Chapter 85
A minute later two puffs of smoke from different vessels shot out into the clear evening air, the b.a.l.l.s ricochetting from the water in each case a few yards away. Then, with the men pulling as hard as ever they could, the boat's head was swung round, and rowing diagonally across the stream they made for the shelter of the sh.o.r.e from which they had come, the sail was hoisted, filled, and away they went till they were right round the bend and the anch.o.r.ed schooners were out of sight.
"There, Mr Rodd, sir, what did I tell you?" cried Joe triumphantly. "I knew they couldn't hit us. Chaps like them ought never to be allowed to handle a gun."
"Well, my man," said the doctor, "if the rest of your plan will only succeed like this we shall achieve a victory."
"Nay, nay, sir; only a little boat action. There, my lads, now we'll have a rest. They're sure to think we have gone right up the river."
"But they may send boats to follow us," suggested Rodd.
"Certainly, sir, they may; but I don't think they will. They won't come to close quarters so long as they have got bulwarks to fight from behind and the guns to tackle us when we show. They think that we can't face the pieces. Well, I don't say as we are very ready to when there's another way round, but we haven't got long to wait before we must make another move, for the sun's down behind the trees, and I shouldn't be sorry if it was to come on a fog."
But no fog came, only darkness the blackest of the black, and the few stars that peered out only looking strangely dim.
The wind had fallen soon after the sail had been lowered and the mast laid well out of their way. One of the b.a.l.l.s of spun yarn they had in the locker had been brought into use, cut into lengths, and the oars secured so that they could not slip away when they were left to swing, and at last under cover of the night the next part of Joe's programme was begun.
It was harder work than had been antic.i.p.ated, for though the current close in sh.o.r.e was slack, it was very difficult to keep at a respectable distance from the bank as they glided down-stream, while every now and then there was a swirl in the water suggesting that one of the great reptiles had been disturbed.
But still the adventurers progressed, and their leader was keenly on the alert, looking out for the lights of the anch.o.r.ed vessels, ready to raise his false alarm as soon as he got abreast.
But he looked in vain; the Spaniards had taken the precaution to cover their riding lights, and Joe Cross was about to draw his bow at a venture, when a sharp shock which made the boat thrill suggested that they had struck upon a floating tree trunk, washed probably out of the bank during the past flood.
But the next moment they were aware that the boat's stem had come in contact with one of the crocodiles, which gave a tremendous plunge and began to send the water flying in all directions as it beat heavily upon the surface with its tail.
"Starn all!" roared Joe Cross involuntarily, and then recollecting himself, he roared out, "Pull, lads! Pull for your lives!" For a light suddenly appeared some thirty or forty yards to their left, followed by another lower down the river.
There was the buzz of voices upon the anch.o.r.ed vessels' decks, and Joe kept on yelling wildly to the men to pull, the noise and excitement being increased by the reports of muskets fired at them in a hurried ungoverned way, the flashes of light giving them faint instantaneous glimpses of the vessels and the faces of the men on board.
"Steady, my lads, steady! Ease off," said Joe, "gently. We have got to come back again, you know, so we needn't go too far. Two or three cables' lengths is plenty. How do you think we're getting on, sir?"
"Is it possible they may come in pursuit?" whispered the doctor.
"Nay, sir, I don't think it's likely. If it was us aboard those schooners we should think that we--meaning us--there, sir--you know what I mean--we should
"I don't see why, Joe," said Rodd, after a few minutes' thought.
"Well, I'll tell you, my lad," whispered Joe.--"Steady there--steady! I am going to lower down the grapnel, for I dursen't run in among the trees. They'd crackle too much if we tried to moor to a branch, and we don't want to capsize. Harry Briggs, look alive, and drop the flukes overboard; make fast, and let us swing."
This was all done almost without a sound, and just then a faint gleam of light as the boat swung round showed them that certainly one of the anch.o.r.ed vessels was still showing her light, while as it swung round a little farther there were a couple more gleams higher up, as of distant stars.
"That's all right, gentlemen. Now, Mr Rodd, sir, I haven't answered your question. Here's just enough breeze blowing to make me alter my plans, so after a bit we'll step the mast again and have the sail ready for hoisting, for we shall be able, with the lights to guide us, to sail close up under the farther sh.o.r.e and come down again from just the way they don't expect, run the boat alongside our schooner, and then one on us will hold on by the boat-hook, while with the rest it's all aboard, and the schooner's ours."
That night seemed to Rodd almost as long, at times longer than the one he had pa.s.sed in the tree. But here it certainly was shorter, as he afterwards declared, for about a couple of hours before daylight Joe whispered his belief that they had none of them heard the slightest sound from the direction of the lights, that if any one on board the schooner's deck would be sleeping it would be then, and that they must start at once.
There was no question of all being ready, and at the whispered orders Harry Briggs hauled softly upon the grapnel line, while very slowly and silently the yard ran up the little mast, and the boat began to careen over as the sail filled.
Then with Joe Cross at the tiller she began to glide up-stream, the grapnel was lifted on board without a sound, and silently and steadily they began to cross the river diagonally till they were as near as the steersman dared lay the little craft to the farther sh.o.r.e.
Under his skilful management all went well, and so silently that nothing but the faint pattering lap of the water against the bows could be heard.
To the two lads, though, that sounded unusually loud, as they crouched down involuntarily but quite unnecessarily lower and lower in the boat lest they should be seen, the light hoisted in each schooner seeming bound to show the white sail to the watch of each vessel in turn.
But no alarm was raised; not a sound reached the adventurers, and to Rodd it seemed as if, after terrible periods of agony, three heavy loads had been lifted from his breast. He wanted to whisper a few words to Morny, who all through had been seated by his side, but nothing but the pressure of hand upon arm pa.s.sed between them, while they could hardly hear the doctor breathe.
At last, though, that period of the terrible suspense was at an end, and the third light they had pa.s.sed, that of the _Maid of Salcombe_, was beginning to grow fainter, and being left behind.
"Now, what next?" thought Rodd. "How much longer shall we have to wait before the attack is made?"
The answer came very shortly after, for Joe Cross bore lightly upon the tiller, sent the boat gliding round in a wide circle which ended by bringing the three mooring lights they had left behind all in a line, and then as they began to glide down-stream he whispered--
"It's now or never, sir.--Cutlashes, my lads; in five minutes we shall be alongside. You, Harry Briggs, shy the grapnel on deck and make fast; we shall soon be all aboard. Then come and help us all you can."
There was a low deep breath like a thrill pa.s.sing through the boat, a peculiar sound of movement which Rodd knew was the men drawing their cutla.s.ses, and then as his heart went heavily thump, thump, thump within his breast, he felt that two hands were seeking for his, and as he raised it towards the right it was grasped firmly a moment by Uncle Paul's, and the next moment, as it was released, by that of Morny.
It was short work, for the boat was gliding steadily down, and directly after the lad felt Joe Cross bending over him.
"She's just right, sir," he whispered. "Ketch hold of the tiller, and keep her as she is. I must go for'ard now to lead."
The boat swayed a little as the man stepped between his mates to the front. Then as soon as the distance was considered right a light rattling sound was heard, and Rodd was conscious of the sail being lowered, though he could see nothing of it, while almost the next minute there was a faint shock as the boat glided against the side of the schooner.
Then Joe Cross's cry, "All aboard!" rang out, followed by a stentorian cheer, and amidst the rush and hurry the tiller slipped from the boy's hand and he was climbing over the thwarts to spring into the fore-chains. Then he tottered as if about to fall back into the boat, but a big hand grasped him by the shoulder, steadied him for a moment, and then he was with the little party das.h.i.+ng side by side into what seemed to be a chaos of savage yells and shrieks which rose in wild confusion from the gang of Spaniards who had sprung up from their sleep, where they lay scattered about the deck.
English shouts to come on, Spanish yells, wild mongrel cries, a shriek or two of despair, a heavy plunge followed by another and another, savage blows, and utterances such as fierce men make in the wild culmination of their rage; then plunge after plunge in the water alongside and astern, the splash of swimmers, strange las.h.i.+ngs about in the river, followed by shrieks and gurgling cries, and then, heard over all, the combined voices of so many stout Englishmen in a fierce--
"_Hurrah_!"
"Now then, all of you," shouted Joe Cross. "There's a lot of them down below. Close that cabin hatch. Two on you to the fo'c'sle; serve that the same. If you run against anybody in the dark, tell the beggar he'll be safer overboard than here."
But there proved to be no one below in the men's quarters, and after making quite sure the two men returned to their comrades. Then--
"Where's Mr Rodd?" shouted Joe.
"Here, Joe," came out of the darkness.
"Mr Morny?"
"I'm here," came in a breathless voice.
"And the doctor?"
"Helpless, Joe. My ankle's sprained."
"Bad luck to it," cried the man. "Where's Harry Briggs?"
"All right, mate," came in a gruff surly voice; "but you needn't have been in such a hurry to get it done."
"Hurry?" cried Joe. "Why, it's only just in time. Later than we thought. It's getting light. Now then, who else is hurt?"
There was a growl or two, and Joe shouted again--