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Sackett’s Land by Louis L’Amour

the cargo. My goods were dumped in after me, and the hatch was battened down. It

was close and hot in the hold.

When the hatch was closed I tried to sit up but my head spun and pain throbbed

dizzily in my skull. I managed to free my body from the cloak. I lay back,

breathing heavily in the close, hot air. I had been hit harder than I realized,

a mild concussion. After a bit my consciousness slipped away and there was a

long time when I was unaware of anything.

It was the movement that brought me alive, movement of a ship on the water. We

must have come down the river during the night for there was more than river in

the movement I felt. I sat up groggily, choking with thirst.

It was totally black in the hold, and when I tried to stand my head bumped the

edge of the hatch.

There was a pounding of feet on the deck, shouting, and the creak of timbers.

The ship began to move faster. I could feel it, I thought. I sat down, holding

my head in my hands. They had me then, Nick Bardle, at Rupert Genester’s orders.

Well, they wouldn’t keep me. What was it he had said: there’s a lot of deep

water? We’d see about that.

I shook my head, and pain shot through me. No matter. I would have to be ready.

I had no wish to die, to let such a scoundrel win.

What had they said of Bardle? That if he was shorthanded he would grab some

country lad? Well, he had me. I doubted he would kill me when there was work to

be had from me. And I was strong. In the quarries they had said I was strong as

any two men. Yet I knew I was even stronger.

No matter what happened, I must get them to keep me alive and working. Then I

could watch my chance. Nick Bardle would be no fool; he would know most of the

dodges. Best not to fight unless they tried to kill me, not resist, not argue.

Hold myself tight, and wait.

Again I slept, and when I opened my eyes it was to the deeper roll of the open

sea. Scarcely had they opened when the hatch covers were lifted and a head

thrust over the combing. “All right! Up with you! There’s work to be done!”

I jumped up, caught the edge of the hatch and swung to the deck.

The mate drew back. He was a stocky, redheaded, red-faced man with a deep scar

over his right eye. His small blue eyes were hard and mean. He was expecting

trouble, and he had two stalwart men behind him … tough men by the looks of

them.

“A ship!” I said. “Well, cursed I am if I am not on a ship! This is what I’d

hoped for, to find a ship and get to sea!”

They were surprised. They stared. They had expected anger, protests, shouts, and

trouble. Here I was, grinning at them.

“Will you show me how to be a sailor? All my life, I’ve wanted to go to sea!”

“We’ll show you, all right!” The mate hadn’t decided whether to be pleased or

disappointed. “Get for’rd!”

Quickly, I obeyed, and when the hands turned to hoist the fores’l, I was in a

hurry to help.

The hatch lay open, and I was scared. What if they examined my goods? But they

did not. After awhile, the hatch was battened again.

It went against my grain to take the pushing I took, and no Sackett I ever heard

of had stood for such action. Yet when I looked about me at the rest of the

crew, I could see they were a bad lot, and no help would I get from them.

Anyway, that would be mutiny. Only it had to be mutiny, or something like it.

Now I made like I knew nothing about a ship, but I did. We in the fens often

sailed out to sea. Wanting to make them feel they’d like to keep me alive, I

buckled to and worked hard enough for two men.

By the third day I heard the mate, whose name was Berryman, tell Cap’n Bardle.

“Don’t you be hasty, Cap’n. That Sackett is worth two of any man aboard. He’s

got to be soft in the head, all he talks about is how he always wanted to be a

sailorman. But he works like the devil and he’s handy.”

Bardle watched me then, whenever he was on deck. Several times he and Berryman

talked, and one time Berryman asked, “You was a farmer ashore?”

“In the fens. We used boats a lot.”

That seemed to satisfy them for awhile, but finally Berryman came to me again.

“How’d a farmer like you get enemies?”

Now I had my chance, and I took it. I wanted them to have reason to keep me

alive. “There’s some that wanted me dead,” I agreed, “but there’s others who’d

pay twice as much to keep me alive.”

Nick Bardle had all he was likely to get from Rupert Genester, but here was

another thought: there might be more to be made.

“That don’t foller,” Berryman commented, after a moment or two. “Who’d want you

alive?”

“Now think.” I said, “if a man will pay to have me dead, it’s because he stands

to profit by it. Just as he will profit if I die, there’s others will lose, and

those others want me alive.

“The man who wants me dead hasn’t much. In fact, if I get back alive, he hasn’t

anything.”

For two weeks then, all went well. I worked hard. They avoided me, but they made

no effort to push me into dangerous jobs. Yet I trusted none of them. They were

thieves and murderers, and I knew my time was short. They would mull it over,

and they would decide if I had to die. There was too much chance of what I’d do

to them if I somehow got back to England.

The weather held good. I kept an eye out for a distant sail, expecting Captain

Tempany to be coming along soon, but I doubted he would want to overhaul the

Jolly Jack. She had twelve guns that were heavier than those I’d seen on the

Tiger. Moreover, the Jack clearly had a crew of pirates, or the next thing to

them.

Then we came upon a spell of bad weather, with the wind set contrary, and made a

bad time of it, day after day. Tempers grew short, and as best I could, I kept

from the gaze of Berryman or Bardle, knowing I was the likely scapegoat. We

sighted a sail once, then, on the fifth day of bad weather. But it was some

distance off and where it sailed there was wind, as we could see the sails

filled and the wind ruffling the water.

There was a man aboard to whom I found some liking—a brawny young man, strong

yet not tall, a man of dark skin, yet not a Negro. He was a Moor, he told me,

but I knew aught of Moors. He said a Moor was a man of Arab blood born in

Africa, in the north of Africa where there were few blacks except slaves … and

as many white slaves as black. His name was Sakim.

He was a good man at sea, and an able one. He had watched me from time to time

but had said nothing until on this fifth day when we watched the far-off sail,

he spoke softly, “No matter who she is, I’d prefer it to this.”

“And I,” I replied, with candor.

After a moment I said, “Are there others who feel so?”

“There’s one,” he said, “the Neapolitan, Rufisco.”

He, too, had I seen: a small, agile man who reminded me of Corvino. It was

something in their movements, their manner.

“Something might be done,” I said, “if you’ve a mind to chance it.”

“At sea?” he stared at me doubtfully.

“Near the shore.” I said. “There’s a coast off the mainland yonder.”

“And savages?” he suggested.

“Better a risk of what we do not know than what we know. They do not intend me

to return,” I added. “I have nothing to lose. But you?”

“Nothing,” he said. “I will speak to Rufisco.”

There was hard work then, trimming sail with a squall coming up, and the wind

ruffling the water in our direction. Our craft heeled far over under the blast,

righted and put her bows down and went to it. She was a good sailer, that Jolly

Jack, and belied her owners.

Nothing had come of my words with Sakim, but at least he seemed to keep them

quiet.

We finally caught a decent wind and turned to the southwest with occasional

squalls of rain but always some wind. And then, on the sixty-seventh day out, we

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Categories: L'Amour, Loius
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