Part 6 (1/2)
”Aye, aye, sir!” came back the response.
”What boat is that?”
”A boat from his majesty's s.h.i.+p the _Sea-Wing._ We wish to come aboard your vessel.”
When the captain asked them their business, they frankly confessed that they were deserters and had been secreted all day on the island watching an opportunity to reach the American brig.
Their story was a probable one, and the captain and his officers believed it. A rope was tossed to them, and in a few moments five stalwart jack tars in the uniform of the British Navy stood on the deck.
One tall, fine-looking seaman, who was every inch a gentleman, and whose conversation was evidence of education and refinement, told their story.
Three of them were Americans, and two were Swedes. They had been seized by the press gang and made slaves on board the frigate.
”It has been many years,” said the tall sailor, ”since I saw my native land. I am a native of Hartford, Connecticut.”
”Why didn't you escape sooner?” the Captain asked.
”Escape, captain, is no easy matter, and is attended with serious consequences. They usually hang one who tries to desert. I am a gunner, by profession, and but for the fact they need my services against the French, I would have been hung long since for trying to desert.”
The gunner impressed Captain Parson favorably. He was a man between forty and forty-five years of age. His eyes were deep blue, his hair light. His round, full face was smooth shaven. As he stood on the deck, his brawny arms folded across his ma.s.sive chest, he looked a perfect model of a man and a tower of strength.
Captain Parson led him aside and said:
”You are no common sailor.”
”I'm only a gunner now, captain.”
”But in the past?”
”I once commanded a s.h.i.+p. I will tell you my story on the morrow. It is a sad one, but, thank G.o.d, there's nothing in it at which I need blush.
For the present, however, let us get along as fast as your s.h.i.+p can make it, for the _Sea-Wing_ is a swift vessel, and if we are not beyond reach of her vision before the dawn of day, we shall be overhauled.”
Captain Parson knew that some evil consequences might result from being overhauled by the _Sea-Wing,_ and consequently every st.i.tch of canvas was spread and the brig sped away with a good stiff breeze. It was a long and anxious night; master and crew were all on deck. No one slept.
The coming dawn would tell the story. If the frigate were in sight, then they might expect the very worst; even the s.h.i.+p might be captured and borne away as a prize and the entire crew enslaved.
Dawn came at last. Each anxious heart welcomed and yet dreaded to see the new day. Sailors and officers swept the sea as it grew lighter, and, to their dread, just as the sun rose over the glossy surface of the sea, a snowy speck appeared far off to the westward.
The lookout at the mast-head first called their attention to it, and as it drew nearer and nearer the tall handsome gunner went aloft with a gla.s.s to see if he could recognize it. In a few moments he came back and said:
”It is the frigate, sir.”
That she was in full chase, there could not be a doubt. Captain Parson had little hope of escaping; but he put the _Dover_ on her best sailing point and scudded away before the wind with every st.i.tch of canvas they could carry.
”Oh, golly! I hope dey won't mistake--dey won't mistake dis chile for a Britisher!” groaned Job the cook, who was trembling from head to foot, and whose black skin was almost pale.
The five deserters were pale but calm. They seemed to read their fate and bore it like men. A flogging was the very least they could expect; but the chances were that every one would hang. The frigate was the swifter sailor and overhauled them so rapidly, that, in two hours and a half, she was within a mile of the brig.
Suddenly a wreath of white smoke curled up from the forecastle, and a moment later a ball came skipping over the water under their larboard deck, while the boom of a cannon sounded over the sea. As the fine spray clipped from the crested waves by the shot, flew over the deck, Mr.