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"Another word, and I fire," shouted the voice of the brute.
But the rifle that never missed its mark spoke again. Tobias's arm fell shattered, and he staggered away screaming. Still once more, Charlie Webster's gun spoke, and the staggering figure fell with a crash on the deck.
"Now, boys, ready," I heard Charlie's voice roar out again, as the sloop tore alongside the schooner--where the rest of the negro crew with raised arms had fallen on their knees, crying for mercy.
All this I saw from the water, as I swam wildly toward the two boats, which now had closed on each other, a ma.s.s of thundering canvas, and screaming and cursing men--and Calypso there, like a beautiful statue, still lashed to the mast, a proud smile on her lovely lips.
Another moment, and Charlie had sprung aboard, and, seizing a knife from one of the screaming negroes, he cut her free.
His deep calm voice came to me over the water.
"That's what I call courage," he said. "I could never have done it."
The "King" had been right. He knew his daughter.
By this I was nearing the boats, though as yet no one had seen me. They were all too busy with the confusion on deck, where four men lay dead, and three others still kept up their gibberish of fear.
I saw Calypso and Charlie Webster stand a moment looking down at the figure of Tobias, prostrate at their feet.
"I am sorry I had to kill him," I heard Charlie's deep growl. "I meant to keep him for the hangman."
But suddenly I saw him start forward and stamp heavily on something.
"No, you don't," I heard him roar--and I learned afterward that Tobias, though mortally wounded, was not yet dead, and that, as the two had stood looking down on him, they had seen his hand furtively moving toward the fallen revolver that lay a few inches from him on the deck.
Just as he had grasped it, Charlie's heavy boot had come down on his wrist. But Tobias was still game.
"Not alive, you English brute!" he was heard to groan out, and, s.n.a.t.c.hing free his wrist too swiftly to be prevented, he had gathered up all his remaining strength, and hurled himself over the side into the sea.
I was but a dozen yards away from him, as he fell; and, as he rose again, it was for his dying eyes to fix with a glare upon me. They dilated with terror, as though he had seen a ghost. Then he gave one strange scream, and fell back into the sea, and we saw him no more.
It will be easier for the reader to imagine, than for me to describe, the look on the faces of Calypso and Charlie Webster when they saw me appear at almost the same spot where poor Tobias had just gone bubbling down. Words I had none, for I was at the end of my strength, and I broke down and sobbed like a child.
"Thank G.o.d you are safe--my treasure, my treasure!" was all I could say, after they had lifted me aboard, and I lay face down on the deck, at her feet. Swiftly she knelt by my side, and caressed my shoulder with her dear hand.
All of which--particularly my reference to "my treasure"--must have been much to the bewilderment of the good simple-hearted Charlie, towering, innocent-eyed, above us. I believe I stayed a little longer at her feet than I really had need to, for the comfort of her being so near and kind; but, presently, we were all aroused by a voice from the cliffs above. It was the "King," with his bodyguard, Erebus and the crew of the _Flamingo_--no Samson, alas! The sound of the firing had reached them in the woods, and they had come hurrying to discover its cause.
So we deferred asking our questions, and telling our several stories, till we were pulled ash.o.r.e.
As Calypso was folded in her father's arms, he turned to me:
"Didn't I tell you that I knew my daughter?" he said.
"And I told you something too, O King," I replied--my eyes daring at last to rest on Calypso with the love and pride of my heart.
"And where on earth have _you_ been, young man?" he asked, laughing.
"Did Tobias kidnap you too?"
It was very hard, as you will have seen, to astonish the "King."
CHAPTER XVIII
_Gathering Up the Threads._
But, though it was hard to astonish and almost impossible to alarm the "King," his sense of wonder was quite another matter, and the boyish delight with which he listened to our several stories would have made it worth while to undergo tenfold the perils we had faced. And the best of it was that we each had a new audience in the others--for none of us knew what had happened to the rest, and how it chanced that we should all come to meet at that moment of crisis on the sea. Our stories, said the "King," were quite in the manner of "The Arabian Nights,"
dovetailing one into the other.
"And now," he added, "we will begin with the Story of the Murdered Slave and the Stolen Lady."
Calypso told her story simply and in a few words. The first part of it, of which the poor murdered Samson had been the eloquent witness, needed no further telling. He had done his brave best--poor fellow--but Tobias had had six men with him, and it was soon over. Her they had gagged and bound and carried in a sort of improvised sedan-chair; Tobias had done the thing with a certain style and--she had to admit--with absolute courtesy.
When they had gone a mile or two from the house, he had had the gag taken from her mouth, and, on her promise not to attempt to escape (which was, of course, quite impossible) he had also had her unbound, so that her hurried journey through the woods was made as comfortable as possible. Certainly it had not been without its spice of romance, for four of the men had carried lanterns, and their progress must have had a very picturesque effect lighting up the blackness of the strange trees.
Tobias had walked at her side the whole way, without speaking a word.
They were making, she had gathered--and as we had surmised--for the northern sh.o.r.e, and, after about a three hours' march, she heard the sound of the sea. On the schooner she had found a cabin all nicely prepared for her--even dainty toilet necessaries--and an excellent dinner was served, on some quite pretty china, to her alone. Poor Tobias had seemed bent on showing--as he had said to Tom--that he was not the "carrion" we had thought him.
After dinner, Tobias had respectfully asked leave for a few words with her. He had apologised for his action, but explained that it was necessary--the only way he had left, he said, of protecting his own interests, and safeguarding a treasure which belonged to him and no one else, if it belonged to any living man. It had seemed to her that it was a monomania with him. His eyes had gleamed so, as he spoke of it, that she had felt a little frightened for the first time--for he seemed like a madman on the subject.
While he had been talking, she had made up her mind what she would do.
She would tell him the plain truth about her doubloons, and offer him what remained of them as a ransom. This she did, and was able at last half to persuade him that, so far as any one knew, that was all the treasure there was, and that the digging among the ruins of the old house was a mere fancy of her father's. There might be something there or not--and she went so far as to give her word of honour that, if anything was found, he should have his share of it.
It was rather a woman's way, she admitted, but she thought that, so long as she kept Tobias near the island, some favouring incident might happen at any moment--that the proffered ransom, in fact, might prove the bait to a trap.
Tobias had seemed impressed, and promised his answer in the morning, leaving her to sleep--with a sentry at her cabin door. She had slept soundly, and wakened only at dawn. As soon as she was up, Tobias had come to her, saying that he had accepted her offer, and asking her to direct him to her treasure.
This she had done, and, to avoid pa.s.sing the settlement, they had taken the course round the eastern end of the island. As they had approached the cave (and here Calypso turned a quizzical smile on me, which no one, of course, understood but ourselves), a sloop was seen approaching them from the westward ... and here she stopped and turned to Charlie Webster.
"Now," said the "King," "we shall hear the Story of Apollo--or, let us say, rather Ajax--the Far-Darter--He of the Arrow that never missed its mark."
And Charlie Webster, more at home with deeds than words, blushed and blushed through his part of the story, telling how--having called at the settlement--he had got our message from Sweeney, and was making up the coast for the hidden creek. He had spied what he felt sure was Tobias's schooner--had called on him "In the King's Name" to surrender--("I had in my pocket the warrant for his arrest," said Charlie, with innocent pride--"the d----d scoundrel") but had been answered with bullets. He had been terribly frightened, he owned, when Calypso had been brought on deck, but she had given him courage--he paused to beam on her, a broad-faced admiration, for which he could find no words--and, as he had never yet missed a flying duck at--I forget how many yards Charlie mentioned--well ... perhaps he oughtn't to have risked it--And so his story came to an end, amid rea.s.suring applause.
"Now," said the "King," "for the Story of the Disappearing Gentleman and the Lighted Lantern."
And then I told my story as it is already known to the reader, and I have to confess that, when I came to the chestful of doubloons and pieces of eight, I had a very attentive audience. But, at first, the "King" shook his head with an amused smile.
"Ulysses is romancing for the benefit of my romantic second childhood,"
he said, and then, after his favourite manner he added--
"I might not this believe Without the sensible and true avouch of mine own eyes ..."
Then, he was for starting off that very night. But, reminded of the difficult seclusion in which the treasure still lay, he was persuaded to wait till the morrow.
"At dawn then," he said, "to-morrow--'what time, the rosy-footed dawn'