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ight. Help him get the stuff aboard, Peterson." They went about their work. Just as turning I saw standing at my elbow, the slight form of L'Olonnois, his arms folded and hat drawn upon his brow. "Bid the varlets hasten," he hissed to me. "Time passes." "Back to your post, L'Olonnois," I rejoined. "See that the captives remain in their room." Jean Lafitte, too, proved unable to restrain his curiosity, and this time his habit of close observation was of benefit in an unexpected way. "Hist, Black Bart!" he whispered distinctly, clutching my arm. "What boat is that?" He pointed in the dim light to a low lying, battered power boat moored in the same slip with us. Something in her look seemed familiar. "I can't see her name," said Jean Lafitte, "but she looks a lot like our own old boat." I hastily stepped on the wharf and got a closer look in the wavering beams of an arc light at the name on the boat's bows. There, in indistinct and shaky, but unmistakable characters, was the title painted by my young ruffians, weeks earlier--_Sea Rover!_ "Jean Lafitte," I whispered, "you are right, and now indeed we must have a care. Yon varlet has beaten us into New Orleans." "Let's board her and take her," hissed Jean Lafitte. "We can do it easy." "No, wait," said I. "Perhaps we can think of a better plan. Wait till we get two drums of gasoline aboard. Then we'll make a run for it, if yon varlet is here on the _Sea Rover_. Probably not, for every one seems gone to bed." "I'll find out," said Jean Lafitte boldly, and before I could stop him was gone, springing lightly on the deck of the _Sea Rover_. "Hello in there," he hailed. "Are you all asleep?" A voice muttered something from the shallow cabin, I could not tell what. "We got a barrel of rum for you from Thibodeau's," said Jean Lafitte. "No, you ain't. Must be some mistake," said a sleepy voice; and now a tousled head appeared, indistinct in the gloom. "Anyhow, I don't know anything about it, and it'll have to stay on the dock until morning. I'm only the engineer, I come from Natchez. Mr. Davidson, he's up-town." "Oh, all right," said Jean Lafitte, apparently mollified, and soon was at my side again. So then, we had the information we sought. I was sure my own engineer, Williams, was busy as usual below, oiling and polishing his double sixties. "Hurry now," I whispered to Peterson. "Get that stuff aboard quick. Don't forget the crates of fruit
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