<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XX" id="CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX.</SPAN><br/> <small>WE SET FORTH AGAIN.</small></h2>
<p class="cap">The last figure we saw as the barges pulled away
from the pier was that of M. de Teligny
outlined against the sky, erect and soldierly, his
feathered beaver hat raised above his head in salute.
We gave him a round and hearty cheer, for we knew
how deep his heart was grieving for the youth that
was his no more.</p>
<p>By great good fortune I found myself with De
Brésac upon the larger vessel, which De Gourgues
had renamed the <i>Vengeance</i>. The two smaller vessels
were under the command of Lieutenant Cazenove
an officer of experience and devotion. With us was
François Bourdelais, a brother of the captain of the
<i>Trinity</i>, and four other gallants. Of arquebusiers
there were fifty, and of seamen there were a dozen
or more, including Goddard and a trumpeter named
Dariol, who had been with Réné de Laudonnière
and knew the Indian language better even than De
Brésac. These arquebusiers were a rough-looking<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</SPAN></span>
lot—different in character from most of those who
had gone with Ribault—and De Gourgues, who knew
his Frenchmen, said with joy that he had never seen so
hard-hitting a company. I smiled a little as I looked
at them and he knew my thought, as he seemed,
through some operation of will, to know everything.</p>
<p>“Ah! M. Killigrew, you think them better let
loose upon the Spanish than upon us.” He laughed.
“True it is, mon ami, but they need only a little
prodding into shape. Take my word for it, these
are the only men for a venture such as this. Make
them forget the debt the world owes them, give them
a free swordarm and a Saint to swear by and they
will charge through an army of Dons and back again
for a faith which may set as lightly upon their consciences
as the skin upon their elbows.”</p>
<p>Our voyage was not to be so favorable as our
preparations. De Gourgues gave a rendezvous at the
River Lor, in Barbary, and we set sail upon a brisk
breeze. Before night, this wind blew up into a storm
which drove us into Rojan. Twice did we venture
forth, and each time were driven back, being at last
forced into the Rade at Rochelle, where we came to
anchor in the Charente and remained eight days.
This was a source of deep chagrin to De Gourgues
for our provisions were being consumed, while we
were coming no nearer to our destination.</p>
<p>For a few hours the storm abated, and with some<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</SPAN></span>
misgivings at the looks of the weather we put to sea
again and set our prows to the southward. But
hardly had we dropped the land into the ragged sea
behind us than it began to blow still more fiercely
than before. ’Twas more like a summer storm in
the tropics, and hardly to be understood so early in
the year, for the summer was yet a month away.
Nor was it a favorable augury for our voyage. We did
not know our men; and sea-people are of a wont
to put strange interpretations upon the movements
of the elements, so I feared that they would take
this misfortune as an evil presage of what was to
come. For two weeks off Cape Finisterre we were
tossed hither and thither at the mercy of the winds,
the waves running sprit-high, dashing in at the ports,
which had come loose, and flooding the lower deck.
It was in no manner so severe as the storm which
had driven the fleet of Ribault upon the beach, but
this <i>Vengeance</i> to which we had trusted our fortunes
was not the <i>Trinity</i> or the <i>Gloire</i>, and the buffets
which met us were short and severe enough to play
great havoc with the mind of a landsman. At last,
all sight of the vessels of Lieutenant Cazenove being
lost, and having had many small misfortunes—such
as the staving of one of our quarter-boats and the
loss of a piece of the bowsprit—the thing I had been
expecting came to pass. The arquebusiers mutinied.</p>
<p>The trouble came on an afternoon, the third week<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</SPAN></span>
from the Charente. The men had gathered forward
in a seething group, with looks more lowering
than the clouds; and there was an ominous muttering
and a clatter of steel under the fore-castle, where
some of the arms were kept. Many of the rogues
were still sea-sick, and this made their tempers even
worse than they were wont to be. These sounds
and sights were most obtrusive where we stood upon
the poop, but De Gourgues had the appearance of one
most oblivious. He searched the sea line with his
glass for the lost sails, glancing ever and anon to
the westward, where the weather was showing signs
of promise; but no look would he give to the waist
or forward deck, where the men were scowling and
gesticulating among themselves. Not until the
sounds became too unruly to be mistaken did he
notice. Then laying his glass upon the binnacle, he
passed to De Brésac and bade him have two of the inboard
patereros loosed and trained upon the decks
below. The Chevalier and Bourdelais sprang to the
guns and in a moment had cast off the sea-breaching.
The rogues saw the movement, and, led by a tall
bearded scoundrel named Cabouche, came aft in a
most formidable array.</p>
<p>They had not passed the main-mast before De
Gourgues with a spring was down the ladder with
drawn sword, and single-handed stood face to face
with their leader.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Back!” he said in a voice of thunder. “Back
to your kennels, you dogs!”</p>
<p>I had never seen him thus. So entirely was he
transformed that he seemed a very demon of rage.
He was leaning forward as though crouching for a
spring. His voice was like the yelp of an arquebus
in the beginning of a battle. We could not see his
face, but it was plain it must have shown something
the rogues had not thought to see in one ordinarily
so melancholy and calm. They stopped as of one
accord, and looked from one to the other as though
some mistake had been made, each ready to accuse
his neighbor.</p>
<p>For Cabouche, the posture was more awkward.
He stood alone in the face of the enemy, plain to
the eye of every man upon the ship. He did not
see his comrades behind him; he only knew that did
he not make good his defiance, his position as bravo
upon that ship was gone for all. He lowered his
pike and came forward upon De Gourgues with the
rush of an angry bull. It was a terrible lunge that
he made. Armed only with a rapier as the commander
was, the blow would have done for any other
most surely. But De Gourgues stood firm, looking
at the fellow, the point of his rapier upon the deck.
He waited until the pike seemed almost to be touching
his doublet, when like the wind he sprang aside.
Then with a deft turn of his foot he tripped the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</SPAN></span>
lout and sent him sprawling, so that he went into
the lee-scuppers and rolled with the wash of the
deck, cursing.</p>
<p>The mutineers, covered by our guns, remained as
de Gourgues had halted them, and stood as though
spellbound at the turn of the affairs of Cabouche.
One discharge and a sudden rush of our seamen and
cavaliers would have driven them below like sheep.
But there was need of none of this. De Gourgues,
holding up his hand to restrain us, stood swinging
with the slant of the deck, watching Cabouche, who
was rising from the scuppers, dripping with salt
water and swearing aloud that he was not yet done.
The man drew his dagger and came forward, moving
in a circle around De Gourgues, looking most
dangerous. The Chevalier stood this play for only
a minute, when, lurching forward like a flash, he
spitted Cabouche neatly through the hollow of
one of his great ears, and bore him back against the
fife-rail.</p>
<p>The rascal dropped his dagger, gave a roar of
pain, and sought to disengage himself. But his ear
was tough, and the Captain only pushed him the
harder, holding him spitted at arm’s length, talking
to him and examining him the while as though he
were an underdone fowl over a broiling-iron.</p>
<p>“Thou art satisfied, Cabouche?” he inquired in a
crisp, sharp voice. “Thou art satisfied? Wilt remain<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</SPAN></span>
upon this vessel? Or wilt thou go ashore?
Thou wilt remain in the fore-castle,—is it not so?
Thou wilt tell them,—thy mutineers,—that rapier
points and pike-points fly on end and bristle for such
as thee?” And here he cast him off against the
main-mast in contempt. “Bah! Cabouche,—thou
art but a poor pikeman. For there is much more to
learn in the management of the feet than of the
hands; and these things I will teach thee one day.
For the present, go below and wash the blood from
thy face. And if the lesson is not enough, I’ll have
an ear-ring for thee to match the hole I have made.
And ’twill be none so fashionable as those you wear,
I’ll warrant.”</p>
<p>The fellow slunk away from his look like a dog.
As for the other arquebusiers, most of them had put
their pieces back in the racks, and had gone about
their business.</p>
<p>I marveled at the skill of De Gourgues in catching
his man so nicely. But he only said, “’Twas most
simple; the rascal has the ears of a donkey—and the
stubbornness—<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">ma foi</i>! But ’tis too brawny a fellow
to feed to the fish, and his hearing of my commands
will be all the better for a little blood-letting
in the ear.”</p>
<p>Afterwards, when I saw Mongol coins, thrown
about into the air, picked upon the point of his
rapier, through the square holes in them, I marveled<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</SPAN></span>
no more at the ease with which De Gourgues had
spitted this Cabouche. It was the influence of his
look which I was at pains to understand. For
though I had seen and quelled mutinies such as this
three or four times in my life, I am at loss to describe
the power which lay behind the boldness,—power
felt by every man upon the ship. It was
the very witchery of fearlessness. Cabouche troubled
us no more; and in the end made a most excellent
soldier, hanging upon the looks and orders of the
Captain, and truckling as he had never before done,
either upon sea or land.</p>
<p>To our great joy, when we came to the rendezvous
we found our consorts awaiting us, they having had
little misfortune of any kind, and all being well. We
went ashore and rested; there, with water, game,
and fresh fruits, the men of the <i>Vengeance</i> were refreshed
and comforted until we set to sea again.
At Cape Blanco, where we anchored for the last
time upon the Afric coast, we were attacked by
three negro chiefs whom the Portuguese, jealous of
our vicinage to their fort, set upon us, hoping to encompass
our destruction. The black chiefs came
in long canoes with their men, but so warm was
their reception that, though they rushed upon us
twice, but one man reached the deck. This one
fought so gallantly that De Gourgues would not have
him killed. So we took him a slave to make good<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</SPAN></span>
our commission from Blaise de Montluc. When the
chiefs found they could do nothing with us, they
went back to the Portuguese, leaving us the freedom
of the port.</p>
<p>Here again we filled our water casks, and then set
out across the great ocean. We drilled each day,
and so sweet was the weather that at no time were the
decks uncomfortable. Had De Gourgues the ordering
of the winds, they could not have pleased him
better, for ’twas a voyage of little event; and in
four weeks we came to the island called St. Germain
de Porterique, where we landed and rested again.
We sighted, and landed on La Manne and Saint
Dominique. In the first place, we met the King of
the island, who took us to his gardens, where lemons,
oranges, melons and plantains grew in great abundance.
He led us to his fountain, which he called
“Paradise,” and which he said would cure the plague
and the fever. The Chevalier gave him a bale of cloth,
and the chiefs loaded us down with fruit. At Saint
Dominique many of the people had been killed by
the Spaniards, and many had starved themselves to
death rather than be ruled by these people. They
made a perpetual war against the Spanish settlements.</p>
<p>“These men with long garments,” they said,
“came among us to teach us of their God and to
make us worship him. And they tell us that we<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</SPAN></span>
must hate the Devil. Their soldiers kill our children
and steal our wives, and they are cowards. For us,
if this is what their God teaches them, then we believe
that the Devil is the best. We adore him. He
makes men brave.”</p>
<p>We sailed on thus from island to island, taking
water and fresh provisions where we could, capturing
many sea-turtles so big that the flesh of one of them
would serve for sixty people at a meal, the shells
being of such a great size that large men could lie in
them, and so hard of surface that an arquebus ball
would not go through. When we reached Cape San
Antonio, which is at the end of the Island of Juanna,
we found a body of Spaniards drawn up on to the
beach to dispute our landing. These we defeated
after a brisk battle and procured the water of which
we were in need.</p>
<p>But during all this time no word had passed the
lips of De Gourgues as to the object of our voyage.
No slaves had been captured, save the one man who
had fought his way to the deck of the <i>Vengeance</i>.
When the men had wished to go into the interior of
the islands in search of gold, which the Caribs said
was plentiful, the Chevalier restrained them, saying
that the time was not yet and that their profit
would all come in good season. But he could not
much longer conceal his mission. Murmurs again
arose among the men of all of the ships; and though<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</SPAN></span>
they went willingly enough about their duties, it was
plain that the desire to get upon shore could not
much longer be restrained. For discontent upon
ship-board is often less pleasant to live with than
ripe mutiny. So one day when we had arrived at a
point not eighty leagues from San Augustin, De
Gourgues called the companies of all three vessels
upon the decks of the <i>Vengeance</i>. The momentous
time had come. We knew not how much sympathy
or how little they would have with our cause and De
Brésac could not conceal his impatience. If De
Gourgues had any doubts or misgivings as to the
matter, he did not show them, but stood before the
soldiers and sailors upon the deck at the main mast,
an expression of great calmness and seriousness
upon his features.</p>
<p>“Gentlemen and brothers,” he began slowly, “the
time has arrived that you should know why we, men
of France, have come so far and braved so many
dangers under the shadow of the Western sun. The
God who rules the raging of the waters, who is the
God of all men upon the sea, has brought us safely
to this day upon a most just and righteous mission.
A foul crime has been committed against our beloved
France, mes braves. A year has passed and
no hand has been raised to cleanse our fair Standard
of the trail of blood which the Spaniards have
drawn across it.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>At first the men listened in silence. Then as they
comprehended, they looked at one another and the
name of San Augustin passed the lips of several.
Muttered curses broke from them here and there.
But in a moment even these few murmurs of anger
were stifled and borne away by the flood of the fiery
Gascon’s eloquence, as he told them in his own way
the story of the massacres at Fort Caroline and on
the sand-spit. As he went on his voice arose in
excitement until it rang out fair and true like a
clarion-call in battle, and his eyes were illumined
with the light of his inspiration, as he painted the
worst horrors of those scenes as I have not dared to
paint them here. He told his men that this alone
was his purpose, and that he had chosen them from
among hundreds of others because they were the
men who could best defeat twice their own number.
And knowing that the duty before them would be
attended with great travail he knew that he should
not fail in the hour of danger.</p>
<p>“What disgrace,” he cried at last, “if such an insult
should pass unpunished! What glory will there
come to us, if we avenge it! To this venture I have
devoted my fortune. The vessels upon which you
float are mine. The morions and the pieces on your
backs are mine! Your weapons,—mine! All mine
to avenge your soldier brothers! From the first I
have relied upon you, even when you did not trust<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</SPAN></span>
me. I have thought you jealous enough of your
country’s glory to sacrifice life itself in a cause like
this! Was I deceived? Must the bodies of your
soldier brothers swing like thieves from these wild
fir trees, the brand of shame upon them, food for
crows and vultures? Will no one cut them down?
My men, I am here to show you the way,—I will be
always at your head,—I will bear the brunt of
danger. Will you refuse to follow me?”</p>
<p>Never had I heard such an impassioned voice, and
the spirits of the men, doubtful and restless at first,
burst from a spark into a flame at his words, and at
his last appeal their response rose in a roar that
seemed to shake the firmament.</p>
<p>“A la mort! To the death will we follow
you!”</p>
<p>It was a wonderful scene. No English company
would have changed so quickly to the fury of enthusiasm
that possessed them. They threw their
caps into the sea and began heaving up the anchor.
Many of them crowded around our Captain, begging
that he would take them to Fort San Mateo and
lead them at once. It was with great difficulty that
he could get them to listen to him; but at last,
quiet having been in a certain measure restored, he
told them that they would sail through the Bahama
Channel—which was most treacherous—at the full
of the moon. It would be folly to take any risk at<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</SPAN></span>
this time, when a mistake would bring to naught
the planning of months.</p>
<p>“The time will come soon enough, my friends, for
there is much to be done. To-night or the night
after, if the weather be fair, we shall sail. In a
week, with Gods help, Ribault will be avenged.”</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</SPAN></span></p>
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