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PAGE 7

The Capture Of The Burgomeister Van Der Werf
by [?]

“All right, my lads. Don’t stand glazing at me like stuck pigs. Stand by to slacken sheets. I’m going to gybe her.”

Well, they obeyed, though not a man of them could guess what he was after. Over went the big mainsail with a jerk that must have pitched Captain Cornelisz clean out of his bunk below; for half a minute later he comes puffing and growling up the companion and wanting to know in his best Dutch if this was the end of the world, and if not, what was it?

“That’s capital,” says Jacka, “for I was just about stepping down to call you. See that lugger, yonder?” He jerked his thumb over his shoulder at a speck in the grey from which the Van der Werf was now running at something like nine knots an hour.

“Well?”

“I know that lugger, and we’re running away from her.”

“Pack of stuff!” says Captain Cornelisz, or Dutch to that effect. “D’ee want to be told a dozen times that this is a licensed ship?” And he called for his flag, to hoist it.

“Oh, drop your fancy pocket-handkerchiefs, and listen to reason, that’s a dear man! O’ course I know you carry a licence; but the point is– the lugger don’t know. O’ course I’m running away from her, by your leave; but the point is–she can run and reach three miles to our two. And lastly, o’ course you’re master here, and can do what you please; but, if you’re not pressed for time, there’s money in it, and you shan’t say I didn’t give you the chance.”

Captain Cornelisz eyed Jacka for a full minute, and then a dinky little smile started in one eye and spread till it covered the whole of his wide face.

“You’re a knowing one,” said he.

“Was never considered so,” answered Jacka, very modest.

“She’s put about and after us,” said the skipper, after a long stare over his right shoulder.

“She’ll have us in less than three hours. There’s one thing to be done, and that’s to stow me somewheres out of the way; for if anyone on board of her catches sight of me, the game’s up. S’pose we try the lazarette, if you have such a place. I like fresh air as a rule, but for once in a while I don’t mind bein’ squoze; and, as lazarettes go, yours ought to be nice and roomy.”

“You shall have a bottle of Hollands for company,” promised Captain Cornelisz.

So the hatch was pulled up, and down Jacka crept and curled himself up in the darkness. The Dutchman provisioned him there with a bottle of strong waters and a bag of biscuits, and–what’s more–called down to him so long as was prudent and kept him informed how the chase was going.

By this time the lugger–which I needn’t tell you was Mr. Zephaniah Job’s pet Unity, with Captain Dick Hewitt commanding–was closing down on the Van der Werf, overhauling her hand-over-fist. Down in the lazarette Jacka had scarcely finished prising the cork out of his bottle of Hollands when he heard the bang of a gun. This was the lugger’s command to round-to and surrender; and the old boy, who had been vexing himself with fear that some cruiser might drop in and spoil sport, put the bottle to his mouth and drank Mr. Job’s very good health.

“For I think,” says he to himself, with a chuckle, “I can trust Cap’n Dick Hewitt to put his foot into this little mess just as deep as it will go.”

With that, being heavy after his night’s watch, he tied up his chin in his bandanna handkerchief to keep him from snoring, curled round, and dropped off to sleep like a babe.

Well, sir, Cap’n Dick Hewitt brought-to his prize, as he reckoned her; and when he came aboard and sized up the cargo and the Unity’s luck, as he reckoned it, his boastfulness was neither to hold nor to bind. No such windfall had been picked up for the Pride of the West during the four years he’d been in the company’s service. He scarce stayed to give a glance at the Van der Werf’s papers, though Captain Cornelisz was ready for him with the wrong set. “I guess,” says he, “you’ll spare yourself the trouble to pretend you ain’t a Dutchman”; and when the skipper flung his arms about and began to jabber like a play-actor, ’twas “All right, Mynheer; we’ll talk about that at Falmouth. Look here, boys,” he sings out to his boarding party, “we’ve something here too good to be let out of sight. My idea is to reach back for Polperro in company, and let Mr. Job and the shareholders have a view of her before taking her round to Falmouth. It won’t cost us three hours extra,” says he, “and a little bit of a flourish is excusable under the circumstances.”