“So far, well enough,” thought Archie, as he rowed ashore, glad to be off the schooner.
It was after dark when, by appointment, the lad met Josiah. Josiah had provided himself with a crowbar and a short length of line, which he said would be sure to come useful, for he had always found it so. Then the two set off for the jail together, and there arrived some time after the drums had warned all good people to be within doors.
“What’s that?” said Josiah of a sudden.
It was a hoarse, melancholy croak proceeding from the other side of the wall. The skipper’s cell had been changed, as Archie had hoped, and the skipper himself was doing his duty to the bitter end. The street was deserted. They acted quickly. Josiah gave Archie a leg. He threw his jacket over the broken glass and mounted the wall. Josiah made off at once; it was his duty to have the skiff in readiness. Archie dropped into the garden.
“Is that you, b’y?” whispered Skipper Bill.
Again Archie once more found it impossible to take the adventure seriously. He began to laugh. It was far too much like the romances he had read to be real. It was play, it seemed–just like a game of smugglers and pirates, played on a summer’s afternoon.
“Is it you, Archie?” the skipper whispered again.
Archie chuckled aloud.
“Is the wind in the west?” the skipper asked.
“Ay,” Archie replied; “and blowing a smart sailing breeze.”
“Haste, then, lad!” said the skipper. “’Tis time t’ be off for Ruddy Cove.”
The window was low. With his crowbar Archie wrenched a bar from its socket. It came with a great clatter. It made the boy’s blood run cold to hear the noise. He pried the second and it yielded. Down fell a block of stone with a crash. While he was feeling for a purchase on the third bar Skipper Bill caught his wrist.
“Hist, lad!”
It was a footfall in the corridor. Skipper Bill slipped into the darkness by the door–vanished like a shadow. Archie dropped to the ground. By what unhappy chance had Deschamps come upon this visitation? Could it have been the silence of Skipper Bill? Archie heard the cover of the grating drawn away from the peep-hole in the door.
“He’s gone!”
That was Deschamps’ voice. Doubtless he had observed that two bars were missing from the window. Archie heard the key slipped into the lock and the door creak on its hinges. All the time he knew that Skipper Bill was crouched in the shadow–poised for the spring. The boy no longer thought of the predicament as a game. Nor was he inclined to laugh again. This was the ugly reality once more come to face him. There would be a fight in the cell. This he knew. And he waited in terror of the issue.
There was a quick step–a crash–a quick-drawn breath–the noise of a shock–a cry–a groan. Skipper Bill had kicked the door to and leaped upon the jailer. Archie pried the third bar out and broke the fourth with a blow. Then he squirmed through the window. Even in that dim light–half the night light without–he could see that the struggle was over. Skipper Bill had Deschamps by the throat with his great right hand. He had the jailer’s waist in his left arm as in a vise, and was forcing his head back–back–back–until Archie thought the Frenchman’s spine would crack.
“Don’t kill him!” Archie cried.
Skipper Bill had no intention of doing so; nor had Deschamps, the wrestler, any idea of allowing his back to be broken.
“Don’t kill him!” Archie begged again.
Deschamps was tugging at that right arm of iron–weakly, vainly tugging to wrench it away from his throat. His eyes were starting from their sockets, and his tongue protruded. Back went the head–back–back! The arm was pitiless. Back–back! He was fordone. In a moment his strength departed and he collapsed. He had not had time to call for help, so quick had been Bill’s hand. They bound his limp body with the length of line Josiah had brought, and they had no sooner bound him than he revived.
“You are a great man, monsieur,” he mumbled. “You have vanquished me–Deschamps! You will be famous–famous, monsieur. I shall send my resignation to His Excellency the Governor to-morrow. Deschamps–he is vanquished!”
“What’s he talkin’ about?” the skipper panted.
“You have beaten him.”
“Let’s be off, b’y,” the skipper gasped.
They locked the door on the inside, clambered through the window and scaled the wall. They sped through the deserted streets with all haste. They came to the landing-place and found the skiff tugging at her painter with her sails all unfurled. Presently they were under way for the Heavenly Home, and, having come safely aboard, hauled up the mainsail, set the jib and were about to slip the anchor. Then they heard the clang, clang, clang of a bell–a warning clang, clang, clang, which could mean but one thing: discovery.
“Fetch up that Frenchman,” the skipper roared.
The watchman was loosed and brought on deck.
“Put un in his dory and cast off,” the skipper ordered.
This done the anchor was slipped and the sheets hauled taut. The rest of the canvas was shaken out and the Heavenly Home gathered way and fairly flew for the open sea.
If there was pursuit it did not come within sight. The old schooner came safely to Ruddy Cove, where Bill o’ Burnt Bay, Josiah Cove and Archie Armstrong lived for a time in sickening fear of discovery and arrest. But nothing was ever heard from Saint Pierre. The Heavenly Home had been unlawfully seized by the French; perhaps that is why the Ruddy Cove pirates heard no more of the Miquelon escapade. There was hardly good ground in the circumstances for complaint to the Newfoundland government. At any rate, Archie wrote a full and true statement of the adventure to his father in St. John’s; and his father replied that his letter had been received and “contents noted.”
There was no chiding; and Archie breathed easier after he had read the letter.
CHAPTER XX
In Which David Grey’s Friend, the Son of the Factor at Fort Red Wing, Yarns of the Professor With the Broken Leg, a Stretch of Rotten River Ice and the Tug of a White Rushing Current
One quiet evening, after sunset, in the early summer, when the folk of Ruddy Cove were passing time in gossip on the wharf, while they awaited the coming of the mail-boat, old David Grey, who had told the tale of McLeod and the tomahawks, called to Billy Topsail and his friends. A bronzed, pleasant-appearing man, David’s friend, shook hands with the boys with the grip of a woodsman. Presently he drifted into a tale of his own boyhood at Fort Red Wing in the wilderness far back of Quebec. “You see,” said he, “my father had never fallen into the habit of coddling me. So when the lost Hudson Bay Geological Expedition made Fort Red Wing in the spring–every man exhausted, except the young professor, who had broken a leg a month back, and had set it with his own hands–it was the most natural thing in the world that my father should command me to take the news to Little Lake, whence it might be carried, from post to post, all the way to the department at Ottawa.
“‘And send the company doctor up,’ said he. ‘The little professor’s leg is in a bad way, if I know anything about doctoring. So you’ll make what haste you can.’
“‘Yes, sir,’ said I.
“‘Keep to the river until you come to the Great Bend. You can take the trail through the bush from there to Swift Rapids. If the ice is broken at the rapids, you’ll have to go round the mountain. That’ll take a good half day longer. But don’t be rash at the rapids, and keep an eye on the ice all along. The sun will be rotting it by day now. It looks like a break-up already.’
“‘Shall I go alone, sir?’ said I.
“‘No,’ said my father, no doubt perceiving the wish in the question. ‘I’ll have John go with you for company.’
“John was an Indian lad of my own age, or thereabouts, who had been brought up at the fort–my companion and friend. I doubt if I shall ever find a stancher one.
“With him at my heels and a little packet of letters in my breast pocket, I set out early the next day. It was late in March, and the sun, as the day advanced, grew uncomfortably hot.
“‘Here’s easy going!’ I cried, when we came to the river.
“‘Bad ice!’ John grunted.
“And it proved to be so–ice which the suns of clear weather had rotted and the frosts of night and cold days had not repaired. Rotten patches alternated with spaces of open water and of thin ice, which the heavy frost of the night before had formed.
“When we came near to Great Bend, where we were to take to the woods, it was late in the afternoon, and the day was beginning to turn cold.
“We sped on even more cautiously, for in that place the current is swift, and we knew that the water was running like mad below us. I was ahead of John, picking the way; and I found, to my cost, that the way was unsafe. In a venture offshore I risked too much. Of a sudden the ice let me through.
“It was like a fall, feet foremost, and when I came again to the possession of my faculties, with the passing of the shock, I found that my arms were beating the edge of ice, which crumbled before them, and that the current was tugging mightily at my legs.
“‘Look out!’ I gasped.
“The warning was neither heard nor needed. John was flat on his stomach, worming his way towards me–wriggling slowly out, his eyes glistening.