Part 33 (2/2)

”The Bay of Belle Amour!” cried Tarboe, his eyes flas.h.i.+ng. ”Ah, I know it! That's where Gaspard the pilot lived. It's only forty leagues or so from here.” His fingers ran here and there on the map. ”Yes, yes,” he continued, ”it's so, but he hasn't placed the reef right. Ah, here is how Brigond's s.h.i.+p went down! There's a needle of rock in the bay. It isn't here.”

Gobal handed the chart over. ”I can't go with you, but I take your word; I can say no more. If you cheat me I'll kill you; that's all.”

”Let me give a bond,” said Tarboe quickly. ”If I saw much gold perhaps I couldn't trust myself, but there's someone to be trusted, who'll swear for me. If my daughter Joan give her word--”

”Is she with you?”

”Yes, in the Ninety-Nine, now. I'll send Bissonnette for her. Yes, yes, I'll send, for gold is worse than bad whisky when it gets into a man's head. Joan will speak for me.”

Ten minutes later Joan was in Gobal's cabin, guaranteeing for her father the fulfilment of his bond. An hour afterwards the Free-and-Easy was moving up stream with her splintered mast and ragged sails, and the Ninety-Nine was looking up and over towards the Bay of Belle Amour. She reached it in the late afternoon of the next day. Bissonnette did not know the object of the expedition, but he had caught the spirit of the affair, and his eyes were like spots of steel as he held the sheet or took his turn at the tiller. Joan's eyes were now on the sky, now on the sail, and now on the land, weighing as wisely as her father the advantage of the wind, yet dwelling on that cave where skeletons kept ward over the spoils of a pirate s.h.i.+p.

They arrived, and Tarboe took the Ninety-Nine warily in on a little wind off the land. He came near sharing the fate of Brigond, for the yawl grazed the needle of the rock that, hiding away in the water, with a nose out for destruction, awaits its victims. They reached safe anchorage, but by the time they landed it was night, with, however, a good moon showing.

All night they searched, three silent, eager figures, drawing step by step nearer the place where the ancient enemy of man was barracked about by men's bodies. It was Joan who, at last, as dawn drew up, discovered the hollow between two great rocks where the treasure lay. A few minutes' fierce digging, and the kegs of gold were disclosed, showing through the ribs of two skeletons. Joan shrank back, but the two men tossed aside the rattling bones, and presently the kegs were standing between them on the open sh.o.r.e. Bissonnette's eyes were hungry--he knew now the wherefore of the quest. He laughed outright, a silly, loud, hysterical laugh. Tarboe's eyes s.h.i.+fted from the sky to the river, from the river to the kegs, from the kegs to Bissonnette. On him they stayed a moment. Bissonnette shrank back. Tarboe was feeling for the first time in his life the deadly suspicion which comes with ill-gotten wealth.

This pa.s.sed as his eyes and Joan's met, for she had caught the melodrama, the overstrain; Bissonnette's laugh had pointed the situation; and her sense of humour had prevailed. ”La, la,” she said, with a whimsical quirk of the head, and no apparent relevancy:

”Lady-bird, lady-bird, fly away home, Your house is on fire, and your children all gone.”

The remedy was good. Tarboe's eyes came again to their natural liveliness, and Bissonnette said:

”My throat's like a piece of sand-paper.”

Tarboe handed over a brandy flask, after taking a pull himself, and then sitting down on one of the kegs, he said: ”It is as you see, and now Angel Point very quick. To get it there safe, that's the thing!” Then, scanning the sky closely: ”It's for a handsome day, and the wind goes to bear us up fine. Good! Well, for you, Bissonnette, there shall be a thousand dollars, you shall have the Belle Chatelaine Inn and the little lady at Point Pierrot. For the rest, you shall keep a quiet tongue, eh?

If not, my Bissonnette, we shall be the best of strangers, and you shall not be happy. Hein?”

Bissonnette's eyes flashed. ”The Belle Chatelaine? Good! That is enough.

My tongue is tied; I cannot speak; it is fastened with a thousand pegs.”

”Very good, a thousand gold pegs, and you shall never pull them. The little lady will have you with them, not without; and unless you stand by me, no one shall have you at any price--by G.o.d!”

He stood up, but Joan put out her hand. ”You have been speaking, now it is my turn. Don't cry cook till you have the venison home. What is more, I gave my word to Gobal, and I will keep it. I will be captain.

No talking! When you've got the kegs in the cellar at Angel Point, good!

But now--come, my comrades, I am your captain!”

She was making the thing a cheerful adventure, and the men now swung the kegs on their shoulders and carried them to the boat. In another half-hour they were under way in the gaudy light of an orange sunrise, a simmering wind from the sea lifting them up the river, and the grey-red coast of Labrador shrinking sullenly back.

About this time, also, a Government cutter was putting out from under the mountain-wall at Quebec, its officer in command having got renewed orders from the Minister to bring in Tarboe the smuggler. And when Mr.

Martin, the inspector in command of the expedition, was ordered to take with him Mr. Orvay Lafarge and five men, ”effectively armed,” it was supposed by the romantic Minister that the matter was as good as done.

What Mr. Orvay Lafarge did when he got the word, was to go straight to his hat-peg, then leave the office, walk to the little club where he spent leisure hours, called office hours by people who wished to be precise as well as suggestive,--sit down, and raise a gla.s.s to his lips.

After which he threw himself back in his chair and said: ”Well, I'm particularly d.a.m.ned!” A few hours later they were away on their doubtful exploit.

II. THE DEFENCE

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