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speak for the rest of the passengers. We are under your orders, sir,
and will fight as you direct. Thank God we have no women or children
aboard.”
But his gallant bearing had no effect upon his companions, who were
terrified. Indeed, it was the Captain himself who ran to the cord and
hauled down the colours.
“We can only treat with them so, and plead for our lives,” he
whispered.
“Faith, sir,” cried Syn, “I hardly think they’ll consider some of
them worth the sparing.”
“They will be short of hands,” said the Captain, trying to raise his
own spirit. “For my part I shall not be the last to turn pirate. We
only live once.”
“I thought you were religious,” said Syn, “and I hoped to hear you
say, ‘It is the Lord’s Will’. Also I fear your hopes of being recruited
are in vain. They do not seem so short of hands.”
Indeed, as the black flag had been run up with a cheer, the roughest
villains swarmed from hiding all over the decks. A shot was fired,
which struck with perfect marksmanship, bringing the sprung mast with a
hideous crash upon the deck, killing outright a member of the crew.
Then, on that quiet morning sea, a pandemonium arose. Boats were
lowered, and in a few minutes the deck of the Intention was alive with
the rascals. They w ere led by a gigantic Negro, gaudily dressed, who
cried out that his name was Black Satan and that he was Captain of the
good ship Pit of Sulphur. This was true, for Syn, who stood apart from
his cringing companions upon the poop-deck, had read this ridicu lous
name inscribed around the pirate prow.
“Come down and do homage, you lost souls,” cried Black Satan from the
well-deck.
Led by the craven New Englander, the Portuguese obeyed promptly, and
knelt before the great Negro abjectly, while he kept whi stling a naked
cutlass over their heads, and prodding their flesh with its point.
“I am the Captain of this ship,” faltered the New Englander. “I am
the best seaman and can navigate. I will join the Brotherhood.”
Captain Satan (for he was indeed the Captain, and notorious too as
the only Negro who had commanded whites on the high seas) now spat in
his prisoner’s face.
“You navigate?” he roared. “I never saw such handling of a ship. Take
him below, my bullies, and see that he shows you the ship’s treasures.
And you other, run out the black plank. The funeral plank, my lumbers.
We provide it for you as your undertakers. Empty their pockets, then
let ‘em walk. Tie up their eyes with their own kerchiefs.”
Then, among the lively cheers of the pirates, a gangway was opened,
and a black plank which they had brought for the purpose was run out
over the water.
“Spare us,” cried the wretches. “In the name of the saints.”
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“Talk not of saints to Satan,” cried the Negro. “Along the bridge, you
dogs, and down. The bridge that leads to hell.”
Blindfolded and pricked with cutlasses, they were hustled one by one
along that quaking, springy bridge. Steered by cold steel on either
side, most of them reached the end, stepped into air and fell into the
sea.
“Swim to the other ship,” cried the Negro, shooting down any who
clung to the hull of the Intention.
Those who could swim attempted this, but when half-across both ships
used them as targets for not only pistols, but ca
craven Captain was brought back from below, behind a procession of
robbers heavily laden with seachests, bales, barrels and casks, which
were quickly lowered to the boats and carried to the pirate ship. Now,
it so happened that amongst those chests were Doctor Syn’s, and he
watched it being lowered as he leaned over the bulwarks of the poop.
“Careful with you, you dogs,” he cried in Spanish. “It is of the
utmost value to me, I assure you. So see to it that I find it safe when
I come over with your Captain.”
Thinking that he must be a grandee who had saved his life by offering
sufficient ransom to Black Satan, the Spaniards in the boat called back,
“Si, Senor.”
Now, so engrossed were the others at their hellish work that no one
noted Doctor Syn, or, if they did, perhaps they did not relish closer
quarters with his long steel. By this time the whimpering captain of
the illfated Intention was dragged towards the plank.
“But I can navigate,” he pleaded.
“Then navigate yourself along that plank,” snarled the Negro.
“I will do anything to please you. I will be your slave in all
things only spare my life.”
Prodded without mercy to the end, he turned and made a last appeal.
As he stood there abjectly pleading to a nigger, Doct or Syn’s gorge
rose and when a facetious pirate shook the plank and the victim fell on
hands and legs astride the plank like a child on a rocking-horse, he
drew one of his pistols from his sash and wondered how long he should
allow a white man to demean himself before a nigger. A captain of a
ship should face death bravely. this was too undignified, and Syn vowed
it should not last.
The captain had not been blindfolded, and tears of self-pity and
terror rained down his cheeks. Syn took careful aim and fired. The
body crumpled and slipped from the plank into the sea.
“And who the devil are you to put him out of his misery without my
word of command?” demanded the astonished Satan, seeing Syn for the
first time.
“Come down here, you dog.”
“Bett er not call me a dog,” replied Syn, with a smile. “I once had a
dog that killed black beetles. As to putting that man out of his
misery, I intended no such thing. I shot him because I hate a coward,
and especially a white coward who can cringe to a nigger, and more than
all a cowardly captain who betrays his ship in the hopes of saving
himself. You are a captain, too, you say, though I can hardly think
that some of these white men fighting for you would not make a change.
The question is, Mr. Satan, if t hat’s your name, are you a cowardly
captain? That I intend to prove.”
With a bellow of rage Black Satan leaped for the poop companion
stairs, swinging his cutlass. What was his astonishment, however, when
he found a calm and elegant gentleman waiting for him with a thin blade,
which somehow all his lashings could not pass.
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“Get down upon that deck, for I have a mind to drive you out upon
your plank. You won’t? Oh yes, you will. Down with you, nigger.”
Chapter 12
Syn Buys a Body and Soul
Down on the well-deck they fought; and an ill-matched fight it was.
A giant of a Negro with a heavy cutlass which he swung murderously, but
with little skill, against a lithe parson whose thin point of steel kept
the scythe-like blade confronting him doing nothing but slashing the
air, so that although the Negro tried to attack and carry it by sheer
weight, the needle-point of Syn’s sword drove him back step by step.
When they perceived that the Negro’s sword was of no avail, Syn heard
the pira tes arguing whether or not they ought to interfere. The most of
them were for keeping to Brotherhood rules, which state that a fight
between two antagonists must be fought fairly, but to the death. One
rascal, disagreeing, tried to trip up Syn as he adva nced. Syn turned
like lightning; passed his sword through the man’s neck, and drew it
back just in time to meet the Negro’s next charge. He more than
expected that they would rush him for this, but was relieved to hear