<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X</SPAN><br/> <small>BRAS-DE-FER MAKES A CAPTURE</small></h2></div>
<p class="cap">The feat at arms of Monsieur Mornay at the
expense of the luckless Gratz had set the
ship by the ears, and with little opposition
Bras-de-Fer became the third in command.
Before many weeks were gone it was discovered
that he had his seamanship at as ready a convenience
as his pike-play, for in a troublesome
squall in a windy watch on deck, while Jacquard
was below, he had not scrupled to take the command
from Captain Billy Winch, who was so
deep in liquor that he didn’t know the main-brace
from a spritsail sheet, and who had had
the <i>Sally</i> upon her beam-ends, with all his ports
and hatches open. Mornay sprang to the helm
and gave the orders necessary to bring her to
rights. Indeed, the command had clearly devolved
upon Jacquard; for the lucid intervals of
Captain Billy Winch were becoming less and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</SPAN></span>
less, until from that state of continued jubilation
which marked his departure from the port of
London he had passed into one of beatific unconsciousness,
from which he only aroused himself
to assuage his thirst the more copiously. One
black morning in the wilds of the Atlantic he
reached the deck, his eyes wide with fever and
his mouth full of oaths, swearing that he would
no longer stay below, but his legs were so completely
at a loss that, what with the wild
plunges of the vessel and the assaults of the
seas which made clean breaches over her, he
was thrown down into the scuppers again and
again, and all but drowned in the wash of the
deck. But the bruising and sousing in the saltwater,
instead of rebuffing him or abating a whit
of his ardor, but served to sober him and make
him the more ambitious to take his proper place
aboard the vessel. Jacquard would have restrained
him, but he threw the Frenchman aside,
and, while trying to descend the ladder at the
angle of the poop, lost his balance, and, catching
wildly at the lee bulwark, disappeared in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</SPAN></span>
dirty smother under the quarter and was seen
no more.</p>
<p>After this mishap, Jacquard went below to
the cabin with Mornay to make his plans for the
future of the <i>Saucy Sally</i>. There, among the
rum-reeking effects of the captain, he discovered
the royal charter and warrant under which
the vessel sailed, together with the lists of
Spanish vessels which should have left port,
their destinations and probable values. Jacquard
outlined the plans he had made for their
operations when they should have reached the
waters he had chosen. Cornbury, who had been
reading abstractedly in the warrant, gave a
sudden cry.</p>
<p>“Bresac,” he said, pointing a long forefinger
upon the parchment. “Faith, my dear man, your
fortune is a silly, whimsical jade, after all.
Cast your eye hither for a moment of time.”</p>
<p>Mornay took the document in amazement.</p>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>Whereas it hath come to Our Notice [it began]
that certain Enemies of the State sailing in the
Vessels of the Kingdom of Spain have prepared,
ordered, and levied war against Us, and have molested<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</SPAN></span>
and harassed Our lawful Commerce upon the
Sea, to the oppression of Our loyal Subjects carrying
on the same, by the advice of Our Privy Council
we hereby grant to our good and loyal subject Henry
Heywood, Knt., that his vessel or vessels—</p>
</div>
<p>“’Tis as plain as a pike-handle,” said Cornbury.
And as Mornay still scanned the document:
“Faith, can ye not see?—ye’re a guest
upon a vessel of your own. The vessel and all
she owns is yours, man—yours!”</p>
<p>“<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Parbleu!</em>” said Mornay, when the edge of
his wonderment was dulled. “I believe you. A
rare investment, indeed, for the millions of the
Bresacs.”</p>
<p>“A thousand per centum at the very least,
with a modicum for the King. Ye cannot wonder
how Charles bewailed the man’s demise.
Ye touched his purse, René. And friendship
has little to expect from the conscience of an
empty pocket.”</p>
<p>“By my life, it is so!” said the wide-eyed
Mornay. “Jacquard shall know. Listen, my
friend.” And, with a particular reticence with
regard to the name of Mistress Clerke, he told<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</SPAN></span>
Jacquard of the great secret, the rape of the
papers, and the other things pertaining to his
discovery. It was learned that in the matter
Jacquard knew only one Captain Brail, a ship-chandler
and owner, who had the finding of all
the sea appurtenances, the making of the contracts,
and the furnishing of the stores. The
sympathetic Jacquard followed Monsieur Mornay
through a description of the duel, his face
wreathed in smiles, his eyes shining with delight.
He wept at the tale of the mother, commiserated
the orphan, and, when he learned how
Sir Henry Heywood had taken possession of the
proofs of the boy’s birth and lineage and had
kept him from his rightful inheritance, Jacquard
rose upon his long legs and swore aloud
at the man’s perfidy. When Mornay had finished,
he sat silent a moment, clasping and unclasping
his knotted, bony fingers.</p>
<p>“It is a strange story, monsieur—the strangest
I have ever heard. It means, monsieur, that
upon the <i>Saucy Sally</i>, at least, you have come
into your own. Besides, once my captain, always
my captain. <em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Allons!</em> It shall be as before.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</SPAN></span>
Bras-de-Fer shall lead. Jacquard shall obey.
That is all.” He arose and took Monsieur Mornay
by the hand. “Henceforth,” he said, “it
shall be Captain René Bras-de-Fer. Now we
will go upon deck, and I shall tell them.”</p>
<p>Although the death of Billy Winch had
caused much commotion aboard the vessel, the
crew in the main were tractable and compliant.
Upon his own great popularity, upon the reputation
of Bras-de-Fer, and upon the large portion
of the crew who were Frenchmen like himself,
Jacquard relied to effect the necessary
changes in the management of the vessel. The
Frenchman’s bearing since he had come aboard
had been such as to enhance rather than to remove
the early impression that he had made,
and but a spark was needed to amalgamate him
with the ship’s company. That spark Jacquard
dexterously applied. He called all hands aft,
and with a stirring appeal to their imagination,
one by one, recalled the feats of the chevalier—the
fight in the open boat with the Austrian
pirate, the defiance of the Spanish Admiral under
the very guns of the <i>Bona Ventura</i>, the six<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</SPAN></span>
duels upon the landing-place at Cronenburg, the
wreck of the <i>Sainte Barbe</i>, and the mutiny and
ignominious defeat of Jean Goujon upon the
<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Dieu Merci</i>. All of these things he painted with
glowing colors, so that as he stepped forth on
deck they hailed Bras-de-Fer with a glad acclaim.
Then Bras-de-Fer told them what he
hoped to do, and read them (amid huzzahs) the
list of Spanish shipping.</p>
<p>When the matter of the captaincy had been
duly settled beyond a doubt, with a grace which
could not fail to gain approval, he unhesitatingly
appointed Yan Gratz again the third in
command, and this magnanimity did much to
unite him to the small faction which stood aloof.
The frank confidence he placed in the Hollander
put them upon the terms of an understanding
which Gratz accepted with as good a grace as
he could bring to the occasion. A cask of rum
was brought up on the deck and the incident
ended in jubilation and health-giving, which in
point of good-fellowship and favorable augury
left nothing to be desired. At the end of a week
Bras-de-Fer had given still more adequate<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</SPAN></span>
proofs of his ability. With a shrewd eye he had
discovered the natural leaders among the crew.
These he placed in positions of authority. Then,
appointing Cornbury master-at-arms, put the
men upon their mettle at pike-play and the
broadsword with such admirable results that
the carousing and laxity engendered by the
habits of Captain Billy Winch became less and
less, until the rum-casks were no more brought
up on deck, except upon rare and exceptional
occasions. Of growls there were a few, and
here and there a muttering apprised him of dissatisfaction
among the free-drinkers. But he
offered prizes from the first Spanish vessel captured
for those most proficient in the manly
arts, to appease their distaste for the sport,
himself entering upon the games with a spirit
and a poise which were irresistible. The unrestrained
life had caught the fancy of Cornbury,
too, and with nimble tongue and nimbler weapon
he won his way with the rough blades as though
he had entered upon this service by the same
hawse-pipe as themselves. Once, when a not too
complimentary remark had been passed upon<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</SPAN></span>
his beard, which was grown long and of an ingenuous
crimson, he took the offender by the
nose and at the point of his sword forced him
upon his knees to swear by all the saints that
his life-long prayer had been that some exclusive
dispensation of nature should one day
turn his beard the very self-same color as the
Irish captain’s; who then, in satisfaction of
the cravings of that reluctant delinquent, forced
him below to the paint closet, where he caused
him to bedaub himself very liberally with a pigment
of the same uncompromising hue—so liberally
that not storm nor stress could avail for
many weeks to wash clean the stigma. Indeed,
so strikingly did the combative characteristics
of his race manifest themselves in the performance
of his new duties that but for Jacquard
the aggressive Irishman had been almost
continually embroiled. But as it was, Cornbury
served his captain a useful purpose; and, though
the ready tact of Bras-de-Fer averted serious
difficulties, there were adventures aplenty for
the master-at-arms—enough, at least, to satisfy
the peculiar needs of his temperament.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>In this fashion, learning a discipline of gunnery,
arms, and seamanship, and a little of discontent
at the restraint besides, they crept south
and across the broad Atlantic. Gales buffeted
them and blew them from their course, but after
many weeks they made northing enough to cross
the path of the Spanish silver ships from South
America. The first vessel they took was a galleon
from Caracas. She was heavy with spices
and silks, but had lost her convoy in the night,
and was making for Porto Bello. A shot across
her bows hove her to, and her guard of soldiers
gave her up without a struggle. The <i>Sally</i> hove
alongside, and here came the first test of the discipline
of Bras-de-Fer. The fellows rushed
aboard with drawn weapons, and, finding no resistance,
were so enraged at the lack of opportunity
to display their new prowess that they
fell to striking lustily right and left, and driving
the frightened Spaniards forward shrieking
down into the hold. ’Twas rare sport for Cornbury,
who went dancing forward, aiding the
progress of the flying foe with the darting end
of his backsword. Only the best efforts of Bras-de-Fer<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</SPAN></span>
prevented the men from following the
victims below, where darker deeds might have
been done. Yan Gratz, who had made one voyage
with an old <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pirato</i> named Mansfelt, made so
bold as to propose that the Spaniards be
dropped overboard, that being the simplest solution
of the difficulty. But Bras-de-Fer clapped
the hatches over the prisoners with a decision
which left little doubt in the minds of the crew
as to his intentions. There was a flare of anger
at this high-handed discipline, for they were
free men of the sea, they said, and owed nothing
to any one. Captain Billy Winch had been none
too particular in this matter of detail. But, in
spite of their curses, Bras-de-Fer brought the
prisoners and the prize to port in safety.</p>
<p>It was the beginning of a series of small successes
which filled the <i>Sally’s</i> store-rooms and
brought three prizes for her into the harbor of
Port Royal, Jamaica. There, quarrelsome,
bedizened, and swaggering through the streets
of the town, Bras-de-Fer and Cornbury saw
many of these gentlemen of the sea, who owed
allegiance to no man, company, or government.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</SPAN></span>
In the same trade as themselves, it might be,
save only that with a less nice discrimination
these gentry robbed broadly, while the <i>Sally</i>, in
despite of her very crew, fought and took only
from the enemies of the English King. It was
there, too, that the Frenchman met the new
English governor, and explained the freak of
fortune by which he had come to command the
<i>Sally</i>. The governor became most friendly, and
(with a sly look of cupidity, which had but one
meaning) gave information of the sailing of the
<i>San Isidro</i> from Spain, bearing the new governor
of Chagres, several bishops and priests,
and gold and silver coin of inestimable value
for the priests of the Church in the Spanish colonies
of America.</p>
<p>Learning that the <i>San Isidro</i> would stop at
the Havana, Bras-de-Fer filled his water-tanks
and sailed boldly forth to intercept her. It was
untried water to the Frenchman, and charted
with so little adequacy that the booming of the
surf upon the reefs sounded with a too portentous
frequency upon the ears. But Jacquard
had eyes and ears for everything, and they won<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</SPAN></span>
their way to the Florida coast without mishap.
There a herikano buffeted them out to sea, and
it was with many misgivings that they won their
way back to the channels of the Bahamas.</p>
<p>The storm had blown itself out, and the ocean
shone translucent as an emerald. Low-hanging
overhead, great patches of fleecy white, torn
from a heaped-up cloud-bank over the low-lying
islands of the eastern horizon, took their wild
flight across the deep vault of sky in mad pursuit
of their fellows who had gone before and
were lost in a shimmer of purple, where the sea
met the palm-grown spits of the western main.
The cool, pink glow upon the <i>Sally’s</i> starboard
beam filled the swell of the top-sails with a soft
effulgence which partook of some of the coolness
and freshness of the air that drove them.
Far down upon the weather bow, first a blur,
then a shadow which grew from gray to silver
and gold, came the <i>San Isidro</i>. Jacquard
sighted her, but it was Bras-de-Fer who proclaimed
her identity. She was a fine new galleon,
spick and span from the Tagus, with three
tiers of guns, and masts of the tallest. Her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</SPAN></span>
bright new fore-topsail bore the arms of Spain,
and the long pennons floating from her trucks
and poles proclaimed the high condition of her
passengers.</p>
<p>Bras-de-Fer cleared his ship for action and
called his men aft.</p>
<p>“There, my fine fellows,” he cried, “is steel
worthy of your metal. Let it not be said that
<i>Saucy Sally</i> takes her sustenance from the weak
and cowardly and flirts her helm to the powerful.
Yonder is your prize. She has thrice
your bulk and complement—three gun tiers and
twenty score of men. So much the more honor!
For in her hold are gold and silver bright and
new minted from the Spanish treasury, and
wines for fat priests, which shall run no less
smoothly down your own proper throats. Yonder
she is. Take her. Follow where I shall
lead and she is yours for the asking.”</p>
<p>A roar of approval greeted him, and the manner
in which the rascals sprang to their places
showed that, if they growled at his discipline,
they were ready enough for this opportunity.</p>
<p>If the Spanish vessel had aught of fear of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</SPAN></span>
the English brig, she did not show it. The sound
of trumpets had proclaimed that she had called
her gun-crews, but she shifted her helm not a
quarter-point of the compass and came
steadily on.</p>
<p>Bras-de-Fer lost no time sending the English
colors aloft and firing a shot from his forward
guns, as a test of distance. This brought the
Spaniard speedily to himself, for he shortened
sail and came upon the wind to keep the
weather-gauge. When he had reached easy gunshot
distance, the <i>Sally</i> began firing a gun at a
time with great deliberation, and so excellent
was her aim that few of these failed to strike
her huge adversary. Cornbury, who had taken
a particular fancy for great-gun exercise, practised
upon the rigging to such advantage that
he brought the mizzen topsail and cross-jack
yard in a clatter about the ears of the fellows
upon the poop. As the Frenchman suspected,
the Spaniards’ gun-play was of the poorest, and
the glittering hordes of harnessed men upon his
decks availed him nothing. Then the <i>San Isidro</i>,
with true concern, and thinking to end the matter,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</SPAN></span>
eased her sheets in the effort to close with
her troublesome antagonist. Bras-de-Fer kept
all fast, and, braving a merciless broadside
which churned the ocean in a hundred gusts of
water all about him, went jauntily up to windward
with no other loss than that of the main
top-gallant yard, the wreck of which was quickly
cut away.</p>
<p>For two hours the roar of the battle echoed
down the distances. The <i>Sally</i> presented a forlorn
appearance with her main topsail torn to
shreds. Two guns of her broadside had been
dismounted and ten of her men had been killed
and injured; but upon the Spaniard the wreck
of yards and spars hung festooned with the useless
gear upon her wounded masts, like tangled
mosses or creepers upon a dying oak.</p>
<p>At last a lucky shot of the unremitting Cornbury
carried away her pintle, rudder, and steering-gear,
so that she lay a heavy and lifeless
thing upon the water. Bras-de-Fer called for
boarders, and, firing a broadside pointblank, lay
the <i>Sally</i> aboard, and with a wild cry for those
who dared follow, himself sprang for the mizzen<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</SPAN></span>
chains of his adversary. In the light of the
dying day, like a hundred wriggling, dusky cats,
they swarmed over the sides of the luckless
<i>San Isidro</i>, springing through the ports and
over the bulwarks upon the deck with cries that
struck terror to the hearts of their adversaries,
many of whom threw down their weapons and
sprang below. A few men in breast-pieces, who
gave back, firing a desultory volley, made a
brief stand upon the forecastle, from which they
were speedily swept down into the head and
so forward upon the prow and into the sea.</p>
<p>Bras-de-Fer and Cornbury sprang into the
after-passage. Two blanched priests fell upon
the deck, raining their jewels like hailstones before
them and chattering out a plea for mercy
from the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pirato</i>. Indeed, Bras-de-Fer looked
not unlike the pictures of the most desperate of
those bloody villains. A splinter-cut upon the
head had bathed him liberally with blood, and
the wild light of exultation glowed from eyes
deep-set and dark with the fumes of dust and
gunpowder. His coat was torn, and his naked
sword, dimmed and lusterless, moved in reckless<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</SPAN></span>
circles with a careless abandon which spoke a
meaning not to be misconstrued.</p>
<p>The priests he pushed aside, and burst
through the door into the cabin. It was almost
dark, but the glow in the west which shone in
the wide stern ports shed a warm light upon the
backs of a dozen persons who had taken refuge
there, and were now gazing wide-eyed upon him.
By the table in the center two or three figures
were standing, and an old man with streaming
gray hair drew a sword most pitifully and put
himself in posture of defense. Several women
thereupon fell jibbering prone upon the deck,
and two figures in uniform crouched back in the
shadow of the bulkhead. But the shedding of
blood was done. Cornbury took the weapon
from the patriarch, and Bras-de-Fer, seeing no
further resistance, bowed in his best manner
and begged that the ladies be put to no further
inquietude. It was then for the first time that
he noticed the figure of one of them, tall, fair,
and of a strange familiarity, standing firm and
impassive, her hand upon a small petronel, or
pistolet, which lay upon the port sill. The<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</SPAN></span>
splendid lines of the neck, the imperious turn of
the head, the determination in the firm lines of
the mouth, which, in spite of the ill-concealed
terror which lurked in the eyes and brows, betrayed
a purpose to defend herself to the last.
Bras-de-Fer stepped back a pace in his surprise
to look again; but there was no mistake. He
had seen that same figure, that same poise of
the head, almost that same look out of the eyes,
and, deep as he had steeped his mind in the
things which brought forgetfulness, every line
of it was written upon his memory. The lady
was Mistress Barbara Clerke.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</SPAN></span></p>
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