The Saintly Buccaneer Read online




  © 1988 by Gilbert Morris

  Published by Bethany House Publishers

  11400 Hampshire Avenue South

  Bloomington, Minnesota 55438

  www.bethanyhouse.com

  Bethany House Publishers is a division of

  Baker Publishing Group, Grand Rapids, Michigan

  www.bakerpublishinggroup.com

  Ebook edition created 2011

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.

  ISBN 978-1-4412-7056-6

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.

  Cover illustration by Dan Thornberg

  Cover design by Danielle White

  To my special granddaughter—Laura Michelle Smith

  All children are “special,” of course, and all grandchildren are extra special—because all of them come from God; they are the fruit of the womb—the reward of the Lord. No two have the same laugh, the same fingerprints, and each of them forges a special golden chain to bind himself to the heart of a parent or a grandparent.

  You are “special,” Laura, because you have “special” parents. If it were not for their faith, you would not be alive on this earth! Stacy—my “special” daughter, the handmaiden of the Lord—and the light of her father’s eyes! Ronnie, my “special” son-in-law who walked by faith!

  You are “special,” my Laura, because God has used you to increase the faith of others.

  You are “special” because although God has not yet made you complete, He has given His promise that what He has begun he will complete.

  And you are “special” because you exactly fill that space in my heart that no other child or grandchild could fill. Without you, I would be incomplete.

  CONTENTS

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Dedication

  1. Visitor at Camp

  2. Death at Valley Forge

  3. Back to Boston

  4. The Bad Seed

  5. Christmas Comes to Valley Forge

  6. Ring Out the Old

  7. The Neptune

  8. Able Seaman Hawke

  9. I’d Let the Devil Himself Man the Guns!

  10. The Blade

  11. Beat to Quarters!

  12. The Lieutenant

  13. A New Lady

  14. The Privateer

  15. Hawke’s Bag

  16. Captured!

  17. An Old Acquaintance

  18. Hero—Or Villain?

  19. Tell Him We Love Him!

  20. The Trap

  21. The Gathering of the Clan

  22. Escape

  23. Charity Has a Plan

  24. Captain Winslow

  25. Admiral de Grass

  26. The Duel

  27. It’s God’s Will

  About the Author

  CHAPTER ONE

  VISITOR AT CAMP

  The bitter cold probed with icy fingers beneath Charity’s thick fur coat, and it took an effort of will for her to ignore its grip. Her face had been stiffened by the bite of the frigid December wind, and despite the thick woolen gloves, she could not feel the reins that guided her rangy bay.

  “Come on, Pompey!” she called out as the horse stopped suddenly. She was surprised at how weak her voice sounded, and her lips were stiff as wood as she spoke. Pulling the whip from the socket, she gave the tired animal a cut; and as he broke into a trot, she muttered, “Better find that camp pretty soon—else I’ll be froze solid!”

  The small black buggy careened along the frozen ruts, but in less than twenty minutes it crested a long hill, and there between a sweep of frozen meadowland on one side and a thick forest on the other, Charity saw with relief the campfires blossoming in the quick-falling darkness. An elderly woman with a wrinkled face but the body of a young girl had told her four hours earlier: “Ye’ll find them soldiers at Valley Forge.” Pointing toward the hills she had added, “Over there’s the Schuylkill—ain’t but a leetle ways to whur they is—was a forge thar once—but ain’t nothin’ there now—’cept Washington and them soldier fellers.”

  The horse sensed the end of the long journey and picked up his pace, so that she had to hold him back as she drew even with the first fires. Her first clear look at the men who stood around the feeble blaze brought a shock. She had pictured in her mind rows of sturdy tents with men dressed in neat uniforms; what she saw was a group of scarecrows! Their faces were blue with the cold, and their eyes looked enormous as they stared at her. And the clothing! Not a good coat or a pair of boots among the lot. Parts of the body showed through huge rents—one man even exposed a portion of bare, blue buttocks where the pants had worn away! Most of them looked deformed, elephantine, with their feet wrapped in blankets.

  She saw them stare at her. Then several of them started toward her, their voices thin on the cold air. “Hup! Pompey!” she commanded quickly, and as she sped down between the ragged tents and flimsy huts, she heard their raucous, obscene cries fade behind her. She was not a girl given to idle fears, but there was a wolfish hunger in their faces.

  Now the dusk was closing in and she grew a little desperate, searching for an officer. The huts grew closer together, and somewhere somebody was singing:

  “Yankee Doodle went to London,

  Riding on a pony—”

  The space narrowed, forcing her to guide the horse between two rows of shacks that seemed to rise out of the ground, specter-like. Suddenly there was a shrill cry, and she caught a startled glimpse of a figure that darted from the shadows, rising up to grab Pompey’s harness and pull him to an abrupt halt.

  “Get out of my way!” she cried out, but even as she snatched the whip from its socket to slash at the man, she felt a pair of hands grab her and drag her off the buggy seat.

  “Well, now! Whut we got here?”

  Charity found herself in the grip of a huge man with yellowish teeth. He was grinning down at her, and his rank odor almost paralyzed her. He kept an iron grip on one arm and ran his free hand over her body, laughing in a shrill manner. “Looky here whut we done got us for a Chrismus gif’, Sam!”

  “Ain’t that a fact, now?” Another man thrust his face close to hers, a thick-bodied man with a huge bulbous nose and small gleaming eyes.

  “Let me go!” Charity tried to pull herself free, but the first man merely laughed at her struggles.

  “You can take the wench first, Charlie,” the one called Sam grinned. He nodded at Pompey, saying, “I’ll cut us some steaks out of that there horse. Blast my eyes, but we’ll have us steaks and a woman tonight—but keep her still so’s them other fellers won’t know ’bout it!”

  Terror ran like fire through Charity, and she opened her mouth to scream, but the tall man named Charlie promptly clapped his dirty paw over her face and said, while dragging her to the shack to his left, “You take that beast and dress him out, Sam. Time you get back, you’ll ’preciate a pretty leetle thing like this!”

  Charity kicked and tried to claw at his face, but he laughed in evil delight. “Thet’s right, honey, you keep it up! I likes a gal with some fight in ’er!”

  Desperately she fought, and just as he was dragging her through the low door, she wrenched her head and his little finger slipped into her mouth. Instantly she bit down with all her might and tasted blood!

  “Owww...!” The soldier instinctively shoved her away, yanking his hand free and sending her sprawling on the ground. But sh
e was up like a flash and let out a piercing cry, “Help! Help me, somebody!”

  She darted toward the buggy, but Sam grabbed her, and with a curse Charlie came racing after Charity, shaking the blood from his wounded finger. There was an ugly expression on his dirty face, and he snarled, “Bite me, will you? Well, maybe you need a lesson ’fore—!”

  “Get away from that woman, both of you!”

  Charity looked wildly toward her left, her eyes lighting on a very tall man dressed in a loose-fitting, shapeless gray smock. He had reddish hair curling out from beneath his fur cap, and the bluest eyes Charity had ever seen. A long rifle rested loosely in one hand. “I said let that woman alone,” he commanded as the men around Charity began moving in.

  Sam Macklin gave a quick look around and was reassured as he saw the ranks closing in, much like wolves circling a wounded deer. “Why, you fool!” he snarled and took one step forward, pulling a knife from his belt. “You git back there with the rest of your kind!” He gestured with the knife, the cold steel glittering in the fading light. “I’ll cut your gizzard out, Winslow!”

  “Do it, Sam!” Charlie urged wickedly. “Like to see one of them Virginia men cut right down the middle like a hawg!”

  A chorus went up from the men and they closed around Charity, but the man named Winslow said evenly, as though he were making a remark about the weather, “I’d rather shoot a lobsterback than one of you; but I’m telling you now, one of you is going to die if you don’t let that woman go.”

  “Aw, he’s only got one shot!” Macklin shouted. “Git him!”

  “Only one—want it, Sam?” Quick as a flash, Winslow brought the rifle up, and Macklin found himself staring down the cold steel muzzle. The blue eyes above it did not waver, but the voice matched the steel in his hands. “You think this is a good day to die? No? I didn’t think you would. Miss, you come over here.”

  Charity jerked free of the hands holding her and ran to the tall man who seemed to hold the others with his eyes.

  “You ain’t gonna do it, Winslow!” Macklin breathed heavily, his face pale. He moved forward and said, “If he gets me, you boys cut him to pieces!”

  With terror Charity saw he was not going to stop, that he was willing to take the bullet, and she knew the tall Virginian would not be able to resist the rest—but suddenly, there was the sound of a horse approaching, and a sharp voice cut through the air: “What the devil? What’s that woman doing here?”

  A man in a blue uniform pulled up, looking down at Charity. He had cold blue eyes, and she sensed the hurried withdrawal of the ragged men.

  “I—I’ve come to see my brother,” she answered quickly. “My name is Charity Alden.”

  He stared at her, a frown on his face. Then Winslow spoke. “I know him, General Wayne. He’s in the hospital.”

  “All right. Take her there, Winslow.” The steely eyes moved to Sam Macklin, and he said evenly, “I’ll cut the heart out of any man who touches a decent woman. You understand that?” Without waiting for an answer, he turned to Winslow. “See to Miss Alden.” He wheeled his mount and rode off swiftly into the maze of huts.

  “I’ll kill you for this, Winslow!” Macklin threatened.

  “Sam, you can’t even kill the lice that’re crawlin’ all over you,” the tall Virginian grinned. Then ignoring the angry stares, he said, “I’ll take you to your brother, Miss.”

  A lump seemed to have lodged in Charity’s throat, and her legs wanted to give way. She had never known such terror, and without Winslow’s help, she would have been lost. “I—I can’t thank you enough, Mr. Winslow! But, won’t those men try to get at you?”

  He looked down at her from his great height and smiled. “Oh, they’ll cuss and rare, but they’re too beat to fool with revenge.” He took Pompey’s bit and laughed, “I think you’d better watch this horse day and night, though. We’ve eaten most of ours—and this one would be prime cut!”

  “You know my brother—Curtis?” she asked, trying to keep up with his long paces.

  “Sure. He’s right down the line from one of my friends.” He glanced at her curiously. “How’d you hear about him being hurt?”

  “He sent word by a friend of his—Malcolm Ruggle.” She bit her lip and asked the question that had been gnawing at her ever since the raw-boned Scot had come to Boston with his message. “Is he hurt bad?”

  Winslow nodded slowly. “Bad enough.” He hesitated, then added, “You see, it has to be very bad before we go to the hospital. Most things we take care of ourselves.”

  “He’s... he’s not going to die?”

  Winslow put a hand on her shoulder, his eyes filled with compassion. “He’s bad, miss—but God is able!”

  God had played little part in Charity’s life, and what she heard the Virginian saying was, Only God can save your brother. Fear shot through her at the thought. Winslow soon turned down an alley of sorts, a winding path between two rows of huts, and stopped before one of them. “I’ll tell my wife about you—and we can leave the horse with a friend of mine.”

  He tied the horse to a slender stump, led her to the door, and called out, “Julie—we’ve got company!”

  The room Charity entered was very dark, for there were no windows and only one small candle flickered, casting deep shadows over the interior. She had time to see a crude table, a small bed, and various objects hanging from pegs along the rough boards that made up the walls. There was an odor of bodies, cooking, and raw earth; it was much like a cave, she thought.

  “This is Charity Alden, Julie—you’ve met her brother at the hospital. And this is my wife—and my son.”

  Charity’s eyes rested on a young woman with black hair and eyes dark as pools. She was moving carefully, for she was very close to the time of giving birth. When she spoke her voice was very husky, and there was a gentle smile on her broad lips. “Welcome to Valley Forge, Miss Alden,” she said. “Your brother is such a fine young man. I only wish we could have done more for him—but it’s so crowded—and there’s so little to do with.”

  “I’m going to take her there now,” Winslow told her. “Tell Jed to watch the horse, will you?”

  “Yes, Nathan.” There was a calmness in the young woman that Charity envied, a stillness and a patience some women seemed to have. “Do you have any place to stay? No? Then you’d better come back here.”

  “Oh, I don’t want to be a bother!”

  Julie did not do more than smile, but turned and got a covered pot and handed it to her. “See if you can get your brother to eat something. I’ll be praying for you.”

  The kindness of Julie Winslow caught at Charity, and she could only nod. Following Nathan outside, she commented as they walked along, “Your wife—she’s so kind!”

  “She’s that.”

  Curiosity nibbled at Charity, and she asked tentatively, “Isn’t she... nervous? About having a baby under such ... conditions?”

  “I tried to get her to go home, but she wants me to be with her when the boy comes.”

  “You seem sure about it—that it’ll be a boy.”

  “Well, Julie says that’s what God’s told her—and I don’t recall that she’s ever missed when she says something like that.”

  Charity was flustered, for when people said “God told me to do this,” it always made her slightly angry somehow. She didn’t understand such things and felt they were attempting to be spiritual in some unfair way. But she could not feel resentment toward the kind young woman who had taken care of her brother.

  “There’s the hospital.”

  A long, low building was perched on top of a knoll, the wind tearing the spark-studded smoke that rose from the chimney, dissipating it into the darkness. She followed Winslow to the door, and a sentry in rags blocked their way. “No more room,” he mumbled through blue lips.

  “Want to visit, Soldier,” Winslow answered shortly, his breath labored from the steep climb.

  The sentry shrugged and stepped aside just as the door opened.
A short man with a long gray apron splattered with blood came to stand inside the frame. He peered at the two of them through small spectacles. He had a long face, a thin nose and very red lips. “What’s this?”

  “This is Miss Alden, Doctor,” Winslow said quickly. “She’s come to see her brother.”

  The doctor peered at her and asked incredulously, “How in the holy hades did you get here?” Then he caught himself, saying abruptly, “Oh, never mind.”

  “How is he, Doctor?”

  “Your brother?” The question seemed to disturb him, and finally after a short pause, he shrugged. “Not well.” Then an angry light leaped into his eyes, and he snapped bitterly, “How could he be doing well in a hellish place like this? No medicine—no bandages—nothing!”

  “Maybe it’ll help to have his sister here,” Nathan offered hopefully.

  The doctor stared at him, and finally said, “I trust it will help.” The futility in his tone sent fear through Charity, and she stared at him as he stalked away to a path that led down the hill.

  “Come along, Miss Alden.”

  Nathan stepped aside to let her enter. It was a simple log cabin thirty feet long at most, but there must have been more than a hundred men inside. They lay close together on beds built the length of the hut. Some of them were asleep, but most of them moved restlessly in the bitter cold. There was a continual groaning, and the stench was overwhelming.

  She followed the tall Virginian to a tiny corner partitioned off in the back, and gave a gasp when she looked down at her brother’s pale face, the hollows of his cheeks made deeper by the yellow glare of the lantern hanging from the ceiling.

  “Curtis!” she cried, tears filling her eyes as she fell beside him. His thin hand was like ice, and for one brief instant terror filled her as she thought, He’s dead! But then he stirred, and as she dashed the tears out of her eyes she saw that he had moved his head to face her. He was her baby brother, only sixteen, but he had been wild to become a soldier. Nothing she nor their father could say would keep him back—and now he lay dying in a miserable hut!

  “Charity?” he asked in a thin, reedy voice—and when she leaned over and kissed him, he stared at her, his eyes enormous in his thin face. “How—did you get here?”

 

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