<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX</SPAN><br/> <small>“BRAS-DE-FER”</small></h2></div>
<p class="cap">And so for the present it was settled. Monsieur
Mornay sought rest vainly, and crept
upon deck at the first flashing of the sun upon
the horizon. The <i>Sally</i>, dressed in a full suit
of cloths upon both her masts, went courtesying
upon her course with a fine show of white about
her bows and under her counter. The brig was
not inaptly named, for there was an impudence
in the rake of her masts and in the way she wore
her canvas which belied her reputation for a
sober and honest-dealing merchantman. There
was a suggestion of archness, too, in the way
her slender stem curved away from the caresses
of the leaping foam which danced rosy and
warm with the dawn to give her greeting, and a
touch of gallantry in the tosses and swayings
of her prow and head as they nodded up and
down, the very soul of careless coquetry. But<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</SPAN></span>
now and then an opalescent sea, more venturesome
and intrepid than his fellows, would catch
her full in the bluff of the bows and go a-flying
over her forecastle in a shower of spume and
water-drops, which in the golden light turned
into jewels of many hues and went flying across
the deck to be carried down to the cool, translucent
deeps under her lee. But she shook herself
free with a disdainful, sweeping toss and set her
broad bows out towards the open, where the
colors were ever growing deeper and the winds
more rude and boisterous, as though she recked
not how impetuous the buffets of the storm, how
turbulent the caresses of the sea.</p>
<p>Something of the exhilaration of the old life
came upon Monsieur Mornay as he sent a seaman-like
eye aloft at the straining canvases.
The <i>Sally</i> was leaving the narrows and making
for the broad reaches where the Channel grew
into the wide ocean. Far away over his larboard
quarter, growing ever dimmer in the
eastern mist of the morning, was the coast of
France, the land where he was born, where he
had suffered and struggled to win the good<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</SPAN></span>
name he thought his birth had denied him. On
his right, slipping rapidly astern, was England,
where he had come to crown his labors with a
new renown, and where he had only squandered
that favor he had passed so many years of
stress in winning—squandered it for a fancy
that now was like some half-forgotten dream.
It seemed only yesterday that he had been
standing there upon a vessel of his own, looking
out to sea. A year had passed since he had
given up the command of the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Dieu Merci</i> and
gone to Paris—a year of reckless abandon to
pleasure at the gay court of Charles, a year in
which he had lived and forgotten what had gone
before, a year in which he had been born into
the life that was his by every right. A dream?
Yes, a dream. It was a rough awakening. He
looked down at his rough clothing—his baggy,
red trousers, with the tawdry brass buttons,
his loose, coarse shirt and rough boots, the
rudest slops that the brig provided; he felt of
his short hair under the woolen cap, and he
wondered if this could be himself, the Chevalier
Mornay; the cock of the bird-cage walk, friend<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</SPAN></span>
of princes and the intimate of a king! Astern,
across the swirling wake, lay the city of pleasure,
but the bitter smile that came into his face
had none of the rancor of hatred. It spoke
rather of failure, of disappointment, of things
forsaken and unachieved.</p>
<p>From these reflections he was surprised by
the sound of a voice at his elbow. There, beside
him, stood a fat man munching at a sea-biscuit.
His face, in consonance with the body, was
round and flabby, but there the consistency
ended, for in color it was gray, like a piece of
mildewed sail-cloth. The distinguishing feature
of his person was his nose, which, round
and inflamed, shone like a beacon in the middle
of his pallid physiognomy. His voice was lost
in the immensity of his frame, for when he spoke
it seemed to come from a long distance, as
though choked in the utterance by the layers of
flesh which hung from his chin and throat. The
pucker which did duty for a frown upon his
brow became a fat knot.</p>
<p>“You vhos a passenger upon dis schip, hey?”
he said, with well-considered sarcasm. “You<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</SPAN></span>
vhos a passenger? You t’ink you make dis
voyage to America und do noding, eh? By Cott!
we’ll see about dot.” And all the while he kept
munching at the sea-biscuit, and Monsieur Mornay
stood leaning against the rail watching him.
“You vhos a French duke or someding, ain’t it?
Vell, ve vant none of de royal family aboardt
de <i>Saucy Sally</i>. Und vhen I, or de capdain, or
Shacky Shackart gif de orders, you joomp, or,
py Cott! I’ll know vy not!”</p>
<p>But still Mornay looked at him, smiling. He
was in a reckless mood, and welcomed any opportunity
that took him out of himself.</p>
<p>“Vell,” the Dutchman asked, his little, thin
voice grown shrill with rising temper, “vy don’t
you moofe? Vy you standt looking at me?”
And, rushing suddenly forward, he aimed a blow
of his heavy boot at Mornay, which, had it
reached its destination, must have wrought a
grave injury to the Frenchman. So great an
impetus had it that, not finding the expected
resistance, the foot flew high in the air. But
the Frenchman was not there. He had stepped
quickly aside, and, deftly catching the heel of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</SPAN></span>
the boot in his hand, threw the surprised Dutchman
completely off his balance, so that he fell,
a sprawling mass of squirming fat, upon the
deck. The commotion had drawn a number of
the crew aft, and the captain, reeling uncertainly
to the roll of the vessel, came blinking and
puffing up the after-ladder. By this time the
Dutchman had struggled to an upright posture
and came rushing upon Mornay again, all arms
and legs, sputtering and furious.</p>
<p>But the captain, no matter how deep in drink,
was a person with the shrewdest sense of his
importance upon a ship of his own. He was
jealous of all blows not aimed by his own sturdy
fist, and it was his fancy that none should strike
any but himself. It was therefore with a sense
of his outraged office that he rushed between
the two men, and with his bulky body and long
arms averted the windmill attack of the burly
Dutchman.</p>
<p>“Mutiny, by ——, and not hout of soundings!
Stand fast, Gratz! Stand fast, I say! Hi’ll do
the billy-coddling on this ship. Stand, I say!
Now, what is it?”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Gratz stepped forward a pace and spat.
“Yaw! I gif her orders. And she stumpled me
packwards upon de deck.”</p>
<p>“What!” roared the captain. “Soho! we’ll
see!” and he seized a pin from the rail. The
situation was threatening. Winch was already
striding forward, and his upraised pin seemed
about to descend upon the luckless Mornay
when Jacquard interposed a long, bony arm.</p>
<p>“Fair play, Billee Winch! You’ll slaughter
the man!”</p>
<p>“Out of the way!”</p>
<p>“Fair play, I say, Billee Winch!” Jacquard
stood his ground and only gripped the captain
the tighter. “Fair play, Billee Winch, I tell
you! Gratz fell over his own feet. I saw it.
Listen to me.”</p>
<p>The captain paused a moment. The lie had
distracted him, and in that pause Jacquard saw
safety. The captain looked blearily at Mornay,
who had made no move to defend himself, but
stood with little sign of discomposure, awaiting
the outcome of the difficulty.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“If Monsieur le Capitaine will but allow
me—”</p>
<p>“By Cott,” broke in Gratz, “you shall not!”
and made a wild effort to strike Mornay again.
But this time Jacquard caught him and twisted
him safely out of the way.</p>
<p>“By the Devil’s Pot!” roared Winch, “am I
in command, or am I not?” He raised his
weapon this time towards Gratz, who cowered
away as though he feared the blow would fall.</p>
<p>“If Monsieur le Capitaine will allow me,” began
Mornay again, politely, “I would take it
as a pleasure—”</p>
<p>“You!” sneered the captain, with a kind of
laugh. “You! Why, Frenchman, Yan Gratz
will make three of ye. He’ll eat ye skin an’
bones.”</p>
<p>Jacquard smiled a little. “<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Voilà!</em> Billee
Winch,” he cried, “the way out of your difficulty:
a little circle upon the deck, a falchion
or a half-pike—fair play for all, and—”</p>
<p>“Yaw! yaw! Fair play! fair play!” yelled
the crew, rejoicing at the prospect of the sport.</p>
<p>Billy Winch blinked a bleared and bloodshot<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</SPAN></span>
eye at Jacquard and Mornay, and then a wide
smile broke the sluggish surface of the skin into
numberless wrinkles.</p>
<p>“If ye’ll have it that way,” he grinned, “ye’ll
be stuck like a sheep. But ’twill save me trouble.
So fight away, my bully, an’ be dammed to ye!”</p>
<p>Immediately a ring was formed, into which
the combatants were speedily pushed. Gratz
laughed in his shrillest choked falsetto, while
he threw off his coat and leered at the Frenchman.
The huge bulk of the man was the more
apparent when his coat had been removed, for
in spite of his girth and fat his limbs were set
most sturdily in his body, and though the
muscles of his arms moved slothfully beneath
the skin, it was easily to be seen that this was a
most formidable antagonist. That he himself
considered his task a rare sport, which would
still further enhance his reputation among the
crew, was easily to be perceived in the way he
looked at Monsieur Mornay. And in this opinion
he was not alone, for even Cornbury, who
had pressed closely to the Frenchman’s side,
wore a look which showed how deep was his concern<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</SPAN></span>
over his friend’s predicament. Only Jacquard,
of all those who stood about, felt no fear
for Mornay. Upon the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Dieu Merci</i> he had seen
the chevalier do a prodigy of strength and skill
which had settled a mutiny once and for all, and
had earned him a title which had given him a
greater reputation in the Marine of France
than all the distinctions which the King had seen
fit to bestow. And as Jacquard looked at him,
slim and not over-tall, but cool and deliberate,
as upon his own deck three years ago, the
Frenchman became again “René Bras-de-Fer,”
“René the Iron Arm,” who fought for the love
of fighting only, and who knew nothing of fear
on sea or land.</p>
<p>That superiority in men which in spite of
every adverse circumstance will not be denied
shone so conspicuously in the face and figure
of the Frenchman that the row of hairy faces
about him looked in wonder. There was a rough
jest or two, for Yan Gratz had won his way from
the bowsprit aft by buffets and blows, and had
waxed fat in the operation. To them he was the
very living embodiment of a fighting devil of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</SPAN></span>
the sea. But many of them saw something in
the cool, impassive expression of the Frenchman—a
something which had won him friends
(and enemies) before this, and were silent.</p>
<p>The Frenchman, with a quiet deliberation,
rolled the sleeves of his shirt above his elbows
and took the half-pike that was thrust into his
hands. It has been said that the Chevalier
Mornay was not above the medium height, nor,
with the exception of an arm which might have
seemed a little too long to be in perfect proportion,
gave in his appearance any striking evidence
of especial physical prowess. He had
been known in London for a graceful and ready
sword, and in his few encounters he had never
received so much as a scratch. But even Gratz
was stricken with wonderment at the appearance
of the forearm, which his wide sleeves had
so effectually concealed. The arm of the chevalier,
as he brought his pike into a posture of
defense, showed a more remarkable degree of
development than he had ever seen before in
any man—Frenchman or Englishman—of his
stature. The legs, strong and straight as they<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</SPAN></span>
were, with a generous bulge at the calf, betrayed
nothing of this wonderful arm, which, swelling
from a strong though not unslender wrist, rose
in fine layers of steel-like ligament, tangled and
knotted like the limbs of an oak. And up above
the elbow the falling cotton shirt scarcely hid
the sturdy bulk of muscle which swelled and
trembled as the fingers moved the weapon down
upon guard to resist the furious attack of the
Hollander. Gratz prided himself no less upon
his use of the pike than upon his use of his fists
and boots, and, thinking to end the matter in a
summary fashion, which might atone for his
somewhat awkward fall upon the deck, he began
thrusting hotly and with a skill which had
hitherto availed his purposes. But he soon discovered
that with this Frenchman, whom he had
so hardily challenged, he was to have no advantage
either in the reach or in the knowledge
of the game. Mornay’s play, he quickly learned,
was to allow him completely to exhaust himself.
This, instead of teaching him caution, only increased
his fury, so that at the end of a few
moments of fruitless exertion he found himself<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</SPAN></span>
puffing like a great grampus, the perspiration
pouring blindingly into his eyes and down his
arms, until his fat hands grew moist and slipped
uncertainly upon the handle of his weapon.</p>
<p>The cloud that had hung upon Cornbury’s
face at the beginning of the combat had disappeared,
and with a childish delight in the clash
of arms he watched his friend slowly but surely
steal away the offensive power of the Dutchman,
whose look of confidence had been replaced by
a lightness of eye and a quivering of the forehead
and lips which denoted the gravest quandary
of uncertainty. Monsieur Mornay was
breathing rapidly, but his brows were as level,
his eye as clear, his hand as steady as when he
had begun.</p>
<p>In a few moments the struggle which had
promised such dire results became a farce. The
Frenchman had suddenly assumed the offensive,
and, beating down the guard of the other, began
pricking him gently, with rare skill and discrimination,
in different conspicuous parts of
his anatomy. The chevalier’s weapon was
sharp, and the skin of Yan Gratz was tender,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</SPAN></span>
but so nicely were the thrusts of the Frenchman
tempered to the occasion that they did no more
than draw a small quantity of blood at each
place, which oozed forth in patches upon his
moist and clinging shirt, so that he presently resembled
some huge, spotted animal of an unknown
species which disaster might have driven
from his fastnesses in the deep. It would have
been a remarkable exhibition of skill with a cut-and-thrust
sword or a rapier, but with a half-pike
it was little less than marvelous.</p>
<p>Yan Gratz struggled on, his tired arms vainly
striving against the Frenchman’s assaults.
Once, when the Dutchman had been disarmed,
Monsieur Mornay generously allowed him to
regain his weapon, choosing the advantage of
Yan Gratz’s posture, however, to complete the
circle of his punctures by a prick in the seat of
his honor, which quickly straightened him again.</p>
<p>When the game had gone far enough, and the
pallid pasty face of Yan Gratz was so suffused
that it looked little less red than his nose or the
blood upon his shirt, and his gasps for breath<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</SPAN></span>
were become so short that they threatened to
come no more at all, Monsieur Mornay threw
his weapon down upon the deck and, breathing
deeply, folded his arms and stood at rest.</p>
<p>“Mynheer,” he said, “it was a mistake to
have begun. I am the best half-pikeman in
France.”</p>
<p>The Dutchman blinked at him with his small
pig-eyes, out of which the bitterness of his
humiliation flashed and sparkled in a wild and
vengeful light. The Frenchman turned his back
to pass beyond the circle of grinning men who
had not scrupled to hide their delight and admiration
at his prowess in vanquishing their
bully. But Gratz, whose exhaustion even could
not avail to curb his fury, put all the small store
of his remaining energy into a savage rush,
which he directed full at the back of the retiring
Frenchman. A cry arose, and Mornay would
have been transfixed had not Cornbury intercepted
the cowardly thrust by a nimble foot,
over which the Dutchman stumbled and fell
sprawling into the scuppers. The point of his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</SPAN></span>
weapon grazed the arm of Mornay and stuck
quivering in the deck, a yard beyond where he
had stood. Jacquard rushed to the prostrate
figure in a fury at his treachery, but the man
made no sign or effort to arise.</p>
<p>“By the ’Oly Rood! A craven stroke!” cried
the captain, fetching the Dutchman a resounding
kick, which brought forth a feeble groan.
“Get up!” he roared. “Get up an’ go forward.
Hods-niggars! we want none but honest blows
among shipmates.”</p>
<p>Yan Gratz struggled to his feet and stumbled
heavily down into the deck-house. Jacquard
was grinning from ear to ear. If he had planned
the combat himself, the result could not have
been more to his liking. The favor of Billy
Winch was no small thing to win, and Monsieur
Mornay had chosen the nearest road to his
heart. The captain, after hurling a parting
curse at the Dutchman’s figure, slouched over to
Mornay.</p>
<p>“Zounds! but ye ’ave a ’and for the pike,
my bully. ’Ave ye aught o’ seamanship? If<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</SPAN></span>
ye know your hangles, ye’re the very figure of
a mate for <i>Saucy Sally</i>, for we want no more o’
’<span class="lcsmcaps">IM</span>,” and he jerked his finger in the direction
taken by Yan Gratz.</p>
<p>Mornay laughed. “I’ve had the deck of a
taller ship than <i>Saucy Sally</i>.” Billy Winch
grasped Mornay by the hand right heartily.</p>
<p>“Come, what d’ye say? Me an’ Jacky Jacquard
an’ you. We three aft. We’ve need o’
ye. Zounds! but ye’ve the useful thrust an’
parry.” Then he roared with laughter. “An’
I’m mistaken if ye’re not as ’andy a liar as a
pikeman. I’ve seen the play of the best in
the French Marine, and Captain René Mornay
would have a word to say with ye as to who’s
the best half-pikeman in France.”</p>
<p>Jacquard held his sides to better contain himself;
his mouth opened widely and his little eyes
were quite closed with the excess of his delight.
Mornay and Cornbury smiled a little, and the
Frenchman said, with composure:</p>
<p>“Perhaps. Monsieur le Capitaine Mornay
and I are not strangers. But he holds his reputation<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</SPAN></span>
so low and I mine so high, that I cannot
bring myself to fight him.”</p>
<p>Here Jacquard could no longer contain himself.</p>
<p>“Can you not see farther than the end of your
bowsprit, Billee Winch?” he cried; and while
the captain wondered, “Can you not see, stupid
fish?—’tis Bras-de-Fer himself!”</p>
<p>Blackbeard fell back a step or two in his
amazement, while a murmur swept over the
crew, who, loath to leave the scene, had remained
interested listeners to the colloquy.</p>
<p>“What! René the Iron Arm aboard the
<i>Sally</i>?” said the captain, approaching the
Frenchman again. “Soho! Though, by St.
Paul’s—ye’re not unlike— An’ with a wig an’
doublet— ’Pon my soul, Jacky Jacquard, but I
believe ’tis the truth. Say, is it so, master?”</p>
<p>“I am René Mornay,” said the Frenchman.</p>
<p>“Soho!” he roared in delight. “Then <i>Sally</i>
shall give ye meat and drink and make a bed to
ye. An’ when ye will she’ll set ye ashore in
France. Or, if ye care for the clashin’ of arms,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</SPAN></span>
she’ll show ye the path of the galleons o’ Spain.
Come, let’s below and drink to a better understanding.”</p>
<p>It was thus that Monsieur Mornay sailed
forth for the Spanish Main.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</SPAN></span></p>
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