The Lady and the Pirate by Emerson Hough (ebook reader library TXT) đ
- Author: Emerson Hough
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Poor Helena! She blushed red to the hair; and I fear I did no better myself. âJimmy!â reproved Aunt Lucinda.
âDonât call me âJimmyâ!â rejoined that hopeful. âMy name is LâOlonnois, the Scourge of The Sea. Me anâ Jean Lafitte, we follow Black Bart the Avenger, to the Spanish Main. Auntie, pass me the bacon, please. Iâm just about starved.â
Mrs. Daniver, as was her custom, ate a very substantial breakfast; Helena, almost none at all; nor had I much taste for food. In some way, our constraint insensibly extended to all the party, much to LâOlonnoisâ disgust. âItâs her fault!â I overheard him say to his mate. âWomen canât play no games. Anâ we was havinâ such a bully chance! Now, likeâs not, we wonât stay here longerân itâll take to get things back to the boat again. I donât want to go back homeâIâd rather be a pirate; anâ soâd any fellow.â
âSure he would,â assented Jean. They did not see me, behind the tent.
âSomethinâs wrong,â began LâOlonnois, portentously.
âWhatâd you guess?â queried Lafitte. âLooks to me like it was somethinâ between him anâ the fair captive.â
âThatâs just itâthatâs just what I said! Now, if Black Bart lets his whiskers grow, anâ Auntie Helena wears them rings, ainât it just like in the book? Course it is! But here they go, donât eat nothinâ, donât talk none to nobody.â
âIâll tell you what!â began Lafitte.
âUh-huh, what?â demanded LâOlonnois.
âA great wrong has been did our brave leader by yon heartless jade; thatâs what!â
âYou betcher life they has. Heâs on the square, anâ look what he done for usâlook how he managed things all the way down to here. Anybody else couldnât have got away with this. Anybody elseâd never aâ went out there last night after John, just a Chink, thataway. Anâ her!â
Jimmyâs disapproval of his auntie, as thus expressed, was extreme. I was now about to step away, but feared detection, so unwillingly heard on.
âBut he canât see no one else but yon fickle jade!â commented Jean Lafitte, âunworthy as she is of a bold chiefâs regard!â
âNope. Thatâs whatâs goinâ to make all the trouble. Iâll tell you what!â
âWhat?â
âWeâll have to fix it up, somehow.â
âHowâd you mean?â
âWhy, reason it out with âem both.â
Jean apparently shook his head, or had some look of dubiousness, for LâOlonnois went on.
âWe gotta do it, somehow. If we donât, weâll about have to go back home; anâ who wants to go back home from a good old desert island like this here. So nowâââ
âUh, huh?â
âWhy, Iâll tell you, now. You see, I got some pull with herâthe fair captive. She used to lick me, but she donât dast to try it on here on a desert island: so I got some pull. Anâ like enough you câd talk it over with Black Bart.â
âNuhâuh! I donât like to.â
âWhy?â
âWell, I donât. Heâs all right.â
âYes, but we got to get âem together!â
âShore. But, my idea, heâs hard to get together if he gets a notion he ainât had a square deal nohow, someways.â
âWell, he ainât. So that makes my part the hardest. But you just go to him, and tell him not to hurry, because you are informed the fair captive is goinâ to relent, pretty soon, if we just donât get in too big a hurry and run away from a place like thisâwhere the duck shootinâ is immense!â
âBut kin you work her, Jimmy?â
âWell, I dunno. Sheâs pretty set, if she thinks she ainât had a square deal, too.â
âWell now,â argued Lafitte, âif thatâs the way they both feel, either theyâre both wrong anâ ought to shake hands, or else one of âemâs wrong, and they either ought to get together anâ find out which it was, or else they ought to leave it to some one else to say which one was wrong. Ainât that so?â
âOâ course itâs so. So now, thing fer us fellows to do, is just to put it before âem plain, anâ get âem both to leave it to us two fellers whatâs right fer âem both to do. Now, I think theyâd ought to get married, both of âemâI mean to each other, you know. Folks does get married.â
âBlack Bart would,â said Jean Lafitte. âIâll bet anything. The fair captive, sheâs a heartless jade, but I seen Black Bart lookinâ at her, anââââ
âAnâ I seen her lookinâ at himâleastways a pictureâanâ says she, âJimmyââââ
âJimmy!â It was I, myself, red and angry, who now broke from my unwilling eavesdropping.
The two boys turned to me innocently. I found it difficult to say anything at all, and wisest to say nothing. âI was just going to ask if you two wouldnât like to take the guns and go out after some more ducksâespecially the kind with red heads and flat noses, such as we had yesterday. And Iâll lend you Partial, so you can try for some more of those funny little turtles. Iâll have to go out to the ship, and also over to the lighthouse, before long. The tide will turn, perhaps, and at least the wind is offshore from the island now.â
âSure, weâll go.â Jean spoke for both at once.
âVery well, then. And be careful. And youâdâyouâd better leave your auntie and her auntie alone, Jimmyâtheyâll want to sleep.â
âYou didnât hear us sayinâ nothinâ, did you, Black Bart?â asked LâOlonnois, suspiciously.
âBy Jove! I believe thatâs a boat beating down the bay,â said I. âSail ho!â And so eager were they that they forgot my omission of direct reply.
âItâs very likely only the lighthouse supply boat coming in,â said I. âIâll find out over there. Better run along, or the morning flight of the birds will be over.â So they ran along.
As for myself, I called Peterson and Williams for another visit to our disabled ship, which now lay on a level keel, white and glistening, rocking gently in the bright wind. I left word for the ladies that we might not be back for luncheon.
We found that the piling waters of CĂŽte Blanche, erstwhile blown out to sea, were now slowly settling back again after the offshore storm. The Belle HelĂšne had risen from her bed in the mud now and rode free. Our soundings showed us that it would be easy now to break out the anchor and reach the channel, just ahead. So, finding no leak of consequence, and the beloved engines not the worse for wear, Williams went below to get up some power, while Peterson took the wheel and I went forward to the capstan.
The donkey winch soon began its work, and I felt the great anchor at length break away and come apeak. The current of the air swung us before we had all made fast; and as I sounded with a long bow pike, I presently called out to Peterson, âNo bottom!â He nodded; and now, slowly, we took the channel and moved on in opposite the light. We could see the white-capped gulf rolling beyond.
âWater there!â said Peterson. âWe can go on through, come around in the Morrison cut-off, and so make the end of the Manning channel to the mainland. But I wish we had a local pilot.â
I nodded. âDrop her in alongside this fellowâs wharf,â I added. âThe ladies have sent some lettersâto go out by the tenderâs boat, yonderâI suppose heâll be going back to-day.â
âLike enough,â said Peterson; and so gently we moved on up the dredged channel, and at last made fast at the tumble-down wharf of the lighthouse; courteously waiting for the little craft of the tender to make its landing.
We found the mooring none too good, what with the stormâs work at the wharf, and as we shifted our lines a time or two, the gaping, jeans-clad Cajun who had come in with mail and supplies passed in to the lighthouse ahead of us; and I wonder his head did not twist quite off its neck, for though he walked forward, he ever looked behind him.
When at length we two, Peterson and myself, passed up the rickety walk to the equally rickety gallery at the foot of the light, we found two very badly frightened men instead of a single curious one. The keeper in sooth had in hand a muzzle-loading shotgun of such extreme age, connected with such extreme length of barrel, as might have led one to suspect it had grown an inch or so annually for all of many decades. He was too much frightened to make active resistance, however, and only warned us away, himself, now, a pale saffron in color.
âKeep hout!â he commanded. âNo, youâll didnât!â
âWeâll didnât what, my friend?â began I mildly. âDonât you like my looks? Not that I blame you if you do not. But has the boat brought down any milk or eggs that you can spare?â
âNo millukâno haig!â muttered the light tender; and they would have closed the door.
âCome, come now, my friends!â I rejoined testily. âSuppose you havenât, you can at least be civil. I want to talk with you a minute. This is the power yacht Belle HelĂšne, of Mackinaw, cruising on the Gulf. We went aground in the storm; and all we want now is to send out a little mail by you to Morgan City, or wherever you go; and to pass the time of day with you, as friends should. Whatâs wrongâdo you think us a government revenue boat, and are you smuggling stuff from Cuba through the light here?â
âWe no make hany smugâ,â replied the keeper. âBut we know you, who you been!â
He smote now upon an open newspaper, whose wrapper still lay on the floor. I glanced, and this time I saw a half-page cut of the Belle HelĂšne herself, together with portraits of myself, Mrs. Daniver, Miss Emory and two wholly imaginary and fearsome boys who very likely were made up from newspaper portraits of the James Brothers! Moreover, my hasty glance caught sight of a line in large letters, reading:
Ten Thousand Dollars Reward!
âPeterson,â said I calmly, handing him the paper, âthey seem to be after us, and to value us rather high.â
He glanced, his eyes eager; but Peterson, while a professional doubter, was personally a man of whose loyalty and whose courage I, myself, had not the slightest doubt.
âLet âem come!â said he. âWeâre on our own way and about our own business; and outside the three mile zone, let âem follow us on the high seas if they like. Sheâs sound as a bell, Mr. Harry, and once we get her docked and her port shaft straight, thereâs nothing can touch her on the Gulf. Let âem come.â
âBut we canât dock here, my good Peterson.â
âWell, we can beat âem with one engine and one screw. Besides, what have we done?â
âHaint you was âhrobber, han ron hoff with those sheep?â demanded the keeper excitedly.
âNo, we are not ship thieves but gentlemen, my friend,â I answered, suddenly catching at his long gun and setting it behind me. âYou might let that go off,â I explained. At which he went yellower than ever, a thing I had thought impossible.
âNow, look here,â said I. âSuppose we
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