Baptiste darted through the cabin door, and locked it on the man within, who, after awaiting him for some time, helped himself to some more brandy, and at last fell into a drunken sleep on the bed.
Baptiste then entered Carew's cabin, and found him sitting up, reading the French novel which Captain Mourez had lent him.
"Come along, sir; the time has arrived," said the Provençal. "Bring the revolvers with you, and first see that they are loaded. I don't suppose we shall have to use them, but Quien sabe? as the Spaniards say."
Carew made no reply, but taking the pistols from the locker in which he kept them, he followed his accomplice on to the deck. As they walked towards the fore part of the vessel Baptiste described his preparations for the coup. "The crew are at our mercy," he said; "Duval in his cabin, and the four men of his watch under the awning forward, are sleeping the heavy sleep of opium. Léon is a prisoner in my cabin, drunk or nearly so, in the company of an open bottle of brandy, and you say that the two sick men in the forecastle are too weak to move. Now, first of all, we must deal with the four men under the awning, for they are the most dangerous."
Still Carew said not a word.
The two Spaniards now joined them. Baptiste looked round the horizon. "We shall have the wind down on us soon," he said; "we must do our work quickly."
The rain was falling more heavily than before. The night was very dark, and there was not a star visible in the heavens. Though as yet there was not a breath of wind, the ocean, as if in anticipation of its coming, was heaving in a long, high swell, and the vessel rolled uneasily, her spars groaning dismally aloft.
Baptiste took two of the revolvers from Carew's hands and handed one to each of the Spaniards.
"Don't use them, lads, unless it is absolutely necessary; we don't want noise. You have your knives," he whispered.