Chapter 59
Then, to the delight of the two lads, the firing ceased, and as they sat anxious and excited, they compared notes and pa.s.sed opinions, while the lieutenant sat sombre and silent, looking straight out before him, only uttering an e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.i.o.n of impatience from time to time as the wind dropped in some bend of the river, or filled the sails again upon a fresh tack.
Only once did the lieutenant rouse himself a little, and that was when they came in sight of the place where the river forked and down which the second cutter had long pa.s.sed. Murray pointed it out, while Roberts exclaimed--
"Of course! I remember that well now; but I had forgotten all about it before."
"Yes; I can recollect it now," said the lieutenant bitterly; and he relapsed into silence again, though he was listening to the conversation of the two middies all the same, as he proved before long.
"You may be right or you may be wrong," said Murray, after a time. "I think you are wrong and haven't told the difference between the shotted and the unshotted guns; but the firing has quite ceased now, and that means that the lugger has given up, and lowered her sails."
"Maybe," said Roberts, "but more likely after holding on so long she has had an unlucky shot and been sunk."
"Lucky shot," said Murray grimly.
"Ah, that depends upon which side you take. I believe that our lads have grown pretty savage, and sunk her."
A low murmur of satisfaction arose from amongst the men who overheard the conversation, and then there was silence again, till the lieutenant suddenly spoke out.
"You've only provided for two alternatives, gentlemen," he said.
"Do you mean about the lugger, sir?" asked Murray.
"Of course. You settled that she had lowered her sails or been sunk."
"Yes, sir; there is no other way."
"Indeed, Mr Roberts?" said the lieutenant. "It seems to me that there is another alternative."
"I don't understand you, sir," said the lad.
"Perhaps Mr Murray does," said the lieutenant sadly. "What do you say, my lad?"
"I'm afraid so, sir, but I hope not," cried the lad; "but we shall soon know, for the river is opening out fast."
"Yes, that will soon be proved," said the first lieutenant; and he relapsed into silence.
"I say," whispered Roberts, giving his companion a nudge, "what do you mean by your alternatives? The lugger must either have lowered her sails or been sunk."
"What about the coast here?" replied Murray.
"Well, what about it?"
"Isn't it all wooded and covered with jungle?"
"Of course: don't we know it well!"
"Yes, and don't the slaving people know it well?"
"Of course they must."
"Then isn't it possible for them to have held on, sailing all they knew, and made for some other river or creek running into the sh.o.r.e right up perhaps into some lagoon or lake known only to themselves, and where we could not follow, knowing so little as we do of the country?"
"Oh, I say," cried Roberts, "what a miserable old prophet of ill you are, Frank! You shouldn't go on like that. Haven't we been disappointed enough, without coming in for worse things still? You might as well stick to it that the lugger has been sunk."
"I can't, old fellow,"
"Oh, bother your honest beliefs!" cried Roberts pettishly. "Be dishonest for once in a way. You might give us a bit of suns.h.i.+ne to freshen us up. Haven't we got enough to go through yet, with the captain fuming over our failure and being ready to bully us till all's blue?"
"Can't help it, old fellow; I must say what I feel. But there, we needn't talk, for we shall soon know now."
The lieutenant was of the same opinion, for he suddenly rose from where he was seated, and pressing the sheets on one side as he went forward he made for the bows, where he stood looking out where the mouth of the river became a wide estuary, and then came back to his place in the stern sheets, and as he sat down he pointed past the sails.
"There, gentlemen," he said; "there lies the _Seafowl_, in quite a different position; but there is no lugger."
"No, sir, but there lies the second cutter," cried Roberts; and he pointed to where their fellow boat was sailing far away and close in sh.o.r.e. "That means she had been chasing the _lugger_ until a lucky shot from the sloop sunk her."
"No, my lad," said the officer gravely. "I hold to Mr Murray's idea-- that the second cutter chased the scoundrels till they dodged into one of their lairs, and they have by this time penetrated far up the country, perhaps been able to get round by some back way through some forest labyrinth to where the plantation house is."
"Well, sir, we know our way better now," said Murray, "and we must go again. Better luck next time."
"Thank you, Mr Murray. Better luck next time. Now to hear what the captain has to say!"
CHAPTER THIRTY ONE.
MR ALLEN'S VISIT.
The captain had too much to say when the first cutter's crew went on board and learned that matters had taken place just as had been antic.i.p.ated, the lugger having suddenly glided out of what had seemed to those on board the sloop to be a patch of dense tropical forest, and then sailed away as if to reach the open sea, paying not the slightest heed to the repeated summonses which she received from the _Seafowl_.
More stringent commands in the shape of shot would have followed, but for the fact that the second cutter, which had been despatched up the river in search of Mr Anderson's expedition, suddenly, to the surprise of all on board, glided out of the same patch of forest as the lugger had appeared from some little time before, and upon catching sight of the sails of the craft they had followed, had continued the pursuit as rapidly as the crew could force their boat along.
"The place is a regular maze, Mr Anderson," said the captain, as he described all that had taken place, "and the scoundrel who commands the lugger--I'll hang him to the yard-arm, Mr Anderson, whether he's a Yankee or English born, and the bigwigs of the United States and in Parliament at home may settle among themselves whether I've done right or not, for he has got the wrong man to deal with if he thinks he is going to play with me. He played with me, Mr Anderson, and tricked me into the belief that he had surrendered, so that I should not fire upon him, and manoeuvred his lugger so as to keep Mr Munday with the second cutter between us. Bah! I'll never forgive Mr Munday for letting himself be so out-manoeuvred. He has been as bad as you have, sir."
"I'm very sorry, sir," said the first lieutenant meekly.
"And so you ought to be, sir! But, as I was telling you, the scoundrel led the second cutter a pretty dance, Munday following him till from the deck here it seemed that all he had to do was to tell his c.o.xswain to put his boat-hook on board the lugger and bring his prisoners alongside here."
"Well, sir, and he did not?" asked the chief officer.
"No, sir, he did not!" cried the captain angrily; and then he stopped short for a few moments. "Well," he continued then, "aren't you going to ask why he didn't take the lugger a prize?"
"I was not going to interrupt you, sir, but I should be glad to hear."
"Very good, then, Mr Anderson, I will tell you. It was because the scoundrel played a regular pantomime trick upon us--yes, sir, a regular pantomime trick. Look yonder," continued the captain, pointing towards the sh.o.r.e. "What can you see there?"
"The edge of the forest that comes down to the bay nearly all round as far as I can make out, sir."
"Exactly. Well, somewhere over yonder the lugger suddenly sailed out, and of course we were astonished, for no gla.s.s that we have on board shows the slightest sign of an opening, while before we had got over our surprise, all of a sudden the second cutter, which went up the river to follow you, popped out of the same place as the lugger. Now, sir, how do you explain? Could you come out of the mouth of the river where you went in, while the second cutter, which I sent up the river after you, came out at the same spot as the lugger? Explain that, if you please."