[Boycotted by Talbot Baines Reed]@TWC D-Link bookBoycotted CHAPTER FOURTEEN 3/12
"Hang me on the Union Jack," (that was a nautical expression by which Peeler added solemnity to his statement) "if there was not exactly one million Spanish doubloons on board." Sep whistled, but immediately checked himself, and sat down on the wind to hear the rest. "Bust my buttons if mortal man knows where she lies!" continued Peeler, "save and except yours 'umbly.
Stand by, my shaver, and cast your cock- eye on this bit of rag." And he produced from his pocket a greasy piece of parchment with a map upon it. "There," said he, laying his broad thumb on a red cross somewhere in the West Pacific, "there she lies--full of gold, my boy.
Shiver my jury- masts if she don't." The wind on which Sep was sitting lifted him to his feet, as he grasped the map and gazed with quivering excitement on the mysterious red mark. He laughed sardonically, and the perspiration stood in beads on his brow.
Then, pushing Peeler over the cliff, he put the map in his pocket, and walked on whistling in the night air to the cottage. Sub-Chapter II. THE SMILE. "My own Velvetina!" "Sep, my pet!" "Can it really be ?" "Even so." A silence, during which a pair of tangled eyelashes are dim with humid dew.
Then-- "Did you meet daddy on the cliff, pet ?" He turned ashy white, even in the darkness, and recoiled several yards at the unexpected inquiry. "Where ?" at last he gasped, prevaricatingly. "Then you saw him not!" cried she, "and he is out alone on this wild night; and only his thin socks on." "Really ?" replies Sep, "let me go and look for him." He crushed her lily hand lovingly in his own and went.
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