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<h2> CHAPTER X. JOHN REX'S REVENGE. </h2>
<p>Mrs Vickers, pale and sick with terror, yet sustained by that strange
courage of which we have before spoken, passed rapidly under the open
skylight, and prepared to ascend. Sylvia—her romance crushed by too
dreadful reality—clung to her mother with one hand, and with the
other pressed close to her little bosom the "English History". In her
all-absorbing fear she had forgotten to lay it down.</p>
<p>"Get a shawl, ma'am, or something," says Bates, "and a hat for missy."</p>
<p>Mrs. Vickers looked back across the space beneath the open skylight, and
shuddering, shook her head. The men above swore impatiently at the delay,
and the three hastened on deck.</p>
<p>"Who's to command the brig now?" asked undaunted Bates, as they came up.</p>
<p>"I am," says John Rex, "and, with these brave fellows, I'll take her round
the world."</p>
<p>The touch of bombast was not out of place. It jumped so far with the
humour of the convicts that they set up a feeble cheer, at which Sylvia
frowned. Frightened as she was, the prison-bred child was as much
astonished at hearing convicts cheer as a fashionable lady would be to
hear her footman quote poetry. Bates, however—practical and calm—took
quite another view of the case. The bold project, so boldly avowed, seemed
to him a sheer absurdity. The "Dandy" and a crew of nine convicts navigate
a brig round the world! Preposterous; why, not a man aboard could work a
reckoning! His nautical fancy pictured the Osprey helplessly rolling on
the swell of the Southern Ocean, or hopelessly locked in the ice of the
Antarctic Seas, and he dimly guessed at the fate of the deluded ten. Even
if they got safe to port, the chances of final escape were all against
them, for what account could they give of themselves? Overpowered by these
reflections, the honest fellow made one last effort to charm his captors
back to their pristine bondage.</p>
<p>"Fools!" he cried, "do you know what you are about to do? You will never
escape. Give up the brig, and I will declare, before my God, upon the
Bible, that I will say nothing, but give all good characters."</p>
<p>Lesly and another burst into a laugh at this wild proposition, but Rex,
who had weighed his chances well beforehand, felt the force of the pilot's
speech, and answered seriously.</p>
<p>"It's no use talking," he said, shaking his still handsome head. "We have
got the brig, and we mean to keep her. I can navigate her, though I am no
seaman, so you needn't talk further about it, Mr. Bates. It's liberty we
require."</p>
<p>"What are you going to do with us?" asked Bates.</p>
<p>"Leave you behind."</p>
<p>Bates's face blanched. "What, here?"</p>
<p>"Yes. It don't look a picturesque spot, does it? And yet I've lived here
for some years"; and he grinned.</p>
<p>Bates was silent. The logic of that grin was unanswerable.</p>
<p>"Come!" cried the Dandy, shaking off his momentary melancholy, "look alive
there! Lower away the jolly-boat. Mrs. Vickers, go down to your cabin and
get anything you want. I am compelled to put you ashore, but I have no
wish to leave you without clothes." Bates listened, in a sort of dismal
admiration, at this courtly convict. He could not have spoken like that
had life depended on it. "Now, my little lady," continued Rex, "run down
with your mamma, and don't be frightened."</p>
<p>Sylvia flashed burning red at this indignity. "Frightened! If there had
been anybody else here but women, you never would have taken the brig.
Frightened! Let me pass, prisoner!"</p>
<p>The whole deck burst into a great laugh at this, and poor Mrs. Vickers
paused, trembling for the consequences of the child's temerity. To thus
taunt the desperate convict who held their lives in his hands seemed sheer
madness. In the boldness of the speech however, lay its safeguard. Rex—whose
politeness was mere bravado—was stung to the quick by the reflection
upon his courage, and the bitter accent with which the child had
pronounced the word prisoner (the generic name of convicts) made him bite
his lips with rage. Had he had his will, he would have struck the little
creature to the deck, but the hoarse laugh of his companions warned him to
forbear. There is "public opinion" even among convicts, and Rex dared not
vent his passion on so helpless an object. As men do in such cases, he
veiled his anger beneath an affectation of amusement. In order to show
that he was not moved by the taunt, he smiled upon the taunter more
graciously than ever.</p>
<p>"Your daughter has her father's spirit, madam," said he to Mrs. Vickers,
with a bow.</p>
<p>Bates opened his mouth to listen. His ears were not large enough to take
in the words of this complimentary convict. He began to think that he was
the victim of a nightmare. He absolutely felt that John Rex was a greater
man at that moment than John Bates.</p>
<p>As Mrs. Vickers descended the hatchway, the boat with Frere and the
soldiers came within musket range, and Lesly, according to orders, fired
his musket over their heads, shouting to them to lay to But Frere, boiling
with rage at the manner in which the tables had been turned on him, had
determined not to resign his lost authority without a struggle.
Disregarding the summons, he came straight on, with his eyes fixed on the
vessel. It was now nearly dark, and the figures on the deck were
indistinguishable. The indignant lieutenant could but guess at the
condition of affairs. Suddenly, from out of the darkness a voice hailed
him—</p>
<p>"Hold water! back water!" it cried, and was then seemingly choked in its
owner's throat.</p>
<p>The voice was the property of Mr. Bates. Standing near the side, he had
observed Rex and Fair bring up a great pig of iron, erst used as part of
the ballast of the brig, and poise it on the rail. Their intention was but
too evident; and honest Bates, like a faithful watch-dog, barked to warn
his master. Bloodthirsty Cheshire caught him by the throat, and Frere,
unheeding, ran the boat alongside, under the very nose of the revengeful
Rex. The mass of iron fell half in-board upon the now stayed boat, and
gave her sternway, with a splintered plank.</p>
<p>"Villains!" cried Frere, "would you swamp us?"</p>
<p>"Aye," laughed Rex, "and a dozen such as ye! The brig's ours, can't ye
see, and we're your masters now!"</p>
<p>Frere, stifling an exclamation of rage, cried to the bow to hook on, but
the bow had driven the boat backward, and she was already beyond arm's
length of the brig. Looking up, he saw Cheshire's savage face, and heard
the click of the lock as he cocked his piece. The two soldiers, exhausted
by their long pull, made no effort to stay the progress of the boat, and
almost before the swell caused by the plunge of the mass of iron had
ceased to agitate the water, the deck of the Osprey had become invisible
in the darkness.</p>
<p>Frere struck his fist upon the thwart in sheer impotence of rage. "The
scoundrels!" he said, between his teeth, "they've mastered us. What do
they mean to do next?"</p>
<p>The answer came pat to the question. From the dark hull of the brig broke
a flash and a report, and a musket ball cut the water beside them with a
chirping noise. Between the black indistinct mass which represented the
brig, and the glimmering water, was visible a white speck, which gradually
neared them.</p>
<p>"Come alongside with ye!" hailed a voice, "or it will be the worse for
ye!"</p>
<p>"They want to murder us," says Frere. "Give way, men!"</p>
<p>But the two soldiers, exchanging glances one with the other, pulled the
boat's head round, and made for the vessel. "It's no use, Mr. Frere," said
the man nearest him; "we can do no good now, and they won't hurt us, I
dare say."</p>
<p>"You dogs, you are in league with them," bursts out Frere, purple with
indignation. "Do you mutiny?"</p>
<p>"Come, come, sir," returned the soldier, sulkily, "this ain't the time to
bully; and, as for mutiny, why, one man's about as good as another just
now."</p>
<p>This speech from the lips of a man who, but a few minutes before, would
have risked his life to obey orders of his officer, did more than an
hour's reasoning to convince Maurice Frere of the hopelessness of
resistance. His authority—born of circumstance, and supported by
adventitious aid—had left him. The musket shot had reduced him to
the ranks. He was now no more than anyone else; indeed, he was less than
many, for those who held the firearms were the ruling powers. With a groan
he resigned himself to his fate, and looking at the sleeve of the undress
uniform he wore, it seemed to him that virtue had gone out of it. When
they reached the brig, they found that the jolly-boat had been lowered and
laid alongside. In her were eleven persons; Bates with forehead gashed,
and hands bound, the stunned Grimes, Russen and Fair pulling, Lyon, Riley,
Cheshire, and Lesly with muskets, and John Rex in the stern sheets, with
Bates's pistols in his trousers' belt, and a loaded musket across his
knees. The white object which had been seen by the men in the whale-boat
was a large white shawl which wrapped Mrs. Vickers and Sylvia.</p>
<p>Frere muttered an oath of relief when he saw this white bundle. He had
feared that the child was injured. By the direction of Rex the whale-boat
was brought alongside the jolly-boat, and Cheshire and Lesly boarded her.
Lesly then gave his musket to Rex, and bound Frere's hands behind him, in
the same manner as had been done for Bates. Frere attempted to resist this
indignity, but Cheshire, clapping his musket to his ear, swore he would
blow out his brains if he uttered another syllable; Frere, catching the
malignant eye of John Rex, remembered how easily a twitch of the finger
would pay off old scores, and was silent. "Step in here, sir, if you
please," said Rex, with polite irony. "I am sorry to be compelled to tie
you, but I must consult my own safety as well as your convenience." Frere
scowled, and, stepping awkwardly into the jolly-boat, fell. Pinioned as he
was, he could not rise without assistance, and Russen pulled him roughly
to his feet with a coarse laugh. In his present frame of mind, that laugh
galled him worse than his bonds.</p>
<p>Poor Mrs. Vickers, with a woman's quick instinct, saw this, and, even amid
her own trouble, found leisure to console him. "The wretches!" she said,
under her breath, as Frere was flung down beside her, "to subject you to
such indignity!" Sylvia said nothing, and seemed to shrink from the
lieutenant. Perhaps in her childish fancy she had pictured him as coming
to her rescue, armed cap-a-pie, and clad in dazzling mail, or, at the very
least, as a muscular hero, who would settle affairs out of hand by sheer
personal prowess. If she had entertained any such notion, the reality must
have struck coldly upon her senses. Mr. Frere, purple, clumsy, and bound,
was not at all heroic.</p>
<p>"Now, my lads," says Rex—who seemed to have endured the cast-off
authority of Frere—"we give you your choice. Stay at Hell's Gates,
or come with us!"</p>
<p>The soldiers paused, irresolute. To join the mutineers meant a certainty
of hard work, with a chance of ultimate hanging. Yet to stay with the
prisoners was—as far as they could see—to incur the inevitable
fate of starvation on a barren coast. As is often the case on such
occasions, a trifle sufficed to turn the scale. The wounded Grimes, who
was slowly recovering from his stupor, dimly caught the meaning of the
sentence, and in his obfuscated condition of intellect must needs make
comment upon it. "Go with him, ye beggars!" said he, "and leave us honest
men! Oh, ye'll get a tying-up for this."</p>
<p>The phrase "tying-up" brought with it recollection of the worst portion of
military discipline, the cat, and revived in the minds of the pair already
disposed to break the yoke that sat so heavily upon them, a train of
dismal memories. The life of a soldier on a convict station was at that
time a hard one. He was often stinted in rations, and of necessity
deprived of all rational recreation, while punishment for offences was
prompt and severe. The companies drafted to the penal settlements were not
composed of the best material, and the pair had good precedent for the
course they were about to take.</p>
<p>"Come," says Rex, "I can't wait here all night. The wind is freshening,
and we must make the Bar. Which is it to be?"</p>
<p>"We'll go with you!" says the man who had pulled the stroke in the
whale-boat, spitting into the water with averted face. Upon which
utterance the convicts burst into joyous oaths, and the pair were received
with much hand-shaking.</p>
<p>Then Rex, with Lyon and Riley as a guard, got into the whale boat, and
having loosed the two prisoners from their bonds, ordered them to take the
place of Russen and Fair. The whale-boat was manned by the seven
mutineers, Rex steering, Fair, Russen, and the two recruits pulling, and
the other four standing up, with their muskets levelled at the jolly-boat.
Their long slavery had begotten such a dread of authority in these men
that they feared it even when it was bound and menaced by four muskets.
"Keep your distance!" shouted Cheshire, as Frere and Bates, in obedience
to orders, began to pull the jolly-boat towards the shore; and in this
fashion was the dismal little party conveyed to the mainland.</p>
<p>It was night when they reached it, but the clear sky began to thrill with
a late moon as yet unrisen, and the waves, breaking gently upon the beach,
glimmered with a radiance born of their own motion. Frere and Bates,
jumping ashore, helped out Mrs. Vickers, Sylvia, and the wounded Grimes.
This being done under the muzzles of the muskets, Rex commanded that Bates
and Frere should push the jolly-boat as far as they could from the shore,
and Riley catching her by a boat-hook as she came towards them, she was
taken in tow.</p>
<p>"Now, boys," says Cheshire, with a savage delight, "three cheers for old
England and Liberty!"</p>
<p>Upon which a great shout went up, echoed by the grim hills which had
witnessed so many miseries.</p>
<p>To the wretched five, this exultant mirth sounded like a knell of death.
"Great God!" cried Bates, running up to his knees in water after the
departing boats, "would you leave us here to starve?"</p>
<p>The only answer was the jerk and dip of the retreating oars.</p>
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