<h3>THE MEETING</h3>
<p>The pirates returned to their vessel discomfited. Those on board, who
were prepared to hoist in ingots of precious metal, had to receive
nought but wounded men, and many of their comrades had remained dead on
the shore. Their captain was melancholy and downcast. Hawkhurst was
badly wounded, and obliged to be carried below as soon as he came on
board. The only capture which they had made was their former associate
Francisco, who, by the last words spoken by Hawkhurst as he was
supported to his cabin, was ordered to be put in irons. The boats were
hoisted in without noise, and a general gloom prevailed. All sail was
then made upon the schooner, and when day dawned she was seen by the
Spaniards far away to the northward.</p>
<p>The report was soon spread through the schooner that Francisco had been
the cause of their defeat; and although this was only a surmise, still,
as they considered that had he not recognised the vessel the Spaniards
would not have been prepared, they had good grounds for what had swelled
into an assertion. He became, therefore, to many of them, an object of
bitter enmity, and they looked forward with pleasure to his destruction,
which his present confinement they considered but the precursor of.</p>
<p>'Hist! Massa Francisco,' said a low voice near to where Francisco sat on
the chest. Francisco turned round and beheld the Krouman, his old
friend.</p>
<p>'Ah! Pompey, are you all still on board?' said Francisco.</p>
<p>'All! no,' replied the man, shaking his head; 'some die—some get
away—only four Kroumen left. Massa Francisco,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</SPAN></span> how you come back again?
Everybody tink you dead. I say no, not dead—ab charm with him—ab
book.'</p>
<p>'If that was my charm, I have it still,' replied Francisco, taking the
Bible out of his vest; for, strange to say, Francisco himself had a kind
of superstition relative to that Bible, and had put it into his bosom
previous to the attack made by the pirates.</p>
<p>'Dat very good, Massa Francisco; den you quite safe. Here come
Johnson—he very bad man. I go away.'</p>
<p>In the meantime Cain had retired to his cabin with feelings scarcely to
be analysed. He was in a bewilderment. Notwithstanding the wound he had
received by the hand of Francisco, he would never have sanctioned
Hawkhurst putting him on shore on a spot which promised nothing but a
lingering and miserable death. Irritated as he had been by the young
man's open defiance, he loved him—loved him much more than he was aware
of himself; and when he had recovered sufficiently from his wound, and
had been informed where Francisco had been sent on shore, he quarrelled
with Hawkhurst, and reproached him bitterly and sternly, in language
which Hawkhurst never forgot or forgave. The vision of the starving lad
haunted Cain, and rendered him miserable. His affection for him, now
that he was, as he supposed, lost for ever, increased with tenfold
force; and since that period Cain had never been seen to smile. He
became more gloomy, more ferocious than ever, and the men trembled when
he appeared on deck.</p>
<p>The apparition of Francisco after so long an interval, and in such an
unexpected quarter of the globe, acted as we have before described upon
Cain. When he was taken to the boat he was still confused in his ideas,
and it was not until they were nearly on board that he perceived that
this young man was indeed at his side. He could have fallen on his neck
and kissed him; for Francisco had become to him a capture more prized
than all the wealth of the Indies. But one pure, good feeling was
unextinguished in the bosom of Cain; stained with every crime—with his
hands so deeply imbrued in blood—at enmity with all the rest of the
world, that one feeling burnt bright and clear, and was not to be
quenched. It might have proved a beacon-light to steer him back to
repentance and to good works.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>But there were other feelings which also crowded upon the mind of the
pirate captain. He knew Francisco's firmness and decision. By some
inscrutable means, which Cain considered as supernatural, Francisco had
obtained the knowledge, and had accused him, of his mother's death.
Would not the affection which he felt for the young man be met with
hatred and defiance? He was but too sure that it would. And then his
gloomy, cruel disposition would resume its influence, and he thought of
revenging the attack upon his life. His astonishment at the reappearance
of Francisco was equally great, and he trembled at the sight of him, as
if he were his accusing and condemning spirit. Thus did he wander from
one fearful fancy to another, until he at last summoned up resolution to
send for him.</p>
<p>A morose, dark man, whom Francisco had not seen when he was before in
the schooner, obeyed the commands of the captain. The irons were
unlocked, and Francisco was brought down into the cabin. The captain
rose and shut the door.</p>
<p>'I little thought to see you here, Francisco,' said Cain.</p>
<p>'Probably not,' replied Francisco boldly, 'but you have me again in your
power, and may now wreak your vengeance.'</p>
<p>'I feel none, Francisco; nor would I have suffered you to have been put
on shore as you were, had I known of it. Even now that our expedition
has failed through your means, I feel no anger towards you, although I
shall have some difficulty in preserving you from the enmity of others.
Indeed, Francisco, I am glad to find that you are alive, and I have
bitterly mourned your loss;' and Cain extended his hand.</p>
<p>But Francisco folded his arms, and was silent.</p>
<p>'Are you then so unforgiving?' said the captain. 'You know that I tell
the truth.'</p>
<p>'I believe that you state the truth, Captain Cain, for you are too bold
to lie; and, as far as I am concerned, you have all the forgiveness you
may wish: but I cannot take that hand; nor are our accounts yet
settled.'</p>
<p>'What would you more? Cannot we be friends again? I do not ask you to
remain on board. You are free to go where you please. Come, Francisco,
take my hand, and let us forget what is past.'</p>
<p>'The hand that is imbrued with my mother's blood, perhaps!' exclaimed
Francisco. 'Never!'<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>'Not so, by G—d!' exclaimed Cain. 'No, no; not quite so bad as that. In
my mood I struck your mother; I grant it. I did not intend to injure
her, but I did, and she died. I will not lie—that is the fact. And it
is also the fact that I wept over her, Francisco; for I loved her as I
do you.' ('It was a hasty, bitter blow, that,' continued Cain,
soliloquising, with his hand to his forehead, and unconscious of
Francisco's presence at the moment. 'It made me what I am, for it made
me reckless.') 'Francisco,' said Cain, raising his head, 'I was bad, but
I was no pirate when your mother lived. There is a curse upon me; that
which I love most I treat the worst. Of all the world, I loved your
mother most; yet did she from me receive much injury, and at last I
caused her death. Next to your mother, whose memory I at once revere and
love, and tremble when I think of (and each night does she appear to
me), I have loved you, Francisco, for you, like her, have an angel's
feelings; yet have I treated you as ill. You thwarted me, and you were
right. Had you been wrong, I had not cared; but you were right, and it
maddened me. Your appeals by day—your mother's in my dreams——'</p>
<p>Francisco's heart was softened; if not repentance, there was at least
contrition. 'Indeed I pity you,' replied Francisco.</p>
<p>'You must do more, Francisco; you must be friends with me,' said Cain,
again extending his hand.</p>
<p>'I cannot take that hand, it is too deeply dyed in blood,' replied
Francisco.</p>
<p>'Well, well, so would have said your mother. But hear me, Francisco,'
said Cain, lowering his voice to a whisper, lest he should be overheard;
'I am tired of this life—perhaps sorry for what I have done—I wish to
leave it—have wealth in plenty concealed where others know not. Tell
me, Francisco, shall we both quit this vessel, and live together happily
and without doing wrong? You shall share all, Francisco. Say, now, does
that please you?'</p>
<p>'Yes; it pleases me to hear that you will abandon your lawless life,
Captain Cain: but share your wealth I cannot, for how has it been
gained?'</p>
<p>'It cannot be returned, Francisco; I will do good with it. I will
indeed, Francisco. I—will—repent;' and again the hand was extended.</p>
<p>Francisco hesitated.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>'I do, so help me God! I <i>do</i> repent, Francisco!' exclaimed the pirate
captain.</p>
<p>'And I, as a Christian, do forgive you all,' replied Francisco, taking
the still extended hand. 'May God forgive you too!'</p>
<p>'Amen!' replied the pirate solemnly, covering his face up in his hands.</p>
<p>In this position he remained some minutes, Francisco watching him in
silence. At last the face was uncovered, and, to the surprise of
Francisco, a tear was on the cheek of Cain, and his eyes suffused with
moisture. Francisco no longer waited for the hand to be extended; he
walked up to the captain, and taking him by the hand, pressed it warmly.</p>
<p>'God bless you, boy! God bless you!' said Cain; 'but leave me now.'</p>
<p>Francisco returned on deck with a light and grateful heart. His
countenance at once told those who were near him that he was not
condemned, and many who dared not before take notice of, now saluted
him. The man who had taken him out of irons looked round; he was a
creature of Hawkhurst, and he knew not how to act. Francisco observed
him, and, with a wave of the hand, ordered him below. That Francisco was
again in authority was instantly perceived, and the first proof of it
was, that the new second mate reported to him that there was a sail on
the weather bow.</p>
<p>Francisco took the glass to examine her. It was a large schooner under
all sail. Not wishing that any one should enter the cabin but himself,
he went down to the cabin door and knocked before he entered, and
reported the vessel.</p>
<p>'Thank you, Francisco; you must take Hawkhurst's duty for the
present—it shall not be for long; and fear not that I shall make
another capture. I swear to you I will not, Francisco. But this
schooner—I know very well what she is; she has been looking after us
some time; and a week ago, Francisco, I was anxious to meet her, that I
might shed more blood. Now I will do all I can to avoid her, and escape.
I can do no more, Francisco. I must not be taken.'</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</SPAN></span></p>
<p><br/></p>
<div class="figcenter border" style="width: 407px; height: 660px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i153.png" width-obs="407" height-obs="600" alt="" title="" />
<span class="caption"><i>'God bless you, boy! God bless you!' said Cain; 'but
leave me now.'</i></span></div>
<p><br/></p>
<p>'There I cannot blame you. To avoid her will be easy, I should think;
the <i>Avenger</i> outsails everything.'</p>
<p>'Except, I believe, the <i>Enterprise</i>, which is a sister vessel. By
heaven! it's a fair match,' continued Cain, his feelings of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</SPAN></span>
combativeness returning for a moment; 'and it will look like a craven to
refuse the fight: but fear not, Francisco—I have promised you, and I
shall keep my word.'</p>
<p>Cain went on deck, and surveyed the vessel through the glass.</p>
<p>'Yes, it must be her,' said he aloud, so as to be heard by the pirates;
'she has been sent out by the admiral on purpose, full of his best men.
What a pity we are so short-handed!'</p>
<p>'There's enough of us, sir,' observed the boatswain.</p>
<p>'Yes,' replied Cain, 'if there was anything but hard blows to be got;
but that is all, and I cannot spare more men. Ready about!' continued
he, walking aft.</p>
<p>The <i>Enterprise</i>, for she was the vessel in pursuit, was then about five
miles distant, steering for the <i>Avenger</i>, who was on a wind. As soon
as the <i>Avenger</i> tacked, the <i>Enterprise</i> took in her topmast
studding-sail, and hauled her wind. This brought the <i>Enterprise</i> well
on the weather-quarter of the <i>Avenger</i>, who now made all sail. The
pirates, who had had quite enough of fighting, and were not stimulated
by the presence of Hawkhurst, or the wishes of their captain, now showed
as much anxiety to avoid as they usually did to seek a combat.</p>
<p>At the first trial of sailing between the two schooners there was no
perceptible difference; for half an hour they both continued on a wind,
and when Edward Templemore examined his sextant a second time, he could
not perceive that he had gained upon the <i>Avenger</i> one cable's length.</p>
<p>'We will keep away half a point,' said Edward to his second in command.
'We can afford that, and still hold the weather-gage.'</p>
<p>The <i>Enterprise</i> was kept away, and increased her speed: they neared the
<i>Avenger</i> more than a quarter of a mile.</p>
<p>'They are nearing us,' observed Francisco; 'we must keep away a point.'</p>
<p>Away went the <i>Avenger</i>, and would have recovered her distance, but the
<i>Enterprise</i> was again steered more off the wind.</p>
<p>Thus did they continue altering their course until the studding-sails
below and aloft were set by both, and the position of the schooners was
changed; the <i>Enterprise</i> now<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</SPAN></span> being on the starboard instead of the
larboard quarter of the <i>Avenger</i>. The relative distance between the two
schooners was, however, nearly the same, that is, about three miles and
a half from each other; and there was every prospect of a long and weary
chase on the part of the <i>Enterprise</i>, who again kept away a point to
near the <i>Avenger</i>. Both vessels were now running to the eastward.</p>
<p>It was about an hour before dark that another sail hove in sight right
ahead of the <i>Avenger</i>, and was clearly made out to be a frigate. The
pirates were alarmed at this unfortunate circumstance, as there was
little doubt but that she would prove a British cruiser; and, if not,
they had equally reason to expect that she would assist in their
capture. She had evidently perceived the two schooners, and had made all
sail, tacking every quarter of an hour so as to keep her relative
position. The <i>Enterprise</i>, who had also made out the frigate, to
attract her attention, though not within range of the <i>Avenger</i>,
commenced firing with her long gun.</p>
<p>'This is rather awkward,' observed Cain.</p>
<p>'It will be dark in less than an hour,' observed Francisco; 'and that is
our only chance.'</p>
<p>Cain reflected a minute.</p>
<p>'Get the long gun ready, my lads! We will return her fire, Francisco,
and hoist American colours; that will puzzle the frigate, at all events,
and the night may do the rest.'</p>
<p>The long gun of the <i>Avenger</i> was ready.</p>
<p>'I would not fire the long gun,' observed Francisco; 'it will show our
force, and will give no reason for our attempt to escape. Now, if we
were to fire our broadside guns, the difference of report between them
and the one of large calibre fired by the other schooner would induce
them to think that we are an American vessel.'</p>
<p>'Very true,' replied Cain; 'and, as America is at peace with all the
world, that our antagonist is a pirate. Hold fast the long gun, there,
and unship the starboard ports. See that the ensign blows out clear.'</p>
<p>The <i>Avenger</i> commenced firing an occasional gun from her broadside, the
reports of which were hardly to be heard by those on board of the
frigate; while the long gun of the <i>Enterprise</i> reverberated along the
water, and its loud resonance was swept by the wind to the frigate to
leeward.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Such was the state of affairs when the sun sank down in the wave, and
darkness obscured the vessels from each other's sight, except with the
assistance of the night-telescopes.</p>
<p>'What do you propose to do, Captain Cain?' said Francisco.</p>
<p>'I have made up my mind to do a bold thing. I will run down to the
frigate, as if for shelter; tell him that the other vessel is a pirate,
and claim his protection. Leave me to escape afterwards; the moon will
not rise till nearly one o'clock.'</p>
<p>'That will be a bold ruse indeed; but suppose you are once under her
broadside, and she suspects you?'</p>
<p>'Then I will show her my heels. I should care nothing for her and her
broadside if the schooner was not here.'</p>
<p>In an hour after dark the <i>Avenger</i> was close to the frigate, having
steered directly for her. She shortened sail gradually, as if she had
few hands on board; and, keeping his men out of sight, Cain ran under
the stern of the frigate.</p>
<p>'Schooner ahoy! What schooner is that?'</p>
<p>'<i>Eliza</i> of Baltimore, from Carthagena,' replied Cain, rounding to under
the lee of the man-of-war, and then continuing: 'That vessel in chase is
a pirate. Shall I send a boat on board?'</p>
<p>'No; keep company with us.'</p>
<p>'Ay, ay, sir,' replied Cain.</p>
<p>'Hands about ship!' now resounded with the boatswain's whistle on board
of the frigate, and in a minute they were on the other tack. The
<i>Avenger</i> also tacked and kept close under the frigate's counter.</p>
<p>In the meantime Edward Templemore and those on board of the
<i>Enterprise</i>, who, by the course steered, had gradually neared them,
perceiving the motions of the two other vessels, were quite puzzled. At
one time they thought they had made a mistake, and that it was not the
pirate vessel; at another they surmised that the crew had mutinied and
surrendered to the frigate. Edward hauled his wind, and steered directly
for them, to ascertain what the real facts were. The captain of the
frigate, who had never lost sight of either vessel, was equally
astonished at the boldness of the supposed pirate.</p>
<p>'Surely the rascal does not intend to board us?' said he to the first
lieutenant.</p>
<p>'There is no saying, sir; you know what a character he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</SPAN></span> has; and some
say there are three hundred men on board, which is equal to our ship's
company. Or perhaps, sir, he will pass to windward of us, and give us a
broadside, and be off in the wind's eye again.'</p>
<p>'At all events we will have a broadside ready for him,' replied the
captain. 'Clear away the starboard guns, and take out the tompions. Pipe
starboard watch to quarters.'</p>
<p>The <i>Enterprise</i> closed with the frigate to windward, intending to run
round her stern and bring to on the same tack.</p>
<p>'He does not shorten sail yet, sir,' said the first lieutenant, as the
schooner appeared skimming along about a cable's length on their weather
bow.</p>
<p>'And she is full of men, sir,' said the master, looking at her through
the night-glass.</p>
<p>'Fire a gun at her!' said the captain.</p>
<p>Bang! The smoke cleared away, and the schooner's foretopsail, which she
was in the act of clewing up, lay over her side. The shot had struck the
foremast of the <i>Enterprise</i>, and cut it in two below the catharpings.
The <i>Enterprise</i> was, for the time, completely disabled.</p>
<p>'Schooner ahoy! What schooner is that?'</p>
<p>'His Majesty's schooner <i>Enterprise</i>.'</p>
<p>'Send a boat on board immediately.'</p>
<p>'Ay, ay, sir.'</p>
<p>'Turn the hands up! Shorten sail!'</p>
<p>The top-gallant and courses of the frigate were taken in, and the
mainsail hove to the mast.</p>
<p>'Signalman, whereabouts is that other schooner now?'</p>
<p>'The schooner, sir? On the quarter,' replied the signalman, who, with
everybody else on board, was so anxious about the <i>Enterprise</i> that they
had neglected to watch the motions of the supposed American. The man had
replied at random, and he now jumped upon the signal-chests abaft to
look for her. But she was not to be seen. Cain, who had watched all that
passed between the other two vessels, and had been prepared to slip off
at a moment's warning, as soon as the gun was fired at the other
schooner, had wore round and made all sail on a wind. The night-glass
discovered her half a mile astern; and the ruse was immediately
perceived. The frigate filled and made sail, leaving Edward to return on
board—for there was no time to stop for the boat—tacked, and gave
chase.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</SPAN></span> But the <i>Avenger</i> was soon in the wind's eye of her; and at
daylight was no longer to be seen.</p>
<p>In the meantime, Edward Templemore had followed the frigate as soon as
he could set sail on his vessel, indignant at his treatment, and vowing
that he would demand a court-martial. About noon the frigate rejoined
him, when matters were fully explained. Annoyed as they all felt at not
having captured the pirate, it was unanimously agreed, that by his
audacity and coolness he deserved to escape. It was found that the mast
of the <i>Enterprise</i> could be fished and scarfed, so as to enable her to
continue her cruise. The carpenters of the frigate were sent on board;
and in two days the injury was repaired, and Edward Templemore once more
went in pursuit of the <i>Avenger</i>.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>CHAPTER XV</h2>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />