“If they make a discovery,” Dante added.
“They already did,” said Adriana. “Or at least, you did.”
Wordlessly, Star reached into the pocket of her cargo shorts and drew out the artifact she had pulled from the wreckage of the coral — the carved white handle. “The anchor, the silver coin, and now this, all in the same spot. Are you going to tell me there isn’t a wreck down there?”
The two boys’ eyes widened as they stared at the gleaming whalebone hilt. A pockmark of coral growth obscured its main decoration — a large dark stone inset in the delicate pattern. Directly above it were etched the initials JB. The old English script was as sharp as if it had been carved only yesterday.
JB. Was that some poor shipwrecked sailor, dead for hundreds of years?
The cruel crack of Captain James Blade’s whip was familiar now. The percussive snap of oiled leather slicing into lacerated skin, the agonized howls of the unfortunate seaman, the evil green flash of the huge emerald embedded in the handle of the captain’s favorite implement of torture.
Today’s victim was Clark, the bosun’s mate. But in the man’s piteous complaint, young Samuel Higgins could hear the cries of Evans the sail maker, the only person on this earth who had ever befriended an orphaned cabin boy. Old Evans, now long dead, like so many others on this terrible crossing.
The captain was rearing back for another brutal lash when the shout was heard from the rigging.
“Land, ho!”
And, mercifully, the flogging was over. The celebration was unlike anything Samuel had ever seen — a mad scramble for the gunwales, all eyes straining to drink in the narrow green-brown ribbon barely visible on the horizon. After four long months at sea, suffering harsh treatment and privations, watching more than half of their numbers succumb to malnutrition, fever, and scurvy, the weary crew of the Griffin had reached the New World. On a boat with a stench fouler than the filthiest sewer in Liverpool, the tattered seamen danced and cheered like children on May Day.
The captain peered through his long spyglass and emitted a bellow of triumph. “Portobelo, by God! Just a few miles down the coast!” There was a roar of approval from the assembled throng.
York reached out a dirty hand and ruffled Samuel’s unruly hair. “To traverse the great sea and strike land a cannon shot from your destination! Aye, boy, that’s like firing a musket ball half a league straight through a keyhole! You’re a lucky one, Samuel Higgins. Well named, you are.”
Praise from the ghoulish barber always made Samuel’s skin crawl. But the feeling quickly dissipated, swept up in the joy of their arrival. Land! The endless voyage was finally over.
He ran his fingers through the few copper coins in his breeches — meager wages for these long months at sea, yet still more money than he had ever held in his thirteen years. “Clean water,” he said aloud. “That’s what I’ll ask for first. And bread — fresh baked, with no maggots in it.”
“Are you feebleminded, boy?” York cried in disbelief. “That little town there is the western terminus of the Spanish treasure fleet, the richest place in all Creation. We’re not here to visit, Lucky. We’re here to plunder their treasure and burn their city to the ground!”
Copyright © 2003 by Gordon Korman.
All rights reserved. Published by Scholastic Inc.
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First printing, June 2003
Photography: Kelly La Duke
Cover design: Ursula S. Albano
e-ISBN 978-0-545-62811-2
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