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One of the men grunted. The skipper turned his black but glowing regard upon him. Another cursed harshly and withdrew a step from the table. The skipper jumped to his feet.
"Who says nay?" he roared. "Who gives the lie to my word? I bes skipper here--aye, an' more nor skipper! Would ye have one gold guinea amongst the whole crew o' ye, but for me? Would ye have a bite o' food in yer bellies, but for me? An' now yer bellies bes full an' yer pockets bes full, an' ye stand there an' say nay to my aye!"
He pulled two pistols from beneath his coat, c.o.c.ked them deliberately and stared insolently and inquiringly around.
"What d'ye say to it, Bill Brennen?" he asked.
Bill Brennen shuffled his big feet uneasily, and eyed the pistols askance.
"Thank ye kindly, skipper. Ye speaks the truth," said he.
"An' ye, Nick Leary?"
"Ye bes skipper here, sure--aye, and more nor skipper. But for ye we'd all be starved to death wid hunger an' cold," said Nick.
"An' what says the rest o' ye? Who denies me the right to four shares o'
the money?"
"Me, Dennis Nolan!" said d.i.c.k Lynch. "I denies ye the right."
"Step up an' say it to my face," cried the skipper.
"Aye, step up an' give it to him straight," said one of the men. "Step up, d.i.c.k, I bes wid ye."
"Who said that?" roared the skipper.
"Sure, 'twas me said it," growled one, Dan Keen.
"Be there four o' ye denies me the right to the money in me pocket?"
asked the skipper.
"Aye, there bes four o' us."
"Then step out, the four o' ye."
d.i.c.k Lynch, Dan Keen and two others shuffled to the front of the group.
Black Dennis Nolan looked them over with fury in his eyes and a sneer on his lips. He called up Bill Brennen and Nick Leary, and gave a pistol to each of them, and exchanged a few guarded words with them.
"d.i.c.k Lynch, Dan Keen, Corny Quinn an' Pat Lynch, stand where ye be," he said. "Ease back along the wall, the rest o' ye. I'll larn ye who bes skipper an' master o' this harbor! I'll larn ye if I bes as good as the four o' ye or not."
He slipped off his coat, with the weight of coined gold in the pockets of it, stepped swiftly around the end of the table and sprang furiously upon the four men who had denied his right to four shares of the loot.
"I'll larn ye!" he roared.
Three of them, all husky fellows, stood their ground; but the fourth turned and dashed clear of the field of instruction. He was a small man, was Corny Quinn, and lacked the courage of his convictions.
The skipper struck the group of three with both feet off the ground.
They staggered, clutched at him, aimed blows and curses at him. A terrible kick delivered by Dan Keen missed its intended object and brought Pat Lynch writhing to the floor, and before Dan fully realized his mistake something as hard as the side of a house struck him on the jaw and laid him across the victim of his error. d.i.c.k Lynch was more fortunate than his fellow-mutineers--for half a minute. He closed with the furious skipper and clung tightly to him, thus avoiding punishment for the moment. The two were well matched in height and weight; but the skipper was the stronger in both body and heart. Also, he seemed now to be possessed of the nerve-strength of a madman. He lifted his clinging antagonist clear of the floor, shook him and wrenched at him, and at last broke his hold and flung him against the wall. d.i.c.k landed on his feet, steadied himself for a moment and then dashed back to the encounter; but he was met by the skipper's fist--and that was the end of the fight.
Black Dennis Nolan returned to the table and sat down behind the smoky lamp. There was a red spot on his forehead from a chance blow, and the knuckles of both big hands were raw. He breathed heavily for a full minute, and glared around him in silence.
"Pick 'em up," he said, at last. "The lesson I larned 'em seems to lay cold on their bellies. Give 'em rum, Burky Nolan--ye'll find a case of bottles behind the stove. Drink up, all o' ye. T'row some water in their faces, too."
His orders were promptly obeyed. He took the pistols from Bill Brennen and Nick Leary, and laid them on the table, and then picked up his coat and put it on.
"Now, men, maybe ye know who bes master of this harbor," he said. "If any one o' ye, or any four o' ye, bain't sure, say the word an' I'll pull off me coat again an' show ye. Well now, we'll git back to business. The jewels bes still hid in the swamp. They bain't no manner o' use to us till we sells 'em. I'll do that, men, bit by bit, in St.
John's. The grub an' liquor we took bes all in the pit under this floor. Ye kin come every day an' tote away what ye wants of it. The wines and brandy bes for them who has sick folks an' old folks to feed.
Lift the trap, Bill, an' let them help theirselves."
Bill Brennen stooped and hoisted a trap-door in the middle of the floor.
The skipper left the table, lamp in hand.
"Help yourselves, men," he invited. "Take whatever ye fancies."
They came up meekly. Even the three who had so lately been disabled obeyed the invitation, leaning upon their companions. The water and rum had revived them physically, but their spirits were thoroughly cowed.
The skipper held the lamp over the square hole in the floor.
"Two at a time, men," he cautioned. "Bill, light a candle an' pa.s.s it down to 'em."
Half an hour later the store was empty, save for the skipper and the inanimate gear. The blankets had been removed from the windows, and the lamp extinguished. The skipper sat beside the deal table from which he had distributed the gold, staring thoughtfully at his raw knuckles. The pistols still lay on the table. He pushed them to one side, scooped the gold from his pockets, spread it out and counted it slowly and awkwardly. Then he produced a canvas bag, stowed the gold away in it and tied the mouth of it securely.
"A rough crew," he muttered. "They needs rough handlin', most o' the time, an' then a mite o' humorin' like ye t'row fish to a team o' dogs after ye lash the hair off 'em. Aye, a rough crew, an' no mistake--but Black Dennis Nolan bes their master!"
He left his chair, stepped across the floor, and lifted the trap that led to the cellar. He descended, returning in a minute with a bottle of wine and two tins of potted meat.
"I'm t'inkin' it bes about time to t'row some fish to that dog Jack Quinn," he murmured.
He went out, leaving the bag of gold on the table, and locked the door behind him. Though he left the gold he did not leave the pistols. Under his arm he carried the wine and the tinned meat. He went straight to Foxey Jack Quinn's cabin, and entered without knocking on the door.
Quinn was sitting by the little stove with his head untidily bandaged.
One pale, undamaged eye glared fiercely from the bandages. The woman was seated close to the only window, sewing, and the children were playing on the floor. All movement was arrested on the instant of the skipper's entrance. The children crouched motionless and the woman's needle stuck idle in the cloth. Quinn sat like an image of wood, showing life only in that one glaring, pale eye.
"How bes ye feelin' now, Jack?" asked the visitor.
The hulking fellow by the stove did not speak, but the hand that held his pipe twitched ever so slightly.
"Orders be orders," continued the skipper. "The lads who obeys me fills their pockets wid gold--an' them who don't get hurt. But I bain't a hard man, Jack Quinn. Ye did yer best to heave me over the edge o' the cliff--an' most would have killed ye for that. Here bes wine an' meat for ye an' the wife an' children."
He laid the bottle and tins on a stool near the woman. Quinn's glance did not waver, and not a word pa.s.sed his swollen lips; but his wife s.n.a.t.c.hed up one of the tins of meat.
"The saints be praised!" she cried. "We bes nigh starvin' to deat' wid hunger!"
"'Twas me give it to ye, not the saints," said Black Dennis Nolan, "an'
there bes more for ye where it come from."
He turned and went out of the cabin.
"I'll fix him yet," mumbled Foxey Jack Quinn.
The woman gave no heed to the remark, for she had already opened one of the tins of choice meat and was feeding the children from her fingers.