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"Send him back with a flea in his ear. No room for no Frenchies here."
"I hope they won't come," said Syd, half to himself.
"Now, now, now, sir; no yarns to an old sailor," said the boatswain, chuckling. "I can believe a deal, but I can't believe that."
"Don't talk nonsense, Strake. Look here, is there anything else to be done?"
"Well, sir, it seems to me, going over it all as I have been, that you've been thinking that we've got our prog here, and some water, and not enough of it till the frigate comes back, so that you might put the lads on 'lowance so as to make sure."
"Ah, I had not thought of that."
"Beggin' your pardon, sir, you had, only it hadn't come up yet. That there was a thing to be thought on by a commanding orficer, and course you thought on it, on'y talking to me promiskus like you forgetted it.
Then there's another thing. The skipper never thought 'bout going far away from here, I s'pose, and there's precious little wood, so I'll tell the cook he's to let it off easy, if so be as you says I am."
"Yes, of course, Strake. Tell him."
"Ay, ay, sir. We may have the luck to get some drift timber chucked up among the rocks; but if we do it'll want a deal o' drying 'fore it's good to burn."
"No, we must not reckon on that."
"Arter seeing to these two or three little things 'cordin' to your orders, sir, I should say that you've got as snug a little fort to hold as any one could wish, and all you'll want then is a sight o' the enemy to make you quite happy."
The boatswain ceased speaking, and Syd stood laughing to himself, but treasuring up what had been said, as the wind swept overhead, and the waves kept on thundering in over the natural pier; though strangely enough the noise of the waves at this end of the gap also pa.s.sed right up and away, so that it was possible to talk in a low tone, and hear the slightest sound anywhere near.
They had been standing like this for some time when Syd suddenly laid his hand on the boatswain's arm.
"What's that?" he said, in a low whisper.
"Dunno, sir," whispered back the boatswain. "Trying to make out. I heard it twyste afore. What did it sound like to you?"
"One stone striking against another."
"That's it, sir, exact. Don't say any more here. It'll only scare yon chap. Sailors is easily frightened 'bout what they don't understand."
They stood listening for some few minutes, but there was no farther sound, so they bade the man on guard keep a sharp look-out, though for what Syd could not have said, and turned to go up to the tent and see if Mr Dallas was awake.
As they approached the place where the fire had been, a faint waft of the wind pa.s.sed down the gap, and as it swept over the embers they brightened up, and shed sufficient light for Syd to see something creeping softly by the spot.
Syd caught the boatswain's arm, and a gentle tap from the rough fellow's hand seemed to express that he knew, and had noticed. This was so evidently the object that had twice before been seen, that now was the time to convince themselves whether it was human, or some quadruped dwelling on the rock.
"If I whisper," thought Syd, "it will take alarm, I know."
He caught the boatswain's arm again and tried to draw him away back into the darkness. For the moment Strake resisted, then he gave way and allowed himself to be drawn toward the man on guard.
"Now we shall lose him, sir," said the boatswain in a gruff whisper.
"I'd got my eye on him, and was just a-going to give a pounce when you stopped it."
"Yes; but look here, Strake," whispered Syd. "Each time it has been seen it came up this way from somewhere close to the gun. If we stop here we shall trap it."
"But will it come back by here?"
"Yes, I feel sure. It goes up there to prowl about and get food, and then it comes back to hide somewhere here in these cracks among the rocks."
"Werry good, sir; I dare say you knows best. What shall I do--shoot it, or give it a chop with the cutlash?"
"No; it may be a man--and we don't want to shed blood."
"Right, sir. Then we watches here?"
"Yes," said Syd, taking his place behind a block of stone, though it was so dark there was hardly need to hide. Strake followed his example, and they crouched down, with their ears on the strain, satisfied now that the clicking sound of stones striking together was made by this creature, whatever it was.
"You must be on your guard, sir," whispered Strake. "Whatever it is, it'll be sure to scratch or bite. But so sure as you make a grab I shall be there, and he won't kick much with me atop of him. Hist!"
Syd listened, but there was no sound, and he waited so long that he was going to speak to the boatswain and say, "We'll give up now," when a curious crunching noise fell upon his ear, and the next moment something dark was evidently trotting by them, looking in the darkness like a great dog.
With one bound the young mids.h.i.+pman was at it, but it eluded his grasp, and ran right at Strake, who was the next moment down on his face.
"Stand, or I fire!" came from a short distance away.
"No, no. Avast there; it's the captain--I mean Mr Belton and me, my lad," growled Strake, getting up. "See that, Mr Belton, sir; I'd just got it when it went right through my legs, and I was down. Which way did it go?"
"Don't know. I did not even feel it."
"It's a big monkey, sir, or else--I know, sir, it's one o' they small bears, and that was biscuit he was chawing. We'd better shoot him.
They bites as well as scratches and hugs, besides being very good eating, so they say."
"Well, it's of no use to try to catch it now. Better hunt it from its hole by daylight. Isn't it time Rogers was relieved?"
"Gettin' nigh, sir; on'y it's all on the guess.--Look here, sir, I know; we'll smoke the beggar out."
"A capital way," said Syd; "only we've first got to find the hole."
CHAPTER TWENTY NINE.
The sea was terrific when Sydney took his first look-out next morning, after a good restful sleep, and he felt terribly low-spirited, for he was experienced enough to see that Mr Dallas was in a very low and dangerous state. He was feverish, and lay wild-eyed and strange, evidently recognising no one, but talking in a low, muttering way.
"It's too much to be on my shoulders," Syd said to himself, despondently, as he took off his hat, and stood letting the cool morning air fan his forehead. "Mr Dallas wanting a surgeon, Terry setting me at defiance, the men half mutinous, and the whole charge of everything on my shoulders."
One of his remarks was hardly fair, for the men greeted him with a smile and a cheery aspect every time he went near them, and after their breakfast worked most energetically to make the improvements suggested overnight, so that about sundown Strake smiled in his grim way, and touched his hat.
"There, sir," he said; "the captain may come back and land now if he likes. I shouldn't be ashamed to show him round."
"No, Strake; everything is beautifully neat."
"Yes, sir; decks cleared for action. We're ready for anybody now."