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@@ -1,30 +1,4 @@
- IN FAR BOLIVIA
-
-
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost
-no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
-under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
-eBook or online at http://www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-
-Title: In Far Bolivia
- A Story of a Strange Wild Land
-
-Author: Gordon Stables
-
-Release Date: May 18, 2012 [EBook #39728]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN FAR BOLIVIA ***
-
-
-
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 39728 ***
Produced by Al Haines.
@@ -8973,374 +8947,4 @@ Billy is estate manager.
Now, if any of my readers want a special treat, let him or her try to
get an invitation to spend Christmas at Burnley Old Hall.
-
-
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN FAR BOLIVIA ***
-
-
-
-
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+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 39728 ***
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- IN FAR BOLIVIA
-
-
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost
-no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
-under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
-eBook or online at http://www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-
-Title: In Far Bolivia
- A Story of a Strange Wild Land
-
-Author: Gordon Stables
-
-Release Date: May 18, 2012 [EBook #39728]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN FAR BOLIVIA ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Al Haines.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Cover]
-
-
-
-[Illustration: "BRAWN ... DASHED ON TO THE RESCUE"]
-
-
-
-
- In Far Bolivia
-
- A Story of a Strange Wild Land
-
-
- BY
-
- DR. GORDON STABLES, R.N.
-
- Author of "'Twixt School and College" "The Hermit Hunter of the Wilds"
-
- "The Naval Cadet" "Kidnapped by Cannibals" &c.
-
-
-
-
- _WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY J. FINNEMORE, R.I._
-
-
-
-
- BLACKIE AND SON LIMITED
-
- LONDON GLASGOW DUBLIN BOMBAY
-
- 1901
-
-
-
-
- TO
-
- MARIE CONNOR LEIGHTON
-
- (NOVELIST AND CRITIC)
-
- THIS BOOK IS INSCRIBED
-
- EVERY KINDLY WISH
-
- BY
-
- THE AUTHOR
-
-
-
-
- PREFACE
-
-
-Every book should tell its own story without the aid of "preface" or
-"introduction". But as in this tale I have broken fresh ground, it is
-but right and just to my reader, as well as to myself, to mention
-prefatorially that, as far as descriptions go, both of the natives and
-the scenery of Bolivia and the mighty Amazon, my story is strictly
-accurate.
-
-I trust that Chapter XXIII, giving facts about social life in La Paz and
-Bolivia, with an account of that most marvellous of all sheets of fresh
-water in the known world, Lake Titicaca, will be found of general
-interest.
-
-But vast stretches of this strange wild land of Bolivia are a closed
-book to the world, for they have never yet been explored; nor do we know
-aught of the tribes of savages who dwell therein, as far removed from
-civilization and from the benign influence of Christianity as if they
-were inhabitants of another planet. I have ventured to send my heroes
-to this land of the great unknown, and have at the same time endeavoured
-to avoid everything that might border on sensationalism.
-
-In conclusion, my boys, if spared I hope to take you out with me again
-to Bolivia in another book, and together we may have stranger adventures
-than any I have yet told.
-
-THE AUTHOR.
-
-
-
-
- ----
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER I--ON THE BANKS OF THE GREAT AMAZON
- CHAPTER II--STRANGE ADVENTURES IN THE FOREST--LOST!
- CHAPTER III--BURNLEY HALL, OLD AND NEW
- CHAPTER IV--AWAY DOWN THE RIVER
- CHAPTER V--A DAY IN THE FOREST WILDS
- CHAPTER VI--"NOT ONE SINGLE DROP OF BLOOD SHED"
- CHAPTER VII--"A COLD HAND SEEMED TO CLUTCH HER HEART"
- CHAPTER VIII--FIERCELY AND WILDLY BOTH SIDES FOUGHT
- CHAPTER IX--THAT TREE IN THE FOREST GLADE
- CHAPTER X--BENEE MAKES A STRANGE DISCOVERY
- CHAPTER XI--ALL ALONE IN THE WILDERNESS
- CHAPTER XII--BENEE ENTRENCHED--SAVAGE REVELS IN THE FOREST
- CHAPTER XIII--THE MARCH TO THE LOVELESS LAND
- CHAPTER XIV--THE HOME OF THE CANNIBAL--BENEE'S ROMANCE
- CHAPTER XV--SHOOKS-GEE'S STORY--A CANNIBAL QUEEN
- CHAPTER XVI--ON THE BANKS OF A BEAUTIFUL RIVER
- CHAPTER XVII--BILL AND HIS BOATS
- CHAPTER XVIII--AS IF STRUCK BY A DUM-DUM BULLET
- CHAPTER XIX--STRUGGLING ONWARDS UP-STREAM
- CHAPTER XX--THE PAGAN PAYNEES WERE THIRSTING FOR BLOOD
- CHAPTER XXI--THE FOREST IS SHEETED IN FLAMES
- CHAPTER XXII--EVENINGS BY THE CAMP FIRE
- CHAPTER XXIII--A MARVELLOUS LAKE IN A MARVELLOUS LAND--LA PAZ
- CHAPTER XXIV--BENEE'S STORY--THE YOUNG CANNIBAL QUEEN
- CHAPTER XXV--BENEE'S MOTHER TO THE FRONT
- CHAPTER XXVI--THE PALE-FACE QUEEN HAS FLED
- CHAPTER XXVII--THE FIGHT AT THE FORT
- CHAPTER XXVIII--THE DREAM AND THE TERROR!
- CHAPTER XXIX--EASTWARD HO! FOR MERRIE ENGLAND
-
- ----
-
-
-
-
- ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-"Brawn ... dashed on to the rescue" . . . . . . _Frontispiece_
-
-"Brawn sprang at once upon his man"
-
-"She ... held her at arm's-length"
-
-"Fire low, lads ... don't waste a shot!"
-
-
-
-
- IN FAR BOLIVIA
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I--ON THE BANKS OF THE GREAT AMAZON
-
-
-Miles upon miles from the banks of the mighty river, had you wandered
-far away in the shade of the dark forest that clothed the valleys and
-struggled high over the mountain-tops themselves, you would have heard
-the roar and the boom of that great buzz-saw.
-
-As early as six of a morning it would start, or soon after the sun, like
-a huge red-hot shot, had leapt up from his bed in the glowing east
-behind the greenery of the hills and woods primeval.
-
-To a stranger coming from the south towards the Amazon--great queen of
-all the rivers on earth--and not knowing he was on the borders of
-civilization, the sound that the huge saw made would have been decidedly
-alarming.
-
-He would have stopped and listened, and listening, wondered. No
-menagerie of wild beasts could have sent forth a noise so loud, so
-strange, so persistent! Harsh and low at times, as its great teeth tore
-through the planks of timber, it would change presently into a dull but
-dreadful _basso profundo_, such as might have been emitted by
-antediluvian monsters in the agonies of death or torture, rising anon
-into a shrill howl or shriek, then subsiding once again into a steady
-grating roar, that seemed to shake the very earth.
-
-Wild beasts in this black forest heard the sounds, and crept stealthily
-away to hide themselves in their caves and dens; caymans or alligators
-heard them too, as they basked in the morning sunshine by lakelet or
-stream--heard them and crawled away into caves, or took to the water
-with a sullen plunge that caused the finny inhabitants to dart away in
-terror to every point of the compass.
-
-"Up with the tree, lads. Feed him home," cried Jake Solomons loudly but
-cheerily. "Our pet is hungry this morning. I say, Bill, doesn't she
-look a beauty. Ever see such teeth, and how they shine, too, in the red
-sunlight. Guess you never did, Bill. I say, what chance would the
-biggest 'gator that ever crawled have with Betsy here. Why, if Betsy
-got one tooth in his hide she'd have fifty before you could say
-'Jerusalem', and that 'gator'd be cut in two. Tear away, Betsy! Grind
-and groan and growl, my lass! Have your breakfast, my little pet; why,
-your voice is sweetest music to my ear. I say, Bill, don't the saw-dust
-fly a few? I should smile!
-
-"But see," he continued, "yonder come the darkies with our matutinal.
-Girls and boys with baskets, and I can see the steam curling up under
-Chloe's arm from the great flagon she is carrying! Look how her white
-eyes roll, and her white teeth shine as she smiles her six-inch smile!
-Good girl is Chloe. She knows we're hungry, and that we'll welcome her.
-Wo, now, Betsy! Let the water off, Bill. Betsy has had her snack, and
-so we'll have ours."
-
-There was quietness now o'er hill and dell and forest-land.
-
-And this tall Yankee, Jake Solomons, who was fully arrayed in cotton
-shirt and trousers, his brown arms bare to the shoulder, stretched his
-splendidly knit but spare form with a sort of a yawn.
-
-"Heigho, Bill!" he said. "I'm pining for breakfast. Aren't you?"
-
-"That I am," replied Burly Bill with his broadest grin.
-
-Jake ran to the open side of the great saw-mill. Three or four strides
-took him there.
-
-"Ah! Good-morning, Chloe, darling! Morning, Keemo! Morning, Kimo!"
-
-"Mawning, sah!" This was a chorus.
-
-"All along dey blessed good-foh-nuffin boys I no come so queeck," said
-Chloe.
-
-"Stay, stay, Chloe," cried Jake, "never let your angry passions rise.
-'Sides, Chloe, I calculate such language ain't half-proper. But how
-glittering your cheeks are, Chloe, how white your teeth! There! you
-smile again. And that vermilion blouse sets off your dark complexion to
-a nicety, and seems just made for it. Chloe, I would kiss you, but the
-fear of making Bill jealous holds me back."
-
-Burly Bill shook with laughter. Bill was well named the Burly. Though
-not so tall as Jake, his frame was immense, though perhaps there was a
-little more adipose tissue about it than was necessary in a climate like
-this. But Bill's strength was wonderful. See him, axe in hand, at the
-foot of a tree! How the chips fly! How set and determined the man's
-face, while the great beads of sweat stand like pearls on his brow!
-
-Burly Bill was a white man turned black. You couldn't easily have
-guessed his age. Perhaps he was forty, but at twenty, when still in
-England, Bill was supple and lithe, and had a skin as white as a
-schoolboy's. But he had got stouter as the years rolled on, and his face
-tanned and tanned till it tired of tanning, and first grew purple, and
-latterly almost black. The same with those hirsute bare arms of his.
-
-There was none of the wild "Ha! ha!" about Bill's laughter. It was a
-sort of suppressed chuckle, that agitated all his anatomy, the while his
-merry good-natured eyes sought shelter behind his cheeks' rotundity.
-
-Under a great spreading tree the two men laid themselves down, and Chloe
-spread their breakfast on a white cloth between them, Jake keeping up
-his fire of chaff and sweet nothings while she did so. Keemo and Kimo,
-and the other "good-foh-nuffin boys" had brought their morning meal to
-the men who fed the great buzz-saw.
-
-"Ah, Chloe!" said Jake, "the odour of that coffee would bring the dead
-to life, and the fish and the beef and the butter, Chloe! Did you do
-all this yourself?"
-
-"All, sah, I do all. De boys jes' kick about de kitchen and do nuffin."
-
-"Dear tender-eyed Chloe! How clever you are! Guess you won't be so kind
-to me when you and I get spliced, eh?"
-
-"Ah sah! you no care to marry a poor black gal like Chloe! Dere is a
-sweet little white missie waiting somew'eres foh Massa Jake. I be your
-maid, and shine yo' boots till all de samee's Massa Bill's cheek foh
-true."
-
-As soon as Chloe with her "good-foh-nuffin boys" had cleared away the
-breakfast things, and retired with a smile and saucy toss of her curly
-poll, the men lay back and lit their pipes.
-
-"She's a bright intelligent girl that," said Jake. "I don't want a wife
-or--but I say, Bill, why don't you marry her? I guess she'd make ye a
-tip-topper."
-
-"Me! Is it marry?"
-
-Burly Bill held back his head and chuckled till he well-nigh choked.
-
-Honest Bill's ordinary English showed that he came from the old country,
-and more particularly from the Midlands. But Bill could talk properly
-enough when he pleased, as will soon be seen.
-
-He smoked quietly enough for a time, but every now and then he felt
-constrained to take his meerschaum from his mouth and give another
-chuckle or two.
-
-"Tchoo-hoo-hoo!" he laughed. "Me marry! And marry Chloe!
-Tchoo-hoo-hoo!"
-
-"To change the subject, William," said Jake, "seein' as how you've
-pretty nearly chuckled yourself silly, or darned near it, how long have
-you left England?"
-
-"W'y, I coom over with Mr. St. Clair hisse'f, and Roland w'y he weren't
-more'n seven. Look at 'e now, and dear little Peggy, 'is sister by
-adoption as ever was, weren't a month over four. Now Rolly 'e bees nigh
-onto fifteen, and Peggy--the jewel o' the plantation--she's goin' on for
-twelve, and main tall for that. W'y time do fly! Don't she, Jake?"
-
-"Well, I guess I've been here five years, and durn me if I want to
-leave. Could we have a better home? I'd like to see it. I'd smile a
-few odd ones. But listen, why here comes the young 'uns!"
-
-There was the clatter of ponies' feet, and next minute as handsome a boy
-as ever sat in saddle, and as pretty and bright a lassie as you could
-wish to meet, galloped into the clearing, and reined up their spirited
-little steeds close to the spot where the men were lounging.
-
-Burly Bill stuck his thumb into the bowl of his meerschaum to put it
-out, and Jake threw his pipe on the bank.
-
-Roland was tall for his age, like Peggy. But while a mass of fair and
-irrepressible hair curled around the boy's sun-burned brow, Peggy's hair
-was straight and black. When she rode fast it streamed out behind her
-like pennons in the breeze. What a bright and sunny face was hers too!
-There was ever a happy smile about her red lips and dark eyes.
-
-"You've got to begin to smoke again immediately," said the boy.
-
-"No, no, Master Roland, not in the presence of your sister."
-
-"But," cried Peggy, with a pretty show of pomposity, "I command you!"
-
-"Ah, then, indeed!" said Jake; and soon both men were blowing clouds
-that made the very mosquitoes change their quarters.
-
-"Father'll be up soon, riding on Glancer. This nag threw Father, coming
-home last night. Mind, Glancer is seventeen hands and over."
-
-"He threw him?"
-
-"That he did, in the moonlight. Scared at a 'gator. Father says he
-heard the 'gator's great teeth snapping and thought he was booked. But
-lo! Jake, at that very moment Glancer struck out with both
-hind-legs--you know how he is shod. He smashed the 'gator's skull, and
-the beast turned up his yellow belly to the moon."
-
-"Bravo!"
-
-"Then Father mounted mighty Glancer and rode quietly home.
-
-"Peggy and I," he continued, "have ridden along the bank to the
-battlefield to hold a coroner's inquest on the 'gator, but he's been
-hauled away by his relations. I suppose they'll make potato soup of
-him."
-
-Burly Bill chuckled.
-
-"Well, Peggy and I are off. See you in the evening, Jake. By-by!"
-
-And away they rode, like a couple of wild Indians, followed by a huge
-Irish wolf-hound, as faithful a dog to his mistress--for he was Peggy's
-own pet--as ever dog could be.
-
-They were going to have a day in the forest, and each carried a short
-six-chambered rifle at the saddle.
-
-A country like the wild one in which they dwelt soon makes anyone brave
-and fearless. They meant to ride quite a long way to-day and not return
-till the sun began to decline in the far and wooded west. So, being
-already quite an old campaigner, Roland had not forgotten to bring
-luncheon with him, and some for bold Brawn also.
-
-Into the forest they dashed, leaving the mighty river, which was there
-about fifteen miles broad probably, in their rear.
-
-They knew every pathway of that primeval woodland, and it mattered but
-little to them that most of these had been worn by the feet of wild
-beasts. Such tracks wind out and in, and in and out, and meet others in
-the most puzzling and labyrinthine manner.
-
-Roland carried a compass, and knew how to use it, but the day was
-unusually fine and sunny, so there was little chance of their getting
-lost.
-
-The country in which they lived might well have been called the land of
-perpetual summer.
-
-But at some spots the forest was so pitchy dark, owing to the
-overhanging trees and wild flowering creepers, that they had to rein up
-and allow Coz and Boz, as their ponies were named, to cautiously feel
-the way for themselves.
-
-How far away they might have ridden they could not themselves tell, had
-they not suddenly entered a kind of fairy glade. At one side it was
-bounded by a crescentic formation of rock, from the very centre of which
-spouted a tiny clear crystal waterfall. Beneath was a deep pool, the
-bottom of which was sand and yellow shingle, with here and there a patch
-of snow-white quartz. And away from this a little stream went
-meandering slowly through the glade, keeping it green.
-
-On the other side were the lordly forest trees, bedraped with flowering
-orchids and ferns.
-
-Flowers and ferns grew here and there in the rockface itself. No wonder
-the young folks gazed around them in delighted wonder.
-
-Brawn was more practical. He cared nothing for the flowers, but enjoyed
-to the fullest extent the clear cool water of the crystal pool.
-
-"Oh, isn't it lovely?" said Roland.
-
-"And oh, I am so hungry, Rolly!"
-
-Rolly took the hint.
-
-The ponies were let loose to graze, Brawn being told to head them off if
-they attempted to take to the woods.
-
-"I understand," said Brawn, with an intelligent glance of his brown eyes
-and wag of his tail.
-
-Then down the boy and girl squatted with the noble wolf-hound beside
-them, and Roland speedily spread the banquet on the moss.
-
-I dare say that hunger and romance seldom tread the same platform--at
-the same time, that is. It is usually one down, the other up; and
-notwithstanding the extraordinary beauty of their surroundings, for some
-time both boy and girl applied themselves assiduously to the discussion
-of the good things before them; that meat-pie disappearing as if by
-magic. Then the hard-boiled eggs, the well-buttered and flouriest of
-floury scones, received their attention, and the whole was washed down
-with _vinum bovis_, as Roland called it, cow's wine, or good milk.
-
-Needless to say, Brawn, whose eyes sparkled like diamonds, and whose
-ears were conveniently erect, came in for a good share.
-
-Well, but the ponies, Boz and Coz, had not the remotest idea of running
-away. In fact they soon drew near to the banqueting-table. Coz laid
-his nose affectionately on his little mistress's shoulder and heaved an
-equine sigh, and Boz began to nibble at Roland's ears in a very winning
-way.
-
-And the nibbling and the sigh brought them cakes galore.
-
-Roland offered Boz a bit of pie.
-
-The pony drew back, as if to say, "Vegetarians, weren't you aware?"
-
-But Brawn cocked his bonnie head to one side, knowingly.
-
-"Pitch it this way, master," he said. "I've got a crop for any kind of
-corn, and a bag for peas."
-
-A strange little rodent creature, much bigger than any rat, however,
-with beautiful sad-looking eyes, came from the bush, and stood on its
-hind-legs begging, not a yard away. Its breast was as white as snow.
-
-Probably it had no experience of the genus _homo_, and all the cruelties
-he is guilty of, under the title of sport.
-
-Roland pitched several pieces of pie towards the innocent. It just
-tasted a morsel, then back it ran towards the wood with wondrous speed.
-
-If they thought they had seen the last of it, they were much mistaken,
-for the innocent returned in two minutes time, accompanied not only by
-another of his own size, but by half a dozen of the funniest little
-fairies ever seen inside a forest.
-
-"My wife and children," said innocent No. 1.
-
-"My services to you," bobbed innocent No. 2.
-
-But the young ones squawked and squealed, and tumbled and leapt over
-each other as they fed in a manner so droll that boy and girl had to
-laugh till the woods rang.
-
-Innocent No. 1 looked on most lovingly, but took not a morsel to
-himself.
-
-Then all disappeared as suddenly as they had come.
-
-Truly the student of Nature who betakes himself to lonely woods sees
-many wonders!
-
-It was time now to lie back in the moss and enjoy the _dolce far
-niente_.
-
-The sky was as blue as blue could be, all between the rifts of
-slowly-moving clouds. The whisper of the wind among the forest trees,
-and the murmur of the falling water, came like softest music to Roland's
-ears. Small wonder, therefore, that his eyes closed, and he was soon in
-the land of sweet forgetfulness.
-
-But Peggy had a tiny book, from which she read passages to Brawn, who
-seemed all attention, but kept one eye on the ponies at the same time.
-
-It was a copy of the "Song of Hiawatha", a poem which Peggy thought
-ineffably lovely. Hark to her sweet girl voice as she reads:
-
- "These songs so wild and wayward,
- These legends and traditions".
-
-
-They appealed to her simple soul, for dearly did she love the haunts of
-Nature.
-
- "Loved the sunshine of the meadow,
- Loved the shadow of the forest,
- Loved the wind among the branches,
- The rushing of great rivers
- Through their palisades of pine-trees."
-
-
-She believed, too:
-
- "That even in savage bosoms
- There are longings, yearnings, strivings
- For the good they comprehend not;
- That feeble hands and helpless,
- Groping blindly in the darkness,
- Touch God's right hand...
- And are lifted up and strengthened".
-
- ----
-
-Roland slumbered quietly, and the day went on apace.
-
-He slept so peacefully that she hardly liked to arouse him.
-
-The little red book dropped from her hand and fell on the moss, and her
-thoughts now went far, far away adown the mighty river that flows so
-sadly, so solemnly onwards to the great Atlantic Ocean, fed on its way
-by a hundred rapid streams that melt in its dark bosom and are seen
-nevermore.
-
-But it was not the river itself the little maiden's thoughts were
-dwelling on; not the strange wild birds that sailed along its surface on
-snow-white wings; not the birds of prey--the eagle and the hawk--that
-hovered high in air, or with eldritch screams darted on their prey like
-bolts from the blue, and bore their bleeding quarries away to the silent
-forest; not even the wealth of wild flowers that nodded over the banks
-of the mighty stream.
-
-Her thoughts were on board a tall and darksome raft that was slowly
-making its way seaward to distant Par, or in the boats that towed it.
-For there was someone on the raft or in those boats who even then might
-be fondly thinking of the dark-haired maiden he had left behind.
-
-But Peggy's awakening from her dream of romance, and Roland's from his
-slumber, was indeed a terrible one.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II--STRANGE ADVENTURES IN THE FOREST--LOST!
-
-
-Fierce eyes had been watching the little camp for an hour and more,
-glaring out on the sunny glade from the dark depths of a forest tree not
-far off; out from under a cloudland of waving foliage that rustled in
-the balmy wind. Watching, and watching unwaveringly, Peggy, while she
-read; watching the sleeping Roland; the great wolf-hound, Brawn; and
-watching the ponies too.
-
-Ever and anon these last would come closer to the tree, as they nibbled
-grass or moss, then those fierce eyes burned more fiercely, and the
-cat-like tail of a monster jaguar moved uneasily as if the wild beast
-meditated a spring.
-
-But the ponies, sniffing danger in the air, perhaps--who can
-tell?--would toss their manes and retreat to the shadow of the rocks.
-
-Had the dog not been there the beast would have dared all, and sprung at
-once on one of those nimble steeds.
-
-But he waited and watched, watched and waited, and at long last his time
-came. With a coughing roar he now launched himself into the air, the
-elasticity of the branch giving greater force to his spring.
-
-Straight on the shoulders or back of poor Boz he alighted. His talons
-were well driven home, his white teeth were preparing to tear the flesh
-from the pony's neck.
-
-Both little steeds yelled wildly, and in nightmarish terror.
-
-Up sprang Brawn, the wolf-hound, and dashed on to the rescue.
-
-Peggy seized her loaded rifle and hurried after him.
-
-Thoroughly awake now, and fully cognizant of the terrible danger, Roland
-too was quickly on the scene of action.
-
-To fire at a distance were madness. He might have missed the struggling
-lion and shot poor Boz, or even faithful Brawn.
-
-This enormous dog had seized the beast by one hock, and with his paws
-against the pony was endeavouring to tear the monster off.
-
-The noise, the movement, the terror, caused poor Roland's head to whirl.
-
-He felt dazed, and almost stupid.
-
-Ah! but Peggy was clear-headed, and a brave and fearless child was she.
-
-Her feet seemed hardly to touch the moss, so lightly did she spring
-along.
-
-Her little rifle was cocked and ready, and, taking advantage of a few
-seconds' lull in the fearful scrimmage, she fired at five yards'
-distance.
-
-The bullet found billet behind the monster's ear, his grip relaxed, and
-now Brawn tore him easily from his perch and finished him off on the
-ground, with awful din and habbering.
-
-Then, with blood-dripping jaws he came with his ears lower, half
-apologetically, to receive the praise and caresses of his master and
-mistress.
-
-But though the adventure ended thus happily, frightened beyond measure,
-the ponies, Coz and Boz, had taken to the bush and disappeared.
-
-Knowing well the danger of the situation, Roland and Peggy, with Brawn,
-tried to follow them. But Irish wolf-hounds have but little scent, and
-so they searched and searched in vain, and returned at last to the
-sun-kissed glade.
-
-It was now well on towards three o'clock, and as they had a long forest
-stretch of at least ten miles before them ere they could touch the banks
-of the great queen of waters, Roland determined, with the aid of his
-compass, to strike at once into the beast-trodden pathway by which they
-had come, and make all haste homewards before the sun should set and
-darkness envelop the gloomy forest.
-
-"Keep up your heart, Peggy; if your courage and your feet hold out we
-shall reach the river before dusk."
-
-"I'm not so frightened now," said Peggy; but her lips were very
-tremulous, and tears stood in her eyes.
-
-"Come, come," she cried, "let us hurry on! Come, Brawn, good dog!"
-
-Brawn leapt up to lick her ear, and taking no thought for the skin of
-the jaguar, which in more favourable circumstances would have been borne
-away as a trophy, and proof of Peggy's valour, they now took to the bush
-in earnest.
-
-Roland looked at his watch.
-
-"Three hours of light and more. Ah! we can do it, if we do not lose our
-way."
-
-So off they set.
-
-Roland took the lead, rifle in hand, Peggy came next, and brave Brawn
-brought up the rear.
-
-They were compelled to walk in single file, for the pathways were so
-narrow in places that two could not have gone abreast.
-
-Roland made constant reference to his little compass, always assuring
-his companion that they were still heading directly for the river.
-
-They had hurried on for nearly an hour, when Roland suddenly paused.
-
-A huge dark monster had leapt clear and clean across the pathway some
-distance ahead, and taken refuge in a tree.
-
-It was, no doubt, another jaguar, and to advance unannounced might mean
-certain death to one of the three.
-
-"Are you all loaded, Peggy?" said Roland.
-
-"Every chamber!" replied the girl.
-
-There was no tremor about her now; and no backwoods Indian could have
-acted more coolly and courageously.
-
-"Blaze away at that tree then, Peg."
-
-Peggy opened fire, throwing in three or four shots in rapid succession.
-
-The beast, with a terrible cry, darted out of the tree and came rushing
-along to meet and fight the little party.
-
-"Down, Brawn, down! To heel, sir!"
-
-Next moment Roland fired, and with a terrible shriek the jaguar took to
-the bush, wounded and bleeding, and was seen no more.
-
-But his yells had awakened the echoes of the forest, and for more than
-five minutes the din of roaring, growling, and shrieking was fearful.
-
-Wild birds, no doubt, helped to swell the pandemonium.
-
-After a time, however, all was still once more, and the journey was
-continued in silence.
-
-Even Peggy, usually the first to commence a conversation, felt in no
-mood for talking now.
-
-She was very tired. Her feet ached, her brow was hot, and her eyes felt
-as if boiling in their sockets.
-
-Roland had filled his large flask at the little waterfall before leaving
-the glade, and he now made her drink.
-
-The draught seemed to renew her strength, and she struggled on as
-bravely as ever.
-
- ----
-
-Just two and a half hours after they had left the forest clearing, and
-when Roland was holding out hopes that they should soon reach the road
-by the banks of the river, much to their astonishment they found
-themselves in a strange clearing which they had never seen before.
-
-The very pathway ended here, and though the boy went round and round the
-circle, he could find no exit.
-
-To retrace his steps and try to find out the right path was the first
-thought that occurred to Roland.
-
-This plan was tried, but tried in vain, and so--weary and hopeless now
-beyond measure--they returned to the centre of the glade and threw
-themselves down on the soft green moss.
-
-Lost! Lost!
-
-The words kept repeating themselves in poor Roland's brain, but Peggy's
-fatigue was so complete that she preferred rest even in the midst of
-danger to going farther.
-
-Brawn, heaving a great sigh, laid himself down beside them.
-
-The warm day wore rapidly to a close, and at last the sun shimmered red
-through the forest trees.
-
-Then it sank.
-
-The briefest of twilight, and the stars shone out.
-
-Two hours of starlight, then solemnly uprose the round moon and flooded
-all the glade, draping the whispering trees in a blue glare, beautifully
-etherealizing them.
-
-Sorrow bringeth sleep.
-
-"Good-night, Rolly! Say your prayers," murmured Peggy.
-
-There were stars in the sky. There were stars too that flitted from
-bush to bush, while the winds made murmuring music among the lofty
-branches.
-
-Peggy was repeating to herself lines that she had read that very day:
-
- ..."the firefly Wah-wah-tay-see,
- Flitting through the dusk of evening,
- With the twinkle of its candle,
- Lighting up the brakes and bushes.
- * * * * *
- Wah-wah-tay-see, little firefly,
- Little, flitting, white-fire insect,
- Little dancing, white-fire creature,
- Light me with your little candle.
- Ere upon my bed I lay me,
- Ere in sleep I close my eyelids."
-
- ----
-
-The forest was unusually silent to-night, but ever and anon might be
-heard some distant growl showing that the woods sheltered the wildest
-beasts. Or an owl with mournful cry would flap its silent wings as it
-flew across the clearing.
-
-But nothing waked those tired and weary sleepers.
-
-So the night wore on and on. The moon had reached the zenith, and was
-shining now with a lustre that almost rivalled daylight itself.
-
-It must have been well on towards two o'clock in the morning when Brawn
-emitted a low and threatening growl.
-
-This aroused both Roland and Peggy, and the former at once seized his
-rifle.
-
-Standing there in the pale moonlight, not twenty yards away, was a tall,
-dark-skinned, and powerful-looking Indian. In his right hand he held a
-spear or something resembling one; in his left a huge catapult or sling.
-He was dressed for comfort--certainly not for ornament. Leggings or
-galligaskins covered his lower extremities, while his body was wrapped
-in a blanket. He had no head-covering, save a matted mass of hair, in
-which were stuck a few feathers.
-
-Roland took all this in at a glance as he seized his rifle and prepared
-for eventualities. According to the traditional painter of Indian life
-and customs the proper thing for this savage to have said is "Ugh!" He
-said nothing of the sort. Nor did he give vent to a whoop and yell that
-would have awakened the wild birds and beasts of the forest and every
-echo far and near.
-
-"Who goes there?" cried Roland, raising his gun.
-
-"No shootee. No shootee poor Indian man. I friendee you. Plenty
-friendee."
-
-Probably there was a little romance about Roland, for, instead of
-saying: "Come this way then, old chap, squat down and give us the news,"
-he said sternly:
-
-"Advance, friend!"
-
-But the Indian stood like a statue.
-
-"No undahstandee foh true."
-
-And Roland had to climb down and say simply:
-
-"Come here, friend, and speak."
-
-Brawn rushed forward now, but he looked a terror, for his hair was all
-on end like a hyena's, and he growled low but fiercely.
-
-"Down, Brawn! It's a good man, Brawn."
-
-Brawn smelt the Indian's hand, and, seeming satisfied, went back to the
-spot where Peggy sat wondering and frightened.
-
-She gathered the great dog to her breast and hugged and kissed him.
-
-"What foh you poh chillun sleepee all in de wood so? S'pose wild beas'
-come eatee you, w'at den you do?"
-
-"But, friend," replied Roland, "we are far from Burnley Hall, our home,
-and we have lost everything. We have lost our ponies, lost our way, and
-lost ourselves."
-
-"Poh chillun!" said this strange being. "But now go sleepee foh true.
-De Indian he lie on blanket. He watchee till de big sun rise."
-
-"Can we trust him, Peggy?"
-
-"Oh yes, yes!" returned Peggy. "He is a dear, good man; I know by his
-voice."
-
-In ten minutes more the boy and girl were fast asleep.
-
-The Indian watched.
-
-And Brawn watched the Indian.
-
- ----
-
-When the sun went down on the previous evening, and there were no signs
-of the young folks returning, both Mr. St. Clair and his wife became
-very uneasy indeed.
-
-Then two long hours of darkness ensued before the moon sailed up, first
-reddening, then silvering, the wavelets and ripples on the great river.
-
-"Surely some evil must have befallen them," moaned Mrs. St. Clair. "Oh,
-my Roland! my son! I may never see you more. Is there nothing can be
-done? Tell me! Tell me!"
-
-"We must trust in Providence, Mary; and it is wrong to mourn. I doubt
-not the children are safe, although perhaps they have lost their way in
-the woods."
-
-Hours of anxious waiting went by, and it was nearly midnight. The house
-was very quiet and still, for the servants were asleep.
-
-Burly Bill and Jake had mounted strong horses at moonrise, and gone off
-to try to find a clue. But they knew it was in vain, nay, 'twould have
-been sheer madness to enter the forest now. They coo-eed over and over
-again, but their only answer was the echoing shriek of the wild birds.
-
-They were just about to return after giving their last shrill coo-ee-ee,
-when out from the moonlit forest, with a fond whinny, sprang Coz and
-Boz.
-
-Jake sprang out of his saddle, throwing his bridle to Bill.
-
-In the bright moonlight, Jake could see at once that there was something
-wrong. He placed his hand on Boz's shoulder. He staggered back as he
-withdrew it.
-
-"Oh, Bill," he cried, "here is blood, and the pony is torn and bleeding!
-Only a jaguar could have done this. This is terrible."
-
-"Let us return at once," said Bill, who had a right soft heart of his
-own behind his burly chest.
-
-"But oh!" he added, "how can we break the news to Roland's parents?"
-
-"We'll give them hope. Mrs. St. Clair must know nothing yet, but at
-early dawn all the ranch must be aroused, and we shall search the forest
-for miles and miles."
-
- ----
-
-Jake, after seeing the ponies safe in their stable, left Bill to look to
-Boz's wounds, while with St. Clair's leave he himself set off at a round
-gallop to get assistance from a neighbouring ranch.
-
-Day had not yet broken ere forty good men and true were on the
-bridle-path and tearing along the river's banks. St. Clair himself was
-at their head.
-
-I must leave the reader to imagine the joy of all the party when soon
-after sunrise there emerged from the forest, guided by the strange
-Indian, Roland, Peggy, and noble Brawn, all looking as fresh as the dew
-on the tender-eyed hibiscus bloom or the wild flowers that nodded by the
-river's brim.
-
-"Wirr--rr--r--wouff, wouff, wouff!" barked Brawn, as he bounded forward
-with joy in every feature of his noble face, and I declare to you there
-seemed to be a lump in his throat, and the sound of his barking was
-half-hysterical.
-
-St. Clair could not utter a word as he fondly embraced the children. He
-pretended to scold a little, but this was all bluff, and simply a ruse
-to keep back the tears.
-
-But soft-hearted Burly Bill was less successful. He just managed to drop
-a little to the rear, and it was not once only that he was fain to draw
-the sleeve of his rough jacket across his eyes.
-
- ----
-
-But now they are mounted, and the horses' heads are turned homewards.
-Peggy is seated in front of Burly Bill, of whom she is very fond, and
-Roland is saddled with Jake. The Indian and Brawn ran.
-
-Poor Mrs. St. Clair, at the big lawn gate, gazing westward, sees the
-cavalcade far away on the horizon.
-
-Presently, borne along on the morning breeze come voices raised in a
-brave and joyous song:
-
- "Down with them, down with the lords of the forest".
-
-
-And she knows her boy and Peggy are safe.
-
-"Thank God for all his mercies!" she says fervently, then, woman-like,
-bursts into tears.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III--BURNLEY HALL, OLD AND NEW
-
-
-I have noticed more than once that although the life-story of some good
-old families in England may run long stagnant, still, when one important
-event does take place, strange thing after strange thing may happen, and
-the story rushes on with heedless speed, like rippling brooklets to the
-sea.
-
-The St. Clairs may have been originally a Scottish family, or branch of
-some Highland clan, but they had been settled on a beautiful estate, far
-away in the wilds of Cornwall, for over one hundred and fifty years.
-
-Stay, though, we are not going back so far as that. Old history, like
-old parchment, has a musty odour. Let us come down to more modern times.
-
-When, then, young Roland's grandfather died, and died intestate, the
-whole of the large estate devolved upon his eldest son, with its fat
-rentals of fully four thousand a-year. Peggy St. Clair, our little
-heroine, was his only child, and said to be, even in her infancy, the
-very image of her dead-and-gone mother.
-
-No wonder her father loved her.
-
-But soon the first great event happened in the life-story of the St.
-Clairs. For, one sad day Peggy's father was borne home from the
-hunting-field grievously wounded.
-
-All hope of recovery was abandoned by the doctor shortly after he had
-examined his patient.
-
-Were Herbert to die intestate, as his father had done, his second
-brother John, according to the old law, could have stepped into his
-shoes and become lord of Burnley Hall and all its broad acres.
-
-But, alive to the peril of his situation, which the surgeon with tears
-in his eyes pointed out to him, the dying man sent at once for his
-solicitor, and a will was drawn up and placed in this lawyer's hands,
-and moreover he was appointed one of the executors. This will was to be
-kept in a safe until Peggy should be seventeen years of age, when it was
-to be opened and read.
-
-I must tell you that between the brothers Herbert and John there had
-long existed a sort of blood-feud, and it was as well they never met.
-
-Thomas, however, was quickly at his wounded brother's bedside, and never
-left it until--
-
- "Clay-cold Death had closed his eye".
-
-
-The surgeon had never given any hopes, yet during the week that
-intervened between the terrible accident and Herbert's death there were
-many hours in which the doomed man appeared as well as ever, though
-scarce able to move hand or foot. His mind was clear at such times, and
-he talked much with Thomas about the dear old times when all were young.
-
-Up till now this youngest son and brother, Thomas, had led rather an
-uneasy and eventful life. Nothing prospered with him, though he had
-tried most things.
-
-He was married, and had the one child, Roland, to whom the reader has
-already been introduced.
-
-"Now, dear Tom," said Herbert, one evening after he had lain still with
-closed eyes for quite a long time, and he placed a white cold hand in
-that of his brother as he spoke, "I am going to leave you. We have
-always been good friends and loved each other well. All I need tell you
-now, and I tell you in confidence, is that Peggy, at the age of
-seventeen, will be my heir, with you, dear Tom, as her guardian."
-
-Tom could not reply for the gathering tears. He just pressed Herbert's
-hand in silence.
-
-"Well," continued the latter, "things have not gone over well with you,
-I know, but I have often heard you say you could do capitally if you
-emigrated to an almost new land--a land you said figuratively 'flowing
-with milk and honey'. I confess I made no attempt to assist you to go
-to the great valley of the Amazon. It was for a selfish reason I
-detained you. My brother John being nobody to me, my desire was to have
-you near."
-
-He paused, almost exhausted, and Tom held a little cup of wine to his
-lips.
-
-Presently he spoke again.
-
-"My little Peggy!" he moaned. "Oh, it is hard, hard to leave my
-darling!
-
-"Tom, listen. You are to take Peggy to your home. You are to care for
-her as the apple of your eye. You must be her father, your wife her
-mother."
-
-"I will! I will! Oh, brother, can you doubt me!"
-
-"No, no, Tom. And now you may emigrate. I leave you thirty thousand
-pounds, all my deposit account at Messrs. Bullion & Co.'s bank. This is
-for Peggy and you. My real will is a secret at present, and that which
-will be read after--I go, is a mere epitome. But in future it will be
-found that I have not forgotten even John."
-
-Poor Peggy had run in just then, and perched upon the bed, wondering
-much that her father should lie there so pale and still, and make no
-attempt to romp with her. At this time her hair was as yellow as the
-first approach of dawn in the eastern sky.
-
- ----
-
-That very week poor Squire St. Clair breathed his last.
-
-John came to the funeral with a long face and a crape-covered hat,
-looking more like a mute than anything else.
-
-He sipped his wine while the epitomized will was read; but a wicked
-light flashed from his eyes, and he ground out an oath at its
-conclusion.
-
-All the information anyone received was that though sums varying from
-five hundred pounds to a thousand were left as little legacies to
-distant relations and to John, as well as _douceurs_ to the servants,
-the whole of the estates were willed in a way that could not be divulged
-for many a long year.
-
-John seized his hat, tore from it the crape, and dashed it on the floor.
-The crape on his arm followed suit. He trampled on both and strode away
-slamming the door behind him.
-
-Years had flown away.
-
-Tom and his wife had emigrated to the banks of the Amazon. They settled
-but a short time at or near one of its mouths, and then Tom, who had no
-lack of enterprise, determined to journey far, far into the interior,
-where the land was not so level, where mountains nodded to the moon, and
-giant forests stretched illimitably to the southward and west.
-
-At first Tom and his men, with faithful Bill as overseer, were mere
-squatters, but squatters by the banks of the queen of waters, and in a
-far more lovely place than dreams of elfinland. Labour was very cheap
-here, and the Indians soon learned from the white men how to work.
-
-Tom St. Clair had imported carpenters and artificers of many sorts from
-the old country, to say nothing of steam plant and machinery, and that
-great resounding steel buzz-saw.
-
-Now, although not really extravagant, he had an eye for the beautiful,
-and determined to build himself a house and home that, although not
-costing a deal, would be in reality a miniature Burnley Hall. And what
-a truly joyous time Peggy and her cousin, or adopted brother, had of it
-while the house was gradually being built by the busy hands of the
-trained Indians and their white brethren!
-
-Not they alone, but also a boy called Dick Temple, whose uncle was Tom
-St. Clair's nearest neighbour, That is, he lived a trifle over seven
-miles higher up the river. Dick was about the same age and build as
-Roland.
-
-There was a good road between Temple's ranch and Tom St. Clair's place,
-and when, after a time, Tom and Peggy had a tutor imported for their own
-especial benefit, the two families became very friendly indeed.
-
-Dick Temple was a well-set-up and really brave and good-looking lad.
-Little Peggy averred that there never had been, or never could be,
-another boy half so nice as Dick.
-
-But I may as well state here at once and be done with it--Dick was
-simply a reckless, wild dare-devil. Nothing else would suffice to
-describe young Dick's character even at this early age. And he soon
-taught Roland to be as reckless as himself.
-
- ----
-
-Time rolled on, and the new Burnley Hall was a _fait accompli_.
-
-The site chosen by Tom for his home by the river was a rounded and
-wooded hill about a quarter of a mile back from the immediate bank of
-the stream. But all the land between the hill and the Amazon was
-cultivated, and not only this, but up and down the river as well for
-over a mile, for St. Clair wanted to avoid too close contact with
-unfriendly alligators, and these scaly reptiles avoid land on which
-crops are growing.
-
-The tall trees were first and foremost cleared off the hill; not all
-though. Many of the most beautiful were left for effect, not to say
-shade, and it was pleasant indeed to hear the wind whispering through
-their foliage, and the bees murmuring in their branches, in this flowery
-land of eternal summer.
-
-Nor was the undergrowth of splendid shrubs and bushes and fruit-trees
-cleared away. They were thinned, however, and beautiful broad winding
-walks led up through them towards the mansion.
-
-The house was one of many gables; altogether English, built of quartz
-for the most part, and having a tower to it of great height.
-
-From this tower one could catch glimpses of the most charming scenery,
-up and down the river, and far away on the other shore, where forests
-swam in the liquid air and giant hills raised their blue tops far into
-the sky.
-
-So well had Tom St. Clair flourished since taking up his quarters here
-that his capital was returning him at least one hundred per cent, after
-allowing for wear and tear of plant.
-
-I could not say for certain how many white men he had with him. The
-number must have been close on fifty, to say nothing of the scores and
-scores of Indians.
-
-Jake Solomons and Burly Bill were his overseers, but they delighted in
-hard work themselves, as we have already seen. So, too, did Roland's
-father himself, and as visitors to the district were few, you may be
-certain he never wore a London hat nor evening dress.
-
-Like those of Jake and Bill, his sleeves were always rolled up, and his
-muscular arms and brave square face showed that he was fit for anything.
-No, a London hat would have been sadly out of place; but the
-broad-brimmed Buffalo Bill he wore became him admirably.
-
-That big buzz-saw was a triumph. The clearing of the forest commenced
-from close under the hill where stood the mansion, and strong horses and
-bullocks were used to drag the gigantic trees towards the mill.
-
-Splendid timber it was!
-
-No one could have guessed the age of these trees until they were cut
-down and sawn into lengths, when their concentric rings might be
-counted.
-
-The saw-mill itself was a long way from the mansion-house, with the
-villages for the whites and Indians between, but quite separate from
-each other.
-
-The habitations of the whites were raised on piles well above the
-somewhat damp ground, and steps led up to them. Two-roomed most of them
-were, but that of Jake was of a more pretentious character. So, too,
-was Burly Bill's hut.
-
-It would have been difficult to say what the Indians lived on. Cakes,
-fruit, fish, and meat of any kind might form the best answer to the
-question. They ate roasted snakes with great relish, and many of these
-were of the deadly-poisonous class. The heads were cut off and buried
-first, however, and thus all danger was prevented. Young alligators
-were frequently caught, too, and made into a stew.
-
-The huts these faithful creatures lived in were chiefly composed of
-bamboo, timber, and leaves. Sometimes they caught fire. That did not
-trouble the savages much, and certainly did not keep them awake at
-night. For, had the whole village been burned down, they could have
-built another in a surprisingly short time.
-
-When our hero and heroine got lost in the great primeval forest, Burnley
-Hall was in the most perfect and beautiful order, and its walks, its
-flower-garden, and shrubberies were a most pleasing sight. All was
-under the superintendence of a Scotch gardener, whom St. Clair had
-imported for the purpose.
-
-By this time, too, a very large portion of the adjoining forest had been
-cut down, and the land on which those lofty trees had grown was under
-cultivation.
-
-If the country which St. Clair had made his home was not in reality a
-land flowing with milk and honey, it yielded many commodities equally
-valuable. Every now and then--especially when the river was more or less
-in flood--immense rafts were sent down stream to distant Par, where the
-valuable timber found ready market.
-
-Several white men in boats always went in charge of these, and the boats
-served to assist in steering, and towing as well.
-
-These rafts used often to be built close to the river before an expected
-rising of the stream, which, when it did come, floated them off and
-away.
-
-But timber was not the only commodity that St. Clair sent down from his
-great estate. There were splendid quinine-trees. There was coca and
-cocoa, too.
-
-There was a sugar plantation which yielded the best results, to say
-nothing of coffee and tobacco, Brazil-nuts and many other kinds of nuts,
-and last, but not least, there was gold.
-
-This latter was invariably sent in charge of a reliable white man, and
-St. Clair lived in hope that he would yet manage to position a really
-paying gold-mine.
-
-More than once St. Clair had permitted Roland and Peggy to journey down
-to Par on a great raft. But only at the season when no storms blew.
-They had an old Indian servant to cook and "do" for them, and the centre
-of the raft was hollowed out into a kind of cabin roofed over with
-bamboo and leaves. Steps led up from this on to a railed platform,
-which was called the deck.
-
-Burly Bill would be in charge of boats and all, and in the evenings he
-would enter the children's cabin to sing them songs and tell them
-strange, weird tales of forest life.
-
-He had a banjo, and right sweetly could he play. Old Beeboo the Indian,
-would invariably light his meerschaum for him, smoking it herself for a
-good five minutes first and foremost, under pretence of getting it well
-alight.
-
-Beeboo, indeed, was altogether a character. Both Mr. and Mrs. St. Clair
-liked her very much, however, for she had been in the family, and nursed
-both Peggy and Roland, from the day they had first come to the country.
-As for her age, she might have been any age between five-and-twenty and
-one hundred and ten. She was dark in skin--oh, no! not black, but more
-of copper colour, and showed a few wrinkles at early morn. But when
-Beeboo was figged out in her nicest white frock and her deep-blue or
-crimson blouse, with her hair hanging down in two huge plaits, then,
-with the smile that always hovered around her lips and went dancing away
-up her face till it flickered about her eyes, she was very pleasant
-indeed. The wrinkles had all flown up to the moon or somewhere, and
-Beeboo was five-and-twenty once again.
-
-I must tell you something, however, regarding her, and that is the
-worst. Beeboo came from a race of cannibals who inhabit one of the
-wildest and almost inaccessible regions of Bolivia, and her teeth had
-been filed by flints into a triangular shape, the form best adapted for
-tearing flesh. She had been brought thence, along with a couple of
-wonderful monkeys and several parrots, when only sixteen, by an English
-traveller who had intended to make her a present to his wife.
-
-Beeboo never got as far as England, however. She had watched her
-chance, and one day escaped to the woods, taking with her one of the
-monkeys, who was an especial favourite with this strange, wild girl.
-
-She was frequently seen for many years after this. It was supposed she
-had lived on roots and rats--I'm not joking--and slept at night in
-trees. She managed to clothe herself, too, with the inner rind of the
-bark of certain shrubs. But how she had escaped death from the talons
-of jaguars and other wild beasts no one could imagine.
-
-Well, one day, shortly after the arrival of St. Clair, hunters found the
-jaguar queen, as they called her, lying in the jungle at the foot of a
-tree.
-
-There was a jaguar not far off, and a huge piece of sodden flesh lay
-near Beeboo's cheek, undoubtedly placed there by this strange, wild pet,
-while close beside her stood a tapir.
-
-Beeboo was carried to the nearest village, and the tapir followed as
-gently as a lamb. My informant does not know what became of the tapir,
-but Beeboo was tamed, turned a Christian too, and never evinced any
-inclination to return to the woods.
-
-Yet, strangely enough, no puma nor jaguar would ever even growl or snarl
-at Beeboo.
-
-These statements can all be verified.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV--AWAY DOWN THE RIVER
-
-
-Before we start on this adventurous cruise, let us take a peep at an
-upland region to the south of the Amazon. It was entirely surrounded by
-caoutchouc or india-rubber trees, and it was while wandering through
-this dense forest with Jake, and making arrangements for the tapping of
-those trees, the juice of which was bound to bring the St. Clairs much
-money, that they came upon the rocky table-land where they found the
-gold.
-
-This was some months after the strange Indian had found the "babes in
-the wood", as Jake sometimes called Roland and Peggy.
-
-"I say, sir, do you see the quartz showing white everywhere through the
-bloom of those beautiful flowers?"
-
-"Ugh!" cried St. Clair, as a splendidly-coloured but hideous large snake
-hissed and glided away from between his feet. "Ugh! had I tramped on
-that fellow my prospecting would have been all ended."
-
-"True, sir," said Jake; "but about the quartz?"
-
-"Well, Jake."
-
-"Well, Mr. St. Clair, there is gold here. I do not say that we've
-struck an El Dorado, but I am certain there is something worth digging
-for in this region."
-
-"Shall we try? You've been in Australia. What say you to a shaft?"
-
-"Good! But a horizontal shaft carried into the base of this hill or
-hummock will, I think, do for the present. It is only for samples, you
-know."
-
-And these samples had turned out so well that St. Clair, after claiming
-the whole hill, determined to send Jake on a special message to Par to
-establish a company for working it.
-
-He could take no more labour on his own head, for really he had more
-than enough to do with his estate.
-
-No white men were allowed to work at the shaft. Only Indians, and these
-were housed on the spot. So that the secret was well kept.
-
-And now the voyage down the river was to be undertaken, and a most
-romantic cruise it turned out to be.
-
-St. Clair had ordered a steamer to be built for him in England and sent
-out in pieces. She was called _The Peggy_, after our heroine. Not very
-large--but little over the dimensions of a large steam-launch, in
-fact--but big enough for the purpose of towing along the immense raft
-with the aid of the current.
-
-Jake was to go with his samples of golden sand and his nuggets; Burly
-Bill, also, who was captain of the _Peggy_; and Beeboo, to attend to the
-youngsters in their raft saloon. Brawn was not to be denied; and last,
-but not least, went wild Dick Temple.
-
-The latter was to sleep on board the steamer, but he would spend most of
-his time by day on the raft.
-
-All was ready at last. The great raft was floated and towed out far
-from the shore. All the plantation hands, both whites and Indians, were
-gathered on the banks, and gave many a lusty cheer as the steamer and
-raft got under way.
-
-The last thing that those on shore heard was the sonorous barking of the
-great wolf-hound, Brawn.
-
-There was a ring of joy in it, however, that brought hope to the heart
-of both Tom St. Clair and his winsome wife.
-
-Well, to our two heroes and to Peggy, not to mention Brawn and Burly
-Bill, the cruise promised to be all one joyous picnic, and they set
-themselves to make the most of it.
-
-But to Jake Solomons it presented a more serious side. He was St.
-Clair's representative and trusted man, and his business was of the
-highest importance, and would need both tact and skill.
-
-However, there was a long time to think about all this, for the river
-does not run more than three miles an hour, and although the little
-steamer could hurry the raft along at probably thrice that speed, still
-long weeks must elapse before they could reach their destination.
-
-As far as the raft was concerned, this would not be Par. She would be
-grounded near to a town far higher up stream, and the timber, nuts,
-spices, and rubber taken seaward by train.
-
-In less than two days everyone had settled down to the voyage.
-
-The river was very wide and getting wider, and soon scarcely could they
-see the opposite shore, except as a long low green cloud on the northern
-horizon.
-
-Life on board the raft was for a whole week a most uneventful dreamy
-sort of existence. One day was remarkably like another. There was the
-blue of the sky above, the blue on the river's great breast, broken,
-however, by thousands of lines of rippling silver.
-
-There were strangely beautiful birds flying tack and half-tack around
-the steamer and raft, waving trees flower-bedraped--the flowers trailing
-and creeping and climbing everywhere, and even dipping their sweet faces
-in the water,--flowers of every hue of the rainbow.
-
-Dreamy though the atmosphere was, I would not have you believe that our
-young folks relapsed into a state of drowsy apathy. Far from it. They
-were very happy indeed. Dick told Peggy that their life, or his, felt
-just like some beautiful song-waltz, and that he was altogether so happy
-and jolly that he had sometimes to turn out in the middle watch to
-laugh.
-
-Peggy had not to do that.
-
-In her little state-room on one side of the cabin, and in a hammock, she
-slept as soundly as the traditional top, and on a grass mat on the deck,
-with a footstool for a pillow, slumbered Beeboo.
-
-Roland slept on the other side, and Brawn guarded the doorway at the
-foot of the steps.
-
-Long before Peggy was awake, and every morning of their aquatic lives,
-the dinghy boat took the boys a little way out into mid-stream, and they
-stripped and dived, enjoyed a two-minutes' splash, and got quickly on
-board again.
-
-The men always stood by with rifles to shoot any alligator that might be
-seen hovering nigh, and more than once reckless Dick had a narrow
-escape.
-
-"But," he said one day in his comical way, "one has only once to die,
-you know, and you might as well die doing a good turn as any other way."
-
-"Doing a good turn?" said Roland enquiringly.
-
-"Certainly. Do you not impart infinite joy to a cayman if you permit
-him to eat you?"
-
-The boys were always delightfully hungry half an hour before breakfast
-was served.
-
-And it was a breakfast too!
-
-Beeboo would be dressed betimes, and have the cloth laid in the saloon.
-The great raft rose and fell with a gentle motion, but there was nothing
-to hurt, so that the dishes stuck on the cloth without any guard.
-
-Beeboo could bake the most delicious of scones and cakes, and these,
-served up hot in a clean white towel, were most tempting; the butter was
-of the best and sweetest. Ham there was, and eggs of the gull, with
-fresh fried fish every morning, and fragrant coffee.
-
-Was it not quite idyllic?
-
-The forenoon would be spent on deck under the awning; there was plenty
-to talk about, and books to read, and there was the ever-varying
-panorama to gaze upon, as the raft went smoothly gliding on, and on, and
-on.
-
-Sometimes they were in very deep water close to the bank, for men were
-always in the chains taking soundings from the steamer's bows.
-
-Close enough to admire the flowers that draped the forest trees; close
-enough to hear the wild lilt of birds or the chattering of monkeys and
-parrots; close enough to see tapirs moving among the trees, watched,
-often enough, by the fierce sly eyes of ghastly alligators, that
-flattened themselves against rocks or bits of clay soil, looking like a
-portion of the ground, but warily waiting until they should see a chance
-to attack.
-
-There cannot be too many tapirs, and there cannot be too few alligators.
-So our young heroes thought it no crime to shoot these squalid horrors
-wherever seen.
-
-But one forenoon clouds banked rapidly up in the southern sky, and soon
-the sun was hidden in sulphurous rolling banks of cumulus.
-
-No one who has ever witnessed a thunderstorm in these regions can live
-long enough to forget it.
-
-For some time before it came on the wind had gone down completely. In
-yonder great forest there could not have been breeze or breath enough to
-stir the pollen on the trailing flowers. The sun, too, seemed shorn of
-its beams, the sky was no longer blue, but of a pale saffron or sulphur
-colour.
-
-It was then that giant clouds, like evil beasts bent on havoc and
-destruction, began to show head above the horizon. Rapidly they rose,
-battalion on battalion, phalanx on phalanx.
-
-There were low mutterings even now, and flashes of fire in the far
-distance. But it was not until the sky was entirely overcast that the
-storm came on in dread and fearful earnest. At this time it was so
-dark, that down in the raft saloon an open book was barely visible.
-Then peal after peal, and vivid flash after flash, of blue and crimson
-fire lit up forest and stream, striking our heroes and heroine blind, or
-causing their eyes for a time to overrun with purple light.
-
-So terrific was the thunder that the raft seemed to rock and shiver in
-the sound.
-
-This lasted for fully half an hour, the whole world seeming to be in
-flames.
-
-Peggy stood by Dick on the little deck, and he held her arm in his; held
-her hand too, for it was cold and trembling.
-
-"Are you afraid?" he whispered, during a momentary lull.
-
-"No, Dick, not afraid, only cold, so cold; take me below."
-
-He did so.
-
-He made her lie down on the little sofa, and covered her with a rug.
-
-All just in time, for now down came the awful rain. It was as if a
-water-spout had broken over the seemingly doomed raft, and was sinking
-it below the dark waters of the river.
-
-Luckily the boys managed to batten down in time, or the little saloon
-would have been flooded.
-
-They lit the lamp, too.
-
-But with the rain the storm seemed to increase in violence, and a strong
-wind had arisen and added greatly to the terror of the situation. Hail
-came down as large as marbles, and the roaring and din was now deafening
-and terrible.
-
-Then, the wind ceased to blow almost instantaneously. It did not die
-away. It simply dropped all of a sudden. Hail and rain ceased shortly
-after.
-
-Dick ventured to peep on deck.
-
-It was still dark, but far away and low down on the horizon a streak of
-the brightest blue sky that ever he had seen had made its appearance.
-It broadened and broadened as the dark canopy of clouds, curtain-like,
-was lifted.
-
-"Come up, Peggy. Come up, Rol. The storm is going. The storm has
-almost gone," cried Dick; and soon all three stood once more on the
-deck.
-
-Away, far away over the northern woods rolled the last bank of clouds,
-still giving voice, however, still spitting fire.
-
-But now the sun was out and shining brightly down with a heat that was
-fierce, and the raft was all enveloped in mist.
-
-So dense, indeed, was the fog that rose from the rain-soaked raft, that
-all the scenery was entirely obscured. It was a hot vapour, too, and
-far from pleasant, so no one was sorry when Burly Bill suddenly appeared
-from the lower part of the raft.
-
-"My dear boys," he said heartily, "why, you'll be parboiled if you stop
-here. Come with me, Miss Peggy, and you, Brawn; I'll come back for you,
-lads. Don't want to upset the dinghy all among the 'gators, see?"
-
-Bill was back again in a quarter of an hour, and the boys were also
-taken on board the boat.
-
-"She's a right smart little boat as ever was," said Bill; "but if we was
-agoin' to get 'er lip on to the water, blow me tight, boys, if the
-'gators wouldn't board us. They'm mebbe very nice sociable kind o'
-animals, but bust my buttons if I'd like to enter the next world down a
-'gator's gullet."
-
-Beeboo did not mind the steam a bit, and by two o'clock she had as nice
-a dinner laid in the raft saloon as ever boy or girl sat down to.
-
-But by this time the timbers were dry once more, and although white
-clouds of fog still lay over the low woods, all was now bright and
-cheerful. Yet not more so than the hearts of our brave youngsters.
-
-Courage and sprightliness are all a matter of strength of heart, and you
-cannot make yourself brave if your system is below par. The coward is
-really more to be pitied than blamed.
-
-Well, it was very delightful, indeed, to sit on deck and talk, build
-castles in the air, and dream daydreams.
-
-The air was cool and bracing now, and the sun felt warm, but by no means
-too hot.
-
-The awning was prettily lined with green cloth, the work of Mrs. St.
-Clair's own hands, assisted by the indefatigable Beeboo, and there was
-not anything worth doing that she could not put willing, artful hands
-to.
-
-The awning was scalloped, too, if that be the woman's word for the flaps
-that hung down a whole foot all round. "Vandyked" is perhaps more
-correct, but then, you see, the sharp corners of the vandyking were all
-rounded off. So I think scalloped must stand, though the word reminds
-me strangely of oysters.
-
-But peeping out from under the scalloped awning, and gazing northwards
-across the sea-like river, boats under steam could be noticed.
-Passengers on board too, both ladies and gentlemen, the former all
-rigged out in summer attire.
-
-"Would you like to be on board yonder?" said Dick to Peggy, as the girl
-handed him back the lorgnettes.
-
-"No, indeed, I shouldn't," she replied, with a saucy toss of her pretty
-head.
-
-"Well," she added, "if you were there, little Dickie, I mightn't mind it
-so much."
-
-"Little Dick! Eh?" Dick laughed right heartily now.
-
-"Yes, little Dickie. Mind, I am nearly twelve; and after I'm twelve I'm
-in my teens, quite an old girl. A child no longer anyhow. And after I'm
-in my teens I'll soon be sixteen, and then I suppose I shall marry."
-
-"Who will marry you, Peggy?"
-
-This was not very good grammar, but Dick was in downright earnest
-anyhow, and his young voice had softened wonderfully.
-
-"Me?" he added, as she remained silent, with her eyes seeming to follow
-the rolling tide.
-
-"You, Dick! Why, you're only a child!"
-
-"Why, Peggy, I'm fifteen--nearly, and if I live I'm bound to get older
-and bigger."
-
-"No, no, Dick, you can marry Beeboo, and I shall get spliced, as the
-sailors call it, to Burly Bill."
-
-The afternoon wore away, and Beeboo came up to summon "the chillun" to
-tea.
-
-Up they started, forgetting all about budding love, flirtation, and
-future marriages, and made a rush for the companion-ladder.
-
-"Wowff--wowff!" barked Brawn, and the 'gators on shore and the tapirs in
-the woods lifted heads to listen, while parrots shrieked and monkeys
-chattered and scolded among the lordly forest trees.
-
-"Wowff--wowff!" he barked. "Who says cakes and butter?"
-
-The night fell, and Burly Bill came on board with his banjo, and his
-great bass voice, which was as sweet as the tone of a 'cello.
-
-Bill was funnier than usual to-night, and when Beeboo brought him a big
-tumbler of rosy rum punch, made by herself and sweetened with honey, he
-was merrier still.
-
-Then to complete his happiness Beeboo lit his pipe.
-
-She puffed away at it for some time as usual, by way of getting it in
-working order.
-
-"'Spose," she said, "Beeboo not warm de bowl ob de big pipe plenty
-proper, den de dear chile Bill take a chill."
-
-"You're a dear old soul, Beeb," said Bill.
-
-Then the dear old soul carefully wiped the amber mouth-piece with her
-apron, and handed Burly Bill his comforter.
-
-The great raft swayed and swung gently to and fro, so Bill sang his pet
-sea-song, "The Rose of Allandale". He was finishing that bonnie verse--
-
- "My life had been a wilderness,
- Unblest by fortune's gale,
- Had fate not linked my lot to hers,
- The Rose of Allandale",
-
-when all at once an ominous grating was heard coming from beneath the
-raft, and motion ceased as suddenly as did Bill's song.
-
-"Save us from evil!" cried Bill. "The raft is aground!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V--A DAY IN THE FOREST WILDS
-
-
-Burly Bill laid down his banjo. Then he pushed his great extinguisher
-of a thumb into the bowl of his big meerschaum, and arose.
-
-"De good Lawd ha' mussy on our souls, chillun!" cried Beeboo, twisting
-her apron into a calico rope. "We soon be all at de bottom ob de deep,
-and de 'gators a-pickin' de bones ob us!"
-
-"Keep quiet, Beeb, there's a dear soul! Never a 'gator'll get near you.
-W'y, look 'ow calm Miss Peggy is. It be'ant much as'll frighten she."
-
-Burly Bill could speak good English when he took time, but invariably
-reverted to Berkshire when in the least degree excited.
-
-He was soon on board the little steamer.
-
-"What cheer, Jake?" he said.
-
-"Not much o' that. A deuced unlucky business. May lose the whole voyage
-if it comes on to blow!"
-
-"W'y, Jake, lad, let's 'ope for the best. No use givin' up; be there?
-I wouldn't let the men go to prayers yet awhile, Jake. Not to make a
-bizness on't like, I means."
-
-Well, the night wore away, but the raft never budged, unless it was to
-get a firmer hold of the mud and sand.
-
-A low wind had sprung up too, and if it increased to a gale she would
-soon begin to break up.
-
-It was a dreary night and a long one, and few on board the steamer slept
-a wink.
-
-But day broke at last, and the sun's crimson light changed the ripples
-on the river from leaden gray to dazzling ruby.
-
-Then the wind fell.
-
-"There are plenty of river-boats, Bill," said Jake. "What say you to
-intercept one and ask assistance?"
-
-"Bust my buttons if I would cringe to ne'er a one on 'em! They'd charge
-salvage, and sponge enormous. I knows the beggars as sails these puffin'
-Jimmies well."
-
-"Guess you're about right, Bill, and you know the river better'n I."
-
-"Listen, Jake. The bloomin' river got low all at once, like, after the
-storm, and so you got kind o' befoozled, and struck. I'd a-kept further
-out. But Burly Bill ain't the man to bully his mate. On'y listen
-again. The river'll rise in a day or two, and if the wind keeps in its
-sack, w'y we'll float like a thousand o' bricks on an old Thames lumper!
-Bust my buttons, Jake, if we don't!"
-
-"Well, Bill, I don't know anything about the bursting of your buttons,
-but you give me hope. So I'll go to breakfast. Tell the engineer to
-keep the fires banked."
-
-Two days went past, and never a move made the raft.
-
-It was a wearisome time for all. The "chillun", as Beeboo called them,
-tried to beguile it in the best way they could with reading, talking,
-and deck games.
-
-Dick and Roland were "dons" at leap-frog, and it mattered not which of
-them was giving the back, but as soon as the other leapt over Brawn
-followed suit, greatly to the delight of Peggy. He jumped in such a
-business-like way that everybody was forced to laugh, especially when
-the noble dog took a leap that would have cleared a five-barred gate.
-
-But things were getting slow on the third morning, when up sprang Burly
-Bill with his cartridge-belt on and his rifle under his arm.
-
-"Cap'n Jake," he said, touching his cap in Royal Navy fashion, "presents
-his compliments to the crew of this durned old stack o' timber, and begs
-to say that Master Rolly and Master Dick can come on shore with me for a
-run among the 'gators, but that Miss Peggy had better stop on board with
-Beeboo. Her life is too precious to risk!"
-
-"Precious or not precious," pouted the girl, "Miss Peggy's going, and
-Brawn too; so you may tell Captain Jake that."
-
-"Bravo, Miss Peggy! you're a real St. Clair. Well, Beeboo, hurry up,
-and get the nicest bit of cold luncheon ready for us ever you made in
-your life."
-
-"Beeboo do dat foh true. Plenty quick, too; but oh, Massa Bill, 'spose
-you let any ebil ting befall de poh chillun, I hopes de 'gators'll eat
-you up!"
-
-"More likely, Beeb, that we'll eat them; and really, come to think of
-it, a slice off a young 'gator's tail aint 'arf bad tackle, Beeboo."
-
-An hour after this the boat was dancing over the rippling river. It was
-not the dinghy, but a gig. Burly Bill himself was stroke, and three
-Indians handled the other bits of timber, while Roland took the tiller.
-
-The redskins sang a curious but happy boat-lilt as they rowed, and Bill
-joined in with his 'cello voice:
-
- "Ober de watter and ober de sea--ee--ee,
- De big black boat am rowing so free,
- Eee--Eee--O--ay--O!
- De big black boat, is it nuffin' to me--ee--ee,
- We're rowing so free?
-
- "Oh yes, de black boat am some-dings to me
- As she rolls o'er de watter and swings o'er de sea,
- Foh de light ob my life, she sits in de stern,
- An' sweet am de glance o' Peggy's dark e'e,
- Ee--ee--O--ay--O--O!"
-
-
-"Well steered!" said Burly Bill, as Roland ran the gig on the sandy
-beach of a sweet little backwater.
-
-Very soon all were landed. Bill went first as guide, and the Indians
-brought up the rear, carrying the basket and a spare gun or two.
-
-Great caution and care were required in venturing far into this wild,
-tropical forest, not so much on account of the beasts that infested it
-as the fear of getting lost.
-
-It was very still and quiet here, however, and Bill had taken the
-precaution to leave a man in the boat, with orders to keep his weather
-ear "lifting", and if he heard four shots fired in rapid succession late
-in the afternoon to fire in reply at once.
-
-It was now the heat of the day, however, and the hairy inhabitants of
-this sylvan wilderness were all sound asleep, jaguars and pumas among
-the trees, and the tapirs in small herds wherever the jungle was
-densest.
-
-There was no chance, therefore, of getting a shot at anything.
-Nevertheless, the boys and Peggy were not idle. They had brought
-butterfly-nets with them, and the specimens they caught when about five
-miles inland, where the forest opened out into a shrub-clad moorland,
-were large and glorious in the extreme.
-
-Indeed, some of them would fetch gold galore in the London markets.
-
-But though these butterflies had an immense spread of quaintly-shaped
-and exquisitely-coloured wings, the smaller ones were even more
-brilliant.
-
-Strange it is that Nature paints these creatures in colours which no
-sunshine can fade. All the tints that man ever invented grow pale in
-the sun; these never do, and the same may be said concerning the
-tropical birds that they saw so many of to-day.
-
-But no one had the heart to shoot any of these. Why should they soil
-such beautiful plumage with blood, and so bring grief and woe into this
-love-lit wilderness?
-
-This is not a book on natural history, else gladly would I describe the
-beauties in shape and colour of the birds, and their strange manners,
-the wary ways adopted in nest-building, and their songs and queer ways
-of love-making.
-
-Suffice it to say here that the boys were delighted with all the
-tropical wonders and all the picturesque gorgeousness they saw
-everywhere around them.
-
-But their journey was not without a spice of real danger and at times of
-discomfort. The discomfort we may dismiss at once. It was borne, as
-Beeboo would say, with Christian "forty-tood", and was due partly to the
-clouds of mosquitoes they encountered wherever the soil was damp and
-marshy, and partly to the attacks of tiny, almost invisible, insects of
-the jigger species that came from the grass and ferns and heaths to
-attack their legs.
-
-Burly Bill was an old forester, and carried with him an infallible
-remedy for mosquito and jigger bites, which acted like a charm.
-
-In the higher ground--where tropical heath and heather painted the
-surface with hues of crimson, pink, and purple--snakes wriggled and
-darted about everywhere.
-
-One cannot help wondering why Nature has taken the pains to paint many
-of the most deadly of these in colours that rival the hues of the
-humming-birds that yonder flit from bush to bush, from flower to flower.
-
-Perhaps it is that they may the more easily seek their prey, their gaudy
-coats matching well with the shrubs and blossoms that they wriggle
-amongst, while gliding on and up to seize helpless birds in their nests
-or to devour the eggs.
-
-Parrots here, and birds of that ilk, have an easy way of repelling such
-invaders, for as soon as they see them they utter a scream that
-paralyses the intruders, and causes them to fall helplessly to the
-ground.
-
-To all creatures Nature grants protection, and clothes them in a manner
-that shall enable them to gain a subsistence; but, moreover, every
-creature in the world has received from the same great power the means
-of defending or protecting itself against the attacks of enemies.
-
-On both sides, then, is Nature just, for though she does her best to
-keep living species extant until evolved into higher forms of life, she
-permits each species to prey on the overgrowth or overplus of others
-that it may live.
-
-Knocking over a heap of soft dry mould with the butt end of his rifle,
-Dick started back in terror to see crawl out from the heap a score or
-more of the most gigantic beetles anyone could imagine. These were
-mostly black, or of a beautiful bronze, with streaks of metallic blue
-and crimson.
-
-They are called harlequins, and live on carrion. Nothing that dies comes
-wrong to these monsters, and a few of them will seize and carry away a
-dead snake five or six hundred times their own weight. My readers will
-see by this that it is not so much muscle that is needed for feats of
-strength as indomitable will and nerve force. But health must be at the
-bottom of all. Were a man, comparatively speaking, as strong as one of
-these beetles, he could lift on his back and walk off with a weight of
-thirty tons!
-
-Our heroes had to stop every now and then to marvel at the huge working
-ants, and all the wondrous proofs of reason they evinced.
-
-It was well to stand off, however, if, with snapping horizontal
-mandibles and on business intent, any of these fellows approached. For
-their bites are as poisonous as those of the green scorpions or
-centipedes themselves.
-
-What with one thing or another, all hands were attacked by healthy
-hunger at last, and sought the shade of a great spreading tree to
-satisfy Nature's demands.
-
-When the big basket was opened it was found that Beeboo had quite
-excelled herself. So glorious a luncheon made every eye sparkle to look
-at it. And the odour thereof caused Brawn's mouth to water and his eyes
-to sparkle with expectancy.
-
-The Indians had disappeared for a time. They were only just round the
-shoulder of a hill, however, where they, too, were enjoying a good feed.
-
-But just as Burly Bill was having a taste from a clear bottle, which, as
-far as the look of it went, would have passed for cold tea, two Indian
-boys appeared, bringing with them the most delicious of fruits as well
-as fresh ripe nuts.
-
-The luncheon after that merged into a banquet.
-
-Burly Bill took many sips of his cold tea. When I come to think over
-it, however, I conclude there was more rum than cold tea in that brown
-mixture, or Bill would hardly have smacked his lips and sighed with such
-satisfaction after every taste.
-
-The fruit done, and even Brawn satisfied, the whole crew gave themselves
-up to rest and meditation. The boys talked low, because Peggy's
-meditations had led to gentle slumber. An Indian very thoughtfully
-brought a huge plantain leaf which quite covered her, and protected her
-from the chequered rays of sunshine that found their way through the
-tree. Brawn edged in below the leaf also, and enjoyed a good sleep
-beside his little mistress.
-
-Not a gun had been fired all day long, yet a more enjoyable picnic in a
-tropical forest it would be difficult to imagine.
-
-Perhaps the number of the Indians scared the jaguars away, for none
-appeared.
-
-Yet the day was not to end without an adventure.
-
-Darkness in this country follows the short twilight so speedily, that
-Burly Bill did well to get clear of the forest's gloom while the sun was
-still well above the horizon.
-
-He trusted to the compass and his own good sense as a forester to come
-out close to the spot where he had left the boat. But he was deceived.
-He struck the river a good mile and a half above the place where the
-steamer lay at anchor and the raft aground on the shoals.
-
-Lower and lower sank the sun. The ground was wet and marshy, and the
-'gators very much in evidence indeed.
-
-Now the tapirs--and droll pig-bodied creatures they look, though in
-South America nearly as big as donkeys--are of a very retiring
-disposition, but not really solitary animals as cheap books on natural
-history would have us believe. They frequent low woods, where their
-long snouts enable them to pull down the tender twigs and foliage on
-which, with roots, which they can speedily unearth, they manage to
-exist--yes, and to wax fat and happy.
-
-But they are strict believers in the doctrine of cleanliness, and are
-never found very far from water. They bathe every night.
-
-Just when the returning picnic was within about half a mile of the boat,
-Burly Bill carrying Peggy on his shoulder because the ground was damp, a
-terrible scrimmage suddenly took place a few yards round a backwater.
-
-There was grunting, squeaking, the splashing of water, and cries of
-pain.
-
-"Hurry on, boys; hurry on; two of you are enough! It's your show, lads."
-
-The boys needed no second bidding, and no sooner had they opened out the
-curve than a strange sight met their gaze.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI--"NOT ONE SINGLE DROP OF BLOOD SHED"
-
-
-A gigantic and horribly fierce alligator had seized upon a strong young
-tapir, and was trying to drag it into the water.
-
-The poor creature had both its feet set well in front, and was resisting
-with all its might, while two other larger animals, probably the
-parents, were clawing the cayman desperately with their fore-feet.
-
-But ill, indeed, would it have fared with all three had not our heroes
-appeared just in the nick of time.
-
-For several more of these scaly and fearsome reptiles were hurrying to
-the scene of action.
-
-Dick's first shot was a splendid one. It struck the offending cayman in
-the eye, and went crashing through his brain.
-
-The brute gasped, the blood flowed freely, and as he fell on his side,
-turning up his yellow belly, the young tapir got free, and was hurried
-speedily away to the woods.
-
-Volley after volley was poured in on the enraged 'gators, but the boys
-had to retreat as they fought. Had they not done so, my story would have
-stopped short just here.
-
-It was not altogether the sun's parting rays that so encrimsoned the
-water, but the blood of those old-world caymans.
-
-Three in all were killed in addition to the one first shot. So that it
-is no wonder the boys felt elated.
-
-Beeboo had supper waiting and there was nothing talked about that
-evening except their strange adventures in the beautiful forest.
-
- ----
-
-Probably no one could sleep more soundly than did our heroes and heroine
-that night.
-
-Next day, and next, they went on shore again, and on the third a huge
-jaguar, who fancied he would like to dine off Brawn's shoulder, fell a
-victim to Dick Temple's unerring aim.
-
-But the raft never stirred nor moved for a whole week.
-
-Said Bill to Jake one morning, as he took his meerschaum from his mouth:
-
-"I think, Jake, and w'at I thinks be's this like. There ain't ne'er a
-morsel o' good smokin' and on'y just lookin' at that fine and valuable
-pile o' timber. It strikes me conclusive like that something 'ad better
-be done."
-
-"And what would you propose, Bill?" said Jake.
-
-"Well, Jake, you're captain like, and my proposition is subject to your
-disposition as it were. But I'd lighten her, and lighten her till she
-floats; then tow her off, and build up the odd timbers again."
-
-"Good! You have a better head than I have, Bill; and it's you that
-should have been skipper, not me."
-
-Nothing was done that day, however, except making a few more attempts
-with the steamer at full speed to tow her off. She did shift and slue
-round a little, but that was all.
-
-Next morning dawned as beautifully as any that had gone before it.
-
-There were fleecy clouds, however, hurrying across the sky as if on
-business bent, and the blue between them was bluer than ever our young
-folks had seen it.
-
-Dick Temple, with Roland and Peggy, had made up their minds to go on
-shore for another day while the work of dismantling the raft went on.
-
-But a fierce south wind began to blow, driving heavy black clouds before
-it, and lashing the river into foam.
-
-One of those terrible tropic storms was evidently on the cards, and come
-it did right soon.
-
-The darkest blackness was away to the west, and here, though no thunder
-could be heard, the lightning was very vivid. It was evident that this
-was the vortex of the hurricane, for only a few drops of rain fell
-around the raft.
-
-The picnic scheme was of course abandoned, and all waited anxiously
-enough for something to come.
-
-That something did come in less than an hour--the descent of the mighty
-Amazon in flood. Its tributaries had no doubt been swollen by the awful
-rain and water-spouts, and poured into the great queen of rivers double
-their usual discharge.
-
-A bore is a curling wave like a shore breaker that rushes down the
-smaller rivers, and is terribly destructive to boating or to shipping.
-
-The Amazon, however, did not rise like this. It came rushing almost
-silently down in a broad tall wave that appeared to stretch right across
-it, from the forest-clad bank where the raft lay to the far-off green
-horizon in the north.
-
-But Burly Bill was quite prepared for eventualities.
-
-Steam had been got up, the vessel's bows were headed for up stream, and
-the hawser betwixt raft and boat tautened.
-
-On and on rushed the huge wave. It towered above the raft, even when
-fifty yards away, in the most threatening manner, as if about to sweep
-all things to destruction.
-
-But on its nearer approach it glided in under the raft, and steamer as
-well--like some huge submarine monster such as we read of in fairy books
-of the long-long-ago--glided in under them, and seemed to lift them
-sky-high.
-
-"Go ahead at full speed!"
-
-It was the sonorous voice of Burly Bill shouting to the engineer.
-
-"Ay, ay, sir!" came the cheery reply.
-
-The screw went round with a rush.
-
-It churned up a wake of foaming water as the _Peggy_ began to forge
-ahead, and next minute, driven along on the breeze, the monster raft
-began to follow and was soon out and away beyond danger from rock or
-shoal.
-
-Then arose to heaven a prayer of thankfulness, and a cheer so loud and
-long that even the parrots and monkeys in the forest depths heard it,
-and yelled and chattered till they frightened both 'gators and jaguars.
-
-Just two weeks after these adventures, the little _Peggy_ was at anchor,
-and the great raft safely beached.
-
-Burly Bill was left in charge with his white men and his Indians, with
-Dick Temple to act as supercargo, and Jake Solomons with Roland and
-Peggy, not to mention the dog, started off for Par.
-
-In due course, but after many discomforts, they arrived there, and Jake,
-after taking rooms in a hotel, hurried off to secure his despatches from
-the post-office.
-
-"No letters!" cried Jake, as his big brown fist came down with a bang on
-the counter. "Why, I see the very documents I came for in the
-pigeon-hole behind you!"
-
-The clerk, somewhat alarmed at the attitude of this tall Yankee
-backwoodsman, pulled them out and looked at them.
-
-"They cannot be delivered," he said.
-
-"And why?" thundered Jake, "Inasmuch as to wherefore, you greasy-faced
-little whipper-snapper!"
-
-"Not sufficient postage."
-
-Jake thrust one hand into a front pocket, and one behind him. Then on
-the counter he dashed down a bag of cash and a six-chambered revolver.
-
-"I'm Jake Solomons," he said. "There before you lies peace or war.
-Hand over the letters, and you'll have the rhino. Refuse, and I guess
-and calculate I'll blow the whole top of your head off."
-
-The clerk preferred peace, and Jake strode away triumphant.
-
-When he returned to the hotel and told the boys the story, they laughed
-heartily. In their eyes, Jake was more a hero than ever.
-
-"Ah!" said the giant quietly, "there's nothing brings these long-shore
-chaps sooner to their senses than letting 'em have a squint down the
-barrel of a six-shooter."
-
-The letters were all from Mr. St. Clair, and had been lying at the
-post-office for over a week. They all related to business, to the sale
-of the timber and the other commodities, the best markets, and so on and
-so forth, with hints as to the gold-mine.
-
-But the last one was much more bulky than the others, and so soon as he
-had glanced at the first lines, Jake lit his meerschaum, then threw
-himself back in his rocker to quietly discuss it.
-
-It was a plain, outspoken letter, such as one man of the world writes to
-another. Here is one extract:--
-
-_Our business is increasing at a rapid rate, Jake Solomon. I have too
-much to do and so have you; therefore, although I did not think it
-necessary to inform you before, I have been in communication with my
-brother John, and he is sending me out a shrewd, splendid man of
-business. He will have arrived before your return._
-
-_I can trust John thoroughly, and this Don Pedro Salvador, over and
-above his excellent business capabilities, can talk Spanish, French, and
-Portuguese._
-
-_I do not quite like the name, Jake, so he must be content to be called
-plain Mr. Peter._
-
- ----
-
-About the very time that Jake Solomons was reading this letter, there
-sat close to the sky-light of an outward-bound steamer at Liverpool, two
-men holding low but earnest conversation. Their faces were partly
-obscured, for it was night, and the only light a glimmer from the ship's
-lamp.
-
-Steam was up and roaring through the pipes.
-
-A casual observer might have noted that one was a slim, swarthy, but
-wiry, smart-looking man of about thirty. His companion was a man
-considerably over forty.
-
-"I shall go now," said the latter. "You have my instructions, and I
-believe I can trust you."
-
-"Have I not already given you reason to?" was the rejoinder. "At the
-risk of penal servitude did I not steal my employer's keys, break into
-his room at night, and copy that will for you? It was but a copy of a
-copy, it is true, and I could not discover the original, else the
-quickest and simplest plan would have been--fire:"
-
-"True, you did so, but"--the older man laughed lightly--"you were well
-paid for the duty you performed."
-
-"Duty, eh?" sneered the other. "Well," he added, "thank God nothing has
-been discovered. My employer has bidden me an almost affectionate
-farewell, and given me excellent certificates."
-
-The other started up as a loud voice hailed the deck:
-
-"Any more for the shore!"
-
-"I am going now," he said. "Good-bye, old man, and remember my last
-words: not one single drop of blood shed!"
-
-"I understand, and will obey to the letter. Obedience pays."
-
-"True; and you shall find it so. Good-bye!"
-
-"_A Dios!_" said the other.
-
-The last bell was struck, and the gangway was hauled on shore.
-
-The great ship _Benedict_ was that night rolling and tossing about on
-the waves of the Irish Channel.
-
- ----
-
-Jake Solomons acquainted Roland and Peggy with the contents of this last
-letter, and greatly did the latter wonder what the new overseer would be
-like, and if she should love him or not.
-
-For Peggy had a soft little heart of her own, and was always prepared to
-be friendly with anyone who, according to her idea, was nice.
-
-Jake took his charges all round the city next day and showed them the
-sights of what is now one of the most beautiful towns in South America.
-
-The gardens, the fountains, the churches and palaces, the flowers and
-fruit, and feathery palm-trees, all things indeed spoke of
-delightfulness, and calm, and peace.
-
-And far beyond and behind all this was the boundless forest primeval.
-
-This was not their last drive through the city, and this good fellow
-Jake, though his business took him from home most of the day, delighted
-to take the children to every place of amusement he could think of. But
-despite all this, these children of the forest wilds began to long for
-home, and very much rejoiced were they when one evening, after dinner,
-Jake told them they should start on the morrow for Bona Vista, near to
-which town the little steamer lay, and so up the great river and home.
-
-Jake had done all his business, and done it satisfactorily, and could
-return to the old plantation and Burnley Hall with a light and cheerful
-heart.
-
-He had even sold the mine, although it was not to be worked for some
-time to come.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII--"A COLD HAND SEEMED TO CLUTCH HER HEART"
-
-
-Many months passed away pleasantly and happily enough on the old
-plantation. The children--Roland, by the way, would hardly have liked
-to be called a child now--were, of course, under the able tuition of Mr.
-Simons, but in addition Peggy had a governess, imported directly from
-Par.
-
-This was a dark-eyed Spanish girl, very piquant and pretty, who talked
-French well, and played on both the guitar and piano.
-
-Tom St. Clair had not only his boy's welfare, but his niece's, or
-adopted daughter's, also at heart.
-
-It would be some years yet before she arrived at the age of sweet
-seventeen, but when she did, her uncle determined to sell off or realize
-on his plantation, his goods and chattels, and sail across the seas once
-more to dear old Cornwall and the real Burnley Hall.
-
-He looked forward to that time as the weary worker in stuffy towns or
-cities does to a summer holiday.
-
-There is excitement enough in money-making, it is like an exhilarating
-game of billiards or whist, but it is apt to become tiresome.
-
-And Tom St. Clair was often overtired and weary. He was always glad when
-he reached home at night to his rocking-chair and a good dinner, after
-toiling all day in the recently-started india-rubber-forest works.
-
-But Mr. Peter took a vast deal of labour off his hands.
-
-Mr. Peter, or Don Pedro, ingratiated himself with nearly everyone from
-the first, and seemed to take to the work as if to the manner born.
-
-There were three individuals, however, who could not like him, strange
-to say; these were Peggy herself, Benee the Indian who had guided them
-through the forest when lost, and who had remained on the estate ever
-since, while the third was Brawn, the Irish wolf-hound.
-
-The dog showed his teeth if Peter tried even to caress him.
-
-Both Roland and Dick--the latter was a very frequent visitor--got on
-very well with Peter--trusted him thoroughly.
-
-"How is it, Benee," said Roland one day to the Indian, "that you do not
-love Don Pedro?"
-
-Benee spat on the ground and stamped his foot.
-
-"I watch he eye," the semi-savage replied. "He one very bad man. Some
-day you know plenty moochee foh true."
-
-"Well," said Tom one evening as he and his wife sat alone in the
-verandah together, "I do long to get back to England. I am tired, dear
-wife--my heart is weak why should we remain here over two years more?
-We are wealthy enough, and I promise myself and you, dear, many long
-years of health and happiness yet in the old country."
-
-He paused and smoked a little; then, after watching for a few moments
-the fireflies that flitted from bush to bush, he stretched his left arm
-out and rested his hand on his wife's lap.
-
-Some impulse seized her. She took it and pressed it to her lips. But a
-tear trickled down her cheek as she did so.
-
-Lovers still this couple were, though nearly twenty years had elapsed
-since he led her, a bonnie, buxom, blushing lassie, to the altar.
-
-But now in a sweet, low, but somewhat sad voice he sang a verse of that
-dear old song--"We have lived and loved together":--
-
- "We have lived and loved together
- Through many changing years,
- We have shared each other's gladness
- And dried each other's tears.
- I have never known a sorrow
- That was long unsoothed by thee,
- For thy smile can make a summer
- Where darkness else would be.
-
-
-Mrs. St. Clair would never forget that evening on the star-lit lawn, nor
-the flitting, little fire-insects, nor her husband's voice.
-
- ----
-
-Is it not just when we expect it least that sorrow sometimes falls
-suddenly upon us, hiding or eclipsing all our promised happiness and
-joy?
-
-I have now to write a pitiful part of my too true story, but it must be
-done.
-
-Next evening St. Clair rode home an hour earlier.
-
-He complained of feeling more tired than usual, and said he would lie
-down on the drawing-room sofa until dinner was ready.
-
-Peggy went singing along the hall to call him at the appointed time.
-
-She went singing into the room.
-
-"Pa, dear," she cried merrily; "Uncle-pa, dinner is all beautifully
-ready!"
-
-"Come, Unky-pa. How sound you sleep!"
-
-Then a terror crept up from the earth, as it were, and a cold hand
-seemed to clutch her heart.
-
-She ran out of the room.
-
-"Oh, Auntie-ma!" she cried, "come, come quickly, pa won't wake, nor
-speak!"
-
-Heigho! the summons had come, and dear "Uncle-pa" would never, never
-wake again.
-
-This is a short chapter, but it is too sad to continue.
-
-So falls the curtain on the first act of this life-drama.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII--FIERCELY AND WILDLY BOTH SIDES FOUGHT
-
-
-The gloomy event related in last chapter must not be allowed to cast a
-damper over our story.
-
-Of course death is always and everywhere hovering near, but why should
-boys like you and me, reader, permit that truth to cloud our days or
-stand between us and happiness?
-
-Two years, then, have elapsed since poor, brave Tom St. Clair's death.
-
-He is buried near the edge of the forest in a beautiful enclosure where
-rare shrubs grow, and where flowers trail and climb far more beautiful
-than any we ever see in England.
-
-At first Mrs. St. Clair had determined to sell all off and go back to
-the old country, but her overseer Jake Solomons and Mr. Peter persuaded
-her not to, or it seemed that it was their advice which kept her from
-carrying out her first intentions. But she had another reason, she
-found she could not leave that lonesome grave yet awhile.
-
-So the years passed on.
-
-The estate continued to thrive.
-
-Roland was now a handsome young fellow in his eighteenth year, and
-Peggy, now beautiful beyond compare, was nearly fifteen.
-
-Dick Temple, the bold and reckless huntsman and horseman, was quieter
-now in his attentions towards her. She was no longer the child that he
-could lift on to his broad young shoulders and carry, neighing and
-galloping like a frightened colt, round and round the lawn.
-
-And Roland felt himself a man. He was more sober and sedate, and had
-taken over all his father's work and his father's responsibilities. But
-for all that, lightly enough lay the burden on his heart.
-
-For he had youth on his side, and
-
- "In the lexicon of youth which fate reserves
- For a bright manhood there is no such word
- As fail".
-
- ----
-
-I do not, however, wish to be misunderstood. It must not be supposed
-that Roland had no difficulties to contend with, that all his business
-life was as fair and serene as a bright summer's day. On the contrary,
-he had many losses owing to the fluctuations of the markets and the
-failures of great firms, owing to fearful storms, and more than once
-owing to strikes or revolts among his Indians in the great india-rubber
-forest.
-
-But Roland was light-hearted and young, and difficulties in life, I have
-often said, are just like nine-pins, they are put up to be bowled over.
-
-Besides, be it remembered that if it were all plain sailing with us in
-this world we should not be able to appreciate how really happy our
-lives are. The sky is always bluest 'twixt the darkest clouds.
-
-On the whole, Roland, who took stock, and, with honest Bill and Jake
-Solomons, went over the books every quarter, had but little reason to
-complain. This stock-taking consumed most of their spare time for the
-greater part of a week, and when it was finished Roland invariably gave
-a dinner-party, at which I need hardly say his dear friend Dick Temple
-was present. And this was always the happiest of happy nights to Dick,
-because the girl he loved more than all things on earth put together was
-here, and looked so innocent and beautiful in her simple dresses of
-white and blue.
-
-There was no such thing as flirtation here, but Dick was fully and
-completely in earnest when he told himself that if he lived till he was
-three- or four-and-twenty he would ask Peggy to be his wife.
-
-Ah! there is many a slip 'twixt the cup and the lip.
-
-Dick, I might, could, would, or should have told you before, lived with
-a bachelor uncle, who, being rather old and infirm, seldom came out. He
-had good earnest men under him, however, as overseers, and his
-plantations were thriving, especially that in which tobacco was
-cultivated.
-
-The old man was exceedingly fond of Dick, and Dick would be his heir.
-
-Probably it was for his uncle's sake that Dick stayed in the
-country--and of course for Peggy's and Roland's--for, despite its grand
-field for sport and adventure, the lad had a strange longing to go to
-England and play cricket or football.
-
-He had been born in Britain just as Roland was, and had visited his
-childhood's home more than once during his short life.
-
-Now just about this time Don Pedro, or Mr. Peter as all called him, had
-asked for and obtained a holiday. He was going to Par for a change, he
-said, and to meet a friend from England.
-
-That he did meet a friend from England there was little doubt, but their
-interview was a very short one. Where he spent the rest of his time was
-best known to himself.
-
-In three months or a little less he turned up smiling again, and most
-effusive.
-
-About a fortnight after his arrival he came to Jake one morning pretty
-early.
-
-Jake was preparing to start on horseback for the great forest.
-
-"I'm on the horns of a dilemma, Mr. Solomons," he said, laughing his
-best laugh. "During the night about twenty Bolivian Indians have
-encamped near to the forest. They ask for work on the india-rubber
-trees. They are well armed, and all sturdy warriors. They look as if
-fighting was more in their line than honest labour."
-
-"Well, Mr. Peter, what is their excuse for being here anyhow?"
-
-"They are bound for the sea-shore at the mouths of the river, and want
-to earn a few dollars to help them on."
-
-"Well, where is the other horn of the dilemma?"
-
-"Oh! if I give them work they may corrupt our fellows."
-
-"Then, Mr. Peter, I'd give the whole blessed lot the boot and the sack."
-
-"Ah! now, Mr. Solomons, you've got to the other horn. These savages,
-for they are little else, are revengeful."
-
-"We're not afraid."
-
-"No, we needn't be were they to make war openly, but they are sly, and
-as dangerous as sly. They would in all probability burn us down some
-dark night."
-
-Jake mused for a minute. Then he said abruptly:
-
-"Let the poor devils earn a few dollars, Mr. Peter, if they are
-stony-broke, and then send them on their way rejoicing."
-
-"That's what I say, too," said Burly Bill, who had just come up. "I've
-been over yonder in the starlight. They look deuced uncouth and nasty.
-So does a bull-dog, Jake, but is there a softer-hearted, more kindly dog
-in all creation?"
-
-So that very day the Indians set to work with the other squads.
-
-The labour connected with the collecting of india-rubber is by no means
-very hard, but it requires a little skill, and is irksome to those not
-used to such toil.
-
-But labour is scarce and Indians are often lazy, so on the whole Jake
-was not sorry to have the new hands, or "serinqueiros" as they are
-called.
-
-The india-rubber trees are indigenous and grow in greatest profusion on
-that great tributary of the Amazon called the Madeira. But when poor
-Tom St. Clair came to the country he had an eye to business. He knew
-that india-rubber would always command a good market, and so he visited
-the distant forests, studied the growth and culture of the trees as
-conducted by Nature, and ventured to believe that he could improve upon
-her methods.
-
-He was successful, and it was not a great many years before he had a
-splendid plantation of young trees in his forest, to say nothing of the
-older ones that had stood the brunt of many a wild tropical storm.
-
-It will do no harm if I briefly describe the method of obtaining the
-india-rubber. Tiny pots of tin, holding about half a pint, are hung
-under an incision in the bark of the tree, and these are filled and
-emptied every day, the contents being delivered by the Indian labourers
-at the house or hut of an under-overseer.
-
-The sap is all emptied into larger utensils, and a large smoking fire,
-made of the nuts of a curious kind of palm called the Motokoo, being
-built, the operators dip wooden shovels into the sap, twirling these
-round quickly and holding them in the smoke. Coagulation takes place
-very quickly. Again the shovel is dipped in the sap, and the same
-process is repeated until the coagulated rubber is about two inches
-thick, when it is cooled, cut, or sliced off, and is ready for the
-distant market.
-
-Now, from the very day of their arrival, there was no love lost between
-the old and steady hands and this new band of independent and flighty
-ones.
-
-The latter were willing enough to slice the bark and to hang up their
-pannikins, and they would even empty them when filled, and condescend to
-carry their contents to the preparing-house. But they were lazy in the
-extreme at gathering the nuts, and positively refused to smoke the sap
-and coagulate it.
-
-It made them weep, they explained, and it was much more comfortable to
-lie and wait for the sap while they smoked and talked in their own
-strange language.
-
-After a few days the permanent hands refused to work at the same trees,
-or even in the same part of the estrados or roads that led through the
-plantation of rubber-trees.
-
-A storm was brewing, that was evident. Nor was it very long before it
-burst.
-
-All unconscious that anything was wrong, Peggy, with Brawn, was romping
-about one day enjoying the busy scene, Peggy often entering into
-conversation with some of her old favourites, when one of the strange
-Indians, returning from the tub with an empty tin, happened to tread on
-Brawn's tail.
-
-The dog snarled, but made no attempt to bite. Afraid, however, that he
-would spring upon the fellow, Peggy threw herself on the ground,
-encircling her arms around Brawn's shoulders, and it was she who
-received the blow that was meant for the dog.
-
-It cut her across the arm, and she fainted with pain.
-
-Brawn sprang at once upon his man and brought him down.
-
-[Illustration: "BRAWN SPRANG AT ONCE UPON HIS MAN"]
-
-He shook the wretch as if he had been but a rat, and blood flowed
-freely.
-
-Burly Bill was not far off, and just as the great hound had all but
-fixed the savage by the windpipe, which he would undoubtedly have torn
-out, Bill pulled him off by the collar and pacified him.
-
-The blood-stained Indian started to his legs to make good his retreat,
-but as his back was turned in flight, Bill rushed after him and dealt
-him a kick that laid him prone on his face.
-
-This was the signal for a general mle, and a terrible one it was!
-
-Bill got Peggy pulled to one side, and gave her in charge to Dick, who
-had come thundering across on his huge horse towards the scene of
-conflict.
-
-Under the shelter of a spreading tree Dick lifted his precious charge.
-But she speedily revived when he laid her flat on the ground. She
-smiled feebly and held out her hand, which Dick took and kissed, the
-tears positively trickling over his cheeks.
-
-Perhaps it was a kind of boyish impulse that caused him to say what he
-now said:
-
-"Oh, Peggy, my darling, how I love you! Whereever you are, dear,
-wherever I am--oh, always think of me a little!"
-
-That was all.
-
-A faint colour suffused Peggy's cheek for just a moment. Then she sat
-up, and the noble hound anxiously licked her face.
-
-But she had made no reply.
-
-Meanwhile the mle went merrily on, as a Donnybrook Irishman might
-remark.
-
-Fiercely and wildly both sides fought, using as weapons whatsoever came
-handiest.
-
-But soon the savages were beaten and discomfited with, sad to tell, the
-loss of one life--that of a savage.
-
-Not only Jake himself, but Roland and Mr. Peter were now on the scene of
-the recent conflict. Close to Peter's side, watching every movement of
-his lips and eyes, stood Benee, the Indian who had saved the children.
-
-Several times Peter looked as if he felt uneasy, and once he turned
-towards Benee as if about to speak.
-
-He said nothing, and the man continued his watchful scrutiny.
-
-After consulting for a short time together, Jake and Roland, with Burly
-Bill, determined to hold a court of inquiry on the spot.
-
-But, strange to say, Peter kept aloof. He continued to walk to and fro,
-and Benee still hung in his rear. But this ex-savage was soon called
-upon to act as interpreter if his services should be needed, which they
-presently were.
-
-Every one of the civilized Indians had the same story to tell of the
-laziness and insolence of the Bolivians, and now Jake ordered the chief
-of the other party to come forward.
-
-They sulked for a short time.
-
-But Jake drew his pistols, and, one in each hand, stepped out and
-ordered all to the front.
-
-They made no verbal response to the questions put to them through Benee.
-Their only reply was scowling.
-
-"Well, Mr. St. Clair," said Jake, "my advice is to pay these rascals and
-send them off."
-
-"Good!" said Roland. "I have money."
-
-The chief was ordered to draw nearer, and the dollars were counted into
-his claw-like fist.
-
-The fellow drew up his men in a line and gave to each his pay, reserving
-his own.
-
-Then at a signal, given by the chief, there was raised a terrible
-war-whoop and howl.
-
-The chief spat on his dollars and dashed them into a neighbouring pool.
-Every man did the same.
-
-Roland was looking curiously on. He was wondering what would happen
-next.
-
-He had not very long to wait, for with his foot the chief turned the
-dead man on his back, and the blood from his death-stab poured out
-afresh.
-
-He dipped his palm in the red stream and held it up on high. His men
-followed his example.
-
-Then all turned to the sun, and in one voice uttered just one word,
-which, being interpreted by Benee, was understood to mean--REVENGE!
-
-They licked the blood from their hands, and, turning round, marched in
-silence and in single file out and away from the forest and were seen no
-more.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX--THAT TREE IN THE FOREST GLADE
-
-
-The things, the happenings, I have now to tell you of in this chapter
-form the turning-point in our story.
-
-Weeks passed by after the departure of that mysterious band of savages,
-and things went on in the same old groove on the plantation.
-
-Whence the savages had come, or whither they had gone, none could tell.
-But all were relieved at their exit, dramatic and threatening though it
-had been.
-
-The hands were all very busy now everywhere, and one day, it being the
-quarter's end, after taking stock Roland gave his usual dinner-party,
-and a ball to his natives. These were all dressed out as gaily as gaily
-could be. The ladies wore the most tawdry of finery, most of which they
-had bought, or rather had had brought them by their brothers and lovers
-from Par, and nothing but the most pronounced evening dress did any
-"lady of colour" deign to wear.
-
-Why should they not ape the quality, and "poh deah Miss Peggy".
-
-Peggy was very happy that evening, and so I need hardly say was Dick
-Temple. Though he never had dared to speak of love again, no one could
-have looked at those dark daring eyes of his and said it was not there.
-
-It must have been about eleven by the clock and a bright moonlight night
-when Dick started to ride home. He knew the track well, he said, and
-could not be prevailed upon to stay all night. Besides, his uncle
-expected him.
-
-The dinner and ball given to the plantation hands had commenced at
-sunset, or six o'clock, and after singing hymns--a queer finish to a
-most hilarious dance--all retired, and by twelve of the clock not a
-sound was to be heard over all the plantation save now and then the
-mournful cry of the shriek-owl or a plash in the river, showing that the
-'gators preferred a moonshiny night to daylight itself.
-
-The night wore on, one o'clock, two o'clock chimed from the turret on
-Burnley Hall, and soon after this, had anyone been in the vicinity he
-would have seen a tall figure, wrapped in cloak and hood, steal away
-from the house adown the walks that led from the flowery lawns. The
-face was quite hidden, but several times the figure paused, as if to
-listen and glance around, then hurried on once more, and finally
-disappeared in the direction of the forest.
-
-Peggy's bedroom was probably the most tastefully-arranged and
-daintily-draped in the house, and when she lay down to-night and fell
-gently asleep, very sweet indeed were the dreams that visited her
-pillow. The room was on a level with the river lawn, on to which it
-opened by a French or casement window. Three o'clock!
-
-The moon shone on the bed, and even on the girl's face, but did not
-awaken her.
-
-A few minutes after this, and the casement window was quietly opened,
-and the same cloaked figure, which stole away from the mansion an hour
-before, softly entered.
-
-It stood for more than half a minute erect and listening, then, bending
-low beside the bed, listened a moment there.
-
-Did no spectral dream cross the sleeping girl's vision to warn her of
-the dreadful fate in store for her?
-
-Had she shrieked even now, assistance would have been speedily
-forthcoming, and she might have been saved!
-
-But she quietly slumbered on.
-
-Then the dark figure retreated as it had come, and presently another and
-more terrible took its place--a burly savage carrying a blanket or rug.
-
-First the girl's clothing and shoes, her watch and all her trinkets,
-were gathered up and handed to someone on the lawn.
-
-Then the savage, approaching the bed with stealthy footsteps, at once
-enveloped poor Peggy in the rug and bore her off.
-
-For a moment she uttered a muffled moan or two, like a nightmare scream,
-then all was still as the grave.
-
- ----
-
-"Missie Peggy! Missie Peggy," cried Beeboo next morning at eight as she
-entered the room. "What for you sleep so long? Ah!" she added
-sympathizingly, still holding the door-knob in her hand. "Ah! but den
-the poh chile very tired. Dance plenty mooch las' night, and--"
-
-She stopped suddenly.
-
-Something unusual in the appearance of the bed attire attracted her
-attention and she speedily rushed towards it.
-
-She gave vent at once to a loud yell, and Roland himself, who was
-passing near, ran in immediately.
-
-He stood like one in a state of catalepsy, with his eyes fixed on the
-empty bed. But he recovered shortly.
-
-"Oh, this is a fearful day!" he cried, and hastened out to acquaint Jake
-and Bill, both of whom, as well as Mr. Peter, slept in the east wing of
-the mansion.
-
-He ran from door to door knocking very loud and shouting: "Awake, awake,
-Peggy has gone! She has been kidnapped, and the accursed savages have
-had their revenge!"
-
-In their pyjamas only, Jake and Bill appeared, and after a while Mr.
-Peter, fully dressed.
-
-He looked sleepy.
-
-"I had too much wine last night," he said, with a yawn, "and slept very
-heavily all night. But what is the matter?"
-
-He was quietly and quickly informed.
-
-"This is indeed a fearful blow, but surely we can trace the scoundrels!"
-
-"Boys, hurry through with your breakfast," said Roland. "Jake, I will
-be back in a few minutes."
-
-He whistled shrilly and Brawn came rushing to his side.
-
-"Follow me, Brawn."
-
-His object was to find out in which direction the savages had gone.
-
-Had Brawn been a blood-hound he could soon have picked up the scent.
-
-As it was, however, his keen eyes discovered the trail on the lawn, and
-led him to the gate. He howled impatiently to have it opened, then
-bounded out and away towards the forest in a westerly and southerly
-direction, which, if pursued far enough, would lead towards Bolivia,
-along the wild rocky banks of the Madeira River.
-
-It was a whole hour before Brawn returned. He carried something in his
-mouth. He soon found his master, and laid the something gently down at
-his feet, stretching himself--grief-stricken--beside it.
-
-It was one of Peggy's boots, with a white silk stocking in it, drenched
-in blood.
-
-The white men and Indians were now fully aroused, and, leaving Jake in
-charge of the estate, Roland picked out thirty of the best men, armed
-them with guns, and placed them under the command of Burly Bill. Then
-they started off in silence, Roland and Burly mounted, the armed whites
-and Indians on foot.
-
-Brawn went galloping on in front in a very excited manner, often
-returning and barking wildly at the horses as if to hurry them on.
-
-Throughout that forenoon they journeyed by the trail, which was now
-distinct enough, and led through the jungle and forest.
-
-They came out on to a clearing about one o'clock. Here was water in
-abundance, and as they were all thoroughly exhausted, they threw
-themselves down by the spring to quench their thirst and rest.
-
-Bill made haste now to deal out the provisions, and after an hour,
-during which time most of them slept, they resumed their journey.
-
-A mile or two farther on they came to a sight which almost froze their
-blood.
-
-In the middle of a clearing or glade stood a great tree. It was
-hollowed out at one side, and against this was still a heap of
-half-charred wood, evidently the remains of a fierce fire, though every
-ember had died black out.
-
-Here was poor Peggy's other shoe. That too was bloody.
-
-And here was a pool of coagulated blood, with huge rhinoceros beetles
-busy at their work of excavation. Portions or rags of dress also!
-
-It was truly an awful sight!
-
-Roland reined up his horse, and placed his right hand over his eyes.
-
-"Bill," he managed to articulate, "can you have the branches removed,
-and let us know the fearful worst?"
-
-Burly Bill gave the order, and the Indians tossed the half-burned wood
-aside.
-
-Then they pulled out bone after bone of limbs, of arms, of ribs. But
-all were charred almost into cinders!
-
-Roland now seemed to rise to the occasion.
-
-He held his right arm on high.
-
-"Bill," he cried; "here, under the blazing sun and above the remains,
-the dust of my dead sister, I register a vow to follow up these fiends
-to their distant homes, if Providence shall but lead us aright, and to
-slay and burn every wretch who has aided or abetted this terrible deed!"
-
-"I too register that vow," said Bill solemnly.
-
-"And I, and I!" shouted the white men, and even the Indians.
-
-They went on again once more, after burying the charred bones and dust.
-
-But the trail took them to a ford, and beyond the stream there was not
-the imprint of even a single footstep.
-
-The retiring savages must either have doubled back on their tracks or
-waded for miles up or down the rocky stream before landing.
-
-Nothing more could be done to-day, for the sun was already declining,
-and they must find their way out of the gloom of the forest before
-darkness. So the return journey was made, and just as the sun's red
-beams were crimsoning the waters of the western river, they arrived once
-more at the plantation and Burnley Hall.
-
-The first to meet them was Peter himself. He seemed all anxiety.
-
-"What have you found?" he gasped.
-
-It was a moment or two before Roland could reply.
-
-"Only the charred remains of my poor sister!" he said at last, then
-compressed his mouth in an effort to keep back the tears.
-
-The Indian who took so lively an interest in Mr. Peter was not far away,
-and was watching his man as usual.
-
-None noticed, save Benee himself, that Mr. Peter heaved something very
-like a sigh of relief as Roland's words fell on his ears.
-
-Burnley Hall was now indeed a castle of gloom; but although poor Mrs.
-St. Clair was greatly cast down, the eager way in which Roland and Dick
-were making their preparations to follow up the savage Indians, even to
-the confines or interior, if necessary, of their own domains, gave her
-hope.
-
-Luckily they had already found a clue to their whereabouts, for one of
-the civilized Bolivians knew that very chief, and indeed had come from
-the same far-off country. He described the people as a race of
-implacable savages and cannibals, into whose territory no white man had
-ever ventured and returned alive.
-
-Were they a large tribe? No, not large, not over three or four
-thousand, counting women and children. Their arms? These were spears
-and broad two-bladed knives, with great slings, from which they could
-hurl large stones and pieces of flint with unerring accuracy, and bows
-and arrows. And no number of white men could stand against these unless
-they sheltered themselves in trenches or behind rocks and trees.
-
-This ex-cannibal told them also that the land of this terrible tribe
-abounded in mineral wealth, in silver ore and even in gold.
-
-For this information Roland cared little; all he wished to do was to
-avenge poor Peggy's death. If his men, after the fighting, chose to lay
-out claims he would permit a certain number of them to do so, their
-names to be drawn by ballot. The rest must accompany the expedition
-back.
-
-Dick's uncle needed but little persuasion to give forty white men, fully
-armed and equipped, to swell Roland's little army of sixty whites.
-Besides these, they would have with them carriers and
-ammunition-bearers--Indians from the plantations.
-
-Dick was all life and fire. If they were successful, he himself, he
-said, would shoot the murderous chief, or stab him to the heart.
-
-A brave show indeed did the little army make, when all mustered and
-drilled, and every man there was most enthusiastic, for all had loved
-poor lost Peggy.
-
-"I shall remain at my post here, I suppose," said Mr. Peter.
-
-"If I do not alter my mind I shall leave you and Jake, with Mr. Roberts,
-the tutor, to manage the estate in my absence," said Roland.
-
-He did alter his mind, and, as the following will show, he had good
-occasion to do so.
-
-One evening the strange Indian Benee, between whom and Peter there
-existed so much hatred, sought Roland out when alone.
-
-"Can I speakee you, all quiet foh true?"
-
-"Certainly, my good fellow. Come into my study. Now, what is it you
-would say?"
-
-"Dat Don Pedro no true man! I tinkee much, and I tinkee dat."
-
-"Well, I know you don't love each other, Benee; but can you give me any
-proofs of his villainy?"
-
-"You letee me go to-night all myse'f alone to de bush. I tinkee I bring
-you someding strange. Some good news. Ha! it may be so!"
-
-"I give you leave, and believe you to be a faithful fellow."
-
-Benee seized his master's hand and bent down his head till his brow
-touched it.
-
-Next moment he was gone.
-
-Next morning he was missed.
-
-"Your pretty Indian," said Mr. Peter, with an ill-concealed sneer, "is a
-traitor, then, after all, and a spy, and it was no doubt he who
-instigated the abduction and the murder, for the sake of revenge, of
-your poor little sister."
-
-"That remains to be seen, Mr. Peter. If he, or anyone else on the
-plantation, is a traitor, he shall hang as high as Haman."
-
-Peter cowered visibly, but smiled his agitation off.
-
-And that same night about twelve, while Roland sat smoking on the lawn
-with Dick, all in the moonlight, everyone else having retired--smoking
-and talking of the happy past--suddenly the gate hinges creaked, and
-with a low growl Brawn sprang forward. But he returned almost
-immediately, wagging his tail and being caressed by Benee himself.
-
-Silently stood the Indian before them, silently as a statue, but in his
-left hand he carried a small bundle bound up in grass. It was not his
-place to speak first, and both young men were a little startled at his
-sudden appearance.
-
-"What, Benee! and back so soon from the forest?"
-
-"Benee did run plenty quickee. Plenty jaguar want eat Benee, but no can
-catchee."
-
-"Well?"
-
-"I would speekee you bof boys in de room."
-
-The two started up together.
-
-Here was some mystery that must be unravelled.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X--BENEE MAKES A STRANGE DISCOVERY
-
-
-Benee followed them into Roland's quiet study, and placed his strange
-grass-girt bundle on a cane chair.
-
-Roland gave him a goblet of wine-and-water, which he drank eagerly, for
-he was faint and tired.
-
-"Now, let us hear quickly what you have to say, Benee."
-
-The Indian came forward, and his words, though uttered with some
-vehemence, and accompanied by much gesticulation, were delivered in
-almost a whisper.
-
-It would have been impossible for any eavesdropper in the hall to have
-heard.
-
-"Wat I tellee you 'bout dat Peter?" he began.
-
-"My good friend," said Roland, "Peter accuses you of being a spy and
-traitor."
-
-"I killee he!"
-
-"No, you will not; if Peter is guilty, I will see that justice overtakes
-him."
-
-"Well, 'fore I go, sah, I speakee you and say I bringee you de good
-news."
-
-"Tell us quickly!" said Dick in a state of great excitement.
-
-"Dis, den, is de good news: Missie Peggy not dead! No, no!"
-
-"Explain, Benee, and do not raise false hopes in our breasts."
-
-"De cannibals make believe she murder; dat all is."
-
-"But have we not found portions of her raiment, her blood-dripping
-stockings, and also her charred remains?"
-
-"Listen, sah. Dese cannibals not fools. Dey beat you plenty of trail,
-so you can easily find de clearing where de fire was. Dey wis' you to
-go to dat tree to see de blood, de shoe, and all. But when you seekee
-de trail after, where is she? Tellee me dat. Missie Peggy no murder.
-No, no. She am carried away, far away, as one prisint to de queen ob de
-cannibals."
-
-"What were the bones, my good Benee?"
-
-Then Benee opened his strange bundle, and there fell on the floor the
-half-burned skull and jaws of a gigantic baboon.
-
-"I find dat hid beside de tree. Ha, ha!"
-
-"It is all clear now," said Roland. "My dear, faithful Benee," he
-continued, "can you guide us to the country of the cannibals? You will
-meet your reward, both here and hereafter."
-
-"I not care. I lub Missie Peggy. Ah, she come backee once moh, foh
-true!"
-
-And now Dick Temple, the impulsive, must step forward and seize Benee by
-the hand. "God bless you!" he said; and indeed it was all he could say.
-
-When the Indian had gone, Roland and Dick drew closer together.
-
-"The mystery," said the former, "seems to me, Dick, to be as dark and
-intricate as ever. I can understand the savages carrying poor Peggy
-away, but why the tricky deceit, the dropped shoe that poor, noble Brawn
-picked up, the pool of blood, the rent and torn garments, and the
-half-charred bones?"
-
-"Well, I think I can see through that, Roland. I believe it was done to
-prevent your further pursuit; for, as Benee observes, the trail is left
-plainly enough for even a white man to see as far as the 'fire-tree' and
-on to the brook. But farther there is none."
-
-"Well, granting all this; think you, Dick, that no one instigated them,
-probably even suggested the crime and the infernal deceit they have
-practised?"
-
-"Now you are thinking of, if not actually accusing, Mr. Peter?"
-
-"I am, Dick. I have had my suspicions of him ever since a month after
-he came. It was strange how Benee hated him from the beginning, to say
-nothing of Brawn, the dog, and our dear lost Peggy."
-
-"Cheer up!" said Dick. "Give Peter a show, though things look dark
-against him."
-
-"Yes," said Roland sternly, "and with us and our expedition he must and
-shall go. We can watch his every move, and if I find that he is a
-villain, may God have mercy on his soul! His body shall feed the
-eagles."
-
-Dick Temple was a wild and reckless boy, it is true, and always first,
-if possible, in any adventure which included a spice of danger, but he
-had a good deal of common sense notwithstanding.
-
-He mused a little, and rolled himself a fresh cigarette before he
-replied.
-
-"Your Mr. Peter," he said, "may or may not be guilty of duplicity,
-though I do not see the _raison d'tre_ for any such conduct, and I
-confess to you that I look upon lynching as a wild kind of justice. At
-the same time I must again beg of you, Roland, to give the man a decent
-show."
-
-"Here is my hand on that, Dick. He shall have justice, even should that
-just finish with his dangling at a rope's end."
-
-The two shortly after this parted for the night, each going to his own
-room, but I do not think that either of them slept till long past
-midnight.
-
-They were up in good time, however, for the bath, and felt invigorated
-and hungry after the dip.
-
-They were not over-merry certainly, but Mrs. St. Clair was quite
-changed, and just a little hysterically hilarious. For as soon as he
-had tubbed, Roland had gone to her bedroom and broken the news to her
-which Benee had brought.
-
-That same forenoon Dick and Roland rode out to the forest.
-
-They could hear the boom and shriek and roar of the great buzz-saw long
-before they came near the white-men's quarters.
-
-They saw Jake,--and busy enough he was too,--and told him that they had
-some reason to doubt the honesty or sincerity of Mr. Peter, and that
-they would take him along with them.
-
-"Thank God!" said Jake most fervently. "I myself cannot trust a man
-whom a dog like Brawn and a savage like Benee have come to hate."
-
-By themselves that day the young fellows completed their plans, and all
-would now be ready to advance in a week's time.
-
-That same day, however, on parade and in presence of Mr. Peter, Roland
-made a little speech.
-
-"We are going," he said, "my good fellows, on a very long and
-adventurous journey. Poor Miss Peggy is, as we all know" (this was
-surely a fib that would be forgiven) "dead and gone, but we mean to
-follow these savages up to their own country, and deal them such a blow
-as will paralyse them for years. Yellow Charlie yonder is himself one
-of their number, but he has proved himself faithful, and has offered to
-be our guide as soon as we enter unknown regions.
-
-"I have," he added, "perfect faith in my white men, faith in Mr. Peter,
-whom I am taking with me--"
-
-Peter took a step forward as if to speak, but Roland waved him back.
-
-"And I know my working Indians will prove themselves good men and true.
-
-"After saying this, it is hardly necessary to add that if anyone is
-found attempting to desert our column, even should it be Burly Bill
-himself" (Burly Bill laughed outright), "he will be shot down as we
-would shoot a puma or alligator."
-
-There was a wild cheer after Roland stepped down from the balcony, and
-in this Mr. Peter seemed to join so heartily that Roland's heart smote
-him.
-
-For perhaps, after all, he had been unkind in thought to this man.
-
-Time alone would tell.
-
-The boys determined to leave nothing to chance, but ammunition was of
-even more importance than food. They hoped to find water everywhere,
-and the biscuits carried, with the roots they should dig, would serve to
-keep the expedition alive and healthy, with the aid of their good guns.
-
-Medicine was not forgotten, nor medical comforts.
-
-For three whole days Roland trained fast-running Indians to pick up a
-trail. A man would be allowed to have three miles' start, and then,
-when he was quite invisible, those human sleuth-hounds would be let
-loose, and they never failed to bring back their prisoner after a time.
-
-One man at least was much impressed by these trials of skill.
-
-Just a week before the start, and late in the evening, Benee once more
-presented himself before our young heroes.
-
-"I would speakee you!"
-
-"Well, Benee, say what you please, but all have not yet retired. Dick,
-get out into the hall, and warn us if anyone approaches."
-
-Dick jumped up, threw his cigarette away, and did as he was told.
-
-"Thus I speakee you and say," said Benee. "You trustee I?"
-
-"Assuredly!"
-
-"Den you let me go?"
-
-"How and where?"
-
-"I go fast as de wind, fleeter dan de rain-squall, far ober de mountains
-ob Madeira, far froo' de wild, dark forest. I heed noting, I fear
-noting. No wil' beas' makee Benee 'fraid. I follow de cannibals. I
-reach de country longee time 'foh you. I creepee like one snake to de
-hut ob poh deah Peggy. She no can fly wid me, but I 'sure her dat you
-come soon, in two moon p'laps, or free. I make de chile happy. Den I
-creep and glide away again all samee one black snake, and come back to
-find you. I go?"
-
-Roland took the man's hand. Savage though he was, there was kindness
-and there was undoubted sincerity in those dark, expressive eyes, and
-our hero at once gave the permission asked.
-
-"But," he said, "the way is long and dangerous, my good Benee, so here I
-give you two long-range six-shooters, a repeating-rifle, and a box of
-cartridges. May God speed your journey, and bring you safely back with
-news that shall inspire our hearts! Go!"
-
-Benee glided away as silently as he had come, and next morning his place
-was found empty. But would their trust in this man reap its reward,
-or--awful doubt--was Benee false?
-
-Next night but one something very strange happened.
-
-All was silent in and around Burnley Hall, and the silvery tones of the
-great tower clock had chimed the hour of three, when the window of Mr.
-Peter's room was silently opened, and out into the moonlight glided the
-man himself.
-
-He carried in his hand a heavy grip-sack, and commenced at once taking
-the path that led downwards to the river.
-
-Here lay the dinghy boat drawn up on the beach. She was secured with
-padlock and chain, but all Roland's officers carried keys.
-
-It was about a quarter of a mile to the river-side, and Peter was
-proceeding at a fairly rapid rate, considering the weight of his
-grip-sack.
-
-He had a habit of talking to himself. He was doing so now.
-
-"I have only to drop well down the river and intercept a steamer. It is
-this very day they pass, and--"
-
-Two figures suddenly glided from the bush and stood before him.
-
-One sprang up behind, whom he could not see.
-
-"Good-morning, Mr. Peter! Going for a walk early, aren't you? It's
-going to turn out a delightful day, I think."
-
-They were white men.
-
-"Here!" cried Peter, "advance but one step, or dare to impede my
-progress, and you are both dead men! I am a good shot, and happen, as
-you see, to have the draw on you."
-
-Next moment his right arm was seized from behind, the men in front
-ducked, and the first shot went off in the air.
-
-"Here, none o' that, guv'nor!" said a set, determined voice.
-
-The revolver was wrenched from his grasp, and he found himself on his
-back in the pathway.
-
-"It is murder you'd be after! Eh?"
-
-"Not so, my good fellow," said Peter. "I will explain."
-
-"Explain, then."
-
-"My duties are ended with Mr. Roland St. Clair. He owes me one month's
-wages. I have forfeited that and given warning, and am going. That is
-all."
-
-"You are going, are you? Well, we shall see about that."
-
-"Yes, you may, and now let me pass on my peaceful way."
-
-"He! he! he! But tell us, Mr. Peter, why this speedy departure? Hast
-aught upon thy conscience, or hast got a conscience?"
-
-Peter had risen to his feet.
-
-"Merely this. I claim the privilege of every working man, that of
-giving leave. I am not strong, and I dread the long journey Mr. St.
-Clair and his little band are to take."
-
-"But," said the other, "you came in such a questionable shape, and we
-were here to watch for stragglers, not of course thinking for a moment,
-Mr. Peter, that your French window would be opened, and that you
-yourself would attempt to take French leave.
-
-"Now you really must get back to your bedroom, guv'nor, and see Mr. St.
-Clair in the morning. My mates will do sentry-go at your window, and I
-shall be by your door in case you need anything. It is a mere matter of
-form, Mr. Peter, but of course we have to obey orders. Got ere a drop
-of brandy in your flask?"
-
-Peter quickly produced quite a large bottle. He drank heavily himself
-first, and then passed it round.
-
-But the men took but little, and Mr. Peter, half-intoxicated, allowed
-himself to be conducted to bed.
-
-When these sentries gave in their report next morning to Roland, Mr.
-Peter did not rise a deal in the young fellow's estimation.
-
-"It only proves one thing," he said to Dick. "If Peter is so anxious to
-give us the slip, we must watch him well until we are far on the road
-towards the cannibals' land."
-
-"That's so," returned Dick Temple.
-
-Not a word was said to Peter regarding his attempted flight when he sat
-down to breakfast with the boys, and naturally enough he believed it had
-not been reported. Indeed he had some hazy remembrance of having
-offered the sentries a bribe to keep dark.
-
-Mr. Peter ate very sparingly, and looked sadly fishy about the eyes.
-
-But he made no more attempts to escape just then.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI--ALL ALONE IN THE WILDERNESS
-
-
-That Benee was a good man and true we have little reason to doubt, up to
-the present time at all events.
-
-Yet Dick Temple was, curiously enough, loth to believe that Mr. Peter
-was other than a friend. And nothing yet had been proved against him.
-
-"Is it not natural enough," said he to Roland, "that he should funk--to
-put it in fine English--the terrible expedition you and I are about to
-embark upon? And knowing that you have commanded him to accompany us
-would, in my opinion, be sufficient to account for his attempt to escape
-and drop down the river to Par, and so home to his own country.
-Roland, I repeat, we must give the man a show."
-
-"True," said Roland, "and poor Benee is having his show. Time alone can
-prove who the traitor is. If it be Benee he will not return. On the
-contrary, he will join the savage captors of poor Peggy, and do all in
-his power to frustrate our schemes."
-
-No more was said.
-
-But the preparations were soon almost completed, and in a day or two
-after this, farewells being said, the brave little army began by forced
-marches to find its way across country and through dense forests and
-damp marshes, and over rocks and plains, to the Madeira river, high
-above its junction with the great Amazon.
-
- ----
-
-Meanwhile let us follow the lonely Indian in his terrible journey to the
-distant and unexplored lands of Bolivia.
-
-Like all true savages, he despised the ordinary routes of traffic or
-trade; his track must be a bee-line, guiding himself by the sun by day,
-but more particularly by the stars by night.
-
-Benee knew the difference betwixt stars and planets. The latter were
-always shifting, but certain stars--most to him were like lighthouses to
-mariners who are approaching land--shone over the country of the
-cannibals, and he could tell from their very altitude how much progress
-he was making night after night.
-
-So lonesome, so long, was his thrice dreary journey, that had it been
-undertaken by a white man, in all probability he would soon have been a
-raving maniac.
-
-But Benee had all the cunning, all the daring, and all the wisdom of a
-true savage, and for weeks he felt a proud exhilaration, a glorious
-sense of freedom and happiness, at being once more his own master, no
-work to do, and hope ever pointing him onwards to his goal.
-
-What was that goal? it may well be asked. Was Benee disinterested? Did
-he really feel love for the white man and the white man's children? Can
-aught save selfishness dwell in the breast of a savage? In brief, was
-it he who had been the spy, he who was the guilty man; or was it Peter
-who was the villain? Look at it in any light we please, one thing is
-certain, this strange Indian was making his way back to his own country
-and to his own friends, and Indians are surely not less fond of each
-other than are the wild beasts who herd together in the forest, on the
-mountain-side, or on the ice in the far-off land of the frozen north.
-And well we know that these creatures will die for each other.
-
-If there was a mystery about Peter, there was something approaching to
-one about Benee also.
-
-But then it must be remembered that since his residence on the St. Clair
-plantation, Benee had been taught the truths of that glorious religion
-of ours, the religion of love that smoothes the rugged paths of life for
-us, that gives a silver lining to every cloud of grief and sorrow, and
-gilds even the dark portals of death itself.
-
-Benee believed even as little children do. And little Peggy in her
-quiet moods used to tell him the story of life by redemption in her
-almost infantile way.
-
-For all that, it is hard and difficult to vanquish old superstitions,
-and this man was only a savage at heart after all, though, nevertheless,
-there seemed to be much good in his rough, rude nature, and you may
-ofttimes see the sweetest and most lovely little flowers growing on the
-blackest and ruggedest of rocks.
-
-Well, this journey of Benee's was certainly no sinecure. Apart even
-from all the dangers attached to it, from wild beasts and wilder men, it
-was one that would have tried the hardest constitution, if only for the
-simple reason that it was all a series of forced marches.
-
-There was something in him that was hurrying him on and encouraging him
-to greater and greater exertions every hour. His daily record depended
-to a great extent on the kind of country he had to negotiate. He began
-with forty miles, but after a time, when he grew harder, he increased
-this to fifty and often to sixty. It was at times difficult for him to
-force his way through deep, dark forest and jungle, along the winding
-wild-beast tracks, past the beasts themselves, who hid in trees ready to
-spring had he paused but a second; through marshes and bogs, with here
-and there a reedy lake, on which aquatic birds of brightest colours
-slept as they floated in the sunshine, but among the long reeds of which
-lay the ever-watchful and awful cayman.
-
-In such places as these, I think Benee owed his safety to his utter
-fearlessness and sang-froid, and to the speed at which he travelled.
-
-It was not a walk by any means, but a strange kind of swinging trot.
-Such a gait may still be seen in far-off outlying districts of the
-Scottish Highlands, where it is adopted by postal "runners", who
-consider it not only faster but less tiresome than walking.
-
-For the first hundred miles, or more, the lonely traveller found himself
-in a comparatively civilized country. This was not very much to his
-liking, and as a rule he endeavoured to give towns and villages, and
-even rubber forests, where Indians worked under white men overseers, a
-wide berth.
-
-Yet sometimes, hidden in a tree, he would watch the work going on; watch
-the men walking hither and thither with their pannikins, or deftly
-whirling the shovels they had dipped in the sap-tub and holding them in
-the dark smoke of the palm-tree nuts, or he would listen to their songs.
-But it was with no feeling of envy; it was quite the reverse.
-
-For Benee was free! Oh what a halo of happiness and glory surrounds
-that one little word "Free"!
-
-Then this lonely wanderer would hug himself, as it were, and, dropping
-down from his perch, start off once more at his swinging trot.
-
-Even as the crow flies, or the bee wings its flight, the length of
-Benee's journey would be over six hundred miles. But it was impossible
-for anyone to keep a bee-line, owing to the roughness of the country and
-the difficulties of every kind to be overcome, so that it is indeed
-impossible to estimate the magnitude of this lone Indian's exploit.
-
-His way, roughly speaking, lay between the Madeira River and the Great
-Snake River called Puras (_vide_ map); latterly it would lead him to the
-lofty regions and plateaux of the head-waters of Maya-tata, called by
-the Peruvians the Madre de Dios, or Holy Virgin River.
-
-But hardly a day now passed that he had not a stream of some kind to
-cross, and wandering by its banks seeking for a ford delayed him
-considerably.
-
-He was journeying thus one morning when the sound of human voices not
-far off made him creep quickly into the jungle.
-
-The men did not take long to put in an appearance.
-
-A portion of some wandering, hunting, or looting tribe they were, and
-cut-throat looking scoundrels everyone of them--five in all.
-
-They were armed with bows and arrows and with spears. Their arrows,
-Benee could see, were tipped with flint, and the flint was doubtless
-poisoned. They carried also slings and broad knives in their belts of
-skin. The slings are used in warfare, but they are also used by
-shepherds--monsters who, like many in this country, know not the meaning
-of the words "mercy to dumb animals"--on their poor sheep.
-
-These fellows, who now lay down to rest and to eat, much to Benee's
-disgust, not to say dismay, were probably a party of llama (pronounced
-yahmah) herds or shepherds who had, after cutting their master's throat,
-banded together and taken to this roving life.
-
-So thought Benee, at all events, for he could see many articles of
-European dress, such as dainty scarves of silk, lace handkerchiefs, &c.,
-as well as brooches, huddled over their own clothing, and one
-fierce-looking fellow pulled out a gold watch and pretended to look at
-the time.
-
-So angry was Benee that his savage nature got uppermost, and he handled
-his huge revolvers in a nervous way that showed his anxiety to open fire
-and spoil the cut-throats' dinner. But he restrained himself for the
-time being.
-
-In addition to the two revolvers, Benee carried the repeating rifle. It
-was the fear of spoiling his ammunition that led to his being in this
-dreadful fix. But for his cartridges he could have swum the river with
-the speed of a gar-fish.
-
-What a long, long time they stayed, and how very leisurely they munched
-and fed!
-
-A slight sound on his left flank caused Benee to gaze hastily round. To
-his horror, he found himself face to face with a puma.
-
-Here was indeed a dilemma!
-
-If he fired he would make his presence known, and small mercy could he
-expect from the cut-throats. At all hazards he determined to keep still.
-
-The yellow eyes of this American lion flared and glanced in a streak of
-sunshine shot downwards through the bush, and it was this probably which
-dimmed his vision, for he made no attempt to spring forward.
-
-Benee dared scarcely to breathe; he could hear the beating of his own
-heart, and could not help wondering if the puma heard it too.
-
-At last the brute backed slowly astern, with a wriggling motion.
-
-But Benee gained courage now.
-
-During the long hours that followed, several great snakes passed him so
-closely that he could have touched their scaly backs. Some of these
-were lithe and long, others very thick and slow in motion, but nearly
-all were beautifully coloured in metallic tints of crimson, orange,
-green, and bronze, and all were poisonous.
-
-The true Bolivian, however, has but little fear of snakes, knowing that
-unless trodden upon, or otherwise actively interfered with, they care
-not to waste their venom by striking.
-
-At long, long last the cut-throats got up to leave. They would before
-midnight no doubt reach some lonely outpost and demand entertainment at
-the point of the knife, and if strange travellers were there, sad indeed
-would be their fate.
-
-Benee now crawled, stiff and cramped, out from his damp and dangerous
-hiding-place. He found a ford not far off, and after crossing, he set
-off once more at his swinging trot, and was soon supple and happy
-enough.
-
-On and on he went all that day, to make up for lost time, and far into
-the starry night.
-
-The hills were getting higher now, the valleys deeper and damper
-between, and stream after stream had to be forded.
-
-It must have been long past eight o'clock when, just as Benee was
-beginning to long for food and rest, his eyes fell on a glimmering light
-at the foot of a high and dark precipice.
-
-He warily ventured forward and found it proceeded from a shepherd's hut;
-inside sat the man himself, quietly eating a kind of thick soup, the
-basin flanked by a huge flagon of milk, with roasted yams. Great,
-indeed, was the innocent fellow's surprise when Benee presented himself
-in the doorway. A few words in Bolivian, kindly uttered by our
-wayfarer, immediately put the man at ease, however, and before long
-Benee was enjoying a hearty supper, followed by a brew of excellent
-mat.
-
-He was a very simple son of the desert, this shepherd, but a desultory
-kind of conversation was maintained, nevertheless, until far into the
-night.
-
-For months and months, he told Benee, he had lived all alone with his
-sheep in these grassy uplands, having only the companionship of his
-half-wild, but faithful dog. But he was contented and happy, and had
-plenty to eat and drink.
-
-It was just sunrise when Benee awoke from a long refreshing sleep on his
-bed of skins. There was the odour of smoke all about, and presently the
-shepherd himself bustled in and bade him "Good-morning!", or "Heaven's
-blessing!" which is much the same.
-
-A breakfast of rough, black cake, with butter, fried fish, and mat,
-made Benee as happy as a king and as fresh as a mountain trout, and soon
-after he said farewell and started once more on his weary road. The only
-regret he experienced rose from the fact that he had nothing wherewith
-to reward this kindly shepherd for his hospitality.
-
-Much against his will, our wanderer had now to make a long detour, for
-not even a goat could have scaled the ramparts of rock in front of him.
-
-In another week he found himself in one of the bleakest and barrenest
-stretches of country that it is possible to imagine. It was a high
-plateau, and covered for the most part with stunted bushes and with
-crimson heath and heather.
-
-Benee climbed a high hill that rose near him, and as he stood on the top
-thereof, just as the sun in a glory of orange clouds and crimson rose
-slowly and majestically over the far-off eastern forest, a scene
-presented itself to him that, savage though he was, caused him for a
-time to stand mute with admiration and wonder.
-
-Then he remembered what little Peggy told him once in her sweet and
-serious voice: "Always pray at sunrise".
-
- "Always pray at sunrise,
- For 'tis God who makes the day;
- When shades of evening gather round
- Kneel down again and pray.
- And He, who loves His children dear,
- Will send some angel bright
- To guard you while you're sleeping sound
- And watch you all the night."
-
-
-And on this lonely hill-top Benee did kneel down to pray a simple
-prayer, while golden clouds were changing to bronze and snowy white, and
-far off on the forest lands hazy vapours were still stretched across
-glens and valleys.
-
-As he rose from his knees he could hear, away down beneath him, a wild
-shout, and gazing in the direction from which it came, he saw seven
-semi-nude savages hurrying towards the mountain with the evident
-intention of making him prisoner.
-
-It was terrible odds; but as there was no escape, Benee determined to
-fight.
-
-As usual, they were armed with bow and arrow and sling.
-
-Indeed, they commenced throwing stones with great precision before they
-reached the hill-foot, and one of these fell at Benee's feet.
-
-Glad, indeed, was he next minute to find himself in a kind of natural
-trench which could have been held by twenty men against a hundred.
-
-On and up, crawling on hands and knees, came the savages.
-
-But Benee stood firm, rifle in hand, and waiting his chance.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII--BENEE ENTRENCHED--SAVAGE REVELS IN THE FOREST
-
-
-The trench in which he found himself was far higher than was necessary,
-and fronted by huge stones. It was evidently the work of human hands,
-but by what class of people erected Benee could not imagine.
-
-He could spare a few boulders anyhow, so, while the enemy was still far
-below, he started first one, then another, and still another, on a
-cruise down the mountain-side and on a mission of death.
-
-These boulders broke into scores of large fragments long before they
-reached the savages, two of whom were struck, one being killed outright.
-
-And Benee knew his advantage right well, and, taking careful aim now
-with his repeating-rifle--a sixteen-shooter it was,--he fired.
-
-He saw the bullet raise the dust some yards ahead of the foe, who paused
-to gaze upwards in great amazement.
-
-But next shot went home, for Benee had got the range, and one of the
-five threw up his hands with a shriek, and fell on his face, to rise no
-more.
-
-Rendered wild by the loss of their companions, the others drew their
-knives and made a brave start for Benee's trench.
-
-But what could poor savages do against the deadly fire of civilized
-warfare. When another of their number paid the penalty of his rashness,
-the other three took fright and went racing and tumbling down the hill
-so quickly that no more of Benee's shots took effect.
-
-Roland had given Benee a field-glass before he started, and through this
-he watched the flying figures for many a mile, noting exactly the way
-they took, and determining in his own mind to choose a somewhat
-different route, even though he should have to make a wide detour.
-
-He started downhill almost immediately, well-knowing that these
-dark-skinned devils would return reinforced to seek revenge.
-
-He knew, moreover, that they could follow up a trail, so he did all in
-his power to pick out the hardest parts of this great moorland on which
-to walk.
-
-He came at last to a stream. It was very shallow, and he plunged in at
-once.
-
-This was indeed good luck, and Benee thought now that Peggy's God, who
-paints the sky at sunrise, was really looking after him. He could baulk
-his pursuers now, or, at least, delay them. For they would not be able
-to tell in which direction he had gone.
-
-So Benee walked in the water for three miles. This walk was really a
-leaping run. He would have gone farther, but all at once the stream
-became very rapid indeed, and on his ears fell the boom of a waterfall.
-
-So he got on shore with all haste.
-
-But for five miles on from the foot of the leaping, dashing, foaming
-linn, the stream was flanked by acres of round, smooth boulders.
-
-These could tell no tale. On these Benee would leave no trail. He
-leapt from one to the other, and was rejoiced at last to find that they
-led him to a forest.
-
-This was indeed a grateful surprise, so he entered the shade at once.
-
-Benee, after his exciting fight and his very long run, greatly needed
-rest, so he gathered some splendid fruit and nuts, despite the
-chattering and threatened attacks of a whole band of hideous baboons,
-and then threw himself down under the shade of a tree in a small glade
-and made a hearty meal.
-
-He felt thirsty now. But as soon as there was silence once more in the
-forest, and even the parrots had gone to sleep in the drowsy noontide
-heat, he could hear the rush of water some distance ahead.
-
-He got up immediately and marched in the direction from which the sound
-came, and was soon on the pebbled shore of another burn.
-
-He drank a long, sweet draught of the cool, delicious water, and felt
-wondrously refreshed.
-
-And now a happy thought occurred to him.
-
-Sooner or later he felt certain the savages would find his trail. They
-would track him to this stream and believe he had once again tried to
-break the pursuit by wading either up or down stream.
-
-His plan was, therefore, to go carefully back on his tracks and rest
-hidden all day until, foiled in their attempt to make him prisoner, they
-should return homeward.
-
-This plan he carried into immediate execution, and in a thicket, quite
-screened from all observation, he laid him down.
-
-He was soon fast asleep.
-
-But in probably a couple of hours' time he sat cautiously up, and,
-gently lifting a branch, looked forth.
-
-For voices had fallen on his ear, and next minute there went filing past
-on his trail no fewer than fifteen well-armed warriors.
-
-They stopped dancing and shouting at the tree where Benee had sat down
-to feed, then, brandishing their broad knives, dashed forward to the
-stream.
-
-They had evidently gone up the river for miles, but finding no trail on
-the other bank returned to search the down-stream.
-
-In his hiding-place Benee could hear their wild shouts of
-vengeance-deferred, and though he feared not death, right well he knew
-that neither his rifle nor revolvers could long protect him against such
-desperate odds as this.
-
-There was now peace once more, and the shades of evening--the short
-tropical gloaming--were falling when he heard the savages returning.
-
-He knew their language well.
-
-It was soon evident that they did not mean to go any farther that night,
-for they were quite tired out.
-
-They were not unprovided with food and drink such as it was, and
-evidently meant to make themselves happy.
-
-A fire was soon lit in the glade, and by its glare poor Benee, lying low
-there and hardly daring to move a limb, could see the sort of savages he
-would have to deal with if they found him.
-
-They were fierce-looking beyond conception. Most of them had long
-matted hair, and the ears of some carried the hideous pelele. The lobe
-of each ear is pierced when the individual is but a boy, and is
-gradually stretched until it is a mere strip of skin capable of
-supporting a bone or wooden, grooved little wheel twice as large as a
-dollar. The stretched lobe of the ear fits round this like the tyre
-round a bicycle wheel.
-
-The faces of these men, although wild-looking, were not positively
-ill-favoured, though the mouths were large and sensual. But if ever
-devil lurked in human eyes it lurked in theirs.
-
-They wore blankets, and some had huge chains of gold and silver nuggets
-round their necks.
-
-Their arms were now piled, or, more correctly speaking, they were
-trundled down in a heap by the tree.
-
-While most of them lay with their feet to the now roaring fire, a space
-was left for the cook, who cleverly arranged a kind of gipsy
-double-trident over the clear embers and commenced to get ready the
-meal.
-
-The uprights carried cross pieces of wood, and on these both fish and
-flesh were laid to broil, while large yams and sweet-potatoes were
-placed in the ashes to roast.
-
-By the time dinner was cooked the night was dark enough, but the glimmer
-of the firelight lit up the savages' faces and cast Rembrandtesque
-shadows far behind.
-
-It was a weird and terrible scene, but it had little effect on Benee,
-who had often witnessed tableaux far more terrifying than this.
-
-Then the orgie commenced. They helped themselves with their fingers and
-tore the fish and flesh off with their splendid teeth.
-
-Huge chattees of chicaga, a most filthy but intoxicating beer, now made
-their appearance. It was evident enough that these men were used to
-being on the war-path and hunting-field.
-
-The wine or beer is made in a very disgusting manner, but its
-manufacture, strangely enough, is not confined to Bolivia. I have seen
-much the same liquor in tropical Africa, made by the Somali Indians, and
-in precisely the same way.
-
-The old women or hags of the village are assembled at, say, a chief's
-house, and large quantities of cocoanuts and various other fruits are
-heaped together in the centre of a hut, as well as large, tub-like
-vessels and chattees of water.
-
-Down the old and almost toothless hags squat, and, helping themselves to
-lumps of cocoa-nut, &c., they commence to mumble and chew these, now and
-then moistening their mouths with a little water, the juice is spit out
-into calabashes, and when these are full of the awful mess they are
-emptied into the big bin.
-
-It is a great gala-day with these hideous old hags, a meeting that they
-take advantage of not only for making wine but for abusing their
-neighbours.
-
-How they cackle and grin, to be sure, as their mouths work to and fro!
-How they talk and chatter, and how they chew! It is chatter and chew,
-chew and chatter, all the time, and the din they make with teeth and
-tongues would deafen a miller.
-
-When all is finished, the bins are left to settle and ferment, and in
-three days' time, the supernatant liquor is poured off and forms the
-wine called chicaga.
-
-Had anyone doubted the intoxicating power of this vilest of all vile
-drinks, a glance at the scene which soon ensued around the fire would
-speedily have convinced him.
-
-Benee lay there watching these fiends as they gradually merged from one
-phase of drunkenness to another, and fain would he have sent half a
-dozen revolver bullets into the centre of the group, but his life
-depended on his keeping still.
-
-The savages first confined themselves to merry talking, with coarse
-jokes and ribaldry, and frequent outbursts of laughter. But when they
-had quaffed still more, they must seize their knives and get up to
-dance. Round and round the blazing fire they whirled and staggered
-through the smoke and through it again, with demoniacal shouts and awful
-yells, that awakened echoes among the forest wild beasts far and near.
-
-Then they pricked their bodies with their knives till the blood ran, and
-with this they splashed each other in hideous wantonness till faces and
-clothes were smeared in gore.
-
-All this could but have one ending--a fight.
-
-Benee saw one savage stabbed to the heart, and then the orgie became a
-fierce battle.
-
-Now was Benee's time to escape.
-
-Yet well he knew how acute the power of hearing is among the Bolivian
-savages. One strange noise, even the crackle of a bush, and the
-fighting would end in a hunt, and he would undoubtedly lose his life.
-
-But he wriggled and crawled like a snake in the grass until twenty yards
-away, and now he moved cautiously, slowly off.
-
-Soon the glare of the fire among the high trees was seen no more, and
-the yelling and cries were far behind and getting more and more
-indistinct every minute.
-
-Benee refreshed himself at the stream, pulled some food from his pocket,
-and ate it while he ran.
-
-He knew, however, that after fighting would come drowsiness, and that
-his late entertainers would soon be fast asleep, some of their heads
-pillowed, perhaps, on the dead body of their murdered comrade.
-
-If there be in all this world a more demonish wretch than man is in a
-state of nature, or when--even among Christians--demoralized by drink, I
-wish to get hold of a specimen for my private menagerie. But the
-creature should be kept in a cage by itself. I would not insult my
-monkeys with the companionship of such a wretch, should it be man or
-beast.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII--THE MARCH TO THE LOVELESS LAND
-
-
-On and on hurried Benee now, at his old swinging trot.
-
-On and on beneath the splendid stars, his only companions, that looked
-so calmly sweet and appeared so near. God's angels surely they,
-speaking, as they gazed down, words from their home on high, peace and
-good-will to men, and happiness to all that lived and breathed.
-
-On and on over plains, through moor and marsh, by lake and stream, by
-forest dark and jungle wild. It was evident that Benee meant to put
-leagues between himself and the camp of his recent enemies before each
-star grew beautiful and died; before the fiery sun leapt red above the
-eastern hills, and turned the darkness into day.
-
-Benee had come onwards with such a rush that even the slimy alligators,
-by pond or brown lake, left their lairs among the tall nodding reeds and
-dashed in terror into the water.
-
-Prowling wild beasts, the jaguar and puma, also hurried off at his
-approach, and many a scared bird flew screaming up into the darkling
-air.
-
-But Benee heeded nothing. His way lay yonder. That bright particular
-star away down on the southwestern horizon shone over the great
-unexplored region of Bolivia.
-
-Morning after morning it would be higher and higher above him, and when
-it shone at an angle of forty-five degrees he would be approaching the
-land of the cannibals.
-
-Yes, but it was still a far cry to that country. By the time the sun
-did rise, and the mists gathered themselves off the valleys and glens
-that lay low beneath him, Benee felt sadly in want of rest.
-
-He found a tree that would make him a good sleeping place, for the
-country he was now traversing abounded in hideous snakes and gigantic
-lizards, and he courted not the companionship of either.
-
-The tree was an Abies of some undefined species.
-
-Up and up crawled Benee, somewhat encumbered by his arms.
-
-He got through a kind of "lubbers' hole" at last, though with much
-difficulty, and, safe enough here, he curled up with his face to the
-stem, and was soon so fast asleep that cannons could not have awakened
-him.
-
-But satisfied Nature got uneasy at last, and far on towards evening he
-opened his eyes and wondered where he was.
-
-Still only half-awake, he staggered to his feet and made a step forward.
-It was only to fall over the end of a huge matted branch, but this
-branch lowered him gently on to the one immediately beneath it, and this
-down to the next, and so on. A strange mode of progression certainly,
-but Benee found himself sitting on the ground at last, as safe and sound
-as if he had come down in a parachute.
-
-Then his recollection came back to him. He sought out some fruit-trees
-now and made a hearty meal, quenched his thirst at a spring, and once
-more resumed his journey.
-
-For three days he marched onwards, but always by night. The country was
-not safe by day, and he preferred the companionship of wild beasts to
-that of wilder men. In this Benee was wise.
-
-But awaking somewhat earlier one afternoon, he saw far beneath him, a
-town, and in Benee's eyes it was a very large one.
-
-And now a happy idea struck him. He had money, and here was
-civilization. By and by he would be in the wilds once more, and among
-savages who knew nothing of cash. Why should he not descend, mix with
-the giddy throng, and make purchases of red cloth, of curios, and of
-beads. He determined to do so.
-
-But it would not do to go armed. So he hid his rifle and pistols in the
-bush, covering them carefully up with dried grass. Then he commenced
-the descent. Yes, the little town, the greater part of which was built
-of mud hovels, was full, and the streets crowded, many in the throng
-being Spaniards, Peruvians, and Portuguese.
-
-Benee sauntered carelessly on and presently came to the bazaar.
-
-Many of the police eyed him curiously, and one or two followed him.
-
-But he had no intention of being baulked in his purpose.
-
-So he entered a likely shop, and quickly made his purchases.
-
-Wrapping these carefully up, he slung the bundle over his shoulder and
-left.
-
-He stumbled over a lanky Portuguese policeman a few yards off.
-
-The man would have fallen had not Benee seized him in his iron grasp and
-brought him again to his equilibrium.
-
-Then he spoke a few words in Bolivian, and made signs that he wished to
-eat and drink.
-
-"Aguardiente!" said the officer, his eyes sparkling with joy.
-
-He had really harboured some intentions of throwing Benee into the
-tumble-down old prison, but a drink would be a far better solution of
-the difficulty, and he cheerfully led the way to a sort of hotel.
-
-And in twenty minutes' time this truly intelligent member of the force
-and Benee were lying on skin mats with apparently all the good things in
-this life spread out before them.
-
-The officer was curious, as all such men are, whether heathens or not,
-to know all about Benee, and put to him a score of questions at least,
-part of which Benee replied to with a delicate and forgivable fib.
-
-So the policeman was but little wiser at the end of the conversation
-than he was at the beginning.
-
-About half an hour before sunset, Benee was once more far up on the
-moorlands, and making straight for the place where he had hidden his
-guns and ammunition.
-
-But he stopped short and stared with astonishment when, before rounding
-the corner of the wood, a pistol shot rang out in the quiet air,
-followed by the most terrible shrieking and howling he had ever listened
-to.
-
-He hurried on quickly enough now, and as he did so, a whole herd of huge
-monkeys, apparently scared out of their senses, rushed madly past him.
-
-Close to the jungle he found one of his revolvers. One chamber had been
-emptied, and not far off lay a baboon in the agonies of death. Benee,
-who, savage though he was, evidently felt for the creature, mercifully
-expended another shot on it, and placed it beyond the reach of woe.
-
-He was glad to find his rifle and other revolver intact, but the
-cartridges from his belt were scattered about in all directions, and
-strenuous efforts had evidently been made to tear open his leathern
-ammunition-box.
-
-It took some time to make everything straight again.
-
-Now down went the sun, and very soon, after a short twilight, out came
-the stars once more.
-
-Benee now resumed his journey as straight as he could across the
-plateau.
-
-He had not travelled many hours, however, before clouds began to bank up
-and obscure the sky, and it became very dark.
-
-A storm was brewing, and, ushered in by low muttering thunder in the far
-distance, it soon came on in earnest.
-
-As the big drops of rain began to fall, shining in the flashes of the
-lightning like a shower of molten gold, Benee sought the shelter of a
-rocky cave which was near to him.
-
-He laid him down on the rough dry grass to wait until the storm should
-clear away.
-
-He felt drowsy, however. Perhaps the unusually good fare he had
-partaken of in the village had something to do with this; but of late
-his hardships had been very great indeed, so it is no wonder that now
-exhausted Nature claimed repose.
-
-The last thing he was conscious of was a long, low, mournful cry that
-seemed to come from the far interior of the cave.
-
-It was broad daylight when he again awoke, and such an awakening!
-
-Great snowy-breasted owls sat blinking at the light, but all the rocks
-around, or the shelves thereof, were alive with coiling, wriggling
-snakes of huge size.
-
-One had twined round his leg, and he knew that if he but moved a muscle,
-it would send its terrible fangs deep into his flesh, and his journey
-would be at an end.
-
-Gradually, however, the awful creature unwound itself and wriggled away.
-
-The sight of this snake-haunted cave was too much for even Benee's
-nerves, and he sprang up and speedily dashed, all intact, into the open
-air.
-
- ----
-
-Notwithstanding his extraordinary adventure in the cave of serpents, the
-wandering Indian felt in fine form that day.
-
-The air was now much cooler after the storm, all the more so, no doubt,
-that Benee was now travelling on a high table-land which stretched
-southwards and west in one long, dreary expanse till bounded on the
-horizon by ridges of lofty serrated mountains, in the hollow of which,
-high in air, patches of snow rested, and probably had so rested for
-millions of years.
-
-The sky was very bright. The trees at this elevation, as well as the
-fruit, the flowers, and stunted shrubs, were just such as one finds at
-the Cape of Good Hope and other semi-tropical regions. The ground on
-which he walked or trotted along was a mass of beauty and perfume, rich
-pink or crimson heaths, heather and geraniums everywhere, with patches
-of pine-wood having little or no undergrowth. Many rare and beautiful
-birds lilted and sang their songs of love on every side, strange larks
-were high in air, some lighting every now and then on the ground, the
-music of their voices drawn out as they glided downwards into one long
-and beautiful cadence.
-
-There seemed to be a sadness in these last notes, as if the birds would
-fain have warbled for ever and for aye at heaven's high gate, though
-duty drew them back to this dull earth of ours.
-
-But dangers to these feathered wildlings hovered even in the sunlit sky,
-and sometimes turned the songs of those speckled-breasted laverocks into
-wails of despair.
-
-Behold yonder hawk silently darting from the pine-wood! High, high he
-darts into the air; he has positioned his quarry, and downwards now he
-swoops like Indian arrow from a bow, and the lark's bright and happy
-song is hushed for ever. His beautiful mate sitting on her cosy nest
-with its five brown eggs looks up astonished and frightened. Down fall
-a few drops of red blood, as if the sky had wept them. Down flutter a
-few feathers, and her dream of happiness is a thing of the past.
-
-And that poor widowed lark will forsake her eggs now, and wander through
-the heath and the scrub till she dies.
-
- ----
-
-Benee had no adventures to-day, but, seeing far off a band of
-travellers, he hid himself in the afternoon. For our Indian wanted no
-company.
-
-He watched them as they came rapidly on towards his hiding-place, but
-they struck off to the east long before reaching it, and made for the
-plains and village far below.
-
-Then Benee had his dinner and slept soundly enough till moonrise, for
-bracing and clear was heaven's ozonic breath in these almost Alpine
-regions.
-
-Only a scimitar of a moon. Not more than three days old was it, yet
-somehow it gave hope and heart to the lonely traveller. He remembered
-when a boy he had been taught to look upon the moon as a good angel, but
-Christianity had banished superstition, and he was indeed a new man.
-
-After once more refreshing himself, he started on his night march,
-hoping to put forty miles behind him ere the sun rose.
-
-Low lay the white haze over the woods a sheer seven thousand feet
-beneath him.
-
-It looked like snow-drifts on the darkling green.
-
-Yet here and there, near to places where the river glistened in the
-young moon's rays were bunches of lights, and Benee knew he was not far
-from towns and civilization. Much too near to be agreeable.
-
-He knew, however, that a few days more of his long weary march would
-bring him far away from these to regions unknown to the pale-face, to a
-land on which Christian feet had never trodden, a loveless land, a
-country that reeked with murder, a country that seemed unblessed by
-heaven, where all was moral darkness, as if indeed it were ruled by
-demons and fiends, who rejoiced only in the spilling of blood.
-
-But, nevertheless, it was Benee's own land, and he could smile while he
-gazed upwards at the now descending moon.
-
-Benee never felt stronger or happier than he did this evening, and he
-sang a strange wild song to himself, as he journeyed onwards, a kind of
-chant to which he kept step.
-
-A huge snake, black as a winter's night, uncoiled itself, hissed, and
-darted into the heath to hide. Benee heeded it not. A wild beast of
-some sort sprang past him with furious growl. Benee never even raised
-his rifle. And when he came to the banks of a reed-girt lake, and saw
-his chance of shooting a huge cayman, he cared not to draw a bead
-thereon. He just went on with his chant and on with his walk. Benee was
-truly happy and hopeful for once in his life.
-
-And amid such scenery, beneath such a galaxy of resplendent stars, who
-could have been aught else?
-
- "How beautiful is night!
- A dewy freshness fills the silent air;
- No mist obscures, nor cloud, nor speck, nor stain,
- Breaks the serene of heaven.
- In glory yonder moon divine
- Rolls through the dark-blue depths,
- Beneath her steely ray
- The desert circle spreads,
- Like the round ocean girdled with the sky.
- How beautiful the night!"
-
-
-But almost before he could have believed it possible, so quickly do
-health and happiness cause time to fly, a long line of crimson cloud,
-high in the east, betokened the return of another day.
-
-The night-owls and the great flitting vampire bats saw it and retreated
-to darksome caves. There was heard no longer far over the plain the
-melancholy howl of the tiger-cat or snarl of puma or jaguar.
-
-Day was coming!
-
-Day was come!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV--THE HOME OF THE CANNIBAL--BENEE'S ROMANCE
-
-
-Like the bats and the night-birds Benee now crept into concealment.
-
-He sought once more the shelter of a tall pine-tree of the spruce
-species. Here he could be safe and here he could sleep.
-
-But after a hearty meal he took the precaution to lash himself to the
-stem, high, high up.
-
-His descent from the last tree had been accomplished with safety
-certainly, but it was of rather a peculiar nature, and Benee had no
-desire to risk his neck again.
-
-The wind softly sighed in the branches.
-
-A bird of the thrush species alighted about a yard above him, and burst
-into shrill sweet melody to welcome the rising sun.
-
-With half-closed eyes Benee could see from under the branches a
-deep-orange horizon, fading into pure sea-green zenithwards, then to
-deepest purple and blue where rested the crimson clouds.
-
-And now there was a glare of brighter and more silvery light, and the
-red streaks were turned into wreaths of snow.
-
-The sun was up, and Benee slept. But he carried that sweet bird's song
-into dreamland.
-
- ----
-
-About three days after this Benee was rejoiced to find himself in a new
-land, but it was a land he knew well--too well.
-
-Though very high above the sea-level it was in reality a
-
- "Land of the mountain and the flood".
-
-
-Hills on hills rose on all sides of him. There were straths or valleys
-of such exceeding beauty that they gladdened the eye to behold. The
-grass grew green here by the banks of many a brown roaring stream, and
-here, too, cattle roamed wild and free, knee-deep in flowery verdure,
-and many a beautiful guanaco and herds of llamas everywhere. The
-streams that meandered through these highland straths were sometimes
-very tortuous, but perhaps a mile distant they would seem to lose all
-control of themselves and go madly rushing over their pebbly beds, till
-they dashed over high cliffs at last, forming splendid cascades that
-fell into deep, dark, agitated pools, the mist that rose above forming
-rainbows which were never absent when the sun shone.
-
-And the hillsides that bounded these valleys were clad in Alpine
-verdure, with Alpine trees and flowers, strangely intermingled with
-beautiful heaths, and in the open glades with gorgeous geraniums, and
-many a lovely flower never seen even in greenhouses in our "tame
-domestic England".
-
-These were valleys, but there were glens and narrow gorges also, where
-dark beetling rocks frowned over the brown waters of streams that rushed
-fiercely onwards round rocks and boulders, against which they lashed
-themselves into foam.
-
-On these rocks strange fantastic trees clung, sometimes attached but by
-the rootlets, sometimes with their heads hanging almost sheer downwards;
-trees that the next storm of wind would hurl, with crash and roar, into
-the water far beneath.
-
-Yet such rivers or big burns were the home _par excellence_ of fish of
-the salmon tribe, and gazing below you might see here and there some
-huge otter, warily watching to spring on his finny prey.
-
-Nor were the otters alone on the _qui vive_, for, strange as it may
-seem, even pumas and tiger-cats often made a sullen dive into dark-brown
-pools, and emerged bearing on high some lordly red-bellied fish. With
-this they would "speel" the flowery, ferny rocks, and dart silently away
-into the depths of the forest.
-
-And this wild and beautiful country, at present inhabited by as wild a
-race of Indians as ever twanged the bow, but bound at no very distant
-date to come under the influence of Christianity and civilization, was
-Benee's real home. 'Twas here he roamed when a boy, for he had been a
-wanderer all his life, a nomad, and an inhabitant of the woods and
-wilds.
-
-Not a scene was unfamiliar to him. He could name every mountain and
-hill he gazed upon in his own strangely musical Indian tongue. Every
-bird, every creature that crept, or glided, or walked, all were his old
-friends; yes, and every tree and every flower, from the splendid
-parasitic plants that wound around the trees wherever the sun shone the
-brightest, and draped them in such a wealth of beauty as would have made
-all the richness and gaudiness of white kings and queens seem but a
-caricature.
-
-There was something of romance even in Benee. As he stood with folded
-arms on the brink of a cliff, and gazed downward into a charming glen,
-something very like tears stood in his eyes.
-
-He loved his country. It was his own, his native land. But the savages
-therein he had ceased to love. Because when but a boy--ah, how well he
-remembered that day,--he was sent one day by his father and mother to
-gather the berries of a deadly kind of thorn-bush, with the juice of
-which the flints in the points of the arrows were poisoned. Coming back
-to his parents' hut in the evening, as happy as boys only can be, he
-found the place in flames, and saw his father, mother, and a sister whom
-he loved, being hurried away by the savages, because the queen had need
-of them. The lot of death had fallen on them. Their flesh was wanted to
-make part of a great feast her majesty was about to give to a
-neighbouring potentate. Benee, who had ever been used to hunt for his
-food as a boy, or fish in the lakes and the brown roaring streams, that
-he and his parents might live, had always abhorred human sacrifice and
-human flesh. The latter he had seldom been prevailed upon even to
-taste.
-
-So from that terrible day he resolved to be a wanderer, and he
-registered a vow--if I may speak so concerning the thoughts of a poor
-boy-Indian--to take revenge when he became a man on this very tribe that
-had brought such grief and woe on him and his.
-
-Benee was still a young man, but little over two-and-twenty, and as he
-stood there thoughts came into his mind about a little sweetheart he had
-when a boy.
-
-Wee Weenah was she called; only a child of six when he was good sixteen.
-But in all his adventures, in forest or by the streams, Weenah used to
-accompany him. They used to be away together all day long, and lived on
-the nuts and the wild fruit that grew everywhere so plentifully about
-them, on trees, on bushes, or on the flowery banks.
-
-Where was Weenah now? Dead, perhaps, or taken away to the queen's
-blood-stained court. As a child Weenah was very beautiful, for many of
-these Indians are very far indeed from being repulsive.
-
-And Benee used to delight to dress his tiny lady-love in feathers of the
-wild birds, crimson and green and blue, and weave her rude garlands of
-the gaudiest flowers, to hang around her neck, or entwine in her long
-dark hair.
-
-He had gone to see Weenah--though he was then in grief and tears--after
-he had left his father's burnt shealing. He had told her that he was
-going away far to the north, that he was to become a hunter of the
-wilds, that he might even visit the homes of the white men, but that
-some day he would return and Weenah should be his wife.
-
-So they had parted thus, in childish grief and tears, and he had never
-seen her since.
-
-He might see her nevermore.
-
-While musing thus to himself, he stretched his weary limbs and body on
-the sweet-scented mossy cliff-top.
-
-It was day certainly, but was he not now at home, in his own, his native
-land?
-
-He seemed to be afraid of nothing, therefore, and so--he fell asleep.
-
-The bank on which he slept adjoined a darkling forest.
-
-A forest of strange dark pines, with red-brown stems, which, owing to
-the absence of all undergrowth save heather and moss and fern, looked
-like the pillars of some vast cavern.
-
-But there was bird music in this forest, and Benee had gone to sleep
-with the flute-like and mellow notes of the soo-soo falling on his ear.
-
-The soo-soo's song had accompanied him to the land of forgetfulness, and
-was mingling even now with his dreams--happy dreams of long ago.
-
-But list! Was that really the song of the bronze-necked soo-soo?
-
-He was half-awake now, but apparently dreaming still.
-
-He thought he was dreaming at all events, and would not have opened his
-eyes and so dispelled the dream for all the world.
-
-It was a sweet girlish voice that seemed to be singing--singing about
-him, about Benee the wanderer in sylvan wilds; the man who for long
-years had been alone because he loved being alone, whose hand--until he
-reached the white man's home--had been against everyone, and against
-every beast as well.
-
-And the song was a kind of sweet little ballad, which I should try in
-vain to translate.
-
-But Benee opened his eyes at last, and his astonishment knew no bounds
-as he saw, kneeling by his mossy couch, the self-same Weenah that he had
-been thinking and dreaming about.
-
-Though still a girl in years, being but thirteen, she seemed a woman in
-all her sympathies.
-
-Beautiful? Yes; scarcely changed as to face from the child of six he
-used to roam in the woods with in the long, long ago. Her dark hair
-hung to her waist and farther in two broad plaits. Her black eyes
-brimmed over with joy, and there was a flush of excitement on her
-sun-kissed cheeks.
-
-"Weenah! Oh, Weenah! Can it be you?" he exclaimed in the Indian
-tongue.
-
-"It is your own little child-love, your Weenah; and ah! how I have
-longed for you, and searched for you far and near. See, I am clad in
-the skins of the puma and the otter; I have killed the jaguar, too, and
-I have been far north and fought with terrible men. They fell before the
-poison of my arrows. They tried to catch me; but fleet of foot is
-Weenah, and they never can see me when I fly. In trees I have slept, on
-the open heather, in caves of rocks, and in jungle. But never, never
-could I find my Benee. Ah! life of mine, you will never go and leave us
-again.
-
-"Yes," she added, "Mother and Father live, and are well. Our home have
-we enlarged. 'Tis big now, and there is room in it for Benee.
-
-"Come; come--shall we go? But what strange, strange war-weapons you
-carry. Ah! they are the fire-spears of the white man."
-
-"Yes, Weenah mine! and deadly are they as the lightning's bolt that
-flashes downward from the storm-sky and lays dead the llama and the ox.
-
-"See yonder eagle, Weenah? Benee's aim is unerring; his hand is the
-hand of the rock, his eye the eye of the kron-dah" (a kind of hawk),
-"yet his touch on the trigger light as the moss-flax. Behold!"
-
-He raised the rifle as he spoke, and without even appearing to take aim
-he fired.
-
-Next moment the bird of Jove turned a somersault. It was a death-spasm.
-Down, down he fell earthwards, his breast-feathers following more
-slowly, like a shower of snow sparkling in the sunshine.
-
-Weenah was almost paralysed with terror, but Benee took her gently in
-his arms, and, kissing her brow and bonnie raven hair, soothed her and
-stilled her alarms.
-
-Hand in hand now through the forest, as in the days of yore! Both
-almost too happy to speak, Benee and his little Indian maiden! Hand in
-hand over the plain, through the crimson heath and the heather, heeding
-nothing, seeing nothing, knowing nothing save their own great happiness!
-Hand in hand until they stood beside Weenah's mother's cottage; and her
-parents soon ran out to welcome and to bless them!
-
-Theirs was no ordinary hut, for the father had been far to the east and
-had dwelt among white men on the banks of the rapid-rolling Madeira.
-
-When he had returned, slaves had come with him--young men whom he had
-bought, for the aborigines barter their children for cloth or schnapps.
-And these slaves brought with them tools of the white men--axes, saws,
-adzes, hammers, spades, and shovels.
-
-Then Shooks-gee (swift of foot) had cut himself timber from the forest,
-and, aided by his slaves, had set to work; and lo! in three moons this
-cottage by the wood arose, and the queen of the cannibals herself had
-none better.
-
-But Benee was welcomed and food set before him, milk of the llama,
-corn-cakes, and eggs of the heron and treel-ba (a kind of plover).
-
-Then warm drinks of coca (not cocoa) were given him, and the child
-Weenah's eyes were never turned away while he ate and drank.
-
-He smoked then, the girl sitting close by him on the bench and watching
-the strange, curling rings of reek rolling upwards towards the black and
-glittering rafters.
-
-"But," said Weenah's mother, "poor Benee has walked far and is much
-tired. Would not Benee like to cover his feet?"
-
-"Yes, our mother, Benee would sleep."
-
-"And I will watch and sing," said Weenah.
-
-"Sing the song of the forest," murmured Benee.
-
-Then Weenah sang low beside him while Benee slept.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV--SHOOKS-GEE'S STORY--A CANNIBAL QUEEN
-
-
-What is called "natural curiosity" in our country, where almost every
-man is a Paul Pry, is no trait of the Indian's character. Or if he ever
-does feel such an impulse, it is instantly checked. Curiosity is but
-the attribute of a squaw, a savage would tell you, but even squaws will
-try to prevent such a weed from flourishing in their hearts.
-
-That was the reason why neither the father nor the mother of Benee's
-little lady-love thought of asking him a single question concerning his
-adventures until he had eaten a hearty meal and had enjoyed a refreshing
-sleep.
-
-But when Benee sat up at last and quaffed the mat that Weenah had made
-haste to get him, and just as the day was beginning to merge into the
-twilight of summer, he began to tell his friends and his love some
-portion of his wonderful adventures, even from the day when he had
-bidden the child Weenah a tearful farewell and betaken himself to a
-wandering life in the woods.
-
-His young life's story was indeed a strange one,
-
- "Wherein he spake of most disastrous chances,
- Of moving accidents by flood and field;
- ... of antres vast and deserts idle,
- Rough quarries, rocks, and hills whose heads touch heaven.
-
- ----
-
-The while Weenah
-
- "... gave him for his pains a world of sighs.
- 'T was strange, 't was passing strange,
- 'T was pitiful, 't was wondrous pitiful:
- She wished she had not heard it; yet she wished
- That heaven had made her such a man."
-
-Then when Benee came down to that portion of his long story when first
-he found the children and their mighty wolf-hound lost in the forest,
-Weenah and her parents listened with greater interest and intensity than
-ever.
-
-There was a fire on the rude, low hearth--a fire of wood, of peat, and
-of moss; for at the great elevation at which this cannibal land is
-situated the nights are chilly.
-
-It was a fire that gave fitful light as well as heat. It fell on the
-faces of Benee's listeners, and cast shadows grotesque behind them. It
-beautified Weenah's face till Benee thought she looked like one of the
-angels that poor Peggy used to tell him about.
-
-Then he related to them all his suspicions of Peter, but did not
-actually accuse him of bringing about the abduction of Peggy, to serve
-some vile and unknown purpose of his own. Next he spoke, yet spoke but
-lightly, of his long, long march, and the incidents and adventures
-therewith connected.
-
-There was much, therefore, that Benee had to tell, but there was also
-much that he had to learn or to be told; and now that he had finished,
-it was Shooks-gee's turn to take up the story.
-
-I wish I could do justice to this man's language, which was grandly
-figurative, or to his dramatic way of talking, accompanied as it was
-with look and gesture that would have elicited applause on any European
-stage. I cannot do so, therefore shall not try; but the following is
-the pith of his story.
-
-This Indian's house was on the very outside and most northerly end of
-the great wild plateau which was the home of these savages and
-cannibals.
-
-The queen, a terrible monarch, and bloodthirsty in the extreme, used to
-hold her court and lived on a strange mountain or hill, in the very
-centre of the rough tree and bush clad plain.
-
-For many, many a long year she had lived here, and to her court Indians
-came from afar to do her homage, bringing with them cloth of crimson,
-wine and oil, which they had stolen or captured in warfare from the
-white men of Madeira valley.
-
-When these presents came, the coca which her courtiers used to chew all
-day long, and the mat they drank, were for a time--for weeks
-indeed--discarded for the wine and fire-water of the pale-face.
-
-Fearful were the revels then held on that lone mountain.
-
-The queen was dainty, so too were her fierce courtiers.
-
-When the revels first began she and they could eat the raw or
-half-roasted flesh of calves and baby-llamas, but when their potations
-waxed deeper, and appetite began to fail, then the orgies commenced in
-earnest. Nothing would her majesty eat now--horrible to say--but
-children, and her courtiers, armed to the teeth, would be sent to scour
-the plains, to visit the mud huts of her people, and drag therefrom the
-most beautiful and plump boys or girls procurable.
-
-I will not tell of the fearful and awfully unnatural human
-sacrifice--the murder of the innocents--that now took place.
-
-Demons could not have been more revolting in their cruelties than were
-those savage courtiers as they obeyed the queen's behests.
-
-Let me drop the curtain over this portion of the tale. Well, this
-particular cottage or hut, being on the confines of the country, had not
-been visited by the queen's fearsome soldiers. But even had they come
-they would have found that Weenah was far away in the woods, for her
-father Shooks-gee loved her much. But one evening there came up out of
-the dark pinewood forest, that lay to the north, a great band of
-wandering natives.
-
-They were all armed and under the command of one of her majesty's most
-bloodthirsty and daring chiefs.
-
-Hand to claw this man had fought pumas and jaguars, and slain them,
-armed only with his two-edged knife.
-
-This savage Rob Roy M'Gregor despised both bow-and-arrow and sling.
-Only at close quarters would he fight with man or beast, and although he
-bore the scars and slashes of many a fearful encounter, he had always
-come off victorious.
-
-Six feet four inches in height was this war-Indian if an inch, and his
-dress was a picturesque costume of skins with the tails attached. A
-huge mat of hair, his own, with emu's feathers drooping therefrom, was
-his only head-gear, but round his neck he wore a chain of polished
-pebbles, with heavy gold rings, in many of which rubies and diamonds
-sparkled and shone.
-
-But, ghastly to relate, between each pebble and between the rings of
-gold and precious stones, was threaded a tanned human ear. More than
-twenty of these were there.
-
-They had been cut from the heads of white men whom this chief--Kaloomah
-was his name--had slain, and the rings had been torn from their dead
-fingers.
-
-This was the band then that had arrived as the sun was going down at the
-hut of Shooks-gee, and this was their chief.
-
-The latter demanded food for his men, and Shooks-gee, with his trembling
-wife--Weenah was hidden--made haste to obey, and a great fire was lit
-out of doors, and flesh of the llama hung over it to roast.
-
-But the strangest thing was this. Seated on a hardy little mule was a
-sad but beautiful girl--white she was, and unmistakably English. Her
-eyes were very large and wistful, and she looked at Kaloomah and his
-band in evident fear and dread, starting and shrinking from the chief
-whenever he came near her or spoke.
-
-But the daintiest portion of the food was handed to her, and she ate in
-silence, as one will who eats in fear.
-
-The wild band slept in the bush, a special bed of dry grass being made
-for the little white queen, as Kaloomah called her, and a savage set to
-watch her while she slept.
-
-Next morning, when the wild chief and his braves started onwards,
-Shooks-gee was obliged to march along with them.
-
-Kaloomah had need of him. That was all the explanation vouchsafed.
-
-But this visit to the queen's home had given Weenah's father an insight
-into court life and usages that he could not otherwise have possessed.
-
-Kaloomah's band bore along with them huge bales of cloth and large boxes
-of beads. How they had become possessed of these Shooks-gee never knew,
-and could not guess.
-
-The grim and haughty queen, surrounded by her body-guard of grotesque
-and hideous warriors with their slashed and fearful faces, and the
-peleles hanging in the lobes of their ears, was seated at the farther
-end of a great wall, and on a throne covered with the skins of wild
-beasts.
-
-All in front the floor was carpeted with crimson, and her majesty
-sparkled with gold ornaments. A tiara of jewels encircled her brow, and
-a living snake of immense size, with gray eyes that never closed, formed
-a girdle round her waist.
-
-In her hand she held a poisoned spear, and at her feet crouched a huge
-jaguar.
-
-She was a tyrant queen, reigning over a people who, though savage, and
-cannibals to boot, had never dared to gainsay a word or order she
-uttered.
-
-Passionate in the extreme, too, she was, and if a slave or subject dared
-to disobey, a prick from the poisoned spear was the reward, and he or
-she was dragged out into the bush to writhe and die in terrible agony.
-
-Probably a more frightful woman never reigned as queen, even in cannibal
-lands.
-
-Kaloomah, on his arrival, bent himself down--nay, but threw himself on
-his knees and face abjectly before her, as if he were scarcely worthy to
-be her footstool.
-
-But she greeted his arrival with a smile, and bade him arise.
-
-"Many presents have we brought," he said in the figurative language of
-the Indian. "Many presents to the beautiful mother of the sun. Cloth
-of scarlet, of blue, and of green, cloth of rainbow colours, jewels and
-beads, and the fire-water of the pale-faces."
-
-"Produce me the fire-water of the pale-faces," she returned. "I would
-drink."
-
-Her voice was husky, hoarse, and horrible.
-
-Kaloomah beckoned to a slave, and in a few minutes a cocoa-nut shell,
-filled with rum, was held to her lips.
-
-The queen drank, and seemed happier after this. Kaloomah thought he
-might now venture to broach another subject.
-
-"We have brought your majesty also a little daughter of the pale-faces!"
-
-Then Peggy--for the reader will have guessed it was she--was led
-trembling in before her, and made to kneel.
-
-But the queen's brows had lowered when she beheld the child's great
-beauty. She made her advance, and seizing her by the hand, held her at
-arm's-length.
-
-[Illustration: "SHE ... HELD HER AT ARM'S LENGTH"]
-
-"Take her away!" she cried. "I can love her not. Put her in prison
-below ground!"
-
-And the beautiful girl was hurried away.
-
-To be put in prison below the ground meant to be buried alive. But
-Kaloomah had no intention of obeying the queen on this occasion, and the
-girl pale-face was conducted to a well-lighted bamboo hut and placed in
-charge of a woman slave.
-
-This slave looked a heart-broken creature, but seemed kind and good, and
-now made haste to spread the girl's bed of leaves on a bamboo bench, and
-to place before her milk of the llama, with much luscious fruit and
-nuts. She needed little pressing to eat, or drink, or sleep. The poor
-child had almost ceased to wonder, or even to be afraid of anything.
-
-But now comes the last act in Shooks-gee's strange story.
-
-Two days after the arrival of the warlike band from the far north,
-Kaloomah had once more presented himself before the queen. He came
-unannounced this time, and with him were seven fierce-looking soldiers,
-armed to the teeth with slings and stones, with bows and arrows, and
-with spears.
-
-The conversation that had ensued was somewhat as follows, being
-interpreted into our plain and humdrum English:--
-
-_The Queen_. "Why advances my general and slave except on his knees,
-even as come the frogs?"
-
-_Kaloomah_. "My queen will pardon me. I will not so offend again.
-Your majesty has reigned long and happily."
-
-_Q_. "True, slave."
-
-She seized the poisoned spear as she spoke, and would have used it
-freely; but at a word from Kaloomah it was wrenched from her grasp.
-
-_K_. "Your majesty's reign has ended! The old queen must make room for
-the beautiful daughter of the pale-faces. Yet will your beneficence
-live in the person of the new queen, and in our hearts--the hearts of
-those who have fought for you. For we each and all shall taste of your
-roasted flesh!"
-
-Then, turning quickly to the soldiers, "Seize her and drag her forth!"
-he cried, "and do your duty speedily."
-
-I must not be too graphic in my description of the scene that followed.
-But the ex-queen was led to a darksome hut, and there she was speedily
-despatched.
-
-That night high revelry was held in the royal camp of the cannibals.
-Many prisoners were killed and roasted, and the feast was a fearful and
-awful one.
-
-But not a chief was there in all that crowd who did not partake of the
-flesh of his late queen, while horn trumpets blared and war tom-toms
-were wildly beaten.
-
-A piece of the fearful flesh was even given to the pale-face girl's
-attendant, with orders that she must make her charge partake thereof.
-
-The girl was spared this terrible ordeal, however.
-
-But long after midnight the revelry and the wild music went on, then
-ceased, and all was still.
-
-The unhappy prisoner lay listening till sleep stole down on a star-ray
-and wafted her off to the land of sweet forgetfulness.
-
- ----
-
-Next day, amidst wild unearthly clamour and music, she was led from the
-tent and seated on the throne. Garments of otter skins and crimson cloth
-were cast on the throne and draped over the beautiful child. She was
-encircled with flowers of rarest hue, and emu's feathers were stuck,
-plume-like, in her bonnie hair.
-
-Meanwhile the trumpets blared more loudly, and the tom-toms were struck
-with treble force, then all ceased at once, and there was a silence deep
-as death, as everyone prostrated himself or herself before the
-newly-made young queen.
-
-Kaloomah rose at last, and advanced with bended back and head towards
-her, and with an intuitive sense of her new-born dignity she touched him
-gently on the shoulder and bade him stand erect.
-
-He did so, and then placed in her hand the sceptre of the dead
-queen--the poison-tipped spear.
-
-Whatever might happen now, the girl knew that she was safe for a time,
-and her spirits rose in consequence.
-
-This, then, was the story told by Shooks-gee, the father of Benee's
-child-love.
-
- ----
-
-Had Dick Temple himself been there he could no longer have doubted the
-fidelity of poor Benee.
-
-But there was much to be done, and it would need all the tact and skill
-of this wily Indian to carry out his plans.
-
-He could trust his father and mother, as he called Weenah's parents, and
-he now told them that he had come, if possible, to deliver Peggy, or if
-that were impossible, to hand her a letter that should give her both
-comfort and hope.
-
-Queen Peggy's apartments on the mountain were cannibalistically regal in
-their splendour. The principal entrance to her private room was
-approached by a long avenue of bamboo rails, completely lined with
-skulls and bones, and the door thereof was also surrounded by the same
-kind of horrors.
-
-But every one of her subjects was deferential to her, and appeared
-awe-struck with her beauty.
-
-And now Benee consulted with his parents as to what had best be done.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI--ON THE BANKS OF A BEAUTIFUL RIVER
-
-
-They would not allow Benee to harbour for a single moment the idea of
-stealing the queen and escaping with her into the forest.
-
-Two thousand armed men were stationed within a mile of the camp, so
-Benee would speedily be killed, and in all likelihood Queen Peggy also.
-
-No; and he must go no farther into the land of the cannibals.
-
-But he, Shooks-gee, undertook to give the queen a little note-book, in
-which a letter was written from her "brother", stating that all haste
-was being made to come to her deliverance. He would receive back the
-note-book, and therein would doubtless be written poor Peggy's letter.
-Meanwhile Benee must wait.
-
-Shooks-gee started on his mission next day.
-
-He was away for a whole week, but it seemed but a few hours to Benee.
-He had divested himself of his arms, and given the cloth and beads to
-Weenah's mother. Then all the dear old life of his boyhood seemed to be
-renewed. Weenah and he wandered wild and free once more in the forest
-and over the heath-clad plains; they fished in lake and stream; they ate
-and drank together under the shade of the pine-tree, and listened to the
-love-song of the sweet soo-soo.
-
-It was all like a happy, happy dream. And is not the love-life of the
-young always a dream of bliss? Ah! but it is one from which there is
-ever an awakening.
-
-And with the return of Shooks-gee, Benee's dream came to an end.
-
-Peggy had written her long, sad story in the notebook.
-
-Benee knew it was long, but he could not read it.
-
-Then farewells were said.
-
-The child Weenah clung to Benee's neck and wept. She thought she could
-not let him go, and at last he had to gently tear himself away and
-disappear speedily in the forest.
-
-Just one glance back at Weenah's sad and wistful face, then the jungle
-swallowed him up, and he would be seen by Weenah, mayhap, never again.
-
- ----
-
-It was not without considerable misgivings that Roland and Dick Temple
-made a start for the country of the cannibals.
-
-The relief party consisted but of one hundred white men all told, with
-about double that number of carriers. It was, of course, the first real
-experience of these boys on the war-path, and difficulty after
-difficulty presented itself, but was bravely met and overcome.
-
-"Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown."
-
-Probably the general of an army, be it of what size it may, is more to
-be pitied than even a king. The latter has his courtiers and his
-parliament to advise him; the general is _princeps_, he is chief, and
-has only his own skill and judgment to fall back upon.
-
-It had been suggested by Burly Bill that instead of journeying overland
-as a first start, and having to cross the whirling river Purus and many
-lesser streams before striking the Madeira some distance above the
-Amazon, they should drop down-stream in steamer-loads, and assemble at
-the junction of the former with the latter.
-
-Neither Roland nor Dick thought well of the plan, and herein lay their
-first mistake. Not only was it weeks before they were able to reach the
-Madeira, but they had the grief of losing one white man and one Indian
-with baggage in the crossing of the Purus.
-
-We cannot put old heads on young shoulders; nevertheless the wise youth
-never fails to profit by the experience of his elders.
-
-Even when they reached the forest lands on the west side of the Madeira,
-another long delay ensued. For here they had to encamp on somewhat damp
-and unwholesome ground until Burly Bill should descend the stream to
-hire canoes or boats suitable for passing the rapids.
-
-Don Pedro or Peter was now doing his best to make himself agreeable. He
-was laughing and singing all day long, but this fact in no way deceived
-Roland, and as a special precaution he told off several white men to act
-as detectives and to be near him by day and by night.
-
-If Peter were really the blood-guilty wretch that Roland, if not Dick,
-believed him to be, he made one mistake now. He tried his very utmost
-to make friends with Brawn, the great Irish wolf-hound, but was, of
-course, unsuccessful.
-
-"I sha'n't take bite nor sup from that evil man's hand," Brawn seemed to
-say to himself. "He looks as if he would poison me. But," he added,
-"he shall have my undivided attention at night."
-
-And so this huge hound guarded Peter, never being ten yards away from
-the man's sleeping-skin till up leapt the sun in the gold and crimson
-east and shone on the waters of the beautiful river.
-
-"That dog is getting very fond of you, I think," said Roland one day to
-Peter, while Brawn was snuffing his hand. "You see how well he protects
-you by night. He will never lie near to either Dick or me."
-
-Peter replied in words that were hardly audible, but were understood to
-mean that he was obliged to Brawn for his condescension. But he
-somewhat marred the beauty of his reply by adding a swear-word or two at
-the end.
-
-While they waited in camp here for the return of Bill and his crews,
-they went in for sport of several sorts.
-
-The fish in this river are somewhat remarkable--remarkable alike for
-their numbers and for their appearance--but all are not edible.
-
-"How are we to know, I wonder, which we should cook and which we
-shouldn't?" said Roland to his friend, Dick Temple.
-
-"I think," replied Dick, "that we may safely cook any of them, but, as
-to eating, why, I should only eat those that are nice in flavour."
-
-"That's right. We'll be guided by that rule."
-
-The boys fished from canoes which they hired or requisitioned from the
-Indian natives of the place. Clever these fellows are, and the manner in
-which they watch for and harpoon or even spear a huge "boto"--which
-looks like a long-snouted porpoise or "sea-pig"--astonished our heroes.
-
-This fish is killed by whites only for its oil, but the Indians did not
-hesitate to cut huge fourteen-pound pieces from the back to take home
-for culinary purposes.
-
-The "piraroocoo" is an immense fellow, and calculated to give good sport
-for a long summer day if you do not know how to handle him.
-
-This "'roocoo", as some of the natives call him, likes to hang around in
-the back reaches of the river, and is often found ten feet in length.
-
-He has the greatest objection in the world to being caught, and to being
-killed after being dragged on shore. Moreover, he has a neat and very
-expert way of lifting a canoe on his back for a few seconds, and letting
-it down bottom-upwards.
-
-When he does so, you, the sportsman or piscador, find yourself
-floundering in the water. You probably gulp down about half a gallon of
-river water, but you thank your stars you learned to swim when a boy,
-and strike out for the bank. But five to one you have a race to run
-with an intelligent 'gator. If he is hungry, you may as well think
-about some short prayer to say; if he is not very ravenous, you may win
-just by a neck.
-
-This last was an experience of Dick's one day; when a 'roocoo capsized
-his frail canoe and his Indian and he got spilt.
-
-Luckily Roland was on the beach, and just as a huge 'gator came
-ploughing up behind poor Dick, with head and awful jaws above water,
-Roland took steady aim and fired. Then the creature turned on his back,
-and the river was dyed with blood.
-
-The natives salt the 'roocoo and eat it. But Roland's Indian carriers
-managed to get through as many as could be caught, without any salt
-worth speaking about.
-
-Surely the fish in this beautiful river must have thought it strange,
-that so many of their number were constantly disappearing heavenwards at
-the end of a line. But it did not trouble them very much after all, and
-they learnt no lesson from what they saw, but took the bait as readily
-as ever.
-
-There were very many other species of fish, which not only gave good
-sport but made a most delicious _addendum_ to the larder.
-
-Boats and canoes were now in the river all day long, and with the fish
-caught, and the turtle which were found in great abundance, not to
-mention the wild animals killed in the woods, Roland managed to feed his
-little army well.
-
-There is one fish in this river which is sometimes called "diabolo". He
-is no relation at all, however, to the real octopus or devil-fish, for
-this creature is flat. It seems a species of ray, and has an immense
-mouthful of the very sharpest of teeth. He is not at all dainty as to
-what he eats. He can make a meal off fresh-water shell-fish; he can
-swallow his smaller brothers of the deep; take a snack from a dead
-'gator, and is quite at home while discussing a nice tender one-pound
-steak from a native's leg.
-
-The young 'gator is neither fish, flesh, nor good red-herring. Yet if
-you catch one not over a yard long, and he doesn't catch you--for he has
-a wicked way of seizing a man by the hand and holding on till his mother
-comes,--his tail, stewed or fried with a morsel of pork, will tide you
-over a "hungry hillock" very pleasantly indeed.
-
-If we turn to the pleasant reaches of the River Madeira, or the quiet
-back-waters, and, gun on shoulder, creep warily through the bush and
-scrub, we shall be rewarded with a sight that will well repay our
-caution.
-
-Here of an early morning we shall see water-fowl innumerable, and of the
-greatest beauty imaginable.
-
-Hidden from view, one is loth indeed to fire a shot and so disturb
-Nature's harmony, but prefers, for a time at all events, to crouch there
-quietly and watch the strange antics of the male birds and the meek
-docility of the female.
-
-Here are teal, black ducks, strange wild geese, brown ducks, sheldrakes,
-widgeons, and whatnot.
-
-And yonder on the shore, in all sorts of droll attitudes with their
-ridiculously long necks and legs, are storks and herons. I think they
-like to perform their toilet close to the calm pellucid water, because
-it serves the same purpose to them as a bedroom mirror does to us.
-
-Young tapirs form a welcome addition to the larder, and the woods all
-round abound in game.
-
-What a paradise! and yet this country is hardly yet known to us young
-Britons. We hear of ague. Bah! Regularity of living, and a dust of
-quinine, and camping in the open, can keep fever of all sorts at bay.
-
-Some may be surprised that our heroes should have settled down, as it
-were, so enthusiastically to fishing and sporting, although uncertain
-all the while as to the fate of poor kidnapped Peggy.
-
-True, but we must remember that activity and constant employment are the
-only cure for grief. So long, then, as Roland and Dick were busy with
-gun or fishing-rod, they were free from thought and care.
-
-But after sunset, when the long dark night closed over the camp; when
-the fire-flies danced from bush to bush, and all was still save the wind
-that sighed among the trees, or the voices of night-birds and prowling
-beasts, and the rush of the river fell on the ear in drowsy, dreamy
-monotone, then the boys felt their anxiety acutely enough, but bravely
-tried to give each other courage, and their conversation, oft-repeated,
-was somewhat as follows:--
-
-_Roland_. "You're a bit gloomy to-night, Dick, I think?"
-
-_Dick_. "Well, Roll, the night is so pitchy dark, never a moon, and
-only a star peeping out now and then. Besides I am thinking of--"
-
-_Roland_. "Hush! hush! aren't we both always thinking about her?
-Though I won't hesitate to say it is wrong not to be hopeful and
-cheerful."
-
-_Dick_. "But do you believe--"
-
-_Roland_. "I believe this, Dick, that if those kidnapping revengeful
-Indians had meant murder they would have slain the dear child in bed and
-not have resorted to all that horrible trickery--instigated without
-doubt by somebody. She has been taken to the country of the cannibals,
-but not to be tortured. She is a slave, let us hope, to some Indian
-princess, and well-guarded too. What we have got to do is to trust in
-God. I'm no preacher, but that is so. And we've got to do our duty and
-rescue Peggy."
-
-_Dick_. "Dead or alive, Roland."
-
-_Roland_. "Dead or alive, Dick. But Heaven have mercy on the souls of
-those who harm a hair of her head!"
-
- ----
-
-Dick did his best to trust in Providence, but often in the middle
-watches of the night he would lie in his tent thinking, thinking, and
-unable to sleep; then, after perhaps an uneasy slumber towards morning,
-awake somewhat wearily to resume the duties of the day.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII--BILL AND HIS BOATS
-
-
-Roland, young and inexperienced as he was, proved himself a fairly good
-general.
-
-He certainly had not forgotten the salt, nor anything else that was
-likely to add to the comfort of his people in this very long cruise by
-river and by land.
-
-They knew not what was before them, nor what trouble or dangers they
-might have to encounter, so our young heroes were pretty well prepared
-to fight or to rough it in every way.
-
-Independent of very large quantities of ammunition for rifles and
-revolvers, Roland had prepared a quantity of war-rockets, for nothing
-strikes greater terror into the breasts of the ordinary savage than
-these fire-devils, as they term them.
-
-Roland, Dick, and Bill each had shot-guns, with sheath-knives, and a
-sort of a portable bill-hook, which many of the men carried also, and
-found extremely handy for making a clearance among reeds, rushes, or
-lighter bush.
-
-We have already seen that they had plenty of fishing-tackle.
-
-Oil and pumice-stone were not forgotten, and Roland had a regular
-inspection of his men every day, to make certain that their rifles and
-revolvers were clean.
-
-But this was not all, for, to the best of their ability, both Roland and
-Dick drilled their men to the use of their arms at short and long
-distances, and taught them to advance and retire in skirmishing order,
-taking advantage of every morsel of cover which the ground might afford.
-
-Plenty of maize and corn-flour were carried, and quite a large supply of
-tinned provisions, from the plantation and from Burnley Hall. These
-included canned meat, sardines, and salmon.
-
-Extra clothing was duly arranged for, because from the plains they would
-have to ascend quite into the regions of cloud and storm, if not snow.
-
-Medicine, too, but only a very little of this, Roland thought, would be
-needed, although, on the other hand, he stowed away lint and bandages in
-abundance, with a few surgical instruments.
-
-Medical comforts? Yes, and these were not to be considered as luxuries,
-though they took the form of brandy and good wine.
-
-Good tea, coffee, cocoa, and coca were, of course, carried, with sugar
-to sweeten these luxuries.
-
-But a small cask of fire-water--arrack--was included among the stores,
-and this was meant as a treat for native Indians, if they should happen
-to meet any civil and obliging enough to hobnob.
-
-Money would be of no use in the extreme wilds. Salt, and cloth of gaudy
-colours, to say nothing of beads, would be bartered for articles of
-necessity.
-
- ----
-
-Everything was ready for the start, but still there were no signs of
-Bill and the boats.
-
-It was the first question Roland asked Dick of a morning, or Dick asked
-Roland, according to who happened to be first up:
-
-"Any signs of Bill and the boats?"
-
-"None!"
-
-On the top of a cliff at the bend of the beautiful river stood a very
-tall tree, and right on top of this was an outlook--an Indian boy, who
-stayed two hours on watch, and was then relieved.
-
-He could command quite an extensive view downstream, and was frequently
-hailed during the day and asked about Bill and his boats, but the answer
-would come somewhat dolefully:
-
-"Plenty boat, sah, but no Beel."
-
-Yes, there were boats of many kinds, and a few steamers now and then
-also, but Roland held no intercourse with any of these. His little army
-was encamped on an open clearing well back in the forest. He did not
-wish to know anyone's business, and he determined that his own should
-not leak out.
-
-But although Roland and Dick had plenty to do, and there was sport
-enough to be had, still the time began to drag wearily on day by day,
-and both young fellows were burning for action and movement and "go".
-
-Peter, _alias_ Don Pedro, seemed as anxious as anyone else to get
-forward.
-
-He was most quiet and affable to everyone, although apt to drop into
-dejected moods at times.
-
-He saw that he was not wholly in bad favour with Dick Temple.
-
-One day, when Roland was at the other side of the river, after smoking
-in silence for some time by the banks of the stream, where, in company
-with Dick and Brawn, he was sitting, a down-steamer hove in sight at the
-bend of the river, and both waved their caps to those on board, a salute
-which was cheerfully returned.
-
-The vessel was some distance out in the broad river, but presently Dick
-could see a huge black-board held over the port-quarter. There was
-writing in chalk on it, and Dick speedily put his lorgnettes up, and
-read as follows:--
-
- IF GOING UP RIVER--BEWARE!
-
- KARAPOONA SAVAGES ON WAR-PATH--TREACHERY!
-
-
-"Forewarned is forearmed!" said Dick.
-
-"What was the legend exposed to view on the telegraph board?" asked
-Peter languidly.
-
-"The Karapoona savages on the war-path," replied Dick.
-
-"What! The Karapoonas! A fearful race, and cannibals to boot--"
-
-"You know them then?"
-
-"What, I? I--I--no--no, only what I have heard."
-
-He took three or four whiffs of his cigarette in quick succession, as if
-afraid of its going dead.
-
-But Dick's eye was on him all the time.
-
-He seemed not to care to meet it.
-
-"Bound for Par, no doubt," he said at last. "I do wish I were on
-board."
-
-"No doubt, Mr. Peter, and really we seem to be taking you on this
-expedition somewhat against your will?"
-
-"True; and I am a man of the world, and have not failed to notice that I
-am in some measure under the ban of suspicion.
-
-"Yet, I think you are not unfriendly to me," he added.
-
-"No, Mr. Peter, I am unfriendly to no one."
-
-"Then, might you not use your influence with your friend, Mr. St. Clair,
-to let me catch the first boat back to Par?"
-
-"I cannot interfere with Mr. Roland St. Clair's private concerns. If he
-suspects you of anything in the shape of duplicity or treachery and you
-are innocent, you have really nothing to fear. As to letting you off
-your engagement, that is his business. I can only say that the tenure
-of your office is not yet complete, and that you are his head-clerk for
-still another year."
-
-"True, true, but I came as governor of the estate, and not to accompany
-a mad-cap expedition like this. Besides, Mr. Temple, I am far from
-strong. I am a man of peace, too, and have hardly ever fired a revolver
-in my life.
-
-"But I have another very urgent reason for getting back to England--"
-
-"No doubt, Mr. Peter!"
-
-This was almost a sneer.
-
-"No doubt--but I interrupt you."
-
-"My other reason may appeal to you in more ways than one. I am in love,
-Mr. Temple--"
-
-"You!"
-
-"I am in love, and engaged to be married to one of the sweetest girls in
-Cornwall. If I am detained here, and unable to write, she may think me
-dead--and--and--well, anything might happen."
-
-"Pah, Mr. Peter! I won't say I don't believe you, but instead of your
-little romance appealing to me, it simply disgusts me. I tell you
-straight, sir, you don't look like a man to fall in love with anything
-except gold; but if the young lady is really fond of you, she will lose
-neither hope nor heart, even if she does not hear of you or from you for
-a year or more."
-
-Then, seeing that he seemed to wound this strange man's feelings:
-
-"Pardon my brusqueness, Mr. Peter," he added more kindly. "I really do
-not mean to hurt you. Come, cheer up, and if I can help you--I will."
-
-Peter held out his hand.
-
-Dick simply touched it.
-
-He could not get himself even to like the man.
-
- ----
-
-The signal-tree was but a few yards distant from the spot where they
-sat.
-
-And now there came a wild, excited hail therefrom.
-
-"Golly foh true, Massa Dick!"
-
-Brawn jumped up, and barked wildly.
-
-His echo came from beyond the stream, and he barked still more wildly at
-that.
-
-"Well, boy," shouted Dick, "do you see anything?"
-
-"Plenty moochee see. Beel come. Not very far off. Beel and de boats!"
-
-This was indeed joyful news for Dick. He happened to glance at Peter
-for a moment, however, and could not help being struck with the change
-that seemed to have come over him. He appeared to have aged suddenly.
-His face was gray, his lips compressed, his brows lowered and stern.
-
-Dick never forgot that look.
-
-Dick Temple was really good-hearted, and he felt for this man, and
-something kept telling him he was innocent and wronged.
-
-But he had nothing to fear if innocent. He would certainly be put to
-inconvenience, but for that, if all went well, Roland would not fail to
-recompense him handsomely, and he--Dick--had a duty to perform to his
-friend. So now in the bustle that followed--if Peter wanted to make a
-rush for the woods--he might try.
-
-Roland had heard the hail, and his canoe was now coming swiftly on
-towards the bank. Dick ran to meet him.
-
-When he half-pulled his friend on shore and turned back with him,
-behold! Peter was gone.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII--AS IF STRUCK BY A DUM-DUM BULLET
-
-
-Roland and Dick walked quickly towards the camp.
-
-It was all a scene of bustle and stir indescribable, for good news as
-well as bad travels apace.
-
-"Bill and the boats are coming!" Englishmen were shouting.
-
-"Beel and de boats!" chorused the Indians.
-
-But on the approach of "the young captains", as the boys were called,
-comparative peace was restored.
-
-"Had anyone seen Mr. Peter?" was the first question put by our heroes to
-their white officers. "No," from all.
-
-"He had disappeared for a few moments in his tent," said an Indian,
-"then der was no more Massa Peter."
-
-Scouts and armed runners were now speedily got together, and Roland gave
-them orders. They were to search the bush and forest, making a long
-detour or outflanking movement, then closing round a centre, as if in
-battue, to allow not a tree to go unexamined.
-
-This was all that could be done.
-
-So our heroes retraced their steps towards the river bank, where, lo!
-they beheld a whole fleet of strange canoes, big and small, being rowed
-swiftly towards them.
-
-In the bows of the biggest--a twelve-tonner--stood Burly Bill himself.
-
-He was blacker with the sun than ever, and wildly waving the broadest
-kind of Panama hat ever seen on the Madeira. But in his left hand he
-clutched his meerschaum, and such clouds was he blowing that one might
-have mistaken the great canoe for a steam-launch.
-
-He jumped on shore as soon as the prow touched the bank--the water here
-being deep.
-
-Black though Burly Bill was, his smile was so pleasant, and his face so
-good-natured, that everybody who looked at him felt at once on excellent
-terms with himself and with all created things.
-
-"I suppose I ought to apologize, Mr. Roland, for the delay--I--"
-
-"And I suppose," interrupted Roland, "you ought to do nothing of the
-kind. Dinner is all ready, Bill; come and eat first. Put guards in
-your boats, and march along. Your boys will be fed immediately."
-
-It was a splendid dinner.
-
-Burly Bill, who was more emphatic than choice in English, called it a
-tiptopper, and all hands in Roland's spacious tent did ample justice to
-it.
-
-Roland even spliced the main-brace, as far as Bill was concerned, by
-opening a bottle of choice port.
-
-The boys themselves merely sipped a little. What need have lads under
-twenty for vinous stimulants?
-
-Bill's story was a long one, but I shall not repeat it. He had
-encountered the greatest difficulty imaginable in procuring the sort of
-boats he needed.
-
-"But," he added, "all's well that end's well, I guess, and we'll start
-soon now, I suppose, for the rapids of Antonio."
-
-"Yes," said Roland, "we'll strike camp possibly to-morrow; but we must
-do as much loading up as possible to-night."
-
-"That's the style," said Bill. "We've got to make haste. Only we've
-got to think! 'Haste but not hurry', that's my motto.
-
-"But I say," he continued, "I miss two friends--where is Mr. Peter and
-where is Brawn?"
-
-"Peter has taken French leave, I fear, and Brawn, where is Brawn, Dick?"
-
-"I really did not miss either till now," answered Dick, "but let us
-continue to be fair to Mr. Peter-- Listen!"
-
-At that moment shouting was heard far down the forest.
-
-The noise came nearer and nearer, and our heroes waited patiently.
-
-In five minutes' time into the tent bounded the great wolf-hound,
-gasping but laughing all down both sides, and with about a foot of pink
-tongue--more or less--hanging out at one side, over his alabaster teeth.
-
-He quickly licked Roland's ears and Dick's, then uttered one joyous bark
-and made straight for Burly Bill.
-
-Yes, Bill was burly, but Brawn fairly rolled him over and nearly
-smothered him with canine caresses. Then he took a leap back to the boys
-as much as to say:
-
-"Why don't you rejoice too? Wouff--wouff! Aren't you glad that Bill
-has returned? Wouff! What would life be worth anyhow without Bill?
-Wouff--wouff--wow!"
-
-But the last wow ended in a low growl, as Peter himself stood smiling at
-the opening.
-
-"Why, Mr. Peter, we thought you were lost!" cried Dick.
-
-Mr. Peter walked up to Bill and shook hands.
-
-"Glad indeed to see you back," he said nonchalantly, "and you're not
-looking a bit paler. Any chance of a morsel to eat?"
-
-"Sit down," cried Dick. "Steward!"
-
-"Yes, sah; to be surely, sah. Dinner foh Massa Peter? One moment,
-sah."
-
-Mr. Peter was laughing now, but he had seated himself on the withered
-grass as far as possible from Brawn.
-
-"I must say that three hours in a tree-top gives one the devil's own
-appetite," he began. "I had gone to take a stroll in the forest, you
-know--"
-
-"Yes," said Roland, "we do know."
-
-Mr. Peter looked a little crestfallen, but said pointedly enough: "If
-you do know, there is no need for me to tell you."
-
-"Oh, yes, go on!" cried Dick.
-
-"Well then, I had not gone half a mile, and was just lighting up a
-cigarette, when Brawn came down on me, and I had barely time to spring
-into the tree before he reached the foot of it. There I waited as
-patiently as Job would have done--thank you, steward, what a splendid
-Irish stew!--till by and by--a precious long by and by--your boys came
-to look for Brawn, and in finding Brawn they found poor famishing me.
-Thank you, Bill, I'll be glad of a little wine."
-
-"Looking for Brawn, they found you, eh!" said Roland. "I should have
-put it differ--"
-
-But Dick punched Roland's leg, and Roland laughed and said no more.
-
- ----
-
-Two days after the arrival of Burly Bill an order was given for general
-embarkation. All under their several officers were inspected on the
-river bank, and to each group was allotted a station in boat or canoe.
-
-The head men or captains from whom Bill had hired the transport were in
-every instance retained, but a large number of Roland's own Indians were
-most expert rowers, and therefore to take others would only serve to
-load the vessels uncomfortably, not to say dangerously.
-
-But peons or paddlers to the number of two or four to each large canoe
-their several captains insisted on having.
-
-The inspection on the bank was a kind of "muster by open list", and
-Roland was exceedingly pleased with the result, for not a man or boy was
-missing.
-
-It was a delightful day when the expedition was at last got under way.
-
-Roland and Dick, with Peter, to say nothing of Brawn, occupied the
-after-cabin in a canoe of very light draught, but really a
-twelve-tonner. The cabin was, of course, both dining-room and sleeping
-berth--the lounges being skins of buffaloes and of wild beasts, but all
-clean and sweet.
-
-The cabin itself was built of bamboo and bamboo leaves lined with very
-light skins, so overlapping as to make the cabin perfectly dry.
-
-Our heroes had arranged about light, and candles were brought out as
-soon as daylight began to fade.
-
-Then the canoes were paddled towards the bank or into some beautiful
-reach or back-water, and there made fast for the night with padlock and
-chain.
-
-Roland and Dick had their own reasons for taking such strict
-precautions.
-
-The first day passed without a single adventure worth relating.
-
-The paddlers or peons, of whom there were seven on each side of our
-hero's huge canoe, worked together well. They oftentimes sang or
-chanted a wild indescribable kind of boat-lilt, to which the sound of
-the paddles was an excellent accompaniment, but now and then the captain
-would shout: "Choorka--choorka!" which, from the excitement the words
-caused, evidently meant "Sweep her up!" and then the vessel seemed to
-fly over the water and dance in the air.
-
-Other canoe captains would take up the cry, and "Choorka--Choorka!"
-would resound from every side.
-
-A sort of race was on at such times, but the _Burnley Hall_, as Roland's
-boat was called, nearly always left the others astern.
-
-Dinner was cooked on shore, and nearly everyone landed at night. Only
-our heroes stuck to their boat.
-
-There were moon and stars at present, and very pleasant it was to sit,
-or rather lie, at their open-sided cabin, and to watch these mirrored in
-the calm water, while fire-flies danced and flitted from bush to bush.
-
-But there was always the sorrow and the weight of grief lying deep down
-in the hearts of both Roland and Dick; the ever-abiding anxiety, the one
-question they kept asking themselves constantly, and which could not be
-answered, "Shall we be in time to save poor Peggy?"
-
-Mr. Peter slept on shore.
-
-Brawn kept him company. Kept untiring watch over him. And two faithful
-and well-armed Indians lay in the bush at a convenient distance.
-
-In a previous chapter I have mentioned an ex-cannibal Bolivian, whom
-Roland had made up his mind to take with him as a guide in the absence
-of, or in addition to, faithful Benee.
-
-He was called Charlie by the whites.
-
-Charlie was as true to his master as the needle to the pole.
-
-On the third evening of the voyage, just as Roland and Dick, with Bill,
-were enjoying an after-dinner lounge in an open glade not far from the
-river brink, the moon shining so brightly that the smallest of type
-could easily have been read by young eyes, he suddenly appeared in their
-midst.
-
-"What cheer, Charlie?" said Roland kindly. "Come, squat thee down, and
-we will give you a tiny toothful of aguardiente."
-
-"Touchee me he, no, no!" was the reply. "He catchee de bref too muchee.
-Smokee me, notwidstanding," he added.
-
-It was one of Charlie's peculiarities that if he could once get hold of
-a big word or two, he planted them in his conversation whenever he
-thought he had a favourable opening.
-
-An ex-cannibal Charlie was, and he came from the great western
-unexplored district of Bolivia.
-
-He confessed that although fond of "de pig ob de forest (tapir), de tail
-ob de 'gator, and de big haboo-snake when roast," there was nothing in
-all the world so satisfactory as "de fles' ob a small boy. Yum, yum! it
-was goodee, goodee notwidstanding, and make bof him ear crack and him
-'tumack feel wa'm."
-
-Charlie lit up his cigarette, and then commenced to explain the reason
-of his visit.
-
-"What you callee dat?" he said, handing Burly Bill a few large purple
-berries of a species of thorny laurel.
-
-"Why," said Bill, "these are the fruit of the lanton-tree, used for
-poisoning arrow-tips."
-
-"And dis, sah. What you callee he? Mind, mind, no touchee de point!
-He poison, notwidstanding."
-
-It was a thin bamboo cane tipped with a fine-pointed nail.
-
-Bill waited for him to explain.
-
-He condescended to do so at last.
-
-"Long time ago I runee away from de cannibal Indians notwidstanding. I
-young den, I fat, I sweet in flesh. Sometime my leg look so nice, I
-like to eat one little piecee ob myse'f. But no. Charlie not one big
-fool. But de chief tink he like me. He take me to him tent one day,
-den all muchee quickee he slaves run in and take up knife. Ha, ha! I
-catchee knife too, notwidstanding. Charlie young and goodee and plenty
-mooch blood fly.
-
-"I killee dat chief, and killee bof slaves. Den I runned away.
-
-"Long time I wander in de bush, but one day I come to de tents ob de
-white men. Dey kind to poh Charlie, and gib me work. I lub de white
-man; all same, I no lub Massa Peter."
-
-He paused to puff at a fresh cigarette.
-
-"And," he added, "I fine dat poison berry and dat leetle poison spear in
-place where Massa Peter sleep."
-
-"Ho, ho!" said Bill.
-
-Charlie grew a little more excited as he continued: "As shuah as God
-madee me, de debbil hisself makee dat bad man Peter. He wantee killee
-poh Brawn. Dat what for, notwidstanding."
-
-Now although there be some human beings--they are really not worth the
-name--who hate dogs, every good-hearted man or woman in the world loves
-those noble animals who are, next to man, the best and bravest that God
-has created.
-
-But there are degrees in the love people bear for their pets. If a
-faithful dog like Brawn is constantly with one, he so wins one's
-affection that death alone can sever the tie.
-
-Not only Roland, but Dick also, dearly loved Brawn, and the bare idea
-that he was in danger of his life so angered both that, had Mr. Peter
-been present when honest Charlie the Indian made his communication, one
-of them would most certainly have gone for him in true Etonian style,
-and the man would have been hardly presentable at court for a fortnight
-after at the least.
-
-"Dick," said Roland, the red blood mounting to his brow, the fire
-seeming to scintillate from his eyes. "Dick, old man, what do you
-advise?"
-
-"I know what I should like to do," answered Dick, with clenched fist and
-lowered brows.
-
-"So do I, Dick; but that might only make matters worse.
-
-"But Heaven keep me calm, old man," he continued, "for now I shall send
-for Peter and have it out with him. Not at present, you say? But,
-Dick, I am all on fire. I must, I shall speak to him. Charlie, retire;
-I would not have Mr. Peter taking revenge on so good a fellow as you."
-
-At Dick's earnest request Roland waited for half an hour before he sent
-for Peter.
-
-This gentleman advanced from the camp fire humming an operatic air, and
-with a cigar in hand.
-
-"Oh, Mr. Peter," said Roland, "I was walking near your sleeping place of
-last night and picked this up."
-
-He held up the little bamboo spear.
-
-"What is it?" said Peter. "An arrow? I suppose some of the Indians
-dropped it. I never saw it before. It seems of little consequence," he
-continued, "though I dare say it would suffice to pink a rat with."
-
-He laughed lightly as he spoke. "Was this all you wanted me for, Mr.
-St. Clair?"
-
-He was handling the little spear as he spoke. Next moment:
-
-"Merciful Father!" he suddenly screamed, "I have pricked myself! I am
-poisoned! I am a dead man! Brandy-- Oh, quick-- Oh--!"
-
-He said never a word more, but dropped on the moss as if struck by a
-dum-dum bullet.
-
-And there he lay, writhing in torture, foaming at the mouth, from which
-blood issued from a bitten tongue.
-
-It was a ghastly and horrible sight. Roland looked at Dick.
-
-"Dick," he said, "the man knew it was poisoned."
-
-"Better he should die than Brawn."
-
-"Infinitely," said Roland.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX--STRUGGLING ONWARDS UP-STREAM
-
-
-"But," said Roland, "it would be a pity to let even Peter die, as we may
-have need of him. Let us send for Charlie at once. Perhaps he can tell
-us of an antidote."
-
-The Indian was not far off.
-
-"Fire-water", was his reply to Dick's question, "and dis."
-
-"Dis" was the contents of a tiny bottle, which he speedily rubbed into
-the wound in Peter's hand.
-
-The steward, as one of the men was called, quickly brought a whole
-bottle of rum, the poisoned man's jaws were forced open, and he was
-literally drenched with the hot and fiery spirit.
-
-But spasm after spasm took place after this, and while the body was
-drawn up with cramp, and the muscles knotted and hard, the features were
-fearfully contorted.
-
-By Roland's directions chloroform was now poured on a handkerchief, and
-after this was breathed by the sufferer for a few minutes the muscles
-became relaxed, and the face, though still pale as death, became more
-sightly.
-
-More rum and more rubbing with the antidote, and Mr. Peter slept in
-peace.
-
-About sunrise he awoke, cold and shivering, but sensible.
-
-After a little more stimulant he began to talk.
-
-"Bitten by a snake, have I not been?"
-
-"Mr. Peter," said Roland sternly, "you have narrowly escaped the death
-you would have meted out to poor Brawn with your cruel and accursed
-arrow.
-
-"You may not love the dog. He certainly does not love you, and dogs are
-good judges of character. He tree'd you, and you sought revenge. You
-doubtless have other reasons to hate Brawn, but his life is far more to
-us than yours. Now confess you meant to do for him, and then to make
-your way down-stream by stealing a canoe."
-
-"I do not, will not confess," cried Peter. "It is a lie. I am here
-against my will. I am kidnapped. I am a prisoner. The laws of even
-this country--and sorry I am ever I saw it--will and shall protect me."
-
-Roland was very calm, even to seeming carelessness.
-
-"We are on the war-path at present, my friend," he said very quietly.
-"You are suspected of one of the most horrible crimes that felon ever
-perpetrated, that of procuring the abduction of Miss St. Clair and
-handing her over to savages."
-
-"As Heaven is above us," cried Peter, "I am guiltless of that!"
-
-"Hush!" roared Roland, "why take the sacred name of Heaven within your
-vile lips. Were you not about to die, I would strike you where you
-stand."
-
-"To die, Mr. Roland? You--you--you surely don't mean--"
-
-Roland placed a whistle to his lips, and its sound brought six stern men
-to his side.
-
-"Bind that man's hands behind his back and hang him to yonder tree," was
-the order.
-
-In two minutes' time the man was pinioned and the noose dangling over
-his head.
-
-As he stood there, arrayed but in shirt and trousers, pale and
-trembling, with the cold sweat on his brow, it would have been difficult
-even to imagine a more distressing and pitiable sight.
-
-His teeth chattered in his head, and he swayed about as if every moment
-about to fall.
-
-A man advanced, and was about to place the noose around his neck when:
-
-"A moment, one little moment!" cried Peter. "Sir--Mr. St. Clair--I did
-mean to take your favourite dog's life."
-
-"And Miss St. Clair?"
-
-"I am innocent. If--I am to be lynched--for--that--you have the blood
-of a guiltless man on your head."
-
-Dick Temple had seen enough. He advanced now to Peter's side.
-
-"Your crime deserves lynching," he said, "but I will intercede for you
-if you promise me sacredly you will never attempt revenge again. If you
-do, as sure as fate you shall swing."
-
-"I promise--Oh--I promise!"
-
-Dick retired, and after a few minutes' conversation with Roland, the
-wretched man was set free.
-
-_Entre nous_, reader, Roland had never really meant to lynch the man.
-But so utterly nerveless and broken-down was Mr. Peter now, that as soon
-as he was released he threw himself on the ground, crying like a child.
-
-Even Brawn pitied him, and ran forward and actually licked the hands of
-the man who would have cruelly done him to death.
-
-So noble is the nature of our friend the dog.
-
- ----
-
-The voyage up-stream was now continued. But the progress of so many
-boats and men was necessarily slow, for all had to be provided for, and
-this meant spending about every alternate day in shooting, fishing, and
-collecting fruit and nuts.
-
-The farther up-stream they got, however, the more lightsome and cheerful
-became the hearts of our heroes.
-
-They began to look upon Peggy as already safe in their camp.
-
-"I say, you know," said Dick one day, "our passage up is all toil and
-trouble, but won't it be delightful coming back."
-
-"Yes, indeed," said Roland, smiling.
-
-"We sha'n't hurry, shall we?"
-
-"Oh, no! poor Peggy's health must need renovating, and we must let her
-see all that is to be seen."
-
-"Ye--es, of course! Certainly, Roll, and it will be all just too lovely
-for anything, all one deliciously delicious picnic."
-
-"I hope so."
-
-"Don't look quite so gloomy, Roland, old man. I tell you it is all
-plain sailing now. We have only to meet Benee when we get as far as the
-rendezvous, then strike across country, and off and away to the land of
-the cannibals and give them fits."
-
-"Oh, I'm not gloomy, you know, Dick, though not quite so hopeful as you!
-We have many difficulties to encounter, and there may be a lot of
-fighting after we get there; and, mind you, that game of giving fits is
-one that two can play at."
-
-"Choorka! Choorka!" shouted the captain of the leading boat, a swarthy
-son of the river.
-
-As he spoke, he pointed towards the western bank, and thither as quickly
-as paddles could send him his boat was hurried. For they had been well
-out in the centre of the river, and had reached a place where the
-current was strong and swift.
-
-But closer to the bank it was more easy to row.
-
-Nevertheless, two of the canoes ran foul of a snag. One was capsized at
-once, and the other stuck on top.
-
-The 'gators here were in dozens apparently, and before the canoe could
-be righted two men had been dragged below, the brown stream being tinged
-with their gushing blood.
-
-Both were Indians, but nevertheless their sad death cast a gloom over
-the hearts of everyone, which was not easily dispelled.
-
-On again once more, still hugging the shore; but after dinner it was
-determined to stay where they were for the night.
-
-They luckily found a fine open back-water, and this they entered and
-were soon snug enough.
-
-They could not be idle, however. Food must be collected, and
-everything--Roland determined--must go on like clock-work, without hurry
-or bustle.
-
-Soon, therefore, after the canoes were made fast, both Indians and
-whites were scattered far and near in the forest, on the rocks and
-hills, and on the rivers.
-
-I believe that all loved the "boys", as Roland and Dick were called by
-the white men, and so all worked right cheerfully, laughing and singing
-as they did so.
-
-Ten men besides our heroes and Burly Bill had remained behind to get the
-tents up and to prepare the evening meal, for everybody would return as
-hungry as alligators, and these gentry seem to have a most insatiable
-appetite.
-
-Just before sunset on this particular evening Roland and Dick had
-another interview with Mr. Peter.
-
-"I should be a fool and a fraud, Mr. Peter," said the former, "were I to
-mince matters. Besides, it is not my way. I tell you, then, that
-during our journey you will have yonder little tent to yourself to eat
-and to sleep in. I tell you, too, that despite your declarations of
-innocence I still suspect you, that nevertheless no one will be more
-happy than Mr. Temple here and myself if you are found not guilty. But
-you must face the music now. You must be guarded, strictly guarded, and
-I wish you to know that you are. I wish to impress upon you also that
-your sentries have strict orders to shoot you if you are found making
-any insane attempt to escape. In all other respects you are a free man,
-and I should be very sorry indeed to rope or tie you. Now you may go."
-
-"My time will come," said Mr. Peter meaningly.
-
-His face was set and determined.
-
-"Is this a threat?" cried Roland, fingering his revolver.
-
-But Peter's dark countenance relaxed at once.
-
-"A threat!" he said. "No, no, Mr. Roland. I am an unarmed man, you are
-armed, and everyone is on your side. But I repeat, my time will come to
-clear my character; that is all.
-
-"So be it, Mr. Peter."
-
-And the man retired to his tent breathing black curses deep though not
-aloud.
-
-"I've had enough of this," he told himself. "And escape that young
-cub's tyranny I must and shall, even should I die in my tracks. Curse
-them all!"
-
- ----
-
-Next day a deal of towing was required, for the river was running fierce
-and strong, and swirling in angry eddies and dangerous maelstroms even
-close to the bank.
-
-This towing was tiresome work, and although all hands bent to it, half a
-mile an hour was their highest record.
-
-But now they neared the terrible rapids of Antonio, and once more a halt
-was called for the night, in order that all might be fresh and strong to
-negotiate these torrents.
-
-Next day they set to work.
-
-All the cargo had to be got on shore, and a few armed men were left to
-guard it. Then the empty boats were towed up.
-
-For three or four miles the river dashed onward here over its rocky bed,
-with a noise like distant thunder, a chafing, boiling, angry stream,
-which but to look at caused the eyes to swim and the senses to reel.
-
-There are stretches of comparatively calm water between the rapids, and
-glad indeed were Roland's brave fellows to reach these for a
-breathing-spell.
-
-In the afternoon, before they were half-way through these torrents, a
-halt was called for the night in a little bay, and the baggage was
-brought up.
-
-They fell asleep that night with the roar of the rapids in their ears,
-and the dreams of many of them were far indeed from pleasant.
-
-Morning brought renewal of toil and struggle. But "stout hearts to stey
-braes" is an excellent old Scottish motto. It was acted on by this
-gallant expedition, and so in a day or two they found themselves in a
-fresh turmoil of water beneath the splendid waterfalls of Theotonia.
-
-The river was low, and in consequence the cataract was seen at its best,
-though not its maddest. Fancy, if you can, paddling to keep your
-way--not to advance--face to face with a waterfall a mile at least in
-breadth, and probably forty feet in height, divided into three by rocky
-little islands, pouring in white-brown sheets sheer down over the rock,
-and falling with a steady roar into the awful cauldrons beneath. It is
-like a small Niagara, but, with the hills and rocks and stately woods,
-and the knowledge that one is in an uncivilized land, among wild beasts
-and wilder men, far more impressive.
-
-Our young heroes were astonished to note the multitudes of fish of
-various kinds on all sides of them. The pools were full.
-
-The larger could be easily speared, but bait of any kind they did not
-seem to fancy. They were troubled and excited, for up the great stream
-and through the wild rapids they had made their way in order to spawn in
-the head-waters of the Madeira and its tributaries. But Nature here had
-erected a barrier.
-
-Yet wild were their attempts to fling themselves over. Many succeeded.
-The fittest would survive. Others missed, or, gaining but the rim of the
-cataract, were hurled back, many being killed.
-
-Another halt, another night of dreaming of all kinds of wild adventures.
-The Indians had told the whites, the evening before, strange legends
-about the deep, almost bottomless, pools beneath the falls.
-
-Down there, according to them, devils dwell, and hold high revelry every
-time the moon is full. Dark? No it is not dark at the bottom, for
-Indians who have been dragged down there and afterwards escaped, have
-related their adventures, and spoken of the splendid caverns lit up by
-crimson fire, whose mouths open into the water. Caverns more gorgeous
-and beautiful than eyes of men ever alight upon above-ground. Caverns of
-crystal, of jasper, onyx, and ruby; caverns around whose stalactites
-demons, in the form of six-legged snakes, writhe and crawl, but are
-nevertheless possessed of the power to change their shapes in the
-twinkling of an eye from the horrible and grotesque to the beautiful.
-
-Prisoners from the upper world are tortured here, whether men, women, or
-children, and the awful rites performed are too fearful--so say the
-Indians--to be even hinted at.
-
-The cargo first and the empty canoes next had to be portaged half a mile
-on shore and above the lovely linn. This was extremely hard work, but
-it was safely accomplished at last.
-
-Roland was not only a born general, but a kind-hearted and excellent
-master. He never lost his temper, nor uttered a bad or impatient word,
-and thus there was not an Indian there who would not have died for him
-and his companion Dick.
-
-Moreover, the officer-Indians found that kind words were more effectual
-than cuts with the bark whips they carried, or blows with the hand on
-naked shoulders.
-
-And so the march and voyage was one of peace and comfort.
-
-Accidents, however, were by no means rare, for there were snags and
-sunken rocks to be guarded against, and more than one of the small
-canoes were stove and sunk, with the loss of precious lives.
-
- ----
-
-Roland determined not to overwork his crew. This might spoil
-everything, for many of the swamps in the neighbourhood of which they
-bivouacked are pestilential in the extreme.
-
-Mosquitoes were found rather a plague at first, but our boys had come
-prepared.
-
-They carried sheets of fine muslin--the ordinary mosquito-nets are
-useless--for if a "squeeter" gets one leg through, his body very soon
-wriggles after, and then he begins to sing a song of thanksgiving before
-piercing the skin of the sleeper with his poison-laden proboscis. But
-mosquitoes cannot get through the muslin, and have to sing to themselves
-on the other side.
-
-After a time, however, the muslin was not thought about, for all hands
-had received their baptism of blood, and bites were hardly felt.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX--THE PAGAN PAYNEES WERE THIRSTING FOR BLOOD
-
-
-A glance at any good map will show the reader the bearings and flow of
-this romantic and beautiful river, the Madeira. It will show him
-something else--the suggestive names of some of the cataracts or rapids
-that have to be negotiated by the enterprising sportsman or traveller in
-this wild land.
-
-The Misericordia Rapids and the Calderano de Inferno speak for
-themselves. The latter signifies Hell's Cauldron, and the former speaks
-to us of many a terrible accident that has occurred here--boats upset,
-bodies washed away in the torrent, or men seized and dragged below by
-voracious alligators before the very eyes of despairing friends.
-
-The Cauldron of Hell is a terrible place, and consists of a whole series
-of rapids each more fierce than the other. To attempt to stem currents
-like these would of course be madness. There is nothing for it but
-portage for a whole mile and more, and it can easily be guessed that
-this is slow and toilsome work indeed. Nor was the weather always
-propitious. Sometimes storms raged through the woods, with thunder,
-lightning, and drenching rain; or even on the brightest of days, down
-might sweep a whirlwind, utterly wrecking acres and acres of forest,
-tearing gigantic trees up by the roots, twisting them as if they were
-ropes, or tossing them high in air, and after cutting immense gaps
-through the jungle, retire, as if satisfied with the chaos and
-devastation worked, to the far-off mountain lands.
-
-Once when, with their rifles in hand, Roland and Dick were watching a
-small flock of tapirs at a pond of water, which formed the centre of a
-green oasis in the dark forest, they noticed a balloon-shaped cloud in
-the south. It got larger and larger as it advanced towards them, its
-great twisted tail seeming to trail along the earth.
-
-Lightning played incessantly around it, and as it got nearer loud peals
-of thunder were heard.
-
-This startled the tapirs. They held their heads aloft and snorted with
-terror, running a little this way and that, but huddling together at
-last in a timid crowd.
-
-Down came the awful whirlwind and dashed upon them.
-
-Roland and Dick threw themselves on the ground, face downwards,
-expecting death every moment.
-
-The din, the dust, the crashing and roaring, were terrific!
-
-When the storm had passed not a bush or leaf of the wood in which our
-heroes lay had been stirred. But the glade was now a strange sight.
-
-The waters of the pool had been taken up. The pond was dry. Only
-half-dead alligators lay there, writhing in agony, but every tapir had
-been not only killed but broken up, and mingled with twisted trees,
-pieces of rock, and hillocks of sand.
-
-Truly, although Nature in these regions may very often be seen in her
-most beautiful aspects, fearful indeed is she when in wrath and rage she
-comes riding in storms and whirlwinds from off the great table-lands,
-bent on ravaging the country beneath.
-
-"What a merciful escape!" said Roland, as he sat by Dick gazing on the
-destruction but a few yards farther off.
-
-"I could not have believed it," returned Dick. "Fancy a whirlwind like
-that sweeping over our camp, Roland?"
-
-"Yes, Dick, or over our boats on the river; but we must trust in
-Providence."
-
-Roland now blew his whistle, and a party of his own Indians soon
-appeared, headed by a few white men.
-
-"Boys," said Roland smiling, "my friend and I came out to shoot young
-tapir for you. Behold! Dame Nature has saved us the trouble, and flesh
-is scattered about in all directions."
-
-The Indians soon selected the choicest, and departed, singing their
-strange, monotonous chant.
-
-Presently Burly Bill himself appeared.
-
-He stood there amazed and astonished for fully half a minute before he
-could speak, and when he did it was to revert to his good old-fashioned
-Berkshire dialect.
-
-"My eye and Elizabeth Martin!" he exclaimed. "What be all that? Well, I
-never! 'Ad an 'urricane, then?"
-
-"It looks a trifle like it, Bill; but sit you down. Got your
-meerschaum?"
-
-"I've got him right enough."
-
-And it was not long before he began to blow a kind of hurricane cloud.
-For when Bill smoked furnaces weren't in it.
-
-"Do you think we have many more rapids to get past, Bill?"
-
-"A main lot on 'em, Master Roland. But we've got to do 'em. We haven't
-got to funk, has we?"
-
-"Oh no, Bill! but don't you think that we might have done better to have
-kept to the land altogether?"
-
-"No," said Bill bluntly, "I do not. We never could have got along, lad.
-Rivers to cross by fords that we might have had to travel leagues and
-leagues to find, lakes to bend round, marshes and swamps, where lurks a
-worse foe than your respectable and gentlemanly 'gators."
-
-"What, snakes?"
-
-"Oh, plenty of them! But I was a-loodin' to fever, what the doctors
-calls malarial fever, boys.
-
-"No, no," he added, "we'll go on now until we meet poor Benee, if he is
-still alive. If anything has happened to him--"
-
-"Or if he is false," interrupted Dick; "false as Peter would have us
-believe--"
-
-"Never mind wot Mr. Bloomin' Peter says! I swears by Benee, and nothing
-less than death can prevent his meeting us somewhere about the mouth of
-the Maya-tata River. You can bet your bottom dollar on that, lads."
-
-"Well, that is the rendezvous anyhow."
-
-"Oh," cried Dick, "sha'n't we be all rejoiced to see Benee once more!"
-
-"God grant," said Roland, "he may bring us good news."
-
-"He is a good man and will bring good tidings," ventured Burly Bill.
-
-Then he went on blowing his cloud, and the boys relapsed into silence.
-
-Each was thinking his own thoughts. But they started up at last.
-
-"I've managed to secure a grand healthy appetite!" cried Roland.
-
-"And so has this pale-faced boy," said Bill, shoving his great thumb as
-usual into the bowl of his meerschaum.
-
-So back to camp they started.
-
-Brawn had been on duty not far from Mr. Peter's tent, but he bounded up
-now with a joyful bark, and rushed forward to meet them.
-
-He displayed as much love and joy as if he had not seen them for a whole
-month.
-
-For ten days longer the expedition struggled onwards.
-
-The work was hard enough, but it really strengthened their hearts and
-increased the size of their muscles, till both their calves and biceps
-were as hard and tough as the stays of a battle-ship.
-
-Some people might think it strange, but it is a fact nevertheless, that
-the stronger they grew the happier and more hopeful were they. We may
-try to account for this physiologically or psychologically as we choose,
-but the great truth remains.
-
- ----
-
-One or two of the men were struck down with ague-fever, but Roland made
-them rest while on shore and lie down while on board.
-
-Meanwhile he doctored them with soup made from the choicest morsels of
-young tapir, with green fresh vegetable mixed therein, and for medicine
-they had rum and quinine, or rather, quinine in rum.
-
-The men liked their soup, but they liked their physic better.
-
-Between the rapids of Arara and the falls of Madeira was a beautiful
-sheet of water, and, being afraid of snags or submerged rocks, the
-canoes were kept well out into the stream.
-
-They made great progress here. The day was unusually fine. Hot the sun
-was certainly, but the men wore broad straw sombreros, and, seated in
-the shadow of their bamboo cabin, our heroes were cool and happy enough.
-
-The luscious acid fruits and fruit-drinks they partook of contributed
-largely to their comfort.
-
-Dick started a song, a river song he had learned on his uncle's
-plantation, and as Burly Bill's great canoe was not far off, he got a
-splendid bass.
-
-The scenery on each bank was very beautiful; rocks, and hills covered
-with great trees, the branches of which near to the stream with their
-wealth of foliage and climbing flowers, bent low to kiss the placid
-waters that went gliding, lapping, and purling onwards.
-
-Who could have believed that aught of danger to our heroes and their
-people could lurk anywhere beneath these sun-gilt trees?
-
-But even as they sang, fierce eyes were jealously watching them from the
-western bank.
-
-Presently first one arrow, and anon a whole shower of these deadly
-missiles, whizzed over them.
-
-One struck the cabin roof right above Dick's head, and another tore
-through the hat of the captain himself.
-
-But rifles were carried loaded, and Roland was ready.
-
-"Lay in your oars, men! Up, guns! Let them have a volley! Straight at
-yonder bush! Fire low, lads! See, yonder is a savage!"
-
-Dick took aim at a dark-skinned native who stood well out from the wood,
-and fired. He was close to the stream and had been about to shoot, but
-Dick's rifle took away his breath, and with an agonized scream he threw
-up his arms and fell headlong into the water.
-
-Volley after volley rang out now on the still air, and soon it was
-evident that the woods were cleared.
-
-"Those are the Paynee Indians without a doubt," said Dick; "the same
-sable devils that the skipper of that steamer warned us about."
-
-They saw no more of the enemy then, however, and the afternoon passed in
-peace.
-
-An hour and a half before sunset they landed at the mouth of a small but
-clear river, about ten miles to the north of the Falls of Woe.
-
-Close to the Madeira itself this lovely stream was thickly banked by
-forest, but the boats were taken higher up, and here excellent
-camping-ground was found in a country sparsely wooded.
-
-Far away to the west rose the everlasting hills, and our heroes thought
-they could perceive snow in the chasms between the rocks.
-
-Roland had not forgotten the adventure with the Indians, so scouts were
-sent out at once to scour the woods. They returned shortly before
-sunset, having seen no one.
-
-Both Roland and Dick were somewhat uneasy in their minds, nevertheless,
-and after dinner, in the wan and uncertain light of a half-moon, a
-double row of sentries was posted, and orders were given that they
-should be relieved every two hours, for the night was close and sultry,
-just such a night as causes restless somnolence. At such times a sentry
-may drop to sleep leaning on his gun or against a tree. He may slumber
-for an hour and not be aware he has even closed an eye.
-
-The boys themselves felt a strange drowsiness stealing away their
-senses. They would have rolled themselves up in their rugs and sought
-repose at once, but this would have made the night irksomely long.
-
-So they chatted, and even sang, till their usual hour.
-
-When they turned in, instead of dressing in a pyjama suit, they retained
-the clothes they had worn all day.
-
-Dick noticed that Roland was doing so, and followed his example. No
-reason was given by his friend, but Dick could guess it. Guess also
-what he meant by placing a rifle close beside him and looking to his
-revolvers before he lay down.
-
-Everyone in camp, except those on duty, was by this time sound asleep.
-Lights and fires were out, and the stillness was almost painful.
-
-Roland would have preferred hearing the wind sighing among the forest
-trees, the murmur of the river, or even the mournful wailing of the
-great blue owl.
-
-But never a leaf stirred, and as the moon sank lower and lower towards
-those strangely rugged and serrated mountains of the west, the boys
-themselves joined the sleepers, and all their care and anxiety was for
-the time being forgotten.
-
-The night waned and waned. The sentries had been changed, and it was
-now nearly one o'clock.
-
-There was a lake about a mile above the camp, that is, a mile farther
-westwards. It was surrounded by tall waving reeds, at least an acre
-wide all round.
-
-The home _par excellence_ of the dreaded 'gator was this dark and sombre
-sheet of water, for to it almost nightly came the tapirs to quench their
-thirst and to bathe.
-
-Silently a troop of these wonderful creatures came up out of the forest
-to-night, all in a string, with the largest and oldest a little way in
-front.
-
-Every now and then these pioneers would pause to listen. They knew the
-wiliness of the enemy that might be lying in wait for them. So acute in
-hearing are they said to be that they can distinguish the sound of a
-snake gliding over withered leaves at a distance of a hundred yards.
-But their sight also is a great protection to them. No 'gator can move
-among the reeds without bending them, move he never so warily. Above
-all this, the tapir's sense of smell is truly marvellous.
-
-To-night the old tapirs that led the van seemed particularly suspicious
-and cautious. Their signal for silence was a kind of snort or cough,
-and this was now ofttimes repeated.
-
-Suddenly the foremost tapir stamped his foot, and at once the whole
-drove turned or wheeled and glided back as silently as they had come,
-until the shadows of the great forest swallowed them up.
-
-What had they seen or heard? They had seen tall, dark human
-figures--one, two, three--a score and over, suddenly raise their heads
-and shoulders above the reeds, and after standing for a moment so still
-that they seemed part and parcel of the solemn scene, move out from the
-jungle and take their way towards the slumbering camp.
-
-Savages all, and on a mission of death.
-
-Nobody's dreams could have been a bit more happy than those of Dick
-Temple just at this moment.
-
-He was sitting once more on the deck of the great raft, which was slowly
-gliding down the sunlit sea-like Amazon. The near bank was tree-clad,
-and every branch was garlanded with flowers of rainbow hues.
-
-But Dick looked not on the trees nor the flowers, nor the waving
-undulating forest itself--looked not on the sun-kissed river. His eyes
-were fixed on a brightly-beautiful and happy face. It was Peggy who sat
-beside him, Peggy to whom he was breathing words of affection and love,
-Peggy with shy, half-flushed face and slightly averted head.
-
-But suddenly this scene was changed, and he awoke with a start to grasp
-his rifle. A shrill quavering yell rang through the camp, and awakened
-every echo in the forest.
-
-The Indians--the dreaded Paynee tribe of cannibals--were on them. That
-yell was a war-cry. These pagan Paynees were thirsting for blood.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI--THE FOREST IS SHEETED IN FLAMES
-
-
-For just a few moments Roland was taken aback. Then, in a steady manly
-voice that could be heard all over the camp, he gave the order.
-
-"All men down! The Indians are approaching from the west. Fire low,
-lads--between you and the light.
-
-"Don't waste a shot!" he added.
-
-[Illustration: "FIRE LOW, LADS.... DON'T WASTE A SHOT!"]
-
-Three Indians bit the dust at the first volley, and though the rest
-struggled on to the attack, it was only to be quickly repulsed.
-
-In ten minutes' time all had fled, and the great forest and woodland was
-as silent as before.
-
-It was Roland's voice that again broke the stillness.
-
-"Rally round, boys," he shouted, "and let me know the worst."
-
-The sacrifice of life, however, was confined to three poor fellows, one
-white man and two peons; and no one was wounded.
-
-Nobody thought of going to sleep again on this sad night, and when red
-clouds were at last seen over the green-wooded horizon, heralding the
-approach of day, a general sense of relief was felt by all in the little
-camp.
-
-Soon after sunrise breakfast was served, and eaten with avidity by all
-hands now in camp, for scouts were out, and Dick and Roland awaited the
-news they would bring with some degree of impatience.
-
-The scouting was really a sort of reconnaisance in force, by picked
-Indians and whites under the command of the redoubtable Burly Bill.
-
-Suddenly Brawn raised his head and gave vent to an angry "wouff!" and
-almost at the same time the sound of distant rifle-firing fell on the
-ears of the little army.
-
-Half an hour after this, Bill and two men stepped out from the bush and
-advanced.
-
-His brow was bound with a blood-stained handkerchief.
-
-It was a spear wound, but he would not hear of it being dressed at
-present.
-
-"What cheer then, Bill?"
-
-"Not much of that," he answered, throwing himself down and lighting that
-marvellous meerschaum, from which he appeared to get so much
-consolation.
-
-"Not a vast deal of cheer. Yes, I'll eat after I gets a bit cooler
-like."
-
-"Ay, we'll have to fight the Dun-skins. They swarm in the forest
-between us and the Madeira, and they are about as far from bein' angels
-as any durned nigger could be."
-
-"And what do you advise, Bill?"
-
-"Well," was the reply, "as soon as your boys get their nose-bags off, my
-advice is to set to work with spade and shovel and transform this 'ere
-camp into a fortress.
-
-"Ay, and it is one we won't be able to abandon for days and days to
-come," he added.
-
-The men were now speedily told off to duty, and in a very short time had
-made the camp all but impregnable, and quite strong enough to give an
-excellent account of any number of Dun-skins.
-
-The Paynee Indians are a semi-nomadic tribe of most implacable savages,
-who roam over hill and dell and upland, hunting or fighting as the case
-may be, but who have nevertheless a home in the dark mountain fastnesses
-of the far interior.
-
-They are cannibals, though once, long, long ago, a band of Jesuits
-attempted their reclamation.
-
-These brave missionaries numbered in all but one hundred and twenty men,
-and they went among the terrible natives with, figuratively speaking,
-their prayer-books in one hand, their lives in the other.
-
-All went well for a time. They succeeded in winning the affections of
-the savages. They erected rude churches, and even to this day crosses
-of stone are to be found in this wild land, half-buried among the rank
-vegetation.
-
-But there came a day, and a sad one it was, when the cannibals were
-attacked by a wild hill-tribe. These highlanders had heard that, owing
-to the new religion, their ancient enemies had degenerated into old
-wives and squaws.
-
-A terrible battle ensued, during which the men from the uplands found
-out their mistake, for they were repulsed with fearful slaughter.
-
-All might have gone well with the Jesuits even yet but for one
-_contretemps_.
-
-At the very moment when the savages returned wildly exultant from the
-hills, bearing, horrible to relate, joints of human flesh on their
-spears, there came from the east a party of men who had been down to the
-banks of the Madeira, and had attacked and looted a small steamer that
-among other things had much fire-water on board.
-
-Oh, that accursed fire-water, how terrible its results wherever on earth
-it gains ascendancy!
-
-All the fearful passions of these savages were soon let loose. The
-scene was like pandemonium.
-
-The poor Jesuits hid themselves in their little church, barricading the
-door, and devoting the first part of the night to prayer and song. But
-at midnight the awful howling of the cannibals coming nearer and nearer
-told them that they had been missed, and that their doom was now sealed.
-
-Only one man escaped to tell the terrible tale.
-
-And these, or rather their descendants, were the very cannibals that
-Roland's little army had now to do battle with.
-
-Both he and Dick, however, kept up a good heart.
-
-There was ammunition enough to last for months of desultory firing, if
-necessary, and when the attack was made at last, after Bill's scouts had
-been driven in, the savages learned a lesson they were never likely to
-forget.
-
-Brave indeed they were, and over and over again they charged, spear in
-hand, almost into the trenches. But only to be thrust back wounded, or
-to die where they stood, beneath a steady revolver fire.
-
-But they retreated almost as quickly as they had come, and once more
-sought the shelter of bush and jungle.
-
-Not for very long, however. They were evidently determined that the
-little garrison should enjoy no peace.
-
-They had changed their tactics now, and instead of making wild rushes
-towards the ramparts, they commenced to bombard the fort with large
-stones.
-
-With their slings the Bolivian Indians can aim with great precision, for
-they learn the art when they are mere infants.
-
-As no one showed above the ramparts, there was in this case no human
-target for the missiles, but use was made of larger stones, and these
-kept falling into the trenches in all directions, so that much mischief
-was done and many men were hurt.
-
-A terrible rifle fire was now opened upon that part of the bush in which
-the cannibal savages were supposed to be in force, and from the howling
-and shrieking that immediately followed, it was evident that many
-bullets were finding their billets.
-
-But soon even these sounds died away, and it was evident enough that the
-enemy had retired, no doubt with the intention of inventing some new
-form of attack. There was peace now for many hours, and Roland took
-advantage of this to order dinner to be got ready. No men, unless it be
-the Scotch, can fight well on empty stomachs.
-
-The wounded were attended to and made as comfortable as possible, and
-after this there was apparently very little to do except to wait and
-watch.
-
-Burly Bill brought out his consolatory meerschaum. But while he puffed
-away, he was not idle. He was thinking.
-
-Now thinking was not very much in this honest fellow's line. Action was
-more his _forte_. But the present occasion demanded thought.
-
-The afternoon was already far spent. The sentries--lynx-eyed Indians,
-rifles in hand--were watching the bush, and longing for a shot. Roland
-and Dick, with Bill and big Brawn, were seated in the shade of a green
-and spreading tree, and all had been silent for some considerable time.
-
-"I say, young fellows!" said Bill at last, "this kind of lounging
-doesn't suit me. What say you to a council of war?"
-
-"Well, you've been thinking, Bill?"
-
-"Ay, I've been doin' a smart bit o' that. Let us consult Charlie."
-
-Charlie the ex-cannibal was now brought forward and seated on the grass.
-
-There was a deal of practical knowledge in this Indian's head. His had
-been a very long experience of savage warfare and wandering in forests
-and wilds; and he was proud now to be consulted.
-
-"Charlie," said Bill, "what do you think of the situation?"
-
-"De sit-uation?" was the reply. "Me not likee he. Me tinkee we sitee
-too much. Byme by, de cannibal he come much quick. Ah! dere will soon
-be muchee much too much sabage cannibal! Fust de killee you and den de
-eatee you, and make fine bobbery. Ha! ha!"
-
-"Well, Charlie, I don't think that there is a deal to laugh at.
-Howsomever, we've got to do something soon."
-
-"So, so," said Charlie, "notwidstanding."
-
-"Well, I've been thinking that we should make tracks for the other side
-of the river. You see these savage rapscallions have no canoes, and
-they seem to have no food. They are not herons or storks, and can't
-wade through deep water."
-
-"Foh true, sah. Dey am not stohks and dey am not herons notwidstanding,
-but see, sah, ebery man he am his own canoe! No stohks, but all same
-one frog, notwidstanding foh true!"
-
-"And you think they would follow us?"
-
-"All same's one eel--two hundred eel. Dey swim wid spears in mouf, and
-bow and arrow held high. Ha! ha! good soldier, ebery modder's son!"
-
-"I'll tell you my plan," said Dick Temple. "Just loose off the boats,
-and make one bold dash for liberty."
-
-"Ha! ha! sah!" cried Charlie. "I takes de liberty to laugh
-notwidstanding, foh true. You plenty much all dead men 'fore you get
-into de big ribber!"
-
-"Well, hang it!" said Dick, "we're not going to stay here with the
-pretty prospect before us of being all scuppered and eaten. What say
-you, Roll?"
-
-"I think," said Roland quietly, "that Charlie there has come prepared to
-speak, for his face is just beaming."
-
-"See, sah," cried Charlie, evidently pleased, "you trust all to Charlie.
-He makee you free after dark. Down in de fo'est yondah dere am mebbe
-two, mebbee free hunder' sabages. Now dey not want to fight till de
-dark. Dey will fight all de same when de moon rise, and de rifle not
-muchee good. No hit in de dark, on'y jes' puff, puff.
-
-"See," he continued, "de wind begin to blow a leetle. De wind get high
-byme by, den de sun go out, and Charlie he fiah de forest."
-
-"Fire the forest, Charlie?"
-
-"Notwidstanding," said Charlie grimly.
-
-"When," he added, "you see de flame curl up, be all ready. Soon de
-flame he bus' highah and highah, and all by de ribber bank one big
-blaze."
-
-"Charlie," cried Bill, "you're a brick! Give us a shake of your yellow
-hand. Hurrah! boys, Charlie's going to do it!"
-
-Never perhaps was sunset waited for with more impatience.
-
-The great and unanswerable question was this: Would these savages attack
-immediately after darkness fell, or would they take some time to
-deliberate?
-
-But behind the rugged mountains down sank the sun at last, and after a
-brief twilight the stars shone out.
-
-Charlie was not going alone. He had asked for the assistance of many
-Indians, and in a whisper he gave them their orders.
-
-Our heroes did not interfere in any way, for fear of confusing the good
-fellow's plans. But they soon noted that while Charlie himself and two
-Indians left in one of the smallest canoes, the others disappeared like
-snakes in the grass, creeping northwards over the plain.
-
-And now there was silence, for the wind was hushed; silence everywhere,
-that deep, indescribable silence which nightfall ever brings to a wild
-and savage land, in which even the beasts are still and listening in
-forest and dell, not knowing from which direction danger may spring.
-
-Within the little camp nothing could be done but lie still, every man
-holding his breath with suspense. Nothing could be done save watch,
-wait, count the weary minutes, and marvel at their length.
-
-Suddenly, however, the deep silence was broken by a mournful cry that
-came from riverwards. It was apparently that of an owl seeking for its
-mate, but it was taken up and repeated northwards all over the plain
-twixt camp and forest, and almost at the same time tiny tongues of fire
-sprang up here and there and everywhere.
-
-Higher and higher they leapt, along the ground they ran, meeting in all
-directions down the dark river and across the wild moor by the edge of
-the woodland. The undergrowth was dry, the grass was withered, and in
-an amazingly short time the whole forest by the banks of the Madeira was
-sheeted in devastating flames.
-
-The savages had been massed in the centre of the jungle, and just
-preparing to issue forth and carry death into the camp of our heroes,
-when suddenly the crackling of the flames fell on their ears, and they
-knew they were caught in a fire-trap, with scarcely any means of escape.
-
-Charlie had been terribly in earnest, and, hurrying on in his canoe
-towards the Madeira, he lit the bank all along, and even down the side
-of the great stream itself.
-
-It was evidently his savage intention to roast these poor cannibals
-alive.
-
-As it was, the only outlet towards salvation that remained for them was
-the Madeira's dark brink.
-
-"Now, boys, now!" shouted Roland, when he saw that the fire had gained
-entire mastery, and, making its own wind, was sweeping onwards, licking
-up everything in its way.
-
-"Now, lads, on board! Let us get off down stream in all haste.
-Hurrah!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII--EVENINGS BY THE CAMP FIRE
-
-
-The moorings were speedily slipped, and by the light of the blazing
-forest the peons bent sturdily to their paddles, and the canoe went
-dancing down stream.
-
-They had already taken on board the Indians who had assisted Charlie,
-and before long his own boat hove in sight, and was soon taken in tow by
-the largest canoe.
-
-That burning forest formed a scene which never could be forgotten. From
-the south side, where the boats were speedily rushing down the stream on
-their way to the Madeira, and from which came the light wind that was
-now blowing, the flames leaned over as it were, instead of ascending
-high in air, and the smoke and sparks took the same direction.
-
-The sparks were as thick as snow-flakes in a snow-storm, and the lurid
-tongues of fire darted high as the zenith, playing with the clouds of
-smoke or licking them up.
-
-The noise was indescribable, yet above the roaring and the crackling
-could be heard the shouts of the maddened savages, as they sought exit
-from the hell around them.
-
-There was no escape except by the Madeira's bank, and to get even at
-this they had to dash through the burning bushes.
-
-Alas! Charlie and his assistants had done their work all too well, and
-I fear that one-half of the cannibals were smothered, dragged down by
-alligators, or found a watery grave.
-
-As the canoes shot past, the heat was terrible, and next morning at
-daybreak, when they were far up the river, towards the falls, Roland and
-his friend were surprised to notice that the palm-leaves which covered
-the cabin were brown and scorched.
-
-On the whole the experience they had gained of the ferocity and fighting
-abilities of these Paynee cannibals was such as they were not likely to
-forget.
-
- ----
-
-During all this period of excitement the suspect Peter had remained
-perfectly quiescent. Indeed he seemed now quite apathetic, taking very
-little notice of anything around him, and eating the food placed before
-him in a way that was almost mechanical. Neither Roland nor Dick had
-taken much heed of him till now. When, however, they observed his
-strange demeanour they took council together and determined that the
-watch over him should be made extra strict, lest he should spring
-overboard and be drowned.
-
-Roland may seem to have been harsh with Mr. Peter. But he only took
-proper precautions, and more than once he assured Dick that if the man's
-innocence were proved he would recompense him a hundred-fold.
-
-"But," added Dick meaningly, "if he is really guilty of the terrible
-crime we impute to him, he cannot be punished too severely."
-
-The expedition had that afternoon to land their stores once more to
-avoid rapids, and a little before sunset they encamped near to the edge
-of a beautiful wood well back from the banks of the Madeira.
-
-The night passed without adventure of any kind, and everyone awoke as
-fresh and full of life and go as the larks that climb the sky to meet
-the morning sun.
-
-Another hard day's paddling and towing and portage, and they found
-themselves high above the Madeira Falls in smooth water, and at the
-entrance to a kind of bay which formed the mouth or confluence of the
-two rivers, called Beni and Madro de Dios. This last is called the
-Maya-tata by the Bolivians.
-
-It is a beautiful stream, overhung by hill and forest, and rises fully
-two hundred miles southward and west from a thousand little rivulets
-that drain the marvellous mountains of Karavaya.
-
-The Beni joins this river about ten or twelve miles above the banks of
-the Madeira. It lies farther to the south and the east, and may be said
-to rise in the La Paz district itself, where it is called the Rio de la
-Paz.
-
-To the north-west of both these big rivers lies the great unexplored
-region, the land of the Bolivian and Peruvian cannibals.
-
-Small need have we to continue to hunt and shoot in Africa, wildly
-interesting though the country is, when such a marvellous tract of tens
-of thousands of square miles is hidden here, all unvisited as yet by a
-single British explorer.
-
-And what splendid possibilities for travel and adventure are here! A
-land larger than Great Britain, France, and Ireland thrown together,
-which no one knows anything about; a land rich in forest and prairie; a
-land the mineral wealth of which is virtually inexhaustible; a land of
-beauty; a land of lake and stream, of hills and rocks and verdant
-prairie, and a veritable land of flowers!
-
-A land, it is true, where wild beasts lurk and prowl, and where unknown
-tribes of savages wander hither and thither and hunt and fight, but all
-as free as the wind that wantons through their forest trees.
-
- ----
-
-The boats were paddled several miles up-stream to a place where the
-scenery was more open.
-
-At every bend and reach of the river Roland expected to find Benee
-waiting for them. Perhaps he had built a hut and was living by
-fishing-rod and gun.
-
-But no Benee was visible and no hut.
-
-Together the two friends, Roland and Dick, accompanied by Charlie and
-Brawn, took their way across the plain and through the scrub, towards a
-lofty, cone-shaped hill that seemed to dominate all the scenery in its
-immediate neighbourhood.
-
-To the very top of this mountain they climbed, agreed between themselves
-not to look back until they had reached the summit, in order that the
-wild beauty of this lone lorn land should burst upon them in all its
-glory, and at once.
-
-They kept to their resolution, and were amply rewarded.
-
-As far as eye could reach in any direction was a vast panorama of
-mountain, forest, and stream, with many a beautiful lake glittering
-silvery in the sunshine.
-
-But no smoke, no indication of inhabitants anywhere.
-
-"It seems to be quite an untenanted country we have struck," said Dick.
-
-"All the better for us, perhaps, Dick," said Roland, "for farther we
-cannot proceed until poor Benee comes. He ought to have been here before
-now. But what adventures and dangers he may have had to pass through
-Heaven and himself only know."
-
-"Charlie," he continued, "in the event of Benee not turning up within
-the next week or two, remember the task of guiding us to the very palace
-gates of the cannibal king devolves upon you."
-
-"You speakee me too muchee fly-high Englese," said Charlie. "But
-Charlie he thinkee he understand. You wantee me takee you to de king's
-gate. I can do."
-
-"That is enough, Charlie, and we can trust you. You have hitherto been
-very faithful, and what we should do without you I know not."
-
-"Now, Dick, I guess we'll get down a little more speedily than we came
-up."
-
-"We'll try, Roland, old man."
-
-All preparations were now made to camp near to the river, where the
-canoes were moored.
-
-They did not expect any attack by armed Indians, nevertheless it was
-deemed well to be on the safe side.
-
-Spades and shovels were accordingly brought into use, and even before
-sunset a deep trench and embankment were thrown up around the tents, and
-at nightfall sentries were posted at each corner.
-
-For a few days the weather was so cold and stormy that there was little
-comfort in either shooting or fishing. It cleared up after this,
-however, and at noon the sun was almost too hot.
-
-They found caves in the rocks by the river-side in which were springs
-bursting and bubbling up through limestone rocks, and quartz as white as
-the driven snow. The water was exquisitely cool and refreshing.
-
-The days were spent in exploring the country all around and in shooting,
-principally for the purpose of keeping the larder well supplied.
-
-Luckily the Indians were very easy to please in the matter of food,
-though their captains liked a little more luxury.
-
-But this land was full of game of every sort, and the river was alive
-with fish, and so unsophisticated were these that they sprang at a hook
-if it were baited only with a morsel of glittering mica picked off a
-rock.
-
-What with fish and fowl and flesh of small deer, little wild pigs and
-the young of the tapir, there would be very little fear of starvation
-should they remain here for a hundred years.
-
-Far up the Maya-tata canoe excursions were made, and at every bend of
-this strange river the scenery seemed more delightfully wild, silent,
-and beautiful.
-
-"Heigh-ho!" said Dick one day. "I think I should not mind living here
-for years and years, did I but know that poor Peggy was safe and well."
-
-"Ah! yes, that is the ever-abiding anxiety, but we are not to lose
-heart, are we?"
-
-"No," said Dick emphatically. "If the worst should come to the worst,
-let us try to look fate fearlessly in the face, as men should."
-
-"Bravo, Dick!"
-
-The evenings closed in at an unconscionably early hour, as they always
-do in these regions, and at times the long forenights were somewhat
-irksome.
-
-I have not said much about the captains of the great canoes. With one
-exception, these were half-castes, and spoke but little.
-
-The exception was Don Rodrigo, who in his time had been a great
-traveller.
-
-He was a man of about fifty, strongly built, but as wiry withal as an
-Arab of the desert.
-
-Genial was he too, and while yarning or playing cards--the cigarette for
-ever in his mouth, sometimes even two--there was always a pleasant smile
-playing around his mouth and eyes.
-
-He liked our young heroes, and they trusted him. Indeed, Brawn had taken
-to the man, and often as he squatted in the large tent of an evening,
-playing cards or dominoes with the boys, big Brawn would lay his honest
-head down on Rodrigo's knee with a sigh of satisfaction and go off to
-sleep.
-
-Rodrigo could sing a good Spanish song, and had a sweet melodious voice
-that would have gone excellently well with a guitar accompaniment; but
-guitar there was none.
-
-Versatile and clever, nevertheless, was Rodrigo, and he had manufactured
-a kind of musical instrument composed of pieces of glass and hard wood
-hung on tape bands across a board. While he sang, Rodrigo used to beat
-a charming accompaniment with little pith hammers.
-
-Some of his songs were very merry indeed and very droll, and all hands
-used to join in the chorus, even the white men and Indians outside.
-
-So the boys' days were for the time being somewhat of the nature of a
-long picnic or holiday.
-
-The story-telling of an evening helped greatly to wile the time away.
-
-Neither Dick nor Roland had any yarns to spin, but Charlie had stories
-of his wild and adventurous life in the bush, which were listened to
-with much pleasure. On the other hand, Rodrigo had been everywhere
-apparently, and done everything, so that he was the chief story-teller.
-
-The man's English was fairly good, with just a little of the Peruvian
-labial accent, which really added to its attractiveness, while at times
-he affected the Mexican drawl.
-
-Around the camp-fire I have seldom or never known what may be called
-systematic yarn-spinning. Everything comes spontaneously, one simple
-yarn or wild adventure leading up to the other. If now and then a song
-intervenes, all the better, and all the more likely is one to spend a
-pleasant evening either in camp or in galley on board ship.
-
-Don Rodrigo did at times let our heroes have some tales that made their
-scalps creep, but they liked him best when he was giving them simple
-narratives of travel, and for this reason: they wanted to learn all they
-could about the country in which they now were.
-
-And Rodrigo knew it well, even from Arauco on the western shore to the
-great marsh-lands of the Paraguay or the mountain fastnesses of
-Albuquerque on the east.
-
-But the range of Rodrigo's travels was not bounded by Brazil, or the
-great Pacific Ocean itself. He had been a cow-boy in Mexico; he had
-bolo'd guanacos on the Pampas; he had wandered among the Patagonians, or
-on fleet horses scoured their wondrous plains; he had dwelt in the
-cities, or call them "towns", if so minded, that border the northern
-shores of the Straits of Magellan; he had even visited Tierra del
-Fuego--the land of fire--and from the black boats of savages had helped
-to spear the silken-coated otters of those wild and stormy seas; and he
-had sailed for years among the glorious sunlit islands of the Southern
-Pacific.
-
-"As to far Bolivia," he said one evening, while his eyes followed the
-rings of pale-blue smoke he emitted as they rose to the tent-roof. "As
-to far Bolivia, dear boys, well, you've seen a good slice of the wilder
-regions of it, but it is to La Paz you must some day go, and to the
-splendid fresh-water ocean called the Titicaca.
-
-"Lads, I never measured it, but, roughly guessing, I should say that it
-is over one hundred miles in length, and in some places fifty wide."
-
-"Wait one moment," said Burly Bill, "this is getting interesting, but my
-meerschaum wants to be loaded."
-
-"Now," he added, a few minutes after, "just fire away, my friend."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII--A MARVELLOUS LAKE IN A MARVELLOUS LAND--LA PAZ
-
-
-"Mebbe," said Rodrigo, "if you knew the down-south Bolivians as well as
-I do, you would not respect them a great deal. Fact is, boys, there is
-little to respect them for.
-
-"Brave? Well, if you can call slaves brave, then they're about as
-bully's they make 'em.
-
-"I have mentioned the inland sea called Lake Titicaca. Ah, boys, you
-must see this fresh-water ocean for yourselves! and if ever you get
-married, why, take my advice and go and spend your honeymoon there.
-
-"Me married, did you say, Mr. Bill? It strikes me, sir, I know a trick
-worth several of that. Been in love as often as I've got toes and
-fingers, and mebbe teeth, but no tying up for life, I'm too old a
-starling to be tamed.
-
-"But think, _amigo mio_, of a lake situated in a grand mountain-land,
-the level of its waters just thirteen thousand feet above the blue
-Pacific.
-
-"Surrounded by the wildest scenery you can imagine. The wildest, ay,
-boys, and the most romantic.
-
-"You have one beautiful lake or loch in your Britain--and I have
-travelled all over that land of the free,--I mean Loch Ness, and the
-surrounding mountains and glens are magnificent; but, bless my buttons,
-boys, you wouldn't have room in Britain for such a lake as the mighty
-Titicaca. It would occupy all your English Midlands, and you'd have to
-give the farmers a free passage to Australia."
-
-"How do you travel on this lake?" said Dick Temple.
-
-"Ah!" continued Rodrigo, "I can answer that; and here lies another
-marvel. For at this enormous height above the ocean-level, steamboats,
-ply up and down. No, not built there, but in sections sent from America,
-and I believe even from England. The labour of dragging these sections
-over the mountain-chains may easily be guessed.
-
-"The steamers are neither so large nor so fine as your Clyde boats, but
-there is a lot of honest comfort in them after all.
-
-"And terrible storms sometimes sweep down from the lofty Cordilleras,
-and then the lake is all a chaos of broken water and waves even houses
-high. If caught in such storms, ordinary boats are speedily sunk, and
-lucky are even the steamers if shelter is handy.
-
-"Well, what would this world be, I wonder, if it were always all
-sunshine. We should soon get well tired of it, I guess, and want to go
-somewhere else--to murky England, for example."
-
-Rodrigo blew volumes of smoke before he continued his desultory yarn.
-
-"Do you know, boys, what I saw when in your Britain, south of the Tweed?
-I saw men calling themselves sportsmen chasing poor little hares with
-harriers, and following unfortunate stags with buck-hounds. I saw them
-hunt the fox too, men and women in a drove, and I called them in my own
-mind cowards all. Brutality and cowardice in every face, and there
-wasn't a farmer in the flock of stag-hunting Jockies and Jennies who
-could muster courage enough to face a puma or even an old baboon with a
-supple stick in its hand. Pah!
-
-"But among the hills and forests around this Lake Titicaca is the
-paradise of the hunter who has a bit of sand and grit in his substance,
-and is not afraid to walk a whole mile away from a cow's tail.
-
-"No, there are no dangerous Indians that ever I came across among the
-mountains and glens; but as you never know what may happen, you've got
-to keep your cartridges free from damp.
-
-"What kind of game? Well, I was going to say pretty much of all sorts.
-We haven't got giraffes nor elephants, it is true, nor do we miss them
-much.
-
-"But there are fish in the lake and beasts on the shore, and rod and gun
-will get but little holiday, I assure you, lads, if you elect to travel
-in that strange land.
-
-"I hardly know very much about the fish. They say that the lake is
-bottomless, and that not only is it swarming with fish, wherever there
-is a bank, but that terrible animals or beasts have been seen on its
-deep-blue surface; creatures so fearful in aspect that even their sudden
-appearance has turned gray the hairs of those who beheld them.
-
-"But I calculate that this is all Indian gammon or superstition.
-
-"As for me, I've been always more at home in the woods and forests, and
-on the mountain's brow.
-
-"I'm not going to boast, boys, but I've climbed the highest hills of the
-Cordilleras, where I have had no companion save the condor.
-
-"You Europeans call the eagle the bird of Jove. If that is so, I want to
-ask them where the condor comes in.
-
-"Why, your golden eagle of Scottish wilds isn't a circumstance to the
-condor of the Andes. He is no more to be compared to this great forest
-vulture than a spring chicken is to a Christmas turkey.
-
-"But the condor is only one of a thousand wild birds of prey, or of
-song, found in the Andean regions or giant Cordilleras.
-
-"And at lower altitude we find the llamas, the guanacos, and herds of
-wild vicuas.
-
-"You may come across the puma and the jaguar also, and be sorry you've
-met.
-
-"Then there are goats, foxes, and wild dogs, as well as the viscacha and
-the chinchilla, to say nothing of deer.
-
-"But on the great lake itself, apart from all thought of fish, you need
-never go without a jolly good dinner if the rarest of water-fowl will
-please you. Ducks and geese galore, and other species too many to
-name."
-
-"That is a land, and that is a lake," said Dick musingly, "that I should
-dearly like to visit. Yes, and to dwell in or on for a time.
-
-"I suppose labour is cheap?" he added enquiringly.
-
-"I guess," returned Rodrigo, "that if you wanted to erect a wooden hut
-on some high and healthy promontory overlooking the lake--and this would
-be your best holt--you would have to learn the use of axe and adze and
-saw, and learn also how to drive a nail or two without doubling it over
-your thumb and hitting the wrong nail on the head."
-
-"Well, anyhow," said Dick, "I shall dream to-night of your great inland
-ocean, of your Lake Titicaca, and in my dreams I shall imagine I am
-already there. I suppose the woods are alive with beautiful birds?"
-
-"Yes," said Rodrigo, "and with splendid moths and butterflies also; so
-let these have a place in your dreams as well. Throw in chattering
-monkeys too, and beautiful parrots that love to mock every sound they
-hear around them. Let there be evergreen trees draped in garments of
-climbing flowers, roaring torrents, wild foaming rivers, that during
-storms roll down before them, from the flooded mountains, massive tree
-trunks, and boulders houses high."
-
-"You are quite poetic!"
-
-"But I am not done yet. People your paradise with strangely beautiful
-lizards that creep and crawl everywhere, looking like living flowers,
-and arrayed in colours that rival the tints of the rainbow. Lizards--ay,
-and snakes; but bless you, boys, these are very innocent, objecting to
-nothing except to having their tails trodden on."
-
-"Well, no creature cares for treatment like that," said Roland. "If you
-and I go to this land of beauty, Dick, we must make a point of not
-treading on snakes' tails."
-
-"But, boys, there are fortunes in this land of ours also. Fortunes to
-be had for the digging."
-
-"Copper?"
-
-"Yes, and gold as well!"
-
-Rodrigo paused to roll and light another cigarette. I have never seen
-anyone do so more deftly. He seemed to take an acute delight in the
-process. He held the snow-white tissue-paper lovingly in his grasp,
-while with his forefinger and thumb he apportioned to it just the right
-quantity of yellow fragrant Virginia leaf, then twisting it tenderly,
-gently, he conveyed it to his lips.
-
-Said Dick now, "I have often heard of the wondrous city of La Paz, and
-to me it has always seemed a sort of semi-mythical town--a South
-American Timbuctoo."
-
-"Ah, lad, it is far from being mythical! On the contrary, it is very
-real, and so are everything and everybody in it.
-
-"I could not, however, call it, speaking conscientiously, a gem of a
-place, though it might be made so. But you see, boys, there is a deal
-of Spanish or Portuguese blood in the veins of the real whites
-here--though, mind you, three-fourths of the population are Indians of
-almost every Bolivian race. Well, the motto of the dark-eyed whites
-seems to be Maana (pronounce Mah-nyah-nah), which signifies
-'to-morrow', you know. Consequently, with the very best intentions in
-the world, they hardly ever finish anything they begin. Some of the
-streets are decently paved, but every now and then you come to a slough
-of despond. Many of the houses are almost palatial, but they stand side
-by side with, and are jostled by, the vile mud-huts of the native
-population. They have a cathedral and a bazaar, but neither is finished
-yet.
-
-"Well, La Paz stands at a great altitude above the ocean. It is well
-worthy of a visit. If you go there, however, there are two things you
-must not forget to take with you, namely, a bottle of smelling-salts and
-plenty of eau-de-Cologne."
-
-"The place smells--slightly, then, I suppose," ventured Dick.
-
-"Ha! ha! ha!" Rodrigo had a hearty laugh of his own. "Yes, it smells
-slightly. So do the people, I may add.
-
-"The natives of La Paz, although some of them boast of a direct descent
-from the ancient Incas, are to all intents and purposes slaves.
-
-"Well, boys, when I say 'slaves' I calculate I know pretty well what I
-am talking about. The old feudal system holds sway in what we call the
-civilized portions of Bolivia. Civilization, indeed! Only in the wilds
-is there true freedom and independence. The servants on ranches and
-farms are bought or sold with the land on which they live. So, Mr.
-Bill, if you purchase a farm in Bolivia, it won't be only the cows and
-cocks and hens you'll have to take, but the servants as well, ay, and
-the children of these.
-
-"Bolivian Indians, who are troubled with families that they consider a
-trifle too large for their income, have a simple and easy method of
-meeting the difficulty. They just take what you might call the surplus
-children to some white-man farmer and sell them as they do their cows."
-
-"Then these children are just brought up as slaves?"
-
-"Yes, their masters treat them fairly well, but they generally make good
-use of the whip. 'Spare the rod and spoil the child' is a motto they
-play up to most emphatically, and certainly I have never known the rod
-to be spared, nor the child to be spoiled either.
-
-"Oh! by the way, as long as my hand is in I may tell you about the
-servants that the gentry-folks of La Paz keep. I don't think any
-European would be plagued with such a dirty squad, for in a household
-of, say, ten, there must be ten slaves at the very least, to say nothing
-of the pongo man.
-
-"This pongo man is in reality the charwoman of La Paz. It is he who
-does all the dirty work, and a disagreeable-looking and painfully dirty
-blackguard he is himself. It is not his custom to stay more than a week
-with any one family. He likes to be always on the move.
-
-"He assists the cook; he collects dried llama manure for firewood, as
-Paddy might say; he fetches water from the fountain; he brings home the
-marketing, in the shape of meat and vegetables; he cleans and scrubs
-everywhere, receiving few pence for his trouble, but an indefinite
-number of kicks and cuffs, while his bed at night is on the cold stones
-behind the hall door. Yet with all his ill-usage, he seems just about as
-happy as a New Hollander, and you always find him trotting around
-trilling a song.
-
-"Ah, there is nothing like contentment in this world, boys!"
-
-"Yes, Mr. Bill, I have seen one or two really pretty girls among the
-Bolivians, but never lost my heart to any of them, for between you and
-me, they don't either brush or comb their hair, and when walking with
-them it is best to keep the weather-gauge. And that's a hint worth
-having, I can assure you."
-
- ----
-
-On the very next evening after Don Rodrigo spoke his piece, as he
-phrased it, about the strange customs and habits of the Bolivians, all
-were assembled as usual in the biggest tent.
-
-Burly Bill and his meerschaum were getting on remarkably well together,
-the Don was rolling a cigarette, when suddenly Brawn started up as if
-from a dream, and stood with his ears pricked and his head a little to
-one side, gazing out into the darkness.
-
-He uttered no warning growl, and made no sound of any sort, but his tail
-was gently agitated, as if something pleased him.
-
-Then with one impatient "Yap!" he sprang away, and was seen no more for
-a few minutes.
-
-"What can ail the dog?" said Roland.
-
-"What, indeed?" said Dick.
-
-And now footsteps soft and slow were heard approaching the tent, and
-next minute poor Benee himself staggered in and almost fell at Roland's
-feet.
-
-The honest hound seemed almost beside himself with joy, but he had sense
-enough to know that his old favourite, Benee, was exhausted and ill,
-and, looking up into his young master's face, appeared to plead for his
-assistance.
-
-Benee's cheeks were hollow, his feet were cut and bleeding, and yet as
-he lay there he smiled feebly.
-
-"I am happy now," he murmured, and forthwith fell asleep.
-
-Both Roland and Dick trembled. They thought that sleep might be the
-sleep of death, but Don Rodrigo, after feeling Benee's pulse, assured
-them that it was all right, and that the poor fellow only needed rest
-and food.
-
-In about half an hour the faithful fellow--ah! who could doubt his
-fidelity now?--sat painfully up.
-
-Dick went hurrying off and soon returned with soup and with wine, and
-having swallowed a little, Benee made signs that he would rest and
-sleep.
-
-"To-morrow," he said, "to-morrow I speak plenty. To-night no can do."
-
-And so they did all they could to make him comfortable, and great Brawn
-lay down by his side to watch him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV--BENEE'S STORY--THE YOUNG CANNIBAL QUEEN
-
-
-I cannot help saying that in forbearing to talk to or to question poor
-Benee on the evening of his arrival, our young heroes exhibited a spirit
-of true manliness and courage which was greatly to their credit.
-
-That they were burning to get news of the unfortunate Peggy goes without
-saying, and to hear at the same time Benee's own marvellous adventures.
-
-Nor did they hurry the poor fellow even next day.
-
-It is a good plan to fly from temptation, when you are not sure you may
-not fall. There is nothing dishonourable about such a course, be the
-temptation what it may.
-
-Roland and Dick adopted the plan this morning at all events. Both were
-awake long before sunrise; long before the beautiful stars had ceased to
-glitter gem-like high over mountains and forest.
-
-The camp was hardly yet astir, although Burly Bill was looming between
-the lads and the light as they stood with honest Brawn in the big tent
-doorway. Over his head rose a huge cloud of fragrant smoke, while ever
-and anon a gleam from the bowl of his meerschaum lit up his
-good-humoured face.
-
-It had not taken the lads long to dress, and now they sauntered out.
-
-The first faint light of the dawning day was already beginning to pale
-the stars. Soon the sun himself, red and rosy, would sail up from his
-bed behind the far green forest.
-
-"Bill!"
-
-"Hillo! Good-morning to you both! I've been up for hours."
-
-"And we could not sleep for--thinking. But I say, Bill, I think Benee
-has good news. I'm burning to hear it, and so is Dick here, but it
-would be downright mean to wake the poor fellow till he is well rested.
-So, for fear we should seem too inquisitive, or too squaw-like, we're
-off with bold Brawn here for a walk. Yes, we are both armed."
-
-When the lads came back in about two hours' time, they found Benee up
-and dressed and seated on the grass at breakfast.
-
-When I say he was dressed I allude to the fact that he very much needed
-dressing, for his garments were in rags, his blanket in tatters. But he
-had taken the clothes Bill provided for him, and gone straight to the
-river for a wash and a swim.
-
-He looked quite the old Benee on his return.
-
-"Ah!" said Bill, "you're smiling, Benee. I know you have good news."
-
-"Plenty good, Massa Bill, one leetle bitee bad!"
-
-"Well, eat, old man; I'm hungry. Yes, the boys are beautiful, and
-they'll be here in a few minutes."
-
-And so they were.
-
-Brawn was before them. He darted in with a rush and a run, and licked
-first Benee's ears and then Bill's. It was a rough but a very kindly
-salute.
-
-In these sky-high regions of Bolivia, a walk or run across the plains
-early in the morning makes one almost painfully hungry.
-
-But here was a breakfast fit for a king; eggs of wild birds, fish, and
-flesh of deer, with cakes galore, for the Indians were splendid cooks.
-
-Then, after breakfast, Benee told the boys and Bill all his long and
-strange story. It was a thrilling one, as we know already, and lost
-none of its effect by being related in Benee's simple, but often graphic
-and figurative language.
-
-"Oh!" cried impulsive Dick, when he had finished, and there were tears
-in the lad's eyes that he took small pains to hide, "you have made
-Roland and me happy, inexpressibly happy, Benee. We know now that dear
-Peggy is well, and that nothing can harm her for the present, and
-something tells me we shall receive her safe and sound."
-
-Benee's face got slightly clouded.
-
-"Will it not be so, Benee?"
-
-"The Christian God will help us, Massa Dick. Der is mooch--plenty
-mooch--to be done!"
-
-"And we're the lads to do it," almost shouted Burly Bill.
-
-"Wowff! Wowff!" barked Brawn in the most emphatic manner.
-
-In another hour all were once more on the march towards the land of the
-cannibals.
-
- ----
-
-Life at the court of Queen Leeboo, as her people called poor Peggy, was
-not all roses, but well the girl knew that if she was to harbour any
-hopes of escape she must keep cool and play her game well.
-
-She had all a woman's wits about her, however, and all a woman's wiles.
-Vain Peggy certainly was not, but she knew she was beautiful, and
-determined to make the best use of the fact.
-
-Luckily for her she could speak the language of this strange wild people
-as well as anyone, for Charlie himself had been her teacher.
-
-A strangely musical and labial tongue it is, and figurative, too, as
-might be expected, for the scenery of every country has a certain effect
-upon its language.
-
-It was soon evident that Queen Leeboo was expected to stay in the royal
-camp almost entirely.
-
-This she determined should not be the case. So after the royal
-breakfast one morning--and a very delightful and natural meal it was,
-consisting chiefly of nuts and fruit--Queen Leeboo seized her sceptre,
-the poisoned spear, and stepped lightly down from her throne.
-
-"That isn't good enough," she said, "I want a little fresh air."
-
-Her attendants threw themselves on their faces before her, but she made
-them get up, and very much astonished they were to see the beautiful
-queen march along the great hall and step out on to the skull-decorated
-verandah.
-
-The palace was built on a mountain ledge or table-land of small
-dimensions. It was backed by gigantic and precipitous rocks, now most
-beautifully draped with the greenery of bush and fern, and trailed over
-by a thousand charming wild flowers.
-
-Leeboo, as we may call her for the present, seated herself languidly on
-a dais. She knew better than to be rash. Her object was to gain the
-entire confidence of her people. In this alone lay her hopes of escape,
-and thoughts of freedom were ever uppermost in her mind.
-
-This was the first time she had been beyond the portals of her royal
-prison-house, but she determined it should not be the last.
-
-While her attendants partially encircled her she gazed dreamily at the
-glorious scenery beyond and beneath her.
-
-From her elevated position she could view the landscape for leagues and
-leagues on every side. Few of us, in this tame domestic land that we
-all love so well, have ever visited so beautiful a country as these
-highlands of Bolivia.
-
-Fresh from the hands of its Maker did it seem on this fresh, cool,
-delightful morning. The dark green of its rolling woods and forests,
-the heath-clad hills, the streams that meandered through the dales like
-threads of silver, the glittering lakes, the plains where the llamas,
-and even oxen, roamed in great herds, and far, far away on the horizon
-the serrated mountains, patched and flecked with snow, that hid their
-summits in the fleecy clouds; the whole formed as grand and lovely a
-panorama as ever human eyes beheld.
-
-But it was marred somewhat by the immediate surroundings of poor Leeboo.
-
-Oh, those awful skulls! "Is everything good and beautiful in Nature,"
-she could not help asking herself, "except mankind?"
-
-Here was the faint odour of death, and she beheld on many of these
-skulls the mark of the axe, reminding her of murder. She shuddered.
-Her palace was but a charnel-house. Those crouching creatures around
-her, waiting to do her bidding or obey her slightest behest, were but
-slaves of tyrant masters, and every day she missed one of the youngest
-and fairest, and knew what her doom would be.
-
-And out beyond the gate yonder were her soldiers, her guards. Alas,
-yes! and they were her keepers also.
-
-But behold! yonder comes the great chief Kaloomah, her prime minister,
-and walking beside him is Kalamazoo.
-
-Kaloomah walks erect and stately, as becomes so high a functionary. He
-is stern in face even to grimness and ferocity, but as handsome in form
-as some of the heroes of Walter Scott.
-
-And Kalamazoo is little more than a boy, and one, too, of somewhat
-fragile form, with face more delicate than is becoming in a cannibal
-Indian.
-
-Kalamazoo is the only son of the late queen. For some reason or other
-he wears a necklace of his mother's red-stained teeth. Probably they
-are a charm.
-
-Both princes kneel at Leeboo's feet. Leeboo strikes both smartly on the
-shoulders with her sceptre and bids them stand up.
-
-"I would not have you grovel round me," she says in their own tongue,
-"like two little pigs of the forest." They stand up, looking sheepish
-and nonplussed, and Leeboo, placing one on each side of her--a
-spear-length distant,--looks first at Kaloomah and then at Kalamazoo and
-bursts into a silvery laugh.
-
-Why laughs Queen Leeboo? These two men are both very natural, both
-somewhat solemn. Not even little pigs of the forest like to be laughed
-at.
-
-But the queen's mistress of the robes--let me call her so--has told her
-that she is expected to take unto herself a husband in three moons, and
-that it must be either Kaloomah or Kalamazoo.
-
-This is now no state secret. All the queen's people know, from her own
-palace gates to the remotest mud hut on this cannibalistic territory.
-They all know it, and they look forward to that week of festivity as
-children in the rural districts of England look forward to a fair.
-
-There will be a monster carousal that day.
-
-The soldiers of the queen will make a raid on a neighbouring hill tribe,
-and bring back many heads and many hams.
-
-If Kaloomah is the favourite, then Kalamazoo will be slain and cooked.
-
-If the queen elects to smile on Kalamazoo with his necklace of the
-maternal molars and incisors, then Kaloomah with the best grace he can
-must submit to the knife.
-
-Yet must I do justice to both and say that it is not because they fear
-death that they are so anxious to curry favour with the young and lovely
-queen. Oh no! for both are over head in love with her.
-
-And a happy thought has occurred to Leeboo. She will play one against
-the other, and thus, in some way to herself at present unknown,
-endeavour to effect her escape from this land of murder, blood, and
-beautiful scenery.
-
-So there they stand silently, a spear-length from her dais, she glorying
-in the power she knows she has over both. There they stand in silence,
-for court etiquette forbids them to speak until spoken to.
-
-Very like a couple of champion idiots they are too. Big Kaloomah doesn't
-quite know what to do with his hands, and Kalamazoo is fidgeting
-nervously with his necklace, and apparently counting his dead mother's
-teeth as monks count their beads.
-
-Leeboo rises at last, and, gathering the loose portion of her skirts
-around her, says: "Come, I would walk."
-
-She is a little way ahead, and she waves her spear so prettily as she
-smiles her sweetest and points to the grimly ornamental gate.
-
-And after hesitating for one moment, both Kaloomah and the young prince
-follow sheepishly.
-
-The guards by the gate, grim, fully armed cut-throats, seeing that her
-majesty expects obedience, fall back, and the trio march through.
-
-But I do not think that either of Leeboo's lovers is prepared for what
-follows.
-
-If they had calculated on a solemn majestic walk around the plateau,
-they were soon very much undeceived.
-
-Leeboo had no sooner begun to breathe the glorious mountain air, than
-she felt as exuberant as a child again. Indeed, she was but little
-else. But she placed her spear and sceptre of royalty very
-unceremoniously into Kaloomah's hand to hold, while she darted off after
-a splendid crimson specimen of dragon-fly.
-
-Kaloomah looked at Kalamazoo. Kalamazoo looked at Kaloomah.
-
-The one didn't love the other, it is true, yet a fellow-feeling made
-them wondrous kind. And the feeling uppermost in the mind of each was
-wonder.
-
-Kaloomah beckoned to Kalamazoo, and pointed to the queen. The words he
-spoke were somewhat as follows:
-
-"Too much choorka-choorka! Suppose the queen we lose--"
-
-He pointed with his thumb to his neck by way of completing the sentence.
-
-"Too much choorka-choorka!" repeated the young prince. "You old--you
-stop her."
-
-"No, no, you young--you run quick, you stop her!"
-
-That dragon-fly gave Leeboo grand sport for over half an hour. From
-bush to bush it flitted, and flew from flower to flower, over rocks,
-over cairns, and finally down the great hill that led to the plain
-below.
-
-Matters looked serious, so both lovers were now in duty bound to follow
-their all-too-lively queen.
-
-When they reached the bottom of the brae, however, behold!--but stay,
-there was no behold about it. Queen Leeboo was nowhere to be seen!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV--BENEE'S MOTHER TO THE FRONT
-
-
-Here was a difficulty!
-
-If they returned without the queen, they would be torn in pieces and
-quietly eaten afterwards.
-
-They became excited. They looked here, there, and everywhere for
-Leeboo. Up into the trees, under the bushes, behind rocks and stones,
-but all in vain. The beautiful girl seemed to have been spirited away,
-or the earth had opened and admitted her into fairy-land, or--
-
-But see! To their great joy, yonder comes the young queen holding aloft
-the dragon-fly and singing to herself.
-
-Not a whit worse was the lovely thing; not one of its four gauzy wings
-was so much as rumpled.
-
-Then she whispered something to it, and tossed it high in air.
-
-And away it flew, straight to the north-east, as if bent upon delivering
-the message she had entrusted to its keeping.
-
-She stood gazing after it with flushed cheeks and parted lips until it
-was no longer visible against the sky's pale blue, then turned away with
-a sigh.
-
-But Leeboo was not tired yet. There were beautiful birds to be seen and
-their songs listened to. And there were garlands of wild flowers to be
-strung.
-
-One she threw over Kaloomah's neck.
-
-Kalamazoo looked wretched.
-
-She made him even a larger, and he was happy. This garland quite hid his
-mother's frightful teeth.
-
-But it must be said that these two lovers of Leeboo's looked--with those
-garlands of flowers around their necks--more foolish than ever.
-
-She trotted them round for two whole hours. Then she resumed her
-sceptre, and intimated her intention to return to the palace.
-
-For a whole week these rambles were continued day after day.
-
-Then storm-winds blew wild from off the snow-patched mountains, and
-Leeboo was confined to her palace for days.
-
-Her maids of honour, however, did all they could to please and comfort
-her. They brought her the choicest of fruits, and they told her strange
-weird tales of strange weird people and mannikins who in these regions
-dwell deep down in caves below the ground, and often steal little
-children to nurse their tiny infants.
-
-And they sang or chanted to her also, and all night long in the
-drapery-hung chamber, where she reposed on a couch of skins, they lay
-near her, ready to start to their feet and obey her slightest command.
-
-Leeboo ruled her empire by love. But she could be haughty and stern
-when she pleased, only she never made use of that terrible spear, one
-touch of which meant death.
-
- ----
-
-In less than six-weeks' time Queen Leeboo had so thoroughly gained the
-confidence of her people that she was trusted to go anywhere, although
-always under the eyes of the young prince or Kaloomah.
-
-I believe Leeboo would have learned to like the savages but for their
-cannibal tastes, and several times, when men returned from the war-path,
-she had to witness the most terrible of orgies.
-
-It was always young girls or boys who were the victims of those fearful
-feasts. Her heart bled for them, but all remonstrance on her part was
-in vain.
-
-Leeboo had got her pony back, and often had a glorious gallop over the
-prairie.
-
-But something else had happened, which added greatly to Leeboo's comfort
-and happiness. Shooks-gee himself came to camp and brought with him
-little Weenah, his beautiful child-daughter.
-
-Leeboo took to her at once, and the two became constant companions.
-
-Weenah could converse in broken English, and so many a long delightful
-"confab" they had together.
-
-Child-like, Weenah told Leeboo of her love for Benee, of their early
-rambles in the forest, too, and of her own wild wanderings in search of
-him. Told her, too, that Benee was coming back again with a fresh army
-of Indians and white men, with Leeboo's own lover and her brother as
-their captains; told her of the fearful fight that was bound to take
-place, but which would end in the complete triumph of the good men and
-the rescue of Leeboo herself.
-
-Yes, Weenah had her prophecy all cut and dry, and her story ended with a
-good "curtain", as all good stories should.
-
-Whether Weenah's prophecy would be fulfilled or not we have to read on
-to see, for, alas! it was a dark and gloomy race of savages that would
-have to be dealt with, and rather than lose their queen, Kaloomah and
-his people would--but there! I have no wish to paint my chapters red.
-
- ----
-
-Leeboo was not slow to perceive that her chief chance of escape lay in
-the skill with which she might play her two lovers against each other.
-
-Whoever married her would be king. He would rank with, but after, the
-queen herself, for, to the credit of these cannibals be it said, they
-always prefer female government.
-
-In civilized society Leeboo might have been accused of acting
-mischievously; for she would take first one into favour and then the
-other, giving, that is, each of them a taste of the seventh heaven time
-about. When Kalamazoo's star was in the ascendant, then Kaloomah was
-deep down in a pit of despair; but anon, he would be up and out again,
-and then it was Kalamazoo's turn to weep and wail and gnash his
-triangular red-stained teeth.
-
-It is needless to say that the game she was playing was a sad strain
-upon our poor young heroine. No wonder her eyes grew bright with that
-brightness which denotes loss of strength, and weariness, and that her
-cheeks were often far too flushed.
-
-Hope deferred makes the heart sick, and but for little Weenah I think
-that Leeboo would have given up heart altogether and lain down to die.
-
-But Weenah was always bright, cheerful, and happy. She was laughing all
-day long. Benee was coming for her; of that she was very certain and
-sure, so she sang about her absent lover even as birds in the woodlands
-sing, and with just as sweet a voice.
-
-The plot was thickening and thickening, and Leeboo managed matters now
-so that only one of her guardians at a time accompanied herself and
-Weenah in their rides or rambles.
-
-Dixie--as the pony was named--was a very faithful little horse, and
-though when Weenah had to trot beside him he never was allowed to go the
-pace, he was exceedingly strong, and could scour the plain or prairie as
-fleet as the wind whenever his young mistress put him on his mettle. On
-such occasions, no matter which of Leeboo's admirers was with her, he
-dropped far astern, and after running for a mile or so, had to sit down
-to pant.
-
-But the young queen always returned, and so she was trusted implicitly.
-
-So too was Weenah, but then Weenah was one of themselves.
-
- ----
-
-In their very long and toilsome march, up the Mayatata, well was it
-indeed for Roland and Dick that they had guides so faithful and clever
-as Benee and Charlie. But for them, indeed, the expedition would have
-been foredoomed to failure.
-
-Benee indeed was really the guiding star. For in his own lonesome
-wanderings he had surveyed the whole country as it were, and knew every
-fitting place for a camp, every ford on every stream, and every pathway
-through the dense and dark forests.
-
-They were but the pathways made by the beasts, however, and often all
-but impassable. Still, in single file they marched, and were always
-successful in making their way. Two whole months passed away, and now,
-as they were nearing the cannibal highlands, greater precautions than
-ever were required.
-
-And for a week they had to turn night into day, and travel while the
-savages slept.
-
-They kept away, too, from any portion of the country which seemed to
-have the slightest claim to be called inhabited. Better they should
-herd with the wild beasts of the forest than sight the face of even a
-single savage. For swift as deer that savage would run towards the
-cannibal head-quarters and give information of the approach of a
-pale-face horde of enemies.
-
-At last there came a day when Benee called a council of war.
-
-"We now get near de bad man's land," he said. "Ugh! I not lub mooch
-blood."
-
-"Then what would you have us do?" said Roland. "Shall we advance boldly
-or make a night attack?"
-
-"No, no, no, sah. Too many cannibal warrior, too much pizen arrow,
-sling, and spear. No; build here a camp. Make he strong. Benee will
-go all same. Benee will creep and crawl till he come to father and
-mother house. Den Benee make all right. Pray for Benee."
-
-Benee left, poor Brawn bidding him a most affectionate farewell. Surely
-that honest dog knew he was bent on saving his little mistress, if only
-he could.
-
-Charlie, the ex-cannibal, stayed in camp for the time being, but he
-might be useful as a spy afterwards.
-
-It is needless to say that the prayers of both our heroes were offered
-up night and day for Benee's success, and that their blessings followed
-him.
-
-But we do not always receive the answers that would appear to us the
-best to our prayers, however earnest and heartfelt they may be. Still,
-we know well, though we are generally very loth to admit it, that
-afflictions are very often blessings in disguise.
-
-And now Benee was once more all alone on the war-path, and he followed
-his old tactics, creeping quietly through the jungle only by night, and
-retiring into hiding whenever day began to obliterate the stars. Roland
-gave orders for the camp to be immediately fortified. It was certainly
-a well-chosen one, on the top of a wooded hill.
-
-This hill was scarcely a hundred feet high, but although it might be
-taken by siege, its position rendered it almost impregnable as far as
-assault was concerned.
-
-A rampart with a trench was thrown round three sides of it. That was
-apparently all that would be needed.
-
-Looking from below by daylight even, hardly a savage could have told
-that an enemy held the hill.
-
-And now there was nothing to do but to wait. And waiting is always
-wearisome work.
-
-But let us follow Benee.
-
-His progress was slow, but it was sure, and at last he reached the
-cottage where good Shooks-gee and his wife resided.
-
-But here was no one save his "mother", as Benee lovingly called her.
-
-A great fear took possession of his mind. Could it be that his father
-himself was dead, and that Weenah was captive?
-
-His lips and voice almost refused to formulate the question nearest to
-his heart.
-
-But his mother's smile reassured him. Weenah was safe, and at the court
-of the queen, and Shooks-gee himself was there. So Benee grew hopeful
-once more.
-
-But his task would be by no means an easy one.
-
-First and foremost he must establish communication between the captive
-girl and himself. How could this be done?
-
-Had Shooks-gee been at home it might have been managed simply enough.
-But he himself dared not appear anywhere in sight of the savages.
-
-He felt almost baffled, but at last his mother came to his rescue.
-
-The risk would be extreme. These cannibal savages are as suspicious of
-strangers as they are fierce and bloodthirsty, and if this poor,
-kindly-hearted woman was taken for a spy her doom would be sealed.
-
-But see the young queen she must, or little Weenah, her daughter; for
-great though Benee's abilities were, he did not possess the
-accomplishment of writing.
-
- ----
-
-Dressed as one of the lowest of peasants, the mother of Weenah set
-boldly out on her forlorn hope the very next day, and in the afternoon
-she was within one mile of the palace itself.
-
-Here she hid herself in the jungle, and after eating a little fruit went
-to sleep.
-
-The stars were still shining when she awoke, but she knew them all, and
-those that were setting told her that day would soon break.
-
-To pass through the soldier-guards and enter the palace would, she knew,
-be an utter impossibility. There was nothing for it but to wait with
-patience, for her husband had told her that the queen rode out for a
-scamper over the plains every forenoon.
-
-He had even told her the direction she usually took, not riding fast,
-but with Weenah running by her side, keeping a long way ahead of her
-lover guardian, whichever one of them might happen for the time being to
-be the happy man.
-
-Benee's mother was as courageous as a mountain cat. She had a duty to
-perform, and she meant to carry it out.
-
-Well, we are told in some old classic that fortune favours the brave.
-
-It does not always do so, but in this case, at all events, this good
-woman was successful.
-
-At a certain part of the plain there were bushes close and thick enough,
-and just here Leeboo with her little charger must pass if she came out
-to-day at all.
-
-It was at this spot, then, that Weenah's mother concealed herself.
-
-Nor had she very long to wait, for soon the sound of the pony's hoofs
-fell on her ear, beating a pleasant accompaniment to two sweet voices
-raised in song.
-
-The Indian woman raised herself and peeped over the bushes.
-
-Yes, they were coming, and alone too, for Kaloomah could not run so fast
-as Kalamazoo, and was a long way behind.
-
-With characteristic impulse Weenah rushed forward and was clasped for a
-moment in her mother's arms.
-
-And, somewhat astonished, Leeboo immediately reined up.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI--THE PALE-FACE QUEEN HAS FLED
-
-
-Leeboo, the young queen, could see that the woman was flurried and
-excited.
-
-She stood with her face to the pony and one arm was held aloft in the
-air. Her eyes were gleaming, and her hat had fallen over her back,
-allowing her wealth of coal-black hair to escape.
-
-Weenah stood by the saddle.
-
-"I have that to say," exclaimed her mother, in her strangely musical
-language, "that must be said speedily. If I am seen we are all doomed.
-But listen, and listen intently. You are free if you are fortunate.
-Liberty is at hand. Your friends are twenty miles down stream in camp.
-Down the stream of Bitter Waters. Ride this way to-morrow, and when far
-enough away take Weenah in your saddle, and gallop for your life into
-the forest. Weenah will be your guide."
-
-So quickly did the woman vanish that for a few moments our heroine half
-believed she must have been dreaming.
-
-But she pulled herself together at once, and now rode back to meet
-Kaloomah.
-
-She was all smiles too.
-
-"Why waits poor Kaloomah here?" she said, in her softest sweetest tones.
-
-Kaloomah placed his hand on the saddle pommel, and panted somewhat. But
-Kaloomah was in the seventh heaven.
-
-"Say--say--say 'poor Kaloomah' again," he muttered.
-
-"Poor Kaloomah! Poor dear Kaloomah!"
-
-She could even afford to place emphasis on the "dear", she was so happy.
-
-"Oh--ugh!" sighed the savage; "but to-morrow it may be 'poor dear
-Kalamazoo!'"
-
-"Ah, you are jealous! A little forest bird is pecking, pecking at your
-heart. But listen; to-morrow it shall not be Kalamazoo, but Kaloomah
-once again."
-
-Well, I dare say that love-making is very much the same all over the
-wide, wide world, and so we cannot even laugh at this cannibal if he did
-bend rapturously down and kiss the toe of Leeboo's sandal-shaped
-stirrup.
-
-"And now, Kaloomah," she added, "I would gather some wild flowers, and
-listen for a little while to the soo-soo's song while you twine my wild
-flowers into a garland. My little handmaiden, Weenah, will assist you.
-
-"But, Kaloomah!" she continued archly.
-
-"Yes, my moon-dream."
-
-"You must not make love to my maiden, else a little forest bird will
-peck poor Leeboo's heart to pieces and Leeboo die."
-
- ----
-
-I hardly think it would be putting it one whit too strongly to say that
-the pale-face maiden queen had turned this savage's head.
-
-They all returned together at last to the palace, and the queen with her
-little handmaiden retired to her chamber to dine.
-
-As to Kaloomah, the spirit of pride had got into him, and this is really
-as difficult to get rid of as if one were possessed of an evil spirit.
-So the chief, decorated with the garland of wild flowers that Leeboo the
-queen had placed around his neck, could not resist the temptation to
-parade himself on the plateau before Kalamazoo's tent. He wished the
-prince to see him. And the prince did.
-
-The prince, moreover, was strongly tempted to rush forth, spear in hand,
-and slay his rival where he stood.
-
-But he remembered in time that Kaloomah was not only a great chief but a
-mighty warrior. Over and over again had he led the cannibal army
-against the glens and valleys of distant highland chiefs. And he had
-been ever victorious, his soldiers returning after a great slaughter of
-the foe, laden with heads and hams, to hold nights and nights of fearful
-orgie.
-
-Kalamazoo knew that Kaloomah was the people's favourite, and that if he
-slew him, he himself would speedily be torn limb from limb.
-
-So he was content to gnash his own teeth, to count his mother's over and
-over again, and to remain quiescent.
-
-It is seldom indeed that a savage is troubled with sleeplessness, but
-that night poor Benee was far too anxious to slumber soundly. For he
-knew not what another day might bring forth. It might be pregnant with
-happiness for him and the young girls he loved so dearly, or it might
-end in bloodshed and in death.
-
-What a glorious morning broke over the woodlands at last! Looking
-eastwards Benee could note a strip of the deepest orange just above the
-dark forest horizon. This faded into palest green, and above all was
-ethereal blue, with just one or two rosy clouds. And westwards those
-patches of snow in the hollow of the mighty Sierras were pink, with
-purple shadows.
-
-And this innocent and unsophisticated savage bent himself low on his
-knees and prayed to Him who is the author of all that is beautiful, to
-bless his enterprise and take his little mistress safe away from this
-blood-stained land of darkness and woe.
-
-He felt better when he rose to his feet. Then he entered the cottage
-and had breakfast.
-
-"I will come again some day," he said, as his "mother" bade him a
-tearful farewell. "I will come again and take Father and you to the
-far-off happy land of the pale-faces."
-
-So he hied him away to the forest, looking back just once to wave his
-hand.
-
-He well knew the road that Weenah and Leeboo--no, let us call her Peggy
-once more--would take, if indeed they should succeed in escaping.
-
-He walked towards the river of Bitter Waters therefore, and, journeying
-for some miles along its wild romantic banks, lay down to wait.
-
-Wild flowers trailed and climbed among the bushes where he hid; he saw
-not their bright colours, he was scarcely sensible of their perfume.
-
-The soo-soo's song was sweet and plaintive; he heard it not.
-
-He was wholly absorbed in thought. So the sun got higher and higher,
-and still he waited and watched--waited and hoped.
-
-Only, ever and anon he would place his ear against the hard ground and
-listen intently.
-
-'Twas noon, and they came not.
-
-Something must have happened. Everything must have failed.
-
-What should he do? What could he do?
-
- ----
-
-But hark! A joyful sound. It was that of a horse at the gallop, and it
-was coming nearer and nearer.
-
-Benee grasped his rifle.
-
-It must be she. It must, and was poor Peggy, and Weenah was seated
-behind her.
-
-He looked quickly to his repeating rifle, and patted the revolvers in
-his belt.
-
-"Oh, Benee, Benee! how rejoiced I am!"
-
-"But are you followed, Missie Peggy?"
-
-"No, no, Benee, we have ridden clean and clear away from the savage
-chief Kaloomah, and we fear no pursuit."
-
-"Ah, Missie! You not know de savage man. I do. Come. Make track now.
-
-"Weenah," he added. "Oh, my love, Weenah! But come not down. We mus'
-fly foh de cannibal come in force."
-
-It seemed but child's play to Benee to trot lightly along beside the
-pony.
-
-Love, no doubt, made the labour lighter. Besides, on faithful little
-Dixie's back was all that Benee cared much for in the world, Weenah and
-"Missie Peggy".
-
-True enough, he liked and respected Roland, and Dick as well, but they
-were not all the world to him as these girls were. And ever since he
-had found Roland and Peggy in the dark forest and rescued them, his
-little mistress had been in his eyes an angel. Never an unkind word was
-it possible for her to say to anyone, least of all--so he flattered
-himself--to Benee.
-
-The poor, untutored savage felt, in his happiness, at this moment, that
-it would be sweet to die were the loved ones only near to hold his hand.
-
-But he could die, too, fighting for them; ay, fighting to the end. Who
-was he that would dare touch the ground where Peggy or Weenah trod if
-he--Benee--were there?
-
-And so they journeyed on and on by the river's side and through jungle
-and forest, never dreaming of danger or pursuit.
-
-Ah! but wild as a panther was Kaloomah now.
-
-When he found that he was baffled, befooled, deserted, then all his
-fury--the fury of an untamed savage--boiled up from the bottom of his
-heart.
-
-Love! Where was love now? It found no place in this wild chief's
-heart; hate had supplanted it, and it was a hate that must be quenched
-in blood. Yes, her blood! He would be revenged, and then--well then,
-the sooner he should die after that the better. For his life's sun had
-gone out, his days could only be days of darkness now.
-
-Yet how happy had he been only this morning, and how proud when he
-stalked forth from his hut and passed that of Kalamazoo, still wearing
-the wild flowers with which she had adorned him!
-
-He tore those wild flowers from his neck now, and scattered them to the
-winds.
-
-Then, as fast and fleet as ever savage ran, he hied him back to the
-palace.
-
-Few had more stentorian lungs than Kaloomah!
-
-"The queen has gone! The white queen has fled!"
-
-That shout awakened one thousand armed men to action, and in less than
-an hour they were on the warpath.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII--THE FIGHT AT THE FORT
-
-
-So toilsome was the road to trace, and so far away was the fortified
-camp of our heroes, that the sun was almost setting before Benee arrived
-with his precious charge.
-
-Why should I make any attempt to describe the meeting of Roland and Dick
-with the long-lost Peggy?
-
-Roland and she had always been as brother and sister, and now that they
-were once more united, all her joy found vent in a flood of tears, which
-her brother did what he could to stem.
-
-It seemed hardly possible that she should be here safe and sound, and in
-the presence of those who loved her so well and dearly.
-
-And here, too, was Brawn, who was delirious with joy, and honest Bill
-with his meerschaum.
-
-"Oh, surely I shall not awake and find it all a dream!" she cried in
-terror. "Awake and find myself still in that awful palace, with its
-dreadful surroundings and the odour of death everywhere! Oh--h!"
-
-The girl shuddered.
-
-"Dear Peggy," said Dick tenderly, "this is no dream; you are with us
-again, and we with you. All the past is as nothing. Let us live for
-the future. Is that right, Roland?"
-
-"Yes, you must forget the past, Peggy," said Roland. "Dick is right.
-The past shall be buried. We are young yet. The world is all before
-us. So come, laugh, and be happy, Peggy."
-
-"And this charming child here, who is she?" said Dick. He alluded to
-Weenah.
-
-"That is little Weenah, a daughter of the wilds, a child of the desert.
-Nay, but no child after all, are you, Weenah?"
-
-Weenah bent her dark eyes on the ground.
-
-"I am nothing," she said. "I am nobody, only--Benee's."
-
-"But, Weenah," said Peggy, taking the girl by the hand, "oh, how I shall
-miss you when you go!"
-
-"Go?" said Weenah wonderingly.
-
-"Yes, dear, you have a father and a mother, who are fond of you. Must
-you not return soon to them?"
-
-"My father and my mother I love," replied Weenah. "And you I love, for
-you have taught me to pray to the pale-face's God. You have taught me
-many, many things that are good and beautiful. My life now is all joy
-and brightness, and so, though I love my mother and my father, oh! bid
-me not to leave you."
-
-All this was spoken in the language of the country. It was Greek to
-those around them, but even Bill could see that the dark-eyed maiden was
-pleading for something, for her hand was in Peggy's, her eyes upon hers.
-
- ----
-
-It was just at this moment that scouts came hurrying in from the forest,
-bringing news that was startling enough, as well as surprising.
-
-These men had come speedily in, almost as fleet of foot as deer, and the
-word they brought was that the savages, at least six hundred strong,
-were not more than three hours distant.
-
-Roland showed no excitement, whatever he might feel. Nor did Dick. Yet
-both were ready for action.
-
-Burly Bill, who had been quietly smoking a little way off, put his great
-thumb in the bowl of his meerschaum, and stowed away that faithful
-companion of his in his coat-pocket.
-
-Can a young fellow still in his teens, and whom we older men are all too
-apt to sneer at as a mere boy, prove himself a good general. He may and
-he can, if he has grit in him and a head of some sort surmounting his
-shoulders.
-
-From what followed I think Roland proved that he was in possession of
-both.
-
-Well, he had descended from a long line of hardy Cornish ancestors, and
-there is more in good blood than we are apt to believe.
-
-He came to the front now at all events, and Dick and Bill, to say
-nothing of Benee, Rodrigo, and the other canoe captains, were ready to
-obey his every command.
-
-Roland called a council of war at once, and it did not take long to come
-to a decision.
-
-Our chief hero was the principal speaker. But brave men do not lose
-much time in words.
-
-"Boys," he said, "we've got to fight these rascally savages. That's so,
-I think?"
-
-"That's so," was the chorus.
-
-"Well, and we've got to beat them, too. We want to give them something
-that shall keep them both quiet and civil until we can afford to send
-out a few missionaries to improve their morals.
-
-"Now, Rodrigo, I cannot force you to fight."
-
-"Force, sir? I need no force. Command me."
-
-"Well, I will. I wish to outflank these beggars. You and our Indians,
-with Benee as your guide, are just the men to do so.
-
-"The moon will be up in another hour. It will be the harvest-moon in
-England. The harvest-moon here, too--but a harvest, alas! of blood.
-
-"Now, Benee," he continued, "as soon as we are ready, guide these men
-with Captain Rodrigo for some distance down-stream, then curl round the
-savages, and when they begin to retreat, or even before that, attack
-them in the rear. Good luck to you!"
-
-As silently as ghosts two hundred and fifty well-armed Indians, a short
-time after Roland made that brave little speech, glided down the brow of
-the hill, and disappeared in the woods beyond.
-
-Though our heroes listened, they could not hear a sound, not even the
-crackling of a bush or broken branch.
-
-Soon the moon glared red through the topmost boughs of the far-off
-trees, and flooded all the land with a light almost as bright as day.
-The stars above, that before had glittered on the river's rippling
-breast, and the stars beneath--those wondrous flitting
-fire-insects--paled before its beams, and the night-birds sought for
-shelter in caves among the rocks. So over all the prairie and woodlands
-there fell a stillness that was almost oppressive. It was as if Nature
-held her breath, expectant of the fight that was to follow.
-
-Nor was that fight very long delayed. But it must have been well on
-towards midnight before the first indication of an approaching foe was
-made manifest.
-
-Only a long, mournful hoot, away in the bush, and bearing a close
-resemblance to that of the owl.
-
-It was repeated here and there from different quarters, and our heroes
-knew that an attack was imminent.
-
-There was in the centre of the camp a roomy cave. In this all stores had
-been placed, with water enough for a night at all events, and here were
-Peggy and Weenah safely guarded by Brawn. Roland had managed to make
-the darkness visible by lighting two candles and placing them on the
-wall.
-
-In a smaller cave was Peter, and as he had given evidence lately of a
-great desire to escape, the boys had taken the liberty to rope him.
-
-"You shall live to repent this," hissed the man through his teeth.
-
-He had thrown overboard all his plausibility now, and assumed his
-natural self--the dangerous villain.
-
-"Have a care," replied Dick, "or you will not live long enough to repent
-of anything."
-
-On one side of the camp was the river, down under a cliff of
-considerable height. It was very quiet and sluggish just here, and its
-gentle whispering was no louder than a light breeze sighing through
-forest trees.
-
-There were, therefore, really only three sides of the parapet and hill
-to defend.
-
-And now Burly Bill's quick ear caught the sound of rustling down below.
-
-"The savages are on us," he said quietly.
-
-"Then give them a volley to begin with," answered Roland.
-
-The white men started down scores of huge stones; but this was more for
-the purpose of bringing the savages into sight than with a view to wound
-or kill any.
-
-It had the desired effect, and probably another, for the cannibals must
-have believed the pale-faces had no other means of defence.
-
-They were seen now in the bright moonlight scrambling up-hill in scores,
-with knives in their mouths and spears on their backs.
-
-"Fire straight and steadily, men," cried the young chief, Roland. "Fire
-independently, and every man at the enemy in front of him."
-
-A well-aimed and rattling volley, followed by another and another, made
-the Indians pause. The number of dead and wounded was great, and
-impeded the progress of those who would have rushed up and on.
-
-Volley after volley was now poured into the savage ranks, but they came
-pressing up from behind as black and fierce and numerous as a colony of
-mountain-ants.
-
-Their yelling and war-cries were terrible to hear.
-
-But the continuous volley-firing still kept them at bay.
-
-"The rockets, Dick, are they ready?"
-
-"Yes, captain, all ready."
-
-"Try the effect of these."
-
-It was a fearful sight to witness those dread weapons of warfare tear
-through the ranks of these shrieking demons.
-
-Death and mutilation was dealt on every side, and the fire from the
-ramparts grew fiercer and fiercer.
-
-Yet so terrible in their battle-wrath are these cannibals, that--well
-our heroes knew--if they were to scale the ramparts, even the white men
-would not be able to stand against them.
-
-Then the fight would degenerate into a massacre, and this would be
-followed by an orgie too awful to contemplate.
-
-At this moment there could not have been fewer than five hundred savages
-striving to capture the little hill on which stood the camp, and
-Roland's men in all were barely eighty. Some who had exposed themselves
-were speedily brought down with poisoned arrows, and already lay
-writhing in the agonies of spasmodic death.
-
-But see, led on by the chief Kaloomah himself, who seems to bear a
-charmed life, the foremost ranks of those sable warriors have already
-all but gained footing on the ramparts, while with axe and adze the
-pale-faces endeavour to repel them.
-
-In vain!
-
-Kaloomah--great knife in hand--and at least a score of his braves have
-effected an entrance, and the whites, though fighting bravely, are being
-pushed, if not driven back.
-
-It is a terrible moment!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII--THE DREAM AND THE TERROR!
-
-
-Far more acute in hearing are these children of the wilds than any white
-man who ever lived, and now, just as hope was beginning to die out of
-even Roland's heart, a sudden movement on the part of the savages who
-had gained admittance caused him to marvel.
-
-More quickly than they had entered, back they sprang towards the
-parapet, and on gazing after them, our heroes found that the hill-sides
-were clear.
-
-It was evident, however, that a great battle was going on down beneath
-on the prairie.
-
-Explanation is hardly needed.
-
-Rodrigo's men, guided by Benee, had outflanked--nay, even
-surrounded--the foe, and with well-aimed volleys had thrust them back
-and back towards the river, into which, with wild agonizing shouts, all
-that was left of Kaloomah's army was driven.
-
-They were excellent swimmers, the 'gators were absent from this river,
-and doubtless hundreds of fugitives would find their way back into their
-own dark land to tell how well and bravely the pale-faces can fight.
-
-But Kaloomah, where is he?
-
-Intent on revenge, even while the battle raged the fiercest and the
-whites were being driven back, his quick eye caught the glimmer of the
-candle-light in the cave.
-
-Leeboo was there, he told himself, and the false witch Weenah.
-
-He shortened his knife, and made a rush for the entrance.
-
-"Hab--a--rabb--rr--rr--ow!" That was the voice of the great wolf-hound,
-as he sprang on the would-be assassin and pinned him to the ground.
-
-Kaloomah's knife dropped from his hand as he tried to free himself.
-
-But Brawn had him by the throat now, and had not brave Peggy sprung to
-the assistance of the savage, the dog would have torn the windpipe from
-his neck.
-
-But Kaloomah was prisoner, and when the fight was all over, the dog was
-released from duty, and the chief was bound hand and foot and placed in
-the other cave beside Peter.
-
-This cave, which had thus been turned into a prison, possessed an
-entrance at the side, a kind of doorway through the dark rocks, and a
-great hole at the top, through which daylight, or even moonlight, could
-stream. At some not very distant date it had evidently been used as a
-hut, and must have been the scene of many a fearful cannibal orgie, for
-scores of human skulls were heaped up in corners, and calcined bones
-were also found. Altogether, therefore, an unhallowed kind of place,
-and eerie beyond conception.
-
-It is as well to tell the truth concerning the battle on the hill-top,
-ghastly though it may appear. There were no wounded men there, for even
-in the thick of the fight the savages not only slew the white men who
-dropped, but their own maimed as well.
-
-So long as the brave fellows under Roland and Dick held the ramparts,
-and poured their volleys into the ranks of the enemy beneath, scarcely a
-white man was hurt; but when the battlements were carried by storm, then
-the havoc of war commenced in earnest; and at daylight a great deep
-trench was excavated, and in this no fewer than eleven white men were
-placed, side by side.
-
-A simple prayer was said, then a hymn was sung--a sad dirge-like hymn to
-that sacred air called "Martyrdom", which has risen in olden times from
-many a Scottish battle-field, where the heather was dripping blood. I
-take my fiddle and play it now, and that mournful scene rises up before
-me, in which the white men crowd around the long quiet grave, where
-their late companions lie sleeping in the tomb.
-
-Every head is bared in the morning sunshine, every eye is wet with
-tears.
-
-It is Bill himself who leads the melody.
-
-Then clods are gently thrown upon the dead, and soon the grave is
-filled.
-
- ----
-
-There was not the slightest apprehension now that the battle would be
-renewed, and so all the day was spent in getting ready for the long
-march back to the spot where, under the charge of one of the captains
-and his faithful peons, the great canoes had been left.
-
-Among the stores brought here to camp--the suggestion had emanated from
-Roland's mother and Beeboo--was a chest containing many changes of
-raiment and dresses belonging to Peggy. In the cave, then, both she and
-Weenah conducted their toilet, and when, some time after, and just as
-breakfast was about to be served, they both came out, it would have been
-difficult, indeed, to keep from exclamations of surprise.
-
-Even Benee gave way to his excitement, and, seizing Weenah, held her for
-a moment high in air.
-
-"I rejoice foh true!" he cried. "All ober my heart go flapperty-flap.
-Oh, Weenah! you am now all same one red pale-face lady."
-
-Dick thought Peggy, with her bonnie sun-tanned face, more lovely now
-than ever he had seen her.
-
- ----
-
-But while they are breakfasting, and while the men are quietly but
-busily engaged getting the stores down-hill, let us take a peep into the
-cave where the prisoners are.
-
-When Kaloomah was thrust into the cave, Peter was fast asleep. Of late
-he had become utterly tired and careless of life. Was his not a wrecked
-existence from beginning to end? This was a question that he oftentimes
-asked himself sadly enough.
-
-During the fight that had raged so long and fiercely he had remained
-perfectly passive. What was it to him who won or who lost? If the
-Indians won, he would speedily be put out of pain. If the white men
-were the victors--well, he would probably die just the same. At all
-events, life was not worth having now.
-
-Then, when the lull of battle came, when the wild shrieks and shouting
-were over, and when the rattling of musketry was no longer heard, he
-felt utterly tired. He would sleep, he told himself, and what cared he
-if it should be
-
- "The sleep that knows not breaking,
- Morn of toil or night of waking"?
-
-
-The cords that bound him hurt a little, but he would not feel their
-pressure when--he slept.
-
-His was not a dreamless sleep by any means, though a long one.
-
-His old, old life seemed to rise up before him. He was back again in
-England--dear old England! He was a clerk, a confidential clerk.
-
-He had no care, no complications, and he was happy. Happy in the love of
-a sweet girl who adored him; the girl that he would have made his wife.
-Poor? Yes, both were; but oh! when one has innocence and sweet
-contentment, love can bloom in a garret.
-
-Yet envy of the rich began to fill his soul. The world was badly
-divided. Why had he to tread the streets day after day with muddy boots
-to his office, and back to his dingy home after long hours of toil and
-drudgery at the desk?
-
-Oh for comfort! Oh for riches!
-
-The girl that was to be his was more beautiful than many who lolled in
-cushioned carriages, with liveried servants to attend their beck and
-call.
-
-So his dream went on, and dreams are but half-waking thoughts.
-
-But it changes now!
-
-He sees Mary his sweetheart, wan and pale, with tears in her eyes for
-him whose voice she may never hear again.
-
-For the tempter has come with gold and with golden promises.
-
-And he has fallen!
-
-Other men have fallen before. Why not he when so much was to be gained?
-So much of--nay, not of glory, but of gold. What is it that gold cannot
-do?
-
-A conscience? Yes, he had possessed one once. But this tempter had
-laughed heartily when he talked of so old-fashioned a possession. It
-was all a matter of business.
-
-Behold those wealthy men who glide past in their beautiful landaus. Did
-they have consciences? If they did, then, instead of a town and country
-house, their home would soon be the garret vile in some back slum in
-London.
-
-Again the dream changes. To the fearful and awful now. For, stretched
-out before him is Mary, wan and worn--Mary, DEAD!
-
-He awakes with a shriek, and sits up with his back against the black
-rock.
-
-His hand touches something cold. It is a skull, and he shudders as he
-thrusts it away.
-
-But is he awake? He lifts his fettered hands and rubs his eyes.
-
-He gazes in terror at someone that is sitting, just as he is, with his
-back against the wall--and asleep.
-
-The rough dress is all disarranged, and the brown hands are covered with
-blood. It is an awful vision.
-
-He shuts his eyes a moment, but when he opens them again the man is
-still there! The terror!
-
-The morning sun is glimmering in and falling directly on the awful
-sleeping face.
-
-He sits bolt upright now and leans forward.
-
-"Kaloomah!" he cries. "Kaloomah!"
-
-And his own voice seems to belong to some spirit behind those prison
-walls.
-
-But the terror awakes.
-
-And the eyes of the two men meet.
-
-"Don Pedro! You here?"
-
-"Kaloomah. I am."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX--EASTWARD HO! FOR MERRIE ENGLAND
-
-
-Captain Roland St. Clair, as he was called by his men, was busy along
-with Dick and Bill in superintending the sending-off of all heavy
-baggage down-stream, when a man came up and saluted him.
-
-"Well, Harris?"
-
-"The prisoner Peter desires to speak with you, sir, in the presence of
-two witnesses. He wished me to request you to bring paper, pen, and
-ink. It is his desire that you should take his deposition."
-
-"Deposition, Harris? But the man is not dying."
-
-"Well, perhaps not, sir. I only tell you what he says."
-
-"I will be in his cell in less than twenty minutes, Harris."
-
-"Dick," said Roland, at the appointed time, "there is some mystery here.
-Come with me, and you also, Bill."
-
-"What I have to say must be said briefly and quickly," said Peter,
-sitting up. "I will not give myself the pain," he added, "to think very
-much about the past. It is all too dark and horrible. But I make this
-confession, unasked for and being still in possession of all my
-faculties and reasoning power."
-
-He spoke very slowly, and Dick wrote down the confession as he made it.
-
-"I am guilty, gentlemen. Dare I say 'with extenuating circumstances'?
-That, however, will be for you to consider. As the matter stands I do
-not beg for my life, but rather that you should deal with me as I
-deserve to be treated.
-
-"Death, believe me, gentlemen, is in my case preferable to life. But
-listen and judge for yourselves, and if parts of my story need
-confirmation, behold yonder is Kaloomah, and he it was whom I hired to
-carry your adopted sister away, where in all human probability she could
-never more be heard of again. Have you got all that down?"
-
-"I have," said Dick.
-
-"But," said Roland, "what reason had you to take so terrible a revenge
-on those who never harmed you, if revenge indeed it was?"
-
-"It was not revenge. What I did, I did for greed of gold. Listen.
-
-"I was happy in England, and had I only been content, I might now have
-been married and in comfort, but I fell, and am now the heart-broken
-villain you see before you.
-
-"You know the will your uncle made, Mr. St. Clair?"
-
-"I have only heard of it."
-
-"It was I who copied it for my master, the wretched solicitor.
-
-"I stole that copy and re-copied it, and sold it to the only man whom it
-could benefit, and that was your Uncle John."
-
-"My Uncle John? He who sent you out to my poor, dear father?"
-
-"The same. But let me hurry on. The real will is still in possession
-of the solicitor, and it gives all the estates of Burnley Hall, in
-Cornwall, to John, in the event of Peggy's death."
-
-"I begin to see," said Dick.
-
-"My reward was to have been great, if I managed the affair properly. I
-have never had it, and, alas! I need it not now.
-
-"But," he continued, "your villainous uncle was too great a coward to
-have Peggy murdered. His last words to me on board the steamer before I
-sailed were: 'Remember--not one single drop of blood shed.'
-
-"I might have done worse than even I did, but these were the words that
-instigated my vile plot, of which I now most heartily repent. All I had
-to do was to get apparent proof of Peggy's death."
-
-"And my Uncle John now holds the estates of Burnley Hall? Is that so?"
-
-"He does. The solicitor could not help but produce the will, on hearing
-of Peggy's capture and death.
-
-"That, then, is my story, gentlemen. Before Heaven I swear it is all
-true. It is, moreover, my deposition, for I already feel the cold
-shadow of death creeping over me. Yes, I will sign it."
-
-He did so.
-
-"I makee sign too," said Kaloomah.
-
-"That is the man whom I hired to do the deed," said Peter again.
-
-And Kaloomah made his mark.
-
-"I feel easier now, gentlemen" continued Peter. "But leave me a while.
-I would sleep."
-
- ----
-
-Kaloomah had all a savage's love for the horrible, and he was merely an
-interested spectator of the tragedy that followed.
-
-Between him and Peter lie two poison-tipped arrows.
-
-At first Peter looks at them like one dazed. Then he glances upwards at
-the glorious sunshine streaming in through the opening.
-
-Nearer and nearer he now creeps to those arrows!
-
-Nearer and nearer!
-
-Now he positions them with his manacled hands.
-
-Then strikes.
-
-In half an hour's time, when Burly Bill entered the cave to inform the
-prisoners that it was time for them to be on the road, he started back
-in horror.
-
-Peter, fearfully contorted, lay on the floor of the cave, dead.
-
- ----
-
-Some weeks after this the party found themselves once more near to the
-banks of the rapid Madeira.
-
-Everything had gone well with those captains and peons whom they had
-left behind, and now every preparation was made to descend the stream
-with all possible speed, consonant with safety.
-
-They had taken Kaloomah thus far, lest he should return and bring
-another army to attack them.
-
-And now a kind of drum-head court-martial was held on this wild chief,
-at which even Charlie and Benee were present.
-
-"I really don't see," said Roland, "what good has come of saddling
-ourselves with a savage."
-
-"No, I agree with you, Roll," said Dick. "Peter has gone to his
-account, and really this Kaloomah has been more sinned against than he
-has sinned."
-
-"What would you advise, Bill?"
-
-"Why, I'd give him a rousing kick and let him go."
-
-"And you Benee?"
-
-"I go for hangee he."
-
-"Charlie, what would you do?"
-
-Charlie was smiling and rubbing his hands; it was evident he had
-formulated some plan that satisfied himself.
-
-"I tie dat savage to one biggee stake all by de ribber, den watch de
-'gator come, chumpee, chumpee he."
-
-But a more merciful plan was adopted. Kaloomah evidently expected
-death, but when Roland himself cut his bonds and pointed to the west,
-the savage gave just one wild whoop and yell, and next moment he had
-disappeared in the forest.
-
- ----
-
-Were I beginning a story instead of ending one, I should not be able to
-resist the temptation to describe that voyage down the beautiful
-Madeira.
-
-It must suffice to say that it was all one long and happy picnic.
-
-Just one grief, however, had been Peggy's at the start. Poor Dixie, the
-pony, must be left behind.
-
-She kissed his forehead as she bade him good-bye, and her face was wet
-with tears as she turned her back to her favourite.
-
-Roland did what he could to comfort her.
-
-"Dixie will soon be as happy as any horse can be," he said. "He will
-find companions, and will live a long, long time in the wilds of this
-beautiful land. So you must not grieve."
-
- ----
-
-There are times when people in this world are so inexpressibly happy
-that they cannot wish evil to happen even to their greatest enemies.
-They feel that they would like every creature, every being on earth, to
-be happy also.
-
-Surely it is with some such spirit that angels and saints in heaven are
-imbued.
-
-Had you been on board the steamship _Panama_ as she was swiftly
-ploughing her way through the wide blue sea that separates Old England
-from South America, from Par and the mouths of the mighty Amazon, you
-could not have been otherwise than struck with the evident contentment
-and happiness of a group of saloon passengers there. Whether walking
-the quarter-deck, or seated on chairs under the awning, or early in the
-morning surrounding their own special little breakfast-table, pleasure
-beamed in every eye, joy in every face.
-
-Who were they? Listen and I shall tell you.
-
-There was Roland, Dick, Roland's sweet-faced mother, Peggy; and last,
-but certainly not least in size at all events, there was dark-skinned
-jolly-looking Burly Bill himself.
-
-But Burly Bill did not obtrude his company too much on the younger
-folks. He was fond of walking on the bridge and talking to the officer
-on duty. Fond, too, of blowing a cloud from his lips as they dallied
-with his great meerschaum. Fond of telling a good story, but fonder
-still of listening to one, and often chuckling over it till he appeared
-quite apoplectic.
-
-There was someone else on board who must be mentioned. And this was
-Dixie, the pony!
-
-Did he remain on the banks of the Madeira? Not he. For by some means
-or other he found his way--so marvellous is the homing instinct in
-animals--back to the old plantation long before Roland and his little
-army, and was the first to run out to meet Peggy and get a kiss on his
-soft warm snout.
-
-Need I add that Brawn was one of the passengers? And a happy dog he was,
-and always ready for a lark when the sailors chose to throw a
-belaying-pin for him.
-
-Dick had had a grief to face when he returned.
-
-His uncle was dead. So he determined--as did Roland with his
-plantation--to sell off and return to England, for a time at all events.
-
-The two estates are now worked by a "Company Ltd.", but Jake Solomons is
-head overseer.
-
-Benee, who has married his "moon-dream", little Weenah, is second in
-command, and right merry of a morning is the boom and the song of the
-old buzz-saw.
-
- ----
-
-So happy, then, were Roland and Dick and Peggy that they concluded they
-would not be too hard on wicked Uncle John.
-
-This wicked Uncle John went into retirement after the arrival of our
-heroes and heroine. He might have been sent into retirement of quite a
-different sort if Roland had cared to press matters.
-
-Peggy got all her own again. She is now Mrs. Temple, and Dick and she
-are beloved by all the tenantry--yes, and by all the county gentry and
-farmer folks round and round.
-
-I had almost forgotten to say a last word about Beeboo. She is Mrs.
-Temple's chief servant, and a right happy body is Beeboo, and Burly
-Billy is estate manager.
-
-Now, if any of my readers want a special treat, let him or her try to
-get an invitation to spend Christmas at Burnley Old Hall.
-
-
-
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN FAR BOLIVIA ***
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-.. -*- encoding: utf-8 -*-
-
-.. meta::
- :PG.Id: 39728
- :PG.Title: In Far Bolivia
- :PG.Released: 2012-05-18
- :PG.Rights: Public Domain
- :PG.Producer: Al Haines
- :DC.Creator: Gordon Stables
- :MARCREL.ill: J. Finnemore
- :DC.Title: In Far Bolivia
- A Story of a Strange Wild Land
- :DC.Language: en
- :DC.Created: 1901
- :coverpage: images/img-cover.jpg
-
-.. role:: small-caps
- :class: small-caps
-
-==============
-IN FAR BOLIVIA
-==============
-
-.. clearpage::
-
-.. pgheader::
-
-.. container:: coverpage
-
- .. vspace:: 3
-
- .. figure:: images/img-cover.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: Cover
-
- Cover
-
-.. container:: frontispiece
-
- .. vspace:: 3
-
- .. _`"BRAWN ... DASHED ON TO THE RESCUE"`:
-
- .. figure:: images/img-front.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: "BRAWN ... DASHED ON TO THE RESCUE"
-
- "BRAWN ... DASHED ON TO THE RESCUE"
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. container:: titlepage center white-space-pre-line
-
- .. class:: x-large
-
- In Far Bolivia
-
- .. class:: medium
-
- A Story of a Strange Wild Land
-
- .. vspace:: 2
-
- .. class:: medium
-
- BY
-
- DR. GORDON STABLES, R.N.
-
- Author of "'Twixt School and College" "The Hermit Hunter of the Wilds"
-
- "The Naval Cadet" "Kidnapped by Cannibals" &c.
-
- .. vspace:: 4
-
- .. class:: small
-
- *WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY J. FINNEMORE, R.I.*
-
- .. vspace:: 4
-
- .. class:: center medium
-
- BLACKIE AND SON LIMITED
-
- .. class:: center small
-
- LONDON GLASGOW DUBLIN BOMBAY
-
- 1901
-
- .. vspace:: 4
-
-.. container:: dedication center white-space-pre-line
-
- TO
-
- MARIE CONNOR LEIGHTON
-
- (NOVELIST AND CRITIC)
-
- THIS BOOK IS INSCRIBED
-
- EVERY KINDLY WISH
-
- BY
-
- THE AUTHOR
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. class:: center large
-
-PREFACE
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-.. class:: left medium
-
-Every book should tell its own story without the
-aid of "preface" or "introduction". But as in this
-tale I have broken fresh ground, it is but right and
-just to my reader, as well as to myself, to mention
-prefatorially that, as far as descriptions go, both of
-the natives and the scenery of Bolivia and the mighty
-Amazon, my story is strictly accurate.
-
-I trust that Chapter XXIII, giving facts about
-social life in La Paz and Bolivia, with an account of
-that most marvellous of all sheets of fresh water in
-the known world, Lake Titicaca, will be found of
-general interest.
-
-But vast stretches of this strange wild land of
-Bolivia are a closed book to the world, for they have
-never yet been explored; nor do we know aught of the
-tribes of savages who dwell therein, as far removed
-from civilization and from the benign influence of
-Christianity as if they were inhabitants of another
-planet. I have ventured to send my heroes to this
-land of the great unknown, and have at the same
-time endeavoured to avoid everything that might
-border on sensationalism.
-
-In conclusion, my boys, if spared I hope to take
-you out with me again to Bolivia in another book,
-and together we may have stranger adventures than
-any I have yet told.
-
-THE AUTHOR.
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-----
-
-.. contents:: CONTENTS
- :depth: 1
- :backlinks: entry
-
-----
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. class:: center large
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-.. class:: left medium
-
-`"Brawn ... dashed on to the rescue"`_ . . . . . . *Frontispiece*
-
-`"Brawn sprang at once upon his man"`_
-
-`"She ... held her at arm's-length"`_
-
-`"Fire low, lads ... don't waste a shot!"`_
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. class:: center large
-
-IN FAR BOLIVIA
-
-.. vspace:: 3
-
-CHAPTER I--ON THE BANKS OF THE GREAT AMAZON
-===========================================
-
-Miles upon miles from the banks of the mighty
-river, had you wandered far away in the
-shade of the dark forest that clothed the
-valleys and struggled high over the mountain-tops
-themselves, you would have heard the roar and the
-boom of that great buzz-saw.
-
-As early as six of a morning it would start, or soon
-after the sun, like a huge red-hot shot, had leapt up
-from his bed in the glowing east behind the greenery
-of the hills and woods primeval.
-
-To a stranger coming from the south towards the
-Amazon--great queen of all the rivers on earth--and
-not knowing he was on the borders of civilization, the
-sound that the huge saw made would have been
-decidedly alarming.
-
-He would have stopped and listened, and listening,
-wondered. No menagerie of wild beasts could have
-sent forth a noise so loud, so strange, so persistent!
-Harsh and low at times, as its great teeth tore through
-the planks of timber, it would change presently into a
-dull but dreadful *basso profundo*, such as might have
-been emitted by antediluvian monsters in the agonies
-of death or torture, rising anon into a shrill howl or
-shriek, then subsiding once again into a steady grating
-roar, that seemed to shake the very earth.
-
-Wild beasts in this black forest heard the sounds,
-and crept stealthily away to hide themselves in their
-caves and dens; caymans or alligators heard them too,
-as they basked in the morning sunshine by lakelet
-or stream--heard them and crawled away into caves,
-or took to the water with a sullen plunge that caused
-the finny inhabitants to dart away in terror to every
-point of the compass.
-
-"Up with the tree, lads. Feed him home," cried
-Jake Solomons loudly but cheerily. "Our pet is
-hungry this morning. I say, Bill, doesn't she look a
-beauty. Ever see such teeth, and how they shine,
-too, in the red sunlight. Guess you never did, Bill.
-I say, what chance would the biggest 'gator that ever
-crawled have with Betsy here. Why, if Betsy got
-one tooth in his hide she'd have fifty before you
-could say 'Jerusalem', and that 'gator'd be cut in two.
-Tear away, Betsy! Grind and groan and growl, my
-lass! Have your breakfast, my little pet; why, your
-voice is sweetest music to my ear. I say, Bill, don't
-the saw-dust fly a few? I should smile!
-
-"But see," he continued, "yonder come the darkies
-with our matutinal. Girls and boys with baskets,
-and I can see the steam curling up under Chloe's arm
-from the great flagon she is carrying! Look how her
-white eyes roll, and her white teeth shine as she smiles
-her six-inch smile! Good girl is Chloe. She knows
-we're hungry, and that we'll welcome her. Wo, now,
-Betsy! Let the water off, Bill. Betsy has had her
-snack, and so we'll have ours."
-
-There was quietness now o'er hill and dell and
-forest-land.
-
-And this tall Yankee, Jake Solomons, who was
-fully arrayed in cotton shirt and trousers, his brown
-arms bare to the shoulder, stretched his splendidly
-knit but spare form with a sort of a yawn.
-
-"Heigho, Bill!" he said. "I'm pining for
-breakfast. Aren't you?"
-
-"That I am," replied Burly Bill with his broadest
-grin.
-
-Jake ran to the open side of the great saw-mill.
-Three or four strides took him there.
-
-"Ah! Good-morning, Chloe, darling! Morning,
-Keemo! Morning, Kimo!"
-
-"Mawning, sah!" This was a chorus.
-
-"All along dey blessed good-foh-nuffin boys I no
-come so queeck," said Chloe.
-
-"Stay, stay, Chloe," cried Jake, "never let your
-angry passions rise. 'Sides, Chloe, I calculate such
-language ain't half-proper. But how glittering your
-cheeks are, Chloe, how white your teeth! There! you
-smile again. And that vermilion blouse sets off your
-dark complexion to a nicety, and seems just made for
-it. Chloe, I would kiss you, but the fear of making
-Bill jealous holds me back."
-
-Burly Bill shook with laughter. Bill was well
-named the Burly. Though not so tall as Jake, his
-frame was immense, though perhaps there was a little
-more adipose tissue about it than was necessary in a
-climate like this. But Bill's strength was wonderful.
-See him, axe in hand, at the foot of a tree! How the
-chips fly! How set and determined the man's face,
-while the great beads of sweat stand like pearls on
-his brow!
-
-Burly Bill was a white man turned black. You
-couldn't easily have guessed his age. Perhaps he was
-forty, but at twenty, when still in England, Bill was
-supple and lithe, and had a skin as white as a schoolboy's.
-But he had got stouter as the years rolled on,
-and his face tanned and tanned till it tired of tanning,
-and first grew purple, and latterly almost black. The
-same with those hirsute bare arms of his.
-
-There was none of the wild "Ha! ha!" about Bill's
-laughter. It was a sort of suppressed chuckle, that
-agitated all his anatomy, the while his merry
-good-natured eyes sought shelter behind his cheeks'
-rotundity.
-
-Under a great spreading tree the two men laid
-themselves down, and Chloe spread their breakfast on
-a white cloth between them, Jake keeping up his
-fire of chaff and sweet nothings while she did so.
-Keemo and Kimo, and the other "good-foh-nuffin boys"
-had brought their morning meal to the men who fed
-the great buzz-saw.
-
-"Ah, Chloe!" said Jake, "the odour of that coffee
-would bring the dead to life, and the fish and the beef
-and the butter, Chloe! Did you do all this yourself?"
-
-"All, sah, I do all. De boys jes' kick about de
-kitchen and do nuffin."
-
-"Dear tender-eyed Chloe! How clever you are!
-Guess you won't be so kind to me when you and I get
-spliced, eh?"
-
-"Ah sah! you no care to marry a poor black gal
-like Chloe! Dere is a sweet little white missie
-waiting somew'eres foh Massa Jake. I be your maid, and
-shine yo' boots till all de samee's Massa Bill's cheek
-foh true."
-
-As soon as Chloe with her "good-foh-nuffin boys"
-had cleared away the breakfast things, and retired
-with a smile and saucy toss of her curly poll, the men
-lay back and lit their pipes.
-
-"She's a bright intelligent girl that," said Jake.
-"I don't want a wife or--but I say, Bill, why don't
-you marry her? I guess she'd make ye a tip-topper."
-
-"Me! Is it marry?"
-
-Burly Bill held back his head and chuckled till he
-well-nigh choked.
-
-Honest Bill's ordinary English showed that he came
-from the old country, and more particularly from the
-Midlands. But Bill could talk properly enough when
-he pleased, as will soon be seen.
-
-He smoked quietly enough for a time, but every
-now and then he felt constrained to take his
-meerschaum from his mouth and give another chuckle or
-two.
-
-"Tchoo-hoo-hoo!" he laughed. "Me marry! And
-marry Chloe! Tchoo-hoo-hoo!"
-
-"To change the subject, William," said Jake, "seein'
-as how you've pretty nearly chuckled yourself silly,
-or darned near it, how long have you left England?"
-
-"W'y, I coom over with Mr. St. Clair hisse'f, and
-Roland w'y he weren't more'n seven. Look at 'e
-now, and dear little Peggy, 'is sister by adoption as
-ever was, weren't a month over four. Now Rolly 'e
-bees nigh onto fifteen, and Peggy--the jewel o' the
-plantation--she's goin' on for twelve, and main tall
-for that. W'y time do fly! Don't she, Jake?"
-
-"Well, I guess I've been here five years, and durn
-me if I want to leave. Could we have a better home?
-I'd like to see it. I'd smile a few odd ones. But
-listen, why here comes the young 'uns!"
-
-There was the clatter of ponies' feet, and next
-minute as handsome a boy as ever sat in saddle, and
-as pretty and bright a lassie as you could wish to
-meet, galloped into the clearing, and reined up their
-spirited little steeds close to the spot where the men
-were lounging.
-
-Burly Bill stuck his thumb into the bowl of his
-meerschaum to put it out, and Jake threw his pipe
-on the bank.
-
-Roland was tall for his age, like Peggy. But while
-a mass of fair and irrepressible hair curled around
-the boy's sun-burned brow, Peggy's hair was straight
-and black. When she rode fast it streamed out
-behind her like pennons in the breeze. What a
-bright and sunny face was hers too! There was ever
-a happy smile about her red lips and dark eyes.
-
-"You've got to begin to smoke again immediately,"
-said the boy.
-
-"No, no, Master Roland, not in the presence of your
-sister."
-
-"But," cried Peggy, with a pretty show of
-pomposity, "I command you!"
-
-"Ah, then, indeed!" said Jake; and soon both men
-were blowing clouds that made the very mosquitoes
-change their quarters.
-
-"Father'll be up soon, riding on Glancer. This nag
-threw Father, coming home last night. Mind, Glancer
-is seventeen hands and over."
-
-"He threw him?"
-
-"That he did, in the moonlight. Scared at a 'gator.
-Father says he heard the 'gator's great teeth snapping
-and thought he was booked. But lo! Jake, at that
-very moment Glancer struck out with both hind-legs--you
-know how he is shod. He smashed the 'gator's
-skull, and the beast turned up his yellow belly to
-the moon."
-
-"Bravo!"
-
-"Then Father mounted mighty Glancer and rode
-quietly home.
-
-"Peggy and I," he continued, "have ridden along
-the bank to the battlefield to hold a coroner's inquest
-on the 'gator, but he's been hauled away by his
-relations. I suppose they'll make potato soup of him."
-
-Burly Bill chuckled.
-
-"Well, Peggy and I are off. See you in the evening,
-Jake. By-by!"
-
-And away they rode, like a couple of wild Indians,
-followed by a huge Irish wolf-hound, as faithful a dog
-to his mistress--for he was Peggy's own pet--as ever
-dog could be.
-
-They were going to have a day in the forest, and
-each carried a short six-chambered rifle at the saddle.
-
-A country like the wild one in which they dwelt
-soon makes anyone brave and fearless. They meant
-to ride quite a long way to-day and not return till the
-sun began to decline in the far and wooded west. So,
-being already quite an old campaigner, Roland had
-not forgotten to bring luncheon with him, and some
-for bold Brawn also.
-
-Into the forest they dashed, leaving the mighty river,
-which was there about fifteen miles broad probably,
-in their rear.
-
-They knew every pathway of that primeval woodland,
-and it mattered but little to them that most of
-these had been worn by the feet of wild beasts. Such
-tracks wind out and in, and in and out, and meet
-others in the most puzzling and labyrinthine manner.
-
-Roland carried a compass, and knew how to use it,
-but the day was unusually fine and sunny, so there
-was little chance of their getting lost.
-
-The country in which they lived might well have
-been called the land of perpetual summer.
-
-But at some spots the forest was so pitchy dark,
-owing to the overhanging trees and wild flowering
-creepers, that they had to rein up and allow Coz and
-Boz, as their ponies were named, to cautiously feel
-the way for themselves.
-
-How far away they might have ridden they could
-not themselves tell, had they not suddenly entered a
-kind of fairy glade. At one side it was bounded by
-a crescentic formation of rock, from the very centre
-of which spouted a tiny clear crystal waterfall.
-Beneath was a deep pool, the bottom of which was
-sand and yellow shingle, with here and there a patch
-of snow-white quartz. And away from this a little
-stream went meandering slowly through the glade,
-keeping it green.
-
-On the other side were the lordly forest trees,
-bedraped with flowering orchids and ferns.
-
-Flowers and ferns grew here and there in the rockface
-itself. No wonder the young folks gazed around
-them in delighted wonder.
-
-Brawn was more practical. He cared nothing for
-the flowers, but enjoyed to the fullest extent the clear
-cool water of the crystal pool.
-
-"Oh, isn't it lovely?" said Roland.
-
-"And oh, I am so hungry, Rolly!"
-
-Rolly took the hint.
-
-The ponies were let loose to graze, Brawn being
-told to head them off if they attempted to take to the
-woods.
-
-"I understand," said Brawn, with an intelligent
-glance of his brown eyes and wag of his tail.
-
-Then down the boy and girl squatted with the
-noble wolf-hound beside them, and Roland speedily
-spread the banquet on the moss.
-
-I dare say that hunger and romance seldom tread
-the same platform--at the same time, that is. It
-is usually one down, the other up; and notwithstanding
-the extraordinary beauty of their surroundings,
-for some time both boy and girl applied
-themselves assiduously to the discussion of the good
-things before them; that meat-pie disappearing as if
-by magic. Then the hard-boiled eggs, the
-well-buttered and flouriest of floury scones, received their
-attention, and the whole was washed down with
-*vinum bovis*, as Roland called it, cow's wine, or good
-milk.
-
-Needless to say, Brawn, whose eyes sparkled like
-diamonds, and whose ears were conveniently erect,
-came in for a good share.
-
-Well, but the ponies, Boz and Coz, had not the
-remotest idea of running away. In fact they soon
-drew near to the banqueting-table. Coz laid his nose
-affectionately on his little mistress's shoulder and
-heaved an equine sigh, and Boz began to nibble at
-Roland's ears in a very winning way.
-
-And the nibbling and the sigh brought them cakes
-galore.
-
-Roland offered Boz a bit of pie.
-
-The pony drew back, as if to say, "Vegetarians,
-weren't you aware?"
-
-But Brawn cocked his bonnie head to one side,
-knowingly.
-
-"Pitch it this way, master," he said. "I've got a
-crop for any kind of corn, and a bag for peas."
-
-A strange little rodent creature, much bigger than
-any rat, however, with beautiful sad-looking eyes, came
-from the bush, and stood on its hind-legs begging, not
-a yard away. Its breast was as white as snow.
-
-Probably it had no experience of the genus *homo*,
-and all the cruelties he is guilty of, under the title of
-sport.
-
-Roland pitched several pieces of pie towards the
-innocent. It just tasted a morsel, then back it ran
-towards the wood with wondrous speed.
-
-If they thought they had seen the last of it, they
-were much mistaken, for the innocent returned in
-two minutes time, accompanied not only by another
-of his own size, but by half a dozen of the funniest
-little fairies ever seen inside a forest.
-
-"My wife and children," said innocent No. 1.
-
-"My services to you," bobbed innocent No. 2.
-
-But the young ones squawked and squealed, and
-tumbled and leapt over each other as they fed in a
-manner so droll that boy and girl had to laugh till
-the woods rang.
-
-Innocent No. 1 looked on most lovingly, but took
-not a morsel to himself.
-
-Then all disappeared as suddenly as they had come.
-
-Truly the student of Nature who betakes himself
-to lonely woods sees many wonders!
-
-It was time now to lie back in the moss and enjoy
-the *dolce far niente*.
-
-The sky was as blue as blue could be, all between
-the rifts of slowly-moving clouds. The whisper of the
-wind among the forest trees, and the murmur of the
-falling water, came like softest music to Roland's ears.
-Small wonder, therefore, that his eyes closed, and he
-was soon in the land of sweet forgetfulness.
-
-But Peggy had a tiny book, from which she read
-passages to Brawn, who seemed all attention, but kept
-one eye on the ponies at the same time.
-
-It was a copy of the "Song of Hiawatha", a poem
-which Peggy thought ineffably lovely. Hark to her
-sweet girl voice as she reads:
-
- | "These songs so wild and wayward,
- | These legends and traditions".
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-They appealed to her simple soul, for dearly did
-she love the haunts of Nature.
-
- | "Loved the sunshine of the meadow,
- | Loved the shadow of the forest,
- | Loved the wind among the branches,
- | The rushing of great rivers
- | Through their palisades of pine-trees."
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-She believed, too:
-
- | "That even in savage bosoms
- | There are longings, yearnings, strivings
- | For the good they comprehend not;
- | That feeble hands and helpless,
- | Groping blindly in the darkness,
- | Touch God's right hand...
- | And are lifted up and strengthened".
-
-----
-
-Roland slumbered quietly, and the day went on apace.
-
-He slept so peacefully that she hardly liked to
-arouse him.
-
-The little red book dropped from her hand and fell
-on the moss, and her thoughts now went far, far away
-adown the mighty river that flows so sadly, so
-solemnly onwards to the great Atlantic Ocean, fed on
-its way by a hundred rapid streams that melt in its
-dark bosom and are seen nevermore.
-
-But it was not the river itself the little maiden's
-thoughts were dwelling on; not the strange wild birds
-that sailed along its surface on snow-white wings;
-not the birds of prey--the eagle and the hawk--that
-hovered high in air, or with eldritch screams darted
-on their prey like bolts from the blue, and bore their
-bleeding quarries away to the silent forest; not even
-the wealth of wild flowers that nodded over the banks
-of the mighty stream.
-
-Her thoughts were on board a tall and darksome
-raft that was slowly making its way seaward to
-distant Pará, or in the boats that towed it. For
-there was someone on the raft or in those boats who
-even then might be fondly thinking of the
-dark-haired maiden he had left behind.
-
-But Peggy's awakening from her dream of romance,
-and Roland's from his slumber, was indeed a terrible
-one.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II--STRANGE ADVENTURES IN THE FOREST--LOST!
-===================================================
-
-Fierce eyes had been watching the little camp for
-an hour and more, glaring out on the sunny
-glade from the dark depths of a forest tree not far
-off; out from under a cloudland of waving foliage
-that rustled in the balmy wind. Watching, and
-watching unwaveringly, Peggy, while she read; watching
-the sleeping Roland; the great wolf-hound, Brawn;
-and watching the ponies too.
-
-Ever and anon these last would come closer to the
-tree, as they nibbled grass or moss, then those fierce
-eyes burned more fiercely, and the cat-like tail of a
-monster jaguar moved uneasily as if the wild beast
-meditated a spring.
-
-But the ponies, sniffing danger in the air, perhaps--who
-can tell?--would toss their manes and retreat to
-the shadow of the rocks.
-
-Had the dog not been there the beast would have
-dared all, and sprung at once on one of those nimble
-steeds.
-
-But he waited and watched, watched and waited,
-and at long last his time came. With a coughing
-roar he now launched himself into the air, the
-elasticity of the branch giving greater force to his
-spring.
-
-Straight on the shoulders or back of poor Boz
-he alighted. His talons were well driven home, his
-white teeth were preparing to tear the flesh from the
-pony's neck.
-
-Both little steeds yelled wildly, and in nightmarish terror.
-
-Up sprang Brawn, the wolf-hound, and dashed on to
-the rescue.
-
-Peggy seized her loaded rifle and hurried after him.
-
-Thoroughly awake now, and fully cognizant of the
-terrible danger, Roland too was quickly on the scene
-of action.
-
-To fire at a distance were madness. He might
-have missed the struggling lion and shot poor Boz, or
-even faithful Brawn.
-
-This enormous dog had seized the beast by one
-hock, and with his paws against the pony was
-endeavouring to tear the monster off.
-
-The noise, the movement, the terror, caused poor
-Roland's head to whirl.
-
-He felt dazed, and almost stupid.
-
-Ah! but Peggy was clear-headed, and a brave and
-fearless child was she.
-
-Her feet seemed hardly to touch the moss, so
-lightly did she spring along.
-
-Her little rifle was cocked and ready, and, taking
-advantage of a few seconds' lull in the fearful
-scrimmage, she fired at five yards' distance.
-
-The bullet found billet behind the monster's ear,
-his grip relaxed, and now Brawn tore him easily from
-his perch and finished him off on the ground, with
-awful din and habbering.
-
-Then, with blood-dripping jaws he came with his
-ears lower, half apologetically, to receive the praise
-and caresses of his master and mistress.
-
-But though the adventure ended thus happily,
-frightened beyond measure, the ponies, Coz and Boz,
-had taken to the bush and disappeared.
-
-Knowing well the danger of the situation, Roland
-and Peggy, with Brawn, tried to follow them. But
-Irish wolf-hounds have but little scent, and so they
-searched and searched in vain, and returned at last
-to the sun-kissed glade.
-
-It was now well on towards three o'clock, and as
-they had a long forest stretch of at least ten miles
-before them ere they could touch the banks of the
-great queen of waters, Roland determined, with the
-aid of his compass, to strike at once into the
-beast-trodden pathway by which they had come, and make
-all haste homewards before the sun should set and
-darkness envelop the gloomy forest.
-
-"Keep up your heart, Peggy; if your courage and
-your feet hold out we shall reach the river before
-dusk."
-
-"I'm not so frightened now," said Peggy; but her
-lips were very tremulous, and tears stood in her eyes.
-
-"Come, come," she cried, "let us hurry on! Come,
-Brawn, good dog!"
-
-Brawn leapt up to lick her ear, and taking no
-thought for the skin of the jaguar, which in more
-favourable circumstances would have been borne
-away as a trophy, and proof of Peggy's valour, they
-now took to the bush in earnest.
-
-Roland looked at his watch.
-
-"Three hours of light and more. Ah! we can do
-it, if we do not lose our way."
-
-So off they set.
-
-Roland took the lead, rifle in hand, Peggy came
-next, and brave Brawn brought up the rear.
-
-They were compelled to walk in single file, for the
-pathways were so narrow in places that two could
-not have gone abreast.
-
-Roland made constant reference to his little
-compass, always assuring his companion that they were
-still heading directly for the river.
-
-They had hurried on for nearly an hour, when
-Roland suddenly paused.
-
-A huge dark monster had leapt clear and clean
-across the pathway some distance ahead, and taken
-refuge in a tree.
-
-It was, no doubt, another jaguar, and to advance
-unannounced might mean certain death to one of the
-three.
-
-"Are you all loaded, Peggy?" said Roland.
-
-"Every chamber!" replied the girl.
-
-There was no tremor about her now; and no
-backwoods Indian could have acted more coolly and
-courageously.
-
-"Blaze away at that tree then, Peg."
-
-Peggy opened fire, throwing in three or four shots
-in rapid succession.
-
-The beast, with a terrible cry, darted out of the tree
-and came rushing along to meet and fight the little
-party.
-
-"Down, Brawn, down! To heel, sir!"
-
-Next moment Roland fired, and with a terrible
-shriek the jaguar took to the bush, wounded and
-bleeding, and was seen no more.
-
-But his yells had awakened the echoes of the forest,
-and for more than five minutes the din of roaring,
-growling, and shrieking was fearful.
-
-Wild birds, no doubt, helped to swell the pandemonium.
-
-After a time, however, all was still once more, and
-the journey was continued in silence.
-
-Even Peggy, usually the first to commence a
-conversation, felt in no mood for talking now.
-
-She was very tired. Her feet ached, her brow was
-hot, and her eyes felt as if boiling in their sockets.
-
-Roland had filled his large flask at the little
-waterfall before leaving the glade, and he now made her
-drink.
-
-The draught seemed to renew her strength, and she
-struggled on as bravely as ever.
-
-----
-
-Just two and a half hours after they had left the
-forest clearing, and when Roland was holding out
-hopes that they should soon reach the road by the
-banks of the river, much to their astonishment they
-found themselves in a strange clearing which they
-had never seen before.
-
-The very pathway ended here, and though the boy
-went round and round the circle, he could find no
-exit.
-
-To retrace his steps and try to find out the right
-path was the first thought that occurred to Roland.
-
-This plan was tried, but tried in vain, and so--weary
-and hopeless now beyond measure--they
-returned to the centre of the glade and threw
-themselves down on the soft green moss.
-
-Lost! Lost!
-
-The words kept repeating themselves in poor
-Roland's brain, but Peggy's fatigue was so complete
-that she preferred rest even in the midst of danger
-to going farther.
-
-Brawn, heaving a great sigh, laid himself down
-beside them.
-
-The warm day wore rapidly to a close, and at last
-the sun shimmered red through the forest trees.
-
-Then it sank.
-
-The briefest of twilight, and the stars shone out.
-
-Two hours of starlight, then solemnly uprose the
-round moon and flooded all the glade, draping the
-whispering trees in a blue glare, beautifully
-etherealizing them.
-
-Sorrow bringeth sleep.
-
-"Good-night, Rolly! Say your prayers," murmured Peggy.
-
-There were stars in the sky. There were stars too
-that flitted from bush to bush, while the winds made
-murmuring music among the lofty branches.
-
-Peggy was repeating to herself lines that she had
-read that very day:
-
- | ..."the firefly Wah-wah-tay-see,
- | Flitting through the dusk of evening,
- | With the twinkle of its candle,
- | Lighting up the brakes and bushes.
- | * * * * *
- | Wah-wah-tay-see, little firefly,
- | Little, flitting, white-fire insect,
- | Little dancing, white-fire creature,
- | Light me with your little candle.
- | Ere upon my bed I lay me,
- | Ere in sleep I close my eyelids."
-
-----
-
-The forest was unusually silent to-night, but ever
-and anon might be heard some distant growl showing
-that the woods sheltered the wildest beasts. Or
-an owl with mournful cry would flap its silent wings
-as it flew across the clearing.
-
-But nothing waked those tired and weary sleepers.
-
-So the night wore on and on. The moon had
-reached the zenith, and was shining now with a
-lustre that almost rivalled daylight itself.
-
-It must have been well on towards two o'clock in
-the morning when Brawn emitted a low and threatening growl.
-
-This aroused both Roland and Peggy, and the former
-at once seized his rifle.
-
-Standing there in the pale moonlight, not twenty
-yards away, was a tall, dark-skinned, and powerful-looking
-Indian. In his right hand he held a spear or
-something resembling one; in his left a huge catapult
-or sling. He was dressed for comfort--certainly not
-for ornament. Leggings or galligaskins covered his
-lower extremities, while his body was wrapped in a
-blanket. He had no head-covering, save a matted
-mass of hair, in which were stuck a few feathers.
-
-Roland took all this in at a glance as he seized his
-rifle and prepared for eventualities. According to the
-traditional painter of Indian life and customs the
-proper thing for this savage to have said is "Ugh!"
-He said nothing of the sort. Nor did he give vent
-to a whoop and yell that would have awakened the
-wild birds and beasts of the forest and every echo far
-and near.
-
-
-"Who goes there?" cried Roland, raising his gun.
-
-"No shootee. No shootee poor Indian man. I
-friendee you. Plenty friendee."
-
-Probably there was a little romance about Roland,
-for, instead of saying: "Come this way then, old chap,
-squat down and give us the news," he said sternly:
-
-"Advance, friend!"
-
-But the Indian stood like a statue.
-
-"No undahstandee foh true."
-
-And Roland had to climb down and say simply:
-
-"Come here, friend, and speak."
-
-Brawn rushed forward now, but he looked a terror,
-for his hair was all on end like a hyena's, and he
-growled low but fiercely.
-
-"Down, Brawn! It's a good man, Brawn."
-
-Brawn smelt the Indian's hand, and, seeming
-satisfied, went back to the spot where Peggy sat wondering
-and frightened.
-
-She gathered the great dog to her breast and hugged
-and kissed him.
-
-"What foh you poh chillun sleepee all in de wood
-so? S'pose wild beas' come eatee you, w'at den you do?"
-
-"But, friend," replied Roland, "we are far from
-Burnley Hall, our home, and we have lost everything.
-We have lost our ponies, lost our way, and lost ourselves."
-
-"Poh chillun!" said this strange being. "But now
-go sleepee foh true. De Indian he lie on blanket. He
-watchee till de big sun rise."
-
-"Can we trust him, Peggy?"
-
-"Oh yes, yes!" returned Peggy. "He is a dear,
-good man; I know by his voice."
-
-In ten minutes more the boy and girl were fast
-asleep.
-
-The Indian watched.
-
-And Brawn watched the Indian.
-
-----
-
-When the sun went down on the previous evening,
-and there were no signs of the young folks returning,
-both Mr. St. Clair and his wife became very uneasy
-indeed.
-
-Then two long hours of darkness ensued before the
-moon sailed up, first reddening, then silvering, the
-wavelets and ripples on the great river.
-
-"Surely some evil must have befallen them," moaned
-Mrs. St. Clair. "Oh, my Roland! my son! I may never
-see you more. Is there nothing can be done? Tell
-me! Tell me!"
-
-"We must trust in Providence, Mary; and it is
-wrong to mourn. I doubt not the children are safe,
-although perhaps they have lost their way in the
-woods."
-
-Hours of anxious waiting went by, and it was
-nearly midnight. The house was very quiet and still,
-for the servants were asleep.
-
-Burly Bill and Jake had mounted strong horses at
-moonrise, and gone off to try to find a clue. But they
-knew it was in vain, nay, 'twould have been sheer
-madness to enter the forest now. They coo-eed over
-and over again, but their only answer was the echoing
-shriek of the wild birds.
-
-They were just about to return after giving their
-last shrill coo-ee-ee, when out from the moonlit forest,
-with a fond whinny, sprang Coz and Boz.
-
-Jake sprang out of his saddle, throwing his bridle
-to Bill.
-
-In the bright moonlight, Jake could see at once
-that there was something wrong. He placed his hand
-on Boz's shoulder. He staggered back as he withdrew it.
-
-"Oh, Bill," he cried, "here is blood, and the pony is
-torn and bleeding! Only a jaguar could have done
-this. This is terrible."
-
-"Let us return at once," said Bill, who had a right
-soft heart of his own behind his burly chest.
-
-"But oh!" he added, "how can we break the news
-to Roland's parents?"
-
-"We'll give them hope. Mrs. St. Clair must know
-nothing yet, but at early dawn all the ranch must be
-aroused, and we shall search the forest for miles and
-miles."
-
-----
-
-Jake, after seeing the ponies safe in their stable,
-left Bill to look to Boz's wounds, while with
-St. Clair's leave he himself set off at a round gallop to
-get assistance from a neighbouring ranch.
-
-Day had not yet broken ere forty good men and
-true were on the bridle-path and tearing along the
-river's banks. St. Clair himself was at their head.
-
-I must leave the reader to imagine the joy of all the
-party when soon after sunrise there emerged from
-the forest, guided by the strange Indian, Roland,
-Peggy, and noble Brawn, all looking as fresh as the
-dew on the tender-eyed hibiscus bloom or the wild
-flowers that nodded by the river's brim.
-
-"Wirr--rr--r--wouff, wouff, wouff!" barked Brawn,
-as he bounded forward with joy in every feature of
-his noble face, and I declare to you there seemed to
-be a lump in his throat, and the sound of his barking
-was half-hysterical.
-
-St. Clair could not utter a word as he fondly
-embraced the children. He pretended to scold a little,
-but this was all bluff, and simply a ruse to keep back
-the tears.
-
-But soft-hearted Burly Bill was less successful.
-He just managed to drop a little to the rear, and it
-was not once only that he was fain to draw the sleeve
-of his rough jacket across his eyes.
-
-----
-
-But now they are mounted, and the horses' heads
-are turned homewards. Peggy is seated in front of
-Burly Bill, of whom she is very fond, and Roland is
-saddled with Jake. The Indian and Brawn ran.
-
-Poor Mrs. St. Clair, at the big lawn gate, gazing
-westward, sees the cavalcade far away on the horizon.
-
-Presently, borne along on the morning breeze come
-voices raised in a brave and joyous song:
-
- | "Down with them, down with the lords of the forest".
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-And she knows her boy and Peggy are safe.
-
-"Thank God for all his mercies!" she says
-fervently, then, woman-like, bursts into tears.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III--BURNLEY HALL, OLD AND NEW
-======================================
-
-I have noticed more than once that although the
-life-story of some good old families in England
-may run long stagnant, still, when one important
-event does take place, strange thing after strange
-thing may happen, and the story rushes on with
-heedless speed, like rippling brooklets to the sea.
-
-The St. Clairs may have been originally a Scottish
-family, or branch of some Highland clan, but they
-had been settled on a beautiful estate, far away in the
-wilds of Cornwall, for over one hundred and fifty years.
-
-Stay, though, we are not going back so far as that.
-Old history, like old parchment, has a musty odour.
-Let us come down to more modern times.
-
-When, then, young Roland's grandfather died, and
-died intestate, the whole of the large estate devolved
-upon his eldest son, with its fat rentals of fully four
-thousand a-year. Peggy St. Clair, our little heroine,
-was his only child, and said to be, even in her infancy,
-the very image of her dead-and-gone mother.
-
-No wonder her father loved her.
-
-But soon the first great event happened in the
-life-story of the St. Clairs. For, one sad day Peggy's
-father was borne home from the hunting-field
-grievously wounded.
-
-All hope of recovery was abandoned by the doctor
-shortly after he had examined his patient.
-
-Were Herbert to die intestate, as his father had
-done, his second brother John, according to the old
-law, could have stepped into his shoes and become
-lord of Burnley Hall and all its broad acres.
-
-But, alive to the peril of his situation, which the
-surgeon with tears in his eyes pointed out to him, the
-dying man sent at once for his solicitor, and a will
-was drawn up and placed in this lawyer's hands, and
-moreover he was appointed one of the executors.
-This will was to be kept in a safe until Peggy should
-be seventeen years of age, when it was to be opened
-and read.
-
-I must tell you that between the brothers Herbert
-and John there had long existed a sort of blood-feud,
-and it was as well they never met.
-
-Thomas, however, was quickly at his wounded
-brother's bedside, and never left it until--
-
- | "Clay-cold Death had closed his eye".
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The surgeon had never given any hopes, yet during
-the week that intervened between the terrible accident
-and Herbert's death there were many hours in which
-the doomed man appeared as well as ever, though
-scarce able to move hand or foot. His mind was
-clear at such times, and he talked much with Thomas
-about the dear old times when all were young.
-
-Up till now this youngest son and brother, Thomas,
-had led rather an uneasy and eventful life. Nothing
-prospered with him, though he had tried most things.
-
-He was married, and had the one child, Roland, to
-whom the reader has already been introduced.
-
-"Now, dear Tom," said Herbert, one evening after
-he had lain still with closed eyes for quite a long
-time, and he placed a white cold hand in that of his
-brother as he spoke, "I am going to leave you. We
-have always been good friends and loved each other
-well. All I need tell you now, and I tell you in
-confidence, is that Peggy, at the age of seventeen,
-will be my heir, with you, dear Tom, as her
-guardian."
-
-Tom could not reply for the gathering tears. He
-just pressed Herbert's hand in silence.
-
-"Well," continued the latter, "things have not gone
-over well with you, I know, but I have often heard
-you say you could do capitally if you emigrated to an
-almost new land--a land you said figuratively 'flowing
-with milk and honey'. I confess I made no attempt
-to assist you to go to the great valley of the Amazon.
-It was for a selfish reason I detained you. My brother
-John being nobody to me, my desire was to have you near."
-
-He paused, almost exhausted, and Tom held a little
-cup of wine to his lips.
-
-Presently he spoke again.
-
-"My little Peggy!" he moaned. "Oh, it is hard,
-hard to leave my darling!
-
-"Tom, listen. You are to take Peggy to your
-home. You are to care for her as the apple of
-your eye. You must be her father, your wife her
-mother."
-
-"I will! I will! Oh, brother, can you doubt me!"
-
-"No, no, Tom. And now you may emigrate. I
-leave you thirty thousand pounds, all my deposit
-account at Messrs. Bullion & Co.'s bank. This is for
-Peggy and you. My real will is a secret at present,
-and that which will be read after--I go, is a mere
-epitome. But in future it will be found that I have
-not forgotten even John."
-
-Poor Peggy had run in just then, and perched upon
-the bed, wondering much that her father should lie
-there so pale and still, and make no attempt to romp
-with her. At this time her hair was as yellow as the
-first approach of dawn in the eastern sky.
-
-----
-
-That very week poor Squire St. Clair breathed
-his last.
-
-John came to the funeral with a long face and
-a crape-covered hat, looking more like a mute than
-anything else.
-
-He sipped his wine while the epitomized will was
-read; but a wicked light flashed from his eyes, and
-he ground out an oath at its conclusion.
-
-All the information anyone received was that though
-sums varying from five hundred pounds to a thousand
-were left as little legacies to distant relations and to
-John, as well as *douceurs* to the servants, the whole
-of the estates were willed in a way that could not
-be divulged for many a long year.
-
-John seized his hat, tore from it the crape, and
-dashed it on the floor. The crape on his arm followed
-suit. He trampled on both and strode away slamming
-the door behind him.
-
-Years had flown away.
-
-Tom and his wife had emigrated to the banks of
-the Amazon. They settled but a short time at or near
-one of its mouths, and then Tom, who had no lack
-of enterprise, determined to journey far, far into the
-interior, where the land was not so level, where
-mountains nodded to the moon, and giant forests
-stretched illimitably to the southward and west.
-
-At first Tom and his men, with faithful Bill as
-overseer, were mere squatters, but squatters by the
-banks of the queen of waters, and in a far more
-lovely place than dreams of elfinland. Labour was
-very cheap here, and the Indians soon learned from
-the white men how to work.
-
-Tom St. Clair had imported carpenters and artificers
-of many sorts from the old country, to say nothing
-of steam plant and machinery, and that great
-resounding steel buzz-saw.
-
-Now, although not really extravagant, he had an
-eye for the beautiful, and determined to build himself
-a house and home that, although not costing a deal,
-would be in reality a miniature Burnley Hall. And
-what a truly joyous time Peggy and her cousin, or
-adopted brother, had of it while the house was
-gradually being built by the busy hands of the trained
-Indians and their white brethren!
-
-Not they alone, but also a boy called Dick Temple,
-whose uncle was Tom St. Clair's nearest neighbour,
-That is, he lived a trifle over seven miles higher up
-the river. Dick was about the same age and build as
-Roland.
-
-There was a good road between Temple's ranch and
-Tom St. Clair's place, and when, after a time, Tom
-and Peggy had a tutor imported for their own especial
-benefit, the two families became very friendly indeed.
-
-Dick Temple was a well-set-up and really brave
-and good-looking lad. Little Peggy averred that
-there never had been, or never could be, another boy
-half so nice as Dick.
-
-But I may as well state here at once and be done
-with it--Dick was simply a reckless, wild dare-devil.
-Nothing else would suffice to describe young Dick's
-character even at this early age. And he soon taught
-Roland to be as reckless as himself.
-
-----
-
-Time rolled on, and the new Burnley Hall was
-a *fait accompli*.
-
-The site chosen by Tom for his home by the river
-was a rounded and wooded hill about a quarter of
-a mile back from the immediate bank of the stream.
-But all the land between the hill and the Amazon
-was cultivated, and not only this, but up and down
-the river as well for over a mile, for St. Clair wanted
-to avoid too close contact with unfriendly alligators,
-and these scaly reptiles avoid land on which crops are
-growing.
-
-The tall trees were first and foremost cleared off
-the hill; not all though. Many of the most beautiful
-were left for effect, not to say shade, and it was
-pleasant indeed to hear the wind whispering through their
-foliage, and the bees murmuring in their branches,
-in this flowery land of eternal summer.
-
-Nor was the undergrowth of splendid shrubs and
-bushes and fruit-trees cleared away. They were
-thinned, however, and beautiful broad winding walks
-led up through them towards the mansion.
-
-The house was one of many gables; altogether
-English, built of quartz for the most part, and
-having a tower to it of great height.
-
-From this tower one could catch glimpses of the
-most charming scenery, up and down the river, and
-far away on the other shore, where forests swam in
-the liquid air and giant hills raised their blue tops
-far into the sky.
-
-So well had Tom St. Clair flourished since taking
-up his quarters here that his capital was returning
-him at least one hundred per cent, after allowing for
-wear and tear of plant.
-
-I could not say for certain how many white men he
-had with him. The number must have been close on
-fifty, to say nothing of the scores and scores of
-Indians.
-
-Jake Solomons and Burly Bill were his overseers,
-but they delighted in hard work themselves, as we
-have already seen. So, too, did Roland's father
-himself, and as visitors to the district were few, you may
-be certain he never wore a London hat nor evening
-dress.
-
-Like those of Jake and Bill, his sleeves were always
-rolled up, and his muscular arms and brave square face
-showed that he was fit for anything. No, a London
-hat would have been sadly out of place; but the
-broad-brimmed Buffalo Bill he wore became him
-admirably.
-
-That big buzz-saw was a triumph. The clearing of
-the forest commenced from close under the hill where
-stood the mansion, and strong horses and bullocks
-were used to drag the gigantic trees towards the mill.
-
-Splendid timber it was!
-
-No one could have guessed the age of these trees
-until they were cut down and sawn into lengths,
-when their concentric rings might be counted.
-
-The saw-mill itself was a long way from the mansion-house,
-with the villages for the whites and Indians
-between, but quite separate from each other.
-
-The habitations of the whites were raised on piles
-well above the somewhat damp ground, and steps led
-up to them. Two-roomed most of them were, but that
-of Jake was of a more pretentious character. So, too,
-was Burly Bill's hut.
-
-It would have been difficult to say what the Indians
-lived on. Cakes, fruit, fish, and meat of any kind
-might form the best answer to the question. They
-ate roasted snakes with great relish, and many of these
-were of the deadly-poisonous class. The heads were
-cut off and buried first, however, and thus all danger
-was prevented. Young alligators were frequently
-caught, too, and made into a stew.
-
-The huts these faithful creatures lived in were chiefly
-composed of bamboo, timber, and leaves. Sometimes
-they caught fire. That did not trouble the savages
-much, and certainly did not keep them awake at
-night. For, had the whole village been burned down,
-they could have built another in a surprisingly short
-time.
-
-When our hero and heroine got lost in the great
-primeval forest, Burnley Hall was in the most perfect
-and beautiful order, and its walks, its flower-garden,
-and shrubberies were a most pleasing sight. All was
-under the superintendence of a Scotch gardener, whom
-St. Clair had imported for the purpose.
-
-By this time, too, a very large portion of the
-adjoining forest had been cut down, and the land on
-which those lofty trees had grown was under
-cultivation.
-
-If the country which St. Clair had made his home
-was not in reality a land flowing with milk and
-honey, it yielded many commodities equally valuable.
-Every now and then--especially when the river was
-more or less in flood--immense rafts were sent down
-stream to distant Pará, where the valuable timber
-found ready market.
-
-Several white men in boats always went in charge
-of these, and the boats served to assist in steering, and
-towing as well.
-
-These rafts used often to be built close to the river
-before an expected rising of the stream, which, when
-it did come, floated them off and away.
-
-But timber was not the only commodity that St. Clair
-sent down from his great estate. There were
-splendid quinine-trees. There was coca and cocoa,
-too.
-
-There was a sugar plantation which yielded the best
-results, to say nothing of coffee and tobacco, Brazil-nuts
-and many other kinds of nuts, and last, but not
-least, there was gold.
-
-This latter was invariably sent in charge of a
-reliable white man, and St. Clair lived in hope that he
-would yet manage to position a really paying gold-mine.
-
-More than once St. Clair had permitted Roland and
-Peggy to journey down to Pará on a great raft. But
-only at the season when no storms blew. They had
-an old Indian servant to cook and "do" for them, and
-the centre of the raft was hollowed out into a kind
-of cabin roofed over with bamboo and leaves. Steps
-led up from this on to a railed platform, which was
-called the deck.
-
-Burly Bill would be in charge of boats and all, and
-in the evenings he would enter the children's cabin to
-sing them songs and tell them strange, weird tales of
-forest life.
-
-He had a banjo, and right sweetly could he play.
-Old Beeboo the Indian, would invariably light his
-meerschaum for him, smoking it herself for a good
-five minutes first and foremost, under pretence of
-getting it well alight.
-
-Beeboo, indeed, was altogether a character. Both
-Mr. and Mrs. St. Clair liked her very much, however,
-for she had been in the family, and nursed both Peggy
-and Roland, from the day they had first come to the
-country. As for her age, she might have been any
-age between five-and-twenty and one hundred and ten.
-She was dark in skin--oh, no! not black, but more
-of copper colour, and showed a few wrinkles at early
-morn. But when Beeboo was figged out in her nicest
-white frock and her deep-blue or crimson blouse,
-with her hair hanging down in two huge plaits,
-then, with the smile that always hovered around
-her lips and went dancing away up her face till it
-flickered about her eyes, she was very pleasant
-indeed. The wrinkles had all flown up to the moon
-or somewhere, and Beeboo was five-and-twenty once again.
-
-I must tell you something, however, regarding her,
-and that is the worst. Beeboo came from a race of
-cannibals who inhabit one of the wildest and almost
-inaccessible regions of Bolivia, and her teeth had been
-filed by flints into a triangular shape, the form best
-adapted for tearing flesh. She had been brought
-thence, along with a couple of wonderful monkeys
-and several parrots, when only sixteen, by an English
-traveller who had intended to make her a present
-to his wife.
-
-Beeboo never got as far as England, however. She
-had watched her chance, and one day escaped to the
-woods, taking with her one of the monkeys, who was
-an especial favourite with this strange, wild girl.
-
-She was frequently seen for many years after this.
-It was supposed she had lived on roots and rats--I'm
-not joking--and slept at night in trees. She managed
-to clothe herself, too, with the inner rind of the bark
-of certain shrubs. But how she had escaped death
-from the talons of jaguars and other wild beasts no
-one could imagine.
-
-Well, one day, shortly after the arrival of St. Clair,
-hunters found the jaguar queen, as they called her,
-lying in the jungle at the foot of a tree.
-
-There was a jaguar not far off, and a huge piece
-of sodden flesh lay near Beeboo's cheek, undoubtedly
-placed there by this strange, wild pet, while close
-beside her stood a tapir.
-
-Beeboo was carried to the nearest village, and the
-tapir followed as gently as a lamb. My informant
-does not know what became of the tapir, but Beeboo
-was tamed, turned a Christian too, and never evinced
-any inclination to return to the woods.
-
-Yet, strangely enough, no puma nor jaguar would
-ever even growl or snarl at Beeboo.
-
-These statements can all be verified.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV--AWAY DOWN THE RIVER
-===============================
-
-Before we start on this adventurous cruise, let
-us take a peep at an upland region to the
-south of the Amazon. It was entirely surrounded
-by caoutchouc or india-rubber trees, and it was while
-wandering through this dense forest with Jake, and
-making arrangements for the tapping of those trees,
-the juice of which was bound to bring the St. Clairs
-much money, that they came upon the rocky
-table-land where they found the gold.
-
-This was some months after the strange Indian had
-found the "babes in the wood", as Jake sometimes
-called Roland and Peggy.
-
-"I say, sir, do you see the quartz showing white
-everywhere through the bloom of those beautiful
-flowers?"
-
-"Ugh!" cried St. Clair, as a splendidly-coloured
-but hideous large snake hissed and glided away
-from between his feet. "Ugh! had I tramped on
-that fellow my prospecting would have been all ended."
-
-"True, sir," said Jake; "but about the quartz?"
-
-"Well, Jake."
-
-"Well, Mr. St. Clair, there is gold here. I do not
-say that we've struck an El Dorado, but I am
-certain there is something worth digging for in this
-region."
-
-"Shall we try? You've been in Australia. What
-say you to a shaft?"
-
-"Good! But a horizontal shaft carried into the
-base of this hill or hummock will, I think, do for the
-present. It is only for samples, you know."
-
-And these samples had turned out so well that
-St. Clair, after claiming the whole hill, determined
-to send Jake on a special message to Pará to establish
-a company for working it.
-
-He could take no more labour on his own head,
-for really he had more than enough to do with his
-estate.
-
-No white men were allowed to work at the shaft.
-Only Indians, and these were housed on the spot.
-So that the secret was well kept.
-
-And now the voyage down the river was to be
-undertaken, and a most romantic cruise it turned out
-to be.
-
-St. Clair had ordered a steamer to be built for him
-in England and sent out in pieces. She was called
-*The Peggy*, after our heroine. Not very large--but
-little over the dimensions of a large steam-launch,
-in fact--but big enough for the purpose of towing
-along the immense raft with the aid of the current.
-
-Jake was to go with his samples of golden sand
-and his nuggets; Burly Bill, also, who was captain
-of the *Peggy*; and Beeboo, to attend to the youngsters
-in their raft saloon. Brawn was not to be denied;
-and last, but not least, went wild Dick Temple.
-
-The latter was to sleep on board the steamer, but
-he would spend most of his time by day on the raft.
-
-All was ready at last. The great raft was floated
-and towed out far from the shore. All the plantation
-hands, both whites and Indians, were gathered on the
-banks, and gave many a lusty cheer as the steamer
-and raft got under way.
-
-The last thing that those on shore heard was the
-sonorous barking of the great wolf-hound, Brawn.
-
-There was a ring of joy in it, however, that brought
-hope to the heart of both Tom St. Clair and his
-winsome wife.
-
-Well, to our two heroes and to Peggy, not to
-mention Brawn and Burly Bill, the cruise promised
-to be all one joyous picnic, and they set themselves to
-make the most of it.
-
-But to Jake Solomons it presented a more serious
-side. He was St. Clair's representative and trusted
-man, and his business was of the highest importance,
-and would need both tact and skill.
-
-However, there was a long time to think about all
-this, for the river does not run more than three miles
-an hour, and although the little steamer could hurry
-the raft along at probably thrice that speed, still long
-weeks must elapse before they could reach their destination.
-
-As far as the raft was concerned, this would not
-be Pará. She would be grounded near to a town far
-higher up stream, and the timber, nuts, spices, and
-rubber taken seaward by train.
-
-In less than two days everyone had settled down to
-the voyage.
-
-The river was very wide and getting wider, and
-soon scarcely could they see the opposite shore, except
-as a long low green cloud on the northern horizon.
-
-Life on board the raft was for a whole week
-a most uneventful dreamy sort of existence. One
-day was remarkably like another. There was the
-blue of the sky above, the blue on the river's great
-breast, broken, however, by thousands of lines of
-rippling silver.
-
-There were strangely beautiful birds flying tack
-and half-tack around the steamer and raft, waving
-trees flower-bedraped--the flowers trailing and
-creeping and climbing everywhere, and even dipping their
-sweet faces in the water,--flowers of every hue of the
-rainbow.
-
-Dreamy though the atmosphere was, I would not
-have you believe that our young folks relapsed into
-a state of drowsy apathy. Far from it. They were
-very happy indeed. Dick told Peggy that their life,
-or his, felt just like some beautiful song-waltz, and
-that he was altogether so happy and jolly that he
-had sometimes to turn out in the middle watch to laugh.
-
-Peggy had not to do that.
-
-In her little state-room on one side of the cabin, and
-in a hammock, she slept as soundly as the traditional
-top, and on a grass mat on the deck, with a footstool
-for a pillow, slumbered Beeboo.
-
-Roland slept on the other side, and Brawn guarded
-the doorway at the foot of the steps.
-
-Long before Peggy was awake, and every morning
-of their aquatic lives, the dinghy boat took the boys
-a little way out into mid-stream, and they stripped
-and dived, enjoyed a two-minutes' splash, and got
-quickly on board again.
-
-The men always stood by with rifles to shoot any
-alligator that might be seen hovering nigh, and more
-than once reckless Dick had a narrow escape.
-
-"But," he said one day in his comical way, "one
-has only once to die, you know, and you might as
-well die doing a good turn as any other way."
-
-"Doing a good turn?" said Roland enquiringly.
-
-"Certainly. Do you not impart infinite joy to a
-cayman if you permit him to eat you?"
-
-The boys were always delightfully hungry half an
-hour before breakfast was served.
-
-And it was a breakfast too!
-
-Beeboo would be dressed betimes, and have the cloth
-laid in the saloon. The great raft rose and fell with
-a gentle motion, but there was nothing to hurt, so
-that the dishes stuck on the cloth without any guard.
-
-Beeboo could bake the most delicious of scones and
-cakes, and these, served up hot in a clean white towel,
-were most tempting; the butter was of the best and
-sweetest. Ham there was, and eggs of the gull,
-with fresh fried fish every morning, and fragrant
-coffee.
-
-Was it not quite idyllic?
-
-The forenoon would be spent on deck under the
-awning; there was plenty to talk about, and books
-to read, and there was the ever-varying panorama to
-gaze upon, as the raft went smoothly gliding on, and
-on, and on.
-
-Sometimes they were in very deep water close to
-the bank, for men were always in the chains taking
-soundings from the steamer's bows.
-
-Close enough to admire the flowers that draped
-the forest trees; close enough to hear the wild lilt of
-birds or the chattering of monkeys and parrots; close
-enough to see tapirs moving among the trees, watched,
-often enough, by the fierce sly eyes of ghastly
-alligators, that flattened themselves against rocks or bits
-of clay soil, looking like a portion of the ground,
-but warily waiting until they should see a chance to
-attack.
-
-There cannot be too many tapirs, and there cannot
-be too few alligators. So our young heroes thought
-it no crime to shoot these squalid horrors wherever
-seen.
-
-But one forenoon clouds banked rapidly up in the
-southern sky, and soon the sun was hidden in sulphurous
-rolling banks of cumulus.
-
-No one who has ever witnessed a thunderstorm in
-these regions can live long enough to forget it.
-
-For some time before it came on the wind had gone
-down completely. In yonder great forest there could
-not have been breeze or breath enough to stir the
-pollen on the trailing flowers. The sun, too, seemed
-shorn of its beams, the sky was no longer blue, but of
-a pale saffron or sulphur colour.
-
-It was then that giant clouds, like evil beasts bent
-on havoc and destruction, began to show head above
-the horizon. Rapidly they rose, battalion on battalion,
-phalanx on phalanx.
-
-There were low mutterings even now, and flashes of
-fire in the far distance. But it was not until the sky
-was entirely overcast that the storm came on in dread
-and fearful earnest. At this time it was so dark, that
-down in the raft saloon an open book was barely
-visible. Then peal after peal, and vivid flash after
-flash, of blue and crimson fire lit up forest and stream,
-striking our heroes and heroine blind, or causing their
-eyes for a time to overrun with purple light.
-
-So terrific was the thunder that the raft seemed to
-rock and shiver in the sound.
-
-This lasted for fully half an hour, the whole world
-seeming to be in flames.
-
-Peggy stood by Dick on the little deck, and he
-held her arm in his; held her hand too, for it was cold
-and trembling.
-
-"Are you afraid?" he whispered, during a momentary
-lull.
-
-"No, Dick, not afraid, only cold, so cold; take me below."
-
-He did so.
-
-He made her lie down on the little sofa, and covered
-her with a rug.
-
-All just in time, for now down came the awful rain.
-It was as if a water-spout had broken over the
-seemingly doomed raft, and was sinking it below the dark
-waters of the river.
-
-Luckily the boys managed to batten down in time,
-or the little saloon would have been flooded.
-
-They lit the lamp, too.
-
-But with the rain the storm seemed to increase in
-violence, and a strong wind had arisen and added
-greatly to the terror of the situation. Hail came
-down as large as marbles, and the roaring and din
-was now deafening and terrible.
-
-Then, the wind ceased to blow almost
-instantaneously. It did not die away. It simply dropped
-all of a sudden. Hail and rain ceased shortly after.
-
-Dick ventured to peep on deck.
-
-It was still dark, but far away and low down on
-the horizon a streak of the brightest blue sky that
-ever he had seen had made its appearance. It
-broadened and broadened as the dark canopy of
-clouds, curtain-like, was lifted.
-
-"Come up, Peggy. Come up, Rol. The storm is
-going. The storm has almost gone," cried Dick; and
-soon all three stood once more on the deck.
-
-Away, far away over the northern woods rolled the
-last bank of clouds, still giving voice, however, still
-spitting fire.
-
-But now the sun was out and shining brightly
-down with a heat that was fierce, and the raft was all
-enveloped in mist.
-
-So dense, indeed, was the fog that rose from the
-rain-soaked raft, that all the scenery was entirely
-obscured. It was a hot vapour, too, and far from
-pleasant, so no one was sorry when Burly Bill
-suddenly appeared from the lower part of the raft.
-
-"My dear boys," he said heartily, "why, you'll be
-parboiled if you stop here. Come with me, Miss
-Peggy, and you, Brawn; I'll come back for you, lads.
-Don't want to upset the dinghy all among the 'gators, see?"
-
-Bill was back again in a quarter of an hour, and
-the boys were also taken on board the boat.
-
-"She's a right smart little boat as ever was," said
-Bill; "but if we was agoin' to get 'er lip on to the
-water, blow me tight, boys, if the 'gators wouldn't
-board us. They'm mebbe very nice sociable kind o'
-animals, but bust my buttons if I'd like to enter the
-next world down a 'gator's gullet."
-
-Beeboo did not mind the steam a bit, and by two
-o'clock she had as nice a dinner laid in the raft saloon
-as ever boy or girl sat down to.
-
-But by this time the timbers were dry once more,
-and although white clouds of fog still lay over the low
-woods, all was now bright and cheerful. Yet not more
-so than the hearts of our brave youngsters.
-
-Courage and sprightliness are all a matter of
-strength of heart, and you cannot make yourself
-brave if your system is below par. The coward is
-really more to be pitied than blamed.
-
-Well, it was very delightful, indeed, to sit on deck
-and talk, build castles in the air, and dream daydreams.
-
-The air was cool and bracing now, and the sun felt
-warm, but by no means too hot.
-
-The awning was prettily lined with green cloth, the
-work of Mrs. St. Clair's own hands, assisted by the
-indefatigable Beeboo, and there was not anything
-worth doing that she could not put willing, artful
-hands to.
-
-The awning was scalloped, too, if that be the
-woman's word for the flaps that hung down a whole
-foot all round. "Vandyked" is perhaps more correct,
-but then, you see, the sharp corners of the vandyking
-were all rounded off. So I think scalloped must
-stand, though the word reminds me strangely of
-oysters.
-
-But peeping out from under the scalloped awning,
-and gazing northwards across the sea-like river, boats
-under steam could be noticed. Passengers on board
-too, both ladies and gentlemen, the former all rigged
-out in summer attire.
-
-"Would you like to be on board yonder?" said
-Dick to Peggy, as the girl handed him back the
-lorgnettes.
-
-"No, indeed, I shouldn't," she replied, with a saucy
-toss of her pretty head.
-
-"Well," she added, "if you were there, little Dickie,
-I mightn't mind it so much."
-
-"Little Dick! Eh?" Dick laughed right heartily now.
-
-"Yes, little Dickie. Mind, I am nearly twelve; and
-after I'm twelve I'm in my teens, quite an old girl.
-A child no longer anyhow. And after I'm in my
-teens I'll soon be sixteen, and then I suppose I shall
-marry."
-
-"Who will marry you, Peggy?"
-
-This was not very good grammar, but Dick was in
-downright earnest anyhow, and his young voice had
-softened wonderfully.
-
-"Me?" he added, as she remained silent, with her
-eyes seeming to follow the rolling tide.
-
-"You, Dick! Why, you're only a child!"
-
-"Why, Peggy, I'm fifteen--nearly, and if I live I'm
-bound to get older and bigger."
-
-"No, no, Dick, you can marry Beeboo, and I shall
-get spliced, as the sailors call it, to Burly Bill."
-
-The afternoon wore away, and Beeboo came up to
-summon "the chillun" to tea.
-
-Up they started, forgetting all about budding love,
-flirtation, and future marriages, and made a rush for
-the companion-ladder.
-
-"Wowff--wowff!" barked Brawn, and the 'gators
-on shore and the tapirs in the woods lifted heads to
-listen, while parrots shrieked and monkeys chattered
-and scolded among the lordly forest trees.
-
-"Wowff--wowff!" he barked. "Who says cakes
-and butter?"
-
-The night fell, and Burly Bill came on board with
-his banjo, and his great bass voice, which was as
-sweet as the tone of a 'cello.
-
-Bill was funnier than usual to-night, and when
-Beeboo brought him a big tumbler of rosy rum punch,
-made by herself and sweetened with honey, he was
-merrier still.
-
-Then to complete his happiness Beeboo lit his pipe.
-
-She puffed away at it for some time as usual, by
-way of getting it in working order.
-
-"'Spose," she said, "Beeboo not warm de bowl ob de
-big pipe plenty proper, den de dear chile Bill take a
-chill."
-
-"You're a dear old soul, Beeb," said Bill.
-
-Then the dear old soul carefully wiped the amber
-mouth-piece with her apron, and handed Burly Bill
-his comforter.
-
-The great raft swayed and swung gently to and fro,
-so Bill sang his pet sea-song, "The Rose of Allandale".
-He was finishing that bonnie verse--
-
- | "My life had been a wilderness,
- | Unblest by fortune's gale,
- | Had fate not linked my lot to hers,
- | The Rose of Allandale",
-
-when all at once an ominous grating was heard
-coming from beneath the raft, and motion ceased as
-suddenly as did Bill's song.
-
-"Save us from evil!" cried Bill. "The raft is
-aground!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V--A DAY IN THE FOREST WILDS
-====================================
-
-Burly Bill laid down his banjo. Then he pushed
-his great extinguisher of a thumb into the bowl
-of his big meerschaum, and arose.
-
-"De good Lawd ha' mussy on our souls, chillun!"
-cried Beeboo, twisting her apron into a calico rope.
-"We soon be all at de bottom ob de deep, and de
-'gators a-pickin' de bones ob us!"
-
-"Keep quiet, Beeb, there's a dear soul! Never a
-'gator'll get near you. W'y, look 'ow calm Miss Peggy
-is. It be'ant much as'll frighten she."
-
-Burly Bill could speak good English when he took
-time, but invariably reverted to Berkshire when in the
-least degree excited.
-
-He was soon on board the little steamer.
-
-"What cheer, Jake?" he said.
-
-"Not much o' that. A deuced unlucky business.
-May lose the whole voyage if it comes on to blow!"
-
-"W'y, Jake, lad, let's 'ope for the best. No use
-givin' up; be there? I wouldn't let the men go to
-prayers yet awhile, Jake. Not to make a bizness on't
-like, I means."
-
-Well, the night wore away, but the raft never
-budged, unless it was to get a firmer hold of the mud
-and sand.
-
-A low wind had sprung up too, and if it increased
-to a gale she would soon begin to break up.
-
-It was a dreary night and a long one, and few on
-board the steamer slept a wink.
-
-But day broke at last, and the sun's crimson light
-changed the ripples on the river from leaden gray to
-dazzling ruby.
-
-Then the wind fell.
-
-"There are plenty of river-boats, Bill," said Jake.
-"What say you to intercept one and ask assistance?"
-
-"Bust my buttons if I would cringe to ne'er a one
-on 'em! They'd charge salvage, and sponge enormous.
-I knows the beggars as sails these puffin' Jimmies
-well."
-
-"Guess you're about right, Bill, and you know the
-river better'n I."
-
-"Listen, Jake. The bloomin' river got low all at
-once, like, after the storm, and so you got kind o'
-befoozled, and struck. I'd a-kept further out. But
-Burly Bill ain't the man to bully his mate. On'y
-listen again. The river'll rise in a day or two, and
-if the wind keeps in its sack, w'y we'll float like a
-thousand o' bricks on an old Thames lumper! Bust
-my buttons, Jake, if we don't!"
-
-"Well, Bill, I don't know anything about the bursting
-of your buttons, but you give me hope. So I'll go
-to breakfast. Tell the engineer to keep the fires
-banked."
-
-Two days went past, and never a move made the raft.
-
-It was a wearisome time for all. The "chillun", as
-Beeboo called them, tried to beguile it in the best way
-they could with reading, talking, and deck games.
-
-Dick and Roland were "dons" at leap-frog, and it
-mattered not which of them was giving the back, but
-as soon as the other leapt over Brawn followed suit,
-greatly to the delight of Peggy. He jumped in such
-a business-like way that everybody was forced to
-laugh, especially when the noble dog took a leap that
-would have cleared a five-barred gate.
-
-But things were getting slow on the third morning,
-when up sprang Burly Bill with his cartridge-belt on
-and his rifle under his arm.
-
-"Cap'n Jake," he said, touching his cap in Royal
-Navy fashion, "presents his compliments to the crew
-of this durned old stack o' timber, and begs to say
-that Master Rolly and Master Dick can come on shore
-with me for a run among the 'gators, but that Miss
-Peggy had better stop on board with Beeboo. Her
-life is too precious to risk!"
-
-"Precious or not precious," pouted the girl, "Miss
-Peggy's going, and Brawn too; so you may tell Captain
-Jake that."
-
-"Bravo, Miss Peggy! you're a real St. Clair. Well,
-Beeboo, hurry up, and get the nicest bit of cold
-luncheon ready for us ever you made in your life."
-
-"Beeboo do dat foh true. Plenty quick, too; but
-oh, Massa Bill, 'spose you let any ebil ting befall de
-poh chillun, I hopes de 'gators'll eat you up!"
-
-"More likely, Beeb, that we'll eat them; and really,
-come to think of it, a slice off a young 'gator's tail
-aint 'arf bad tackle, Beeboo."
-
-An hour after this the boat was dancing over the
-rippling river. It was not the dinghy, but a gig.
-Burly Bill himself was stroke, and three Indians
-handled the other bits of timber, while Roland took
-the tiller.
-
-The redskins sang a curious but happy boat-lilt as
-they rowed, and Bill joined in with his 'cello voice:
-
- | "Ober de watter and ober de sea--ee--ee,
- | De big black boat am rowing so free,
- | Eee--Eee--O--ay--O!
- | De big black boat, is it nuffin' to me--ee--ee,
- | We're rowing so free?
-
- | "Oh yes, de black boat am some-dings to me
- | As she rolls o'er de watter and swings o'er de sea,
- | Foh de light ob my life, she sits in de stern,
- | An' sweet am de glance o' Peggy's dark e'e,
- | Ee--ee--O--ay--O--O!"
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-"Well steered!" said Burly Bill, as Roland ran the
-gig on the sandy beach of a sweet little backwater.
-
-Very soon all were landed. Bill went first as guide,
-and the Indians brought up the rear, carrying the
-basket and a spare gun or two.
-
-Great caution and care were required in venturing
-far into this wild, tropical forest, not so much on
-account of the beasts that infested it as the fear of
-getting lost.
-
-It was very still and quiet here, however, and Bill
-had taken the precaution to leave a man in the boat,
-with orders to keep his weather ear "lifting", and if
-he heard four shots fired in rapid succession late in
-the afternoon to fire in reply at once.
-
-It was now the heat of the day, however, and the
-hairy inhabitants of this sylvan wilderness were all
-sound asleep, jaguars and pumas among the trees, and
-the tapirs in small herds wherever the jungle was
-densest.
-
-There was no chance, therefore, of getting a shot
-at anything. Nevertheless, the boys and Peggy were
-not idle. They had brought butterfly-nets with them,
-and the specimens they caught when about five miles
-inland, where the forest opened out into a shrub-clad
-moorland, were large and glorious in the extreme.
-
-Indeed, some of them would fetch gold galore in the
-London markets.
-
-But though these butterflies had an immense spread
-of quaintly-shaped and exquisitely-coloured wings, the
-smaller ones were even more brilliant.
-
-Strange it is that Nature paints these creatures in
-colours which no sunshine can fade. All the tints that
-man ever invented grow pale in the sun; these never
-do, and the same may be said concerning the tropical
-birds that they saw so many of to-day.
-
-But no one had the heart to shoot any of these.
-Why should they soil such beautiful plumage with
-blood, and so bring grief and woe into this love-lit
-wilderness?
-
-This is not a book on natural history, else gladly
-would I describe the beauties in shape and colour of
-the birds, and their strange manners, the wary ways
-adopted in nest-building, and their songs and queer
-ways of love-making.
-
-Suffice it to say here that the boys were delighted
-with all the tropical wonders and all the picturesque
-gorgeousness they saw everywhere around them.
-
-But their journey was not without a spice of real
-danger and at times of discomfort. The discomfort
-we may dismiss at once. It was borne, as Beeboo
-would say, with Christian "forty-tood", and was due
-partly to the clouds of mosquitoes they encountered
-wherever the soil was damp and marshy, and partly
-to the attacks of tiny, almost invisible, insects of the
-jigger species that came from the grass and ferns and
-heaths to attack their legs.
-
-Burly Bill was an old forester, and carried with him
-an infallible remedy for mosquito and jigger bites,
-which acted like a charm.
-
-In the higher ground--where tropical heath and
-heather painted the surface with hues of crimson, pink,
-and purple--snakes wriggled and darted about everywhere.
-
-One cannot help wondering why Nature has taken
-the pains to paint many of the most deadly of these in
-colours that rival the hues of the humming-birds that
-yonder flit from bush to bush, from flower to flower.
-
-Perhaps it is that they may the more easily seek
-their prey, their gaudy coats matching well with the
-shrubs and blossoms that they wriggle amongst, while
-gliding on and up to seize helpless birds in their nests
-or to devour the eggs.
-
-Parrots here, and birds of that ilk, have an easy
-way of repelling such invaders, for as soon as they
-see them they utter a scream that paralyses the
-intruders, and causes them to fall helplessly to the ground.
-
-To all creatures Nature grants protection, and
-clothes them in a manner that shall enable them to
-gain a subsistence; but, moreover, every creature in
-the world has received from the same great power the
-means of defending or protecting itself against the
-attacks of enemies.
-
-On both sides, then, is Nature just, for though she
-does her best to keep living species extant until
-evolved into higher forms of life, she permits each
-species to prey on the overgrowth or overplus of
-others that it may live.
-
-Knocking over a heap of soft dry mould with the
-butt end of his rifle, Dick started back in terror to see
-crawl out from the heap a score or more of the most
-gigantic beetles anyone could imagine. These were
-mostly black, or of a beautiful bronze, with streaks of
-metallic blue and crimson.
-
-They are called harlequins, and live on carrion.
-Nothing that dies comes wrong to these monsters,
-and a few of them will seize and carry away a dead
-snake five or six hundred times their own weight.
-My readers will see by this that it is not so much
-muscle that is needed for feats of strength as indomitable
-will and nerve force. But health must be at the
-bottom of all. Were a man, comparatively speaking,
-as strong as one of these beetles, he could lift on his
-back and walk off with a weight of thirty tons!
-
-Our heroes had to stop every now and then to
-marvel at the huge working ants, and all the wondrous
-proofs of reason they evinced.
-
-It was well to stand off, however, if, with snapping
-horizontal mandibles and on business intent, any of
-these fellows approached. For their bites are as
-poisonous as those of the green scorpions or
-centipedes themselves.
-
-What with one thing or another, all hands were
-attacked by healthy hunger at last, and sought the
-shade of a great spreading tree to satisfy Nature's
-demands.
-
-When the big basket was opened it was found that
-Beeboo had quite excelled herself. So glorious a
-luncheon made every eye sparkle to look at it. And
-the odour thereof caused Brawn's mouth to water and
-his eyes to sparkle with expectancy.
-
-The Indians had disappeared for a time. They
-were only just round the shoulder of a hill, however,
-where they, too, were enjoying a good feed.
-
-But just as Burly Bill was having a taste from a
-clear bottle, which, as far as the look of it went,
-would have passed for cold tea, two Indian boys
-appeared, bringing with them the most delicious of
-fruits as well as fresh ripe nuts.
-
-The luncheon after that merged into a banquet.
-
-Burly Bill took many sips of his cold tea. When I
-come to think over it, however, I conclude there was
-more rum than cold tea in that brown mixture, or
-Bill would hardly have smacked his lips and sighed
-with such satisfaction after every taste.
-
-The fruit done, and even Brawn satisfied, the whole
-crew gave themselves up to rest and meditation. The
-boys talked low, because Peggy's meditations had led
-to gentle slumber. An Indian very thoughtfully
-brought a huge plantain leaf which quite covered her,
-and protected her from the chequered rays of sunshine
-that found their way through the tree. Brawn edged
-in below the leaf also, and enjoyed a good sleep beside
-his little mistress.
-
-Not a gun had been fired all day long, yet a more
-enjoyable picnic in a tropical forest it would be difficult
-to imagine.
-
-Perhaps the number of the Indians scared the
-jaguars away, for none appeared.
-
-Yet the day was not to end without an adventure.
-
-Darkness in this country follows the short twilight
-so speedily, that Burly Bill did well to get clear of the
-forest's gloom while the sun was still well above the
-horizon.
-
-He trusted to the compass and his own good sense
-as a forester to come out close to the spot where he
-had left the boat. But he was deceived. He struck
-the river a good mile and a half above the place
-where the steamer lay at anchor and the raft aground
-on the shoals.
-
-Lower and lower sank the sun. The ground was
-wet and marshy, and the 'gators very much in evidence
-indeed.
-
-Now the tapirs--and droll pig-bodied creatures they
-look, though in South America nearly as big as donkeys--are
-of a very retiring disposition, but not really
-solitary animals as cheap books on natural history
-would have us believe. They frequent low woods,
-where their long snouts enable them to pull down the
-tender twigs and foliage on which, with roots, which
-they can speedily unearth, they manage to exist--yes,
-and to wax fat and happy.
-
-But they are strict believers in the doctrine of
-cleanliness, and are never found very far from water.
-They bathe every night.
-
-Just when the returning picnic was within about
-half a mile of the boat, Burly Bill carrying Peggy on
-his shoulder because the ground was damp, a terrible
-scrimmage suddenly took place a few yards round a
-backwater.
-
-There was grunting, squeaking, the splashing of
-water, and cries of pain.
-
-"Hurry on, boys; hurry on; two of you are enough!
-It's your show, lads."
-
-The boys needed no second bidding, and no sooner
-had they opened out the curve than a strange sight
-met their gaze.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI--"NOT ONE SINGLE DROP OF BLOOD SHED"
-===============================================
-
-A gigantic and horribly fierce alligator had
-seized upon a strong young tapir, and was
-trying to drag it into the water.
-
-The poor creature had both its feet set well in front,
-and was resisting with all its might, while two other
-larger animals, probably the parents, were clawing the
-cayman desperately with their fore-feet.
-
-But ill, indeed, would it have fared with all three
-had not our heroes appeared just in the nick of
-time.
-
-For several more of these scaly and fearsome
-reptiles were hurrying to the scene of action.
-
-Dick's first shot was a splendid one. It struck the
-offending cayman in the eye, and went crashing
-through his brain.
-
-The brute gasped, the blood flowed freely, and as he
-fell on his side, turning up his yellow belly, the young
-tapir got free, and was hurried speedily away to the
-woods.
-
-Volley after volley was poured in on the enraged
-'gators, but the boys had to retreat as they fought.
-Had they not done so, my story would have stopped
-short just here.
-
-It was not altogether the sun's parting rays that so
-encrimsoned the water, but the blood of those
-old-world caymans.
-
-Three in all were killed in addition to the one first
-shot. So that it is no wonder the boys felt elated.
-
-Beeboo had supper waiting and there was nothing
-talked about that evening except their strange
-adventures in the beautiful forest.
-
-----
-
-Probably no one could sleep more soundly than did
-our heroes and heroine that night.
-
-Next day, and next, they went on shore again, and
-on the third a huge jaguar, who fancied he would like
-to dine off Brawn's shoulder, fell a victim to Dick
-Temple's unerring aim.
-
-But the raft never stirred nor moved for a whole week.
-
-Said Bill to Jake one morning, as he took his meerschaum
-from his mouth:
-
-"I think, Jake, and w'at I thinks be's this like.
-There ain't ne'er a morsel o' good smokin' and on'y
-just lookin' at that fine and valuable pile o' timber.
-It strikes me conclusive like that something 'ad better
-be done."
-
-"And what would you propose, Bill?" said Jake.
-
-"Well, Jake, you're captain like, and my proposition
-is subject to your disposition as it were. But I'd
-lighten her, and lighten her till she floats; then tow
-her off, and build up the odd timbers again."
-
-"Good! You have a better head than I have, Bill;
-and it's you that should have been skipper, not me."
-
-Nothing was done that day, however, except making
-a few more attempts with the steamer at full speed to
-tow her off. She did shift and slue round a little, but
-that was all.
-
-Next morning dawned as beautifully as any that
-had gone before it.
-
-There were fleecy clouds, however, hurrying across
-the sky as if on business bent, and the blue between
-them was bluer than ever our young folks had seen it.
-
-Dick Temple, with Roland and Peggy, had made up
-their minds to go on shore for another day while the
-work of dismantling the raft went on.
-
-But a fierce south wind began to blow, driving
-heavy black clouds before it, and lashing the river
-into foam.
-
-One of those terrible tropic storms was evidently
-on the cards, and come it did right soon.
-
-The darkest blackness was away to the west, and
-here, though no thunder could be heard, the lightning
-was very vivid. It was evident that this was the
-vortex of the hurricane, for only a few drops of rain
-fell around the raft.
-
-The picnic scheme was of course abandoned, and all
-waited anxiously enough for something to come.
-
-That something did come in less than an hour--the
-descent of the mighty Amazon in flood. Its tributaries
-had no doubt been swollen by the awful rain
-and water-spouts, and poured into the great queen of
-rivers double their usual discharge.
-
-A bore is a curling wave like a shore breaker that
-rushes down the smaller rivers, and is terribly
-destructive to boating or to shipping.
-
-The Amazon, however, did not rise like this. It
-came rushing almost silently down in a broad tall
-wave that appeared to stretch right across it, from the
-forest-clad bank where the raft lay to the far-off
-green horizon in the north.
-
-But Burly Bill was quite prepared for eventualities.
-
-Steam had been got up, the vessel's bows were
-headed for up stream, and the hawser betwixt raft
-and boat tautened.
-
-On and on rushed the huge wave. It towered
-above the raft, even when fifty yards away, in the
-most threatening manner, as if about to sweep all
-things to destruction.
-
-But on its nearer approach it glided in under the
-raft, and steamer as well--like some huge submarine
-monster such as we read of in fairy books of the
-long-long-ago--glided in under them, and seemed to lift
-them sky-high.
-
-"Go ahead at full speed!"
-
-It was the sonorous voice of Burly Bill shouting to
-the engineer.
-
-"Ay, ay, sir!" came the cheery reply.
-
-The screw went round with a rush.
-
-It churned up a wake of foaming water as the
-*Peggy* began to forge ahead, and next minute, driven
-along on the breeze, the monster raft began to follow
-and was soon out and away beyond danger from rock
-or shoal.
-
-Then arose to heaven a prayer of thankfulness, and
-a cheer so loud and long that even the parrots and
-monkeys in the forest depths heard it, and yelled and
-chattered till they frightened both 'gators and jaguars.
-
-Just two weeks after these adventures, the little
-*Peggy* was at anchor, and the great raft safely beached.
-
-Burly Bill was left in charge with his white men
-and his Indians, with Dick Temple to act as
-supercargo, and Jake Solomons with Roland and Peggy,
-not to mention the dog, started off for Pará.
-
-In due course, but after many discomforts, they
-arrived there, and Jake, after taking rooms in a
-hotel, hurried off to secure his despatches from the
-post-office.
-
-"No letters!" cried Jake, as his big brown fist came
-down with a bang on the counter. "Why, I see the
-very documents I came for in the pigeon-hole behind you!"
-
-The clerk, somewhat alarmed at the attitude of
-this tall Yankee backwoodsman, pulled them out and
-looked at them.
-
-"They cannot be delivered," he said.
-
-"And why?" thundered Jake, "Inasmuch as to
-wherefore, you greasy-faced little whipper-snapper!"
-
-"Not sufficient postage."
-
-Jake thrust one hand into a front pocket, and one
-behind him. Then on the counter he dashed down a
-bag of cash and a six-chambered revolver.
-
-"I'm Jake Solomons," he said. "There before you
-lies peace or war. Hand over the letters, and you'll
-have the rhino. Refuse, and I guess and calculate I'll
-blow the whole top of your head off."
-
-The clerk preferred peace, and Jake strode away
-triumphant.
-
-When he returned to the hotel and told the boys
-the story, they laughed heartily. In their eyes, Jake
-was more a hero than ever.
-
-"Ah!" said the giant quietly, "there's nothing brings
-these long-shore chaps sooner to their senses than
-letting 'em have a squint down the barrel of a six-shooter."
-
-The letters were all from Mr. St. Clair, and had
-been lying at the post-office for over a week. They
-all related to business, to the sale of the timber and
-the other commodities, the best markets, and so on
-and so forth, with hints as to the gold-mine.
-
-But the last one was much more bulky than the
-others, and so soon as he had glanced at the first
-lines, Jake lit his meerschaum, then threw himself
-back in his rocker to quietly discuss it.
-
-It was a plain, outspoken letter, such as one man of
-the world writes to another. Here is one extract:--
-
-.. vspace:: 1
-
-*Our business is increasing at a rapid rate, Jake
-Solomon. I have too much to do and so have you;
-therefore, although I did not think it necessary to
-inform you before, I have been in communication
-with my brother John, and he is sending me out a
-shrewd, splendid man of business. He will have
-arrived before your return.*
-
-*I can trust John thoroughly, and this Don Pedro
-Salvador, over and above his excellent business
-capabilities, can talk Spanish, French, and Portuguese.*
-
-*I do not quite like the name, Jake, so he must be
-content to be called plain Mr. Peter.*
-
-----
-
-About the very time that Jake Solomons was reading
-this letter, there sat close to the sky-light of an
-outward-bound steamer at Liverpool, two men holding
-low but earnest conversation. Their faces were partly
-obscured, for it was night, and the only light a
-glimmer from the ship's lamp.
-
-Steam was up and roaring through the pipes.
-
-A casual observer might have noted that one was a
-slim, swarthy, but wiry, smart-looking man of about
-thirty. His companion was a man considerably over forty.
-
-"I shall go now," said the latter. "You have my
-instructions, and I believe I can trust you."
-
-"Have I not already given you reason to?" was the
-rejoinder. "At the risk of penal servitude did I not
-steal my employer's keys, break into his room at
-night, and copy that will for you? It was but a copy
-of a copy, it is true, and I could not discover the
-original, else the quickest and simplest plan would
-have been--fire:"
-
-"True, you did so, but"--the older man laughed
-lightly--"you were well paid for the duty you performed."
-
-"Duty, eh?" sneered the other. "Well," he added,
-"thank God nothing has been discovered. My
-employer has bidden me an almost affectionate farewell,
-and given me excellent certificates."
-
-The other started up as a loud voice hailed the deck:
-
-"Any more for the shore!"
-
-"I am going now," he said. "Good-bye, old man,
-and remember my last words: not one single drop of
-blood shed!"
-
-"I understand, and will obey to the letter. Obedience pays."
-
-"True; and you shall find it so. Good-bye!"
-
-"*A Dios!*" said the other.
-
-The last bell was struck, and the gangway was
-hauled on shore.
-
-The great ship *Benedict* was that night rolling and
-tossing about on the waves of the Irish Channel.
-
-----
-
-Jake Solomons acquainted Roland and Peggy with
-the contents of this last letter, and greatly did the
-latter wonder what the new overseer would be like,
-and if she should love him or not.
-
-For Peggy had a soft little heart of her own, and
-was always prepared to be friendly with anyone who,
-according to her idea, was nice.
-
-Jake took his charges all round the city next
-day and showed them the sights of what is now one
-of the most beautiful towns in South America.
-
-The gardens, the fountains, the churches and palaces,
-the flowers and fruit, and feathery palm-trees, all
-things indeed spoke of delightfulness, and calm, and
-peace.
-
-And far beyond and behind all this was the
-boundless forest primeval.
-
-This was not their last drive through the city, and
-this good fellow Jake, though his business took him
-from home most of the day, delighted to take the
-children to every place of amusement he could think
-of. But despite all this, these children of the forest
-wilds began to long for home, and very much rejoiced
-were they when one evening, after dinner, Jake told
-them they should start on the morrow for Bona Vista,
-near to which town the little steamer lay, and so up
-the great river and home.
-
-Jake had done all his business, and done it satisfactorily,
-and could return to the old plantation and
-Burnley Hall with a light and cheerful heart.
-
-He had even sold the mine, although it was not to
-be worked for some time to come.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII--"A COLD HAND SEEMED TO CLUTCH HER HEART"
-=====================================================
-
-Many months passed away pleasantly and happily
-enough on the old plantation. The children--Roland,
-by the way, would hardly have liked to be
-called a child now--were, of course, under the able
-tuition of Mr. Simons, but in addition Peggy had a
-governess, imported directly from Pará.
-
-This was a dark-eyed Spanish girl, very piquant
-and pretty, who talked French well, and played on
-both the guitar and piano.
-
-Tom St. Clair had not only his boy's welfare, but
-his niece's, or adopted daughter's, also at heart.
-
-It would be some years yet before she arrived at
-the age of sweet seventeen, but when she did, her
-uncle determined to sell off or realize on his plantation,
-his goods and chattels, and sail across the seas once
-more to dear old Cornwall and the real Burnley Hall.
-
-He looked forward to that time as the weary
-worker in stuffy towns or cities does to a summer
-holiday.
-
-There is excitement enough in money-making, it is
-like an exhilarating game of billiards or whist, but it
-is apt to become tiresome.
-
-And Tom St. Clair was often overtired and weary.
-He was always glad when he reached home at night
-to his rocking-chair and a good dinner, after toiling
-all day in the recently-started india-rubber-forest works.
-
-But Mr. Peter took a vast deal of labour off his hands.
-
-Mr. Peter, or Don Pedro, ingratiated himself with
-nearly everyone from the first, and seemed to take to
-the work as if to the manner born.
-
-There were three individuals, however, who could
-not like him, strange to say; these were Peggy herself,
-Benee the Indian who had guided them through the
-forest when lost, and who had remained on the estate
-ever since, while the third was Brawn, the Irish wolf-hound.
-
-The dog showed his teeth if Peter tried even to
-caress him.
-
-Both Roland and Dick--the latter was a very
-frequent visitor--got on very well with Peter--trusted
-him thoroughly.
-
-"How is it, Benee," said Roland one day to the
-Indian, "that you do not love Don Pedro?"
-
-Benee spat on the ground and stamped his foot.
-
-"I watch he eye," the semi-savage replied. "He
-one very bad man. Some day you know plenty
-moochee foh true."
-
-"Well," said Tom one evening as he and his wife
-sat alone in the verandah together, "I do long to get
-back to England. I am tired, dear wife--my heart is
-weak why should we remain here over two years
-more? We are wealthy enough, and I promise myself
-and you, dear, many long years of health and
-happiness yet in the old country."
-
-He paused and smoked a little; then, after watching
-for a few moments the fireflies that flitted from bush
-to bush, he stretched his left arm out and rested his
-hand on his wife's lap.
-
-Some impulse seized her. She took it and pressed
-it to her lips. But a tear trickled down her cheek as
-she did so.
-
-Lovers still this couple were, though nearly twenty
-years had elapsed since he led her, a bonnie, buxom,
-blushing lassie, to the altar.
-
-But now in a sweet, low, but somewhat sad voice he
-sang a verse of that dear old song--"We have lived
-and loved together":--
-
- | "We have lived and loved together
- | Through many changing years,
- | We have shared each other's gladness
- | And dried each other's tears.
- | I have never known a sorrow
- | That was long unsoothed by thee,
- | For thy smile can make a summer
- | Where darkness else would be.
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-Mrs. St. Clair would never forget that evening on
-the star-lit lawn, nor the flitting, little fire-insects, nor
-her husband's voice.
-
-----
-
-Is it not just when we expect it least that sorrow
-sometimes falls suddenly upon us, hiding or eclipsing
-all our promised happiness and joy?
-
-I have now to write a pitiful part of my too true
-story, but it must be done.
-
-Next evening St. Clair rode home an hour earlier.
-
-He complained of feeling more tired than usual,
-and said he would lie down on the drawing-room sofa
-until dinner was ready.
-
-Peggy went singing along the hall to call him at
-the appointed time.
-
-She went singing into the room.
-
-"Pa, dear," she cried merrily; "Uncle-pa, dinner is
-all beautifully ready!"
-
-"Come, Unky-pa. How sound you sleep!"
-
-Then a terror crept up from the earth, as it were,
-and a cold hand seemed to clutch her heart.
-
-She ran out of the room.
-
-"Oh, Auntie-ma!" she cried, "come, come quickly,
-pa won't wake, nor speak!"
-
-Heigho! the summons had come, and dear "Uncle-pa"
-would never, never wake again.
-
-This is a short chapter, but it is too sad to continue.
-
-So falls the curtain on the first act of this life-drama.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII--FIERCELY AND WILDLY BOTH SIDES FOUGHT
-===================================================
-
-The gloomy event related in last chapter must not
-be allowed to cast a damper over our story.
-
-Of course death is always and everywhere hovering
-near, but why should boys like you and me, reader,
-permit that truth to cloud our days or stand between
-us and happiness?
-
-Two years, then, have elapsed since poor, brave Tom
-St. Clair's death.
-
-He is buried near the edge of the forest in a
-beautiful enclosure where rare shrubs grow, and where
-flowers trail and climb far more beautiful than any
-we ever see in England.
-
-At first Mrs. St. Clair had determined to sell all off
-and go back to the old country, but her overseer Jake
-Solomons and Mr. Peter persuaded her not to, or it
-seemed that it was their advice which kept her from
-carrying out her first intentions. But she had another
-reason, she found she could not leave that lonesome
-grave yet awhile.
-
-So the years passed on.
-
-The estate continued to thrive.
-
-Roland was now a handsome young fellow in his
-eighteenth year, and Peggy, now beautiful beyond
-compare, was nearly fifteen.
-
-Dick Temple, the bold and reckless huntsman and
-horseman, was quieter now in his attentions towards
-her. She was no longer the child that he could lift
-on to his broad young shoulders and carry, neighing
-and galloping like a frightened colt, round and round
-the lawn.
-
-And Roland felt himself a man. He was more
-sober and sedate, and had taken over all his father's
-work and his father's responsibilities. But for all that,
-lightly enough lay the burden on his heart.
-
-For he had youth on his side, and
-
- | "In the lexicon of youth which fate reserves
- | For a bright manhood there is no such word
- | As fail".
-
-----
-
-I do not, however, wish to be misunderstood. It
-must not be supposed that Roland had no difficulties
-to contend with, that all his business life was
-as fair and serene as a bright summer's day. On
-the contrary, he had many losses owing to the
-fluctuations of the markets and the failures of great firms,
-owing to fearful storms, and more than once owing
-to strikes or revolts among his Indians in the great
-india-rubber forest.
-
-But Roland was light-hearted and young, and difficulties
-in life, I have often said, are just like nine-pins,
-they are put up to be bowled over.
-
-Besides, be it remembered that if it were all plain
-sailing with us in this world we should not be able to
-appreciate how really happy our lives are. The sky
-is always bluest 'twixt the darkest clouds.
-
-On the whole, Roland, who took stock, and, with
-honest Bill and Jake Solomons, went over the books
-every quarter, had but little reason to complain.
-This stock-taking consumed most of their spare
-time for the greater part of a week, and when it was
-finished Roland invariably gave a dinner-party, at
-which I need hardly say his dear friend Dick Temple
-was present. And this was always the happiest of
-happy nights to Dick, because the girl he loved more
-than all things on earth put together was here, and
-looked so innocent and beautiful in her simple dresses
-of white and blue.
-
-There was no such thing as flirtation here, but Dick
-was fully and completely in earnest when he told
-himself that if he lived till he was three- or
-four-and-twenty he would ask Peggy to be his wife.
-
-Ah! there is many a slip 'twixt the cup and the lip.
-
-Dick, I might, could, would, or should have told
-you before, lived with a bachelor uncle, who, being
-rather old and infirm, seldom came out. He had good
-earnest men under him, however, as overseers, and his
-plantations were thriving, especially that in which
-tobacco was cultivated.
-
-The old man was exceedingly fond of Dick, and
-Dick would be his heir.
-
-Probably it was for his uncle's sake that Dick
-stayed in the country--and of course for Peggy's
-and Roland's--for, despite its grand field for sport
-and adventure, the lad had a strange longing to go to
-England and play cricket or football.
-
-He had been born in Britain just as Roland was,
-and had visited his childhood's home more than once
-during his short life.
-
-Now just about this time Don Pedro, or Mr. Peter
-as all called him, had asked for and obtained a
-holiday. He was going to Pará for a change, he said, and
-to meet a friend from England.
-
-That he did meet a friend from England there was
-little doubt, but their interview was a very short one.
-Where he spent the rest of his time was best known
-to himself.
-
-In three months or a little less he turned up smiling
-again, and most effusive.
-
-About a fortnight after his arrival he came to Jake
-one morning pretty early.
-
-Jake was preparing to start on horseback for the
-great forest.
-
-"I'm on the horns of a dilemma, Mr. Solomons," he
-said, laughing his best laugh. "During the night
-about twenty Bolivian Indians have encamped near
-to the forest. They ask for work on the india-rubber
-trees. They are well armed, and all sturdy warriors.
-They look as if fighting was more in their line than
-honest labour."
-
-"Well, Mr. Peter, what is their excuse for being
-here anyhow?"
-
-"They are bound for the sea-shore at the mouths of
-the river, and want to earn a few dollars to help them on."
-
-"Well, where is the other horn of the dilemma?"
-
-"Oh! if I give them work they may corrupt our fellows."
-
-"Then, Mr. Peter, I'd give the whole blessed lot the
-boot and the sack."
-
-"Ah! now, Mr. Solomons, you've got to the other
-horn. These savages, for they are little else, are
-revengeful."
-
-"We're not afraid."
-
-"No, we needn't be were they to make war openly,
-but they are sly, and as dangerous as sly. They would
-in all probability burn us down some dark night."
-
-Jake mused for a minute. Then he said abruptly:
-
-"Let the poor devils earn a few dollars, Mr. Peter,
-if they are stony-broke, and then send them on their
-way rejoicing."
-
-"That's what I say, too," said Burly Bill, who had
-just come up. "I've been over yonder in the starlight.
-They look deuced uncouth and nasty. So does a bull-dog,
-Jake, but is there a softer-hearted, more kindly
-dog in all creation?"
-
-So that very day the Indians set to work with the
-other squads.
-
-The labour connected with the collecting of india-rubber
-is by no means very hard, but it requires a
-little skill, and is irksome to those not used to such
-toil.
-
-But labour is scarce and Indians are often lazy, so
-on the whole Jake was not sorry to have the new
-hands, or "serinqueiros" as they are called.
-
-The india-rubber trees are indigenous and grow in
-greatest profusion on that great tributary of the
-Amazon called the Madeira. But when poor Tom
-St. Clair came to the country he had an eye to business.
-He knew that india-rubber would always command a
-good market, and so he visited the distant forests,
-studied the growth and culture of the trees as
-conducted by Nature, and ventured to believe that he
-could improve upon her methods.
-
-He was successful, and it was not a great many
-years before he had a splendid plantation of young
-trees in his forest, to say nothing of the older ones
-that had stood the brunt of many a wild tropical
-storm.
-
-It will do no harm if I briefly describe the method
-of obtaining the india-rubber. Tiny pots of tin,
-holding about half a pint, are hung under an incision
-in the bark of the tree, and these are filled and
-emptied every day, the contents being delivered by
-the Indian labourers at the house or hut of an
-under-overseer.
-
-The sap is all emptied into larger utensils, and a
-large smoking fire, made of the nuts of a curious kind
-of palm called the Motokoo, being built, the operators
-dip wooden shovels into the sap, twirling these round
-quickly and holding them in the smoke. Coagulation
-takes place very quickly. Again the shovel is dipped
-in the sap, and the same process is repeated until the
-coagulated rubber is about two inches thick, when it
-is cooled, cut, or sliced off, and is ready for the distant
-market.
-
-Now, from the very day of their arrival, there was
-no love lost between the old and steady hands and
-this new band of independent and flighty ones.
-
-The latter were willing enough to slice the bark
-and to hang up their pannikins, and they would even
-empty them when filled, and condescend to carry their
-contents to the preparing-house. But they were lazy
-in the extreme at gathering the nuts, and positively
-refused to smoke the sap and coagulate it.
-
-It made them weep, they explained, and it was
-much more comfortable to lie and wait for the sap
-while they smoked and talked in their own strange
-language.
-
-After a few days the permanent hands refused to
-work at the same trees, or even in the same part of
-the estrados or roads that led through the plantation
-of rubber-trees.
-
-A storm was brewing, that was evident. Nor was
-it very long before it burst.
-
-All unconscious that anything was wrong, Peggy,
-with Brawn, was romping about one day enjoying
-the busy scene, Peggy often entering into conversation
-with some of her old favourites, when one of the
-strange Indians, returning from the tub with an
-empty tin, happened to tread on Brawn's tail.
-
-The dog snarled, but made no attempt to bite.
-Afraid, however, that he would spring upon the fellow,
-Peggy threw herself on the ground, encircling her
-arms around Brawn's shoulders, and it was she who
-received the blow that was meant for the dog.
-
-It cut her across the arm, and she fainted with pain.
-
-Brawn sprang at once upon his man and brought
-him down.
-
-.. _`"BRAWN SPRANG AT ONCE UPON HIS MAN"`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-090.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: "BRAWN SPRANG AT ONCE UPON HIS MAN"
-
- "BRAWN SPRANG AT ONCE UPON HIS MAN"
-
-
-He shook the wretch as if he had been but a rat,
-and blood flowed freely.
-
-Burly Bill was not far off, and just as the great
-hound had all but fixed the savage by the windpipe,
-which he would undoubtedly have torn out, Bill pulled
-him off by the collar and pacified him.
-
-The blood-stained Indian started to his legs to
-make good his retreat, but as his back was turned in
-flight, Bill rushed after him and dealt him a kick that
-laid him prone on his face.
-
-This was the signal for a general mêlée, and a
-terrible one it was!
-
-Bill got Peggy pulled to one side, and gave her in
-charge to Dick, who had come thundering across on
-his huge horse towards the scene of conflict.
-
-Under the shelter of a spreading tree Dick lifted
-his precious charge. But she speedily revived when
-he laid her flat on the ground. She smiled feebly
-and held out her hand, which Dick took and kissed,
-the tears positively trickling over his cheeks.
-
-Perhaps it was a kind of boyish impulse that caused
-him to say what he now said:
-
-"Oh, Peggy, my darling, how I love you! Whereever
-you are, dear, wherever I am--oh, always think
-of me a little!"
-
-That was all.
-
-A faint colour suffused Peggy's cheek for just a
-moment. Then she sat up, and the noble hound
-anxiously licked her face.
-
-But she had made no reply.
-
-Meanwhile the mêlée went merrily on, as a Donnybrook
-Irishman might remark.
-
-Fiercely and wildly both sides fought, using as
-weapons whatsoever came handiest.
-
-But soon the savages were beaten and discomfited
-with, sad to tell, the loss of one life--that of a
-savage.
-
-Not only Jake himself, but Roland and Mr. Peter
-were now on the scene of the recent conflict. Close
-to Peter's side, watching every movement of his lips
-and eyes, stood Benee, the Indian who had saved the
-children.
-
-Several times Peter looked as if he felt uneasy,
-and once he turned towards Benee as if about to speak.
-
-He said nothing, and the man continued his watchful
-scrutiny.
-
-After consulting for a short time together, Jake and
-Roland, with Burly Bill, determined to hold a court of
-inquiry on the spot.
-
-But, strange to say, Peter kept aloof. He continued
-to walk to and fro, and Benee still hung in his rear.
-But this ex-savage was soon called upon to act as
-interpreter if his services should be needed, which
-they presently were.
-
-Every one of the civilized Indians had the same
-story to tell of the laziness and insolence of the
-Bolivians, and now Jake ordered the chief of the
-other party to come forward.
-
-They sulked for a short time.
-
-But Jake drew his pistols, and, one in each hand,
-stepped out and ordered all to the front.
-
-They made no verbal response to the questions put
-to them through Benee. Their only reply was scowling.
-
-"Well, Mr. St. Clair," said Jake, "my advice is to
-pay these rascals and send them off."
-
-"Good!" said Roland. "I have money."
-
-The chief was ordered to draw nearer, and the
-dollars were counted into his claw-like fist.
-
-The fellow drew up his men in a line and gave to
-each his pay, reserving his own.
-
-Then at a signal, given by the chief, there was
-raised a terrible war-whoop and howl.
-
-The chief spat on his dollars and dashed them into
-a neighbouring pool. Every man did the same.
-
-Roland was looking curiously on. He was wondering
-what would happen next.
-
-He had not very long to wait, for with his foot the
-chief turned the dead man on his back, and the blood
-from his death-stab poured out afresh.
-
-He dipped his palm in the red stream and held it
-up on high. His men followed his example.
-
-Then all turned to the sun, and in one voice uttered
-just one word, which, being interpreted by Benee, was
-understood to mean--REVENGE!
-
-They licked the blood from their hands, and, turning
-round, marched in silence and in single file out
-and away from the forest and were seen no more.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX--THAT TREE IN THE FOREST GLADE
-=========================================
-
-The things, the happenings, I have now to tell you
-of in this chapter form the turning-point in our
-story.
-
-Weeks passed by after the departure of that
-mysterious band of savages, and things went on in the
-same old groove on the plantation.
-
-Whence the savages had come, or whither they had
-gone, none could tell. But all were relieved at their
-exit, dramatic and threatening though it had been.
-
-The hands were all very busy now everywhere, and
-one day, it being the quarter's end, after taking stock
-Roland gave his usual dinner-party, and a ball to his
-natives. These were all dressed out as gaily as gaily
-could be. The ladies wore the most tawdry of finery,
-most of which they had bought, or rather had had
-brought them by their brothers and lovers from Pará,
-and nothing but the most pronounced evening dress
-did any "lady of colour" deign to wear.
-
-Why should they not ape the quality, and "poh
-deah Miss Peggy".
-
-Peggy was very happy that evening, and so I need
-hardly say was Dick Temple. Though he never had
-dared to speak of love again, no one could have looked
-at those dark daring eyes of his and said it was not
-there.
-
-It must have been about eleven by the clock and a
-bright moonlight night when Dick started to ride
-home. He knew the track well, he said, and could
-not be prevailed upon to stay all night. Besides, his
-uncle expected him.
-
-The dinner and ball given to the plantation hands
-had commenced at sunset, or six o'clock, and after
-singing hymns--a queer finish to a most hilarious
-dance--all retired, and by twelve of the clock not a
-sound was to be heard over all the plantation save
-now and then the mournful cry of the shriek-owl or a
-plash in the river, showing that the 'gators preferred
-a moonshiny night to daylight itself.
-
-The night wore on, one o'clock, two o'clock chimed
-from the turret on Burnley Hall, and soon after this,
-had anyone been in the vicinity he would have seen
-a tall figure, wrapped in cloak and hood, steal away
-from the house adown the walks that led from the
-flowery lawns. The face was quite hidden, but several
-times the figure paused, as if to listen and glance
-around, then hurried on once more, and finally
-disappeared in the direction of the forest.
-
-Peggy's bedroom was probably the most tastefully-arranged
-and daintily-draped in the house, and when
-she lay down to-night and fell gently asleep, very
-sweet indeed were the dreams that visited her pillow.
-The room was on a level with the river lawn, on
-to which it opened by a French or casement window.
-Three o'clock!
-
-The moon shone on the bed, and even on the girl's
-face, but did not awaken her.
-
-A few minutes after this, and the casement window
-was quietly opened, and the same cloaked figure,
-which stole away from the mansion an hour before,
-softly entered.
-
-It stood for more than half a minute erect and
-listening, then, bending low beside the bed, listened a
-moment there.
-
-Did no spectral dream cross the sleeping girl's vision
-to warn her of the dreadful fate in store for her?
-
-Had she shrieked even now, assistance would have
-been speedily forthcoming, and she might have been
-saved!
-
-But she quietly slumbered on.
-
-Then the dark figure retreated as it had come, and
-presently another and more terrible took its place--a
-burly savage carrying a blanket or rug.
-
-First the girl's clothing and shoes, her watch and
-all her trinkets, were gathered up and handed to
-someone on the lawn.
-
-Then the savage, approaching the bed with stealthy
-footsteps, at once enveloped poor Peggy in the rug
-and bore her off.
-
-For a moment she uttered a muffled moan or two,
-like a nightmare scream, then all was still as the
-grave.
-
-----
-
-"Missie Peggy! Missie Peggy," cried Beeboo next
-morning at eight as she entered the room. "What for
-you sleep so long? Ah!" she added sympathizingly,
-still holding the door-knob in her hand. "Ah! but
-den the poh chile very tired. Dance plenty mooch las'
-night, and--"
-
-She stopped suddenly.
-
-Something unusual in the appearance of the bed
-attire attracted her attention and she speedily rushed
-towards it.
-
-She gave vent at once to a loud yell, and Roland
-himself, who was passing near, ran in immediately.
-
-He stood like one in a state of catalepsy, with his
-eyes fixed on the empty bed. But he recovered
-shortly.
-
-"Oh, this is a fearful day!" he cried, and hastened
-out to acquaint Jake and Bill, both of whom, as well
-as Mr. Peter, slept in the east wing of the mansion.
-
-He ran from door to door knocking very loud and
-shouting: "Awake, awake, Peggy has gone! She has
-been kidnapped, and the accursed savages have had
-their revenge!"
-
-In their pyjamas only, Jake and Bill appeared, and
-after a while Mr. Peter, fully dressed.
-
-He looked sleepy.
-
-"I had too much wine last night," he said, with a
-yawn, "and slept very heavily all night. But what
-is the matter?"
-
-He was quietly and quickly informed.
-
-"This is indeed a fearful blow, but surely we can
-trace the scoundrels!"
-
-"Boys, hurry through with your breakfast," said
-Roland. "Jake, I will be back in a few minutes."
-
-He whistled shrilly and Brawn came rushing to his side.
-
-"Follow me, Brawn."
-
-His object was to find out in which direction the
-savages had gone.
-
-Had Brawn been a blood-hound he could soon have
-picked up the scent.
-
-As it was, however, his keen eyes discovered the
-trail on the lawn, and led him to the gate. He howled
-impatiently to have it opened, then bounded out and
-away towards the forest in a westerly and southerly
-direction, which, if pursued far enough, would lead
-towards Bolivia, along the wild rocky banks of the
-Madeira River.
-
-It was a whole hour before Brawn returned. He
-carried something in his mouth. He soon found his
-master, and laid the something gently down at his
-feet, stretching himself--grief-stricken--beside it.
-
-It was one of Peggy's boots, with a white silk
-stocking in it, drenched in blood.
-
-The white men and Indians were now fully aroused,
-and, leaving Jake in charge of the estate, Roland
-picked out thirty of the best men, armed them with
-guns, and placed them under the command of Burly
-Bill. Then they started off in silence, Roland and
-Burly mounted, the armed whites and Indians on foot.
-
-Brawn went galloping on in front in a very excited
-manner, often returning and barking wildly at the
-horses as if to hurry them on.
-
-Throughout that forenoon they journeyed by the
-trail, which was now distinct enough, and led through
-the jungle and forest.
-
-They came out on to a clearing about one o'clock.
-Here was water in abundance, and as they were all
-thoroughly exhausted, they threw themselves down
-by the spring to quench their thirst and rest.
-
-Bill made haste now to deal out the provisions, and
-after an hour, during which time most of them slept,
-they resumed their journey.
-
-A mile or two farther on they came to a sight
-which almost froze their blood.
-
-In the middle of a clearing or glade stood a great
-tree. It was hollowed out at one side, and against
-this was still a heap of half-charred wood, evidently
-the remains of a fierce fire, though every ember had
-died black out.
-
-Here was poor Peggy's other shoe. That too was
-bloody.
-
-And here was a pool of coagulated blood, with
-huge rhinoceros beetles busy at their work of
-excavation. Portions or rags of dress also!
-
-It was truly an awful sight!
-
-Roland reined up his horse, and placed his right
-hand over his eyes.
-
-"Bill," he managed to articulate, "can you have
-the branches removed, and let us know the fearful
-worst?"
-
-Burly Bill gave the order, and the Indians tossed
-the half-burned wood aside.
-
-Then they pulled out bone after bone of limbs,
-of arms, of ribs. But all were charred almost into
-cinders!
-
-Roland now seemed to rise to the occasion.
-
-He held his right arm on high.
-
-"Bill," he cried; "here, under the blazing sun and
-above the remains, the dust of my dead sister, I
-register a vow to follow up these fiends to their
-distant homes, if Providence shall but lead us aright,
-and to slay and burn every wretch who has aided or
-abetted this terrible deed!"
-
-"I too register that vow," said Bill solemnly.
-
-"And I, and I!" shouted the white men, and even
-the Indians.
-
-They went on again once more, after burying the
-charred bones and dust.
-
-But the trail took them to a ford, and beyond the
-stream there was not the imprint of even a single
-footstep.
-
-The retiring savages must either have doubled back
-on their tracks or waded for miles up or down the
-rocky stream before landing.
-
-Nothing more could be done to-day, for the sun was
-already declining, and they must find their way out
-of the gloom of the forest before darkness. So the
-return journey was made, and just as the sun's red
-beams were crimsoning the waters of the western
-river, they arrived once more at the plantation and
-Burnley Hall.
-
-The first to meet them was Peter himself. He
-seemed all anxiety.
-
-"What have you found?" he gasped.
-
-It was a moment or two before Roland could reply.
-
-"Only the charred remains of my poor sister!" he
-said at last, then compressed his mouth in an effort
-to keep back the tears.
-
-The Indian who took so lively an interest in
-Mr. Peter was not far away, and was watching his man
-as usual.
-
-None noticed, save Benee himself, that Mr. Peter
-heaved something very like a sigh of relief as Roland's
-words fell on his ears.
-
-Burnley Hall was now indeed a castle of gloom;
-but although poor Mrs. St. Clair was greatly cast
-down, the eager way in which Roland and Dick were
-making their preparations to follow up the savage
-Indians, even to the confines or interior, if necessary,
-of their own domains, gave her hope.
-
-Luckily they had already found a clue to their
-whereabouts, for one of the civilized Bolivians knew
-that very chief, and indeed had come from the same
-far-off country. He described the people as a race
-of implacable savages and cannibals, into whose territory
-no white man had ever ventured and returned alive.
-
-Were they a large tribe? No, not large, not over
-three or four thousand, counting women and children.
-Their arms? These were spears and broad
-two-bladed knives, with great slings, from which they
-could hurl large stones and pieces of flint with
-unerring accuracy, and bows and arrows. And no
-number of white men could stand against these unless
-they sheltered themselves in trenches or behind rocks
-and trees.
-
-This ex-cannibal told them also that the land of
-this terrible tribe abounded in mineral wealth, in silver
-ore and even in gold.
-
-For this information Roland cared little; all he
-wished to do was to avenge poor Peggy's death. If
-his men, after the fighting, chose to lay out claims he
-would permit a certain number of them to do so,
-their names to be drawn by ballot. The rest must
-accompany the expedition back.
-
-Dick's uncle needed but little persuasion to give
-forty white men, fully armed and equipped, to swell
-Roland's little army of sixty whites. Besides these,
-they would have with them carriers and
-ammunition-bearers--Indians from the plantations.
-
-Dick was all life and fire. If they were successful,
-he himself, he said, would shoot the murderous chief,
-or stab him to the heart.
-
-A brave show indeed did the little army make, when
-all mustered and drilled, and every man there was
-most enthusiastic, for all had loved poor lost Peggy.
-
-"I shall remain at my post here, I suppose," said
-Mr. Peter.
-
-"If I do not alter my mind I shall leave you and
-Jake, with Mr. Roberts, the tutor, to manage the
-estate in my absence," said Roland.
-
-He did alter his mind, and, as the following will
-show, he had good occasion to do so.
-
-One evening the strange Indian Benee, between
-whom and Peter there existed so much hatred, sought
-Roland out when alone.
-
-"Can I speakee you, all quiet foh true?"
-
-"Certainly, my good fellow. Come into my study.
-Now, what is it you would say?"
-
-"Dat Don Pedro no true man! I tinkee much, and
-I tinkee dat."
-
-"Well, I know you don't love each other, Benee;
-but can you give me any proofs of his villainy?"
-
-"You letee me go to-night all myse'f alone to de
-bush. I tinkee I bring you someding strange. Some
-good news. Ha! it may be so!"
-
-"I give you leave, and believe you to be a faithful
-fellow."
-
-Benee seized his master's hand and bent down his
-head till his brow touched it.
-
-Next moment he was gone.
-
-Next morning he was missed.
-
-"Your pretty Indian," said Mr. Peter, with an
-ill-concealed sneer, "is a traitor, then, after all, and a
-spy, and it was no doubt he who instigated the
-abduction and the murder, for the sake of revenge, of
-your poor little sister."
-
-"That remains to be seen, Mr. Peter. If he, or anyone
-else on the plantation, is a traitor, he shall hang
-as high as Haman."
-
-Peter cowered visibly, but smiled his agitation off.
-
-And that same night about twelve, while Roland
-sat smoking on the lawn with Dick, all in the
-moonlight, everyone else having retired--smoking and
-talking of the happy past--suddenly the gate hinges
-creaked, and with a low growl Brawn sprang forward.
-But he returned almost immediately, wagging his tail
-and being caressed by Benee himself.
-
-Silently stood the Indian before them, silently as a
-statue, but in his left hand he carried a small bundle
-bound up in grass. It was not his place to speak
-first, and both young men were a little startled at his
-sudden appearance.
-
-"What, Benee! and back so soon from the forest?"
-
-"Benee did run plenty quickee. Plenty jaguar
-want eat Benee, but no can catchee."
-
-"Well?"
-
-"I would speekee you bof boys in de room."
-
-The two started up together.
-
-Here was some mystery that must be unravelled.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X--BENEE MAKES A STRANGE DISCOVERY
-==========================================
-
-Benee followed them into Roland's quiet study,
-and placed his strange grass-girt bundle on a
-cane chair.
-
-Roland gave him a goblet of wine-and-water, which
-he drank eagerly, for he was faint and tired.
-
-"Now, let us hear quickly what you have to say, Benee."
-
-The Indian came forward, and his words, though
-uttered with some vehemence, and accompanied by
-much gesticulation, were delivered in almost a whisper.
-
-It would have been impossible for any eavesdropper
-in the hall to have heard.
-
-"Wat I tellee you 'bout dat Peter?" he began.
-
-"My good friend," said Roland, "Peter accuses you
-of being a spy and traitor."
-
-"I killee he!"
-
-"No, you will not; if Peter is guilty, I will see
-that justice overtakes him."
-
-"Well, 'fore I go, sah, I speakee you and say I
-bringee you de good news."
-
-"Tell us quickly!" said Dick in a state of great
-excitement.
-
-"Dis, den, is de good news: Missie Peggy not dead!
-No, no!"
-
-"Explain, Benee, and do not raise false hopes in
-our breasts."
-
-"De cannibals make believe she murder; dat all is."
-
-"But have we not found portions of her raiment,
-her blood-dripping stockings, and also her charred
-remains?"
-
-"Listen, sah. Dese cannibals not fools. Dey beat
-you plenty of trail, so you can easily find de clearing
-where de fire was. Dey wis' you to go to dat tree to
-see de blood, de shoe, and all. But when you seekee
-de trail after, where is she? Tellee me dat. Missie
-Peggy no murder. No, no. She am carried away,
-far away, as one prisint to de queen ob de cannibals."
-
-"What were the bones, my good Benee?"
-
-Then Benee opened his strange bundle, and there
-fell on the floor the half-burned skull and jaws of a
-gigantic baboon.
-
-"I find dat hid beside de tree. Ha, ha!"
-
-"It is all clear now," said Roland. "My dear,
-faithful Benee," he continued, "can you guide us to
-the country of the cannibals? You will meet your
-reward, both here and hereafter."
-
-"I not care. I lub Missie Peggy. Ah, she come
-backee once moh, foh true!"
-
-And now Dick Temple, the impulsive, must step
-forward and seize Benee by the hand. "God bless
-you!" he said; and indeed it was all he could say.
-
-When the Indian had gone, Roland and Dick drew
-closer together.
-
-"The mystery," said the former, "seems to me,
-Dick, to be as dark and intricate as ever. I can
-understand the savages carrying poor Peggy away,
-but why the tricky deceit, the dropped shoe that
-poor, noble Brawn picked up, the pool of blood, the
-rent and torn garments, and the half-charred bones?"
-
-"Well, I think I can see through that, Roland. I
-believe it was done to prevent your further pursuit;
-for, as Benee observes, the trail is left plainly enough
-for even a white man to see as far as the 'fire-tree'
-and on to the brook. But farther there is none."
-
-"Well, granting all this; think you, Dick, that no
-one instigated them, probably even suggested the
-crime and the infernal deceit they have practised?"
-
-"Now you are thinking of, if not actually accusing,
-Mr. Peter?"
-
-"I am, Dick. I have had my suspicions of him ever
-since a month after he came. It was strange how
-Benee hated him from the beginning, to say nothing
-of Brawn, the dog, and our dear lost Peggy."
-
-"Cheer up!" said Dick. "Give Peter a show, though
-things look dark against him."
-
-"Yes," said Roland sternly, "and with us and our
-expedition he must and shall go. We can watch his
-every move, and if I find that he is a villain, may God
-have mercy on his soul! His body shall feed the eagles."
-
-Dick Temple was a wild and reckless boy, it is true,
-and always first, if possible, in any adventure which
-included a spice of danger, but he had a good deal of
-common sense notwithstanding.
-
-He mused a little, and rolled himself a fresh
-cigarette before he replied.
-
-"Your Mr. Peter," he said, "may or may not be
-guilty of duplicity, though I do not see the *raison
-d'être* for any such conduct, and I confess to you that
-I look upon lynching as a wild kind of justice. At
-the same time I must again beg of you, Roland, to
-give the man a decent show."
-
-"Here is my hand on that, Dick. He shall have
-justice, even should that just finish with his dangling
-at a rope's end."
-
-The two shortly after this parted for the night,
-each going to his own room, but I do not think that
-either of them slept till long past midnight.
-
-They were up in good time, however, for the bath,
-and felt invigorated and hungry after the dip.
-
-They were not over-merry certainly, but Mrs. St. Clair
-was quite changed, and just a little hysterically
-hilarious. For as soon as he had tubbed, Roland had
-gone to her bedroom and broken the news to her
-which Benee had brought.
-
-That same forenoon Dick and Roland rode out to
-the forest.
-
-They could hear the boom and shriek and roar of
-the great buzz-saw long before they came near the
-white-men's quarters.
-
-They saw Jake,--and busy enough he was too,--and
-told him that they had some reason to doubt the
-honesty or sincerity of Mr. Peter, and that they would
-take him along with them.
-
-"Thank God!" said Jake most fervently. "I myself
-cannot trust a man whom a dog like Brawn and a
-savage like Benee have come to hate."
-
-By themselves that day the young fellows
-completed their plans, and all would now be ready to
-advance in a week's time.
-
-That same day, however, on parade and in presence
-of Mr. Peter, Roland made a little speech.
-
-"We are going," he said, "my good fellows, on a
-very long and adventurous journey. Poor Miss Peggy
-is, as we all know" (this was surely a fib that would
-be forgiven) "dead and gone, but we mean to follow
-these savages up to their own country, and deal them
-such a blow as will paralyse them for years. Yellow
-Charlie yonder is himself one of their number, but he
-has proved himself faithful, and has offered to be our
-guide as soon as we enter unknown regions.
-
-"I have," he added, "perfect faith in my white men,
-faith in Mr. Peter, whom I am taking with me--"
-
-Peter took a step forward as if to speak, but Roland
-waved him back.
-
-"And I know my working Indians will prove
-themselves good men and true.
-
-"After saying this, it is hardly necessary to add
-that if anyone is found attempting to desert our
-column, even should it be Burly Bill himself" (Burly
-Bill laughed outright), "he will be shot down as we
-would shoot a puma or alligator."
-
-There was a wild cheer after Roland stepped down
-from the balcony, and in this Mr. Peter seemed to join
-so heartily that Roland's heart smote him.
-
-For perhaps, after all, he had been unkind in
-thought to this man.
-
-Time alone would tell.
-
-The boys determined to leave nothing to chance,
-but ammunition was of even more importance than
-food. They hoped to find water everywhere, and the
-biscuits carried, with the roots they should dig, would
-serve to keep the expedition alive and healthy, with
-the aid of their good guns.
-
-Medicine was not forgotten, nor medical comforts.
-
-For three whole days Roland trained fast-running
-Indians to pick up a trail. A man would be allowed
-to have three miles' start, and then, when he was
-quite invisible, those human sleuth-hounds would be
-let loose, and they never failed to bring back their
-prisoner after a time.
-
-One man at least was much impressed by these
-trials of skill.
-
-Just a week before the start, and late in the evening,
-Benee once more presented himself before our young
-heroes.
-
-"I would speakee you!"
-
-"Well, Benee, say what you please, but all have not
-yet retired. Dick, get out into the hall, and warn us
-if anyone approaches."
-
-Dick jumped up, threw his cigarette away, and did
-as he was told.
-
-"Thus I speakee you and say," said Benee. "You
-trustee I?"
-
-"Assuredly!"
-
-"Den you let me go?"
-
-"How and where?"
-
-"I go fast as de wind, fleeter dan de rain-squall, far
-ober de mountains ob Madeira, far froo' de wild, dark
-forest. I heed noting, I fear noting. No wil' beas'
-makee Benee 'fraid. I follow de cannibals. I reach
-de country longee time 'foh you. I creepee like one
-snake to de hut ob poh deah Peggy. She no can fly
-wid me, but I 'sure her dat you come soon, in two
-moon p'laps, or free. I make de chile happy. Den I
-creep and glide away again all samee one black snake,
-and come back to find you. I go?"
-
-Roland took the man's hand. Savage though he
-was, there was kindness and there was undoubted
-sincerity in those dark, expressive eyes, and our hero
-at once gave the permission asked.
-
-"But," he said, "the way is long and dangerous, my
-good Benee, so here I give you two long-range
-six-shooters, a repeating-rifle, and a box of cartridges.
-May God speed your journey, and bring you safely
-back with news that shall inspire our hearts! Go!"
-
-Benee glided away as silently as he had come, and
-next morning his place was found empty. But would
-their trust in this man reap its reward, or--awful
-doubt--was Benee false?
-
-Next night but one something very strange happened.
-
-All was silent in and around Burnley Hall, and the
-silvery tones of the great tower clock had chimed the
-hour of three, when the window of Mr. Peter's room
-was silently opened, and out into the moonlight glided
-the man himself.
-
-He carried in his hand a heavy grip-sack, and
-commenced at once taking the path that led downwards
-to the river.
-
-Here lay the dinghy boat drawn up on the beach.
-She was secured with padlock and chain, but all
-Roland's officers carried keys.
-
-It was about a quarter of a mile to the river-side,
-and Peter was proceeding at a fairly rapid rate,
-considering the weight of his grip-sack.
-
-He had a habit of talking to himself. He was doing
-so now.
-
-"I have only to drop well down the river and
-intercept a steamer. It is this very day they pass,
-and--"
-
-Two figures suddenly glided from the bush and
-stood before him.
-
-One sprang up behind, whom he could not see.
-
-"Good-morning, Mr. Peter! Going for a walk early,
-aren't you? It's going to turn out a delightful day, I
-think."
-
-They were white men.
-
-"Here!" cried Peter, "advance but one step, or dare
-to impede my progress, and you are both dead men!
-I am a good shot, and happen, as you see, to have the
-draw on you."
-
-Next moment his right arm was seized from behind,
-the men in front ducked, and the first shot went off in
-the air.
-
-"Here, none o' that, guv'nor!" said a set, determined
-voice.
-
-The revolver was wrenched from his grasp, and he
-found himself on his back in the pathway.
-
-"It is murder you'd be after! Eh?"
-
-"Not so, my good fellow," said Peter. "I will explain."
-
-"Explain, then."
-
-"My duties are ended with Mr. Roland St. Clair.
-He owes me one month's wages. I have forfeited that
-and given warning, and am going. That is all."
-
-"You are going, are you? Well, we shall see about that."
-
-"Yes, you may, and now let me pass on my peaceful way."
-
-"He! he! he! But tell us, Mr. Peter, why this
-speedy departure? Hast aught upon thy conscience,
-or hast got a conscience?"
-
-Peter had risen to his feet.
-
-"Merely this. I claim the privilege of every working
-man, that of giving leave. I am not strong, and I dread
-the long journey Mr. St. Clair and his little band are
-to take."
-
-"But," said the other, "you came in such a questionable
-shape, and we were here to watch for stragglers,
-not of course thinking for a moment, Mr. Peter, that
-your French window would be opened, and that you
-yourself would attempt to take French leave.
-
-"Now you really must get back to your bedroom,
-guv'nor, and see Mr. St. Clair in the morning. My
-mates will do sentry-go at your window, and I shall
-be by your door in case you need anything. It is a
-mere matter of form, Mr. Peter, but of course we have
-to obey orders. Got ere a drop of brandy in your
-flask?"
-
-Peter quickly produced quite a large bottle. He
-drank heavily himself first, and then passed it
-round.
-
-But the men took but little, and Mr. Peter,
-half-intoxicated, allowed himself to be conducted to bed.
-
-When these sentries gave in their report next
-morning to Roland, Mr. Peter did not rise a deal in
-the young fellow's estimation.
-
-"It only proves one thing," he said to Dick. "If
-Peter is so anxious to give us the slip, we must watch
-him well until we are far on the road towards the
-cannibals' land."
-
-"That's so," returned Dick Temple.
-
-Not a word was said to Peter regarding his
-attempted flight when he sat down to breakfast with
-the boys, and naturally enough he believed it had not
-been reported. Indeed he had some hazy remembrance
-of having offered the sentries a bribe to keep dark.
-
-Mr. Peter ate very sparingly, and looked sadly fishy
-about the eyes.
-
-But he made no more attempts to escape just then.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI--ALL ALONE IN THE WILDERNESS
-=======================================
-
-That Benee was a good man and true we have
-little reason to doubt, up to the present time at
-all events.
-
-Yet Dick Temple was, curiously enough, loth to
-believe that Mr. Peter was other than a friend. And
-nothing yet had been proved against him.
-
-"Is it not natural enough," said he to Roland, "that
-he should funk--to put it in fine English--the terrible
-expedition you and I are about to embark upon? And
-knowing that you have commanded him to accompany
-us would, in my opinion, be sufficient to account for
-his attempt to escape and drop down the river to Pará,
-and so home to his own country. Roland, I repeat, we
-must give the man a show."
-
-"True," said Roland, "and poor Benee is having his
-show. Time alone can prove who the traitor is. If it
-be Benee he will not return. On the contrary, he will
-join the savage captors of poor Peggy, and do all in
-his power to frustrate our schemes."
-
-No more was said.
-
-But the preparations were soon almost completed,
-and in a day or two after this, farewells being said,
-the brave little army began by forced marches to find
-its way across country and through dense forests
-and damp marshes, and over rocks and plains, to the
-Madeira river, high above its junction with the great
-Amazon.
-
-----
-
-Meanwhile let us follow the lonely Indian in his
-terrible journey to the distant and unexplored lands
-of Bolivia.
-
-Like all true savages, he despised the ordinary
-routes of traffic or trade; his track must be a
-bee-line, guiding himself by the sun by day, but more
-particularly by the stars by night.
-
-Benee knew the difference betwixt stars and planets.
-The latter were always shifting, but certain stars--most
-to him were like lighthouses to mariners who
-are approaching land--shone over the country of the
-cannibals, and he could tell from their very altitude
-how much progress he was making night after night.
-
-So lonesome, so long, was his thrice dreary journey,
-that had it been undertaken by a white man, in all
-probability he would soon have been a raving maniac.
-
-But Benee had all the cunning, all the daring, and
-all the wisdom of a true savage, and for weeks he felt
-a proud exhilaration, a glorious sense of freedom
-and happiness, at being once more his own master, no
-work to do, and hope ever pointing him onwards to
-his goal.
-
-What was that goal? it may well be asked. Was
-Benee disinterested? Did he really feel love for the
-white man and the white man's children? Can aught
-save selfishness dwell in the breast of a savage? In
-brief, was it he who had been the spy, he who was
-the guilty man; or was it Peter who was the villain?
-Look at it in any light we please, one thing is
-certain, this strange Indian was making his way back
-to his own country and to his own friends, and Indians
-are surely not less fond of each other than are the
-wild beasts who herd together in the forest, on the
-mountain-side, or on the ice in the far-off land of the
-frozen north. And well we know that these creatures
-will die for each other.
-
-If there was a mystery about Peter, there was
-something approaching to one about Benee also.
-
-But then it must be remembered that since his
-residence on the St. Clair plantation, Benee had been
-taught the truths of that glorious religion of ours, the
-religion of love that smoothes the rugged paths of life
-for us, that gives a silver lining to every cloud of
-grief and sorrow, and gilds even the dark portals of
-death itself.
-
-Benee believed even as little children do. And
-little Peggy in her quiet moods used to tell him the
-story of life by redemption in her almost infantile way.
-
-For all that, it is hard and difficult to vanquish
-old superstitions, and this man was only a savage at
-heart after all, though, nevertheless, there seemed to
-be much good in his rough, rude nature, and you
-may ofttimes see the sweetest and most lovely little
-flowers growing on the blackest and ruggedest of rocks.
-
-Well, this journey of Benee's was certainly no
-sinecure. Apart even from all the dangers attached
-to it, from wild beasts and wilder men, it was one that
-would have tried the hardest constitution, if only for
-the simple reason that it was all a series of forced
-marches.
-
-There was something in him that was hurrying him
-on and encouraging him to greater and greater
-exertions every hour. His daily record depended to a
-great extent on the kind of country he had to
-negotiate. He began with forty miles, but after a time,
-when he grew harder, he increased this to fifty and
-often to sixty. It was at times difficult for him to
-force his way through deep, dark forest and jungle,
-along the winding wild-beast tracks, past the beasts
-themselves, who hid in trees ready to spring had he
-paused but a second; through marshes and bogs, with
-here and there a reedy lake, on which aquatic birds of
-brightest colours slept as they floated in the sunshine,
-but among the long reeds of which lay the
-ever-watchful and awful cayman.
-
-In such places as these, I think Benee owed his
-safety to his utter fearlessness and sang-froid, and to
-the speed at which he travelled.
-
-It was not a walk by any means, but a strange kind
-of swinging trot. Such a gait may still be seen in
-far-off outlying districts of the Scottish Highlands,
-where it is adopted by postal "runners", who consider
-it not only faster but less tiresome than walking.
-
-For the first hundred miles, or more, the lonely
-traveller found himself in a comparatively civilized
-country. This was not very much to his liking, and
-as a rule he endeavoured to give towns and villages,
-and even rubber forests, where Indians worked under
-white men overseers, a wide berth.
-
-Yet sometimes, hidden in a tree, he would watch
-the work going on; watch the men walking hither
-and thither with their pannikins, or deftly whirling
-the shovels they had dipped in the sap-tub and
-holding them in the dark smoke of the palm-tree nuts, or
-he would listen to their songs. But it was with no
-feeling of envy; it was quite the reverse.
-
-For Benee was free! Oh what a halo of happiness
-and glory surrounds that one little word "Free"!
-
-Then this lonely wanderer would hug himself, as it
-were, and, dropping down from his perch, start off
-once more at his swinging trot.
-
-Even as the crow flies, or the bee wings its flight,
-the length of Benee's journey would be over six
-hundred miles. But it was impossible for anyone to
-keep a bee-line, owing to the roughness of the country
-and the difficulties of every kind to be overcome, so
-that it is indeed impossible to estimate the magnitude
-of this lone Indian's exploit.
-
-His way, roughly speaking, lay between the Madeira
-River and the Great Snake River called Puras (*vide*
-map); latterly it would lead him to the lofty regions
-and plateaux of the head-waters of Maya-tata, called
-by the Peruvians the Madre de Dios, or Holy Virgin
-River.
-
-But hardly a day now passed that he had not a
-stream of some kind to cross, and wandering by its
-banks seeking for a ford delayed him considerably.
-
-He was journeying thus one morning when the
-sound of human voices not far off made him creep
-quickly into the jungle.
-
-The men did not take long to put in an appearance.
-
-A portion of some wandering, hunting, or looting
-tribe they were, and cut-throat looking scoundrels
-everyone of them--five in all.
-
-They were armed with bows and arrows and with
-spears. Their arrows, Benee could see, were tipped
-with flint, and the flint was doubtless poisoned. They
-carried also slings and broad knives in their belts of
-skin. The slings are used in warfare, but they are also
-used by shepherds--monsters who, like many in this
-country, know not the meaning of the words "mercy
-to dumb animals"--on their poor sheep.
-
-These fellows, who now lay down to rest and to eat,
-much to Benee's disgust, not to say dismay, were
-probably a party of llama (pronounced yahmah)
-herds or shepherds who had, after cutting their
-master's throat, banded together and taken to this
-roving life.
-
-So thought Benee, at all events, for he could see
-many articles of European dress, such as dainty
-scarves of silk, lace handkerchiefs, &c., as well as
-brooches, huddled over their own clothing, and one
-fierce-looking fellow pulled out a gold watch and
-pretended to look at the time.
-
-So angry was Benee that his savage nature got
-uppermost, and he handled his huge revolvers in a
-nervous way that showed his anxiety to open fire
-and spoil the cut-throats' dinner. But he restrained
-himself for the time being.
-
-In addition to the two revolvers, Benee carried the
-repeating rifle. It was the fear of spoiling his
-ammunition that led to his being in this dreadful fix. But
-for his cartridges he could have swum the river with
-the speed of a gar-fish.
-
-What a long, long time they stayed, and how very
-leisurely they munched and fed!
-
-A slight sound on his left flank caused Benee to
-gaze hastily round. To his horror, he found himself
-face to face with a puma.
-
-Here was indeed a dilemma!
-
-If he fired he would make his presence known, and
-small mercy could he expect from the cut-throats.
-At all hazards he determined to keep still.
-
-The yellow eyes of this American lion flared and
-glanced in a streak of sunshine shot downwards
-through the bush, and it was this probably which
-dimmed his vision, for he made no attempt to spring
-forward.
-
-Benee dared scarcely to breathe; he could hear
-the beating of his own heart, and could not help
-wondering if the puma heard it too.
-
-At last the brute backed slowly astern, with a
-wriggling motion.
-
-But Benee gained courage now.
-
-During the long hours that followed, several great
-snakes passed him so closely that he could have
-touched their scaly backs. Some of these were lithe
-and long, others very thick and slow in motion, but
-nearly all were beautifully coloured in metallic tints
-of crimson, orange, green, and bronze, and all were
-poisonous.
-
-The true Bolivian, however, has but little fear of
-snakes, knowing that unless trodden upon, or
-otherwise actively interfered with, they care not to waste
-their venom by striking.
-
-At long, long last the cut-throats got up to leave.
-They would before midnight no doubt reach some
-lonely outpost and demand entertainment at the
-point of the knife, and if strange travellers were
-there, sad indeed would be their fate.
-
-Benee now crawled, stiff and cramped, out from his
-damp and dangerous hiding-place. He found a ford
-not far off, and after crossing, he set off once more at
-his swinging trot, and was soon supple and happy enough.
-
-On and on he went all that day, to make up for lost
-time, and far into the starry night.
-
-The hills were getting higher now, the valleys
-deeper and damper between, and stream after stream
-had to be forded.
-
-It must have been long past eight o'clock when,
-just as Benee was beginning to long for food and rest,
-his eyes fell on a glimmering light at the foot of a
-high and dark precipice.
-
-He warily ventured forward and found it proceeded
-from a shepherd's hut; inside sat the man himself,
-quietly eating a kind of thick soup, the basin flanked
-by a huge flagon of milk, with roasted yams. Great,
-indeed, was the innocent fellow's surprise when Benee
-presented himself in the doorway. A few words in
-Bolivian, kindly uttered by our wayfarer, immediately
-put the man at ease, however, and before long Benee
-was enjoying a hearty supper, followed by a brew of
-excellent maté.
-
-He was a very simple son of the desert, this
-shepherd, but a desultory kind of conversation was
-maintained, nevertheless, until far into the night.
-
-For months and months, he told Benee, he had
-lived all alone with his sheep in these grassy uplands,
-having only the companionship of his half-wild, but
-faithful dog. But he was contented and happy, and
-had plenty to eat and drink.
-
-It was just sunrise when Benee awoke from a long
-refreshing sleep on his bed of skins. There was the
-odour of smoke all about, and presently the shepherd
-himself bustled in and bade him "Good-morning!", or
-"Heaven's blessing!" which is much the same.
-
-A breakfast of rough, black cake, with butter, fried
-fish, and maté, made Benee as happy as a king and as
-fresh as a mountain trout, and soon after he said
-farewell and started once more on his weary road.
-The only regret he experienced rose from the fact that
-he had nothing wherewith to reward this kindly
-shepherd for his hospitality.
-
-Much against his will, our wanderer had now to
-make a long detour, for not even a goat could have
-scaled the ramparts of rock in front of him.
-
-In another week he found himself in one of the
-bleakest and barrenest stretches of country that it
-is possible to imagine. It was a high plateau, and
-covered for the most part with stunted bushes and
-with crimson heath and heather.
-
-Benee climbed a high hill that rose near him, and
-as he stood on the top thereof, just as the sun in a
-glory of orange clouds and crimson rose slowly and
-majestically over the far-off eastern forest, a scene
-presented itself to him that, savage though he was,
-caused him for a time to stand mute with admiration
-and wonder.
-
-Then he remembered what little Peggy told him
-once in her sweet and serious voice: "Always pray at
-sunrise".
-
- | "Always pray at sunrise,
- | For 'tis God who makes the day;
- | When shades of evening gather round
- | Kneel down again and pray.
- | And He, who loves His children dear,
- | Will send some angel bright
- | To guard you while you're sleeping sound
- | And watch you all the night."
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-And on this lonely hill-top Benee did kneel down
-to pray a simple prayer, while golden clouds were
-changing to bronze and snowy white, and far off on
-the forest lands hazy vapours were still stretched
-across glens and valleys.
-
-As he rose from his knees he could hear, away down
-beneath him, a wild shout, and gazing in the direction
-from which it came, he saw seven semi-nude savages
-hurrying towards the mountain with the evident
-intention of making him prisoner.
-
-It was terrible odds; but as there was no escape,
-Benee determined to fight.
-
-As usual, they were armed with bow and arrow and sling.
-
-Indeed, they commenced throwing stones with great
-precision before they reached the hill-foot, and one of
-these fell at Benee's feet.
-
-Glad, indeed, was he next minute to find himself in
-a kind of natural trench which could have been held
-by twenty men against a hundred.
-
-On and up, crawling on hands and knees, came the
-savages.
-
-But Benee stood firm, rifle in hand, and waiting
-his chance.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII--BENEE ENTRENCHED--SAVAGE REVELS IN THE FOREST
-==========================================================
-
-The trench in which he found himself was far
-higher than was necessary, and fronted by huge
-stones. It was evidently the work of human hands,
-but by what class of people erected Benee could not
-imagine.
-
-He could spare a few boulders anyhow, so, while
-the enemy was still far below, he started first one,
-then another, and still another, on a cruise down the
-mountain-side and on a mission of death.
-
-These boulders broke into scores of large fragments
-long before they reached the savages, two of whom
-were struck, one being killed outright.
-
-And Benee knew his advantage right well, and,
-taking careful aim now with his repeating-rifle--a
-sixteen-shooter it was,--he fired.
-
-He saw the bullet raise the dust some yards ahead
-of the foe, who paused to gaze upwards in great
-amazement.
-
-But next shot went home, for Benee had got the
-range, and one of the five threw up his hands with
-a shriek, and fell on his face, to rise no more.
-
-Rendered wild by the loss of their companions, the
-others drew their knives and made a brave start for
-Benee's trench.
-
-But what could poor savages do against the deadly
-fire of civilized warfare. When another of their
-number paid the penalty of his rashness, the other
-three took fright and went racing and tumbling down
-the hill so quickly that no more of Benee's shots took
-effect.
-
-Roland had given Benee a field-glass before he
-started, and through this he watched the flying figures
-for many a mile, noting exactly the way they took,
-and determining in his own mind to choose a somewhat
-different route, even though he should have to
-make a wide detour.
-
-He started downhill almost immediately, well-knowing
-that these dark-skinned devils would return
-reinforced to seek revenge.
-
-He knew, moreover, that they could follow up a
-trail, so he did all in his power to pick out the hardest
-parts of this great moorland on which to walk.
-
-He came at last to a stream. It was very shallow,
-and he plunged in at once.
-
-This was indeed good luck, and Benee thought now
-that Peggy's God, who paints the sky at sunrise,
-was really looking after him. He could baulk his
-pursuers now, or, at least, delay them. For they
-would not be able to tell in which direction he had
-gone.
-
-So Benee walked in the water for three miles.
-This walk was really a leaping run. He would have
-gone farther, but all at once the stream became very
-rapid indeed, and on his ears fell the boom of a
-waterfall.
-
-So he got on shore with all haste.
-
-But for five miles on from the foot of the leaping,
-dashing, foaming linn, the stream was flanked by
-acres of round, smooth boulders.
-
-These could tell no tale. On these Benee would
-leave no trail. He leapt from one to the other, and
-was rejoiced at last to find that they led him to a
-forest.
-
-This was indeed a grateful surprise, so he entered
-the shade at once.
-
-Benee, after his exciting fight and his very long
-run, greatly needed rest, so he gathered some splendid
-fruit and nuts, despite the chattering and threatened
-attacks of a whole band of hideous baboons, and then
-threw himself down under the shade of a tree in
-a small glade and made a hearty meal.
-
-He felt thirsty now. But as soon as there was
-silence once more in the forest, and even the parrots
-had gone to sleep in the drowsy noontide heat, he
-could hear the rush of water some distance ahead.
-
-He got up immediately and marched in the direction
-from which the sound came, and was soon on the
-pebbled shore of another burn.
-
-He drank a long, sweet draught of the cool,
-delicious water, and felt wondrously refreshed.
-
-And now a happy thought occurred to him.
-
-Sooner or later he felt certain the savages would
-find his trail. They would track him to this stream
-and believe he had once again tried to break the
-pursuit by wading either up or down stream.
-
-His plan was, therefore, to go carefully back on his
-tracks and rest hidden all day until, foiled in their
-attempt to make him prisoner, they should return
-homeward.
-
-This plan he carried into immediate execution, and
-in a thicket, quite screened from all observation, he
-laid him down.
-
-He was soon fast asleep.
-
-But in probably a couple of hours' time he sat
-cautiously up, and, gently lifting a branch, looked
-forth.
-
-For voices had fallen on his ear, and next minute
-there went filing past on his trail no fewer than fifteen
-well-armed warriors.
-
-They stopped dancing and shouting at the tree
-where Benee had sat down to feed, then, brandishing
-their broad knives, dashed forward to the stream.
-
-They had evidently gone up the river for miles,
-but finding no trail on the other bank returned to
-search the down-stream.
-
-In his hiding-place Benee could hear their wild
-shouts of vengeance-deferred, and though he feared
-not death, right well he knew that neither his rifle
-nor revolvers could long protect him against such
-desperate odds as this.
-
-There was now peace once more, and the shades of
-evening--the short tropical gloaming--were falling
-when he heard the savages returning.
-
-He knew their language well.
-
-It was soon evident that they did not mean to go
-any farther that night, for they were quite tired out.
-
-They were not unprovided with food and drink
-such as it was, and evidently meant to make
-themselves happy.
-
-A fire was soon lit in the glade, and by its glare
-poor Benee, lying low there and hardly daring to
-move a limb, could see the sort of savages he would
-have to deal with if they found him.
-
-They were fierce-looking beyond conception. Most
-of them had long matted hair, and the ears of some
-carried the hideous pelele. The lobe of each ear is
-pierced when the individual is but a boy, and is
-gradually stretched until it is a mere strip of skin
-capable of supporting a bone or wooden, grooved little
-wheel twice as large as a dollar. The stretched lobe
-of the ear fits round this like the tyre round a bicycle
-wheel.
-
-The faces of these men, although wild-looking, were
-not positively ill-favoured, though the mouths were
-large and sensual. But if ever devil lurked in human
-eyes it lurked in theirs.
-
-They wore blankets, and some had huge chains of
-gold and silver nuggets round their necks.
-
-Their arms were now piled, or, more correctly
-speaking, they were trundled down in a heap by the
-tree.
-
-While most of them lay with their feet to the now
-roaring fire, a space was left for the cook, who
-cleverly arranged a kind of gipsy double-trident over
-the clear embers and commenced to get ready the meal.
-
-The uprights carried cross pieces of wood, and on
-these both fish and flesh were laid to broil, while large
-yams and sweet-potatoes were placed in the ashes to
-roast.
-
-By the time dinner was cooked the night was dark
-enough, but the glimmer of the firelight lit up the
-savages' faces and cast Rembrandtesque shadows far
-behind.
-
-It was a weird and terrible scene, but it had little
-effect on Benee, who had often witnessed tableaux far
-more terrifying than this.
-
-Then the orgie commenced. They helped themselves
-with their fingers and tore the fish and flesh off
-with their splendid teeth.
-
-Huge chattees of chicaga, a most filthy but
-intoxicating beer, now made their appearance. It was
-evident enough that these men were used to being on
-the war-path and hunting-field.
-
-The wine or beer is made in a very disgusting
-manner, but its manufacture, strangely enough, is
-not confined to Bolivia. I have seen much the same
-liquor in tropical Africa, made by the Somali Indians,
-and in precisely the same way.
-
-The old women or hags of the village are assembled
-at, say, a chief's house, and large quantities of
-cocoanuts and various other fruits are heaped together in
-the centre of a hut, as well as large, tub-like vessels
-and chattees of water.
-
-Down the old and almost toothless hags squat,
-and, helping themselves to lumps of cocoa-nut, &c.,
-they commence to mumble and chew these, now and
-then moistening their mouths with a little water, the
-juice is spit out into calabashes, and when these are
-full of the awful mess they are emptied into the big bin.
-
-It is a great gala-day with these hideous old hags,
-a meeting that they take advantage of not only for
-making wine but for abusing their neighbours.
-
-How they cackle and grin, to be sure, as their
-mouths work to and fro! How they talk and chatter,
-and how they chew! It is chatter and chew, chew
-and chatter, all the time, and the din they make with
-teeth and tongues would deafen a miller.
-
-When all is finished, the bins are left to settle
-and ferment, and in three days' time, the
-supernatant liquor is poured off and forms the wine
-called chicaga.
-
-Had anyone doubted the intoxicating power of
-this vilest of all vile drinks, a glance at the scene
-which soon ensued around the fire would speedily
-have convinced him.
-
-Benee lay there watching these fiends as they
-gradually merged from one phase of drunkenness to
-another, and fain would he have sent half a dozen
-revolver bullets into the centre of the group, but his
-life depended on his keeping still.
-
-The savages first confined themselves to merry
-talking, with coarse jokes and ribaldry, and frequent
-outbursts of laughter. But when they had quaffed
-still more, they must seize their knives and get up to
-dance. Round and round the blazing fire they whirled
-and staggered through the smoke and through it
-again, with demoniacal shouts and awful yells, that
-awakened echoes among the forest wild beasts far
-and near.
-
-Then they pricked their bodies with their knives
-till the blood ran, and with this they splashed each
-other in hideous wantonness till faces and clothes were
-smeared in gore.
-
-All this could but have one ending--a fight.
-
-Benee saw one savage stabbed to the heart, and then
-the orgie became a fierce battle.
-
-Now was Benee's time to escape.
-
-Yet well he knew how acute the power of hearing
-is among the Bolivian savages. One strange noise,
-even the crackle of a bush, and the fighting would
-end in a hunt, and he would undoubtedly lose his life.
-
-But he wriggled and crawled like a snake in the
-grass until twenty yards away, and now he moved
-cautiously, slowly off.
-
-Soon the glare of the fire among the high trees
-was seen no more, and the yelling and cries were far
-behind and getting more and more indistinct every
-minute.
-
-Benee refreshed himself at the stream, pulled some
-food from his pocket, and ate it while he ran.
-
-He knew, however, that after fighting would come
-drowsiness, and that his late entertainers would soon
-be fast asleep, some of their heads pillowed, perhaps,
-on the dead body of their murdered comrade.
-
-If there be in all this world a more demonish wretch
-than man is in a state of nature, or when--even among
-Christians--demoralized by drink, I wish to get hold
-of a specimen for my private menagerie. But the
-creature should be kept in a cage by itself. I would
-not insult my monkeys with the companionship of
-such a wretch, should it be man or beast.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII--THE MARCH TO THE LOVELESS LAND
-============================================
-
-On and on hurried Benee now, at his old swinging trot.
-
-On and on beneath the splendid stars, his only
-companions, that looked so calmly sweet and appeared so
-near. God's angels surely they, speaking, as they
-gazed down, words from their home on high, peace
-and good-will to men, and happiness to all that lived
-and breathed.
-
-On and on over plains, through moor and marsh,
-by lake and stream, by forest dark and jungle wild.
-It was evident that Benee meant to put leagues
-between himself and the camp of his recent enemies
-before each star grew beautiful and died; before the
-fiery sun leapt red above the eastern hills, and turned
-the darkness into day.
-
-Benee had come onwards with such a rush that
-even the slimy alligators, by pond or brown lake, left
-their lairs among the tall nodding reeds and dashed in
-terror into the water.
-
-Prowling wild beasts, the jaguar and puma, also
-hurried off at his approach, and many a scared bird
-flew screaming up into the darkling air.
-
-But Benee heeded nothing. His way lay yonder.
-That bright particular star away down on the
-southwestern horizon shone over the great unexplored
-region of Bolivia.
-
-Morning after morning it would be higher and
-higher above him, and when it shone at an angle of
-forty-five degrees he would be approaching the land
-of the cannibals.
-
-Yes, but it was still a far cry to that country. By
-the time the sun did rise, and the mists gathered
-themselves off the valleys and glens that lay low beneath
-him, Benee felt sadly in want of rest.
-
-He found a tree that would make him a good sleeping
-place, for the country he was now traversing abounded
-in hideous snakes and gigantic lizards, and he courted
-not the companionship of either.
-
-The tree was an Abies of some undefined species.
-
-Up and up crawled Benee, somewhat encumbered
-by his arms.
-
-He got through a kind of "lubbers' hole" at last,
-though with much difficulty, and, safe enough here,
-he curled up with his face to the stem, and was soon
-so fast asleep that cannons could not have awakened him.
-
-But satisfied Nature got uneasy at last, and far on
-towards evening he opened his eyes and wondered
-where he was.
-
-Still only half-awake, he staggered to his feet and
-made a step forward. It was only to fall over the
-end of a huge matted branch, but this branch lowered
-him gently on to the one immediately beneath it, and
-this down to the next, and so on. A strange mode of
-progression certainly, but Benee found himself sitting
-on the ground at last, as safe and sound as if he had
-come down in a parachute.
-
-Then his recollection came back to him. He sought
-out some fruit-trees now and made a hearty meal,
-quenched his thirst at a spring, and once more
-resumed his journey.
-
-For three days he marched onwards, but always by
-night. The country was not safe by day, and he
-preferred the companionship of wild beasts to that of
-wilder men. In this Benee was wise.
-
-But awaking somewhat earlier one afternoon, he
-saw far beneath him, a town, and in Benee's eyes it
-was a very large one.
-
-And now a happy idea struck him. He had money,
-and here was civilization. By and by he would be in
-the wilds once more, and among savages who knew
-nothing of cash. Why should he not descend, mix
-with the giddy throng, and make purchases of red
-cloth, of curios, and of beads. He determined to do so.
-
-But it would not do to go armed. So he hid his
-rifle and pistols in the bush, covering them carefully
-up with dried grass. Then he commenced the descent.
-Yes, the little town, the greater part of which was
-built of mud hovels, was full, and the streets crowded,
-many in the throng being Spaniards, Peruvians, and
-Portuguese.
-
-Benee sauntered carelessly on and presently came to
-the bazaar.
-
-Many of the police eyed him curiously, and one or
-two followed him.
-
-But he had no intention of being baulked in his purpose.
-
-So he entered a likely shop, and quickly made his
-purchases.
-
-Wrapping these carefully up, he slung the bundle
-over his shoulder and left.
-
-He stumbled over a lanky Portuguese policeman a
-few yards off.
-
-The man would have fallen had not Benee seized
-him in his iron grasp and brought him again to his
-equilibrium.
-
-Then he spoke a few words in Bolivian, and made
-signs that he wished to eat and drink.
-
-"Aguardiente!" said the officer, his eyes sparkling
-with joy.
-
-He had really harboured some intentions of throwing
-Benee into the tumble-down old prison, but a
-drink would be a far better solution of the difficulty,
-and he cheerfully led the way to a sort of hotel.
-
-And in twenty minutes' time this truly intelligent
-member of the force and Benee were lying on skin
-mats with apparently all the good things in this life
-spread out before them.
-
-The officer was curious, as all such men are, whether
-heathens or not, to know all about Benee, and put to
-him a score of questions at least, part of which Benee
-replied to with a delicate and forgivable fib.
-
-So the policeman was but little wiser at the end of
-the conversation than he was at the beginning.
-
-About half an hour before sunset, Benee was once
-more far up on the moorlands, and making straight
-for the place where he had hidden his guns and
-ammunition.
-
-But he stopped short and stared with astonishment
-when, before rounding the corner of the wood, a pistol
-shot rang out in the quiet air, followed by the most
-terrible shrieking and howling he had ever listened to.
-
-He hurried on quickly enough now, and as he did
-so, a whole herd of huge monkeys, apparently scared
-out of their senses, rushed madly past him.
-
-Close to the jungle he found one of his revolvers.
-One chamber had been emptied, and not far off lay a
-baboon in the agonies of death. Benee, who, savage
-though he was, evidently felt for the creature,
-mercifully expended another shot on it, and placed it
-beyond the reach of woe.
-
-He was glad to find his rifle and other revolver
-intact, but the cartridges from his belt were scattered
-about in all directions, and strenuous efforts had
-evidently been made to tear open his leathern
-ammunition-box.
-
-It took some time to make everything straight again.
-
-Now down went the sun, and very soon, after a
-short twilight, out came the stars once more.
-
-Benee now resumed his journey as straight as he
-could across the plateau.
-
-He had not travelled many hours, however, before
-clouds began to bank up and obscure the sky, and it
-became very dark.
-
-A storm was brewing, and, ushered in by low muttering
-thunder in the far distance, it soon came on in earnest.
-
-As the big drops of rain began to fall, shining in the
-flashes of the lightning like a shower of molten gold,
-Benee sought the shelter of a rocky cave which was
-near to him.
-
-He laid him down on the rough dry grass to wait
-until the storm should clear away.
-
-He felt drowsy, however. Perhaps the unusually
-good fare he had partaken of in the village had
-something to do with this; but of late his hardships had
-been very great indeed, so it is no wonder that now
-exhausted Nature claimed repose.
-
-The last thing he was conscious of was a long, low,
-mournful cry that seemed to come from the far interior
-of the cave.
-
-It was broad daylight when he again awoke, and
-such an awakening!
-
-Great snowy-breasted owls sat blinking at the
-light, but all the rocks around, or the shelves thereof,
-were alive with coiling, wriggling snakes of huge size.
-
-One had twined round his leg, and he knew that if
-he but moved a muscle, it would send its terrible
-fangs deep into his flesh, and his journey would be at
-an end.
-
-Gradually, however, the awful creature unwound
-itself and wriggled away.
-
-The sight of this snake-haunted cave was too much
-for even Benee's nerves, and he sprang up and speedily
-dashed, all intact, into the open air.
-
-----
-
-Notwithstanding his extraordinary adventure in
-the cave of serpents, the wandering Indian felt in
-fine form that day.
-
-The air was now much cooler after the storm, all
-the more so, no doubt, that Benee was now travelling
-on a high table-land which stretched southwards and
-west in one long, dreary expanse till bounded on the
-horizon by ridges of lofty serrated mountains, in the
-hollow of which, high in air, patches of snow rested,
-and probably had so rested for millions of years.
-
-The sky was very bright. The trees at this elevation,
-as well as the fruit, the flowers, and stunted
-shrubs, were just such as one finds at the Cape of Good
-Hope and other semi-tropical regions. The ground
-on which he walked or trotted along was a mass of
-beauty and perfume, rich pink or crimson heaths,
-heather and geraniums everywhere, with patches of
-pine-wood having little or no undergrowth. Many
-rare and beautiful birds lilted and sang their songs
-of love on every side, strange larks were high in air,
-some lighting every now and then on the ground, the
-music of their voices drawn out as they glided
-downwards into one long and beautiful cadence.
-
-There seemed to be a sadness in these last notes, as
-if the birds would fain have warbled for ever and for
-aye at heaven's high gate, though duty drew them
-back to this dull earth of ours.
-
-But dangers to these feathered wildlings hovered
-even in the sunlit sky, and sometimes turned the songs
-of those speckled-breasted laverocks into wails of
-despair.
-
-Behold yonder hawk silently darting from the
-pine-wood! High, high he darts into the air; he has
-positioned his quarry, and downwards now he swoops
-like Indian arrow from a bow, and the lark's bright
-and happy song is hushed for ever. His beautiful mate
-sitting on her cosy nest with its five brown eggs looks
-up astonished and frightened. Down fall a few drops
-of red blood, as if the sky had wept them. Down
-flutter a few feathers, and her dream of happiness is
-a thing of the past.
-
-And that poor widowed lark will forsake her eggs
-now, and wander through the heath and the scrub till
-she dies.
-
-----
-
-Benee had no adventures to-day, but, seeing far off
-a band of travellers, he hid himself in the afternoon.
-For our Indian wanted no company.
-
-He watched them as they came rapidly on towards
-his hiding-place, but they struck off to the east long
-before reaching it, and made for the plains and
-village far below.
-
-Then Benee had his dinner and slept soundly
-enough till moonrise, for bracing and clear was
-heaven's ozonic breath in these almost Alpine regions.
-
-Only a scimitar of a moon. Not more than three
-days old was it, yet somehow it gave hope and heart
-to the lonely traveller. He remembered when a boy
-he had been taught to look upon the moon as a good
-angel, but Christianity had banished superstition, and
-he was indeed a new man.
-
-After once more refreshing himself, he started on
-his night march, hoping to put forty miles behind
-him ere the sun rose.
-
-Low lay the white haze over the woods a sheer
-seven thousand feet beneath him.
-
-It looked like snow-drifts on the darkling green.
-
-Yet here and there, near to places where the river
-glistened in the young moon's rays were bunches of
-lights, and Benee knew he was not far from towns
-and civilization. Much too near to be agreeable.
-
-He knew, however, that a few days more of his
-long weary march would bring him far away from
-these to regions unknown to the pale-face, to a land
-on which Christian feet had never trodden, a loveless
-land, a country that reeked with murder, a country
-that seemed unblessed by heaven, where all was moral
-darkness, as if indeed it were ruled by demons and
-fiends, who rejoiced only in the spilling of blood.
-
-But, nevertheless, it was Benee's own land, and he
-could smile while he gazed upwards at the now
-descending moon.
-
-Benee never felt stronger or happier than he did
-this evening, and he sang a strange wild song to
-himself, as he journeyed onwards, a kind of chant to
-which he kept step.
-
-A huge snake, black as a winter's night, uncoiled
-itself, hissed, and darted into the heath to hide. Benee
-heeded it not. A wild beast of some sort sprang past
-him with furious growl. Benee never even raised
-his rifle. And when he came to the banks of a
-reed-girt lake, and saw his chance of shooting a huge
-cayman, he cared not to draw a bead thereon. He
-just went on with his chant and on with his walk.
-Benee was truly happy and hopeful for once in his life.
-
-And amid such scenery, beneath such a galaxy of
-resplendent stars, who could have been aught else?
-
- | "How beautiful is night!
- | A dewy freshness fills the silent air;
- | No mist obscures, nor cloud, nor speck, nor stain,
- | Breaks the serene of heaven.
- | In glory yonder moon divine
- | Rolls through the dark-blue depths,
- | Beneath her steely ray
- | The desert circle spreads,
- | Like the round ocean girdled with the sky.
- | How beautiful the night!"
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-But almost before he could have believed it possible,
-so quickly do health and happiness cause time to fly, a
-long line of crimson cloud, high in the east, betokened
-the return of another day.
-
-The night-owls and the great flitting vampire bats
-saw it and retreated to darksome caves. There was
-heard no longer far over the plain the melancholy
-howl of the tiger-cat or snarl of puma or jaguar.
-
-Day was coming!
-
-Day was come!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV--THE HOME OF THE CANNIBAL--BENEE'S ROMANCE
-======================================================
-
-Like the bats and the night-birds Benee now crept
-into concealment.
-
-He sought once more the shelter of a tall pine-tree
-of the spruce species. Here he could be safe and here
-he could sleep.
-
-But after a hearty meal he took the precaution to
-lash himself to the stem, high, high up.
-
-His descent from the last tree had been accomplished
-with safety certainly, but it was of rather a
-peculiar nature, and Benee had no desire to risk his
-neck again.
-
-The wind softly sighed in the branches.
-
-A bird of the thrush species alighted about a yard
-above him, and burst into shrill sweet melody to
-welcome the rising sun.
-
-With half-closed eyes Benee could see from under
-the branches a deep-orange horizon, fading into pure
-sea-green zenithwards, then to deepest purple and
-blue where rested the crimson clouds.
-
-And now there was a glare of brighter and more
-silvery light, and the red streaks were turned into
-wreaths of snow.
-
-The sun was up, and Benee slept. But he carried
-that sweet bird's song into dreamland.
-
-----
-
-About three days after this Benee was rejoiced to
-find himself in a new land, but it was a land he knew
-well--too well.
-
-Though very high above the sea-level it was in
-reality a
-
- | "Land of the mountain and the flood".
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-Hills on hills rose on all sides of him. There were
-straths or valleys of such exceeding beauty that they
-gladdened the eye to behold. The grass grew green
-here by the banks of many a brown roaring stream,
-and here, too, cattle roamed wild and free, knee-deep
-in flowery verdure, and many a beautiful guanaco
-and herds of llamas everywhere. The streams that
-meandered through these highland straths were
-sometimes very tortuous, but perhaps a mile distant they
-would seem to lose all control of themselves and go
-madly rushing over their pebbly beds, till they dashed
-over high cliffs at last, forming splendid cascades that
-fell into deep, dark, agitated pools, the mist that rose
-above forming rainbows which were never absent
-when the sun shone.
-
-And the hillsides that bounded these valleys were
-clad in Alpine verdure, with Alpine trees and flowers,
-strangely intermingled with beautiful heaths, and in
-the open glades with gorgeous geraniums, and many
-a lovely flower never seen even in greenhouses in our
-"tame domestic England".
-
-These were valleys, but there were glens and narrow
-gorges also, where dark beetling rocks frowned over
-the brown waters of streams that rushed fiercely
-onwards round rocks and boulders, against which they
-lashed themselves into foam.
-
-On these rocks strange fantastic trees clung,
-sometimes attached but by the rootlets, sometimes with
-their heads hanging almost sheer downwards; trees
-that the next storm of wind would hurl, with crash
-and roar, into the water far beneath.
-
-Yet such rivers or big burns were the home *par
-excellence* of fish of the salmon tribe, and gazing below
-you might see here and there some huge otter, warily
-watching to spring on his finny prey.
-
-Nor were the otters alone on the *qui vive*, for,
-strange as it may seem, even pumas and tiger-cats
-often made a sullen dive into dark-brown pools, and
-emerged bearing on high some lordly red-bellied fish.
-With this they would "speel" the flowery, ferny rocks,
-and dart silently away into the depths of the forest.
-
-And this wild and beautiful country, at present
-inhabited by as wild a race of Indians as ever twanged
-the bow, but bound at no very distant date to come
-under the influence of Christianity and civilization,
-was Benee's real home. 'Twas here he roamed when
-a boy, for he had been a wanderer all his life, a nomad,
-and an inhabitant of the woods and wilds.
-
-Not a scene was unfamiliar to him. He could
-name every mountain and hill he gazed upon in his
-own strangely musical Indian tongue. Every bird,
-every creature that crept, or glided, or walked, all
-were his old friends; yes, and every tree and every
-flower, from the splendid parasitic plants that wound
-around the trees wherever the sun shone the brightest,
-and draped them in such a wealth of beauty as would
-have made all the richness and gaudiness of white
-kings and queens seem but a caricature.
-
-There was something of romance even in Benee.
-As he stood with folded arms on the brink of a
-cliff, and gazed downward into a charming glen,
-something very like tears stood in his eyes.
-
-He loved his country. It was his own, his native
-land. But the savages therein he had ceased to love.
-Because when but a boy--ah, how well he remembered
-that day,--he was sent one day by his father
-and mother to gather the berries of a deadly kind of
-thorn-bush, with the juice of which the flints in the
-points of the arrows were poisoned. Coming back
-to his parents' hut in the evening, as happy as boys
-only can be, he found the place in flames, and saw
-his father, mother, and a sister whom he loved, being
-hurried away by the savages, because the queen had
-need of them. The lot of death had fallen on them.
-Their flesh was wanted to make part of a great feast
-her majesty was about to give to a neighbouring
-potentate. Benee, who had ever been used to hunt
-for his food as a boy, or fish in the lakes and the
-brown roaring streams, that he and his parents might
-live, had always abhorred human sacrifice and human
-flesh. The latter he had seldom been prevailed upon
-even to taste.
-
-So from that terrible day he resolved to be a
-wanderer, and he registered a vow--if I may speak so
-concerning the thoughts of a poor boy-Indian--to take
-revenge when he became a man on this very tribe
-that had brought such grief and woe on him and his.
-
-Benee was still a young man, but little over
-two-and-twenty, and as he stood there thoughts came into
-his mind about a little sweetheart he had when a boy.
-
-Wee Weenah was she called; only a child of six when
-he was good sixteen. But in all his adventures, in
-forest or by the streams, Weenah used to accompany
-him. They used to be away together all day long,
-and lived on the nuts and the wild fruit that grew
-everywhere so plentifully about them, on trees, on
-bushes, or on the flowery banks.
-
-Where was Weenah now? Dead, perhaps, or taken
-away to the queen's blood-stained court. As a child
-Weenah was very beautiful, for many of these Indians
-are very far indeed from being repulsive.
-
-And Benee used to delight to dress his tiny lady-love
-in feathers of the wild birds, crimson and green
-and blue, and weave her rude garlands of the gaudiest
-flowers, to hang around her neck, or entwine in her
-long dark hair.
-
-He had gone to see Weenah--though he was then
-in grief and tears--after he had left his father's burnt
-shealing. He had told her that he was going away
-far to the north, that he was to become a hunter of
-the wilds, that he might even visit the homes of the
-white men, but that some day he would return and
-Weenah should be his wife.
-
-So they had parted thus, in childish grief and tears,
-and he had never seen her since.
-
-He might see her nevermore.
-
-While musing thus to himself, he stretched his weary
-limbs and body on the sweet-scented mossy cliff-top.
-
-It was day certainly, but was he not now at home,
-in his own, his native land?
-
-He seemed to be afraid of nothing, therefore, and
-so--he fell asleep.
-
-The bank on which he slept adjoined a darkling forest.
-
-A forest of strange dark pines, with red-brown
-stems, which, owing to the absence of all undergrowth
-save heather and moss and fern, looked like the pillars
-of some vast cavern.
-
-But there was bird music in this forest, and Benee
-had gone to sleep with the flute-like and mellow notes
-of the soo-soo falling on his ear.
-
-The soo-soo's song had accompanied him to the land
-of forgetfulness, and was mingling even now with his
-dreams--happy dreams of long ago.
-
-But list! Was that really the song of the bronze-necked
-soo-soo?
-
-He was half-awake now, but apparently dreaming still.
-
-He thought he was dreaming at all events, and
-would not have opened his eyes and so dispelled the
-dream for all the world.
-
-It was a sweet girlish voice that seemed to be
-singing--singing about him, about Benee the
-wanderer in sylvan wilds; the man who for long years
-had been alone because he loved being alone, whose
-hand--until he reached the white man's home--had
-been against everyone, and against every beast as well.
-
-And the song was a kind of sweet little ballad,
-which I should try in vain to translate.
-
-But Benee opened his eyes at last, and his astonishment
-knew no bounds as he saw, kneeling by his
-mossy couch, the self-same Weenah that he had been
-thinking and dreaming about.
-
-Though still a girl in years, being but thirteen, she
-seemed a woman in all her sympathies.
-
-Beautiful? Yes; scarcely changed as to face from
-the child of six he used to roam in the woods with in
-the long, long ago. Her dark hair hung to her waist
-and farther in two broad plaits. Her black eyes
-brimmed over with joy, and there was a flush of
-excitement on her sun-kissed cheeks.
-
-"Weenah! Oh, Weenah! Can it be you?" he
-exclaimed in the Indian tongue.
-
-"It is your own little child-love, your Weenah; and
-ah! how I have longed for you, and searched for you
-far and near. See, I am clad in the skins of the
-puma and the otter; I have killed the jaguar, too, and
-I have been far north and fought with terrible men.
-They fell before the poison of my arrows. They
-tried to catch me; but fleet of foot is Weenah, and
-they never can see me when I fly. In trees I have
-slept, on the open heather, in caves of rocks, and in
-jungle. But never, never could I find my Benee.
-Ah! life of mine, you will never go and leave us again.
-
-"Yes," she added, "Mother and Father live, and are
-well. Our home have we enlarged. 'Tis big now,
-and there is room in it for Benee.
-
-"Come; come--shall we go? But what strange,
-strange war-weapons you carry. Ah! they are the
-fire-spears of the white man."
-
-"Yes, Weenah mine! and deadly are they as the
-lightning's bolt that flashes downward from the
-storm-sky and lays dead the llama and the ox.
-
-"See yonder eagle, Weenah? Benee's aim is unerring;
-his hand is the hand of the rock, his eye the
-eye of the kron-dah" (a kind of hawk), "yet his touch
-on the trigger light as the moss-flax. Behold!"
-
-He raised the rifle as he spoke, and without even
-appearing to take aim he fired.
-
-Next moment the bird of Jove turned a somersault.
-It was a death-spasm. Down, down he fell earthwards,
-his breast-feathers following more slowly, like
-a shower of snow sparkling in the sunshine.
-
-Weenah was almost paralysed with terror, but
-Benee took her gently in his arms, and, kissing her
-brow and bonnie raven hair, soothed her and stilled
-her alarms.
-
-Hand in hand now through the forest, as in the
-days of yore! Both almost too happy to speak, Benee
-and his little Indian maiden! Hand in hand over
-the plain, through the crimson heath and the heather,
-heeding nothing, seeing nothing, knowing nothing
-save their own great happiness! Hand in hand until
-they stood beside Weenah's mother's cottage; and
-her parents soon ran out to welcome and to bless them!
-
-Theirs was no ordinary hut, for the father had been
-far to the east and had dwelt among white men on
-the banks of the rapid-rolling Madeira.
-
-When he had returned, slaves had come with him--young
-men whom he had bought, for the aborigines
-barter their children for cloth or schnapps. And
-these slaves brought with them tools of the white
-men--axes, saws, adzes, hammers, spades, and shovels.
-
-Then Shooks-gee (swift of foot) had cut himself
-timber from the forest, and, aided by his slaves, had
-set to work; and lo! in three moons this cottage by
-the wood arose, and the queen of the cannibals
-herself had none better.
-
-But Benee was welcomed and food set before him,
-milk of the llama, corn-cakes, and eggs of the heron
-and treel-ba (a kind of plover).
-
-Then warm drinks of coca (not cocoa) were given
-him, and the child Weenah's eyes were never turned
-away while he ate and drank.
-
-He smoked then, the girl sitting close by him on
-the bench and watching the strange, curling rings of
-reek rolling upwards towards the black and glittering
-rafters.
-
-"But," said Weenah's mother, "poor Benee has
-walked far and is much tired. Would not Benee like
-to cover his feet?"
-
-"Yes, our mother, Benee would sleep."
-
-"And I will watch and sing," said Weenah.
-
-"Sing the song of the forest," murmured Benee.
-
-Then Weenah sang low beside him while Benee slept.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV--SHOOKS-GEE'S STORY--A CANNIBAL QUEEN
-================================================
-
-What is called "natural curiosity" in our country,
-where almost every man is a Paul Pry, is no
-trait of the Indian's character. Or if he ever does feel
-such an impulse, it is instantly checked. Curiosity is
-but the attribute of a squaw, a savage would tell you,
-but even squaws will try to prevent such a weed from
-flourishing in their hearts.
-
-That was the reason why neither the father nor the
-mother of Benee's little lady-love thought of asking
-him a single question concerning his adventures until
-he had eaten a hearty meal and had enjoyed a
-refreshing sleep.
-
-But when Benee sat up at last and quaffed the maté
-that Weenah had made haste to get him, and just as
-the day was beginning to merge into the twilight of
-summer, he began to tell his friends and his love some
-portion of his wonderful adventures, even from the
-day when he had bidden the child Weenah a tearful
-farewell and betaken himself to a wandering life in
-the woods.
-
-His young life's story was indeed a strange one,
-
- | "Wherein he spake of most disastrous chances,
- | Of moving accidents by flood and field;
- | ... of antres vast and deserts idle,
- | Rough quarries, rocks, and hills whose heads touch heaven.
-
-----
-
-The while Weenah
-
- | "... gave him for his pains a world of sighs.
- | 'T was strange, 't was passing strange,
- | 'T was pitiful, 't was wondrous pitiful:
- | She wished she had not heard it; yet she wished
- | That heaven had made her such a man."
-
-Then when Benee came down to that portion of his
-long story when first he found the children and their
-mighty wolf-hound lost in the forest, Weenah and her
-parents listened with greater interest and intensity
-than ever.
-
-There was a fire on the rude, low hearth--a fire of
-wood, of peat, and of moss; for at the great elevation
-at which this cannibal land is situated the nights are
-chilly.
-
-It was a fire that gave fitful light as well as
-heat. It fell on the faces of Benee's listeners, and
-cast shadows grotesque behind them. It beautified
-Weenah's face till Benee thought she looked like one
-of the angels that poor Peggy used to tell him about.
-
-Then he related to them all his suspicions of Peter,
-but did not actually accuse him of bringing about the
-abduction of Peggy, to serve some vile and unknown
-purpose of his own. Next he spoke, yet spoke but
-lightly, of his long, long march, and the incidents and
-adventures therewith connected.
-
-There was much, therefore, that Benee had to tell,
-but there was also much that he had to learn or to
-be told; and now that he had finished, it was
-Shooks-gee's turn to take up the story.
-
-I wish I could do justice to this man's language,
-which was grandly figurative, or to his dramatic way
-of talking, accompanied as it was with look and gesture
-that would have elicited applause on any European
-stage. I cannot do so, therefore shall not try; but
-the following is the pith of his story.
-
-This Indian's house was on the very outside and
-most northerly end of the great wild plateau which
-was the home of these savages and cannibals.
-
-The queen, a terrible monarch, and bloodthirsty in
-the extreme, used to hold her court and lived on a
-strange mountain or hill, in the very centre of the
-rough tree and bush clad plain.
-
-For many, many a long year she had lived here, and
-to her court Indians came from afar to do her homage,
-bringing with them cloth of crimson, wine and oil,
-which they had stolen or captured in warfare from
-the white men of Madeira valley.
-
-When these presents came, the coca which her
-courtiers used to chew all day long, and the maté they
-drank, were for a time--for weeks indeed--discarded
-for the wine and fire-water of the pale-face.
-
-Fearful were the revels then held on that lone
-mountain.
-
-The queen was dainty, so too were her fierce courtiers.
-
-When the revels first began she and they could eat
-the raw or half-roasted flesh of calves and baby-llamas,
-but when their potations waxed deeper, and appetite
-began to fail, then the orgies commenced in earnest.
-Nothing would her majesty eat now--horrible to say--but
-children, and her courtiers, armed to the teeth,
-would be sent to scour the plains, to visit the mud
-huts of her people, and drag therefrom the most
-beautiful and plump boys or girls procurable.
-
-I will not tell of the fearful and awfully unnatural
-human sacrifice--the murder of the innocents--that
-now took place.
-
-Demons could not have been more revolting in their
-cruelties than were those savage courtiers as they
-obeyed the queen's behests.
-
-Let me drop the curtain over this portion of the tale.
-Well, this particular cottage or hut, being on the
-confines of the country, had not been visited by the
-queen's fearsome soldiers. But even had they come
-they would have found that Weenah was far away in
-the woods, for her father Shooks-gee loved her much.
-But one evening there came up out of the dark
-pinewood forest, that lay to the north, a great band of
-wandering natives.
-
-They were all armed and under the command of one
-of her majesty's most bloodthirsty and daring chiefs.
-
-Hand to claw this man had fought pumas and
-jaguars, and slain them, armed only with his two-edged
-knife.
-
-This savage Rob Roy M'Gregor despised both bow-and-arrow
-and sling. Only at close quarters would he
-fight with man or beast, and although he bore the
-scars and slashes of many a fearful encounter, he had
-always come off victorious.
-
-Six feet four inches in height was this war-Indian
-if an inch, and his dress was a picturesque costume of
-skins with the tails attached. A huge mat of hair,
-his own, with emu's feathers drooping therefrom, was
-his only head-gear, but round his neck he wore a chain
-of polished pebbles, with heavy gold rings, in many of
-which rubies and diamonds sparkled and shone.
-
-But, ghastly to relate, between each pebble and
-between the rings of gold and precious stones, was
-threaded a tanned human ear. More than twenty of
-these were there.
-
-They had been cut from the heads of white men
-whom this chief--Kaloomah was his name--had
-slain, and the rings had been torn from their dead
-fingers.
-
-This was the band then that had arrived as the sun
-was going down at the hut of Shooks-gee, and this
-was their chief.
-
-The latter demanded food for his men, and Shooks-gee,
-with his trembling wife--Weenah was hidden--made
-haste to obey, and a great fire was lit out of doors,
-and flesh of the llama hung over it to roast.
-
-But the strangest thing was this. Seated on a
-hardy little mule was a sad but beautiful girl--white
-she was, and unmistakably English. Her eyes were
-very large and wistful, and she looked at Kaloomah
-and his band in evident fear and dread, starting and
-shrinking from the chief whenever he came near her
-or spoke.
-
-But the daintiest portion of the food was handed
-to her, and she ate in silence, as one will who eats in
-fear.
-
-The wild band slept in the bush, a special bed of
-dry grass being made for the little white queen, as
-Kaloomah called her, and a savage set to watch her
-while she slept.
-
-Next morning, when the wild chief and his braves
-started onwards, Shooks-gee was obliged to march
-along with them.
-
-Kaloomah had need of him. That was all the
-explanation vouchsafed.
-
-But this visit to the queen's home had given
-Weenah's father an insight into court life and usages
-that he could not otherwise have possessed.
-
-Kaloomah's band bore along with them huge bales
-of cloth and large boxes of beads. How they had
-become possessed of these Shooks-gee never knew, and
-could not guess.
-
-The grim and haughty queen, surrounded by her
-body-guard of grotesque and hideous warriors with
-their slashed and fearful faces, and the peleles hanging
-in the lobes of their ears, was seated at the farther
-end of a great wall, and on a throne covered with the
-skins of wild beasts.
-
-All in front the floor was carpeted with crimson,
-and her majesty sparkled with gold ornaments. A
-tiara of jewels encircled her brow, and a living snake
-of immense size, with gray eyes that never closed,
-formed a girdle round her waist.
-
-In her hand she held a poisoned spear, and at her
-feet crouched a huge jaguar.
-
-She was a tyrant queen, reigning over a people
-who, though savage, and cannibals to boot, had never
-dared to gainsay a word or order she uttered.
-
-Passionate in the extreme, too, she was, and if a slave
-or subject dared to disobey, a prick from the poisoned
-spear was the reward, and he or she was dragged out
-into the bush to writhe and die in terrible agony.
-
-Probably a more frightful woman never reigned
-as queen, even in cannibal lands.
-
-Kaloomah, on his arrival, bent himself down--nay,
-but threw himself on his knees and face abjectly
-before her, as if he were scarcely worthy to be her
-footstool.
-
-But she greeted his arrival with a smile, and bade
-him arise.
-
-"Many presents have we brought," he said in the
-figurative language of the Indian. "Many presents
-to the beautiful mother of the sun. Cloth of scarlet,
-of blue, and of green, cloth of rainbow colours, jewels
-and beads, and the fire-water of the pale-faces."
-
-"Produce me the fire-water of the pale-faces," she
-returned. "I would drink."
-
-Her voice was husky, hoarse, and horrible.
-
-Kaloomah beckoned to a slave, and in a few minutes
-a cocoa-nut shell, filled with rum, was held to her
-lips.
-
-The queen drank, and seemed happier after this.
-Kaloomah thought he might now venture to broach
-another subject.
-
-"We have brought your majesty also a little daughter
-of the pale-faces!"
-
-Then Peggy--for the reader will have guessed it
-was she--was led trembling in before her, and made
-to kneel.
-
-But the queen's brows had lowered when she beheld
-the child's great beauty. She made her advance, and
-seizing her by the hand, held her at arm's-length.
-
-.. _`"SHE ... HELD HER AT ARM'S-LENGTH"`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-158.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: "SHE ... HELD HER AT ARM'S LENGTH"
-
- "SHE ... HELD HER AT ARM'S LENGTH"
-
-
-"Take her away!" she cried. "I can love her
-not. Put her in prison below ground!"
-
-And the beautiful girl was hurried away.
-
-To be put in prison below the ground meant to be
-buried alive. But Kaloomah had no intention of
-obeying the queen on this occasion, and the girl
-pale-face was conducted to a well-lighted bamboo hut and
-placed in charge of a woman slave.
-
-This slave looked a heart-broken creature, but
-seemed kind and good, and now made haste to spread
-the girl's bed of leaves on a bamboo bench, and to
-place before her milk of the llama, with much luscious
-fruit and nuts. She needed little pressing to eat, or
-drink, or sleep. The poor child had almost ceased to
-wonder, or even to be afraid of anything.
-
-But now comes the last act in Shooks-gee's strange
-story.
-
-Two days after the arrival of the warlike band
-from the far north, Kaloomah had once more presented
-himself before the queen. He came unannounced
-this time, and with him were seven fierce-looking
-soldiers, armed to the teeth with slings and stones,
-with bows and arrows, and with spears.
-
-The conversation that had ensued was somewhat
-as follows, being interpreted into our plain and
-humdrum English:--
-
-*The Queen*. "Why advances my general and slave
-except on his knees, even as come the frogs?"
-
-*Kaloomah*. "My queen will pardon me. I will not
-so offend again. Your majesty has reigned long and
-happily."
-
-*Q*. "True, slave."
-
-She seized the poisoned spear as she spoke, and
-would have used it freely; but at a word from
-Kaloomah it was wrenched from her grasp.
-
-*K*. "Your majesty's reign has ended! The old
-queen must make room for the beautiful daughter
-of the pale-faces. Yet will your beneficence live in
-the person of the new queen, and in our hearts--the
-hearts of those who have fought for you. For we
-each and all shall taste of your roasted flesh!"
-
-Then, turning quickly to the soldiers, "Seize her
-and drag her forth!" he cried, "and do your duty
-speedily."
-
-I must not be too graphic in my description of the
-scene that followed. But the ex-queen was led to
-a darksome hut, and there she was speedily despatched.
-
-That night high revelry was held in the royal camp
-of the cannibals. Many prisoners were killed and
-roasted, and the feast was a fearful and awful one.
-
-But not a chief was there in all that crowd who did
-not partake of the flesh of his late queen, while horn
-trumpets blared and war tom-toms were wildly beaten.
-
-A piece of the fearful flesh was even given to the
-pale-face girl's attendant, with orders that she must
-make her charge partake thereof.
-
-The girl was spared this terrible ordeal, however.
-
-But long after midnight the revelry and the wild
-music went on, then ceased, and all was still.
-
-The unhappy prisoner lay listening till sleep stole
-down on a star-ray and wafted her off to the land
-of sweet forgetfulness.
-
-----
-
-Next day, amidst wild unearthly clamour and music,
-she was led from the tent and seated on the throne.
-Garments of otter skins and crimson cloth were
-cast on the throne and draped over the beautiful
-child. She was encircled with flowers of rarest hue,
-and emu's feathers were stuck, plume-like, in her
-bonnie hair.
-
-Meanwhile the trumpets blared more loudly, and
-the tom-toms were struck with treble force, then all
-ceased at once, and there was a silence deep as death,
-as everyone prostrated himself or herself before the
-newly-made young queen.
-
-Kaloomah rose at last, and advanced with bended
-back and head towards her, and with an intuitive
-sense of her new-born dignity she touched him gently
-on the shoulder and bade him stand erect.
-
-He did so, and then placed in her hand the sceptre
-of the dead queen--the poison-tipped spear.
-
-Whatever might happen now, the girl knew that
-she was safe for a time, and her spirits rose in
-consequence.
-
-This, then, was the story told by Shooks-gee, the
-father of Benee's child-love.
-
-----
-
-Had Dick Temple himself been there he could no
-longer have doubted the fidelity of poor Benee.
-
-But there was much to be done, and it would need
-all the tact and skill of this wily Indian to carry
-out his plans.
-
-He could trust his father and mother, as he called
-Weenah's parents, and he now told them that he had
-come, if possible, to deliver Peggy, or if that were
-impossible, to hand her a letter that should give her
-both comfort and hope.
-
-Queen Peggy's apartments on the mountain were
-cannibalistically regal in their splendour. The principal
-entrance to her private room was approached by a
-long avenue of bamboo rails, completely lined with
-skulls and bones, and the door thereof was also
-surrounded by the same kind of horrors.
-
-But every one of her subjects was deferential to
-her, and appeared awe-struck with her beauty.
-
-And now Benee consulted with his parents as to
-what had best be done.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI--ON THE BANKS OF A BEAUTIFUL RIVER
-==============================================
-
-They would not allow Benee to harbour for a
-single moment the idea of stealing the queen
-and escaping with her into the forest.
-
-Two thousand armed men were stationed within a
-mile of the camp, so Benee would speedily be killed,
-and in all likelihood Queen Peggy also.
-
-No; and he must go no farther into the land of the
-cannibals.
-
-But he, Shooks-gee, undertook to give the queen
-a little note-book, in which a letter was written from
-her "brother", stating that all haste was being made
-to come to her deliverance. He would receive back
-the note-book, and therein would doubtless be written
-poor Peggy's letter. Meanwhile Benee must wait.
-
-Shooks-gee started on his mission next day.
-
-He was away for a whole week, but it seemed but
-a few hours to Benee. He had divested himself of
-his arms, and given the cloth and beads to Weenah's
-mother. Then all the dear old life of his boyhood
-seemed to be renewed. Weenah and he wandered
-wild and free once more in the forest and over the
-heath-clad plains; they fished in lake and stream;
-they ate and drank together under the shade of the
-pine-tree, and listened to the love-song of the sweet
-soo-soo.
-
-It was all like a happy, happy dream. And is not
-the love-life of the young always a dream of bliss?
-Ah! but it is one from which there is ever an
-awakening.
-
-And with the return of Shooks-gee, Benee's dream
-came to an end.
-
-Peggy had written her long, sad story in the notebook.
-
-Benee knew it was long, but he could not read it.
-
-Then farewells were said.
-
-The child Weenah clung to Benee's neck and wept.
-She thought she could not let him go, and at last he
-had to gently tear himself away and disappear speedily
-in the forest.
-
-Just one glance back at Weenah's sad and wistful
-face, then the jungle swallowed him up, and he would
-be seen by Weenah, mayhap, never again.
-
-----
-
-It was not without considerable misgivings that
-Roland and Dick Temple made a start for the
-country of the cannibals.
-
-The relief party consisted but of one hundred
-white men all told, with about double that number
-of carriers. It was, of course, the first real experience
-of these boys on the war-path, and difficulty after
-difficulty presented itself, but was bravely met and
-overcome.
-
-"Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown."
-
-Probably the general of an army, be it of what
-size it may, is more to be pitied than even a king.
-The latter has his courtiers and his parliament to
-advise him; the general is *princeps*, he is chief, and
-has only his own skill and judgment to fall back upon.
-
-It had been suggested by Burly Bill that instead
-of journeying overland as a first start, and having
-to cross the whirling river Purus and many lesser
-streams before striking the Madeira some distance
-above the Amazon, they should drop down-stream in
-steamer-loads, and assemble at the junction of the
-former with the latter.
-
-Neither Roland nor Dick thought well of the plan,
-and herein lay their first mistake. Not only was it
-weeks before they were able to reach the Madeira,
-but they had the grief of losing one white man and
-one Indian with baggage in the crossing of the Purus.
-
-We cannot put old heads on young shoulders;
-nevertheless the wise youth never fails to profit by
-the experience of his elders.
-
-Even when they reached the forest lands on the
-west side of the Madeira, another long delay ensued.
-For here they had to encamp on somewhat damp and
-unwholesome ground until Burly Bill should descend
-the stream to hire canoes or boats suitable for passing
-the rapids.
-
-Don Pedro or Peter was now doing his best to make
-himself agreeable. He was laughing and singing all
-day long, but this fact in no way deceived Roland,
-and as a special precaution he told off several white
-men to act as detectives and to be near him by day
-and by night.
-
-If Peter were really the blood-guilty wretch that
-Roland, if not Dick, believed him to be, he made one
-mistake now. He tried his very utmost to make
-friends with Brawn, the great Irish wolf-hound, but
-was, of course, unsuccessful.
-
-"I sha'n't take bite nor sup from that evil man's
-hand," Brawn seemed to say to himself. "He looks
-as if he would poison me. But," he added, "he shall
-have my undivided attention at night."
-
-And so this huge hound guarded Peter, never being
-ten yards away from the man's sleeping-skin till up
-leapt the sun in the gold and crimson east and shone
-on the waters of the beautiful river.
-
-"That dog is getting very fond of you, I think,"
-said Roland one day to Peter, while Brawn was
-snuffing his hand. "You see how well he protects you by
-night. He will never lie near to either Dick or me."
-
-Peter replied in words that were hardly audible,
-but were understood to mean that he was obliged to
-Brawn for his condescension. But he somewhat marred
-the beauty of his reply by adding a swear-word or
-two at the end.
-
-While they waited in camp here for the return of
-Bill and his crews, they went in for sport of several
-sorts.
-
-The fish in this river are somewhat
-remarkable--remarkable alike for their numbers and for their
-appearance--but all are not edible.
-
-"How are we to know, I wonder, which we should
-cook and which we shouldn't?" said Roland to his
-friend, Dick Temple.
-
-"I think," replied Dick, "that we may safely cook
-any of them, but, as to eating, why, I should only eat
-those that are nice in flavour."
-
-"That's right. We'll be guided by that rule."
-
-The boys fished from canoes which they hired or
-requisitioned from the Indian natives of the place.
-Clever these fellows are, and the manner in which
-they watch for and harpoon or even spear a huge
-"boto"--which looks like a long-snouted porpoise or
-"sea-pig"--astonished our heroes.
-
-This fish is killed by whites only for its oil, but
-the Indians did not hesitate to cut huge fourteen-pound
-pieces from the back to take home for culinary purposes.
-
-The "piraroocoo" is an immense fellow, and calculated
-to give good sport for a long summer day if you
-do not know how to handle him.
-
-This "'roocoo", as some of the natives call him,
-likes to hang around in the back reaches of the river,
-and is often found ten feet in length.
-
-He has the greatest objection in the world to being
-caught, and to being killed after being dragged on
-shore. Moreover, he has a neat and very expert way
-of lifting a canoe on his back for a few seconds, and
-letting it down bottom-upwards.
-
-When he does so, you, the sportsman or piscador,
-find yourself floundering in the water. You probably
-gulp down about half a gallon of river water, but
-you thank your stars you learned to swim when a
-boy, and strike out for the bank. But five to one
-you have a race to run with an intelligent 'gator. If
-he is hungry, you may as well think about some short
-prayer to say; if he is not very ravenous, you may
-win just by a neck.
-
-This last was an experience of Dick's one day;
-when a 'roocoo capsized his frail canoe and his Indian
-and he got spilt.
-
-Luckily Roland was on the beach, and just as a
-huge 'gator came ploughing up behind poor Dick,
-with head and awful jaws above water, Roland took
-steady aim and fired. Then the creature turned on
-his back, and the river was dyed with blood.
-
-The natives salt the 'roocoo and eat it. But
-Roland's Indian carriers managed to get through as
-many as could be caught, without any salt worth
-speaking about.
-
-Surely the fish in this beautiful river must have
-thought it strange, that so many of their number
-were constantly disappearing heavenwards at the end
-of a line. But it did not trouble them very much after
-all, and they learnt no lesson from what they saw, but
-took the bait as readily as ever.
-
-There were very many other species of fish, which
-not only gave good sport but made a most delicious
-*addendum* to the larder.
-
-Boats and canoes were now in the river all day
-long, and with the fish caught, and the turtle which
-were found in great abundance, not to mention the
-wild animals killed in the woods, Roland managed to
-feed his little army well.
-
-There is one fish in this river which is sometimes
-called "diabolo". He is no relation at all, however,
-to the real octopus or devil-fish, for this creature is
-flat. It seems a species of ray, and has an immense
-mouthful of the very sharpest of teeth. He is not
-at all dainty as to what he eats. He can make a
-meal off fresh-water shell-fish; he can swallow his
-smaller brothers of the deep; take a snack from a
-dead 'gator, and is quite at home while discussing
-a nice tender one-pound steak from a native's leg.
-
-The young 'gator is neither fish, flesh, nor good
-red-herring. Yet if you catch one not over a yard long,
-and he doesn't catch you--for he has a wicked way of
-seizing a man by the hand and holding on till his
-mother comes,--his tail, stewed or fried with a morsel
-of pork, will tide you over a "hungry hillock" very
-pleasantly indeed.
-
-If we turn to the pleasant reaches of the River
-Madeira, or the quiet back-waters, and, gun on
-shoulder, creep warily through the bush and scrub,
-we shall be rewarded with a sight that will well
-repay our caution.
-
-Here of an early morning we shall see water-fowl
-innumerable, and of the greatest beauty imaginable.
-
-Hidden from view, one is loth indeed to fire a shot
-and so disturb Nature's harmony, but prefers, for a time
-at all events, to crouch there quietly and watch the
-strange antics of the male birds and the meek docility
-of the female.
-
-Here are teal, black ducks, strange wild geese,
-brown ducks, sheldrakes, widgeons, and whatnot.
-
-And yonder on the shore, in all sorts of droll
-attitudes with their ridiculously long necks and legs, are
-storks and herons. I think they like to perform
-their toilet close to the calm pellucid water, because it
-serves the same purpose to them as a bedroom mirror
-does to us.
-
-Young tapirs form a welcome addition to the larder,
-and the woods all round abound in game.
-
-What a paradise! and yet this country is hardly
-yet known to us young Britons. We hear of ague.
-Bah! Regularity of living, and a dust of quinine,
-and camping in the open, can keep fever of all sorts
-at bay.
-
-Some may be surprised that our heroes should have
-settled down, as it were, so enthusiastically to fishing
-and sporting, although uncertain all the while as to
-the fate of poor kidnapped Peggy.
-
-True, but we must remember that activity and
-constant employment are the only cure for grief.
-So long, then, as Roland and Dick were busy with
-gun or fishing-rod, they were free from thought
-and care.
-
-But after sunset, when the long dark night closed
-over the camp; when the fire-flies danced from bush
-to bush, and all was still save the wind that sighed
-among the trees, or the voices of night-birds and
-prowling beasts, and the rush of the river fell on the
-ear in drowsy, dreamy monotone, then the boys felt
-their anxiety acutely enough, but bravely tried to
-give each other courage, and their conversation,
-oft-repeated, was somewhat as follows:--
-
-*Roland*. "You're a bit gloomy to-night, Dick, I think?"
-
-*Dick*. "Well, Roll, the night is so pitchy dark, never
-a moon, and only a star peeping out now and then.
-Besides I am thinking of--"
-
-*Roland*. "Hush! hush! aren't we both always
-thinking about her? Though I won't hesitate to say
-it is wrong not to be hopeful and cheerful."
-
-*Dick*. "But do you believe--"
-
-*Roland*. "I believe this, Dick, that if those
-kidnapping revengeful Indians had meant murder they
-would have slain the dear child in bed and not have
-resorted to all that horrible trickery--instigated
-without doubt by somebody. She has been taken to
-the country of the cannibals, but not to be tortured.
-She is a slave, let us hope, to some Indian princess,
-and well-guarded too. What we have got to do is
-to trust in God. I'm no preacher, but that is so.
-And we've got to do our duty and rescue Peggy."
-
-*Dick*. "Dead or alive, Roland."
-
-*Roland*. "Dead or alive, Dick. But Heaven have
-mercy on the souls of those who harm a hair of her
-head!"
-
-----
-
-Dick did his best to trust in Providence, but often
-in the middle watches of the night he would lie in his
-tent thinking, thinking, and unable to sleep; then,
-after perhaps an uneasy slumber towards morning,
-awake somewhat wearily to resume the duties of
-the day.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII--BILL AND HIS BOATS
-================================
-
-Roland, young and inexperienced as he was,
-proved himself a fairly good general.
-
-He certainly had not forgotten the salt, nor
-anything else that was likely to add to the comfort of
-his people in this very long cruise by river and by land.
-
-They knew not what was before them, nor what
-trouble or dangers they might have to encounter, so
-our young heroes were pretty well prepared to fight
-or to rough it in every way.
-
-Independent of very large quantities of ammunition
-for rifles and revolvers, Roland had prepared a
-quantity of war-rockets, for nothing strikes greater terror
-into the breasts of the ordinary savage than these
-fire-devils, as they term them.
-
-Roland, Dick, and Bill each had shot-guns, with
-sheath-knives, and a sort of a portable bill-hook,
-which many of the men carried also, and found
-extremely handy for making a clearance among reeds,
-rushes, or lighter bush.
-
-We have already seen that they had plenty of
-fishing-tackle.
-
-Oil and pumice-stone were not forgotten, and
-Roland had a regular inspection of his men every day,
-to make certain that their rifles and revolvers were
-clean.
-
-But this was not all, for, to the best of their ability,
-both Roland and Dick drilled their men to the use
-of their arms at short and long distances, and taught
-them to advance and retire in skirmishing order,
-taking advantage of every morsel of cover which the
-ground might afford.
-
-Plenty of maize and corn-flour were carried, and
-quite a large supply of tinned provisions, from the
-plantation and from Burnley Hall. These included
-canned meat, sardines, and salmon.
-
-Extra clothing was duly arranged for, because from
-the plains they would have to ascend quite into the
-regions of cloud and storm, if not snow.
-
-Medicine, too, but only a very little of this, Roland
-thought, would be needed, although, on the other hand,
-he stowed away lint and bandages in abundance, with
-a few surgical instruments.
-
-Medical comforts? Yes, and these were not to be
-considered as luxuries, though they took the form of
-brandy and good wine.
-
-Good tea, coffee, cocoa, and coca were, of course,
-carried, with sugar to sweeten these luxuries.
-
-But a small cask of fire-water--arrack--was
-included among the stores, and this was meant as a
-treat for native Indians, if they should happen to
-meet any civil and obliging enough to hobnob.
-
-Money would be of no use in the extreme wilds.
-Salt, and cloth of gaudy colours, to say nothing of
-beads, would be bartered for articles of necessity.
-
-----
-
-Everything was ready for the start, but still there
-were no signs of Bill and the boats.
-
-It was the first question Roland asked Dick of a
-morning, or Dick asked Roland, according to who
-happened to be first up:
-
-"Any signs of Bill and the boats?"
-
-"None!"
-
-On the top of a cliff at the bend of the beautiful
-river stood a very tall tree, and right on top of this
-was an outlook--an Indian boy, who stayed two hours
-on watch, and was then relieved.
-
-He could command quite an extensive view downstream,
-and was frequently hailed during the day and
-asked about Bill and his boats, but the answer would
-come somewhat dolefully:
-
-"Plenty boat, sah, but no Beel."
-
-Yes, there were boats of many kinds, and a few
-steamers now and then also, but Roland held no
-intercourse with any of these. His little army was
-encamped on an open clearing well back in the forest.
-He did not wish to know anyone's business, and he
-determined that his own should not leak out.
-
-But although Roland and Dick had plenty to do,
-and there was sport enough to be had, still the time
-began to drag wearily on day by day, and both young
-fellows were burning for action and movement and "go".
-
-Peter, *alias* Don Pedro, seemed as anxious as
-anyone else to get forward.
-
-He was most quiet and affable to everyone, although
-apt to drop into dejected moods at times.
-
-He saw that he was not wholly in bad favour with
-Dick Temple.
-
-One day, when Roland was at the other side of the
-river, after smoking in silence for some time by the
-banks of the stream, where, in company with Dick
-and Brawn, he was sitting, a down-steamer hove in
-sight at the bend of the river, and both waved their
-caps to those on board, a salute which was cheerfully
-returned.
-
-The vessel was some distance out in the broad river,
-but presently Dick could see a huge black-board held
-over the port-quarter. There was writing in chalk on
-it, and Dick speedily put his lorgnettes up, and read
-as follows:--
-
-.. class:: center medium
-
- IF GOING UP RIVER--BEWARE!
-
- KARAPOONA SAVAGES ON WAR-PATH--TREACHERY!
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-"Forewarned is forearmed!" said Dick.
-
-"What was the legend exposed to view on the
-telegraph board?" asked Peter languidly.
-
-"The Karapoona savages on the war-path," replied Dick.
-
-"What! The Karapoonas! A fearful race, and
-cannibals to boot--"
-
-"You know them then?"
-
-"What, I? I--I--no--no, only what I have heard."
-
-He took three or four whiffs of his cigarette in quick
-succession, as if afraid of its going dead.
-
-But Dick's eye was on him all the time.
-
-He seemed not to care to meet it.
-
-"Bound for Pará, no doubt," he said at last. "I do
-wish I were on board."
-
-"No doubt, Mr. Peter, and really we seem to be
-taking you on this expedition somewhat against your
-will?"
-
-"True; and I am a man of the world, and have not
-failed to notice that I am in some measure under the
-ban of suspicion.
-
-"Yet, I think you are not unfriendly to me," he added.
-
-"No, Mr. Peter, I am unfriendly to no one."
-
-"Then, might you not use your influence with your
-friend, Mr. St. Clair, to let me catch the first boat back
-to Pará?"
-
-"I cannot interfere with Mr. Roland St. Clair's
-private concerns. If he suspects you of anything in the
-shape of duplicity or treachery and you are innocent,
-you have really nothing to fear. As to letting you off
-your engagement, that is his business. I can only say
-that the tenure of your office is not yet complete, and
-that you are his head-clerk for still another year."
-
-"True, true, but I came as governor of the estate,
-and not to accompany a mad-cap expedition like this.
-Besides, Mr. Temple, I am far from strong. I am a
-man of peace, too, and have hardly ever fired a revolver
-in my life.
-
-"But I have another very urgent reason for getting
-back to England--"
-
-"No doubt, Mr. Peter!"
-
-This was almost a sneer.
-
-"No doubt--but I interrupt you."
-
-"My other reason may appeal to you in more ways
-than one. I am in love, Mr. Temple--"
-
-"You!"
-
-"I am in love, and engaged to be married to one of
-the sweetest girls in Cornwall. If I am detained here,
-and unable to write, she may think me dead--and--and--well,
-anything might happen."
-
-"Pah, Mr. Peter! I won't say I don't believe you,
-but instead of your little romance appealing to me, it
-simply disgusts me. I tell you straight, sir, you don't
-look like a man to fall in love with anything except
-gold; but if the young lady is really fond of you, she
-will lose neither hope nor heart, even if she does not
-hear of you or from you for a year or more."
-
-Then, seeing that he seemed to wound this strange
-man's feelings:
-
-"Pardon my brusqueness, Mr. Peter," he added more
-kindly. "I really do not mean to hurt you. Come,
-cheer up, and if I can help you--I will."
-
-Peter held out his hand.
-
-Dick simply touched it.
-
-He could not get himself even to like the man.
-
-----
-
-The signal-tree was but a few yards distant from
-the spot where they sat.
-
-And now there came a wild, excited hail therefrom.
-
-"Golly foh true, Massa Dick!"
-
-Brawn jumped up, and barked wildly.
-
-His echo came from beyond the stream, and he
-barked still more wildly at that.
-
-"Well, boy," shouted Dick, "do you see anything?"
-
-"Plenty moochee see. Beel come. Not very far
-off. Beel and de boats!"
-
-This was indeed joyful news for Dick. He happened
-to glance at Peter for a moment, however, and
-could not help being struck with the change that
-seemed to have come over him. He appeared to have
-aged suddenly. His face was gray, his lips compressed,
-his brows lowered and stern.
-
-Dick never forgot that look.
-
-Dick Temple was really good-hearted, and he felt
-for this man, and something kept telling him he was
-innocent and wronged.
-
-But he had nothing to fear if innocent. He would
-certainly be put to inconvenience, but for that, if all
-went well, Roland would not fail to recompense him
-handsomely, and he--Dick--had a duty to perform to
-his friend. So now in the bustle that followed--if
-Peter wanted to make a rush for the woods--he might try.
-
-Roland had heard the hail, and his canoe was now
-coming swiftly on towards the bank. Dick ran to
-meet him.
-
-When he half-pulled his friend on shore and turned
-back with him, behold! Peter was gone.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII--AS IF STRUCK BY A DUM-DUM BULLET
-===============================================
-
-Roland and Dick walked quickly towards the camp.
-
-It was all a scene of bustle and stir indescribable,
-for good news as well as bad travels apace.
-
-"Bill and the boats are coming!" Englishmen were
-shouting.
-
-"Beel and de boats!" chorused the Indians.
-
-But on the approach of "the young captains", as the
-boys were called, comparative peace was restored.
-
-"Had anyone seen Mr. Peter?" was the first question
-put by our heroes to their white officers. "No," from all.
-
-"He had disappeared for a few moments in his
-tent," said an Indian, "then der was no more Massa
-Peter."
-
-Scouts and armed runners were now speedily got
-together, and Roland gave them orders. They were
-to search the bush and forest, making a long detour
-or outflanking movement, then closing round a
-centre, as if in battue, to allow not a tree to go
-unexamined.
-
-This was all that could be done.
-
-So our heroes retraced their steps towards the river
-bank, where, lo! they beheld a whole fleet of strange
-canoes, big and small, being rowed swiftly towards them.
-
-In the bows of the biggest--a twelve-tonner--stood
-Burly Bill himself.
-
-He was blacker with the sun than ever, and wildly
-waving the broadest kind of Panama hat ever seen on
-the Madeira. But in his left hand he clutched his
-meerschaum, and such clouds was he blowing that one
-might have mistaken the great canoe for a steam-launch.
-
-He jumped on shore as soon as the prow touched
-the bank--the water here being deep.
-
-Black though Burly Bill was, his smile was so
-pleasant, and his face so good-natured, that everybody
-who looked at him felt at once on excellent terms with
-himself and with all created things.
-
-"I suppose I ought to apologize, Mr. Roland, for the
-delay--I--"
-
-"And I suppose," interrupted Roland, "you ought
-to do nothing of the kind. Dinner is all ready, Bill;
-come and eat first. Put guards in your boats, and
-march along. Your boys will be fed immediately."
-
-It was a splendid dinner.
-
-Burly Bill, who was more emphatic than choice in
-English, called it a tiptopper, and all hands in Roland's
-spacious tent did ample justice to it.
-
-Roland even spliced the main-brace, as far as Bill
-was concerned, by opening a bottle of choice port.
-
-The boys themselves merely sipped a little. What
-need have lads under twenty for vinous stimulants?
-
-Bill's story was a long one, but I shall not repeat it.
-He had encountered the greatest difficulty imaginable
-in procuring the sort of boats he needed.
-
-"But," he added, "all's well that end's well, I guess,
-and we'll start soon now, I suppose, for the rapids of
-Antonio."
-
-"Yes," said Roland, "we'll strike camp possibly
-to-morrow; but we must do as much loading up as
-possible to-night."
-
-"That's the style," said Bill. "We've got to make
-haste. Only we've got to think! 'Haste but not
-hurry', that's my motto.
-
-"But I say," he continued, "I miss two friends--where
-is Mr. Peter and where is Brawn?"
-
-"Peter has taken French leave, I fear, and Brawn,
-where is Brawn, Dick?"
-
-"I really did not miss either till now," answered
-Dick, "but let us continue to be fair to Mr. Peter-- Listen!"
-
-At that moment shouting was heard far down the forest.
-
-The noise came nearer and nearer, and our heroes
-waited patiently.
-
-In five minutes' time into the tent bounded the great
-wolf-hound, gasping but laughing all down both sides,
-and with about a foot of pink tongue--more or
-less--hanging out at one side, over his alabaster teeth.
-
-He quickly licked Roland's ears and Dick's, then
-uttered one joyous bark and made straight for Burly Bill.
-
-Yes, Bill was burly, but Brawn fairly rolled him
-over and nearly smothered him with canine caresses.
-Then he took a leap back to the boys as much as to say:
-
-"Why don't you rejoice too? Wouff--wouff! Aren't
-you glad that Bill has returned? Wouff! What
-would life be worth anyhow without Bill?
-Wouff--wouff--wow!"
-
-But the last wow ended in a low growl, as Peter
-himself stood smiling at the opening.
-
-"Why, Mr. Peter, we thought you were lost!" cried Dick.
-
-Mr. Peter walked up to Bill and shook hands.
-
-"Glad indeed to see you back," he said nonchalantly,
-"and you're not looking a bit paler. Any chance of a
-morsel to eat?"
-
-"Sit down," cried Dick. "Steward!"
-
-"Yes, sah; to be surely, sah. Dinner foh Massa
-Peter? One moment, sah."
-
-Mr. Peter was laughing now, but he had seated
-himself on the withered grass as far as possible from
-Brawn.
-
-"I must say that three hours in a tree-top gives one
-the devil's own appetite," he began. "I had gone to
-take a stroll in the forest, you know--"
-
-"Yes," said Roland, "we do know."
-
-Mr. Peter looked a little crestfallen, but said
-pointedly enough: "If you do know, there is no need
-for me to tell you."
-
-"Oh, yes, go on!" cried Dick.
-
-"Well then, I had not gone half a mile, and was just
-lighting up a cigarette, when Brawn came down on
-me, and I had barely time to spring into the tree
-before he reached the foot of it. There I waited as
-patiently as Job would have done--thank you, steward,
-what a splendid Irish stew!--till by and by--a
-precious long by and by--your boys came to look for
-Brawn, and in finding Brawn they found poor famishing
-me. Thank you, Bill, I'll be glad of a little wine."
-
-"Looking for Brawn, they found you, eh!" said
-Roland. "I should have put it differ--"
-
-But Dick punched Roland's leg, and Roland laughed
-and said no more.
-
-----
-
-Two days after the arrival of Burly Bill an order
-was given for general embarkation. All under their
-several officers were inspected on the river bank, and
-to each group was allotted a station in boat or canoe.
-
-The head men or captains from whom Bill had hired
-the transport were in every instance retained, but a
-large number of Roland's own Indians were most
-expert rowers, and therefore to take others would only
-serve to load the vessels uncomfortably, not to say
-dangerously.
-
-But peons or paddlers to the number of two or four
-to each large canoe their several captains insisted on
-having.
-
-The inspection on the bank was a kind of "muster
-by open list", and Roland was exceedingly pleased
-with the result, for not a man or boy was missing.
-
-It was a delightful day when the expedition was at
-last got under way.
-
-Roland and Dick, with Peter, to say nothing of
-Brawn, occupied the after-cabin in a canoe of very
-light draught, but really a twelve-tonner. The cabin
-was, of course, both dining-room and sleeping berth--the
-lounges being skins of buffaloes and of wild beasts,
-but all clean and sweet.
-
-The cabin itself was built of bamboo and bamboo
-leaves lined with very light skins, so overlapping as
-to make the cabin perfectly dry.
-
-Our heroes had arranged about light, and candles
-were brought out as soon as daylight began to fade.
-
-Then the canoes were paddled towards the bank or
-into some beautiful reach or back-water, and there
-made fast for the night with padlock and chain.
-
-Roland and Dick had their own reasons for taking
-such strict precautions.
-
-The first day passed without a single adventure
-worth relating.
-
-The paddlers or peons, of whom there were seven
-on each side of our hero's huge canoe, worked
-together well. They oftentimes sang or chanted a wild
-indescribable kind of boat-lilt, to which the sound of
-the paddles was an excellent accompaniment, but
-now and then the captain would shout: "Choorka--choorka!"
-which, from the excitement the words caused,
-evidently meant "Sweep her up!" and then the vessel
-seemed to fly over the water and dance in the air.
-
-Other canoe captains would take up the cry, and
-"Choorka--Choorka!" would resound from every side.
-
-A sort of race was on at such times, but the *Burnley
-Hall*, as Roland's boat was called, nearly always left
-the others astern.
-
-Dinner was cooked on shore, and nearly everyone
-landed at night. Only our heroes stuck to their boat.
-
-There were moon and stars at present, and very
-pleasant it was to sit, or rather lie, at their open-sided
-cabin, and to watch these mirrored in the calm water,
-while fire-flies danced and flitted from bush to bush.
-
-But there was always the sorrow and the weight of
-grief lying deep down in the hearts of both Roland
-and Dick; the ever-abiding anxiety, the one question
-they kept asking themselves constantly, and which
-could not be answered, "Shall we be in time to save
-poor Peggy?"
-
-Mr. Peter slept on shore.
-
-Brawn kept him company. Kept untiring watch
-over him. And two faithful and well-armed Indians
-lay in the bush at a convenient distance.
-
-In a previous chapter I have mentioned an
-ex-cannibal Bolivian, whom Roland had made up his
-mind to take with him as a guide in the absence of,
-or in addition to, faithful Benee.
-
-He was called Charlie by the whites.
-
-Charlie was as true to his master as the needle to
-the pole.
-
-On the third evening of the voyage, just as Roland
-and Dick, with Bill, were enjoying an after-dinner
-lounge in an open glade not far from the river brink,
-the moon shining so brightly that the smallest of type
-could easily have been read by young eyes, he
-suddenly appeared in their midst.
-
-"What cheer, Charlie?" said Roland kindly. "Come,
-squat thee down, and we will give you a tiny toothful
-of aguardiente."
-
-"Touchee me he, no, no!" was the reply. "He
-catchee de bref too muchee. Smokee me,
-notwidstanding," he added.
-
-It was one of Charlie's peculiarities that if he could
-once get hold of a big word or two, he planted them in
-his conversation whenever he thought he had a
-favourable opening.
-
-An ex-cannibal Charlie was, and he came from the
-great western unexplored district of Bolivia.
-
-He confessed that although fond of "de pig ob de
-forest (tapir), de tail ob de 'gator, and de big
-haboo-snake when roast," there was nothing in all the world
-so satisfactory as "de fles' ob a small boy. Yum,
-yum! it was goodee, goodee notwidstanding, and make
-bof him ear crack and him 'tumack feel wa'm."
-
-Charlie lit up his cigarette, and then commenced to
-explain the reason of his visit.
-
-"What you callee dat?" he said, handing Burly Bill
-a few large purple berries of a species of thorny
-laurel.
-
-"Why," said Bill, "these are the fruit of the
-lanton-tree, used for poisoning arrow-tips."
-
-"And dis, sah. What you callee he? Mind, mind,
-no touchee de point! He poison, notwidstanding."
-
-It was a thin bamboo cane tipped with a fine-pointed
-nail.
-
-Bill waited for him to explain.
-
-He condescended to do so at last.
-
-"Long time ago I runee away from de cannibal
-Indians notwidstanding. I young den, I fat, I sweet
-in flesh. Sometime my leg look so nice, I like to eat
-one little piecee ob myse'f. But no. Charlie not one
-big fool. But de chief tink he like me. He take
-me to him tent one day, den all muchee quickee he
-slaves run in and take up knife. Ha, ha! I catchee
-knife too, notwidstanding. Charlie young and goodee
-and plenty mooch blood fly.
-
-"I killee dat chief, and killee bof slaves. Den I
-runned away.
-
-"Long time I wander in de bush, but one day I
-come to de tents ob de white men. Dey kind to poh
-Charlie, and gib me work. I lub de white man; all
-same, I no lub Massa Peter."
-
-He paused to puff at a fresh cigarette.
-
-"And," he added, "I fine dat poison berry and dat
-leetle poison spear in place where Massa Peter sleep."
-
-"Ho, ho!" said Bill.
-
-Charlie grew a little more excited as he continued:
-"As shuah as God madee me, de debbil hisself makee
-dat bad man Peter. He wantee killee poh Brawn.
-Dat what for, notwidstanding."
-
-Now although there be some human beings--they
-are really not worth the name--who hate dogs, every
-good-hearted man or woman in the world loves those
-noble animals who are, next to man, the best and
-bravest that God has created.
-
-But there are degrees in the love people bear for
-their pets. If a faithful dog like Brawn is constantly
-with one, he so wins one's affection that death alone
-can sever the tie.
-
-Not only Roland, but Dick also, dearly loved Brawn,
-and the bare idea that he was in danger of his life so
-angered both that, had Mr. Peter been present when
-honest Charlie the Indian made his communication,
-one of them would most certainly have gone for him
-in true Etonian style, and the man would have been
-hardly presentable at court for a fortnight after at
-the least.
-
-"Dick," said Roland, the red blood mounting to his
-brow, the fire seeming to scintillate from his eyes.
-"Dick, old man, what do you advise?"
-
-"I know what I should like to do," answered Dick,
-with clenched fist and lowered brows.
-
-"So do I, Dick; but that might only make matters worse.
-
-"But Heaven keep me calm, old man," he continued,
-"for now I shall send for Peter and have it out with
-him. Not at present, you say? But, Dick, I am all
-on fire. I must, I shall speak to him. Charlie, retire;
-I would not have Mr. Peter taking revenge on so
-good a fellow as you."
-
-At Dick's earnest request Roland waited for half an
-hour before he sent for Peter.
-
-This gentleman advanced from the camp fire
-humming an operatic air, and with a cigar in hand.
-
-"Oh, Mr. Peter," said Roland, "I was walking near
-your sleeping place of last night and picked this up."
-
-He held up the little bamboo spear.
-
-"What is it?" said Peter. "An arrow? I suppose
-some of the Indians dropped it. I never saw it before.
-It seems of little consequence," he continued, "though
-I dare say it would suffice to pink a rat with."
-
-He laughed lightly as he spoke. "Was this all you
-wanted me for, Mr. St. Clair?"
-
-He was handling the little spear as he spoke. Next moment:
-
-"Merciful Father!" he suddenly screamed, "I have
-pricked myself! I am poisoned! I am a dead man!
-Brandy-- Oh, quick-- Oh--!"
-
-He said never a word more, but dropped on the
-moss as if struck by a dum-dum bullet.
-
-And there he lay, writhing in torture, foaming at
-the mouth, from which blood issued from a bitten
-tongue.
-
-It was a ghastly and horrible sight. Roland looked
-at Dick.
-
-"Dick," he said, "the man knew it was poisoned."
-
-"Better he should die than Brawn."
-
-"Infinitely," said Roland.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX--STRUGGLING ONWARDS UP-STREAM
-=========================================
-
-"But," said Roland, "it would be a pity to let even
-Peter die, as we may have need of him. Let us
-send for Charlie at once. Perhaps he can tell us of an
-antidote."
-
-The Indian was not far off.
-
-"Fire-water", was his reply to Dick's question, "and dis."
-
-"Dis" was the contents of a tiny bottle, which he
-speedily rubbed into the wound in Peter's hand.
-
-The steward, as one of the men was called, quickly
-brought a whole bottle of rum, the poisoned man's jaws
-were forced open, and he was literally drenched with
-the hot and fiery spirit.
-
-But spasm after spasm took place after this, and
-while the body was drawn up with cramp, and the
-muscles knotted and hard, the features were fearfully
-contorted.
-
-By Roland's directions chloroform was now poured
-on a handkerchief, and after this was breathed by the
-sufferer for a few minutes the muscles became relaxed,
-and the face, though still pale as death, became more
-sightly.
-
-More rum and more rubbing with the antidote, and
-Mr. Peter slept in peace.
-
-About sunrise he awoke, cold and shivering, but
-sensible.
-
-After a little more stimulant he began to talk.
-
-"Bitten by a snake, have I not been?"
-
-"Mr. Peter," said Roland sternly, "you have
-narrowly escaped the death you would have meted
-out to poor Brawn with your cruel and accursed arrow.
-
-"You may not love the dog. He certainly does not
-love you, and dogs are good judges of character. He
-tree'd you, and you sought revenge. You doubtless
-have other reasons to hate Brawn, but his life is far
-more to us than yours. Now confess you meant to do
-for him, and then to make your way down-stream by
-stealing a canoe."
-
-"I do not, will not confess," cried Peter. "It is a
-lie. I am here against my will. I am kidnapped. I
-am a prisoner. The laws of even this country--and
-sorry I am ever I saw it--will and shall protect me."
-
-Roland was very calm, even to seeming carelessness.
-
-"We are on the war-path at present, my friend," he
-said very quietly. "You are suspected of one of the
-most horrible crimes that felon ever perpetrated, that
-of procuring the abduction of Miss St. Clair and
-handing her over to savages."
-
-"As Heaven is above us," cried Peter, "I am guiltless
-of that!"
-
-"Hush!" roared Roland, "why take the sacred name
-of Heaven within your vile lips. Were you not about
-to die, I would strike you where you stand."
-
-"To die, Mr. Roland? You--you--you surely don't mean--"
-
-Roland placed a whistle to his lips, and its sound
-brought six stern men to his side.
-
-"Bind that man's hands behind his back and hang
-him to yonder tree," was the order.
-
-In two minutes' time the man was pinioned and the
-noose dangling over his head.
-
-As he stood there, arrayed but in shirt and trousers,
-pale and trembling, with the cold sweat on his brow,
-it would have been difficult even to imagine a more
-distressing and pitiable sight.
-
-His teeth chattered in his head, and he swayed
-about as if every moment about to fall.
-
-A man advanced, and was about to place the noose
-around his neck when:
-
-"A moment, one little moment!" cried Peter. "Sir--Mr. St. Clair--I
-did mean to take your favourite dog's life."
-
-"And Miss St. Clair?"
-
-"I am innocent. If--I am to be lynched--for--that--you
-have the blood of a guiltless man on your head."
-
-Dick Temple had seen enough. He advanced now
-to Peter's side.
-
-"Your crime deserves lynching," he said, "but I will
-intercede for you if you promise me sacredly you will
-never attempt revenge again. If you do, as sure as
-fate you shall swing."
-
-"I promise--Oh--I promise!"
-
-Dick retired, and after a few minutes' conversation
-with Roland, the wretched man was set free.
-
-*Entre nous*, reader, Roland had never really meant
-to lynch the man. But so utterly nerveless and
-broken-down was Mr. Peter now, that as soon as he
-was released he threw himself on the ground, crying
-like a child.
-
-Even Brawn pitied him, and ran forward and
-actually licked the hands of the man who would have
-cruelly done him to death.
-
-So noble is the nature of our friend the dog.
-
-----
-
-The voyage up-stream was now continued. But
-the progress of so many boats and men was necessarily
-slow, for all had to be provided for, and this meant
-spending about every alternate day in shooting,
-fishing, and collecting fruit and nuts.
-
-The farther up-stream they got, however, the more
-lightsome and cheerful became the hearts of our heroes.
-
-They began to look upon Peggy as already safe in
-their camp.
-
-"I say, you know," said Dick one day, "our passage
-up is all toil and trouble, but won't it be delightful
-coming back."
-
-"Yes, indeed," said Roland, smiling.
-
-"We sha'n't hurry, shall we?"
-
-"Oh, no! poor Peggy's health must need renovating,
-and we must let her see all that is to be seen."
-
-"Ye--es, of course! Certainly, Roll, and it will be
-all just too lovely for anything, all one deliciously
-delicious picnic."
-
-"I hope so."
-
-"Don't look quite so gloomy, Roland, old man. I
-tell you it is all plain sailing now. We have only to
-meet Benee when we get as far as the rendezvous,
-then strike across country, and off and away to the
-land of the cannibals and give them fits."
-
-"Oh, I'm not gloomy, you know, Dick, though not
-quite so hopeful as you! We have many difficulties
-to encounter, and there may be a lot of fighting after
-we get there; and, mind you, that game of giving fits
-is one that two can play at."
-
-"Choorka! Choorka!" shouted the captain of the
-leading boat, a swarthy son of the river.
-
-As he spoke, he pointed towards the western bank,
-and thither as quickly as paddles could send him his
-boat was hurried. For they had been well out in the
-centre of the river, and had reached a place where the
-current was strong and swift.
-
-But closer to the bank it was more easy to row.
-
-Nevertheless, two of the canoes ran foul of a snag.
-One was capsized at once, and the other stuck on top.
-
-The 'gators here were in dozens apparently, and
-before the canoe could be righted two men had been
-dragged below, the brown stream being tinged with
-their gushing blood.
-
-Both were Indians, but nevertheless their sad death
-cast a gloom over the hearts of everyone, which was
-not easily dispelled.
-
-On again once more, still hugging the shore; but
-after dinner it was determined to stay where they
-were for the night.
-
-They luckily found a fine open back-water, and this
-they entered and were soon snug enough.
-
-They could not be idle, however. Food must be
-collected, and everything--Roland determined--must
-go on like clock-work, without hurry or bustle.
-
-Soon, therefore, after the canoes were made fast,
-both Indians and whites were scattered far and near
-in the forest, on the rocks and hills, and on the rivers.
-
-I believe that all loved the "boys", as Roland and
-Dick were called by the white men, and so all worked
-right cheerfully, laughing and singing as they did so.
-
-Ten men besides our heroes and Burly Bill had
-remained behind to get the tents up and to prepare
-the evening meal, for everybody would return as
-hungry as alligators, and these gentry seem to have
-a most insatiable appetite.
-
-Just before sunset on this particular evening Roland
-and Dick had another interview with Mr. Peter.
-
-"I should be a fool and a fraud, Mr. Peter," said the
-former, "were I to mince matters. Besides, it is not
-my way. I tell you, then, that during our journey
-you will have yonder little tent to yourself to eat and
-to sleep in. I tell you, too, that despite your declarations
-of innocence I still suspect you, that nevertheless
-no one will be more happy than Mr. Temple here and
-myself if you are found not guilty. But you must
-face the music now. You must be guarded, strictly
-guarded, and I wish you to know that you are. I
-wish to impress upon you also that your sentries have
-strict orders to shoot you if you are found making
-any insane attempt to escape. In all other respects
-you are a free man, and I should be very sorry indeed
-to rope or tie you. Now you may go."
-
-"My time will come," said Mr. Peter meaningly.
-
-His face was set and determined.
-
-"Is this a threat?" cried Roland, fingering his
-revolver.
-
-But Peter's dark countenance relaxed at once.
-
-"A threat!" he said. "No, no, Mr. Roland. I am
-an unarmed man, you are armed, and everyone is on
-your side. But I repeat, my time will come to clear
-my character; that is all.
-
-"So be it, Mr. Peter."
-
-And the man retired to his tent breathing black
-curses deep though not aloud.
-
-"I've had enough of this," he told himself. "And
-escape that young cub's tyranny I must and shall,
-even should I die in my tracks. Curse them all!"
-
-----
-
-Next day a deal of towing was required, for the
-river was running fierce and strong, and swirling in
-angry eddies and dangerous maelstroms even close to
-the bank.
-
-This towing was tiresome work, and although all
-hands bent to it, half a mile an hour was their highest
-record.
-
-But now they neared the terrible rapids of Antonio,
-and once more a halt was called for the night, in
-order that all might be fresh and strong to negotiate
-these torrents.
-
-Next day they set to work.
-
-All the cargo had to be got on shore, and a few
-armed men were left to guard it. Then the empty
-boats were towed up.
-
-For three or four miles the river dashed onward
-here over its rocky bed, with a noise like distant
-thunder, a chafing, boiling, angry stream, which but
-to look at caused the eyes to swim and the senses to
-reel.
-
-There are stretches of comparatively calm water
-between the rapids, and glad indeed were Roland's
-brave fellows to reach these for a breathing-spell.
-
-In the afternoon, before they were half-way through
-these torrents, a halt was called for the night in a little
-bay, and the baggage was brought up.
-
-They fell asleep that night with the roar of the
-rapids in their ears, and the dreams of many of them
-were far indeed from pleasant.
-
-Morning brought renewal of toil and struggle. But
-"stout hearts to stey braes" is an excellent old
-Scottish motto. It was acted on by this gallant expedition,
-and so in a day or two they found themselves in a
-fresh turmoil of water beneath the splendid waterfalls
-of Theotonia.
-
-The river was low, and in consequence the cataract
-was seen at its best, though not its maddest. Fancy,
-if you can, paddling to keep your way--not to
-advance--face to face with a waterfall a mile at least in
-breadth, and probably forty feet in height, divided
-into three by rocky little islands, pouring in
-white-brown sheets sheer down over the rock, and falling
-with a steady roar into the awful cauldrons beneath.
-It is like a small Niagara, but, with the hills and rocks
-and stately woods, and the knowledge that one is in
-an uncivilized land, among wild beasts and wilder men,
-far more impressive.
-
-Our young heroes were astonished to note the
-multitudes of fish of various kinds on all sides of
-them. The pools were full.
-
-The larger could be easily speared, but bait of any
-kind they did not seem to fancy. They were troubled
-and excited, for up the great stream and through the
-wild rapids they had made their way in order to
-spawn in the head-waters of the Madeira and its
-tributaries. But Nature here had erected a barrier.
-
-Yet wild were their attempts to fling themselves
-over. Many succeeded. The fittest would survive.
-Others missed, or, gaining but the rim of the cataract,
-were hurled back, many being killed.
-
-Another halt, another night of dreaming of all
-kinds of wild adventures. The Indians had told the
-whites, the evening before, strange legends about the
-deep, almost bottomless, pools beneath the falls.
-
-Down there, according to them, devils dwell, and
-hold high revelry every time the moon is full. Dark?
-No it is not dark at the bottom, for Indians who have
-been dragged down there and afterwards escaped,
-have related their adventures, and spoken of the
-splendid caverns lit up by crimson fire, whose mouths
-open into the water. Caverns more gorgeous and
-beautiful than eyes of men ever alight upon above-ground.
-Caverns of crystal, of jasper, onyx, and ruby;
-caverns around whose stalactites demons, in the form
-of six-legged snakes, writhe and crawl, but are
-nevertheless possessed of the power to change their shapes
-in the twinkling of an eye from the horrible and
-grotesque to the beautiful.
-
-Prisoners from the upper world are tortured here,
-whether men, women, or children, and the awful rites
-performed are too fearful--so say the Indians--to be
-even hinted at.
-
-The cargo first and the empty canoes next had to
-be portaged half a mile on shore and above the
-lovely linn. This was extremely hard work, but it
-was safely accomplished at last.
-
-Roland was not only a born general, but a
-kind-hearted and excellent master. He never lost his
-temper, nor uttered a bad or impatient word, and
-thus there was not an Indian there who would not
-have died for him and his companion Dick.
-
-Moreover, the officer-Indians found that kind words
-were more effectual than cuts with the bark whips
-they carried, or blows with the hand on naked shoulders.
-
-And so the march and voyage was one of peace and
-comfort.
-
-Accidents, however, were by no means rare, for
-there were snags and sunken rocks to be guarded
-against, and more than one of the small canoes were
-stove and sunk, with the loss of precious lives.
-
-----
-
-Roland determined not to overwork his crew. This
-might spoil everything, for many of the swamps in the
-neighbourhood of which they bivouacked are
-pestilential in the extreme.
-
-Mosquitoes were found rather a plague at first, but
-our boys had come prepared.
-
-They carried sheets of fine muslin--the ordinary
-mosquito-nets are useless--for if a "squeeter" gets
-one leg through, his body very soon wriggles after,
-and then he begins to sing a song of thanksgiving
-before piercing the skin of the sleeper with his
-poison-laden proboscis. But mosquitoes cannot get through
-the muslin, and have to sing to themselves on the
-other side.
-
-After a time, however, the muslin was not thought
-about, for all hands had received their baptism of
-blood, and bites were hardly felt.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX--THE PAGAN PAYNEES WERE THIRSTING FOR BLOOD
-======================================================
-
-A glance at any good map will show the reader
-the bearings and flow of this romantic and
-beautiful river, the Madeira. It will show him something
-else--the suggestive names of some of the cataracts
-or rapids that have to be negotiated by the enterprising
-sportsman or traveller in this wild land.
-
-The Misericordia Rapids and the Calderano de
-Inferno speak for themselves. The latter signifies
-Hell's Cauldron, and the former speaks to us of many
-a terrible accident that has occurred here--boats
-upset, bodies washed away in the torrent, or men
-seized and dragged below by voracious alligators
-before the very eyes of despairing friends.
-
-The Cauldron of Hell is a terrible place, and consists
-of a whole series of rapids each more fierce than the
-other. To attempt to stem currents like these would
-of course be madness. There is nothing for it but
-portage for a whole mile and more, and it can easily
-be guessed that this is slow and toilsome work indeed.
-Nor was the weather always propitious. Sometimes
-storms raged through the woods, with thunder,
-lightning, and drenching rain; or even on the brightest of
-days, down might sweep a whirlwind, utterly wrecking
-acres and acres of forest, tearing gigantic trees up by
-the roots, twisting them as if they were ropes, or
-tossing them high in air, and after cutting immense gaps
-through the jungle, retire, as if satisfied with the
-chaos and devastation worked, to the far-off mountain
-lands.
-
-Once when, with their rifles in hand, Roland and
-Dick were watching a small flock of tapirs at a pond
-of water, which formed the centre of a green oasis in
-the dark forest, they noticed a balloon-shaped cloud
-in the south. It got larger and larger as it advanced
-towards them, its great twisted tail seeming to trail
-along the earth.
-
-Lightning played incessantly around it, and as it
-got nearer loud peals of thunder were heard.
-
-This startled the tapirs. They held their heads aloft
-and snorted with terror, running a little this way and
-that, but huddling together at last in a timid crowd.
-
-Down came the awful whirlwind and dashed upon them.
-
-Roland and Dick threw themselves on the ground,
-face downwards, expecting death every moment.
-
-The din, the dust, the crashing and roaring, were
-terrific!
-
-When the storm had passed not a bush or leaf of
-the wood in which our heroes lay had been stirred.
-But the glade was now a strange sight.
-
-The waters of the pool had been taken up. The
-pond was dry. Only half-dead alligators lay there,
-writhing in agony, but every tapir had been not only
-killed but broken up, and mingled with twisted trees,
-pieces of rock, and hillocks of sand.
-
-Truly, although Nature in these regions may very
-often be seen in her most beautiful aspects, fearful
-indeed is she when in wrath and rage she comes
-riding in storms and whirlwinds from off the great
-table-lands, bent on ravaging the country beneath.
-
-"What a merciful escape!" said Roland, as he sat
-by Dick gazing on the destruction but a few yards
-farther off.
-
-"I could not have believed it," returned Dick.
-"Fancy a whirlwind like that sweeping over our camp,
-Roland?"
-
-"Yes, Dick, or over our boats on the river; but we
-must trust in Providence."
-
-Roland now blew his whistle, and a party of his
-own Indians soon appeared, headed by a few white men.
-
-"Boys," said Roland smiling, "my friend and I
-came out to shoot young tapir for you. Behold!
-Dame Nature has saved us the trouble, and flesh is
-scattered about in all directions."
-
-The Indians soon selected the choicest, and departed,
-singing their strange, monotonous chant.
-
-Presently Burly Bill himself appeared.
-
-He stood there amazed and astonished for fully half
-a minute before he could speak, and when he did it
-was to revert to his good old-fashioned Berkshire
-dialect.
-
-"My eye and Elizabeth Martin!" he exclaimed.
-"What be all that? Well, I never! 'Ad an 'urricane, then?"
-
-"It looks a trifle like it, Bill; but sit you down.
-Got your meerschaum?"
-
-"I've got him right enough."
-
-And it was not long before he began to blow a kind
-of hurricane cloud. For when Bill smoked furnaces
-weren't in it.
-
-"Do you think we have many more rapids to get
-past, Bill?"
-
-"A main lot on 'em, Master Roland. But we've got
-to do 'em. We haven't got to funk, has we?"
-
-"Oh no, Bill! but don't you think that we might
-have done better to have kept to the land altogether?"
-
-"No," said Bill bluntly, "I do not. We never could
-have got along, lad. Rivers to cross by fords that we
-might have had to travel leagues and leagues to find,
-lakes to bend round, marshes and swamps, where
-lurks a worse foe than your respectable and gentlemanly
-'gators."
-
-"What, snakes?"
-
-"Oh, plenty of them! But I was a-loodin' to fever,
-what the doctors calls malarial fever, boys.
-
-"No, no," he added, "we'll go on now until we meet
-poor Benee, if he is still alive. If anything has
-happened to him--"
-
-"Or if he is false," interrupted Dick; "false as Peter
-would have us believe--"
-
-"Never mind wot Mr. Bloomin' Peter says! I
-swears by Benee, and nothing less than death can
-prevent his meeting us somewhere about the mouth of
-the Maya-tata River. You can bet your bottom dollar
-on that, lads."
-
-"Well, that is the rendezvous anyhow."
-
-"Oh," cried Dick, "sha'n't we be all rejoiced to see
-Benee once more!"
-
-"God grant," said Roland, "he may bring us good
-news."
-
-"He is a good man and will bring good tidings,"
-ventured Burly Bill.
-
-Then he went on blowing his cloud, and the boys
-relapsed into silence.
-
-Each was thinking his own thoughts. But they
-started up at last.
-
-"I've managed to secure a grand healthy appetite!"
-cried Roland.
-
-"And so has this pale-faced boy," said Bill, shoving
-his great thumb as usual into the bowl of his meerschaum.
-
-So back to camp they started.
-
-Brawn had been on duty not far from Mr. Peter's
-tent, but he bounded up now with a joyful bark, and
-rushed forward to meet them.
-
-He displayed as much love and joy as if he had not
-seen them for a whole month.
-
-For ten days longer the expedition struggled onwards.
-
-The work was hard enough, but it really strengthened
-their hearts and increased the size of their muscles,
-till both their calves and biceps were as hard and
-tough as the stays of a battle-ship.
-
-Some people might think it strange, but it is a fact
-nevertheless, that the stronger they grew the happier
-and more hopeful were they. We may try to account
-for this physiologically or psychologically as we choose,
-but the great truth remains.
-
-----
-
-One or two of the men were struck down with
-ague-fever, but Roland made them rest while on shore
-and lie down while on board.
-
-Meanwhile he doctored them with soup made from
-the choicest morsels of young tapir, with green fresh
-vegetable mixed therein, and for medicine they had
-rum and quinine, or rather, quinine in rum.
-
-The men liked their soup, but they liked their
-physic better.
-
-Between the rapids of Arara and the falls of
-Madeira was a beautiful sheet of water, and, being
-afraid of snags or submerged rocks, the canoes were
-kept well out into the stream.
-
-They made great progress here. The day was unusually
-fine. Hot the sun was certainly, but the men
-wore broad straw sombreros, and, seated in the shadow
-of their bamboo cabin, our heroes were cool and happy
-enough.
-
-The luscious acid fruits and fruit-drinks they
-partook of contributed largely to their comfort.
-
-Dick started a song, a river song he had learned on
-his uncle's plantation, and as Burly Bill's great canoe
-was not far off, he got a splendid bass.
-
-The scenery on each bank was very beautiful; rocks,
-and hills covered with great trees, the branches of
-which near to the stream with their wealth of foliage
-and climbing flowers, bent low to kiss the placid
-waters that went gliding, lapping, and purling onwards.
-
-Who could have believed that aught of danger to
-our heroes and their people could lurk anywhere
-beneath these sun-gilt trees?
-
-But even as they sang, fierce eyes were jealously
-watching them from the western bank.
-
-Presently first one arrow, and anon a whole shower
-of these deadly missiles, whizzed over them.
-
-One struck the cabin roof right above Dick's head,
-and another tore through the hat of the captain himself.
-
-But rifles were carried loaded, and Roland was ready.
-
-"Lay in your oars, men! Up, guns! Let them
-have a volley! Straight at yonder bush! Fire low,
-lads! See, yonder is a savage!"
-
-Dick took aim at a dark-skinned native who stood
-well out from the wood, and fired. He was close to
-the stream and had been about to shoot, but Dick's
-rifle took away his breath, and with an agonized
-scream he threw up his arms and fell headlong into
-the water.
-
-Volley after volley rang out now on the still air,
-and soon it was evident that the woods were cleared.
-
-"Those are the Paynee Indians without a doubt,"
-said Dick; "the same sable devils that the skipper
-of that steamer warned us about."
-
-They saw no more of the enemy then, however, and
-the afternoon passed in peace.
-
-An hour and a half before sunset they landed at
-the mouth of a small but clear river, about ten miles
-to the north of the Falls of Woe.
-
-Close to the Madeira itself this lovely stream was
-thickly banked by forest, but the boats were taken
-higher up, and here excellent camping-ground was
-found in a country sparsely wooded.
-
-Far away to the west rose the everlasting hills, and
-our heroes thought they could perceive snow in the
-chasms between the rocks.
-
-Roland had not forgotten the adventure with the
-Indians, so scouts were sent out at once to scour the
-woods. They returned shortly before sunset, having
-seen no one.
-
-Both Roland and Dick were somewhat uneasy in
-their minds, nevertheless, and after dinner, in the wan
-and uncertain light of a half-moon, a double row of
-sentries was posted, and orders were given that they
-should be relieved every two hours, for the night was
-close and sultry, just such a night as causes restless
-somnolence. At such times a sentry may drop to
-sleep leaning on his gun or against a tree. He may
-slumber for an hour and not be aware he has even
-closed an eye.
-
-The boys themselves felt a strange drowsiness
-stealing away their senses. They would have rolled
-themselves up in their rugs and sought repose at once, but
-this would have made the night irksomely long.
-
-So they chatted, and even sang, till their usual hour.
-
-When they turned in, instead of dressing in a pyjama
-suit, they retained the clothes they had worn all day.
-
-Dick noticed that Roland was doing so, and followed
-his example. No reason was given by his friend, but
-Dick could guess it. Guess also what he meant by
-placing a rifle close beside him and looking to his
-revolvers before he lay down.
-
-Everyone in camp, except those on duty, was by
-this time sound asleep. Lights and fires were out, and
-the stillness was almost painful.
-
-Roland would have preferred hearing the wind
-sighing among the forest trees, the murmur of the
-river, or even the mournful wailing of the great blue
-owl.
-
-But never a leaf stirred, and as the moon sank
-lower and lower towards those strangely rugged and
-serrated mountains of the west, the boys themselves
-joined the sleepers, and all their care and anxiety was
-for the time being forgotten.
-
-The night waned and waned. The sentries had
-been changed, and it was now nearly one o'clock.
-
-There was a lake about a mile above the camp, that
-is, a mile farther westwards. It was surrounded by
-tall waving reeds, at least an acre wide all round.
-
-The home *par excellence* of the dreaded 'gator was
-this dark and sombre sheet of water, for to it almost
-nightly came the tapirs to quench their thirst and
-to bathe.
-
-Silently a troop of these wonderful creatures came
-up out of the forest to-night, all in a string, with the
-largest and oldest a little way in front.
-
-Every now and then these pioneers would pause
-to listen. They knew the wiliness of the enemy that
-might be lying in wait for them. So acute in hearing
-are they said to be that they can distinguish the
-sound of a snake gliding over withered leaves at a
-distance of a hundred yards. But their sight also
-is a great protection to them. No 'gator can move
-among the reeds without bending them, move he never
-so warily. Above all this, the tapir's sense of smell
-is truly marvellous.
-
-To-night the old tapirs that led the van seemed
-particularly suspicious and cautious. Their signal for
-silence was a kind of snort or cough, and this was
-now ofttimes repeated.
-
-Suddenly the foremost tapir stamped his foot, and
-at once the whole drove turned or wheeled and glided
-back as silently as they had come, until the shadows
-of the great forest swallowed them up.
-
-What had they seen or heard? They had seen tall,
-dark human figures--one, two, three--a score and over,
-suddenly raise their heads and shoulders above the
-reeds, and after standing for a moment so still that
-they seemed part and parcel of the solemn scene, move
-out from the jungle and take their way towards the
-slumbering camp.
-
-Savages all, and on a mission of death.
-
-Nobody's dreams could have been a bit more happy
-than those of Dick Temple just at this moment.
-
-He was sitting once more on the deck of the great
-raft, which was slowly gliding down the sunlit
-sea-like Amazon. The near bank was tree-clad, and every
-branch was garlanded with flowers of rainbow hues.
-
-But Dick looked not on the trees nor the flowers,
-nor the waving undulating forest itself--looked not
-on the sun-kissed river. His eyes were fixed on a
-brightly-beautiful and happy face. It was Peggy
-who sat beside him, Peggy to whom he was breathing
-words of affection and love, Peggy with shy,
-half-flushed face and slightly averted head.
-
-But suddenly this scene was changed, and he awoke
-with a start to grasp his rifle. A shrill quavering
-yell rang through the camp, and awakened every
-echo in the forest.
-
-The Indians--the dreaded Paynee tribe of cannibals--were
-on them. That yell was a war-cry. These
-pagan Paynees were thirsting for blood.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI--THE FOREST IS SHEETED IN FLAMES
-============================================
-
-For just a few moments Roland was taken aback.
-Then, in a steady manly voice that could be
-heard all over the camp, he gave the order.
-
-"All men down! The Indians are approaching
-from the west. Fire low, lads--between you and the
-light.
-
-"Don't waste a shot!" he added.
-
-.. _`"FIRE LOW, LADS ... DON'T WASTE A SHOT!"`:
-
-.. figure:: images/img-211.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: "FIRE LOW, LADS.... DON'T WASTE A SHOT!"
-
- "FIRE LOW, LADS.... DON'T WASTE A SHOT!"
-
-
-Three Indians bit the dust at the first volley, and
-though the rest struggled on to the attack, it was only
-to be quickly repulsed.
-
-In ten minutes' time all had fled, and the great
-forest and woodland was as silent as before.
-
-It was Roland's voice that again broke the stillness.
-
-"Rally round, boys," he shouted, "and let me know
-the worst."
-
-The sacrifice of life, however, was confined to three
-poor fellows, one white man and two peons; and no
-one was wounded.
-
-Nobody thought of going to sleep again on this
-sad night, and when red clouds were at last seen over
-the green-wooded horizon, heralding the approach of
-day, a general sense of relief was felt by all in the
-little camp.
-
-Soon after sunrise breakfast was served, and eaten
-with avidity by all hands now in camp, for scouts
-were out, and Dick and Roland awaited the news they
-would bring with some degree of impatience.
-
-The scouting was really a sort of reconnaisance
-in force, by picked Indians and whites under the
-command of the redoubtable Burly Bill.
-
-Suddenly Brawn raised his head and gave vent to
-an angry "wouff!" and almost at the same time the
-sound of distant rifle-firing fell on the ears of the
-little army.
-
-Half an hour after this, Bill and two men stepped
-out from the bush and advanced.
-
-His brow was bound with a blood-stained handkerchief.
-
-It was a spear wound, but he would not hear of it
-being dressed at present.
-
-"What cheer then, Bill?"
-
-"Not much of that," he answered, throwing himself
-down and lighting that marvellous meerschaum, from
-which he appeared to get so much consolation.
-
-"Not a vast deal of cheer. Yes, I'll eat after I gets
-a bit cooler like."
-
-"Ay, we'll have to fight the Dun-skins. They
-swarm in the forest between us and the Madeira, and
-they are about as far from bein' angels as any durned
-nigger could be."
-
-"And what do you advise, Bill?"
-
-"Well," was the reply, "as soon as your boys get
-their nose-bags off, my advice is to set to work with
-spade and shovel and transform this 'ere camp into a
-fortress.
-
-"Ay, and it is one we won't be able to abandon for
-days and days to come," he added.
-
-The men were now speedily told off to duty, and in
-a very short time had made the camp all but
-impregnable, and quite strong enough to give an
-excellent account of any number of Dun-skins.
-
-The Paynee Indians are a semi-nomadic tribe
-of most implacable savages, who roam over hill and
-dell and upland, hunting or fighting as the case may
-be, but who have nevertheless a home in the dark
-mountain fastnesses of the far interior.
-
-They are cannibals, though once, long, long ago, a
-band of Jesuits attempted their reclamation.
-
-These brave missionaries numbered in all but one
-hundred and twenty men, and they went among the
-terrible natives with, figuratively speaking, their
-prayer-books in one hand, their lives in the other.
-
-All went well for a time. They succeeded in winning
-the affections of the savages. They erected rude
-churches, and even to this day crosses of stone are to
-be found in this wild land, half-buried among the rank
-vegetation.
-
-But there came a day, and a sad one it was, when
-the cannibals were attacked by a wild hill-tribe.
-These highlanders had heard that, owing to the new
-religion, their ancient enemies had degenerated into
-old wives and squaws.
-
-A terrible battle ensued, during which the men
-from the uplands found out their mistake, for they
-were repulsed with fearful slaughter.
-
-All might have gone well with the Jesuits even yet
-but for one *contretemps*.
-
-At the very moment when the savages returned
-wildly exultant from the hills, bearing, horrible to
-relate, joints of human flesh on their spears, there
-came from the east a party of men who had been
-down to the banks of the Madeira, and had attacked
-and looted a small steamer that among other things
-had much fire-water on board.
-
-Oh, that accursed fire-water, how terrible its results
-wherever on earth it gains ascendancy!
-
-All the fearful passions of these savages were soon
-let loose. The scene was like pandemonium.
-
-The poor Jesuits hid themselves in their little church,
-barricading the door, and devoting the first part of the
-night to prayer and song. But at midnight the awful
-howling of the cannibals coming nearer and nearer
-told them that they had been missed, and that their
-doom was now sealed.
-
-Only one man escaped to tell the terrible tale.
-
-And these, or rather their descendants, were the
-very cannibals that Roland's little army had now to
-do battle with.
-
-Both he and Dick, however, kept up a good heart.
-
-There was ammunition enough to last for months
-of desultory firing, if necessary, and when the attack
-was made at last, after Bill's scouts had been driven
-in, the savages learned a lesson they were never likely
-to forget.
-
-Brave indeed they were, and over and over again
-they charged, spear in hand, almost into the trenches.
-But only to be thrust back wounded, or to die where
-they stood, beneath a steady revolver fire.
-
-But they retreated almost as quickly as they had
-come, and once more sought the shelter of bush and jungle.
-
-Not for very long, however. They were evidently
-determined that the little garrison should enjoy no peace.
-
-They had changed their tactics now, and instead
-of making wild rushes towards the ramparts, they
-commenced to bombard the fort with large stones.
-
-With their slings the Bolivian Indians can aim
-with great precision, for they learn the art when
-they are mere infants.
-
-As no one showed above the ramparts, there was in
-this case no human target for the missiles, but use was
-made of larger stones, and these kept falling into the
-trenches in all directions, so that much mischief was
-done and many men were hurt.
-
-A terrible rifle fire was now opened upon that part
-of the bush in which the cannibal savages were
-supposed to be in force, and from the howling and
-shrieking that immediately followed, it was evident
-that many bullets were finding their billets.
-
-But soon even these sounds died away, and it was
-evident enough that the enemy had retired, no doubt
-with the intention of inventing some new form of attack.
-There was peace now for many hours, and Roland
-took advantage of this to order dinner to be got ready.
-No men, unless it be the Scotch, can fight well on
-empty stomachs.
-
-The wounded were attended to and made as
-comfortable as possible, and after this there was
-apparently very little to do except to wait and watch.
-
-Burly Bill brought out his consolatory meerschaum.
-But while he puffed away, he was not idle. He was
-thinking.
-
-Now thinking was not very much in this honest
-fellow's line. Action was more his *forte*. But the
-present occasion demanded thought.
-
-The afternoon was already far spent. The
-sentries--lynx-eyed Indians, rifles in hand--were watching
-the bush, and longing for a shot. Roland and Dick,
-with Bill and big Brawn, were seated in the shade of
-a green and spreading tree, and all had been silent for
-some considerable time.
-
-"I say, young fellows!" said Bill at last, "this kind
-of lounging doesn't suit me. What say you to a council
-of war?"
-
-"Well, you've been thinking, Bill?"
-
-"Ay, I've been doin' a smart bit o' that. Let us
-consult Charlie."
-
-Charlie the ex-cannibal was now brought forward
-and seated on the grass.
-
-There was a deal of practical knowledge in this
-Indian's head. His had been a very long experience
-of savage warfare and wandering in forests and wilds;
-and he was proud now to be consulted.
-
-"Charlie," said Bill, "what do you think of the
-situation?"
-
-"De sit-uation?" was the reply. "Me not likee he.
-Me tinkee we sitee too much. Byme by, de cannibal
-he come much quick. Ah! dere will soon be muchee
-much too much sabage cannibal! Fust de killee you
-and den de eatee you, and make fine bobbery. Ha! ha!"
-
-"Well, Charlie, I don't think that there is a deal to
-laugh at. Howsomever, we've got to do something soon."
-
-"So, so," said Charlie, "notwidstanding."
-
-"Well, I've been thinking that we should make
-tracks for the other side of the river. You see these
-savage rapscallions have no canoes, and they seem to
-have no food. They are not herons or storks, and
-can't wade through deep water."
-
-"Foh true, sah. Dey am not stohks and dey am
-not herons notwidstanding, but see, sah, ebery man
-he am his own canoe! No stohks, but all same one
-frog, notwidstanding foh true!"
-
-"And you think they would follow us?"
-
-"All same's one eel--two hundred eel. Dey swim
-wid spears in mouf, and bow and arrow held high.
-Ha! ha! good soldier, ebery modder's son!"
-
-"I'll tell you my plan," said Dick Temple. "Just
-loose off the boats, and make one bold dash for
-liberty."
-
-"Ha! ha! sah!" cried Charlie. "I takes de liberty
-to laugh notwidstanding, foh true. You plenty much
-all dead men 'fore you get into de big ribber!"
-
-"Well, hang it!" said Dick, "we're not going to stay
-here with the pretty prospect before us of being all
-scuppered and eaten. What say you, Roll?"
-
-"I think," said Roland quietly, "that Charlie there has
-come prepared to speak, for his face is just beaming."
-
-"See, sah," cried Charlie, evidently pleased, "you
-trust all to Charlie. He makee you free after dark.
-Down in de fo'est yondah dere am mebbe two, mebbee
-free hunder' sabages. Now dey not want to fight till
-de dark. Dey will fight all de same when de moon
-rise, and de rifle not muchee good. No hit in de dark,
-on'y jes' puff, puff.
-
-"See," he continued, "de wind begin to blow a leetle.
-De wind get high byme by, den de sun go out, and
-Charlie he fiah de forest."
-
-"Fire the forest, Charlie?"
-
-"Notwidstanding," said Charlie grimly.
-
-"When," he added, "you see de flame curl up, be all
-ready. Soon de flame he bus' highah and highah, and
-all by de ribber bank one big blaze."
-
-"Charlie," cried Bill, "you're a brick! Give us a
-shake of your yellow hand. Hurrah! boys, Charlie's
-going to do it!"
-
-Never perhaps was sunset waited for with more
-impatience.
-
-The great and unanswerable question was this:
-Would these savages attack immediately after darkness
-fell, or would they take some time to deliberate?
-
-But behind the rugged mountains down sank the
-sun at last, and after a brief twilight the stars shone
-out.
-
-Charlie was not going alone. He had asked for the
-assistance of many Indians, and in a whisper he gave
-them their orders.
-
-Our heroes did not interfere in any way, for fear
-of confusing the good fellow's plans. But they soon
-noted that while Charlie himself and two Indians left
-in one of the smallest canoes, the others disappeared
-like snakes in the grass, creeping northwards over the
-plain.
-
-And now there was silence, for the wind was hushed;
-silence everywhere, that deep, indescribable silence
-which nightfall ever brings to a wild and savage land,
-in which even the beasts are still and listening in forest
-and dell, not knowing from which direction danger
-may spring.
-
-Within the little camp nothing could be done but
-lie still, every man holding his breath with suspense.
-Nothing could be done save watch, wait, count the
-weary minutes, and marvel at their length.
-
-Suddenly, however, the deep silence was broken by
-a mournful cry that came from riverwards. It was
-apparently that of an owl seeking for its mate, but it
-was taken up and repeated northwards all over the
-plain twixt camp and forest, and almost at the same
-time tiny tongues of fire sprang up here and there and
-everywhere.
-
-Higher and higher they leapt, along the ground they
-ran, meeting in all directions down the dark river
-and across the wild moor by the edge of the
-woodland. The undergrowth was dry, the grass was
-withered, and in an amazingly short time the whole
-forest by the banks of the Madeira was sheeted in
-devastating flames.
-
-The savages had been massed in the centre of the
-jungle, and just preparing to issue forth and carry
-death into the camp of our heroes, when suddenly
-the crackling of the flames fell on their ears, and they
-knew they were caught in a fire-trap, with scarcely
-any means of escape.
-
-Charlie had been terribly in earnest, and, hurrying
-on in his canoe towards the Madeira, he lit the bank
-all along, and even down the side of the great stream
-itself.
-
-It was evidently his savage intention to roast these
-poor cannibals alive.
-
-As it was, the only outlet towards salvation that
-remained for them was the Madeira's dark brink.
-
-"Now, boys, now!" shouted Roland, when he saw
-that the fire had gained entire mastery, and, making
-its own wind, was sweeping onwards, licking up
-everything in its way.
-
-"Now, lads, on board! Let us get off down stream
-in all haste. Hurrah!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII--EVENINGS BY THE CAMP FIRE
-=======================================
-
-The moorings were speedily slipped, and by the
-light of the blazing forest the peons bent sturdily
-to their paddles, and the canoe went dancing down
-stream.
-
-They had already taken on board the Indians who
-had assisted Charlie, and before long his own boat
-hove in sight, and was soon taken in tow by the
-largest canoe.
-
-That burning forest formed a scene which never
-could be forgotten. From the south side, where the
-boats were speedily rushing down the stream on their
-way to the Madeira, and from which came the light
-wind that was now blowing, the flames leaned over as
-it were, instead of ascending high in air, and the smoke
-and sparks took the same direction.
-
-The sparks were as thick as snow-flakes in a snow-storm,
-and the lurid tongues of fire darted high as the
-zenith, playing with the clouds of smoke or licking
-them up.
-
-The noise was indescribable, yet above the roaring
-and the crackling could be heard the shouts of the
-maddened savages, as they sought exit from the hell
-around them.
-
-There was no escape except by the Madeira's bank,
-and to get even at this they had to dash through the
-burning bushes.
-
-Alas! Charlie and his assistants had done their
-work all too well, and I fear that one-half of the
-cannibals were smothered, dragged down by alligators,
-or found a watery grave.
-
-As the canoes shot past, the heat was terrible, and
-next morning at daybreak, when they were far up the
-river, towards the falls, Roland and his friend were
-surprised to notice that the palm-leaves which covered
-the cabin were brown and scorched.
-
-On the whole the experience they had gained of the
-ferocity and fighting abilities of these Paynee cannibals
-was such as they were not likely to forget.
-
-----
-
-During all this period of excitement the suspect
-Peter had remained perfectly quiescent. Indeed he
-seemed now quite apathetic, taking very little notice
-of anything around him, and eating the food placed
-before him in a way that was almost mechanical.
-Neither Roland nor Dick had taken much heed of
-him till now. When, however, they observed his
-strange demeanour they took council together and
-determined that the watch over him should be made
-extra strict, lest he should spring overboard and be
-drowned.
-
-Roland may seem to have been harsh with Mr. Peter.
-But he only took proper precautions, and more than
-once he assured Dick that if the man's innocence were
-proved he would recompense him a hundred-fold.
-
-"But," added Dick meaningly, "if he is really guilty
-of the terrible crime we impute to him, he cannot be
-punished too severely."
-
-The expedition had that afternoon to land their
-stores once more to avoid rapids, and a little before
-sunset they encamped near to the edge of a beautiful
-wood well back from the banks of the Madeira.
-
-The night passed without adventure of any kind,
-and everyone awoke as fresh and full of life and go as
-the larks that climb the sky to meet the morning sun.
-
-Another hard day's paddling and towing and portage,
-and they found themselves high above the Madeira
-Falls in smooth water, and at the entrance to a kind
-of bay which formed the mouth or confluence of the
-two rivers, called Beni and Madro de Dios. This last
-is called the Maya-tata by the Bolivians.
-
-It is a beautiful stream, overhung by hill and forest,
-and rises fully two hundred miles southward and
-west from a thousand little rivulets that drain the
-marvellous mountains of Karavaya.
-
-The Beni joins this river about ten or twelve miles
-above the banks of the Madeira. It lies farther to the
-south and the east, and may be said to rise in the
-La Paz district itself, where it is called the Rio de
-la Paz.
-
-To the north-west of both these big rivers lies the
-great unexplored region, the land of the Bolivian and
-Peruvian cannibals.
-
-Small need have we to continue to hunt and shoot
-in Africa, wildly interesting though the country is,
-when such a marvellous tract of tens of thousands of
-square miles is hidden here, all unvisited as yet by a
-single British explorer.
-
-And what splendid possibilities for travel and
-adventure are here! A land larger than Great Britain,
-France, and Ireland thrown together, which no one
-knows anything about; a land rich in forest and prairie;
-a land the mineral wealth of which is virtually
-inexhaustible; a land of beauty; a land of lake and
-stream, of hills and rocks and verdant prairie, and a
-veritable land of flowers!
-
-A land, it is true, where wild beasts lurk and prowl,
-and where unknown tribes of savages wander hither
-and thither and hunt and fight, but all as free as the
-wind that wantons through their forest trees.
-
-----
-
-The boats were paddled several miles up-stream
-to a place where the scenery was more open.
-
-At every bend and reach of the river Roland
-expected to find Benee waiting for them. Perhaps he
-had built a hut and was living by fishing-rod and gun.
-
-But no Benee was visible and no hut.
-
-Together the two friends, Roland and Dick, accompanied
-by Charlie and Brawn, took their way across the
-plain and through the scrub, towards a lofty,
-cone-shaped hill that seemed to dominate all the scenery in
-its immediate neighbourhood.
-
-To the very top of this mountain they climbed,
-agreed between themselves not to look back until they
-had reached the summit, in order that the wild beauty
-of this lone lorn land should burst upon them in all its
-glory, and at once.
-
-They kept to their resolution, and were amply rewarded.
-
-As far as eye could reach in any direction was a
-vast panorama of mountain, forest, and stream, with
-many a beautiful lake glittering silvery in the sunshine.
-
-But no smoke, no indication of inhabitants anywhere.
-
-"It seems to be quite an untenanted country we
-have struck," said Dick.
-
-"All the better for us, perhaps, Dick," said Roland,
-"for farther we cannot proceed until poor Benee comes.
-He ought to have been here before now. But what
-adventures and dangers he may have had to pass
-through Heaven and himself only know."
-
-"Charlie," he continued, "in the event of Benee not
-turning up within the next week or two, remember
-the task of guiding us to the very palace gates of the
-cannibal king devolves upon you."
-
-"You speakee me too muchee fly-high Englese,"
-said Charlie. "But Charlie he thinkee he understand.
-You wantee me takee you to de king's gate. I can do."
-
-"That is enough, Charlie, and we can trust you. You
-have hitherto been very faithful, and what we should
-do without you I know not."
-
-"Now, Dick, I guess we'll get down a little more
-speedily than we came up."
-
-"We'll try, Roland, old man."
-
-All preparations were now made to camp near to
-the river, where the canoes were moored.
-
-They did not expect any attack by armed Indians,
-nevertheless it was deemed well to be on the safe side.
-
-Spades and shovels were accordingly brought into
-use, and even before sunset a deep trench and
-embankment were thrown up around the tents, and at
-nightfall sentries were posted at each corner.
-
-For a few days the weather was so cold and stormy
-that there was little comfort in either shooting or
-fishing. It cleared up after this, however, and at noon
-the sun was almost too hot.
-
-They found caves in the rocks by the river-side in
-which were springs bursting and bubbling up through
-limestone rocks, and quartz as white as the driven
-snow. The water was exquisitely cool and refreshing.
-
-The days were spent in exploring the country all
-around and in shooting, principally for the purpose of
-keeping the larder well supplied.
-
-Luckily the Indians were very easy to please in the
-matter of food, though their captains liked a little
-more luxury.
-
-But this land was full of game of every sort, and
-the river was alive with fish, and so unsophisticated
-were these that they sprang at a hook if it were baited
-only with a morsel of glittering mica picked off a rock.
-
-What with fish and fowl and flesh of small deer,
-little wild pigs and the young of the tapir, there would
-be very little fear of starvation should they remain
-here for a hundred years.
-
-Far up the Maya-tata canoe excursions were made,
-and at every bend of this strange river the scenery
-seemed more delightfully wild, silent, and beautiful.
-
-"Heigh-ho!" said Dick one day. "I think I should
-not mind living here for years and years, did I but
-know that poor Peggy was safe and well."
-
-"Ah! yes, that is the ever-abiding anxiety, but we
-are not to lose heart, are we?"
-
-"No," said Dick emphatically. "If the worst
-should come to the worst, let us try to look fate
-fearlessly in the face, as men should."
-
-"Bravo, Dick!"
-
-The evenings closed in at an unconscionably
-early hour, as they always do in these regions, and
-at times the long forenights were somewhat irksome.
-
-I have not said much about the captains of the great
-canoes. With one exception, these were half-castes,
-and spoke but little.
-
-The exception was Don Rodrigo, who in his time
-had been a great traveller.
-
-He was a man of about fifty, strongly built, but as
-wiry withal as an Arab of the desert.
-
-Genial was he too, and while yarning or playing
-cards--the cigarette for ever in his mouth, sometimes
-even two--there was always a pleasant smile playing
-around his mouth and eyes.
-
-He liked our young heroes, and they trusted him.
-Indeed, Brawn had taken to the man, and often as he
-squatted in the large tent of an evening, playing cards
-or dominoes with the boys, big Brawn would lay his
-honest head down on Rodrigo's knee with a sigh of
-satisfaction and go off to sleep.
-
-Rodrigo could sing a good Spanish song, and had a
-sweet melodious voice that would have gone
-excellently well with a guitar accompaniment; but guitar
-there was none.
-
-Versatile and clever, nevertheless, was Rodrigo, and
-he had manufactured a kind of musical instrument
-composed of pieces of glass and hard wood hung on
-tape bands across a board. While he sang, Rodrigo
-used to beat a charming accompaniment with little
-pith hammers.
-
-Some of his songs were very merry indeed and very
-droll, and all hands used to join in the chorus, even
-the white men and Indians outside.
-
-So the boys' days were for the time being somewhat
-of the nature of a long picnic or holiday.
-
-The story-telling of an evening helped greatly to
-wile the time away.
-
-Neither Dick nor Roland had any yarns to spin, but
-Charlie had stories of his wild and adventurous life in
-the bush, which were listened to with much pleasure.
-On the other hand, Rodrigo had been everywhere
-apparently, and done everything, so that he was the
-chief story-teller.
-
-The man's English was fairly good, with just a little
-of the Peruvian labial accent, which really added to
-its attractiveness, while at times he affected the
-Mexican drawl.
-
-Around the camp-fire I have seldom or never known
-what may be called systematic yarn-spinning.
-Everything comes spontaneously, one simple yarn or wild
-adventure leading up to the other. If now and then
-a song intervenes, all the better, and all the more
-likely is one to spend a pleasant evening either in
-camp or in galley on board ship.
-
-Don Rodrigo did at times let our heroes have
-some tales that made their scalps creep, but they
-liked him best when he was giving them simple
-narratives of travel, and for this reason: they wanted to
-learn all they could about the country in which they
-now were.
-
-And Rodrigo knew it well, even from Arauco on the
-western shore to the great marsh-lands of the
-Paraguay or the mountain fastnesses of Albuquerque on
-the east.
-
-But the range of Rodrigo's travels was not bounded
-by Brazil, or the great Pacific Ocean itself. He had
-been a cow-boy in Mexico; he had bolo'd guanacos on
-the Pampas; he had wandered among the Patagonians,
-or on fleet horses scoured their wondrous plains; he had
-dwelt in the cities, or call them "towns", if so minded,
-that border the northern shores of the Straits of
-Magellan; he had even visited Tierra del Fuego--the
-land of fire--and from the black boats of savages had
-helped to spear the silken-coated otters of those wild
-and stormy seas; and he had sailed for years among
-the glorious sunlit islands of the Southern Pacific.
-
-"As to far Bolivia," he said one evening, while his
-eyes followed the rings of pale-blue smoke he emitted
-as they rose to the tent-roof. "As to far Bolivia, dear
-boys, well, you've seen a good slice of the wilder
-regions of it, but it is to La Paz you must some
-day go, and to the splendid fresh-water ocean called
-the Titicaca.
-
-"Lads, I never measured it, but, roughly guessing,
-I should say that it is over one hundred miles in length,
-and in some places fifty wide."
-
-"Wait one moment," said Burly Bill, "this is getting
-interesting, but my meerschaum wants to be loaded."
-
-"Now," he added, a few minutes after, "just fire
-away, my friend."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII--A MARVELLOUS LAKE IN A MARVELLOUS LAND--LA PAZ
-=============================================================
-
-"Mebbe," said Rodrigo, "if you knew the
-down-south Bolivians as well as I do, you would not
-respect them a great deal. Fact is, boys, there is little
-to respect them for.
-
-"Brave? Well, if you can call slaves brave, then
-they're about as bully's they make 'em.
-
-"I have mentioned the inland sea called Lake
-Titicaca. Ah, boys, you must see this fresh-water
-ocean for yourselves! and if ever you get married,
-why, take my advice and go and spend your honeymoon there.
-
-"Me married, did you say, Mr. Bill? It strikes me,
-sir, I know a trick worth several of that. Been in
-love as often as I've got toes and fingers, and mebbe
-teeth, but no tying up for life, I'm too old a starling
-to be tamed.
-
-"But think, *amigo mio*, of a lake situated in a
-grand mountain-land, the level of its waters just
-thirteen thousand feet above the blue Pacific.
-
-"Surrounded by the wildest scenery you can
-imagine. The wildest, ay, boys, and the most
-romantic.
-
-"You have one beautiful lake or loch in your
-Britain--and I have travelled all over that land of the
-free,--I mean Loch Ness, and the surrounding
-mountains and glens are magnificent; but, bless my buttons,
-boys, you wouldn't have room in Britain for such a
-lake as the mighty Titicaca. It would occupy all
-your English Midlands, and you'd have to give the
-farmers a free passage to Australia."
-
-"How do you travel on this lake?" said Dick Temple.
-
-"Ah!" continued Rodrigo, "I can answer that; and
-here lies another marvel. For at this enormous height
-above the ocean-level, steamboats, ply up and down.
-No, not built there, but in sections sent from America,
-and I believe even from England. The labour of
-dragging these sections over the mountain-chains may
-easily be guessed.
-
-"The steamers are neither so large nor so fine as
-your Clyde boats, but there is a lot of honest comfort
-in them after all.
-
-"And terrible storms sometimes sweep down from
-the lofty Cordilleras, and then the lake is all a chaos
-of broken water and waves even houses high. If
-caught in such storms, ordinary boats are speedily
-sunk, and lucky are even the steamers if shelter is handy.
-
-"Well, what would this world be, I wonder, if it
-were always all sunshine. We should soon get well
-tired of it, I guess, and want to go somewhere
-else--to murky England, for example."
-
-Rodrigo blew volumes of smoke before he continued
-his desultory yarn.
-
-"Do you know, boys, what I saw when in your
-Britain, south of the Tweed? I saw men calling
-themselves sportsmen chasing poor little hares with
-harriers, and following unfortunate stags with
-buck-hounds. I saw them hunt the fox too, men and
-women in a drove, and I called them in my own mind
-cowards all. Brutality and cowardice in every face,
-and there wasn't a farmer in the flock of stag-hunting
-Jockies and Jennies who could muster courage enough
-to face a puma or even an old baboon with a supple
-stick in its hand. Pah!
-
-"But among the hills and forests around this Lake
-Titicaca is the paradise of the hunter who has a bit of
-sand and grit in his substance, and is not afraid to
-walk a whole mile away from a cow's tail.
-
-"No, there are no dangerous Indians that ever I
-came across among the mountains and glens; but as
-you never know what may happen, you've got to keep
-your cartridges free from damp.
-
-"What kind of game? Well, I was going to say
-pretty much of all sorts. We haven't got giraffes
-nor elephants, it is true, nor do we miss them much.
-
-"But there are fish in the lake and beasts on the
-shore, and rod and gun will get but little holiday, I
-assure you, lads, if you elect to travel in that
-strange land.
-
-"I hardly know very much about the fish. They
-say that the lake is bottomless, and that not only is it
-swarming with fish, wherever there is a bank, but
-that terrible animals or beasts have been seen on its
-deep-blue surface; creatures so fearful in aspect that
-even their sudden appearance has turned gray the
-hairs of those who beheld them.
-
-"But I calculate that this is all Indian gammon or
-superstition.
-
-"As for me, I've been always more at home in the
-woods and forests, and on the mountain's brow.
-
-"I'm not going to boast, boys, but I've climbed the
-highest hills of the Cordilleras, where I have had
-no companion save the condor.
-
-"You Europeans call the eagle the bird of Jove.
-If that is so, I want to ask them where the condor
-comes in.
-
-"Why, your golden eagle of Scottish wilds isn't
-a circumstance to the condor of the Andes. He is no
-more to be compared to this great forest vulture than
-a spring chicken is to a Christmas turkey.
-
-"But the condor is only one of a thousand wild
-birds of prey, or of song, found in the Andean regions
-or giant Cordilleras.
-
-"And at lower altitude we find the llamas, the
-guanacos, and herds of wild vicuñas.
-
-"You may come across the puma and the jaguar
-also, and be sorry you've met.
-
-"Then there are goats, foxes, and wild dogs, as
-well as the viscacha and the chinchilla, to say nothing
-of deer.
-
-"But on the great lake itself, apart from all thought
-of fish, you need never go without a jolly good dinner
-if the rarest of water-fowl will please you. Ducks
-and geese galore, and other species too many to name."
-
-"That is a land, and that is a lake," said Dick
-musingly, "that I should dearly like to visit. Yes,
-and to dwell in or on for a time.
-
-"I suppose labour is cheap?" he added enquiringly.
-
-"I guess," returned Rodrigo, "that if you wanted
-to erect a wooden hut on some high and healthy
-promontory overlooking the lake--and this would be
-your best holt--you would have to learn the use of
-axe and adze and saw, and learn also how to drive
-a nail or two without doubling it over your thumb
-and hitting the wrong nail on the head."
-
-"Well, anyhow," said Dick, "I shall dream to-night
-of your great inland ocean, of your Lake Titicaca,
-and in my dreams I shall imagine I am already there.
-I suppose the woods are alive with beautiful birds?"
-
-"Yes," said Rodrigo, "and with splendid moths and
-butterflies also; so let these have a place in your
-dreams as well. Throw in chattering monkeys too,
-and beautiful parrots that love to mock every sound
-they hear around them. Let there be evergreen trees
-draped in garments of climbing flowers, roaring
-torrents, wild foaming rivers, that during storms roll
-down before them, from the flooded mountains,
-massive tree trunks, and boulders houses high."
-
-"You are quite poetic!"
-
-"But I am not done yet. People your paradise
-with strangely beautiful lizards that creep and crawl
-everywhere, looking like living flowers, and arrayed
-in colours that rival the tints of the rainbow.
-Lizards--ay, and snakes; but bless you, boys, these are very
-innocent, objecting to nothing except to having their
-tails trodden on."
-
-"Well, no creature cares for treatment like that,"
-said Roland. "If you and I go to this land of beauty,
-Dick, we must make a point of not treading on snakes'
-tails."
-
-"But, boys, there are fortunes in this land of ours
-also. Fortunes to be had for the digging."
-
-"Copper?"
-
-"Yes, and gold as well!"
-
-Rodrigo paused to roll and light another cigarette.
-I have never seen anyone do so more deftly. He
-seemed to take an acute delight in the process. He
-held the snow-white tissue-paper lovingly in his
-grasp, while with his forefinger and thumb he apportioned
-to it just the right quantity of yellow fragrant
-Virginia leaf, then twisting it tenderly, gently, he
-conveyed it to his lips.
-
-Said Dick now, "I have often heard of the wondrous
-city of La Paz, and to me it has always seemed a sort
-of semi-mythical town--a South American Timbuctoo."
-
-"Ah, lad, it is far from being mythical! On the
-contrary, it is very real, and so are everything and
-everybody in it.
-
-"I could not, however, call it, speaking conscientiously,
-a gem of a place, though it might be made
-so. But you see, boys, there is a deal of Spanish or
-Portuguese blood in the veins of the real whites
-here--though, mind you, three-fourths of the population
-are Indians of almost every Bolivian race. Well, the
-motto of the dark-eyed whites seems to be Mañana
-(pronounce Mah-nyah-nah), which signifies
-'to-morrow', you know. Consequently, with the very
-best intentions in the world, they hardly ever finish
-anything they begin. Some of the streets are decently
-paved, but every now and then you come to a slough
-of despond. Many of the houses are almost palatial,
-but they stand side by side with, and are jostled by,
-the vile mud-huts of the native population. They
-have a cathedral and a bazaar, but neither is finished yet.
-
-"Well, La Paz stands at a great altitude above
-the ocean. It is well worthy of a visit. If you go
-there, however, there are two things you must not
-forget to take with you, namely, a bottle of
-smelling-salts and plenty of eau-de-Cologne."
-
-"The place smells--slightly, then, I suppose," ventured Dick.
-
-"Ha! ha! ha!" Rodrigo had a hearty laugh of his
-own. "Yes, it smells slightly. So do the people, I
-may add.
-
-"The natives of La Paz, although some of them
-boast of a direct descent from the ancient Incas, are
-to all intents and purposes slaves.
-
-"Well, boys, when I say 'slaves' I calculate I
-know pretty well what I am talking about. The
-old feudal system holds sway in what we call the
-civilized portions of Bolivia. Civilization, indeed!
-Only in the wilds is there true freedom and
-independence. The servants on ranches and farms are
-bought or sold with the land on which they live. So,
-Mr. Bill, if you purchase a farm in Bolivia, it won't
-be only the cows and cocks and hens you'll have to
-take, but the servants as well, ay, and the children
-of these.
-
-"Bolivian Indians, who are troubled with families
-that they consider a trifle too large for their income,
-have a simple and easy method of meeting the difficulty.
-They just take what you might call the surplus
-children to some white-man farmer and sell them as
-they do their cows."
-
-"Then these children are just brought up as slaves?"
-
-"Yes, their masters treat them fairly well, but they
-generally make good use of the whip. 'Spare the
-rod and spoil the child' is a motto they play up to
-most emphatically, and certainly I have never known
-the rod to be spared, nor the child to be spoiled
-either.
-
-"Oh! by the way, as long as my hand is in I may
-tell you about the servants that the gentry-folks of
-La Paz keep. I don't think any European would
-be plagued with such a dirty squad, for in a household
-of, say, ten, there must be ten slaves at the very least,
-to say nothing of the pongo man.
-
-"This pongo man is in reality the charwoman of
-La Paz. It is he who does all the dirty work, and
-a disagreeable-looking and painfully dirty blackguard
-he is himself. It is not his custom to stay more than
-a week with any one family. He likes to be always
-on the move.
-
-"He assists the cook; he collects dried llama manure
-for firewood, as Paddy might say; he fetches water
-from the fountain; he brings home the marketing, in
-the shape of meat and vegetables; he cleans and scrubs
-everywhere, receiving few pence for his trouble, but
-an indefinite number of kicks and cuffs, while his bed
-at night is on the cold stones behind the hall door.
-Yet with all his ill-usage, he seems just about as
-happy as a New Hollander, and you always find him
-trotting around trilling a song.
-
-"Ah, there is nothing like contentment in this
-world, boys!"
-
-"Yes, Mr. Bill, I have seen one or two really pretty
-girls among the Bolivians, but never lost my heart to
-any of them, for between you and me, they don't
-either brush or comb their hair, and when walking
-with them it is best to keep the weather-gauge. And
-that's a hint worth having, I can assure you."
-
-----
-
-On the very next evening after Don Rodrigo spoke
-his piece, as he phrased it, about the strange customs
-and habits of the Bolivians, all were assembled as
-usual in the biggest tent.
-
-Burly Bill and his meerschaum were getting on
-remarkably well together, the Don was rolling a
-cigarette, when suddenly Brawn started up as if from
-a dream, and stood with his ears pricked and his head
-a little to one side, gazing out into the darkness.
-
-He uttered no warning growl, and made no sound
-of any sort, but his tail was gently agitated, as if
-something pleased him.
-
-Then with one impatient "Yap!" he sprang away,
-and was seen no more for a few minutes.
-
-"What can ail the dog?" said Roland.
-
-"What, indeed?" said Dick.
-
-And now footsteps soft and slow were heard
-approaching the tent, and next minute poor Benee
-himself staggered in and almost fell at Roland's feet.
-
-The honest hound seemed almost beside himself
-with joy, but he had sense enough to know that his
-old favourite, Benee, was exhausted and ill, and,
-looking up into his young master's face, appeared to
-plead for his assistance.
-
-Benee's cheeks were hollow, his feet were cut and
-bleeding, and yet as he lay there he smiled feebly.
-
-"I am happy now," he murmured, and forthwith
-fell asleep.
-
-Both Roland and Dick trembled. They thought
-that sleep might be the sleep of death, but Don Rodrigo,
-after feeling Benee's pulse, assured them that it
-was all right, and that the poor fellow only needed
-rest and food.
-
-In about half an hour the faithful fellow--ah! who
-could doubt his fidelity now?--sat painfully up.
-
-Dick went hurrying off and soon returned with
-soup and with wine, and having swallowed a little,
-Benee made signs that he would rest and sleep.
-
-"To-morrow," he said, "to-morrow I speak plenty.
-To-night no can do."
-
-And so they did all they could to make him
-comfortable, and great Brawn lay down by his side to
-watch him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV--BENEE'S STORY--THE YOUNG CANNIBAL QUEEN
-=====================================================
-
-I cannot help saying that in forbearing to talk
-to or to question poor Benee on the evening of
-his arrival, our young heroes exhibited a spirit of
-true manliness and courage which was greatly to
-their credit.
-
-That they were burning to get news of the
-unfortunate Peggy goes without saying, and to hear at
-the same time Benee's own marvellous adventures.
-
-Nor did they hurry the poor fellow even next day.
-
-It is a good plan to fly from temptation, when you
-are not sure you may not fall. There is nothing
-dishonourable about such a course, be the temptation
-what it may.
-
-Roland and Dick adopted the plan this morning at
-all events. Both were awake long before sunrise;
-long before the beautiful stars had ceased to glitter
-gem-like high over mountains and forest.
-
-The camp was hardly yet astir, although Burly Bill
-was looming between the lads and the light as they
-stood with honest Brawn in the big tent doorway.
-Over his head rose a huge cloud of fragrant smoke,
-while ever and anon a gleam from the bowl of his
-meerschaum lit up his good-humoured face.
-
-It had not taken the lads long to dress, and now
-they sauntered out.
-
-The first faint light of the dawning day was already
-beginning to pale the stars. Soon the sun himself,
-red and rosy, would sail up from his bed behind the
-far green forest.
-
-"Bill!"
-
-"Hillo! Good-morning to you both! I've been up
-for hours."
-
-"And we could not sleep for--thinking. But I say,
-Bill, I think Benee has good news. I'm burning to
-hear it, and so is Dick here, but it would be downright
-mean to wake the poor fellow till he is well rested.
-So, for fear we should seem too inquisitive, or too
-squaw-like, we're off with bold Brawn here for a
-walk. Yes, we are both armed."
-
-When the lads came back in about two hours' time,
-they found Benee up and dressed and seated on the
-grass at breakfast.
-
-When I say he was dressed I allude to the fact that
-he very much needed dressing, for his garments were
-in rags, his blanket in tatters. But he had taken the
-clothes Bill provided for him, and gone straight to the
-river for a wash and a swim.
-
-He looked quite the old Benee on his return.
-
-"Ah!" said Bill, "you're smiling, Benee. I know
-you have good news."
-
-"Plenty good, Massa Bill, one leetle bitee bad!"
-
-"Well, eat, old man; I'm hungry. Yes, the boys are
-beautiful, and they'll be here in a few minutes."
-
-And so they were.
-
-Brawn was before them. He darted in with a rush
-and a run, and licked first Benee's ears and then Bill's.
-It was a rough but a very kindly salute.
-
-In these sky-high regions of Bolivia, a walk or run
-across the plains early in the morning makes one
-almost painfully hungry.
-
-But here was a breakfast fit for a king; eggs of
-wild birds, fish, and flesh of deer, with cakes galore,
-for the Indians were splendid cooks.
-
-Then, after breakfast, Benee told the boys and Bill
-all his long and strange story. It was a thrilling one,
-as we know already, and lost none of its effect by
-being related in Benee's simple, but often graphic and
-figurative language.
-
-"Oh!" cried impulsive Dick, when he had finished,
-and there were tears in the lad's eyes that he took
-small pains to hide, "you have made Roland and me
-happy, inexpressibly happy, Benee. We know now
-that dear Peggy is well, and that nothing can harm
-her for the present, and something tells me we shall
-receive her safe and sound."
-
-Benee's face got slightly clouded.
-
-"Will it not be so, Benee?"
-
-"The Christian God will help us, Massa Dick. Der
-is mooch--plenty mooch--to be done!"
-
-"And we're the lads to do it," almost shouted Burly Bill.
-
-"Wowff! Wowff!" barked Brawn in the most emphatic manner.
-
-In another hour all were once more on the march
-towards the land of the cannibals.
-
-----
-
-Life at the court of Queen Leeboo, as her people
-called poor Peggy, was not all roses, but well the girl
-knew that if she was to harbour any hopes of escape
-she must keep cool and play her game well.
-
-She had all a woman's wits about her, however, and
-all a woman's wiles. Vain Peggy certainly was not,
-but she knew she was beautiful, and determined to
-make the best use of the fact.
-
-Luckily for her she could speak the language of
-this strange wild people as well as anyone, for Charlie
-himself had been her teacher.
-
-A strangely musical and labial tongue it is, and
-figurative, too, as might be expected, for the scenery
-of every country has a certain effect upon its language.
-
-It was soon evident that Queen Leeboo was expected
-to stay in the royal camp almost entirely.
-
-This she determined should not be the case. So
-after the royal breakfast one morning--and a very
-delightful and natural meal it was, consisting chiefly
-of nuts and fruit--Queen Leeboo seized her sceptre,
-the poisoned spear, and stepped lightly down from her
-throne.
-
-"That isn't good enough," she said, "I want a little
-fresh air."
-
-Her attendants threw themselves on their faces
-before her, but she made them get up, and very much
-astonished they were to see the beautiful queen march
-along the great hall and step out on to the
-skull-decorated verandah.
-
-The palace was built on a mountain ledge or table-land
-of small dimensions. It was backed by gigantic
-and precipitous rocks, now most beautifully draped
-with the greenery of bush and fern, and trailed over
-by a thousand charming wild flowers.
-
-Leeboo, as we may call her for the present, seated
-herself languidly on a dais. She knew better than to
-be rash. Her object was to gain the entire confidence
-of her people. In this alone lay her hopes of escape,
-and thoughts of freedom were ever uppermost in her mind.
-
-This was the first time she had been beyond the
-portals of her royal prison-house, but she determined
-it should not be the last.
-
-While her attendants partially encircled her she
-gazed dreamily at the glorious scenery beyond and
-beneath her.
-
-From her elevated position she could view the
-landscape for leagues and leagues on every side. Few of
-us, in this tame domestic land that we all love so well,
-have ever visited so beautiful a country as these
-highlands of Bolivia.
-
-Fresh from the hands of its Maker did it seem on
-this fresh, cool, delightful morning. The dark green
-of its rolling woods and forests, the heath-clad hills,
-the streams that meandered through the dales like
-threads of silver, the glittering lakes, the plains where
-the llamas, and even oxen, roamed in great herds, and
-far, far away on the horizon the serrated mountains,
-patched and flecked with snow, that hid their summits
-in the fleecy clouds; the whole formed as grand and
-lovely a panorama as ever human eyes beheld.
-
-But it was marred somewhat by the immediate
-surroundings of poor Leeboo.
-
-Oh, those awful skulls! "Is everything good and
-beautiful in Nature," she could not help asking
-herself, "except mankind?"
-
-Here was the faint odour of death, and she beheld
-on many of these skulls the mark of the axe,
-reminding her of murder. She shuddered. Her palace
-was but a charnel-house. Those crouching creatures
-around her, waiting to do her bidding or obey her
-slightest behest, were but slaves of tyrant masters,
-and every day she missed one of the youngest and
-fairest, and knew what her doom would be.
-
-And out beyond the gate yonder were her soldiers,
-her guards. Alas, yes! and they were her keepers also.
-
-But behold! yonder comes the great chief Kaloomah,
-her prime minister, and walking beside him is Kalamazoo.
-
-Kaloomah walks erect and stately, as becomes so
-high a functionary. He is stern in face even to
-grimness and ferocity, but as handsome in form as some of
-the heroes of Walter Scott.
-
-And Kalamazoo is little more than a boy, and one,
-too, of somewhat fragile form, with face more delicate
-than is becoming in a cannibal Indian.
-
-Kalamazoo is the only son of the late queen. For
-some reason or other he wears a necklace of his
-mother's red-stained teeth. Probably they are a charm.
-
-Both princes kneel at Leeboo's feet. Leeboo strikes
-both smartly on the shoulders with her sceptre and
-bids them stand up.
-
-"I would not have you grovel round me," she says
-in their own tongue, "like two little pigs of the
-forest." They stand up, looking sheepish and nonplussed, and
-Leeboo, placing one on each side of her--a spear-length
-distant,--looks first at Kaloomah and then at Kalamazoo
-and bursts into a silvery laugh.
-
-Why laughs Queen Leeboo? These two men are
-both very natural, both somewhat solemn. Not even
-little pigs of the forest like to be laughed at.
-
-But the queen's mistress of the robes--let me call
-her so--has told her that she is expected to take unto
-herself a husband in three moons, and that it must be
-either Kaloomah or Kalamazoo.
-
-This is now no state secret. All the queen's people
-know, from her own palace gates to the remotest mud
-hut on this cannibalistic territory. They all know it,
-and they look forward to that week of festivity as
-children in the rural districts of England look forward
-to a fair.
-
-There will be a monster carousal that day.
-
-The soldiers of the queen will make a raid on a
-neighbouring hill tribe, and bring back many heads
-and many hams.
-
-If Kaloomah is the favourite, then Kalamazoo will
-be slain and cooked.
-
-If the queen elects to smile on Kalamazoo with his
-necklace of the maternal molars and incisors, then
-Kaloomah with the best grace he can must submit to
-the knife.
-
-Yet must I do justice to both and say that it is not
-because they fear death that they are so anxious to
-curry favour with the young and lovely queen. Oh
-no! for both are over head in love with her.
-
-And a happy thought has occurred to Leeboo. She
-will play one against the other, and thus, in some way
-to herself at present unknown, endeavour to effect her
-escape from this land of murder, blood, and beautiful
-scenery.
-
-So there they stand silently, a spear-length from her
-dais, she glorying in the power she knows she has
-over both. There they stand in silence, for court
-etiquette forbids them to speak until spoken to.
-
-Very like a couple of champion idiots they are too.
-Big Kaloomah doesn't quite know what to do with his
-hands, and Kalamazoo is fidgeting nervously with his
-necklace, and apparently counting his dead mother's
-teeth as monks count their beads.
-
-Leeboo rises at last, and, gathering the loose portion
-of her skirts around her, says: "Come, I would walk."
-
-She is a little way ahead, and she waves her spear
-so prettily as she smiles her sweetest and points to the
-grimly ornamental gate.
-
-And after hesitating for one moment, both Kaloomah
-and the young prince follow sheepishly.
-
-The guards by the gate, grim, fully armed cut-throats,
-seeing that her majesty expects obedience, fall back,
-and the trio march through.
-
-But I do not think that either of Leeboo's lovers
-is prepared for what follows.
-
-If they had calculated on a solemn majestic walk
-around the plateau, they were soon very much undeceived.
-
-Leeboo had no sooner begun to breathe the glorious
-mountain air, than she felt as exuberant as a child
-again. Indeed, she was but little else. But she placed
-her spear and sceptre of royalty very unceremoniously
-into Kaloomah's hand to hold, while she darted off
-after a splendid crimson specimen of dragon-fly.
-
-Kaloomah looked at Kalamazoo. Kalamazoo looked
-at Kaloomah.
-
-The one didn't love the other, it is true, yet a
-fellow-feeling made them wondrous kind. And the feeling
-uppermost in the mind of each was wonder.
-
-Kaloomah beckoned to Kalamazoo, and pointed to
-the queen. The words he spoke were somewhat as
-follows:
-
-"Too much choorka-choorka! Suppose the queen
-we lose--"
-
-He pointed with his thumb to his neck by way of
-completing the sentence.
-
-"Too much choorka-choorka!" repeated the young
-prince. "You old--you stop her."
-
-"No, no, you young--you run quick, you stop her!"
-
-That dragon-fly gave Leeboo grand sport for over
-half an hour. From bush to bush it flitted, and flew
-from flower to flower, over rocks, over cairns, and
-finally down the great hill that led to the plain below.
-
-Matters looked serious, so both lovers were now in
-duty bound to follow their all-too-lively queen.
-
-When they reached the bottom of the brae, however,
-behold!--but stay, there was no behold about it.
-Queen Leeboo was nowhere to be seen!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV--BENEE'S MOTHER TO THE FRONT
-========================================
-
-Here was a difficulty!
-
-If they returned without the queen, they
-would be torn in pieces and quietly eaten afterwards.
-
-They became excited. They looked here, there, and
-everywhere for Leeboo. Up into the trees, under the
-bushes, behind rocks and stones, but all in vain. The
-beautiful girl seemed to have been spirited away, or
-the earth had opened and admitted her into fairy-land, or--
-
-But see! To their great joy, yonder comes the
-young queen holding aloft the dragon-fly and singing
-to herself.
-
-Not a whit worse was the lovely thing; not one of
-its four gauzy wings was so much as rumpled.
-
-Then she whispered something to it, and tossed it
-high in air.
-
-And away it flew, straight to the north-east, as
-if bent upon delivering the message she had entrusted
-to its keeping.
-
-She stood gazing after it with flushed cheeks and
-parted lips until it was no longer visible against the
-sky's pale blue, then turned away with a sigh.
-
-But Leeboo was not tired yet. There were beautiful
-birds to be seen and their songs listened to. And
-there were garlands of wild flowers to be strung.
-
-One she threw over Kaloomah's neck.
-
-Kalamazoo looked wretched.
-
-She made him even a larger, and he was happy.
-This garland quite hid his mother's frightful teeth.
-
-But it must be said that these two lovers of Leeboo's
-looked--with those garlands of flowers around their
-necks--more foolish than ever.
-
-She trotted them round for two whole hours. Then
-she resumed her sceptre, and intimated her intention
-to return to the palace.
-
-For a whole week these rambles were continued
-day after day.
-
-Then storm-winds blew wild from off the snow-patched
-mountains, and Leeboo was confined to her
-palace for days.
-
-Her maids of honour, however, did all they could
-to please and comfort her. They brought her the
-choicest of fruits, and they told her strange weird
-tales of strange weird people and mannikins who in
-these regions dwell deep down in caves below the
-ground, and often steal little children to nurse their
-tiny infants.
-
-And they sang or chanted to her also, and all night
-long in the drapery-hung chamber, where she reposed
-on a couch of skins, they lay near her, ready to start
-to their feet and obey her slightest command.
-
-Leeboo ruled her empire by love. But she could
-be haughty and stern when she pleased, only she
-never made use of that terrible spear, one touch of
-which meant death.
-
-----
-
-In less than six-weeks' time Queen Leeboo had so
-thoroughly gained the confidence of her people that
-she was trusted to go anywhere, although always
-under the eyes of the young prince or Kaloomah.
-
-I believe Leeboo would have learned to like the
-savages but for their cannibal tastes, and several times,
-when men returned from the war-path, she had to
-witness the most terrible of orgies.
-
-It was always young girls or boys who were the
-victims of those fearful feasts. Her heart bled for
-them, but all remonstrance on her part was in vain.
-
-Leeboo had got her pony back, and often had a
-glorious gallop over the prairie.
-
-But something else had happened, which added
-greatly to Leeboo's comfort and happiness. Shooks-gee
-himself came to camp and brought with him little
-Weenah, his beautiful child-daughter.
-
-Leeboo took to her at once, and the two became
-constant companions.
-
-Weenah could converse in broken English, and so
-many a long delightful "confab" they had together.
-
-Child-like, Weenah told Leeboo of her love for
-Benee, of their early rambles in the forest, too, and of
-her own wild wanderings in search of him. Told her,
-too, that Benee was coming back again with a fresh
-army of Indians and white men, with Leeboo's own
-lover and her brother as their captains; told her of the
-fearful fight that was bound to take place, but which
-would end in the complete triumph of the good men
-and the rescue of Leeboo herself.
-
-Yes, Weenah had her prophecy all cut and dry, and
-her story ended with a good "curtain", as all good
-stories should.
-
-Whether Weenah's prophecy would be fulfilled or
-not we have to read on to see, for, alas! it was a dark
-and gloomy race of savages that would have to be dealt
-with, and rather than lose their queen, Kaloomah and
-his people would--but there! I have no wish to
-paint my chapters red.
-
-----
-
-Leeboo was not slow to perceive that her chief
-chance of escape lay in the skill with which she might
-play her two lovers against each other.
-
-Whoever married her would be king. He would
-rank with, but after, the queen herself, for, to the
-credit of these cannibals be it said, they always prefer
-female government.
-
-In civilized society Leeboo might have been accused
-of acting mischievously; for she would take first one
-into favour and then the other, giving, that is, each
-of them a taste of the seventh heaven time about.
-When Kalamazoo's star was in the ascendant, then
-Kaloomah was deep down in a pit of despair; but
-anon, he would be up and out again, and then it was
-Kalamazoo's turn to weep and wail and gnash his
-triangular red-stained teeth.
-
-It is needless to say that the game she was playing
-was a sad strain upon our poor young heroine. No
-wonder her eyes grew bright with that brightness
-which denotes loss of strength, and weariness, and that
-her cheeks were often far too flushed.
-
-Hope deferred makes the heart sick, and but for
-little Weenah I think that Leeboo would have given
-up heart altogether and lain down to die.
-
-But Weenah was always bright, cheerful, and
-happy. She was laughing all day long. Benee was
-coming for her; of that she was very certain and
-sure, so she sang about her absent lover even as
-birds in the woodlands sing, and with just as sweet
-a voice.
-
-The plot was thickening and thickening, and Leeboo
-managed matters now so that only one of her
-guardians at a time accompanied herself and Weenah in
-their rides or rambles.
-
-Dixie--as the pony was named--was a very faithful
-little horse, and though when Weenah had to trot
-beside him he never was allowed to go the pace, he
-was exceedingly strong, and could scour the plain
-or prairie as fleet as the wind whenever his young
-mistress put him on his mettle. On such occasions,
-no matter which of Leeboo's admirers was with her,
-he dropped far astern, and after running for a mile
-or so, had to sit down to pant.
-
-But the young queen always returned, and so she
-was trusted implicitly.
-
-So too was Weenah, but then Weenah was one of
-themselves.
-
-----
-
-In their very long and toilsome march, up the Mayatata,
-well was it indeed for Roland and Dick that they
-had guides so faithful and clever as Benee and Charlie.
-But for them, indeed, the expedition would have been
-foredoomed to failure.
-
-Benee indeed was really the guiding star. For in
-his own lonesome wanderings he had surveyed the
-whole country as it were, and knew every fitting
-place for a camp, every ford on every stream, and
-every pathway through the dense and dark forests.
-
-They were but the pathways made by the beasts,
-however, and often all but impassable. Still, in single
-file they marched, and were always successful in
-making their way. Two whole months passed away,
-and now, as they were nearing the cannibal highlands,
-greater precautions than ever were required.
-
-And for a week they had to turn night into day,
-and travel while the savages slept.
-
-They kept away, too, from any portion of the
-country which seemed to have the slightest claim to
-be called inhabited. Better they should herd with
-the wild beasts of the forest than sight the face of
-even a single savage. For swift as deer that savage
-would run towards the cannibal head-quarters and
-give information of the approach of a pale-face horde
-of enemies.
-
-At last there came a day when Benee called a
-council of war.
-
-"We now get near de bad man's land," he said.
-"Ugh! I not lub mooch blood."
-
-"Then what would you have us do?" said Roland.
-"Shall we advance boldly or make a night attack?"
-
-"No, no, no, sah. Too many cannibal warrior, too
-much pizen arrow, sling, and spear. No; build here
-a camp. Make he strong. Benee will go all same.
-Benee will creep and crawl till he come to father and
-mother house. Den Benee make all right. Pray for
-Benee."
-
-Benee left, poor Brawn bidding him a most
-affectionate farewell. Surely that honest dog knew he
-was bent on saving his little mistress, if only he
-could.
-
-Charlie, the ex-cannibal, stayed in camp for the
-time being, but he might be useful as a spy afterwards.
-
-It is needless to say that the prayers of both our
-heroes were offered up night and day for Benee's
-success, and that their blessings followed him.
-
-But we do not always receive the answers that
-would appear to us the best to our prayers, however
-earnest and heartfelt they may be. Still, we know
-well, though we are generally very loth to admit it,
-that afflictions are very often blessings in disguise.
-
-And now Benee was once more all alone on the
-war-path, and he followed his old tactics, creeping
-quietly through the jungle only by night, and retiring
-into hiding whenever day began to obliterate the stars.
-Roland gave orders for the camp to be immediately
-fortified. It was certainly a well-chosen one, on the
-top of a wooded hill.
-
-This hill was scarcely a hundred feet high, but
-although it might be taken by siege, its position
-rendered it almost impregnable as far as assault was
-concerned.
-
-A rampart with a trench was thrown round three
-sides of it. That was apparently all that would be
-needed.
-
-Looking from below by daylight even, hardly a
-savage could have told that an enemy held the hill.
-
-And now there was nothing to do but to wait. And
-waiting is always wearisome work.
-
-But let us follow Benee.
-
-His progress was slow, but it was sure, and at last
-he reached the cottage where good Shooks-gee and
-his wife resided.
-
-But here was no one save his "mother", as Benee
-lovingly called her.
-
-A great fear took possession of his mind. Could it
-be that his father himself was dead, and that Weenah
-was captive?
-
-His lips and voice almost refused to formulate the
-question nearest to his heart.
-
-But his mother's smile reassured him. Weenah
-was safe, and at the court of the queen, and Shooks-gee
-himself was there. So Benee grew hopeful once more.
-
-But his task would be by no means an easy one.
-
-First and foremost he must establish communication
-between the captive girl and himself. How could
-this be done?
-
-Had Shooks-gee been at home it might have been
-managed simply enough. But he himself dared not
-appear anywhere in sight of the savages.
-
-He felt almost baffled, but at last his mother came
-to his rescue.
-
-The risk would be extreme. These cannibal savages
-are as suspicious of strangers as they are fierce and
-bloodthirsty, and if this poor, kindly-hearted woman
-was taken for a spy her doom would be sealed.
-
-But see the young queen she must, or little Weenah,
-her daughter; for great though Benee's abilities were,
-he did not possess the accomplishment of writing.
-
-----
-
-Dressed as one of the lowest of peasants, the mother
-of Weenah set boldly out on her forlorn hope the very
-next day, and in the afternoon she was within one
-mile of the palace itself.
-
-Here she hid herself in the jungle, and after eating
-a little fruit went to sleep.
-
-The stars were still shining when she awoke, but
-she knew them all, and those that were setting told
-her that day would soon break.
-
-To pass through the soldier-guards and enter the
-palace would, she knew, be an utter impossibility.
-There was nothing for it but to wait with patience,
-for her husband had told her that the queen rode out
-for a scamper over the plains every forenoon.
-
-He had even told her the direction she usually
-took, not riding fast, but with Weenah running by
-her side, keeping a long way ahead of her lover
-guardian, whichever one of them might happen for
-the time being to be the happy man.
-
-Benee's mother was as courageous as a mountain
-cat. She had a duty to perform, and she meant to
-carry it out.
-
-Well, we are told in some old classic that fortune
-favours the brave.
-
-It does not always do so, but in this case, at all
-events, this good woman was successful.
-
-At a certain part of the plain there were bushes
-close and thick enough, and just here Leeboo with
-her little charger must pass if she came out to-day at all.
-
-It was at this spot, then, that Weenah's mother
-concealed herself.
-
-Nor had she very long to wait, for soon the
-sound of the pony's hoofs fell on her ear, beating a
-pleasant accompaniment to two sweet voices raised in
-song.
-
-The Indian woman raised herself and peeped over
-the bushes.
-
-Yes, they were coming, and alone too, for Kaloomah
-could not run so fast as Kalamazoo, and was a long
-way behind.
-
-With characteristic impulse Weenah rushed forward
-and was clasped for a moment in her mother's arms.
-
-And, somewhat astonished, Leeboo immediately
-reined up.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI--THE PALE-FACE QUEEN HAS FLED
-==========================================
-
-Leeboo, the young queen, could see that the
-woman was flurried and excited.
-
-She stood with her face to the pony and one arm
-was held aloft in the air. Her eyes were gleaming,
-and her hat had fallen over her back, allowing her
-wealth of coal-black hair to escape.
-
-Weenah stood by the saddle.
-
-"I have that to say," exclaimed her mother, in her
-strangely musical language, "that must be said speedily.
-If I am seen we are all doomed. But listen, and listen
-intently. You are free if you are fortunate. Liberty
-is at hand. Your friends are twenty miles down
-stream in camp. Down the stream of Bitter Waters.
-Ride this way to-morrow, and when far enough
-away take Weenah in your saddle, and gallop for
-your life into the forest. Weenah will be your guide."
-
-So quickly did the woman vanish that for a few
-moments our heroine half believed she must have been
-dreaming.
-
-But she pulled herself together at once, and now
-rode back to meet Kaloomah.
-
-She was all smiles too.
-
-"Why waits poor Kaloomah here?" she said, in her
-softest sweetest tones.
-
-Kaloomah placed his hand on the saddle pommel,
-and panted somewhat. But Kaloomah was in the
-seventh heaven.
-
-"Say--say--say 'poor Kaloomah' again," he muttered.
-
-"Poor Kaloomah! Poor dear Kaloomah!"
-
-She could even afford to place emphasis on the
-"dear", she was so happy.
-
-"Oh--ugh!" sighed the savage; "but to-morrow it
-may be 'poor dear Kalamazoo!'"
-
-"Ah, you are jealous! A little forest bird is
-pecking, pecking at your heart. But listen; to-morrow it
-shall not be Kalamazoo, but Kaloomah once again."
-
-Well, I dare say that love-making is very much the
-same all over the wide, wide world, and so we cannot
-even laugh at this cannibal if he did bend rapturously
-down and kiss the toe of Leeboo's sandal-shaped
-stirrup.
-
-"And now, Kaloomah," she added, "I would gather
-some wild flowers, and listen for a little while to the
-soo-soo's song while you twine my wild flowers into
-a garland. My little handmaiden, Weenah, will assist
-you.
-
-"But, Kaloomah!" she continued archly.
-
-"Yes, my moon-dream."
-
-"You must not make love to my maiden, else a
-little forest bird will peck poor Leeboo's heart to
-pieces and Leeboo die."
-
-----
-
-I hardly think it would be putting it one whit too
-strongly to say that the pale-face maiden queen had
-turned this savage's head.
-
-They all returned together at last to the palace, and
-the queen with her little handmaiden retired to her
-chamber to dine.
-
-As to Kaloomah, the spirit of pride had got into him,
-and this is really as difficult to get rid of as if one
-were possessed of an evil spirit. So the chief, decorated
-with the garland of wild flowers that Leeboo the
-queen had placed around his neck, could not resist
-the temptation to parade himself on the plateau before
-Kalamazoo's tent. He wished the prince to see him.
-And the prince did.
-
-The prince, moreover, was strongly tempted to
-rush forth, spear in hand, and slay his rival where
-he stood.
-
-But he remembered in time that Kaloomah was not
-only a great chief but a mighty warrior. Over and
-over again had he led the cannibal army against the
-glens and valleys of distant highland chiefs. And he
-had been ever victorious, his soldiers returning after
-a great slaughter of the foe, laden with heads and
-hams, to hold nights and nights of fearful orgie.
-
-Kalamazoo knew that Kaloomah was the people's
-favourite, and that if he slew him, he himself would
-speedily be torn limb from limb.
-
-So he was content to gnash his own teeth, to count
-his mother's over and over again, and to remain quiescent.
-
-It is seldom indeed that a savage is troubled with
-sleeplessness, but that night poor Benee was far too
-anxious to slumber soundly. For he knew not what
-another day might bring forth. It might be pregnant
-with happiness for him and the young girls he loved
-so dearly, or it might end in bloodshed and in death.
-
-What a glorious morning broke over the woodlands
-at last! Looking eastwards Benee could note a strip
-of the deepest orange just above the dark forest
-horizon. This faded into palest green, and above all
-was ethereal blue, with just one or two rosy clouds.
-And westwards those patches of snow in the hollow of
-the mighty Sierras were pink, with purple shadows.
-
-And this innocent and unsophisticated savage bent
-himself low on his knees and prayed to Him who
-is the author of all that is beautiful, to bless his
-enterprise and take his little mistress safe away
-from this blood-stained land of darkness and woe.
-
-He felt better when he rose to his feet. Then he
-entered the cottage and had breakfast.
-
-"I will come again some day," he said, as his "mother"
-bade him a tearful farewell. "I will come again and
-take Father and you to the far-off happy land of the
-pale-faces."
-
-So he hied him away to the forest, looking back
-just once to wave his hand.
-
-He well knew the road that Weenah and Leeboo--no,
-let us call her Peggy once more--would take, if
-indeed they should succeed in escaping.
-
-He walked towards the river of Bitter Waters therefore,
-and, journeying for some miles along its wild
-romantic banks, lay down to wait.
-
-Wild flowers trailed and climbed among the bushes
-where he hid; he saw not their bright colours, he
-was scarcely sensible of their perfume.
-
-The soo-soo's song was sweet and plaintive; he
-heard it not.
-
-He was wholly absorbed in thought. So the sun got
-higher and higher, and still he waited and
-watched--waited and hoped.
-
-Only, ever and anon he would place his ear against
-the hard ground and listen intently.
-
-'Twas noon, and they came not.
-
-Something must have happened. Everything must
-have failed.
-
-What should he do? What could he do?
-
-----
-
-But hark! A joyful sound. It was that of a horse
-at the gallop, and it was coming nearer and nearer.
-
-Benee grasped his rifle.
-
-It must be she. It must, and was poor Peggy, and
-Weenah was seated behind her.
-
-He looked quickly to his repeating rifle, and patted
-the revolvers in his belt.
-
-"Oh, Benee, Benee! how rejoiced I am!"
-
-"But are you followed, Missie Peggy?"
-
-"No, no, Benee, we have ridden clean and clear
-away from the savage chief Kaloomah, and we fear
-no pursuit."
-
-"Ah, Missie! You not know de savage man. I do.
-Come. Make track now.
-
-"Weenah," he added. "Oh, my love, Weenah! But
-come not down. We mus' fly foh de cannibal come
-in force."
-
-It seemed but child's play to Benee to trot lightly
-along beside the pony.
-
-Love, no doubt, made the labour lighter. Besides,
-on faithful little Dixie's back was all that Benee cared
-much for in the world, Weenah and "Missie Peggy".
-
-True enough, he liked and respected Roland, and
-Dick as well, but they were not all the world to
-him as these girls were. And ever since he had
-found Roland and Peggy in the dark forest and
-rescued them, his little mistress had been in his eyes
-an angel. Never an unkind word was it possible for
-her to say to anyone, least of all--so he flattered
-himself--to Benee.
-
-The poor, untutored savage felt, in his happiness, at
-this moment, that it would be sweet to die were the
-loved ones only near to hold his hand.
-
-But he could die, too, fighting for them; ay, fighting
-to the end. Who was he that would dare touch the
-ground where Peggy or Weenah trod if he--Benee--were
-there?
-
-And so they journeyed on and on by the river's side
-and through jungle and forest, never dreaming of
-danger or pursuit.
-
-Ah! but wild as a panther was Kaloomah now.
-
-When he found that he was baffled, befooled,
-deserted, then all his fury--the fury of an untamed
-savage--boiled up from the bottom of his heart.
-
-Love! Where was love now? It found no place in
-this wild chief's heart; hate had supplanted it, and it
-was a hate that must be quenched in blood. Yes, her
-blood! He would be revenged, and then--well then,
-the sooner he should die after that the better. For
-his life's sun had gone out, his days could only be days
-of darkness now.
-
-Yet how happy had he been only this morning, and
-how proud when he stalked forth from his hut and
-passed that of Kalamazoo, still wearing the wild
-flowers with which she had adorned him!
-
-He tore those wild flowers from his neck now, and
-scattered them to the winds.
-
-Then, as fast and fleet as ever savage ran, he hied
-him back to the palace.
-
-Few had more stentorian lungs than Kaloomah!
-
-"The queen has gone! The white queen has fled!"
-
-That shout awakened one thousand armed men to
-action, and in less than an hour they were on the warpath.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII--THE FIGHT AT THE FORT
-====================================
-
-So toilsome was the road to trace, and so far away
-was the fortified camp of our heroes, that the sun
-was almost setting before Benee arrived with his
-precious charge.
-
-Why should I make any attempt to describe the
-meeting of Roland and Dick with the long-lost Peggy?
-
-Roland and she had always been as brother and
-sister, and now that they were once more united, all
-her joy found vent in a flood of tears, which her
-brother did what he could to stem.
-
-It seemed hardly possible that she should be here
-safe and sound, and in the presence of those who
-loved her so well and dearly.
-
-And here, too, was Brawn, who was delirious with
-joy, and honest Bill with his meerschaum.
-
-"Oh, surely I shall not awake and find it all a
-dream!" she cried in terror. "Awake and find myself
-still in that awful palace, with its dreadful surroundings
-and the odour of death everywhere! Oh--h!"
-
-The girl shuddered.
-
-"Dear Peggy," said Dick tenderly, "this is no dream;
-you are with us again, and we with you. All the
-past is as nothing. Let us live for the future. Is that
-right, Roland?"
-
-"Yes, you must forget the past, Peggy," said Roland.
-"Dick is right. The past shall be buried. We are
-young yet. The world is all before us. So come,
-laugh, and be happy, Peggy."
-
-"And this charming child here, who is she?" said
-Dick. He alluded to Weenah.
-
-"That is little Weenah, a daughter of the wilds, a
-child of the desert. Nay, but no child after all, are
-you, Weenah?"
-
-Weenah bent her dark eyes on the ground.
-
-"I am nothing," she said. "I am nobody, only--Benee's."
-
-"But, Weenah," said Peggy, taking the girl by the
-hand, "oh, how I shall miss you when you go!"
-
-"Go?" said Weenah wonderingly.
-
-"Yes, dear, you have a father and a mother, who
-are fond of you. Must you not return soon to them?"
-
-"My father and my mother I love," replied Weenah.
-"And you I love, for you have taught me to pray to
-the pale-face's God. You have taught me many, many
-things that are good and beautiful. My life now is
-all joy and brightness, and so, though I love my
-mother and my father, oh! bid me not to leave you."
-
-All this was spoken in the language of the country.
-It was Greek to those around them, but even Bill could
-see that the dark-eyed maiden was pleading for
-something, for her hand was in Peggy's, her eyes upon
-hers.
-
-----
-
-It was just at this moment that scouts came
-hurrying in from the forest, bringing news that was
-startling enough, as well as surprising.
-
-These men had come speedily in, almost as fleet of
-foot as deer, and the word they brought was that the
-savages, at least six hundred strong, were not more
-than three hours distant.
-
-Roland showed no excitement, whatever he might
-feel. Nor did Dick. Yet both were ready for action.
-
-Burly Bill, who had been quietly smoking a little
-way off, put his great thumb in the bowl of his
-meerschaum, and stowed away that faithful companion of
-his in his coat-pocket.
-
-Can a young fellow still in his teens, and whom we
-older men are all too apt to sneer at as a mere boy,
-prove himself a good general. He may and he can, if
-he has grit in him and a head of some sort surmounting
-his shoulders.
-
-From what followed I think Roland proved that he
-was in possession of both.
-
-Well, he had descended from a long line of hardy
-Cornish ancestors, and there is more in good blood
-than we are apt to believe.
-
-He came to the front now at all events, and Dick
-and Bill, to say nothing of Benee, Rodrigo, and the
-other canoe captains, were ready to obey his every
-command.
-
-Roland called a council of war at once, and it did
-not take long to come to a decision.
-
-Our chief hero was the principal speaker. But
-brave men do not lose much time in words.
-
-"Boys," he said, "we've got to fight these rascally
-savages. That's so, I think?"
-
-"That's so," was the chorus.
-
-"Well, and we've got to beat them, too. We want
-to give them something that shall keep them both
-quiet and civil until we can afford to send out a few
-missionaries to improve their morals.
-
-"Now, Rodrigo, I cannot force you to fight."
-
-"Force, sir? I need no force. Command me."
-
-"Well, I will. I wish to outflank these beggars.
-You and our Indians, with Benee as your guide, are
-just the men to do so.
-
-"The moon will be up in another hour. It will be
-the harvest-moon in England. The harvest-moon here,
-too--but a harvest, alas! of blood.
-
-"Now, Benee," he continued, "as soon as we are
-ready, guide these men with Captain Rodrigo for some
-distance down-stream, then curl round the savages,
-and when they begin to retreat, or even before that,
-attack them in the rear. Good luck to you!"
-
-As silently as ghosts two hundred and fifty well-armed
-Indians, a short time after Roland made that
-brave little speech, glided down the brow of the hill,
-and disappeared in the woods beyond.
-
-Though our heroes listened, they could not hear a
-sound, not even the crackling of a bush or broken
-branch.
-
-Soon the moon glared red through the topmost
-boughs of the far-off trees, and flooded all the land
-with a light almost as bright as day. The stars above,
-that before had glittered on the river's rippling breast,
-and the stars beneath--those wondrous flitting
-fire-insects--paled before its beams, and the night-birds
-sought for shelter in caves among the rocks. So over
-all the prairie and woodlands there fell a stillness
-that was almost oppressive. It was as if Nature held
-her breath, expectant of the fight that was to follow.
-
-Nor was that fight very long delayed. But it must
-have been well on towards midnight before the first
-indication of an approaching foe was made manifest.
-
-Only a long, mournful hoot, away in the bush, and
-bearing a close resemblance to that of the owl.
-
-It was repeated here and there from different
-quarters, and our heroes knew that an attack was
-imminent.
-
-There was in the centre of the camp a roomy cave.
-In this all stores had been placed, with water enough
-for a night at all events, and here were Peggy and
-Weenah safely guarded by Brawn. Roland had
-managed to make the darkness visible by lighting
-two candles and placing them on the wall.
-
-In a smaller cave was Peter, and as he had given
-evidence lately of a great desire to escape, the boys
-had taken the liberty to rope him.
-
-"You shall live to repent this," hissed the man
-through his teeth.
-
-He had thrown overboard all his plausibility now,
-and assumed his natural self--the dangerous villain.
-
-"Have a care," replied Dick, "or you will not live
-long enough to repent of anything."
-
-On one side of the camp was the river, down under
-a cliff of considerable height. It was very quiet and
-sluggish just here, and its gentle whispering was no
-louder than a light breeze sighing through forest
-trees.
-
-There were, therefore, really only three sides of the
-parapet and hill to defend.
-
-And now Burly Bill's quick ear caught the sound of
-rustling down below.
-
-"The savages are on us," he said quietly.
-
-"Then give them a volley to begin with," answered
-Roland.
-
-The white men started down scores of huge stones;
-but this was more for the purpose of bringing the
-savages into sight than with a view to wound or kill any.
-
-It had the desired effect, and probably another, for
-the cannibals must have believed the pale-faces had
-no other means of defence.
-
-They were seen now in the bright moonlight
-scrambling up-hill in scores, with knives in their
-mouths and spears on their backs.
-
-"Fire straight and steadily, men," cried the young
-chief, Roland. "Fire independently, and every man
-at the enemy in front of him."
-
-A well-aimed and rattling volley, followed by
-another and another, made the Indians pause. The
-number of dead and wounded was great, and impeded
-the progress of those who would have rushed up and on.
-
-Volley after volley was now poured into the savage
-ranks, but they came pressing up from behind as
-black and fierce and numerous as a colony of
-mountain-ants.
-
-Their yelling and war-cries were terrible to hear.
-
-But the continuous volley-firing still kept them
-at bay.
-
-"The rockets, Dick, are they ready?"
-
-"Yes, captain, all ready."
-
-"Try the effect of these."
-
-It was a fearful sight to witness those dread
-weapons of warfare tear through the ranks of these
-shrieking demons.
-
-Death and mutilation was dealt on every side, and
-the fire from the ramparts grew fiercer and fiercer.
-
-Yet so terrible in their battle-wrath are these
-cannibals, that--well our heroes knew--if they were
-to scale the ramparts, even the white men would not
-be able to stand against them.
-
-Then the fight would degenerate into a massacre,
-and this would be followed by an orgie too awful to
-contemplate.
-
-At this moment there could not have been fewer
-than five hundred savages striving to capture the little
-hill on which stood the camp, and Roland's men in all
-were barely eighty. Some who had exposed
-themselves were speedily brought down with poisoned
-arrows, and already lay writhing in the agonies of
-spasmodic death.
-
-But see, led on by the chief Kaloomah himself, who
-seems to bear a charmed life, the foremost ranks of
-those sable warriors have already all but gained
-footing on the ramparts, while with axe and adze the
-pale-faces endeavour to repel them.
-
-In vain!
-
-Kaloomah--great knife in hand--and at least a score
-of his braves have effected an entrance, and the whites,
-though fighting bravely, are being pushed, if not
-driven back.
-
-It is a terrible moment!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII--THE DREAM AND THE TERROR!
-=========================================
-
-Far more acute in hearing are these children of the
-wilds than any white man who ever lived, and
-now, just as hope was beginning to die out of even
-Roland's heart, a sudden movement on the part of the
-savages who had gained admittance caused him to
-marvel.
-
-More quickly than they had entered, back they
-sprang towards the parapet, and on gazing after them,
-our heroes found that the hill-sides were clear.
-
-It was evident, however, that a great battle was
-going on down beneath on the prairie.
-
-Explanation is hardly needed.
-
-Rodrigo's men, guided by Benee, had outflanked--nay,
-even surrounded--the foe, and with well-aimed
-volleys had thrust them back and back towards the
-river, into which, with wild agonizing shouts, all that
-was left of Kaloomah's army was driven.
-
-They were excellent swimmers, the 'gators were
-absent from this river, and doubtless hundreds of
-fugitives would find their way back into their own
-dark land to tell how well and bravely the pale-faces
-can fight.
-
-But Kaloomah, where is he?
-
-Intent on revenge, even while the battle raged the
-fiercest and the whites were being driven back, his quick
-eye caught the glimmer of the candle-light in the cave.
-
-Leeboo was there, he told himself, and the false
-witch Weenah.
-
-He shortened his knife, and made a rush for the
-entrance.
-
-"Hab--a--rabb--rr--rr--ow!" That was the voice
-of the great wolf-hound, as he sprang on the would-be
-assassin and pinned him to the ground.
-
-Kaloomah's knife dropped from his hand as he tried
-to free himself.
-
-But Brawn had him by the throat now, and had not
-brave Peggy sprung to the assistance of the savage,
-the dog would have torn the windpipe from his neck.
-
-But Kaloomah was prisoner, and when the fight was
-all over, the dog was released from duty, and the chief
-was bound hand and foot and placed in the other cave
-beside Peter.
-
-This cave, which had thus been turned into a prison,
-possessed an entrance at the side, a kind of doorway
-through the dark rocks, and a great hole at the top,
-through which daylight, or even moonlight, could
-stream. At some not very distant date it had
-evidently been used as a hut, and must have been the
-scene of many a fearful cannibal orgie, for scores of
-human skulls were heaped up in corners, and calcined
-bones were also found. Altogether, therefore, an
-unhallowed kind of place, and eerie beyond conception.
-
-It is as well to tell the truth concerning the battle
-on the hill-top, ghastly though it may appear. There
-were no wounded men there, for even in the thick
-of the fight the savages not only slew the white men
-who dropped, but their own maimed as well.
-
-So long as the brave fellows under Roland and
-Dick held the ramparts, and poured their volleys into
-the ranks of the enemy beneath, scarcely a white man
-was hurt; but when the battlements were carried by
-storm, then the havoc of war commenced in earnest;
-and at daylight a great deep trench was excavated,
-and in this no fewer than eleven white men were
-placed, side by side.
-
-A simple prayer was said, then a hymn was
-sung--a sad dirge-like hymn to that sacred air
-called "Martyrdom", which has risen in olden times
-from many a Scottish battle-field, where the heather
-was dripping blood. I take my fiddle and play it
-now, and that mournful scene rises up before me, in
-which the white men crowd around the long quiet
-grave, where their late companions lie sleeping in the
-tomb.
-
-Every head is bared in the morning sunshine, every
-eye is wet with tears.
-
-It is Bill himself who leads the melody.
-
-Then clods are gently thrown upon the dead, and
-soon the grave is filled.
-
-----
-
-There was not the slightest apprehension now that
-the battle would be renewed, and so all the day was
-spent in getting ready for the long march back to the
-spot where, under the charge of one of the captains
-and his faithful peons, the great canoes had been left.
-
-Among the stores brought here to camp--the
-suggestion had emanated from Roland's mother and
-Beeboo--was a chest containing many changes of
-raiment and dresses belonging to Peggy. In the cave,
-then, both she and Weenah conducted their toilet, and
-when, some time after, and just as breakfast was
-about to be served, they both came out, it would
-have been difficult, indeed, to keep from exclamations
-of surprise.
-
-Even Benee gave way to his excitement, and, seizing
-Weenah, held her for a moment high in air.
-
-"I rejoice foh true!" he cried. "All ober my heart
-go flapperty-flap. Oh, Weenah! you am now all same
-one red pale-face lady."
-
-Dick thought Peggy, with her bonnie sun-tanned
-face, more lovely now than ever he had seen her.
-
-----
-
-But while they are breakfasting, and while the
-men are quietly but busily engaged getting the stores
-down-hill, let us take a peep into the cave where the
-prisoners are.
-
-When Kaloomah was thrust into the cave, Peter
-was fast asleep. Of late he had become utterly
-tired and careless of life. Was his not a wrecked
-existence from beginning to end? This was a question
-that he oftentimes asked himself sadly enough.
-
-During the fight that had raged so long and fiercely
-he had remained perfectly passive. What was it to
-him who won or who lost? If the Indians won, he
-would speedily be put out of pain. If the white men
-were the victors--well, he would probably die just
-the same. At all events, life was not worth having now.
-
-Then, when the lull of battle came, when the wild
-shrieks and shouting were over, and when the rattling
-of musketry was no longer heard, he felt utterly tired.
-He would sleep, he told himself, and what cared he
-if it should be
-
- | "The sleep that knows not breaking,
- | Morn of toil or night of waking"?
-
-.. vspace:: 2
-
-The cords that bound him hurt a little, but he would
-not feel their pressure when--he slept.
-
-His was not a dreamless sleep by any means, though
-a long one.
-
-His old, old life seemed to rise up before him. He
-was back again in England--dear old England! He
-was a clerk, a confidential clerk.
-
-He had no care, no complications, and he was happy.
-Happy in the love of a sweet girl who adored him;
-the girl that he would have made his wife. Poor?
-Yes, both were; but oh! when one has innocence and
-sweet contentment, love can bloom in a garret.
-
-Yet envy of the rich began to fill his soul. The
-world was badly divided. Why had he to tread the
-streets day after day with muddy boots to his office,
-and back to his dingy home after long hours of toil
-and drudgery at the desk?
-
-Oh for comfort! Oh for riches!
-
-The girl that was to be his was more beautiful than
-many who lolled in cushioned carriages, with liveried
-servants to attend their beck and call.
-
-So his dream went on, and dreams are but half-waking
-thoughts.
-
-But it changes now!
-
-He sees Mary his sweetheart, wan and pale, with
-tears in her eyes for him whose voice she may never
-hear again.
-
-For the tempter has come with gold and with
-golden promises.
-
-And he has fallen!
-
-Other men have fallen before. Why not he when
-so much was to be gained? So much of--nay, not of
-glory, but of gold. What is it that gold cannot do?
-
-A conscience? Yes, he had possessed one once.
-But this tempter had laughed heartily when he talked
-of so old-fashioned a possession. It was all a matter
-of business.
-
-Behold those wealthy men who glide past in their
-beautiful landaus. Did they have consciences? If
-they did, then, instead of a town and country house,
-their home would soon be the garret vile in some
-back slum in London.
-
-Again the dream changes. To the fearful and
-awful now. For, stretched out before him is Mary,
-wan and worn--Mary, DEAD!
-
-He awakes with a shriek, and sits up with his back
-against the black rock.
-
-His hand touches something cold. It is a skull,
-and he shudders as he thrusts it away.
-
-But is he awake? He lifts his fettered hands and
-rubs his eyes.
-
-He gazes in terror at someone that is sitting, just
-as he is, with his back against the wall--and asleep.
-
-The rough dress is all disarranged, and the brown
-hands are covered with blood. It is an awful vision.
-
-He shuts his eyes a moment, but when he opens
-them again the man is still there! The terror!
-
-The morning sun is glimmering in and falling
-directly on the awful sleeping face.
-
-He sits bolt upright now and leans forward.
-
-"Kaloomah!" he cries. "Kaloomah!"
-
-And his own voice seems to belong to some spirit
-behind those prison walls.
-
-But the terror awakes.
-
-And the eyes of the two men meet.
-
-"Don Pedro! You here?"
-
-"Kaloomah. I am."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX--EASTWARD HO! FOR MERRIE ENGLAND
-==============================================
-
-Captain Roland St. Clair, as he was called
-by his men, was busy along with Dick and Bill
-in superintending the sending-off of all heavy
-baggage down-stream, when a man came up and saluted him.
-
-"Well, Harris?"
-
-"The prisoner Peter desires to speak with you, sir,
-in the presence of two witnesses. He wished me to
-request you to bring paper, pen, and ink. It is his
-desire that you should take his deposition."
-
-"Deposition, Harris? But the man is not dying."
-
-"Well, perhaps not, sir. I only tell you what he says."
-
-"I will be in his cell in less than twenty minutes,
-Harris."
-
-"Dick," said Roland, at the appointed time, "there
-is some mystery here. Come with me, and you also,
-Bill."
-
-"What I have to say must be said briefly and
-quickly," said Peter, sitting up. "I will not give
-myself the pain," he added, "to think very much
-about the past. It is all too dark and horrible. But
-I make this confession, unasked for and being still in
-possession of all my faculties and reasoning power."
-
-He spoke very slowly, and Dick wrote down the
-confession as he made it.
-
-"I am guilty, gentlemen. Dare I say 'with
-extenuating circumstances'? That, however, will be for
-you to consider. As the matter stands I do not beg
-for my life, but rather that you should deal with me
-as I deserve to be treated.
-
-"Death, believe me, gentlemen, is in my case preferable
-to life. But listen and judge for yourselves, and
-if parts of my story need confirmation, behold yonder
-is Kaloomah, and he it was whom I hired to carry
-your adopted sister away, where in all human
-probability she could never more be heard of again.
-Have you got all that down?"
-
-"I have," said Dick.
-
-"But," said Roland, "what reason had you to take
-so terrible a revenge on those who never harmed you,
-if revenge indeed it was?"
-
-"It was not revenge. What I did, I did for greed
-of gold. Listen.
-
-"I was happy in England, and had I only been
-content, I might now have been married and in
-comfort, but I fell, and am now the heart-broken villain
-you see before you.
-
-"You know the will your uncle made, Mr. St. Clair?"
-
-"I have only heard of it."
-
-"It was I who copied it for my master, the wretched
-solicitor.
-
-"I stole that copy and re-copied it, and sold it to
-the only man whom it could benefit, and that was
-your Uncle John."
-
-"My Uncle John? He who sent you out to my
-poor, dear father?"
-
-"The same. But let me hurry on. The real will
-is still in possession of the solicitor, and it gives
-all the estates of Burnley Hall, in Cornwall, to
-John, in the event of Peggy's death."
-
-"I begin to see," said Dick.
-
-"My reward was to have been great, if I managed
-the affair properly. I have never had it, and, alas!
-I need it not now.
-
-"But," he continued, "your villainous uncle was too
-great a coward to have Peggy murdered. His last
-words to me on board the steamer before I sailed
-were: 'Remember--not one single drop of blood
-shed.'
-
-"I might have done worse than even I did, but these
-were the words that instigated my vile plot, of which
-I now most heartily repent. All I had to do was to
-get apparent proof of Peggy's death."
-
-"And my Uncle John now holds the estates of
-Burnley Hall? Is that so?"
-
-"He does. The solicitor could not help but produce
-the will, on hearing of Peggy's capture and death.
-
-"That, then, is my story, gentlemen. Before Heaven
-I swear it is all true. It is, moreover, my deposition,
-for I already feel the cold shadow of death creeping
-over me. Yes, I will sign it."
-
-He did so.
-
-"I makee sign too," said Kaloomah.
-
-"That is the man whom I hired to do the deed,"
-said Peter again.
-
-And Kaloomah made his mark.
-
-"I feel easier now, gentlemen" continued Peter.
-"But leave me a while. I would sleep."
-
-----
-
-Kaloomah had all a savage's love for the horrible,
-and he was merely an interested spectator of the
-tragedy that followed.
-
-Between him and Peter lie two poison-tipped arrows.
-
-At first Peter looks at them like one dazed. Then
-he glances upwards at the glorious sunshine streaming
-in through the opening.
-
-Nearer and nearer he now creeps to those arrows!
-
-Nearer and nearer!
-
-Now he positions them with his manacled hands.
-
-Then strikes.
-
-In half an hour's time, when Burly Bill entered the
-cave to inform the prisoners that it was time for them
-to be on the road, he started back in horror.
-
-Peter, fearfully contorted, lay on the floor of the
-cave, dead.
-
-----
-
-Some weeks after this the party found themselves
-once more near to the banks of the rapid Madeira.
-
-Everything had gone well with those captains and
-peons whom they had left behind, and now every
-preparation was made to descend the stream with all
-possible speed, consonant with safety.
-
-They had taken Kaloomah thus far, lest he should
-return and bring another army to attack them.
-
-And now a kind of drum-head court-martial was
-held on this wild chief, at which even Charlie and
-Benee were present.
-
-"I really don't see," said Roland, "what good has
-come of saddling ourselves with a savage."
-
-"No, I agree with you, Roll," said Dick. "Peter has
-gone to his account, and really this Kaloomah has
-been more sinned against than he has sinned."
-
-"What would you advise, Bill?"
-
-"Why, I'd give him a rousing kick and let him go."
-
-"And you Benee?"
-
-"I go for hangee he."
-
-"Charlie, what would you do?"
-
-Charlie was smiling and rubbing his hands; it was
-evident he had formulated some plan that satisfied
-himself.
-
-"I tie dat savage to one biggee stake all by de
-ribber, den watch de 'gator come, chumpee, chumpee
-he."
-
-But a more merciful plan was adopted. Kaloomah
-evidently expected death, but when Roland himself
-cut his bonds and pointed to the west, the savage gave
-just one wild whoop and yell, and next moment he
-had disappeared in the forest.
-
-----
-
-Were I beginning a story instead of ending one, I
-should not be able to resist the temptation to describe
-that voyage down the beautiful Madeira.
-
-It must suffice to say that it was all one long and
-happy picnic.
-
-Just one grief, however, had been Peggy's at the
-start. Poor Dixie, the pony, must be left behind.
-
-She kissed his forehead as she bade him good-bye,
-and her face was wet with tears as she turned her
-back to her favourite.
-
-Roland did what he could to comfort her.
-
-"Dixie will soon be as happy as any horse can
-be," he said. "He will find companions, and will live
-a long, long time in the wilds of this beautiful land.
-So you must not grieve."
-
-----
-
-There are times when people in this world are so
-inexpressibly happy that they cannot wish evil to
-happen even to their greatest enemies. They feel
-that they would like every creature, every being on
-earth, to be happy also.
-
-Surely it is with some such spirit that angels and
-saints in heaven are imbued.
-
-Had you been on board the steamship *Panama*
-as she was swiftly ploughing her way through the
-wide blue sea that separates Old England from South
-America, from Pará and the mouths of the mighty
-Amazon, you could not have been otherwise than
-struck with the evident contentment and happiness of
-a group of saloon passengers there. Whether walking
-the quarter-deck, or seated on chairs under the awning,
-or early in the morning surrounding their own special
-little breakfast-table, pleasure beamed in every eye,
-joy in every face.
-
-Who were they? Listen and I shall tell you.
-
-There was Roland, Dick, Roland's sweet-faced
-mother, Peggy; and last, but certainly not least
-in size at all events, there was dark-skinned
-jolly-looking Burly Bill himself.
-
-But Burly Bill did not obtrude his company too
-much on the younger folks. He was fond of walking
-on the bridge and talking to the officer on duty.
-Fond, too, of blowing a cloud from his lips as they
-dallied with his great meerschaum. Fond of telling
-a good story, but fonder still of listening to one,
-and often chuckling over it till he appeared quite
-apoplectic.
-
-There was someone else on board who must be
-mentioned. And this was Dixie, the pony!
-
-Did he remain on the banks of the Madeira? Not
-he. For by some means or other he found his way--so
-marvellous is the homing instinct in animals--back
-to the old plantation long before Roland and his
-little army, and was the first to run out to meet Peggy
-and get a kiss on his soft warm snout.
-
-Need I add that Brawn was one of the passengers?
-And a happy dog he was, and always ready for a lark
-when the sailors chose to throw a belaying-pin for him.
-
-Dick had had a grief to face when he returned.
-
-His uncle was dead. So he determined--as did
-Roland with his plantation--to sell off and return to
-England, for a time at all events.
-
-The two estates are now worked by a "Company
-Ltd.", but Jake Solomons is head overseer.
-
-Benee, who has married his "moon-dream", little
-Weenah, is second in command, and right merry of
-a morning is the boom and the song of the old buzz-saw.
-
-----
-
-So happy, then, were Roland and Dick and Peggy
-that they concluded they would not be too hard on
-wicked Uncle John.
-
-This wicked Uncle John went into retirement after
-the arrival of our heroes and heroine. He might have
-been sent into retirement of quite a different sort if
-Roland had cared to press matters.
-
-Peggy got all her own again. She is now
-Mrs. Temple, and Dick and she are beloved by all the
-tenantry--yes, and by all the county gentry and
-farmer folks round and round.
-
-I had almost forgotten to say a last word about
-Beeboo. She is Mrs. Temple's chief servant, and a
-right happy body is Beeboo, and Burly Billy is estate
-manager.
-
-Now, if any of my readers want a special treat, let
-him or her try to get an invitation to spend Christmas
-at Burnley Old Hall.
-
-.. vspace:: 4
-
-.. pgfooter::
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- IN FAR BOLIVIA
-
-
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost
-no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
-under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
-eBook or online at http://www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-
-Title: In Far Bolivia
- A Story of a Strange Wild Land
-
-Author: Gordon Stables
-
-Release Date: May 18, 2012 [EBook #39728]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: US-ASCII
-
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN FAR BOLIVIA ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Al Haines.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Cover]
-
-
-
-[Illustration: "BRAWN ... DASHED ON TO THE RESCUE"]
-
-
-
-
- In Far Bolivia
-
- A Story of a Strange Wild Land
-
-
- BY
-
- DR. GORDON STABLES, R.N.
-
- Author of "'Twixt School and College" "The Hermit Hunter of the Wilds"
-
- "The Naval Cadet" "Kidnapped by Cannibals" &c.
-
-
-
-
- _WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY J. FINNEMORE, R.I._
-
-
-
-
- BLACKIE AND SON LIMITED
-
- LONDON GLASGOW DUBLIN BOMBAY
-
- 1901
-
-
-
-
- TO
-
- MARIE CONNOR LEIGHTON
-
- (NOVELIST AND CRITIC)
-
- THIS BOOK IS INSCRIBED
-
- EVERY KINDLY WISH
-
- BY
-
- THE AUTHOR
-
-
-
-
- PREFACE
-
-
-Every book should tell its own story without the aid of "preface" or
-"introduction". But as in this tale I have broken fresh ground, it is
-but right and just to my reader, as well as to myself, to mention
-prefatorially that, as far as descriptions go, both of the natives and
-the scenery of Bolivia and the mighty Amazon, my story is strictly
-accurate.
-
-I trust that Chapter XXIII, giving facts about social life in La Paz and
-Bolivia, with an account of that most marvellous of all sheets of fresh
-water in the known world, Lake Titicaca, will be found of general
-interest.
-
-But vast stretches of this strange wild land of Bolivia are a closed
-book to the world, for they have never yet been explored; nor do we know
-aught of the tribes of savages who dwell therein, as far removed from
-civilization and from the benign influence of Christianity as if they
-were inhabitants of another planet. I have ventured to send my heroes
-to this land of the great unknown, and have at the same time endeavoured
-to avoid everything that might border on sensationalism.
-
-In conclusion, my boys, if spared I hope to take you out with me again
-to Bolivia in another book, and together we may have stranger adventures
-than any I have yet told.
-
-THE AUTHOR.
-
-
-
-
- ----
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER I--ON THE BANKS OF THE GREAT AMAZON
- CHAPTER II--STRANGE ADVENTURES IN THE FOREST--LOST!
- CHAPTER III--BURNLEY HALL, OLD AND NEW
- CHAPTER IV--AWAY DOWN THE RIVER
- CHAPTER V--A DAY IN THE FOREST WILDS
- CHAPTER VI--"NOT ONE SINGLE DROP OF BLOOD SHED"
- CHAPTER VII--"A COLD HAND SEEMED TO CLUTCH HER HEART"
- CHAPTER VIII--FIERCELY AND WILDLY BOTH SIDES FOUGHT
- CHAPTER IX--THAT TREE IN THE FOREST GLADE
- CHAPTER X--BENEE MAKES A STRANGE DISCOVERY
- CHAPTER XI--ALL ALONE IN THE WILDERNESS
- CHAPTER XII--BENEE ENTRENCHED--SAVAGE REVELS IN THE FOREST
- CHAPTER XIII--THE MARCH TO THE LOVELESS LAND
- CHAPTER XIV--THE HOME OF THE CANNIBAL--BENEE'S ROMANCE
- CHAPTER XV--SHOOKS-GEE'S STORY--A CANNIBAL QUEEN
- CHAPTER XVI--ON THE BANKS OF A BEAUTIFUL RIVER
- CHAPTER XVII--BILL AND HIS BOATS
- CHAPTER XVIII--AS IF STRUCK BY A DUM-DUM BULLET
- CHAPTER XIX--STRUGGLING ONWARDS UP-STREAM
- CHAPTER XX--THE PAGAN PAYNEES WERE THIRSTING FOR BLOOD
- CHAPTER XXI--THE FOREST IS SHEETED IN FLAMES
- CHAPTER XXII--EVENINGS BY THE CAMP FIRE
- CHAPTER XXIII--A MARVELLOUS LAKE IN A MARVELLOUS LAND--LA PAZ
- CHAPTER XXIV--BENEE'S STORY--THE YOUNG CANNIBAL QUEEN
- CHAPTER XXV--BENEE'S MOTHER TO THE FRONT
- CHAPTER XXVI--THE PALE-FACE QUEEN HAS FLED
- CHAPTER XXVII--THE FIGHT AT THE FORT
- CHAPTER XXVIII--THE DREAM AND THE TERROR!
- CHAPTER XXIX--EASTWARD HO! FOR MERRIE ENGLAND
-
- ----
-
-
-
-
- ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-"Brawn ... dashed on to the rescue" . . . . . . _Frontispiece_
-
-"Brawn sprang at once upon his man"
-
-"She ... held her at arm's-length"
-
-"Fire low, lads ... don't waste a shot!"
-
-
-
-
- IN FAR BOLIVIA
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I--ON THE BANKS OF THE GREAT AMAZON
-
-
-Miles upon miles from the banks of the mighty river, had you wandered
-far away in the shade of the dark forest that clothed the valleys and
-struggled high over the mountain-tops themselves, you would have heard
-the roar and the boom of that great buzz-saw.
-
-As early as six of a morning it would start, or soon after the sun, like
-a huge red-hot shot, had leapt up from his bed in the glowing east
-behind the greenery of the hills and woods primeval.
-
-To a stranger coming from the south towards the Amazon--great queen of
-all the rivers on earth--and not knowing he was on the borders of
-civilization, the sound that the huge saw made would have been decidedly
-alarming.
-
-He would have stopped and listened, and listening, wondered. No
-menagerie of wild beasts could have sent forth a noise so loud, so
-strange, so persistent! Harsh and low at times, as its great teeth tore
-through the planks of timber, it would change presently into a dull but
-dreadful _basso profundo_, such as might have been emitted by
-antediluvian monsters in the agonies of death or torture, rising anon
-into a shrill howl or shriek, then subsiding once again into a steady
-grating roar, that seemed to shake the very earth.
-
-Wild beasts in this black forest heard the sounds, and crept stealthily
-away to hide themselves in their caves and dens; caymans or alligators
-heard them too, as they basked in the morning sunshine by lakelet or
-stream--heard them and crawled away into caves, or took to the water
-with a sullen plunge that caused the finny inhabitants to dart away in
-terror to every point of the compass.
-
-"Up with the tree, lads. Feed him home," cried Jake Solomons loudly but
-cheerily. "Our pet is hungry this morning. I say, Bill, doesn't she
-look a beauty. Ever see such teeth, and how they shine, too, in the red
-sunlight. Guess you never did, Bill. I say, what chance would the
-biggest 'gator that ever crawled have with Betsy here. Why, if Betsy
-got one tooth in his hide she'd have fifty before you could say
-'Jerusalem', and that 'gator'd be cut in two. Tear away, Betsy! Grind
-and groan and growl, my lass! Have your breakfast, my little pet; why,
-your voice is sweetest music to my ear. I say, Bill, don't the saw-dust
-fly a few? I should smile!
-
-"But see," he continued, "yonder come the darkies with our matutinal.
-Girls and boys with baskets, and I can see the steam curling up under
-Chloe's arm from the great flagon she is carrying! Look how her white
-eyes roll, and her white teeth shine as she smiles her six-inch smile!
-Good girl is Chloe. She knows we're hungry, and that we'll welcome her.
-Wo, now, Betsy! Let the water off, Bill. Betsy has had her snack, and
-so we'll have ours."
-
-There was quietness now o'er hill and dell and forest-land.
-
-And this tall Yankee, Jake Solomons, who was fully arrayed in cotton
-shirt and trousers, his brown arms bare to the shoulder, stretched his
-splendidly knit but spare form with a sort of a yawn.
-
-"Heigho, Bill!" he said. "I'm pining for breakfast. Aren't you?"
-
-"That I am," replied Burly Bill with his broadest grin.
-
-Jake ran to the open side of the great saw-mill. Three or four strides
-took him there.
-
-"Ah! Good-morning, Chloe, darling! Morning, Keemo! Morning, Kimo!"
-
-"Mawning, sah!" This was a chorus.
-
-"All along dey blessed good-foh-nuffin boys I no come so queeck," said
-Chloe.
-
-"Stay, stay, Chloe," cried Jake, "never let your angry passions rise.
-'Sides, Chloe, I calculate such language ain't half-proper. But how
-glittering your cheeks are, Chloe, how white your teeth! There! you
-smile again. And that vermilion blouse sets off your dark complexion to
-a nicety, and seems just made for it. Chloe, I would kiss you, but the
-fear of making Bill jealous holds me back."
-
-Burly Bill shook with laughter. Bill was well named the Burly. Though
-not so tall as Jake, his frame was immense, though perhaps there was a
-little more adipose tissue about it than was necessary in a climate like
-this. But Bill's strength was wonderful. See him, axe in hand, at the
-foot of a tree! How the chips fly! How set and determined the man's
-face, while the great beads of sweat stand like pearls on his brow!
-
-Burly Bill was a white man turned black. You couldn't easily have
-guessed his age. Perhaps he was forty, but at twenty, when still in
-England, Bill was supple and lithe, and had a skin as white as a
-schoolboy's. But he had got stouter as the years rolled on, and his face
-tanned and tanned till it tired of tanning, and first grew purple, and
-latterly almost black. The same with those hirsute bare arms of his.
-
-There was none of the wild "Ha! ha!" about Bill's laughter. It was a
-sort of suppressed chuckle, that agitated all his anatomy, the while his
-merry good-natured eyes sought shelter behind his cheeks' rotundity.
-
-Under a great spreading tree the two men laid themselves down, and Chloe
-spread their breakfast on a white cloth between them, Jake keeping up
-his fire of chaff and sweet nothings while she did so. Keemo and Kimo,
-and the other "good-foh-nuffin boys" had brought their morning meal to
-the men who fed the great buzz-saw.
-
-"Ah, Chloe!" said Jake, "the odour of that coffee would bring the dead
-to life, and the fish and the beef and the butter, Chloe! Did you do
-all this yourself?"
-
-"All, sah, I do all. De boys jes' kick about de kitchen and do nuffin."
-
-"Dear tender-eyed Chloe! How clever you are! Guess you won't be so kind
-to me when you and I get spliced, eh?"
-
-"Ah sah! you no care to marry a poor black gal like Chloe! Dere is a
-sweet little white missie waiting somew'eres foh Massa Jake. I be your
-maid, and shine yo' boots till all de samee's Massa Bill's cheek foh
-true."
-
-As soon as Chloe with her "good-foh-nuffin boys" had cleared away the
-breakfast things, and retired with a smile and saucy toss of her curly
-poll, the men lay back and lit their pipes.
-
-"She's a bright intelligent girl that," said Jake. "I don't want a wife
-or--but I say, Bill, why don't you marry her? I guess she'd make ye a
-tip-topper."
-
-"Me! Is it marry?"
-
-Burly Bill held back his head and chuckled till he well-nigh choked.
-
-Honest Bill's ordinary English showed that he came from the old country,
-and more particularly from the Midlands. But Bill could talk properly
-enough when he pleased, as will soon be seen.
-
-He smoked quietly enough for a time, but every now and then he felt
-constrained to take his meerschaum from his mouth and give another
-chuckle or two.
-
-"Tchoo-hoo-hoo!" he laughed. "Me marry! And marry Chloe!
-Tchoo-hoo-hoo!"
-
-"To change the subject, William," said Jake, "seein' as how you've
-pretty nearly chuckled yourself silly, or darned near it, how long have
-you left England?"
-
-"W'y, I coom over with Mr. St. Clair hisse'f, and Roland w'y he weren't
-more'n seven. Look at 'e now, and dear little Peggy, 'is sister by
-adoption as ever was, weren't a month over four. Now Rolly 'e bees nigh
-onto fifteen, and Peggy--the jewel o' the plantation--she's goin' on for
-twelve, and main tall for that. W'y time do fly! Don't she, Jake?"
-
-"Well, I guess I've been here five years, and durn me if I want to
-leave. Could we have a better home? I'd like to see it. I'd smile a
-few odd ones. But listen, why here comes the young 'uns!"
-
-There was the clatter of ponies' feet, and next minute as handsome a boy
-as ever sat in saddle, and as pretty and bright a lassie as you could
-wish to meet, galloped into the clearing, and reined up their spirited
-little steeds close to the spot where the men were lounging.
-
-Burly Bill stuck his thumb into the bowl of his meerschaum to put it
-out, and Jake threw his pipe on the bank.
-
-Roland was tall for his age, like Peggy. But while a mass of fair and
-irrepressible hair curled around the boy's sun-burned brow, Peggy's hair
-was straight and black. When she rode fast it streamed out behind her
-like pennons in the breeze. What a bright and sunny face was hers too!
-There was ever a happy smile about her red lips and dark eyes.
-
-"You've got to begin to smoke again immediately," said the boy.
-
-"No, no, Master Roland, not in the presence of your sister."
-
-"But," cried Peggy, with a pretty show of pomposity, "I command you!"
-
-"Ah, then, indeed!" said Jake; and soon both men were blowing clouds
-that made the very mosquitoes change their quarters.
-
-"Father'll be up soon, riding on Glancer. This nag threw Father, coming
-home last night. Mind, Glancer is seventeen hands and over."
-
-"He threw him?"
-
-"That he did, in the moonlight. Scared at a 'gator. Father says he
-heard the 'gator's great teeth snapping and thought he was booked. But
-lo! Jake, at that very moment Glancer struck out with both
-hind-legs--you know how he is shod. He smashed the 'gator's skull, and
-the beast turned up his yellow belly to the moon."
-
-"Bravo!"
-
-"Then Father mounted mighty Glancer and rode quietly home.
-
-"Peggy and I," he continued, "have ridden along the bank to the
-battlefield to hold a coroner's inquest on the 'gator, but he's been
-hauled away by his relations. I suppose they'll make potato soup of
-him."
-
-Burly Bill chuckled.
-
-"Well, Peggy and I are off. See you in the evening, Jake. By-by!"
-
-And away they rode, like a couple of wild Indians, followed by a huge
-Irish wolf-hound, as faithful a dog to his mistress--for he was Peggy's
-own pet--as ever dog could be.
-
-They were going to have a day in the forest, and each carried a short
-six-chambered rifle at the saddle.
-
-A country like the wild one in which they dwelt soon makes anyone brave
-and fearless. They meant to ride quite a long way to-day and not return
-till the sun began to decline in the far and wooded west. So, being
-already quite an old campaigner, Roland had not forgotten to bring
-luncheon with him, and some for bold Brawn also.
-
-Into the forest they dashed, leaving the mighty river, which was there
-about fifteen miles broad probably, in their rear.
-
-They knew every pathway of that primeval woodland, and it mattered but
-little to them that most of these had been worn by the feet of wild
-beasts. Such tracks wind out and in, and in and out, and meet others in
-the most puzzling and labyrinthine manner.
-
-Roland carried a compass, and knew how to use it, but the day was
-unusually fine and sunny, so there was little chance of their getting
-lost.
-
-The country in which they lived might well have been called the land of
-perpetual summer.
-
-But at some spots the forest was so pitchy dark, owing to the
-overhanging trees and wild flowering creepers, that they had to rein up
-and allow Coz and Boz, as their ponies were named, to cautiously feel
-the way for themselves.
-
-How far away they might have ridden they could not themselves tell, had
-they not suddenly entered a kind of fairy glade. At one side it was
-bounded by a crescentic formation of rock, from the very centre of which
-spouted a tiny clear crystal waterfall. Beneath was a deep pool, the
-bottom of which was sand and yellow shingle, with here and there a patch
-of snow-white quartz. And away from this a little stream went
-meandering slowly through the glade, keeping it green.
-
-On the other side were the lordly forest trees, bedraped with flowering
-orchids and ferns.
-
-Flowers and ferns grew here and there in the rockface itself. No wonder
-the young folks gazed around them in delighted wonder.
-
-Brawn was more practical. He cared nothing for the flowers, but enjoyed
-to the fullest extent the clear cool water of the crystal pool.
-
-"Oh, isn't it lovely?" said Roland.
-
-"And oh, I am so hungry, Rolly!"
-
-Rolly took the hint.
-
-The ponies were let loose to graze, Brawn being told to head them off if
-they attempted to take to the woods.
-
-"I understand," said Brawn, with an intelligent glance of his brown eyes
-and wag of his tail.
-
-Then down the boy and girl squatted with the noble wolf-hound beside
-them, and Roland speedily spread the banquet on the moss.
-
-I dare say that hunger and romance seldom tread the same platform--at
-the same time, that is. It is usually one down, the other up; and
-notwithstanding the extraordinary beauty of their surroundings, for some
-time both boy and girl applied themselves assiduously to the discussion
-of the good things before them; that meat-pie disappearing as if by
-magic. Then the hard-boiled eggs, the well-buttered and flouriest of
-floury scones, received their attention, and the whole was washed down
-with _vinum bovis_, as Roland called it, cow's wine, or good milk.
-
-Needless to say, Brawn, whose eyes sparkled like diamonds, and whose
-ears were conveniently erect, came in for a good share.
-
-Well, but the ponies, Boz and Coz, had not the remotest idea of running
-away. In fact they soon drew near to the banqueting-table. Coz laid
-his nose affectionately on his little mistress's shoulder and heaved an
-equine sigh, and Boz began to nibble at Roland's ears in a very winning
-way.
-
-And the nibbling and the sigh brought them cakes galore.
-
-Roland offered Boz a bit of pie.
-
-The pony drew back, as if to say, "Vegetarians, weren't you aware?"
-
-But Brawn cocked his bonnie head to one side, knowingly.
-
-"Pitch it this way, master," he said. "I've got a crop for any kind of
-corn, and a bag for peas."
-
-A strange little rodent creature, much bigger than any rat, however,
-with beautiful sad-looking eyes, came from the bush, and stood on its
-hind-legs begging, not a yard away. Its breast was as white as snow.
-
-Probably it had no experience of the genus _homo_, and all the cruelties
-he is guilty of, under the title of sport.
-
-Roland pitched several pieces of pie towards the innocent. It just
-tasted a morsel, then back it ran towards the wood with wondrous speed.
-
-If they thought they had seen the last of it, they were much mistaken,
-for the innocent returned in two minutes time, accompanied not only by
-another of his own size, but by half a dozen of the funniest little
-fairies ever seen inside a forest.
-
-"My wife and children," said innocent No. 1.
-
-"My services to you," bobbed innocent No. 2.
-
-But the young ones squawked and squealed, and tumbled and leapt over
-each other as they fed in a manner so droll that boy and girl had to
-laugh till the woods rang.
-
-Innocent No. 1 looked on most lovingly, but took not a morsel to
-himself.
-
-Then all disappeared as suddenly as they had come.
-
-Truly the student of Nature who betakes himself to lonely woods sees
-many wonders!
-
-It was time now to lie back in the moss and enjoy the _dolce far
-niente_.
-
-The sky was as blue as blue could be, all between the rifts of
-slowly-moving clouds. The whisper of the wind among the forest trees,
-and the murmur of the falling water, came like softest music to Roland's
-ears. Small wonder, therefore, that his eyes closed, and he was soon in
-the land of sweet forgetfulness.
-
-But Peggy had a tiny book, from which she read passages to Brawn, who
-seemed all attention, but kept one eye on the ponies at the same time.
-
-It was a copy of the "Song of Hiawatha", a poem which Peggy thought
-ineffably lovely. Hark to her sweet girl voice as she reads:
-
- "These songs so wild and wayward,
- These legends and traditions".
-
-
-They appealed to her simple soul, for dearly did she love the haunts of
-Nature.
-
- "Loved the sunshine of the meadow,
- Loved the shadow of the forest,
- Loved the wind among the branches,
- The rushing of great rivers
- Through their palisades of pine-trees."
-
-
-She believed, too:
-
- "That even in savage bosoms
- There are longings, yearnings, strivings
- For the good they comprehend not;
- That feeble hands and helpless,
- Groping blindly in the darkness,
- Touch God's right hand...
- And are lifted up and strengthened".
-
- ----
-
-Roland slumbered quietly, and the day went on apace.
-
-He slept so peacefully that she hardly liked to arouse him.
-
-The little red book dropped from her hand and fell on the moss, and her
-thoughts now went far, far away adown the mighty river that flows so
-sadly, so solemnly onwards to the great Atlantic Ocean, fed on its way
-by a hundred rapid streams that melt in its dark bosom and are seen
-nevermore.
-
-But it was not the river itself the little maiden's thoughts were
-dwelling on; not the strange wild birds that sailed along its surface on
-snow-white wings; not the birds of prey--the eagle and the hawk--that
-hovered high in air, or with eldritch screams darted on their prey like
-bolts from the blue, and bore their bleeding quarries away to the silent
-forest; not even the wealth of wild flowers that nodded over the banks
-of the mighty stream.
-
-Her thoughts were on board a tall and darksome raft that was slowly
-making its way seaward to distant Para, or in the boats that towed it.
-For there was someone on the raft or in those boats who even then might
-be fondly thinking of the dark-haired maiden he had left behind.
-
-But Peggy's awakening from her dream of romance, and Roland's from his
-slumber, was indeed a terrible one.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II--STRANGE ADVENTURES IN THE FOREST--LOST!
-
-
-Fierce eyes had been watching the little camp for an hour and more,
-glaring out on the sunny glade from the dark depths of a forest tree not
-far off; out from under a cloudland of waving foliage that rustled in
-the balmy wind. Watching, and watching unwaveringly, Peggy, while she
-read; watching the sleeping Roland; the great wolf-hound, Brawn; and
-watching the ponies too.
-
-Ever and anon these last would come closer to the tree, as they nibbled
-grass or moss, then those fierce eyes burned more fiercely, and the
-cat-like tail of a monster jaguar moved uneasily as if the wild beast
-meditated a spring.
-
-But the ponies, sniffing danger in the air, perhaps--who can
-tell?--would toss their manes and retreat to the shadow of the rocks.
-
-Had the dog not been there the beast would have dared all, and sprung at
-once on one of those nimble steeds.
-
-But he waited and watched, watched and waited, and at long last his time
-came. With a coughing roar he now launched himself into the air, the
-elasticity of the branch giving greater force to his spring.
-
-Straight on the shoulders or back of poor Boz he alighted. His talons
-were well driven home, his white teeth were preparing to tear the flesh
-from the pony's neck.
-
-Both little steeds yelled wildly, and in nightmarish terror.
-
-Up sprang Brawn, the wolf-hound, and dashed on to the rescue.
-
-Peggy seized her loaded rifle and hurried after him.
-
-Thoroughly awake now, and fully cognizant of the terrible danger, Roland
-too was quickly on the scene of action.
-
-To fire at a distance were madness. He might have missed the struggling
-lion and shot poor Boz, or even faithful Brawn.
-
-This enormous dog had seized the beast by one hock, and with his paws
-against the pony was endeavouring to tear the monster off.
-
-The noise, the movement, the terror, caused poor Roland's head to whirl.
-
-He felt dazed, and almost stupid.
-
-Ah! but Peggy was clear-headed, and a brave and fearless child was she.
-
-Her feet seemed hardly to touch the moss, so lightly did she spring
-along.
-
-Her little rifle was cocked and ready, and, taking advantage of a few
-seconds' lull in the fearful scrimmage, she fired at five yards'
-distance.
-
-The bullet found billet behind the monster's ear, his grip relaxed, and
-now Brawn tore him easily from his perch and finished him off on the
-ground, with awful din and habbering.
-
-Then, with blood-dripping jaws he came with his ears lower, half
-apologetically, to receive the praise and caresses of his master and
-mistress.
-
-But though the adventure ended thus happily, frightened beyond measure,
-the ponies, Coz and Boz, had taken to the bush and disappeared.
-
-Knowing well the danger of the situation, Roland and Peggy, with Brawn,
-tried to follow them. But Irish wolf-hounds have but little scent, and
-so they searched and searched in vain, and returned at last to the
-sun-kissed glade.
-
-It was now well on towards three o'clock, and as they had a long forest
-stretch of at least ten miles before them ere they could touch the banks
-of the great queen of waters, Roland determined, with the aid of his
-compass, to strike at once into the beast-trodden pathway by which they
-had come, and make all haste homewards before the sun should set and
-darkness envelop the gloomy forest.
-
-"Keep up your heart, Peggy; if your courage and your feet hold out we
-shall reach the river before dusk."
-
-"I'm not so frightened now," said Peggy; but her lips were very
-tremulous, and tears stood in her eyes.
-
-"Come, come," she cried, "let us hurry on! Come, Brawn, good dog!"
-
-Brawn leapt up to lick her ear, and taking no thought for the skin of
-the jaguar, which in more favourable circumstances would have been borne
-away as a trophy, and proof of Peggy's valour, they now took to the bush
-in earnest.
-
-Roland looked at his watch.
-
-"Three hours of light and more. Ah! we can do it, if we do not lose our
-way."
-
-So off they set.
-
-Roland took the lead, rifle in hand, Peggy came next, and brave Brawn
-brought up the rear.
-
-They were compelled to walk in single file, for the pathways were so
-narrow in places that two could not have gone abreast.
-
-Roland made constant reference to his little compass, always assuring
-his companion that they were still heading directly for the river.
-
-They had hurried on for nearly an hour, when Roland suddenly paused.
-
-A huge dark monster had leapt clear and clean across the pathway some
-distance ahead, and taken refuge in a tree.
-
-It was, no doubt, another jaguar, and to advance unannounced might mean
-certain death to one of the three.
-
-"Are you all loaded, Peggy?" said Roland.
-
-"Every chamber!" replied the girl.
-
-There was no tremor about her now; and no backwoods Indian could have
-acted more coolly and courageously.
-
-"Blaze away at that tree then, Peg."
-
-Peggy opened fire, throwing in three or four shots in rapid succession.
-
-The beast, with a terrible cry, darted out of the tree and came rushing
-along to meet and fight the little party.
-
-"Down, Brawn, down! To heel, sir!"
-
-Next moment Roland fired, and with a terrible shriek the jaguar took to
-the bush, wounded and bleeding, and was seen no more.
-
-But his yells had awakened the echoes of the forest, and for more than
-five minutes the din of roaring, growling, and shrieking was fearful.
-
-Wild birds, no doubt, helped to swell the pandemonium.
-
-After a time, however, all was still once more, and the journey was
-continued in silence.
-
-Even Peggy, usually the first to commence a conversation, felt in no
-mood for talking now.
-
-She was very tired. Her feet ached, her brow was hot, and her eyes felt
-as if boiling in their sockets.
-
-Roland had filled his large flask at the little waterfall before leaving
-the glade, and he now made her drink.
-
-The draught seemed to renew her strength, and she struggled on as
-bravely as ever.
-
- ----
-
-Just two and a half hours after they had left the forest clearing, and
-when Roland was holding out hopes that they should soon reach the road
-by the banks of the river, much to their astonishment they found
-themselves in a strange clearing which they had never seen before.
-
-The very pathway ended here, and though the boy went round and round the
-circle, he could find no exit.
-
-To retrace his steps and try to find out the right path was the first
-thought that occurred to Roland.
-
-This plan was tried, but tried in vain, and so--weary and hopeless now
-beyond measure--they returned to the centre of the glade and threw
-themselves down on the soft green moss.
-
-Lost! Lost!
-
-The words kept repeating themselves in poor Roland's brain, but Peggy's
-fatigue was so complete that she preferred rest even in the midst of
-danger to going farther.
-
-Brawn, heaving a great sigh, laid himself down beside them.
-
-The warm day wore rapidly to a close, and at last the sun shimmered red
-through the forest trees.
-
-Then it sank.
-
-The briefest of twilight, and the stars shone out.
-
-Two hours of starlight, then solemnly uprose the round moon and flooded
-all the glade, draping the whispering trees in a blue glare, beautifully
-etherealizing them.
-
-Sorrow bringeth sleep.
-
-"Good-night, Rolly! Say your prayers," murmured Peggy.
-
-There were stars in the sky. There were stars too that flitted from
-bush to bush, while the winds made murmuring music among the lofty
-branches.
-
-Peggy was repeating to herself lines that she had read that very day:
-
- ..."the firefly Wah-wah-tay-see,
- Flitting through the dusk of evening,
- With the twinkle of its candle,
- Lighting up the brakes and bushes.
- * * * * *
- Wah-wah-tay-see, little firefly,
- Little, flitting, white-fire insect,
- Little dancing, white-fire creature,
- Light me with your little candle.
- Ere upon my bed I lay me,
- Ere in sleep I close my eyelids."
-
- ----
-
-The forest was unusually silent to-night, but ever and anon might be
-heard some distant growl showing that the woods sheltered the wildest
-beasts. Or an owl with mournful cry would flap its silent wings as it
-flew across the clearing.
-
-But nothing waked those tired and weary sleepers.
-
-So the night wore on and on. The moon had reached the zenith, and was
-shining now with a lustre that almost rivalled daylight itself.
-
-It must have been well on towards two o'clock in the morning when Brawn
-emitted a low and threatening growl.
-
-This aroused both Roland and Peggy, and the former at once seized his
-rifle.
-
-Standing there in the pale moonlight, not twenty yards away, was a tall,
-dark-skinned, and powerful-looking Indian. In his right hand he held a
-spear or something resembling one; in his left a huge catapult or sling.
-He was dressed for comfort--certainly not for ornament. Leggings or
-galligaskins covered his lower extremities, while his body was wrapped
-in a blanket. He had no head-covering, save a matted mass of hair, in
-which were stuck a few feathers.
-
-Roland took all this in at a glance as he seized his rifle and prepared
-for eventualities. According to the traditional painter of Indian life
-and customs the proper thing for this savage to have said is "Ugh!" He
-said nothing of the sort. Nor did he give vent to a whoop and yell that
-would have awakened the wild birds and beasts of the forest and every
-echo far and near.
-
-"Who goes there?" cried Roland, raising his gun.
-
-"No shootee. No shootee poor Indian man. I friendee you. Plenty
-friendee."
-
-Probably there was a little romance about Roland, for, instead of
-saying: "Come this way then, old chap, squat down and give us the news,"
-he said sternly:
-
-"Advance, friend!"
-
-But the Indian stood like a statue.
-
-"No undahstandee foh true."
-
-And Roland had to climb down and say simply:
-
-"Come here, friend, and speak."
-
-Brawn rushed forward now, but he looked a terror, for his hair was all
-on end like a hyena's, and he growled low but fiercely.
-
-"Down, Brawn! It's a good man, Brawn."
-
-Brawn smelt the Indian's hand, and, seeming satisfied, went back to the
-spot where Peggy sat wondering and frightened.
-
-She gathered the great dog to her breast and hugged and kissed him.
-
-"What foh you poh chillun sleepee all in de wood so? S'pose wild beas'
-come eatee you, w'at den you do?"
-
-"But, friend," replied Roland, "we are far from Burnley Hall, our home,
-and we have lost everything. We have lost our ponies, lost our way, and
-lost ourselves."
-
-"Poh chillun!" said this strange being. "But now go sleepee foh true.
-De Indian he lie on blanket. He watchee till de big sun rise."
-
-"Can we trust him, Peggy?"
-
-"Oh yes, yes!" returned Peggy. "He is a dear, good man; I know by his
-voice."
-
-In ten minutes more the boy and girl were fast asleep.
-
-The Indian watched.
-
-And Brawn watched the Indian.
-
- ----
-
-When the sun went down on the previous evening, and there were no signs
-of the young folks returning, both Mr. St. Clair and his wife became
-very uneasy indeed.
-
-Then two long hours of darkness ensued before the moon sailed up, first
-reddening, then silvering, the wavelets and ripples on the great river.
-
-"Surely some evil must have befallen them," moaned Mrs. St. Clair. "Oh,
-my Roland! my son! I may never see you more. Is there nothing can be
-done? Tell me! Tell me!"
-
-"We must trust in Providence, Mary; and it is wrong to mourn. I doubt
-not the children are safe, although perhaps they have lost their way in
-the woods."
-
-Hours of anxious waiting went by, and it was nearly midnight. The house
-was very quiet and still, for the servants were asleep.
-
-Burly Bill and Jake had mounted strong horses at moonrise, and gone off
-to try to find a clue. But they knew it was in vain, nay, 'twould have
-been sheer madness to enter the forest now. They coo-eed over and over
-again, but their only answer was the echoing shriek of the wild birds.
-
-They were just about to return after giving their last shrill coo-ee-ee,
-when out from the moonlit forest, with a fond whinny, sprang Coz and
-Boz.
-
-Jake sprang out of his saddle, throwing his bridle to Bill.
-
-In the bright moonlight, Jake could see at once that there was something
-wrong. He placed his hand on Boz's shoulder. He staggered back as he
-withdrew it.
-
-"Oh, Bill," he cried, "here is blood, and the pony is torn and bleeding!
-Only a jaguar could have done this. This is terrible."
-
-"Let us return at once," said Bill, who had a right soft heart of his
-own behind his burly chest.
-
-"But oh!" he added, "how can we break the news to Roland's parents?"
-
-"We'll give them hope. Mrs. St. Clair must know nothing yet, but at
-early dawn all the ranch must be aroused, and we shall search the forest
-for miles and miles."
-
- ----
-
-Jake, after seeing the ponies safe in their stable, left Bill to look to
-Boz's wounds, while with St. Clair's leave he himself set off at a round
-gallop to get assistance from a neighbouring ranch.
-
-Day had not yet broken ere forty good men and true were on the
-bridle-path and tearing along the river's banks. St. Clair himself was
-at their head.
-
-I must leave the reader to imagine the joy of all the party when soon
-after sunrise there emerged from the forest, guided by the strange
-Indian, Roland, Peggy, and noble Brawn, all looking as fresh as the dew
-on the tender-eyed hibiscus bloom or the wild flowers that nodded by the
-river's brim.
-
-"Wirr--rr--r--wouff, wouff, wouff!" barked Brawn, as he bounded forward
-with joy in every feature of his noble face, and I declare to you there
-seemed to be a lump in his throat, and the sound of his barking was
-half-hysterical.
-
-St. Clair could not utter a word as he fondly embraced the children. He
-pretended to scold a little, but this was all bluff, and simply a ruse
-to keep back the tears.
-
-But soft-hearted Burly Bill was less successful. He just managed to drop
-a little to the rear, and it was not once only that he was fain to draw
-the sleeve of his rough jacket across his eyes.
-
- ----
-
-But now they are mounted, and the horses' heads are turned homewards.
-Peggy is seated in front of Burly Bill, of whom she is very fond, and
-Roland is saddled with Jake. The Indian and Brawn ran.
-
-Poor Mrs. St. Clair, at the big lawn gate, gazing westward, sees the
-cavalcade far away on the horizon.
-
-Presently, borne along on the morning breeze come voices raised in a
-brave and joyous song:
-
- "Down with them, down with the lords of the forest".
-
-
-And she knows her boy and Peggy are safe.
-
-"Thank God for all his mercies!" she says fervently, then, woman-like,
-bursts into tears.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III--BURNLEY HALL, OLD AND NEW
-
-
-I have noticed more than once that although the life-story of some good
-old families in England may run long stagnant, still, when one important
-event does take place, strange thing after strange thing may happen, and
-the story rushes on with heedless speed, like rippling brooklets to the
-sea.
-
-The St. Clairs may have been originally a Scottish family, or branch of
-some Highland clan, but they had been settled on a beautiful estate, far
-away in the wilds of Cornwall, for over one hundred and fifty years.
-
-Stay, though, we are not going back so far as that. Old history, like
-old parchment, has a musty odour. Let us come down to more modern times.
-
-When, then, young Roland's grandfather died, and died intestate, the
-whole of the large estate devolved upon his eldest son, with its fat
-rentals of fully four thousand a-year. Peggy St. Clair, our little
-heroine, was his only child, and said to be, even in her infancy, the
-very image of her dead-and-gone mother.
-
-No wonder her father loved her.
-
-But soon the first great event happened in the life-story of the St.
-Clairs. For, one sad day Peggy's father was borne home from the
-hunting-field grievously wounded.
-
-All hope of recovery was abandoned by the doctor shortly after he had
-examined his patient.
-
-Were Herbert to die intestate, as his father had done, his second
-brother John, according to the old law, could have stepped into his
-shoes and become lord of Burnley Hall and all its broad acres.
-
-But, alive to the peril of his situation, which the surgeon with tears
-in his eyes pointed out to him, the dying man sent at once for his
-solicitor, and a will was drawn up and placed in this lawyer's hands,
-and moreover he was appointed one of the executors. This will was to be
-kept in a safe until Peggy should be seventeen years of age, when it was
-to be opened and read.
-
-I must tell you that between the brothers Herbert and John there had
-long existed a sort of blood-feud, and it was as well they never met.
-
-Thomas, however, was quickly at his wounded brother's bedside, and never
-left it until--
-
- "Clay-cold Death had closed his eye".
-
-
-The surgeon had never given any hopes, yet during the week that
-intervened between the terrible accident and Herbert's death there were
-many hours in which the doomed man appeared as well as ever, though
-scarce able to move hand or foot. His mind was clear at such times, and
-he talked much with Thomas about the dear old times when all were young.
-
-Up till now this youngest son and brother, Thomas, had led rather an
-uneasy and eventful life. Nothing prospered with him, though he had
-tried most things.
-
-He was married, and had the one child, Roland, to whom the reader has
-already been introduced.
-
-"Now, dear Tom," said Herbert, one evening after he had lain still with
-closed eyes for quite a long time, and he placed a white cold hand in
-that of his brother as he spoke, "I am going to leave you. We have
-always been good friends and loved each other well. All I need tell you
-now, and I tell you in confidence, is that Peggy, at the age of
-seventeen, will be my heir, with you, dear Tom, as her guardian."
-
-Tom could not reply for the gathering tears. He just pressed Herbert's
-hand in silence.
-
-"Well," continued the latter, "things have not gone over well with you,
-I know, but I have often heard you say you could do capitally if you
-emigrated to an almost new land--a land you said figuratively 'flowing
-with milk and honey'. I confess I made no attempt to assist you to go
-to the great valley of the Amazon. It was for a selfish reason I
-detained you. My brother John being nobody to me, my desire was to have
-you near."
-
-He paused, almost exhausted, and Tom held a little cup of wine to his
-lips.
-
-Presently he spoke again.
-
-"My little Peggy!" he moaned. "Oh, it is hard, hard to leave my
-darling!
-
-"Tom, listen. You are to take Peggy to your home. You are to care for
-her as the apple of your eye. You must be her father, your wife her
-mother."
-
-"I will! I will! Oh, brother, can you doubt me!"
-
-"No, no, Tom. And now you may emigrate. I leave you thirty thousand
-pounds, all my deposit account at Messrs. Bullion & Co.'s bank. This is
-for Peggy and you. My real will is a secret at present, and that which
-will be read after--I go, is a mere epitome. But in future it will be
-found that I have not forgotten even John."
-
-Poor Peggy had run in just then, and perched upon the bed, wondering
-much that her father should lie there so pale and still, and make no
-attempt to romp with her. At this time her hair was as yellow as the
-first approach of dawn in the eastern sky.
-
- ----
-
-That very week poor Squire St. Clair breathed his last.
-
-John came to the funeral with a long face and a crape-covered hat,
-looking more like a mute than anything else.
-
-He sipped his wine while the epitomized will was read; but a wicked
-light flashed from his eyes, and he ground out an oath at its
-conclusion.
-
-All the information anyone received was that though sums varying from
-five hundred pounds to a thousand were left as little legacies to
-distant relations and to John, as well as _douceurs_ to the servants,
-the whole of the estates were willed in a way that could not be divulged
-for many a long year.
-
-John seized his hat, tore from it the crape, and dashed it on the floor.
-The crape on his arm followed suit. He trampled on both and strode away
-slamming the door behind him.
-
-Years had flown away.
-
-Tom and his wife had emigrated to the banks of the Amazon. They settled
-but a short time at or near one of its mouths, and then Tom, who had no
-lack of enterprise, determined to journey far, far into the interior,
-where the land was not so level, where mountains nodded to the moon, and
-giant forests stretched illimitably to the southward and west.
-
-At first Tom and his men, with faithful Bill as overseer, were mere
-squatters, but squatters by the banks of the queen of waters, and in a
-far more lovely place than dreams of elfinland. Labour was very cheap
-here, and the Indians soon learned from the white men how to work.
-
-Tom St. Clair had imported carpenters and artificers of many sorts from
-the old country, to say nothing of steam plant and machinery, and that
-great resounding steel buzz-saw.
-
-Now, although not really extravagant, he had an eye for the beautiful,
-and determined to build himself a house and home that, although not
-costing a deal, would be in reality a miniature Burnley Hall. And what
-a truly joyous time Peggy and her cousin, or adopted brother, had of it
-while the house was gradually being built by the busy hands of the
-trained Indians and their white brethren!
-
-Not they alone, but also a boy called Dick Temple, whose uncle was Tom
-St. Clair's nearest neighbour, That is, he lived a trifle over seven
-miles higher up the river. Dick was about the same age and build as
-Roland.
-
-There was a good road between Temple's ranch and Tom St. Clair's place,
-and when, after a time, Tom and Peggy had a tutor imported for their own
-especial benefit, the two families became very friendly indeed.
-
-Dick Temple was a well-set-up and really brave and good-looking lad.
-Little Peggy averred that there never had been, or never could be,
-another boy half so nice as Dick.
-
-But I may as well state here at once and be done with it--Dick was
-simply a reckless, wild dare-devil. Nothing else would suffice to
-describe young Dick's character even at this early age. And he soon
-taught Roland to be as reckless as himself.
-
- ----
-
-Time rolled on, and the new Burnley Hall was a _fait accompli_.
-
-The site chosen by Tom for his home by the river was a rounded and
-wooded hill about a quarter of a mile back from the immediate bank of
-the stream. But all the land between the hill and the Amazon was
-cultivated, and not only this, but up and down the river as well for
-over a mile, for St. Clair wanted to avoid too close contact with
-unfriendly alligators, and these scaly reptiles avoid land on which
-crops are growing.
-
-The tall trees were first and foremost cleared off the hill; not all
-though. Many of the most beautiful were left for effect, not to say
-shade, and it was pleasant indeed to hear the wind whispering through
-their foliage, and the bees murmuring in their branches, in this flowery
-land of eternal summer.
-
-Nor was the undergrowth of splendid shrubs and bushes and fruit-trees
-cleared away. They were thinned, however, and beautiful broad winding
-walks led up through them towards the mansion.
-
-The house was one of many gables; altogether English, built of quartz
-for the most part, and having a tower to it of great height.
-
-From this tower one could catch glimpses of the most charming scenery,
-up and down the river, and far away on the other shore, where forests
-swam in the liquid air and giant hills raised their blue tops far into
-the sky.
-
-So well had Tom St. Clair flourished since taking up his quarters here
-that his capital was returning him at least one hundred per cent, after
-allowing for wear and tear of plant.
-
-I could not say for certain how many white men he had with him. The
-number must have been close on fifty, to say nothing of the scores and
-scores of Indians.
-
-Jake Solomons and Burly Bill were his overseers, but they delighted in
-hard work themselves, as we have already seen. So, too, did Roland's
-father himself, and as visitors to the district were few, you may be
-certain he never wore a London hat nor evening dress.
-
-Like those of Jake and Bill, his sleeves were always rolled up, and his
-muscular arms and brave square face showed that he was fit for anything.
-No, a London hat would have been sadly out of place; but the
-broad-brimmed Buffalo Bill he wore became him admirably.
-
-That big buzz-saw was a triumph. The clearing of the forest commenced
-from close under the hill where stood the mansion, and strong horses and
-bullocks were used to drag the gigantic trees towards the mill.
-
-Splendid timber it was!
-
-No one could have guessed the age of these trees until they were cut
-down and sawn into lengths, when their concentric rings might be
-counted.
-
-The saw-mill itself was a long way from the mansion-house, with the
-villages for the whites and Indians between, but quite separate from
-each other.
-
-The habitations of the whites were raised on piles well above the
-somewhat damp ground, and steps led up to them. Two-roomed most of them
-were, but that of Jake was of a more pretentious character. So, too,
-was Burly Bill's hut.
-
-It would have been difficult to say what the Indians lived on. Cakes,
-fruit, fish, and meat of any kind might form the best answer to the
-question. They ate roasted snakes with great relish, and many of these
-were of the deadly-poisonous class. The heads were cut off and buried
-first, however, and thus all danger was prevented. Young alligators
-were frequently caught, too, and made into a stew.
-
-The huts these faithful creatures lived in were chiefly composed of
-bamboo, timber, and leaves. Sometimes they caught fire. That did not
-trouble the savages much, and certainly did not keep them awake at
-night. For, had the whole village been burned down, they could have
-built another in a surprisingly short time.
-
-When our hero and heroine got lost in the great primeval forest, Burnley
-Hall was in the most perfect and beautiful order, and its walks, its
-flower-garden, and shrubberies were a most pleasing sight. All was
-under the superintendence of a Scotch gardener, whom St. Clair had
-imported for the purpose.
-
-By this time, too, a very large portion of the adjoining forest had been
-cut down, and the land on which those lofty trees had grown was under
-cultivation.
-
-If the country which St. Clair had made his home was not in reality a
-land flowing with milk and honey, it yielded many commodities equally
-valuable. Every now and then--especially when the river was more or less
-in flood--immense rafts were sent down stream to distant Para, where the
-valuable timber found ready market.
-
-Several white men in boats always went in charge of these, and the boats
-served to assist in steering, and towing as well.
-
-These rafts used often to be built close to the river before an expected
-rising of the stream, which, when it did come, floated them off and
-away.
-
-But timber was not the only commodity that St. Clair sent down from his
-great estate. There were splendid quinine-trees. There was coca and
-cocoa, too.
-
-There was a sugar plantation which yielded the best results, to say
-nothing of coffee and tobacco, Brazil-nuts and many other kinds of nuts,
-and last, but not least, there was gold.
-
-This latter was invariably sent in charge of a reliable white man, and
-St. Clair lived in hope that he would yet manage to position a really
-paying gold-mine.
-
-More than once St. Clair had permitted Roland and Peggy to journey down
-to Para on a great raft. But only at the season when no storms blew.
-They had an old Indian servant to cook and "do" for them, and the centre
-of the raft was hollowed out into a kind of cabin roofed over with
-bamboo and leaves. Steps led up from this on to a railed platform,
-which was called the deck.
-
-Burly Bill would be in charge of boats and all, and in the evenings he
-would enter the children's cabin to sing them songs and tell them
-strange, weird tales of forest life.
-
-He had a banjo, and right sweetly could he play. Old Beeboo the Indian,
-would invariably light his meerschaum for him, smoking it herself for a
-good five minutes first and foremost, under pretence of getting it well
-alight.
-
-Beeboo, indeed, was altogether a character. Both Mr. and Mrs. St. Clair
-liked her very much, however, for she had been in the family, and nursed
-both Peggy and Roland, from the day they had first come to the country.
-As for her age, she might have been any age between five-and-twenty and
-one hundred and ten. She was dark in skin--oh, no! not black, but more
-of copper colour, and showed a few wrinkles at early morn. But when
-Beeboo was figged out in her nicest white frock and her deep-blue or
-crimson blouse, with her hair hanging down in two huge plaits, then,
-with the smile that always hovered around her lips and went dancing away
-up her face till it flickered about her eyes, she was very pleasant
-indeed. The wrinkles had all flown up to the moon or somewhere, and
-Beeboo was five-and-twenty once again.
-
-I must tell you something, however, regarding her, and that is the
-worst. Beeboo came from a race of cannibals who inhabit one of the
-wildest and almost inaccessible regions of Bolivia, and her teeth had
-been filed by flints into a triangular shape, the form best adapted for
-tearing flesh. She had been brought thence, along with a couple of
-wonderful monkeys and several parrots, when only sixteen, by an English
-traveller who had intended to make her a present to his wife.
-
-Beeboo never got as far as England, however. She had watched her
-chance, and one day escaped to the woods, taking with her one of the
-monkeys, who was an especial favourite with this strange, wild girl.
-
-She was frequently seen for many years after this. It was supposed she
-had lived on roots and rats--I'm not joking--and slept at night in
-trees. She managed to clothe herself, too, with the inner rind of the
-bark of certain shrubs. But how she had escaped death from the talons
-of jaguars and other wild beasts no one could imagine.
-
-Well, one day, shortly after the arrival of St. Clair, hunters found the
-jaguar queen, as they called her, lying in the jungle at the foot of a
-tree.
-
-There was a jaguar not far off, and a huge piece of sodden flesh lay
-near Beeboo's cheek, undoubtedly placed there by this strange, wild pet,
-while close beside her stood a tapir.
-
-Beeboo was carried to the nearest village, and the tapir followed as
-gently as a lamb. My informant does not know what became of the tapir,
-but Beeboo was tamed, turned a Christian too, and never evinced any
-inclination to return to the woods.
-
-Yet, strangely enough, no puma nor jaguar would ever even growl or snarl
-at Beeboo.
-
-These statements can all be verified.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV--AWAY DOWN THE RIVER
-
-
-Before we start on this adventurous cruise, let us take a peep at an
-upland region to the south of the Amazon. It was entirely surrounded by
-caoutchouc or india-rubber trees, and it was while wandering through
-this dense forest with Jake, and making arrangements for the tapping of
-those trees, the juice of which was bound to bring the St. Clairs much
-money, that they came upon the rocky table-land where they found the
-gold.
-
-This was some months after the strange Indian had found the "babes in
-the wood", as Jake sometimes called Roland and Peggy.
-
-"I say, sir, do you see the quartz showing white everywhere through the
-bloom of those beautiful flowers?"
-
-"Ugh!" cried St. Clair, as a splendidly-coloured but hideous large snake
-hissed and glided away from between his feet. "Ugh! had I tramped on
-that fellow my prospecting would have been all ended."
-
-"True, sir," said Jake; "but about the quartz?"
-
-"Well, Jake."
-
-"Well, Mr. St. Clair, there is gold here. I do not say that we've
-struck an El Dorado, but I am certain there is something worth digging
-for in this region."
-
-"Shall we try? You've been in Australia. What say you to a shaft?"
-
-"Good! But a horizontal shaft carried into the base of this hill or
-hummock will, I think, do for the present. It is only for samples, you
-know."
-
-And these samples had turned out so well that St. Clair, after claiming
-the whole hill, determined to send Jake on a special message to Para to
-establish a company for working it.
-
-He could take no more labour on his own head, for really he had more
-than enough to do with his estate.
-
-No white men were allowed to work at the shaft. Only Indians, and these
-were housed on the spot. So that the secret was well kept.
-
-And now the voyage down the river was to be undertaken, and a most
-romantic cruise it turned out to be.
-
-St. Clair had ordered a steamer to be built for him in England and sent
-out in pieces. She was called _The Peggy_, after our heroine. Not very
-large--but little over the dimensions of a large steam-launch, in
-fact--but big enough for the purpose of towing along the immense raft
-with the aid of the current.
-
-Jake was to go with his samples of golden sand and his nuggets; Burly
-Bill, also, who was captain of the _Peggy_; and Beeboo, to attend to the
-youngsters in their raft saloon. Brawn was not to be denied; and last,
-but not least, went wild Dick Temple.
-
-The latter was to sleep on board the steamer, but he would spend most of
-his time by day on the raft.
-
-All was ready at last. The great raft was floated and towed out far
-from the shore. All the plantation hands, both whites and Indians, were
-gathered on the banks, and gave many a lusty cheer as the steamer and
-raft got under way.
-
-The last thing that those on shore heard was the sonorous barking of the
-great wolf-hound, Brawn.
-
-There was a ring of joy in it, however, that brought hope to the heart
-of both Tom St. Clair and his winsome wife.
-
-Well, to our two heroes and to Peggy, not to mention Brawn and Burly
-Bill, the cruise promised to be all one joyous picnic, and they set
-themselves to make the most of it.
-
-But to Jake Solomons it presented a more serious side. He was St.
-Clair's representative and trusted man, and his business was of the
-highest importance, and would need both tact and skill.
-
-However, there was a long time to think about all this, for the river
-does not run more than three miles an hour, and although the little
-steamer could hurry the raft along at probably thrice that speed, still
-long weeks must elapse before they could reach their destination.
-
-As far as the raft was concerned, this would not be Para. She would be
-grounded near to a town far higher up stream, and the timber, nuts,
-spices, and rubber taken seaward by train.
-
-In less than two days everyone had settled down to the voyage.
-
-The river was very wide and getting wider, and soon scarcely could they
-see the opposite shore, except as a long low green cloud on the northern
-horizon.
-
-Life on board the raft was for a whole week a most uneventful dreamy
-sort of existence. One day was remarkably like another. There was the
-blue of the sky above, the blue on the river's great breast, broken,
-however, by thousands of lines of rippling silver.
-
-There were strangely beautiful birds flying tack and half-tack around
-the steamer and raft, waving trees flower-bedraped--the flowers trailing
-and creeping and climbing everywhere, and even dipping their sweet faces
-in the water,--flowers of every hue of the rainbow.
-
-Dreamy though the atmosphere was, I would not have you believe that our
-young folks relapsed into a state of drowsy apathy. Far from it. They
-were very happy indeed. Dick told Peggy that their life, or his, felt
-just like some beautiful song-waltz, and that he was altogether so happy
-and jolly that he had sometimes to turn out in the middle watch to
-laugh.
-
-Peggy had not to do that.
-
-In her little state-room on one side of the cabin, and in a hammock, she
-slept as soundly as the traditional top, and on a grass mat on the deck,
-with a footstool for a pillow, slumbered Beeboo.
-
-Roland slept on the other side, and Brawn guarded the doorway at the
-foot of the steps.
-
-Long before Peggy was awake, and every morning of their aquatic lives,
-the dinghy boat took the boys a little way out into mid-stream, and they
-stripped and dived, enjoyed a two-minutes' splash, and got quickly on
-board again.
-
-The men always stood by with rifles to shoot any alligator that might be
-seen hovering nigh, and more than once reckless Dick had a narrow
-escape.
-
-"But," he said one day in his comical way, "one has only once to die,
-you know, and you might as well die doing a good turn as any other way."
-
-"Doing a good turn?" said Roland enquiringly.
-
-"Certainly. Do you not impart infinite joy to a cayman if you permit
-him to eat you?"
-
-The boys were always delightfully hungry half an hour before breakfast
-was served.
-
-And it was a breakfast too!
-
-Beeboo would be dressed betimes, and have the cloth laid in the saloon.
-The great raft rose and fell with a gentle motion, but there was nothing
-to hurt, so that the dishes stuck on the cloth without any guard.
-
-Beeboo could bake the most delicious of scones and cakes, and these,
-served up hot in a clean white towel, were most tempting; the butter was
-of the best and sweetest. Ham there was, and eggs of the gull, with
-fresh fried fish every morning, and fragrant coffee.
-
-Was it not quite idyllic?
-
-The forenoon would be spent on deck under the awning; there was plenty
-to talk about, and books to read, and there was the ever-varying
-panorama to gaze upon, as the raft went smoothly gliding on, and on, and
-on.
-
-Sometimes they were in very deep water close to the bank, for men were
-always in the chains taking soundings from the steamer's bows.
-
-Close enough to admire the flowers that draped the forest trees; close
-enough to hear the wild lilt of birds or the chattering of monkeys and
-parrots; close enough to see tapirs moving among the trees, watched,
-often enough, by the fierce sly eyes of ghastly alligators, that
-flattened themselves against rocks or bits of clay soil, looking like a
-portion of the ground, but warily waiting until they should see a chance
-to attack.
-
-There cannot be too many tapirs, and there cannot be too few alligators.
-So our young heroes thought it no crime to shoot these squalid horrors
-wherever seen.
-
-But one forenoon clouds banked rapidly up in the southern sky, and soon
-the sun was hidden in sulphurous rolling banks of cumulus.
-
-No one who has ever witnessed a thunderstorm in these regions can live
-long enough to forget it.
-
-For some time before it came on the wind had gone down completely. In
-yonder great forest there could not have been breeze or breath enough to
-stir the pollen on the trailing flowers. The sun, too, seemed shorn of
-its beams, the sky was no longer blue, but of a pale saffron or sulphur
-colour.
-
-It was then that giant clouds, like evil beasts bent on havoc and
-destruction, began to show head above the horizon. Rapidly they rose,
-battalion on battalion, phalanx on phalanx.
-
-There were low mutterings even now, and flashes of fire in the far
-distance. But it was not until the sky was entirely overcast that the
-storm came on in dread and fearful earnest. At this time it was so
-dark, that down in the raft saloon an open book was barely visible.
-Then peal after peal, and vivid flash after flash, of blue and crimson
-fire lit up forest and stream, striking our heroes and heroine blind, or
-causing their eyes for a time to overrun with purple light.
-
-So terrific was the thunder that the raft seemed to rock and shiver in
-the sound.
-
-This lasted for fully half an hour, the whole world seeming to be in
-flames.
-
-Peggy stood by Dick on the little deck, and he held her arm in his; held
-her hand too, for it was cold and trembling.
-
-"Are you afraid?" he whispered, during a momentary lull.
-
-"No, Dick, not afraid, only cold, so cold; take me below."
-
-He did so.
-
-He made her lie down on the little sofa, and covered her with a rug.
-
-All just in time, for now down came the awful rain. It was as if a
-water-spout had broken over the seemingly doomed raft, and was sinking
-it below the dark waters of the river.
-
-Luckily the boys managed to batten down in time, or the little saloon
-would have been flooded.
-
-They lit the lamp, too.
-
-But with the rain the storm seemed to increase in violence, and a strong
-wind had arisen and added greatly to the terror of the situation. Hail
-came down as large as marbles, and the roaring and din was now deafening
-and terrible.
-
-Then, the wind ceased to blow almost instantaneously. It did not die
-away. It simply dropped all of a sudden. Hail and rain ceased shortly
-after.
-
-Dick ventured to peep on deck.
-
-It was still dark, but far away and low down on the horizon a streak of
-the brightest blue sky that ever he had seen had made its appearance.
-It broadened and broadened as the dark canopy of clouds, curtain-like,
-was lifted.
-
-"Come up, Peggy. Come up, Rol. The storm is going. The storm has
-almost gone," cried Dick; and soon all three stood once more on the
-deck.
-
-Away, far away over the northern woods rolled the last bank of clouds,
-still giving voice, however, still spitting fire.
-
-But now the sun was out and shining brightly down with a heat that was
-fierce, and the raft was all enveloped in mist.
-
-So dense, indeed, was the fog that rose from the rain-soaked raft, that
-all the scenery was entirely obscured. It was a hot vapour, too, and
-far from pleasant, so no one was sorry when Burly Bill suddenly appeared
-from the lower part of the raft.
-
-"My dear boys," he said heartily, "why, you'll be parboiled if you stop
-here. Come with me, Miss Peggy, and you, Brawn; I'll come back for you,
-lads. Don't want to upset the dinghy all among the 'gators, see?"
-
-Bill was back again in a quarter of an hour, and the boys were also
-taken on board the boat.
-
-"She's a right smart little boat as ever was," said Bill; "but if we was
-agoin' to get 'er lip on to the water, blow me tight, boys, if the
-'gators wouldn't board us. They'm mebbe very nice sociable kind o'
-animals, but bust my buttons if I'd like to enter the next world down a
-'gator's gullet."
-
-Beeboo did not mind the steam a bit, and by two o'clock she had as nice
-a dinner laid in the raft saloon as ever boy or girl sat down to.
-
-But by this time the timbers were dry once more, and although white
-clouds of fog still lay over the low woods, all was now bright and
-cheerful. Yet not more so than the hearts of our brave youngsters.
-
-Courage and sprightliness are all a matter of strength of heart, and you
-cannot make yourself brave if your system is below par. The coward is
-really more to be pitied than blamed.
-
-Well, it was very delightful, indeed, to sit on deck and talk, build
-castles in the air, and dream daydreams.
-
-The air was cool and bracing now, and the sun felt warm, but by no means
-too hot.
-
-The awning was prettily lined with green cloth, the work of Mrs. St.
-Clair's own hands, assisted by the indefatigable Beeboo, and there was
-not anything worth doing that she could not put willing, artful hands
-to.
-
-The awning was scalloped, too, if that be the woman's word for the flaps
-that hung down a whole foot all round. "Vandyked" is perhaps more
-correct, but then, you see, the sharp corners of the vandyking were all
-rounded off. So I think scalloped must stand, though the word reminds
-me strangely of oysters.
-
-But peeping out from under the scalloped awning, and gazing northwards
-across the sea-like river, boats under steam could be noticed.
-Passengers on board too, both ladies and gentlemen, the former all
-rigged out in summer attire.
-
-"Would you like to be on board yonder?" said Dick to Peggy, as the girl
-handed him back the lorgnettes.
-
-"No, indeed, I shouldn't," she replied, with a saucy toss of her pretty
-head.
-
-"Well," she added, "if you were there, little Dickie, I mightn't mind it
-so much."
-
-"Little Dick! Eh?" Dick laughed right heartily now.
-
-"Yes, little Dickie. Mind, I am nearly twelve; and after I'm twelve I'm
-in my teens, quite an old girl. A child no longer anyhow. And after I'm
-in my teens I'll soon be sixteen, and then I suppose I shall marry."
-
-"Who will marry you, Peggy?"
-
-This was not very good grammar, but Dick was in downright earnest
-anyhow, and his young voice had softened wonderfully.
-
-"Me?" he added, as she remained silent, with her eyes seeming to follow
-the rolling tide.
-
-"You, Dick! Why, you're only a child!"
-
-"Why, Peggy, I'm fifteen--nearly, and if I live I'm bound to get older
-and bigger."
-
-"No, no, Dick, you can marry Beeboo, and I shall get spliced, as the
-sailors call it, to Burly Bill."
-
-The afternoon wore away, and Beeboo came up to summon "the chillun" to
-tea.
-
-Up they started, forgetting all about budding love, flirtation, and
-future marriages, and made a rush for the companion-ladder.
-
-"Wowff--wowff!" barked Brawn, and the 'gators on shore and the tapirs in
-the woods lifted heads to listen, while parrots shrieked and monkeys
-chattered and scolded among the lordly forest trees.
-
-"Wowff--wowff!" he barked. "Who says cakes and butter?"
-
-The night fell, and Burly Bill came on board with his banjo, and his
-great bass voice, which was as sweet as the tone of a 'cello.
-
-Bill was funnier than usual to-night, and when Beeboo brought him a big
-tumbler of rosy rum punch, made by herself and sweetened with honey, he
-was merrier still.
-
-Then to complete his happiness Beeboo lit his pipe.
-
-She puffed away at it for some time as usual, by way of getting it in
-working order.
-
-"'Spose," she said, "Beeboo not warm de bowl ob de big pipe plenty
-proper, den de dear chile Bill take a chill."
-
-"You're a dear old soul, Beeb," said Bill.
-
-Then the dear old soul carefully wiped the amber mouth-piece with her
-apron, and handed Burly Bill his comforter.
-
-The great raft swayed and swung gently to and fro, so Bill sang his pet
-sea-song, "The Rose of Allandale". He was finishing that bonnie verse--
-
- "My life had been a wilderness,
- Unblest by fortune's gale,
- Had fate not linked my lot to hers,
- The Rose of Allandale",
-
-when all at once an ominous grating was heard coming from beneath the
-raft, and motion ceased as suddenly as did Bill's song.
-
-"Save us from evil!" cried Bill. "The raft is aground!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V--A DAY IN THE FOREST WILDS
-
-
-Burly Bill laid down his banjo. Then he pushed his great extinguisher
-of a thumb into the bowl of his big meerschaum, and arose.
-
-"De good Lawd ha' mussy on our souls, chillun!" cried Beeboo, twisting
-her apron into a calico rope. "We soon be all at de bottom ob de deep,
-and de 'gators a-pickin' de bones ob us!"
-
-"Keep quiet, Beeb, there's a dear soul! Never a 'gator'll get near you.
-W'y, look 'ow calm Miss Peggy is. It be'ant much as'll frighten she."
-
-Burly Bill could speak good English when he took time, but invariably
-reverted to Berkshire when in the least degree excited.
-
-He was soon on board the little steamer.
-
-"What cheer, Jake?" he said.
-
-"Not much o' that. A deuced unlucky business. May lose the whole voyage
-if it comes on to blow!"
-
-"W'y, Jake, lad, let's 'ope for the best. No use givin' up; be there?
-I wouldn't let the men go to prayers yet awhile, Jake. Not to make a
-bizness on't like, I means."
-
-Well, the night wore away, but the raft never budged, unless it was to
-get a firmer hold of the mud and sand.
-
-A low wind had sprung up too, and if it increased to a gale she would
-soon begin to break up.
-
-It was a dreary night and a long one, and few on board the steamer slept
-a wink.
-
-But day broke at last, and the sun's crimson light changed the ripples
-on the river from leaden gray to dazzling ruby.
-
-Then the wind fell.
-
-"There are plenty of river-boats, Bill," said Jake. "What say you to
-intercept one and ask assistance?"
-
-"Bust my buttons if I would cringe to ne'er a one on 'em! They'd charge
-salvage, and sponge enormous. I knows the beggars as sails these puffin'
-Jimmies well."
-
-"Guess you're about right, Bill, and you know the river better'n I."
-
-"Listen, Jake. The bloomin' river got low all at once, like, after the
-storm, and so you got kind o' befoozled, and struck. I'd a-kept further
-out. But Burly Bill ain't the man to bully his mate. On'y listen
-again. The river'll rise in a day or two, and if the wind keeps in its
-sack, w'y we'll float like a thousand o' bricks on an old Thames lumper!
-Bust my buttons, Jake, if we don't!"
-
-"Well, Bill, I don't know anything about the bursting of your buttons,
-but you give me hope. So I'll go to breakfast. Tell the engineer to
-keep the fires banked."
-
-Two days went past, and never a move made the raft.
-
-It was a wearisome time for all. The "chillun", as Beeboo called them,
-tried to beguile it in the best way they could with reading, talking,
-and deck games.
-
-Dick and Roland were "dons" at leap-frog, and it mattered not which of
-them was giving the back, but as soon as the other leapt over Brawn
-followed suit, greatly to the delight of Peggy. He jumped in such a
-business-like way that everybody was forced to laugh, especially when
-the noble dog took a leap that would have cleared a five-barred gate.
-
-But things were getting slow on the third morning, when up sprang Burly
-Bill with his cartridge-belt on and his rifle under his arm.
-
-"Cap'n Jake," he said, touching his cap in Royal Navy fashion, "presents
-his compliments to the crew of this durned old stack o' timber, and begs
-to say that Master Rolly and Master Dick can come on shore with me for a
-run among the 'gators, but that Miss Peggy had better stop on board with
-Beeboo. Her life is too precious to risk!"
-
-"Precious or not precious," pouted the girl, "Miss Peggy's going, and
-Brawn too; so you may tell Captain Jake that."
-
-"Bravo, Miss Peggy! you're a real St. Clair. Well, Beeboo, hurry up,
-and get the nicest bit of cold luncheon ready for us ever you made in
-your life."
-
-"Beeboo do dat foh true. Plenty quick, too; but oh, Massa Bill, 'spose
-you let any ebil ting befall de poh chillun, I hopes de 'gators'll eat
-you up!"
-
-"More likely, Beeb, that we'll eat them; and really, come to think of
-it, a slice off a young 'gator's tail aint 'arf bad tackle, Beeboo."
-
-An hour after this the boat was dancing over the rippling river. It was
-not the dinghy, but a gig. Burly Bill himself was stroke, and three
-Indians handled the other bits of timber, while Roland took the tiller.
-
-The redskins sang a curious but happy boat-lilt as they rowed, and Bill
-joined in with his 'cello voice:
-
- "Ober de watter and ober de sea--ee--ee,
- De big black boat am rowing so free,
- Eee--Eee--O--ay--O!
- De big black boat, is it nuffin' to me--ee--ee,
- We're rowing so free?
-
- "Oh yes, de black boat am some-dings to me
- As she rolls o'er de watter and swings o'er de sea,
- Foh de light ob my life, she sits in de stern,
- An' sweet am de glance o' Peggy's dark e'e,
- Ee--ee--O--ay--O--O!"
-
-
-"Well steered!" said Burly Bill, as Roland ran the gig on the sandy
-beach of a sweet little backwater.
-
-Very soon all were landed. Bill went first as guide, and the Indians
-brought up the rear, carrying the basket and a spare gun or two.
-
-Great caution and care were required in venturing far into this wild,
-tropical forest, not so much on account of the beasts that infested it
-as the fear of getting lost.
-
-It was very still and quiet here, however, and Bill had taken the
-precaution to leave a man in the boat, with orders to keep his weather
-ear "lifting", and if he heard four shots fired in rapid succession late
-in the afternoon to fire in reply at once.
-
-It was now the heat of the day, however, and the hairy inhabitants of
-this sylvan wilderness were all sound asleep, jaguars and pumas among
-the trees, and the tapirs in small herds wherever the jungle was
-densest.
-
-There was no chance, therefore, of getting a shot at anything.
-Nevertheless, the boys and Peggy were not idle. They had brought
-butterfly-nets with them, and the specimens they caught when about five
-miles inland, where the forest opened out into a shrub-clad moorland,
-were large and glorious in the extreme.
-
-Indeed, some of them would fetch gold galore in the London markets.
-
-But though these butterflies had an immense spread of quaintly-shaped
-and exquisitely-coloured wings, the smaller ones were even more
-brilliant.
-
-Strange it is that Nature paints these creatures in colours which no
-sunshine can fade. All the tints that man ever invented grow pale in
-the sun; these never do, and the same may be said concerning the
-tropical birds that they saw so many of to-day.
-
-But no one had the heart to shoot any of these. Why should they soil
-such beautiful plumage with blood, and so bring grief and woe into this
-love-lit wilderness?
-
-This is not a book on natural history, else gladly would I describe the
-beauties in shape and colour of the birds, and their strange manners,
-the wary ways adopted in nest-building, and their songs and queer ways
-of love-making.
-
-Suffice it to say here that the boys were delighted with all the
-tropical wonders and all the picturesque gorgeousness they saw
-everywhere around them.
-
-But their journey was not without a spice of real danger and at times of
-discomfort. The discomfort we may dismiss at once. It was borne, as
-Beeboo would say, with Christian "forty-tood", and was due partly to the
-clouds of mosquitoes they encountered wherever the soil was damp and
-marshy, and partly to the attacks of tiny, almost invisible, insects of
-the jigger species that came from the grass and ferns and heaths to
-attack their legs.
-
-Burly Bill was an old forester, and carried with him an infallible
-remedy for mosquito and jigger bites, which acted like a charm.
-
-In the higher ground--where tropical heath and heather painted the
-surface with hues of crimson, pink, and purple--snakes wriggled and
-darted about everywhere.
-
-One cannot help wondering why Nature has taken the pains to paint many
-of the most deadly of these in colours that rival the hues of the
-humming-birds that yonder flit from bush to bush, from flower to flower.
-
-Perhaps it is that they may the more easily seek their prey, their gaudy
-coats matching well with the shrubs and blossoms that they wriggle
-amongst, while gliding on and up to seize helpless birds in their nests
-or to devour the eggs.
-
-Parrots here, and birds of that ilk, have an easy way of repelling such
-invaders, for as soon as they see them they utter a scream that
-paralyses the intruders, and causes them to fall helplessly to the
-ground.
-
-To all creatures Nature grants protection, and clothes them in a manner
-that shall enable them to gain a subsistence; but, moreover, every
-creature in the world has received from the same great power the means
-of defending or protecting itself against the attacks of enemies.
-
-On both sides, then, is Nature just, for though she does her best to
-keep living species extant until evolved into higher forms of life, she
-permits each species to prey on the overgrowth or overplus of others
-that it may live.
-
-Knocking over a heap of soft dry mould with the butt end of his rifle,
-Dick started back in terror to see crawl out from the heap a score or
-more of the most gigantic beetles anyone could imagine. These were
-mostly black, or of a beautiful bronze, with streaks of metallic blue
-and crimson.
-
-They are called harlequins, and live on carrion. Nothing that dies comes
-wrong to these monsters, and a few of them will seize and carry away a
-dead snake five or six hundred times their own weight. My readers will
-see by this that it is not so much muscle that is needed for feats of
-strength as indomitable will and nerve force. But health must be at the
-bottom of all. Were a man, comparatively speaking, as strong as one of
-these beetles, he could lift on his back and walk off with a weight of
-thirty tons!
-
-Our heroes had to stop every now and then to marvel at the huge working
-ants, and all the wondrous proofs of reason they evinced.
-
-It was well to stand off, however, if, with snapping horizontal
-mandibles and on business intent, any of these fellows approached. For
-their bites are as poisonous as those of the green scorpions or
-centipedes themselves.
-
-What with one thing or another, all hands were attacked by healthy
-hunger at last, and sought the shade of a great spreading tree to
-satisfy Nature's demands.
-
-When the big basket was opened it was found that Beeboo had quite
-excelled herself. So glorious a luncheon made every eye sparkle to look
-at it. And the odour thereof caused Brawn's mouth to water and his eyes
-to sparkle with expectancy.
-
-The Indians had disappeared for a time. They were only just round the
-shoulder of a hill, however, where they, too, were enjoying a good feed.
-
-But just as Burly Bill was having a taste from a clear bottle, which, as
-far as the look of it went, would have passed for cold tea, two Indian
-boys appeared, bringing with them the most delicious of fruits as well
-as fresh ripe nuts.
-
-The luncheon after that merged into a banquet.
-
-Burly Bill took many sips of his cold tea. When I come to think over
-it, however, I conclude there was more rum than cold tea in that brown
-mixture, or Bill would hardly have smacked his lips and sighed with such
-satisfaction after every taste.
-
-The fruit done, and even Brawn satisfied, the whole crew gave themselves
-up to rest and meditation. The boys talked low, because Peggy's
-meditations had led to gentle slumber. An Indian very thoughtfully
-brought a huge plantain leaf which quite covered her, and protected her
-from the chequered rays of sunshine that found their way through the
-tree. Brawn edged in below the leaf also, and enjoyed a good sleep
-beside his little mistress.
-
-Not a gun had been fired all day long, yet a more enjoyable picnic in a
-tropical forest it would be difficult to imagine.
-
-Perhaps the number of the Indians scared the jaguars away, for none
-appeared.
-
-Yet the day was not to end without an adventure.
-
-Darkness in this country follows the short twilight so speedily, that
-Burly Bill did well to get clear of the forest's gloom while the sun was
-still well above the horizon.
-
-He trusted to the compass and his own good sense as a forester to come
-out close to the spot where he had left the boat. But he was deceived.
-He struck the river a good mile and a half above the place where the
-steamer lay at anchor and the raft aground on the shoals.
-
-Lower and lower sank the sun. The ground was wet and marshy, and the
-'gators very much in evidence indeed.
-
-Now the tapirs--and droll pig-bodied creatures they look, though in
-South America nearly as big as donkeys--are of a very retiring
-disposition, but not really solitary animals as cheap books on natural
-history would have us believe. They frequent low woods, where their
-long snouts enable them to pull down the tender twigs and foliage on
-which, with roots, which they can speedily unearth, they manage to
-exist--yes, and to wax fat and happy.
-
-But they are strict believers in the doctrine of cleanliness, and are
-never found very far from water. They bathe every night.
-
-Just when the returning picnic was within about half a mile of the boat,
-Burly Bill carrying Peggy on his shoulder because the ground was damp, a
-terrible scrimmage suddenly took place a few yards round a backwater.
-
-There was grunting, squeaking, the splashing of water, and cries of
-pain.
-
-"Hurry on, boys; hurry on; two of you are enough! It's your show, lads."
-
-The boys needed no second bidding, and no sooner had they opened out the
-curve than a strange sight met their gaze.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI--"NOT ONE SINGLE DROP OF BLOOD SHED"
-
-
-A gigantic and horribly fierce alligator had seized upon a strong young
-tapir, and was trying to drag it into the water.
-
-The poor creature had both its feet set well in front, and was resisting
-with all its might, while two other larger animals, probably the
-parents, were clawing the cayman desperately with their fore-feet.
-
-But ill, indeed, would it have fared with all three had not our heroes
-appeared just in the nick of time.
-
-For several more of these scaly and fearsome reptiles were hurrying to
-the scene of action.
-
-Dick's first shot was a splendid one. It struck the offending cayman in
-the eye, and went crashing through his brain.
-
-The brute gasped, the blood flowed freely, and as he fell on his side,
-turning up his yellow belly, the young tapir got free, and was hurried
-speedily away to the woods.
-
-Volley after volley was poured in on the enraged 'gators, but the boys
-had to retreat as they fought. Had they not done so, my story would have
-stopped short just here.
-
-It was not altogether the sun's parting rays that so encrimsoned the
-water, but the blood of those old-world caymans.
-
-Three in all were killed in addition to the one first shot. So that it
-is no wonder the boys felt elated.
-
-Beeboo had supper waiting and there was nothing talked about that
-evening except their strange adventures in the beautiful forest.
-
- ----
-
-Probably no one could sleep more soundly than did our heroes and heroine
-that night.
-
-Next day, and next, they went on shore again, and on the third a huge
-jaguar, who fancied he would like to dine off Brawn's shoulder, fell a
-victim to Dick Temple's unerring aim.
-
-But the raft never stirred nor moved for a whole week.
-
-Said Bill to Jake one morning, as he took his meerschaum from his mouth:
-
-"I think, Jake, and w'at I thinks be's this like. There ain't ne'er a
-morsel o' good smokin' and on'y just lookin' at that fine and valuable
-pile o' timber. It strikes me conclusive like that something 'ad better
-be done."
-
-"And what would you propose, Bill?" said Jake.
-
-"Well, Jake, you're captain like, and my proposition is subject to your
-disposition as it were. But I'd lighten her, and lighten her till she
-floats; then tow her off, and build up the odd timbers again."
-
-"Good! You have a better head than I have, Bill; and it's you that
-should have been skipper, not me."
-
-Nothing was done that day, however, except making a few more attempts
-with the steamer at full speed to tow her off. She did shift and slue
-round a little, but that was all.
-
-Next morning dawned as beautifully as any that had gone before it.
-
-There were fleecy clouds, however, hurrying across the sky as if on
-business bent, and the blue between them was bluer than ever our young
-folks had seen it.
-
-Dick Temple, with Roland and Peggy, had made up their minds to go on
-shore for another day while the work of dismantling the raft went on.
-
-But a fierce south wind began to blow, driving heavy black clouds before
-it, and lashing the river into foam.
-
-One of those terrible tropic storms was evidently on the cards, and come
-it did right soon.
-
-The darkest blackness was away to the west, and here, though no thunder
-could be heard, the lightning was very vivid. It was evident that this
-was the vortex of the hurricane, for only a few drops of rain fell
-around the raft.
-
-The picnic scheme was of course abandoned, and all waited anxiously
-enough for something to come.
-
-That something did come in less than an hour--the descent of the mighty
-Amazon in flood. Its tributaries had no doubt been swollen by the awful
-rain and water-spouts, and poured into the great queen of rivers double
-their usual discharge.
-
-A bore is a curling wave like a shore breaker that rushes down the
-smaller rivers, and is terribly destructive to boating or to shipping.
-
-The Amazon, however, did not rise like this. It came rushing almost
-silently down in a broad tall wave that appeared to stretch right across
-it, from the forest-clad bank where the raft lay to the far-off green
-horizon in the north.
-
-But Burly Bill was quite prepared for eventualities.
-
-Steam had been got up, the vessel's bows were headed for up stream, and
-the hawser betwixt raft and boat tautened.
-
-On and on rushed the huge wave. It towered above the raft, even when
-fifty yards away, in the most threatening manner, as if about to sweep
-all things to destruction.
-
-But on its nearer approach it glided in under the raft, and steamer as
-well--like some huge submarine monster such as we read of in fairy books
-of the long-long-ago--glided in under them, and seemed to lift them
-sky-high.
-
-"Go ahead at full speed!"
-
-It was the sonorous voice of Burly Bill shouting to the engineer.
-
-"Ay, ay, sir!" came the cheery reply.
-
-The screw went round with a rush.
-
-It churned up a wake of foaming water as the _Peggy_ began to forge
-ahead, and next minute, driven along on the breeze, the monster raft
-began to follow and was soon out and away beyond danger from rock or
-shoal.
-
-Then arose to heaven a prayer of thankfulness, and a cheer so loud and
-long that even the parrots and monkeys in the forest depths heard it,
-and yelled and chattered till they frightened both 'gators and jaguars.
-
-Just two weeks after these adventures, the little _Peggy_ was at anchor,
-and the great raft safely beached.
-
-Burly Bill was left in charge with his white men and his Indians, with
-Dick Temple to act as supercargo, and Jake Solomons with Roland and
-Peggy, not to mention the dog, started off for Para.
-
-In due course, but after many discomforts, they arrived there, and Jake,
-after taking rooms in a hotel, hurried off to secure his despatches from
-the post-office.
-
-"No letters!" cried Jake, as his big brown fist came down with a bang on
-the counter. "Why, I see the very documents I came for in the
-pigeon-hole behind you!"
-
-The clerk, somewhat alarmed at the attitude of this tall Yankee
-backwoodsman, pulled them out and looked at them.
-
-"They cannot be delivered," he said.
-
-"And why?" thundered Jake, "Inasmuch as to wherefore, you greasy-faced
-little whipper-snapper!"
-
-"Not sufficient postage."
-
-Jake thrust one hand into a front pocket, and one behind him. Then on
-the counter he dashed down a bag of cash and a six-chambered revolver.
-
-"I'm Jake Solomons," he said. "There before you lies peace or war.
-Hand over the letters, and you'll have the rhino. Refuse, and I guess
-and calculate I'll blow the whole top of your head off."
-
-The clerk preferred peace, and Jake strode away triumphant.
-
-When he returned to the hotel and told the boys the story, they laughed
-heartily. In their eyes, Jake was more a hero than ever.
-
-"Ah!" said the giant quietly, "there's nothing brings these long-shore
-chaps sooner to their senses than letting 'em have a squint down the
-barrel of a six-shooter."
-
-The letters were all from Mr. St. Clair, and had been lying at the
-post-office for over a week. They all related to business, to the sale
-of the timber and the other commodities, the best markets, and so on and
-so forth, with hints as to the gold-mine.
-
-But the last one was much more bulky than the others, and so soon as he
-had glanced at the first lines, Jake lit his meerschaum, then threw
-himself back in his rocker to quietly discuss it.
-
-It was a plain, outspoken letter, such as one man of the world writes to
-another. Here is one extract:--
-
-_Our business is increasing at a rapid rate, Jake Solomon. I have too
-much to do and so have you; therefore, although I did not think it
-necessary to inform you before, I have been in communication with my
-brother John, and he is sending me out a shrewd, splendid man of
-business. He will have arrived before your return._
-
-_I can trust John thoroughly, and this Don Pedro Salvador, over and
-above his excellent business capabilities, can talk Spanish, French, and
-Portuguese._
-
-_I do not quite like the name, Jake, so he must be content to be called
-plain Mr. Peter._
-
- ----
-
-About the very time that Jake Solomons was reading this letter, there
-sat close to the sky-light of an outward-bound steamer at Liverpool, two
-men holding low but earnest conversation. Their faces were partly
-obscured, for it was night, and the only light a glimmer from the ship's
-lamp.
-
-Steam was up and roaring through the pipes.
-
-A casual observer might have noted that one was a slim, swarthy, but
-wiry, smart-looking man of about thirty. His companion was a man
-considerably over forty.
-
-"I shall go now," said the latter. "You have my instructions, and I
-believe I can trust you."
-
-"Have I not already given you reason to?" was the rejoinder. "At the
-risk of penal servitude did I not steal my employer's keys, break into
-his room at night, and copy that will for you? It was but a copy of a
-copy, it is true, and I could not discover the original, else the
-quickest and simplest plan would have been--fire:"
-
-"True, you did so, but"--the older man laughed lightly--"you were well
-paid for the duty you performed."
-
-"Duty, eh?" sneered the other. "Well," he added, "thank God nothing has
-been discovered. My employer has bidden me an almost affectionate
-farewell, and given me excellent certificates."
-
-The other started up as a loud voice hailed the deck:
-
-"Any more for the shore!"
-
-"I am going now," he said. "Good-bye, old man, and remember my last
-words: not one single drop of blood shed!"
-
-"I understand, and will obey to the letter. Obedience pays."
-
-"True; and you shall find it so. Good-bye!"
-
-"_A Dios!_" said the other.
-
-The last bell was struck, and the gangway was hauled on shore.
-
-The great ship _Benedict_ was that night rolling and tossing about on
-the waves of the Irish Channel.
-
- ----
-
-Jake Solomons acquainted Roland and Peggy with the contents of this last
-letter, and greatly did the latter wonder what the new overseer would be
-like, and if she should love him or not.
-
-For Peggy had a soft little heart of her own, and was always prepared to
-be friendly with anyone who, according to her idea, was nice.
-
-Jake took his charges all round the city next day and showed them the
-sights of what is now one of the most beautiful towns in South America.
-
-The gardens, the fountains, the churches and palaces, the flowers and
-fruit, and feathery palm-trees, all things indeed spoke of
-delightfulness, and calm, and peace.
-
-And far beyond and behind all this was the boundless forest primeval.
-
-This was not their last drive through the city, and this good fellow
-Jake, though his business took him from home most of the day, delighted
-to take the children to every place of amusement he could think of. But
-despite all this, these children of the forest wilds began to long for
-home, and very much rejoiced were they when one evening, after dinner,
-Jake told them they should start on the morrow for Bona Vista, near to
-which town the little steamer lay, and so up the great river and home.
-
-Jake had done all his business, and done it satisfactorily, and could
-return to the old plantation and Burnley Hall with a light and cheerful
-heart.
-
-He had even sold the mine, although it was not to be worked for some
-time to come.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII--"A COLD HAND SEEMED TO CLUTCH HER HEART"
-
-
-Many months passed away pleasantly and happily enough on the old
-plantation. The children--Roland, by the way, would hardly have liked
-to be called a child now--were, of course, under the able tuition of Mr.
-Simons, but in addition Peggy had a governess, imported directly from
-Para.
-
-This was a dark-eyed Spanish girl, very piquant and pretty, who talked
-French well, and played on both the guitar and piano.
-
-Tom St. Clair had not only his boy's welfare, but his niece's, or
-adopted daughter's, also at heart.
-
-It would be some years yet before she arrived at the age of sweet
-seventeen, but when she did, her uncle determined to sell off or realize
-on his plantation, his goods and chattels, and sail across the seas once
-more to dear old Cornwall and the real Burnley Hall.
-
-He looked forward to that time as the weary worker in stuffy towns or
-cities does to a summer holiday.
-
-There is excitement enough in money-making, it is like an exhilarating
-game of billiards or whist, but it is apt to become tiresome.
-
-And Tom St. Clair was often overtired and weary. He was always glad when
-he reached home at night to his rocking-chair and a good dinner, after
-toiling all day in the recently-started india-rubber-forest works.
-
-But Mr. Peter took a vast deal of labour off his hands.
-
-Mr. Peter, or Don Pedro, ingratiated himself with nearly everyone from
-the first, and seemed to take to the work as if to the manner born.
-
-There were three individuals, however, who could not like him, strange
-to say; these were Peggy herself, Benee the Indian who had guided them
-through the forest when lost, and who had remained on the estate ever
-since, while the third was Brawn, the Irish wolf-hound.
-
-The dog showed his teeth if Peter tried even to caress him.
-
-Both Roland and Dick--the latter was a very frequent visitor--got on
-very well with Peter--trusted him thoroughly.
-
-"How is it, Benee," said Roland one day to the Indian, "that you do not
-love Don Pedro?"
-
-Benee spat on the ground and stamped his foot.
-
-"I watch he eye," the semi-savage replied. "He one very bad man. Some
-day you know plenty moochee foh true."
-
-"Well," said Tom one evening as he and his wife sat alone in the
-verandah together, "I do long to get back to England. I am tired, dear
-wife--my heart is weak why should we remain here over two years more?
-We are wealthy enough, and I promise myself and you, dear, many long
-years of health and happiness yet in the old country."
-
-He paused and smoked a little; then, after watching for a few moments
-the fireflies that flitted from bush to bush, he stretched his left arm
-out and rested his hand on his wife's lap.
-
-Some impulse seized her. She took it and pressed it to her lips. But a
-tear trickled down her cheek as she did so.
-
-Lovers still this couple were, though nearly twenty years had elapsed
-since he led her, a bonnie, buxom, blushing lassie, to the altar.
-
-But now in a sweet, low, but somewhat sad voice he sang a verse of that
-dear old song--"We have lived and loved together":--
-
- "We have lived and loved together
- Through many changing years,
- We have shared each other's gladness
- And dried each other's tears.
- I have never known a sorrow
- That was long unsoothed by thee,
- For thy smile can make a summer
- Where darkness else would be.
-
-
-Mrs. St. Clair would never forget that evening on the star-lit lawn, nor
-the flitting, little fire-insects, nor her husband's voice.
-
- ----
-
-Is it not just when we expect it least that sorrow sometimes falls
-suddenly upon us, hiding or eclipsing all our promised happiness and
-joy?
-
-I have now to write a pitiful part of my too true story, but it must be
-done.
-
-Next evening St. Clair rode home an hour earlier.
-
-He complained of feeling more tired than usual, and said he would lie
-down on the drawing-room sofa until dinner was ready.
-
-Peggy went singing along the hall to call him at the appointed time.
-
-She went singing into the room.
-
-"Pa, dear," she cried merrily; "Uncle-pa, dinner is all beautifully
-ready!"
-
-"Come, Unky-pa. How sound you sleep!"
-
-Then a terror crept up from the earth, as it were, and a cold hand
-seemed to clutch her heart.
-
-She ran out of the room.
-
-"Oh, Auntie-ma!" she cried, "come, come quickly, pa won't wake, nor
-speak!"
-
-Heigho! the summons had come, and dear "Uncle-pa" would never, never
-wake again.
-
-This is a short chapter, but it is too sad to continue.
-
-So falls the curtain on the first act of this life-drama.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII--FIERCELY AND WILDLY BOTH SIDES FOUGHT
-
-
-The gloomy event related in last chapter must not be allowed to cast a
-damper over our story.
-
-Of course death is always and everywhere hovering near, but why should
-boys like you and me, reader, permit that truth to cloud our days or
-stand between us and happiness?
-
-Two years, then, have elapsed since poor, brave Tom St. Clair's death.
-
-He is buried near the edge of the forest in a beautiful enclosure where
-rare shrubs grow, and where flowers trail and climb far more beautiful
-than any we ever see in England.
-
-At first Mrs. St. Clair had determined to sell all off and go back to
-the old country, but her overseer Jake Solomons and Mr. Peter persuaded
-her not to, or it seemed that it was their advice which kept her from
-carrying out her first intentions. But she had another reason, she
-found she could not leave that lonesome grave yet awhile.
-
-So the years passed on.
-
-The estate continued to thrive.
-
-Roland was now a handsome young fellow in his eighteenth year, and
-Peggy, now beautiful beyond compare, was nearly fifteen.
-
-Dick Temple, the bold and reckless huntsman and horseman, was quieter
-now in his attentions towards her. She was no longer the child that he
-could lift on to his broad young shoulders and carry, neighing and
-galloping like a frightened colt, round and round the lawn.
-
-And Roland felt himself a man. He was more sober and sedate, and had
-taken over all his father's work and his father's responsibilities. But
-for all that, lightly enough lay the burden on his heart.
-
-For he had youth on his side, and
-
- "In the lexicon of youth which fate reserves
- For a bright manhood there is no such word
- As fail".
-
- ----
-
-I do not, however, wish to be misunderstood. It must not be supposed
-that Roland had no difficulties to contend with, that all his business
-life was as fair and serene as a bright summer's day. On the contrary,
-he had many losses owing to the fluctuations of the markets and the
-failures of great firms, owing to fearful storms, and more than once
-owing to strikes or revolts among his Indians in the great india-rubber
-forest.
-
-But Roland was light-hearted and young, and difficulties in life, I have
-often said, are just like nine-pins, they are put up to be bowled over.
-
-Besides, be it remembered that if it were all plain sailing with us in
-this world we should not be able to appreciate how really happy our
-lives are. The sky is always bluest 'twixt the darkest clouds.
-
-On the whole, Roland, who took stock, and, with honest Bill and Jake
-Solomons, went over the books every quarter, had but little reason to
-complain. This stock-taking consumed most of their spare time for the
-greater part of a week, and when it was finished Roland invariably gave
-a dinner-party, at which I need hardly say his dear friend Dick Temple
-was present. And this was always the happiest of happy nights to Dick,
-because the girl he loved more than all things on earth put together was
-here, and looked so innocent and beautiful in her simple dresses of
-white and blue.
-
-There was no such thing as flirtation here, but Dick was fully and
-completely in earnest when he told himself that if he lived till he was
-three- or four-and-twenty he would ask Peggy to be his wife.
-
-Ah! there is many a slip 'twixt the cup and the lip.
-
-Dick, I might, could, would, or should have told you before, lived with
-a bachelor uncle, who, being rather old and infirm, seldom came out. He
-had good earnest men under him, however, as overseers, and his
-plantations were thriving, especially that in which tobacco was
-cultivated.
-
-The old man was exceedingly fond of Dick, and Dick would be his heir.
-
-Probably it was for his uncle's sake that Dick stayed in the
-country--and of course for Peggy's and Roland's--for, despite its grand
-field for sport and adventure, the lad had a strange longing to go to
-England and play cricket or football.
-
-He had been born in Britain just as Roland was, and had visited his
-childhood's home more than once during his short life.
-
-Now just about this time Don Pedro, or Mr. Peter as all called him, had
-asked for and obtained a holiday. He was going to Para for a change, he
-said, and to meet a friend from England.
-
-That he did meet a friend from England there was little doubt, but their
-interview was a very short one. Where he spent the rest of his time was
-best known to himself.
-
-In three months or a little less he turned up smiling again, and most
-effusive.
-
-About a fortnight after his arrival he came to Jake one morning pretty
-early.
-
-Jake was preparing to start on horseback for the great forest.
-
-"I'm on the horns of a dilemma, Mr. Solomons," he said, laughing his
-best laugh. "During the night about twenty Bolivian Indians have
-encamped near to the forest. They ask for work on the india-rubber
-trees. They are well armed, and all sturdy warriors. They look as if
-fighting was more in their line than honest labour."
-
-"Well, Mr. Peter, what is their excuse for being here anyhow?"
-
-"They are bound for the sea-shore at the mouths of the river, and want
-to earn a few dollars to help them on."
-
-"Well, where is the other horn of the dilemma?"
-
-"Oh! if I give them work they may corrupt our fellows."
-
-"Then, Mr. Peter, I'd give the whole blessed lot the boot and the sack."
-
-"Ah! now, Mr. Solomons, you've got to the other horn. These savages,
-for they are little else, are revengeful."
-
-"We're not afraid."
-
-"No, we needn't be were they to make war openly, but they are sly, and
-as dangerous as sly. They would in all probability burn us down some
-dark night."
-
-Jake mused for a minute. Then he said abruptly:
-
-"Let the poor devils earn a few dollars, Mr. Peter, if they are
-stony-broke, and then send them on their way rejoicing."
-
-"That's what I say, too," said Burly Bill, who had just come up. "I've
-been over yonder in the starlight. They look deuced uncouth and nasty.
-So does a bull-dog, Jake, but is there a softer-hearted, more kindly dog
-in all creation?"
-
-So that very day the Indians set to work with the other squads.
-
-The labour connected with the collecting of india-rubber is by no means
-very hard, but it requires a little skill, and is irksome to those not
-used to such toil.
-
-But labour is scarce and Indians are often lazy, so on the whole Jake
-was not sorry to have the new hands, or "serinqueiros" as they are
-called.
-
-The india-rubber trees are indigenous and grow in greatest profusion on
-that great tributary of the Amazon called the Madeira. But when poor
-Tom St. Clair came to the country he had an eye to business. He knew
-that india-rubber would always command a good market, and so he visited
-the distant forests, studied the growth and culture of the trees as
-conducted by Nature, and ventured to believe that he could improve upon
-her methods.
-
-He was successful, and it was not a great many years before he had a
-splendid plantation of young trees in his forest, to say nothing of the
-older ones that had stood the brunt of many a wild tropical storm.
-
-It will do no harm if I briefly describe the method of obtaining the
-india-rubber. Tiny pots of tin, holding about half a pint, are hung
-under an incision in the bark of the tree, and these are filled and
-emptied every day, the contents being delivered by the Indian labourers
-at the house or hut of an under-overseer.
-
-The sap is all emptied into larger utensils, and a large smoking fire,
-made of the nuts of a curious kind of palm called the Motokoo, being
-built, the operators dip wooden shovels into the sap, twirling these
-round quickly and holding them in the smoke. Coagulation takes place
-very quickly. Again the shovel is dipped in the sap, and the same
-process is repeated until the coagulated rubber is about two inches
-thick, when it is cooled, cut, or sliced off, and is ready for the
-distant market.
-
-Now, from the very day of their arrival, there was no love lost between
-the old and steady hands and this new band of independent and flighty
-ones.
-
-The latter were willing enough to slice the bark and to hang up their
-pannikins, and they would even empty them when filled, and condescend to
-carry their contents to the preparing-house. But they were lazy in the
-extreme at gathering the nuts, and positively refused to smoke the sap
-and coagulate it.
-
-It made them weep, they explained, and it was much more comfortable to
-lie and wait for the sap while they smoked and talked in their own
-strange language.
-
-After a few days the permanent hands refused to work at the same trees,
-or even in the same part of the estrados or roads that led through the
-plantation of rubber-trees.
-
-A storm was brewing, that was evident. Nor was it very long before it
-burst.
-
-All unconscious that anything was wrong, Peggy, with Brawn, was romping
-about one day enjoying the busy scene, Peggy often entering into
-conversation with some of her old favourites, when one of the strange
-Indians, returning from the tub with an empty tin, happened to tread on
-Brawn's tail.
-
-The dog snarled, but made no attempt to bite. Afraid, however, that he
-would spring upon the fellow, Peggy threw herself on the ground,
-encircling her arms around Brawn's shoulders, and it was she who
-received the blow that was meant for the dog.
-
-It cut her across the arm, and she fainted with pain.
-
-Brawn sprang at once upon his man and brought him down.
-
-[Illustration: "BRAWN SPRANG AT ONCE UPON HIS MAN"]
-
-He shook the wretch as if he had been but a rat, and blood flowed
-freely.
-
-Burly Bill was not far off, and just as the great hound had all but
-fixed the savage by the windpipe, which he would undoubtedly have torn
-out, Bill pulled him off by the collar and pacified him.
-
-The blood-stained Indian started to his legs to make good his retreat,
-but as his back was turned in flight, Bill rushed after him and dealt
-him a kick that laid him prone on his face.
-
-This was the signal for a general melee, and a terrible one it was!
-
-Bill got Peggy pulled to one side, and gave her in charge to Dick, who
-had come thundering across on his huge horse towards the scene of
-conflict.
-
-Under the shelter of a spreading tree Dick lifted his precious charge.
-But she speedily revived when he laid her flat on the ground. She
-smiled feebly and held out her hand, which Dick took and kissed, the
-tears positively trickling over his cheeks.
-
-Perhaps it was a kind of boyish impulse that caused him to say what he
-now said:
-
-"Oh, Peggy, my darling, how I love you! Whereever you are, dear,
-wherever I am--oh, always think of me a little!"
-
-That was all.
-
-A faint colour suffused Peggy's cheek for just a moment. Then she sat
-up, and the noble hound anxiously licked her face.
-
-But she had made no reply.
-
-Meanwhile the melee went merrily on, as a Donnybrook Irishman might
-remark.
-
-Fiercely and wildly both sides fought, using as weapons whatsoever came
-handiest.
-
-But soon the savages were beaten and discomfited with, sad to tell, the
-loss of one life--that of a savage.
-
-Not only Jake himself, but Roland and Mr. Peter were now on the scene of
-the recent conflict. Close to Peter's side, watching every movement of
-his lips and eyes, stood Benee, the Indian who had saved the children.
-
-Several times Peter looked as if he felt uneasy, and once he turned
-towards Benee as if about to speak.
-
-He said nothing, and the man continued his watchful scrutiny.
-
-After consulting for a short time together, Jake and Roland, with Burly
-Bill, determined to hold a court of inquiry on the spot.
-
-But, strange to say, Peter kept aloof. He continued to walk to and fro,
-and Benee still hung in his rear. But this ex-savage was soon called
-upon to act as interpreter if his services should be needed, which they
-presently were.
-
-Every one of the civilized Indians had the same story to tell of the
-laziness and insolence of the Bolivians, and now Jake ordered the chief
-of the other party to come forward.
-
-They sulked for a short time.
-
-But Jake drew his pistols, and, one in each hand, stepped out and
-ordered all to the front.
-
-They made no verbal response to the questions put to them through Benee.
-Their only reply was scowling.
-
-"Well, Mr. St. Clair," said Jake, "my advice is to pay these rascals and
-send them off."
-
-"Good!" said Roland. "I have money."
-
-The chief was ordered to draw nearer, and the dollars were counted into
-his claw-like fist.
-
-The fellow drew up his men in a line and gave to each his pay, reserving
-his own.
-
-Then at a signal, given by the chief, there was raised a terrible
-war-whoop and howl.
-
-The chief spat on his dollars and dashed them into a neighbouring pool.
-Every man did the same.
-
-Roland was looking curiously on. He was wondering what would happen
-next.
-
-He had not very long to wait, for with his foot the chief turned the
-dead man on his back, and the blood from his death-stab poured out
-afresh.
-
-He dipped his palm in the red stream and held it up on high. His men
-followed his example.
-
-Then all turned to the sun, and in one voice uttered just one word,
-which, being interpreted by Benee, was understood to mean--REVENGE!
-
-They licked the blood from their hands, and, turning round, marched in
-silence and in single file out and away from the forest and were seen no
-more.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX--THAT TREE IN THE FOREST GLADE
-
-
-The things, the happenings, I have now to tell you of in this chapter
-form the turning-point in our story.
-
-Weeks passed by after the departure of that mysterious band of savages,
-and things went on in the same old groove on the plantation.
-
-Whence the savages had come, or whither they had gone, none could tell.
-But all were relieved at their exit, dramatic and threatening though it
-had been.
-
-The hands were all very busy now everywhere, and one day, it being the
-quarter's end, after taking stock Roland gave his usual dinner-party,
-and a ball to his natives. These were all dressed out as gaily as gaily
-could be. The ladies wore the most tawdry of finery, most of which they
-had bought, or rather had had brought them by their brothers and lovers
-from Para, and nothing but the most pronounced evening dress did any
-"lady of colour" deign to wear.
-
-Why should they not ape the quality, and "poh deah Miss Peggy".
-
-Peggy was very happy that evening, and so I need hardly say was Dick
-Temple. Though he never had dared to speak of love again, no one could
-have looked at those dark daring eyes of his and said it was not there.
-
-It must have been about eleven by the clock and a bright moonlight night
-when Dick started to ride home. He knew the track well, he said, and
-could not be prevailed upon to stay all night. Besides, his uncle
-expected him.
-
-The dinner and ball given to the plantation hands had commenced at
-sunset, or six o'clock, and after singing hymns--a queer finish to a
-most hilarious dance--all retired, and by twelve of the clock not a
-sound was to be heard over all the plantation save now and then the
-mournful cry of the shriek-owl or a plash in the river, showing that the
-'gators preferred a moonshiny night to daylight itself.
-
-The night wore on, one o'clock, two o'clock chimed from the turret on
-Burnley Hall, and soon after this, had anyone been in the vicinity he
-would have seen a tall figure, wrapped in cloak and hood, steal away
-from the house adown the walks that led from the flowery lawns. The
-face was quite hidden, but several times the figure paused, as if to
-listen and glance around, then hurried on once more, and finally
-disappeared in the direction of the forest.
-
-Peggy's bedroom was probably the most tastefully-arranged and
-daintily-draped in the house, and when she lay down to-night and fell
-gently asleep, very sweet indeed were the dreams that visited her
-pillow. The room was on a level with the river lawn, on to which it
-opened by a French or casement window. Three o'clock!
-
-The moon shone on the bed, and even on the girl's face, but did not
-awaken her.
-
-A few minutes after this, and the casement window was quietly opened,
-and the same cloaked figure, which stole away from the mansion an hour
-before, softly entered.
-
-It stood for more than half a minute erect and listening, then, bending
-low beside the bed, listened a moment there.
-
-Did no spectral dream cross the sleeping girl's vision to warn her of
-the dreadful fate in store for her?
-
-Had she shrieked even now, assistance would have been speedily
-forthcoming, and she might have been saved!
-
-But she quietly slumbered on.
-
-Then the dark figure retreated as it had come, and presently another and
-more terrible took its place--a burly savage carrying a blanket or rug.
-
-First the girl's clothing and shoes, her watch and all her trinkets,
-were gathered up and handed to someone on the lawn.
-
-Then the savage, approaching the bed with stealthy footsteps, at once
-enveloped poor Peggy in the rug and bore her off.
-
-For a moment she uttered a muffled moan or two, like a nightmare scream,
-then all was still as the grave.
-
- ----
-
-"Missie Peggy! Missie Peggy," cried Beeboo next morning at eight as she
-entered the room. "What for you sleep so long? Ah!" she added
-sympathizingly, still holding the door-knob in her hand. "Ah! but den
-the poh chile very tired. Dance plenty mooch las' night, and--"
-
-She stopped suddenly.
-
-Something unusual in the appearance of the bed attire attracted her
-attention and she speedily rushed towards it.
-
-She gave vent at once to a loud yell, and Roland himself, who was
-passing near, ran in immediately.
-
-He stood like one in a state of catalepsy, with his eyes fixed on the
-empty bed. But he recovered shortly.
-
-"Oh, this is a fearful day!" he cried, and hastened out to acquaint Jake
-and Bill, both of whom, as well as Mr. Peter, slept in the east wing of
-the mansion.
-
-He ran from door to door knocking very loud and shouting: "Awake, awake,
-Peggy has gone! She has been kidnapped, and the accursed savages have
-had their revenge!"
-
-In their pyjamas only, Jake and Bill appeared, and after a while Mr.
-Peter, fully dressed.
-
-He looked sleepy.
-
-"I had too much wine last night," he said, with a yawn, "and slept very
-heavily all night. But what is the matter?"
-
-He was quietly and quickly informed.
-
-"This is indeed a fearful blow, but surely we can trace the scoundrels!"
-
-"Boys, hurry through with your breakfast," said Roland. "Jake, I will
-be back in a few minutes."
-
-He whistled shrilly and Brawn came rushing to his side.
-
-"Follow me, Brawn."
-
-His object was to find out in which direction the savages had gone.
-
-Had Brawn been a blood-hound he could soon have picked up the scent.
-
-As it was, however, his keen eyes discovered the trail on the lawn, and
-led him to the gate. He howled impatiently to have it opened, then
-bounded out and away towards the forest in a westerly and southerly
-direction, which, if pursued far enough, would lead towards Bolivia,
-along the wild rocky banks of the Madeira River.
-
-It was a whole hour before Brawn returned. He carried something in his
-mouth. He soon found his master, and laid the something gently down at
-his feet, stretching himself--grief-stricken--beside it.
-
-It was one of Peggy's boots, with a white silk stocking in it, drenched
-in blood.
-
-The white men and Indians were now fully aroused, and, leaving Jake in
-charge of the estate, Roland picked out thirty of the best men, armed
-them with guns, and placed them under the command of Burly Bill. Then
-they started off in silence, Roland and Burly mounted, the armed whites
-and Indians on foot.
-
-Brawn went galloping on in front in a very excited manner, often
-returning and barking wildly at the horses as if to hurry them on.
-
-Throughout that forenoon they journeyed by the trail, which was now
-distinct enough, and led through the jungle and forest.
-
-They came out on to a clearing about one o'clock. Here was water in
-abundance, and as they were all thoroughly exhausted, they threw
-themselves down by the spring to quench their thirst and rest.
-
-Bill made haste now to deal out the provisions, and after an hour,
-during which time most of them slept, they resumed their journey.
-
-A mile or two farther on they came to a sight which almost froze their
-blood.
-
-In the middle of a clearing or glade stood a great tree. It was
-hollowed out at one side, and against this was still a heap of
-half-charred wood, evidently the remains of a fierce fire, though every
-ember had died black out.
-
-Here was poor Peggy's other shoe. That too was bloody.
-
-And here was a pool of coagulated blood, with huge rhinoceros beetles
-busy at their work of excavation. Portions or rags of dress also!
-
-It was truly an awful sight!
-
-Roland reined up his horse, and placed his right hand over his eyes.
-
-"Bill," he managed to articulate, "can you have the branches removed,
-and let us know the fearful worst?"
-
-Burly Bill gave the order, and the Indians tossed the half-burned wood
-aside.
-
-Then they pulled out bone after bone of limbs, of arms, of ribs. But
-all were charred almost into cinders!
-
-Roland now seemed to rise to the occasion.
-
-He held his right arm on high.
-
-"Bill," he cried; "here, under the blazing sun and above the remains,
-the dust of my dead sister, I register a vow to follow up these fiends
-to their distant homes, if Providence shall but lead us aright, and to
-slay and burn every wretch who has aided or abetted this terrible deed!"
-
-"I too register that vow," said Bill solemnly.
-
-"And I, and I!" shouted the white men, and even the Indians.
-
-They went on again once more, after burying the charred bones and dust.
-
-But the trail took them to a ford, and beyond the stream there was not
-the imprint of even a single footstep.
-
-The retiring savages must either have doubled back on their tracks or
-waded for miles up or down the rocky stream before landing.
-
-Nothing more could be done to-day, for the sun was already declining,
-and they must find their way out of the gloom of the forest before
-darkness. So the return journey was made, and just as the sun's red
-beams were crimsoning the waters of the western river, they arrived once
-more at the plantation and Burnley Hall.
-
-The first to meet them was Peter himself. He seemed all anxiety.
-
-"What have you found?" he gasped.
-
-It was a moment or two before Roland could reply.
-
-"Only the charred remains of my poor sister!" he said at last, then
-compressed his mouth in an effort to keep back the tears.
-
-The Indian who took so lively an interest in Mr. Peter was not far away,
-and was watching his man as usual.
-
-None noticed, save Benee himself, that Mr. Peter heaved something very
-like a sigh of relief as Roland's words fell on his ears.
-
-Burnley Hall was now indeed a castle of gloom; but although poor Mrs.
-St. Clair was greatly cast down, the eager way in which Roland and Dick
-were making their preparations to follow up the savage Indians, even to
-the confines or interior, if necessary, of their own domains, gave her
-hope.
-
-Luckily they had already found a clue to their whereabouts, for one of
-the civilized Bolivians knew that very chief, and indeed had come from
-the same far-off country. He described the people as a race of
-implacable savages and cannibals, into whose territory no white man had
-ever ventured and returned alive.
-
-Were they a large tribe? No, not large, not over three or four
-thousand, counting women and children. Their arms? These were spears
-and broad two-bladed knives, with great slings, from which they could
-hurl large stones and pieces of flint with unerring accuracy, and bows
-and arrows. And no number of white men could stand against these unless
-they sheltered themselves in trenches or behind rocks and trees.
-
-This ex-cannibal told them also that the land of this terrible tribe
-abounded in mineral wealth, in silver ore and even in gold.
-
-For this information Roland cared little; all he wished to do was to
-avenge poor Peggy's death. If his men, after the fighting, chose to lay
-out claims he would permit a certain number of them to do so, their
-names to be drawn by ballot. The rest must accompany the expedition
-back.
-
-Dick's uncle needed but little persuasion to give forty white men, fully
-armed and equipped, to swell Roland's little army of sixty whites.
-Besides these, they would have with them carriers and
-ammunition-bearers--Indians from the plantations.
-
-Dick was all life and fire. If they were successful, he himself, he
-said, would shoot the murderous chief, or stab him to the heart.
-
-A brave show indeed did the little army make, when all mustered and
-drilled, and every man there was most enthusiastic, for all had loved
-poor lost Peggy.
-
-"I shall remain at my post here, I suppose," said Mr. Peter.
-
-"If I do not alter my mind I shall leave you and Jake, with Mr. Roberts,
-the tutor, to manage the estate in my absence," said Roland.
-
-He did alter his mind, and, as the following will show, he had good
-occasion to do so.
-
-One evening the strange Indian Benee, between whom and Peter there
-existed so much hatred, sought Roland out when alone.
-
-"Can I speakee you, all quiet foh true?"
-
-"Certainly, my good fellow. Come into my study. Now, what is it you
-would say?"
-
-"Dat Don Pedro no true man! I tinkee much, and I tinkee dat."
-
-"Well, I know you don't love each other, Benee; but can you give me any
-proofs of his villainy?"
-
-"You letee me go to-night all myse'f alone to de bush. I tinkee I bring
-you someding strange. Some good news. Ha! it may be so!"
-
-"I give you leave, and believe you to be a faithful fellow."
-
-Benee seized his master's hand and bent down his head till his brow
-touched it.
-
-Next moment he was gone.
-
-Next morning he was missed.
-
-"Your pretty Indian," said Mr. Peter, with an ill-concealed sneer, "is a
-traitor, then, after all, and a spy, and it was no doubt he who
-instigated the abduction and the murder, for the sake of revenge, of
-your poor little sister."
-
-"That remains to be seen, Mr. Peter. If he, or anyone else on the
-plantation, is a traitor, he shall hang as high as Haman."
-
-Peter cowered visibly, but smiled his agitation off.
-
-And that same night about twelve, while Roland sat smoking on the lawn
-with Dick, all in the moonlight, everyone else having retired--smoking
-and talking of the happy past--suddenly the gate hinges creaked, and
-with a low growl Brawn sprang forward. But he returned almost
-immediately, wagging his tail and being caressed by Benee himself.
-
-Silently stood the Indian before them, silently as a statue, but in his
-left hand he carried a small bundle bound up in grass. It was not his
-place to speak first, and both young men were a little startled at his
-sudden appearance.
-
-"What, Benee! and back so soon from the forest?"
-
-"Benee did run plenty quickee. Plenty jaguar want eat Benee, but no can
-catchee."
-
-"Well?"
-
-"I would speekee you bof boys in de room."
-
-The two started up together.
-
-Here was some mystery that must be unravelled.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X--BENEE MAKES A STRANGE DISCOVERY
-
-
-Benee followed them into Roland's quiet study, and placed his strange
-grass-girt bundle on a cane chair.
-
-Roland gave him a goblet of wine-and-water, which he drank eagerly, for
-he was faint and tired.
-
-"Now, let us hear quickly what you have to say, Benee."
-
-The Indian came forward, and his words, though uttered with some
-vehemence, and accompanied by much gesticulation, were delivered in
-almost a whisper.
-
-It would have been impossible for any eavesdropper in the hall to have
-heard.
-
-"Wat I tellee you 'bout dat Peter?" he began.
-
-"My good friend," said Roland, "Peter accuses you of being a spy and
-traitor."
-
-"I killee he!"
-
-"No, you will not; if Peter is guilty, I will see that justice overtakes
-him."
-
-"Well, 'fore I go, sah, I speakee you and say I bringee you de good
-news."
-
-"Tell us quickly!" said Dick in a state of great excitement.
-
-"Dis, den, is de good news: Missie Peggy not dead! No, no!"
-
-"Explain, Benee, and do not raise false hopes in our breasts."
-
-"De cannibals make believe she murder; dat all is."
-
-"But have we not found portions of her raiment, her blood-dripping
-stockings, and also her charred remains?"
-
-"Listen, sah. Dese cannibals not fools. Dey beat you plenty of trail,
-so you can easily find de clearing where de fire was. Dey wis' you to
-go to dat tree to see de blood, de shoe, and all. But when you seekee
-de trail after, where is she? Tellee me dat. Missie Peggy no murder.
-No, no. She am carried away, far away, as one prisint to de queen ob de
-cannibals."
-
-"What were the bones, my good Benee?"
-
-Then Benee opened his strange bundle, and there fell on the floor the
-half-burned skull and jaws of a gigantic baboon.
-
-"I find dat hid beside de tree. Ha, ha!"
-
-"It is all clear now," said Roland. "My dear, faithful Benee," he
-continued, "can you guide us to the country of the cannibals? You will
-meet your reward, both here and hereafter."
-
-"I not care. I lub Missie Peggy. Ah, she come backee once moh, foh
-true!"
-
-And now Dick Temple, the impulsive, must step forward and seize Benee by
-the hand. "God bless you!" he said; and indeed it was all he could say.
-
-When the Indian had gone, Roland and Dick drew closer together.
-
-"The mystery," said the former, "seems to me, Dick, to be as dark and
-intricate as ever. I can understand the savages carrying poor Peggy
-away, but why the tricky deceit, the dropped shoe that poor, noble Brawn
-picked up, the pool of blood, the rent and torn garments, and the
-half-charred bones?"
-
-"Well, I think I can see through that, Roland. I believe it was done to
-prevent your further pursuit; for, as Benee observes, the trail is left
-plainly enough for even a white man to see as far as the 'fire-tree' and
-on to the brook. But farther there is none."
-
-"Well, granting all this; think you, Dick, that no one instigated them,
-probably even suggested the crime and the infernal deceit they have
-practised?"
-
-"Now you are thinking of, if not actually accusing, Mr. Peter?"
-
-"I am, Dick. I have had my suspicions of him ever since a month after
-he came. It was strange how Benee hated him from the beginning, to say
-nothing of Brawn, the dog, and our dear lost Peggy."
-
-"Cheer up!" said Dick. "Give Peter a show, though things look dark
-against him."
-
-"Yes," said Roland sternly, "and with us and our expedition he must and
-shall go. We can watch his every move, and if I find that he is a
-villain, may God have mercy on his soul! His body shall feed the
-eagles."
-
-Dick Temple was a wild and reckless boy, it is true, and always first,
-if possible, in any adventure which included a spice of danger, but he
-had a good deal of common sense notwithstanding.
-
-He mused a little, and rolled himself a fresh cigarette before he
-replied.
-
-"Your Mr. Peter," he said, "may or may not be guilty of duplicity,
-though I do not see the _raison d'etre_ for any such conduct, and I
-confess to you that I look upon lynching as a wild kind of justice. At
-the same time I must again beg of you, Roland, to give the man a decent
-show."
-
-"Here is my hand on that, Dick. He shall have justice, even should that
-just finish with his dangling at a rope's end."
-
-The two shortly after this parted for the night, each going to his own
-room, but I do not think that either of them slept till long past
-midnight.
-
-They were up in good time, however, for the bath, and felt invigorated
-and hungry after the dip.
-
-They were not over-merry certainly, but Mrs. St. Clair was quite
-changed, and just a little hysterically hilarious. For as soon as he
-had tubbed, Roland had gone to her bedroom and broken the news to her
-which Benee had brought.
-
-That same forenoon Dick and Roland rode out to the forest.
-
-They could hear the boom and shriek and roar of the great buzz-saw long
-before they came near the white-men's quarters.
-
-They saw Jake,--and busy enough he was too,--and told him that they had
-some reason to doubt the honesty or sincerity of Mr. Peter, and that
-they would take him along with them.
-
-"Thank God!" said Jake most fervently. "I myself cannot trust a man
-whom a dog like Brawn and a savage like Benee have come to hate."
-
-By themselves that day the young fellows completed their plans, and all
-would now be ready to advance in a week's time.
-
-That same day, however, on parade and in presence of Mr. Peter, Roland
-made a little speech.
-
-"We are going," he said, "my good fellows, on a very long and
-adventurous journey. Poor Miss Peggy is, as we all know" (this was
-surely a fib that would be forgiven) "dead and gone, but we mean to
-follow these savages up to their own country, and deal them such a blow
-as will paralyse them for years. Yellow Charlie yonder is himself one
-of their number, but he has proved himself faithful, and has offered to
-be our guide as soon as we enter unknown regions.
-
-"I have," he added, "perfect faith in my white men, faith in Mr. Peter,
-whom I am taking with me--"
-
-Peter took a step forward as if to speak, but Roland waved him back.
-
-"And I know my working Indians will prove themselves good men and true.
-
-"After saying this, it is hardly necessary to add that if anyone is
-found attempting to desert our column, even should it be Burly Bill
-himself" (Burly Bill laughed outright), "he will be shot down as we
-would shoot a puma or alligator."
-
-There was a wild cheer after Roland stepped down from the balcony, and
-in this Mr. Peter seemed to join so heartily that Roland's heart smote
-him.
-
-For perhaps, after all, he had been unkind in thought to this man.
-
-Time alone would tell.
-
-The boys determined to leave nothing to chance, but ammunition was of
-even more importance than food. They hoped to find water everywhere,
-and the biscuits carried, with the roots they should dig, would serve to
-keep the expedition alive and healthy, with the aid of their good guns.
-
-Medicine was not forgotten, nor medical comforts.
-
-For three whole days Roland trained fast-running Indians to pick up a
-trail. A man would be allowed to have three miles' start, and then,
-when he was quite invisible, those human sleuth-hounds would be let
-loose, and they never failed to bring back their prisoner after a time.
-
-One man at least was much impressed by these trials of skill.
-
-Just a week before the start, and late in the evening, Benee once more
-presented himself before our young heroes.
-
-"I would speakee you!"
-
-"Well, Benee, say what you please, but all have not yet retired. Dick,
-get out into the hall, and warn us if anyone approaches."
-
-Dick jumped up, threw his cigarette away, and did as he was told.
-
-"Thus I speakee you and say," said Benee. "You trustee I?"
-
-"Assuredly!"
-
-"Den you let me go?"
-
-"How and where?"
-
-"I go fast as de wind, fleeter dan de rain-squall, far ober de mountains
-ob Madeira, far froo' de wild, dark forest. I heed noting, I fear
-noting. No wil' beas' makee Benee 'fraid. I follow de cannibals. I
-reach de country longee time 'foh you. I creepee like one snake to de
-hut ob poh deah Peggy. She no can fly wid me, but I 'sure her dat you
-come soon, in two moon p'laps, or free. I make de chile happy. Den I
-creep and glide away again all samee one black snake, and come back to
-find you. I go?"
-
-Roland took the man's hand. Savage though he was, there was kindness
-and there was undoubted sincerity in those dark, expressive eyes, and
-our hero at once gave the permission asked.
-
-"But," he said, "the way is long and dangerous, my good Benee, so here I
-give you two long-range six-shooters, a repeating-rifle, and a box of
-cartridges. May God speed your journey, and bring you safely back with
-news that shall inspire our hearts! Go!"
-
-Benee glided away as silently as he had come, and next morning his place
-was found empty. But would their trust in this man reap its reward,
-or--awful doubt--was Benee false?
-
-Next night but one something very strange happened.
-
-All was silent in and around Burnley Hall, and the silvery tones of the
-great tower clock had chimed the hour of three, when the window of Mr.
-Peter's room was silently opened, and out into the moonlight glided the
-man himself.
-
-He carried in his hand a heavy grip-sack, and commenced at once taking
-the path that led downwards to the river.
-
-Here lay the dinghy boat drawn up on the beach. She was secured with
-padlock and chain, but all Roland's officers carried keys.
-
-It was about a quarter of a mile to the river-side, and Peter was
-proceeding at a fairly rapid rate, considering the weight of his
-grip-sack.
-
-He had a habit of talking to himself. He was doing so now.
-
-"I have only to drop well down the river and intercept a steamer. It is
-this very day they pass, and--"
-
-Two figures suddenly glided from the bush and stood before him.
-
-One sprang up behind, whom he could not see.
-
-"Good-morning, Mr. Peter! Going for a walk early, aren't you? It's
-going to turn out a delightful day, I think."
-
-They were white men.
-
-"Here!" cried Peter, "advance but one step, or dare to impede my
-progress, and you are both dead men! I am a good shot, and happen, as
-you see, to have the draw on you."
-
-Next moment his right arm was seized from behind, the men in front
-ducked, and the first shot went off in the air.
-
-"Here, none o' that, guv'nor!" said a set, determined voice.
-
-The revolver was wrenched from his grasp, and he found himself on his
-back in the pathway.
-
-"It is murder you'd be after! Eh?"
-
-"Not so, my good fellow," said Peter. "I will explain."
-
-"Explain, then."
-
-"My duties are ended with Mr. Roland St. Clair. He owes me one month's
-wages. I have forfeited that and given warning, and am going. That is
-all."
-
-"You are going, are you? Well, we shall see about that."
-
-"Yes, you may, and now let me pass on my peaceful way."
-
-"He! he! he! But tell us, Mr. Peter, why this speedy departure? Hast
-aught upon thy conscience, or hast got a conscience?"
-
-Peter had risen to his feet.
-
-"Merely this. I claim the privilege of every working man, that of
-giving leave. I am not strong, and I dread the long journey Mr. St.
-Clair and his little band are to take."
-
-"But," said the other, "you came in such a questionable shape, and we
-were here to watch for stragglers, not of course thinking for a moment,
-Mr. Peter, that your French window would be opened, and that you
-yourself would attempt to take French leave.
-
-"Now you really must get back to your bedroom, guv'nor, and see Mr. St.
-Clair in the morning. My mates will do sentry-go at your window, and I
-shall be by your door in case you need anything. It is a mere matter of
-form, Mr. Peter, but of course we have to obey orders. Got ere a drop
-of brandy in your flask?"
-
-Peter quickly produced quite a large bottle. He drank heavily himself
-first, and then passed it round.
-
-But the men took but little, and Mr. Peter, half-intoxicated, allowed
-himself to be conducted to bed.
-
-When these sentries gave in their report next morning to Roland, Mr.
-Peter did not rise a deal in the young fellow's estimation.
-
-"It only proves one thing," he said to Dick. "If Peter is so anxious to
-give us the slip, we must watch him well until we are far on the road
-towards the cannibals' land."
-
-"That's so," returned Dick Temple.
-
-Not a word was said to Peter regarding his attempted flight when he sat
-down to breakfast with the boys, and naturally enough he believed it had
-not been reported. Indeed he had some hazy remembrance of having
-offered the sentries a bribe to keep dark.
-
-Mr. Peter ate very sparingly, and looked sadly fishy about the eyes.
-
-But he made no more attempts to escape just then.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI--ALL ALONE IN THE WILDERNESS
-
-
-That Benee was a good man and true we have little reason to doubt, up to
-the present time at all events.
-
-Yet Dick Temple was, curiously enough, loth to believe that Mr. Peter
-was other than a friend. And nothing yet had been proved against him.
-
-"Is it not natural enough," said he to Roland, "that he should funk--to
-put it in fine English--the terrible expedition you and I are about to
-embark upon? And knowing that you have commanded him to accompany us
-would, in my opinion, be sufficient to account for his attempt to escape
-and drop down the river to Para, and so home to his own country.
-Roland, I repeat, we must give the man a show."
-
-"True," said Roland, "and poor Benee is having his show. Time alone can
-prove who the traitor is. If it be Benee he will not return. On the
-contrary, he will join the savage captors of poor Peggy, and do all in
-his power to frustrate our schemes."
-
-No more was said.
-
-But the preparations were soon almost completed, and in a day or two
-after this, farewells being said, the brave little army began by forced
-marches to find its way across country and through dense forests and
-damp marshes, and over rocks and plains, to the Madeira river, high
-above its junction with the great Amazon.
-
- ----
-
-Meanwhile let us follow the lonely Indian in his terrible journey to the
-distant and unexplored lands of Bolivia.
-
-Like all true savages, he despised the ordinary routes of traffic or
-trade; his track must be a bee-line, guiding himself by the sun by day,
-but more particularly by the stars by night.
-
-Benee knew the difference betwixt stars and planets. The latter were
-always shifting, but certain stars--most to him were like lighthouses to
-mariners who are approaching land--shone over the country of the
-cannibals, and he could tell from their very altitude how much progress
-he was making night after night.
-
-So lonesome, so long, was his thrice dreary journey, that had it been
-undertaken by a white man, in all probability he would soon have been a
-raving maniac.
-
-But Benee had all the cunning, all the daring, and all the wisdom of a
-true savage, and for weeks he felt a proud exhilaration, a glorious
-sense of freedom and happiness, at being once more his own master, no
-work to do, and hope ever pointing him onwards to his goal.
-
-What was that goal? it may well be asked. Was Benee disinterested? Did
-he really feel love for the white man and the white man's children? Can
-aught save selfishness dwell in the breast of a savage? In brief, was
-it he who had been the spy, he who was the guilty man; or was it Peter
-who was the villain? Look at it in any light we please, one thing is
-certain, this strange Indian was making his way back to his own country
-and to his own friends, and Indians are surely not less fond of each
-other than are the wild beasts who herd together in the forest, on the
-mountain-side, or on the ice in the far-off land of the frozen north.
-And well we know that these creatures will die for each other.
-
-If there was a mystery about Peter, there was something approaching to
-one about Benee also.
-
-But then it must be remembered that since his residence on the St. Clair
-plantation, Benee had been taught the truths of that glorious religion
-of ours, the religion of love that smoothes the rugged paths of life for
-us, that gives a silver lining to every cloud of grief and sorrow, and
-gilds even the dark portals of death itself.
-
-Benee believed even as little children do. And little Peggy in her
-quiet moods used to tell him the story of life by redemption in her
-almost infantile way.
-
-For all that, it is hard and difficult to vanquish old superstitions,
-and this man was only a savage at heart after all, though, nevertheless,
-there seemed to be much good in his rough, rude nature, and you may
-ofttimes see the sweetest and most lovely little flowers growing on the
-blackest and ruggedest of rocks.
-
-Well, this journey of Benee's was certainly no sinecure. Apart even
-from all the dangers attached to it, from wild beasts and wilder men, it
-was one that would have tried the hardest constitution, if only for the
-simple reason that it was all a series of forced marches.
-
-There was something in him that was hurrying him on and encouraging him
-to greater and greater exertions every hour. His daily record depended
-to a great extent on the kind of country he had to negotiate. He began
-with forty miles, but after a time, when he grew harder, he increased
-this to fifty and often to sixty. It was at times difficult for him to
-force his way through deep, dark forest and jungle, along the winding
-wild-beast tracks, past the beasts themselves, who hid in trees ready to
-spring had he paused but a second; through marshes and bogs, with here
-and there a reedy lake, on which aquatic birds of brightest colours
-slept as they floated in the sunshine, but among the long reeds of which
-lay the ever-watchful and awful cayman.
-
-In such places as these, I think Benee owed his safety to his utter
-fearlessness and sang-froid, and to the speed at which he travelled.
-
-It was not a walk by any means, but a strange kind of swinging trot.
-Such a gait may still be seen in far-off outlying districts of the
-Scottish Highlands, where it is adopted by postal "runners", who
-consider it not only faster but less tiresome than walking.
-
-For the first hundred miles, or more, the lonely traveller found himself
-in a comparatively civilized country. This was not very much to his
-liking, and as a rule he endeavoured to give towns and villages, and
-even rubber forests, where Indians worked under white men overseers, a
-wide berth.
-
-Yet sometimes, hidden in a tree, he would watch the work going on; watch
-the men walking hither and thither with their pannikins, or deftly
-whirling the shovels they had dipped in the sap-tub and holding them in
-the dark smoke of the palm-tree nuts, or he would listen to their songs.
-But it was with no feeling of envy; it was quite the reverse.
-
-For Benee was free! Oh what a halo of happiness and glory surrounds
-that one little word "Free"!
-
-Then this lonely wanderer would hug himself, as it were, and, dropping
-down from his perch, start off once more at his swinging trot.
-
-Even as the crow flies, or the bee wings its flight, the length of
-Benee's journey would be over six hundred miles. But it was impossible
-for anyone to keep a bee-line, owing to the roughness of the country and
-the difficulties of every kind to be overcome, so that it is indeed
-impossible to estimate the magnitude of this lone Indian's exploit.
-
-His way, roughly speaking, lay between the Madeira River and the Great
-Snake River called Puras (_vide_ map); latterly it would lead him to the
-lofty regions and plateaux of the head-waters of Maya-tata, called by
-the Peruvians the Madre de Dios, or Holy Virgin River.
-
-But hardly a day now passed that he had not a stream of some kind to
-cross, and wandering by its banks seeking for a ford delayed him
-considerably.
-
-He was journeying thus one morning when the sound of human voices not
-far off made him creep quickly into the jungle.
-
-The men did not take long to put in an appearance.
-
-A portion of some wandering, hunting, or looting tribe they were, and
-cut-throat looking scoundrels everyone of them--five in all.
-
-They were armed with bows and arrows and with spears. Their arrows,
-Benee could see, were tipped with flint, and the flint was doubtless
-poisoned. They carried also slings and broad knives in their belts of
-skin. The slings are used in warfare, but they are also used by
-shepherds--monsters who, like many in this country, know not the meaning
-of the words "mercy to dumb animals"--on their poor sheep.
-
-These fellows, who now lay down to rest and to eat, much to Benee's
-disgust, not to say dismay, were probably a party of llama (pronounced
-yahmah) herds or shepherds who had, after cutting their master's throat,
-banded together and taken to this roving life.
-
-So thought Benee, at all events, for he could see many articles of
-European dress, such as dainty scarves of silk, lace handkerchiefs, &c.,
-as well as brooches, huddled over their own clothing, and one
-fierce-looking fellow pulled out a gold watch and pretended to look at
-the time.
-
-So angry was Benee that his savage nature got uppermost, and he handled
-his huge revolvers in a nervous way that showed his anxiety to open fire
-and spoil the cut-throats' dinner. But he restrained himself for the
-time being.
-
-In addition to the two revolvers, Benee carried the repeating rifle. It
-was the fear of spoiling his ammunition that led to his being in this
-dreadful fix. But for his cartridges he could have swum the river with
-the speed of a gar-fish.
-
-What a long, long time they stayed, and how very leisurely they munched
-and fed!
-
-A slight sound on his left flank caused Benee to gaze hastily round. To
-his horror, he found himself face to face with a puma.
-
-Here was indeed a dilemma!
-
-If he fired he would make his presence known, and small mercy could he
-expect from the cut-throats. At all hazards he determined to keep still.
-
-The yellow eyes of this American lion flared and glanced in a streak of
-sunshine shot downwards through the bush, and it was this probably which
-dimmed his vision, for he made no attempt to spring forward.
-
-Benee dared scarcely to breathe; he could hear the beating of his own
-heart, and could not help wondering if the puma heard it too.
-
-At last the brute backed slowly astern, with a wriggling motion.
-
-But Benee gained courage now.
-
-During the long hours that followed, several great snakes passed him so
-closely that he could have touched their scaly backs. Some of these
-were lithe and long, others very thick and slow in motion, but nearly
-all were beautifully coloured in metallic tints of crimson, orange,
-green, and bronze, and all were poisonous.
-
-The true Bolivian, however, has but little fear of snakes, knowing that
-unless trodden upon, or otherwise actively interfered with, they care
-not to waste their venom by striking.
-
-At long, long last the cut-throats got up to leave. They would before
-midnight no doubt reach some lonely outpost and demand entertainment at
-the point of the knife, and if strange travellers were there, sad indeed
-would be their fate.
-
-Benee now crawled, stiff and cramped, out from his damp and dangerous
-hiding-place. He found a ford not far off, and after crossing, he set
-off once more at his swinging trot, and was soon supple and happy
-enough.
-
-On and on he went all that day, to make up for lost time, and far into
-the starry night.
-
-The hills were getting higher now, the valleys deeper and damper
-between, and stream after stream had to be forded.
-
-It must have been long past eight o'clock when, just as Benee was
-beginning to long for food and rest, his eyes fell on a glimmering light
-at the foot of a high and dark precipice.
-
-He warily ventured forward and found it proceeded from a shepherd's hut;
-inside sat the man himself, quietly eating a kind of thick soup, the
-basin flanked by a huge flagon of milk, with roasted yams. Great,
-indeed, was the innocent fellow's surprise when Benee presented himself
-in the doorway. A few words in Bolivian, kindly uttered by our
-wayfarer, immediately put the man at ease, however, and before long
-Benee was enjoying a hearty supper, followed by a brew of excellent
-mate.
-
-He was a very simple son of the desert, this shepherd, but a desultory
-kind of conversation was maintained, nevertheless, until far into the
-night.
-
-For months and months, he told Benee, he had lived all alone with his
-sheep in these grassy uplands, having only the companionship of his
-half-wild, but faithful dog. But he was contented and happy, and had
-plenty to eat and drink.
-
-It was just sunrise when Benee awoke from a long refreshing sleep on his
-bed of skins. There was the odour of smoke all about, and presently the
-shepherd himself bustled in and bade him "Good-morning!", or "Heaven's
-blessing!" which is much the same.
-
-A breakfast of rough, black cake, with butter, fried fish, and mate,
-made Benee as happy as a king and as fresh as a mountain trout, and soon
-after he said farewell and started once more on his weary road. The only
-regret he experienced rose from the fact that he had nothing wherewith
-to reward this kindly shepherd for his hospitality.
-
-Much against his will, our wanderer had now to make a long detour, for
-not even a goat could have scaled the ramparts of rock in front of him.
-
-In another week he found himself in one of the bleakest and barrenest
-stretches of country that it is possible to imagine. It was a high
-plateau, and covered for the most part with stunted bushes and with
-crimson heath and heather.
-
-Benee climbed a high hill that rose near him, and as he stood on the top
-thereof, just as the sun in a glory of orange clouds and crimson rose
-slowly and majestically over the far-off eastern forest, a scene
-presented itself to him that, savage though he was, caused him for a
-time to stand mute with admiration and wonder.
-
-Then he remembered what little Peggy told him once in her sweet and
-serious voice: "Always pray at sunrise".
-
- "Always pray at sunrise,
- For 'tis God who makes the day;
- When shades of evening gather round
- Kneel down again and pray.
- And He, who loves His children dear,
- Will send some angel bright
- To guard you while you're sleeping sound
- And watch you all the night."
-
-
-And on this lonely hill-top Benee did kneel down to pray a simple
-prayer, while golden clouds were changing to bronze and snowy white, and
-far off on the forest lands hazy vapours were still stretched across
-glens and valleys.
-
-As he rose from his knees he could hear, away down beneath him, a wild
-shout, and gazing in the direction from which it came, he saw seven
-semi-nude savages hurrying towards the mountain with the evident
-intention of making him prisoner.
-
-It was terrible odds; but as there was no escape, Benee determined to
-fight.
-
-As usual, they were armed with bow and arrow and sling.
-
-Indeed, they commenced throwing stones with great precision before they
-reached the hill-foot, and one of these fell at Benee's feet.
-
-Glad, indeed, was he next minute to find himself in a kind of natural
-trench which could have been held by twenty men against a hundred.
-
-On and up, crawling on hands and knees, came the savages.
-
-But Benee stood firm, rifle in hand, and waiting his chance.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII--BENEE ENTRENCHED--SAVAGE REVELS IN THE FOREST
-
-
-The trench in which he found himself was far higher than was necessary,
-and fronted by huge stones. It was evidently the work of human hands,
-but by what class of people erected Benee could not imagine.
-
-He could spare a few boulders anyhow, so, while the enemy was still far
-below, he started first one, then another, and still another, on a
-cruise down the mountain-side and on a mission of death.
-
-These boulders broke into scores of large fragments long before they
-reached the savages, two of whom were struck, one being killed outright.
-
-And Benee knew his advantage right well, and, taking careful aim now
-with his repeating-rifle--a sixteen-shooter it was,--he fired.
-
-He saw the bullet raise the dust some yards ahead of the foe, who paused
-to gaze upwards in great amazement.
-
-But next shot went home, for Benee had got the range, and one of the
-five threw up his hands with a shriek, and fell on his face, to rise no
-more.
-
-Rendered wild by the loss of their companions, the others drew their
-knives and made a brave start for Benee's trench.
-
-But what could poor savages do against the deadly fire of civilized
-warfare. When another of their number paid the penalty of his rashness,
-the other three took fright and went racing and tumbling down the hill
-so quickly that no more of Benee's shots took effect.
-
-Roland had given Benee a field-glass before he started, and through this
-he watched the flying figures for many a mile, noting exactly the way
-they took, and determining in his own mind to choose a somewhat
-different route, even though he should have to make a wide detour.
-
-He started downhill almost immediately, well-knowing that these
-dark-skinned devils would return reinforced to seek revenge.
-
-He knew, moreover, that they could follow up a trail, so he did all in
-his power to pick out the hardest parts of this great moorland on which
-to walk.
-
-He came at last to a stream. It was very shallow, and he plunged in at
-once.
-
-This was indeed good luck, and Benee thought now that Peggy's God, who
-paints the sky at sunrise, was really looking after him. He could baulk
-his pursuers now, or, at least, delay them. For they would not be able
-to tell in which direction he had gone.
-
-So Benee walked in the water for three miles. This walk was really a
-leaping run. He would have gone farther, but all at once the stream
-became very rapid indeed, and on his ears fell the boom of a waterfall.
-
-So he got on shore with all haste.
-
-But for five miles on from the foot of the leaping, dashing, foaming
-linn, the stream was flanked by acres of round, smooth boulders.
-
-These could tell no tale. On these Benee would leave no trail. He
-leapt from one to the other, and was rejoiced at last to find that they
-led him to a forest.
-
-This was indeed a grateful surprise, so he entered the shade at once.
-
-Benee, after his exciting fight and his very long run, greatly needed
-rest, so he gathered some splendid fruit and nuts, despite the
-chattering and threatened attacks of a whole band of hideous baboons,
-and then threw himself down under the shade of a tree in a small glade
-and made a hearty meal.
-
-He felt thirsty now. But as soon as there was silence once more in the
-forest, and even the parrots had gone to sleep in the drowsy noontide
-heat, he could hear the rush of water some distance ahead.
-
-He got up immediately and marched in the direction from which the sound
-came, and was soon on the pebbled shore of another burn.
-
-He drank a long, sweet draught of the cool, delicious water, and felt
-wondrously refreshed.
-
-And now a happy thought occurred to him.
-
-Sooner or later he felt certain the savages would find his trail. They
-would track him to this stream and believe he had once again tried to
-break the pursuit by wading either up or down stream.
-
-His plan was, therefore, to go carefully back on his tracks and rest
-hidden all day until, foiled in their attempt to make him prisoner, they
-should return homeward.
-
-This plan he carried into immediate execution, and in a thicket, quite
-screened from all observation, he laid him down.
-
-He was soon fast asleep.
-
-But in probably a couple of hours' time he sat cautiously up, and,
-gently lifting a branch, looked forth.
-
-For voices had fallen on his ear, and next minute there went filing past
-on his trail no fewer than fifteen well-armed warriors.
-
-They stopped dancing and shouting at the tree where Benee had sat down
-to feed, then, brandishing their broad knives, dashed forward to the
-stream.
-
-They had evidently gone up the river for miles, but finding no trail on
-the other bank returned to search the down-stream.
-
-In his hiding-place Benee could hear their wild shouts of
-vengeance-deferred, and though he feared not death, right well he knew
-that neither his rifle nor revolvers could long protect him against such
-desperate odds as this.
-
-There was now peace once more, and the shades of evening--the short
-tropical gloaming--were falling when he heard the savages returning.
-
-He knew their language well.
-
-It was soon evident that they did not mean to go any farther that night,
-for they were quite tired out.
-
-They were not unprovided with food and drink such as it was, and
-evidently meant to make themselves happy.
-
-A fire was soon lit in the glade, and by its glare poor Benee, lying low
-there and hardly daring to move a limb, could see the sort of savages he
-would have to deal with if they found him.
-
-They were fierce-looking beyond conception. Most of them had long
-matted hair, and the ears of some carried the hideous pelele. The lobe
-of each ear is pierced when the individual is but a boy, and is
-gradually stretched until it is a mere strip of skin capable of
-supporting a bone or wooden, grooved little wheel twice as large as a
-dollar. The stretched lobe of the ear fits round this like the tyre
-round a bicycle wheel.
-
-The faces of these men, although wild-looking, were not positively
-ill-favoured, though the mouths were large and sensual. But if ever
-devil lurked in human eyes it lurked in theirs.
-
-They wore blankets, and some had huge chains of gold and silver nuggets
-round their necks.
-
-Their arms were now piled, or, more correctly speaking, they were
-trundled down in a heap by the tree.
-
-While most of them lay with their feet to the now roaring fire, a space
-was left for the cook, who cleverly arranged a kind of gipsy
-double-trident over the clear embers and commenced to get ready the
-meal.
-
-The uprights carried cross pieces of wood, and on these both fish and
-flesh were laid to broil, while large yams and sweet-potatoes were
-placed in the ashes to roast.
-
-By the time dinner was cooked the night was dark enough, but the glimmer
-of the firelight lit up the savages' faces and cast Rembrandtesque
-shadows far behind.
-
-It was a weird and terrible scene, but it had little effect on Benee,
-who had often witnessed tableaux far more terrifying than this.
-
-Then the orgie commenced. They helped themselves with their fingers and
-tore the fish and flesh off with their splendid teeth.
-
-Huge chattees of chicaga, a most filthy but intoxicating beer, now made
-their appearance. It was evident enough that these men were used to
-being on the war-path and hunting-field.
-
-The wine or beer is made in a very disgusting manner, but its
-manufacture, strangely enough, is not confined to Bolivia. I have seen
-much the same liquor in tropical Africa, made by the Somali Indians, and
-in precisely the same way.
-
-The old women or hags of the village are assembled at, say, a chief's
-house, and large quantities of cocoanuts and various other fruits are
-heaped together in the centre of a hut, as well as large, tub-like
-vessels and chattees of water.
-
-Down the old and almost toothless hags squat, and, helping themselves to
-lumps of cocoa-nut, &c., they commence to mumble and chew these, now and
-then moistening their mouths with a little water, the juice is spit out
-into calabashes, and when these are full of the awful mess they are
-emptied into the big bin.
-
-It is a great gala-day with these hideous old hags, a meeting that they
-take advantage of not only for making wine but for abusing their
-neighbours.
-
-How they cackle and grin, to be sure, as their mouths work to and fro!
-How they talk and chatter, and how they chew! It is chatter and chew,
-chew and chatter, all the time, and the din they make with teeth and
-tongues would deafen a miller.
-
-When all is finished, the bins are left to settle and ferment, and in
-three days' time, the supernatant liquor is poured off and forms the
-wine called chicaga.
-
-Had anyone doubted the intoxicating power of this vilest of all vile
-drinks, a glance at the scene which soon ensued around the fire would
-speedily have convinced him.
-
-Benee lay there watching these fiends as they gradually merged from one
-phase of drunkenness to another, and fain would he have sent half a
-dozen revolver bullets into the centre of the group, but his life
-depended on his keeping still.
-
-The savages first confined themselves to merry talking, with coarse
-jokes and ribaldry, and frequent outbursts of laughter. But when they
-had quaffed still more, they must seize their knives and get up to
-dance. Round and round the blazing fire they whirled and staggered
-through the smoke and through it again, with demoniacal shouts and awful
-yells, that awakened echoes among the forest wild beasts far and near.
-
-Then they pricked their bodies with their knives till the blood ran, and
-with this they splashed each other in hideous wantonness till faces and
-clothes were smeared in gore.
-
-All this could but have one ending--a fight.
-
-Benee saw one savage stabbed to the heart, and then the orgie became a
-fierce battle.
-
-Now was Benee's time to escape.
-
-Yet well he knew how acute the power of hearing is among the Bolivian
-savages. One strange noise, even the crackle of a bush, and the
-fighting would end in a hunt, and he would undoubtedly lose his life.
-
-But he wriggled and crawled like a snake in the grass until twenty yards
-away, and now he moved cautiously, slowly off.
-
-Soon the glare of the fire among the high trees was seen no more, and
-the yelling and cries were far behind and getting more and more
-indistinct every minute.
-
-Benee refreshed himself at the stream, pulled some food from his pocket,
-and ate it while he ran.
-
-He knew, however, that after fighting would come drowsiness, and that
-his late entertainers would soon be fast asleep, some of their heads
-pillowed, perhaps, on the dead body of their murdered comrade.
-
-If there be in all this world a more demonish wretch than man is in a
-state of nature, or when--even among Christians--demoralized by drink, I
-wish to get hold of a specimen for my private menagerie. But the
-creature should be kept in a cage by itself. I would not insult my
-monkeys with the companionship of such a wretch, should it be man or
-beast.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII--THE MARCH TO THE LOVELESS LAND
-
-
-On and on hurried Benee now, at his old swinging trot.
-
-On and on beneath the splendid stars, his only companions, that looked
-so calmly sweet and appeared so near. God's angels surely they,
-speaking, as they gazed down, words from their home on high, peace and
-good-will to men, and happiness to all that lived and breathed.
-
-On and on over plains, through moor and marsh, by lake and stream, by
-forest dark and jungle wild. It was evident that Benee meant to put
-leagues between himself and the camp of his recent enemies before each
-star grew beautiful and died; before the fiery sun leapt red above the
-eastern hills, and turned the darkness into day.
-
-Benee had come onwards with such a rush that even the slimy alligators,
-by pond or brown lake, left their lairs among the tall nodding reeds and
-dashed in terror into the water.
-
-Prowling wild beasts, the jaguar and puma, also hurried off at his
-approach, and many a scared bird flew screaming up into the darkling
-air.
-
-But Benee heeded nothing. His way lay yonder. That bright particular
-star away down on the southwestern horizon shone over the great
-unexplored region of Bolivia.
-
-Morning after morning it would be higher and higher above him, and when
-it shone at an angle of forty-five degrees he would be approaching the
-land of the cannibals.
-
-Yes, but it was still a far cry to that country. By the time the sun
-did rise, and the mists gathered themselves off the valleys and glens
-that lay low beneath him, Benee felt sadly in want of rest.
-
-He found a tree that would make him a good sleeping place, for the
-country he was now traversing abounded in hideous snakes and gigantic
-lizards, and he courted not the companionship of either.
-
-The tree was an Abies of some undefined species.
-
-Up and up crawled Benee, somewhat encumbered by his arms.
-
-He got through a kind of "lubbers' hole" at last, though with much
-difficulty, and, safe enough here, he curled up with his face to the
-stem, and was soon so fast asleep that cannons could not have awakened
-him.
-
-But satisfied Nature got uneasy at last, and far on towards evening he
-opened his eyes and wondered where he was.
-
-Still only half-awake, he staggered to his feet and made a step forward.
-It was only to fall over the end of a huge matted branch, but this
-branch lowered him gently on to the one immediately beneath it, and this
-down to the next, and so on. A strange mode of progression certainly,
-but Benee found himself sitting on the ground at last, as safe and sound
-as if he had come down in a parachute.
-
-Then his recollection came back to him. He sought out some fruit-trees
-now and made a hearty meal, quenched his thirst at a spring, and once
-more resumed his journey.
-
-For three days he marched onwards, but always by night. The country was
-not safe by day, and he preferred the companionship of wild beasts to
-that of wilder men. In this Benee was wise.
-
-But awaking somewhat earlier one afternoon, he saw far beneath him, a
-town, and in Benee's eyes it was a very large one.
-
-And now a happy idea struck him. He had money, and here was
-civilization. By and by he would be in the wilds once more, and among
-savages who knew nothing of cash. Why should he not descend, mix with
-the giddy throng, and make purchases of red cloth, of curios, and of
-beads. He determined to do so.
-
-But it would not do to go armed. So he hid his rifle and pistols in the
-bush, covering them carefully up with dried grass. Then he commenced
-the descent. Yes, the little town, the greater part of which was built
-of mud hovels, was full, and the streets crowded, many in the throng
-being Spaniards, Peruvians, and Portuguese.
-
-Benee sauntered carelessly on and presently came to the bazaar.
-
-Many of the police eyed him curiously, and one or two followed him.
-
-But he had no intention of being baulked in his purpose.
-
-So he entered a likely shop, and quickly made his purchases.
-
-Wrapping these carefully up, he slung the bundle over his shoulder and
-left.
-
-He stumbled over a lanky Portuguese policeman a few yards off.
-
-The man would have fallen had not Benee seized him in his iron grasp and
-brought him again to his equilibrium.
-
-Then he spoke a few words in Bolivian, and made signs that he wished to
-eat and drink.
-
-"Aguardiente!" said the officer, his eyes sparkling with joy.
-
-He had really harboured some intentions of throwing Benee into the
-tumble-down old prison, but a drink would be a far better solution of
-the difficulty, and he cheerfully led the way to a sort of hotel.
-
-And in twenty minutes' time this truly intelligent member of the force
-and Benee were lying on skin mats with apparently all the good things in
-this life spread out before them.
-
-The officer was curious, as all such men are, whether heathens or not,
-to know all about Benee, and put to him a score of questions at least,
-part of which Benee replied to with a delicate and forgivable fib.
-
-So the policeman was but little wiser at the end of the conversation
-than he was at the beginning.
-
-About half an hour before sunset, Benee was once more far up on the
-moorlands, and making straight for the place where he had hidden his
-guns and ammunition.
-
-But he stopped short and stared with astonishment when, before rounding
-the corner of the wood, a pistol shot rang out in the quiet air,
-followed by the most terrible shrieking and howling he had ever listened
-to.
-
-He hurried on quickly enough now, and as he did so, a whole herd of huge
-monkeys, apparently scared out of their senses, rushed madly past him.
-
-Close to the jungle he found one of his revolvers. One chamber had been
-emptied, and not far off lay a baboon in the agonies of death. Benee,
-who, savage though he was, evidently felt for the creature, mercifully
-expended another shot on it, and placed it beyond the reach of woe.
-
-He was glad to find his rifle and other revolver intact, but the
-cartridges from his belt were scattered about in all directions, and
-strenuous efforts had evidently been made to tear open his leathern
-ammunition-box.
-
-It took some time to make everything straight again.
-
-Now down went the sun, and very soon, after a short twilight, out came
-the stars once more.
-
-Benee now resumed his journey as straight as he could across the
-plateau.
-
-He had not travelled many hours, however, before clouds began to bank up
-and obscure the sky, and it became very dark.
-
-A storm was brewing, and, ushered in by low muttering thunder in the far
-distance, it soon came on in earnest.
-
-As the big drops of rain began to fall, shining in the flashes of the
-lightning like a shower of molten gold, Benee sought the shelter of a
-rocky cave which was near to him.
-
-He laid him down on the rough dry grass to wait until the storm should
-clear away.
-
-He felt drowsy, however. Perhaps the unusually good fare he had
-partaken of in the village had something to do with this; but of late
-his hardships had been very great indeed, so it is no wonder that now
-exhausted Nature claimed repose.
-
-The last thing he was conscious of was a long, low, mournful cry that
-seemed to come from the far interior of the cave.
-
-It was broad daylight when he again awoke, and such an awakening!
-
-Great snowy-breasted owls sat blinking at the light, but all the rocks
-around, or the shelves thereof, were alive with coiling, wriggling
-snakes of huge size.
-
-One had twined round his leg, and he knew that if he but moved a muscle,
-it would send its terrible fangs deep into his flesh, and his journey
-would be at an end.
-
-Gradually, however, the awful creature unwound itself and wriggled away.
-
-The sight of this snake-haunted cave was too much for even Benee's
-nerves, and he sprang up and speedily dashed, all intact, into the open
-air.
-
- ----
-
-Notwithstanding his extraordinary adventure in the cave of serpents, the
-wandering Indian felt in fine form that day.
-
-The air was now much cooler after the storm, all the more so, no doubt,
-that Benee was now travelling on a high table-land which stretched
-southwards and west in one long, dreary expanse till bounded on the
-horizon by ridges of lofty serrated mountains, in the hollow of which,
-high in air, patches of snow rested, and probably had so rested for
-millions of years.
-
-The sky was very bright. The trees at this elevation, as well as the
-fruit, the flowers, and stunted shrubs, were just such as one finds at
-the Cape of Good Hope and other semi-tropical regions. The ground on
-which he walked or trotted along was a mass of beauty and perfume, rich
-pink or crimson heaths, heather and geraniums everywhere, with patches
-of pine-wood having little or no undergrowth. Many rare and beautiful
-birds lilted and sang their songs of love on every side, strange larks
-were high in air, some lighting every now and then on the ground, the
-music of their voices drawn out as they glided downwards into one long
-and beautiful cadence.
-
-There seemed to be a sadness in these last notes, as if the birds would
-fain have warbled for ever and for aye at heaven's high gate, though
-duty drew them back to this dull earth of ours.
-
-But dangers to these feathered wildlings hovered even in the sunlit sky,
-and sometimes turned the songs of those speckled-breasted laverocks into
-wails of despair.
-
-Behold yonder hawk silently darting from the pine-wood! High, high he
-darts into the air; he has positioned his quarry, and downwards now he
-swoops like Indian arrow from a bow, and the lark's bright and happy
-song is hushed for ever. His beautiful mate sitting on her cosy nest
-with its five brown eggs looks up astonished and frightened. Down fall
-a few drops of red blood, as if the sky had wept them. Down flutter a
-few feathers, and her dream of happiness is a thing of the past.
-
-And that poor widowed lark will forsake her eggs now, and wander through
-the heath and the scrub till she dies.
-
- ----
-
-Benee had no adventures to-day, but, seeing far off a band of
-travellers, he hid himself in the afternoon. For our Indian wanted no
-company.
-
-He watched them as they came rapidly on towards his hiding-place, but
-they struck off to the east long before reaching it, and made for the
-plains and village far below.
-
-Then Benee had his dinner and slept soundly enough till moonrise, for
-bracing and clear was heaven's ozonic breath in these almost Alpine
-regions.
-
-Only a scimitar of a moon. Not more than three days old was it, yet
-somehow it gave hope and heart to the lonely traveller. He remembered
-when a boy he had been taught to look upon the moon as a good angel, but
-Christianity had banished superstition, and he was indeed a new man.
-
-After once more refreshing himself, he started on his night march,
-hoping to put forty miles behind him ere the sun rose.
-
-Low lay the white haze over the woods a sheer seven thousand feet
-beneath him.
-
-It looked like snow-drifts on the darkling green.
-
-Yet here and there, near to places where the river glistened in the
-young moon's rays were bunches of lights, and Benee knew he was not far
-from towns and civilization. Much too near to be agreeable.
-
-He knew, however, that a few days more of his long weary march would
-bring him far away from these to regions unknown to the pale-face, to a
-land on which Christian feet had never trodden, a loveless land, a
-country that reeked with murder, a country that seemed unblessed by
-heaven, where all was moral darkness, as if indeed it were ruled by
-demons and fiends, who rejoiced only in the spilling of blood.
-
-But, nevertheless, it was Benee's own land, and he could smile while he
-gazed upwards at the now descending moon.
-
-Benee never felt stronger or happier than he did this evening, and he
-sang a strange wild song to himself, as he journeyed onwards, a kind of
-chant to which he kept step.
-
-A huge snake, black as a winter's night, uncoiled itself, hissed, and
-darted into the heath to hide. Benee heeded it not. A wild beast of
-some sort sprang past him with furious growl. Benee never even raised
-his rifle. And when he came to the banks of a reed-girt lake, and saw
-his chance of shooting a huge cayman, he cared not to draw a bead
-thereon. He just went on with his chant and on with his walk. Benee was
-truly happy and hopeful for once in his life.
-
-And amid such scenery, beneath such a galaxy of resplendent stars, who
-could have been aught else?
-
- "How beautiful is night!
- A dewy freshness fills the silent air;
- No mist obscures, nor cloud, nor speck, nor stain,
- Breaks the serene of heaven.
- In glory yonder moon divine
- Rolls through the dark-blue depths,
- Beneath her steely ray
- The desert circle spreads,
- Like the round ocean girdled with the sky.
- How beautiful the night!"
-
-
-But almost before he could have believed it possible, so quickly do
-health and happiness cause time to fly, a long line of crimson cloud,
-high in the east, betokened the return of another day.
-
-The night-owls and the great flitting vampire bats saw it and retreated
-to darksome caves. There was heard no longer far over the plain the
-melancholy howl of the tiger-cat or snarl of puma or jaguar.
-
-Day was coming!
-
-Day was come!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV--THE HOME OF THE CANNIBAL--BENEE'S ROMANCE
-
-
-Like the bats and the night-birds Benee now crept into concealment.
-
-He sought once more the shelter of a tall pine-tree of the spruce
-species. Here he could be safe and here he could sleep.
-
-But after a hearty meal he took the precaution to lash himself to the
-stem, high, high up.
-
-His descent from the last tree had been accomplished with safety
-certainly, but it was of rather a peculiar nature, and Benee had no
-desire to risk his neck again.
-
-The wind softly sighed in the branches.
-
-A bird of the thrush species alighted about a yard above him, and burst
-into shrill sweet melody to welcome the rising sun.
-
-With half-closed eyes Benee could see from under the branches a
-deep-orange horizon, fading into pure sea-green zenithwards, then to
-deepest purple and blue where rested the crimson clouds.
-
-And now there was a glare of brighter and more silvery light, and the
-red streaks were turned into wreaths of snow.
-
-The sun was up, and Benee slept. But he carried that sweet bird's song
-into dreamland.
-
- ----
-
-About three days after this Benee was rejoiced to find himself in a new
-land, but it was a land he knew well--too well.
-
-Though very high above the sea-level it was in reality a
-
- "Land of the mountain and the flood".
-
-
-Hills on hills rose on all sides of him. There were straths or valleys
-of such exceeding beauty that they gladdened the eye to behold. The
-grass grew green here by the banks of many a brown roaring stream, and
-here, too, cattle roamed wild and free, knee-deep in flowery verdure,
-and many a beautiful guanaco and herds of llamas everywhere. The
-streams that meandered through these highland straths were sometimes
-very tortuous, but perhaps a mile distant they would seem to lose all
-control of themselves and go madly rushing over their pebbly beds, till
-they dashed over high cliffs at last, forming splendid cascades that
-fell into deep, dark, agitated pools, the mist that rose above forming
-rainbows which were never absent when the sun shone.
-
-And the hillsides that bounded these valleys were clad in Alpine
-verdure, with Alpine trees and flowers, strangely intermingled with
-beautiful heaths, and in the open glades with gorgeous geraniums, and
-many a lovely flower never seen even in greenhouses in our "tame
-domestic England".
-
-These were valleys, but there were glens and narrow gorges also, where
-dark beetling rocks frowned over the brown waters of streams that rushed
-fiercely onwards round rocks and boulders, against which they lashed
-themselves into foam.
-
-On these rocks strange fantastic trees clung, sometimes attached but by
-the rootlets, sometimes with their heads hanging almost sheer downwards;
-trees that the next storm of wind would hurl, with crash and roar, into
-the water far beneath.
-
-Yet such rivers or big burns were the home _par excellence_ of fish of
-the salmon tribe, and gazing below you might see here and there some
-huge otter, warily watching to spring on his finny prey.
-
-Nor were the otters alone on the _qui vive_, for, strange as it may
-seem, even pumas and tiger-cats often made a sullen dive into dark-brown
-pools, and emerged bearing on high some lordly red-bellied fish. With
-this they would "speel" the flowery, ferny rocks, and dart silently away
-into the depths of the forest.
-
-And this wild and beautiful country, at present inhabited by as wild a
-race of Indians as ever twanged the bow, but bound at no very distant
-date to come under the influence of Christianity and civilization, was
-Benee's real home. 'Twas here he roamed when a boy, for he had been a
-wanderer all his life, a nomad, and an inhabitant of the woods and
-wilds.
-
-Not a scene was unfamiliar to him. He could name every mountain and
-hill he gazed upon in his own strangely musical Indian tongue. Every
-bird, every creature that crept, or glided, or walked, all were his old
-friends; yes, and every tree and every flower, from the splendid
-parasitic plants that wound around the trees wherever the sun shone the
-brightest, and draped them in such a wealth of beauty as would have made
-all the richness and gaudiness of white kings and queens seem but a
-caricature.
-
-There was something of romance even in Benee. As he stood with folded
-arms on the brink of a cliff, and gazed downward into a charming glen,
-something very like tears stood in his eyes.
-
-He loved his country. It was his own, his native land. But the savages
-therein he had ceased to love. Because when but a boy--ah, how well he
-remembered that day,--he was sent one day by his father and mother to
-gather the berries of a deadly kind of thorn-bush, with the juice of
-which the flints in the points of the arrows were poisoned. Coming back
-to his parents' hut in the evening, as happy as boys only can be, he
-found the place in flames, and saw his father, mother, and a sister whom
-he loved, being hurried away by the savages, because the queen had need
-of them. The lot of death had fallen on them. Their flesh was wanted to
-make part of a great feast her majesty was about to give to a
-neighbouring potentate. Benee, who had ever been used to hunt for his
-food as a boy, or fish in the lakes and the brown roaring streams, that
-he and his parents might live, had always abhorred human sacrifice and
-human flesh. The latter he had seldom been prevailed upon even to
-taste.
-
-So from that terrible day he resolved to be a wanderer, and he
-registered a vow--if I may speak so concerning the thoughts of a poor
-boy-Indian--to take revenge when he became a man on this very tribe that
-had brought such grief and woe on him and his.
-
-Benee was still a young man, but little over two-and-twenty, and as he
-stood there thoughts came into his mind about a little sweetheart he had
-when a boy.
-
-Wee Weenah was she called; only a child of six when he was good sixteen.
-But in all his adventures, in forest or by the streams, Weenah used to
-accompany him. They used to be away together all day long, and lived on
-the nuts and the wild fruit that grew everywhere so plentifully about
-them, on trees, on bushes, or on the flowery banks.
-
-Where was Weenah now? Dead, perhaps, or taken away to the queen's
-blood-stained court. As a child Weenah was very beautiful, for many of
-these Indians are very far indeed from being repulsive.
-
-And Benee used to delight to dress his tiny lady-love in feathers of the
-wild birds, crimson and green and blue, and weave her rude garlands of
-the gaudiest flowers, to hang around her neck, or entwine in her long
-dark hair.
-
-He had gone to see Weenah--though he was then in grief and tears--after
-he had left his father's burnt shealing. He had told her that he was
-going away far to the north, that he was to become a hunter of the
-wilds, that he might even visit the homes of the white men, but that
-some day he would return and Weenah should be his wife.
-
-So they had parted thus, in childish grief and tears, and he had never
-seen her since.
-
-He might see her nevermore.
-
-While musing thus to himself, he stretched his weary limbs and body on
-the sweet-scented mossy cliff-top.
-
-It was day certainly, but was he not now at home, in his own, his native
-land?
-
-He seemed to be afraid of nothing, therefore, and so--he fell asleep.
-
-The bank on which he slept adjoined a darkling forest.
-
-A forest of strange dark pines, with red-brown stems, which, owing to
-the absence of all undergrowth save heather and moss and fern, looked
-like the pillars of some vast cavern.
-
-But there was bird music in this forest, and Benee had gone to sleep
-with the flute-like and mellow notes of the soo-soo falling on his ear.
-
-The soo-soo's song had accompanied him to the land of forgetfulness, and
-was mingling even now with his dreams--happy dreams of long ago.
-
-But list! Was that really the song of the bronze-necked soo-soo?
-
-He was half-awake now, but apparently dreaming still.
-
-He thought he was dreaming at all events, and would not have opened his
-eyes and so dispelled the dream for all the world.
-
-It was a sweet girlish voice that seemed to be singing--singing about
-him, about Benee the wanderer in sylvan wilds; the man who for long
-years had been alone because he loved being alone, whose hand--until he
-reached the white man's home--had been against everyone, and against
-every beast as well.
-
-And the song was a kind of sweet little ballad, which I should try in
-vain to translate.
-
-But Benee opened his eyes at last, and his astonishment knew no bounds
-as he saw, kneeling by his mossy couch, the self-same Weenah that he had
-been thinking and dreaming about.
-
-Though still a girl in years, being but thirteen, she seemed a woman in
-all her sympathies.
-
-Beautiful? Yes; scarcely changed as to face from the child of six he
-used to roam in the woods with in the long, long ago. Her dark hair
-hung to her waist and farther in two broad plaits. Her black eyes
-brimmed over with joy, and there was a flush of excitement on her
-sun-kissed cheeks.
-
-"Weenah! Oh, Weenah! Can it be you?" he exclaimed in the Indian
-tongue.
-
-"It is your own little child-love, your Weenah; and ah! how I have
-longed for you, and searched for you far and near. See, I am clad in
-the skins of the puma and the otter; I have killed the jaguar, too, and
-I have been far north and fought with terrible men. They fell before the
-poison of my arrows. They tried to catch me; but fleet of foot is
-Weenah, and they never can see me when I fly. In trees I have slept, on
-the open heather, in caves of rocks, and in jungle. But never, never
-could I find my Benee. Ah! life of mine, you will never go and leave us
-again.
-
-"Yes," she added, "Mother and Father live, and are well. Our home have
-we enlarged. 'Tis big now, and there is room in it for Benee.
-
-"Come; come--shall we go? But what strange, strange war-weapons you
-carry. Ah! they are the fire-spears of the white man."
-
-"Yes, Weenah mine! and deadly are they as the lightning's bolt that
-flashes downward from the storm-sky and lays dead the llama and the ox.
-
-"See yonder eagle, Weenah? Benee's aim is unerring; his hand is the
-hand of the rock, his eye the eye of the kron-dah" (a kind of hawk),
-"yet his touch on the trigger light as the moss-flax. Behold!"
-
-He raised the rifle as he spoke, and without even appearing to take aim
-he fired.
-
-Next moment the bird of Jove turned a somersault. It was a death-spasm.
-Down, down he fell earthwards, his breast-feathers following more
-slowly, like a shower of snow sparkling in the sunshine.
-
-Weenah was almost paralysed with terror, but Benee took her gently in
-his arms, and, kissing her brow and bonnie raven hair, soothed her and
-stilled her alarms.
-
-Hand in hand now through the forest, as in the days of yore! Both
-almost too happy to speak, Benee and his little Indian maiden! Hand in
-hand over the plain, through the crimson heath and the heather, heeding
-nothing, seeing nothing, knowing nothing save their own great happiness!
-Hand in hand until they stood beside Weenah's mother's cottage; and her
-parents soon ran out to welcome and to bless them!
-
-Theirs was no ordinary hut, for the father had been far to the east and
-had dwelt among white men on the banks of the rapid-rolling Madeira.
-
-When he had returned, slaves had come with him--young men whom he had
-bought, for the aborigines barter their children for cloth or schnapps.
-And these slaves brought with them tools of the white men--axes, saws,
-adzes, hammers, spades, and shovels.
-
-Then Shooks-gee (swift of foot) had cut himself timber from the forest,
-and, aided by his slaves, had set to work; and lo! in three moons this
-cottage by the wood arose, and the queen of the cannibals herself had
-none better.
-
-But Benee was welcomed and food set before him, milk of the llama,
-corn-cakes, and eggs of the heron and treel-ba (a kind of plover).
-
-Then warm drinks of coca (not cocoa) were given him, and the child
-Weenah's eyes were never turned away while he ate and drank.
-
-He smoked then, the girl sitting close by him on the bench and watching
-the strange, curling rings of reek rolling upwards towards the black and
-glittering rafters.
-
-"But," said Weenah's mother, "poor Benee has walked far and is much
-tired. Would not Benee like to cover his feet?"
-
-"Yes, our mother, Benee would sleep."
-
-"And I will watch and sing," said Weenah.
-
-"Sing the song of the forest," murmured Benee.
-
-Then Weenah sang low beside him while Benee slept.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV--SHOOKS-GEE'S STORY--A CANNIBAL QUEEN
-
-
-What is called "natural curiosity" in our country, where almost every
-man is a Paul Pry, is no trait of the Indian's character. Or if he ever
-does feel such an impulse, it is instantly checked. Curiosity is but
-the attribute of a squaw, a savage would tell you, but even squaws will
-try to prevent such a weed from flourishing in their hearts.
-
-That was the reason why neither the father nor the mother of Benee's
-little lady-love thought of asking him a single question concerning his
-adventures until he had eaten a hearty meal and had enjoyed a refreshing
-sleep.
-
-But when Benee sat up at last and quaffed the mate that Weenah had made
-haste to get him, and just as the day was beginning to merge into the
-twilight of summer, he began to tell his friends and his love some
-portion of his wonderful adventures, even from the day when he had
-bidden the child Weenah a tearful farewell and betaken himself to a
-wandering life in the woods.
-
-His young life's story was indeed a strange one,
-
- "Wherein he spake of most disastrous chances,
- Of moving accidents by flood and field;
- ... of antres vast and deserts idle,
- Rough quarries, rocks, and hills whose heads touch heaven.
-
- ----
-
-The while Weenah
-
- "... gave him for his pains a world of sighs.
- 'T was strange, 't was passing strange,
- 'T was pitiful, 't was wondrous pitiful:
- She wished she had not heard it; yet she wished
- That heaven had made her such a man."
-
-Then when Benee came down to that portion of his long story when first
-he found the children and their mighty wolf-hound lost in the forest,
-Weenah and her parents listened with greater interest and intensity than
-ever.
-
-There was a fire on the rude, low hearth--a fire of wood, of peat, and
-of moss; for at the great elevation at which this cannibal land is
-situated the nights are chilly.
-
-It was a fire that gave fitful light as well as heat. It fell on the
-faces of Benee's listeners, and cast shadows grotesque behind them. It
-beautified Weenah's face till Benee thought she looked like one of the
-angels that poor Peggy used to tell him about.
-
-Then he related to them all his suspicions of Peter, but did not
-actually accuse him of bringing about the abduction of Peggy, to serve
-some vile and unknown purpose of his own. Next he spoke, yet spoke but
-lightly, of his long, long march, and the incidents and adventures
-therewith connected.
-
-There was much, therefore, that Benee had to tell, but there was also
-much that he had to learn or to be told; and now that he had finished,
-it was Shooks-gee's turn to take up the story.
-
-I wish I could do justice to this man's language, which was grandly
-figurative, or to his dramatic way of talking, accompanied as it was
-with look and gesture that would have elicited applause on any European
-stage. I cannot do so, therefore shall not try; but the following is
-the pith of his story.
-
-This Indian's house was on the very outside and most northerly end of
-the great wild plateau which was the home of these savages and
-cannibals.
-
-The queen, a terrible monarch, and bloodthirsty in the extreme, used to
-hold her court and lived on a strange mountain or hill, in the very
-centre of the rough tree and bush clad plain.
-
-For many, many a long year she had lived here, and to her court Indians
-came from afar to do her homage, bringing with them cloth of crimson,
-wine and oil, which they had stolen or captured in warfare from the
-white men of Madeira valley.
-
-When these presents came, the coca which her courtiers used to chew all
-day long, and the mate they drank, were for a time--for weeks
-indeed--discarded for the wine and fire-water of the pale-face.
-
-Fearful were the revels then held on that lone mountain.
-
-The queen was dainty, so too were her fierce courtiers.
-
-When the revels first began she and they could eat the raw or
-half-roasted flesh of calves and baby-llamas, but when their potations
-waxed deeper, and appetite began to fail, then the orgies commenced in
-earnest. Nothing would her majesty eat now--horrible to say--but
-children, and her courtiers, armed to the teeth, would be sent to scour
-the plains, to visit the mud huts of her people, and drag therefrom the
-most beautiful and plump boys or girls procurable.
-
-I will not tell of the fearful and awfully unnatural human
-sacrifice--the murder of the innocents--that now took place.
-
-Demons could not have been more revolting in their cruelties than were
-those savage courtiers as they obeyed the queen's behests.
-
-Let me drop the curtain over this portion of the tale. Well, this
-particular cottage or hut, being on the confines of the country, had not
-been visited by the queen's fearsome soldiers. But even had they come
-they would have found that Weenah was far away in the woods, for her
-father Shooks-gee loved her much. But one evening there came up out of
-the dark pinewood forest, that lay to the north, a great band of
-wandering natives.
-
-They were all armed and under the command of one of her majesty's most
-bloodthirsty and daring chiefs.
-
-Hand to claw this man had fought pumas and jaguars, and slain them,
-armed only with his two-edged knife.
-
-This savage Rob Roy M'Gregor despised both bow-and-arrow and sling.
-Only at close quarters would he fight with man or beast, and although he
-bore the scars and slashes of many a fearful encounter, he had always
-come off victorious.
-
-Six feet four inches in height was this war-Indian if an inch, and his
-dress was a picturesque costume of skins with the tails attached. A
-huge mat of hair, his own, with emu's feathers drooping therefrom, was
-his only head-gear, but round his neck he wore a chain of polished
-pebbles, with heavy gold rings, in many of which rubies and diamonds
-sparkled and shone.
-
-But, ghastly to relate, between each pebble and between the rings of
-gold and precious stones, was threaded a tanned human ear. More than
-twenty of these were there.
-
-They had been cut from the heads of white men whom this chief--Kaloomah
-was his name--had slain, and the rings had been torn from their dead
-fingers.
-
-This was the band then that had arrived as the sun was going down at the
-hut of Shooks-gee, and this was their chief.
-
-The latter demanded food for his men, and Shooks-gee, with his trembling
-wife--Weenah was hidden--made haste to obey, and a great fire was lit
-out of doors, and flesh of the llama hung over it to roast.
-
-But the strangest thing was this. Seated on a hardy little mule was a
-sad but beautiful girl--white she was, and unmistakably English. Her
-eyes were very large and wistful, and she looked at Kaloomah and his
-band in evident fear and dread, starting and shrinking from the chief
-whenever he came near her or spoke.
-
-But the daintiest portion of the food was handed to her, and she ate in
-silence, as one will who eats in fear.
-
-The wild band slept in the bush, a special bed of dry grass being made
-for the little white queen, as Kaloomah called her, and a savage set to
-watch her while she slept.
-
-Next morning, when the wild chief and his braves started onwards,
-Shooks-gee was obliged to march along with them.
-
-Kaloomah had need of him. That was all the explanation vouchsafed.
-
-But this visit to the queen's home had given Weenah's father an insight
-into court life and usages that he could not otherwise have possessed.
-
-Kaloomah's band bore along with them huge bales of cloth and large boxes
-of beads. How they had become possessed of these Shooks-gee never knew,
-and could not guess.
-
-The grim and haughty queen, surrounded by her body-guard of grotesque
-and hideous warriors with their slashed and fearful faces, and the
-peleles hanging in the lobes of their ears, was seated at the farther
-end of a great wall, and on a throne covered with the skins of wild
-beasts.
-
-All in front the floor was carpeted with crimson, and her majesty
-sparkled with gold ornaments. A tiara of jewels encircled her brow, and
-a living snake of immense size, with gray eyes that never closed, formed
-a girdle round her waist.
-
-In her hand she held a poisoned spear, and at her feet crouched a huge
-jaguar.
-
-She was a tyrant queen, reigning over a people who, though savage, and
-cannibals to boot, had never dared to gainsay a word or order she
-uttered.
-
-Passionate in the extreme, too, she was, and if a slave or subject dared
-to disobey, a prick from the poisoned spear was the reward, and he or
-she was dragged out into the bush to writhe and die in terrible agony.
-
-Probably a more frightful woman never reigned as queen, even in cannibal
-lands.
-
-Kaloomah, on his arrival, bent himself down--nay, but threw himself on
-his knees and face abjectly before her, as if he were scarcely worthy to
-be her footstool.
-
-But she greeted his arrival with a smile, and bade him arise.
-
-"Many presents have we brought," he said in the figurative language of
-the Indian. "Many presents to the beautiful mother of the sun. Cloth
-of scarlet, of blue, and of green, cloth of rainbow colours, jewels and
-beads, and the fire-water of the pale-faces."
-
-"Produce me the fire-water of the pale-faces," she returned. "I would
-drink."
-
-Her voice was husky, hoarse, and horrible.
-
-Kaloomah beckoned to a slave, and in a few minutes a cocoa-nut shell,
-filled with rum, was held to her lips.
-
-The queen drank, and seemed happier after this. Kaloomah thought he
-might now venture to broach another subject.
-
-"We have brought your majesty also a little daughter of the pale-faces!"
-
-Then Peggy--for the reader will have guessed it was she--was led
-trembling in before her, and made to kneel.
-
-But the queen's brows had lowered when she beheld the child's great
-beauty. She made her advance, and seizing her by the hand, held her at
-arm's-length.
-
-[Illustration: "SHE ... HELD HER AT ARM'S LENGTH"]
-
-"Take her away!" she cried. "I can love her not. Put her in prison
-below ground!"
-
-And the beautiful girl was hurried away.
-
-To be put in prison below the ground meant to be buried alive. But
-Kaloomah had no intention of obeying the queen on this occasion, and the
-girl pale-face was conducted to a well-lighted bamboo hut and placed in
-charge of a woman slave.
-
-This slave looked a heart-broken creature, but seemed kind and good, and
-now made haste to spread the girl's bed of leaves on a bamboo bench, and
-to place before her milk of the llama, with much luscious fruit and
-nuts. She needed little pressing to eat, or drink, or sleep. The poor
-child had almost ceased to wonder, or even to be afraid of anything.
-
-But now comes the last act in Shooks-gee's strange story.
-
-Two days after the arrival of the warlike band from the far north,
-Kaloomah had once more presented himself before the queen. He came
-unannounced this time, and with him were seven fierce-looking soldiers,
-armed to the teeth with slings and stones, with bows and arrows, and
-with spears.
-
-The conversation that had ensued was somewhat as follows, being
-interpreted into our plain and humdrum English:--
-
-_The Queen_. "Why advances my general and slave except on his knees,
-even as come the frogs?"
-
-_Kaloomah_. "My queen will pardon me. I will not so offend again.
-Your majesty has reigned long and happily."
-
-_Q_. "True, slave."
-
-She seized the poisoned spear as she spoke, and would have used it
-freely; but at a word from Kaloomah it was wrenched from her grasp.
-
-_K_. "Your majesty's reign has ended! The old queen must make room for
-the beautiful daughter of the pale-faces. Yet will your beneficence
-live in the person of the new queen, and in our hearts--the hearts of
-those who have fought for you. For we each and all shall taste of your
-roasted flesh!"
-
-Then, turning quickly to the soldiers, "Seize her and drag her forth!"
-he cried, "and do your duty speedily."
-
-I must not be too graphic in my description of the scene that followed.
-But the ex-queen was led to a darksome hut, and there she was speedily
-despatched.
-
-That night high revelry was held in the royal camp of the cannibals.
-Many prisoners were killed and roasted, and the feast was a fearful and
-awful one.
-
-But not a chief was there in all that crowd who did not partake of the
-flesh of his late queen, while horn trumpets blared and war tom-toms
-were wildly beaten.
-
-A piece of the fearful flesh was even given to the pale-face girl's
-attendant, with orders that she must make her charge partake thereof.
-
-The girl was spared this terrible ordeal, however.
-
-But long after midnight the revelry and the wild music went on, then
-ceased, and all was still.
-
-The unhappy prisoner lay listening till sleep stole down on a star-ray
-and wafted her off to the land of sweet forgetfulness.
-
- ----
-
-Next day, amidst wild unearthly clamour and music, she was led from the
-tent and seated on the throne. Garments of otter skins and crimson cloth
-were cast on the throne and draped over the beautiful child. She was
-encircled with flowers of rarest hue, and emu's feathers were stuck,
-plume-like, in her bonnie hair.
-
-Meanwhile the trumpets blared more loudly, and the tom-toms were struck
-with treble force, then all ceased at once, and there was a silence deep
-as death, as everyone prostrated himself or herself before the
-newly-made young queen.
-
-Kaloomah rose at last, and advanced with bended back and head towards
-her, and with an intuitive sense of her new-born dignity she touched him
-gently on the shoulder and bade him stand erect.
-
-He did so, and then placed in her hand the sceptre of the dead
-queen--the poison-tipped spear.
-
-Whatever might happen now, the girl knew that she was safe for a time,
-and her spirits rose in consequence.
-
-This, then, was the story told by Shooks-gee, the father of Benee's
-child-love.
-
- ----
-
-Had Dick Temple himself been there he could no longer have doubted the
-fidelity of poor Benee.
-
-But there was much to be done, and it would need all the tact and skill
-of this wily Indian to carry out his plans.
-
-He could trust his father and mother, as he called Weenah's parents, and
-he now told them that he had come, if possible, to deliver Peggy, or if
-that were impossible, to hand her a letter that should give her both
-comfort and hope.
-
-Queen Peggy's apartments on the mountain were cannibalistically regal in
-their splendour. The principal entrance to her private room was
-approached by a long avenue of bamboo rails, completely lined with
-skulls and bones, and the door thereof was also surrounded by the same
-kind of horrors.
-
-But every one of her subjects was deferential to her, and appeared
-awe-struck with her beauty.
-
-And now Benee consulted with his parents as to what had best be done.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI--ON THE BANKS OF A BEAUTIFUL RIVER
-
-
-They would not allow Benee to harbour for a single moment the idea of
-stealing the queen and escaping with her into the forest.
-
-Two thousand armed men were stationed within a mile of the camp, so
-Benee would speedily be killed, and in all likelihood Queen Peggy also.
-
-No; and he must go no farther into the land of the cannibals.
-
-But he, Shooks-gee, undertook to give the queen a little note-book, in
-which a letter was written from her "brother", stating that all haste
-was being made to come to her deliverance. He would receive back the
-note-book, and therein would doubtless be written poor Peggy's letter.
-Meanwhile Benee must wait.
-
-Shooks-gee started on his mission next day.
-
-He was away for a whole week, but it seemed but a few hours to Benee.
-He had divested himself of his arms, and given the cloth and beads to
-Weenah's mother. Then all the dear old life of his boyhood seemed to be
-renewed. Weenah and he wandered wild and free once more in the forest
-and over the heath-clad plains; they fished in lake and stream; they ate
-and drank together under the shade of the pine-tree, and listened to the
-love-song of the sweet soo-soo.
-
-It was all like a happy, happy dream. And is not the love-life of the
-young always a dream of bliss? Ah! but it is one from which there is
-ever an awakening.
-
-And with the return of Shooks-gee, Benee's dream came to an end.
-
-Peggy had written her long, sad story in the notebook.
-
-Benee knew it was long, but he could not read it.
-
-Then farewells were said.
-
-The child Weenah clung to Benee's neck and wept. She thought she could
-not let him go, and at last he had to gently tear himself away and
-disappear speedily in the forest.
-
-Just one glance back at Weenah's sad and wistful face, then the jungle
-swallowed him up, and he would be seen by Weenah, mayhap, never again.
-
- ----
-
-It was not without considerable misgivings that Roland and Dick Temple
-made a start for the country of the cannibals.
-
-The relief party consisted but of one hundred white men all told, with
-about double that number of carriers. It was, of course, the first real
-experience of these boys on the war-path, and difficulty after
-difficulty presented itself, but was bravely met and overcome.
-
-"Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown."
-
-Probably the general of an army, be it of what size it may, is more to
-be pitied than even a king. The latter has his courtiers and his
-parliament to advise him; the general is _princeps_, he is chief, and
-has only his own skill and judgment to fall back upon.
-
-It had been suggested by Burly Bill that instead of journeying overland
-as a first start, and having to cross the whirling river Purus and many
-lesser streams before striking the Madeira some distance above the
-Amazon, they should drop down-stream in steamer-loads, and assemble at
-the junction of the former with the latter.
-
-Neither Roland nor Dick thought well of the plan, and herein lay their
-first mistake. Not only was it weeks before they were able to reach the
-Madeira, but they had the grief of losing one white man and one Indian
-with baggage in the crossing of the Purus.
-
-We cannot put old heads on young shoulders; nevertheless the wise youth
-never fails to profit by the experience of his elders.
-
-Even when they reached the forest lands on the west side of the Madeira,
-another long delay ensued. For here they had to encamp on somewhat damp
-and unwholesome ground until Burly Bill should descend the stream to
-hire canoes or boats suitable for passing the rapids.
-
-Don Pedro or Peter was now doing his best to make himself agreeable. He
-was laughing and singing all day long, but this fact in no way deceived
-Roland, and as a special precaution he told off several white men to act
-as detectives and to be near him by day and by night.
-
-If Peter were really the blood-guilty wretch that Roland, if not Dick,
-believed him to be, he made one mistake now. He tried his very utmost
-to make friends with Brawn, the great Irish wolf-hound, but was, of
-course, unsuccessful.
-
-"I sha'n't take bite nor sup from that evil man's hand," Brawn seemed to
-say to himself. "He looks as if he would poison me. But," he added,
-"he shall have my undivided attention at night."
-
-And so this huge hound guarded Peter, never being ten yards away from
-the man's sleeping-skin till up leapt the sun in the gold and crimson
-east and shone on the waters of the beautiful river.
-
-"That dog is getting very fond of you, I think," said Roland one day to
-Peter, while Brawn was snuffing his hand. "You see how well he protects
-you by night. He will never lie near to either Dick or me."
-
-Peter replied in words that were hardly audible, but were understood to
-mean that he was obliged to Brawn for his condescension. But he
-somewhat marred the beauty of his reply by adding a swear-word or two at
-the end.
-
-While they waited in camp here for the return of Bill and his crews,
-they went in for sport of several sorts.
-
-The fish in this river are somewhat remarkable--remarkable alike for
-their numbers and for their appearance--but all are not edible.
-
-"How are we to know, I wonder, which we should cook and which we
-shouldn't?" said Roland to his friend, Dick Temple.
-
-"I think," replied Dick, "that we may safely cook any of them, but, as
-to eating, why, I should only eat those that are nice in flavour."
-
-"That's right. We'll be guided by that rule."
-
-The boys fished from canoes which they hired or requisitioned from the
-Indian natives of the place. Clever these fellows are, and the manner in
-which they watch for and harpoon or even spear a huge "boto"--which
-looks like a long-snouted porpoise or "sea-pig"--astonished our heroes.
-
-This fish is killed by whites only for its oil, but the Indians did not
-hesitate to cut huge fourteen-pound pieces from the back to take home
-for culinary purposes.
-
-The "piraroocoo" is an immense fellow, and calculated to give good sport
-for a long summer day if you do not know how to handle him.
-
-This "'roocoo", as some of the natives call him, likes to hang around in
-the back reaches of the river, and is often found ten feet in length.
-
-He has the greatest objection in the world to being caught, and to being
-killed after being dragged on shore. Moreover, he has a neat and very
-expert way of lifting a canoe on his back for a few seconds, and letting
-it down bottom-upwards.
-
-When he does so, you, the sportsman or piscador, find yourself
-floundering in the water. You probably gulp down about half a gallon of
-river water, but you thank your stars you learned to swim when a boy,
-and strike out for the bank. But five to one you have a race to run
-with an intelligent 'gator. If he is hungry, you may as well think
-about some short prayer to say; if he is not very ravenous, you may win
-just by a neck.
-
-This last was an experience of Dick's one day; when a 'roocoo capsized
-his frail canoe and his Indian and he got spilt.
-
-Luckily Roland was on the beach, and just as a huge 'gator came
-ploughing up behind poor Dick, with head and awful jaws above water,
-Roland took steady aim and fired. Then the creature turned on his back,
-and the river was dyed with blood.
-
-The natives salt the 'roocoo and eat it. But Roland's Indian carriers
-managed to get through as many as could be caught, without any salt
-worth speaking about.
-
-Surely the fish in this beautiful river must have thought it strange,
-that so many of their number were constantly disappearing heavenwards at
-the end of a line. But it did not trouble them very much after all, and
-they learnt no lesson from what they saw, but took the bait as readily
-as ever.
-
-There were very many other species of fish, which not only gave good
-sport but made a most delicious _addendum_ to the larder.
-
-Boats and canoes were now in the river all day long, and with the fish
-caught, and the turtle which were found in great abundance, not to
-mention the wild animals killed in the woods, Roland managed to feed his
-little army well.
-
-There is one fish in this river which is sometimes called "diabolo". He
-is no relation at all, however, to the real octopus or devil-fish, for
-this creature is flat. It seems a species of ray, and has an immense
-mouthful of the very sharpest of teeth. He is not at all dainty as to
-what he eats. He can make a meal off fresh-water shell-fish; he can
-swallow his smaller brothers of the deep; take a snack from a dead
-'gator, and is quite at home while discussing a nice tender one-pound
-steak from a native's leg.
-
-The young 'gator is neither fish, flesh, nor good red-herring. Yet if
-you catch one not over a yard long, and he doesn't catch you--for he has
-a wicked way of seizing a man by the hand and holding on till his mother
-comes,--his tail, stewed or fried with a morsel of pork, will tide you
-over a "hungry hillock" very pleasantly indeed.
-
-If we turn to the pleasant reaches of the River Madeira, or the quiet
-back-waters, and, gun on shoulder, creep warily through the bush and
-scrub, we shall be rewarded with a sight that will well repay our
-caution.
-
-Here of an early morning we shall see water-fowl innumerable, and of the
-greatest beauty imaginable.
-
-Hidden from view, one is loth indeed to fire a shot and so disturb
-Nature's harmony, but prefers, for a time at all events, to crouch there
-quietly and watch the strange antics of the male birds and the meek
-docility of the female.
-
-Here are teal, black ducks, strange wild geese, brown ducks, sheldrakes,
-widgeons, and whatnot.
-
-And yonder on the shore, in all sorts of droll attitudes with their
-ridiculously long necks and legs, are storks and herons. I think they
-like to perform their toilet close to the calm pellucid water, because
-it serves the same purpose to them as a bedroom mirror does to us.
-
-Young tapirs form a welcome addition to the larder, and the woods all
-round abound in game.
-
-What a paradise! and yet this country is hardly yet known to us young
-Britons. We hear of ague. Bah! Regularity of living, and a dust of
-quinine, and camping in the open, can keep fever of all sorts at bay.
-
-Some may be surprised that our heroes should have settled down, as it
-were, so enthusiastically to fishing and sporting, although uncertain
-all the while as to the fate of poor kidnapped Peggy.
-
-True, but we must remember that activity and constant employment are the
-only cure for grief. So long, then, as Roland and Dick were busy with
-gun or fishing-rod, they were free from thought and care.
-
-But after sunset, when the long dark night closed over the camp; when
-the fire-flies danced from bush to bush, and all was still save the wind
-that sighed among the trees, or the voices of night-birds and prowling
-beasts, and the rush of the river fell on the ear in drowsy, dreamy
-monotone, then the boys felt their anxiety acutely enough, but bravely
-tried to give each other courage, and their conversation, oft-repeated,
-was somewhat as follows:--
-
-_Roland_. "You're a bit gloomy to-night, Dick, I think?"
-
-_Dick_. "Well, Roll, the night is so pitchy dark, never a moon, and
-only a star peeping out now and then. Besides I am thinking of--"
-
-_Roland_. "Hush! hush! aren't we both always thinking about her?
-Though I won't hesitate to say it is wrong not to be hopeful and
-cheerful."
-
-_Dick_. "But do you believe--"
-
-_Roland_. "I believe this, Dick, that if those kidnapping revengeful
-Indians had meant murder they would have slain the dear child in bed and
-not have resorted to all that horrible trickery--instigated without
-doubt by somebody. She has been taken to the country of the cannibals,
-but not to be tortured. She is a slave, let us hope, to some Indian
-princess, and well-guarded too. What we have got to do is to trust in
-God. I'm no preacher, but that is so. And we've got to do our duty and
-rescue Peggy."
-
-_Dick_. "Dead or alive, Roland."
-
-_Roland_. "Dead or alive, Dick. But Heaven have mercy on the souls of
-those who harm a hair of her head!"
-
- ----
-
-Dick did his best to trust in Providence, but often in the middle
-watches of the night he would lie in his tent thinking, thinking, and
-unable to sleep; then, after perhaps an uneasy slumber towards morning,
-awake somewhat wearily to resume the duties of the day.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII--BILL AND HIS BOATS
-
-
-Roland, young and inexperienced as he was, proved himself a fairly good
-general.
-
-He certainly had not forgotten the salt, nor anything else that was
-likely to add to the comfort of his people in this very long cruise by
-river and by land.
-
-They knew not what was before them, nor what trouble or dangers they
-might have to encounter, so our young heroes were pretty well prepared
-to fight or to rough it in every way.
-
-Independent of very large quantities of ammunition for rifles and
-revolvers, Roland had prepared a quantity of war-rockets, for nothing
-strikes greater terror into the breasts of the ordinary savage than
-these fire-devils, as they term them.
-
-Roland, Dick, and Bill each had shot-guns, with sheath-knives, and a
-sort of a portable bill-hook, which many of the men carried also, and
-found extremely handy for making a clearance among reeds, rushes, or
-lighter bush.
-
-We have already seen that they had plenty of fishing-tackle.
-
-Oil and pumice-stone were not forgotten, and Roland had a regular
-inspection of his men every day, to make certain that their rifles and
-revolvers were clean.
-
-But this was not all, for, to the best of their ability, both Roland and
-Dick drilled their men to the use of their arms at short and long
-distances, and taught them to advance and retire in skirmishing order,
-taking advantage of every morsel of cover which the ground might afford.
-
-Plenty of maize and corn-flour were carried, and quite a large supply of
-tinned provisions, from the plantation and from Burnley Hall. These
-included canned meat, sardines, and salmon.
-
-Extra clothing was duly arranged for, because from the plains they would
-have to ascend quite into the regions of cloud and storm, if not snow.
-
-Medicine, too, but only a very little of this, Roland thought, would be
-needed, although, on the other hand, he stowed away lint and bandages in
-abundance, with a few surgical instruments.
-
-Medical comforts? Yes, and these were not to be considered as luxuries,
-though they took the form of brandy and good wine.
-
-Good tea, coffee, cocoa, and coca were, of course, carried, with sugar
-to sweeten these luxuries.
-
-But a small cask of fire-water--arrack--was included among the stores,
-and this was meant as a treat for native Indians, if they should happen
-to meet any civil and obliging enough to hobnob.
-
-Money would be of no use in the extreme wilds. Salt, and cloth of gaudy
-colours, to say nothing of beads, would be bartered for articles of
-necessity.
-
- ----
-
-Everything was ready for the start, but still there were no signs of
-Bill and the boats.
-
-It was the first question Roland asked Dick of a morning, or Dick asked
-Roland, according to who happened to be first up:
-
-"Any signs of Bill and the boats?"
-
-"None!"
-
-On the top of a cliff at the bend of the beautiful river stood a very
-tall tree, and right on top of this was an outlook--an Indian boy, who
-stayed two hours on watch, and was then relieved.
-
-He could command quite an extensive view downstream, and was frequently
-hailed during the day and asked about Bill and his boats, but the answer
-would come somewhat dolefully:
-
-"Plenty boat, sah, but no Beel."
-
-Yes, there were boats of many kinds, and a few steamers now and then
-also, but Roland held no intercourse with any of these. His little army
-was encamped on an open clearing well back in the forest. He did not
-wish to know anyone's business, and he determined that his own should
-not leak out.
-
-But although Roland and Dick had plenty to do, and there was sport
-enough to be had, still the time began to drag wearily on day by day,
-and both young fellows were burning for action and movement and "go".
-
-Peter, _alias_ Don Pedro, seemed as anxious as anyone else to get
-forward.
-
-He was most quiet and affable to everyone, although apt to drop into
-dejected moods at times.
-
-He saw that he was not wholly in bad favour with Dick Temple.
-
-One day, when Roland was at the other side of the river, after smoking
-in silence for some time by the banks of the stream, where, in company
-with Dick and Brawn, he was sitting, a down-steamer hove in sight at the
-bend of the river, and both waved their caps to those on board, a salute
-which was cheerfully returned.
-
-The vessel was some distance out in the broad river, but presently Dick
-could see a huge black-board held over the port-quarter. There was
-writing in chalk on it, and Dick speedily put his lorgnettes up, and
-read as follows:--
-
- IF GOING UP RIVER--BEWARE!
-
- KARAPOONA SAVAGES ON WAR-PATH--TREACHERY!
-
-
-"Forewarned is forearmed!" said Dick.
-
-"What was the legend exposed to view on the telegraph board?" asked
-Peter languidly.
-
-"The Karapoona savages on the war-path," replied Dick.
-
-"What! The Karapoonas! A fearful race, and cannibals to boot--"
-
-"You know them then?"
-
-"What, I? I--I--no--no, only what I have heard."
-
-He took three or four whiffs of his cigarette in quick succession, as if
-afraid of its going dead.
-
-But Dick's eye was on him all the time.
-
-He seemed not to care to meet it.
-
-"Bound for Para, no doubt," he said at last. "I do wish I were on
-board."
-
-"No doubt, Mr. Peter, and really we seem to be taking you on this
-expedition somewhat against your will?"
-
-"True; and I am a man of the world, and have not failed to notice that I
-am in some measure under the ban of suspicion.
-
-"Yet, I think you are not unfriendly to me," he added.
-
-"No, Mr. Peter, I am unfriendly to no one."
-
-"Then, might you not use your influence with your friend, Mr. St. Clair,
-to let me catch the first boat back to Para?"
-
-"I cannot interfere with Mr. Roland St. Clair's private concerns. If he
-suspects you of anything in the shape of duplicity or treachery and you
-are innocent, you have really nothing to fear. As to letting you off
-your engagement, that is his business. I can only say that the tenure
-of your office is not yet complete, and that you are his head-clerk for
-still another year."
-
-"True, true, but I came as governor of the estate, and not to accompany
-a mad-cap expedition like this. Besides, Mr. Temple, I am far from
-strong. I am a man of peace, too, and have hardly ever fired a revolver
-in my life.
-
-"But I have another very urgent reason for getting back to England--"
-
-"No doubt, Mr. Peter!"
-
-This was almost a sneer.
-
-"No doubt--but I interrupt you."
-
-"My other reason may appeal to you in more ways than one. I am in love,
-Mr. Temple--"
-
-"You!"
-
-"I am in love, and engaged to be married to one of the sweetest girls in
-Cornwall. If I am detained here, and unable to write, she may think me
-dead--and--and--well, anything might happen."
-
-"Pah, Mr. Peter! I won't say I don't believe you, but instead of your
-little romance appealing to me, it simply disgusts me. I tell you
-straight, sir, you don't look like a man to fall in love with anything
-except gold; but if the young lady is really fond of you, she will lose
-neither hope nor heart, even if she does not hear of you or from you for
-a year or more."
-
-Then, seeing that he seemed to wound this strange man's feelings:
-
-"Pardon my brusqueness, Mr. Peter," he added more kindly. "I really do
-not mean to hurt you. Come, cheer up, and if I can help you--I will."
-
-Peter held out his hand.
-
-Dick simply touched it.
-
-He could not get himself even to like the man.
-
- ----
-
-The signal-tree was but a few yards distant from the spot where they
-sat.
-
-And now there came a wild, excited hail therefrom.
-
-"Golly foh true, Massa Dick!"
-
-Brawn jumped up, and barked wildly.
-
-His echo came from beyond the stream, and he barked still more wildly at
-that.
-
-"Well, boy," shouted Dick, "do you see anything?"
-
-"Plenty moochee see. Beel come. Not very far off. Beel and de boats!"
-
-This was indeed joyful news for Dick. He happened to glance at Peter
-for a moment, however, and could not help being struck with the change
-that seemed to have come over him. He appeared to have aged suddenly.
-His face was gray, his lips compressed, his brows lowered and stern.
-
-Dick never forgot that look.
-
-Dick Temple was really good-hearted, and he felt for this man, and
-something kept telling him he was innocent and wronged.
-
-But he had nothing to fear if innocent. He would certainly be put to
-inconvenience, but for that, if all went well, Roland would not fail to
-recompense him handsomely, and he--Dick--had a duty to perform to his
-friend. So now in the bustle that followed--if Peter wanted to make a
-rush for the woods--he might try.
-
-Roland had heard the hail, and his canoe was now coming swiftly on
-towards the bank. Dick ran to meet him.
-
-When he half-pulled his friend on shore and turned back with him,
-behold! Peter was gone.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII--AS IF STRUCK BY A DUM-DUM BULLET
-
-
-Roland and Dick walked quickly towards the camp.
-
-It was all a scene of bustle and stir indescribable, for good news as
-well as bad travels apace.
-
-"Bill and the boats are coming!" Englishmen were shouting.
-
-"Beel and de boats!" chorused the Indians.
-
-But on the approach of "the young captains", as the boys were called,
-comparative peace was restored.
-
-"Had anyone seen Mr. Peter?" was the first question put by our heroes to
-their white officers. "No," from all.
-
-"He had disappeared for a few moments in his tent," said an Indian,
-"then der was no more Massa Peter."
-
-Scouts and armed runners were now speedily got together, and Roland gave
-them orders. They were to search the bush and forest, making a long
-detour or outflanking movement, then closing round a centre, as if in
-battue, to allow not a tree to go unexamined.
-
-This was all that could be done.
-
-So our heroes retraced their steps towards the river bank, where, lo!
-they beheld a whole fleet of strange canoes, big and small, being rowed
-swiftly towards them.
-
-In the bows of the biggest--a twelve-tonner--stood Burly Bill himself.
-
-He was blacker with the sun than ever, and wildly waving the broadest
-kind of Panama hat ever seen on the Madeira. But in his left hand he
-clutched his meerschaum, and such clouds was he blowing that one might
-have mistaken the great canoe for a steam-launch.
-
-He jumped on shore as soon as the prow touched the bank--the water here
-being deep.
-
-Black though Burly Bill was, his smile was so pleasant, and his face so
-good-natured, that everybody who looked at him felt at once on excellent
-terms with himself and with all created things.
-
-"I suppose I ought to apologize, Mr. Roland, for the delay--I--"
-
-"And I suppose," interrupted Roland, "you ought to do nothing of the
-kind. Dinner is all ready, Bill; come and eat first. Put guards in
-your boats, and march along. Your boys will be fed immediately."
-
-It was a splendid dinner.
-
-Burly Bill, who was more emphatic than choice in English, called it a
-tiptopper, and all hands in Roland's spacious tent did ample justice to
-it.
-
-Roland even spliced the main-brace, as far as Bill was concerned, by
-opening a bottle of choice port.
-
-The boys themselves merely sipped a little. What need have lads under
-twenty for vinous stimulants?
-
-Bill's story was a long one, but I shall not repeat it. He had
-encountered the greatest difficulty imaginable in procuring the sort of
-boats he needed.
-
-"But," he added, "all's well that end's well, I guess, and we'll start
-soon now, I suppose, for the rapids of Antonio."
-
-"Yes," said Roland, "we'll strike camp possibly to-morrow; but we must
-do as much loading up as possible to-night."
-
-"That's the style," said Bill. "We've got to make haste. Only we've
-got to think! 'Haste but not hurry', that's my motto.
-
-"But I say," he continued, "I miss two friends--where is Mr. Peter and
-where is Brawn?"
-
-"Peter has taken French leave, I fear, and Brawn, where is Brawn, Dick?"
-
-"I really did not miss either till now," answered Dick, "but let us
-continue to be fair to Mr. Peter-- Listen!"
-
-At that moment shouting was heard far down the forest.
-
-The noise came nearer and nearer, and our heroes waited patiently.
-
-In five minutes' time into the tent bounded the great wolf-hound,
-gasping but laughing all down both sides, and with about a foot of pink
-tongue--more or less--hanging out at one side, over his alabaster teeth.
-
-He quickly licked Roland's ears and Dick's, then uttered one joyous bark
-and made straight for Burly Bill.
-
-Yes, Bill was burly, but Brawn fairly rolled him over and nearly
-smothered him with canine caresses. Then he took a leap back to the boys
-as much as to say:
-
-"Why don't you rejoice too? Wouff--wouff! Aren't you glad that Bill
-has returned? Wouff! What would life be worth anyhow without Bill?
-Wouff--wouff--wow!"
-
-But the last wow ended in a low growl, as Peter himself stood smiling at
-the opening.
-
-"Why, Mr. Peter, we thought you were lost!" cried Dick.
-
-Mr. Peter walked up to Bill and shook hands.
-
-"Glad indeed to see you back," he said nonchalantly, "and you're not
-looking a bit paler. Any chance of a morsel to eat?"
-
-"Sit down," cried Dick. "Steward!"
-
-"Yes, sah; to be surely, sah. Dinner foh Massa Peter? One moment,
-sah."
-
-Mr. Peter was laughing now, but he had seated himself on the withered
-grass as far as possible from Brawn.
-
-"I must say that three hours in a tree-top gives one the devil's own
-appetite," he began. "I had gone to take a stroll in the forest, you
-know--"
-
-"Yes," said Roland, "we do know."
-
-Mr. Peter looked a little crestfallen, but said pointedly enough: "If
-you do know, there is no need for me to tell you."
-
-"Oh, yes, go on!" cried Dick.
-
-"Well then, I had not gone half a mile, and was just lighting up a
-cigarette, when Brawn came down on me, and I had barely time to spring
-into the tree before he reached the foot of it. There I waited as
-patiently as Job would have done--thank you, steward, what a splendid
-Irish stew!--till by and by--a precious long by and by--your boys came
-to look for Brawn, and in finding Brawn they found poor famishing me.
-Thank you, Bill, I'll be glad of a little wine."
-
-"Looking for Brawn, they found you, eh!" said Roland. "I should have
-put it differ--"
-
-But Dick punched Roland's leg, and Roland laughed and said no more.
-
- ----
-
-Two days after the arrival of Burly Bill an order was given for general
-embarkation. All under their several officers were inspected on the
-river bank, and to each group was allotted a station in boat or canoe.
-
-The head men or captains from whom Bill had hired the transport were in
-every instance retained, but a large number of Roland's own Indians were
-most expert rowers, and therefore to take others would only serve to
-load the vessels uncomfortably, not to say dangerously.
-
-But peons or paddlers to the number of two or four to each large canoe
-their several captains insisted on having.
-
-The inspection on the bank was a kind of "muster by open list", and
-Roland was exceedingly pleased with the result, for not a man or boy was
-missing.
-
-It was a delightful day when the expedition was at last got under way.
-
-Roland and Dick, with Peter, to say nothing of Brawn, occupied the
-after-cabin in a canoe of very light draught, but really a
-twelve-tonner. The cabin was, of course, both dining-room and sleeping
-berth--the lounges being skins of buffaloes and of wild beasts, but all
-clean and sweet.
-
-The cabin itself was built of bamboo and bamboo leaves lined with very
-light skins, so overlapping as to make the cabin perfectly dry.
-
-Our heroes had arranged about light, and candles were brought out as
-soon as daylight began to fade.
-
-Then the canoes were paddled towards the bank or into some beautiful
-reach or back-water, and there made fast for the night with padlock and
-chain.
-
-Roland and Dick had their own reasons for taking such strict
-precautions.
-
-The first day passed without a single adventure worth relating.
-
-The paddlers or peons, of whom there were seven on each side of our
-hero's huge canoe, worked together well. They oftentimes sang or
-chanted a wild indescribable kind of boat-lilt, to which the sound of
-the paddles was an excellent accompaniment, but now and then the captain
-would shout: "Choorka--choorka!" which, from the excitement the words
-caused, evidently meant "Sweep her up!" and then the vessel seemed to
-fly over the water and dance in the air.
-
-Other canoe captains would take up the cry, and "Choorka--Choorka!"
-would resound from every side.
-
-A sort of race was on at such times, but the _Burnley Hall_, as Roland's
-boat was called, nearly always left the others astern.
-
-Dinner was cooked on shore, and nearly everyone landed at night. Only
-our heroes stuck to their boat.
-
-There were moon and stars at present, and very pleasant it was to sit,
-or rather lie, at their open-sided cabin, and to watch these mirrored in
-the calm water, while fire-flies danced and flitted from bush to bush.
-
-But there was always the sorrow and the weight of grief lying deep down
-in the hearts of both Roland and Dick; the ever-abiding anxiety, the one
-question they kept asking themselves constantly, and which could not be
-answered, "Shall we be in time to save poor Peggy?"
-
-Mr. Peter slept on shore.
-
-Brawn kept him company. Kept untiring watch over him. And two faithful
-and well-armed Indians lay in the bush at a convenient distance.
-
-In a previous chapter I have mentioned an ex-cannibal Bolivian, whom
-Roland had made up his mind to take with him as a guide in the absence
-of, or in addition to, faithful Benee.
-
-He was called Charlie by the whites.
-
-Charlie was as true to his master as the needle to the pole.
-
-On the third evening of the voyage, just as Roland and Dick, with Bill,
-were enjoying an after-dinner lounge in an open glade not far from the
-river brink, the moon shining so brightly that the smallest of type
-could easily have been read by young eyes, he suddenly appeared in their
-midst.
-
-"What cheer, Charlie?" said Roland kindly. "Come, squat thee down, and
-we will give you a tiny toothful of aguardiente."
-
-"Touchee me he, no, no!" was the reply. "He catchee de bref too muchee.
-Smokee me, notwidstanding," he added.
-
-It was one of Charlie's peculiarities that if he could once get hold of
-a big word or two, he planted them in his conversation whenever he
-thought he had a favourable opening.
-
-An ex-cannibal Charlie was, and he came from the great western
-unexplored district of Bolivia.
-
-He confessed that although fond of "de pig ob de forest (tapir), de tail
-ob de 'gator, and de big haboo-snake when roast," there was nothing in
-all the world so satisfactory as "de fles' ob a small boy. Yum, yum! it
-was goodee, goodee notwidstanding, and make bof him ear crack and him
-'tumack feel wa'm."
-
-Charlie lit up his cigarette, and then commenced to explain the reason
-of his visit.
-
-"What you callee dat?" he said, handing Burly Bill a few large purple
-berries of a species of thorny laurel.
-
-"Why," said Bill, "these are the fruit of the lanton-tree, used for
-poisoning arrow-tips."
-
-"And dis, sah. What you callee he? Mind, mind, no touchee de point!
-He poison, notwidstanding."
-
-It was a thin bamboo cane tipped with a fine-pointed nail.
-
-Bill waited for him to explain.
-
-He condescended to do so at last.
-
-"Long time ago I runee away from de cannibal Indians notwidstanding. I
-young den, I fat, I sweet in flesh. Sometime my leg look so nice, I
-like to eat one little piecee ob myse'f. But no. Charlie not one big
-fool. But de chief tink he like me. He take me to him tent one day,
-den all muchee quickee he slaves run in and take up knife. Ha, ha! I
-catchee knife too, notwidstanding. Charlie young and goodee and plenty
-mooch blood fly.
-
-"I killee dat chief, and killee bof slaves. Den I runned away.
-
-"Long time I wander in de bush, but one day I come to de tents ob de
-white men. Dey kind to poh Charlie, and gib me work. I lub de white
-man; all same, I no lub Massa Peter."
-
-He paused to puff at a fresh cigarette.
-
-"And," he added, "I fine dat poison berry and dat leetle poison spear in
-place where Massa Peter sleep."
-
-"Ho, ho!" said Bill.
-
-Charlie grew a little more excited as he continued: "As shuah as God
-madee me, de debbil hisself makee dat bad man Peter. He wantee killee
-poh Brawn. Dat what for, notwidstanding."
-
-Now although there be some human beings--they are really not worth the
-name--who hate dogs, every good-hearted man or woman in the world loves
-those noble animals who are, next to man, the best and bravest that God
-has created.
-
-But there are degrees in the love people bear for their pets. If a
-faithful dog like Brawn is constantly with one, he so wins one's
-affection that death alone can sever the tie.
-
-Not only Roland, but Dick also, dearly loved Brawn, and the bare idea
-that he was in danger of his life so angered both that, had Mr. Peter
-been present when honest Charlie the Indian made his communication, one
-of them would most certainly have gone for him in true Etonian style,
-and the man would have been hardly presentable at court for a fortnight
-after at the least.
-
-"Dick," said Roland, the red blood mounting to his brow, the fire
-seeming to scintillate from his eyes. "Dick, old man, what do you
-advise?"
-
-"I know what I should like to do," answered Dick, with clenched fist and
-lowered brows.
-
-"So do I, Dick; but that might only make matters worse.
-
-"But Heaven keep me calm, old man," he continued, "for now I shall send
-for Peter and have it out with him. Not at present, you say? But,
-Dick, I am all on fire. I must, I shall speak to him. Charlie, retire;
-I would not have Mr. Peter taking revenge on so good a fellow as you."
-
-At Dick's earnest request Roland waited for half an hour before he sent
-for Peter.
-
-This gentleman advanced from the camp fire humming an operatic air, and
-with a cigar in hand.
-
-"Oh, Mr. Peter," said Roland, "I was walking near your sleeping place of
-last night and picked this up."
-
-He held up the little bamboo spear.
-
-"What is it?" said Peter. "An arrow? I suppose some of the Indians
-dropped it. I never saw it before. It seems of little consequence," he
-continued, "though I dare say it would suffice to pink a rat with."
-
-He laughed lightly as he spoke. "Was this all you wanted me for, Mr.
-St. Clair?"
-
-He was handling the little spear as he spoke. Next moment:
-
-"Merciful Father!" he suddenly screamed, "I have pricked myself! I am
-poisoned! I am a dead man! Brandy-- Oh, quick-- Oh--!"
-
-He said never a word more, but dropped on the moss as if struck by a
-dum-dum bullet.
-
-And there he lay, writhing in torture, foaming at the mouth, from which
-blood issued from a bitten tongue.
-
-It was a ghastly and horrible sight. Roland looked at Dick.
-
-"Dick," he said, "the man knew it was poisoned."
-
-"Better he should die than Brawn."
-
-"Infinitely," said Roland.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX--STRUGGLING ONWARDS UP-STREAM
-
-
-"But," said Roland, "it would be a pity to let even Peter die, as we may
-have need of him. Let us send for Charlie at once. Perhaps he can tell
-us of an antidote."
-
-The Indian was not far off.
-
-"Fire-water", was his reply to Dick's question, "and dis."
-
-"Dis" was the contents of a tiny bottle, which he speedily rubbed into
-the wound in Peter's hand.
-
-The steward, as one of the men was called, quickly brought a whole
-bottle of rum, the poisoned man's jaws were forced open, and he was
-literally drenched with the hot and fiery spirit.
-
-But spasm after spasm took place after this, and while the body was
-drawn up with cramp, and the muscles knotted and hard, the features were
-fearfully contorted.
-
-By Roland's directions chloroform was now poured on a handkerchief, and
-after this was breathed by the sufferer for a few minutes the muscles
-became relaxed, and the face, though still pale as death, became more
-sightly.
-
-More rum and more rubbing with the antidote, and Mr. Peter slept in
-peace.
-
-About sunrise he awoke, cold and shivering, but sensible.
-
-After a little more stimulant he began to talk.
-
-"Bitten by a snake, have I not been?"
-
-"Mr. Peter," said Roland sternly, "you have narrowly escaped the death
-you would have meted out to poor Brawn with your cruel and accursed
-arrow.
-
-"You may not love the dog. He certainly does not love you, and dogs are
-good judges of character. He tree'd you, and you sought revenge. You
-doubtless have other reasons to hate Brawn, but his life is far more to
-us than yours. Now confess you meant to do for him, and then to make
-your way down-stream by stealing a canoe."
-
-"I do not, will not confess," cried Peter. "It is a lie. I am here
-against my will. I am kidnapped. I am a prisoner. The laws of even
-this country--and sorry I am ever I saw it--will and shall protect me."
-
-Roland was very calm, even to seeming carelessness.
-
-"We are on the war-path at present, my friend," he said very quietly.
-"You are suspected of one of the most horrible crimes that felon ever
-perpetrated, that of procuring the abduction of Miss St. Clair and
-handing her over to savages."
-
-"As Heaven is above us," cried Peter, "I am guiltless of that!"
-
-"Hush!" roared Roland, "why take the sacred name of Heaven within your
-vile lips. Were you not about to die, I would strike you where you
-stand."
-
-"To die, Mr. Roland? You--you--you surely don't mean--"
-
-Roland placed a whistle to his lips, and its sound brought six stern men
-to his side.
-
-"Bind that man's hands behind his back and hang him to yonder tree," was
-the order.
-
-In two minutes' time the man was pinioned and the noose dangling over
-his head.
-
-As he stood there, arrayed but in shirt and trousers, pale and
-trembling, with the cold sweat on his brow, it would have been difficult
-even to imagine a more distressing and pitiable sight.
-
-His teeth chattered in his head, and he swayed about as if every moment
-about to fall.
-
-A man advanced, and was about to place the noose around his neck when:
-
-"A moment, one little moment!" cried Peter. "Sir--Mr. St. Clair--I did
-mean to take your favourite dog's life."
-
-"And Miss St. Clair?"
-
-"I am innocent. If--I am to be lynched--for--that--you have the blood
-of a guiltless man on your head."
-
-Dick Temple had seen enough. He advanced now to Peter's side.
-
-"Your crime deserves lynching," he said, "but I will intercede for you
-if you promise me sacredly you will never attempt revenge again. If you
-do, as sure as fate you shall swing."
-
-"I promise--Oh--I promise!"
-
-Dick retired, and after a few minutes' conversation with Roland, the
-wretched man was set free.
-
-_Entre nous_, reader, Roland had never really meant to lynch the man.
-But so utterly nerveless and broken-down was Mr. Peter now, that as soon
-as he was released he threw himself on the ground, crying like a child.
-
-Even Brawn pitied him, and ran forward and actually licked the hands of
-the man who would have cruelly done him to death.
-
-So noble is the nature of our friend the dog.
-
- ----
-
-The voyage up-stream was now continued. But the progress of so many
-boats and men was necessarily slow, for all had to be provided for, and
-this meant spending about every alternate day in shooting, fishing, and
-collecting fruit and nuts.
-
-The farther up-stream they got, however, the more lightsome and cheerful
-became the hearts of our heroes.
-
-They began to look upon Peggy as already safe in their camp.
-
-"I say, you know," said Dick one day, "our passage up is all toil and
-trouble, but won't it be delightful coming back."
-
-"Yes, indeed," said Roland, smiling.
-
-"We sha'n't hurry, shall we?"
-
-"Oh, no! poor Peggy's health must need renovating, and we must let her
-see all that is to be seen."
-
-"Ye--es, of course! Certainly, Roll, and it will be all just too lovely
-for anything, all one deliciously delicious picnic."
-
-"I hope so."
-
-"Don't look quite so gloomy, Roland, old man. I tell you it is all
-plain sailing now. We have only to meet Benee when we get as far as the
-rendezvous, then strike across country, and off and away to the land of
-the cannibals and give them fits."
-
-"Oh, I'm not gloomy, you know, Dick, though not quite so hopeful as you!
-We have many difficulties to encounter, and there may be a lot of
-fighting after we get there; and, mind you, that game of giving fits is
-one that two can play at."
-
-"Choorka! Choorka!" shouted the captain of the leading boat, a swarthy
-son of the river.
-
-As he spoke, he pointed towards the western bank, and thither as quickly
-as paddles could send him his boat was hurried. For they had been well
-out in the centre of the river, and had reached a place where the
-current was strong and swift.
-
-But closer to the bank it was more easy to row.
-
-Nevertheless, two of the canoes ran foul of a snag. One was capsized at
-once, and the other stuck on top.
-
-The 'gators here were in dozens apparently, and before the canoe could
-be righted two men had been dragged below, the brown stream being tinged
-with their gushing blood.
-
-Both were Indians, but nevertheless their sad death cast a gloom over
-the hearts of everyone, which was not easily dispelled.
-
-On again once more, still hugging the shore; but after dinner it was
-determined to stay where they were for the night.
-
-They luckily found a fine open back-water, and this they entered and
-were soon snug enough.
-
-They could not be idle, however. Food must be collected, and
-everything--Roland determined--must go on like clock-work, without hurry
-or bustle.
-
-Soon, therefore, after the canoes were made fast, both Indians and
-whites were scattered far and near in the forest, on the rocks and
-hills, and on the rivers.
-
-I believe that all loved the "boys", as Roland and Dick were called by
-the white men, and so all worked right cheerfully, laughing and singing
-as they did so.
-
-Ten men besides our heroes and Burly Bill had remained behind to get the
-tents up and to prepare the evening meal, for everybody would return as
-hungry as alligators, and these gentry seem to have a most insatiable
-appetite.
-
-Just before sunset on this particular evening Roland and Dick had
-another interview with Mr. Peter.
-
-"I should be a fool and a fraud, Mr. Peter," said the former, "were I to
-mince matters. Besides, it is not my way. I tell you, then, that
-during our journey you will have yonder little tent to yourself to eat
-and to sleep in. I tell you, too, that despite your declarations of
-innocence I still suspect you, that nevertheless no one will be more
-happy than Mr. Temple here and myself if you are found not guilty. But
-you must face the music now. You must be guarded, strictly guarded, and
-I wish you to know that you are. I wish to impress upon you also that
-your sentries have strict orders to shoot you if you are found making
-any insane attempt to escape. In all other respects you are a free man,
-and I should be very sorry indeed to rope or tie you. Now you may go."
-
-"My time will come," said Mr. Peter meaningly.
-
-His face was set and determined.
-
-"Is this a threat?" cried Roland, fingering his revolver.
-
-But Peter's dark countenance relaxed at once.
-
-"A threat!" he said. "No, no, Mr. Roland. I am an unarmed man, you are
-armed, and everyone is on your side. But I repeat, my time will come to
-clear my character; that is all.
-
-"So be it, Mr. Peter."
-
-And the man retired to his tent breathing black curses deep though not
-aloud.
-
-"I've had enough of this," he told himself. "And escape that young
-cub's tyranny I must and shall, even should I die in my tracks. Curse
-them all!"
-
- ----
-
-Next day a deal of towing was required, for the river was running fierce
-and strong, and swirling in angry eddies and dangerous maelstroms even
-close to the bank.
-
-This towing was tiresome work, and although all hands bent to it, half a
-mile an hour was their highest record.
-
-But now they neared the terrible rapids of Antonio, and once more a halt
-was called for the night, in order that all might be fresh and strong to
-negotiate these torrents.
-
-Next day they set to work.
-
-All the cargo had to be got on shore, and a few armed men were left to
-guard it. Then the empty boats were towed up.
-
-For three or four miles the river dashed onward here over its rocky bed,
-with a noise like distant thunder, a chafing, boiling, angry stream,
-which but to look at caused the eyes to swim and the senses to reel.
-
-There are stretches of comparatively calm water between the rapids, and
-glad indeed were Roland's brave fellows to reach these for a
-breathing-spell.
-
-In the afternoon, before they were half-way through these torrents, a
-halt was called for the night in a little bay, and the baggage was
-brought up.
-
-They fell asleep that night with the roar of the rapids in their ears,
-and the dreams of many of them were far indeed from pleasant.
-
-Morning brought renewal of toil and struggle. But "stout hearts to stey
-braes" is an excellent old Scottish motto. It was acted on by this
-gallant expedition, and so in a day or two they found themselves in a
-fresh turmoil of water beneath the splendid waterfalls of Theotonia.
-
-The river was low, and in consequence the cataract was seen at its best,
-though not its maddest. Fancy, if you can, paddling to keep your
-way--not to advance--face to face with a waterfall a mile at least in
-breadth, and probably forty feet in height, divided into three by rocky
-little islands, pouring in white-brown sheets sheer down over the rock,
-and falling with a steady roar into the awful cauldrons beneath. It is
-like a small Niagara, but, with the hills and rocks and stately woods,
-and the knowledge that one is in an uncivilized land, among wild beasts
-and wilder men, far more impressive.
-
-Our young heroes were astonished to note the multitudes of fish of
-various kinds on all sides of them. The pools were full.
-
-The larger could be easily speared, but bait of any kind they did not
-seem to fancy. They were troubled and excited, for up the great stream
-and through the wild rapids they had made their way in order to spawn in
-the head-waters of the Madeira and its tributaries. But Nature here had
-erected a barrier.
-
-Yet wild were their attempts to fling themselves over. Many succeeded.
-The fittest would survive. Others missed, or, gaining but the rim of the
-cataract, were hurled back, many being killed.
-
-Another halt, another night of dreaming of all kinds of wild adventures.
-The Indians had told the whites, the evening before, strange legends
-about the deep, almost bottomless, pools beneath the falls.
-
-Down there, according to them, devils dwell, and hold high revelry every
-time the moon is full. Dark? No it is not dark at the bottom, for
-Indians who have been dragged down there and afterwards escaped, have
-related their adventures, and spoken of the splendid caverns lit up by
-crimson fire, whose mouths open into the water. Caverns more gorgeous
-and beautiful than eyes of men ever alight upon above-ground. Caverns of
-crystal, of jasper, onyx, and ruby; caverns around whose stalactites
-demons, in the form of six-legged snakes, writhe and crawl, but are
-nevertheless possessed of the power to change their shapes in the
-twinkling of an eye from the horrible and grotesque to the beautiful.
-
-Prisoners from the upper world are tortured here, whether men, women, or
-children, and the awful rites performed are too fearful--so say the
-Indians--to be even hinted at.
-
-The cargo first and the empty canoes next had to be portaged half a mile
-on shore and above the lovely linn. This was extremely hard work, but
-it was safely accomplished at last.
-
-Roland was not only a born general, but a kind-hearted and excellent
-master. He never lost his temper, nor uttered a bad or impatient word,
-and thus there was not an Indian there who would not have died for him
-and his companion Dick.
-
-Moreover, the officer-Indians found that kind words were more effectual
-than cuts with the bark whips they carried, or blows with the hand on
-naked shoulders.
-
-And so the march and voyage was one of peace and comfort.
-
-Accidents, however, were by no means rare, for there were snags and
-sunken rocks to be guarded against, and more than one of the small
-canoes were stove and sunk, with the loss of precious lives.
-
- ----
-
-Roland determined not to overwork his crew. This might spoil
-everything, for many of the swamps in the neighbourhood of which they
-bivouacked are pestilential in the extreme.
-
-Mosquitoes were found rather a plague at first, but our boys had come
-prepared.
-
-They carried sheets of fine muslin--the ordinary mosquito-nets are
-useless--for if a "squeeter" gets one leg through, his body very soon
-wriggles after, and then he begins to sing a song of thanksgiving before
-piercing the skin of the sleeper with his poison-laden proboscis. But
-mosquitoes cannot get through the muslin, and have to sing to themselves
-on the other side.
-
-After a time, however, the muslin was not thought about, for all hands
-had received their baptism of blood, and bites were hardly felt.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX--THE PAGAN PAYNEES WERE THIRSTING FOR BLOOD
-
-
-A glance at any good map will show the reader the bearings and flow of
-this romantic and beautiful river, the Madeira. It will show him
-something else--the suggestive names of some of the cataracts or rapids
-that have to be negotiated by the enterprising sportsman or traveller in
-this wild land.
-
-The Misericordia Rapids and the Calderano de Inferno speak for
-themselves. The latter signifies Hell's Cauldron, and the former speaks
-to us of many a terrible accident that has occurred here--boats upset,
-bodies washed away in the torrent, or men seized and dragged below by
-voracious alligators before the very eyes of despairing friends.
-
-The Cauldron of Hell is a terrible place, and consists of a whole series
-of rapids each more fierce than the other. To attempt to stem currents
-like these would of course be madness. There is nothing for it but
-portage for a whole mile and more, and it can easily be guessed that
-this is slow and toilsome work indeed. Nor was the weather always
-propitious. Sometimes storms raged through the woods, with thunder,
-lightning, and drenching rain; or even on the brightest of days, down
-might sweep a whirlwind, utterly wrecking acres and acres of forest,
-tearing gigantic trees up by the roots, twisting them as if they were
-ropes, or tossing them high in air, and after cutting immense gaps
-through the jungle, retire, as if satisfied with the chaos and
-devastation worked, to the far-off mountain lands.
-
-Once when, with their rifles in hand, Roland and Dick were watching a
-small flock of tapirs at a pond of water, which formed the centre of a
-green oasis in the dark forest, they noticed a balloon-shaped cloud in
-the south. It got larger and larger as it advanced towards them, its
-great twisted tail seeming to trail along the earth.
-
-Lightning played incessantly around it, and as it got nearer loud peals
-of thunder were heard.
-
-This startled the tapirs. They held their heads aloft and snorted with
-terror, running a little this way and that, but huddling together at
-last in a timid crowd.
-
-Down came the awful whirlwind and dashed upon them.
-
-Roland and Dick threw themselves on the ground, face downwards,
-expecting death every moment.
-
-The din, the dust, the crashing and roaring, were terrific!
-
-When the storm had passed not a bush or leaf of the wood in which our
-heroes lay had been stirred. But the glade was now a strange sight.
-
-The waters of the pool had been taken up. The pond was dry. Only
-half-dead alligators lay there, writhing in agony, but every tapir had
-been not only killed but broken up, and mingled with twisted trees,
-pieces of rock, and hillocks of sand.
-
-Truly, although Nature in these regions may very often be seen in her
-most beautiful aspects, fearful indeed is she when in wrath and rage she
-comes riding in storms and whirlwinds from off the great table-lands,
-bent on ravaging the country beneath.
-
-"What a merciful escape!" said Roland, as he sat by Dick gazing on the
-destruction but a few yards farther off.
-
-"I could not have believed it," returned Dick. "Fancy a whirlwind like
-that sweeping over our camp, Roland?"
-
-"Yes, Dick, or over our boats on the river; but we must trust in
-Providence."
-
-Roland now blew his whistle, and a party of his own Indians soon
-appeared, headed by a few white men.
-
-"Boys," said Roland smiling, "my friend and I came out to shoot young
-tapir for you. Behold! Dame Nature has saved us the trouble, and flesh
-is scattered about in all directions."
-
-The Indians soon selected the choicest, and departed, singing their
-strange, monotonous chant.
-
-Presently Burly Bill himself appeared.
-
-He stood there amazed and astonished for fully half a minute before he
-could speak, and when he did it was to revert to his good old-fashioned
-Berkshire dialect.
-
-"My eye and Elizabeth Martin!" he exclaimed. "What be all that? Well, I
-never! 'Ad an 'urricane, then?"
-
-"It looks a trifle like it, Bill; but sit you down. Got your
-meerschaum?"
-
-"I've got him right enough."
-
-And it was not long before he began to blow a kind of hurricane cloud.
-For when Bill smoked furnaces weren't in it.
-
-"Do you think we have many more rapids to get past, Bill?"
-
-"A main lot on 'em, Master Roland. But we've got to do 'em. We haven't
-got to funk, has we?"
-
-"Oh no, Bill! but don't you think that we might have done better to have
-kept to the land altogether?"
-
-"No," said Bill bluntly, "I do not. We never could have got along, lad.
-Rivers to cross by fords that we might have had to travel leagues and
-leagues to find, lakes to bend round, marshes and swamps, where lurks a
-worse foe than your respectable and gentlemanly 'gators."
-
-"What, snakes?"
-
-"Oh, plenty of them! But I was a-loodin' to fever, what the doctors
-calls malarial fever, boys.
-
-"No, no," he added, "we'll go on now until we meet poor Benee, if he is
-still alive. If anything has happened to him--"
-
-"Or if he is false," interrupted Dick; "false as Peter would have us
-believe--"
-
-"Never mind wot Mr. Bloomin' Peter says! I swears by Benee, and nothing
-less than death can prevent his meeting us somewhere about the mouth of
-the Maya-tata River. You can bet your bottom dollar on that, lads."
-
-"Well, that is the rendezvous anyhow."
-
-"Oh," cried Dick, "sha'n't we be all rejoiced to see Benee once more!"
-
-"God grant," said Roland, "he may bring us good news."
-
-"He is a good man and will bring good tidings," ventured Burly Bill.
-
-Then he went on blowing his cloud, and the boys relapsed into silence.
-
-Each was thinking his own thoughts. But they started up at last.
-
-"I've managed to secure a grand healthy appetite!" cried Roland.
-
-"And so has this pale-faced boy," said Bill, shoving his great thumb as
-usual into the bowl of his meerschaum.
-
-So back to camp they started.
-
-Brawn had been on duty not far from Mr. Peter's tent, but he bounded up
-now with a joyful bark, and rushed forward to meet them.
-
-He displayed as much love and joy as if he had not seen them for a whole
-month.
-
-For ten days longer the expedition struggled onwards.
-
-The work was hard enough, but it really strengthened their hearts and
-increased the size of their muscles, till both their calves and biceps
-were as hard and tough as the stays of a battle-ship.
-
-Some people might think it strange, but it is a fact nevertheless, that
-the stronger they grew the happier and more hopeful were they. We may
-try to account for this physiologically or psychologically as we choose,
-but the great truth remains.
-
- ----
-
-One or two of the men were struck down with ague-fever, but Roland made
-them rest while on shore and lie down while on board.
-
-Meanwhile he doctored them with soup made from the choicest morsels of
-young tapir, with green fresh vegetable mixed therein, and for medicine
-they had rum and quinine, or rather, quinine in rum.
-
-The men liked their soup, but they liked their physic better.
-
-Between the rapids of Arara and the falls of Madeira was a beautiful
-sheet of water, and, being afraid of snags or submerged rocks, the
-canoes were kept well out into the stream.
-
-They made great progress here. The day was unusually fine. Hot the sun
-was certainly, but the men wore broad straw sombreros, and, seated in
-the shadow of their bamboo cabin, our heroes were cool and happy enough.
-
-The luscious acid fruits and fruit-drinks they partook of contributed
-largely to their comfort.
-
-Dick started a song, a river song he had learned on his uncle's
-plantation, and as Burly Bill's great canoe was not far off, he got a
-splendid bass.
-
-The scenery on each bank was very beautiful; rocks, and hills covered
-with great trees, the branches of which near to the stream with their
-wealth of foliage and climbing flowers, bent low to kiss the placid
-waters that went gliding, lapping, and purling onwards.
-
-Who could have believed that aught of danger to our heroes and their
-people could lurk anywhere beneath these sun-gilt trees?
-
-But even as they sang, fierce eyes were jealously watching them from the
-western bank.
-
-Presently first one arrow, and anon a whole shower of these deadly
-missiles, whizzed over them.
-
-One struck the cabin roof right above Dick's head, and another tore
-through the hat of the captain himself.
-
-But rifles were carried loaded, and Roland was ready.
-
-"Lay in your oars, men! Up, guns! Let them have a volley! Straight at
-yonder bush! Fire low, lads! See, yonder is a savage!"
-
-Dick took aim at a dark-skinned native who stood well out from the wood,
-and fired. He was close to the stream and had been about to shoot, but
-Dick's rifle took away his breath, and with an agonized scream he threw
-up his arms and fell headlong into the water.
-
-Volley after volley rang out now on the still air, and soon it was
-evident that the woods were cleared.
-
-"Those are the Paynee Indians without a doubt," said Dick; "the same
-sable devils that the skipper of that steamer warned us about."
-
-They saw no more of the enemy then, however, and the afternoon passed in
-peace.
-
-An hour and a half before sunset they landed at the mouth of a small but
-clear river, about ten miles to the north of the Falls of Woe.
-
-Close to the Madeira itself this lovely stream was thickly banked by
-forest, but the boats were taken higher up, and here excellent
-camping-ground was found in a country sparsely wooded.
-
-Far away to the west rose the everlasting hills, and our heroes thought
-they could perceive snow in the chasms between the rocks.
-
-Roland had not forgotten the adventure with the Indians, so scouts were
-sent out at once to scour the woods. They returned shortly before
-sunset, having seen no one.
-
-Both Roland and Dick were somewhat uneasy in their minds, nevertheless,
-and after dinner, in the wan and uncertain light of a half-moon, a
-double row of sentries was posted, and orders were given that they
-should be relieved every two hours, for the night was close and sultry,
-just such a night as causes restless somnolence. At such times a sentry
-may drop to sleep leaning on his gun or against a tree. He may slumber
-for an hour and not be aware he has even closed an eye.
-
-The boys themselves felt a strange drowsiness stealing away their
-senses. They would have rolled themselves up in their rugs and sought
-repose at once, but this would have made the night irksomely long.
-
-So they chatted, and even sang, till their usual hour.
-
-When they turned in, instead of dressing in a pyjama suit, they retained
-the clothes they had worn all day.
-
-Dick noticed that Roland was doing so, and followed his example. No
-reason was given by his friend, but Dick could guess it. Guess also
-what he meant by placing a rifle close beside him and looking to his
-revolvers before he lay down.
-
-Everyone in camp, except those on duty, was by this time sound asleep.
-Lights and fires were out, and the stillness was almost painful.
-
-Roland would have preferred hearing the wind sighing among the forest
-trees, the murmur of the river, or even the mournful wailing of the
-great blue owl.
-
-But never a leaf stirred, and as the moon sank lower and lower towards
-those strangely rugged and serrated mountains of the west, the boys
-themselves joined the sleepers, and all their care and anxiety was for
-the time being forgotten.
-
-The night waned and waned. The sentries had been changed, and it was
-now nearly one o'clock.
-
-There was a lake about a mile above the camp, that is, a mile farther
-westwards. It was surrounded by tall waving reeds, at least an acre
-wide all round.
-
-The home _par excellence_ of the dreaded 'gator was this dark and sombre
-sheet of water, for to it almost nightly came the tapirs to quench their
-thirst and to bathe.
-
-Silently a troop of these wonderful creatures came up out of the forest
-to-night, all in a string, with the largest and oldest a little way in
-front.
-
-Every now and then these pioneers would pause to listen. They knew the
-wiliness of the enemy that might be lying in wait for them. So acute in
-hearing are they said to be that they can distinguish the sound of a
-snake gliding over withered leaves at a distance of a hundred yards.
-But their sight also is a great protection to them. No 'gator can move
-among the reeds without bending them, move he never so warily. Above
-all this, the tapir's sense of smell is truly marvellous.
-
-To-night the old tapirs that led the van seemed particularly suspicious
-and cautious. Their signal for silence was a kind of snort or cough,
-and this was now ofttimes repeated.
-
-Suddenly the foremost tapir stamped his foot, and at once the whole
-drove turned or wheeled and glided back as silently as they had come,
-until the shadows of the great forest swallowed them up.
-
-What had they seen or heard? They had seen tall, dark human
-figures--one, two, three--a score and over, suddenly raise their heads
-and shoulders above the reeds, and after standing for a moment so still
-that they seemed part and parcel of the solemn scene, move out from the
-jungle and take their way towards the slumbering camp.
-
-Savages all, and on a mission of death.
-
-Nobody's dreams could have been a bit more happy than those of Dick
-Temple just at this moment.
-
-He was sitting once more on the deck of the great raft, which was slowly
-gliding down the sunlit sea-like Amazon. The near bank was tree-clad,
-and every branch was garlanded with flowers of rainbow hues.
-
-But Dick looked not on the trees nor the flowers, nor the waving
-undulating forest itself--looked not on the sun-kissed river. His eyes
-were fixed on a brightly-beautiful and happy face. It was Peggy who sat
-beside him, Peggy to whom he was breathing words of affection and love,
-Peggy with shy, half-flushed face and slightly averted head.
-
-But suddenly this scene was changed, and he awoke with a start to grasp
-his rifle. A shrill quavering yell rang through the camp, and awakened
-every echo in the forest.
-
-The Indians--the dreaded Paynee tribe of cannibals--were on them. That
-yell was a war-cry. These pagan Paynees were thirsting for blood.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI--THE FOREST IS SHEETED IN FLAMES
-
-
-For just a few moments Roland was taken aback. Then, in a steady manly
-voice that could be heard all over the camp, he gave the order.
-
-"All men down! The Indians are approaching from the west. Fire low,
-lads--between you and the light.
-
-"Don't waste a shot!" he added.
-
-[Illustration: "FIRE LOW, LADS.... DON'T WASTE A SHOT!"]
-
-Three Indians bit the dust at the first volley, and though the rest
-struggled on to the attack, it was only to be quickly repulsed.
-
-In ten minutes' time all had fled, and the great forest and woodland was
-as silent as before.
-
-It was Roland's voice that again broke the stillness.
-
-"Rally round, boys," he shouted, "and let me know the worst."
-
-The sacrifice of life, however, was confined to three poor fellows, one
-white man and two peons; and no one was wounded.
-
-Nobody thought of going to sleep again on this sad night, and when red
-clouds were at last seen over the green-wooded horizon, heralding the
-approach of day, a general sense of relief was felt by all in the little
-camp.
-
-Soon after sunrise breakfast was served, and eaten with avidity by all
-hands now in camp, for scouts were out, and Dick and Roland awaited the
-news they would bring with some degree of impatience.
-
-The scouting was really a sort of reconnaisance in force, by picked
-Indians and whites under the command of the redoubtable Burly Bill.
-
-Suddenly Brawn raised his head and gave vent to an angry "wouff!" and
-almost at the same time the sound of distant rifle-firing fell on the
-ears of the little army.
-
-Half an hour after this, Bill and two men stepped out from the bush and
-advanced.
-
-His brow was bound with a blood-stained handkerchief.
-
-It was a spear wound, but he would not hear of it being dressed at
-present.
-
-"What cheer then, Bill?"
-
-"Not much of that," he answered, throwing himself down and lighting that
-marvellous meerschaum, from which he appeared to get so much
-consolation.
-
-"Not a vast deal of cheer. Yes, I'll eat after I gets a bit cooler
-like."
-
-"Ay, we'll have to fight the Dun-skins. They swarm in the forest
-between us and the Madeira, and they are about as far from bein' angels
-as any durned nigger could be."
-
-"And what do you advise, Bill?"
-
-"Well," was the reply, "as soon as your boys get their nose-bags off, my
-advice is to set to work with spade and shovel and transform this 'ere
-camp into a fortress.
-
-"Ay, and it is one we won't be able to abandon for days and days to
-come," he added.
-
-The men were now speedily told off to duty, and in a very short time had
-made the camp all but impregnable, and quite strong enough to give an
-excellent account of any number of Dun-skins.
-
-The Paynee Indians are a semi-nomadic tribe of most implacable savages,
-who roam over hill and dell and upland, hunting or fighting as the case
-may be, but who have nevertheless a home in the dark mountain fastnesses
-of the far interior.
-
-They are cannibals, though once, long, long ago, a band of Jesuits
-attempted their reclamation.
-
-These brave missionaries numbered in all but one hundred and twenty men,
-and they went among the terrible natives with, figuratively speaking,
-their prayer-books in one hand, their lives in the other.
-
-All went well for a time. They succeeded in winning the affections of
-the savages. They erected rude churches, and even to this day crosses
-of stone are to be found in this wild land, half-buried among the rank
-vegetation.
-
-But there came a day, and a sad one it was, when the cannibals were
-attacked by a wild hill-tribe. These highlanders had heard that, owing
-to the new religion, their ancient enemies had degenerated into old
-wives and squaws.
-
-A terrible battle ensued, during which the men from the uplands found
-out their mistake, for they were repulsed with fearful slaughter.
-
-All might have gone well with the Jesuits even yet but for one
-_contretemps_.
-
-At the very moment when the savages returned wildly exultant from the
-hills, bearing, horrible to relate, joints of human flesh on their
-spears, there came from the east a party of men who had been down to the
-banks of the Madeira, and had attacked and looted a small steamer that
-among other things had much fire-water on board.
-
-Oh, that accursed fire-water, how terrible its results wherever on earth
-it gains ascendancy!
-
-All the fearful passions of these savages were soon let loose. The
-scene was like pandemonium.
-
-The poor Jesuits hid themselves in their little church, barricading the
-door, and devoting the first part of the night to prayer and song. But
-at midnight the awful howling of the cannibals coming nearer and nearer
-told them that they had been missed, and that their doom was now sealed.
-
-Only one man escaped to tell the terrible tale.
-
-And these, or rather their descendants, were the very cannibals that
-Roland's little army had now to do battle with.
-
-Both he and Dick, however, kept up a good heart.
-
-There was ammunition enough to last for months of desultory firing, if
-necessary, and when the attack was made at last, after Bill's scouts had
-been driven in, the savages learned a lesson they were never likely to
-forget.
-
-Brave indeed they were, and over and over again they charged, spear in
-hand, almost into the trenches. But only to be thrust back wounded, or
-to die where they stood, beneath a steady revolver fire.
-
-But they retreated almost as quickly as they had come, and once more
-sought the shelter of bush and jungle.
-
-Not for very long, however. They were evidently determined that the
-little garrison should enjoy no peace.
-
-They had changed their tactics now, and instead of making wild rushes
-towards the ramparts, they commenced to bombard the fort with large
-stones.
-
-With their slings the Bolivian Indians can aim with great precision, for
-they learn the art when they are mere infants.
-
-As no one showed above the ramparts, there was in this case no human
-target for the missiles, but use was made of larger stones, and these
-kept falling into the trenches in all directions, so that much mischief
-was done and many men were hurt.
-
-A terrible rifle fire was now opened upon that part of the bush in which
-the cannibal savages were supposed to be in force, and from the howling
-and shrieking that immediately followed, it was evident that many
-bullets were finding their billets.
-
-But soon even these sounds died away, and it was evident enough that the
-enemy had retired, no doubt with the intention of inventing some new
-form of attack. There was peace now for many hours, and Roland took
-advantage of this to order dinner to be got ready. No men, unless it be
-the Scotch, can fight well on empty stomachs.
-
-The wounded were attended to and made as comfortable as possible, and
-after this there was apparently very little to do except to wait and
-watch.
-
-Burly Bill brought out his consolatory meerschaum. But while he puffed
-away, he was not idle. He was thinking.
-
-Now thinking was not very much in this honest fellow's line. Action was
-more his _forte_. But the present occasion demanded thought.
-
-The afternoon was already far spent. The sentries--lynx-eyed Indians,
-rifles in hand--were watching the bush, and longing for a shot. Roland
-and Dick, with Bill and big Brawn, were seated in the shade of a green
-and spreading tree, and all had been silent for some considerable time.
-
-"I say, young fellows!" said Bill at last, "this kind of lounging
-doesn't suit me. What say you to a council of war?"
-
-"Well, you've been thinking, Bill?"
-
-"Ay, I've been doin' a smart bit o' that. Let us consult Charlie."
-
-Charlie the ex-cannibal was now brought forward and seated on the grass.
-
-There was a deal of practical knowledge in this Indian's head. His had
-been a very long experience of savage warfare and wandering in forests
-and wilds; and he was proud now to be consulted.
-
-"Charlie," said Bill, "what do you think of the situation?"
-
-"De sit-uation?" was the reply. "Me not likee he. Me tinkee we sitee
-too much. Byme by, de cannibal he come much quick. Ah! dere will soon
-be muchee much too much sabage cannibal! Fust de killee you and den de
-eatee you, and make fine bobbery. Ha! ha!"
-
-"Well, Charlie, I don't think that there is a deal to laugh at.
-Howsomever, we've got to do something soon."
-
-"So, so," said Charlie, "notwidstanding."
-
-"Well, I've been thinking that we should make tracks for the other side
-of the river. You see these savage rapscallions have no canoes, and
-they seem to have no food. They are not herons or storks, and can't
-wade through deep water."
-
-"Foh true, sah. Dey am not stohks and dey am not herons notwidstanding,
-but see, sah, ebery man he am his own canoe! No stohks, but all same
-one frog, notwidstanding foh true!"
-
-"And you think they would follow us?"
-
-"All same's one eel--two hundred eel. Dey swim wid spears in mouf, and
-bow and arrow held high. Ha! ha! good soldier, ebery modder's son!"
-
-"I'll tell you my plan," said Dick Temple. "Just loose off the boats,
-and make one bold dash for liberty."
-
-"Ha! ha! sah!" cried Charlie. "I takes de liberty to laugh
-notwidstanding, foh true. You plenty much all dead men 'fore you get
-into de big ribber!"
-
-"Well, hang it!" said Dick, "we're not going to stay here with the
-pretty prospect before us of being all scuppered and eaten. What say
-you, Roll?"
-
-"I think," said Roland quietly, "that Charlie there has come prepared to
-speak, for his face is just beaming."
-
-"See, sah," cried Charlie, evidently pleased, "you trust all to Charlie.
-He makee you free after dark. Down in de fo'est yondah dere am mebbe
-two, mebbee free hunder' sabages. Now dey not want to fight till de
-dark. Dey will fight all de same when de moon rise, and de rifle not
-muchee good. No hit in de dark, on'y jes' puff, puff.
-
-"See," he continued, "de wind begin to blow a leetle. De wind get high
-byme by, den de sun go out, and Charlie he fiah de forest."
-
-"Fire the forest, Charlie?"
-
-"Notwidstanding," said Charlie grimly.
-
-"When," he added, "you see de flame curl up, be all ready. Soon de
-flame he bus' highah and highah, and all by de ribber bank one big
-blaze."
-
-"Charlie," cried Bill, "you're a brick! Give us a shake of your yellow
-hand. Hurrah! boys, Charlie's going to do it!"
-
-Never perhaps was sunset waited for with more impatience.
-
-The great and unanswerable question was this: Would these savages attack
-immediately after darkness fell, or would they take some time to
-deliberate?
-
-But behind the rugged mountains down sank the sun at last, and after a
-brief twilight the stars shone out.
-
-Charlie was not going alone. He had asked for the assistance of many
-Indians, and in a whisper he gave them their orders.
-
-Our heroes did not interfere in any way, for fear of confusing the good
-fellow's plans. But they soon noted that while Charlie himself and two
-Indians left in one of the smallest canoes, the others disappeared like
-snakes in the grass, creeping northwards over the plain.
-
-And now there was silence, for the wind was hushed; silence everywhere,
-that deep, indescribable silence which nightfall ever brings to a wild
-and savage land, in which even the beasts are still and listening in
-forest and dell, not knowing from which direction danger may spring.
-
-Within the little camp nothing could be done but lie still, every man
-holding his breath with suspense. Nothing could be done save watch,
-wait, count the weary minutes, and marvel at their length.
-
-Suddenly, however, the deep silence was broken by a mournful cry that
-came from riverwards. It was apparently that of an owl seeking for its
-mate, but it was taken up and repeated northwards all over the plain
-twixt camp and forest, and almost at the same time tiny tongues of fire
-sprang up here and there and everywhere.
-
-Higher and higher they leapt, along the ground they ran, meeting in all
-directions down the dark river and across the wild moor by the edge of
-the woodland. The undergrowth was dry, the grass was withered, and in
-an amazingly short time the whole forest by the banks of the Madeira was
-sheeted in devastating flames.
-
-The savages had been massed in the centre of the jungle, and just
-preparing to issue forth and carry death into the camp of our heroes,
-when suddenly the crackling of the flames fell on their ears, and they
-knew they were caught in a fire-trap, with scarcely any means of escape.
-
-Charlie had been terribly in earnest, and, hurrying on in his canoe
-towards the Madeira, he lit the bank all along, and even down the side
-of the great stream itself.
-
-It was evidently his savage intention to roast these poor cannibals
-alive.
-
-As it was, the only outlet towards salvation that remained for them was
-the Madeira's dark brink.
-
-"Now, boys, now!" shouted Roland, when he saw that the fire had gained
-entire mastery, and, making its own wind, was sweeping onwards, licking
-up everything in its way.
-
-"Now, lads, on board! Let us get off down stream in all haste.
-Hurrah!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII--EVENINGS BY THE CAMP FIRE
-
-
-The moorings were speedily slipped, and by the light of the blazing
-forest the peons bent sturdily to their paddles, and the canoe went
-dancing down stream.
-
-They had already taken on board the Indians who had assisted Charlie,
-and before long his own boat hove in sight, and was soon taken in tow by
-the largest canoe.
-
-That burning forest formed a scene which never could be forgotten. From
-the south side, where the boats were speedily rushing down the stream on
-their way to the Madeira, and from which came the light wind that was
-now blowing, the flames leaned over as it were, instead of ascending
-high in air, and the smoke and sparks took the same direction.
-
-The sparks were as thick as snow-flakes in a snow-storm, and the lurid
-tongues of fire darted high as the zenith, playing with the clouds of
-smoke or licking them up.
-
-The noise was indescribable, yet above the roaring and the crackling
-could be heard the shouts of the maddened savages, as they sought exit
-from the hell around them.
-
-There was no escape except by the Madeira's bank, and to get even at
-this they had to dash through the burning bushes.
-
-Alas! Charlie and his assistants had done their work all too well, and
-I fear that one-half of the cannibals were smothered, dragged down by
-alligators, or found a watery grave.
-
-As the canoes shot past, the heat was terrible, and next morning at
-daybreak, when they were far up the river, towards the falls, Roland and
-his friend were surprised to notice that the palm-leaves which covered
-the cabin were brown and scorched.
-
-On the whole the experience they had gained of the ferocity and fighting
-abilities of these Paynee cannibals was such as they were not likely to
-forget.
-
- ----
-
-During all this period of excitement the suspect Peter had remained
-perfectly quiescent. Indeed he seemed now quite apathetic, taking very
-little notice of anything around him, and eating the food placed before
-him in a way that was almost mechanical. Neither Roland nor Dick had
-taken much heed of him till now. When, however, they observed his
-strange demeanour they took council together and determined that the
-watch over him should be made extra strict, lest he should spring
-overboard and be drowned.
-
-Roland may seem to have been harsh with Mr. Peter. But he only took
-proper precautions, and more than once he assured Dick that if the man's
-innocence were proved he would recompense him a hundred-fold.
-
-"But," added Dick meaningly, "if he is really guilty of the terrible
-crime we impute to him, he cannot be punished too severely."
-
-The expedition had that afternoon to land their stores once more to
-avoid rapids, and a little before sunset they encamped near to the edge
-of a beautiful wood well back from the banks of the Madeira.
-
-The night passed without adventure of any kind, and everyone awoke as
-fresh and full of life and go as the larks that climb the sky to meet
-the morning sun.
-
-Another hard day's paddling and towing and portage, and they found
-themselves high above the Madeira Falls in smooth water, and at the
-entrance to a kind of bay which formed the mouth or confluence of the
-two rivers, called Beni and Madro de Dios. This last is called the
-Maya-tata by the Bolivians.
-
-It is a beautiful stream, overhung by hill and forest, and rises fully
-two hundred miles southward and west from a thousand little rivulets
-that drain the marvellous mountains of Karavaya.
-
-The Beni joins this river about ten or twelve miles above the banks of
-the Madeira. It lies farther to the south and the east, and may be said
-to rise in the La Paz district itself, where it is called the Rio de la
-Paz.
-
-To the north-west of both these big rivers lies the great unexplored
-region, the land of the Bolivian and Peruvian cannibals.
-
-Small need have we to continue to hunt and shoot in Africa, wildly
-interesting though the country is, when such a marvellous tract of tens
-of thousands of square miles is hidden here, all unvisited as yet by a
-single British explorer.
-
-And what splendid possibilities for travel and adventure are here! A
-land larger than Great Britain, France, and Ireland thrown together,
-which no one knows anything about; a land rich in forest and prairie; a
-land the mineral wealth of which is virtually inexhaustible; a land of
-beauty; a land of lake and stream, of hills and rocks and verdant
-prairie, and a veritable land of flowers!
-
-A land, it is true, where wild beasts lurk and prowl, and where unknown
-tribes of savages wander hither and thither and hunt and fight, but all
-as free as the wind that wantons through their forest trees.
-
- ----
-
-The boats were paddled several miles up-stream to a place where the
-scenery was more open.
-
-At every bend and reach of the river Roland expected to find Benee
-waiting for them. Perhaps he had built a hut and was living by
-fishing-rod and gun.
-
-But no Benee was visible and no hut.
-
-Together the two friends, Roland and Dick, accompanied by Charlie and
-Brawn, took their way across the plain and through the scrub, towards a
-lofty, cone-shaped hill that seemed to dominate all the scenery in its
-immediate neighbourhood.
-
-To the very top of this mountain they climbed, agreed between themselves
-not to look back until they had reached the summit, in order that the
-wild beauty of this lone lorn land should burst upon them in all its
-glory, and at once.
-
-They kept to their resolution, and were amply rewarded.
-
-As far as eye could reach in any direction was a vast panorama of
-mountain, forest, and stream, with many a beautiful lake glittering
-silvery in the sunshine.
-
-But no smoke, no indication of inhabitants anywhere.
-
-"It seems to be quite an untenanted country we have struck," said Dick.
-
-"All the better for us, perhaps, Dick," said Roland, "for farther we
-cannot proceed until poor Benee comes. He ought to have been here before
-now. But what adventures and dangers he may have had to pass through
-Heaven and himself only know."
-
-"Charlie," he continued, "in the event of Benee not turning up within
-the next week or two, remember the task of guiding us to the very palace
-gates of the cannibal king devolves upon you."
-
-"You speakee me too muchee fly-high Englese," said Charlie. "But
-Charlie he thinkee he understand. You wantee me takee you to de king's
-gate. I can do."
-
-"That is enough, Charlie, and we can trust you. You have hitherto been
-very faithful, and what we should do without you I know not."
-
-"Now, Dick, I guess we'll get down a little more speedily than we came
-up."
-
-"We'll try, Roland, old man."
-
-All preparations were now made to camp near to the river, where the
-canoes were moored.
-
-They did not expect any attack by armed Indians, nevertheless it was
-deemed well to be on the safe side.
-
-Spades and shovels were accordingly brought into use, and even before
-sunset a deep trench and embankment were thrown up around the tents, and
-at nightfall sentries were posted at each corner.
-
-For a few days the weather was so cold and stormy that there was little
-comfort in either shooting or fishing. It cleared up after this,
-however, and at noon the sun was almost too hot.
-
-They found caves in the rocks by the river-side in which were springs
-bursting and bubbling up through limestone rocks, and quartz as white as
-the driven snow. The water was exquisitely cool and refreshing.
-
-The days were spent in exploring the country all around and in shooting,
-principally for the purpose of keeping the larder well supplied.
-
-Luckily the Indians were very easy to please in the matter of food,
-though their captains liked a little more luxury.
-
-But this land was full of game of every sort, and the river was alive
-with fish, and so unsophisticated were these that they sprang at a hook
-if it were baited only with a morsel of glittering mica picked off a
-rock.
-
-What with fish and fowl and flesh of small deer, little wild pigs and
-the young of the tapir, there would be very little fear of starvation
-should they remain here for a hundred years.
-
-Far up the Maya-tata canoe excursions were made, and at every bend of
-this strange river the scenery seemed more delightfully wild, silent,
-and beautiful.
-
-"Heigh-ho!" said Dick one day. "I think I should not mind living here
-for years and years, did I but know that poor Peggy was safe and well."
-
-"Ah! yes, that is the ever-abiding anxiety, but we are not to lose
-heart, are we?"
-
-"No," said Dick emphatically. "If the worst should come to the worst,
-let us try to look fate fearlessly in the face, as men should."
-
-"Bravo, Dick!"
-
-The evenings closed in at an unconscionably early hour, as they always
-do in these regions, and at times the long forenights were somewhat
-irksome.
-
-I have not said much about the captains of the great canoes. With one
-exception, these were half-castes, and spoke but little.
-
-The exception was Don Rodrigo, who in his time had been a great
-traveller.
-
-He was a man of about fifty, strongly built, but as wiry withal as an
-Arab of the desert.
-
-Genial was he too, and while yarning or playing cards--the cigarette for
-ever in his mouth, sometimes even two--there was always a pleasant smile
-playing around his mouth and eyes.
-
-He liked our young heroes, and they trusted him. Indeed, Brawn had taken
-to the man, and often as he squatted in the large tent of an evening,
-playing cards or dominoes with the boys, big Brawn would lay his honest
-head down on Rodrigo's knee with a sigh of satisfaction and go off to
-sleep.
-
-Rodrigo could sing a good Spanish song, and had a sweet melodious voice
-that would have gone excellently well with a guitar accompaniment; but
-guitar there was none.
-
-Versatile and clever, nevertheless, was Rodrigo, and he had manufactured
-a kind of musical instrument composed of pieces of glass and hard wood
-hung on tape bands across a board. While he sang, Rodrigo used to beat
-a charming accompaniment with little pith hammers.
-
-Some of his songs were very merry indeed and very droll, and all hands
-used to join in the chorus, even the white men and Indians outside.
-
-So the boys' days were for the time being somewhat of the nature of a
-long picnic or holiday.
-
-The story-telling of an evening helped greatly to wile the time away.
-
-Neither Dick nor Roland had any yarns to spin, but Charlie had stories
-of his wild and adventurous life in the bush, which were listened to
-with much pleasure. On the other hand, Rodrigo had been everywhere
-apparently, and done everything, so that he was the chief story-teller.
-
-The man's English was fairly good, with just a little of the Peruvian
-labial accent, which really added to its attractiveness, while at times
-he affected the Mexican drawl.
-
-Around the camp-fire I have seldom or never known what may be called
-systematic yarn-spinning. Everything comes spontaneously, one simple
-yarn or wild adventure leading up to the other. If now and then a song
-intervenes, all the better, and all the more likely is one to spend a
-pleasant evening either in camp or in galley on board ship.
-
-Don Rodrigo did at times let our heroes have some tales that made their
-scalps creep, but they liked him best when he was giving them simple
-narratives of travel, and for this reason: they wanted to learn all they
-could about the country in which they now were.
-
-And Rodrigo knew it well, even from Arauco on the western shore to the
-great marsh-lands of the Paraguay or the mountain fastnesses of
-Albuquerque on the east.
-
-But the range of Rodrigo's travels was not bounded by Brazil, or the
-great Pacific Ocean itself. He had been a cow-boy in Mexico; he had
-bolo'd guanacos on the Pampas; he had wandered among the Patagonians, or
-on fleet horses scoured their wondrous plains; he had dwelt in the
-cities, or call them "towns", if so minded, that border the northern
-shores of the Straits of Magellan; he had even visited Tierra del
-Fuego--the land of fire--and from the black boats of savages had helped
-to spear the silken-coated otters of those wild and stormy seas; and he
-had sailed for years among the glorious sunlit islands of the Southern
-Pacific.
-
-"As to far Bolivia," he said one evening, while his eyes followed the
-rings of pale-blue smoke he emitted as they rose to the tent-roof. "As
-to far Bolivia, dear boys, well, you've seen a good slice of the wilder
-regions of it, but it is to La Paz you must some day go, and to the
-splendid fresh-water ocean called the Titicaca.
-
-"Lads, I never measured it, but, roughly guessing, I should say that it
-is over one hundred miles in length, and in some places fifty wide."
-
-"Wait one moment," said Burly Bill, "this is getting interesting, but my
-meerschaum wants to be loaded."
-
-"Now," he added, a few minutes after, "just fire away, my friend."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII--A MARVELLOUS LAKE IN A MARVELLOUS LAND--LA PAZ
-
-
-"Mebbe," said Rodrigo, "if you knew the down-south Bolivians as well as
-I do, you would not respect them a great deal. Fact is, boys, there is
-little to respect them for.
-
-"Brave? Well, if you can call slaves brave, then they're about as
-bully's they make 'em.
-
-"I have mentioned the inland sea called Lake Titicaca. Ah, boys, you
-must see this fresh-water ocean for yourselves! and if ever you get
-married, why, take my advice and go and spend your honeymoon there.
-
-"Me married, did you say, Mr. Bill? It strikes me, sir, I know a trick
-worth several of that. Been in love as often as I've got toes and
-fingers, and mebbe teeth, but no tying up for life, I'm too old a
-starling to be tamed.
-
-"But think, _amigo mio_, of a lake situated in a grand mountain-land,
-the level of its waters just thirteen thousand feet above the blue
-Pacific.
-
-"Surrounded by the wildest scenery you can imagine. The wildest, ay,
-boys, and the most romantic.
-
-"You have one beautiful lake or loch in your Britain--and I have
-travelled all over that land of the free,--I mean Loch Ness, and the
-surrounding mountains and glens are magnificent; but, bless my buttons,
-boys, you wouldn't have room in Britain for such a lake as the mighty
-Titicaca. It would occupy all your English Midlands, and you'd have to
-give the farmers a free passage to Australia."
-
-"How do you travel on this lake?" said Dick Temple.
-
-"Ah!" continued Rodrigo, "I can answer that; and here lies another
-marvel. For at this enormous height above the ocean-level, steamboats,
-ply up and down. No, not built there, but in sections sent from America,
-and I believe even from England. The labour of dragging these sections
-over the mountain-chains may easily be guessed.
-
-"The steamers are neither so large nor so fine as your Clyde boats, but
-there is a lot of honest comfort in them after all.
-
-"And terrible storms sometimes sweep down from the lofty Cordilleras,
-and then the lake is all a chaos of broken water and waves even houses
-high. If caught in such storms, ordinary boats are speedily sunk, and
-lucky are even the steamers if shelter is handy.
-
-"Well, what would this world be, I wonder, if it were always all
-sunshine. We should soon get well tired of it, I guess, and want to go
-somewhere else--to murky England, for example."
-
-Rodrigo blew volumes of smoke before he continued his desultory yarn.
-
-"Do you know, boys, what I saw when in your Britain, south of the Tweed?
-I saw men calling themselves sportsmen chasing poor little hares with
-harriers, and following unfortunate stags with buck-hounds. I saw them
-hunt the fox too, men and women in a drove, and I called them in my own
-mind cowards all. Brutality and cowardice in every face, and there
-wasn't a farmer in the flock of stag-hunting Jockies and Jennies who
-could muster courage enough to face a puma or even an old baboon with a
-supple stick in its hand. Pah!
-
-"But among the hills and forests around this Lake Titicaca is the
-paradise of the hunter who has a bit of sand and grit in his substance,
-and is not afraid to walk a whole mile away from a cow's tail.
-
-"No, there are no dangerous Indians that ever I came across among the
-mountains and glens; but as you never know what may happen, you've got
-to keep your cartridges free from damp.
-
-"What kind of game? Well, I was going to say pretty much of all sorts.
-We haven't got giraffes nor elephants, it is true, nor do we miss them
-much.
-
-"But there are fish in the lake and beasts on the shore, and rod and gun
-will get but little holiday, I assure you, lads, if you elect to travel
-in that strange land.
-
-"I hardly know very much about the fish. They say that the lake is
-bottomless, and that not only is it swarming with fish, wherever there
-is a bank, but that terrible animals or beasts have been seen on its
-deep-blue surface; creatures so fearful in aspect that even their sudden
-appearance has turned gray the hairs of those who beheld them.
-
-"But I calculate that this is all Indian gammon or superstition.
-
-"As for me, I've been always more at home in the woods and forests, and
-on the mountain's brow.
-
-"I'm not going to boast, boys, but I've climbed the highest hills of the
-Cordilleras, where I have had no companion save the condor.
-
-"You Europeans call the eagle the bird of Jove. If that is so, I want to
-ask them where the condor comes in.
-
-"Why, your golden eagle of Scottish wilds isn't a circumstance to the
-condor of the Andes. He is no more to be compared to this great forest
-vulture than a spring chicken is to a Christmas turkey.
-
-"But the condor is only one of a thousand wild birds of prey, or of
-song, found in the Andean regions or giant Cordilleras.
-
-"And at lower altitude we find the llamas, the guanacos, and herds of
-wild vicunas.
-
-"You may come across the puma and the jaguar also, and be sorry you've
-met.
-
-"Then there are goats, foxes, and wild dogs, as well as the viscacha and
-the chinchilla, to say nothing of deer.
-
-"But on the great lake itself, apart from all thought of fish, you need
-never go without a jolly good dinner if the rarest of water-fowl will
-please you. Ducks and geese galore, and other species too many to
-name."
-
-"That is a land, and that is a lake," said Dick musingly, "that I should
-dearly like to visit. Yes, and to dwell in or on for a time.
-
-"I suppose labour is cheap?" he added enquiringly.
-
-"I guess," returned Rodrigo, "that if you wanted to erect a wooden hut
-on some high and healthy promontory overlooking the lake--and this would
-be your best holt--you would have to learn the use of axe and adze and
-saw, and learn also how to drive a nail or two without doubling it over
-your thumb and hitting the wrong nail on the head."
-
-"Well, anyhow," said Dick, "I shall dream to-night of your great inland
-ocean, of your Lake Titicaca, and in my dreams I shall imagine I am
-already there. I suppose the woods are alive with beautiful birds?"
-
-"Yes," said Rodrigo, "and with splendid moths and butterflies also; so
-let these have a place in your dreams as well. Throw in chattering
-monkeys too, and beautiful parrots that love to mock every sound they
-hear around them. Let there be evergreen trees draped in garments of
-climbing flowers, roaring torrents, wild foaming rivers, that during
-storms roll down before them, from the flooded mountains, massive tree
-trunks, and boulders houses high."
-
-"You are quite poetic!"
-
-"But I am not done yet. People your paradise with strangely beautiful
-lizards that creep and crawl everywhere, looking like living flowers,
-and arrayed in colours that rival the tints of the rainbow. Lizards--ay,
-and snakes; but bless you, boys, these are very innocent, objecting to
-nothing except to having their tails trodden on."
-
-"Well, no creature cares for treatment like that," said Roland. "If you
-and I go to this land of beauty, Dick, we must make a point of not
-treading on snakes' tails."
-
-"But, boys, there are fortunes in this land of ours also. Fortunes to
-be had for the digging."
-
-"Copper?"
-
-"Yes, and gold as well!"
-
-Rodrigo paused to roll and light another cigarette. I have never seen
-anyone do so more deftly. He seemed to take an acute delight in the
-process. He held the snow-white tissue-paper lovingly in his grasp,
-while with his forefinger and thumb he apportioned to it just the right
-quantity of yellow fragrant Virginia leaf, then twisting it tenderly,
-gently, he conveyed it to his lips.
-
-Said Dick now, "I have often heard of the wondrous city of La Paz, and
-to me it has always seemed a sort of semi-mythical town--a South
-American Timbuctoo."
-
-"Ah, lad, it is far from being mythical! On the contrary, it is very
-real, and so are everything and everybody in it.
-
-"I could not, however, call it, speaking conscientiously, a gem of a
-place, though it might be made so. But you see, boys, there is a deal
-of Spanish or Portuguese blood in the veins of the real whites
-here--though, mind you, three-fourths of the population are Indians of
-almost every Bolivian race. Well, the motto of the dark-eyed whites
-seems to be Manana (pronounce Mah-nyah-nah), which signifies
-'to-morrow', you know. Consequently, with the very best intentions in
-the world, they hardly ever finish anything they begin. Some of the
-streets are decently paved, but every now and then you come to a slough
-of despond. Many of the houses are almost palatial, but they stand side
-by side with, and are jostled by, the vile mud-huts of the native
-population. They have a cathedral and a bazaar, but neither is finished
-yet.
-
-"Well, La Paz stands at a great altitude above the ocean. It is well
-worthy of a visit. If you go there, however, there are two things you
-must not forget to take with you, namely, a bottle of smelling-salts and
-plenty of eau-de-Cologne."
-
-"The place smells--slightly, then, I suppose," ventured Dick.
-
-"Ha! ha! ha!" Rodrigo had a hearty laugh of his own. "Yes, it smells
-slightly. So do the people, I may add.
-
-"The natives of La Paz, although some of them boast of a direct descent
-from the ancient Incas, are to all intents and purposes slaves.
-
-"Well, boys, when I say 'slaves' I calculate I know pretty well what I
-am talking about. The old feudal system holds sway in what we call the
-civilized portions of Bolivia. Civilization, indeed! Only in the wilds
-is there true freedom and independence. The servants on ranches and
-farms are bought or sold with the land on which they live. So, Mr.
-Bill, if you purchase a farm in Bolivia, it won't be only the cows and
-cocks and hens you'll have to take, but the servants as well, ay, and
-the children of these.
-
-"Bolivian Indians, who are troubled with families that they consider a
-trifle too large for their income, have a simple and easy method of
-meeting the difficulty. They just take what you might call the surplus
-children to some white-man farmer and sell them as they do their cows."
-
-"Then these children are just brought up as slaves?"
-
-"Yes, their masters treat them fairly well, but they generally make good
-use of the whip. 'Spare the rod and spoil the child' is a motto they
-play up to most emphatically, and certainly I have never known the rod
-to be spared, nor the child to be spoiled either.
-
-"Oh! by the way, as long as my hand is in I may tell you about the
-servants that the gentry-folks of La Paz keep. I don't think any
-European would be plagued with such a dirty squad, for in a household
-of, say, ten, there must be ten slaves at the very least, to say nothing
-of the pongo man.
-
-"This pongo man is in reality the charwoman of La Paz. It is he who
-does all the dirty work, and a disagreeable-looking and painfully dirty
-blackguard he is himself. It is not his custom to stay more than a week
-with any one family. He likes to be always on the move.
-
-"He assists the cook; he collects dried llama manure for firewood, as
-Paddy might say; he fetches water from the fountain; he brings home the
-marketing, in the shape of meat and vegetables; he cleans and scrubs
-everywhere, receiving few pence for his trouble, but an indefinite
-number of kicks and cuffs, while his bed at night is on the cold stones
-behind the hall door. Yet with all his ill-usage, he seems just about as
-happy as a New Hollander, and you always find him trotting around
-trilling a song.
-
-"Ah, there is nothing like contentment in this world, boys!"
-
-"Yes, Mr. Bill, I have seen one or two really pretty girls among the
-Bolivians, but never lost my heart to any of them, for between you and
-me, they don't either brush or comb their hair, and when walking with
-them it is best to keep the weather-gauge. And that's a hint worth
-having, I can assure you."
-
- ----
-
-On the very next evening after Don Rodrigo spoke his piece, as he
-phrased it, about the strange customs and habits of the Bolivians, all
-were assembled as usual in the biggest tent.
-
-Burly Bill and his meerschaum were getting on remarkably well together,
-the Don was rolling a cigarette, when suddenly Brawn started up as if
-from a dream, and stood with his ears pricked and his head a little to
-one side, gazing out into the darkness.
-
-He uttered no warning growl, and made no sound of any sort, but his tail
-was gently agitated, as if something pleased him.
-
-Then with one impatient "Yap!" he sprang away, and was seen no more for
-a few minutes.
-
-"What can ail the dog?" said Roland.
-
-"What, indeed?" said Dick.
-
-And now footsteps soft and slow were heard approaching the tent, and
-next minute poor Benee himself staggered in and almost fell at Roland's
-feet.
-
-The honest hound seemed almost beside himself with joy, but he had sense
-enough to know that his old favourite, Benee, was exhausted and ill,
-and, looking up into his young master's face, appeared to plead for his
-assistance.
-
-Benee's cheeks were hollow, his feet were cut and bleeding, and yet as
-he lay there he smiled feebly.
-
-"I am happy now," he murmured, and forthwith fell asleep.
-
-Both Roland and Dick trembled. They thought that sleep might be the
-sleep of death, but Don Rodrigo, after feeling Benee's pulse, assured
-them that it was all right, and that the poor fellow only needed rest
-and food.
-
-In about half an hour the faithful fellow--ah! who could doubt his
-fidelity now?--sat painfully up.
-
-Dick went hurrying off and soon returned with soup and with wine, and
-having swallowed a little, Benee made signs that he would rest and
-sleep.
-
-"To-morrow," he said, "to-morrow I speak plenty. To-night no can do."
-
-And so they did all they could to make him comfortable, and great Brawn
-lay down by his side to watch him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV--BENEE'S STORY--THE YOUNG CANNIBAL QUEEN
-
-
-I cannot help saying that in forbearing to talk to or to question poor
-Benee on the evening of his arrival, our young heroes exhibited a spirit
-of true manliness and courage which was greatly to their credit.
-
-That they were burning to get news of the unfortunate Peggy goes without
-saying, and to hear at the same time Benee's own marvellous adventures.
-
-Nor did they hurry the poor fellow even next day.
-
-It is a good plan to fly from temptation, when you are not sure you may
-not fall. There is nothing dishonourable about such a course, be the
-temptation what it may.
-
-Roland and Dick adopted the plan this morning at all events. Both were
-awake long before sunrise; long before the beautiful stars had ceased to
-glitter gem-like high over mountains and forest.
-
-The camp was hardly yet astir, although Burly Bill was looming between
-the lads and the light as they stood with honest Brawn in the big tent
-doorway. Over his head rose a huge cloud of fragrant smoke, while ever
-and anon a gleam from the bowl of his meerschaum lit up his
-good-humoured face.
-
-It had not taken the lads long to dress, and now they sauntered out.
-
-The first faint light of the dawning day was already beginning to pale
-the stars. Soon the sun himself, red and rosy, would sail up from his
-bed behind the far green forest.
-
-"Bill!"
-
-"Hillo! Good-morning to you both! I've been up for hours."
-
-"And we could not sleep for--thinking. But I say, Bill, I think Benee
-has good news. I'm burning to hear it, and so is Dick here, but it
-would be downright mean to wake the poor fellow till he is well rested.
-So, for fear we should seem too inquisitive, or too squaw-like, we're
-off with bold Brawn here for a walk. Yes, we are both armed."
-
-When the lads came back in about two hours' time, they found Benee up
-and dressed and seated on the grass at breakfast.
-
-When I say he was dressed I allude to the fact that he very much needed
-dressing, for his garments were in rags, his blanket in tatters. But he
-had taken the clothes Bill provided for him, and gone straight to the
-river for a wash and a swim.
-
-He looked quite the old Benee on his return.
-
-"Ah!" said Bill, "you're smiling, Benee. I know you have good news."
-
-"Plenty good, Massa Bill, one leetle bitee bad!"
-
-"Well, eat, old man; I'm hungry. Yes, the boys are beautiful, and
-they'll be here in a few minutes."
-
-And so they were.
-
-Brawn was before them. He darted in with a rush and a run, and licked
-first Benee's ears and then Bill's. It was a rough but a very kindly
-salute.
-
-In these sky-high regions of Bolivia, a walk or run across the plains
-early in the morning makes one almost painfully hungry.
-
-But here was a breakfast fit for a king; eggs of wild birds, fish, and
-flesh of deer, with cakes galore, for the Indians were splendid cooks.
-
-Then, after breakfast, Benee told the boys and Bill all his long and
-strange story. It was a thrilling one, as we know already, and lost
-none of its effect by being related in Benee's simple, but often graphic
-and figurative language.
-
-"Oh!" cried impulsive Dick, when he had finished, and there were tears
-in the lad's eyes that he took small pains to hide, "you have made
-Roland and me happy, inexpressibly happy, Benee. We know now that dear
-Peggy is well, and that nothing can harm her for the present, and
-something tells me we shall receive her safe and sound."
-
-Benee's face got slightly clouded.
-
-"Will it not be so, Benee?"
-
-"The Christian God will help us, Massa Dick. Der is mooch--plenty
-mooch--to be done!"
-
-"And we're the lads to do it," almost shouted Burly Bill.
-
-"Wowff! Wowff!" barked Brawn in the most emphatic manner.
-
-In another hour all were once more on the march towards the land of the
-cannibals.
-
- ----
-
-Life at the court of Queen Leeboo, as her people called poor Peggy, was
-not all roses, but well the girl knew that if she was to harbour any
-hopes of escape she must keep cool and play her game well.
-
-She had all a woman's wits about her, however, and all a woman's wiles.
-Vain Peggy certainly was not, but she knew she was beautiful, and
-determined to make the best use of the fact.
-
-Luckily for her she could speak the language of this strange wild people
-as well as anyone, for Charlie himself had been her teacher.
-
-A strangely musical and labial tongue it is, and figurative, too, as
-might be expected, for the scenery of every country has a certain effect
-upon its language.
-
-It was soon evident that Queen Leeboo was expected to stay in the royal
-camp almost entirely.
-
-This she determined should not be the case. So after the royal
-breakfast one morning--and a very delightful and natural meal it was,
-consisting chiefly of nuts and fruit--Queen Leeboo seized her sceptre,
-the poisoned spear, and stepped lightly down from her throne.
-
-"That isn't good enough," she said, "I want a little fresh air."
-
-Her attendants threw themselves on their faces before her, but she made
-them get up, and very much astonished they were to see the beautiful
-queen march along the great hall and step out on to the skull-decorated
-verandah.
-
-The palace was built on a mountain ledge or table-land of small
-dimensions. It was backed by gigantic and precipitous rocks, now most
-beautifully draped with the greenery of bush and fern, and trailed over
-by a thousand charming wild flowers.
-
-Leeboo, as we may call her for the present, seated herself languidly on
-a dais. She knew better than to be rash. Her object was to gain the
-entire confidence of her people. In this alone lay her hopes of escape,
-and thoughts of freedom were ever uppermost in her mind.
-
-This was the first time she had been beyond the portals of her royal
-prison-house, but she determined it should not be the last.
-
-While her attendants partially encircled her she gazed dreamily at the
-glorious scenery beyond and beneath her.
-
-From her elevated position she could view the landscape for leagues and
-leagues on every side. Few of us, in this tame domestic land that we
-all love so well, have ever visited so beautiful a country as these
-highlands of Bolivia.
-
-Fresh from the hands of its Maker did it seem on this fresh, cool,
-delightful morning. The dark green of its rolling woods and forests,
-the heath-clad hills, the streams that meandered through the dales like
-threads of silver, the glittering lakes, the plains where the llamas,
-and even oxen, roamed in great herds, and far, far away on the horizon
-the serrated mountains, patched and flecked with snow, that hid their
-summits in the fleecy clouds; the whole formed as grand and lovely a
-panorama as ever human eyes beheld.
-
-But it was marred somewhat by the immediate surroundings of poor Leeboo.
-
-Oh, those awful skulls! "Is everything good and beautiful in Nature,"
-she could not help asking herself, "except mankind?"
-
-Here was the faint odour of death, and she beheld on many of these
-skulls the mark of the axe, reminding her of murder. She shuddered.
-Her palace was but a charnel-house. Those crouching creatures around
-her, waiting to do her bidding or obey her slightest behest, were but
-slaves of tyrant masters, and every day she missed one of the youngest
-and fairest, and knew what her doom would be.
-
-And out beyond the gate yonder were her soldiers, her guards. Alas,
-yes! and they were her keepers also.
-
-But behold! yonder comes the great chief Kaloomah, her prime minister,
-and walking beside him is Kalamazoo.
-
-Kaloomah walks erect and stately, as becomes so high a functionary. He
-is stern in face even to grimness and ferocity, but as handsome in form
-as some of the heroes of Walter Scott.
-
-And Kalamazoo is little more than a boy, and one, too, of somewhat
-fragile form, with face more delicate than is becoming in a cannibal
-Indian.
-
-Kalamazoo is the only son of the late queen. For some reason or other
-he wears a necklace of his mother's red-stained teeth. Probably they
-are a charm.
-
-Both princes kneel at Leeboo's feet. Leeboo strikes both smartly on the
-shoulders with her sceptre and bids them stand up.
-
-"I would not have you grovel round me," she says in their own tongue,
-"like two little pigs of the forest." They stand up, looking sheepish
-and nonplussed, and Leeboo, placing one on each side of her--a
-spear-length distant,--looks first at Kaloomah and then at Kalamazoo and
-bursts into a silvery laugh.
-
-Why laughs Queen Leeboo? These two men are both very natural, both
-somewhat solemn. Not even little pigs of the forest like to be laughed
-at.
-
-But the queen's mistress of the robes--let me call her so--has told her
-that she is expected to take unto herself a husband in three moons, and
-that it must be either Kaloomah or Kalamazoo.
-
-This is now no state secret. All the queen's people know, from her own
-palace gates to the remotest mud hut on this cannibalistic territory.
-They all know it, and they look forward to that week of festivity as
-children in the rural districts of England look forward to a fair.
-
-There will be a monster carousal that day.
-
-The soldiers of the queen will make a raid on a neighbouring hill tribe,
-and bring back many heads and many hams.
-
-If Kaloomah is the favourite, then Kalamazoo will be slain and cooked.
-
-If the queen elects to smile on Kalamazoo with his necklace of the
-maternal molars and incisors, then Kaloomah with the best grace he can
-must submit to the knife.
-
-Yet must I do justice to both and say that it is not because they fear
-death that they are so anxious to curry favour with the young and lovely
-queen. Oh no! for both are over head in love with her.
-
-And a happy thought has occurred to Leeboo. She will play one against
-the other, and thus, in some way to herself at present unknown,
-endeavour to effect her escape from this land of murder, blood, and
-beautiful scenery.
-
-So there they stand silently, a spear-length from her dais, she glorying
-in the power she knows she has over both. There they stand in silence,
-for court etiquette forbids them to speak until spoken to.
-
-Very like a couple of champion idiots they are too. Big Kaloomah doesn't
-quite know what to do with his hands, and Kalamazoo is fidgeting
-nervously with his necklace, and apparently counting his dead mother's
-teeth as monks count their beads.
-
-Leeboo rises at last, and, gathering the loose portion of her skirts
-around her, says: "Come, I would walk."
-
-She is a little way ahead, and she waves her spear so prettily as she
-smiles her sweetest and points to the grimly ornamental gate.
-
-And after hesitating for one moment, both Kaloomah and the young prince
-follow sheepishly.
-
-The guards by the gate, grim, fully armed cut-throats, seeing that her
-majesty expects obedience, fall back, and the trio march through.
-
-But I do not think that either of Leeboo's lovers is prepared for what
-follows.
-
-If they had calculated on a solemn majestic walk around the plateau,
-they were soon very much undeceived.
-
-Leeboo had no sooner begun to breathe the glorious mountain air, than
-she felt as exuberant as a child again. Indeed, she was but little
-else. But she placed her spear and sceptre of royalty very
-unceremoniously into Kaloomah's hand to hold, while she darted off after
-a splendid crimson specimen of dragon-fly.
-
-Kaloomah looked at Kalamazoo. Kalamazoo looked at Kaloomah.
-
-The one didn't love the other, it is true, yet a fellow-feeling made
-them wondrous kind. And the feeling uppermost in the mind of each was
-wonder.
-
-Kaloomah beckoned to Kalamazoo, and pointed to the queen. The words he
-spoke were somewhat as follows:
-
-"Too much choorka-choorka! Suppose the queen we lose--"
-
-He pointed with his thumb to his neck by way of completing the sentence.
-
-"Too much choorka-choorka!" repeated the young prince. "You old--you
-stop her."
-
-"No, no, you young--you run quick, you stop her!"
-
-That dragon-fly gave Leeboo grand sport for over half an hour. From
-bush to bush it flitted, and flew from flower to flower, over rocks,
-over cairns, and finally down the great hill that led to the plain
-below.
-
-Matters looked serious, so both lovers were now in duty bound to follow
-their all-too-lively queen.
-
-When they reached the bottom of the brae, however, behold!--but stay,
-there was no behold about it. Queen Leeboo was nowhere to be seen!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV--BENEE'S MOTHER TO THE FRONT
-
-
-Here was a difficulty!
-
-If they returned without the queen, they would be torn in pieces and
-quietly eaten afterwards.
-
-They became excited. They looked here, there, and everywhere for
-Leeboo. Up into the trees, under the bushes, behind rocks and stones,
-but all in vain. The beautiful girl seemed to have been spirited away,
-or the earth had opened and admitted her into fairy-land, or--
-
-But see! To their great joy, yonder comes the young queen holding aloft
-the dragon-fly and singing to herself.
-
-Not a whit worse was the lovely thing; not one of its four gauzy wings
-was so much as rumpled.
-
-Then she whispered something to it, and tossed it high in air.
-
-And away it flew, straight to the north-east, as if bent upon delivering
-the message she had entrusted to its keeping.
-
-She stood gazing after it with flushed cheeks and parted lips until it
-was no longer visible against the sky's pale blue, then turned away with
-a sigh.
-
-But Leeboo was not tired yet. There were beautiful birds to be seen and
-their songs listened to. And there were garlands of wild flowers to be
-strung.
-
-One she threw over Kaloomah's neck.
-
-Kalamazoo looked wretched.
-
-She made him even a larger, and he was happy. This garland quite hid his
-mother's frightful teeth.
-
-But it must be said that these two lovers of Leeboo's looked--with those
-garlands of flowers around their necks--more foolish than ever.
-
-She trotted them round for two whole hours. Then she resumed her
-sceptre, and intimated her intention to return to the palace.
-
-For a whole week these rambles were continued day after day.
-
-Then storm-winds blew wild from off the snow-patched mountains, and
-Leeboo was confined to her palace for days.
-
-Her maids of honour, however, did all they could to please and comfort
-her. They brought her the choicest of fruits, and they told her strange
-weird tales of strange weird people and mannikins who in these regions
-dwell deep down in caves below the ground, and often steal little
-children to nurse their tiny infants.
-
-And they sang or chanted to her also, and all night long in the
-drapery-hung chamber, where she reposed on a couch of skins, they lay
-near her, ready to start to their feet and obey her slightest command.
-
-Leeboo ruled her empire by love. But she could be haughty and stern
-when she pleased, only she never made use of that terrible spear, one
-touch of which meant death.
-
- ----
-
-In less than six-weeks' time Queen Leeboo had so thoroughly gained the
-confidence of her people that she was trusted to go anywhere, although
-always under the eyes of the young prince or Kaloomah.
-
-I believe Leeboo would have learned to like the savages but for their
-cannibal tastes, and several times, when men returned from the war-path,
-she had to witness the most terrible of orgies.
-
-It was always young girls or boys who were the victims of those fearful
-feasts. Her heart bled for them, but all remonstrance on her part was
-in vain.
-
-Leeboo had got her pony back, and often had a glorious gallop over the
-prairie.
-
-But something else had happened, which added greatly to Leeboo's comfort
-and happiness. Shooks-gee himself came to camp and brought with him
-little Weenah, his beautiful child-daughter.
-
-Leeboo took to her at once, and the two became constant companions.
-
-Weenah could converse in broken English, and so many a long delightful
-"confab" they had together.
-
-Child-like, Weenah told Leeboo of her love for Benee, of their early
-rambles in the forest, too, and of her own wild wanderings in search of
-him. Told her, too, that Benee was coming back again with a fresh army
-of Indians and white men, with Leeboo's own lover and her brother as
-their captains; told her of the fearful fight that was bound to take
-place, but which would end in the complete triumph of the good men and
-the rescue of Leeboo herself.
-
-Yes, Weenah had her prophecy all cut and dry, and her story ended with a
-good "curtain", as all good stories should.
-
-Whether Weenah's prophecy would be fulfilled or not we have to read on
-to see, for, alas! it was a dark and gloomy race of savages that would
-have to be dealt with, and rather than lose their queen, Kaloomah and
-his people would--but there! I have no wish to paint my chapters red.
-
- ----
-
-Leeboo was not slow to perceive that her chief chance of escape lay in
-the skill with which she might play her two lovers against each other.
-
-Whoever married her would be king. He would rank with, but after, the
-queen herself, for, to the credit of these cannibals be it said, they
-always prefer female government.
-
-In civilized society Leeboo might have been accused of acting
-mischievously; for she would take first one into favour and then the
-other, giving, that is, each of them a taste of the seventh heaven time
-about. When Kalamazoo's star was in the ascendant, then Kaloomah was
-deep down in a pit of despair; but anon, he would be up and out again,
-and then it was Kalamazoo's turn to weep and wail and gnash his
-triangular red-stained teeth.
-
-It is needless to say that the game she was playing was a sad strain
-upon our poor young heroine. No wonder her eyes grew bright with that
-brightness which denotes loss of strength, and weariness, and that her
-cheeks were often far too flushed.
-
-Hope deferred makes the heart sick, and but for little Weenah I think
-that Leeboo would have given up heart altogether and lain down to die.
-
-But Weenah was always bright, cheerful, and happy. She was laughing all
-day long. Benee was coming for her; of that she was very certain and
-sure, so she sang about her absent lover even as birds in the woodlands
-sing, and with just as sweet a voice.
-
-The plot was thickening and thickening, and Leeboo managed matters now
-so that only one of her guardians at a time accompanied herself and
-Weenah in their rides or rambles.
-
-Dixie--as the pony was named--was a very faithful little horse, and
-though when Weenah had to trot beside him he never was allowed to go the
-pace, he was exceedingly strong, and could scour the plain or prairie as
-fleet as the wind whenever his young mistress put him on his mettle. On
-such occasions, no matter which of Leeboo's admirers was with her, he
-dropped far astern, and after running for a mile or so, had to sit down
-to pant.
-
-But the young queen always returned, and so she was trusted implicitly.
-
-So too was Weenah, but then Weenah was one of themselves.
-
- ----
-
-In their very long and toilsome march, up the Mayatata, well was it
-indeed for Roland and Dick that they had guides so faithful and clever
-as Benee and Charlie. But for them, indeed, the expedition would have
-been foredoomed to failure.
-
-Benee indeed was really the guiding star. For in his own lonesome
-wanderings he had surveyed the whole country as it were, and knew every
-fitting place for a camp, every ford on every stream, and every pathway
-through the dense and dark forests.
-
-They were but the pathways made by the beasts, however, and often all
-but impassable. Still, in single file they marched, and were always
-successful in making their way. Two whole months passed away, and now,
-as they were nearing the cannibal highlands, greater precautions than
-ever were required.
-
-And for a week they had to turn night into day, and travel while the
-savages slept.
-
-They kept away, too, from any portion of the country which seemed to
-have the slightest claim to be called inhabited. Better they should
-herd with the wild beasts of the forest than sight the face of even a
-single savage. For swift as deer that savage would run towards the
-cannibal head-quarters and give information of the approach of a
-pale-face horde of enemies.
-
-At last there came a day when Benee called a council of war.
-
-"We now get near de bad man's land," he said. "Ugh! I not lub mooch
-blood."
-
-"Then what would you have us do?" said Roland. "Shall we advance boldly
-or make a night attack?"
-
-"No, no, no, sah. Too many cannibal warrior, too much pizen arrow,
-sling, and spear. No; build here a camp. Make he strong. Benee will
-go all same. Benee will creep and crawl till he come to father and
-mother house. Den Benee make all right. Pray for Benee."
-
-Benee left, poor Brawn bidding him a most affectionate farewell. Surely
-that honest dog knew he was bent on saving his little mistress, if only
-he could.
-
-Charlie, the ex-cannibal, stayed in camp for the time being, but he
-might be useful as a spy afterwards.
-
-It is needless to say that the prayers of both our heroes were offered
-up night and day for Benee's success, and that their blessings followed
-him.
-
-But we do not always receive the answers that would appear to us the
-best to our prayers, however earnest and heartfelt they may be. Still,
-we know well, though we are generally very loth to admit it, that
-afflictions are very often blessings in disguise.
-
-And now Benee was once more all alone on the war-path, and he followed
-his old tactics, creeping quietly through the jungle only by night, and
-retiring into hiding whenever day began to obliterate the stars. Roland
-gave orders for the camp to be immediately fortified. It was certainly
-a well-chosen one, on the top of a wooded hill.
-
-This hill was scarcely a hundred feet high, but although it might be
-taken by siege, its position rendered it almost impregnable as far as
-assault was concerned.
-
-A rampart with a trench was thrown round three sides of it. That was
-apparently all that would be needed.
-
-Looking from below by daylight even, hardly a savage could have told
-that an enemy held the hill.
-
-And now there was nothing to do but to wait. And waiting is always
-wearisome work.
-
-But let us follow Benee.
-
-His progress was slow, but it was sure, and at last he reached the
-cottage where good Shooks-gee and his wife resided.
-
-But here was no one save his "mother", as Benee lovingly called her.
-
-A great fear took possession of his mind. Could it be that his father
-himself was dead, and that Weenah was captive?
-
-His lips and voice almost refused to formulate the question nearest to
-his heart.
-
-But his mother's smile reassured him. Weenah was safe, and at the court
-of the queen, and Shooks-gee himself was there. So Benee grew hopeful
-once more.
-
-But his task would be by no means an easy one.
-
-First and foremost he must establish communication between the captive
-girl and himself. How could this be done?
-
-Had Shooks-gee been at home it might have been managed simply enough.
-But he himself dared not appear anywhere in sight of the savages.
-
-He felt almost baffled, but at last his mother came to his rescue.
-
-The risk would be extreme. These cannibal savages are as suspicious of
-strangers as they are fierce and bloodthirsty, and if this poor,
-kindly-hearted woman was taken for a spy her doom would be sealed.
-
-But see the young queen she must, or little Weenah, her daughter; for
-great though Benee's abilities were, he did not possess the
-accomplishment of writing.
-
- ----
-
-Dressed as one of the lowest of peasants, the mother of Weenah set
-boldly out on her forlorn hope the very next day, and in the afternoon
-she was within one mile of the palace itself.
-
-Here she hid herself in the jungle, and after eating a little fruit went
-to sleep.
-
-The stars were still shining when she awoke, but she knew them all, and
-those that were setting told her that day would soon break.
-
-To pass through the soldier-guards and enter the palace would, she knew,
-be an utter impossibility. There was nothing for it but to wait with
-patience, for her husband had told her that the queen rode out for a
-scamper over the plains every forenoon.
-
-He had even told her the direction she usually took, not riding fast,
-but with Weenah running by her side, keeping a long way ahead of her
-lover guardian, whichever one of them might happen for the time being to
-be the happy man.
-
-Benee's mother was as courageous as a mountain cat. She had a duty to
-perform, and she meant to carry it out.
-
-Well, we are told in some old classic that fortune favours the brave.
-
-It does not always do so, but in this case, at all events, this good
-woman was successful.
-
-At a certain part of the plain there were bushes close and thick enough,
-and just here Leeboo with her little charger must pass if she came out
-to-day at all.
-
-It was at this spot, then, that Weenah's mother concealed herself.
-
-Nor had she very long to wait, for soon the sound of the pony's hoofs
-fell on her ear, beating a pleasant accompaniment to two sweet voices
-raised in song.
-
-The Indian woman raised herself and peeped over the bushes.
-
-Yes, they were coming, and alone too, for Kaloomah could not run so fast
-as Kalamazoo, and was a long way behind.
-
-With characteristic impulse Weenah rushed forward and was clasped for a
-moment in her mother's arms.
-
-And, somewhat astonished, Leeboo immediately reined up.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI--THE PALE-FACE QUEEN HAS FLED
-
-
-Leeboo, the young queen, could see that the woman was flurried and
-excited.
-
-She stood with her face to the pony and one arm was held aloft in the
-air. Her eyes were gleaming, and her hat had fallen over her back,
-allowing her wealth of coal-black hair to escape.
-
-Weenah stood by the saddle.
-
-"I have that to say," exclaimed her mother, in her strangely musical
-language, "that must be said speedily. If I am seen we are all doomed.
-But listen, and listen intently. You are free if you are fortunate.
-Liberty is at hand. Your friends are twenty miles down stream in camp.
-Down the stream of Bitter Waters. Ride this way to-morrow, and when far
-enough away take Weenah in your saddle, and gallop for your life into
-the forest. Weenah will be your guide."
-
-So quickly did the woman vanish that for a few moments our heroine half
-believed she must have been dreaming.
-
-But she pulled herself together at once, and now rode back to meet
-Kaloomah.
-
-She was all smiles too.
-
-"Why waits poor Kaloomah here?" she said, in her softest sweetest tones.
-
-Kaloomah placed his hand on the saddle pommel, and panted somewhat. But
-Kaloomah was in the seventh heaven.
-
-"Say--say--say 'poor Kaloomah' again," he muttered.
-
-"Poor Kaloomah! Poor dear Kaloomah!"
-
-She could even afford to place emphasis on the "dear", she was so happy.
-
-"Oh--ugh!" sighed the savage; "but to-morrow it may be 'poor dear
-Kalamazoo!'"
-
-"Ah, you are jealous! A little forest bird is pecking, pecking at your
-heart. But listen; to-morrow it shall not be Kalamazoo, but Kaloomah
-once again."
-
-Well, I dare say that love-making is very much the same all over the
-wide, wide world, and so we cannot even laugh at this cannibal if he did
-bend rapturously down and kiss the toe of Leeboo's sandal-shaped
-stirrup.
-
-"And now, Kaloomah," she added, "I would gather some wild flowers, and
-listen for a little while to the soo-soo's song while you twine my wild
-flowers into a garland. My little handmaiden, Weenah, will assist you.
-
-"But, Kaloomah!" she continued archly.
-
-"Yes, my moon-dream."
-
-"You must not make love to my maiden, else a little forest bird will
-peck poor Leeboo's heart to pieces and Leeboo die."
-
- ----
-
-I hardly think it would be putting it one whit too strongly to say that
-the pale-face maiden queen had turned this savage's head.
-
-They all returned together at last to the palace, and the queen with her
-little handmaiden retired to her chamber to dine.
-
-As to Kaloomah, the spirit of pride had got into him, and this is really
-as difficult to get rid of as if one were possessed of an evil spirit.
-So the chief, decorated with the garland of wild flowers that Leeboo the
-queen had placed around his neck, could not resist the temptation to
-parade himself on the plateau before Kalamazoo's tent. He wished the
-prince to see him. And the prince did.
-
-The prince, moreover, was strongly tempted to rush forth, spear in hand,
-and slay his rival where he stood.
-
-But he remembered in time that Kaloomah was not only a great chief but a
-mighty warrior. Over and over again had he led the cannibal army
-against the glens and valleys of distant highland chiefs. And he had
-been ever victorious, his soldiers returning after a great slaughter of
-the foe, laden with heads and hams, to hold nights and nights of fearful
-orgie.
-
-Kalamazoo knew that Kaloomah was the people's favourite, and that if he
-slew him, he himself would speedily be torn limb from limb.
-
-So he was content to gnash his own teeth, to count his mother's over and
-over again, and to remain quiescent.
-
-It is seldom indeed that a savage is troubled with sleeplessness, but
-that night poor Benee was far too anxious to slumber soundly. For he
-knew not what another day might bring forth. It might be pregnant with
-happiness for him and the young girls he loved so dearly, or it might
-end in bloodshed and in death.
-
-What a glorious morning broke over the woodlands at last! Looking
-eastwards Benee could note a strip of the deepest orange just above the
-dark forest horizon. This faded into palest green, and above all was
-ethereal blue, with just one or two rosy clouds. And westwards those
-patches of snow in the hollow of the mighty Sierras were pink, with
-purple shadows.
-
-And this innocent and unsophisticated savage bent himself low on his
-knees and prayed to Him who is the author of all that is beautiful, to
-bless his enterprise and take his little mistress safe away from this
-blood-stained land of darkness and woe.
-
-He felt better when he rose to his feet. Then he entered the cottage
-and had breakfast.
-
-"I will come again some day," he said, as his "mother" bade him a
-tearful farewell. "I will come again and take Father and you to the
-far-off happy land of the pale-faces."
-
-So he hied him away to the forest, looking back just once to wave his
-hand.
-
-He well knew the road that Weenah and Leeboo--no, let us call her Peggy
-once more--would take, if indeed they should succeed in escaping.
-
-He walked towards the river of Bitter Waters therefore, and, journeying
-for some miles along its wild romantic banks, lay down to wait.
-
-Wild flowers trailed and climbed among the bushes where he hid; he saw
-not their bright colours, he was scarcely sensible of their perfume.
-
-The soo-soo's song was sweet and plaintive; he heard it not.
-
-He was wholly absorbed in thought. So the sun got higher and higher,
-and still he waited and watched--waited and hoped.
-
-Only, ever and anon he would place his ear against the hard ground and
-listen intently.
-
-'Twas noon, and they came not.
-
-Something must have happened. Everything must have failed.
-
-What should he do? What could he do?
-
- ----
-
-But hark! A joyful sound. It was that of a horse at the gallop, and it
-was coming nearer and nearer.
-
-Benee grasped his rifle.
-
-It must be she. It must, and was poor Peggy, and Weenah was seated
-behind her.
-
-He looked quickly to his repeating rifle, and patted the revolvers in
-his belt.
-
-"Oh, Benee, Benee! how rejoiced I am!"
-
-"But are you followed, Missie Peggy?"
-
-"No, no, Benee, we have ridden clean and clear away from the savage
-chief Kaloomah, and we fear no pursuit."
-
-"Ah, Missie! You not know de savage man. I do. Come. Make track now.
-
-"Weenah," he added. "Oh, my love, Weenah! But come not down. We mus'
-fly foh de cannibal come in force."
-
-It seemed but child's play to Benee to trot lightly along beside the
-pony.
-
-Love, no doubt, made the labour lighter. Besides, on faithful little
-Dixie's back was all that Benee cared much for in the world, Weenah and
-"Missie Peggy".
-
-True enough, he liked and respected Roland, and Dick as well, but they
-were not all the world to him as these girls were. And ever since he
-had found Roland and Peggy in the dark forest and rescued them, his
-little mistress had been in his eyes an angel. Never an unkind word was
-it possible for her to say to anyone, least of all--so he flattered
-himself--to Benee.
-
-The poor, untutored savage felt, in his happiness, at this moment, that
-it would be sweet to die were the loved ones only near to hold his hand.
-
-But he could die, too, fighting for them; ay, fighting to the end. Who
-was he that would dare touch the ground where Peggy or Weenah trod if
-he--Benee--were there?
-
-And so they journeyed on and on by the river's side and through jungle
-and forest, never dreaming of danger or pursuit.
-
-Ah! but wild as a panther was Kaloomah now.
-
-When he found that he was baffled, befooled, deserted, then all his
-fury--the fury of an untamed savage--boiled up from the bottom of his
-heart.
-
-Love! Where was love now? It found no place in this wild chief's
-heart; hate had supplanted it, and it was a hate that must be quenched
-in blood. Yes, her blood! He would be revenged, and then--well then,
-the sooner he should die after that the better. For his life's sun had
-gone out, his days could only be days of darkness now.
-
-Yet how happy had he been only this morning, and how proud when he
-stalked forth from his hut and passed that of Kalamazoo, still wearing
-the wild flowers with which she had adorned him!
-
-He tore those wild flowers from his neck now, and scattered them to the
-winds.
-
-Then, as fast and fleet as ever savage ran, he hied him back to the
-palace.
-
-Few had more stentorian lungs than Kaloomah!
-
-"The queen has gone! The white queen has fled!"
-
-That shout awakened one thousand armed men to action, and in less than
-an hour they were on the warpath.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII--THE FIGHT AT THE FORT
-
-
-So toilsome was the road to trace, and so far away was the fortified
-camp of our heroes, that the sun was almost setting before Benee arrived
-with his precious charge.
-
-Why should I make any attempt to describe the meeting of Roland and Dick
-with the long-lost Peggy?
-
-Roland and she had always been as brother and sister, and now that they
-were once more united, all her joy found vent in a flood of tears, which
-her brother did what he could to stem.
-
-It seemed hardly possible that she should be here safe and sound, and in
-the presence of those who loved her so well and dearly.
-
-And here, too, was Brawn, who was delirious with joy, and honest Bill
-with his meerschaum.
-
-"Oh, surely I shall not awake and find it all a dream!" she cried in
-terror. "Awake and find myself still in that awful palace, with its
-dreadful surroundings and the odour of death everywhere! Oh--h!"
-
-The girl shuddered.
-
-"Dear Peggy," said Dick tenderly, "this is no dream; you are with us
-again, and we with you. All the past is as nothing. Let us live for
-the future. Is that right, Roland?"
-
-"Yes, you must forget the past, Peggy," said Roland. "Dick is right.
-The past shall be buried. We are young yet. The world is all before
-us. So come, laugh, and be happy, Peggy."
-
-"And this charming child here, who is she?" said Dick. He alluded to
-Weenah.
-
-"That is little Weenah, a daughter of the wilds, a child of the desert.
-Nay, but no child after all, are you, Weenah?"
-
-Weenah bent her dark eyes on the ground.
-
-"I am nothing," she said. "I am nobody, only--Benee's."
-
-"But, Weenah," said Peggy, taking the girl by the hand, "oh, how I shall
-miss you when you go!"
-
-"Go?" said Weenah wonderingly.
-
-"Yes, dear, you have a father and a mother, who are fond of you. Must
-you not return soon to them?"
-
-"My father and my mother I love," replied Weenah. "And you I love, for
-you have taught me to pray to the pale-face's God. You have taught me
-many, many things that are good and beautiful. My life now is all joy
-and brightness, and so, though I love my mother and my father, oh! bid
-me not to leave you."
-
-All this was spoken in the language of the country. It was Greek to
-those around them, but even Bill could see that the dark-eyed maiden was
-pleading for something, for her hand was in Peggy's, her eyes upon hers.
-
- ----
-
-It was just at this moment that scouts came hurrying in from the forest,
-bringing news that was startling enough, as well as surprising.
-
-These men had come speedily in, almost as fleet of foot as deer, and the
-word they brought was that the savages, at least six hundred strong,
-were not more than three hours distant.
-
-Roland showed no excitement, whatever he might feel. Nor did Dick. Yet
-both were ready for action.
-
-Burly Bill, who had been quietly smoking a little way off, put his great
-thumb in the bowl of his meerschaum, and stowed away that faithful
-companion of his in his coat-pocket.
-
-Can a young fellow still in his teens, and whom we older men are all too
-apt to sneer at as a mere boy, prove himself a good general. He may and
-he can, if he has grit in him and a head of some sort surmounting his
-shoulders.
-
-From what followed I think Roland proved that he was in possession of
-both.
-
-Well, he had descended from a long line of hardy Cornish ancestors, and
-there is more in good blood than we are apt to believe.
-
-He came to the front now at all events, and Dick and Bill, to say
-nothing of Benee, Rodrigo, and the other canoe captains, were ready to
-obey his every command.
-
-Roland called a council of war at once, and it did not take long to come
-to a decision.
-
-Our chief hero was the principal speaker. But brave men do not lose
-much time in words.
-
-"Boys," he said, "we've got to fight these rascally savages. That's so,
-I think?"
-
-"That's so," was the chorus.
-
-"Well, and we've got to beat them, too. We want to give them something
-that shall keep them both quiet and civil until we can afford to send
-out a few missionaries to improve their morals.
-
-"Now, Rodrigo, I cannot force you to fight."
-
-"Force, sir? I need no force. Command me."
-
-"Well, I will. I wish to outflank these beggars. You and our Indians,
-with Benee as your guide, are just the men to do so.
-
-"The moon will be up in another hour. It will be the harvest-moon in
-England. The harvest-moon here, too--but a harvest, alas! of blood.
-
-"Now, Benee," he continued, "as soon as we are ready, guide these men
-with Captain Rodrigo for some distance down-stream, then curl round the
-savages, and when they begin to retreat, or even before that, attack
-them in the rear. Good luck to you!"
-
-As silently as ghosts two hundred and fifty well-armed Indians, a short
-time after Roland made that brave little speech, glided down the brow of
-the hill, and disappeared in the woods beyond.
-
-Though our heroes listened, they could not hear a sound, not even the
-crackling of a bush or broken branch.
-
-Soon the moon glared red through the topmost boughs of the far-off
-trees, and flooded all the land with a light almost as bright as day.
-The stars above, that before had glittered on the river's rippling
-breast, and the stars beneath--those wondrous flitting
-fire-insects--paled before its beams, and the night-birds sought for
-shelter in caves among the rocks. So over all the prairie and woodlands
-there fell a stillness that was almost oppressive. It was as if Nature
-held her breath, expectant of the fight that was to follow.
-
-Nor was that fight very long delayed. But it must have been well on
-towards midnight before the first indication of an approaching foe was
-made manifest.
-
-Only a long, mournful hoot, away in the bush, and bearing a close
-resemblance to that of the owl.
-
-It was repeated here and there from different quarters, and our heroes
-knew that an attack was imminent.
-
-There was in the centre of the camp a roomy cave. In this all stores had
-been placed, with water enough for a night at all events, and here were
-Peggy and Weenah safely guarded by Brawn. Roland had managed to make
-the darkness visible by lighting two candles and placing them on the
-wall.
-
-In a smaller cave was Peter, and as he had given evidence lately of a
-great desire to escape, the boys had taken the liberty to rope him.
-
-"You shall live to repent this," hissed the man through his teeth.
-
-He had thrown overboard all his plausibility now, and assumed his
-natural self--the dangerous villain.
-
-"Have a care," replied Dick, "or you will not live long enough to repent
-of anything."
-
-On one side of the camp was the river, down under a cliff of
-considerable height. It was very quiet and sluggish just here, and its
-gentle whispering was no louder than a light breeze sighing through
-forest trees.
-
-There were, therefore, really only three sides of the parapet and hill
-to defend.
-
-And now Burly Bill's quick ear caught the sound of rustling down below.
-
-"The savages are on us," he said quietly.
-
-"Then give them a volley to begin with," answered Roland.
-
-The white men started down scores of huge stones; but this was more for
-the purpose of bringing the savages into sight than with a view to wound
-or kill any.
-
-It had the desired effect, and probably another, for the cannibals must
-have believed the pale-faces had no other means of defence.
-
-They were seen now in the bright moonlight scrambling up-hill in scores,
-with knives in their mouths and spears on their backs.
-
-"Fire straight and steadily, men," cried the young chief, Roland. "Fire
-independently, and every man at the enemy in front of him."
-
-A well-aimed and rattling volley, followed by another and another, made
-the Indians pause. The number of dead and wounded was great, and
-impeded the progress of those who would have rushed up and on.
-
-Volley after volley was now poured into the savage ranks, but they came
-pressing up from behind as black and fierce and numerous as a colony of
-mountain-ants.
-
-Their yelling and war-cries were terrible to hear.
-
-But the continuous volley-firing still kept them at bay.
-
-"The rockets, Dick, are they ready?"
-
-"Yes, captain, all ready."
-
-"Try the effect of these."
-
-It was a fearful sight to witness those dread weapons of warfare tear
-through the ranks of these shrieking demons.
-
-Death and mutilation was dealt on every side, and the fire from the
-ramparts grew fiercer and fiercer.
-
-Yet so terrible in their battle-wrath are these cannibals, that--well
-our heroes knew--if they were to scale the ramparts, even the white men
-would not be able to stand against them.
-
-Then the fight would degenerate into a massacre, and this would be
-followed by an orgie too awful to contemplate.
-
-At this moment there could not have been fewer than five hundred savages
-striving to capture the little hill on which stood the camp, and
-Roland's men in all were barely eighty. Some who had exposed themselves
-were speedily brought down with poisoned arrows, and already lay
-writhing in the agonies of spasmodic death.
-
-But see, led on by the chief Kaloomah himself, who seems to bear a
-charmed life, the foremost ranks of those sable warriors have already
-all but gained footing on the ramparts, while with axe and adze the
-pale-faces endeavour to repel them.
-
-In vain!
-
-Kaloomah--great knife in hand--and at least a score of his braves have
-effected an entrance, and the whites, though fighting bravely, are being
-pushed, if not driven back.
-
-It is a terrible moment!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII--THE DREAM AND THE TERROR!
-
-
-Far more acute in hearing are these children of the wilds than any white
-man who ever lived, and now, just as hope was beginning to die out of
-even Roland's heart, a sudden movement on the part of the savages who
-had gained admittance caused him to marvel.
-
-More quickly than they had entered, back they sprang towards the
-parapet, and on gazing after them, our heroes found that the hill-sides
-were clear.
-
-It was evident, however, that a great battle was going on down beneath
-on the prairie.
-
-Explanation is hardly needed.
-
-Rodrigo's men, guided by Benee, had outflanked--nay, even
-surrounded--the foe, and with well-aimed volleys had thrust them back
-and back towards the river, into which, with wild agonizing shouts, all
-that was left of Kaloomah's army was driven.
-
-They were excellent swimmers, the 'gators were absent from this river,
-and doubtless hundreds of fugitives would find their way back into their
-own dark land to tell how well and bravely the pale-faces can fight.
-
-But Kaloomah, where is he?
-
-Intent on revenge, even while the battle raged the fiercest and the
-whites were being driven back, his quick eye caught the glimmer of the
-candle-light in the cave.
-
-Leeboo was there, he told himself, and the false witch Weenah.
-
-He shortened his knife, and made a rush for the entrance.
-
-"Hab--a--rabb--rr--rr--ow!" That was the voice of the great wolf-hound,
-as he sprang on the would-be assassin and pinned him to the ground.
-
-Kaloomah's knife dropped from his hand as he tried to free himself.
-
-But Brawn had him by the throat now, and had not brave Peggy sprung to
-the assistance of the savage, the dog would have torn the windpipe from
-his neck.
-
-But Kaloomah was prisoner, and when the fight was all over, the dog was
-released from duty, and the chief was bound hand and foot and placed in
-the other cave beside Peter.
-
-This cave, which had thus been turned into a prison, possessed an
-entrance at the side, a kind of doorway through the dark rocks, and a
-great hole at the top, through which daylight, or even moonlight, could
-stream. At some not very distant date it had evidently been used as a
-hut, and must have been the scene of many a fearful cannibal orgie, for
-scores of human skulls were heaped up in corners, and calcined bones
-were also found. Altogether, therefore, an unhallowed kind of place,
-and eerie beyond conception.
-
-It is as well to tell the truth concerning the battle on the hill-top,
-ghastly though it may appear. There were no wounded men there, for even
-in the thick of the fight the savages not only slew the white men who
-dropped, but their own maimed as well.
-
-So long as the brave fellows under Roland and Dick held the ramparts,
-and poured their volleys into the ranks of the enemy beneath, scarcely a
-white man was hurt; but when the battlements were carried by storm, then
-the havoc of war commenced in earnest; and at daylight a great deep
-trench was excavated, and in this no fewer than eleven white men were
-placed, side by side.
-
-A simple prayer was said, then a hymn was sung--a sad dirge-like hymn to
-that sacred air called "Martyrdom", which has risen in olden times from
-many a Scottish battle-field, where the heather was dripping blood. I
-take my fiddle and play it now, and that mournful scene rises up before
-me, in which the white men crowd around the long quiet grave, where
-their late companions lie sleeping in the tomb.
-
-Every head is bared in the morning sunshine, every eye is wet with
-tears.
-
-It is Bill himself who leads the melody.
-
-Then clods are gently thrown upon the dead, and soon the grave is
-filled.
-
- ----
-
-There was not the slightest apprehension now that the battle would be
-renewed, and so all the day was spent in getting ready for the long
-march back to the spot where, under the charge of one of the captains
-and his faithful peons, the great canoes had been left.
-
-Among the stores brought here to camp--the suggestion had emanated from
-Roland's mother and Beeboo--was a chest containing many changes of
-raiment and dresses belonging to Peggy. In the cave, then, both she and
-Weenah conducted their toilet, and when, some time after, and just as
-breakfast was about to be served, they both came out, it would have been
-difficult, indeed, to keep from exclamations of surprise.
-
-Even Benee gave way to his excitement, and, seizing Weenah, held her for
-a moment high in air.
-
-"I rejoice foh true!" he cried. "All ober my heart go flapperty-flap.
-Oh, Weenah! you am now all same one red pale-face lady."
-
-Dick thought Peggy, with her bonnie sun-tanned face, more lovely now
-than ever he had seen her.
-
- ----
-
-But while they are breakfasting, and while the men are quietly but
-busily engaged getting the stores down-hill, let us take a peep into the
-cave where the prisoners are.
-
-When Kaloomah was thrust into the cave, Peter was fast asleep. Of late
-he had become utterly tired and careless of life. Was his not a wrecked
-existence from beginning to end? This was a question that he oftentimes
-asked himself sadly enough.
-
-During the fight that had raged so long and fiercely he had remained
-perfectly passive. What was it to him who won or who lost? If the
-Indians won, he would speedily be put out of pain. If the white men
-were the victors--well, he would probably die just the same. At all
-events, life was not worth having now.
-
-Then, when the lull of battle came, when the wild shrieks and shouting
-were over, and when the rattling of musketry was no longer heard, he
-felt utterly tired. He would sleep, he told himself, and what cared he
-if it should be
-
- "The sleep that knows not breaking,
- Morn of toil or night of waking"?
-
-
-The cords that bound him hurt a little, but he would not feel their
-pressure when--he slept.
-
-His was not a dreamless sleep by any means, though a long one.
-
-His old, old life seemed to rise up before him. He was back again in
-England--dear old England! He was a clerk, a confidential clerk.
-
-He had no care, no complications, and he was happy. Happy in the love of
-a sweet girl who adored him; the girl that he would have made his wife.
-Poor? Yes, both were; but oh! when one has innocence and sweet
-contentment, love can bloom in a garret.
-
-Yet envy of the rich began to fill his soul. The world was badly
-divided. Why had he to tread the streets day after day with muddy boots
-to his office, and back to his dingy home after long hours of toil and
-drudgery at the desk?
-
-Oh for comfort! Oh for riches!
-
-The girl that was to be his was more beautiful than many who lolled in
-cushioned carriages, with liveried servants to attend their beck and
-call.
-
-So his dream went on, and dreams are but half-waking thoughts.
-
-But it changes now!
-
-He sees Mary his sweetheart, wan and pale, with tears in her eyes for
-him whose voice she may never hear again.
-
-For the tempter has come with gold and with golden promises.
-
-And he has fallen!
-
-Other men have fallen before. Why not he when so much was to be gained?
-So much of--nay, not of glory, but of gold. What is it that gold cannot
-do?
-
-A conscience? Yes, he had possessed one once. But this tempter had
-laughed heartily when he talked of so old-fashioned a possession. It
-was all a matter of business.
-
-Behold those wealthy men who glide past in their beautiful landaus. Did
-they have consciences? If they did, then, instead of a town and country
-house, their home would soon be the garret vile in some back slum in
-London.
-
-Again the dream changes. To the fearful and awful now. For, stretched
-out before him is Mary, wan and worn--Mary, DEAD!
-
-He awakes with a shriek, and sits up with his back against the black
-rock.
-
-His hand touches something cold. It is a skull, and he shudders as he
-thrusts it away.
-
-But is he awake? He lifts his fettered hands and rubs his eyes.
-
-He gazes in terror at someone that is sitting, just as he is, with his
-back against the wall--and asleep.
-
-The rough dress is all disarranged, and the brown hands are covered with
-blood. It is an awful vision.
-
-He shuts his eyes a moment, but when he opens them again the man is
-still there! The terror!
-
-The morning sun is glimmering in and falling directly on the awful
-sleeping face.
-
-He sits bolt upright now and leans forward.
-
-"Kaloomah!" he cries. "Kaloomah!"
-
-And his own voice seems to belong to some spirit behind those prison
-walls.
-
-But the terror awakes.
-
-And the eyes of the two men meet.
-
-"Don Pedro! You here?"
-
-"Kaloomah. I am."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX--EASTWARD HO! FOR MERRIE ENGLAND
-
-
-Captain Roland St. Clair, as he was called by his men, was busy along
-with Dick and Bill in superintending the sending-off of all heavy
-baggage down-stream, when a man came up and saluted him.
-
-"Well, Harris?"
-
-"The prisoner Peter desires to speak with you, sir, in the presence of
-two witnesses. He wished me to request you to bring paper, pen, and
-ink. It is his desire that you should take his deposition."
-
-"Deposition, Harris? But the man is not dying."
-
-"Well, perhaps not, sir. I only tell you what he says."
-
-"I will be in his cell in less than twenty minutes, Harris."
-
-"Dick," said Roland, at the appointed time, "there is some mystery here.
-Come with me, and you also, Bill."
-
-"What I have to say must be said briefly and quickly," said Peter,
-sitting up. "I will not give myself the pain," he added, "to think very
-much about the past. It is all too dark and horrible. But I make this
-confession, unasked for and being still in possession of all my
-faculties and reasoning power."
-
-He spoke very slowly, and Dick wrote down the confession as he made it.
-
-"I am guilty, gentlemen. Dare I say 'with extenuating circumstances'?
-That, however, will be for you to consider. As the matter stands I do
-not beg for my life, but rather that you should deal with me as I
-deserve to be treated.
-
-"Death, believe me, gentlemen, is in my case preferable to life. But
-listen and judge for yourselves, and if parts of my story need
-confirmation, behold yonder is Kaloomah, and he it was whom I hired to
-carry your adopted sister away, where in all human probability she could
-never more be heard of again. Have you got all that down?"
-
-"I have," said Dick.
-
-"But," said Roland, "what reason had you to take so terrible a revenge
-on those who never harmed you, if revenge indeed it was?"
-
-"It was not revenge. What I did, I did for greed of gold. Listen.
-
-"I was happy in England, and had I only been content, I might now have
-been married and in comfort, but I fell, and am now the heart-broken
-villain you see before you.
-
-"You know the will your uncle made, Mr. St. Clair?"
-
-"I have only heard of it."
-
-"It was I who copied it for my master, the wretched solicitor.
-
-"I stole that copy and re-copied it, and sold it to the only man whom it
-could benefit, and that was your Uncle John."
-
-"My Uncle John? He who sent you out to my poor, dear father?"
-
-"The same. But let me hurry on. The real will is still in possession
-of the solicitor, and it gives all the estates of Burnley Hall, in
-Cornwall, to John, in the event of Peggy's death."
-
-"I begin to see," said Dick.
-
-"My reward was to have been great, if I managed the affair properly. I
-have never had it, and, alas! I need it not now.
-
-"But," he continued, "your villainous uncle was too great a coward to
-have Peggy murdered. His last words to me on board the steamer before I
-sailed were: 'Remember--not one single drop of blood shed.'
-
-"I might have done worse than even I did, but these were the words that
-instigated my vile plot, of which I now most heartily repent. All I had
-to do was to get apparent proof of Peggy's death."
-
-"And my Uncle John now holds the estates of Burnley Hall? Is that so?"
-
-"He does. The solicitor could not help but produce the will, on hearing
-of Peggy's capture and death.
-
-"That, then, is my story, gentlemen. Before Heaven I swear it is all
-true. It is, moreover, my deposition, for I already feel the cold
-shadow of death creeping over me. Yes, I will sign it."
-
-He did so.
-
-"I makee sign too," said Kaloomah.
-
-"That is the man whom I hired to do the deed," said Peter again.
-
-And Kaloomah made his mark.
-
-"I feel easier now, gentlemen" continued Peter. "But leave me a while.
-I would sleep."
-
- ----
-
-Kaloomah had all a savage's love for the horrible, and he was merely an
-interested spectator of the tragedy that followed.
-
-Between him and Peter lie two poison-tipped arrows.
-
-At first Peter looks at them like one dazed. Then he glances upwards at
-the glorious sunshine streaming in through the opening.
-
-Nearer and nearer he now creeps to those arrows!
-
-Nearer and nearer!
-
-Now he positions them with his manacled hands.
-
-Then strikes.
-
-In half an hour's time, when Burly Bill entered the cave to inform the
-prisoners that it was time for them to be on the road, he started back
-in horror.
-
-Peter, fearfully contorted, lay on the floor of the cave, dead.
-
- ----
-
-Some weeks after this the party found themselves once more near to the
-banks of the rapid Madeira.
-
-Everything had gone well with those captains and peons whom they had
-left behind, and now every preparation was made to descend the stream
-with all possible speed, consonant with safety.
-
-They had taken Kaloomah thus far, lest he should return and bring
-another army to attack them.
-
-And now a kind of drum-head court-martial was held on this wild chief,
-at which even Charlie and Benee were present.
-
-"I really don't see," said Roland, "what good has come of saddling
-ourselves with a savage."
-
-"No, I agree with you, Roll," said Dick. "Peter has gone to his
-account, and really this Kaloomah has been more sinned against than he
-has sinned."
-
-"What would you advise, Bill?"
-
-"Why, I'd give him a rousing kick and let him go."
-
-"And you Benee?"
-
-"I go for hangee he."
-
-"Charlie, what would you do?"
-
-Charlie was smiling and rubbing his hands; it was evident he had
-formulated some plan that satisfied himself.
-
-"I tie dat savage to one biggee stake all by de ribber, den watch de
-'gator come, chumpee, chumpee he."
-
-But a more merciful plan was adopted. Kaloomah evidently expected
-death, but when Roland himself cut his bonds and pointed to the west,
-the savage gave just one wild whoop and yell, and next moment he had
-disappeared in the forest.
-
- ----
-
-Were I beginning a story instead of ending one, I should not be able to
-resist the temptation to describe that voyage down the beautiful
-Madeira.
-
-It must suffice to say that it was all one long and happy picnic.
-
-Just one grief, however, had been Peggy's at the start. Poor Dixie, the
-pony, must be left behind.
-
-She kissed his forehead as she bade him good-bye, and her face was wet
-with tears as she turned her back to her favourite.
-
-Roland did what he could to comfort her.
-
-"Dixie will soon be as happy as any horse can be," he said. "He will
-find companions, and will live a long, long time in the wilds of this
-beautiful land. So you must not grieve."
-
- ----
-
-There are times when people in this world are so inexpressibly happy
-that they cannot wish evil to happen even to their greatest enemies.
-They feel that they would like every creature, every being on earth, to
-be happy also.
-
-Surely it is with some such spirit that angels and saints in heaven are
-imbued.
-
-Had you been on board the steamship _Panama_ as she was swiftly
-ploughing her way through the wide blue sea that separates Old England
-from South America, from Para and the mouths of the mighty Amazon, you
-could not have been otherwise than struck with the evident contentment
-and happiness of a group of saloon passengers there. Whether walking
-the quarter-deck, or seated on chairs under the awning, or early in the
-morning surrounding their own special little breakfast-table, pleasure
-beamed in every eye, joy in every face.
-
-Who were they? Listen and I shall tell you.
-
-There was Roland, Dick, Roland's sweet-faced mother, Peggy; and last,
-but certainly not least in size at all events, there was dark-skinned
-jolly-looking Burly Bill himself.
-
-But Burly Bill did not obtrude his company too much on the younger
-folks. He was fond of walking on the bridge and talking to the officer
-on duty. Fond, too, of blowing a cloud from his lips as they dallied
-with his great meerschaum. Fond of telling a good story, but fonder
-still of listening to one, and often chuckling over it till he appeared
-quite apoplectic.
-
-There was someone else on board who must be mentioned. And this was
-Dixie, the pony!
-
-Did he remain on the banks of the Madeira? Not he. For by some means
-or other he found his way--so marvellous is the homing instinct in
-animals--back to the old plantation long before Roland and his little
-army, and was the first to run out to meet Peggy and get a kiss on his
-soft warm snout.
-
-Need I add that Brawn was one of the passengers? And a happy dog he was,
-and always ready for a lark when the sailors chose to throw a
-belaying-pin for him.
-
-Dick had had a grief to face when he returned.
-
-His uncle was dead. So he determined--as did Roland with his
-plantation--to sell off and return to England, for a time at all events.
-
-The two estates are now worked by a "Company Ltd.", but Jake Solomons is
-head overseer.
-
-Benee, who has married his "moon-dream", little Weenah, is second in
-command, and right merry of a morning is the boom and the song of the
-old buzz-saw.
-
- ----
-
-So happy, then, were Roland and Dick and Peggy that they concluded they
-would not be too hard on wicked Uncle John.
-
-This wicked Uncle John went into retirement after the arrival of our
-heroes and heroine. He might have been sent into retirement of quite a
-different sort if Roland had cared to press matters.
-
-Peggy got all her own again. She is now Mrs. Temple, and Dick and she
-are beloved by all the tenantry--yes, and by all the county gentry and
-farmer folks round and round.
-
-I had almost forgotten to say a last word about Beeboo. She is Mrs.
-Temple's chief servant, and a right happy body is Beeboo, and Burly
-Billy is estate manager.
-
-Now, if any of my readers want a special treat, let him or her try to
-get an invitation to spend Christmas at Burnley Old Hall.
-
-
-
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN FAR BOLIVIA ***
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