Tropical was a mild expression of what was to come, as was
shortly proved. It was about three bells in the next day's
forenoon watch when the look-out man first sighted the
piratebrigantine. I disliked the looks of her from the first, and,
after piping all hands to quarters, had the brass carronade on
the fore-deck crammed with grape to the muzzle.
This proved a wise
precaution. For the flagitious
pirate craft,
having crept up to us under the colours of the Swiss Republic, a
state with which we were just then on the best possible terms,
suddenly shook out the skull-and-cross-bones at her masthead, and
let fly with round-shot at close quarters, knocking into pieces
several of my crew, who could ill be spared. The sight of
their disconnected limbs aroused my ire to its
utmostheight, and
I let them have the
contents of the brass carronade, with ghastly
effect. Next moment the hulls of the two ships were grinding
together, the cold steel flashed from its scabbard, and the
death-grapple had begun.
In spite of the
deadly work of my grape-gorged carronade, our foe
still outnumbered us, I reckoned, by three to one. Honour
forbade my fixing it at a lower figure--this was the
minimum rate
at which one dared to do business with
pirates. They were stark
veterans, too, every man seamed with ancient sabre-cuts, whereas
my crew had many of them hardly attained the
maturity which is
the gift of ten long summers--and the whole thing was so sudden
that I had no time to
invent a reinforcement of riper years. It
was not
surprising,
therefore, that my
dauntless boarding-
party, axe in hand and cutlass between teeth, fought their way to
the
pirates' deck only to be repulsed again and yet again, and
that our planks were soon
slippery with our own ungrudged and
inexhaustible blood. At this
critical point in the
conflict, the
bo'sun, grasping me by the arm, drew my attention to a
magnificent British man-of-war, just hove to in the offing, while
the signalman, his glass at his eye, reported that she was
inquiring whether we wanted any
assistance or preferred to go
through with the little job ourselves.
This veiled attempt to share our laurels with us,
courteously as
it was worded, put me on my mettle. Wiping the blood out of my
eyes, I ordered the signalman to reply
instantly, with the half-
dozen or so of flags that he had at his
disposal, that much as we
appreciated the
valour of the regular service, and the delicacy
of spirit that
animated its commanders, still this was an
orthodox case of the young gentleman-adventurer versus the
unshaved
pirate, and Her Majesty's Marine had nothing to do but
to form the usual admiring and applauding
background. Then,
rallying round me the
remnant of my
faithful crew, I selected a
fresh cutlass (I had worn out three already) and plunged once
more into the
pleasing carnage.
The result was not long
doubtful. Indeed, I could not allow it
to be, as I was already getting somewhat bored with the
piratebusiness, and was
wanting to get on to something more southern
and sensuous. All serious
resistance came to an end as soon as I
had reached the quarter-deck and cut down the
pirate chief--a
fine black-bearded fellow in his way, but hardly up to date in
his parry-and-thrust business. Those whom our cutlasses had
spared were marched out along their own plank, in the
approved old fashion; and in time the scuppers relieved the decks
of the blood that made
traffictemporarily impossible. And all
the time the British-man-of-war admired and applauded in the
offing.
As soon as we had got through with the necessary throat-cutting
and swabbing-up all hands set to work to discover treasure; and
soon the deck shone
bravely with ingots and Mexican dollars and
church plate. There were ropes of pearls, too, and big stacks of
nougat; and rubies, and gold watches, and Turkish Delight in
tubs. But I left these trifles to my crew, and continued the
search alone. For by this time I had determined that there
should be a Princess on board, carried off to be sold in
captivity to the bold bad Moors, and now with
beating heart
awaiting her
rescue by me, the Perseus of her dreams.
I came upon her at last in the big state-cabin in the stern; and
she wore a
holland pinafore over her Princess-clothes, and
she had brown wavy hair,
hanging down her back, just like--well,
never mind, she had brown wavy hair. When gentle-folk meet,
courtesies pass; and I will not weary other people with relating
all the compliments and counter-compliments that we exchanged,
all in the most approved manner. Occasions like this, when
tongues wagged
smoothly and speech flowed free, were always
especially
pleasing to me, who am naturally inclined to be
tongue-tied with women. But at last
ceremony was over, and we
sat on the table and swung our legs and agreed to be fast
friends. And I showed her my latest knife--one-bladed, horn-
handled,
terrific, hung round my neck with string; and she showed
me the chiefest treasures the ship contained,
hidden away in a
most private and particular locker--a
musical box with a glass
top that let you see the works, and a railway train with
real lines and a real
tunnel, and a tin iron-clad that followed a
magnet, and was ever so much handier in many respects than the
real full-sized thing that still lay and applauded in the offing.
There was high feasting that night in my cabin. We invited the
captain of the man-of-war--one could hardly do less, it seemed to
me--and the Princess took one end of the table and I took the
other, and the captain was very kind and nice, and told us fairy-
stories, and asked us both to come and stay with him next
Christmas, and promised we should have some
hunting, on real
ponies. When he left I gave him some ingots and things, and saw
him into his boat; and then I went round the ship and addressed
the crew in several set speeches, which moved them deeply, and
with my own hands loaded up the carronade with grape-shot till it
ran over at the mouth. This done, I
retired" target="_blank" title="a.退休的;通职的">
retired into the cabin
with the Princess, and locked the door. And first we started the
musical box,
taking turns to wind it up; and then we made toffee
in the cabin-stove; and then we ran the train round and round the
room, and through and through the
tunnel; and
lastly we swam the
tin ironclad in the bath, with the soap-dish for a
pirate.
Next morning the air was rich with spices, porpoises rolled and
gambolled round the bows, and the South Sea Islands lay full in
view (they were the REAL South Sea Islands, of course--not the
badly furnished journeymen-islands that are to be perceived on
the map). As for the
pirate brigantine and the man-of-war, I
don't really know what became of them. They had played their
part very well, for the time, but I wasn't going to
bother to
account for them, so I just let them
evaporate quietly. The
islands provided plenty of fresh
occupation. For here were
little bays of
silvery sand, dotted with land-crabs; groves
of palm-trees
wherein monkeys frisked and pelted each other with
cocoanuts; and caves, and sites for stockades, and
hiddentreasures significantly indicated by skulls, in riotous plenty;
while birds and beasts of every colour and all latitudes made
pleasing noises which excited the sporting instinct.
The islands lay
conveniently close together, which necessitated
careful steering as we threaded the devious and intricate
channels that separated them. Of course no one else could be
trusted at the wheel, so it is not
surprising that for some time
I quite forgot that there was such a thing as a Princess on
board. This is too much the
masculine way,
whenever there's any
real business doing. However, I remembered her as soon as the
anchor was dropped, and I went below and consoled her, and we had
breakfast together, and she was allowed to "pour out," which
quite made up for everything. When breakfast was over we ordered
out the captain's gig, and rowed all about the islands, and
paddled, and explored, and hunted bisons and beetles and
butterflies, and found everything we wanted. And I gave her pink