<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII</SPAN><br/> <small>PRISONER AND CAPTOR</small></h2></div>
<p class="cap">When the heels of the <i>Sally</i> had put so
great a distance between herself and
her pursuers that there was nothing to fear of
their overhauling her, Bras-de-Fer went below
to the cabin. Exhausted by the events of the
night, leaning listlessly against the sill of the
stern-port, was Mistress Clerke, her lids drooping
with weariness as she struggled against
tired nature to keep her lone vigil. Her eyes
started wide at the sound of his footsteps. She
struggled to her feet and stood, her face pallid
and drawn, in the cold, garish light of the morning.
She scanned him eagerly, peering fearfully
into his face for any portentous sign. The dust
of battle was still streaked upon it, and the
shadows under the brows which had made his
countenance forbidding in the mad flush of war
upon the <i>San Isidro</i> now only gave the shadows<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</SPAN></span>
a darker depth of settled melancholy. There
was a fierceness and wildness, too, but it was
distant, hidden, and self-contained; at bay, only
with nothing of aggressiveness for immediate
apprehension or alarm. Instead, there was a
reserved dignity and aloofness which spoke of
a nice sense of a delicate situation. He made no
move to draw near her, but stood in the narrow
cabin door, hat in hand.</p>
<p>“Madame is weary?” he said. “If you will
permit—” And then he searched the cabin,
a question in his eyes.</p>
<p>“The señorita, madame?” he asked.</p>
<p>Mistress Clerke sighed wearily. “I am alone,
monsieur. She came frozen with terror—and
fled again—”</p>
<p>“You alone!”</p>
<p>“I can only crave your pity.”</p>
<p>He peered around at the dingy surroundings.
“I am bereaved, madame. This cabin is not the
<i>San Isidro</i>. ’Twere better, more cleanly. I am
sorry. I had come to order it to your comfort.
See. I have brought your bedding and belongings
from the <i>San Isidro</i>. In a moment, if you<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</SPAN></span>
will permit, I can do very much to better your
condition.”</p>
<p>A spark of gratitude at this evidence of his
kindly disposition gleamed in her eyes a moment
and she signed an acquiescence. The
Frenchman conducted her to the half-deck, while
two negroes set busily about the place, removing
his and Cornbury’s effects and making it sweet
and clean for its gentle tenant.</p>
<p>The Frenchman would have left her, but
Mistress Barbara stopped him at the cabin door.</p>
<p>“I cannot thank you, monsieur. To do so
pays no jot of my great obligation, which every
moment becomes greater.”</p>
<p>He bowed and would have passed out. “You
owe me nothing but silence, madame,” he said,
coldly.</p>
<p>“And that I cannot pay,” she cried. “Oh,
why will you not listen to me, monsieur? Have
you no kindness?”</p>
<p>“I have done what small service I could,
madame. If I owe you more—”</p>
<p>She clenched her small hands together, as
though in pain. “Ah, you do not understand.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</SPAN></span>
Why will you not see? It is not that. I wish
you to do me justice.”</p>
<p>“Madame, justice and I are many miles
asunder. I have no indulgent memory. It is
best that there should be no talk of what has
been. Only what <em>is</em> and what is <em>to be</em> has any
power to open my ears or my lips. And so, if
you will permit me,” and once more he made the
motion to withdraw.</p>
<p>“It <em>is</em> the present and the future, Monsieur le
Chevalier,” she began. But at the sound of
that name he turned abruptly towards her,
frowning darkly.</p>
<p>“It cannot be, madame,” he cried, with a
brusqueness which frightened her. “I have no
name but Bras-de-Fer aboard this ship. Please
address your needs to him.”</p>
<p>She recoiled in dismay in the corner of the
bulkhead to listen to the tramp of his heavy
sea-boots down the passage. For the first time
she feared him. She could not know that it was
the sight of her face and of something new he
saw there which raised a doubt that had entered,
a canker, into his mind. She could not know<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</SPAN></span>
what a struggle it was costing him and at what
pains he took refuge in the silence he demanded.
His brutality was but the sudden outward manifestation
of this battle, which, should it not take
one side, must assuredly take the other. He had
decided. Nothing should turn the iron helm of
his will. But as he sought the deck, hot memory
poured over him in a flood. He recalled the
times she had tossed her head at him, even before
the incident of the coach. That, too, he remembered,
even with a sense of amusement.
The coranto! and how he had sought to patch
and mend his wounded pride by fruitlessly
assailing hers, battering abortively at the citadel
of the heart he could never hope to win.
Ferrers! The precious papers he had had for
a sweet half-hour in his bosom and had thrown
away! Where had Ferrers hidden them from
her? The priceless heritage with which he
could have daunted this woman-enemy of his
whom he had loved and hated at the same time
and from whom he had received only scorn and
misprision. Could he refuse her now that she
was a helpless captive, weak, frail, and unfriended<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</SPAN></span>
among a crew of rascals who stood at
nothing and from whom only himself could preserve
her? Had he not secretly welcomed her
wish last night to be carried aboard the <i>Saucy
Sally</i>, and the contingency which made it impossible
for her to be returned to the <i>San
Isidro</i>? Was he not conscious of a sense of
guilt that he had not found an opportunity to
send her back to safety? She was completely in
his power. His heart sang high; but the cord
was frayed, and the note rang false. It was impossible;
no matter how deeply he had seared
his soul, no man born as he had been born could
refuse the mute appeal of a woman in distress.
He thought of his dishonor the night he had
come upon the <i>Saucy Sally</i>, when in a fury
against the fortune which still denied him he
had railed, madly, impotently, against all virtue,
and in a passion of vengefulness sunk so low
that he had loudly threatened, like a common
street ruffian and card-room bully, this woman,
whom—God help him!—he loved and would love
throughout all time. The depth of his degradation
cumbered him about, remorse fell upon him,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</SPAN></span>
and anguish wrung his heart from his body as
nothing—not even the loss of the papers—had
done.</p>
<p>The old life in London, with its gaming, its
carousing and gallantry—he could see it all
through new eyes, washed clean and clear by the
purging winds and storms of heaven. Himself
he marked from a great moral distance, almost
as though from another planet—the silly,
spoiled child of folly that he had been. And it
was this impotent creature who had cried out
against his fate, which, with a rare honesty, had
only lowered him from the high estate to which
he had won, in accordance with the same inexorable
regulations of the human law which had
raised him there. The figures in that London
life passed before him like a row of tawdry
puppets, serving the same martyrdom to folly
as himself, at the expense of love, charity, and
all true virtue. Soft thinking for a powder-blackened,
bearded <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">flibustier</i>, with hands even
yet red from his last depredation! He smiled
supinely to himself, that he could think thus of
the things that so recently had been his very<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</SPAN></span>
existence. In that London life, amid that
throng of tinsel goddesses, one figure stood eminent
and conspicuous. It was that of the woman
who in all companies of men and women held
her fame so fair that, whatever their reputations
for high deeds or ignoble vices, none was so
great as she. In that great court where virtue
was a gem of so little worth that it was kept hid
and secret, Mistress Barbara had worn it
openly, broadly, high upon her brow, with a
rare pride, as the most priceless of her inestimable
jewels.</p>
<p>He loved her. Flaunted, scorned, despised,
he loved her the more. The past was engulfed
and vanquished. He only saw her an actuality
of the flesh here aboard his very ship—the dove
in the eagle’s nest, whom every law and impulse,
human and divine, impelled him to succor and
protect. The vibrant voice, the gentle touch,
the soft perfume of her presence provoked the
covetous senses and stole away his will. It was
with mingled feelings of apprehension and
alarm that he discovered to himself the persistency
of his attachment. He acknowledged it<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</SPAN></span>
only when he learned that nothing else was possible.
And when that was done he planned and
resolved again, with a new fervency of determination.
The future should atone. She had
thought him a wild, reckless gallant, who had
won his way and continued to win—by his wits—a
worthless creature who consorted with the
worst men of the court and presented in the
world the characteristics she most despised.
How he hated the thing that he had been, the
mask that he had worn! If she had cared, she
could have seen, she would have learned that he
was not all that she had thought him. The reckless
gallant was become a rough <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">boucanier</i> and
<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pirato</i>. She had seen him in the red fever of
battle. <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Eh bien.</i> He would not undeceive her.
Red-handed <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pirato</i> he would remain. No
glimpse should she have of the struggle beneath.
He would set her safe ashore at Port Royal. He
would sail away from her forever, and she
should enjoy her fortune. That was the price
that he would pay.</p>
<p>None the less, he found the occasion to wash
away the stains of battle, and in fresh linen and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</SPAN></span>
hose became less offensive to the sight. When
he sought the deck there was no sign of a
vessel upon any side. Cornbury he found at the
after-hatch, puffing upon a pipe.</p>
<p>“Ochone, dear Iron Arm,” the Irishman began,
“ye’re the anomalous figure of a <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pirato</i>, to
be sure. One minute your form is painted
broad upon the horizon with a cutlass in your
teeth, an’ glistenin’ pikes in both your fists. I’
the next ye’re playin’ the hero part of ‘Vartue
in Distress.’”</p>
<p>Bras-de-Fer smiled.</p>
<p>“Oh, ye may laugh. But in truth ’tis all
most irregular. Ye violate every tradition of
the thrade. By the laws, ye’re no dacent figure
of a swashbuckler at all at all.”</p>
<p>“What would ye have then, <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">mon ami</i>?”</p>
<p>“Ah, he’s clean daffy! What would I have?
Bah! ye know my misliking for the sex, and
ye ask me what would I have? Egad! a walk
on the plank, and a little dance on nothing would
not be amiss for <em>her</em>. ’Tis the simplest thing
in the world. The least bit of a rope, three ten-pound
shot, a shove of the arm, and <em>spsh!</em> your<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</SPAN></span>
troubles are sunk in a mile of sea. To England,
a treaty of peace with Captain Ferrers, and,
<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">voilà!</em> ye’re a French viscount, with a fortune
beyond the dreams of avarice, and an out-at-the-knees-and-elbows
of an Irishman to help ye
spend it. Man, ’tis a squanderin’ waste of opportunity.”
He growled, and puffed upon his
pipe, sending crabbed, sour glances at his
captain.</p>
<p>“Oh, ye may laugh. Instead of this, what do
ye do? Ye have my lady aboard the ship to the
pervarsion of all dacent piratical society, give
her <em>my</em> bed and board, and <em>my</em> particular niggar
for waiting-man. Ye’re sowin’ the seeds of ripe
mutiny, me handsome picaroon, an’ a red-headed
Irishman will be there to aid in the
blossomin’.”</p>
<p>“Nay, Cornbury,” said Bras-de-Fer. “We
do but go a short cruise to Port Royal. I’ve set
my mind on seeing my lady safe in English
hands.”</p>
<p>“There ye are,” fumed the Irishman.
“<em>There ye are!</em> Ye’ll kill the golden goose.
Ye’ll jeopardize your callin’ again, all for that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</SPAN></span>
same finical bundle of superficialities. Slapped
once in the face, ye turn your cheek with new
avidity for more. Zoons! I’ve no patience with
such shilly-shallyin’.” And, as Bras-de-Fer
was silent, he sent forth a quick succession of
smoke puffs which chased madly down the wind.</p>
<p>“Ask Jacquard,” he growled again; “he likes
it no more than I. There’s a mutterin’ forward.
’Tis discipline—the lack of drink and an unequal
partitionin’ of the spoils—”</p>
<p>“<em lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Pardieu!</em>” interrupted the Frenchman at
last, his eyes flashing in a fury. “Do they
growl? Let them do it in the forecastle. No
man, no, not even you, shall beard me on my
quarter-deck!”</p>
<p>Cornbury did not arise or show the least sign
of a changed countenance. “Ask Jacquard,”
he repeated again.</p>
<p>Bras-de-Fer swung hotly on his heel and went
below.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />