Twice Bought by R. M. Ballantyne (fun books to read for adults .txt) đ
- Author: R. M. Ballantyne
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âPerhaps not,â returned Gashford, with a sneer, âbut you are always too sure by half oâ yer work. Come, stand up,â he added, going to where Tom lay, and stirring his prostrate form with his toe.
Brixton having now had time to consider his case coolly, had made up his mind to submit with a good grace to his fate, and, if it were so decreed, to die âlike a man.â âI deserve punishment,â he reasoned with himself, âthough death is too severe for the offence. However, a guilty man canât expect to be the chooser of his reward. I suppose it is fate, as the Turks say, so Iâll submitâlike them.â
He stood up at once, therefore, on being ordered to do so, and quietly underwent inspection.
âHa! I thought so!â exclaimed Gashford, contemptuously. âAny man could free himself from that in half an hour. But what better could be expected from a land-lubber?â
Crossby made some sharp allusions to a âsea-lubber,â but he wisely restrained his voice so that only those nearest overheard him.
Meanwhile Gashford undid the rope that bound Tom Brixtonâs arms behind him, and, holding him in his iron grip, ordered a smaller cord to be fetched.
Paddy Flinders, who had a schoolboy tendency to stuff his various pockets full of all sorts of miscellaneous articles, at once stepped forward and handed the leader a piece of strong cod-line.
âThere ye are, sor,â said he.
âJust the thing, Paddy. Here, catch hold of this end of it anâ haul.â
âYis, gineral,â said the Irishman, in a tone and with a degree of alacrity that caused a laugh from most of those who were looking on. Even the âgineralâ observed it, and remarked with a sardonic smileâ
âYou seem to be pleased to see your old chum in this fix, I think.â
âWell now, gineral,â returned Flinders, in an argumentative tone of voice, âI canât exactly say that, sor, for Iâm troubled with what ye may call amiable weaknesses. Anyhow, I might see âim in a worse fix.â
âWell, youâre like to see him in a worse fix if you live long enough,â returned the leader. âHaul now on this knot. Itâll puzzle him to undo that. Lend me your knife.â
Flinders drew his glittering bowie-knife from its sheath and handed it to his leader, who cut off the superfluous cordage with it, after having bound the prisonerâs wrists behind his back in a sailor-like manner.
In returning the knife to its owner, Gashford, who was fond of a practical joke, tossed it high in the air towards him with a âHere, catch.â
The keen glittering thing came twirling down, but to the surprise of all, the Irishman caught it by the handle as deftly as though he had been a trained juggler.
âThank your gineralship,â exclaimed Paddy, amid a shout of laughter and applause, bowing low in mock reverence. As he rose he made a wild flourish with the knife, uttered an Indian war-whoop, and cut a caper.
In that flourish he managed to strike the cord that bound the prisoner, and severed one turn of it. The barefaced audacity of the act (like that of a juggler) caused it to pass unobserved. Even Tom, although he felt the touch of the knife, was not aware of what had happened, for, of course, a number of uncut turns of the cord still held his wrists painfully tight.
âNow, lie down on your back,â said Gashford, sternly, when the laugh that Paddy had raised subsided.
Either the tone of this command, or the pain caused by his bonds, roused Tomâs anger, for he refused to obey.
âLie down, ye spalpeen, whin the gineral bids ye,â cried Flinders, suddenly seizing his old friend by the collar and flinging him flat on his back, in which act he managed to trip and fall on the top of him.
The opportunity was not a good one, nevertheless the energetic fellow managed to whisper, âThe ropeâs cut! Lie still!â in the very act of falling.
âWell done, Paddy,â exclaimed several of the laughing men, as Flinders rose with a pretended look of discomfiture, and went towards the fire, exclaimingâ
âNiver mind, boys, Iâll have me supper now. Hi! whoâs bin anâ stole it whin I was out on dooty? Oh! here it is all right. Now then, go to work, anâ whin the pipes is lighted Iâll maybe sing ye a song, or tell ye a story about ould Ireland.â
Obedient to orders, Tom Brixton lay perfectly still on his back, just where he had fallen, wondering much whether the cord was really cut, for he did not feel much relaxation of it or abatement of the pain. He resolved, at any rate, to give no further cause for rough treatment, but to await the issue of events as patiently as he could.
True to his promise, the Irishman after supper sang several songs, which, if not characterised by sweetness of tone, were delivered with a degree of vigour that seemed to make full amends in the estimation of his hearers. After that he told a thrilling ghost story, which drew the entire band of men round him. Paddy had a natural gift in the way of relating ghost stories, for, besides the power of rapid and sustained discourse, without hesitation or redundancy of words, he possessed a vivid imagination, a rich fancy, a deep bass voice, an expressive countenance, and a pair of large coal-black eyes, which, as one of the Yankee diggers said, âwould sartinly bore two holes in a blanket if he only looked at it long enough.â
We do not intend to inflict that ghost story on the reader. It is sufficient to say that Paddy began it by exclaiming in a loud voiceâââNow or niver, boysânow or niver.â Thatâs what the ghost said.â
âWhatâs that you say, Paddy?â asked Gashford, leaving his own separate and private fire, which he enjoyed with one or two chosen comrades, and approaching that round which the great body of the diggers were already assembled.
âI was just goinâ to tell the boys, sor, a bit of a ghost story.â
âWell, go on, lad, Iâd like to hear it, too.â
ââNow or niver!ââ repeated the Irishman, with such startling emphasis that even Tom Brixton, lying bound as he was under the shelter of a spreading tree at some distance from the fire, had his curiosity aroused. âThatâs what the ghost said, under somewhat pecooliar circumstances; anâ he said it twice so that there might be no mistake at all about it. âNow or niver! now or niver!â says he, anâ he said it earnestlyââ
âI didnât know that ghosts could speak,â interrupted Crossby, who, when not in a bad humour, was rather fond of thrusting bad jokes and blunt witticisms on his comrades.
âSure, Iâm not surprised at that for thereâs many things ye donât know, Crossby; besides, no ghost with the smallest taste of propriety about it would condescind to spake wid you. Well, boys, thatâs what the ghost said in a muffled viceâtheir vices are muffled, you know, an their virtues too, for all I know to the contrairy. Itâs a good sentiment is that âNow or niverâ for every wan of yeâso ye may putt it in yer pipes anâ smoke it, anâ those of ye who havenât got pipes can make a quid of it anâ chaw it, or subject it to meditation. âNow or niver!â Think oâ that! You see Iâm partikler about it, for the whole story turns on that pint, as the ghostâs life depended on it, but yeâll see anâ onderstanâ better whin I come to the end oâ the story.â
Paddy said this so earnestly that it had the double effect of chaining the attention of his hearers and sending a flash of light into Tom Brixtonâs brain.
âNow or never!â he muttered to himself, and turned gently on his side so as to be able to feel the cord that bound his wrists. It was still tight, but, by moving his fingers, he could feel that one of its coils had really been cut, and that with a little patience and exertion he might possibly free his hands.
Slight as the motion was, however, Gashford observed it, for the fire-light shone brightly on Tomâs recumbent figure.
âLie still, there!â he cried, sternly.
Tom lay perfectly still, and the Irishman continued his story. It grew in mystery and in horror as he proceeded, and his audience became entranced, while some of the more superstitious among them cast occasional glances over their shoulders into the forest behind, which ere long was steeped in the blackness of an unusually dark night. A few of those outside the circle rose and drew nearer to the story-teller.
At that moment a gleam of light which had already entered Brixtonâs brain flashed into that of Fred Westly, who arose, and, under pretext of being too far off from the speaker, went round to the opposite side of the fire so as to face him. By so doing he placed himself between the fire and his friend Tom. Two or three of the others followed his example, though not from the same motive, and thus, when the fire burnt low, the prisoner found himself lying in deep shadow. By that time he had freed his benumbed hands, chafed them into a condition of vitality, and was considering whether he should endeavour to creep quietly away or spring up and make a dash for life.
ââNow or niver,â said the ghost, in a solemn muffled vice,â continued Paddyâ
âWho did he say that to?â asked Gashford, who was by that time as much fascinated as the rest of the party.
âTo the thief, sor, av coorse, who was standinâ tremblinâ fornint him, while the sexton was digginâ the grave to putt him in aliveâin the dark shadow of a big tombstone.â
The Irishman had now almost reached the climax of his story, and was intensely graphic in his descriptionsâespecially at the horrible parts. He was obviously spinning it out, and the profound silence around told how completely he had enchained his hearers. It also warned Tom Brixton that his time was short, and that in his case it was indeed, ânow or never.â
He crept quietly towards the bushes near him. In passing a tree against which several rifles had been placed he could not resist the temptation to take one. Laying hold of that which stood nearest, and which seemed to be similar in make to the rifle they had taken from himself when he was captured, he drew it towards him. Unfortunately it formed a prop to several other rifles, which fell with a crash, and one of them exploded in the fall.
The effect on Paddyâs highly-strung audience was tremendous. Many of them yelled as if they had received an electric shock. All of them sprang up and turned round just in time to see their captive vanish, not unlike a ghost, into the thick darkness!
That glance, however, was sufficient to enlighten them. With shouts of rage many of them darted after the fugitive, and followed him up like bloodhounds. Others, who had never been very anxious for his capture or death, and had been turned somewhat in his favour by the bold stand he had made against the bear, returned to the fire after a short run.
If there had been even a glimmering of light Tom would certainly have been retaken at once, for not a few of his pursuers were quite as active and hardy as himself, but the intense darkness favoured him. Fortunately the forest immediately behind him was not so dense as elsewhere, else in his first desperate rush, regardless of consequences, he would probably have dashed himself against a tree. As it was he went right through a thicket and plunged headlong into a deep hole. He scrambled out of this with the agility of a panther, just in time to escape Gashford, who chanced to plunge into the same hole, but not so lightly. Heavy though he was, however, his strength was equal to the shock, and he
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