|                        PART SIX: Captain Silver
                       Chapter 28: In the Enemy's Camp
 THE red glare of the torch, lighting up the interior of
 the block house, showed me the worst of my
 apprehensions realized.  The pirates were in possession
 of the house and stores: there was the cask of cognac,
 there were the pork and bread, as before, and what
 tenfold increased my horror, not a sign of any
 prisoner.  I could only judge that all had perished,
 and my heart smote me sorely that I had not been there
 to perish with them. There were six of the buccaneers, all told; not another
 man was left alive.  Five of them were on their feet,
 flushed and swollen, suddenly called out of the first
 sleep of drunkenness.  The sixth had only risen upon
 his elbow; he was deadly pale, and the blood-stained
 bandage round his head told that he had recently been
 wounded, and still more recently dressed.  I remembered
 the man who had been shot and had run back among the woods
 in the great attack, and doubted not that this was he. The parrot sat, preening her plumage, on Long John's
 shoulder.  He himself, I thought, looked somewhat paler
 and more stern than I was used to.  He still wore the
 fine broadcloth suit in which he had fulfilled his
 mission, but it was bitterly the worse for wear, daubed
 with clay and torn with the sharp briers of the wood. "So," said he, "here's Jim Hawkins, shiver my timbers!
 Dropped in, like, eh?  Well, come, I take that friendly." And thereupon he sat down across the brandy cask and
 began to fill a pipe. "Give me a loan of the link, Dick," said he; and then,
 when he had a good light, "That'll do, lad," he added;
 "stick the glim in the wood heap; and you, gentlemen,
 bring yourselves to!  You needn't stand up for Mr.
 Hawkins; HE'LL excuse you, you may lay to that.
 And so, Jim"--stopping the tobacco--"here you were, and
 quite a pleasant surprise for poor old John.  I see you
 were smart when first I set my eyes on you, but this
 here gets away from me clean, it do." |