1. Tuyển Mod quản lý diễn đàn. Các thành viên xem chi tiết tại đây

CAPTAIN BLOOD by Rafael Sabatini

Chủ đề trong 'Tác phẩm Văn học' bởi Milou, 14/03/2003.

Trạng thái chủ đề:
Đã khóa
  1. 0 người đang xem box này (Thành viên: 0, Khách: 0)
  1. Milou

    Milou Thành viên rất tích cực

    Tham gia ngày:
    07/06/2001
    Bài viết:
    7.928
    Đã được thích:
    0
    CAPTAIN BLOOD by Rafael Sabatini

    His Odyssey



    CONTENTS

    I. THE MESSENGER
    II. KIRKE'S DRAGOONS
    III. THE LORD CHIEF JUSTICE
    IV. HUMAN MERCHANDISE
    V. ARABELLA BISHOP
    VI. PLANS OF ESCAPE
    VII. PIRATES
    VIII. SPANIARDS
    IX. THE REBELS-CONVICT
    X. DON DIEGO
    XI. FILIAL PIETY
    XII. DON PEDRO SANGRE
    XIII. TORTUGA
    XIV. LEVASSEUR'S HEROICS
    XV. THE RANSOM
    XVI. THE TRAP
    XVII. THE DUPES
    XVIII. THE MILAGROSA
    XIX. THE MEETING
    XX. THIEF AND PIRATE
    XXI. THE SERVICE OF KING JAMES
    XXIII. HOSTAGES
    XXIV. WAR
    XXV. THE SERVICE OF KING LOUIS
    XXVI. M. DE RIVAROL
    XXVII. CARTAGENA
    XXVIII. THE HONOUR OF M. DE RIVAROL
    XXIX. THE SERVICE OF KING WILLIAM
    XXX. THE LAST FIGHT OF THE ARABELLA
    XXXI. HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR




    CHAPTER I

    THE MESSENGER


    Peter Blood, bachelor of medicine and several other things besides,
    smoked a pipe and tended the geraniums boxed on the sill of his
    window above Water Lane in the town of Bridgewater.

    Sternly disapproving eyes considered him from a window opposite,
    but went disregarded. Mr. Blood's attention was divided between his
    task and the stream of humanity in the narrow street below; a stream
    which poured for the second time that day towards Castle Field,
    where earlier in the afternoon Ferguson, the Duke's chaplain, had
    preached a sermon containing more treason than divinity.

    These straggling, excited groups were mainly composed of men with
    green boughs in their hats and the most ludicrous of weapons in
    their hands. Some, it is true, shouldered fowling pieces, and here
    and there a sword was brandished; but more of them were armed with
    clubs, and most of them trailed the mammoth pikes fashioned out of
    scythes, as formidable to the eye as they were clumsy to the hand.
    There were weavers, brewers, carpenters, smiths, masons, bricklayers,
    cobblers, and representatives of every other of the trades of peace
    among these improvised men of war. Bridgewater, like Taunton, had
    yielded so generously of its manhood to the service of the bastard
    Duke that for any to abstain whose age and strength admitted of his
    bearing arms was to brand himself a coward or a papist.

    Yet Peter Blood, who was not only able to bear arms, but trained and
    skilled in their use, who was certainly no coward, and a papist only
    when it suited him, tended his geraniums and smoked his pipe on that
    warm July evening as indifferently as if nothing were afoot. One
    other thing he did. He flung after those war-fevered enthusiasts a
    line of Horace - a poet for whose work he had early conceived an
    inordinate affection:

    "Quo, quo, scelesti, ruitis?"

    And now perhaps you guess why the hot, intrepid blood inherited from
    the roving sires of his Somersetshire mother remained cool amidst
    all this frenzied fanatical heat of rebellion; why the turbulent
    spirit which had forced him once from the sedate academical bonds
    his father would have imposed upon him, should now remain quiet in
    the very midst of turbulence. You realize how he regarded these
    men who were rallying to the banners of liberty - the banners woven
    by the virgins of Taunton, the girls from the seminaries of Miss
    Blake and Mrs. Musgrove, who - as the ballad runs - had ripped open
    their silk petticoats to make colours for King Monmouth's army.
    That Latin line, contemptuously flung after them as they clattered
    down the cobbled street, reveals his mind. To him they were fools
    rushing in wicked frenzy upon their ruin.

    You see, he knew too much about this fellow Monmouth and the pretty
    brown slut who had borne him, to be deceived by the legend of
    legitimacy, on the strength of which this standard of rebellion had
    been raised. He had read the absurd proclamation posted at the
    Cross at Bridgewater - as it bad been posted also at Taunton and
    elsewhere - setting forth that "upon the decease of our Sovereign
    Lord Charles the Second, the right of succession to the Crown of
    England, Scotland, France, and Ireland, with the dominions and
    territories thereunto belonging, did legally descend and devolve
    upon the most illustrious and high-born Prince James, Duke of
    Monmouth, son and heir apparent to the said King Charles the Second."

    It had moved him to laughter, as had the further announcement that
    "James Duke of York did first cause the said late King to be
    poysoned, and immediately thereupon did usurp and invade the Crown."

    He knew not which was the greater lie. For Mr. Blood had spent a
    third of his life in the Netherlands, where this same James Scott
    - who now proclaimed himself James the Second, by the grace of God,
    King, et cetera - first saw the light some six-and-thirty years ago,
    and he was acquainted with the story current there of the fellow's
    real paternity. Far from being legitimate - by virtue of a
    pretended secret marriage between Charles Stuart and Lucy Walter
    - it was possible that this Monmouth who now proclaimed himself
    King of England was not even the illegitimate child of the late
    sovereign. What but ruin and disaster could be the end of this
    grotesque pretension? How could it be hoped that England would
    ever swallow such a Perkin? And it was on his behalf, to uphold
    his fantastic claim, that these West Country clods, led by a few
    armigerous Whigs, had been seduced into rebellion!

    "Quo, quo, scelesti, ruitis?"

    He laughed and sighed in one; but the laugh dominated the sigh, for
    Mr. Blood was unsympathetic, as are most self-sufficient men; and he
    was very self-sufficient; adversity had taught him so to be. A more
    tender-hearted man, possessing his vision and his knowledge, might
    have found cause for tears in the contemplation of these ardent,
    simple, Nonconformist sheep going forth to the shambles - escorted
    to the rallying ground on Castle Field by wives and daughters,
    sweethearts and mothers, sustained by the delusion that they were
    to take the field in defence of Right, of Liberty, and of Religion.
    For he knew, as all Bridgewater knew and had known now for some
    hours, that it was Monmouth's intention to deliver battle that same
    night. The Duke was to lead a surprise attack upon the Royalist
    army under Feversham that was now encamped on Sedgemoor. Mr. Blood
    assumed that Lord Feversham would be equally well-informed, and if
    in this assumption he was wrong, at least he was justified of it.
    He was not *****ppose the Royalist commander so indifferently
    skilled in the trade he followed.

    Mr. Blood knocked the ashes from his pipe, and drew back to close
    his window. As he did so, his glance travelling straight across
    the street met at last the glance of those hostile eyes that watched
    him. There were two pairs, and they belonged to the Misses Pitt,
    two amiable, sentimental maiden ladies who yielded to none in
    Bridgewater in their worship of the handsome Monmouth.

    Mr. Blood smiled and inclined his head, for he was on friendly terms
    with these ladies, one of whom, indeed, had been for a little while
    his patient. But there was no response to his greeting. Instead,
    the eyes gave him back a stare of cold disdain. The smile on his
    thin lips grew a little broader, a little less pleasant. He
    understood the reason of that hostility, which had been daily growing
    in this past week since Monmouth had come to turn the brains of women
    of all ages. The Misses Pitt, he apprehended, contemned him that he,
    a young and vigorous man, of a military training which might now be
    valuable to the Cause, should stand aloof; that he should placidly
    smoke his pipe and tend his geraniums on this evening of all
    evenings, when men of spirit were rallying to the Protestant
    Champion, offering their blood to place him on the throne where he
    belonged.

    If Mr. Blood had condescended to debate the matter with these ladies,
    he might have urged that having had his fill of wandering and
    adventuring, he was now embarked upon the career for which he had
    been originally intended and for which his studies had equipped him;
    that he was a man of medicine and not of war; a healer, not a slayer.
    But they would have answered him, he knew, that in such a cause it
    behoved every man who deemed himself a man to take up arms. They
    would have pointed out that their own nephew Jeremiah, who was by
    trade a sailor, the master of a ship - which by an ill-chance for
    that young man had come to anchor at this season in Bridgewater Bay
    - had quitted the helm to snatch up a musket in defence of Right.
    But Mr. Blood was not of those who argue. As I have said, he was
    a self-sufficient man.

    He closed the window, drew the curtains, and turned to the pleasant,
    candle-lighted room, and the table on which Mrs. Barlow, his
    housekeeper, was in the very act of spreading supper. To her,
    however, he spoke aloud his thought.

    "It's out of favour I am with the vinegary virgins over the way."

    He had a pleasant, vibrant voice, whose metallic ring was softened
    and muted by the Irish accent which in all his wanderings he had
    never lost. It was a voice that could woo seductively and
    caressingly, or command in such a way as to compel obedience.
    Indeed, the man's whole nature was in that voice of his. For the
    rest of him, he was tall and spare, swarthy of tint as a gipsy,
    with eyes that were startlingly blue in that dark face and under
    those level black brows. In their glance those eyes, flanking a
    high-bridged, intrepid nose, were of singular penetration and of
    a steady haughtiness that went well with his firm lips. Though
    dressed in black as became his calling, yet it was with an
    elegance derived from the love of clothes that is peculiar to the
    adventurer he had been, rather than to the staid medicus he now
    was. His coat was of fine camlet, and it was laced with silver;
    there were ruffles of Mechlin at his wrists and a Mechlin cravat
    encased his throat. His great black periwig was as sedulously
    curled as any at Whitehall.

    Seeing him thus, and perceiving his real nature, which was plain
    upon him, you might have been tempted to speculate how long such
    a man would be content to lie by in this little backwater of the
    world into which chance had swept him some six months ago; how
    long he would continue to pursue the trade for which he had
    qualified himself before he had begun to live. Difficult of belief
    though it may be when you know his history, previous and subsequent,
    yet it is possible that but for the trick that Fate was about to
    play him, he might have continued this peaceful existence, settling
    down completely to the life of a doctor in this Somersetshire haven.
    It is possible, but not probable.

    He was the son of an Irish medicus, by a Somersetshire lady in whose
    veins ran the rover blood of the Frobishers, which may account for
    a certain wildness that had early manifested itself in his
    disposition. This wildness had profoundly alarmed his father, who
    for an Irishman was of a singularly peace-loving nature. He had
    early resolved that the boy should follow his own honourable
    profession, and Peter Blood, being quick to learn and oddly greedy
    of knowledge, had satisfied his parent by receiving at the age of
    twenty the degree of baccalaureus medicinae at Trinity College,
    Dublin. His father survived that satisfaction by three months only.
    His mother had then been dead some years already. Thus Peter Blood
    came into an inheritance of some few hundred pounds, with which he
    had set out to see the world and give for a season a free rein to
    that restless spirit by which he was imbued. A set of curious
    chances led him to take service with the Dutch, then at war with
    France; and a predilection for the sea made him elect that this
    service should be upon that element. He had the advantage of a
    commission under the famous de Ruyter, and fought in the
    Me***erranean engagement in which that great Dutch admiral lost
    his life.

    After the Peace of Nimeguen his movements are obscure. But we know
    that he spent two years in a Spanish prison, though we do not know
    how he contrived to get there. It may be due to this that upon his
    release he took his sword to France, and saw service with the French
    in their warring upon the Spanish Netherlands. Having reached, at
    last, the age of thirty-two, his appetite for adventure surfeited,
    his health having grown indifferent as the result of a neglected
    wound, he was suddenly overwhelmed by homesickness. He took ship
    from Nantes with intent to cross to Ireland. But the vessel being
    driven by stress of weather into Bridgewater Bay, and Blood's health
    having grown worse during the voyage, he decided to go ashore there,
    ad***ionally urged to it by the fact that it was his mother's native
    soil.
  2. Milou

    Milou Thành viên rất tích cực

    Tham gia ngày:
    07/06/2001
    Bài viết:
    7.928
    Đã được thích:
    0
    Thus in January of that year 1685 he had come to Bridgewater,
    possessor of a fortune that was approximately the same as that with
    which he had originally set out from Dublin eleven years ago.
    Because he liked the place, in which his health was rapidly
    restored to him, and because he conceived that he had passed
    through adventures enough for a man's lifetime, he determined to
    settle there, and take up at last the profession of medicine from
    which he had, with so little profit, broken away.
    That is all his story, or so much of it as matters up to that night,
    six months later, when the battle of Sedgemoor was fought.
    Deeming the impending action no affair of his, as indeed it was not,
    and indifferent to the activity with which Bridgewater was that
    night agog, Mr. Blood closed his ears to the sounds of it, and went
    early to bed. He was peacefully asleep long before eleven o'clock,
    at which hour, as you know, Monmouth rode but with his rebel host
    along the Bristol Road, circuitously to avoid the marshland that
    lay directly between himself and the Royal Army. You also know
    that his numerical advantage - possibly counter-balanced by the
    greater steadiness of the regular troops on the other side - and
    the advantages he derived from falling by surprise upon an army that
    was more or less asleep, were all lost to him by blundering and bad
    leadership before ever he was at grips with Feversham.
    The armies came into collision in the neighbourhood of two o'clock
    in the morning. Mr. Blood slept undisturbed through the distant
    boom of cannon. Not until four o'clock, when the sun was rising to
    dispel the last wisps of mist over that stricken field of battle,
    did he awaken from his tranquil slumbers.
    He sat up in bed, rubbed the sleep from his eyes, and collected
    himself. Blows were thundering upon the door of his house, and a
    voice was calling incoherently. This was the noise that had aroused
    him. Conceiving that he had to do with some urgent obstetrical
    case, he reached for bedgown and slippers, to go below. On the
    landing he almost collided with Mrs. Barlow, new-risen and unsightly,
    in a state of panic. He quieted her cluckings with a word of
    reassurance, and went himself to open.
    There in slanting golden light of the new-risen sun stood a
    breathless, wild-eyed man and a steaming horse. Smothered in dust
    and grime, his clothes in disarray, the left sleeve of his doublet
    hanging in rags, this young man opened his lips to speak, yet for
    a long moment remained speechless.
    In that moment Mr. Blood recognized him for the young shipmaster,
    Jeremiah Pitt, the nephew of the maiden ladies opposite, one who
    had been drawn by the general enthusiasm into the vortex of that
    rebellion. The street was rousing, awakened by the sailor's noisy
    advent; doors were opening, and lattices were being unlatched for
    the protrusion of anxious, inquisitive heads.
    "Take your time, now," said Mr. Blood. "I never knew speed made
    by overhaste."
    But the wild-eyed lad paid no heed to the admonition. He plunged,
    headlong, into speech, gasping, breathless.
    "It is Lord Gildoy," he panted. "He is sore wounded ... at
    Oglethorpe's Farm by the river. I bore him thither ... and ...
    and he sent me for you. Come away! Come away!"
    He would have clutched the doctor, and haled him forth by force in
    bedgown and slippers as he was. But the doctor eluded that too
    eager hand.
    "To be sure, I'll come," said he. He was distressed. Gildoy had
    been a very friendly, generous patron to him since his settling in
    these parts. And Mr. Blood was eager enough to do what he now
    could to discharge the debt, grieved that the occasion should have
    arisen, and in such a manner - for he knew quite well that the rash
    young nobleman had been an active agent of the Duke's. "To be sure,
    I'll come. But first give me leave to get some clothes and other
    things that I may need."
    "There's no time to lose."
    "Be easy now. I'll lose none. I tell ye again, ye'll go quickest
    by going leisurely. Come in ... take a chair..." He threw open the
    door of a parlour.

    Young Pitt waved aside the invitation.
    "I'll wait here. Make haste, in God's name." Mr. Blood went off
    to dress and to fetch a case of instruments.
    Questions concerning the precise nature of Lord Gildoy's hurt could
    wait until they were on their way. Whilst he pulled on his boots,
    he gave Mrs. Barlow instructions for the day, which included the
    matter of a dinner he was not destined to eat.
    When at last he went forth again, Mrs. Barlow clucking after him
    like a disgruntled fowl, he found young Pitt smothered in a crowd
    of scared, half-dressed townsfolk - mostly women - who had come
    hastening for news of how the battle had sped. The news he gave
    them was to be read in the lamentations with which they disturbed
    the morning air.
    At sight of the doctor, dressed and booted, the case of instruments
    tucked under his arm, the messenger disengaged himself from those
    who pressed about, shook off his weariness and the two tearful aunts
    that clung most closely, and seizing the bridle of his horse, he
    climbed to the saddle.
    "Come along, sir," he cried. "Mount behind me."
    Mr. Blood, without wasting words, did as he was bidden. Pitt touched
    the horse with his spur. The little crowd gave way, and thus, upon
    the crupper of that doubly-laden horse, clinging to the belt of his
    companion, Peter Blood set out upon his Odyssey. For this Pitt, in
    whom he beheld no more than the messenger of a wounded rebel
    gentleman, was indeed the very messenger of Fate.
  3. Milou

    Milou Thành viên rất tích cực

    Tham gia ngày:
    07/06/2001
    Bài viết:
    7.928
    Đã được thích:
    0
    CHAPTER TWO
    KIRKE'S DRAGOONS
    Oglethorpe's farm stood a mile or so to the south of Bridgewater on
    the right bank of the river. It was a straggling Tudor building
    showing grey above the ivy that clothed its lower parts. Approaching
    it now, through the fragrant orchards amid which it seemed to drowse
    in Arcadian peace beside the waters of the Parrett, sparkling in
    the morning sunlight, Mr. Blood might have had a difficulty in
    believing it part of a world tormented by strife and bloodshed.
    On the bridge, as they had been riding out of Bridgewater, they had
    met a vanguard of fugitives from the field of battle, weary, broken
    men, many of them wounded, all of them terror-stricken, staggering
    in speedless haste with the last remnants of their strength into the
    shelter which it was their vain illusion the town would afford them.
    Eyes glazed with lassitude and fear looked up piteously out of haggard
    faces at Mr. Blood and his companion as they rode forth; hoarse
    voices cried a warning that merciless pursuit was not far behind.
    Undeterred, however, young Pitt rode amain along the dusty road by
    which these poor fugitives from that swift rout on Sedgemoor came
    flocking in ever-increasing numbers. Presently he swung aside,
    and quitting the road took to a pathway that crossed the dewy
    meadowlands. Even here they met odd groups of these human derelicts,
    who were scattering in all directions, looking fearfully behind them
    as they came through the long grass, expecting at every moment to
    see the red coats of the dragoons.
    But as Pitt's direction was a southward one, bringing them ever
    nearer to Feversham's headquarters, they were presently clear of
    that human flotsam and jetsam of the battle, and riding through
    the peaceful orchards heavy with the ripening fruit that was soon
    to make its annual yield of cider.
    At last they alighted on the kidney stones of the courtyard, and
    Baynes, the master, of the homestead, grave of countenance and
    flustered of manner, gave them welcome.
    In the spacious, stone-flagged hall, the doctor found Lord Gildoy
    - a very tall and dark young gentleman, prominent of chin and nose
    - stretched on a cane day-bed under one of the tall mullioned
    windows, in the care of Mrs. Baynes and her comely daughter. His
    cheeks were leaden-hued, his eyes closed, and from his blue lips
    came with each laboured breath a faint, moaning noise.
    Mr. Blood stood for a moment silently considering his patient. He
    deplored that a youth with such bright hopes in life as Lord Gildoy's
    should have risked all, perhaps existence itself, to forward the
    ambition of a worthless adventurer. Because he had liked and
    honoured this brave lad he paid his case the tribute of a sigh.
    Then he knelt to his task, ripped away doublet and underwear to
    lay bare his lordship's mangled side, and called for water and linen
    and what else he needed for his work.
    He was still intent upon it a half-hour later when the dragoons
    invaded the homestead. The clatter of hooves and hoarse shouts
    that heralded their approach disturbed him not at all. For one
    thing, he was not easily disturbed; for another, his task absorbed
    him. But his lordship, who had now recovered consciousness,
    showed considerable alarm, and the battle-stained Jeremy Pitt sped
    to cover in a clothes-press. Baynes was uneasy, and his wife and
    daughter trembled. Mr. Blood reassured them.
    "Why, what's to fear?" he said. "It's a Christian country, this, and
    Christian men do not make war upon the wounded, nor upon those who
    harbour them." He still had, you see, illusions about Christians.
    He held a glass of cordial, prepared under his directions, to his
    lordship's lips. "Give your mind peace, my lord. The worst is done."
    And then they came rattling and clanking into the stone-flagged hall
    - a round dozen jack-booted, lobster-coated troopers of the Tangiers
    Regiment, led by a sturdy, black-browed fellow with a deal of gold
    lace about the breast of his coat.
    Baynes stood his ground, his attitude half-defiant, whilst his wife
    and daughter shrank away in renewed fear. Mr. Blood, at the head
    of the day-bed, looked over his shoulder to take stock of the
    invaders.
    The officer barked an order, which brought his men to an attentive
    halt, then swaggered forward, his gloved hand bearing down the
    pummel of his sword, his spurs jingling musically as he moved. He
    announced his authority to the yeoman.
    "I am Captain Hobart, of Colonel Kirke's dragoons. What rebels do
    you harbour?"
    The yeoman took alarm at that ferocious truculence. It expressed
    itself in his trembling voice.
    "I... I am no harbourer of rebels, sir. This wounded gentleman...."
    "I can see for myself." The Captain stamped forward to the day-bed,
    and scowled down upon the grey-faced sufferer.
    "No need to ask how he came in this state and by his wounds. A
    damned rebel, and that's enough for me." He flung a command at his
    dragoons. "Out with him, my lads."
    Mr. Blood got between the day-bed and the troopers.
    "In the name of humanity, sir!" said he, on a note of anger. "This
    is England, not Tangiers. The gentleman is in sore case. He may
    not be moved without peril to his life."
    Captain Hobart was amused.
    "Oh, I am to be tender of the lives of these rebels! Odds blood!
    Do you think it's to benefit his health we're taking him? There's
    gallows being planted along the road from Weston to Bridgewater,
    and he'll serve for one of them as well as another. Colonel Kirke'll
    learn these nonconforming oafs something they'll not forget in
    generations."
    "You're hanging men without trial? Faith, then, it's mistaken I am.
    We're in Tangiers, after all, it seems, where your regiment belongs."
    The Captain considered him with a kindling eye. He looked him over
    from the soles of his riding-boots to the crown of his periwig. He
    noted the spare, active frame, the arrogant poise of the head, the
    air of authority that invested Mr. Blood, and soldier recognized
    soldier. The Captain's eyes narrowed. Recognition went further.
    "Who the hell may you be?" he exploded."
    "My name is Blood, sir - Peter Blood, at your service."
    "Aye - aye! Codso! That's the name. You were in French service
    once, were you not?"
    If Mr. Blood was surprised, he did not betray it.
    "I was."
    "Then I remember you - five years ago, or more, you were in Tangiers,"
    "That is so. I knew your colonel."
    "Faith, you may be renewing the acquaintance." The Captain laughed
    unpleasantly. "What brings you here, sir?"
    "This wounded gentleman. I was fetched to attend him. I am a
    medicus."
    "A doctor - you?" Scorn of that lie - as he conceived it - rang in
    the heavy, hectoring voice.
    "Medicinae baccalaureus," said Mr. Blood.
    "Don't fling your French at me, man," snapped Hobart. "Speak
    English!"
    Mr. Blood's smile annoyed him.
    "I am a physician practising my calling in the town of Bridgewater."
    The Captain sneered. "Which you reached by way of Lyme Regis in
    the following of your bastard Duke."
    It was Mr. Blood's turn to sneer. "If your wit were as big as your
    voice, my dear, it's the great man you'd be by this."
    For a moment the dragoon was speechless, The colour deepened in his
    face.
    "You may find me great enough to hang you."
    "Faith, yes. Ye've the look and the manners of a hangman. But if
    you practise your trade on my patient here, you may be putting a
    rope round your own neck. He's not the kind you may string up and
    no questions asked. He has the right to trial, and the right to
    trial by his peers."
    "By his peers?"
    The Captain was taken aback by these three words, which Mr. Blood
    had stressed.
    "Sure, now, any but a fool or a savage would have asked his name
    before ordering him to the gallows. The gentleman is my Lord Gildoy."
    And then his lordship spoke for himself, in a weak voice.
    "I make no concealment of my association with the Duke of Monmouth.
    I'll take the consequences. But, if you please, I'll take them after
    trial - by my peers, as the doctor has said."
    The feeble voice ceased, and was followed by a moment's silence. As
    is common in many blustering men, there was a deal of timi***y deep
    down in Hobart. The announcement of his lordship's rank had touched
    those depths. A servile upstart, he stood in awe of titles. And he
    stood in awe of his colonel. Percy Kirke was not lenient with
    blunderers.
    By a gesture he checked his men. He must consider. Mr. Blood,
    observing his pause, added further matter for his consideration.
    "Ye'll be remembering, Captain, that Lord Gildoy will have friends
    and relatives on the Tory side, who'll have something to say to
    Colonel Kirke if his lordship should be handled like a common felon.
    You'll go warily, Captain, or, as I've said, it's a halter for your
    neck ye'll be weaving this morning."
  4. Milou

    Milou Thành viên rất tích cực

    Tham gia ngày:
    07/06/2001
    Bài viết:
    7.928
    Đã được thích:
    0
    Captain Hobart swept the warning aside with a bluster of contempt,
    but he acted upon it none the less. "Take up the day-bed," said he,
    "and convey him on that to Bridgewater. Lodge him in the gaol until
    I take order about him."
    "He may not survive the journey," Blood remonstrated. "He's in no
    case to be moved."
    "So much the worse for him. My affair is to round up rebels." He
    confirmed his order by a gesture. Two of his men took up the day-bed,
    and swung to depart with it.
    Gildoy made a feeble effort to put forth a hand towards Mr. Blood.
    "Sir," he said, "you leave me in your debt. If I live I shall study
    how to discharge it."
    Mr. Blood bowed for answer; then to the men: "Bear him steadily,"
    he commanded. "His life depends on it."
    As his lordship was carried out, the Captain became brisk. He turned
    upon the yeoman.
    "What other cursed rebels do you harbour?"
    "None other, sir. His lordship...."
    "We've dealt with his lordship for the present. We'll deal with
    you in a moment when we've searched your house. And, by God, if
    you've lied to me...." He broke off, snarling, to give an order.
    Four of his dragoons went out. In a moment they were heard moving
    noisily in the adjacent room. Meanwhile, the Captain was questing
    about the hall, sounding the wainscoting with the butt of a pistol.
    Mr. Blood saw no profit to himself in lingering.
    "By your leave, it's a very good day I'll be wishing you," said he.
    "By my leave, you'll remain awhile," the Captain ordered him.
    Mr. Blood shrugged, and sat down. "You're tiresome," he said." I
    wonder your colonel hasn't discovered it yet."
    But the Captain did not heed him. He was stooping to pick up a
    soiled and dusty hat in which there was pinned a little bunch of
    oak leaves. It had been lying near the clothes-press in which the
    unfortunate Pitt had taken refuge. The Captain smiled malevolently.
    His eyes raked the room, resting first sardonically on the yeoman,
    then on the two women in the background, and finally on Mr. Blood,
    who sat with one leg thrown over the other in an attitude of
    indifference that was far from reflecting his mind.
    Then the Captain stepped to the press, and pulled open one of the
    wings of its massive oaken door. He took the huddled inmate by
    the collar of his doublet, and lugged him out into the open.
    "And who the devil's this?" quoth he. "Another nobleman?"
    Mr. Blood had a vision of those gallows of which Captain Hobart had
    spoken, and of this unfortunate young shipmaster going to adorn one
    of them, strung up without trial, in the place of the other victim
    of whom the Captain had been cheated. On the spot he invented not
    only a title but a whole family for the young rebel.
    "Faith, ye've said it, Captain. This is Viscount Pitt, first cousin
    to Sir Thomas Vernon, who's married to that slut Moll Kirke, sister
    to your own colonel, and sometime lady in waiting upon King James's
    queen."
    Both the Captain and his prisoner gasped. But whereas thereafter
    young Pitt discreetly held his peace, the Captain rapped out a nasty
    oath. He considered his prisoner again.
    "He's lying, is he not?" he demanded, seizing the lad by the shoulder,
    and glaring into his face. "He's rallying rue, by God!"
    "If ye believe that," said Blood, "hang him, and see what happens to
    you."
    The dragoon glared at the doctor and then at his prisoner. "Pah!"
    He thrust the lad into the hands of his men. "Fetch him along to
    Bridgewater. And make fast that fellow also," he pointed to Baynes.
    "We'll show him what it means to harbour and comfort rebels."
    There was a moment of confusion. Baynes struggled in the grip of
    the troopers, protesting vehemently. The terrified women screamed
    until silenced by a greater terror. The Captain strode across to
    them. He took the girl by the shoulders. She was a pretty,
    golden-headed creature, with soft blue eyes that looked up
    entreatingly, piteously into the face of the dragoon. He leered
    upon her, his eyes aglow, took her chin in his hand, and set her
    shuddering by his brutal kiss.
    "It's an earnest," he said, smiling grimly. "Let that quiet you,
    little rebel, till I've done with these rogues."
    And he swung away again, leaving her faint and trembling in the
    arms of her anguished mother. His men stood, grinning, awaiting
    orders, the two prisoners now fast pinioned.
    "Take them away. Let Cornet Drake have charge of them." His
    smouldering eye again sought the cowering girl. "I'll stay awhile
    - to search out this place. There may be other rebels hidden here."
    As an afterthought, he added: "And take this fellow with you." He
    pointed to Mr. Blood. "Bestir!"
    Mr. Blood started out of his musings. He had been considering that
    in his case of instruments there was a lancet with which he might
    perform on Captain Hobart a beneficial operation. Beneficial, that
    is, to humanity. In any case, the dragoon was obviously plethoric
    and would be the better for a blood-letting. The difficulty lay in
    making the opportunity. He was beginning to wonder if he could
    lure the Captain aside with some tale of hidden treasure, when this
    untimely interruption set a term to that interesting speculation.
    He sought to temporize.
    "Faith it will suit me very well," said he. "For Bridgewater is my
    destination, and but that ye detained me I'd have been on my way
    thither now."
    "Your destination there will he the gaol."
    "Ah, bah! Ye're surely joking!"
    "There's a gallows for you if you prefer it. It's merely a question
    of now or later."
    Rude hands seized Mr. Blood, and that precious lancet was in the
    case on the table out of reach. He twisted out of the grip of the
    dragoons, for he was strong and agile, but they dosed with him again
    immediately, and bore him down. Pinning him to the round, they tied
    his wrists behind his back, then roughly pulled him to his feet
    again.
    "Take him away," said Hobart shortly, and turned to issue his orders
    to the other waiting troopers. "Go search the house, from attic to
    cellar; then report to me here."
    The soldiers trailed out by the door leading to the interior. Mr.
    Blood was thrust by his guards into the courtyard, where Pitt and
    Baynes already waited. From the threshold of the hall, he looked
    back at Captain Hobart, and his sapphire eyes were blazing. On his
    lips trembled a threat of what he would do to Hobart if he should
    happen *****rvive this business. Betimes he remembered that to
    utter it were probably to extinguish his chance of living to execute
    it. For to-day the King's men were masters in the West, and the
    West was regarded as enemy country, to be subjected to the worst
    horror of war by the victorious side. Here a captain of horse was
    for the moment lord of life and death.
    Under the apple-trees in the orchard Mr. Blood and his companions
    in misfortune were made fast each to a trooper's stirrup leather.
    Then at the sharp order of the cornet, the little troop started
    for Bridgewater. As they set out there was the fullest confirmation
    of Mr. Blood's hideous assumption that to the dragoons this was a
    conquered enemy country. There were sounds of rending timbers,
    of furniture smashed and overthrown, the shouts and laughter of
    brutal men, to announce that this hunt for rebels was no more than
    a pretext for pillage and destruction. Finally above all other
    sounds came the piercing screams of a woman in acutest agony.
    Baynes checked in his stride, and swung round writhing, his face
    ashen. As a consequence he was jerked from his feet by the rope
    that attached him to the stirrup leather, and he was dragged
    helplessly a yard or two before the trooper reined in, cursing him
    foully, and striking him with the flat of his sword.
    It came to Mr. Blood, as he trudged forward under the laden
    apple-trees on that fragrant, delicious July morning, that man - as
    he had long suspected - was the vilest work of God, and that only
    a fool would set himself up as a healer of a species that was best
    exterminated.
  5. Milou

    Milou Thành viên rất tích cực

    Tham gia ngày:
    07/06/2001
    Bài viết:
    7.928
    Đã được thích:
    0
    CHAPTER III
    THE LORD CHIEF JUSTICE
    It was not until two months later - on the 19th of September, if
    you must have the actual date - that Peter Blood was brought to
    trial, upon a charge of high treason. We know that he was not
    guilty of this; but we need not doubt that he was quite capable
    of it by the time he was indicted. Those two months of inhuman,
    unspeakable imprisonment had moved his mind to a cold and deadly
    hatred of King James and his representatives. It says something
    for his fortitude that in all the circumstances he should still
    have had a mind at all. Yet, terrible as was the position of this
    entirely innocent man, he had cause for thankfulness on two counts.
    The first of these was that he should have been brought to trial at
    all; the second, that his trial took place on the date named, and
    not a day earlier. In the very delay which exacerbated him lay -
    although he did not realize it - his only chance of avoiding the
    gallows.
    Easily, but for the favour of Fortune, he might have been one of
    those haled, on the morrow of the battle, more or less haphazard
    from the overflowing gaol at Bridgewater to be summarily hanged in
    the market-place by the bloodthirsty Colonel Kirke. There was about
    the Colonel of the Tangiers Regiment a deadly despatch which might
    have disposed in like fashion of all those prisoners, numerous as
    they were, but for the vigorous intervention of Bishop Mews, which
    put an end to the drumhead courts-martial.
    Even so, in that first week after Sedgemoor, Kirke and Feversham
    contrived between them to put to death over a hundred men after a
    trial so summary as to be no trial at all. They required human
    freights for the gibbets with which they were planting the
    countryside, and they little cared how they procured them or what
    innocent lives they took. What, after all, was the life of a clod?
    The executioners were kept busy with rope and chopper and cauldrons
    of pitch. I spare you the details of that nauseating picture. It
    is, after all, with the fate of Peter Blood that we are concerned
    rather than with that of the Monmouth rebels.
    He survived to be included in one of those melancholy droves of
    prisoners who, chained in pairs, were marched from Bridgewater to
    Taunton. Those who were too sorely wounded to march were conveyed
    in carts, into which they were brutally crowded, their wounds
    undressed and festering. Many were fortunate enough to die upon
    the way. When Blood insisted upon his right to exercise his art so
    as to relieve some of this suffering, he was accounted importunate
    and threatened with a flogging. If he had one regret now it was
    that he had not been out with Monmouth. That, of course, was
    illogical; but you can hardly expect logic from a man in his position.
    His chain companion on that dreadful march was the same Jeremy Pitt
    who had been the agent of his present misfortunes. The young
    shipmaster had remained his close companion after their common arrest.
    Hence, fortuitously, had they been chained together in the crowded
    prison, where they were almost suffocated by the heat and the stench
    during those days of July, August, and September.
    Scraps of news filtered into the gaol from the outside world. Some
    may have been deliberately allowed to penetrate. Of these was the
    tale of Monmouth's execution. It created profoundest dismay amongst
    those men who were suffering for the Duke and for the religious cause
    he had professed to champion. Many refused utterly to believe it.
    A wild story began to circulate that a man resembling Monmouth had
    offered himself up in the Duke's stead, and that Monmouth survived
    to come again in glory to deliver Zion and make war upon Babylon.
    Mr. Blood heard that tale with the same indifference with which he
    had received the news of Monmouth's death. But one shameful thing
    he heard in connection with this which left him not quite so unmoved,
    and served to nourish the contempt he was forming for King James.
    His Majesty had consented to see Monmouth. To have done so unless
    he intended to pardon him was a thing execrable and damnable beyond
    belief; for the only other object in granting that interview could
    be the evilly mean satisfaction of spurning the abject penitence of
    his unfortunate nephew.
    Later they heard that Lord Grey, who after the Duke - indeed,
    perhaps, before him - was the main leader of the rebellion, had
    purchased his own pardon for forty thousand pounds. Peter Blood
    found this of a piece with the rest. His contempt for King James
    blazed out at last.
    "Why, here's a filthy mean creature to sit on a throne. If I had
    known as much of him before as I know to-day, I don't doubt I should
    have given cause to be where I am now." And then on a sudden thought:
    "And where will Lord Gildoy be, do you suppose?" he asked.
    Young Pitt, whom he addressed, turned towards him a face from which
    the ruddy tan of the sea had faded almost completely during those
    months of captivity. His grey eyes were round and questioning.
    Blood answered him.
    "Sure, now, we've never seen his lordship since that day at
    Oglethorpe's. And where are the other gentry that were taken? -
    the real leaders of this plaguey rebellion. Grey's case explains
    their absence, I think. They are wealthy men that can ransom
    themselves. Here awaiting the gallows are none but the unfortunates
    who followed; those who had the honour to lead them go free. It's
    a curious and instructive reversal of the usual way of these things.
    Faith, it's an uncertain world entirely!"
    He laughed, and settled down into that spirit of scorn, wrapped in
    which he stepped later into the great hall of Taunton Castle to take
    his trial. With him went Pitt and the yeoman Baynes. The three of
    them were to be tried together, and their case was to open the
    proceedings of that ghastly day.
    The hall, even to the galleries - thronged with spectators, most of
    whom were ladies - was hung in scarlet; a pleasant conceit, this, of
    the Lord Chief Justice's, who naturally enough preferred the colour
    that should reflect his own bloody mind.
    At the upper end, on a raised dais, sat the Lords Commissioners, the
    five judges in their scarlet robes and heavy dark periwigs, Baron
    Jeffreys of Wem enthroned in the middle place.
    The prisoners filed in under guard. The crier called for silence
    under pain of imprisonment, and as the hum of voices gradually became
    hushed, Mr. Blood considered with interest the twelve good men and
    true that composed the jury. Neither good nor true did they look.
    They were scared, uneasy, and hangdog as any set of thieves caught
    with their hands in the pockets of their neighbours. They were
    twelve shaken men, each of whom stood between the sword of the Lord
    Chief Justice's recent bloodthirsty charge and the wall of his own
    conscience.
    From them Mr. Blood's calm, deliberate glance passed on to consider
    the Lords Commissioners, and particularly the presiding Judge, that
    Lord Jeffreys, whose terrible fame had come ahead of him from
    Dorchester.
    He beheld a tall, slight man on the young side of forty, with an
    oval face that was delicately beautiful. There were dark stains of
    suffering or sleeplessness under the low-lidded eyes, heightening
    their brilliance and their gentle melancholy. The face was very
    pale, save for the vivid colour of the full lips and the hectic
    flush on the rather high but inconspicuous cheek-bones. It was
    something in those lips that marred the perfection of that
    countenance; a fault, elusive but undeniable, lurked there to belie
    the fine sensitiveness of those nostrils, the tenderness of those
    dark, liquid eyes and the noble calm of that pale brow.
    The physician in Mr. Blood regarded the man with peculiar interest
    knowing as he did the agonizing malady from which his lordship
    suffered, and the amazingly irregular, debauched life that he led
    in spite of it - perhaps because of it.
    "Peter Blood, hold up your hand!"
    Abruptly he was recalled to his position by the harsh voice of the
    clerk of arraigns. His obedience was mechanical, and the clerk
    droned out the wordy indictment which pronounced Peter Blood a
    false traitor against the Most Illustrious and Most Excellent Prince,
    James the Second, by the grace of God, of England, Scotland, France,
    and Ireland King, his supreme and natural lord. It informed him
    that, having no fear of God in his heart, but being moved and
    seduced by the instigation of the Devil, he had failed in the love
    and true and due natural obedience towards his said lord the King,
    and had moved to disturb the peace and tranquillity of the kingdom
    and to stir up war and rebellion to depose his said lord the King
    from the title, honour, and the regal name of the imperial crown -
    and much more of the same kind, at the end of all of which he was
    invited to say whether he was guilty or not guilty. He answered
    more than was asked.
    "It's entirely innocent I am."
    A small, sharp-faced man at a table before and to the right of him
    bounced up. It was Mr. Pollexfen, the Judge-Advocate.
    "Are you guilty or not guilty?" snapped this peppery gentleman.
    "You must take the words."
    "Words, is it?" said Peter Blood. "Oh - not guilty." And he went
    on, addressing himself to the bench. "On this same subject of words,
    may it please your lordships, I am guilty of nothing to justify any
    of those words I have heard used to describe me, unless it be of a
    want of patience at having been closely confined for two months and
    longer in a foetid gaol with great peril to my health and even life."
    Being started, he would have added a deal more; but at this point
    the Lord Chief Justice interposed in a gentle, rather plaintive
    voice.
    "Look you, sir: because we must observe the common and usual methods
    of trial, I must interrupt you now. You are no doubt ignorant of
    the forms of law?"
    "Not only ignorant, my lord, but hitherto most happy in that
    ignorance. I could gladly have forgone this acquaintance with them."
    A pale smile momentarily lightened the wistful countenance.
    "I believe you. You shall be fully heard when you come to your
    defence. But anything you say now is altogether irregular and
    improper."
    Enheartened by that apparent sympathy and consideration, Mr. Blood
    answered thereafter, as was required of him, that he would be tried
    by God and his country. Whereupon, having prayed to God to send him
    a good deliverance, the clerk called upon Andrew Baynes to hold up
    his hand and plead.
    From Baynes, who pleaded not guilty, the clerk passed on to Pitt,
    who boldly owned his guilt. The Lord Chief Justice stirred at that.
    "Come; that's better," quoth he, and his four scarlet brethren
    nodded. "If all were as obstinate as his two fellow-rebels, there
    would never be an end."
    After that ominous interpolation, delivered with an inhuman iciness
    that sent a shiver through the court, Mr. Pollexfen got to his feet.
    With great prolixity he stated the general case against the three
    men, and the particular case against Peter Blood, whose indictment
    was to be taken first.
    The only witness called for the King was Captain Hobart. He
    testified briskly to the manner in which he had found and taken the
    three prisoners, together with Lord Gildoy. Upon the orders of his
    colonel he would have hanged Pitt out of hand, but was restrained
    by the lies of the prisoner Blood, who led him to believe that Pitt
    was a peer of the realm and a person of consideration.
    As the Captain's evidence concluded, Lord Jeffreys looked across at
    Peter Blood.
    "Will the prisoner Blood ask the witness any questions?"
    "None, my lord. He has correctly related what occurred."
    "I am glad to have your admission of that without any of the
    prevarications that are usual in your kind. And I will say this,
    that here prevarication would avail you little. For we always have
    the truth in the end. Be sure of that."
    Baynes and Pitt similarly admitted the accuracy of the Captain's
    evidence, whereupon the scarlet figure of the Lord Chief Justice
    heaved a sigh of relief.
    "This being so, let us get on, in God's name; for we have much to
    do." There was now no trace of gentleness in his voice. It was
    brisk and rasping, and the lips through which it passed were curved
    in scorn. "I take it, Mr. Pollexfen, that the wicked treason of
    these three rogues being established - indeed, admitted by them
    - there is no more to be said."
    Peter Blood's voice rang out crisply, on a note that almost seemed
    to contain laughter.
    "May it please your lordship, but there's a deal more to be said."
    His lordship looked at him, first in blank amazement at his audacity,
    then gradually with an expression of dull anger. The scarlet lips
    fell into unpleasant, cruel lines that transfigured the whole
    countenance.
    "How now, rogue? Would you waste our time with idle subterfuge?"
    "I would have your lordship and the gentlemen of the jury hear me
    on my defence, as your lordship promised that I should be heard."
    "Why, so you shall, villain; so you shall." His lordship's voice
    was harsh as a file. He writhed as he spoke, and for an instant
    his features were distorted. A delicate dead-white hand, on which
    the veins showed blue, brought forth a handkerchief with which he
    dabbed his lips and then his brow. Observing him with his
    physician's eye, Peter Blood judged him a prey to the pain of the
    disease that was destroying him. "So you shall. But after the
    admission made, what defence remains?"
    "You shall judge, my lord."
    "That is the purpose for which I sit here."
    "And so shall you, gentlemen." Blood looked from judge to jury.
    The latter shifted uncomfortably under the confident flash of his
    blue eyes. Lord Jeffreys's bullying charge had whipped the spirit
    out of them. Had they, themselves, been prisoners accused of
    treason, he could not have arraigned them more ferociously.
    Peter Blood stood boldly forward, erect, self-possessed, and
    saturnine. He was freshly shaven, and his periwig, if out of curl,
    was at least carefully combed and dressed.
  6. Milou

    Milou Thành viên rất tích cực

    Tham gia ngày:
    07/06/2001
    Bài viết:
    7.928
    Đã được thích:
    0
    "Captain Hobart has testified to what he knows - that he found me
    at Oglethorpe's Farm on the Monday morning after the battle at
    Weston. But he has not told you what I did there."
    Again the Judge broke in. "Why, what should you have been doing
    there in the company of rebels, two of whom - Lord Gildoy and your
    fellow there - have already admitted their guilt?"
    "That is what I beg leave to tell your lordship."
    "I pray you do, and in God's name be brief, man. For if I am to be
    troubled with the say of all you traitor dogs, I may sit here until
    the Spring Assizes."
    "I was there, my lord, in my quality as a physician, to dress Lord
    Gildoy's wounds."
    "What's this? Do you tell us that you are a physician?"
    "A graduate of Trinity College, Dublin."
    "Good God!" cried Lord Jeffreys, his voice suddenly swelling, his
    eyes upon the jury. "What an impudent rogue is this! You heard the
    witness say that he had known him in Tangiers some years ago, and
    that he was then an officer in the French service. You heard the
    prisoner admit that the witness had spoken the truth?"
    "Why, so he had. Yet what I am telling you is also true, so it is.
    For some years I was a soldier; but before that I was a physician,
    and I have been one again since January last, established in
    Bridgewater, as I can bring a hundred witnesses to prove."
    "There's not the need to waste our time with that. I will convict
    you out of your own rascally mouth. I will ask you only this: How
    came you, who represent yourself as a physician peacefully following
    your calling in the town of Bridgewater, to be with the army of the
    Duke of Monmouth?"
    "I was never with that army. No witness has sworn to that, and I
    dare swear that no witness will. I never was attracted to the late
    rebellion. I regarded the adventure as a wicked madness. I take
    leave to ask your lordship" (his brogue became more marked than ever)
    "what should I, who was born and bred a papist, be doing in the army
    of the Protestant Champion?"
    "A papist thou?" The judge gloomed on him a moment. "Art more like
    a snivelling, canting Jack Presbyter. I tell you, man, I can smell
    a Presbyterian forty miles."
    "Then I'll take leave to marvel that with so keen a nose your
    lordship can't smell a papist at four paces."
    There was a ripple of laughter in the galleries, instantly quelled
    by the fierce glare of the Judge and the voice of the crier.
    Lord Jeffreys leaned farther forward upon his desk. He raised that
    delicate white hand, still clutching its handkerchief, and sprouting
    from a froth of lace.
    "We'll leave your religion out of account for the moment, friend,"
    said he. "But mark what I say to you." With a minatory forefinger
    he beat the time of his words. "Know, friend, that there is no
    religion a man can pretend to can give a countenance to lying. Thou
    hast a precious immortal soul, and there is nothing in the world
    equal to it in value. Consider that the great God of Heaven and
    Earth, before Whose tribunal thou and we and all persons are to
    stand at the last day, will take vengeance on thee for every
    falsehood, and justly strike thee into eternal flames, make thee
    drop into the bottomless pit of fire and brimstone, if thou offer
    to deviate the least from the truth and nothing but the truth. For
    I tell thee God is not mocked. On that I charge you to answer
    truthfully. How came you to be taken with these rebels?"
    Peter Blood gaped at him a moment in consternation. The man was
    incredible, unreal, fantastic, a nightmare judge. Then he collected
    himself to answer.
    "I was summoned that morning *****ccour Lord Gildoy, and I conceived
    it to be the duty imposed upon me by my calling to answer that
    summons."
    "Did you so?" The Judge, terrible now of aspect - his face white,
    his twisted lips red as the blood for which they thirsted - glared
    upon him in evil mockery. Then he controlled himself as if by an
    effort. He sighed. He resumed his earlier gentle plaintiveness.
    "Lord! How you waste our time. But I'll have patience with you.
    Who summoned you?"
    "Master Pitt there, as he will testify."
    "Oh! Master Pitt will testify - he that is himself a traitor
    self-confessed. Is that your witness?"
    "There is also Master Baynes here, who can answer to it."
    "Good Master Baynes will have to answer for himself; and I doubt not
    he'll be greatly exercised to save his own neck from a halter.
    Come, come, sir; are these your only witnesses?"
    "I could bring others from Bridgewater, who saw me set out that
    morning upon the crupper of Master Pitt's horse."
    His lordship smiled. "It will not be necessary. For, mark me, I
    do not intend to waste more time on you. Answer me only this: When
    Master Pitt, as you pretend, came *****mmon you, did you know that
    he had been, as you have heard him confess, of Monmouth's following?"
    "I did, My lord."
    "You did! Ha!" His lordship looked at the cringing jury and uttered
    a short, stabbing laugh. "Yet in spite of that you went with him?"
    "*****ccour a wounded man, as was my sacred duty."
    "Thy sacred duty, sayest thou?" Fury blazed out of him again. "Good
    God! What a generation of vipers do we live in! Thy sacred duty,
    rogue, is to thy King and to God. But let it pass. Did he tell you
    whom it was that you were desired *****ccour?"
    "Lord Gildoy - yes."
    "And you knew that Lord Gildoy had been wounded in the battle, and
    on what side he fought?"
    "I knew."
    "And yet, being, as you would have us believe, a true and loyal
    subject of our Lord the King, you went *****ccour him?"
    Peter Blood lost patience for a moment. "My business, my lord, was
    with his wounds, not with his politics."
    A murmur from the galleries and even from the jury approved him.
    It served only to drive his terrible judge into a deeper fury.
    "Jesus God! Was there ever such an impudent villain in the world
    as thou?" He swung, white-faced, to the jury. "I hope, gentlemen
    of the jury, you take notice of the horrible carriage of this traitor
    rogue, and withal you cannot but observe the spirit of this sort of
    people, what a villainous and devilish one it is. Out of his own
    mouth he has said enough to hang him a dozen times. Yet is there
    more. Answer me this, sir: When you cozened Captain Hobart with
    your lies concerning the station of this other traitor Pitt, what
    was your business then?"
    "To save him from being hanged without trial, as was threatened."
    "What concern was it of yours whether or how the wretch was hanged?"
    "Justice is the concern of every loyal subject, for an injustice
    committed by one who holds the King's commission is in some sense
    a dishonour to the King's majesty."
    It was a shrewd, sharp thrust aimed at the jury, and it reveals,
    I think, the alertness of the man's mind, his self-possession ever
    steadiest in moments of dire peril. With any other jury it must
    have made the impression that he hoped to make. It may even have
    made its impression upon these poor pusillanimous sheep. But the
    dread judge was there to efface it.
    He gasped aloud, then flung himself violently forward.
    "Lord of Heaven!" he stormed. "Was there ever such a canting,
    impudent rascal? But I have done with you. I see thee, villain, I
    see thee already with a halter round thy neck."
    Having spoken so, gloatingly, evilly, he sank back again, and
    composed himself. It was as if a curtain fell. All emotion passed
    again from his pale face. Back to invest it again came that gentle
    melancholy. Speaking after a moment's pause, his voice was soft,
    almost tender, yet every word of it carried sharply through that
    hushed court.
    "If I know my own heart it is not in my nature to desire the hurt
    of anybody, much less to delight in his eternal per***ion. It is
    out of compassion for you that I have used all these words - because
    I would have you have some regard for your immortal soul, and not
    ensure its damnation by obdurately persisting in falsehood and
    prevarication. But I see that all the pains in the world, and all
    compassion and charity are lost upon you, and therefore I will say
    no more to you." He turned again to the jury that countenance of
    wistful beauty. "Gentlemen, I must tell you for law, of which we
    are the judges, and not you, that if any person be in actual
    rebellion against the King, and another person - who really and
    actually was not in rebellion - does knowingly receive, harbour,
    comfort, or succour him, such a person is as much a traitor as he
    who indeed bore arms. We are bound by our oaths and consciences to
    declare to you what is law; and you are bound by your oaths and your
    consciences to deliver and to declare to us by your verdict the
    truth of the facts."
    Upon that he proceeded to his summing-up, showing how Baynes and
    Blood were both guilty of treason, the first for having harboured
    a traitor, the second for having succoured that traitor by dressing
    his wounds. He interlarded his address by sycophantic allusions
    to his natural lord and lawful sovereign, the King, whom God had
    set over them, and with vituperations of Nonconformity and of
    Monmouth, of whom - in his own words - he dared boldly affirm that
    the meanest subject within the kingdom that was of legitimate birth
    had a better title to the crown. "Jesus God! That ever we should
    have such a generation of vipers among us," he burst out in
    rhetorical frenzy. And then he sank back as if exhausted by the
    violence he had used. A moment he was still, dabbing his lips again;
    then he moved uneasily; once more his features were twisted by pain,
    and in a few snarling, almost incoherent words he dismissed the jury
    to consider the verdict.
    Peter Blood had listened to the intemperate, the blasphemous, and
    almost obscene invective of that tirade with a detachment that
    afterwards, in retrospect, surprised him. He was so amazed by the
    man, by the reactions taking place in him between mind and body,
    and by his methods of bullying and coercing the jury into bloodshed,
    that he almost forgot that his own life was at stake.
    The absence of that dazed jury was a brief one. The verdict found
    the three prisoners guilty. Peter Blood looked round the
    scarlet-hung court. For an instant that foam of white faces seemed
    to heave before him. Then he was himself again, and a voice was
    asking him what he had to say for himself, why sentence of death
    should not be passed upon him, being convicted of high treason.
    He laughed, and his laugh jarred uncannily upon the deathly stillness
    of the court. It was all so grotesque, such a mockery of justice
    administered by that wistful-eyed jack-pudding in scarlet, who was
    himself a mockery - the venal instrument of a brutally spiteful and
    vindictive king. His laughter shocked the austerity of that same
    jack-pudding.
    "Do you laugh, sirrah, with the rope about your neck, upon the very
    threshold of that eternity you are so suddenly to enter into?"
    And then Blood took his revenge.
    "Faith, it's in better case I am for mirth than your lordship. For
    I have this to say before you deliver judgment. Your lordship sees
    me - an innocent man whose only offence is that I practised charity
    - with a halter round my neck. Your lordship, being the justiciar,
    speaks with knowledge of what is to come to me. I, being a physician,
    may speak with knowledge of what is to come to your lordship. And I
    tell you that I would not now change places with you - that I would
    not exchange this halter that you fling about my neck for the stone
    that you carry in your body. The death to which you may doom me is
    a light pleasantry by contrast with the death to which your lordship
    has been doomed by that Great Judge with whose name your lordship
    makes so free."
    The Lord Chief Justice sat stiffly upright, his face ashen, his lips
    twitching, and whilst you might have counted ten there was no sound
    in that paralyzed court after Peter Blood had finished speaking. All
    those who knew Lord Jeffreys regarded this as the lull before the
    storm, and braced themselves for the explosion. But none came.
    Slowly, faintly, the colour crept back into that ashen face. The
    scarlet figure lost its rigi***y, and bent forward. His lordship
    began to speak. In a muted voice and briefly - much more briefly
    than his wont on such occasions and in a manner entirely mechanical,
    the manner of a man whose thoughts are elsewhere while his lips are
    speaking - he delivered sentence of death in the prescribed form,
    and without the least allusion to what Peter Blood had said. Having
    delivered it, he sank back exhausted, his eyes half-closed, his brow
    agleam with sweat.
    The prisoners filed out.
    Mr. Pollexfen - a Whig at heart despite the position of
    Judge-Advocate which he occupied - was overheard by one of the
    jurors to mutter in the ear of a brother counsel:
    "On my soul, that swarthy rascal has given his lordship a scare.
    It's a pity he must hang. For a man who can frighten Jeffreys
    should go far."
  7. Milou

    Milou Thành viên rất tích cực

    Tham gia ngày:
    07/06/2001
    Bài viết:
    7.928
    Đã được thích:
    0
    CHAPTER IV
    HUMAN MERCHANDISE
    Mr. Pollexfen was at one and the same time right and wrong - a
    con***ion much more common than is generally supposed.
    He was right in his indifferently expressed thought that a man whose
    mien and words could daunt such a lord of terror as Jeffreys, should
    by the dominance of his nature be able to fashion himself a
    considerable destiny. He was wrong - though justifiably so - in his
    assumption that Peter Blood must hang.
    I have said that the tribulations with which he was visited as a
    result of his errand of mercy to Oglethorpe's Farm contained -
    although as yet he did not perceive it, perhaps - two sources of
    thankfulness: one that he was tried at all; the other that his trial
    took place on the 19th of September. Until the 18th, the sentences
    passed by the court of the Lords Commissioners had been carried out
    literally and expe***iously. But on the morning of the 19th there
    arrived at Taunton a courier from Lord Sunderland, the Secretary of
    State, with a letter for Lord Jeffreys wherein he was informed that
    His Majesty had been graciously pleased to command that eleven
    hundred rebels should be furnished for transportation to some of His
    Majesty's southern plantations, Jamaica, Barbados, or any of the
    Leeward Islands.
    You are not *****ppose that this command was dictated by any sense
    of mercy. Lord Churchill was no more than just when he spoke of the
    King's heart as being as insensible as marble. It had been realized
    that in these wholesale hangings there was taking place a reckless
    waste of valuable material. Slaves were urgently required in the
    plantations, and a healthy, vigorous man could be reckoned worth at
    least from ten to fifteen pounds. Then, there were at court many
    gentlemen who had some claim or other upon His Majesty's bounty.
    Here was a cheap and ready way to discharge these claims. From
    amongst the convicted rebels a certain number might be set aside to
    be bestowed upon those gentlemen, so that they might dispose of them
    to their own profit.
    My Lord Sunderland's letter gives precise details of the royal
    munificence in human flesh. A thousand prisoners were to be
    distributed among some eight courtiers and others, whilst a
    postscriptum to his lordship's letter asked for a further hundred
    to be held at the disposal of the Queen. These prisoners were to
    be transported at once to His Majesty's southern plantations, and
    to be kept there for the space of ten years before being restored
    to liberty, the parties to whom they were assigned entering into
    security to see that transportation was immediately effected.
    We know from Lord Jeffreys's secretary how the Chief Justice
    inveighed that night in drunken frenzy against this misplaced
    clemency to which His Majesty had been persuaded. We know how he
    attempted by letter to induce the King to reconsider his decision.
    But James adhered to it. It was - apart from the indirect profit
    he derived from it - a clemency full worthy of him. He knew that
    to spare lives in this fashion was to convert them into living
    deaths. Many must succumb in torment to the horrors of West
    Indian slavery, and so be the envy of their surviving companions.
    Thus it happened that Peter Blood, and with him Jeremy Pitt and
    Andrew Baynes, instead of being hanged, drawn, and quartered as
    their sentences directed, were conveyed to Bristol and there shipped
    with some fifty others aboard the Jamaica Merchant. From close
    confinement under hatches, ill-nourishment and foul water, a
    sickness broke out amongst them, of which eleven died. Amongst
    these was the unfortunate yeoman from Oglethorpe's Farm, brutally
    torn from his quiet homestead amid the fragrant cider orchards
    for no other sin but that he had practised mercy.
    The mortality might have been higher than it was but for Peter Blood.
    At first the master of the Jamaica Merchant had answered with oaths
    and threats the doctor's expostulations against permitting men to
    perish in this fashion, and his insistence that he should be made
    free of the medicine chest and given leave to minister to the sick.
    But presently Captain Gardner came to see that he might be brought
    to task for these too heavy losses of human merchandise and because
    of this he was belatedly glad to avail himself of the skill of Peter
    Blood. The doctor went to work zealously and zestfully, and wrought
    so ably that, by his ministrations and by improving the con***ion of
    his fellow-captives, he checked the spread of the disease.
    Towards the middle of December the Jamaica Merchant dropped anchor
    in Carlisle Bay, and put ashore the forty-two surviving
    rebels-convict.
    If these unfortunates had imagined - as many of them appear to have
    done - that they were coming into some wild, savage country, the
    prospect, of which they had a glimpse before they were hustled over
    the ship's side into the waiting boats, was enough to correct the
    impression. They beheld a town of sufficiently imposing proportions
    composed of houses built upon European notions of architecture, but
    without any of the huddle usual in European cities. The spire of
    a church rose dominantly above the red roofs, a fort guarded the
    entrance of the wide harbour, with guns thrusting their muzzles
    between the crenels, and the wide facade of Government House
    revealed itself dominantly placed on a gentle hill above the town.
    This hill was vividly green as is an English hill in April, and the
    day was such a day as April gives to England, the season of heavy
    rains being newly ended.
    On a wide cobbled space on the sea front they found a guard of
    red-coated militia drawn up to receive them, and a crowd - attracted
    by their arrival - which in dress and manner differed little from a
    crowd in a seaport at home save that it contained fewer women and a
    great number of negroes.
    To inspect them, drawn up there on the mole, came Governor Steed,
    a short, stout, red-faced gentleman, in blue taffetas burdened by
    a prodigious amount of gold lace, who limped a little and leaned
    heavily upon a stout ebony cane. After him, in the uniform of a
    colonel of the Barbados Militia, rolled a tall, corpulent man who
    towered head and shoulders above the Governor, with malevolence
    plainly written on his enormous yellowish countenance. At his side,
    and contrasting oddly with his grossness, moving with an easy
    stripling grace, came a slight young lady in a modish riding-gown.
    The broad brim of a grey hat with scarlet sweep of ostrich plume
    shaded an oval face upon which the climate of the Tropic of Cancer
    had made no impression, so delicately fair was its complexion.
    Ringlets of red-brown hair hung to her shoulders. Frankness looked
    out from her hazel eyes which were set wide; commiseration repressed
    now the mischievousness that normally inhabited her fresh young
    mouth.
    Peter Blood caught himself staring in a sort of amazement at that
    piquant face, which seemed here so out of place, and finding his
    stare returned, he shifted uncomfortably. He grew conscious of the
    sorry figure that he cut. Unwashed, with rank and matted hair and
    a disfiguring black beard upon his face, and the erstwhile splendid
    suit of black camlet in which he had been taken prisoner now reduced
    to rags that would have disgraced a scarecrow, he was in no case for
    inspection by such dainty eyes as these. Nevertheless, they
    continued to inspect him with round-eyed, almost childlike wonder
    and pity. Their owner put forth a hand to touch the scarlet sleeve
    of her companion, whereupon with an ill-tempered grunt the man swung
    his great bulk round so that he directly confronted her.
    Looking up into his face, she was speaking to him earnestly, but the
    Colonel plainly gave her no more than the half of his attention.
    His little beady eyes, closely flanking a fleshly, pendulous nose,
    had passed from her and were fixed upon fair-haired, sturdy young
    Pitt, who was standing beside Blood.
    The Governor had also come to a halt, and for a moment now that
    little group of three stood in conversation. What the lady said,
    Peter could not hear at all, for she lowered her voice; the Colonel's
    reached him in a confused rumble, but the Governor was neither
    considerate nor indistinct; he had a high-pitched voice which carried
    far, and believing himself witty, he desired to be heard by all.
    "But, my dear Colonel Bishop, it is for you to take first choice
    from this dainty nosegay, and at your own price. After that we'll
    send the rest to auction."
    Colonel Bishop nodded his acknowledgment. He raised his voice in
    answering. "Your excellency is very good. But, faith, they're a
    weedy lot, not likely to be of much value in the plantation." His
    beady eyes scanned them again, and his contempt of them deepened
    the malevolence of his face. It was as if he were annoyed with
    them for being in no better con***ion. Then he beckoned forward
    Captain Gardner, the master of the Jamaica Merchant, and for some
    minutes stood in talk with him over a list which the latter produced
    at his request.
    Presently he waved aside the list and advanced alone towards the
    rebels-convict, his eyes considering them, his lips pursed. Before
    the young Somersetshire shipmaster he came to a halt, and stood an
    instant pondering him. Then he fingered the muscles of the young
    man's arm, and bade him open his mouth that he might see his teeth.
    He pursed his coarse lips again and nodded.
    He spoke to Gardner over his shoulder.
    "Fifteen pounds for this one."
    The Captain made a face of dismay. "Fifteen pounds! It isn't half
    what I meant to ask for him."
    "It is double what I had meant to give," grunted the Colonel.
    "But he would be cheap at thirty pounds, your honour."
    "I can get a negro for that. These white swine don't live. They're
    not fit for the labour."
    Gardner broke into protestations of Pitt's health, youth, and vigour.
    It was not a man he was discussing; it was a beast of burden. Pitt,
    a sensitive lad, stood mute and unmoving. Only the ebb and flow of
    colour in his cheeks showed the inward struggle by which he
    maintained his self-control.
    Peter Blood was nauseated by the loathsome haggle.
    In the background, moving slowly away down the line of prisoners,
    went the lady in conversation with the Governor, who smirked and
    preened himself as he limped beside her. She was unconscious of the
    loathly business the Colonel was transacting. Was she, wondered
    Blood, indifferent to it?
    Colonel Bishop swung on his heel to pass on.
    "I'll go as far as twenty pounds. Not a penny more, and it's twice
    as much as you are like to get from Crabston."
    Captain Gardner, recognizing the finality of the tone, sighed and
    yielded. Already Bishop was moving down the line. For Mr. Blood,
    as for a weedy youth on his left, the Colonel had no more than a
    glance of contempt. But the next man, a middle-aged Colossus named
    Wolverstone, who had lost an eye at Sedgemoor, drew his regard, and
    the haggling was recommenced.
    Peter Blood stood there in the brilliant sunshine and inhaled the
    fragrant air, which was unlike any air that he had ever breathed.
    It was laden with a strange perfume, blend of logwood flower,
    pimento, and aromatic cedars. He lost himself in unprofitable
    speculations born of that singular fragrance. He was in no mood for
    conversation, nor was Pitt, who stood dumbly at his side, and who
    was afflicted mainly at the moment by the thought that he was at
    last about to be separated from this man with whom he had stood
    shoulder to shoulder throughout all these troublous months, and
    whom he had come to love and depend upon for guidance and sustenance.
    A sense of loneliness and misery pervaded him by contrast with which
    all that he had endured seemed as nothing. To Pitt, this separation
    was the poignant climax of all his sufferings.
    Other buyers came and stared at them, and passed on. Blood did not
    heed them. And then at the end of the line there was a movement.
    Gardner was speaking in a loud voice, making an announcement to the
    general public of buyers that had waited until Colonel Bishop had
    taken his choice of that human merchandise. As he finished, Blood,
    looking in his direction, noticed that the girl was speaking to
    Bishop, and pointing up the line with a silver-hilted riding-whip
    she carried. Bishop shaded his eyes with his hand to look in the
    direction in which she was pointing. Then slowly, with his
    ponderous, rolling gait, he approached again accompanied by Gardner,
    and followed by the lady and the Governor.
    On they came until the Colonel was abreast of Blood. He would have
    passed on, but that the lady tapped his arm with her whip.
    "But this is the man I meant," she said.
    "This one?" Contempt rang in the voice. Peter Blood found himself
    staring into a pair of beady brown eyes sunk into a yellow, fleshly
    face like currants into a dumpling. He felt the colour creeping
    into his face under the insult of that contemptuous inspection.
    "Bah! A bag of bones. What should I do with him?"
    He was turning away when Gardner interposed.
    "He maybe lean, but he's tough; tough and healthy. When half of
    them was sick and the other half sickening, this rogue kept his legs
    and doctored his fellows. But for him there'd ha' been more deaths
    than there was. Say fifteen pounds for him, Colonel. That's cheap
    enough. He's tough, I tell your honour - tough and strong, though
    he be lean. And he's just the man to bear the heat when it comes.
    The climate'll never kill him."
    There came a chuckle from Governor Steed. "You hear, Colonel.
    Trust your niece. Her *** knows a man when it sees one." And he
    laughed, well pleased with his wit.
    But he laughed alone. A cloud of annoyance swept across the face
    of the Colonel's niece, whilst the Colonel himself was too absorbed
    in the consideration of this bargain to heed the Governor's humour.
    He twisted his lip a little, stroking his chin with his hand the
    while. Jeremy Pitt had almost ceased to breathe.
    "I'll give you ten pounds for him," said the Colonel at last.
    Peter Blood prayed that the offer might be rejected. For no reason
    that he could have given you, he was taken with repugnance at the
    thought of becoming the property of this gross animal, and in some
    sort the property of that hazel-eyed young girl. But it would need
    more than repugnance to save him from his destiny. A slave is a
    slave, and has no power to shape his fate. Peter Blood was sold
    to Colonel Bishop - a disdainful buyer - for the ignominious sum of
    ten pounds.
  8. Milou

    Milou Thành viên rất tích cực

    Tham gia ngày:
    07/06/2001
    Bài viết:
    7.928
    Đã được thích:
    0
    CHAPTER V
    ARABELLA BISHOP
    One sunny morning in January, about a month after the arrival of
    the Jamaica Merchant at Bridgetown, Miss Arabella Bishop rode out
    from her uncle's fine house on the heights to the northwest of the
    city. She was attended by two negroes who trotted after her at a
    respectful distance, and her destination was Government House,
    whither she went to visit the Governor's lady, who had lately been
    ailing. Reaching the summit of a gentle, grassy slope, she met a
    tall, lean man dressed in a sober, gentlemanly fashion, who was
    walking in the opposite direction. He was a stranger to her, and
    strangers were rare enough in the island. And yet in some vague
    way he did not seem quite a stranger.
    Miss Arabella drew rein, affecting to pause that she might admire
    the prospect, which was fair enough to warrant it. Yet out of the
    corner of those hazel eyes she scanned this fellow very attentively
    as he came nearer. She corrected her first impression of his dress.
    It was sober enough, but hardly gentlemanly. Coat and breeches were
    of plain homespun; and if the former sat so well upon him it was
    more by virtue of his natural grace than by that of tailoring. His
    stockings were of cotton, harsh and plain, and the broad castor,
    which he respectfully doffed as he came up with her, was an old one
    unadorned by band or feather. What had seemed to be a periwig at a
    little distance was now revealed for the man's own lustrous coiling
    black hair.
    Out of a brown, shaven, saturnine face two eyes that were startlingly
    blue considered her gravely. The man would have passed on but that
    she detained him.
    "I think I know you, sir," said she.
    Her voice was crisp and boyish, and there was something of boyishness
    in her manner - if one can apply the term to so dainty a lady. It
    arose perhaps from an ease, a directness, which disdained the
    artifices of her ***, and set her on good terms with all the world.
    To this it may be due that Miss Arabella had reached the age of five
    and twenty not merely unmarried but unwooed. She used with all men
    a sisterly frankness which in itself contains a quality of aloofness,
    rendering it difficult for any man to become her lover.
    Her negroes had halted at some distance in the rear, and they
    squatted now upon the short grass until it should be her pleasure
    to proceed upon her way.
    The stranger came to a standstill upon being addressed.
    "A lady should know her own property," said he.
    "My property?"
    "Your uncle's, leastways. Let me present myself. I am called Peter
    Blood, and I am worth precisely ten pounds. I know it because that
    is the sum your uncle paid for me. It is not every man has the same
    opportunities of ascertaining his real value."
    She recognized him then. She had not seen him since that day upon
    the mole a month ago, and that she should not instantly have known
    him again despite the interest he had then aroused in her is not
    surprising, considering the change he had wrought in his appearance,
    which now was hardly that of a slave.
    "My God!" said she. "And you can laugh!"
    "It's an achievement," he admitted. "But then, I have not fared as
    ill as I might."
    "I have heard of that," said she.
    What she had heard was that this rebel-convict had been discovered
    to be a physician. The thing had come to the ears of Governor Steed,
    who suffered damnably from the gout, and Governor Steed had borrowed
    the fellow from his purchaser. Whether by skill or good fortune,
    Peter Blood had afforded the Governor that relief which his
    excellency had failed to obtain from the ministrations of either of
    the two physicians practising in Bridgetown. Then the Governor's
    lady had desired him to attend her for the megrims. Mr. Blood had
    found her suffering from nothing worse than peevishness - the result
    of a natural petulance aggravated by the dulness of life in Barbados
    to a lady of her social aspirations. But he had prescribed for her
    none the less, and she had conceived herself the better for his
    prescription. After that the fame of him had gone through Bridgetown,
    and Colonel Bishop had found that there was more profit to be made
    out of this new slave by leaving him to pursue his profession than
    by setting him to work on the plantations, for which purpose he had
    been originally acquired.
    "It is yourself, madam, I have to thank for my comparatively easy
    and clean con***ion," said Mr. Blood, "and I am glad to take this
    opportunity of doing so."
    The gratitude was in his words rather than in his tone. Was he
    mocking, she wondered, and looked at him with the searching frankness
    that another might have found disconcerting. He took the glance for
    a question, and answered it.
    "If some other planter had bought me," he explained, "it is odds
    that the facts of my shining abilities might never have been brought
    to light, and I should be hewing and hoeing at this moment like the
    poor wretches who were landed with me."
    "And why do you thank me for that? It was my uncle who bought you."
    "But he would not have done so had you not urged him. I perceived
    your interest. At the time I resented it."
    "You resented it?" There was a challenge in her boyish voice.
    "I have had no lack of experiences of this mortal life; but to be
    bought and sold was a new one, and I was hardly in the mood to love
    my purchaser."
    "If I urged you upon my uncle, sir, it was that I commiserated you."
    There was a slight severity in her tone, as if to reprove the mixture
    of mockery and flippancy in which he seemed to be speaking.
    She proceeded to explain herself. "My uncle may appear to you a
    hard man. No doubt he is. They are all hard men, these planters.
    It is the life, I suppose. But there are others here who are worse.
    There is Mr. Crabston, for instance, up at Speightstown. He was
    there on the mole, waiting to buy my uncle's leavings, and if you
    had fallen into his hands ... A dreadful man. That is why."
    He was a little bewildered.
    "This interest in a stranger ..." he began. Then changed the
    direction of his probe. "But there were others as deserving of
    commiseration."
    "You did not seem quite like the others."
    "I am not," said he.
    "Oh!" She stared at him, bridling a little. "You have a good
    opinion of yourself."
    "On the contrary. The others are all worthy rebels. I am not.
    That is the difference. I was one who had not the wit to see that
    England requires purifying. I was content to pursue a doctor's
    trade in Bridgewater whilst my betters were shedding their blood
    to drive out an unclean tyrant and his rascally crew."
    "Sir!" she checked him. "I think you are talking treason."
    "I hope I am not obscure," said he.
    "There are those here who would have you flogged if they heard you."
    "The Governor would never allow it. He has the gout, and his lady
    has the megrims."
    "Do you depend upon that?" She was frankly scornful.
    "You have certainly never had the gout; probably not even the
    megrims," said he.
    She made a little impatient movement with her hand, and looked away
    from him a moment, out to sea. Quite suddenly she looked at him
    again; and now her brows were knit.
    "But if you are not a rebel, how come you here?"
    He saw the thing she apprehended, and he laughed. "Faith, now, it's
    a long story," said he.
    "And one perhaps that you would prefer not to tell?"
    Briefly on that he told it her.
    "My God! What an infamy!" she cried, when he had done.
    "Oh, it's a sweet country England under King James! There's no need
    to commiserate me further. All things considered I prefer Barbados.
    Here at least one can believe in God."
    He looked first to right, then to left as he spoke, from the distant
    shadowy bulk of Mount Hillbay to the limitless ocean ruffled by the
    winds of heaven. Then, as if the fair prospect rendered him
    conscious of his own littleness and the insignificance of his woes,
    he fell thoughtful.
    "Is that so difficult elsewhere?" she asked him, and she was very
    grave.
    "Men make it so."
    "I see." She laughed a little, on a note of sadness, it seemed to
    him. "I have never deemed Barbados the earthly mirror of heaven,"
    she confessed. "But no doubt you know your world better than I."
    She touched her horse with her little silver-hilted whip. "I
    congratulate you on this easing of your misfortunes."
    He bowed, and she moved on. Her negroes sprang up, and went
    trotting after her.
    Awhile Peter Blood remained standing there, where she left him,
    conning the sunlit waters of Carlisle Bay below, and the shipping
    in that spacious haven about which the gulls were fluttering
    noisily.
    It was a fair enough prospect, he reflected, but it was a prison,
    and in announcing that he preferred it to England, he had indulged
    that almost laudable form of boasting which lies in belittling our
    misadventures.
    He turned, and resuming his way, went off in long, swinging strides
    towards the little huddle of huts built of mud and wattles - a
    miniature village enclosed in a stockade which the plantation slaves
    inhabited, and where he, himself, was lodged with them.
    Through his mind sang the line of Lovelace:
    "Stone walls do not a prison make,
    Nor iron bars a cage."
    But he gave it a fresh meaning, the very converse of that which its
    author had intended. A prison, he reflected, was a prison, though
    it had neither walls nor bars, however spacious it might be. And
    as he realized it that morning so he was to realize it increasingly
    as time sped on. Daily he came to think more of his clipped wings,
    of his exclusion from the world, and less of the fortuitous liberty
    he enjoyed. Nor did the contrasting of his comparatively easy lot
    with that of his unfortunate fellow-convicts bring him the
    satisfaction a differently constituted mind might have derived from
    it. Rather did the contemplation of their misery increase the
    bitterness that was gathering in his soul.
    Of the forty-two who had been landed with him from the Jamaica
    Merchant, Colonel Bishop had purchased no less than twenty-five.
    The remainder had gone to lesser planters, some of them to
    Speightstown, and others still farther north. What may have been
    the lot of the latter he could not tell, but amongst Bishop's slaves
    Peter Blood came and went freely, sleeping in their quarters, and
    their lot he knew to be a brutalizing misery. They toiled in the
    sugar plantations from sunrise *****nset, and if their labours
    flagged, there were the whips of the overseer and his men to quicken
    them. They went in rags, some almost naked; they dwelt in squalor,
    and they were ill-nourished on salted meat and maize dumplings -
    food which to many of them was for a season at least so nauseating
    that two of them sickened and died before Bishop remembered that
    their lives had a certain value in labour to him and yielded to
    Blood's intercessions for a better care of such as fell ill. To
    curb insubordination, one of them who had rebelled against Kent, the
    brutal overseer, was lashed to death by negroes under his comrades'
    eyes, and another who had been so misguided as to run away into the
    woods was tracked, brought back, flogged, and then branded on the
    forehead with the letters "F. T.," that all might know him for a
    fugitive traitor as long as he lived. Fortunately for him the poor
    fellow died as a consequence of the flogging.
    After that a dull, spiritless resignation settled down upon the
    remainder. The most mutinous were quelled, and accepted their
    unspeakable lot with the tragic fortitude of despair.
    Peter Blood alone, escaping these excessive sufferings, remained
    outwardly unchanged, whilst inwardly the only change in him was a
    daily deeper hatred of his kind, a daily deeper longing to escape
    from this place where man defiled so foully the lovely work of his
    Creator. It was a longing too vague to amount to a hope. Hope
    here was inadmissible. And yet he did not yield to despair. He
    set a mask of laughter on his saturnine countenance and went his
    way, treating the sick to the profit of Colonel Bishop, and
    encroaching further and further upon the preserves of the two
    other men of medicine in Bridgetown.
    Immune from the degrading punishments and privations of his
    fellow-convicts, he was enabled to keep his self-respect, and was
    treated without harshness even by the soulless planter to whom he
    had been sold. He owed it all to gout and megrims. He had won
    the esteem of Governor Steed, and - what is even more important
    - of Governor Steed's lady, whom he shamelessly and cynically
    flattered and humoured.
  9. Milou

    Milou Thành viên rất tích cực

    Tham gia ngày:
    07/06/2001
    Bài viết:
    7.928
    Đã được thích:
    0
    Occasionally he saw Miss Bishop, and they seldom met but that she
    paused to hold him in conversation for some moments, evincing her
    interest in him. Himself, he was never disposed to linger. He was
    not, he told himself, to be deceived by her delicate exterior, her
    sapling grace, her easy, boyish ways and pleasant, boyish voice.
    In all his life - and it had been very varied - he had never met a
    man whom he accounted more beastly than her uncle, and he could not
    dissociate her from the man. She was his niece, of his own blood,
    and some of the vices of it, some of the remorseless cruelty of
    the wealthy planter must, he argued, inhabit that pleasant body of
    hers. He argued this very often to himself, as if answering and
    convincing some instinct that pleaded otherwise, and arguing it he
    avoided her when it was possible, and was frigidly civil when it
    was not.
    Justifiable as his reasoning was, plausible as it may seem, yet he
    would have done better to have trusted the instinct that was in
    conflict with it. Though the same blood ran in her veins as in
    those of Colonel Bishop, yet hers was free of the vices that tainted
    her uncle's, for these vices were not natural to that blood; they
    were, in his case, acquired. Her father, Tom Bishop - that same
    Colonel Bishop's brother - had been a kindly, chivalrous, gentle
    soul, who, broken-hearted by the early death of a young wife, had
    abandoned the Old World and sought an anodyne for his grief in
    the New. He had come out to the Antilles, bringing with him his
    little daughter, then five years of age, and had given himself up
    to the life of a planter. He had prospered from the first, as men
    sometimes will who care nothing for prosperity. Prospering, he
    had bethought him of his younger brother, a soldier at home
    reputed somewhat wild. He had advised him to come out to Barbados;
    and the advice, which at another season William Bishop might have
    scorned, reached him at a moment when his wildness was beginning to
    bear such fruit that a change of climate was desirable. William
    came, and was admitted by his generous brother to a partnership
    in the prosperous plantation. Some six years later, when Arabella
    was fifteen, her father died, leaving her in her uncle's
    guardianship. It was perhaps his one mistake. But the goodness of
    his own nature coloured his views of other men; moreover, himself,
    he had conducted the education of his daughter, giving her an
    independence of character upon which perhaps he counted unduly. As
    things were, there was little love between uncle and niece. But
    she was dutiful to him, and he was circumspect in his behaviour
    before her. All his life, and for all his wildness, he had gone
    in a certain awe of his brother, whose worth he had the wit to
    recognize; and now it was almost as if some of that awe was
    transferred to his brother's child, who was also, in a sense, his
    partner, although she took no active part in the business of the
    plantations.
    Peter Blood judged her - as we are all too prone to judge - upon
    insufficient knowledge.
    He was very soon to have cause to correct that judgment. One day
    towards the end of May, when the heat was beginning to grow
    oppressive, there crawled into Carlisle Bay a wounded, battered
    English ship, the Pride of Devon, her freeboard scarred and broken,
    her coach a gaping wreck, her mizzen so shot away that only a jagged
    stump remained to tell the place where it had stood. She had been
    in action off Martinique with two Spanish treasure ships, and
    although her captain swore that the Spaniards had beset him without
    provocation, it is difficult to avoid a suspicion that the encounter
    had been brought about quite otherwise. One of the Spaniards had
    fled from the combat, and if the Pride of Devon had not given chase
    it was probably because she was by then in no case to do so. The
    other had been sunk, but not before the English ship had transferred
    to her own hold a good deal of the treasure aboard the Spaniard.
    It was, in fact, one of those piratical affrays which were a
    perpetual source of trouble between the courts of St. James's and
    the Escurial, complaints emanating now from one and now from the
    other side.
    Steed, however, after the fashion of most Colonial governors, was
    willing enough to dull his wits to the extent of accepting the
    English seaman's story, disregarding any evidence that might belie
    it. He shared the hatred so richly deserved by arrogant, overbearing
    Spain that was common to men of every other nation from the Bahamas
    to the Main. Therefore he gave the Pride of Devon the shelter she
    sought in his harbour and every facility to careen and carry out
    repairs.
    But before it came to this, they fetched from her hold over a score
    of English seamen as battered and broken as the ship herself, and
    together with these some half-dozen Spaniards in like case, the
    only survivors of a boarding party from the Spanish galleon that
    had invaded the English ship and found itself unable to retreat.
    These wounded men were conveyed to a long shed on the wharf, and
    the medical skill of Bridgetown was summoned to their aid. Peter
    Blood was ordered to bear a hand in this work, and partly because
    he spoke Castilian - and he spoke it as fluently as his own native
    tongue - partly because of his inferior con***ion as a slave, he
    was given the Spaniards for his patients.
    Now Blood had no cause to love Spaniards. His two years in a Spanish
    prison and his subsequent campaigning in the Spanish Netherlands had
    shown him a side of the Spanish character which he had found anything
    but admirable. Nevertheless he performed his doctor's duties
    zealously and painstakingly, if emotionlessly, and even with a
    certain superficial friendliness towards each of his patients.
    These were so surprised at having their wounds healed instead of
    being summarily hanged that they manifested a docility very unusual
    in their kind. They were shunned, however, by all those charitably
    disposed inhabitants of Bridgetown who flocked to the improvised
    hospital with gifts of fruit and flowers and delicacies for the
    injured English seamen. Indeed, had the wishes of some of these
    inhabitants been regarded, the Spaniards would have been left to
    die like vermin, and of this Peter Blood had an example almost at
    the very outset.
    With the assistance of one of the negroes sent to the shed for the
    purpose, he was in the act of setting a broken leg, when a deep,
    gruff voice, that he had come to know and dislike as he had never
    disliked the voice of living man, abruptly challenged him.
    "What are you doing there?"
    Blood did not look up from his task. There was not the need. He
    knew the voice, as I have said.
    "I am setting a broken leg," he answered, without pausing in his
    labours.
    "I can see that, fool." A bulky body interposed between Peter Blood
    and the window. The half-naked man on the straw rolled his black
    eyes to stare up fearfully out of a clay-coloured face at this
    intruder. A knowledge of English was unnecessary to inform him that
    here came an enemy. The harsh, minatory note of that voice
    sufficiently expressed the fact. "I can see that, fool; just as I
    can see what the rascal is. Who gave you leave to set Spanish legs?"
    "I am a doctor, Colonel Bishop. The man is wounded. It is not for
    me to discriminate. I keep to my trade."
    "Do you, by God! If you'd done that, you wouldn't now be here."
    "On the contrary, it is because I did it that I am here."
    "Aye, I know that's your lying tale." The Colonel sneered; and
    then, observing Blood to continue his work unmoved, he grew really
    angry. "Will you cease that, and attend to me when I am speaking?"
    Peter Blood paused, but only for an instant. "The man is in pain,"
    he said shortly, and resumed his work.
    "In pain, is he? I hope he is, the damned piratical dog. But will
    you heed me, you insubordinate knave?"
    The Colonel delivered himself in a roar, infuriated by what he
    conceived to be defiance, and defiance expressing itself in the
    most unruffled disregard of himself. His long bamboo cane was
    raised to strike. Peter Blood's blue eyes caught the flash of it,
    and he spoke quickly to arrest the blow.
    "Not insubordinate, sir, whatever I may be. I am acting upon the
    express orders of Governor Steed."
    The Colonel checked, his great face empurpling. His mouth fell open.
    "Governor Steed!" he echoed. Then he lowered his cane, swung round,
    and without another word to Blood rolled away towards the other end
    of the shed where the Governor was standing at the moment.
    Peter Blood chuckled. But his triumph was dictated less by
    humanitarian considerations than by the reflection that he had
    baulked his brutal owner.
    The Spaniard, realizing that in this altercation, whatever its
    nature, the doctor had stood his friend, ventured in a muted voice
    to ask him what had happened. But the doctor shook his head in
    silence, and pursued his work. His ears were straining to catch
    the words now passing between Steed and Bishop. The Colonel was
    blustering and storming, the great bulk of him towering above the
    wizened little overdressed figure of the Governor. But the little
    fop was not to be browbeaten. His excellency was conscious that
    he had behind him the force of public opinion *****pport him.
    Some there might be, but they were not many, who held such ruthless
    views as Colonel Bishop. His excellency asserted his authority.
    It was by his orders that Blood had devoted himself to the wounded
    Spaniards, and his orders were to be carried out. There was no
    more to be said.
    Colonel Bishop was of another opinion. In his view there was a
    great deal to be said. He said it, with great circumstance, loudly,
    vehemently, obscenely - for he could be fluently obscene when moved
    to anger.
    "You talk like a Spaniard, Colonel," said the Governor, and thus
    dealt the Colonel's pride a wound that was to smart resentfully
    for many a week. At the moment it struck him silent, and sent him
    stamping out of the shed in a rage for which he could find no words.
    It was two days later when the ladies of Bridgetown, the wives and
    daughters of her planters and merchants, paid their first visit of
    charity to the wharf, bringing their gifts to the wounded seamen.
    Again Peter Blood was there, ministering to the sufferers in his
    care, moving among those unfortunate Spaniards whom no one heeded.
    All the charity, all the gifts were for the members of the crew of
    the Pride of Devon. And this Peter Blood accounted natural enough.
    But rising suddenly from the re-dressing of a wound, a task in
    which he had been absorbed for some moments, he saw to his surprise
    that one lady, detached from the general throng, was placing some
    plantains and a bundle of succulent sugar cane on the cloak that
    served one of his patients for a coverlet. She was elegantly
    dressed in lavender silk and was followed by a half-naked negro
    carrying a basket.
    Peter Blood, stripped of his coat, the sleeves of his coarse shirt
    rolled to the elbow, and holding a bloody rag in his hand, stood at
    gaze a moment. The lady, turning now to confront him, her lips
    parting in a smile of recognition, was Arabella Bishop.
    "The man's a Spaniard," said he, in the tone of one who corrects a
    misapprehension, and also tinged never so faintly by something of
    the derision that was in his soul.
    The smile with which she had been greeting him withered on her lips.
    She frowned and stared at him a moment, with increasing haughtiness.
    "So I perceive. But he's a human being none the less," said she.
    That answer, and its implied rebuke, took him by surprise.
    "Your uncle, the Colonel, is of a different opinion," said he, when
    he had recovered. "He regards them as vermin to be left to languish
    and die of their festering wounds."
    She caught the irony now more plainly in his voice. She continued
    to stare at him.
    "Why do you tell me this?"
    "To warn you that you may be incurring the Colonel's displeasure.
    If he had had his way, I should never have been allowed to dress
    their wounds."
    "And you thought, of course, that I must be of my uncle's mind?"
    There was a crispness about her voice, an ominous challenging
    sparkle in her hazel eyes.
    "I'd not willingly be rude to a lady even in my thoughts," said he.
    "But that you should bestow gifts on them, considering that if your
    uncle came to hear of it...." He paused, leaving the sentence
    unfinished. "Ah, well - there it is!" he concluded.
    But the lady was not satisfied at all.
    "First you impute to me inhumanity, and then cowardice. Faith!
    For a man who would not willingly be rude to a lady even in his
    thoughts, it's none so bad." Her boyish laugh trilled out, but the
    note of it jarred his ears this time.
    He saw her now, it seemed to him, for the first time, and saw how
    he had misjudged her.
    "Sure, now, how was I to guess that... that Colonel Bishop could
    have an angel for his niece?" said he recklessly, for he was reckless
    as men often are in sudden penitence.
    "You wouldn't, of course. I shouldn't think you often guess aright."
    Having withered him with that and her glance, she turned to her
    negro and the basket that he carried. From this she lifted now the
    fruits and delicacies with which it was laden, and piled them in
    such heaps upon the beds of the six Spaniards that by the time she
    had so served the last of them her basket was empty, and there was
    nothing left for her own fellow-countrymen. These, indeed, stood
    in no need of her bounty - as she no doubt observed - since they
    were being plentifully supplied by others.
    Having thus emptied her basket, she called her negro, and without
    another word or so much as another glance at Peter Blood, swept out
    of the place with her head high and chin thrust forward.
    Peter watched her departure. Then he fetched a sigh.
    It startled him to discover that the thought that he had incurred
    her anger gave him concern. It could not have been so yesterday.
    It became so only since he had been vouchsafed this revelation of
    her true nature. "Bad cess to it now, it serves me right. It
    seems I know nothing at all of human nature. But how the devil was
    I to guess that a family that can breed a devil like Colonel Bishop
    should also breed a saint like this?"
  10. Milou

    Milou Thành viên rất tích cực

    Tham gia ngày:
    07/06/2001
    Bài viết:
    7.928
    Đã được thích:
    0
    CHAPTER VI
    PLANS OF ESCAPE
    After that Arabella Bishop went daily to the shed on the wharf with
    gifts of fruit, and later of money and of wearing apparel for the
    Spanish prisoners. But she contrived so to time her visits that
    Peter Blood never again met her there. Also his own visits were
    growing shorter in a measure as his patients healed. That they all
    throve and returned to health under his care, whilst fully one
    third of the wounded in the care of Whacker and Bronson - the two
    other surgeons - died of their wounds, served to increase the
    reputation in which this rebel-convict stood in Bridgetown. It may
    have been no more than the fortune of war. But the townsfolk did
    not choose so to regard it. It led to a further dwindling of the
    practices of his free colleagues and a further increase of his own
    labours and his owner's profit. Whacker and Bronson laid their
    heads together to devise a scheme by which this intolerable state
    of things should be brought to an end. But that is to anticipate.
    One day, whether by accident or design, Peter Blood came striding
    down the wharf a full half-hour earlier than usual, and so met Miss
    Bishop just issuing from the shed. He doffed his hat and stood
    aside to give her passage. She took it, chin in the air, and eyes
    which disdained to look anywhere where the sight of him was possible.
    "Miss Arabella," said he, on a coaxing, pleading note.
    She grew conscious of his presence, and looked him over with an air
    that was faintly, mockingly searching.
    "La!" said she. "It's the delicate-minded gentleman!"
    Peter groaned. "Am I so hopelessly beyond forgiveness? I ask it
    very humbly."
    "What condescension!"
    "It is cruel to mock me," said he, and adopted mock-humility. "After
    all, I am but a slave. And you might be ill one of these days."
    "What, then?"
    "It would be humiliating to send for me if you treat me like an enemy."
    "You are not the only doctor in Bridgetown."
    "But I am the least dangerous."
    She grew suddenly suspicious of him, aware that he was permitting
    himself to rally her, and in a measure she had already yielded to
    it. She stiffened, and looked him over again.
    "You make too free, I think," she rebuked him.
    "A doctor's privilege."
    "I am not your patient. Please to remember it in future." And on
    that, unquestionably angry, she departed.
    "Now is she a vixen or am I a fool, or is it both?" he asked the
    blue vault of heaven, and then went into the shed.
    It was to be a morning of excitements. As he was leaving an hour
    or so later, Whacker, the younger of the other two physicians, joined
    him - an unprecedented condescension this, for hitherto neither of
    them had addressed him beyond an occasional and surly "good-day!"
    "If you are for Colonel Bishop's, I'll walk with you a little way,
    Doctor Blood," said he. He was a short, broad man of five-and-forty
    with pendulous cheeks and hard blue eyes.
    Peter Blood was startled. But he dissembled it.
    "I am for Government House," said he.
    "Ah! To be sure! The Governor's lady." And he laughed; or perhaps
    he sneered. Peter Blood was not quite certain. "She encroaches a
    deal upon your time, I hear. Youth and good looks, Doctor Blood!
    Youth and good looks! They are inestimable advantages in our
    profession as in others - particularly where the ladies are
    concerned."
    Peter stared at him."If you mean what you seem to mean, you had
    better say it to Governor Steed. It may amuse him."
    "You surely misapprehend me."
    "I hope so."
    "You're so very hot, now!" The doctor linked his arm through Peter's.
    "I protest I desire to be your friend - to serve you. Now, listen."
    Instinctively his voice grew lower. "This slavery in which you find
    yourself must be singularly irksome to a man of parts such as
    yourself."
    "What intuitions!" cried sardonic Mr. Blood. But the doctor took
    him literally.
    "I am no fool, my dear doctor. I know a man when I see one, and
    often I can tell his thoughts."
    "If you can tell me mine, you'll persuade me of it," said
    Mr. Blood.
    Dr. Whacker drew still closer to him as they stepped along the wharf.
    He lowered his voice to a still more confidential tone. His hard
    blue eyes peered up into the swart, sardonic face of his companion,
    who was a head taller than himself.
    "How often have I not seen you staring out over the sea, your soul
    in your eyes! Don't I know what you are thinking? If you could
    escape from this hell of slavery, you could exercise the profession
    of which you are an ornament as a free man with pleasure and profit
    to yourself. The world is large. There are many nations besides
    England where a man of your parts would be warmly welcomed. There
    are many colonies besides these English ones." Lower still came
    the voice until it was no more than a whisper. Yet there was no
    one within earshot. "It is none so far now to the Dutch settlement
    of Curacao. At this time of the year the voyage may safely be
    undertaken in a light craft. And Curacao need be no more than a
    stepping-stone to the great world, which would lie open to you once
    you were delivered from this bondage."
    Dr. Whacker ceased. He was pale and a little out of breath. But
    his hard eyes continued to study his impassive companion.
    "Well?" he said alter a pause. "What do you say to that?"
    Yet Blood did not immediately answer. His mind was heaving in
    tumult, and he was striving to calm it that he might take a proper
    survey of this thing flung into it to create so monstrous a
    disturbance. He began where another might have ended.
    "I have no money. And for that a handsome sum would be necessary."
    "Did I not say that I desired to be your friend?"
    "Why?" asked Peter Blood at point-blank range.
    But he never heeded the answer. Whilst Dr. Whacker was professing
    that his heart bled for a brother doctor languishing in slavery,
    denied the opportunity which his gifts entitled him to make for
    himself, Peter Blood pounced like a hawk upon the obvious truth.
    Whacker and his colleague desired to be rid of one who threatened
    to ruin them. Sluggishness of decision was never a fault of Blood's.
    He leapt where another crawled. And so this thought of evasion
    never entertained until planted there now by Dr. Whacker sprouted
    into instant growth.
    "I see, I see," he said, whilst his companion was still talking,
    explaining, and to save Dr. Whacker's face he played the hypocrite.
    "It is very noble in you - very brotherly, as between men of medicine.
    It is what I myself should wish to do in like case."
    The hard eyes flashed, the husky voice grew tremulous as the other
    asked almost too eagerly:
    "You agree, then? You agree?"
    "Agree?" Blood laughed. "If I should be caught and brought back,
    they'd clip my wings and brand me for life."
    "Surely the thing is worth a little risk?" More tremulous than ever
    was the tempter's voice.
    "Surely," Blood agreed. "But it asks more than courage. It asks
    money. A sloop might be bought for twenty pounds, perhaps."
    "It shall be forthcoming. It shall be a loan, which you shall repay
    us - repay me, when you can."
    That betraying "us" so hastily retrieved completed Blood's
    understanding. The other doctor was also in the business.
    They were approaching the peopled part of the mole. Quickly, but
    eloquently, Blood expressed his thanks, where he knew that no thanks
    were due.
    "We will talk of this again, sir - to-morrow," he concluded. "You
    have opened for me the gates of hope."
    In that at least he tittered no more than the bare truth, and
    expressed it very baldly. It was, indeed, as if a door had been
    suddenly flung open to the sunlight for escape from a dark prison
    in which a man had thought to spend his life.
    He was in haste now to be alone, to straighten out his agitated
    mind and plan coherently what was to be done. Also he must consult
    another. Already he had hit upon that other. For such a voyage a
    navigator would be necessary, and a navigator was ready to his hand
    in Jeremy Pitt. The first thing was to take counsel with the young
    shipmaster, who must be associated with him in this business if it
    were to be undertaken. All that day his mind was in turmoil with
    this new hope, and he was sick with impatience for night and a
    chance to discuss the matter with his chosen partner. As a result
    Blood was betimes that evening in the spacious stockade that enclosed
    the huts of the slaves together with the big white house of the
    overseer, and he found an opportunity of a few words with Pitt,
    unobserved by the others.
    "To-night when all are asleep, come to my cabin. I have something
    to say to you."
    The young man stared at him, roused by Blood's pregnant tone out
    of the mental lethargy into which he had of late been lapsing as a
    result of the dehumanizing life he lived. Then he nodded
    understanding and assent, and they moved apart.
    The six months of plantation life in Barbados had made an almost
    tragic mark upon the young seaman. His erstwhile bright alertness
    was all departed. His face was growing vacuous, his eyes were dull
    and lack-lustre, and he moved in a cringing, furtive manner, like
    an over-beaten dog. He had survived the ill-nourishment, the
    excessive work on the sugar plantation under a pitiless sun, the
    lashes of the overseer's whip when his labours flagged, and the
    deadly, unrelieved animal life to which he was condemned. But the
    price he was paying for survival was the usual price. He was in
    danger of becoming no better than an animal, of sinking to the
    level of the negroes who sometimes toiled beside him. The man,
    however, was still there, not yet dormant, but merely torpid from
    a surfeit of despair; and the man in him promptly shook off that
    torpi***y and awoke at the first words Blood spoke to him that
    night - awoke and wept.
    "Escape?" he panted. "0 God!" He took his head in his hands,
    and fell to sobbing like a child.
    "Sh! Steady now! Steady!" Blood admonished him in a whisper,
    alarmed by the lad's blubbering. He crossed to Pitt's side, and
    set a restraining hand upon his shoulder. "For God's sake, command
    yourself. If we're overheard we shall both be flogged for this."
    Among the privileges enjoyed by Blood was that of a hut to himself,
    and they were alone in this. But, after all, it was built of
    wattles thinly plastered with mud, and its door was composed of
    bamboos, through which sound passed very easily. Though the stockade
    was locked for the night, and all within it asleep by now - it was
    after midnight - yet a prowling overseer was not impossible, and a
    sound of voices must lead to discovery. Pitt realized this, and
    controlled his outburst of emotion.
    Sitting close thereafter they talked in whispers for an hour or more,
    and all the while those dulled wits of Pitt's were sharpening
    themselves anew upon this precious whetstone of hope. They would
    need to recruit others into their enterprise, a half-dozen at least,
    a half-score if possible, but no more than that. They must pick
    the best out of that score of survivors of the Monmouth men that
    Colonel Bishop had acquired. Men who understood the sea were
    desirable. But of these there were only two in that unfortunate
    gang, and their knowledge was none too full. They were Hagthorpe,
    a gentleman who had served in the Royal Navy, and Nicholas Dyke, who
    had been a petty officer in the late king's time, and there was
    another who had been a gunner, a man named Ogle.
    It was agreed before they parted that Pitt should begin with these
    three and then proceed to recruit some six or eight others. He was
    to move with the utmost caution, sounding his men very carefully
    before making anything in the nature of a disclosure, and even then
    avoid rendering that disclosure so full that its betrayal might
    frustrate the plans which as yet had to be worked out in detail.
    Labouring with them in the plantations, Pitt would not want for
    opportunities of broaching the matter to his fellow-slaves.
    "Caution above everything," was Blood's last recommendation to him
    at parting. "Who goes slowly, goes safely, as the Italians have it.
    And remember that if you betray yourself, you ruin all, for you are
    the only navigator amongst us, and without you there is no escaping."
    Pitt reassured him, and slunk off back to his own hut and the straw
    that served him for a bed.
    Coming next morning to the wharf, Blood found Dr. Whacker in a
    generous mood. Having slept on the matter, he was prepared to
    advance the convict any sum up to thirty pounds that would enable
    him to acquire a boat capable of taking him away from the settlement.
    Blood expressed his thanks becomingly, betraying no sign that he
    saw clearly into the true reason of the other's munificence.
    "It's not money I'll require," said he, "but the boat itself. For
    who will be selling me a boat and incurring the penalties in Governor
    Steed's proclamation? Ye'll have read it, no doubt?"
    Dr. Whacker's heavy face grew overcast. Thoughtfully he rubbed his
    chin. "I've read it - yes. And I dare not procure the boat for you.
    It would be discovered. It must be. And the penalty is a fine of
    two hundred pounds besides imprisonment. It would ruin me. You'll
    see that?"
    The high hopes in Blood's soul, began to shrink. And the shadow of
    his despair overcast his face.
    "But then..." he faltered. "There is nothing to be done."
    "Nay, nay: things are not so desperate." Dr. Whacker smiled a little
    with tight lips. "I've thought of it. You will see that the man who
    buys the boat must be one of those who goes with you - so that he is
    not here to answer questions afterwards."
    "But who is to go with me save men in my own case? What I cannot
    do, they cannot."
    "There are others detained on the island besides slaves. There are
    several who are here for debt, and would be glad enough to spread
    their wings. There's a fellow Nuttall, now, who follows the trade
    of a shipwright, whom I happen to know would welcome such a chance
    as you might afford him."
    "But how should a debtor come with money to buy a boat? The question
    will be asked."
    "To be sure it will. But if you contrive shrewdly, you'll all be
    gone before that happens."
    Blood nodded understanding, and the doctor, setting a hand upon his
    sleeve, unfolded the scheme he had conceived.
    "You shall have the money from me at once. Having received it,
    you'll forget that it was I who supplied it to you. You have friends
    in England - relatives, perhaps - who sent it out to you through the
    agency of one of your Bridgetown patients, whose name as a man of
    honour you will on no account divulge lest you bring trouble upon
    him. That is your tale if there are questions."
    He paused, looking hard at Blood. Blood nodded understanding and
    assent. Relieved, the doctor continued:
    "But there should be no questions if you go carefully to work. You
    concert matters With Nuttall. You enlist him as one of your
    companions and a shipwright should be a very useful member of your
    crew. You engage him to discover a likely sloop whose owner is
    disposed to sell. Then let your preparations all be made before the
    purchase is effected, so that your escape may follow instantly
    upon it before the inevitable questions come to be asked. You take
    me?"
    So well did Blood take him that within an hour he contrived to see
    Nuttall, and found the fellow as disposed to the business as Dr.
    Whacker had predicted. When he left the shipwright, it was agreed
    that Nuttall should seek the boat required, for which Blood would
    at once produce the money.
    The quest took longer than was expected by Blood, who waited
    impatiently with the doctor's gold concealed about his person. But
    at the end of some three weeks, Nuttall - whom he was now meeting
    daily - informed him that he had found a serviceable wherry, and
    that its owner was disposed to sell it for twenty-two pounds. That
    evening, on the beach, remote from all eyes, Peter Blood handed that
    sum to his new associate, and Nuttall went off with instructions to
    complete the purchase late on the following day. He was to bring
    the boat to the wharf, where under cover of night Blood and his
    fellow-convicts would join him and make off.
    Everything was ready. In the shed, from which all the wounded men
    had now been removed and which had since remained untenanted,
    Nuttall had concealed the necessary stores: a hundredweight of
    bread, a quantity of cheese, a cask of water and some few bottles
    of Canary, a compass, quadrant, chart, half-hour glass, log and
    line, a tarpaulin, some carpenter's tools, and a lantern and candles.
    And in the stockade, all was likewise in readiness. Hagthorpe, Dyke,
    and Ogle had agreed to join the venture, and eight others had been
    carefully recruited. In Pitt's hut, which he shared with five other
    rebels-convict, all of whom were to join in this bid for liberty, a
    ladder had been constructed in secret during those nights of waiting.
    With this they were *****rmount the stockade and gain the open. The
    risk of detection, so that they made little noise, was negligible.
    Beyond locking them all into that stockade at night, there was no
    great precaution taken. Where, after all, could any so foolish as
    to attempt escape hope to conceal himself in that island? The chief
    risk lay in discovery by those of their companions who were to be
    left behind. It was because of these that they must go cautiously
    and in silence.
    The day that was to have been their last in Barbados was a day of
    hope and anxiety to the twelve associates in that enterprise, no
    less than to Nuttall in the town below.
Trạng thái chủ đề:
Đã khóa

Chia sẻ trang này