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+The Project Gutenberg E-text of The Ruby of Kishmoor, by Howard Pyle
+</TITLE>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Ruby of Kishmoor, by Howard Pyle
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Ruby of Kishmoor
+
+Author: Howard Pyle
+
+Posting Date: April 29, 2009 [EBook #3687]
+Release Date: January, 2003
+First Posted: July 16, 2001
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RUBY OF KISHMOOR ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Paul J. Hollander. HTML version by Al Haines.
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<H1 ALIGN="center">
+The Ruby of Kishmoor
+</H1>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+By
+</H3>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+Howard Pyle
+</H2>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+CONTENTS
+</H2>
+
+<H4>
+<A HREF="#prologue">Prologue</A>
+<BR>
+I. <A HREF="#chap01">Jonathan Rugg</A>
+<BR>
+II. <A HREF="#chap02">The Mysterious Lady with the Silver Veil</A>
+<BR>
+III. <A HREF="#chap03">The Terrific Encounter with the One-eyed Little Gentleman in Black</A>
+<BR>
+IV. <A HREF="#chap04">The Momentous Adventure with the Stranger with the Silver Ear-rings</A>
+<BR>
+V. <A HREF="#chap05">The Unexpected Encounter with the Sea-captain with the Broken Nose</A>
+<BR>
+VI. <A HREF="#chap06">The Conclusion of the Adventure with the Lady with the Silver Veil</A>
+<BR>
+<A HREF="#epilogue">Epilogue</A>
+</H4>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="prologue"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+Prologue
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+A very famous pirate of his day was Captain Robertson Keitt.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Before embarking upon his later career of infamy, he was, in the
+beginning, very well known as a reputable merchant in the island of
+Jamaica. Thence entering, first of all, upon the business of the
+African trade, he presently, by regular degrees, became a pirate, and
+finally ended his career as one of the most renowned freebooters of
+history.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The remarkable adventure through which he at once reached the pinnacle
+of success, and became in his profession the most famous figure of his
+day, was the capture of the Rajah of Kishmoor's great ship, The Sun of
+the East. In this vessel was the Rajah's favorite Queen, who, together
+with her attendants, were set upon a pilgrimage to Mecca. The court of
+this great Oriental potentate was, as may be readily supposed, fairly
+a-glitter with gold and jewels, so that, what with such personal
+adornments that the Queen and her attendants had fetched with them,
+besides an ample treasury for the expenses of the expedition, an
+incredible prize of gold and jewels rewarded the freebooters for their
+successful adventure.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Among the precious stones taken in this great purchase was the splendid
+ruby of Kishmoor. This, as may be known to the reader, was one of the
+world's greatest gems, and was unique alike both for its prodigious
+size and the splendor of its color. This precious jewel the Rajah of
+Kishmoor had, upon a certain occasion, bestowed upon his Queen, and at
+the time of her capture she wore it as the centre-piece of a sort of a
+coronet which encircled her forehead and brow.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The seizure by the pirate of so considerable a person as that of the
+Queen of Kishmoor, and of the enormous treasure that he found aboard
+her ship, would alone have been sufficient to have established his
+fame. But the capture of so extraordinary a prize as that of the
+ruby&mdash;which was, in itself, worth the value of an entire Oriental
+kingdom&mdash;exalted him at once to the very highest pinnacle of renown.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Having achieved the capture of this incredible prize, our captain
+scuttled the great ship and left her to sink with all on board. Three
+Lascars of the crew alone escaped to bear the news of this tremendous
+disaster to an astounded world.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As may readily be supposed, it was now no longer possible for Captain
+Keitt to hope to live in such comparative obscurity as he had before
+enjoyed. His was now too remarkable a figure in the eyes of the world.
+Several expeditions from various parts were immediately fitted out
+against him, and it presently became no longer compatible with his
+safety to remain thus clearly outlined before the eyes of the world.
+Accordingly, he immediately set about seeking such security as he might
+now hope to find, which he did the more readily since he had now, and
+at one cast, so entirely fulfilled his most sanguine expectations of
+good-fortune and of fame.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Thereafter, accordingly, the adventures of our captain became of a more
+apocryphal sort. It was known that he reached the West Indies in
+safety, for he was once seen at Port Royal and twice at Spanish Town,
+in the island of Jamaica. Thereafter, however, he disappeared; nor was
+it until several years later that the world heard anything concerning
+him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One day a certain Nicholas Duckworthy, who had once been gunner aboard
+the pirate captain's own ship, The Good Fortune, was arrested in the
+town of Bristol in the very act of attempting to sell to a merchant of
+that place several valuable gems from a quantity which he carried with
+him tied up in a red bandanna handkerchief.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the confession of which Duckworthy afterward delivered himself he
+declared that Captain Keitt, after his great adventure, having sailed
+from Africa in safety, and so reached the shores of the New World, had
+wrecked The Good Fortune on a coral reef off the Windward Islands; that
+he then immediately deserted the ship, and together with Duckworthy
+himself, the sailing-master (who was a Portuguese), the captain of a
+brig The Bloody Hand (a consort of Keitt's), and a villainous rascal
+named Hunt (who, occupying no precise position among the pirates, was
+at once the instigator of and the partaker in the greatest part of
+Captain Keitt's wickednesses), made his way to the nearest port of
+safety. These five worthies at last fetched the island of Jamaica,
+bringing with them all of the jewels and some of the gold that had been
+captured from The Sun of the East.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But, upon coming to a division of their booty, it was presently
+discovered that the Rajah's ruby had mysteriously disappeared from the
+collection of jewels to be divided. The other pirates immediately
+suspected their captain of having secretly purloined it, and, indeed,
+so certain were they of his turpitude that they immediately set about
+taking means to force a confession from him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In this, however, they were so far unsuccessful that the captain,
+refusing to yield to their importunities, had suffered himself to die
+under their hands, and had so carried the secret of the hiding-place of
+the great ruby&mdash;if he possessed such a secret&mdash;along with him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Duckworthy concluded his confession by declaring that in his opinion he
+himself, the Portuguese sailing-master, the captain of The Bloody Hand,
+and Hunt were the only ones of Captain Keitt's crew who were now alive;
+for that The Good Fortune must have broken up in a storm, which
+immediately followed their desertion of her; in which event the entire
+crew must inevitably have perished.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It may be added that Duckworthy himself was shortly hanged, so that, if
+his surmise was true, there was now only three left alive of all that
+wicked crew that had successfully carried to its completion the
+greatest adventure which any pirate in the world had ever, perhaps,
+embarked upon.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap01"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+I. Jonathan Rugg
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+You may never know what romantic aspirations may lie hidden beneath the
+most sedate and sober demeanor.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+To have observed Jonathan Rugg, who was a tall, lean, loose-jointed
+young Quaker of a somewhat forbidding aspect, with straight, dark hair
+and a bony, overhanging forehead set into a frown, a pair of small,
+deep-set eyes, and a square jaw, no one would for a moment have
+suspected that he concealed beneath so serious an exterior any appetite
+for romantic adventure.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Nevertheless, finding himself suddenly transported, as it were, from
+the quiet of so sober a town as that of Philadelphia to the tropical
+enchantment of Kingston, in the island of Jamaica, the night brilliant
+with a full moon that swung in an opal sky, the warm and luminous
+darkness replete with the mysteries of a tropical night, and burdened
+with the odors of a land breeze, he suddenly discovered himself to be
+overtaken with so vehement a desire for some unwonted excitement that,
+had the opportunity presented itself, he felt himself ready to embrace
+any adventure with the utmost eagerness, no matter whither it would
+have conducted him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At home (where he was a clerk in the counting-house of a leading
+merchant, by name Jeremiah Doolittle), should such idle fancies have
+come to him, he would have looked upon himself as little better than a
+fool, but now that he found himself for the first time in a foreign
+country, surrounded by such strange and unusual sights and sounds, all
+conducive to extravagant imaginations, the wish for some extraordinary
+and altogether unusual experience took possession of him with a
+singular vehemence to which he had heretofore been altogether a
+stranger.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the street where he stood, which was of a shining whiteness and
+which reflected the effulgence of the moonlight with an incredible
+distinction, he observed, stretching before him, long lines of white
+garden walls, overtopped by a prodigious luxuriance of tropical foliage.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In these gardens, and set close to the street, stood several
+pretentious villas and mansions, the slatted blinds and curtains of the
+windows of which were raised to admit of the freer entrance of the cool
+and balmy air of the night. From within there issued forth bright
+lights, together with the exhilarating sound of merry voices laughing
+and talking, or perhaps a song accompanied by the tinkling music of a
+spinet or of a guitar. An occasional group of figures, clad in light
+and summer-like garments, and adorned with gay and startling colors,
+passed him through the moonlight; so that what with the brightness and
+warmth of the night, together with all these unusual sights and sounds,
+it appeared to Jonathan Rugg that he was rather the inhabitant of some
+extraordinary land of enchantment and unreality than a dweller upon
+that sober and solid world in which he had heretofore passed his entire
+existence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Before continuing this narrative the reader may here be informed that
+our hero had come into this enchanted world as the supercargo of the
+ship SUSANNA HAYES, of Philadelphia; that he had for several years
+proved himself so honest and industrious a servant to the merchant
+house of the worthy Jeremiah Doolittle that that benevolent man had
+given to his well-deserving clerk this opportunity at once of
+gratifying an inclination for foreign travel and of filling a position
+of trust that should redound to his individual profit. The SUSANNA
+HAYES had entered Kingston Harbor that afternoon, and this was
+Jonathan's first night spent in those tropical latitudes, whither his
+fancy and his imagination had so often carried him while he stood over
+the desk filing the accounts of invoices from foreign parts.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It might be finally added that, had he at all conceived how soon and to
+what a degree his sudden inclination for adventure was to be gratified,
+his romantic aspirations might have been somewhat dashed at the
+prospect that lay before him.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap02"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+II. The Mysterious Lady with the Silver Veil
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+At that moment our hero suddenly became conscious of the fact that a
+small wicket in a wooden gate near which he stood had been opened, and
+that the eyes of an otherwise concealed countenance were observing him
+with the utmost closeness of scrutiny.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He had hardly time to become aware of this observation of his person
+when the gate itself was opened, and there appeared before him, in the
+moonlight, the bent and crooked figure of an aged negress. She was
+clad in a calamanco raiment, and was further adorned with a variety of
+gaudily colored trimmings, vastly suggestive of the tropical world of
+which she was an inhabitant. Her woolly head was enveloped, after the
+fashion of her people, in the folds of a gigantic and flaming red
+turban constructed of an entire pocket-handkerchief. Her face was
+pock-pitted to an incredible degree, so that what with this deformity,
+emphasized by the pouting of her prodigious and shapeless lips, and the
+rolling of a pair of eyes as yellow as saffron, Jonathan Rugg thought
+that he had never beheld a figure at once so extraordinary and so
+repulsive.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It occurred to our hero that here, maybe, was to overtake him such an
+adventure as that which he had just a moment before been desiring so
+ardently. Nor was he mistaken; for the negress, first looking this way
+and then that, with an extremely wary and cunning expression, and
+apparently having satisfied herself that the street, for the moment,
+was pretty empty of passers, beckoned to him to draw nearer. When he
+had approached close enough to her she caught him by the sleeve, and,
+instantly drawing him into the garden beyond, shut and bolted the gate
+with a quickness and a silence suggestive of the most extravagant
+secrecy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At the same moment a huge negro suddenly appeared from the shadow of
+the gatepost, and so placed himself between Jonathan and the gate that
+any attempt to escape would inevitably have entailed a conflict, upon
+our hero's part, with the sable and giant guardian.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Says the negress, looking very intently at our hero: "Be you afeard,
+Buckra?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why, no," quothed Jonathan; "for to tell thee the truth, friend,
+though I am a man of peace, being of that religious order known as the
+Society of Friends, I am not so weak in person nor so timid in
+disposition as to warrant me in being afraid of any one. Indeed, were I
+of a mind to escape, I might, without boasting, declare my belief that
+I should be able to push my way past even a better man than thy large
+friend who stands so threateningly in front of yonder gate."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At these words the negress broke into so prodigious a grin that, in the
+moonlight, it appeared as though the whole lower part of her face had
+been transformed into shining teeth. "You be a brave Buckra," says
+she, in her gibbering English. "You come wid Melina, and Melina take
+you to pretty lady, who want you to eat supper wid her."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Thereupon, and allowing our hero no opportunity to decline this
+extraordinary invitation, even had he been of a mind to do so, she took
+him by the hand, and led him toward the large and imposing house which
+commanded the garden. "Indeed," says Jonathan to himself, as he
+followed his sable guide&mdash;himself followed in turn by the gigantic
+negro&mdash;"indeed, I am like to have my fill of adventure, if anything is
+to be judged from such a beginning as this."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Nor did the interior sumptuousness of the mansion at all belie the
+imposing character of its exterior, for, entering by way of an
+illuminated veranda, and so coming into a brilliantly lighted hallway
+beyond, Jonathan beheld himself to be surrounded by such a wealth of
+exquisite and well-appointed tastefulness as it had never before been
+his good-fortune to behold.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Candles of clarified wax sparkled like stars in chandeliers of crystal.
+These in turn, catching the illumination, glittered in prismatic
+fragments with all the varied colors of the rainbow, so that a mellow
+yet brilliant radiance filled the entire apartment. Polished mirrors of
+a spotless clearness, framed in golden frames and built into the walls,
+reflected the waxed floors, the rich Oriental carpets, and the
+sumptuous paintings that hung against the ivory-tinted paneling, so
+that in appearance the beauties of the apartment were continued in
+bewildering vistas upon every side toward which the beholder directed
+his gaze.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bidding our hero to be seated, which he did with no small degree of
+embarrassment and constraint, and upon the extreme edge of the gilt and
+satin-covered chair, the negress who had been his conductor left him
+for the time being to his own contemplation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Almost before he had an opportunity to compose himself into anything
+more than a part of his ordinary sedateness of demeanor, the silken
+curtains at the doorway at the other end of the apartment were suddenly
+divided, and Jonathan beheld before him a female figure displaying the
+most exquisite contour of mould and of proportion. She was clad
+entirely in white, and was enveloped from head to foot in the folds of
+a veil of delicate silver gauze, which, though hiding her countenance
+from recognition, nevertheless permitted sufficient of her beauties to
+be discerned to suggest the extreme elegance and loveliness of her
+lineaments. Advancing toward our hero, and extending to him a tapering
+hand as white as alabaster, the fingers encircled with a multitude of
+jewelled rings, she addressed him thus:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sir," she said, speaking in accents of the most silvery and musical
+cadence, "you are no doubt vastly surprised to find yourself thus
+unexpectedly, and almost as by violence, introduced into the house of
+one who is such an entire stranger to you as myself. But though I am
+unknown to you, I must inform you that I am better acquainted with my
+visitor, for my agents have been observing you ever since you landed
+this afternoon at the dock, and they have followed you ever since,
+until a little while ago, when you stopped immediately opposite my
+garden gate. These agents have observed you with a closeness of
+scrutiny of which you are doubtless entirely unaware. They have even
+informed me that, owing doubtless to your extreme interest in your new
+surroundings, you have not as yet supped. Knowing this, and that you
+must now be enjoying a very hearty appetite, I have to ask you if you
+will do me the extreme favor of sitting at table with me at a repast
+which you will doubtless be surprised to learn has been hastily
+prepared entirely in your honor."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So saying, and giving Jonathan no time for reply, she offered him her
+hand, and with the most polite insistence conducted him into an
+exquisitely appointed dining room adjoining.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Here stood a table covered with a snow-white cloth, and embellished
+with silver and crystal ornaments of every description. Having seated
+herself and having indicated to Jonathan to take the chair opposite to
+her, the two were presently served with a repast such as our hero had
+not thought could have existed out of the pages of certain
+extraordinary Oriental tales which one time had fallen to his lot to
+read.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This supper (which in itself might successfully have tempted the taste
+of a Sybarite) was further enhanced by several wines and cordials
+which, filling the room with the aroma of the sunlit grapes from which
+they had been expressed, stimulated the appetite, which without them
+needed no such spur. The lady, who ate but sparingly herself,
+possessed herself with patience until Jonathan's hunger had been
+appeased. When, however, she beheld that he weakened in his attacks
+upon the dessert of sweets with which the banquet was concluded, she
+addressed him upon the business which was evidently entirely occupying
+her mind.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sir," said she, "you are doubtless aware that every one, whether man
+or woman, is possessed of an enemy. In my own case I must inform you
+that I have no less than three who, to compass their ends, would gladly
+sacrifice my life itself to their purposes. At no time am I safe from
+their machinations, nor have I any one," cried she, exhibiting a great
+emotion, "to whom I may turn in my need. It was this that led me to
+hope to find in you a friend in my perils, for, having observed through
+my agents that you are not only honest in disposition and strong in
+person, but that you are possessed of a considerable degree of energy
+and determination, I am most desirous of imposing upon your good-nature
+a trust of which you cannot for a moment suspect the magnitude. Tell
+me, are you willing to assist a poor, defenceless female in her hour of
+trial?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Indeed, friend," quoth Jonathan, with more vivacity than he usually
+exhibited, with a lenity to which he had heretofore in his lifetime
+been a stranger&mdash;being warmed into such a spirit, doubtless, by the
+generous wines of which he had partaken&mdash;"indeed, friend, if I could
+but see thy face it would doubtless make my decision in such a matter
+the more favorable, since I am inclined to think from the little I can
+behold of it, that thy appearance must be extremely comely to the eye."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sir," said the lady, exhibiting some amusement at this unexpected
+sally, "I am, you must know, as God made me. Sometime, perhaps, I may
+be very glad to satisfy your curiosity, and exhibit to you my poor
+countenance such as it is. But now"&mdash;and here she reverted to her more
+serious mood&mdash;"I must again put it to you: are you willing to help an
+unprotected woman in a period of very great danger to herself? Should
+you decline the assistance which I solicit, my slaves shall conduct you
+to the gate through which you entered, and suffer you to depart in
+peace. Should you, upon the other hand, accept the trust, you are to
+receive no reward therefor, except the gratitude of one who thus
+appeals to you in her helplessness."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For a few moments Jonathan fell silent, for here, indeed, was he
+entering into an adventure which infinitely surpassed any anticipation
+that he could have formed. He was, besides, of a cautious nature, and
+was entirely disinclined to embark into any affair so obscure and
+tangled as that in which he now found himself becoming involved.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Friend," said he, at last, "I may tell thee that thy story has so far
+moved me as to give me every inclination to help thee in thy
+difficulties, but I must also inform thee that I am a man of caution,
+having never before entered into any business of this sort. Therefore,
+before giving any promise that may bind my future actions, I must, in
+common wisdom, demand to know what are the conditions that thou hast in
+mind to impose upon me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Indeed, sir," cried the lady, with great vivacity and with more
+cheerful accents&mdash;as though her mind had been relieved of a burden of
+fear that her companion might at once have declined even a
+consideration of her request&mdash;"indeed, sir, you will find that the
+trust which I would impose upon you is in appearance no such great
+matter as my words may have led you to suppose.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You must know that I am possessed of a little trinket which, in the
+hands of any one who, like yourself, is a stranger in these parts,
+would possess no significance, but which while in my keeping is fraught
+with infinite menace to me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Hereupon, and having so spoken, she clapped her hands, and an attendant
+immediately entered, disclosing the person of the same negress who had
+first introduced Jonathan into the strange adventure in which he now
+found himself involved. This creature, who appeared still more
+deformed and repulsive in the brilliantly lighted room than she had in
+the moonlight, carried in her hands a white napkin, which she handed to
+her mistress. This being opened, disclosed a small ivory ball of about
+the bigness of a lime. Nodding to the negress to withdraw, the lady
+handed him the ivory ball, and Jonathan took it with no small degree of
+curiosity and examined it carefully. It appeared to be of an exceeding
+antiquity, and of so deep a yellow as to be almost brown in color. It
+was covered over with strange figures and characters of an Oriental
+sort, which appeared to our hero to be of Chinese workmanship.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I must tell you, sir," said the lady, after she had permitted her
+guest to examine this for a while in silence, "that though this appears
+to you to be of little worth, it is yet of extreme value. After all,
+however, it is nothing but a curiosity that any one who is interested
+in such matters might possess. What I have to ask you is this: Will
+you be willing to take this into your charge, to guard it with the
+utmost care and fidelity&mdash;yes, even as the apple of your eye&mdash;during
+your continuance in these parts, and to return it to me in safety the
+day before your departure. By so doing you will render me a service
+which you may neither understand nor comprehend, but which shall make
+me your debtor for my entire life."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+By this time Jonathan had pretty well composed his mind for a reply.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Friend," said he, "such a matter as this is entirely out of my
+knowledge of business, which is, indeed, that of a clerk in the
+mercantile profession. Nevertheless, I have every inclination to help
+thee, though I trust thou mayest have magnified the dangers that beset
+thee. This appears to me to be a little trifle for such an ado;
+nevertheless, I will do as thou dost request. I will keep it in safety
+and will return it to thee upon this day a week hence, by which time I
+hope to have discharged my cargo and be ready to continue my voyage to
+Demerara."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At these words the lady, who had been watching him all the time with a
+most unaccountable eagerness, burst forth into words of such heart-felt
+gratitude as to entirely overwhelm our hero. When her transports had
+been somewhat assuaged she permitted him to depart, and the negress
+conducted him back through the garden, whence she presently showed him
+through the gate whither he had entered and out into the street.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap03"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+III. The Terrific Encounter with the One-eyed Little Gentleman in Black
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Finding himself once more in the open street, Jonathan Rugg stood for a
+while in the moonlight, endeavoring to compose his mind into somewhat
+of that sobriety that was habitual with him; for, indeed, he was not a
+little excited by the unexpected incidents that had just befallen him.
+From this effort at composure he was aroused by observing that a little
+gentleman clad all in black had stopped at a little distance away and
+was looking very intently at him. In the brightness of the moonlight
+our hero could see that the little gentleman possessed but a single
+eye, and that he carried a gold-headed cane in his hand. He had hardly
+time to observe these particulars, when the other approached him with
+every appearance of politeness and cordiality.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sir," said he, "surely I am not mistaken in recognizing in you the
+supercargo of the ship SUSANNA HAYES, which arrived this afternoon at
+this port?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Indeed," said Jonathan, "thou art right, friend. That is my
+occupation, and that is whence I came."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"To be sure!" said the little gentleman. "To be sure! To be sure!
+The SUSANNA HAYES, with a cargo of Indian-corn meal, and from dear good
+friend Jeremiah Doolittle, of Philadelphia. I know your good master
+very well&mdash;very well indeed. And have you never heard him speak of his
+friend Mr. Abner Greenway, of Kingston, Jamaica?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why, no," replied Jonathan, "I have no such recollection of the name
+nor do I know that any such name hath ever appeared upon our books."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"To be sure! To be sure!" repeated the little gentleman, briskly, and
+with exceeding good-nature. "Indeed, my name is not likely to have
+ever appeared upon his books, for I am not a business correspondent,
+but one who, in times past, was his extremely intimate friend. There
+is much I would like to ask about him, and, indeed, I was in hopes that
+you would have been the bearer of a letter from him. But I have
+lodgings at a little distance from here, so that if it is not
+requesting too much of you maybe you will accompany me thither, so that
+we may talk at our leisure. I would gladly accompany you to your ship
+instead of urging you to come to my apartments, but I must tell you I
+am possessed of a devil of a fever, so that my physician hath forbidden
+me to be out of nights."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Indeed," said Jonathan, whom, you may have observed, was of a very
+easy disposition&mdash;"indeed, I shall be very glad to accompany thee to
+thy lodgings. There is nothing I would like better than to serve any
+friend of good Jeremiah Doolittle's."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And thereupon, and with great amity, the two walked off together, the
+little one-eyed gentleman in black linking his arm confidingly into
+that of Jonathan's, and tapping the pavement continually with his cane
+as he trotted on at a great pace. He was very well acquainted with the
+town (of which he was a citizen), and so interesting was his discourse
+that they had gone a considerable distance before Jonathan observed
+they were entering into a quarter darker and less frequented than that
+which they had quitted. Tall brick houses stood upon either side,
+between which stretched a narrow, crooked roadway, with a kennel
+running down the centre.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In front of one of these houses&mdash;a tall and gloomy structure&mdash;our
+hero's conductor stopped and, opening the door with a key, beckoned for
+him to enter. Jonathan having complied, his new-found friend led the
+way up a flight of steps, against which Jonathan's feet beat noisily in
+the darkness, and at length, having ascended two stairways and having
+reached a landing, he opened a door at the end of the passage and
+ushered Jonathan into an apartment, unlighted, except for the
+Moonshine, which, coming in through a partly open shutter, lay in a
+brilliant patch of light upon the floor.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His conductor having struck a light with a flint and steel, our hero by
+the illumination of a single candle presently discovered himself to be
+in a bedchamber furnished with no small degree of comfort, and even
+elegance, and having every appearance of a bachelor's chamber.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You will pardon me," said his new acquaintance, "if I shut these
+shutters and the window, for that devilish fever of which I spoke is of
+such a sort that I must keep the night air even out from my room, or
+else I shall be shaking the bones out of my joints and chattering the
+teeth out of my head by to-morrow morning."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So saying he was as good as his word, and not only drew the shutters
+to, but shot the heavy iron bolt into its place. Having accomplished
+this he bade our hero to be seated, and placing before him some
+exceedingly superior rum, together with some equally excellent tobacco,
+they presently fell into the friendliest discourse imaginable. In the
+course of their talk, which after awhile became exceedingly
+confidential, Jonathan confided to his new friend the circumstances of
+the adventure into which he had been led by the beautiful stranger, and
+to all that he said concerning his adventure his interlocutor listened
+with the closest and most scrupulously riveted attention.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Upon my word," said he, when Jonathan had concluded, "I hope that you
+may not have been made the victim of some foolish hoax. Let me see what
+it is she has confided to you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That I will," replied Jonathan. And thereupon he thrust his hand into
+his breeches-pocket and brought forth the ivory ball.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+No sooner did the one eye of the little gentleman in black light upon
+the object than a most singular and extraordinary convulsion appeared
+to seize upon him. Had a bullet penetrated his heart he could not have
+started more violently, nor have sat more rigidly and breathlessly
+staring.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mastering his emotion with the utmost difficulty as Jonathan replaced
+the ball in his pocket, he drew a deep and profound breath and wiped
+the palm of his hand across his forehead as though arousing himself
+from a dream.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And you," he said, of a sudden, "are, I understand it, a Quaker. Do
+you, then, never carry a weapon, even in such a place as this, where at
+any moment in the dark a Spanish knife may be stuck betwixt your ribs?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why, no," said Jonathan, somewhat surprised that so foreign a topic
+should have been so suddenly introduced into the discourse. "I am a man
+of peace and not of blood. The people of the Society of Friends never
+carry weapons, either of offence or defence."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As Jonathan concluded his reply the little gentleman suddenly arose
+from his chair and moved briskly around to the other side of the room.
+Our hero, watching him with some surprise, beheld him clap to the door
+and with a single movement shoot the bolt and turn the key therein.
+The next instant he turned to Jonathan a visage transformed as suddenly
+as though he had dropped a mask from his face. The gossiping and
+polite little old bachelor was there no longer, but in his stead a man
+with a countenance convulsed with some furious and nameless passion.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That ball!" he cried, in a hoarse and raucous voice. "That ivory
+ball! Give it to me upon the instant!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As he spoke he whipped out from his bosom a long, keen Spanish knife
+that in its every appearance spoke without equivocation of the most
+murderous possibilities.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The malignant passions that distorted every lineament of the
+countenance of the little old gentleman in black filled our hero with
+such astonishment that he knew not whether he were asleep or awake; but
+when he beheld the other advancing with the naked and shining knife in
+his hand his reason returned to him like a flash. Leaping to his feet,
+he lost no time in putting the table between himself and his sudden
+enemy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Indeed, friend," he cried, in a voice penetrated with terror&mdash;"indeed,
+friend, thou hadst best keep thy distance from me, for though I am a
+man of peace and a shunner of bloodshed, I promise thee that I will not
+stand still to be murdered without outcry or without endeavoring to
+defend my life!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Cry as loud as you please!" exclaimed the other. "No one is near this
+place to hear you! Cry until you are hoarse; no one in this
+neighborhood will stop to ask what is the matter with you. I tell you
+I am determined to possess myself of that ivory ball, and have it I
+shall, even though I am obliged to cut out your heart to get it!" As
+he spoke he grinned with so extraordinary and devilish a distortion of
+his countenance, and with such an appearance of every intention of
+carrying out his threat as to send the goose-flesh creeping like icy
+fingers up and down our hero's spine with the most incredible rapidity
+and acuteness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Nevertheless, mastering his fears, Jonathan contrived to speak up with
+a pretty good appearance of spirit. "Indeed, friend," he said, "thou
+appearest to forget that I am a man of twice thy bulk and half thy
+years, and that though thou hast a knife I am determined to defend
+myself to the last extremity. I am not going to give thee that which
+thou demandest of me, and for thy sake I advise thee to open the door
+and let me go free as I entered, or else harm may befall thee."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Fool!" cried the other, hardly giving him time to end. "Do you, then,
+think that I have time to chatter with you while two villains are lying
+in wait for me, perhaps at the very door? Blame your own self for your
+death!" And, gnashing his teeth with an indescribable menace, and
+resting his hand upon the table, he vaulted with incredible agility
+clean across it and upon our hero, who, entirely unprepared for such an
+extraordinary attack, was flung back against the wall, with an arm as
+strong as steel clutching his throat and a knife flashing in his very
+eyes with dreadful portent of instant death.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With an instinct to preserve his life, he caught his assailant by the
+wrist, and, bending it away from himself, set every fibre of his body
+in a superhuman effort to guard and protect himself. The other, though
+so much older and smaller, seemed to be composed entirely of fibres of
+steel, and, in his murderous endeavors, put forth a strength so
+extraordinary that for a moment our hero felt his heart melt within him
+with terror for his life. The spittal appeared to dry up within his
+mouth, and his hair to creep and rise upon his head. With a vehement
+cry of despair and anguish, he put forth one stupendous effort for
+defence, and, clapping his heel behind the other's leg, and throwing
+his whole weight forward, he fairly tripped his antagonist backward as
+he stood. Together they fell upon the floor, locked in the most
+desperate embrace, and overturning a chair with a prodigious clatter in
+their descent&mdash;our hero upon the top and the little gentleman in black
+beneath him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As they struck the floor the little man in black emitted a most
+piercing and terrible scream, and instantly relaxing his efforts of
+attack, fell to beating the floor with the back of his hands and
+drubbing with his heels upon the rug in which he had become entangled.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Our hero leaped to his feet, and with dilating eyes and expanding brain
+and swimming sight stared down upon the other like one turned to a
+stone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He beheld instantly what had occurred, and that he had, without so
+intending, killed a fellow-man. The knife, turned away from his own
+person, had in their fall been plunged into the bosom of the other, and
+he now lay quivering in the last throes of death. As Jonathan gazed he
+beheld a thin red stream trickle out from the parted and grinning lips;
+he beheld the eyes turn inward; he beheld the eyelids contract; he
+beheld the figure stretch itself; he beheld it become still in death.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap04"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+IV. The Momentous Adventure with the Stranger with the Silver Ear-rings
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+So our hero stood stunned and bedazed, gazing down upon his victim,
+like a man turned into a stone. His brain appeared to him to expand
+like a bubble, the blood surged and bummed in his ears with every
+gigantic beat of his heart, his vision swam, and his trembling hands
+were bedewed with a cold and repugnant sweat. The dead figure upon the
+floor at his feet gazed at him with a wide, glassy stare, and in the
+confusion of his mind it appeared to Jonathan that he was, indeed, a
+murderer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+What monstrous thing was this that had befallen him who, but a moment
+before, had been so entirely innocent of the guilt of blood? What was
+he now to do in such an extremity as this, with his victim lying dead
+at his feet, a poniard in his heart? Who would believe him to be
+guiltless of crime with such a dreadful evidence as this presented
+against him? How was he, a stranger in a foreign land, to totally
+defend himself against an accusing of mistaken justice? At these
+thoughts a developed terror gripped at his vitals and a sweat as cold
+as ice bedewed his entire body. No, he must tarry for no explanation or
+defense! He must immediately fly from this terrible place, or else,
+should he be discovered, his doom would certainly be sealed!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At that moment, and in the very extremity of his apprehensions, there
+fell of a sudden a knock upon the door, sounding so loud and so
+startling upon the silence of the room that every shattered nerve in
+our hero's frame tingled and thrilled in answer to it. He stood
+petrified, scarcely so much as daring to breathe; and then, observing
+that his mouth was agape, he moistened his dry and parching lips, and
+drew his jaws together with a snap.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Again there fell the same loud, insistent knock upon the panel,
+followed by the imperative words: "Open within!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The wretched Jonathan flung about him a glance at once of terror and of
+despair, but there was for him no possible escape. He was shut tight
+in the room with his dead victim, like a rat in a trap. Nothing
+remained for him but to obey the summons from without. Indeed, in the
+very extremity of his distraction, he possessed reason enough to
+perceive that the longer he delayed opening the door the less innocent
+he might hope to appear in the eyes of whoever stood without.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With the uncertain and spasmodic movements of an ill-constructed
+automaton, he crossed the room, and stepping very carefully over the
+prostrate body upon the floor, and with a hesitating reluctance that he
+could in no degree master, he unlocked, unbolted, and opened the door.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The figure that outlined itself in the light of the candle, against the
+blackness of the passageway without was of such a singular and foreign
+aspect as to fit extremely well into the extraordinary tragedy of which
+Jonathan was at once the victim and the cause.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was that of a lean, tall man with a thin, yellow countenance,
+embellished with a long, black mustache, and having a pair of
+forbidding, deeply set, and extremely restless black eyes. A crimson
+handkerchief beneath a lace cocked hat was tied tightly around the
+head, and a pair of silver earrings, which caught the light of the
+candle, gleamed and twinkled against the inky darkness of the
+passageway beyond.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This extraordinary being, without favoring our hero with any word of
+apology for his intrusion, immediately thrust himself forward into the
+room, and stretching his long, lean, bird-like neck so as to direct his
+gaze over the intervening table, fixed a gaping and concentrated stare
+upon the figure lying still and motionless in the centre of the room.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Vat you do dare," said he, with a guttural and foreign accent, and
+thereupon, without waiting for a reply, came forward and knelt down
+beside the dead man. After thrusting his hand into the silent and
+shrunken bosom, he presently looked up and fixed his penetrating eyes
+upon our hero's countenance, who, benumbed and bedazed with his
+despair, still stood like one enchained in the bonds of a nightmare.
+"He vas dead!" said the stranger, and Jonathan nodded his head in reply.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Vy you keel ze man?" inquired his interlocutor.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Indeed," cried Jonathan, finding a voice at last, but one so hoarse
+that he could hardly recognize it for his own, "I know not what to make
+of the affair! But, indeed, I do assure thee, friend, that I am
+entirely innocent of what thou seest."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The stranger still kept his piercing gaze fixed upon our hero's
+countenance, and Jonathan, feeling that something further was demanded
+of him, continued: "I am, indeed, a victim of a most extravagant and
+extraordinary adventure. This evening, coming an entire stranger to
+this country, I was introduced into the house of a beautiful female,
+who bestowed upon me a charge that appeared to me to be at once
+insignificant and absurd. Behold this little ivory ball," said he,
+drawing the globe from his pocket, and displaying it between his thumb
+and finger. "It is this that appears to have brought all this disaster
+upon me; for, coming from the house of the young woman, the man whom
+thou now beholdest lying dead upon the floor induced me to come to this
+place. Having inveigled me hither, he demanded of me to give him at
+once this insignificant trifle. Upon my refusing to do so, he
+assaulted me with every appearance of a mad and furious inclination to
+deprive me of my life!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At the sight of the ivory ball the stranger quickly arose from his
+kneeling posture and fixed upon our hero a gaze the most extraordinary
+that he had ever encountered. His eyes dilated like those of a cat,
+the breath expelled itself from his bosom in so deep and profound an
+expiration that it appeared as though it might never return again. Nor
+was it until Jonathan had replaced the ball in his pocket that he
+appeared to awaken from the trance that the sight of the object had
+sent him into. But no sooner had the cause of this strange demeanor
+disappeared into our hero's breeches-pocket than he arose as with an
+electric shock. In an instant he became transformed as by the touch of
+magic. A sudden and baleful light flamed into his eyes, his face grew
+as red as blood, and he clapped his hand to his pocket with a sudden
+and violent motion. "Ze ball!" he cried, in a hoarse and strident
+voice. "Ze ball! Give me ze ball!" And upon the next instant our
+hero beheld the round and shining nozzle of a pistol pointed directly
+against his forehead.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For a moment he stood as though transfixed; then in the mortal peril
+that faced him, he uttered a roar that sounded in his own ears like the
+outcry of a wild beast, and thereupon flung himself bodily upon the
+other with the violence and the fury of a madman.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The stranger drew the trigger, and the powder flashed in the pan. He
+dropped the weapon, clattering, and in an instant tried to draw another
+from his other pocket. Before he could direct his aim, however, our
+hero had caught him by both wrists, and, bending his hand backward,
+prevented the chance of any shot from taking immediate effect upon his
+person. Then followed a struggle of extraordinary ferocity and
+frenzy&mdash;the stranger endeavoring to free his hand, and Jonathan
+striving with all the energy of despair to prevent him from effecting
+his murderous purpose.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the struggle our hero became thrust against the edge of the table.
+He felt as though his back were breaking, and became conscious that in
+such a situation he could hope to defend himself only a few moments
+longer. The stranger's face was pressed close to his own. His hot
+breath, strong with the odor of garlic, fanned our hero's cheek, while
+his lips, distended into a ferocious and ferine grin, displayed his
+sharp teeth shining in the candlelight.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Give me ze ball!" he said, in a harsh and furious whisper.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At the moment there rang in Jonathan's ears the sudden and astounding
+detonation of a pistol-shot, and for a moment he wondered whether he
+had received a mortal wound without being aware of it. Then suddenly
+he beheld an extraordinary and dreadful transformation take place in
+the countenance thrust so close to his own; the eyes winked several
+times with incredible rapidity, and then rolled upward and inward; the
+jaws gaped into a dreadful and cavernous yawn; the pistol fell with a
+clatter to the floor, and the next moment the muscles, so rigid but an
+instant before, relaxed into a limp and listless flaccidity. The
+joints collapsed, and the entire man fell into an indistinguishable
+heap upon and across the dead figure stretched out upon the floor,
+while at the same time a pungent and blinding cloud of gunpowder smoke
+filled the apartment. For a few moments the hands twitched
+convulsively; the neck stretched itself to an abominable length; the
+long, lean legs slowly and gradually relaxed, and every fibre of the
+body gradually collapsed into the lassitude of death. A spot of blood
+appeared and grew upon the collar at the throat, and in the same degree
+the color ebbed from the face leaving it of a dull and leaden pallor.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+All these terrible and formidable changes of aspect our hero stood
+watching with a motionless and riveted attention, and as though they
+were to him matters of the utmost consequence and importance; and only
+when the last flicker of life had departed from his second victim did
+he lift his gaze from this terrible scene of dissolution to stare about
+him, this way and that, his eyes blinded, and his breath stifled by the
+thick cloud of sulphurous smoke that obscured the objects about him in
+a pungent cloud.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap05"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+V. The Unexpected Encounter with the Sea-captain with the Broken Nose
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+If our hero had been distracted and bedazed by the first catastrophe
+that had befallen, this second and even more dreadful and violent
+occurrence appeared to take away from him, for the moment, every power
+of thought and of sensation. All that perturbation of emotion that had
+before convulsed him he discovered to have disappeared, and in its
+stead a benumbed and blinded intelligence alone remained to him. As he
+stood in the presence of this second death, of which he had been as
+innocent and as unwilling an instrument as he had of the first, he
+could observe no signs either of remorse or of horror within him. He
+picked up his hat, which had fallen upon the floor in the first
+encounter, and, brushing away the dust with the cuff of his coat sleeve
+with extraordinary care, adjusted the beaver upon his head with the
+utmost nicety. Then turning, still stupefied as with the fumes of some
+powerful drug, he prepared to quit the scene of tragic terrors that had
+thus unexpectedly accumulated upon him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But ere he could put his design into execution his ears were startled
+by the sound of loud and hurried footsteps which, coming from below,
+ascended the stairs with a prodigious clatter and bustle of speed. At
+the landing these footsteps paused for a while, and then approached,
+more cautious and deliberate, toward the room where the double tragedy
+had been enacted, and where our hero yet stood silent and inert.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+All this while Jonathan made no endeavor to escape, but stood passive
+and submissive to what might occur. He felt himself the victim of
+circumstances over which he himself had no control. Gazing at the
+partly opened door, he awaited for whatever adventure might next befall
+him. Once again the footsteps paused, this time at the very threshold,
+and then the door was slowly pushed open from without.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As our hero gazed at the aperture there presently became disclosed to
+his view the strong and robust figure of one who was evidently of a
+seafaring habit. From the gold braid upon his hat, the seals dangling
+from the ribbon at his fob, and a certain particularity of custom, he
+was evidently one of no small consideration in his profession. He was
+of a strong and powerful build, with a head set close to his shoulders,
+and upon a round, short bull neck. He wore a black cravat, loosely
+tied into a knot, and a red waistcoat elaborately trimmed with gold
+braid; a leather belt with a brass buckle and hanger, and huge
+sea-boots completed a costume singularly suggestive of his occupation
+in life. His face was round and broad, like that of a cat, and a
+complexion stained, by constant exposure to the sun and wind, to a
+color of newly polished mahogany. But a countenance which otherwise
+might have been humorous, in this case was rendered singularly
+repulsive by the fact that his nose had been broken so flat to his face
+that all that remained to distinguish that feature were two circular
+orifices where the nostrils should have been. His eyes were by no
+means so sinister as the rest of his visage, being of a light-gray
+color and exceedingly vivacious&mdash;even good-natured in the merry
+restlessness of their glance&mdash;albeit they were well-nigh hidden beneath
+a black bush of overhanging eyebrows. When he spoke, his voice was so
+deep and resonant that it was as though it issued from a barrel rather
+than from the breast of a human being.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How now, my hearty!" cried he, in stentorian tones, so loud that they
+seemed to stun the tensely drawn drums of our hero's ears. "How now, my
+hearty! What's to-do here? Who is shooting pistols at this hour of
+the night?" Then, catching sight of the figures lying in a huddle upon
+the floor, his great, thick lips parted into a gape of wonder and his
+gray eyes rolled in his head like two balls, so that what with his flat
+face and the round holes of his nostrils he presented an appearance
+which, under other circumstances, would have been at once ludicrous and
+grotesque.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"By the blood!" cried he, "to be sure it is murder that has happened
+here."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not murder!" cried Jonathan, in a shrill and panting voice. "Not
+murder! It was all an accident, and I am as innocent as a baby."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The new-comer looked at him and then at the two figures upon the floor,
+and then back at him again with eyes at once quizzical and cunning.
+Then his face broke into a grin that might hardly be called of
+drollery. "Accident!" quoth he. "By the blood! d'ye see 'tis a
+strange accident, indeed, that lays two men by the heels and lets the
+third go without a scratch!" Delivering himself thus, he came forward
+into the room, and, taking the last victim of Jonathan's adventure by
+the arm, with as little compunction as he would have handled a sack of
+grain he dragged the limp and helpless figure from where it lay to the
+floor beside the first victim. Then, lifting the lighted candle, he
+bent over the two prostrate bodies, holding the illumination close to
+the lineaments first of one and then of the other. He looked at them
+very carefully for a long while, with the closest and most intent
+scrutiny, and in perfect silence. "They are both as dead," says he,
+"as Davy Jones, and, whoever you be, I protest that you have done your
+business the most completest that I ever saw in all of my life."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Indeed," cried Jonathan, in the same shrill and panting voice, "it was
+themselves who did it. First one of them attacked me and then the
+other, and I did but try to keep them from murdering me. This one fell
+on his knife, and that one shot himself in his efforts to destroy me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That," says the seaman, "you may very well tell to a dry-lander, and
+maybe he will believe you; but you cannot so easily pull the wool over
+the eyes of Captain Benny Willitts. And what, if I may be so bold as
+for to ask you, was the reason for their attacking so harmless a man as
+you proclaim yourself to be?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That I know not," cried Jonathan; "but I am entirely willing to tell
+thee all the circumstances. Thou must know that I am a member of the
+Society of Friends. This day I landed here in Kingston, and met a
+young woman of very comely appearance, who intrusted me with this
+little ivory ball, which she requested me to keep for her a few days.
+The sight of this ball&mdash;in which I can detect nothing that could be
+likely to arouse any feelings of violence&mdash;appears to have driven these
+two men entirely mad, so that they instantly made the most ferocious
+and murderous assault upon me. See! wouldst thou have believed that so
+small a thing as this would have caused so much trouble?" And as he
+spoke he held up to the gaze of the other the cause of the double
+tragedy that had befallen. But no sooner had Captain Willitts's eyes
+lighted upon the ball than the most singular change passed over his
+countenance. The color appeared to grow dull and yellow in his ruddy
+cheeks, his fat lips dropped apart, and his eyes stared with a fixed
+and glassy glare. He arose to his feet and, still with the expression
+of astonishment and wonder upon his face, gazed first at our hero and
+then at the ivory ball in his hands, as though he were deprived both of
+reason and of speech. At last, as our hero slipped the trifle back in
+his pocket again, the mariner slowly recovered himself, though with a
+prodigious effort, and drew a deep and profound breath as to the very
+bottom of his lungs. He wiped, with the corner of his black silk
+cravat, his brow, upon which the sweat appeared to have gathered.
+"Well, messmate," says he, at last, with a sudden change of voice, "you
+have, indeed, had a most wonderful adventure." Then with another deep
+breath: "Well, by the blood! I may tell you plainly that I am no poor
+hand at the reading of faces. Well, I think you to be honest, and I am
+inclined to believe every word you tell me. By the blood! I am
+prodigiously sorry for you, and am inclined to help you out of your
+scrape.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The first thing to do," he continued, "is to get rid of these two dead
+men, and that is an affair I believe we shall have no trouble in
+handling. One of them we will wrap up in the carpet here, and t'other
+we can roll into yonder bed-curtain. You shall carry the one and I the
+other, and, the harbor being at no great distance, we can easily bring
+them thither and tumble them overboard, and no one will be the wiser of
+what has happened. For your own safety, as you may easily see, you can
+hardly go away and leave these objects here to be found by the
+first-comer, and to arise up in evidence against you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This reasoning, in our hero's present bewildered state, appeared to him
+to be so extremely just that he raised not the least objection to it.
+Accordingly, each of the two silent, voiceless victims of the evening's
+occurrences were wrapped into a bundle that from without appeared to be
+neither portentous nor terrible in appearance.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Thereupon, Jonathan shouldering the rug containing the little gentleman
+in black, and the sea-captain doing the like for the other, they
+presently made their way down the stairs through the darkness, and so
+out into the street. Here the sea-captain became the conductor of the
+expedition, and leading the way down several alleys and along certain
+by-streets&mdash;now and then stopping to rest, for the burdens were both
+heavy and clumsy to carry&mdash;they both came out at last to the harbor
+front, without any one having questioned them or having appeared to
+suspect them of anything wrong. At the water-side was an open wharf
+extending a pretty good distance out into the harbor. Thither the
+captain led the way and Jonathan followed. So they made their way out
+along the wharf or pier, stumbling now and then over loose boards,
+until they came at last to where the water was of a sufficient depth
+for their purpose. Here the captain, bending his shoulders, shot his
+burden out into the dark, mysterious waters, and Jonathan, following
+his example, did the same. Each body sank with a sullen and leaden
+splash into the element where, the casings which swathed them becoming
+loosened, the rug and the curtain rose to the surface and drifted
+slowly away with the tide.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As Jonathan stood gazing dully at the disappearance of these last
+evidences of his two inadvertent murders, he was suddenly and
+vehemently aroused by feeling a pair of arms of enormous strength flung
+about him from behind. In their embrace his elbows were instantly
+pinned tight to his side, and he stood for a moment helpless and
+astounded, while the voice of the sea-captain, rumbling in his very
+ear, exclaimed: "Ye bloody, murthering Quaker, I'll have that ivory
+ball, or I'll have your life!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+These words produced the same effect upon Jonathan as though a douche
+of cold water had suddenly been flung over him. He began instantly to
+struggle to free himself, and that with a frantic and vehement violence
+begotten at once of terror and despair. So prodigious were his efforts
+that more than once he had nearly torn himself free, but still the
+powerful arms of his captor held him as in a vise of iron. Meantime,
+our hero's assailant made frequent though ineffectual attempts to
+thrust a hand into the breeches-pocket where the ivory ball was hidden,
+swearing the while under his breath with a terrifying and monstrous
+string of oaths. At last, finding himself foiled in every such
+attempt, and losing all patience at the struggles of his victim, he
+endeavored to lift Jonathan off of his feet, as though to dash him
+bodily upon the ground. In this he would doubtless have succeeded had
+he not caught his heel in the crack of a loose board of the wharf.
+Instantly they both fell, violently prostrate, the captain beneath and
+Jonathan above him, though still encircled in his iron embrace. Our
+hero felt the back of his head strike violently upon the flat face of
+the other, and he heard the captain's skull sound with a terrific crack
+like that of a breaking egg upon some post or billet of wood, against
+which he must have struck. In their frantic struggles they had
+approached extremely near the edge of the wharf, so that the next
+instant, with an enormous and thunderous splash, Jonathan found himself
+plunged into the waters of the harbor, and the arms of his assailant
+loosened from about his body.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The shock of the water brought him instantly to his senses, and, being
+a fairly good swimmer, he had not the least difficulty in reaching and
+clutching the cross-piece of a wooden ladder that, coated with slimy
+sea-moss, led from the water-level to the wharf above.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After reaching the safety of the dry land once more, Jonathan gazed
+about him as though to discern whence the next attack might be
+delivered upon him. But he stood entirely alone upon the dock&mdash;not
+another living soul was in sight. The surface of the water exhibited
+some commotion, as though disturbed by something struggling beneath;
+but the sea-captain, who had doubtless been stunned by the tremendous
+crack upon his head, never arose again out of the element that had
+engulfed him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The moonlight shone with a peaceful and resplendent illumination, and,
+excepting certain remote noises from the distant town not a sound broke
+the silence and the peacefulness of the balmy, tropical night. The
+limpid water, illuminated by the resplendent moonlight, lapped against
+the wharf. All the world was calm, serene, and enveloped in a profound
+and entire repose.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Jonathan looked up at the round and brilliant globe of light floating
+in the sky above his head, and wondered whether it were, indeed,
+possible that all that had befallen him was a reality and not some
+tremendous hallucination. Then suddenly arousing himself to a renewed
+realization of that which had occurred, he turned and ran like one
+possessed, up along the wharf, and so into the moonlit town once more.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap06"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+VI. The Conclusion of the Adventure with the Lady with the Silver Veil
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Nor did he check his precipitous flight until suddenly, being led
+perhaps by some strange influence of which he was not at all the
+master, he discovered himself to be standing before the garden-gate
+where not more than an hour before he had first entered upon the series
+of monstrous adventures that had led to such tremendous conclusions.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+People were still passing and repassing, and one of these groups&mdash;a
+party of young ladies and gentlemen&mdash;paused upon the opposite side of
+the street to observe, with no small curiosity and amusement, his
+dripping and bedraggled aspect. But only one thought and one intention
+possessed our hero&mdash;to relieve himself as quickly as possible of that
+trust which he had taken up so thoughtlessly, and with such monstrous
+results to himself and to his victims. He ran to the gate of the
+garden and began beating and kicking upon it with a vehemence that he
+could neither master nor control. He was aware that the entire
+neighborhood was becoming aroused, for he beheld lights moving and loud
+voices of inquiry; yet he gave not the least thought to the disturbance
+he was creating, but continued without intermission his uproarious
+pounding upon the gate.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At length, in answer to the sound of his vehement blows, the little
+wicket was opened and a pair of eyes appeared thereat. The next
+instant the gate was cast ajar very hastily, and the pock-pitted
+negress appeared. She caught him by the sleeve of his coat and drew
+him quickly into the garden. "Buckra, Buckra!" she cried. "What you
+doing? You wake de whole town!" Then, observing his dripping
+garments: "You been in de water. You catch de fever and shake till you
+die."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thy mistress!" cried Jonathan, almost sobbing in the excess of his
+emotion; "take me to her upon the instant, or I cannot answer for my
+not going entirely mad!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When our hero was again introduced to the lady, he found her clad in a
+loose and an elegant negligee, infinitely becoming to her graceful
+figure, and still covered with the veil of silver gauze that had before
+enveloped her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Friend," he cried, vehemently, approaching her and holding out toward
+her the little ivory ball, "take again this which thou gavest me! It
+has brought death to three men, and I know not what terrible fate may
+befall me if I keep it longer in my possession.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What is it you say?" cried she, in a piercing voice. "Did you say it
+hath caused the death of three men? Quick! Tell me what has happened,
+for I feel somehow a presage that you bring me news of safety and
+release from all my dangers."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know not what thou meanest!" cried Jonathan, still panting with
+agitation. "But this I do know: that when I went away from thee I
+departed an innocent man, and now I come back to thee burdened with the
+weight of three lives, which, though innocent I have been instrumental
+in taking."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Explain!" exclaimed the lady, tapping the floor with her foot.
+"Explain! explain! explain!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That I will," cried Jonathan, "and as soon as I am able! When I left
+thee and went out into the street I was accosted by a little gentleman
+clad in black."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Indeed!" cried the lady; "and had he but one eye, and did he carry a
+gold-headed cane?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Exactly," said Jonathan; "and he claimed acquaintance with friend
+Jeremiah Doolittle."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He never knew him!" cried the lady, vehemently; "and I must tell you
+that he was a villain named Hunt, who at one time was the intimate
+consort of the pirate Keitt. He it was who plunged a deadly knife into
+his captain's bosom, and so murdered him in this very house. He
+himself or his agents, must have been watching my gate when you went
+forth."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know not how that may be," said Jonathan, "but he took me to his
+apartment, and there, obtaining a knowledge of the trust thou didst
+burden me with, he demanded it of me, and upon my refusing to deliver
+it to him he presently fell to attacking me with a dagger. In my
+efforts to protect my life I inadvertently caused him to plunge the
+knife into his own bosom and to kill himself."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And what then?" cried the lady, who appeared well-nigh distracted
+with her emotions.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then," said Jonathan, "there came a strange man&mdash;a foreigner&mdash;who upon
+his part assaulted me with a pistol, with every intention of murdering
+me and thus obtaining possession of that same little trifle."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And did he," exclaimed the lady, "have long, black mustachios, and did
+he have silver ear-rings in his ears?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes," said Jonathan, "he did."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That," cried the lady, "could have been none other than Captain
+Keitt's Portuguese sailing-master, who must have been spying upon Hunt!
+Tell me what happened next!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He would have taken my life," said Jonathan, "but in the struggle that
+followed he shot himself accidentally with his own pistol, and died at
+my very feet. I do not know what would have happened to me if a
+sea-captain had not come and proffered his assistance."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A sea-captain!" she exclaimed; "and had he a flat face and a broken
+nose?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Indeed he had," replied Jonathan.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That," said the lady, "must have been Captain Keitt's pirate
+partner&mdash;Captain Willitts, of The Bloody Hand. He was doubtless spying
+upon the Portuguese."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He induced me," said Jonathan, "to carry the two bodies down to the
+wharf. Having inveigled me there&mdash;where, I suppose, he thought no one
+could interfere&mdash;he assaulted me, and endeavored to take the ivory ball
+away from me. In my efforts to escape we both fell into the water, and
+he, striking his head upon the edge of the wharf, was first stunned and
+then drowned."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thank God!" cried the lady, with a transport of fervor, and clasping
+her jewelled hands together. "At last I am free of those who have
+heretofore persecuted me and threatened my very life itself! You have
+asked to behold my face; I will now show it to you! Heretofore I have
+been obliged to keep it concealed lest, recognizing me, my enemies
+should have slain me." As she spoke she drew aside her veil, and
+disclosed to the vision of our hero a countenance of the most
+extraordinary and striking beauty. Her luminous eyes were like those
+of a Jawa, and set beneath exquisitely arched and pencilled brows. Her
+forehead was like lustrous ivory and her lips like rose-leaves. Her
+hair, which was as soft as the finest silk, was fastened up in masses
+of ravishing abundance. "I am," said she, "the daughter of that
+unfortunate Captain Keitt, who, though weak and a pirate, was not so
+wicked, I would have you know, as he has been painted. He would,
+doubtless, have been an honest man had he not been led astray by the
+villain Hunt, who so nearly compassed your own destruction. He
+returned to this island before his death, and made me the sole heir of
+all that great fortune which he had gathered&mdash;perhaps not by the most
+honest means&mdash;in the waters of the Indian Ocean. But the greatest
+treasure of all that fortune bequeathed to me was a single jewel which
+you yourself have just now defended with a courage and a fidelity that
+I cannot sufficiently extol. It is that priceless gem known as the
+Ruby of Kishmoor. I will show it to you." Hereupon she took the
+little ivory ball in her hand, and, with a turn of her beautiful
+wrists, unscrewed a lid so nicely and cunningly adjusted that no eye
+could have detected where it was joined to the parent globe. Within was
+a fleece of raw silk containing an object which she presently displayed
+before the astonished gaze of our hero. It was a red stone of about
+the bigness of a plover's egg, and which glowed and flamed with such an
+exquisite and ruddy brilliancy as to dazzle even Jonathan's
+inexperienced eyes. Indeed, he did not need to be informed of the
+priceless value of the treasure, which he beheld in the rosy palm
+extended toward him. How long he gazed at this extraordinary jewel he
+knew not, but he was aroused from his contemplation by the sound of the
+lady's voice addressing him. "The three villains," said she, "who have
+this day met their deserts in a violent and bloody death, had by an
+accident obtained knowledge that this jewel was in my possession.
+Since then my life has hung upon a thread, and every step that I have
+taken has been watched by these enemies, the most cruel and relentless
+that it was ever the lot of any unfortunate to possess. From the
+mortal dangers of their machinations you have saved me, exhibiting a
+courage and a determination that cannot be sufficiently applauded. In
+this you have earned my deepest admiration and regard. I would
+rather," she cried, "intrust my life and my happiness to you than into
+the keeping of any man whom I have ever known! I cannot hope to reward
+you in such a way as to recompense you for the perils into which my
+necessities have thrust you; but yet"&mdash;and here she hesitated, as
+though seeking for words in which to express herself&mdash;"but yet if you
+are willing to accept of this jewel, and all of the fortune that
+belongs to me, together with the person of poor Evaline Keitt herself,
+not only the stone and the wealth, but the woman also, are yours to
+dispose of as you see fit!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Our hero was so struck aback at this unexpected turn that he knew not
+upon the instant what reply to make. "Friend," said he, at last, "I
+thank thee extremely for thy offer, and, though I would not be
+ungracious, it is yet borne in upon me to testify to thee that as to
+the stone itself and the fortune&mdash;of which thou speakest, and of which
+I very well know the history&mdash;I have no inclination to receive either
+the one or the other, both the fruits of theft, rapine, and murder.
+The jewel I have myself beheld three times stained, as it were, with
+the blood of my fellow-man, so that it now has so little value in my
+sight that I would not give a peppercorn to possess it. Indeed, there
+is no inducement in the world that could persuade me to accept it, or
+even to take it again into my hand. As to the rest of thy generous
+offer, I have only to say that I am, four months hence, to be married
+to a very comely young woman of Kensington, in Pennsylvania, by name
+Martha Dobbs, and therefore I am not at all at liberty to consider my
+inclinations in any other direction."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Having so delivered himself, Jonathan bowed with such ease as his stiff
+and awkward joints might command, and thereupon withdrew from the
+presence of the charmer, who, with cheeks suffused with blushes and
+with eyes averted, made no endeavor to detain him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So ended the only adventure of moment that ever happened to him in all
+his life. For thereafter he contented himself with such excitement as
+his mercantile profession and his extremely peaceful existence might
+afford.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="epilogue"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+Epilogue
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+In conclusion it may be said that when the worthy Jonathan Rugg was
+married to Martha Dobbs, upon the following June, some mysterious
+friend presented to the bride a rope of pearls of such considerable
+value that when they were realized into money our hero was enabled to
+enter into partnership with his former patron the worthy Jeremiah
+Doolittle, and that, having made such a beginning, he by-and-by arose
+to become, in his day, one of the leading merchants of his native town
+of Philadelphia.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR><BR>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Ruby of Kishmoor, by Howard Pyle
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Ruby of Kishmoor, by Howard Pyle
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Ruby of Kishmoor
+
+Author: Howard Pyle
+
+Posting Date: April 29, 2009 [EBook #3687]
+Release Date: January, 2003
+First Posted: July 16, 2001
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RUBY OF KISHMOOR ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Paul J. Hollander. HTML version by Al Haines.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+The Ruby of Kishmoor
+
+
+By
+
+Howard Pyle
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+Prologue
+
+I. Jonathan Rugg
+
+II. The Mysterious Lady with the Silver Veil
+
+III. The Terrific Encounter with the One-eyed Little Gentleman in Black
+
+IV. The Momentous Adventure with the Stranger with the Silver Ear-rings
+
+V. The Unexpected Encounter with the Sea-captain with the Broken Nose
+
+VI. The Conclusion of the Adventure with the Lady with the Silver Veil
+
+Epilogue
+
+
+
+
+Prologue
+
+
+A very famous pirate of his day was Captain Robertson Keitt.
+
+Before embarking upon his later career of infamy, he was, in the
+beginning, very well known as a reputable merchant in the island of
+Jamaica. Thence entering, first of all, upon the business of the
+African trade, he presently, by regular degrees, became a pirate, and
+finally ended his career as one of the most renowned freebooters of
+history.
+
+The remarkable adventure through which he at once reached the pinnacle
+of success, and became in his profession the most famous figure of his
+day, was the capture of the Rajah of Kishmoor's great ship, The Sun of
+the East. In this vessel was the Rajah's favorite Queen, who, together
+with her attendants, were set upon a pilgrimage to Mecca. The court of
+this great Oriental potentate was, as may be readily supposed, fairly
+a-glitter with gold and jewels, so that, what with such personal
+adornments that the Queen and her attendants had fetched with them,
+besides an ample treasury for the expenses of the expedition, an
+incredible prize of gold and jewels rewarded the freebooters for their
+successful adventure.
+
+Among the precious stones taken in this great purchase was the splendid
+ruby of Kishmoor. This, as may be known to the reader, was one of the
+world's greatest gems, and was unique alike both for its prodigious
+size and the splendor of its color. This precious jewel the Rajah of
+Kishmoor had, upon a certain occasion, bestowed upon his Queen, and at
+the time of her capture she wore it as the centre-piece of a sort of a
+coronet which encircled her forehead and brow.
+
+The seizure by the pirate of so considerable a person as that of the
+Queen of Kishmoor, and of the enormous treasure that he found aboard
+her ship, would alone have been sufficient to have established his
+fame. But the capture of so extraordinary a prize as that of the
+ruby--which was, in itself, worth the value of an entire Oriental
+kingdom--exalted him at once to the very highest pinnacle of renown.
+
+Having achieved the capture of this incredible prize, our captain
+scuttled the great ship and left her to sink with all on board. Three
+Lascars of the crew alone escaped to bear the news of this tremendous
+disaster to an astounded world.
+
+As may readily be supposed, it was now no longer possible for Captain
+Keitt to hope to live in such comparative obscurity as he had before
+enjoyed. His was now too remarkable a figure in the eyes of the world.
+Several expeditions from various parts were immediately fitted out
+against him, and it presently became no longer compatible with his
+safety to remain thus clearly outlined before the eyes of the world.
+Accordingly, he immediately set about seeking such security as he might
+now hope to find, which he did the more readily since he had now, and
+at one cast, so entirely fulfilled his most sanguine expectations of
+good-fortune and of fame.
+
+Thereafter, accordingly, the adventures of our captain became of a more
+apocryphal sort. It was known that he reached the West Indies in
+safety, for he was once seen at Port Royal and twice at Spanish Town,
+in the island of Jamaica. Thereafter, however, he disappeared; nor was
+it until several years later that the world heard anything concerning
+him.
+
+One day a certain Nicholas Duckworthy, who had once been gunner aboard
+the pirate captain's own ship, The Good Fortune, was arrested in the
+town of Bristol in the very act of attempting to sell to a merchant of
+that place several valuable gems from a quantity which he carried with
+him tied up in a red bandanna handkerchief.
+
+In the confession of which Duckworthy afterward delivered himself he
+declared that Captain Keitt, after his great adventure, having sailed
+from Africa in safety, and so reached the shores of the New World, had
+wrecked The Good Fortune on a coral reef off the Windward Islands; that
+he then immediately deserted the ship, and together with Duckworthy
+himself, the sailing-master (who was a Portuguese), the captain of a
+brig The Bloody Hand (a consort of Keitt's), and a villainous rascal
+named Hunt (who, occupying no precise position among the pirates, was
+at once the instigator of and the partaker in the greatest part of
+Captain Keitt's wickednesses), made his way to the nearest port of
+safety. These five worthies at last fetched the island of Jamaica,
+bringing with them all of the jewels and some of the gold that had been
+captured from The Sun of the East.
+
+But, upon coming to a division of their booty, it was presently
+discovered that the Rajah's ruby had mysteriously disappeared from the
+collection of jewels to be divided. The other pirates immediately
+suspected their captain of having secretly purloined it, and, indeed,
+so certain were they of his turpitude that they immediately set about
+taking means to force a confession from him.
+
+In this, however, they were so far unsuccessful that the captain,
+refusing to yield to their importunities, had suffered himself to die
+under their hands, and had so carried the secret of the hiding-place of
+the great ruby--if he possessed such a secret--along with him.
+
+Duckworthy concluded his confession by declaring that in his opinion he
+himself, the Portuguese sailing-master, the captain of The Bloody Hand,
+and Hunt were the only ones of Captain Keitt's crew who were now alive;
+for that The Good Fortune must have broken up in a storm, which
+immediately followed their desertion of her; in which event the entire
+crew must inevitably have perished.
+
+It may be added that Duckworthy himself was shortly hanged, so that, if
+his surmise was true, there was now only three left alive of all that
+wicked crew that had successfully carried to its completion the
+greatest adventure which any pirate in the world had ever, perhaps,
+embarked upon.
+
+
+
+
+I. Jonathan Rugg
+
+
+You may never know what romantic aspirations may lie hidden beneath the
+most sedate and sober demeanor.
+
+To have observed Jonathan Rugg, who was a tall, lean, loose-jointed
+young Quaker of a somewhat forbidding aspect, with straight, dark hair
+and a bony, overhanging forehead set into a frown, a pair of small,
+deep-set eyes, and a square jaw, no one would for a moment have
+suspected that he concealed beneath so serious an exterior any appetite
+for romantic adventure.
+
+Nevertheless, finding himself suddenly transported, as it were, from
+the quiet of so sober a town as that of Philadelphia to the tropical
+enchantment of Kingston, in the island of Jamaica, the night brilliant
+with a full moon that swung in an opal sky, the warm and luminous
+darkness replete with the mysteries of a tropical night, and burdened
+with the odors of a land breeze, he suddenly discovered himself to be
+overtaken with so vehement a desire for some unwonted excitement that,
+had the opportunity presented itself, he felt himself ready to embrace
+any adventure with the utmost eagerness, no matter whither it would
+have conducted him.
+
+At home (where he was a clerk in the counting-house of a leading
+merchant, by name Jeremiah Doolittle), should such idle fancies have
+come to him, he would have looked upon himself as little better than a
+fool, but now that he found himself for the first time in a foreign
+country, surrounded by such strange and unusual sights and sounds, all
+conducive to extravagant imaginations, the wish for some extraordinary
+and altogether unusual experience took possession of him with a
+singular vehemence to which he had heretofore been altogether a
+stranger.
+
+In the street where he stood, which was of a shining whiteness and
+which reflected the effulgence of the moonlight with an incredible
+distinction, he observed, stretching before him, long lines of white
+garden walls, overtopped by a prodigious luxuriance of tropical foliage.
+
+In these gardens, and set close to the street, stood several
+pretentious villas and mansions, the slatted blinds and curtains of the
+windows of which were raised to admit of the freer entrance of the cool
+and balmy air of the night. From within there issued forth bright
+lights, together with the exhilarating sound of merry voices laughing
+and talking, or perhaps a song accompanied by the tinkling music of a
+spinet or of a guitar. An occasional group of figures, clad in light
+and summer-like garments, and adorned with gay and startling colors,
+passed him through the moonlight; so that what with the brightness and
+warmth of the night, together with all these unusual sights and sounds,
+it appeared to Jonathan Rugg that he was rather the inhabitant of some
+extraordinary land of enchantment and unreality than a dweller upon
+that sober and solid world in which he had heretofore passed his entire
+existence.
+
+Before continuing this narrative the reader may here be informed that
+our hero had come into this enchanted world as the supercargo of the
+ship SUSANNA HAYES, of Philadelphia; that he had for several years
+proved himself so honest and industrious a servant to the merchant
+house of the worthy Jeremiah Doolittle that that benevolent man had
+given to his well-deserving clerk this opportunity at once of
+gratifying an inclination for foreign travel and of filling a position
+of trust that should redound to his individual profit. The SUSANNA
+HAYES had entered Kingston Harbor that afternoon, and this was
+Jonathan's first night spent in those tropical latitudes, whither his
+fancy and his imagination had so often carried him while he stood over
+the desk filing the accounts of invoices from foreign parts.
+
+It might be finally added that, had he at all conceived how soon and to
+what a degree his sudden inclination for adventure was to be gratified,
+his romantic aspirations might have been somewhat dashed at the
+prospect that lay before him.
+
+
+
+
+II. The Mysterious Lady with the Silver Veil
+
+
+At that moment our hero suddenly became conscious of the fact that a
+small wicket in a wooden gate near which he stood had been opened, and
+that the eyes of an otherwise concealed countenance were observing him
+with the utmost closeness of scrutiny.
+
+He had hardly time to become aware of this observation of his person
+when the gate itself was opened, and there appeared before him, in the
+moonlight, the bent and crooked figure of an aged negress. She was
+clad in a calamanco raiment, and was further adorned with a variety of
+gaudily colored trimmings, vastly suggestive of the tropical world of
+which she was an inhabitant. Her woolly head was enveloped, after the
+fashion of her people, in the folds of a gigantic and flaming red
+turban constructed of an entire pocket-handkerchief. Her face was
+pock-pitted to an incredible degree, so that what with this deformity,
+emphasized by the pouting of her prodigious and shapeless lips, and the
+rolling of a pair of eyes as yellow as saffron, Jonathan Rugg thought
+that he had never beheld a figure at once so extraordinary and so
+repulsive.
+
+It occurred to our hero that here, maybe, was to overtake him such an
+adventure as that which he had just a moment before been desiring so
+ardently. Nor was he mistaken; for the negress, first looking this way
+and then that, with an extremely wary and cunning expression, and
+apparently having satisfied herself that the street, for the moment,
+was pretty empty of passers, beckoned to him to draw nearer. When he
+had approached close enough to her she caught him by the sleeve, and,
+instantly drawing him into the garden beyond, shut and bolted the gate
+with a quickness and a silence suggestive of the most extravagant
+secrecy.
+
+At the same moment a huge negro suddenly appeared from the shadow of
+the gatepost, and so placed himself between Jonathan and the gate that
+any attempt to escape would inevitably have entailed a conflict, upon
+our hero's part, with the sable and giant guardian.
+
+Says the negress, looking very intently at our hero: "Be you afeard,
+Buckra?"
+
+"Why, no," quothed Jonathan; "for to tell thee the truth, friend,
+though I am a man of peace, being of that religious order known as the
+Society of Friends, I am not so weak in person nor so timid in
+disposition as to warrant me in being afraid of any one. Indeed, were I
+of a mind to escape, I might, without boasting, declare my belief that
+I should be able to push my way past even a better man than thy large
+friend who stands so threateningly in front of yonder gate."
+
+At these words the negress broke into so prodigious a grin that, in the
+moonlight, it appeared as though the whole lower part of her face had
+been transformed into shining teeth. "You be a brave Buckra," says
+she, in her gibbering English. "You come wid Melina, and Melina take
+you to pretty lady, who want you to eat supper wid her."
+
+Thereupon, and allowing our hero no opportunity to decline this
+extraordinary invitation, even had he been of a mind to do so, she took
+him by the hand, and led him toward the large and imposing house which
+commanded the garden. "Indeed," says Jonathan to himself, as he
+followed his sable guide--himself followed in turn by the gigantic
+negro--"indeed, I am like to have my fill of adventure, if anything is
+to be judged from such a beginning as this."
+
+Nor did the interior sumptuousness of the mansion at all belie the
+imposing character of its exterior, for, entering by way of an
+illuminated veranda, and so coming into a brilliantly lighted hallway
+beyond, Jonathan beheld himself to be surrounded by such a wealth of
+exquisite and well-appointed tastefulness as it had never before been
+his good-fortune to behold.
+
+Candles of clarified wax sparkled like stars in chandeliers of crystal.
+These in turn, catching the illumination, glittered in prismatic
+fragments with all the varied colors of the rainbow, so that a mellow
+yet brilliant radiance filled the entire apartment. Polished mirrors of
+a spotless clearness, framed in golden frames and built into the walls,
+reflected the waxed floors, the rich Oriental carpets, and the
+sumptuous paintings that hung against the ivory-tinted paneling, so
+that in appearance the beauties of the apartment were continued in
+bewildering vistas upon every side toward which the beholder directed
+his gaze.
+
+Bidding our hero to be seated, which he did with no small degree of
+embarrassment and constraint, and upon the extreme edge of the gilt and
+satin-covered chair, the negress who had been his conductor left him
+for the time being to his own contemplation.
+
+Almost before he had an opportunity to compose himself into anything
+more than a part of his ordinary sedateness of demeanor, the silken
+curtains at the doorway at the other end of the apartment were suddenly
+divided, and Jonathan beheld before him a female figure displaying the
+most exquisite contour of mould and of proportion. She was clad
+entirely in white, and was enveloped from head to foot in the folds of
+a veil of delicate silver gauze, which, though hiding her countenance
+from recognition, nevertheless permitted sufficient of her beauties to
+be discerned to suggest the extreme elegance and loveliness of her
+lineaments. Advancing toward our hero, and extending to him a tapering
+hand as white as alabaster, the fingers encircled with a multitude of
+jewelled rings, she addressed him thus:
+
+"Sir," she said, speaking in accents of the most silvery and musical
+cadence, "you are no doubt vastly surprised to find yourself thus
+unexpectedly, and almost as by violence, introduced into the house of
+one who is such an entire stranger to you as myself. But though I am
+unknown to you, I must inform you that I am better acquainted with my
+visitor, for my agents have been observing you ever since you landed
+this afternoon at the dock, and they have followed you ever since,
+until a little while ago, when you stopped immediately opposite my
+garden gate. These agents have observed you with a closeness of
+scrutiny of which you are doubtless entirely unaware. They have even
+informed me that, owing doubtless to your extreme interest in your new
+surroundings, you have not as yet supped. Knowing this, and that you
+must now be enjoying a very hearty appetite, I have to ask you if you
+will do me the extreme favor of sitting at table with me at a repast
+which you will doubtless be surprised to learn has been hastily
+prepared entirely in your honor."
+
+So saying, and giving Jonathan no time for reply, she offered him her
+hand, and with the most polite insistence conducted him into an
+exquisitely appointed dining room adjoining.
+
+Here stood a table covered with a snow-white cloth, and embellished
+with silver and crystal ornaments of every description. Having seated
+herself and having indicated to Jonathan to take the chair opposite to
+her, the two were presently served with a repast such as our hero had
+not thought could have existed out of the pages of certain
+extraordinary Oriental tales which one time had fallen to his lot to
+read.
+
+This supper (which in itself might successfully have tempted the taste
+of a Sybarite) was further enhanced by several wines and cordials
+which, filling the room with the aroma of the sunlit grapes from which
+they had been expressed, stimulated the appetite, which without them
+needed no such spur. The lady, who ate but sparingly herself,
+possessed herself with patience until Jonathan's hunger had been
+appeased. When, however, she beheld that he weakened in his attacks
+upon the dessert of sweets with which the banquet was concluded, she
+addressed him upon the business which was evidently entirely occupying
+her mind.
+
+"Sir," said she, "you are doubtless aware that every one, whether man
+or woman, is possessed of an enemy. In my own case I must inform you
+that I have no less than three who, to compass their ends, would gladly
+sacrifice my life itself to their purposes. At no time am I safe from
+their machinations, nor have I any one," cried she, exhibiting a great
+emotion, "to whom I may turn in my need. It was this that led me to
+hope to find in you a friend in my perils, for, having observed through
+my agents that you are not only honest in disposition and strong in
+person, but that you are possessed of a considerable degree of energy
+and determination, I am most desirous of imposing upon your good-nature
+a trust of which you cannot for a moment suspect the magnitude. Tell
+me, are you willing to assist a poor, defenceless female in her hour of
+trial?"
+
+"Indeed, friend," quoth Jonathan, with more vivacity than he usually
+exhibited, with a lenity to which he had heretofore in his lifetime
+been a stranger--being warmed into such a spirit, doubtless, by the
+generous wines of which he had partaken--"indeed, friend, if I could
+but see thy face it would doubtless make my decision in such a matter
+the more favorable, since I am inclined to think from the little I can
+behold of it, that thy appearance must be extremely comely to the eye."
+
+"Sir," said the lady, exhibiting some amusement at this unexpected
+sally, "I am, you must know, as God made me. Sometime, perhaps, I may
+be very glad to satisfy your curiosity, and exhibit to you my poor
+countenance such as it is. But now"--and here she reverted to her more
+serious mood--"I must again put it to you: are you willing to help an
+unprotected woman in a period of very great danger to herself? Should
+you decline the assistance which I solicit, my slaves shall conduct you
+to the gate through which you entered, and suffer you to depart in
+peace. Should you, upon the other hand, accept the trust, you are to
+receive no reward therefor, except the gratitude of one who thus
+appeals to you in her helplessness."
+
+For a few moments Jonathan fell silent, for here, indeed, was he
+entering into an adventure which infinitely surpassed any anticipation
+that he could have formed. He was, besides, of a cautious nature, and
+was entirely disinclined to embark into any affair so obscure and
+tangled as that in which he now found himself becoming involved.
+
+"Friend," said he, at last, "I may tell thee that thy story has so far
+moved me as to give me every inclination to help thee in thy
+difficulties, but I must also inform thee that I am a man of caution,
+having never before entered into any business of this sort. Therefore,
+before giving any promise that may bind my future actions, I must, in
+common wisdom, demand to know what are the conditions that thou hast in
+mind to impose upon me."
+
+"Indeed, sir," cried the lady, with great vivacity and with more
+cheerful accents--as though her mind had been relieved of a burden of
+fear that her companion might at once have declined even a
+consideration of her request--"indeed, sir, you will find that the
+trust which I would impose upon you is in appearance no such great
+matter as my words may have led you to suppose.
+
+"You must know that I am possessed of a little trinket which, in the
+hands of any one who, like yourself, is a stranger in these parts,
+would possess no significance, but which while in my keeping is fraught
+with infinite menace to me."
+
+Hereupon, and having so spoken, she clapped her hands, and an attendant
+immediately entered, disclosing the person of the same negress who had
+first introduced Jonathan into the strange adventure in which he now
+found himself involved. This creature, who appeared still more
+deformed and repulsive in the brilliantly lighted room than she had in
+the moonlight, carried in her hands a white napkin, which she handed to
+her mistress. This being opened, disclosed a small ivory ball of about
+the bigness of a lime. Nodding to the negress to withdraw, the lady
+handed him the ivory ball, and Jonathan took it with no small degree of
+curiosity and examined it carefully. It appeared to be of an exceeding
+antiquity, and of so deep a yellow as to be almost brown in color. It
+was covered over with strange figures and characters of an Oriental
+sort, which appeared to our hero to be of Chinese workmanship.
+
+"I must tell you, sir," said the lady, after she had permitted her
+guest to examine this for a while in silence, "that though this appears
+to you to be of little worth, it is yet of extreme value. After all,
+however, it is nothing but a curiosity that any one who is interested
+in such matters might possess. What I have to ask you is this: Will
+you be willing to take this into your charge, to guard it with the
+utmost care and fidelity--yes, even as the apple of your eye--during
+your continuance in these parts, and to return it to me in safety the
+day before your departure. By so doing you will render me a service
+which you may neither understand nor comprehend, but which shall make
+me your debtor for my entire life."
+
+By this time Jonathan had pretty well composed his mind for a reply.
+
+"Friend," said he, "such a matter as this is entirely out of my
+knowledge of business, which is, indeed, that of a clerk in the
+mercantile profession. Nevertheless, I have every inclination to help
+thee, though I trust thou mayest have magnified the dangers that beset
+thee. This appears to me to be a little trifle for such an ado;
+nevertheless, I will do as thou dost request. I will keep it in safety
+and will return it to thee upon this day a week hence, by which time I
+hope to have discharged my cargo and be ready to continue my voyage to
+Demerara."
+
+At these words the lady, who had been watching him all the time with a
+most unaccountable eagerness, burst forth into words of such heart-felt
+gratitude as to entirely overwhelm our hero. When her transports had
+been somewhat assuaged she permitted him to depart, and the negress
+conducted him back through the garden, whence she presently showed him
+through the gate whither he had entered and out into the street.
+
+
+
+
+III. The Terrific Encounter with the One-eyed Little Gentleman in Black
+
+
+Finding himself once more in the open street, Jonathan Rugg stood for a
+while in the moonlight, endeavoring to compose his mind into somewhat
+of that sobriety that was habitual with him; for, indeed, he was not a
+little excited by the unexpected incidents that had just befallen him.
+From this effort at composure he was aroused by observing that a little
+gentleman clad all in black had stopped at a little distance away and
+was looking very intently at him. In the brightness of the moonlight
+our hero could see that the little gentleman possessed but a single
+eye, and that he carried a gold-headed cane in his hand. He had hardly
+time to observe these particulars, when the other approached him with
+every appearance of politeness and cordiality.
+
+"Sir," said he, "surely I am not mistaken in recognizing in you the
+supercargo of the ship SUSANNA HAYES, which arrived this afternoon at
+this port?"
+
+"Indeed," said Jonathan, "thou art right, friend. That is my
+occupation, and that is whence I came."
+
+"To be sure!" said the little gentleman. "To be sure! To be sure!
+The SUSANNA HAYES, with a cargo of Indian-corn meal, and from dear good
+friend Jeremiah Doolittle, of Philadelphia. I know your good master
+very well--very well indeed. And have you never heard him speak of his
+friend Mr. Abner Greenway, of Kingston, Jamaica?"
+
+"Why, no," replied Jonathan, "I have no such recollection of the name
+nor do I know that any such name hath ever appeared upon our books."
+
+"To be sure! To be sure!" repeated the little gentleman, briskly, and
+with exceeding good-nature. "Indeed, my name is not likely to have
+ever appeared upon his books, for I am not a business correspondent,
+but one who, in times past, was his extremely intimate friend. There
+is much I would like to ask about him, and, indeed, I was in hopes that
+you would have been the bearer of a letter from him. But I have
+lodgings at a little distance from here, so that if it is not
+requesting too much of you maybe you will accompany me thither, so that
+we may talk at our leisure. I would gladly accompany you to your ship
+instead of urging you to come to my apartments, but I must tell you I
+am possessed of a devil of a fever, so that my physician hath forbidden
+me to be out of nights."
+
+"Indeed," said Jonathan, whom, you may have observed, was of a very
+easy disposition--"indeed, I shall be very glad to accompany thee to
+thy lodgings. There is nothing I would like better than to serve any
+friend of good Jeremiah Doolittle's."
+
+And thereupon, and with great amity, the two walked off together, the
+little one-eyed gentleman in black linking his arm confidingly into
+that of Jonathan's, and tapping the pavement continually with his cane
+as he trotted on at a great pace. He was very well acquainted with the
+town (of which he was a citizen), and so interesting was his discourse
+that they had gone a considerable distance before Jonathan observed
+they were entering into a quarter darker and less frequented than that
+which they had quitted. Tall brick houses stood upon either side,
+between which stretched a narrow, crooked roadway, with a kennel
+running down the centre.
+
+In front of one of these houses--a tall and gloomy structure--our
+hero's conductor stopped and, opening the door with a key, beckoned for
+him to enter. Jonathan having complied, his new-found friend led the
+way up a flight of steps, against which Jonathan's feet beat noisily in
+the darkness, and at length, having ascended two stairways and having
+reached a landing, he opened a door at the end of the passage and
+ushered Jonathan into an apartment, unlighted, except for the
+Moonshine, which, coming in through a partly open shutter, lay in a
+brilliant patch of light upon the floor.
+
+His conductor having struck a light with a flint and steel, our hero by
+the illumination of a single candle presently discovered himself to be
+in a bedchamber furnished with no small degree of comfort, and even
+elegance, and having every appearance of a bachelor's chamber.
+
+"You will pardon me," said his new acquaintance, "if I shut these
+shutters and the window, for that devilish fever of which I spoke is of
+such a sort that I must keep the night air even out from my room, or
+else I shall be shaking the bones out of my joints and chattering the
+teeth out of my head by to-morrow morning."
+
+So saying he was as good as his word, and not only drew the shutters
+to, but shot the heavy iron bolt into its place. Having accomplished
+this he bade our hero to be seated, and placing before him some
+exceedingly superior rum, together with some equally excellent tobacco,
+they presently fell into the friendliest discourse imaginable. In the
+course of their talk, which after awhile became exceedingly
+confidential, Jonathan confided to his new friend the circumstances of
+the adventure into which he had been led by the beautiful stranger, and
+to all that he said concerning his adventure his interlocutor listened
+with the closest and most scrupulously riveted attention.
+
+"Upon my word," said he, when Jonathan had concluded, "I hope that you
+may not have been made the victim of some foolish hoax. Let me see what
+it is she has confided to you."
+
+"That I will," replied Jonathan. And thereupon he thrust his hand into
+his breeches-pocket and brought forth the ivory ball.
+
+No sooner did the one eye of the little gentleman in black light upon
+the object than a most singular and extraordinary convulsion appeared
+to seize upon him. Had a bullet penetrated his heart he could not have
+started more violently, nor have sat more rigidly and breathlessly
+staring.
+
+Mastering his emotion with the utmost difficulty as Jonathan replaced
+the ball in his pocket, he drew a deep and profound breath and wiped
+the palm of his hand across his forehead as though arousing himself
+from a dream.
+
+"And you," he said, of a sudden, "are, I understand it, a Quaker. Do
+you, then, never carry a weapon, even in such a place as this, where at
+any moment in the dark a Spanish knife may be stuck betwixt your ribs?"
+
+"Why, no," said Jonathan, somewhat surprised that so foreign a topic
+should have been so suddenly introduced into the discourse. "I am a man
+of peace and not of blood. The people of the Society of Friends never
+carry weapons, either of offence or defence."
+
+As Jonathan concluded his reply the little gentleman suddenly arose
+from his chair and moved briskly around to the other side of the room.
+Our hero, watching him with some surprise, beheld him clap to the door
+and with a single movement shoot the bolt and turn the key therein.
+The next instant he turned to Jonathan a visage transformed as suddenly
+as though he had dropped a mask from his face. The gossiping and
+polite little old bachelor was there no longer, but in his stead a man
+with a countenance convulsed with some furious and nameless passion.
+
+"That ball!" he cried, in a hoarse and raucous voice. "That ivory
+ball! Give it to me upon the instant!"
+
+As he spoke he whipped out from his bosom a long, keen Spanish knife
+that in its every appearance spoke without equivocation of the most
+murderous possibilities.
+
+The malignant passions that distorted every lineament of the
+countenance of the little old gentleman in black filled our hero with
+such astonishment that he knew not whether he were asleep or awake; but
+when he beheld the other advancing with the naked and shining knife in
+his hand his reason returned to him like a flash. Leaping to his feet,
+he lost no time in putting the table between himself and his sudden
+enemy.
+
+"Indeed, friend," he cried, in a voice penetrated with terror--"indeed,
+friend, thou hadst best keep thy distance from me, for though I am a
+man of peace and a shunner of bloodshed, I promise thee that I will not
+stand still to be murdered without outcry or without endeavoring to
+defend my life!"
+
+"Cry as loud as you please!" exclaimed the other. "No one is near this
+place to hear you! Cry until you are hoarse; no one in this
+neighborhood will stop to ask what is the matter with you. I tell you
+I am determined to possess myself of that ivory ball, and have it I
+shall, even though I am obliged to cut out your heart to get it!" As
+he spoke he grinned with so extraordinary and devilish a distortion of
+his countenance, and with such an appearance of every intention of
+carrying out his threat as to send the goose-flesh creeping like icy
+fingers up and down our hero's spine with the most incredible rapidity
+and acuteness.
+
+Nevertheless, mastering his fears, Jonathan contrived to speak up with
+a pretty good appearance of spirit. "Indeed, friend," he said, "thou
+appearest to forget that I am a man of twice thy bulk and half thy
+years, and that though thou hast a knife I am determined to defend
+myself to the last extremity. I am not going to give thee that which
+thou demandest of me, and for thy sake I advise thee to open the door
+and let me go free as I entered, or else harm may befall thee."
+
+"Fool!" cried the other, hardly giving him time to end. "Do you, then,
+think that I have time to chatter with you while two villains are lying
+in wait for me, perhaps at the very door? Blame your own self for your
+death!" And, gnashing his teeth with an indescribable menace, and
+resting his hand upon the table, he vaulted with incredible agility
+clean across it and upon our hero, who, entirely unprepared for such an
+extraordinary attack, was flung back against the wall, with an arm as
+strong as steel clutching his throat and a knife flashing in his very
+eyes with dreadful portent of instant death.
+
+With an instinct to preserve his life, he caught his assailant by the
+wrist, and, bending it away from himself, set every fibre of his body
+in a superhuman effort to guard and protect himself. The other, though
+so much older and smaller, seemed to be composed entirely of fibres of
+steel, and, in his murderous endeavors, put forth a strength so
+extraordinary that for a moment our hero felt his heart melt within him
+with terror for his life. The spittal appeared to dry up within his
+mouth, and his hair to creep and rise upon his head. With a vehement
+cry of despair and anguish, he put forth one stupendous effort for
+defence, and, clapping his heel behind the other's leg, and throwing
+his whole weight forward, he fairly tripped his antagonist backward as
+he stood. Together they fell upon the floor, locked in the most
+desperate embrace, and overturning a chair with a prodigious clatter in
+their descent--our hero upon the top and the little gentleman in black
+beneath him.
+
+As they struck the floor the little man in black emitted a most
+piercing and terrible scream, and instantly relaxing his efforts of
+attack, fell to beating the floor with the back of his hands and
+drubbing with his heels upon the rug in which he had become entangled.
+
+Our hero leaped to his feet, and with dilating eyes and expanding brain
+and swimming sight stared down upon the other like one turned to a
+stone.
+
+He beheld instantly what had occurred, and that he had, without so
+intending, killed a fellow-man. The knife, turned away from his own
+person, had in their fall been plunged into the bosom of the other, and
+he now lay quivering in the last throes of death. As Jonathan gazed he
+beheld a thin red stream trickle out from the parted and grinning lips;
+he beheld the eyes turn inward; he beheld the eyelids contract; he
+beheld the figure stretch itself; he beheld it become still in death.
+
+
+
+
+IV. The Momentous Adventure with the Stranger with the Silver Ear-rings
+
+
+So our hero stood stunned and bedazed, gazing down upon his victim,
+like a man turned into a stone. His brain appeared to him to expand
+like a bubble, the blood surged and bummed in his ears with every
+gigantic beat of his heart, his vision swam, and his trembling hands
+were bedewed with a cold and repugnant sweat. The dead figure upon the
+floor at his feet gazed at him with a wide, glassy stare, and in the
+confusion of his mind it appeared to Jonathan that he was, indeed, a
+murderer.
+
+What monstrous thing was this that had befallen him who, but a moment
+before, had been so entirely innocent of the guilt of blood? What was
+he now to do in such an extremity as this, with his victim lying dead
+at his feet, a poniard in his heart? Who would believe him to be
+guiltless of crime with such a dreadful evidence as this presented
+against him? How was he, a stranger in a foreign land, to totally
+defend himself against an accusing of mistaken justice? At these
+thoughts a developed terror gripped at his vitals and a sweat as cold
+as ice bedewed his entire body. No, he must tarry for no explanation or
+defense! He must immediately fly from this terrible place, or else,
+should he be discovered, his doom would certainly be sealed!
+
+At that moment, and in the very extremity of his apprehensions, there
+fell of a sudden a knock upon the door, sounding so loud and so
+startling upon the silence of the room that every shattered nerve in
+our hero's frame tingled and thrilled in answer to it. He stood
+petrified, scarcely so much as daring to breathe; and then, observing
+that his mouth was agape, he moistened his dry and parching lips, and
+drew his jaws together with a snap.
+
+Again there fell the same loud, insistent knock upon the panel,
+followed by the imperative words: "Open within!"
+
+The wretched Jonathan flung about him a glance at once of terror and of
+despair, but there was for him no possible escape. He was shut tight
+in the room with his dead victim, like a rat in a trap. Nothing
+remained for him but to obey the summons from without. Indeed, in the
+very extremity of his distraction, he possessed reason enough to
+perceive that the longer he delayed opening the door the less innocent
+he might hope to appear in the eyes of whoever stood without.
+
+With the uncertain and spasmodic movements of an ill-constructed
+automaton, he crossed the room, and stepping very carefully over the
+prostrate body upon the floor, and with a hesitating reluctance that he
+could in no degree master, he unlocked, unbolted, and opened the door.
+
+The figure that outlined itself in the light of the candle, against the
+blackness of the passageway without was of such a singular and foreign
+aspect as to fit extremely well into the extraordinary tragedy of which
+Jonathan was at once the victim and the cause.
+
+It was that of a lean, tall man with a thin, yellow countenance,
+embellished with a long, black mustache, and having a pair of
+forbidding, deeply set, and extremely restless black eyes. A crimson
+handkerchief beneath a lace cocked hat was tied tightly around the
+head, and a pair of silver earrings, which caught the light of the
+candle, gleamed and twinkled against the inky darkness of the
+passageway beyond.
+
+This extraordinary being, without favoring our hero with any word of
+apology for his intrusion, immediately thrust himself forward into the
+room, and stretching his long, lean, bird-like neck so as to direct his
+gaze over the intervening table, fixed a gaping and concentrated stare
+upon the figure lying still and motionless in the centre of the room.
+
+"Vat you do dare," said he, with a guttural and foreign accent, and
+thereupon, without waiting for a reply, came forward and knelt down
+beside the dead man. After thrusting his hand into the silent and
+shrunken bosom, he presently looked up and fixed his penetrating eyes
+upon our hero's countenance, who, benumbed and bedazed with his
+despair, still stood like one enchained in the bonds of a nightmare.
+"He vas dead!" said the stranger, and Jonathan nodded his head in reply.
+
+"Vy you keel ze man?" inquired his interlocutor.
+
+"Indeed," cried Jonathan, finding a voice at last, but one so hoarse
+that he could hardly recognize it for his own, "I know not what to make
+of the affair! But, indeed, I do assure thee, friend, that I am
+entirely innocent of what thou seest."
+
+The stranger still kept his piercing gaze fixed upon our hero's
+countenance, and Jonathan, feeling that something further was demanded
+of him, continued: "I am, indeed, a victim of a most extravagant and
+extraordinary adventure. This evening, coming an entire stranger to
+this country, I was introduced into the house of a beautiful female,
+who bestowed upon me a charge that appeared to me to be at once
+insignificant and absurd. Behold this little ivory ball," said he,
+drawing the globe from his pocket, and displaying it between his thumb
+and finger. "It is this that appears to have brought all this disaster
+upon me; for, coming from the house of the young woman, the man whom
+thou now beholdest lying dead upon the floor induced me to come to this
+place. Having inveigled me hither, he demanded of me to give him at
+once this insignificant trifle. Upon my refusing to do so, he
+assaulted me with every appearance of a mad and furious inclination to
+deprive me of my life!"
+
+At the sight of the ivory ball the stranger quickly arose from his
+kneeling posture and fixed upon our hero a gaze the most extraordinary
+that he had ever encountered. His eyes dilated like those of a cat,
+the breath expelled itself from his bosom in so deep and profound an
+expiration that it appeared as though it might never return again. Nor
+was it until Jonathan had replaced the ball in his pocket that he
+appeared to awaken from the trance that the sight of the object had
+sent him into. But no sooner had the cause of this strange demeanor
+disappeared into our hero's breeches-pocket than he arose as with an
+electric shock. In an instant he became transformed as by the touch of
+magic. A sudden and baleful light flamed into his eyes, his face grew
+as red as blood, and he clapped his hand to his pocket with a sudden
+and violent motion. "Ze ball!" he cried, in a hoarse and strident
+voice. "Ze ball! Give me ze ball!" And upon the next instant our
+hero beheld the round and shining nozzle of a pistol pointed directly
+against his forehead.
+
+For a moment he stood as though transfixed; then in the mortal peril
+that faced him, he uttered a roar that sounded in his own ears like the
+outcry of a wild beast, and thereupon flung himself bodily upon the
+other with the violence and the fury of a madman.
+
+The stranger drew the trigger, and the powder flashed in the pan. He
+dropped the weapon, clattering, and in an instant tried to draw another
+from his other pocket. Before he could direct his aim, however, our
+hero had caught him by both wrists, and, bending his hand backward,
+prevented the chance of any shot from taking immediate effect upon his
+person. Then followed a struggle of extraordinary ferocity and
+frenzy--the stranger endeavoring to free his hand, and Jonathan
+striving with all the energy of despair to prevent him from effecting
+his murderous purpose.
+
+In the struggle our hero became thrust against the edge of the table.
+He felt as though his back were breaking, and became conscious that in
+such a situation he could hope to defend himself only a few moments
+longer. The stranger's face was pressed close to his own. His hot
+breath, strong with the odor of garlic, fanned our hero's cheek, while
+his lips, distended into a ferocious and ferine grin, displayed his
+sharp teeth shining in the candlelight.
+
+"Give me ze ball!" he said, in a harsh and furious whisper.
+
+At the moment there rang in Jonathan's ears the sudden and astounding
+detonation of a pistol-shot, and for a moment he wondered whether he
+had received a mortal wound without being aware of it. Then suddenly
+he beheld an extraordinary and dreadful transformation take place in
+the countenance thrust so close to his own; the eyes winked several
+times with incredible rapidity, and then rolled upward and inward; the
+jaws gaped into a dreadful and cavernous yawn; the pistol fell with a
+clatter to the floor, and the next moment the muscles, so rigid but an
+instant before, relaxed into a limp and listless flaccidity. The
+joints collapsed, and the entire man fell into an indistinguishable
+heap upon and across the dead figure stretched out upon the floor,
+while at the same time a pungent and blinding cloud of gunpowder smoke
+filled the apartment. For a few moments the hands twitched
+convulsively; the neck stretched itself to an abominable length; the
+long, lean legs slowly and gradually relaxed, and every fibre of the
+body gradually collapsed into the lassitude of death. A spot of blood
+appeared and grew upon the collar at the throat, and in the same degree
+the color ebbed from the face leaving it of a dull and leaden pallor.
+
+All these terrible and formidable changes of aspect our hero stood
+watching with a motionless and riveted attention, and as though they
+were to him matters of the utmost consequence and importance; and only
+when the last flicker of life had departed from his second victim did
+he lift his gaze from this terrible scene of dissolution to stare about
+him, this way and that, his eyes blinded, and his breath stifled by the
+thick cloud of sulphurous smoke that obscured the objects about him in
+a pungent cloud.
+
+
+
+
+V. The Unexpected Encounter with the Sea-captain with the Broken Nose
+
+
+If our hero had been distracted and bedazed by the first catastrophe
+that had befallen, this second and even more dreadful and violent
+occurrence appeared to take away from him, for the moment, every power
+of thought and of sensation. All that perturbation of emotion that had
+before convulsed him he discovered to have disappeared, and in its
+stead a benumbed and blinded intelligence alone remained to him. As he
+stood in the presence of this second death, of which he had been as
+innocent and as unwilling an instrument as he had of the first, he
+could observe no signs either of remorse or of horror within him. He
+picked up his hat, which had fallen upon the floor in the first
+encounter, and, brushing away the dust with the cuff of his coat sleeve
+with extraordinary care, adjusted the beaver upon his head with the
+utmost nicety. Then turning, still stupefied as with the fumes of some
+powerful drug, he prepared to quit the scene of tragic terrors that had
+thus unexpectedly accumulated upon him.
+
+But ere he could put his design into execution his ears were startled
+by the sound of loud and hurried footsteps which, coming from below,
+ascended the stairs with a prodigious clatter and bustle of speed. At
+the landing these footsteps paused for a while, and then approached,
+more cautious and deliberate, toward the room where the double tragedy
+had been enacted, and where our hero yet stood silent and inert.
+
+All this while Jonathan made no endeavor to escape, but stood passive
+and submissive to what might occur. He felt himself the victim of
+circumstances over which he himself had no control. Gazing at the
+partly opened door, he awaited for whatever adventure might next befall
+him. Once again the footsteps paused, this time at the very threshold,
+and then the door was slowly pushed open from without.
+
+As our hero gazed at the aperture there presently became disclosed to
+his view the strong and robust figure of one who was evidently of a
+seafaring habit. From the gold braid upon his hat, the seals dangling
+from the ribbon at his fob, and a certain particularity of custom, he
+was evidently one of no small consideration in his profession. He was
+of a strong and powerful build, with a head set close to his shoulders,
+and upon a round, short bull neck. He wore a black cravat, loosely
+tied into a knot, and a red waistcoat elaborately trimmed with gold
+braid; a leather belt with a brass buckle and hanger, and huge
+sea-boots completed a costume singularly suggestive of his occupation
+in life. His face was round and broad, like that of a cat, and a
+complexion stained, by constant exposure to the sun and wind, to a
+color of newly polished mahogany. But a countenance which otherwise
+might have been humorous, in this case was rendered singularly
+repulsive by the fact that his nose had been broken so flat to his face
+that all that remained to distinguish that feature were two circular
+orifices where the nostrils should have been. His eyes were by no
+means so sinister as the rest of his visage, being of a light-gray
+color and exceedingly vivacious--even good-natured in the merry
+restlessness of their glance--albeit they were well-nigh hidden beneath
+a black bush of overhanging eyebrows. When he spoke, his voice was so
+deep and resonant that it was as though it issued from a barrel rather
+than from the breast of a human being.
+
+"How now, my hearty!" cried he, in stentorian tones, so loud that they
+seemed to stun the tensely drawn drums of our hero's ears. "How now, my
+hearty! What's to-do here? Who is shooting pistols at this hour of
+the night?" Then, catching sight of the figures lying in a huddle upon
+the floor, his great, thick lips parted into a gape of wonder and his
+gray eyes rolled in his head like two balls, so that what with his flat
+face and the round holes of his nostrils he presented an appearance
+which, under other circumstances, would have been at once ludicrous and
+grotesque.
+
+"By the blood!" cried he, "to be sure it is murder that has happened
+here."
+
+"Not murder!" cried Jonathan, in a shrill and panting voice. "Not
+murder! It was all an accident, and I am as innocent as a baby."
+
+The new-comer looked at him and then at the two figures upon the floor,
+and then back at him again with eyes at once quizzical and cunning.
+Then his face broke into a grin that might hardly be called of
+drollery. "Accident!" quoth he. "By the blood! d'ye see 'tis a
+strange accident, indeed, that lays two men by the heels and lets the
+third go without a scratch!" Delivering himself thus, he came forward
+into the room, and, taking the last victim of Jonathan's adventure by
+the arm, with as little compunction as he would have handled a sack of
+grain he dragged the limp and helpless figure from where it lay to the
+floor beside the first victim. Then, lifting the lighted candle, he
+bent over the two prostrate bodies, holding the illumination close to
+the lineaments first of one and then of the other. He looked at them
+very carefully for a long while, with the closest and most intent
+scrutiny, and in perfect silence. "They are both as dead," says he,
+"as Davy Jones, and, whoever you be, I protest that you have done your
+business the most completest that I ever saw in all of my life."
+
+"Indeed," cried Jonathan, in the same shrill and panting voice, "it was
+themselves who did it. First one of them attacked me and then the
+other, and I did but try to keep them from murdering me. This one fell
+on his knife, and that one shot himself in his efforts to destroy me."
+
+"That," says the seaman, "you may very well tell to a dry-lander, and
+maybe he will believe you; but you cannot so easily pull the wool over
+the eyes of Captain Benny Willitts. And what, if I may be so bold as
+for to ask you, was the reason for their attacking so harmless a man as
+you proclaim yourself to be?"
+
+"That I know not," cried Jonathan; "but I am entirely willing to tell
+thee all the circumstances. Thou must know that I am a member of the
+Society of Friends. This day I landed here in Kingston, and met a
+young woman of very comely appearance, who intrusted me with this
+little ivory ball, which she requested me to keep for her a few days.
+The sight of this ball--in which I can detect nothing that could be
+likely to arouse any feelings of violence--appears to have driven these
+two men entirely mad, so that they instantly made the most ferocious
+and murderous assault upon me. See! wouldst thou have believed that so
+small a thing as this would have caused so much trouble?" And as he
+spoke he held up to the gaze of the other the cause of the double
+tragedy that had befallen. But no sooner had Captain Willitts's eyes
+lighted upon the ball than the most singular change passed over his
+countenance. The color appeared to grow dull and yellow in his ruddy
+cheeks, his fat lips dropped apart, and his eyes stared with a fixed
+and glassy glare. He arose to his feet and, still with the expression
+of astonishment and wonder upon his face, gazed first at our hero and
+then at the ivory ball in his hands, as though he were deprived both of
+reason and of speech. At last, as our hero slipped the trifle back in
+his pocket again, the mariner slowly recovered himself, though with a
+prodigious effort, and drew a deep and profound breath as to the very
+bottom of his lungs. He wiped, with the corner of his black silk
+cravat, his brow, upon which the sweat appeared to have gathered.
+"Well, messmate," says he, at last, with a sudden change of voice, "you
+have, indeed, had a most wonderful adventure." Then with another deep
+breath: "Well, by the blood! I may tell you plainly that I am no poor
+hand at the reading of faces. Well, I think you to be honest, and I am
+inclined to believe every word you tell me. By the blood! I am
+prodigiously sorry for you, and am inclined to help you out of your
+scrape.
+
+"The first thing to do," he continued, "is to get rid of these two dead
+men, and that is an affair I believe we shall have no trouble in
+handling. One of them we will wrap up in the carpet here, and t'other
+we can roll into yonder bed-curtain. You shall carry the one and I the
+other, and, the harbor being at no great distance, we can easily bring
+them thither and tumble them overboard, and no one will be the wiser of
+what has happened. For your own safety, as you may easily see, you can
+hardly go away and leave these objects here to be found by the
+first-comer, and to arise up in evidence against you."
+
+This reasoning, in our hero's present bewildered state, appeared to him
+to be so extremely just that he raised not the least objection to it.
+Accordingly, each of the two silent, voiceless victims of the evening's
+occurrences were wrapped into a bundle that from without appeared to be
+neither portentous nor terrible in appearance.
+
+Thereupon, Jonathan shouldering the rug containing the little gentleman
+in black, and the sea-captain doing the like for the other, they
+presently made their way down the stairs through the darkness, and so
+out into the street. Here the sea-captain became the conductor of the
+expedition, and leading the way down several alleys and along certain
+by-streets--now and then stopping to rest, for the burdens were both
+heavy and clumsy to carry--they both came out at last to the harbor
+front, without any one having questioned them or having appeared to
+suspect them of anything wrong. At the water-side was an open wharf
+extending a pretty good distance out into the harbor. Thither the
+captain led the way and Jonathan followed. So they made their way out
+along the wharf or pier, stumbling now and then over loose boards,
+until they came at last to where the water was of a sufficient depth
+for their purpose. Here the captain, bending his shoulders, shot his
+burden out into the dark, mysterious waters, and Jonathan, following
+his example, did the same. Each body sank with a sullen and leaden
+splash into the element where, the casings which swathed them becoming
+loosened, the rug and the curtain rose to the surface and drifted
+slowly away with the tide.
+
+As Jonathan stood gazing dully at the disappearance of these last
+evidences of his two inadvertent murders, he was suddenly and
+vehemently aroused by feeling a pair of arms of enormous strength flung
+about him from behind. In their embrace his elbows were instantly
+pinned tight to his side, and he stood for a moment helpless and
+astounded, while the voice of the sea-captain, rumbling in his very
+ear, exclaimed: "Ye bloody, murthering Quaker, I'll have that ivory
+ball, or I'll have your life!"
+
+These words produced the same effect upon Jonathan as though a douche
+of cold water had suddenly been flung over him. He began instantly to
+struggle to free himself, and that with a frantic and vehement violence
+begotten at once of terror and despair. So prodigious were his efforts
+that more than once he had nearly torn himself free, but still the
+powerful arms of his captor held him as in a vise of iron. Meantime,
+our hero's assailant made frequent though ineffectual attempts to
+thrust a hand into the breeches-pocket where the ivory ball was hidden,
+swearing the while under his breath with a terrifying and monstrous
+string of oaths. At last, finding himself foiled in every such
+attempt, and losing all patience at the struggles of his victim, he
+endeavored to lift Jonathan off of his feet, as though to dash him
+bodily upon the ground. In this he would doubtless have succeeded had
+he not caught his heel in the crack of a loose board of the wharf.
+Instantly they both fell, violently prostrate, the captain beneath and
+Jonathan above him, though still encircled in his iron embrace. Our
+hero felt the back of his head strike violently upon the flat face of
+the other, and he heard the captain's skull sound with a terrific crack
+like that of a breaking egg upon some post or billet of wood, against
+which he must have struck. In their frantic struggles they had
+approached extremely near the edge of the wharf, so that the next
+instant, with an enormous and thunderous splash, Jonathan found himself
+plunged into the waters of the harbor, and the arms of his assailant
+loosened from about his body.
+
+The shock of the water brought him instantly to his senses, and, being
+a fairly good swimmer, he had not the least difficulty in reaching and
+clutching the cross-piece of a wooden ladder that, coated with slimy
+sea-moss, led from the water-level to the wharf above.
+
+After reaching the safety of the dry land once more, Jonathan gazed
+about him as though to discern whence the next attack might be
+delivered upon him. But he stood entirely alone upon the dock--not
+another living soul was in sight. The surface of the water exhibited
+some commotion, as though disturbed by something struggling beneath;
+but the sea-captain, who had doubtless been stunned by the tremendous
+crack upon his head, never arose again out of the element that had
+engulfed him.
+
+The moonlight shone with a peaceful and resplendent illumination, and,
+excepting certain remote noises from the distant town not a sound broke
+the silence and the peacefulness of the balmy, tropical night. The
+limpid water, illuminated by the resplendent moonlight, lapped against
+the wharf. All the world was calm, serene, and enveloped in a profound
+and entire repose.
+
+Jonathan looked up at the round and brilliant globe of light floating
+in the sky above his head, and wondered whether it were, indeed,
+possible that all that had befallen him was a reality and not some
+tremendous hallucination. Then suddenly arousing himself to a renewed
+realization of that which had occurred, he turned and ran like one
+possessed, up along the wharf, and so into the moonlit town once more.
+
+
+
+
+VI. The Conclusion of the Adventure with the Lady with the Silver Veil
+
+
+Nor did he check his precipitous flight until suddenly, being led
+perhaps by some strange influence of which he was not at all the
+master, he discovered himself to be standing before the garden-gate
+where not more than an hour before he had first entered upon the series
+of monstrous adventures that had led to such tremendous conclusions.
+
+People were still passing and repassing, and one of these groups--a
+party of young ladies and gentlemen--paused upon the opposite side of
+the street to observe, with no small curiosity and amusement, his
+dripping and bedraggled aspect. But only one thought and one intention
+possessed our hero--to relieve himself as quickly as possible of that
+trust which he had taken up so thoughtlessly, and with such monstrous
+results to himself and to his victims. He ran to the gate of the
+garden and began beating and kicking upon it with a vehemence that he
+could neither master nor control. He was aware that the entire
+neighborhood was becoming aroused, for he beheld lights moving and loud
+voices of inquiry; yet he gave not the least thought to the disturbance
+he was creating, but continued without intermission his uproarious
+pounding upon the gate.
+
+At length, in answer to the sound of his vehement blows, the little
+wicket was opened and a pair of eyes appeared thereat. The next
+instant the gate was cast ajar very hastily, and the pock-pitted
+negress appeared. She caught him by the sleeve of his coat and drew
+him quickly into the garden. "Buckra, Buckra!" she cried. "What you
+doing? You wake de whole town!" Then, observing his dripping
+garments: "You been in de water. You catch de fever and shake till you
+die."
+
+"Thy mistress!" cried Jonathan, almost sobbing in the excess of his
+emotion; "take me to her upon the instant, or I cannot answer for my
+not going entirely mad!"
+
+When our hero was again introduced to the lady, he found her clad in a
+loose and an elegant negligee, infinitely becoming to her graceful
+figure, and still covered with the veil of silver gauze that had before
+enveloped her.
+
+"Friend," he cried, vehemently, approaching her and holding out toward
+her the little ivory ball, "take again this which thou gavest me! It
+has brought death to three men, and I know not what terrible fate may
+befall me if I keep it longer in my possession.
+
+"What is it you say?" cried she, in a piercing voice. "Did you say it
+hath caused the death of three men? Quick! Tell me what has happened,
+for I feel somehow a presage that you bring me news of safety and
+release from all my dangers."
+
+"I know not what thou meanest!" cried Jonathan, still panting with
+agitation. "But this I do know: that when I went away from thee I
+departed an innocent man, and now I come back to thee burdened with the
+weight of three lives, which, though innocent I have been instrumental
+in taking."
+
+"Explain!" exclaimed the lady, tapping the floor with her foot.
+"Explain! explain! explain!"
+
+"That I will," cried Jonathan, "and as soon as I am able! When I left
+thee and went out into the street I was accosted by a little gentleman
+clad in black."
+
+"Indeed!" cried the lady; "and had he but one eye, and did he carry a
+gold-headed cane?"
+
+"Exactly," said Jonathan; "and he claimed acquaintance with friend
+Jeremiah Doolittle."
+
+"He never knew him!" cried the lady, vehemently; "and I must tell you
+that he was a villain named Hunt, who at one time was the intimate
+consort of the pirate Keitt. He it was who plunged a deadly knife into
+his captain's bosom, and so murdered him in this very house. He
+himself or his agents, must have been watching my gate when you went
+forth."
+
+"I know not how that may be," said Jonathan, "but he took me to his
+apartment, and there, obtaining a knowledge of the trust thou didst
+burden me with, he demanded it of me, and upon my refusing to deliver
+it to him he presently fell to attacking me with a dagger. In my
+efforts to protect my life I inadvertently caused him to plunge the
+knife into his own bosom and to kill himself."
+
+"And what then?" cried the lady, who appeared well-nigh distracted
+with her emotions.
+
+"Then," said Jonathan, "there came a strange man--a foreigner--who upon
+his part assaulted me with a pistol, with every intention of murdering
+me and thus obtaining possession of that same little trifle."
+
+"And did he," exclaimed the lady, "have long, black mustachios, and did
+he have silver ear-rings in his ears?"
+
+"Yes," said Jonathan, "he did."
+
+"That," cried the lady, "could have been none other than Captain
+Keitt's Portuguese sailing-master, who must have been spying upon Hunt!
+Tell me what happened next!"
+
+"He would have taken my life," said Jonathan, "but in the struggle that
+followed he shot himself accidentally with his own pistol, and died at
+my very feet. I do not know what would have happened to me if a
+sea-captain had not come and proffered his assistance."
+
+"A sea-captain!" she exclaimed; "and had he a flat face and a broken
+nose?"
+
+"Indeed he had," replied Jonathan.
+
+"That," said the lady, "must have been Captain Keitt's pirate
+partner--Captain Willitts, of The Bloody Hand. He was doubtless spying
+upon the Portuguese."
+
+"He induced me," said Jonathan, "to carry the two bodies down to the
+wharf. Having inveigled me there--where, I suppose, he thought no one
+could interfere--he assaulted me, and endeavored to take the ivory ball
+away from me. In my efforts to escape we both fell into the water, and
+he, striking his head upon the edge of the wharf, was first stunned and
+then drowned."
+
+"Thank God!" cried the lady, with a transport of fervor, and clasping
+her jewelled hands together. "At last I am free of those who have
+heretofore persecuted me and threatened my very life itself! You have
+asked to behold my face; I will now show it to you! Heretofore I have
+been obliged to keep it concealed lest, recognizing me, my enemies
+should have slain me." As she spoke she drew aside her veil, and
+disclosed to the vision of our hero a countenance of the most
+extraordinary and striking beauty. Her luminous eyes were like those
+of a Jawa, and set beneath exquisitely arched and pencilled brows. Her
+forehead was like lustrous ivory and her lips like rose-leaves. Her
+hair, which was as soft as the finest silk, was fastened up in masses
+of ravishing abundance. "I am," said she, "the daughter of that
+unfortunate Captain Keitt, who, though weak and a pirate, was not so
+wicked, I would have you know, as he has been painted. He would,
+doubtless, have been an honest man had he not been led astray by the
+villain Hunt, who so nearly compassed your own destruction. He
+returned to this island before his death, and made me the sole heir of
+all that great fortune which he had gathered--perhaps not by the most
+honest means--in the waters of the Indian Ocean. But the greatest
+treasure of all that fortune bequeathed to me was a single jewel which
+you yourself have just now defended with a courage and a fidelity that
+I cannot sufficiently extol. It is that priceless gem known as the
+Ruby of Kishmoor. I will show it to you." Hereupon she took the
+little ivory ball in her hand, and, with a turn of her beautiful
+wrists, unscrewed a lid so nicely and cunningly adjusted that no eye
+could have detected where it was joined to the parent globe. Within was
+a fleece of raw silk containing an object which she presently displayed
+before the astonished gaze of our hero. It was a red stone of about
+the bigness of a plover's egg, and which glowed and flamed with such an
+exquisite and ruddy brilliancy as to dazzle even Jonathan's
+inexperienced eyes. Indeed, he did not need to be informed of the
+priceless value of the treasure, which he beheld in the rosy palm
+extended toward him. How long he gazed at this extraordinary jewel he
+knew not, but he was aroused from his contemplation by the sound of the
+lady's voice addressing him. "The three villains," said she, "who have
+this day met their deserts in a violent and bloody death, had by an
+accident obtained knowledge that this jewel was in my possession.
+Since then my life has hung upon a thread, and every step that I have
+taken has been watched by these enemies, the most cruel and relentless
+that it was ever the lot of any unfortunate to possess. From the
+mortal dangers of their machinations you have saved me, exhibiting a
+courage and a determination that cannot be sufficiently applauded. In
+this you have earned my deepest admiration and regard. I would
+rather," she cried, "intrust my life and my happiness to you than into
+the keeping of any man whom I have ever known! I cannot hope to reward
+you in such a way as to recompense you for the perils into which my
+necessities have thrust you; but yet"--and here she hesitated, as
+though seeking for words in which to express herself--"but yet if you
+are willing to accept of this jewel, and all of the fortune that
+belongs to me, together with the person of poor Evaline Keitt herself,
+not only the stone and the wealth, but the woman also, are yours to
+dispose of as you see fit!"
+
+Our hero was so struck aback at this unexpected turn that he knew not
+upon the instant what reply to make. "Friend," said he, at last, "I
+thank thee extremely for thy offer, and, though I would not be
+ungracious, it is yet borne in upon me to testify to thee that as to
+the stone itself and the fortune--of which thou speakest, and of which
+I very well know the history--I have no inclination to receive either
+the one or the other, both the fruits of theft, rapine, and murder.
+The jewel I have myself beheld three times stained, as it were, with
+the blood of my fellow-man, so that it now has so little value in my
+sight that I would not give a peppercorn to possess it. Indeed, there
+is no inducement in the world that could persuade me to accept it, or
+even to take it again into my hand. As to the rest of thy generous
+offer, I have only to say that I am, four months hence, to be married
+to a very comely young woman of Kensington, in Pennsylvania, by name
+Martha Dobbs, and therefore I am not at all at liberty to consider my
+inclinations in any other direction."
+
+Having so delivered himself, Jonathan bowed with such ease as his stiff
+and awkward joints might command, and thereupon withdrew from the
+presence of the charmer, who, with cheeks suffused with blushes and
+with eyes averted, made no endeavor to detain him.
+
+So ended the only adventure of moment that ever happened to him in all
+his life. For thereafter he contented himself with such excitement as
+his mercantile profession and his extremely peaceful existence might
+afford.
+
+
+
+
+Epilogue
+
+
+In conclusion it may be said that when the worthy Jonathan Rugg was
+married to Martha Dobbs, upon the following June, some mysterious
+friend presented to the bride a rope of pearls of such considerable
+value that when they were realized into money our hero was enabled to
+enter into partnership with his former patron the worthy Jeremiah
+Doolittle, and that, having made such a beginning, he by-and-by arose
+to become, in his day, one of the leading merchants of his native town
+of Philadelphia.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Ruby of Kishmoor, by Howard Pyle
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+This etext was produced by Paul J. Hollander <pholland@iastate.edu>
+
+
+
+
+
+The Ruby of Kishmoor
+
+By Howard Pyle
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+Prologue
+
+I. Jonathan Rugg
+
+II. The Mysterious Lady with the Silver Veil
+
+III. The Terrific Encounter with the One-eyed Little Gentleman in
+ Black
+
+IV. The Momentous Adventure with the Stranger with the Silver
+ Ear-rings
+
+V. The Unexpected Encounter with the Sea-captain with the
+ Broken Nose
+
+VI. The Conclusion of the Adventure with the Lady with the
+ Silver Veil
+
+Epilogue
+
+
+
+
+Prologue
+
+
+
+A very famous pirate of his day was Captain Robertson Keitt.
+
+Before embarking upon his later career of infamy, he was, in the
+beginning, very well known as a reputable merchant in the island
+of Jamaica. Thence entering, first of all, upon the business of
+the African trade, he presently, by regular degrees, became a
+pirate, and finally ended his career as one of the most renowned
+freebooters of history.
+
+The remarkable adventure through which he at once reached the
+pinnacle of success, and became in his profession the most famous
+figure of his day, was the capture of the Rajah of Kishmoor's
+great ship, The Sun of the East. In this vessel was the Rajah's
+favorite Queen, who, together with her attendants, were set upon
+a pilgrimage to Mecca. The court of this great Oriental potentate
+was, as may be readily supposed, fairly a-glitter with gold and
+jewels, so that, what with such personal adornments that the
+Queen and her attendants had fetched with them, besides an ample
+treasury for the expenses of the expedition, an incredible prize
+of gold and jewels rewarded the freebooters for their successful
+adventure.
+
+Among the precious stones taken in this great purchase was the
+splendid ruby of Kishmoor. This, as may be known to the reader,
+was one of the world's greatest gems, and was unique alike both
+for its prodigious size and the splendor of its color. This
+precious jewel the Rajah of Kishmoor had, upon a certain
+occasion, bestowed upon his Queen, and at the time of her capture
+she wore it as the centre-piece of a sort of a coronet which
+encircled her forehead and brow.
+
+The seizure by the pirate of so considerable a person as that of
+the Queen of Kishmoor, and of the enormous treasure that he found
+aboard her ship, would alone have been sufficient to have
+established his fame. But the capture of so extraordinary a prize
+as that of the ruby--which was, in itself, worth the value of an
+entire Oriental kingdom--exalted him at once to the very highest
+pinnacle of renown.
+
+Having achieved the capture of this incredible prize, our captain
+scuttled the great ship and left her to sink with all on board.
+Three Lascars of the crew alone escaped to bear the news of this
+tremendous disaster to an astounded world.
+
+As may readily be supposed, it was now no longer possible for
+Captain Keitt to hope to live in such comparative obscurity as he
+had before enjoyed. His was now too remarkable a figure in the
+eyes of the world. Several expeditions from various parts were
+immediately fitted out against him, and it presently became no
+longer compatible with his safety to remain thus clearly outlined
+before the eyes of the world. Accordingly, he immediately set
+about seeking such security as he might now hope to find, which
+he did the more readily since he had now, and at one cast, so
+entirely fulfilled his most sanguine expectations of good-fortune
+and of fame.
+
+Thereafter, accordingly, the adventures of our captain became of
+a more apocryphal sort. It was known that he reached the West
+Indies in safety, for he was once seen at Port Royal and twice at
+Spanish Town, in the island of Jamaica. Thereafter, however, he
+disappeared; nor was it until several years later that the world
+heard anything concerning him.
+
+One day a certain Nicholas Duckworthy, who had once been gunner
+aboard the pirate captain's own ship, The Good Fortune, was
+arrested in the town of Bristol in the very act of attempting to
+sell to a merchant of that place several valuable gems from a
+quantity which he carried with him tied up in a red bandanna
+handkerchief.
+
+In the confession of which Duckworthy afterward delivered himself
+he declared that Captain Keitt, after his great adventure, having
+sailed from Africa in safety, and so reached the shores of the
+New World, had wrecked The Good Fortune on a coral reef off the
+Windward Islands; that he then immediately deserted the ship, and
+together with Duckworthy himself, the sailing-master (who was a
+Portuguese), the captain of a brig The Bloody Hand (a consort of
+Keitt's), and a villainous rascal named Hunt (who, occupying no
+precise position among the pirates, was at once the instigator of
+and the partaker in the greatest part of Captain Keitt's
+wickednesses), made his way to the nearest port of safety. These
+five worthies at last fetched the island of Jamaica, bringing
+with them all of the jewels and some of the gold that had been
+captured from The Sun of the East.
+
+But, upon coming to a division of their booty, it was presently
+discovered that the Rajah's ruby had mysteriously disappeared
+from the collection of jewels to be divided. The other pirates
+immediately suspected their captain of having secretly purloined
+it, and, indeed, so certain were they of his turpitude that they
+immediately set about taking means to force a confession from
+him.
+
+In this, however, they were so far unsuccessful that the captain,
+refusing to yield to their importunities, had suffered himself to
+die under their hands, and had so carried the secret of the
+hiding-place of the great ruby--if he possessed such a
+secret--along with him.
+
+Duckworthy concluded his confession by declaring that in his
+opinion he himself, the Portuguese sailing-master, the captain of
+The Bloody Hand, and Hunt were the only ones of Captain Keitt's
+crew who were now alive; for that The Good Fortune must have
+broken up in a storm, which immediately followed their desertion
+of her; in which event the entire crew must inevitably have
+perished.
+
+It may be added that Duckworthy himself was shortly hanged, so
+that, if his surmise was true, there was now only three left
+alive of all that wicked crew that had successfully carried to
+its completion the greatest adventure which any pirate in the
+world had ever, perhaps, embarked upon.
+
+
+
+
+I. Jonathan Rugg
+
+
+
+You may never know what romantic aspirations may lie hidden
+beneath the most sedate and sober demeanor.
+
+To have observed Jonathan Rugg, who was a tall, lean,
+loose-jointed young Quaker of a somewhat forbidding aspect, with
+straight, dark hair and a bony, overhanging forehead set into a
+frown, a pair of small, deep-set eyes, and a square jaw, no one
+would for a moment have suspected that he concealed beneath so
+serious an exterior any appetite for romantic adventure.
+
+Nevertheless, finding himself suddenly transported, as it were,
+from the quiet of so sober a town as that of Philadelphia to the
+tropical enchantment of Kingston, in the island of Jamaica, the
+night brilliant with a full moon that swung in an opal sky, the
+warm and luminous darkness replete with the mysteries of a
+tropical night, and burdened with the odors of a land breeze, he
+suddenly discovered himself to be overtaken with so vehement a
+desire for some unwonted excitement that, had the opportunity
+presented itself, he felt himself ready to embrace any adventure
+with the utmost eagerness, no matter whither it would have
+conducted him.
+
+At home (where he was a clerk in the counting-house of a leading
+merchant, by name Jeremiah Doolittle), should such idle fancies
+have come to him, he would have looked upon himself as little
+better than a fool, but now that he found himself for the first
+time in a foreign country, surrounded by such strange and unusual
+sights and sounds, all conducive to extravagant imaginations, the
+wish for some extraordinary and altogether unusual experience
+took possession of him with a singular vehemence to which he had
+heretofore been altogether a stranger.
+
+In the street where he stood, which was of a shining whiteness
+and which reflected the effulgence of the moonlight with an
+incredible distinction, he observed, stretching before him, long
+lines of white garden walls, overtopped by a prodigious
+luxuriance of tropical foliage.
+
+In these gardens, and set close to the street, stood several
+pretentious villas and mansions, the slatted blinds and curtains
+of the windows of which were raised to admit of the freer
+entrance of the cool and balmy air of the night. From within
+there issued forth bright lights, together with the exhilarating
+sound of merry voices laughing and talking, or perhaps a song
+accompanied by the tinkling music of a spinet or of a guitar. An
+occasional group of figures, clad in light and summer-like
+garments, and adorned with gay and startling colors, passed him
+through the moonlight; so that what with the brightness and
+warmth of the night, together with all these unusual sights and
+sounds, it appeared to Jonathan Rugg that he was rather the
+inhabitant of some extraordinary land of enchantment and
+unreality than a dweller upon that sober and solid world in which
+he had heretofore passed his entire existence.
+
+Before continuing this narrative the reader may here be informed
+that our hero had come into this enchanted world as the
+supercargo of the ship SUSANNA HAYES, of Philadelphia; that he
+had for several years proved himself so honest and industrious a
+servant to the merchant house of the worthy Jeremiah Doolittle
+that that benevolent man had given to his well-deserving clerk
+this opportunity at once of gratifying an inclination for foreign
+travel and of filling a position of trust that should redound to
+his individual profit. The SUSANNA HAYES had entered Kingston
+Harbor that afternoon, and this was Jonathan's first night spent
+in those tropical latitudes, whither his fancy and his
+imagination had so often carried him while he stood over the desk
+filing the accounts of invoices from foreign parts.
+
+It might be finally added that, had he at all conceived how soon
+and to what a degree his sudden inclination for adventure was to
+be gratified, his romantic aspirations might have been somewhat
+dashed at the prospect that lay before him.
+
+
+
+
+II. The Mysterious Lady with the Silver Veil
+
+
+
+At that moment our hero suddenly became conscious of the fact
+that a small wicket in a wooden gate near which he stood had been
+opened, and that the eyes of an otherwise concealed countenance
+were observing him with the utmost closeness of scrutiny.
+
+He had hardly time to become aware of this observation of his
+person when the gate itself was opened, and there appeared before
+him, in the moonlight, the bent and crooked figure of an aged
+negress. She was clad in a calamanco raiment, and was further
+adorned with a variety of gaudily colored trimmings, vastly
+suggestive of the tropical world of which she was an inhabitant.
+Her woolly head was enveloped, after the fashion of her people,
+in the folds of a gigantic and flaming red turban constructed of
+an entire pocket-handkerchief. Her face was pock-pitted to an
+incredible degree, so that what with this deformity, emphasized
+by the pouting of her prodigious and shapeless lips, and the
+rolling of a pair of eyes as yellow as saffron, Jonathan Rugg
+thought that he had never beheld a figure at once so
+extraordinary and so repulsive.
+
+It occurred to our hero that here, maybe, was to overtake him
+such an adventure as that which he had just a moment before been
+desiring so ardently. Nor was he mistaken; for the negress, first
+looking this way and then that, with an extremely wary and
+cunning expression, and apparently having satisfied herself that
+the street, for the moment, was pretty empty of passers, beckoned
+to him to draw nearer. When he had approached close enough to her
+she caught him by the sleeve, and, instantly drawing him into the
+garden beyond, shut and bolted the gate with a quickness and a
+silence suggestive of the most extravagant secrecy.
+
+At the same moment a huge negro suddenly appeared from the shadow
+of the gatepost, and so placed himself between Jonathan and the
+gate that any attempt to escape would inevitably have entailed a
+conflict, upon our hero's part, with the sable and giant
+guardian.
+
+Says the negress, looking very intently at our hero: "Be you
+afeard, Buckra?"
+
+"Why, no," quothed Jonathan; "for to tell thee the truth, friend,
+though I am a man of peace, being of that religious order known
+as the Society of Friends, I am not so weak in person nor so
+timid in disposition as to warrant me in being afraid of any one.
+Indeed, were I of a mind to escape, I might, without boasting,
+declare my belief that I should be able to push my way past even
+a better man than thy large friend who stands so threateningly in
+front of yonder gate."
+
+At these words the negress broke into so prodigious a grin that,
+in the moonlight, it appeared as though the whole lower part of
+her face had been transformed into shining teeth. "You be a brave
+Buckra," says she, in her gibbering English. "You come wid
+Melina, and Melina take you to pretty lady, who want you to eat
+supper wid her."
+
+Thereupon, and allowing our hero no opportunity to decline this
+extraordinary invitation, even had he been of a mind to do so,
+she took him by the hand, and led him toward the large and
+imposing house which commanded the garden. "Indeed," says
+Jonathan to himself, as he followed his sable guide--himself
+followed in turn by the gigantic negro--"indeed, I am like to
+have my fill of adventure, if anything is to be judged from such
+a beginning as this."
+
+Nor did the interior sumptuousness of the mansion at all belie
+the imposing character of its exterior, for, entering by way of
+an illuminated veranda, and so coming into a brilliantly lighted
+hallway beyond, Jonathan beheld himself to be surrounded by such
+a wealth of exquisite and well-appointed tastefulness as it had
+never before been his good-fortune to behold.
+
+Candles of clarified wax sparkled like stars in chandeliers of
+crystal. These in turn, catching the illumination, glittered in
+prismatic fragments with all the varied colors of the rainbow, so
+that a mellow yet brilliant radiance filled the entire apartment.
+Polished mirrors of a spotless clearness, framed in golden frames
+and built into the walls, reflected the waxed floors, the rich
+Oriental carpets, and the sumptuous paintings that hung against
+the ivory-tinted paneling, so that in appearance the beauties of
+the apartment were continued in bewildering vistas upon every
+side toward which the beholder directed his gaze.
+
+Bidding our hero to be seated, which he did with no small degree
+of embarrassment and constraint, and upon the extreme edge of the
+gilt and satin-covered chair, the negress who had been his
+conductor left him for the time being to his own contemplation.
+
+Almost before he had an opportunity to compose himself into
+anything more than a part of his ordinary sedateness of demeanor,
+the silken curtains at the doorway at the other end of the
+apartment were suddenly divided, and Jonathan beheld before him a
+female figure displaying the most exquisite contour of mould and
+of proportion. She was clad entirely in white, and was enveloped
+from head to foot in the folds of a veil of delicate silver
+gauze, which, though hiding her countenance from recognition,
+nevertheless permitted sufficient of her beauties to be discerned
+to suggest the extreme elegance and loveliness of her lineaments.
+Advancing toward our hero, and extending to him a tapering hand
+as white as alabaster, the fingers encircled with a multitude of
+jewelled rings, she addressed him thus:
+
+"Sir," she said, speaking in accents of the most silvery and
+musical cadence, "you are no doubt vastly surprised to find
+yourself thus unexpectedly, and almost as by violence, introduced
+into the house of one who is such an entire stranger to you as
+myself. But though I am unknown to you, I must inform you that I
+am better acquainted with my visitor, for my agents have been
+observing you ever since you landed this afternoon at the dock,
+and they have followed you ever since, until a little while ago,
+when you stopped immediately opposite my garden gate. These
+agents have observed you with a closeness of scrutiny of which
+you are doubtless entirely unaware. They have even informed me
+that, owing doubtless to your extreme interest in your new
+surroundings, you have not as yet supped. Knowing this, and that
+you must now be enjoying a very hearty appetite, I have to ask
+you if you will do me the extreme favor of sitting at table with
+me at a repast which you will doubtless be surprised to learn has
+been hastily prepared entirely in your honor."
+
+So saying, and giving Jonathan no time for reply, she offered him
+her hand, and with the most polite insistence conducted him into
+an exquisitely appointed dining room adjoining.
+
+Here stood a table covered with a snow-white cloth, and
+embellished with silver and crystal ornaments of every
+description. Having seated herself and having indicated to
+Jonathan to take the chair opposite to her, the two were
+presently served with a repast such as our hero had not thought
+could have existed out of the pages of certain extraordinary
+Oriental tales which one time had fallen to his lot to read.
+
+This supper (which in itself might successfully have tempted the
+taste of a Sybarite) was further enhanced by several wines and
+cordials which, filling the room with the aroma of the sunlit
+grapes from which they had been expressed, stimulated the
+appetite, which without them needed no such spur. The lady, who
+ate but sparingly herself, possessed herself with patience until
+Jonathan's hunger had been appeased. When, however, she beheld
+that he weakened in his attacks upon the dessert of sweets with
+which the banquet was concluded, she addressed him upon the
+business which was evidently entirely occupying her mind.
+
+"Sir," said she, "you are doubtless aware that every one, whether
+man or woman, is possessed of an enemy. In my own case I must
+inform you that I have no less than three who, to compass their
+ends, would gladly sacrifice my life itself to their purposes. At
+no time am I safe from their machinations, nor have I any one,"
+cried she, exhibiting a great emotion, "to whom I may turn in my
+need. It was this that led me to hope to find in you a friend in
+my perils, for, having observed through my agents that you are
+not only honest in disposition and strong in person, but that you
+are possessed of a considerable degree of energy and
+determination, I am most desirous of imposing upon your
+good-nature a trust of which you cannot for a moment suspect the
+magnitude. Tell me, are you willing to assist a poor, defenceless
+female in her hour of trial?"
+
+"Indeed, friend," quoth Jonathan, with more vivacity than he
+usually exhibited, with a lenity to which he had heretofore in
+his lifetime been a stranger--being warmed into such a spirit,
+doubtless, by the generous wines of which he had
+partaken--"indeed, friend, if I could but see thy face it would
+doubtless make my decision in such a matter the more favorable,
+since I am inclined to think from the little I can behold of it,
+that thy appearance must be extremely comely to the eye."
+
+"Sir," said the lady, exhibiting some amusement at this
+unexpected sally, "I am, you must know, as God made me. Sometime,
+perhaps, I may be very glad to satisfy your curiosity, and
+exhibit to you my poor countenance such as it is. But now"--and
+here she reverted to her more serious mood--"I must again put it
+to you: are you willing to help an unprotected woman in a period
+of very great danger to herself? Should you decline the
+assistance which I solicit, my slaves shall conduct you to the
+gate through which you entered, and suffer you to depart in
+peace. Should you, upon the other hand, accept the trust, you are
+to receive no reward therefor, except the gratitude of one who
+thus appeals to you in her helplessness."
+
+For a few moments Jonathan fell silent, for here, indeed, was he
+entering into an adventure which infinitely surpassed any
+anticipation that he could have formed. He was, besides, of a
+cautious nature, and was entirely disinclined to embark into any
+affair so obscure and tangled as that in which he now found
+himself becoming involved.
+
+"Friend," said he, at last, "I may tell thee that thy story has
+so far moved me as to give me every inclination to help thee in
+thy difficulties, but I must also inform thee that I am a man of
+caution, having never before entered into any business of this
+sort. Therefore, before giving any promise that may bind my
+future actions, I must, in common wisdom, demand to know what are
+the conditions that thou hast in mind to impose upon me."
+
+"Indeed, sir," cried the lady, with great vivacity and with more
+cheerful accents--as though her mind had been relieved of a
+burden of fear that her companion might at once have declined
+even a consideration of her request--"indeed, sir, you will find
+that the trust which I would impose upon you is in appearance no
+such great matter as my words may have led you to suppose.
+
+"You must know that I am possessed of a little trinket which, in
+the hands of any one who, like yourself, is a stranger in these
+parts, would possess no significance, but which while in my
+keeping is fraught with infinite menace to me."
+
+Hereupon, and having so spoken, she clapped her hands, and an
+attendant immediately entered, disclosing the person of the same
+negress who had first introduced Jonathan into the strange
+adventure in which he now found himself involved. This creature,
+who appeared still more deformed and repulsive in the brilliantly
+lighted room than she had in the moonlight, carried in her hands
+a white napkin, which she handed to her mistress. This being
+opened, disclosed a small ivory ball of about the bigness of a
+lime. Nodding to the negress to withdraw, the lady handed him the
+ivory ball, and Jonathan took it with no small degree of
+curiosity and examined it carefully. It appeared to be of an
+exceeding antiquity, and of so deep a yellow as to be almost
+brown in color. It was covered over with strange figures and
+characters of an Oriental sort, which appeared to our hero to be
+of Chinese workmanship.
+
+"I must tell you, sir," said the lady, after she had permitted
+her guest to examine this for a while in silence, "that though
+this appears to you to be of little worth, it is yet of extreme
+value. After all, however, it is nothing but a curiosity that any
+one who is interested in such matters might possess. What I have
+to ask you is this: Will you be willing to take this into your
+charge, to guard it with the utmost care and fidelity--yes, even
+as the apple of your eye--during your continuance in these parts,
+and to return it to me in safety the day before your departure.
+By so doing you will render me a service which you may neither
+understand nor comprehend, but which shall make me your debtor
+for my entire life."
+
+By this time Jonathan had pretty well composed his mind for a
+reply.
+
+"Friend," said he, "such a matter as this is entirely out of my
+knowledge of business, which is, indeed, that of a clerk in the
+mercantile profession. Nevertheless, I have every inclination to
+help thee, though I trust thou mayest have magnified the dangers
+that beset thee. This appears to me to be a little trifle for
+such an ado; nevertheless, I will do as thou dost request. I will
+keep it in safety and will return it to thee upon this day a week
+hence, by which time I hope to have discharged my cargo and be
+ready to continue my voyage to Demerara."
+
+At these words the lady, who had been watching him all the time
+with a most unaccountable eagerness, burst forth into words of
+such heart-felt gratitude as to entirely overwhelm our hero. When
+her transports had been somewhat assuaged she permitted him to
+depart, and the negress conducted him back through the garden,
+whence she presently showed him through the gate whither he had
+entered and out into the street.
+
+
+
+
+III. The Terrific Encounter with the One-eyed Little Gentleman in
+Black
+
+
+
+Finding himself once more in the open street, Jonathan Rugg stood
+for a while in the moonlight, endeavoring to compose his mind
+into somewhat of that sobriety that was habitual with him; for,
+indeed, he was not a little excited by the unexpected incidents
+that had just befallen him. From this effort at composure he was
+aroused by observing that a little gentleman clad all in black
+had stopped at a little distance away and was looking very
+intently at him. In the brightness of the moonlight our hero
+could see that the little gentleman possessed but a single eye,
+and that he carried a gold-headed cane in his hand. He had hardly
+time to observe these particulars, when the other approached him
+with every appearance of politeness and cordiality.
+
+"Sir," said he, "surely I am not mistaken in recognizing in you
+the supercargo of the ship SUSANNA HAYES, which arrived this
+afternoon at this port?"
+
+"Indeed," said Jonathan, "thou art right, friend. That is my
+occupation, and that is whence I came."
+
+"To be sure!" said the little gentleman. "To be sure! To be sure!
+The SUSANNA HAYES, with a cargo of Indian-corn meal, and from
+dear good friend Jeremiah Doolittle, of Philadelphia. I know your
+good master very well--very well indeed. And have you never heard
+him speak of his friend Mr. Abner Greenway, of Kingston,
+Jamaica?"
+
+"Why, no," replied Jonathan, "I have no such recollection of the
+name nor do I know that any such name hath ever appeared upon our
+books."
+
+"To be sure! To be sure!" repeated the little gentleman, briskly,
+and with exceeding good-nature. "Indeed, my name is not likely to
+have ever appeared upon his books, for I am not a business
+correspondent, but one who, in times past, was his extremely
+intimate friend. There is much I would like to ask about him,
+and, indeed, I was in hopes that you would have been the bearer
+of a letter from him. But I have lodgings at a little distance
+from here, so that if it is not requesting too much of you maybe
+you will accompany me thither, so that we may talk at our
+leisure. I would gladly accompany you to your ship instead of
+urging you to come to my apartments, but I must tell you I am
+possessed of a devil of a fever, so that my physician hath
+forbidden me to be out of nights."
+
+"Indeed," said Jonathan, whom, you may have observed, was of a
+very easy disposition--"indeed, I shall be very glad to accompany
+thee to thy lodgings. There is nothing I would like better than
+to serve any friend of good Jeremiah Doolittle's."
+
+And thereupon, and with great amity, the two walked off together,
+the little one-eyed gentleman in black linking his arm
+confidingly into that of Jonathan's, and tapping the pavement
+continually with his cane as he trotted on at a great pace. He
+was very well acquainted with the town (of which he was a
+citizen), and so interesting was his discourse that they had gone
+a considerable distance before Jonathan observed they were
+entering into a quarter darker and less frequented than that
+which they had quitted. Tall brick houses stood upon either side,
+between which stretched a narrow, crooked roadway, with a kennel
+running down the centre.
+
+In front of one of these houses--a tall and gloomy structure--our
+hero's conductor stopped and, opening the door with a key,
+beckoned for him to enter. Jonathan having complied, his
+new-found friend led the way up a flight of steps, against which
+Jonathan's feet beat noisily in the darkness, and at length,
+having ascended two stairways and having reached a landing, he
+opened a door at the end of the passage and ushered Jonathan into
+an apartment, unlighted, except for the Moonshine, which, coming
+in through a partly open shutter, lay in a brilliant patch of
+light upon the floor.
+
+His conductor having struck a light with a flint and steel, our
+hero by the illumination of a single candle presently discovered
+himself to be in a bedchamber furnished with no small degree of
+comfort, and even elegance, and having every appearance of a
+bachelor's chamber.
+
+"You will pardon me," said his new acquaintance, "if I shut these
+shutters and the window, for that devilish fever of which I spoke
+is of such a sort that I must keep the night air even out from my
+room, or else I shall be shaking the bones out of my joints and
+chattering the teeth out of my head by to-morrow morning."
+
+So saying he was as good as his word, and not only drew the
+shutters to, but shot the heavy iron bolt into its place. Having
+accomplished this he bade our hero to be seated, and placing
+before him some exceedingly superior rum, together with some
+equally excellent tobacco, they presently fell into the
+friendliest discourse imaginable. In the course of their talk,
+which after awhile became exceedingly confidential, Jonathan
+confided to his new friend the circumstances of the adventure
+into which he had been led by the beautiful stranger, and to all
+that he said concerning his adventure his interlocutor listened
+with the closest and most scrupulously riveted attention.
+
+"Upon my word," said he, when Jonathan had concluded, "I hope
+that you may not have been made the victim of some foolish hoax.
+Let me see what it is she has confided to you."
+
+"That I will," replied Jonathan. And thereupon he thrust his hand
+into his breeches-pocket and brought forth the ivory ball.
+
+No sooner did the one eye of the little gentleman in black light
+upon the object than a most singular and extraordinary convulsion
+appeared to seize upon him. Had a bullet penetrated his heart he
+could not have started more violently, nor have sat more rigidly
+and breathlessly staring.
+
+Mastering his emotion with the utmost difficulty as Jonathan
+replaced the ball in his pocket, he drew a deep and profound
+breath and wiped the palm of his hand across his forehead as
+though arousing himself from a dream.
+
+"And you," he said, of a sudden, "are, I understand it, a Quaker.
+Do you, then, never carry a weapon, even in such a place as this,
+where at any moment in the dark a Spanish knife may be stuck
+betwixt your ribs?"
+
+"Why, no," said Jonathan, somewhat surprised that so foreign a
+topic should have been so suddenly introduced into the discourse.
+"I am a man of peace and not of blood. The people of the Society
+of Friends never carry weapons, either of offence or defence."
+
+As Jonathan concluded his reply the little gentleman suddenly
+arose from his chair and moved briskly around to the other side
+of the room. Our hero, watching him with some surprise, beheld
+him clap to the door and with a single movement shoot the bolt
+and turn the key therein. The next instant he turned to Jonathan
+a visage transformed as suddenly as though he had dropped a mask
+from his face. The gossiping and polite little old bachelor was
+there no longer, but in his stead a man with a countenance
+convulsed with some furious and nameless passion.
+
+"That ball!" he cried, in a hoarse and raucous voice. "That ivory
+ball! Give it to me upon the instant!"
+
+As he spoke he whipped out from his bosom a long, keen Spanish
+knife that in its every appearance spoke without equivocation of
+the most murderous possibilities.
+
+The malignant passions that distorted every lineament of the
+countenance of the little old gentleman in black filled our hero
+with such astonishment that he knew not whether he were asleep or
+awake; but when he beheld the other advancing with the naked and
+shining knife in his hand his reason returned to him like a
+flash. Leaping to his feet, he lost no time in putting the table
+between himself and his sudden enemy.
+
+"Indeed, friend," he cried, in a voice penetrated with
+terror--"indeed, friend, thou hadst best keep thy distance from
+me, for though I am a man of peace and a shunner of bloodshed, I
+promise thee that I will not stand still to be murdered without
+outcry or without endeavoring to defend my life!"
+
+"Cry as loud as you please!" exclaimed the other. "No one is near
+this place to hear you! Cry until you are hoarse; no one in this
+neighborhood will stop to ask what is the matter with you. I tell
+you I am determined to possess myself of that ivory ball, and
+have it I shall, even though I am obliged to cut out your heart
+to get it!" As he spoke he grinned with so extraordinary and
+devilish a distortion of his countenance, and with such an
+appearance of every intention of carrying out his threat as to
+send the goose-flesh creeping like icy fingers up and down our
+hero's spine with the most incredible rapidity and acuteness.
+
+Nevertheless, mastering his fears, Jonathan contrived to speak up
+with a pretty good appearance of spirit. "Indeed, friend," he
+said, "thou appearest to forget that I am a man of twice thy bulk
+and half thy years, and that though thou hast a knife I am
+determined to defend myself to the last extremity. I am not going
+to give thee that which thou demandest of me, and for thy sake I
+advise thee to open the door and let me go free as I entered, or
+else harm may befall thee."
+
+"Fool!" cried the other, hardly giving him time to end. "Do you,
+then, think that I have time to chatter with you while two
+villains are lying in wait for me, perhaps at the very door?
+Blame your own self for your death!" And, gnashing his teeth with
+an indescribable menace, and resting his hand upon the table, he
+vaulted with incredible agility clean across it and upon our
+hero, who, entirely unprepared for such an extraordinary attack,
+was flung back against the wall, with an arm as strong as steel
+clutching his throat and a knife flashing in his very eyes with
+dreadful portent of instant death.
+
+With an instinct to preserve his life, he caught his assailant by
+the wrist, and, bending it away from himself, set every fibre of
+his body in a superhuman effort to guard and protect himself. The
+other, though so much older and smaller, seemed to be composed
+entirely of fibres of steel, and, in his murderous endeavors, put
+forth a strength so extraordinary that for a moment our hero felt
+his heart melt within him with terror for his life. The spittal
+appeared to dry up within his mouth, and his hair to creep and
+rise upon his head. With a vehement cry of despair and anguish,
+he put forth one stupendous effort for defence, and, clapping his
+heel behind the other's leg, and throwing his whole weight
+forward, he fairly tripped his antagonist backward as he stood.
+Together they fell upon the floor, locked in the most desperate
+embrace, and overturning a chair with a prodigious clatter in
+their descent--our hero upon the top and the little gentleman in
+black beneath him.
+
+As they struck the floor the little man in black emitted a most
+piercing and terrible scream, and instantly relaxing his efforts
+of attack, fell to beating the floor with the back of his hands
+and drubbing with his heels upon the rug in which he had become
+entangled.
+
+Our hero leaped to his feet, and with dilating eyes and expanding
+brain and swimming sight stared down upon the other like one
+turned to a stone.
+
+He beheld instantly what had occurred, and that he had, without
+so intending, killed a fellow-man. The knife, turned away from
+his own person, had in their fall been plunged into the bosom of
+the other, and he now lay quivering in the last throes of death.
+As Jonathan gazed he beheld a thin red stream trickle out from
+the parted and grinning lips; he beheld the eyes turn inward; he
+beheld the eyelids contract; he beheld the figure stretch itself;
+he beheld it become still in death.
+
+
+
+
+IV. The Momentous Adventure with the Stranger with the Silver
+Ear-rings
+
+
+
+So our hero stood stunned and bedazed, gazing down upon his
+victim, like a man turned into a stone. His brain appeared to him
+to expand like a bubble, the blood surged and bummed in his ears
+with every gigantic beat of his heart, his vision swam, and his
+trembling hands were bedewed with a cold and repugnant sweat. The
+dead figure upon the floor at his feet gazed at him with a wide,
+glassy stare, and in the confusion of his mind it appeared to
+Jonathan that he was, indeed, a murderer.
+
+What monstrous thing was this that had befallen him who, but a
+moment before, had been so entirely innocent of the guilt of
+blood? What was he now to do in such an extremity as this, with
+his victim lying dead at his feet, a poniard in his heart? Who
+would believe him to be guiltless of crime with such a dreadful
+evidence as this presented against him? How was he, a stranger in
+a foreign land, to totally defend himself against an accusing of
+mistaken justice? At these thoughts a developed terror gripped at
+his vitals and a sweat as cold as ice bedewed his entire body.
+No, he must tarry for no explanation or defense! He must
+immediately fly from this terrible place, or else, should he be
+discovered, his doom would certainly be sealed!
+
+At that moment, and in the very extremity of his apprehensions,
+there fell of a sudden a knock upon the door, sounding so loud
+and so startling upon the silence of the room that every
+shattered nerve in our hero's frame tingled and thrilled in
+answer to it. He stood petrified, scarcely so much as daring to
+breathe; and then, observing that his mouth was agape, he
+moistened his dry and parching lips, and drew his jaws together
+with a snap.
+
+Again there fell the same loud, insistent knock upon the panel,
+followed by the imperative words: "Open within!"
+
+The wretched Jonathan flung about him a glance at once of terror
+and of despair, but there was for him no possible escape. He was
+shut tight in the room with his dead victim, like a rat in a
+trap. Nothing remained for him but to obey the summons from
+without. Indeed, in the very extremity of his distraction, he
+possessed reason enough to perceive that the longer he delayed
+opening the door the less innocent he might hope to appear in the
+eyes of whoever stood without.
+
+With the uncertain and spasmodic movements of an ill-constructed
+automaton, he crossed the room, and stepping very carefully over
+the prostrate body upon the floor, and with a hesitating
+reluctance that he could in no degree master, he unlocked,
+unbolted, and opened the door.
+
+The figure that outlined itself in the light of the candle,
+against the blackness of the passageway without was of such a
+singular and foreign aspect as to fit extremely well into the
+extraordinary tragedy of which Jonathan was at once the victim
+and the cause.
+
+It was that of a lean, tall man with a thin, yellow countenance,
+embellished with a long, black mustache, and having a pair of
+forbidding, deeply set, and extremely restless black eyes. A
+crimson handkerchief beneath a lace cocked hat was tied tightly
+around the head, and a pair of silver earrings, which caught the
+light of the candle, gleamed and twinkled against the inky
+darkness of the passageway beyond.
+
+This extraordinary being, without favoring our hero with any word
+of apology for his intrusion, immediately thrust himself forward
+into the room, and stretching his long, lean, bird-like neck so
+as to direct his gaze over the intervening table, fixed a gaping
+and concentrated stare upon the figure lying still and motionless
+in the centre of the room.
+
+"Vat you do dare," said he, with a guttural and foreign accent,
+and thereupon, without waiting for a reply, came forward and
+knelt down beside the dead man. After thrusting his hand into the
+silent and shrunken bosom, he presently looked up and fixed his
+penetrating eyes upon our hero's countenance, who, benumbed and
+bedazed with his despair, still stood like one enchained in the
+bonds of a nightmare. "He vas dead!" said the stranger, and
+Jonathan nodded his head in reply.
+
+"Vy you keel ze man?" inquired his interlocutor.
+
+"Indeed," cried Jonathan, finding a voice at last, but one so
+hoarse that he could hardly recognize it for his own, "I know not
+what to make of the affair! But, indeed, I do assure thee,
+friend, that I am entirely innocent of what thou seest."
+
+The stranger still kept his piercing gaze fixed upon our hero's
+countenance, and Jonathan, feeling that something further was
+demanded of him, continued: "I am, indeed, a victim of a most
+extravagant and extraordinary adventure. This evening, coming an
+entire stranger to this country, I was introduced into the house
+of a beautiful female, who bestowed upon me a charge that
+appeared to me to be at once insignificant and absurd. Behold
+this little ivory ball," said he, drawing the globe from his
+pocket, and displaying it between his thumb and finger. "It is
+this that appears to have brought all this disaster upon me; for,
+coming from the house of the young woman, the man whom thou now
+beholdest lying dead upon the floor induced me to come to this
+place. Having inveigled me hither, he demanded of me to give him
+at once this insignificant trifle. Upon my refusing to do so, he
+assaulted me with every appearance of a mad and furious
+inclination to deprive me of my life!"
+
+At the sight of the ivory ball the stranger quickly arose from
+his kneeling posture and fixed upon our hero a gaze the most
+extraordinary that he had ever encountered. His eyes dilated like
+those of a cat, the breath expelled itself from his bosom in so
+deep and profound an expiration that it appeared as though it
+might never return again. Nor was it until Jonathan had replaced
+the ball in his pocket that he appeared to awaken from the trance
+that the sight of the object had sent him into. But no sooner had
+the cause of this strange demeanor disappeared into our hero's
+breeches-pocket than he arose as with an electric shock. In an
+instant he became transformed as by the touch of magic. A sudden
+and baleful light flamed into his eyes, his face grew as red as
+blood, and he clapped his hand to his pocket with a sudden and
+violent motion. "Ze ball!" he cried, in a hoarse and strident
+voice. "Ze ball! Give me ze ball!" And upon the next instant our
+hero beheld the round and shining nozzle of a pistol pointed
+directly against his forehead.
+
+For a moment he stood as though transfixed; then in the mortal
+peril that faced him, he uttered a roar that sounded in his own
+ears like the outcry of a wild beast, and thereupon flung himself
+bodily upon the other with the violence and the fury of a madman.
+
+The stranger drew the trigger, and the powder flashed in the pan.
+He dropped the weapon, clattering, and in an instant tried to
+draw another from his other pocket. Before he could direct his
+aim, however, our hero had caught him by both wrists, and,
+bending his hand backward, prevented the chance of any shot from
+taking immediate effect upon his person. Then followed a struggle
+of extraordinary ferocity and frenzy--the stranger endeavoring to
+free his hand, and Jonathan striving with all the energy of
+despair to prevent him from effecting his murderous purpose.
+
+In the struggle our hero became thrust against the edge of the
+table. He felt as though his back were breaking, and became
+conscious that in such a situation he could hope to defend
+himself only a few moments longer. The stranger's face was
+pressed close to his own. His hot breath, strong with the odor of
+garlic, fanned our hero's cheek, while his lips, distended into a
+ferocious and ferine grin, displayed his sharp teeth shining in
+the candlelight.
+
+"Give me ze ball!" he said, in a harsh and furious whisper.
+
+At the moment there rang in Jonathan's ears the sudden and
+astounding detonation of a pistol-shot, and for a moment he
+wondered whether he had received a mortal wound without being
+aware of it. Then suddenly he beheld an extraordinary and
+dreadful transformation take place in the countenance thrust so
+close to his own; the eyes winked several times with incredible
+rapidity, and then rolled upward and inward; the jaws gaped into
+a dreadful and cavernous yawn; the pistol fell with a clatter to
+the floor, and the next moment the muscles, so rigid but an
+instant before, relaxed into a limp and listless flaccidity. The
+joints collapsed, and the entire man fell into an
+indistinguishable heap upon and across the dead figure stretched
+out upon the floor, while at the same time a pungent and blinding
+cloud of gunpowder smoke filled the apartment. For a few moments
+the hands twitched convulsively; the neck stretched itself to an
+abominable length; the long, lean legs slowly and gradually
+relaxed, and every fibre of the body gradually collapsed into the
+lassitude of death. A spot of blood appeared and grew upon the
+collar at the throat, and in the same degree the color ebbed from
+the face leaving it of a dull and leaden pallor.
+
+All these terrible and formidable changes of aspect our hero
+stood watching with a motionless and riveted attention, and as
+though they were to him matters of the utmost consequence and
+importance; and only when the last flicker of life had departed
+from his second victim did he lift his gaze from this terrible
+scene of dissolution to stare about him, this way and that, his
+eyes blinded, and his breath stifled by the thick cloud of
+sulphurous smoke that obscured the objects about him in a pungent
+cloud.
+
+
+
+
+V. The Unexpected Encounter with the Sea-captain with the Broken
+Nose
+
+
+
+If our hero had been distracted and bedazed by the first
+catastrophe that had befallen, this second and even more dreadful
+and violent occurrence appeared to take away from him, for the
+moment, every power of thought and of sensation. All that
+perturbation of emotion that had before convulsed him he
+discovered to have disappeared, and in its stead a benumbed and
+blinded intelligence alone remained to him. As he stood in the
+presence of this second death, of which he had been as innocent
+and as unwilling an instrument as he had of the first, he could
+observe no signs either of remorse or of horror within him. He
+picked up his hat, which had fallen upon the floor in the first
+encounter, and, brushing away the dust with the cuff of his coat
+sleeve with extraordinary care, adjusted the beaver upon his head
+with the utmost nicety. Then turning, still stupefied as with the
+fumes of some powerful drug, he prepared to quit the scene of
+tragic terrors that had thus unexpectedly accumulated upon him.
+
+But ere he could put his design into execution his ears were
+startled by the sound of loud and hurried footsteps which, coming
+from below, ascended the stairs with a prodigious clatter and
+bustle of speed. At the landing these footsteps paused for a
+while, and then approached, more cautious and deliberate, toward
+the room where the double tragedy had been enacted, and where our
+hero yet stood silent and inert.
+
+All this while Jonathan made no endeavor to escape, but stood
+passive and submissive to what might occur. He felt himself the
+victim of circumstances over which he himself had no control.
+Gazing at the partly opened door, he awaited for whatever
+adventure might next befall him. Once again the footsteps paused,
+this time at the very threshold, and then the door was slowly
+pushed open from without.
+
+As our hero gazed at the aperture there presently became
+disclosed to his view the strong and robust figure of one who was
+evidently of a seafaring habit. From the gold braid upon his hat,
+the seals dangling from the ribbon at his fob, and a certain
+particularity of custom, he was evidently one of no small
+consideration in his profession. He was of a strong and powerful
+build, with a head set close to his shoulders, and upon a round,
+short bull neck. He wore a black cravat, loosely tied into a
+knot, and a red waistcoat elaborately trimmed with gold braid; a
+leather belt with a brass buckle and hanger, and huge sea-boots
+completed a costume singularly suggestive of his occupation in
+life. His face was round and broad, like that of a cat, and a
+complexion stained, by constant exposure to the sun and wind, to
+a color of newly polished mahogany. But a countenance which
+otherwise might have been humorous, in this case was rendered
+singularly repulsive by the fact that his nose had been broken so
+flat to his face that all that remained to distinguish that
+feature were two circular orifices where the nostrils should have
+been. His eyes were by no means so sinister as the rest of his
+visage, being of a light-gray color and exceedingly
+vivacious--even good-natured in the merry restlessness of their
+glance--albeit they were well-nigh hidden beneath a black bush of
+overhanging eyebrows. When he spoke, his voice was so deep and
+resonant that it was as though it issued from a barrel rather
+than from the breast of a human being.
+
+"How now, my hearty!" cried he, in stentorian tones, so loud that
+they seemed to stun the tensely drawn drums of our hero's ears.
+"How now, my hearty! What's to-do here? Who is shooting pistols
+at this hour of the night?" Then, catching sight of the figures
+lying in a huddle upon the floor, his great, thick lips parted
+into a gape of wonder and his gray eyes rolled in his head like
+two balls, so that what with his flat face and the round holes of
+his nostrils he presented an appearance which, under other
+circumstances, would have been at once ludicrous and grotesque.
+
+"By the blood!" cried he, "to be sure it is murder that has
+happened here."
+
+"Not murder!" cried Jonathan, in a shrill and panting voice. "Not
+murder! It was all an accident, and I am as innocent as a baby."
+
+The new-comer looked at him and then at the two figures upon the
+floor, and then back at him again with eyes at once quizzical and
+cunning. Then his face broke into a grin that might hardly be
+called of drollery. "Accident!" quoth he. "By the blood! d'ye see
+'tis a strange accident, indeed, that lays two men by the heels
+and lets the third go without a scratch!" Delivering himself
+thus, he came forward into the room, and, taking the last victim
+of Jonathan's adventure by the arm, with as little compunction as
+he would have handled a sack of grain he dragged the limp and
+helpless figure from where it lay to the floor beside the first
+victim. Then, lifting the lighted candle, he bent over the two
+prostrate bodies, holding the illumination close to the
+lineaments first of one and then of the other. He looked at them
+very carefully for a long while, with the closest and most intent
+scrutiny, and in perfect silence. "They are both as dead," says
+he, "as Davy Jones, and, whoever you be, I protest that you have
+done your business the most completest that I ever saw in all of
+my life."
+
+Indeed," cried Jonathan, in the same shrill and panting voice,
+"it was themselves who did it. First one of them attacked me and
+then the other, and I did but try to keep them from murdering me.
+This one fell on his knife, and that one shot himself in his
+efforts to destroy me."
+
+"That," says the seaman, "you may very well tell to a dry-lander,
+and maybe he will believe you; but you cannot so easily pull the
+wool over the eyes of Captain Benny Willitts. And what, if I may
+be so bold as for to ask you, was the reason for their attacking
+so harmless a man as you proclaim yourself to be?"
+
+"That I know not," cried Jonathan; "but I am entirely willing to
+tell thee all the circumstances. Thou must know that I am a
+member of the Society of Friends. This day I landed here in
+Kingston, and met a young woman of very comely appearance, who
+intrusted me with this little ivory ball, which she requested me
+to keep for her a few days. The sight of this ball--in which I
+can detect nothing that could be likely to arouse any feelings of
+violence--appears to have driven these two men entirely mad, so
+that they instantly made the most ferocious and murderous assault
+upon me. See! wouldst thou have believed that so small a thing as
+this would have caused so much trouble?" And as he spoke he held
+up to the gaze of the other the cause of the double tragedy that
+had befallen. But no sooner had Captain Willitts's eyes lighted
+upon the ball than the most singular change passed over his
+countenance. The color appeared to grow dull and yellow in his
+ruddy cheeks, his fat lips dropped apart, and his eyes stared
+with a fixed and glassy glare. He arose to his feet and, still
+with the expression of astonishment and wonder upon his face,
+gazed first at our hero and then at the ivory ball in his hands,
+as though he were deprived both of reason and of speech. At last,
+as our hero slipped the trifle back in his pocket again, the
+mariner slowly recovered himself, though with a prodigious
+effort, and drew a deep and profound breath as to the very bottom
+of his lungs. He wiped, with the corner of his black silk cravat,
+his brow, upon which the sweat appeared to have gathered. "Well,
+messmate," says he, at last, with a sudden change of voice, "you
+have, indeed, had a most wonderful adventure." Then with another
+deep breath: "Well, by the blood! I may tell you plainly that I
+am no poor hand at the reading of faces. Well, I think you to be
+honest, and I am inclined to believe every word you tell me. By
+the blood! I am prodigiously sorry for you, and am inclined to
+help you out of your scrape.
+
+"The first thing to do," he continued, "is to get rid of these
+two dead men, and that is an affair I believe we shall have no
+trouble in handling. One of them we will wrap up in the carpet
+here, and t'other we can roll into yonder bed-curtain. You shall
+carry the one and I the other, and, the harbor being at no great
+distance, we can easily bring them thither and tumble them
+overboard, and no one will be the wiser of what has happened. For
+your own safety, as you may easily see, you can hardly go away
+and leave these objects here to be found by the first-comer, and
+to arise up in evidence against you."
+
+This reasoning, in our hero's present bewildered state, appeared
+to him to be so extremely just that he raised not the least
+objection to it. Accordingly, each of the two silent, voiceless
+victims of the evening's occurrences were wrapped into a bundle
+that from without appeared to be neither portentous nor terrible
+in appearance.
+
+Thereupon, Jonathan shouldering the rug containing the little
+gentleman in black, and the sea-captain doing the like for the
+other, they presently made their way down the stairs through the
+darkness, and so out into the street. Here the sea-captain became
+the conductor of the expedition, and leading the way down several
+alleys and along certain by-streets--now and then stopping to
+rest, for the burdens were both heavy and clumsy to carry--they
+both came out at last to the harbor front, without any one having
+questioned them or having appeared to suspect them of anything
+wrong. At the water-side was an open wharf extending a pretty
+good distance out into the harbor. Thither the captain led the
+way and Jonathan followed. So they made their way out along the
+wharf or pier, stumbling now and then over loose boards, until
+they came at last to where the water was of a sufficient depth
+for their purpose. Here the captain, bending his shoulders, shot
+his burden out into the dark, mysterious waters, and Jonathan,
+following his example, did the same. Each body sank with a sullen
+and leaden splash into the element where, the casings which
+swathed them becoming loosened, the rug and the curtain rose to
+the surface and drifted slowly away with the tide.
+
+As Jonathan stood gazing dully at the disappearance of these last
+evidences of his two inadvertent murders, he was suddenly and
+vehemently aroused by feeling a pair of arms of enormous strength
+flung about him from behind. In their embrace his elbows were
+instantly pinned tight to his side, and he stood for a moment
+helpless and astounded, while the voice of the sea-captain,
+rumbling in his very ear, exclaimed: "Ye bloody, murthering
+Quaker, I'll have that ivory ball, or I'll have your life!"
+
+These words produced the same effect upon Jonathan as though a
+douche of cold water had suddenly been flung over him. He began
+instantly to struggle to free himself, and that with a frantic
+and vehement violence begotten at once of terror and despair. So
+prodigious were his efforts that more than once he had nearly
+torn himself free, but still the powerful arms of his captor held
+him as in a vise of iron. Meantime, our hero's assailant made
+frequent though ineffectual attempts to thrust a hand into the
+breeches-pocket where the ivory ball was hidden, swearing the
+while under his breath with a terrifying and monstrous string of
+oaths. At last, finding himself foiled in every such attempt, and
+losing all patience at the struggles of his victim, he endeavored
+to lift Jonathan off of his feet, as though to dash him bodily
+upon the ground. In this he would doubtless have succeeded had he
+not caught his heel in the crack of a loose board of the wharf.
+Instantly they both fell, violently prostrate, the captain
+beneath and Jonathan above him, though still encircled in his
+iron embrace. Our hero felt the back of his head strike violently
+upon the flat face of the other, and he heard the captain's skull
+sound with a terrific crack like that of a breaking egg upon some
+post or billet of wood, against which he must have struck. In
+their frantic struggles they had approached extremely near the
+edge of the wharf, so that the next instant, with an enormous and
+thunderous splash, Jonathan found himself plunged into the waters
+of the harbor, and the arms of his assailant loosened from about
+his body.
+
+The shock of the water brought him instantly to his senses, and,
+being a fairly good swimmer, he had not the least difficulty in
+reaching and clutching the cross-piece of a wooden ladder that,
+coated with slimy sea-moss, led from the water-level to the wharf
+above.
+
+After reaching the safety of the dry land once more, Jonathan
+gazed about him as though to discern whence the next attack might
+be delivered upon him. But he stood entirely alone upon the
+dock--not another living soul was in sight. The surface of the
+water exhibited some commotion, as though disturbed by something
+struggling beneath; but the sea-captain, who had doubtless been
+stunned by the tremendous crack upon his head, never arose again
+out of the element that had engulfed him.
+
+The moonlight shone with a peaceful and resplendent illumination,
+and, excepting certain remote noises from the distant town not a
+sound broke the silence and the peacefulness of the balmy,
+tropical night. The limpid water, illuminated by the resplendent
+moonlight, lapped against the wharf. All the world was calm,
+serene, and enveloped in a profound and entire repose.
+
+Jonathan looked up at the round and brilliant globe of light
+floating in the sky above his head, and wondered whether it were,
+indeed, possible that all that had befallen him was a reality and
+not some tremendous hallucination. Then suddenly arousing himself
+to a renewed realization of that which had occurred, he turned
+and ran like one possessed, up along the wharf, and so into the
+moonlit town once more.
+
+
+
+
+VI. The Conclusion of the Adventure with the Lady with the Silver
+Veil
+
+
+
+Nor did he check his precipitous flight until suddenly, being led
+perhaps by some strange influence of which he was not at all the
+master, he discovered himself to be standing before the
+garden-gate where not more than an hour before he had first
+entered upon the series of monstrous adventures that had led to
+such tremendous conclusions.
+
+People were still passing and repassing, and one of these
+groups--a party of young ladies and gentlemen--paused upon the
+opposite side of the street to observe, with no small curiosity
+and amusement, his dripping and bedraggled aspect. But only one
+thought and one intention possessed our hero--to relieve himself
+as quickly as possible of that trust which he had taken up so
+thoughtlessly, and with such monstrous results to himself and to
+his victims. He ran to the gate of the garden and began beating
+and kicking upon it with a vehemence that he could neither master
+nor control. He was aware that the entire neighborhood was
+becoming aroused, for he beheld lights moving and loud voices of
+inquiry; yet he gave not the least thought to the disturbance he
+was creating, but continued without intermission his uproarious
+pounding upon the gate.
+
+At length, in answer to the sound of his vehement blows, the
+little wicket was opened and a pair of eyes appeared thereat. The
+next instant the gate was cast ajar very hastily, and the
+pock-pitted negress appeared. She caught him by the sleeve of his
+coat and drew him quickly into the garden. "Buckra, Buckra!" she
+cried. "What you doing? You wake de whole town!" Then, observing
+his dripping garments: "You been in de water. You catch de fever
+and shake till you die."
+
+"Thy mistress!" cried Jonathan, almost sobbing in the excess of
+his emotion; "take me to her upon the instant, or I cannot answer
+for my not going entirely mad!"
+
+When our hero was again introduced to the lady, he found her clad
+in a loose and an elegant negligee, infinitely becoming to her
+graceful figure, and still covered with the veil of silver gauze
+that had before enveloped her.
+
+"Friend," he cried, vehemently, approaching her and holding out
+toward her the little ivory ball, "take again this which thou
+gavest me! It has brought death to three men, and I know not what
+terrible fate may befall me if I keep it longer in my possession.
+
+"What is it you say?" cried she, in a piercing voice. "Did you
+say it hath caused the death of three men? Quick! Tell me what
+has happened, for I feel somehow a presage that you bring me news
+of safety and release from all my dangers."
+
+"I know not what thou meanest!" cried Jonathan, still panting
+with agitation. "But this I do know: that when I went away from
+thee I departed an innocent man, and now I come back to thee
+burdened with the weight of three lives, which, though innocent I
+have been instrumental in taking."
+
+"Explain!" exclaimed the lady, tapping the floor with her foot.
+"Explain! explain! explain!"
+
+"That I will," cried Jonathan, "and as soon as I am able! When
+I left thee and went out into the street I was accosted by a
+little gentleman clad in black."
+
+"Indeed!" cried the lady; "and had he but one eye, and did he
+carry a gold-headed cane?"
+
+"Exactly," said Jonathan; "and he claimed acquaintance with
+friend Jeremiah Doolittle."
+
+"He never knew him!" cried the lady, vehemently; "and I must tell
+you that he was a villain named Hunt, who at one time was the
+intimate consort of the pirate Keitt. He it was who plunged a
+deadly knife into his captain's bosom, and so murdered him in
+this very house. He himself or his agents, must have been
+watching my gate when you went forth."
+
+"I know not how that may be," said Jonathan, "but he took me to
+his apartment, and there, obtaining a knowledge of the trust thou
+didst burden me with, he demanded it of me, and upon my refusing
+to deliver it to him he presently fell to attacking me with a
+dagger. In my efforts to protect my life I inadvertently caused
+him to plunge the knife into his own bosom and to kill himself."
+
+"And what then?" cried the lady, who appeared well-nigh
+distracted with her emotions.
+
+"Then," said Jonathan, "there came a strange man--a
+foreigner--who upon his part assaulted me with a pistol, with
+every intention of murdering me and thus obtaining possession of
+that same little trifle."
+
+And did he," exclaimed the lady, "have long, black mustachios,
+and did he have silver ear-rings in his ears?"
+
+"Yes," said Jonathan, "he did."
+
+"That," cried the lady, could have been none other than Captain
+Keitt's Portuguese sailing-master, who must have been spying upon
+Hunt! Tell me what happened next!"
+
+"He would have taken my life," said Jonathan, "but in the
+struggle that followed he shot himself accidentally with his own
+pistol, and died at my very feet. I do not know what would have
+happened to me if a sea-captain had not come and proffered his
+assistance."
+
+"A sea-captain!" she exclaimed; "and had he a flat face and a
+broken nose?"
+
+"Indeed he had," replied Jonathan.
+
+"That," said the lady, "must have been Captain Keitt's pirate
+partner--Captain Willitts, of The Bloody Hand. He was doubtless
+spying upon the Portuguese."
+
+"He induced me," said Jonathan, "to carry the two bodies down to
+the wharf. Having inveigled me there--where, I suppose, he
+thought no one could interfere--he assaulted me, and endeavored
+to take the ivory ball away from me. In my efforts to escape we
+both fell into the water, and he, striking his head upon the edge
+of the wharf, was first stunned and then drowned."
+
+"Thank God!" cried the lady, with a transport of fervor, and
+clasping her jewelled hands together. "At last I am free of those
+who have heretofore persecuted me and threatened my very life
+itself! You have asked to behold my face; I will now show it to
+you! Heretofore I have been obliged to keep it concealed lest,
+recognizing me, my enemies should have slain me." As she spoke
+she drew aside her veil, and disclosed to the vision of our hero
+a countenance of the most extraordinary and striking beauty. Her
+luminous eyes were like those of a Jawa, and set beneath
+exquisitely arched and pencilled brows. Her forehead was like
+lustrous ivory and her lips like rose-leaves. Her hair, which was
+as soft as the finest silk, was fastened up in masses of
+ravishing abundance. "I am," said she, "the daughter of that
+unfortunate Captain Keitt, who, though weak and a pirate, was not
+so wicked, I would have you know, as he has been painted. He
+would, doubtless, have been an honest man had he not been led
+astray by the villain Hunt, who so nearly compassed your own
+destruction. He returned to this island before his death, and
+made me the sole heir of all that great fortune which he had
+gathered--perhaps not by the most honest means--in the waters of
+the Indian Ocean. But the greatest treasure of all that fortune
+bequeathed to me was a single jewel which you yourself have just
+now defended with a courage and a fidelity that I cannot
+sufficiently extol. It is that priceless gem known as the Ruby of
+Kishmoor. I will show it to you." Hereupon she took the little
+ivory ball in her hand, and, with a turn of her beautiful wrists,
+unscrewed a lid so nicely and cunningly adjusted that no eye
+could have detected where it was joined to the parent globe.
+Within was a fleece of raw silk containing an object which she
+presently displayed before the astonished gaze of our hero. It
+was a red stone of about the bigness of a plover's egg, and which
+glowed and flamed with such an exquisite and ruddy brilliancy as
+to dazzle even Jonathan's inexperienced eyes. Indeed, he did not
+need to be informed of the priceless value of the treasure, which
+he beheld in the rosy palm extended toward him. How long he gazed
+at this extraordinary jewel he knew not, but he was aroused from
+his contemplation by the sound of the lady's voice addressing
+him. "The three villains," said she, "who have this day met their
+deserts in a violent and bloody death, had by an accident
+obtained knowledge that this jewel was in my possession. Since
+then my life has hung upon a thread, and every step that I have
+taken has been watched by these enemies, the most cruel and
+relentless that it was ever the lot of any unfortunate to
+possess. From the mortal dangers of their machinations you have
+saved me, exhibiting a courage and a determination that cannot be
+sufficiently applauded. In this you have earned my deepest
+admiration and regard. I would rather," she cried, "intrust my
+life and my happiness to you than into the keeping of any man
+whom I have ever known! I cannot hope to reward you in such a way
+as to recompense you for the perils into which my necessities
+have thrust you; but yet"--and here she hesitated, as though
+seeking for words in which to express herself--"but yet if you
+are willing to accept of this jewel, and all of the fortune that
+belongs to me, together with the person of poor Evaline Keitt
+herself, not only the stone and the wealth, but the woman also,
+are yours to dispose of as you see fit!"
+
+Our hero was so struck aback at this unexpected turn that he knew
+not upon the instant what reply to make. "Friend," said he, at
+last, "I thank thee extremely for thy offer, and, though I would
+not be ungracious, it is yet borne in upon me to testify to thee
+that as to the stone itself and the fortune--of which thou
+speakest, and of which I very well know the history--I have no
+inclination to receive either the one or the other, both the
+fruits of theft, rapine, and murder. The jewel I have myself
+beheld three times stained, as it were, with the blood of my
+fellow-man, so that it now has so little value in my sight that I
+would not give a peppercorn to possess it. Indeed, there is no
+inducement in the world that could persuade me to accept it, or
+even to take it again into my hand. As to the rest of thy
+generous offer, I have only to say that I am, four months hence,
+to be married to a very comely young woman of Kensington, in
+Pennsylvania, by name Martha Dobbs, and therefore I am not at all
+at liberty to consider my inclinations in any other direction."
+
+Having so delivered himself, Jonathan bowed with such ease as his
+stiff and awkward joints might command, and thereupon withdrew
+from the presence of the charmer, who, with cheeks suffused with
+blushes and with eyes averted, made no endeavor to detain him.
+
+So ended the only adventure of moment that ever happened to him
+in all his life. For thereafter he contented himself with such
+excitement as his mercantile profession and his extremely
+peaceful existence might afford.
+
+
+
+
+Epilogue
+
+
+
+In conclusion it may be said that when the worthy Jonathan Rugg
+was married to Martha Dobbs, upon the following June, some
+mysterious friend presented to the bride a rope of pearls of such
+considerable value that when they were realized into money our
+hero was enabled to enter into partnership with his former patron
+the worthy Jeremiah Doolittle, and that, having made such a
+beginning, he by-and-by arose to become, in his day, one of the
+leading merchants of his native town of Philadelphia.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg etext of The Ruby of Kishmoor, by Howard Pyle
+
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