tasted bitter, but it was a hot drink.
Neb was pouring boiling water into the urn, the crew ignoring him completely. Because he could not talk, they treated him as deaf, dumb, and dim-witted, a thing people did to anyone not the same as themselves. Neb could see their faces in the surface of the copper urn, which he had polished earlier. Though they whispered, the boy heard every word of the conversation between Scraggs, Jamil, and the Burmese scarface, whose name was Sindh. They were plotting against the captain.
âYou go into his cabin with a blade while he sleeps.â
âOh no, not Jamil. They say the Dutchman never sleeps.â
âStay out of that cabin, my friend. He keeps a sharp sword there, always near at hand. If we want to finish Vanderdecken, it must be done by us all, swiftly, out on deck. That way he can be thrown right over the side anâ we sail off, eh?â
Scraggs sipped his coffee thoughtfully. âAye, youâre right, Sindh . . . when âtis good and quiet. When he comes out to check on the night watch before turning in. Thatâs the best time.â
The scar on Sindhâs face twitched. âGood, me anâ Jamil will change watches with the two out there later tonight. You can hide yourself on deck.â
A stiletto blade gleamed as Scraggs laid it on the table. âYou two grab him, Iâll give our capân a swift taste of this beauty, then we strip the body and heâs ready for the fishes!â
Sindh traced his blue scar with a cracked fingernail. âWhen the kapitan is gone, what then, Scraggs, my friend? One green stone is hard to split three ways.â
Scraggs winked at them both. âThen I take command. We sail her to Valparaiso and I as capân pick up the rest of the stones. There should be plenty to go âround twixt three then.â
Sindh thought about this for a moment before replying. âWhy canât I be kapitan, or Jamil here?â
âBecause Iâm an Englander, I look more like a Dutchy than you two ever could, anâ I speak the lingo. Any objections?â Scraggs toyed with the dangerous-looking stiletto, watching them. Jamil smiled and patted the mateâs hand.
âOf course not, my friend, it is a good plan. But I do have a harmless little question. What happens when we have both the ship and the stones? We cannot sail back to Europe.â
âSimple, we follow the coast up north until we sight a place called Costa Rica. Anchor up there to take on fresh water and fruit. While the crew are busy doing that, we jump ship. Other side of the mountain there is the Carribean Sea, Hispaniola, Cartagena, Naracaibo, beyond the reach of law. Sunny climes, blue seas, golden sands, anâ we three, rich as kings. Think of itâwe could build our own castles, own ships, employ servants, or buy slaves. That would do me fine, never to feel another cold day for life!â
Petros came stumping through from a cabin that led off the main one. The conspirators nudged one another and fell silent. The Greek cook clipped Nebâs ear with his good hand. âYou never brought me any coffee. Get on, boy, leave some on the table by my bunk!â Obediently Neb poured a bowl of coffee and hurried through to the other cabin, with Petros following, berating him. âAfter all I do for you, save your life, feed you, teach you how to be sea cook. This is how you treat Petros. I should have left you for the fishes. Donât spill that coffee, put it down there. Not there . . . there! Get out of here and leave me now. Nobody wants a poor sea cook with one hand. Iâm in pain night and day, with not a soul to care. Out, out!â
Neb retired gratefully to his galley.
Sitting beneath the table with his dog, Neb stroked Denmark as he pondered his dilemma. Three crewmen were planning to murder the captain! From what Neb had seen of the Dutchmanâs crew, he knew they were lawless drunkards and thieves.
Eleanor Coerr, Ronald Himler