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and fire their ship above them. At the end of which speech the Spaniard began to
rave, and sprang at me like a catamount. Paradise put forth a foot and tripped
him up, whereat the pirates laughed again, and held him back when he would
have come at me a second time.
From the deck of the shattered galleon I watched her boats, with their heavy
freight of cowering humanity, pull off toward the island. Back upon my own poop,
the grappling irons cast loose, and a swiftly widening ribbon of blue between us
and the sinking ship, I looked at the pirates thronging the waist below me, and
knew that the play was nearly over. How many days, weeks, hours, before the
lights would go out, I could not tell: they might burn until we took or lost another
ship; the next hour might see that brief tragedy consummated.
I turned, and going below met Sparrow at the foot of the poop ladder.
"I have sworn at these pirates until my hair stood on end," he said ruefully. "God
forgive me! And I have bent into circles three half pikes in demonstration of the
thing that would occur to them if they tempted me overmuch. And I have sung
them all the bloody and lascivious songs that ever I knew in my unregenerate
days. I have played the bravo and buffoon until they gaped for wonder. I have
damned myself to all eternity, I fear, but there'll be no mutiny this fair day. It may
arrive by to-morrow, though."
"Likely enough," I said. "Come within. I have eaten nothing since yesterday."
"I'll speak to Diccon first," he answered, and went on toward the forecastle, while
I entered the state cabin. Here I found Mistress Percy kneeling beside the bench
beneath the stern windows, her face buried in her outstretched arms, her dark
hair shadowing her like a mantle. When I spoke to her she did not answer. With a
sudden fear I stooped and touched her clasped hands. A shudder ran through
her frame, and she slowly raised a colorless face.
"Are you come back?" she whispered. "I thought you would never come back. I
thought they had killed you. I was only praying before I killed myself."
I took her hands and wrung them apart to rouse her, she was so white and cold,
and spoke so strangely. "God forbid that I should die yet awhile, madam!" I said.
"When I can no longer serve you, then I shall not care how soon I die."
The eyes with which she gazed upon me were still wide and unseeing. "The
guns!" she cried, wresting her hands from mine and putting them to her ears.
"Oh, the guns! they shake the air. And the screams and the trampling - the guns
again! "
I brought her wine and made her drink it; then sat beside her, and told her gently,
over and over again, that there was no longer thunder of the guns or screams or
trampling. At last the long, tearless sobs ceased, and she rose from her knees,
and let me lead her to the door of her cabin. There she thanked me softly, with
downcast eyes and lips that yet trembled; then vanished from my sight, leaving
me first to wonder at that terror and emotion in her who seldom showed the thing
she felt, and finally to conclude that it was not so wonderful after all.
We sailed on, - southwards to Cuba, then north again to the Lucayas and the
Florida straits, looking for Spanish ships and their gold. The lights yet burned, -
now brightly, now so sunken that it seemed as though the next hour they must

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