome pirates might conclude to leave
+them alone.</p>
+
+<p>It went sorely against the grain, however, to be driven
+away from the precious sea-chest when it was almost
+within their grasp, to have to scuttle from this crew of
+scurvy pirates. Jack Cockrell was for making a sortie
+by night, gustily declaiming to his companions:</p>
+
+<p>"The sentries will be drunk or drowsy. I know these
+swine. A well-timed rush and we can cut 'em down and
+pistol the rest. Didn't they open fire on us from the
+pinnace?"</p>
+
+<p>"Aye, Jack, and we'll fight to save our skins," said
+the cool-headed Captain Wellsby, "but 'tis a desperate
+business to attack yon cut-throats, even by night, and
+there will be men of us hurt and killed. Blackbeard's
+gold is not worth it."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Right sensibly put," declared Mr. Peter Forbes.
+"We had best spend this night in felling more trees and
+notching logs to pile them breast high. If these pirates
+find the sea-chest, they will leave us unmolested. If
+they fail to find it, they may conclude that we have already
+discovered the treasure. In that event, they will
+storm the knoll and give us no quarter."</p>
+
+<p>"It would be rank folly to surrender," said stout Bill
+Saxby. "There be men in the pinnace who have no
+love for me nor for the two lads. 'Twas a shrewd suspicion
+of theirs that Blackbeard had played secret tricks
+in this Cherokee swamp, what with his excursions in
+that little cock-boat."</p>
+
+<p>Keeping vigilant watch, they labored far into the
+night until the camp on the knoll was a hard nut to
+crack, with its surrounding ditch and palisade of logs
+behind which a man could lie and shoot. Now and then
+it might have been noted that Jack Cockrell and Joe
+Hawkridge conferred with their heads together as
+though something private were in the wind. As soon as
+they were relieved from duty, some time before the
+dawn, they stole very softly away from the knoll and
+groped along the path which led to the creek. Curiosity
+and the impetuous folly of youth impelled them to reconnoitre
+the pirates' bivouac.</p>
+
+<p>"We may hear something worth listening to," whispered
+Jack, "and perhaps we can crawl close and steal
+some of their arms."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"None of that," chided young Hawkridge. "I am
+a man of goodly station in Charles Town and I would
+go back with a whole hide."</p>
+
+<p>"You have grown too respectable," grumbled Jack.
+"Here is the chance for one last fling&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>His words stuck in his throat. A gurgle of horrified
+amazement and he tumbled headlong into the grass with
+a bare, sinewy arm wrapped around his neck. He
+fought to free himself but the breath was fairly choked
+out of him. Joe Hawkridge was desperately thrashing
+about in the swamp, gasping and snorting, his cries also
+smothered. In a twinkling they were captives, their
+arms tightly bound behind them, the stifling grip of
+their necks unrelaxed. Weakened almost to suffocation,
+the two lads could make no lively resistance. Jack
+uttered one feeble shout for help but subsided when
+those strong fingers tightened the clutch on his windpipe.</p>
+
+<p>The assailants made no sound. Not a word was uttered.
+There were several of them, for the helpless
+prisoners were picked up bodily and lugged along by
+the head and the heels. They expected to be taken into
+the pirates' camp, believing they had been surprised and
+overpowered by an outlying sentry post. It was an old
+game, reflected Joe Hawkridge, to hold them alive as
+hostages. But he was vastly puzzled when these silent
+kidnappers, deftly picking their way in the darkness,
+took a direction which led them away from the bank of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span>
+the creek. They had forsaken the trampled path and
+were proceeding through the trackless swamp whose pitfalls
+were avoided by a sort of sixth sense.</p>
+
+<p>A mile of this laborious, uncanny progress and the
+bearers dumped their burdens and paused to rest. The
+two lads dizzily crawled to their feet and peered at the
+shadowy figures surrounding them. They heard a guttural
+exclamation and words exchanged in a strange,
+harsh tongue.</p>
+
+<p>"Indians, blow me!" hoarsely whispered Joe, his
+throat sore and swollen.</p>
+
+<p>"Comrade ahoy!" croaked Jack. "No pirates these,
+but Yemassees. Do they save us for the torture?"</p>
+
+<p>"God knows. 'Tis a sorry mischance as ever was.
+I'd sooner meet up with Blackbeard's ghost. Are ye
+badly hurt?"</p>
+
+<p>"Like a man hanged by the neck, Joe, but no mortal
+wounds. Had we minded Uncle Peter we would be safe
+in the sloop by now. One more day of hunting that
+filthy treasure undid us."</p>
+
+<p>The half dozen Yemassees squatted about them, talking
+in low tones, and offered no further violence. Presumably
+they were waiting for daybreak, having conveyed
+their prisoners beyond all chance of rescue. The
+two lads shivered with fear and weariness. They were
+bruised and breathless and the thongs which tightly
+bound their wrists made their arms ache intolerably.
+Bitter was the regret at invading this baleful Cherokee<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span>
+swamp when they might have remained safe from all
+harm in pleasant Charles Town.</p>
+
+<p>Sadly they watched the eastern sky grow brighter
+while the gloom of the desolate swamp turned wan and
+gray. The Indian captors became visible, brown, half-naked
+men wearing leggings and breech-clouts of tanned
+deerskin. Two of them carried muskets. They were
+not made hideous by war-paint, as Jack Cockrell was
+quick to note. He said to his companion:</p>
+
+<p>"A hunting party, Joe. They were spying on our
+camp, like enough, or keeping watch of the pirates. No
+doubt they wonder why white men come to fight one
+another in the swamp."</p>
+
+<p>"They will wish to find out from us," was the hopeful
+reply. "They seem a deal more curious than bloodthirsty.
+A stout heart, say I, and we may weather it
+yet."</p>
+
+<p>Soon the lads were roughly prodded ahead and went
+stumbling and splashing through the marshy verdure
+and slippery ooze until they came to higher ground and
+easier walking. Upon this ridge they descried the camp
+of the Yemassees&mdash;huts fashioned of poles and bark and
+boughs, a freshly killed deer hanging from a tree, smoke
+rising from beneath a huge iron kettle, plump, naked
+children scampering in play with several barking dogs,
+the squaws shrilly scolding them. Several warriors lazily
+emerged from the huts, yawning, brushing the long
+black hair from their eyes.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>They moved more actively at perceiving the procession
+which approached from the swamp. Two or three
+ran back to the largest shelter and presently a big-bodied,
+middle-aged man strode out, his mien stern and
+dignified, his rank denoted by the elaborate fringed
+tunic of buckskin and the head-dress of heron plumes.
+He shouted something in a sonorous voice. The hunting
+party hastened forward, dragging the two English
+lads by the elbows and flinging them down at the feet
+of the chief. He stood with arms folded across his chest,
+scowling, formidable.</p>
+
+<p>Then he spoke a few words of broken English, to the
+astonishment of the captives. He mentioned the names
+of settlements on the Cape Fear River where, it was inferred,
+he had been on friendly terms with the colonists.
+His manner was not so much hostile as questioning. In
+Charles Town both Joe and Jack had learned the common
+phrases of the Indian tongue such as were used
+among the merchants and traders. Pieced out with
+signs and gestures, they were able to carry on a halting
+dialogue with the chief of this small band.</p>
+
+<p>They were able to comprehend that he hated pirates
+above all other men. He recognized the name of Blackbeard
+and indicated his great joy that this eminent
+scoundrel had met his just deserts. Many times the
+freebooters of the coast had hunted and slain the Indians
+for wanton sport. And perhaps the word had sped of
+that expedition of Captain Stede Bonnet out of Charles<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span>
+Town when he had exterminated the Yemassees who
+had set out to harry and burn the near-by plantations.
+The two uneasy lads felt that they still stood in the
+shadow of death unless they could persuade the chief
+that they were not pirates, that they were in no way to
+be confused with the crew of blackguards which had
+ascended the creek in the pinnace.</p>
+
+<p>The chief delayed his judgment. Two young men
+lifted the huge kettle from the fire. It was steaming
+with a savory smell of stewed meat. The captives were
+invited to join the others in spearing bits of venison
+with sharpened sticks. Chewing lustily, with a noble
+appetite, Joe Hawkridge confided:</p>
+
+<p>"My spirits rise, Jack. An empty belly always did
+make a coward of me. How now, my lusty cockerel?
+Shall we flap our wings and crow?"</p>
+
+<p>"Crow we must, or have our necks wrung as pirates,"
+said Jack, gnawing a bone. "Which one of us shall
+make the first oration?"</p>
+
+<p>"The nephew of the Councilor, of course," cried Joe,
+"with his cargo of Greek and Latin education. Make
+a power of noise, Jack."</p>
+
+<p>And now indeed did young Master Cockrell prove
+that all those drudging hours with snuffy Parson
+Throckmorton had not been wasted. Standing in an
+open space, clear of the crowd, he addressed the chief
+in loud and impressive language. The gist of it was
+that he and his friends were the sworn foes of all pirates<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span>
+and especially anxious to rid the world of such vermin
+as those that had come into the Cherokee swamp in the
+great ship's boat and were encamped on the bank of the
+creek.</p>
+
+<p>This other peaceful party entrenched on the knoll
+were honest, law-abiding men of Charles Town who
+would harm no one. They had come in search of pirates'
+gold. If the chief of the Yemassees would join
+forces with them and smoke the pipe of peace, they
+would drive those foul pirates out of the Cherokee
+swamp. And should the gold be found, it would be
+fairly divided between the godly men of Charles Town
+and their Indian allies. To bind this bargain Master
+Cockrell and Master Hawkridge were ready to pledge
+their honor and their lives.</p>
+
+<p>It was a most eloquent effort delivered with much
+gesticulation. The Yemassee braves set in a circle and
+grunted approval. They liked the sound and fury of it.
+Jack hurled scraps of Homer and Virgil at them when
+at a loss for resounding periods. The chief nodded his
+understanding of such words as <i>pirates</i> and <i>gold</i> and
+actually smiled when Jack's pantomime depicted the
+death of Blackbeard on the deck of his ship. <i>Gold</i> was
+a magic word to these Indians. It would purchase
+muskets and powder and ball, cloth and ironmongery
+and strong liquors from the white men of the settlements.</p>
+
+<p>The chief discussed it with his followers. During<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span>
+the lull Joe Hawkridge said, with a long sigh of relief:</p>
+
+<p>"My scalp itches not so much, Jack. The notion of
+having it twisted off with a dull blade vexed me. Ye
+did wondrous well. The mouth of Secretary Peter
+Forbes would ha' gaped wide open."</p>
+
+<p>"Much sound and little sense, Joe, but methinks it
+hit the target. I took care to sprinkle it with such words
+as yonder savage could bite on."</p>
+
+<p>"If we find no gold, the fat may be in the fire again,
+but it gives us time to draw breath."</p>
+
+<p>They rubbed their chafed wrists and sat on the ground
+while the savages held a long pow-wow. The chief was
+explaining the purport of Master Cockrell's impressive
+declamation. There was no enmity in the glances aimed
+at the English lads. It was more a matter of deliberation,
+of passing judgment on the truth or the falsity of
+the story. It was plain to read that the Yemassees desired
+to lay greedy hold of Blackbeard's gold. They
+were like children listening to a fairy tale. The fat little
+papooses crawled timidly near to inspect the mysterious
+strangers and scrambled away squealing with delicious
+terror.</p>
+
+<p>The hours passed and the verdict was delayed. Two
+young braves stole away into the pine woodland on
+some errand, at the behest of the chief. It was after
+noon when they returned. With them came a dozen
+Yemassee warriors from another hunting camp, strong,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span>
+quick-footed men in light marching order who were
+armed with long bows and knives. The chief spoke a
+few words and mustered his force. All told he had more
+than thirty picked followers. The English lads were
+told to move with them.</p>
+
+<p>In single file the band flitted silently along the ridge
+and plunged into the swamp. The prisoners were
+closely guarded. At the slightest sign of treachery the
+long knives would slither between their ribs. This they
+well knew and their devout prayer was that their friends
+on the knoll might not commit some rash act of hostility
+and so ruin the enterprise. With heart-quaking trepidation
+they perceived at some distance the rude barricade
+of logs and the yellow streaks of earth hastily
+thrown up.</p>
+
+<p>The cautious Yemassees concealed themselves as
+though the swamp had swallowed them up. The chief
+made certain signs, and the lads understood his meaning.
+Jack Cockrell ripped a sleeve from his shirt and
+tied it to a stick as a flag of truce. Joe Hawkridge advanced
+with them, the stalwart chief between them, his
+empty hands extended in token of peace. The ambushed
+Yemassees, lying in the tall grass, were ready to
+let fly with musket balls and flights of arrows or to
+storm the knoll.</p>
+
+<p>A sailor on sentry duty gave the alarm and the lads
+saw a row of heads bob above the logs, and the gleam
+of weapons. Then Captain Jonathan Wellsby moved<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span>
+out into the open and was joined by Mr. Peter Forbes.
+They stood gazing at the singular spectacle, the bedraggled
+runaways who had vanished without trace, the
+odd flag of truce, the brawny, dignified savage making
+signs of friendship. The men in the stockade were ordered
+to lay down their arms. They came running out
+to cheer and wave their hats.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Peter Forbes was torn betwixt affection and the
+desire to scold his flighty nephew. They met half-way
+down the slope and Jack hastened to explain:</p>
+
+<p>"Before you clap us in irons as deserters, Uncle
+Peter, grant a parley, if you please. Our lives hang by
+a hair."</p>
+
+<p>"God bless me, boy, we thought the pirates had slain
+you both," spluttered Uncle Peter, a tear in his eye.
+"What means this tall savage?"</p>
+
+<p>"A noble chief of the Yemassees who used us with
+all courtesy," said Jack.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Wellsby had drawn Joe Hawkridge aside
+and was swiftly enlightened concerning the alliance with
+the Indians. Presently they were holding a conference,
+all seated together in the shade of a tree. A tobacco
+pipe of clay, with a long reed for a stem, was lighted
+and passed from hand to hand. The chief puffed solemnly
+with an occasional nod and a grunt. It was
+agreed, with due ceremony, that the pirates should be
+attacked in their camp and driven away. The Yemassee
+warriors would make common cause with the English<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span>men.
+As a reward, Blackbeard's treasure was to be
+fairly divided, half and half.</p>
+
+<p>The chief raised his voice in a long, deep shout of
+summons and his band of fighting men emerged from
+their ambush in the swamp. There was no reason for
+delaying the movement against the pirates. The <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'Yemasses'">Yemassees</ins>
+were eager for the fray. They were about to
+advance through the swamp, cunningly hidden, while
+the Englishmen followed at a slower pace to spread out
+on the flanks. Just then there was heard a sudden and
+riotous commotion among the pirates at the creek. It
+was a mad, jubilant uproar as though some frenzy had
+seized them all. Bill Saxby leaned on his musket and
+listened for a long moment.</p>
+
+<p>"The rogues have fished up the sea-chest, by the din
+they make," said he. "We left that sounding rod
+a-stickin' in the mud. They save us the trouble, eh,
+Captain Wellsby?"</p>
+
+<p>The skipper laughed in his beard and floundered
+ahead like a bear. Jack Cockrell passed the word to
+the chief that the gold was awaiting them. Like
+shadows the Yemassees drew near the creek and then,
+full-lunged, terrific, their war-whoop echoed through
+the dismal Cherokee swamp. Nimble Jack Cockrell
+was not far behind them, his heart pumping as though
+it would burst.</p>
+
+<p>He was in time to see four lusty pirates swaying at a
+rope which led through the pulley-blocks of the spars<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span>
+that overhung the creek as a tall derrick. They were
+hoisting away with all their might while there slowly
+rose in air a mud-covered, befouled sea-chest all hung
+with weeds and slimy refuse. Two other pirates tailed
+on to a guy rope and the heavy chest swung toward the
+bank, suspended in air.</p>
+
+<p>At this moment the screeching chorus of the Indian
+war-whoop smote their affrighted ears, followed by the
+discharge of muskets. These startled pirates let go the
+tackle and the guy rope and, with one accord, leaped
+for the pinnace which floated close to the bank. The
+weighty sea-chest swinging in air came down by the run
+as the ropes smoked through the blocks. It had been
+swayed in far enough so that it fell not in the water but
+upon the edge of the shore between the derrick spars.
+The rusty hinges and straps were burst asunder as the
+treasure chest crashed upon a log and cracked open like
+an egg.</p>
+
+<p>Out spilled a stream of doubloons and pieces of eight,
+a cascade of gold and silver bars, of jewels flowing from
+the rotten bags which had contained them. In this extraordinary
+manner was the hoard of the departed
+Blackbeard brought to light. The unfortunate pirates
+who had found the spoils tarried not to gloat and rejoice.
+They appeared to have urgent business elsewhere.
+In hot pursuit came the ravening Yemassees,
+yelling like fiends, assisted by the reinforcements of
+Captain Jonathan Wellsby.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>What saved the lives of these panic-smitten pirates
+was the dramatic explosion of that great treasure chest
+when it fell and smashed upon the log. Indians and
+Englishmen alike forgot their intent to shoot and
+slaughter. They rushed to surround the bewitching
+booty, to cut capers like excited urchins.</p>
+
+<p>"Share and share," roared Captain Wellsby, shoving
+them headlong. "Half to the Yemassees and half to
+us. Our word is given. Stand back, ye lunatics, while
+we do the thing with order and decency."</p>
+
+<p>Already the pinnace was filled with cursing pirates
+who saw that the game was lost. Some of them had left
+their weapons in camp, others fired a few wild shots, but
+those who had any wit left were tugging at the oars to
+make for the open sea.</p>
+
+<p>"After 'em," roared Bill Saxby. "Follow down the
+creek to make sure they do not molest our sloop."</p>
+
+<p>A score of men, Indians included, jumped into the
+boat and pulled in chase, no longer on slaughter bent.
+The only thought in their heads was to despatch the
+errand and return to squat around the treasure chest.
+Jack Cockrell and Joe Hawkridge remained to help
+scoop up the coin and jewels and stow them in stout
+kegs and sacks. The stoical chief of the Yemassees was
+grinning from ear to ear as he grunted:</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Plenty gold. Good! Hurrah, boys!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Arm-in-arm Jack Cockrell and Joe Hawkridge
+danced a sailor's hornpipe upon the splintered lid of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span>
+Blackbeard's sea-chest while they sang with all their
+might:</p>
+
+<div class='poem'>
+"For his work he's never loth,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">An' a-pleasurin' he'll go,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">Tho' certain sure to be popt off,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;"><i>Yo, ho, with the rum below.</i>"</span><br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h2>THE END</h2>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<img src="images/illus8.jpg" width="400" height="159" alt="Through the mist" title="Through the mist" />
+</div>
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div class='tnote'><h3>Transcriber's Notes:</h3>
+<p>Obvious punctuation errors repaired.</p>
+
+<p>The remaining corrections made are indicated by dotted lines under the corrections. Scroll the mouse over the word and the original text will <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'apprear'">appear</ins>.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Blackbeard: Buccaneer, by Ralph D. Paine
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+</body>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Blackbeard: Buccaneer, by Ralph D. Paine
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Blackbeard: Buccaneer
+
+Author: Ralph D. Paine
+
+Illustrator: Frank E. Schoonover
+
+Release Date: May 14, 2008 [EBook #25472]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BLACKBEARD: BUCCANEER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Robert Cicconetti, Emmy and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: THIS LEAN, STRAIGHT ROVER LOOKED THE PART OF A COMPETENT
+SOLDIER]
+
+
+
+
+BLACKBEARD BUCCANEER
+
+_By_ RALPH D. PAINE
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ _Illustrated by
+ Frank E. Schoonover_
+
+ THE PENN PUBLISHING
+ COMPANY PHILADELPHIA
+
+
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT
+ 1922 BY
+ THE PENN
+ PUBLISHING
+ COMPANY
+
+ Blackbeard: Buccaneer
+
+ Made in the U. S. A.
+
+
+
+
+Contents
+
+
+
+ I. THAT COURTEOUS PIRATE, CAPTAIN BONNET 7
+
+ II. THE MERCHANT TRADER, _PLYMOUTH ADVENTURE_ 21
+
+ III. HELD AS HOSTAGES TO BLACKBEARD 43
+
+ IV. THE CAPTIVE SEAMEN IN THE FORECASTLE 62
+
+ V. RELEASING A FEARFUL WEAPON 79
+
+ VI. THE VOYAGE OF THE LITTLE RAFT 99
+
+ VII. THE MIST OF THE CHEROKEE SWAMP 114
+
+ VIII. THE EPISODE OF THE WINDING CREEK 132
+
+ IX. BLACKBEARD'S ERRAND IS INTERRUPTED 147
+
+ X. THE SEA URCHIN AND THE CARPENTER'S MATE 161
+
+ XI. JACK JOURNEYS AFOOT 177
+
+ XII. A PRIVATE ACCOUNT TO SETTLE 189
+
+ XIII. OUR HEROES SEEK SECLUSION 203
+
+ XIV. BLACKBEARD APPEARS IN FIRE AND BRIMSTONE 217
+
+ XV. MR. PETER FORBES MOURNS HIS NEPHEW 232
+
+ XVI. NED RACKHAM'S PLANS GO MUCH AMISS 248
+
+ XVII. THE GREAT FIGHT OF CAPTAIN TEACH 260
+
+ XVIII. THE OLD BUCCANEER IS LOYAL 274
+
+ XIX. THE QUEST FOR PIRATES' GOLD 288
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ THIS LEAN, STRAIGHT ROVER LOOKED THE PART OF A COMPETENT
+ SOLDIER _Frontispiece_
+
+ THE BRAWN OF THESE LADS MADE THE PIKE A MATCH FOR A
+ PIRATE'S CUTLASS 83
+
+ THE FIRST MATE LEAPED UP WITH A HORRIBLE YELL 120
+
+ JACK ALMOST BUMPED INTO THE DUGOUT CANOE 129
+
+ THEY CAPERED AND HUGGED EACH OTHER 164
+
+ HE LOOMED LIKE THE BELIAL WHOM HE WAS SO FOND OF CLAIMING
+ AS HIS MENTOR 224
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+Blackbeard: Buccaneer
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THAT COURTEOUS PIRATE, CAPTAIN BONNET
+
+
+THE year of 1718 seems very dim and far away, but the tall lad who
+sauntered down to the harbor of Charles Town, South Carolina, on a fine,
+bright morning, was much like the youngsters of this generation. His
+clothes were quite different, it is true, and he lived in a queer, rough
+world, but he detested grammar and arithmetic and loved adventure, and
+would have made a sturdy tackle for a modern high-school football team.
+He wore a peaked straw hat of Indian weave, a linen shirt open at the
+throat, short breeches with silver buckles at the knees, and a
+flint-lock pistol hung from his leather belt.
+
+He passed by scattered houses and stores which were mere log huts
+loopholed for defense, with shutters and doors of hewn plank heavy
+enough to stop a musket ball. The unpaved lanes wandered between mud
+holes in which pigs wallowed enjoyably. Negro slaves, half-naked and
+bearing heavy burdens, jabbered the dialects of the African jungle from
+which they had been kidnapped a few months before. Yemassee Indians clad
+in tanned deer-skins bartered with the merchants and hid their hatred of
+the English. Jovial, hard-riding gentlemen galloped in from the indigo
+plantations and dismounted at the tavern to drink and gamble and fight
+duels at the smallest excuse.
+
+Young Jack Cockrell paid scant heed to these accustomed sights but
+walked as far as the wharf built of palmetto piling. The wide harbor and
+the sea that flashed beyond the outer bar were ruffled by a piping
+breeze out of the northeast. The only vessel at anchor was a heavily
+sparred brig whose bulwarks were high enough to hide the rows of cannon
+behind the closed ports.
+
+The lad gazed at the shapely brig with a lively curiosity, as if here
+was something really interesting. Presently a boat splashed into the
+water and was tied alongside the vessel while a dozen of the crew
+tumbled in to sprawl upon the thwarts and shove the oars into the
+thole-pins. An erect, graceful man in a red coat and a great beaver hat
+roared a command from the stern-sheets and the pinnace pulled in the
+direction of the wharf.
+
+"Pirates, to be sure!" said Jack Cockrell to himself, without a sign of
+alarm. "'Tis Captain Stede Bonnet and his _Royal James_. I know the
+ship. I saw her when she came in leaking last October and was careened
+on the beach at Sullivan's Island. A rich voyage this time, for the brig
+rides deep."
+
+The coast of South Carolina swarmed with pirates two hundred years ago,
+and they cared not a rap for the law. Indeed, some of these rascals
+lived on friendly terms with the people of the small settlements and
+swaggered ashore to squander the broad gold pieces and merchandise
+stolen from honest trading vessels. You must not blame the South
+Carolina colonists too harshly because they sometimes welcomed the
+visiting pirates instead of clapping them in jail. Charles Town was a
+village at the edge of a wilderness filled with hostile Indians. By sea
+it stood in fear of attack by the Spaniards of Florida and Havana. There
+were almost no crops for food and among the population were many
+runaways from England, loafers and vagabonds who hated the sight of
+work.
+
+The pirates helped them fight their enemies and did a thriving trade in
+goods that were sorely needed. Respectable citizens grumbled and one
+high official was removed in disgrace because he encouraged the pirates
+to make Charles Town their headquarters, but there was no general outcry
+unless the sea-rovers happened to molest English ships outside the
+harbor.
+
+It was Captain Stede Bonnet himself who steered the pinnace and cursed
+his sweating sailors in a deep voice which went echoing across the bay.
+He made a brave figure in his scarlet coat, with the brass guard of his
+naked cutlass winking in the sun. His boat's crew had been mustered from
+many climes and races, several strapping Englishmen, a wiry, spluttering
+little Frenchman, a swarthy Portuguese with gold rings in his ears, a
+brace of stolid Norwegians, and two or three coal black negroes from
+Barbadoes.
+
+They were well armed, every weapon burnished clean of rust and ready for
+instant use. Some wore tarnished, sea-stained finery looted from hapless
+prizes, a brocaded waistcoat, a pair of tasseled jack-boots, a plumed
+hat, a ruffled cape. The heads of several were bound around with knotted
+kerchiefs on which dark stains showed,--marks of a brawl aboard the brig
+or a fight with another ship.
+
+Soon a second boat moved away from the _Royal James_ and many people
+drifted toward the wharf to see the pirates come ashore, but they left
+plenty of room when the captain scrambled up the weedy ladder and told
+his men to follow him. Charles Town felt little dread of Stede Bonnet
+himself. He knew how to conduct himself as a gentleman and the story was
+well known,--how he had been a major in the British army and a man of
+wealth and refinement. He had left his home in Barbadoes to follow the
+trade of piracy because he couldn't get along with his wife, so the
+rumor ran. At any rate, he seemed oddly out of place among the dirty
+rogues who sailed under the black flag.
+
+He looked more the soldier than the sailor as he strode along the wharf,
+his lean, dark visage both grim and melancholy, his chin clean shaven,
+his mustachios carefully cropped. There were respectful greetings from
+the crowd of idlers and a gray-haired seaman all warped with rheumatism
+spoke up louder than the rest.
+
+"Good morrow to ye, Cap'n Bonnet! I be old Sam Griscom that sailed bos'n
+with you on a marchant voyage out of Liverpool. An' now you are a fine
+gentleman of fortune, with moidores and pieces of eight to fling at the
+gals, an' here I be, a sheer hulk on the beach."
+
+Captain Stede Bonnet halted, stared from beneath heavy brows, and a
+smile made his seamed, sun-dried face almost gentle as he replied:
+
+"It cheers me to run athwart a true old shipmate. A slant of ill
+fortune, eh, Sam Griscom? You are too old and crippled to sail in the
+_Royal James_. Here, and a blessing with the gift."
+
+The pirate skipper rammed a hand in his pocket and flung a shower of
+gold coins at the derelict seaman while the crowd cheered the generous
+deed. It was easy to guess why Stede Bonnet was something of a hero in
+Charles Town. He passed on and turned into the street. Most of his
+ruffians were at his heels but one of the younger of them delayed to pay
+his compliments to a pretty girl whose manner was sweet and shy and
+gentle. She had remained aloof from the crowd, having some errand of her
+own at the wharf, and evidently hoped to be unobserved. Jack Cockrell
+had failed to notice her, absorbed as he was in gazing his fill of
+Captain Stede Bonnet.
+
+The girl resented the young pirate's gallantry and would have fled, but
+he nimbly blocked her path. Just then Jack Cockrell happened to glance
+that way and his anger flamed hot. He was about to run after Captain
+Bonnet and beg him to interfere but the maid's distress was too urgent.
+Her blackguardly admirer was trying to slip his arm around her trim
+waist while he laughingly demanded a kiss from those fair lips. She
+evaded him and screamed for help.
+
+There were lusty townsmen among those who beheld the scene but they
+sheepishly stood in their tracks and were afraid to punish the insolent
+pirate with his dirk and pistols. He was much taller and heavier than
+Jack Cockrell, the lad of seventeen, who came of gentlefolk and was
+unused to brawls with weapons. But the youngster hesitated no more than
+an instant, although his own pistol lacked a flint and was carried for
+show.
+
+His quick eye spied a capstan bar which he snatched up as a cudgel.
+Chivalry had taught him that a man should never reckon the odds when a
+woman appealed for succor. With a headlong rush he crossed the wharf and
+swung the hickory bar. The pirate dodged the blow and whipped out his
+dirk which slithered through Jack's shirt and scratched his shoulder.
+Undismayed, he aimed a smashing blow at the pirate's wrist and the dirk
+went spinning into the water.
+
+The rascal tugged at a pistol in his belt but it was awkward work with
+his left hand and he was bewildered by this amazing attack. Before he
+could clear for action, Jack smote him on the pate and the battle ended
+then and there, for the pirate staggered back, missed his footing, and
+toppled overboard with a tremendous splash.
+
+Leaping to the edge of the wharf, Jack saw him bob to the surface and
+strike out for shore. Then the doughty young champion ran to offer his
+escort to the damsel in distress. But she had hastened to slip away from
+this hateful notoriety and he saw her at the bend of the street where
+she turned to wave him a grateful farewell.
+
+He would have hastened to overtake her but just then Captain Stede
+Bonnet came striding back in a temper so black that it terrified his own
+men. His wrath was not aimed at Jack Cockrell, for he laid a hand upon
+the lad's arm and exclaimed:
+
+"A shrewd stroke, boy, and a mettlesome spirit! You struck him swift and
+hard. 'Twould please me better if you had killed the dog."
+
+Stede Bonnet waited with folded arms until the culprit had emerged from
+the water. Jack Cockrell had punished him severely and there was no more
+fight in him. His head was reeling, the blood ran into his eyes, and he
+had swallowed much salt water. Captain Bonnet crooked a finger at him
+and he obeyed without a word. For a moment they stood face to face, the
+wretched offender trembling, the captain scowling as he said:
+
+"And so you mistook a lady for a common serving wench, Will Brant? Would
+ye have Charles Town rise and reeve the ropes about our necks? Is this
+your promise of good behavior? Learn a lesson then, poor fool."
+
+With the steel-shod butt of a pistol Stede Bonnet hit him squarely
+between the eyes. He dropped without a groan and lay stretched out as if
+dead. The captain kicked him once and carelessly shouted:
+
+"Ho, men! Toss this squire o' dames into the pinnace to await our
+return. And harkee, take warning."
+
+Jack Cockrell felt almost sorry for his fallen foeman but the other
+pirates grinned and did as they were told. It was a trifling episode.
+Resuming his stroll to the tavern, Captain Bonnet linked Jack's arm in
+his and fairly towed him along while the assorted scoundrels trooped
+behind them. It was shocking company for a lad of the most respectable
+connections but he felt greatly flattered by the distinction. The name
+of Stede Bonnet had spread terror from the Capes of the Chesapeake to
+the blue waters of the Caribbean.
+
+"And so you were unafraid of this bullying Will Brant of mine," said the
+captain, with one of his pleasant smiles. "You clipped his comb right
+handsomely. And who may ye be, my brave young sprig?"
+
+"I am John Spencer Cockrell, may it please you, sir," was the answer.
+"'Twas a small thing to do for a lady. Your pirate would have been too
+much for me in a fair set-to."
+
+"Pirate? A poor word!" objected Captain Bonnet, his accents severe but
+the bold eyes twinkling. "We are loyal servants of the King, sworn to do
+mischief to his lawful enemies,--to wit, all ships and sailors of Spain.
+For such a young gentleman adventurer as you, Master Cockrell, there is
+a berth in the _Royal James_. Will ye rendezvous at the tavern and sign
+your fist to the articles?"
+
+Jack stammered that his kinfolk would never consent, at which Captain
+Bonnet forbore to coax him but kept a grip on his arm as though they
+were chums who could not bear to be parted. Down the middle of the
+street paraded this extraordinary company, the seamen breaking into a
+song which ran:
+
+ "In Bristowe I left Poll ashore,
+ Well stored wi' togs an' gold,
+ And off I go to sea for more,
+ A-piratin' so bold.
+ An' wounded in the arm I got,
+ An' then a pretty blow;
+ Comed home I find Poll's flowed away,
+ _Yo, ho, with the rum below!_"
+
+Charles Town might be glad to get the pirates' gold but it seemed a
+timorous welcome, for the merchants peered from their doorways like
+rabbits when the hounds are loose, and nervous old gentlemen took cover
+in the near-by alleys. Stede Bonnet knew how to keep his men in hand and
+allowed only part of the company ashore at once. They were like
+hilarious children out for a lark, capering outside the tavern to the
+music of a strolling fiddler or buying horses on the spot and trying to
+ride them. When they were pitched off on their heads the mirth was
+uproarious.
+
+In a field beside the tavern some townsmen were shooting at a mark for a
+prize of a dressed bullock while a group of gentlemen from the
+plantations were intent on a cock-fight in the tap-room. Here was rare
+pastime for the frolicsome blades of the _Royal James_ and soon they
+were banging away with their pistols or betting their gold-pieces on the
+steel-gaffed birds, singing the louder as the bottle was passed. Captain
+Stede Bonnet stayed prudently sober, ready for any emergency, his
+demeanor cool and watchful while he chatted with old acquaintances.
+
+He talked often with Jack Cockrell to whom he had taken a strong fancy,
+and pressed the lad to dine with him. Jack was uneasy at being seen so
+publicly with a notorious pirate but the experience was delightful
+beyond words. The captain asked him many questions, twisting his
+mustachios and staring down from his commanding height with an air of
+friendly interest. He had found a lad after his own heart.
+
+The seamen tired of their sport and sought new diversion. Some of them
+kicked off their boots and clinched in wrestling matches for prodigal
+stakes of gold and jewels. Others found girls to dance with them or
+wandered off to buy useless trinkets in the shops. Jack Cockrell knew he
+ought to be posting home to dinner but he was tempted to accept Stede
+Bonnet's cordial bidding. Boyish friends of his hovered near and
+regarded him as a hero. No pirate captain had ever deigned to notice
+them.
+
+Alas for Jack and his puffed-up pride which was doomed to a sudden fall!
+There advanced from a better quarter of the town a florid, foppishly
+dressed gentleman of middle age who walked with a pompous gait. He was
+stout-bodied and the heat of the day oppressed him. Mopping his face
+with a lace handkerchief or fanning himself with his hat, he halted now
+and then in a shady spot. Very mindful of his rank and dignity was Mr.
+Peter Arbuthnot Forbes, sometime London barrister, at present Secretary
+to the Council of the Province.
+
+He differed from some of his neighbors in that he abominated pirates and
+would have given them short shift. A trifle near-sighted, he was quite
+close to the tavern before he espied his own nephew and ward, Jack
+Cockrell, in this shameful company of roisterers. The august uncle
+blinked, opened his mouth, and turned as red as a lobster. Indignation
+choked his speech. For his part, Jack stood dumfounded and quaking, the
+picture of a coward with a guilty conscience. He would have tried to
+steal from sight but it was too late.
+
+Captain Stede Bonnet enjoyed the tableau and several of his wicked
+sailors were mimicking the pompous strut of Mr. Peter Arbuthnot Forbes.
+Poor Jack mumbled some explanation but his irate uncle first paid his
+respects to Captain Bonnet.
+
+"Shame to you, sirrah," he cried in a voice that shook with passion. "A
+man of good birth, by all accounts, who has fallen so low as to lead
+these vile gallows-birds! And you would entice this lad of mine to
+follow your dirty trade?"
+
+Captain Bonnet doffed the great beaver hat and bowed low in mocking
+courtesy. He perceived that this fussy lawyer was not wholly a popinjay,
+for it required courage to insult a pirate to his face. The reply was
+therefore milder than expected.
+
+"Mayhap I am painted blacker than the fact, Councilor. As for this fine
+stripling who has so disgraced himself, the fault is mine. He risked his
+life to save a maid from harm. The deed won my affection."
+
+"The maids of Charles Town would need to fear no harm if more pirates
+were hanged, Captain Bonnet," roundly declared Mr. Forbes, shaking his
+gold-tipped cane at the freebooter.
+
+"'Tis fortunate for me that you lack the power, my fat and petulant
+gentleman," was the smiling response.
+
+"Laugh while you may," quoth the other. "These Provinces may soon
+proclaim joint action against such pests as you."
+
+With a shrug, the Secretary turned to his crestfallen nephew and sharply
+exclaimed:
+
+"Home with you, John Cockrell. You shall go dinnerless and be locked in
+your room."
+
+The seamen guffawed at this and Jack furiously resented their ridicule.
+He was on the point of rebellion as he hotly retorted:
+
+"I am no child to be treated thus, Uncle Peter. Didn't you hear Captain
+Bonnet report that I had proved myself a man? I trounced one of his own
+crew, a six-foot bully with a dirk and pistols."
+
+"A fig for that," rapped out Uncle Peter. "Your bully was drunk and
+helpless, I have no doubt. Will you bandy words with me?"
+
+With this his plump fingers closed on Jack's elbow which he used as a
+handle to lead him firmly and rapidly away. Behind them pranced a limber
+young negro who showed every tooth in his head. Jack heard the derisive
+laughter of the pirates who had hailed him as a hero. His cup of
+bitterness overflowed when it occurred to him that Captain Bonnet would
+despise a lad who could be led home in custody of a dandified tyrant of
+an uncle.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE MERCHANT TRADER, _PLYMOUTH ADVENTURE_
+
+
+RUBBING his ear which Mr. Peter Arbuthnot Forbes had soundly boxed
+before releasing him, Jack marched along in gloomy silence until he was
+conducted into his small, unplastered room. His uncle stalked out and
+shot the ponderous bolt behind him. Passing through the kitchen, he
+halted to scold the black cook as a lazy slattern and then sat himself
+down to a lonely meal. Jack was a problem which the finicky, middle-aged
+bachelor had been unable to solve. He had undertaken the care of the boy
+after his parents had died in the same week of a mysterious fever which
+ravaged the settlement. The uncle failed to realize how fast this
+strapping youngster was growing into manhood. He disliked punishing him
+and was usually unhappy after one of these stormy episodes.
+
+Mr. Peter Forbes pecked at his dinner with little appetite and his plump
+face was clouded. Shoving back his chair, he paced the floor in a
+fidgety manner and, at length, opened the door of Jack's room. The
+hungry prisoner was lounging upon a wooden settle, his chin in his hand,
+while he sullenly stared at the wall. Always mindful of his manners, he
+slowly rose to his feet and waited for another scolding.
+
+"I wish we might avoid such scenes as these, Jack," sadly observed Uncle
+Peter, his hot temper cooled. "No sooner do you leave my sight than some
+new mischief is afoot."
+
+"You do not understand, sir," impatiently protested the nephew. "In your
+eyes I am still the urchin who came out from England clinging to his
+dear mother's skirts. Would ye have me pass my time with girls or have
+no other friends than snuffy old Parson Throckmorton, my tutor, who
+tries to pound the Greek and Latin into my thick skull?"
+
+"He is a wise and ripened scholar who wastes his effort," was the dry
+comment. "Most of the lads of the town are coarse louts who pattern
+after their ribald elders, Jack. They will lead you into evil courses."
+
+"I shall always pray God to be a gentleman, sir," was the spirited
+response, "but I must learn to fight my own battles. Were it not for
+hardy pastimes with these other stout lads, think you I could have
+cracked the crown of a six-foot pirate?"
+
+Uncle Peter gazed at the boy before he spoke. Tanned and hard and
+muscular, this was a nephew to be proud of, a man in deeds if not in
+years, and there was unswerving honesty in the straight mouth and firm
+chin. The guardian sighed and then annoyance got the better of his
+affection as he burst out:
+
+"Perdition take all pirates! You were cozened by this hell-rake of a
+Stede Bonnet and thought it a rare pleasure! John Spencer Cockrell, own
+nephew to the Secretary of the Colony!"
+
+"I did but copy older men of fair repute," demurely answered Jack, a
+twinkle in his eye. "Graybeards of Parson Throckmorton's flock traffick
+in merchandise with the pirates and are mighty civil to them, I note."
+
+"A vile business!" cried Uncle Peter. "It was decided at the recent
+conference in Virginia that I should go to England as a delegate to lay
+before His Majesty's Government such evidence as might invoke aid in our
+campaign against the pirates. It was my intention to leave you in care
+of Parson Throckmorton, Jack, but I have now resolved to take you with
+me. And you will remain at school in England. No more of this boon
+comradeship with villains like Stede Bonnet."
+
+Poor Jack looked most unhappy at the tidings. It was not at all in
+accord with his ambitions. Here was worse punishment than he had dreamed
+his uncle could inflict. Dolefully he exclaimed:
+
+"To live in tame and stupid England, locked up in a school? Why, I am
+big enough to join the forays against the Indians, or to fight bloody
+battles against the pirates if you really mean to chastise them. But I
+cannot promise to attack Captain Bonnet. He is a friend of mine."
+
+"You shall come to see him hanged," shouted Mr. Peter Arbuthnot Forbes,
+very red in the face. "The merchant ship _Plymouth Adventure_ is
+expected soon, and you and I shall take passage in her for Merry
+England, thanking heaven to see the last of the barbarous Carolinas for
+a time."
+
+"Thank your own thanks, sir," grumbled Jack. "Captain Bonnet may be a
+pirate but he is not nearly so heartless as my own uncle. He asked me to
+dinner at the tavern. I am faint for lack of food. My stomach sticks to
+my ribs. 'Tis a great pity you were never a growing boy yourself. For a
+platter of cold meat and bread I will take my oath to chop you a pile of
+firewood as high as the kitchen."
+
+The gaoler relented and bustled out to ransack the pantry. Having
+demolished a joint and a loaf, young John Spencer Cockrell was in a mood
+much less melancholy. In fact, when he swung the axe behind the fence of
+hewn palings, he was humming the refrain of that wicked ditty: "_Yo, Ho,
+with the Rum Below!_" He was tremendously sorry that he had been
+snatched away from the engaging society of Captain Bonnet and his wild
+crew, and the future had a gloomy aspect, but even these grievances were
+forgotten when he descried, in a lane which led past the house, the
+lovely maid whose cause he had championed at the wharf.
+
+She was Dorothy, only daughter of Colonel Malcolm Stuart who commanded
+the militia forces of the Colony. Although she was the elder by two or
+three years and gave herself the airs of a young lady, Jack Cockrell
+hopelessly, secretly adored her. It was an anti-climax for a hero to be
+serving out his sentence at the wood-pile and he turned his back to the
+gate while he made the chips fly. But Dorothy had no intention of
+ignoring him. She paused with a smile so winsome that Jack's heart
+fluttered and he dropped the axe to grasp her outstretched hand. He
+squeezed it so hard that Dorothy winced as she said:
+
+"What a masterful man it is, but please don't crush my poor fingers. I
+fled from those pirates at the wharf, Jack, instead of waiting to offer
+you my most humble thanks. Will you accept them now? They come straight
+from the heart."
+
+For such a reward as this Jack would have fought a dozen pirates. Baring
+his head, he murmured bashfully:
+
+"A trifling service, Mistress Dorothy, and 'tis my devout hope that I
+may always be ready in time of need."
+
+"So?" she exclaimed, with mischief in her eyes. "I believe you would
+slay a pirate each morning before breakfast, should I ask it."
+
+"Or any other small favors like that," gallantly returned Jack.
+
+"A proper courtier," cried Dorothy. "My father will thank you when he
+returns from North Carolina. When I ventured to the wharf this morning
+it was in hopes of sighting his armed sloop."
+
+The dwelling of Mr. Peter Arbuthnot Forbes was at some distance from the
+tavern which was on the sloping ground that overlooked the harbor, among
+the spreading live-oaks and magnolias. Borne on the breeze came the
+sounds of Stede Bonnet's pirates at their revels, pistol shots, wild
+choruses, drunken yells. Jack was not disturbed although Mistress
+Dorothy moved closer and laid a hand on his arm. Presently the tumult
+ceased, abruptly, and now Jack was perplexed. It might mean a sudden
+recall to the ship. Something was in the wind. The youth and the maid
+stood listening. Jack was about to scramble to the roof of the house in
+order to gaze toward the harbor but Dorothy bade him stay with her. Her
+fair cheek had paled and she shivered with a vague apprehension.
+
+This sudden stillness was uncanny, threatening. Soon, however, a trumpet
+blew a long, shrill call to arms, and they heard one hoarse, jubilant
+huzza after another.
+
+"Have Stede Bonnet's pirates mustered to sack the town?" implored
+Dorothy.
+
+"I can speedily find out," replied her protector.
+
+"Oh, I pray you not to leave me," she tremulously besought him.
+
+"Captain Bonnet will wreak no harm on Charles Town," Jack assured her.
+"I know him too well for that. You saw what he did to the base varlet
+who annoyed you at the wharf,--felled him like an ox."
+
+"If only my father were here, to call out the troops and rout this
+rabble of sea rogues, Jack dear," was her fluttering prayer.
+
+A little after this, the tumult increased and it was drawing nearer. It
+was a martial clamor of men on the march, with the rattle of drums and a
+loud fanfare of trumpets. Mr. Peter Arbuthnot Forbes came running out of
+the house, all flustered and waving his hands, and ordered the two young
+people indoors. The servants were closing the heavy wooden shutters and
+sliding the bars across the doors.
+
+Jack slipped out into the lane and hailed a neighbor who dashed past.
+The news was babbled in fragments and Jack scurried back to blurt to his
+uncle:
+
+"An Indian raid,--the savages are within a dozen miles of Charles Town,
+laying waste the plantations,--slaying the laborers. The militia is
+called to arms but they lack a leader. Colonel Stuart is sorely missed.
+Captain Bonnet called another boat-load of his pirates ashore, and they
+march in the van to assail the Indians. May I go with them, Uncle Peter?
+Must I play the coward and the laggard?"
+
+"Nonsense, John Cockrell. These mad pirates have addled your wits. Shall
+I let you be scalped by these painted fiends of Yemassees?"
+
+"Then you will volunteer in my stead," shrewdly ventured Jack, with a
+glance at Dorothy.
+
+"Um-m. Duty and my official cares prevent," quoth the worshipful
+Secretary of the Colony, frowning and pursing his lips. Dorothy smiled
+at this and winked at Jack. Uncle Peter was rated a better lawyer than a
+valiant man of war.
+
+"Let us stand at a window," exclaimed the girl. "Ah, they come! My
+faith, but this is a brave array. And Captain Bonnet leads them well."
+
+She had never expected to praise a pirate but there was no denying that
+this lean, straight rover in the scarlet coat and great cocked hat
+looked the part of a competent and intrepid soldier. He was superbly fit
+for the task in hand. Catching sight of Jack Cockrell and Dorothy Stuart
+in the window, he saluted by raising the hilt of his cutlass and his
+melancholy visage brightened in a smile.
+
+Behind him tramped his men in column of fours, matchlocks across their
+shoulders, bright weapons swinging against their thighs as they sang all
+together and kept step to the beat of the drums.
+
+ "But ere to Execution Bay,
+ The wind these bones do blow,
+ I'll drink an' fight what's left away,
+ _Yo, ho, with the rum below_."
+
+Behind these hardy volunteers straggled as many of the militia company
+as had been able to answer the sudden call, merchants, clerks, artisans,
+and vagabonds who seemed none too eager to meet the bloodthirsty
+Yemassees. Their wives and children trailed after them to the edge of
+the town, amidst tears and loud lamentations. The contrast did not
+escape the eye of Mr. Peter Arbuthnot Forbes who reluctantly admitted:
+
+"Give the devil his due, say I. These wicked brethren of the coast go
+swaggering off of their own free will, as though it were to a frolic. I
+will remember it in their favor when they come to hang."
+
+A long roll of the drums and a lilting flourish by the pirate trumpeter
+as a farewell to Charles Town and its tavern and its girls, and the
+company passed from view. The lane was again deserted and silent and
+Jack offered to escort Dorothy Stuart to her own home. As they loitered
+across an open field, he cried in a fierce flare of rebellion:
+
+"My good uncle will drive me too far. Let him sail for old England and
+leave me to find my own career. Upon my soul, I may run away to join a
+pirate ship."
+
+Dorothy tried to look grave at this dreadful announcement but a dimple
+showed in her cheek as she replied:
+
+"My dear Jack, you can never be braver but you will be wiser some day.
+Banish such silly thoughts. You must obey your lawful guardian."
+
+"But did you see the lads in the militia company? Two or three of them I
+have whipped in fair fight. And Uncle Peter wants to keep me tucked in a
+cradle."
+
+"Softly, Jack," said she, with pretty solicitude. "Stede Bonnet has
+bewitched you utterly."
+
+The stubborn youth shook his head. This day of humiliation had been the
+last straw. He was ripe for desperate adventure. It would have made him
+happy and contented to be marching against the Indians with Stede Bonnet
+and his cut-throats, in peril of tomahawks and ambuscades.
+
+Small wonder that poor Jack Cockrell's notions of right and wrong were
+rather confused, for he lived in an age when might ruled blue water,
+when every ship was armed and merchant seamen fought to save their skins
+as well as their cargoes. English, French, Spanish, and Dutch, they
+plundered each other on the flimsiest pretexts and the pirates harried
+them all.
+
+Still sulky, Jack betook himself to the rectory next morning for his
+daily bout with his studies. Parson Throckmorton was puttering in the
+garden, a shrunken little man who wore black small-clothes, lace at his
+wrists, and a powdered wig. Opening the silver snuff-box he almost
+sneezed the wig off before he chirruped:
+
+"Ye mind me of Will Shakespeare's whining schoolboy, Master
+John,--creeping like snail unwillingly to school. A treat is in store
+for us to-day, a signal treat! We begin our Virgil. '_Arma virumque
+cano._'"
+
+"Arms and a man? I like that much of it," glowered the mutinous scholar,
+"but my uncle makes me sing a different tune."
+
+"He accepted my advice,--that you be educated in England," said the
+parson.
+
+"Then I may hold you responsible for this hellish thing?" angrily
+declaimed Jack. "Were it not for your white hairs----"
+
+He subsided and had the grace to apologize as they entered the library.
+The tutor was an impatient old gentleman and the pupil was so
+inattentive that his knuckles were sharply rapped with a ruler. A
+blunder more glaring and the ruler came down with another whack. This
+was too much for Jack who jumped up, rubbed his knuckles, and shouted:
+
+"Enough, sir. I would have you know that I all but killed a big, ugly
+pirate yesterday."
+
+"So rumor informs me," rasped Parson Throckmorton, "but you will give
+yourself no grand airs with me. Construe this passage properly or I must
+tan those leather breeches with a limber rod."
+
+This was too much for the insulted Jack who slammed down the book,
+clapped on his hat, and tramped from the room in high dudgeon. Such
+scurvy treatment as this was fairly urging him to a life of crime on the
+rolling ocean. He wandered down to the wharf and wistfully gazed at the
+lawless brig, _Royal James_, which swam at her anchorage in trim and
+graceful beauty. A few men moved briskly on deck, painting the bulwarks
+or polishing brass. Evidently Stede Bonnet had sent off word to be all
+taut and ready to hoist sail for another cruise.
+
+After a while the truant went homeward and manfully confessed to the
+quarrel with Parson Throckmorton. Uncle Peter Forbes was amazingly mild.
+There was no gusty outbreak of temper and, in fact, he had little to
+say. It was in his mind to patch up a truce with his troublesome nephew
+pending their departure for England. He even suggested that the studies
+be dropped and advised Jack to go fishing in his canoe.
+
+Several days later, Captain Bonnet and his pirates came back from their
+foray against the Indians. They were a foot-sore, weary band, the
+wounded carried in litters and several men missing. Their gay garments
+were caked with mud, the finery all tatters, and most of them were
+marked with cuts and scratches, but they pulled themselves together and
+swaggered into Charles Town as boldly as ever to the music of trumpet
+and drum. Stede Bonnet carried an arm in a sling. As he passed the
+Secretary's house he cheerily called out to Jack:
+
+"Ahoy, my young comrade! 'Twill please you to know that fair Mistress
+Dorothy Stuart may sleep in peace."
+
+"Did you scatter the savages, sir?" asked Jack, running out to shake his
+hand.
+
+"God bless ye, boy, we exterminated 'em."
+
+The gratitude of Mr. Peter Arbuthnot Forbes was stronger than his
+dislike and he came out to thank the captain in behalf of the citizens
+of Charles Town. To his excited questions the pirate replied:
+
+"There be old buccaneers from Hispaniola in my crew, may it please Your
+Excellency,--fellows who hunted the Indians in their youth,--tracked 'em
+like hounds through forest and bayou. Others served their time with the
+log-wood cutters of Yucatan. They laughed at the tricks of these
+Yemassees of the Carolinas."
+
+One of the militia company broke in to say to Mr. Forbes:
+
+"Your Honor's own plantation was saved from the torch by this doughty
+Captain Bonnet. It was there he pulled the flint arrow-head from his arm
+and was near bleeding to death."
+
+Mr. Peter Forbes could do no less than invite the pirate into the house,
+for the wounded arm had been rudely bandaged and was in sore need of
+dressing. Jack fetched a tray of cakes and wine while his uncle bawled
+at the servants who came running with soft cloths and hot water and
+healing lotions. Captain Bonnet protested that the hurt was trifling and
+carelessly explained:
+
+"My own ship's surgeon was spitted on a boarding-pike in our last action
+at sea and I have not found me another one. You show much skill and
+tenderness, sir."
+
+"The wound is deep and ragged. Hold still," commanded Mr. Peter Forbes.
+"You have been a soldier, Captain Bonnet, commended for valor on the
+fields of Europe and holding the king's commission. Why not seek pardon
+and serve with the armed forces of this province? My services in the
+matter are yours to command."
+
+Stede Bonnet frowned and bit his lip. All he said was:
+
+"You meddle with matters that concern you not, my good sir. I am a man
+able to make my own free choice."
+
+"Captain Bonnet does honor to the trade of piracy," cried the admiring
+Jack, at which his uncle declared, with a wrathful gesture:
+
+"I must remove this daft lad to England to be rid of you, Stede Bonnet.
+You have cast a wicked spell over him."
+
+"To England?" said the pirate, with a sympathetic glance at the boy. "I
+would sooner lie in gaol."
+
+"And reap your deserts," snapped Uncle Peter.
+
+"No doubt of that," frankly agreed the pirate. "And what thinks the lad
+of this sad penance?"
+
+"I hate it," was Jack's swift answer. "Will you grant our merchant ship
+safe conduct, Captain Bonnet?"
+
+"What ship, boy? You have only to name her. She will go scathless, as
+far as in my power."
+
+"The _Plymouth Adventure_," replied Jack. "It would ruin my uncle's
+temper beyond all mending to be taken by pirates."
+
+"I pledge you my word," swore Stede Bonnet. "Moreover, if trouble
+befall you by sea or land, Master Cockrell, I pray you send me tidings
+and you will have a friend in need."
+
+That night those who dwelt near the harbor heard the clank of a windlass
+as the crew of the _Royal James_ hove the cable short, and the
+melodious, deep-throated refrain of a farewell chantey floated across
+the quiet water. With the flood of the tide and a landward breeze, the
+brig stole out across the bar while the topsails were sheeted home. When
+daylight dawned, she had vanished in the empty reaches of the Atlantic.
+
+The brig sailed without Jack Cockrell. His shrewd uncle saw to that. It
+was not by accident that a constable of the town watch loitered in the
+lane by the Secretary's house. And Uncle Peter himself was careful not
+to let the lad out of his sight until the beguiling Stede Bonnet had
+left his haunts in Charles Town. Life resumed its routine next day but
+the boy's whole current of thought had been changed. He was restless,
+craving some fresh excitement and hoping that more pirates might come
+roaring to the tavern green.
+
+He found welcome diversion when the _Plymouth Adventure_, merchant
+trader, arrived from London after a famous passage of thirty-two days to
+the westward. Her master's orders were to make quick dispatch and return
+with freight and passengers direct from Charles Town. Jack was given no
+more leisure to brood over his own misfortunes. There were many errands
+to be done for Mr. Peter Forbes, besides the chests and boxes to be
+packed and stoutly corded. As was the custom, they had to supply their
+own furniture for the cabin in the ship and Jack Cockrell enjoyed the
+frequent trips aboard.
+
+He found much to interest him in the sedate, bearded Captain Jonathan
+Wellsby of the _Plymouth Adventure_, in the crew of hearty British tars
+who feared neither man nor devil, in the battery of nine-pounders, the
+stands of boarding-pikes, and the triced hammock nettings to protect the
+vessel against hand-to-hand encounters with pirates. The voyage might be
+worth while, after all. There were to be a dozen of passengers, several
+ladies among them. The most distinguished was Mr. Peter Arbuthnot
+Forbes, Secretary of the Provincial Council, who was accorded the
+greatest respect and given the largest cabin.
+
+It was an important event when the _Plymouth Adventure_ hoisted all her
+bunting on sailing day and Charles Town flocked to the harbor with
+wistful envy of the lucky people who were bound home to old England.
+There were sad faces among those left behind to endure the perils,
+hardships and loneliness of pioneers. Jack Cockrell's heart beat high
+when he saw sweet Dorothy Stuart in the throng. He tarried ashore with
+her until the boatswain's pipe trilled from the _Plymouth Adventure_ to
+summon the passengers on board. Colonel Stuart, blonde and bronzed and
+stalwart, escorted his winsome daughter and he praised Jack for his
+deed of courage, telling him:
+
+"There will soon be fewer pirates for you to trounce, I hope, my lad."
+
+"The town will be a stupid place without a visit from the jolly rovers
+now and then," honestly replied Jack, at which Colonel Stuart laughed
+and his daughter suggested:
+
+"With my brave knight in distant England, deliver me from any more
+pirates."
+
+Jack blushed and was both happy and sad when the dear maid took a flower
+from her bodice and gave it to him as a token of remembrance. He
+solemnly tucked it away in a pocket, stammered his farewells, and went
+to join his uncle who waited in the yawl at the wharf. Once on board the
+_Plymouth Adventure_, they were swept into a bustle and confusion.
+Captain Jonathan Wellsby was in haste to catch a fair wind and make his
+offing before nightfall. His sailors ran to and fro, jumping at the
+word, active and cheery. Stately and slow, the high-pooped merchant
+trader filled away on the larboard tack and pointed her lofty bowsprit
+seaward.
+
+The watches were set, ropes coiled down, and the tackles of the cannon
+overhauled. The skipper paced the after-deck, a long telescope under his
+arm, while the passengers lined the rail and gazed at the rude
+settlement that was slowly dropping below the horizon. The sea was
+tranquil and the breeze steady. The ship was clothed in canvas which
+bellied to drive her eastward with a frothing wake. Safely she left the
+outer bar astern and wallowed in the ocean swell.
+
+The afternoon sun was sinking when a sail gleamed like a bit of cloud
+against the southerly sky. Captain Wellsby held to his course and showed
+no uneasiness. Soon another sail became visible and then a third, these
+two smaller than the first. They might be honest merchantmen steering in
+company, but the skipper consulted with his mates and the spy-glass
+passed from hand to hand. The passengers were at supper in the cuddy and
+their talk and laughter came through the open skylights.
+
+Presently the boatswain piped the crew to quarters and the men moved
+quietly to their battle stations, opening the gun-ports and casting
+loose the lashings. The boys fetched paper cartridges of powder in
+buckets from the magazine and the gunners lighted the matches of tow.
+Cutlasses were buckled on and the pikes were scattered along the
+bulwarks ready to be snatched up.
+
+It was impossible to escape these three strange vessels by beating back
+to Charles Town, for the _Plymouth Adventure_ made lubberly work of it
+when thrashing to windward. She was a swift ship, however, before a fair
+wind, and Captain Wellsby resolved to run for it, hoping to edge away
+from danger if his suspicions should be confirmed.
+
+Before sunset the largest of the strange sail shifted her course as
+though to set out in chase and overhaul the deep-laden merchant trader.
+Captain Wellsby stood near the tiller, his hands clasped behind him, a
+solid, dependable figure of a British mariner. The passengers were
+crowding around him in distressful agitation but he calmly assured them
+a stern chase was a long chase and he expected to slip away under cover
+of night. So far as he was aware, no pirates, excepting Stede Bonnet,
+had been recently reported in these waters.
+
+Here Mr. Peter Forbes broke in to say that the _Plymouth Adventure_ had
+naught to fear from Captain Bonnet who had pledged his word to let her
+sail unmolested. Other passengers scoffed at the absurd notion of
+trusting a pirate's oath, but the pompous Secretary of the Council could
+not be cried down. He was a canny critic of human nature and he knew an
+honorable pirate when he met him.
+
+It was odd, but in a pinch like this the dapper, finicky Councilor Peter
+Arbuthnot Forbes displayed an unshaken courage as became a gentleman of
+his position, while young Jack Cockrell had suddenly changed his opinion
+of the fascinating trade of piracy. He had not the slightest desire to
+investigate it at any closer range. His knees were inclined to wobble
+and his stomach felt qualms. His uncle twitted him as a braggart ashore
+who sang a different tune afloat. The lad's grin was feeble as he
+retorted that he took his pirates one at a time.
+
+The largest vessel of the pursuit came up at a tremendous pace, reeling
+beneath an extraordinary spread of canvas, her spray-swept hull
+disclosing an armament of thirty guns, the decks swarming with men. She
+was no merchant ship, this was already clear, but there was still the
+hope that she might be a man-of-war or a privateer. Captain Wellsby
+looked in vain for her colors. At length he saw a flag whip from the
+spanker gaff. He laid down the glass with a profound sigh.
+
+The flag was black with a sinister device, a white blotch whose outline
+suggested a human skull.
+
+Captain Wellsby gazed again and carefully examined the two sloops which
+were acting in concert with the thirty-gun ship. It was a squadron, and
+the brave _Plymouth Adventure_ was hopelessly outmatched. To fight meant
+a slaughter with never a chance of survival.
+
+The passengers had made no great clamor until the menacing ship drew
+close enough for them to descry the dreadful pennant which showed as a
+sable blot against the evening sky. Two women fainted and others were
+seized with violent hysteria. Their shrill screams were so distressing
+that the skipper ordered them to be lugged below and shut in their
+cabins. Mr. Peter Forbes had plumped himself down upon a coil of hawser,
+as if utterly disgusted, but he implored the captain to blaze away at
+the besotted scoundrels as long as two planks held together. The
+Honorable Secretary of the Council had been too outspoken in his
+opinions of pirates to expect kindness at their hands.
+
+The sailors also expected no quarter but they sullenly crouched at the
+gun-carriages, gripping the handspikes and blowing the matches while
+they waited for the word. The pirate ship was now reaching to windward
+of the _Plymouth Adventure_, heeling over until her decks were in full
+view. Upon the poop stood a man of the most singular appearance. He was
+squat and burly and immensely broad across the shoulders. What made him
+grotesque was a growth of beard which swept almost to his waist and
+covered his face like a hairy curtain. In it were tied bright streamers
+of crimson ribbon. Evidently this fantastic monster was proud of his
+whiskers and liked to adorn them.
+
+The laced hat with a feather in it, the skirted coat of buff and blue
+which flapped around his bow-legs, and the rows of gold buttons across
+his chest were in slovenly imitation of a naval uniform. But there was
+nothing like naval discipline on those crowded decks where half the crew
+appeared to be drunk and the rest of them cursing each other.
+
+Captain Jonathan Wellsby smothered a groan and his stern mouth twitched
+as he said to his chief mate:
+
+"God's mercy on us! 'Tis none other than the bloody Edward Teach,--that
+calls himself Blackbeard! My information was that he still cruised off
+the Spanish Main and refitted his ships in the Bay of Honduras."
+
+"The madman of the sea," said the stolid mate. "A bad day for us when he
+sailed to the north'ard. He kills for the pleasure of it. Now Stede
+Bonnet loots such stuff as takes his fancy and----"
+
+"He loves to fight a king's ship for the sport of it," broke in the
+skipper, "but this murderer---- An unlucky voyage for the old _Plymouth
+Adventure_ and all hands, Mate."
+
+One of the women who had been suffered to remain on deck was close
+enough to overhear the direful news. Her hands to heaven, she wailed:
+
+"Blackbeard! Oh, my soul, we are as good as dead, or worse. Fight and
+sink him, dear captain. What shall I do? What shall I do? If I had only
+minded the dream I had the night before we sailed----"
+
+Jack Cockrell sat down beside his uncle, a limp and sorry youth for one
+who had offered to slay a six-foot pirate before breakfast to please a
+pretty maid. With a sickly grin he murmured:
+
+"This cockerel crowed too loud, Uncle Peter. Methinks I share your
+distaste for piracy."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+HELD AS HOSTAGES TO BLACKBEARD
+
+
+TO discover the pestilent Blackbeard in Carolina waters was like a
+thunderbolt from a clear sky. Captain Wellsby had felt confident that he
+could beat off the ordinary pirate craft which was apt to be smaller
+than his own stout ship. And most of these unsavory gentry were mere
+salt-water burglars who had little taste for hard fighting. The master
+of the _Plymouth Adventure_, so pious and sedate, was a brave man to
+whom the thought of surrender was intolerable. From what he knew of
+Blackbeard, it was useless to try to parley for the lives of his
+passengers. Better it was to answer with double-shotted guns than to beg
+for mercy.
+
+The British tars, stripped to the waist, turned anxious eyes to the
+skipper upon the quarter-deck while they quaffed pannikins of rum and
+water and cracked many a rough jest. They fancied death no more than
+other men, but seafaring was a perilous trade and they were toughened to
+its hazards. They were facing hopeless odds but let the master shout the
+command and they would send the souls of some of these pirates sizzling
+down to hell before the _Plymouth Adventure_ sank, a splintered hulk, in
+the smoke of her own gunpowder.
+
+Captain Wellsby delayed his decision a moment longer. Something most
+unusual had attracted his attention. A ball of smoke puffed from a port
+of Blackbeard's ship, but the round shot splashed beyond the bowsprit of
+the _Plymouth Adventure_ instead of thudding into her oaken side. This
+was a signal to heave to. It was a courtesy both unexpected and
+perplexing, because Blackbeard's habit was to let fly with all the guns
+that could bear as the summons to submit. Presently a dingy bit of cloth
+fluttered just beneath the black flag. It looked like the remains of a
+pirate's shirt which had once been white.
+
+"A signal for a truce?" muttered Captain Wellsby. "A ruse, mayhap, but
+the rogue has no need to resort to trickery."
+
+The two sloops of Blackbeard's squadron, spreading tall, square
+topsails, came driving down to windward in readiness to fire their
+bow-chasers and form in line of battle. The passengers of the _Plymouth
+Adventure_, snatching at the chance of safety, implored the skipper to
+send his men away from the guns lest a rash shot might be their ruin.
+They prayed him to respect the precious flag of truce and to ascertain
+the meaning of it. Mystified and wavering in his purpose, he told the
+mates to back the main-yard and heave the ship to.
+
+Upon his own deck Blackbeard was stamping to and fro, bellowing at his
+crew while he flourished a broadsword by way of emphasis. The hapless
+company of the _Plymouth Adventure_ shivered at the very sight of him
+and yet there was something almost ludicrous in the antics of this
+atrocious pirate, as though he were play-acting upon the stage of a
+theatre. He had tucked up the tails of his military coat because the
+wind whipped them about his bandy legs and made him stumble. The flowing
+whiskers also proved bothersome, wherefore he looped them back over his
+ears by means of the bows of crimson ribbon. This seemed to be his
+personal fashion of clearing for action.
+
+"There be pirates and pirates," critically observed Mr. Peter Forbes as
+he stared at the unpleasant Blackbeard. "This is a filthy beast, Jack,
+and he was badly brought up. He has no manners whatever."
+
+"Parson Throckmorton would take him for the devil himself," gloomily
+answered the lad.
+
+And now they saw Blackbeard raise a speaking-trumpet to his lips and
+heard the hoarse voice come down the wind with this message:
+
+"The ship ahoy! Steady as ye be, blast your eyes, or I'll lay aboard and
+butcher all hands."
+
+He turned and yelled commands to the two sloops which now rolled within
+pistol-shot. In helter-skelter style but with great speed, one boat
+after another was lowered away and filled with armed pirates. They rowed
+toward the _Plymouth Adventure_ and there were enough of them to carry
+her by boarding. In addition to this, she was directly under the guns of
+Blackbeard's powerful ship. One valorous young gentleman passenger
+whipped out a rapier and swore to perish with his face to the foe, but
+Captain Wellsby kicked him into the cabin and fastened the scuttle. This
+was no time for dramatics.
+
+"It looks that the old ruffian comes on a peaceful errand," said the
+skipper, by way of comfort. But the hysterical ladies below decks
+redoubled their screams and one substantial merchant of Charles Town
+scrambled down to hide himself among them. Mr. Peter Arbuthnot Forbes
+folded his arms and there was no sign of weakness in his pink
+countenance. His dignity still sustained him.
+
+As agile as monkeys, the mob of pirates poured over the bulwark,
+slashing through the hammock nettings, and swept forward in a compact
+mass, driving Captain Wellsby's seamen before them and penning them in
+the forecastle. Having cleared the waist of the ship, they loitered
+there until a few of them discovered the galley and pantry. They swept
+the shelves and lockers bare of food like a pack of famished wolves.
+Jack Cockrell looked at them from the poop and perceived that they were
+a gaunt, ragged lot. The skins of some were yellow like parchment, and
+fits of trembling overtook them. Something more than dissipation ailed
+them.
+
+With a body-guard of the sturdiest men, Blackbeard clambered up the
+poop ladder and, with wicked oaths, told the skipper to stand forth.
+Clean and trig and carefully dressed, Captain Jonathan Wellsby
+confronted these savage, unwashed pirates and calmly demanded to know
+their errand. It was plain to read that Blackbeard thought himself an
+imposing figure. With a smirk and a grimace he bowed clumsily to a woman
+on deck who had refused to desert her husband. He growled like a bear at
+Captain Wellsby and prodded the poor man with his cutlass as he
+thundered:
+
+"You tried my patience, shipmaster, with your cracking on sail. A little
+more and I'd ha' slit your throat. Blood an' wounds, would ye dare to
+vex Blackbeard?"
+
+Captain Wellsby faced him with unshaken composure and returned in a
+strong voice:
+
+"I beg no favors for myself but these helpless people, women amongst
+them, came on board with my assurance of safety. They have friends and
+kinsmen in Charles Town who will ransom them in gold."
+
+Blackbeard's mien was a shade less ferocious as he cried:
+
+"Gold? Can it cool a fever or heal a festering sore? A score of my men
+are down and the others are tottering ghosts. Medicines I must have. A
+foul plague on those ports of the Spanish Main which laid my fine lads
+by the heels."
+
+Jack Cockrell, who had retreated to the taffrail, decided that this
+unkempt pirate was not so absurd as he appeared. There was the strength
+of a giant in those hulking shoulders and in the long arms which bulged
+the coat-sleeves, and the man moved with a quickness which made that
+clumsy air deceptive. The beard masked his features but the eye was keen
+and roving, and he had a trick of baring his teeth in a nasty snarl. He
+uttered no more threats, however, and seemed to be anxiously awaiting
+the reply of Captain Wellsby, who said:
+
+"The few medicines and simples in my chest will not suffice your need.
+Your ships are rotten with the Spanish fever."
+
+"A ransom, shipmaster?" exclaimed the pirate. "'Twas in my mind when I
+flew a white flag for parley. I will hold some of your fine passengers
+as hostages while the others go in to rake Charles Town for medicines to
+fetch back to my fleet."
+
+"You will send my ship in?" asked the skipper.
+
+"No! This _Plymouth Adventure_ is my good prize and I will overhaul the
+cargo and sink her at my leisure. My ship will tack in to Charles Town
+bar. Then let the messengers go in the long-boat to find the store of
+medicines. Harkee, shipmaster,--two days, no longer, for their return!
+Failing this, the hostages feed the fishes. Such sport 'ud liven the
+hearts of my doleful seamen."
+
+It was a shameful bargain, thus to submit to a pirate's whim, but the
+wretched ship's company hailed it as a glad surprise. They had stood in
+the shadow of death and this was a respite and a chance of salvation.
+Captain Wellsby was heart-sick with humiliation but it was not for him
+to take into his hands the fate of all these others. Sadly he nodded
+assent. Jack Cockrell nudged his uncle and whispered:
+
+"Why doesn't he sail in with his three ships and take what he likes? The
+town lies helpless against such a force as this."
+
+"Ssh-h, be silent," was the warning. "He is a wary bird of prey and he
+fears a trap. He dare not attack the port, since he lacks knowledge of
+its defenses."
+
+Jack's cheek was rosy again and his knees had ceased to tremble. There
+was no immediate prospect of walking the plank. To be captured by
+Blackbeard was a finer adventure than strutting arm-in-arm with Captain
+Stede Bonnet. It was mournful, indeed, that Captain Wellsby should have
+to lose his ship but 'tis an ill wind that blows nobody good and the
+voyage to England, which Jack had loathed from the bottom of his heart,
+was indefinitely postponed. Such an experience as this was apt to
+discourage Uncle Peter Forbes from trying it again.
+
+There were sundry chicken-hearted passengers anxious to curry favor with
+Blackbeard, who gabbled when they should have held their tongues, and in
+this manner he learned that he had bagged the honorable Secretary of the
+Provincial Council. The bewhiskered pirate slapped his thighs and roared
+with glee.
+
+"Damme, but he looks it! Alack that my sorry need of medicines compels
+me to give quarter! Would I might swing this fat Secretary from a
+topsail yard! And a rogue of a lawyer to boot! He tempts me----"
+
+"I demand the courtesy due a hostage," exclaimed Mr. Peter Forbes.
+
+"Ho, ho, you shall be my lackey,--the chief messenger," laughed
+Blackbeard, showing his yellow teeth. "Hat in hand, begging medicines
+for me."
+
+The honorable Secretary was near apoplexy. He could only sputter and
+cough. He was to be sent as an errand boy to the people of Charles Town,
+at the brutal behest of this unspeakable knave, but refusal meant death
+and there were his fellow captives to consider. He thought of his nephew
+and was about to plead that Jack be sent along with him when Blackbeard
+demanded:
+
+"What of the boy? He takes my eye. No pursy swine of a lawyer could sire
+a lad of his brawn and inches."
+
+"I am Master Cockrell," Jack answered for himself, "and I would have you
+more courteous to my worthy uncle."
+
+It was a speech so bold that the scourge of the Spanish Main tugged at
+his whiskers with an air of comical perplexity. The headstrong Jack was
+keen enough to note that he had made an impression and he rashly added:
+
+"'Tis not long since I knocked a pirate on the head for incivility."
+
+Mr. Peter Forbes gazed aghast, with slackened jaw, expecting to see his
+mad nephew cut down by the sweep of a broadsword, but Blackbeard merely
+grinned and slapped the lad half-way across the deck with a buffet of
+his open hand. Dizzily Jack picked himself up and was furiously scolded
+by his uncle. Their lives hung by a hair and this was no time to play
+the fool. For once, however, Jack was the wiser of the two. In an
+amiable humor Blackbeard exclaimed:
+
+"And so this strapping young jackanapes knocks pirates on the head!
+There be lazy dogs among my men that well deserve it. You shall stay
+aboard, Master Cockrell, whilst the juicy lubber of a lawyer voyages
+into Charles Town. He may sweat an' strive the more if I hold you as his
+security. Zounds, I'll make a gentleman rover of ye, Jack, for I like
+your mettle."
+
+It was futile for the unhappy uncle to argue the matter. He could only
+obey the tyrant's pleasure and hope for a speedy return and the release
+of the terrified passengers. The _Plymouth Adventure_ was ordered to
+haul her course to the westward and jog under easy sail toward the
+Charles Town bar. Blackbeard was rowed off to his own ship, the
+_Revenge_, leaving his sailing-master and a prize crew. These amused
+themselves by dragging the weeping women on deck and robbing them of
+their jewels and money, but no worse violence was offered. Middle-aged
+matrons and elderly spinsters, they were neither young nor fair enough
+to be stolen as pirates' brides.
+
+The _Revenge_ and the two sloops hovered within sight of the _Plymouth
+Adventure_ and their sails gleamed phantom-like in the darkness. There
+was little sleep aboard the captured merchant trader. Some of the
+pirates amused themselves with hauling chests and boxes out of the
+cabins and spilling the contents about the deck in riotous disorder. One
+sprightly outlaw arrayed himself in a silken petticoat and flowered
+bodice and paraded as a languishing lady with false curls until the
+others pelted him with broken bottles and tar buckets. By the flare of
+torches they ransacked the ship for provisions, cordage, canvas, and
+heaped them ready to be dumped into boats.
+
+Jack Cockrell looked on until he was too drowsy to stay awake and fell
+asleep on deck, his head pillowed on his arm. Through the night the
+watches were changed to the harsh summons of the pirate sailing-master
+or his mate. Once Jack awoke when a seaman staggered into the moonlight
+with blood running down his face. He was not likely to be caught napping
+on watch again.
+
+At dawn the _Plymouth Adventure_ was astir and the _Revenge_ ran close
+aboard to watch Mr. Peter Arbuthnot Forbes and two prosperous merchants
+of Charles Town bundled into the long-boat. Blackbeard shouted bloody
+threats through his trumpet, reminding them that he would allow no more
+than two days' grace for their errand ashore. Uncle Peter was deeply
+affected as he embraced his nephew and kissed him on the cheek. Jack's
+eyes were wet and he faltered, with unsteady voice:
+
+"Forgive me, sir, for all the trouble I have made you. Never did I
+expect a parting like this."
+
+"A barbarous coast, Jack, and a hard road to old England," smiled the
+Secretary of the Council. "Have a stout heart. By God's grace I shall
+soon deliver you from these sea vermin."
+
+The boy watched the long-boat hoist sail with a grizzled, scarred old
+boatswain from the _Revenge_ at the tiller. It drove for the blue
+fairway of the channel between the frothing shoals of the bar and made
+brave headway for the harbor. Then the ships stood out to sea to go
+clear of a lee shore and the captives of the _Plymouth Adventure_
+endured the harrowing suspense with such courage as they could muster.
+Should any accident delay the return of the long-boat beyond two days,
+even head winds or foul weather, or if there was lack of medicines in
+the town, they were doomed to perish.
+
+Jack Cockrell endured it with less anguish than the other wretched
+hostages. He had the sublime confidence of youth in its own destiny and
+he had found a chum in a boyish pirate named Joseph Hawkridge who said
+he had sailed out of London as an apprentice seaman in a ketch bound to
+Jamaica. He had been taken out of his ship by Blackbeard, somewhere off
+the Azores, and compelled to enlist or walk the plank. At first he was
+made cook's scullion but because he was well-grown and active, the chief
+gunner had taken him over as a powder boy.
+
+This Joe Hawkridge was a waif of the London slums, hard and wise beyond
+his years, who had been starved and abused ever since he could remember.
+He had fled from cruel taskmasters ashore to endure the slavery of the
+sea and to be kidnapped into piracy was no worse than other things he
+had suffered. A gangling lad, with a grin on his homely face, he had
+certain instincts of manliness, of decent conduct, although he had known
+only men whose souls were black with sin. Heaven knows where he learned
+these cleaner aspirations. They were like the reflection of a star in a
+muddy pool.
+
+It was easy for Jack Cockrell to win his confidence. Few of his
+shipmates spoke kindly or showed pity for him. And their youth drew them
+together. Jack's motive was largely curiosity as soon as he discovered
+that here was one of Blackbeard's crew ready to confide in him. The two
+lads chatted in sheltered corners of the deck, between watches, or met
+more freely in the night hours. Jack shuddered at some of the tales that
+were told him but he harkened breathless and asked for more.
+
+"Yes, this Blackbeard is the very wickedest pirate that ever sailed,"
+said Joe Hawkridge in the most matter-of-fact tones. "You have found him
+merciful because he fears a mortal sickness will sweep through his
+ships."
+
+"You have curdled my blood enough for now," admitted Jack. "Tell me
+this. What do they say of Captain Stede Bonnet? He chances to be a
+friend of mine."
+
+Joe Hawkridge ceased to grin. He was startled and impressed. Real
+gentlemen like this young Cockrell always told the truth. Making certain
+that they could not be overheard, Joe whispered:
+
+"What news of Stede Bonnet? You've seen him? When? Did he cruise to the
+north'ard? Has he been seen off Charles Town?"
+
+"He came ashore not long ago, and invited me to dinner at the tavern
+with him," bragged Jack. "And he coaxed me to sign in his ship."
+
+"Yes, you'd catch his eye, Cockrell, but listen! What ship had he, and
+how many men? God strike me, but I'll not tattle it. I'm true as steel
+to Stede Bonnet. If you love me, don't breathe it here."
+
+"There is no love lost betwixt him and Blackbeard?" excitedly queried
+Jack.
+
+"Mortal foes they be, if you ask Stede Bonnet."
+
+Feeling sure he could trust this young Hawkridge, Jack informed him:
+
+"Stede Bonnet flies his pennant in a fine brig, the _Royal James_, with
+seventy lusty rovers. But what about him, Joe? Why does he hate this
+foul ogre of a Blackbeard? Did they ever sail together?"
+
+"'Twas in the Bay of Honduras. Captain Bonnet was a green hand at the
+trade but zealous to win renown at piratin'. And so he made compact with
+Blackbeard, to sail as partners. There was Stede Bonnet with a fine ship
+and his own picked crew. By treachery Blackbeard stole the vessel from
+him. Bonnet and his men were left to shift for 'emselves in a rotten old
+hulk that was like to founder in a breeze o' wind."
+
+"But they stayed afloat and took them a good ship," proudly exclaimed
+Jack, with a personal interest in the venture.
+
+"True, by what you say. D'ye see the _Revenge_ yonder, Blackbeard's tall
+cruiser? The very ship he filched from Stede Bonnet by dirty stratagem
+and broken oaths!"
+
+"Then the powder will burn when next they meet?"
+
+"As long as there's a shot in the locker, Jack. And Blackbeard's men are
+ripe for mutiny. Let 'em once sight Stede Bonnet's topsails and----"
+
+A gunner's mate broke into this interview with a cat-o'-nine-tails and
+flogged Joe Hawkridge forward to duty. He ducked and fled with a
+farewell grin at the nephew of the Secretary of the Council. Now all
+this was diverting enough to keep Jack from bemoaning his fate, but the
+other passengers counted the hours one by one and their hearts began to
+drum against their ribs. They scanned the sea and the harbor bar with
+aching eyes, for the two days were well-nigh spent and there was never a
+sign of the long-boat and the messengers with the ransom of medicines
+which should avert the sentence of death.
+
+Sunrise of the second day brought them no comfort. The sea was gray and
+the sky leaden, without the slightest stir of wind. The drifting vessels
+rolled in a swell that heaved as smooth as oil. It was a calm which
+presaged violent weather. Against her masts the yards of the _Plymouth
+Adventure_ banged with a sound like distant thunder and the idle canvas
+slatted to the thump of blocks and the thin wail of chafing cordage.
+
+Captain Jonathan Wellsby was permitted the freedom of the poop by
+Blackbeard's sailing-master who seemed a sober and competent officer.
+They were seen to confer earnestly, as though the safety of the ship
+were uppermost in their minds. Soon the pirates of the prize crew were
+ordered to stow and secure all light sail and pass extra lashings about
+the boats and batten the hatches. They worked slowly, some of them
+shaking with fever, nor could kicks and curses and the sting of the
+whistling cat make them turn to smartly. The sailing-master signaled the
+_Revenge_ to send off more hands but Blackbeard was either drunk or in
+one of his crack-brained moods. With a laugh he pulled a brace of
+pistols from his sash and blazed away at the _Plymouth Adventure._
+
+The two sloops of the pirate squadron had sagged down to leeward during
+the night and were trying to work back to their stations when the dead
+calm intervened. Their skippers had sense enough to read the weather
+signs and had begun to take in canvas. On board of the _Revenge_,
+however, there was aimless confusion, the mates making some attempt to
+prepare the ship for a heavy blow while Blackbeard defied the elements.
+His idea of arousing his men was to try potshots with his pistols as
+they crept out on the swaying spars.
+
+It was quite apparent that the sailing-master was sorely needed in the
+_Revenge_, if order was to be brought out of this chaos, but he received
+no orders to quit the _Plymouth Adventure_. He was a proper seaman, Ned
+Rackham by name, who had deserted from the Royal Navy, after being
+flogged and keel-hauled for some trifling offense. Rumor had it that he
+was able to enforce respect from Blackbeard and would stand none of his
+infernal nonsense.
+
+"In this autumn season we may catch a storm from the West Indies, Mr.
+Rackham," said Captain Wellsby. "The sea has a greasy look and this
+heavy ground swell is a portent."
+
+"The feel of it is in the air, shipmaster. There fell an evil calm like
+this come two year ago when I was wrecked in a ship-of-the-line within
+sight of Havana. Four hundred men sank with her."
+
+"If my sailors were not penned in the fo'castle----" suggested the
+merchant skipper.
+
+"None o' that," was the stern retort. "This ship is a prize to
+Blackbeard and so she stays, and you will sink or swim with her."
+
+The morning wore on and the two days of grace had passed for those
+doleful hostages in the _Plymouth Adventure_. They beheld the black flag
+hoisted to the rigging of the _Revenge_ as a signal of tragic import,
+but the bandy-legged monster with the festooned whiskers was not to
+disport himself with this wanton butchery. The sky had closed darkly
+around the becalmed ships, in sodden clouds which were suddenly obscured
+by mist and rain while the wind sighed in fitful gusts. It steadied into
+the southward and swiftly increased in force until the sea was whipped
+into foam and scud.
+
+Staunch and well-found, the _Plymouth Adventure_ went reeling off across
+the spray-swept leagues of water, showing only her reefed topsails and
+courses. The two pirate sloops vanished beyond the curtain of mist. When
+last seen, one of them was dismasted and the other was laboring in grave
+peril. The _Revenge_ loomed as a spectral shape while Blackbeard was
+endeavoring to get her running free in pursuit of the _Plymouth
+Adventure_. But slovenly, reckless seamanship had caught him unready.
+His sails were blowing to ribbons, ropes flying at loose ends, and it
+was with great difficulty that the vessel could be made to mind her
+tiller.
+
+Already the sea was rising in crested combers which broke with the noise
+of thunder and the fury of the wind was insensate. Slowly the struggling
+_Revenge_ dropped astern, yawing wildly, rolling her bulwarks under,
+splintered spars dangling from the caps. She was a crippled ship which
+would be lucky to see port again. It was to be inferred that Blackbeard
+had ceased to cut his mirthful capers on the poop and that he would have
+given bushels of doubloons to regain his sailing-master and men.
+
+In the _Plymouth Adventure_ things were in far better plight, even with
+the feeble, short-handed prize crew. Prudently snugged down in ample
+time, with extra hands at the steering tackles, they let her drive. She
+would perhaps wear clear of the coast and there was hope of survival
+unless the tempest should fairly wrench her strong timbers asunder.
+
+Lashed to the weather rigging, Captain Jonathan Wellsby wiped the brine
+from his eyes and waved his arm at the helmsman, now to ease her a
+little, again to haul up and thus thwart some ravening sea which
+threatened to stamp his ship under. Sailing-Master Ned Rackham was
+content to let the skipper con his own vessel in this great emergency.
+
+The mind of Captain Wellsby was very active and he pondered on something
+else than winning through the storm. He had been helpless while under
+the guns of the _Revenge_, with the two sloops in easy call. Now the
+situation was vastly different. He had been delivered out of
+Blackbeard's clutches. And in the forecastle were thirty British seamen
+with hearts of oak, raging to be loosed with weapons in their hands.
+Peering into the gray smother of sea and sky, Captain Jonathan Wellsby
+licked his lips hungrily as he said to himself:
+
+"Not now, but if the storm abates and we float through the night, these
+lousy picaroons shall dance to another tune."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+THE CAPTIVE SEAMEN IN THE FORECASTLE
+
+
+JACK COCKRELL was seasick. This was enough to spoil any adventure.
+Curled up under a boat, the spray pelted him and the wild motion of the
+ship sloshed him back and forth. He took no interest even in piracy. Joe
+Hawkridge, tough as whip-cord and seasoned to all kinds of weather, came
+clawing his way aft while the water streamed from his thin shirt and
+ragged breeches. The pirates of the prize crew had sought shelter
+wherever they could find it. The waist of the ship was flooded with
+breaking seas. A few of the larboard watch were huddled forward, close
+to the lofty forecastle where they were stationed as sentries over the
+imprisoned sailors of the _Plymouth Adventure_.
+
+The commotion of the wind shrieking in the rigging and the horrid crash
+of the toppling combers were enough to convince a landlubber that the
+vessel was doomed to founder. But Joe Hawkridge clapped young Jack an
+affectionate clout on the ear and bawled at him:
+
+ "For his work he's never loth,
+ An' a-pleasurin' he'll go,
+ Tho' certain sure to be popt off;
+ _Yo, ho, with the rum below!_"
+
+Jack managed to fetch a sickly smile of greeting, but had nothing to
+say. Joe snuggled down beside him and explained:
+
+"I wouldn't dare sing that song if Blackbeard's bullies could hear me.
+'Tis known as Stede Bonnet's ditty, for a fight or a frolic."
+
+"By Harry, they can roll it out. My blood tingled when they chorused it
+through Charles Town," said Jack, with signs of animation and a sparkle
+in his eye. "Tell me truly, Joe. What about this pirate sailing-master,
+Ned Rackham? He seems a different sort from your other drunken wretches.
+He is more like one of Captain Bonnet's choosing."
+
+"Gulled you, has he?" cried Joe. "I was afeard of that. And he's getting
+on the blind side of your skipper. This Cap'n Jonathan Wellsby is brave
+enough and a rare seaman, but he ne'er dealt with a smooth rogue like
+Ned Rackham. He stays sober to plot for his own advantage. He will serve
+Blackbeard only till he can trip him by the heels. Now listen well,
+Jack, seasick though ye be. You will have to warn your skipper, Captain
+Wellsby."
+
+"Warn him of what? My poor head is so addled that I can fathom no plots.
+How can Ned Rackham do us mischief while this infernal gale blows? He
+toils with might and main for the safety of the ship."
+
+"Yes, you dunce, and let a lull come," scornfully exclaimed the boyish
+pirate. "What then? A fine ship this, and well gunned. She would make a
+smackin' cruiser for Ned Rackham, eh? He hoists the Jolly Roger on his
+own account and laughs at Blackbeard."
+
+"Take our ship for his own?" faltered Jack, his wits confused. "I never
+thought of that. Why, that means getting rid of us, of the passengers
+and crew."
+
+Joe passed a hand across his throat with a grimace that said more than
+words.
+
+"He has the ship's company disarmed and helpless, Jack. And pirates
+a-plenty to work her till he recruits a stronger force. All hands of 'em
+have a surfeit of Blackbeard's bloody whims an' didoes."
+
+"And Captain Wellsby will be caught off his guard?" said Jack, shivering
+at the aspect of this new terror.
+
+"Can he do aught to prevent, unless he is bold enough to forestall it?"
+answered the shrewd young sea waif. "Better die fighting than be slain
+like squealin' rats."
+
+"Recapture the ship ere Ned Rackham casts the dice," said Jack. "But it
+means playing the hazard in the midst of this storm. How can it be done?
+A forlorn venture. It can but fail."
+
+"You are as good as dead if you don't," was Joe's sensible verdict.
+
+Jack Cockrell forgot his wretched qualms of mind and body. The trumpet
+call of duty invigorated him. He was no longer a useless lump. The color
+returned to his cheek as he crawled from under the boat and shakily
+hauled himself to his feet. Joe Hawkridge nodded approval and exhorted:
+
+"A stiff upper lip, my gallant young gentleman. Steady she goes, an' not
+too hasty. Ned Rackham is as sharp as a whetted sword. Ware ye, boy,
+lest he pick up the scent. Fetch me word, here, beneath this
+jolly-boat."
+
+Jack stole away, staggering along the high poop deck until he could
+cling to the life-line stretched along the roof of the great cabin.
+There he slumped down and feigned helplessness, banged against the
+bulwark as a dripping heap of misery or kicked aside by the pirates of
+the watch as they were relieved at the steering tackles. From
+half-closed eyes he watched Ned Rackham, a vigilant, dominant figure in
+a tarred jacket and quilted breeches and long sea-boots. Now and again
+he cupped his hands and yelled in the ear of Captain Wellsby whose beard
+was gray with brine.
+
+Jack saw that it was hopeless to get a private word with the skipper on
+deck. The clamor of the storm was too deafening. The one chance was to
+intercept him in the cabin when he went below for food and drink. Jack
+dragged himself to the after hatchway which was shoved open a trifle to
+admit air, and squeezed himself through. Before he tumbled down the
+steep staircase he turned to glance at Captain Wellsby. Unseen by Ned
+Rackham, the boy raised his hand in a furtive, beckoning gesture.
+
+The pirates had taken the main room of the after-house for their own
+use, driving the passengers and ship's officers into the small cabins or
+staterooms. The air was foul below, reeking of the bilges, and the main
+room was incredibly filthy. The pirates ate from dirty dishes, they had
+scattered food about, and they kicked off their boots to sleep on the
+floor like pigs in a sty.
+
+Several of them were seated at the long table, bottle and mug in hand,
+and the gloomy place was poorly lighted by a swinging whale-oil lamp.
+Jack Cockrell crept unnoticed into a corner and was giddy and almost
+helpless with nausea. It seemed ages before Captain Wellsby's legs
+appeared in the hatchway and he came down into the cabin, bringing a
+shower of spray with him. His kindly face was haggard and sad and he
+tottered from sheer weariness. Passing through to his own room, a scurvy
+pirate hurled refuse food at him, with a silly laugh, and others
+insulted him with the foulest epithets.
+
+He paid them no heed and they returned to their own amusements. Jack
+Cockrell aroused himself to stumble after the skipper who halted to
+grasp the lad by the shoulder and shove him headlong into the little
+room. The door was quickly bolted behind them. A lurch of the vessel
+flung Jack into the bunk but he managed to sit up, holding his head in
+his hands, while he feebly implored:
+
+"Did you note me wave my hand, sir, when I came below?"
+
+"Yes, and I followed as soon as I could," answered the master of the
+_Plymouth Adventure_. "There was the hint of secrecy in your signal,
+Jack. What's in the wind?"
+
+"I am the only passenger to win the confidence of one of Blackbeard's
+crew," explained the lad. "This Joe Hawkridge is true to us, I'll swear
+it. He is a pressed man, hating his masters. He bids me tell you that
+Ned Rackham will seize the ship for his own as soon as ever the wind
+goes down."
+
+"Um-m, is he as bold as that?" grunted the skipper, rubbing his nose
+with an air of rueful surprise. "No honor among thieves, Jack. I thought
+him loyal to Blackbeard. I have considered attempting something of my
+own when the weather permits but this news quickens me. This young imp
+o' Satan that ye call Joe,--he will side with us in a pinch?"
+
+"Aye, sir. And he knows this Ned Rackham well. There has been talk among
+the pirates of rising against Blackbeard to follow the fortunes of
+Sailing-Master Rackham. Here is the ship, as Joe says."
+
+"It has a plausible sound," said Captain Wellsby. "My intention was to
+wait, but I shall have to strike first."
+
+"Can we fight in this storm, sir, even if we manage to release our
+sailors?" asked Jack, very dismally.
+
+"Not what we can, but what we must do," growled the stubborn British
+mariner. "The shame of striking my colors rankles like a wound. God
+helping me, we shall wipe out that stain if we drown in a sinking ship.
+I talk to you as a man, Master Cockrell, for such you have proven
+yourself. And who else is there to serve me in this adventure?"
+
+"To set our sailors free, you mean, sir?" eagerly exclaimed Jack. "I
+took thought of that. There is nobody but me, neither your mates nor the
+passengers, who can pass among the pirates without suspicion. The knaves
+have humored me, hearing the tale of the pirate I knocked on the head
+and my braggart remark to Blackbeard. They have seen me about the decks
+with Joe Hawkridge as my boon comrade. 'Tis their fancy that I am likely
+to enlist."
+
+"Well said, Jack," was the skipper's compliment. "Yes, you might make
+your way for'ard without interference,--but the fo'castle hatches are
+stoutly guarded. Again, should my brave fellows find exit, they are
+weaponless, unready. Moreover, they have been crammed in that dark hole,
+drenched by the sea, cruelly bruised by the tossing of the ship, and
+weakened for lack of food and air."
+
+"Granted, sir," sighed Jack. "But if some message could be smuggled in
+to forewarn them of the enterprise,--would that brace 'em to the
+assault?"
+
+"Will ye try it, Jack?" asked the skipper, with a note of appeal in his
+hearty voice. "I know not where else to turn. You take your life in your
+hands but----"
+
+The shipmaster broke off with a grim smile. It was absurd to prate of
+life or death in such a strait as this. The boy reflected before he
+said:
+
+"If--if I fail, sir, Joe Hawkridge will try to pass a message in to the
+men. You can depend on 't."
+
+"A last resort, Jack. You vouch for him but I trust you far sooner. He
+has kept sorry company."
+
+"When is the best hour, Captain Wellsby?"
+
+"Just before nightfall when the watches will be changing. I dare not
+delay it longer than that. In darkness, my lads will be unable to find
+the foe and strike hard and quick. Nor can they rush to lay hold of the
+only weapons in their reach,--the pikes in the racks beside the masts.
+Not a pistol or cutlass amongst 'em, and they must fight with these
+wicked dogs of pirates who think naught of killing men."
+
+"Let your lusty sailors once get clear, sir," stoutly declared Jack
+Cockrell, "and they will play a merry game with those long pikes. Then I
+am to slip the message written by your hand on a bit of paper?"
+
+"That's it! I will command them to pound against the scuttle, three
+raps, for a signal of response, and you must listen for it. Then it is
+for them to stand ready, on the chance that you can slip the bar of the
+hatch or the bolts on the door."
+
+"But if they have to come out singly, sir, and the sentries are
+ready-witted, why, your men may be cut down or pistoled in their
+tracks."
+
+"I am so aware," said Captain Wellsby, his honest features glum, "but we
+cannot change the odds."
+
+He found an ink-horn and quill and laboriously wrote a few lines on a
+leaf torn from the back of a sea-stained log-book. Jack tucked it
+carefully away and thus they parted company, perhaps to meet no more in
+life. Through the waning afternoon, Jack stowed himself on deck and held
+long converse with Joe Hawkridge when they met between the keel-chocks
+of the jolly-boat. Because he shared not the skipper's feeling of
+distrust, Jack sought the active aid of his chum of a pirate lad. It was
+agreed that they should endeavor to reach the forecastle together when
+the ship's bell tolled the hour of beginning the first night watch.
+
+Joe hoped he might decoy or divert the sentries. If not, he had another
+scheme or two. A gunner's mate of the prize crew had sent him to
+overhaul the lashings of the battery of nine-pounders which were ranged
+along the waist. With several other hands Joe had made all secure,
+because the guns were apt to get adrift in such weather as this and
+plunge to and fro across the deck like maddened beasts. Now Joe
+Hawkridge had lingered, on pretext of making sure that one forward gun
+could be fired, if needs be, as a distress signal should the ship open
+her seams or strike upon a shoal.
+
+He had satisfied himself that the tompion, or wooden plug which sealed
+the muzzle was tight, and that no water had leaked through the wrapping
+of tarred canvas which protected the touch-hole. Before replacing them,
+he had made two or three trips to the deck-house amidships in which was
+the carpenter's room. Each time he tucked inside his shirt as many
+forged iron spikes, bolts, and what not as he could safely carry.
+
+Unobserved, he shoved this junk down the throat of the nine-pounder and
+wadded it fast with handfuls of oakum. He worked coolly, without haste,
+as agile as a monkey when the ship careened and the sea spurted through
+the cracks of the gun-ports. Well pleased with his task, he said to
+himself, with that grin which no peril could obliterate:
+
+"God alone knows how I can strike fire to a match and keep it alight,
+but the sky shows signs of easier weather."
+
+The fury of the storm had, indeed, diminished. It might be a respite
+before the wind hauled into another quarter and renewed its ferocious
+violence, but the air was no longer thick with the whirling smother of
+foam and spray and the straining topmasts had ceased to bend like whips.
+The ship was gallantly easing herself of the waves which broke aboard
+and the rearing billows astern were not threatening to stamp her under.
+
+It lacked almost an hour of nightfall when Jack Cockrell crept along the
+poop and halted to lean against the timbered railing by the mizzen
+shrouds. All he could think of was that Ned Rackham might seize upon
+this sudden abatement of the gale to hasten his own wicked conspiracy
+and so ruin the plan to restore the _Plymouth Adventure_ to her own
+lawful company. This menace had occurred to Captain Jonathan Wellsby who
+stood tense and rigid at the sailing-master's elbow, watching him from
+the tail of his eye.
+
+Relief o'erspread the skipper's worn features when he espied Jack
+Cockrell who stood as if waiting for orders. A nod, a meaning glance,
+and they understood each other. Striving to appear unconcerned, Jack
+moved toward the forward part of the ship. He was aquiver with
+excitement, and his breath was quick and small, but the sense of fear
+had left him. Captain Wellsby had called him a man and, by God's sweet
+grace, he would so acquit himself.
+
+The pirates were swarming out of the cabin to taste the clean air and
+limber their cramped muscles. The ship still wallowed as she ran before
+the wind and it was breakneck work to clamber about. From the topsail
+yards fluttered mere ribbons of canvas where the reefed sails had
+bellied. Ned Rackham shouted for the watch to lay aloft and cut the
+remnants clear and bend new cloths to keep her from broaching to.
+
+Jack Cockrell's heart leaped for joy. At least a dozen of the most
+active pirates would have to obey this order. This would remove them
+from the deck for a precious interval of time. He slouched aimlessly
+nearer the forecastle, stretching his neck to gaze up at the pirates as
+they footed the ratlines and squirmed over the clumsy tops. Joe
+Hawkridge joined him, as if by chance, and they wandered to the lee side
+of the forecastle. There they were screened from the sight of the
+sentries.
+
+The wooden shutters of the little windows had been spiked fast on the
+outside and Jack was at his wits' end to find by what means he might
+slip the fateful message to the captive seamen. He dared not climb upon
+the roof and seek for a crack in a hatchway. This would make him too
+conspicuous.
+
+Cautiously he stole around the massive structure and was all but washed
+overboard when he gained the windward side where the water broke in
+hissing cataracts. So great had been its force during the height of the
+storm, that one of the shutters had been splintered and almost crushed
+in. Clutching the bit of paper which was tightly rolled and wrapped in a
+square of oiled linen, Jack pushed it through a ragged crevice in the
+shutter.
+
+It was gravely doubtful whether the men would discover the message in
+the gloom of their prison. It might fall to the floor and be trampled
+unperceived. And yet Jack Cockrell could not make himself believe that
+deliverance would be thwarted. He said a prayer and waited with his ear
+against the wall of the forecastle. There he leaned through an agonized
+eternity as the slow moments passed. It was like the ordeal of a
+condemned man who hopes that a blessed reprieve may save him, in the
+last hour, from the black cap and the noose.
+
+Up aloft the pirate seamen were slashing the torn canvas with their
+dirks and casting loose the gaskets. Presently they began to come down
+to the deck, one by one. Some whispered word must have passed amongst
+them, because they drifted aft as by a common impulse although it was
+not yet the hour to change the watch. Their gunner's mate, a gigantic
+mulatto with a broken nose, went to the poop when Ned Rackham crooked
+his finger and these two stood aside, beyond earshot of Captain Wellsby,
+while they conferred with heads together.
+
+"They will strike first," Jack whispered to himself.
+
+The misty daylight had not darkened. The decks were not yet dusky with
+the shadows which Jack had hoped might enable him to approach the
+forecastle door in his brave endeavor to unbar it. The plans were all
+awry. Tears filled his eyes. And then there came to his ear a muffled
+knock against the other side of the forecastle planking.
+
+Once, twice, thrice! The signal was unmistakable. A little interval and
+it was repeated.
+
+Softly the trembling lad tiptoed to the corner of the forecastle house
+and peered around it to look for the sentries. Two of them had moved a
+few yards away to join a group which gazed aft as if expecting a
+summons from Ned Rackham on the poop. The third sentry leaned against
+the forecastle door, a cutlass at his belt. He was a long, bony man with
+a face as yellow as parchment from the Spanish fever and it was plain to
+read that there was no great strength in him.
+
+Faithful Joe Hawkridge sat astride the breech of the nine-pounder at
+which he had been so busily engaged earlier in the afternoon. He
+appeared to be an idler who merely looked on but he was watching every
+motion, and that hard, canny face of his had, for once, forgot to grin.
+Releasing a three-foot handspike from its lashing beside the
+gun-carriage, he awaited the next roll of the deck and deftly kicked
+this handy weapon. It slid toward the forecastle and Jack Cockrell
+stopped it with his foot.
+
+There was no time for hesitation. Snatching up the iron-shod handspike,
+Jack rushed straight at the forecastle door. Just then the ship lurched
+far down and he was shot headlong, like falling off the roof of a house.
+He had the momentum of a battering-ram. The sentry yelled and drew his
+cutlass with a swiftness amazing in a sick man. His footing was unsteady
+or Jack would have spitted himself on the point of the blade. As he went
+crashing full-tilt into the man the impact was terrific. They went to
+the deck together and the handspike spun out of Jack's grasp. There was
+no need to swing it on this luckless pirate for his bald head smote a
+plank with a thump which must have cracked it like an egg.
+
+Not even pausing to dart after the cutlass which had clattered from the
+lifeless fingers, Jack spun on his heel and wrenched at the heavy bar
+across the forecastle door and felt it slide from the fastenings. He
+tugged it clear and swung himself up to the roof to draw the bolts which
+secured the hatch. Rusted in their sockets, they resisted him but he
+spied a pulley-block within reach and used it as a hammer.
+
+All this was a matter of seconds only. The pirates grouped amidships had
+been waiting for Ned Rackham's word from aft and they were muddled by
+this sudden shift of action. The other sentries stared in foolish
+astonishment. The brief delay was enough to let Jack Cockrell free the
+hatch. While he toiled furiously, several pistols and a musket were
+snapped at him but the flint sparked on damp powder in the pans and only
+one ball whistled by his head.
+
+Out of the forecastle hatchway and through the door, the enraged sailors
+of the _Plymouth Adventure_ came rocketing like an explosion. They
+stumbled over each other, emerging head or feet first, blinking like
+owls in the daylight but with vision good enough to serve their purpose.
+Their goal was the nearest stand of boarding-pikes at the foot of the
+mainmast.
+
+But as they came surging on deck, they were not empty-handed. In the
+forecastle was a bricked oven for warmth in winter and for cooking
+kettles of soup. This they had torn to pieces and every man sallied
+forth with a square, flat brick in each hand and more inside his shirt.
+Those who were first to gain the deck pelted the nearest pirates with
+these ugly missiles. The air was full of hurtling bricks and the
+earliest casualty was a stout buccaneer who stopped one with his
+stomach.
+
+Driven back in yelling confusion, the pirates found their firearms
+almost useless, so drenched had the whole ship been by the battering
+seas, but they were accustomed to fighting it out with the cold steel
+and they were by no means a panicky mob. The fusillade of bricks held
+them long enough for the merchant sailors to escape from the forecastle
+and this was an advantage more precious than Captain Wellsby had hoped
+for.
+
+What the pirates required was a leader to rally them for attack. Quicker
+than it takes to tell it, Ned Rackham had raced along the poop and
+leaped to the waist at peril of breaking his neck. Agile, quick-witted,
+he bounded into the thick of it, cutlass in hand, while he shouted:
+
+"At 'em, lads! And give the dogs no quarter!"
+
+With hoarse outcry, his gallows-birds mustered compactly while those who
+had been in the cabin came scampering to join them. Curiously enough,
+Captain Jonathan Wellsby had been forgotten. He was left alone to handle
+the ship while the pirate helmsmen stood by the great tiller. To forsake
+it meant to let the vessel run wild and perhaps turn turtle in the
+swollen seas. And so the doughty skipper was, for the time, a looker-on.
+
+And now with Ned Rackham in the van, it seemed that the British sailors
+were in a parlous plight and that their sortie must fail. Craftily the
+pirates manoeuvered to drive them back into the forecastle and there
+to butcher them like sheep.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+RELEASING A FEARFUL WEAPON
+
+
+JACK COCKRELL sprawled flat upon the forecastle roof and knew not what
+to do. He could lay hands on nothing to serve as a weapon and he bade
+fair to be trapped like the sailors whose cause he had joined. With a
+feeling of despair he let his gaze rove to the scrawny figure of Joe
+Hawkridge who still bestrode the nine-pounder and took no part in the
+fray. But Joe had no comfort for him, as a gesture conveyed. It had been
+Joe's wild scheme to obtain the help of Jack and Captain Wellsby, at the
+least, and so cast loose the gun and slew it around to rake the deck and
+mow the pirates down. But the men were lacking for this heavy task, and
+the sailors of the _Plymouth Adventure_ were too intent on fighting
+against fearful odds to pay heed to Joe Hawkridge's appeals. He had even
+skulked into the galley and was ready with a little iron pot filled with
+live coals which was hidden under a bit of tarpaulin.
+
+Ned Rackham was a young man and powerful, with a long reach and a
+skilled blade. He fairly hewed his way into the ruck of the dauntless
+sailors who had no more bricks to hurl. Several pirates were disabled,
+with broken arms or bloody crowns, but the others crowded forward,
+grunting as they slashed and stabbed, and well aware that Ned Rackham
+would cut the laggards down should he detect them.
+
+At the moment when there seemed no chance of salvation for the crew of
+the _Plymouth Adventure_, Joe Hawkridge leaped from the gun and beckoned
+Jack. The grin was restored to the homely, freckled visage and the salt
+water gamin danced in jubilant excitement. Down from the forecastle roof
+tumbled Jack Cockrell and went sliding across the deck, heels over head,
+to fetch up in the scupper. Joe hauled him by the leg, close to the
+wooden carriage of the gun, and swiftly told him what was to be done.
+
+Obediently Jack began to loose the knots which secured the rope tackles
+but it was a slow task. The wet had made the hemp as hard as iron and he
+lacked a marlinspike. Joe dodged around the gun, saw the difficulty and
+sawed through one rope after another, all but the last strand or two.
+Then the lads tailed on to the breeching hawsers, which held the
+carriage from sliding on its iron rollers, and eased the strain as well
+as they could.
+
+The ponderous mass was almost free to plunge across the deck. Joe
+sweated and braced his feet against a ring-bolt while Jack Cockrell
+found a cleat. Ned Rackham's men were moving forward, cut and thrust,
+while the sailors grappled with them bare-handed and battled grimly
+like mastiffs.
+
+"The next time she rolls!" panted Joe Hawkridge as the hawser ripped the
+skin from his palms.
+
+"Aye, make ready to cut," muttered Jack.
+
+The ship heaved herself high and then listed far down to starboard. Joe
+slashed at the last strands of the tackles and yelled to Jack to let go
+the hawser. Instead of discharging the nine-pounder, they were employing
+the piece itself, and the carriage of oak and iron, as a terrible
+missile. The moment of launching it was shrewdly chosen. The pirates,
+still in compact formation as led by Ned Rackham, were directly abreast
+of this forward gun of the main deck battery. The deck inclined at a
+steep and giddy pitch. With a grinding roar the gun rolled from its
+station. It gathered impetus and lunged across the ship as an instrument
+of fell destruction. It was more to be feared than an assault of armed
+men.
+
+The warning rumble of the iron wheels as they furrowed the planking was
+heard by the pirates. They turned from their game of butchery and stood
+frozen in their tracks for a frightened instant. Then they tried to flee
+in all directions. Their tarry pigtails fairly stood on end. Well they
+knew what it meant to have a gun break adrift in a heavy sea. Two or
+three who had been badly hurt were unable to move fast enough. The gun
+crunched over them and then seemed to pursue a limping pirate, veering
+to overtake him as he fled. He was tossed against the bulwark like a
+bundle of bloody rags.
+
+The gun crashed into the stout timbers of the ship's side and they were
+splintered like match-wood. It rebounded as the deck sloped sharply in
+the next wallowing roll, and now this frenzied monster of wood and iron
+seemed fairly to run amuck. It was inspired with a sinister
+intelligence, resolved to wreak all the damage possible. The pinnace,
+the water barrels, the coamings of the cargo hatches, were smashed to
+fragments as the gun turned this way and that and went plunging in
+search of victims.
+
+[Illustration: THE BRAWN OF THESE LADS MADE THE PIKE A MATCH FOR A
+PIRATE'S CUTLASS]
+
+Left to themselves, the seamen of the _Plymouth Adventure_ would have
+risked their lives to cast ropes about the gun and moor it fast. But now
+they were quick to see that the tide had been turned in their favor. The
+pirates were demoralized. Some were in the rigging, others atop the
+bulwarks, and only the readiest and boldest, with Ned Rackham in the
+lead, had an eye to the task in hand, which was to regain possession of
+the ship.
+
+And now the boatswain of the _Plymouth Adventure_, a rosy giant of a man
+from South Devon, shouted to his comrades to follow him. They delayed
+until the runaway cannon crashed into another gun, and then they broke
+like sprinters from the mark and sped straight for the mainmast, seeking
+the rack of boarding-pikes. They ran nimbly, as men used to swaying
+decks, and compassed the distance in a few strides.
+
+Ned Rackham perceived their purpose and tried to intercept but his few
+staunch followers moved warily, expecting to see that insensate monster
+of a gun bear down upon them. The swiftest of the merchant sailors laid
+hands on the pikes and whirled to cover their shipmates, until all hands
+could be armed. Then the gun came roaring down at them but they ducked
+behind the mast or stepped watchfully aside. Men condemned to death are
+not apt to lose their wits in the face of one more peril.
+
+These pikes were ashen shafts with long steel points and the merchant
+seamen had been trained to use them. And the brawn of these lads made
+the pike a match for a pirate's cutlass. Ned Rackham bounded forward to
+swing at the broad, deep-chested boatswain. A wondrous pair of
+antagonists they were, in the prime of their youth and vigor. The
+pirate's cutlass bit clean through the pike shaft as the boatswain
+parried the blow but the apple-cheeked Devonshire man closed in and
+wrapped his arms around his foe. They went to the deck clutching for
+each other's throats and the fight trampled over them.
+
+Meanwhile Joe Hawkridge and Jack Cockrell, unwilling to twiddle their
+thumbs, had rushed aft as fast as their legs could carry them. It was a
+mutual impulse, to release such of the men passengers as might have a
+stomach for fighting and also the ship's officers. Into the doorway
+which led from the waist, the two lads dived and scurried through the
+main cabin now clear of pirates. Locked doors they smashed with a
+broadaxe found in the small-arms chest and so entered all the rooms.
+
+The women passengers were almost dead with suffering, what with the
+turbulence of the storm and the wild riot on deck. The lads pitied them
+but had no time to console. Several of the men, merchants and planters
+of some physical hardihood, begged for weapons and Joe Hawkridge bade
+them help themselves from the spare arms which the pirates had left in
+the great cabin. In another little room the boys found the mates,
+steward, surgeon, and gunner of the _Plymouth Adventure_ and you may be
+sure that they came boiling out with a raging thirst for strife.
+
+"Harkee, Jack," said Joe before they climbed to the poop deck, "if the
+pirates are driven aft, as I expect, they will make a last stand in this
+cabin house which is like a fort. These 'fenseless women must be hidden
+safe from harm. Do you coax 'em into the lazarette."
+
+This was a room on the deck below, in the very stern of the ship where
+were kept the extra sails and coils of rope and various stores. It was
+the surest shelter against harm in such stress as this. Alas, Jack's
+persuasions were vain. The frantic women were in no humor to listen, and
+so the lads bundled them through the hatch as gently as possible and
+for company gave them such male passengers as lacked strength or courage
+to join the battle.
+
+While they were thus engaged, two pirates came flying down the ladder
+from the poop deck into the main cabin. They revolved like windmills in
+a jumble of arms and legs. Close behind them, in a manner more orderly
+came Captain Jonathan Wellsby who had tossed the one and tremendously
+booted the other. They were the helmsmen whom he had replaced with his
+own officers at the steering tackles, while his first mate had been left
+in charge of handling the ship.
+
+The skipper was now free to follow his own desires and he fell upon
+those two stunned pirates in the cabin and trussed them tight with bits
+of rope. Then he reloaded with dry powder all the pistols he could find
+and made a walking arsenal of himself. The two lads who now joined him
+needed no word of command. At his heels they made for the main deck and
+the shout which arose from those British sailors, so sorely beset, was
+mightily heartening.
+
+Blazing away with his pistols, the skipper cleared a path for himself,
+the pirates being taken aback when they were attacked in the rear. And
+they were leaderless, for Ned Rackham had been dragged aside with the
+marks of the boatswain's fingers on his throat and a sheath-knife buried
+in his side. He was alive but nobody paid heed to his groans.
+
+With the skipper in the thick of it, there was no danger of being penned
+in the forecastle again. The pirates were crowded aft, step by step,
+before the play of those wicked boarding-pikes. It would be hard to
+match a sea fight like this, amid the spray and the washing seas, on a
+deck that tipsily danced and staggered, with a truant gun smashing a
+good ship to bits and the wounded screaming as they saw this horror
+thundering at them. Captain Wellsby's men were at pains to drag their
+helpless comrades to safety but the pirates were too callous and too
+hard pressed to care for aught save their own worthless skins. They
+fought like wolves but they lacked the gristle and endurance of the
+stalwart sailors. Wheezing for breath, they ceased to curse and reeled
+back in silence while the sailors huzzaed and seemed to wax the lustier.
+
+As was bound to happen, the stubborn retreat broke into a rout. It was
+every man for himself and the devil take the hindmost. The pirates fled
+for the after cabin-house, there to take cover behind the timbered walls
+and use the small port-holes for musketry fire. Thus they could find
+respite and it would be immensely difficult to dislodge them.
+
+The first mate of the _Plymouth Adventure_ and his own two helmsmen saw
+what was taking place and they were of no mind to be cut off at the
+stern of the ship. They footed it along the poop and the cabin roof as
+the pirates were scampering inside and so gained the waist and were
+with their comrades. The tiller deserted, the vessel careened into the
+trough of the sea with a portentous creaking of spars and rending of
+canvas.
+
+The mainmast had been dealt more than one splintering blow by the
+fugitive gun. This sudden strain, of a ship broached to and hurled
+almost on her beam ends, was too much for the damaged mast. It broke
+short off, a few feet above the deck, and the ragged butt ripped the
+planks asunder as it was dragged overside by the weight of the towering
+fabric of yards and canvas. One merciful circumstance befell, for the
+tangle of shrouds and sheets and halliards ensnared the ramping monster
+of a cannon and overturned it. Caught in this manner, the gun was
+dragged to the broken bulwark and there it was held with the battered
+carriage in air.
+
+The mainmast was floating alongside the ship which it belabored with
+thumps that jarred the hull. It was likely to stave in the skin of the
+vessel and Captain Wellsby shouted to his men to hack at the trailing
+cordage and send the mast clear before it did a fatal injury. A dozen
+men risked drowning at this task while the others guarded the after
+cabin lest the pirates attempt a sally. These besieged rogues were given
+an interval in which to muster their force, organize a defense, and
+break into the magazine for muskets and powder and ball.
+
+Now Captain Wellsby was no dullard and he purposed to make short work of
+these vile pirates. Otherwise his crippled ship might not survive the
+wind and weather. He conferred with his gunner who had bethought
+himself, by force of habit, to fetch from aft his powder-horn and
+several yards of match, or twisted tow, which were wrapped around his
+body, beneath the tarred jerkin.
+
+"It grieves me sore to wreck yonder goodly cabin house," said the
+skipper in his beard, "but, by Judas, we'll blow 'em out of it. Haul and
+belay your pieces, Master Gunner, and let 'em have a salvo of round
+shot."
+
+Reckless of the musket balls which began to fly among them, the sailors
+jumped for their stations at the guns. First they set aright that
+capsized nine-pounder which had wreaked so much mischief and found that
+it could be discharged, despite the broken carriage. Joe Hawkridge and
+Jack Cockrell blithely aided to swing and secure it with emergency
+tackles and Joe exclaimed, with a chuckle:
+
+"This dose is enough to surprise Blackbeard hisself. 'Tis an
+ironmonger's shop I rammed down its throat."
+
+The gun was laid on the largest cabin port-hole just as it framed the
+ugly face of a pirate with a musket while another peered over his
+shoulder. Joe shook the powder-horn into the touch-hole and the gunner
+was ready with the match which he had lighted with his own flint and
+steel. Boom, and the gun recoiled in a veil of smoke. Through the cabin
+port-hole flew a deadly shower of spikes and bolts while the framework
+around it was shattered to bits. It was a most unhealthy place for
+pirates. They forsook it instantly. And the musketry fire slackened
+elsewhere. It was to be inferred that there was painful consternation in
+the cabin.
+
+With boisterous mirth, the sailors deftly turned other guns to bear and
+were careful not to let them get adrift. The muzzles had been well
+stopped against wetting by the sea and with a little dry powder for the
+priming, most of them could be served. They could not be reloaded for
+dearth of ammunition but Captain Wellsby felt confident that one round
+would suffice.
+
+Methodically the gun-crews aimed and fired one gun after another,
+watching the chance between the seas that broke aboard. The solid round
+shot, at short range, ripped through the cabin walls and bulkheads and
+buried themselves in the frames and timbers of the ship's stern. A good
+gunner was never so happy as when he saw the white splinters fly in
+showers and these zealous sailormen forgot they were knocking their own
+ship to pieces. They were on the target, and this was good enough.
+
+The beleaguered pirates made no more pretense of firing muskets or
+defying the crew to dig them out. Their fort was an untenable position.
+At this sport of playing bowls with round shot they were bound to lose.
+Captain Wellsby sighted the last gun himself. It was a bronze culverin
+of large bore, taken as a trophy from the stranded wreck of a Spanish
+galleon. With a tremendous blast this formidable cannon spat out a
+double-shotted load and the supports of the cabin roof were torn
+asunder. The tottering beams collapsed. Half the structure fell in.
+
+It was the signal for the sailors of the _Plymouth Adventure_ to charge
+aft and finish the business. They found pirates crawling from under the
+wreckage. It was like a demolished ant-heap. In the smaller cabins and
+other rooms far aft, which were more or less intact, some of the rascals
+showed fight but they were remorselessly prodded out with pikes and
+those unwounded were hustled forward to be thrown into the forecastle.
+It was difficult to restrain the seamen from dealing them the death they
+deserved but Captain Wellsby was no sea-butcher and he hoped to turn
+them over to the colonial authorities to be hanged with due ceremony.
+
+The badly hurt were laid in the forecastle bunks where the ship's
+surgeon washed and bandaged them after he had cared for the injured men
+of his own crew. Ned Rackham was still alive, conscious and defiant,
+surviving a wound which would have been mortal in most cases. Whether he
+lived or died was a matter of small concern to Captain Wellsby but he
+ordered the surgeon to nurse him with special care.
+
+The dead pirates were flung overboard but the bodies of seven brave
+British seamen were wrapped in sailcloth to be committed to the deep on
+the morrow, with a round shot at their feet and a prayer to speed their
+souls. There were men enough to work the ship but she was in a
+situation indescribably forlorn. It was possible to patch and shore the
+cabin house and make a refuge, even to find place for the wretched women
+who were lifted unharmed out of the lazarette. But the stout ship, her
+mainmast gone by the board, the deck ravaged by that infernal catapult
+of an errant gun, the hull pounded by the floating wreckage of spars,
+would achieve a miracle should she see port again.
+
+The combat with the pirates and their overthrow had been waged in the
+last hour before the gray night closed over a somber sea. God's mercy
+had caused the wind to fall and the waves to diminish in size else the
+ship would have gone to the bottom ere dawn. Much water had washed down
+into the hold through the broken cargo hatch and the gaps where the
+runaway gun had torn other fittings away. The carpenter sounded the well
+and solemnly stared at the wetted rod by the flicker of his horn
+lantern. The ship was settling. It was his doleful surmise that she
+leaked where the pounding spars overside had started the butts. It was
+man the pumps to keep the old hooker afloat and Captain Wellsby ordered
+his weary men to sway at the brakes, watch and watch.
+
+Joe Hawkridge and Jack Cockrell, more fit for duty than the others, put
+their backs into it right heartily while the sailors droned to the
+cadence of the pump a sentimental ditty which ran on for any number of
+verses and began in this wise:
+
+ "As, lately I traveled toward Gravesend,
+ I heard a fair Damosel a Sea-man commend:
+ And as in a Tilt-boat we passed along,
+ In praise of brave Sea-men she sung this new Song,
+ _Come Tradesman or Marchant, whoever he be,
+ There's none but a Sea-man shall marry with me!_"
+
+Thus they labored all the night through, men near dead with fatigue
+whose hard fate it was to contend now with pirates and again with the
+hostile ocean. The skipper managed to stay the foremast and to bend
+steering sails so that the ship was brought into the wind where her
+motion was easier. The sky cleared before daybreak and the rosy horizon
+proclaimed a fair sunrise. How far and in what direction the _Plymouth
+Adventure_ had been blown by the storm was largely guesswork. By means
+of dead reckoning and the compass and cross-staff, Captain Wellsby hoped
+to work out a position but meanwhile he scanned the sea with a sense of
+brooding anxiety.
+
+Instead of praying for plenty of sea room, he now hoped with all his
+heart that the vessel had been set in toward the coast. She was sinking
+under his feet and would not live through the day. It was useless to
+toil at the pumps or to strive at mending the shattered upperworks. The
+men turned to the task of quitting the ship, and of saving the souls on
+board. It was a pitiful extremity and yet they displayed a dogged,
+unshaken fidelity. Only one boat had escaped destruction. The pinnace
+had been staved in by the thunderbolt of a gun and the yawl, stowed upon
+the cabin roof, was wrecked by round shot. The small jolly-boat would
+hold the women passengers and the wounded sailors, with the hands
+required to tend oars and sail.
+
+Nothing remained but to try to knock together one or more rafts. Captain
+Wellsby discussed it with his officers and it was agreed that the
+able-bodied pirates should be left to build a raft for themselves,
+taking their own wounded with them. This was more mercy than they had
+any right to expect. The strapping young Devonshire boatswain, with his
+head tied up, was for leaving the blackguards to drown in the forecastle
+but the shipmaster was too humane a man for that.
+
+It was drawing toward noon when the first mate descried land to the
+westward, a bit of low coast almost level with the sea. In the light air
+the sluggish ship moved ever so slowly, with canvas spread on the fore
+and mizzen masts. Spirits revived and life tasted passing sweet. To
+drift in the open sea upon wave-washed rafts was an expedient which all
+mariners shuddered to contemplate. It was with feelings far different
+that they now assembled spars and planks and lashed and spiked them
+together on the chance of needing rafts to ferry them ashore from a
+stranded ship.
+
+Well into the bright afternoon the _Plymouth Adventure_ was wafted
+nearer and nearer the sandy coast. Within a half mile of it a line of
+breakers frothed and tumbled on a shoal beyond which the water deepened
+again. The ship could not be steered to avoid this barrier. Her main
+deck was almost level with the sea which lapped her gently and sobbed
+through the broken bulwarks. With a slight shock she struck the shoal
+and rested there just before she was ready to founder.
+
+With disciplined haste, the jolly-boat was launched and filled with its
+human freightage. The boatswain went in charge and four seamen tugged at
+the sweeps. There were trees and clumps of bushes among the hillocks of
+sand and a tiny bight for a landing place. The bulwark was then chopped
+away so that the largest raft could be shoved into the water by means of
+tackles, rollers and handspikes. It floated buoyantly and supported as
+many as fifteen men, who did not mind in the least getting their feet
+wet. Upon a raised platform in the centre of the raft were fastened
+barrels of beef and bread and casks of fresh water.
+
+The jolly-boat could hope to make other trips between the ship and the
+shore but the prudent skipper took no chances with the weather. A sudden
+gale might pluck the _Plymouth Adventure_ from the shoal or tear her to
+fragments where she lay. Therefore most of the men, including
+passengers, were embarked on the raft. Captain Wellsby remained aboard
+with a few of his sailors and our two lads, Joe and Jack, who had not
+attempted to thrust themselves upon the crowded raft.
+
+The pirates were making a commotion in the forecastle, yammering to be
+freed, but the skipper had no intention of loosing them until all his
+people had safely abandoned ship. The jolly-boat made a landing without
+mishap and returned to the wreck as the sun went down. More stores were
+dumped into it, sacks of potatoes and onions which had been overlooked,
+bedding for the women, powder and ball for the muskets, and other things
+which it was necessary to keep dry.
+
+Captain Wellsby got rid of the rest of his men on this trip, excepting
+the gunner and carpenter, and these lingered with him as a kind of
+body-guard pending the ticklish business of releasing the imprisoned
+pirates and forsaking them to their own devices. The jolly-boat was
+laden to the gunwales and Jack Cockrell held back, saying to Joe
+Hawkridge:
+
+"Why trouble the captain to set us ashore? Let us make a raft of our
+own. The breeze holds fair to the beach and it will be a lark."
+
+"It suits me well," grinned Joe. "If we wait to go off with the master,
+and those sinful pirates see me aboard, I'll need wings to escape 'em.
+They saw me serve the gun that was filled with spikes to the muzzle.
+Aye, Jack, I will feel happier to be elsewhere when Cap'n Wellsby unbars
+the fo'castle and holds 'em back with his pistols till he can cast off
+in the jolly-boat."
+
+"Yes, the sight of you is apt to put them in a vile temper," laughingly
+agreed Jack, "and 'tis awkward for the master to bother with us. Now
+about a little raft----"
+
+"Two short spars are enough. There they lie. And the cabin hatch will do
+for a deck. Spikes for thole-pins, and oars from the pinnace. Unlace the
+bonnet of the jib for a sail."
+
+"You are a proper sailorman, Joe. A voyage by starlight to an unknown
+coast. 'Tis highly romantic."
+
+They set to work without delay. Captain Wellsby had occupations of his
+own and no more than glanced at them in passing. Jack insisted on
+carrying a water breaker and rations, he being hungry and too busy to
+pause for supper. They would make a picnic cruise of the adventure.
+Handily Joe reeved a purchase and they hauled away until their raft slid
+off the sloping deck to leeward. With a gay hurrah to Captain Wellsby,
+they paddled around the stern of the ship and through the ruffle of surf
+that marked the shoal.
+
+In the soft twilight they trimmed the sail and swung at the clumsy oars,
+while a fire blazing on the beach was a beacon to guide their course.
+After a time they rested and wiped the sweat from their faces. The
+progress of the raft was like that of a lazy snail. In the luminous
+darkness they pulled with all their strength. The wind had died to a
+calm. The sail hung idle from its yard. They heard, faint and afar, the
+deep voices of the sailors in the jolly-boat as they returned to take
+the skipper and his two companions from the ship on which a light
+burned.
+
+The lads shouted but there came no answering hail from the unseen boat.
+They were perplexed to understand how their courses could be so far
+apart. Presently the night breeze drew off the land, bringing with it
+the scent of green things growing. Joe Hawkridge stared at the fire on
+the beach and then turned to look at the spark of light on the ship. The
+raft had drifted considerably to the southward. Anxiously Joe said to
+his shipmate:
+
+"The flood o' the tide must be setting us down the coast, in some crazy
+current or other. Mayhap it runs strong through this race betwixt the
+shoal and the beach with a slant that's bad for us."
+
+"I noted it," glumly agreed Jack. "The jolly-boat passed too far away to
+please me. And this landward breeze is driving us to sea."
+
+"No sense in breaking our backs at these oars," grumbled Joe. "We go
+ahead like a crab, with a sternboard. Think ye we can swing the raft to
+fetch the ship?"
+
+"After Captain Wellsby turns the pirates loose and quits her?" scoffed
+Jack.
+
+"I am a plaguey fool," cheerfully admitted Joe Hawkridge. "'Twould be
+out of the frying-pan into the fire, with a vengeance."
+
+"And no way to signal our friends," sadly exclaimed Jack. "We forgot
+flint and steel. It looks much like another voyage."
+
+"Straight for the open sea, my bully boy," agreed Joe. "And I'd as soon
+chance it on a hen-coop."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+THE VOYAGE OF THE LITTLE RAFT
+
+
+THESE sturdy youngsters were not easily frightened, and Jack Cockrell,
+the landsman, was confident that wind and tide would change to send the
+little raft shoreward. So tranquil was the sea that they rode secure and
+dry upon the cabin hatch which was buoyed by the two short spars. Joe
+Hawkridge was silent with foreboding of a fate more bitter than the
+perils which they had escaped. He had seen a lone survivor of a crew of
+pirates picked off a raft in the Caribbean, a grisly phantom raving mad
+who had gnawed the flesh of his dead comrades.
+
+They drifted quietly before the land breeze, beneath a sky all jeweled
+with bright stars. The fire on the beach dimmed to a red spark and then
+vanished from their wistful ken. They could no longer see the light on
+the wreck of the _Plymouth Adventure_. Now and then the boys struggled
+with the heavy oars and rowed until exhausted but they knew they could
+be making no headway against the current which had gripped the derelict
+raft. They ate sparingly of flinty biscuit and leathery beef pickled in
+brine and stinted themselves to a few swallows of water from the wooden
+breaker or tiny cask.
+
+"Hunger and thirst are strange to ye, Jack," said young Hawkridge as
+they lay stretched side by side. "Hanged if I ever did get enough to eat
+till I boarded the _Plymouth Adventure_. Skin and bone I am. I'll not
+call this a bad cruise unless we have to chew our boot-tops. A pesky
+diet is leather. I've tried it."
+
+"Truly, Joe?" cried Jack in lugubrious accents. "We may have more heart
+when morning comes. A piping easterly breeze, such as is wont to come up
+with the sun in Charles Town, and we can steer for the coast all taut
+and cheery."
+
+"I dread the sun, Jack. For men adrift the blaze of it fries them like
+fish on a grid. A pint of water a day, no more, is the allowance. 'Twill
+torture you, but castaways can live on it. They have done it for weeks
+on end. Here's two musket balls in my pocket. I can whittle a balance
+from a bit of pine and we must weigh the bread and meat."
+
+"Two musket balls' weight of food for a meal?" protested Jack.
+
+"Not a morsel more," was the grim answer. "Granted we be not washed off
+this silly raft and drowned when a fresh breeze kicks up the sea, we may
+hold body and soul together through five or six days."
+
+"But some vessel will sight us, Joe, even if the plight is as dark as
+your melancholy fancies paint it. And I thought you a light-hearted
+mariner in danger."
+
+"The sea is a cruel master and she hath taught me prudence," was the
+reply. "A vessel sight us? I fear an empty sea so soon after the storm.
+And honest ships will be loth to venture out from port if the word sped
+that Blackbeard was cruising off Charles Town bar."
+
+Jack Cockrell forsook the attempt to wring comfort out of his hardy
+companion who refused to delude himself with vain imaginings. However,
+it is the blessed gift of youth to keep the torch of hope unquenched and
+presently they diverted themselves with chatting of their earlier
+adventures. Jack was minded of his pompous, stout-hearted uncle, Mr.
+Peter Arbuthnot Forbes, and wondered how he had fared, whether he had
+set out to return to Blackbeard's ship with the store of medicines from
+Charles Town when the great storm swooped down. Forgotten were Jack's
+hot grievances against the worthy Secretary of the Council who had
+sought to take a father's place. Piracy had lost its charm for young
+Master Cockrell and meekly would he have obeyed the mandate to go to
+school in merry England among sober, Christian folk.
+
+"Tremendous odd, I call it," exclaimed Joe Hawkridge. "Here I was a
+pirate and hating the dirty business. And my dreams were all of learnin'
+to be a gentleman ashore, to know how to read books and such. Blow me,
+Jack, we should ha' swapped berths."
+
+"If my good uncle is alive I mean to commend you to his kindness,"
+exclaimed Jack. "We must cleave together, and you shall have a skinful
+of books and school and manners."
+
+This pleased the young sea rover beyond measure and he diverted himself
+with pictures of a cleaner, kindlier world than he had ever known. In
+the small hours of the night, the twain drowsed upon their frail
+platform which floated as a speck on the shrouded ocean. The waves
+splashed over the spars as the breeze grew livelier and the piteous
+voyagers were sopping wet but the water was not chill and they slept
+through this discomfort.
+
+Jack Cockrell dreamed of walking in a green lane of Charles Town with
+lovely Dorothy Stuart. A wave slapped his face and he awoke with a
+sputtering cry of bewilderment. The eastern sky was rosy and the sea
+shimmered in the eternal beauty of a new day. Joe Hawkridge sat huddled
+against the mast, chin and knees together, his sharp eyes scanning the
+horizon. With a grin he exclaimed:
+
+"The watch ahoy! Rouse out, shipmate, and show a leg! Turn to cheerly!
+Holystone decks and wash down, ye lazy lubber."
+
+Jack groaned and scowled as he rolled over to ease his aching bones. He
+was in no mood for jesting. There was no land in sight nor the gleam of
+a sail, naught but the empty waste of the Atlantic, and the wind still
+held westerly.
+
+"Let's have the beggarly morsel you miscall breakfast, Joe, and a swig
+from the breaker. Are we bound across the main?"
+
+"Straight for London River, and the school you prate about, my bucko,"
+replied the scamp of a pirate. "Haul away on your belt and set the
+buckle tighter. 'Twill ease the cursed hunger pain that gnaws like a
+rat."
+
+They munched the pittance of salty food which made the thirst the harder
+to endure, and then watched the sun climb hot and dazzling. It was
+futile to hoist the sail and so they pulled the canvas over them as the
+heat became more intense. By noon, Jack was begging for water to lave
+his tongue but Joe Hawkridge laughed him to scorn and swore to hit him
+with an oar unless he changed his tune. Never in his life had Jack known
+the lack of food or drink and he therefore suffered cruelly.
+
+Worse than this privation was the increasing roughness of the sea. It
+was a blithesome wind, rollicking across a sparkling carpet of blue,
+with the little white clouds in flocks above, like lambs at play. But
+the raft was more and more tossed about and the waves gushed over it
+like foam on a reef. Through the day the castaways might cling to it but
+they dreaded another night in which their weary bodies could not
+possibly ward off sleep. Even though they tied themselves fast, what if
+the raft should be capsized by the heave of the mounting swell? It was
+the merest makeshift, scrambled together in haste as a ferry from the
+wreck of the _Plymouth Adventure_.
+
+No longer did Jack Cockrell bemoan his situation. Taking pattern from
+his comrade in misery, he set his teeth to await the end as became a
+true man of gentle blood. After all, drowning was easier than the slow
+torments of hunger and thirst.
+
+Every little while one of them crawled from under the canvas to look for
+a ship. It was the vigilant Joe Hawkridge who, at length, discovered
+what was very like a fleck of cloud on the ocean's rim, to the
+southward. Afraid that his vision tricked him, he displayed no emotion
+but held himself as steady as any stoic. Jack was wildly excited,
+blubbering and waving his arms about. His hard-won composure was broken
+to bits. But even though it were a ship, Joe well knew it might pass
+afar off and so miss sighting this bit of raft which drifted almost
+submerged.
+
+Slowly the semblance of a wandering fragment of cloud climbed the curve
+of the watery globe until Joe Hawkridge perceived, with a mariner's eye,
+that it was, indeed, a vessel steering in their direction.
+
+"Two masts!" said he, "and to'gallant-sails set to profit by this brave
+breeze. A brig, Jack! Had she been a ship, my heart 'ud ha' been in my
+throat. Blackbeard's _Revenge_ might be working up the coast, did she
+live through the storm."
+
+"A brig?" joyfully cried Jack. "Ah, ha, I see her two masts plainly,
+with mine own eyes. And they soar too tall for a merchant trader. Her
+sails, too,--she spreads them like great wings. Who else will it be than
+Captain Stede Bonnet in the _Royal James?_"
+
+"A shift of luck is due us, by the bones of Saint Iago," shouted Joe, in
+a thrill of glad anticipation. "Watch her closely. You saw the brig in
+Charles Town harbor. Bless God, this may well be Cap'n Stede Bonnet
+yonder, an' perchance he cruises in search of Blackbeard to square
+accounts with that vile traitor that so misused him."
+
+"A sworn friend of mine is Stede Bonnet," proudly declared Jack
+Cockrell, "and pledged to bear a hand when I am in distress. He will
+land us safe in Charles Town, Joe,--unless,--unless we choose to go
+a-piratin' with him in the _Royal James_----"
+
+Jack's voice trailed off in tones of indecision so comical that his
+comrade cried:
+
+"Not cured yet, you big numbskull? 'Cause this fine Cap'n Bonnet is a
+gentleman pirate? His neck will stretch with the rest of 'em when the
+law overtakes him. Thirteen burly lads I saw swinging in a row at
+Wapping on the Thames."
+
+"I'll not argue it," sheepishly mumbled Jack. "However, we'll find a
+safe deliverance aboard this _Royal James_."
+
+They clung to the swaying raft while the water washed over their knees
+and watched the two masts disclose themselves until they fancied they
+could not be mistaken. No other brig as powerful as this had been
+reported cruising in the waters of Virginia and the Carolinas. By a
+stroke of fortune almost incredible they had been saved at the very
+brink of death. The brig was steering straight toward them, hauled to
+take the wind abeam, and she would be up before sunset.
+
+Shading his eyes with his hand, Joe Hawkridge suddenly uttered a curse
+so fierce and wicked that it was enough to freeze the blood. He clutched
+Jack's shoulder for support as though shorn of all his strength and
+hoarsely gasped:
+
+"Not two masts but three! See it? She lifts high enough to show the
+stump of the foremast with head-sails jury rigged. 'Twas the storm made
+a brig of her!"
+
+"Then she may be Blackbeard's ship?" faltered Jack, in a whisper.
+
+"Remember when the gale first broke and we parted company?" was the
+reply. "The _Revenge_ lost her fore-topmast ere the swine could find
+their wits."
+
+"Aye, Joe, but this may be some other vessel."
+
+"She looks most damnably familiar," was the reluctant admission. "A
+great press of sail,--it fooled me into thinking her Stede Bonnet's
+brig."
+
+Gloomily they waited until the black line of the hull was visible
+whenever the raft lifted on the back of a wave. This was enough for Joe.
+He recognized the graceful shear of the flush deck which had been
+extended fore and aft to make room for a heavier main battery. Even at
+a distance, a sailor's eye could read other signs that marked this ship
+as the _Revenge_.
+
+"The devil looks after his own," angrily exclaimed Joe. "I'd ha' wagered
+my last ducat that she was whirled away to founder. Blackbeard boasts of
+his compact with Satan. I believe it's true."
+
+"Shall we pull down our mast and pray that he passes the raft as a piece
+of wreckage?" implored Jack.
+
+Mustering his wits to meet this new crisis, Joe Hawkridge cried
+impatiently:
+
+"No, no, boy! This way death is sure, and most discomfortin'. If it
+suits Blackbeard's whim to pick us up, there is a chance,--a chance, I
+say, but make one slip and he will run us through with his own hand."
+
+"We must arrange our tale of the wreck, Joe, to match without flaw.
+Quick! What have we to say?"
+
+"A task for a scholar, this," grinned the sea urchin. "If it's not well
+learned, we'll taste worse'n a flogging. Where be his prize crew of
+pirates, asketh Blackbeard. Answer me that, Jack."
+
+"The _Plymouth Adventure_ was driven upon a shoal and lost," glibly
+affirmed the other lad who had rallied to play at this hazardous game.
+"Her boats were stove up. We left the pirates building a raft for
+themselves and trusted ourselves to this poor contrivance, hoping to
+gain the coast."
+
+"Good, as far as it goes," observed the critical Joe.
+
+"And it veers close to the truth. About the ship's company? What say
+you?"
+
+"There I hang in the wind," confessed Jack. "Blackbeard would have flung
+'em overboard, I trow. Have a shot at it yourself."
+
+"Well, leave me to answer that when the time comes. That we may agree,
+suppose we say Ned Rackham needed the sailors to work the ship and so
+spared 'em. Hanged if we can make it all true as Gospel."
+
+"But if Blackbeard searches for the wreck, or if some of those pirates
+rejoin him, Joe----"
+
+"But me no more buts," snapped the sea rover. "We be jammed in a
+clove-hitch, as the seaman's lingo hath it. Take trouble as it comes
+and, ware ye, don't weaken."
+
+They stared at the oncoming ship, dreading to be rescued and even more
+fearful of being passed by. Disfigured though she was by a shattered
+foremast, the _Revenge_ made a gallant picture as she leaned to show the
+copper sheathing which flashed like gold. Her bow flung the crested seas
+aside and Joe Hawkridge muttered admiringly:
+
+"A swift vessel! She carries a bone in her teeth. A telescope can sight
+us soon. Steady the raft, Jack, whilst I wriggle up this mast of ours
+and wave my shirt."
+
+"A hard choice," sighed Jack. "Now we well know what it means to be
+betwixt the devil and the deep sea."
+
+They saw the _Revenge_ shift her course a couple of points as the sheets
+were eased off. A little way to windward of the raft, she hove to while
+a small boat was hoisted out. Curiosity prompted Blackbeard to find out
+who these castaways were and from what ship they had drifted. It
+occurred to Joe Hawkridge that he might be in quest of tidings of the
+two sloops of his squadron which no longer kept him company. Jack
+Cockrell's teeth chattered but not with cold as the boat bobbed away
+from the side of the _Revenge_. Presently Joe recognized the pirate at
+the steering oar as a petty officer who had often befriended him.
+
+This fellow's swarthy, pockmarked face crinkled in a smile as he
+flourished his broad hat and yelled:
+
+"Stab my gizzard, but here's the London 'prentice-boy a-cruisin' on his
+own adventure."
+
+"Right-o, Jesse Strawn," Joe called back. "My bark is short-handed. I
+need lively recruits. Will ye enlist?"
+
+The boat's crew laughed at this as they reached out to lay hold of the
+raft while the two lads leaped aboard. Joe Hawkridge carried it off with
+rough bravado as though glad to be among his pals again. They eyed Jack
+Cockrell with quizzical interest and he did his best to be at ease,
+permitting Joe to vouch for him as a young gentleman with a taste for
+piracy who had won Blackbeard's favor in the _Plymouth Adventure_. They
+were plied with eager questions regarding the fate of the merchant ship
+and Ned Rackham's prize crew. It was a chance to rehearse the tale as
+they had concocted it, and it seemed to hang together well enough to
+satisfy these simple rogues.
+
+In his turn, Joe Hawkridge demanded to know the gossip of the _Revenge_.
+The storm had sobered Blackbeard, it seemed, and he had displayed the
+skill of a masterly seaman in bringing them safely through. In toiling
+for their own lives, the men had forgotten their brawls and plots and
+guzzling. And the great wind had blown the ship clear of Spanish fever.
+There were no new cases and the invalids were gaining strength. Fresh
+food and sweet water were needed and the opinion was that Blackbeard now
+steered for an old rendezvous of his on the North Carolina coast where
+his sloops would meet him if they were still afloat.
+
+Jack Cockrell found his courage returning as he clambered up the side of
+the _Revenge_ and followed Joe aft to the quarter-deck. Unless they
+bungled it, there was a chance that they might escape when the pirates
+made their landing on the coast to refresh themselves and refit the
+ship. The mate on watch greeted them good-humoredly enough and bade them
+enter the cabin where the captain awaited them. Jack was all a-flutter
+again but he managed to imitate Joe's careless swagger.
+
+Blackbeard lounged at his ease in a huge chair of carven ebony which
+might have been filched from some stately East Indiaman or a ship of the
+Grand Mogul himself. He had flung off his coat and the sleeves of a
+shirt of damask silk were rolled to the elbow. Instead of the great,
+mildewed sea-boots he wore slippers of crimson leather embroidered with
+threads of gold. Gorgeous cushions, pieces of plate, costly apparel
+strewed the cabin in barbaric confusion.
+
+What the two lads gazed at, however, was this bizarre figure of a despot
+who held the power of life and death. It was one of his quieter
+interludes when he laid aside the ferocious and bombastic play-acting
+which made it hard to discover whether he was very cunning or half-mad.
+The immense beard flowed down his chest instead of being tricked out in
+gaudy ribbons. He was idly running a comb through it when his small,
+rum-reddened eyes took in the two lads in dripping clothes who were
+shoved toward him by the sentry guarding the hatch.
+
+Blackbeard let a hairy hand stray to clutch one of the pistols kept on
+the table beside him. Jack Cockrell gulped and stole a frightened glance
+at Joe Hawkridge who winked and nudged him. There was some small comfort
+in this. Spellbound, they stared at the pistol and then at the pirate's
+massive forearm on which a skull and cross-bones was pricked in India
+ink. At this moment Jack earnestly wished himself back on the raft. The
+barrel of the pistol looked as big as a blunderbuss.
+
+With a yawn, Blackbeard reached for a silver bowl of Brazil nuts,
+cracked one of them with the pistol-butt and roared for the black cabin
+boy who came running with a flask of Canary wine and a goblet. Jack
+Cockrell's sigh of relief sounded like a porpoise coming up for air. He
+was not to be shot at once. Suddenly Blackbeard exclaimed, in that
+husky, growling voice of his:
+
+"I saw you rascals through the glass before I came below. What of the
+ship I left ye in? Briefly now, and no lies."
+
+Together the lads pieced out the narrative as they had hastily prepared
+it. The vital thing was to watch lest they tell a word too much. Jack
+stumbled once or twice but his comrade covered it adroitly, and they did
+not betray themselves. The sweat trickled into their eyes but the heat
+of the cabin was excuse for this. Blackbeard studied them intently,
+munching Brazil nuts and noisily sipping his wine.
+
+"The _Plymouth Adventure_ stranded yester-eve?" said he. "Know ye the
+lay of the coast where the wreck lies? What of the shipmaster and Ned
+Rackham? Were they able to fix the shoal by reckoning?"
+
+"No, sir," readily answered Joe Hawkridge. "'Twas strange land to all
+hands."
+
+From a chest Blackbeard hauled out a dog-eared chart of parchment and
+unrolled it upon the table. The boys foresaw his intention and feared
+the worst. Presently they heard him mumble to himself:
+
+"A small wind setting from the west'ard,--twenty-four hours of drift
+for the lads' raft,--a dozen leagues, I call it."
+
+He looked up from the chart to ask:
+
+"The wreck was lodged fast in smooth water and holding together?"
+
+"Aye, but in peril of working off and sinking like an iron pot,"
+answered Joe. "For this reason the people were in haste to quit her."
+
+"Her own crew made for the beach, I have no doubt," shrewdly pursued
+Blackbeard, "but my men 'ud stay by the wreck and watch the weather ere
+they shoved off. Trust the food and drink and plunder to hold 'em."
+
+He lumbered to the hatch and called up to the mate on watch. While they
+conferred, Joe Hawkridge whispered to his perturbed companion:
+
+"He will hunt for the wreck, Jack. But unless the wind changes, he can't
+beat in to the coast with his fore-topmast gone."
+
+"A merciful delay," muttered Jack. "I worry not so much for Captain
+Wellsby and his people. They will hide themselves well inland when they
+make out the _Revenge_, but what of you and me?"
+
+"'Tis a vexing life we lead. I will say that much, Master Cockrell."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE MIST OF THE CHEROKEE SWAMP
+
+
+THE dark cloud of anxiety was lightened a trifle by the fact that
+Blackbeard displayed no ill temper toward the two young castaways.
+Having obtained such information as they chose to offer, he roughly told
+them to go forward and join the crew. Whether or no, Jack was impressed
+as a pirate and it may have amused Blackbeard to recruit by force the
+nephew of the honorable Secretary of the Provincial Council. For his
+part, Jack was grateful to be regarded no longer as a hostage under
+sentence of death. With Joe as an escort who knew the ropes, he went on
+deck and was promptly kicked off the poop by the mate.
+
+They first found food and quenched their raging thirst with water which
+had a loathsome smell. Joe reported to the chief gunner and begged the
+chance to sleep for a dozen hours on end. This was granted amiably
+enough and the pirates clustered about to ask all manner of curious
+questions, but the weary lads dragged themselves into the bows of the
+ship and curled up in a stupor. There they lay as if drugged, all
+through the night, even when the seamen trampled over them to haul the
+head-sails and tack ship.
+
+When, at last, they blinked at the morning sky, it dismayed them to find
+the breeze blowing strong out of the southeast and the _Revenge_
+standing in to the coast under easy sail. They looked aft and saw
+Blackbeard at the rail with a long glass at his eye. The whole crew was
+eager with expectation and the routine work went undone. The ship had
+been put about several hours earlier, Joe learned, and was due soon to
+sight the shore unless the reckoning was all at fault.
+
+So cleverly had Blackbeard calculated the drift of the boys' raft that a
+little later in the morning a lookout in the maintop called down:
+
+"Land, ho! Two points off the starboard bow she bears."
+
+"The maintop, ahoy!" shouted Blackbeard. "Can ye see a vessel's spars?"
+
+"'Tis too hazy inshore. But unless my eyes play me tricks, a smudge of
+smoke arises."
+
+Jack Cockrell nervously confided to Joe:
+
+"That would be Captain Wellsby's campfire on the beach."
+
+"Trust him to douse it," was the easy assurance. "I feel better. Blow
+me, but I expect to live another day."
+
+"Answer me why," begged Jack. "I am like a palsied old man."
+
+"Well, you know this bit o' coast, how low it sets above the sea.
+Despite the haze, a man aloft could see a ship's masts and yards before
+he had a glimpse of land."
+
+"Then the wreck of the _Plymouth Adventure_ has slid off the shoal and
+gone down, Joe?"
+
+"Yes, when the wind veered and stirred a surf on the shoal. She pounded
+over with the flood-tide and dropped into fifteen fathom."
+
+"Then we are saved, for now?" joyfully exclaimed Jack.
+
+"Unless we're unlucky enough to find some o' those plaguey pirates
+afloat on a raft or makin' signals from the beach."
+
+The _Revenge_ sailed shoreward until those on board could discern the
+marching lines of breakers which tumbled across the shoal. The smudge of
+smoke had vanished from the beach. The lookout man concluded that the
+haze had deceived him. Blackbeard steered as close as he dared go, with
+a sailor heaving the lead, but there was no sign of life among the
+sand-dunes and the stunted trees. And the _Plymouth Adventure_ had
+disappeared leaving no trace excepting scattered bits of floating
+wreckage.
+
+The pirate ship headed to follow the coast to the northward, on the
+chance that Ned Rackham's prize crew might have made a landing
+elsewhere. To Jack Cockrell the gift of life had been miraculously
+vouchsafed him and he felt secure for the moment. Joe's theory seemed
+plausible, that the pirates had abandoned the _Plymouth Adventure_ in
+time to avert drowning with her, and were driven away from the bight and
+the beach by Captain Wellsby's well-armed sailors.
+
+"Do they know Blackbeard's rendezvous in the North Carolina waters,
+Joe?" was the natural query. "Are they likely to make their way thither,
+knowing that honest men will slay them at sight?"
+
+"The swamps and the murderous Indians will take full toll of 'em, Jack.
+I believe we have seen the last of those rogues, but I'd rest better
+could I know for certain."
+
+"Meanwhile this mad Blackbeard may be taken in one of his savage
+frenzies and shoot me for sport," said young Master Cockrell, for whom
+existence had come to be one hazard after another.
+
+"He seems strangely tame, much like a human soul," observed Joe. "I
+ne'er beheld him like this. He plots some huge mischief, methinks."
+
+And now the ship's officers drove the men to their work but they were
+less abusive than usual. They seemed to reflect Blackbeard's milder
+humor and it was manifest that they wished to avoid the crew's
+resentment. Joe Hawkridge was puzzled and began to ferret it out among
+his friends who were trustworthy. They had their own suspicions and the
+general opinion was that Blackbeard was in great dread of encountering
+Captain Stede Bonnet in the _Royal James_. It seemed that the _Revenge_
+had spoken a disabled merchant ship just after the storm and her skipper
+reported that he had been overhauled by Stede Bonnet a few days earlier
+and the best of his cargo stolen. Blackbeard had been seized with
+violent rage but had suffered the ship to proceed on her way because of
+his own short-handed condition.
+
+With a prize crew lost in the _Plymouth Adventure_, including
+Sailing-Master Ned Rackham, and the two sloops of the squadron missing
+with all hands, the terrible Blackbeard was in poor shape to meet this
+Captain Bonnet who hated him beyond measure. As if this were not gloomy
+enough, there were men in the _Revenge_ eager to sail under Bonnet's
+flag and to mutiny if ever they sighted the _Royal James_. It behooved
+Blackbeard to press on to that lonely inlet on the North Carolina coast
+and avoid the open sea until he could prepare to fight this dangerous
+foeman.
+
+It surprised Jack Cockrell to see how quiet a pirate ship could be. The
+ruffians were bone-weary, for one thing, after the struggle to bring the
+vessel through the storm. And the scourge of tropic fever had left its
+marks. Moreover, the rum was running short because some of the casks had
+been staved in the heavy weather and Blackbeard was doling it out as
+grog with an ample dilution of water. There was no more dicing and
+brawling and tipsy choruses. Sobered against their will, some of these
+bloody-minded sinners talked repentance or shed tears over wives and
+children deserted in distant ports.
+
+The wind blew fair until the _Revenge_ approached the landmarks familiar
+to Blackbeard and found a channel which led to the wide mouth of
+Cherokee Inlet. It was a quiet roadstead sheltered from seaward by
+several small islands. The unpeopled swamp and forest fringed the shores
+but a green meadow and a margin of white sand offered a favorable place
+for landing. As the _Revenge_ slowly rounded the last wooded point, the
+tall mast of a sloop became visible. The pirates cheered and discharged
+their muskets in salute as they recognized one of the consorts which had
+been blown away in the storm.
+
+Blackbeard strutted on his quarter-deck, no longer biting his nails in
+fretful anxiety. He had donned the military coat with the glittering
+buttons and epaulets and the huge cocked hat with the feather in it. He
+noted that the sloop, which was called the _Triumph_, fairly buzzed with
+men, many more than her usual complement. No sooner had the ship let her
+anchor splash than a boat was sent over to her with the captain of the
+sloop who made haste to pay his compliments and explain his voyage. He
+was a portly, sallow man with a blustering manner and looked more like a
+bailiff or a tapster than a brine-pickled gentleman of fortune.
+
+Blackbeard hailed him cordially and invited him into the cabin. The boat
+waited alongside the _Revenge_ and the men scrambled aboard to swap
+yarns with the ship's crew. Jack Cockrell hovered near the group as
+they squatted on their heels around a tub of grog and learned that the
+_Triumph_ had rescued the crew of the other sloop just before it had
+foundered. There were a hundred men of them, in all, crowded together
+like dried herring, and part were sleeping ashore in huts of boughs and
+canvas. No wonder Blackbeard was in blither spirits. Here was a company
+to pick and choose from and so fill the depleted berth-deck of the
+_Revenge_.
+
+Finding the poop deserted, Joe Hawkridge ventured far enough to peer in
+at a cabin window. Blackbeard was at table, together with his first
+mate, the chief gunner, the acting sailing-master, and the captain of
+the sloop. They were exceeding noisy, singing most discordantly and
+laughing at indecent jests. Suddenly Blackbeard whipped two pistols from
+his sash and fired them under the table, quite at random.
+
+The first mate leaped up with a horrible yell and clapped a hand to the
+calf of his leg. Then he bolted out of the cabin, which was blue with
+smoke, and limped in search of the surgeon. Joe Hawkridge dodged aside
+but he heard the jovial Blackbeard shout, with a whoop of laughter:
+
+"Discipline, damme! If I don't kill one of you now and then, you'll
+forget who I am."
+
+Inasmuch as none of the other guests dared squeak after this episode, it
+was to be inferred that they were properly impressed.
+
+[Illustration: THE FIRST MATE LEAPED UP WITH A HORRIBLE YELL]
+
+In a little while the mate returned with his leg neatly bandaged,
+announced that it was a mere flesh wound, and sat down as though nothing
+out of the ordinary had occurred to mar the festive occasion. Through
+the rest of the day, boats were passing between the ship and the sloop
+in a convivial reunion. Supper was to be cooked on the beach in great
+iron kettles and a frolic would follow the feast. The sloop had rum
+enough to sluice all the parched gullets aboard the _Revenge_.
+
+Jack Cockrell had no desire to join this stupid revel but he was eager
+to get ashore to discover what opportunity there might be to escape. But
+the wiser Joe Hawkridge counseled patience, saying:
+
+"Wait a bit. We'd be as helpless as any babes should we take to our
+heels in this ungodly wilderness. Is there a town or plantation near
+by?"
+
+"I know not," ruefully confessed Jack. "Charles Town lies to the south,
+and Virginia to the north. There my knowledge fetches up short."
+
+"And leagues of morass to flounder through, by the look of this coast,"
+said Joe. "We be without weapons, or food, or----"
+
+"I am a hot-headed fool, I grant you that," broke in Jack. "Now bestow
+your sage advice."
+
+"You will not be allowed to go ashore, for one thing, Master Cockrell.
+Blackbeard has no notion of letting you get away from him to betray this
+rendezvous and stir the colonies to send an expedition after him.
+Steady the helm, Jack, and watch for squalls. If I can read the signs,
+there is trouble afoot. And we must seek our own advantage in the nick
+of time."
+
+"But these wild sots no longer think of mutiny and the like, Joe. They
+are content to let the morrow go hang."
+
+"S-s-s-h, 'ware the master of the sloop," cautioned Joe. "He makes for
+the gangway, the big lump of tallow."
+
+They moved away while Captain Richard Spender clumsily descended into
+his boat, his broad face flushed, his breath asthmatic. He had a piping
+voice absurd for his bulk and the two lads amused themselves with
+mimicking him as the boat pulled in the direction of the sloop. So safe
+against surprise did Blackbeard regard himself in this lonely anchorage
+that no more than a dozen men were left aboard to keep the ship through
+the night. Among these was Jack Cockrell, as his comrade had foreseen.
+It therefore happened that they remained together, for Joe had
+volunteered to join the anchor watch. In a melancholy mood the two lads
+idled upon the after deck.
+
+The sun dropped behind the dark and tangled forest and flights of herons
+came winging it home to the islets in the swamps. On the sward by the
+silver strand the throng of pirates had stilled their clamor while a
+rascal with a tenor voice held them enraptured with the haunting refrain
+of:
+
+ "Sweet Annie frae the sea-beach came,
+ Where Jockey's climbed the vessel's side:
+ Ah! wha can keep her heart at hame,
+ When Jockey's tossed aboon the tide?
+
+ "Far off 'till distant realms he gangs,
+ But I'se be true, as he ha' been;
+ And when ilk lass around him thrangs,
+ He'll think on Annie's faithful een."
+
+Forlorn Jack Cockrell had homesick thoughts and felt hopeless of loosing
+the snares which bound him. All that sustained his courage was the
+sanguine disposition of Joe Hawkridge, whose youthful soul had been so
+battered and toughened by dangers manifold on land and sea that he
+expected nothing less. Listening to the pirate's moving ballad, they sat
+and swung their legs from the ship's taffrail while their gaze idly
+roved to the green curtain of undergrowth which ran lush to the water's
+edge to the northward of the beach.
+
+It was Joe who called attention to a floating object which moved inside
+the mouth of the small, tidal creek that wandered through the marshy
+lowlands. In the shadowy light it could easily be mistaken for a log
+drifting down on the ebb of the tide. This was what the lads assumed it
+to be until they both noticed a behavior curious in a log. The long, low
+object turned athwart the current at the entrance of the creek and shot
+toward the nearest bank as though strongly propelled.
+
+Joe lifted the telescope from its case in front of the wooden
+binnacle-box and squinted long at the edge of the creek. Crude though
+the glass was, he was enabled to discern that the object was, in truth,
+a log, but evidently hollowed out. Rounded at the ends, it held two men
+whose figures so blended into the dusk that they disclosed themselves
+only when in motion.
+
+"A pirogue," said Joe, "and fashioned by Indians! What is the tribe
+hereabouts? Have ye a guess?"
+
+"Roving Yemassees, or men of the Hatteras tribe," answered Jack. "Yonder
+brace of savages will be scouts."
+
+"Aye, but there'll be no attack 'gainst this pirates' bivouac, right
+under the guns of the ships. The Indians are too wise to attempt it."
+
+"Look, Joe! Hand me the glass. Those two spies have quitted the pirogue.
+'Tis quite empty. They may lay up all night to creep closer and keep
+watch on the camp."
+
+"Right enough, by Crambo! If we could but gain yon cypress canoe, and
+steal along the coast by sail and paddle----"
+
+"'Tis the chance we prayed for," eagerly exclaimed Jack. "Dare we swim
+for it?"
+
+"Not with a boat just coming off from shore. What if we try it in the
+night and find the pirogue gone?"
+
+"We are stranded for sure, and Blackbeard will kill us."
+
+Baffled, they strained their eyes until the shore stood black in the
+starlight, but as long as the dusk lingered they fancied they could
+descry the empty pirogue. The ship's boat which presently drew alongside
+contained Blackbeard himself and Captain Dick Spender of the _Triumph_
+sloop, besides several officers of the two vessels. They withdrew into
+the cabin and there was prolonged discussion, lasting well toward
+midnight.
+
+It was a secretive session, with trusted men of the boat's crew posted
+to keep eavesdroppers away from the hatches and windows, nor was there
+any loud carousing. Some business was afoot and Jack wondered whether it
+might concern the trouble which Joe had sworn was brewing under the
+surface. A circumstance even more suspicious was that three of the
+sailors from the boat were called into the cabin. Joe Hawkridge knew
+them as fellows loyal to Blackbeard through thick and thin. Drunken
+beasts, as a rule, they were cold sober to-night.
+
+As quietly as they had come, the whole party dropped into the boat and
+returned either to the beach or to the sloop which rode at anchor two
+cable-lengths away. The _Revenge_ floated with no more activity on her
+darkened decks. The few men of the watch drowsed at their stations or
+wistfully gazed at the fires ashore and the mob of pirates who moved in
+the red glare. Jack Cockrell and Joe Hawkridge felt no desire for sleep.
+As the ship swung with the turn of the tide, they went to the side and
+leaned on the tall bulwark where they might catch the first glimpse of
+the shore with the break of day.
+
+Meanwhile they busied themselves with this wild scheme and that. Sifting
+them out, it was resolved to swim from the ship at the first
+opportunity. If they could not find the Indian pirogue, Joe would try to
+get into the pirates' camp by night and possess himself of an axe, an
+adze, a musket or two, and such food as he could smuggle out. Then, at a
+pinch, they could hide themselves a little way inland and hew out a
+pirogue of their own from a dry log. After hitting upon this plan, the
+better it seemed the more they thrashed it over.
+
+Unluckily it occurred to them so late in the night that they feared to
+attempt it then lest the dawn might overtake them while they were
+swimming. 'Twas a great pity, said Joe, that their wits had hung fire,
+like a damp flint-lock, for this was the night when the pirates would be
+the most slack and befuddled and it would be precious hard waiting
+through another day. Jack glumly agreed with this point of view.
+
+It was so near morning, however, that they lingered to scan the shore.
+Then it was observed that a pearly mist was rising from the swamp lands
+and spreading out over the water. It was almost like a fog which the
+morning breeze would dispel after a while. Rolling like smoke it hung so
+low that the topmast of the sloop rose above it although her hull was
+like the gray ghost of a vessel.
+
+"No sign of wind as yet," said Joe, holding up a wetted finger, "and
+that red sunset bespoke a calm, hot day. This odd smother o' mist may
+stay a couple of hours. Will ye venture it with me, Jack?"
+
+"Gladly! Over we go, before the watch is flogged awake by the bos'n's
+mate."
+
+They crept aft to the high stern and paid out a coil of rope until it
+trailed in the water beneath the railed gallery which overhung the huge
+rudder. Joe belayed his end securely and slid over like a flash,
+twisting the rope around one leg and letting himself down as agile as a
+monkey. Without a splash he cast himself loose and Jack followed but not
+so adroitly. When he plopped into the water the commotion was like
+tossing a barrel overboard, but nobody sounded an alarm.
+
+They clung to the rusty rudder chains and listened. The ship was all
+quiet. Then out into the mist they launched themselves, swimming almost
+submerged, dreading to hear an outcry and the spatter of musket balls.
+But the veiling mist and the uncertain light of dawn soon protected the
+fugitives. It was slow, exhausting progress, hampered as they were by
+their breeches and shoes which could not be discarded. They tried to
+keep a sense of direction, striking out for the mouth of the creek in
+which the pirogue had been moored, but the tide set them off the course
+and the only visible marks were the spars of the ship behind them and
+the sloop's topmast off to one side.
+
+[Illustration: JACK ALMOST BUMPED INTO THE DUGOUT CANOE]
+
+Jack swam more strongly and showed greater endurance because he had the
+beef and had been better nourished all his life than the scrawny young
+powder boy who was more like a lath. Now and then Jack paused to tread
+water while his shipmate clung to his shoulder and husbanded his waning
+strength, with that indomitable grin on his freckled phiz. Of one thing
+they were thankful, that the tide was bearing them farther away from the
+pirates' camp, which was now as still as though the sleepers were dead
+men.
+
+"Blood and bones, but I have swum a league a'ready," gurgled Joe during
+one of the halts.
+
+"Shut your mouth or you'll fill up to the hatch and founder," scolded
+Jack. "I see trees in the mist. The shore is scarce a pistol shot away."
+
+"I pray my keel scrapes soon," spluttered the waterlogged Hawkridge as
+he kicked himself along in a final effort.
+
+Huzza, their feet touched the soft ooze and they fell over stumps and
+rotted trunks buried under the surface. Scratched and beplastered with
+mud, they crawled out in muck which gripped them to the knees, and
+roosted like buzzards upon the butt of a prostrate live-oak.
+
+"Marooned," quoth Joe, "to be eaten by snakes and alligators."
+
+"Nonsense," snapped Master Cockrell, who had hunted deer and wild-fowl
+on the Carolina coast. "We can pick our way with care. I have seen
+pleasanter landscapes than this, but I like it better than Blackbeard's
+company."
+
+There was no disputing this statement and Joe plucked up spirit, as was
+his habit when another arduous task confronted him. Cautiously they made
+their way from one quaking patch of sedge to another or scrambled to
+their middles. There came a ridge of higher ground thick with brambles
+and knotted vines and they traversed this with less misery. A gleam of
+water among the trees and they took it to be the creek which they sought
+to find. Wary of lurking Indians, they wormed along on their stomachs
+and so came to the high swamp grass of the bank.
+
+They swam the creek and crept toward its mouth. Jack was rooting along
+like a bear when he almost bumped into the dugout canoe which had looked
+so very like a stranded log. It was tied to a tree by a line of twisted
+fibre and the rising tide had borne it well up into the marsh. Here it
+was invisible from the ship and only a miracle of good fortune had
+revealed it to the lads in that glimpse from the deck at sundown.
+
+They crawled over the gunwale and slumped in the bottom of the pirogue,
+which was larger than they expected, a clumsy yet seaworthy craft with a
+wide floor and space to crowd a dozen men. Fire had helped to hollow it
+from a giant of a cypress log, for the inner skin was charred black.
+Three roughly made paddles were discovered. This was tremendously
+important, and all they lacked was a mast and sail to be true
+navigators.
+
+Something else they presently found which was so unlooked for, so
+incredible, that they could only gape and stare at each other. Tucked in
+the bow was a seaman's jacket of tarred canvas, of the kind used in wet
+weather. Sewed to the inside of it was a pocket of leather with a
+buttoned flap. This Jack Cockrell proceeded to explore, recovering from
+his stupefaction, and fished out a wallet bound in sharkskin as was the
+habit of sailors to make for themselves in tropic waters. It contained
+nothing of value, a few scraps of paper stitched together, a bit of
+coral, a lock of yellow hair, a Spanish coin, some shreds of dried
+tobacco leaf.
+
+Carefully Jack examined the ragged sheets of paper which seemed to be a
+carelessly jotted diary of dates and events. Upon the last leaf was
+scrawled, "_Bill Saxby, His Share_," and beneath this entry such items
+as these:
+
+ "Aprl. ye 17--A Spanish shippe rich laden. 1 sack
+ Vanilla. 2 Rolls Blue Cloth of Peru. 1 Packet
+ Bezoar Stones.
+
+ "May ye 24--A Poor Shippe. 3 Bars of Silver. 1
+ Case Cordial Waters. A Golden Candle-stick. My
+ share by Lot afore ye Mast."
+
+Joe Hawkridge could neither read nor write but he had ready knowledge
+of the meaning of these entries and he cried excitedly:
+
+"Say the name again, Jack. Bill Saxby, His Share. Strike me blind, but I
+was chums with Bill when we lay off Honduras. As decent a lad as ever
+went a-piratin'! A heart of oak is Bill, hailin' from London town."
+
+"But what of the riddle?" impatiently demanded Jack. "Whence this Indian
+pirogue? And where is Bill Saxby?"
+
+"He sailed with Stede Bonnet, bless ye," answered Joe. "These two men we
+spied in the canoe last night were no Indians. _They were Cap'n Bonnet's
+men._ Indians would ha' hid the pirogue more craftily."
+
+"But they came not along the coast. Did they drop down this creek from
+somewhere inland?"
+
+"There you put me in stays," confessed Joe. "One thing I can swear. They
+were sent to look for Blackbeard's ships. And I sore mistrust they were
+caught whilst prowling near the camp. Else they would ha' come back to
+the canoe before day."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+THE EPISODE OF THE WINDING CREEK
+
+
+THE singular discovery of Bill Saxby's jacket was like a shock to drive
+all else out of their minds. Now they found that it had been thrown over
+a jug of water and a bag of beef and biscuit stowed in the bow. This
+solved one pressing problem, and they nibbled the hard ration while
+debating the situation. It was agreed that they could not honorably run
+away with the pirogue if it really belonged to Stede Bonnet's men, who
+must have come on foot along the higher ground back of the coast and
+descended the creek in the canoe stolen or purchased from Indians met by
+chance.
+
+Granted this much, it was fair to conjecture that Captain Bonnet's ship
+was in some harbor not many leagues distant and that he knew where to
+find Blackbeard's rendezvous, at Cherokee Inlet.
+
+"'Tis your job to stand by the pirogue, Jack," suggested Hawkridge, "and
+I will make a sally toward the pirates' camp afore they rouse out."
+
+"Go softly, Joe, and don't be reckless. Why not lie up till night before
+you reconnoitre?"
+
+"'Cause the mist still hangs heavy and I'm blowed if I dilly-dally if
+good Bill Saxby has come to grief."
+
+"Supposing he has, you cannot wrest him single-handed from Blackbeard's
+crew."
+
+"Well, if I can but slip a word of comfort in his ear, it'll cheer him
+mightily, unless his throat be cut by now," was the stubborn response.
+"Sit thee taut, Jack, old _camarada_, and chuck the worry. Care killed a
+cat. These rogues yonder in the camp won't _molest me_ if I walk boldly
+amongst 'em."
+
+"What if you don't return?" persisted Jack. "How long shall I wait here
+with the pirogue?"
+
+"Now what the deuce can I say to such foolish queries? If things go
+wrong with me and Bill and his mate, you will have to cruise alone or
+hop back to the _Revenge_."
+
+With a laugh and a wave of the hand, the dauntless adventurer leaped
+from the nose of the canoe, nimbly hauled himself into a tree, and then
+plunged into the gloomy swamp where he was speedily lost to view. Jack
+Cockrell settled himself to wait for he knew not what. Clouds of midges
+and mosquitoes tormented him and he ached with fatigue. Soon after
+sunrise the mist began to burn away and the mouth of the creek was no
+longer obscured by shadows. In the glare of day Jack thought it likely
+that the canoe might be detected by some pair of keen eyes aboard the
+_Revenge_.
+
+To move it far might imperil Joe Hawkridge and Bonnet's two seamen
+should they come in haste with a hue-and-cry behind them. Jack paddled
+the pirogue up the creek and soon found a safe ambuscade, a stagnant
+cove in among the dense growth, where he tied up to a gnarled root. Then
+he climbed a wide-branching oak and propped himself in a crotch from
+which he could see the open water and the two vessels at anchor. Clumps
+of taller trees cut off any view of the beach and the camp but he dared
+stray no farther from the pirogue.
+
+Tediously an hour passed and there was no sign of Joe Hawkridge. He had
+a journey of only a few hundred yards to make, and Jack began to imagine
+all kinds of misfortune that might have befallen him, such as being
+mired beyond his depth in the swamp and perishing miserably. The
+sensible conclusion was, however, that he had tarried among his
+shipmates in the camp with some shrewd purpose in mind.
+
+A little later in the morning, Jack's anxious cogitations were diverted
+by the frequent passage of boats between the _Revenge_ and the sloop
+which was anchored nearer the beach. One of these small craft was
+Blackbeard's own cock-boat, or captain's gig, which he used for errands
+in smooth water, with a couple of men to pull it. Jack was reminded of
+that secret conference in the cabin and Joe's conviction that some
+uncommon devilment was afoot. It appeared as though "Tallow Dick"
+Spender, that unwholesome master of the _Triumph_ sloop, had been chosen
+as the right bower.
+
+And now there arose a sudden and riotous noise in the camp. It was not
+the mirth and song of jolly pirates a-pleasuring ashore but the
+ferocious tumult of men in conflict and taken unawares. Perched in the
+tree, Jack Cockrell listened all agog as the sounds rose and fell with
+the breeze which swayed the long gray moss that draped the branches. He
+heard a few pistol shots and then was startled to see a spurt of flame
+dart from a gun-port of the sloop. The dull report reached him an
+instant later. He could see that the gun had been fired from the
+vessel's shoreward battery. It meant that Blackbeard was making a target
+of some part of the camp. Another gun belched its cloud of smoke.
+
+The noise died down, save for intermittent shouts and one long wail of
+anguish. Presently a boat moved out past the sloop. A dozen men tugged
+at the oars and others stood crowded in the stern-sheets. Jack caught
+the gleam of weapons and thought he recognized the squat, broad figure
+of Blackbeard himself beside the man at the steering oar. Behind this
+pinnace from the _Revenge_ trailed two other boats in tow. They passed
+in slow procession, out between the vessels. The boats which the pinnace
+towed were not empty. Instead of sitting upon the thwarts, men seemed to
+be strewn about in them as if they had been tossed over the gunwales
+like so much dunnage.
+
+Jack rubbed his eyes in amazement and watched the line of boats turn to
+follow the channel which led out of the sheltered roadstead to the sea
+beyond. When they vanished beyond a sandy island, the lad in the
+live-oak tree said to himself:
+
+"My guess is that Blackbeard has put a stopper on all talk of mutiny by
+one bold stroke. A bloody weeding-out, and in those two boats are the
+poor wretches who were taken alive. Alas, one of 'em may be Joe
+Hawkridge unless he be dead already. He talked too much of Stede Bonnet
+aboard the ship. And there were sneaking dogs in the crew who spied on
+their comrades. We saw them enter the cabin last night."
+
+There was no getting around the evidence. It fitted together all too
+well. Jack sadly reflected that, beyond a doubt, he had seen the last of
+gallant, loyal Joe Hawkridge. Left alone with the pirogue, which he
+could not paddle single-handed, it was folly to think of trying to
+escape along the coast. And to wander inland, ignorant of the country,
+was to court almost certain death. Nor could he now expect mercy from
+Blackbeard, having deserted the ship against orders and known to be a
+true friend of Captain Stede Bonnet.
+
+The most unhappy lad could no longer hold his cramped station in the
+tree and he decided to seek the canoe and find the meagre solace of a
+little food and water. He was half-way to the ground when he clutched a
+limb and halted to peer into the swamp. Something was splashing through
+the mud and grass and making a prodigious fuss about it. Then Jack heard
+two voices in grunts and maledictions. Fearing the enemy might have
+tracked him, he stood as still as a mouse in the leafage of the oak.
+
+Out of the swamp emerged a young man with a musket on his shoulder.
+Behind him came one very much older, gaunt and wrinkled, his hair as
+gray as the Spanish moss that overhung his path. They reached the edge
+of the creek and then turned down to halt where the pirogue had been
+left. At failing to find it there, they argued hotly and were much
+distressed. Jack Cockrell's fears were calmed. These were no men of
+Blackbeard's company, but good Bill Saxby and his mate. He called to
+them from his perch and they stood wondering at this voice from heaven.
+
+In a jiffy Jack had slid down and was beckoning them. They hurried as
+fast as they could pull their feet out of the muck, and were overjoyed
+to jump into the hidden canoe. There they sat and thumped Jack Cockrell
+on the head by way of affectionate greeting. The younger man had a
+chubby cheek, a dimple in his chin, and blue eyes as big and round as a
+babe's.
+
+"Bill Saxby is me," said his pleasant voice, "and a precious job had I
+to get here. Joe Hawkridge told me of you, Master Cockrell."
+
+"Where is Joe?" cried Jack, dreading to hear his own opinion confirmed.
+
+"Marooned, along with two dozen luckless lads that were trapped like
+pigeons----"
+
+"'Twas more like turtles all a-sleepin' in the sand," the old man
+croaked in rusty accents. "A few was sharp awake and they fought pretty
+whilst the rest rallied, but they got drove with their backs to the
+swamp and a deep slough. Then the sloop turned her guns on 'em and they
+struck their colors."
+
+"And Joe Hawkridge sided with his friends, of course," said Jack.
+
+"Would ye expect aught else of him?" proudly answered Bill Saxby. "He
+searched us out where we lay trussed like fowls, all bound with ropes.
+We blundered fair into the camp last night, and old Trimble Rogers here,
+his legs knotted with cramps, couldn't make a run for it. They saved us
+for Blackbeard's pleasure but he had other fish to fry."
+
+"What then?" demanded Jack.
+
+"'Twas Joe Hawkridge that ran to cut our bonds when the fight began. And
+he bade us leg it for the pirogue and carry word to you. A pledge of
+honor, he called it, to stand by his dear friend Jack, and he made us
+swear it."
+
+"Bless him for a Christian knight of a pirate," said Jack, with tears in
+his eyes. "Was he hurt, did ye happen to note?"
+
+"We hid ourselves till the prisoners were flung into the boats. I marked
+Joe as one of 'em, and he was sprightly, barring a bloody face."
+
+"Marooned, Bill Saxby?" asked Jack. "What's your judgment on that
+score? It cannot be many leagues from here, or the ship would have
+transported them instead of the boats."
+
+"These barren islands lie strung well out from the coast, Master
+Cockrell. Waterless they be, and without shelter. Blackbeard's fancy is
+to let the men die there----"
+
+"An ancient custom of buccaneers and pirates," put in old Trimble
+Rogers, with an air of grave authority. "I mind me in the year of 1687
+when I sailed in the South Sea with that great captain, Edward
+Davis,--'twas after the sack of Guayaquil when every man had a greater
+weight of gold and silver than he could lug on his back----"
+
+Bill Saxby interrupted, in a petulant manner:
+
+"Stow it, grandsire! At a better time ye can please the lad with your
+long-winded yarns,--of marching on Panama with Henry Morgan when the
+mother's milk was scarce dry on your lips."
+
+"I cruised with the best of 'em," boasted the last of the storied race
+of true buccaneers of the Spanish Main, "and now I be in this cheap
+trade of piratin'. The fortunes I gamed away, and the plate ships I
+boarded! Take warnin', boy, and salt your treasure down."
+
+"This Trimble Rogers will talk you deaf," said Bill Saxby, "but there's
+pith in his old bones and wisdom under yon hoary thatch. Cap'n Bonnet
+sent him along with me as a rare old hound to trail the swamps."
+
+In a vivid flash of remembrance, Jack Cockrell saw this salty relic of
+the Spanish Main among the crew which had disported itself on the tavern
+green at Charles Town,--the old man sitting aside with a couple of stray
+children upon his knees while his head nodded to the lilt of the fiddle.
+And again there had been a glimpse of him trudging in the column which
+had followed Stede Bonnet, with trumpet and drum, to attack the hostile
+Indians. Jack's heart warmed to Trimble Rogers and also to young Bill
+Saxby. They would find some way out of all this tribulation.
+
+"Whither lies Captain Bonnet's stout ship?" eagerly demanded Jack.
+
+"On this side the Western Ocean," smiled Saxby. "We shall waste no time
+in finding her. We had better bide where we are a few hours, eh,
+Trimble?"
+
+"Aye, and double back up the stream in the canoe to spend the night on
+dry land and push on afoot at dawn. If we wait to sight Blackbeard's
+boats come in from sea, 'twill aid us to reckon how far out they went
+and what the bearings are."
+
+"So Captain Bonnet may sail to pick off those poor seamen marooned,"
+exclaimed Jack.
+
+"He is not apt to leave 'em to bleach their bones," said Bill Saxby.
+"And when it comes to closing in with Blackbeard, they will have a
+grudge of their own."
+
+They made themselves as comfortable as possible on the bottom of the
+pirogue. Now and then Jack climbed the live-oak to look for the return
+of the boats. There was no more leisure for the pirates left in the ship
+and the sloop. Evidently Blackbeard had been alarmed by the tidings that
+two of Stede Bonnet's men had been caught spying him out and had made
+their escape in the confusion. The sloop was now listed over in shoal
+water and Bill Saxby ventured the opinion that they intended to take the
+mast out of her and put it in the _Revenge_.
+
+"Along with most of her guns, I take it," said Trimble Rogers. "What
+with losing all those men, in one way or another, this Blackbeard, as
+Cap'n Ed'ard Teach miscalls hisself, must needs abandon the sloop. The
+more the merrier, says I, when we come at close quarters."
+
+Jack asked many curious questions, by way of passing the time. The old
+man was easy to read. He had been a lawless sea rover in the days when
+there was both gold and glory in harrying Spanish towns and galleons,
+from Mexico to Peru. The real buccaneers had vanished but he was too old
+a dog to learn new tricks and he faithfully served Stede Bonnet, who had
+a spark of the chivalry and manliness which had burned so brightly in
+that idolized master, Captain Edward Davis.
+
+As for this blue-eyed smiling young Bill Saxby, he had been a small
+tradesman in London. Through no fault of his own, he was cruelly
+imprisoned for debt and, after two years, shipped to the Carolina
+plantations as no better than a slave. For all he knew, the girl wife
+and child in London had been suffered to starve. He had never heard any
+word of them. As a fugitive he had been taken aboard a pirate vessel.
+There he found kindlier treatment than honest men had ever offered him,
+and so grew somewhat reconciled to this wicked calling.
+
+On one of the occasions when Jack left these entertaining companions to
+visit his high sentry post in the tree, he surmised that all hands had
+been summoned on the vessel and lifting out her mast. He could see two
+boats plying back and forth and filled with men. He lingered because
+something else caught his interest. A little boat was putting out from
+the seaward side of the _Revenge_ and it fetched a wide circuit of the
+harbor. This brought the ship between it and the sloop so that its
+departure would be unobserved by the toiling crew.
+
+Two men were at the oars and a third sat in the stern. At a distance,
+Jack guessed they were bound to one of the nearest islands, perhaps in
+search of oysters or crabs, but after making a long sweep which carried
+the boat out of vision of the sloop and the beach, it swung toward the
+shore, a little to the northward of the mouth of the creek. The errand
+had a stealthy air. Jack Cockrell started and almost fell out of the
+tree. He had been mistaken in his fancy that Blackbeard was in the
+pinnace which had towed the prisoners out to be marooned. This was none
+other than the grotesque fiend of a pirate himself, furtively steering
+his cock-boat on some private errand of his own.
+
+As soon as he was certain of this, Jack fairly scurried down the tree,
+digging his toes in the bark like a squirrel, and tumbling head over
+heels into the pirogue. Breathing rapidly, he stuttered:
+
+"The--the devil himself,--in that little w-wherry of his,--c-coming
+inshore. He must ha' seen the canoe. He is in chase of me."
+
+"Go take a look, Bill," coolly remarked old Trimble Rogers, who was busy
+slapping at mosquitoes. "A touch o' the sun has bred a nightmare in the
+lad."
+
+Bill Saxby swarmed up the live-oak like a limber seaman with fish-hooks
+for fingers and he, too, almost lost his balance at what he saw. He
+waved a warning hand at the canoe and then put his fingers to his lips.
+Down he came in breakneck haste and urged the others to haul their craft
+farther up into the sedge. He was plucking green bushes and armfuls of
+dried grass to fling across the gunwales.
+
+Satisfied that the canoe was entirely concealed, they crouched low. The
+old man was more concerned with the pest of insects and he reached out
+to claw up the sticky mud with which he plastered his face and neck like
+a mask. This seemed to give him some relief and his comrades were glad
+to do the same. Bill Saxby was attentive to the priming of the musket,
+which he passed over to Trimble Rogers, saying:
+
+"You are the chief gunner, old hawk. But hold your fire. I'm itching to
+know what trick this Don Whiskerando is up to."
+
+"Fair enough," muttered the old man. "Cap'n Bonnet 'ud clap me in irons
+if I slew this filthy Ed'ard Teach and robbed him of that enjoyment.
+I'll pull no trigger save in our own defense."
+
+They heard the faint splash of oars. Soon the little cock-boat came
+gliding around the bend of the shore and floated into the mouth of the
+creek. Bill Saxby raised himself for a moment and ducked swiftly as he
+whispered:
+
+"He is not lookin' about but motions 'em to row on up the stream."
+
+"Then our canoe is not what he's after?" murmured Jack.
+
+"'Tis some queer game. Were he hunting us, he'd fetch along more hands
+than them two. Hush! Let him pass."
+
+The little boat came steadily on, the tide helping the oars. It sat very
+low in the water, oddly so for the weight of three men. Blackbeard,
+hunched in the stern, held a pistol in one hand while the other gripped
+the tiller. This was not in fear of danger from the shore because he
+kept his eyes on the two seamen at the oars and it was plain to see that
+the pistol was meant to menace them.
+
+The boat passed abreast of the pirogue so artfully concealed in the
+pocket of a tiny cove. The intervening distance was no more than a dozen
+yards. Old Trimble Rogers wistfully fingered the musket and lifted it to
+squint along the barrel. Never was temptation more sturdily resisted.
+Then his face, hard as iron and puckered like dried leather, broke into
+a smile. The idea pleased him immensely. They would follow Blackbeard
+and watch the chance to take him alive. He who had trapped his own men
+in camp was now neatly trapped himself, his retreat cut off. Tie a
+couple of fathom of stout cord to his whiskers and tow him along by
+land, all the way to Stede Bonnet's ship. There the worthy captain could
+bargain with him at his own terms, silently chuckled the old buccaneer.
+
+They held their breath and gazed at the fantastic scoundrel who had made
+himself the ogre among pirates. He had discarded the great hat as
+cumbersome and his tousled head was bound around with a wide strip of
+the red calico from India. Still and solid he sat, like a heathen idol,
+staring in front of him and intent on his mysterious errand. The unseen
+spectators in the pirogue scanned also the two seamen at the oars and
+felt a vague pity for them. Unmistakably they were sick with fear. It
+was conveyed by their dejected aspect, by the tinge of pallor, by the
+fixity with which they regarded the cocked pistol in Blackbeard's fist.
+Jack Cockrell knew them as abandoned villains who had boasted of many a
+bloody deed but the swarthy, pockmarked fellow had been in the boat
+which had saved the two lads from the drifting raft. This was enough to
+awaken a lively sympathy.
+
+Trimble Rogers gripped Jack's shoulder with a strength which made him
+wince and pointed a skinny finger at the boat. The fate of the two
+seamen did not trouble him greatly. Those who lived by violence should
+rightly expect to die by it. The sea was their gaming table and it was
+their ill luck if the dice were cogged. Just then Bill Saxby stifled an
+ejaculation. He, too, had discovered the freightage in the cock-boat,
+the heavy burden which made it swim so low.
+
+It rested in front of Blackbeard's knees, the top showing above the
+curve of the gunwales. It was a sea-chest, uncommonly large, built of
+some dark tropical wood and strapped with iron. Old Trimble Rogers'
+fierce eyes glittered and he licked his lips. He leaned over to whisper
+in Bill Saxby's ear the one word:
+
+"_Treasure!_"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+BLACKBEARD'S ERRAND IS INTERRUPTED
+
+
+BLACKBEARD'S deep-laden boat was rowed on past the pirogue and turned to
+follow the channel of the sluggish stream. Bill Saxby thrust aside the
+cover of grass and boughs and shoved the log canoe out of the cove. So
+crooked was the course of the creek that the boat was already out of
+sight and by stealthy paddling it was possible to pursue undetected. Old
+Trimble Rogers had forgotten his lust to slay Blackbeard. His gloating
+imagination could picture the contents of that massive sea-chest after a
+long cruise in southern waters.
+
+It was foolish to attempt to surprise Blackbeard while afloat in the
+creek. In a race of it, the handy cock-boat could pull away from the
+clumsier pirogue manned by two paddles only, for Trimble Rogers was
+needed to steer and be ready with the musket. This was their only
+firearm, which Bill Saxby had snatched up during the flight from the
+camp. At the same time he had lifted a powder-horn and bullet pouch from
+a wounded pirate.
+
+"If I do bang away and miss him," grumbled Trimble Rogers, "he's apt to
+pepper us afore I can reload."
+
+"But you forswore shootin' him," chided Bill Saxby, between strokes of
+the paddle.
+
+"Show me a great sea-chest crammed wi' treasure and I'd put a hole
+through the Grand High Panjandrum hisself," replied the ancient one.
+"Aye, Bill, there be more'n one way to skin an eel. We'll lay aboard
+this bloody blow-hard of a Cap'n Teach whilst he's a-buryin' of it. Here
+may well be where he has tucked away his other plunder. What if we bag
+the whole of it?"
+
+"One more fling, eh, Trimble, and more gold than ye lugged on your back
+from Guayaquil," grinned young Bill.
+
+They had spoken in cautious tones and now held their tongues. The
+paddles dipped with no more than a trickle of water and the canoe hugged
+the marsh. They were close to the next bend of the stream and the sound
+of the oars in the cock-boat was faintly audible. As the tallest of the
+three, the old man stood up after swathing his head in dried grass, and
+gazed across the curve of the shore. By signs he told his companions
+that Blackbeard was bound farther up the stream.
+
+They waited a little, giving their quarry time to pass beyond another
+turn of the channel. Jack Cockrell was embarked on the most entrancing
+excursion of his life. This repaid him for all he had suffered. His only
+regret was that poor Joe Hawkridge had been marooned before he could
+share this golden adventure. However, he would see that Joe received a
+handsome amount of treasure. Trimble Rogers was muttering again, and
+thus he angrily expounded a grievance:
+
+"A thief is this Cap'n Teach,--like a wild hog, all greed and bristles.
+'Tis the custom of honest buccaneers and pirates to divide the spoils by
+the strict rule,--six shares for the commander, two for the master's
+mate, and other officers accordin' to their employment, with one share
+to every seaman alike. Think ye this bloody pick-purse dealt fairly by
+his crew? In yon sea-chest be the lawful shares of all the woesome lads
+he marooned this day. An' as much more as he durst skulk away with."
+
+"Easy, now, old Fire-and-Brimstone," warned Bill, "or that temper will
+gain the upper hand. Don't spoil the show by bombardin' Blackbeard with
+that cross-eyed musket."
+
+Now here was young Master Cockrell, a gentleman and a near kinsman of a
+high official who had sworn to hang every mother's son of a pirate that
+harried Carolina waters. And yet this godly youth was eager to lay hands
+on Blackbeard's treasure so as to divide it among the pirates who had
+been robbed of it. It was a twisted sense of justice, no doubt, and a
+code of morals turned topsy-turvy, but you are entreated to think not
+too harshly of such behavior. Master Cockrell had fallen into almighty
+bad company but the friends he had made displayed fidelity and readiness
+to serve him.
+
+"How far will the chase lead us?" he inquired.
+
+"Did you men come down this same creek in the pirogue?"
+
+"Aye, in this very same mess o' pea soup and jungle," answered Bill
+Saxby. "Two miles in from the coast, at a venture, was where we stumbled
+on the canoe and tossed the Indians out of it. Beyond that the water
+spreads o'er the swamp with no fairway for a boat."
+
+Once more they paddled for a short stretch and then repeated the
+stratagem of hauling into the dense growth of the mud-flat and pausing
+until the cock-boat had steered beyond the next elbow of the stream. It
+became more and more difficult to avoid the fallen trees and other
+obstructions, but Blackbeard was threading his course like a pilot
+acquainted with this dank and somber region. The pirogue ceased to lag
+purposely but had to be urged in order to keep within striking distance.
+
+Twice they were compelled to climb out and shove clear of sunken
+entanglements or slimy shoals. But when they held themselves to listen,
+they could still hear the measured thump of oars against the pins, like
+the beat of a distant drum in the brooding silence of this melancholy
+solitude. They had struggled on for perhaps a mile and a half, in all,
+when Trimble Rogers ordered another halt. He was perplexed, like a hound
+uncertain of the scent. From the left bank of the creek, a smaller
+stream meandered blindly off into the swamp. Into which of these
+watercourses had Blackbeard continued his secret voyage?
+
+Again they listened, and more anxiously than ever. The tell-tale thump
+of the oars had ceased. The only sounds in the bayou were the trickle of
+water from the tidal pools, the wind in the tree-tops, the rat-tat-tat
+of a woodpecker, and the scream of a bob-cat. With a foolish air of
+chagrin, Trimble Rogers rubbed his hoary pate and exclaimed:
+
+"Whilst Bill and me were a-paddlin' this hollow log down-stream, we took
+no heed of a fork like this yonder. With the sun at our backs to guide
+us, we knew we was makin' easterly to fetch the coast. What say, Bill?"
+
+"Cursed if I know. Spin a coin. The treasure has slipped us."
+
+"Rot me if it has!" snarled the old man. "We'll push on as we are, in
+the bigger stream. That stinkin' ditch on my left hand looks too weedy
+and shallow to float a boat."
+
+"It makes no odds. A gamester's choice," amiably agreed Bill.
+
+They paddled with might and main, flinging caution to the winds. Jack
+Cockrell was well versed in handling one of these dugout canoes and his
+stout arms made Bill Saxby grunt and sweat to keep stroke with him. When
+the craft grounded they strove like madmen to push it clear. Trimble
+Rogers tore the water with a paddle, straining every sinew and
+condemning Blackbeard to the bottomless pit in a queer jargon of the
+Spanish, French, and English tongues. It required such a lurid
+vocabulary to give vent to his feelings. He was even more distressed
+when he sighted the clump of gum trees near by which he and Bill had
+purloined the pirogue. Beyond this the creek was impassable.
+
+"Throwed a blank! Wear ship and drive back to the fork o' the waters,"
+shouted the old man. "Hull down an' under though he be, we'll nab yon
+_picaro_, with his jolly treasure. _Rapido, camaradas! Vivo!_"
+
+To make haste was easier said than done but the sluggish current was now
+in their favor and there was no more than a half mile to traverse under
+stress of furious exertion. The heavy canoe crashed through obstacles
+which had delayed the upward journey and they knew where to avoid the
+worst of the shoals. What fretted them was the fear that Blackbeard
+might have buried the sea-chest and descended the creek while they were
+engaged in this wild-goose chase. But this seemed unlikely and,
+moreover, old Trimble Rogers was the man to nose out the marks of the
+landing-place and the trail which must have been left.
+
+Where the two streams joined, the pirogue turned and shot into the
+smaller one. To their surprise it presently widened and was like a tiny
+lagoon, with the water much clearer as if fed by springs. The view was
+less broken and there were glimpses of dry knolls in the swamp and
+verdure not so noxious and tanglesome. Along the edge of this pretty
+pond skimmed the pirogue while Trimble Rogers keenly scanned every inch
+of it for the imprint of a boat's keel. A hundred yards and the water
+again narrowed to a little creek. Impetuously the canoe swung to pass
+around a spit of land covered with a thicket of sweet bay.
+
+There, no more than a dozen feet beyond, was the captain's cock-boat
+from the _Revenge_. Its bow had been pulled out of the water which
+deepened from a shelving bank. The boat was deserted but above the
+gunwale could be seen the iron-bound lid of the massive sea-chest. Those
+in the pirogue desired to behold nothing else. They were suddenly
+diverted by a tremendous yell which came booming out of the tall grass
+where it waved breast-high on the shore of the stream. A pistol barked
+and the ball clipped a straggling lock of Trimble Rogers' gray hair.
+
+Driving his two seamen before him, Blackbeard rushed for his boat as
+fast as the bandy legs and clumsy sea-boots could carry him. In fancied
+security he had explored the nearest knoll. And now appeared this
+infernal canoe, surging full-tilt at his treasure chest.
+
+Things happened _rapido_ enough to glut even an old buccaneer. The
+consternation in the pirogue prevented any thought of checking headway
+with the paddles. This hollowed cypress log, narrow beamed and solid at
+both ends, still moved with a weighty momentum. Its astounded crew were
+otherwise occupied. Blackbeard appeared to have the advantage of them.
+Jack Cockrell ducked to the bottom of the canoe. Bill Saxby's eyes of
+baby blue were big and round as saucers as he wildly flourished his
+paddle as the only cudgel at hand.
+
+With a whoop-la, old Trimble Rogers leaped to his feet, the long musket
+at his shoulder. Before he could aim at the savage, bushy figure of
+Blackbeard, the prow of the pirogue crashed into the side of the
+cock-boat, striking it well toward the stern. The ancient freebooter
+described a somersault and smote the water with a mighty splash, musket
+and all. Blowing like a grampus, he bobbed to the top, clawing the weeds
+from his eyes but still clutching the musket. Nobody paid his misfortune
+the slightest heed.
+
+The water deepened suddenly, as has been said, where the current had
+scoured the bank. With the nose of the little boat pulled well up in the
+mud, the stern sloped almost level with the surface of the stream. The
+blunt, slanting bow of the pirogue banged into the plank gunwale and
+slid over it. The force of the blow dragged the cock-boat to one side
+and wrenched it free of the shore. It floated at the end of a tether but
+the bow of the canoe pressed the stern under and tipped it until the
+water rushed in.
+
+Listed far over, the sea-chest slid a trifle and this was enough to push
+the gunwale clear under. The boat filled and capsized, what with the
+weight of the chest and the pressure of the canoe's fore part. Down to
+the oozy bed sank Blackbeard's treasure.
+
+The arch-pirate himself came charging out of the marsh-grass in time to
+witness this lamentable disaster. His hoarse ejaculations were too
+dreadful for a Christian reader's ears. Dumfounded for an instant, he
+gathered his wits to fire another pistol at the pirogue. The ball flew
+wild, as was to be expected of a marksman in a state of mind so
+distraught. He had overlooked those two poor seamen of his who had been
+impressed to bury the treasure, after which they were presumably to be
+pistoled or knocked on the head. Dead men told no tales. Doomed
+wretches, they were quick to snatch from this confusion the precious
+hope of life.
+
+The pockmarked fellow, who was powerfully built, whirled like a cat as
+he heard Blackbeard's pistol discharged just behind him. There was no
+time to draw and cock another pistol. The seaman fairly flew at the
+pirate captain's throat. Down they toppled and vanished in the grass
+together. A moment later Blackbeard bounded to his feet, a bloody dirk
+in his hand. He had done for the poor fellow who lay groaning where he
+fell. Terrified by this, the other seaman wheeled and fled to the bank
+of the creek, seeking the pirogue as his only refuge.
+
+He leaped for it but his feet slipped in the treacherous mud and his
+impetus was checked so that he tumbled forward, striking the solid side
+of the dugout with great force. He was splashing in the water but his
+exertions were feeble. Either the collision had stunned him or he was
+unable to swim. Bill Saxby and Jack Cockrell were trying to swing the
+canoe clear of the boat and effect a landing. Trimble Rogers had rescued
+himself from the creek and was ramming a dry charge into his dripping
+musket. Blackbeard was a deadly menace and their attention was fixed on
+him.
+
+When they endeavored to lend a hand to the helpless seaman he had sunk
+beneath the surface of the roily stream. They saw him come up and turn a
+ghastly face to them, but he went down like a stone before a hand could
+clutch at him. A few bubbles and this was the end of him. Jack Cockrell
+hesitated with a brave impulse to dive in search of him although he knew
+the bottom was a tangle of rotted trees, but just then Bill Saxby yelled
+to him to follow ashore with a paddle for a weapon. The luckless seaman
+was already drowned, this was as good as certain, and Jack jumped from
+the pirogue.
+
+Blackbeard had halted his onrush and he wavered when he beheld stout
+Bill Saxby within a few strides of him and long Trimble Rogers galloping
+through the grass with his musket. Another pistol shot or two would not
+stop these three antagonists and a buffet from one of those hewn paddles
+would dash out a man's brains. The most ferocious of all pirates for
+once preferred to run away and live to fight another day. His boat
+denied him, he whirled about to plunge through the tall, matted grass.
+He was running in the direction of the dry knoll whence he had
+appeared.
+
+Infuriated by the fate of the two seamen, Trimble Rogers made a try at
+shooting him on the wing but the musket ball failed to find the mark. It
+was necessary to hunt him down for the sake of their own safety. They
+might have gone their way in the pirogue but this would have been to
+abandon the sea-chest without an effort to drag it up or fix its
+location.
+
+Now it might seem an easy matter for these pursuers, two of them young
+and active, to run down this fugitive Blackbeard, encumbered as he was
+by middle age and dissipation. They put after him boldly, with little
+fear of his pistols. In this dense cover he would have to fire at them
+haphazard and he was unlikely to tarry and wait for them. They saw him
+in glimpses as he fled from one grassy patch to another, or burst out of
+a leafy thicket, the great beard streaming over his shoulders like
+studding-sails, the red turban of calico a vivid blotch of color.
+
+Nimble as they were, however, they failed to overtake him. This was
+because he was familiar with this landscape of bog and hummock and pine
+knoll. Jack Cockrell fell into a hidden quagmire and had to be fished
+out by main strength. Bill Saxby was caught amidst the tenacious vines,
+like a bull by the horns, and old Trimble came a cropper in a patch of
+saw-tooth palmetto. They straggled to the nearest knoll after Blackbeard
+had crossed it. Then he followed a ridge which led in the direction of
+another of these dry islands.
+
+The pursuers halted to gaze from this slight elevation. There was not a
+solitary glimpse of the crimson turban. Trimble Rogers plowed through
+the prickly ash, short of wind and temper, with the musket again ready
+for action. His language was hot enough to flash the powder in the pan.
+
+"Lost him a'ready, ye lubbers, whilst I fetched up the rear?" he
+scolded. "Leave the old dog to find the trail. I be hanged if I take him
+alive for Stede Bonnet. What say, Bill? Skin and stuff him for a
+trophy----"
+
+"First catch the slippery son o' Satan," tartly answered Bill. "He hides
+away like a hare. You can track him, no doubt, Trimble, but the sun will
+be down ere long. I'll not pass the night in this cursed puddle of a
+place."
+
+Just then Jack Cockrell roved far enough to find on the knoll a small
+pit freshly dug, with a spade and pick beside it. Like excited children,
+his two comrades ran to inspect the hole which Blackbeard's seamen had
+dug ready for the treasure chest. Then they scattered to explore the
+knoll in search of signs to indicate where previous hoards might have
+been buried. Trimble Rogers scouted like a red Indian, eager to find
+traces of upturned earth, or the leaf mould disturbed, or marks of an
+axe on the pine trees as symbols of secret guidance. It was a futile
+quest, possibly because the high spring tides, when swept by easterly
+gales, had now and then crept back from the coast to cover the knoll and
+obliterate man's handiwork.
+
+Like a hunter bewitched, the gray buccaneer was absorbed in this rare
+pastime until Bill Saxby exclaimed:
+
+"Is there no wit in our addled pates? Quit this dashed folly! What of
+the treasure chest that was spilled from the boat?"
+
+"It won't take wings. Wait a bit," growled Trimble. "_Madre de Dios_,
+but there must be more of it here. This truant Cap'n Teach knew the road
+well. Did ye mark how he doubled for the knoll, like a fox to its hole?"
+
+Jack Cockrell ended the argument when he spoke up, with a shamefaced
+air:
+
+"We are three heartless men! One of the seamen is drowned, rest his
+soul, and we could not save the poor wretch. But the other fellow was
+stabbed and lies in the grass near the stream. For all we know, there
+may be life in him."
+
+"Heartless? 'Tis monstrous of us," cried Bill Saxby. "This greed for
+pirates' gold is like a poison."
+
+They hastened to retrace their steps. The wounded seaman was breathing
+his last when they reached his side. They could not have prolonged his
+life had they remained with him. Jack Cockrell stroked his damp forehead
+and murmured:
+
+"Farewell to ye, Jesse Strawn. Any message before you slip your cable?"
+
+There was a faint whisper of:
+
+"Scuppered, lad! Take warnin' and avast this cruel piratin' or you'll
+get it. A few words from the Bible 'ud ease me off."
+
+To Jack's amazement, the veteran sinner of the lot, old Trimble Rogers,
+fumbled in his breeches and withdrew a small book carefully wrapped in
+canvas. Solemnly he hooked behind his ears a pair of huge, horn-rimmed
+spectacles and knelt beside the dying pirate. In the manner of a priest
+the buccaneer intoned a chapter of Holy Writ which he appeared to know
+by rote. Then he said a prayer in a powerful broken voice. Silence
+followed. The others waited with bared heads until Trimble said:
+
+"His soul has passed. Shall we give the poor lad a decent burial?"
+
+"His grave is ready. He helped dig it himself," said Bill Saxby. "And
+may his ghost be a torment to the fiend that slew him."
+
+It seemed a fitting suggestion. In the freshly made treasure pit on the
+knoll they laid the dead pirate and used the spade to cover him. Jack
+Cockrell had a sheath knife with which he fashioned a rude cross and
+hacked on it:
+
+ JESSE STRAWN
+ A. D. 1718
+
+"Aye, his ghost will flit to plague this Cap'n Teach," said Trimble
+Rogers. "We can leave Jesse Strawn to square his own account. Now for
+the sea-chest, though I misdoubt we can fish it up."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE SEA URCHIN AND THE CARPENTER'S MATE
+
+
+FOR the sake of a treasure sordid and blood-stained, it would seem
+shabby to overlook the fate of hapless Joe Hawkridge marooned along with
+the hands of the _Revenge_ who were suspected of plotting mutiny. His
+behavior was courageous and unselfish, for he could have fled back into
+the swamp when Blackbeard's wily attack threw the camp into tumult. From
+a sense of duty he flung himself into the fray. What friends he had in
+the ship were those of the decenter sort who were tired of wanton
+brutalities and of a master who was no better than a lunatic.
+
+When the sloop opened fire with her guns, it was time to surrender.
+Unhurt save for a few scratches and a gorgeous black eye, Joe was
+dragged to the beach and thrown into a boat. Promptly the armed pinnace
+took them in tow, as arranged beforehand. Several of the prisoners had
+visited this rendezvous at Cherokee Inlet during a previous cruise and
+had some knowledge of the lay of the coast. Five or six miles out were
+certain shoals of sand scarcely lifted above high tide, so desolate that
+nothing whatever grew upon them nor was there any means of obtaining
+fresh water.
+
+"A pretty fancy,--to cast us where he can enjoy the sight of it when the
+ship sails out," said one of them who held a wounded comrade in his
+arms.
+
+"Some trading vessel may sight us in the nick o' time," hopefully
+suggested Joe. "Never say die!"
+
+"Trust most honest skippers to give the Inlet a wide berth," was the
+lugubrious reply. "This harbor was used by pirates afore Blackbeard's
+time. I was a silly 'prentice-boy, same as you, Joe, wi' Cap'n Willum
+Kidd when we lay in here to caulk his galley for the long voyage to
+Madagascar."
+
+"A poor figger of a pirate was that same Kidd," spoke up another. "He
+ne'er scuttled a ship nor fought an action. An' his treasure was all in
+my eye. What did he swing for, at Execution Dock? For crackin' the skull
+of his gunner with a wooden bucket."
+
+"They can't h'ist this Cap'n Teach to the same gibbet any too soon to
+please me, Sam," croaked a horse-faced rogue with two fingers chopped
+off. "He's gone and murdered all us men, as sure as blazes."
+
+Joe Hawkridge held his peace and wondered what had become of his
+partner, Jack Cockrell, waiting alone in the pirogue. In the infernal
+commotion at the camp, Joe had failed to note whether Bill Saxby and
+Trimble Rogers had betaken themselves off or had been among those
+killed. There was the faint hope that these trusty messengers might find
+their way back to Captain Stede Bonnet's ship and so hasten his coming.
+
+The boats crept over the burnished surface of the harbor and passed the
+nearest islands which were green and wooded. Beyond them shone the
+gently heaving sea, with the distant gleam of a patch of sandy shoal
+ringed about with a necklace of surf. It was remote enough from any
+other land to daunt the strongest swimmer. The boats kept on until they
+had rounded to leeward of this ghastly prison. There was no means of
+resistance. The captives were driven ashore by force of arms, carrying a
+few of their wounded with them.
+
+With emotions beyond the power of speech, they stared at the pinnace as
+the oars splashed on the return journey to the _Revenge_. Joe Hawkridge
+wept a little, perplexed that men could be so cruel to their own
+shipmates. And yet what could be expected of pirates debased enough to
+be Blackbeard's loyal followers? Recovering from their first stupor, the
+twenty able-bodied survivors began to ransack the strip of naked sand on
+which they had been marooned. It was no more than an acre in extent. A
+few small fish were found in a pool left by the falling tide and perhaps
+a hundred turtle eggs were uncovered during the afternoon. This merely
+postponed starvation.
+
+There was not much bickering. In the shadow of certain death, these
+outlaws of the sea seemed to have acquired a spirit of resignation which
+was akin to dignity. They had lost the game. In their own lingo, it was
+the black spot for all hands of 'em. With the coolness of night they
+revived to bathe in the surf which made their thirst less hard to bear.
+There was not much sleep. Men walked in restless circles, looking up at
+the stars, muttering to themselves, or scanning the sea which had known
+their crimes and follies.
+
+[Illustration: THEY CAPERED AND HUGGED EACH OTHER]
+
+Joe Hawkridge scooped out a bed for himself in the sand and dropped off
+to sleep by spells, with dreams of ease and quiet ashore and learning to
+be a gentleman. It was daylight when shouts startled him. The other
+derelicts were in a frenzy of agitation. They capered and hugged each
+other, and made unearthly sounds. Joe brushed the sand from his eyes and
+saw a small vessel approaching the tiny island. Her rig was made out to
+be that of a snow, which was very like a brig, the difference being in
+the larger main-topsail and the absence of a spanker or after
+steering-sail.
+
+Such trading craft as this snow came coasting down from Salem and other
+New England ports to Virginia and the Carolinas laden with molasses,
+rum, salt, cider, mackerel, woodenware, Muscavado sugar, and dried
+codfish. They bartered for return cargoes and carried no specie,
+wherefore pirates like Stede Bonnet seldom molested them excepting to
+take such stores as might be needed and sometimes actually to pay for
+them. They were the prey of miscreants of Blackbeard's stripe who
+destroyed and slew for the pleasure of it.
+
+This trim little snow was making to the southward in fancied security,
+having picked up a landfall, as the marooned pirates conjectured. No
+doubt her master had failed to receive warning that Blackbeard was in
+these waters and he was running his risk of encountering other
+marauders. He must have seen that there were people in distress on the
+tide-washed strip of sand. The snow shifted her helm and fired a gun.
+The marooned wretches could scarce credit their amazing good fortune but
+a grave, slow-spoken fellow who had been a carpenter's mate in the
+_Revenge_ thought the rejoicing premature.
+
+"When that God-fearin' skipper takes a look at us, he will sheer off and
+clap on sail, lads. For shipwrecked sailors you are a pizen lot o' mugs.
+The only blighted one of ye what's the leastwise respectable is me."
+
+Here was a terrible misgiving which clouded the bright anticipations.
+They were, indeed, an unlovely cargo for the little trading vessel to
+take on board. One of them whipped out a pair of scissors and hastily
+sawed at his unkempt whiskers while his comrades stood in line and
+waited their turn. Others discarded gaudy kerchiefs and pistol-belts, or
+kicked off Spanish jack-boots. Scraps of gold lace were also unpopular.
+But they could not get rid of scarred faces and rum-reddened noses and
+the other hall-marks of their trade.
+
+To their immense relief, the snow displayed no signs of alarm but sailed
+as close as the shoaling water permitted and dipped her colors. The
+pirates flattered themselves that they were not as frightful as the
+carpenter's mate had painted them. And this New England shipmaster was
+a merciful man who would not leave his fellow mortals to perish. They
+saw a boat lowered from the snow and into it jumped half a dozen
+sailors, soberly clad in dungaree, with round straw hats on their heads.
+With a gush of gratitude, the pirates swore to deal courteously by these
+noble merchant mariners and to repay them in whatever manner possible.
+
+Out into the murmuring surf rushed the mild-mannered rascals, eager to
+grasp the boat and haul it up. It was Joe Hawkridge, hovering in the
+background, who raised the first cry of astonishment. His voice was so
+affrighted that it quavered. Before the boat was half-way from the
+vessel, he perceived that these were no sedate seamen from the
+Massachusetts Colony, even though they were in dungaree and round straw
+hats. He was gazing at some of Ned Rackham's evil pirates whom he had
+last beheld on the shattered deck of the _Plymouth Adventure_ where they
+had been left to build a raft for themselves!
+
+The devil had looked after his own. They had floated away from the
+stranded ship and instead of landing on the beach had been rescued by
+this unfortunate snow whose crew had been disposed of in some violent
+manner. This much Joe Hawkridge comprehended, although his mind was
+awhirl. He was better off marooned. He had helped to turn the guns of
+the _Plymouth Adventure_ against these very same men when they had been
+blown out of the after cabin and the ship retaken by Captain Jonathan
+Wellsby.
+
+Whatever other plans they had in store, the first business would be to
+kill Joe Hawkridge. This was painfully obvious. He retreated still
+farther behind his companions and had a confused idea of digging into
+the sand and burying himself from view. The discovery that these were
+Blackbeard's pirates in the boat created general confusion but there was
+no fear of instant death. It was a situation excessively awkward for the
+marooned company but nevertheless open to parley and argument.
+
+By hurried agreement, the carpenter's mate, Peter Tobey by name, was
+chosen as spokesman. Before he began to talk with the men in the boat,
+Joe Hawkridge called to him in piteous accents and begged him to step
+back in rear of the crowd for a moment. Tobey shouted to the boat to
+wait outside the surf and not attempt a landing.
+
+"What's the row, Joe?" he asked, with a kindly smile. "'Tis a
+disappointment for all of us,--this tangle with Rackham's crew,--but why
+any worse for you?"
+
+"I can't tell it all, Peter, but my life is forfeit once they lay hands
+on me."
+
+"What tarradiddle is this? As I remember it in the _Revenge_, when all
+hands of us were cruisin' together, ye had no mortal enemies."
+
+"It happened in the _Plymouth Adventure_," answered Joe. "There be men
+in yon boat that 'ud delight in flayin' me alive. I swear it, Peter, by
+my mother's name. Give me up, and my blood is on your head."
+
+The boy's words carried conviction. The stolid carpenter's mate pondered
+and knitted his bushy brows.
+
+"I never did a wilful murder yet," said he. "Mallet and chisel come
+readier to my fist than a cutlass. Bide here, Joe. Let me get my
+bearings. This has the look of a ticklish matter for the lot of us. I
+shall be keepin' a weather eye lifted for squalls."
+
+In mortal fear of discovery by the men in the boat, Joe flattened
+himself behind a palmetto log which had drifted to the other side of the
+island. Here he was hidden unless the boat should make a landing. The
+carpenter's mate waded out to join his companions who were amiably
+conversing with Ned Rackham's pirates. They had all been shipmates
+either in the _Revenge_ or the _Triumph_ sloop and there was boisterous
+curiosity concerning the divers adventures while they had been apart.
+Rackham's crew had been reduced to eighteen men when they were lucky
+enough to capture the snow, it was learned. With this small company he
+dared not go pirating on his own account and so had decided to rejoin
+Blackbeard.
+
+"Is Ned Rackham aboard the snow?" asked Peter Tobey of the boat's
+coxswain.
+
+"He is all o' that, matey, though the big bos'n of the _Plymouth
+Adventure_ shoved a knife in his ribs to the hilt. He is flat in a bunk
+but he gives the orders an' it's jump at the word."
+
+"A hard man to kill," said Peter Tobey. "Take me aboard. 'Tis best I
+have speech with him. Let the people wait here on the cay. They can
+stand another hour of it."
+
+There was fierce protest among the marooned pirates but the carpenter's
+mate gruffly demanded to know if they wished to be carried into the
+harbor and turned over to Blackbeard. This gave the mob something to
+think about and they permitted the boat to pull away from them without
+much objection.
+
+"A rough joke on you lads, I call it, to be dumped on this bit o'
+purgatory," said the coxswain to Peter Tobey. "The great Cap'n Teach
+must ha' been in one of his tantrums."
+
+"It had been long brewing, as ye know," answered the carpenter's mate.
+"These men with you in the snow 'ud sooner follow Ned Rackham,
+flint-hearted though he be, than to rejoin the _Revenge_."
+
+"Not so loud," cautioned the coxswain. "We'll see which way the cat is
+going to jump. Us poor devils is sore uneasy at findin' how you were
+dealt with."
+
+"What of the master and crew of the snow?" asked Tobey. "Were they
+snuffed out? That 'ud be Rackham's way."
+
+"No, we set 'em off in a boat, within sight of the coast. Ned Rackham
+was too shrewd to bloody his hands, bein' helpless in this tub of a snow
+which could neither fight nor show her heels if she was chased."
+
+Few men as there were aboard the snow, they were smartly disciplined and
+kept things shipshape, as Peter Tobey noted when he climbed on deck. A
+few minutes later he was summoned into the small cabin. Propped up in
+the skipper's berth, Sailing-Master Ned Rackham had a pinched and
+ghastly look. He was a young man, with clean-cut, handsome features, and
+a certain refinement of manner when he cared to assume it. The rumor was
+that he was the black sheep of an English house of some distinction and
+that he had enlisted in the Royal Navy under a false name.
+
+"What is this mare's-nest, my good Tobey?" said he as the carpenter's
+mate stood diffidently fumbling with his cap. "Marooned? Twenty men of
+you on a reef of sand? Were ye naughty boys whilst I was absent?"
+
+"No more than them I could name who planned to go a-cruisin' in the
+_Plymouth Adventure_," doggedly replied Peter Tobey who resented the
+tone of sneering patronage.
+
+"Fie, fie! You talk boldly for a man in your situation. Never mind! Why
+the honor of this visit?"
+
+"To make terms, Master Rackham. If us twenty men consent to serve
+you----"
+
+"You babble of terms?" was the biting interruption. "I can leave you to
+perish on the sand, as ye no doubt deserve, or I can carry you in with
+me, when I report to Captain Teach."
+
+"But there's another choice, which hasn't escaped you," persisted the
+intrepid carpenter's mate. "Enlist us in your service and you'll have
+nigh on forty men. This snow mounts a few old swivels and you must ha'
+found muskets in her. With forty men, Master Rackham, there's no
+occasion to bow to Blackbeard's whimsies. You can h'ist the Jolly Roger
+for yourself and lay 'longside a bigger ship to take and cruise in. I've
+heard tell of a great buccaneer that started for himself in a pinnace
+and captured a galleon as tall as a church."
+
+Ned Rackham's eyes flashed. Indeed, this was what he had in mind. This
+score of recruits would make the venture worth undertaking. Men were
+essential. Given enough of them to handle the snow and a boarding party
+besides, and he would not hesitate to shift helm and bear away to sea
+again.
+
+"You will sign articles, then?" he demanded.
+
+"Aye, I can speak for all, Master Rackham. What else is there for us?
+Hold fast, I would except one man. He must be granted safe conduct, on
+your sacred honor."
+
+"His name, Tobey?"
+
+"That matters not. Pledge me first. He has no more stomach for piracy
+and will be set ashore at some port."
+
+"A pig in a poke?" cried Rackham, with an ugly smile. "If I refuse,
+what?"
+
+"You will have sulky men that may turn against you some day."
+
+"And I can leave you to rot where you are, with your nonsense of 'making
+terms,'" was the harsh rejoinder.
+
+"But you won't do that," argued Peter Tobey. "Your own fortune hangs on
+enlisting us twenty lads. You bear Blackbeard no more love than we do."
+
+Ned Rackham was making no great headway with this stubborn carpenter's
+mate who was playing strong cards of his own.
+
+"A drawn bout, Tobey," said he, with a change of front. "No more backing
+and filling. You ask a small favor. Fetch your man along, whoever he may
+be. He shall be done no harm by me."
+
+"Even though he made a mortal enemy of you, Master Rackham?"
+
+"Enough, Peter. I have many enemies and scores to settle. You have my
+assurance but I demand the lad's name."
+
+"Not without his permission," declared Tobey. "Set me ashore and I will
+confer with him."
+
+Grudgingly Rackham consented, unwilling to have a hitch in the
+negotiations. In a somber humor, the carpenter's mate returned to his
+impatient comrades on the island. They crowded about him and he briefly
+delivered the message, that they were desired to cruise under Ned
+Rackham's flag. This delighted them, as the only way out of a fatal
+dilemma. Then Tobey went over to sit down upon the palmetto log behind
+which Joe Hawkridge still sprawled like a turtle. The anxious boy poked
+up his head to say:
+
+"What cheer, Peter? A plaguey muddle you found it, I'll bet."
+
+"Worse'n that, Joe. Rackham wouldn't clinch it with his oath unless I
+told him your name. I plead with him for safe conduct."
+
+"I'd not trust his oath on a stack o' Bibles, once he set eyes on me,"
+exclaimed Joe. "As soon put my fist to my own death warrant as go aboard
+with him."
+
+"That may be," said Peter Tobey, "but you will have friends. You can't
+expect us to refuse to sail on account o' you."
+
+"Leave me here, then," cried the boy. "I'll not call it deserting me.
+Take your men aboard the snow. Tell Ned Rackham you have the fellow
+amongst 'em who implored the safe conduct. Pick out some harmless lad
+that was saucy to Rackham in the _Revenge_, a half-wit like that
+Robinson younker that was the sailing-master's own cabin boy. He was
+allus blubberin' that Rackham 'ud kill him some day."
+
+"No half-wit about you," admiringly quoth the carpenter's mate. "But,
+harkee, Joe, you will die in slow misery. Better a quick bullet from
+Rackham's pistol."
+
+"Find some way to send off a little food and water, Peter, and I will
+set tight on this desert island. And mayhap you will dance at the end
+of a rope afore I shuffle off."
+
+"A hard request, Joe," replied the puzzled Tobey. "Unless I can come off
+again with some of our own men, how can it be done? Let Rackham's crew
+suspect I am leaving a man behind and they will rout you out."
+
+"And they all love me, like a parson loves a pirate," grinned Joe. "I
+shot 'em full of spikes and bolts from a nine-pounder in the _Plymouth
+Adventure_."
+
+"I shall use my best endeavor, so help me," sighed Peter Tobey. "What
+for did I ever quit carpenterin' to go a-piratin'? 'Tis the worst basket
+of chips that ever was."
+
+"No sooner do I crawl out of one hole than I tumble into another," very
+truthfully observed Joe Hawkridge. "Insomuch as I've allus crawled out,
+you and me'll shed no more tears, Peter. There's a kick in me yet."
+
+The disconsolate carpenter's mate returned to his fellow pirates and
+bade them go off to the snow. First, however, he extracted from every
+man the solemn promise that he would not divulge the secret of Joe
+Hawkridge's presence nor reveal the fact that he had remained behind.
+They were eager to promise anything. Several of them stole over to tell
+him furtive farewells. They displayed no great emotion. The trade they
+followed was not apt to make them turn soft over such a tragic episode
+as this.
+
+When the snow was ready to take her departure, with almost forty
+seasoned pirates to seek their fortunes anew, the wind died to a calm
+and the little vessel drifted within easy vision of the sandy island
+through a long afternoon. Peter Tobey tormented himself to find some
+pretext for smuggling food and water ashore. He invented a tale of a
+precious gold snuff-box which must have fallen out of his pocket and
+begged permission to go and search for it. But Ned Rackham sent up word
+that he had no notion of being delayed by a fool's errand, should a
+breeze spring up. He was not at all anxious to linger so close to
+Cherokee Inlet whence Blackbeard might sight the spars of the snow and
+perhaps weigh anchor in the _Revenge_.
+
+Soon after dark the sails filled with a soft wind which drew the snow
+clear of the coast. Peter Tobey had been mightily busy with an empty
+cask. In it he stowed meat and biscuit and a bag of onions, stealthily
+abstracted from the storeroom while his own companions stood guard
+against surprise. This stuff was packed around two jugs of water tightly
+stoppered. Then Peter headed up the cask with professional skill and
+watched the opportunity to lower it from the vessel's bow where he was
+unseen.
+
+The wind and tide were favorable to carrying the cask in the direction
+of the little patch of sea-washed sand upon which was marooned the
+solitary young mariner, Joe Hawkridge. The carpenter's mate saw the cask
+drift past the side of the snow and roll in the silvery wake. Slowly it
+vanished in the darkness and he said to himself, in a prayer devoutly
+earnest:
+
+"That boy deserves a slant o' luck, and may the good God let him have it
+this once. Send the cask to the beach, and I vow to go a-piratin' never
+again."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+JACK JOURNEYS AFOOT
+
+
+IT is often said that a thing is not lost if you know where it is. This
+was Jack Cockrell's opinion concerning that weighty sea-chest which had
+splashed to the bottom of the sluggish stream in the heart of the
+Cherokee swamp. With young Bill Saxby and eager old Trimble Rogers he
+hastened from the grave of the pirate seaman whom they had buried on the
+knoll and fetched up at the shore where the pirogue had been left.
+Beside it floated Blackbeard's boat filled with water.
+
+Having cut two or three long poles, they sounded the depth and prodded
+in the muddy bed to find the treasure chest. It had sunk no more than
+eight feet below the surface, as the tide then stood, which was not much
+over the head of a tall man. The end of a pole struck something solid,
+after considerable poking about. It was not rough, like a sunken log,
+and further investigation with the poles convinced them that they were
+thumping the lid of the chest.
+
+"D'ye suppose you could muster breath to dive and bend a line to one o'
+the handles, Master Cockrell?" suggested Trimble Rogers. "Here's a coil
+of stout stuff in Cap'n Teach's boat what he used for a painter."
+
+"The bottom of the creek is too befouled," promptly objected Jack, "and
+I confess it daunts me to think of meeting that drownded corpse down
+there. Try it yourself, if you like."
+
+"I be needed above water to handle the musket if Blackbeard sneaks back
+to bang at us with his pistols," was the evasive reply. The mention of
+the corpse had given old Trimble a distaste for the task. To his
+petulant question, Bill Saxby protested that he couldn't swim a blessed
+stroke and he sensibly added:
+
+"What if you did get a rope's end belayed to a handle of the chest? Even
+if the strain didn't part the line, we couldn't heave away in this tipsy
+canoe. And I am blamed certain we can't drag the chest ashore lackin'
+purchase and tackles."
+
+"The smell o' treasure warps my judgment," grumpily confessed Trimble
+Rogers. "We ain't properly rigged to h'ist that chest from where she
+lays, and that's the fact."
+
+"Give us the gear and we'd have it out and cracked open as pretty as you
+please," said Bill. "Set up a couple o' spars for shears, stay 'em from
+the bank, rig double blocks, and grapplin' irons for a diver to work
+with----"
+
+"Which is exactly what Cap'n Teach will be doin' of when he finds his
+ship again," lamented the buccaneer.
+
+"He will be some time findin' his ship afoot," grimly chuckled Bill.
+"We have naught to smash his boat with, but we'll just take it along
+with us."
+
+"If we make haste to report to Captain Stede Bonnet," spoke up Jack
+Cockrell, "he may make sail in time to give Blackbeard other things to
+think on than this treasure chest. And it is my notion that the need of
+fitting the _Revenge_ for action is too urgent to spare a crew to
+attempt this errand."
+
+"We shall have it yet," cried Trimble, much consoled. "And Stede
+Bonnet'll blithely furnish the men and gear. For a mere babe, Master
+Cockrell, ye leak wisdom like a colander. Our duty is to tarry no longer
+at this mad business."
+
+"The first sound word I've heard out of the old barnacle, eh, Jack?"
+said Bill Saxby. "We must be out of this swamp by night and layin' a
+course for Cap'n Bonnet and the _Royal James_."
+
+"Whilst you empty Blackbeard's boat of water so we can tow it, let me
+make a rude chart," was Jack's happy idea. "Some mishap or other may
+overtake us ere we get the chance to seek the treasure again. And our
+own memory of this pest-hole of a swamp may trick us."
+
+Bill Saxby's tattered diary supplied a scrap of paper and Jack dug
+charred splinters from the inside of the canoe which enabled him to draw
+a charcoal sketch or map. It traced the smaller stream from the fork
+where it had branched off, the stretch in which it widened like a tiny
+lagoon or bayou, and the point of shore just beyond which the pirogue
+had unexpectedly rammed Blackbeard's boat. A cross designated the spot
+where the treasure chest had sunk in eight feet of water.
+
+The knoll and the grave of Seaman Jesse Strawn were also indicated, with
+the distance estimated in paces and the bearings set down by the
+position of the sun.
+
+"There," said Jack, well pleased with his handiwork, "and once we are
+aboard ship, I can make fair copies on parchment, one for each of us."
+
+"Thankee, lad," gratefully exclaimed Trimble Rogers who now had
+something to live for. "'Twas a fond dream o' mine, when I sailed wi'
+the great Cap'n Edward Davis in the South Sea, some day to blink at a
+chart what showed where the gold was hid."
+
+They were, indeed, recovered from the intoxication of treasure and
+recalled to realizing the obligation that was upon them. They had
+swerved from it but now they pressed forward to finish the appointed
+journey. The canoe moved down to the fork of the waters with the light
+cock-boat skittering in its wake and perhaps the unhappy Blackbeard,
+stranded in the swamp, hurled after them a volley of those curses for
+which he was renowned. Once Jack Cockrell laughed aloud, explaining to
+his laboring comrades:
+
+"Captain Teach will be combing the burrs from his grand beard when he
+boards his ship again. He may get hung by the chin in a thicket."
+
+"He's sure to spend this night in the swamp, blast him," earnestly
+observed Bill, "and the mosquitoes'll riddle his hide."
+
+"And may Jesse Strawn lose no time in hauntin' him," said Trimble
+Rogers.
+
+There was an hour of daylight to spare when they had ascended the larger
+creek as far as the canoe could be paddled. There they disembarked and
+hid the dugout and the cock-boat in the overhanging bushes where they
+could be found again in case of a forced retreat. Bill and Jack burdened
+themselves with the sack of food and the water jug while the old
+buccaneer set out in the lead as a guide. It was irksome progress for a
+time, but gradually the ground became drier and the foliage was more
+open. Dusk found them safely emerged from the great Cherokee swamp and
+in a pleasant forest of long-leaf pine with a carpet of brown needles.
+
+In fear of Indians, they dared not kindle a fire and so stretched
+themselves in their wet and muddy rags and slept like dead men. What
+awakened Jack Cockrell before sunrise was a series of groans from
+Trimble Rogers who sat with his back against a tree while he rubbed his
+legs. Ashamed at being heard, he grumpily explained:
+
+"Cord and faggot 'ud torment me no worse than this hell-begotten
+rheumatism. I be free of it in a ship but the land reeks with foul
+vapors. It hurt me cruel at Cartagena in the year of----"
+
+"But can you walk all day, in such misery as that?" anxiously
+interrupted Jack.
+
+"If not, I'll make shift to crawl," said the old sea dog.
+
+It was apparent to Jack and also to Bill Saxby that the ordeal of the
+swamp had crippled their companion whose bodily strength had been
+overtaxed. They debated whether to try to return to the coast and risk a
+voyage in the canoe but Trimble Rogers swore by all the saints in the
+calendar that he was done with the pestilent swamp. He would push on in
+spite of the rheumatism. His hardy spirit was unbroken. And so they
+resumed the march, the suffering buccaneer hobbling with the musket as a
+staff or with a strong arm supporting him.
+
+Halts were frequent and progress very slow. Now and then they had
+glimpses of the blue sea and so knew that they held the course true. It
+had been reckoned that two days would suffice to bring them to the bay
+in which Stede Bonnet's ship was anchored. By noon of this first day,
+however, it was plainly evident that Trimble Rogers was done for. He
+uttered no complaints, and withheld the groans behind his set teeth, but
+his lank body was a-tremble with pain and fatigue. Whenever he sank down
+to rest they had to raise him up and set him on his legs again before he
+could totter a little way farther.
+
+"What say, Jack, to slingin' him on a pole, neck and heels?" suggested
+Bill Saxby. "Can we make him fast with our belts?"
+
+"And choke him to death? In Charles Town I saw Captain Bonnet's pirates
+carry their wounded in litters woven of boughs."
+
+The suffering Trimble put a stop to this by shouting:
+
+"Avast wi' the maunderin' nonsense! Push on, lads, and leave this old
+hulk be. Many a goodly man have I seen drop in the jungle. What matters
+it? Speed ye to Cap'n Bonnet."
+
+"Here is one pirate that won't desert a shipmate," declared Bill Saxby.
+"And how can we push on without you, old True-Penny, to lay your nose to
+the trail? I took no heed o' the marks and landfalls."
+
+"Like a sailor ashore, mouth open and eyes shut," rasped the buccaneer
+of Hispaniola.
+
+"Methinks I might find my way in this Carolina country," ventured Jack
+Cockrell. "It would be easier for a landsman like myself than for Bill
+who is city-bred and a seaman besides."
+
+"More wisdom from the stripling," said Trimble. "Willing as I be to die
+sooner than delay ye and so vex Stede Bonnet, it 'ud please me to live
+to overhaul that sea chest of Blackbeard's."
+
+"I'll stand by this condemned old relic," amiably agreed Bill Saxby. "Do
+you request Cap'n Bonnet to send a party to salvage us, Jack."
+
+"He will take pleasure in it, Bill. Before I go let me help you find
+shelter,--dry limbs for props and a thatch of palmetto leaves."
+
+"Take no thought of us," urged Trimble. "Trust me to set this lazy oaf
+to work. Now listen, Jack, and carefully. Cap'n Bonnet's ship waits in
+the Cape Fear River, twelve leagues to the north'ard of us. You will
+find her betwixt a bay of the mainland and a big-sized island where the
+river makes in from the sea. There will be a lookout kept and I can tell
+ye where to meet a boat."
+
+With a memory as retentive as a printed page, the keen-eyed old wanderer
+described the landscape league by league, the streams and their
+direction, the hills which were prominent, the broad stretches of
+savannah or grassy meadow, the belts of pine forest, the tongues of
+swamp which had to be avoided. Jack was compelled to repeat the detailed
+instructions over and over, and he was a far more studious pupil than
+when snuffy Parson Throckmorton had rapped his knuckles and fired him
+with rebellious dreams of piracy. At length, the buccaneer was willing
+to acknowledge:
+
+"Unless an Indian drive an arrow through the lad's brisket, Bill, I can
+trust him to find our ship. Best give him the musket."
+
+"Me shoulder that carronade and trudge a dozen leagues?" objected Jack.
+"I travel light and leave the ordnance with you."
+
+They insisted on his taking more than a third of the food but he
+refused to deprive them of the water jug. There would be streams enough
+to slake his thirst. It was an affectionate parting. Bill Saxby's
+innocent blue eyes were suffused and his chubby face sorrowful at the
+thought that they might not meet again. Trimble Rogers fished out his
+battered little Bible and quoted a few verses, as appeared to be his
+habit on all solemn occasions. Jack Cockrell knew him well enough by now
+to find it not incongruous. Among this vanishing race of sea fighters
+had been many a hero of the most fervent piety. Their spirit was akin to
+that of Francis Drake who summoned his crew to prayers before he cleared
+for action.
+
+And in this wise did Master Jack Cockrell set out to bear a message from
+comrades in dire distress. Moreover, in his hands were the lives of Joe
+Hawkridge and those other marooned seamen, as he had every reason to
+believe. It was a grave responsibility to be thrust upon a raw lad in
+his teens who had been so carefully nurtured by his fretful guardian of
+an uncle, Mr. Peter Arbuthnot Forbes. Jack thought of this and said to
+himself, with a smile:
+
+"A few weeks gone, and I was locked in my room without any dinner for
+loitering with Stede Bonnet's pirates at the Charles Town tavern. My
+education has been swift since then."
+
+He was expectant of meeting no end of peril and hardship and he fought
+down a sense of dread that was not to his discredit. But it was so
+decreed that he should pass secure and unmolested. At first he went too
+fast, without husbanding his strength, and loped along like a hound
+whenever the country was clear of brushwood. This wore him down and he
+failed to watch carefully enough for his landmarks. Toward the end of
+the day he became confused because he could not discern the sea even by
+climbing a tree. But he tried to keep bearing to the northeast until the
+sun went down. Afraid of losing himself entirely and ignorant of the lay
+of the land by night, he made his bivouac in a grove of sycamore
+saplings and imagined Indians were creeping up whenever the leaves
+rustled.
+
+This fear of roaming savages troubled him next day as he wearily trudged
+through this primeval wilderness unknown to white settlers. It spurred
+him on despite his foot-sore fatigue and he was making the journey more
+rapidly than old Trimble Rogers, for all his cunning woodcraft, had been
+able to accomplish it. Almost at the end of his endurance, the plucky
+lad discerned the sheen of a broad water in the twilight and so came to
+the Cape Fear River.
+
+He had worried greatly lest he might have veered too far inland but
+there was the wooded bay and the fore-land crowned with dead pines which
+had been swept by forest fire. And out beyond it was the island, of the
+size and shape described by Trimble Rogers, making a harbor from the sea
+which rolled to the horizon rim.
+
+But no tall brig, nor any other vessel rode at anchor in this silent and
+lonely haven. Jack had been told precisely where to look for it. He had
+made no mistake. Some emergency had caused Captain Stede Bonnet to make
+sail and away.
+
+A king's ship or some other hostile force might have compelled him to
+slip his cable in haste, reflected Jack as he descended to the shore of
+the bay. It was most unlike the chivalrous Stede Bonnet to abandon two
+of his faithful seamen without an effort to succor them. Endeavoring to
+comfort himself with this surmise, the sorely disappointed boy paced the
+sand far into the night and gazed in vain for the glimmer of a fire or
+the spark of a signal lantern in a ship's rigging. He could not bear to
+think of the dark prospect should no help betide him.
+
+Some time before day he was between waking and sleeping when a queer
+delusion distracted him. Humming in his ears was the refrain of a song
+which was both familiar and hauntingly pleasant. It seemed to charm away
+his poignant anxieties, to lull him with a feeling of safety. He
+wondered if his troublesome adventures had made him light-headed. He
+moved not a muscle but listened to this phantom music and noted that it
+sounded louder and clearer instead of fading away. And still he refused
+to believe that it was anything more than a drowsy mockery.
+
+At length a vagrant breeze brought him a snatch of this enjoyable
+chorus in deeper, stronger volume and he leaped to his feet with a
+shout. It was no hallucination. Lusty seamen were singing in time to the
+beat of their oars, and Jack Cockrell knew it for the favorite song of
+Stede Bonnet's crew. He could distinguish the words as they rolled them
+out in buoyant, stentorian harmony:
+
+ "An' when my precious leg was lopt,
+ Just for a bit of fun
+ I picks it up, on t'other hopt,
+ An' rammed it in a gun.
+ 'What's that for?' cries out Ginger Dick,
+ 'What for? my jumpin' beau?
+ Why, to give the lubbers one more kick,'
+ _Yo, ho, with the rum below!_"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+A PRIVATE ACCOUNT TO SETTLE
+
+
+THE ship's boat was bound into the bay, probably to lie there for
+daybreak, and Jack Cockrell rushed down to the beach where he set up
+such a frantic hullabaloo that the sailors ceased singing and held their
+breath and their oars suspended. They had come to look for Bill Saxby
+and Trimble Rogers, but this was a strange voice. It was so odd a
+circumstance that several of them hailed the shore with questions loud
+and perplexed.
+
+"Master John Cockrell, at your service," came back the reply. "Captain
+Bonnet knows me. I am the lad that clouted a six-foot pirate of yours
+for being saucy to a maid in Charles Town."
+
+This aroused a roar of laughter and there were gusty shouts of:
+
+"Here's that same Will Brant in the boat with us. He shakes in his boots
+at the sound of ye."
+
+"What's the game, lad? Have ye taken a ship of your own to scour the
+Main?"
+
+Jack ignored this good-natured badinage and, in dignified accents, told
+them to come ashore and take him off to the _Royal James_. In this
+company he had a reputation to live up to as a man of parts and valor.
+They let the boat ground on the smooth sand and one of them lighted a
+torch of pitch-pine splinters. The fine young gentleman who had strolled
+arm-in-arm with Stede Bonnet to the tavern green was a ragged scarecrow
+and bedaubed with red clay and black mud. This aroused their sympathy
+before he told them of his escape from the _Revenge_ and his adventures
+with Bill Saxby and the crippled buccaneer. In their turn they explained
+how Captain Bonnet had sent them down the river to await the return of
+the two men who were now stranded in the wilderness two days' march
+distant.
+
+"And why did your captain shift the brig from her anchorage off the
+island?" asked Jack.
+
+This amused the boat's crew who nudged each other and were evasive until
+the master's mate who was in charge went far enough to say:
+
+"A sloop came in from the Pamlico River. Our ship sought a snugger
+harbor, d'ye see? There was some private business. We loaded the sloop
+with hogshead of sugar, and bolts of damask, and silver ingots. His
+Excellency, Governor Eden, of the North Carolina Province, turns an
+honest penny now and then."
+
+"The Governor of this Province is a partner in piracy?" cried Jack.
+
+"Brawl it not so loud, nor spill it to Cap'n Bonnet," cautioned the
+master's mate. "I confide this much to stave off your foolish questions
+when ye board the ship."
+
+There was no reason to tarry in the bay and the boat pulled out to
+follow the course of the river and return in haste to the brig _Royal
+James_ in her more secluded harbor. The news that Blackbeard was at his
+old rendezvous within easy sail to the southward eclipsed all other
+topics. And when it was learned that he had lost the two sloops of his
+squadron, there was fierce delight. Although the _Revenge_ was a larger
+vessel and more heavily manned and gunned, they were hilariously
+confident of victory. It was a burning grudge and a private quarrel, and
+fuel was added to the flame by the tidings that a score or more of
+seamen had been mercilessly marooned to perish because of their
+suspected preference for Captain Stede Bonnet.
+
+When Jack Cockrell caught sight of the shapely brig as she loomed in the
+morning haze, it seemed as though years had passed since he had
+enviously watched her pass out over the Charles Town bar. Presently he
+spied the soldierly captain on the quarter-deck, his spare figure all
+taut and erect, his chin clean-shaven, his queue powdered, his apparel
+fresh and in good taste. A ship is like her master and the watch was
+sluicing down decks or setting up the rigging which had slackened with
+the heavy dew. Jack felt ashamed to let himself be seen. This was no
+place for a ragamuffin.
+
+Captain Bonnet strode to the gangway and stared down at this bit of
+human flotsam. He was quick to recognize his boyish friend and admirer
+and ordered the men to lower a boatswain's chair and lift Master
+Cockrell aboard. Jack was, indeed, so stiffened and sore and weary that
+he had been wondering how he could climb the side of a ship.
+
+"Tut, tut, my son, bide your time," exclaimed Stede Bonnet as they met
+on deck. "Tell it later. The master's mate will enlighten me."
+
+He led the way into the cabin which was in order and simply furnished.
+One servant brewed fragrant coffee from Arabia while another made a room
+ready for the guest and fetched clean clothing from the captain's chests
+and a tub of hot water. And as soon as the grateful Master Cockrell had
+made himself presentable, he was invited to sit down at table with the
+captain and enjoy a meal of porridge and crisp English bacon and fresh
+eggs from the ship's hen-coop in the long-boat and hot crumpets and
+marmalade. And this after the pinched ration of mouldy salt-horse and
+wormy hard-bread! Captain Bonnet lighted a roll of tobacco leaves, which
+he called a _cigarro_, and puffed clouds of smoke while Master Cockrell
+cleaned every dish and lamented that his skin felt too tight to begin
+all over again.
+
+He was now in a mood to relate his strange yarn, from its outset in the
+ill-fated merchant trader, _Plymouth Adventure_. Eagerly he begged
+information concerning her people after their shipwreck, but Captain
+Bonnet had been cruising far offshore to intercept a convoy of rich
+West Indiamen from Jamaica for the old country.
+
+"I will make it my duty to set you ashore at Charles Town, Master Jack,"
+said he, "and I pray you may find your good uncle alive and still vowing
+to hang all rogues of pirates."
+
+"But I must sail with you, sir, till you have saved Joe Hawkridge and
+his shipmates and blown Blackbeard out of water."
+
+"Rest easy on that," exclaimed Stede Bonnet. "Those affairs are most
+urgent. My ship will drop down the river to-day, with the turn o' the
+tide, and heave to long enough to land a party, six men, to go in search
+of Trimble Rogers who is the apple of my eye. I shall not ask you to
+join them, but you can give directions and pen a fair map, I trow."
+
+"Gladly would I go," replied Jack, "but my poor legs wobble like your
+valiant old buccaneer's. And my feet are raw."
+
+"You have proved yourself," was the fine compliment. "I judged ye aright
+when we first met."
+
+Soon the deck above them resounded to the tramp of boots and the thump
+of sheet-blocks as the brisk seamen made ready to cast the ship free.
+She was in competent hands and so Stede Bonnet lingered below to enjoy
+talking with the youth whose manners and breeding were like his own. In
+a mood unusually confidential he confirmed Jack's earlier impressions,
+that he was a pirate with a certain code of honor which reminded one of
+Robin Hood of Sherwood Forest who robbed the rich and befriended the
+poor. Touching on his mortal quarrel with Blackbeard, he revealed how
+that traitorous ruffian had proposed a partnership while he, Stede
+Bonnet, was a novice at the trade. The plot all hatched to take Bonnet's
+fine ship, the _Revenge_, from him, Blackbeard had disclosed his hand at
+the final conference when he said, with a sarcastic grimace:
+
+"I see, my good sir, that you are not used to the cares and duties of
+commanding a vessel, so I will relieve you of 'em."
+
+As soon as Captain Bonnet had mended his fortunes and had the goodly
+brig _Royal James_ to cruise in, his ruling purpose was to regain the
+_Revenge_ from Blackbeard and at the same time wreak a proper
+punishment.
+
+"So now if we can trap this black-hearted Teach before he flits to sea,"
+said Stede Bonnet, "you will see a pretty engagement, Master Cockrell.
+But first we must find the score o' men that he marooned. It will be a
+deed of mercy, besides affording me a stronger crew."
+
+The brig was soon standing down the river while the landing party broke
+out an ample store of provisions and powder and ball, with canvas for a
+tent. The plan was for them to pitch a camp near the shore of the bay to
+which they could fetch back Trimble Rogers and Bill Saxby and there wait
+for their ship to return and take them off. They were ready to go ashore
+when Captain Bonnet's navigator ordered the main-topsail laid aback and
+the brig slowly swung into the wind. The delay was brief and no sooner
+was the boat cast off than the _Royal James_ proceeded on the voyage to
+Cherokee Inlet.
+
+Clumsy as those sailing ships of two hundred years ago appear to modern
+eyes, their lines were finely moulded under water and with a favoring
+wind they could log a fair distance in a day's run. It goes without
+saying that this tall brig was shoved along for all she was worth before
+a humming breeze that made her creak, and during the night she was
+reckoned to be a few miles to seaward of the sandy islands which
+extended like a barrier outside of Cherokee Inlet. Jack Cockrell stood a
+watch of his own, dead weary but with no thought of sleep until he could
+hear the lookout shout "Land ho!"
+
+This cry came from aloft soon after dawn. The brig moved toward the
+nearest of these exposed shoals while her officers consulted a chart
+spread upon the cabin roof. They were wary of running the ship aground
+with Blackbeard no more than a few miles distant. So bare were these
+yellow patches of sand that showed against the green water that a group
+of men on any one of them would have been easily discernible. The _Royal
+James_ coasted along outside of them under shortened sail but discovered
+nothing to indicate a party of marooned seamen.
+
+"But they must be out here somewhere," cried Jack Cockrell, in great
+distress.
+
+"They ought to be, for no trading vessel would take 'em off," replied
+the puzzled Captain Bonnet. "And if they were towed out in boats as ye
+say, Jack, these islands must ha' been where they were beached."
+
+"But you won't give up the search, sir, without another tack past those
+outermost shoals?"
+
+"Oh, we shall rake them all, but Blackbeard may have changed that
+crotchety mind of his and taken the men back to his ship."
+
+"I fear I have seen the last of my dear Joe Hawkridge," exclaimed Jack.
+
+"From what you tell me, the young scamp is not so easily disposed of,"
+smiled Captain Bonnet. "I must haul out to sea ere long. 'Tis poor
+business to let Blackbeard glimpse my spars and so take warning."
+
+This was sad news and Jack walked away to hide his quivering lip. To
+examine the islands again was a forlorn hope because already it seemed
+certain that nothing alive moved on any of them. The brig passed them
+closer than before as she made a long reach before turning out to sea.
+It was the intention to sail in to engage Blackbeard very early the next
+morning and meanwhile he would be vigilantly blockaded.
+
+Even Jack Cockrell, hopeful to the last, was compelled to agree with the
+crew of the brig that not a solitary man could be seen on these sea-girt
+cays and it seemed useless to send off a boat to explore them one by
+one. There would have been some stir or signal, even if men were too
+weak to stand. The air was clear and from the brig's masts it was
+possible to sweep every foot of sandy surface. Here was another mystery
+of the sea. It occurred to Stede Bonnet to ask:
+
+"You took it for granted they were marooned, Jack, when the boats passed
+from your sight and you were hidden in the tree in the swamp. What if a
+quicker death were dealt 'em?"
+
+"That may be, sir."
+
+The brig was leaving the coast astern. Jack moped by himself until his
+curiosity was drawn to a group of seamen upon the forecastle head who
+were talking loudly and pointing at something in the water, well ahead
+of the ship. One vowed it was a big sea-turtle asleep, another was
+willing to wager his silver-mounted pistols that it was a rum barrel,
+while a third announced that he'd stake his head on its being a mermaid
+or her husband. The after-deck brought a spy-glass to bear and perceived
+that the thing was splashing about. The tiller was shifted to bring it
+close aboard and soon Captain Bonnet exclaimed that it was, indeed, a
+merman a-cruising with a cask!
+
+Jack Cockrell scampered to the heel of the bowsprit to investigate this
+ocean prodigy. And as the cask drifted nearer he saw that Joe Hawkridge
+was clinging to it. There was no mistaking that dauntless grin and the
+mop of carroty hair. A handy seaman tossed a bight of line over his
+shoulders as he bobbed past the forefoot of the brig and he was yanked
+bodily over the bulwark like a strange species of fish. Flopping on deck
+he waved a skinny arm in greeting and then Jack Cockrell rushed at him,
+lifted him bodily, and dragged him to the cabin.
+
+"What ho, comrade!" said the dripping merman. "Blast my eyes, but I was
+sick with worry for you. I left you in that swamp----"
+
+"And I thought you dead, Joe. For the love o' heaven, tell me how you
+fared and what----"
+
+Captain Bonnet interfered to say:
+
+"I treated you more courteously than this, Jack. Let us make him
+comfortable."
+
+Accepting the rebuke, Jack bustled his amazing friend into a change of
+clothes and saw that he was well fed. Little the worse for his watery
+pilgrimage, Joe Hawkridge explained at his leisure:
+
+"Ned Rackham took the others away in the snow, as I tell ye, Cap'n
+Bonnet, and there was I in the doleful dumps. Prayers get answered and
+miracles do happen, for next day there come a-floatin' to the beach a
+cask full of grub and water. Good Peter Tobey, the carpenter's mate, had
+a hand in launchin' it, no doubt, but the Lord hisself steered the
+blessed cask. Well, while I set a-giving thanks and thinkin' one thing
+an' another, I figgered that when I'd ate all the grub and swigged the
+water, I was no further along."
+
+"And so you thought you would trust the Lord again," suggested Captain
+Bonnet.
+
+"Aye, sir, that was it. By watchin' the tides I reckoned I might drift
+to another island and so work to the coast, taking my provisions with
+me. There was some small line in the cask that Peter Tobey had wrapped
+the stores in, and I knotted a harness about the cask that I could slip
+an arm in, and off I goes when the tide sets right. But some kind of a
+dratted cross-current ketched me and I'm sailin' out to sea, I finds,
+without compass or cross-staff. Bound to get to London River, eh, Jack,
+same as we started out on the silly little raft."
+
+"Whew, this adventure was bad enough," cried Jack, "but when you saw Ned
+Rackham's pirates in the boat, and you couldn't run away,--I wonder,
+honest, Joe, you didn't die of fright."
+
+"What for? This is no trade for a nervous wight. And now for a bloody
+frolic with Blackbeard's bullies."
+
+"There is a share of his treasure for you, Joe, as soon as we can go
+find it," gleefully announced Master Cockrell. "I have the chart drawn
+all true with mine own hand. Let me get it."
+
+While the two lads pored entranced over the map of the branching creek
+and the pine-covered knoll, the crew of the _Royal James_ were
+overhauling weapons and clearing the ship for action. It disappointed
+them to lack the twenty men whom they had expected to find marooned but
+this made them no less eager for battle. Concerning Ned Rackham, there
+was no feud with him or grudge to square and he could go his way in the
+little trading snow without fear of molestation from Stede Bonnet.
+
+Under cover of night the _Royal James_ worked back to the sandy islands
+and anchored in the channel. One of her boats had ventured within sight
+of the Inlet for a stealthy reconnaissance and reported that the
+_Revenge_ was still in the harbor. Captain Bonnet was considering his
+plan of attack. He said nothing about it to Jack Cockrell and his chum,
+the merman, and they greedily listened to the gossip of the petty
+officers or thrashed out theories of their own.
+
+To sail boldly into the harbor was a ticklish risk to run as there was
+no pilot aboard who knew the inner channel and the depths of water. All
+the gunners were in favor of attempting it because they yearned to
+settle it with crashing broadsides. But the battered, hairy sea-dogs who
+had fought it out in hand-to-hand conflicts on the Caribbean were for
+leaving the brig in safe water and sending fifty men in boats to board
+the _Revenge_ at the first break of day.
+
+In the midst of the fo'castle argument, Captain Bonnet sent for Jack
+Cockrell and told him:
+
+"You are to keep out of harm's way, my young gamecock. I have undertaken
+to deliver you to your esteemed uncle with arms and legs intact, and
+your head on your shoulders."
+
+"But I am lusty enough to poke about with a pike or serve at a gun
+tackle," protested the unhappy Master Cockrell.
+
+"I expect you to obey me," was the stern mandate. "You will have
+company. This Joe Hawkridge is to stay with you."
+
+"But he is a rare hand in a fight, Captain Bonnet. You should have seen
+him in the _Plymouth Adventure_."
+
+"The boy is weak and all unstrung, though he carries it bravely, Jack.
+And Blackbeard's men would take special pains to kill him as a
+deserter."
+
+By this humane verdict the two lads were shielded from peril, as far as
+it lay within Stede Bonnet's power. They should have felt grateful to
+him but on the contrary it made them quite peevish and they sulked by
+themselves up in the bow of the ship until it was time to eat again.
+Then their gnawing appetites persuaded them to forgive their considerate
+host.
+
+The pirates moved about the deck until far into the night while the
+sparks flew from cutlass blades pressed to the whirling grindstone. Tubs
+were filled with hand-grenades and fire-pots, the deck strewn with sand,
+the magazine opened and powder passed up. Stede Bonnet was careful to
+see for himself that all things were in order. At such times he was a
+martinet of a soldier.
+
+Anxiously he watched the weather signs, as did every seasoned sailor on
+board. It bade fair to be a bright morning with an easterly air and this
+would carry the brig into the harbor with the minimum danger of
+stranding if the lead were cast often enough. Joe Hawkridge and Jack
+Cockrell were of some assistance in explaining the marks and bearings of
+the channel, and Captain Bonnet consulted them over the chart unrolled
+upon the cabin table. He had made up his mind to sail the brig in and
+risk the hazards of shoal water. When he went on deck, Jack thought of a
+topic as thrilling as this imminent duel between ships and he remarked
+with joyous excitement:
+
+"Now, Joe, as soon as ever Blackbeard gets his drubbing, we beg a boat
+and men and gear of Captain Bonnet and go up the creek to fish out the
+treasure chest and dig in the knoll."
+
+"Hook your fish before you fry 'em," replied the sagacious
+apprentice-boy. "This scrummage with the _Revenge_ will be no dancin'
+heel-and-toe. A bigger ship, more guns and men, and a Blackbeard who
+will fight like a demon when he's cornered. Crazy though he may be, he
+is the most dangerous pirate afloat."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+OUR HEROES SEEK SECLUSION
+
+
+AN hour before dawn the anchor was aweigh and the _Royal James_ drifted
+ahead like a shadow, in between the outer islands where the fairway was
+wide and safe. Her gun-ports were open and every man was alertly at his
+station. It was a silent ship excepting when an officer passed an order
+along. Joe Hawkridge began to feel more sanguine of winning against
+odds. He had never seen such iron discipline as this in the bedlam
+aboard the _Revenge_. Stede Bonnet knew how to slacken the reins and
+when to apply the curb. His men were loyal because he dealt out justice
+as well as severity.
+
+"The captain says we must go below when the action commences, Joe,"
+dismally observed Jack Cockrell.
+
+"It goes against the grain but we will not dispute him," was the sage
+reply. "We needn't be idle. You can lend a hand with the powder or pass
+the water buckets to douse the fire if she gets ablaze. And there's the
+wounded to carry into the cockpit and the blood to mop up, and----"
+
+"Enough o' that," cried Jack, getting pale about the gills. "You take it
+like a butcher!"
+
+"What else is it, you big moon-calf? Set me safe ashore in that Charles
+Town of yours, and I hope ne'er to see another weapon barring a spoon
+and a knife to cut my vittles."
+
+"There is sense in that," agreed young Master Cockrell.
+
+Smartly handled, the brig crept in as far as she dared go without more
+light by which to avoid the shallower water. The anchor was dropped to a
+short cable and buoyed ready to slip. It was estimated that the distance
+from Blackbeard's ship was somewhat more than a mile. The stars faded
+and the cloudless sky began to take on a roseate hue. The light breeze
+which had breathed like a cool zephyr through the night was dying in
+languid catspaws. Gradually the dark outline of coastal swamp and forest
+was uncurtained. And eager eyes were able to discern the yellow spars
+and blurred hull of the _Revenge_ against the gloomy background.
+
+Stede Bonnet's brig was, of course, pricked out much more sharply with
+the seaward horizon behind her. To her crew, in this hushed morning,
+there came a prolonged, shrill note that was like the call of a bird. It
+trilled with a silvery sweetness and was repeated over and over again.
+
+"A bos'n's pipe," said Captain Bonnet, a hand cupped at his ear.
+"Blackbeard has sighted us and is mustering his crew."
+
+So faint was the breeze that the command was given to man two boats and
+take a hawser from the brig to tow her through the inner channel. Before
+they were in motion, however, the pearly mist began to roll out of the
+Cherokee swamp as if a great cauldron were steaming. The weather favored
+it, heat in the air and little wind. The mist seemed also to rise from
+the water, hanging low but as thick as a summer fog. It shrouded the
+coast and Blackbeard's ship and crept out across the harbor until the
+brig was enveloped in it.
+
+"'Twas like this when we swum ashore and found the pirogue, Cap'n
+Bonnet," said Joe Hawkridge. "A curious kind o' white smother from the
+swamp."
+
+"And how long did it hang thus?" was the impatient query.
+
+"When the sun was well up, sir, it seemed to burn away like. It has the
+same look as the fever-breedin' vapors of Darien and Yucatan."
+
+Captain Bonnet called his boats back and was in an ugly humor. There was
+no towing the brig through this bothersome fog which obscured every mark
+and left a man bewildered. And instead of surprising Blackbeard
+unprepared, he would now have time to make his ship ready. However,
+Stede Bonnet was not a man to wring his hands because a well-laid scheme
+went wrong. Without delay the crew was assembled in the waist and he
+spoke to them from the break of the poop.
+
+"We shall make this weather serve our purpose, lads. Fill the boats,
+every man to his billet. The mates will see to it that the oars are
+well muffled. Silence above all things. Nimbly now."
+
+There was no need to say more. They fathomed the strategy which would
+enable them to approach Blackbeard's ship unheard and unseen and then
+swarm over her side in a ferocious onslaught. Cheerily they took stock
+of their weapons, drank a health from a tub of stiff grog, and lined up
+for Captain Bonnet's inspection. They wore clean clothes, the best they
+could find in their bags, as has always been the sailor's habit when
+going into action. The ship was left in charge of the navigator with a
+few men who were the least stalwart or experienced in such desperate
+adventures as this.
+
+Stede Bonnet went in command of the largest boat to lead the party and
+single out Blackbeard as his own particular foe. There was a large
+chance that he might not return and he therefore left instructions for
+the disposal of the brig, advising the navigator to take her to Charles
+Town and there sue for the king's pardon in behalf of those on board. He
+shook hands with Jack Cockrell and Joe Hawkridge, bade them be careful
+of their own safety, and with no more ado took his place in the boat.
+The flotilla stole away from the brig, sunburned, savage men with bright
+weapons for whom life was like a throw of the dice, and the pearly fog
+concealed them when they had passed no more than a cable-length away. So
+skilfully was the sound of the oars deadened that you would not have
+guessed that boats were moving across the harbor.
+
+"Blackbeard fights like a tiger but trust Cap'n Bonnet to outwit him,"
+said Joe Hawkridge, who stood at the brig's rail with Jack at his elbow.
+
+"It will be mighty hard waiting," was the tense reply. "We shall know
+when they find the _Revenge_. They are not apt to miss her, with a
+compass in the captain's boat."
+
+"Aye, there'll be noise enough. Plaguey queer, eh, Jack, to be a-loafin'
+with nothing to see, like your head was wrapped in a blanket. They ought
+to fetch alongside Blackbeard in a half-hour. Go turn the sand-glass in
+the cabin."
+
+They fidgeted about in aimless fashion and fell into talk with the
+navigator, or artist, as he was called, a middle-aged man who had been a
+master mariner in the slave trade. He told them a yarn or two of the
+Guinea coast but he, too, was restless and left them to stump up and
+down the deck and peer toward the shore. Jack dodged into the cabin to
+watch the sand trickle into the bottom of the glass. Never was a
+half-hour so long in passing.
+
+A yell from Joe Hawkridge recalled him to the deck. He listened but
+heard no distant pistol shots or the hoarse uproar of men in mortal
+combat. Joe raised a warning hand and told him to stand still. There
+came a faint splash. It might have been a fish leaping but Joe insisted
+that it was made by a careless oar. Jack heard it again and then fancied
+he caught the softened beat of muffled oars close at hand.
+
+"They lost the course. The fog confused 'em," said he, in great disgust.
+
+"But why come back to the ship?" demanded Joe. "They could lay and wait
+for the fog to lift a little. And I told Cap'n Bonnet to bear to the
+north'ard if in doubt and find the shore of the swamp. Then he could
+coast back to the beach and so strike the _Revenge_."
+
+"Well, here they come, Joe, and there is sure to be a good reason.
+Mayhap the fog cleared to landward and they intend to tow the brig in,
+after all."
+
+Just then the foremost boat became visible and behind it was the vague
+shape of another. The puzzled lads stared and stared and the hair
+stiffened on their scalps for sheer horror. These were not the boats
+from the _Royal James_. They were filled with Blackbeard's own pirates
+from the _Revenge_!
+
+The explanation was simple enough. Joe Hawkridge read it at a glance.
+Blackbeard was not the drunken chuckle-head that Stede Bonnet had
+assumed him to be. He, too, had taken advantage of the fog to attempt to
+carry the enemy by stealth. The wit of the one had been matched by the
+other. And the two flotillas had gone wide enough in passing to escape
+mutual discovery. In a way it was a pirates' comedy but there were two
+spectators who foresaw a personal tragedy. They fled for the cabin and
+scuttled through a small door in a bulkhead which admitted them to the
+dark hold of the ship.
+
+It was their purpose to hide in the remotest nook that could be found.
+Falling over odds and ends of cargo they burrowed like rats and stowed
+themselves behind a tier of mahogany logs which had been taken out of
+some prize or other. They were in the bottom of the ship, upon the rough
+floor covering the stone ballast. Then these frightened stowaways found
+respite to confer in tremulous whispers.
+
+"This is the very dreadfulest fix of all, Joe. I had a fair look at
+Blackbeard himself, in the stern of the boat,--red ribbons in his
+whiskers, and his sash stuck full of pistols."
+
+"That old rip isn't an easy man to mistake, Jack. Now the fat _is_ in
+the fire," replied the Hawkridge lad who, for once, appeared
+discouraged. "Cap'n Bonnet is a vast sight happier than us. He gets the
+_Revenge_ without strikin' a blow."
+
+"But Blackbeard gets _us_," wailed Master Cockrell. "And I helped to
+chase him through the swamp after we rammed the pirogue into his wherry
+and capsized the treasure chest. Do you suppose he knew me just now?"
+
+"Those little red eyes of his are passing keen. But didn't ye tell me of
+smearing your face with mud that day to fend off the mosquitoes? It may
+ha' disguised you."
+
+"A little comfort in that, Joe, but to be found in Stede Bonnet's brig
+bodes ill enough. Of a truth we be born to trouble as the sparks fly
+upward ever since we joined the pirates. What is your advice?"
+
+"To stay hid below and pray God for another shift o' fortune," piously
+answered Joe. "There is no fear of Blackbeard's rummagin' the hold at
+present. He must decide if he'll fight the _Revenge_ or give her the
+slip. And whilst him and his men are busied on deck, I can make bold to
+search for stores fit to eat. Cap'n Bonnet allus had a well-found ship.
+Blast it, Jack, my hearty, stock us up and we could lie tucked in the
+forepeak for a month o' Sundays."
+
+"But the rats and the darkness and the stinks, and to be expecting
+discovery," was Jack's dreary comment.
+
+"It would ha' looked like a parlor to me when I was on that barren cay
+and sighted Ned Rackham's rogues coming off from the snow," said the
+other stowaway. He was beginning to recuperate from the shock.
+
+They were in a mood for no more speech but sat in this rayless cavern of
+a hold and strove to hear any sounds which might indicate the course of
+events on deck. There was no hubbub of firearms nor the cries of wounded
+men. It was foolish to assume that the dozen seamen who had been left to
+keep the ship would attempt resisting Blackbeard's mob of pirates all
+primed for slaughter. When quietude seemed to reign all through the ship
+Joe Hawkridge whispered this opinion:
+
+"If his fancy was to deal with 'em later, he would pitch the lot down
+here in the hold. Failing that, Jack, he has offered 'em the chance to
+enlist. Being so few, they can't plot mischief, and he has lost the
+hands he left aboard the _Revenge_."
+
+"But I thought all this crew was true as steel to Stede Bonnet, Joe."
+
+"Many a man'll change his mind to save his life," was the reply. "And
+these lads aren't what you call Cap'n Bonnet's picked men. As for the
+navigator, Blackbeard needs him to fill Ned Rackham's berth."
+
+Soon Joe Hawkridge told Jack to stay where he was. Now was the time to
+explore the lower part of the ship. Squeezing his comrade's hand in
+farewell, Joe crawled aft to make his way to a rough bulkhead which
+walled off a storeroom built next to the cabin. The boys had passed
+through it in their headlong flight below. Here was kept the bulk of the
+ship's provisions. Joe Hawkridge had learned of the storeroom through
+helping the steward hoist out a barrel of pork.
+
+With his heart in his throat the venturesome lad groped like a blind
+man, grievously barking his shins and his knuckles, until he bumped into
+the timbers of the bulkhead. Inching himself along, he came to the small
+door which had been cut into the hold to connect with the main hatch. He
+had slipped the iron bar behind him during his flight with Jack
+Cockrell. Pulling the door ajar he wormed through into the storeroom
+which was also dark as midnight. His fingers touched what seemed to be
+a tierce of beef but he had no tools to start the head or the hoops. In
+the same manner he discovered other casks and barrels but they were
+utterly useless to him. Here was food enough, he reflected, if a man had
+teeth to gnaw through oak staves.
+
+Now and again he had to cross to the other door which led into the cabin
+passageway and press his ear against a plank to make certain against
+surprise. Up and down the dark room he blundered, refusing to admit
+himself beaten. The first bit of cheer was when his foot struck a round
+object as solid as a round shot and he picked up a small Dutch cheese.
+This renewed his courage and he ransacked the corners on hands and
+knees. Blackbeard's treasure chest was not half so precious as a side of
+salted fish which he ran down by scent, saying to himself:
+
+"With this rancid cheese and the slab o' ancient cod, ye could smell my
+course a league to wind'ard."
+
+In a crumpled sack he found a few pounds of what seemed to be wheat
+flour, by the feel and taste of it. Poor stuff as it was, dry and
+uncooked, he added it to his stock.
+
+"Rubbishy vittles," he sighed. "They may keep a man alive but he'll
+choke to death a-swallowin' of 'em."
+
+Water was the desperate necessity and it was not to be sought for in the
+storeroom. There was rum enough, the place reeked with it, but to
+thirsty throats it was so much liquid fire. Joe was resolved not to
+return to Jack Cockrell without a few pints of water if reckless
+enterprise could procure it. Was the cabin still empty? He stood for a
+long time and listened but there was not a sound beyond the door of the
+passageway. Taking his courage in both hands he pushed at the door and
+it creaked open on rusty hinges. Light as a feather he moved one foot in
+front of the other, halted, advanced another step, and so entered the
+large cabin in which Stede Bonnet had lived with a Spartan simplicity.
+
+What Joe coveted was the porous jar or water-monkey which hung suspended
+in a netting above the table. It was kept filled, he knew, in order to
+cool the tepid water from the casks. A heavenly sight it was to him to
+see the drops sweating on its rounded sides. He snatched it down and was
+about to make a swift retirement, but still spread upon the table he
+noted the chart of the Carolina and Virginia coasts which he had pored
+over with Stede Bonnet. This he delayed to roll up and tuck under one
+arm, not that he expected to employ it himself, but to make cruising
+more difficult for Blackbeard.
+
+This bit of strategy held him a moment too long. He shot a glance over
+his shoulder, alarmed by a tread on the companion ladder. Horrified he
+beheld a pair of Spanish boots with scarlet, crinkled morocco tops, and
+they encased bandy legs which were strong and thick. What saved the
+miserable young Hawkridge was that the occupant of these splendid boots
+paused half-way down the ladder to shout a profane command or two in
+those husky accents so feared by all lawful shipmen.
+
+Before that sable beard came into his field of vision the lad was in
+full stride, running like a whippet, chart under one arm, water-jar
+under the other. He checked himself to ease the door behind him just as
+the truculent captor of the _Royal James_ brig reached the foot of the
+ladder and let his gaze rove about the cabin. Sinking to the floor of
+the storeroom, Joe was afraid that for once he was about to swoon like a
+silly maid at sight of a mouse. As he had truly said, this pirating was
+no trade for a nervous man. Never mind, a miss was as good as a mile.
+Thankful for the darkness that closed around him, he slung the
+water-monkey over his shoulder in its hammock of netted cord, pushed the
+side of codfish inside his shirt, poked the chart into his boot-leg, put
+the cheese in the sack atop the flour, and was freighted for his journey
+through the hold.
+
+This he accomplished after great difficulty and had to whistle and wait
+for a response before he could be sure of Jack Cockrell's whereabouts.
+
+"What luck, Joe?" was the plaintive question. "I'd sooner starve than be
+left alone in this dungeon."
+
+"Behold the dashing 'prentice-boy with another hairbreadth escape to his
+credit," replied the hero. "Be thankful for your dinner 'cause
+Blackbeard all but made a mouthful of me."
+
+"You saw him, Joe?"
+
+"Up to the middle of him, and that was a-plenty. Don't ask me. I had a
+bad turn."
+
+"I feel sick, too," said Jack. "The smell of this vile bilge-water
+breeds a nausea, and, whew, 'tis worse than ever."
+
+"Bilge, my eye! You sniff the banquet I fetched ye. Here's a prime
+cheese that was hatched when Trimble Rogers was a pup."
+
+Jack offered a feeble apology and felt revived after a pull at the
+water-monkey. What they craved most was a spark of light, the glimmer of
+a candle to lift this appalling gloom which pressed down like a visible
+burden. With nothing to do but discuss the situation from every slant
+and angle of conjecture, it was Joe Hawkridge's theory that Stede Bonnet
+would not rest content with regaining the _Revenge_ but would come out
+to attack the brig as soon as the wind favored. His hatred of Blackbeard
+was one motive but there was a point of honor even more compelling.
+
+"He called you his guest, Jack," explained Joe, "and I never did see a
+man so jealous of his plighted word when once he swore it. He took
+obligation to set you safe in Charles Town, d'ye see? And powder smoke
+won't stop him."
+
+"Will Blackbeard tarry for a fight, Joe?"
+
+"Not to my notion. He knows well this brig is no match for the
+_Revenge_, knows it better than did Cap'n Bonnet, what with all the
+heavy metal slung aboard from the sloop. And what does Blackbeard gain
+by having this brig hammered into a cocked hat? Fate tricked him
+comically with this swappin' about of ships."
+
+"And will he linger on this coast? Oh, Joe, if he goes for a long
+cruise, what in mercy's name becomes of us two?"
+
+"A long cruise, it looks like, shipmate. In the _Revenge_ he could laugh
+at the small king's men-o'-war commissioned to hunt him down. He was
+ready to slap alongside any of 'em. Now 'tis different. As another flea
+in his ear, I stole the only chart of these waters. To the south'ard
+he'll turn, and I will bet that rampageous cheese on it."
+
+"Clear to the Bay of Honduras?" said Jack.
+
+"As far as that, at a guess. Or he may skirt the Floridas to look for
+Spanish prizes and put in at the Dry Tortugas which is a famous
+rendezvous for pirates of the Main. He will be hot to fit himself with a
+bigger ship, by capture or by some knavish trick such as he dealt Cap'n
+Bonnet."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+BLACKBEARD APPEARS IN FIRE AND BRIMSTONE
+
+
+HERE was a tragic predicament from which there was no release. Jack
+Cockrell was firmly convinced that Blackbeard must have recognized him
+that day in the swamp while Joe felt no less certain that he was marked
+for death because he had been one of the party of marooned mutineers.
+The hope of prolonging their existence by means of raiding the storeroom
+had ebbed after Joe's investigation. Such provisions as had been broken
+out of bulk were kept in lockers and pantries on deck where they were
+convenient to the galley and forecastle. It was realized also that their
+twittering nerves could not long withstand the darkness and suspense
+once the brig had put out to sea. Joe Hawkridge had nothing more to say
+about enduring it a month o' Sundays.
+
+While the brig remained at anchor they clung to the thought that Captain
+Stede Bonnet might intervene in their behalf. It did bring them a gleam
+of solace to imagine him hoisting sail on the _Revenge_ and crowding out
+to rake the brig with his formidable broadsides. And yet they were in
+doubt whether the _Revenge_ was fit to proceed at once, what with all
+the work there had been to do, rigging a new foremast, caulking leaky
+seams, repairing the other ravages of the storm.
+
+These pitiable stowaways had no means of telling one hour from another
+until, at length, they heard over their heads the faint, musical strokes
+of the ship's bell on the forecastle head. This led them to believe that
+the fog had cleared else Blackbeard would not have revealed the vessel's
+position. And lifting fog meant a breeze to sweep it away from the
+harbor.
+
+"Eight bells she strikes, the first o' the forenoon watch," said Joe.
+"We have been cooped in this black pit a matter of three hours a'ready."
+
+"No more than that?" groaned Jack. "It seems at least a week. We must
+divert ourselves in some wise. What say if I learn you a bit o' Latin?
+And you can say over such sea songs as come to mind, for me to tuck in
+my memory."
+
+"Well said, my worthy scholar. 'Tis high time we bowled ahead with my
+eddication as a proper gentleman."
+
+Jack began to conjugate _amo_, _amas_, _amat_, and the pupil droned it
+after him but the verb _to love_ recalled a black-eyed lass who had
+stolen his heart in the Azores and he veered from the Latin lesson to
+confide that sentimental passage. So Jack hammered nouns of the first
+declension into him until they grew tired of that, and then the sea waif
+played his part by reciting such fo'castle ballads as "_Neptune's Raging
+Fury_; _or The Gallant Seaman's Sufferings_," and "_Sir Walter Raleigh
+Sailing in the Lowlands_."
+
+This was better than the slow agony of waiting in silence, but Joe
+spoiled it by turning lovelorn and Jack bemourned fair Dorothy Stuart of
+Charles Town whom he would never greet again, and they sang very softly
+together a verse of "_The Maid's Lamentation_" which went like this:
+
+ "There shall be no Scarf go on my Head,
+ No Comb into my Hair,
+ No Fire burn, no Candle light
+ To shew my Beauty fair,
+ For never will I married be
+ Until the Day I die,
+ Since the Seas and the Winds
+ Has parted my Love and me."
+
+This left them really in worse spirits than before, and they drowsed off
+to sleep, and no wonder, after such a night as they had passed.
+Accustomed to broken watches, Joe Hawkridge slept uneasily with one ear
+open. Once or twice he sat up, heard Jack's steady snores, and lay down
+again. It was the ship's bell which finally brought him to, and he
+counted the strokes.
+
+"Five bells, but what watch is it?" he muttered anxiously. "How long was
+I napping? Lost track o' the time, so I have, and can't say if it's
+night or day."
+
+He sat blinking into the darkness and then had an inspiration. So
+staunch and well-kept was the brig that the deck seams were tight and no
+light filtered through. Joe left his hiding-place and groped along to
+where he thought the main hatch ought to be. Gazing upward he saw a
+gleam like a silvered line between the coaming and the edge of the
+canvas cover which was battened with iron bars. This persuaded him that
+the day had not yet faded, and he concluded that he had heard the bell
+strike either in the afternoon watch or the second dog watch of early
+evening.
+
+This he imparted to Jack, after prodding him awake. They mulled it over
+and agreed that Captain Bonnet must have found the _Revenge_ unready to
+weigh anchor or he would have engaged the brig ere this. Perhaps there
+was not breeze enough for either vessel to move. Another hour of this
+stressful tedium and they heard a sound of sharp significance. It was
+the lap-lap of water against the vessel's side. No more than the
+thickness of the planking was between them and this tinkling sea, and
+Joe exclaimed, in an agitated whisper:
+
+"A breeze o' wind! Gentle it draws, but steady, like it comes off the
+land at sundown."
+
+"The same as it did when we were blown offshore on the little raft,
+after we quitted the _Plymouth Adventure_," replied Jack.
+
+"Blackbeard will take advantage of it to make for the open sea. There be
+three things offered us, Master Cockrell, to starve or go mad in this
+blighted hold, to sally on deck and beg mercy, which means a short
+shift, or to climb out softly in the night and try to swim for it."
+
+"Swim to what, Joe?"
+
+"Swim to the bottom, most likely. But we might fetch one o' them cays or
+the coast itself if he steers close in to find smooth water. 'Tis the
+worst odds yet but I'd sooner drown than tarry in this vessel. One
+miracle was wrought when the cask came driftin' to the beach to save me,
+and who knows but the Lord can spare another one for the salvation of us
+poor lads that mean to do right and forsake piratin'."
+
+As they expected, there came soon the familiar racket of making sail and
+trimming yards and the clank of the capstan pawls. Then the anchor
+flukes scraped and banged against the bow timbers. The vessel heeled a
+little and the lapping water changed its tune to a swash-swash as the
+hull pushed it aside. The brig was alive and in motion.
+
+"She makes no more than two or three knots," observed Joe, after a
+little while. "Ye can tell by the feel of her. The wind is steady but
+small."
+
+"Then he can't go clear of the islands till long after night,"
+thankfully returned Jack.
+
+Joe made another trip to crane his neck at the main hatch. The bright
+thread of daylight had dimmed. He could scarce discern it. The lads
+occupied themselves with reckoning the distance, the hour, and the
+vessel's speed. Now that Joe had satisfied himself that the end of the
+day was near, he knew what the ship's bell meant when it was struck
+every half-hour. They would await the passing of another hour, until two
+bells of the first watch, by which time they calculated the brig should
+be in the wide, outer channel between the seaward islands.
+
+The plan was to emerge through the forepeak in the very bows of the ship
+where a scuttle was let into the deck. There they might hope to lower
+themselves to the chain stays under the bowsprit and so drop into the
+sea. They would be washed past the ship, close to her side, and into the
+wake, and there was little chance of drawing attention. True it was that
+in this hard choice they preferred to swim to the bottom if so it had to
+be.
+
+They crouched where they were hid, waiting to hear the fateful signal of
+two bells. It struck, mellow, clear, and they were about to creep in the
+direction of the forepeak. But Joe Hawkridge gripped his comrade's arm
+and held him fast. A whispered warning and they ceased to move. Behind
+them, in the after part of the ship, gleamed a lantern. It illumined the
+open door of the bulkhead which walled off the storeroom. And in this
+doorway, like a life-sized portrait, grotesque and sinister, set in a
+frame, was the figure of Blackbeard.
+
+He advanced into the hold and the cowering stowaways assumed that he had
+come to search them out. The impulse was to dash into the forepeak and
+so plunge overboard, flinging away all caution, but before their
+palsied muscles could respond, the behavior of Blackbeard held them
+irresolute and curious. He had turned his back to them and was shouting
+boisterously to others to follow him. Seven men came through the
+doorway, one after the other, hanging back with evident reluctance. It
+was impossible to discern who they were, whether officers or seamen.
+Every one carried in his arms what looked to be a tub or an iron pot.
+These they set upon the dunnage boards which covered the ballast and
+made a flooring in the hold.
+
+Blackbeard bellowed at them to squat in a circle, which they meekly did.
+He was in one of his fiendishly mirthful humors, rumpling his beard,
+strutting to and fro, laughing in senseless outbursts. At such times his
+men were most fearful for their lives. What sort of an infernal pastime
+he had now concocted was beyond the imagination of the lads who were
+concealed a dozen yards away. He was not hunting them, this much was
+plain, and it seemed wise to be quiet and avoid drawing attention to
+themselves.
+
+They saw Blackbeard ignite a torch at the lantern and poke it into one
+pot after another. Flames began to burn, blue and green and yellow, and
+lurid smoke rolled to the deck-beams overhead. Amid this glare and reek
+of combustibles, Blackbeard waved his torch and tremendously proclaimed:
+
+"Come, lads, we be all devils together, with a hell of our
+own,--brimstone fires and pitch. Now, braggarts, see how long ye can
+bear it. 'Tis a foretaste of what's in store for all hands. At this game
+I'll outlast ye, for, harkee, I sold my soul to the Old Scratch as is
+well known."
+
+[Illustration: HE LOOMED LIKE THE BELIAL WHOM HE WAS SO FOND OF CLAIMING
+AS HIS MENTOR]
+
+He stirred his infernal pots and the greasy smoke rolled upward in
+choking volume. The brimstone fumes were so vile and noxious that the
+victims of this outlandish revel soon gasped and wheezed. But they dared
+not object nor move from their places among the villainous pots.
+Blackbeard enjoyed their sufferings, taunting them as milksops and
+poltroons who could not endure even this taste of Gehenna. He himself
+appeared to be unaffected by it, lurching from one man to another,
+whacking them with the burning torch or playfully upsetting them. In the
+gaseous pall of smoke he loomed like the Belial whom he was so fond of
+claiming as his mentor.
+
+Finally one of his involuntary guests toppled over in a faint.
+Blackbeard was kind enough to haul him to the door and boot him through
+it. A second man dragged himself thither. A third found voice to
+supplicate. The witch-fires still smoked and stewed in the pots and
+Blackbeard had proved that he was the toughest demon of them all.
+
+The two stowaways watched this demented exploit in sheer wonderment. The
+fumes were not dense in their part of the hold and they could breathe,
+but they well-nigh strangled in trying to refrain from coughing. The
+fires of tar and brimstone and what not cast so much light that they
+dared not betray themselves by crawling toward the forepeak. The upright
+beams between the keelson and the deck threw black shadows over them and
+they were in no great peril of detection so long as they stayed
+motionless.
+
+Joe Hawkridge had heard gossip of this extraordinary amusement as a kind
+of initiation for hands newly joining Blackbeard's ship. He therefore
+read it that these unfortunates were some of Stede Bonnet's men who had
+been captured with the brig. They had been allowed to enlist and were
+being taught to respect their new master.
+
+Jack Cockrell had hugely admired young Joe for his ready wit and
+coolness in other crises of their mutual fortunes but now came a moment
+in which the astute sea urchin surpassed himself. It was not too much to
+say that he displayed absolute genius with the sturdy Master Cockrell to
+aid and abet him. Joe clawed in the dark until he found the sack with a
+few pounds of wheat flour in it. A quick whisper and his comrade grasped
+the great idea. They took no thought of a sequel. They would trust to
+opportunity. Hastily they rubbed the flour into their shirts and
+breeches. They covered their faces with it and lavishly sprinkled their
+hair. They looked at each other in the shadow of the beams and were
+pleased with their handiwork.
+
+Another whispered consultation and Joe possessed himself of the
+cannon-ball of a cheese while Jack grasped the side of salt-fish by the
+tail. They resembled two whitened clowns of a pantomime but in spirit
+they were as grimly serious as the menace of death could make them.
+
+Blackbeard was dancing clumsily, like a drunken bear, and deriding with
+lewd oaths the two or three tortured survivors of his brimstone
+carnival. In a high, wailing voice which rose to a shriek there was
+borne to him the words:
+
+"Ye dirked poor Jesse Strawn and left him rotting in the swamp. I was a
+true and faithful seaman, Cap'n Teach."
+
+A deeper voice boomed out, filling the hold with unearthly echoes:
+
+"I am the shade of the master mariner whom ye did foully murder off
+Matanzas and there is no rest for me ten fathom down."
+
+The apparitions flitted out of the shadow and were vaguely disclosed in
+the flickering glare from the brimstone pots. The smoke gave them a
+wavering aspect as though their shapes were unsubstantial. Blackbeard
+stood beholding them in a trance of horror. With an aimless finger he
+traced the sign of the cross and his pallid lips moved in the murmur:
+
+"_The ghost o' Jesse Strawn! For the love of God, forbear._"
+
+It was a petition as pious as ever Christian uttered. Forgotten was his
+wicked counterfeit of the nether region. Again the shrill voice wailed:
+
+"Pity poor Jesse Strawn. I'll haunt ye by land and sea, Cap'n Teach.
+Swear by the Book to let that treasure chest lie at the bottom of the
+creek else I tear your sinful soul from your body."
+
+The terrible Blackbeard was incapable of motion. Huskily he muttered:
+
+"I'll ne'er seek the chest, good Jesse Strawn, an' it please you to pass
+me by."
+
+The two spectres moved forward as the one of the deeper voice declaimed:
+
+"Doomed I was to find no rest till I overtook your ship, Ed'ard Teach.
+Each night you'll see me walk the plank from your quarter-deck."
+
+The unhappy Blackbeard gibbered something and would have fled as the
+spirits approached him. But those bandy legs tottered and before he
+could turn the awful visitants were upon him. One raised a round shot
+above his head, or so it appeared to be, and smote him full upon the
+crown. The other whirled a flat bludgeon and hit him on the jaw. With
+the smell of brimstone was mingled the pungent flavor of ripe cheese and
+salt-fish. Blackbeard measured his length, and the ghost of Jesse Strawn
+delayed an instant to dump a pot of sizzling combustibles over him.
+
+Then the spirits twain made for the cabin at top speed. Several of the
+crew had rushed down to harken to the strange disturbance. They
+scattered wildly at the first glimpse of these phantoms, being
+superstitious sailormen with many a wicked deed to answer for. It
+flashed into Joe Hawkridge's mind that all the men of the watch might be
+chased below, the hatches clapped on them, and the mastery of the brig
+secured. Blackbeard was absent for reasons best known to himself and his
+pirates lacked leadership. A brace of ghosts could put them to panic
+rout. And, no doubt, that wailing message of dead Jesse Strawn had
+carried like the cry of a banshee.
+
+The poop was deserted in the twinkling of an eye, even to the pair of
+helmsmen and the officer of the watch. Against the sky of night the
+unwelcome phantoms were wan and luminous while the groans which issued
+from them were enough to curdle the blood of the brawniest pirate. He
+who had been Jack Cockrell in mortal guise was quick to slide the cabin
+hatch closed and fasten it. For the moment they had captured the armed
+brig _Royal James_ and as ferocious a crew of rascals as ever scuttled a
+merchantman.
+
+Joe Hawkridge glided to the taffrail and peered over the stern. A boat
+was towing behind the ship. It had been left there for taking soundings
+or pulling the brig's head around while she was still in the shoaler
+waters near the coast. This was better than Joe had dared anticipate.
+Feeling his way along the rail, he found the end of the rope which was
+belayed around a wooden pin. Heaven be praised, they would not have to
+swim for it! He beckoned his comrade to say in his ear:
+
+"They will soon find their wits. It 'ud be foolish to try scaring 'em
+under hatches now that the jolly-boat floats so handy. There's hard
+cases amongst 'em that will begin shooting at us presently. Down the
+rope ye go, Jack. I'll stand by and give 'em another dose of poor Jesse
+Strawn."
+
+Over the rail flew the stouter phantom of the two and slid like a white
+streak, fetching up in the boat with a most earthly and substantial
+thump. With a farewell wail the other ghost flung a limber leg over and
+shot down so fast that his hands were scorched. To such pirates as
+beheld this instant vanishment, these disturbing spirits floated off
+into space. Jack cut the rope with his knife and the boat dropped back
+in the shining wake. They shoved out two heavy oars and fairly broke
+their hearts in pulling dead into the wind where the brig would have to
+tack to pursue them.
+
+The rattle of the oars and the discovery of the shorn rope's end must
+have convinced the pirates who ran aft that they had been tricked by
+mortal beings like themselves. A musket spat a red streak of fire.
+Blocks whined as the braces were hauled to change the brig's course. In
+the light breeze she responded awkwardly and soon hung in stays.
+Meanwhile the jolly-boat was slowly working to windward while two
+frightened lads tugged and swung until the flour turned to paste on
+their dripping faces.
+
+Before the brig began to forge ahead, the boat was invisible from her
+decks. This was evident because the spatter of musket-fire ceased. Soon
+the fugitives heard Blackbeard's harsh voice damning all hands. That
+thick skull of his had not been cracked by the impact of the solid
+cheese and he had been released from his brimstone inferno. The ghosts
+rested on their oars. They could watch the glimmering canvas of the brig
+and see what her procedure might be. Soon she filled away and forsook
+the attempt to find the boat. Blackbeard had wisdom enough to avoid
+blundering about and putting the brig aground in a chase so elusive as
+this.
+
+"Farewell, ye hairy son of Tophet," said Joe Hawkridge, waving his hand
+at the disappearing vessel. "And here's hoping I set your whiskers
+ablaze when I turned the pot over 'em."
+
+"Did you hear him swear not to touch the treasure chest, Joe? That was a
+master stroke of yours."
+
+"Aye, it was bright of me. But he thinks different now. He knows we made
+a booby of him."
+
+"But we learned one thing,--he hasn't recovered the treasure yet,"
+suggested Jack.
+
+"He is such a powerful liar that I don't know as the ghost o' Jesse
+Strawn could budge the truth out of him. However, it was comfortin' to
+hear him swear it on his marrow-bones. I fetched away the navigation
+chart, the one I poached from the cabin table. It gives us the lay o'
+the coast."
+
+"What ho and whither bound?" was Jack's question. "Here is a sail wound
+round a sprit beneath the thwarts."
+
+"The wrong wind to head for Cap'n Bonnet and the _Revenge_. This
+swag-bellied jolly-boat handles like a firkin. We had best wait for day
+and then decide the voyage."
+
+"Nothing to eat and no water, Joe. All I can find is an empty pannikin."
+
+"You're a glutton," severely exclaimed young Hawkridge. "After the
+banquet I served in the hold!"
+
+What Master Cockrell said in reply sounds as familiar and as wistful
+to-day as when he spoke it two hundred years ago.
+
+"I have had enough of wandering and strange adventures, Joe. I want to
+go home."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+MR. PETER FORBES MOURNS HIS NEPHEW
+
+
+IT seems a long time, in the course of this story, since the honorable
+Secretary of the Council, Mr. Peter Arbuthnot Forbes, was forced to sail
+in to Charles Town from the _Plymouth Adventure_ on that most
+humiliating errand of finding medicines for Blackbeard's fever-smitten
+rogues. For the sake of his own dear nephew and the other hostages
+detained on board, he had endeavored to perform his bargain and was
+returning across the bar when the threatening clouds and other portents
+of a violent storm caused the seamen to lose heart. They put about and
+drove back into the harbor for shelter in the very nick of time.
+
+These were pirates from Blackbeard's crew, it may be recalled, with his
+grizzled, scarred boatswain at the tiller. They had felt safe enough to
+swagger and ruffle it through the streets of Charles Town and to terrify
+the people. Their worthless lives were protected by the hostages who
+waited in fear and trembling. The town seethed with indignation and was
+hot with shame. There would be no more of the friendly traffic with
+pirates.
+
+It was fully believed that the wretched Blackbeard would be as good as
+his word in allowing no more than two days' grace. Therefore when Mr.
+Peter Forbes came back in the boat to inform his neighbors that he had
+been unable to reach the ship, it was sadly taken for granted that those
+helpless passengers had been put to death. Forthwith the pirates of the
+boat's crew were seized and thrown in gaol. There they lay in double
+irons until the Council met and ordered them to be tried. In accordance
+with the verdict the six seamen and the boatswain were promptly hanged
+by the neck from the same gallows at White Point hard by the town. And
+the people no longer shivered at the name of Blackbeard nor feared his
+vengeance. Their fighting blood was thoroughly aroused.
+
+Not long after this, there arrived from England a new Governor of the
+Province, a man of honor and resolution who approved what had been done.
+This Governor Johnson proceeded to organize the town for defense,
+building batteries on Sullivan's Island, recruiting the seafaring men in
+the militia, and seeking to obtain merchant vessels which could be
+employed as armed cruisers. Learning that the Governor of North Carolina
+was in a corrupt partnership with pirates, he sent messages to Virginia
+to solicit cooperation.
+
+This activity made much work for Secretary Peter Forbes who forsook his
+intention of going to England to beg the cooperation of his Majesty's
+Government against the plague of pirates. Dapper and plump and
+important as of yore, his florid face was clouded with sorrow and he
+seemed a much older man. He mourned his nephew, Jack Cockrell, as no
+more and felt as though he had lost an only son. Every angry word he had
+ever addressed the lad, every hasty punishment inflicted, hurt him
+grievously.
+
+It was a solace to talk with winsome Dorothy Stuart because hers was the
+bright optimism of youth and she held so exalted an opinion of Jack's
+strength and courage that she refused to abandon hope. And the fact that
+he had confided to her his rash intention of running away and signing as
+a pirate sooner than be transported to school in England, persuaded her
+that he might be alive.
+
+"From what you saw yourself, Mr. Forbes," said she, "when Blackbeard
+boarded the _Plymouth Adventure_ with his dreadful men, our Jack won his
+fancy."
+
+"So it appeared, Dorothy. The boy boasted of knocking a tall pirate on
+the head, and he read this monster of a pirate more shrewdly than I.
+Yes, Blackbeard took it with rough good humor. But Jack would ne'er
+consent to sail with him. 'Twas that confounded Stede Bonnet with his
+gallant air that turned the lad's head. He cast a glamor over this trade
+of murder and pillage."
+
+"Be that as it may," returned Dorothy, with a sigh and a smile, "I
+confess to a romantic admiration for this bold Captain Bonnet. He wears
+an air of mystery which is most becoming. We must not blame poor Jack."
+
+"No, no, I am done with all that," hastily exclaimed Uncle Peter. "All I
+dare hope is that when Blackbeard is captured, we may learn what fate
+befell the boy. It makes the torture worse to have him vanish without
+trace."
+
+"And yet I have faith the sea will give him back to us, Mr. Forbes. He
+will find you a chastened guardian, not so apt to box his ears."
+
+Uncle Peter was so distressed by this gentle raillery that the girl
+begged pardon and vowed that she would never again offend. It so
+happened that they were sitting together in Parson Throckmorton's garden
+a day or so after this when a friend came running in with tidings the
+most unexpected and incredible. A negro slave had come from a plantation
+a few miles inland and he bore a letter written by none other than
+Captain Jonathan Wellsby of the _Plymouth Adventure_. It narrated how he
+and the survivors of his ship had journeyed that far after weeks of
+suffering and frequent skirmishes with Indians. They were compelled to
+rest and take shelter before undertaking the last stage of the journey.
+
+Councilor Peter Forbes was magically changed. He shed his dignity and
+threw his hat in air. Clasping Miss Dorothy's slender waist, he planted
+a kiss on her damask cheek. Parson Throckmorton was ramming snuff into
+his nostrils, his wig all awry, while he sneezed trumpet blasts of
+rejoicing.
+
+"Survivors? _Kerchooh!_ God bless me, that lusty stripling will be
+amongst them,--_kerchooh_,--he can survive anything but Greek and
+Latin,--_kerchooh_,--I will spare the rod in future."
+
+"I told you so, Uncle Peter Forbes," laughed Dorothy.
+
+"Not so fast," quoth he, in a mood suddenly sobered. "Captain Wellsby
+includes no list of those in his party."
+
+"But, of course, one of them is _sure_ to be Master Jack," she insisted.
+
+"I am a selfish man and a laggard officer of the Crown," he exclaimed
+with air of great self-reproach. "There are women in that company and
+wounded men, no doubt. We must take them clothing, horses, food, a
+surgeon."
+
+He bustled off to the Governor's house to find that energetic gentleman
+absent at Sullivan's Island. Acting for him, the Secretary of the
+Council sent the town crier to summon all good citizens to the tavern
+green. In the space of an hour the men and supplies were assembled and
+with Mr. Forbes in command the band of mercy made haste to reach the
+plantation. During the march there was a buzz of anxious surmise. Was
+this one and that alive or dead? Had the hostages been slain and were
+these the sailormen of the _Plymouth Adventure_ who had been set adrift
+by Blackbeard? Councilor Forbes winced at hearing such talk as this, but
+his heart beat high nevertheless, so confident was he that he was about
+to behold his manly nephew.
+
+There was loud cheering when they came to the cleared land of the indigo
+fields and saw a tattered British ensign fluttering from the log
+stockade which enclosed the huts of the overseer and his laborers. In
+the gateway appeared the stalwart figure of Captain Wellsby in ragged
+garments and with a limping gait. Other men crowded behind him and
+responded with huzzas which were like a feeble echo. The friends from
+Charles Town rushed forward to embrace them, loudly demanding to know
+where the rest were.
+
+"We fetched the women safe through," answered Captain Wellsby whose eyes
+were sunken and the brown beard streaked with gray. "Twelve good men of
+my crew are dead, and three of the gentlemen passengers. The swamps took
+toll of some and the Indians slew the others. We were besieged a
+fortnight by the Yemassees,--a hard experience all of it, and wondrous
+luck to have escaped----"
+
+Councilor Forbes delayed while his companions entered the huts to attend
+the invalids. He struggled to ask a question but his voice was beyond
+control.
+
+"I understand," kindly spoke the shipmaster. "Your lad is not with us,
+nor can I say if he be dead or alive."
+
+"The Indians carried him off?" weakly inquired the uncle.
+
+"No, he was never seen after we abandoned ship. Your Jack and a chum of
+his from Blackbeard's crew were for making the beach on a small raft of
+their own contrivance. This was after nightfall, Councilor, and what
+with a land'ard breeze and a crotchety set of the tide amongst the
+shoals, they floated out to sea."
+
+"On a small raft," muttered Mr. Forbes, "and a vast ocean. I know of no
+ship voyaging to or from these ports which might have found them."
+
+"I was in hopes of hearing news of the lads from you," sorrowfully said
+the shipmaster. "There is the chance, tiny though it be, that they were
+sighted by some vessel bound to foreign parts, across the Western
+Ocean."
+
+The uncle shook his head in a manner profoundly dejected. There were
+duties which summoned him and he choked down his own grief, turning from
+the sympathetic mariner to minister to those in distress. Horse litters
+were soon ready for the exhausted but heroic women who had been kept
+alive by the devotion of the noble British seamen in accordance with the
+traditions of the merchant service. Those unable to walk farther were
+placed in carts. Clothed and fed, the sailors were in blithe spirits and
+talked of going to sea again as soon as they could find a ship.
+
+In the crowd which met them on the outskirts of the Charles Town
+settlement was Dorothy Stuart. She scanned the straggling column and
+then ran from one cart to another. It was impossible to convince her
+that Jack Cockrell was not there. But when she heard from Uncle Peter
+the news that Jack was missing but not surely dead, her faith burned
+anew, triumphant over fact and reason.
+
+"See how the great storm came to save him from Blackbeard," she cried,
+her hand nestling in Uncle Peter's arm. "And look how he came unscathed
+through that bloody battle with the pirates in the _Plymouth Adventure_.
+Why, a cruise on a raft is merely a frolic after all that."
+
+"I would not discourage your dear dreams, sweet maid," was the gentle
+response. "And may they be truer than my own forebodings."
+
+Charles Town was more than ever resentful when it learned from these
+poor people how the pirate sailing-master, Ned Rackham, had plotted to
+get rid of them and how mournful had been their sufferings after the
+shipwreck. The one boat left to them had been too rotten to send along
+the coast and they had plunged into a wilderness almost impassable.
+
+Meanwhile Governor Johnson, stirred by this episode, had received word
+that the province of Virginia was both ready and anxious to join in an
+expedition against Blackbeard. Governor Spottswood of Virginia would be
+outfitting such craft as he could get together in the James River while
+he awaited a reinforcement from Charles Town.
+
+The best vessel available for immediate use was a small brigantine, the
+_King George_. There was no lack of eager seamen when Councilor Forbes
+and Colonel Stuart proclaimed the muster on the tavern green. Among
+those selected were several of Captain Jonathan Wellsby's sailors who
+were primed to fight even though there was not much flesh on their
+bones. He himself was a forlorn mariner who had lost his good ship and
+found no joy in life. With a grim smile of gratitude he accepted the
+invitation to go as master of the _King George_, with Colonel Stuart as
+a sea soldier to drill the men and lead them in action.
+
+It was while they were slinging guns aboard the brigantine that some of
+the men happened to notice a small boat coming into the harbor under a
+rag of sail. At first it was taken for a fishing craft and there was no
+comment until it was quite close. Then they saw that it was a ship's
+jolly-boat much the worse for wear, with only two occupants. These were
+half-naked lads, burned black to the waist, with a queer kind of canvas
+head-gear as a protection against the sun.
+
+The boat was steered to pass under the stern of the _King George_ and
+the crew was unable to fathom if these were pirates or victims of
+another shipwreck. Captain Wellsby solved it by shouting:
+
+"Both your guesses are right! One is the pirate younker that served our
+cause in the _Plymouth Adventure_ and t'other is Master Jack Cockrell!"
+
+One of the Charles Town volunteers heard only the word _pirate_ and
+growled, with an oath:
+
+"One o' Blackbeard's spawn? We'll make precious short work of him. Hand
+me a musket and I will save trouble for the hangman."
+
+"Here, stop that," said Captain Wellsby, beckoning his own men. "You old
+_Adventure_ hands know better. Quell these lubbers. If there's to be
+hostile feeling ashore I shall take this lad aboard under my own
+protection."
+
+During this argument the sea-worn pilgrims in the jolly-boat had
+recognized the shipmaster and were joyfully yelling at him. In response
+to his gesture, they pulled down the sail and rowed to the gangway of
+the brigantine. There was no need to fear the wrath of the Charles Town
+seamen, because the _Adventure_ hands stood by as a guard while they
+explained how this young Joe Hawkridge had valiantly helped to turn the
+tide of battle against the prize crew of pirates. And there was such a
+rousing welcome for Master Cockrell that all else was forgotten. His old
+shipmates fairly mobbed him.
+
+"I will fire a gun and hoist all the bunting to signal the town," cried
+the skipper, his face shining. "And presently I'll send you to the wharf
+in my own boat, but first tell me, boys, who took you off the little
+raft and whence come you in this ship's boat?"
+
+"Blackbeard rescued us. And we borrowed the boat from him," demurely
+answered Jack, watching the effect of this bombshell of a sensation.
+
+"_Blackbeard!_" echoed the bedazed shipmaster and the others chimed it
+like a chorus.
+
+"Aye, old Buckets o' Blood hisself," grinned Joe Hawkridge. "We had him
+tamed proper when we parted company. First we chased him through a swamp
+till his tongue hung out and left him mired to the whiskers. Then for
+another lark we scared him in his own ship so he begged us on his knees
+to forbear. We learned Cap'n Ed'ard Teach his manners, eh, Jack?"
+
+This was too much for the audience which stood agape. A dozen voices at
+once implored enlightenment. With a lordly air for a youth whose costume
+was mostly one leg of his breeches, Master Cockrell reproved them to
+wit:
+
+"Captain Stede Bonnet was more courteous to our distress when we sailed
+with him. He gave us a thumping big breakfast."
+
+"Right-o," declared Joe. "'Tis our custom to spin strange yarns for
+clothes and vittles in payment."
+
+The men scampered to the galley and pantry but refused to let Captain
+Wellsby carry these rare entertainers into the cabin. Graciously they
+sketched the chief events, omitting all mention of the treasure chest,
+and Jack explained in conclusion:
+
+"And so I was stricken homesick, like an illness, and Joe had his fill
+of pirates, too. The wind was wrong to rejoin Captain Bonnet in the
+Inlet harbor after we shipped as ghosts in the jolly-boat, and we had a
+mariner's chart of the Carolina coast and----"
+
+"But what did you do for subsistence?" broke in Captain Wellsby.
+
+"Food and water?" answered Joe. "Oh, we landed when the thirst plagued
+us too bad. And there was rain to fill a bight of the sail and a
+pannikin to save it in."
+
+"And we lived on oysters mostly," said Jack, "and Joe killed a fat
+opossum with a club, and we caught some fish in a net which I knotted
+from a ball of marline that was in the boat. And we foraged for pawpaws
+and persimmons."
+
+"And whenever the breeze was fair we put to sea again," said Joe, "and
+it was a long and weary voyage, though not so many leagues on the
+chart."
+
+The captain's boat was ready and they tumbled in, two wayfarers of the
+sea who were as lean and sun-dried as the buccaneers of old Trimble
+Rogers' fond memories. Hardships had seasoned and weathered them like
+good ash staves. On the wharf was Uncle Peter Forbes and Governor
+Johnson and a concourse of townspeople drawn by the joyous signals flown
+from the brigantine. Jack looked in vain for Dorothy Stuart and was
+thankful that her welcome was deferred. Shears and a razor and
+Christian raiment would make him look less like a savage from the coast
+of Barbary.
+
+Uncle Peter wasted a vast deal of pity, thinking the castaways too weak
+and wasted to walk. Jack strode along with him, the crowd at their
+heels, and soon had the plump Councilor puffing for breath. They
+insisted on taking Joe Hawkridge with them although he was for seeking
+lodgings at the tavern. He was one of the household, declared Mr.
+Forbes, while Jack warned him to beware of impertinence lest he be
+sentenced to chop wood for the kitchen fire.
+
+The neighbors and friends, as curious as they were joyful, were barred
+from the house while the lads talked and Uncle Peter carefully made
+notes of it all. It was too much for him to realize that Jack was
+sitting there lusty and laughing and with the dutifully respectful
+manner as of yore, in spite of the man's part he had played to the hilt.
+Of all the exploits, that which most fascinated Mr. Peter Forbes was the
+chase after Blackbeard's sea-chest weighty with treasure and the
+discovery of the knoll in the Cherokee swamp where he might have buried
+other booty. Here was a picaresque romance which allured the methodical
+barrister and Councilor and he was as boyishly excited as his nephew. He
+examined the chart which Jack had copied from his rude sketch made on a
+piece of bark and this raised a question which he was quick to ask:
+
+"What of Bill Saxby and this old bloodhound of a Trimble Rogers? As
+soon as Stede Bonnet could get the _Revenge_ to sea, I have no doubt he
+sailed to Cape Fear River to get these pirate comrades of yours and the
+seamen he left to find them. Once aboard, they would urge Bonnet to
+return to Cherokee Inlet and let them go hunt the treasure."
+
+"That may be, but we can trust them to deal fair by us," replied Jack.
+
+"Possibly," was the skeptical comment. Mr. Forbes was not too ready to
+believe in honest pirates.
+
+"I'm not sure Cap'n Bonnet had a mind to bother with this treasure
+hunting," suggested Joe Hawkridge. "Leastwise, he may ha' put it off to
+an easier day. He has friends that keep him well informed, such as the
+Governor of North Carolina at Bath Town. And all this flurry against
+piratin', here and in Virginia, 'ud be apt to make Cap'n Bonnet wary of
+bein' trapped on the coast."
+
+"Joe is full of wisdom, as usual," said Master Cockrell. "And if
+Blackbeard has cruised to the Spanish Main, as we suspect, the treasure
+may lie undisturbed for a while."
+
+"Concerning Blackbeard, the evidence then in hand warranted your
+conclusions," was Uncle Peter's judicial comment, "but I have received
+later information. The rumor is, and well-founded, that he turned his
+ship and made for the Pamlico River with the intention of obtaining
+pardon from the false and greedy Governor Eden. This would baffle our
+plans against him, or so he would assume. And it would enable him to
+remain within convenient distance of his treasure."
+
+"Would this Province and Virginia respect such a pardon as that?"
+queried Jack.
+
+"Not in the case of Blackbeard," snapped the Councilor, "because we know
+it would be violated as soon as this treacherous villain could safely
+return to his piracies."
+
+"Then Joe and I will enlist in the _King George_ brigantine," cried
+Jack. "Captain Wellsby tells me she will sail for Virginia inside the
+week."
+
+Uncle Peter was about to make violent protest but he checked himself and
+his emotions were torn betwixt pride and yearning affection. He could
+not bear to let his nephew go so soon to new perils, but what right had
+he to try to shield him when the public duty called? It was idle to
+pretend that Jack was too young and tender to embark on such service as
+this. He was fitter for it than some of the other volunteers. And so the
+unhappy Uncle Peter walked the floor with his cheeks puffed out and his
+hands clasped behind him and said, with a tremulous sigh:
+
+"I swore to treat you no more as a child, Jack. 'Tis right and natural
+for you to desire to go in the _King George_ as a fighting man tried and
+true. As for Joe Hawkridge, I have acquainted the Governor with his
+merits and his pardon is assured."
+
+"Thankee, sir," returned the reformed young pirate. "A respectable life
+is what I crave, and the parson for company."
+
+"It sounds almost pleasant to me, including the parson," admitted Jack,
+"as soon as we shall have settled this matter with Blackbeard."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+NED RACKHAM'S PLANS GO MUCH AMISS
+
+
+THE armed brigantine had been out several days on the voyage to Virginia
+when a vessel was sighted hull-down. Captain Wellsby and Colonel Stuart
+decided to edge over and take a look at the stranger although they were
+not anxious to engage an enemy of heavier metal. If, however, this
+should happen to be Blackbeard in the _Revenge_ they were in no mood to
+avoid him, despite the odds. After an hour of sailing in a strong
+breeze, it was seen that this other vessel was a small merchantman which
+shifted her course as though to shake off pursuit.
+
+"They take us for a pirate," chuckled Captain Wellsby. "I have no wish
+to scare 'em, poor souls. They will feel easy as soon as we bring the
+wind abeam."
+
+He was about to give the order when Joe Hawkridge, gunner's mate, called
+to Jack Cockrell standing his watch at the helm:
+
+"Remember the snow I told ye of? Yonder is the same rig and tonnage,
+alike it as peas in a pod."
+
+Jack spoke to the shipmaster who summoned Joe to the quarter-deck. The
+boy was confident that this was the New England coasting vessel in which
+Ned Rackham and his pirates had appeared off Cherokee Inlet and had
+carried the marooned seamen from the sandy cay.
+
+"A brown patch in the big main-topsail, and the bowsprit steeved more'n
+ordinary," said Joe. "Tit for tat, Cap'n Wellsby. Your men can have the
+fun of jamming them in the fo'castle. And you won't find me or Jack
+helpin' these picaroons to break out."
+
+"No fear of that," sternly spoke the shipmaster. "They shall make their
+exit with a taut rope and a long drop when I deliver them in Virginia."
+
+It was to be gathered that the bold Ned Rackham had failed in his
+desperate enterprise of capturing a larger ship and that he was probably
+cruising up the coast in hopes of rejoining Blackbeard. The snow had too
+few guns to cope with the _King George_ brigantine which could throw a
+battering broadside. As soon as identification was certain, Captain
+Wellsby hauled to windward to hold the weather gauge and Colonel Stuart
+called the men to quarters. The _Plymouth Adventure_ hands were
+disappointed that they would be unable to pay their own grudge. They had
+no doubt that Ned Rackham would strike his colors without a battle.
+
+The _King George_ ran close enough for Captain Wellsby to shout through
+the trumpet:
+
+"The snow ahoy! Send your men aboard or I'll sink you. No tricks,
+Rackham. Lively, now."
+
+They saw the men running to cut the boat lashings and struggle to
+launch the boats from the deck. Ned Rackham, handsome and debonair,
+stared coolly at the brigantine but gave no sign that he had heard the
+ultimatum. With a shrug he walked across the poop, glanced up at the
+British ensign which flew from his main truck, and made no motion to
+pull it down.
+
+"Blow your matches, boys," roared Colonel Stuart from his station in the
+waist of the _King George_. "Five minutes' grace, no more."
+
+Captain Wellsby said to wait a little. The pirates were endeavoring to
+quit the snow. And presently Rackham appeared to change his own purpose.
+No longer ignoring the _King George_, he doffed his hat in a graceful
+flourish and bowed with a mocking obeisance. Then he strolled to the
+cabin hatch and went below, presumably to get a change of clothing or
+something of the sort. But he failed to reappear and his men were in a
+frenzy of haste, with one boat already in the water.
+
+So incensed was Colonel Stuart by the insolent refusal of Ned Rackham to
+strike his colors in token of surrender that he gave orders to fire at
+the mainmast and try to bring it down. An instant before the starboard
+battery thundered, the snow seemed to fly upwards in a tremendous
+explosion. The masts were flung out of her and the hull opened like a
+shattered basket. So violent was the shock that men were thrown to the
+deck of the _King George_ and she quivered as though her bows had
+rammed a reef. Black smoke spouted as from a crater and debris rained
+down on a boiling sea.
+
+A few survivors, scorched or half-stunned, were clinging to bits of
+wreckage and wailing for succor. Where the snow had floated was a
+discolored eddy, broken timbers, a lather of dirty foam. Captain
+Jonathan Wellsby picked himself up, rubbed a bump on his head, and gazed
+wildly at the tragic scene. Collecting his wits, he exclaimed:
+
+"That 'ud be like Ned Rackham, to blow up the ship sooner than be taken
+and hanged. More than likely he had the train all laid to the powder
+barrels."
+
+"He saved us a lot of trouble," said Colonel Stuart as he climbed to the
+poop. "A fellow of iron will and courage, this Rackham, by all accounts.
+I have conceived a respect for him."
+
+"I forgive him his sins," replied the skipper. "Now, lads, boats away,
+and fish up those dying wretches."
+
+Joe Hawkridge emitted a jubilant whoop and dived over the rail without
+waiting for a boat. He had caught a glimpse of a feeble swimmer whose
+square, solid features and bushy brows were familiar. It was Peter
+Tobey, the carpenter's mate, who had befriended him on the cay and who
+had set adrift that miraculous cask of food and water. A few strokes and
+Joe was at his side, clutching him by the neck-band and towing him
+toward the _King George_ like a faithful retriever. Ropes were flung to
+them and Joe saw his good friend safely aboard before he went up the
+side.
+
+The carpenter's mate was both burned and bruised but his hurts were not
+grievous and he was able to drag himself aft with Joe as a crutch.
+
+"My own particular prize, sir, by your gracious leave," said Joe
+Hawkridge, addressing Captain Wellsby. "This is Mr. Peter Tobey, a poor,
+faint-hearted pirate like me. May I have him to keep, sir?"
+
+"Bless me, but there will be no pirates left to hang," was the quizzical
+reply. "Master Cockrell has adopted you, and now I am ordered to be kind
+to Bill Saxby and Trimble Rogers if I meet up with 'em."
+
+"That's the whole list, sir. Ask Jack Cockrell. You can string the rest
+of the bloody pirates to the yardarm, for all we care. Do I get
+exemption for this Peter Tobey?"
+
+"What is your verdict, Colonel Stuart?" asked the captain.
+
+"I heard the tale from Hawkridge," answered the brusque but generous
+soldier. "The carpenter's mate has won my allegiance. What say you in
+your own behalf, Peter Tobey?"
+
+The blistered, singed survivor touched a hand to his forehead and
+respectfully responded:
+
+"A carpenter by trade and nature, and allus was. I never see one happy
+day a-piratin' nor did I shed the blood of any human creatur'. With a
+bench and tools, you will find me a proper handy man in Charles Town."
+
+"That clinches it," cried Colonel Stuart. "I should call it a crime to
+hang an artisan like Peter Tobey. Your prize is awarded you, Hawkridge.
+See that he is well cared for."
+
+"The first booty that ever was handed me from a sinkin' ship," said Joe.
+"Come along, Master Tobey, and roll into my bunk."
+
+"Verily I was castin' bread upon the waters when I gave that cask to the
+wind and tide," devoutly murmured the carpenter's mate as he limped
+below with his new owner.
+
+No more than a dozen other pirates were rescued alive and several of
+these expired soon after they were lifted aboard the brigantine. This
+was the only sensational incident of the coastwise voyage to the James
+River. Comfortably quartered, with no more work than was wholesome, Jack
+Cockrell and Joe Hawkridge thought it a holiday excursion after their
+previous adventures at sea.
+
+In the roadstead of the James were two men-of-war, small frigates flying
+the broad pennant of the Royal Navy. A conference was held in the cabin
+of the senior officer, to which Captain Wellsby and Colonel Stuart were
+invited. The latest advices made it seem certain that Blackbeard still
+lurked off the coast of the Carolinas. Planters had reported seeing his
+ship in Pamlico Sound and it was also learned that he had been in
+communication with the disloyal Governor Eden at Bath Town. A letter had
+been intercepted, in handwriting of the Governor's secretary, and
+addressed to Captain Teach, which included these words:
+
+"_I have sent you four of your men. They are all I can meet with about
+town. Be upon your guard._"
+
+This was readily construed to mean that Blackbeard was in haste to
+recall such of his crew as had strayed ashore. At the council of war in
+the frigate's cabin, a proclamation was read. It offered a handsome
+reward for the capture of Captain Edward Teach, dead or alive, and
+lesser rewards for other pirates.
+
+It was the decision that the two frigates were unhandy for cruising
+inshore. Therefore officers and men would be chosen from them to fill
+the complements of two sloops, light and active craft which would be
+unhampered by batteries of cannon. They would be employed for boarding
+Blackbeard's ship while the Charles Town brigantine _King George_ should
+convoy them and engage in the attack if the depth of water should
+permit. The naval officer selected to command the sloops was Lieutenant
+Maynard who went off to the _King George_ to inspect her and make a call
+of courtesy.
+
+He was especially cordial to Master Cockrell and Gunner's Mate Joe
+Hawkridge, laying aside the stiff dignity of naval rank. To his
+persuasive argument that they enter the royal service with promise of
+quick promotion, they turned a deaf ear although they were wonderfully
+taken with him. He was a gentle, soft-spoken young man with a boyish
+smile who blushed when pressed to talk of his own exploits against the
+Spanish, the Dutch, and the French in Britannia's wooden walls. His own
+questions were mostly about Blackbeard's fighting quality. Would he make
+a stand against disciplined tars who were accustomed to close in,
+hammer-and-tongs? Joe Hawkridge answered to this:
+
+"I ne'er saw him in action against a king's ship, and all his wild
+nonsense is apt to delude ye into thinkin' him a drunken play-actor. But
+you will never take him alive, so long as those bandy legs have strength
+to prop him up."
+
+"I look forward to meeting him with a deal of pleasure. It may be my
+good fortune to measure swords with him," observed Lieutenant Maynard.
+
+Joe Hawkridge was puzzled by this gentle fire-eater with the complexion
+of a girl. Nothing could have been more unlike the ramping, roaring
+pirates of Blackbeard's dirty crew who tried to terrify by their very
+appearance. After the lieutenant had returned to his frigate, Jack
+Cockrell remarked:
+
+"A most misleading man, Joe. You cannot picture him seeking the bubble
+reputation at the cannon's mouth, as Will Shakespeare saith."
+
+"Blackbeard will bite him in two," replied Joe. "He is too pretty to be
+risked in such a slaughter pen. I own up to feelin' squeamish on my own
+account, hardy pirate though I be."
+
+"This Lieutenant Maynard is welcome to measure swords with Blackbeard,"
+said Jack, "and I shall not quarrel with him for the honor. Pick me a
+pirate with a wooden leg, Joe, or one that still shakes with Spanish
+fever."
+
+"My only chance of getting out with a whole skin is to lug a sack of
+flour under one arm and play the ghost o' Jesse Strawn."
+
+Expeditiously the brigantine and the two sloops sailed out of the James
+River to head for the North Carolina coast and first rake the nooks and
+bays of Pamlico Sound. There was no intention of offering Blackbeard
+fair odds in battle. With men and vessels enough it was resolved to
+exterminate him, like ridding a house of rats or other vermin. If he had
+gone out to sea, then the pursuers would wait and watch for his return
+to his favorite haunts in these waters. There was every reason to
+believe, however, that he was concealed inshore, within easy distance of
+his friend Governor Eden.
+
+Failing to find him in Pamlico Sound, it was debated whether to cruise
+farther to the southward. Now Master Jack Cockrell and his chum had said
+nothing to the officers concerning the treasure in the Cherokee swamp.
+They felt bound in honor not to reveal it without the consent of Bill
+Saxby and old Trimble Rogers who were partners in the enterprise.
+Moreover, Lieutenant Maynard and the Virginia officers would feel bound
+to turn the treasure over to the crown or its representatives. Governor
+Eden of North Carolina would undoubtedly claim it as found within his
+territory and this meant that he would steal most of it for himself.
+
+It thrilled the lads when Colonel Stuart told them that this Provincial
+squadron would cruise as far as Cherokee Inlet before working to the
+northward again. Information had led the officers to believe that
+Blackbeard had lost many men by desertion while his ship lay at Bath
+Town and near by. They had been roving about the plantations and making
+a nuisance of themselves and seemed ready to quit their red-handed
+despot of a master. In this event he might have sought his old
+hiding-place at the Inlet sooner than risk a clash with the force which
+had been sent after him and of which he had been warned by Governor
+Eden.
+
+Lieutenant Maynard scouted in advance with the two sloops because there
+was small danger of their getting aground and they could be moved along
+with oars if the wind failed. The brigantine kept further offshore but
+within signaling distance. She was running within sight of the
+scattering barrier of low islands when Captain Wellsby summoned Joe
+Hawkridge and informed him:
+
+"You will act as pilot, Joe, once we fetch sounding on the Twelve Fathom
+Bank. The chart is faulty, as ye know, and me and my mates are in
+strange waters with a'mighty little elbow-room. You know the marks, I
+take it."
+
+"Aye, sir, I do that," answered Joe. "Then I stays aboard ship and miss
+the chance to go pokin' about with a cutlass? I'm all screwed up to
+terrible deeds, Cap'n Wellsby, after a spell o' mortal fear. And who
+takes care of Master Cockrell if he goes in a boat?"
+
+"His own lusty right arm, Joe. Avast with your melancholy. We must first
+catch this Blackbeard."
+
+Presently Joe Hawkridge footed it up the main shrouds to scan the sea
+ahead and try to get a glimpse of that sandy bit of exposed shoal on
+which he had been marooned. This would enable him to find the entrance
+to the outer channel and so con the brigantine in from seaward. While he
+shaded his eyes with his hand against the glare of the morning sun, one
+of the sloops hoisted a string of bright signal flags and fired two
+guns. The other sloop was seen to lower her topsail and wait for the
+_King George_ to come up.
+
+Joe Hawkridge climbed higher and found a perch where he could discern
+the spars of a vessel etched almost as fine as threads against the azure
+horizon. He was almost certain that the ship he saw was very close to
+that tiny cay of which he had such unhappy knowledge. Soon he was able
+to perceive that the vessel's sails were furled. This was an odd place
+for an anchorage. His conjecture was confirmed when the _King George_
+passed close to the nearest sloop and Lieutenant Maynard shouted:
+
+"Stranded hard and fast! And she is deucedly like Blackbeard's brig."
+
+Scampering to the deck, Joe Hawkridge mustered his gun's crew as Jack
+Cockrell came running up to say:
+
+"Trapped on the very islet where he cast you and the other pirates! His
+chickens have come home to roost."
+
+"Call me no pirate or I'll stretch ye with a handspike," grinned Joe.
+"'Tis a plaguey poor word in this company. Aye, Cap'n Ed'ard Teach has a
+taste of his own medicine and he will get a worse dose this day than
+ever he served me."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+THE GREAT FIGHT OF CAPTAIN TEACH
+
+
+YES, there was Blackbeard's ship hard in the sand which had gripped her
+keel while she was steering to enter the Cherokee Inlet. There was no
+pearly vapor of swamp mist out here to shroud her from attack. The air
+was clear and bright, with a robust breeze which stirred a flashing surf
+on the shoals. Under lower sails, the two sloops watchfully crept nearer
+until their crews could examine the stranded brig and read the story of
+her plight. She stood on a slant with the decks sloped toward the enemy.
+This made it impossible to use her guns with any great effect.
+
+Captain Wellsby tacked ship and kept the _King George_ well away from
+the cay, as Joe Hawkridge advised. With an ebbing tide, it was unsafe to
+venture into shallower water in order to pound Blackbeard's vessel with
+broadsides. Lieutenant Maynard came aboard in a small boat and was quite
+the dandy with his brocaded coat and ruffles and velvet small-clothes.
+One might have thought he had engaged to dance the minuet. Colonel
+Stuart met him in a spick-and-span uniform of His Majesty's Foot,
+cross-belts pipe-clayed white as snow, boots polished until they shone.
+Such gentlemen were punctilious in war two hundred years ago.
+
+"Your solid shot will not pound him much at this range, my good sir,"
+said the lieutenant. "With his hull so badly listed toward us, you can
+no more than splinter the decks while his men take shelter below."
+
+"I grant you that," regretfully replied the soldier. "And case-shot will
+not scatter to do him much harm. Shall I blaze away and demoralize the
+rascals whilst you make ready your boats?"
+
+"Toss a few rounds into the varlets, Colonel Stuart. It may keep them
+from massing on deck. One boat from your ship, if it please you, with
+twenty picked men. I shall take twenty men from each sloop as boarders."
+
+"Sixty in all?" queried the colonel. "Why not take a hundred?"
+
+"They would be tumbling over one another,--too much confusion. This is
+not a large vessel yonder. We must have room on deck to swing and cut."
+
+"I will have my men away in ten minutes, Lieutenant Maynard," crisply
+replied the blonde, raw-boned Scotsman with a finger at his hat-brim in
+courteous salute. He proceeded to call the men by name, strapping, sober
+fellows who had followed the sea amid the frequent perils of the
+merchant service. Jack Cockrell was the only landsman and he felt
+greatly honored that he should be included. Gone was his unmanly
+trepidation. Was he more worthy to live than these humble seamen who
+fought to make the ocean safer for other voyagers, who were true kinsmen
+of the Elizabethan heroes of blue water? He tarried a moment to wring
+Joe Hawkridge's hand in farewell and to tell him:
+
+"If I have ill luck in this adventure, old comrade,--do you mind
+presenting my best compliments, and--and a fond farewell to Mistress
+Dorothy Stuart?"
+
+"Strike me, Jack, stow that or you'll have me blubberin'," said Joe.
+"Bring me a lock of Cap'n Teach's whiskers as a token for my lass in
+Fayal if ever I clap eyes on her again. And you'd best take this heavy
+cutlass which I whetted a-purpose for ye. 'Twill split a pirate like
+slicin' an apple."
+
+With this useful gift in his hand, Master Cockrell swung himself into
+the boat where Colonel Stuart stood in the stern-sheets. Perhaps he,
+too, was dwelling on a fair maid named Dorothy who might be left
+fatherless before the sun climbed an hour higher. The sloops were moving
+nearer the cay under sail and oar, trailing their crowded boats behind
+them. Blackbeard had hauled two or three of his guns into such positions
+that he could open fire but the sloops crawled doggedly into the shoal
+water and so screened their boats until these were ready to cast off for
+the final dash.
+
+It was a rare sea picture, the stranded brig with canvas loose on the
+yards and ropes streaming, her listed decks a-swarm with pirates in
+outlandish, vari-colored garb, the surf playing about her in a bright
+dazzle and the gulls screaming overhead. The broad, squat figure of
+Blackbeard himself was never more conspicuous. He no longer strutted the
+quarter-deck but was all over the ship, menacing his men with his
+pistols, shifting them in groups for defense, shouldering bags of
+munitions, or heaping up the grenades and stink-pots to be lighted and
+thrown into the attacking boats.
+
+It was his humor to adorn himself more elaborately than usual. Under his
+broad hat with the great feather in it he had stuck lengths of tow
+matches which were all sputtering and burning so that he ran to and fro
+in a cloud of sparks and smoke like that Evil One whom he professed to
+admire. He realized, no doubt, that this was likely to be his last
+stand. The inferno which he was so fond of counterfeiting, fairly yawned
+at his feet.
+
+And now the sloops let go their anchors while from astern of them
+appeared the three boats of the assailants. They steered wide of each
+other to seek different parts of the pirate brig and so divide
+Blackbeard's force. The boats of Colonel Stuart and Lieutenant Maynard
+were racing for the honor of first place alongside. Blackbeard trained
+two guns on them, filled with grape and chain-shot, and one boat was
+shattered but it swam long enough for the cheering men to pull it to the
+brig and toss their grapples to the rail which was inclined quite close
+to the water. They were in the surf which broke against the ship, but
+this was a mere trifle.
+
+Most of them went up the side like cats, leaping for the chains and
+dead-eyes, slashing at the nettings, swinging by a rope's end, or
+digging their toes in a crack of a gun-port. Forward they were pouring
+over the bowsprit, vaulting like acrobats from the anchor stocks, or
+swarming up the stays. It seemed beyond belief that they could gain
+footing on the decks with Blackbeard's demons stabbing and hacking and
+shooting at them, but in such manner as this was many a great sea fight
+won in the brave days of old.
+
+Lieutenant Maynard gained his lodgment in the bows amid a swirl of
+pirates who tried to pen him in front of the forecastle house. But his
+tars of the Royal Navy were accustomed to close quarters and they
+straightway made room for themselves. Chest to chest and hand to hand
+they hewed their way toward the waist of the ship where Colonel Stuart
+raged like the braw, bonny Highlander that he was. Almost at the same
+time, the third boat had made fast under the jutting stern gallery and
+its twenty men were piling in through the cabin windows like so many
+human projectiles.
+
+In the _King George_ brigantine, Captain Jonathan Wellsby fidgeted and
+gnawed his lip, with a telescope at his eye, while he watched the
+conflict in which he could scarce distinguish friend from foe. He could
+see Blackbeard charge aft to rally his men and then whirl back to lunge
+into the melee where towered Colonel Stuart's tall figure. The powder
+smoke from pistols and muskets drifted in a thin blue haze. Joe
+Hawkridge was fairly shaking with nervousness as he said to the
+skipper:
+
+"There'll be no clearing the decks 'less they down that monster of a
+Cap'n Teach. And he has more lives than a cat. See you my dear crony,
+Master Jack?"
+
+"No, I cannot make him out in that mad turmoil," replied Captain
+Wellsby. "Nip and tuck, I call it, Joe."
+
+This was the opinion forced upon Lieutenant Maynard as he saw the
+engagement resolve itself into a series of bloody whirlpools, his seamen
+and the pirates intermingled. He won his way past the forecastle into
+the wider spaces of the deck, with only a few of his twenty tars on
+their feet. Colonel Stuart was hard pressed and the boarders who had
+come over the stern had as much as they could do to hold their own. Thus
+far the issue was indecisive.
+
+Jack Cockrell had kept close to the colonel, and felt amazement that he
+was still alive. His cheek was laid open, a bullet had torn his thigh,
+and a powder burn streaked his neck, but he felt these hurts not at all.
+It was a nightmare from which there seemed no escape. He saw Blackbeard
+rush at him with a raucous shout of:
+
+"The scurvy young cockerel! He will ne'er crow again."
+
+Colonel Stuart sprang between them, blades clashed, and they were swept
+apart in another wave of jostling combat. A moment later the colonel
+slipped and fell as a coal-black negro chopped at him with a broken
+cutlass. Jack Cockrell flew at him and they wrestled until a hip-lock
+threw the negro to the deck, where the colonel made him one pirate less.
+
+Formidable as these outlaws were, they lacked the stern cohesion which
+had been drilled into the sailors of the Royal Navy and likewise learned
+in the hard school of the merchant service. Very slowly the odds were
+shifting against Blackbeard's crew. It was unmistakable when Lieutenant
+Maynard cut his way through to join Colonel Stuart, while the third
+group of boarders was advancing little by little from the after quarter.
+This meant that the force was gradually uniting in spite of the furious
+efforts to scatter it.
+
+And now there came an episode which lives in history two centuries after
+that scene of carnage on the decks of the stranded brig. It has
+preserved the name of a humble lieutenant of the Royal Navy and saved it
+from the oblivion which is the common lot of most brave men who do and
+dare when duty beckons.
+
+Blackbeard was bleeding from a dozen wounds and yet his activity was
+unabated. He was like a grizzly bear at bay. His men began to believe
+that his league with Satan, of which he obscenely boasted, had made him
+invulnerable. He was all that he had proclaimed himself to be, the
+wickedest and most fearsome pirate of the Western Ocean. And all the
+while, the slender, boyish Lieutenant Maynard, sailor and gentleman, had
+one aim in mind, and that was to slay Captain Edward Teach with his own
+hand. Nor was he at all content until he had cleared a path to where the
+hairy pirate was playing havoc with his broadsword.
+
+With a loud laugh in mockery, Blackbeard snatched a loaded pistol from
+one of his men and fired at this foppish young officer who presumed to
+single him out. The ball chipped Maynard's ear and he dodged the pistol
+which was hurled at his head. It was curious to note a lull in the
+general engagement, a little interval of suspense while men regained
+their breath or tried to staunch their wounds. They were unconsciously
+awaiting the verdict of this duel between their leaders. Jack Cockrell,
+for instance, finding himself alone by some chance, leaned against a
+stanchion and heard his own blood drip--drip--on the deck.
+
+It was a fleeting respite. Blackbeard swung his sword, with the might of
+those wide shoulders behind it. The lieutenant stepped aside like
+lightning and the bright weapon whistled past his arm. Then they went at
+each other like blacksmiths, sparks flying as steel bit steel. Dexterity
+and a cool wit were a match for the pirate's untamable strength. Gory,
+snarling, Blackbeard shortened his stroke to use the point. The
+lieutenant dropped to one knee, thrust upward, and found a vital spot.
+
+Blackbeard stood staring at him with wonder in his eyes. Then those
+thick, bowed legs gave way and he toppled like a tree uprooted. He
+passed out quietly enough, with no more cursing, and in this last moment
+of sensibility his thoughts appeared to wander far to his youth as a
+brisk merchant seaman out of Bristol port, for he was heard to mutter,
+with a long sigh:
+
+"A pretty babe as ever was, Mollie, and the mortal image of its mother."
+
+To his waist the sable beard covered him like a pall and one corded arm
+was flung across his breast and it showed the design of the skull and
+cross-bones pricked in India ink. Then as if the dead leader had issued
+the command, the surviving pirates began to fling down their weapons and
+loudly cry for quarter. They need not have felt ashamed of the
+resistance they had made up to this time, but now the delirium of combat
+had slackened and Blackbeard was no more. One or two of his officers
+were alive and they knew that the game was lost. Reinforcements could be
+sent from the sloops and the brigantine as soon as they were signaled
+for. And there was no flight from a stranded ship. Blackbeard had been
+able to infuse them with his own madness. Better chance the gallows than
+no quarter.
+
+Here and there a few of the most desperate dogs of the Spanish Main who
+had followed Blackbeard's fortunes a long time, refused to surrender but
+they were either shot down or overpowered. Captain Wellsby was sending
+off two boats from the _King George_ with his surgeon, and the sloops
+were kedging in closer to the cay with the rising tide. Half the seamen
+were beyond aid and of the pirates no more than twenty were alive. Jack
+Cockrell was thankful to have come off so lightly, and he consoled
+himself with the notion that a scar across his cheek would be a manly
+memento. Colonel Stuart had been several times wounded but 'tis hard
+killing a Highlander.
+
+It was Lieutenant Maynard's duty to offer public proof that he had slain
+none other than the infamous Blackbeard, wherefore he made no protest
+when his armorer hacked off the head of the dead pirate. There was no
+feeling of chivalry due a fallen foe, valiant though his end had been.
+This horrid trophy was tied at the end of a sloop's bowsprit, to be
+displayed for the gratification of all honest sailormen who might behold
+it in port. It was not a gentle age on blue water and Captain Edward
+Teach had been the death of many helpless people during his wicked
+career.
+
+Lieutenant Maynard announced that he would take the two sloops into Bath
+Town, before proceeding to Virginia, as they were overcrowded vessels
+and the survivors of the boarding party needed proper care ashore. It
+would also afford the unscrupulous Governor Eden of North Carolina an
+opportunity to see his friend, Captain Teach, as a pirate who would
+divide no more plundered merchandise with him.
+
+The brigantine _King George_ was ready to escort them into Pamlico
+Sound, after which she would sail for Charles Town. Before the
+departure from the entrance of Cherokee Inlet, the stranded vessel was
+set afire and blazed grandly as the funeral pyre of Blackbeard's stout
+lads who would go no more a-roving.
+
+Never was a nurse more devoted than Joe Hawkridge when his comrade was
+mercifully restored to him. Jack was woefully pale and weak but in
+blithe spirits and thankful to have seen the last of Blackbeard.
+
+"Hulled in the leg and a damaged figger-head," said Joe, as he sat on
+the edge of the hero's bunk. "Triflin', I call it, when I expected to
+see you come aboard feet first wrapped in a bit o' canvas."
+
+"I don't want to talk about it, Joe. Let's find something pleasant. Ho
+for Charles Town, and the green trees and a bench in the shade."
+
+"And a tidy little vessel after a while, you and me and the Councilor
+a-pleasurin' up the coast with men and gear to fish up the treasure
+chest."
+
+"And you believe that Blackbeard never got back to the Inlet to save the
+treasure for himself?" asked Jack.
+
+"Not the way his ship was headed when she struck the shoal."
+
+The brigantine was well on her way to Charles Town when Captain Wellsby
+found that Master Cockrell could be carried into the comfortable main
+cabin to rest on a cushioned settle for an hour or two at a time. It was
+during one of these visits, when Joe Hawkridge was present, that the
+skipper remembered to say:
+
+"Here is a bit of memorandum which may entertain you lads. Lieutenant
+Maynard had Blackbeard's quarters searched before the brig was burned.
+Some valuable stuff was found, but nothing what you'd call a pirate's
+treasure."
+
+The lads looked at each other but kept their own counsel and Captain
+Wellsby went on to explain:
+
+"There was a private log, Blackbeard's own journal, with a few entries
+in it, and most of the leaves torn out. I made a copy of what could be
+read, for the late Captain Teach was a better pirate than scrivener.
+Here, Jack, you are the scholar."
+
+Jack read aloud this extract, which was about what might have been
+expected:
+
+"_Such a day! Rum all out,--our company somewhat sober. A confusion
+amongst us,--rogues a-plotting--great talk of separation. So I looked
+sharp for a prize. Took one, with a great deal of liquor on board, so
+kept the company hot, very hot. Then all things went well again._"
+
+"That sounds familiar enough to me," was Joe Hawkridge's comment. "And
+the rest of his writing will be much like it."
+
+"Not so fast," exclaimed Captain Wellsby. "Scan the next page, Jack.
+'Twill fetch you up all standing. Not that it puts gold in our pockets,
+for we know not where to search, but I swear it will make your eyes
+sparkle and your mouth water."
+
+Trying to hide his excitement, Jack saw a kind of rough inventory, and
+it ran like this:
+
+ "Where I Hid Itt This Cruse:
+
+ 1 Bag 54 Silver Barrs. 1 Bag 79 Barrs & Peaces of
+ Silver.
+
+ 1 Bag Coyned Gold. 1 Bag Dust Gold. 2 Bags Gold
+ Barrs.
+
+ 1 Bag Silver Rings & Sundry Precious Stones. 3
+ Bags Unpolyshed Stones.
+
+ 1 Silver Box set with Diamonds. 4 Golden Lockets.
+
+ Also 1 Silver Porringer--2 Gold Boxons--7 Green
+ Stones--Rubies Great & Small 67--P'cl Peaces of
+ Eight & Dollars--Also 1 Bag Lump Silver--a Small
+ Chaine--a corral Necklace--1 Bag English Crowns."
+
+Captain Jonathan Wellsby listened to this luscious recital with an air
+of mild amusement. He was of a temper too stolid and sensible to waste
+his time on random treasure hunting. Blackbeard might have chosen his
+hiding-place anywhere along hundreds of leagues of coast. He could
+understand the agitation of these two adventurous lads to whom this
+memorandum was like a magic spell. Of such was the spirit of youth.
+
+"Any more of it?" demanded Joe Hawkridge.
+
+"The next page was ripped out of the journal," answered the skipper.
+"What cruise did he mean? If it was this last one, he may have hid it on
+the Virginia or Carolina coast."
+
+Master Cockrell gave it as an excuse that he had sat up long enough and
+would return to his bunk. He was fairly bursting for a conference with
+Joe, and as soon as they were alone he exclaimed:
+
+"It may be the sea-chest! What do you think?"
+
+"A handsome clue, I call it, something to warm the cockles of your
+heart," grinned the sea urchin. "Aye, Jack, I should wager he wrote that
+down whilst he lay at anchor in Cherokee Inlet."
+
+"It seems shabby of us to keep the secret from Captain Wellsby, but
+there is an obligation on us----"
+
+"To Bill Saxby and the old sea wolf," said Joe. "We'll not forget this
+trump of a skipper when it comes to splittin' up the treasure."
+
+"I am anxious for Captain Bonnet and his crew," remarked Jack. "With
+this crusade against pirates afoot, our friends may be hanged before we
+see them again."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+THE OLD BUCCANEER IS LOYAL
+
+
+SORROW mingled with rejoicing when the _King George_ brigantine sailed
+into Charles Town harbor. The sea fight off Cherokee Inlet had taken a
+heavy toll of brave seamen and there were vacant chairs and aching
+hearts ashore, but the fiendish Blackbeard had been blotted out and
+would no more harry the coast. Small and rude as was this pioneer
+settlement, it was most fair and attractive to the eyes of young Master
+Cockrell and Joe Hawkridge. In the house of Uncle Peter Forbes they
+rested at their ease and planned sedate careers for themselves.
+
+Even the treasure ceased to be uppermost in their lively discussions. It
+could wait a while. They were no longer under the spell of its
+influence. This different world in which they now dwelt so contentedly
+made their adventures seem like shadowy figments with precious little
+romance in them. And neither lad expressed any great anxiety to go
+exploring the noisome Cherokee swamp and to challenge the ghost of
+Blackbeard.
+
+Without a sign of rebellion, Jack returned to his books and lessons in
+Parson Throckmorton's garden. The learning already acquired he began to
+pass on to Joe Hawkridge, who was a zealous pupil and determined to
+read and write and cipher without letting the grass grow under his feet.
+It was this young pirate's ambition to make a shipping merchant of
+himself, and Councilor Forbes found him employment in a warehouse where
+the planters traded their rice, resin, and indigo for the varied
+merchandise brought out from England. Jack aspired to manage his uncle's
+plantation and to acquire lands of his own and some day to sit in the
+Governor's Council.
+
+Of a Sunday morning he went to the little English church, dressed in his
+best and using a cane, for he limped from the wound in his thigh. Joe
+Hawkridge walked with him, careful to banish his grin, and sat in the
+Councilor's pew where he paid proper attention to the prayers and
+responses. This caused some gossip but the ocean waif was winning his
+way to favor by dint of industry, a shrewd wit, and his perennial good
+humor.
+
+Frequently they escorted fair Dorothy Stuart home from church. She was
+fonder than ever of stalwart Master Cockrell because the colonel had
+told her he would have been a dead man had not the lad intervened to
+save him from the stroke of a negro pirate. Alas, however, it was not
+that sentimental devotion for which the lovelorn Jack yearned, and he
+confided to Joe that his existence was blighted. This evoked no sympathy
+from the fickle Hawkridge, who was forgetting his black-eyed lass in the
+Azores and was already a slave to Dorothy Stuart. She laughed at them
+both and was their true friend, tender, and whimsical and anxious for
+their welfare. It was a valuable chapter in their education.
+
+One morning while Joe was at work in the warehouse near the harbor, he
+heard a commotion in the street and was about to run out when his
+employer came in and explained:
+
+"Two pirates captured,--just as I happened to pass. The knaves landed
+from a boat in broad daylight, unaware that Charles Town has mended its
+loose habit toward such gentry."
+
+"What will be done with 'em?" quickly asked Joe, with an unhappy
+premonition.
+
+"They were recognized as two of Stede Bonnet's old hands that used to
+resort to the tavern. Soldiers of the Governor's guard have been sent
+for to drag them to the gaol."
+
+Joe hastened out but slackened his pace to lag behind the crowd of
+idlers who were jostling the prisoners along with hoots and jeers. Yes,
+there was the tall, gaunt frame and gray head of old Trimble Rogers
+whose mien was so forbidding and masterful that the mob forbore to
+handle him too roughly, unarmed though he was. At his elbow trudged
+chubby Bill Saxby, gazing about him with those wide blue eyes in which
+was not a trace of guile. Joe realized that for him to intercede would
+make matters worse. He was a reformed pirate on probation and was known
+to have sailed with Blackbeard himself.
+
+Therefore he darted into another street and sped to find Jack Cockrell,
+who chanced to be at home. They rushed into the room where Uncle Peter
+Forbes was writing at his desk and informed him that their two staunch
+comrades had come ashore to find them and were already in custody and
+something must be done to save them from the wrath of Governor Johnson,
+who had a mortal distaste for pirates still at large. The Councilor
+calmed the perturbation by assuring them:
+
+"I have already spoken to His Excellency in behalf of these two men
+should they appear in this port. He was not wholly pleased but promised
+clemency should they offer to repent and if I gave surety for the
+pledge."
+
+"They will be ready to live as respectable as Joe," impetuously declared
+Master Cockrell. "I'll go bail on it. Bill Saxby is a tradesman by
+nature and if you will lend him enough money to set himself up as a
+linen-draper and haberdasher, Uncle Peter, he can live happily ever
+after."
+
+"And old Trimble Rogers has sailed his last cruise under the Jolly
+Roger, Councilor," put in Joe Hawkridge. "His timbers are full o' dry
+rot and he seeks a safe mooring."
+
+"There seems no end to the bad company you drag me into," quoth Uncle
+Peter. "My hat and broadcloth cloak, Jack, and let us fare to the gaol
+and see what these awkward visitors have to say. After that I will
+attend upon the Governor."
+
+In better spirits the anxious lads followed the dignified Secretary of
+the Council to the strongly built gaol on the edge of the town. In a
+very gloomy cell behind iron bars they found the luckless brace of
+pirates, shackled hand and foot. Bill Saxby took it like a placid
+philosopher but the ancient buccaneer was spitting Spanish oaths and
+condemning the hospitality of Charles Town in violent terms. He quieted
+instantly at sight of his young friends and the harsh, wrinkled visage
+fairly beamed as he shouted:
+
+"Our _camaradas_, Bill. Here they be, to haul us out of this filthy
+hole! I forgive the unmannerly folks that allus used to welcome us."
+
+They shook hands through the bars while Uncle Peter stood aside. He felt
+that his official station forbade his joining this fraternal reunion. In
+the narrow corridor he chatted with the gaoler to pass the time while
+Bill Saxby was explaining to the lads:
+
+"We was in duty bound, in a manner of speakin', to run you down as soon
+as possible and make a report. Eh, Trimble?"
+
+"Aye, Bill, to see what was to be done about the treasure. We wouldn't
+have 'em think we had run off with it. D'ye see, Master Cockrell, me and
+Bill took Cap'n Bonnet into our confidence. He is an honorable man and
+to be mentioned along with the great Cap'n Ed'ard Davis what I was
+shipmates with in the South Sea and at the sack of----"
+
+"Stow it, grandsire," cried Bill. "I don't want to linger in gaol while
+you spin that long-winded yarn. Tell the lads what they want to know."
+
+"If I weren't chained to the wall, Bill, I'd put my fist in your eye,"
+severely retorted the veteran. "As I was a-sayin', Cap'n Bonnet was all
+courtesy and allowed the treasure belonged to us and he was ready to
+help find it."
+
+"We told him we had to join up with our gentleman partner, Master
+Cockrell, and win his consent," said Bill, "afore we put our hooks on
+that blessed sea-chest."
+
+"Which is exactly how I felt about you," Jack told them and he was
+greatly touched by this proof of their unbending fidelity. "But how did
+you manage it to reach Charles Town?"
+
+"Cap'n Bonnet hove to outside the bar last night," explained Trimble
+Rogers, "and gave us a handy boat to sail in with."
+
+The wary Joe Hawkridge took alarm at this and put a finger to his lips.
+It was unwise to parade the fact that Stede Bonnet cruised so near. His
+Excellency, the Governor, was anxious that he should share the fate of
+Blackbeard. Jack Cockrell had no fear that his Uncle Peter would be a
+tale-bearer. His private honor would forbid because this interview with
+the two lads was a privileged communication. What made Jack a trifle
+anxious was the presence of the gaol keeper in the corridor. He was a
+sneaking sort of man, soft of tread and oily of speech and inclined to
+curry favor with those in authority.
+
+Councilor Peter Forbes had tactfully withdrawn this person beyond
+earshot but he began to edge toward the cell. Old Trimble Rogers tried
+to heed Joe's cautionary signal but what he meant to be a whisper was a
+hoarse rumble as he explained:
+
+"Cap'n Bonnet sends word he will be off this coast again in thirty days.
+He will come ashore hisself, to Sullivan's Island to get the answer,
+whether you are to go with us, Master Cockrell, to Cherokee Inlet."
+
+Jack glanced at the gaol keeper but he was a dozen feet away and deep in
+talk with Mr. Forbes. There was no sign that this confidence had been
+overheard. Bill Saxby scolded the buccaneer for his careless speech but
+the old man had been a freebooter too long to be easily tamed. With
+artful design, Jack led him away from this dangerous ground and
+suggested:
+
+"You are done with pirating? And will you both be ready to stay ashore
+in Charles Town after this,--this certain errand is accomplished?"
+
+"I swear it gladly and on my own Bible," answered Trimble Rogers.
+
+"Swear it for me," said Bill Saxby.
+
+Mr. Forbes interrupted and told the lads to go home and await his
+conference with Governor Johnson. It proved to be a session somewhat
+stormy but the upshot was a pardon conditioned on good behavior. The
+convincing argument was that these men had been faithful to Master
+Cockrell through thick and thin and had saved him from perishing in the
+Cherokee swamp. Moreover, it might be an inducement to others of Stede
+Bonnet's crew to surrender themselves and forsake their evil ways.
+
+No sooner were these two pirates released from gaol than they found an
+active friend in Mr. Peter Forbes. He went about it quietly, for obvious
+reasons, but he felt under great obligation to them for their goodness
+to his nephew. Just at this time one of the shop-keepers became a
+bankrupt because of unthrifty habits and too much card-playing. Through
+an agent, Peter Forbes purchased the stock of muslins and calicos, of
+brocades and taffetas, calash bonnets, satin petticoats, shoe-buckles,
+laces, and buttons. And having given his promissory notes for said
+merchandise, Bill Saxby proudly hung his own sign-board over the door.
+
+There was a flutter among the ladies. Here was a noteworthy sensation,
+to be served by an obsequious pirate with innocent blue eyes who had
+sailed the Spanish Main. A few days and it was evident that William
+Saxby, late of London, would conduct a thriving trade. He was fairly
+enraptured with his good fortune and congenial occupation and took it
+most amiably when Jack Cockrell or Joe Hawkridge sauntered in to tease
+him. He was a disgrace to Stede Bonnet, said they, and never had a
+pirate fallen to such a low estate as this.
+
+Trimble Rogers was in no situation to rant at smug William, the linen
+draper. The old sea wolf who had outlived the most glorious era of the
+storied buccaneers, had a few gold pieces tucked away in his belt and at
+first he was content to loaf about the tavern, with an audience to
+listen to his wondrous tales which ranged from Henry Morgan to the great
+Captain Edward Davis. But he had never been a sot or an idler and soon
+he found himself lending a hand to assist the landlord in this way or
+that. And when disorder occurred, a word from this gray, hawk-eyed rover
+was enough to quell the wildest roisterers from the plantations.
+
+Children strayed to the tavern green to sit upon his knee and twist
+those fierce mustachios of his, and their mothers ceased to snatch them
+away when they learned to know him better. Sometimes in his leisure
+hours he pored over his tattered little Bible with muttering lips and
+found pleasure in the Psalmist's denunciation of his enemies who were
+undoubtedly Spaniards in some other guise. He puttered about the flower
+beds with spade and rake and kept the bowling green clipped close with a
+keen sickle. In short, there was a niche for Trimble Rogers in his old
+age and he seemed well satisfied to fill it, just as Admiral Benbow
+spent his time among his posies at Deptford when he was not bombarding
+or blockading the French fleet off Dunkirk.
+
+Jack Cockrell halted for a chat while passing the tavern and these two
+shipmates retired to a quiet corner of the porch. The blind fiddler was
+plying a lively bow and a dozen boys and girls danced on the turf.
+Trimble Rogers surveyed them with a fatherly aspect as he said:
+
+"They ain't afeard of me, Jack, not one of 'em. Was ever a worn out old
+hulk laid up in a fairer berth?"
+
+"None of the sea fever left, Trimble? What about Captain Bonnet? He is
+due off the bar two days hence. My uncle frowns upon my sailing with him
+to seek the treasure. He insists that I steer clear of pirates."
+
+"And that's entirely proper, Jack. I look at things different like, now
+I be a worthy citizen. 'Tis better to fit out a little expedition of our
+own, if we can drag silly Bill out of his rubbishy shop."
+
+"Oh, he will come fast enough after a while. We are all tired of the sea
+just now," said Jack. "What about Captain Bonnet and meeting him at
+Sullivan's Island to pass the word that we must decline his courteous
+invitation?"
+
+"I shall tend to that," answered the retired buccaneer, "And from what
+gossip I glean in the tavern, Cap'n Bonnet had best steer for his home
+port of Barbadoes and quit his fancy piratin'. This fractious Governor
+has set his heart on hangin' him. And Colonel Stuart is up and about
+again and has ordered the _King George_ to fit for sea. 'Tis rumored he
+has sent messages to the north'ard for Lieutenant Maynard to sail
+another cruise in his company."
+
+"Then be sure you warn Stede Bonnet," strongly advised Jack. "I would
+not be disloyal to the Province or to mine own good uncle, but one good
+turn deserves another."
+
+Two days after this, Trimble Rogers vanished from the tavern and found
+Jack's canoe tied in a cove beyond the settled part of the town. It was
+in the evening of this same day that Jack was reading in his room by
+candle-light when a tap-tap on the window shutter startled him. He threw
+it open and dimly perceived that Dorothy Stuart stood there. Her face
+was white in the gloom and she wore a dress of some dark stuff. At her
+beckoning gesture, Jack slipped through the window and silently led her
+into the lane.
+
+"Oh, Jack, I have been so torn betwixt scruples," she softly confided.
+"And I hope I am not doing wrong. If I am disloyal to my dear father,
+may I be forgiven. But I have made myself believe that there is a
+stronger obligation."
+
+"It concerns Stede Bonnet," murmured Jack, reading the motive of this
+secret errand.
+
+"Yes, you are bound to befriend him, Jack, on your honor as a
+gentleman."
+
+"He has been warned to keep clear of Charles Town, Dorothy. Trimble
+Rogers has gone off to meet him."
+
+"But it is worse than that. The keeper of the gaol, Jason Cutter, was
+closeted with my father this morning. I heard something that was said.
+Soldiers have been sent to Sullivan's Island."
+
+"To capture Captain Bonnet?" wrathfully exclaimed Jack. "Did Colonel
+Stuart go with them? Does he know why Stede Bonnet risks putting into
+this harbor in a small boat? It is to do a deed of pure friendship and
+chivalry."
+
+"All my father understands is what the gaoler reported," replied
+Dorothy, "and the Governor acted on this evidence. No, he did not go
+with the troops but sent a major in command."
+
+"Too late for me to be of service, alas! If they take Captain Bonnet
+alive, he will most certainly hang. And Bill Saxby and Trimble Rogers
+will be embroiled in some desperate attempt to aid his escape from
+gaol."
+
+"I am a dreadful, wicked girl to be thus in league with pirates," sighed
+Mistress Dorothy, "but I confess to you, Jack dear, that it would grieve
+my heart to see this charming pirate wear a hempen halter."
+
+"My rival, is he? So I have found you out," flared Jack, pretending vast
+indignation. "Nevertheless, I shall still be true to him."
+
+"And to me, I trust," she fondly replied. "Oh, I feel so thankful that
+faithful Trimble Rogers is keeping tryst. He will hear the soldiers
+blundering about in time to make Captain Bonnet take heed and shove
+off."
+
+Jack walked home with her, very glad of the excuse, but with jealousy
+rankling in his bosom. It was not a lasting malady, however, and he had
+forgotten it next morning when he went early to the tavern to look for
+Trimble Rogers. There he found the major of the detachment at breakfast
+with an extraordinary story to tell. He had made a landing on Sullivan's
+Island after dark and deployed some of his men to patrol the beach that
+faced the ocean. The squad which remained with him had surprised a man
+lurking amongst the trees. Pursued and fired at, he had led them an
+infernal chase until they burst out upon the open beach. There they
+heard the sound of oars and voices in a boat which was making in for the
+shore. The hunted man raised his voice in one stentorian shout of:
+
+"Pull out to sea, Cap'n Bonnet. And 'ware this coast. The soldiers are
+on my heels. Old Trimble Rogers sends a fare-ye-well."
+
+The boat was wrenched about in a trice and moved away from the island,
+soon disappearing in the direction of the bar. The major's men had shot
+at it but without effect. When they had rushed to capture the fugitive
+who had shouted the warning, they found him prone upon the sand. There
+was not a scratch on him and yet he was quite dead. The prodigious
+exertion had broken his heart, ventured the major, and it had ceased to
+beat. His body would be prepared for Christian burial because of the
+esteem in which he was already held by many of the townspeople.
+
+To Jack Cockrell and Joe Hawkridge it was sad news indeed but
+tender-hearted Bill Saxby mourned like one who had lost a parent. He
+closed the shop for a day and hung black ribbons on the knob. They
+agreed that the end had come for Trimble Rogers as he would have wished
+it, giving his life in loyal service to a friend and master. And perhaps
+it was better thus than for the creeping disabilities of old age to
+overtake him.
+
+"He knew he was liable to pop off," said Bill, "with the rheumatism
+getting closer to his heart all the time. And he told me, did Trimble,
+that his share of the treasure was to go to the poor and needy of the
+town. Orphans and such was Trimble's weakness."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+THE QUEST FOR PIRATES' GOLD
+
+
+A SMALL sloop was making its leisurely way up the Carolina coast with a
+crew of a dozen men all told. The skipper was Captain Jonathan Wellsby
+who was taking this holiday cruise before sailing for England to command
+a fine new ship in the colonial trade. In the cabin were Jack Cockrell
+and Joe Hawkridge, Councilor Peter Arbuthnot Forbes, and that brisk
+young linen draper William Saxby. In the forecastle were trusty seamen
+who had sailed in the _Plymouth Adventure_. The sloop's destination was
+Cherokee Inlet and she was equipped with tackle and gear for a peculiar
+kind of fishing.
+
+For once they made a voyage without fear of pirates. Safely the sloop
+passed in by the outlying cay where the charred bones of Blackbeard's
+brig were washed by the surf. An anchorage was found in the bight where
+the _Revenge_ had tarried, close by the beach and the greensward of the
+pirates' old camp. After diligent preparation all hands manned a boat
+which pulled into the mouth of the sluggish creek. With axes to clear
+the entanglements and men enough to shove over the muddy shoals the
+boat was slowly forced up-stream and then into the smaller creek at the
+fork of the waters.
+
+Uncle Peter Forbes was as gay as a truant schoolboy. This was the lark
+of a lifetime. The two lads, however, were uneasy and depressed. To them
+this sombre region was haunted, if not by ghosts then by memories as
+unhappy. They would not have been surprised to see Blackbeard skulking
+in the tall grass, his head bound in red calico, his pistols cocked to
+ambush them. And, alas, old Trimble Rogers was not along to protect them
+with his musket. He had lived and dreamed in expectation of this quest.
+
+"We'll find no treasure, nary a penny of it," dolefully observed Joe
+Hawkridge who had actually begun to shiver.
+
+"Of course we can find the sea-chest, you ninny," scolded Jack.
+
+"Dead or alive, Cap'n Ed'ard Teach flew away with it afore now," was
+Joe's rejoinder. "He was a master one at black magic."
+
+"Don't chatter like an idiot," spoke up Uncle Peter who was wildly
+brushing the mosquitoes from a sun-blistered nose. "My faith, I cannot
+understand how you lads got out of this swamp alive. It breeds all the
+plagues of Egypt."
+
+They came to the tiny lagoon and rounded the bend beyond which the
+pirogue had capsized Blackbeard's cock-boat. There was nothing to
+indicate that any human being had visited this lonely spot since that
+sensational encounter. No trees had been cut down to serve as purchases
+for lifting the sea-chest from its oozy hiding-place. It was agreed that
+some traces would have remained if Blackbeard had been at work here
+before his death.
+
+A camp was made upon the higher ground of the knoll and the party went
+about its task with skill and deliberation. Jointed sounding rods of
+iron were screwed together and the exact position of the spot determined
+from Jack Cockrell's chart and description. But neither he nor Joe
+Hawkridge could be coaxed into lending more active assistance. They were
+afraid of disturbing the bones of the drowned seaman who had fled from
+Blackbeard's bloody dirk. Jack had seen him go down and it was not a
+pleasant recollection. And so these two heroes who had faced so many
+other perils without flinching were content to putter about
+half-heartedly and let the others exert themselves.
+
+All one day they prodded and sounded but struck only sunken logs. What
+gave them more concern than this was the discovery that the slender
+rods, sharpened to a point, could be driven through one yielding stratum
+after another of muck and ooze. Through myriad years the decaying
+vegetable matter of this rank swamp had been accumulating in these
+layers of muck. There was no telling how deep down the weight of the
+sea-chest might have caused it to settle.
+
+Mr. Peter Forbes began to lose his youthful optimism and took four men
+to go and dig in the knoll while the others continued to search for the
+chest. The wooden cross still stood above the grave of Jesse Strawn and
+the long-leaf pines murmured his requiem. Having selected at random a
+place where he thought treasure ought to be, the worthy Councilor
+wielded a shovel until he perspired rivers.
+
+"Confound it, Blackbeard must have left a scrap of paper somewhere to
+give us the proper instructions," he complained. "'Tis the custom of all
+proper pirates. Look at the trouble he has put us to."
+
+"I helped search the cabin afore the brig was set afire," replied one of
+the seamen, "and all the writin' we found was in the bit of a book with
+the leaves tore out, same as Cap'n Wellsby made a fair copy of."
+
+"That explains it," cried Uncle Peter. "I have no doubt the vile
+Blackbeard destroyed his private note of where he hid it, just to make
+the matter more difficult for us honest men."
+
+This was plausible, but it failed to solve the riddle. A day or two of
+impatient digging and the portly Secretary of the Council was almost
+wrecked in mind and body, what with insects and heat, ague and fatigue.
+The ardor of his companions had likewise slackened. The boat's crew
+swore that the condemned sea-chest must have sunk all the way to China.
+Joe Hawkridge still argued that Blackbeard had whisked it away in a
+cloud of smoke and brimstone. The unhappy Mr. Peter Forbes suggested:
+
+"What say you, lads, to dropping down to the sloop for a respite from
+this accursed swamp? There we can take comfort and discuss what is to be
+done next."
+
+Captain Jonathan Wellsby, who was a stubborn man, urged that they fish
+once more for the sunken chest before taking a rest, and this was agreed
+to. The sounding rods were plied with vigor and, at length, one of them
+drove against some solid object deep in the mud. It was more unyielding
+than a water-soaked log. The iron rod was lifted and rammed down with a
+thud which was like metal striking against metal. The explorers forgot
+the torments of the swamp. Uncle Peter Forbes was in no haste to flee
+the mosquitoes and the fever.
+
+The sailors began to rig the spars and tackle as a derrick set up on the
+bank of the creek, with grapple hooks like huge tongs to swing out over
+the water and grope in the muddy depths. Absorbed in this fascinating
+task, they were startled beyond measure to hear the _thump, thump_ of
+thole-pins sounding from somewhere below them in the swamp. It was no
+Indian pirogue. Only a ship's boat heavily manned could make that
+cadenced noise of oars. Bill Saxby bade the men be silent while he held
+a hand at his ear and harkened with taut attention. The mysterious boat,
+following the winding channel of the creek, was drawing nearer. Voices
+could be heard, a rough command, a curse, a laugh.
+
+"No honest men, I warrant," growled Captain Jonathan Wellsby, ready to
+take command by virtue of long habit. "Who else can they be but pirates,
+plague 'em. And they are betwixt us and the sea. All hands ashore and
+look to your arms. Lively now."
+
+They were bewildered and taken all aback. In this holiday excursion
+after Blackbeard's treasure the party had reckoned only with dead or
+phantom pirates. There was some confusion, while Bill Saxby bawled at
+the seamen as addle-pated lubbers. Deserting their boat, they scrambled
+to cover in the tall grass while those busy with the derrick gear rushed
+to catch up muskets and powder-horns.
+
+The strange boat was steadily forging up-stream and presently it was
+disclosed to view no more than a cable-length away. It was a pinnace
+filled with ruffianly fellows, more than a score of them. No merchant
+seamen these but brethren of the coast, freebooters who were
+gallows-ripe. Bill Saxby was quick to recognize two or three of them as
+old hands of Blackbeard's crew who must have deserted their leader in
+time to escape his fate. Presumably they had recruited others of their
+own stamp to go adventuring in the Cherokee swamp. They could have only
+one purpose. The very sight of them was enough to explain it. They were
+in quest of treasure like bloodhounds trailing a scent.
+
+Against such a force as this, discretion was the better part of valor. A
+ferocious yell burst from the pinnace and a flight of musket balls
+whistled over the heads of the fugitives who had so hastily abandoned
+their operations with the derrick and gear and the boat. Stout Bill
+Saxby and his comrades, finding concealment in the swamp, primed their
+muskets and let fly a volley at the pinnace which was an easy target. A
+pirate standing in the stern-sheets clapped a hand to his thigh and sat
+down abruptly. Another one let go his oar to dangle a bloody hand.
+
+The pinnace drifted with the tide and stranded on a weedy shoal while
+the blue powder smoke hung over it like a fog. For the moment it was a
+demoralized crew of pirates, roaring all manner of threats but at a loss
+how to proceed. The other party took advantage of this delay to beat a
+rapid retreat along the path which led to the knoll where the camp was
+pitched. Upon this higher ground they might hope to defend themselves
+against a force which outnumbered them. They ran at top speed, bending
+low, hidden from observation, avoiding the pools and bogs.
+
+The pirates were diverted from their hostile intentions as soon as they
+caught sight of the tall spars and tackle, and the boat with its
+sounding rods and other gear. With a great clamor they swarmed out of
+the pinnace and began to investigate. This gave the refugees on the
+knoll a little time to make their camp more compact, to wield the
+shovels furiously and throw up intrenchments, to cut down trees for a
+barricade, to fill the water kegs, to prepare to withstand an assault or
+a siege.
+
+The sun went down and the infatuated pirates were still exploring the
+creek, convinced that they could straightway lay hold of the treasure
+they had come to find. They kindled a fire on the bank and evidently
+intended to pass the night there. This mightily eased the minds of the
+toilers upon the knoll. Their predicament was still awkward in the
+extreme but the fear of sudden death had been lifted. And it seemed
+possible that these bothersome pirates might conclude to leave them
+alone.
+
+It went sorely against the grain, however, to be driven away from the
+precious sea-chest when it was almost within their grasp, to have to
+scuttle from this crew of scurvy pirates. Jack Cockrell was for making a
+sortie by night, gustily declaiming to his companions:
+
+"The sentries will be drunk or drowsy. I know these swine. A well-timed
+rush and we can cut 'em down and pistol the rest. Didn't they open fire
+on us from the pinnace?"
+
+"Aye, Jack, and we'll fight to save our skins," said the cool-headed
+Captain Wellsby, "but 'tis a desperate business to attack yon
+cut-throats, even by night, and there will be men of us hurt and killed.
+Blackbeard's gold is not worth it."
+
+"Right sensibly put," declared Mr. Peter Forbes. "We had best spend this
+night in felling more trees and notching logs to pile them breast high.
+If these pirates find the sea-chest, they will leave us unmolested. If
+they fail to find it, they may conclude that we have already discovered
+the treasure. In that event, they will storm the knoll and give us no
+quarter."
+
+"It would be rank folly to surrender," said stout Bill Saxby. "There be
+men in the pinnace who have no love for me nor for the two lads. 'Twas a
+shrewd suspicion of theirs that Blackbeard had played secret tricks in
+this Cherokee swamp, what with his excursions in that little cock-boat."
+
+Keeping vigilant watch, they labored far into the night until the camp
+on the knoll was a hard nut to crack, with its surrounding ditch and
+palisade of logs behind which a man could lie and shoot. Now and then it
+might have been noted that Jack Cockrell and Joe Hawkridge conferred
+with their heads together as though something private were in the wind.
+As soon as they were relieved from duty, some time before the dawn, they
+stole very softly away from the knoll and groped along the path which
+led to the creek. Curiosity and the impetuous folly of youth impelled
+them to reconnoitre the pirates' bivouac.
+
+"We may hear something worth listening to," whispered Jack, "and perhaps
+we can crawl close and steal some of their arms."
+
+"None of that," chided young Hawkridge. "I am a man of goodly station in
+Charles Town and I would go back with a whole hide."
+
+"You have grown too respectable," grumbled Jack. "Here is the chance for
+one last fling----"
+
+His words stuck in his throat. A gurgle of horrified amazement and he
+tumbled headlong into the grass with a bare, sinewy arm wrapped around
+his neck. He fought to free himself but the breath was fairly choked out
+of him. Joe Hawkridge was desperately thrashing about in the swamp,
+gasping and snorting, his cries also smothered. In a twinkling they were
+captives, their arms tightly bound behind them, the stifling grip of
+their necks unrelaxed. Weakened almost to suffocation, the two lads
+could make no lively resistance. Jack uttered one feeble shout for help
+but subsided when those strong fingers tightened the clutch on his
+windpipe.
+
+The assailants made no sound. Not a word was uttered. There were several
+of them, for the helpless prisoners were picked up bodily and lugged
+along by the head and the heels. They expected to be taken into the
+pirates' camp, believing they had been surprised and overpowered by an
+outlying sentry post. It was an old game, reflected Joe Hawkridge, to
+hold them alive as hostages. But he was vastly puzzled when these silent
+kidnappers, deftly picking their way in the darkness, took a direction
+which led them away from the bank of the creek. They had forsaken the
+trampled path and were proceeding through the trackless swamp whose
+pitfalls were avoided by a sort of sixth sense.
+
+A mile of this laborious, uncanny progress and the bearers dumped their
+burdens and paused to rest. The two lads dizzily crawled to their feet
+and peered at the shadowy figures surrounding them. They heard a
+guttural exclamation and words exchanged in a strange, harsh tongue.
+
+"Indians, blow me!" hoarsely whispered Joe, his throat sore and swollen.
+
+"Comrade ahoy!" croaked Jack. "No pirates these, but Yemassees. Do they
+save us for the torture?"
+
+"God knows. 'Tis a sorry mischance as ever was. I'd sooner meet up with
+Blackbeard's ghost. Are ye badly hurt?"
+
+"Like a man hanged by the neck, Joe, but no mortal wounds. Had we minded
+Uncle Peter we would be safe in the sloop by now. One more day of
+hunting that filthy treasure undid us."
+
+The half dozen Yemassees squatted about them, talking in low tones, and
+offered no further violence. Presumably they were waiting for daybreak,
+having conveyed their prisoners beyond all chance of rescue. The two
+lads shivered with fear and weariness. They were bruised and breathless
+and the thongs which tightly bound their wrists made their arms ache
+intolerably. Bitter was the regret at invading this baleful Cherokee
+swamp when they might have remained safe from all harm in pleasant
+Charles Town.
+
+Sadly they watched the eastern sky grow brighter while the gloom of the
+desolate swamp turned wan and gray. The Indian captors became visible,
+brown, half-naked men wearing leggings and breech-clouts of tanned
+deerskin. Two of them carried muskets. They were not made hideous by
+war-paint, as Jack Cockrell was quick to note. He said to his companion:
+
+"A hunting party, Joe. They were spying on our camp, like enough, or
+keeping watch of the pirates. No doubt they wonder why white men come to
+fight one another in the swamp."
+
+"They will wish to find out from us," was the hopeful reply. "They seem
+a deal more curious than bloodthirsty. A stout heart, say I, and we may
+weather it yet."
+
+Soon the lads were roughly prodded ahead and went stumbling and
+splashing through the marshy verdure and slippery ooze until they came
+to higher ground and easier walking. Upon this ridge they descried the
+camp of the Yemassees--huts fashioned of poles and bark and boughs, a
+freshly killed deer hanging from a tree, smoke rising from beneath a
+huge iron kettle, plump, naked children scampering in play with several
+barking dogs, the squaws shrilly scolding them. Several warriors lazily
+emerged from the huts, yawning, brushing the long black hair from their
+eyes.
+
+They moved more actively at perceiving the procession which approached
+from the swamp. Two or three ran back to the largest shelter and
+presently a big-bodied, middle-aged man strode out, his mien stern and
+dignified, his rank denoted by the elaborate fringed tunic of buckskin
+and the head-dress of heron plumes. He shouted something in a sonorous
+voice. The hunting party hastened forward, dragging the two English lads
+by the elbows and flinging them down at the feet of the chief. He stood
+with arms folded across his chest, scowling, formidable.
+
+Then he spoke a few words of broken English, to the astonishment of the
+captives. He mentioned the names of settlements on the Cape Fear River
+where, it was inferred, he had been on friendly terms with the
+colonists. His manner was not so much hostile as questioning. In Charles
+Town both Joe and Jack had learned the common phrases of the Indian
+tongue such as were used among the merchants and traders. Pieced out
+with signs and gestures, they were able to carry on a halting dialogue
+with the chief of this small band.
+
+They were able to comprehend that he hated pirates above all other men.
+He recognized the name of Blackbeard and indicated his great joy that
+this eminent scoundrel had met his just deserts. Many times the
+freebooters of the coast had hunted and slain the Indians for wanton
+sport. And perhaps the word had sped of that expedition of Captain Stede
+Bonnet out of Charles Town when he had exterminated the Yemassees who
+had set out to harry and burn the near-by plantations. The two uneasy
+lads felt that they still stood in the shadow of death unless they could
+persuade the chief that they were not pirates, that they were in no way
+to be confused with the crew of blackguards which had ascended the creek
+in the pinnace.
+
+The chief delayed his judgment. Two young men lifted the huge kettle
+from the fire. It was steaming with a savory smell of stewed meat. The
+captives were invited to join the others in spearing bits of venison
+with sharpened sticks. Chewing lustily, with a noble appetite, Joe
+Hawkridge confided:
+
+"My spirits rise, Jack. An empty belly always did make a coward of me.
+How now, my lusty cockerel? Shall we flap our wings and crow?"
+
+"Crow we must, or have our necks wrung as pirates," said Jack, gnawing a
+bone. "Which one of us shall make the first oration?"
+
+"The nephew of the Councilor, of course," cried Joe, "with his cargo of
+Greek and Latin education. Make a power of noise, Jack."
+
+And now indeed did young Master Cockrell prove that all those drudging
+hours with snuffy Parson Throckmorton had not been wasted. Standing in
+an open space, clear of the crowd, he addressed the chief in loud and
+impressive language. The gist of it was that he and his friends were the
+sworn foes of all pirates and especially anxious to rid the world of
+such vermin as those that had come into the Cherokee swamp in the great
+ship's boat and were encamped on the bank of the creek.
+
+This other peaceful party entrenched on the knoll were honest,
+law-abiding men of Charles Town who would harm no one. They had come in
+search of pirates' gold. If the chief of the Yemassees would join forces
+with them and smoke the pipe of peace, they would drive those foul
+pirates out of the Cherokee swamp. And should the gold be found, it
+would be fairly divided between the godly men of Charles Town and their
+Indian allies. To bind this bargain Master Cockrell and Master Hawkridge
+were ready to pledge their honor and their lives.
+
+It was a most eloquent effort delivered with much gesticulation. The
+Yemassee braves set in a circle and grunted approval. They liked the
+sound and fury of it. Jack hurled scraps of Homer and Virgil at them
+when at a loss for resounding periods. The chief nodded his
+understanding of such words as _pirates_ and _gold_ and actually smiled
+when Jack's pantomime depicted the death of Blackbeard on the deck of
+his ship. _Gold_ was a magic word to these Indians. It would purchase
+muskets and powder and ball, cloth and ironmongery and strong liquors
+from the white men of the settlements.
+
+The chief discussed it with his followers. During the lull Joe
+Hawkridge said, with a long sigh of relief:
+
+"My scalp itches not so much, Jack. The notion of having it twisted off
+with a dull blade vexed me. Ye did wondrous well. The mouth of Secretary
+Peter Forbes would ha' gaped wide open."
+
+"Much sound and little sense, Joe, but methinks it hit the target. I
+took care to sprinkle it with such words as yonder savage could bite
+on."
+
+"If we find no gold, the fat may be in the fire again, but it gives us
+time to draw breath."
+
+They rubbed their chafed wrists and sat on the ground while the savages
+held a long pow-wow. The chief was explaining the purport of Master
+Cockrell's impressive declamation. There was no enmity in the glances
+aimed at the English lads. It was more a matter of deliberation, of
+passing judgment on the truth or the falsity of the story. It was plain
+to read that the Yemassees desired to lay greedy hold of Blackbeard's
+gold. They were like children listening to a fairy tale. The fat little
+papooses crawled timidly near to inspect the mysterious strangers and
+scrambled away squealing with delicious terror.
+
+The hours passed and the verdict was delayed. Two young braves stole
+away into the pine woodland on some errand, at the behest of the chief.
+It was after noon when they returned. With them came a dozen Yemassee
+warriors from another hunting camp, strong, quick-footed men in light
+marching order who were armed with long bows and knives. The chief spoke
+a few words and mustered his force. All told he had more than thirty
+picked followers. The English lads were told to move with them.
+
+In single file the band flitted silently along the ridge and plunged
+into the swamp. The prisoners were closely guarded. At the slightest
+sign of treachery the long knives would slither between their ribs. This
+they well knew and their devout prayer was that their friends on the
+knoll might not commit some rash act of hostility and so ruin the
+enterprise. With heart-quaking trepidation they perceived at some
+distance the rude barricade of logs and the yellow streaks of earth
+hastily thrown up.
+
+The cautious Yemassees concealed themselves as though the swamp had
+swallowed them up. The chief made certain signs, and the lads understood
+his meaning. Jack Cockrell ripped a sleeve from his shirt and tied it to
+a stick as a flag of truce. Joe Hawkridge advanced with them, the
+stalwart chief between them, his empty hands extended in token of peace.
+The ambushed Yemassees, lying in the tall grass, were ready to let fly
+with musket balls and flights of arrows or to storm the knoll.
+
+A sailor on sentry duty gave the alarm and the lads saw a row of heads
+bob above the logs, and the gleam of weapons. Then Captain Jonathan
+Wellsby moved out into the open and was joined by Mr. Peter Forbes.
+They stood gazing at the singular spectacle, the bedraggled runaways who
+had vanished without trace, the odd flag of truce, the brawny, dignified
+savage making signs of friendship. The men in the stockade were ordered
+to lay down their arms. They came running out to cheer and wave their
+hats.
+
+Mr. Peter Forbes was torn betwixt affection and the desire to scold his
+flighty nephew. They met half-way down the slope and Jack hastened to
+explain:
+
+"Before you clap us in irons as deserters, Uncle Peter, grant a parley,
+if you please. Our lives hang by a hair."
+
+"God bless me, boy, we thought the pirates had slain you both,"
+spluttered Uncle Peter, a tear in his eye. "What means this tall
+savage?"
+
+"A noble chief of the Yemassees who used us with all courtesy," said
+Jack.
+
+Captain Wellsby had drawn Joe Hawkridge aside and was swiftly
+enlightened concerning the alliance with the Indians. Presently they
+were holding a conference, all seated together in the shade of a tree. A
+tobacco pipe of clay, with a long reed for a stem, was lighted and
+passed from hand to hand. The chief puffed solemnly with an occasional
+nod and a grunt. It was agreed, with due ceremony, that the pirates
+should be attacked in their camp and driven away. The Yemassee warriors
+would make common cause with the Englishmen. As a reward, Blackbeard's
+treasure was to be fairly divided, half and half.
+
+The chief raised his voice in a long, deep shout of summons and his band
+of fighting men emerged from their ambush in the swamp. There was no
+reason for delaying the movement against the pirates. The Yemassees were
+eager for the fray. They were about to advance through the swamp,
+cunningly hidden, while the Englishmen followed at a slower pace to
+spread out on the flanks. Just then there was heard a sudden and riotous
+commotion among the pirates at the creek. It was a mad, jubilant uproar
+as though some frenzy had seized them all. Bill Saxby leaned on his
+musket and listened for a long moment.
+
+"The rogues have fished up the sea-chest, by the din they make," said
+he. "We left that sounding rod a-stickin' in the mud. They save us the
+trouble, eh, Captain Wellsby?"
+
+The skipper laughed in his beard and floundered ahead like a bear. Jack
+Cockrell passed the word to the chief that the gold was awaiting them.
+Like shadows the Yemassees drew near the creek and then, full-lunged,
+terrific, their war-whoop echoed through the dismal Cherokee swamp.
+Nimble Jack Cockrell was not far behind them, his heart pumping as
+though it would burst.
+
+He was in time to see four lusty pirates swaying at a rope which led
+through the pulley-blocks of the spars that overhung the creek as a
+tall derrick. They were hoisting away with all their might while there
+slowly rose in air a mud-covered, befouled sea-chest all hung with weeds
+and slimy refuse. Two other pirates tailed on to a guy rope and the
+heavy chest swung toward the bank, suspended in air.
+
+At this moment the screeching chorus of the Indian war-whoop smote their
+affrighted ears, followed by the discharge of muskets. These startled
+pirates let go the tackle and the guy rope and, with one accord, leaped
+for the pinnace which floated close to the bank. The weighty sea-chest
+swinging in air came down by the run as the ropes smoked through the
+blocks. It had been swayed in far enough so that it fell not in the
+water but upon the edge of the shore between the derrick spars. The
+rusty hinges and straps were burst asunder as the treasure chest crashed
+upon a log and cracked open like an egg.
+
+Out spilled a stream of doubloons and pieces of eight, a cascade of gold
+and silver bars, of jewels flowing from the rotten bags which had
+contained them. In this extraordinary manner was the hoard of the
+departed Blackbeard brought to light. The unfortunate pirates who had
+found the spoils tarried not to gloat and rejoice. They appeared to have
+urgent business elsewhere. In hot pursuit came the ravening Yemassees,
+yelling like fiends, assisted by the reinforcements of Captain Jonathan
+Wellsby.
+
+What saved the lives of these panic-smitten pirates was the dramatic
+explosion of that great treasure chest when it fell and smashed upon the
+log. Indians and Englishmen alike forgot their intent to shoot and
+slaughter. They rushed to surround the bewitching booty, to cut capers
+like excited urchins.
+
+"Share and share," roared Captain Wellsby, shoving them headlong. "Half
+to the Yemassees and half to us. Our word is given. Stand back, ye
+lunatics, while we do the thing with order and decency."
+
+Already the pinnace was filled with cursing pirates who saw that the
+game was lost. Some of them had left their weapons in camp, others fired
+a few wild shots, but those who had any wit left were tugging at the
+oars to make for the open sea.
+
+"After 'em," roared Bill Saxby. "Follow down the creek to make sure they
+do not molest our sloop."
+
+A score of men, Indians included, jumped into the boat and pulled in
+chase, no longer on slaughter bent. The only thought in their heads was
+to despatch the errand and return to squat around the treasure chest.
+Jack Cockrell and Joe Hawkridge remained to help scoop up the coin and
+jewels and stow them in stout kegs and sacks. The stoical chief of the
+Yemassees was grinning from ear to ear as he grunted:
+
+"_Plenty gold. Good! Hurrah, boys!_"
+
+Arm-in-arm Jack Cockrell and Joe Hawkridge danced a sailor's hornpipe
+upon the splintered lid of Blackbeard's sea-chest while they sang with
+all their might:
+
+ "For his work he's never loth,
+ An' a-pleasurin' he'll go,
+ Tho' certain sure to be popt off,
+ _Yo, ho, with the rum below._"
+
+
+THE END
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+Obvious punctuation errors repaired.
+
+Page 34, "Steve" changed to "Stede" (Stede Bonnet frowned)
+
+Page 77, "than" changed to "them" (rally them for attack)
+
+Page 85, "arsensal" changed to "arsenal" (arsenal of himself)
+
+Page 306, "Yemasses" changed to "Yemassees" (The Yemassees were eager)
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Blackbeard: Buccaneer, by Ralph D. Paine
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