Part 5 (2/2)

Hogg told his s.h.i.+pmates he cared not a ”dime with a hole in it” for James Dagg or any man. They had no food fit to eat, so they might as well help themselves to the s.h.i.+p's grog, to keep--as he described it--body and soul together.

Rushby--as his duty was--warned the captain of what was coming; but Dagg, who had been losing heavily at cards to Mr. Forsyth, only abused the boatswain for his pains, and said that he himself was the best judge of such matters and would know how to deal with insubordination.

And that night the crew, led by Hogg, the n.i.g.g.e.r, broke into the storeroom with a hatchet and broached the rum casks. Within half-an-hour, they were all roaring drunk; and that was a night that I shall never live to forget.

The moon came out from the white sea-mist, as if to look down in scandalised amazement upon a scene of debauchery and violence--a round, red ball of fire, casting its rays upon the stagnant, reeking seaweed, illuminating the deck of that floating madhouse with a dull crimson glare, whereby you might see the whites of men's eyes and the glitter of the sharp blades they handled.

Dagg appeared on deck, his face livid with pa.s.sion; and I could see by his walk that he, too, had been drinking heavily at his card-playing.

”What's all this?” he shouted at the top of his voice. ”Understand, I'll have no monkey-tricks aboard the s.h.i.+p that I command.”

Hogg at once squared up to him, his two fists before his face, very drunk and brazen.

”Come on, James Dagg!” he cried, with his Christy-minstrel accent. ”Time yer and me settled de account.”

”This here's mutiny!” exclaimed the captain.

”Dat's de right word, boss,” said Hogg. ”Mutiny it is.”

And at that, he struck the captain with his fist, so that Dagg rolled over and over upon the deck, groaning loudly.

The fat was now in the fire. If discipline could be restored, Hogg would be hanged at the yard-arm and his body cast into the sea; and drunk as he was, the n.i.g.g.e.r knew it.

”I'm de captain of dis s.h.i.+p,” he bellowed, ”an' James Dagg's de cook.”

He showed his white teeth in a grin, and then gave orders as if he had been accustomed all his life to a position of authority; and the wonder was he was instantly obeyed. Five minutes later, both Dagg and his mate were bound hand and foot; and the second mate had been locked in his cabin, where he was fast asleep. The negro went staggering backwards and forwards, from the forecastle to the p.o.o.p, crying out that he it was who was Captain and his name was Admiral Hogg.

There were two spectators of this comedy, who could not be considered as partisans; and the one was William Rushby and the other was myself. The boatswain's sense of duty would have held him to the captain, had it not been for me; for, though I had no liking for any of the crew, and a feeling of positive loathing for a great brute like Hogg, I saw in the discomfiture of James Dagg and his officers some chance of my own ultimate deliverance. So that when the cook turned upon me, and caught me by the scruff of the neck, I played the card that I thought safest at the time, but which certainly lost me the trick that meant the game.

”And now, boy,” said Hogg, ”which way de wind blow wid you? Will you sign on to serve as cabin-steward under Admiral Hogg?”

”Why, sure,” said I, having picked up something of the man's own way of speaking. ”I was never a friend of Captain Dagg's, as you may have seen for yourself.”

And thereupon, I looked away from the negro's grinning countenance, and straight in the black, pig-like eyes of Amos Baverstock.

If I had feared him before, I was well-nigh terrified of him then; for there was black murder in the look he gave me, and his mouth was working horribly.

For all that, he straightened his face in half a second, and turned to Hogg as calm as the sea itself.

”I'll settle with you in a moment,” said he. ”I've not lived more than half my life without learning how to deal with a buck n.i.g.g.e.r who's three parts tipsy. Bo's'n,” said he to Rushby, pointing straight at me, ”put that boy in irons.”

Rushby never moved.

”Did you hear my orders?” rapped out Amos.

”I heard right enough,” said the boatswain. ”But I'm not here to take orders from you.”

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