Dead Men Tell No Tales by E. W. Hornung (ebook reader for comics TXT) ๐
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- Author: E. W. Hornung
Read book online ยซDead Men Tell No Tales by E. W. Hornung (ebook reader for comics TXT) ๐ยป. Author - E. W. Hornung
Harris held up his hand. We were still before we had fairly found our tongues. His words did run together a little, but he was not drunk.
โMen and women,โ said he, โwhat I told that poor devil is Gospel truth; but I didn't tell him we'd no chance of saving our lives, did I? Not me, because we have! Keep your heads and listen to me. There's two good boats on the davits amidships; the chief will take one, the second officer the other; and there ain't no reason why every blessed one of you shouldn't sleep in Ascension to-morrow night. As for me, let me see every soul off of my ship and perhaps I may follow; but by the God that made you, look alive! Mr. ArnottโMr. McClellanโman them boats and lower away. You can't get quit o' the ship too soon, an' I don't mind tellin' you why. I'll tell you the worst, an' then you'll know. There's been a lot o' gossip goin', gossip about my cargo. I give out as I'd none but ship's stores and ballast, an' I give out a lie. I don't mind tellin' you now. I give out a cussed lie, but I give it out for the good o' the ship! What was the use o' frightenin' folks? But where's the sense in keepin' it back now? We have a bit of a cargo,โ shouted Harris; โand it's gunpowderโevery damned ton of it!โ
The effect of this announcement may be imagined; my hand has not the cunning to reproduce it on paper; and if it had, it would shrink from the task. Mild men became brutes, brutal men, devils, womenโGod help them!โshrieking beldams for the most part. Never shall I forget them with their streaming hair, their screaming open mouths, and the cruel ascending fire glinting on their starting eyeballs!
Pell-mell they tumbled down the poop-ladders; pell-mell they raced amidships past that yawning open furnace; the pitch was boiling through the seams of the crackling deck; they slipped and fell upon it, one over another, and the wonder is that none plunged headlong into the flames. A handful remained on the poop, cowering and undone with terror. Upon these turned Captain Harris, as Ready and I, stemming the torrent of maddened humanity, regained the poop ourselves.
โFor'ard with ye!โ yelled the skipper. โThe powder's underneath you in the lazarette!โ
They were gone like hunted sheep. And now abaft the flaming hatchway there were only we four surviving saloon passengers, the captain, his steward, the Zambesi negro, and the quarter-master at the wheel. The steward and the black I observed putting stores aboard the captain's gig as it overhung the water from the stern davits.
โNow, gentlemen,โ said Harris to the two of us, โI must trouble you to step forward with the rest. Senhor Santos insists on taking his chance along with the young lady in my gig. I've told him the risk, but he insists, and the gig'll hold no more.โ
โBut she must have a crew, and I can row. For God's sake take me, captain!โ cried I; for Eva Denison sat weeping in her deck chair, and my heart bled faint at the thought of leaving her, I who loved her so, and might die without ever telling her my love! Harris, however, stood firm.
โThere's that quartermaster and my steward, and Jose the nigger,โ said he. โThat's quite enough, Mr. Cole, for I ain't above an oar myself; but, by God, I'm skipper o' this here ship, and I'll skip her as long as I remain aboard!โ
I saw his hand go to his belt; I saw the pistols stuck there for mutineers. I looked at Santos. He answered me with his neutral shrug, and, by my soul, he struck a match and lit a cigarette in that hour of life and death! Then last I looked at Ready; and he leant invertebrate over the rail, gasping pitiably from his exertions in regaining the poop, a dying man once more. I pointed out his piteous state.
โAt least,โ I whispered, โyou won't refuse to take him?โ
โWill there be anything to take?โ said the captain brutally.
Santos advanced leisurely, and puffed his cigarette over the poor wasted and exhausted frame.
โIt is for you to decide, captain,โ said he cynically; โbut this one will make no deeference. Yes, I would take him. It will not be far,โ he added, in a tone that was not the less detestable for being lowered.
โTake them both!โ moaned little Eva, putting in her first and last sweet word.
โThen we all drown, Evasinha,โ said her stepfather. โIt is impossible.โ
โWe're too many for her as it is,โ said the captain. โSo for'ard with ye, Mr. Cole, before it's too late.โ
But my darling's brave word for me had fired my blood, and I turned with equal resolution on Harris and on the Portuguese. โI will go like a lamb,โ said I, โif you will first give me five minutes' conversation with Miss Denison. Otherwise I do not go; and as for the gig, you may take me or leave me, as you choose.โ
โWhat have you to say to her?โ asked Santos, coming up to me, and again lowering his voice.
I lowered mine still more. โThat I love her!โ I answered in a soft ecstasy. โThat she may remember how I loved her, if I die!โ
His shoulders shrugged a cynical acquiescence.
โBy all mins, senhor; there is no harm in that.โ
I was at her side before another word could pass his withered lips.
โMiss Denison, will you grant me five minutes', conversation? It may be the last that we shall ever have together!โ
Uncovering her face, she looked at me with a strange terror in her great eyes; then with a questioning light that was yet more strange, for in it there was a wistfulness I could not comprehend. She suffered me to take her hand, however, and to lead her unresisting to the weather rail.
โWhat is it you have to say?โ she asked me in her turn. โWhat is it that youโthink?โ
Her voice fell as though she must have the truth.
โThat we have all a very good chance,โ said I heartily.
โIs that all?โ cried Eva, and my heart sank at her eager manner.
She seemed at once disappointed and relieved. Could it be possible she dreaded a declaration which she had foreseen all along? My evil first experience rose up to warn me. No, I would not speak now; it was no time. If she loved me, it might make her love me less; better to trust to God to spare us both.
โYes, it is all,โ I said doggedly.
She drew a little nearer, hesitating. It was as though her disappointment had gained on her relief.
โDo you know what I thought you were going to say?โ
โNo, indeed.โ
โDare I tell you?โ
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