登陆注册
19313100000072

第72章 AGAIN THE GODS MAKE CHANGE(4)

"Greeting, my lord," said he, "but I'd have been pleased to see you earlier. We've small enough force and slow enough heels in this vessel, and it's my idea that the sooner we're away from here and beyond range of pursuit, the safer it will be for my woman and brats who are in that hutch of an after-castle. It's long enough since I sailed in such a small old-fashioned ship as this. She's no machines, and she's not even a steering mannikin. Look at the meanness of her furniture and (in your ear) I've suspicions that there's rottenness in her bottom. But she's the best I'd the means to buy, and if she reaches the place at the farther end I've got my eye on, we shall have to make a home there, or be content to die, for she'll never have strength to carry us farther or back. She's been a ship in the Egypt trade, and you know what that is for getting worm and rot in the wood.""You'd enough hands for your scheme before I came?""Oh yes. I've fifty stout lads and eight women packed in the ship somehow, and trouble enough I've had to get them away from the city. That thief of a port-captain wellnigh skinned us clean before he could see it lawful that so many useful fighting men might go out of harbour. Times are not what they were, I tell you, and the sea trade's about done. All sailor men of any skill have taken a woman or two and gone out in companies to try their fortunes in other lands. Why, I'd trouble enough to get half a score to help me work this ship. All my balance are just landsmen raw and simple, and if I land half of them alive at the other end, we shall be doing well.""Still with luck and a few good winds it should not take long to get across to Europe."Tob slapped his leg. "No savage Europe for me, my lord. Now, see the advantage of being a mariner. I found once some islands to the north of Europe, separated from the main by a strait, which Icalled the Tin Islands, seeing that tin ore litters many of the beaches. I was driven there by storm, and said no word of the find when I got back, and here you see it comes in useful. There's no one in all Atlantis but me knows of those Tin Islands to-day, and we'll go and fight honestly for our ground, and build a town and a kingdom on it.""With Tob for king?""Well, I have figured it out as such for many a day, but Iknow when I meet my better, and I'm content to serve under Deucalion. My lord would have done wiser to have brought a wife with him, though, and I thought it was understood by the good lady that spoke to me down at the harbour, or I'd have mentioned it earlier. The savages in my Tin Islands go naked and stain themselves blue with woad, and are very filthy and brutish to look upon. They are sturdy, and should make good slaves, but one would have to get blunted in the taste before one could wish to be father to their children.""I am still husband to Phorenice."Tob grinned. "The Gods give you joy of her. But it is part of a mariner's creed--and you will grow to be a mariner here--that wedlock does not hold across the seas. However, that matter may rest. But, coming to my Tin Islands again: they'll delight you.

And I tell you, a kingdom will not be so hard to carve out as it was in Egypt, or as you found in Yucatan. There are beasts there, of course, and no one who can hunt need ever go hungry. But the greater beasts are few. There are cave-bears and cave-tigers in small numbers, to be sure, and some river-horses and great snakes.

But the greater lizards seem to avoid the land; and as for birds, there is rarely seen one that can hurt a grown man. Oh, I tell you, it will be a most desirable kingdom.""Tob seems to have imagined himself king of the Tin Islands with much reality."He sighed a little. "In truth I did, and there is no denying it, and I tell you plain, there is not another man living that Iwould have broken this voyage for but Deucalion. But don't think I regret it, and don't think I want to push myself above my place.

This breeze and the ebb are taking the old ship finely along her ways. See those fire baskets on the harbour forts? We're abreast of them now. We'll have dropped them and the city out of sight by daylight, and the flood will not begin to run up till then. But Ifear unless the wind hardens down with the dawn we'll have to bring up to an anchor when the flood makes. Tides run very hard in these narrow seas. Aye, and there are some shrewdish tide-rips round my Tin Islands, as you shall see when we reach them."There were many fearful glances backwards when day came and showed the waters, and the burning mountains that hemmed them in beyond the shores. All seemed to expect some navy of Phorenice to come surging up to take them back to servitude and starvation in the squalid wards of the city; and I confess ingenuously that I was with them in all truth when they swore they would fight the ship till she sank beneath them, before they would obey another of the commands of Phorenice. However, their brave heroics were displayed to no small purpose. For the full flow of the tide we hung in our place, barely moving past the land, but yet not seeing either oar or sail; and then, when the tide turned, away we went once more with speed, mightily comforted.

Tob's woman must needs bring drink on deck, and bid all pour libations to her as a future queen. But Tob cuffed her back into the after-castle, slamming to the hatch behind her heels, and bidding the crew send the liquor down their dusty throats. "We are done with that foolery," said he. "My Lord Deucalion will be king of this new kingdom we shall build in the Tin Islands, and a right proper king he'll make, as you untravelled ones would know, if you'd sailed the outer seas with him as I have done." Beneath which I read a regret, but said nothing, having made my plans from the moment of stepping on board, as will appear on a later sheet.

So on down the great estuary we made our way, and though it pleasured the others on board when they saw that the seas were desolate of sails, it saddened me when I recalled how once the waters had been whitened with the glut of shipping.

They had started off on their voyage with a bare two days'

同类推荐
  • 杌近志

    杌近志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 哀江南赋

    哀江南赋

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说楼炭经

    佛说楼炭经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 三论元旨

    三论元旨

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 刘生觅莲记

    刘生觅莲记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 小江小湖

    小江小湖

    小小江湖,普通的人遇到不寻常的事。这里,每个人都有不同的心法,不同的招式。主角不只是一个人,故事里的每个人都有不同的故事。小小的江湖,精彩的故事。神秘、打斗、解密、群殴、暗杀、救人、抢劫、毒药、绝世武器、宝藏神功、逃跑、陷阱、单挑、比武、绑架、盗侠、暗器、武林人物、军队这小江小湖将一个一个故事与你分享,故事很长很长。
  • 妃你莫属:王爷请娶我

    妃你莫属:王爷请娶我

    他是王爷了怎么了,只要她喜欢,他就得娶她,什么公主什么圣女,她都不要管,因为爱上了,谁也不能来阻止,哪怕是父王母后,哪怕是王公大臣,哪怕是三纲五常,只要她喜欢就够了,只要他答应就够了,爱是两个人的事,就算真的到了那个时候,她会嫁的,但那人必须是…
  • 洞玄青莲录

    洞玄青莲录

    传说上古之时,于虚空之中曾诞出诸多洞天秘境。其间灵气充溢,天材地宝蕴生其中,灵气滋渗于世间,更可灵秀一方水土,滋养一乡生灵。然而,不知从何时起,再无洞天秘境新生。原来所现洞天也逐渐成为修士们所独占的修行之地。封禁之后再无丝毫灵气向外溢出,不复当初盛状,继而竟在人间成为传说。庄户少年徐晋元,机缘巧合下踏上修行路。只是于纷争修行途中,渐渐生出疑惑:莫非修仙便是为贼?夺天之灵气,采地之精华,以无尽灵秀方成就一人。然而天生万物以养人,人却以何来报天?因为这一颗凡世赤诚之心,徐晋元选择走上了另一条艰难仙途,为此他上下求索,激昂前行……正是:凡心参尽洞玄路,仙识可至青莲境!
  • 极限猎手

    极限猎手

    无限瑰丽的宇宙,所有欲望与梦想所在的无限之海。但那注定是属于生活在美丽的“天空之城”,天生能够与“LN”任一型号相合的所谓“上等人。而像姜飞这样,因天生无法与任一高等“LN”芯片相合的“废柴”,则只能生活在昏暗,脏乱的工业地下之城,每天被“上等人”蔑称为“下等人”“贱民”。但当姜飞得到“L1N”植入芯片。梦,也就不在是梦了,一切,唾手可得,欲望,得以实现。
  • 都市之逍遥游行

    都市之逍遥游行

    一个小婴儿被抛弃在一条小溪边,眼看就要被野狼吃掉。然而上天有好生之德,天见犹怜,上天当然是不希望这么一个幼小的生命就这么丧身狼口,就在那些散发着幽光的狼尚未来到孩子身边的时候,一个须发皆白的老人出现在了孩子的面前。没有人知道老人是怎么来的,只是看着那鹤发童颜的脸上露出了慈祥的笑容,宽大的衣袖对这远处的狼群一挥,一股无形的罡气如秋风扫落叶般将瞬间就让狼群土崩瓦解。于是,一个牛B的少年,就这样得救。
  • 恶魔总裁:小娇妻逃了

    恶魔总裁:小娇妻逃了

    现在给你两个选择,一是选择我,和我过上不愁的日子嫁入豪门,而是你可以不选择我,选择这个穷小子,不过,你可想好了,你要为你生病的母亲,还有天生有疾病的妹妹考虑
  • 天纵神话

    天纵神话

    是谁,在那滚滚红尘中谈笑风生?是谁,在那危机四伏中依旧笑魇如花?她是曾经华夏乃至整个世界的恶魔,是至高无上的王者,永远张扬狂妄!然而,遗忘了千万年的真相究竟是什么,她又是否会完成她真正的使命?不管什么时候她啊,依旧是那个神话,就算,逆了这天的纵容……那一袭白衣,惊艳了谁的眼,动了谁的心?那一双恶魔异眸,又将为谁留住目光?曾经无情的人啊,感动你的是什么,你曾经流溢黑暗的世界啊,那一丝救赎的光明,在哪里……
  • 尸裔

    尸裔

    尸王裔,死胎现,一个被从小被称为鬼娃子的少年,考上大学后却意外的知道了自己的身世,从此,一件件扑朔迷离的事情接踵而来,带着自己的使命,走上了一条不为人知的尸裔之路,成就一个不一样的尸王之路……
  • 江湖旧事录

    江湖旧事录

    许久不闻江湖事,闲时偏思江湖情刀光剑影我细诉,侠肝义胆君慢听
  • 通灵铜钱

    通灵铜钱

    生死判官在人间遗落了一枚通灵铜钱,被衡南大学的大三学生胡小北捡到,从此胡小北总能看到一些平常人所看不到的东西,并利用通灵铜钱为自己获得许多好处,这时生死判官发现了生死薄上的异常,特来人间寻通灵铜钱。。。。