Название | The Pirate Story Megapack |
---|---|
Автор произведения | R.M. Ballantyne |
Жанр | Контркультура |
Серия | |
Издательство | Контркультура |
Год выпуска | 0 |
isbn | 9781479408948 |
To this Jack Dawson nods assent.
“And your other fellow—what of him?” asked Don Sanchez.
I replied that Ned Herring was but a fair-weather friend, who had joined fortunes with us to get out of London and escape the Plague, and how having robbed us, we were like never to see his face again.
“And well for him if we do not,” cries Dawson, rousing up; “for by the Lord, if I clap eyes on him, though it be a score of years hence, he shan’t escape the most horrid beating ever man outlived!”
The Don nodded his satisfaction at this, and then Moll, awaking with the sudden outburst of her father’s voice, gives first a gape, then a shiver, and looking about her with an air of wonder, smiles as her eye fell on the Don. Whereon, still as solemn as any judge, he pulls the bell, and the maid, coming to the room with a rushlight, he bids her take the poor weary child to bed, and the best there is in the house, which I think did delight Dawson not less than his Moll to hear.
Then Moll gives her father a kiss, and me another according to her wont, and drops a civil curtsey to Don Sanchez.
“Give me thy hand, child,” says he; and having it, he lifts it to his lips and kisses it as if she had been the finest lady in the land.
She being gone, the Don calls for a second bowl of spiced wine, and we, mightily pleased at the prospect of another half-hour of comfort, stretch our legs out afresh before the fire. Then Don Sanchez, lighting another cigarro, and setting his chair towards us, says as he takes his knee up betwixt his long, thin fingers:
“Now let us come to the heart of this business and understand one another clearly.”
CHAPTER III.
Of that design which Don Sanchez opened to us at the Bell.
We pulled our pipes from our mouths, Dawson and I, and stretched our ears very eager to know what this business was the Don had to propound, and he, after drawing two or three mouthfuls of smoke, which he expelled through his nostrils in a most surprising unnatural manner, says in excellent good English, but speaking mighty slow and giving every letter its worth:
“What do you go to do tomorrow?”
“The Lord only knows,” answers Jack, and Don Sanchez, lifting his eyebrows as if he considers this no answer at all, he continues: “We cannot go hence with none of our stage things; and if we could, I see not how we are to act our play, now that our villain is gone, with a plague to him! I doubt but we must sell all that we have for the few shillings they will fetch to get us out of this hobble.”
“With our landlord’s permission,” remarks Don Sanchez, dryly.
“Permission!” cries Dawson, in a passion. “I ask no man’s permission to do what I please with my own.”
“Suppose he claims these things in payment of the money you owe him. What then?” asks the Don.
“We never thought of that, Kit,” says Dawson, turning to me in a pucker. “But ’tis likely enough he has, for I observed he was mighty careless whether we found our thief or not. That’s it, sure enough. We have nought to hope. All’s lost!”
With that he drops his elbows on his knees, and stares into the fire with a most desponding countenance, being in that stage of liquor when a man must either laugh or weep.
“Come, Jack,” says I. “You are not used to yield like this. Let us make the best of a bad lot, and face the worst like men. Though we trudge hence with nothing but the rags on our backs, we shall be no worse off tomorrow than we were this morning.”
“Why, that’s true enough!” cries he, plucking up his courage. “Let the thieving rascal take our poor nag and our things for his payment, and much good may they do him. We will wipe this out of our memory the moment we leave his cursed inn behind us.”
It seemed to me that this would not greatly advance us, and maybe Don Sanchez thought the same, for he presently asks:
“And what then?”
“Why, Señor,” replies Dawson, “we will face each new buffet as it comes, and make a good fight of it till we’re beat. A man may die but once.”
“You think only of yourselves,” says the Don, very quietly.
“And pray, saving your Señor’s presence, who else should we think of?”
“The child above,” answers the Don, a little more sternly than he had yet spoken. “Is a young creature like that to bear the buffets you are so bold to meet? Can you offer her no shelter from the wind and rain but such as chance offers? make no provision for the time when she is left alone, to protect her against the evils that lie in the path of friendless maids?”
“God forgive me,” says Jack, humbly. And then we could say nothing, for thinking what might befall Moll if we should be parted, but sat there under the keen eye of Don Sanchez, looking helplessly into the fire. And there was no sound until Jack’s pipe, slipping from his hand, fell and broke in pieces upon the hearth. Then rousing himself up and turning to Don Sanchez, he says:
“The Lord help her, Señor, if we find no good friend to lend us a few shillings for our present wants.”
“Good friends are few,” says the Don, “and they who lend need some better security for repayment than chance. For my own part, I would as soon fling straws to a drowning man as attempt to save you and that child from ruin by setting you on your feet today only to fall again tomorrow.”
“If that be so, Señor,” says I, “you had some larger view in mind than that of offering temporary relief to our misery when you gave us a supper and Moll a bed for the night.”
Don Sanchez assented with a grave inclination of his head, and going to the door opened it sharply, listened awhile, and then closing it softly, returned and stood before us with folded arms. Then, in a low voice, not to be heard beyond the room, he questioned us very particularly as to our relations with other men, the length of time we had been wandering about the country, and especially about the tractability of Moll. And, being satisfied with our replies—above all, with Jack’s saying that Moll would jump out of window at his bidding, without a thought to the consequences—he says:
“There’s a comedy we might play to some advantage if you were minded to take the parts I give you and act them as I direct.”
“With all my heart,” cries Dawson. “I’ll play any part you choose; and as to the directing, you’re welcome to that, for I’ve had my fill of it. If you can make terms with our landlord, those things in the yard shall be yours, and for our payment I’m willing to trust to your honour’s generosity.”
“As regards payment,” says the Don, “I can speak precisely. We shall gain fifty thousand pounds by our performance.”
“Fifty thousand pounds,” says Jack, as if in doubt whether he had heard aright. Don Sanchez bent his head, without stirring a line in his face.
Dawson took up his beaker slowly, and looked in it, to make sure that he was none the worse for drink, then, after emptying it, to steady his wits, he says again:
“Fifty thousand pounds.”
“Fifty thousand pounds, if not more; and that there be no jealousies one of the other, it shall be divided fairly amongst us—as much for your friend as for you, for the child as for me.”
“Pray God, this part be no more than I can compass,” says Jack, devoutly.
“You may learn it in a few hours—at