"'Well, what do you want?' asked Black Pedro again. His voice was low, but terrible.
"'Why,' said the bo's'n, 'we'd like some of our share of the money, if it's all the same to you.'
"'And when you get it,' continued the pirate chief, 'what do you propose to do with it?'
"'Why, spend some on it, an' buy some o' the good things o' life. Look at us. Like a lot of scare-crows, we be. In rags, ev'ry one on us, 'cept you,—an' your black velvet suit is lookin' a leetle mite rusty, if you'll 'scuse an ol' sailor-man, for speakin' right out. An' we'd like somethin' good to eat, an' somethin' good to drink. Look at me: risin' eighty-six year, I be, an' aint never tasted nothin' all my life 'cept salt-hoss, an' ship-bread, an' rum; never slep' nowheres 'cept in a hammock, an' had to turn out on deck an' stand watch in all kinds of weather. An' wuth today nine hundred an' sixty-six thousand, seven hundred an' forty-three dollars, an' thirty-two cents.'
"'Twenty-two cents,' corrected the bookkeeper.'
"'Twenty-two cents,' said Aaron. 'An' what good does it do me? Nothin' 't all. What can I buy with it, here on this here island? Nothin'. Here I am—an' here we all be—scorched an' burnt by the sun, and bit by these here scorpions, an' other varmints, an' dressed in rags an' tatters, an' all the while, all that loot of our'n lyin' there idle in the ground.'
"At this moment Black Pedro leaped four feet into the air, and gave a bellow like an infuriated tiger.
"'What?' he yelled, 'what? you dogs! you scoundrels! you miserable, low-down ruffians you! Oh, that I should have lived to see this day! Thankful am I that my father and grand-father are safe in their graves! This would have broken their hearts. Why, you horrible villains,—do you mean to tell me that you have been doing all this pirating for money?'
"Aaron Halyard scraped his feet in the sand, and shuffled about uneasily.
"'Beggin' yer pardin', Cap'n, but what in Sancho HAVE we been doin' of it for, else?'