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es, have to know the tides and the winds as well, and if one be wrong the boat goes aground on these wide shoals. Less than a fathom here and here and here on the chart soundings--less than that if an offshore wind blows." "You mean we'll go aground?" "No, I mean that any pursuer very likely would. The glass is falling now. Soon the wind will rise. If it comes offshore for five hours--and it will wait for five hours before it does come offshore--we shall be safe, inside, at one of your old haunts, Jean Lafitte; and back of us will lie fifty miles of barrier--yon varlet may well have a care." "Yon varlet don't know where we have went," commented L'Olonnois in his alarming grammar. "No, that is true. The water leaves no trail. Most Northerners go to Florida for the winter, and not to these marshes. Methinks they will have a long chase." "An' here," said Jean Lafitte, with much enthusiasm, "we kin lie concealed an' dart out on passin' craft that strike our fancy as prizes." "We could," said I, "but we will not." "Why not?" He seemed chilled by my reply. "Oh, we shall not need to," I hastened to explain. "We have everything we need for a long stay here. We can live chiefly by hunting and fishing for a month or so, until----" "Until the fair captive has gave her consent," broke in L'Olonnois, also with enthusiasm. "Yes," said I, endeavoring a like enthusiasm. "Or, at least, until we find it needful to go inland to one of the live-oak islands. There are houses there. I know some of the planters over yonder." "Let's make them places scenes of rapeen!" suggested Jean Lafitte anxiously. "They must have gold and jewels. Besides, I bear it well in mind, many a time have I and my stout crew buried chests of treasure on them islands. We c'd dig 'em up. Maybe them folks has a'ready dug 'em up. Then why not search their strongholds with a stout party of our own hardy bullies, Black Bart?" "No," said I mildly; "for several reasons I think it best for my hardy bullies to go and eat some breakfast and then go to sleep. If we go into the live-oak heights above Cote Blanche, I think we'll only ask for salt. I am almost sure, for instance, that my friend Edouard Manning, of Bon Secours plantation, would give me salt if I asked it. He has done so before. Beshrew me, it should go hard with him if he refused." "There's a barrel an' eight boxes o' sacks o' salt aboard," said the practical Jean Lafitte. "What'd you
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