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FOUR: The Harmony

Then they went on deck at last, with Mrs. Waverly clinging tightly to John's arm, the cleaning-up had begun; which was to say, dead men from both sides were being pitched overboard, and the blood was being swilled off the decks with buckets of seawater. The survivors of the crew of the Fyrey Pentacost were lined up along the rail, being jeered at by the survivors of Captain Reynald's crew. Captain Sharp was slumped against the mast, clutching a lace-edged handkerchief to his eye. Captain Reynald, a lean Frenchman, was surveying his new quarterdeck and looking pleased with himself.

"Captain sir?" Anslow touched his forelock and led John and Mrs. Waverly forward. "This is my mate John, what I mentioned, and his bride."

"Madame!" Captain Reynald gaze fixed on Mrs. Waverly. "Enchanted!" He took her hand and kissed it. "Please have no fears for your safety. We are a gallant band of adventurers, and respect the honor of a woman. Mr. Anslow informs me your husband is a comrade of his."

"How very kind," said Mrs. Waverly, with a bright artificial smile.

"And you are welcome to our crew, sir," said Captain Reynald to John, looking him up and down. "We are short-handed."

"Er," said John. "Well—"

"Hear me!" Captain Reynald turned to the prisoners. "I offer each man among you the same choice! You may go over the side with your captain, or you may take the oath to join our company and live free. Will you join us, for liberty and treasure? What of you?" He pointed his cutlass at Mr. Tudeley, who had been hauled up from his cabin sobbing and now stood swaying and white-faced, from sickness and terror both.

"Oh, Jesus, sir! I wish to live!" cried Mr. Tudeley.

"Trés bien! Welcome, friend. And you?" Captain Reynald swung the tip of his cutlass to Sejanus, who was next in line.

"I cheerfully accept your offer," said Sejanus. About this point it sank in on Mr. Tudeley that he had just joined a pirate crew, and his mouth opened for a cry of horror. Somehow, though, all that emerged was a sort of croak.

Captain Reynald moved briskly down the line, and one after another of the Fyrey Pentacost's crew joined up, except for the ship's cook and Mr. Harris, who had been beaten unconscious and couldn't voice a preference. He was dumped unceremoniously into the bottom of one of the boats, and lowered over the side; the ship's cook was shoved down to join him and so, after a certain amount of furious invective and threats of the rope's end, was Captain Sharp. They were set adrift, as the Fyrey Pentacost put on sail and tacked about.

All this while John had been revolving in his mind what he ought to do, and was just clearing his throat and preparing to approach Captain Reynald when Mrs. Waverly's fingers pinched off the circulation in his arm.

"Husband, may I just speak a word in your ear?"

"To be sure, wife," said John, walking with her into the waist, where nobody much was standing at the moment.

"I must commend you on your swift thought, and your care for mine honor," said Mrs. Waverly. "Knowing full well that you will never be such a beast as to press your advantage against a helpless female. Now, my dear: on no account must we let slip, amongst such people, any least detail regarding our plans."

"I wasn't about to tell 'em," said John, indignant. "What kind of a mooncalf do you take me for?"

"I'm sure you're quite clever," said Mrs. Waverly. "Just as I am sure Mr. Anslow is a kind gentleman, and Captain Reynald too for all I know. But I think it best to be discreet amongst so many other persons of uncertain character, don't you? We will go along for the present and bear with our misfortune, trusting that we will have the opportunity to escape at some point and make our way to Leauchaud."

"Right," said John. "It's only that I was getting out of the business, as it were, and now I'm on the account again whether I will or no. Any court's going to say this was an English ship, and hang me up alongside that frog captain."

"Only if we are caught," said Mrs. Waverly. "And in any case I shall plead for mercy, and swear that you only did it to protect me."

"How likely is that to work?"

"It has never failed before," said Mrs. Waverly, smiling graciously at Captain Reynald.

 

* * *

 

The ship was rechristened the Harmony, and that night they found themselves invited to another dinner with the captain; only this time it was at a long trestle table set up belowdecks, in the crew's quarters.

"Welcome, friends," said Captain Reynald, who had put on a clean shirt for the occasion. "Madame." He bowed deeply and once more kissed Mrs. Waverly's hand. "I trust you will find the viands to your liking. They have been prepared with these own hands of mine."

"Really," said Mrs. Waverly, as he led her to a place at the head of the table.

"Indeed, madame. We are a happy community of brothers here; I am the leader only in matters of war and philosophy."

"Philosophy?" said John, taking his seat to Mrs. Waverly's left, since Captain Reynald had taken the seat to her right. Sejanus took a seat next to him and sat looking around, in great enjoyment; Mr. Tudeley, still pale and miserable, found himself seated far down the table.

"Indeed, my friend. We are a utopian fraternity of corsairs, rebels against the entrenched corruption of kings and merchants. We have refused the chains of Civilization and live in perfect equality here, upon the wide sea, the mother of liberty. Is it not so?"

"Yes, Captain," chorused the crew, in tones that suggested they'd heard his speech a multitude of times.

"For example: all delicacies shall be shared in common among us." Captain Reynald drew the serving platter close, and carved one of a pair of Captain Sharp's capons. "My brother corsairs share in whatever bounty we find. Will you have some of this chicken, madame?"

"I thank you, yes," said Mrs. Waverly. He loaded her plate with generous slices, to the point where the men at table looked narrowly at what was left.

"Perhaps you are surprised by such men; perhaps you expected us to be little better than savages," continued Captain Reynald.

"I confess I scarcely knew what to expect," said Mrs. Waverly.

"Though of course it is a fact that among civilized men, you will generally find filth, moral turpitude, decadence and lies, whereas if you make the acquaintance of primitive Man in his natural element you will find him a noble and honest creature," said Captain Reynald, with a gracious nod in the direction of Sejanus.

"I wouldn't know, sir," said Sejanus dryly. "I was born in Massachusetts."

"Pardon me," said John, a little irritated by Captain Reynald's attentions to Mrs. Waverly. "This sounds all right and proper, and I'm grateful to know we've fallen in with such a high-minded lot; but, since we're on the account, let's talk business. Have we got a commission?"

"Why, of course," said Captain Reynald. "Signed by the governor of Tortuga."

"Allows us to go after anybody but the French," said Anslow, grinning. "And even them, if the captain don't feel they're yew-topian enough."

"How do you know?"

"I regard them through the spyglass," said Captain Reynald. "If the captain is dressed in great finery and his men are ragged, clearly he is oppressing them and it is our duty to liberate the ship."

"We got the Triomphe de Bourbon that way," volunteered one of the crew. "There was a ship, by God!"

"Pity about that reef off Curacao," said another man, looking mournful.

"It is no matter," said Captain Reynald. "We have this fine ship now, and the Fraternity; we shall cruise together and increase our fleet. Others will come to join us, and who can say? Perhaps we will find a suitable island on which to set up our community, and govern ourselves democratically."

There were responses from the crew of "Oui, c'est vrai," and "Right you are," and "We're all looking forward to that day, I'm sure," none of it in tones of great enthusiasm.

"But in the meantime," Anslow said to John, "It's the old rules. No Purchase No Pay, but no damned shares to the King nor the Duke of York nor no governors, neither!"

"Not even the governor of Tortuga?"

"He is a reasonable man, and is content with a modest bribe," said Captain Reynald. "And even I, the captain, even my share is no greater than that of my fellow corsairs. We are equal in all things!"

"Really," said Sejanus.

"Indeed," said Captain Reynald, filling Mrs. Waverly's glass with Captain Sharp's best rhenish. "I propose a toast, my friends: to universal liberty and the brotherhood of all mankind!"

They drank, all of them; even Mr. Tudeley, who screwed up his face as though he was about to swallow poison. After the first taste, though, he sighed and had another.

 

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Framed