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stop behind, d'ee see? Well, we was diggin' one day, in a place where there was a lot o' red Injins--not steam engines, you know, but the sort o' niggers what lives out there. One o' them Injins was named Glutton--he was such an awful eater--and one o' my mates, whose name was Samson, bet a bag o' goold-dust, that he'd make the glutton eat till he bu'sted. I'm afeard that Samson was groggy at the time. Howiver, we took him up, an' invited Glutton to a feast next day. He was a great thin savage, over six futt high, with plenty breadth of beam about the shoulders, and a mouth that seemed made a' purpus for shovellin' wittles into. We laid in lots of grub because we was all more or less given to feedin'--an' some of us not bad hands at it. Before we began the feast Samson, who seemed to be repentin' of his bet, took us a-one side an' says, `Now mind,' says he, `I can't say exactly _how_ he'll bu'st, or _when_ he'll bu'st, or what sort of a bu'st he'll make of it.' `Oh, never mind that,' says we, laughin'. `We won't be par-tickler how he does it. If he bu'sts at all, in any fashion, we'll be satisfied, and admit that you've won.'

"Well, we went to work, an' the way that Injin went in for grub was quite awful. You wouldn't have believed it if you'd seen it."

"P'r'aps not," said Zulu, with a grin.

"An' when we'd all finished we sat glarin' at him, some of us half believin' that he'd really go off, but he took no notice. On he went until he'd finished a small leg o' pork, two wild-ducks, six plover, eight mugs o' tea, an' fifteen hard-boiled eggs. But there was no sign o' bu'stin'. Glutton was as slim to look at as before he began. At this pint Samson got up an' went out o' the hut. In a minute or so he came back with a bark basket quite shallow, but about fourteen inches square, an' full of all kinds of eggs--for the wild-birds was breedin' at the time. `What's that for?' says we. `For Glutton, when he's ready for 'em,' says he. `There's six dozen here, an' if that don't do it, I've got another basket ready outside.' With that he sets the basket down in front o' the Injin, who just gave a glance at it over a goose drumstick he was tearin' away at. Well, Samson turned round to sit down in his place again, when somethin' or other caught hold of his foot tripped him up, an' down he sat squash! into the basket of eggs. You niver did see sich a mess! There was sich a lot, an' Samson was so heavy, that the yolks squirted up all round him, an' a lot of it went slap into some of our faces. For one moment we sat glarin', we was so took by surprise, and Glutton was so tickled that he gave a great roar of laughter, an' swayed himself from side to side, an' fore an' aft like a Dutchman in a cross sea. Of course we joined him. We couldn't help it, but we was brought up in the middle by Samson sayin', while he scraped himself, `Well, boys, I've won.' `Won!' says I, `how so? He ain't bu'sted yet.' `Hasn't he?' cried Samson. `Hasn't he gone on eatin' till he bu'sted out larfin?' We was real mad at 'im, for a' course that wasn't the kind o' bu'stin we meant; and the end of it was, that we spent the most o' that night disputin' the pint whether Samson had lost or won. We continued the dispute every night for a month, an' sometimes had a free fight over it by way of a change, but I don't think it was ever settled. Leastways it wasn't up to the time when I left the country."

"Here, Zulu, hand me a mug o' tea," said Billy Bright; "the biggest one you've got."

"What's make you turn so greedy?" asked Zulu.

"It's not greed," returned Billy, "but Ned's little story is so hard an' tough, that I can't get it down dry."

"I should think not. It would take the Glutton himself to swallow it with a bucket of tea to wash it down," said Luke Trevor.

At this point the conversation was interrupted by an order from the skipper to go on deck and "jibe" the smack, an operation which it would be difficult, as well as unprofitable, to explain to landsmen. When it was completed the men returned to the little cabin, where conversation was resumed.

"Who'll spin us a _yarn_ now, something more believable than the last?" asked Billy, as they began to refill pipes.

"Do it yourself, boy," said Joe.

"Not I. Never was a good hand at it," returned Billy, "but I know that the mate o' the _Sparrow_ there can spin a good yarn. Come, Evan, tell us about that dead man what came up to point out his own murderer."

"I'm not sure," said Evan, "that the story is a true one, though there's truth at the bottom of it, for we all know well enough that we sometimes pick up a corpse in our nets."

"Know it!" exclaimed Joe, "I should think we do. Why, it's not so long ago that I picked one up myself. But what were ye goin' to say, mate?"

"I was goin' to say that this yarn tells of what happened long before you an' me was born; so we can't be wery sure on it you know."

"Why not?" interrupted Ned Spivin. "The battle o' Trafalgar happened long before you an' me was born; so did the battle o' Waterloo, yet we're sure enough about them, ain't we?"

"Right you are, Ned," returned Evan; "it would be a bad look-out for the world if we couldn't believe or prove the truth of things that happened before we was born!"

"Come, shut up your argiments," growled Gunter, "an' let Evan go on wi' his yarn."

"Well, as I was a-goin' to say," resumed Evan, "the story may or may not be true, but it's possible, an' it was told to me when I was a boy by the old fisherman as said he saw the dead man his-self. One stormy night the fleet was out--for you must know the fishin' was carried on in the old days in the same way pretty much, though they hadn't steamers to help 'em like we has now. They was goin' along close-hauled, with a heavy sea on, not far, it must have been, from the Silver Pits--though they wasn't discovered at that time."

We may interrupt Evan here, to explain that the Silver Pits is a name given to a particular part of the North Sea which is frequented by immense numbers of soles. The man who by chance discovered the spot kept his secret, it is said, long enough to enable him to make a considerable amount of money. It was observed, however, that he was in the habit of falling behind the fleet frequently, and turning up with splendid hauls of "prime" fish. This led to the discovery of his haunt, and the spot named the Silver Pits, is still a prolific fishing-ground.

"Well," continued Evan, "there was a sort of half furriner aboard. He wasn't a reg'lar fisherman--never served his apprenticeship to it, you know,--an' was named Zola. The skipper, whose name was John Dewks, couldn't abide him, an' they often used to quarrel, specially when they was in liquor. There was nobody on deck that night except the skipper and Zola, but my old friend--Dawson was his name--was in his bunk lyin' wide awake. He heard that Zola an' the skipper was disputin' about somethin', but couldn't make out what was said--only he know'd they was both very angry. At last he heard the skipper say sharply--`Ha! would you dare?'

"`Yes, I vill dare,' cries Zola, in his broken English, `I vill cut your throat.' With that there seemed to be a kind of scuffle. Then there was a loud cry, and Dawson with the other men rushed on deck.

"`Oh!' cried Zola, lookin' wild, `de skipper! him fall into de sea! Quick, out wid de boat!'

"Some ran to the boat but the mate stopped 'em. `It's no use, boys. She couldn't live in such a sea, an' our poor skipper is fathoms down by this time. It would only sacrifice more lives to try.' `This was true,' Dawson said, `for the night was as dark as pitch, an' a heavy sea on.'

"Dawson went to the man an' whispered in his ear. `You know you are lying, Zola; you cut the skipper's throat.'

"`No, I didn't; he felled overboard,' answered the man in such an earnest tone that Dawson's opinion was shook. But next day when they was at breakfast, he noticed that the point of Zola's clasp-knife was broken off.

"`Hallo! Zola,' says he, `what's broke the point of your knife?'

"The man was much confused, but replied quickly enough that he broke it when cleaning fish--it had dropped on the deck an' broke.

"This brought back all Dawson's suspicion, but as he could prove nothing he thought it best to hold his tongue. That afternoon, however, it fell calm, an' they found themselves close aboard of one of the smacks which had sailed astern of them on the port quarter durin' the night. She appeared to be signallin', so the mate hove-to till he came up.

"`We've got the body o' your skipper aboard,' they said, when near enough to hail.

"Dawson looked at Zola. His lips were compressed, and he was very stern, but said nothin'. Nobody spoke except the mate, who told them to shove out the boat and fetch the body. This was done, and it was found that the poor man had been wounded in the breast. `Murdered!' the men whispered, as they looked at Zola.

"`Why you looks at me so?' he says, fiercely; `skipper falls over an' sink; git among wrecks at de bottom, an' a nail scratch him.'

"Nobody answered, but when the corpse was put down in the hold the mate examined it and found the broken point of Zola's knife stickin' in the breast-bone.

"That night at supper, while they were all eatin' an' talkin' in low tones, the mate said in an easy off-hand tone, `Hand me your knife, Zola, for a moment.' Now, his askin' that was so natural-like that the man at once did what he was asked, though next moment he saw the mistake. His greatest mistake, however, was that he did not fling the knife away when he found it was broken; but they do say that `murder will out.' The mate at once fitted the point to the broken knife. Zola leaped up and tried to snatch another knife from one o' the men, but they was too quick for him. He was seized, and his hands tied, and they were leadin' him along the deck to put him in the hold when he burst from them and jumped overboard. They hove-to at once, an' out with the boat, but never saw Zola again; he
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