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THE THIRTEENTH CHAPTER RED SAILS AND BLUE WINGS AILING homeward, the Doctor's ship had
to pass the coast of Barbary. This coast is the seashore of the Great Desert.
It is a wild, lonely place — all sand and stones. And it was here that the
Barbary pirates lived.
These pirates, a bad lot of men, used to
wait for sailors to be shipwrecked on their shores. And often, if they saw a
boat passing, they would come out in their fast sailing-ships and chase it.
When they caught a boat like this at sea, they would steal everything on it;
and after they had taken the people off they would sink the ship and sail back
to Barbary singing songs and feeling proud of the mischief they had done. Then
they used to make the people they had caught write home to their friends for
money. And if the friends sent no money, the pirates often threw the people
into the sea. Now one sunshiny day the Doctor and
Dab-Dab were walking up and down on the ship for exercise; a nice fresh wind
was blowing the boat along, and everybody was happy. Presently Dab-Dab saw the
sail of another ship a long way behind them on the edge of the sea. It was a
red sail. "I don't like the look of that
sail," said Dab-Dab. "I have a feeling it isn't a friendly ship. I am
afraid there is more trouble coming to us." Jip, who was lying near taking a nap in
the sun, began to growl and talk in his sleep. "I smell roast beef cooking,"
he mumbled — "underdone roast beef — with brown gravy over it." "Good gracious!" cried the
Doctor. "What's the matter with the dog? Is he smelling in his sleep — as
well as talking?" "I suppose he is," said
Dab-Dab. "All dogs can smell in their sleep." "But what is he smelling?"
asked the Doctor. "There is no roast beef cooking on
our ship." "No," said Dab-Dab. "The
roast beef must be on that other ship over there." "But that's ten miles away,"
said the Doctor. "He couldn't smell that far surely!" "Oh, yes, he could," said
Dab-Dab. "You ask him." Then Jip, still fast asleep, began to
growl again and his lip curled up angrily, showing his clean, white teeth. 'They are surely the pirates of Barbary' "I smell bad men," he growled
— "the worst men I ever smelt. I smell trouble. I smell a fight — six bad
scoundrels fighting against one brave man. I want to help him. Woof — oo —
WOOF!" Then he barked, loud, and woke himself up with a surprised look on
his face. "See!" cried Dab-Dab.
"That boat is nearer now. You can count its three big sails — all red.
Whoever it is, they are coming after us. . . . I wonder who they are." "They are bad sailors," said
Jip; "and their ship is very swift. They are surely the pirates of
Barbary." "Well, we must put up more sails on
our boat," said the Doctor, "so we can go faster and get away from
them. Run downstairs, Jip, and fetch me all the sails you see." The dog hurried downstairs and dragged
up every sail he could find. But even when all these were put up on
the masts to catch the wind, the boat did not go nearly as fast as the pirates'
— which kept coming on behind, closer and closer. "This is a poor ship the Prince
gave us," said Gub-Gub, the pig — "the slowest he could find, I
should think. Might as well try to win a race in a soup-tureen as hope to get
away from them in this old barge. Look how near they are now! — You can see the mustaches on the faces of
the men — six of them. What are we going to do?" Then the Doctor asked Dab-Dab to fly up
and tell the swallows that pirates were coming after them in a swift ship, and
what should he do about it. When the swallows heard this, they all
came down on to the Doctor's ship; and they told him to unravel some pieces of
long rope and make them into a lot of thin strings as quickly as he could. Then
the ends of these strings were tied on to the front of the ship; and the
swallows took hold of the strings with their feet and flew off, pulling the
boat along. And although swallows are not very
strong when only one or two are by themselves, it is different when there are a
great lot of them together. And there, tied to the Doctor's ship, were a
thousand strings; and two thousand swallows were pulling on each string — all
terribly swift fliers. And in a moment the Doctor found himself
traveling so fast he had to hold his hat on with both hands; for he felt as
though the ship itself were flying through waves that frothed and boiled with
speed. And all the animals on the ship began to
laugh and dance about in the rushing air, for when they looked back at the
pirates' ship, they could see that it was growing smaller now, instead of
bigger. The red sails were being left far, far behind. |