Part 5 (1/2)
”All right as far as I could see; and Allison wants to join your crew.”
”The idea!” exclaimed Captain Beardsley. ”Well, he can just stay where he is for all of me, hollering for the Confederacy and doing never a thing to help us gain our independence. His place is in the army, and I won't have no haymakers aboard of me. See any Union folks while you was to home?”
”I saw and talked with one man who said he was for the Union,” answered the young pilot. He was prepared for the question, and positive that if he managed the matter rightly, Beardsley would soon let him know whether or not he was concerned in that little plot, as Marcy believed he was.
But, as it happened, no management was necessary, for keeping a secret was the hardest work Beardsley ever did.
”Did, hey?” he exclaimed, throwing the stump of his cigar over the stern and looking very angry indeed. ”I always suspected that man Hanson. You discharged him, of course.”
”No, I didn't,” replied Marcy. ”It wouldn't have been safe. I told Kelsey that if the colonel and his friends desired that he should be run off the place, they could attend to the matter themselves. I wouldn't have the first thing to do with it. I was given to understand that there were many Union men in the settlement, and I didn't care to give them an excuse for burning us out of house and home.”
”That was perfectly right. And what did Shelby say?”
”I didn't hear, for he sent no message to me.”
”Did you say anything to Hanson about it?”
”I did, and told him that as long as he attended strictly to his business he would have no trouble with me.”
Marcy had purposely avoided speaking Colonel Shelby's name and Hanson's, preferring to let Captain Beardsley do it himself. The latter walked squarely into the trap without appearing to realize that he had done it, and the young pilot was satisfied that his commander was the man who needed watching more than anybody else.
”I can't say that I hope Beardsley will be killed or drowned during the cruise,” thought Marcy. ”But I do say that if he was out of the way I would have less trouble with my neighbors.”
”Never mind,” said Beardsley, after a little pause. ”When I get home I will ask Shelby and Dillon to tell me all about it; and if that overseer of yourn is really Union, perhaps I can make him see that he had better go up to the United States, where he belongs.”
The captain took a turn or two across the deck, looked up at the topmasts as he might have done if the schooner had been under way and he wanted to make sure that everything was drawing, and then he leaned up against the rail.
”Oh!” said he, as if the thought had just come to him, ”what do you think of your good fortune? Eight hundred dollars don't grow in every boy's dooryard. I tell you. And, Marcy,” he went on in a lower tone, ”I've got as much more laid by for you. I told you I would do the fair thing, and I meant every word of it. You're pilot, you know.”
”Thank you, sir,” replied the boy--not because he felt grateful to Captain Beardsley for giving him nearly nine hundred dollars of another's man's money, but because he knew he was expected to say it.
”Seventeen hundred dollars and better will keep your folks in grub and clothes for quite a spell, won't it?” the captain continued. ”But law!
what am I saying? It ain't a drop in the bucket to such rich people as you be.”
Marcy listened, but said nothing. He thought he knew what Beardsley had on his mind.
”Some folks pertend to think we're going to have the very toughest kind of a war, but I don't,” said the latter. ”The Yankees don't come of fighting stock, like we Southern gentlemen do; but if a war should come, I suppose your folks are well fixed for it?”
”About as well fixed as most of the planters in the settlement,”
answered the pilot. ”You know we've had the best of crops for a year or two back.”
”But I mean--you see--any money?” inquired the captain cautiously--so very cautiously that he thought it necessary to whisper the words.
”Oh, yes; we have money. How could we live without it?”
”That's so; how could you? I reckon you've got right smart of a lot, ain't you?”
”Mother has some in the bank at Wilmington, but just how much I don't know. I never asked her.”
The young pilot's gaze was fastened upon the men who were at work getting the provisions aboard, but for all that, he could see that Beardsley was looking at him as if he meant to read his most secret thoughts.