The Coral Island by Robert Michael Ballantyne (interesting books to read in english TXT) đź“–
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companions had a pistol. Without a moment’s hesitation, therefore,
I lifted the keg from the deck and tossed it into the sea! An
exclamation of surprise burst from the captain and some of the men
who witnessed this act of mine.
Striding up to me, and uttering fearful imprecations, the captain
raised his hand to strike me, while he shouted, “Boy! whelp! what
mean you by that?”
“If you lower your hand,” said I, in a loud voice, while I felt the
blood rush to my temples, “I’ll tell you. Until you do so I’m
dumb!”
The captain stepped back and regarded me with a look of amazement.
“Now,” continued I, “I threw that keg into the sea because the wind
and waves will carry it to my friends on the Coral Island, who
happen to have a pistol, but no powder. I hope that it will reach
them soon, and my only regret is that the keg was not a bigger one.
Moreover, pirate, you said just now that you thought I was made of
better stuff! I don’t know what stuff I am made of, - I never
thought much about that subject; but I’m quite certain of this,
that I am made of such stuff as the like of you shall never tame,
though you should do your worst.”
To my surprise the captain, instead of flying into a rage, smiled,
and, thrusting his hand into the voluminous shawl that encircled
his waist, turned on his heel and walked aft, while I went below.
Here, instead of being rudely handled, as I had expected, the men
received me with a shout of laughter, and one of them, patting me
on the back, said, “Well done, lad! you’re a brick, and I have no
doubt will turn out a rare cove. Bloody Bill, there, was just such
a fellow as you are, and he’s now the biggest cut-throat of us
all.”
“Take a can of beer, lad,” cried another, “and wet your whistle
after that speech o’ your’n to the captain. If any one o’ us had
made it, youngster, he would have had no whistle to wet by this
time.”
“Stop your clapper, Jack,” vociferated a third; “give the boy a
junck o’ meat. Don’t you see he’s a’most goin’ to kick the
bucket?”
“And no wonder,” said the first speaker, with an oath, “after the
tumble you gave him into the boat. I guess it would have broke
YOUR neck if you had got it.”
I did indeed feel somewhat faint; which was owing, doubtless, to
the combined effects of ill-usage and hunger; for it will be
recollected that I had dived out of the cave that morning before
breakfast, and it was now near mid-day. I therefore gladly
accepted a plate of boiled pork and a yam, which were handed to me
by one of the men from the locker on which some of the crew were
seated eating their dinner. But I must add that the zest with
which I ate my meal was much abated in consequence of the frightful
oaths and the terrible language that flowed from the lips of these
godless men, even in the midst of their hilarity and good-humour.
The man who had been alluded to as Bloody Bill was seated near me,
and I could not help wondering at the moody silence he maintained
among his comrades. He did indeed reply to their questions in a
careless, off-hand tone, but he never volunteered a remark. The
only difference between him and the others was his taciturnity and
his size, for he was nearly, if not quite, as large a man as the
captain.
During the remainder of the afternoon I was left to my own
reflections, which were anything but agreeable, for I could not
banish from my mind the threat about the thumb-screws, of the
nature and use of which I had a vague but terrible conception. I
was still meditating on my unhappy fate when, just after night-fall, one of the watch on deck called down the hatchway, -
“Hallo there! one o’ you, tumble up and light the cabin lamp, and
send that boy aft to the captain - sharp!”
“Now then, do you hear, youngster? the captain wants you. Look
alive,” said Bloody Bill, raising his huge frame from the locker on
which he had been asleep for the last two hours. He sprang up the
ladder and I instantly followed him, and, going aft, was shown into
the cabin by one of the men, who closed the door after me.
A small silver lamp which hung from a beam threw a dim soft light
over the cabin, which was a small apartment, and comfortably but
plainly finished. Seated on a camp-stool at the table, and busily
engaged in examining a chart of the Pacific, was the captain, who
looked up as I entered, and, in a quiet voice, bade me be seated,
while he threw down his pencil, and, rising from the table,
stretched himself on a sofa at the upper end of the cabin.
“Boy,” said he, looking me full in the face, “what is your name?”
“Ralph Rover,” I replied.
“Where did you come from, and how came you to be on that island?
How many companions had you on it? Answer me, now, and mind you
tell no lies.”
“I never tell lies,” said I, firmly.
The captain received this reply with a cold sarcastic smile, and
bade me answer his questions.
I then told him the history of myself and my companions from the
time we sailed till the day of his visit to the island, taking
care, however, to make no mention of the Diamond Cave. After I had
concluded, he was silent for a few minutes; then, looking up, he
said - “Boy, I believe you.”
I was surprised at this remark, for I could not imagine why he
should not believe me. However, I made no reply.
“And what,” continued the captain, “makes you think that this
schooner is a pirate?”
“The black flag,” said I, “showed me what you are; and if any
further proof were wanting I have had it in the brutal treatment I
have received at your hands.”
The captain frowned as I spoke, but subduing his anger he continued
- “Boy, you are too bold. I admit that we treated you roughly, but
that was because you made us lose time and gave us a good deal of
trouble. As to the black flag, that is merely a joke that my
fellows play off upon people sometimes in order to frighten them.
It is their humour, and does no harm. I am no pirate, boy, but a
lawful trader, - a rough one, I grant you, but one can’t help that
in these seas, where there are so many pirates on the water and
such murderous blackguards on the land. I carry on a trade in
sandal-wood with the Feejee Islands; and if you choose, Ralph, to
behave yourself and be a good boy, I’ll take you along with me and
give you a good share of the profits. You see I’m in want of an
honest boy like you, to look after the cabin and keep the log, and
superintend the traffic on shore sometimes. What say you, Ralph,
would you like to become a sandal-wood trader?”
I was much surprised by this explanation, and a good deal relieved
to find that the vessel, after all, was not a pirate; but instead
of replying I said, “If it be as you state, then why did you take
me from my island, and why do you not now take me back?”
The captain smiled as he replied, “I took you off in anger, boy,
and I’m sorry for it. I would even now take you back, but we are
too far away from it. See, there it is,” he added, laying his
finger on the chart, “and we are now here, - fifty miles at least.
It would not be fair to my men to put about now, for they have all
an interest in the trade.”
I could make no reply to this; so, after a little more
conversation, I agreed to become one of the crew, at least until we
could reach some civilized island where I might be put ashore. The
captain assented to this proposition, and after thanking him for
the promise, I left the cabin and went on deck with feelings that
ought to have been lighter, but which were, I could not tell why,
marvellously heavy and uncomfortable still.
CHAPTER XXIII.
Bloody Bill - Dark surmises - A strange sail, and a strange crew,
and a still stranger cargo - New reasons for favouring missionaries
- A murderous massacre, and thoughts thereon.
THREE weeks after the conversation narrated in the last chapter, I
was standing on the quarterdeck of the schooner watching the
gambols of a shoal of porpoises that swam round us. It was a dead
calm. One of those still, hot, sweltering days, so common in the
Pacific, when Nature seems to have gone to sleep, and the only
thing in water or in air that proves her still alive, is her long,
deep breathing, in the swell of the mighty sea. No cloud floated
in the deep blue above; no ripple broke the reflected blue below.
The sun shone fiercely in the sky, and a ball of fire blazed, with
almost equal power, from out the bosom of the water. So intensely
still was it, and so perfectly transparent was the surface of the
deep, that had it not been for the long swell already alluded to,
we might have believed the surrounding universe to be a huge blue
liquid ball, and our little ship the one solitary material speck in
all creation, floating in the midst of it.
No sound broke on our ears save the soft puff now and then of a
porpoise, the slow creak of the masts, as we swayed gently on the
swell, the patter of the reef-points, and the occasional flap of
the hanging sails. An awning covered the fore and after parts of
the schooner, under which the men composing the watch on deck
lolled in sleepy indolence, overcome with excessive heat. Bloody
Bill, as the men invariably called him, was standing at the tiller,
but his post for the present was a sinecure, and he whiled away the
time by alternately gazing in dreamy abstraction at the compass in
the binnacle, and by walking to the taffrail in order to spit into
the sea. In one of these turns he came near to where I was
standing, and, leaning over the side, looked long and earnestly
down into the blue wave.
This man, although he was always taciturn and often surly, was the
only human being on board with whom I had the slightest desire to
become better acquainted. The other men, seeing that I did not
relish their company, and knowing that I was a protege of the
captain, treated me with total indifference. Bloody Bill, it is
true, did the same; but as this was his conduct towards every one
else, it was not peculiar in reference to me. Once or twice I
tried to draw him into conversation, but he always turned away
after a few cold monosyllables. As he now leaned over the taffrail
close beside me, I said to him, -
“Bill, why is it that you are so gloomy? Why do you never speak to
any one?”
Bill smiled slightly as he replied, “Why, I s’pose it’s because I
haint got nothin’ to say!”
“That’s strange,” said I, musingly; “you look like
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