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The fearful moment had passed.

Dreamer turned to face Harper and lifted his hand.

Harper raised his hat and bowed, and rode back to his place at the head of the colonels, heart thumping and head dizzy with relief.

At dusk there was a formal council. Dreamer and his sachems sat down with Colonel Harper, the other colonels and the leaders of the city of Charlestown. To the white men it was long, incomprehensible and tedious. But it was necessary. It was part of the passing away of the Patanq nation from its homeland.

Next day the Patanq embarked. And it took all day to get them out and aboard the six ships, for there were serious matters of precedence to be considered, and families and clans to be kept together. There were long discussions, led by Dreamer, and the sachems, while Colonel Harper and the rest of the South Carolinians did no more than stand by and watch.

But some of the white men — while they were glad the Indians were going — were puzzled as to the reason.

"Why are they doing this, Colonel?" said his second-eldest, as they sat on their horses and looked on.

"They have their reasons, Lieutenant."

"Where are they going?"

"North! At least, that's what they told me."

"But why are they going? They've been fighting us on and off since white men came here. Why should they give up their lands and pay in gold to be taken into ships and carried away?"

Harper sighed.

"Boy, you've asked me that a hundred times these past months, and I just don't know."

"But this has been planned for over a year, and you've spent weeks among them. Didn't you ever ask?"

"'Course I did, but they'd never tell me."

"Not anything? Not at all?"

Harper paused and gazed out across the harbour, where busy boats slid across the water like insects with flashing limbs, and the decks of the six ships swarmed with excited Indians. Only a couple of dozen Patanq remained ashore, climbing into two big boats with oarsmen ready, helmsmen at the tillers… and Dreamer looking on, determined to see all his people safely away before he stepped into a boat himself.

"I don't know the truth of it, boy," said Harper, "but it's all to do with him."

Chapter 6

Dawn, 1st October 1752
The southern anchorage
The island

Billy Bones was pumping ship among the trees, only his broad back visible as he turned away for privacy, fumbling with the falls of his breeches and aiming at the roots of a big palm. Grunting in relief, he let loose a stream like that of a brewer's dray horse.

"Can you trust him, Cap'n?" said Israel Hands, a hundred yards off, preparing to help launch the jolly-boat. It was rigged for sail, with provisions for a week, two men standing by as crew, and Long John ready seated in the stern-sheets. Silver shrugged his shoulders.

"We got to trust him, shipmate. There ain't no other way."

"Then let me come along o' you."

"Can't do that, matey. There's too much to do and too few to do it. I want you out with your party, along o' Sarney Sawyer and Black Dog and their crews. I want this island mapped and charted, and not an inch that we don't know the bearings of."

"But, John, it might be half a year or more before we sees Flint again."

"Not him, Israel!" Silver thumped the gunwale. "Not him, my cocker! He'll flog all hands to their duties, and whistle up the Devil if need be." He shook his head. "No, he'll be back before you can blink, and we has to be ready."

"Then take the pistols off Billy-boy. At least do that," said Israel Hands.

"No," said Silver, "them are to show we trust him."

"But we don't."

"Israel!" said Silver, taking hold of his arm. "Yes, we do, and I'll tell you for why…" He nodded in Bones's direction. "I saw the look on the bugger's face when he opened his sea- chest and saw the cargo untouched. He piped his eye like a babby."

"Looks as though he's done," said Israel Hands, for Bones was now busy shaking off the last drops. Heaving everything back into place, he turned towards the boat, making fast his britches as he stumped across the sand, head down, lips pursed.

In addition to restoring Bones's pistols and cutlass, Silver had issued him with a blue coat and tricorne to signify that he was, once more, an officer and jolly companion. Now he gazed upon these icons of resurrection.

If a thing's worth doing… he thought. But even then he knew that Billy would turn traitor the instant he caught sight of Flint.

"Come aboard, Mr Bones," said Silver with a smile.

"Aye-aye, Cap'n," said Billy Bones, touching his hat with utmost respect. The broad nose occupying the centre of his rough, heavy face was a constant reminder of the need to show respect to Silver, for it was Silver who'd flattened it, in past days aboard Walrus. Billy's piggish eyes blinked nervously as — seaman born and bred — he gave a hand to shoving the jolly-boat out till she floated, before leaping aboard with the others.

The two seamen immediately took up their oars in the rocking boat, set them in the rowlocks, feathered, and looked to Silver for orders.

"Give way!" said Silver, and the boat shot forward, clear of the shore. "Take the tiller, Mr Bones, and set a course for Foremast Hill." He looked at the oarsmen. "We'll set sail, just so soon as she's clear o' the inlet. Wind's fair from the west."

"Aye-aye, Cap'n."

Out they went, pulling through the land-locked waters where — surrounded by hills and jungle, and shielded by the mass of a craggy islet that was the island's companion — the winds blew feeble and erratic. As soon as they cleared the narrows and came about, with the heights of Haulbowline Head on the starboard beam, the fifteen-foot boat began to lift and plunge, and all aboard her felt their spirits lift as the fresh salt smell, the wind and spray and the wheeling gulls blew away the foetid heat of the enclosed anchorage.

"Make sail, lads," said Silver, and in came the oars, and up went a gaff and headsail, to fill in the steady westerly blow, driving them onward. The speed was exhilarating. Too small for deep sea work, and dangerously stretched even for a coastal cruise, the jolly-boat — chosen for the job because she was all they had — was rising to the occasion magnificently.

"Fine sport, there!" said Silver, pointing to the honking, trumpeting sealions that frolicked — fat, black and slippery — among the breakers pounding the rocks off Haulbowline Head.

"Fine for them, Cap'n," said Billy Bones, with a broken- toothed grin, "but not for us." It was the first time Silver had seen him smile. "And there's the Cape of the Woods to clear, half a league ahead, so I'll steer a point to windward, to give us sea-room."

"Well and good, Mr Bones," said Silver approvingly. "I see you knows your island."

"Aye, Cap'n, 'deed I do. When I was here under…" His words died.

"Tell the truth and shame the Devil, Mr Bones!" said Silver.

The two seaman were looking on with round eyes. "When you was here under Cap'n Flint…"

Billy Bones swallowed, studied the sea rather than Silver, and went on, "When I was here… before… we… that is he… charted her from north to south and east to west, and all the seas around."

"So he knows the island well?"

"Every blessed inch."

"And the seas to the north? Does he know what lies there?"

Bones bit his lip and mumbled. If ever a man wore his thoughts on his face it was Billy Bones, and Silver knew he'd touched on something important. But he let it pass, and waited until they'd forged further out to sea, where more of the island's mysteries became visible over the line of cliffs.