The Lady and the Pirate - Page 47/199

Cal Davidson took on five drums of petrol at Cairo, and a like amount

of champagne at Memphis, and no man may tell what other supplies at

this or that other point along the river. He evidently suspected no

pursuit, or, if he did, was a swaggering varlet enough, for, according

to all accounts which we could get, he loitered and lingered along,

altogether at his leisure, with due attention to social matters at

every port; for if he had not a wife at every port, at least, he had

an acquaintance of business or social sort, so that, one might be

sure, there were few dull moments for him and his party, whether

afloat or ashore. He must have attended a dinner-party and two

theaters at Memphis, and have sailed only after making three thousand

dollars out of a combination in champagne present and cotton future,

whose disgusting details I did not seek to learn. Trust Davidson to

make money, and to make the most of life also as he went along. He

always had the best of everything; and surely now he had, for the

leisurely, ease-seeking Belle Helène, not actuated by any vast

motive beyond that of the bee and the honey flower, slipped on down

and ahead with perfect ease, while we, grimy, slow, determined, plowed

on in her wake losing miles each hour the graceful Belle Helène

chose to show us her light disdainful heels, serenely indifferent

because wholly ignorant of our existence.

But we held to the chase as true pirates, not loitering at any port,

and--since now I, also, had learned something of the intricacies of

our engine, and could take a trick while the others slept--running

twice the hours daily the haughty yacht would deign to log. I knew

that Cal Davidson would stop to shoot and to visit, and knew that he

could, by no human means, be induced to pass any telegraph point where

the daily standing of the baseball clubs could be learned--he counted

that day lost in which he did not learn the scores. As for myself, I

have never been able to understand how any grown man or any one

ungrown can take any interest whatever in the deeds of hired

ball-playing Hessians, who have back of them neither patriotism nor

even a municipal pride. But, for once, I was joyed that the organized

business sense of a few men had put an otherwise able citizen under

tribute, because now, though the Belle Helène must pause at least

daily, the Sea Rover need do no such thing.

Nor did we. We were hot on the trail of the enemy as he flew south

along the Chickasha Bluffs, hot as he left Memphis behind, and taking

the widening waters which now wandered through low forest lands,

reached out for the next city of size, historic Vicksburg on her

seventy hills. And hot and eager, more than ever, were we when,

chugging around the head of that vast arm of the river, where it

curves like a boy of some southern sea, with its heights rising beyond

and afar, we saw what caused me to exclaim aloud, "At last! There she

lies, my hearties!"