The Lady and the Pirate - Page 42/199

There were many lesser adventures in which Lafitte, L'Olonnois and I

shared on our voyage through the long waterways leading down to the

great river, but of these I make small mention, for, in truth, one

boasts little of one's deeds in piracy after the fact, or of inciting

piracy and making accessories before the fact, the more especially if

such accessories be small but bloodthirsty boys. These latter, let me

plead in extenuation of my own sins, already were pirates, and set

upon rapine. For my own part, seeing their resolution to take green

corn and other vegetables, aye, even fowls, as part of the natural

returns of their stern calling, I made no remonstrances, not the first

leader unable to restrain his ruthless band, but I eased my own

conscience by leaving--quite unknown to them,--sundry silver coins in

cleft sticks, prominently displayed, in the hope that irate farmers

might find them when, after our departure, they visited the scenes of

our marauding. And to such an extent did this marauding obtain that,

by the time we had reached the Mississippi River, I was almost wholly

barren of further silver coins.

Many things I learned as we voyaged; as that my dog Partial would,

when asked, roll over and over upon the ground, or sit up and

bark--things taught him by no man known in his history, so far as

Lafitte could recall it. And things I learned regarding birds and

small animals of which my law books had told me nothing. As to

mosquitoes, I learned that, whereas they do not hurt a young pirate,

they do an old one; and I half resolved to discontinue my book

regarding them. Perhaps it was not of first importance.

But two things grew on me in conviction. First, I loved Helena Emory

more and more each day of my life; and second, that I must see her at

the first moment possible--in spite of all my resolutions to put her

out of my life forever! And, these two things being assured, when we

saw the rolling yellowish flood of the Father of the Waters at last

sweeping before us, I realized that, bound as I was in honor to hold

on with my faithful band, our craft, the Sea Rover--sixteen feet

long she was, and well equipped with Long Toms and deck

cannonades--would have no chance to overtake the Belle Helène,

fastest yacht on the Great Lakes, who might, so far as I could tell,

at that very moment be cleaving through the Chicago canal, to enter

the great river hundreds of miles ahead of us.

Wherefore, leaving my bold mates in bivouac one day, I made journey

to the nearest town. There, I sent certain messages to anxious

parents, and left for them our probable itinerary as tourists

traveling by private conveyance. I could not set our future dates and

ports more closely together; for, before I left town, I had purchased

a sturdy power boat of our own, capable of doing her ten or twelve

miles under her own petrol. I was in no mind to fall farther and

farther back of the Belle Helène each day; and I counted upon our

piratical energy to keep us going more hours a day than Cal

Davidson--curses on him!--would be apt to travel.