Page:Ballantyne--The Battery and the Boiler.djvu/281

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THE BATTERY AND THE BOILER.
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CHAPTER XXI.

DEPARTURE FROM PIRATE ISLAND AND HOPEFUL NEWS AT SARAWAK.


The vessel of which Robin and his friends had thus become possessed, was one of those numerous native pirate ships which did, and we believe still do, infest some parts of the Malay Archipelago—ships which can assume the form and do the work of simple trading vessels when convenience requires, or can hoist the black flag when circumstances favour. It was not laden with anything valuable at the time of its capture. The slaves who wrought at the oars when wind failed, were wretched creatures who had been captured among the various islands, and many of them were in the last stage of exhaustion, having been worked almost to death by their inhuman captors, though a good many were still robust and fresh.

These latter it was resolved to keep still in fetters, as it was just possible that some of them, if freed, might take a fancy to seize the ship and become pirates on their own account. They were treated