Sweet Mace - Sweet Mace Part 8
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Sweet Mace Part 8

nights," growled Wat.

"Silence, sir," cried Gil.

As he spoke, the young man's face flushed with shame and mortification at being twitted with his amorous passages, but there was a look of command and an imperious tone in his voice that told of one accustomed to be obeyed, and the great lank muscular man, tanned and hardened by a life of exposure, shuffled uneasily in his seat and let his little pipe go out.

"If it had been another man, Wat," continued Gil, "I should have given him a week in irons for daring to go near the place."

"What! after his skipper set an example?" growled Wat.

"Silence, sir," roared Gil, catching the old fellow by the shoulder.

"Bah!" he continued, calming down, "Why do you anger me, Wat?" and he loosed his hold.

"Oh, haul away, young 'un," growled Wat, with a grim smile, "you don't hurt me. I like to see what a sturdy young lion you've grown. That's your father, every inch of him, as did that. Hah! he was a one."

"Let him rest, Wat," cried Gil impatiently. "My father would never have looked over an act of folly or disobedience. Neither will I."

"You never ordered me not to go," growled Wat.

"Then I do now, sir! Look here. What does it mean? Are you not ashamed of yourself, carrying on these gallantries? There was that Carib woman out at Essequibo."

"Hah!" with a smokeless exhalation.

"And the flat-nosed Malayan in the Eastern Seas."

"Hah!"

"And that Chinese, yellow, moon-faced woman."

"Hah!"

"And the black girl on the Guinea Coast."

"Hah!"

"And that Portingallo wench, and the Spanish lass with the dark eyes, and that great Greek, and a score beside."

"Hah! Yes, skipper," said Wat calmly, "I've got an ugly shell, but the core inside is very soft."

"Soft? Yes."

"But you're going back a many years, skipper."

"I need," cried Gil angrily. "A man of your age, too! Why, Wat, you're sixty, if you are a day!"

"Sixty-four," growled Wat quietly, as he took out his flint and steel and screwed up his grim weather-beaten face.

"Then it's a disgrace to you!"

"Disgrace? What's being sixty-four got to do with it?"

"Why you're an old man, sir!"

"Old man? Not I, captain. I'm as young as ever I was, and as fond of a pretty girl. I'm not old; and, if I was, I get fonder of 'em every year I live."

"It is disgraceful, sir!" cried Gil, angrily. "You ought to be thinking of your coffin instead of pretty girls."

That touched Wat home, and he sprang to his feet with the activity of a boy.

"No, I oughtn't, skipper," he cried, excitedly. "And, look here, don't you say that there terrifying word to me again--I hate it. When it's all over, if you don't have me dropped overboard, just as I am, at sea, or even here at home in the little river, I'll come back and haunt you.

Coffin, indeed! Talk about such trade as that! Just as if I hadn't sailed round the world like a man."

He reseated himself, and began once more to use his flint and steel, but this time viciously.

"Once for all then, Wat, I will not have this sort of thing here. A man of your years hanging about after that great ugly dairy wench."

"Who did?" cried Wat sharply. "Nay, captain, never."

"Have I been mistaken, then?" cried Gil, eagerly. "Stop, though--you don't mean to say that you have been casting your ancient eyes on Janet?"

"Why not?" cried Wat, leaping up once more. "She's as pretty a creature as ever I set my ancient eyes, as you call 'em, on."

"Why, man, she's eighteen, and you are sixty-four."

"All the better," cried Wat. "Janet it is, and I'm going to wed her."

"Does she know it?"

"Not quite, captain, not yet. Look ye here, skipper, my poor old mother had a plum grow on a tree by the cottage wall, and when I was a boy I meant to have that plum. Did I go and pick it right off and eat it there and then? Nay, I set my eyes on that plum while it was young and green, and saw it grow day by day rounder and redder, and covered with soft down and riper purple, and more rich and plump, and at last, when I picked that plum, I had a hundred times more 'joyment than if I'd plucked it when I saw it first. That's what I'm doing with little Janet, and that's what Master Peasegood calls a parabole."

Gil felt that he might just as well argue with a rock as with his rugged old follower, so he changed the subject.

"When will the _Golden Fleece_ be fit for sea again?"

"It'll be a month before they've got in the new keel, captain, and then she's got to be well overhauled."

"It will be two months, then, before we can load up?"

"Ay, all that," was the reply. "Go on getting in the meal and bacon.

Have it ready for placing in store. We must have everything ready there for putting on board."

"Ay, ay, skipper."

"Keep the men from going near. Let there be no hanging about the valley on any pretence. See to that with those two last lads."

"Ay," growled Wat. "The others can be trusted, of course."

Gil nodded, and walked away, while Wat went on striking a light.

"He's half afraid I should get in his way," growled the old fellow, "but he needn't be. Much better be afraid of some one finding out the store.