Your dories
would be ice-logged for a month yet."
"It--it--it aren't the Grand Banks no more," stammered Jack.
His manner arrested me. The honest blue eyes were shifting and his
toes at work in the sand.
"There be gold on the high seas for the taking," vouched Jack. "An
your fine gentlemen grow rich that way, why mayn't I?"
"Jack," I warned, thinking of Ben Gillam's craft rigged with sails of
as many colours as Joseph's coat, "Jack--is it a pirate-ship?"
"No," laughed the sailor lad sheepishly, "'tis a pirateer," meaning
thereby a privateer, which was the same thing in those days.
"Have a care of your pirateers--privateers, Jack," said I, speaking
plain. "A gentleman would be run through the gullet with a clean
rapier, but you--you--would be strangled by sentence of court or sold
to the Barbadoes."
"Not if the warden o' the court owns half the ship," protested Jack,
smiling queerly under his shaggy brows.
"Oh--ho!" said I, thinking of Rebecca's father, and beginning to
understand who supplied money for Ben Gillam's ventures.
"I'm tired o' being a kick-a-toe and fisticuff to everybody. Now, if
I'd been rich and had a ship, I might 'a' sailed for M. Picot."
"Or Mistress Hortense," I added, which brought red spots to the sailor
lad's cheeks.
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