<h2><SPAN name="Ch7">Chapter 7</SPAN>: On Board A Trader.</h2>
<p>"Have you heard the news, Francisco? My cousins are rescued! I
have been out this morning and have only just heard it, and I was
on the point of starting to tell you."</p>
<p>"Your news is old, Matteo. I knew it hours ago."</p>
<p>"And I hear," Matteo went on, "that Polani found them in a hut
on San Nicolo. My father cannot think how he came to hear of their
hiding place. He says Polani would not say how he learned the news.
My father supposes he heard it from some member of Ruggiero's
household."</p>
<p>Francis hesitated for a moment. He had at first been on the
point of telling Matteo of the share he had had in the recovery of
the girls; but he thought that although his friend could be trusted
not to repeat the news wilfully, he might accidentally say
something which would lead to the fact being known, and that as
Polani had strongly enjoined the necessity of keeping the secret,
and had himself declined to mention, even to the council, the
source from which he obtained his information, he would look upon
him as a babbler, and unworthy of trust, did he find that Matteo
had been let into the secret.</p>
<p>"It does not much matter who it is Polani learned the news from.
The great point is, he has found his daughters safe from all
injury, and I hear has brought back with him the woman who betrayed
them. It is fortunate indeed that he took such prompt measures with
Ruggiero, and thus prevented his escaping from the mainland, and
making off with the girls, as of course he intended to do."</p>
<p>"My father tells me," Matteo said, "that a state gondola has
already been dispatched to bring Ruggiero a prisoner here, and that
even his powerful connections will not save him from severe
punishment, for public indignation is so great at the attempt, that
his friends will not venture to plead on his behalf."</p>
<p>"And now I have my bit of news to tell you, Matteo. Signor
Polani has most generously offered me a position in his house, and
I am to sail tomorrow in one of his ships for the East."</p>
<p>"I congratulate you, Francisco, for I know, from what you have
often said, that you would like this much better than going back to
England. But it seems very sudden. You did not know anything about
it yesterday, and now you are going to start at once. Why, when can
it have been settled? Polani has been absent since daybreak,
engaged in this matter of the girls, and has been occupied ever
since with the council."</p>
<p>"I have seen him since he returned," Francis replied; "and
though it was only absolutely settled this morning, he has had
several interviews with my father on the subject. I believe he and
my father thought that it was better to get me away as soon as
possible, as Ruggiero's friends may put down the disgrace which has
befallen him to my interference in his first attempt to carry off
the girls."</p>
<p>"Well, I think you are a lucky fellow anyhow, Francisco, and I
hope that I may be soon doing something also. I shall speak to my
father about it, and ask him to get Polani to let me take some
voyages in his vessels, so that I may be fit to become an officer
in one of the state galleys, as soon as I am of age. Where are you
going now?"</p>
<p>"I am going round to the School of Arms, to say goodbye to our
comrades. After that I am going to Signor Polani's to pay my
respects to the signoras. Then I shall be at home with my father
till it is time to go on board. He will have left here before I
return from my voyage, as he is going to wind up his affairs at
once and return to England."</p>
<p>"Well, I will accompany you to the school and to my cousin's,"
Matteo said. "I shall miss you terribly here, and shall certainly
do all I can to follow your example, and get afloat. You may have
all sorts of adventures, for we shall certainly be at war with
Genoa before many weeks are over, and you will have to keep a sharp
lookout for their war galleys. Polani's ships are prizes worth
taking, and you may have the chance of seeing the inside of a
Genoese prison before you return."</p>
<p>After a visit to the School of Arms, the two friends were rowed
to Signor Polani's. The merchant himself was out, but they were at
once shown up to the room where the girls were sitting.</p>
<p>"My dear cousins," Matteo said as he entered, "I am delighted to
see you back safe and well. All Venice is talking of your return.
You are the heroines of the day. You do not know what an excitement
there has been over your adventure."</p>
<p>"The sooner people get to talk about something else the better,
Matteo," Maria said, "for we shall have to be prisoners all day
till something else occupies their attention. We have not the least
desire to be pointed at, whenever we go out, as the maidens who
were carried away. If the Venetians were so interested in us, they
had much better have set about discovering where we were hidden
away before."</p>
<p>"But everyone did try, I can assure you, Maria. Every place has
been ransacked, high and low. Every gondolier has been questioned
and cross questioned as to his doings on that day. Every fishing
village has been visited. Never was such a search, I do believe.
But who could have thought of your being hidden away all the time
at San Nicolo! As for me, I have spent most of my time in a
gondola, going out and staring up at every house I passed, in hopes
of seeing a handkerchief waved from a casement. And so has
Francisco; he has been just as busy in the search as anyone, I can
assure you."</p>
<p>"Francisco is different," Maria said, not observing the signs
Francis was making for her to be silent. "Francisco has got eyes in
his head, and a brain in his skull, which is more, it seems, than
any of the Venetians have; and had he not brought father to our
hiding place, there we should have remained until Ruggiero Mocenigo
came and carried us away."</p>
<p>"Francisco brought your father the news!" Matteo exclaimed in
astonishment. "Why, was it he who found you out, after all?"</p>
<p>"Did you not know that, Matteo? Of course it was Francisco! As I
told you, he has got brains; and if it had not been for him, we
should certainly never have been rescued. Giulia and I owe him
everything--don't we, Giulia?"</p>
<p>"Forgive me for not telling you, Matteo," Francis said to his
astonished friend; "but Signor Polani, and my father, both
impressed upon me so strongly that I should keep silent as to my
share in the business, that I thought it better not even to mention
it to you at present. It was purely the result of an accident."</p>
<p>"It was nothing of the sort," Maria said. "It was the result of
your keeping your eyes open and knowing how to put two and two
together. I did not know, Francisco, that it was a secret. We have
not seen our father since we have returned, and I suppose he
thought we should see nobody until he saw us again, and so did not
tell us that we were not to mention your name in the affair; but we
will be careful in future."</p>
<p>"But how was it, Francisco?" Matteo asked. "Now I know so much
as this, I suppose I can be told the rest. I can understand well
enough why it was to be kept a secret, and why my cousin is anxious
to get you out of Venice at once."</p>
<p>Francis related the manner in which he first became acquainted
with the existence of the hut on the island, and the fact of its
being frequented by Ruggiero Mocenigo; and how, on catching sight
of the gouvernante in a gondola, and seeing her make out across the
lagoons, the idea struck him that the girls were confined in the
hut.</p>
<p>"It is all very simple, you see, Matteo," he concluded.</p>
<p>"I will never say anything against learning to row a gondola in
future," Matteo said, "for it seems to lead to all sorts of
adventures; and unless you could have rowed well, you would never
have got back to tell the story. But it is certain that it is a
good thing you are leaving Venice for a time, for Ruggiero's
friends may find out the share you had in it from some of my
cousin's servants. You may be sure that they will do their best to
discover how he came to be informed of the hiding place, and he is
quite right to send you off at once."</p>
<p>"What! are you going away, Francisco?" the two girls exclaimed
together.</p>
<p>"I am sailing tomorrow in one of your father's ships,
signoras."</p>
<p>"And you are not coming back again?" Maria exclaimed.</p>
<p>"I hope to have the pleasure of seeing you again before very
long, signora. I am entering your father's service for good, and
shall be backwards and forwards to Venice as the ship comes and
goes. My father is returning to England, and Signor Polani has most
kindly requested me to make my home with him whenever I am in
port."</p>
<p>"That is better," Maria said. "We should have a pretty quarrel
with papa if he had let you go away altogether, after what you have
done for us--</p>
<p>"Shouldn't we, Giulia?"</p>
<p>But Giulia had walked away to the window, and did not seem to
hear the question.</p>
<p>"That will be very pleasant," Maria went on; "for you will be
back every two or three months, and I shall take good care that
papa does not send the ship off in a hurry again. It will be almost
as good as having a brother; and I look upon you almost as a
brother now, Francisco--and a very good brother, too. I don't think
that man will molest us any more. If I thought there was any chance
of it, I should ask papa to keep you for a time, because I should
feel confident that you would manage to protect us somehow."</p>
<p>"I do not think there is the slightest chance of more trouble
from him," Francis said. "He is sure of a long term of imprisonment
for carrying you off."</p>
<p>"That is the least they can do to him, I should think," Maria
said indignantly. "I certainly shall not feel comfortable while he
is at large."</p>
<p>After half an hour's talk Francis and his friend took their
leave.</p>
<p>"You certainly were born with a silver spoon in your mouth,"
Matteo said as they took their seats in the gondola, "and my cousin
does well to get you out of Venice at once, for I can tell you
there are scores of young fellows who would feel jealous at your
position with my cousins."</p>
<p>"Nonsense!" Francis said, colouring. "How can you talk so
absurdly, Matteo? I am only a boy, and it will be years before I
could think of marriage. Besides, your cousins are said to be the
richest heiresses in Venice; and it is not because I have been able
to be of some slight service to them, that I should venture to
think of either of them in that way."</p>
<p>"We shall see," Matteo laughed. "Maria is a little too old for
you, I grant, but Giulia will do very well; and as you have already
come, as Maria says, to be looked upon by them as a brother and
protector, there is no saying as to how she may regard you in
another two or three years."</p>
<p>"The thing is absurd, Matteo," Francis said impatiently. "Do not
talk such nonsense any more."</p>
<p>Matteo lay back in his seat and whistled.</p>
<p>"I will say no more about it at present, Francisco," he said,
after a pause; "but I must own that I should be well content to
stand as high in the good graces of my pretty cousins as you
do."</p>
<p>The next morning Francis spent some time with his father talking
over future arrangements.</p>
<p>"I have no doubt that I shall see you sometimes, Francis; for
Polani will be sure to give you an opportunity of making a trip to
England, from time to time, in one of his ships trading thither.
Unless anything unexpected happens, your future appears assured.
Polani tells me he shall always regard you in the light of a son;
and I have no fear of your doing anything to cause him to forfeit
his good opinion of you. Do not be over adventurous, for even in a
merchant ship there are many perils to be met with. Pirates swarm
in the Mediterranean, in spite of the efforts of Venice to suppress
them; and when war is going on, both Venice and Genoa send out
numbers of ships whose doings savour strongly of piracy. Remember
that the first duty of the captain of a merchant ship is to save
his vessel and cargo, and that he should not think of fighting
unless he sees no other method of escape open to him.</p>
<p>"It is possible that, after a time, I may send one of your
brothers out here, but that will depend upon what I find of their
disposition when I get home; for it will be worse than useless to
send a lad of a headstrong disposition out to the care of one but a
few years older than himself. But this we can talk about when you
come over to England, and we see what position you are occupying
here.</p>
<p>"I fear that Venice is about to enter upon a period of great
difficulty and danger. There can be little doubt that Genoa, Padua,
and Hungary are leagued against her; and powerful as she is, and
great as are her resources, they will be taxed to the utmost to
carry her through the dangers that threaten her. However, I have
faith in her future, and believe that she will weather the storm,
as she has done many that have preceded it.</p>
<p>"Venice has the rare virtue of endurance--the greatest dangers,
the most disastrous defeats, fail to shake her courage, and only
arouse her to greater efforts. In this respect she is in the
greatest contrast to her rival, Genoa, who always loses heart the
moment the tide turns against her. No doubt this is due, in no
slight extent, to her oligarchic form of government. The people see
the nobles, who rule them, calm and self possessed, however great
the danger, and remain confident and tranquil; while in Genoa each
misfortune is the signal for a struggle between contending
factions. The occasion is seized to throw blame and contumely upon
those in power, and the people give way to alternate outbursts of
rage and depression.</p>
<p>"I do not say there are no faults in the government of Venice,
but taking her altogether there is no government in Europe to
compare with it. During the last three hundred years, the history
of every other city in Italy, I may say of every other nation in
Europe, is one long record of intestine struggle and bloodshed,
while in Venice there has not been a single popular tumult worthy
of the name. It is to the strength, the firmness, and the
moderation of her government that Venice owes her advancement, the
respect in which she is held among nations, as much as to the
commercial industry of her people.</p>
<p>"She alone among nations could for years have withstood the
interdict of the pope, or the misfortunes that have sometimes
befallen her. She alone has never felt the foot of the invader, or
bent her neck beneath a foreign yoke to preserve her existence.
Here, save only in matters of government, all opinions are free,
strangers of all nationalities are welcome. It is a grand city and
a grand people, Francis, and though I shall be glad to return to
England I cannot but feel regret at leaving it.</p>
<p>"And now, my boy, it is time to be going off to your ship.
Polani said she would sail at ten o'clock. It is now nine, and it
will take you half an hour to get there. I am glad to hear that
Giuseppi is going with you. The lad is faithful and attached to
you, and may be of service. Your trunk has already been sent on
board, so let us be going."</p>
<p>On arriving at the ship, which was lying in the port of
Malamocco, they found that she was just ready for sailing. The last
bales of goods were being hoisted on board, and the sailors were
preparing to loosen the sails.</p>
<p>The Bonito was a large vessel, built for stowage rather than
speed. She carried two masts with large square sails, and before
the wind would probably proceed at a fair rate; but the art of
sailing close hauled was then unknown, and in the event of the wind
being unfavourable she would be forced either to anchor or to
depend upon her oars, of which she rowed fifteen on either side. As
they mounted on to the deck they were greeted by Polani
himself.</p>
<p>"I have come off to see the last of your son, Messer Hammond,
and to make sure that my orders for his comfort have been carried
out.</p>
<p>"Captain Corpadio, this is the young gentleman of whom I have
spoken to you, and who is to be treated in all respects as if he
were my son. You will instruct him in all matters connected with
the navigation of the ship, as well as in the mercantile portion of
the business, the best methods of buying and selling, the prices of
goods, and the methods of payment.</p>
<p>"This is your cabin, Francisco."</p>
<p>He opened the door of a roomy cabin in the poop of the ship. It
was fitted up with every luxury.</p>
<p>"Thank you very much indeed, Signor Polani," Francis said. "The
only fault is that it is too comfortable. I would as lief have
roughed it as other aspirants have to do."</p>
<p>"There was no occasion, Francisco. When there is rough work to
be done, you will, I have no doubt, do it; but as you are going to
be a trader, and not a sailor, there is no occasion that you should
do so more than is necessary. You will learn to command a ship just
as well as if you began by dipping your hands in tar. And it is
well that you should learn to do this, for unless a man can sail a
vessel himself, he is not well qualified to judge of the merits of
men he appoints to be captains; but you must remember that you are
going as a representative of my house, and must, therefore, travel
in accordance with that condition.</p>
<p>"You will be sorry to hear that bad news has just been received
from the mainland. The state galley sent to fetch Ruggiero Mocenigo
has arrived with the news that, on the previous night, a strong
party of men who are believed to have come from Padua, fell upon
the guard and carried off Ruggiero. My sailors came up and fought
stoutly, but they were overpowered, and several of them were
killed; so Ruggiero is again at large.</p>
<p>"This is a great disappointment to me. Though the villain is not
likely to show his face in the Venetian territory again, I shall be
anxious until Maria is safely married, and shall lose no time in
choosing a husband for her. Unless I am mistaken, her liking is
turned in the direction of Rufino, brother of your friend Matteo
Giustiniani, and as I like none better among the suitors for her
hand, methinks that by the time you return you will find that they
are betrothed.</p>
<p>"And now I hear the sailors are heaving the anchor, and
therefore, Messer Hammond, it is time we took to our boats."</p>
<p>There was a parting embrace between Francis and his father. Then
the merchants descended into their gondolas, and lay waiting
alongside until the anchor was up, the great sails shaken out, and
the Bonito began to move slowly through the water towards the
entrance of the port. Then, with a final wave of the hand, the
gondolas rowed off and Francis turned to look at his surroundings.
The first object that met his eye was Giuseppi, who was standing
near him waving his cap to his father.</p>
<p>"Well, Giuseppi, what do you think of this?"</p>
<p>"I don't know what to think yet, Messer Francisco. It all seems
so big and solid one does not feel as if one was on the water. It's
more like living in a house. It does not seem as if anything could
move her."</p>
<p>"You will find the waves can move her about when we get fairly
to sea, Giuseppi, and the time will come when you will think our
fast gondola was a steady craft in comparison. How long have you
been on board?"</p>
<p>"I came off three hours ago, signor, with the boat that brought
the furniture for your cabin. I have been putting that to rights
since. A supply of the best wine has been sent off, and extra
stores of all sorts, so you need not be afraid of being starved on
the voyage."</p>
<p>"I wish he hadn't sent so much," Francis said. "It makes one
feel like a milksop. Whose cabin is it I have got?"</p>
<p>"I believe that it is the cabin usually used by the supercargo,
who is in charge of the goods and does the trading, but the men say
the captain of this ship has been a great many years in Polani's
employment, and often sails without a supercargo, being able to
manage the trading perfectly well by himself. But the usual cabin
is only half the size of yours, and two have been thrown into one
to make it light and airy."</p>
<p>"And where do you sleep, Giuseppi?"</p>
<p>"I am going to sleep in the passage outside your door, Messer
Francisco."</p>
<p>"Oh, but I sha'n't like that!" Francis said. "You ought to have
a better place than that."</p>
<p>Giuseppi laughed.</p>
<p>"Why, Messer Francisco, considering that half my time I slept in
the gondola, and the other half on some straw in our kitchen, I
shall do capitally. Of course I could sleep in the fo'castle with
the crew if I liked, but I should find it hot and stifling there. I
chose the place myself, and asked the captain if I could sleep
there, and he has given me leave."</p>
<p>In an hour the Bonito had passed through the Malamocco Channel,
and was out on the broad sea. The wind was very light, and but just
sufficient to keep the great sails bellied out. The sailors were
all at work, coiling down ropes, washing the decks, and making
everything clean and tidy.</p>
<p>"This is a good start, Messer Hammond," the captain said, coming
up to him. "If this wind holds, we shall be able to make our course
round the southern point of Greece, and then on to Candia, which is
our first port. I always like a light breeze when I first go out of
port, it gives time for everyone to get at home and have things
shipshape before we begin to get lively."</p>
<p>"She does not look as if she would ever get lively," Francis
said, looking at the heavy vessel.</p>
<p>"She is lively enough in a storm, I can tell you," the captain
said, laughing. "When she once begins to roll she does it in
earnest, but she is a fine sea boat, and I have no fear of gales. I
wish I could say as much of pirates. However, she has always been
fortunate, and as we carry a stout crew she could give a good
account of herself against any of the small piratical vessels that
swarm among the islands, although, of course, if she fell in with
two or three of them together it would be awkward."</p>
<p>"How many men do you carry altogether, captain?"</p>
<p>"Just seventy. You see she rows thirty oars, and in case of need
we put two men to each oar, and though she doesn't look fast she
can get along at a fine rate when the oars are double banked. We
have shown them our heels many a time. Our orders are strict. We
are never to fight if we can get away by running."</p>
<p>"But I suppose you have to fight sometimes?" Francis asked.</p>
<p>"Yes, I have been in some tough fights several times, though not
in the Bonito, which was only built last year. Once in the Lion we
were attacked by three pirates. We were at anchor in a bay, and the
wind was blowing on the shore, when they suddenly came round the
headland, so there was no chance of running, and we had to fight it
out. We fought for five hours before they sheered off, pretty well
crippled, and one of them in flames, for we carried Greek fire.</p>
<p>"Three or four times they nearly got a footing on deck, but we
managed to beat them off somehow. We lost a third of our crew. I
don't think there was a man escaped without a wound. I was laid up
for three months, after I got home, with a slash on the shoulder,
which pretty nigh took off my left arm. However, we saved the ship
and the cargo, which was a valuable one, and Messer Polani saw that
no one was the worse for his share in the business. There's no more
liberal-hearted man in the trade than he is, and whatever may be
the scarcity of hands in the port, there is never any difficulty in
getting a good crew together for his vessels.</p>
<p>"Of course there are the roughs with the smooths. Some years ago
I was in prison for six months, with all my crew, in Azoff. It was
the work of those rascally Genoese, who are always doing us a bad
turn when they have the chance, even when we are at peace with
them. They set the mind of the native khan--that is the prince of
the country--against us by some lying stories that we had been
engaged in smuggling goods in at another port. And suddenly, in the
middle of the night, in marched his soldiers on board my ship, and
two other Venetian craft lying in the harbour, and took possession
of them, and shut us all up in prison. There we were till Messer
Polani got news, and sent out another ship to pay the fine
demanded. That was no joke, I can tell you, for the prison was so
hot and crowded, and the food so bad, that we got fever, and pretty
near half of us died before our ransom came. Then at Constantinople
the Genoese stirred the people up against us once or twice, and all
the sailors ashore had to fight for their lives. Those Genoese are
always doing us mischief."</p>
<p>"But I suppose you do them mischief sometimes, captain. I
imagine it isn't all one side."</p>
<p>"Of course, we pay them out when we get a chance," the captain
replied. "It isn't likely we are going to stand being always put
upon, and not take our chance when it comes. We only want fair
trade and no favour, while those rascals want it all to themselves.
They know they have no chance with us when it comes to fair
trading."</p>
<p>"You know, captain, that the Genoese say just the same things
about the Venetians, that the Venetians do about them. So I expect
that there are faults on both sides."</p>
<p>The captain laughed.</p>
<p>"I suppose each want to have matters their own way, Messer
Hammond, but I don't consider the Genoese have any right to come
interfering with us, to the eastward of Italy. They have got France
and Spain to trade with, and all the western parts of Italy. Why
don't they keep there? Besides, I look upon them as landsmen. Why,
we can always lick them at sea in a fair fight."</p>
<p>"Generally, captain. I admit you generally thrash them. Still,
you know they have sometimes got the better of you, even when the
force was equal."</p>
<p>The captain grunted. He could not deny the fact.</p>
<p>"Sometimes our captains don't do their duty," he said. "They put
a lot of young patricians in command of the galleys, men that don't
know one end of a ship from the other, and then, of course, we get
the worst of it. But I maintain that, properly fought, a Venetian
ship is always more than a match for a Genoese."</p>
<p>"I think she generally is, captain, and I hope it will always
prove so in the future. You see, though I am English, I have lived
long enough in Venice to feel like a Venetian."</p>
<p>"I have never been to England," the captain said, "though a good
many Venetian ships go there every year. They tell me it's an
island, like Venice, only a deal bigger than any we have got in the
Mediterranean. Those who have been there say the sea is mighty
stormy, and that, sailing up from Spain, you get tremendous
tempests sometimes, with the waves ever so much bigger than we have
here, and longer and more regular, but not so trying to the ships
as the short sharp gales of these seas."</p>
<p>"I believe that is so, captain, though I don't know anything
about it myself. It is some years since I came out, and our voyage
was a very calm one."</p>
<p>Three days of quiet sailing, and the Bonito rounded the
headlands of the Morea, and shaped her course to Candia. The voyage
was a very pleasant one to Francis. Each day the captain brought
out the list of cargo, and instructed him in the prices of each
description of goods, told him of the various descriptions of
merchandise which they would be likely to purchase at the different
ports at which they were to touch, and the prices which they would
probably have to pay for them. A certain time, too, was devoted
each day to the examination of the charts of the various ports and
islands, the captain pointing out the marks which were to be
observed on entering and leaving the harbours, the best places for
anchorage, and the points where shelter could be obtained should
high winds come on.</p>
<p>After losing sight of the Morea the weather changed, clouds
banked up rapidly in the southwest, and the captain ordered the
great sails to be furled.</p>
<p>"We are going to have a serious gale," he said to Francis,
"which is unusual at this period of the year. I have thought, for
the last two days, we were going to have a change, but I hoped to
have reached Candia before the gale burst upon us. I fear that this
will drive us off our course."</p>
<p>By evening it was blowing hard, and the sea got up rapidly. The
ship speedily justified the remarks of the captain on her power of
rolling, and the oars, at which the men had been labouring since
the sails were furled, were laid in.</p>
<p>"It is impossible to keep our course," the captain said, "and we
must run up among the islands, and anchor under the lee of one of
them. I should recommend you to get into your bed as soon as
possible. You have not learned to keep your legs in a storm. I see
that lad of yours is very ill already, but as you show no signs of
suffering thus far, you will probably escape."</p>
<p>It was some time, however, before Francis went below. The scene
was novel to him, and he was astonished at the sight of the waves,
and at the manner in which they tossed the great ship about, as if
she were an eggshell. But when it became quite dark, and he could
see nothing but the white crests of the waves and the foam that
flew high in the air every time the bluff bows of the ship plunged
down into a hollow, he took the captain's advice and retired to his
cabin.</p>
<p>He was on deck again early. A gray mist overhung the water. The
sea was of a leaden colour, crested with white heads. The waves
were far higher than they had been on the previous evening, and as
they came racing along behind the Bonito each crest seemed as if it
would rise over her stern and overwhelm her. But this apprehension
was soon dispelled, as he saw how lightly the vessel rose each
time. Although showing but a very small breadth of sail, she was
running along at a great rate, leaving a white streak of foam
behind her. The captain was standing near the helm, and Francis
made his way to him.</p>
<p>"Well, captain, and how are you getting on, and where are we?"
he asked, cheerfully.</p>
<p>"We are getting on well enough, Messer Francisco, as you can see
for yourself. The Bonito is as good a sea boat as ever floated, and
would not care for the wind were it twice as strong as it is. It is
not the storm I am thinking about, but the islands. If we were down
in the Mediterranean I could turn into my cot and sleep soundly;
but here it is another matter. We are somewhere up among the
islands, but where, no man can say. The wind has shifted a bit two
or three times during the night, and, as we are obliged to run
straight before it, there is no calculating to within a few miles
where we are. I have tried to edge out to the westward as much as I
could, but with this wind blowing and the height of the ship out of
water, we sag away to leeward so fast that nothing is gained by
it.</p>
<p>"According to my calculation, we cannot be very far from the
west coast of Mitylene. If the clouds would but lift, and give us a
look round for two minutes, we should know all about it, as I know
the outline of every island in the Aegean; and as over on this side
you are always in sight of two or three of them, I should know all
about it if I could get a view of the land. Now, for aught we know,
we may be running straight down upon some rocky coast."</p>
<p>The idea was not a pleasant one, and Francis strained his eyes,
gazing through the mist.</p>
<p>"What should we do if we saw land, captain?" he asked
presently.</p>
<p>"Get out the oars, row her head round, and try to work either to
the right or left, whichever point of land seemed easiest to
weather. Of course, if it was the mainland we were being driven on
there would be no use, and we should try and row into the teeth of
the gale, so as to keep her off land as long as possible, in the
hope of the wind dropping. When we got into shallow water we should
drop our anchors, and still keep on rowing to lessen the strain
upon them. If they gave, there would be an end to the Bonito. But
if, as I think, we are driving towards Mitylene, there is a safe
harbour on this side of the island, and I shall certainly run into
it. It is well sheltered and landlocked."</p>
<p>Two more hours passed, and then there was a startling
transformation. The clouds broke suddenly and cleared off, as if by
magic, and the sun streamed brightly out. The wind was blowing as
strong as ever, but the change in the hue of sky and sea would at
once have raised the spirits of the tired crew, had not a long line
of land been seen stretching ahead of them at a distance of four or
five miles.</p>
<p>"Just as I thought," the captain exclaimed as he saw it. "That
is Mitylene, sure enough, and the entrance to the harbour I spoke
of lies away there on that beam."</p>
<p>The oars were at once got out, the sail braced up a little, and
the Bonito made for the point indicated by the captain, who himself
took the helm.</p>
<p>Another half hour and they were close to land. Francis could see
no sign of a port, but in a few minutes the Bonito rounded the end
of a low island, and a passage opened before her. She passed
through this and found herself in still water, in a harbour large
enough to hold the fleet of Venice. The anchor was speedily let
drop.</p>
<p>"It seems almost bewildering," Francis said, "the hush and quiet
here after the turmoil of the storm outside. To whom does Mitylene
belong?"</p>
<p>"The Genoese have a trading station and a castle at the other
side of the island, but it belongs to Constantinople. The other
side of the island is rich and fertile, but this, as you see, is
mountainous and barren. The people have not a very good reputation,
and if we had been wrecked we should have been plundered, if not
murdered.</p>
<p>"You see those two vessels lying close to the shore, near the
village? They are pirates when they get a chance, you may be quite
sure. In fact, these islands swarm with them. Venice does all she
can to keep them down, but the Genoese, and the Hungarians, and the
rest of them, keep her so busy that she has no time to take the
matter properly in hand, and make a clean sweep of them."</p>
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