The Perils of Certain English Prisoners

by Charles Dickens

CHAPTER  I--THE ISLAND OF SILVER-STORE



It was in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and forty-
four, that I, Gill Davis to command, His Mark, having then the
honour to be a private in the Royal Marines, stood a-leaning over
the bulwarks of the armed sloop Christopher Columbus, in the South
American waters off the Mosquito shore.

My lady remarks to me, before I go any further, that there is no
such christian-name as Gill, and that her confident opinion is, that
the name given to me in the baptism wherein I was made, &c., was
Gilbert.  She is certain to be right, but I never heard of it.  I
was a foundling child, picked up somewhere or another, and I always
understood my christian-name to be Gill.  It is true that I was
called Gills when employed at Snorridge Bottom betwixt Chatham and
Maidstone to frighten birds; but that had nothing to do with the
Baptism wherein I was made, &c., and wherein a number of things were
promised for me by somebody, who let me alone ever afterwards as to
performing any of them, and who, I consider, must have been the
Beadle.  Such name of Gills was entirely owing to my cheeks, or
gills, which at that time of my life were of a raspy description.

My lady stops me again, before I go any further, by laughing exactly
in her old way and waving the feather of her pen at me.  That action
on her part, calls to my mind as I look at her hand with the rings
on it--Well!  I won't!  To be sure it will come in, in its own
place.  But it's always strange to me, noticing the quiet hand, and
noticing it (as I have done, you know, so many times) a-fondling
children and grandchildren asleep, to think that when blood and
honour were up--there!  I won't! not at present!--Scratch it out.

She won't scratch it out, and quite honourable; because we have made
an understanding that everything is to be taken down, and that
nothing that is once taken down shall be scratched out.  I have the
great misfortune not to be able to read and write, and I am speaking
my true and faithful account of those Adventures, and my lady is
writing it, word for word.

I say, there I was, a-leaning over the bulwarks of the sloop
Christopher Columbus in the South American waters off the Mosquito
shore:  a subject of his Gracious Majesty King George of England,
and a private in the Royal Marines.

In those climates, you don't want to do much.  I was doing nothing.
I was thinking of the shepherd (my father, I wonder?) on the
hillsides by Snorridge Bottom, with a long staff, and with a rough
white coat in all weathers all the year round, who used to let me
lie in a corner of his hut by night, and who used to let me go about
with him and his sheep by day when I could get nothing else to do,
and who used to give me so little of his victuals and so much of his
staff, that I ran away from him--which was what he wanted all along,
I expect--to be knocked about the world in preference to Snorridge
Bottom.  I had been knocked about the world for nine-and-twenty
years in all, when I stood looking along those bright blue South
American Waters.  Looking after the shepherd, I may say.  Watching
him in a half-waking dream, with my eyes half-shut, as he, and his
flock of sheep, and his two dogs, seemed to move away from the
ship's side, far away over the blue water, and go right down into
the sky.

"It's rising out of the water, steady," a voice said close to me.  I
had been thinking on so, that it like woke me with a start, though
it was no stranger voice than the voice of Harry Charker, my own
comrade.

"What's rising out of the water, steady?" I asked my comrade.

"What?" says he.  "The Island."

"O!  The Island!" says I, turning my eyes towards it.  "True.  I
forgot the Island."

"Forgot the port you're going to?  That's odd, ain't it?"

"It is odd," says I.

"And odd," he said, slowly considering with himself, "ain't even.
Is it, Gill?"

He had always a remark just like that to make, and seldom another.
As soon as he had brought a thing round to what it was not, he was
satisfied.  He was one of the best of men, and, in a certain sort of
a way, one with the least to say for himself.  I qualify it,
because, besides being able to read and write like a Quarter-master,
he had always one most excellent idea in his mind.  That was, Duty.
Upon my soul, I don't believe, though I admire learning beyond
everything, that he could have got a better idea out of all the
books in the world, if he had learnt them every word, and been the
cleverest of scholars.

My comrade and I had been quartered in Jamaica, and from there we
had been drafted off to the British settlement of Belize, lying away
West and North of the Mosquito coast.  At Belize there had been
great alarm of one cruel gang of pirates (there were always more
pirates than enough in those Caribbean Seas), and as they got the
better of our English cruisers by running into out-of-the-way creeks
and shallows, and taking the land when they were hotly pressed, the
governor of Belize had received orders from home to keep a sharp
look-out for them along shore.  Now, there was an armed sloop came
once a-year from Port Royal, Jamaica, to the Island, laden with all
manner of necessaries, to eat, and to drink, and to wear, and to use
in various ways; and it was aboard of that sloop which had touched
at Belize, that I was a-standing, leaning over the bulwarks.

The Island was occupied by a very small English colony.  It had been
given the name of Silver-Store.  The reason of its being so called,
was, that the English colony owned and worked a silver-mine over on
the mainland, in Honduras, and used this Island as a safe and
convenient place to store their silver in, until it was annually
fetched away by the sloop.  It was brought down from the mine to the
coast on the backs of mules, attended by friendly Indians and
guarded by white men; from thence it was conveyed over to Silver-
Store, when the weather was fair, in the canoes of that country;
from Silver-Store, it was carried to Jamaica by the armed sloop once
a-year, as I have already mentioned; from Jamaica, it went, of
course, all over the world.

How I came to be aboard the armed sloop, is easily told.  Four-and-
twenty marines under command of a lieutenant--that officer's name
was Linderwood--had been told off at Belize, to proceed to Silver-
Store, in aid of boats and seamen stationed there for the chase of
the Pirates.  The Island was considered a good post of observation
against the pirates, both by land and sea; neither the pirate ship
nor yet her boats had been seen by any of us, but they had been so
much heard of, that the reinforcement was sent.  Of that party, I
was one.  It included a corporal and a sergeant.  Charker was
corporal, and the sergeant's name was Drooce.  He was the most
tyrannical non-commissioned officer in His Majesty's service.

The night came on, soon after I had had the foregoing words with
Charker.  All the wonderful bright colours went out of the sea and
sky in a few minutes, and all the stars in the Heavens seemed to
shine out together, and to look down at themselves in the sea, over
one another's shoulders, millions deep.  Next morning, we cast
anchor off the Island.  There was a snug harbour within a little
reef; there was a sandy beach; there were cocoa-nut trees with high
straight stems, quite bare, and foliage at the top like plumes of
magnificent green feathers; there were all the objects that are
usually seen in those parts, and I am not going to describe them,
having something else to tell about.

Great rejoicings, to be sure, were made on our arrival.  All the
flags in the place were hoisted, all the guns in the place were
fired, and all the people in the place came down to look at us.  One
of those Sambo fellows--they call those natives Sambos, when they
are half-negro and half-Indian--had come off outside the reef, to
pilot us in, and remained on board after we had let go our anchor.
He was called Christian George King, and was fonder of all hands
than anybody else was.  Now, I confess, for myself, that on that
first day, if I had been captain of the Christopher Columbus,
instead of private in the Royal Marines, I should have kicked
Christian George King--who was no more a Christian than he was a
King or a George--over the side, without exactly knowing why, except
that it was the right thing to do.

But, I must likewise confess, that I was not in a particularly
pleasant humour, when I stood under arms that morning, aboard the
Christopher Columbus in the harbour of the Island of Silver-Store.
I had had a hard life, and the life of the English on the Island
seemed too easy and too gay to please me.  "Here you are," I thought
to myself, "good scholars and good livers; able to read what you
like, able to write what you like, able to eat and drink what you
like, and spend what you like, and do what you like; and much you
care for a poor, ignorant Private in the Royal Marines!  Yet it's
hard, too, I think, that you should have all the half-pence, and I
all the kicks; you all the smooth, and I all the rough; you all the
oil, and I all the vinegar."  It was as envious a thing to think as
might be, let alone its being nonsensical; but, I thought it.  I
took it so much amiss, that, when a very beautiful young English
lady came aboard, I grunted to myself, "Ah! you have got a lover,
I'll be bound!"  As if there was any new offence to me in that, if
she had!

She was sister to the captain of our sloop, who had been in a poor
way for some time, and who was so ill then that he was obliged to be
carried ashore.  She was the child of a military officer, and had
come out there with her sister, who was married to one of the owners
of the silver-mine, and who had three children with her.  It was
easy to see that she was the light and spirit of the Island.  After
I had got a good look at her, I grunted to myself again, in an even
worse state of mind than before, "I'll be damned, if I don't hate
him, whoever he is!"

My officer, Lieutenant Linderwood, was as ill as the captain of the
sloop, and was carried ashore, too.  They were both young men of
about my age, who had been delicate in the West India climate.  I
even took that in bad part.  I thought I was much fitter for the
work than they were, and that if all of us had our deserts, I should
be both of them rolled into one.  (It may be imagined what sort of
an officer of marines I should have made, without the power of
reading a written order.  And as to any knowledge how to command the
sloop--Lord!  I should have sunk her in a quarter of an hour!)

However, such were my reflections; and when we men were ashore and
dismissed, I strolled about the place along with Charker, making my
observations in a similar spirit.

It was a pretty place:  in all its arrangements partly South
American and partly English, and very agreeable to look at on that
account, being like a bit of home that had got chipped off and had
floated away to that spot, accommodating itself to circumstances as
it drifted along.  The huts of the Sambos, to the number of five-
and-twenty, perhaps, were down by the beach to the left of the
anchorage.  On the right was a sort of barrack, with a South
American Flag and the Union Jack, flying from the same staff, where
the little English colony could all come together, if they saw
occasion.  It was a walled square of building, with a sort of
pleasure-ground inside, and inside that again a sunken block like a
powder magazine, with a little square trench round it, and steps
down to the door.  Charker and I were looking in at the gate, which
was not guarded; and I had said to Charker, in reference to the bit
like a powder magazine, "That's where they keep the silver you see;"
and Charker had said to me, after thinking it over, "And silver
ain't gold.  Is it, Gill?" when the beautiful young English lady I
had been so bilious about, looked out of a door, or a window--at all
events looked out, from under a bright awning.  She no sooner saw us
two in uniform, than she came out so quickly that she was still
putting on her broad Mexican hat of plaited straw when we saluted.

"Would you like to come in," she said, "and see the place?  It is
rather a curious place."

We thanked the young lady, and said we didn't wish to be
troublesome; but, she said it could be no trouble to an English
soldier's daughter, to show English soldiers how their countrymen
and country-women fared, so far away from England; and consequently
we saluted again, and went in.  Then, as we stood in the shade, she
showed us (being as affable as beautiful), how the different
families lived in their separate houses, and how there was a general
house for stores, and a general reading-room, and a general room for
music and dancing, and a room for Church; and how there were other
houses on the rising ground called the Signal Hill, where they lived
in the hotter weather.

"Your officer has been carried up there," she said, "and my brother,
too, for the better air.  At present, our few residents are
dispersed over both spots:  deducting, that is to say, such of our
number as are always going to, or coming from, or staying at, the
Mine."

("He is among one of those parties," I thought, "and I wish somebody
would knock his head off.")

"Some of our married ladies live here," she said, "during at least
half the year, as lonely as widows, with their children."

"Many children here, ma'am?"

"Seventeen.  There are thirteen married ladies, and there are eight
like me."

There were not eight like her--there was not one like her--in the
world.  She meant single.

"Which, with about thirty Englishmen of various degrees," said the
young lady, "form the little colony now on the Island.  I don't
count the sailors, for they don't belong to us.  Nor the soldiers,"
she gave us a gracious smile when she spoke of the soldiers, "for
the same reason."

"Nor the Sambos, ma'am," said I.

"No."

"Under your favour, and with your leave, ma'am," said I, "are they
trustworthy?"

"Perfectly!  We are all very kind to them, and they are very
grateful to us."

"Indeed, ma'am?  Now--Christian George King?--"

"Very much attached to us all.  Would die for us."

She was, as in my uneducated way I have observed, very beautiful
women almost always to be, so composed, that her composure gave
great weight to what she said, and I believed it.

Then, she pointed out to us the building like a powder magazine, and
explained to us in what manner the silver was brought from the mine,
and was brought over from the mainland, and was stored here.  The
Christopher Columbus would have a rich lading, she said, for there
had been a great yield that year, a much richer yield than usual,
and there was a chest of jewels besides the silver.

When we had looked about us, and were getting sheepish, through
fearing we were troublesome, she turned us over to a young woman,
English born but West India bred, who served her as her maid.  This
young woman was the widow of a non-commissioned officer in a
regiment of the line.  She had got married and widowed at St.
Vincent, with only a few months between the two events.  She was a
little saucy woman, with a bright pair of eyes, rather a neat little
foot and figure, and rather a neat little turned-up nose.  The sort
of young woman, I considered at the time, who appeared to invite you
to give her a kiss, and who would have slapped your face if you
accepted the invitation.

I couldn't make out her name at first; for, when she gave it in
answer to my inquiry, it sounded like Beltot, which didn't sound
right.  But, when we became better acquainted--which was while
Charker and I were drinking sugar-cane sangaree, which she made in a
most excellent manner--I found that her Christian name was Isabella,
which they shortened into Bell, and that the name of the deceased
non-commissioned officer was Tott.  Being the kind of neat little
woman it was natural to make a toy of--I never saw a woman so like a
toy in my life--she had got the plaything name of Belltott.  In
short, she had no other name on the island.  Even Mr. Commissioner
Pordage (and he was a grave one!) formally addressed her as Mrs.
Belltott, but, I shall come to Mr. Commissioner Pordage presently.

The name of the captain of the sloop was Captain Maryon, and
therefore it was no news to hear from Mrs. Belltott, that his
sister, the beautiful unmarried young English lady, was Miss Maryon.
The novelty was, that her christian-name was Marion too.  Marion
Maryon.  Many a time I have run off those two names in my thoughts,
like a bit of verse.  Oh many, and many, and many a time!

We saw out all the drink that was produced, like good men and true,
and then took our leaves, and went down to the beach.  The weather
was beautiful; the wind steady, low, and gentle; the island, a
picture; the sea, a picture; the sky, a picture.  In that country
there are two rainy seasons in the year.  One sets in at about our
English Midsummer; the other, about a fortnight after our English
Michaelmas.  It was the beginning of August at that time; the first
of these rainy seasons was well over; and everything was in its most
beautiful growth, and had its loveliest look upon it.

"They enjoy themselves here," I says to Charker, turning surly
again.  "This is better than private-soldiering."

We had come down to the beach, to be friendly with the boat's-crew
who were camped and hutted there; and we were approaching towards
their quarters over the sand, when Christian George King comes up
from the landing-place at a wolf's-trot, crying, "Yup, So-Jeer!"--
which was that Sambo Pilot's barbarous way of saying, Hallo,
Soldier!  I have stated myself to be a man of no learning, and, if I
entertain prejudices, I hope allowance may be made.  I will now
confess to one.  It may be a right one or it may be a wrong one;
but, I never did like Natives, except in the form of oysters.

So, when Christian George King, who was individually unpleasant to
me besides, comes a trotting along the sand, clucking, "Yup, So-
Jeer!"  I had a thundering good mind to let fly at him with my
right.  I certainly should have done it, but that it would have
exposed me to reprimand.

"Yup, So-Jeer!" says he.  "Bad job."

"What do you mean?" says I.

"Yup, So-Jeer!" says he, "Ship Leakee."

"Ship leaky?" says I.

"Iss," says he, with a nod that looked as if it was jerked out of
him by a most violent hiccup--which is the way with those savages.

I cast my eyes at Charker, and we both heard the pumps going aboard
the sloop, and saw the signal run up, "Come on board; hands wanted
from the shore."  In no time some of the sloop's liberty-men were
already running down to the water's edge, and the party of seamen,
under orders against the Pirates, were putting off to the Columbus
in two boats.

"O Christian George King sar berry sorry!" says that Sambo vagabond,
then.  "Christian George King cry, English fashion!"  His English
fashion of crying was to screw his black knuckles into his eyes,
howl like a dog, and roll himself on his back on the sand.  It was
trying not to kick him, but I gave Charker the word, "Double-quick,
Harry!" and we got down to the water's edge, and got on board the
sloop.

By some means or other, she had sprung such a leak, that no pumping
would keep her free; and what between the two fears that she would
go down in the harbour, and that, even if she did not, all the
supplies she had brought for the little colony would be destroyed by
the sea-water as it rose in her, there was great confusion.  In the
midst of it, Captain Maryon was heard hailing from the beach.  He
had been carried down in his hammock, and looked very bad; but he
insisted on being stood there on his feet; and I saw him, myself,
come off in the boat, sitting upright in the stern-sheets, as if
nothing was wrong with him.

A quick sort of council was held, and Captain Maryon soon resolved
that we must all fall to work to get the cargo out, and that when
that was done, the guns and heavy matters must be got out, and that
the sloop must be hauled ashore, and careened, and the leak stopped.
We were all mustered (the Pirate-Chace party volunteering), and told
off into parties, with so many hours of spell and so many hours of
relief, and we all went at it with a will.  Christian George King
was entered one of the party in which I worked, at his own request,
and he went at it with as good a will as any of the rest.  He went
at it with so much heartiness, to say the truth, that he rose in my
good opinion almost as fast as the water rose in the ship.  Which
was fast enough, and faster.

Mr. Commissioner Pordage kept in a red-and-black japanned box, like
a family lump-sugar box, some document or other, which some Sambo
chief or other had got drunk and spilt some ink over (as well as I
could understand the matter), and by that means had given up lawful
possession of the Island.  Through having hold of this box, Mr.
Pordage got his title of Commissioner.  He was styled Consul too,
and spoke of himself as "Government."

He was a stiff-jointed, high-nosed old gentleman, without an ounce
of fat on him, of a very angry temper and a very yellow complexion.
Mrs. Commissioner Pordage, making allowance for difference of sex,
was much the same.  Mr. Kitten, a small, youngish, bald, botanical
and mineralogical gentleman, also connected with the mine--but
everybody there was that, more or less--was sometimes called by Mr.
Commissioner Pordage, his Vice-commissioner, and sometimes his
Deputy-consul.  Or sometimes he spoke of Mr. Kitten, merely as being
"under Government."

The beach was beginning to be a lively scene with the preparations
for careening the sloop, and with cargo, and spars, and rigging, and
water-casks, dotted about it, and with temporary quarters for the
men rising up there out of such sails and odds and ends as could be
best set on one side to make them, when Mr. Commissioner Pordage
comes down in a high fluster, and asks for Captain Maryon.  The
Captain, ill as he was, was slung in his hammock betwixt two trees,
that he might direct; and he raised his head, and answered for
himself.

"Captain Maryon," cries Mr. Commissioner Pordage, "this is not
official.  This is not regular."

"Sir," says the Captain, "it hath been arranged with the clerk and
supercargo, that you should be communicated with, and requested to
render any little assistance that may lie in your power.  I am quite
certain that hath been duly done."

"Captain Maryon," replied Mr. Commissioner Pordage, "there hath been
no written correspondence.  No documents have passed, no memoranda
have been made, no minutes have been made, no entries and counter-
entries appear in the official muniments.  This is indecent.  I call
upon you, sir, to desist, until all is regular, or Government will
take this up."

"Sir," says Captain Maryon, chafing a little, as he looked out of
his hammock; "between the chances of Government taking this up, and
my ship taking herself down, I much prefer to trust myself to the
former."

"You do, sir?" cries Mr. Commissioner Pordage.

"I do, sir," says Captain Maryon, lying down again.

"Then, Mr. Kitten," says the Commissioner, "send up instantly for my
Diplomatic coat."

He was dressed in a linen suit at that moment; but, Mr. Kitten
started off himself and brought down the Diplomatic coat, which was
a blue cloth one, gold-laced, and with a crown on the button.

"Now, Mr. Kitten," says Pordage, "I instruct you, as Vice-
commissioner, and Deputy-consul of this place, to demand of Captain
Maryon, of the sloop Christopher Columbus, whether he drives me to
the act of putting this coat on?"

"Mr. Pordage," says Captain Maryon, looking out of his hammock
again, "as I can hear what you say, I can answer it without
troubling the gentleman.  I should be sorry that you should be at
the pains of putting on too hot a coat on my account; but,
otherwise, you may put it on hind-side before, or inside-out, or
with your legs in the sleeves, or your head in the skirts, for any
objection that I have to offer to your thoroughly pleasing
yourself."

"Very good, Captain Maryon," says Pordage, in a tremendous passion.
"Very good, sir.  Be the consequences on your own head!  Mr. Kitten,
as it has come to this, help me on with it."

When he had given that order, he walked off in the coat, and all our
names were taken, and I was afterwards told that Mr. Kitten wrote
from his dictation more than a bushel of large paper on the subject,
which cost more before it was done with, than ever could be
calculated, and which only got done with after all, by being lost.

Our work went on merrily, nevertheless, and the Christopher
Columbus, hauled up, lay helpless on her side like a great fish out
of water.  While she was in that state, there was a feast, or a
ball, or an entertainment, or more properly all three together,
given us in honour of the ship, and the ship's company, and the
other visitors.  At that assembly, I believe, I saw all the
inhabitants then upon the Island, without any exception.  I took no
particular notice of more than a few, but I found it very agreeable
in that little corner of the world to see the children, who were of
all ages, and mostly very pretty--as they mostly are.  There was one
handsome elderly lady, with very dark eyes and gray hair, that I
inquired about.  I was told that her name was Mrs. Venning; and her
married daughter, a fair slight thing, was pointed out to me by the
name of Fanny Fisher.  Quite a child she looked, with a little copy
of herself holding to her dress; and her husband, just come back
from the mine, exceeding proud of her.  They were a good-looking set
of people on the whole, but I didn't like them.  I was out of sorts;
in conversation with Charker, I found fault with all of them.  I
said of Mrs. Venning, she was proud; of Mrs. Fisher, she was a
delicate little baby-fool.  What did I think of this one?  Why, he
was a fine gentleman.  What did I say to that one?  Why, she was a
fine lady.  What could you expect them to be (I asked Charker),
nursed in that climate, with the tropical night shining for them,
musical instruments playing to them, great trees bending over them,
soft lamps lighting them, fire-flies sparkling in among them, bright
flowers and birds brought into existence to please their eyes,
delicious drinks to be had for the pouring out, delicious fruits to
be got for the picking, and every one dancing and murmuring happily
in the scented air, with the sea breaking low on the reef for a
pleasant chorus.

"Fine gentlemen and fine ladies, Harry?" I says to Charker.  "Yes, I
think so!  Dolls!  Dolls!  Not the sort of stuff for wear, that
comes of poor private soldiering in the Royal Marines!"

However, I could not gainsay that they were very hospitable people,
and that they treated us uncommonly well.  Every man of us was at
the entertainment, and Mrs. Belltott had more partners than she
could dance with:  though she danced all night, too.  As to Jack
(whether of the Christopher Columbus, or of the Pirate pursuit
party, it made no difference), he danced with his brother Jack,
danced with himself, danced with the moon, the stars, the trees, the
prospect, anything.  I didn't greatly take to the chief-officer of
that party, with his bright eyes, brown face, and easy figure.  I
didn't much like his way when he first happened to come where we
were, with Miss Maryon on his arm.  "O, Captain Carton," she says,
"here are two friends of mine!"  He says, "Indeed?  These two
Marines?"--meaning Charker and self.  "Yes," says she, "I showed
these two friends of mine when they first came, all the wonders of
Silver-Store."  He gave us a laughing look, and says he, "You are in
luck, men.  I would be disrated and go before the mast to-morrow, to
be shown the way upward again by such a guide.  You are in luck,
men."  When we had saluted, and he and the lady had waltzed away, I
said, "You are a pretty follow, too, to talk of luck.  You may go to
the Devil!"

Mr. Commissioner Pordage and Mrs. Commissioner, showed among the
company on that occasion like the King and Queen of a much Greater
Britain than Great Britain.  Only two other circumstances in that
jovial night made much separate impression on me.  One was this.  A
man in our draft of marines, named Tom Packer, a wild unsteady young
fellow, but the son of a respectable shipwright in Portsmouth Yard,
and a good scholar who had been well brought up, comes to me after a
spell of dancing, and takes me aside by the elbow, and says,
swearing angrily:

"Gill Davis, I hope I may not be the death of Sergeant Drooce one
day!"

Now, I knew Drooce had always borne particularly hard on this man,
and I knew this man to be of a very hot temper:  so, I said:

"Tut, nonsense! don't talk so to me!  If there's a man in the corps
who scorns the name of an assassin, that man and Tom Packer are
one."

Tom wipes his head, being in a mortal sweat, and says he:

"I hope so, but I can't answer for myself when he lords it over me,
as he has just now done, before a woman.  I tell you what, Gill!
Mark my words!  It will go hard with Sergeant Drooce, if ever we are
in an engagement together, and he has to look to me to save him.
Let him say a prayer then, if he knows one, for it's all over with
him, and he is on his Death-bed.  Mark my words!"

I did mark his words, and very soon afterwards, too, as will shortly
be taken down.

The other circumstance that I noticed at that ball, was, the gaiety
and attachment of Christian George King.  The innocent spirits that
Sambo Pilot was in, and the impossibility he found himself under of
showing all the little colony, but especially the ladies and
children, how fond he was of them, how devoted to them, and how
faithful to them for life and death, for present, future, and
everlasting, made a great impression on me.  If ever a man, Sambo or
no Sambo, was trustful and trusted, to what may be called quite an
infantine and sweetly beautiful extent, surely, I thought that
morning when I did at last lie down to rest, it was that Sambo
Pilot, Christian George King.

This may account for my dreaming of him.  He stuck in my sleep,
cornerwise, and I couldn't get him out.  He was always flitting
about me, dancing round me, and peeping in over my hammock, though I
woke and dozed off again fifty times.  At last, when I opened my
eyes, there he really was, looking in at the open side of the little
dark hut; which was made of leaves, and had Charker's hammock slung
in it as well as mine.

"So-Jeer!" says he, in a sort of a low croak.  "Yup!"

"Hallo!" says I, starting up.  "What?  You are there, are you?"

"Iss," says he.  "Christian George King got news."

"What news has he got?"

"Pirates out!"

I was on my feet in a second.  So was Charker.  We were both aware
that Captain Carton, in command of the boats, constantly watched the
mainland for a secret signal, though, of course, it was not known to
such as us what the signal was.

Christian George King had vanished before we touched the ground.
But, the word was already passing from hut to hut to turn out
quietly, and we knew that the nimble barbarian had got hold of the
truth, or something near it.

In a space among the trees behind the encampment of us visitors,
naval and military, was a snugly-screened spot, where we kept the
stores that were in use, and did our cookery.  The word was passed
to assemble here.  It was very quickly given, and was given (so far
as we were concerned) by Sergeant Drooce, who was as good in a
soldier point of view, as he was bad in a tyrannical one.  We were
ordered to drop into this space, quietly, behind the trees, one by
one.  As we assembled here, the seamen assembled too.  Within ten
minutes, as I should estimate, we were all here, except the usual
guard upon the beach.  The beach (we could see it through the wood)
looked as it always had done in the hottest time of the day.  The
guard were in the shadow of the sloop's hull, and nothing was moving
but the sea,--and that moved very faintly.  Work had always been
knocked off at that hour, until the sun grew less fierce, and the
sea-breeze rose; so that its being holiday with us, made no
difference, just then, in the look of the place.  But I may mention
that it was a holiday, and the first we had had since our hard work
began.  Last night's ball had been given, on the leak's being
repaired, and the careening done.  The worst of the work was over,
and to-morrow we were to begin to get the sloop afloat again.

We marines were now drawn up here under arms.  The chace-party were
drawn up separate.  The men of the Columbus were drawn up separate.
The officers stepped out into the midst of the three parties, and
spoke so as all might hear.  Captain Carton was the officer in
command, and he had a spy-glass in his hand.  His coxswain stood by
him with another spy-glass, and with a slate on which he seemed to
have been taking down signals.

"Now, men!" says Captain Carton; "I have to let you know, for your
satisfaction:  Firstly, that there are ten pirate-boats, strongly
manned and armed, lying hidden up a creek yonder on the coast, under
the overhanging branches of the dense trees.  Secondly, that they
will certainly come out this night when the moon rises, on a
pillaging and murdering expedition, of which some part of the
mainland is the object.  Thirdly--don't cheer, men!--that we will
give chace, and, if we can get at them, rid the world of them,
please God!"

Nobody spoke, that I heard, and nobody moved, that I saw.  Yet there
was a kind of ring, as if every man answered and approved with the
best blood that was inside of him.

"Sir," says Captain Maryon, "I beg to volunteer on this service,
with my boats.  My people volunteer, to the ship's boys."

"In His Majesty's name and service," the other answers, touching his
hat, "I accept your aid with pleasure.  Lieutenant Linderwood, how
will you divide your men?"

I was ashamed--I give it out to be written down as large and plain
as possible--I was heart and soul ashamed of my thoughts of those
two sick officers, Captain Maryon and Lieutenant Linderwood, when I
saw them, then and there.  The spirit in those two gentlemen beat
down their illness (and very ill I knew them to be) like Saint
George beating down the Dragon.  Pain and weakness, want of ease and
want of rest, had no more place in their minds than fear itself.
Meaning now to express for my lady to write down, exactly what I
felt then and there, I felt this:  "You two brave fellows that I had
been so grudgeful of, I know that if you were dying you would put it
off to get up and do your best, and then you would be so modest that
in lying down again to die, you would hardly say, 'I did it!'"

It did me good.  It really did me good.

But, to go back to where I broke off.  Says Captain Carton to
Lieutenant Linderwood, "Sir, how will you divide your men?  There is
not room for all; and a few men should, in any case, be left here."

There was some debate about it.  At last, it was resolved to leave
eight Marines and four seamen on the Island, besides the sloop's two
boys.  And because it was considered that the friendly Sambos would
only want to be commanded in case of any danger (though none at all
was apprehended there), the officers were in favour of leaving the
two non-commissioned officers, Drooce and Charker.  It was a heavy
disappointment to them, just as my being one of the left was a heavy
disappointment to me--then, but not soon afterwards.  We men drew
lots for it, and I drew "Island."  So did Tom Packer.  So of course,
did four more of our rank and file.

When this was settled, verbal instructions were given to all hands
to keep the intended expedition secret, in order that the women and
children might not be alarmed, or the expedition put in a difficulty
by more volunteers.  The assembly was to be on that same spot at
sunset.  Every man was to keep up an appearance, meanwhile, of
occupying himself in his usual way.  That is to say, every man
excepting four old trusty seamen, who were appointed, with an
officer, to see to the arms and ammunition, and to muffle the
rullocks of the boats, and to make everything as trim and swift and
silent as it could be made.

The Sambo Pilot had been present all the while, in case of his being
wanted, and had said to the officer in command, five hundred times
over if he had said it once, that Christian George King would stay
with the So-Jeers, and take care of the booffer ladies and the
booffer childs--booffer being that native's expression for
beautiful.  He was now asked a few questions concerning the putting
off of the boats, and in particular whether there was any way of
embarking at the back of the Island:  which Captain Carton would
have half liked to do, and then have dropped round in its shadow and
slanted across to the main.  But, "No," says Christian George King.
"No, no, no!  Told you so, ten time.  No, no, no!  All reef, all
rock, all swim, all drown!"  Striking out as he said it, like a
swimmer gone mad, and turning over on his back on dry land, and
spluttering himself to death, in a manner that made him quite an
exhibition.

The sun went down, after appearing to be a long time about it, and
the assembly was called.  Every man answered to his name, of course,
and was at his post.  It was not yet black dark, and the roll was
only just gone through, when up comes Mr. Commissioner Pordage with
his Diplomatic coat on.

"Captain Carton," says he, "Sir, what is this?"

"This, Mr. Commissioner" (he was very short with him), "is an
expedition against the Pirates.  It is a secret expedition, so
please to keep it a secret."

"Sir," says Commissioner Pordage, "I trust there is going to be no
unnecessary cruelty committed?"

"Sir," returns the officer, "I trust not."

"That is not enough, sir," cries Commissioner Pordage, getting
wroth.  "Captain Carton, I give you notice.  Government requires you
to treat the enemy with great delicacy, consideration, clemency, and
forbearance."

"Sir," says Captain Carton, "I am an English officer, commanding
English Men, and I hope I am not likely to disappoint the
Government's just expectations.  But, I presume you know that these
villains under their black flag have despoiled our countrymen of
their property, burnt their homes, barbarously murdered them and
their little children, and worse than murdered their wives and
daughters?"

"Perhaps I do, Captain Carton," answers Pordage, waving his hand,
with dignity; "perhaps I do not.  It is not customary, sir, for
Government to commit itself."

"It matters very little, Mr. Pordage, whether or no.  Believing that
I hold my commission by the allowance of God, and not that I have
received it direct from the Devil, I shall certainly use it, with
all avoidance of unnecessary suffering and with all merciful
swiftness of execution, to exterminate these people from the face of
the earth.  Let me recommend you to go home, sir, and to keep out of
the night-air."

Never another syllable did that officer say to the Commissioner, but
turned away to his men.  The Commissioner buttoned his Diplomatic
coat to the chin, said, "Mr. Kitten, attend me!" gasped, half choked
himself, and took himself off.

It now fell very dark, indeed.  I have seldom, if ever, seen it
darker, nor yet so dark.  The moon was not due until one in the
morning, and it was but a little after nine when our men lay down
where they were mustered.  It was pretended that they were to take a
nap, but everybody knew that no nap was to be got under the
circumstances.  Though all were very quiet, there was a restlessness
among the people; much what I have seen among the people on a race-
course, when the bell has rung for the saddling for a great race
with large stakes on it.

At ten, they put off; only one boat putting off at a time; another
following in five minutes; both then lying on their oars until
another followed.  Ahead of all, paddling his own outlandish little
canoe without a sound, went the Sambo pilot, to take them safely
outside the reef.  No light was shown but once, and that was in the
commanding officer's own hand.  I lighted the dark lantern for him,
and he took it from me when he embarked.  They had blue lights and
such like with them, but kept themselves as dark as Murder.

The expedition got away with wonderful quietness, and Christian
George King soon came back dancing with joy.

"Yup, So-Jeer," says he to myself in a very objectionable kind of
convulsions, "Christian George King sar berry glad.  Pirates all be
blown a-pieces.  Yup!  Yup!"

My reply to that cannibal was, "However glad you may be, hold your
noise, and don't dance jigs and slap your knees about it, for I
can't abear to see you do it."

I was on duty then; we twelve who were left being divided into four
watches of three each, three hours' spell.  I was relieved at
twelve.  A little before that time, I had challenged, and Miss
Maryon and Mrs. Belltott had come in.

"Good Davis," says Miss Maryon, "what is the matter?  Where is my
brother?"

I told her what was the matter, and where her brother was.

"O Heaven help him!" says she, clasping her hands and looking up--
she was close in front of me, and she looked most lovely to be sure;
he is not sufficiently recovered, not strong enough for such
strife!"

"If you had seen him, miss," I told her, "as I saw him when he
volunteered, you would have known that his spirit is strong enough
for any strife.  It will bear his body, miss, to wherever duty calls
him.  It will always bear him to an honourable life, or a brave
death."

"Heaven bless you!" says she, touching my arm.  "I know it.  Heaven
bless you!"

Mrs. Belltott surprised me by trembling and saying nothing.  They
were still standing looking towards the sea and listening, after the
relief had come round.  It continuing very dark, I asked to be
allowed to take them back.  Miss Maryon thanked me, and she put her
arm in mine, and I did take them back.  I have now got to make a
confession that will appear singular.  After I had left them, I laid
myself down on my face on the beach, and cried for the first time
since I had frightened birds as a boy at Snorridge Bottom, to think
what a poor, ignorant, low-placed, private soldier I was.

It was only for half a minute or so.  A man can't at all times be
quite master of himself, and it was only for half a minute or so.
Then I up and went to my hut, and turned into my hammock, and fell
asleep with wet eyelashes, and a sore, sore heart.  Just as I had
often done when I was a child, and had been worse used than usual.

I slept (as a child under those circumstances might) very sound, and
yet very sore at heart all through my sleep.  I was awoke by the
words, "He is a determined man."  I had sprung out of my hammock,
and had seized my firelock, and was standing on the ground, saying
the words myself.  "He is a determined man."  But, the curiosity of
my state was, that I seemed to be repeating them after somebody, and
to have been wonderfully startled by hearing them.

As soon as I came to myself, I went out of the hut, and away to
where the guard was.  Charker challenged:

"Who goes there?"

"A friend."

"Not Gill?" says he, as he shouldered his piece.

"Gill," says I.

"Why, what the deuce do you do out of your hammock?" says he.

"Too hot for sleep," says I; "is all right?"

"Right!" says Charker, "yes, yes; all's right enough here; what
should be wrong here?  It's the boats that we want to know of.
Except for fire-flies twinkling about, and the lonesome splashes of
great creatures as they drop into the water, there's nothing going
on here to ease a man's mind from the boats."

The moon was above the sea, and had risen, I should say, some half-
an-hour.  As Charker spoke, with his face towards the sea, I,
looking landward, suddenly laid my right hand on his breast, and
said, "Don't move.  Don't turn.  Don't raise your voice!  You never
saw a Maltese face here?"

"No.  What do you mean?" he asks, staring at me.

"Nor yet, an English face, with one eye and a patch across the
nose?"

"No.  What ails you?  What do you mean?"

I had seen both, looking at us round the stem of a cocoa-nut tree,
where the moon struck them.  I had seen that Sambo Pilot, with one
hand laid on the stem of the tree, drawing them back into the heavy
shadow.  I had seen their naked cutlasses twinkle and shine, like
bits of the moonshine in the water that had got blown ashore among
the trees by the light wind.  I had seen it all, in a moment.  And I
saw in a moment (as any man would), that the signalled move of the
pirates on the mainland was a plot and a feint; that the leak had
been made to disable the sloop; that the boats had been tempted
away, to leave the Island unprotected; that the pirates had landed
by some secreted way at the back; and that Christian George King was
a double-dyed traitor, and a most infernal villain.

I considered, still all in one and the same moment, that Charker was
a brave man, but not quick with his head; and that Sergeant Drooce,
with a much better head, was close by.  All I said to Charker was,
"I am afraid we are betrayed.  Turn your back full to the moonlight
on the sea, and cover the stem of the cocoa-nut tree which will then
be right before you, at the height of a man's heart.  Are you
right?"

"I am right," says Charker, turning instantly, and falling into the
position with a nerve of iron; "and right ain't left.  Is it, Gill?"

A few seconds brought me to Sergeant Drooce's hut.  He was fast
asleep, and being a heavy sleeper, I had to lay my hand upon him to
rouse him.  The instant I touched him he came rolling out of his
hammock, and upon me like a tiger.  And a tiger he was, except that
he knew what he was up to, in his utmost heat, as well as any man.

I had to struggle with him pretty hard to bring him to his senses,
panting all the while (for he gave me a breather), "Sergeant, I am
Gill Davis!  Treachery!  Pirates on the Island!"

The last words brought him round, and he took his hands of.  "I have
seen two of them within this minute," said I.  And so I told him
what I had told Harry Charker.

His soldierly, though tyrannical, head was clear in an instant.  He
didn't waste one word, even of surprise.  "Order the guard," says
he, "to draw off quietly into the Fort."  (They called the enclosure
I have before mentioned, the Fort, though it was not much of that.)
"Then get you to the Fort as quick as you can, rouse up every soul
there, and fasten the gate.  I will bring in all those who are at
the Signal Hill.  If we are surrounded before we can join you, you
must make a sally and cut us out if you can.  The word among our men
is, 'Women and children!'"

He burst away, like fire going before the wind over dry reeds.  He
roused up the seven men who were off duty, and had them bursting
away with him, before they know they were not asleep.  I reported
orders to Charker, and ran to the Fort, as I have never run at any
other time in all my life:  no, not even in a dream.

The gate was not fast, and had no good fastening:  only a double
wooden bar, a poor chain, and a bad lock.  Those, I secured as well
as they could be secured in a few seconds by one pair of hands, and
so ran to that part of the building where Miss Maryon lived.  I
called to her loudly by her name until she answered.  I then called
loudly all the names I knew--Mrs. Macey (Miss Maryon's married
sister), Mr. Macey, Mrs. Venning, Mr. and Mrs. Fisher, even Mr. and
Mrs. Pordage.  Then I called out, "All you gentlemen here, get up
and defend the place!  We are caught in a trap.  Pirates have
landed.  We are attacked!"

At the terrible word "Pirates!"--for, those villains had done such
deeds in those seas as never can be told in writing, and can
scarcely be so much as thought of--cries and screams rose up from
every part of the place.  Quickly lights moved about from window to
window, and the cries moved about with them, and men, women, and
children came flying down into the square.  I remarked to myself,
even then, what a number of things I seemed to see at once.  I
noticed Mrs. Macey coming towards me, carrying all her three
children together.  I noticed Mr. Pordage in the greatest terror, in
vain trying to get on his Diplomatic coat; and Mr. Kitten
respectfully tying his pocket-handkerchief over Mrs. Pordage's
nightcap.  I noticed Mrs. Belltott run out screaming, and shrink
upon the ground near me, and cover her face in her hands, and lie
all of a bundle, shivering.  But, what I noticed with the greatest
pleasure was, the determined eyes with which those men of the Mine
that I had thought fine gentlemen, came round me with what arms they
had:  to the full as cool and resolute as I could be, for my life--
ay, and for my soul, too, into the bargain!

The chief person being Mr. Macey, I told him how the three men of
the guard would be at the gate directly, if they were not already
there, and how Sergeant Drooce and the other seven were gone to
bring in the outlying part of the people of Silver-Store.  I next
urged him, for the love of all who were dear to him, to trust no
Sambo, and, above all, if he could got any good chance at Christian
George King, not to lose it, but to put him out of the world.

"I will follow your advice to the letter, Davis," says he; "what
next?"

My answer was, "I think, sir, I would recommend you next, to order
down such heavy furniture and lumber as can be moved, and make a
barricade within the gate."

"That's good again," says he:  "will you see it done?"

"I'll willingly help to do it," says I, "unless or until my
superior, Sergeant Drooce, gives me other orders."

He shook me by the hand, and having told off some of his companions
to help me, bestirred himself to look to the arms and ammunition.  A
proper quick, brave, steady, ready gentleman!

One of their three little children was deaf and dumb, Miss Maryon
had been from the first with all the children, soothing them, and
dressing them (poor little things, they had been brought out of
their beds), and making them believe that it was a game of play, so
that some of them were now even laughing.  I had been working hard
with the others at the barricade, and had got up a pretty good
breast-work within the gate.  Drooce and the seven men had come
back, bringing in the people from the Signal Hill, and had worked
along with us:  but, I had not so much as spoken a word to Drooce,
nor had Drooce so much as spoken a word to me, for we were both too
busy.  The breastwork was now finished, and I found Miss Maryon at
my side, with a child in her arms.  Her dark hair was fastened round
her head with a band.  She had a quantity of it, and it looked even
richer and more precious, put up hastily out of her way, than I had
seen it look when it was carefully arranged.  She was very pale, but
extraordinarily quiet and still.

"Dear good Davis," said she, "I have been waiting to speak one word
to you."

I turned to her directly.  If I had received a musket-ball in the
heart, and she had stood there, I almost believe I should have
turned to her before I dropped.

"This pretty little creature," said she, kissing the child in her
arms, who was playing with her hair and trying to pull it down,
"cannot hear what we say--can hear nothing.  I trust you so much,
and have such great confidence in you, that I want you to make me a
promise."

"What is it, Miss?"

"That if we are defeated, and you are absolutely sure of my being
taken, you will kill me."

"I shall not be alive to do it, Miss.  I shall have died in your
defence before it comes to that.  They must step across my body to
lay a hand on you."

"But, if you are alive, you brave soldier."  How she looked at me!
"And if you cannot save me from the Pirates, living, you will save
me, dead.  Tell me so."

Well!  I told her I would do that at the last, if all else failed.
She took my hand--my rough, coarse hand--and put it to her lips.
She put it to the child's lips, and the child kissed it.  I believe
I had the strength of half a dozen men in me, from that moment,
until the fight was over.

All this time, Mr. Commissioner Pordage had been wanting to make a
Proclamation to the Pirates to lay down their arms and go away; and
everybody had been hustling him about and tumbling over him, while
he was calling for pen and ink to write it with.  Mrs. Pordage, too,
had some curious ideas about the British respectability of her
nightcap (which had as many frills to it, growing in layers one
inside another, as if it was a white vegetable of the artichoke
sort), and she wouldn't take the nightcap off, and would be angry
when it got crushed by the other ladies who were handing things
about, and, in short, she gave as much trouble as her husband did.
But, as we were now forming for the defence of the place, they were
both poked out of the way with no ceremony.  The children and ladies
were got into the little trench which surrounded the silver-house
(we were afraid of leaving them in any of the light buildings, lest
they should be set on fire), and we made the best disposition we
could.  There was a pretty good store, in point of amount, of
tolerable swords and cutlasses.  Those were issued.  There were,
also, perhaps a score or so of spare muskets.  Those were brought
out.  To my astonishment, little Mrs. Fisher that I had taken for a
doll and a baby, was not only very active in that service, but
volunteered to load the spare arms.

"For, I understand it well," says she, cheerfully, without a shake
in her voice.

"I am a soldier's daughter and a sailor's sister, and I understand
it too," says Miss Maryon, just in the same way.

Steady and busy behind where I stood, those two beautiful and
delicate young women fell to handling the guns, hammering the
flints, looking to the locks, and quietly directing others to pass
up powder and bullets from hand to hand, as unflinching as the best
of tried soldiers.

Sergeant Drooce had brought in word that the pirates were very
strong in numbers--over a hundred was his estimate--and that they
were not, even then, all landed; for, he had seen them in a very
good position on the further side of the Signal Hill, evidently
waiting for the rest of their men to come up.  In the present pause,
the first we had had since the alarm, he was telling this over again
to Mr. Macey, when Mr. Macey suddenly cried our:  "The signal!
Nobody has thought of the signal!"

We knew of no signal, so we could not have thought of it.

"What signal may you mean, sir?" says Sergeant Drooce, looking sharp
at him.

"There is a pile of wood upon the Signal Hill.  If it could be
lighted--which never has been done yet--it would be a signal of
distress to the mainland."

Charker cries, directly:  "Sergeant Drooce, dispatch me on that
duty.  Give me the two men who were on guard with me to-night, and
I'll light the fire, if it can be done."

"And if it can't, Corporal--" Mr. Macey strikes in.

"Look at these ladies and children, sir!" says Charker.  "I'd sooner
light myself, than not try any chance to save them."

We gave him a Hurrah!--it burst from us, come of it what might--and
he got his two men, and was let out at the gate, and crept away.  I
had no sooner come back to my place from being one of the party to
handle the gate, than Miss Maryon said in a low voice behind me:

"Davis, will you look at this powder?  This is not right."

I turned my head.  Christian George King again, and treachery again!
Sea-water had been conveyed into the magazine, and every grain of
powder was spoiled!

"Stay a moment," said Sergeant Drooce, when I had told him, without
causing a movement in a muscle of his face:  "look to your pouch, my
lad.  You Tom Packer, look to your pouch, confound you!  Look to
your pouches, all you Marines."

The same artful savage had got at them, somehow or another, and the
cartridges were all unserviceable.  "Hum!" says the Sergeant.  "Look
to your loading, men.  You are right so far?"

Yes; we were right so far.

"Well, my lads, and gentlemen all," says the Sergeant, "this will be
a hand-to-hand affair, and so much the better."

He treated himself to a pinch of snuff, and stood up, square-
shouldered and broad-chested, in the light of the moon--which was
now very bright--as cool as if he was waiting for a play to begin.
He stood quiet, and we all stood quiet, for a matter of something
like half-an-hour.  I took notice from such whispered talk as there
was, how little we that the silver did not belong to, thought about
it, and how much the people that it did belong to, thought about it.
At the end of the half-hour, it was reported from the gate that
Charker and the two were falling back on us, pursued by about a
dozen.

"Sally!  Gate-party, under Gill Davis," says the Sergeant, "and
bring 'em in!  Like men, now!"

We were not long about it, and we brought them in.  "Don't take me,"
says Charker, holding me round the neck, and stumbling down at my
feet when the gate was fast, "don't take me near the ladies or the
children, Gill.  They had better not see Death, till it can't be
helped.  They'll see it soon enough."

"Harry!" I answered, holding up his head.  "Comrade!"

He was cut to pieces.  The signal had been secured by the first
pirate party that landed; his hair was all singed off, and his face
was blackened with the running pitch from a torch.

He made no complaint of pain, or of anything.  "Good-bye, old chap,"
was all he said, with a smile.  "I've got my death.  And Death ain't
life.  Is it, Gill?"

Having helped to lay his poor body on one side, I went back to my
post.  Sergeant Drooce looked at me, with his eyebrows a little
lifted.  I nodded.  "Close up here men, and gentlemen all!" said the
Sergeant.  "A place too many, in the line."

The Pirates were so close upon us at this time, that the foremost of
them were already before the gate.  More and more came up with a
great noise, and shouting loudly.  When we believed from the sound
that they were all there, we gave three English cheers.  The poor
little children joined, and were so fully convinced of our being at
play, that they enjoyed the noise, and were heard clapping their
hands in the silence that followed.

Our disposition was this, beginning with the rear.  Mrs. Venning,
holding her daughter's child in her arms, sat on the steps of the
little square trench surrounding the silver-house, encouraging and
directing those women and children as she might have done in the
happiest and easiest time of her life.  Then, there was an armed
line, under Mr. Macey, across the width of the enclosure, facing
that way and having their backs towards the gate, in order that they
might watch the walls and prevent our being taken by surprise.  Then
there was a space of eight or ten feet deep, in which the spare arms
were, and in which Miss Maryon and Mrs. Fisher, their hands and
dresses blackened with the spoilt gunpowder, worked on their knees,
tying such things as knives, old bayonets, and spear-heads, to the
muzzles of the useless muskets.  Then, there was a second armed
line, under Sergeant Drooce, also across the width of the enclosure,
but facing to the gate.  Then came the breastwork we had made, with
a zigzag way through it for me and my little party to hold good in
retreating, as long as we could, when we were driven from the gate.
We all knew that it was impossible to hold the place long, and that
our only hope was in the timely discovery of the plot by the boats,
and in their coming back.

I and my men were now thrown forward to the gate.  From a spy-hole,
I could see the whole crowd of Pirates.  There were Malays among
them, Dutch, Maltese, Greeks, Sambos, Negroes, and Convict
Englishmen from the West India Islands; among the last, him with the
one eye and the patch across the nose.  There were some Portuguese,
too, and a few Spaniards.  The captain was a Portuguese; a little
man with very large ear-rings under a very broad hat, and a great
bright shawl twisted about his shoulders.  They were all strongly
armed, but like a boarding party, with pikes, swords, cutlasses, and
axes.  I noticed a good many pistols, but not a gun of any kind
among them.  This gave me to understand that they had considered
that a continued roll of musketry might perhaps have been heard on
the mainland; also, that for the reason that fire would be seen from
the mainland they would not set the Fort in flames and roast us
alive; which was one of their favourite ways of carrying on.  I
looked about for Christian George King, and if I had seen him I am
much mistaken if he would not have received my one round of ball-
cartridge in his head.  But, no Christian George King was visible.

A sort of a wild Portuguese demon, who seemed either fierce-mad or
fierce-drunk--but, they all seemed one or the other--came forward
with the black flag, and gave it a wave or two.  After that, the
Portuguese captain called out in shrill English, "I say you!
English fools!  Open the gate!  Surrender!"

As we kept close and quiet, he said something to his men which I
didn't understand, and when he had said it, the one-eyed English
rascal with the patch (who had stepped out when he began), said it
again in English.  It was only this.  "Boys of the black flag, this
is to be quickly done.  Take all the prisoners you can.  If they
don't yield, kill the children to make them.  Forward!"  Then, they
all came on at the gate, and in another half-minute were smashing
and splitting it in.

We struck at them through the gaps and shivers, and we dropped many
of them, too; but, their very weight would have carried such a gate,
if they had been unarmed.  I soon found Sergeant Drooce at my side,
forming us six remaining marines in line--Tom Packer next to me--and
ordering us to fall back three paces, and, as they broke in, to give
them our one little volley at short distance.  "Then," says he,
"receive them behind your breastwork on the bayonet, and at least
let every man of you pin one of the cursed cockchafers through the
body."

We checked them by our fire, slight as it was, and we checked them
at the breastwork.  However, they broke over it like swarms of
devils--they were, really and truly, more devils than men--and then
it was hand to hand, indeed.

We clubbed our muskets and laid about us; even then, those two
ladies--always behind me--were steady and ready with the arms.  I
had a lot of Maltese and Malays upon me, and, but for a broadsword
that Miss Maryon's own hand put in mine, should have got my end from
them.  But, was that all?  No.  I saw a heap of banded dark hair and
a white dress come thrice between me and them, under my own raised
right arm, which each time might have destroyed the wearer of the
white dress; and each time one of the lot went down, struck dead.

Drooce was armed with a broadsword, too, and did such things with
it, that there was a cry, in half-a-dozen languages, of "Kill that
sergeant!" as I knew, by the cry being raised in English, and taken
up in other tongues.  I had received a severe cut across the left
arm a few moments before, and should have known nothing of it,
except supposing that somebody had struck me a smart blow, if I had
not felt weak, and seen myself covered with spouting blood, and, at
the same instant of time, seen Miss Maryon tearing her dress and
binding it with Mrs. Fisher's help round the wound.  They called to
Tom Packer, who was scouring by, to stop and guard me for one
minute, while I was bound, or I should bleed to death in trying to
defend myself.  Tom stopped directly, with a good sabre in his hand.

In that same moment--all things seem to happen in that same moment,
at such a time--half-a-dozen had rushed howling at Sergeant Drooce.
The Sergeant, stepping back against the wall, stopped one howl for
ever with such a terrible blow, and waited for the rest to come on,
with such a wonderfully unmoved face, that they stopped and looked
at him.

"See him now!" cried Tom Packer.  "Now, when I could cut him out!
Gill!  Did I tell you to mark my words?"

I implored Tom Packer in the Lord's name, as well as I could in my
faintness, to go to the Sergeant's aid.

"I hate and detest him," says Tom, moodily wavering.  "Still, he is
a brave man."  Then he calls out, "Sergeant Drooce, Sergeant Drooce!
Tell me you have driven me too hard, and are sorry for it."

The Sergeant, without turning his eyes from his assailants, which
would have been instant death to him, answers.

"No.  I won't."

"Sergeant Drooce!" cries Tom, in a kind of an agony.  "I have passed
my word that I would never save you from Death, if I could, but
would leave you to die.  Tell me you have driven me too hard and are
sorry for it, and that shall go for nothing."

One of the group laid the Sergeant's bald bare head open.  The
Sergeant laid him dead.

"I tell you," says the Sergeant, breathing a little short, and
waiting for the next attack, "no.  I won't.  If you are not man
enough to strike for a fellow-soldier because he wants help, and
because of nothing else, I'll go into the other world and look for a
better man."

Tom swept upon them, and cut him out.  Tom and he fought their way
through another knot of them, and sent them flying, and came over to
where I was beginning again to feel, with inexpressible joy, that I
had got a sword in my hand.

They had hardly come to us, when I heard, above all the other
noises, a tremendous cry of women's voices.  I also saw Miss Maryon,
with quite a new face, suddenly clap her two hands over Mrs.
Fisher's eyes.  I looked towards the silver-house, and saw Mrs.
Venning--standing upright on the top of the steps of the trench,
with her gray hair and her dark eyes--hide her daughter's child
behind her, among the folds of her dress, strike a pirate with her
other hand, and fall, shot by his pistol.

The cry arose again, and there was a terrible and confusing rush of
the women into the midst of the struggle.  In another moment,
something came tumbling down upon me that I thought was the wall.
It was a heap of Sambos who had come over the wall; and of four men
who clung to my legs like serpents, one who clung to my right leg
was Christian George King.

"Yup, So-Jeer," says he, "Christian George King sar berry glad So-
Jeer a prisoner.  Christian George King been waiting for So-Jeer
sech long time.  Yup, yup!"

What could I do, with five-and-twenty of them on me, but be tied
hand and foot?  So, I was tied hand and foot.  It was all over now--
boats not come back--all lost!  When I was fast bound and was put up
against the wall, the one-eyed English convict came up with the
Portuguese Captain, to have a look at me.

"See!" says he.  "Here's the determined man!  If you had slept
sounder, last night, you'd have slept your soundest last night, my
determined man."

The Portuguese Captain laughed in a cool way, and with the flat of
his cutlass, hit me crosswise, as if I was the bough of a tree that
he played with:  first on the face, and then across the chest and
the wounded arm.  I looked him steady in the face without tumbling
while he looked at me, I am happy to say; but, when they went away,
I fell, and lay there.

The sun was up, when I was roused and told to come down to the beach
and be embarked.  I was full of aches and pains, and could not at
first remember; but, I remembered quite soon enough.  The killed
were lying about all over the place, and the Pirates were burying
their dead, and taking away their wounded on hastily-made litters,
to the back of the Island.  As for us prisoners, some of their boats
had come round to the usual harbour, to carry us off.  We looked a
wretched few, I thought, when I got down there; still, it was
another sign that we had fought well, and made the enemy suffer.

The Portuguese Captain had all the women already embarked in the
boat he himself commanded, which was just putting off when I got
down.  Miss Maryon sat on one side of him, and gave me a moment's
look, as full of quiet courage, and pity, and confidence, as if it
had been an hour long.  On the other side of him was poor little
Mrs. Fisher, weeping for her child and her mother.  I was shoved
into the same boat with Drooce and Packer, and the remainder of our
party of marines:  of whom we had lost two privates, besides
Charker, my poor, brave comrade.  We all made a melancholy passage,
under the hot sun over to the mainland.  There, we landed in a
solitary place, and were mustered on the sea sand.  Mr. and Mrs.
Macey and their children were amongst us, Mr. and Mrs. Pordage, Mr.
Kitten, Mr. Fisher, and Mrs. Belltott.  We mustered only fourteen
men, fifteen women, and seven children.  Those were all that
remained of the English who had lain down to sleep last night,
unsuspecting and happy, on the Island of Silver-Store.



CHAPTER III {1}--THE RAFTS ON THE RIVER



We contrived to keep afloat all that night, and, the stream running
strong with us, to glide a long way down the river.  But, we found
the night to be a dangerous time for such navigation, on account of
the eddies and rapids, and it was therefore settled next day that in
future we would bring-to at sunset, and encamp on the shore.  As we
knew of no boats that the Pirates possessed, up at the Prison in the
Woods, we settled always to encamp on the opposite side of the
stream, so as to have the breadth of the river between our sleep and
them.  Our opinion was, that if they were acquainted with any near
way by land to the mouth of this river, they would come up it in
force, and retake us or kill us, according as they could; but that
if that was not the case, and if the river ran by none of their
secret stations, we might escape.

When I say we settled this or that, I do not mean that we planned
anything with any confidence as to what might happen an hour hence.
So much had happened in one night, and such great changes had been
violently and suddenly made in the fortunes of many among us, that
we had got better used to uncertainty, in a little while, than I
dare say most people do in the course of their lives.

The difficulties we soon got into, through the off-settings and
point-currents of the stream, made the likelihood of our being
drowned, alone,--to say nothing of our being retaken--as broad and
plain as the sun at noonday to all of us.  But, we all worked hard
at managing the rafts, under the direction of the seamen (of our own
skill, I think we never could have prevented them from oversetting),
and we also worked hard at making good the defects in their first
hasty construction--which the water soon found out.  While we humbly
resigned ourselves to going down, if it was the will of Our Father
that was in Heaven, we humbly made up our minds, that we would all
do the best that was in us.

And so we held on, gliding with the stream.  It drove us to this
bank, and it drove us to that bank, and it turned us, and whirled
us; but yet it carried us on.  Sometimes much too slowly; sometimes
much too fast, but yet it carried us on.

My little deaf and dumb boy slumbered a good deal now, and that was
the case with all the children.  They caused very little trouble to
any one.  They seemed, in my eyes, to get more like one another, not
only in quiet manner, but in the face, too.  The motion of the raft
was usually so much the same, the scene was usually so much the
same, the sound of the soft wash and ripple of the water was usually
so much the same, that they were made drowsy, as they might have
been by the constant playing of one tune.  Even on the grown people,
who worked hard and felt anxiety, the same things produced something
of the same effect.  Every day was so like the other, that I soon
lost count of the days, myself, and had to ask Miss Maryon, for
instance, whether this was the third or fourth?  Miss Maryon had a
pocket-book and pencil, and she kept the log; that is to say, she
entered up a clear little journal of the time, and of the distances
our seamen thought we had made, each night.

So, as I say, we kept afloat and glided on.  All day long, and every
day, the water, and the woods, and sky; all day long, and every day,
the constant watching of both sides of the river, and far a-head at
every bold turn and sweep it made, for any signs of Pirate-boats, or
Pirate-dwellings.  So, as I say, we kept afloat and glided on.  The
days melting themselves together to that degree, that I could hardly
believe my ears when I asked "How many now, Miss?" and she answered
"Seven."

To be sure, poor Mr. Pordage had, by about now, got his Diplomatic
coat into such a state as never was seen.  What with the mud of the
river, what with the water of the river, what with the sun, and the
dews, and the tearing boughs, and the thickets, it hung about him in
discoloured shreds like a mop.  The sun had touched him a bit.  He
had taken to always polishing one particular button, which just held
on to his left wrist, and to always calling for stationery.  I
suppose that man called for pens, ink, and paper, tape, and scaling-
wax, upwards of one thousand times in four-and-twenty hours.  He had
an idea that we should never get out of that river unless we were
written out of it in a formal Memorandum; and the more we laboured
at navigating the rafts, the more he ordered us not to touch them at
our peril, and the more he sat and roared for stationery.

Mrs. Pordage, similarly, persisted in wearing her nightcap.  I doubt
if any one but ourselves who had seen the progress of that article
of dress, could by this time have told what it was meant for.  It
had got so limp and ragged that she couldn't see out of her eyes for
it.  It was so dirty, that whether it was vegetable matter out of a
swamp, or weeds out of the river, or an old porter's-knot from
England, I don't think any new spectator could have said.  Yet, this
unfortunate old woman had a notion that it was not only vastly
genteel, but that it was the correct thing as to propriety.  And she
really did carry herself over the other ladies who had no nightcaps,
and who were forced to tie up their hair how they could, in a
superior manner that was perfectly amazing.

I don't know what she looked like, sitting in that blessed nightcap,
on a log of wood, outside the hut or cabin upon our raft.  She would
have rather resembled a fortune-teller in one of the picture-books
that used to be in the shop windows in my boyhood, except for her
stateliness.  But, Lord bless my heart, the dignity with which she
sat and moped, with her head in that bundle of tatters, was like
nothing else in the world!  She was not on speaking terms with more
than three of the ladies.  Some of them had, what she called, "taken
precedence" of her--in getting into, or out of, that miserable
little shelter!--and others had not called to pay their respects, or
something of that kind.  So, there she sat, in her own state and
ceremony, while her husband sat on the same log of wood, ordering us
one and all to let the raft go to the bottom, and to bring him
stationery.

What with this noise on the part of Mr. Commissioner Pordage, and
what with the cries of Sergeant Drooce on the raft astern (which
were sometimes more than Tom Packer could silence), we often made
our slow way down the river, anything but quietly.  Yet, that it was
of great importance that no ears should be able to hear us from the
woods on the banks, could not be doubted.  We were looked for, to a
certainty, and we might be retaken at any moment.  It was an anxious
time; it was, indeed, indeed, an anxious time.

On the seventh night of our voyage on the rafts, we made fast, as
usual, on the opposite side of the river to that from which we had
started, in as dark a place as we could pick out.  Our little
encampment was soon made, and supper was eaten, and the children
fell asleep.  The watch was set, and everything made orderly for the
night.  Such a starlight night, with such blue in the sky, and such
black in the places of heavy shade on the banks of the great stream!

Those two ladies, Miss Maryon and Mrs. Fisher, had always kept near
me since the night of the attack.  Mr. Fisher, who was untiring in
the work of our raft, had said to me:

"My dear little childless wife has grown so attached to you, Davis,
and you are such a gentle fellow, as well as such a determined one;"
our party had adopted that last expression from the one-eyed English
pirate, and I repeat what Mr. Fisher said, only because he said it;
"that it takes a load off my mind to leave her in your charge."

I said to him:  "Your lady is in far better charge than mine, Sir,
having Miss Maryon to take care of her; but, you may rely upon it,
that I will guard them both--faithful and true."

Says he:  "I do rely upon it, Davis, and I heartily wish all the
silver on our old Island was yours."

That seventh starlight night, as I have said, we made our camp, and
got our supper, and set our watch, and the children fell asleep.  It
was solemn and beautiful in those wild and solitary parts, to see
them, every night before they lay down, kneeling under the bright
sky, saying their little prayers at women's laps.  At that time we
men all uncovered, and mostly kept at a distance.  When the innocent
creatures rose up, we murmured "Amen!" all together.  For, though we
had not heard what they said, we know it must be good for us.

At that time, too, as was only natural, those poor mothers in our
company, whose children had been killed, shed many tears.  I thought
the sight seemed to console them while it made them cry; but,
whether I was right or wrong in that, they wept very much.  On this
seventh night, Mrs. Fisher had cried for her lost darling until she
cried herself asleep.  She was lying on a little couch of leaves and
such-like (I made the best little couch I could for them every
night), and Miss Maryon had covered her, and sat by her, holding her
hand.  The stars looked down upon them.  As for me, I guarded them.

"Davis!" says Miss Maryon.  (I am not going to say what a voice she
had.  I couldn't if I tried.)

"I am here, Miss."

"The river sounds as if it were swollen to-night."

"We all think, Miss, that we are coming near the sea."

"Do you believe now, we shall escape?"

"I do now, Miss, really believe it."  I had always said I did; but,
I had in my own mind been doubtful.

"How glad you will be, my good Davis, to see England again!"

I have another confession to make that will appear singular.  When
she said these words, something rose in my throat; and the stars I
looked away at, seemed to break into sparkles that fell down my face
and burnt it.

"England is not much to me, Miss, except as a name."

"O, so true an Englishman should not say that!--Are you not well to-
night, Davis?"  Very kindly, and with a quick change.

"Quite well, Miss."

"Are you sure?  Your voice sounds altered in my hearing."

"No, Miss, I am a stronger man than ever.  But, England is nothing
to me."

Miss Maryon sat silent for so long a while, that I believed she had
done speaking to me for one time.  However, she had not; for by-and-
by she said in a distinct clear tone:

"No, good friend; you must not say that England is nothing to you.
It is to be much to you, yet--everything to you.  You have to take
back to England the good name you have earned here, and the
gratitude and attachment and respect you have won here:  and you
have to make some good English girl very happy and proud, by
marrying her; and I shall one day see her, I hope, and make her
happier and prouder still, by telling her what noble services her
husband's were in South America, and what a noble friend he was to
me there."

Though she spoke these kind words in a cheering manner, she spoke
them compassionately.  I said nothing.  It will appear to be another
strange confession, that I paced to and fro, within call, all that
night, a most unhappy man, reproaching myself all the night long.
"You are as ignorant as any man alive; you are as obscure as any man
alive; you are as poor as any man alive; you are no better than the
mud under your foot."  That was the way in which I went on against
myself until the morning.

With the day, came the day's labour.  What I should have done--
without the labour, I don't know.  We were afloat again at the usual
hour, and were again making our way down the river.  It was broader,
and clearer of obstructions than it had been, and it seemed to flow
faster.  This was one of Drooce's quiet days; Mr. Pordage, besides
being sulky, had almost lost his voice; and we made good way, and
with little noise.

There was always a seaman forward on the raft, keeping a bright
look-out.  Suddenly, in the full heat of the day, when the children
were slumbering, and the very trees and reeds appeared to be
slumbering, this man--it was Short--holds up his hand, and cries
with great caution:  "Avast!  Voices ahead!"

We held on against the stream as soon as we could bring her up, and
the other raft followed suit.  At first, Mr. Macey, Mr. Fisher, and
myself, could hear nothing; though both the seamen aboard of us
agreed that they could hear voices and oars.  After a little pause,
however, we united in thinking that we could hear the sound of
voices, and the dip of oars.  But, you can hear a long way in those
countries, and there was a bend of the river before us, and nothing
was to be seen except such waters and such banks as we were now in
the eighth day (and might, for the matter of our feelings, have been
in the eightieth), of having seen with anxious eyes.

It was soon decided to put a man ashore, who should creep through
the wood, see what was coming, and warn the rafts.  The rafts in the
meantime to keep the middle of the stream.  The man to be put
ashore, and not to swim ashore, as the first thing could be more
quickly done than the second.  The raft conveying him, to get back
into mid-stream, and to hold on along with the other, as well is it
could, until signalled by the man.  In case of danger, the man to
shift for himself until it should be safe to take him on board
again.  I volunteered to be the man.

We knew that the voices and oars must come up slowly against the
stream; and our seamen knew, by the set of the stream, under which
bank they would come.  I was put ashore accordingly.  The raft got
off well, and I broke into the wood.

Steaming hot it was, and a tearing place to get through.  So much
the better for me, since it was something to contend against and do.
I cut off the bend of the river, at a great saving of space, came to
the water's edge again, and hid myself, and waited.  I could now
hear the dip of the oars very distinctly; the voices had ceased.

The sound came on in a regular tune, and as I lay hidden, I fancied
the tune so played to be, "Chris'en--George--King!  Chris'en--
George--King!  Chris'en--George--King!" over and over again, always
the same, with the pauses always at the same places.  I had likewise
time to make up my mind that if these were the Pirates, I could and
would (barring my being shot) swim off to my raft, in spite of my
wound, the moment I had given the alarm, and hold my old post by
Miss Maryon.

"Chris'en--George--King!  Chris'en--George--King!  Chris'en--George-
-King!" coming up, now, very near.

I took a look at the branches about me, to see where a shower of
bullets would be most likely to do me least hurt; and I took a look
back at the track I had made in forcing my way in; and now I was
wholly prepared and fully ready for them.

"Chris'en--George--King!  Chris'en--George--King!  Chris'en--George-
-King!"  Here they are!

Who were they?  The barbarous Pirates, scum of all nations, headed
by such men as the hideous little Portuguese monkey, and the one-
eyed English convict with the gash across his face, that ought to
have gashed his wicked head off?  The worst men in the world picked
out from the worst, to do the cruellest and most atrocious deeds
that ever stained it?  The howling, murdering, black-flag waving,
mad, and drunken crowd of devils that had overcome us by numbers and
by treachery?  No.  These were English men in English boats--good
blue-jackets and red-coats--marines that I knew myself, and sailors
that knew our seamen!  At the helm of the first boat, Captain
Carton, eager and steady.  At the helm of the second boat, Captain
Maryon, brave and bold.  At the helm of the third boat, an old
seaman, with determination carved into his watchful face, like the
figure-head of a ship.  Every man doubly and trebly armed from head
to foot.  Every man lying-to at his work, with a will that had all
his heart and soul in it.  Every man looking out for any trace of
friend or enemy, and burning to be the first to do good or avenge
evil.  Every man with his face on fire when he saw me, his
countryman who had been taken prisoner, and hailed me with a cheer,
as Captain Carton's boat ran in and took me on board.

I reported, "All escaped, sir!  All well, all safe, all here!"

God bless me--and God bless them--what a cheer!  It turned me weak,
as I was passed on from hand to hand to the stern of the boat:
every hand patting me or grasping me in some way or other, in the
moment of my going by.

"Hold up, my brave fellow," says Captain Carton, clapping me on the
shoulder like a friend, and giving me a flask.  "Put your lips to
that, and they'll be red again.  Now, boys, give way!"

The banks flew by us as if the mightiest stream that ever ran was
with us; and so it was, I am sure, meaning the stream to those men's
ardour and spirit.  The banks flew by us, and we came in sight of
the rafts--the banks flew by us, and we came alongside of the rafts-
-the banks stopped; and there was a tumult of laughing and crying,
and kissing and shaking of hands, and catching up of children and
setting of them down again, and a wild hurry of thankfulness and joy
that melted every one and softened all hearts.

I had taken notice, in Captain Carton's boat, that there was a
curious and quite new sort of fitting on board.  It was a kind of a
little bower made of flowers, and it was set up behind the captain,
and betwixt him and the rudder.  Not only was this arbour, so to
call it, neatly made of flowers, but it was ornamented in a singular
way.  Some of the men had taken the ribbons and buckles off their
hats, and hung them among the flowers; others had made festoons and
streamers of their handkerchiefs, and hung them there; others had
intermixed such trifles as bits of glass and shining fragments of
lockets and tobacco-boxes with the flowers; so that altogether it
was a very bright and lively object in the sunshine.  But why there,
or what for, I did not understand.

Now, as soon as the first bewilderment was over, Captain Carton gave
the order to land for the present.  But this boat of his, with two
hands left in her, immediately put off again when the men were out
of her, and kept off, some yards from the shore.  As she floated
there, with the two hands gently backing water to keep her from
going down the stream, this pretty little arbour attracted many
eyes.  None of the boat's crew, however, had anything to say about
it, except that it was the captain's fancy.

The captain--with the women and children clustering round him, and
the men of all ranks grouped outside them, and all listening--stood
telling how the Expedition, deceived by its bad intelligence, had
chased the light Pirate boats all that fatal night, and had still
followed in their wake next day, and had never suspected until many
hours too late that the great Pirate body had drawn off in the
darkness when the chase began, and shot over to the Island.  He
stood telling how the Expedition, supposing the whole array of armed
boats to be ahead of it, got tempted into shallows and went aground;
but not without having its revenge upon the two decoy-boats, both of
which it had come up with, overhand, and sent to the bottom with all
on board.  He stood telling how the Expedition, fearing then that
the case stood as it did, got afloat again, by great exertion, after
the loss of four more tides, and returned to the Island, where they
found the sloop scuttled and the treasure gone.  He stood telling
how my officer, Lieutenant Linderwood, was left upon the Island,
with as strong a force as could be got together hurriedly from the
mainland, and how the three boats we saw before us were manned and
armed and had come away, exploring the coast and inlets, in search
of any tidings of us.  He stood telling all this, with his face to
the river; and, as he stood telling it, the little arbour of flowers
floated in the sunshine before all the faces there.

Leaning on Captain Carton's shoulder, between him and Miss Maryon,
was Mrs. Fisher, her head drooping on her arm.  She asked him,
without raising it, when he had told so much, whether he had found
her mother?

"Be comforted!  She lies," said the Captain gently, "under the
cocoa-nut trees on the beach."

"And my child, Captain Carton, did you find my child, too?  Does my
darling rest with my mother?"

"No.  Your pretty child sleeps," said the Captain, "under a shade of
flowers."

His voice shook; but there was something in it that struck all the
hearers.  At that moment there sprung from the arbour in his boat a
little creature, clapping her hands and stretching out her arms, and
crying, "Dear papa!  Dear mamma!  I am not killed.  I am saved.  I
am coming to kiss you.  Take me to them, take me to them, good, kind
sailors!"

Nobody who saw that scene has ever forgotten it, I am sure, or ever
will forget it.  The child had kept quite still, where her brave
grandmamma had put her (first whispering in her ear, "Whatever
happens to me, do not stir, my dear!"), and had remained quiet until
the fort was deserted; she had then crept out of the trench, and
gone into her mother's house; and there, alone on the solitary
Island, in her mother's room, and asleep on her mother's bed, the
Captain had found her.  Nothing could induce her to be parted from
him after he took her up in his arms, and he had brought her away
with him, and the men had made the bower for her.  To see those men
now, was a sight.  The joy of the women was beautiful; the joy of
those women who had lost their own children, was quite sacred and
divine; but, the ecstasies of Captain Carton's boat's crew, when
their pet was restored to her parents, were wonderful for the
tenderness they showed in the midst of roughness.  As the Captain
stood with the child in his arms, and the child's own little arms
now clinging round his neck, now round her father's, now round her
mother's, now round some one who pressed up to kiss her, the boat's
crew shook hands with one another, waved their hats over their
heads, laughed, sang, cried, danced--and all among themselves,
without wanting to interfere with anybody--in a manner never to be
represented.  At last, I saw the coxswain and another, two very
hard-faced men, with grizzled heads, who had been the heartiest of
the hearty all along, close with one another, get each of them the
other's head under his arm, and pommel away at it with his fist as
hard as he could, in his excess of joy.

When we had well rested and refreshed ourselves--and very glad we
were to have some of the heartening things to eat and drink that had
come up in the boats--we recommenced our voyage down the river:
rafts, and boats, and all.  I said to myself, it was a very
different kind of voyage now, from what it had been; and I fell into
my proper place and station among my fellow-soldiers.

But, when we halted for the night, I found that Miss Maryon had
spoken to Captain Carton concerning me.  For, the Captain came
straight up to me, and says he, "My brave fellow, you have been Miss
Maryon's body-guard all along, and you shall remain so.  Nobody
shall supersede you in the distinction and pleasure of protecting
that young lady."  I thanked his honour in the fittest words I could
find, and that night I was placed on my old post of watching the
place where she slept.  More than once in the night, I saw Captain
Carton come out into the air, and stroll about there, to see that
all was well.  I have now this other singular confession to make,
that I saw him with a heavy heart.  Yes; I saw him with a heavy,
heavy heart.

In the day-time, I had the like post in Captain Carton's boat.  I
had a special station of my own, behind Miss Maryon, and no hands
but hers ever touched my wound.  (It has been healed these many long
years; but, no other hands have ever touched it.)  Mr. Pordage was
kept tolerably quiet now, with pen and ink, and began to pick up his
senses a little.  Seated in the second boat, he made documents with
Mr. Kitten, pretty well all day; and he generally handed in a
Protest about something whenever we stopped.  The Captain, however,
made so very light of these papers, that it grew into a saying among
the men, when one of them wanted a match for his pipe, "Hand us over
a Protest, Jack!"  As to Mrs. Pordage, she still wore the nightcap,
and she now had cut all the ladies on account of her not having been
formally and separately rescued by Captain Carton before anybody
else.  The end of Mr. Pordage, to bring to an end all I know about
him, was, that he got great compliments at home for his conduct on
these trying occasions, and that he died of yellow jaundice, a
Governor and a K.C.B.

Sergeant Drooce had fallen from a high fever into a low one.  Tom
Packer--the only man who could have pulled the Sergeant through it--
kept hospital aboard the old raft, and Mrs. Belltott, as brisk as
ever again (but the spirit of that little woman, when things tried
it, was not equal to appearances), was head-nurse under his
directions.  Before we got down to the Mosquito coast, the joke had
been made by one of our men, that we should see her gazetted Mrs.
Tom Packer, vice Belltott exchanged.

When we reached the coast, we got native boats as substitutes for
the rafts; and we rowed along under the land; and in that beautiful
climate, and upon that beautiful water, the blooming days were like
enchantment.  Ah!  They were running away, faster than any sea or
river, and there was no tide to bring them back.  We were coming
very near the settlement where the people of Silver-Store were to be
left, and from which we Marines were under orders to return to
Belize.

Captain Carton had, in the boat by him, a curious long-barrelled
Spanish gun, and he had said to Miss Maryon one day that it was the
best of guns, and had turned his head to me, and said:

"Gill Davis, load her fresh with a couple of slugs, against a chance
of showing how good she is."

So, I had discharged the gun over the sea, and had loaded her,
according to orders, and there it had lain at the Captain's feet,
convenient to the Captain's hand.

The last day but one of our journey was an uncommonly hot day.  We
started very early; but, there was no cool air on the sea as the day
got on, and by noon the heat was really hard to bear, considering
that there were women and children to bear it.  Now, we happened to
open, just at that time, a very pleasant little cove or bay, where
there was a deep shade from a great growth of trees.  Now, the
Captain, therefore, made the signal to the other boats to follow him
in and lie by a while.

The men who were off duty went ashore, and lay down, but were
ordered, for caution's sake, not to stray, and to keep within view.
The others rested on their oars, and dozed.  Awnings had been made
of one thing and another, in all the boats, and the passengers found
it cooler to be under them in the shade, when there was room enough,
than to be in the thick woods.  So, the passengers were all afloat,
and mostly sleeping.  I kept my post behind Miss Maryon, and she was
on Captain Carton's right in the boat, and Mrs. Fisher sat on her
right again.  The Captain had Mrs. Fisher's daughter on his knee.
He and the two ladies were talking about the Pirates, and were
talking softly; partly, because people do talk softly under such
indolent circumstances, and partly because the little girl had gone
off asleep.

I think I have before given it out for my Lady to write down, that
Captain Carton had a fine bright eye of his own.  All at once, he
darted me a side look, as much as to say, "Steady--don't take on--I
see something!"--and gave the child into her mother's arms.  That
eye of his was so easy to understand, that I obeyed it by not so
much as looking either to the right or to the left out of a corner
of my own, or changing my attitude the least trifle.  The Captain
went on talking in the same mild and easy way; but began--with his
arms resting across his knees, and his head a little hanging
forward, as if the heat were rather too much for him--began to play
with the Spanish gun.

"They had laid their plans, you see," says the Captain, taking up
the Spanish gun across his knees, and looking, lazily, at the
inlaying on the stock, "with a great deal of art; and the corrupt or
blundering local authorities were so easily deceived;" he ran his
left hand idly along the barrel, but I saw, with my breath held,
that he covered the action of cocking the gun with his right--"so
easily deceived, that they summoned us out to come into the trap.
But my intention as to future operations--"  In a flash the Spanish
gun was at his bright eye, and he fired.

All started up; innumerable echoes repeated the sound of the
discharge; a cloud of bright-coloured birds flew out of the woods
screaming; a handful of leaves were scattered in the place where the
shot had struck; a crackling of branches was heard; and some lithe
but heavy creature sprang into the air, and fell forward, head down,
over the muddy bank.

"What is it?" cries Captain Maryon from his boat.  All silent then,
but the echoes rolling away.

"It is a Traitor and a Spy," said Captain Carton, handing me the gun
to load again.  "And I think the other name of the animal is
Christian George King!"

Shot through the heart.  Some of the people ran round to the spot,
and drew him out, with the slime and wet trickling down his face;
but his face itself would never stir any more to the end of time.

"Leave him hanging to that tree," cried Captain Carton; his boat's
crew giving way, and he leaping ashore.  "But first into this wood,
every man in his place.  And boats!  Out of gunshot!"

It was a quick change, well meant and well made, though it ended in
disappointment.  No Pirates were there; no one but the Spy was
found.  It was supposed that the Pirates, unable to retake us, and
expecting a great attack upon them to be the consequence of our
escape, had made from the ruins in the Forest, taken to their ship
along with the Treasure, and left the Spy to pick up what
intelligence he could.  In the evening we went away, and he was left
hanging to the tree, all alone, with the red sun making a kind of a
dead sunset on his black face.

Next day, we gained the settlement on the Mosquito coast for which
we were bound.  Having stayed there to refresh seven days, and
having been much commended, and highly spoken of, and finely
entertained, we Marines stood under orders to march from the Town-
Gate (it was neither much of a town nor much of a gate), at five in
the morning.

My officer had joined us before then.  When we turned out at the
gate, all the people were there; in the front of them all those who
had been our fellow-prisoners, and all the seamen.

"Davis," says Lieutenant Linderwood.  "Stand out, my friend!"

I stood out from the ranks, and Miss Maryon and Captain Carton came
up to me.

"Dear Davis," says Miss Maryon, while the tears fell fast down her
face, "your grateful friends, in most unwillingly taking leave of
you, ask the favour that, while you bear away with you their
affectionate remembrance, which nothing can ever impair, you will
also take this purse of money--far more valuable to you, we all
know, for the deep attachment and thankfulness with which it is
offered, than for its own contents, though we hope those may prove
useful to you, too, in after life."

I got out, in answer, that I thankfully accepted the attachment and
affection, but not the money.  Captain Carton looked at me very
attentively, and stepped back, and moved away.  I made him my bow as
he stepped back, to thank him for being so delicate.

"No, miss," said I, "I think it would break my heart to accept of
money.  But, if you could condescend to give to a man so ignorant
and common as myself, any little thing you have worn--such as a bit
of ribbon--"

She took a ring from her finger, and put it in my hand.  And she
rested her hand in mine, while she said these words:

"The brave gentlemen of old--but not one of them was braver, or had
a nobler nature than you--took such gifts from ladies, and did all
their good actions for the givers' sakes.  If you will do yours for
mine, I shall think with pride that I continue to have some share in
the life of a gallant and generous man."

For the second time in my life she kissed my hand.  I made so bold,
for the first time, as to kiss hers; and I tied the ring at my
breast, and I fell back to my place.

Then, the horse-litter went out at the gate with Sergeant Drooce in
it; and the horse-litter went out at the gate with Mrs. Belltott in
it; and Lieutenant Linderwood gave the word of command, "Quick
march!" and, cheered and cried for, we went out of the gate too,
marching along the level plain towards the serene blue sky, as if we
were marching straight to Heaven.

When I have added here that the Pirate scheme was blown to shivers,
by the Pirate-ship which had the Treasure on board being so
vigorously attacked by one of His Majesty's cruisers, among the West
India Keys, and being so swiftly boarded and carried, that nobody
suspected anything about the scheme until three-fourths of the
Pirates were killed, and the other fourth were in irons, and the
Treasure was recovered; I come to the last singular confession I
have got to make.

It is this.  I well knew what an immense and hopeless distance there
was between me and Miss Maryon; I well knew that I was no fitter
company for her than I was for the angels; I well knew, that she was
as high above my reach as the sky over my head; and yet I loved her.
What put it in my low heart to be so daring, or whether such a thing
ever happened before or since, as that a man so uninstructed and
obscure as myself got his unhappy thoughts lifted up to such a
height, while knowing very well how presumptuous and impossible to
be realised they were, I am unable to say; still, the suffering to
me was just as great as if I had been a gentleman.  I suffered
agony--agony.  I suffered hard, and I suffered long.  I thought of
her last words to me, however, and I never disgraced them.  If it
had not been for those dear words, I think I should have lost myself
in despair and recklessness.

The ring will be found lying on my heart, of course, and will be
laid with me wherever I am laid.  I am getting on in years now,
though I am able and hearty.  I was recommended for promotion, and
everything was done to reward me that could be done; but my total
want of all learning stood in my way, and I found myself so
completely out of the road to it that I could not conquer any
learning, though I tried.  I was long in the service, and I
respected it, and was respected in it, and the service is dear to me
at this present hour.

At this present hour, when I give this out to my Lady to be written
down, all my old pain has softened away, and I am as happy as a man
can be, at this present fine old country-house of Admiral Sir George
Carton, Baronet.  It was my Lady Carton who herself sought me out,
over a great many miles of the wide world, and found me in Hospital
wounded, and brought me here.  It is my Lady Carton who writes down
my words.  My Lady was Miss Maryon.  And now, that I conclude what I
had to tell, I see my Lady's honoured gray hair droop over her face,
as she leans a little lower at her desk; and I fervently thank her
for being so tender as I see she is, towards the past pain and
trouble of her poor, old, faithful, humble soldier.



Footnotes:

{1}   Dicken's didn't write the second chapter and it is omitted in
this edition.  In it the prisoners are firstly made a ransom of for
the treasure left on the Island and then manage to escape from the
Pirates.