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to meet his daughters and his friend Claud Halcro,
Chapter XXXIX
Now, Emma, now the last reflection make,
What thou wouldst follow, what thou must forsake.
By our ill-omen’d stars and adverse Heaven,
No middle object to thy choice is given.
Henry and Emma,
The sun was high in heaven; the boats were busily fetching off from the shore the promised supply of provisions and water, which, as many fishing skiffs were employed in the service, were got on board with unexpected speed, and stowed away by the crew of the sloop, with equal despatch. All worked with good will; for all, save Cleveland himself, were weary of a coast, where every moment increased their danger, and where, which they esteemed a worst misfortune, there was no booty to be won. Bunce and Derrick took the immediate direction of this duty, while Cleveland, walking the deck alone, and in silence, only interfered from time to time, to give some order which circumstances required, and then relapsed into his own sad reflections.
There are two sorts of men whom situations of guilt, terror, and commotion, bring forward as prominent agents. The first are spirits so naturally moulded and fitted for deeds of horror, that they stalk forth from their lurking-places like actual demons, to work in their native element, as the hideous apparition of the Bearded Man came forth at Versailles, on the memorable 5th October 1789, the delighted executioner of the victims delivered up to him by a bloodthirsty rabble. But Cleveland belonged to the second class of these unfortunate beings, who are involved in evil rather by the concurrence of external circumstances than by natural inclination, being, indeed, one in whom his first engaging in this lawless mode of life, as the follower of his father, nay, perhaps, even his pursuing it as his father’s avenger, carried with it something of mitigation and apology; — one also who often considered his’guilty situation with horror, ahd had made repeated, though ineffectual efforts, to escape from it.
Such thoughts of remorse were now rolling in his mind, and he may be forgiven, if recollections of Minna mingled with and aided them. He looked around, too, on his mates, and, profligate and hardened as he knew them to be, he could not think of their paying the penalty of his obstinacy. “We shall be ready to sail with the ebbtide,” he said to himself — ” why should I endanger these men, by detaining them till the hour of danger, predicted by that singular woman, shall arrive? Her intelligence, howsoever acquired, has been always strangely accurate; and her warning was as solemn as if a mother were to apprise an erring son of his crimes, and of his approaching punishment. Besides, what chance is there that I can again see Minna? She is at Kirkwall, doubtless, and to hold my course thither would be to steer right upon the rocks. No, I will not endanger these poor fellows — I will sail with the ebbtide. On the desolate Hebrides, or on the northwest coast of Ireland, I will leave the vessel, and return hither in some disguise — yet, why should I return, since it will perhaps be only to see Minna the bride of Mordaunt? No — let the vessel sail with this ebbtide without me. I will abide and take my fate.”
His meditations were here interrupted by Jack Bunce, who hailing him noble Captain, said they were ready to sail wher he pleased.
“When you please, Bunce; for I shall leave the commanc with you, and go ashore at Stromness,” said Cleveland.
“You shall do no such matter, by Heaven!” answered Bunce. “The command with me, truly! and how the devi am I to get the crew to obey me? Why, even Dick Fletche; rides rusty on me now and then. You know well enough that without you, we shall be all at each other’s throats in half-an hour; and, if you desert us, what a rope’s end does it signif; whether we are destroyed by the king’s cruisers, or by each other? Come, come, noble Captain, there are black-eye girls enough in the world, but where will you find so tight a sea-boat as the little Favourite here, manned as she is with a set of tearing lads,
‘Fit to disturb the peace of all the world,
And rule it when ‘tis wildest’?”
“You are a precious fool, Jack Bunce,” said Cleveland half-angry, and, in despite of himself, half-diverted, by th false tones and exaggerated gesture of the stage-struck pirate “It may be so, noble Captain,” answered Bunce, “ and it may be that I have my comrades in my folly. Here are you, now, going to play ‘All for Love, and the World well Lost,’ and yet you cannot bear a harmless bounce in blank verse. Well, I can talk prose for the matter, for I have news enough to tell — and strange news, too — ay, and stirring news to boot.”
“Well, prithee deliver them (to speak thy own cant) like a man of this world.”
“The Stromness fishers will accept nothing for their provisions and trouble,” said Bunce — ”there is a wonder for you!”
“And for what reason, I pray?” said Cleveland: “it is the first time I have ever heard of cash being refused at a seaport.”
“True — they commonly lay the charges on as thick as it they were caulking. But here is the matter. The owner of the brig yonder, the father of your fair Imoinda, stands paymaster, by way of thanks for the civility with which we treated his daughters, and that we may not meet our due, as he calls it, on these shores.”
“It is like the frank-hearted old Udaller!” said Cleveland; “ but is he at Stromness? I thought he was to have crossed the island for Kirkwall.”
“He did so purpose,” said Bunce; “ but more folks than King Duncan change the course of their voyage. He was no sooner ashore than he was met with by a meddling old witch ‘of these parts, who has her finger in every man’s pie, and by her counsel he changed his purpose of going to Kirkwall, and lies at anchor for the present in yonder white house, that you may see with your glass up the lake yonder. I am told the old woman clubbed also to pay for the sloop’s stores. Why ishe should shell out the boards I cannot conceive an idea, except that she is said to be a witch, and may befriend us as so many devils.”
“But who told you all this?” said Cleveland, withoui using his spyglass, or seeming so much interested in the news is his comrade had expected.
“Why,” replied Bunce, “ I made a trip ashore this morning:o the village, and had a can with an old acquaintance, who. lad been sent by Master Troil to look after matters, and I fished it all out of him, and more, too, than I am desirous of telling you, noble Captain.”
“And who is your intelligencer?” said Cleveland; “has he got no name?”
“Why, he is an old, fiddling, foppish acquaintance of mine, called Halcro, if you must know,” said Bunce.
“Halcro!” echoed Cleveland, his eyes sparkling with surprise — ”Claud Halcro? — Why, he went ashore at Inganess with Minna and her sister — Where are they?”
“Why, that is just what I did not want to tell you,” replied the confidant — ”yet hang me if I can help it, for I cannot baulk a fine situation. — That start had a fine effect — Oh ay, and the spyglass is turned on the House of Stennis now! — Well, yonder they are, it must be confessed — indifferently well guarded, too. Some of the old witch’s people are come over from that mountain of an island — Hoy, as they call it; and the old gentleman has got some fellows under arms himself. But what of all that, noble Captain! — give you but the word, and we snap up the wenches tonight — clap them under hatches — man the capstern by daybreak — up topsails — and sail with the morning tide.”
“You sicken me with your villainy,” said Cleveland, turning away from him.
“Umph! — villainy, and sicken you!” said Bunce — ” Now, r>ray, what have I said but what has been done a thousand times by gentlemen of fortune like ourselves?”
“Mention it; not again,” said Cleveland; then took a turn along the deck, in deep meditation, and, coming back to Bunce, took him by the