Part 16 (2/2)

”Here comes the breeze,” exclaimed Manton, with a look of satisfaction.

”Now, look alive, lads; we shall be close on the n.i.g.g.e.r village in five minutes--it's just round the point of this small island close ahead.

Come, Mr Scraggs, we've other business on hand just now than squinting at the scrimmages of these fellows.”

”Hold on,” cried Scraggs with a grin; ”I do believe they're going to pitch a feller over that cliff. What a crack he'll come down into the water with, to be sure. It's to be hoped the poor man is dead, for his own sake, before he takes that flight. Hallo!” added Scraggs with an energetic shout and a look of surprise, ”I say, that's one of _our_ men; I know him by his striped flannel s.h.i.+rt. If he would only give up kicking for a second I'd make out his--humph! it's all up with him now, poor fellow, whoever he is.”

As he said the last words, the figure of a man was seen to shoot out from the cliff, and, descending with ever increasing rapidity, to strike the water with terrific violence, sending up a jet of white foam as it disappeared.

”Stand by to lower the gig,” shouted Manton.

”Ay, ay, sir,” was the hearty response of the men, as some of them sprang to obey.

”Lower away!”

The boat struck the water, and its crew were on the thwarts in a moment.

At the same time the point of the island was pa.s.sed, and the native village opened up to view.

”Load Long Tom--double shot!” roared Manton, whose ire was raised not so much at the idea of a fellow-creature having been so barbarously murdered, as at the notion of one of the crew of his schooner having been so treated by contemptible n.i.g.g.e.rs. ”Away, lads, and pick up that man.”

”It's of no use,” remonstrated Scraggs; ”he's done for by this time.”

”I know it,” said Manton, with a fierce oath, ”bring him in, dead or alive; if the sharks leave an inch of him, bring it to me. I'll make the black villains eat it raw.”

This ferocious threat was interlarded with and followed by a series of terrible oaths which we think it inadvisable to repeat.

”Starboard!” he shouted to the man at the helm, as soon as the boat shot away on its mission of mercy.

”Starboard it is.”

”Steady!”

While he gave these orders, Manton sighted the bra.s.s gun carefully, and, just as the schooner's head came up to the wind, he applied the match.

Instantly a cloud of smoke obscured the centre of the little vessel as if her powder magazine had blown up, and a deafening roar went ringing and reverberating from cliff to cliff as two of the great iron shot were sent groaning through the air and pitched right into the heart of the village.

It was this tremendous shot from Long Tom, followed almost instantaneously by the entire broadside of the _Talisman_, that saved the life of Alice, possibly the lives of her young companions also,-- that struck terror to the hearts of the savages, causing them to converge towards their defenceless homes from all directions, and that apprised Ole Thorwald and Henry Stuart that the a.s.sault on the village had commenced in earnest.

CHAPTER FOURTEEN.

GREATER MYSTERIES THAN EVER--A BOLD MOVE AND A CLEVER ESCAPE.

We return now to the _Talisman_.

The instant the broadside of the cruiser burst with such violence, and in such close proximity, on Manton's ears, he felt that he had run into the very jaws of the lion; and that escape was almost impossible. The bold heart of the pirate quailed at the thought of his impending fate, but the fear caused by conscious guilt was momentary; his const.i.tutional courage returned so violently as to render him reckless.

It was too late to put about and avoid being seen, for, before the shot was fired, the schooner had already almost run into the narrow channel between the island and the sh.o.r.e. A few seconds later, she sailed gracefully into view of the amazed Montague, who at once recognised the pirate vessel from Gascoyne's faithful description of her, and hurriedly gave orders to load with ball and grape, while a boat was lowered in order to slew the s.h.i.+p round more rapidly, so as to bring her broadside to bear on the schooner.

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