First, clearly, he must not apply the order to confine Dyck to his plantation; also he must give Dyck authority to use the hounds in hunting down the Maroons and slaves who were committing awful crimes. He forthwith decided to write, asking Dyck to send him outline of his scheme against the rebels. That he must do, for the game was with Dyck.

“How long will it take the hounds to get to Salem?” he asked the Custos presently in his office, with deepset lines in his face and a determined look in his eyes. He was an arrogant man, but he was not insane, and he wished to succeed. It could only be success if he dragged Jamaica out of this rebellion with flying colours, and his one possible weapon was the man whom he detested.

“Why, your honour, as we sent them by wagons and good horses they should be in Dyck Calhoun’s hands this evening. They should be there by now almost, for they’ve been going for hours, and the distance is not great.”

The governor nodded, and began to write. A halfhour later he handed to the Custos what he had written.

“See what you think of that, Custos,” he said. “Does it, in your mind, cover the ground as it should?”

The Custos read it all over slowly and carefully, weighing every word. Presently he handed back the paper. “Your honour, it is complete and masterly,” he said. “It puts the crushing of the revolt into the hands of Mr. Calhoun, and nothing could be wiser. He has the gifts of a leader, and he will do the job with no mistake, and in a time of crisis like this, that is essential. You have given him the right to order the militia to obey him, and nothing could be better. He will organize like a master. We haven’t forgotten his fight on the Ariadne. Didn’t the admiral tell the story at the dinner we gave him of how this ex-convict and mutineer, by sheer genius, broke the power of the French at the critical moment and saved our fleet, though it was only three-fourths that of the French?”

“You don’t think the French will get us some day?” asked the governor with a smile.

“I certainly don’t since our defences have been improved. Look at the sixty big cannon on Fort Augusta! They’d be knocked to smithereens before they could get into the quiet waters of the harbour. Don’t forget the narrows, your honour. Then there’s the Apostle’s Battery with its huge shot, and the guns of Fort Royal would give them a cross-fire that would make them sick. Besides, we could stop them within the shoals and reefs and narrow channels before they got near the inner circle. It would only be the hand of God that would get them in, and it doesn’t work for Frenchmen these days, I observe. No, this place is safe, and King’s House will be the home of British governors for many a century.”

“Ah, that’s your gallant faith, and no doubt you are right, but go on with your tale of the hounds,” said Lord Mallow.

“Your honour, as the hounds went away with Michael Clones there was greater applause than I have ever seen in the island except when Rodney defeated De Grasse. Imagine a little sloop in the wash of the seas and the buccaneers piling down on him, and no chance of escape, and then a great British battleship appearing, and the situation saved—that was how we were placed here till the hounds arrived.