Part 19 (1/2)

”I'll defend you against the Indians,” coolly capped M. Radisson.

G.o.defroy whispered in my ear that he would not give a pin's purchase for all the furs the New Englander would get; and Ben Gillam looked like a man whose shoe pinches. He hung his head hesitating.

”But if you run up a flag, or fire a gun, or let your people leave the island,” warned M. Radisson, ”I may let my men come, or tell the English, or join the Indians against you.”

Gillam put out his hand.

”It's a treaty,” said he.

There and then he would have been glad to see the last of us; but M.

Radisson was not the man to miss the chance of seeing a rival's s.h.i.+p.

”How about that Canary taken from the foreign s.h.i.+p? A galleon, did you say, tall and slim? Did you sink her or sell her? Send down your men to my fellows! Let us go aboard for the story.”

CHAPTER XI

MORE OF M. RADISSON'S RIVALS

So Ben Gillam must take M. Radisson aboard the Susan, or Garden, as she was called when she sailed different colours, the young fellow with a wry face, the Frenchman, all gaiety. As the two leaders mounted the companion-ladder, hostages came towards the beach to join us. I had scarce noticed them when one tugged at my sleeve, and I turned to look full in the faithful shy face of little Jack Battle.

”Jack!” I shouted, but he only wrung and wrung and wrung at my hand, emitting little gurgling laughs.

Then we linked arms and walked along the beach, where others could not hear.

”Where did you come from?” I demanded.

”Master Ben fished me up on the Grand Banks. I was with the fleet. It was after he met you off the straits; and here I be, Ramsay.”

”After he met us off the straits.” I was trying to piece some connection between Gillam's s.h.i.+p and the inland a.s.sailants. ”Jack, tell me! How many days have you been here?”

”Three,” says Jack. ”Split me fore and aft if we've been a day more!”

It was four since that night in the bush.

”You could not build a fort in three days!”

”'Twas half-built when we came.”

”Who did that? Is Captain Gillam stealing the Company's furs for Ben?”

”No-o-o,” drawled Jack thoughtfully, ”it aren't that. It are something else, I can't make out. Master Ben keeps firing and firing and firing his guns expecting some one to answer.”

”The Indians with the pelts,” I suggested.

”No-o-o,” answered Jack. ”Split me fore and aft if it's Indians he wants! He could send up river for them. It's some one as came from his father's s.h.i.+p outside Boston when Master Ben sailed for the north and Captain Gillam was agoing home to England with Mistress Hortense in his s.h.i.+p. When no answer comes to our firing, Master Ben takes to climbing the masthead and yelling like a fog-horn and dropping curses like hail and swearing he'll shoot him as fails to keep appointment as he'd shoot a dog, if he has to track him inland a thousand leagues.

Split me fore and aft if he don't!”

”Who shoot what?” I demanded, trying to extract some meaning from the jumbled narrative.