Meanwhile the men set to work methodically but very quietly to remove the wedges that held the battens of the hatches, getting ready to haul up the cargo.
Their leader took several turns up and down the deck before he seemed able to make up his mind to the interview: then lowered himself into Marpole’s cabin, followed by his mate.
This mate was a small man: very fair, and intelligent-looking beside his chief. He was almost dapper, in a quiet way, in his dress.
They found Captain Marpole even now only half awake: and the stranger stood for a moment in silence, nervously twiddling his cap in his hands. When he spoke at last, it was with a soft German accent:
“Excuse me,” he began, “but would you have the goodness to lend me a few stores?”
Captain Marpole stared in astonishment, first at him and then at the much be-painted faces of the “ladies” pressed against his cabin skylight.
“Who the devil are you?” he contrived to ask at last.
“I hold a commission in the Columbian navy,” the stranger explained: “and I am in need of a few stores.”
(Meanwhile his men had the hatches off, and were preparing to help themselves to everything in the ship.)
Marpole looked him up and down. It was barely conceivable that even the Columbian navy should have such a figure of an officer. Then his eye wandered back to the skylight:
“If you call yourself a man-of-war, sir, who in Heaven’s name are those?” As he pointed, the smirking faces hastily retreated.
The stranger blushed.
“They are rather difficult to explain,” he admitted ingenuously.
“If you had said Turkish navy, that would have been more reasonable-sounding!” said Marpole.
But the stranger did not seem to take the joke. He stood, silent, in a characteristic attitude: rocking himself from foot to foot, and rubbing his cheek on his shoulder.
Suddenly Marpole’s ear caught the muffled racketing forward. Almost at the same time a bump that shivered the whole barque told that the schooner had been laid alongside.
“What’s that?” he exclaimed. “Is there someone in my hold?”
“Stores …” mumbled the stranger.
Marpole up to now had lain growling in his bunk like a dog in its kennel. Now for the first time realising that something serious was afoot he flung himself out and made for the companionway. The little silent fair man tripped him up, and he fell against the table.
“You had much better stay here, yes?” said the big man. “My fellows shall keep a tally, you shall be paid in full for everything we take.”
The eyes of the marine coal-merchant gleamed momentarily:
“You’ll have to pay for this outrage to a pretty tune!” he growled.
“I will pay you,” said the stranger, with a sudden magnificence in his voice, “at the very least five thousand pounds!”
Marpole stared in astonishment.
“I will write you an order on the Columbian government for that amount,” the other went on.
Marpole thumped the table, almost speechless:
“D’you think I believe that cock-and-bull story?” he thundered.
Captain Jonsen made no protest.
“Do you realise that you are technically guilty of piracy, making a forced requisition on a British ship like this, even if you pay every farthing?”
Still Jonsen made no reply: though the bored expression of his mate was lit up for a moment by a smile.
“You’ll pay me in cash!” Marpole concluded. Then he went off on a fresh tack: “Though how the devil you got on board without being called beats me!—Where’s my mate?”
Jonsen began in a toneless voice, as if by rote: “I will write you an order for five thousand pounds: three thousand for the stores, and two thousand you will give me in money.”
“We know you’ve got specie on board,” interjected the little fair mate, speaking for the first time.
“Our information is certain!” declared Jonsen.
Marpole at last went white and began to sweat. It took even Fear an extraordinarily long time to penetrate his thick skull. But he denied that he had any treasure on board.
“Is that your answer?” said Jonsen. He drew a heavy pistol from his side pocket. “If you do not tell us the truth, your life shall pay the forfeit.” His voice was peculiarly gentle, and mechanical, as if he did not attach much meaning to what he said. “Do not expect mercy, for this is my profession, and in it I am inured to blood.”
A frightful squawking from the deck above told Marpole that his chickens were being moved to new quarters.
In an agony of feeling Marpole told him that he had a wife and children, who would be left destitute if his life was taken.
Jonsen, with rather a perplexed look on his face, put the gun back in his pocket, and the two of them began to search for themselves, at the same time stripping the saloon and cabins of everything they contained: firearms, wearing apparel, the bedclothes, and even (as Marpole with a rare touch of accuracy mentioned in his report) the bellpulls.
Overhead there was a continuous bumping: the rolling of casks, cases, etc.
“Remember,” Jonsen went on over his shoulder while he searched, “money cannot recall life, nor in the least avail you when you are dead. If you regard your life in the least, at once acquaint me with the hiding-place, and your life shall be safe.”
Marpole’s only reply was again to invoke the thought of his wife and children (he was, as a matter of fact, a widower: and his only relative, a niece, would be the better off by his death to the tune of some ten thousand pounds).
But this reiteration seemed to give the mate an idea: and he began to talk to his chief rapidly in a language Marpole had never even heard. For a moment a curious glint came into Jonsen’s eye: but soon he was chuckling in the
