the light of the lamps Crookenden signed the paper, and handed it
back to the carrier, who mounted to his seat, and drove away.
The merchant went to the edge of the wharf.
"All right, down there?"
"Aye, aye, sir," replied a gruff voice.
"Then cast off."
There was the noise of oars, and a dark object upon the waters vanished
into the night.
"Good-night!"
"Good-night," answered the gruff voice faintly, and Crookenden turned
his steps towards home.
"That's all serene," said the owner of the gruff voice, whose
modulations had suddenly assumed their accustomed timbre--the rather
rasping articulation of the goldsmith.
"Couldn't have fallen out better if I'd arranged it myself. Lay to!
belay! you lazy lubbers, forrard--or whatever is the correct nautical
expression to make her jump. Put your backs into it, and there'll be
five pounds apiece for you in the morning."
"Alla right, boss; we ze boys to pulla. Rocka Codda, you asleep
zere?--you maka Macaroni do alla ze work."
"Pull yerself, you lazy Dago. Anyone w'd think you was rowing the
bloomin' boat by yourself. Why, man, I'm pulling you round every dozen
strokes. The skipper, aft there, is steerin' all he knows agin me."
The truth was that Benjamin's manipulation of the tiller was
extraordinary and erratic, and it was not until the boat was well past
the wharves that he mastered its mysteries.
The tide was ebbing, and when the boat was in the stream her speed
doubled, and there was no need for using the oars. Swiftly and silently
she drifted past the lights on the quay and the ghostly houses which
stood beside the water.
The Pilot's system of beacons was so perfect that with their aid a tyro
such as Tresco found no difficulty in steering his course out of the
harbour.
Outside in the bay, the lights of two vessels could be seen: those of
the plague-ship and of the steamer which, unable to get into the port in
the teeth of the tide, was waiting for the mails.
But Tresco pointed his boat's nose straight for the long beach which
fringed the end of the bay.
The rowers had seen the mail-bags put aboard the boat, and they now
wondered why they did not go straight to the steamer.
"Hi! boss. The mail-steamer lies to starboard: that's her lights behind
the barque's."
"Right, my man," replied Tresco; "but I have a little business ashore
here, before we pull out to her."
The boat was now nearing the beach. As soon as her keel touched the
sa
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