"Ah!" said Hastings, struck with inspiration. He scrambled to his feet and began kicking the seaman's hands and fingers with all his might.
"Ow! Ow! Little bastard!" yelled the tar.
"Help me!" cried Hastings.
"Aye-aye, sir!" said Povey, and laid in with the toe of his boot.
"Here!" said Hastings, grabbing the cask as the tar finally let go. "Help me lift it!"
The two mids heaved the heavy cask up and poised it on the rolling, heaving gunwale.
"NO!" wailed the horrified tar. He drew breath and gave out an ear-splitting shout, "Ahoooooy, shipmates! 'Ware astern! Look what the little sods are a-doin'!"
The instant they clapped eyes on the awful thing the mids were doing, the men gave a collective groan and magically ceased to fight.
"Now then," screeched Hastings, having been handed his audience without even having to summon it, "pay attention, you men!" Silence fell. He looked at Povey. He looked at the wobbling cask "Can you hold it?"
"Aye-aye, sir."
"Right!" said Hastings. "Now listen to me: either I shall have discipline aboard of this ship, or that cask — " the men gaped in round-eyed horror "- goes over the side!" He turned to the other mid: "Isn't that so, Mr Povey?"
"Indeed, sir!" said Povey, and wriggled the cask.
"Uh!" gasped the hands.
"Now then…" said Hastings, his hands clasped behind his back in the style of an officer. Drawing on all he'd learned in a year and a half afloat, he then behaved like an officer and divided the men into starboard and larboard watches, appointed captains of each watch, rated the man with stamped fingers as boatswain (to keep him out of mischief) and rated the eldest of the marines as acting-corporal. He then threatened stopped-grog for all future offenders, reminded them that the longboat was rigged for sail and in all respects seaworthy, and assured all present that he and Mr Povey would now confer to agree a course to the nearest port. Then — putting the larboard watch on duty — he sat down, exhausted.
This cheered the men wonderfully. Gloom vanished. Smiles returned.
"Gaw' bless-you for a young gen'man, sir!" said a voice.
"Aye!" said the rest.
"Well done, sir!" said Acting-Corporal Bennet.
"By Jove!" said Povey. "Well said, George!"
"I do hope, so," said Mr Midshipman Hastings quietly. "Just as I hope you know how to find the bloody land, because I'm damned if I do."
Chapter 15
Flint stared at the yellow-haired man, who seemed fluent in a number of languages.
"I am English, sir," he said. "My name is Flint, and I am commander of this vessel." He took off his hat and bowed. He knew himself the weaker party, and so he was polite. To his surprise, the tall man doffed his own hat and bowed in return.
"John Silver, at your service, Captain," he said. "John Silver of the good ship Walrus, and until this morning under the command of Captain John Mason, God rest his soul!"
"Your captain was killed in the action?" asked Flint — the action indeed! He was consciously modelling his bearing on that of this amazing visitor. Flint was in the other's power, so if he wanted to play the gentleman instead of the pirate, then so would Joseph Flint.
"Aye, sir!" said Silver. "And him one o' the finest who ever served under Captain England, the which I had the honour to do myself."
"Captain England?" said Flint. "The famous pirate of the East Indies?" That was genuine and not role-playing. Flint had heard of England and the huge prizes that he took.
Silver smiled an odd smile.
"Not pirate, sir," he corrected, "but a gentleman o' fortune. One of the brethren of the coast, and a true buccaneer in the old style, that was Cap'n England; and Cap'n Mason was one just the same. Why, the instant he saw the Don's colours matched against your own, he sent hands to quarters and made sail to come up with you to take your part. That was England's way, and it was Mason's too."
Flint clung hard to his reason. He was dumbfounded. He heard the words. He understood the meaning of each one separately. But put the words together, and there was no meaning to be had; not by Joe Flint, at any rate.
"You came to our aid," he said, in as neutral and careful a voice as he could. His instinct was to be friends with this fellow, and to be just such a creature as he was. This could not be avoided. Not while Silver had the bigger ship, more guns and more men.
"Aye, sir," said Silver, "we acted in the old way, as gentlemen o' fortune should." He smiled and took Flint's hand and looked him in the eye, honestly and without guile. Then he grinned at the parrot nestling against Flint's ear.
"Fine bird that, sir," he said. "By repute, they talks as well as a Christian, and they lives for ever mostly." He reached out and stroked the green plumage, and the bird nuzzled his hand. Flint's eyebrows went up. Most men kept clear of the bird. Most men were afraid of losing a finger, and were justified in their fear.
"Hmm," said Flint, still in the dark as to Silver's intentions, but beginning to hope that dawn might be approaching. For, as far as Flint could judge, Silver was living out a dream of buccaneering on the Spanish Main, as it had existed forty years ago. Either that or he was plain mad. Flint was inclined to the latter supposition, but decided to wait upon events and to see what the other did, as opposed to what he said.
And again Flint was amazed. Silver and his men bustled about the smashed and battered Betsy, going to the aid of the wounded, taking a hand at the pumps, helping to clear away the wreckage, and in every way anxiously seeking to make right and mend. After a while of this, and when everything was done that was urgent, Silver took Flint aside and spoke to him.
"Cap'n Flint," said he, "asking your pardon, but it won't do and that's the truth."
"Won't do?" said Flint. Terror struck him like a knife, and his imagination conjured the horrors of hell. Here it comes, he thought, awaiting a cut throat and a plunge over the side.
"No, sir, it won't," said Silver. "Here's you with seventeen whole men, and twenty wounded and your ship leaking and her rigging cut to ruins…" He paused to run a highly critical eye over Betsy's timbers and fittings. "And your ship not one of the best to begin with, begging your pardon."
"She was built from the ruins of another," said Flint, stung to the defence of his ship. "Built on a sea shore under conditions of utmost inconvenience and difficulty."
"Ah," said Silver, "I thought she weren't Bristol-built." He smiled and continued, "So let's make the best out of the worst, and fetch away yourself and your people and repair on board of the old Walrus and be good companions one and all."
"Aye," said Flint, still waiting for a trap to spring, "but what about the ship?"
"Flotsam an' jetsam, Cap'n," said Silver. "One good blow'll see her dismasted and rolling like a barrel. Better you should come on board with us."
But Flint hesitated, thinking of the loot down below. He thought of it even though he knew it was no longer his. It belonged to the man with the greater strength. Even so, Flint was constitutionally incapable of giving it up willingly.
"But… ah…" he stumbled for words. Without thinking, he looked towards the hatch in the waist. Silver was far too sharp to miss that.
"I see, Cap'n!" he said, and tapped a finger alongside his nose. "You've a cargo below decks," he smiled. "Well done, sir! But never you mind about that, for we'll hoist it out, and across to the old Walrus, and all shall share and share alike: your goods and our goods, and jolly companions one and all."