<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XVIII. THE MILAGROSA </h2>
<p>The affair at Maracaybo is to be considered as Captain Blood's
buccaneering masterpiece. Although there is scarcely one of the many
actions that he fought—recorded in such particular detail by Jeremy
Pitt—which does not afford some instance of his genius for naval
tactics, yet in none is this more shiningly displayed than in those two
engagements by which he won out of the trap which Don Miguel de Espinosa
had sprung upon him.</p>
<p>The fame which he had enjoyed before this, great as it already was, is
dwarfed into insignificance by the fame that followed. It was a fame such
as no buccaneer—not even Morgan—has ever boasted, before or
since.</p>
<p>In Tortuga, during the months he spent there refitting the three ships he
had captured from the fleet that had gone out to destroy him, he found
himself almost an object of worship in the eyes of the wild Brethren of
the Coast, all of whom now clamoured for the honour of serving under him.
It placed him in the rare position of being able to pick and choose the
crews for his augmented fleet, and he chose fastidiously. When next he
sailed away it was with a fleet of five fine ships in which went something
over a thousand men. Thus you behold him not merely famous, but really
formidable. The three captured Spanish vessels he had renamed with a
certain scholarly humour the Clotho, Lachesis, and Atropos, a grimly
jocular manner of conveying to the world that he made them the arbiters of
the fate of any Spaniards he should henceforth encounter upon the seas.</p>
<p>In Europe the news of this fleet, following upon the news of the Spanish
Admiral's defeat at Maracaybo, produced something of a sensation. Spain
and England were variously and unpleasantly exercised, and if you care to
turn up the diplomatic correspondence exchanged on the subject, you will
find that it is considerable and not always amiable.</p>
<p>And meanwhile in the Caribbean, the Spanish Admiral Don Miguel de Espinosa
might be said—to use a term not yet invented in his day—to
have run amok. The disgrace into which he had fallen as a result of the
disasters suffered at the hands of Captain Blood had driven the Admiral
all but mad. It is impossible, if we impose our minds impartially, to
withhold a certain sympathy from Don Miguel. Hate was now this unfortunate
man's daily bread, and the hope of vengeance an obsession to his mind. As
a madman he went raging up and down the Caribbean seeking his enemy, and
in the meantime, as an hors d'oeuvre to his vindictive appetite, he fell
upon any ship of England or of France that loomed above his horizon.</p>
<p>I need say no more to convey the fact that this illustrious sea-captain
and great gentleman of Castile had lost his head, and was become a pirate
in his turn. The Supreme Council of Castile might anon condemn him for his
practices. But how should that matter to one who already was condemned
beyond redemption? On the contrary, if he should live to lay the audacious
and ineffable Blood by the heels, it was possible that Spain might view
his present irregularities and earlier losses with a more lenient eye.</p>
<p>And so, reckless of the fact that Captain Blood was now in vastly superior
strength, the Spaniard sought him up and down the trackless seas. But for
a whole year he sought him vainly. The circumstances in which eventually
they met are very curious.</p>
<p>An intelligent observation of the facts of human existence will reveal to
shallow-minded folk who sneer at the use of coincidence in the arts of
fiction and drama that life itself is little more than a series of
coincidences. Open the history of the past at whatsoever page you will,
and there you shall find coincidence at work bringing about events that
the merest chance might have averted. Indeed, coincidence may be defined
as the very tool used by Fate to shape the destinies of men and nations.</p>
<p>Observe it now at work in the affairs of Captain Blood and of some others.</p>
<p>On the 15th September of the year 1688—a memorable year in the
annals of England—three ships were afloat upon the Caribbean, which
in their coming conjunctions were to work out the fortunes of several
persons.</p>
<p>The first of these was Captain Blood's flagship the Arabella, which had
been separated from the buccaneer fleet in a hurricane off the Lesser
Antilles. In somewhere about 17 deg. N. Lat., and 74 deg. Long., she was
beating up for the Windward Passage, before the intermittent southeasterly
breezes of that stifling season, homing for Tortuga, the natural
rendezvous of the dispersed vessels.</p>
<p>The second ship was the great Spanish galleon, the Milagrosa, which,
accompanied by the smaller frigate Hidalga, lurked off the Caymites, to
the north of the long peninsula that thrusts out from the southwest corner
of Hispaniola. Aboard the Milagrosa sailed the vindictive Don Miguel.</p>
<p>The third and last of these ships with which we are at present concerned
was an English man-of-war, which on the date I have given was at anchor in
the French port of St. Nicholas on the northwest coast of Hispaniola. She
was on her way from Plymouth to Jamaica, and carried on board a very
distinguished passenger in the person of Lord Julian Wade, who came
charged by his kinsman, my Lord Sunderland, with a mission of some
consequence and delicacy, directly arising out of that vexatious
correspondence between England and Spain.</p>
<p>The French Government, like the English, excessively annoyed by the
depredations of the buccaneers, and the constant straining of relations
with Spain that ensued, had sought in vain to put them down by enjoining
the utmost severity against them upon her various overseas governors. But
these, either—like the Governor of Tortuga—throve out of a
scarcely tacit partnership with the filibusters, or—like the
Governor of French Hispaniola—felt that they were to be encouraged
as a check upon the power and greed of Spain, which might otherwise be
exerted to the disadvantage of the colonies of other nations. They looked,
indeed, with apprehension upon recourse to any vigorous measures which
must result in driving many of the buccaneers to seek new hunting-grounds
in the South Sea.</p>
<p>To satisfy King James's anxiety to conciliate Spain, and in response to
the Spanish Ambassador's constant and grievous expostulations, my Lord
Sunderland, the Secretary of State, had appointed a strong man to the
deputy-governorship of Jamaica. This strong man was that Colonel Bishop
who for some years now had been the most influential planter in Barbados.</p>
<p>Colonel Bishop had accepted the post, and departed from the plantations in
which his great wealth was being amassed with an eagerness that had its
roots in a desire to pay off a score of his own with Peter Blood.</p>
<p>From his first coming to Jamaica, Colonel Bishop had made himself felt by
the buccaneers. But do what he might, the one buccaneer whom he made his
particular quarry—that Peter Blood who once had been his slave—eluded
him ever, and continued undeterred and in great force to harass the
Spaniards upon sea and land, and to keep the relations between England and
Spain in a state of perpetual ferment, particularly dangerous in those
days when the peace of Europe was precariously maintained.</p>
<p>Exasperated not only by his own accumulated chagrin, but also by the
reproaches for his failure which reached him from London, Colonel Bishop
actually went so far as to consider hunting his quarry in Tortuga itself
and making an attempt to clear the island of the buccaneers it sheltered.
Fortunately for himself, he abandoned the notion of so insane an
enterprise, deterred not only by the enormous natural strength of the
place, but also by the reflection that a raid upon what was, nominally at
least, a French settlement, must be attended by grave offence to France.
Yet short of some such measure, it appeared to Colonel Bishop that he was
baffled. He confessed as much in a letter to the Secretary of State.</p>
<p>This letter and the state of things which it disclosed made my Lord
Sunderland despair of solving this vexatious problem by ordinary means. He
turned to the consideration of extraordinary ones, and bethought him of
the plan adopted with Morgan, who had been enlisted into the King's
service under Charles II. It occurred to him that a similar course might
be similarly effective with Captain Blood. His lordship did not omit the
consideration that Blood's present outlawry might well have been
undertaken not from inclination, but under stress of sheer necessity; that
he had been forced into it by the circumstances of his transportation, and
that he would welcome the opportunity of emerging from it.</p>
<p>Acting upon this conclusion, Sunderland sent out his kinsman, Lord Julian
Wade, with some commissions made out in blank, and full directions as to
the course which the Secretary considered it desirable to pursue and yet
full discretion in the matter of pursuing them. The crafty Sunderland,
master of all labyrinths of intrigue, advised his kinsman that in the
event of his finding Blood intractable, or judging for other reasons that
it was not desirable to enlist him in the King's service, he should turn
his attention to the officers serving under him, and by seducing them away
from him leave him so weakened that he must fall an easy victim to Colonel
Bishop's fleet.</p>
<p>The Royal Mary—the vessel bearing that ingenious, tolerably
accomplished, mildly dissolute, entirely elegant envoy of my Lord
Sunderland's—made a good passage to St. Nicholas, her last port of
call before Jamaica. It was understood that as a preliminary Lord Julian
should report himself to the Deputy-Governor at Port Royal, whence at need
he might have himself conveyed to Tortuga. Now it happened that the
Deputy-Governor's niece had come to St. Nicholas some months earlier on a
visit to some relatives, and so that she might escape the insufferable
heat of Jamaica in that season. The time for her return being now at hand,
a passage was sought for her aboard the Royal Mary, and in view of her
uncle's rank and position promptly accorded.</p>
<p>Lord Julian hailed her advent with satisfaction. It gave a voyage that had
been full of interest for him just the spice that it required to achieve
perfection as an experience. His lordship was one of your gallants to whom
existence that is not graced by womankind is more or less of a stagnation.
Miss Arabella Bishop—this straight up and down slip of a girl with
her rather boyish voice and her almost boyish ease of movement—was
not perhaps a lady who in England would have commanded much notice in my
lord's discerning eyes. His very sophisticated, carefully educated tastes
in such matters inclined him towards the plump, the languishing, and the
quite helplessly feminine. Miss Bishop's charms were undeniable. But they
were such that it would take a delicate-minded man to appreciate them; and
my Lord Julian, whilst of a mind that was very far from gross, did not
possess the necessary degree of delicacy. I must not by this be understood
to imply anything against him.</p>
<p>It remained, however, that Miss Bishop was a young woman and a lady; and
in the latitude into which Lord Julian had strayed this was a phenomenon
sufficiently rare to command attention. On his side, with his title and
position, his personal grace and the charm of a practised courtier, he
bore about him the atmosphere of the great world in which normally he had
his being—a world that was little more than a name to her, who had
spent most of her life in the Antilles. It is not therefore wonderful that
they should have been attracted to each other before the Royal Mary was
warped out of St. Nicholas. Each could tell the other much upon which the
other desired information. He could regale her imagination with stories of
St. James's—in many of which he assigned himself a heroic, or at
least a distinguished part—and she could enrich his mind with
information concerning this new world to which he had come.</p>
<p>Before they were out of sight of St. Nicholas they were good friends, and
his lordship was beginning to correct his first impressions of her and to
discover the charm of that frank, straightforward attitude of comradeship
which made her treat every man as a brother. Considering how his mind was
obsessed with the business of his mission, it is not wonderful that he
should have come to talk to her of Captain Blood. Indeed, there was a
circumstance that directly led to it.</p>
<p>"I wonder now," he said, as they were sauntering on the poop, "if you ever
saw this fellow Blood, who was at one time on your uncle's plantations as
a slave."</p>
<p>Miss Bishop halted. She leaned upon the taffrail, looking out towards the
receding land, and it was a moment before she answered in a steady, level
voice:</p>
<p>"I saw him often. I knew him very well."</p>
<p>"Ye don't say!" His lordship was slightly moved out of an imperturbability
that he had studiously cultivated. He was a young man of perhaps
eight-and-twenty, well above the middle height in stature and appearing
taller by virtue of his exceeding leanness. He had a thin, pale, rather
pleasing hatchet-face, framed in the curls of a golden periwig, a
sensitive mouth and pale blue eyes that lent his countenance a dreamy
expression, a rather melancholy pensiveness. But they were alert,
observant eyes notwithstanding, although they failed on this occasion to
observe the slight change of colour which his question had brought to Miss
Bishop's cheeks or the suspiciously excessive composure of her answer.</p>
<p>"Ye don't say!" he repeated, and came to lean beside her. "And what manner
of man did you find him?"</p>
<p>"In those days I esteemed him for an unfortunate gentleman."</p>
<p>"You were acquainted with his story?"</p>
<p>"He told it me. That is why I esteemed him—for the calm fortitude
with which he bore adversity. Since then, considering what he has done, I
have almost come to doubt if what he told me of himself was true."</p>
<p>"If you mean of the wrongs he suffered at the hands of the Royal
Commission that tried the Monmouth rebels, there's little doubt that it
would be true enough. He was never out with Monmouth; that is certain. He
was convicted on a point of law of which he may well have been ignorant
when he committed what was construed into treason. But, faith, he's had
his revenge, after a fashion."</p>
<p>"That," she said in a small voice, "is the unforgivable thing. It has
destroyed him—deservedly."</p>
<p>"Destroyed him?" His lordship laughed a little. "Be none so sure of that.
He has grown rich, I hear. He has translated, so it is said, his Spanish
spoils into French gold, which is being treasured up for him in France.
His future father-in-law, M. d'Ogeron, has seen to that."</p>
<p>"His future father-in-law?" said she, and stared at him round-eyed, with
parted lips. Then added: "M. d'Ogeron? The Governor of Tortuga?"</p>
<p>"The same. You see the fellow's well protected. It's a piece of news I
gathered in St. Nicholas. I am not sure that I welcome it, for I am not
sure that it makes any easier a task upon which my kinsman, Lord
Sunderland, has sent me hither. But there it is. You didn't know?"</p>
<p>She shook her head without replying. She had averted her face, and her
eyes were staring down at the gently heaving water. After a moment she
spoke, her voice steady and perfectly controlled.</p>
<p>"But surely, if this were true, there would have been an end to his piracy
by now. If he... if he loved a woman and was betrothed, and was also rich
as you say, surely he would have abandoned this desperate life, and..."</p>
<p>"Why, so I thought," his lordship interrupted, "until I had the
explanation. D'Ogeron is avaricious for himself and for his child. And as
for the girl, I'm told she's a wild piece, fit mate for such a man as
Blood. Almost I marvel that he doesn't marry her and take her a-roving
with him. It would be no new experience for her. And I marvel, too, at
Blood's patience. He killed a man to win her."</p>
<p>"He killed a man for her, do you say?" There was horror now in her voice.</p>
<p>"Yes—a French buccaneer named Levasseur. He was the girl's lover and
Blood's associate on a venture. Blood coveted the girl, and killed
Levasseur to win her. Pah! It's an unsavoury tale, I own. But men live by
different codes out in these parts...."</p>
<p>She had turned to face him. She was pale to the lips, and her hazel eyes
were blazing, as she cut into his apologies for Blood.</p>
<p>"They must, indeed, if his other associates allowed him to live after
that."</p>
<p>"Oh, the thing was done in fair fight, I am told."</p>
<p>"Who told you?"</p>
<p>"A man who sailed with them, a Frenchman named Cahusac, whom I found in a
waterside tavern in St. Nicholas. He was Levasseur's lieutenant, and he
was present on the island where the thing happened, and when Levasseur was
killed."</p>
<p>"And the girl? Did he say the girl was present, too?"</p>
<p>"Yes. She was a witness of the encounter. Blood carried her off when he
had disposed of his brother-buccaneer."</p>
<p>"And the dead man's followers allowed it?" He caught the note of
incredulity in her voice, but missed the note of relief with which it was
blent. "Oh, I don't believe the tale. I won't believe it!"</p>
<p>"I honour you for that, Miss Bishop. It strained my own belief that men
should be so callous, until this Cahusac afforded me the explanation."</p>
<p>"What?" She checked her unbelief, an unbelief that had uplifted her from
an inexplicable dismay. Clutching the rail, she swung round to face his
lordship with that question. Later he was to remember and perceive in her
present behaviour a certain oddness which went disregarded now.</p>
<p>"Blood purchased their consent, and his right to carry the girl off. He
paid them in pearls that were worth more than twenty thousand pieces of
eight." His lordship laughed again with a touch of contempt. "A handsome
price! Faith, they're scoundrels all—just thieving, venal curs. And
faith, it's a pretty tale this for a lady's ear."</p>
<p>She looked away from him again, and found that her sight was blurred.
After a moment in a voice less steady than before she asked him:</p>
<p>"Why should this Frenchman have told you such a tale? Did he hate this
Captain Blood?"</p>
<p>"I did not gather that," said his lordship slowly. "He related it... oh,
just as a commonplace, an instance of buccaneering ways.</p>
<p>"A commonplace!" said she. "My God! A commonplace!"</p>
<p>"I dare say that we are all savages under the cloak that civilization
fashions for us," said his lordship. "But this Blood, now, was a man of
considerable parts, from what else this Cahusac told me. He was a bachelor
of medicine."</p>
<p>"That is true, to my own knowledge."</p>
<p>"And he has seen much foreign service on sea and land. Cahusac said—though
this I hardly credit—that he had fought under de Ruyter."</p>
<p>"That also is true," said she. She sighed heavily. "Your Cahusac seems to
have been accurate enough. Alas!"</p>
<p>"You are sorry, then?"</p>
<p>She looked at him. She was very pale, he noticed.</p>
<p>"As we are sorry to hear of the death of one we have esteemed. Once I held
him in regard for an unfortunate but worthy gentleman. Now...."</p>
<p>She checked, and smiled a little crooked smile. "Such a man is best
forgotten."</p>
<p>And upon that she passed at once to speak of other things. The friendship,
which it was her great gift to command in all she met, grew steadily
between those two in the little time remaining, until the event befell
that marred what was promising to be the pleasantest stage of his
lordship's voyage.</p>
<p>The marplot was the mad-dog Spanish Admiral, whom they encountered on the
second day out, when halfway across the Gulf of Gonaves. The Captain of
the Royal Mary was not disposed to be intimidated even when Don Miguel
opened fire on him. Observing the Spaniard's plentiful seaboard towering
high above the water and offering him so splendid a mark, the Englishman
was moved to scorn. If this Don who flew the banner of Castile wanted a
fight, the Royal Mary was just the ship to oblige him. It may be that he
was justified of his gallant confidence, and that he would that day have
put an end to the wild career of Don Miguel de Espinosa, but that a lucky
shot from the Milagrosa got among some powder stored in his forecastle,
and blew up half his ship almost before the fight had started. How the
powder came there will never now be known, and the gallant Captain himself
did not survive to enquire into it.</p>
<p>Before the men of the Royal Mary had recovered from their consternation,
their captain killed and a third of their number destroyed with him, the
ship yawing and rocking helplessly in a crippled state, the Spaniards
boarded her.</p>
<p>In the Captain's cabin under the poop, to which Miss Bishop had been
conducted for safety, Lord Julian was seeking to comfort and encourage
her, with assurances that all would yet be well, at the very moment when
Don Miguel was stepping aboard. Lord Julian himself was none so steady,
and his face was undoubtedly pale. Not that he was by any means a coward.
But this cooped-up fighting on an unknown element in a thing of wood that
might at any moment founder under his feet into the depths of ocean was
disturbing to one who could be brave enough ashore. Fortunately Miss
Bishop did not appear to be in desperate need of the poor comfort he was
in case to offer. Certainly she, too, was pale, and her hazel eyes may
have looked a little larger than usual. But she had herself well in hand.
Half sitting, half leaning on the Captain's table, she preserved her
courage sufficiently to seek to calm the octoroon waiting-woman who was
grovelling at her feet in a state of terror.</p>
<p>And then the cabin-door flew open, and Don Miguel himself, tall,
sunburned, and aquiline of face, strode in. Lord Julian span round, to
face him, and clapped a hand to his sword.</p>
<p>The Spaniard was brisk and to the point.</p>
<p>"Don't be a fool," he said in his own tongue, "or you'll come by a fool's
end. Your ship is sinking."</p>
<p>There were three or four men in morions behind Don Miguel, and Lord Julian
realized the position. He released his hilt, and a couple of feet or so of
steel slid softly back into the scabbard. But Don Miguel smiled, with a
flash of white teeth behind his grizzled beard, and held out his hand.</p>
<p>"If you please," he said.</p>
<p>Lord Julian hesitated. His eyes strayed to Miss Bishop's. "I think you had
better," said that composed young lady, whereupon with a shrug his
lordship made the required surrender.</p>
<p>"Come you—all of you—aboard my ship," Don Miguel invited them,
and strode out.</p>
<p>They went, of course. For one thing the Spaniard had force to compel them;
for another a ship which he announced to be sinking offered them little
inducement to remain. They stayed no longer than was necessary to enable
Miss Bishop to collect some spare articles of dress and my lord to snatch
up his valise.</p>
<p>As for the survivors in that ghastly shambles that had been the Royal
Mary, they were abandoned by the Spaniards to their own resources. Let
them take to the boats, and if those did not suffice them, let them swim
or drown. If Lord Julian and Miss Bishop were retained, it was because Don
Miguel perceived their obvious value. He received them in his cabin with
great urbanity. Urbanely he desired to have the honour of being acquainted
with their names.</p>
<p>Lord Julian, sick with horror of the spectacle he had just witnessed,
commanded himself with difficulty to supply them. Then haughtily he
demanded to know in his turn the name of their aggressor. He was in an
exceedingly ill temper. He realized that if he had done nothing positively
discreditable in the unusual and difficult position into which Fate had
thrust him, at least he had done nothing creditable. This might have
mattered less but that the spectator of his indifferent performance was a
lady. He was determined if possible to do better now.</p>
<p>"I am Don Miguel de Espinosa," he was answered. "Admiral of the Navies of
the Catholic King."</p>
<p>Lord Julian gasped. If Spain made such a hubbub about the depredations of
a runagate adventurer like Captain Blood, what could not England answer
now?</p>
<p>"Will you tell me, then, why you behave like a damned pirate?" he asked.
And added: "I hope you realize what will be the consequences, and the
strict account to which you shall be brought for this day's work, for the
blood you have murderously shed, and for your violence to this lady and to
myself."</p>
<p>"I offer you no violence," said the Admiral, smiling, as only the man who
holds the trumps can smile. "On the contrary, I have saved your lives...."</p>
<p>"Saved our lives!" Lord Julian was momentarily speechless before such
callous impudence. "And what of the lives you have destroyed in wanton
butchery? By God, man, they shall cost you dear."</p>
<p>Don Miguel's smile persisted. "It is possible. All things are possible.
Meantime it is your own lives that will cost you dear. Colonel Bishop is a
rich man; and you, milord, are no doubt also rich. I will consider and fix
your ransom."</p>
<p>"So that you're just the damned murderous pirate I was supposing you,"
stormed his lordship. "And you have the impudence to call yourself the
Admiral of the Navies of the Catholic King? We shall see what your
Catholic King will have to say to it."</p>
<p>The Admiral ceased to smile. He revealed something of the rage that had
eaten into his brain. "You do not understand," he said. "It is that I
treat you English heretic dogs just as you English heretic dogs have
treated Spaniards upon the seas—you robbers and thieves out of hell!
I have the honesty to do it in my own name—but you, you perfidious
beasts, you send your Captain Bloods, your Hagthorpes, and your Morgans
against us and disclaim responsibility for what they do. Like Pilate, you
wash your hands." He laughed savagely. "Let Spain play the part of Pilate.
Let her disclaim responsibility for me, when your ambassador at the
Escurial shall go whining to the Supreme Council of this act of piracy by
Don Miguel de Espinosa."</p>
<p>"Captain Blood and the rest are not admirals of England!" cried Lord
Julian.</p>
<p>"Are they not? How do I know? How does Spain know? Are you not liars all,
you English heretics?"</p>
<p>"Sir!" Lord Julian's voice was harsh as a rasp, his eyes flashed.
Instinctively he swung a hand to the place where his sword habitually
hung. Then he shrugged and sneered: "Of course," said he, "it sorts with
all I have heard of Spanish honour and all that I have seen of yours that
you should insult a man who is unarmed and your prisoner."</p>
<p>The Admiral's face flamed scarlet. He half raised his hand to strike. And
then, restrained, perhaps, by the very words that had cloaked the
retorting insult, he turned on his heel abruptly and went out without
answering.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />