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THE FIFTEENTH CHAPTER THE BARBARY DRAGON VERYTHING would have gone all right if
the pig had not caught a cold in his head while eating the damp sugar-cane on
the island. This is what happened:
After they had pulled up the anchor
without a sound, and were moving the ship very, very carefully out of the bay,
Gub-Gub suddenly sneezed so loud that the pirates on the other ship came
rushing upstairs to see what the noise was. As soon as they saw that the Doctor was
escaping, they sailed the other boat right across the entrance to the bay so
that the Doctor could not get out into the open sea. Then the leader of these bad men (who
called himself "Ben Ali, The Dragon") shook his fist at the Doctor
and shouted across the water, "Ha! Ha! You are caught, my fine
friend! You were going to run off in my ship, eh? But you are not a good enough
sailor to beat Ben Ali, the Barbary Dragon. I want that duck you've got — and
the pig too. We'll have pork-chops and roast duck for supper to-night. And
before I let you go home, you must make your friends send me a trunk-full of
gold." Poor Gub-Gub began to weep; and Dab-Dab
made ready to fly to save her life. But the owl, Too-Too, whispered to the
Doctor, "Keep him talking, Doctor. Be
pleasant to him. Our old ship is bound to sink soon — the rats said it would be
at the bottom of the sea before to-morrow-night — and the rats are never
wrong. Be pleasant, till the ship sinks under him. Keep him talking." "What, until to-morrow night!"
said the Doctor. "Well, I'll do my best. . . . Let me see — What shall I
talk about?" "Oh, let them come on," said
Jip. "We can fight the dirty rascals. There are only six of them. Let them
come on. I'd love to tell that collie next door, when we get home, that I had
bitten a real pirate. Let 'em come. We can fight them." "But they have pistols and
swords," said the Doctor. "No, that would never do. I must talk to
him. . . . Look here, Ben Ali — " 'Look here, Ben Ali — ' But before the Doctor could say any
more, the pirates began to sail the ship nearer, laughing with glee, and
saying one to another, "Who shall be the first to catch the pig?" Poor Gub-Gub was dreadfully frightened;
and the pushmi-pullyu began to sharpen his horns for a fight by rubbing them on
the mast of the ship; while Jip kept springing into the air and barking and
calling Ben Ali bad names in dog-language. But presently something seemed to go
wrong with the pirates; they stopped laughing and cracking jokes; they looked
puzzled; something was making them uneasy. Then Ben Ali, staring down at his feet,
suddenly bellowed out, "Thunder and Lightning! — Men, the
boat's leaking!" And then the other pirates peered over
the side and they saw' that the boat was indeed getting lower and lower in the
water. And one of them said to Ben Ali, "But surely if this old boat were
sinking we should see the rats leaving it." And Jip shouted across from the other
ship, "You great duffers, there are no
rats there to leave! They left two hours ago! 'Ha, ha,' to you, 'my fine
friends!' " But of course the men did not understand
him. Soon the front end of the ship began to
go down and down, faster and faster — till the boat looked almost as though it
were standing on its head; and the pirates had to cling to the rails and the
masts and the ropes and anything to keep from sliding off. Then the sea rushed
roaring in through all the windows and the doors. And at last the ship plunged
right down to the bottom of the sea, making a dreadful gurgling sound; and the
six bad men were left bobbing about in the deep water of the bay. Some of them started to swim for the
shores of the island; while others came and tried to get on to the boat where
the Doctor was. But Jip kept snapping at their noses, so they were afraid to
climb up the side of the ship. Then suddenly they all cried out in
great fear, "The sharks! The sharks are coming!
Let us get on to the ship before they eat us! Help, help! — The sharks! The
sharks!" And now the Doctor could see, all over
the bay, the backs of big fishes swimming swiftly through the water. And one great shark came near to the
ship, and poking his nose out of the water he said to the Doctor, "Are you John Dolittle, the famous
animal-doctor?" "Yes," said Doctor Dolittle.
"That is my name." "Well," said the shark,
"we know these pirates to be a bad lot — especially Ben Ali. If they are
annoying you, we will gladly eat them up for you — and then you won't be
troubled any more." "Thank you," said the Doctor.
"This is really most attentive. But I don't think it will be necessary to
eat them. Don't let any of them reach the shore until I tell you — just keep
them swimming about, will you? And please make Ben Ali swim over here that I
may talk to him." So the shark went off and chased Ben Ali
over to the Doctor. "Listen, Ben Ali," said John
Dolittle, leaning over the side. "You have been a very bad man; and I
understand that you have killed many people. These good sharks here have
just offered to eat you up for me — and 'twould indeed be a good thing if the
seas were rid of you. But if you will promise to do as I tell you, will let you
go in safety." "What must I do?" asked the
pirate, looking down sideways at the big shark who was smelling his leg under
the water. "You must kill no more
people," said the Doctor; "you must stop stealing; you must never
sink another ship; you must give up being a pirate altogether." "But what shall I do then?"
asked Ben Ali. "How shall I live?" "You and all your men must go on to
this island and be bird-seed-farmers," the Doctor answered. "You
must grow bird-seed for the canaries." The Barbary Dragon turned pale with
anger. "Grow bird-seed!" he groaned in disgust. "Can't I be a
sailor?" "No," said the Doctor,
"you cannot. You have been a sailor long enough — and sent many stout
ships and good men to the bottom of the sea. For the rest of your life you must
be a peaceful farmer. The shark is waiting. Do not waste any more of his time.
Make up your mind." "Thunder and Lightning!" Ben
Ali muttered — "Bird-seed!"
Then he looked down into the water again and saw the great fish smelling his
other leg. "Very well," he said sadly.
"We'll be farmers." "And remember," said the
Doctor, "that if you do not keep your promise — if you start killing and
stealing again, I shall hear of it, because the canaries will come and tell me.
And be very sure that I will find a way to punish you. For though I may not be
able to sail a ship as well as you, so long as the birds and the beasts and the
fishes are my friends, I do not have to be afraid of a pirate chief — even
though he call himself The Dragon of Barbary.' Now go and be a good farmer and
live in peace." Then the Doctor turned to the big shark,
and waving his hand he said, "All right. Let them swim safely to
the land." |