And they embraced each other like spider and fly, each with a free hand to his sword-hilt, and a questioning look on the other’s face.
Says M. Radisson: “I’ve seen that ship before!”
Ben laughs awkwardly. “We captured her from a Dutchman,” he begins.
“Oh!” says Sieur Radisson. “I meant outside the straits after the storm!”
Gillam’s eyes widen. “Were those your ships?” he asks. Then both men laugh.
“Not much to boast in the way of a fleet,” taunts Ben.
“Those are the two smallest we have,” quickly explains Radisson.
Gillam’s face went blank, and M. Radisson’s eyes closed to the watchful slit of a cat mouse-hunting.
“Come! Come!” exclaims Ben, with a sudden flare of friendliness, “I am no baby-eater! Put a peg in that! Shiver my soul if this is a way to welcome friends! Come aboard all of you and test the Canary we got in the hold of a fine Spanish galleon last week! Such a top-heavy ship, with sails like a tinker’s tatters, you never saw! And her hold running over with Canary and Madeira—oh! Come aboard! Come aboard!” he urged.
It was Pierre Radisson’s turn to blink.
“And drink to the success of the beaver trade,” importunes Ben.
’Twas as pretty a piece of play as you could see: Ben, scheming to get the Frenchman captive; M. Radisson, with the lightnings under his brows and that dare-devil rashness of his blood tempting him to spy out the lad’s strength.
“Ben was the body of the venture! Where was the brain? It was that took me aboard his ship,” M. Radisson afterward confessed to us.
“Come! Come!” pressed Gillam. “I know young Stanhope there”—his mighty air brought the laugh to my face—“young Stanhope there has a taste for fine Canary——”
“But, lad,” protested Radisson, with a condescension that was vinegar to Ben’s vanity, “we cannot be debtors altogether. Let two of your men stay here and whiff pipes with my fellows, while I go aboard!”
Ben’s teeth ground out an assent that sounded precious like an oath; for he knew that he was being asked for hostages of safe-conduct while M. Radisson spied out the ship. He signalled, as we thought, for two hostages to come down from the fort; but scarce had he dropped his hand when fort and ship let out such a roar of cannonading as would have lifted the hair from any other head than Pierre Radisson’s.
Godefroy cut a caper. The Indian’s eyes bulged with terror, and my own pulse went a-hop; but M. Radisson never changed countenance.
“Pardieu,” says he softly, with a pleased smile as the last shot went skipping over the water, “you’re devilish fond o’ fireworks, to waste good powder so far from home!”
Ben mumbled out that he had plenty of powder, and that some fools didn’t know fireworks from war.
M. Radisson said he was glad there was plenty of powder, there would doubtless be use found for it, and he knew fools oft mistook fireworks for war.