Things had grown too hot for Shard, captain of pirates, on
all the seas that he knew. The ports of Spain were closed to
him; they knew him in San Domingo; men winked in Syracuse when
he went by; the two Kings of the Sicilies never smiled within an
hour of speaking of him; there were huge rewards for his head in
every capital city, with pictures of it for
identification and all the pictures were
unflattering. Therefore Captain
Shard decided that the time had come to tell his men the secret.
Riding off Teneriffe one night, he called them all
together. He generously admitted that there were things in the
past that might require explanation: the crowns that the
Princes of Aragon had sent to their nephews the Kings of the two
Americas had certainly never reached their Most Sacred
Majesties. Where, men might ask, were the eyes of Captain
Stobbud? Who had been burning towns on the Patagonian seaboard?
Why should such a ship as theirs choose pearls for cargo? Why
so much blood on the decks and so many guns? And where was the
Nancy, the Lark, or the Margaret Belle?
Such questions as these, he urged, might be asked by the inquisitive, and if
counsel for the defence should happen to be a fool, and
unacquainted with the ways of the sea, they might become
involved in troublesome legal formulae. And Bloody Bill, as
they rudely called Mr. Gagg, a member of the crew, looked up at
the sky, and said that it was a windy night and looked like
hanging. And some of those present thoughtfully stroked their
necks while Captain Shard unfolded to them his plan. He said
the time was come to quit the Desperate Lark, for she was
too well known to the navies of four kingdoms, and a fifth was
getting to know her, and others had suspicions. (More cutters
than even Captain Shard suspected were already looking for her
jolly black flag with its neat skull-and-crossbones in yellow.)
There was a little archipelago that he knew of on the wrong side
of the Sargasso Sea; there were but thirty islands there, bare,
ordinary islands, but one of them floated. He had noticed it
years ago, and had gone ashore and never told a soul, but had
quietly anchored it with the anchor of his ship to the bottom of
the sea, which just there was profoundly deep, and had made the
thing the secret of his life, determining to marry and settle
down there if it ever became impossible to earn his livelihood
in the usual way at sea. When first he saw it it was drifting
slowly, with the wind in the tops of the trees; but if the cable
had not rusted away, it should be still where he left it, and
they would make a rudder and hollow out cabins below, and at
night they would hoist sails to the trunks of the trees and sail
wherever they liked.
And all the pirates cheered, for they wanted to set their
feet on land again somewhere where the hangman would not come
and jerk them off it at once; and bold men though they were, it
was a strain seeing so many lights coming their way at night.
Even then ... ! But it swerved away again and was lost in the
mist.
And Captain Shard said that they would need to get
provisions first, and he, for one, intended to marry before he
settled down; and so they should have one more fight before they
left the ship, and sack the sea-coast city of Bombasharna and
take from it provisions for several years, while he himself
would marry the Queen of the South. And again the pirates
cheered, for often they had seen seacoast Bombasharna, and had
always envied its opulence from the sea.
So they set all sail, and often altered their course, and
dodged and fled from strange lights till dawn appeared, and all
day long fled southwards. And by evening they saw the silver
spires of slender Bombasharna, a city that was the glory of the
coast. And in the midst of it, far away though they were, they
saw the palace of the Queen of the South; and it was so full of
windows all looking toward the sea, and they were so full of
light, both from the sunset that was fading upon the water and
from candles that maids were lighting one by one, that it looked
far off like a pearl, shimmering still in its haliotis shell,
still wet from the sea.
So Captain Shard and his pirates saw it, at evening over
the water, and thought of rumours that said that Bombasharna was
the loveliest city of the coasts of the world, and that its
palace was lovelier even than Bombasharna; but for the Queen of
the South rumour had no comparison. Then night came down and
hid the silver spires, and Shard slipped on through the
gathering darkness until by midnight the piratic ship lay under
the seaward battlements.
And at the hour when sick men mostly die, and sentries on
lonely ramparts stand to arms, exactly half-an-hour before dawn,
Shard, with two rowing boats and half his crew, with craftily
muffled oars, landed below the battlements. They were through
the gateway of the palace itself before the alarm was sounded,
and as soon as they heard the alarm Shard's gunners at sea
opened upon the town, and before the sleepy soldiery of
Bombasharna knew whether the danger was from the land or the
sea, Shard had successfully captured the Queen of the South.
They would have looted all day that silver sea-coast city, but
there appeared with dawn suspicious topsails just along the
horizon. Therefore the captain with his Queen went down to the
shore at once and hastily re-embarked and sailed away with what
loot they had hurridly got, and with fewer men, for they had to
fight a good deal to get back to the boat. They cursed all day
the interference of those ominous ships which steadily grew
nearer. There were six ships at first, and that night they
slipped away from all but two; but all the next day those two
were still in sight, and each of them had more guns than the
Desperate Lark. All the next night Shard dodged about the
sea, but the two ships separated and one kept him in sight, and
the next morning it was alone with Shard on the sea, and his
archipelago was just in sight, the secret of his life.
And Shard saw he must fight, and a bad fight it was, and
yet it suited Shard's purpose, for he had more merry men when
the fight began than he needed for his island. And they got it
over before any other ship came up; and Shard put all adverse
evidence out of the way, and came that night to the islands near
the Sargasso Sea.
Long before it was light the survivors of the crew were
peering at the sea, and when dawn came there was the island, no
bigger than two ships, straining hard at its anchor, with the
wind in the tops of the trees.
And then they landed and dug cabins below and raised the
anchor out of the deep sea, and soon they made the island what
they called shipshape. But the Desperate Lark they sent
away empty under full sail to sea, where more nations than Shard
suspected were watching for her, and where she was presently
captured by an admiral of Spain, who, when he found none of that
infamous crew on board to hang by the neck from the yard-arm,
grew ill through disappointment.
And Shard on his island offered the Queen of the South the
choicest of the old wines of Provence, and for adornment gave
her Indian jewels looted from galleons with treasure for Madrid,
and spread a table where she dined in the sun, while in some
cabin below he bade the least coarse of his mariners sing; yet
always she was morose and moody towards him, and often at
evening he was heard to say that he wished he knew more about
the ways of Queens. So they lived for years, the pirates mostly
gambling and drinking below, Captain Shard trying to please the
Queen of the South, and she never wholly forgetting Bombasharna.
When they needed new provisions they hoisted sails on the trees,
and as long as no ship came in sight they scudded before the
wind, with the water rippling over the beach of the island; but
as soon as they sighted a ship the sails came down, and they
became an ordinary uncharted rock.
They mostly moved by night; sometimes they hovered off
sea-coast towns as of old, sometimes they boldly entered
river-mouths, and even attached themselves for a while to the
mainland, whence they would plunder the neighbourhood and escape
again to sea. And if a ship was wrecked on their island of a
night they said it was all to the good. They grew very crafty in
seamanship, and cunning in what they did, for they knew that any
news of the Desperate Lark's old crew would bring hangmen
from the interior running down to every port.
And no one is known to have found them out or to have
annexed their island; but a rumour arose and passed from port to
port and every place where sailors meet together, and even
survives to this day, of a dangerous uncharted rock anywhere
between Plymouth and the Horn, which would suddenly rise in the
safest track of ships, and upon which vessels were supposed to
have been wrecked, leaving, strangely enough, no evidence of
their doom. There was a little speculation about it at first,
till it was silenced by the chance remark of a man old with
wandering: "It is one of the mysteries that haunt the sea."
And almost Captain Shard and the Queen of the South lived
happily ever after, though still at evening those on watch in
the trees would see their captain sit with a puzzled air or hear
him mutter now and again in a discontented way: "I wish I knew
more about the ways of Queens."