|                       PART THREE: My Shore Adventure
                       Chapter 14: The First Blow
 (continued)This put me in a great fear, and I crawled under cover
 of the nearest live-oak and squatted there, hearkening,
 as silent as a mouse. Another voice answered, and then the first voice, which
 I now recognized to be Silver's, once more took up the
 story and ran on for a long while in a stream, only now
 and again interrupted by the other.  By the sound they
 must have been talking earnestly, and almost fiercely;
 but no distinct word came to my hearing. At last the speakers seemed to have paused and perhaps
 to have sat down, for not only did they cease to draw
 any nearer, but the birds themselves began to grow more
 quiet and to settle again to their places in the swamp. And now I began to feel that I was neglecting my business,
 that since I had been so foolhardy as to come ashore with
 these desperadoes, the least I could do was to overhear
 them at their councils, and that my plain and obvious duty
 was to draw as close as I could manage, under the favourable
 ambush of the crouching trees. I could tell the direction of the speakers pretty
 exactly, not only by the sound of their voices but by
 the behaviour of the few birds that still hung in alarm
 above the heads of the intruders. Crawling on all fours, I made steadily but slowly
 towards them, till at last, raising my head to an
 aperture among the leaves, I could see clear down into
 a little green dell beside the marsh, and closely set
 about with trees, where Long John Silver and another of
 the crew stood face to face in conversation. The sun beat full upon them.  Silver had thrown his hat
 beside him on the ground, and his great, smooth, blond
 face, all shining with heat, was lifted to the other
 man's in a kind of appeal. "Mate," he was saying, "it's because I thinks gold dust
 of you--gold dust, and you may lay to that!  If I
 hadn't took to you like pitch, do you think I'd have
 been here a-warning of you?  All's up--you can't make
 nor mend; it's to save your neck that I'm a-speaking,
 and if one of the wild uns knew it, where'd I be, Tom--
 now, tell me, where'd I be?" |