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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #50897 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/50897)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Haunted Pagodas--The Quest of the
-Golden Pearl, by J. E. Hutchinson
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Haunted Pagodas--The Quest of the Golden Pearl
-
-Author: J. E. Hutchinson
-
-Illustrator: Hume Nisbet
-
-Release Date: January 11, 2016 [EBook #50897]
-Last Updated: March 15, 2018
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HAUNTED PAGODAS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-THE HAUNTED PAGODAS--THE QUEST OF THE GOLDEN PEARL
-
-By J. E. Hutchinson
-
-Illustrated by Hume Nisbet
-
-London: Ward and Downey
-
-1897
-
-[Illustration: 0001]
-
-[Illustration: 0008]
-
-[Illustration: 0009]
-
-
-
-
-QUEST OF THE GOLDEN PEARL.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.--THE SHARK-CHARMER WALKS THE PLANK.
-
-
- Jack! I say, Jack! there's a row among the boatmen.”
-
-A sturdy, thick-set young fellow of seventeen was Jack, with low-hung
-fists of formidable size, and a love for anything in the shape of a row
-that constantly led him into scrapes. Hot-headed though he was, he was
-one of the most good-humoured, well-meaning young fellows in the world,
-who, while he would not hurt a fly if he could help it, was always ready
-to fight in defence of his own or another's rights.
-
-His chum, Roydon Leigh--“Don” for short--was of an altogether different
-type of young manhood. Jack's senior by a year, he was tall for his
-age, standing five feet ten in his stockings. His lithe, wiry frame
-contrasted strongly with Jack's sturdier build, as did his Scotch
-“canniness” with that young gentleman's headlong impetuosity.
-
-“A row!” cried Jack delightedly, as he rushed to the taffrail. “Time,
-too; four weeks we've lain here, and never a hand in a single shindy!”
-
-His companion laughed.
-
-“As for that,” said he, “you're not likely to have a hand in this,
-unless you take the boat and row off to the diving grounds. All the
-same, there's a jolly row on--look yonder.”
-
-The schooner _Wellington_ rode at anchor at the northern extremity of
-the Strait of Manaar, on the famous pearl-fishing grounds of Ceylon.
-On her larboard bow lay the coast--a string of low, white sand-hills,
-dotted with the dark-brown thatch of fisher huts and the vivid green
-of cocoa-nut palms. The hour was eight o'clock in the morning of a
-cloudless March day; the fitful land-breeze had died away, leaving
-the whole surface of the sea like billowy glass. Half-a-dozen
-cable's-lengths distant on the schooner's starboard quarter, a score
-or-more of native _dhonies_ or diving-boats rose and dipped to the
-regular motion of the long ground-swell.
-
-It was towards these boats that Don pointed.
-
-That something unusual had occurred was evident enough. Angry shouts
-floated across the placid water; and the native boatmen could be seen
-hurriedly pulling the boats together into a compact group about one
-central spot where the clamour was loudest.
-
-“I say,” cried Jack, after watching the boats for some time in silence,
-“they're making for the schooner.”
-
-“I don't half like the look of it,” replied Don uneasily; “they
-shouldn't leave the diving grounds, you know, until the signal gun's
-fired. I wish the guv was here.”
-
-“Wishing's no good when he's ashore,” said Jack philosophically. “You're
-the skipper _pro tem_., and you must make the most of your promotion,
-old fellow. We'll have some fun, anyhow. Whew! how those niggers pull,
-and what a jolly row they're making!”
-
-By this time the excited cries, which had first attracted the attention
-of those upon the schooner's deck, had been exchanged by the boatmen for
-a weird chant, to which every oar kept time. Erect in the stern of the
-foremost boat an old whiteheaded _tyndal_ or “master” led the song,
-while at the end of each measure a hundred voices raised a chorus that
-seemed fairly to lift the boats clear of the water.
-
-“What are they singing, anyway?” demanded Jack. “There's something about
-a diver and a shark in it, but I can't half make it out, can you?”
-
-“We'll call Puggles--he'll be able to tell us. Pug! Hi, Pug! come here.”
-
-“Coming, sa'b!” answered a voice from the cook's galley; and almost
-simultaneously there appeared on deck the plumpest, shiniest, most
-good-natured looking black boy that ever displayed two raws of pearly
-teeth. Nature had, apparently, pulled him into the world by the nose,
-and then, as a sort of finishing touch to the job, had given that organ
-a sharp upward tweak and left it so. It was to this feature that Puggles
-owed his name.
-
-“Pug,” said his master, “tell us what those boatmen yonder are singing.”
-
-The black boy cocked his ears and listened for a moment with parted
-lips. “Boat-wallahs this way telling, sa'b,” said he; and, catching the
-strain of the chant, he repeated the words of each line as it fell from
-the lips of the old _tyndal_:
-
- “Salambo selling the diver one charm,
-
- Salaam, Alii kum!
-
- Old shark, he telling, then do no harm,
-
- Salaam, Alii kum!
-
- One spotted shark come out the south,
-
- Salaam, Alii kum!
-
- He taking diver's leg in his mouth,
-
- Salaam, Alii kum!
-
- Me big liking got, he telling, for you,
-
- Salaam, Alii kum!
-
- So he biting diver clean in two,
-
- Salaam, Alii kum!
-
- The lying charmer we take to the ship,
-
- Salaam, Alii kum!
-
- There he feeling bite of the sahib's whip,
-
- Salaam, Alii kum!”
-
-“Why, this Salambo must be the chap the guv had whipped off the grounds
-last season, eh, Pug?” cried Don excitedly.
-
-“Same black rascal, sa'b. His skin getting well, he coming back. Dey
-bring him 'board ship, make his skin sore two times,” explained Puggles,
-grinning.
-
-“Ha, ha!” laughed Jack. “We'll oblige 'em! We'll trice the fellow up!
-Hullo, here they come!”
-
-The boats having now reached the schooner, the chant ceased abruptly,
-the heavy oars were noisily shipped, and, amid a perfect Babel of
-voices, the boatmen came swarming up the sides, until the deck was one
-mass of wildly gesticulating, dusky humanity. The uproar was terrific.
-
-The old _tyndal_, who towered a full head and shoulders above his
-comrades, pushed his way to the front, and commanding silence among his
-followers, addressed himself to Don, who was always-recognised as master
-in his fathers absence.
-
-“Sab.” said he in pigeon English, “one year back big sa'b ordering
-Salambo eat plenty blows for selling charm to diver-man. All same, this
-season he done come back and sell plenty charm, telling diver-man he
-put charm round neck, shark no eat him up. He telling plenty lie--this
-morning one shark done come, eat diver, charm, all!”
-
-“Let him stand forward,” said Don, beginning to enter as much into the
-novelty of the thing as Jack himself.
-
-The culprit, a sleek old fellow with shaven head, crafty eyes, and a
-rosary of wooden beads about his neck, was shoved to the front.
-
-“Are you the chap who was whipped off the grounds last year for selling
-chaims?” demanded Don.
-
-“Your honour speaking true words.” whined the shark-charmer, salaaming
-until his shaven head almost touched the deck; “I same rascal.”
-
-“I say, Jack,” whispered Don, “I shan't have him whipped, you know.
-We'll, make him walk the plank.”
-
-“Capital! Hell funk, certain, and there'll be no end of fun.”
-
-“Well do it, then,” said Don decidedly. “Go forward and order two of
-the lascars to take the boat and lie under the schooner's quarter---this
-side, you know--ready to pick him up.”
-
-In high glee Jack departed to execute this commission, while Don again
-turned to the shark-doctor.
-
-“Do you happen to have one of those charms about you?” he asked.
-
-“One here got, sa'b,” said the fellow, producing from the folds of his
-waist-cloth an _ola_ or fragment of palm-leaf, covered with cabalistic
-characters. “Sa'b no look at him?”
-
-“Keep it yourself,” said Don; “you'll soon need it. Hi, lascar!” to one
-of the schooner's crew who stood near. “Fetch a plank here and run it
-out over the side.”
-
-By the time the plank was brought and run out until one-half its
-length projected over the water, Jack came up chuckling, and by a sign
-intimated that the boat was in readiness. The crowd of natives, guessing
-that something unusual was afoot, craned their necks eagerly,
-while Puggles executed a comic _pas seul_ in his delight. But the
-shark-charmer, as Jack had predicted, “funked” miserably.
-
-Knowing that with the boat in waiting there was absolutely no danger to
-the shark-charmer's life, Don turned a deaf ear to his pleadings, and
-made a signal to the lascars to proceed.
-
-[Illustration: 0022]
-
-Willing hands seized the quaking wretch and dragged him to the
-schooner's side, where he was placed upon, the plank, Puggles standing
-on the deck-end to keep it down.
-
-“Steady, Puggles!” cried Don. “One, two, three--let him slide!”
-
-Puggles jumped aside, the deck-end of the plank rose high in air, then
-descended with a crash; and with a scream of terror the shark-charmer
-disappeared over the side.
-
-A tremendous shout rose from the natives on deck, and with a common
-impulse they one and all rushed to the schooner's side, which they
-reached just as the shark-charmer's head reappeared above the surface.
-Another moment, and he was dragged into the boat, where, catching sight
-of the laughing faces ranged along the rail above, he shook his fist in
-mute menace, and so was rowed to shore.
-
-“Teach the beggar a lesson he won't forget in a hurry,” said Don, as he
-watched the boat recede. “Good-bye, old boy; we're not likely to meet
-again.”
-
-But in this sanguine forecast of the future he was mistaken, as events
-speedily proved.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II. A STROKE OF LUCK AND AN AFTER-STROKE.
-
-
- It was the afternoon of the day on which the shark-charmer so
-unwillingly walked the plank. The breeze was so light and fitful that it
-barely ruffled the surface of the sea about the schooner. Weary of the
-narrow limits of the deck, Don and his chum dropped into the boat and
-rowed ashore--Puggles, as a matter of course, bearing them company.
-
-“These beastly sands are like an oven!” growled Don, lifting his helmet
-to cool his dripping forehead. “Where shall we go, Jack?”
-
-“Bazaar,” replied Jack laconically; “always some fun to be had there.
-Pug, point for the bazaar.”
-
-“Me pointing, sar,” puffed the black boy, setting his dumpy legs in
-motion.
-
-Puggles was never so much in his element as when thus strutting
-pompously in advance, warning common nigger humanity of the white
-sahibs' approach. At such times the disdainful tilt of his nose, the
-supreme self-complaisance of his expansive grin, were as good as a show.
-
-A gay and animated scene did the bazaar present. Back and forth through
-the temporary street surged an endless throng of natives of every
-shade of complexion and variety of costume--buying, selling, shouting,
-jabbering, drinking with friends or fighting with enemies.
-
-“Much cry and little wool,” laughed Jack. “There's a big black fellow
-yonder auctioning off some pearl oysters; let's have a go at the next
-lot.”
-
-“All right,” assented Don; “perhaps we'll have a stroke of luck. The guv
-knew a poor half-caste once who bid in just such a chance lot as this,
-and in one of them he found sixty-eight thumping big pearls. Cleared
-thousands of pounds by that one bid, the guv says. Pug! here, Pug!”
-
-“Coming, sa'b,” gasped a faint voice, and Puggles wriggled his way from
-amongst the bystanders, shining with abundant perspiration and squeezed
-well-nigh flat by the pressure of the crowd.
-
-“Pug,” said his master, “up on this creel with you, and when that big
-black fellow yonder puts up his next lot, bid 'em in.”
-
-Up went Puggles, nothing loth to escape further squeezing, and up went
-the auctioneer's next lot. In five minutes' time the few dozens of
-oysters composing the lot were knocked down to the black boy at an
-absurdly low figure.
-
-“Here you are,” said Don, handing him the coin. “Pass that over, and
-fetch the things away till we see what's inside them.”
-
-Making a dive for the oysters, Puggles scrambled them into his cloth,
-and followed the sahibs to the outskirts of the crowd, blowing like
-a porpoise. Finding a convenient patch of shade beneath a banyan tree
-within a few yards of the lazy surf, they proceeded to ascertain,
-without further delay, whether the shells contained anything of value.
-
-“Him plenty smell got, anyhow,” commented Puggles, as he arranged
-the oysters, which had been several days out of the water, in a small
-pyramid.
-
-Jack threw himself on the sand, and surveyed the rough, discoloured heap
-with unqualified disgust. “They don't look very promising, I must say,”
- he cried. “Try that big one on top, Don.”
-
-Inserting the blade of his pocket-knife between the shells of the
-bivalve, Don prized it open and carefully examined its contents. It
-contained nothing of any value.
-
-Jack looked listlessly on, while his companion opened shell after
-shell with no other result than the finding of two or three miserable
-specimens of pearls, so small that, as Jack laughingly said, “one might
-stick them in ones eye and forget the moment after where one had put
-them.”
-
-Only three or four shells now remained unopened, and Don was on the
-point of abandoning the search in disgust, when Jack, who had edged
-himself on his elbow as close to the heap as the villainous odour of the
-decomposed oysters would allow, snatched up a shell of large size, and
-said:
-
-“Let me have the knife a moment, will you? This looks promising--it's
-the biggest of the whole lot, anyhow.”
-
-“There you are, then; I've had enough of them myself,” said Don, tossing
-him the knife and walking off.
-
-He had not proceeded half-a-dozen yards, however, when a loud shout
-brought him back at a run. Jack and Puggles were eagerly bending over
-the opened oyster.
-
-“What is it?” he asked breathlessly, going down on his knees beside
-them.
-
-Jack thrust the half-shell towards him. It was literally filled with
-magnificent pearls. *
-
- * In 1828 no less than sixty-seven pearls were taken from a
- single oyster on these grounds.--J. K. H.
-
-Not a word was spoken as the glistening, priceless globules were
-carefully abstracted from their unsightly case and laid upon Pug's
-coffee-coloured palm. Twenty-five pearls of matchless size and
-brilliancy did Jack count out ere the store was exhausted. So taken up
-were they with their good fortune that not one of the three observed a
-native creep stealthily towards them under cover of the tree.
-
-“There's been nothing like it known on the grounds for years!” cried Don
-excitedly. “Any more, Jack?”
-
-“No more,” said Jack, and was about to throw the shell away, when
-Puggles caught his arm.
-
-“Stop, sar, stop! Me see something yellow in shell. Stick knife in the
-meat, sar, that side.”
-
-With the point of the blade Jack prodded the substance of the oyster
-at the point indicated, and presently laid bare the queen of the royal
-family of pearls on which they had stumbled. Larger by far than any of
-the twenty-five already taken from the shell, this latest addition to
-the number was in shape like a pear, in lustre of the purest pale
-yellow.
-
-“Him gold pearl, sa'b!” cried Puggles gleefully, grinning from ear to
-ear. “Other only silver. Gold pearl plenty price fetching.”
-
-“Jack, old fellow,” cried Don, thumping his companion on the back,
-“Puggles is right; we're in luck. I've heard the guv say that a golden
-pearl isn't found once in twenty years. The priests are ready to give
-simply any sum you like for a really fine specimen.”
-
-The native who had concealed himself behind the trunk of the banyan
-tree, leaned eagerly forward. So close was he to the absorbed group
-that he could distinctly hear every word of their conversation. As he
-listened, an avaricious glitter shone in his crafty eyes, and he rubbed
-his hands unctuously together, as though he were rubbing pearls between
-them.
-
-“How much do you suppose the lot is worth; Don?” Jack inquired.
-
-“Some thousands of pounds, I should say. But the guv will be able to
-tell us. Say, I'd better put them in this.”
-
-Taking out his watch, he drew off the soft chamois leather case, and
-carefully transferred the output of the mammoth oyster from Pugs palm to
-this temporary receptacle.
-
-“Now,” cried Jack, leaping to his feet, “let's make for the schooner.
-The sun's set, and besides, I shan't feel easy until the golden 'un is
-in a safer place than a waistcoat pocket.”
-
-“That's so,” assented Don. “Point, Pug!”
-
-When they had disappeared in the crowded bazaar, the shark-charmer
-emerged from behind the tree, and took the road to that part of the
-beach where the boats lay.
-
-By the time Don and his companions reached the schooner, the brief
-twilight had deepened into the gray darkness of early night. The pearls
-were at once shown to Captain Leigh, who confirmed his son's estimate of
-their value. It would, he said, run well into four figures, if not into
-five. The golden pearl he pronounced to be of special value.
-
-“Not that it would fetch anything in England,” said he; “but wealthy
-natives--and more especially priests--stop at nothing to secure a pearl
-like that. I mean that in a double sense, my lads; so you had better
-stow your find away in a safe place.”
-
-In the locker under the cabin clock, accordingly, the chamois leather
-bag with its precious contents was placed. On closing the locker,
-however, to his annoyance Don found the key to be missing.
-
-“I shall put it in the little locker under the cabin clock,” said Don.
-“It locks, and there isn't a safer place on board the schooner.”
-
-[Illustration: 0031]
-
-“Wrap your handkerchief round the bag, so it won't be noticed if any
-one opens the locker,” suggested Jack. “It will be safe enough then,
-especially as nobody ever comes here except ourselves and Pug.”
-
-But on quitting the cabin, to their amazement they came face to face
-with the shark-charmer! He stood at the very bottom of the companionway,
-within a yard of the cabin door, and directly opposite the clock and
-locker.
-
-“What are you doing here?” cried Don, advancing upon him angrily.
-
-“Nothing, sab, nothing!” protested the native, dropping a running salvo
-of salaams as he backed up the steps. “Me only wanting to see big sa'b.”
-
-“Then be off about your business, or you'll get the whipping you missed
-this morning. Do you hear?” And, without further ado, Salambo made for
-the deck, where they saw him disappear over the side.
-
-“Do you think he saw us at the locker, Jack?” Don asked uneasily.
-
-“I should think not. But even if he did he wouldn't be any the wiser. He
-knows nothing about the pearls.”
-
-“True enough,” said Don, and so the subject dropped.
-
-The cabin clock indicated the hour of ten when they turned in for the
-night. Somehow Don found himself unable to sleep. In spite of every
-effort he could make to the contrary, his thoughts _would_ run on the
-pearls. At last he could stand it no longer. Leaping out of his berth,
-he struck a light and crept noiselessly into the main cabin. The
-companion door stood open to admit the night air, and his candle flared
-in the draught.
-
-“I'll get to sleep, perhaps, if I take a look at them,” he said to
-himself as he made his way to the locker.
-
-An exclamation of alarm burst from his lips. His hand shook so violently
-that it was with difficulty he could hold the candle. The lid of the
-locker stood wide open!
-
-Advancing the light, he peered into the receptacle. It contained
-nothing. Handkerchief, bag, pearls--all had disappeared!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.--THE QUEST BEGINS.
-
-
-For a moment the discovery paralysed him, body and mind. Then he turned
-and hurried to Jack's cabin. Jack was snoring. Don shook him fiercely by
-the shoulder.
-
-“Wake up! The pearls are gone!”
-
-Jack was awake and on his feet in a twinkling. “You're dreaming, old
-fellow,” said he, seeing Don in his night-clothes. “You're only half
-awake.” Don did not argue the matter. He simply seized Jack by the arm
-and dragged him into the main cabin. There the empty locker placed the
-truth of his assertion beyond dispute.
-
-“What's to be done?” gasped Jack.
-
-“Let us call Pug,” suggested Don. “He may know something about this.”
-
-Puggles slept on deck. In two minutes they were by his side, and he was
-stretching his jaws in a mighty yawn. Great was his astonishment when
-he heard of the loss. But he could throw no light on the matter. He had
-neither seen nor heard anything suspicious. As for Puggles himself, he
-was above suspicion.
-
-“Come down and let us have another look,” said Jack. “It's just
-possible, you know, that some one may have been to the locker and
-accidentally dropped or knocked the case out upon the floor. I can't
-believe it's gone.”
-
-Just as they reached the bottom of the companion-way, Puggles, who
-was slightly in advance of his master, stopped short, and called their
-attention to an object dangling from the handle of the door. Jack caught
-it up and ran to the table, where the lighted candle stood.
-
-“Merely a string of wooden beads,” said he, tossing the object on the
-table.
-
-“A native rosary!” cried Don, snatching it up. “I've seen this before
-somewhere.”
-
-“Sa'b,” broke in Puggles, his eyes the size and colour of Spanish
-onions, “him shark-charmer rosilly, sa'b!”
-
-“The very same!” cried Don. “I recollect seeing it round his neck this
-morning.”
-
-“And I recollect seeing it there this evening,” added Jack.
-
-“When we bundled him out of the companionway?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Then how do you account for our finding it on the door-knob, and for
-its being broken as it is now?”
-
-“Don't you see? The fellow returned, of course.”
-
-“Returned? When?”
-
-“After we saw him over the side; he never went ashore. He sneaked back,
-and then made off in a tremendous hurry. The position, not to say the
-condition, in which we found the rosary proves that. Jove! what a pair
-of fools we've been. That rascally shark-charmer has diddled us out of
-the pearls.”
-
-Don stared at his friend open-mouthed, yet unable to utter a single word
-either of assent or doubt, so great was the consternation produced in
-his mind by Jack's daring theory as to the disappearance of the pearls,
-and the consequences which must follow if it held good.
-
-“You may take it to be a dead certainty,” resumed Jack, following up his
-idea, “that when Salambo actually left the ship, the pearls went with
-him. We made the rascal walk the plank this morning, and he's bound to
-resent that, of course. In fact, the way in which he shook his fist
-at us when he went off in the boat shows that he _did_ resent it. Very
-well, then, there's a readymade motive for you--revenge.”
-
-“That's all right,” said Don, finding his tongue at last, “I'm not
-boggling over the motive: the value of the pearls is enough motive for
-any nigger. What puzzles me is this: How did he know we had them in our
-possession at all?”
-
-“Why, that's as plain as the nose on your face,” replied Jack; “the
-fellow was on shore at the same time we were, was he not?”
-
-“He was.”
-
-“Well, then, suppose he saw us buy the shells, watched us open them,
-and, in short, discovered that we had met with a stroke of luck. Then he
-follows us back here--you saw him yourself, didn't you?”
-
-“I did,” said Don.
-
-“And you see this, don't you?” dangling the rosary before Don's eyes.
-
-“I do; I'm not blind.”
-
-“Then what the dickens more do you want?”
-
-“The pearls,” said Don, laughing. “I'm convinced, old fellow, so no
-more palaver. Our business now is to run the shark-charmer down. What's
-the time?”
-
-“Eleven o'clock to the minute.”
-
-“And what start of us do you think he has got?”
-
-“It was about nine when we caught him sneaking, and we turned in at
-ten.”
-
-“And out again half an hour later. Then the locker must have been rifled
-between ten and halfpast. That would give him, say, forty-five minutes'
-start if we were on his track at this identical moment, which we------
-What was that? I heard a noise overhead.”
-
-“Some one at the skylight,” said Jack in a whisper. “S-s-sh! I'll slip on
-deck and see who it is.”
-
-The skylight referred to was situated directly over the cabin table, so
-that, its sash being then raised some six inches to admit the night air,
-it afforded a ready means of eavesdropping. Springing lightly up the
-cabin steps in his stocking feet, Jack took a cautious survey of the
-deck. The awning had been taken in at nightfall, and a full moon shone
-overhead, making the whole deck as light as day. Close beside the
-skylight, lashed against the cabin, stood a water-butt; and bending
-carelessly over this he saw one of the native crew. Calling out sharply,
-he bade him go forward, and the fellow, muttering some half-audible
-excuse about wanting a drink, slunk away.
-
-“A lascar after water; I don't think he was spying,” said Jack, diving
-below again. “All the same, we'll keep an eye aloft; that rascally
-Salambo may have an accomplice among the crew.”
-
-“Very likely; but as I was saying,” resumed Don, in a lower key, “the
-thief has had ample time to make himself scarce. Now the thing is--how
-are we to nab him?”
-
-“There are the _peons_. * Why not get the guv to set them on the fellow's
-track?”
-
- * Native attendants; pronounced _pewns_.--J..R. H.
-
-“Why, there's just the difficulty,” said Don, with a despairing gesture.
-“They all sleep ashore except one or two; and by the time we woke the
-governor, explained matters to him, and got the fellows started, there'd
-be no end of delay. Besides, the rascal would naturally be on the
-look-out for the _peons_, and either give them the slip or bribe them to
-let him off.”
-
-“That's so; whatever's done must be done sharp.”
-
-“Just what I was going to say,” continued Don. “The schooner, you see,
-sails for Colombo in two or three days' time at the most, and it would
-put the governor to no end of inconvenience to despatch half-a-dozen
-_peons_ on an errand like this just now. Fact is, I doubt if he'd do it
-at all, and we might go whistle for our pearls. No, I've a better plan
-than that to propose. There's no need to trouble the guv at all; we'll
-go ashore and capture the thief ourselves.”
-
-“Capital!” cried Jack; “I'd like nothing better. When shall we start?”
-
-“At once. There's a bright moon, the fellow has only about an hour's
-start, and with ordinary luck we ought to run him down by daybreak at
-the very----”
-
-“Hist!” said Jack suddenly; “there's some one at the skylight again.
-Wait a minute--I'll soon put an end to his spying.”
-
-Clearing the ladder at a bound, he emerged upon the deck before the
-listener was aware of his approach. The spy was actually bending over
-the open skylight. He was there for no good or friendly purpose--that
-was evident.
-
-“You're not after water this time, anyhow,” said Jack, hauling him off
-the cabin with scant ceremony. “Didn't I tell you to go forward?
-You'll obey orders next time, perhaps;” and drawing off, he felled him
-to the deck with a single blow.
-
-The lascar picked himself up and scuttled forward, muttering curses
-beneath his breath.
-
-“There,” said Jack quietly, as he rejoined those below, “we'll not
-be spied upon again to-night, I fancy. Now, Don, for the rest of your
-plan.”
-
-“That's soon told. I propose that we follow the thief at once. The only
-difficulty will be to get on his track.”
-
-“Marster going take me?” queried Puggles anxiously.
-
-“Why, of course,” said Don; “we couldn't manage without you, Pug.”
-
-“Then,” said Puggles, grinning, “me soon putting on track; me knowing
-place Salambo sleeping plenty nights.”
-
-“Good; there's something in that,” said Don. “He is sure to go straight
-to his den on leaving the schooner, though it's hardly likely he'll
-remain there to sleep. Still, he might. 'Twill give us a clue to his
-whereabouts, at all events. And now, Jack, ready's the word.”
-
-No time was to be lost, and quietly and quickly their preparations were
-completed. These were by no means extensive: they fully expected to
-return to the schooner by break of day. A revolver, half-a-dozen rounds
-of ammunition, and a few rupees-disposed in their pockets, they stole
-noiselessly on deck. The night was one of breathless calm, and the watch
-lay stretched upon their backs, snoring away the sultry hours of duty.
-Save our three adventurers, not a living thing was astir; not a sound
-broke the stillness of the night; and high overhead the moon floated in
-ghostly splendour.
-
-The boat, as it chanced, lay on that side of the schooner farthest
-from the shore; and in order to shape their course for the beach it was
-necessary to round the vessel's bows. Puggles held the tiller-ropes, but
-in doing this he miscalculated his distance, and ran the boat full tilt
-against the schooners cable.
-
-“Keep her off, Pug!” cried his master in suppressed, half-angry tones.
-“Can't you see where you're steering?”
-
-In the momentary confusion a figure appeared for a moment above the
-schooner's bulwarks. Then a glittering object hurtled through the
-moonlit air and struck the gun'le of the boat immediately abaft the
-thwait on which Jack sat. Jack uttered a stifled cry and dropped his
-oar.
-
-“What's the matter?” said Don impatiently, as the boat swung clear of
-the cable. “Pull, old fellow; we've no time to lose.”
-
-“Better lose a little time than one's life,” muttered Jack through his
-set teeth. “Look here!”
-
-Turning in his seat Don saw, still quivering in the gun'le of the boat
-where its point had stuck, a sailor's heavy sheath-knife. In its passage
-it had slashed open the shoulder of Jack's coat, grazing the flesh so
-closely as to draw blood--the first shed in the quest of the golden
-pearl.
-
-Jack passed it off with an air of indifference.
-
-“A mere scratch,” said he; “but a close shave all the same. The work
-of that treacherous lascar I knocked down a while back. Saw his ugly
-head-piece above the rail just now, don't you know. There's no time to
-pay him out now, but if ever he interferes with me again he'll get his
-knife back, anyhow!” and wrenching the formidable weapon free of the
-plank, he thrust it into his belt and again bent to his oar.
-
-“If that fellow's an accomplice of the shark-charmer, it looks as though
-they meant business,” commented Don, seconding his companion's stroke.
-
-“So do we, if it comes to that,” was Jacks significant retort,
-
-For some time they pulled in silence, the creaking of the oars in the
-rowlocks and the soft purling of the water about the boat's prow being
-the only sounds audible. When within a couple of hundred yards of the
-gleaming surfline, Don suddenly broke the silence.
-
-“Hold hard, Jack! Do you make out anything astern there--anything black
-on the water?”
-
-“Nothing,” said Jack, after a moment's hesitation.
-
-“It's gone now, but I saw it quite plainly. Struck me it looked like a
-man's head. Must have been a dugong.”
-
-“Or the lascar,” suggested Jack. “He's safe to follow us if he's an
-accomplice.”
-
-“Hardly safe with so many sharks about,” rejoined Don, “unless his
-master has provided him with an extra potent charm.”
-
-Five minutes later, the boat having meanwhile been beached upon the
-deserted sands, Puggles was rapidly “pointing” for the bazaar, where the
-shark-charmer slept o' nights. That they should find him there to-night,
-however, was almost too much to hope. He had probably “made tracks” with
-all speed after securing the pearls. All the same, a visit to the bazaar
-might furnish some clue to his present whereabouts.
-
-“Stop!” said Don, when within fifty yards of the spot. “The whole place
-will be astir in two minutes if we show ourselves, Jack. We'd better
-send Pug on ahead to reconnoitre while we wait here. Do you know the hut
-he usually sleeps in, Pug?”
-
-“Me finding with me eyes shut, sa'b.”
-
-“Good! Now listen. Make your way to this hut as quietly as you can, and
-ascertain whether he's there or not. If he's there, don't wake him, but
-come back here as fast as your legs can carry you. If he's not there,
-try and find out where he's gone.”
-
-“Put your cloth over your head so he won't recognise you, and say you've
-come on business,” put in Jack. “Pretend you want a charm, or something
-of that sort.”
-
-“Not a bad idea,” assented Don. “You understand, Pug?”
-
-“Me understanding, sa'b.”
-
-“Then be off with you, sharp!”
-
-Puggles promptly disappeared.
-
-In the course of ten minutes he returned, accompanied by a native
-muffled from head to heel in a blanket.
-
-“Surely he can't have induced the old fellow to return with him!”
- whispered Jack excitedly.
-
-But in this surmise he was wrong. It was not the shark-charmer.
-
-“Dis one bery nice black man; plenty talk got,” said Puggles, by way of
-introduction, when he reached the spot where his master and Jack were
-waiting. “Him telling shark-charmer no here; he going one village.”
-
-“Just as I feared,” said Don. “How far is it to this village, Pug!”
-
-“Him telling one two legs,” replied Puggles, meaning leagues. “Village
-'long shore; marster giving one rupee, dis'black man showing way.”
-
-Without further parley the rupee was transferred from Don's pocket to
-the stranger's outstretched palm, and off they started. After following
-the beach for about a mile, their guide turned his back upon the sea and
-struck inland, leading them a tortuous course amid ghostly, interminable
-sand-hills, where the mournful sighing of the night-wind through the
-tall silver-grass, and the howling of predatory jackals, added to the
-weird loneliness of the scene. A blurred furrow in the yielding sand
-formed the only footpath. So slow was their progress that when at last
-the guide pointed out the village a halfmile ahead, Don, on consulting
-his watch, found it to be three o'clock. They had wasted fully two hours
-in walking six miles.
-
-While they were still some little distance short of the village, the
-guide stopped, and pointing out a pool of water which shone like a boss
-of polished silver amid the sand-hills, asked leave to go and slake his
-thirst. His request granted, he disappeared amid the dunes.
-
-“Do you know,” said Jack, while they were impatiently awaiting his
-return, “I fancy I've seen that fellow before, though I can't for the
-life of me recall where.”
-
-The guide not returning, they at length went in search of him. But Pug's
-“bery nice black man” was nowhere to be seen.
-
-“Looks as if he meant to leave us in the lurch,” Jack began, when a
-shout of “Him here got, sa'b!” from Puggles, brought them back to the
-footpath at a run.
-
-The new-comer, however, was not the missing guide, but a stranger. He
-had been belated at the bazaar, he told them, and was now making his
-way home to the village close by. In answer to inquiries concerning the
-shark-charmer, he imparted a startling piece of news.
-
-The shark-charmer had indeed taken his departure from the bazaar,
-but not to this village. He had, the stranger asserted, embarked in a
-coasting vessel bound for the opposite side of the Strait.
-
-Don uttered an exclamation of impatience and dismay.
-
-“He will be safe on the Madras coast by daybreak!” he cried.
-
-“Him there coming from, sa'b,” put in Puggles.
-
-“And that lying guide,” added Jack savagely, “was an accomplice, left
-behind to throw us off the scent. Don't you remember you saw some one
-swimming after the boat? I'll lay any odds 'twas the lascar. He got
-to the bazaar ahead of us--he could easily manage that, you know,
-by running along the sands--muffled himself up so that I shouldn't
-recognise him, and then led us on this fool's errand while his master
-made off. Well, good-bye to the golden pearl!”
-
-“Not a bit of it!” cried Don resolutely. “I, for one, shan't relinquish
-the quest, come what may. Back we go to the schooner! Then, with the
-governor's consent, we'll go further. Point, Pug!”
-
-Jack seconding this proposal heartily, they rewarded the communicative
-native, and with unflagging determination retraced their steps. By four
-o'clock they had traversed something more than half the distance. The
-dawn star was now high above the eastern horizon. A rosy flush in the
-same quarter warned them that day was rapidly approaching. Suddenly, out
-of the gray distance ahead, a dull booming sound floated to their ears.
-
-“The schooner's signal gun!” exclaimed Don. “Why, it's too early yet
-by a good hour for the boats to put out. What's the governor about, I
-wonder?”
-
-“There it goes again!” cried Jack. “I never knew it to be fired twice of
-a morning, did you?”
-
-“Never,” said Don uneasily. “Come, let us get on!”
-
-Off again at their best speed, until at length the heavy path was
-exchanged for the smooth, hard sand of the beach. On this it was
-possible to make better time, and by five o'clock they were within half
-a mile or so of the bazaar. It was now daylight; but a sharp bend in the
-coast-line, and the sand-hills which here rose steeply from the beach
-on their left, as yet concealed both the landing-place and the schooner
-from view.
-
-Puggles, who in spite of his shortness of limb had throughout maintained
-the lead by several rods, suddenly stopped, and fell to shouting and
-gesticulating wildly. Breaking into a run, Don and Jack speedily came up
-with him.
-
-“Look, sa'b, look!” gasped Puggles, pointing down the coast with shaking
-hand.
-
-Far away on the horizon appeared the white canvas of a vessel bowling
-along before the fresh land breeze, with a fleet of fishing-boats
-spreading their fustian-hued wings in her wake.
-
-The spot where our adventurers had last seen the schooner at anchor was
-deserted. She was gone!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.--INTRODUCES BOSIN, AND TELLS HOW CAPTAIN MANGO PROVED
-HIMSELF A TRUMP.
-
-
- The schooner had sailed!
-
-When the dismay caused by this unlooked-for turn of events had somewhat
-abated, Jack, catching sight of the black boy's lugubrious face, fell to
-laughing heartily.
-
-“After all,” said Don, following his chum's example, “it's no use crying
-over spilt milk. I'm not sure but this is the best thing that could have
-happened, Jack.”
-
-“My opinion exactly. We began the quest without the guv's knowledge, and
-_nolens volens_ we must continue it without his consent. What's the next
-piece on the programme, old fellow?”
-
-Don pondered for a moment.
-
-“Why, first,” said he, “we must ascertain whether that fellow told us
-the truth about the shark-charmer's having gone across the Strait. If
-it turns out that he has, then I'm not exactly clear yet as to what our
-next move will be, though I've an idea. You shall hear what it is later
-on.”
-
-“All right,” said Jack “whatever course you decide on, I'm with you
-heart and fist, anyhow.”
-
-Arrived in the vicinity of the bazaar, Puggles was at once despatched to
-learn what he could of the shark-charmer's movements. In half an hour
-he returned. His report confirmed that which they had already heard.
-The shark-charmer had undoubtedly sailed for the opposite side of the
-Strait.
-
-Throwing himself upon his back in the shade of the banyan tree which
-had witnessed the discovery of the pearls, Don drew his helmet over his
-eyes, and pondered long and deeply.
-
-“Jack,” said he at length, “how much money have you?”
-
-Jack turned out his pockets.
-
-“Barely a rupee and a half,” said he,
-
-“And I,” added Don, turning out his own, “have four and a half.”
-
-“Here one rupee got, sa'b,” cried Puggles, tugging at his waist-cloth.
-“Me giving him heart and fist, anyhow.”
-
-“That makes seven rupees, then,” said his master, laughing; “not much to
-continue the quest on, eh, Jack?”
-
-“We'll manage,” said Jack hopefully. “But, I say, you haven't told us
-your plans yet, old fellow.”
-
-“Oh, our course is as plain as a pikestaff. We'll hire a native boat,
-and follow the shark-charmer across the Strait. The only question is,
-where's enough money to come from?”
-
-“Don't know,” said Jack, “unless we try to borrow it in the bazaar.”
-
-At this juncture there occurred an interruption which, unlikely though
-it may seem, was destined to lead to a most satisfactory solution of
-this all-important and perplexing question.
-
-While this conversation was in progress Puggles had seated himself at
-a short distance behind his master, and throwing his turban aside,
-proceeded to untie and dress the one tuft of hair which adorned the back
-of his otherwise cleanly shaven head.
-
-Directly above the spot where he sat there extended far out from the
-trunk of the banyan a branch of great size, from which dangled numerous
-rope-like air-roots, which, reaching to-within a few feet of the ground,
-swayed to and fro in the morning breeze. Out along this branch crept a
-large black monkey, which, after taking a cautious survey of Puggles and
-his unconscious neighbours, glided noiselessly down one of the swinging
-roots, and from its extremity dropped lightly to the ground within a
-yard of the discarded turban. Cautiously, with his cunning ferret-eyes
-fastened on the preoccupied Puggles, the monkey approached the coveted
-prize, snatched it up, and with a shrill cry of triumph turned tail and
-fled.
-
-Looking quickly round at the cry, Puggles took in the situation at a
-glance.
-
-“Sa'b! Sar!” he shouted, invoking the aid of both his master and Jack in
-one breath, “one black debil monkey me turban done hooking;” and leaping
-to his feet he gave chase.
-
-“Why,” said Jack, “the little beast is making a bee-line for the old
-fort. It must be Bosin, Captain Mango's pet monkey.”
-
-“Captain Mango!” cried Don, as though seized with some sudden
-inspiration. “Never thought of him until this minute!” and, clapping on
-his helmet, he set off at a run after Puggles and the monkey.
-
-Away like the wind went the monkey, the stolen turban trailing after him
-through the sand like a great serpent; and away went Puggles, his back
-hair flying. But while Puggles was short of wind, the monkey was nimble
-of foot. The race was, therefore, unequal from the start, its finish
-more summary than satisfactory; for as Puggles ran, with his eyes
-glued upon the scurrying monkey, and his mouth wide-stretched, his foot
-unluckily came in contact with a tree-root, which lay directly across
-his path. Immediately beyond was a bed of fine soft sand, and into this
-he pitched, head foremost. Just then his master came up, with Jack at
-his heels.
-
-“Sa'b! Sar!” spluttered Puggles, knuckling his eyes and spitting sand
-right and left, “debil monkey done stole turban. Where him going, sa'b?”
-
-“Come on, Pug,” his master called out as he ran past; “your headgear's
-all right--the monkey's taken it into the fort.”
-
-The structure known as “the fort” occupied the summit of a sandy knoll,
-about which grew a thick plantation of cocoanut palms, seemingly as
-ancient as the fort itself. The walls of the enclosure had so crumbled
-away in places as to afford glimpses of the buildings within. These
-were two in number--one an ancient _godown_, as dilapidated as the
-surrounding wall; the other, a bungalow in excellent repair, blazing in
-all the glory of abundant whitewash.
-
-Towards this building, after passing the tumble-down gateway, with its
-turreted side-towers alive with pigeons, Don and his companion shaped
-their course; for this was by no means their first visit to the fort.
-A broad, low-eaved verandah shaded the front of the bungalow, and upon
-this opened two or three low windows and a door. As they drew near
-a shadow suddenly darkened the doorway, and there emerged upon the
-verandah an individual whose pea-jacket and trousers of generous
-nautical cut unmistakably proclaimed him to be a seafaring man. About
-his throat a neckerchief of a deep marine blue was tied in a huge knot;
-while from beneath the left leg of his wide pantaloons there projected
-the end of a stout wooden substitute for the real limb.
-
-On catching sight of his visitors an expression of mingled astonishment
-and pleasure overspread his honest, bronzed features.
-
-[Illustration: 0057]
-
-“Shiver my binnacle!” roared he, advancing with a series of hitches and
-extended hand to meet them. “Shiver my binnacle if it ain't Master Don
-and Master Jack made port again! An' split my topsails, yonder's the
-little nigger swab a-bearin' down under full sail out o' the offin! Lay
-alongside the old hulk, my hearties, an' tell an old shipmate what may
-be the meaning of it all. Where away might the schooner be, I axes?”
-
-“To tell you the truth, Captain Mango,” said Don, shaking the old sailor
-by the hand in hearty fashion, “on that point we're as much at sea as
-yourself. We pulled ashore last night on a little matter of business of
-our own--without the skipper's knowledge, you understand--and when we
-returned here this morning the schooner had sailed.”
-
-“Shiver my figger-head if ever I hear'd any yarn to beat that!” roared
-the captain, gripping Jack by the hand in turn. “An' d'ye mean to say
-now, as ye ain't atween decks, sound asleep in your bunks, when the
-wessel gets under weigh?”
-
-“Not we,” cried Jack, laughing at the captain's puzzled face and earnest
-manner; “we were miles down the coast just then.”
-
-“Belay there!” sang out the captain, rubbing his stubbly chin in greater
-perplexity than ever. “Blow me if I'm able to make out what tack you're
-on, lad. For, d'ye see, I lays alongside o' the wessel somewheres
-about eight bells--arter they fires the signal gun, d'ye see--to pay my
-'specks to the master like, and shiver my bulk-head, when I axes what
-might _your_ bearin's be, lads, he ups an' says, 'The younkers be below
-decks,' says he; an' so he weighs anchor, an' shapes his course for
-Colombie.”
-
-“It's plain there's been a double misunderstanding,” said Don; “_we_
-knew nothing of the guv's intention to sail this morning, and _he_ knew
-nothing of our absence from the schooner. He, of course, thought we were
-below, and so sailed without us. As I hinted just now, we're ashore on
-business of our own. Fact is, we're in a fix, and we want your advice.”
-
-“Adwice is it?” cried the captain, leading his visitors indoors; “fire
-away, lads, till I hears what manner o' stuff you wants, and the wery
-best a water-logged old seaman can give ye, ye shall have--shiver my
-figger-head if ye shan't! Howsomedever, afore we lays our heads together
-like, I'll pipe the cook and order ye some wittles.” This hospitable
-duty performed, the captain threw himself into a chair with his
-“main-brace,” as he jocosely termed his wooden leg, extended before him,
-and, bidding Don proceed with what he had to say, composed himself
-to listen. Whereupon Don recounted the cause and manner of the
-shark-charmer's punishment, the discovery and subsequent loss of the
-pearls, together with their reasons for suspecting the shark-charmer of
-the theft, as well as how they had been tricked by the latter's supposed
-accomplice, and on making their way back to the beach had found, not the
-schooner as they expected, but a deserted roadstead.
-
-“The thief has crossed the Strait, there's no doubt about that,” he
-concluded. “_We_ want to hire a boat and go in pursuit of him; but the
-governor's sudden departure has placed us in a dilemma. The fact is,
-captain, we haven't enough cash to----”
-
-“Belay there!” roared the captain, stumping across the room to a
-side-table. “Hold hard, lads, till I has a whiff o' the fragrant!
-Shiver my maintop! there's nothing like tobackie for ilin' up a seaman's
-runnin' gear, says you!”
-
-Filling a meerschaum pipe of high colour and huge dimensions from a
-pouch almost as large as a sailor's bag, the captain reseated himself,
-and for some minutes puffed away in silence.
-
-“Shiver my smokestack!” cried he at last, slapping his thigh
-energetically with his disengaged hand, “the thing's as easy as boxin'
-the compass, lads! You axes me for adwice: my adwice is, up anchor and
-away as soon as ye can. Supplies is low, says you. What o' that? I axes.
-There's a canvas bag in the old sea-chest yonder as'll charter all the
-boats hereabouts, if so be as they're wanted, which they ain't, d'ye
-mind me. Ye can dror on the canvas bag, lads, an' welcome--why not? I
-axes. An' there's as tight a leetle cutter in the boat-house below as
-ever ye clapped eyes on--which the _Jolly Tar's_ her name--what's at
-your sarvice, shiver my main-brace if it ain't! An' blow me, as the
-fog-horn says to the donkey-engine, I'll ship along with ye, lads!”
-
- “An' a-sailin' we'll go, we'll go;
-
- An' a-sailin' we will go-o-o!”
-
-he concluded, with a stave of a rollicking old sea-song.
-
-“Hurrah! You're a trump, captain, and no mistake!” cried Jack, while Don
-sprang forward and gripped the old sailor's hand with a heartiness that
-showed how thoroughly he appreciated this generous offer.
-
-“Why, y'see, lads,” explained the captain apologetically, “'twould be
-ekal to a-sendin' of ye to Davy Jones if I was to let ye go pokin” round
-this 'ere Strait alone. Now me--rope-yarn an' marlin-spikes!--there
-ain't a reef, nor a shool, nor yet a crik atween Colombie an' Jafna
-P'int but what's laid down on this 'ere old chart o' mine,” tapping his
-forehead significantly. “An' besides I'm a-spilin' for a bit o' the
-briny, so with you I ships--an' why not? I axes.”
-
-“And right glad of your company and assistance we'll be, captain,” said
-Don. “The main difficulty will be, of course, to discover to what part
-of the Indian coast the thief has gone.”
-
-The captain puffed thoughtfully at his pipe.
-
-“Why, as for that,” said he at length, “I've an idee as I knows his
-reckonin', shiver my binnacle if I ain't! But that's neither here nor
-there at this present speakin'. Ballast's the first consideration, lads;
-so dror up your cheers an' tackle the perwisions.”
-
-When they had complied with this welcome invitation to the entire
-satisfaction of the captain and their own appetites, “Now, lads,” said
-the old sailor gaily, “do ye turn in an' snatch a wink o' sleep, whiles
-I goes an' gets the cutter ready for puttin' to sea. For, says you, look
-alive's the word if so be as we wants to overhaul the warmint as took
-the treasure in tow. Spike my guns!--we'll make him heave to in no
-time!
-
- “For all things is ready, an' nothing we want,
-
- To fit out our ship as rides so close by;
-
- Both wittles an' weapons, they be nothing scant,
-
- Like worthy sea-dogs ourselves we will try!”
-
-Trolling this ditty, the captain stumped away, while his guests made
-themselves as comfortable as they could, and sought the slumber of which
-they stood so much in need.
-
-It was late in the afternoon when they woke. Puggles had disappeared.
-Proceeding to the beach, they found the captain, assisted by a small
-army of native servants, busily engaged in putting the-finishing touches
-to his preparations for the proposed voyage. Just above the surf-line
-lay the _Jolly Tar_--a trim little craft, fitted with mast-and sprit,
-whose sharp, clean-cut lines betokened possibilities in the way of speed
-that promised well for the issue of their enterprise. In the cuddy, amid
-a bewildering array of pots, pans, and pannkins, Puggles had already
-installed himself, his shining face a perfect picture of self-complacent
-good-nature, whilst Bosin, newly released from durance vile, sat in the
-stern-sheets, cracking nuts-and jabbering defiance at his black rival.
-
-“A purty craft!” chuckled the captain, checking for a moment the song
-that was always on his lips, as he led his visitors to the cutters side;
-“stave my water-butt if there's anything can pull ahead of her in these
-'ere parts. Everything shipshape 'an' ready to hand, d'ye see--wittles
-for the woyage, an' drink for the woyagers. Likewise ammunitions o'
-war,” cried he proudly, pointing out a number of muskets and shining
-cutlasses, which a servant just then brought up and placed on board.
-
- “Bath, wittles an' weapons, they be nothing scant,
-
- So like worthy sea-dogs ourselves we will try.”
-
-“What with the cutlasses and guns, and the captain's wooden leg, to
-say nothing of our small-arms, Don,” said Jack, “we'd better set up for
-buccaneers at once.”
-
-“Shiver my main-brace! a wooden leg ain't sich a bad article arter all,”
- rejoined the captain; “specially when a seaman falls overboard. With a
-life-buoy o' that nater rove on to his starn-sheets, he's sartin to keep
-one leg above water, says you.”
-
-“No doubt of that, even if he goes down by the head,” assented Don,
-laughing. “But, I say, captain, what's in the keg--spirits?”
-
-“Avast there!” replied the captain, half shutting one eye and
-contemplating the keg with the other, “that 'ere keg, lads, has stuff in
-its hold what's a sight better'n spurts. Gunpowder, lads, that's what it
-is; and spike my guns if we don't broach the same to the health of old
-Salambo when we falls in with him. What say you, lads?
-
- “We always be ready,
-
- Steady, lads, steady;
-
- We'll fight an' we'll conquer agin an' agin.”
-
-“I hope we shan't have to do that, captain,” said Jack gravely. “But
-powder or no powder, we'll pay the beggar out, anyhow.”
-
-“Right, lad; so we'll just take the keg along with us in case of
-emargencies like. Shiver my compass, there's no telling aforehand what
-this 'ere wenture may lead to.”
-
-To whatever the venture was destined to lead, preparations for its
-successful inception went on apace, and by nightfall all was in
-readiness. The captain declaring that he “couldn't abide the ways o'
-them 'ere jabbering nigger swabs when afloat,” the only addition to
-their numbers was a single trusty servant of the old sailor's, who was
-taken along rather with a view to the cutter's safety when they should
-be ashore than because his assistance was required in sailing her.
-
-Don having despatched an overland messenger with a letter to his father,
-explaining their absence and proposed undertaking, as the full moon rose
-out of the eastern sea the cutter was launched.
-
-Half an hour later, with her white sails bellying before the freshening
-land-breeze, she bore away for the opposite shore of the Strait, on that
-quest from which one at least of those on board was destined never to
-return.
-
-While her sails were yet visible in the moonlit offing, a native crept
-down to the deserted beach. He was a dark-skinned, evil-featured fellow;
-and the moonlight, falling upon his face, showed his left temple to
-be swollen and discoloured as from a recent blow. On his shoulder he
-carried a paddle-and a boathook.
-
-“The wind will drop just before dawn,” he muttered, as he stood a moment
-noting the strength and direction of the breeze. “Then, you white-devil,
-then!” and he patted the boathook affectionately, as if between him and
-it there existed some secret, dark understanding.
-
-Selecting a _ballam_ or “dug-out” from amongst a number that lay there,
-he placed the boathook carefully in the bottom of the frail skiff, and
-launched it almost in the furrow which the cutter's keel had ploughed in
-the yielding sand. Then springing in, and plying his paddle with rapid
-strokes, he quickly disappeared in the cutter's wake.
-
-[Illustration: 0067]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.--THE LASCAR GETS HIS KNIFE BACK.
-
-
- Her light sails winged to catch every breath of the light but steady
-breeze that chased her astern, the cutter for some hours bowled through
-the water merrily. In the cabin Puggles and the captain's Black servant
-snored side by side; whilst Don and Jack lolled comfortably just abaft
-the mast-, where the night wind, soft and spicy as the breath of Eden,
-would speedily have lulled them to slumber but for the excitement that
-fired their blood. The Captain was at the tiller, Bosin curled up by his
-side.
-
-“If this 'ere wind holds, lads,” exclaimed the old sailor abruptly,
-after a prolonged silence on his part, “we'd orter make the island agin
-sunrise, shiver my forefoot if we don't!”
-
-Don looked up with half-sleepy interest. “Island, captain? I thought we
-were heading straight for the Indian coast.”
-
-“Ay, so we be, straight away. But, y'see, lad, as I hinted a while back,
-I has a sort o' innard idee, so to say, as the old woman ain't on the
-mainland.”
-
-“What old woman?” queried Jack, yawning. “Didn't know there was one in
-the case, captain.”
-
-The old sailor burst into a roar of laughter. “An' no more there ain't,
-lad,” chuckled he; “an' slit my hammock if we wants one, says you. Forty
-odd year has I sailed the seas, an' hain't signed articles with any on
-'em yet. A tight leetle wessel's the lass for me, lads; for, unship my
-helm! _she_ never takes her own head for it, says you.”
-
-“Then what about the old woman you mentioned captain?” said Don
-banteringly.
-
-“Avast there now! An' d'ye mean to say,” demanded the captain
-incredulously, “as you ain't ever hear'd tell o' the fish what sails
-under that 'ere name? And a wicious warmint he is, too, shiver my
-keelson! Hysters is his wittles, an' pearls his physic; he lives on 'em,
-so to say; an' so I calls the cove as took them pearls o' your'n in tow
-an old woman; an' why not, I axes?”
-
-“But what about the island you spoke of just now, captain?”
-
-“Why, d'ye see, it's this way, lads; there's an island off the coast
-ahead, a sort o' holy place like, where them thievin' natives goes once
-a year an' gets salwation from their sins. Howsomedever, that's neither
-here nor there, says you; the p'int's this, lads: Somewheres about the
-month o' March, which is this same month, says you, here the priests
-flocks from all parts, an' here they stays until they gets a purty
-pocketful o' cash. Now, my idee's this, d'ye see: the old woman--which
-I means Salambo--lays alongside the schooner an' takes them pearls o'
-your'n in tow. What for? says you. Cash, says I. An' so, shiver my
-main-brace, he shapes his course for this 'ere island, an' sells 'em to
-the priests.”
-
-“Very likely,” assented Don. “He's bound to carry them to the best
-market, of course.”
-
-“And equally of course the best market is where the most priests are. By
-Jove, you _have_ a headpiece, captain!” put in Jack.
-
-“I'm afraid, though,” resumed Don, after a moment's silence, “I'm afraid
-it's not going to be so easy to come at the old fellow as we think. You
-say this island's a sort of holy place; well, it's bound to be packed
-with natives to the very surf-line in that case. Rather ticklish work,
-I should think, taking the old fellow among so many pals. There's the
-getting ashore, too; what's to prevent their sighting us?”
-
-“Belay there!” roared the captain, vigorously thumping the bottom of the
-boat with his wooden leg. “Shiver my main-brace! what sort o' craft do
-ye take me for, I axes? A island's a island the world over--a lump o'
-land what's floated out to sea. Wery good, that bein' so--painters an'
-boathooks!--ain't it as easy a-boardin' of her through the starn-ports
-as along o' the forechains?”
-
-“Oh, you mean to make the back of the island, and steal a march on old
-Salambo from the rear, then?” cried Don. “A capital idea!”
-
-“You're on the right tack there, lad,” assented the captain. “There's as
-purty a leetle cove at the backside o' that island as ever wessel cast
-anchor in, an' well I knows it, shiver my binnacle! Daylight orter put
-us into it, if so be---- Split my sprit-sail, lads, if it ain't
-a-fallin' calm!”
-
-[Illustration: 0074]
-
-An ominous flapping of the cutter's sails confirmed the captain's words.
-During the half-hour over which this conversation extended the wind
-had gradually died away until scarcely a movement of the warm night
-air could be felt. The cutter, losing her headway, rolled lazily to the
-motion of the long, glassy swell. Consulting his watch, Don announced it
-to be three o'clock.
-
-“This 'ere's the lull at ween the sea-breeze an' the land-breeze,”
- observed the captain complacently, working the tiller from side to side
-as if trying to coax renewed life into the cutter. “How-somedever, it
-hadn't orter last long. Stow my sea-chest!--we'll turn in an' catch a
-wink o' sleep atween whiles. Here, Master Jack, lad! take a turn at the
-tiller, will 'ee?”
-
-Settling himself in the captain's place, with instructions to call that
-worthy sea-dog should the wind freshen, Jack began his first watch.
-Becalmed as they were, the tiller was useless, so he let it swing,
-contenting himself with keeping a bright look-out. But soon he concluded
-even this to be an unnecessary precaution. Not a sail was to be seen on
-the moonlit expanse of ocean; and even had a score been in sight, there
-would still have been no danger whatever, in the absence of wind, of
-their interfering with the cutter. In fine, so secure did he consider
-their position, and so soporific an influence did the comfortable
-snoring of Don and the captain exercise upon him, that in a very short
-time his head sank upon his breast, and he fell asleep.
-
-He had slept soundly for perhaps an hour, when a cold, touch upon the
-cheek startled him into consciousness.
-
-Rousing himself, he found Bosin at his elbow. The monkey for some
-reason had left his masters side, and it was his clammy paw, Jack now
-perceived, that had awakened him. It almost looked as if the monkey had
-purposely interrupted his slumber. But what had roused the monkey? Jack
-rose to his feet, stretched himself, and looked about him.
-
-The night was, if anything, more breathlessly calm than when he had
-relieved the captain. Upon the unruffled, deserted sea the moonlight
-shimmered with a brilliancy uncanny in its ghostliness. From the cutter
-straight away to and around the horizon not an object, so far as he
-could make out, darkened the surface of the water, except under the
-cutter's larboard bow, where the moon-cast shadow of the sail fell.
-He fancied he saw something move there, close under the bow where the
-shadow lay blackest. The next instant it had disappeared.
-
-“All right, Bosin, old chap,” said he, stroking the monkeys back; “a
-false alarm this time--back to your quarters, old fellow!”
-
-The monkey, as if reassured by these words, crept away to his master's
-side, whilst Jack resumed his seat, and again dozed off.
-
-Not for long, however. It was not the monkey this time, but a sudden and
-by no means gentle thud against the cutters side that roused him. Awake
-in an instant, he sprang to his feet with a startled exclamation. Close
-under the cutter's quarter lay a canoe, and in the canoe there stood
-erect a native, with what appeared to be a boathook poised above his
-head. All this Jack took in at a glance.
-
-“Boat ahoy! Who's that?” he cried sharply, his hand instinctively
-seeking the knife at his belt.
-
-For answer came a savage, muttered imprecation; and the boathook,
-impelled with all the strength of the native's muscular arms, descended
-swiftly through the air. Starting aside, Jack received the blow' upon
-his left arm, off which the heavy, iron-shod weapon glanced, striking
-the gun'le of the boat with a resounding crash.
-
-“The lascar!” muttered Jack between his teeth, as he stepped back a pace
-and whipped out his knife in anticipation of a renewal of the attack.
-
-But the lascar, baffled in his attempt to take his enemy by surprise,
-did not repeat the blow. Instead, he drew off, and with all his strength
-drove the iron point of the boathook through the cutter's side below the
-water-line.
-
-“By Heaven!” cried Jack, as he perceived his intention, “I'll soon
-settle scores with you, my fine fellow.”
-
-Springing lightly upon the gunle, at a single bound he cleared the few
-yards of open water intervening between the cutter and the canoe, and
-with all the impetus of his leap drove the knife into the lascar's
-shoulder up to the very hilt.
-
-The lascar went overboard like a log. The canoe overturning at the same
-instant, Jack followed him.
-
-The noise of the scuffle having roused the sleepers, all was now wild
-commotion on board the cutter; Captain Mango roaring out his strange
-nautical oaths, and stumping hither and thither in search of something
-with which to stop the leak; Don shouting wildly at Jack, as he hastily
-threw off shoes and coat to swim to his assistance. Before either well
-knew what had actually happened, Jack was alongside.
-
-“What's the matter? Are you hurt?” Don inquired anxiously, giving him a
-hand over the side.
-
-“Hurt? No, not a scratch,” said Jack lightly, scrambling inboard, and
-proceeding to wring the water from his dripping garments. “A narrow
-squeak, though. That lascar villain has got his knife back, anyhow.”
-
-“Who?” cried Don in amazement; for, amid the confusion, neither he nor
-the captain had seen the native.
-
-“The lascar. What else do you suppose I went over the side for? I dozed
-off, you see, captain,” said Jack, as the old sailor came stumping up
-with extended hand, “and that lascar dog, who must have seen us sail and
-paddled after us, stole a march on me, and tried to crack my nut with
-a boathook. Lucky for me, he ran his canoe against the side and woke me
-up. Got on my feet just in time to dodge the blow. Then he smashed the
-boathook through the side. By Jove! I forgot that. We must stop the
-leak, or we'll fill in no time.”
-
-“Stave my quarter!” roared the captain, detaining him as he was about
-to rush aft. “The leak's stopped, lad; but blow me if ever I hear'd
-anything to beat this 'ere yarn o' your'n, so spin us the rest on it.”
-
-“That's soon done,” resumed Jack. “When I found the fellow wouldn't give
-me a fair show, I boarded him, captain, and treated him to a few inches
-of cold steel. He won't trouble us again, I reckon!”
-
-Scarcely had he finished speaking when Don gripped his arm and pointed
-to where, a dozen yards away, the bottom of the canoe glistened in the
-moonlight. A dark object had suddenly appeared alongside the overturned
-skiff. Presently a surging splash was heard.
-
-“Shiver my keelson if he ain't righted the craft!” roared the captain,
-snatching up one of the muskets as the lascar was seen to scramble into
-the canoe and paddle slowly away.
-
-Don laid a quick hand upon the old sailor's arm.
-
-“Let the beggar go,” said he. “He'll never reach land with that knife in
-him.”
-
-“Maybe not, lad,” replied the captain, shaking off the hold upon his arm
-and taking the best aim he could, considering the motion of the boat.
-“Bloodshed's best awoided, says you. Wery good; all' the best way to
-awoid it, d'ye mind me, is to send yon warmint to Davy Jones straight
-away. Consequential, the quality o' marcy shan't be strained on
-this 'ere occasion, as the whale says when he swallied the school o'
-codlings.” And with that he fired.
-
-The lascar was seen to discontinue the use of his paddle for a moment,
-and then to make off faster than before.
-
-The old sailor's face fell.
-
-“Spike my guns, I've gone and missed the warmint!” said he.
-“Howsomedever, we'll meet again, as the shark's lower jaw says to the
-upper 'un when they parted company to accomidate the sailor. An' blow
-me, lads, here comes the wind!
-
- “Ay, here's a master excelleth in skill,
-
- An' the master's mate he is not to seek;
-
- An' here's a Bjsin ull do our good will,
-
- An' a ship, d'ye see, lads, as never had leak.
-
- So lustily, lustily, let us sail forth!
-
- Our sails he right trim an' the wind's to the north!”
-
-It was now five o'clock, and as day broke the cutter, with a freshening
-breeze on her starboard quarter, bore away for the island, now in full
-view. When about a mile short of it, however, the captain laid the
-boat's head several points nearer the wind, and shaped his course as
-though running past it for the mainland, which lay like a low bank of
-mist on the horizon. In the cuddy Puggles was busy with preparations for
-breakfast, whilst Don lolled on the rail, watching the shore, and idly
-trailing one hand in the water.
-
-“Hullo! what's this?” he exclaimed suddenly, examining with interest
-a fragment of dripping cloth that had caught on his hand. “Jack, come
-here!”
-
-Jack happened to be forward just then, hanging out his drenched clothes
-to dry upon an improvised line, but hearing Don's exclamation, he sprang
-aft. Somehow he was always expecting surprises now.
-
-“Look here,” said Don, rapidly spreading out the soaked cloth upon his
-knee, “have you ever seen this before?”
-
-“Not likely!--a mere scrap of rag that some greasy native----” Jack
-began, eyeing the said scrap of rag contemptuously. But suddenly his
-tone changed, and he gasped out: “By Jove, old fellow, it's not the
-handkerchief, is it?”
-
-“The very same!” replied-Don, rising and hurrying aft to where the
-captain stood at the tiller. “I say, captain, you remember my telling
-you how I tied a handkerchief round that bag of pearls? Well, here's the
-identical 'wipe.' with my initials on it as large as life. Just fished
-it out of the water.”
-
-For full a minute the old sailor stared at him open-mouthed. Then:
-“Flush my scuppers,” roared he, “if this 'ere ain't the tidiest piece o'
-luck as ever I run agin. We've got the warmint safe in the maintop, so
-to say, where he can't run away--shiver my main-brace if we ain't!”
-
-“Thanks to your clear head, captain,” said Don. “It certainly does look
-as if he had come straight to the island here.”
-
-“We'll purty soon know for sartin; we're a-makin' port hand over fist,”
- rejoined the captain, bringing the cutter's head round, and running
-under the lee of the island.
-
-This side, unlike the wind-swept seaward face, was thickly clad in
-jungle, above which at intervals towered a solitary palm like a sentinel
-on duty. No traces of human habitation were to be seen; for a rocky
-backbone or ridge, running lengthwise of the island, isolated its
-frequented portion from this jungly half. Midway between the extremities
-of this ridge rose two hills: one a symmetrical, cone-shaped elevation,
-clad in a mantle of jungle green; the other a vast mass of naked rock,
-towering hundreds of feet in air, and in its general-outline somewhat
-resembling a colossal kneeling elephant. As if to heighten the
-resemblance, there was perched upon the lofty back a native temple,
-which looked for all the world like a gigantic howdah.
-
-“D'ye see them elewations, lads?” cried the captain, heading the cutter
-straight for what-appeared to be an unbroken line of jungle. “A. brace
-o' twins, says you. Wery good; atween 'em lies as purty a leetle cove as
-wessel ever cast anchor in--slip my cable if it ain't!”
-
-“Are you sure you're not out of your reckoning, captain?” said Jack,
-scanning the shore-line with dubious eye. “It's no thoroughfare, so far
-as I can see.”
-
-“Avast there! What d'ye say to that, now?” chuckled the captain, as the
-cutter, in obedience to a movement of the tiller, swept round a tiny
-eyot indistinguishable in its mantle of green from, the shore itself,
-and entered a narrow, land-locked creek, whose precipitous sides were
-completely covered from summit to water-line with a rank growth of
-vegetation. “Out with the oars, lads! a steam-whistle couldn't coax a
-wind into the likes o' this place, says you.”
-
-The oars run out, they pulled for some distance through this remarkable
-rift in the hills, the cutter's mast in places sweeping the overhanging
-jungle; until at last a spot was reached where a side ravine cleft the
-cliff upon their left, terminating at the water's edge in a strip of
-sandy beach, thickly shaded with cocoa-nut palms.
-
-“Stow my cargo!” chuckled the captain, as he ran the cutter bow-on into
-the sand, “a nautical sea-sarpent himself couldn't smell us out here,
-says you. So here we heaves to, and here we lies until----swabs an'
-slush-buckets, what's this?”
-
-For the captain had already scrambled ashore, and as he uttered these
-words he stooped and intently examined the sand at his feet. In it were
-visible recent footprints, and a long trailing furrow that started from
-the water's edge and ran for several yards straight up the beach. Where
-the furrow terminated there lay a native _ballam_.
-
-Jack was first to espy the canoe. Guessing the cause of the captain's
-sudden excitement, he ran up the sands to the spot where the rude vessel
-lay. The _ballam_ was still dripping sea-water; and in it, amid a pool
-of blood, lay a sailors sheath-knife.
-
-“The lascar!” he shouted, snatching up the blood-stained weapon, and
-holding it out at arms length, as Don and the captain hurried up; “we've
-landed in his very tracks!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.--IN THE THICK OF IT.
-
-
- Either the lascar's wound had not proved as serious as Jack surmised,
-or the fellow was endowed with as many lives as a cat. At all events, he
-had reached land before them, and in safety.
-
-“Sharks an' sea-sarpents!” fumed the captain, Stumping excitedly round
-and round the canoe. “The warmint had orter been sent to Davy Jones as I
-ad wised. Howsomedever, bloodshed's best awoided, says you, Master Don,
-lad; an' so, shiver my keelson! here we lies stranded. What's the course
-to be steered now, I axes? That's a matter o' argyment, says you; so
-here's for a whiff o' the fragrant!”
-
-Bidding his servant fetch pipe and tobacco, the captain seated himself
-upon the canoe and fell to puffing meditatively, his companions
-meanwhile discussing the situation and a project of their own, with
-many anxious glances in the direction of the adjacent jungle, where,
-for anything they knew to the contrary, the lascar might even then be
-stealthily watching their movements.
-
-“Shiver my smokestack! d'ye see that, now?” exclaimed the captain at
-last, following with half-closed eye and tarry finger the ascent of a
-perfect smoke-ring that had just left his lips. “An' what's a ring o'
-tobackie smoke? says you. A forep'intin' to ewents to come,
-says I. A ring means surrounded, d'ye see; an'--grape-shot an'
-gun-swabs!--surrounded means fightin', lads!”
-
-“Fun or fighting, I'm ready, anyhow!” cried Jack, flourishing his knife.
-
-“Ay, ay, lad; an' me, too, for the matter o' that,” replied the old
-sailor, presenting his pipe at an imaginary foe like a pistol; “but when
-our situation an' forces is beknownst to the enemy, we're sartin to be
-surprised, d'ye mind me. An' so I gets an idee!
-
- “Go palter to lubbers an' swabs, d'ye see?
-
- 'Bout danger, an' fear, an' the like;
-
- A tight leetle boat an' good sea-room give me,
-
- An' it ain't to a leetle I'll strike!”
-
-“Out with the idea then, captain!” cried Don.
-
-“Shiver my cutlass, lads!--we must carry the war into the camp o' the
-enemy, dye see'. Wery good, that bein' so, what we wants, d'ye mind me,
-is a safe, tidy place to fall back on, as can't be took, or looted, or
-burnt, like the cutter here, whiles we're away on the rampage, so to
-say.”
-
-“Why not entrench ourselves on the hill just above?” suggested Jack.
-
-“Stow my sea-chest!--the wery identical plan I perposes,” promptly
-replied the captain. “An' why? you naterally axes. Because it's ha'nted,
-says I.”
-
-“Because it's what?” cried the two young men in chorus. “Haunted?”
-
-“Ay, the abode o' spurts,” continued the captain. “There's a old
-ancient temple aloft on yon hill, d'ye see, as they calls the 'Ha'nted
-Pagodas'--which they say as it's a tiger-witch or summat inhabits it,
-d'ye see--an' shiver my binnacle if a native'll go a-nigh it day or
-night!”
-
-“Admirable! But what about the cutter, captain?” said Don.
-
-The captain sucked for a moment at his pipe as if seeking to draw a
-suitable idea therefrom.
-
-“What o' the cutter? you axes,” said he presently. “Why, we'll wrarp her
-down the crik a bit, d'ye see, an' stow her away out o' sight where the
-wegitation's thickish-like on the face o' the cliff; copper my bottom if
-we won't!”
-
-“The stores, of course, must be carried up the hill,” said Jack,
-entering readily into the captain's plans. “We should set about the job
-at once.”
-
-“Avast there, lad! What's to perwent the jungle hereabouts a-usin' of
-its eyes? I axes. The wail o' night, says you. So, when the wail o'
-night unfurls, as the poic says, why, up the hill they goes.”
-
-This being unanimously agreed to, and Puggles at that moment announcing
-breakfast, our trio of adventurers adjourned to the cutter.
-
-“Captain,” said Don, after delighting the black boy's heart by a
-ravenous attack upon the eatables, “like you, I've got an idee--Hullo,
-you, Pug! What are you grinning at?”
-
-“Nutting, sa'b,” replied Puggles, clapping his hand over his mouth;
-“only when marster plenty eating, he sometimes bery often one idee
-getting. Plenty food go inside, he kicking idee out!”
-
-“Just double reef those lips of yours, Pug, and tell us where do _your_
-ideas come from?” said Jack, laughing.
-
-“Me tinking him here got, sar,” said Puggles, gravely patting his
-waistband, at which the old sailor nearly choked.
-
-“And a pretty stock of them you have, too, judging by the size of your
-apple-cart!” said his master, shying a biscuit at his head. “Well, as I
-was saying, captain, I have an idea----”
-
-“Flush my scuppers!” gasped the old sailor, swallowing a brimming
-pannikin of coffee to clear his throat. “Let's hear more on it then,
-lad.”
-
-“Well, it's this. Jack and I are going over to the town--where the
-temples are, you understand--to see if we can't sight old Salambo. A bit
-of reconnoitring may be of use to us later, you see.”
-
-“A-goin'--over--to--the--town!” roared the captain in amazement,
-separating the words as though each were a reluctant step in the
-direction proposed. “Scuttle my cutter, lads! ye'll have the whole pack
-o' waimints down on ye in a brace o' shakes!”
-
-“You won't say so when you see us in full war-paint,” retorted Jack, as
-he and Don rose and disappeared in the cuddy.
-
-In the course of half an hour the cuddy door was thrown open, and
-two stalwart young natives, in full country dress, confronted the old
-sailor. With the assistance of Puggles and the captain's “boy,” not to
-mention soot from the cuddy pots, the two young fellows had cleverly
-“made up” in the guise of Indian pilgrims. At first sight of them, the
-captain, thinking old Salambo's crew were upon him, seized a musket and
-threw himself into an attitude of defence.
-
-“Blow me!” he roared, when a loud burst of laughter apprised him of
-his mistake, “if this ain't the purtiest go as ever I see. Scrapers an'
-holystones, ye might lay alongside the old woman himself, lads, an' him
-not know ye from a reglar, genewine brace o' lying niggers. What tack
-are ye on now, lads? I axes.”
-
-“Off to the town, captain,” replied Don, “to search for old Salambo
-among his idols. That is, if you'll let Spottie here come with us as
-pilot.”
-
-“Spottie” was the nickname with which they had dubbed the captain's
-black servant, whose face was deeply pitted from smallpox.
-
-“Right, lads; he's been here afore, an' knows the lay o' the land; so
-take him in tow, and welcome,” was the captain's hearty rejoinder. “An'
-stow your knives away amidships, in case of emargency like; though blow
-me if they ever take ye for aught but genewine lying niggers!”
-
-Concealing their knives about their persons in accordance with this
-advice, they launched the lascar's _ballam_ upon the creek--which the
-captain assured them expanded a little further inland into a broad
-lagoon, too deep to ford--and so set out.. The paddle had been removed;
-but as the creek appeared to have nowhere, in its upper reaches at
-any rate, a greater depth than half-a-dozen feet, the boathook served
-admirably as, a substitute for propelling the canoe.
-
-“What's the line for, Spottie?” Jack asked, seeing their guide throw a
-coil of small rope into the canoe, which he afterwards boarded in person
-and shoved off.
-
-“Turkle, sar,” replied Spottie. “Plenty time me catching big turkle
-asleep on sand. He no come in _ballam_, so me taking rope to tow him
-astern. Him bery nice soup making, sar,” said Spottie, who had always an
-eye to anything.
-
-Little as they guessed it then, this line was to play a more unique
-and serviceable part in the day's adventures than that indicated by the
-soup-loving Spottie.
-
-The creek, as the captain had intimated, presently expanded into a
-lagoon fully a quarter of a mile wide, and so shallow in parts that
-the canoe almost touched the amber-coloured sands over which it passed.
-Arrived at the further side, they drew the canoe upon the beach, and
-continued their route to the town by way of a steep jungle-path, which,
-in the course of some fifteen minutes' hard climbing, led them to the
-crest of the rocky ridge. Here they paused a moment to look about them.
-
-To the left lay Haunted Pagoda Hill; on their right the colossal
-Elephant Rock; and, nestling at its base, the native town, with its sea
-of dun roofs and gleaming white temples. The stirring ramp of tom-toms,
-and the hoarse roar of the multitude, floated up to them as they stood
-contemplating the scene.
-
-“Now for it!” cried Jack, heading the descent. “We'll soon be in the
-thick of it, anyhow.”
-
-A few minutes more and they stood on the outskirts of the town.
-
-“Make for the chief temple, Spottie,” said Don to their guide; “and
-whatever you do, don't call us sahib or sir. We're only pilgrims like
-yourself, you understand. And say, Spottie, do you know old Salambo, the
-shark-charmer, when you see him?”
-
-By a nod Spottie intimated that he did.
-
-“Good! He's the chap we're after, you understand. Keep a sharp look-out,
-and if you happen to get your eye on him----”
-
-“Or on a lascar with a knife-wound in his shoulder,” put in Jack.
-
-“Just pull my cloth, will you?” concluded Don.
-
-Again the trusty Spottie nodded, and at a signal led the way into the
-main-street, where they immediately found themselves in the midst of a
-noisy, surging crowd of natives.
-
-So perfect was their disguise, however, that Don could not detect a
-single suspicious glance directed towards them.
-
-The natives who thronged the street were, to a man, heading for the
-temples. Into these, if nothing was seen of the shark-charmer outside,
-Don was resolved to penetrate.
-
-As no English foot is ever allowed--in Southern India, at least--to
-cross the threshold of a Hindu shrine, this was a step attended with
-tremendous risk. Detection would mean fighting for their lives against
-overwhelming odds.
-
-“We'll do it, however,” said Don resolutely. “The temple's the place to
-look for him, since he's a priest, and in this disguise the pearls are
-worth the risk.”
-
-That this was also Jack's opinion was plain from the resolute,
-nonchalant manner in which he pressed forward.
-
-Owing to the congested state of the thoroughfare, progress was
-necessarily slow. They were more than an hour in gaining the open
-_maidan_ in which the street terminated.
-
-In the centre of this open space lay a sacred tank, flanked, on that
-side nearest the Elephant Rock, by a vast semicircle of temples. Midway
-in this line stood the chief temple. Here, if at all, the shark-charmer
-would most likely be found.
-
-But to reach the chief temple was no easy task. Vast crowds of pilgrims
-surrounded the sacred tank, awaiting their turn to bathe in its stagnant
-green waters.
-
-At last, after much elbowing and pushing, they reached the steps of the
-chief temple. Thus far they had seen nothing of Salambo. As they had
-already made the entire circuit of the tank, there was nothing for it
-but to seek him in the sacred edifice itself.
-
-Spottie led the way, since for him there was absolutely no risk.
-Following close upon his heels, past the hideous stone monsters which
-flanked the entrance, the mock pilgrims found themselves in the temple
-court. Here the crush was even greater than without.
-
-They had now reached the crucial point of their adventure.
-
-A single unguarded word or action on their part, and each man of these
-teeming thousands would instantly become a mortal enemy!
-
-Don strove to appear unconcerned, but his pulses throbbed madly at the
-mere thought of detection. As for Jack, the careless poise of his right
-hand at his belt showed him to be on his guard, though he looked as cool
-as a sea-breeze.
-
-Over the heads of the multitude, on the opposite side of the court,
-could be seen an inner shrine, where offerings were being made.
-Selecting this as his goal, Don began to edge his way slowly but
-steadily towards it, closely followed by Spottie and the undaunted Jack.
-
-Suddenly he felt a hand tugging at his cloth. Unable to turn himself
-about in the crush, he twisted his head round and caught Spottie's eye.
-By a quick, almost imperceptible movement of hand and head, the black
-directed his attention towards the left. Looking in the direction thus
-indicated, Don saw, but a few yards away, the portly person of the
-shark-charmer.
-
-By dint of persistent pushing, he presently succeeded in approaching so
-near to his man that, had he so wished, he could have laid a hand upon
-his shoulder.
-
-The shark-charmer was evidently bent upon gaining the inner shrine
-at the opposite side of the court. Inch by inch he pummelled his way
-through the dense crowd, unconscious that the sahibs whom he had robbed
-were dogging his steps. Once when he turned his head his eyes actually
-rested upon Don's face. But he failed to recognise him, and so went on
-again, greatly to Don's relief.
-
-Then of a sudden the limit of the crush was reached, and they emerged
-upon a comparatively clear space immediately in front of the shrine.
-This the shark-charmer crossed without hesitation, but Don hung back,
-uncertain whether it would be prudent to venture further. However,
-seeing a group of natives about to approach the shrine with offerings,
-he joined them, and in company with Jack ascended the steps.
-
-The shark-charmer had already disappeared within.
-
-Fumbling in his cloth for some small coin, to present as an offering,
-Don crossed the threshold, and was in the very act of penetrating the
-dimly lighted, incense-clouded chamber just beyond, when a guarded
-exclamation from Jack caused him to glance quickly over his shoulder.
-
-Following them with the stealthy tread of a panther was a swarthy,
-evil-looking native.
-
-“The lascar!” said Jack, in a low, breathless whisper. “Back, old
-fellow, for your life! Once in the crowd, we're safe.”
-
-[Illustration: 0099]
-
-Back they darted towards the entrance, but the lascar, anticipating this
-manouvre, was on his guard. As Jack dashed past, the cunning spy thrust
-out his foot and sent him sprawling on the flagstones. Don, hearing
-the noise, turned back to his friend's assistance, and by the time Jack
-regained his feet the lascar had reached the entrance mid raised the
-hue-and-cry.
-
-“This way!” cried Don, making for a narrow side door, as the lascar's
-shouts began to echo through the precincts of the temple. “Get your
-knife ready, he's raised the alarm!”
-
-Through the door they dashed, only to find themselves in the court,
-hemmed in on every side. The frenzied cries of the lascar continued to
-ring through the enclosure; but, fortunately for the mock pilgrims, so
-vast was the concourse of natives, and so deafening the uproar, that
-only those nearest the shrine understood, his words, while even they
-failed, as yet to penetrate the clever disguise of the intruders. This
-gave them time to draw breath, and look about them.
-
-Close, on their left Jack's quick eye discovered an exit, about which
-the crowd was less dense than elsewhere. The great doors stood wide
-open, disclosing a narrow street. Between this exit and the spot where
-they stood at bay, a number of sacred bulls were quietly feeding off a
-great heap of corn which the devotees had poured out upon the flags of
-the court. All this Jack's eyes took in at a glance.
-
-A roar, terrific as that of ten thousand beasts of prey, burst from the
-surging multitude. The lascars words were understood. Glancing quickly
-over his shoulder, Jack saw that this man, from his place upon the steps
-of the shrine, was pointing them out.
-
-Another instant, and their disguise would avail them nothing; the
-maddened, fanatical crowd would be upon them.
-
-“Don,” he said, in rapid, husky tones, as he grasped his friend's hand
-for what he believed to be the last time, “there's but one chance left
-us, and that's a slim one. You see the door on our left, and those
-bulls? Do you take one of the two big fellows feeding side by side, and
-I'll take the other. Use your knife to guide the brute, and with God's
-help----”
-
-A tremendous roar of voices and a thunderous rush-of feet cut his words
-short.
-
-“Now for it, old fellow!”
-
-With one swift backward glance at the furious human wave sweeping down
-upon them, they darted towards the bulls, of which the two largest,
-accustomed to the daily tumult of town and temple, were still composedly
-feeding, their muzzles buried deep in the mound of corn.
-
-Before the animals had time to lift their heads, the mock pilgrims were
-on their backs and plying knives and heels upon their sleek flanks.
-
-Bellowing with pain and terror, the bulls, with tails erect and heads
-lowered, charged the throng about the doorway, bowling them over in all
-directions like so many ninepins. Before the infuriated crowd in their
-rear understood the meaning of this unexpected manoeuvre, the mock
-pilgrims were in the street.
-
-It was a side street, fortunately, separated from the densely-packed
-_maidan_ by a high brick wall, and but few natives were about. Those
-who followed them out of the temple, too, they soon distanced, for their
-ungainly steeds made capital time.
-
-But now a new, if less serious, danger menaced them. Apart from the
-difficulty of clinging to the round, arched backs of the bulls, once
-started, the maddened animals could not be stopped. Fortunately, they
-took the direction of the hill-path.
-
-On they tore, bellowing madly, and scattering showers of foam and sand
-right and left, until, in an amazingly brief space of time, they reached
-the outskirts of the town. Here, as if divining that their services were
-no longer required, the bulls stopped abruptly, shooting their riders
-off their backs into the sand with scant ceremony.
-
-“Regular buck-jumpers!” groaned Jack, rubbing his lacerated shins
-ruefully. “Glad we're safe out of it, anyhow.”
-
-“So am I. But I wonder where Spottie is?” said Don, fanning himself with
-the loosened end of his turban.
-
-Jack started up. “Never once thought of Spottie since we entered the
-shrine,” cried he. “Come, we must go back and look him up.”
-
-Their uneasiness on Spottie's account, however, was at that instant set
-at rest by the precipitate appearance on the scene of Spottie himself.
-Seeing his masters charge the crowd on the bulls' backs, he had
-extricated himself from the crush, and followed them with all possible
-speed.
-
-“Dey coming, sar!” he panted, as he ran up, “Lascar debil done fetching
-plenty black man!”
-
-And there swelled up from the street below a tumult of voices that left
-no doubt as to the accuracy of his statement.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.--“FUN OR FIGHTING, I'M READY, ANYHOW!”
-
-
- Dey coming, sar!” groaned Spottie; and even as he spoke the leaders of
-the mob came tearing round the corner.
-
-“Is it fight or run, Don?” said Jack quietly, adjusting his turban with
-one hand and laying the other significantly upon his knife.
-
-“No two ways about that! We could never stand against such odds; so we'll
-run first and fight afterwards.”
-
-“And reverse the old saying, eh?” laughed Jack. “I should dearly love to
-have a whack at them; but if you say run, why--run it is, so here goes!”
-
-Shaking his fist at the howling mob, he sprang up the steep hill-path,
-followed closely by Don. Spottie had already made good use of his legs,
-but they soon caught him up, whereupon Jack seized the terrified native
-by the arm and dragged him over the brow of the ridge.
-
-Down the further side they dashed, breathing easier now, for their
-movements were here well concealed by the dense jungle through which the
-pathway ran. As they emerged panting upon the sandy shore of the lagoon,
-a yell from the hill behind told them that their pursuers had gained
-the crest of the ridge. At the same instant Don pulled up abruptly, and
-being too much out of breath to speak, pointed in the direction of the
-canoe. Beside it stood a couple of natives, who, on seeing them, turned
-and fled towards the jungle.
-
-“The tall fellow!” shouted Jack. “Stop him! He's got the boathook!”
-
-The boathook was their only means of propelling the canoe. That gone,
-they were practically at the mercy of their enemies.
-
-After the flying natives they dashed, Jack leading. He quickly came up
-with the hinder-most, whom he dealt a blow that stretched him senseless
-in the sand. But the fellow who carried the boathook was long of leg and
-fresh of wind; while Jack was still a dozen yards in his rear, he gained
-the jungle and disappeared.
-
-“No good!” groaned Jack, as he relinquished the pursuit and turned back.
-“There's nothing for it but to fight. I say, Don, what's up?”
-
-Don lay sprawling in the sand.
-
-“Tripped over that lazy beast,” said Don, picking himself up and aiming
-a kick at an enormous turtle which was already heading for the water.
-
-“Him bery nice soup making, sar!” cried Spottie, rubbing his brown hands
-unctuously. But just then a fierce tumult of voices, rolling down from
-the jungle path, put other thoughts than soup into Spottie's pate.
-
-“The rope! Fetch the rope, Spottie!” cried Jack, throwing himself on the
-turtle's back.
-
-Don dragged him off.
-
-“Come away!” cried he. “There's no time to fetch that beast along. Are
-you out of your senses?”
-
-Jack's only reply was to snatch the rope from Spottie's hands, rapidly
-reeve a running knot at one end, and slip the loop around the body of
-the giant chelonian, which had by this time reached the water's edge.
-
-All this had occupied much less time than it takes to relate.
-
-The shouts of the mob now sounded ominously near. Without loss of time
-the canoe was launched, and at once Jack's purpose became apparent.
-
-Seating himself in the bow of the canoe, he drew in the slack of the
-rope until the turtle was within easy reach, and, holding it firmly so,
-prodded it with his knife. This was a cruel act, but the stern necessity
-of the moment outweighed all other considerations.
-
-The turtle at once began making frantic efforts to escape from its
-tormentor; and as its weight could not have been less than three or four
-hundred pounds, and its strength in proportion, it easily and rapidly
-drew the canoe through the water.
-
-In a few minutes they were a stone's throw from shore--and not a moment
-too soon, for at that instant the mob of natives rushed out of the
-jungle path, and finding themselves outwitted, gave utterance to a
-furious howl of disappointment and rage.
-
-The canoe, thanks to the efforts of the turtle, was soon so far from
-shore that Jack considered it safe to alter their course and steer for
-the creek. No sooner did he do so than the natives set off at a run in
-the same direction.
-
-“Dey there canoe got, maybe,” observed Spottie, who had now recovered
-from his fright.
-
-“In that case we may have some fun yet,” laughed Jack, lashing the
-turtle with the rope's end, as if anxious to be in time for the
-anticipated sport.
-
-By the time the creek was reached, however, not a native was to be seen;
-so, congratulating themselves on having given their pursuers the slip,
-they reached the cutter.
-
-Here the old sailor, to say nothing of Puggles, was most anxiously
-watching for their return.
-
-“Shiver my mizzen!” shouted he, as they ran under the cutter's stern;
-“ha' ye gone an' took a mermaid in tow, lads?”
-
-“No; one of Spottie's turkles has taken us in tow, captain,” replied
-Jack, setting the turtle free with a slash of his knife, in spite of
-Spottie's protestations that the creature would make “bery nice soup.”
-
-“Ugh, you cannibal!” he added, with a glance of disgust at the black's
-chagrined face, “you wouldn't eat the beast after he has saved your
-life, would you?”
-
-“Belay there! what's this 'ere yarn about the warmint a-savin' o' your
-lives, lads?” sang out the captain. “Hours ago,” continued he, as the
-two young men, leaving Spottie to beach the canoe, scrambled on board
-the cutter, “hours ago I says to myself, 'Mango, my boy,' says I, 'may
-I never set tooth to salt junk agin if they younkers ain't all dead men
-afore this.' says I. Howsomedever, here ye be safe an' sound; so let's
-hear the whole on it, lads.”
-
-In compliance with this request Don began to relate the adventures which
-had befallen them since morning; but scarcely had he got fairly launched
-upon his narrative, when:
-
-“Sharks an' sea'-sarpents!” interrupted the captain, rising to his feet
-with a lurch, and pointing up the creek, “what sort o' craft's this 'ere
-a-bearin' down on us? I axes.”
-
-A canoe, laden to the water's edge with natives, appeared round a bend
-in the creek. Presently other canoes, to the number of half-a-dozen,
-hove in sight in rapid succession, whose occupants, perceiving their
-approach to be discovered, set up a shout that made the cliffs ring.
-
-“Spottie was right,” cried Jack, catching up a musket, while Don and the
-captain followed suit; “they've found canoes, and mean to board us.”
-
-“Fire my magazine, but we'll give 'em a right warm welcome, then,” said
-the captain. “Look to the primin', lads, an' hold hard when I says fire,
-for blow me, these 'ere old muskets kicks like a passel o' lubberly
-donkeys, d'ye see!”
-
-“Captain,” Don hastily interposed, “why not draw the bullets and load
-up with shot? The canoes are so deep in the water that a smart volley of
-shot right into the midst of the rascals is sure to make them flop over.
-We've just time to do it.”
-
-This suggestion tickled the captain immensely, and without delay the
-change was made. The canoes were now within easy range.
-
-“Ready, lads,” cried the captain:
-
- “We always be ready,
-
- Steady, lads, steady!
-
- We'll fight an' we'll conquer agin and agin!”
-
-Up went the muskets. At sight of them the natives rested on their oars,
-or rather paddles, and the canoes slowed down.
-
-“Fire!”
-
-The cliffs trembled beneath the treble report. Jack, who in his
-excitement had forgotten the captain's caution, went sprawling backwards
-over the thwarts.
-
-“Ho, ho, ho! flint-locks an' small-shot, a wolley's the thing, lads,”
- roared the captain, pointing up the creek as the smoke rolled, away.
-
- “We ne'er see our foes but we wants 'em to stay,
-
- An' they never see us but they wants us away;
-
- When they runs, why, we follows an' runs 'em ashore,
-
- For if they won't fight us, we can't do no more!”
-
-The “wolley” had told. Driven frantic by the stinging shot, the
-natives had leapt to their feet and overturned four out of the seven
-deeply-laden canoes, whose late occupants were now struggling in the
-water.
-
-“They've a softer berth of it than I, anyway,” said Jack from the bottom
-of the boat, as he rubbed his shoulder ruefully. “I shall get at the
-muzzle end of your thundering old blunderbuss next time, captain. Hullo,
-there's that rascally----”
-
-The remainder of the exclamation was drowned in the creek, for as he
-uttered it Jack took a header over the stern.
-
-“Shift my ballast, what's the young dog arter now? I axes,” cried the
-captain, gazing aghast at the spot where Jack had disappeared.
-
-His speedy reappearance solved the riddle. By the queue he grasped a
-dripping, half-naked native, whom he dragged after him to the beach. It
-was the lascar.
-
-“Hurrah! he's got him this time,” shouted Don, leaping out upon the
-sands to lend a hand in landing the prize.
-
-At first the lascar struggled fiercely for liberty; but as Jack was by
-no means particular to keep his head above water, he soon quieted down,
-and presently, with Dons assistance, was hauled out on the sands, where
-he fell on his knees and began whining piteously for mercy.
-
-“Your revolver, Don,” gasped Jack, with a watery side-wink at his
-friend. “He shall tell us what he knows of the pearls, or die like the
-dog he is.”
-
-Don placed the revolver in his hand, ready cocked. The lascar grovelled
-in the sand.
-
-“Sa'b, sa'b!” he whined, “you no shoot, me telling anyting.”
-
-“No doubt you will,” replied Jack significantly, pressing the muzzle of
-the weapon to his forehead; “but what I want is the truth. Now, then,
-has old Salambo sold the pearls yet? Come, out with it!”
-
-“He n-n-no selling, sa'b,” stammered the terrified native, shrinking as
-far away from the pistol as Jack's hold on his queue would permit “Where
-are they, then? Come, look sharp!”
-
-“He d-d-done hiding in Elephant Rock, s-s-sa'b,” confessed the lascar,
-apparently on the point of fainting with terror.
-
-“Don! Captain! Do you hear that?” cried Jack, half-turning, in the
-excitement produced by this disclosure, towards his friends. “He says
-old Salambo's hid the pearls in the ---- ------ Phew!”
-
-He stopped, with a shrill whistle of dismay. By a quick upward stroke
-of his arm the lascar had sent the revolver spinning, and at the same
-instant wrenched himself free from his captor's grasp. Ere Jack could
-stir hand or foot, he had plunged headlong into the creek.
-
-“Let him go,” said Jack tranquilly, as the water closed over the
-fellow's heels; “we've got an important clue out of him, anyhow.”
-
-The captain slowly lowered the musket he had raised for a shot at
-the fugitive should he comet to the surface within range, and said
-approvingly:
-
-“Right, lad! Spike my guns, I've heard tell as how that 'ere Elephant
-Rock's riddled from main-deck to keelson, so to say, with gangways, and
-air-wents, an' sich. Howsomedever, that's matter for arter reflection,
-as the whale said to himself when he swallied Jonah. The warmints astarn
-there”--indicating that part of the creek where the occupants of the
-canoes had taken their involuntary bath--“the warmints astarn ha'
-sheered off a p'int or two; so now, lads, let's tackle the perwisions
-afore the wail o' night descends, an' then to work!”
-
-The “wail o' night” was not long in descending, for the sun had
-disappeared with the lascar. Ere they had done justice to the ample meal
-which Puggles set before them, and exchanged the draggled pilgrim garb
-for their everyday clothes, the shadows had crept silently from their
-hiding-places beneath thicket and cliff, and blotted out the last
-lingering touch of day from the bosom of the creek. Save the musical
-chirping of some amorous tree-frog to his mate, or the lazy swish of
-wings as some belated flying-fox swung slowly past, unbroken silence
-reigned between the darkling cliffs.
-
-In the captain's opinion, no immediate repetition of the recent attack
-was to be feared. But the events of the day had made it only too plain
-that their present position was far from being-one of security. To
-remain on board the cutter would be to invite daily skirmishes with the
-natives, which would not only deter the quest of the golden pearl, but
-prove a source of constant annoyance and danger.
-
-So far as the captain knew, the island afforded no safer retreat than
-the hill of the Haunted Pagodas.
-
-The natives of the island, he said, believed this hill to be the abode
-of a witch in the form of a ferocious tiger, merely to look upon which
-meant death. For this reason they would on no account venture near it.
-
-So upon the Haunted Pagodas they resolved to fall back without delay.
-But here an unforeseen difficulty arose.
-
-With the path to the summit of the hill none of the party was acquainted
-except the captain, and he was unwilling that the precious cutter should
-be entrusted to the care of any one except himself while the several
-journeys necessary for the removal of the stores were being made.
-
-“Shiver my main-brace!” roared he, thumping the bottom of the boat with
-his wooden leg after they had talked it all over. “Shiver my mainbrace!
-I'll go the first trip with ye, lads, an' trust the old cutter to luck.”
-
-“See here, captain,” said Jack persuasively “why not trust her to me?
-It's for only one trip, as you say; and besides, there's not much danger
-of an attack to-night. You said so yourself.”
-
-To this arrangement the old sailor finally agreed. So Don, Spottie,
-and Puggles loaded up with the stores and other necessaries for their
-proposed sojourn on the summit of the hill, and a start was made, the
-captain leading with musket and lantern.
-
-“Good-bye, Jack!” Don called back, as he struck into the jungle at the
-captain's heels. “'Fire a gun if you want help.”
-
-“All right, old fellow,” was Jack's careless reply. “Good-bye till I see
-you again!”
-
-'So, with no other companion than Bosin, he was left alone to guard the
-cutter.
-
-And now the difficulties of the captain's party began in earnest. The
-path before them was, it is true, scarce half a mile in length, but so
-precipitous was the hillside, so overgrown the track, that every
-furlong seemed a league. The tangled, overhanging jungle growth not only
-completely shut out the rays of the moon, but by its thickness impeded
-their progress at every step, as though determined to guard the abode
-of the witch-tiger from all human intrusion. To make matters worse, they
-had neglected to provide themselves with an axe.
-
-“Shiver my main-brace!” the captain cried, as his wooden leg stuck fast
-in a tangled mass of creepers. “These 'ere land trips be a pesky sight
-worse nor a sea woyage, says you! Blow me! I'd ruther round the Horn in
-mid-winter than wade through such wegetation as this 'ere in midnight
-darkness! Howsomedever, the port's afore us, so up we goes, as Jonah
-says to the whale when he bid the warmint adoo.”
-
-Up they went accordingly, and after much stumbling and tough climbing,
-reached the summit and the Haunted Pagodas. Finding here a clear space
-and bright moonlight, they quickly relieved themselves of their loads.
-
-“An' now, lads,” cried the captain, “wear ship an' back to the cutter,
-says you. Fire my magazine! what's that? I axes.”
-
-Sharp and distinct upon the night air there floated up from the darkness
-of the ravine the report of a gun.
-
-Don felt his heart stand still with dread, then race at lightning speed.
-
-“An attack!” he cried hoarsely; “and Jack alone! Hurry, captain!--for
-God's sake hurry!
-
-Easier said than done. Haste only added to the difficulties of the way.
-It seemed to Don that he should never shake off the retarding clutch of
-the jungle.
-
-At last their weary feet pressed again the sands of the little beach.
-But now a new terror seized them. The beach was illuminated by a ruddy,
-fitful glow..The cutter was on fire!
-
-Don cleared the sands almost at a bound.
-
-“Jack!” he shouted, leaping the cutter's rail, and with lightning glance
-scanning the bottom of the boat, and then the cuddy, for some sign of
-his friend. “Jack, where are you? Captain, he's not here! and--my God!
-look at this!”
-
-Upon the bottom of the boat, showing darkly crimson in the ruddy
-firelight, lay a pool of blood, and beside it a discharged musket.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.--AT THE HAUNTED PAGODAS.
-
-
- The fire, fortunately, had gained so little headway that a few
-bucketfuls of water sufficed to put the _Jolly Tar_ cut of danger. Then
-the captain stumped up to Don, where he sat disconsolate on the cutter's
-gun'le, and laid a sympathetic hand upon his shoulder.
-
-“Cheer up, my hearty! They warmints ain't done for Master Jack yet,
-not by a long chalk, says I. Flush my scuppers, lad!” he roared in
-stentorian tones, as he turned the light of the lantern upon the pool of
-blood, “this 'ere sanguinary gore as dyes the deck bain't his'n at all.
-It's the blood o' some native warmint, what he's gone an' let daylight
-into, d'ye mind me, an' here's the musket as done the trick.”
-
-“Then you think he's not--not dead?” asked Don, steadying his voice with
-an effort.
-
-“Dead? Not him! Alive he is, and alive he remains,” cried the old
-sailor. “An' why so? you naterally axes. To begin with, as the shark
-says when he nipped the seaman's leg off, because the keg o' powder's
-gone. Spurts, the warmints thinks to theirselves, an' so they makes
-away with _it._ Secondly”--and here the old sailor's voice grew
-husky--“because that 'ere imp of a Besin's gone. 'I'll stand hard by
-Master Jack,' says he, so off _he_ goes. Sharks an' sea-sarpents, lad,
-can't ye see as the lubbers have only gone an' took Master Jack in tow?”
-
-“But I can't understand,” persisted Don, “why they should do it.”
-
-“Ransom, lad, that's what the lubbers is arter. Master Jack's life's
-worth a sight more'n a bag o' pearls, an' well they knows it.
-
- “Avast there, an' don't be a milksop so soft,
-
- To be taken for trifles aback;
-
- There's a Providence, lad, as sits up aloft
-
- To watch for the life of poor Jack.”
-
-Trolling out this sailorly reproof of Don's fears, the captain stretched
-himself in the bottom of the boat, and drawing a tai paulin over his
-nose, was soon sleeping off the effects of his recent exertions ashore.
-But upon Don's heart his chum's fate lay like a leaden weight. He could
-not rest.
-
-“Good-bye, old fellow, till I see you again.” These, Jack's last
-careless words, repeated themselves in every me urnful sigh of the
-night-wind; and as he lay, hour after hour, watching the stars climb the
-heavens; he wondered, with a keen pain at his heart, when that “again”
- was to be.
-
-As the night wore on, however, he found more and more comfort in the
-old sailor's words. It was so much easier to believe that Jack had been
-kidnapped than to believe him dead. This view of his disappearance,
-too, was altogether in keeping with the shark-charmer's cunning. As
-for himself, he would gladly have cried quits with old Salambo then and
-there, if by so doing he could have recalled Jack to his side.
-
-At length he fell into a troubled sleep, unconscious of the fact that
-another brain than his was busy with Jack's fate. Had he but known it,
-Bosin deserved more than a passing thought that night.
-
-By daybreak they were again astir, and within an hour the cutter lay
-snugly ensconced in the shelter of a deep, vine-draped cavern beneath
-the cliff, some hundred yards down the creek, of which the captain knew.
-In carrying out this part of the old sailor's plan, the canoe, for which
-an effective paddle was improvised out of an old oar, proved of signal
-service; and when the smaller skiff had in its turn been hidden away in
-the dense jungle bordering the beach, they loaded up with the remaining
-stores, and took the pathway to the Haunted Pagodas, which they
-eventually reached just as the sun, like a huge ball of fire, rolled up
-out of the eastern sea.
-
-As the captain had said, the Haunted Pagodas was indeed “a tidy spot to
-fall back upon.” Ages before, a circle of massive temples had crowned
-the summit of this island hill; but for full a thousand years had Nature
-searched out with silent, prying fingers the minutest crevices of the
-closer-cemented stones, ruthlessly destroying what man had so proudly
-reared, until nothing save a confusion of tumble down walls and broken
-pillars, grotesquely draped with climbing vines and like parasitic
-growths, remained to mark the site of the erstwhile stately cloisters. A
-shuddery spot it was!--a likely lurking-place for reptile or wild beast,
-so uncanny in its weird union of jungle wildness and dead men's work,
-that one would scarcely have been surprised had the terrible witch-tiger
-of the native legend suddenly leapt out upon one from some dark pit or
-sunless recess.
-
-In one spot alone had the walls successfully resisted the action of the
-insinuating roots. This was a sort of cloister with a floor of stone,
-upon which the roof had fallen. But when the _debris_ had been cleared
-away, and the stores scattered about in its stead, this corner of
-the ruins looked positively homelike and comfortable--especially when
-Puggles, taking possession of one of its angles, converted it into a
-kitchen, and began active preparations for breakfast. The captain dubbed
-their new retreat “the fo'csle.”
-
-All that day the old sailor was in an unusually thoughtful mood. Every
-half-hour or so he would produce his pipe and take a number of slow,
-meditative “whiffs o' the fragrant,” after which he would slap his thigh
-energetically with one horny hand, and stump back and forth amid the
-ruins in a state of high excitement, until, something going wrong with
-his train of thought, the pipe had to be relighted, and the difficulty,
-like the tobacco, smoked out again.
-
-This characteristic process of “ilin' up his runnin' gear” he continued
-far on into the afternoon, when he abruptly laid the huge meerschaum
-aside, took a critical survey of sea and sky, and, bearing down on
-Don, where he sat cleaning the muskets, without further ado planted a
-resounding thump on that young gentleman's back.
-
-“Blow me!” he burst out, as if Don was already initiated into his
-train of thought, “the wery identical thing, lad. An what's that? you
-naterally axes. Why, d'ye see, I've been splicin' o' my idees together
-a bit, so to say, an' shiver my main-brace if I ain't gone an' rescued
-Master Jack!”
-
-Edging away a little lest the captain's rising excitement should again
-culminate in one of his well-meant, but none the less undesirable
-thumps, “You mean, I suppose,” said Don, “that you've hit upon a plan
-for his rescue.”
-
-“Ay, lad,” assented the captain, “but an idee well spun is a deed half
-done, d'ye mind me. Howsomedever, let's take our bearin's afore we runs
-for port, says you. An' to begin with, as the shark said----”
-
-What the shark said, as well as what the captain was about to say, was
-doomed to remain for ever a matter of conjecture, for at that instant
-Puggles set up a shout that effectually interrupted the conversation.
-
-“Sa'b! sar! me done see um, sa'b. Him done come back, sar.”
-
-Naturally enough, Don's first thought was of Jack. He sprang to his
-feet, his heart giving a wild leap of joy, and then standing still with
-suspense. For in all the clearing no human form appeared.
-
-Puggles had now reached his master's side. “Him there got, sa'b, there!”
- he reiterated, pointing towards the narrow break in the jungle which
-indicated the starting-point of the pathway to the creek. Between this
-point and the spot where they stood, the jungle grass grew thick and
-tall.
-
-As they looked they saw it sway in a long, wavy undulation, as if some
-living thing were rapidly making its way towards them. In another moment
-the rank covert parted, and there appeared, not Jack, but Bosin.
-
-“Knots an' marlinspikes!” ejaculated the delighted captain, as the
-monkey scrambled chattering upon his knee. “What's this 'ere as the imp
-o' darkness's been an' made a prize of? I axes.”
-
-Around the monkey's neck a shred of draggled, blood-stained linen was
-securely bound. Already Don was fumbling at the knot, his face whiter
-than the rag itself.
-
-“A message from Jack!” he announced joyfully, when at length the
-tightly-drawn knot yielded, and a scrap of paper fluttered to the
-ground.
-
-“Shiver my main-brace!” roared the captain, bringing his hand down on
-that unoffending member as if about to give a practical demonstration of
-his words, “ain't I said as much all along, lad? Alive he is, an' alive
-he remains. An' blow me if ever I see anything to beat this 'ere method
-o' excommunicating atween friends, says I. So let's hear what Master
-Jack has got to say for hisself.”
-
-Don had already run his eye over the pencilled writing. “He's all right,
-thank God!” he exclaimed, in a tone of intense relief. “Wounded, as I
-feared--a mere scratch, he says--but you shall hear for yourself:--
-
-“'Don't be cut up, old fellow,'” he read aloud, “'it will all come light
-in the end. The niggers pounced down on me before I heard them. Just had
-time to let off one of the captain's old kickers, when a crack on the
-head laid me out. I'm in a village on the sea-shore, and by great good
-luck I can see the hill and the smoke of what, I suppose, is your fire,
-from the window of the hut they've stuck me in. It doesn't seem quite
-so bad when I look at that.... Bosin just turned up. Am writing in hopes
-he'll carry this safely to you. Close prisoner. Have to scribble when
-the beggars aren't watching me. Overheard them palavering just now. They
-take me to the E. R. to-night--'”
-
-“Which he means the Elephant Rock!” cried the captain, interrupting.
-“Blow me! I knowed as that 'ere Elephant 'ud go an' make wittles of him,
-d'ye see?”
-
-Don nodded and read on:
-
-“'Old Salambo's work this. He means to make terms for the pearls----'”
-
-“Copper my bottom, lad! Them's the wery identical words as I've stood by
-all along!” the captain broke in again.
-
-“Wait!” said Don impatiently. “There's something important here. I
-couldn't make it out before, the writing's so scrawly towards the end.
-Listen to this: 'There's a streak down the face of the hill, that looks
-like a path to the village here. If Bosin's in time, come early. Don't
-let the hdkf.(sp) alarm you; it's a mere scratch.'”
-
-Reading off these last words rapidly, Don pointed to the sun, already
-half-hidden by the western horizon.
-
-“There's no time to lose, captain! He must be set free before he's taken
-to the Rock.”
-
-“Right, lad; so let's tumble out and man the guns!” cried the captain,
-lurching to his feet and giving his pantaloons a determined hitch-up.
-
- “We always be ready!
-
- Steady, lad, steady!
-
- We'll fight an' we'll conquer agin and agin!”
-
-“That we will,” assented Don heartily; “but first we must get the
-bearings of this village, captain. Where's the glass? Spottie! Hi,
-Spottie!--the glass here!”
-
-In response to the summons, Puggles ran up with the captain's telescope.
-
-“Spottie done go fetch water, sa'b,” he explained.
-
-“There is a village,” Don announced, after adjusting the instrument and
-carefully sweeping the sea-shore. “Just there, in that clump of trees;
-the only one within range, so far as I can see. Do you make it out,
-captain?”
-
-“Ay,” said the captain, taking the glass; “there's a willage below, sure
-as sharks is sharks.”
-
-“The next thing, then,” continued Don, “is to find this path Jack speaks
-of. 'Twould take us two good hours at least to go round by way of the
-creek. Do you know, I've a notion the path to the spring is the one we
-want. Suppose we try it?”
-
-The captain making no demur, Don caught up a musket and led the way to
-the spring. This spring was Spottie's discovery. It lay to the left
-of the creek path, about fifty yards down the hillside. The jungle had
-almost obliterated the path by which it was approached, but this the
-black had in some degree remedied by a vigorous use of the axe during
-the day, and, as Puggles had intimated, he was now at the spring,
-replenishing the water bucket.
-
-Hardly had Don and the captain got fairly into the path when there rose
-from the depths of the jungle immediately below them a series of frantic
-yells. The voice was undoubtedly Spottie's, and, judging from the manner
-in which he used it, Sputtie stood--or believed he stood--in sore need
-of assistance. Quickening his pace to a run, Don soon came upon him,
-making for the open, minus bucket and turban, his eyes protruding from
-their sockets, and altogether in a terrible state of fright.
-
-“What's the matter?” cried Don, catching him by the arm and shaking him
-until he was fain to cease his bellowing.
-
-“De t-t-tiger-witch, sa'b!” said Spottie, his teeth chattering. “Me done
-see um, sa'b!”
-
-Just then the captain came up.
-
-“He's seen a monkey or something, and thinks it's the tiger-witch,”
- explained Don, laughing at the poor fellows piteous face. “Whereabouts
-is it, Spottie?”
-
-Spottie pointed fearfully down the shadowy pathway, where a faint
-snapping of twigs could be heard in the underbrush.
-
-“Blow me!” said the captain, after listening intently a moment, “yon
-warmint bain't no monkey, lad. So let's lay alongside an' diskiver what
-quarter o' the animile kingdom he hails from, says you.”
-
-And with that he started off in the direction of the sound.
-
-Bidding Spottie remain where he was, Don followed. The captain was,
-perhaps, ten paces in advance. Suddenly the jungle parted with a loud
-swish, and a tawny body shot through the air and alighted full upon the
-captain's back, bearing him to the ground ere he could utter so much as
-a cry.
-
-Don stood petrified. Then a savage, guttural growling, accompanied by a
-sickening crunching sound, roused him to the old sailors danger.
-There was just sufficient light left to show the two figures on the
-ground--the tiger atop, his fangs buried in the captains thigh. Priming
-the musket rapidly with some loose powder he happened to have in his
-pocket, Don sprang to the captain's aid. The tiger lifted its head at
-his approach with an angry snarl, but this was no time to think of his
-own danger. Quick as thought he thrust the muzzle of the musket between
-the beast's jaws and fired.
-
-An instant later and he was on his back. The tiger had sprung clean
-over him, knocking him down in its passage, and now lay some yards away,
-writhing in the death struggle. Don picked himself up and ran to the
-old sailor's side. As he reached the spot where he lay, the captain
-struggled into a sitting posture, and stared about him bewilderedly.
-
-“Stave my bulkhead!” roared he, “if this bain't the purtiest go as ever
-I see. An' what quarter o' the animile kingdom might the warmint hail
-from? I axes.”
-
-“A tiger, captain; a genuine man-eater. But, I say, are you hurt?”
-
-“Hurt is it?” demanded the captain. “Why, dye see, lad,” first adjusting
-his neckcloth, and then proceeding to feel himself carefully over,
-“barrin' this 'ere bit of a chafe to my figgerhead, I hain't started a
-nail, d'ye see. Avast there! Shiver my main-brace, what's this? I axes.”
-
-Just where the “main-brace” was spliced upon the thigh, a sad rent in
-the captain's broad pantaloons showed the wooden portion of his anatomy
-to be deeply indented and splintered. At this discovery he stopped
-aghast in the process of feeling for broken bones.
-
-“Why, don't you see how it is?” laughed Don. “The brute has tried
-to make a meal off your wooden leg, captain.”
-
-The captain burst into one of his tremendous guffaws. “Blow me if I
-don't admire the warmint's taste,” said he. “An uncommon affectionate un
-he is, says you, so let's pay our respec's to him 'ithout delay, lad.”
-
-The tiger proved to be a magnificent specimen of his tribe; and, as he
-stood over the 'tawny carcase in the waning light, Don could not
-repress a feeling of pardonable pride at thought of his own share in the
-adventure which had ended so disastrously for the superb creature at his
-feet.
-
-“Captain,” said he presently, when that worthy had inspected and admired
-the striped monster to his heart's content, “Captain, it strikes me as
-being somewhat of a rare thing to run against a fullblown tiger on an
-island like this. Don't you think so?”
-
-“Ay, that it is,” assented the captain; “rare as sea-sarpents.”
-
-“That explains it, then: the tiger-witch story, I mean. This chap's
-great size, and the fact that man-eaters aren't often met with on
-these little nutshell islands, have made him the terror of the whole
-community, you see. He's their witch, I'll be bound. Now.” he ran on,
-seeing the captain express his approval of this likely explanation by a
-series of emphatic nods, “now I'll tell you what I mean to do. Dear old
-Jack's a prisoner, and we're bound to get him out of limbo if we can.
-His captors--those native beggars--go in mortal terror of this beast
-here. Good! Why shouldn't Pug and I carry the creature's skin down to
-the village yonder--where Jack is, you know--use it to impersonate the
-witch-tiger, and terrify the niggers----”
-
-He got no farther with his explanation, for the captain, having already
-grasped the idea, at this point grasped its originator by the hand, and
-cut in with: “Spike my guns, the wery identical thing, lad! Blow me, the
-lubberly swabs'll tumble into the jungle like a lot o' porpoises when
-they sees that 'ere tiger-skin a-hangin' on your recreant limbs. An'
-then hooray for Master Jack, says you! Why not? I axes.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.--WAS IT JACK?
-
-
- What a night it was! Overhead one glorious; maze of scintillating
-stars; in the jungle ebon: blackness, shot with the soft glow of myriad
-fireflies, that flashed their tiny lamps only to leave-the spot they had
-illumined more intensely black than before.
-
-Don's surmise as to the spring path proved correct--it extended quite
-to the foot of the hill, where it merged almost imperceptibly into the
-scantier vegetation fringing the sea-shore. After a hard fight with the
-difficulties of the way--increased in no small degree by the dead weight
-of the tiger-skin--he and Puggles at length reached the limits of the
-jungle and paused for breath. The utmost caution was now necessary in
-order to avoid untimely discovery.
-
-The moon was not yet up, and the cocoa-nut _tope_ in which, but a stoned
-throw away, nestled the village that formed at once their destination
-and Jack's place of imprisonment, lay wrapped in gloom so impenetrable
-that not a single outline of tree or hut could be distinguished from
-where they stood. Excepting a faint glow, which at infrequent intervals
-flickered amid the lofty branches of the palm-trees, there was nothing
-to show that the spot was tenanted by any human being. This light--or,
-to speak more correctly, this reflection of a light--Don attributed to a
-fire in the village street.
-
-“They done lighting um for company, maybe,” suggested Puggles. “Plenty
-people going feast, black man 'fraid got, making fire keep tiger-witch
-off.”
-
-“So much the better for us,” said his master; “especially if everybody's
-at the town except the fellows in charge of Jack. But shut up, Pug; it
-won't do to risk their overhearing our palaver.” With stealthy steps
-they advanced, pausing often to listen, until they gained the deeper
-shade of the trees close under the rear of the huts. Leaving the black
-boy here, Don skirted the nearer row of cabins and took a cautious view
-of the street.
-
-The huts stood in two irregular rows, one facing the other, and
-midway down the open space or street between was a smouldering fire of
-brushwood, about which, in listless, drowsy attitudes, there lolled a
-group of perhaps twenty natives. Save for these the place, so far as he
-could make out, was quite deserted. The doors of the huts were closed,
-and no glimmer of lamp or fire shone through them to indicate that any
-occupants were within. A little to one side of the fire the light fell
-upon an object at sight of which Don started violently. It was the
-stolen keg of powder. Jack could not be far off, then!
-
-Quitting the spot as noiselessly as he had approached it, he made his
-way back to the rear of the huts, and with the assistance of Puggles,
-adjusted the limp tigers pelt upon his back, shoulders, and head. Next
-he gave the black boy his orders. He was to lie close until the natives
-about the fire took to flight--which, if they fled at all, would, in the
-ordinary course of events, be in the direction of the other extremity of
-the street--when he was to join his master in searching the huts.
-
-All was now in readiness, and Don, gripping the defunct tiger's ears at
-either side of his head to hold the skin in position, once more skirted
-the row of huts, Puggles in close attendance. His former post of
-observation gained, he went down upon all-fours, and when Puggles had
-readjusted the skin to his satisfaction, in this attitude he boldly
-advanced into the street.
-
-The distance to be traversed in order to reach the group about the fire
-was not less than fifty yards. He had covered a third of the ground
-unobserved, when one of the natives rose to his feet and threw a fresh
-bundle of faggots on the smouldering embers. Fanned by the breeze, the
-fire blazed up fiercely, illuminating the street from end to end. The
-tiger-witch uttered a terrific roar.
-
-When this sound fell upon the ears of the native, he wheeled and peered
-fearfully into the semi-darkness in which Don's end of the street lay.
-A second roar brought a second native to his feet. He was followed by
-another and another, till all were on the alert. The witch-tiger was now
-in full view.
-
-For a little while the group about the fire hesitated. Should they
-stand their ground or decamp? As the intruder advanced, and the ruddy
-firelight threw its gruesome outlines into stronger relief, they
-suddenly perceived what manner of apparition this was that had stolen
-up an them out of the darkness. To them the tiger-witch, with its swift,
-silent visitations of death, had doubtless long been a dread reality.
-The island held but one tiger--and here it was! With frantic outcries
-they turned and fled pell-mell down the village street.
-
-This was just what Don desired--what he had calculated upon. Until
-the heels of the hindermost had quite disappeared in the darkness, he
-sustained his rôle. Thus far the ruse had succeeded admirably. But the
-real business of the night had as yet only begun. Shaking the clammy
-skin from off his back, he rose to his feet and made a dash for the door
-of the nearest hut. Just as he reached it, Puggles, who had watched the
-rout of the natives with shaking sides, came trotting up.
-
-“Look alive, Pug!” cried his master, bursting in the frail door with a
-crash. “Search the huts on the left, while I take these on the right.
-Look alive, I say--they may come back at any minute.”
-
-Puggles needed no urging. He was only too well aware of the danger that
-threatened his master and his own precious self should the fugitives
-think better of their cowardice and reappear on, the scene. He set to
-work with a will.
-
-Into hut after hut they forced their way, peering into every nook and
-corner, and calling upon Jack as loudly as they dared; only to receive
-for answer the dull echoes of their own shouts. Nowhere was there
-any sign of Jack. “Had he been already removed?” Don asked himself
-desperately, as he sped from door to door. It almost seemed so; but
-while a single hut remained unsearched there was still hope.
-
-Half-a-dozen only were left, when the catastrophe he had all along been
-dreading actually occurred. The natives came trooping back. To their
-infinite relief, no doubt, the witch-tiger had vanished, and in its
-stead appeared two human figures darting from hut to hut. The natives
-raised a shout of defiance and pressed forward to the attack, catching
-up as weapons whatever came first to hand.
-
-Crossing the street at a bound, Don joined the black boy, just as the
-latter emerged from the doorway of a hut, and thrust into his hands one
-of two pistols with which he had come provided. Backing against the door
-of the hut, with pistols drawn they awaited the attack. It began with
-a rattling volley of missiles, but the low, projecting thatch of the
-native dwelling, jutting out as it did several feet from the wall,
-served to somewhat break the force of the stony hail.
-
-“Don't fire till I give the word,” said Don between his teeth. “We can't
-afford to waste a shot. The beggars are drawing their knives.”
-
-The words had barely left his lips when, with a shout and a disorderly
-rush, the crowd broke for the spot where they stood.
-
-“Ready, Pug. Fire!”
-
-Simultaneously with the sharp crack of the pistols, there leapt skyward
-from mid-street a sudden, blinding flash of lurid light, accompanied by
-dense volumes of sulphurous smoke, and a thunderous shock that shook
-the walls of the huts to their foundations. Don and his companion were
-dashed violently through the door against which they stood, and hurled
-upon the floor within. A thick shower of sand and stones rattled about
-and upon them. But of this fact they were unconscious. The shock had
-stunned them.
-
-When Don came to himself he found Puggles seated on the ground by his
-side, blubbering dismally.
-
-Not only was the roof ablaze, but showers of glowing sparks fell thickly
-upon them. The floor of the hut was a bed of fire, the heat intolerable.
-Puggs, dazed “by the recent shock, and stupefied with fright, seemed to
-comprehend not a word that was said to him. Don accordingly seized him
-by the arm and dragged him into the street.
-
-“What's the matter? Where are the natives?” he demanded, struggling to
-his feet, and scanning the interior of the hut with bewildered eyes.
-“Hullo, the roof's on fire!”
-
-[Illustration: 0143]
-
-Here the scene was appalling indeed. How long he had lain insensible he
-could not tell; but the time thus spent upon the floor of the hut must
-have been considerable, for from end to end the double line of thatched
-dwellings was wrapped in flames that shot high into the inky air, and
-there united in one roaring, swirling canopy of fire above the narrow
-thoroughfare. As if to render the spectacle more awful, here and there
-lay stretched upon the ground the mangled, blackened body of a native.
-Through one of these a sharp splinter of wood had been driven. Don
-examined it curiously. Then--he had been too dazed to realise it
-before--the truth flashed upon him. The keg of powder had exploded!
-
-Whilst crossing the street to Pug's side he had noticed, he remembered
-now, that the head, of the keg was stove in. It then lay close beside
-the fire, within a few feet of the scene of the attack. It was not there
-now, but in its stead was a shallow, blackened cavity. That told the
-whole story of the explosion. A handful of powder carelessly scattered,
-a wisp of straw kicked into the fire amid the rush of feet, a chance
-spark even, and---------
-
-“Sa'b, sa'b, the huts done tumble in!”
-
-Puggles was tugging at his sleeve, and pointing fearfully down the
-street. For an instant Don gazed into the black boy's face blankly, not
-grasping the import of his words. Then, like a repetition of that lurid
-flash of light which had burnt itself into his very brain, came the
-recollection of Jack.
-
-The sudden return of the natives had left but half-a-dozen huts
-unsearched. These were situated at the extreme end of the street--the
-end opposite to that from which Don and Puggles had approached the
-village. Towards these the former now ran, only to discover, to his
-consternation, that the fire was before him. For in this direction the
-wind blew, and the unsearched huts, like the rest, were a seething mass
-of flames. Of all save one the roofs had already given way, while at the
-very moment he ran up that also crashed in.
-
-As the blood-red flames shot skyward, an agonised, inarticulate shriek
-rose from within the glowing walls.
-
-Was it Jack?
-
-Shielding his face with his hands, Don attempted to force an entrance,
-but the heat of the furnace-like doorway drove him back. In frantic
-accents he called his chum by name--called again and again--to be
-answered only by the hissing of the pitiless flame-tongues that licked
-the black heavens.
-
-Was it Jack? Had the natives who escaped--if, indeed, any did--the
-deadly effects of the explosion, carried him with them in their flight
-from the burning village, or had he been mercilessly abandoned to a
-fiery grave within his prison walls?
-
-It was a terrible question; but not that night, nor for many nights to
-come, was he to know whether those unnumbered moments of unconsciousness
-had consigned his chum to continued captivity or to death.
-
-One thing only was certain: their mission to the village had reached
-a disastrous climax. To remain longer where they were was useless; to
-follow the trail of the natives who had escaped, impossible. No course
-was left but immediate return to the camp.
-
-Weary, dejected, with aching bodies and aching hearts--for even
-light-hearted Puggles, heathen though he was, felt crushed by their sad
-misadventure--they sought the spot where, the axe and lantern had been
-left, and then set their blackened faces towards the hill.
-
-By this time the moon had risen, making the task of finding the footpath
-an easy one. Just as they turned their backs upon the beach and the
-burning village, out upon the tense stillness of the night--a stillness
-softened rather than broken by the music of the surf--from the shadowy
-hill above rang the sharp report of a gun.
-
-“Something wrong up there, I'm afraid,” said Don, rousing himself and
-pausing to listen. “Hullo!” as a second report broke the stillness,
-“there goes another! Come, Pug, we must pull ourselves together a bit
-and get over the ground faster. The captain's not a man to waste powder;
-those reports mean danger.”
-
-“Him maybe another lubberly warmint shooting, sa'b,” Pug suggested.
-
-“Unless I'm very much mistaken, there's something a jolly sight worse
-afoot,” was his master's uneasy rejoinder as they began the ascent.
-
-Here and there upon the hillside were spots where the rains of many
-summers had so washed away the thin surface-soil as to lay bare the rock
-beneath and leave little or no roothold for vegetation. As he paused for
-a brief breathing space in one of these clearings, Don's attention was
-drawn to a dull red glare, which, though but a short distance in advance
-of the spot where he stood, had up to that moment been quite concealed
-by the intervening jungle.
-
-“Say, Pug, what do you make of that light?”
-
-The black boy knuckled his eyes vigorously, as if to assure himself they
-were playing him no trick.
-
-“Me linking there one fire got, sa'b,” said he, after a long look at the
-mysterious light.
-
-“In that case we'd better stir our stumps. The breeze seems to be
-freshening, and once the fire gets a hold on this tindery jungle, why,
-there's no knowing----”
-
-“There another got, sa'b!” broke in Puggles, pointing excitedly to the
-right.
-
-“Phew! And, by Jove, there's a third beyond that again! And the wind's
-blowing straight for the camp, too! Now I understand why the captain
-fired those shots! The hill's on fire! Point, Pug!”
-
-Up the hillside they bounded, panting, stumbling. There was light enough
-now and to spare, for the fire towards which they were advancing had
-made more headway than at first sight appeared. The wonder was that they
-had not observed it sooner; but this perhaps was sufficiently accounted
-for by the fact that the thoughts of both had lagged behind in the
-burning village.
-
-The point of danger was soon reached. The fire had not yet crossed the
-path, but only a few yards of tindery underbrush separated the swaying
-wall of flame-shot smoke from the narrow trail, while every instant the
-margin grew perceptibly less.
-
-“Now for it, Pug!”
-
-Don raced past with head lowered, the greedy flames licking his face.
-Half-blinded, he stumbled on for a dozen yards or so before turning
-to ascertain how Puggles had stood the ordeal. To his horror he then
-discovered that the fire had swallowed up the pathway at a single bound,
-and that Puggles was nowhere to be seen.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.--IN WHICH THE OLD SAW, “OUT OF THE FRYING-PAN, INTO THE
-FIRE,” IS REVERSED WITH STARTLING EFFECT.
-
-
- Back he ran, battling with the flames and sparks that rolled in volumes
-up the hillside, until, half-stifled and well-nigh fainting from the
-heat, he was forced to turn and flee for his life before the swiftly
-advancing flames.
-
-Whether Puggles, terrified by the close proximity of the fire, had
-hung back at the last moment, or whether he had attempted to follow his
-master and paid for his devotion with his life, heaven alone knew.
-
-“Poor chap!” gasped Don, as he stumbled free of the smoke and turned
-for a last look at the fiery veil so suddenly drawn over his faithful
-servant's fate. “God help him!”
-
-The rapid advance of the fire, however, allowed little time for the
-indulgence of emotion. The long rainless months had scorched the face
-of the hill until the thick-set bamboo copse was as dry as tinder,
-inflammable as shavings. The wind and the steepness of the hillside,
-too, proved powerful allies of the flames. On and up they swept, leaping
-from point to point with such rapidity that Don found it necessary to
-strain every nerve to avoid being overtaken by the greedy holocaust.
-Glad indeed was he when, the scene of his recent adventure passed, he
-at length emerged upon the comparatively open ground abreast of the
-encampment.
-
-Stumping uneasily to and fro, “abaft the fo'csle,” with Bosin perched
-contentedly upon his shoulder, was the old sailor--the jerky creak,
-creak of his wooden leg showing him to be in an unusually disturbed
-state of mind.
-
-“Right glad I am to clap eyes on ye, lad!” he sang out cheerily on
-catching sight of the returned wanderer. “An' whereaway's Master Jack
-an' the leetle nigger, I axes?”
-
-The captain paused abruptly, both in his walk and speech, for the pained
-look on Don's blackened but ghastly face told him at a glance that
-something more than ordinary was amiss.
-
-Slowly setting down the lantern, which he had all along retained in
-his grasp--most fortunately, as it turned out--Don threw himself on the
-trampled grass, and, as rapidly as his shortness of breath would
-permit, summed up the disastrous results of his village expedition. In
-open-mouthed silence, as was his wont, the old sailor listened; but when
-he learned of the dark uncertainty that overhung the fate of Jack
-and Puggles, he hastily brushed aside a tear that straggled down his
-weather-beaten cheek, and, in a voice husky with emotion, burst into one
-of his characteristic snatches of song:
-
- “Why, what's that to you if my eyes I'm a-wipin'?
-
- A tear is a pleasure, d'ye see, in its way.
-
- 'Tis nonsense for trifles, I owns, to be pipin',
-
- But they as hain't pily--why, I pities they!”
-
-And having delivered himself of this sailorly apology for his weakness,
-he added in his usual voice:
-
-“Blow me!--as the speakin trumpet says to the skipper--if ever I
-heard any yarn as beats this 'un, lad. Howsomedever, when the ship's
-a-sinkin', pipin' your eye ain't a-goin' to stop the leak, d'ye mind me;
-an' so, just to bear away on the off tack a bit, what d'ye make o' this
-'ere confleegration, I axes?”
-
-“I can tell you better what it came jolly near making of me, captain,
-and that's cinders! But what do _you_ make of it?--and, by the way, what
-were those shots for? You don't think there's any danger here, do you?”
-
-“Ay,” replied the captain, with an emphatic tug at his neckerchief,
-“that I does, lad! An' why? you naterally axes. Because, d'ye mind
-me, the hill's ablaze from stem to starn--blow me if it bain t!
-Howsomedever,” leading the way towards a jagged remnant of wall that
-stood out in ghostly solitude amid the ruins, “go aloft an' cast an eye
-out to lee'ard, lad.”
-
-The captain's ominous words prepared Don for an unpleasant surprise;
-yet, when he had scaled the pile of masonry, an involuntary cry of alarm
-broke from him.
-
-“Good heavens, captain, we're surrounded by fire!”
-
-“Right, lad! an' the confleegration's gettin' uncommon clost under our
-weather bow; says you. An hour back, d'ye see, I sights the first on
-'em alongside o' the path below, an' fires the gun to signal ye to put
-about. An' then, flush, my scuppers! what does I see but a hull sarcle
-o' confleegrations, as it may be a cable's len'th apart, clean round the
-hill; lad! an' so I fires the second wolley.”
-
-“This is the work of those cowardly niggers!” said Don, clenching his
-fists. “They daren't come here to fight us, so they mean to scorch us
-out!”
-
-“The wery identical words as I says to myself when first I sights the
-fires, lad,” rejoined the captain; “an' a purty lot o' tobackie it cost
-me afore I overhauled the idee, says you.”
-
-“It's likely to cost us more than a few pipes of tobacco, I'm afraid,
-captain,” said Don uneasily, leaping down from his post of observation.
-“The fire's close upon us, and once this grass catches, why, good-bye to
-the stores! I say, where's Spottie?”
-
-“Belay there!” chuckled the captain, who, somehow, seemed remarkably
-cheerful, considering the gravity of the situation. “Whereaway's the
-nigger, you axes? Why, d'ye mind me, lad, this 'ere old hulk ain't
-been a-lyin' on her beam-ends all this time, not by a long chalk. The
-nigger's with the stores, d'ye see; an' stow my cargo, where should the
-stores be but safe and snug under hatches?”
-
-With that he seized his perplexed companion by the arm, skirted the
-dilapidated wall, and presently halted on the very brink of a black
-chasm that yawned to the stars close under its rear. Little else was to
-be seen, for the wall cut off the light of both the fire and the moon.
-From the depths of the cavity proceeded a sound suspiciously like
-snoring. The captain indulged in another chuckle, and then, shaping his
-hands into a sort of speaking-trumpet, he bent over the hole and shouted
-loudly for Spottie. The snoring suddenly ceased, and in half a minute
-or so up the black tumbled, rubbing his eyes. The captain bade him fetch
-the lantern, adding strict injunctions that he should replenish the
-store of oil before lighting it.
-
-“And now, lad, let's go below,” said he, when Spottie had fulfilled his
-mission.
-
-So down they went, the captain leading. First came a dozen or more
-moss-grown steps, littered with blocks of stone, which, ages before,
-perhaps, had fallen and found a resting-place here. At the foot of the
-steps there opened out a subterranean passage, of height sufficient to
-admit of Don's standing erect in it with ease. Upon the floor lay the
-stores; beyond these again all was blank darkness. To all appearance the
-passage extended far into the bowels of the hill.
-
-“Blow me!” chuckled the captain, turning a triumphant gaze upon the
-massive walls, “electric lightnin' itself ud never smell us out in sich
-a tidy berth as this, says you.”
-
-“It certainly is a snug spot,” assented Don; “though I wish”--glancing
-round at their sadly depleted numbers--“I wish that Jack and Pug were as
-safe, poor fellows.”
-
-“Cheer up, my hearty. As I says afore, there's a Providence, lad, as
-sits up aloft to keep watch for the life of poor Jack.' Ay, an for the
-nigger's too, d'ye mind me, lad,” rejoined the captain, blowing his
-nose loudly. “So let's turn out an' see what manner o' headway the
-confleegrations makin'.”
-
-Brief as was their absence from “the glimpses of the moon,” the fire had
-made alarming progress in the interval. Viewed from the centre of the
-swiftly-narrowing cordon of flame, the scene was awesome in the extreme.
-The rear column of the invader advanced the more slowly of the two, but
-even it was now within a stone's throw of that godsend, the captain's
-“tidy berth.”
-
-On the seaward side the flames had overleapt the jungle's edge, and
-seized with unsated greed upon the luxuriant grass that everywhere
-grew amid the ruins. Nearer still, the dense, parasitic growth upon the
-remnant of wall, ignited by the dense clouds of sparks which the wind
-drove far ahead of the actual fire, was blazing fiercely. The heat was
-stifling; the air, choked with smoke and showers of glowing sparks,
-unbreathable. They retreated precipitately to the cooler shelter of the
-underground chamber.
-
-Even here the noise of the flames could be distinctly heard. Indeed,
-they had been barely ten minutes below when the fiery sea rolled with a
-sullen roar over their heads, the fierce heat driving them back from the
-entrance.
-
-Some hours must pass before it would be either safe or practicable to
-venture into the open air. Accordingly, following the captain's
-example, Don made himself as comfortable for the night as circumstances
-permitted. A quantity of dried grass, which Spottie had thoughtfully
-collected and deposited beside the stores, afforded an excellent bed,
-and soon the deep breathing of all three told that sleep too had made
-this long untenanted nook her refuge.
-
-Upwards of an hour had passed when a tremendous grinding crash shook
-the passage from roof to floor, and brought Don and the captain to their
-feet. They had fallen asleep surrounded by a subdued glow of firelight;
-they woke to find themselves in pitchy darkness. Bosin and the scarcely
-more courageous Spottie began to whimper.
-
-“Avast there!” the captain sang out at the latter. “Is this a time to
-begin a-pipin' of your eye like a wench, I axes? Belay that, ye lubberly
-swab, an' light the binnacle lamp till we takes our bearin's.”
-
-This order Spottie obeyed with an alacrity which, it is but due to him
-to explain, sprang rather from a dread of his master's heavy boot than
-from his fear of the dark. In the light thus thrown on the situation,
-the cause of the recent crash became only too apparent. So, too, did its
-effect.
-
-The ruined wall which overtopped their place of refuge had fallen,
-completely blocking the exit with huge stones, still glowing hot from
-the action of the fire.
-
-“Batten--my--hatches, lad!” ejaculated the old sailor, as the full
-significance of the catastrophe flashed upon him. “We're prisoners, says
-you!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.--INTO THE HEART OF THE HILL.
-
-
- There was no denying the truth of the captain's disconcerting
-announcement. So far as concerned the ancient flight of steps, egress
-from the underground chamber was wholly cut off. In the space of a
-single moment their refuge had become a prison. For, to begin with, the
-stones which blocked the entrance were glowing hot; while, to end with,
-these were of such a size, and so tightly wedged between the walls of
-the narrow opening, as to render any attempt at removing them, in the
-absence of suitable implements, utterly futile. If ever there existed a
-dilemma worthy the consumption of the captain's tobacco, here was one.
-The huge meerschaum was lighted forthwith.
-
-And never, perhaps, in all its long and varied history, did the pipe
-perform its task of “'ilin' up” the old sailors “runnin' gear”
- so promptly and satisfactorily as now. For scarcely had he taken
-half-a-dozen “w'hiffs o' the fragrant,” when, “Blow me, lad!” he
-exclaimed, triumphantly following with the stem of the pipe the course
-of a blue spiral which had just left his lips, “d'ye see that, now? No
-sooner I lets it out than away it scuds!”
-
-Under other circumstances this observation would have sounded
-commonplace; here it was significant. The fragrant spiral, after
-wavering an instant as if uncertain what course to take, broke and
-floated slowly towards the wall of _débris_ which blocked the entrance.
-
-“Wery good!” resumed the captain, when this became apparent; “an' what
-o' that? you naterally axes. Why, do ye mind me, lad, when smoke sheers
-off to lee'ard in that 'ere fashion, it sinnifies a drorin'; and a
-drorin', dye see, sinnifies a current o' atmospheric air; and--as
-the maintop-gallan's'l says when it sights the squall---blow me! if
-a current o' atmospheric air don't sinnify as this 'ere subterraneous
-ramification's got a venthole in it somewheres, d'ye see!”
-
-“Why, as for that,” said Don, “I noticed a draught drawing up the steps,
-as soon as I set foot on them. The entrance seemed to act like a sort
-of flue; and, come to think of it, it couldn't do that, in spite of the
-heated air above, unless there was an inlet somewhere below, could it?”
-
-“Ay, inlet's the wery nautical tarm I was a-tryin' to overhaul, lad,”
- replied the captain complacently. “An'--shiver my binnacle!--for that
-inlet we runs. Legs we has, light we has!--so why not? I axes.”
-
-“More grope than run, I fancy,” said Don, peering into the darkness of
-the tunnel. “But there's no help for it, I suppose; though Heaven only
-knows where or what it may lead to! The stores, of course, remain here
-for the present; they're safe enough, at any rate.”
-
-Seizing the lantern, he led off without further parley. Spottie--haunted
-in the dark by an ever-pursuing fear of spooks--made a close second;
-while the old sailor brought up the rear with Bosin on his shoulder.
-Here and there a lizard, alarmed by the hollow echo of their footsteps,
-or by the glare of the passing light, scurried across their path.
-
-For a considerable distance the passage continued on the level, then
-dipped suddenly in a steep flight of steps. After this came other
-level bits, succeeded by other descents, the number of steps in each
-successive flight--or, rather, fall--increasing as they proceeded.
-
-“Looks as if we were bound for the foot of the hill,” remarked Don,
-pausing to allow the captain to overtake him.
-
-“An' well I knows it, lad!” replied that worthy, as he accomplished the
-descent of that particular flight of steps with a sigh of relief like
-the blowing of a small whale. “Sleepin' in the open an' that, d'ye
-see, 's made my jints a bit stiff like--'specially the wooden one!
-Howsomedever, let's get on again--as the seaman says when the lubberly
-donkey rose by the starn an' hove him by the board.”
-
-On they accordingly went, and down, the level intervals growing less
-and less frequent, the seemingly interminable tiers of steps more
-precipitous. Even the captain, level-headed old sailor though he was,
-detected himself in the act of clutching at the wall, so suggestive of
-utter bottomlessness was the black chasm yawning ever at their feet. The
-very echoes hurried back to them as if fearful of venturing the abysmal
-depths. What it would have been to have penetrated the tunnel without a
-lantern Don dared not think.
-
-And now the roof and walls contracted until they seemed to press with
-an insupportable weight upon their shoulders. The steps, too, at first
-equal in height and even of surface, became irregular and slippery. Ooze
-of a vivid prismatic green glistened on either hand; water gathered
-in pellucid, elongated drops overhead, shivered for an instant as if
-startled by the unwonted light, then glinted noiselessly down upon the
-dank, mould-carpeted steps, which no human foot apparently had pressed
-for ages. Suppose their advance, when they got a little lower, should be
-cut off by the water, as retreat was already cut off by the fallen wall!
-
-A level footing at last! Twenty yards on through the darkness, and no
-steps. Had these come to an end? It almost seemed so.
-
-Suddenly the captain stopped. On the rock floor a tiny pool shimmered
-like crystal in the lantern-light. He scooped up a little of the water
-in his broad palm and tasted it, “Stave my water-butt, lad!” cried he,
-smacking his lips with immense gusto. “This 'ere aqueous fluid what's
-a-washin' round in the scuppers ain't no bilge-water, d'ye mind me!
-Reg'lar genewine old briny's what it is, an' well I knows the taste on
-it! We're under the crik--blow me if we bain't!”
-
-“Shouldn't wonder,” said Don, consulting his watch. “It's now three
-o'clock; we've been on the grope just three-quarters of an hour. A
-jolly nice fix we'll be in if we reach daylight on the far side of the
-creek--with no means of crossing it, I mean. But wherever this mole-hole
-leads to, let's get to the end of it.”
-
-More steps, but this time ascending. The walls, too, became perceptibly
-drier, the narrow limits and musty air of the vaulted way less
-oppressive. With elastic steps and light hearts they pressed forward,
-assured that release was now close at hand.
-
-It came sooner than they anticipated, for presently the tunnel veered
-sharply to the left, and as Don rounded the angle of wall a low, musical
-lapping of waves fell on his ears.
-
-The captain was right in his conjecture; the passage had conducted
-them directly under the creek, and it was on that side of the ravine
-immediately adjacent to the Elephant Rock that they now emerged into the
-fresh night air.
-
-Here the tunnel terminated in a platform of rock, escarped from the
-solid cliff, and draped by a curtain of vines similar to, though
-somewhat thinner than, that which concealed the hiding-place of the
-_Jolly Tar_. The platform itself lay wrapped in deepest shade, but
-through the interstices of the natural curtain overhanging it they could
-see the moonlight shimmering on the surface of the creek.
-
-“Blow me, lad!” cried the captain, after peering about him for some
-seconds: “this 'ere cove as we're hove-to in orter lay purty nigh
-abreast o' the _Jolly Tar_, says you. Belay that, ye lubber!” making a
-dive after the monkey, who, with a shrill cry, had swung down from his
-shoulder and scuttled to the edge of the platform.
-
-Don gripped the old sailor by the arm and forcibly held him back.
-“Hist!” he cried in suppressed, excited tones. “Did you hear that?”
-
-A moment of strained silence; then, from the direction of the creek came
-a faint plashing sound, such as might have been produced by the regular
-dip of paddles. Releasing his hold on the captain's arm, Don crossed the
-rocky floor on tiptoe, parted the trailing vines with cautious hand,
-and took a rapid survey of the moonlit creek. Then he hastily seized the
-monkey and darted back to the captains side.
-
-“Canoes!” he whispered. “Two of them, packed with natives, and heading
-straight for us. Back into the passage! And, Spottie! douse that light.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.--RELATES HOW A WRONG ROAD LED TO THE RIGHT PLACE.
-
-
- They had barely gained the shelter of the tunnel and extinguished
-the light, when the prows of the canoes grated against the rock, and a
-number of natives scrambled out upon the platform, jabbering loudly.
-
-Would they remain there, or enter the tunnel where the little band of
-unarmed adventurers--for the captain had neglected to fetch a musket,
-and Don to load his pistols--lay concealed? It was a moment of
-breathless suspense. Then a torch was lighted, and 'the intruders, to
-the number of perhaps a score, filed off to the right and disappeared.
-
-When the last echo of their footsteps had died away, the captain heaved
-a sigh of relief, and bade Spottie relight the lantern.
-
-“Not that I be afear'd o' the warmints, dye mind me, lad,” said he, as
-if in apology for the sigh; “only--spike my guns!--a couple o' brace o'
-fists 'ud be short rations to set under the noses o' sich a rampageous
-crew, d'ye see. Howsome-dever, the way's clear at last, as the shark
-says when he'd swallied the sailor; so beat up to wind'ard a bit, till
-we diskiver whereaway the warmints's bound for.”
-
-“There's another passage, most likely,” observed Don, holding the
-lantern aloft at arm's length as they left the tunnel behind and
-reemerged upon the rock platform. “Ha! there it is, captain; yonder, in
-the far corner.”
-
-“Right ye are, lad,” replied the captain with a chuckle. “We'll
-inwestigate into this 'ere subterraneous ramification, says you; so
-forge ahead, my hearty.”
-
-The entrance to the second tunnel was quickly gained, and into it,
-as nothing was either to be seen or heard of the natives, they
-“inwestigated”--to use the captain's phraseology---as far as a flight of
-steps which extended upwards for an unknown distance beyond the limits
-of the lantern's rays. Here the captain paused, and bending forward:
-
-“Scrapers an' holystones, lad!” cried he with a chuckle; “the
-quarterdeck of a ship-o'-the-line itself ain't cleaner'n these 'ere
-steps. Native feet goin' aloft and a-comin' down continual, that's
-what's scraped 'em, says you; an' so I gets an idee. This 'ere
-subterraneous carawan as we've been an' diskivered is the tail o' the
-'Elephant'!”
-
-“The what, captain?” cried Don.
-
-“Why, d'ye mind me, lad,” the captain proceeded to explain, “when them
-lubberly land-swabs as pilots elephants--which I means mahouts, d'ye
-see--when they wants to go aloft, so to say, how does they manage the
-business? I axes. They lays hold on the warmint's tail, says you, and
-up they goes over the starn. Wery good! This 'ere's a Elephant Rock as
-we're at the present moment inwestigatin' into, d'ye mind me, an' when
-betimes the lubberly crew as mans it is ordered aloft onto the animile's
-back, why, up these 'ere steps they goes. An' so I calls 'em the tail o'
-the 'Elephant'--an' why not? I axes.”
-
-Don gripped the old sailor's hand impulsively.
-
-“Hurrah! this discovery's worth a dozen hours' groping underground,
-captain!” he cried. “For if the natives can gain the Elephant Rock by
-following this passage, why can't we do the same? Jack, old boy, if
-you're still alive--which you are, please God!--we'll find you yet!”
-
-“Ay, at the risk of our wery lives, if need be!” responded the captain,
-in tones that lost none of their heartiness through being a bit husky.
-“An' the bag o' pearls, too, for the matter o' that, lad,” he added;
-“for, d'ye see, as the old song says:
-
- We always be ready,
-
- Steady, lad, steady!
-
- We'll fight an' we'll conquer agin and agin!
-
-“Howsomedever, fightin' without wittles ain't to be thought of, no more'n
-without powder, says you; so 'bout ship an' bear away for the Ha'nted
-Pagodas!”
-
-“Thank Heaven for the fire and that tumbledown wall!” ejaculated Don as
-they retraced their steps to the platform. “Chance has done for us what
-no planning--or fighting either, for the matter of that--could ever have
-done. We started on a wrong road, but, all the same, it has led us to
-the right place.”
-
-“Ay, lad, only chance bain't the right word for it, d'ye see. There's
-a Providence, lad, as sits up aloft,” said the captain, lifting his cap
-reverently. “I bain't, so to say, a religious cove; but, storm or calm,
-them's the wery identical words as I always writes in my log. An', d'ye
-mind me, lad, 'tis the hand o' the Good Pilot as has guided us here
-to-night.”
-
-“I don't doubt it,” replied Don gravely, “any more than I doubt that the
-same Good Pilot will guide us safely into port. Bearing that in mind, we
-have only to mature our plans and end the whole thing at a stroke. Here
-we are, and now for the creek,” he concluded, crossing the platform and
-thrusting aside the pendent vines. “We'll borrow one of the canoes those
-niggers came in. Hullo, they're gone!”
-
-“Some of the lubberly crew stopped aboard and rowed off agin, belike,”
- observed the captain. “Blow me, if we shan't have to take to the water,
-as the sailors said when they'd swallied all the rum.”
-
-Don made no reply, but rapidly divesting himself of his coat and shoes,
-he slipped into the water before the old sailor well knew what he was
-about.
-
-“I'm off for the canoe we hid in the jungle,” he called back as he
-struck out for the other shore.
-
-“Ay, ay, lad!” responded the captain; “an' here's to your speedy retarn,
-as the shark says when they hoisted the sailor into the ship's gig.”
-
-Swimming the creek was, after all, an insignificant feat for a
-sturdy-limbed young fellow like Don. The water was warm and refreshing,
-the distance far from great. A dozen vigorous strokes, and he was well
-within the deep shadow of the opposite cliff, for he deemed it prudent
-to avoid the moonlight, lest by any chance the natives who had removed
-the canoes should be in the vicinity.
-
-Once, indeed, he fancied he actually heard a faint splashing in the
-water a short distance ahead. He floated for a moment, motionless and
-alert; but as the noise was not repeated, he swam on again. He had made
-scarce half-a-dozen strokes, however, when he suddenly felt himself
-gripped from below by the leg. His first thought was of sharks; his
-next, that he was in the clutches of a human foe, for a vice-like hand
-was at his throat.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.--CAPTAIN MANGO “GOES ALOFT.”
-
-
- Self-preservation is the first law of life, and no sooner did Don feel
-that iron grip compressing his throat, and dragging him down into the
-depths of the creep, than he struck out to such good purpose that the
-hold of his unknown assailant quickly relaxed. As he shot up to the
-surface he found himself confronted by the dripping head and shoulders
-of a native. A brief cessation of hostilities followed; each glared
-at the other defiantly, the native's tense breathing and watchful eye
-indicating that, though baffled for the moment by his opponents prompt
-defensive measures, he was in no two minds about renewing the struggle.
-
-Suddenly, by a lightning-like movement of the hand, he dashed a blinding
-jet of spray into Don's eyes, instantly followed up the advantage thus
-treacherously gained, grappled with him, and pinioned his arms tightly
-at his sides. Then, to his horror, Don felt his head thrust violently
-back, felt the fellow's hot, quick breath on his neck, and his teeth
-gnashing savagely at his throat.
-
-Luckily for himself Don was no mean athlete, and knew how to use his
-fists to advantage when occasion demanded. Wrenching his arms free,
-he seized the native by the throat, and in spite of his eel-like
-slipperiness and desperate struggles, by an almost superhuman effort
-forced him slowly backwards until he had him at effective striking
-distance, when, suddenly loosing his hold, he let him have a tremendous
-“one-two” straight from the shoulder, that stretched the native
-senseless and bleeding on the water.
-
-“You would have it!” he panted, surveying the native's sinewy
-proportions with grim satisfaction. “Next time you won't wait to be
-knocked out, I reckon. But 'twon't do to let you drown, though you
-richly deserve it; so come along, you black cub!”
-
-Seizing the black by the convenient tuft of hair at the back of his
-bullet-head, he towed him to the strip of beach, and there hauled him
-out upon the sand, directly into a patch of moonlight, as it happened,
-that came slanting down through a rift in the canopy of palm-leaves
-overhead. Something in the appearance of the upturned features caused
-him to drop on his knees at the natives side.
-
-“Hullo!” he cried, peering into the fellow's face, “Jack's lascar, as
-I'm alive! By Jove, you are a prize! We'll keep you with us longer than
-we did last time, my friend. Ha, ha! won't the captain chuckle, though!”
-
-With his belt he proceeded to strap the lascar's hands securely behind
-his back; but when it came to fastening his legs, a difficulty cropped
-up. That is to say, the strap could not be used for both, and he had no
-substitute. Fortunately the lascar wore about his loins the regulation
-length of strong country cotton--his only covering--and this Don was in
-the act of removing when a knife fell out of its folds.
-
-“Lucky thing I didn't run against you in the water,” he soliloquised,
-picking the weapon up. “Why, it's the very knife the lascar shot at
-Jack from the schooner's deck; the one he let the fellow have back for
-sending the boathook through the cutter's side; and that we afterwards
-found lying in the _ballam_ here. And yet Jack certainly had it on him
-when those niggers carried him off. So, old chap,” apostrophising
-the insensible owner of the much-bandied knife, “so you had a hand in
-kidnapping him too, had you? All the more reason for caring for you now
-that we've got you.”
-
-Following up this idea, he knotted the cloth tightly about the lascar's
-legs, dragged him well up the beach, and went in search of the canoe.
-This, fortunately, had not been molested in their absence; in a few
-minutes he had it in the water. Then, seizing the paddle, he propelled
-the light skiff swiftly in the direction of the rock platform, where he
-found the old sailor stumping his beat in a terrible state of uneasiness
-over his prolonged absence.
-
-“Spike my guns, lad!” cried he, bearing down upon the young man with
-outstretched hand and a smile as broad as the cutter's mainsail, “they
-warmints's been an' done for Master Don this hitch, I says to myself
-when the half-hour fails to bring ye. An' what manner o' mishap's kept
-ye broached-to all this while? I axes.”
-
-“Fact is, captain, I was attacked by the enemy. Came within an ace of
-being captured, too. But, as good luck would have it, I managed to
-get in a thundering broadside, boarded the enemy--there was only one,
-luckily--spiked his guns, and towed him ashore, where he's waiting to
-pay his respects to you now. But get in and see for yourself what a
-valuable prize I've taken.”
-
-The captain got in with all despatch, and, as soon as the canoe touched
-the opposite beach, got out again without delay, so eager was he to
-inspect, the captive. As it was now daylight, he recognised the fellow
-the moment he set eyes on him. His delight knew no bounds. Bound and
-round the luckless lascar he stumped, chuckling as he always did when
-he was pleased, and every now and then prodding him in the ribs with
-his wooden leg, as if to reassure himself that he laboured under no
-delusion.
-
-“Sharks an' sea-sarpents, lad!” he roared, when quite satisfied as to the
-lascar's identity, “we'll keep the warmint fast in the bilboes a while,
-says you; for, d'ye mind me, he's old Salambo's right-hand man, is this
-lubber, as comes an' goes at his beck an' call, an' executes the orders
-as he gives. So in the bilboes he remains; why not? I axes.”
-
-“My idea precisely, captain. He can't be up to any of his little games
-so long as he has a good stout strap to hug him; and, what's more, he'll
-have a capital chance to recover from that nasty slash Jack gave him
-the other night. By the way, I've often wondered, do you know, how he
-managed to pull through that affair so easily. Suppose we turn him over
-and have a look at his shoulder?”
-
-No sooner said than done, notwithstanding the captive's snarling
-protests; but, to their great amazement, his shoulder showed neither
-wound nor scar.
-
-“Well, this beats me!” exclaimed Don incredulously.
-
-“An' is this the wery identical swab, an' no mistake? I axes,” demanded
-the captain.
-
-“Mistake? None whatever, unless Jack was mistaken in the fellow the
-other day, which isn't at all likely. Besides, I've seen him twice
-before myself; once in the temple, and again on the sands here. I'd know
-that hang-dog look of his among a thousand. Then there's Spottie; he saw
-him as well. Stop! let's see what Spottie makes of this.”
-
-Spottie was summoned, and, without being informed of the point in
-dispute, unhesitatingly identified the captive as the lascar.
-
-“Then,” said Don, “Jack must have supposed he stabbed the fellow when he
-didn't; that's the most I can make of it.”
-
-“Belay there!” objected the captain. “What about the blood in the canoe
-and on the knife when arterwards found? I axes.”
-
-“There you have me. This fellow's the lascar fast enough; but how he's
-the lascar and yet doesn't show the wound Jack gave him, I know no more
-than the man in the moon. Ugh! what a greasy beast he is! I'd better
-take the strap up another hole to make sure of him.”
-
-So, for a time, the puzzling question of the lascar's identity dropped.
-
-No food being procurable here, they decided to push oh to the Haunted
-Pagodas ere the sun became too hot, and there endeavour to clear a
-passage to the immured stores. Accordingly, when the canoe had been
-dragged back to its former place of concealment, they set out, Don
-taking charge of the lascar, who, clad in Spottie's upper-cloth, and
-having his legs only at liberty, led as quietly as a lamb.
-
-Two-thirds of the way up they came upon that portion of the hill which
-had been ravaged by the fire. For the most part this had now burnt
-itself out, leaving the summit of the elevation one vast bed of ghastly
-gray ashes, with here and there a smouldering stump or cluster of bamboo
-stems still smoking.
-
-At the Haunted Pagodas two surprises awaited them. The first of these
-was no other than Puggles himself, alive and lachrymose. On the floor
-of the otherwise empty “fo'csle” he sat, blubbering dolefully. Comical
-indeed was the spectacle he presented, with his woebegone face thickly
-begrimed with a mixture of ashes and tears--a sort of fortuitous
-whitewash, relieved in the funniest fashion by the black skin showing in
-patches through its lighter veneer, and by the double line of vivid red,
-stretching half-way from ear to ear, that marked the generous expanse of
-his mouth.
-
-The explanation of his sudden disappearance proved simple enough. He
-had stumbled in the very act of following his master past the
-swiftly-advancing fire, and crawling back on hands and knees to a place
-of safety, had there passed the night alone in the jungle. On reaching
-the encampment and finding it deserted, he jumped to the conclusion that
-the fire had, as he put it, “done eat sahibs up,” stores and all. Hence
-his tearful condition on their return.
-
-The second surprise was one of an equally pleasing nature, since it
-concerned the stores. The mass of _debris_ which blocked the tunnel's
-mouth had subsided to such an extent in cooling as to admit of their
-reaching the imprisoned stores with but little difficulty.
-
-“All the same, captain,” remarked Don, when presently they began a
-vigorous attack on the provisions, “I'm jolly glad our fear of being
-buried alive drove us to the far end of the hole. We've got the key to
-the Elephant Rock, and, what's more, we've got a grip on old Salambo's
-right hand,” nodding towards the lascar, who was again bound hand and
-foot, “that's safe to stand us in good stead when it comes to the final
-tussle for Jack and the pearls.”
-
-“Right ye are, lad,” said the captain in tones as hearty as
-his appetite; “an', blow me!--as the fog-horn says to the
-donkey-ingin--arter we snatches a wink o' sleep, d'ye mind me, we'll
-lay our heads together a bit an' detarmine on the best course to be
-steered.”
-
-On the stone floor of the “fo'csle” the blacks were already sleeping the
-sleep of repletion; and, their meal finished, Don and the captain lost
-no time in following their example--for thirty-six hours of almost
-unremitting exertion and danger had told heavily upon their powers of
-endurance. Dead tired as they were, they gave little heed to the lascar
-beyond assuring themselves by a hasty glance that his bonds were secure.
-To all appearance he was wrapped in profound slumber.
-
-The sun was at the zenith when they stretched themselves upon the
-flags of the “fo'csle”; slowly it burnt its way downward to the western
-horizon, and still they slept. Don was the first to stir. He raised
-himself upon his elbow with a yawn, rubbed his eyes, gazed about him in
-momentary bewilderment. Twilight had already crept out of the ravine
-and invaded the ghostly, fire-scathed ruins. This was the first-thing he
-noticed. Then the recollection of the events of the past day and night
-rushed upon him, and he turned abruptly, with a sudden vague sense of
-dread, to the spot where the lascar lay.
-
-Lay? No; that place was empty!
-
-He could scarcely believe the evidence of his senses. Had the fellow
-somehow managed to shift his position, and roll out of sight behind one
-of the numerous blocks of stone that lay about? Or had he----
-
-With a cry of alarm he threw himself upon an object that lay where the
-lascar had lain. It was the leathern belt with which he had bound the
-fellow's arms. The tongue of the buckle was broken. He recollected now,
-and almost cursed his folly for not recollecting before, that the buckle
-had long been weak. Too late! The lascar had escaped!
-
-Dashing the traitorous belt upon the stones, he hurried to where the
-old sailor lay asleep, with Bosin curled up by his side, and shook him
-roughly by the shoulder. He was in no gentle mood just then.
-
-“Captain! Captain! Wake up! The lascars off!”
-
-No response. No movement. Only the monkey awoke suddenly and fell to
-whimpering.
-
-The captain lay at full length upon his back, his bronzed hands clasped
-upon his broad chest, his blue sailor's cap drawn well over his
-eyes. Something in the pose of the figure at his feet, in its
-stillness--something, too, in the plaintive half-human wail the monkey
-uttered at the moment--struck a sudden chill to Don's heart. He dropped
-upon his knees, lifted the cap, peered into the upturned face. It was
-distorted, purple. He started back with a fearful cry:
-
-“Not dead! Oh, my God, not dead!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.--SHROUDED IN A HAMMOCK.
-
-
- That was a fearful moment for Don. The quest of the golden pearl,
-entered upon with all the love of adventure and sanguine hope natural to
-young hearts, began to wear a serious aspect indeed. Even had Jack been
-there to share the heartbreak of it, this sudden, numbing blow would
-still have been terribly hard to bear. But Jack was gone--whither,
-Heaven alone knew--and the captain was dead.
-
-Ay, the “Providence that sits up aloft” had at last looked out a snug
-berth for the old sailor, and shipped him for the Eternal Voyage.
-Kneeling by his side in the solemn twilight, with aching heart Don
-recalled all his quaint ways and quainter sayings, his large-hearted
-generosity, his rollicking good-nature, his rough but ever-ready
-sympathy--and sealed the kindly eyes with such tears as are wrung from
-us but once or twice in a lifetime, and recalled with sadness often,
-with shame never.
-
-But for him the captain would never have undertaken this disastrous
-venture. This was the bitterest, the sorest thought of all.
-
-At last Bosin's low wailing broke in upon his sad reverie. Well-nigh
-human did the monkey seem, as with tender, lingering touch he caressed
-his master's face, and sought to rouse him from this strange sleep of
-which he felt but could not understand the awful meaning. Then, failing
-to win from the dumb lips the response he craved, he turned his
-eyes upon his master's friend with a look of pathetic appeal fairly
-heartbreaking in its mute intensity.
-
-No sooner did he succeed in attracting Don's attention, however, than
-his manner underwent a complete change. The plaintive wail became a
-hiss, the puny, lithe hands tore frantically at something that showed
-like a thin, dark streak about the dead man's neck. What with the waning
-light and the shock of finding the captain dead, Don had not noticed
-this streak before. He looked at it closely now, and as he looked a
-horrified intelligence leapt into his face. The dark streak was a cord:
-the captain had been strangled!
-
-Oh, the horror of that discovery! Hitherto he had suspected no foul
-play, no connection of any kind, indeed, between the captain's death and
-the lascar's escape; for had he not taken the precaution to disarm
-the native? But now he remembered seeing that cord about the fellow's
-middle. He had thought it harmless. Harmless! Ah, how different was the
-mute witness borne by the old sailor's lifeless form! In the lascar's
-hands the cord had proved an instrument of death as swift and sure as
-any knife.
-
-But why had the captain been singled out as the victim? Was the lascar
-merely bent on wreaking vengeance on those who had injured him? Or was
-he a tool in other and invisible hands?
-
-Feverishly he asked himself these questions as he removed the fatal
-cord, and composed the distorted features into a semblance of what they
-had been in life; asked, but could not answer them. Only, back of the
-whole terrible business, he seemed to see the cunning, unscrupulous
-shark-charmer, bent on retaining the pearls at any cost, fanning the
-lascar's hatred into fiercer flame, guiding his ready hand in its work
-of death.
-
-Could he, alone and all but unaided, cope with the cunning of this enemy
-who, while himself unseen, made his devilish power felt at every turn?
-The responsibility thrown upon his shoulders by the captain's murder
-involved other and weightier issues than the mere recovery of a few
-thousand pounds' worth of stolen pearls. Jack must be rescued, if indeed
-he was still alive; while, if he too was dead, his and the captain's
-murderers must be brought to justice. This was the task before him; no
-light one for a youth of eighteen, with only a brace of timid native
-servants at his back. Yet he addressed himself to it with all the
-passionate determination born of his love for the chum and his grief for
-the friend who had stood by him “through thick and thin.” There was no
-hesitation, no wavering. “Do or die!” It was come to that now.
-
-The captain's burial must be his first consideration; for Don had lived
-long enough in the East to know how remorseless is the climate in
-its treatment of the dead. Morning at the latest must snatch the old
-sailor's familiar form for ever from his sight.
-
-A tarpaulin lay in the “fo'csle,” and with this he determined to hide
-the lascar's dread handiwork from view before waking the blacks, who
-still slept. While he was disposing this appropriate pall above the
-corpse, the captain's jacket fell open, and in an inside pocket he
-caught sight of a small volume.
-
-“Perhaps he has papers about him that ought to be preserved,” thought
-Don. “I'll have a look.”
-
-Drawing the volume from its resting-place with reverent touch, he found
-it to be a copy of the Book of Common Prayer, sadly worn and battered,
-like its owner, by long service. Here and there a leaf was turned down,
-or a passage marked by the dent of a heavy thumb-nail--the sailor's
-pencil. But what arrested his attention were these words written on the
-yellow fly-leaf in a bold, irregular hand, and in ink so faded as to
-make it evident that many years had elapsed since they were penned:
-
-“To all and sundry as sights these lines, when-somedever it may please
-the Good Skipper to tow this 'ere old hulk safe into port, widelicit.
-If so be as I'm spared to go aloft when on the high-seas, wery good! the
-loan of a hammock and a bit o' ballast is all I axes. But if so be as
-I'm ewentually stranded on shore, why then, d'ye mind me, who-somedever
-ye be as sights these 'ere lines, I ain't to be battened down like a
-lubberly landsman, d'ye see, but warped off-shore an' shipped for the
-Eternal V'yage as a true seaman had ought to be. And may God have mercy
-on my soul.--Amen. The last Log and Testament of me,
-
-“(Signed) John Mango, A.B.”
-
-The faded characters grew blurred and misty before Don's eyes as he
-scanned them. Closing the book, he grasped the captain's cold hand
-impulsively, and in tones choked with emotion, cried:
-
-“You shall have your wish, dear old friend! We'll warp you off-shore and
-ship you for the Eternal Voyage in a way befitting the true seaman that
-you are.”
-
-And the mute lips seemed to smile back their approval, as though they
-would say:
-
-“Ay, ay, wrhy not, I axes? An' cheer up, my hearty, for, d'ye mind me,
-lad, pipin' your eye won't stop the leak when the ship's a-sinkin'.”
-
-What boots it to linger over the noisy, but none the less genuine
-grief, of the faithful Spottie when he learned the sad truth? Nor is it
-necessary to describe at length the sad preparations for consigning the
-dead captain to his long home beneath the waves that had been his home
-so long in life. Suffice it to say that without loss of time a rude bier
-was constructed on which to convey the remains to the beach, and that
-while this was preparing there occurred an event so remarkable, and
-withal of so important a bearing upon the future of the quest, as to
-merit something more than mere passing mention.
-
-It happened while the three were in the jungle cutting materials for the
-litter, and it concerned the fatal cord.
-
-“Until the lascar's paid out, I'll keep this as a reminder of what I owe
-him,” Don had said grimly, just before starting; and taking the lascars
-knife from his belt he stuck it into a crevice in the “fo'csle” wall,
-and hung the snake-like cord upon it.
-
-Spottie and Puggles being too timid to leave with the dead, or to send
-alone into the jungle in quest of materials for the bier--for was it not
-at nightfall that shadowy spooks walked abroad?--Don was forced to bear
-them company. There was no help for it; the captain's body must be left
-unguarded in their absence--except, indeed, for such watch-care as puny
-Bosin was able to give it.
-
-Up to the moment of their setting out the monkey had not for a single
-instant left his master's side. This fact served to render all the more
-extraordinary the discovery they made on their return--namely, that the
-monkey had quitted his post. What could have induced him to abandon his
-master at such a moment was a mystery.
-
-And the mystery deepened when Don, wanting the knife, sought it in the
-“fo'csle,” for, to his astonishment, neither knife nor cord was to be
-found.
-
-“Dey spooks done steal urn, sar,” cried Spottie, with chattering teeth.
-
-“Huh,” objected Puggles, between whom and Spottie there had grown up a
-sharp rivalry during their brief acquaintance, “why they no steal
-dead sahib? I axes.” Then to his master: “Lascar maybe done come back,
-sahib.”
-
-This suggestion certainly smacked more of plausibility than that offered
-by Spottie, since it not only accounted for the disappearance of the
-cord and knife, but of Bosin as well. Was it too much to believe that
-the faithful creature's hatred, instinctively awakened by the lascar's
-stealthy return, had outweighed affection for his dead master and
-impelled him to abandon the one that he might track the other?
-Remembering the intelligence exhibited by the monkey in the past, Don at
-least was satisfied that this explanation was the true one.
-
-By midnight all was in readiness, and with heavy hearts they took up
-their dead and began the toilsome descent to the creek. This reached,
-the _Jolly Tar_ was drawn from her place of concealment, and the
-captain's body lashed in a tarpaulin. Then, with white wings spread,
-the cutter bore silently away from the creek's mouth in quest of a last
-resting-place for the master whose behest she was never again to obey.
-
-“This will do,” said Don, when a half-hour's run had put them well
-off-shore. “Take the tiller, Pug, and keep her head to the wind for a
-little.”
-
-With bowed head he opened the well-worn Prayer Book, and, while the
-waves chanted a solemn funeral dirge, read in hushed tones the office
-for the burial of the dead at sea. A pause, a tear glinting in the
-moonlight, a splash--and just as the morning star flashed out like
-a beacon above the eastern sea-rim, the old sailor began the Eternal
-Voyage.
-
-“And now,” said Don, as he brought the cutters head round in the
-direction of the creek; “now for the last tussle and justice for the
-dead. Let me only come face to face once more with that murderous lascar
-or his master, and no false notions of mercy shall stay my hand--so help
-me Heaven!”
-
-And surely not Heaven itself could deem that vow unrighteous.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.--THE CROCODILE PIT.
-
-
- The last melancholy duty to the captain discharged, Don threw himself
-heart and fist--as Jack would have said--into the work cut out for him;
-and by the time the _Jolly Tar_ was again rubbing her nose against the
-inner wall of the grotto, he had decided to abandon the Haunted Pagodas
-and to make this secluded spot--next door to the back entrance of the
-Elephant Rock--his base of operations.
-
-“Up to now it's been all take and no give,” he said to himself; “but now
-we've got to act, and act like a steel trap, sharp and sure. What is it
-the old school motto says?--'_bis dat qui cito dat_,' 'a quick blow's as
-good as two any day.' The old Roman who strung that together knew what
-he was talking about, anyhow, and I'll put his old saw to the test
-before another sun sets.”
-
-In the letter of which Bosin had been the bearer Jack had said--“They
-take me to the Elephant Rock to-night.” Twice since then had night come
-and gone; and if his chum had not perished in the village holocaust, in
-the Elephant Rock he was probably to be found. Hurrah for the finding!
-
-The muskets were still at the “fo'csle,” for that sad midnight descent
-of the hill had left their hands too full for weapons. Besides, none
-were needed then. They were needed now, however, so there was nothing
-for it but to climb the hill after them. This, and the time necessarily
-consumed in snatching a hasty meal, delayed the start by a good two
-hours.
-
-At length all was ready, and tumbling into the canoe they pushed off.
-To stick to the literal truth, Spottie did the tumbling. In spite of all
-his efforts to assume a dignity of carriage in keeping with his weapons
-and the occasion, the cutlass at Spottie's belt would persist in getting
-at crosspurposes with his long, thin legs, and so throw him, physically
-speaking, off his balance. Once seated in the canoe, however, with the
-point of the cutlass in dangerous proximity to Puggles's back, and
-the old flint-lock so disposed upon his knees as to hit Don to a dead
-certainty if by any mischance it went off, Spottie looked exceedingly
-fierce--in fact, an out-and-out swashbuckler.
-
-Not so Puggles. No weapons could make him look other than what nature
-had made him--a happy-go-lucky, fun-and-food loving, sunny-faced lump of
-oily blackness. The extra broad grin that tugged at the far corners
-of bis expansive mouth proclaimed him at peace with all the
-world--especially with that important section of it bounded by his
-swelling waistband--and gave the lie direct to his warlike equipment.
-
-Of crossing the creek Don made short work, and soon they stood upon the
-rock platform, where, but little more than twenty-four hours before,
-the landing and sudden disappearance of the native crew had put them in
-possession of the key which was now, if fortune favoured them, to unlock
-the secret of Jack's fate, and, haply, the door of his prison-house.
-
-Yonder on the right--for the spot was light enough by day, despite
-its curtain of vegetation--could be seen the black mouth of the tunnel
-running under the creek, and so to the summit of Haunted Pagoda Hill;
-here, on the left, that by which the natives had taken their departure.
-It was with this that Don's business lay now; and as he led the way into
-it he recalled with a sorrowful smile that quaint fancy of the captain's
-which made this approach to the Rook “the tail o' the Elephant.” And
-here was the very spot where he had uttered the words. He almost fancied
-he could see the old sailor standing there still, his wooden leg thrust
-well forward, his cap well back, and Bosin perched contentedly upon his
-broad shoulder. Alas for fancy!
-
-But what was this that came leaping down the dim vista of steps? No
-creature of fancy surely, but actual flesh and blood. Only flesh and
-blood in the form of a monkey, it is true, but what mattered that, since
-the monkey was none other than Bosin himself?
-
-A jubilant shout from Puggles greeted his appearance--a shout which Don,
-fearful of discovery, immediately checked--while Spottie made as if to
-catch the returned truant. But the impish Bosin would have none of him;
-eluding the grasp of the black, he sprang upon Don's shoulder. Only
-then did Don observe that the monkey was not empty-handed. He carried
-something hugged tightly against his breast.
-
-Like all his tribe, Bosin had a pretty _penchant_ for annexing any
-chance article that happened to take his fancy, without regard to
-ordinary rights of property.
-
-“Prigging again, eh?” said Don, as he gently disengaged the monkey's
-booty from his grasp. “What have you got this time?”
-
-To his astonishment he saw that he held in his hands the lascar's cord,
-and--surely he was not mistaken?--the fellow to that half of Jack's
-handkerchief in which his letter had been wrapped up when despatched
-from the village per monkey post.
-
-Bosin's mysterious disappearance, then, was explained. In quitting his
-dead master's side so unaccountably he had had a purpose in view--a
-monkeyish, unreasoning purpose, doubtless, but none the less a
-purpose--which was none other than to track the lascar to his lair and
-regain possession of the cord. Not that he knew in the least the value
-to Don of the yard of twisted hemp, or the significance of the scrap of
-crumpled, bloodstained cambric he was at such pains to filch. With only
-blind instinct for his guide, he had been guided better than he knew;
-for while the cord proved the Elephant Rock to be the hiding-place of
-the lascar, the handkerchief proved, or seemed to prove, that Jack was
-still alive and that the lascar's hiding-place was his prison.
-
-Don's heart leapt at the discovery.
-
-Perhaps Jack, unable for some reason to scribble even so much as a word,
-had entrusted the handkerchief to the monkey's care, knowing that the
-sight of it would assure his chum of his safety, if it did no more. Or
-perhaps Bosin had carried it off while Jack slept?
-
-A thousand conjectures flashed through Don's brain, but he thrust them
-hastily aside, since mere conjecture could not release his chum; and
-calling to the blacks to follow, he sprang up the steps with a lighter
-heart. The monkey swung himself down from his perch and took the lead,
-as if instinctively divining the object of their quest; chattering
-gleefully when the trio pressed close upon his heels--impatiently when
-they lagged behind.
-
-The steps surmounted, they discovered an offshoot from the main tunnel,
-from which point of division the latter dwindled straight away into a
-mere dot of light in the distance. In the main tunnel itself the light
-was faint enough; but as they advanced it increased in brilliancy till
-presently--the distance being actually much less than the unbroken
-perspective of chiselled rock made it appear--they emerged suddenly into
-the broad light of day, streaming down through an oblong cleft or gash
-cut deep into the solid heart of the Rock.
-
-The light itself was more welcome than what it revealed.
-
-Directly across their path, at their very feet indeed, extended a
-yawning chasm, of depth unknown--but, as the first glance served to
-show, of such breadth as to effectually bar their further progress.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.--DON SETS A DEATH-TRAP FOR THE LASCAR.
-
-
- To be sure, skirting the end wall on the extreme left was a ledge along
-which the agile monkey made his way to the opposite side of the pit
-with little or no difficulty; but, as for following him, by that road at
-least, why, the thing was an utter impossibility. The ledge was a mere
-thread. Scarce a handbreadth of rock lay between the smooth-cut upper
-wall and the perpendicular face of the pit.
-
-“Blow me!” muttered Don, unconsciously echoing the phrase he had so
-often heard on the captains lips, “if this ain't the purtiest go as ever
-I see!” Which assertion was purely figurative; for as he was only too
-well aware it was “no go” at all, so far as the pit was concerned.
-
-Peering over the brink of the chasm he found it to be partially filled
-with water, between which and the spot where he stood intervened perhaps
-thirty feet of sheer wall. An uninviting pool it looked, lying as green
-and putrescent within its sunken basin as if the bones of unnumbered
-dead men were rotting in its depths. The very sunshine that fell in
-great golden blotch upon its surface seemed to shrink from its foul
-touch.
-
-But what struck Don as the strangest feature of this noisome pool was
-the constant agitation of its waters. To what was it due? What were
-those black, glistening objects floating here and there upon its
-surface? And those others, ranged along the half-submerged ledge on the
-far side? A small fragment of stone chanced to lie near him. He picked
-it up and aimed it at one of these curious objects. To his astonishment
-the black mass slowly shifted its position and plunged with a wallowing
-splash into the pool. Puggles, who had been looking on with mouth agape,
-raised a shout.
-
-“Him corkadile, sa'b! Me sometimes bery often seeing um in riber. Him
-plenty appetite got!”
-
-“Ugh, the monsters!” muttered his master, watching with a sort of
-horrible fascination the movements of the hulking reptiles, which lifted
-their ugly, square snouts towards him as if scenting prey. “Here's a
-pretty kettle of fish! Crossing this hole is hound to be a tough job at
-the best--but, as if that wasn't enough, these brutes must turn up and
-add danger to difficulty. Plenty appetite? I should think so, indeed, in
-such a hole as this! However, crocodile or no crocodile, it's got to be
-crossed.”
-
-Until now he had rather wondered, to tell the truth, why it was that
-not a single native had crossed their path. He had expected to find the
-passage guarded. The pit, not to say the crocodiles, shed a flood of
-light--not very cheering light, he was forced to admit--upon this
-point. No doubt the natives considered themselves in little danger from
-intrusion, so long as they were guarded by a dozen feet of sheer pit,
-with a dozen brace or so of healthy crocodiles at the bottom of it.
-
-And probably they were right so far as concerned intruders of their own
-colour and pluck; but Don was made of sturdier stuff than native clay.
-Beyond the crocodile pit lay his chum, a prisoner. Cross it he must,
-and would. Therefore, to borrow the expressive phrase of an American
-humorist, he “rose to the emergency and caved the emergency's head in.”
-
-Was the pit too wide to leap? Spanning it with his eye, he estimated its
-width at a dozen feet; certainly not less. A tremendous leap that, and
-fraught with fearful risk. And even should he be able to take it, what
-of Spottie and Puggles? They would never dare face it. And what, too, of
-the muskets and cutlasses?
-
-Suddenly he descried, just where the continuation of the tunnel pierced
-the wall on the far side of the pit, an object that inspired him with
-fresh hope and determination. True, it was nothing more than a plank,
-but once that plank was in his hands, he could, perhaps, bridge the pit.
-
-A dozen feet at the very least! Could he clear it? To jump short of
-the opposite ledge, to reach it, even, and then slip, meant certain and
-horrible death at the jaws of the crocodiles. Should he venture? Jack
-had ventured much for him. He slipped off his shoes--his stockinged feet
-would afford a surer foothold--and quietly bade the blacks stand aside.
-Sauntering carelessly into the tunnel--that by which they had approached
-the pit--a distance of forty paces or so, he turned, drew a deep breath,
-threw all his lithe strength into the short run, his whole soul into the
-leap, and---- Would he clear it?
-
-No--yes! A horrified shriek from the blacks, and he was over, the pit a
-scant handbreadth behind him.
-
-Dragging the plank from its place of partial concealment, he was
-delighted to find a short piece of rope attached to it. Good; it would
-facilitate the bridging of the chasm. Standing on the brink, he
-coiled the rope--not without a misgiving that it was too short for his
-purpose--and, calling to Spottie to catch the end, threw it out over the
-pit sailor-fashion. It fell short.
-
-“Stop!” cried he. “This will make it right;” and drawing the lascar's
-cord from his pocket, he knotted it to the rope. This time Spottie
-succeeded in grasping the end; and so, with the aid of the lascar's
-cord, the plank was drawn across. Its length was such that it bridged
-the pit from wall to wall, with a foot of spring-way to spare at either
-end.
-
-At the time Don thought nothing of this apparently trivial incident;
-yet, had he but known it, with that cord he had laid a death-trap for
-the-captain's murderer.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.--THE BLAST OF A CONCH-SHELL.
-
-
- The rest was easy. In five minutes the blacks had crawled across, with
-many fearful glances at the upturned snouts of the huge reptiles below;
-and Don, treading the springy length of plank with sure foot, had
-transferred muskets and cutlasses to what he mentally termed “Jack's
-side” of the chasm. They were now ready for a fresh start.
-
-All this time Bosin had watched their movements with an expression of
-mingled shrewdness and approval in his restless eyes that seemed to say:
-“Ha! the very thing I'd do myself were I in the fix you're in.” Again he
-took the lead, like one who had travelled the road before, and was quite
-satisfied in his own mind that he knew all its little ins and outs.
-
-His knowledge of the way became more apparent still when, after
-penetrating the heart of the rock for some distance, the tunnel split
-into three distinct branches. This point Don hesitated to pass; but not
-so Bosin. Without a pause he took the passage to the right, glancing
-back as if to assure himself that he was followed. Off this gallery
-others opened, until it became evident that, as the captain had once
-affirmed, the rock was honeycombed “from maindeck to keelson.” But for the
-monkey's guidance Don must have found himself utterly at a loss amid so
-perplexing a labyrinth. As it was, he pressed forward with confidence.
-
-Danger of discovery, owing to the multiplicity of passages, now
-increased momentarily. Any of these ghostly corridors might afford
-concealment to an enemy who, warned of danger by the muffled echo of
-approaching steps, might steal away, silently and unobserved, and so
-raise the alarm. Though still in his stocking feet, Don instinctively
-found himself treading on tip-toe, while the bare-footed blacks--who
-were even less inclined for a brush with the enemy than he--purposely
-did the same. Even then their movements, well-nigh noiseless though they
-were, caused commotion amongst the bats that clung in patches of living
-fungi to the vaulted roof, and sent them wheeling hither and thither in
-swift, startled flight.
-
-To succeed in finding his chum, and to liberate him ere discovery came,
-was almost more than Don dared hope for. For come it must, sooner or
-later. Only, once Jack was by his side, he cared little how soon or in
-what manner it came. True, the natives possessed the seeming advantage
-of overwhelming numbers; but in these rock corridors the nozzle of a
-single musket was better than a hundred men.
-
-To do him justice, he had thrust the pearls entirely out of his thoughts
-in his eagerness to set Jack at liberty. “Time enough to think about the
-pearls afterwards,” he said to himself--forgetting that “afterwards” was
-at the best but a blind alley, full of unknown pitfalls.
-
-They were now well into the heart of the Elephant Bock, where any moment
-might bring them face to face with Jack or his captors, or both.
-
-At this point the monkey, who was some yards in advance, suddenly
-stopped and uttered a peculiar hissing sound. Once before--when, on
-the rock platform, Bosin had given warning of the approach of
-the canoes--had Don heard that hiss. There was no mistaking its
-significance. He motioned to the blacks to halt, and with stealthy tread
-crept forward alone.
-
-Just ahead a sharp bend in the passage limited his view to a few yards
-of indifferently lighted wall. Hugging the inner side of this bend, he
-presently gained the jutting shoulder of rock which formed the dividing
-line between the vista of gallery behind and that ahead, and from this
-point of vantage peered cautiously round the projection in search of the
-cause of Bosin's alarm.
-
-This was not far to seek. Immediately beyond the bend the passage
-expanded into a sort of vestibule, communicating, by means of a
-lofty portal, with a spacious, well-lighted chamber. It was not this
-discovery, however, that riveted his gaze, but a dusky figure crouched
-on the floor of the vestibule--the figure of a native, reclining on a
-mat, with his back to the spot where Don stood. By his side lay a sword
-of curious workmanship, and a huge conch-shell, the pearly pink of its
-inner surface contrasting strangely with the native's coffee-coloured
-skin. The weapon and the shell told their own tale: the native was doing
-“sentry-go.”
-
-Over what or whom? With swift glance Don scanned every nook and corner
-of the vestibule, and as much of the interior chamber as lay within
-range of his vision. So far as he could see both were empty, barring
-only the dusky sentinel. Then he fancied he heard the faint clanking
-of a chain, though from what direction the sound proceeded it was
-impossible to determine. Listening with bated breath, he heard it again,
-and now it seemed to come from the larger chamber. His pulses thrilled,
-and a determined light shone in his eyes as he turned them once more
-upon the sentinel.
-
-“I'll jolly soon fix you, old chap,” he said to himself; and noiselessly
-clubbing the musket he carried, he prepared to advance.
-
-But for the monkey's vigilance he must have come upon the recumbent
-guard without the slightest warning, for not more than ten paces
-separated the shoulder of rock--Don's post of observation--from the mat
-on which the native reclined.
-
-To fire upon him was out of the question, since that would fulfil the
-very purpose for which he, with his conch-shell trumpet, was stationed
-there--namely, to send a thousand wild echoes hurtling through chamber
-and galleries, and so apprise his comrades of impending danger.
-Moreover, Don had a wholesome horror of bloodshed, which at most times
-effectually held his trigger finger in check.
-
-A swift, sure blow--that would be the best means of keeping the native's
-lips from the nozzle of his conch-trumpet. A blow--ay, there was
-the-rub! For, though the native's back was towards-him, the space by
-which they two were divided must be crossed; and these walls, dumb
-as they looked, had hidden tongues, which would echo and re-echo the
-faintest sound. Could he, then, get near enough to strike?
-
-Inch by inch he crept towards the unconscious sentinel, slowly raising
-the butt of the musket as he advanced. So intense was the suspense of
-those few brief moments that he hardly breathed. It seemed as if the
-very beating of his heart must reach the native's ears. Inch by inch,
-foot by foot, until----
-
-[Illustration: 0213]
-
-The native turned his head; but before he could spring to his feet, or
-even utter a cry, the musket crashed upon his shaven pate, and he rolled
-over on his side without a sound.
-
-Don did not stop to ascertain the extent of his injuries. Neither did he
-summon the blacks. Again the clanking of chains rang in his ears, and at
-a bound he crossed the threshold of the larger chamber, An unkempt human
-figure started up in the far corner.
-
-“Jack!”
-
-“And is it really you, old fellow?” cried Jack joyfully. “Give us your
-hand; and how did you find your way here, I want to know?”
-
-“You have Bosin to thank for that,” replied Don, returning his chum's'
-grip with interest. “When I saw your handkerchief----”
-
-“Ah, the monkey stole it, then! I missed it, don't you know, but never
-imagined that Bosin took it, though he paid me a visit early this
-morning. Well, he did me a good turn that time, anyhow.”
-
-“And a better one when he led us back here. But,” continued Don in
-hurried, suppressed tones, “don't let us waste time palavering, Jack.
-There's not a moment to lose. I've done for old conchy yonder--knocked
-him on the head--but the rest may swoop down on us any minute. Say, how
-are you tethered?”
-
-“Leg,” said Jack laconically, rattling a chain which secured him to the
-wall. “Stop!”--as Don unslung his cutlass with the intention of hacking
-at the links--“I'll show you a trick worth two of that. You see that
-ring-bolt the chain's fastened to? Well, it's set in lead--not very
-securely as it happens--and I've managed to work it so loose that I
-fancy a good hard tug ought to bring it away. Meant to make off on my
-own account, you see, if you hadn't turned up, old fellow. But lay hold
-and let's have a pull for it, anyhow.”
-
-“Quick, then!” said Don. “I thought I heard footsteps.”
-
-Throwing their combined weight upon the chain, they pulled for dear
-life. The ring-bolt yielded little by little, and presently came away
-from its setting bodily, like an ancient tooth, and Jack was free. The
-chain, it is true, was still attached to his leg; but as it encircled
-only one ankle, this did not so much matter.
-
-“Don't let it rattle,” said Don breathlessly, “I'm positive I heard
-footsteps. And here, take this,” thrusting the cutlass into Jack's
-disengaged hand. “Now, come on!”
-
-Barely had he uttered the words when a hollow, prolonged blast, like
-that of a gigantic trumpet with a cold in its throat, filled the chamber
-with deafening clamour. And as the echoes leapt from wall to wall, and
-buffeted each other into silence, another sound succeeded them, faint
-and far away, but swelling momentarily into ominous loudness and
-nearness.
-
-Don clutched his companion's arm.
-
-“The fellow I knocked on the head--he's come to!” he said thickly. “That
-was the blast of his conch; and this”--pausing with uplifted hand and
-bated breath until that other sound broke clearly on their ears--“this
-is the tread of heaven only knows how many native feet. Jack, we're
-discovered!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.--BETWEEN LIFE AND DEATH.
-
-
- Four galleries centred on the rock-chamber, and the confused,
-tumultuous rush of feet which followed the blast of the conch-shell like
-an ominous echo, proceeded from that particular gallery opposite the
-vestibule.
-
-“Seems to be a rare lot of them; but we needn't stop to reckon 'em up,”
- said Jack, with a constrained laugh. “Lead the way, old fellow.”
-
-Into the smaller chamber they dashed, to find the exit blocked by the
-sentinel with sword drawn. Rapidly reversing his musket, Don bore down
-upon him--he, to do him justice, standing his ground bravely,--and with
-the butt-end of the weapon dealt the nigger a blow in the stomach that
-doubled him up like a broken bulrush.
-
-“Where are the others?” cried Jack, as they rounded the shoulder of rock
-separating the antechamber from the passage. “You never came alone!”
-
-“No; I left them just here--told them to wait,” said Don, peering about
-in search of the blacks. “They must have gone back; thought they'd save
-their skins while they could, I suppose, the chicken-hearted beggars!
-Ha, here's Bosin, at any rate.”
-
-Swinging the monkey upon his shoulder, he set off at a run down the
-passage, Jack following as close as the weight of the chain would allow
-him, to do. They had proceeded only a short distance when a faint,
-sepulchral shout brought them to a stand. The sound seemed to proceed
-from a gallery on their immediate right. The way out did not lie in that
-direction.
-
-“That's Pug's wheeze,” said Don. “They've taken the wrong turning;” and
-he drew a deep breath to answer the call.
-
-Jack interposed quickly. “Stop! The natives will be down on us soon
-enough without, that. Off with you, old fellow, and fetch' pur party
-back. I'll wait here.”
-
-Already Don was racing down the side passage. Presently Jack heard him
-jitter a cautious “hullo.” A short silence followed then the echoes told
-him that the fugitives were hastily retracing their steps. At the same
-moment a confused uproar burst on his ears from the direction of the
-chamber in his rear. The pursuing mob had turned the angle of the
-passage and were actually in sight. The chain attached to Jack's leg
-clanked impatiently. He fairly danced with excitement. That ill-advised
-move on the part of the blacks had almost proved fatal to their sole
-chance of escape.
-
-But not quite; for now Don and the blacks came up, Jack joined them,
-and, with the oncoming thunder of many feet loud in their ears, away
-they sped, running as they alone can run who know that death is at their
-heels.
-
-Two circumstances favoured them so long as the race was confined to the
-cramped limits of the corridors: the smallness of their own number, and
-the multitude of their pursuers. Where four could run with ease, forty
-wasted their breath in fighting each other for running room.
-
-“We must put the pit between us and-these howling demons while they're
-tumbling over each other in the passage here,” cried Don.
-
-It was their only hope. Racing on by Jack's side, close on-the heels of
-the blacks, he rapidly explained to his chum--who knew nothing of the
-pit, having been brought into the rock by a more circuitous route--the
-nature of the contemplated manoeuvre; and gave Spottie and Puggles their
-instructions how to act, backed up by a wholesome threat of summary
-abandonment to the enemy should they shirk when it came to the crucial
-point, the plank. The blacks were to cross first, Jack next; while he,
-Don, would cover their retreat as best he could. To this arrangement
-Jack could raise no demur. He was too seriously handicapped by the
-chain.
-
-A final spurt, and they cleared the tunnel and reached the pit. The
-plank lay where they had left it. Across it ran their only road to
-safety. At a significant signal from Don Spottie led off, and, when he
-had reached the further side in safety, Puggles followed in his tracks.
-Doffs threat, coupled with the ominous uproar belched forth by the mouth
-of the tunnel, eclipsed all fear of the crocodiles.
-
-“Now, Jack,” cried Don, ere the plank had ceased to vibrate under
-Puggles's tread, “after you.”
-
-Jack crossed, and Don was in the act of stepping on the unstable bridge,
-when the foremost of the native gang burst from the gallery. One swift
-backward glance--a glance that stowed him how alarmingly narrow was
-the margin between escape and capture--and with outstretched arms he
-balanced himself on the handbreadth of plank--it was scarcely more--and
-began the perilous passage. Swift as was this backward glance, it
-sufficed to show him, too, that the leader of the pursuit was none
-other than the escaped lascar; and ere he had traversed half the plank's
-length, he felt it yield and rebound beneath the quick tread of the
-fellows feet. At the same instant Jack raised a warning shout.
-
-There are moments when the strongest nerve quails, the steadiest head
-swings a little off its balance, the surest foot slips. Such a moment
-did this prove for Don. The disconcerting vibration of the plank,
-the knowledge that the lascar was at his very back, Jack's sudden
-shout--these for an instant conspired against and overcame his natural
-cool-headedness. He made a hurried step or two, staggered, and, his foot
-catching in the rope where it encircled the plank a short distance from
-the end, he stumbled and fell.
-
-Fell! but in falling dislodged the end of the plank which lay behind
-him, and on which the lascar stood, from its hold upon the further brink
-of the pit. The lascar, throwing up his arms with a despairing shriek,
-plunged headlong into the pool, where he was instantly seized upon by
-the ravenous crocodiles and torn limb from limb.
-
-[Illustration: 0223]
-
-And now, if ever, did the “Providence that sits up aloft” watch over
-Don. Almost miraculously, as it seemed, instead of plunging into the
-horrible death-trap below, he fell astride the plank, the hither end
-of which still retained its hold upon the rock at an angle of perhaps
-sixty-five degrees; and up this steep incline--whither Bosin had already
-preceded him--with Jack's assistance he managed to scramble. Then they
-laid hold upon the plank and dragged it from the pit, amid the furious
-howling of the baffled rabble debouching from the tunnel opposite.
-
-“Safe over, at any rate,” panted Don. “But--good heavens! what's become
-of the lascar?” For, suspended as he had been between life and death, he
-had neither heard the lascar's shriek nor witnessed the horrible manner
-in which he had received his quietus at the jaws of the crocodiles.
-
-Jack pointed out a bright crimson blotch on the surface of the pool.
-“We've seen the last of him, poor devil,” said he with a shudder. “Say,
-did I tell you--no, of course I didn't--that this fellows not _my_
-lascar?”
-
-“What, not the lascar who's been hounding us all this time?”
-
-“The lascar who's been hounding us on the island here--yes; but not the
-one who tried to brain me on board the cutter and got the knife for his
-pains. _That_ chap kicked the bucket shortly after he got ashore; this
-fellow's his brother. They're as like as two peas.”
-
-Don vented his astonishment in a shrill whistle. “Then that accounts for
-it,” said he; “for there being no scar on his shoulder, I mean.”
-
-“Precisely; and it came jolly near accounting for yours truly as well,”
- said Jack, with a queer little laugh and a significant shrug of the
-shoulders. “This fellow, you see--the one who was just now eaten by the
-crocodiles--raised a sort of vendetta against us when his brother died,
-and of course he wanted to try his hand on me first, since it was I who
-gave his brother his death-blow. He'd have done it, too, if it hadn't
-been for old Salambo. But the old man put his foot down--I overheard
-their talk last night, and that's how I know--and said he wouldn't allow
-any violence, lucky for me. He was hoping for overtures from you, I
-suppose. But I say, what's this about the scar? How do _you_ know there
-was none on the fellow's shoulder?”
-
-“How do I know? Why, you see, it was this way. I was swimming the creek
-yesterday morning--you shall hear how that came about later on, by
-the way--when the lascar,” indicating the crimson blotch on the pool,
-“tried to throttle me. I had to knock him on the head to quiet him. Then
-I towed him ashore, and the captain and I----”
-
-“The captain!” cried Jack with a start. “By Jove, we've left him
-behind!”
-
-The wild hurry-scurry and excitement of the last half-hour had afforded
-Don scant opportunity for speaking of the captain's sad end--had,
-indeed, driven all thought of the old sailor from his mind, as it also
-had from Jack's. Now that the captain was mentioned, however, Jack,
-naturally enough, jumped to the conclusion that he had formed one of
-the rescue party, and had been overlooked in their recent precipitate
-flight. The time was now come when he must be undeceived; but when Don
-attempted to disclose the sad truth emotion choked his utterance, and he
-could not. But Jack, gazing into his convulsed face, instinctively read
-there what his lips refused to utter.
-
-“When did it happen?” he asked in a hushed, awed whisper. “And how?”
-
-Controlling his voice with an effort, “Only last night,” faltered Don;
-“the lascar did it.”
-
-Jack turned away and buried his face in his hands.
-
-“He was strangled,” Don presently resumed, “strangled with that cord
-you see tied to the rope there. Afterwards, when the lascar gave me
-the slip, as he did in the night, he took the cord with him; but Bosin
-somehow recovered it and fetched it back. I little guessed how it would
-serve the lascar out when I used it to bridge the pit!”
-
-“Retribution!” cried Jack, flinging his hands impulsively away from his
-face. “He's rightly served, the villain. Only”--regretfully--“I wish it
-had been me instead of the cord, that's all. But it's done, anyhow, so
-let's get out of this.”
-
-And it was time; for during this conversation the natives had not been
-idle. At this very moment, indeed, a number of them rushed shouting from
-the tunnel, bearing other planks with which to bridge the chasm. Don
-and his chum did not wait to see this done. Without further loss of time
-they set out for the creek, in which direction the blacks had already
-preceded them.
-
-Hardly had they entered the tunnel, however, when they encountered the
-blacks, running back full pelt; and before Don could inquire the cause
-of their precipitate return, a shout, reverberating up the vaulted
-corridor from the semi-darkness ahead, made inquiry unnecessary. While
-he and Jack had dallied in fancied security, the natives, skirting the
-pit by another route, had cut off their retreat.
-
-And, as if to increase the consternation caused by this discovery, at
-the same instant a chorus of yells in their rear announced that the
-party in pursuit had succeeded in bridging the pit anew.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.--ONE-TO-TWENTY GIVES TWENTY-TO-ONE THE WORST OF IT.
-
-
- Hemmed in!” cried Don, as the desperate character of the situation
-flashed upon him. “Shall we try to cut our way through the gang ahead,
-or fall back on the pit?”
-
-“Back!” was Jack's prompt rejoinder. “Once prevent the niggers in
-our rear from crossing the pit, and we're all right. We'll have more
-fighting room there, anyhow.”
-
-Back they ran, hustling the blacks before them. At the pit matters were
-even worse than they had feared. Half-a-dozen planks already spanned the
-chasm, each of them black with natives, who jostled each other in their
-eagerness to cross, supremely indifferent to the reptilian horrors that
-awaited them should they lose their balance.
-
-“Hurrah!” shouted Jack, pouncing upon the 'bobbing end of the nearest
-plank. “Tumble 'em in! To the crocodiles with the beggars!”
-
-Though the occupants of the plank could understand not a syllable of
-Jack's speech, they readily understood his intention; and crowding
-back upon each other with warning cries, by their combined weight they
-hastened the very catastrophe they desired to avert. The plank bent
-like a bow, snapped in twain, and launched its shrieking burden into
-the abyss. In their frantic efforts to escape, a number of the doomed
-wretches clutched at a second plank that happened to lie within reach.
-Already heavily overloaded, this also gave way, and added its quota to
-the horrible commotion of the pool. Two planks were thus accounted for.
-
-Meanwhile Don and the blacks had not been slow to second Jack's efforts.
-By their united strength a third plank was dislodged, and they were in
-the act of attacking the fourth when their energies were diverted into
-another channel.
-
-For at this juncture the detachment of natives who had cut off the
-retreat to the creek suddenly appeared upon the scene. The remaining
-planks, too, now began to pour the enemy upon the hither side of the pit
-in steady streams.
-
-The rocky shelf' that here flanked the chasm had, perhaps, a width of
-three yards, and that portion of it to the left of the creek-tunnel's
-mouth, where the unmolested planks lay, was speedily packed with
-natives, armed with formidable pikes and knives, who bore down upon
-the little group with furious outcries and all the weight of superior
-numbers. Jack was the first to perceive the danger.
-
-“To the right! It's all up with us if we're surrounded.”
-
-Suiting the action to the words, he darted to the right, closely
-followed by Don and the blacks. Here they stationed themselves side
-by side, the timid blacks in the rear, and prepared to meet their
-assailants.
-
-“Couldn't be better!” was Jack's cheerful comment, as he took a hasty
-survey of their surroundings. “Wall on our right; pit on left; enemy
-in front; and elbow-room behind. Say, we'll buckle to with the muskets
-first, and reserve the cutlasses till it comes to close quarters. Look
-out; they're coming!”
-
-On came the howling, disorderly mob, maddened by the terrible fate of
-their comrades, and thirsting for vengeance.
-
-“Ready!”
-
-Together the muskets rose to the level.
-
-“Don't fire too high. Now, let 'em have it hot!”
-
-The walls of the narrow enclosure rocked with the thunderous report. The
-mob quailed, fell back: “they had no stomach for cold lead.
-
-“That's all right,” said Jack coolly as they rapidly reloaded; “but I
-wish we had breechloaders! A ball, quick!”
-
-The human wave in front, silent except for a sullen murmur that only
-waited for the rush to be renewed ere it swelled into fury, was again
-raising its ugly, threatening crest.
-
-“I doubt if we check it this time,” said Don, watching it with anxious
-eyes; “they've seen us reload, and know where they have the advantage.
-Better get your cutlass----”
-
-“Ready!” cried his companion.
-
-The wave, broke. A hoarse roar, a tumultuous rusk such as it seemed no
-human power could withstand, and it was upon them. Again the walls leapt
-to the thunder of the muskets; again the serried ranks quailed. But
-before the smoke had left the muzzles of the muskets, the wave swept on
-again with redoubled fury, poured itself upon and around the brave lads,
-swept them off their feet For a moment it seemed as if the death-balance
-must kick the beam.
-
-But the “final tussle” was not to be just yet. Spottie and Puggles,
-terrified into momentary daring by the imminence of their own danger,
-now threw themselves into the fray with an energy-which, if it did
-little execution, at least served to divert many a blow from their
-masters. No mean help that--to take the blows meant for another.
-
-Nor were the masters themselves slow to recognise and profit by this
-fact. Right and left they slashed, dealing terrific swinging blows when,
-they could get them in, lunging desperately at the sinewy, half-naked
-forms about them when they could not, until British pluck and British
-muscle told, as they ever must in a righteous struggle for life and
-liberty, and One-to-twenty found itself clear of the _mêlée_, with a
-ghastly ridge of wounded at its feet, and fighting room behind.
-
-Well they had it! For the space of one deep breath the disconcerted
-rabble suspended hostilities, as if unable to believe that Twenty-to-one
-had got the worst of it. Then their ranks closed up into a solid mass
-of dusky, perspiring, blood-stained forms, and the onslaught was
-renewed--not hurriedly now, but with a watchful determination, a
-guarded, fierceness, that forced One-to-twenty back foot by foot until
-but little room was left for fighting, and none, in sooth, for quarter
-when it should come, as soon it must, to the sheer wall and the bitter
-end.
-
-Once more the blacks had slunk to the rear--had, in fact, already
-reached the wall, where, since they could get no farther, they cowered
-in miserable anticipation of speedy death. The “final tussle” was not
-far off now. Don and Jack had barely room to swing their cutlasses in.
-So much of the rocky ledge as might be measured by a single backward
-stride--only that separated them from the wall and the last scene of
-all. Inch by inch, their teeth hard set, their breath coming and going
-in quick, laboured gasps, they contested this narrow selvage of life. So
-the balance hung, when there came a second momentary lull in the deadly
-game of give and take. The dusky foe could now afford to breathe, being
-confident of the issue.
-
-Keeping a wary eye upon their movements, Don seized his chum by the
-hand. “I never thought it would come to--to this, old fellow,” he said
-huskily; “God knows I didn't!”
-
-Jack swallowed hard several times before he could trust himself to
-reply. “No more did I. But were not going to funk now, old fellow;
-and--and I'm glad it's to be together, anyhow!”
-
-One mute, agonised look into each other's eyes; one last pressure of
-the hand, and again, shoulder to shoulder, they faced the foe and the
-inevitable end.
-
-At this instant, when it seemed that not a ghost of a chance remained,
-there arose on their immediate right a shrill chattering sound--a
-sound that, somehow, had in it a ring of joyousness so strangely out
-of keeping with the situation that Don turned with a start and a sudden
-thrill of hope towards the quarter whence it came. As he did so, his
-eyes fell upon Bosin, forgotten in the heat of the fray, and now
-perched--good God! upon what?
-
-Don clutched his companion's arm and pointed with unsteady finger.
-
-“Look!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.--THE LAST STRAW.
-
-
- A glance--more he did not dare bestow whilst confronted by that
-treacherous throng--showed Jack what he and Don had hitherto entirely
-failed (and no wonder!) to observe. In the extreme corner of the ledge
-on which they stood, a deep, narrow gash divided the towering side wall,
-and up this, clear to the summit of the rock, there ran a flight of
-steps. On these Bosin had perched himself. At their foot crouched the
-blacks, blind to everything except their own danger. .
-
-“Wake those niggers up, and start them on ahead up the steps!” said Jack
-quickly. “Look sharp! they're going to rush us again.”
-
-Falling on Spottie and Puggles, by dint of vigorous cuffing and shoving
-Don succeeded in getting them on the stairs. Rapidly as this was done,
-it produced an instantaneous effect upon the native rabble. They too had
-overlooked the existence of the stairway until Don's action recalled
-it to mind. A moment later the opening was besieged by a clamouring,
-infuriated throng.
-
-“Up with you, old fellow!” cried Jack, turning on the natives with drawn
-cutlass after he had ascended some half-dozen steps, and thus covering
-his friend's retreat. “You had your innings at the pit; now it's my
-turn.”
-
-Stationed on the steps as he was, Jack would have possessed no mean
-advantage over the natives but for one circumstance. The chain attached
-to his leg dangled down the steps, and the natives, discovering this,
-promptly seized it. In a twinkling Jack was dragged back into the midst
-of the furious rabble.
-
-Don was half-way up the steps when the uproar caused by this mishap
-reached his ears. He turned just in time to see his companion disappear.
-
-Down the steps he bounded, clearing half-a-dozen at a leap, until barely
-that number lay between him and the bottom, where, owing to Jack's
-desperate resistance, the natives had their hands too full to notice his
-approach. Gauging the distance with his eye, he took a flying leap
-from this height into the very midst of them, scattering them in all
-directions. As he intended, he overleapt his friend, who now quickly
-regained his feet. Before the natives had time to recover from the shock
-of Don's precipitate arrival in their midst, he and Jack were well up
-the steps again. One or two of the gang made as if to follow them, but
-turned tail when menaced with the cutlasses.
-
-“Nick and go that time!” cried Don, as he gained the top and threw
-himself exhausted upon the rock. “Just for a minute I thought it was all
-U.P.”
-
-“Me too,” said Jack, with more gravity than grammar; “and, between
-ourselves, the sensation wasn't half pleasant, either. But, I say, are
-you hurt?”
-
-“No; nothing worse than a scratch or two. And you?”
-
-“Oh, I'm all right. Though it's little short of a miracle that we
-weren't spitted on those beastly pikes. Say, do you think they'll try to
-rush us here?”
-
-“Hardly, after the lesson we've taught them; unless, indeed, there is
-a wider approach to the summit here than those steps. We ought to look
-about us at once so as to make sure.”
-
-“Right you are,” assented Jack. “Let's load the muskets and leave the
-niggers in charge here while we take our bearin's like, as the captain
-used to say, poor old chap!”
-
-But when it came to charging the muskets--old-fashioned muzzle-loaders,
-it will be remembered--they made an unpleasant discovery. Don had lost
-his powder-flask in the fight.
-
-To make matters worse, Spottie, when called upon to produce his,
-confessed that he had left it on board the cutter in the hurry of the
-start. Only Pug's flask remained; but this, unfortunately, was nearly
-empty. There was barely enough powder left for three charges.
-
-This was but one of a series of disconcerting revelations which quickly
-followed the loading of the muskets.
-
-In the first place, the most careful search failed to disclose any other
-means of egress from the Rock. In all the length and breadth of its
-summit they could find no opening except the one by which they had
-ascended, while on every hand its sides fell away in declivities so
-steep and smooth that not even Bosin could have found a foothold upon
-them---or in perpendicular precipices that made the head swim as one
-looked down from their dizzy height upon the town, or sands, or jungle,
-far below.
-
-With the bright sky above, and the free air of heaven all around them,
-they were as effectually hemmed in as when that bristling array of pikes
-forced them back to the blank wall. The jaws of the trap were a little
-wider; the effects of its deadly grip a little delayed--that was all.
-
-To add to the horrors of their position, absolute starvation stared them
-in the face in the event of a prolonged siege. Since early morning they
-had eaten nothing, and the day was now far advanced; they had brought no
-food with them, and none was procurable here. A small temple crowned the
-Rock; but when they penetrated it in the hope of finding fruit or other
-edible offerings, its dustladen shrine spoke only too plainly of long
-disuse. Even the thin clusters of dates upon the few palms that eked
-out a stunted existence in a shallow depression of the Rock were acrid,
-shrivelled, and wholly unfit for food. The pit, it is true, contained
-water; but this, even had it been drinkable, lay hopelessly beyond their
-reach.
-
-“No powder, no grub, no drink; it's a pretty, pickle to be in, anyhow,”
- said Jack, ruefully summing up these calamitous discoveries as they
-rejoined the blacks at the head of the stairs. “And, by Jove!” pointing
-down the steps, “they've gone and doubled the guard.”
-
-“The waters the worst,” he presently resumed, scanning the arid expanse
-of rock thirstily. “We could hold out for days, if we only had a supply
-of that. As it is, I don't dare think what this place will be like under
-a midday sun--ugh!”
-
-“All the more reason we should leave it, then,” said Don.
-
-“How?”
-
-Don was silent. The question did not seem to admit of an answer.
-
-“Now, see here, old' fellow,” said Jack; “I admit, of course, that U.P.
-is written large all over the face of things just now; but at the same
-time it strikes me there's more than one way of getting off our white
-elephant's back.”
-
-“There's only the tunnel to the creek,” said Don, “and that's not
-going to help us much while it's chock-full of natives, and we have no
-powder.”
-
-“Then why not go over the cliff?” demanded Jack.
-
-This daring and seemingly absurd proposal Don greeted with a stare of
-utter incredulity. “That would be facing death with a vengeance,” was
-his far from encouraging comment. “How high do you estimate the cliff to
-be, anyway?”
-
-“A couple of hundred feet or so.”
-
-Don laughed. “You may as well say thousands, so far as our chances
-of reaching the base in safety are concerned.. The thing's a sheer
-impossibility, I tell you; Bosin himself couldn't do it. You're
-downright mad to think of it, Jack.”
-
-“Am I? I admit the difficulty, but not the impossibility. What Bosin
-can't do, we can.”
-
-“How, I should like to know?”
-
-“By making a rope. See here, did you notice those palm-trees we passed
-while making the round of the Rock?”
-
-“I did; but 'pon my word I don't see what they've got to do with your
-proposal. Ropes don't grow on palm-trees.”
-
-“Oh, but they do, though. Do you mean to say that you never saw the
-natives make a rope out of the branches of a palm?”
-
-“Of course I have. And what's more, I know how it's done. But say,” his
-tone suddenly changing to one of anxiety, “suppose the palm-leaves don't
-give, us enough material?”
-
-“I'm not sure they will,” said Jack doubtfully, “unless we spin it,
-out pretty fine; and that, of course, increases the danger of breakage.
-Well, if we run short, we can make shift with the blacks' clothes and
-turbans. But it's going to take a jolly long time to make--though we
-ought to finish it easily by to-morrow night. Then, ho for the cliff!
-And now, old fellow, just lie down, will you, and take a snooze: you're
-completely done up. When the moon rises I'll call you, and we'll have a
-whack at the trees, while Pug and Spottie do sentry-go.”
-
-The blacks, poor fellows, were already sound asleep, with Bosin snuggled
-up between them; and Don was not long in following them into that realm
-of dreams, where waking cares, if they intrude at all, more often than
-not lie low and shadowy on the horizon. So Jack was left alone in the
-darkness and solitude of the Rock.
-
-Kicking off his shoes, and tucking the end of the chain beneath his belt
-to secure perfect noiselessness of movement, he shouldered a musket,
-and fell to pacing back and forth past the black orifice that marked the
-point where the stairway cleft the rocky floor. Monotonous work it was,
-and weird. The steely glint of the stars, the mournful sobbing of the
-surf upon the sands, sent an involuntary shiver through his frame.
-He crept softly to the extreme brink of the chasm and peered into its
-depths. Below all was pitchy blackness; he could distinguish nothing,
-save, far down, at an infinite depth as it seemed, the faint, fantastic
-reflection of a star on the surface of the pool. Occasionally a sound
-of lazy splashing floated up to where he stood, and he thought with
-creeping flesh of the horrible, ghoulish surfeit the crocodiles had had
-that day.
-
-To and fro beneath the steely stars--tramp, tramp, tramp, to the solemn
-dirge of the sea. Would the laggard moon never rise and put an end to
-his weird vigil?
-
-Hark! what was that? He paused and listened with suspended breath, his
-back towards the dim outline of the stairway; listened, but heard only
-the moaning of the surf and the regular, sonorous breathing of his
-sleeping companions.
-
-“One of those gorged crocodile beasts got a nightmare,” he muttered,
-with a smile at the comic aspect of his own fancy. “Ha,” catching sight
-of a faint, silvery glow in the east, “there's the moon at last. Time to
-call our fellows; I've had enough of this death's watch, anyhow.”
-
-While uttering these words he made a step forward with the intention of
-calling Don and the blacks, when something whizzed swiftly through the
-air, he felt a sharp twinge, an intense burning sensation in his left
-arm, a deathly faintness stealing over him, and realised that he was
-wounded--wounded by a dexterously-thrown knife, which, had it not been
-for that timely forward stride, must have buried itself deep in his
-back. Luckily, in spite of the pain and giddiness, he retained his
-presence of mind. Quick as a flash he, wheeled, brought the hammer of
-the musket to full cock, and the musket itself to his shoulder. Above
-the yawning staircase the outline of a human figure showed indistinctly.
-
-“One for you,” muttered Jack, and fired.
-
-The figure threw up its arms and fell backwards.
-
-The report of the musket brought Don to his feet. “What's the row?” he
-asked, running to his companion's side in alarm.
-
-The appearance of other figures in lieu of the first supplied a more
-pertinent answer to this question than Jack could have given. He
-snatched up one of the remaining muskets, Jack possessing himself of
-the other. By this time Spottie and Puggles were also up, but, like the
-dutiful servants they were, they kept well in the rear of their masters.
-
-The enemy were now literally swarming up the steps and sides of the
-stairway.
-
-Jack gave the word--“Blaze away!” and a double report went hurtling
-wildly out over the sea.
-
-Clubbing their muskets, they then fell upon and began clubbing the
-escaladers with an energy that speedily choked the contracted avenue of
-approach to the summit of the Rock with a heaving, scrambling, trampling
-mass of natives, whose desperate struggles to regain their lost foothold
-upon the steps only served to facilitate their descent to the bottom. In
-five minutes' time the repulse was complete; the foe retreated into the
-dark security of the chasm, leaving some six or eight of their number
-lying upon the scene of the affray. Jack threw aside his musket and
-sprang: down the steps to where they lay.
-
-“What are you after now?” cried Don, leaping down after him.
-
-“Cloths,” was Jack's laconic rejoinder, as he unceremoniously began to
-divest the natives of the long strips of country cotton that encircled
-their waists. “We want these for our rope.”
-
-On hearing this Don also set to work, and in a short time they had
-secured some half-dozen cloths, together with an equal number of
-turbans, which lay scattered all up and down the steps like enormous
-mushrooms. With this booty they returned in triumph to the summit of the
-rock.
-
-“They'll average twelve feet at least,” said Jack, eyeing the tumbled
-heap critically. “Let's see--twelve twelves make a hundred and
-forty-four; and by tearing them in two down the middle we'll get double
-length. Total, two hundred and eighty-eight feet. Hurrah, we've got our
-rope!”
-
-“And a far safer one,” observed Don, “than if we had patched it up out
-of those palm-leaves. Well, it's an ill wind that---”
-
-He got no further, for Jack suddenly dropped at his feet as though he
-had been shot. He had fainted from loss of blood, as Don, to his horror,
-quickly discovered. As a matter of fact, the knife that had penetrated
-Jack's arm was still in the wound, and its projecting hilt was the first
-intimation Don received of his chum's hairbreadth escape. By the time
-he had removed the knife, ripped open the coat-sleeve, and bandaged the
-wound with a fragment torn from one of the cloths, Jack opened his eyes.
-
-“Why didn't you tell me about this?” exclaimed Don reproachfully. “How
-did it happen?”
-
-“How? Oh, one of those treacherous niggers shot his knife at me--the
-old trick,” said Jack, scrambling to his feet and shaking himself with
-nonchalant air, “I'd have told you, only I forgot it in the scuffle,
-Nothing but a scratch, anyway; I'm all right.”
-
-Don's look was rather dubious, for, in spite of his companion's
-assumption of _sang-froid_, he could not but foresee the possible effect
-of a badly-wounded arm upon their proposed descent of the cliff.
-
-The moon was now well above the horizon; so, setting the blacks to watch
-the stairs, they went to work on the rope at once--an easy task compared
-to what it must have been had they attempted to utilise the tough,
-fibrous palm-branches, as at first proposed.
-
-“You haven't told me yet,” Jack presently observed, pausing in his task
-of knotting together the long strips of cloth as Don tore them off ready
-to his hand; “you haven't told me how you came to lay the lascar by the
-heels--in the creek, I think you said? Let's have the story now, old
-fellow.”
-
-“Oh, there's a whole cable's-length of events leading up to that,” said
-Don. “I'd better begin at the beginning--with your disappearance, I
-mean.”
-
-So there, beneath the stars, while the rope which was to ensure escape
-from the Rock grew under, their busy fingers, he recounted link by link
-the chain of events which the days and nights of Jack's absence had
-forged.
-
-Far into the night did the story spin itself out, for Jack had many
-questions to ask, many comments to make; until at last it came to that
-terrible moment when Don had sought to rouse the captain, and found him
-to be sleeping the sleep that knows no waking. His voice grew choked
-and husky then Jack bent low over his work, and tears glistened in the
-ghostly moonlight.
-
-“And in his jacket pocket I found this,” concluded Don, producing the
-well-thumbed Prayer Book. “On the fly-leaf--no, you can't make it out
-now, the light is so faint--but on the fly-leaf the dear old chap had
-written that whatever happened, he was to be buried at sea. So this
-morning, just before daybreak, we put off in the cutter, and gave him
-what he wished for--a seaman's burial.”
-
-Jack knew the whole sad story now, and for a time they fell into one of
-those silences which, somehow, are apt to follow the mention of the dead
-who have endeared themselves to us in life--silences eloquent, in their
-very stillness, of regret and grief.
-
-“There, it's done,” said Jack at last, as he tied and tested the final
-knot. “And now, hurrah for the cliff!”
-
-Don had begun to coil the rope, when he suddenly paused in his task
-and exclaimed:
-
-“Say, how are we going _to fasten the end?_”
-
-“Fasten the end? Why, to----” Jack came to an abrupt stop, adding
-blankly after a moment: “Blest if I know what we _can_ fasten it to!”
-
-“Nor I,” Don acknowledged, as much taken aback as his companion by the
-appalling nature of this discovery. “There are the palms, of course,
-and the temple; but they're too far from the cliff to be of any use. The
-rope will hardly reach as it is, I'm afraid.”
-
-“Oh, there must be some way of securing it,” replied Jack incredulously,
-“Surely there's a crack or something we can wedge one of the cutlasses
-into. Let's look, anyhow!”
-
-Look they did, but not with the result Jack had so confidently
-anticipated. From side to side, from end to end of the Rock, they
-searched and searched again, even going down on their hands and knees
-that they might perchance feel what had escaped the eye, But without
-avail. So far as the moonlight enabled them to discern--and it made the
-place nearly as light as day--neither crack nor projection marred
-the smooth surface of the stone. They gave it up at length, utterly
-disheartened. Even Jack felt this to be the last straw, and abandoned
-himself to despair.
-
-“It's a bad job altogether,” was the despondent comment with which he
-threw himself down beside the apparently useless coil of rope. “God help
-us, we haven't a ghost of a chance left!”
-
-“Oh, things aren't quite so bad as that!” replied his companion, with an
-assumption of hopefulness he was far from feeling. “Who can say what may
-turn up? The darkest hour is just before the dawn, you know.”
-
-“But,” said Jack, “suppose there isn't any dawn, what then?”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI. RIVALS FOR THE HONOURS OF DEATH.
-
-
- A night of dread foreboding, of weary watching for the day that seemed
-as if it would never come. With what tantalising slowness did the
-snail-like stars crawl across the black vault of the heavens! And when
-day came, what then?
-
-Hunger and thirst, danger and despair, and the certainty of death! But
-no need to await the dawn for these; already they were here. Comfortable
-bed-fellows, truly, and for a bed the bare, unyielding rock.
-
-Jack lay with his head pillowed upon the coil of rope. Not that he found
-it a comfortable resting-place. The knowledge of what the rope could
-_not_ do for them made it a pillow of thorns. He could not rest. The
-last thread of hope had broken, plunging him into the abyss of despair.
-Besides, his arm had become extremely painful within the last hour; he
-was restless, feverish. Fever goads the brain. Jack's brain was just
-then busier, perhaps, than it had ever been before. He felt none of the
-sharp gnawings of hunger, none of the insatiable cravings of thirst,
-though, as a matter of fact, these were even then conspiring with his
-wound to fever his blood and keep him awake, and make him think, think,
-think with: never an instant's pause. When thought is goaded like this,
-it speedily verges on delirium.
-
-To give way to despondency was not at all like Jack; and as he tossed
-from side to side and thought upon the “whine” (that was what he called
-it, in his own mind) in which he had indulged a little while ago when
-the utter desperateness of the situation first burst upon him--when he
-thought of this, he felt heartily ashamed of himself. He was a coward,
-a rank, out-and-out coward. He hated himself for his faint-hearted,
-babyish lack of spirit. But he would redeem his reputation yet. He would
-show them--meaning Don and the blacks--that he was no coward, anyhow!
-
-The blacks, as they crossed and recrossed each other on their noiseless
-beat, thought little and said less. They were desperately hungry, and
-hunger is the one fellow-feeling that does not make us wondrous kind.
-Every now and then they tightened their waist-cloths a little, but
-beyond this gave no outward sign or token of what they thought or felt.
-
-So the night wore on, and still Jack thought in restless silence. There
-was a deeper flush on his cheek, but it was no longer the flush of
-shame. The fever in his blood, the delirium in his brain, were rising.
-So was his resolution. He flung himself about restlessly, muttering. He
-would show them he was no coward, anyhow!
-
-So the night wore on, until by-and-by, as Don turned for the hundredth
-time upon his uneasy couch--for he, too, was unable to rest--his hand
-came into accidental contact with that of his chum. He started; Jack's
-hand was fiery hot.
-
-Housed by his companion's touch and movement, Jack sat bolt upright, and
-gazed about him in an excited, feverish fashion, muttering incoherently.
-His breath came and went in short, hurried catches, and in his eyes
-shone an unnatural wildness that struck terror to Don's heart. Knowing
-nothing of his chum's resolve, he thought him simply delirious.
-
-“Lie down,” he said soothingly, placing his hand on Jack's shoulder,
-and attempting, with gentle force, to push him back into his former
-recumbent position.
-
-Jack flung the hand aside petulantly. Whatever of delirium there might
-be in his eyes and manner, his words, though spoken rapidly and with
-excitement, were rational enough.
-
-“Look here, old fellow,” he cried, “it's all my fault, your being here
-in this fix; and I'm bound to do my level best to get you safe out of
-it, especially after the way I funked a while back. No, don't cut in and
-try to stop me--I know what I'm saying right enough, though I expect I
-do look a bit wild and that. Now, my arm here--I ain't said much about
-it--'tain't like me to whine, anyhow--at least not often--but all the
-same, my arm's getting jolly bad. Knotting the rope and that, you see,
-has made it a bit worse, and--well, the fact is, old fellow, I don't
-believe I could go down that rope to save my neck, even supposing it to
-be fastened, you understand.”
-
-“I feared as much,” said Don gravely.
-
-“Yes? Well, that's just how it stands,” Jack went rapidly on. “Tisn't
-that I'm afraid, you understand--there's no cliff hereabouts that would
-make me funk--it's simply that my arm's out of gear and won't work. Not
-even if the rope were fastened, you see, which it isn't. And that's what
-I'm coming at, old fellow. Look here, I'll tell you what we _can_ do.
-Spottie and Pug can lower you away--over the cliff, you know--and then,
-when Pug and I have sent Spottie after you, I'll manage somehow to pay
-out the line while Pug follows. He's the lightest weight of the lot,
-anyhow.”
-
-“All very well,” demurred Don, who thought he saw a fatal objection to
-Jack's plan, “but how will you get down yourself?”
-
-“Oh, my getting down isn't in the bill at all,” said Jack; “I mean to
-stay right here.”
-
-This announcement fairly took Don's breath away. He had supposed all
-along that Jack was holding the pith of his proposal in reserve; but
-never once had he so much as dreamed of such a climax as this.
-
-“What! stop here?” he gasped. “You don't know what you're saying--it's
-certain death.”
-
-“Hope I ain't such a duffer as not to know that,” said Jack brusquely.
-“All the same, I mean to stay.”
-
-“Don't say that, Jack.”
-
-“Why not? Better one than four.”
-
-“Then I'll stop with you,” said Don, with dogged determination. “The
-blacks may have my chance and welcome. Nothing on earth will induce me
-to go.”
-
-His chum was silent for a long time after that--so long, indeed, that
-Don thought the matter settled for good and all. But in this he was
-mistaken.
-
-“Say, old fellow,” said Jack at last, “tell you what I'll do; I'll toss
-you as to which of us is togo. What do you say?”
-
-“No, no,” cried Don.
-
-“But why not? Where's the use of being such a softie over the matter?
-There are no end of reasons why I should stay, I tell you. For one
-thing, I've got no mother to consider.”
-
-“That's true enough,” assented Don, gulping as he thought of his own
-mother.
-
-“And no sisters or brothers.”
-
-“Don't,” said Don huskily; “you forget me, Jack.”
-
-“No, I don't,” protested Jack; “you are more to me than any brother
-could ever be, old man; but that's only an additional reason why I
-should see you safe out of this mess. Then there's another thing; you
-know how good the guv has always been to me--sent me to school, and
-treated me just as if I was his own son, you know.”
-
-“Yes?” said Don.
-
-“Well, I've always felt that if ever I got the chance I should like to
-repay his kindness, don't you know; and now that the chance has come I
-don't mean to let it slip. Say, will you toss?” Don wavered. It seemed
-terribly hard that they should all have to die like so many rats in a
-trap. Besides, once he and the blacks were off the Rock, they could fall
-back on the cutter, renew their stock of ammunition, and----
-
-“I'll toss you on one condition,” he said suddenly.
-
-“What condition's that?”
-
-“Why, this. That after the die is cast we take no further steps until
-daylight, so as to make quite sure there's no way of securing the rope
-to the rock. Are you agreed?”
-
-For reply Jack held out his hand, and thus the compact was sealed.
-Then Don drew a rupee from his pocket and passed it to his companion...
-“Tails, you go,” said Jack, and tossed.
-
-A flash of silver in the moonlight, a mocking jingle, and the coin lay
-still. Eagerly the rivals for the honours of death bent over it.
-
-“Tails!”
-
-“I knew it!” said Jack quietly; “and what's more, I'm jolly glad it
-isn't heads.”
-
-His chum turned quickly away and bowed his head upon his knees, while a
-sound suspiciously like a stifled sob broke the stillness of the night.
-Jack crept close up to him and slipped an arm about his neck. So, for a
-long time, they sat in silence.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.--A REPORT FROM THE SEA.
-
-
- Jack was the first to break the silence that followed the spinning of
-the fateful coin. He rose, stretched himself, and, pointing to a ruddy
-glow that had begun to light up the eastern horizon, exclaimed in a
-voice of undisguised relief:
-
-“Daybreak at last!”
-
-“I only wish it would never come,” his companion rejoined gloomily,
-turning his gaze upon the unwelcome light--of which, however, he had
-caught scarce a glimpse ere he sprang to his feet in sudden excitement.
-
-“That's no daybreak, Jack! It's more like the reflection of a fire.”
-
-“I believe you're right,” assented Jack. “It certainly _is_ a fire; but
-where can it be, that we see only the reflection? Behind Haunted Pagoda
-Hill?”
-
-“No; this side of the hill, I should say.”
-
-“Then it must be somewhere in the creek.”
-
-At mention of the creek Don started violently, a suspicion of the truth
-flashing upon him. He began to sniff the air. An odour of smoke floated
-to them on the fresh morning breeze, faint but pungent. Jack, catching a
-whiff of it, fell to sniffing too.
-
-“Well, what do you make of it?” Don inquired anxiously.
-
-“Tar!” replied Jack, without hesitation.
-
-“I thought so,” said Don, with a queer catch in his voice. “Jack, it's
-the cutter!”
-
-With this he set off at a run towards that part of the Rock which
-overlooked the creek. Advancing as far as the rapidly-increasing slope
-of the declivity, made it prudent to venture, he came to a stand. The
-glow of the fire was now brighter, though its source still remained
-hidden from view; but by edging his way well to the right, he at length
-succeeded in reaching a point whence the ruddy light that had excited
-his fears could be seen as a leaping, swaying column of smoke and flame,
-terminating, far down amid the darkness of the creek, in a single point
-of lurid red.
-
-“Just as I feared!” he cried, as Jack rejoined him. “The niggers have
-set fire to the _Jolly Tar_. I was afraid the rascals had smelt her out
-when I met the lascar in the creek the other morning. The old boat's
-done for, anyhow; so let me off my promise, Jack.”
-
-“What for? I can't see that the burning of the cutter has anything to do
-with it. There are plenty of native boats to get away in.”
-
-“Oh, it isn't the getting away! You don't suppose I'd go off and leave
-you in the lurch, I hope? It's the powder that troubles me. There wasn't
-much on board the cutter, it's true; just about enough to fight my way
-back here with--as I meant to do, please God, had this not happened. I
-planned the whole thing out while we sat mooning yonder, you see. But
-now!” and at thought of how this hope--the secret of his acquiescence
-in the outcome of that fatal toss--had vanished into thin air before his
-very eyes, Don's lips trembled and his voice choked.
-
-“Never mind, old chap!” said Jack, deeply touched by this new proof
-of his friend's generosity; “I'll take the will for the deed. But, I
-say--you pledged me your word, you know; and at daybreak, if no way of
-anchoring the rope shows up, I shall expect you to go over the cliff
-like a man. We shan't have long to wait now. Look!”
-
-He pointed to a deep roseate hue which tinged the sky just above the
-ocean rim. And even as they stood watching it, the light came leaping
-up from the sea, and outshone the stars, and set the whole east aglow. A
-flush of dawn, and it was day.
-
-“Now,” said Jack, tightening his belt, “let's make the round of the Rock
-again. If there's a shadow of a flaw anywhere we're bound to find it in
-this light.”
-
-“Heaven grant we may!” ejaculated Don, as they began the search.
-
-The cliff forming the Elephant's left side was out of it altogether. The
-native town lay directly at its base, rendering escape in that direction
-impracticable. So, too, with that part of the Rock abutting on the
-creek; its formation was such that no human being, rope or no rope,
-could have made his way down its face. There remained only the
-Elephant's right flank--overlooking the jungly back of the island--and
-the loftier head parts facing the western sea. To these, then, the
-search was necessarily confined.
-
-Again and yet again did they pace the dizzy heights, scanning every inch
-of the rocky surface for that crack or projection upon the existence
-of which Jack's life was staked. But, as before, the search ended in
-failure and despair. There was absolutely nothing--neither crevice, nor
-jutting point, nor friendly block of stone--in which, or to which, the
-rope's end could be made fast: nothing but Jack's body!
-
-To secure the rope to the palms or the masonry of the temple was an
-utter impossibility. It was too short by half.
-
-As a last hope Don approached the chasm in which lay the pool. But
-the hope was short-lived. The native guard had been trebled overnight.
-Hope--so far, at least, as Jack's life was concerned--stood on a par
-with the powder: not a grain was left.
-
-As a matter of fact, Don had all along indulged a secret conviction
-that “something would turn Up.” Now, when the terrible truth was at last
-forced upon him in such a manner that he could no longer shut his eyes
-to it, his distress was pitiable to witness.
-
-He had hazarded his friend's life on the toss of a coin--and lost! And
-now he must go over the cliff--over the cliff to safety and life--over
-the cliff by means of a rope, at the death-end of which stood his
-dearest friend. Given his choice, he would have taken that friend's
-place--oh, how gladly! But go he must, for his honour was-pledged, and
-the time was come!
-
-Ay, the time was come--the supreme moment of Jack's heroic resolve. And
-Jack was glad of it, ready for it. The fever in his blood had abated,
-leaving him cool, collected, and more firm in his resolve than ever. He
-had chosen his-course and he would stick to it, anyhow!
-
-“Come,” he said simply, laying a gentle hand on Don's shoulder, “it is
-time for us to go.”
-
-“For us!” The words, though kindly meant stabbed Don to the heart.
-
-Kicking the coil of rope before him like a ball, Jack approached the
-brink of the precipice. The blacks followed. There was little danger of
-their being missed by the native guard, unless the latter mounted the
-steps, and this they were not likely to do after the severe lesson they
-had received in the night. Last of all came Don--slowly, reluctantly. He
-looked and felt like one going to his execution.
-
-Without a word Jack picked up the loose end of the rope and knotted
-it securely about his friend's chest, beneath his arms. When he had
-uncoiled the rope to its full length, he fastened the other end about
-his own waist. Then he held out his hand.
-
-“Good-bye, old fellow,” he said, his voice shaking in spite of himself.
-“Good-bye, and God bless you! Be sure and cast the rope loose when you
-reach the ground.”
-
-“Oh, Jack, Jack! Must I go--must I?” cried Don desperately, his voice
-full of agony.
-
-With unfaltering step Jack led him to the extreme brink of the cliff,
-left him there with his face set towards liberty and life, turned back,
-and beckoning to the blacks--who had purposely been kept in ignorance of
-Jack's resolve--prepared to pay out the line.
-
-“Over with you, old fellow! As gently as you can!”
-
-The rope tightened. Wheeling where he stood, Don cast one last imploring
-look at his friend, who pointed upwards and then motioned him to go. He
-obeyed.
-
-[Illustration: 0267]
-
-As the remorseless Rock closed above him, he let himself swing, neither
-seeing nor caring whither he was being lowered. The abyss below had no
-terrors for him--he even hoped that the rope might snap--why should he
-live since Jack must die? And when at last his feet touched earth, and
-he had flung the rope from him like a hated thing, he threw himself
-upon his face at the foot of the insurmountable cliff and burst into a
-passion of bitter, remorseful tears.
-
-After a time a gentle thud on the back aroused him. He looked up. It was
-the rope again, but empty! What did it mean? Where was Spottie? Why
-had he not been sent down? What had happened? A dozen questions such as
-these flashed through his brain, and with them a sudden wild hope. He
-started to his feet.
-
-A scrap of paper was secured to the rope by a half-knot. He snatched at
-it, drawing it to him with something of dread in the movement. It was a
-leaf from Jacks note-book, scrawled over with writing in Jack's familiar
-hand. His eyes devoured the words:--
-
-“Good news! A wonderful thing has happened. Was just going to lower
-Spottie away when the report of a gun came booming up from the sea. The
-schooner--the governor's schooner--is at anchor off the front of the
-island! I'd signal her, only I have no powder. I'm all in a daze,
-anyhow; but you'll know what to do.”
-
-An exclamation of intense gratitude to Heaven burst from Don's lips, and
-crushing the scrap of paper in his hand, he set off at a run along the
-base of the cliff, in the direction of the Elephant's head.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.--DON RUNS THE GAUNTLET.
-
-
- There was but one thing to be done: he must gain the schooner with all
-possible speed, at any risk, and take immediate steps for Jack's rescue.
-
-Instinctively he shaped his course for the Elephant's head. The
-precipitous cliff was there skirted by a narrow beach. He had seen it
-gleaming above the surf-line while rounding the island on the morning of
-their arrival. This beach would afford a short-cut to the front of the
-island, off which the schooner lay. Once there, he must swim for it.
-These were his thoughts as he ran.
-
-Tough work it was. True, the jungle did not grow close up to the base of
-the cliff; but here and there yawning _nullahs_, of considerable depth,
-and with sides almost as-steep as walls, had been cut across his pathway
-by the rains. At intervals, too, he encountered rugged, irregular heaps
-of stones, fallen from the cliff above, and studded thick with thorny
-clumps of prickly-pear.
-
-The cutlass at his side impeded his progress. He threw it away. Then on
-again.
-
-The sands at last! Close on his right lay the sea, close on his left
-rose the beetling cliff. There was not much room--just enough to run in.
-Away before him, like a narrow ribbon of burnished silver, stretched
-the smooth, hard sands, with never a living thing in sight on all their
-gleaming reach.
-
-Gradually the cliffs crept behind, and the seafront opened out before
-him. And now, of a sudden, he espied a group of natives making for the
-beach--a company of fishermen, laden with creels, and oars, and nets.
-
-Just ahead, a wedge-shaped gully split the low bank that bordered the
-beach on the landward side. Above this bank were the fishermen, heading
-for the gully. They were perhaps fifty yards short of it, while he,
-on the beach below the bank, was a full hundred. Should they reach it
-first, he would certainly be intercepted; whereas, could he but pass the
-point of danger ere' the natives gained it, he might succeed in eluding
-them. They did not see him yet. He darted under the bank, and ran as he
-had never run in all his life before.
-
-Seventy-five yards, fifty yards, twenty yards--and then the gully. Had
-the natives reached it? As he raced past he darted a swift sidelong
-glance at the _nullah_. The fishermen were already halfway down it. They
-saw him, dropped their fishing implements, and gave chase, yelling like
-a pack of fiends.
-
-On and on he ran, looking back but once to ascertain what start he had
-of the dusky gang. Twenty yards at least. They were just emerging from
-the bottom of the gully.
-
-And now, away to the right, he sighted the schooner, riding at anchor
-with half a mile of sea between her holding-ground and the shore. He
-could see her boats swinging at the davits. They had not sighted him,
-then. He wondered whether Jack could see him from the cliff.
-
-Jack caught sight of Don as he raced past the gully. The fishermen,
-as it happened, were just then in the gully itself, and consequently
-invisible. Don's appearance he hailed with a shout.
-
-“Hurrah! he hasn't lost much time, anyhow.”
-
-This exclamation brought both Spottie and Puggles to his side in hot
-haste. The stairs were thus left unguarded--a step the imprudence of
-which was wholly overlooked in the excitement of the moment.
-
-At sight of his master tearing along the beach below, a grim
-delight--not unmixed with anxiety--overspread Puggles' black
-countenance, while a chuckle of intense satisfaction welled up from the
-red abyss of his fat, shiny throat. Then, like the shadow of an April
-cloud driven swiftly across a sunlit meadow, a look of blank dismay
-eclipsed the grin, the chuckle died away in a gasp of alarm, and
-pointing to the beach with shaking finger, he cried:
-
-“Sar! sar! black warmints done catch um, sar!”
-
-His alarm was well-founded. The fishermen had just tumbled out of the
-gully, at Don's very heels, as it seemed at this distance.
-
-“They're after him, sure enough,” cried Jack. “By Jove, how he runs! Go
-it, old fellow! you've got the start of them, anyhow.”
-
-Away went Don, running like a deer, and after him pelted the fishermen,
-in a headlong, rough-and-tumble, happy-go-lucky fashion, that, under
-circumstances less serious, must have provoked the spectators on the
-Rock to hearty laughter. No laughing matter this, however; for Don's
-pursuers, having thrown aside their fishing gear, and being moreover
-fresh in wind and limb, were seen to gain on him at every stride. The
-race could not prolong itself for many minutes now, and the finish--Jack
-shuddered, as he thought of what that must be.
-
-At this critical juncture, too, matters took an unexpected turn for the
-worse. A short distance up the beach a second party of natives appeared
-on the scene. Don ran straight on, apparently not perceiving them. They,
-on the contrary, saw him, and bore down upon him swiftly. Their cries,
-doubtless, warned him of his danger, for now he pulled up short, looked
-ahead, glanced quickly over his shoulder, and then-----
-
-With a groan Jack turned away.
-
-A loud outcry from the blacks, however, drew his gaze seawards again,
-and as he looked his pulses thrilled. Don was making straight for the
-surf!
-
-As often happens on these coasts when the wind is but a whisper, and
-the sea glass-like in its placidity, a heavy ground-swell was rolling
-sullenly in from the outer bay. A stone's throw from the shore this
-swell was but a sinuous, almost imperceptible, undulation of the glassy
-surface; but as it swept towards the beach, where the water shoaled
-rapidly, of a sudden it reared aloft a crest of hissing foam, which
-curled higher and higher as it came on, until it overtopped the sands
-at the height of a boat's mast. Then with a mighty roar it broke, hurled
-itself far up the shelving sands, and retired, seething, to make room
-for the green battalions pressing shorewards in its wake.
-
-Straight towards this living wall of water Don ran. The two bands of
-natives, uniting their forces as they swerved aside like bloodhounds in
-pursuit, were close upon him. Before, above him, curled the mighty wave;
-and then, to his great horror, Jack saw him stumble and fall.
-
-Lucky fall! Ere the natives could throw themselves upon him, the combing
-wave broke, passed directly over his prostrate body, swept the niggers
-off their legs, and hurled them with irresistible force far up the
-beach.
-
-A moment later the breathless watchers on the cliff saw a black object
-floating on the surface of the water, yards from shore. It was Don. The
-under-tow had swept him out to sea, beyond his pursuers' reach.
-
-An expert and powerful swimmer, he lost no time in increasing the
-distance between himself and the disconcerted native crew, one or two of
-whom attempted to overtake him, but soon gave it up for a bad job.
-
-Then a boat put off from the schooner, and soon Jack had the
-satisfaction of seeing his plucky friend hauled' in over her side. A
-quarter of an hour later, when the boat had regained the schooner,
-the signal gun once more boomed out over the sea, and with feelings of
-devout thankfulness to Heaven Jack realised that Don was safe on board,
-and that the term of his own and his companions' imprisonment on the
-summit of the Rock was bounded by a few brief hours at the most.
-
-Even as he looked, as if by magic the schooner's canvas swelled to the
-breeze, and he caught the distant song of the lascars as they hove the
-anchor to the cathead.
-
-Hunger, thirst, his wound, the very enemy at the foot of the rock
-stairs--all had been forgotten in the breathless interest inspired by
-Don's race for life; were forgotten still as he and the blacks stood
-watching the schooner get under weigh.
-
-Till a sharp clank of metal, as of a spear carelessly let fall, recalled
-their roving thoughts, and brought, them swiftly to the right-about,
-to find the Rock in the immediate vicinity of the pit's mouth literally
-swarming with armed natives.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.--IN THE NICK OF TIME.
-
-
- The surprise had been cleverly executed. Another moment, and Jack and
-his black attendants would have been surrounded. As it was, the odds
-were dead against them.
-
-The unexpected appearance of the schooner had evidently wrought a
-complete change in the tactics of the enemy. So here they were.
-
-This sleek, corpulent native who led the escaladers was none other than
-old Salambo!
-
-Salambo, the shark-charmer, thief, and director-in-chief of the
-harassing attacks by which they, the party of adventurers in search of
-what was indisputably their own, had been baffled at every turn.
-
-By means of the lascar's murderous hand he had clutched at the captain's
-throat and taken the captain's life. And now that his tool was for
-ever wrenched from his grasp, he had come in person to add the
-finishing-stroke to his evil work. Jack's blood boiled as he thought of
-it. One swift glance around, and his course was taken.
-
-“The temple, Spottie! Point for the temple, Pug!”
-
-The natives, perceiving their intention, swerved aside and attempted
-to cut them off. But so unexpected was Jack's manouvre, so prompt the
-obedience of Spottie and Puggles, that the attempt proved unsuccessful.
-A wild, breathless dash, and they had turned the corner of the
-temple--whose door, as usual, faced east--and crossed its threshold.
-
-Old and neglected as the edifice was, stout wooden doors still swung
-upon the rust-eaten hinges. To slam these to and thrust the bolts home,
-top and bottom, was the work of but a moment. Bosin darted in as the
-great doors swung into place, narrowly escaping the amputation of his
-tail as the penalty of his tardiness. Scarcely had the last bolt been
-shot when up trooped the enemy, howling like hyenas, and commenced a
-determined assault upon the doors.
-
-At first they hurled themselves upon the barrier and attempted to force
-it in by sheer imposition of weight. Thud followed thud in furious
-succession, while Jack stood by with palpitating heart. His fears as
-to the stability of the doors, however, were soon set at rest. They
-creaked, yielded a little, but otherwise stood as firm as the solid
-masonry in which they were framed. The natives were not slow to discover
-this, and the ill-advised attempt was soon abandoned. In the brief lull
-that followed Jack looked about him.
-
-Inside here, beneath the cobwebbed, blackened roof of the outer temple,
-the light was funereal in its dimness. What little there was crept in
-through the cracks in the shrunken doors in a reluctant sort of way,
-as if it found the society of bats and spiders anything but agreeable;
-except at the further or western end of the temple, where there was
-a second chamber, smaller and somewhat better lighted than the first.
-Eight feet or so above the floor a small square window pierced the wall,
-and directly beneath this stood a sort of stone pediment or shrine, on
-which squatted a hideously distorted image. This was the temple _swami_,
-and _swami's_ ugly head reached to within a couple of feet of the
-window.
-
-A second attempt was now made upon the doors, though not after the
-haphazard fashion of the first. The cracks in the shrunken woodwork
-attracting the attention of the natives, they fell to work on the widest
-of these, and with their spears began chipping away the plank splinter
-by splinter. But the extreme toughness of the material, seasoned as it
-was by unnumbered years of exposure to the elements, rendered the task
-of demolition both difficult and slow.
-
-“Take you a jolly long time to get your ugly head-pieces through that,
-anyhow!” muttered Jack, as he watched--or rather listened to, for he
-could see little or nothing of what was going on outside--the fast
-and furious play of the spears. “And when you do get 'em through, why
-then----”
-
-To symbolise what would happen then, Jack did what was certainly quite
-excusable under the circumstances--spat in his palm, and with immense
-gusto decapitated an imaginary nigger.
-
-Still, given sufficient time for the spears to do their work, it was a
-foregone conclusion that the doors must fall. Would they hold out till
-the schooner cast anchor off the creek? He allowed an hour for that--an
-hour from the time the anchor was weighed.. Well, they--he and-the two
-blacks--had been in the temple the best part of an hour already. So that
-was all right.
-
-But then, the rescue party must make their way up the creek, and from
-the creek to the--summit of the Bock, along that passage by which Don
-and the blacks had entered on the previous day. This would consume
-another hour. He made the calculation with the utmost coolness; only,
-when it was finished, and he asked himself whether the doors would hold
-out that other hour, the reluctant “No” with which he was compelled to
-answer the question somehow stuck in his throat and nearly choked him.
-By way of relief, he slashed the head off another imaginary nigger.
-
-The second hour wore on. The gap in the door grew wider and wider
-beneath the ceaseless play of the spears, and still the natives showed
-no signs of desisting or of taking their departure.
-
-Presently a shadow darkened the little window at the rear of the temple.
-Jack turned on his heel expecting to see a native, but instead saw only
-Bosin. The monkey had clambered up the image, and so reached the window.
-The sight of the creature gave Jack a sudden inspiration.
-
-What was to hinder the blacks and himself from beating a noiseless
-retreat by way of this same window? The aperture was quite ample in size
-to admit of their squeezing through it. But--his wounded arm! And could
-the thing be done without attracting the attention of the gang about the
-doors?
-
-He climbed up the image and looked out. So far as he could discover the
-way was clear. Between that end of the temple and the stairs leading
-to the pit, not a single native was to be seen. True, his view was
-but limited at the best--the aperture was so narrow, and a straggling
-blackskin or two might, after all, have their eyes on the window, or,
-worse still, be guarding the stairs. Probably, though--and this seemed
-the more likely view--the entire force and attention of the belligerents
-were concentrated upon the temple doors. He would risk it, anyhow!
-
-Once gain the pit, and they were as good as saved; for by that time the
-rescue party could not be far off.
-
-A wilder shout from the besiegers recalled his thoughts and eyes to
-the doors. He scrambled down off the idols head and ran into the outer
-chamber.
-
-What was that peculiar crackling sound--this pungent odour with which
-the air had suddenly grown so heavy? Fire--smoke! They had set fire to
-the doors!
-
-He ran back into the inner chamber. The blacks were there, cowering in
-terror against the wall. In a few hurried words he directed them how
-to proceed. They pulled themselves together and prepared to obey the
-sahib's directions.
-
-“The window, lads! through the window! Quick now, you lazy beggars!”
-
-Spottie went first--somewhat unwillingly, it must be confessed, which
-was scarcely to be wondered at, considering that the drop from the
-window might land him in the arms of the enemy, or on the point of a
-spear. The smallness of the aperture, its height from the ground,
-and the necessity for going through it feet foremost, made a triple
-difficulty, too. But with Jack's assistance this was speedily overcome,
-and Spottie dropped out of sight. Barring the faint thud of his bare
-feet on the rock, no sound followed. Thus far, then, the stratagem had
-escaped detection. Jack began to breathe easier.
-
-After Spottie went Puggles--with even more difficulty, for, as the
-reader is aware, Puggles was extremely fat; and again all was still
-without. Within there was noise enough and to spare. The crackling
-of the burning doors had grown ominously loud. As Pug's black head
-disappeared, too, a tremendous shout burst from the rabble gathered
-about the entrance. Its significance Jack did not stop to inquire.
-Already he had scaled the image. A wry face or two at the pain of his
-wounded arm, and a moment later he stood beside the blacks.
-
-The moment of their flight was well chosen. The natives, to a man, were
-watching the doors with all their eyes.
-
-Bidding the blacks follow close at his heels, he sped across the few
-yards of rock that separated the temple from the stairs, sprang down the
-steps, and fell insensible at the feet of his friend, Roydon Leigh.
-
-The rescue party had arrived in the very nick of time.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.--THE SHARK-CHARMER IS CAUGHT IN HIS OWN TRAP.
-
-
- After all, Jack was but human. His fortitude, strung to a tense pitch
-by those terrible days and nights of danger, snapped, in presence of
-actual safety, like an overdrawn bow.
-
-A pitiful spectacle he presented, his clothes torn to ribbons, his hands
-and face grimy, bloodstained, yet ghastly in their pallor. Don uttered a
-cry and flung himself on his knees beside his chum. He thought him dead.
-
-“No, not dead, thank God! Only done up. He'll be all right soon,” said
-Captain Leigh, with his hand upon Jack's heart, which still beat, though
-faintly; and taking out a pocket-flask he poured a few drops of brandy
-between the drawn, bloodless lips of the unconscious lad.
-
-Under this stimulating treatment Jack soon came round. Needless to dwell
-on the confusion into which his thoughts were thrown by the sight of
-the familiar faces bending over him. His bewilderment, however, was but
-momentary. Memory returned with a rush and spurred him to action and
-speech. He sat bolt upright.
-
-“Have you got the rascal?” he demanded in eager tones..
-
-“What rascal?” asked Don.
-
-“The shark-charmer, to be sure. Who else should I mean? He's on the
-Rock, I tell you!”
-
-“Him done stick his leg in trap, sa'b,” interpolated Puggles, with
-appropriate action.
-
-Don started to his feet. Jack followed suit, somewhat unsteadily.
-
-“Is he above there?” cried Captain Leigh.
-
-“Yes, yes!” said Jack eagerly.
-
-“Up with you, boys!” cried the captain to the _peons_.
-
-Don had already acquainted his father with the shark-charmer's part in
-the tragic events of the past week, and the _peons_ had overheard the
-story. They all knew the shark-charmer, and they followed their leader
-with enthusiasm. They carried carbines; these glinted in the sunshine,
-and clanked against the contracted walls of the rock stairway as they
-jostled each other in the ascent.
-
-A rush of many feet above, and the natives appeared at the stair-head.
-Only the moment before had they discovered the temple to be deserted,
-and become alive to the fact that they had lingered too long on the
-Rock. They were now in hot pursuit of the fugitives. But the sudden
-apparition of the red-sashed _peons_, the ominous glint and clash of the
-carbines, promised hotter pursuit than they had bargained for. A wave of
-consternation swept through their ranks. _Sauve qui peut!_ In headlong
-flight they scattered in all directions.
-
-As before, the shark-charmer had led the gang. He almost ran into the
-arms of the _peons_.
-
-“Rama! Rama!”
-
-It was the cry of a coward and miscreant who knows that his last hour
-of freedom, if not of life, has come: the hour of reckoning for his
-misdeeds.
-
-For as long as it took his half-paralysed tongue to frame the words, the
-shark-charmer faced his approaching doom. Then he turned and fled like a
-frightened cur.
-
-The voice of Captain Leigh rang out on the air clear and full as the
-note of a bugle:
-
-“After him, lads! Never mind the others! Take the fellow alive!”
-
-Up scrambled the _peons_ in obedience to the command, deploying to right
-and left in a long, semicircular line as they debouched upon the Rock.
-
-“Forward!”
-
-Off they went at the quick; then, with a wild cheer, broke into a loping
-run, the extremities of the semicircle closing in as they advanced.
-
-The shark-charmer ran towards the Elephant's head, where the precipice
-was the loftiest and dizziest of the four, the beach lying full three
-hundred feet below. Whatever chance of escape he possessed, it assuredly
-did not lie in that direction. To all human seeming his escape was an
-utter impossibility. So thought the _peons_, and slackened speed, though
-the extremities of the living, steel-crested semicircle still closed in
-and in. Between, and somewhat ahead, ran the shark-charmer. He could not
-run much farther; the brink of the precipice was only a few yards away.
-He was caught!
-
-What the thoughts of the guilty, hunted wretch were during those awful
-moments, God alone knows.
-
-The _peons_ had slowed down to a walk now--a walk confident, yet timid.
-They were altogether sure of the shark-charmer, and not a little afraid
-of the precipice. Not so the fugitive; for him all fear lay behind. He
-advanced to the very brink of the cliff. His arms dropped at his sides.
-
-In upon him closed his pursuers with cat-like tread and alert eyes. They
-had no desire to be dashed over the cliff. Besides, was he not as good
-as caught? A mere span of rock divided him from their grasp. He stood
-motionless, half-turned towards them, apparently resigned to his fate.
-
-Suddenly, however, hurling upon the close-drawn ranks a swift look of
-defiance, he wheeled full-face to the sea; wheeled, and drew his arms up
-and back.
-
-Captain Leigh was the first to perceive the significance of the
-movement.
-
-“Seize him!” he shouted, dashing through the line of _peons_; “quick, or
-he'll be over!... Good God!”
-
-He fell back appalled. A stifled cry of horror broke from the _peons_.
-The shark-charmer had leapt into mid-air.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.--BRINGS THE QUEST TO AN END.
-
-
- Silent and pale as death, Don turned and stood for a moment facing
-Haunted Pagoda Hill, with head bared. His thoughts were with the captain
-as he had seen him on that terrible evening of the murder. Plainer than
-words his attitude cried:
-
-“Avenged!”
-
-The other natives had taken advantage of the opportunity afforded by the
-pursuit of the shark-charmer to make good their escape. Captain Leigh
-accordingly ordered the _peons_ back to the schooner. Their mission was
-at an end.
-
-At the head of the stairs they came upon Bosin. The monkey at once
-clambered on to Don's shoulder, happier far than his new master.
-
-Here, too, as they were about to turn their backs upon the spot where
-death had hovered in ever-narrowing circles about their heads through
-the hopeless hours of that awful night and day, Jack and Don joined
-hands and silently renewed the friendship which had here been put to
-so crucial a test. Our boy-friendships seldom pass the boundary line
-of youth and manhood; or, if they do, too often become tarnished and
-neglected things in which we find no pleasure. Theirs, just then, seemed
-fit to last a lifetime.
-
-“Say!” cried Jack abruptly, when he had done wringing his chunks hand,
-“what about the pearls, old fellow? You're surely not going off without
-them after all the trouble we've had? I'm not, anyhow!”
-
-Jack was nothing if not practical.
-
-Captain Leigh, who was standing by, overheard the words, and approached
-with a curious, not to say mysterious, smile on his lips.
-
-“What! not had enough of it yet, Jack?” said he, in bantering tones.
-
-“Not I, sir! Where's the use of being half cut to bits if one doesn't
-get what one's after? I shan't be content till I handle the shiners.”
-
-“And where do you purpose looking for them?”
-
-Jack's face fell.. It was not easy to find an answer to this question.
-
-“Perhaps I can assist you,” continued Captain Leigh, with a repetition
-of his mysterious smile. “This quest of yours, boys, has been a string
-of surprises from the very start, judging by what I have heard and seen
-of it. So, just to keep the ball rolling, we'll wind up with the biggest
-surprise of all.”
-
-And slipping his fingers into his waistcoat pocket, to the astonishment
-of the young men he drew therefrom the identical wash-leather case
-which they had all along, and with good reason, supposed to be in the
-shark-charmer's possession.
-
-“Why--how--?” Don began, hardly able to believe his eyes.
-
-Jack interrupted him.
-
-“Don't you see how it is?” cried he. “The governor's running a rig
-on us. Old Salambo took the pearls, but left the bag; it's empty, of
-course!”
-
-Captain Leigh quietly turned the pouch upside-down, and poured into the
-palm of his left hand a little silvery heap with a shimmer of pale gold
-in its midst. This he pushed into full view with his finger. It was the
-Golden Pearl.
-
-“You don't mean to say we've been on a wild-goose chase all this time?”
- gasped Jack.
-
-“A downright fool's errand!” muttered Don, in tones of intense disgust.
-
-“No; neither one nor the other,” interposed Captain Leigh. “Don't
-go scattering self-accusations of that sort about before you hear my
-explanation--though it's a queer business, I must acknowledge,” he
-added, with a laugh. “Will you hear it out now or wait till we go on
-board?”
-
-“Tell us one thing,” put in Don; “were the pearls stolen at all?”
-
-“No, they were not, or I should not be able to produce them. But the
-shark-charmer was none the less a thief, for all that. But I see you're
-on tenterhooks to hear all about it, so I'll read you the riddle at
-once.”
-
-Carefully restoring the pearls to the pouch, he handed the treasure to
-Don, and then resumed:
-
-“It goes without saying, of course, that you remember the evening you
-brought the pearls on board. Well, shortly after you had placed them
-in the locker--you had just turned in, I think--I got an uneasy sort of
-feeling that they were not as safe there as they should be----”
-
-“So you took them into your state-room!” interrupted Don, who thought he
-began to see light.
-
-“Exactly. The companion door was open, you recollect, and the
-shark-charmer, I suppose, must have been hanging about at the moment
-and seen me. Very imprudently, as it turned out, I left my door on the
-latch, though I took the precaution to put the pearls under my pillow.
-You remember, perhaps, my paying off some of the men that afternoon?
-Well, when I turned in I left the bag of rupees--or rather what remained
-of them, about two hundred in all, I should think--on the sofa opposite
-my berth, and my gold chronometer on the stand at my head, as I always
-do. I slept like a top until I was called at three, when we got under
-weigh. At this time, you understand, I was under the impression that you
-two were snug between the sheets. The schooner was a dozen miles down
-the coast before I found out my mistake. Being due in Colombo the
-following day, you see, I couldn't put back. Neither could I make head
-nor tail of your disappearance until the carrier brought your letter,
-Don. That made the whole matter plain enough. You had found the locker
-empty, supposed that the shark-charmer had stolen the pearls, and had
-given chase.”
-
-“Then,” cried Jack, “what I said a minute ago was right enough, after
-all. The pearls were safe, and we've been on a jolly wild-goose chase.”
-
-“Oh, no; that doesn't follow. The shark-charmer left the schooner far
-from empty-handed. He stole the bag of rupees and the watch.”
-
-“Ah, but what about the handkerchief the pearls were tied up in?” asked
-Don. “I fished it out of the water off the island here. How do you
-account for that?”
-
-“I must have thrown the handkerchief on the sofa. Probably the fellow
-snatched it up with the bag of rupees, thinking that it still contained
-the pearls.”
-
-“And threw it away when he found that it didn't,” chuckled Jack. “Well,
-the shiners are all right, anyhow!”
-
-Nightfall found the schooner bowling towards the open sea under full
-sail. Three figures stood grouped on her deck in the fading twilight.
-
-“It was just about here,” said Don in a choked voice:
-
- “Here, a sheer hulk, lies poor Tom Bowling,
-
- The darling of our crew;
-
- No more he'll hear the tempest howling,
-
- For death has broached him to.
-
-
- His form was of the manliest beauty,
-
- His heart was kind and soft;
-
- Faithful below he did his duty,
-
- But now he's gone aloft.”
-
-All three uncovered and stood with bowed heads until the old sailor's
-resting-place was left far behind.
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Haunted Pagodas--The Quest of the
-Golden Pearl, by J. E. Hutchinson
-
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Haunted Pagodas--The Quest of the
-Golden Pearl, by J. E. Hutchinson
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Haunted Pagodas--The Quest of the Golden Pearl
-
-Author: J. E. Hutchinson
-
-Illustrator: Hume Nisbet
-
-Release Date: January 11, 2016 [EBook #50897]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HAUNTED PAGODAS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-THE HAUNTED PAGODAS--THE QUEST OF THE GOLDEN PEARL
-
-By J. E. Hutchinson
-
-Illustrated by Hume Nisbet
-
-London: Ward and Downey
-
-1897
-
-[Illustration: 0001]
-
-[Illustration: 0008]
-
-[Illustration: 0009]
-
-
-
-
-QUEST OF THE GOLDEN PEARL.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.--THE SHARK-CHARMER WALKS THE PLANK.
-
-
-|Jack! I say, Jack! there's a row among the boatmen."
-
-A sturdy, thick-set young fellow of seventeen was Jack, with low-hung
-fists of formidable size, and a love for anything in the shape of a row
-that constantly led him into scrapes. Hot-headed though he was, he was
-one of the most good-humoured, well-meaning young fellows in the world,
-who, while he would not hurt a fly if he could help it, was always ready
-to fight in defence of his own or another's rights.
-
-His chum, Roydon Leigh--"Don" for short--was of an altogether different
-type of young manhood. Jack's senior by a year, he was tall for his
-age, standing five feet ten in his stockings. His lithe, wiry frame
-contrasted strongly with Jack's sturdier build, as did his Scotch
-"canniness" with that young gentleman's headlong impetuosity.
-
-"A row!" cried Jack delightedly, as he rushed to the taffrail. "Time,
-too; four weeks we've lain here, and never a hand in a single shindy!"
-
-His companion laughed.
-
-"As for that," said he, "you're not likely to have a hand in this,
-unless you take the boat and row off to the diving grounds. All the
-same, there's a jolly row on--look yonder."
-
-The schooner _Wellington_ rode at anchor at the northern extremity of
-the Strait of Manaar, on the famous pearl-fishing grounds of Ceylon.
-On her larboard bow lay the coast--a string of low, white sand-hills,
-dotted with the dark-brown thatch of fisher huts and the vivid green
-of cocoa-nut palms. The hour was eight o'clock in the morning of a
-cloudless March day; the fitful land-breeze had died away, leaving
-the whole surface of the sea like billowy glass. Half-a-dozen
-cable's-lengths distant on the schooner's starboard quarter, a score
-or-more of native _dhonies_ or diving-boats rose and dipped to the
-regular motion of the long ground-swell.
-
-It was towards these boats that Don pointed.
-
-That something unusual had occurred was evident enough. Angry shouts
-floated across the placid water; and the native boatmen could be seen
-hurriedly pulling the boats together into a compact group about one
-central spot where the clamour was loudest.
-
-"I say," cried Jack, after watching the boats for some time in silence,
-"they're making for the schooner."
-
-"I don't half like the look of it," replied Don uneasily; "they
-shouldn't leave the diving grounds, you know, until the signal gun's
-fired. I wish the guv was here."
-
-"Wishing's no good when he's ashore," said Jack philosophically. "You're
-the skipper _pro tem_., and you must make the most of your promotion,
-old fellow. We'll have some fun, anyhow. Whew! how those niggers pull,
-and what a jolly row they're making!"
-
-By this time the excited cries, which had first attracted the attention
-of those upon the schooner's deck, had been exchanged by the boatmen for
-a weird chant, to which every oar kept time. Erect in the stern of the
-foremost boat an old whiteheaded _tyndal_ or "master" led the song,
-while at the end of each measure a hundred voices raised a chorus that
-seemed fairly to lift the boats clear of the water.
-
-"What are they singing, anyway?" demanded Jack. "There's something about
-a diver and a shark in it, but I can't half make it out, can you?"
-
-"We'll call Puggles--he'll be able to tell us. Pug! Hi, Pug! come here."
-
-"Coming, sa'b!" answered a voice from the cook's galley; and almost
-simultaneously there appeared on deck the plumpest, shiniest, most
-good-natured looking black boy that ever displayed two raws of pearly
-teeth. Nature had, apparently, pulled him into the world by the nose,
-and then, as a sort of finishing touch to the job, had given that organ
-a sharp upward tweak and left it so. It was to this feature that Puggles
-owed his name.
-
-"Pug," said his master, "tell us what those boatmen yonder are singing."
-
-The black boy cocked his ears and listened for a moment with parted
-lips. "Boat-wallahs this way telling, sa'b," said he; and, catching the
-strain of the chant, he repeated the words of each line as it fell from
-the lips of the old _tyndal_:=
-
-```"Salambo selling the diver one charm,
-
-````Salaam, Alii kum!
-
-```Old shark, he telling, then do no harm,
-
-````Salaam, Alii kum!=
-
-```One spotted shark come out the south,
-
-````Salaam, Alii kum!
-
-```He taking diver's leg in his mouth,
-
-````Salaam, Alii kum!
-
-```Me big liking got, he telling, for you,
-
-````Salaam, Alii kum!
-
-```So he biting diver clean in two,
-
-````Salaam, Alii kum!
-
-```The lying charmer we take to the ship,
-
-````Salaam, Alii kum!
-
-```There he feeling bite of the sahib's whip,
-
-````Salaam, Alii kum!"=
-
-"Why, this Salambo must be the chap the guv had whipped off the grounds
-last season, eh, Pug?" cried Don excitedly.
-
-"Same black rascal, sa'b. His skin getting well, he coming back. Dey
-bring him 'board ship, make his skin sore two times," explained Puggles,
-grinning.
-
-"Ha, ha!" laughed Jack. "We'll oblige 'em! We'll trice the fellow up!
-Hullo, here they come!"
-
-The boats having now reached the schooner, the chant ceased abruptly,
-the heavy oars were noisily shipped, and, amid a perfect Babel of
-voices, the boatmen came swarming up the sides, until the deck was one
-mass of wildly gesticulating, dusky humanity. The uproar was terrific.
-
-The old _tyndal_, who towered a full head and shoulders above his
-comrades, pushed his way to the front, and commanding silence among his
-followers, addressed himself to Don, who was always-recognised as master
-in his fathers absence.
-
-"Sab." said he in pigeon English, "one year back big sa'b ordering
-Salambo eat plenty blows for selling charm to diver-man. All same, this
-season he done come back and sell plenty charm, telling diver-man he
-put charm round neck, shark no eat him up. He telling plenty lie--this
-morning one shark done come, eat diver, charm, all!"
-
-"Let him stand forward," said Don, beginning to enter as much into the
-novelty of the thing as Jack himself.
-
-The culprit, a sleek old fellow with shaven head, crafty eyes, and a
-rosary of wooden beads about his neck, was shoved to the front.
-
-"Are you the chap who was whipped off the grounds last year for selling
-chaims?" demanded Don.
-
-"Your honour speaking true words." whined the shark-charmer, salaaming
-until his shaven head almost touched the deck; "I same rascal."
-
-"I say, Jack," whispered Don, "I shan't have him whipped, you know.
-We'll, make him walk the plank."
-
-"Capital! Hell funk, certain, and there'll be no end of fun."
-
-"Well do it, then," said Don decidedly. "Go forward and order two of
-the lascars to take the boat and lie under the schooner's quarter---this
-side, you know--ready to pick him up."
-
-In high glee Jack departed to execute this commission, while Don again
-turned to the shark-doctor.
-
-"Do you happen to have one of those charms about you?" he asked.
-
-"One here got, sa'b," said the fellow, producing from the folds of his
-waist-cloth an _ola_ or fragment of palm-leaf, covered with cabalistic
-characters. "Sa'b no look at him?"
-
-"Keep it yourself," said Don; "you'll soon need it. Hi, lascar!" to one
-of the schooner's crew who stood near. "Fetch a plank here and run it
-out over the side."
-
-By the time the plank was brought and run out until one-half its
-length projected over the water, Jack came up chuckling, and by a sign
-intimated that the boat was in readiness. The crowd of natives, guessing
-that something unusual was afoot, craned their necks eagerly,
-while Puggles executed a comic _pas seul_ in his delight. But the
-shark-charmer, as Jack had predicted, "funked" miserably.
-
-Knowing that with the boat in waiting there was absolutely no danger to
-the shark-charmer's life, Don turned a deaf ear to his pleadings, and
-made a signal to the lascars to proceed.
-
-[Illustration: 0022]
-
-Willing hands seized the quaking wretch and dragged him to the
-schooner's side, where he was placed upon, the plank, Puggles standing
-on the deck-end to keep it down.
-
-"Steady, Puggles!" cried Don. "One, two, three--let him slide!"
-
-Puggles jumped aside, the deck-end of the plank rose high in air, then
-descended with a crash; and with a scream of terror the shark-charmer
-disappeared over the side.
-
-A tremendous shout rose from the natives on deck, and with a common
-impulse they one and all rushed to the schooner's side, which they
-reached just as the shark-charmer's head reappeared above the surface.
-Another moment, and he was dragged into the boat, where, catching sight
-of the laughing faces ranged along the rail above, he shook his fist in
-mute menace, and so was rowed to shore.
-
-"Teach the beggar a lesson he won't forget in a hurry," said Don, as he
-watched the boat recede. "Good-bye, old boy; we're not likely to meet
-again."
-
-But in this sanguine forecast of the future he was mistaken, as events
-speedily proved.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II. A STROKE OF LUCK AND AN AFTER-STROKE.
-
-
-|It was the afternoon of the day on which the shark-charmer so
-unwillingly walked the plank. The breeze was so light and fitful that it
-barely ruffled the surface of the sea about the schooner. Weary of the
-narrow limits of the deck, Don and his chum dropped into the boat and
-rowed ashore--Puggles, as a matter of course, bearing them company.
-
-"These beastly sands are like an oven!" growled Don, lifting his helmet
-to cool his dripping forehead. "Where shall we go, Jack?"
-
-"Bazaar," replied Jack laconically; "always some fun to be had there.
-Pug, point for the bazaar."
-
-"Me pointing, sar," puffed the black boy, setting his dumpy legs in
-motion.
-
-Puggles was never so much in his element as when thus strutting
-pompously in advance, warning common nigger humanity of the white
-sahibs' approach. At such times the disdainful tilt of his nose, the
-supreme self-complaisance of his expansive grin, were as good as a show.
-
-A gay and animated scene did the bazaar present. Back and forth through
-the temporary street surged an endless throng of natives of every
-shade of complexion and variety of costume--buying, selling, shouting,
-jabbering, drinking with friends or fighting with enemies.
-
-"Much cry and little wool," laughed Jack. "There's a big black fellow
-yonder auctioning off some pearl oysters; let's have a go at the next
-lot."
-
-"All right," assented Don; "perhaps we'll have a stroke of luck. The guv
-knew a poor half-caste once who bid in just such a chance lot as this,
-and in one of them he found sixty-eight thumping big pearls. Cleared
-thousands of pounds by that one bid, the guv says. Pug! here, Pug!"
-
-"Coming, sa'b," gasped a faint voice, and Puggles wriggled his way from
-amongst the bystanders, shining with abundant perspiration and squeezed
-well-nigh flat by the pressure of the crowd.
-
-"Pug," said his master, "up on this creel with you, and when that big
-black fellow yonder puts up his next lot, bid 'em in."
-
-Up went Puggles, nothing loth to escape further squeezing, and up went
-the auctioneer's next lot. In five minutes' time the few dozens of
-oysters composing the lot were knocked down to the black boy at an
-absurdly low figure.
-
-"Here you are," said Don, handing him the coin. "Pass that over, and
-fetch the things away till we see what's inside them."
-
-Making a dive for the oysters, Puggles scrambled them into his cloth,
-and followed the sahibs to the outskirts of the crowd, blowing like
-a porpoise. Finding a convenient patch of shade beneath a banyan tree
-within a few yards of the lazy surf, they proceeded to ascertain,
-without further delay, whether the shells contained anything of value.
-
-"Him plenty smell got, anyhow," commented Puggles, as he arranged
-the oysters, which had been several days out of the water, in a small
-pyramid.
-
-Jack threw himself on the sand, and surveyed the rough, discoloured heap
-with unqualified disgust. "They don't look very promising, I must say,"
-he cried. "Try that big one on top, Don."
-
-Inserting the blade of his pocket-knife between the shells of the
-bivalve, Don prized it open and carefully examined its contents. It
-contained nothing of any value.
-
-Jack looked listlessly on, while his companion opened shell after
-shell with no other result than the finding of two or three miserable
-specimens of pearls, so small that, as Jack laughingly said, "one might
-stick them in ones eye and forget the moment after where one had put
-them."
-
-Only three or four shells now remained unopened, and Don was on the
-point of abandoning the search in disgust, when Jack, who had edged
-himself on his elbow as close to the heap as the villainous odour of the
-decomposed oysters would allow, snatched up a shell of large size, and
-said:
-
-"Let me have the knife a moment, will you? This looks promising--it's
-the biggest of the whole lot, anyhow."
-
-"There you are, then; I've had enough of them myself," said Don, tossing
-him the knife and walking off.
-
-He had not proceeded half-a-dozen yards, however, when a loud shout
-brought him back at a run. Jack and Puggles were eagerly bending over
-the opened oyster.
-
-"What is it?" he asked breathlessly, going down on his knees beside
-them.
-
-Jack thrust the half-shell towards him. It was literally filled with
-magnificent pearls. *
-
- * In 1828 no less than sixty-seven pearls were taken from a
- single oyster on these grounds.--J. K. H.
-
-Not a word was spoken as the glistening, priceless globules were
-carefully abstracted from their unsightly case and laid upon Pug's
-coffee-coloured palm. Twenty-five pearls of matchless size and
-brilliancy did Jack count out ere the store was exhausted. So taken up
-were they with their good fortune that not one of the three observed a
-native creep stealthily towards them under cover of the tree.
-
-"There's been nothing like it known on the grounds for years!" cried Don
-excitedly. "Any more, Jack?"
-
-"No more," said Jack, and was about to throw the shell away, when
-Puggles caught his arm.
-
-"Stop, sar, stop! Me see something yellow in shell. Stick knife in the
-meat, sar, that side."
-
-With the point of the blade Jack prodded the substance of the oyster
-at the point indicated, and presently laid bare the queen of the royal
-family of pearls on which they had stumbled. Larger by far than any of
-the twenty-five already taken from the shell, this latest addition to
-the number was in shape like a pear, in lustre of the purest pale
-yellow.
-
-"Him gold pearl, sa'b!" cried Puggles gleefully, grinning from ear to
-ear. "Other only silver. Gold pearl plenty price fetching."
-
-"Jack, old fellow," cried Don, thumping his companion on the back,
-"Puggles is right; we're in luck. I've heard the guv say that a golden
-pearl isn't found once in twenty years. The priests are ready to give
-simply any sum you like for a really fine specimen."
-
-The native who had concealed himself behind the trunk of the banyan
-tree, leaned eagerly forward. So close was he to the absorbed group
-that he could distinctly hear every word of their conversation. As he
-listened, an avaricious glitter shone in his crafty eyes, and he rubbed
-his hands unctuously together, as though he were rubbing pearls between
-them.
-
-"How much do you suppose the lot is worth; Don?" Jack inquired.
-
-"Some thousands of pounds, I should say. But the guv will be able to
-tell us. Say, I'd better put them in this."
-
-Taking out his watch, he drew off the soft chamois leather case, and
-carefully transferred the output of the mammoth oyster from Pugs palm to
-this temporary receptacle.
-
-"Now," cried Jack, leaping to his feet, "let's make for the schooner.
-The sun's set, and besides, I shan't feel easy until the golden 'un is
-in a safer place than a waistcoat pocket."
-
-"That's so," assented Don. "Point, Pug!"
-
-When they had disappeared in the crowded bazaar, the shark-charmer
-emerged from behind the tree, and took the road to that part of the
-beach where the boats lay.
-
-By the time Don and his companions reached the schooner, the brief
-twilight had deepened into the gray darkness of early night. The pearls
-were at once shown to Captain Leigh, who confirmed his son's estimate of
-their value. It would, he said, run well into four figures, if not into
-five. The golden pearl he pronounced to be of special value.
-
-"Not that it would fetch anything in England," said he; "but wealthy
-natives--and more especially priests--stop at nothing to secure a pearl
-like that. I mean that in a double sense, my lads; so you had better
-stow your find away in a safe place."
-
-In the locker under the cabin clock, accordingly, the chamois leather
-bag with its precious contents was placed. On closing the locker,
-however, to his annoyance Don found the key to be missing.
-
-"I shall put it in the little locker under the cabin clock," said Don.
-"It locks, and there isn't a safer place on board the schooner."
-
-[Illustration: 0031]
-
-"Wrap your handkerchief round the bag, so it won't be noticed if any
-one opens the locker," suggested Jack. "It will be safe enough then,
-especially as nobody ever comes here except ourselves and Pug."
-
-But on quitting the cabin, to their amazement they came face to face
-with the shark-charmer! He stood at the very bottom of the companionway,
-within a yard of the cabin door, and directly opposite the clock and
-locker.
-
-"What are you doing here?" cried Don, advancing upon him angrily.
-
-"Nothing, sab, nothing!" protested the native, dropping a running salvo
-of salaams as he backed up the steps. "Me only wanting to see big sa'b."
-
-"Then be off about your business, or you'll get the whipping you missed
-this morning. Do you hear?" And, without further ado, Salambo made for
-the deck, where they saw him disappear over the side.
-
-"Do you think he saw us at the locker, Jack?" Don asked uneasily.
-
-"I should think not. But even if he did he wouldn't be any the wiser. He
-knows nothing about the pearls."
-
-"True enough," said Don, and so the subject dropped.
-
-The cabin clock indicated the hour of ten when they turned in for the
-night. Somehow Don found himself unable to sleep. In spite of every
-effort he could make to the contrary, his thoughts _would_ run on the
-pearls. At last he could stand it no longer. Leaping out of his berth,
-he struck a light and crept noiselessly into the main cabin. The
-companion door stood open to admit the night air, and his candle flared
-in the draught.
-
-"I'll get to sleep, perhaps, if I take a look at them," he said to
-himself as he made his way to the locker.
-
-An exclamation of alarm burst from his lips. His hand shook so violently
-that it was with difficulty he could hold the candle. The lid of the
-locker stood wide open!
-
-Advancing the light, he peered into the receptacle. It contained
-nothing. Handkerchief, bag, pearls--all had disappeared!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.--THE QUEST BEGINS.
-
-
-For a moment the discovery paralysed him, body and mind. Then he turned
-and hurried to Jack's cabin. Jack was snoring. Don shook him fiercely by
-the shoulder.
-
-"Wake up! The pearls are gone!"
-
-Jack was awake and on his feet in a twinkling. "You're dreaming, old
-fellow," said he, seeing Don in his night-clothes. "You're only half
-awake." Don did not argue the matter. He simply seized Jack by the arm
-and dragged him into the main cabin. There the empty locker placed the
-truth of his assertion beyond dispute.
-
-"What's to be done?" gasped Jack.
-
-"Let us call Pug," suggested Don. "He may know something about this."
-
-Puggles slept on deck. In two minutes they were by his side, and he was
-stretching his jaws in a mighty yawn. Great was his astonishment when
-he heard of the loss. But he could throw no light on the matter. He had
-neither seen nor heard anything suspicious. As for Puggles himself, he
-was above suspicion.
-
-"Come down and let us have another look," said Jack. "It's just
-possible, you know, that some one may have been to the locker and
-accidentally dropped or knocked the case out upon the floor. I can't
-believe it's gone."
-
-Just as they reached the bottom of the companion-way, Puggles, who
-was slightly in advance of his master, stopped short, and called their
-attention to an object dangling from the handle of the door. Jack caught
-it up and ran to the table, where the lighted candle stood.
-
-"Merely a string of wooden beads," said he, tossing the object on the
-table.
-
-"A native rosary!" cried Don, snatching it up. "I've seen this before
-somewhere."
-
-"Sa'b," broke in Puggles, his eyes the size and colour of Spanish
-onions, "him shark-charmer rosilly, sa'b!"
-
-"The very same!" cried Don. "I recollect seeing it round his neck this
-morning."
-
-"And I recollect seeing it there this evening," added Jack.
-
-"When we bundled him out of the companionway?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Then how do you account for our finding it on the door-knob, and for
-its being broken as it is now?"
-
-"Don't you see? The fellow returned, of course."
-
-"Returned? When?"
-
-"After we saw him over the side; he never went ashore. He sneaked back,
-and then made off in a tremendous hurry. The position, not to say the
-condition, in which we found the rosary proves that. Jove! what a pair
-of fools we've been. That rascally shark-charmer has diddled us out of
-the pearls."
-
-Don stared at his friend open-mouthed, yet unable to utter a single word
-either of assent or doubt, so great was the consternation produced in
-his mind by Jack's daring theory as to the disappearance of the pearls,
-and the consequences which must follow if it held good.
-
-"You may take it to be a dead certainty," resumed Jack, following up his
-idea, "that when Salambo actually left the ship, the pearls went with
-him. We made the rascal walk the plank this morning, and he's bound to
-resent that, of course. In fact, the way in which he shook his fist
-at us when he went off in the boat shows that he _did_ resent it. Very
-well, then, there's a readymade motive for you--revenge."
-
-"That's all right," said Don, finding his tongue at last, "I'm not
-boggling over the motive: the value of the pearls is enough motive for
-any nigger. What puzzles me is this: How did he know we had them in our
-possession at all?"
-
-"Why, that's as plain as the nose on your face," replied Jack; "the
-fellow was on shore at the same time we were, was he not?"
-
-"He was."
-
-"Well, then, suppose he saw us buy the shells, watched us open them,
-and, in short, discovered that we had met with a stroke of luck. Then he
-follows us back here--you saw him yourself, didn't you?"
-
-"I did," said Don.
-
-"And you see this, don't you?" dangling the rosary before Don's eyes.
-
-"I do; I'm not blind."
-
-"Then what the dickens more do you want?"
-
-"The pearls," said Don, laughing. "I'm convinced, old fellow, so no
-more palaver. Our business now is to run the shark-charmer down. What's
-the time?"
-
-"Eleven o'clock to the minute."
-
-"And what start of us do you think he has got?"
-
-"It was about nine when we caught him sneaking, and we turned in at
-ten."
-
-"And out again half an hour later. Then the locker must have been rifled
-between ten and halfpast. That would give him, say, forty-five minutes'
-start if we were on his track at this identical moment, which we------
-What was that? I heard a noise overhead."
-
-"Some one at the skylight," said Jack in a whisper. "S-s-sh! I'll slip on
-deck and see who it is."
-
-The skylight referred to was situated directly over the cabin table, so
-that, its sash being then raised some six inches to admit the night air,
-it afforded a ready means of eavesdropping. Springing lightly up the
-cabin steps in his stocking feet, Jack took a cautious survey of the
-deck. The awning had been taken in at nightfall, and a full moon shone
-overhead, making the whole deck as light as day. Close beside the
-skylight, lashed against the cabin, stood a water-butt; and bending
-carelessly over this he saw one of the native crew. Calling out sharply,
-he bade him go forward, and the fellow, muttering some half-audible
-excuse about wanting a drink, slunk away.
-
-"A lascar after water; I don't think he was spying," said Jack, diving
-below again. "All the same, we'll keep an eye aloft; that rascally
-Salambo may have an accomplice among the crew."
-
-"Very likely; but as I was saying," resumed Don, in a lower key, "the
-thief has had ample time to make himself scarce. Now the thing is--how
-are we to nab him?"
-
-"There are the _peons_. * Why not get the guv to set them on the fellow's
-track?"
-
- * Native attendants; pronounced _pewns_.--J..R. H.
-
-"Why, there's just the difficulty," said Don, with a despairing gesture.
-"They all sleep ashore except one or two; and by the time we woke the
-governor, explained matters to him, and got the fellows started, there'd
-be no end of delay. Besides, the rascal would naturally be on the
-look-out for the _peons_, and either give them the slip or bribe them to
-let him off."
-
-"That's so; whatever's done must be done sharp."
-
-"Just what I was going to say," continued Don. "The schooner, you see,
-sails for Colombo in two or three days' time at the most, and it would
-put the governor to no end of inconvenience to despatch half-a-dozen
-_peons_ on an errand like this just now. Fact is, I doubt if he'd do it
-at all, and we might go whistle for our pearls. No, I've a better plan
-than that to propose. There's no need to trouble the guv at all; we'll
-go ashore and capture the thief ourselves."
-
-"Capital!" cried Jack; "I'd like nothing better. When shall we start?"
-
-"At once. There's a bright moon, the fellow has only about an hour's
-start, and with ordinary luck we ought to run him down by daybreak at
-the very----"
-
-"Hist!" said Jack suddenly; "there's some one at the skylight again.
-Wait a minute--I'll soon put an end to his spying."
-
-Clearing the ladder at a bound, he emerged upon the deck before the
-listener was aware of his approach. The spy was actually bending over
-the open skylight. He was there for no good or friendly purpose--that
-was evident.
-
-"You're not after water this time, anyhow," said Jack, hauling him off
-the cabin with scant ceremony. "Didn't I tell you to go forward?
-You'll obey orders next time, perhaps;" and drawing off, he felled him
-to the deck with a single blow.
-
-The lascar picked himself up and scuttled forward, muttering curses
-beneath his breath.
-
-"There," said Jack quietly, as he rejoined those below, "we'll not
-be spied upon again to-night, I fancy. Now, Don, for the rest of your
-plan."
-
-"That's soon told. I propose that we follow the thief at once. The only
-difficulty will be to get on his track."
-
-"Marster going take me?" queried Puggles anxiously.
-
-"Why, of course," said Don; "we couldn't manage without you, Pug."
-
-"Then," said Puggles, grinning, "me soon putting on track; me knowing
-place Salambo sleeping plenty nights."
-
-"Good; there's something in that," said Don. "He is sure to go straight
-to his den on leaving the schooner, though it's hardly likely he'll
-remain there to sleep. Still, he might. 'Twill give us a clue to his
-whereabouts, at all events. And now, Jack, ready's the word."
-
-No time was to be lost, and quietly and quickly their preparations were
-completed. These were by no means extensive: they fully expected to
-return to the schooner by break of day. A revolver, half-a-dozen rounds
-of ammunition, and a few rupees-disposed in their pockets, they stole
-noiselessly on deck. The night was one of breathless calm, and the watch
-lay stretched upon their backs, snoring away the sultry hours of duty.
-Save our three adventurers, not a living thing was astir; not a sound
-broke the stillness of the night; and high overhead the moon floated in
-ghostly splendour.
-
-The boat, as it chanced, lay on that side of the schooner farthest
-from the shore; and in order to shape their course for the beach it was
-necessary to round the vessel's bows. Puggles held the tiller-ropes, but
-in doing this he miscalculated his distance, and ran the boat full tilt
-against the schooners cable.
-
-"Keep her off, Pug!" cried his master in suppressed, half-angry tones.
-"Can't you see where you're steering?"
-
-In the momentary confusion a figure appeared for a moment above the
-schooner's bulwarks. Then a glittering object hurtled through the
-moonlit air and struck the gun'le of the boat immediately abaft the
-thwait on which Jack sat. Jack uttered a stifled cry and dropped his
-oar.
-
-"What's the matter?" said Don impatiently, as the boat swung clear of
-the cable. "Pull, old fellow; we've no time to lose."
-
-"Better lose a little time than one's life," muttered Jack through his
-set teeth. "Look here!"
-
-Turning in his seat Don saw, still quivering in the gun'le of the boat
-where its point had stuck, a sailor's heavy sheath-knife. In its passage
-it had slashed open the shoulder of Jack's coat, grazing the flesh so
-closely as to draw blood--the first shed in the quest of the golden
-pearl.
-
-Jack passed it off with an air of indifference.
-
-"A mere scratch," said he; "but a close shave all the same. The work
-of that treacherous lascar I knocked down a while back. Saw his ugly
-head-piece above the rail just now, don't you know. There's no time to
-pay him out now, but if ever he interferes with me again he'll get his
-knife back, anyhow!" and wrenching the formidable weapon free of the
-plank, he thrust it into his belt and again bent to his oar.
-
-"If that fellow's an accomplice of the shark-charmer, it looks as though
-they meant business," commented Don, seconding his companion's stroke.
-
-"So do we, if it comes to that," was Jacks significant retort,
-
-For some time they pulled in silence, the creaking of the oars in the
-rowlocks and the soft purling of the water about the boat's prow being
-the only sounds audible. When within a couple of hundred yards of the
-gleaming surfline, Don suddenly broke the silence.
-
-"Hold hard, Jack! Do you make out anything astern there--anything black
-on the water?"
-
-"Nothing," said Jack, after a moment's hesitation.
-
-"It's gone now, but I saw it quite plainly. Struck me it looked like a
-man's head. Must have been a dugong."
-
-"Or the lascar," suggested Jack. "He's safe to follow us if he's an
-accomplice."
-
-"Hardly safe with so many sharks about," rejoined Don, "unless his
-master has provided him with an extra potent charm."
-
-Five minutes later, the boat having meanwhile been beached upon the
-deserted sands, Puggles was rapidly "pointing" for the bazaar, where the
-shark-charmer slept o' nights. That they should find him there to-night,
-however, was almost too much to hope. He had probably "made tracks" with
-all speed after securing the pearls. All the same, a visit to the bazaar
-might furnish some clue to his present whereabouts.
-
-"Stop!" said Don, when within fifty yards of the spot. "The whole place
-will be astir in two minutes if we show ourselves, Jack. We'd better
-send Pug on ahead to reconnoitre while we wait here. Do you know the hut
-he usually sleeps in, Pug?"
-
-"Me finding with me eyes shut, sa'b."
-
-"Good! Now listen. Make your way to this hut as quietly as you can, and
-ascertain whether he's there or not. If he's there, don't wake him, but
-come back here as fast as your legs can carry you. If he's not there,
-try and find out where he's gone."
-
-"Put your cloth over your head so he won't recognise you, and say you've
-come on business," put in Jack. "Pretend you want a charm, or something
-of that sort."
-
-"Not a bad idea," assented Don. "You understand, Pug?"
-
-"Me understanding, sa'b."
-
-"Then be off with you, sharp!"
-
-Puggles promptly disappeared.
-
-In the course of ten minutes he returned, accompanied by a native
-muffled from head to heel in a blanket.
-
-"Surely he can't have induced the old fellow to return with him!"
-whispered Jack excitedly.
-
-But in this surmise he was wrong. It was not the shark-charmer.
-
-"Dis one bery nice black man; plenty talk got," said Puggles, by way of
-introduction, when he reached the spot where his master and Jack were
-waiting. "Him telling shark-charmer no here; he going one village."
-
-"Just as I feared," said Don. "How far is it to this village, Pug!"
-
-"Him telling one two legs," replied Puggles, meaning leagues. "Village
-'long shore; marster giving one rupee, dis'black man showing way."
-
-Without further parley the rupee was transferred from Don's pocket to
-the stranger's outstretched palm, and off they started. After following
-the beach for about a mile, their guide turned his back upon the sea and
-struck inland, leading them a tortuous course amid ghostly, interminable
-sand-hills, where the mournful sighing of the night-wind through the
-tall silver-grass, and the howling of predatory jackals, added to the
-weird loneliness of the scene. A blurred furrow in the yielding sand
-formed the only footpath. So slow was their progress that when at last
-the guide pointed out the village a halfmile ahead, Don, on consulting
-his watch, found it to be three o'clock. They had wasted fully two hours
-in walking six miles.
-
-While they were still some little distance short of the village, the
-guide stopped, and pointing out a pool of water which shone like a boss
-of polished silver amid the sand-hills, asked leave to go and slake his
-thirst. His request granted, he disappeared amid the dunes.
-
-"Do you know," said Jack, while they were impatiently awaiting his
-return, "I fancy I've seen that fellow before, though I can't for the
-life of me recall where."
-
-The guide not returning, they at length went in search of him. But Pug's
-"bery nice black man" was nowhere to be seen.
-
-"Looks as if he meant to leave us in the lurch," Jack began, when a
-shout of "Him here got, sa'b!" from Puggles, brought them back to the
-footpath at a run.
-
-The new-comer, however, was not the missing guide, but a stranger. He
-had been belated at the bazaar, he told them, and was now making his
-way home to the village close by. In answer to inquiries concerning the
-shark-charmer, he imparted a startling piece of news.
-
-The shark-charmer had indeed taken his departure from the bazaar,
-but not to this village. He had, the stranger asserted, embarked in a
-coasting vessel bound for the opposite side of the Strait.
-
-Don uttered an exclamation of impatience and dismay.
-
-"He will be safe on the Madras coast by daybreak!" he cried.
-
-"Him there coming from, sa'b," put in Puggles.
-
-"And that lying guide," added Jack savagely, "was an accomplice, left
-behind to throw us off the scent. Don't you remember you saw some one
-swimming after the boat? I'll lay any odds 'twas the lascar. He got
-to the bazaar ahead of us--he could easily manage that, you know,
-by running along the sands--muffled himself up so that I shouldn't
-recognise him, and then led us on this fool's errand while his master
-made off. Well, good-bye to the golden pearl!"
-
-"Not a bit of it!" cried Don resolutely. "I, for one, shan't relinquish
-the quest, come what may. Back we go to the schooner! Then, with the
-governor's consent, we'll go further. Point, Pug!"
-
-Jack seconding this proposal heartily, they rewarded the communicative
-native, and with unflagging determination retraced their steps. By four
-o'clock they had traversed something more than half the distance. The
-dawn star was now high above the eastern horizon. A rosy flush in the
-same quarter warned them that day was rapidly approaching. Suddenly, out
-of the gray distance ahead, a dull booming sound floated to their ears.
-
-"The schooner's signal gun!" exclaimed Don. "Why, it's too early yet
-by a good hour for the boats to put out. What's the governor about, I
-wonder?"
-
-"There it goes again!" cried Jack. "I never knew it to be fired twice of
-a morning, did you?"
-
-"Never," said Don uneasily. "Come, let us get on!"
-
-Off again at their best speed, until at length the heavy path was
-exchanged for the smooth, hard sand of the beach. On this it was
-possible to make better time, and by five o'clock they were within half
-a mile or so of the bazaar. It was now daylight; but a sharp bend in the
-coast-line, and the sand-hills which here rose steeply from the beach
-on their left, as yet concealed both the landing-place and the schooner
-from view.
-
-Puggles, who in spite of his shortness of limb had throughout maintained
-the lead by several rods, suddenly stopped, and fell to shouting and
-gesticulating wildly. Breaking into a run, Don and Jack speedily came up
-with him.
-
-"Look, sa'b, look!" gasped Puggles, pointing down the coast with shaking
-hand.
-
-Far away on the horizon appeared the white canvas of a vessel bowling
-along before the fresh land breeze, with a fleet of fishing-boats
-spreading their fustian-hued wings in her wake.
-
-The spot where our adventurers had last seen the schooner at anchor was
-deserted. She was gone!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.--INTRODUCES BOSIN, AND TELLS HOW CAPTAIN MANGO PROVED
-HIMSELF A TRUMP.
-
-
-|The schooner had sailed!
-
-When the dismay caused by this unlooked-for turn of events had somewhat
-abated, Jack, catching sight of the black boy's lugubrious face, fell to
-laughing heartily.
-
-"After all," said Don, following his chum's example, "it's no use crying
-over spilt milk. I'm not sure but this is the best thing that could have
-happened, Jack."
-
-"My opinion exactly. We began the quest without the guv's knowledge, and
-_nolens volens_ we must continue it without his consent. What's the next
-piece on the programme, old fellow?"
-
-Don pondered for a moment.
-
-"Why, first," said he, "we must ascertain whether that fellow told us
-the truth about the shark-charmer's having gone across the Strait. If
-it turns out that he has, then I'm not exactly clear yet as to what our
-next move will be, though I've an idea. You shall hear what it is later
-on."
-
-"All right," said Jack "whatever course you decide on, I'm with you
-heart and fist, anyhow."
-
-Arrived in the vicinity of the bazaar, Puggles was at once despatched to
-learn what he could of the shark-charmer's movements. In half an hour
-he returned. His report confirmed that which they had already heard.
-The shark-charmer had undoubtedly sailed for the opposite side of the
-Strait.
-
-Throwing himself upon his back in the shade of the banyan tree which
-had witnessed the discovery of the pearls, Don drew his helmet over his
-eyes, and pondered long and deeply.
-
-"Jack," said he at length, "how much money have you?"
-
-Jack turned out his pockets.
-
-"Barely a rupee and a half," said he,
-
-"And I," added Don, turning out his own, "have four and a half."
-
-"Here one rupee got, sa'b," cried Puggles, tugging at his waist-cloth.
-"Me giving him heart and fist, anyhow."
-
-"That makes seven rupees, then," said his master, laughing; "not much to
-continue the quest on, eh, Jack?"
-
-"We'll manage," said Jack hopefully. "But, I say, you haven't told us
-your plans yet, old fellow."
-
-"Oh, our course is as plain as a pikestaff. We'll hire a native boat,
-and follow the shark-charmer across the Strait. The only question is,
-where's enough money to come from?"
-
-"Don't know," said Jack, "unless we try to borrow it in the bazaar."
-
-At this juncture there occurred an interruption which, unlikely though
-it may seem, was destined to lead to a most satisfactory solution of
-this all-important and perplexing question.
-
-While this conversation was in progress Puggles had seated himself at
-a short distance behind his master, and throwing his turban aside,
-proceeded to untie and dress the one tuft of hair which adorned the back
-of his otherwise cleanly shaven head.
-
-Directly above the spot where he sat there extended far out from the
-trunk of the banyan a branch of great size, from which dangled numerous
-rope-like air-roots, which, reaching to-within a few feet of the ground,
-swayed to and fro in the morning breeze. Out along this branch crept a
-large black monkey, which, after taking a cautious survey of Puggles and
-his unconscious neighbours, glided noiselessly down one of the swinging
-roots, and from its extremity dropped lightly to the ground within a
-yard of the discarded turban. Cautiously, with his cunning ferret-eyes
-fastened on the preoccupied Puggles, the monkey approached the coveted
-prize, snatched it up, and with a shrill cry of triumph turned tail and
-fled.
-
-Looking quickly round at the cry, Puggles took in the situation at a
-glance.
-
-"Sa'b! Sar!" he shouted, invoking the aid of both his master and Jack in
-one breath, "one black debil monkey me turban done hooking;" and leaping
-to his feet he gave chase.
-
-"Why," said Jack, "the little beast is making a bee-line for the old
-fort. It must be Bosin, Captain Mango's pet monkey."
-
-"Captain Mango!" cried Don, as though seized with some sudden
-inspiration. "Never thought of him until this minute!" and, clapping on
-his helmet, he set off at a run after Puggles and the monkey.
-
-Away like the wind went the monkey, the stolen turban trailing after him
-through the sand like a great serpent; and away went Puggles, his back
-hair flying. But while Puggles was short of wind, the monkey was nimble
-of foot. The race was, therefore, unequal from the start, its finish
-more summary than satisfactory; for as Puggles ran, with his eyes
-glued upon the scurrying monkey, and his mouth wide-stretched, his foot
-unluckily came in contact with a tree-root, which lay directly across
-his path. Immediately beyond was a bed of fine soft sand, and into this
-he pitched, head foremost. Just then his master came up, with Jack at
-his heels.
-
-"Sa'b! Sar!" spluttered Puggles, knuckling his eyes and spitting sand
-right and left, "debil monkey done stole turban. Where him going, sa'b?"
-
-"Come on, Pug," his master called out as he ran past; "your headgear's
-all right--the monkey's taken it into the fort."
-
-The structure known as "the fort" occupied the summit of a sandy knoll,
-about which grew a thick plantation of cocoanut palms, seemingly as
-ancient as the fort itself. The walls of the enclosure had so crumbled
-away in places as to afford glimpses of the buildings within. These
-were two in number--one an ancient _godown_, as dilapidated as the
-surrounding wall; the other, a bungalow in excellent repair, blazing in
-all the glory of abundant whitewash.
-
-Towards this building, after passing the tumble-down gateway, with its
-turreted side-towers alive with pigeons, Don and his companion shaped
-their course; for this was by no means their first visit to the fort.
-A broad, low-eaved verandah shaded the front of the bungalow, and upon
-this opened two or three low windows and a door. As they drew near
-a shadow suddenly darkened the doorway, and there emerged upon the
-verandah an individual whose pea-jacket and trousers of generous
-nautical cut unmistakably proclaimed him to be a seafaring man. About
-his throat a neckerchief of a deep marine blue was tied in a huge knot;
-while from beneath the left leg of his wide pantaloons there projected
-the end of a stout wooden substitute for the real limb.
-
-On catching sight of his visitors an expression of mingled astonishment
-and pleasure overspread his honest, bronzed features.
-
-[Illustration: 0057]
-
-"Shiver my binnacle!" roared he, advancing with a series of hitches and
-extended hand to meet them. "Shiver my binnacle if it ain't Master Don
-and Master Jack made port again! An' split my topsails, yonder's the
-little nigger swab a-bearin' down under full sail out o' the offin! Lay
-alongside the old hulk, my hearties, an' tell an old shipmate what may
-be the meaning of it all. Where away might the schooner be, I axes?"
-
-"To tell you the truth, Captain Mango," said Don, shaking the old sailor
-by the hand in hearty fashion, "on that point we're as much at sea as
-yourself. We pulled ashore last night on a little matter of business of
-our own--without the skipper's knowledge, you understand--and when we
-returned here this morning the schooner had sailed."
-
-"Shiver my figger-head if ever I hear'd any yarn to beat that!" roared
-the captain, gripping Jack by the hand in turn. "An' d'ye mean to say
-now, as ye ain't atween decks, sound asleep in your bunks, when the
-wessel gets under weigh?"
-
-"Not we," cried Jack, laughing at the captain's puzzled face and earnest
-manner; "we were miles down the coast just then."
-
-"Belay there!" sang out the captain, rubbing his stubbly chin in greater
-perplexity than ever. "Blow me if I'm able to make out what tack you're
-on, lad. For, d'ye see, I lays alongside o' the wessel somewheres
-about eight bells--arter they fires the signal gun, d'ye see--to pay my
-'specks to the master like, and shiver my bulk-head, when I axes what
-might _your_ bearin's be, lads, he ups an' says, 'The younkers be below
-decks,' says he; an' so he weighs anchor, an' shapes his course for
-Colombie."
-
-"It's plain there's been a double misunderstanding," said Don; "_we_
-knew nothing of the guv's intention to sail this morning, and _he_ knew
-nothing of our absence from the schooner. He, of course, thought we were
-below, and so sailed without us. As I hinted just now, we're ashore on
-business of our own. Fact is, we're in a fix, and we want your advice."
-
-"Adwice is it?" cried the captain, leading his visitors indoors; "fire
-away, lads, till I hears what manner o' stuff you wants, and the wery
-best a water-logged old seaman can give ye, ye shall have--shiver my
-figger-head if ye shan't! Howsomedever, afore we lays our heads together
-like, I'll pipe the cook and order ye some wittles." This hospitable
-duty performed, the captain threw himself into a chair with his
-"main-brace," as he jocosely termed his wooden leg, extended before him,
-and, bidding Don proceed with what he had to say, composed himself
-to listen. Whereupon Don recounted the cause and manner of the
-shark-charmer's punishment, the discovery and subsequent loss of the
-pearls, together with their reasons for suspecting the shark-charmer of
-the theft, as well as how they had been tricked by the latter's supposed
-accomplice, and on making their way back to the beach had found, not the
-schooner as they expected, but a deserted roadstead.
-
-"The thief has crossed the Strait, there's no doubt about that," he
-concluded. "_We_ want to hire a boat and go in pursuit of him; but the
-governor's sudden departure has placed us in a dilemma. The fact is,
-captain, we haven't enough cash to----"
-
-"Belay there!" roared the captain, stumping across the room to a
-side-table. "Hold hard, lads, till I has a whiff o' the fragrant!
-Shiver my maintop! there's nothing like tobackie for ilin' up a seaman's
-runnin' gear, says you!"
-
-Filling a meerschaum pipe of high colour and huge dimensions from a
-pouch almost as large as a sailor's bag, the captain reseated himself,
-and for some minutes puffed away in silence.
-
-"Shiver my smokestack!" cried he at last, slapping his thigh
-energetically with his disengaged hand, "the thing's as easy as boxin'
-the compass, lads! You axes me for adwice: my adwice is, up anchor and
-away as soon as ye can. Supplies is low, says you. What o' that? I axes.
-There's a canvas bag in the old sea-chest yonder as'll charter all the
-boats hereabouts, if so be as they're wanted, which they ain't, d'ye
-mind me. Ye can dror on the canvas bag, lads, an' welcome--why not? I
-axes. An' there's as tight a leetle cutter in the boat-house below as
-ever ye clapped eyes on--which the _Jolly Tar's_ her name--what's at
-your sarvice, shiver my main-brace if it ain't! An' blow me, as the
-fog-horn says to the donkey-engine, I'll ship along with ye, lads!"=
-
-````"An' a-sailin' we'll go, we'll go;
-
-````An' a-sailin' we will go-o-o!"=
-
-he concluded, with a stave of a rollicking old sea-song.
-
-"Hurrah! You're a trump, captain, and no mistake!" cried Jack, while Don
-sprang forward and gripped the old sailor's hand with a heartiness that
-showed how thoroughly he appreciated this generous offer.
-
-"Why, y'see, lads," explained the captain apologetically, "'twould be
-ekal to a-sendin' of ye to Davy Jones if I was to let ye go pokin" round
-this 'ere Strait alone. Now me--rope-yarn an' marlin-spikes!--there
-ain't a reef, nor a shool, nor yet a crik atween Colombie an' Jafna
-P'int but what's laid down on this 'ere old chart o' mine," tapping his
-forehead significantly. "An' besides I'm a-spilin' for a bit o' the
-briny, so with you I ships--an' why not? I axes."
-
-"And right glad of your company and assistance we'll be, captain," said
-Don. "The main difficulty will be, of course, to discover to what part
-of the Indian coast the thief has gone."
-
-The captain puffed thoughtfully at his pipe.
-
-"Why, as for that," said he at length, "I've an idee as I knows his
-reckonin', shiver my binnacle if I ain't! But that's neither here nor
-there at this present speakin'. Ballast's the first consideration, lads;
-so dror up your cheers an' tackle the perwisions."
-
-When they had complied with this welcome invitation to the entire
-satisfaction of the captain and their own appetites, "Now, lads," said
-the old sailor gaily, "do ye turn in an' snatch a wink o' sleep, whiles
-I goes an' gets the cutter ready for puttin' to sea. For, says you, look
-alive's the word if so be as we wants to overhaul the warmint as took
-the treasure in tow. Spike my guns!--we'll make him heave to in no
-time!=
-
-```"For all things is ready, an' nothing we want,
-
-````To fit out our ship as rides so close by;
-
-```Both wittles an' weapons, they be nothing scant,
-
-````Like worthy sea-dogs ourselves we will try!"=
-
-Trolling this ditty, the captain stumped away, while his guests made
-themselves as comfortable as they could, and sought the slumber of which
-they stood so much in need.
-
-It was late in the afternoon when they woke. Puggles had disappeared.
-Proceeding to the beach, they found the captain, assisted by a small
-army of native servants, busily engaged in putting the-finishing touches
-to his preparations for the proposed voyage. Just above the surf-line
-lay the _Jolly Tar_--a trim little craft, fitted with mast-and sprit,
-whose sharp, clean-cut lines betokened possibilities in the way of speed
-that promised well for the issue of their enterprise. In the cuddy, amid
-a bewildering array of pots, pans, and pannkins, Puggles had already
-installed himself, his shining face a perfect picture of self-complacent
-good-nature, whilst Bosin, newly released from durance vile, sat in the
-stern-sheets, cracking nuts-and jabbering defiance at his black rival.
-
-"A purty craft!" chuckled the captain, checking for a moment the song
-that was always on his lips, as he led his visitors to the cutters side;
-"stave my water-butt if there's anything can pull ahead of her in these
-'ere parts. Everything shipshape 'an' ready to hand, d'ye see--wittles
-for the woyage, an' drink for the woyagers. Likewise ammunitions o'
-war," cried he proudly, pointing out a number of muskets and shining
-cutlasses, which a servant just then brought up and placed on board.=
-
-```"Bath, wittles an' weapons, they be nothing scant,
-
-```So like worthy sea-dogs ourselves we will try."=
-
-"What with the cutlasses and guns, and the captain's wooden leg, to
-say nothing of our small-arms, Don," said Jack, "we'd better set up for
-buccaneers at once."
-
-"Shiver my main-brace! a wooden leg ain't sich a bad article arter all,"
-rejoined the captain; "specially when a seaman falls overboard. With a
-life-buoy o' that nater rove on to his starn-sheets, he's sartin to keep
-one leg above water, says you."
-
-"No doubt of that, even if he goes down by the head," assented Don,
-laughing. "But, I say, captain, what's in the keg--spirits?"
-
-"Avast there!" replied the captain, half shutting one eye and
-contemplating the keg with the other, "that 'ere keg, lads, has stuff in
-its hold what's a sight better'n spurts. Gunpowder, lads, that's what it
-is; and spike my guns if we don't broach the same to the health of old
-Salambo when we falls in with him. What say you, lads?=
-
-````"We always be ready,
-
-````Steady, lads, steady;
-
-```We'll fight an' we'll conquer agin an' agin."=
-
-"I hope we shan't have to do that, captain," said Jack gravely. "But
-powder or no powder, we'll pay the beggar out, anyhow."
-
-"Right, lad; so we'll just take the keg along with us in case of
-emargencies like. Shiver my compass, there's no telling aforehand what
-this 'ere wenture may lead to."
-
-To whatever the venture was destined to lead, preparations for its
-successful inception went on apace, and by nightfall all was in
-readiness. The captain declaring that he "couldn't abide the ways o'
-them 'ere jabbering nigger swabs when afloat," the only addition to
-their numbers was a single trusty servant of the old sailor's, who was
-taken along rather with a view to the cutter's safety when they should
-be ashore than because his assistance was required in sailing her.
-
-Don having despatched an overland messenger with a letter to his father,
-explaining their absence and proposed undertaking, as the full moon rose
-out of the eastern sea the cutter was launched.
-
-Half an hour later, with her white sails bellying before the freshening
-land-breeze, she bore away for the opposite shore of the Strait, on that
-quest from which one at least of those on board was destined never to
-return.
-
-While her sails were yet visible in the moonlit offing, a native crept
-down to the deserted beach. He was a dark-skinned, evil-featured fellow;
-and the moonlight, falling upon his face, showed his left temple to
-be swollen and discoloured as from a recent blow. On his shoulder he
-carried a paddle-and a boathook.
-
-"The wind will drop just before dawn," he muttered, as he stood a moment
-noting the strength and direction of the breeze. "Then, you white-devil,
-then!" and he patted the boathook affectionately, as if between him and
-it there existed some secret, dark understanding.
-
-Selecting a _ballam_ or "dug-out" from amongst a number that lay there,
-he placed the boathook carefully in the bottom of the frail skiff, and
-launched it almost in the furrow which the cutter's keel had ploughed in
-the yielding sand. Then springing in, and plying his paddle with rapid
-strokes, he quickly disappeared in the cutter's wake.
-
-[Illustration: 0067]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.--THE LASCAR GETS HIS KNIFE BACK.
-
-
-|Her light sails winged to catch every breath of the light but steady
-breeze that chased her astern, the cutter for some hours bowled through
-the water merrily. In the cabin Puggles and the captain's Black servant
-snored side by side; whilst Don and Jack lolled comfortably just abaft
-the mast-, where the night wind, soft and spicy as the breath of Eden,
-would speedily have lulled them to slumber but for the excitement that
-fired their blood. The Captain was at the tiller, Bosin curled up by his
-side.
-
-"If this 'ere wind holds, lads," exclaimed the old sailor abruptly,
-after a prolonged silence on his part, "we'd orter make the island agin
-sunrise, shiver my forefoot if we don't!"
-
-Don looked up with half-sleepy interest. "Island, captain? I thought we
-were heading straight for the Indian coast."
-
-"Ay, so we be, straight away. But, y'see, lad, as I hinted a while back,
-I has a sort o' innard idee, so to say, as the old woman ain't on the
-mainland."
-
-"What old woman?" queried Jack, yawning. "Didn't know there was one in
-the case, captain."
-
-The old sailor burst into a roar of laughter. "An' no more there ain't,
-lad," chuckled he; "an' slit my hammock if we wants one, says you. Forty
-odd year has I sailed the seas, an' hain't signed articles with any on
-'em yet. A tight leetle wessel's the lass for me, lads; for, unship my
-helm! _she_ never takes her own head for it, says you."
-
-"Then what about the old woman you mentioned captain?" said Don
-banteringly.
-
-"Avast there now! An' d'ye mean to say," demanded the captain
-incredulously, "as you ain't ever hear'd tell o' the fish what sails
-under that 'ere name? And a wicious warmint he is, too, shiver my
-keelson! Hysters is his wittles, an' pearls his physic; he lives on 'em,
-so to say; an' so I calls the cove as took them pearls o' your'n in tow
-an old woman; an' why not, I axes?"
-
-"But what about the island you spoke of just now, captain?"
-
-"Why, d'ye see, it's this way, lads; there's an island off the coast
-ahead, a sort o' holy place like, where them thievin' natives goes once
-a year an' gets salwation from their sins. Howsomedever, that's neither
-here nor there, says you; the p'int's this, lads: Somewheres about the
-month o' March, which is this same month, says you, here the priests
-flocks from all parts, an' here they stays until they gets a purty
-pocketful o' cash. Now, my idee's this, d'ye see: the old woman--which
-I means Salambo--lays alongside the schooner an' takes them pearls o'
-your'n in tow. What for? says you. Cash, says I. An' so, shiver my
-main-brace, he shapes his course for this 'ere island, an' sells 'em to
-the priests."
-
-"Very likely," assented Don. "He's bound to carry them to the best
-market, of course."
-
-"And equally of course the best market is where the most priests are. By
-Jove, you _have_ a headpiece, captain!" put in Jack.
-
-"I'm afraid, though," resumed Don, after a moment's silence, "I'm afraid
-it's not going to be so easy to come at the old fellow as we think. You
-say this island's a sort of holy place; well, it's bound to be packed
-with natives to the very surf-line in that case. Rather ticklish work,
-I should think, taking the old fellow among so many pals. There's the
-getting ashore, too; what's to prevent their sighting us?"
-
-"Belay there!" roared the captain, vigorously thumping the bottom of the
-boat with his wooden leg. "Shiver my main-brace! what sort o' craft do
-ye take me for, I axes? A island's a island the world over--a lump o'
-land what's floated out to sea. Wery good, that bein' so--painters an'
-boathooks!--ain't it as easy a-boardin' of her through the starn-ports
-as along o' the forechains?"
-
-"Oh, you mean to make the back of the island, and steal a march on old
-Salambo from the rear, then?" cried Don. "A capital idea!"
-
-"You're on the right tack there, lad," assented the captain. "There's as
-purty a leetle cove at the backside o' that island as ever wessel cast
-anchor in, an' well I knows it, shiver my binnacle! Daylight orter put
-us into it, if so be---- Split my sprit-sail, lads, if it ain't
-a-fallin' calm!"
-
-[Illustration: 0074]
-
-An ominous flapping of the cutter's sails confirmed the captain's words.
-During the half-hour over which this conversation extended the wind
-had gradually died away until scarcely a movement of the warm night
-air could be felt. The cutter, losing her headway, rolled lazily to the
-motion of the long, glassy swell. Consulting his watch, Don announced it
-to be three o'clock.
-
-"This 'ere's the lull at ween the sea-breeze an' the land-breeze,"
-observed the captain complacently, working the tiller from side to side
-as if trying to coax renewed life into the cutter. "How-somedever, it
-hadn't orter last long. Stow my sea-chest!--we'll turn in an' catch a
-wink o' sleep atween whiles. Here, Master Jack, lad! take a turn at the
-tiller, will 'ee?"
-
-Settling himself in the captain's place, with instructions to call that
-worthy sea-dog should the wind freshen, Jack began his first watch.
-Becalmed as they were, the tiller was useless, so he let it swing,
-contenting himself with keeping a bright look-out. But soon he concluded
-even this to be an unnecessary precaution. Not a sail was to be seen on
-the moonlit expanse of ocean; and even had a score been in sight, there
-would still have been no danger whatever, in the absence of wind, of
-their interfering with the cutter. In fine, so secure did he consider
-their position, and so soporific an influence did the comfortable
-snoring of Don and the captain exercise upon him, that in a very short
-time his head sank upon his breast, and he fell asleep.
-
-He had slept soundly for perhaps an hour, when a cold, touch upon the
-cheek startled him into consciousness.
-
-Rousing himself, he found Bosin at his elbow. The monkey for some
-reason had left his masters side, and it was his clammy paw, Jack now
-perceived, that had awakened him. It almost looked as if the monkey had
-purposely interrupted his slumber. But what had roused the monkey? Jack
-rose to his feet, stretched himself, and looked about him.
-
-The night was, if anything, more breathlessly calm than when he had
-relieved the captain. Upon the unruffled, deserted sea the moonlight
-shimmered with a brilliancy uncanny in its ghostliness. From the cutter
-straight away to and around the horizon not an object, so far as he
-could make out, darkened the surface of the water, except under the
-cutter's larboard bow, where the moon-cast shadow of the sail fell.
-He fancied he saw something move there, close under the bow where the
-shadow lay blackest. The next instant it had disappeared.
-
-"All right, Bosin, old chap," said he, stroking the monkeys back; "a
-false alarm this time--back to your quarters, old fellow!"
-
-The monkey, as if reassured by these words, crept away to his master's
-side, whilst Jack resumed his seat, and again dozed off.
-
-Not for long, however. It was not the monkey this time, but a sudden and
-by no means gentle thud against the cutters side that roused him. Awake
-in an instant, he sprang to his feet with a startled exclamation. Close
-under the cutter's quarter lay a canoe, and in the canoe there stood
-erect a native, with what appeared to be a boathook poised above his
-head. All this Jack took in at a glance.
-
-"Boat ahoy! Who's that?" he cried sharply, his hand instinctively
-seeking the knife at his belt.
-
-For answer came a savage, muttered imprecation; and the boathook,
-impelled with all the strength of the native's muscular arms, descended
-swiftly through the air. Starting aside, Jack received the blow' upon
-his left arm, off which the heavy, iron-shod weapon glanced, striking
-the gun'le of the boat with a resounding crash.
-
-"The lascar!" muttered Jack between his teeth, as he stepped back a pace
-and whipped out his knife in anticipation of a renewal of the attack.
-
-But the lascar, baffled in his attempt to take his enemy by surprise,
-did not repeat the blow. Instead, he drew off, and with all his strength
-drove the iron point of the boathook through the cutter's side below the
-water-line.
-
-"By Heaven!" cried Jack, as he perceived his intention, "I'll soon
-settle scores with you, my fine fellow."
-
-Springing lightly upon the gunle, at a single bound he cleared the few
-yards of open water intervening between the cutter and the canoe, and
-with all the impetus of his leap drove the knife into the lascar's
-shoulder up to the very hilt.
-
-The lascar went overboard like a log. The canoe overturning at the same
-instant, Jack followed him.
-
-The noise of the scuffle having roused the sleepers, all was now wild
-commotion on board the cutter; Captain Mango roaring out his strange
-nautical oaths, and stumping hither and thither in search of something
-with which to stop the leak; Don shouting wildly at Jack, as he hastily
-threw off shoes and coat to swim to his assistance. Before either well
-knew what had actually happened, Jack was alongside.
-
-"What's the matter? Are you hurt?" Don inquired anxiously, giving him a
-hand over the side.
-
-"Hurt? No, not a scratch," said Jack lightly, scrambling inboard, and
-proceeding to wring the water from his dripping garments. "A narrow
-squeak, though. That lascar villain has got his knife back, anyhow."
-
-"Who?" cried Don in amazement; for, amid the confusion, neither he nor
-the captain had seen the native.
-
-"The lascar. What else do you suppose I went over the side for? I dozed
-off, you see, captain," said Jack, as the old sailor came stumping up
-with extended hand, "and that lascar dog, who must have seen us sail and
-paddled after us, stole a march on me, and tried to crack my nut with
-a boathook. Lucky for me, he ran his canoe against the side and woke me
-up. Got on my feet just in time to dodge the blow. Then he smashed the
-boathook through the side. By Jove! I forgot that. We must stop the
-leak, or we'll fill in no time."
-
-"Stave my quarter!" roared the captain, detaining him as he was about
-to rush aft. "The leak's stopped, lad; but blow me if ever I hear'd
-anything to beat this 'ere yarn o' your'n, so spin us the rest on it."
-
-"That's soon done," resumed Jack. "When I found the fellow wouldn't give
-me a fair show, I boarded him, captain, and treated him to a few inches
-of cold steel. He won't trouble us again, I reckon!"
-
-Scarcely had he finished speaking when Don gripped his arm and pointed
-to where, a dozen yards away, the bottom of the canoe glistened in the
-moonlight. A dark object had suddenly appeared alongside the overturned
-skiff. Presently a surging splash was heard.
-
-"Shiver my keelson if he ain't righted the craft!" roared the captain,
-snatching up one of the muskets as the lascar was seen to scramble into
-the canoe and paddle slowly away.
-
-Don laid a quick hand upon the old sailor's arm.
-
-"Let the beggar go," said he. "He'll never reach land with that knife in
-him."
-
-"Maybe not, lad," replied the captain, shaking off the hold upon his arm
-and taking the best aim he could, considering the motion of the boat.
-"Bloodshed's best awoided, says you. Wery good; all' the best way to
-awoid it, d'ye mind me, is to send yon warmint to Davy Jones straight
-away. Consequential, the quality o' marcy shan't be strained on
-this 'ere occasion, as the whale says when he swallied the school o'
-codlings." And with that he fired.
-
-The lascar was seen to discontinue the use of his paddle for a moment,
-and then to make off faster than before.
-
-The old sailor's face fell.
-
-"Spike my guns, I've gone and missed the warmint!" said he.
-"Howsomedever, we'll meet again, as the shark's lower jaw says to the
-upper 'un when they parted company to accomidate the sailor. An' blow
-me, lads, here comes the wind!=
-
-```"Ay, here's a master excelleth in skill,
-
-````An' the master's mate he is not to seek;
-
-```An' here's a Bjsin ull do our good will,
-
-````An' a ship, d'ye see, lads, as never had leak.
-
-```So lustily, lustily, let us sail forth!
-
-```Our sails he right trim an' the wind's to the north!"=
-
-It was now five o'clock, and as day broke the cutter, with a freshening
-breeze on her starboard quarter, bore away for the island, now in full
-view. When about a mile short of it, however, the captain laid the
-boat's head several points nearer the wind, and shaped his course as
-though running past it for the mainland, which lay like a low bank of
-mist on the horizon. In the cuddy Puggles was busy with preparations for
-breakfast, whilst Don lolled on the rail, watching the shore, and idly
-trailing one hand in the water.
-
-"Hullo! what's this?" he exclaimed suddenly, examining with interest
-a fragment of dripping cloth that had caught on his hand. "Jack, come
-here!"
-
-Jack happened to be forward just then, hanging out his drenched clothes
-to dry upon an improvised line, but hearing Don's exclamation, he sprang
-aft. Somehow he was always expecting surprises now.
-
-"Look here," said Don, rapidly spreading out the soaked cloth upon his
-knee, "have you ever seen this before?"
-
-"Not likely!--a mere scrap of rag that some greasy native----" Jack
-began, eyeing the said scrap of rag contemptuously. But suddenly his
-tone changed, and he gasped out: "By Jove, old fellow, it's not the
-handkerchief, is it?"
-
-"The very same!" replied-Don, rising and hurrying aft to where the
-captain stood at the tiller. "I say, captain, you remember my telling
-you how I tied a handkerchief round that bag of pearls? Well, here's the
-identical 'wipe.' with my initials on it as large as life. Just fished
-it out of the water."
-
-For full a minute the old sailor stared at him open-mouthed. Then:
-"Flush my scuppers," roared he, "if this 'ere ain't the tidiest piece o'
-luck as ever I run agin. We've got the warmint safe in the maintop, so
-to say, where he can't run away--shiver my main-brace if we ain't!"
-
-"Thanks to your clear head, captain," said Don. "It certainly does look
-as if he had come straight to the island here."
-
-"We'll purty soon know for sartin; we're a-makin' port hand over fist,"
-rejoined the captain, bringing the cutter's head round, and running
-under the lee of the island.
-
-This side, unlike the wind-swept seaward face, was thickly clad in
-jungle, above which at intervals towered a solitary palm like a sentinel
-on duty. No traces of human habitation were to be seen; for a rocky
-backbone or ridge, running lengthwise of the island, isolated its
-frequented portion from this jungly half. Midway between the extremities
-of this ridge rose two hills: one a symmetrical, cone-shaped elevation,
-clad in a mantle of jungle green; the other a vast mass of naked rock,
-towering hundreds of feet in air, and in its general-outline somewhat
-resembling a colossal kneeling elephant. As if to heighten the
-resemblance, there was perched upon the lofty back a native temple,
-which looked for all the world like a gigantic howdah.
-
-"D'ye see them elewations, lads?" cried the captain, heading the cutter
-straight for what-appeared to be an unbroken line of jungle. "A. brace
-o' twins, says you. Wery good; atween 'em lies as purty a leetle cove as
-wessel ever cast anchor in--slip my cable if it ain't!"
-
-"Are you sure you're not out of your reckoning, captain?" said Jack,
-scanning the shore-line with dubious eye. "It's no thoroughfare, so far
-as I can see."
-
-"Avast there! What d'ye say to that, now?" chuckled the captain, as the
-cutter, in obedience to a movement of the tiller, swept round a tiny
-eyot indistinguishable in its mantle of green from, the shore itself,
-and entered a narrow, land-locked creek, whose precipitous sides were
-completely covered from summit to water-line with a rank growth of
-vegetation. "Out with the oars, lads! a steam-whistle couldn't coax a
-wind into the likes o' this place, says you."
-
-The oars run out, they pulled for some distance through this remarkable
-rift in the hills, the cutter's mast in places sweeping the overhanging
-jungle; until at last a spot was reached where a side ravine cleft the
-cliff upon their left, terminating at the water's edge in a strip of
-sandy beach, thickly shaded with cocoa-nut palms.
-
-"Stow my cargo!" chuckled the captain, as he ran the cutter bow-on into
-the sand, "a nautical sea-sarpent himself couldn't smell us out here,
-says you. So here we heaves to, and here we lies until----swabs an'
-slush-buckets, what's this?"
-
-For the captain had already scrambled ashore, and as he uttered these
-words he stooped and intently examined the sand at his feet. In it were
-visible recent footprints, and a long trailing furrow that started from
-the water's edge and ran for several yards straight up the beach. Where
-the furrow terminated there lay a native _ballam_.
-
-Jack was first to espy the canoe. Guessing the cause of the captain's
-sudden excitement, he ran up the sands to the spot where the rude vessel
-lay. The _ballam_ was still dripping sea-water; and in it, amid a pool
-of blood, lay a sailors sheath-knife.
-
-"The lascar!" he shouted, snatching up the blood-stained weapon, and
-holding it out at arms length, as Don and the captain hurried up; "we've
-landed in his very tracks!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.--IN THE THICK OF IT.
-
-
-|Either the lascar's wound had not proved as serious as Jack surmised,
-or the fellow was endowed with as many lives as a cat. At all events, he
-had reached land before them, and in safety.
-
-"Sharks an' sea-sarpents!" fumed the captain, Stumping excitedly round
-and round the canoe. "The warmint had orter been sent to Davy Jones as I
-ad wised. Howsomedever, bloodshed's best awoided, says you, Master Don,
-lad; an' so, shiver my keelson! here we lies stranded. What's the course
-to be steered now, I axes? That's a matter o' argyment, says you; so
-here's for a whiff o' the fragrant!"
-
-Bidding his servant fetch pipe and tobacco, the captain seated himself
-upon the canoe and fell to puffing meditatively, his companions
-meanwhile discussing the situation and a project of their own, with
-many anxious glances in the direction of the adjacent jungle, where,
-for anything they knew to the contrary, the lascar might even then be
-stealthily watching their movements.
-
-"Shiver my smokestack! d'ye see that, now?" exclaimed the captain at
-last, following with half-closed eye and tarry finger the ascent of a
-perfect smoke-ring that had just left his lips. "An' what's a ring o'
-tobackie smoke? says you. A forep'intin' to ewents to come,
-says I. A ring means surrounded, d'ye see; an'--grape-shot an'
-gun-swabs!--surrounded means fightin', lads!"
-
-"Fun or fighting, I'm ready, anyhow!" cried Jack, flourishing his knife.
-
-"Ay, ay, lad; an' me, too, for the matter o' that," replied the old
-sailor, presenting his pipe at an imaginary foe like a pistol; "but when
-our situation an' forces is beknownst to the enemy, we're sartin to be
-surprised, d'ye mind me. An' so I gets an idee!=
-
-```"Go palter to lubbers an' swabs, d'ye see?
-
-````'Bout danger, an' fear, an' the like;
-
-```A tight leetle boat an' good sea-room give me,
-
-````An' it ain't to a leetle I'll strike!"=
-
-"Out with the idea then, captain!" cried Don.
-
-"Shiver my cutlass, lads!--we must carry the war into the camp o' the
-enemy, dye see'. Wery good, that bein' so, what we wants, d'ye mind me,
-is a safe, tidy place to fall back on, as can't be took, or looted, or
-burnt, like the cutter here, whiles we're away on the rampage, so to
-say."
-
-"Why not entrench ourselves on the hill just above?" suggested Jack.
-
-"Stow my sea-chest!--the wery identical plan I perposes," promptly
-replied the captain. "An' why? you naterally axes. Because it's ha'nted,
-says I."
-
-"Because it's what?" cried the two young men in chorus. "Haunted?"
-
-"Ay, the abode o' spurts," continued the captain. "There's a old
-ancient temple aloft on yon hill, d'ye see, as they calls the 'Ha'nted
-Pagodas'--which they say as it's a tiger-witch or summat inhabits it,
-d'ye see--an' shiver my binnacle if a native'll go a-nigh it day or
-night!"
-
-"Admirable! But what about the cutter, captain?" said Don.
-
-The captain sucked for a moment at his pipe as if seeking to draw a
-suitable idea therefrom.
-
-"What o' the cutter? you axes," said he presently. "Why, we'll wrarp her
-down the crik a bit, d'ye see, an' stow her away out o' sight where the
-wegitation's thickish-like on the face o' the cliff; copper my bottom if
-we won't!"
-
-"The stores, of course, must be carried up the hill," said Jack,
-entering readily into the captain's plans. "We should set about the job
-at once."
-
-"Avast there, lad! What's to perwent the jungle hereabouts a-usin' of
-its eyes? I axes. The wail o' night, says you. So, when the wail o'
-night unfurls, as the poic says, why, up the hill they goes."
-
-This being unanimously agreed to, and Puggles at that moment announcing
-breakfast, our trio of adventurers adjourned to the cutter.
-
-"Captain," said Don, after delighting the black boy's heart by a
-ravenous attack upon the eatables, "like you, I've got an idee--Hullo,
-you, Pug! What are you grinning at?"
-
-"Nutting, sa'b," replied Puggles, clapping his hand over his mouth;
-"only when marster plenty eating, he sometimes bery often one idee
-getting. Plenty food go inside, he kicking idee out!"
-
-"Just double reef those lips of yours, Pug, and tell us where do _your_
-ideas come from?" said Jack, laughing.
-
-"Me tinking him here got, sar," said Puggles, gravely patting his
-waistband, at which the old sailor nearly choked.
-
-"And a pretty stock of them you have, too, judging by the size of your
-apple-cart!" said his master, shying a biscuit at his head. "Well, as I
-was saying, captain, I have an idea----"
-
-"Flush my scuppers!" gasped the old sailor, swallowing a brimming
-pannikin of coffee to clear his throat. "Let's hear more on it then,
-lad."
-
-"Well, it's this. Jack and I are going over to the town--where the
-temples are, you understand--to see if we can't sight old Salambo. A bit
-of reconnoitring may be of use to us later, you see."
-
-"A-goin'--over--to--the--town!" roared the captain in amazement,
-separating the words as though each were a reluctant step in the
-direction proposed. "Scuttle my cutter, lads! ye'll have the whole pack
-o' waimints down on ye in a brace o' shakes!"
-
-"You won't say so when you see us in full war-paint," retorted Jack, as
-he and Don rose and disappeared in the cuddy.
-
-In the course of half an hour the cuddy door was thrown open, and
-two stalwart young natives, in full country dress, confronted the old
-sailor. With the assistance of Puggles and the captain's "boy," not to
-mention soot from the cuddy pots, the two young fellows had cleverly
-"made up" in the guise of Indian pilgrims. At first sight of them, the
-captain, thinking old Salambo's crew were upon him, seized a musket and
-threw himself into an attitude of defence.
-
-"Blow me!" he roared, when a loud burst of laughter apprised him of
-his mistake, "if this ain't the purtiest go as ever I see. Scrapers an'
-holystones, ye might lay alongside the old woman himself, lads, an' him
-not know ye from a reglar, genewine brace o' lying niggers. What tack
-are ye on now, lads? I axes."
-
-"Off to the town, captain," replied Don, "to search for old Salambo
-among his idols. That is, if you'll let Spottie here come with us as
-pilot."
-
-"Spottie" was the nickname with which they had dubbed the captain's
-black servant, whose face was deeply pitted from smallpox.
-
-"Right, lads; he's been here afore, an' knows the lay o' the land; so
-take him in tow, and welcome," was the captain's hearty rejoinder. "An'
-stow your knives away amidships, in case of emargency like; though blow
-me if they ever take ye for aught but genewine lying niggers!"
-
-Concealing their knives about their persons in accordance with this
-advice, they launched the lascar's _ballam_ upon the creek--which the
-captain assured them expanded a little further inland into a broad
-lagoon, too deep to ford--and so set out.. The paddle had been removed;
-but as the creek appeared to have nowhere, in its upper reaches at
-any rate, a greater depth than half-a-dozen feet, the boathook served
-admirably as, a substitute for propelling the canoe.
-
-"What's the line for, Spottie?" Jack asked, seeing their guide throw a
-coil of small rope into the canoe, which he afterwards boarded in person
-and shoved off.
-
-"Turkle, sar," replied Spottie. "Plenty time me catching big turkle
-asleep on sand. He no come in _ballam_, so me taking rope to tow him
-astern. Him bery nice soup making, sar," said Spottie, who had always an
-eye to anything.
-
-Little as they guessed it then, this line was to play a more unique
-and serviceable part in the day's adventures than that indicated by the
-soup-loving Spottie.
-
-The creek, as the captain had intimated, presently expanded into a
-lagoon fully a quarter of a mile wide, and so shallow in parts that
-the canoe almost touched the amber-coloured sands over which it passed.
-Arrived at the further side, they drew the canoe upon the beach, and
-continued their route to the town by way of a steep jungle-path, which,
-in the course of some fifteen minutes' hard climbing, led them to the
-crest of the rocky ridge. Here they paused a moment to look about them.
-
-To the left lay Haunted Pagoda Hill; on their right the colossal
-Elephant Rock; and, nestling at its base, the native town, with its sea
-of dun roofs and gleaming white temples. The stirring ramp of tom-toms,
-and the hoarse roar of the multitude, floated up to them as they stood
-contemplating the scene.
-
-"Now for it!" cried Jack, heading the descent. "We'll soon be in the
-thick of it, anyhow."
-
-A few minutes more and they stood on the outskirts of the town.
-
-"Make for the chief temple, Spottie," said Don to their guide; "and
-whatever you do, don't call us sahib or sir. We're only pilgrims like
-yourself, you understand. And say, Spottie, do you know old Salambo, the
-shark-charmer, when you see him?"
-
-By a nod Spottie intimated that he did.
-
-"Good! He's the chap we're after, you understand. Keep a sharp look-out,
-and if you happen to get your eye on him----"
-
-"Or on a lascar with a knife-wound in his shoulder," put in Jack.
-
-"Just pull my cloth, will you?" concluded Don.
-
-Again the trusty Spottie nodded, and at a signal led the way into the
-main-street, where they immediately found themselves in the midst of a
-noisy, surging crowd of natives.
-
-So perfect was their disguise, however, that Don could not detect a
-single suspicious glance directed towards them.
-
-The natives who thronged the street were, to a man, heading for the
-temples. Into these, if nothing was seen of the shark-charmer outside,
-Don was resolved to penetrate.
-
-As no English foot is ever allowed--in Southern India, at least--to
-cross the threshold of a Hindu shrine, this was a step attended with
-tremendous risk. Detection would mean fighting for their lives against
-overwhelming odds.
-
-"We'll do it, however," said Don resolutely. "The temple's the place to
-look for him, since he's a priest, and in this disguise the pearls are
-worth the risk."
-
-That this was also Jack's opinion was plain from the resolute,
-nonchalant manner in which he pressed forward.
-
-Owing to the congested state of the thoroughfare, progress was
-necessarily slow. They were more than an hour in gaining the open
-_maidan_ in which the street terminated.
-
-In the centre of this open space lay a sacred tank, flanked, on that
-side nearest the Elephant Rock, by a vast semicircle of temples. Midway
-in this line stood the chief temple. Here, if at all, the shark-charmer
-would most likely be found.
-
-But to reach the chief temple was no easy task. Vast crowds of pilgrims
-surrounded the sacred tank, awaiting their turn to bathe in its stagnant
-green waters.
-
-At last, after much elbowing and pushing, they reached the steps of the
-chief temple. Thus far they had seen nothing of Salambo. As they had
-already made the entire circuit of the tank, there was nothing for it
-but to seek him in the sacred edifice itself.
-
-Spottie led the way, since for him there was absolutely no risk.
-Following close upon his heels, past the hideous stone monsters which
-flanked the entrance, the mock pilgrims found themselves in the temple
-court. Here the crush was even greater than without.
-
-They had now reached the crucial point of their adventure.
-
-A single unguarded word or action on their part, and each man of these
-teeming thousands would instantly become a mortal enemy!
-
-Don strove to appear unconcerned, but his pulses throbbed madly at the
-mere thought of detection. As for Jack, the careless poise of his right
-hand at his belt showed him to be on his guard, though he looked as cool
-as a sea-breeze.
-
-Over the heads of the multitude, on the opposite side of the court,
-could be seen an inner shrine, where offerings were being made.
-Selecting this as his goal, Don began to edge his way slowly but
-steadily towards it, closely followed by Spottie and the undaunted Jack.
-
-Suddenly he felt a hand tugging at his cloth. Unable to turn himself
-about in the crush, he twisted his head round and caught Spottie's eye.
-By a quick, almost imperceptible movement of hand and head, the black
-directed his attention towards the left. Looking in the direction thus
-indicated, Don saw, but a few yards away, the portly person of the
-shark-charmer.
-
-By dint of persistent pushing, he presently succeeded in approaching so
-near to his man that, had he so wished, he could have laid a hand upon
-his shoulder.
-
-The shark-charmer was evidently bent upon gaining the inner shrine
-at the opposite side of the court. Inch by inch he pummelled his way
-through the dense crowd, unconscious that the sahibs whom he had robbed
-were dogging his steps. Once when he turned his head his eyes actually
-rested upon Don's face. But he failed to recognise him, and so went on
-again, greatly to Don's relief.
-
-Then of a sudden the limit of the crush was reached, and they emerged
-upon a comparatively clear space immediately in front of the shrine.
-This the shark-charmer crossed without hesitation, but Don hung back,
-uncertain whether it would be prudent to venture further. However,
-seeing a group of natives about to approach the shrine with offerings,
-he joined them, and in company with Jack ascended the steps.
-
-The shark-charmer had already disappeared within.
-
-Fumbling in his cloth for some small coin, to present as an offering,
-Don crossed the threshold, and was in the very act of penetrating the
-dimly lighted, incense-clouded chamber just beyond, when a guarded
-exclamation from Jack caused him to glance quickly over his shoulder.
-
-Following them with the stealthy tread of a panther was a swarthy,
-evil-looking native.
-
-"The lascar!" said Jack, in a low, breathless whisper. "Back, old
-fellow, for your life! Once in the crowd, we're safe."
-
-[Illustration: 0099]
-
-Back they darted towards the entrance, but the lascar, anticipating this
-manouvre, was on his guard. As Jack dashed past, the cunning spy thrust
-out his foot and sent him sprawling on the flagstones. Don, hearing
-the noise, turned back to his friend's assistance, and by the time Jack
-regained his feet the lascar had reached the entrance mid raised the
-hue-and-cry.
-
-"This way!" cried Don, making for a narrow side door, as the lascar's
-shouts began to echo through the precincts of the temple. "Get your
-knife ready, he's raised the alarm!"
-
-Through the door they dashed, only to find themselves in the court,
-hemmed in on every side. The frenzied cries of the lascar continued to
-ring through the enclosure; but, fortunately for the mock pilgrims, so
-vast was the concourse of natives, and so deafening the uproar, that
-only those nearest the shrine understood, his words, while even they
-failed, as yet to penetrate the clever disguise of the intruders. This
-gave them time to draw breath, and look about them.
-
-Close, on their left Jack's quick eye discovered an exit, about which
-the crowd was less dense than elsewhere. The great doors stood wide
-open, disclosing a narrow street. Between this exit and the spot where
-they stood at bay, a number of sacred bulls were quietly feeding off a
-great heap of corn which the devotees had poured out upon the flags of
-the court. All this Jack's eyes took in at a glance.
-
-A roar, terrific as that of ten thousand beasts of prey, burst from the
-surging multitude. The lascars words were understood. Glancing quickly
-over his shoulder, Jack saw that this man, from his place upon the steps
-of the shrine, was pointing them out.
-
-Another instant, and their disguise would avail them nothing; the
-maddened, fanatical crowd would be upon them.
-
-"Don," he said, in rapid, husky tones, as he grasped his friend's hand
-for what he believed to be the last time, "there's but one chance left
-us, and that's a slim one. You see the door on our left, and those
-bulls? Do you take one of the two big fellows feeding side by side, and
-I'll take the other. Use your knife to guide the brute, and with God's
-help----"
-
-A tremendous roar of voices and a thunderous rush-of feet cut his words
-short.
-
-"Now for it, old fellow!"
-
-With one swift backward glance at the furious human wave sweeping down
-upon them, they darted towards the bulls, of which the two largest,
-accustomed to the daily tumult of town and temple, were still composedly
-feeding, their muzzles buried deep in the mound of corn.
-
-Before the animals had time to lift their heads, the mock pilgrims were
-on their backs and plying knives and heels upon their sleek flanks.
-
-Bellowing with pain and terror, the bulls, with tails erect and heads
-lowered, charged the throng about the doorway, bowling them over in all
-directions like so many ninepins. Before the infuriated crowd in their
-rear understood the meaning of this unexpected manoeuvre, the mock
-pilgrims were in the street.
-
-It was a side street, fortunately, separated from the densely-packed
-_maidan_ by a high brick wall, and but few natives were about. Those
-who followed them out of the temple, too, they soon distanced, for their
-ungainly steeds made capital time.
-
-But now a new, if less serious, danger menaced them. Apart from the
-difficulty of clinging to the round, arched backs of the bulls, once
-started, the maddened animals could not be stopped. Fortunately, they
-took the direction of the hill-path.
-
-On they tore, bellowing madly, and scattering showers of foam and sand
-right and left, until, in an amazingly brief space of time, they reached
-the outskirts of the town. Here, as if divining that their services were
-no longer required, the bulls stopped abruptly, shooting their riders
-off their backs into the sand with scant ceremony.
-
-"Regular buck-jumpers!" groaned Jack, rubbing his lacerated shins
-ruefully. "Glad we're safe out of it, anyhow."
-
-"So am I. But I wonder where Spottie is?" said Don, fanning himself with
-the loosened end of his turban.
-
-Jack started up. "Never once thought of Spottie since we entered the
-shrine," cried he. "Come, we must go back and look him up."
-
-Their uneasiness on Spottie's account, however, was at that instant set
-at rest by the precipitate appearance on the scene of Spottie himself.
-Seeing his masters charge the crowd on the bulls' backs, he had
-extricated himself from the crush, and followed them with all possible
-speed.
-
-"Dey coming, sar!" he panted, as he ran up, "Lascar debil done fetching
-plenty black man!"
-
-And there swelled up from the street below a tumult of voices that left
-no doubt as to the accuracy of his statement.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.--"FUN OR FIGHTING, I'M READY, ANYHOW!"
-
-
-|Dey coming, sar!" groaned Spottie; and even as he spoke the leaders of
-the mob came tearing round the corner.
-
-"Is it fight or run, Don?" said Jack quietly, adjusting his turban with
-one hand and laying the other significantly upon his knife.
-
-"No two ways about that! We could never stand against such odds; so we'll
-run first and fight afterwards."
-
-"And reverse the old saying, eh?" laughed Jack. "I should dearly love to
-have a whack at them; but if you say run, why--run it is, so here goes!"
-
-Shaking his fist at the howling mob, he sprang up the steep hill-path,
-followed closely by Don. Spottie had already made good use of his legs,
-but they soon caught him up, whereupon Jack seized the terrified native
-by the arm and dragged him over the brow of the ridge.
-
-Down the further side they dashed, breathing easier now, for their
-movements were here well concealed by the dense jungle through which the
-pathway ran. As they emerged panting upon the sandy shore of the lagoon,
-a yell from the hill behind told them that their pursuers had gained
-the crest of the ridge. At the same instant Don pulled up abruptly, and
-being too much out of breath to speak, pointed in the direction of the
-canoe. Beside it stood a couple of natives, who, on seeing them, turned
-and fled towards the jungle.
-
-"The tall fellow!" shouted Jack. "Stop him! He's got the boathook!"
-
-The boathook was their only means of propelling the canoe. That gone,
-they were practically at the mercy of their enemies.
-
-After the flying natives they dashed, Jack leading. He quickly came up
-with the hinder-most, whom he dealt a blow that stretched him senseless
-in the sand. But the fellow who carried the boathook was long of leg and
-fresh of wind; while Jack was still a dozen yards in his rear, he gained
-the jungle and disappeared.
-
-"No good!" groaned Jack, as he relinquished the pursuit and turned back.
-"There's nothing for it but to fight. I say, Don, what's up?"
-
-Don lay sprawling in the sand.
-
-"Tripped over that lazy beast," said Don, picking himself up and aiming
-a kick at an enormous turtle which was already heading for the water.
-
-"Him bery nice soup making, sar!" cried Spottie, rubbing his brown hands
-unctuously. But just then a fierce tumult of voices, rolling down from
-the jungle path, put other thoughts than soup into Spottie's pate.
-
-"The rope! Fetch the rope, Spottie!" cried Jack, throwing himself on the
-turtle's back.
-
-Don dragged him off.
-
-"Come away!" cried he. "There's no time to fetch that beast along. Are
-you out of your senses?"
-
-Jack's only reply was to snatch the rope from Spottie's hands, rapidly
-reeve a running knot at one end, and slip the loop around the body of
-the giant chelonian, which had by this time reached the water's edge.
-
-All this had occupied much less time than it takes to relate.
-
-The shouts of the mob now sounded ominously near. Without loss of time
-the canoe was launched, and at once Jack's purpose became apparent.
-
-Seating himself in the bow of the canoe, he drew in the slack of the
-rope until the turtle was within easy reach, and, holding it firmly so,
-prodded it with his knife. This was a cruel act, but the stern necessity
-of the moment outweighed all other considerations.
-
-The turtle at once began making frantic efforts to escape from its
-tormentor; and as its weight could not have been less than three or four
-hundred pounds, and its strength in proportion, it easily and rapidly
-drew the canoe through the water.
-
-In a few minutes they were a stone's throw from shore--and not a moment
-too soon, for at that instant the mob of natives rushed out of the
-jungle path, and finding themselves outwitted, gave utterance to a
-furious howl of disappointment and rage.
-
-The canoe, thanks to the efforts of the turtle, was soon so far from
-shore that Jack considered it safe to alter their course and steer for
-the creek. No sooner did he do so than the natives set off at a run in
-the same direction.
-
-"Dey there canoe got, maybe," observed Spottie, who had now recovered
-from his fright.
-
-"In that case we may have some fun yet," laughed Jack, lashing the
-turtle with the rope's end, as if anxious to be in time for the
-anticipated sport.
-
-By the time the creek was reached, however, not a native was to be seen;
-so, congratulating themselves on having given their pursuers the slip,
-they reached the cutter.
-
-Here the old sailor, to say nothing of Puggles, was most anxiously
-watching for their return.
-
-"Shiver my mizzen!" shouted he, as they ran under the cutter's stern;
-"ha' ye gone an' took a mermaid in tow, lads?"
-
-"No; one of Spottie's turkles has taken us in tow, captain," replied
-Jack, setting the turtle free with a slash of his knife, in spite of
-Spottie's protestations that the creature would make "bery nice soup."
-
-"Ugh, you cannibal!" he added, with a glance of disgust at the black's
-chagrined face, "you wouldn't eat the beast after he has saved your
-life, would you?"
-
-"Belay there! what's this 'ere yarn about the warmint a-savin' o' your
-lives, lads?" sang out the captain. "Hours ago," continued he, as the
-two young men, leaving Spottie to beach the canoe, scrambled on board
-the cutter, "hours ago I says to myself, 'Mango, my boy,' says I, 'may
-I never set tooth to salt junk agin if they younkers ain't all dead men
-afore this.' says I. Howsomedever, here ye be safe an' sound; so let's
-hear the whole on it, lads."
-
-In compliance with this request Don began to relate the adventures which
-had befallen them since morning; but scarcely had he got fairly launched
-upon his narrative, when:
-
-"Sharks an' sea'-sarpents!" interrupted the captain, rising to his feet
-with a lurch, and pointing up the creek, "what sort o' craft's this 'ere
-a-bearin' down on us? I axes."
-
-A canoe, laden to the water's edge with natives, appeared round a bend
-in the creek. Presently other canoes, to the number of half-a-dozen,
-hove in sight in rapid succession, whose occupants, perceiving their
-approach to be discovered, set up a shout that made the cliffs ring.
-
-"Spottie was right," cried Jack, catching up a musket, while Don and the
-captain followed suit; "they've found canoes, and mean to board us."
-
-"Fire my magazine, but we'll give 'em a right warm welcome, then," said
-the captain. "Look to the primin', lads, an' hold hard when I says fire,
-for blow me, these 'ere old muskets kicks like a passel o' lubberly
-donkeys, d'ye see!"
-
-"Captain," Don hastily interposed, "why not draw the bullets and load
-up with shot? The canoes are so deep in the water that a smart volley of
-shot right into the midst of the rascals is sure to make them flop over.
-We've just time to do it."
-
-This suggestion tickled the captain immensely, and without delay the
-change was made. The canoes were now within easy range.
-
-"Ready, lads," cried the captain:=
-
-````"We always be ready,
-
-````Steady, lads, steady!
-
-```We'll fight an' we'll conquer agin and agin!"=
-
-Up went the muskets. At sight of them the natives rested on their oars,
-or rather paddles, and the canoes slowed down.
-
-"Fire!"
-
-The cliffs trembled beneath the treble report. Jack, who in his
-excitement had forgotten the captain's caution, went sprawling backwards
-over the thwarts.
-
-"Ho, ho, ho! flint-locks an' small-shot, a wolley's the thing, lads,"
-roared the captain, pointing up the creek as the smoke rolled, away.=
-
-```"We ne'er see our foes but we wants 'em to stay,
-
-```An' they never see us but they wants us away;
-
-```When they runs, why, we follows an' runs 'em ashore,
-
-```For if they won't fight us, we can't do no more!"=
-
-The "wolley" had told. Driven frantic by the stinging shot, the
-natives had leapt to their feet and overturned four out of the seven
-deeply-laden canoes, whose late occupants were now struggling in the
-water.
-
-"They've a softer berth of it than I, anyway," said Jack from the bottom
-of the boat, as he rubbed his shoulder ruefully. "I shall get at the
-muzzle end of your thundering old blunderbuss next time, captain. Hullo,
-there's that rascally----"
-
-The remainder of the exclamation was drowned in the creek, for as he
-uttered it Jack took a header over the stern.
-
-"Shift my ballast, what's the young dog arter now? I axes," cried the
-captain, gazing aghast at the spot where Jack had disappeared.
-
-His speedy reappearance solved the riddle. By the queue he grasped a
-dripping, half-naked native, whom he dragged after him to the beach. It
-was the lascar.
-
-"Hurrah! he's got him this time," shouted Don, leaping out upon the
-sands to lend a hand in landing the prize.
-
-At first the lascar struggled fiercely for liberty; but as Jack was by
-no means particular to keep his head above water, he soon quieted down,
-and presently, with Dons assistance, was hauled out on the sands, where
-he fell on his knees and began whining piteously for mercy.
-
-"Your revolver, Don," gasped Jack, with a watery side-wink at his
-friend. "He shall tell us what he knows of the pearls, or die like the
-dog he is."
-
-Don placed the revolver in his hand, ready cocked. The lascar grovelled
-in the sand.
-
-"Sa'b, sa'b!" he whined, "you no shoot, me telling anyting."
-
-"No doubt you will," replied Jack significantly, pressing the muzzle of
-the weapon to his forehead; "but what I want is the truth. Now, then,
-has old Salambo sold the pearls yet? Come, out with it!"
-
-"He n-n-no selling, sa'b," stammered the terrified native, shrinking as
-far away from the pistol as Jack's hold on his queue would permit "Where
-are they, then? Come, look sharp!"
-
-"He d-d-done hiding in Elephant Rock, s-s-sa'b," confessed the lascar,
-apparently on the point of fainting with terror.
-
-"Don! Captain! Do you hear that?" cried Jack, half-turning, in the
-excitement produced by this disclosure, towards his friends. "He says
-old Salambo's hid the pearls in the ---- ------ Phew!"
-
-He stopped, with a shrill whistle of dismay. By a quick upward stroke
-of his arm the lascar had sent the revolver spinning, and at the same
-instant wrenched himself free from his captor's grasp. Ere Jack could
-stir hand or foot, he had plunged headlong into the creek.
-
-"Let him go," said Jack tranquilly, as the water closed over the
-fellow's heels; "we've got an important clue out of him, anyhow."
-
-The captain slowly lowered the musket he had raised for a shot at
-the fugitive should he comet to the surface within range, and said
-approvingly:
-
-"Right, lad! Spike my guns, I've heard tell as how that 'ere Elephant
-Rock's riddled from main-deck to keelson, so to say, with gangways, and
-air-wents, an' sich. Howsomedever, that's matter for arter reflection,
-as the whale said to himself when he swallied Jonah. The warmints astarn
-there"--indicating that part of the creek where the occupants of the
-canoes had taken their involuntary bath--"the warmints astarn ha'
-sheered off a p'int or two; so now, lads, let's tackle the perwisions
-afore the wail o' night descends, an' then to work!"
-
-The "wail o' night" was not long in descending, for the sun had
-disappeared with the lascar. Ere they had done justice to the ample meal
-which Puggles set before them, and exchanged the draggled pilgrim garb
-for their everyday clothes, the shadows had crept silently from their
-hiding-places beneath thicket and cliff, and blotted out the last
-lingering touch of day from the bosom of the creek. Save the musical
-chirping of some amorous tree-frog to his mate, or the lazy swish of
-wings as some belated flying-fox swung slowly past, unbroken silence
-reigned between the darkling cliffs.
-
-In the captain's opinion, no immediate repetition of the recent attack
-was to be feared. But the events of the day had made it only too plain
-that their present position was far from being-one of security. To
-remain on board the cutter would be to invite daily skirmishes with the
-natives, which would not only deter the quest of the golden pearl, but
-prove a source of constant annoyance and danger.
-
-So far as the captain knew, the island afforded no safer retreat than
-the hill of the Haunted Pagodas.
-
-The natives of the island, he said, believed this hill to be the abode
-of a witch in the form of a ferocious tiger, merely to look upon which
-meant death. For this reason they would on no account venture near it.
-
-So upon the Haunted Pagodas they resolved to fall back without delay.
-But here an unforeseen difficulty arose.
-
-With the path to the summit of the hill none of the party was acquainted
-except the captain, and he was unwilling that the precious cutter should
-be entrusted to the care of any one except himself while the several
-journeys necessary for the removal of the stores were being made.
-
-"Shiver my main-brace!" roared he, thumping the bottom of the boat with
-his wooden leg after they had talked it all over. "Shiver my mainbrace!
-I'll go the first trip with ye, lads, an' trust the old cutter to luck."
-
-"See here, captain," said Jack persuasively "why not trust her to me?
-It's for only one trip, as you say; and besides, there's not much danger
-of an attack to-night. You said so yourself."
-
-To this arrangement the old sailor finally agreed. So Don, Spottie,
-and Puggles loaded up with the stores and other necessaries for their
-proposed sojourn on the summit of the hill, and a start was made, the
-captain leading with musket and lantern.
-
-"Good-bye, Jack!" Don called back, as he struck into the jungle at the
-captain's heels. "'Fire a gun if you want help."
-
-"All right, old fellow," was Jack's careless reply. "Good-bye till I see
-you again!"
-
-'So, with no other companion than Bosin, he was left alone to guard the
-cutter.
-
-And now the difficulties of the captain's party began in earnest. The
-path before them was, it is true, scarce half a mile in length, but so
-precipitous was the hillside, so overgrown the track, that every
-furlong seemed a league. The tangled, overhanging jungle growth not only
-completely shut out the rays of the moon, but by its thickness impeded
-their progress at every step, as though determined to guard the abode
-of the witch-tiger from all human intrusion. To make matters worse, they
-had neglected to provide themselves with an axe.
-
-"Shiver my main-brace!" the captain cried, as his wooden leg stuck fast
-in a tangled mass of creepers. "These 'ere land trips be a pesky sight
-worse nor a sea woyage, says you! Blow me! I'd ruther round the Horn in
-mid-winter than wade through such wegetation as this 'ere in midnight
-darkness! Howsomedever, the port's afore us, so up we goes, as Jonah
-says to the whale when he bid the warmint adoo."
-
-Up they went accordingly, and after much stumbling and tough climbing,
-reached the summit and the Haunted Pagodas. Finding here a clear space
-and bright moonlight, they quickly relieved themselves of their loads.
-
-"An' now, lads," cried the captain, "wear ship an' back to the cutter,
-says you. Fire my magazine! what's that? I axes."
-
-Sharp and distinct upon the night air there floated up from the darkness
-of the ravine the report of a gun.
-
-Don felt his heart stand still with dread, then race at lightning speed.
-
-"An attack!" he cried hoarsely; "and Jack alone! Hurry, captain!--for
-God's sake hurry!
-
-Easier said than done. Haste only added to the difficulties of the way.
-It seemed to Don that he should never shake off the retarding clutch of
-the jungle.
-
-At last their weary feet pressed again the sands of the little beach.
-But now a new terror seized them. The beach was illuminated by a ruddy,
-fitful glow..The cutter was on fire!
-
-Don cleared the sands almost at a bound.
-
-"Jack!" he shouted, leaping the cutter's rail, and with lightning glance
-scanning the bottom of the boat, and then the cuddy, for some sign of
-his friend. "Jack, where are you? Captain, he's not here! and--my God!
-look at this!"
-
-Upon the bottom of the boat, showing darkly crimson in the ruddy
-firelight, lay a pool of blood, and beside it a discharged musket.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.--AT THE HAUNTED PAGODAS.
-
-
-|The fire, fortunately, had gained so little headway that a few
-bucketfuls of water sufficed to put the _Jolly Tar_ cut of danger. Then
-the captain stumped up to Don, where he sat disconsolate on the cutter's
-gun'le, and laid a sympathetic hand upon his shoulder.
-
-"Cheer up, my hearty! They warmints ain't done for Master Jack yet,
-not by a long chalk, says I. Flush my scuppers, lad!" he roared in
-stentorian tones, as he turned the light of the lantern upon the pool of
-blood, "this 'ere sanguinary gore as dyes the deck bain't his'n at all.
-It's the blood o' some native warmint, what he's gone an' let daylight
-into, d'ye mind me, an' here's the musket as done the trick."
-
-"Then you think he's not--not dead?" asked Don, steadying his voice with
-an effort.
-
-"Dead? Not him! Alive he is, and alive he remains," cried the old
-sailor. "An' why so? you naterally axes. To begin with, as the shark
-says when he nipped the seaman's leg off, because the keg o' powder's
-gone. Spurts, the warmints thinks to theirselves, an' so they makes
-away with _it._ Secondly"--and here the old sailor's voice grew
-husky--"because that 'ere imp of a Besin's gone. 'I'll stand hard by
-Master Jack,' says he, so off _he_ goes. Sharks an' sea-sarpents, lad,
-can't ye see as the lubbers have only gone an' took Master Jack in tow?"
-
-"But I can't understand," persisted Don, "why they should do it."
-
-"Ransom, lad, that's what the lubbers is arter. Master Jack's life's
-worth a sight more'n a bag o' pearls, an' well they knows it.=
-
-```"Avast there, an' don't be a milksop so soft,
-
-````To be taken for trifles aback;
-
-```There's a Providence, lad, as sits up aloft
-
-````To watch for the life of poor Jack."=
-
-Trolling out this sailorly reproof of Don's fears, the captain stretched
-himself in the bottom of the boat, and drawing a tai paulin over his
-nose, was soon sleeping off the effects of his recent exertions ashore.
-But upon Don's heart his chum's fate lay like a leaden weight. He could
-not rest.
-
-"Good-bye, old fellow, till I see you again." These, Jack's last
-careless words, repeated themselves in every me urnful sigh of the
-night-wind; and as he lay, hour after hour, watching the stars climb the
-heavens; he wondered, with a keen pain at his heart, when that "again"
-was to be.
-
-As the night wore on, however, he found more and more comfort in the
-old sailor's words. It was so much easier to believe that Jack had been
-kidnapped than to believe him dead. This view of his disappearance,
-too, was altogether in keeping with the shark-charmer's cunning. As
-for himself, he would gladly have cried quits with old Salambo then and
-there, if by so doing he could have recalled Jack to his side.
-
-At length he fell into a troubled sleep, unconscious of the fact that
-another brain than his was busy with Jack's fate. Had he but known it,
-Bosin deserved more than a passing thought that night.
-
-By daybreak they were again astir, and within an hour the cutter lay
-snugly ensconced in the shelter of a deep, vine-draped cavern beneath
-the cliff, some hundred yards down the creek, of which the captain knew.
-In carrying out this part of the old sailor's plan, the canoe, for which
-an effective paddle was improvised out of an old oar, proved of signal
-service; and when the smaller skiff had in its turn been hidden away in
-the dense jungle bordering the beach, they loaded up with the remaining
-stores, and took the pathway to the Haunted Pagodas, which they
-eventually reached just as the sun, like a huge ball of fire, rolled up
-out of the eastern sea.
-
-As the captain had said, the Haunted Pagodas was indeed "a tidy spot to
-fall back upon." Ages before, a circle of massive temples had crowned
-the summit of this island hill; but for full a thousand years had Nature
-searched out with silent, prying fingers the minutest crevices of the
-closer-cemented stones, ruthlessly destroying what man had so proudly
-reared, until nothing save a confusion of tumble down walls and broken
-pillars, grotesquely draped with climbing vines and like parasitic
-growths, remained to mark the site of the erstwhile stately cloisters. A
-shuddery spot it was!--a likely lurking-place for reptile or wild beast,
-so uncanny in its weird union of jungle wildness and dead men's work,
-that one would scarcely have been surprised had the terrible witch-tiger
-of the native legend suddenly leapt out upon one from some dark pit or
-sunless recess.
-
-In one spot alone had the walls successfully resisted the action of the
-insinuating roots. This was a sort of cloister with a floor of stone,
-upon which the roof had fallen. But when the _debris_ had been cleared
-away, and the stores scattered about in its stead, this corner of
-the ruins looked positively homelike and comfortable--especially when
-Puggles, taking possession of one of its angles, converted it into a
-kitchen, and began active preparations for breakfast. The captain dubbed
-their new retreat "the fo'csle."
-
-All that day the old sailor was in an unusually thoughtful mood. Every
-half-hour or so he would produce his pipe and take a number of slow,
-meditative "whiffs o' the fragrant," after which he would slap his thigh
-energetically with one horny hand, and stump back and forth amid the
-ruins in a state of high excitement, until, something going wrong with
-his train of thought, the pipe had to be relighted, and the difficulty,
-like the tobacco, smoked out again.
-
-This characteristic process of "ilin' up his runnin' gear" he continued
-far on into the afternoon, when he abruptly laid the huge meerschaum
-aside, took a critical survey of sea and sky, and, bearing down on
-Don, where he sat cleaning the muskets, without further ado planted a
-resounding thump on that young gentleman's back.
-
-"Blow me!" he burst out, as if Don was already initiated into his
-train of thought, "the wery identical thing, lad. An what's that? you
-naterally axes. Why, d'ye see, I've been splicin' o' my idees together
-a bit, so to say, an' shiver my main-brace if I ain't gone an' rescued
-Master Jack!"
-
-Edging away a little lest the captain's rising excitement should again
-culminate in one of his well-meant, but none the less undesirable
-thumps, "You mean, I suppose," said Don, "that you've hit upon a plan
-for his rescue."
-
-"Ay, lad," assented the captain, "but an idee well spun is a deed half
-done, d'ye mind me. Howsomedever, let's take our bearin's afore we runs
-for port, says you. An' to begin with, as the shark said----"
-
-What the shark said, as well as what the captain was about to say, was
-doomed to remain for ever a matter of conjecture, for at that instant
-Puggles set up a shout that effectually interrupted the conversation.
-
-"Sa'b! sar! me done see um, sa'b. Him done come back, sar."
-
-Naturally enough, Don's first thought was of Jack. He sprang to his
-feet, his heart giving a wild leap of joy, and then standing still with
-suspense. For in all the clearing no human form appeared.
-
-Puggles had now reached his master's side. "Him there got, sa'b, there!"
-he reiterated, pointing towards the narrow break in the jungle which
-indicated the starting-point of the pathway to the creek. Between this
-point and the spot where they stood, the jungle grass grew thick and
-tall.
-
-As they looked they saw it sway in a long, wavy undulation, as if some
-living thing were rapidly making its way towards them. In another moment
-the rank covert parted, and there appeared, not Jack, but Bosin.
-
-"Knots an' marlinspikes!" ejaculated the delighted captain, as the
-monkey scrambled chattering upon his knee. "What's this 'ere as the imp
-o' darkness's been an' made a prize of? I axes."
-
-Around the monkey's neck a shred of draggled, blood-stained linen was
-securely bound. Already Don was fumbling at the knot, his face whiter
-than the rag itself.
-
-"A message from Jack!" he announced joyfully, when at length the
-tightly-drawn knot yielded, and a scrap of paper fluttered to the
-ground.
-
-"Shiver my main-brace!" roared the captain, bringing his hand down on
-that unoffending member as if about to give a practical demonstration of
-his words, "ain't I said as much all along, lad? Alive he is, an' alive
-he remains. An' blow me if ever I see anything to beat this 'ere method
-o' excommunicating atween friends, says I. So let's hear what Master
-Jack has got to say for hisself."
-
-Don had already run his eye over the pencilled writing. "He's all right,
-thank God!" he exclaimed, in a tone of intense relief. "Wounded, as I
-feared--a mere scratch, he says--but you shall hear for yourself:--
-
-"'Don't be cut up, old fellow,'" he read aloud, "'it will all come light
-in the end. The niggers pounced down on me before I heard them. Just had
-time to let off one of the captain's old kickers, when a crack on the
-head laid me out. I'm in a village on the sea-shore, and by great good
-luck I can see the hill and the smoke of what, I suppose, is your fire,
-from the window of the hut they've stuck me in. It doesn't seem quite
-so bad when I look at that.... Bosin just turned up. Am writing in hopes
-he'll carry this safely to you. Close prisoner. Have to scribble when
-the beggars aren't watching me. Overheard them palavering just now. They
-take me to the E. R. to-night--'"
-
-"Which he means the Elephant Rock!" cried the captain, interrupting.
-"Blow me! I knowed as that 'ere Elephant 'ud go an' make wittles of him,
-d'ye see?"
-
-Don nodded and read on:
-
-"'Old Salambo's work this. He means to make terms for the pearls----'"
-
-"Copper my bottom, lad! Them's the wery identical words as I've stood by
-all along!" the captain broke in again.
-
-"Wait!" said Don impatiently. "There's something important here. I
-couldn't make it out before, the writing's so scrawly towards the end.
-Listen to this: 'There's a streak down the face of the hill, that looks
-like a path to the village here. If Bosin's in time, come early. Don't
-let the hdkf.(sp) alarm you; it's a mere scratch.'"
-
-Reading off these last words rapidly, Don pointed to the sun, already
-half-hidden by the western horizon.
-
-"There's no time to lose, captain! He must be set free before he's taken
-to the Rock."
-
-"Right, lad; so let's tumble out and man the guns!" cried the captain,
-lurching to his feet and giving his pantaloons a determined hitch-up.=
-
-````"We always be ready!
-
-````Steady, lad, steady!
-
-```We'll fight an' we'll conquer agin and agin!"=
-
-"That we will," assented Don heartily; "but first we must get the
-bearings of this village, captain. Where's the glass? Spottie! Hi,
-Spottie!--the glass here!"
-
-In response to the summons, Puggles ran up with the captain's telescope.
-
-"Spottie done go fetch water, sa'b," he explained.
-
-"There is a village," Don announced, after adjusting the instrument and
-carefully sweeping the sea-shore. "Just there, in that clump of trees;
-the only one within range, so far as I can see. Do you make it out,
-captain?"
-
-"Ay," said the captain, taking the glass; "there's a willage below, sure
-as sharks is sharks."
-
-"The next thing, then," continued Don, "is to find this path Jack speaks
-of. 'Twould take us two good hours at least to go round by way of the
-creek. Do you know, I've a notion the path to the spring is the one we
-want. Suppose we try it?"
-
-The captain making no demur, Don caught up a musket and led the way to
-the spring. This spring was Spottie's discovery. It lay to the left
-of the creek path, about fifty yards down the hillside. The jungle had
-almost obliterated the path by which it was approached, but this the
-black had in some degree remedied by a vigorous use of the axe during
-the day, and, as Puggles had intimated, he was now at the spring,
-replenishing the water bucket.
-
-Hardly had Don and the captain got fairly into the path when there rose
-from the depths of the jungle immediately below them a series of frantic
-yells. The voice was undoubtedly Spottie's, and, judging from the manner
-in which he used it, Sputtie stood--or believed he stood--in sore need
-of assistance. Quickening his pace to a run, Don soon came upon him,
-making for the open, minus bucket and turban, his eyes protruding from
-their sockets, and altogether in a terrible state of fright.
-
-"What's the matter?" cried Don, catching him by the arm and shaking him
-until he was fain to cease his bellowing.
-
-"De t-t-tiger-witch, sa'b!" said Spottie, his teeth chattering. "Me done
-see um, sa'b!"
-
-Just then the captain came up.
-
-"He's seen a monkey or something, and thinks it's the tiger-witch,"
-explained Don, laughing at the poor fellows piteous face. "Whereabouts
-is it, Spottie?"
-
-Spottie pointed fearfully down the shadowy pathway, where a faint
-snapping of twigs could be heard in the underbrush.
-
-"Blow me!" said the captain, after listening intently a moment, "yon
-warmint bain't no monkey, lad. So let's lay alongside an' diskiver what
-quarter o' the animile kingdom he hails from, says you."
-
-And with that he started off in the direction of the sound.
-
-Bidding Spottie remain where he was, Don followed. The captain was,
-perhaps, ten paces in advance. Suddenly the jungle parted with a loud
-swish, and a tawny body shot through the air and alighted full upon the
-captain's back, bearing him to the ground ere he could utter so much as
-a cry.
-
-Don stood petrified. Then a savage, guttural growling, accompanied by a
-sickening crunching sound, roused him to the old sailors danger.
-There was just sufficient light left to show the two figures on the
-ground--the tiger atop, his fangs buried in the captains thigh. Priming
-the musket rapidly with some loose powder he happened to have in his
-pocket, Don sprang to the captain's aid. The tiger lifted its head at
-his approach with an angry snarl, but this was no time to think of his
-own danger. Quick as thought he thrust the muzzle of the musket between
-the beast's jaws and fired.
-
-An instant later and he was on his back. The tiger had sprung clean
-over him, knocking him down in its passage, and now lay some yards away,
-writhing in the death struggle. Don picked himself up and ran to the
-old sailor's side. As he reached the spot where he lay, the captain
-struggled into a sitting posture, and stared about him bewilderedly.
-
-"Stave my bulkhead!" roared he, "if this bain't the purtiest go as ever
-I see. An' what quarter o' the animile kingdom might the warmint hail
-from? I axes."
-
-"A tiger, captain; a genuine man-eater. But, I say, are you hurt?"
-
-"Hurt is it?" demanded the captain. "Why, dye see, lad," first adjusting
-his neckcloth, and then proceeding to feel himself carefully over,
-"barrin' this 'ere bit of a chafe to my figgerhead, I hain't started a
-nail, d'ye see. Avast there! Shiver my main-brace, what's this? I axes."
-
-Just where the "main-brace" was spliced upon the thigh, a sad rent in
-the captain's broad pantaloons showed the wooden portion of his anatomy
-to be deeply indented and splintered. At this discovery he stopped
-aghast in the process of feeling for broken bones.
-
-"Why, don't you see how it is?" laughed Don. "The brute has tried
-to make a meal off your wooden leg, captain."
-
-The captain burst into one of his tremendous guffaws. "Blow me if I
-don't admire the warmint's taste," said he. "An uncommon affectionate un
-he is, says you, so let's pay our respec's to him 'ithout delay, lad."
-
-The tiger proved to be a magnificent specimen of his tribe; and, as he
-stood over the 'tawny carcase in the waning light, Don could not
-repress a feeling of pardonable pride at thought of his own share in the
-adventure which had ended so disastrously for the superb creature at his
-feet.
-
-"Captain," said he presently, when that worthy had inspected and admired
-the striped monster to his heart's content, "Captain, it strikes me as
-being somewhat of a rare thing to run against a fullblown tiger on an
-island like this. Don't you think so?"
-
-"Ay, that it is," assented the captain; "rare as sea-sarpents."
-
-"That explains it, then: the tiger-witch story, I mean. This chap's
-great size, and the fact that man-eaters aren't often met with on
-these little nutshell islands, have made him the terror of the whole
-community, you see. He's their witch, I'll be bound. Now." he ran on,
-seeing the captain express his approval of this likely explanation by a
-series of emphatic nods, "now I'll tell you what I mean to do. Dear old
-Jack's a prisoner, and we're bound to get him out of limbo if we can.
-His captors--those native beggars--go in mortal terror of this beast
-here. Good! Why shouldn't Pug and I carry the creature's skin down to
-the village yonder--where Jack is, you know--use it to impersonate the
-witch-tiger, and terrify the niggers----"
-
-He got no farther with his explanation, for the captain, having already
-grasped the idea, at this point grasped its originator by the hand, and
-cut in with: "Spike my guns, the wery identical thing, lad! Blow me, the
-lubberly swabs'll tumble into the jungle like a lot o' porpoises when
-they sees that 'ere tiger-skin a-hangin' on your recreant limbs. An'
-then hooray for Master Jack, says you! Why not? I axes."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.--WAS IT JACK?
-
-
-|What a night it was! Overhead one glorious; maze of scintillating
-stars; in the jungle ebon: blackness, shot with the soft glow of myriad
-fireflies, that flashed their tiny lamps only to leave-the spot they had
-illumined more intensely black than before.
-
-Don's surmise as to the spring path proved correct--it extended quite
-to the foot of the hill, where it merged almost imperceptibly into the
-scantier vegetation fringing the sea-shore. After a hard fight with the
-difficulties of the way--increased in no small degree by the dead weight
-of the tiger-skin--he and Puggles at length reached the limits of the
-jungle and paused for breath. The utmost caution was now necessary in
-order to avoid untimely discovery.
-
-The moon was not yet up, and the cocoa-nut _tope_ in which, but a stoned
-throw away, nestled the village that formed at once their destination
-and Jack's place of imprisonment, lay wrapped in gloom so impenetrable
-that not a single outline of tree or hut could be distinguished from
-where they stood. Excepting a faint glow, which at infrequent intervals
-flickered amid the lofty branches of the palm-trees, there was nothing
-to show that the spot was tenanted by any human being. This light--or,
-to speak more correctly, this reflection of a light--Don attributed to a
-fire in the village street.
-
-"They done lighting um for company, maybe," suggested Puggles. "Plenty
-people going feast, black man 'fraid got, making fire keep tiger-witch
-off."
-
-"So much the better for us," said his master; "especially if everybody's
-at the town except the fellows in charge of Jack. But shut up, Pug; it
-won't do to risk their overhearing our palaver." With stealthy steps
-they advanced, pausing often to listen, until they gained the deeper
-shade of the trees close under the rear of the huts. Leaving the black
-boy here, Don skirted the nearer row of cabins and took a cautious view
-of the street.
-
-The huts stood in two irregular rows, one facing the other, and
-midway down the open space or street between was a smouldering fire of
-brushwood, about which, in listless, drowsy attitudes, there lolled a
-group of perhaps twenty natives. Save for these the place, so far as he
-could make out, was quite deserted. The doors of the huts were closed,
-and no glimmer of lamp or fire shone through them to indicate that any
-occupants were within. A little to one side of the fire the light fell
-upon an object at sight of which Don started violently. It was the
-stolen keg of powder. Jack could not be far off, then!
-
-Quitting the spot as noiselessly as he had approached it, he made his
-way back to the rear of the huts, and with the assistance of Puggles,
-adjusted the limp tigers pelt upon his back, shoulders, and head. Next
-he gave the black boy his orders. He was to lie close until the natives
-about the fire took to flight--which, if they fled at all, would, in the
-ordinary course of events, be in the direction of the other extremity of
-the street--when he was to join his master in searching the huts.
-
-All was now in readiness, and Don, gripping the defunct tiger's ears at
-either side of his head to hold the skin in position, once more skirted
-the row of huts, Puggles in close attendance. His former post of
-observation gained, he went down upon all-fours, and when Puggles had
-readjusted the skin to his satisfaction, in this attitude he boldly
-advanced into the street.
-
-The distance to be traversed in order to reach the group about the fire
-was not less than fifty yards. He had covered a third of the ground
-unobserved, when one of the natives rose to his feet and threw a fresh
-bundle of faggots on the smouldering embers. Fanned by the breeze, the
-fire blazed up fiercely, illuminating the street from end to end. The
-tiger-witch uttered a terrific roar.
-
-When this sound fell upon the ears of the native, he wheeled and peered
-fearfully into the semi-darkness in which Don's end of the street lay.
-A second roar brought a second native to his feet. He was followed by
-another and another, till all were on the alert. The witch-tiger was now
-in full view.
-
-For a little while the group about the fire hesitated. Should they
-stand their ground or decamp? As the intruder advanced, and the ruddy
-firelight threw its gruesome outlines into stronger relief, they
-suddenly perceived what manner of apparition this was that had stolen
-up an them out of the darkness. To them the tiger-witch, with its swift,
-silent visitations of death, had doubtless long been a dread reality.
-The island held but one tiger--and here it was! With frantic outcries
-they turned and fled pell-mell down the village street.
-
-This was just what Don desired--what he had calculated upon. Until
-the heels of the hindermost had quite disappeared in the darkness, he
-sustained his rle. Thus far the ruse had succeeded admirably. But the
-real business of the night had as yet only begun. Shaking the clammy
-skin from off his back, he rose to his feet and made a dash for the door
-of the nearest hut. Just as he reached it, Puggles, who had watched the
-rout of the natives with shaking sides, came trotting up.
-
-"Look alive, Pug!" cried his master, bursting in the frail door with a
-crash. "Search the huts on the left, while I take these on the right.
-Look alive, I say--they may come back at any minute."
-
-Puggles needed no urging. He was only too well aware of the danger that
-threatened his master and his own precious self should the fugitives
-think better of their cowardice and reappear on, the scene. He set to
-work with a will.
-
-Into hut after hut they forced their way, peering into every nook and
-corner, and calling upon Jack as loudly as they dared; only to receive
-for answer the dull echoes of their own shouts. Nowhere was there
-any sign of Jack. "Had he been already removed?" Don asked himself
-desperately, as he sped from door to door. It almost seemed so; but
-while a single hut remained unsearched there was still hope.
-
-Half-a-dozen only were left, when the catastrophe he had all along been
-dreading actually occurred. The natives came trooping back. To their
-infinite relief, no doubt, the witch-tiger had vanished, and in its
-stead appeared two human figures darting from hut to hut. The natives
-raised a shout of defiance and pressed forward to the attack, catching
-up as weapons whatever came first to hand.
-
-Crossing the street at a bound, Don joined the black boy, just as the
-latter emerged from the doorway of a hut, and thrust into his hands one
-of two pistols with which he had come provided. Backing against the door
-of the hut, with pistols drawn they awaited the attack. It began with
-a rattling volley of missiles, but the low, projecting thatch of the
-native dwelling, jutting out as it did several feet from the wall,
-served to somewhat break the force of the stony hail.
-
-"Don't fire till I give the word," said Don between his teeth. "We can't
-afford to waste a shot. The beggars are drawing their knives."
-
-The words had barely left his lips when, with a shout and a disorderly
-rush, the crowd broke for the spot where they stood.
-
-"Ready, Pug. Fire!"
-
-Simultaneously with the sharp crack of the pistols, there leapt skyward
-from mid-street a sudden, blinding flash of lurid light, accompanied by
-dense volumes of sulphurous smoke, and a thunderous shock that shook
-the walls of the huts to their foundations. Don and his companion were
-dashed violently through the door against which they stood, and hurled
-upon the floor within. A thick shower of sand and stones rattled about
-and upon them. But of this fact they were unconscious. The shock had
-stunned them.
-
-When Don came to himself he found Puggles seated on the ground by his
-side, blubbering dismally.
-
-Not only was the roof ablaze, but showers of glowing sparks fell thickly
-upon them. The floor of the hut was a bed of fire, the heat intolerable.
-Puggs, dazed "by the recent shock, and stupefied with fright, seemed to
-comprehend not a word that was said to him. Don accordingly seized him
-by the arm and dragged him into the street.
-
-"What's the matter? Where are the natives?" he demanded, struggling to
-his feet, and scanning the interior of the hut with bewildered eyes.
-"Hullo, the roof's on fire!"
-
-[Illustration: 0143]
-
-Here the scene was appalling indeed. How long he had lain insensible he
-could not tell; but the time thus spent upon the floor of the hut must
-have been considerable, for from end to end the double line of thatched
-dwellings was wrapped in flames that shot high into the inky air, and
-there united in one roaring, swirling canopy of fire above the narrow
-thoroughfare. As if to render the spectacle more awful, here and there
-lay stretched upon the ground the mangled, blackened body of a native.
-Through one of these a sharp splinter of wood had been driven. Don
-examined it curiously. Then--he had been too dazed to realise it
-before--the truth flashed upon him. The keg of powder had exploded!
-
-Whilst crossing the street to Pug's side he had noticed, he remembered
-now, that the head, of the keg was stove in. It then lay close beside
-the fire, within a few feet of the scene of the attack. It was not there
-now, but in its stead was a shallow, blackened cavity. That told the
-whole story of the explosion. A handful of powder carelessly scattered,
-a wisp of straw kicked into the fire amid the rush of feet, a chance
-spark even, and---------
-
-"Sa'b, sa'b, the huts done tumble in!"
-
-Puggles was tugging at his sleeve, and pointing fearfully down the
-street. For an instant Don gazed into the black boy's face blankly, not
-grasping the import of his words. Then, like a repetition of that lurid
-flash of light which had burnt itself into his very brain, came the
-recollection of Jack.
-
-The sudden return of the natives had left but half-a-dozen huts
-unsearched. These were situated at the extreme end of the street--the
-end opposite to that from which Don and Puggles had approached the
-village. Towards these the former now ran, only to discover, to his
-consternation, that the fire was before him. For in this direction the
-wind blew, and the unsearched huts, like the rest, were a seething mass
-of flames. Of all save one the roofs had already given way, while at the
-very moment he ran up that also crashed in.
-
-As the blood-red flames shot skyward, an agonised, inarticulate shriek
-rose from within the glowing walls.
-
-Was it Jack?
-
-Shielding his face with his hands, Don attempted to force an entrance,
-but the heat of the furnace-like doorway drove him back. In frantic
-accents he called his chum by name--called again and again--to be
-answered only by the hissing of the pitiless flame-tongues that licked
-the black heavens.
-
-Was it Jack? Had the natives who escaped--if, indeed, any did--the
-deadly effects of the explosion, carried him with them in their flight
-from the burning village, or had he been mercilessly abandoned to a
-fiery grave within his prison walls?
-
-It was a terrible question; but not that night, nor for many nights to
-come, was he to know whether those unnumbered moments of unconsciousness
-had consigned his chum to continued captivity or to death.
-
-One thing only was certain: their mission to the village had reached
-a disastrous climax. To remain longer where they were was useless; to
-follow the trail of the natives who had escaped, impossible. No course
-was left but immediate return to the camp.
-
-Weary, dejected, with aching bodies and aching hearts--for even
-light-hearted Puggles, heathen though he was, felt crushed by their sad
-misadventure--they sought the spot where, the axe and lantern had been
-left, and then set their blackened faces towards the hill.
-
-By this time the moon had risen, making the task of finding the footpath
-an easy one. Just as they turned their backs upon the beach and the
-burning village, out upon the tense stillness of the night--a stillness
-softened rather than broken by the music of the surf--from the shadowy
-hill above rang the sharp report of a gun.
-
-"Something wrong up there, I'm afraid," said Don, rousing himself and
-pausing to listen. "Hullo!" as a second report broke the stillness,
-"there goes another! Come, Pug, we must pull ourselves together a bit
-and get over the ground faster. The captain's not a man to waste powder;
-those reports mean danger."
-
-"Him maybe another lubberly warmint shooting, sa'b," Pug suggested.
-
-"Unless I'm very much mistaken, there's something a jolly sight worse
-afoot," was his master's uneasy rejoinder as they began the ascent.
-
-Here and there upon the hillside were spots where the rains of many
-summers had so washed away the thin surface-soil as to lay bare the rock
-beneath and leave little or no roothold for vegetation. As he paused for
-a brief breathing space in one of these clearings, Don's attention was
-drawn to a dull red glare, which, though but a short distance in advance
-of the spot where he stood, had up to that moment been quite concealed
-by the intervening jungle.
-
-"Say, Pug, what do you make of that light?"
-
-The black boy knuckled his eyes vigorously, as if to assure himself they
-were playing him no trick.
-
-"Me linking there one fire got, sa'b," said he, after a long look at the
-mysterious light.
-
-"In that case we'd better stir our stumps. The breeze seems to be
-freshening, and once the fire gets a hold on this tindery jungle, why,
-there's no knowing----"
-
-"There another got, sa'b!" broke in Puggles, pointing excitedly to the
-right.
-
-"Phew! And, by Jove, there's a third beyond that again! And the wind's
-blowing straight for the camp, too! Now I understand why the captain
-fired those shots! The hill's on fire! Point, Pug!"
-
-Up the hillside they bounded, panting, stumbling. There was light enough
-now and to spare, for the fire towards which they were advancing had
-made more headway than at first sight appeared. The wonder was that they
-had not observed it sooner; but this perhaps was sufficiently accounted
-for by the fact that the thoughts of both had lagged behind in the
-burning village.
-
-The point of danger was soon reached. The fire had not yet crossed the
-path, but only a few yards of tindery underbrush separated the swaying
-wall of flame-shot smoke from the narrow trail, while every instant the
-margin grew perceptibly less.
-
-"Now for it, Pug!"
-
-Don raced past with head lowered, the greedy flames licking his face.
-Half-blinded, he stumbled on for a dozen yards or so before turning
-to ascertain how Puggles had stood the ordeal. To his horror he then
-discovered that the fire had swallowed up the pathway at a single bound,
-and that Puggles was nowhere to be seen.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.--IN WHICH THE OLD SAW, "OUT OF THE FRYING-PAN, INTO THE
-FIRE," IS REVERSED WITH STARTLING EFFECT.
-
-
-|Back he ran, battling with the flames and sparks that rolled in volumes
-up the hillside, until, half-stifled and well-nigh fainting from the
-heat, he was forced to turn and flee for his life before the swiftly
-advancing flames.
-
-Whether Puggles, terrified by the close proximity of the fire, had
-hung back at the last moment, or whether he had attempted to follow his
-master and paid for his devotion with his life, heaven alone knew.
-
-"Poor chap!" gasped Don, as he stumbled free of the smoke and turned
-for a last look at the fiery veil so suddenly drawn over his faithful
-servant's fate. "God help him!"
-
-The rapid advance of the fire, however, allowed little time for the
-indulgence of emotion. The long rainless months had scorched the face
-of the hill until the thick-set bamboo copse was as dry as tinder,
-inflammable as shavings. The wind and the steepness of the hillside,
-too, proved powerful allies of the flames. On and up they swept, leaping
-from point to point with such rapidity that Don found it necessary to
-strain every nerve to avoid being overtaken by the greedy holocaust.
-Glad indeed was he when, the scene of his recent adventure passed, he
-at length emerged upon the comparatively open ground abreast of the
-encampment.
-
-Stumping uneasily to and fro, "abaft the fo'csle," with Bosin perched
-contentedly upon his shoulder, was the old sailor--the jerky creak,
-creak of his wooden leg showing him to be in an unusually disturbed
-state of mind.
-
-"Right glad I am to clap eyes on ye, lad!" he sang out cheerily on
-catching sight of the returned wanderer. "An' whereaway's Master Jack
-an' the leetle nigger, I axes?"
-
-The captain paused abruptly, both in his walk and speech, for the pained
-look on Don's blackened but ghastly face told him at a glance that
-something more than ordinary was amiss.
-
-Slowly setting down the lantern, which he had all along retained in
-his grasp--most fortunately, as it turned out--Don threw himself on the
-trampled grass, and, as rapidly as his shortness of breath would
-permit, summed up the disastrous results of his village expedition. In
-open-mouthed silence, as was his wont, the old sailor listened; but when
-he learned of the dark uncertainty that overhung the fate of Jack
-and Puggles, he hastily brushed aside a tear that straggled down his
-weather-beaten cheek, and, in a voice husky with emotion, burst into one
-of his characteristic snatches of song:=
-
-```"Why, what's that to you if my eyes I'm a-wipin'?
-
-````A tear is a pleasure, d'ye see, in its way.
-
-```'Tis nonsense for trifles, I owns, to be pipin',
-
-```But they as hain't pily--why, I pities they!"=
-
-And having delivered himself of this sailorly apology for his weakness,
-he added in his usual voice:
-
-"Blow me!--as the speakin trumpet says to the skipper--if ever I
-heard any yarn as beats this 'un, lad. Howsomedever, when the ship's
-a-sinkin', pipin' your eye ain't a-goin' to stop the leak, d'ye mind me;
-an' so, just to bear away on the off tack a bit, what d'ye make o' this
-'ere confleegration, I axes?"
-
-"I can tell you better what it came jolly near making of me, captain,
-and that's cinders! But what do _you_ make of it?--and, by the way, what
-were those shots for? You don't think there's any danger here, do you?"
-
-"Ay," replied the captain, with an emphatic tug at his neckerchief,
-"that I does, lad! An' why? you naterally axes. Because, d'ye mind
-me, the hill's ablaze from stem to starn--blow me if it bain t!
-Howsomedever," leading the way towards a jagged remnant of wall that
-stood out in ghostly solitude amid the ruins, "go aloft an' cast an eye
-out to lee'ard, lad."
-
-The captain's ominous words prepared Don for an unpleasant surprise;
-yet, when he had scaled the pile of masonry, an involuntary cry of alarm
-broke from him.
-
-"Good heavens, captain, we're surrounded by fire!"
-
-"Right, lad! an' the confleegration's gettin' uncommon clost under our
-weather bow; says you. An hour back, d'ye see, I sights the first on
-'em alongside o' the path below, an' fires the gun to signal ye to put
-about. An' then, flush, my scuppers! what does I see but a hull sarcle
-o' confleegrations, as it may be a cable's len'th apart, clean round the
-hill; lad! an' so I fires the second wolley."
-
-"This is the work of those cowardly niggers!" said Don, clenching his
-fists. "They daren't come here to fight us, so they mean to scorch us
-out!"
-
-"The wery identical words as I says to myself when first I sights the
-fires, lad," rejoined the captain; "an' a purty lot o' tobackie it cost
-me afore I overhauled the idee, says you."
-
-"It's likely to cost us more than a few pipes of tobacco, I'm afraid,
-captain," said Don uneasily, leaping down from his post of observation.
-"The fire's close upon us, and once this grass catches, why, good-bye to
-the stores! I say, where's Spottie?"
-
-"Belay there!" chuckled the captain, who, somehow, seemed remarkably
-cheerful, considering the gravity of the situation. "Whereaway's the
-nigger, you axes? Why, d'ye mind me, lad, this 'ere old hulk ain't
-been a-lyin' on her beam-ends all this time, not by a long chalk. The
-nigger's with the stores, d'ye see; an' stow my cargo, where should the
-stores be but safe and snug under hatches?"
-
-With that he seized his perplexed companion by the arm, skirted the
-dilapidated wall, and presently halted on the very brink of a black
-chasm that yawned to the stars close under its rear. Little else was to
-be seen, for the wall cut off the light of both the fire and the moon.
-From the depths of the cavity proceeded a sound suspiciously like
-snoring. The captain indulged in another chuckle, and then, shaping his
-hands into a sort of speaking-trumpet, he bent over the hole and shouted
-loudly for Spottie. The snoring suddenly ceased, and in half a minute
-or so up the black tumbled, rubbing his eyes. The captain bade him fetch
-the lantern, adding strict injunctions that he should replenish the
-store of oil before lighting it.
-
-"And now, lad, let's go below," said he, when Spottie had fulfilled his
-mission.
-
-So down they went, the captain leading. First came a dozen or more
-moss-grown steps, littered with blocks of stone, which, ages before,
-perhaps, had fallen and found a resting-place here. At the foot of the
-steps there opened out a subterranean passage, of height sufficient to
-admit of Don's standing erect in it with ease. Upon the floor lay the
-stores; beyond these again all was blank darkness. To all appearance the
-passage extended far into the bowels of the hill.
-
-"Blow me!" chuckled the captain, turning a triumphant gaze upon the
-massive walls, "electric lightnin' itself ud never smell us out in sich
-a tidy berth as this, says you."
-
-"It certainly is a snug spot," assented Don; "though I wish"--glancing
-round at their sadly depleted numbers--"I wish that Jack and Pug were as
-safe, poor fellows."
-
-"Cheer up, my hearty. As I says afore, there's a Providence, lad, as
-sits up aloft to keep watch for the life of poor Jack.' Ay, an for the
-nigger's too, d'ye mind me, lad," rejoined the captain, blowing his
-nose loudly. "So let's turn out an' see what manner o' headway the
-confleegrations makin'."
-
-Brief as was their absence from "the glimpses of the moon," the fire had
-made alarming progress in the interval. Viewed from the centre of the
-swiftly-narrowing cordon of flame, the scene was awesome in the extreme.
-The rear column of the invader advanced the more slowly of the two, but
-even it was now within a stone's throw of that godsend, the captain's
-"tidy berth."
-
-On the seaward side the flames had overleapt the jungle's edge, and
-seized with unsated greed upon the luxuriant grass that everywhere
-grew amid the ruins. Nearer still, the dense, parasitic growth upon the
-remnant of wall, ignited by the dense clouds of sparks which the wind
-drove far ahead of the actual fire, was blazing fiercely. The heat was
-stifling; the air, choked with smoke and showers of glowing sparks,
-unbreathable. They retreated precipitately to the cooler shelter of the
-underground chamber.
-
-Even here the noise of the flames could be distinctly heard. Indeed,
-they had been barely ten minutes below when the fiery sea rolled with a
-sullen roar over their heads, the fierce heat driving them back from the
-entrance.
-
-Some hours must pass before it would be either safe or practicable to
-venture into the open air. Accordingly, following the captain's
-example, Don made himself as comfortable for the night as circumstances
-permitted. A quantity of dried grass, which Spottie had thoughtfully
-collected and deposited beside the stores, afforded an excellent bed,
-and soon the deep breathing of all three told that sleep too had made
-this long untenanted nook her refuge.
-
-Upwards of an hour had passed when a tremendous grinding crash shook
-the passage from roof to floor, and brought Don and the captain to their
-feet. They had fallen asleep surrounded by a subdued glow of firelight;
-they woke to find themselves in pitchy darkness. Bosin and the scarcely
-more courageous Spottie began to whimper.
-
-"Avast there!" the captain sang out at the latter. "Is this a time to
-begin a-pipin' of your eye like a wench, I axes? Belay that, ye lubberly
-swab, an' light the binnacle lamp till we takes our bearin's."
-
-This order Spottie obeyed with an alacrity which, it is but due to him
-to explain, sprang rather from a dread of his master's heavy boot than
-from his fear of the dark. In the light thus thrown on the situation,
-the cause of the recent crash became only too apparent. So, too, did its
-effect.
-
-The ruined wall which overtopped their place of refuge had fallen,
-completely blocking the exit with huge stones, still glowing hot from
-the action of the fire.
-
-"Batten--my--hatches, lad!" ejaculated the old sailor, as the full
-significance of the catastrophe flashed upon him. "We're prisoners, says
-you!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.--INTO THE HEART OF THE HILL.
-
-
-|There was no denying the truth of the captain's disconcerting
-announcement. So far as concerned the ancient flight of steps, egress
-from the underground chamber was wholly cut off. In the space of a
-single moment their refuge had become a prison. For, to begin with, the
-stones which blocked the entrance were glowing hot; while, to end with,
-these were of such a size, and so tightly wedged between the walls of
-the narrow opening, as to render any attempt at removing them, in the
-absence of suitable implements, utterly futile. If ever there existed a
-dilemma worthy the consumption of the captain's tobacco, here was one.
-The huge meerschaum was lighted forthwith.
-
-And never, perhaps, in all its long and varied history, did the pipe
-perform its task of "'ilin' up" the old sailors "runnin' gear"
-so promptly and satisfactorily as now. For scarcely had he taken
-half-a-dozen "w'hiffs o' the fragrant," when, "Blow me, lad!" he
-exclaimed, triumphantly following with the stem of the pipe the course
-of a blue spiral which had just left his lips, "d'ye see that, now? No
-sooner I lets it out than away it scuds!"
-
-Under other circumstances this observation would have sounded
-commonplace; here it was significant. The fragrant spiral, after
-wavering an instant as if uncertain what course to take, broke and
-floated slowly towards the wall of _dbris_ which blocked the entrance.
-
-"Wery good!" resumed the captain, when this became apparent; "an' what
-o' that? you naterally axes. Why, do ye mind me, lad, when smoke sheers
-off to lee'ard in that 'ere fashion, it sinnifies a drorin'; and a
-drorin', dye see, sinnifies a current o' atmospheric air; and--as
-the maintop-gallan's'l says when it sights the squall---blow me! if
-a current o' atmospheric air don't sinnify as this 'ere subterraneous
-ramification's got a venthole in it somewheres, d'ye see!"
-
-"Why, as for that," said Don, "I noticed a draught drawing up the steps,
-as soon as I set foot on them. The entrance seemed to act like a sort
-of flue; and, come to think of it, it couldn't do that, in spite of the
-heated air above, unless there was an inlet somewhere below, could it?"
-
-"Ay, inlet's the wery nautical tarm I was a-tryin' to overhaul, lad,"
-replied the captain complacently. "An'--shiver my binnacle!--for that
-inlet we runs. Legs we has, light we has!--so why not? I axes."
-
-"More grope than run, I fancy," said Don, peering into the darkness of
-the tunnel. "But there's no help for it, I suppose; though Heaven only
-knows where or what it may lead to! The stores, of course, remain here
-for the present; they're safe enough, at any rate."
-
-Seizing the lantern, he led off without further parley. Spottie--haunted
-in the dark by an ever-pursuing fear of spooks--made a close second;
-while the old sailor brought up the rear with Bosin on his shoulder.
-Here and there a lizard, alarmed by the hollow echo of their footsteps,
-or by the glare of the passing light, scurried across their path.
-
-For a considerable distance the passage continued on the level, then
-dipped suddenly in a steep flight of steps. After this came other
-level bits, succeeded by other descents, the number of steps in each
-successive flight--or, rather, fall--increasing as they proceeded.
-
-"Looks as if we were bound for the foot of the hill," remarked Don,
-pausing to allow the captain to overtake him.
-
-"An' well I knows it, lad!" replied that worthy, as he accomplished the
-descent of that particular flight of steps with a sigh of relief like
-the blowing of a small whale. "Sleepin' in the open an' that, d'ye
-see, 's made my jints a bit stiff like--'specially the wooden one!
-Howsomedever, let's get on again--as the seaman says when the lubberly
-donkey rose by the starn an' hove him by the board."
-
-On they accordingly went, and down, the level intervals growing less
-and less frequent, the seemingly interminable tiers of steps more
-precipitous. Even the captain, level-headed old sailor though he was,
-detected himself in the act of clutching at the wall, so suggestive of
-utter bottomlessness was the black chasm yawning ever at their feet. The
-very echoes hurried back to them as if fearful of venturing the abysmal
-depths. What it would have been to have penetrated the tunnel without a
-lantern Don dared not think.
-
-And now the roof and walls contracted until they seemed to press with
-an insupportable weight upon their shoulders. The steps, too, at first
-equal in height and even of surface, became irregular and slippery. Ooze
-of a vivid prismatic green glistened on either hand; water gathered
-in pellucid, elongated drops overhead, shivered for an instant as if
-startled by the unwonted light, then glinted noiselessly down upon the
-dank, mould-carpeted steps, which no human foot apparently had pressed
-for ages. Suppose their advance, when they got a little lower, should be
-cut off by the water, as retreat was already cut off by the fallen wall!
-
-A level footing at last! Twenty yards on through the darkness, and no
-steps. Had these come to an end? It almost seemed so.
-
-Suddenly the captain stopped. On the rock floor a tiny pool shimmered
-like crystal in the lantern-light. He scooped up a little of the water
-in his broad palm and tasted it, "Stave my water-butt, lad!" cried he,
-smacking his lips with immense gusto. "This 'ere aqueous fluid what's
-a-washin' round in the scuppers ain't no bilge-water, d'ye mind me!
-Reg'lar genewine old briny's what it is, an' well I knows the taste on
-it! We're under the crik--blow me if we bain't!"
-
-"Shouldn't wonder," said Don, consulting his watch. "It's now three
-o'clock; we've been on the grope just three-quarters of an hour. A
-jolly nice fix we'll be in if we reach daylight on the far side of the
-creek--with no means of crossing it, I mean. But wherever this mole-hole
-leads to, let's get to the end of it."
-
-More steps, but this time ascending. The walls, too, became perceptibly
-drier, the narrow limits and musty air of the vaulted way less
-oppressive. With elastic steps and light hearts they pressed forward,
-assured that release was now close at hand.
-
-It came sooner than they anticipated, for presently the tunnel veered
-sharply to the left, and as Don rounded the angle of wall a low, musical
-lapping of waves fell on his ears.
-
-The captain was right in his conjecture; the passage had conducted
-them directly under the creek, and it was on that side of the ravine
-immediately adjacent to the Elephant Rock that they now emerged into the
-fresh night air.
-
-Here the tunnel terminated in a platform of rock, escarped from the
-solid cliff, and draped by a curtain of vines similar to, though
-somewhat thinner than, that which concealed the hiding-place of the
-_Jolly Tar_. The platform itself lay wrapped in deepest shade, but
-through the interstices of the natural curtain overhanging it they could
-see the moonlight shimmering on the surface of the creek.
-
-"Blow me, lad!" cried the captain, after peering about him for some
-seconds: "this 'ere cove as we're hove-to in orter lay purty nigh
-abreast o' the _Jolly Tar_, says you. Belay that, ye lubber!" making a
-dive after the monkey, who, with a shrill cry, had swung down from his
-shoulder and scuttled to the edge of the platform.
-
-Don gripped the old sailor by the arm and forcibly held him back.
-"Hist!" he cried in suppressed, excited tones. "Did you hear that?"
-
-A moment of strained silence; then, from the direction of the creek came
-a faint plashing sound, such as might have been produced by the regular
-dip of paddles. Releasing his hold on the captain's arm, Don crossed the
-rocky floor on tiptoe, parted the trailing vines with cautious hand,
-and took a rapid survey of the moonlit creek. Then he hastily seized the
-monkey and darted back to the captains side.
-
-"Canoes!" he whispered. "Two of them, packed with natives, and heading
-straight for us. Back into the passage! And, Spottie! douse that light."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.--RELATES HOW A WRONG ROAD LED TO THE RIGHT PLACE.
-
-
-|They had barely gained the shelter of the tunnel and extinguished
-the light, when the prows of the canoes grated against the rock, and a
-number of natives scrambled out upon the platform, jabbering loudly.
-
-Would they remain there, or enter the tunnel where the little band of
-unarmed adventurers--for the captain had neglected to fetch a musket,
-and Don to load his pistols--lay concealed? It was a moment of
-breathless suspense. Then a torch was lighted, and 'the intruders, to
-the number of perhaps a score, filed off to the right and disappeared.
-
-When the last echo of their footsteps had died away, the captain heaved
-a sigh of relief, and bade Spottie relight the lantern.
-
-"Not that I be afear'd o' the warmints, dye mind me, lad," said he, as
-if in apology for the sigh; "only--spike my guns!--a couple o' brace o'
-fists 'ud be short rations to set under the noses o' sich a rampageous
-crew, d'ye see. Howsome-dever, the way's clear at last, as the shark
-says when he'd swallied the sailor; so beat up to wind'ard a bit, till
-we diskiver whereaway the warmints's bound for."
-
-"There's another passage, most likely," observed Don, holding the
-lantern aloft at arm's length as they left the tunnel behind and
-reemerged upon the rock platform. "Ha! there it is, captain; yonder, in
-the far corner."
-
-"Right ye are, lad," replied the captain with a chuckle. "We'll
-inwestigate into this 'ere subterraneous ramification, says you; so
-forge ahead, my hearty."
-
-The entrance to the second tunnel was quickly gained, and into it,
-as nothing was either to be seen or heard of the natives, they
-"inwestigated"--to use the captain's phraseology---as far as a flight of
-steps which extended upwards for an unknown distance beyond the limits
-of the lantern's rays. Here the captain paused, and bending forward:
-
-"Scrapers an' holystones, lad!" cried he with a chuckle; "the
-quarterdeck of a ship-o'-the-line itself ain't cleaner'n these 'ere
-steps. Native feet goin' aloft and a-comin' down continual, that's
-what's scraped 'em, says you; an' so I gets an idee. This 'ere
-subterraneous carawan as we've been an' diskivered is the tail o' the
-'Elephant'!"
-
-"The what, captain?" cried Don.
-
-"Why, d'ye mind me, lad," the captain proceeded to explain, "when them
-lubberly land-swabs as pilots elephants--which I means mahouts, d'ye
-see--when they wants to go aloft, so to say, how does they manage the
-business? I axes. They lays hold on the warmint's tail, says you, and
-up they goes over the starn. Wery good! This 'ere's a Elephant Rock as
-we're at the present moment inwestigatin' into, d'ye mind me, an' when
-betimes the lubberly crew as mans it is ordered aloft onto the animile's
-back, why, up these 'ere steps they goes. An' so I calls 'em the tail o'
-the 'Elephant'--an' why not? I axes."
-
-Don gripped the old sailor's hand impulsively.
-
-"Hurrah! this discovery's worth a dozen hours' groping underground,
-captain!" he cried. "For if the natives can gain the Elephant Rock by
-following this passage, why can't we do the same? Jack, old boy, if
-you're still alive--which you are, please God!--we'll find you yet!"
-
-"Ay, at the risk of our wery lives, if need be!" responded the captain,
-in tones that lost none of their heartiness through being a bit husky.
-"An' the bag o' pearls, too, for the matter o' that, lad," he added;
-"for, d'ye see, as the old song says:=
-
-````We always be ready,
-
-````Steady, lad, steady!
-
-```We'll fight an' we'll conquer agin and agin!=
-
-"Howsomedever, fightin' without wittles ain't to be thought of, no more'n
-without powder, says you; so 'bout ship an' bear away for the Ha'nted
-Pagodas!"
-
-"Thank Heaven for the fire and that tumbledown wall!" ejaculated Don as
-they retraced their steps to the platform. "Chance has done for us what
-no planning--or fighting either, for the matter of that--could ever have
-done. We started on a wrong road, but, all the same, it has led us to
-the right place."
-
-"Ay, lad, only chance bain't the right word for it, d'ye see. There's
-a Providence, lad, as sits up aloft," said the captain, lifting his cap
-reverently. "I bain't, so to say, a religious cove; but, storm or calm,
-them's the wery identical words as I always writes in my log. An', d'ye
-mind me, lad, 'tis the hand o' the Good Pilot as has guided us here
-to-night."
-
-"I don't doubt it," replied Don gravely, "any more than I doubt that the
-same Good Pilot will guide us safely into port. Bearing that in mind, we
-have only to mature our plans and end the whole thing at a stroke. Here
-we are, and now for the creek," he concluded, crossing the platform and
-thrusting aside the pendent vines. "We'll borrow one of the canoes those
-niggers came in. Hullo, they're gone!"
-
-"Some of the lubberly crew stopped aboard and rowed off agin, belike,"
-observed the captain. "Blow me, if we shan't have to take to the water,
-as the sailors said when they'd swallied all the rum."
-
-Don made no reply, but rapidly divesting himself of his coat and shoes,
-he slipped into the water before the old sailor well knew what he was
-about.
-
-"I'm off for the canoe we hid in the jungle," he called back as he
-struck out for the other shore.
-
-"Ay, ay, lad!" responded the captain; "an' here's to your speedy retarn,
-as the shark says when they hoisted the sailor into the ship's gig."
-
-Swimming the creek was, after all, an insignificant feat for a
-sturdy-limbed young fellow like Don. The water was warm and refreshing,
-the distance far from great. A dozen vigorous strokes, and he was well
-within the deep shadow of the opposite cliff, for he deemed it prudent
-to avoid the moonlight, lest by any chance the natives who had removed
-the canoes should be in the vicinity.
-
-Once, indeed, he fancied he actually heard a faint splashing in the
-water a short distance ahead. He floated for a moment, motionless and
-alert; but as the noise was not repeated, he swam on again. He had made
-scarce half-a-dozen strokes, however, when he suddenly felt himself
-gripped from below by the leg. His first thought was of sharks; his
-next, that he was in the clutches of a human foe, for a vice-like hand
-was at his throat.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.--CAPTAIN MANGO "GOES ALOFT."
-
-
-|Self-preservation is the first law of life, and no sooner did Don feel
-that iron grip compressing his throat, and dragging him down into the
-depths of the creep, than he struck out to such good purpose that the
-hold of his unknown assailant quickly relaxed. As he shot up to the
-surface he found himself confronted by the dripping head and shoulders
-of a native. A brief cessation of hostilities followed; each glared
-at the other defiantly, the native's tense breathing and watchful eye
-indicating that, though baffled for the moment by his opponents prompt
-defensive measures, he was in no two minds about renewing the struggle.
-
-Suddenly, by a lightning-like movement of the hand, he dashed a blinding
-jet of spray into Don's eyes, instantly followed up the advantage thus
-treacherously gained, grappled with him, and pinioned his arms tightly
-at his sides. Then, to his horror, Don felt his head thrust violently
-back, felt the fellow's hot, quick breath on his neck, and his teeth
-gnashing savagely at his throat.
-
-Luckily for himself Don was no mean athlete, and knew how to use his
-fists to advantage when occasion demanded. Wrenching his arms free,
-he seized the native by the throat, and in spite of his eel-like
-slipperiness and desperate struggles, by an almost superhuman effort
-forced him slowly backwards until he had him at effective striking
-distance, when, suddenly loosing his hold, he let him have a tremendous
-"one-two" straight from the shoulder, that stretched the native
-senseless and bleeding on the water.
-
-"You would have it!" he panted, surveying the native's sinewy
-proportions with grim satisfaction. "Next time you won't wait to be
-knocked out, I reckon. But 'twon't do to let you drown, though you
-richly deserve it; so come along, you black cub!"
-
-Seizing the black by the convenient tuft of hair at the back of his
-bullet-head, he towed him to the strip of beach, and there hauled him
-out upon the sand, directly into a patch of moonlight, as it happened,
-that came slanting down through a rift in the canopy of palm-leaves
-overhead. Something in the appearance of the upturned features caused
-him to drop on his knees at the natives side.
-
-"Hullo!" he cried, peering into the fellow's face, "Jack's lascar, as
-I'm alive! By Jove, you are a prize! We'll keep you with us longer than
-we did last time, my friend. Ha, ha! won't the captain chuckle, though!"
-
-With his belt he proceeded to strap the lascar's hands securely behind
-his back; but when it came to fastening his legs, a difficulty cropped
-up. That is to say, the strap could not be used for both, and he had no
-substitute. Fortunately the lascar wore about his loins the regulation
-length of strong country cotton--his only covering--and this Don was in
-the act of removing when a knife fell out of its folds.
-
-"Lucky thing I didn't run against you in the water," he soliloquised,
-picking the weapon up. "Why, it's the very knife the lascar shot at
-Jack from the schooner's deck; the one he let the fellow have back for
-sending the boathook through the cutter's side; and that we afterwards
-found lying in the _ballam_ here. And yet Jack certainly had it on him
-when those niggers carried him off. So, old chap," apostrophising
-the insensible owner of the much-bandied knife, "so you had a hand in
-kidnapping him too, had you? All the more reason for caring for you now
-that we've got you."
-
-Following up this idea, he knotted the cloth tightly about the lascar's
-legs, dragged him well up the beach, and went in search of the canoe.
-This, fortunately, had not been molested in their absence; in a few
-minutes he had it in the water. Then, seizing the paddle, he propelled
-the light skiff swiftly in the direction of the rock platform, where he
-found the old sailor stumping his beat in a terrible state of uneasiness
-over his prolonged absence.
-
-"Spike my guns, lad!" cried he, bearing down upon the young man with
-outstretched hand and a smile as broad as the cutter's mainsail, "they
-warmints's been an' done for Master Don this hitch, I says to myself
-when the half-hour fails to bring ye. An' what manner o' mishap's kept
-ye broached-to all this while? I axes."
-
-"Fact is, captain, I was attacked by the enemy. Came within an ace of
-being captured, too. But, as good luck would have it, I managed to
-get in a thundering broadside, boarded the enemy--there was only one,
-luckily--spiked his guns, and towed him ashore, where he's waiting to
-pay his respects to you now. But get in and see for yourself what a
-valuable prize I've taken."
-
-The captain got in with all despatch, and, as soon as the canoe touched
-the opposite beach, got out again without delay, so eager was he to
-inspect, the captive. As it was now daylight, he recognised the fellow
-the moment he set eyes on him. His delight knew no bounds. Bound and
-round the luckless lascar he stumped, chuckling as he always did when
-he was pleased, and every now and then prodding him in the ribs with
-his wooden leg, as if to reassure himself that he laboured under no
-delusion.
-
-"Sharks an' sea-sarpents, lad!" he roared, when quite satisfied as to the
-lascar's identity, "we'll keep the warmint fast in the bilboes a while,
-says you; for, d'ye mind me, he's old Salambo's right-hand man, is this
-lubber, as comes an' goes at his beck an' call, an' executes the orders
-as he gives. So in the bilboes he remains; why not? I axes."
-
-"My idea precisely, captain. He can't be up to any of his little games
-so long as he has a good stout strap to hug him; and, what's more, he'll
-have a capital chance to recover from that nasty slash Jack gave him
-the other night. By the way, I've often wondered, do you know, how he
-managed to pull through that affair so easily. Suppose we turn him over
-and have a look at his shoulder?"
-
-No sooner said than done, notwithstanding the captive's snarling
-protests; but, to their great amazement, his shoulder showed neither
-wound nor scar.
-
-"Well, this beats me!" exclaimed Don incredulously.
-
-"An' is this the wery identical swab, an' no mistake? I axes," demanded
-the captain.
-
-"Mistake? None whatever, unless Jack was mistaken in the fellow the
-other day, which isn't at all likely. Besides, I've seen him twice
-before myself; once in the temple, and again on the sands here. I'd know
-that hang-dog look of his among a thousand. Then there's Spottie; he saw
-him as well. Stop! let's see what Spottie makes of this."
-
-Spottie was summoned, and, without being informed of the point in
-dispute, unhesitatingly identified the captive as the lascar.
-
-"Then," said Don, "Jack must have supposed he stabbed the fellow when he
-didn't; that's the most I can make of it."
-
-"Belay there!" objected the captain. "What about the blood in the canoe
-and on the knife when arterwards found? I axes."
-
-"There you have me. This fellow's the lascar fast enough; but how he's
-the lascar and yet doesn't show the wound Jack gave him, I know no more
-than the man in the moon. Ugh! what a greasy beast he is! I'd better
-take the strap up another hole to make sure of him."
-
-So, for a time, the puzzling question of the lascar's identity dropped.
-
-No food being procurable here, they decided to push oh to the Haunted
-Pagodas ere the sun became too hot, and there endeavour to clear a
-passage to the immured stores. Accordingly, when the canoe had been
-dragged back to its former place of concealment, they set out, Don
-taking charge of the lascar, who, clad in Spottie's upper-cloth, and
-having his legs only at liberty, led as quietly as a lamb.
-
-Two-thirds of the way up they came upon that portion of the hill which
-had been ravaged by the fire. For the most part this had now burnt
-itself out, leaving the summit of the elevation one vast bed of ghastly
-gray ashes, with here and there a smouldering stump or cluster of bamboo
-stems still smoking.
-
-At the Haunted Pagodas two surprises awaited them. The first of these
-was no other than Puggles himself, alive and lachrymose. On the floor
-of the otherwise empty "fo'csle" he sat, blubbering dolefully. Comical
-indeed was the spectacle he presented, with his woebegone face thickly
-begrimed with a mixture of ashes and tears--a sort of fortuitous
-whitewash, relieved in the funniest fashion by the black skin showing in
-patches through its lighter veneer, and by the double line of vivid red,
-stretching half-way from ear to ear, that marked the generous expanse of
-his mouth.
-
-The explanation of his sudden disappearance proved simple enough. He
-had stumbled in the very act of following his master past the
-swiftly-advancing fire, and crawling back on hands and knees to a place
-of safety, had there passed the night alone in the jungle. On reaching
-the encampment and finding it deserted, he jumped to the conclusion that
-the fire had, as he put it, "done eat sahibs up," stores and all. Hence
-his tearful condition on their return.
-
-The second surprise was one of an equally pleasing nature, since it
-concerned the stores. The mass of _debris_ which blocked the tunnel's
-mouth had subsided to such an extent in cooling as to admit of their
-reaching the imprisoned stores with but little difficulty.
-
-"All the same, captain," remarked Don, when presently they began a
-vigorous attack on the provisions, "I'm jolly glad our fear of being
-buried alive drove us to the far end of the hole. We've got the key to
-the Elephant Rock, and, what's more, we've got a grip on old Salambo's
-right hand," nodding towards the lascar, who was again bound hand and
-foot, "that's safe to stand us in good stead when it comes to the final
-tussle for Jack and the pearls."
-
-"Right ye are, lad," said the captain in tones as hearty as
-his appetite; "an', blow me!--as the fog-horn says to the
-donkey-ingin--arter we snatches a wink o' sleep, d'ye mind me, we'll
-lay our heads together a bit an' detarmine on the best course to be
-steered."
-
-On the stone floor of the "fo'csle" the blacks were already sleeping the
-sleep of repletion; and, their meal finished, Don and the captain lost
-no time in following their example--for thirty-six hours of almost
-unremitting exertion and danger had told heavily upon their powers of
-endurance. Dead tired as they were, they gave little heed to the lascar
-beyond assuring themselves by a hasty glance that his bonds were secure.
-To all appearance he was wrapped in profound slumber.
-
-The sun was at the zenith when they stretched themselves upon the
-flags of the "fo'csle"; slowly it burnt its way downward to the western
-horizon, and still they slept. Don was the first to stir. He raised
-himself upon his elbow with a yawn, rubbed his eyes, gazed about him in
-momentary bewilderment. Twilight had already crept out of the ravine
-and invaded the ghostly, fire-scathed ruins. This was the first-thing he
-noticed. Then the recollection of the events of the past day and night
-rushed upon him, and he turned abruptly, with a sudden vague sense of
-dread, to the spot where the lascar lay.
-
-Lay? No; that place was empty!
-
-He could scarcely believe the evidence of his senses. Had the fellow
-somehow managed to shift his position, and roll out of sight behind one
-of the numerous blocks of stone that lay about? Or had he----
-
-With a cry of alarm he threw himself upon an object that lay where the
-lascar had lain. It was the leathern belt with which he had bound the
-fellow's arms. The tongue of the buckle was broken. He recollected now,
-and almost cursed his folly for not recollecting before, that the buckle
-had long been weak. Too late! The lascar had escaped!
-
-Dashing the traitorous belt upon the stones, he hurried to where the
-old sailor lay asleep, with Bosin curled up by his side, and shook him
-roughly by the shoulder. He was in no gentle mood just then.
-
-"Captain! Captain! Wake up! The lascars off!"
-
-No response. No movement. Only the monkey awoke suddenly and fell to
-whimpering.
-
-The captain lay at full length upon his back, his bronzed hands clasped
-upon his broad chest, his blue sailor's cap drawn well over his
-eyes. Something in the pose of the figure at his feet, in its
-stillness--something, too, in the plaintive half-human wail the monkey
-uttered at the moment--struck a sudden chill to Don's heart. He dropped
-upon his knees, lifted the cap, peered into the upturned face. It was
-distorted, purple. He started back with a fearful cry:
-
-"Not dead! Oh, my God, not dead!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.--SHROUDED IN A HAMMOCK.
-
-
-|That was a fearful moment for Don. The quest of the golden pearl,
-entered upon with all the love of adventure and sanguine hope natural to
-young hearts, began to wear a serious aspect indeed. Even had Jack been
-there to share the heartbreak of it, this sudden, numbing blow would
-still have been terribly hard to bear. But Jack was gone--whither,
-Heaven alone knew--and the captain was dead.
-
-Ay, the "Providence that sits up aloft" had at last looked out a snug
-berth for the old sailor, and shipped him for the Eternal Voyage.
-Kneeling by his side in the solemn twilight, with aching heart Don
-recalled all his quaint ways and quainter sayings, his large-hearted
-generosity, his rollicking good-nature, his rough but ever-ready
-sympathy--and sealed the kindly eyes with such tears as are wrung from
-us but once or twice in a lifetime, and recalled with sadness often,
-with shame never.
-
-But for him the captain would never have undertaken this disastrous
-venture. This was the bitterest, the sorest thought of all.
-
-At last Bosin's low wailing broke in upon his sad reverie. Well-nigh
-human did the monkey seem, as with tender, lingering touch he caressed
-his master's face, and sought to rouse him from this strange sleep of
-which he felt but could not understand the awful meaning. Then, failing
-to win from the dumb lips the response he craved, he turned his
-eyes upon his master's friend with a look of pathetic appeal fairly
-heartbreaking in its mute intensity.
-
-No sooner did he succeed in attracting Don's attention, however, than
-his manner underwent a complete change. The plaintive wail became a
-hiss, the puny, lithe hands tore frantically at something that showed
-like a thin, dark streak about the dead man's neck. What with the waning
-light and the shock of finding the captain dead, Don had not noticed
-this streak before. He looked at it closely now, and as he looked a
-horrified intelligence leapt into his face. The dark streak was a cord:
-the captain had been strangled!
-
-Oh, the horror of that discovery! Hitherto he had suspected no foul
-play, no connection of any kind, indeed, between the captain's death and
-the lascar's escape; for had he not taken the precaution to disarm
-the native? But now he remembered seeing that cord about the fellow's
-middle. He had thought it harmless. Harmless! Ah, how different was the
-mute witness borne by the old sailor's lifeless form! In the lascar's
-hands the cord had proved an instrument of death as swift and sure as
-any knife.
-
-But why had the captain been singled out as the victim? Was the lascar
-merely bent on wreaking vengeance on those who had injured him? Or was
-he a tool in other and invisible hands?
-
-Feverishly he asked himself these questions as he removed the fatal
-cord, and composed the distorted features into a semblance of what they
-had been in life; asked, but could not answer them. Only, back of the
-whole terrible business, he seemed to see the cunning, unscrupulous
-shark-charmer, bent on retaining the pearls at any cost, fanning the
-lascar's hatred into fiercer flame, guiding his ready hand in its work
-of death.
-
-Could he, alone and all but unaided, cope with the cunning of this enemy
-who, while himself unseen, made his devilish power felt at every turn?
-The responsibility thrown upon his shoulders by the captain's murder
-involved other and weightier issues than the mere recovery of a few
-thousand pounds' worth of stolen pearls. Jack must be rescued, if indeed
-he was still alive; while, if he too was dead, his and the captain's
-murderers must be brought to justice. This was the task before him; no
-light one for a youth of eighteen, with only a brace of timid native
-servants at his back. Yet he addressed himself to it with all the
-passionate determination born of his love for the chum and his grief for
-the friend who had stood by him "through thick and thin." There was no
-hesitation, no wavering. "Do or die!" It was come to that now.
-
-The captain's burial must be his first consideration; for Don had lived
-long enough in the East to know how remorseless is the climate in
-its treatment of the dead. Morning at the latest must snatch the old
-sailor's familiar form for ever from his sight.
-
-A tarpaulin lay in the "fo'csle," and with this he determined to hide
-the lascar's dread handiwork from view before waking the blacks, who
-still slept. While he was disposing this appropriate pall above the
-corpse, the captain's jacket fell open, and in an inside pocket he
-caught sight of a small volume.
-
-"Perhaps he has papers about him that ought to be preserved," thought
-Don. "I'll have a look."
-
-Drawing the volume from its resting-place with reverent touch, he found
-it to be a copy of the Book of Common Prayer, sadly worn and battered,
-like its owner, by long service. Here and there a leaf was turned down,
-or a passage marked by the dent of a heavy thumb-nail--the sailor's
-pencil. But what arrested his attention were these words written on the
-yellow fly-leaf in a bold, irregular hand, and in ink so faded as to
-make it evident that many years had elapsed since they were penned:
-
-"To all and sundry as sights these lines, when-somedever it may please
-the Good Skipper to tow this 'ere old hulk safe into port, widelicit.
-If so be as I'm spared to go aloft when on the high-seas, wery good! the
-loan of a hammock and a bit o' ballast is all I axes. But if so be as
-I'm ewentually stranded on shore, why then, d'ye mind me, who-somedever
-ye be as sights these 'ere lines, I ain't to be battened down like a
-lubberly landsman, d'ye see, but warped off-shore an' shipped for the
-Eternal V'yage as a true seaman had ought to be. And may God have mercy
-on my soul.--Amen. The last Log and Testament of me,
-
-"(Signed) John Mango, A.B."
-
-The faded characters grew blurred and misty before Don's eyes as he
-scanned them. Closing the book, he grasped the captain's cold hand
-impulsively, and in tones choked with emotion, cried:
-
-"You shall have your wish, dear old friend! We'll warp you off-shore and
-ship you for the Eternal Voyage in a way befitting the true seaman that
-you are."
-
-And the mute lips seemed to smile back their approval, as though they
-would say:
-
-"Ay, ay, wrhy not, I axes? An' cheer up, my hearty, for, d'ye mind me,
-lad, pipin' your eye won't stop the leak when the ship's a-sinkin'."
-
-What boots it to linger over the noisy, but none the less genuine
-grief, of the faithful Spottie when he learned the sad truth? Nor is it
-necessary to describe at length the sad preparations for consigning the
-dead captain to his long home beneath the waves that had been his home
-so long in life. Suffice it to say that without loss of time a rude bier
-was constructed on which to convey the remains to the beach, and that
-while this was preparing there occurred an event so remarkable, and
-withal of so important a bearing upon the future of the quest, as to
-merit something more than mere passing mention.
-
-It happened while the three were in the jungle cutting materials for the
-litter, and it concerned the fatal cord.
-
-"Until the lascar's paid out, I'll keep this as a reminder of what I owe
-him," Don had said grimly, just before starting; and taking the lascars
-knife from his belt he stuck it into a crevice in the "fo'csle" wall,
-and hung the snake-like cord upon it.
-
-Spottie and Puggles being too timid to leave with the dead, or to send
-alone into the jungle in quest of materials for the bier--for was it not
-at nightfall that shadowy spooks walked abroad?--Don was forced to bear
-them company. There was no help for it; the captain's body must be left
-unguarded in their absence--except, indeed, for such watch-care as puny
-Bosin was able to give it.
-
-Up to the moment of their setting out the monkey had not for a single
-instant left his master's side. This fact served to render all the more
-extraordinary the discovery they made on their return--namely, that the
-monkey had quitted his post. What could have induced him to abandon his
-master at such a moment was a mystery.
-
-And the mystery deepened when Don, wanting the knife, sought it in the
-"fo'csle," for, to his astonishment, neither knife nor cord was to be
-found.
-
-"Dey spooks done steal urn, sar," cried Spottie, with chattering teeth.
-
-"Huh," objected Puggles, between whom and Spottie there had grown up a
-sharp rivalry during their brief acquaintance, "why they no steal
-dead sahib? I axes." Then to his master: "Lascar maybe done come back,
-sahib."
-
-This suggestion certainly smacked more of plausibility than that offered
-by Spottie, since it not only accounted for the disappearance of the
-cord and knife, but of Bosin as well. Was it too much to believe that
-the faithful creature's hatred, instinctively awakened by the lascar's
-stealthy return, had outweighed affection for his dead master and
-impelled him to abandon the one that he might track the other?
-Remembering the intelligence exhibited by the monkey in the past, Don at
-least was satisfied that this explanation was the true one.
-
-By midnight all was in readiness, and with heavy hearts they took up
-their dead and began the toilsome descent to the creek. This reached,
-the _Jolly Tar_ was drawn from her place of concealment, and the
-captain's body lashed in a tarpaulin. Then, with white wings spread,
-the cutter bore silently away from the creek's mouth in quest of a last
-resting-place for the master whose behest she was never again to obey.
-
-"This will do," said Don, when a half-hour's run had put them well
-off-shore. "Take the tiller, Pug, and keep her head to the wind for a
-little."
-
-With bowed head he opened the well-worn Prayer Book, and, while the
-waves chanted a solemn funeral dirge, read in hushed tones the office
-for the burial of the dead at sea. A pause, a tear glinting in the
-moonlight, a splash--and just as the morning star flashed out like
-a beacon above the eastern sea-rim, the old sailor began the Eternal
-Voyage.
-
-"And now," said Don, as he brought the cutters head round in the
-direction of the creek; "now for the last tussle and justice for the
-dead. Let me only come face to face once more with that murderous lascar
-or his master, and no false notions of mercy shall stay my hand--so help
-me Heaven!"
-
-And surely not Heaven itself could deem that vow unrighteous.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.--THE CROCODILE PIT.
-
-
-|The last melancholy duty to the captain discharged, Don threw himself
-heart and fist--as Jack would have said--into the work cut out for him;
-and by the time the _Jolly Tar_ was again rubbing her nose against the
-inner wall of the grotto, he had decided to abandon the Haunted Pagodas
-and to make this secluded spot--next door to the back entrance of the
-Elephant Rock--his base of operations.
-
-"Up to now it's been all take and no give," he said to himself; "but now
-we've got to act, and act like a steel trap, sharp and sure. What is it
-the old school motto says?--'_bis dat qui cito dat_,' 'a quick blow's as
-good as two any day.' The old Roman who strung that together knew what
-he was talking about, anyhow, and I'll put his old saw to the test
-before another sun sets."
-
-In the letter of which Bosin had been the bearer Jack had said--"They
-take me to the Elephant Rock to-night." Twice since then had night come
-and gone; and if his chum had not perished in the village holocaust, in
-the Elephant Rock he was probably to be found. Hurrah for the finding!
-
-The muskets were still at the "fo'csle," for that sad midnight descent
-of the hill had left their hands too full for weapons. Besides, none
-were needed then. They were needed now, however, so there was nothing
-for it but to climb the hill after them. This, and the time necessarily
-consumed in snatching a hasty meal, delayed the start by a good two
-hours.
-
-At length all was ready, and tumbling into the canoe they pushed off.
-To stick to the literal truth, Spottie did the tumbling. In spite of all
-his efforts to assume a dignity of carriage in keeping with his weapons
-and the occasion, the cutlass at Spottie's belt would persist in getting
-at crosspurposes with his long, thin legs, and so throw him, physically
-speaking, off his balance. Once seated in the canoe, however, with the
-point of the cutlass in dangerous proximity to Puggles's back, and
-the old flint-lock so disposed upon his knees as to hit Don to a dead
-certainty if by any mischance it went off, Spottie looked exceedingly
-fierce--in fact, an out-and-out swashbuckler.
-
-Not so Puggles. No weapons could make him look other than what nature
-had made him--a happy-go-lucky, fun-and-food loving, sunny-faced lump of
-oily blackness. The extra broad grin that tugged at the far corners
-of bis expansive mouth proclaimed him at peace with all the
-world--especially with that important section of it bounded by his
-swelling waistband--and gave the lie direct to his warlike equipment.
-
-Of crossing the creek Don made short work, and soon they stood upon the
-rock platform, where, but little more than twenty-four hours before,
-the landing and sudden disappearance of the native crew had put them in
-possession of the key which was now, if fortune favoured them, to unlock
-the secret of Jack's fate, and, haply, the door of his prison-house.
-
-Yonder on the right--for the spot was light enough by day, despite
-its curtain of vegetation--could be seen the black mouth of the tunnel
-running under the creek, and so to the summit of Haunted Pagoda Hill;
-here, on the left, that by which the natives had taken their departure.
-It was with this that Don's business lay now; and as he led the way into
-it he recalled with a sorrowful smile that quaint fancy of the captain's
-which made this approach to the Rook "the tail o' the Elephant." And
-here was the very spot where he had uttered the words. He almost fancied
-he could see the old sailor standing there still, his wooden leg thrust
-well forward, his cap well back, and Bosin perched contentedly upon his
-broad shoulder. Alas for fancy!
-
-But what was this that came leaping down the dim vista of steps? No
-creature of fancy surely, but actual flesh and blood. Only flesh and
-blood in the form of a monkey, it is true, but what mattered that, since
-the monkey was none other than Bosin himself?
-
-A jubilant shout from Puggles greeted his appearance--a shout which Don,
-fearful of discovery, immediately checked--while Spottie made as if to
-catch the returned truant. But the impish Bosin would have none of him;
-eluding the grasp of the black, he sprang upon Don's shoulder. Only
-then did Don observe that the monkey was not empty-handed. He carried
-something hugged tightly against his breast.
-
-Like all his tribe, Bosin had a pretty _penchant_ for annexing any
-chance article that happened to take his fancy, without regard to
-ordinary rights of property.
-
-"Prigging again, eh?" said Don, as he gently disengaged the monkey's
-booty from his grasp. "What have you got this time?"
-
-To his astonishment he saw that he held in his hands the lascar's cord,
-and--surely he was not mistaken?--the fellow to that half of Jack's
-handkerchief in which his letter had been wrapped up when despatched
-from the village per monkey post.
-
-Bosin's mysterious disappearance, then, was explained. In quitting his
-dead master's side so unaccountably he had had a purpose in view--a
-monkeyish, unreasoning purpose, doubtless, but none the less a
-purpose--which was none other than to track the lascar to his lair and
-regain possession of the cord. Not that he knew in the least the value
-to Don of the yard of twisted hemp, or the significance of the scrap of
-crumpled, bloodstained cambric he was at such pains to filch. With only
-blind instinct for his guide, he had been guided better than he knew;
-for while the cord proved the Elephant Rock to be the hiding-place of
-the lascar, the handkerchief proved, or seemed to prove, that Jack was
-still alive and that the lascar's hiding-place was his prison.
-
-Don's heart leapt at the discovery.
-
-Perhaps Jack, unable for some reason to scribble even so much as a word,
-had entrusted the handkerchief to the monkey's care, knowing that the
-sight of it would assure his chum of his safety, if it did no more. Or
-perhaps Bosin had carried it off while Jack slept?
-
-A thousand conjectures flashed through Don's brain, but he thrust them
-hastily aside, since mere conjecture could not release his chum; and
-calling to the blacks to follow, he sprang up the steps with a lighter
-heart. The monkey swung himself down from his perch and took the lead,
-as if instinctively divining the object of their quest; chattering
-gleefully when the trio pressed close upon his heels--impatiently when
-they lagged behind.
-
-The steps surmounted, they discovered an offshoot from the main tunnel,
-from which point of division the latter dwindled straight away into a
-mere dot of light in the distance. In the main tunnel itself the light
-was faint enough; but as they advanced it increased in brilliancy till
-presently--the distance being actually much less than the unbroken
-perspective of chiselled rock made it appear--they emerged suddenly into
-the broad light of day, streaming down through an oblong cleft or gash
-cut deep into the solid heart of the Rock.
-
-The light itself was more welcome than what it revealed.
-
-Directly across their path, at their very feet indeed, extended a
-yawning chasm, of depth unknown--but, as the first glance served to
-show, of such breadth as to effectually bar their further progress.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.--DON SETS A DEATH-TRAP FOR THE LASCAR.
-
-
-|To be sure, skirting the end wall on the extreme left was a ledge along
-which the agile monkey made his way to the opposite side of the pit
-with little or no difficulty; but, as for following him, by that road at
-least, why, the thing was an utter impossibility. The ledge was a mere
-thread. Scarce a handbreadth of rock lay between the smooth-cut upper
-wall and the perpendicular face of the pit.
-
-"Blow me!" muttered Don, unconsciously echoing the phrase he had so
-often heard on the captains lips, "if this ain't the purtiest go as ever
-I see!" Which assertion was purely figurative; for as he was only too
-well aware it was "no go" at all, so far as the pit was concerned.
-
-Peering over the brink of the chasm he found it to be partially filled
-with water, between which and the spot where he stood intervened perhaps
-thirty feet of sheer wall. An uninviting pool it looked, lying as green
-and putrescent within its sunken basin as if the bones of unnumbered
-dead men were rotting in its depths. The very sunshine that fell in
-great golden blotch upon its surface seemed to shrink from its foul
-touch.
-
-But what struck Don as the strangest feature of this noisome pool was
-the constant agitation of its waters. To what was it due? What were
-those black, glistening objects floating here and there upon its
-surface? And those others, ranged along the half-submerged ledge on the
-far side? A small fragment of stone chanced to lie near him. He picked
-it up and aimed it at one of these curious objects. To his astonishment
-the black mass slowly shifted its position and plunged with a wallowing
-splash into the pool. Puggles, who had been looking on with mouth agape,
-raised a shout.
-
-"Him corkadile, sa'b! Me sometimes bery often seeing um in riber. Him
-plenty appetite got!"
-
-"Ugh, the monsters!" muttered his master, watching with a sort of
-horrible fascination the movements of the hulking reptiles, which lifted
-their ugly, square snouts towards him as if scenting prey. "Here's a
-pretty kettle of fish! Crossing this hole is hound to be a tough job at
-the best--but, as if that wasn't enough, these brutes must turn up and
-add danger to difficulty. Plenty appetite? I should think so, indeed, in
-such a hole as this! However, crocodile or no crocodile, it's got to be
-crossed."
-
-Until now he had rather wondered, to tell the truth, why it was that
-not a single native had crossed their path. He had expected to find the
-passage guarded. The pit, not to say the crocodiles, shed a flood of
-light--not very cheering light, he was forced to admit--upon this
-point. No doubt the natives considered themselves in little danger from
-intrusion, so long as they were guarded by a dozen feet of sheer pit,
-with a dozen brace or so of healthy crocodiles at the bottom of it.
-
-And probably they were right so far as concerned intruders of their own
-colour and pluck; but Don was made of sturdier stuff than native clay.
-Beyond the crocodile pit lay his chum, a prisoner. Cross it he must,
-and would. Therefore, to borrow the expressive phrase of an American
-humorist, he "rose to the emergency and caved the emergency's head in."
-
-Was the pit too wide to leap? Spanning it with his eye, he estimated its
-width at a dozen feet; certainly not less. A tremendous leap that, and
-fraught with fearful risk. And even should he be able to take it, what
-of Spottie and Puggles? They would never dare face it. And what, too, of
-the muskets and cutlasses?
-
-Suddenly he descried, just where the continuation of the tunnel pierced
-the wall on the far side of the pit, an object that inspired him with
-fresh hope and determination. True, it was nothing more than a plank,
-but once that plank was in his hands, he could, perhaps, bridge the pit.
-
-A dozen feet at the very least! Could he clear it? To jump short of
-the opposite ledge, to reach it, even, and then slip, meant certain and
-horrible death at the jaws of the crocodiles. Should he venture? Jack
-had ventured much for him. He slipped off his shoes--his stockinged feet
-would afford a surer foothold--and quietly bade the blacks stand aside.
-Sauntering carelessly into the tunnel--that by which they had approached
-the pit--a distance of forty paces or so, he turned, drew a deep breath,
-threw all his lithe strength into the short run, his whole soul into the
-leap, and---- Would he clear it?
-
-No--yes! A horrified shriek from the blacks, and he was over, the pit a
-scant handbreadth behind him.
-
-Dragging the plank from its place of partial concealment, he was
-delighted to find a short piece of rope attached to it. Good; it would
-facilitate the bridging of the chasm. Standing on the brink, he
-coiled the rope--not without a misgiving that it was too short for his
-purpose--and, calling to Spottie to catch the end, threw it out over the
-pit sailor-fashion. It fell short.
-
-"Stop!" cried he. "This will make it right;" and drawing the lascar's
-cord from his pocket, he knotted it to the rope. This time Spottie
-succeeded in grasping the end; and so, with the aid of the lascar's
-cord, the plank was drawn across. Its length was such that it bridged
-the pit from wall to wall, with a foot of spring-way to spare at either
-end.
-
-At the time Don thought nothing of this apparently trivial incident;
-yet, had he but known it, with that cord he had laid a death-trap for
-the-captain's murderer.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.--THE BLAST OF A CONCH-SHELL.
-
-
-|The rest was easy. In five minutes the blacks had crawled across, with
-many fearful glances at the upturned snouts of the huge reptiles below;
-and Don, treading the springy length of plank with sure foot, had
-transferred muskets and cutlasses to what he mentally termed "Jack's
-side" of the chasm. They were now ready for a fresh start.
-
-All this time Bosin had watched their movements with an expression of
-mingled shrewdness and approval in his restless eyes that seemed to say:
-"Ha! the very thing I'd do myself were I in the fix you're in." Again he
-took the lead, like one who had travelled the road before, and was quite
-satisfied in his own mind that he knew all its little ins and outs.
-
-His knowledge of the way became more apparent still when, after
-penetrating the heart of the rock for some distance, the tunnel split
-into three distinct branches. This point Don hesitated to pass; but not
-so Bosin. Without a pause he took the passage to the right, glancing
-back as if to assure himself that he was followed. Off this gallery
-others opened, until it became evident that, as the captain had once
-affirmed, the rock was honeycombed "from maindeck to keelson." But for the
-monkey's guidance Don must have found himself utterly at a loss amid so
-perplexing a labyrinth. As it was, he pressed forward with confidence.
-
-Danger of discovery, owing to the multiplicity of passages, now
-increased momentarily. Any of these ghostly corridors might afford
-concealment to an enemy who, warned of danger by the muffled echo of
-approaching steps, might steal away, silently and unobserved, and so
-raise the alarm. Though still in his stocking feet, Don instinctively
-found himself treading on tip-toe, while the bare-footed blacks--who
-were even less inclined for a brush with the enemy than he--purposely
-did the same. Even then their movements, well-nigh noiseless though they
-were, caused commotion amongst the bats that clung in patches of living
-fungi to the vaulted roof, and sent them wheeling hither and thither in
-swift, startled flight.
-
-To succeed in finding his chum, and to liberate him ere discovery came,
-was almost more than Don dared hope for. For come it must, sooner or
-later. Only, once Jack was by his side, he cared little how soon or in
-what manner it came. True, the natives possessed the seeming advantage
-of overwhelming numbers; but in these rock corridors the nozzle of a
-single musket was better than a hundred men.
-
-To do him justice, he had thrust the pearls entirely out of his thoughts
-in his eagerness to set Jack at liberty. "Time enough to think about the
-pearls afterwards," he said to himself--forgetting that "afterwards" was
-at the best but a blind alley, full of unknown pitfalls.
-
-They were now well into the heart of the Elephant Bock, where any moment
-might bring them face to face with Jack or his captors, or both.
-
-At this point the monkey, who was some yards in advance, suddenly
-stopped and uttered a peculiar hissing sound. Once before--when, on
-the rock platform, Bosin had given warning of the approach of
-the canoes--had Don heard that hiss. There was no mistaking its
-significance. He motioned to the blacks to halt, and with stealthy tread
-crept forward alone.
-
-Just ahead a sharp bend in the passage limited his view to a few yards
-of indifferently lighted wall. Hugging the inner side of this bend, he
-presently gained the jutting shoulder of rock which formed the dividing
-line between the vista of gallery behind and that ahead, and from this
-point of vantage peered cautiously round the projection in search of the
-cause of Bosin's alarm.
-
-This was not far to seek. Immediately beyond the bend the passage
-expanded into a sort of vestibule, communicating, by means of a
-lofty portal, with a spacious, well-lighted chamber. It was not this
-discovery, however, that riveted his gaze, but a dusky figure crouched
-on the floor of the vestibule--the figure of a native, reclining on a
-mat, with his back to the spot where Don stood. By his side lay a sword
-of curious workmanship, and a huge conch-shell, the pearly pink of its
-inner surface contrasting strangely with the native's coffee-coloured
-skin. The weapon and the shell told their own tale: the native was doing
-"sentry-go."
-
-Over what or whom? With swift glance Don scanned every nook and corner
-of the vestibule, and as much of the interior chamber as lay within
-range of his vision. So far as he could see both were empty, barring
-only the dusky sentinel. Then he fancied he heard the faint clanking
-of a chain, though from what direction the sound proceeded it was
-impossible to determine. Listening with bated breath, he heard it again,
-and now it seemed to come from the larger chamber. His pulses thrilled,
-and a determined light shone in his eyes as he turned them once more
-upon the sentinel.
-
-"I'll jolly soon fix you, old chap," he said to himself; and noiselessly
-clubbing the musket he carried, he prepared to advance.
-
-But for the monkey's vigilance he must have come upon the recumbent
-guard without the slightest warning, for not more than ten paces
-separated the shoulder of rock--Don's post of observation--from the mat
-on which the native reclined.
-
-To fire upon him was out of the question, since that would fulfil the
-very purpose for which he, with his conch-shell trumpet, was stationed
-there--namely, to send a thousand wild echoes hurtling through chamber
-and galleries, and so apprise his comrades of impending danger.
-Moreover, Don had a wholesome horror of bloodshed, which at most times
-effectually held his trigger finger in check.
-
-A swift, sure blow--that would be the best means of keeping the native's
-lips from the nozzle of his conch-trumpet. A blow--ay, there was
-the-rub! For, though the native's back was towards-him, the space by
-which they two were divided must be crossed; and these walls, dumb
-as they looked, had hidden tongues, which would echo and re-echo the
-faintest sound. Could he, then, get near enough to strike?
-
-Inch by inch he crept towards the unconscious sentinel, slowly raising
-the butt of the musket as he advanced. So intense was the suspense of
-those few brief moments that he hardly breathed. It seemed as if the
-very beating of his heart must reach the native's ears. Inch by inch,
-foot by foot, until----
-
-[Illustration: 0213]
-
-The native turned his head; but before he could spring to his feet, or
-even utter a cry, the musket crashed upon his shaven pate, and he rolled
-over on his side without a sound.
-
-Don did not stop to ascertain the extent of his injuries. Neither did he
-summon the blacks. Again the clanking of chains rang in his ears, and at
-a bound he crossed the threshold of the larger chamber, An unkempt human
-figure started up in the far corner.
-
-"Jack!"
-
-"And is it really you, old fellow?" cried Jack joyfully. "Give us your
-hand; and how did you find your way here, I want to know?"
-
-"You have Bosin to thank for that," replied Don, returning his chum's'
-grip with interest. "When I saw your handkerchief----"
-
-"Ah, the monkey stole it, then! I missed it, don't you know, but never
-imagined that Bosin took it, though he paid me a visit early this
-morning. Well, he did me a good turn that time, anyhow."
-
-"And a better one when he led us back here. But," continued Don in
-hurried, suppressed tones, "don't let us waste time palavering, Jack.
-There's not a moment to lose. I've done for old conchy yonder--knocked
-him on the head--but the rest may swoop down on us any minute. Say, how
-are you tethered?"
-
-"Leg," said Jack laconically, rattling a chain which secured him to the
-wall. "Stop!"--as Don unslung his cutlass with the intention of hacking
-at the links--"I'll show you a trick worth two of that. You see that
-ring-bolt the chain's fastened to? Well, it's set in lead--not very
-securely as it happens--and I've managed to work it so loose that I
-fancy a good hard tug ought to bring it away. Meant to make off on my
-own account, you see, if you hadn't turned up, old fellow. But lay hold
-and let's have a pull for it, anyhow."
-
-"Quick, then!" said Don. "I thought I heard footsteps."
-
-Throwing their combined weight upon the chain, they pulled for dear
-life. The ring-bolt yielded little by little, and presently came away
-from its setting bodily, like an ancient tooth, and Jack was free. The
-chain, it is true, was still attached to his leg; but as it encircled
-only one ankle, this did not so much matter.
-
-"Don't let it rattle," said Don breathlessly, "I'm positive I heard
-footsteps. And here, take this," thrusting the cutlass into Jack's
-disengaged hand. "Now, come on!"
-
-Barely had he uttered the words when a hollow, prolonged blast, like
-that of a gigantic trumpet with a cold in its throat, filled the chamber
-with deafening clamour. And as the echoes leapt from wall to wall, and
-buffeted each other into silence, another sound succeeded them, faint
-and far away, but swelling momentarily into ominous loudness and
-nearness.
-
-Don clutched his companion's arm.
-
-"The fellow I knocked on the head--he's come to!" he said thickly. "That
-was the blast of his conch; and this"--pausing with uplifted hand and
-bated breath until that other sound broke clearly on their ears--"this
-is the tread of heaven only knows how many native feet. Jack, we're
-discovered!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.--BETWEEN LIFE AND DEATH.
-
-
-|Four galleries centred on the rock-chamber, and the confused,
-tumultuous rush of feet which followed the blast of the conch-shell like
-an ominous echo, proceeded from that particular gallery opposite the
-vestibule.
-
-"Seems to be a rare lot of them; but we needn't stop to reckon 'em up,"
-said Jack, with a constrained laugh. "Lead the way, old fellow."
-
-Into the smaller chamber they dashed, to find the exit blocked by the
-sentinel with sword drawn. Rapidly reversing his musket, Don bore down
-upon him--he, to do him justice, standing his ground bravely,--and with
-the butt-end of the weapon dealt the nigger a blow in the stomach that
-doubled him up like a broken bulrush.
-
-"Where are the others?" cried Jack, as they rounded the shoulder of rock
-separating the antechamber from the passage. "You never came alone!"
-
-"No; I left them just here--told them to wait," said Don, peering about
-in search of the blacks. "They must have gone back; thought they'd save
-their skins while they could, I suppose, the chicken-hearted beggars!
-Ha, here's Bosin, at any rate."
-
-Swinging the monkey upon his shoulder, he set off at a run down the
-passage, Jack following as close as the weight of the chain would allow
-him, to do. They had proceeded only a short distance when a faint,
-sepulchral shout brought them to a stand. The sound seemed to proceed
-from a gallery on their immediate right. The way out did not lie in that
-direction.
-
-"That's Pug's wheeze," said Don. "They've taken the wrong turning;" and
-he drew a deep breath to answer the call.
-
-Jack interposed quickly. "Stop! The natives will be down on us soon
-enough without, that. Off with you, old fellow, and fetch' pur party
-back. I'll wait here."
-
-Already Don was racing down the side passage. Presently Jack heard him
-jitter a cautious "hullo." A short silence followed then the echoes told
-him that the fugitives were hastily retracing their steps. At the same
-moment a confused uproar burst on his ears from the direction of the
-chamber in his rear. The pursuing mob had turned the angle of the
-passage and were actually in sight. The chain attached to Jack's leg
-clanked impatiently. He fairly danced with excitement. That ill-advised
-move on the part of the blacks had almost proved fatal to their sole
-chance of escape.
-
-But not quite; for now Don and the blacks came up, Jack joined them,
-and, with the oncoming thunder of many feet loud in their ears, away
-they sped, running as they alone can run who know that death is at their
-heels.
-
-Two circumstances favoured them so long as the race was confined to the
-cramped limits of the corridors: the smallness of their own number, and
-the multitude of their pursuers. Where four could run with ease, forty
-wasted their breath in fighting each other for running room.
-
-"We must put the pit between us and-these howling demons while they're
-tumbling over each other in the passage here," cried Don.
-
-It was their only hope. Racing on by Jack's side, close on-the heels of
-the blacks, he rapidly explained to his chum--who knew nothing of the
-pit, having been brought into the rock by a more circuitous route--the
-nature of the contemplated manoeuvre; and gave Spottie and Puggles their
-instructions how to act, backed up by a wholesome threat of summary
-abandonment to the enemy should they shirk when it came to the crucial
-point, the plank. The blacks were to cross first, Jack next; while he,
-Don, would cover their retreat as best he could. To this arrangement
-Jack could raise no demur. He was too seriously handicapped by the
-chain.
-
-A final spurt, and they cleared the tunnel and reached the pit. The
-plank lay where they had left it. Across it ran their only road to
-safety. At a significant signal from Don Spottie led off, and, when he
-had reached the further side in safety, Puggles followed in his tracks.
-Doffs threat, coupled with the ominous uproar belched forth by the mouth
-of the tunnel, eclipsed all fear of the crocodiles.
-
-"Now, Jack," cried Don, ere the plank had ceased to vibrate under
-Puggles's tread, "after you."
-
-Jack crossed, and Don was in the act of stepping on the unstable bridge,
-when the foremost of the native gang burst from the gallery. One swift
-backward glance--a glance that stowed him how alarmingly narrow was
-the margin between escape and capture--and with outstretched arms he
-balanced himself on the handbreadth of plank--it was scarcely more--and
-began the perilous passage. Swift as was this backward glance, it
-sufficed to show him, too, that the leader of the pursuit was none
-other than the escaped lascar; and ere he had traversed half the plank's
-length, he felt it yield and rebound beneath the quick tread of the
-fellows feet. At the same instant Jack raised a warning shout.
-
-There are moments when the strongest nerve quails, the steadiest head
-swings a little off its balance, the surest foot slips. Such a moment
-did this prove for Don. The disconcerting vibration of the plank,
-the knowledge that the lascar was at his very back, Jack's sudden
-shout--these for an instant conspired against and overcame his natural
-cool-headedness. He made a hurried step or two, staggered, and, his foot
-catching in the rope where it encircled the plank a short distance from
-the end, he stumbled and fell.
-
-Fell! but in falling dislodged the end of the plank which lay behind
-him, and on which the lascar stood, from its hold upon the further brink
-of the pit. The lascar, throwing up his arms with a despairing shriek,
-plunged headlong into the pool, where he was instantly seized upon by
-the ravenous crocodiles and torn limb from limb.
-
-[Illustration: 0223]
-
-And now, if ever, did the "Providence that sits up aloft" watch over
-Don. Almost miraculously, as it seemed, instead of plunging into the
-horrible death-trap below, he fell astride the plank, the hither end
-of which still retained its hold upon the rock at an angle of perhaps
-sixty-five degrees; and up this steep incline--whither Bosin had already
-preceded him--with Jack's assistance he managed to scramble. Then they
-laid hold upon the plank and dragged it from the pit, amid the furious
-howling of the baffled rabble debouching from the tunnel opposite.
-
-"Safe over, at any rate," panted Don. "But--good heavens! what's become
-of the lascar?" For, suspended as he had been between life and death, he
-had neither heard the lascar's shriek nor witnessed the horrible manner
-in which he had received his quietus at the jaws of the crocodiles.
-
-Jack pointed out a bright crimson blotch on the surface of the pool.
-"We've seen the last of him, poor devil," said he with a shudder. "Say,
-did I tell you--no, of course I didn't--that this fellows not _my_
-lascar?"
-
-"What, not the lascar who's been hounding us all this time?"
-
-"The lascar who's been hounding us on the island here--yes; but not the
-one who tried to brain me on board the cutter and got the knife for his
-pains. _That_ chap kicked the bucket shortly after he got ashore; this
-fellow's his brother. They're as like as two peas."
-
-Don vented his astonishment in a shrill whistle. "Then that accounts for
-it," said he; "for there being no scar on his shoulder, I mean."
-
-"Precisely; and it came jolly near accounting for yours truly as well,"
-said Jack, with a queer little laugh and a significant shrug of the
-shoulders. "This fellow, you see--the one who was just now eaten by the
-crocodiles--raised a sort of vendetta against us when his brother died,
-and of course he wanted to try his hand on me first, since it was I who
-gave his brother his death-blow. He'd have done it, too, if it hadn't
-been for old Salambo. But the old man put his foot down--I overheard
-their talk last night, and that's how I know--and said he wouldn't allow
-any violence, lucky for me. He was hoping for overtures from you, I
-suppose. But I say, what's this about the scar? How do _you_ know there
-was none on the fellow's shoulder?"
-
-"How do I know? Why, you see, it was this way. I was swimming the creek
-yesterday morning--you shall hear how that came about later on, by
-the way--when the lascar," indicating the crimson blotch on the pool,
-"tried to throttle me. I had to knock him on the head to quiet him. Then
-I towed him ashore, and the captain and I----"
-
-"The captain!" cried Jack with a start. "By Jove, we've left him
-behind!"
-
-The wild hurry-scurry and excitement of the last half-hour had afforded
-Don scant opportunity for speaking of the captain's sad end--had,
-indeed, driven all thought of the old sailor from his mind, as it also
-had from Jack's. Now that the captain was mentioned, however, Jack,
-naturally enough, jumped to the conclusion that he had formed one of
-the rescue party, and had been overlooked in their recent precipitate
-flight. The time was now come when he must be undeceived; but when Don
-attempted to disclose the sad truth emotion choked his utterance, and he
-could not. But Jack, gazing into his convulsed face, instinctively read
-there what his lips refused to utter.
-
-"When did it happen?" he asked in a hushed, awed whisper. "And how?"
-
-Controlling his voice with an effort, "Only last night," faltered Don;
-"the lascar did it."
-
-Jack turned away and buried his face in his hands.
-
-"He was strangled," Don presently resumed, "strangled with that cord
-you see tied to the rope there. Afterwards, when the lascar gave me
-the slip, as he did in the night, he took the cord with him; but Bosin
-somehow recovered it and fetched it back. I little guessed how it would
-serve the lascar out when I used it to bridge the pit!"
-
-"Retribution!" cried Jack, flinging his hands impulsively away from his
-face. "He's rightly served, the villain. Only"--regretfully--"I wish it
-had been me instead of the cord, that's all. But it's done, anyhow, so
-let's get out of this."
-
-And it was time; for during this conversation the natives had not been
-idle. At this very moment, indeed, a number of them rushed shouting from
-the tunnel, bearing other planks with which to bridge the chasm. Don
-and his chum did not wait to see this done. Without further loss of time
-they set out for the creek, in which direction the blacks had already
-preceded them.
-
-Hardly had they entered the tunnel, however, when they encountered the
-blacks, running back full pelt; and before Don could inquire the cause
-of their precipitate return, a shout, reverberating up the vaulted
-corridor from the semi-darkness ahead, made inquiry unnecessary. While
-he and Jack had dallied in fancied security, the natives, skirting the
-pit by another route, had cut off their retreat.
-
-And, as if to increase the consternation caused by this discovery, at
-the same instant a chorus of yells in their rear announced that the
-party in pursuit had succeeded in bridging the pit anew.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.--ONE-TO-TWENTY GIVES TWENTY-TO-ONE THE WORST OF IT.
-
-
-|Hemmed in!" cried Don, as the desperate character of the situation
-flashed upon him. "Shall we try to cut our way through the gang ahead,
-or fall back on the pit?"
-
-"Back!" was Jack's prompt rejoinder. "Once prevent the niggers in
-our rear from crossing the pit, and we're all right. We'll have more
-fighting room there, anyhow."
-
-Back they ran, hustling the blacks before them. At the pit matters were
-even worse than they had feared. Half-a-dozen planks already spanned the
-chasm, each of them black with natives, who jostled each other in their
-eagerness to cross, supremely indifferent to the reptilian horrors that
-awaited them should they lose their balance.
-
-"Hurrah!" shouted Jack, pouncing upon the 'bobbing end of the nearest
-plank. "Tumble 'em in! To the crocodiles with the beggars!"
-
-Though the occupants of the plank could understand not a syllable of
-Jack's speech, they readily understood his intention; and crowding
-back upon each other with warning cries, by their combined weight they
-hastened the very catastrophe they desired to avert. The plank bent
-like a bow, snapped in twain, and launched its shrieking burden into
-the abyss. In their frantic efforts to escape, a number of the doomed
-wretches clutched at a second plank that happened to lie within reach.
-Already heavily overloaded, this also gave way, and added its quota to
-the horrible commotion of the pool. Two planks were thus accounted for.
-
-Meanwhile Don and the blacks had not been slow to second Jack's efforts.
-By their united strength a third plank was dislodged, and they were in
-the act of attacking the fourth when their energies were diverted into
-another channel.
-
-For at this juncture the detachment of natives who had cut off the
-retreat to the creek suddenly appeared upon the scene. The remaining
-planks, too, now began to pour the enemy upon the hither side of the pit
-in steady streams.
-
-The rocky shelf' that here flanked the chasm had, perhaps, a width of
-three yards, and that portion of it to the left of the creek-tunnel's
-mouth, where the unmolested planks lay, was speedily packed with
-natives, armed with formidable pikes and knives, who bore down upon
-the little group with furious outcries and all the weight of superior
-numbers. Jack was the first to perceive the danger.
-
-"To the right! It's all up with us if we're surrounded."
-
-Suiting the action to the words, he darted to the right, closely
-followed by Don and the blacks. Here they stationed themselves side
-by side, the timid blacks in the rear, and prepared to meet their
-assailants.
-
-"Couldn't be better!" was Jack's cheerful comment, as he took a hasty
-survey of their surroundings. "Wall on our right; pit on left; enemy
-in front; and elbow-room behind. Say, we'll buckle to with the muskets
-first, and reserve the cutlasses till it comes to close quarters. Look
-out; they're coming!"
-
-On came the howling, disorderly mob, maddened by the terrible fate of
-their comrades, and thirsting for vengeance.
-
-"Ready!"
-
-Together the muskets rose to the level.
-
-"Don't fire too high. Now, let 'em have it hot!"
-
-The walls of the narrow enclosure rocked with the thunderous report. The
-mob quailed, fell back: "they had no stomach for cold lead.
-
-"That's all right," said Jack coolly as they rapidly reloaded; "but I
-wish we had breechloaders! A ball, quick!"
-
-The human wave in front, silent except for a sullen murmur that only
-waited for the rush to be renewed ere it swelled into fury, was again
-raising its ugly, threatening crest.
-
-"I doubt if we check it this time," said Don, watching it with anxious
-eyes; "they've seen us reload, and know where they have the advantage.
-Better get your cutlass----"
-
-"Ready!" cried his companion.
-
-The wave, broke. A hoarse roar, a tumultuous rusk such as it seemed no
-human power could withstand, and it was upon them. Again the walls leapt
-to the thunder of the muskets; again the serried ranks quailed. But
-before the smoke had left the muzzles of the muskets, the wave swept on
-again with redoubled fury, poured itself upon and around the brave lads,
-swept them off their feet For a moment it seemed as if the death-balance
-must kick the beam.
-
-But the "final tussle" was not to be just yet. Spottie and Puggles,
-terrified into momentary daring by the imminence of their own danger,
-now threw themselves into the fray with an energy-which, if it did
-little execution, at least served to divert many a blow from their
-masters. No mean help that--to take the blows meant for another.
-
-Nor were the masters themselves slow to recognise and profit by this
-fact. Right and left they slashed, dealing terrific swinging blows when,
-they could get them in, lunging desperately at the sinewy, half-naked
-forms about them when they could not, until British pluck and British
-muscle told, as they ever must in a righteous struggle for life and
-liberty, and One-to-twenty found itself clear of the _mle_, with a
-ghastly ridge of wounded at its feet, and fighting room behind.
-
-Well they had it! For the space of one deep breath the disconcerted
-rabble suspended hostilities, as if unable to believe that Twenty-to-one
-had got the worst of it. Then their ranks closed up into a solid mass
-of dusky, perspiring, blood-stained forms, and the onslaught was
-renewed--not hurriedly now, but with a watchful determination, a
-guarded, fierceness, that forced One-to-twenty back foot by foot until
-but little room was left for fighting, and none, in sooth, for quarter
-when it should come, as soon it must, to the sheer wall and the bitter
-end.
-
-Once more the blacks had slunk to the rear--had, in fact, already
-reached the wall, where, since they could get no farther, they cowered
-in miserable anticipation of speedy death. The "final tussle" was not
-far off now. Don and Jack had barely room to swing their cutlasses in.
-So much of the rocky ledge as might be measured by a single backward
-stride--only that separated them from the wall and the last scene of
-all. Inch by inch, their teeth hard set, their breath coming and going
-in quick, laboured gasps, they contested this narrow selvage of life. So
-the balance hung, when there came a second momentary lull in the deadly
-game of give and take. The dusky foe could now afford to breathe, being
-confident of the issue.
-
-Keeping a wary eye upon their movements, Don seized his chum by the
-hand. "I never thought it would come to--to this, old fellow," he said
-huskily; "God knows I didn't!"
-
-Jack swallowed hard several times before he could trust himself to
-reply. "No more did I. But were not going to funk now, old fellow;
-and--and I'm glad it's to be together, anyhow!"
-
-One mute, agonised look into each other's eyes; one last pressure of
-the hand, and again, shoulder to shoulder, they faced the foe and the
-inevitable end.
-
-At this instant, when it seemed that not a ghost of a chance remained,
-there arose on their immediate right a shrill chattering sound--a
-sound that, somehow, had in it a ring of joyousness so strangely out
-of keeping with the situation that Don turned with a start and a sudden
-thrill of hope towards the quarter whence it came. As he did so, his
-eyes fell upon Bosin, forgotten in the heat of the fray, and now
-perched--good God! upon what?
-
-Don clutched his companion's arm and pointed with unsteady finger.
-
-"Look!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.--THE LAST STRAW.
-
-
-|A glance--more he did not dare bestow whilst confronted by that
-treacherous throng--showed Jack what he and Don had hitherto entirely
-failed (and no wonder!) to observe. In the extreme corner of the ledge
-on which they stood, a deep, narrow gash divided the towering side wall,
-and up this, clear to the summit of the rock, there ran a flight of
-steps. On these Bosin had perched himself. At their foot crouched the
-blacks, blind to everything except their own danger. .
-
-"Wake those niggers up, and start them on ahead up the steps!" said Jack
-quickly. "Look sharp! they're going to rush us again."
-
-Falling on Spottie and Puggles, by dint of vigorous cuffing and shoving
-Don succeeded in getting them on the stairs. Rapidly as this was done,
-it produced an instantaneous effect upon the native rabble. They too had
-overlooked the existence of the stairway until Don's action recalled
-it to mind. A moment later the opening was besieged by a clamouring,
-infuriated throng.
-
-"Up with you, old fellow!" cried Jack, turning on the natives with drawn
-cutlass after he had ascended some half-dozen steps, and thus covering
-his friend's retreat. "You had your innings at the pit; now it's my
-turn."
-
-Stationed on the steps as he was, Jack would have possessed no mean
-advantage over the natives but for one circumstance. The chain attached
-to his leg dangled down the steps, and the natives, discovering this,
-promptly seized it. In a twinkling Jack was dragged back into the midst
-of the furious rabble.
-
-Don was half-way up the steps when the uproar caused by this mishap
-reached his ears. He turned just in time to see his companion disappear.
-
-Down the steps he bounded, clearing half-a-dozen at a leap, until barely
-that number lay between him and the bottom, where, owing to Jack's
-desperate resistance, the natives had their hands too full to notice his
-approach. Gauging the distance with his eye, he took a flying leap
-from this height into the very midst of them, scattering them in all
-directions. As he intended, he overleapt his friend, who now quickly
-regained his feet. Before the natives had time to recover from the shock
-of Don's precipitate arrival in their midst, he and Jack were well up
-the steps again. One or two of the gang made as if to follow them, but
-turned tail when menaced with the cutlasses.
-
-"Nick and go that time!" cried Don, as he gained the top and threw
-himself exhausted upon the rock. "Just for a minute I thought it was all
-U.P."
-
-"Me too," said Jack, with more gravity than grammar; "and, between
-ourselves, the sensation wasn't half pleasant, either. But, I say, are
-you hurt?"
-
-"No; nothing worse than a scratch or two. And you?"
-
-"Oh, I'm all right. Though it's little short of a miracle that we
-weren't spitted on those beastly pikes. Say, do you think they'll try to
-rush us here?"
-
-"Hardly, after the lesson we've taught them; unless, indeed, there is
-a wider approach to the summit here than those steps. We ought to look
-about us at once so as to make sure."
-
-"Right you are," assented Jack. "Let's load the muskets and leave the
-niggers in charge here while we take our bearin's like, as the captain
-used to say, poor old chap!"
-
-But when it came to charging the muskets--old-fashioned muzzle-loaders,
-it will be remembered--they made an unpleasant discovery. Don had lost
-his powder-flask in the fight.
-
-To make matters worse, Spottie, when called upon to produce his,
-confessed that he had left it on board the cutter in the hurry of the
-start. Only Pug's flask remained; but this, unfortunately, was nearly
-empty. There was barely enough powder left for three charges.
-
-This was but one of a series of disconcerting revelations which quickly
-followed the loading of the muskets.
-
-In the first place, the most careful search failed to disclose any other
-means of egress from the Rock. In all the length and breadth of its
-summit they could find no opening except the one by which they had
-ascended, while on every hand its sides fell away in declivities so
-steep and smooth that not even Bosin could have found a foothold upon
-them---or in perpendicular precipices that made the head swim as one
-looked down from their dizzy height upon the town, or sands, or jungle,
-far below.
-
-With the bright sky above, and the free air of heaven all around them,
-they were as effectually hemmed in as when that bristling array of pikes
-forced them back to the blank wall. The jaws of the trap were a little
-wider; the effects of its deadly grip a little delayed--that was all.
-
-To add to the horrors of their position, absolute starvation stared them
-in the face in the event of a prolonged siege. Since early morning they
-had eaten nothing, and the day was now far advanced; they had brought no
-food with them, and none was procurable here. A small temple crowned the
-Rock; but when they penetrated it in the hope of finding fruit or other
-edible offerings, its dustladen shrine spoke only too plainly of long
-disuse. Even the thin clusters of dates upon the few palms that eked
-out a stunted existence in a shallow depression of the Rock were acrid,
-shrivelled, and wholly unfit for food. The pit, it is true, contained
-water; but this, even had it been drinkable, lay hopelessly beyond their
-reach.
-
-"No powder, no grub, no drink; it's a pretty, pickle to be in, anyhow,"
-said Jack, ruefully summing up these calamitous discoveries as they
-rejoined the blacks at the head of the stairs. "And, by Jove!" pointing
-down the steps, "they've gone and doubled the guard."
-
-"The waters the worst," he presently resumed, scanning the arid expanse
-of rock thirstily. "We could hold out for days, if we only had a supply
-of that. As it is, I don't dare think what this place will be like under
-a midday sun--ugh!"
-
-"All the more reason we should leave it, then," said Don.
-
-"How?"
-
-Don was silent. The question did not seem to admit of an answer.
-
-"Now, see here, old' fellow," said Jack; "I admit, of course, that U.P.
-is written large all over the face of things just now; but at the same
-time it strikes me there's more than one way of getting off our white
-elephant's back."
-
-"There's only the tunnel to the creek," said Don, "and that's not
-going to help us much while it's chock-full of natives, and we have no
-powder."
-
-"Then why not go over the cliff?" demanded Jack.
-
-This daring and seemingly absurd proposal Don greeted with a stare of
-utter incredulity. "That would be facing death with a vengeance," was
-his far from encouraging comment. "How high do you estimate the cliff to
-be, anyway?"
-
-"A couple of hundred feet or so."
-
-Don laughed. "You may as well say thousands, so far as our chances
-of reaching the base in safety are concerned.. The thing's a sheer
-impossibility, I tell you; Bosin himself couldn't do it. You're
-downright mad to think of it, Jack."
-
-"Am I? I admit the difficulty, but not the impossibility. What Bosin
-can't do, we can."
-
-"How, I should like to know?"
-
-"By making a rope. See here, did you notice those palm-trees we passed
-while making the round of the Rock?"
-
-"I did; but 'pon my word I don't see what they've got to do with your
-proposal. Ropes don't grow on palm-trees."
-
-"Oh, but they do, though. Do you mean to say that you never saw the
-natives make a rope out of the branches of a palm?"
-
-"Of course I have. And what's more, I know how it's done. But say," his
-tone suddenly changing to one of anxiety, "suppose the palm-leaves don't
-give, us enough material?"
-
-"I'm not sure they will," said Jack doubtfully, "unless we spin it,
-out pretty fine; and that, of course, increases the danger of breakage.
-Well, if we run short, we can make shift with the blacks' clothes and
-turbans. But it's going to take a jolly long time to make--though we
-ought to finish it easily by to-morrow night. Then, ho for the cliff!
-And now, old fellow, just lie down, will you, and take a snooze: you're
-completely done up. When the moon rises I'll call you, and we'll have a
-whack at the trees, while Pug and Spottie do sentry-go."
-
-The blacks, poor fellows, were already sound asleep, with Bosin snuggled
-up between them; and Don was not long in following them into that realm
-of dreams, where waking cares, if they intrude at all, more often than
-not lie low and shadowy on the horizon. So Jack was left alone in the
-darkness and solitude of the Rock.
-
-Kicking off his shoes, and tucking the end of the chain beneath his belt
-to secure perfect noiselessness of movement, he shouldered a musket,
-and fell to pacing back and forth past the black orifice that marked the
-point where the stairway cleft the rocky floor. Monotonous work it was,
-and weird. The steely glint of the stars, the mournful sobbing of the
-surf upon the sands, sent an involuntary shiver through his frame.
-He crept softly to the extreme brink of the chasm and peered into its
-depths. Below all was pitchy blackness; he could distinguish nothing,
-save, far down, at an infinite depth as it seemed, the faint, fantastic
-reflection of a star on the surface of the pool. Occasionally a sound
-of lazy splashing floated up to where he stood, and he thought with
-creeping flesh of the horrible, ghoulish surfeit the crocodiles had had
-that day.
-
-To and fro beneath the steely stars--tramp, tramp, tramp, to the solemn
-dirge of the sea. Would the laggard moon never rise and put an end to
-his weird vigil?
-
-Hark! what was that? He paused and listened with suspended breath, his
-back towards the dim outline of the stairway; listened, but heard only
-the moaning of the surf and the regular, sonorous breathing of his
-sleeping companions.
-
-"One of those gorged crocodile beasts got a nightmare," he muttered,
-with a smile at the comic aspect of his own fancy. "Ha," catching sight
-of a faint, silvery glow in the east, "there's the moon at last. Time to
-call our fellows; I've had enough of this death's watch, anyhow."
-
-While uttering these words he made a step forward with the intention of
-calling Don and the blacks, when something whizzed swiftly through the
-air, he felt a sharp twinge, an intense burning sensation in his left
-arm, a deathly faintness stealing over him, and realised that he was
-wounded--wounded by a dexterously-thrown knife, which, had it not been
-for that timely forward stride, must have buried itself deep in his
-back. Luckily, in spite of the pain and giddiness, he retained his
-presence of mind. Quick as a flash he, wheeled, brought the hammer of
-the musket to full cock, and the musket itself to his shoulder. Above
-the yawning staircase the outline of a human figure showed indistinctly.
-
-"One for you," muttered Jack, and fired.
-
-The figure threw up its arms and fell backwards.
-
-The report of the musket brought Don to his feet. "What's the row?" he
-asked, running to his companion's side in alarm.
-
-The appearance of other figures in lieu of the first supplied a more
-pertinent answer to this question than Jack could have given. He
-snatched up one of the remaining muskets, Jack possessing himself of
-the other. By this time Spottie and Puggles were also up, but, like the
-dutiful servants they were, they kept well in the rear of their masters.
-
-The enemy were now literally swarming up the steps and sides of the
-stairway.
-
-Jack gave the word--"Blaze away!" and a double report went hurtling
-wildly out over the sea.
-
-Clubbing their muskets, they then fell upon and began clubbing the
-escaladers with an energy that speedily choked the contracted avenue of
-approach to the summit of the Rock with a heaving, scrambling, trampling
-mass of natives, whose desperate struggles to regain their lost foothold
-upon the steps only served to facilitate their descent to the bottom. In
-five minutes' time the repulse was complete; the foe retreated into the
-dark security of the chasm, leaving some six or eight of their number
-lying upon the scene of the affray. Jack threw aside his musket and
-sprang: down the steps to where they lay.
-
-"What are you after now?" cried Don, leaping down after him.
-
-"Cloths," was Jack's laconic rejoinder, as he unceremoniously began to
-divest the natives of the long strips of country cotton that encircled
-their waists. "We want these for our rope."
-
-On hearing this Don also set to work, and in a short time they had
-secured some half-dozen cloths, together with an equal number of
-turbans, which lay scattered all up and down the steps like enormous
-mushrooms. With this booty they returned in triumph to the summit of the
-rock.
-
-"They'll average twelve feet at least," said Jack, eyeing the tumbled
-heap critically. "Let's see--twelve twelves make a hundred and
-forty-four; and by tearing them in two down the middle we'll get double
-length. Total, two hundred and eighty-eight feet. Hurrah, we've got our
-rope!"
-
-"And a far safer one," observed Don, "than if we had patched it up out
-of those palm-leaves. Well, it's an ill wind that---"
-
-He got no further, for Jack suddenly dropped at his feet as though he
-had been shot. He had fainted from loss of blood, as Don, to his horror,
-quickly discovered. As a matter of fact, the knife that had penetrated
-Jack's arm was still in the wound, and its projecting hilt was the first
-intimation Don received of his chum's hairbreadth escape. By the time
-he had removed the knife, ripped open the coat-sleeve, and bandaged the
-wound with a fragment torn from one of the cloths, Jack opened his eyes.
-
-"Why didn't you tell me about this?" exclaimed Don reproachfully. "How
-did it happen?"
-
-"How? Oh, one of those treacherous niggers shot his knife at me--the
-old trick," said Jack, scrambling to his feet and shaking himself with
-nonchalant air, "I'd have told you, only I forgot it in the scuffle,
-Nothing but a scratch, anyway; I'm all right."
-
-Don's look was rather dubious, for, in spite of his companion's
-assumption of _sang-froid_, he could not but foresee the possible effect
-of a badly-wounded arm upon their proposed descent of the cliff.
-
-The moon was now well above the horizon; so, setting the blacks to watch
-the stairs, they went to work on the rope at once--an easy task compared
-to what it must have been had they attempted to utilise the tough,
-fibrous palm-branches, as at first proposed.
-
-"You haven't told me yet," Jack presently observed, pausing in his task
-of knotting together the long strips of cloth as Don tore them off ready
-to his hand; "you haven't told me how you came to lay the lascar by the
-heels--in the creek, I think you said? Let's have the story now, old
-fellow."
-
-"Oh, there's a whole cable's-length of events leading up to that," said
-Don. "I'd better begin at the beginning--with your disappearance, I
-mean."
-
-So there, beneath the stars, while the rope which was to ensure escape
-from the Rock grew under, their busy fingers, he recounted link by link
-the chain of events which the days and nights of Jack's absence had
-forged.
-
-Far into the night did the story spin itself out, for Jack had many
-questions to ask, many comments to make; until at last it came to that
-terrible moment when Don had sought to rouse the captain, and found him
-to be sleeping the sleep that knows no waking. His voice grew choked
-and husky then Jack bent low over his work, and tears glistened in the
-ghostly moonlight.
-
-"And in his jacket pocket I found this," concluded Don, producing the
-well-thumbed Prayer Book. "On the fly-leaf--no, you can't make it out
-now, the light is so faint--but on the fly-leaf the dear old chap had
-written that whatever happened, he was to be buried at sea. So this
-morning, just before daybreak, we put off in the cutter, and gave him
-what he wished for--a seaman's burial."
-
-Jack knew the whole sad story now, and for a time they fell into one of
-those silences which, somehow, are apt to follow the mention of the dead
-who have endeared themselves to us in life--silences eloquent, in their
-very stillness, of regret and grief.
-
-"There, it's done," said Jack at last, as he tied and tested the final
-knot. "And now, hurrah for the cliff!"
-
-Don had begun to coil the rope, when he suddenly paused in his task
-and exclaimed:
-
-"Say, how are we going _to fasten the end?_"
-
-"Fasten the end? Why, to----" Jack came to an abrupt stop, adding
-blankly after a moment: "Blest if I know what we _can_ fasten it to!"
-
-"Nor I," Don acknowledged, as much taken aback as his companion by the
-appalling nature of this discovery. "There are the palms, of course,
-and the temple; but they're too far from the cliff to be of any use. The
-rope will hardly reach as it is, I'm afraid."
-
-"Oh, there must be some way of securing it," replied Jack incredulously,
-"Surely there's a crack or something we can wedge one of the cutlasses
-into. Let's look, anyhow!"
-
-Look they did, but not with the result Jack had so confidently
-anticipated. From side to side, from end to end of the Rock, they
-searched and searched again, even going down on their hands and knees
-that they might perchance feel what had escaped the eye, But without
-avail. So far as the moonlight enabled them to discern--and it made the
-place nearly as light as day--neither crack nor projection marred
-the smooth surface of the stone. They gave it up at length, utterly
-disheartened. Even Jack felt this to be the last straw, and abandoned
-himself to despair.
-
-"It's a bad job altogether," was the despondent comment with which he
-threw himself down beside the apparently useless coil of rope. "God help
-us, we haven't a ghost of a chance left!"
-
-"Oh, things aren't quite so bad as that!" replied his companion, with an
-assumption of hopefulness he was far from feeling. "Who can say what may
-turn up? The darkest hour is just before the dawn, you know."
-
-"But," said Jack, "suppose there isn't any dawn, what then?"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI. RIVALS FOR THE HONOURS OF DEATH.
-
-
-|A night of dread foreboding, of weary watching for the day that seemed
-as if it would never come. With what tantalising slowness did the
-snail-like stars crawl across the black vault of the heavens! And when
-day came, what then?
-
-Hunger and thirst, danger and despair, and the certainty of death! But
-no need to await the dawn for these; already they were here. Comfortable
-bed-fellows, truly, and for a bed the bare, unyielding rock.
-
-Jack lay with his head pillowed upon the coil of rope. Not that he found
-it a comfortable resting-place. The knowledge of what the rope could
-_not_ do for them made it a pillow of thorns. He could not rest. The
-last thread of hope had broken, plunging him into the abyss of despair.
-Besides, his arm had become extremely painful within the last hour; he
-was restless, feverish. Fever goads the brain. Jack's brain was just
-then busier, perhaps, than it had ever been before. He felt none of the
-sharp gnawings of hunger, none of the insatiable cravings of thirst,
-though, as a matter of fact, these were even then conspiring with his
-wound to fever his blood and keep him awake, and make him think, think,
-think with: never an instant's pause. When thought is goaded like this,
-it speedily verges on delirium.
-
-To give way to despondency was not at all like Jack; and as he tossed
-from side to side and thought upon the "whine" (that was what he called
-it, in his own mind) in which he had indulged a little while ago when
-the utter desperateness of the situation first burst upon him--when he
-thought of this, he felt heartily ashamed of himself. He was a coward,
-a rank, out-and-out coward. He hated himself for his faint-hearted,
-babyish lack of spirit. But he would redeem his reputation yet. He would
-show them--meaning Don and the blacks--that he was no coward, anyhow!
-
-The blacks, as they crossed and recrossed each other on their noiseless
-beat, thought little and said less. They were desperately hungry, and
-hunger is the one fellow-feeling that does not make us wondrous kind.
-Every now and then they tightened their waist-cloths a little, but
-beyond this gave no outward sign or token of what they thought or felt.
-
-So the night wore on, and still Jack thought in restless silence. There
-was a deeper flush on his cheek, but it was no longer the flush of
-shame. The fever in his blood, the delirium in his brain, were rising.
-So was his resolution. He flung himself about restlessly, muttering. He
-would show them he was no coward, anyhow!
-
-So the night wore on, until by-and-by, as Don turned for the hundredth
-time upon his uneasy couch--for he, too, was unable to rest--his hand
-came into accidental contact with that of his chum. He started; Jack's
-hand was fiery hot.
-
-Housed by his companion's touch and movement, Jack sat bolt upright, and
-gazed about him in an excited, feverish fashion, muttering incoherently.
-His breath came and went in short, hurried catches, and in his eyes
-shone an unnatural wildness that struck terror to Don's heart. Knowing
-nothing of his chum's resolve, he thought him simply delirious.
-
-"Lie down," he said soothingly, placing his hand on Jack's shoulder,
-and attempting, with gentle force, to push him back into his former
-recumbent position.
-
-Jack flung the hand aside petulantly. Whatever of delirium there might
-be in his eyes and manner, his words, though spoken rapidly and with
-excitement, were rational enough.
-
-"Look here, old fellow," he cried, "it's all my fault, your being here
-in this fix; and I'm bound to do my level best to get you safe out of
-it, especially after the way I funked a while back. No, don't cut in and
-try to stop me--I know what I'm saying right enough, though I expect I
-do look a bit wild and that. Now, my arm here--I ain't said much about
-it--'tain't like me to whine, anyhow--at least not often--but all the
-same, my arm's getting jolly bad. Knotting the rope and that, you see,
-has made it a bit worse, and--well, the fact is, old fellow, I don't
-believe I could go down that rope to save my neck, even supposing it to
-be fastened, you understand."
-
-"I feared as much," said Don gravely.
-
-"Yes? Well, that's just how it stands," Jack went rapidly on. "Tisn't
-that I'm afraid, you understand--there's no cliff hereabouts that would
-make me funk--it's simply that my arm's out of gear and won't work. Not
-even if the rope were fastened, you see, which it isn't. And that's what
-I'm coming at, old fellow. Look here, I'll tell you what we _can_ do.
-Spottie and Pug can lower you away--over the cliff, you know--and then,
-when Pug and I have sent Spottie after you, I'll manage somehow to pay
-out the line while Pug follows. He's the lightest weight of the lot,
-anyhow."
-
-"All very well," demurred Don, who thought he saw a fatal objection to
-Jack's plan, "but how will you get down yourself?"
-
-"Oh, my getting down isn't in the bill at all," said Jack; "I mean to
-stay right here."
-
-This announcement fairly took Don's breath away. He had supposed all
-along that Jack was holding the pith of his proposal in reserve; but
-never once had he so much as dreamed of such a climax as this.
-
-"What! stop here?" he gasped. "You don't know what you're saying--it's
-certain death."
-
-"Hope I ain't such a duffer as not to know that," said Jack brusquely.
-"All the same, I mean to stay."
-
-"Don't say that, Jack."
-
-"Why not? Better one than four."
-
-"Then I'll stop with you," said Don, with dogged determination. "The
-blacks may have my chance and welcome. Nothing on earth will induce me
-to go."
-
-His chum was silent for a long time after that--so long, indeed, that
-Don thought the matter settled for good and all. But in this he was
-mistaken.
-
-"Say, old fellow," said Jack at last, "tell you what I'll do; I'll toss
-you as to which of us is togo. What do you say?"
-
-"No, no," cried Don.
-
-"But why not? Where's the use of being such a softie over the matter?
-There are no end of reasons why I should stay, I tell you. For one
-thing, I've got no mother to consider."
-
-"That's true enough," assented Don, gulping as he thought of his own
-mother.
-
-"And no sisters or brothers."
-
-"Don't," said Don huskily; "you forget me, Jack."
-
-"No, I don't," protested Jack; "you are more to me than any brother
-could ever be, old man; but that's only an additional reason why I
-should see you safe out of this mess. Then there's another thing; you
-know how good the guv has always been to me--sent me to school, and
-treated me just as if I was his own son, you know."
-
-"Yes?" said Don.
-
-"Well, I've always felt that if ever I got the chance I should like to
-repay his kindness, don't you know; and now that the chance has come I
-don't mean to let it slip. Say, will you toss?" Don wavered. It seemed
-terribly hard that they should all have to die like so many rats in a
-trap. Besides, once he and the blacks were off the Rock, they could fall
-back on the cutter, renew their stock of ammunition, and----
-
-"I'll toss you on one condition," he said suddenly.
-
-"What condition's that?"
-
-"Why, this. That after the die is cast we take no further steps until
-daylight, so as to make quite sure there's no way of securing the rope
-to the rock. Are you agreed?"
-
-For reply Jack held out his hand, and thus the compact was sealed.
-Then Don drew a rupee from his pocket and passed it to his companion...
-"Tails, you go," said Jack, and tossed.
-
-A flash of silver in the moonlight, a mocking jingle, and the coin lay
-still. Eagerly the rivals for the honours of death bent over it.
-
-"Tails!"
-
-"I knew it!" said Jack quietly; "and what's more, I'm jolly glad it
-isn't heads."
-
-His chum turned quickly away and bowed his head upon his knees, while a
-sound suspiciously like a stifled sob broke the stillness of the night.
-Jack crept close up to him and slipped an arm about his neck. So, for a
-long time, they sat in silence.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.--A REPORT FROM THE SEA.
-
-
-|Jack was the first to break the silence that followed the spinning of
-the fateful coin. He rose, stretched himself, and, pointing to a ruddy
-glow that had begun to light up the eastern horizon, exclaimed in a
-voice of undisguised relief:
-
-"Daybreak at last!"
-
-"I only wish it would never come," his companion rejoined gloomily,
-turning his gaze upon the unwelcome light--of which, however, he had
-caught scarce a glimpse ere he sprang to his feet in sudden excitement.
-
-"That's no daybreak, Jack! It's more like the reflection of a fire."
-
-"I believe you're right," assented Jack. "It certainly _is_ a fire; but
-where can it be, that we see only the reflection? Behind Haunted Pagoda
-Hill?"
-
-"No; this side of the hill, I should say."
-
-"Then it must be somewhere in the creek."
-
-At mention of the creek Don started violently, a suspicion of the truth
-flashing upon him. He began to sniff the air. An odour of smoke floated
-to them on the fresh morning breeze, faint but pungent. Jack, catching a
-whiff of it, fell to sniffing too.
-
-"Well, what do you make of it?" Don inquired anxiously.
-
-"Tar!" replied Jack, without hesitation.
-
-"I thought so," said Don, with a queer catch in his voice. "Jack, it's
-the cutter!"
-
-With this he set off at a run towards that part of the Rock which
-overlooked the creek. Advancing as far as the rapidly-increasing slope
-of the declivity, made it prudent to venture, he came to a stand. The
-glow of the fire was now brighter, though its source still remained
-hidden from view; but by edging his way well to the right, he at length
-succeeded in reaching a point whence the ruddy light that had excited
-his fears could be seen as a leaping, swaying column of smoke and flame,
-terminating, far down amid the darkness of the creek, in a single point
-of lurid red.
-
-"Just as I feared!" he cried, as Jack rejoined him. "The niggers have
-set fire to the _Jolly Tar_. I was afraid the rascals had smelt her out
-when I met the lascar in the creek the other morning. The old boat's
-done for, anyhow; so let me off my promise, Jack."
-
-"What for? I can't see that the burning of the cutter has anything to do
-with it. There are plenty of native boats to get away in."
-
-"Oh, it isn't the getting away! You don't suppose I'd go off and leave
-you in the lurch, I hope? It's the powder that troubles me. There wasn't
-much on board the cutter, it's true; just about enough to fight my way
-back here with--as I meant to do, please God, had this not happened. I
-planned the whole thing out while we sat mooning yonder, you see. But
-now!" and at thought of how this hope--the secret of his acquiescence
-in the outcome of that fatal toss--had vanished into thin air before his
-very eyes, Don's lips trembled and his voice choked.
-
-"Never mind, old chap!" said Jack, deeply touched by this new proof
-of his friend's generosity; "I'll take the will for the deed. But, I
-say--you pledged me your word, you know; and at daybreak, if no way of
-anchoring the rope shows up, I shall expect you to go over the cliff
-like a man. We shan't have long to wait now. Look!"
-
-He pointed to a deep roseate hue which tinged the sky just above the
-ocean rim. And even as they stood watching it, the light came leaping
-up from the sea, and outshone the stars, and set the whole east aglow. A
-flush of dawn, and it was day.
-
-"Now," said Jack, tightening his belt, "let's make the round of the Rock
-again. If there's a shadow of a flaw anywhere we're bound to find it in
-this light."
-
-"Heaven grant we may!" ejaculated Don, as they began the search.
-
-The cliff forming the Elephant's left side was out of it altogether. The
-native town lay directly at its base, rendering escape in that direction
-impracticable. So, too, with that part of the Rock abutting on the
-creek; its formation was such that no human being, rope or no rope,
-could have made his way down its face. There remained only the
-Elephant's right flank--overlooking the jungly back of the island--and
-the loftier head parts facing the western sea. To these, then, the
-search was necessarily confined.
-
-Again and yet again did they pace the dizzy heights, scanning every inch
-of the rocky surface for that crack or projection upon the existence
-of which Jack's life was staked. But, as before, the search ended in
-failure and despair. There was absolutely nothing--neither crevice, nor
-jutting point, nor friendly block of stone--in which, or to which, the
-rope's end could be made fast: nothing but Jack's body!
-
-To secure the rope to the palms or the masonry of the temple was an
-utter impossibility. It was too short by half.
-
-As a last hope Don approached the chasm in which lay the pool. But
-the hope was short-lived. The native guard had been trebled overnight.
-Hope--so far, at least, as Jack's life was concerned--stood on a par
-with the powder: not a grain was left.
-
-As a matter of fact, Don had all along indulged a secret conviction
-that "something would turn Up." Now, when the terrible truth was at last
-forced upon him in such a manner that he could no longer shut his eyes
-to it, his distress was pitiable to witness.
-
-He had hazarded his friend's life on the toss of a coin--and lost! And
-now he must go over the cliff--over the cliff to safety and life--over
-the cliff by means of a rope, at the death-end of which stood his
-dearest friend. Given his choice, he would have taken that friend's
-place--oh, how gladly! But go he must, for his honour was-pledged, and
-the time was come!
-
-Ay, the time was come--the supreme moment of Jack's heroic resolve. And
-Jack was glad of it, ready for it. The fever in his blood had abated,
-leaving him cool, collected, and more firm in his resolve than ever. He
-had chosen his-course and he would stick to it, anyhow!
-
-"Come," he said simply, laying a gentle hand on Don's shoulder, "it is
-time for us to go."
-
-"For us!" The words, though kindly meant stabbed Don to the heart.
-
-Kicking the coil of rope before him like a ball, Jack approached the
-brink of the precipice. The blacks followed. There was little danger of
-their being missed by the native guard, unless the latter mounted the
-steps, and this they were not likely to do after the severe lesson they
-had received in the night. Last of all came Don--slowly, reluctantly. He
-looked and felt like one going to his execution.
-
-Without a word Jack picked up the loose end of the rope and knotted
-it securely about his friend's chest, beneath his arms. When he had
-uncoiled the rope to its full length, he fastened the other end about
-his own waist. Then he held out his hand.
-
-"Good-bye, old fellow," he said, his voice shaking in spite of himself.
-"Good-bye, and God bless you! Be sure and cast the rope loose when you
-reach the ground."
-
-"Oh, Jack, Jack! Must I go--must I?" cried Don desperately, his voice
-full of agony.
-
-With unfaltering step Jack led him to the extreme brink of the cliff,
-left him there with his face set towards liberty and life, turned back,
-and beckoning to the blacks--who had purposely been kept in ignorance of
-Jack's resolve--prepared to pay out the line.
-
-"Over with you, old fellow! As gently as you can!"
-
-The rope tightened. Wheeling where he stood, Don cast one last imploring
-look at his friend, who pointed upwards and then motioned him to go. He
-obeyed.
-
-[Illustration: 0267]
-
-As the remorseless Rock closed above him, he let himself swing, neither
-seeing nor caring whither he was being lowered. The abyss below had no
-terrors for him--he even hoped that the rope might snap--why should he
-live since Jack must die? And when at last his feet touched earth, and
-he had flung the rope from him like a hated thing, he threw himself
-upon his face at the foot of the insurmountable cliff and burst into a
-passion of bitter, remorseful tears.
-
-After a time a gentle thud on the back aroused him. He looked up. It was
-the rope again, but empty! What did it mean? Where was Spottie? Why
-had he not been sent down? What had happened? A dozen questions such as
-these flashed through his brain, and with them a sudden wild hope. He
-started to his feet.
-
-A scrap of paper was secured to the rope by a half-knot. He snatched at
-it, drawing it to him with something of dread in the movement. It was a
-leaf from Jacks note-book, scrawled over with writing in Jack's familiar
-hand. His eyes devoured the words:--
-
-"Good news! A wonderful thing has happened. Was just going to lower
-Spottie away when the report of a gun came booming up from the sea. The
-schooner--the governor's schooner--is at anchor off the front of the
-island! I'd signal her, only I have no powder. I'm all in a daze,
-anyhow; but you'll know what to do."
-
-An exclamation of intense gratitude to Heaven burst from Don's lips, and
-crushing the scrap of paper in his hand, he set off at a run along the
-base of the cliff, in the direction of the Elephant's head.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.--DON RUNS THE GAUNTLET.
-
-
-|There was but one thing to be done: he must gain the schooner with all
-possible speed, at any risk, and take immediate steps for Jack's rescue.
-
-Instinctively he shaped his course for the Elephant's head. The
-precipitous cliff was there skirted by a narrow beach. He had seen it
-gleaming above the surf-line while rounding the island on the morning of
-their arrival. This beach would afford a short-cut to the front of the
-island, off which the schooner lay. Once there, he must swim for it.
-These were his thoughts as he ran.
-
-Tough work it was. True, the jungle did not grow close up to the base of
-the cliff; but here and there yawning _nullahs_, of considerable depth,
-and with sides almost as-steep as walls, had been cut across his pathway
-by the rains. At intervals, too, he encountered rugged, irregular heaps
-of stones, fallen from the cliff above, and studded thick with thorny
-clumps of prickly-pear.
-
-The cutlass at his side impeded his progress. He threw it away. Then on
-again.
-
-The sands at last! Close on his right lay the sea, close on his left
-rose the beetling cliff. There was not much room--just enough to run in.
-Away before him, like a narrow ribbon of burnished silver, stretched
-the smooth, hard sands, with never a living thing in sight on all their
-gleaming reach.
-
-Gradually the cliffs crept behind, and the seafront opened out before
-him. And now, of a sudden, he espied a group of natives making for the
-beach--a company of fishermen, laden with creels, and oars, and nets.
-
-Just ahead, a wedge-shaped gully split the low bank that bordered the
-beach on the landward side. Above this bank were the fishermen, heading
-for the gully. They were perhaps fifty yards short of it, while he,
-on the beach below the bank, was a full hundred. Should they reach it
-first, he would certainly be intercepted; whereas, could he but pass the
-point of danger ere' the natives gained it, he might succeed in eluding
-them. They did not see him yet. He darted under the bank, and ran as he
-had never run in all his life before.
-
-Seventy-five yards, fifty yards, twenty yards--and then the gully. Had
-the natives reached it? As he raced past he darted a swift sidelong
-glance at the _nullah_. The fishermen were already halfway down it. They
-saw him, dropped their fishing implements, and gave chase, yelling like
-a pack of fiends.
-
-On and on he ran, looking back but once to ascertain what start he had
-of the dusky gang. Twenty yards at least. They were just emerging from
-the bottom of the gully.
-
-And now, away to the right, he sighted the schooner, riding at anchor
-with half a mile of sea between her holding-ground and the shore. He
-could see her boats swinging at the davits. They had not sighted him,
-then. He wondered whether Jack could see him from the cliff.
-
-Jack caught sight of Don as he raced past the gully. The fishermen,
-as it happened, were just then in the gully itself, and consequently
-invisible. Don's appearance he hailed with a shout.
-
-"Hurrah! he hasn't lost much time, anyhow."
-
-This exclamation brought both Spottie and Puggles to his side in hot
-haste. The stairs were thus left unguarded--a step the imprudence of
-which was wholly overlooked in the excitement of the moment.
-
-At sight of his master tearing along the beach below, a grim
-delight--not unmixed with anxiety--overspread Puggles' black
-countenance, while a chuckle of intense satisfaction welled up from the
-red abyss of his fat, shiny throat. Then, like the shadow of an April
-cloud driven swiftly across a sunlit meadow, a look of blank dismay
-eclipsed the grin, the chuckle died away in a gasp of alarm, and
-pointing to the beach with shaking finger, he cried:
-
-"Sar! sar! black warmints done catch um, sar!"
-
-His alarm was well-founded. The fishermen had just tumbled out of the
-gully, at Don's very heels, as it seemed at this distance.
-
-"They're after him, sure enough," cried Jack. "By Jove, how he runs! Go
-it, old fellow! you've got the start of them, anyhow."
-
-Away went Don, running like a deer, and after him pelted the fishermen,
-in a headlong, rough-and-tumble, happy-go-lucky fashion, that, under
-circumstances less serious, must have provoked the spectators on the
-Rock to hearty laughter. No laughing matter this, however; for Don's
-pursuers, having thrown aside their fishing gear, and being moreover
-fresh in wind and limb, were seen to gain on him at every stride. The
-race could not prolong itself for many minutes now, and the finish--Jack
-shuddered, as he thought of what that must be.
-
-At this critical juncture, too, matters took an unexpected turn for the
-worse. A short distance up the beach a second party of natives appeared
-on the scene. Don ran straight on, apparently not perceiving them. They,
-on the contrary, saw him, and bore down upon him swiftly. Their cries,
-doubtless, warned him of his danger, for now he pulled up short, looked
-ahead, glanced quickly over his shoulder, and then-----
-
-With a groan Jack turned away.
-
-A loud outcry from the blacks, however, drew his gaze seawards again,
-and as he looked his pulses thrilled. Don was making straight for the
-surf!
-
-As often happens on these coasts when the wind is but a whisper, and
-the sea glass-like in its placidity, a heavy ground-swell was rolling
-sullenly in from the outer bay. A stone's throw from the shore this
-swell was but a sinuous, almost imperceptible, undulation of the glassy
-surface; but as it swept towards the beach, where the water shoaled
-rapidly, of a sudden it reared aloft a crest of hissing foam, which
-curled higher and higher as it came on, until it overtopped the sands
-at the height of a boat's mast. Then with a mighty roar it broke, hurled
-itself far up the shelving sands, and retired, seething, to make room
-for the green battalions pressing shorewards in its wake.
-
-Straight towards this living wall of water Don ran. The two bands of
-natives, uniting their forces as they swerved aside like bloodhounds in
-pursuit, were close upon him. Before, above him, curled the mighty wave;
-and then, to his great horror, Jack saw him stumble and fall.
-
-Lucky fall! Ere the natives could throw themselves upon him, the combing
-wave broke, passed directly over his prostrate body, swept the niggers
-off their legs, and hurled them with irresistible force far up the
-beach.
-
-A moment later the breathless watchers on the cliff saw a black object
-floating on the surface of the water, yards from shore. It was Don. The
-under-tow had swept him out to sea, beyond his pursuers' reach.
-
-An expert and powerful swimmer, he lost no time in increasing the
-distance between himself and the disconcerted native crew, one or two of
-whom attempted to overtake him, but soon gave it up for a bad job.
-
-Then a boat put off from the schooner, and soon Jack had the
-satisfaction of seeing his plucky friend hauled' in over her side. A
-quarter of an hour later, when the boat had regained the schooner,
-the signal gun once more boomed out over the sea, and with feelings of
-devout thankfulness to Heaven Jack realised that Don was safe on board,
-and that the term of his own and his companions' imprisonment on the
-summit of the Rock was bounded by a few brief hours at the most.
-
-Even as he looked, as if by magic the schooner's canvas swelled to the
-breeze, and he caught the distant song of the lascars as they hove the
-anchor to the cathead.
-
-Hunger, thirst, his wound, the very enemy at the foot of the rock
-stairs--all had been forgotten in the breathless interest inspired by
-Don's race for life; were forgotten still as he and the blacks stood
-watching the schooner get under weigh.
-
-Till a sharp clank of metal, as of a spear carelessly let fall, recalled
-their roving thoughts, and brought, them swiftly to the right-about,
-to find the Rock in the immediate vicinity of the pit's mouth literally
-swarming with armed natives.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.--IN THE NICK OF TIME.
-
-
-|The surprise had been cleverly executed. Another moment, and Jack and
-his black attendants would have been surrounded. As it was, the odds
-were dead against them.
-
-The unexpected appearance of the schooner had evidently wrought a
-complete change in the tactics of the enemy. So here they were.
-
-This sleek, corpulent native who led the escaladers was none other than
-old Salambo!
-
-Salambo, the shark-charmer, thief, and director-in-chief of the
-harassing attacks by which they, the party of adventurers in search of
-what was indisputably their own, had been baffled at every turn.
-
-By means of the lascar's murderous hand he had clutched at the captain's
-throat and taken the captain's life. And now that his tool was for
-ever wrenched from his grasp, he had come in person to add the
-finishing-stroke to his evil work. Jack's blood boiled as he thought of
-it. One swift glance around, and his course was taken.
-
-"The temple, Spottie! Point for the temple, Pug!"
-
-The natives, perceiving their intention, swerved aside and attempted
-to cut them off. But so unexpected was Jack's manouvre, so prompt the
-obedience of Spottie and Puggles, that the attempt proved unsuccessful.
-A wild, breathless dash, and they had turned the corner of the
-temple--whose door, as usual, faced east--and crossed its threshold.
-
-Old and neglected as the edifice was, stout wooden doors still swung
-upon the rust-eaten hinges. To slam these to and thrust the bolts home,
-top and bottom, was the work of but a moment. Bosin darted in as the
-great doors swung into place, narrowly escaping the amputation of his
-tail as the penalty of his tardiness. Scarcely had the last bolt been
-shot when up trooped the enemy, howling like hyenas, and commenced a
-determined assault upon the doors.
-
-At first they hurled themselves upon the barrier and attempted to force
-it in by sheer imposition of weight. Thud followed thud in furious
-succession, while Jack stood by with palpitating heart. His fears as
-to the stability of the doors, however, were soon set at rest. They
-creaked, yielded a little, but otherwise stood as firm as the solid
-masonry in which they were framed. The natives were not slow to discover
-this, and the ill-advised attempt was soon abandoned. In the brief lull
-that followed Jack looked about him.
-
-Inside here, beneath the cobwebbed, blackened roof of the outer temple,
-the light was funereal in its dimness. What little there was crept in
-through the cracks in the shrunken doors in a reluctant sort of way,
-as if it found the society of bats and spiders anything but agreeable;
-except at the further or western end of the temple, where there was
-a second chamber, smaller and somewhat better lighted than the first.
-Eight feet or so above the floor a small square window pierced the wall,
-and directly beneath this stood a sort of stone pediment or shrine, on
-which squatted a hideously distorted image. This was the temple _swami_,
-and _swami's_ ugly head reached to within a couple of feet of the
-window.
-
-A second attempt was now made upon the doors, though not after the
-haphazard fashion of the first. The cracks in the shrunken woodwork
-attracting the attention of the natives, they fell to work on the widest
-of these, and with their spears began chipping away the plank splinter
-by splinter. But the extreme toughness of the material, seasoned as it
-was by unnumbered years of exposure to the elements, rendered the task
-of demolition both difficult and slow.
-
-"Take you a jolly long time to get your ugly head-pieces through that,
-anyhow!" muttered Jack, as he watched--or rather listened to, for he
-could see little or nothing of what was going on outside--the fast
-and furious play of the spears. "And when you do get 'em through, why
-then----"
-
-To symbolise what would happen then, Jack did what was certainly quite
-excusable under the circumstances--spat in his palm, and with immense
-gusto decapitated an imaginary nigger.
-
-Still, given sufficient time for the spears to do their work, it was a
-foregone conclusion that the doors must fall. Would they hold out till
-the schooner cast anchor off the creek? He allowed an hour for that--an
-hour from the time the anchor was weighed.. Well, they--he and-the two
-blacks--had been in the temple the best part of an hour already. So that
-was all right.
-
-But then, the rescue party must make their way up the creek, and from
-the creek to the--summit of the Bock, along that passage by which Don
-and the blacks had entered on the previous day. This would consume
-another hour. He made the calculation with the utmost coolness; only,
-when it was finished, and he asked himself whether the doors would hold
-out that other hour, the reluctant "No" with which he was compelled to
-answer the question somehow stuck in his throat and nearly choked him.
-By way of relief, he slashed the head off another imaginary nigger.
-
-The second hour wore on. The gap in the door grew wider and wider
-beneath the ceaseless play of the spears, and still the natives showed
-no signs of desisting or of taking their departure.
-
-Presently a shadow darkened the little window at the rear of the temple.
-Jack turned on his heel expecting to see a native, but instead saw only
-Bosin. The monkey had clambered up the image, and so reached the window.
-The sight of the creature gave Jack a sudden inspiration.
-
-What was to hinder the blacks and himself from beating a noiseless
-retreat by way of this same window? The aperture was quite ample in size
-to admit of their squeezing through it. But--his wounded arm! And could
-the thing be done without attracting the attention of the gang about the
-doors?
-
-He climbed up the image and looked out. So far as he could discover the
-way was clear. Between that end of the temple and the stairs leading
-to the pit, not a single native was to be seen. True, his view was
-but limited at the best--the aperture was so narrow, and a straggling
-blackskin or two might, after all, have their eyes on the window, or,
-worse still, be guarding the stairs. Probably, though--and this seemed
-the more likely view--the entire force and attention of the belligerents
-were concentrated upon the temple doors. He would risk it, anyhow!
-
-Once gain the pit, and they were as good as saved; for by that time the
-rescue party could not be far off.
-
-A wilder shout from the besiegers recalled his thoughts and eyes to
-the doors. He scrambled down off the idols head and ran into the outer
-chamber.
-
-What was that peculiar crackling sound--this pungent odour with which
-the air had suddenly grown so heavy? Fire--smoke! They had set fire to
-the doors!
-
-He ran back into the inner chamber. The blacks were there, cowering in
-terror against the wall. In a few hurried words he directed them how
-to proceed. They pulled themselves together and prepared to obey the
-sahib's directions.
-
-"The window, lads! through the window! Quick now, you lazy beggars!"
-
-Spottie went first--somewhat unwillingly, it must be confessed, which
-was scarcely to be wondered at, considering that the drop from the
-window might land him in the arms of the enemy, or on the point of a
-spear. The smallness of the aperture, its height from the ground,
-and the necessity for going through it feet foremost, made a triple
-difficulty, too. But with Jack's assistance this was speedily overcome,
-and Spottie dropped out of sight. Barring the faint thud of his bare
-feet on the rock, no sound followed. Thus far, then, the stratagem had
-escaped detection. Jack began to breathe easier.
-
-After Spottie went Puggles--with even more difficulty, for, as the
-reader is aware, Puggles was extremely fat; and again all was still
-without. Within there was noise enough and to spare. The crackling
-of the burning doors had grown ominously loud. As Pug's black head
-disappeared, too, a tremendous shout burst from the rabble gathered
-about the entrance. Its significance Jack did not stop to inquire.
-Already he had scaled the image. A wry face or two at the pain of his
-wounded arm, and a moment later he stood beside the blacks.
-
-The moment of their flight was well chosen. The natives, to a man, were
-watching the doors with all their eyes.
-
-Bidding the blacks follow close at his heels, he sped across the few
-yards of rock that separated the temple from the stairs, sprang down the
-steps, and fell insensible at the feet of his friend, Roydon Leigh.
-
-The rescue party had arrived in the very nick of time.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.--THE SHARK-CHARMER IS CAUGHT IN HIS OWN TRAP.
-
-
-|After all, Jack was but human. His fortitude, strung to a tense pitch
-by those terrible days and nights of danger, snapped, in presence of
-actual safety, like an overdrawn bow.
-
-A pitiful spectacle he presented, his clothes torn to ribbons, his hands
-and face grimy, bloodstained, yet ghastly in their pallor. Don uttered a
-cry and flung himself on his knees beside his chum. He thought him dead.
-
-"No, not dead, thank God! Only done up. He'll be all right soon," said
-Captain Leigh, with his hand upon Jack's heart, which still beat, though
-faintly; and taking out a pocket-flask he poured a few drops of brandy
-between the drawn, bloodless lips of the unconscious lad.
-
-Under this stimulating treatment Jack soon came round. Needless to dwell
-on the confusion into which his thoughts were thrown by the sight of
-the familiar faces bending over him. His bewilderment, however, was but
-momentary. Memory returned with a rush and spurred him to action and
-speech. He sat bolt upright.
-
-"Have you got the rascal?" he demanded in eager tones..
-
-"What rascal?" asked Don.
-
-"The shark-charmer, to be sure. Who else should I mean? He's on the
-Rock, I tell you!"
-
-"Him done stick his leg in trap, sa'b," interpolated Puggles, with
-appropriate action.
-
-Don started to his feet. Jack followed suit, somewhat unsteadily.
-
-"Is he above there?" cried Captain Leigh.
-
-"Yes, yes!" said Jack eagerly.
-
-"Up with you, boys!" cried the captain to the _peons_.
-
-Don had already acquainted his father with the shark-charmer's part in
-the tragic events of the past week, and the _peons_ had overheard the
-story. They all knew the shark-charmer, and they followed their leader
-with enthusiasm. They carried carbines; these glinted in the sunshine,
-and clanked against the contracted walls of the rock stairway as they
-jostled each other in the ascent.
-
-A rush of many feet above, and the natives appeared at the stair-head.
-Only the moment before had they discovered the temple to be deserted,
-and become alive to the fact that they had lingered too long on the
-Rock. They were now in hot pursuit of the fugitives. But the sudden
-apparition of the red-sashed _peons_, the ominous glint and clash of the
-carbines, promised hotter pursuit than they had bargained for. A wave of
-consternation swept through their ranks. _Sauve qui peut!_ In headlong
-flight they scattered in all directions.
-
-As before, the shark-charmer had led the gang. He almost ran into the
-arms of the _peons_.
-
-"Rama! Rama!"
-
-It was the cry of a coward and miscreant who knows that his last hour
-of freedom, if not of life, has come: the hour of reckoning for his
-misdeeds.
-
-For as long as it took his half-paralysed tongue to frame the words, the
-shark-charmer faced his approaching doom. Then he turned and fled like a
-frightened cur.
-
-The voice of Captain Leigh rang out on the air clear and full as the
-note of a bugle:
-
-"After him, lads! Never mind the others! Take the fellow alive!"
-
-Up scrambled the _peons_ in obedience to the command, deploying to right
-and left in a long, semicircular line as they debouched upon the Rock.
-
-"Forward!"
-
-Off they went at the quick; then, with a wild cheer, broke into a loping
-run, the extremities of the semicircle closing in as they advanced.
-
-The shark-charmer ran towards the Elephant's head, where the precipice
-was the loftiest and dizziest of the four, the beach lying full three
-hundred feet below. Whatever chance of escape he possessed, it assuredly
-did not lie in that direction. To all human seeming his escape was an
-utter impossibility. So thought the _peons_, and slackened speed, though
-the extremities of the living, steel-crested semicircle still closed in
-and in. Between, and somewhat ahead, ran the shark-charmer. He could not
-run much farther; the brink of the precipice was only a few yards away.
-He was caught!
-
-What the thoughts of the guilty, hunted wretch were during those awful
-moments, God alone knows.
-
-The _peons_ had slowed down to a walk now--a walk confident, yet timid.
-They were altogether sure of the shark-charmer, and not a little afraid
-of the precipice. Not so the fugitive; for him all fear lay behind. He
-advanced to the very brink of the cliff. His arms dropped at his sides.
-
-In upon him closed his pursuers with cat-like tread and alert eyes. They
-had no desire to be dashed over the cliff. Besides, was he not as good
-as caught? A mere span of rock divided him from their grasp. He stood
-motionless, half-turned towards them, apparently resigned to his fate.
-
-Suddenly, however, hurling upon the close-drawn ranks a swift look of
-defiance, he wheeled full-face to the sea; wheeled, and drew his arms up
-and back.
-
-Captain Leigh was the first to perceive the significance of the
-movement.
-
-"Seize him!" he shouted, dashing through the line of _peons_; "quick, or
-he'll be over!... Good God!"
-
-He fell back appalled. A stifled cry of horror broke from the _peons_.
-The shark-charmer had leapt into mid-air.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.--BRINGS THE QUEST TO AN END.
-
-
-|Silent and pale as death, Don turned and stood for a moment facing
-Haunted Pagoda Hill, with head bared. His thoughts were with the captain
-as he had seen him on that terrible evening of the murder. Plainer than
-words his attitude cried:
-
-"Avenged!"
-
-The other natives had taken advantage of the opportunity afforded by the
-pursuit of the shark-charmer to make good their escape. Captain Leigh
-accordingly ordered the _peons_ back to the schooner. Their mission was
-at an end.
-
-At the head of the stairs they came upon Bosin. The monkey at once
-clambered on to Don's shoulder, happier far than his new master.
-
-Here, too, as they were about to turn their backs upon the spot where
-death had hovered in ever-narrowing circles about their heads through
-the hopeless hours of that awful night and day, Jack and Don joined
-hands and silently renewed the friendship which had here been put to
-so crucial a test. Our boy-friendships seldom pass the boundary line
-of youth and manhood; or, if they do, too often become tarnished and
-neglected things in which we find no pleasure. Theirs, just then, seemed
-fit to last a lifetime.
-
-"Say!" cried Jack abruptly, when he had done wringing his chunks hand,
-"what about the pearls, old fellow? You're surely not going off without
-them after all the trouble we've had? I'm not, anyhow!"
-
-Jack was nothing if not practical.
-
-Captain Leigh, who was standing by, overheard the words, and approached
-with a curious, not to say mysterious, smile on his lips.
-
-"What! not had enough of it yet, Jack?" said he, in bantering tones.
-
-"Not I, sir! Where's the use of being half cut to bits if one doesn't
-get what one's after? I shan't be content till I handle the shiners."
-
-"And where do you purpose looking for them?"
-
-Jack's face fell.. It was not easy to find an answer to this question.
-
-"Perhaps I can assist you," continued Captain Leigh, with a repetition
-of his mysterious smile. "This quest of yours, boys, has been a string
-of surprises from the very start, judging by what I have heard and seen
-of it. So, just to keep the ball rolling, we'll wind up with the biggest
-surprise of all."
-
-And slipping his fingers into his waistcoat pocket, to the astonishment
-of the young men he drew therefrom the identical wash-leather case
-which they had all along, and with good reason, supposed to be in the
-shark-charmer's possession.
-
-"Why--how--?" Don began, hardly able to believe his eyes.
-
-Jack interrupted him.
-
-"Don't you see how it is?" cried he. "The governor's running a rig
-on us. Old Salambo took the pearls, but left the bag; it's empty, of
-course!"
-
-Captain Leigh quietly turned the pouch upside-down, and poured into the
-palm of his left hand a little silvery heap with a shimmer of pale gold
-in its midst. This he pushed into full view with his finger. It was the
-Golden Pearl.
-
-"You don't mean to say we've been on a wild-goose chase all this time?"
-gasped Jack.
-
-"A downright fool's errand!" muttered Don, in tones of intense disgust.
-
-"No; neither one nor the other," interposed Captain Leigh. "Don't
-go scattering self-accusations of that sort about before you hear my
-explanation--though it's a queer business, I must acknowledge," he
-added, with a laugh. "Will you hear it out now or wait till we go on
-board?"
-
-"Tell us one thing," put in Don; "were the pearls stolen at all?"
-
-"No, they were not, or I should not be able to produce them. But the
-shark-charmer was none the less a thief, for all that. But I see you're
-on tenterhooks to hear all about it, so I'll read you the riddle at
-once."
-
-Carefully restoring the pearls to the pouch, he handed the treasure to
-Don, and then resumed:
-
-"It goes without saying, of course, that you remember the evening you
-brought the pearls on board. Well, shortly after you had placed them
-in the locker--you had just turned in, I think--I got an uneasy sort of
-feeling that they were not as safe there as they should be----"
-
-"So you took them into your state-room!" interrupted Don, who thought he
-began to see light.
-
-"Exactly. The companion door was open, you recollect, and the
-shark-charmer, I suppose, must have been hanging about at the moment
-and seen me. Very imprudently, as it turned out, I left my door on the
-latch, though I took the precaution to put the pearls under my pillow.
-You remember, perhaps, my paying off some of the men that afternoon?
-Well, when I turned in I left the bag of rupees--or rather what remained
-of them, about two hundred in all, I should think--on the sofa opposite
-my berth, and my gold chronometer on the stand at my head, as I always
-do. I slept like a top until I was called at three, when we got under
-weigh. At this time, you understand, I was under the impression that you
-two were snug between the sheets. The schooner was a dozen miles down
-the coast before I found out my mistake. Being due in Colombo the
-following day, you see, I couldn't put back. Neither could I make head
-nor tail of your disappearance until the carrier brought your letter,
-Don. That made the whole matter plain enough. You had found the locker
-empty, supposed that the shark-charmer had stolen the pearls, and had
-given chase."
-
-"Then," cried Jack, "what I said a minute ago was right enough, after
-all. The pearls were safe, and we've been on a jolly wild-goose chase."
-
-"Oh, no; that doesn't follow. The shark-charmer left the schooner far
-from empty-handed. He stole the bag of rupees and the watch."
-
-"Ah, but what about the handkerchief the pearls were tied up in?" asked
-Don. "I fished it out of the water off the island here. How do you
-account for that?"
-
-"I must have thrown the handkerchief on the sofa. Probably the fellow
-snatched it up with the bag of rupees, thinking that it still contained
-the pearls."
-
-"And threw it away when he found that it didn't," chuckled Jack. "Well,
-the shiners are all right, anyhow!"
-
-Nightfall found the schooner bowling towards the open sea under full
-sail. Three figures stood grouped on her deck in the fading twilight.
-
-"It was just about here," said Don in a choked voice:=
-
-```"Here, a sheer hulk, lies poor Tom Bowling,
-
-````The darling of our crew;
-
-```No more he'll hear the tempest howling,
-
-````For death has broached him to.=
-
-
-```His form was of the manliest beauty,
-
-````His heart was kind and soft;
-
-```Faithful below he did his duty,
-
-````But now he's gone aloft."=
-
-All three uncovered and stood with bowed heads until the old sailor's
-resting-place was left far behind.
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Haunted Pagodas--The Quest of the
-Golden Pearl, by J. E. Hutchinson
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- <head>
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=UTF-8" />
- <title>
- The Haunted Pagodas--the Quest of the Golden Pearl, by J. E. Hutchinson
- </title>
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Haunted Pagodas--The Quest of the
-Golden Pearl, by J. E. Hutchinson
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Haunted Pagodas--The Quest of the Golden Pearl
-
-Author: J. E. Hutchinson
-
-Illustrator: Hume Nisbet
-
-Release Date: January 11, 2016 [EBook #50897]
-Last Updated: March 15, 2018
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HAUNTED PAGODAS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
- <div style="height: 8em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h1>
- THE HAUNTED PAGODAS
- </h1>
- <h1>
- THE QUEST OF THE GOLDEN PEARL
- </h1>
- <h2>
- By J. E. Hutchinson
- </h2>
- <h3>
- Illustrated by Hume Nisbet
- </h3>
- <h4>
- London: Ward and Downey
- </h4>
- <h3>
- 1897
- </h3>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0001" id="linkimage-0001"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0001.jpg" alt="0001 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0001.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0002" id="linkimage-0002"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0008.jpg" alt="0008 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0008.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0003" id="linkimage-0003"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0009.jpg" alt="0009 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0009.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- <b>CONTENTS</b>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> QUEST OF THE GOLDEN PEARL. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I.&mdash;THE SHARK-CHARMER WALKS THE
- PLANK. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. A STROKE OF LUCK AND AN AFTER-STROKE.
- </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III.&mdash;THE QUEST BEGINS. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV.&mdash;INTRODUCES BOSIN, AND TELLS HOW
- CAPTAIN MANGO PROVED HIMSELF A TRUMP. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V.&mdash;THE LASCAR GETS HIS KNIFE BACK.
- </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI.&mdash;IN THE THICK OF IT. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII.&mdash;&ldquo;FUN OR FIGHTING, I'M READY,
- ANYHOW!&rdquo; </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII.&mdash;AT THE HAUNTED PAGODAS. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX.&mdash;WAS IT JACK? </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X.&mdash;IN WHICH THE OLD SAW, &ldquo;OUT OF
- THE FRYING-PAN, INTO THE FIRE,&rdquo; IS REVERSED WITH STARTLING EFFECT. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI.&mdash;INTO THE HEART OF THE HILL.
- </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII.&mdash;RELATES HOW A WRONG ROAD LED
- TO THE RIGHT PLACE. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII.&mdash;CAPTAIN MANGO &ldquo;GOES ALOFT.&rdquo;
- </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV.&mdash;SHROUDED IN A HAMMOCK. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV.&mdash;THE CROCODILE PIT. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI.&mdash;DON SETS A DEATH-TRAP FOR THE
- LASCAR. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII.&mdash;THE BLAST OF A CONCH-SHELL.
- </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII.&mdash;BETWEEN LIFE AND DEATH. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX.&mdash;ONE-TO-TWENTY GIVES
- TWENTY-TO-ONE THE WORST OF IT. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX.&mdash;THE LAST STRAW. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI. RIVALS FOR THE HONOURS OF DEATH.
- </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER XXII.&mdash;A REPORT FROM THE SEA. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER XXIII.&mdash;DON RUNS THE GAUNTLET. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER XXIV.&mdash;IN THE NICK OF TIME. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0025"> CHAPTER XXV.&mdash;THE SHARK-CHARMER IS CAUGHT IN
- HIS OWN TRAP. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0026"> CHAPTER XXV.&mdash;BRINGS THE QUEST TO AN END.
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h1>
- QUEST OF THE GOLDEN PEARL.
- </h1>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER I.&mdash;THE SHARK-CHARMER WALKS THE PLANK.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">J</span>ack! I say, Jack!
- there's a row among the boatmen.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A sturdy, thick-set young fellow of seventeen was Jack, with low-hung
- fists of formidable size, and a love for anything in the shape of a row
- that constantly led him into scrapes. Hot-headed though he was, he was one
- of the most good-humoured, well-meaning young fellows in the world, who,
- while he would not hurt a fly if he could help it, was always ready to
- fight in defence of his own or another's rights.
- </p>
- <p>
- His chum, Roydon Leigh&mdash;&ldquo;Don&rdquo; for short&mdash;was of an altogether
- different type of young manhood. Jack's senior by a year, he was tall for
- his age, standing five feet ten in his stockings. His lithe, wiry frame
- contrasted strongly with Jack's sturdier build, as did his Scotch
- &ldquo;canniness&rdquo; with that young gentleman's headlong impetuosity.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A row!&rdquo; cried Jack delightedly, as he rushed to the taffrail. &ldquo;Time, too;
- four weeks we've lain here, and never a hand in a single shindy!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His companion laughed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As for that,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;you're not likely to have a hand in this, unless
- you take the boat and row off to the diving grounds. All the same, there's
- a jolly row on&mdash;look yonder.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The schooner <i>Wellington</i> rode at anchor at the northern extremity of
- the Strait of Manaar, on the famous pearl-fishing grounds of Ceylon. On
- her larboard bow lay the coast&mdash;a string of low, white sand-hills,
- dotted with the dark-brown thatch of fisher huts and the vivid green of
- cocoa-nut palms. The hour was eight o'clock in the morning of a cloudless
- March day; the fitful land-breeze had died away, leaving the whole surface
- of the sea like billowy glass. Half-a-dozen cable's-lengths distant on the
- schooner's starboard quarter, a score or-more of native <i>dhonies</i> or
- diving-boats rose and dipped to the regular motion of the long
- ground-swell.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was towards these boats that Don pointed.
- </p>
- <p>
- That something unusual had occurred was evident enough. Angry shouts
- floated across the placid water; and the native boatmen could be seen
- hurriedly pulling the boats together into a compact group about one
- central spot where the clamour was loudest.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I say,&rdquo; cried Jack, after watching the boats for some time in silence,
- &ldquo;they're making for the schooner.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't half like the look of it,&rdquo; replied Don uneasily; &ldquo;they shouldn't
- leave the diving grounds, you know, until the signal gun's fired. I wish
- the guv was here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wishing's no good when he's ashore,&rdquo; said Jack philosophically. &ldquo;You're
- the skipper <i>pro tem</i>., and you must make the most of your promotion,
- old fellow. We'll have some fun, anyhow. Whew! how those niggers pull, and
- what a jolly row they're making!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- By this time the excited cries, which had first attracted the attention of
- those upon the schooner's deck, had been exchanged by the boatmen for a
- weird chant, to which every oar kept time. Erect in the stern of the
- foremost boat an old whiteheaded <i>tyndal</i> or &ldquo;master&rdquo; led the song,
- while at the end of each measure a hundred voices raised a chorus that
- seemed fairly to lift the boats clear of the water.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What are they singing, anyway?&rdquo; demanded Jack. &ldquo;There's something about a
- diver and a shark in it, but I can't half make it out, can you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We'll call Puggles&mdash;he'll be able to tell us. Pug! Hi, Pug! come
- here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Coming, sa'b!&rdquo; answered a voice from the cook's galley; and almost
- simultaneously there appeared on deck the plumpest, shiniest, most
- good-natured looking black boy that ever displayed two raws of pearly
- teeth. Nature had, apparently, pulled him into the world by the nose, and
- then, as a sort of finishing touch to the job, had given that organ a
- sharp upward tweak and left it so. It was to this feature that Puggles
- owed his name.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pug,&rdquo; said his master, &ldquo;tell us what those boatmen yonder are singing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The black boy cocked his ears and listened for a moment with parted lips.
- &ldquo;Boat-wallahs this way telling, sa'b,&rdquo; said he; and, catching the strain
- of the chant, he repeated the words of each line as it fell from the lips
- of the old <i>tyndal</i>:
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- &ldquo;Salambo selling the diver one charm,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- Salaam, Alii kum!
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- Old shark, he telling, then do no harm,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- Salaam, Alii kum!
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- One spotted shark come out the south,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- Salaam, Alii kum!
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- He taking diver's leg in his mouth,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- Salaam, Alii kum!
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- Me big liking got, he telling, for you,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- Salaam, Alii kum!
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- So he biting diver clean in two,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- Salaam, Alii kum!
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- The lying charmer we take to the ship,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- Salaam, Alii kum!
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- There he feeling bite of the sahib's whip,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- Salaam, Alii kum!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, this Salambo must be the chap the guv had whipped off the grounds
- last season, eh, Pug?&rdquo; cried Don excitedly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Same black rascal, sa'b. His skin getting well, he coming back. Dey bring
- him 'board ship, make his skin sore two times,&rdquo; explained Puggles,
- grinning.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ha, ha!&rdquo; laughed Jack. &ldquo;We'll oblige 'em! We'll trice the fellow up!
- Hullo, here they come!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The boats having now reached the schooner, the chant ceased abruptly, the
- heavy oars were noisily shipped, and, amid a perfect Babel of voices, the
- boatmen came swarming up the sides, until the deck was one mass of wildly
- gesticulating, dusky humanity. The uproar was terrific.
- </p>
- <p>
- The old <i>tyndal</i>, who towered a full head and shoulders above his
- comrades, pushed his way to the front, and commanding silence among his
- followers, addressed himself to Don, who was always-recognised as master
- in his fathers absence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sab.&rdquo; said he in pigeon English, &ldquo;one year back big sa'b ordering Salambo
- eat plenty blows for selling charm to diver-man. All same, this season he
- done come back and sell plenty charm, telling diver-man he put charm round
- neck, shark no eat him up. He telling plenty lie&mdash;this morning one
- shark done come, eat diver, charm, all!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let him stand forward,&rdquo; said Don, beginning to enter as much into the
- novelty of the thing as Jack himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- The culprit, a sleek old fellow with shaven head, crafty eyes, and a
- rosary of wooden beads about his neck, was shoved to the front.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Are you the chap who was whipped off the grounds last year for selling
- chaims?&rdquo; demanded Don.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your honour speaking true words.&rdquo; whined the shark-charmer, salaaming
- until his shaven head almost touched the deck; &ldquo;I same rascal.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I say, Jack,&rdquo; whispered Don, &ldquo;I shan't have him whipped, you know. We'll,
- make him walk the plank.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Capital! Hell funk, certain, and there'll be no end of fun.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well do it, then,&rdquo; said Don decidedly. &ldquo;Go forward and order two of the
- lascars to take the boat and lie under the schooner's quarter&mdash;-this
- side, you know&mdash;ready to pick him up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In high glee Jack departed to execute this commission, while Don again
- turned to the shark-doctor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you happen to have one of those charms about you?&rdquo; he asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;One here got, sa'b,&rdquo; said the fellow, producing from the folds of his
- waist-cloth an <i>ola</i> or fragment of palm-leaf, covered with
- cabalistic characters. &ldquo;Sa'b no look at him?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Keep it yourself,&rdquo; said Don; &ldquo;you'll soon need it. Hi, lascar!&rdquo; to one of
- the schooner's crew who stood near. &ldquo;Fetch a plank here and run it out
- over the side.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- By the time the plank was brought and run out until one-half its length
- projected over the water, Jack came up chuckling, and by a sign intimated
- that the boat was in readiness. The crowd of natives, guessing that
- something unusual was afoot, craned their necks eagerly, while Puggles
- executed a comic <i>pas seul</i> in his delight. But the shark-charmer, as
- Jack had predicted, &ldquo;funked&rdquo; miserably.
- </p>
- <p>
- Knowing that with the boat in waiting there was absolutely no danger to
- the shark-charmer's life, Don turned a deaf ear to his pleadings, and made
- a signal to the lascars to proceed.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0004" id="linkimage-0004"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0022.jpg" alt="0022 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0022.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- Willing hands seized the quaking wretch and dragged him to the schooner's
- side, where he was placed upon, the plank, Puggles standing on the
- deck-end to keep it down.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Steady, Puggles!&rdquo; cried Don. &ldquo;One, two, three&mdash;let him slide!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Puggles jumped aside, the deck-end of the plank rose high in air, then
- descended with a crash; and with a scream of terror the shark-charmer
- disappeared over the side.
- </p>
- <p>
- A tremendous shout rose from the natives on deck, and with a common
- impulse they one and all rushed to the schooner's side, which they reached
- just as the shark-charmer's head reappeared above the surface. Another
- moment, and he was dragged into the boat, where, catching sight of the
- laughing faces ranged along the rail above, he shook his fist in mute
- menace, and so was rowed to shore.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Teach the beggar a lesson he won't forget in a hurry,&rdquo; said Don, as he
- watched the boat recede. &ldquo;Good-bye, old boy; we're not likely to meet
- again.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But in this sanguine forecast of the future he was mistaken, as events
- speedily proved.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER II. A STROKE OF LUCK AND AN AFTER-STROKE.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was the
- afternoon of the day on which the shark-charmer so unwillingly walked the
- plank. The breeze was so light and fitful that it barely ruffled the
- surface of the sea about the schooner. Weary of the narrow limits of the
- deck, Don and his chum dropped into the boat and rowed ashore&mdash;Puggles,
- as a matter of course, bearing them company.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;These beastly sands are like an oven!&rdquo; growled Don, lifting his helmet to
- cool his dripping forehead. &ldquo;Where shall we go, Jack?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bazaar,&rdquo; replied Jack laconically; &ldquo;always some fun to be had there. Pug,
- point for the bazaar.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me pointing, sar,&rdquo; puffed the black boy, setting his dumpy legs in
- motion.
- </p>
- <p>
- Puggles was never so much in his element as when thus strutting pompously
- in advance, warning common nigger humanity of the white sahibs' approach.
- At such times the disdainful tilt of his nose, the supreme
- self-complaisance of his expansive grin, were as good as a show.
- </p>
- <p>
- A gay and animated scene did the bazaar present. Back and forth through
- the temporary street surged an endless throng of natives of every shade of
- complexion and variety of costume&mdash;buying, selling, shouting,
- jabbering, drinking with friends or fighting with enemies.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Much cry and little wool,&rdquo; laughed Jack. &ldquo;There's a big black fellow
- yonder auctioning off some pearl oysters; let's have a go at the next
- lot.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right,&rdquo; assented Don; &ldquo;perhaps we'll have a stroke of luck. The guv
- knew a poor half-caste once who bid in just such a chance lot as this, and
- in one of them he found sixty-eight thumping big pearls. Cleared thousands
- of pounds by that one bid, the guv says. Pug! here, Pug!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Coming, sa'b,&rdquo; gasped a faint voice, and Puggles wriggled his way from
- amongst the bystanders, shining with abundant perspiration and squeezed
- well-nigh flat by the pressure of the crowd.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pug,&rdquo; said his master, &ldquo;up on this creel with you, and when that big
- black fellow yonder puts up his next lot, bid 'em in.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Up went Puggles, nothing loth to escape further squeezing, and up went the
- auctioneer's next lot. In five minutes' time the few dozens of oysters
- composing the lot were knocked down to the black boy at an absurdly low
- figure.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Here you are,&rdquo; said Don, handing him the coin. &ldquo;Pass that over, and fetch
- the things away till we see what's inside them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Making a dive for the oysters, Puggles scrambled them into his cloth, and
- followed the sahibs to the outskirts of the crowd, blowing like a
- porpoise. Finding a convenient patch of shade beneath a banyan tree within
- a few yards of the lazy surf, they proceeded to ascertain, without further
- delay, whether the shells contained anything of value.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Him plenty smell got, anyhow,&rdquo; commented Puggles, as he arranged the
- oysters, which had been several days out of the water, in a small pyramid.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack threw himself on the sand, and surveyed the rough, discoloured heap
- with unqualified disgust. &ldquo;They don't look very promising, I must say,&rdquo; he
- cried. &ldquo;Try that big one on top, Don.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Inserting the blade of his pocket-knife between the shells of the bivalve,
- Don prized it open and carefully examined its contents. It contained
- nothing of any value.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack looked listlessly on, while his companion opened shell after shell
- with no other result than the finding of two or three miserable specimens
- of pearls, so small that, as Jack laughingly said, &ldquo;one might stick them
- in ones eye and forget the moment after where one had put them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Only three or four shells now remained unopened, and Don was on the point
- of abandoning the search in disgust, when Jack, who had edged himself on
- his elbow as close to the heap as the villainous odour of the decomposed
- oysters would allow, snatched up a shell of large size, and said:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let me have the knife a moment, will you? This looks promising&mdash;it's
- the biggest of the whole lot, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There you are, then; I've had enough of them myself,&rdquo; said Don, tossing
- him the knife and walking off.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had not proceeded half-a-dozen yards, however, when a loud shout
- brought him back at a run. Jack and Puggles were eagerly bending over the
- opened oyster.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; he asked breathlessly, going down on his knees beside them.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack thrust the half-shell towards him. It was literally filled with
- magnificent pearls. *
- </p>
-<pre xml:space="preserve">
- * In 1828 no less than sixty-seven pearls were taken from a
- single oyster on these grounds.&mdash;J. K. H.
-</pre>
- <p>
- Not a word was spoken as the glistening, priceless globules were carefully
- abstracted from their unsightly case and laid upon Pug's coffee-coloured
- palm. Twenty-five pearls of matchless size and brilliancy did Jack count
- out ere the store was exhausted. So taken up were they with their good
- fortune that not one of the three observed a native creep stealthily
- towards them under cover of the tree.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's been nothing like it known on the grounds for years!&rdquo; cried Don
- excitedly. &ldquo;Any more, Jack?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No more,&rdquo; said Jack, and was about to throw the shell away, when Puggles
- caught his arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stop, sar, stop! Me see something yellow in shell. Stick knife in the
- meat, sar, that side.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With the point of the blade Jack prodded the substance of the oyster at
- the point indicated, and presently laid bare the queen of the royal family
- of pearls on which they had stumbled. Larger by far than any of the
- twenty-five already taken from the shell, this latest addition to the
- number was in shape like a pear, in lustre of the purest pale yellow.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Him gold pearl, sa'b!&rdquo; cried Puggles gleefully, grinning from ear to ear.
- &ldquo;Other only silver. Gold pearl plenty price fetching.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Jack, old fellow,&rdquo; cried Don, thumping his companion on the back,
- &ldquo;Puggles is right; we're in luck. I've heard the guv say that a golden
- pearl isn't found once in twenty years. The priests are ready to give
- simply any sum you like for a really fine specimen.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The native who had concealed himself behind the trunk of the banyan tree,
- leaned eagerly forward. So close was he to the absorbed group that he
- could distinctly hear every word of their conversation. As he listened, an
- avaricious glitter shone in his crafty eyes, and he rubbed his hands
- unctuously together, as though he were rubbing pearls between them.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How much do you suppose the lot is worth; Don?&rdquo; Jack inquired.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Some thousands of pounds, I should say. But the guv will be able to tell
- us. Say, I'd better put them in this.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Taking out his watch, he drew off the soft chamois leather case, and
- carefully transferred the output of the mammoth oyster from Pugs palm to
- this temporary receptacle.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; cried Jack, leaping to his feet, &ldquo;let's make for the schooner. The
- sun's set, and besides, I shan't feel easy until the golden 'un is in a
- safer place than a waistcoat pocket.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's so,&rdquo; assented Don. &ldquo;Point, Pug!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When they had disappeared in the crowded bazaar, the shark-charmer emerged
- from behind the tree, and took the road to that part of the beach where
- the boats lay.
- </p>
- <p>
- By the time Don and his companions reached the schooner, the brief
- twilight had deepened into the gray darkness of early night. The pearls
- were at once shown to Captain Leigh, who confirmed his son's estimate of
- their value. It would, he said, run well into four figures, if not into
- five. The golden pearl he pronounced to be of special value.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not that it would fetch anything in England,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;but wealthy
- natives&mdash;and more especially priests&mdash;stop at nothing to secure
- a pearl like that. I mean that in a double sense, my lads; so you had
- better stow your find away in a safe place.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In the locker under the cabin clock, accordingly, the chamois leather bag
- with its precious contents was placed. On closing the locker, however, to
- his annoyance Don found the key to be missing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I shall put it in the little locker under the cabin clock,&rdquo; said Don. &ldquo;It
- locks, and there isn't a safer place on board the schooner.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0005" id="linkimage-0005"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0031.jpg" alt="0031 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0031.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wrap your handkerchief round the bag, so it won't be noticed if any one
- opens the locker,&rdquo; suggested Jack. &ldquo;It will be safe enough then,
- especially as nobody ever comes here except ourselves and Pug.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But on quitting the cabin, to their amazement they came face to face with
- the shark-charmer! He stood at the very bottom of the companionway, within
- a yard of the cabin door, and directly opposite the clock and locker.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What are you doing here?&rdquo; cried Don, advancing upon him angrily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nothing, sab, nothing!&rdquo; protested the native, dropping a running salvo of
- salaams as he backed up the steps. &ldquo;Me only wanting to see big sa'b.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then be off about your business, or you'll get the whipping you missed
- this morning. Do you hear?&rdquo; And, without further ado, Salambo made for the
- deck, where they saw him disappear over the side.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you think he saw us at the locker, Jack?&rdquo; Don asked uneasily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I should think not. But even if he did he wouldn't be any the wiser. He
- knows nothing about the pearls.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;True enough,&rdquo; said Don, and so the subject dropped.
- </p>
- <p>
- The cabin clock indicated the hour of ten when they turned in for the
- night. Somehow Don found himself unable to sleep. In spite of every effort
- he could make to the contrary, his thoughts <i>would</i> run on the
- pearls. At last he could stand it no longer. Leaping out of his berth, he
- struck a light and crept noiselessly into the main cabin. The companion
- door stood open to admit the night air, and his candle flared in the
- draught.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll get to sleep, perhaps, if I take a look at them,&rdquo; he said to himself
- as he made his way to the locker.
- </p>
- <p>
- An exclamation of alarm burst from his lips. His hand shook so violently
- that it was with difficulty he could hold the candle. The lid of the
- locker stood wide open!
- </p>
- <p>
- Advancing the light, he peered into the receptacle. It contained nothing.
- Handkerchief, bag, pearls&mdash;all had disappeared!
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER III.&mdash;THE QUEST BEGINS.
- </h2>
- <p>
- For a moment the discovery paralysed him, body and mind. Then he turned
- and hurried to Jack's cabin. Jack was snoring. Don shook him fiercely by
- the shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wake up! The pearls are gone!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack was awake and on his feet in a twinkling. &ldquo;You're dreaming, old
- fellow,&rdquo; said he, seeing Don in his night-clothes. &ldquo;You're only half
- awake.&rdquo; Don did not argue the matter. He simply seized Jack by the arm and
- dragged him into the main cabin. There the empty locker placed the truth
- of his assertion beyond dispute.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's to be done?&rdquo; gasped Jack.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let us call Pug,&rdquo; suggested Don. &ldquo;He may know something about this.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Puggles slept on deck. In two minutes they were by his side, and he was
- stretching his jaws in a mighty yawn. Great was his astonishment when he
- heard of the loss. But he could throw no light on the matter. He had
- neither seen nor heard anything suspicious. As for Puggles himself, he was
- above suspicion.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come down and let us have another look,&rdquo; said Jack. &ldquo;It's just possible,
- you know, that some one may have been to the locker and accidentally
- dropped or knocked the case out upon the floor. I can't believe it's
- gone.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Just as they reached the bottom of the companion-way, Puggles, who was
- slightly in advance of his master, stopped short, and called their
- attention to an object dangling from the handle of the door. Jack caught
- it up and ran to the table, where the lighted candle stood.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Merely a string of wooden beads,&rdquo; said he, tossing the object on the
- table.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A native rosary!&rdquo; cried Don, snatching it up. &ldquo;I've seen this before
- somewhere.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sa'b,&rdquo; broke in Puggles, his eyes the size and colour of Spanish onions,
- &ldquo;him shark-charmer rosilly, sa'b!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The very same!&rdquo; cried Don. &ldquo;I recollect seeing it round his neck this
- morning.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And I recollect seeing it there this evening,&rdquo; added Jack.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;When we bundled him out of the companionway?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then how do you account for our finding it on the door-knob, and for its
- being broken as it is now?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't you see? The fellow returned, of course.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Returned? When?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;After we saw him over the side; he never went ashore. He sneaked back,
- and then made off in a tremendous hurry. The position, not to say the
- condition, in which we found the rosary proves that. Jove! what a pair of
- fools we've been. That rascally shark-charmer has diddled us out of the
- pearls.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don stared at his friend open-mouthed, yet unable to utter a single word
- either of assent or doubt, so great was the consternation produced in his
- mind by Jack's daring theory as to the disappearance of the pearls, and
- the consequences which must follow if it held good.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You may take it to be a dead certainty,&rdquo; resumed Jack, following up his
- idea, &ldquo;that when Salambo actually left the ship, the pearls went with him.
- We made the rascal walk the plank this morning, and he's bound to resent
- that, of course. In fact, the way in which he shook his fist at us when he
- went off in the boat shows that he <i>did</i> resent it. Very well, then,
- there's a readymade motive for you&mdash;revenge.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's all right,&rdquo; said Don, finding his tongue at last, &ldquo;I'm not
- boggling over the motive: the value of the pearls is enough motive for any
- nigger. What puzzles me is this: How did he know we had them in our
- possession at all?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, that's as plain as the nose on your face,&rdquo; replied Jack; &ldquo;the fellow
- was on shore at the same time we were, was he not?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He was.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, then, suppose he saw us buy the shells, watched us open them, and,
- in short, discovered that we had met with a stroke of luck. Then he
- follows us back here&mdash;you saw him yourself, didn't you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I did,&rdquo; said Don.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you see this, don't you?&rdquo; dangling the rosary before Don's eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I do; I'm not blind.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then what the dickens more do you want?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The pearls,&rdquo; said Don, laughing. &ldquo;I'm convinced, old fellow, so no more
- palaver. Our business now is to run the shark-charmer down. What's the
- time?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Eleven o'clock to the minute.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And what start of us do you think he has got?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was about nine when we caught him sneaking, and we turned in at ten.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And out again half an hour later. Then the locker must have been rifled
- between ten and halfpast. That would give him, say, forty-five minutes'
- start if we were on his track at this identical moment, which we&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
- What was that? I heard a noise overhead.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Some one at the skylight,&rdquo; said Jack in a whisper. &ldquo;S-s-sh! I'll slip on
- deck and see who it is.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The skylight referred to was situated directly over the cabin table, so
- that, its sash being then raised some six inches to admit the night air,
- it afforded a ready means of eavesdropping. Springing lightly up the cabin
- steps in his stocking feet, Jack took a cautious survey of the deck. The
- awning had been taken in at nightfall, and a full moon shone overhead,
- making the whole deck as light as day. Close beside the skylight, lashed
- against the cabin, stood a water-butt; and bending carelessly over this he
- saw one of the native crew. Calling out sharply, he bade him go forward,
- and the fellow, muttering some half-audible excuse about wanting a drink,
- slunk away.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A lascar after water; I don't think he was spying,&rdquo; said Jack, diving
- below again. &ldquo;All the same, we'll keep an eye aloft; that rascally Salambo
- may have an accomplice among the crew.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Very likely; but as I was saying,&rdquo; resumed Don, in a lower key, &ldquo;the
- thief has had ample time to make himself scarce. Now the thing is&mdash;how
- are we to nab him?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There are the <i>peons</i>. * Why not get the guv to set them on the
- fellow's track?&rdquo;
- </p>
-<pre xml:space="preserve">
- * Native attendants; pronounced <i>pewns</i>.&mdash;J..R. H.
-</pre>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, there's just the difficulty,&rdquo; said Don, with a despairing gesture.
- &ldquo;They all sleep ashore except one or two; and by the time we woke the
- governor, explained matters to him, and got the fellows started, there'd
- be no end of delay. Besides, the rascal would naturally be on the look-out
- for the <i>peons</i>, and either give them the slip or bribe them to let
- him off.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's so; whatever's done must be done sharp.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Just what I was going to say,&rdquo; continued Don. &ldquo;The schooner, you see,
- sails for Colombo in two or three days' time at the most, and it would put
- the governor to no end of inconvenience to despatch half-a-dozen <i>peons</i>
- on an errand like this just now. Fact is, I doubt if he'd do it at all,
- and we might go whistle for our pearls. No, I've a better plan than that
- to propose. There's no need to trouble the guv at all; we'll go ashore and
- capture the thief ourselves.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Capital!&rdquo; cried Jack; &ldquo;I'd like nothing better. When shall we start?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At once. There's a bright moon, the fellow has only about an hour's
- start, and with ordinary luck we ought to run him down by daybreak at the
- very&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hist!&rdquo; said Jack suddenly; &ldquo;there's some one at the skylight again. Wait
- a minute&mdash;I'll soon put an end to his spying.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Clearing the ladder at a bound, he emerged upon the deck before the
- listener was aware of his approach. The spy was actually bending over the
- open skylight. He was there for no good or friendly purpose&mdash;that was
- evident.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're not after water this time, anyhow,&rdquo; said Jack, hauling him off the
- cabin with scant ceremony. &ldquo;Didn't I tell you to go forward? You'll obey
- orders next time, perhaps;&rdquo; and drawing off, he felled him to the deck
- with a single blow.
- </p>
- <p>
- The lascar picked himself up and scuttled forward, muttering curses
- beneath his breath.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There,&rdquo; said Jack quietly, as he rejoined those below, &ldquo;we'll not be
- spied upon again to-night, I fancy. Now, Don, for the rest of your plan.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's soon told. I propose that we follow the thief at once. The only
- difficulty will be to get on his track.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Marster going take me?&rdquo; queried Puggles anxiously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, of course,&rdquo; said Don; &ldquo;we couldn't manage without you, Pug.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then,&rdquo; said Puggles, grinning, &ldquo;me soon putting on track; me knowing
- place Salambo sleeping plenty nights.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good; there's something in that,&rdquo; said Don. &ldquo;He is sure to go straight to
- his den on leaving the schooner, though it's hardly likely he'll remain
- there to sleep. Still, he might. 'Twill give us a clue to his whereabouts,
- at all events. And now, Jack, ready's the word.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- No time was to be lost, and quietly and quickly their preparations were
- completed. These were by no means extensive: they fully expected to return
- to the schooner by break of day. A revolver, half-a-dozen rounds of
- ammunition, and a few rupees-disposed in their pockets, they stole
- noiselessly on deck. The night was one of breathless calm, and the watch
- lay stretched upon their backs, snoring away the sultry hours of duty.
- Save our three adventurers, not a living thing was astir; not a sound
- broke the stillness of the night; and high overhead the moon floated in
- ghostly splendour.
- </p>
- <p>
- The boat, as it chanced, lay on that side of the schooner farthest from
- the shore; and in order to shape their course for the beach it was
- necessary to round the vessel's bows. Puggles held the tiller-ropes, but
- in doing this he miscalculated his distance, and ran the boat full tilt
- against the schooners cable.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Keep her off, Pug!&rdquo; cried his master in suppressed, half-angry tones.
- &ldquo;Can't you see where you're steering?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In the momentary confusion a figure appeared for a moment above the
- schooner's bulwarks. Then a glittering object hurtled through the moonlit
- air and struck the gun'le of the boat immediately abaft the thwait on
- which Jack sat. Jack uttered a stifled cry and dropped his oar.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the matter?&rdquo; said Don impatiently, as the boat swung clear of the
- cable. &ldquo;Pull, old fellow; we've no time to lose.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Better lose a little time than one's life,&rdquo; muttered Jack through his set
- teeth. &ldquo;Look here!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Turning in his seat Don saw, still quivering in the gun'le of the boat
- where its point had stuck, a sailor's heavy sheath-knife. In its passage
- it had slashed open the shoulder of Jack's coat, grazing the flesh so
- closely as to draw blood&mdash;the first shed in the quest of the golden
- pearl.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack passed it off with an air of indifference.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A mere scratch,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;but a close shave all the same. The work of
- that treacherous lascar I knocked down a while back. Saw his ugly
- head-piece above the rail just now, don't you know. There's no time to pay
- him out now, but if ever he interferes with me again he'll get his knife
- back, anyhow!&rdquo; and wrenching the formidable weapon free of the plank, he
- thrust it into his belt and again bent to his oar.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If that fellow's an accomplice of the shark-charmer, it looks as though
- they meant business,&rdquo; commented Don, seconding his companion's stroke.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So do we, if it comes to that,&rdquo; was Jacks significant retort,
- </p>
- <p>
- For some time they pulled in silence, the creaking of the oars in the
- rowlocks and the soft purling of the water about the boat's prow being the
- only sounds audible. When within a couple of hundred yards of the gleaming
- surfline, Don suddenly broke the silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hold hard, Jack! Do you make out anything astern there&mdash;anything
- black on the water?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nothing,&rdquo; said Jack, after a moment's hesitation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's gone now, but I saw it quite plainly. Struck me it looked like a
- man's head. Must have been a dugong.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Or the lascar,&rdquo; suggested Jack. &ldquo;He's safe to follow us if he's an
- accomplice.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hardly safe with so many sharks about,&rdquo; rejoined Don, &ldquo;unless his master
- has provided him with an extra potent charm.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Five minutes later, the boat having meanwhile been beached upon the
- deserted sands, Puggles was rapidly &ldquo;pointing&rdquo; for the bazaar, where the
- shark-charmer slept o' nights. That they should find him there to-night,
- however, was almost too much to hope. He had probably &ldquo;made tracks&rdquo; with
- all speed after securing the pearls. All the same, a visit to the bazaar
- might furnish some clue to his present whereabouts.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stop!&rdquo; said Don, when within fifty yards of the spot. &ldquo;The whole place
- will be astir in two minutes if we show ourselves, Jack. We'd better send
- Pug on ahead to reconnoitre while we wait here. Do you know the hut he
- usually sleeps in, Pug?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me finding with me eyes shut, sa'b.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good! Now listen. Make your way to this hut as quietly as you can, and
- ascertain whether he's there or not. If he's there, don't wake him, but
- come back here as fast as your legs can carry you. If he's not there, try
- and find out where he's gone.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Put your cloth over your head so he won't recognise you, and say you've
- come on business,&rdquo; put in Jack. &ldquo;Pretend you want a charm, or something of
- that sort.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not a bad idea,&rdquo; assented Don. &ldquo;You understand, Pug?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me understanding, sa'b.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then be off with you, sharp!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Puggles promptly disappeared.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the course of ten minutes he returned, accompanied by a native muffled
- from head to heel in a blanket.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Surely he can't have induced the old fellow to return with him!&rdquo;
- whispered Jack excitedly.
- </p>
- <p>
- But in this surmise he was wrong. It was not the shark-charmer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dis one bery nice black man; plenty talk got,&rdquo; said Puggles, by way of
- introduction, when he reached the spot where his master and Jack were
- waiting. &ldquo;Him telling shark-charmer no here; he going one village.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Just as I feared,&rdquo; said Don. &ldquo;How far is it to this village, Pug!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Him telling one two legs,&rdquo; replied Puggles, meaning leagues. &ldquo;Village
- 'long shore; marster giving one rupee, dis'black man showing way.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Without further parley the rupee was transferred from Don's pocket to the
- stranger's outstretched palm, and off they started. After following the
- beach for about a mile, their guide turned his back upon the sea and
- struck inland, leading them a tortuous course amid ghostly, interminable
- sand-hills, where the mournful sighing of the night-wind through the tall
- silver-grass, and the howling of predatory jackals, added to the weird
- loneliness of the scene. A blurred furrow in the yielding sand formed the
- only footpath. So slow was their progress that when at last the guide
- pointed out the village a halfmile ahead, Don, on consulting his watch,
- found it to be three o'clock. They had wasted fully two hours in walking
- six miles.
- </p>
- <p>
- While they were still some little distance short of the village, the guide
- stopped, and pointing out a pool of water which shone like a boss of
- polished silver amid the sand-hills, asked leave to go and slake his
- thirst. His request granted, he disappeared amid the dunes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you know,&rdquo; said Jack, while they were impatiently awaiting his return,
- &ldquo;I fancy I've seen that fellow before, though I can't for the life of me
- recall where.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The guide not returning, they at length went in search of him. But Pug's
- &ldquo;bery nice black man&rdquo; was nowhere to be seen.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Looks as if he meant to leave us in the lurch,&rdquo; Jack began, when a shout
- of &ldquo;Him here got, sa'b!&rdquo; from Puggles, brought them back to the footpath
- at a run.
- </p>
- <p>
- The new-comer, however, was not the missing guide, but a stranger. He had
- been belated at the bazaar, he told them, and was now making his way home
- to the village close by. In answer to inquiries concerning the
- shark-charmer, he imparted a startling piece of news.
- </p>
- <p>
- The shark-charmer had indeed taken his departure from the bazaar, but not
- to this village. He had, the stranger asserted, embarked in a coasting
- vessel bound for the opposite side of the Strait.
- </p>
- <p>
- Don uttered an exclamation of impatience and dismay.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He will be safe on the Madras coast by daybreak!&rdquo; he cried.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Him there coming from, sa'b,&rdquo; put in Puggles.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And that lying guide,&rdquo; added Jack savagely, &ldquo;was an accomplice, left
- behind to throw us off the scent. Don't you remember you saw some one
- swimming after the boat? I'll lay any odds 'twas the lascar. He got to the
- bazaar ahead of us&mdash;he could easily manage that, you know, by running
- along the sands&mdash;muffled himself up so that I shouldn't recognise
- him, and then led us on this fool's errand while his master made off.
- Well, good-bye to the golden pearl!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not a bit of it!&rdquo; cried Don resolutely. &ldquo;I, for one, shan't relinquish
- the quest, come what may. Back we go to the schooner! Then, with the
- governor's consent, we'll go further. Point, Pug!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack seconding this proposal heartily, they rewarded the communicative
- native, and with unflagging determination retraced their steps. By four
- o'clock they had traversed something more than half the distance. The dawn
- star was now high above the eastern horizon. A rosy flush in the same
- quarter warned them that day was rapidly approaching. Suddenly, out of the
- gray distance ahead, a dull booming sound floated to their ears.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The schooner's signal gun!&rdquo; exclaimed Don. &ldquo;Why, it's too early yet by a
- good hour for the boats to put out. What's the governor about, I wonder?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There it goes again!&rdquo; cried Jack. &ldquo;I never knew it to be fired twice of a
- morning, did you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Never,&rdquo; said Don uneasily. &ldquo;Come, let us get on!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Off again at their best speed, until at length the heavy path was
- exchanged for the smooth, hard sand of the beach. On this it was possible
- to make better time, and by five o'clock they were within half a mile or
- so of the bazaar. It was now daylight; but a sharp bend in the coast-line,
- and the sand-hills which here rose steeply from the beach on their left,
- as yet concealed both the landing-place and the schooner from view.
- </p>
- <p>
- Puggles, who in spite of his shortness of limb had throughout maintained
- the lead by several rods, suddenly stopped, and fell to shouting and
- gesticulating wildly. Breaking into a run, Don and Jack speedily came up
- with him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Look, sa'b, look!&rdquo; gasped Puggles, pointing down the coast with shaking
- hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- Far away on the horizon appeared the white canvas of a vessel bowling
- along before the fresh land breeze, with a fleet of fishing-boats
- spreading their fustian-hued wings in her wake.
- </p>
- <p>
- The spot where our adventurers had last seen the schooner at anchor was
- deserted. She was gone!
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IV.&mdash;INTRODUCES BOSIN, AND TELLS HOW CAPTAIN MANGO PROVED
- HIMSELF A TRUMP.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he schooner had
- sailed!
- </p>
- <p>
- When the dismay caused by this unlooked-for turn of events had somewhat
- abated, Jack, catching sight of the black boy's lugubrious face, fell to
- laughing heartily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;After all,&rdquo; said Don, following his chum's example, &ldquo;it's no use crying
- over spilt milk. I'm not sure but this is the best thing that could have
- happened, Jack.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My opinion exactly. We began the quest without the guv's knowledge, and
- <i>nolens volens</i> we must continue it without his consent. What's the
- next piece on the programme, old fellow?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don pondered for a moment.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, first,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;we must ascertain whether that fellow told us the
- truth about the shark-charmer's having gone across the Strait. If it turns
- out that he has, then I'm not exactly clear yet as to what our next move
- will be, though I've an idea. You shall hear what it is later on.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right,&rdquo; said Jack &ldquo;whatever course you decide on, I'm with you heart
- and fist, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Arrived in the vicinity of the bazaar, Puggles was at once despatched to
- learn what he could of the shark-charmer's movements. In half an hour he
- returned. His report confirmed that which they had already heard. The
- shark-charmer had undoubtedly sailed for the opposite side of the Strait.
- </p>
- <p>
- Throwing himself upon his back in the shade of the banyan tree which had
- witnessed the discovery of the pearls, Don drew his helmet over his eyes,
- and pondered long and deeply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Jack,&rdquo; said he at length, &ldquo;how much money have you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack turned out his pockets.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Barely a rupee and a half,&rdquo; said he,
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And I,&rdquo; added Don, turning out his own, &ldquo;have four and a half.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Here one rupee got, sa'b,&rdquo; cried Puggles, tugging at his waist-cloth. &ldquo;Me
- giving him heart and fist, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That makes seven rupees, then,&rdquo; said his master, laughing; &ldquo;not much to
- continue the quest on, eh, Jack?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We'll manage,&rdquo; said Jack hopefully. &ldquo;But, I say, you haven't told us your
- plans yet, old fellow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, our course is as plain as a pikestaff. We'll hire a native boat, and
- follow the shark-charmer across the Strait. The only question is, where's
- enough money to come from?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't know,&rdquo; said Jack, &ldquo;unless we try to borrow it in the bazaar.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At this juncture there occurred an interruption which, unlikely though it
- may seem, was destined to lead to a most satisfactory solution of this
- all-important and perplexing question.
- </p>
- <p>
- While this conversation was in progress Puggles had seated himself at a
- short distance behind his master, and throwing his turban aside, proceeded
- to untie and dress the one tuft of hair which adorned the back of his
- otherwise cleanly shaven head.
- </p>
- <p>
- Directly above the spot where he sat there extended far out from the trunk
- of the banyan a branch of great size, from which dangled numerous
- rope-like air-roots, which, reaching to-within a few feet of the ground,
- swayed to and fro in the morning breeze. Out along this branch crept a
- large black monkey, which, after taking a cautious survey of Puggles and
- his unconscious neighbours, glided noiselessly down one of the swinging
- roots, and from its extremity dropped lightly to the ground within a yard
- of the discarded turban. Cautiously, with his cunning ferret-eyes fastened
- on the preoccupied Puggles, the monkey approached the coveted prize,
- snatched it up, and with a shrill cry of triumph turned tail and fled.
- </p>
- <p>
- Looking quickly round at the cry, Puggles took in the situation at a
- glance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sa'b! Sar!&rdquo; he shouted, invoking the aid of both his master and Jack in
- one breath, &ldquo;one black debil monkey me turban done hooking;&rdquo; and leaping
- to his feet he gave chase.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; said Jack, &ldquo;the little beast is making a bee-line for the old fort.
- It must be Bosin, Captain Mango's pet monkey.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Captain Mango!&rdquo; cried Don, as though seized with some sudden inspiration.
- &ldquo;Never thought of him until this minute!&rdquo; and, clapping on his helmet, he
- set off at a run after Puggles and the monkey.
- </p>
- <p>
- Away like the wind went the monkey, the stolen turban trailing after him
- through the sand like a great serpent; and away went Puggles, his back
- hair flying. But while Puggles was short of wind, the monkey was nimble of
- foot. The race was, therefore, unequal from the start, its finish more
- summary than satisfactory; for as Puggles ran, with his eyes glued upon
- the scurrying monkey, and his mouth wide-stretched, his foot unluckily
- came in contact with a tree-root, which lay directly across his path.
- Immediately beyond was a bed of fine soft sand, and into this he pitched,
- head foremost. Just then his master came up, with Jack at his heels.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sa'b! Sar!&rdquo; spluttered Puggles, knuckling his eyes and spitting sand
- right and left, &ldquo;debil monkey done stole turban. Where him going, sa'b?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come on, Pug,&rdquo; his master called out as he ran past; &ldquo;your headgear's all
- right&mdash;the monkey's taken it into the fort.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The structure known as &ldquo;the fort&rdquo; occupied the summit of a sandy knoll,
- about which grew a thick plantation of cocoanut palms, seemingly as
- ancient as the fort itself. The walls of the enclosure had so crumbled
- away in places as to afford glimpses of the buildings within. These were
- two in number&mdash;one an ancient <i>godown</i>, as dilapidated as the
- surrounding wall; the other, a bungalow in excellent repair, blazing in
- all the glory of abundant whitewash.
- </p>
- <p>
- Towards this building, after passing the tumble-down gateway, with its
- turreted side-towers alive with pigeons, Don and his companion shaped
- their course; for this was by no means their first visit to the fort. A
- broad, low-eaved verandah shaded the front of the bungalow, and upon this
- opened two or three low windows and a door. As they drew near a shadow
- suddenly darkened the doorway, and there emerged upon the verandah an
- individual whose pea-jacket and trousers of generous nautical cut
- unmistakably proclaimed him to be a seafaring man. About his throat a
- neckerchief of a deep marine blue was tied in a huge knot; while from
- beneath the left leg of his wide pantaloons there projected the end of a
- stout wooden substitute for the real limb.
- </p>
- <p>
- On catching sight of his visitors an expression of mingled astonishment
- and pleasure overspread his honest, bronzed features.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0006" id="linkimage-0006"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0057.jpg" alt="0057 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0057.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shiver my binnacle!&rdquo; roared he, advancing with a series of hitches and
- extended hand to meet them. &ldquo;Shiver my binnacle if it ain't Master Don and
- Master Jack made port again! An' split my topsails, yonder's the little
- nigger swab a-bearin' down under full sail out o' the offin! Lay alongside
- the old hulk, my hearties, an' tell an old shipmate what may be the
- meaning of it all. Where away might the schooner be, I axes?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To tell you the truth, Captain Mango,&rdquo; said Don, shaking the old sailor
- by the hand in hearty fashion, &ldquo;on that point we're as much at sea as
- yourself. We pulled ashore last night on a little matter of business of
- our own&mdash;without the skipper's knowledge, you understand&mdash;and
- when we returned here this morning the schooner had sailed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shiver my figger-head if ever I hear'd any yarn to beat that!&rdquo; roared the
- captain, gripping Jack by the hand in turn. &ldquo;An' d'ye mean to say now, as
- ye ain't atween decks, sound asleep in your bunks, when the wessel gets
- under weigh?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not we,&rdquo; cried Jack, laughing at the captain's puzzled face and earnest
- manner; &ldquo;we were miles down the coast just then.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Belay there!&rdquo; sang out the captain, rubbing his stubbly chin in greater
- perplexity than ever. &ldquo;Blow me if I'm able to make out what tack you're
- on, lad. For, d'ye see, I lays alongside o' the wessel somewheres about
- eight bells&mdash;arter they fires the signal gun, d'ye see&mdash;to pay
- my 'specks to the master like, and shiver my bulk-head, when I axes what
- might <i>your</i> bearin's be, lads, he ups an' says, 'The younkers be
- below decks,' says he; an' so he weighs anchor, an' shapes his course for
- Colombie.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's plain there's been a double misunderstanding,&rdquo; said Don; &ldquo;<i>we</i>
- knew nothing of the guv's intention to sail this morning, and <i>he</i>
- knew nothing of our absence from the schooner. He, of course, thought we
- were below, and so sailed without us. As I hinted just now, we're ashore
- on business of our own. Fact is, we're in a fix, and we want your advice.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Adwice is it?&rdquo; cried the captain, leading his visitors indoors; &ldquo;fire
- away, lads, till I hears what manner o' stuff you wants, and the wery best
- a water-logged old seaman can give ye, ye shall have&mdash;shiver my
- figger-head if ye shan't! Howsomedever, afore we lays our heads together
- like, I'll pipe the cook and order ye some wittles.&rdquo; This hospitable duty
- performed, the captain threw himself into a chair with his &ldquo;main-brace,&rdquo;
- as he jocosely termed his wooden leg, extended before him, and, bidding
- Don proceed with what he had to say, composed himself to listen. Whereupon
- Don recounted the cause and manner of the shark-charmer's punishment, the
- discovery and subsequent loss of the pearls, together with their reasons
- for suspecting the shark-charmer of the theft, as well as how they had
- been tricked by the latter's supposed accomplice, and on making their way
- back to the beach had found, not the schooner as they expected, but a
- deserted roadstead.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The thief has crossed the Strait, there's no doubt about that,&rdquo; he
- concluded. &ldquo;<i>We</i> want to hire a boat and go in pursuit of him; but
- the governor's sudden departure has placed us in a dilemma. The fact is,
- captain, we haven't enough cash to&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Belay there!&rdquo; roared the captain, stumping across the room to a
- side-table. &ldquo;Hold hard, lads, till I has a whiff o' the fragrant! Shiver
- my maintop! there's nothing like tobackie for ilin' up a seaman's runnin'
- gear, says you!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Filling a meerschaum pipe of high colour and huge dimensions from a pouch
- almost as large as a sailor's bag, the captain reseated himself, and for
- some minutes puffed away in silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shiver my smokestack!&rdquo; cried he at last, slapping his thigh energetically
- with his disengaged hand, &ldquo;the thing's as easy as boxin' the compass,
- lads! You axes me for adwice: my adwice is, up anchor and away as soon as
- ye can. Supplies is low, says you. What o' that? I axes. There's a canvas
- bag in the old sea-chest yonder as'll charter all the boats hereabouts, if
- so be as they're wanted, which they ain't, d'ye mind me. Ye can dror on
- the canvas bag, lads, an' welcome&mdash;why not? I axes. An' there's as
- tight a leetle cutter in the boat-house below as ever ye clapped eyes on&mdash;which
- the <i>Jolly Tar's</i> her name&mdash;what's at your sarvice, shiver my
- main-brace if it ain't! An' blow me, as the fog-horn says to the
- donkey-engine, I'll ship along with ye, lads!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- &ldquo;An' a-sailin' we'll go, we'll go;
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- An' a-sailin' we will go-o-o!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- he concluded, with a stave of a rollicking old sea-song.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hurrah! You're a trump, captain, and no mistake!&rdquo; cried Jack, while Don
- sprang forward and gripped the old sailor's hand with a heartiness that
- showed how thoroughly he appreciated this generous offer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, y'see, lads,&rdquo; explained the captain apologetically, &ldquo;'twould be ekal
- to a-sendin' of ye to Davy Jones if I was to let ye go pokin&rdquo; round this
- 'ere Strait alone. Now me&mdash;rope-yarn an' marlin-spikes!&mdash;there
- ain't a reef, nor a shool, nor yet a crik atween Colombie an' Jafna P'int
- but what's laid down on this 'ere old chart o' mine,&rdquo; tapping his forehead
- significantly. &ldquo;An' besides I'm a-spilin' for a bit o' the briny, so with
- you I ships&mdash;an' why not? I axes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And right glad of your company and assistance we'll be, captain,&rdquo; said
- Don. &ldquo;The main difficulty will be, of course, to discover to what part of
- the Indian coast the thief has gone.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The captain puffed thoughtfully at his pipe.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, as for that,&rdquo; said he at length, &ldquo;I've an idee as I knows his
- reckonin', shiver my binnacle if I ain't! But that's neither here nor
- there at this present speakin'. Ballast's the first consideration, lads;
- so dror up your cheers an' tackle the perwisions.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When they had complied with this welcome invitation to the entire
- satisfaction of the captain and their own appetites, &ldquo;Now, lads,&rdquo; said the
- old sailor gaily, &ldquo;do ye turn in an' snatch a wink o' sleep, whiles I goes
- an' gets the cutter ready for puttin' to sea. For, says you, look alive's
- the word if so be as we wants to overhaul the warmint as took the treasure
- in tow. Spike my guns!&mdash;we'll make him heave to in no time!
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- &ldquo;For all things is ready, an' nothing we want,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- To fit out our ship as rides so close by;
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- Both wittles an' weapons, they be nothing scant,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- Like worthy sea-dogs ourselves we will try!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- Trolling this ditty, the captain stumped away, while his guests made
- themselves as comfortable as they could, and sought the slumber of which
- they stood so much in need.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was late in the afternoon when they woke. Puggles had disappeared.
- Proceeding to the beach, they found the captain, assisted by a small army
- of native servants, busily engaged in putting the-finishing touches to his
- preparations for the proposed voyage. Just above the surf-line lay the <i>Jolly
- Tar</i>&mdash;a trim little craft, fitted with mast-and sprit, whose
- sharp, clean-cut lines betokened possibilities in the way of speed that
- promised well for the issue of their enterprise. In the cuddy, amid a
- bewildering array of pots, pans, and pannkins, Puggles had already
- installed himself, his shining face a perfect picture of self-complacent
- good-nature, whilst Bosin, newly released from durance vile, sat in the
- stern-sheets, cracking nuts-and jabbering defiance at his black rival.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A purty craft!&rdquo; chuckled the captain, checking for a moment the song that
- was always on his lips, as he led his visitors to the cutters side; &ldquo;stave
- my water-butt if there's anything can pull ahead of her in these 'ere
- parts. Everything shipshape 'an' ready to hand, d'ye see&mdash;wittles for
- the woyage, an' drink for the woyagers. Likewise ammunitions o' war,&rdquo;
- cried he proudly, pointing out a number of muskets and shining cutlasses,
- which a servant just then brought up and placed on board.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- &ldquo;Bath, wittles an' weapons, they be nothing scant,
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- So like worthy sea-dogs ourselves we will try.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What with the cutlasses and guns, and the captain's wooden leg, to say
- nothing of our small-arms, Don,&rdquo; said Jack, &ldquo;we'd better set up for
- buccaneers at once.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shiver my main-brace! a wooden leg ain't sich a bad article arter all,&rdquo;
- rejoined the captain; &ldquo;specially when a seaman falls overboard. With a
- life-buoy o' that nater rove on to his starn-sheets, he's sartin to keep
- one leg above water, says you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No doubt of that, even if he goes down by the head,&rdquo; assented Don,
- laughing. &ldquo;But, I say, captain, what's in the keg&mdash;spirits?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Avast there!&rdquo; replied the captain, half shutting one eye and
- contemplating the keg with the other, &ldquo;that 'ere keg, lads, has stuff in
- its hold what's a sight better'n spurts. Gunpowder, lads, that's what it
- is; and spike my guns if we don't broach the same to the health of old
- Salambo when we falls in with him. What say you, lads?
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- &ldquo;We always be ready,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- Steady, lads, steady;
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- We'll fight an' we'll conquer agin an' agin.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I hope we shan't have to do that, captain,&rdquo; said Jack gravely. &ldquo;But
- powder or no powder, we'll pay the beggar out, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Right, lad; so we'll just take the keg along with us in case of
- emargencies like. Shiver my compass, there's no telling aforehand what
- this 'ere wenture may lead to.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- To whatever the venture was destined to lead, preparations for its
- successful inception went on apace, and by nightfall all was in readiness.
- The captain declaring that he &ldquo;couldn't abide the ways o' them 'ere
- jabbering nigger swabs when afloat,&rdquo; the only addition to their numbers
- was a single trusty servant of the old sailor's, who was taken along
- rather with a view to the cutter's safety when they should be ashore than
- because his assistance was required in sailing her.
- </p>
- <p>
- Don having despatched an overland messenger with a letter to his father,
- explaining their absence and proposed undertaking, as the full moon rose
- out of the eastern sea the cutter was launched.
- </p>
- <p>
- Half an hour later, with her white sails bellying before the freshening
- land-breeze, she bore away for the opposite shore of the Strait, on that
- quest from which one at least of those on board was destined never to
- return.
- </p>
- <p>
- While her sails were yet visible in the moonlit offing, a native crept
- down to the deserted beach. He was a dark-skinned, evil-featured fellow;
- and the moonlight, falling upon his face, showed his left temple to be
- swollen and discoloured as from a recent blow. On his shoulder he carried
- a paddle-and a boathook.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The wind will drop just before dawn,&rdquo; he muttered, as he stood a moment
- noting the strength and direction of the breeze. &ldquo;Then, you white-devil,
- then!&rdquo; and he patted the boathook affectionately, as if between him and it
- there existed some secret, dark understanding.
- </p>
- <p>
- Selecting a <i>ballam</i> or &ldquo;dug-out&rdquo; from amongst a number that lay
- there, he placed the boathook carefully in the bottom of the frail skiff,
- and launched it almost in the furrow which the cutter's keel had ploughed
- in the yielding sand. Then springing in, and plying his paddle with rapid
- strokes, he quickly disappeared in the cutter's wake.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0007" id="linkimage-0007"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0067.jpg" alt="0067 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0067.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER V.&mdash;THE LASCAR GETS HIS KNIFE BACK.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>er light sails
- winged to catch every breath of the light but steady breeze that chased
- her astern, the cutter for some hours bowled through the water merrily. In
- the cabin Puggles and the captain's Black servant snored side by side;
- whilst Don and Jack lolled comfortably just abaft the mast-, where the
- night wind, soft and spicy as the breath of Eden, would speedily have
- lulled them to slumber but for the excitement that fired their blood. The
- Captain was at the tiller, Bosin curled up by his side.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If this 'ere wind holds, lads,&rdquo; exclaimed the old sailor abruptly, after
- a prolonged silence on his part, &ldquo;we'd orter make the island agin sunrise,
- shiver my forefoot if we don't!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don looked up with half-sleepy interest. &ldquo;Island, captain? I thought we
- were heading straight for the Indian coast.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ay, so we be, straight away. But, y'see, lad, as I hinted a while back, I
- has a sort o' innard idee, so to say, as the old woman ain't on the
- mainland.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What old woman?&rdquo; queried Jack, yawning. &ldquo;Didn't know there was one in the
- case, captain.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old sailor burst into a roar of laughter. &ldquo;An' no more there ain't,
- lad,&rdquo; chuckled he; &ldquo;an' slit my hammock if we wants one, says you. Forty
- odd year has I sailed the seas, an' hain't signed articles with any on 'em
- yet. A tight leetle wessel's the lass for me, lads; for, unship my helm!
- <i>she</i> never takes her own head for it, says you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then what about the old woman you mentioned captain?&rdquo; said Don
- banteringly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Avast there now! An' d'ye mean to say,&rdquo; demanded the captain
- incredulously, &ldquo;as you ain't ever hear'd tell o' the fish what sails under
- that 'ere name? And a wicious warmint he is, too, shiver my keelson!
- Hysters is his wittles, an' pearls his physic; he lives on 'em, so to say;
- an' so I calls the cove as took them pearls o' your'n in tow an old woman;
- an' why not, I axes?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But what about the island you spoke of just now, captain?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, d'ye see, it's this way, lads; there's an island off the coast
- ahead, a sort o' holy place like, where them thievin' natives goes once a
- year an' gets salwation from their sins. Howsomedever, that's neither here
- nor there, says you; the p'int's this, lads: Somewheres about the month o'
- March, which is this same month, says you, here the priests flocks from
- all parts, an' here they stays until they gets a purty pocketful o' cash.
- Now, my idee's this, d'ye see: the old woman&mdash;which I means Salambo&mdash;lays
- alongside the schooner an' takes them pearls o' your'n in tow. What for?
- says you. Cash, says I. An' so, shiver my main-brace, he shapes his course
- for this 'ere island, an' sells 'em to the priests.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Very likely,&rdquo; assented Don. &ldquo;He's bound to carry them to the best market,
- of course.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And equally of course the best market is where the most priests are. By
- Jove, you <i>have</i> a headpiece, captain!&rdquo; put in Jack.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm afraid, though,&rdquo; resumed Don, after a moment's silence, &ldquo;I'm afraid
- it's not going to be so easy to come at the old fellow as we think. You
- say this island's a sort of holy place; well, it's bound to be packed with
- natives to the very surf-line in that case. Rather ticklish work, I should
- think, taking the old fellow among so many pals. There's the getting
- ashore, too; what's to prevent their sighting us?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Belay there!&rdquo; roared the captain, vigorously thumping the bottom of the
- boat with his wooden leg. &ldquo;Shiver my main-brace! what sort o' craft do ye
- take me for, I axes? A island's a island the world over&mdash;a lump o'
- land what's floated out to sea. Wery good, that bein' so&mdash;painters
- an' boathooks!&mdash;ain't it as easy a-boardin' of her through the
- starn-ports as along o' the forechains?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, you mean to make the back of the island, and steal a march on old
- Salambo from the rear, then?&rdquo; cried Don. &ldquo;A capital idea!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're on the right tack there, lad,&rdquo; assented the captain. &ldquo;There's as
- purty a leetle cove at the backside o' that island as ever wessel cast
- anchor in, an' well I knows it, shiver my binnacle! Daylight orter put us
- into it, if so be&mdash;&mdash; Split my sprit-sail, lads, if it ain't
- a-fallin' calm!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0008" id="linkimage-0008"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0074.jpg" alt="0074 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0074.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- An ominous flapping of the cutter's sails confirmed the captain's words.
- During the half-hour over which this conversation extended the wind had
- gradually died away until scarcely a movement of the warm night air could
- be felt. The cutter, losing her headway, rolled lazily to the motion of
- the long, glassy swell. Consulting his watch, Don announced it to be three
- o'clock.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This 'ere's the lull at ween the sea-breeze an' the land-breeze,&rdquo;
- observed the captain complacently, working the tiller from side to side as
- if trying to coax renewed life into the cutter. &ldquo;How-somedever, it hadn't
- orter last long. Stow my sea-chest!&mdash;we'll turn in an' catch a wink
- o' sleep atween whiles. Here, Master Jack, lad! take a turn at the tiller,
- will 'ee?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Settling himself in the captain's place, with instructions to call that
- worthy sea-dog should the wind freshen, Jack began his first watch.
- Becalmed as they were, the tiller was useless, so he let it swing,
- contenting himself with keeping a bright look-out. But soon he concluded
- even this to be an unnecessary precaution. Not a sail was to be seen on
- the moonlit expanse of ocean; and even had a score been in sight, there
- would still have been no danger whatever, in the absence of wind, of their
- interfering with the cutter. In fine, so secure did he consider their
- position, and so soporific an influence did the comfortable snoring of Don
- and the captain exercise upon him, that in a very short time his head sank
- upon his breast, and he fell asleep.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had slept soundly for perhaps an hour, when a cold, touch upon the
- cheek startled him into consciousness.
- </p>
- <p>
- Rousing himself, he found Bosin at his elbow. The monkey for some reason
- had left his masters side, and it was his clammy paw, Jack now perceived,
- that had awakened him. It almost looked as if the monkey had purposely
- interrupted his slumber. But what had roused the monkey? Jack rose to his
- feet, stretched himself, and looked about him.
- </p>
- <p>
- The night was, if anything, more breathlessly calm than when he had
- relieved the captain. Upon the unruffled, deserted sea the moonlight
- shimmered with a brilliancy uncanny in its ghostliness. From the cutter
- straight away to and around the horizon not an object, so far as he could
- make out, darkened the surface of the water, except under the cutter's
- larboard bow, where the moon-cast shadow of the sail fell. He fancied he
- saw something move there, close under the bow where the shadow lay
- blackest. The next instant it had disappeared.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, Bosin, old chap,&rdquo; said he, stroking the monkeys back; &ldquo;a false
- alarm this time&mdash;back to your quarters, old fellow!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The monkey, as if reassured by these words, crept away to his master's
- side, whilst Jack resumed his seat, and again dozed off.
- </p>
- <p>
- Not for long, however. It was not the monkey this time, but a sudden and
- by no means gentle thud against the cutters side that roused him. Awake in
- an instant, he sprang to his feet with a startled exclamation. Close under
- the cutter's quarter lay a canoe, and in the canoe there stood erect a
- native, with what appeared to be a boathook poised above his head. All
- this Jack took in at a glance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Boat ahoy! Who's that?&rdquo; he cried sharply, his hand instinctively seeking
- the knife at his belt.
- </p>
- <p>
- For answer came a savage, muttered imprecation; and the boathook, impelled
- with all the strength of the native's muscular arms, descended swiftly
- through the air. Starting aside, Jack received the blow' upon his left
- arm, off which the heavy, iron-shod weapon glanced, striking the gun'le of
- the boat with a resounding crash.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The lascar!&rdquo; muttered Jack between his teeth, as he stepped back a pace
- and whipped out his knife in anticipation of a renewal of the attack.
- </p>
- <p>
- But the lascar, baffled in his attempt to take his enemy by surprise, did
- not repeat the blow. Instead, he drew off, and with all his strength drove
- the iron point of the boathook through the cutter's side below the
- water-line.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;By Heaven!&rdquo; cried Jack, as he perceived his intention, &ldquo;I'll soon settle
- scores with you, my fine fellow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Springing lightly upon the gunle, at a single bound he cleared the few
- yards of open water intervening between the cutter and the canoe, and with
- all the impetus of his leap drove the knife into the lascar's shoulder up
- to the very hilt.
- </p>
- <p>
- The lascar went overboard like a log. The canoe overturning at the same
- instant, Jack followed him.
- </p>
- <p>
- The noise of the scuffle having roused the sleepers, all was now wild
- commotion on board the cutter; Captain Mango roaring out his strange
- nautical oaths, and stumping hither and thither in search of something
- with which to stop the leak; Don shouting wildly at Jack, as he hastily
- threw off shoes and coat to swim to his assistance. Before either well
- knew what had actually happened, Jack was alongside.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the matter? Are you hurt?&rdquo; Don inquired anxiously, giving him a
- hand over the side.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hurt? No, not a scratch,&rdquo; said Jack lightly, scrambling inboard, and
- proceeding to wring the water from his dripping garments. &ldquo;A narrow
- squeak, though. That lascar villain has got his knife back, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who?&rdquo; cried Don in amazement; for, amid the confusion, neither he nor the
- captain had seen the native.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The lascar. What else do you suppose I went over the side for? I dozed
- off, you see, captain,&rdquo; said Jack, as the old sailor came stumping up with
- extended hand, &ldquo;and that lascar dog, who must have seen us sail and
- paddled after us, stole a march on me, and tried to crack my nut with a
- boathook. Lucky for me, he ran his canoe against the side and woke me up.
- Got on my feet just in time to dodge the blow. Then he smashed the
- boathook through the side. By Jove! I forgot that. We must stop the leak,
- or we'll fill in no time.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stave my quarter!&rdquo; roared the captain, detaining him as he was about to
- rush aft. &ldquo;The leak's stopped, lad; but blow me if ever I hear'd anything
- to beat this 'ere yarn o' your'n, so spin us the rest on it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's soon done,&rdquo; resumed Jack. &ldquo;When I found the fellow wouldn't give
- me a fair show, I boarded him, captain, and treated him to a few inches of
- cold steel. He won't trouble us again, I reckon!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Scarcely had he finished speaking when Don gripped his arm and pointed to
- where, a dozen yards away, the bottom of the canoe glistened in the
- moonlight. A dark object had suddenly appeared alongside the overturned
- skiff. Presently a surging splash was heard.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shiver my keelson if he ain't righted the craft!&rdquo; roared the captain,
- snatching up one of the muskets as the lascar was seen to scramble into
- the canoe and paddle slowly away.
- </p>
- <p>
- Don laid a quick hand upon the old sailor's arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let the beggar go,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;He'll never reach land with that knife in
- him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Maybe not, lad,&rdquo; replied the captain, shaking off the hold upon his arm
- and taking the best aim he could, considering the motion of the boat.
- &ldquo;Bloodshed's best awoided, says you. Wery good; all' the best way to awoid
- it, d'ye mind me, is to send yon warmint to Davy Jones straight away.
- Consequential, the quality o' marcy shan't be strained on this 'ere
- occasion, as the whale says when he swallied the school o' codlings.&rdquo; And
- with that he fired.
- </p>
- <p>
- The lascar was seen to discontinue the use of his paddle for a moment, and
- then to make off faster than before.
- </p>
- <p>
- The old sailor's face fell.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Spike my guns, I've gone and missed the warmint!&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Howsomedever,
- we'll meet again, as the shark's lower jaw says to the upper 'un when they
- parted company to accomidate the sailor. An' blow me, lads, here comes the
- wind!
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- &ldquo;Ay, here's a master excelleth in skill,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- An' the master's mate he is not to seek;
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- An' here's a Bjsin ull do our good will,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- An' a ship, d'ye see, lads, as never had leak.
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- So lustily, lustily, let us sail forth!
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- Our sails he right trim an' the wind's to the north!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- It was now five o'clock, and as day broke the cutter, with a freshening
- breeze on her starboard quarter, bore away for the island, now in full
- view. When about a mile short of it, however, the captain laid the boat's
- head several points nearer the wind, and shaped his course as though
- running past it for the mainland, which lay like a low bank of mist on the
- horizon. In the cuddy Puggles was busy with preparations for breakfast,
- whilst Don lolled on the rail, watching the shore, and idly trailing one
- hand in the water.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hullo! what's this?&rdquo; he exclaimed suddenly, examining with interest a
- fragment of dripping cloth that had caught on his hand. &ldquo;Jack, come here!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack happened to be forward just then, hanging out his drenched clothes to
- dry upon an improvised line, but hearing Don's exclamation, he sprang aft.
- Somehow he was always expecting surprises now.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Look here,&rdquo; said Don, rapidly spreading out the soaked cloth upon his
- knee, &ldquo;have you ever seen this before?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not likely!&mdash;a mere scrap of rag that some greasy native&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- Jack began, eyeing the said scrap of rag contemptuously. But suddenly his
- tone changed, and he gasped out: &ldquo;By Jove, old fellow, it's not the
- handkerchief, is it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The very same!&rdquo; replied-Don, rising and hurrying aft to where the captain
- stood at the tiller. &ldquo;I say, captain, you remember my telling you how I
- tied a handkerchief round that bag of pearls? Well, here's the identical
- 'wipe.' with my initials on it as large as life. Just fished it out of the
- water.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For full a minute the old sailor stared at him open-mouthed. Then: &ldquo;Flush
- my scuppers,&rdquo; roared he, &ldquo;if this 'ere ain't the tidiest piece o' luck as
- ever I run agin. We've got the warmint safe in the maintop, so to say,
- where he can't run away&mdash;shiver my main-brace if we ain't!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thanks to your clear head, captain,&rdquo; said Don. &ldquo;It certainly does look as
- if he had come straight to the island here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We'll purty soon know for sartin; we're a-makin' port hand over fist,&rdquo;
- rejoined the captain, bringing the cutter's head round, and running under
- the lee of the island.
- </p>
- <p>
- This side, unlike the wind-swept seaward face, was thickly clad in jungle,
- above which at intervals towered a solitary palm like a sentinel on duty.
- No traces of human habitation were to be seen; for a rocky backbone or
- ridge, running lengthwise of the island, isolated its frequented portion
- from this jungly half. Midway between the extremities of this ridge rose
- two hills: one a symmetrical, cone-shaped elevation, clad in a mantle of
- jungle green; the other a vast mass of naked rock, towering hundreds of
- feet in air, and in its general-outline somewhat resembling a colossal
- kneeling elephant. As if to heighten the resemblance, there was perched
- upon the lofty back a native temple, which looked for all the world like a
- gigantic howdah.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D'ye see them elewations, lads?&rdquo; cried the captain, heading the cutter
- straight for what-appeared to be an unbroken line of jungle. &ldquo;A. brace o'
- twins, says you. Wery good; atween 'em lies as purty a leetle cove as
- wessel ever cast anchor in&mdash;slip my cable if it ain't!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Are you sure you're not out of your reckoning, captain?&rdquo; said Jack,
- scanning the shore-line with dubious eye. &ldquo;It's no thoroughfare, so far as
- I can see.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Avast there! What d'ye say to that, now?&rdquo; chuckled the captain, as the
- cutter, in obedience to a movement of the tiller, swept round a tiny eyot
- indistinguishable in its mantle of green from, the shore itself, and
- entered a narrow, land-locked creek, whose precipitous sides were
- completely covered from summit to water-line with a rank growth of
- vegetation. &ldquo;Out with the oars, lads! a steam-whistle couldn't coax a wind
- into the likes o' this place, says you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The oars run out, they pulled for some distance through this remarkable
- rift in the hills, the cutter's mast in places sweeping the overhanging
- jungle; until at last a spot was reached where a side ravine cleft the
- cliff upon their left, terminating at the water's edge in a strip of sandy
- beach, thickly shaded with cocoa-nut palms.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stow my cargo!&rdquo; chuckled the captain, as he ran the cutter bow-on into
- the sand, &ldquo;a nautical sea-sarpent himself couldn't smell us out here, says
- you. So here we heaves to, and here we lies until&mdash;&mdash;swabs an'
- slush-buckets, what's this?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For the captain had already scrambled ashore, and as he uttered these
- words he stooped and intently examined the sand at his feet. In it were
- visible recent footprints, and a long trailing furrow that started from
- the water's edge and ran for several yards straight up the beach. Where
- the furrow terminated there lay a native <i>ballam</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack was first to espy the canoe. Guessing the cause of the captain's
- sudden excitement, he ran up the sands to the spot where the rude vessel
- lay. The <i>ballam</i> was still dripping sea-water; and in it, amid a
- pool of blood, lay a sailors sheath-knife.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The lascar!&rdquo; he shouted, snatching up the blood-stained weapon, and
- holding it out at arms length, as Don and the captain hurried up; &ldquo;we've
- landed in his very tracks!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VI.&mdash;IN THE THICK OF IT.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">E</span>ither the lascar's
- wound had not proved as serious as Jack surmised, or the fellow was
- endowed with as many lives as a cat. At all events, he had reached land
- before them, and in safety.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sharks an' sea-sarpents!&rdquo; fumed the captain, Stumping excitedly round and
- round the canoe. &ldquo;The warmint had orter been sent to Davy Jones as I ad
- wised. Howsomedever, bloodshed's best awoided, says you, Master Don, lad;
- an' so, shiver my keelson! here we lies stranded. What's the course to be
- steered now, I axes? That's a matter o' argyment, says you; so here's for
- a whiff o' the fragrant!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Bidding his servant fetch pipe and tobacco, the captain seated himself
- upon the canoe and fell to puffing meditatively, his companions meanwhile
- discussing the situation and a project of their own, with many anxious
- glances in the direction of the adjacent jungle, where, for anything they
- knew to the contrary, the lascar might even then be stealthily watching
- their movements.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shiver my smokestack! d'ye see that, now?&rdquo; exclaimed the captain at last,
- following with half-closed eye and tarry finger the ascent of a perfect
- smoke-ring that had just left his lips. &ldquo;An' what's a ring o' tobackie
- smoke? says you. A forep'intin' to ewents to come, says I. A ring means
- surrounded, d'ye see; an'&mdash;grape-shot an' gun-swabs!&mdash;surrounded
- means fightin', lads!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Fun or fighting, I'm ready, anyhow!&rdquo; cried Jack, flourishing his knife.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ay, ay, lad; an' me, too, for the matter o' that,&rdquo; replied the old
- sailor, presenting his pipe at an imaginary foe like a pistol; &ldquo;but when
- our situation an' forces is beknownst to the enemy, we're sartin to be
- surprised, d'ye mind me. An' so I gets an idee!
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- &ldquo;Go palter to lubbers an' swabs, d'ye see?
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- 'Bout danger, an' fear, an' the like;
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- A tight leetle boat an' good sea-room give me,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- An' it ain't to a leetle I'll strike!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Out with the idea then, captain!&rdquo; cried Don.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shiver my cutlass, lads!&mdash;we must carry the war into the camp o' the
- enemy, dye see'. Wery good, that bein' so, what we wants, d'ye mind me, is
- a safe, tidy place to fall back on, as can't be took, or looted, or burnt,
- like the cutter here, whiles we're away on the rampage, so to say.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why not entrench ourselves on the hill just above?&rdquo; suggested Jack.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stow my sea-chest!&mdash;the wery identical plan I perposes,&rdquo; promptly
- replied the captain. &ldquo;An' why? you naterally axes. Because it's ha'nted,
- says I.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because it's what?&rdquo; cried the two young men in chorus. &ldquo;Haunted?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ay, the abode o' spurts,&rdquo; continued the captain. &ldquo;There's a old ancient
- temple aloft on yon hill, d'ye see, as they calls the 'Ha'nted Pagodas'&mdash;which
- they say as it's a tiger-witch or summat inhabits it, d'ye see&mdash;an'
- shiver my binnacle if a native'll go a-nigh it day or night!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Admirable! But what about the cutter, captain?&rdquo; said Don.
- </p>
- <p>
- The captain sucked for a moment at his pipe as if seeking to draw a
- suitable idea therefrom.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What o' the cutter? you axes,&rdquo; said he presently. &ldquo;Why, we'll wrarp her
- down the crik a bit, d'ye see, an' stow her away out o' sight where the
- wegitation's thickish-like on the face o' the cliff; copper my bottom if
- we won't!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The stores, of course, must be carried up the hill,&rdquo; said Jack, entering
- readily into the captain's plans. &ldquo;We should set about the job at once.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Avast there, lad! What's to perwent the jungle hereabouts a-usin' of its
- eyes? I axes. The wail o' night, says you. So, when the wail o' night
- unfurls, as the poic says, why, up the hill they goes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- This being unanimously agreed to, and Puggles at that moment announcing
- breakfast, our trio of adventurers adjourned to the cutter.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Captain,&rdquo; said Don, after delighting the black boy's heart by a ravenous
- attack upon the eatables, &ldquo;like you, I've got an idee&mdash;Hullo, you,
- Pug! What are you grinning at?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nutting, sa'b,&rdquo; replied Puggles, clapping his hand over his mouth; &ldquo;only
- when marster plenty eating, he sometimes bery often one idee getting.
- Plenty food go inside, he kicking idee out!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Just double reef those lips of yours, Pug, and tell us where do <i>your</i>
- ideas come from?&rdquo; said Jack, laughing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me tinking him here got, sar,&rdquo; said Puggles, gravely patting his
- waistband, at which the old sailor nearly choked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And a pretty stock of them you have, too, judging by the size of your
- apple-cart!&rdquo; said his master, shying a biscuit at his head. &ldquo;Well, as I
- was saying, captain, I have an idea&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Flush my scuppers!&rdquo; gasped the old sailor, swallowing a brimming pannikin
- of coffee to clear his throat. &ldquo;Let's hear more on it then, lad.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, it's this. Jack and I are going over to the town&mdash;where the
- temples are, you understand&mdash;to see if we can't sight old Salambo. A
- bit of reconnoitring may be of use to us later, you see.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A-goin'&mdash;over&mdash;to&mdash;the&mdash;town!&rdquo; roared the captain in
- amazement, separating the words as though each were a reluctant step in
- the direction proposed. &ldquo;Scuttle my cutter, lads! ye'll have the whole
- pack o' waimints down on ye in a brace o' shakes!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You won't say so when you see us in full war-paint,&rdquo; retorted Jack, as he
- and Don rose and disappeared in the cuddy.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the course of half an hour the cuddy door was thrown open, and two
- stalwart young natives, in full country dress, confronted the old sailor.
- With the assistance of Puggles and the captain's &ldquo;boy,&rdquo; not to mention
- soot from the cuddy pots, the two young fellows had cleverly &ldquo;made up&rdquo; in
- the guise of Indian pilgrims. At first sight of them, the captain,
- thinking old Salambo's crew were upon him, seized a musket and threw
- himself into an attitude of defence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Blow me!&rdquo; he roared, when a loud burst of laughter apprised him of his
- mistake, &ldquo;if this ain't the purtiest go as ever I see. Scrapers an'
- holystones, ye might lay alongside the old woman himself, lads, an' him
- not know ye from a reglar, genewine brace o' lying niggers. What tack are
- ye on now, lads? I axes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Off to the town, captain,&rdquo; replied Don, &ldquo;to search for old Salambo among
- his idols. That is, if you'll let Spottie here come with us as pilot.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Spottie&rdquo; was the nickname with which they had dubbed the captain's black
- servant, whose face was deeply pitted from smallpox.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Right, lads; he's been here afore, an' knows the lay o' the land; so take
- him in tow, and welcome,&rdquo; was the captain's hearty rejoinder. &ldquo;An' stow
- your knives away amidships, in case of emargency like; though blow me if
- they ever take ye for aught but genewine lying niggers!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Concealing their knives about their persons in accordance with this
- advice, they launched the lascar's <i>ballam</i> upon the creek&mdash;which
- the captain assured them expanded a little further inland into a broad
- lagoon, too deep to ford&mdash;and so set out.. The paddle had been
- removed; but as the creek appeared to have nowhere, in its upper reaches
- at any rate, a greater depth than half-a-dozen feet, the boathook served
- admirably as, a substitute for propelling the canoe.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the line for, Spottie?&rdquo; Jack asked, seeing their guide throw a
- coil of small rope into the canoe, which he afterwards boarded in person
- and shoved off.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Turkle, sar,&rdquo; replied Spottie. &ldquo;Plenty time me catching big turkle asleep
- on sand. He no come in <i>ballam</i>, so me taking rope to tow him astern.
- Him bery nice soup making, sar,&rdquo; said Spottie, who had always an eye to
- anything.
- </p>
- <p>
- Little as they guessed it then, this line was to play a more unique and
- serviceable part in the day's adventures than that indicated by the
- soup-loving Spottie.
- </p>
- <p>
- The creek, as the captain had intimated, presently expanded into a lagoon
- fully a quarter of a mile wide, and so shallow in parts that the canoe
- almost touched the amber-coloured sands over which it passed. Arrived at
- the further side, they drew the canoe upon the beach, and continued their
- route to the town by way of a steep jungle-path, which, in the course of
- some fifteen minutes' hard climbing, led them to the crest of the rocky
- ridge. Here they paused a moment to look about them.
- </p>
- <p>
- To the left lay Haunted Pagoda Hill; on their right the colossal Elephant
- Rock; and, nestling at its base, the native town, with its sea of dun
- roofs and gleaming white temples. The stirring ramp of tom-toms, and the
- hoarse roar of the multitude, floated up to them as they stood
- contemplating the scene.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now for it!&rdquo; cried Jack, heading the descent. &ldquo;We'll soon be in the thick
- of it, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A few minutes more and they stood on the outskirts of the town.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Make for the chief temple, Spottie,&rdquo; said Don to their guide; &ldquo;and
- whatever you do, don't call us sahib or sir. We're only pilgrims like
- yourself, you understand. And say, Spottie, do you know old Salambo, the
- shark-charmer, when you see him?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- By a nod Spottie intimated that he did.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good! He's the chap we're after, you understand. Keep a sharp look-out,
- and if you happen to get your eye on him&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Or on a lascar with a knife-wound in his shoulder,&rdquo; put in Jack.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Just pull my cloth, will you?&rdquo; concluded Don.
- </p>
- <p>
- Again the trusty Spottie nodded, and at a signal led the way into the
- main-street, where they immediately found themselves in the midst of a
- noisy, surging crowd of natives.
- </p>
- <p>
- So perfect was their disguise, however, that Don could not detect a single
- suspicious glance directed towards them.
- </p>
- <p>
- The natives who thronged the street were, to a man, heading for the
- temples. Into these, if nothing was seen of the shark-charmer outside, Don
- was resolved to penetrate.
- </p>
- <p>
- As no English foot is ever allowed&mdash;in Southern India, at least&mdash;to
- cross the threshold of a Hindu shrine, this was a step attended with
- tremendous risk. Detection would mean fighting for their lives against
- overwhelming odds.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We'll do it, however,&rdquo; said Don resolutely. &ldquo;The temple's the place to
- look for him, since he's a priest, and in this disguise the pearls are
- worth the risk.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- That this was also Jack's opinion was plain from the resolute, nonchalant
- manner in which he pressed forward.
- </p>
- <p>
- Owing to the congested state of the thoroughfare, progress was necessarily
- slow. They were more than an hour in gaining the open <i>maidan</i> in
- which the street terminated.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the centre of this open space lay a sacred tank, flanked, on that side
- nearest the Elephant Rock, by a vast semicircle of temples. Midway in this
- line stood the chief temple. Here, if at all, the shark-charmer would most
- likely be found.
- </p>
- <p>
- But to reach the chief temple was no easy task. Vast crowds of pilgrims
- surrounded the sacred tank, awaiting their turn to bathe in its stagnant
- green waters.
- </p>
- <p>
- At last, after much elbowing and pushing, they reached the steps of the
- chief temple. Thus far they had seen nothing of Salambo. As they had
- already made the entire circuit of the tank, there was nothing for it but
- to seek him in the sacred edifice itself.
- </p>
- <p>
- Spottie led the way, since for him there was absolutely no risk. Following
- close upon his heels, past the hideous stone monsters which flanked the
- entrance, the mock pilgrims found themselves in the temple court. Here the
- crush was even greater than without.
- </p>
- <p>
- They had now reached the crucial point of their adventure.
- </p>
- <p>
- A single unguarded word or action on their part, and each man of these
- teeming thousands would instantly become a mortal enemy!
- </p>
- <p>
- Don strove to appear unconcerned, but his pulses throbbed madly at the
- mere thought of detection. As for Jack, the careless poise of his right
- hand at his belt showed him to be on his guard, though he looked as cool
- as a sea-breeze.
- </p>
- <p>
- Over the heads of the multitude, on the opposite side of the court, could
- be seen an inner shrine, where offerings were being made. Selecting this
- as his goal, Don began to edge his way slowly but steadily towards it,
- closely followed by Spottie and the undaunted Jack.
- </p>
- <p>
- Suddenly he felt a hand tugging at his cloth. Unable to turn himself about
- in the crush, he twisted his head round and caught Spottie's eye. By a
- quick, almost imperceptible movement of hand and head, the black directed
- his attention towards the left. Looking in the direction thus indicated,
- Don saw, but a few yards away, the portly person of the shark-charmer.
- </p>
- <p>
- By dint of persistent pushing, he presently succeeded in approaching so
- near to his man that, had he so wished, he could have laid a hand upon his
- shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- The shark-charmer was evidently bent upon gaining the inner shrine at the
- opposite side of the court. Inch by inch he pummelled his way through the
- dense crowd, unconscious that the sahibs whom he had robbed were dogging
- his steps. Once when he turned his head his eyes actually rested upon
- Don's face. But he failed to recognise him, and so went on again, greatly
- to Don's relief.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then of a sudden the limit of the crush was reached, and they emerged upon
- a comparatively clear space immediately in front of the shrine. This the
- shark-charmer crossed without hesitation, but Don hung back, uncertain
- whether it would be prudent to venture further. However, seeing a group of
- natives about to approach the shrine with offerings, he joined them, and
- in company with Jack ascended the steps.
- </p>
- <p>
- The shark-charmer had already disappeared within.
- </p>
- <p>
- Fumbling in his cloth for some small coin, to present as an offering, Don
- crossed the threshold, and was in the very act of penetrating the dimly
- lighted, incense-clouded chamber just beyond, when a guarded exclamation
- from Jack caused him to glance quickly over his shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- Following them with the stealthy tread of a panther was a swarthy,
- evil-looking native.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The lascar!&rdquo; said Jack, in a low, breathless whisper. &ldquo;Back, old fellow,
- for your life! Once in the crowd, we're safe.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0009" id="linkimage-0009"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0099.jpg" alt="0099 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0099.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- Back they darted towards the entrance, but the lascar, anticipating this
- manouvre, was on his guard. As Jack dashed past, the cunning spy thrust
- out his foot and sent him sprawling on the flagstones. Don, hearing the
- noise, turned back to his friend's assistance, and by the time Jack
- regained his feet the lascar had reached the entrance mid raised the
- hue-and-cry.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This way!&rdquo; cried Don, making for a narrow side door, as the lascar's
- shouts began to echo through the precincts of the temple. &ldquo;Get your knife
- ready, he's raised the alarm!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Through the door they dashed, only to find themselves in the court, hemmed
- in on every side. The frenzied cries of the lascar continued to ring
- through the enclosure; but, fortunately for the mock pilgrims, so vast was
- the concourse of natives, and so deafening the uproar, that only those
- nearest the shrine understood, his words, while even they failed, as yet
- to penetrate the clever disguise of the intruders. This gave them time to
- draw breath, and look about them.
- </p>
- <p>
- Close, on their left Jack's quick eye discovered an exit, about which the
- crowd was less dense than elsewhere. The great doors stood wide open,
- disclosing a narrow street. Between this exit and the spot where they
- stood at bay, a number of sacred bulls were quietly feeding off a great
- heap of corn which the devotees had poured out upon the flags of the
- court. All this Jack's eyes took in at a glance.
- </p>
- <p>
- A roar, terrific as that of ten thousand beasts of prey, burst from the
- surging multitude. The lascars words were understood. Glancing quickly
- over his shoulder, Jack saw that this man, from his place upon the steps
- of the shrine, was pointing them out.
- </p>
- <p>
- Another instant, and their disguise would avail them nothing; the
- maddened, fanatical crowd would be upon them.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don,&rdquo; he said, in rapid, husky tones, as he grasped his friend's hand for
- what he believed to be the last time, &ldquo;there's but one chance left us, and
- that's a slim one. You see the door on our left, and those bulls? Do you
- take one of the two big fellows feeding side by side, and I'll take the
- other. Use your knife to guide the brute, and with God's help&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A tremendous roar of voices and a thunderous rush-of feet cut his words
- short.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now for it, old fellow!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With one swift backward glance at the furious human wave sweeping down
- upon them, they darted towards the bulls, of which the two largest,
- accustomed to the daily tumult of town and temple, were still composedly
- feeding, their muzzles buried deep in the mound of corn.
- </p>
- <p>
- Before the animals had time to lift their heads, the mock pilgrims were on
- their backs and plying knives and heels upon their sleek flanks.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bellowing with pain and terror, the bulls, with tails erect and heads
- lowered, charged the throng about the doorway, bowling them over in all
- directions like so many ninepins. Before the infuriated crowd in their
- rear understood the meaning of this unexpected manoeuvre, the mock
- pilgrims were in the street.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a side street, fortunately, separated from the densely-packed <i>maidan</i>
- by a high brick wall, and but few natives were about. Those who followed
- them out of the temple, too, they soon distanced, for their ungainly
- steeds made capital time.
- </p>
- <p>
- But now a new, if less serious, danger menaced them. Apart from the
- difficulty of clinging to the round, arched backs of the bulls, once
- started, the maddened animals could not be stopped. Fortunately, they took
- the direction of the hill-path.
- </p>
- <p>
- On they tore, bellowing madly, and scattering showers of foam and sand
- right and left, until, in an amazingly brief space of time, they reached
- the outskirts of the town. Here, as if divining that their services were
- no longer required, the bulls stopped abruptly, shooting their riders off
- their backs into the sand with scant ceremony.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Regular buck-jumpers!&rdquo; groaned Jack, rubbing his lacerated shins
- ruefully. &ldquo;Glad we're safe out of it, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So am I. But I wonder where Spottie is?&rdquo; said Don, fanning himself with
- the loosened end of his turban.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack started up. &ldquo;Never once thought of Spottie since we entered the
- shrine,&rdquo; cried he. &ldquo;Come, we must go back and look him up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Their uneasiness on Spottie's account, however, was at that instant set at
- rest by the precipitate appearance on the scene of Spottie himself. Seeing
- his masters charge the crowd on the bulls' backs, he had extricated
- himself from the crush, and followed them with all possible speed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dey coming, sar!&rdquo; he panted, as he ran up, &ldquo;Lascar debil done fetching
- plenty black man!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And there swelled up from the street below a tumult of voices that left no
- doubt as to the accuracy of his statement.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VII.&mdash;&ldquo;FUN OR FIGHTING, I'M READY, ANYHOW!&rdquo;
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">D</span>ey coming, sar!&rdquo;
- groaned Spottie; and even as he spoke the leaders of the mob came tearing
- round the corner.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is it fight or run, Don?&rdquo; said Jack quietly, adjusting his turban with
- one hand and laying the other significantly upon his knife.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No two ways about that! We could never stand against such odds; so we'll
- run first and fight afterwards.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And reverse the old saying, eh?&rdquo; laughed Jack. &ldquo;I should dearly love to
- have a whack at them; but if you say run, why&mdash;run it is, so here
- goes!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Shaking his fist at the howling mob, he sprang up the steep hill-path,
- followed closely by Don. Spottie had already made good use of his legs,
- but they soon caught him up, whereupon Jack seized the terrified native by
- the arm and dragged him over the brow of the ridge.
- </p>
- <p>
- Down the further side they dashed, breathing easier now, for their
- movements were here well concealed by the dense jungle through which the
- pathway ran. As they emerged panting upon the sandy shore of the lagoon, a
- yell from the hill behind told them that their pursuers had gained the
- crest of the ridge. At the same instant Don pulled up abruptly, and being
- too much out of breath to speak, pointed in the direction of the canoe.
- Beside it stood a couple of natives, who, on seeing them, turned and fled
- towards the jungle.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The tall fellow!&rdquo; shouted Jack. &ldquo;Stop him! He's got the boathook!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The boathook was their only means of propelling the canoe. That gone, they
- were practically at the mercy of their enemies.
- </p>
- <p>
- After the flying natives they dashed, Jack leading. He quickly came up
- with the hinder-most, whom he dealt a blow that stretched him senseless in
- the sand. But the fellow who carried the boathook was long of leg and
- fresh of wind; while Jack was still a dozen yards in his rear, he gained
- the jungle and disappeared.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No good!&rdquo; groaned Jack, as he relinquished the pursuit and turned back.
- &ldquo;There's nothing for it but to fight. I say, Don, what's up?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don lay sprawling in the sand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Tripped over that lazy beast,&rdquo; said Don, picking himself up and aiming a
- kick at an enormous turtle which was already heading for the water.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Him bery nice soup making, sar!&rdquo; cried Spottie, rubbing his brown hands
- unctuously. But just then a fierce tumult of voices, rolling down from the
- jungle path, put other thoughts than soup into Spottie's pate.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The rope! Fetch the rope, Spottie!&rdquo; cried Jack, throwing himself on the
- turtle's back.
- </p>
- <p>
- Don dragged him off.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come away!&rdquo; cried he. &ldquo;There's no time to fetch that beast along. Are you
- out of your senses?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack's only reply was to snatch the rope from Spottie's hands, rapidly
- reeve a running knot at one end, and slip the loop around the body of the
- giant chelonian, which had by this time reached the water's edge.
- </p>
- <p>
- All this had occupied much less time than it takes to relate.
- </p>
- <p>
- The shouts of the mob now sounded ominously near. Without loss of time the
- canoe was launched, and at once Jack's purpose became apparent.
- </p>
- <p>
- Seating himself in the bow of the canoe, he drew in the slack of the rope
- until the turtle was within easy reach, and, holding it firmly so, prodded
- it with his knife. This was a cruel act, but the stern necessity of the
- moment outweighed all other considerations.
- </p>
- <p>
- The turtle at once began making frantic efforts to escape from its
- tormentor; and as its weight could not have been less than three or four
- hundred pounds, and its strength in proportion, it easily and rapidly drew
- the canoe through the water.
- </p>
- <p>
- In a few minutes they were a stone's throw from shore&mdash;and not a
- moment too soon, for at that instant the mob of natives rushed out of the
- jungle path, and finding themselves outwitted, gave utterance to a furious
- howl of disappointment and rage.
- </p>
- <p>
- The canoe, thanks to the efforts of the turtle, was soon so far from shore
- that Jack considered it safe to alter their course and steer for the
- creek. No sooner did he do so than the natives set off at a run in the
- same direction.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dey there canoe got, maybe,&rdquo; observed Spottie, who had now recovered from
- his fright.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In that case we may have some fun yet,&rdquo; laughed Jack, lashing the turtle
- with the rope's end, as if anxious to be in time for the anticipated
- sport.
- </p>
- <p>
- By the time the creek was reached, however, not a native was to be seen;
- so, congratulating themselves on having given their pursuers the slip,
- they reached the cutter.
- </p>
- <p>
- Here the old sailor, to say nothing of Puggles, was most anxiously
- watching for their return.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shiver my mizzen!&rdquo; shouted he, as they ran under the cutter's stern; &ldquo;ha'
- ye gone an' took a mermaid in tow, lads?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No; one of Spottie's turkles has taken us in tow, captain,&rdquo; replied Jack,
- setting the turtle free with a slash of his knife, in spite of Spottie's
- protestations that the creature would make &ldquo;bery nice soup.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ugh, you cannibal!&rdquo; he added, with a glance of disgust at the black's
- chagrined face, &ldquo;you wouldn't eat the beast after he has saved your life,
- would you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Belay there! what's this 'ere yarn about the warmint a-savin' o' your
- lives, lads?&rdquo; sang out the captain. &ldquo;Hours ago,&rdquo; continued he, as the two
- young men, leaving Spottie to beach the canoe, scrambled on board the
- cutter, &ldquo;hours ago I says to myself, 'Mango, my boy,' says I, 'may I never
- set tooth to salt junk agin if they younkers ain't all dead men afore
- this.' says I. Howsomedever, here ye be safe an' sound; so let's hear the
- whole on it, lads.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In compliance with this request Don began to relate the adventures which
- had befallen them since morning; but scarcely had he got fairly launched
- upon his narrative, when:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sharks an' sea'-sarpents!&rdquo; interrupted the captain, rising to his feet
- with a lurch, and pointing up the creek, &ldquo;what sort o' craft's this 'ere
- a-bearin' down on us? I axes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A canoe, laden to the water's edge with natives, appeared round a bend in
- the creek. Presently other canoes, to the number of half-a-dozen, hove in
- sight in rapid succession, whose occupants, perceiving their approach to
- be discovered, set up a shout that made the cliffs ring.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Spottie was right,&rdquo; cried Jack, catching up a musket, while Don and the
- captain followed suit; &ldquo;they've found canoes, and mean to board us.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Fire my magazine, but we'll give 'em a right warm welcome, then,&rdquo; said
- the captain. &ldquo;Look to the primin', lads, an' hold hard when I says fire,
- for blow me, these 'ere old muskets kicks like a passel o' lubberly
- donkeys, d'ye see!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Captain,&rdquo; Don hastily interposed, &ldquo;why not draw the bullets and load up
- with shot? The canoes are so deep in the water that a smart volley of shot
- right into the midst of the rascals is sure to make them flop over. We've
- just time to do it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- This suggestion tickled the captain immensely, and without delay the
- change was made. The canoes were now within easy range.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ready, lads,&rdquo; cried the captain:
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- &ldquo;We always be ready,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- Steady, lads, steady!
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- We'll fight an' we'll conquer agin and agin!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- Up went the muskets. At sight of them the natives rested on their oars, or
- rather paddles, and the canoes slowed down.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Fire!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The cliffs trembled beneath the treble report. Jack, who in his excitement
- had forgotten the captain's caution, went sprawling backwards over the
- thwarts.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ho, ho, ho! flint-locks an' small-shot, a wolley's the thing, lads,&rdquo;
- roared the captain, pointing up the creek as the smoke rolled, away.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- &ldquo;We ne'er see our foes but we wants 'em to stay,
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- An' they never see us but they wants us away;
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- When they runs, why, we follows an' runs 'em ashore,
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- For if they won't fight us, we can't do no more!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- The &ldquo;wolley&rdquo; had told. Driven frantic by the stinging shot, the natives
- had leapt to their feet and overturned four out of the seven deeply-laden
- canoes, whose late occupants were now struggling in the water.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They've a softer berth of it than I, anyway,&rdquo; said Jack from the bottom
- of the boat, as he rubbed his shoulder ruefully. &ldquo;I shall get at the
- muzzle end of your thundering old blunderbuss next time, captain. Hullo,
- there's that rascally&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The remainder of the exclamation was drowned in the creek, for as he
- uttered it Jack took a header over the stern.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shift my ballast, what's the young dog arter now? I axes,&rdquo; cried the
- captain, gazing aghast at the spot where Jack had disappeared.
- </p>
- <p>
- His speedy reappearance solved the riddle. By the queue he grasped a
- dripping, half-naked native, whom he dragged after him to the beach. It
- was the lascar.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hurrah! he's got him this time,&rdquo; shouted Don, leaping out upon the sands
- to lend a hand in landing the prize.
- </p>
- <p>
- At first the lascar struggled fiercely for liberty; but as Jack was by no
- means particular to keep his head above water, he soon quieted down, and
- presently, with Dons assistance, was hauled out on the sands, where he
- fell on his knees and began whining piteously for mercy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your revolver, Don,&rdquo; gasped Jack, with a watery side-wink at his friend.
- &ldquo;He shall tell us what he knows of the pearls, or die like the dog he is.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don placed the revolver in his hand, ready cocked. The lascar grovelled in
- the sand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sa'b, sa'b!&rdquo; he whined, &ldquo;you no shoot, me telling anyting.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No doubt you will,&rdquo; replied Jack significantly, pressing the muzzle of
- the weapon to his forehead; &ldquo;but what I want is the truth. Now, then, has
- old Salambo sold the pearls yet? Come, out with it!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He n-n-no selling, sa'b,&rdquo; stammered the terrified native, shrinking as
- far away from the pistol as Jack's hold on his queue would permit &ldquo;Where
- are they, then? Come, look sharp!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He d-d-done hiding in Elephant Rock, s-s-sa'b,&rdquo; confessed the lascar,
- apparently on the point of fainting with terror.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don! Captain! Do you hear that?&rdquo; cried Jack, half-turning, in the
- excitement produced by this disclosure, towards his friends. &ldquo;He says old
- Salambo's hid the pearls in the &mdash;&mdash; &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
- Phew!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He stopped, with a shrill whistle of dismay. By a quick upward stroke of
- his arm the lascar had sent the revolver spinning, and at the same instant
- wrenched himself free from his captor's grasp. Ere Jack could stir hand or
- foot, he had plunged headlong into the creek.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let him go,&rdquo; said Jack tranquilly, as the water closed over the fellow's
- heels; &ldquo;we've got an important clue out of him, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The captain slowly lowered the musket he had raised for a shot at the
- fugitive should he comet to the surface within range, and said
- approvingly:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Right, lad! Spike my guns, I've heard tell as how that 'ere Elephant
- Rock's riddled from main-deck to keelson, so to say, with gangways, and
- air-wents, an' sich. Howsomedever, that's matter for arter reflection, as
- the whale said to himself when he swallied Jonah. The warmints astarn
- there&rdquo;&mdash;indicating that part of the creek where the occupants of the
- canoes had taken their involuntary bath&mdash;&ldquo;the warmints astarn ha'
- sheered off a p'int or two; so now, lads, let's tackle the perwisions
- afore the wail o' night descends, an' then to work!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The &ldquo;wail o' night&rdquo; was not long in descending, for the sun had
- disappeared with the lascar. Ere they had done justice to the ample meal
- which Puggles set before them, and exchanged the draggled pilgrim garb for
- their everyday clothes, the shadows had crept silently from their
- hiding-places beneath thicket and cliff, and blotted out the last
- lingering touch of day from the bosom of the creek. Save the musical
- chirping of some amorous tree-frog to his mate, or the lazy swish of wings
- as some belated flying-fox swung slowly past, unbroken silence reigned
- between the darkling cliffs.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the captain's opinion, no immediate repetition of the recent attack was
- to be feared. But the events of the day had made it only too plain that
- their present position was far from being-one of security. To remain on
- board the cutter would be to invite daily skirmishes with the natives,
- which would not only deter the quest of the golden pearl, but prove a
- source of constant annoyance and danger.
- </p>
- <p>
- So far as the captain knew, the island afforded no safer retreat than the
- hill of the Haunted Pagodas.
- </p>
- <p>
- The natives of the island, he said, believed this hill to be the abode of
- a witch in the form of a ferocious tiger, merely to look upon which meant
- death. For this reason they would on no account venture near it.
- </p>
- <p>
- So upon the Haunted Pagodas they resolved to fall back without delay. But
- here an unforeseen difficulty arose.
- </p>
- <p>
- With the path to the summit of the hill none of the party was acquainted
- except the captain, and he was unwilling that the precious cutter should
- be entrusted to the care of any one except himself while the several
- journeys necessary for the removal of the stores were being made.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shiver my main-brace!&rdquo; roared he, thumping the bottom of the boat with
- his wooden leg after they had talked it all over. &ldquo;Shiver my mainbrace!
- I'll go the first trip with ye, lads, an' trust the old cutter to luck.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;See here, captain,&rdquo; said Jack persuasively &ldquo;why not trust her to me? It's
- for only one trip, as you say; and besides, there's not much danger of an
- attack to-night. You said so yourself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- To this arrangement the old sailor finally agreed. So Don, Spottie, and
- Puggles loaded up with the stores and other necessaries for their proposed
- sojourn on the summit of the hill, and a start was made, the captain
- leading with musket and lantern.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good-bye, Jack!&rdquo; Don called back, as he struck into the jungle at the
- captain's heels. &ldquo;'Fire a gun if you want help.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, old fellow,&rdquo; was Jack's careless reply. &ldquo;Good-bye till I see
- you again!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- 'So, with no other companion than Bosin, he was left alone to guard the
- cutter.
- </p>
- <p>
- And now the difficulties of the captain's party began in earnest. The path
- before them was, it is true, scarce half a mile in length, but so
- precipitous was the hillside, so overgrown the track, that every furlong
- seemed a league. The tangled, overhanging jungle growth not only
- completely shut out the rays of the moon, but by its thickness impeded
- their progress at every step, as though determined to guard the abode of
- the witch-tiger from all human intrusion. To make matters worse, they had
- neglected to provide themselves with an axe.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shiver my main-brace!&rdquo; the captain cried, as his wooden leg stuck fast in
- a tangled mass of creepers. &ldquo;These 'ere land trips be a pesky sight worse
- nor a sea woyage, says you! Blow me! I'd ruther round the Horn in
- mid-winter than wade through such wegetation as this 'ere in midnight
- darkness! Howsomedever, the port's afore us, so up we goes, as Jonah says
- to the whale when he bid the warmint adoo.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Up they went accordingly, and after much stumbling and tough climbing,
- reached the summit and the Haunted Pagodas. Finding here a clear space and
- bright moonlight, they quickly relieved themselves of their loads.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' now, lads,&rdquo; cried the captain, &ldquo;wear ship an' back to the cutter,
- says you. Fire my magazine! what's that? I axes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Sharp and distinct upon the night air there floated up from the darkness
- of the ravine the report of a gun.
- </p>
- <p>
- Don felt his heart stand still with dread, then race at lightning speed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An attack!&rdquo; he cried hoarsely; &ldquo;and Jack alone! Hurry, captain!&mdash;for
- God's sake hurry!
- </p>
- <p>
- Easier said than done. Haste only added to the difficulties of the way. It
- seemed to Don that he should never shake off the retarding clutch of the
- jungle.
- </p>
- <p>
- At last their weary feet pressed again the sands of the little beach. But
- now a new terror seized them. The beach was illuminated by a ruddy, fitful
- glow..The cutter was on fire!
- </p>
- <p>
- Don cleared the sands almost at a bound.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Jack!&rdquo; he shouted, leaping the cutter's rail, and with lightning glance
- scanning the bottom of the boat, and then the cuddy, for some sign of his
- friend. &ldquo;Jack, where are you? Captain, he's not here! and&mdash;my God!
- look at this!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Upon the bottom of the boat, showing darkly crimson in the ruddy
- firelight, lay a pool of blood, and beside it a discharged musket.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VIII.&mdash;AT THE HAUNTED PAGODAS.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he fire,
- fortunately, had gained so little headway that a few bucketfuls of water
- sufficed to put the <i>Jolly Tar</i> cut of danger. Then the captain
- stumped up to Don, where he sat disconsolate on the cutter's gun'le, and
- laid a sympathetic hand upon his shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Cheer up, my hearty! They warmints ain't done for Master Jack yet, not by
- a long chalk, says I. Flush my scuppers, lad!&rdquo; he roared in stentorian
- tones, as he turned the light of the lantern upon the pool of blood, &ldquo;this
- 'ere sanguinary gore as dyes the deck bain't his'n at all. It's the blood
- o' some native warmint, what he's gone an' let daylight into, d'ye mind
- me, an' here's the musket as done the trick.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then you think he's not&mdash;not dead?&rdquo; asked Don, steadying his voice
- with an effort.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dead? Not him! Alive he is, and alive he remains,&rdquo; cried the old sailor.
- &ldquo;An' why so? you naterally axes. To begin with, as the shark says when he
- nipped the seaman's leg off, because the keg o' powder's gone. Spurts, the
- warmints thinks to theirselves, an' so they makes away with <i>it.</i>
- Secondly&rdquo;&mdash;and here the old sailor's voice grew husky&mdash;&ldquo;because
- that 'ere imp of a Besin's gone. 'I'll stand hard by Master Jack,' says
- he, so off <i>he</i> goes. Sharks an' sea-sarpents, lad, can't ye see as
- the lubbers have only gone an' took Master Jack in tow?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But I can't understand,&rdquo; persisted Don, &ldquo;why they should do it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ransom, lad, that's what the lubbers is arter. Master Jack's life's worth
- a sight more'n a bag o' pearls, an' well they knows it.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- &ldquo;Avast there, an' don't be a milksop so soft,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- To be taken for trifles aback;
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- There's a Providence, lad, as sits up aloft
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- To watch for the life of poor Jack.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- Trolling out this sailorly reproof of Don's fears, the captain stretched
- himself in the bottom of the boat, and drawing a tai paulin over his nose,
- was soon sleeping off the effects of his recent exertions ashore. But upon
- Don's heart his chum's fate lay like a leaden weight. He could not rest.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good-bye, old fellow, till I see you again.&rdquo; These, Jack's last careless
- words, repeated themselves in every me urnful sigh of the night-wind; and
- as he lay, hour after hour, watching the stars climb the heavens; he
- wondered, with a keen pain at his heart, when that &ldquo;again&rdquo; was to be.
- </p>
- <p>
- As the night wore on, however, he found more and more comfort in the old
- sailor's words. It was so much easier to believe that Jack had been
- kidnapped than to believe him dead. This view of his disappearance, too,
- was altogether in keeping with the shark-charmer's cunning. As for
- himself, he would gladly have cried quits with old Salambo then and there,
- if by so doing he could have recalled Jack to his side.
- </p>
- <p>
- At length he fell into a troubled sleep, unconscious of the fact that
- another brain than his was busy with Jack's fate. Had he but known it,
- Bosin deserved more than a passing thought that night.
- </p>
- <p>
- By daybreak they were again astir, and within an hour the cutter lay
- snugly ensconced in the shelter of a deep, vine-draped cavern beneath the
- cliff, some hundred yards down the creek, of which the captain knew. In
- carrying out this part of the old sailor's plan, the canoe, for which an
- effective paddle was improvised out of an old oar, proved of signal
- service; and when the smaller skiff had in its turn been hidden away in
- the dense jungle bordering the beach, they loaded up with the remaining
- stores, and took the pathway to the Haunted Pagodas, which they eventually
- reached just as the sun, like a huge ball of fire, rolled up out of the
- eastern sea.
- </p>
- <p>
- As the captain had said, the Haunted Pagodas was indeed &ldquo;a tidy spot to
- fall back upon.&rdquo; Ages before, a circle of massive temples had crowned the
- summit of this island hill; but for full a thousand years had Nature
- searched out with silent, prying fingers the minutest crevices of the
- closer-cemented stones, ruthlessly destroying what man had so proudly
- reared, until nothing save a confusion of tumble down walls and broken
- pillars, grotesquely draped with climbing vines and like parasitic
- growths, remained to mark the site of the erstwhile stately cloisters. A
- shuddery spot it was!&mdash;a likely lurking-place for reptile or wild
- beast, so uncanny in its weird union of jungle wildness and dead men's
- work, that one would scarcely have been surprised had the terrible
- witch-tiger of the native legend suddenly leapt out upon one from some
- dark pit or sunless recess.
- </p>
- <p>
- In one spot alone had the walls successfully resisted the action of the
- insinuating roots. This was a sort of cloister with a floor of stone, upon
- which the roof had fallen. But when the <i>debris</i> had been cleared
- away, and the stores scattered about in its stead, this corner of the
- ruins looked positively homelike and comfortable&mdash;especially when
- Puggles, taking possession of one of its angles, converted it into a
- kitchen, and began active preparations for breakfast. The captain dubbed
- their new retreat &ldquo;the fo'csle.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- All that day the old sailor was in an unusually thoughtful mood. Every
- half-hour or so he would produce his pipe and take a number of slow,
- meditative &ldquo;whiffs o' the fragrant,&rdquo; after which he would slap his thigh
- energetically with one horny hand, and stump back and forth amid the ruins
- in a state of high excitement, until, something going wrong with his train
- of thought, the pipe had to be relighted, and the difficulty, like the
- tobacco, smoked out again.
- </p>
- <p>
- This characteristic process of &ldquo;ilin' up his runnin' gear&rdquo; he continued
- far on into the afternoon, when he abruptly laid the huge meerschaum
- aside, took a critical survey of sea and sky, and, bearing down on Don,
- where he sat cleaning the muskets, without further ado planted a
- resounding thump on that young gentleman's back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Blow me!&rdquo; he burst out, as if Don was already initiated into his train of
- thought, &ldquo;the wery identical thing, lad. An what's that? you naterally
- axes. Why, d'ye see, I've been splicin' o' my idees together a bit, so to
- say, an' shiver my main-brace if I ain't gone an' rescued Master Jack!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Edging away a little lest the captain's rising excitement should again
- culminate in one of his well-meant, but none the less undesirable thumps,
- &ldquo;You mean, I suppose,&rdquo; said Don, &ldquo;that you've hit upon a plan for his
- rescue.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ay, lad,&rdquo; assented the captain, &ldquo;but an idee well spun is a deed half
- done, d'ye mind me. Howsomedever, let's take our bearin's afore we runs
- for port, says you. An' to begin with, as the shark said&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- What the shark said, as well as what the captain was about to say, was
- doomed to remain for ever a matter of conjecture, for at that instant
- Puggles set up a shout that effectually interrupted the conversation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sa'b! sar! me done see um, sa'b. Him done come back, sar.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Naturally enough, Don's first thought was of Jack. He sprang to his feet,
- his heart giving a wild leap of joy, and then standing still with
- suspense. For in all the clearing no human form appeared.
- </p>
- <p>
- Puggles had now reached his master's side. &ldquo;Him there got, sa'b, there!&rdquo;
- he reiterated, pointing towards the narrow break in the jungle which
- indicated the starting-point of the pathway to the creek. Between this
- point and the spot where they stood, the jungle grass grew thick and tall.
- </p>
- <p>
- As they looked they saw it sway in a long, wavy undulation, as if some
- living thing were rapidly making its way towards them. In another moment
- the rank covert parted, and there appeared, not Jack, but Bosin.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Knots an' marlinspikes!&rdquo; ejaculated the delighted captain, as the monkey
- scrambled chattering upon his knee. &ldquo;What's this 'ere as the imp o'
- darkness's been an' made a prize of? I axes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Around the monkey's neck a shred of draggled, blood-stained linen was
- securely bound. Already Don was fumbling at the knot, his face whiter than
- the rag itself.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A message from Jack!&rdquo; he announced joyfully, when at length the
- tightly-drawn knot yielded, and a scrap of paper fluttered to the ground.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shiver my main-brace!&rdquo; roared the captain, bringing his hand down on that
- unoffending member as if about to give a practical demonstration of his
- words, &ldquo;ain't I said as much all along, lad? Alive he is, an' alive he
- remains. An' blow me if ever I see anything to beat this 'ere method o'
- excommunicating atween friends, says I. So let's hear what Master Jack has
- got to say for hisself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don had already run his eye over the pencilled writing. &ldquo;He's all right,
- thank God!&rdquo; he exclaimed, in a tone of intense relief. &ldquo;Wounded, as I
- feared&mdash;a mere scratch, he says&mdash;but you shall hear for
- yourself:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Don't be cut up, old fellow,'&rdquo; he read aloud, &ldquo;'it will all come light
- in the end. The niggers pounced down on me before I heard them. Just had
- time to let off one of the captain's old kickers, when a crack on the head
- laid me out. I'm in a village on the sea-shore, and by great good luck I
- can see the hill and the smoke of what, I suppose, is your fire, from the
- window of the hut they've stuck me in. It doesn't seem quite so bad when I
- look at that.... Bosin just turned up. Am writing in hopes he'll carry
- this safely to you. Close prisoner. Have to scribble when the beggars
- aren't watching me. Overheard them palavering just now. They take me to
- the E. R. to-night&mdash;'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which he means the Elephant Rock!&rdquo; cried the captain, interrupting. &ldquo;Blow
- me! I knowed as that 'ere Elephant 'ud go an' make wittles of him, d'ye
- see?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don nodded and read on:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Old Salambo's work this. He means to make terms for the pearls&mdash;&mdash;'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Copper my bottom, lad! Them's the wery identical words as I've stood by
- all along!&rdquo; the captain broke in again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wait!&rdquo; said Don impatiently. &ldquo;There's something important here. I
- couldn't make it out before, the writing's so scrawly towards the end.
- Listen to this: 'There's a streak down the face of the hill, that looks
- like a path to the village here. If Bosin's in time, come early. Don't let
- the hdkf.(sp) alarm you; it's a mere scratch.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Reading off these last words rapidly, Don pointed to the sun, already
- half-hidden by the western horizon.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's no time to lose, captain! He must be set free before he's taken
- to the Rock.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Right, lad; so let's tumble out and man the guns!&rdquo; cried the captain,
- lurching to his feet and giving his pantaloons a determined hitch-up.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- &ldquo;We always be ready!
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- Steady, lad, steady!
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- We'll fight an' we'll conquer agin and agin!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That we will,&rdquo; assented Don heartily; &ldquo;but first we must get the bearings
- of this village, captain. Where's the glass? Spottie! Hi, Spottie!&mdash;the
- glass here!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In response to the summons, Puggles ran up with the captain's telescope.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Spottie done go fetch water, sa'b,&rdquo; he explained.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There is a village,&rdquo; Don announced, after adjusting the instrument and
- carefully sweeping the sea-shore. &ldquo;Just there, in that clump of trees; the
- only one within range, so far as I can see. Do you make it out, captain?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; said the captain, taking the glass; &ldquo;there's a willage below, sure
- as sharks is sharks.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The next thing, then,&rdquo; continued Don, &ldquo;is to find this path Jack speaks
- of. 'Twould take us two good hours at least to go round by way of the
- creek. Do you know, I've a notion the path to the spring is the one we
- want. Suppose we try it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The captain making no demur, Don caught up a musket and led the way to the
- spring. This spring was Spottie's discovery. It lay to the left of the
- creek path, about fifty yards down the hillside. The jungle had almost
- obliterated the path by which it was approached, but this the black had in
- some degree remedied by a vigorous use of the axe during the day, and, as
- Puggles had intimated, he was now at the spring, replenishing the water
- bucket.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hardly had Don and the captain got fairly into the path when there rose
- from the depths of the jungle immediately below them a series of frantic
- yells. The voice was undoubtedly Spottie's, and, judging from the manner
- in which he used it, Sputtie stood&mdash;or believed he stood&mdash;in
- sore need of assistance. Quickening his pace to a run, Don soon came upon
- him, making for the open, minus bucket and turban, his eyes protruding
- from their sockets, and altogether in a terrible state of fright.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the matter?&rdquo; cried Don, catching him by the arm and shaking him
- until he was fain to cease his bellowing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;De t-t-tiger-witch, sa'b!&rdquo; said Spottie, his teeth chattering. &ldquo;Me done
- see um, sa'b!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Just then the captain came up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's seen a monkey or something, and thinks it's the tiger-witch,&rdquo;
- explained Don, laughing at the poor fellows piteous face. &ldquo;Whereabouts is
- it, Spottie?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Spottie pointed fearfully down the shadowy pathway, where a faint snapping
- of twigs could be heard in the underbrush.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Blow me!&rdquo; said the captain, after listening intently a moment, &ldquo;yon
- warmint bain't no monkey, lad. So let's lay alongside an' diskiver what
- quarter o' the animile kingdom he hails from, says you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And with that he started off in the direction of the sound.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bidding Spottie remain where he was, Don followed. The captain was,
- perhaps, ten paces in advance. Suddenly the jungle parted with a loud
- swish, and a tawny body shot through the air and alighted full upon the
- captain's back, bearing him to the ground ere he could utter so much as a
- cry.
- </p>
- <p>
- Don stood petrified. Then a savage, guttural growling, accompanied by a
- sickening crunching sound, roused him to the old sailors danger. There was
- just sufficient light left to show the two figures on the ground&mdash;the
- tiger atop, his fangs buried in the captains thigh. Priming the musket
- rapidly with some loose powder he happened to have in his pocket, Don
- sprang to the captain's aid. The tiger lifted its head at his approach
- with an angry snarl, but this was no time to think of his own danger.
- Quick as thought he thrust the muzzle of the musket between the beast's
- jaws and fired.
- </p>
- <p>
- An instant later and he was on his back. The tiger had sprung clean over
- him, knocking him down in its passage, and now lay some yards away,
- writhing in the death struggle. Don picked himself up and ran to the old
- sailor's side. As he reached the spot where he lay, the captain struggled
- into a sitting posture, and stared about him bewilderedly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stave my bulkhead!&rdquo; roared he, &ldquo;if this bain't the purtiest go as ever I
- see. An' what quarter o' the animile kingdom might the warmint hail from?
- I axes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A tiger, captain; a genuine man-eater. But, I say, are you hurt?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hurt is it?&rdquo; demanded the captain. &ldquo;Why, dye see, lad,&rdquo; first adjusting
- his neckcloth, and then proceeding to feel himself carefully over,
- &ldquo;barrin' this 'ere bit of a chafe to my figgerhead, I hain't started a
- nail, d'ye see. Avast there! Shiver my main-brace, what's this? I axes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Just where the &ldquo;main-brace&rdquo; was spliced upon the thigh, a sad rent in the
- captain's broad pantaloons showed the wooden portion of his anatomy to be
- deeply indented and splintered. At this discovery he stopped aghast in the
- process of feeling for broken bones.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, don't you see how it is?&rdquo; laughed Don. &ldquo;The brute has tried to make
- a meal off your wooden leg, captain.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The captain burst into one of his tremendous guffaws. &ldquo;Blow me if I don't
- admire the warmint's taste,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;An uncommon affectionate un he is,
- says you, so let's pay our respec's to him 'ithout delay, lad.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The tiger proved to be a magnificent specimen of his tribe; and, as he
- stood over the 'tawny carcase in the waning light, Don could not repress a
- feeling of pardonable pride at thought of his own share in the adventure
- which had ended so disastrously for the superb creature at his feet.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Captain,&rdquo; said he presently, when that worthy had inspected and admired
- the striped monster to his heart's content, &ldquo;Captain, it strikes me as
- being somewhat of a rare thing to run against a fullblown tiger on an
- island like this. Don't you think so?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ay, that it is,&rdquo; assented the captain; &ldquo;rare as sea-sarpents.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That explains it, then: the tiger-witch story, I mean. This chap's great
- size, and the fact that man-eaters aren't often met with on these little
- nutshell islands, have made him the terror of the whole community, you
- see. He's their witch, I'll be bound. Now.&rdquo; he ran on, seeing the captain
- express his approval of this likely explanation by a series of emphatic
- nods, &ldquo;now I'll tell you what I mean to do. Dear old Jack's a prisoner,
- and we're bound to get him out of limbo if we can. His captors&mdash;those
- native beggars&mdash;go in mortal terror of this beast here. Good! Why
- shouldn't Pug and I carry the creature's skin down to the village yonder&mdash;where
- Jack is, you know&mdash;use it to impersonate the witch-tiger, and terrify
- the niggers&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He got no farther with his explanation, for the captain, having already
- grasped the idea, at this point grasped its originator by the hand, and
- cut in with: &ldquo;Spike my guns, the wery identical thing, lad! Blow me, the
- lubberly swabs'll tumble into the jungle like a lot o' porpoises when they
- sees that 'ere tiger-skin a-hangin' on your recreant limbs. An' then
- hooray for Master Jack, says you! Why not? I axes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IX.&mdash;WAS IT JACK?
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>hat a night it
- was! Overhead one glorious; maze of scintillating stars; in the jungle
- ebon: blackness, shot with the soft glow of myriad fireflies, that flashed
- their tiny lamps only to leave-the spot they had illumined more intensely
- black than before.
- </p>
- <p>
- Don's surmise as to the spring path proved correct&mdash;it extended quite
- to the foot of the hill, where it merged almost imperceptibly into the
- scantier vegetation fringing the sea-shore. After a hard fight with the
- difficulties of the way&mdash;increased in no small degree by the dead
- weight of the tiger-skin&mdash;he and Puggles at length reached the limits
- of the jungle and paused for breath. The utmost caution was now necessary
- in order to avoid untimely discovery.
- </p>
- <p>
- The moon was not yet up, and the cocoa-nut <i>tope</i> in which, but a
- stoned throw away, nestled the village that formed at once their
- destination and Jack's place of imprisonment, lay wrapped in gloom so
- impenetrable that not a single outline of tree or hut could be
- distinguished from where they stood. Excepting a faint glow, which at
- infrequent intervals flickered amid the lofty branches of the palm-trees,
- there was nothing to show that the spot was tenanted by any human being.
- This light&mdash;or, to speak more correctly, this reflection of a light&mdash;Don
- attributed to a fire in the village street.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They done lighting um for company, maybe,&rdquo; suggested Puggles. &ldquo;Plenty
- people going feast, black man 'fraid got, making fire keep tiger-witch
- off.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So much the better for us,&rdquo; said his master; &ldquo;especially if everybody's
- at the town except the fellows in charge of Jack. But shut up, Pug; it
- won't do to risk their overhearing our palaver.&rdquo; With stealthy steps they
- advanced, pausing often to listen, until they gained the deeper shade of
- the trees close under the rear of the huts. Leaving the black boy here,
- Don skirted the nearer row of cabins and took a cautious view of the
- street.
- </p>
- <p>
- The huts stood in two irregular rows, one facing the other, and midway
- down the open space or street between was a smouldering fire of brushwood,
- about which, in listless, drowsy attitudes, there lolled a group of
- perhaps twenty natives. Save for these the place, so far as he could make
- out, was quite deserted. The doors of the huts were closed, and no glimmer
- of lamp or fire shone through them to indicate that any occupants were
- within. A little to one side of the fire the light fell upon an object at
- sight of which Don started violently. It was the stolen keg of powder.
- Jack could not be far off, then!
- </p>
- <p>
- Quitting the spot as noiselessly as he had approached it, he made his way
- back to the rear of the huts, and with the assistance of Puggles, adjusted
- the limp tigers pelt upon his back, shoulders, and head. Next he gave the
- black boy his orders. He was to lie close until the natives about the fire
- took to flight&mdash;which, if they fled at all, would, in the ordinary
- course of events, be in the direction of the other extremity of the street&mdash;when
- he was to join his master in searching the huts.
- </p>
- <p>
- All was now in readiness, and Don, gripping the defunct tiger's ears at
- either side of his head to hold the skin in position, once more skirted
- the row of huts, Puggles in close attendance. His former post of
- observation gained, he went down upon all-fours, and when Puggles had
- readjusted the skin to his satisfaction, in this attitude he boldly
- advanced into the street.
- </p>
- <p>
- The distance to be traversed in order to reach the group about the fire
- was not less than fifty yards. He had covered a third of the ground
- unobserved, when one of the natives rose to his feet and threw a fresh
- bundle of faggots on the smouldering embers. Fanned by the breeze, the
- fire blazed up fiercely, illuminating the street from end to end. The
- tiger-witch uttered a terrific roar.
- </p>
- <p>
- When this sound fell upon the ears of the native, he wheeled and peered
- fearfully into the semi-darkness in which Don's end of the street lay. A
- second roar brought a second native to his feet. He was followed by
- another and another, till all were on the alert. The witch-tiger was now
- in full view.
- </p>
- <p>
- For a little while the group about the fire hesitated. Should they stand
- their ground or decamp? As the intruder advanced, and the ruddy firelight
- threw its gruesome outlines into stronger relief, they suddenly perceived
- what manner of apparition this was that had stolen up an them out of the
- darkness. To them the tiger-witch, with its swift, silent visitations of
- death, had doubtless long been a dread reality. The island held but one
- tiger&mdash;and here it was! With frantic outcries they turned and fled
- pell-mell down the village street.
- </p>
- <p>
- This was just what Don desired&mdash;what he had calculated upon. Until
- the heels of the hindermost had quite disappeared in the darkness, he
- sustained his rôle. Thus far the ruse had succeeded admirably. But the
- real business of the night had as yet only begun. Shaking the clammy skin
- from off his back, he rose to his feet and made a dash for the door of the
- nearest hut. Just as he reached it, Puggles, who had watched the rout of
- the natives with shaking sides, came trotting up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Look alive, Pug!&rdquo; cried his master, bursting in the frail door with a
- crash. &ldquo;Search the huts on the left, while I take these on the right. Look
- alive, I say&mdash;they may come back at any minute.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Puggles needed no urging. He was only too well aware of the danger that
- threatened his master and his own precious self should the fugitives think
- better of their cowardice and reappear on, the scene. He set to work with
- a will.
- </p>
- <p>
- Into hut after hut they forced their way, peering into every nook and
- corner, and calling upon Jack as loudly as they dared; only to receive for
- answer the dull echoes of their own shouts. Nowhere was there any sign of
- Jack. &ldquo;Had he been already removed?&rdquo; Don asked himself desperately, as he
- sped from door to door. It almost seemed so; but while a single hut
- remained unsearched there was still hope.
- </p>
- <p>
- Half-a-dozen only were left, when the catastrophe he had all along been
- dreading actually occurred. The natives came trooping back. To their
- infinite relief, no doubt, the witch-tiger had vanished, and in its stead
- appeared two human figures darting from hut to hut. The natives raised a
- shout of defiance and pressed forward to the attack, catching up as
- weapons whatever came first to hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- Crossing the street at a bound, Don joined the black boy, just as the
- latter emerged from the doorway of a hut, and thrust into his hands one of
- two pistols with which he had come provided. Backing against the door of
- the hut, with pistols drawn they awaited the attack. It began with a
- rattling volley of missiles, but the low, projecting thatch of the native
- dwelling, jutting out as it did several feet from the wall, served to
- somewhat break the force of the stony hail.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't fire till I give the word,&rdquo; said Don between his teeth. &ldquo;We can't
- afford to waste a shot. The beggars are drawing their knives.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The words had barely left his lips when, with a shout and a disorderly
- rush, the crowd broke for the spot where they stood.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ready, Pug. Fire!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Simultaneously with the sharp crack of the pistols, there leapt skyward
- from mid-street a sudden, blinding flash of lurid light, accompanied by
- dense volumes of sulphurous smoke, and a thunderous shock that shook the
- walls of the huts to their foundations. Don and his companion were dashed
- violently through the door against which they stood, and hurled upon the
- floor within. A thick shower of sand and stones rattled about and upon
- them. But of this fact they were unconscious. The shock had stunned them.
- </p>
- <p>
- When Don came to himself he found Puggles seated on the ground by his
- side, blubbering dismally.
- </p>
- <p>
- Not only was the roof ablaze, but showers of glowing sparks fell thickly
- upon them. The floor of the hut was a bed of fire, the heat intolerable.
- Puggs, dazed &ldquo;by the recent shock, and stupefied with fright, seemed to
- comprehend not a word that was said to him. Don accordingly seized him by
- the arm and dragged him into the street.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the matter? Where are the natives?&rdquo; he demanded, struggling to his
- feet, and scanning the interior of the hut with bewildered eyes. &ldquo;Hullo,
- the roof's on fire!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0010" id="linkimage-0010"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0143.jpg" alt="0143 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0143.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- Here the scene was appalling indeed. How long he had lain insensible he
- could not tell; but the time thus spent upon the floor of the hut must
- have been considerable, for from end to end the double line of thatched
- dwellings was wrapped in flames that shot high into the inky air, and
- there united in one roaring, swirling canopy of fire above the narrow
- thoroughfare. As if to render the spectacle more awful, here and there lay
- stretched upon the ground the mangled, blackened body of a native. Through
- one of these a sharp splinter of wood had been driven. Don examined it
- curiously. Then&mdash;he had been too dazed to realise it before&mdash;the
- truth flashed upon him. The keg of powder had exploded!
- </p>
- <p>
- Whilst crossing the street to Pug's side he had noticed, he remembered
- now, that the head, of the keg was stove in. It then lay close beside the
- fire, within a few feet of the scene of the attack. It was not there now,
- but in its stead was a shallow, blackened cavity. That told the whole
- story of the explosion. A handful of powder carelessly scattered, a wisp
- of straw kicked into the fire amid the rush of feet, a chance spark even,
- and&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;-
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sa'b, sa'b, the huts done tumble in!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Puggles was tugging at his sleeve, and pointing fearfully down the street.
- For an instant Don gazed into the black boy's face blankly, not grasping
- the import of his words. Then, like a repetition of that lurid flash of
- light which had burnt itself into his very brain, came the recollection of
- Jack.
- </p>
- <p>
- The sudden return of the natives had left but half-a-dozen huts
- unsearched. These were situated at the extreme end of the street&mdash;the
- end opposite to that from which Don and Puggles had approached the
- village. Towards these the former now ran, only to discover, to his
- consternation, that the fire was before him. For in this direction the
- wind blew, and the unsearched huts, like the rest, were a seething mass of
- flames. Of all save one the roofs had already given way, while at the very
- moment he ran up that also crashed in.
- </p>
- <p>
- As the blood-red flames shot skyward, an agonised, inarticulate shriek
- rose from within the glowing walls.
- </p>
- <p>
- Was it Jack?
- </p>
- <p>
- Shielding his face with his hands, Don attempted to force an entrance, but
- the heat of the furnace-like doorway drove him back. In frantic accents he
- called his chum by name&mdash;called again and again&mdash;to be answered
- only by the hissing of the pitiless flame-tongues that licked the black
- heavens.
- </p>
- <p>
- Was it Jack? Had the natives who escaped&mdash;if, indeed, any did&mdash;the
- deadly effects of the explosion, carried him with them in their flight
- from the burning village, or had he been mercilessly abandoned to a fiery
- grave within his prison walls?
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a terrible question; but not that night, nor for many nights to
- come, was he to know whether those unnumbered moments of unconsciousness
- had consigned his chum to continued captivity or to death.
- </p>
- <p>
- One thing only was certain: their mission to the village had reached a
- disastrous climax. To remain longer where they were was useless; to follow
- the trail of the natives who had escaped, impossible. No course was left
- but immediate return to the camp.
- </p>
- <p>
- Weary, dejected, with aching bodies and aching hearts&mdash;for even
- light-hearted Puggles, heathen though he was, felt crushed by their sad
- misadventure&mdash;they sought the spot where, the axe and lantern had
- been left, and then set their blackened faces towards the hill.
- </p>
- <p>
- By this time the moon had risen, making the task of finding the footpath
- an easy one. Just as they turned their backs upon the beach and the
- burning village, out upon the tense stillness of the night&mdash;a
- stillness softened rather than broken by the music of the surf&mdash;from
- the shadowy hill above rang the sharp report of a gun.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Something wrong up there, I'm afraid,&rdquo; said Don, rousing himself and
- pausing to listen. &ldquo;Hullo!&rdquo; as a second report broke the stillness, &ldquo;there
- goes another! Come, Pug, we must pull ourselves together a bit and get
- over the ground faster. The captain's not a man to waste powder; those
- reports mean danger.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Him maybe another lubberly warmint shooting, sa'b,&rdquo; Pug suggested.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Unless I'm very much mistaken, there's something a jolly sight worse
- afoot,&rdquo; was his master's uneasy rejoinder as they began the ascent.
- </p>
- <p>
- Here and there upon the hillside were spots where the rains of many
- summers had so washed away the thin surface-soil as to lay bare the rock
- beneath and leave little or no roothold for vegetation. As he paused for a
- brief breathing space in one of these clearings, Don's attention was drawn
- to a dull red glare, which, though but a short distance in advance of the
- spot where he stood, had up to that moment been quite concealed by the
- intervening jungle.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say, Pug, what do you make of that light?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The black boy knuckled his eyes vigorously, as if to assure himself they
- were playing him no trick.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me linking there one fire got, sa'b,&rdquo; said he, after a long look at the
- mysterious light.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In that case we'd better stir our stumps. The breeze seems to be
- freshening, and once the fire gets a hold on this tindery jungle, why,
- there's no knowing&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There another got, sa'b!&rdquo; broke in Puggles, pointing excitedly to the
- right.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Phew! And, by Jove, there's a third beyond that again! And the wind's
- blowing straight for the camp, too! Now I understand why the captain fired
- those shots! The hill's on fire! Point, Pug!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Up the hillside they bounded, panting, stumbling. There was light enough
- now and to spare, for the fire towards which they were advancing had made
- more headway than at first sight appeared. The wonder was that they had
- not observed it sooner; but this perhaps was sufficiently accounted for by
- the fact that the thoughts of both had lagged behind in the burning
- village.
- </p>
- <p>
- The point of danger was soon reached. The fire had not yet crossed the
- path, but only a few yards of tindery underbrush separated the swaying
- wall of flame-shot smoke from the narrow trail, while every instant the
- margin grew perceptibly less.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now for it, Pug!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don raced past with head lowered, the greedy flames licking his face.
- Half-blinded, he stumbled on for a dozen yards or so before turning to
- ascertain how Puggles had stood the ordeal. To his horror he then
- discovered that the fire had swallowed up the pathway at a single bound,
- and that Puggles was nowhere to be seen.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER X.&mdash;IN WHICH THE OLD SAW, &ldquo;OUT OF THE FRYING-PAN, INTO THE
- FIRE,&rdquo; IS REVERSED WITH STARTLING EFFECT.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">B</span>ack he ran,
- battling with the flames and sparks that rolled in volumes up the
- hillside, until, half-stifled and well-nigh fainting from the heat, he was
- forced to turn and flee for his life before the swiftly advancing flames.
- </p>
- <p>
- Whether Puggles, terrified by the close proximity of the fire, had hung
- back at the last moment, or whether he had attempted to follow his master
- and paid for his devotion with his life, heaven alone knew.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Poor chap!&rdquo; gasped Don, as he stumbled free of the smoke and turned for a
- last look at the fiery veil so suddenly drawn over his faithful servant's
- fate. &ldquo;God help him!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The rapid advance of the fire, however, allowed little time for the
- indulgence of emotion. The long rainless months had scorched the face of
- the hill until the thick-set bamboo copse was as dry as tinder,
- inflammable as shavings. The wind and the steepness of the hillside, too,
- proved powerful allies of the flames. On and up they swept, leaping from
- point to point with such rapidity that Don found it necessary to strain
- every nerve to avoid being overtaken by the greedy holocaust. Glad indeed
- was he when, the scene of his recent adventure passed, he at length
- emerged upon the comparatively open ground abreast of the encampment.
- </p>
- <p>
- Stumping uneasily to and fro, &ldquo;abaft the fo'csle,&rdquo; with Bosin perched
- contentedly upon his shoulder, was the old sailor&mdash;the jerky creak,
- creak of his wooden leg showing him to be in an unusually disturbed state
- of mind.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Right glad I am to clap eyes on ye, lad!&rdquo; he sang out cheerily on
- catching sight of the returned wanderer. &ldquo;An' whereaway's Master Jack an'
- the leetle nigger, I axes?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The captain paused abruptly, both in his walk and speech, for the pained
- look on Don's blackened but ghastly face told him at a glance that
- something more than ordinary was amiss.
- </p>
- <p>
- Slowly setting down the lantern, which he had all along retained in his
- grasp&mdash;most fortunately, as it turned out&mdash;Don threw himself on
- the trampled grass, and, as rapidly as his shortness of breath would
- permit, summed up the disastrous results of his village expedition. In
- open-mouthed silence, as was his wont, the old sailor listened; but when
- he learned of the dark uncertainty that overhung the fate of Jack and
- Puggles, he hastily brushed aside a tear that straggled down his
- weather-beaten cheek, and, in a voice husky with emotion, burst into one
- of his characteristic snatches of song:
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- &ldquo;Why, what's that to you if my eyes I'm a-wipin'?
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- A tear is a pleasure, d'ye see, in its way.
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- 'Tis nonsense for trifles, I owns, to be pipin',
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- But they as hain't pily&mdash;why, I pities they!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- And having delivered himself of this sailorly apology for his weakness, he
- added in his usual voice:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Blow me!&mdash;as the speakin trumpet says to the skipper&mdash;if ever I
- heard any yarn as beats this 'un, lad. Howsomedever, when the ship's
- a-sinkin', pipin' your eye ain't a-goin' to stop the leak, d'ye mind me;
- an' so, just to bear away on the off tack a bit, what d'ye make o' this
- 'ere confleegration, I axes?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I can tell you better what it came jolly near making of me, captain, and
- that's cinders! But what do <i>you</i> make of it?&mdash;and, by the way,
- what were those shots for? You don't think there's any danger here, do
- you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; replied the captain, with an emphatic tug at his neckerchief, &ldquo;that
- I does, lad! An' why? you naterally axes. Because, d'ye mind me, the
- hill's ablaze from stem to starn&mdash;blow me if it bain t!
- Howsomedever,&rdquo; leading the way towards a jagged remnant of wall that stood
- out in ghostly solitude amid the ruins, &ldquo;go aloft an' cast an eye out to
- lee'ard, lad.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The captain's ominous words prepared Don for an unpleasant surprise; yet,
- when he had scaled the pile of masonry, an involuntary cry of alarm broke
- from him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good heavens, captain, we're surrounded by fire!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Right, lad! an' the confleegration's gettin' uncommon clost under our
- weather bow; says you. An hour back, d'ye see, I sights the first on 'em
- alongside o' the path below, an' fires the gun to signal ye to put about.
- An' then, flush, my scuppers! what does I see but a hull sarcle o'
- confleegrations, as it may be a cable's len'th apart, clean round the
- hill; lad! an' so I fires the second wolley.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This is the work of those cowardly niggers!&rdquo; said Don, clenching his
- fists. &ldquo;They daren't come here to fight us, so they mean to scorch us
- out!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The wery identical words as I says to myself when first I sights the
- fires, lad,&rdquo; rejoined the captain; &ldquo;an' a purty lot o' tobackie it cost me
- afore I overhauled the idee, says you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's likely to cost us more than a few pipes of tobacco, I'm afraid,
- captain,&rdquo; said Don uneasily, leaping down from his post of observation.
- &ldquo;The fire's close upon us, and once this grass catches, why, good-bye to
- the stores! I say, where's Spottie?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Belay there!&rdquo; chuckled the captain, who, somehow, seemed remarkably
- cheerful, considering the gravity of the situation. &ldquo;Whereaway's the
- nigger, you axes? Why, d'ye mind me, lad, this 'ere old hulk ain't been
- a-lyin' on her beam-ends all this time, not by a long chalk. The nigger's
- with the stores, d'ye see; an' stow my cargo, where should the stores be
- but safe and snug under hatches?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With that he seized his perplexed companion by the arm, skirted the
- dilapidated wall, and presently halted on the very brink of a black chasm
- that yawned to the stars close under its rear. Little else was to be seen,
- for the wall cut off the light of both the fire and the moon. From the
- depths of the cavity proceeded a sound suspiciously like snoring. The
- captain indulged in another chuckle, and then, shaping his hands into a
- sort of speaking-trumpet, he bent over the hole and shouted loudly for
- Spottie. The snoring suddenly ceased, and in half a minute or so up the
- black tumbled, rubbing his eyes. The captain bade him fetch the lantern,
- adding strict injunctions that he should replenish the store of oil before
- lighting it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And now, lad, let's go below,&rdquo; said he, when Spottie had fulfilled his
- mission.
- </p>
- <p>
- So down they went, the captain leading. First came a dozen or more
- moss-grown steps, littered with blocks of stone, which, ages before,
- perhaps, had fallen and found a resting-place here. At the foot of the
- steps there opened out a subterranean passage, of height sufficient to
- admit of Don's standing erect in it with ease. Upon the floor lay the
- stores; beyond these again all was blank darkness. To all appearance the
- passage extended far into the bowels of the hill.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Blow me!&rdquo; chuckled the captain, turning a triumphant gaze upon the
- massive walls, &ldquo;electric lightnin' itself ud never smell us out in sich a
- tidy berth as this, says you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It certainly is a snug spot,&rdquo; assented Don; &ldquo;though I wish&rdquo;&mdash;glancing
- round at their sadly depleted numbers&mdash;&ldquo;I wish that Jack and Pug were
- as safe, poor fellows.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Cheer up, my hearty. As I says afore, there's a Providence, lad, as sits
- up aloft to keep watch for the life of poor Jack.' Ay, an for the nigger's
- too, d'ye mind me, lad,&rdquo; rejoined the captain, blowing his nose loudly.
- &ldquo;So let's turn out an' see what manner o' headway the confleegrations
- makin'.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Brief as was their absence from &ldquo;the glimpses of the moon,&rdquo; the fire had
- made alarming progress in the interval. Viewed from the centre of the
- swiftly-narrowing cordon of flame, the scene was awesome in the extreme.
- The rear column of the invader advanced the more slowly of the two, but
- even it was now within a stone's throw of that godsend, the captain's
- &ldquo;tidy berth.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- On the seaward side the flames had overleapt the jungle's edge, and seized
- with unsated greed upon the luxuriant grass that everywhere grew amid the
- ruins. Nearer still, the dense, parasitic growth upon the remnant of wall,
- ignited by the dense clouds of sparks which the wind drove far ahead of
- the actual fire, was blazing fiercely. The heat was stifling; the air,
- choked with smoke and showers of glowing sparks, unbreathable. They
- retreated precipitately to the cooler shelter of the underground chamber.
- </p>
- <p>
- Even here the noise of the flames could be distinctly heard. Indeed, they
- had been barely ten minutes below when the fiery sea rolled with a sullen
- roar over their heads, the fierce heat driving them back from the
- entrance.
- </p>
- <p>
- Some hours must pass before it would be either safe or practicable to
- venture into the open air. Accordingly, following the captain's example,
- Don made himself as comfortable for the night as circumstances permitted.
- A quantity of dried grass, which Spottie had thoughtfully collected and
- deposited beside the stores, afforded an excellent bed, and soon the deep
- breathing of all three told that sleep too had made this long untenanted
- nook her refuge.
- </p>
- <p>
- Upwards of an hour had passed when a tremendous grinding crash shook the
- passage from roof to floor, and brought Don and the captain to their feet.
- They had fallen asleep surrounded by a subdued glow of firelight; they
- woke to find themselves in pitchy darkness. Bosin and the scarcely more
- courageous Spottie began to whimper.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Avast there!&rdquo; the captain sang out at the latter. &ldquo;Is this a time to
- begin a-pipin' of your eye like a wench, I axes? Belay that, ye lubberly
- swab, an' light the binnacle lamp till we takes our bearin's.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- This order Spottie obeyed with an alacrity which, it is but due to him to
- explain, sprang rather from a dread of his master's heavy boot than from
- his fear of the dark. In the light thus thrown on the situation, the cause
- of the recent crash became only too apparent. So, too, did its effect.
- </p>
- <p>
- The ruined wall which overtopped their place of refuge had fallen,
- completely blocking the exit with huge stones, still glowing hot from the
- action of the fire.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Batten&mdash;my&mdash;hatches, lad!&rdquo; ejaculated the old sailor, as the
- full significance of the catastrophe flashed upon him. &ldquo;We're prisoners,
- says you!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XI.&mdash;INTO THE HEART OF THE HILL.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>here was no
- denying the truth of the captain's disconcerting announcement. So far as
- concerned the ancient flight of steps, egress from the underground chamber
- was wholly cut off. In the space of a single moment their refuge had
- become a prison. For, to begin with, the stones which blocked the entrance
- were glowing hot; while, to end with, these were of such a size, and so
- tightly wedged between the walls of the narrow opening, as to render any
- attempt at removing them, in the absence of suitable implements, utterly
- futile. If ever there existed a dilemma worthy the consumption of the
- captain's tobacco, here was one. The huge meerschaum was lighted
- forthwith.
- </p>
- <p>
- And never, perhaps, in all its long and varied history, did the pipe
- perform its task of &ldquo;'ilin' up&rdquo; the old sailors &ldquo;runnin' gear&rdquo; so promptly
- and satisfactorily as now. For scarcely had he taken half-a-dozen &ldquo;w'hiffs
- o' the fragrant,&rdquo; when, &ldquo;Blow me, lad!&rdquo; he exclaimed, triumphantly
- following with the stem of the pipe the course of a blue spiral which had
- just left his lips, &ldquo;d'ye see that, now? No sooner I lets it out than away
- it scuds!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Under other circumstances this observation would have sounded commonplace;
- here it was significant. The fragrant spiral, after wavering an instant as
- if uncertain what course to take, broke and floated slowly towards the
- wall of <i>débris</i> which blocked the entrance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wery good!&rdquo; resumed the captain, when this became apparent; &ldquo;an' what o'
- that? you naterally axes. Why, do ye mind me, lad, when smoke sheers off
- to lee'ard in that 'ere fashion, it sinnifies a drorin'; and a drorin',
- dye see, sinnifies a current o' atmospheric air; and&mdash;as the
- maintop-gallan's'l says when it sights the squall&mdash;-blow me! if a
- current o' atmospheric air don't sinnify as this 'ere subterraneous
- ramification's got a venthole in it somewheres, d'ye see!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, as for that,&rdquo; said Don, &ldquo;I noticed a draught drawing up the steps,
- as soon as I set foot on them. The entrance seemed to act like a sort of
- flue; and, come to think of it, it couldn't do that, in spite of the
- heated air above, unless there was an inlet somewhere below, could it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ay, inlet's the wery nautical tarm I was a-tryin' to overhaul, lad,&rdquo;
- replied the captain complacently. &ldquo;An'&mdash;shiver my binnacle!&mdash;for
- that inlet we runs. Legs we has, light we has!&mdash;so why not? I axes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;More grope than run, I fancy,&rdquo; said Don, peering into the darkness of the
- tunnel. &ldquo;But there's no help for it, I suppose; though Heaven only knows
- where or what it may lead to! The stores, of course, remain here for the
- present; they're safe enough, at any rate.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Seizing the lantern, he led off without further parley. Spottie&mdash;haunted
- in the dark by an ever-pursuing fear of spooks&mdash;made a close second;
- while the old sailor brought up the rear with Bosin on his shoulder. Here
- and there a lizard, alarmed by the hollow echo of their footsteps, or by
- the glare of the passing light, scurried across their path.
- </p>
- <p>
- For a considerable distance the passage continued on the level, then
- dipped suddenly in a steep flight of steps. After this came other level
- bits, succeeded by other descents, the number of steps in each successive
- flight&mdash;or, rather, fall&mdash;increasing as they proceeded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Looks as if we were bound for the foot of the hill,&rdquo; remarked Don,
- pausing to allow the captain to overtake him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' well I knows it, lad!&rdquo; replied that worthy, as he accomplished the
- descent of that particular flight of steps with a sigh of relief like the
- blowing of a small whale. &ldquo;Sleepin' in the open an' that, d'ye see, 's
- made my jints a bit stiff like&mdash;'specially the wooden one!
- Howsomedever, let's get on again&mdash;as the seaman says when the
- lubberly donkey rose by the starn an' hove him by the board.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- On they accordingly went, and down, the level intervals growing less and
- less frequent, the seemingly interminable tiers of steps more precipitous.
- Even the captain, level-headed old sailor though he was, detected himself
- in the act of clutching at the wall, so suggestive of utter bottomlessness
- was the black chasm yawning ever at their feet. The very echoes hurried
- back to them as if fearful of venturing the abysmal depths. What it would
- have been to have penetrated the tunnel without a lantern Don dared not
- think.
- </p>
- <p>
- And now the roof and walls contracted until they seemed to press with an
- insupportable weight upon their shoulders. The steps, too, at first equal
- in height and even of surface, became irregular and slippery. Ooze of a
- vivid prismatic green glistened on either hand; water gathered in
- pellucid, elongated drops overhead, shivered for an instant as if startled
- by the unwonted light, then glinted noiselessly down upon the dank,
- mould-carpeted steps, which no human foot apparently had pressed for ages.
- Suppose their advance, when they got a little lower, should be cut off by
- the water, as retreat was already cut off by the fallen wall!
- </p>
- <p>
- A level footing at last! Twenty yards on through the darkness, and no
- steps. Had these come to an end? It almost seemed so.
- </p>
- <p>
- Suddenly the captain stopped. On the rock floor a tiny pool shimmered like
- crystal in the lantern-light. He scooped up a little of the water in his
- broad palm and tasted it, &ldquo;Stave my water-butt, lad!&rdquo; cried he, smacking
- his lips with immense gusto. &ldquo;This 'ere aqueous fluid what's a-washin'
- round in the scuppers ain't no bilge-water, d'ye mind me! Reg'lar genewine
- old briny's what it is, an' well I knows the taste on it! We're under the
- crik&mdash;blow me if we bain't!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shouldn't wonder,&rdquo; said Don, consulting his watch. &ldquo;It's now three
- o'clock; we've been on the grope just three-quarters of an hour. A jolly
- nice fix we'll be in if we reach daylight on the far side of the creek&mdash;with
- no means of crossing it, I mean. But wherever this mole-hole leads to,
- let's get to the end of it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- More steps, but this time ascending. The walls, too, became perceptibly
- drier, the narrow limits and musty air of the vaulted way less oppressive.
- With elastic steps and light hearts they pressed forward, assured that
- release was now close at hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- It came sooner than they anticipated, for presently the tunnel veered
- sharply to the left, and as Don rounded the angle of wall a low, musical
- lapping of waves fell on his ears.
- </p>
- <p>
- The captain was right in his conjecture; the passage had conducted them
- directly under the creek, and it was on that side of the ravine
- immediately adjacent to the Elephant Rock that they now emerged into the
- fresh night air.
- </p>
- <p>
- Here the tunnel terminated in a platform of rock, escarped from the solid
- cliff, and draped by a curtain of vines similar to, though somewhat
- thinner than, that which concealed the hiding-place of the <i>Jolly Tar</i>.
- The platform itself lay wrapped in deepest shade, but through the
- interstices of the natural curtain overhanging it they could see the
- moonlight shimmering on the surface of the creek.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Blow me, lad!&rdquo; cried the captain, after peering about him for some
- seconds: &ldquo;this 'ere cove as we're hove-to in orter lay purty nigh abreast
- o' the <i>Jolly Tar</i>, says you. Belay that, ye lubber!&rdquo; making a dive
- after the monkey, who, with a shrill cry, had swung down from his shoulder
- and scuttled to the edge of the platform.
- </p>
- <p>
- Don gripped the old sailor by the arm and forcibly held him back. &ldquo;Hist!&rdquo;
- he cried in suppressed, excited tones. &ldquo;Did you hear that?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A moment of strained silence; then, from the direction of the creek came a
- faint plashing sound, such as might have been produced by the regular dip
- of paddles. Releasing his hold on the captain's arm, Don crossed the rocky
- floor on tiptoe, parted the trailing vines with cautious hand, and took a
- rapid survey of the moonlit creek. Then he hastily seized the monkey and
- darted back to the captains side.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Canoes!&rdquo; he whispered. &ldquo;Two of them, packed with natives, and heading
- straight for us. Back into the passage! And, Spottie! douse that light.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XII.&mdash;RELATES HOW A WRONG ROAD LED TO THE RIGHT PLACE.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>hey had barely
- gained the shelter of the tunnel and extinguished the light, when the
- prows of the canoes grated against the rock, and a number of natives
- scrambled out upon the platform, jabbering loudly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Would they remain there, or enter the tunnel where the little band of
- unarmed adventurers&mdash;for the captain had neglected to fetch a musket,
- and Don to load his pistols&mdash;lay concealed? It was a moment of
- breathless suspense. Then a torch was lighted, and 'the intruders, to the
- number of perhaps a score, filed off to the right and disappeared.
- </p>
- <p>
- When the last echo of their footsteps had died away, the captain heaved a
- sigh of relief, and bade Spottie relight the lantern.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not that I be afear'd o' the warmints, dye mind me, lad,&rdquo; said he, as if
- in apology for the sigh; &ldquo;only&mdash;spike my guns!&mdash;a couple o'
- brace o' fists 'ud be short rations to set under the noses o' sich a
- rampageous crew, d'ye see. Howsome-dever, the way's clear at last, as the
- shark says when he'd swallied the sailor; so beat up to wind'ard a bit,
- till we diskiver whereaway the warmints's bound for.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's another passage, most likely,&rdquo; observed Don, holding the lantern
- aloft at arm's length as they left the tunnel behind and reemerged upon
- the rock platform. &ldquo;Ha! there it is, captain; yonder, in the far corner.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Right ye are, lad,&rdquo; replied the captain with a chuckle. &ldquo;We'll
- inwestigate into this 'ere subterraneous ramification, says you; so forge
- ahead, my hearty.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The entrance to the second tunnel was quickly gained, and into it, as
- nothing was either to be seen or heard of the natives, they &ldquo;inwestigated&rdquo;&mdash;to
- use the captain's phraseology&mdash;-as far as a flight of steps which
- extended upwards for an unknown distance beyond the limits of the
- lantern's rays. Here the captain paused, and bending forward:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Scrapers an' holystones, lad!&rdquo; cried he with a chuckle; &ldquo;the quarterdeck
- of a ship-o'-the-line itself ain't cleaner'n these 'ere steps. Native feet
- goin' aloft and a-comin' down continual, that's what's scraped 'em, says
- you; an' so I gets an idee. This 'ere subterraneous carawan as we've been
- an' diskivered is the tail o' the 'Elephant'!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The what, captain?&rdquo; cried Don.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, d'ye mind me, lad,&rdquo; the captain proceeded to explain, &ldquo;when them
- lubberly land-swabs as pilots elephants&mdash;which I means mahouts, d'ye
- see&mdash;when they wants to go aloft, so to say, how does they manage the
- business? I axes. They lays hold on the warmint's tail, says you, and up
- they goes over the starn. Wery good! This 'ere's a Elephant Rock as we're
- at the present moment inwestigatin' into, d'ye mind me, an' when betimes
- the lubberly crew as mans it is ordered aloft onto the animile's back,
- why, up these 'ere steps they goes. An' so I calls 'em the tail o' the
- 'Elephant'&mdash;an' why not? I axes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don gripped the old sailor's hand impulsively.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hurrah! this discovery's worth a dozen hours' groping underground,
- captain!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;For if the natives can gain the Elephant Rock by
- following this passage, why can't we do the same? Jack, old boy, if you're
- still alive&mdash;which you are, please God!&mdash;we'll find you yet!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ay, at the risk of our wery lives, if need be!&rdquo; responded the captain, in
- tones that lost none of their heartiness through being a bit husky. &ldquo;An'
- the bag o' pearls, too, for the matter o' that, lad,&rdquo; he added; &ldquo;for, d'ye
- see, as the old song says:
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- We always be ready,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- Steady, lad, steady!
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- We'll fight an' we'll conquer agin and agin!
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Howsomedever, fightin' without wittles ain't to be thought of, no more'n
- without powder, says you; so 'bout ship an' bear away for the Ha'nted
- Pagodas!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thank Heaven for the fire and that tumbledown wall!&rdquo; ejaculated Don as
- they retraced their steps to the platform. &ldquo;Chance has done for us what no
- planning&mdash;or fighting either, for the matter of that&mdash;could ever
- have done. We started on a wrong road, but, all the same, it has led us to
- the right place.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ay, lad, only chance bain't the right word for it, d'ye see. There's a
- Providence, lad, as sits up aloft,&rdquo; said the captain, lifting his cap
- reverently. &ldquo;I bain't, so to say, a religious cove; but, storm or calm,
- them's the wery identical words as I always writes in my log. An', d'ye
- mind me, lad, 'tis the hand o' the Good Pilot as has guided us here
- to-night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't doubt it,&rdquo; replied Don gravely, &ldquo;any more than I doubt that the
- same Good Pilot will guide us safely into port. Bearing that in mind, we
- have only to mature our plans and end the whole thing at a stroke. Here we
- are, and now for the creek,&rdquo; he concluded, crossing the platform and
- thrusting aside the pendent vines. &ldquo;We'll borrow one of the canoes those
- niggers came in. Hullo, they're gone!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Some of the lubberly crew stopped aboard and rowed off agin, belike,&rdquo;
- observed the captain. &ldquo;Blow me, if we shan't have to take to the water, as
- the sailors said when they'd swallied all the rum.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don made no reply, but rapidly divesting himself of his coat and shoes, he
- slipped into the water before the old sailor well knew what he was about.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm off for the canoe we hid in the jungle,&rdquo; he called back as he struck
- out for the other shore.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ay, ay, lad!&rdquo; responded the captain; &ldquo;an' here's to your speedy retarn,
- as the shark says when they hoisted the sailor into the ship's gig.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Swimming the creek was, after all, an insignificant feat for a
- sturdy-limbed young fellow like Don. The water was warm and refreshing,
- the distance far from great. A dozen vigorous strokes, and he was well
- within the deep shadow of the opposite cliff, for he deemed it prudent to
- avoid the moonlight, lest by any chance the natives who had removed the
- canoes should be in the vicinity.
- </p>
- <p>
- Once, indeed, he fancied he actually heard a faint splashing in the water
- a short distance ahead. He floated for a moment, motionless and alert; but
- as the noise was not repeated, he swam on again. He had made scarce
- half-a-dozen strokes, however, when he suddenly felt himself gripped from
- below by the leg. His first thought was of sharks; his next, that he was
- in the clutches of a human foe, for a vice-like hand was at his throat.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIII.&mdash;CAPTAIN MANGO &ldquo;GOES ALOFT.&rdquo;
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>elf-preservation
- is the first law of life, and no sooner did Don feel that iron grip
- compressing his throat, and dragging him down into the depths of the
- creep, than he struck out to such good purpose that the hold of his
- unknown assailant quickly relaxed. As he shot up to the surface he found
- himself confronted by the dripping head and shoulders of a native. A brief
- cessation of hostilities followed; each glared at the other defiantly, the
- native's tense breathing and watchful eye indicating that, though baffled
- for the moment by his opponents prompt defensive measures, he was in no
- two minds about renewing the struggle.
- </p>
- <p>
- Suddenly, by a lightning-like movement of the hand, he dashed a blinding
- jet of spray into Don's eyes, instantly followed up the advantage thus
- treacherously gained, grappled with him, and pinioned his arms tightly at
- his sides. Then, to his horror, Don felt his head thrust violently back,
- felt the fellow's hot, quick breath on his neck, and his teeth gnashing
- savagely at his throat.
- </p>
- <p>
- Luckily for himself Don was no mean athlete, and knew how to use his fists
- to advantage when occasion demanded. Wrenching his arms free, he seized
- the native by the throat, and in spite of his eel-like slipperiness and
- desperate struggles, by an almost superhuman effort forced him slowly
- backwards until he had him at effective striking distance, when, suddenly
- loosing his hold, he let him have a tremendous &ldquo;one-two&rdquo; straight from the
- shoulder, that stretched the native senseless and bleeding on the water.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You would have it!&rdquo; he panted, surveying the native's sinewy proportions
- with grim satisfaction. &ldquo;Next time you won't wait to be knocked out, I
- reckon. But 'twon't do to let you drown, though you richly deserve it; so
- come along, you black cub!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Seizing the black by the convenient tuft of hair at the back of his
- bullet-head, he towed him to the strip of beach, and there hauled him out
- upon the sand, directly into a patch of moonlight, as it happened, that
- came slanting down through a rift in the canopy of palm-leaves overhead.
- Something in the appearance of the upturned features caused him to drop on
- his knees at the natives side.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hullo!&rdquo; he cried, peering into the fellow's face, &ldquo;Jack's lascar, as I'm
- alive! By Jove, you are a prize! We'll keep you with us longer than we did
- last time, my friend. Ha, ha! won't the captain chuckle, though!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With his belt he proceeded to strap the lascar's hands securely behind his
- back; but when it came to fastening his legs, a difficulty cropped up.
- That is to say, the strap could not be used for both, and he had no
- substitute. Fortunately the lascar wore about his loins the regulation
- length of strong country cotton&mdash;his only covering&mdash;and this Don
- was in the act of removing when a knife fell out of its folds.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Lucky thing I didn't run against you in the water,&rdquo; he soliloquised,
- picking the weapon up. &ldquo;Why, it's the very knife the lascar shot at Jack
- from the schooner's deck; the one he let the fellow have back for sending
- the boathook through the cutter's side; and that we afterwards found lying
- in the <i>ballam</i> here. And yet Jack certainly had it on him when those
- niggers carried him off. So, old chap,&rdquo; apostrophising the insensible
- owner of the much-bandied knife, &ldquo;so you had a hand in kidnapping him too,
- had you? All the more reason for caring for you now that we've got you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Following up this idea, he knotted the cloth tightly about the lascar's
- legs, dragged him well up the beach, and went in search of the canoe.
- This, fortunately, had not been molested in their absence; in a few
- minutes he had it in the water. Then, seizing the paddle, he propelled the
- light skiff swiftly in the direction of the rock platform, where he found
- the old sailor stumping his beat in a terrible state of uneasiness over
- his prolonged absence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Spike my guns, lad!&rdquo; cried he, bearing down upon the young man with
- outstretched hand and a smile as broad as the cutter's mainsail, &ldquo;they
- warmints's been an' done for Master Don this hitch, I says to myself when
- the half-hour fails to bring ye. An' what manner o' mishap's kept ye
- broached-to all this while? I axes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Fact is, captain, I was attacked by the enemy. Came within an ace of
- being captured, too. But, as good luck would have it, I managed to get in
- a thundering broadside, boarded the enemy&mdash;there was only one,
- luckily&mdash;spiked his guns, and towed him ashore, where he's waiting to
- pay his respects to you now. But get in and see for yourself what a
- valuable prize I've taken.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The captain got in with all despatch, and, as soon as the canoe touched
- the opposite beach, got out again without delay, so eager was he to
- inspect, the captive. As it was now daylight, he recognised the fellow the
- moment he set eyes on him. His delight knew no bounds. Bound and round the
- luckless lascar he stumped, chuckling as he always did when he was
- pleased, and every now and then prodding him in the ribs with his wooden
- leg, as if to reassure himself that he laboured under no delusion.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sharks an' sea-sarpents, lad!&rdquo; he roared, when quite satisfied as to the
- lascar's identity, &ldquo;we'll keep the warmint fast in the bilboes a while,
- says you; for, d'ye mind me, he's old Salambo's right-hand man, is this
- lubber, as comes an' goes at his beck an' call, an' executes the orders as
- he gives. So in the bilboes he remains; why not? I axes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My idea precisely, captain. He can't be up to any of his little games so
- long as he has a good stout strap to hug him; and, what's more, he'll have
- a capital chance to recover from that nasty slash Jack gave him the other
- night. By the way, I've often wondered, do you know, how he managed to
- pull through that affair so easily. Suppose we turn him over and have a
- look at his shoulder?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- No sooner said than done, notwithstanding the captive's snarling protests;
- but, to their great amazement, his shoulder showed neither wound nor scar.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, this beats me!&rdquo; exclaimed Don incredulously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' is this the wery identical swab, an' no mistake? I axes,&rdquo; demanded
- the captain.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mistake? None whatever, unless Jack was mistaken in the fellow the other
- day, which isn't at all likely. Besides, I've seen him twice before
- myself; once in the temple, and again on the sands here. I'd know that
- hang-dog look of his among a thousand. Then there's Spottie; he saw him as
- well. Stop! let's see what Spottie makes of this.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Spottie was summoned, and, without being informed of the point in dispute,
- unhesitatingly identified the captive as the lascar.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then,&rdquo; said Don, &ldquo;Jack must have supposed he stabbed the fellow when he
- didn't; that's the most I can make of it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Belay there!&rdquo; objected the captain. &ldquo;What about the blood in the canoe
- and on the knife when arterwards found? I axes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There you have me. This fellow's the lascar fast enough; but how he's the
- lascar and yet doesn't show the wound Jack gave him, I know no more than
- the man in the moon. Ugh! what a greasy beast he is! I'd better take the
- strap up another hole to make sure of him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- So, for a time, the puzzling question of the lascar's identity dropped.
- </p>
- <p>
- No food being procurable here, they decided to push oh to the Haunted
- Pagodas ere the sun became too hot, and there endeavour to clear a passage
- to the immured stores. Accordingly, when the canoe had been dragged back
- to its former place of concealment, they set out, Don taking charge of the
- lascar, who, clad in Spottie's upper-cloth, and having his legs only at
- liberty, led as quietly as a lamb.
- </p>
- <p>
- Two-thirds of the way up they came upon that portion of the hill which had
- been ravaged by the fire. For the most part this had now burnt itself out,
- leaving the summit of the elevation one vast bed of ghastly gray ashes,
- with here and there a smouldering stump or cluster of bamboo stems still
- smoking.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the Haunted Pagodas two surprises awaited them. The first of these was
- no other than Puggles himself, alive and lachrymose. On the floor of the
- otherwise empty &ldquo;fo'csle&rdquo; he sat, blubbering dolefully. Comical indeed was
- the spectacle he presented, with his woebegone face thickly begrimed with
- a mixture of ashes and tears&mdash;a sort of fortuitous whitewash,
- relieved in the funniest fashion by the black skin showing in patches
- through its lighter veneer, and by the double line of vivid red,
- stretching half-way from ear to ear, that marked the generous expanse of
- his mouth.
- </p>
- <p>
- The explanation of his sudden disappearance proved simple enough. He had
- stumbled in the very act of following his master past the
- swiftly-advancing fire, and crawling back on hands and knees to a place of
- safety, had there passed the night alone in the jungle. On reaching the
- encampment and finding it deserted, he jumped to the conclusion that the
- fire had, as he put it, &ldquo;done eat sahibs up,&rdquo; stores and all. Hence his
- tearful condition on their return.
- </p>
- <p>
- The second surprise was one of an equally pleasing nature, since it
- concerned the stores. The mass of <i>debris</i> which blocked the tunnel's
- mouth had subsided to such an extent in cooling as to admit of their
- reaching the imprisoned stores with but little difficulty.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All the same, captain,&rdquo; remarked Don, when presently they began a
- vigorous attack on the provisions, &ldquo;I'm jolly glad our fear of being
- buried alive drove us to the far end of the hole. We've got the key to the
- Elephant Rock, and, what's more, we've got a grip on old Salambo's right
- hand,&rdquo; nodding towards the lascar, who was again bound hand and foot,
- &ldquo;that's safe to stand us in good stead when it comes to the final tussle
- for Jack and the pearls.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Right ye are, lad,&rdquo; said the captain in tones as hearty as his appetite;
- &ldquo;an', blow me!&mdash;as the fog-horn says to the donkey-ingin&mdash;arter
- we snatches a wink o' sleep, d'ye mind me, we'll lay our heads together a
- bit an' detarmine on the best course to be steered.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- On the stone floor of the &ldquo;fo'csle&rdquo; the blacks were already sleeping the
- sleep of repletion; and, their meal finished, Don and the captain lost no
- time in following their example&mdash;for thirty-six hours of almost
- unremitting exertion and danger had told heavily upon their powers of
- endurance. Dead tired as they were, they gave little heed to the lascar
- beyond assuring themselves by a hasty glance that his bonds were secure.
- To all appearance he was wrapped in profound slumber.
- </p>
- <p>
- The sun was at the zenith when they stretched themselves upon the flags of
- the &ldquo;fo'csle&rdquo;; slowly it burnt its way downward to the western horizon,
- and still they slept. Don was the first to stir. He raised himself upon
- his elbow with a yawn, rubbed his eyes, gazed about him in momentary
- bewilderment. Twilight had already crept out of the ravine and invaded the
- ghostly, fire-scathed ruins. This was the first-thing he noticed. Then the
- recollection of the events of the past day and night rushed upon him, and
- he turned abruptly, with a sudden vague sense of dread, to the spot where
- the lascar lay.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lay? No; that place was empty!
- </p>
- <p>
- He could scarcely believe the evidence of his senses. Had the fellow
- somehow managed to shift his position, and roll out of sight behind one of
- the numerous blocks of stone that lay about? Or had he&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- With a cry of alarm he threw himself upon an object that lay where the
- lascar had lain. It was the leathern belt with which he had bound the
- fellow's arms. The tongue of the buckle was broken. He recollected now,
- and almost cursed his folly for not recollecting before, that the buckle
- had long been weak. Too late! The lascar had escaped!
- </p>
- <p>
- Dashing the traitorous belt upon the stones, he hurried to where the old
- sailor lay asleep, with Bosin curled up by his side, and shook him roughly
- by the shoulder. He was in no gentle mood just then.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Captain! Captain! Wake up! The lascars off!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- No response. No movement. Only the monkey awoke suddenly and fell to
- whimpering.
- </p>
- <p>
- The captain lay at full length upon his back, his bronzed hands clasped
- upon his broad chest, his blue sailor's cap drawn well over his eyes.
- Something in the pose of the figure at his feet, in its stillness&mdash;something,
- too, in the plaintive half-human wail the monkey uttered at the moment&mdash;struck
- a sudden chill to Don's heart. He dropped upon his knees, lifted the cap,
- peered into the upturned face. It was distorted, purple. He started back
- with a fearful cry:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not dead! Oh, my God, not dead!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIV.&mdash;SHROUDED IN A HAMMOCK.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>hat was a fearful
- moment for Don. The quest of the golden pearl, entered upon with all the
- love of adventure and sanguine hope natural to young hearts, began to wear
- a serious aspect indeed. Even had Jack been there to share the heartbreak
- of it, this sudden, numbing blow would still have been terribly hard to
- bear. But Jack was gone&mdash;whither, Heaven alone knew&mdash;and the
- captain was dead.
- </p>
- <p>
- Ay, the &ldquo;Providence that sits up aloft&rdquo; had at last looked out a snug
- berth for the old sailor, and shipped him for the Eternal Voyage. Kneeling
- by his side in the solemn twilight, with aching heart Don recalled all his
- quaint ways and quainter sayings, his large-hearted generosity, his
- rollicking good-nature, his rough but ever-ready sympathy&mdash;and sealed
- the kindly eyes with such tears as are wrung from us but once or twice in
- a lifetime, and recalled with sadness often, with shame never.
- </p>
- <p>
- But for him the captain would never have undertaken this disastrous
- venture. This was the bitterest, the sorest thought of all.
- </p>
- <p>
- At last Bosin's low wailing broke in upon his sad reverie. Well-nigh human
- did the monkey seem, as with tender, lingering touch he caressed his
- master's face, and sought to rouse him from this strange sleep of which he
- felt but could not understand the awful meaning. Then, failing to win from
- the dumb lips the response he craved, he turned his eyes upon his master's
- friend with a look of pathetic appeal fairly heartbreaking in its mute
- intensity.
- </p>
- <p>
- No sooner did he succeed in attracting Don's attention, however, than his
- manner underwent a complete change. The plaintive wail became a hiss, the
- puny, lithe hands tore frantically at something that showed like a thin,
- dark streak about the dead man's neck. What with the waning light and the
- shock of finding the captain dead, Don had not noticed this streak before.
- He looked at it closely now, and as he looked a horrified intelligence
- leapt into his face. The dark streak was a cord: the captain had been
- strangled!
- </p>
- <p>
- Oh, the horror of that discovery! Hitherto he had suspected no foul play,
- no connection of any kind, indeed, between the captain's death and the
- lascar's escape; for had he not taken the precaution to disarm the native?
- But now he remembered seeing that cord about the fellow's middle. He had
- thought it harmless. Harmless! Ah, how different was the mute witness
- borne by the old sailor's lifeless form! In the lascar's hands the cord
- had proved an instrument of death as swift and sure as any knife.
- </p>
- <p>
- But why had the captain been singled out as the victim? Was the lascar
- merely bent on wreaking vengeance on those who had injured him? Or was he
- a tool in other and invisible hands?
- </p>
- <p>
- Feverishly he asked himself these questions as he removed the fatal cord,
- and composed the distorted features into a semblance of what they had been
- in life; asked, but could not answer them. Only, back of the whole
- terrible business, he seemed to see the cunning, unscrupulous
- shark-charmer, bent on retaining the pearls at any cost, fanning the
- lascar's hatred into fiercer flame, guiding his ready hand in its work of
- death.
- </p>
- <p>
- Could he, alone and all but unaided, cope with the cunning of this enemy
- who, while himself unseen, made his devilish power felt at every turn? The
- responsibility thrown upon his shoulders by the captain's murder involved
- other and weightier issues than the mere recovery of a few thousand
- pounds' worth of stolen pearls. Jack must be rescued, if indeed he was
- still alive; while, if he too was dead, his and the captain's murderers
- must be brought to justice. This was the task before him; no light one for
- a youth of eighteen, with only a brace of timid native servants at his
- back. Yet he addressed himself to it with all the passionate determination
- born of his love for the chum and his grief for the friend who had stood
- by him &ldquo;through thick and thin.&rdquo; There was no hesitation, no wavering. &ldquo;Do
- or die!&rdquo; It was come to that now.
- </p>
- <p>
- The captain's burial must be his first consideration; for Don had lived
- long enough in the East to know how remorseless is the climate in its
- treatment of the dead. Morning at the latest must snatch the old sailor's
- familiar form for ever from his sight.
- </p>
- <p>
- A tarpaulin lay in the &ldquo;fo'csle,&rdquo; and with this he determined to hide the
- lascar's dread handiwork from view before waking the blacks, who still
- slept. While he was disposing this appropriate pall above the corpse, the
- captain's jacket fell open, and in an inside pocket he caught sight of a
- small volume.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Perhaps he has papers about him that ought to be preserved,&rdquo; thought Don.
- &ldquo;I'll have a look.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Drawing the volume from its resting-place with reverent touch, he found it
- to be a copy of the Book of Common Prayer, sadly worn and battered, like
- its owner, by long service. Here and there a leaf was turned down, or a
- passage marked by the dent of a heavy thumb-nail&mdash;the sailor's
- pencil. But what arrested his attention were these words written on the
- yellow fly-leaf in a bold, irregular hand, and in ink so faded as to make
- it evident that many years had elapsed since they were penned:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To all and sundry as sights these lines, when-somedever it may please the
- Good Skipper to tow this 'ere old hulk safe into port, widelicit. If so be
- as I'm spared to go aloft when on the high-seas, wery good! the loan of a
- hammock and a bit o' ballast is all I axes. But if so be as I'm ewentually
- stranded on shore, why then, d'ye mind me, who-somedever ye be as sights
- these 'ere lines, I ain't to be battened down like a lubberly landsman,
- d'ye see, but warped off-shore an' shipped for the Eternal V'yage as a
- true seaman had ought to be. And may God have mercy on my soul.&mdash;Amen.
- The last Log and Testament of me,
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;(Signed) John Mango, A.B.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The faded characters grew blurred and misty before Don's eyes as he
- scanned them. Closing the book, he grasped the captain's cold hand
- impulsively, and in tones choked with emotion, cried:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You shall have your wish, dear old friend! We'll warp you off-shore and
- ship you for the Eternal Voyage in a way befitting the true seaman that
- you are.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And the mute lips seemed to smile back their approval, as though they
- would say:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ay, ay, wrhy not, I axes? An' cheer up, my hearty, for, d'ye mind me,
- lad, pipin' your eye won't stop the leak when the ship's a-sinkin'.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- What boots it to linger over the noisy, but none the less genuine grief,
- of the faithful Spottie when he learned the sad truth? Nor is it necessary
- to describe at length the sad preparations for consigning the dead captain
- to his long home beneath the waves that had been his home so long in life.
- Suffice it to say that without loss of time a rude bier was constructed on
- which to convey the remains to the beach, and that while this was
- preparing there occurred an event so remarkable, and withal of so
- important a bearing upon the future of the quest, as to merit something
- more than mere passing mention.
- </p>
- <p>
- It happened while the three were in the jungle cutting materials for the
- litter, and it concerned the fatal cord.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Until the lascar's paid out, I'll keep this as a reminder of what I owe
- him,&rdquo; Don had said grimly, just before starting; and taking the lascars
- knife from his belt he stuck it into a crevice in the &ldquo;fo'csle&rdquo; wall, and
- hung the snake-like cord upon it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Spottie and Puggles being too timid to leave with the dead, or to send
- alone into the jungle in quest of materials for the bier&mdash;for was it
- not at nightfall that shadowy spooks walked abroad?&mdash;Don was forced
- to bear them company. There was no help for it; the captain's body must be
- left unguarded in their absence&mdash;except, indeed, for such watch-care
- as puny Bosin was able to give it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Up to the moment of their setting out the monkey had not for a single
- instant left his master's side. This fact served to render all the more
- extraordinary the discovery they made on their return&mdash;namely, that
- the monkey had quitted his post. What could have induced him to abandon
- his master at such a moment was a mystery.
- </p>
- <p>
- And the mystery deepened when Don, wanting the knife, sought it in the
- &ldquo;fo'csle,&rdquo; for, to his astonishment, neither knife nor cord was to be
- found.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dey spooks done steal urn, sar,&rdquo; cried Spottie, with chattering teeth.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Huh,&rdquo; objected Puggles, between whom and Spottie there had grown up a
- sharp rivalry during their brief acquaintance, &ldquo;why they no steal dead
- sahib? I axes.&rdquo; Then to his master: &ldquo;Lascar maybe done come back, sahib.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- This suggestion certainly smacked more of plausibility than that offered
- by Spottie, since it not only accounted for the disappearance of the cord
- and knife, but of Bosin as well. Was it too much to believe that the
- faithful creature's hatred, instinctively awakened by the lascar's
- stealthy return, had outweighed affection for his dead master and impelled
- him to abandon the one that he might track the other? Remembering the
- intelligence exhibited by the monkey in the past, Don at least was
- satisfied that this explanation was the true one.
- </p>
- <p>
- By midnight all was in readiness, and with heavy hearts they took up their
- dead and began the toilsome descent to the creek. This reached, the <i>Jolly
- Tar</i> was drawn from her place of concealment, and the captain's body
- lashed in a tarpaulin. Then, with white wings spread, the cutter bore
- silently away from the creek's mouth in quest of a last resting-place for
- the master whose behest she was never again to obey.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This will do,&rdquo; said Don, when a half-hour's run had put them well
- off-shore. &ldquo;Take the tiller, Pug, and keep her head to the wind for a
- little.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With bowed head he opened the well-worn Prayer Book, and, while the waves
- chanted a solemn funeral dirge, read in hushed tones the office for the
- burial of the dead at sea. A pause, a tear glinting in the moonlight, a
- splash&mdash;and just as the morning star flashed out like a beacon above
- the eastern sea-rim, the old sailor began the Eternal Voyage.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And now,&rdquo; said Don, as he brought the cutters head round in the direction
- of the creek; &ldquo;now for the last tussle and justice for the dead. Let me
- only come face to face once more with that murderous lascar or his master,
- and no false notions of mercy shall stay my hand&mdash;so help me Heaven!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And surely not Heaven itself could deem that vow unrighteous.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XV.&mdash;THE CROCODILE PIT.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he last melancholy
- duty to the captain discharged, Don threw himself heart and fist&mdash;as
- Jack would have said&mdash;into the work cut out for him; and by the time
- the <i>Jolly Tar</i> was again rubbing her nose against the inner wall of
- the grotto, he had decided to abandon the Haunted Pagodas and to make this
- secluded spot&mdash;next door to the back entrance of the Elephant Rock&mdash;his
- base of operations.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Up to now it's been all take and no give,&rdquo; he said to himself; &ldquo;but now
- we've got to act, and act like a steel trap, sharp and sure. What is it
- the old school motto says?&mdash;'<i>bis dat qui cito dat</i>,' 'a quick
- blow's as good as two any day.' The old Roman who strung that together
- knew what he was talking about, anyhow, and I'll put his old saw to the
- test before another sun sets.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In the letter of which Bosin had been the bearer Jack had said&mdash;&ldquo;They
- take me to the Elephant Rock to-night.&rdquo; Twice since then had night come
- and gone; and if his chum had not perished in the village holocaust, in
- the Elephant Rock he was probably to be found. Hurrah for the finding!
- </p>
- <p>
- The muskets were still at the &ldquo;fo'csle,&rdquo; for that sad midnight descent of
- the hill had left their hands too full for weapons. Besides, none were
- needed then. They were needed now, however, so there was nothing for it
- but to climb the hill after them. This, and the time necessarily consumed
- in snatching a hasty meal, delayed the start by a good two hours.
- </p>
- <p>
- At length all was ready, and tumbling into the canoe they pushed off. To
- stick to the literal truth, Spottie did the tumbling. In spite of all his
- efforts to assume a dignity of carriage in keeping with his weapons and
- the occasion, the cutlass at Spottie's belt would persist in getting at
- crosspurposes with his long, thin legs, and so throw him, physically
- speaking, off his balance. Once seated in the canoe, however, with the
- point of the cutlass in dangerous proximity to Puggles's back, and the old
- flint-lock so disposed upon his knees as to hit Don to a dead certainty if
- by any mischance it went off, Spottie looked exceedingly fierce&mdash;in
- fact, an out-and-out swashbuckler.
- </p>
- <p>
- Not so Puggles. No weapons could make him look other than what nature had
- made him&mdash;a happy-go-lucky, fun-and-food loving, sunny-faced lump of
- oily blackness. The extra broad grin that tugged at the far corners of bis
- expansive mouth proclaimed him at peace with all the world&mdash;especially
- with that important section of it bounded by his swelling waistband&mdash;and
- gave the lie direct to his warlike equipment.
- </p>
- <p>
- Of crossing the creek Don made short work, and soon they stood upon the
- rock platform, where, but little more than twenty-four hours before, the
- landing and sudden disappearance of the native crew had put them in
- possession of the key which was now, if fortune favoured them, to unlock
- the secret of Jack's fate, and, haply, the door of his prison-house.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yonder on the right&mdash;for the spot was light enough by day, despite
- its curtain of vegetation&mdash;could be seen the black mouth of the
- tunnel running under the creek, and so to the summit of Haunted Pagoda
- Hill; here, on the left, that by which the natives had taken their
- departure. It was with this that Don's business lay now; and as he led the
- way into it he recalled with a sorrowful smile that quaint fancy of the
- captain's which made this approach to the Rook &ldquo;the tail o' the Elephant.&rdquo;
- And here was the very spot where he had uttered the words. He almost
- fancied he could see the old sailor standing there still, his wooden leg
- thrust well forward, his cap well back, and Bosin perched contentedly upon
- his broad shoulder. Alas for fancy!
- </p>
- <p>
- But what was this that came leaping down the dim vista of steps? No
- creature of fancy surely, but actual flesh and blood. Only flesh and blood
- in the form of a monkey, it is true, but what mattered that, since the
- monkey was none other than Bosin himself?
- </p>
- <p>
- A jubilant shout from Puggles greeted his appearance&mdash;a shout which
- Don, fearful of discovery, immediately checked&mdash;while Spottie made as
- if to catch the returned truant. But the impish Bosin would have none of
- him; eluding the grasp of the black, he sprang upon Don's shoulder. Only
- then did Don observe that the monkey was not empty-handed. He carried
- something hugged tightly against his breast.
- </p>
- <p>
- Like all his tribe, Bosin had a pretty <i>penchant</i> for annexing any
- chance article that happened to take his fancy, without regard to ordinary
- rights of property.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Prigging again, eh?&rdquo; said Don, as he gently disengaged the monkey's booty
- from his grasp. &ldquo;What have you got this time?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- To his astonishment he saw that he held in his hands the lascar's cord,
- and&mdash;surely he was not mistaken?&mdash;the fellow to that half of
- Jack's handkerchief in which his letter had been wrapped up when
- despatched from the village per monkey post.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bosin's mysterious disappearance, then, was explained. In quitting his
- dead master's side so unaccountably he had had a purpose in view&mdash;a
- monkeyish, unreasoning purpose, doubtless, but none the less a purpose&mdash;which
- was none other than to track the lascar to his lair and regain possession
- of the cord. Not that he knew in the least the value to Don of the yard of
- twisted hemp, or the significance of the scrap of crumpled, bloodstained
- cambric he was at such pains to filch. With only blind instinct for his
- guide, he had been guided better than he knew; for while the cord proved
- the Elephant Rock to be the hiding-place of the lascar, the handkerchief
- proved, or seemed to prove, that Jack was still alive and that the
- lascar's hiding-place was his prison.
- </p>
- <p>
- Don's heart leapt at the discovery.
- </p>
- <p>
- Perhaps Jack, unable for some reason to scribble even so much as a word,
- had entrusted the handkerchief to the monkey's care, knowing that the
- sight of it would assure his chum of his safety, if it did no more. Or
- perhaps Bosin had carried it off while Jack slept?
- </p>
- <p>
- A thousand conjectures flashed through Don's brain, but he thrust them
- hastily aside, since mere conjecture could not release his chum; and
- calling to the blacks to follow, he sprang up the steps with a lighter
- heart. The monkey swung himself down from his perch and took the lead, as
- if instinctively divining the object of their quest; chattering gleefully
- when the trio pressed close upon his heels&mdash;impatiently when they
- lagged behind.
- </p>
- <p>
- The steps surmounted, they discovered an offshoot from the main tunnel,
- from which point of division the latter dwindled straight away into a mere
- dot of light in the distance. In the main tunnel itself the light was
- faint enough; but as they advanced it increased in brilliancy till
- presently&mdash;the distance being actually much less than the unbroken
- perspective of chiselled rock made it appear&mdash;they emerged suddenly
- into the broad light of day, streaming down through an oblong cleft or
- gash cut deep into the solid heart of the Rock.
- </p>
- <p>
- The light itself was more welcome than what it revealed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Directly across their path, at their very feet indeed, extended a yawning
- chasm, of depth unknown&mdash;but, as the first glance served to show, of
- such breadth as to effectually bar their further progress.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVI.&mdash;DON SETS A DEATH-TRAP FOR THE LASCAR.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>o be sure,
- skirting the end wall on the extreme left was a ledge along which the
- agile monkey made his way to the opposite side of the pit with little or
- no difficulty; but, as for following him, by that road at least, why, the
- thing was an utter impossibility. The ledge was a mere thread. Scarce a
- handbreadth of rock lay between the smooth-cut upper wall and the
- perpendicular face of the pit.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Blow me!&rdquo; muttered Don, unconsciously echoing the phrase he had so often
- heard on the captains lips, &ldquo;if this ain't the purtiest go as ever I see!&rdquo;
- Which assertion was purely figurative; for as he was only too well aware
- it was &ldquo;no go&rdquo; at all, so far as the pit was concerned.
- </p>
- <p>
- Peering over the brink of the chasm he found it to be partially filled
- with water, between which and the spot where he stood intervened perhaps
- thirty feet of sheer wall. An uninviting pool it looked, lying as green
- and putrescent within its sunken basin as if the bones of unnumbered dead
- men were rotting in its depths. The very sunshine that fell in great
- golden blotch upon its surface seemed to shrink from its foul touch.
- </p>
- <p>
- But what struck Don as the strangest feature of this noisome pool was the
- constant agitation of its waters. To what was it due? What were those
- black, glistening objects floating here and there upon its surface? And
- those others, ranged along the half-submerged ledge on the far side? A
- small fragment of stone chanced to lie near him. He picked it up and aimed
- it at one of these curious objects. To his astonishment the black mass
- slowly shifted its position and plunged with a wallowing splash into the
- pool. Puggles, who had been looking on with mouth agape, raised a shout.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Him corkadile, sa'b! Me sometimes bery often seeing um in riber. Him
- plenty appetite got!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ugh, the monsters!&rdquo; muttered his master, watching with a sort of horrible
- fascination the movements of the hulking reptiles, which lifted their
- ugly, square snouts towards him as if scenting prey. &ldquo;Here's a pretty
- kettle of fish! Crossing this hole is hound to be a tough job at the best&mdash;but,
- as if that wasn't enough, these brutes must turn up and add danger to
- difficulty. Plenty appetite? I should think so, indeed, in such a hole as
- this! However, crocodile or no crocodile, it's got to be crossed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Until now he had rather wondered, to tell the truth, why it was that not a
- single native had crossed their path. He had expected to find the passage
- guarded. The pit, not to say the crocodiles, shed a flood of light&mdash;not
- very cheering light, he was forced to admit&mdash;upon this point. No
- doubt the natives considered themselves in little danger from intrusion,
- so long as they were guarded by a dozen feet of sheer pit, with a dozen
- brace or so of healthy crocodiles at the bottom of it.
- </p>
- <p>
- And probably they were right so far as concerned intruders of their own
- colour and pluck; but Don was made of sturdier stuff than native clay.
- Beyond the crocodile pit lay his chum, a prisoner. Cross it he must, and
- would. Therefore, to borrow the expressive phrase of an American humorist,
- he &ldquo;rose to the emergency and caved the emergency's head in.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Was the pit too wide to leap? Spanning it with his eye, he estimated its
- width at a dozen feet; certainly not less. A tremendous leap that, and
- fraught with fearful risk. And even should he be able to take it, what of
- Spottie and Puggles? They would never dare face it. And what, too, of the
- muskets and cutlasses?
- </p>
- <p>
- Suddenly he descried, just where the continuation of the tunnel pierced
- the wall on the far side of the pit, an object that inspired him with
- fresh hope and determination. True, it was nothing more than a plank, but
- once that plank was in his hands, he could, perhaps, bridge the pit.
- </p>
- <p>
- A dozen feet at the very least! Could he clear it? To jump short of the
- opposite ledge, to reach it, even, and then slip, meant certain and
- horrible death at the jaws of the crocodiles. Should he venture? Jack had
- ventured much for him. He slipped off his shoes&mdash;his stockinged feet
- would afford a surer foothold&mdash;and quietly bade the blacks stand
- aside. Sauntering carelessly into the tunnel&mdash;that by which they had
- approached the pit&mdash;a distance of forty paces or so, he turned, drew
- a deep breath, threw all his lithe strength into the short run, his whole
- soul into the leap, and&mdash;&mdash; Would he clear it?
- </p>
- <p>
- No&mdash;yes! A horrified shriek from the blacks, and he was over, the pit
- a scant handbreadth behind him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dragging the plank from its place of partial concealment, he was delighted
- to find a short piece of rope attached to it. Good; it would facilitate
- the bridging of the chasm. Standing on the brink, he coiled the rope&mdash;not
- without a misgiving that it was too short for his purpose&mdash;and,
- calling to Spottie to catch the end, threw it out over the pit
- sailor-fashion. It fell short.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stop!&rdquo; cried he. &ldquo;This will make it right;&rdquo; and drawing the lascar's cord
- from his pocket, he knotted it to the rope. This time Spottie succeeded in
- grasping the end; and so, with the aid of the lascar's cord, the plank was
- drawn across. Its length was such that it bridged the pit from wall to
- wall, with a foot of spring-way to spare at either end.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the time Don thought nothing of this apparently trivial incident; yet,
- had he but known it, with that cord he had laid a death-trap for
- the-captain's murderer.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVII.&mdash;THE BLAST OF A CONCH-SHELL.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he rest was easy.
- In five minutes the blacks had crawled across, with many fearful glances
- at the upturned snouts of the huge reptiles below; and Don, treading the
- springy length of plank with sure foot, had transferred muskets and
- cutlasses to what he mentally termed &ldquo;Jack's side&rdquo; of the chasm. They were
- now ready for a fresh start.
- </p>
- <p>
- All this time Bosin had watched their movements with an expression of
- mingled shrewdness and approval in his restless eyes that seemed to say:
- &ldquo;Ha! the very thing I'd do myself were I in the fix you're in.&rdquo; Again he
- took the lead, like one who had travelled the road before, and was quite
- satisfied in his own mind that he knew all its little ins and outs.
- </p>
- <p>
- His knowledge of the way became more apparent still when, after
- penetrating the heart of the rock for some distance, the tunnel split into
- three distinct branches. This point Don hesitated to pass; but not so
- Bosin. Without a pause he took the passage to the right, glancing back as
- if to assure himself that he was followed. Off this gallery others opened,
- until it became evident that, as the captain had once affirmed, the rock
- was honeycombed &ldquo;from maindeck to keelson.&rdquo; But for the monkey's guidance
- Don must have found himself utterly at a loss amid so perplexing a
- labyrinth. As it was, he pressed forward with confidence.
- </p>
- <p>
- Danger of discovery, owing to the multiplicity of passages, now increased
- momentarily. Any of these ghostly corridors might afford concealment to an
- enemy who, warned of danger by the muffled echo of approaching steps,
- might steal away, silently and unobserved, and so raise the alarm. Though
- still in his stocking feet, Don instinctively found himself treading on
- tip-toe, while the bare-footed blacks&mdash;who were even less inclined
- for a brush with the enemy than he&mdash;purposely did the same. Even then
- their movements, well-nigh noiseless though they were, caused commotion
- amongst the bats that clung in patches of living fungi to the vaulted
- roof, and sent them wheeling hither and thither in swift, startled flight.
- </p>
- <p>
- To succeed in finding his chum, and to liberate him ere discovery came,
- was almost more than Don dared hope for. For come it must, sooner or
- later. Only, once Jack was by his side, he cared little how soon or in
- what manner it came. True, the natives possessed the seeming advantage of
- overwhelming numbers; but in these rock corridors the nozzle of a single
- musket was better than a hundred men.
- </p>
- <p>
- To do him justice, he had thrust the pearls entirely out of his thoughts
- in his eagerness to set Jack at liberty. &ldquo;Time enough to think about the
- pearls afterwards,&rdquo; he said to himself&mdash;forgetting that &ldquo;afterwards&rdquo;
- was at the best but a blind alley, full of unknown pitfalls.
- </p>
- <p>
- They were now well into the heart of the Elephant Bock, where any moment
- might bring them face to face with Jack or his captors, or both.
- </p>
- <p>
- At this point the monkey, who was some yards in advance, suddenly stopped
- and uttered a peculiar hissing sound. Once before&mdash;when, on the rock
- platform, Bosin had given warning of the approach of the canoes&mdash;had
- Don heard that hiss. There was no mistaking its significance. He motioned
- to the blacks to halt, and with stealthy tread crept forward alone.
- </p>
- <p>
- Just ahead a sharp bend in the passage limited his view to a few yards of
- indifferently lighted wall. Hugging the inner side of this bend, he
- presently gained the jutting shoulder of rock which formed the dividing
- line between the vista of gallery behind and that ahead, and from this
- point of vantage peered cautiously round the projection in search of the
- cause of Bosin's alarm.
- </p>
- <p>
- This was not far to seek. Immediately beyond the bend the passage expanded
- into a sort of vestibule, communicating, by means of a lofty portal, with
- a spacious, well-lighted chamber. It was not this discovery, however, that
- riveted his gaze, but a dusky figure crouched on the floor of the
- vestibule&mdash;the figure of a native, reclining on a mat, with his back
- to the spot where Don stood. By his side lay a sword of curious
- workmanship, and a huge conch-shell, the pearly pink of its inner surface
- contrasting strangely with the native's coffee-coloured skin. The weapon
- and the shell told their own tale: the native was doing &ldquo;sentry-go.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Over what or whom? With swift glance Don scanned every nook and corner of
- the vestibule, and as much of the interior chamber as lay within range of
- his vision. So far as he could see both were empty, barring only the dusky
- sentinel. Then he fancied he heard the faint clanking of a chain, though
- from what direction the sound proceeded it was impossible to determine.
- Listening with bated breath, he heard it again, and now it seemed to come
- from the larger chamber. His pulses thrilled, and a determined light shone
- in his eyes as he turned them once more upon the sentinel.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll jolly soon fix you, old chap,&rdquo; he said to himself; and noiselessly
- clubbing the musket he carried, he prepared to advance.
- </p>
- <p>
- But for the monkey's vigilance he must have come upon the recumbent guard
- without the slightest warning, for not more than ten paces separated the
- shoulder of rock&mdash;Don's post of observation&mdash;from the mat on
- which the native reclined.
- </p>
- <p>
- To fire upon him was out of the question, since that would fulfil the very
- purpose for which he, with his conch-shell trumpet, was stationed there&mdash;namely,
- to send a thousand wild echoes hurtling through chamber and galleries, and
- so apprise his comrades of impending danger. Moreover, Don had a wholesome
- horror of bloodshed, which at most times effectually held his trigger
- finger in check.
- </p>
- <p>
- A swift, sure blow&mdash;that would be the best means of keeping the
- native's lips from the nozzle of his conch-trumpet. A blow&mdash;ay, there
- was the-rub! For, though the native's back was towards-him, the space by
- which they two were divided must be crossed; and these walls, dumb as they
- looked, had hidden tongues, which would echo and re-echo the faintest
- sound. Could he, then, get near enough to strike?
- </p>
- <p>
- Inch by inch he crept towards the unconscious sentinel, slowly raising the
- butt of the musket as he advanced. So intense was the suspense of those
- few brief moments that he hardly breathed. It seemed as if the very
- beating of his heart must reach the native's ears. Inch by inch, foot by
- foot, until&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0011" id="linkimage-0011"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0213.jpg" alt="0213 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0213.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- The native turned his head; but before he could spring to his feet, or
- even utter a cry, the musket crashed upon his shaven pate, and he rolled
- over on his side without a sound.
- </p>
- <p>
- Don did not stop to ascertain the extent of his injuries. Neither did he
- summon the blacks. Again the clanking of chains rang in his ears, and at a
- bound he crossed the threshold of the larger chamber, An unkempt human
- figure started up in the far corner.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Jack!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And is it really you, old fellow?&rdquo; cried Jack joyfully. &ldquo;Give us your
- hand; and how did you find your way here, I want to know?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You have Bosin to thank for that,&rdquo; replied Don, returning his chum's'
- grip with interest. &ldquo;When I saw your handkerchief&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, the monkey stole it, then! I missed it, don't you know, but never
- imagined that Bosin took it, though he paid me a visit early this morning.
- Well, he did me a good turn that time, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And a better one when he led us back here. But,&rdquo; continued Don in
- hurried, suppressed tones, &ldquo;don't let us waste time palavering, Jack.
- There's not a moment to lose. I've done for old conchy yonder&mdash;knocked
- him on the head&mdash;but the rest may swoop down on us any minute. Say,
- how are you tethered?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Leg,&rdquo; said Jack laconically, rattling a chain which secured him to the
- wall. &ldquo;Stop!&rdquo;&mdash;as Don unslung his cutlass with the intention of
- hacking at the links&mdash;&ldquo;I'll show you a trick worth two of that. You
- see that ring-bolt the chain's fastened to? Well, it's set in lead&mdash;not
- very securely as it happens&mdash;and I've managed to work it so loose
- that I fancy a good hard tug ought to bring it away. Meant to make off on
- my own account, you see, if you hadn't turned up, old fellow. But lay hold
- and let's have a pull for it, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Quick, then!&rdquo; said Don. &ldquo;I thought I heard footsteps.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Throwing their combined weight upon the chain, they pulled for dear life.
- The ring-bolt yielded little by little, and presently came away from its
- setting bodily, like an ancient tooth, and Jack was free. The chain, it is
- true, was still attached to his leg; but as it encircled only one ankle,
- this did not so much matter.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't let it rattle,&rdquo; said Don breathlessly, &ldquo;I'm positive I heard
- footsteps. And here, take this,&rdquo; thrusting the cutlass into Jack's
- disengaged hand. &ldquo;Now, come on!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Barely had he uttered the words when a hollow, prolonged blast, like that
- of a gigantic trumpet with a cold in its throat, filled the chamber with
- deafening clamour. And as the echoes leapt from wall to wall, and buffeted
- each other into silence, another sound succeeded them, faint and far away,
- but swelling momentarily into ominous loudness and nearness.
- </p>
- <p>
- Don clutched his companion's arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The fellow I knocked on the head&mdash;he's come to!&rdquo; he said thickly.
- &ldquo;That was the blast of his conch; and this&rdquo;&mdash;pausing with uplifted
- hand and bated breath until that other sound broke clearly on their ears&mdash;&ldquo;this
- is the tread of heaven only knows how many native feet. Jack, we're
- discovered!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVIII.&mdash;BETWEEN LIFE AND DEATH.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">F</span>our galleries
- centred on the rock-chamber, and the confused, tumultuous rush of feet
- which followed the blast of the conch-shell like an ominous echo,
- proceeded from that particular gallery opposite the vestibule.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Seems to be a rare lot of them; but we needn't stop to reckon 'em up,&rdquo;
- said Jack, with a constrained laugh. &ldquo;Lead the way, old fellow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Into the smaller chamber they dashed, to find the exit blocked by the
- sentinel with sword drawn. Rapidly reversing his musket, Don bore down
- upon him&mdash;he, to do him justice, standing his ground bravely,&mdash;and
- with the butt-end of the weapon dealt the nigger a blow in the stomach
- that doubled him up like a broken bulrush.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where are the others?&rdquo; cried Jack, as they rounded the shoulder of rock
- separating the antechamber from the passage. &ldquo;You never came alone!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No; I left them just here&mdash;told them to wait,&rdquo; said Don, peering
- about in search of the blacks. &ldquo;They must have gone back; thought they'd
- save their skins while they could, I suppose, the chicken-hearted beggars!
- Ha, here's Bosin, at any rate.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Swinging the monkey upon his shoulder, he set off at a run down the
- passage, Jack following as close as the weight of the chain would allow
- him, to do. They had proceeded only a short distance when a faint,
- sepulchral shout brought them to a stand. The sound seemed to proceed from
- a gallery on their immediate right. The way out did not lie in that
- direction.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's Pug's wheeze,&rdquo; said Don. &ldquo;They've taken the wrong turning;&rdquo; and he
- drew a deep breath to answer the call.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack interposed quickly. &ldquo;Stop! The natives will be down on us soon enough
- without, that. Off with you, old fellow, and fetch' pur party back. I'll
- wait here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Already Don was racing down the side passage. Presently Jack heard him
- jitter a cautious &ldquo;hullo.&rdquo; A short silence followed then the echoes told
- him that the fugitives were hastily retracing their steps. At the same
- moment a confused uproar burst on his ears from the direction of the
- chamber in his rear. The pursuing mob had turned the angle of the passage
- and were actually in sight. The chain attached to Jack's leg clanked
- impatiently. He fairly danced with excitement. That ill-advised move on
- the part of the blacks had almost proved fatal to their sole chance of
- escape.
- </p>
- <p>
- But not quite; for now Don and the blacks came up, Jack joined them, and,
- with the oncoming thunder of many feet loud in their ears, away they sped,
- running as they alone can run who know that death is at their heels.
- </p>
- <p>
- Two circumstances favoured them so long as the race was confined to the
- cramped limits of the corridors: the smallness of their own number, and
- the multitude of their pursuers. Where four could run with ease, forty
- wasted their breath in fighting each other for running room.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We must put the pit between us and-these howling demons while they're
- tumbling over each other in the passage here,&rdquo; cried Don.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was their only hope. Racing on by Jack's side, close on-the heels of
- the blacks, he rapidly explained to his chum&mdash;who knew nothing of the
- pit, having been brought into the rock by a more circuitous route&mdash;the
- nature of the contemplated manoeuvre; and gave Spottie and Puggles their
- instructions how to act, backed up by a wholesome threat of summary
- abandonment to the enemy should they shirk when it came to the crucial
- point, the plank. The blacks were to cross first, Jack next; while he,
- Don, would cover their retreat as best he could. To this arrangement Jack
- could raise no demur. He was too seriously handicapped by the chain.
- </p>
- <p>
- A final spurt, and they cleared the tunnel and reached the pit. The plank
- lay where they had left it. Across it ran their only road to safety. At a
- significant signal from Don Spottie led off, and, when he had reached the
- further side in safety, Puggles followed in his tracks. Doffs threat,
- coupled with the ominous uproar belched forth by the mouth of the tunnel,
- eclipsed all fear of the crocodiles.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, Jack,&rdquo; cried Don, ere the plank had ceased to vibrate under
- Puggles's tread, &ldquo;after you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack crossed, and Don was in the act of stepping on the unstable bridge,
- when the foremost of the native gang burst from the gallery. One swift
- backward glance&mdash;a glance that stowed him how alarmingly narrow was
- the margin between escape and capture&mdash;and with outstretched arms he
- balanced himself on the handbreadth of plank&mdash;it was scarcely more&mdash;and
- began the perilous passage. Swift as was this backward glance, it sufficed
- to show him, too, that the leader of the pursuit was none other than the
- escaped lascar; and ere he had traversed half the plank's length, he felt
- it yield and rebound beneath the quick tread of the fellows feet. At the
- same instant Jack raised a warning shout.
- </p>
- <p>
- There are moments when the strongest nerve quails, the steadiest head
- swings a little off its balance, the surest foot slips. Such a moment did
- this prove for Don. The disconcerting vibration of the plank, the
- knowledge that the lascar was at his very back, Jack's sudden shout&mdash;these
- for an instant conspired against and overcame his natural cool-headedness.
- He made a hurried step or two, staggered, and, his foot catching in the
- rope where it encircled the plank a short distance from the end, he
- stumbled and fell.
- </p>
- <p>
- Fell! but in falling dislodged the end of the plank which lay behind him,
- and on which the lascar stood, from its hold upon the further brink of the
- pit. The lascar, throwing up his arms with a despairing shriek, plunged
- headlong into the pool, where he was instantly seized upon by the ravenous
- crocodiles and torn limb from limb.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0012" id="linkimage-0012"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0223.jpg" alt="0223 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0223.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- And now, if ever, did the &ldquo;Providence that sits up aloft&rdquo; watch over Don.
- Almost miraculously, as it seemed, instead of plunging into the horrible
- death-trap below, he fell astride the plank, the hither end of which still
- retained its hold upon the rock at an angle of perhaps sixty-five degrees;
- and up this steep incline&mdash;whither Bosin had already preceded him&mdash;with
- Jack's assistance he managed to scramble. Then they laid hold upon the
- plank and dragged it from the pit, amid the furious howling of the baffled
- rabble debouching from the tunnel opposite.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Safe over, at any rate,&rdquo; panted Don. &ldquo;But&mdash;good heavens! what's
- become of the lascar?&rdquo; For, suspended as he had been between life and
- death, he had neither heard the lascar's shriek nor witnessed the horrible
- manner in which he had received his quietus at the jaws of the crocodiles.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack pointed out a bright crimson blotch on the surface of the pool.
- &ldquo;We've seen the last of him, poor devil,&rdquo; said he with a shudder. &ldquo;Say,
- did I tell you&mdash;no, of course I didn't&mdash;that this fellows not <i>my</i>
- lascar?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What, not the lascar who's been hounding us all this time?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The lascar who's been hounding us on the island here&mdash;yes; but not
- the one who tried to brain me on board the cutter and got the knife for
- his pains. <i>That</i> chap kicked the bucket shortly after he got ashore;
- this fellow's his brother. They're as like as two peas.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don vented his astonishment in a shrill whistle. &ldquo;Then that accounts for
- it,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;for there being no scar on his shoulder, I mean.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Precisely; and it came jolly near accounting for yours truly as well,&rdquo;
- said Jack, with a queer little laugh and a significant shrug of the
- shoulders. &ldquo;This fellow, you see&mdash;the one who was just now eaten by
- the crocodiles&mdash;raised a sort of vendetta against us when his brother
- died, and of course he wanted to try his hand on me first, since it was I
- who gave his brother his death-blow. He'd have done it, too, if it hadn't
- been for old Salambo. But the old man put his foot down&mdash;I overheard
- their talk last night, and that's how I know&mdash;and said he wouldn't
- allow any violence, lucky for me. He was hoping for overtures from you, I
- suppose. But I say, what's this about the scar? How do <i>you</i> know
- there was none on the fellow's shoulder?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How do I know? Why, you see, it was this way. I was swimming the creek
- yesterday morning&mdash;you shall hear how that came about later on, by
- the way&mdash;when the lascar,&rdquo; indicating the crimson blotch on the pool,
- &ldquo;tried to throttle me. I had to knock him on the head to quiet him. Then I
- towed him ashore, and the captain and I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The captain!&rdquo; cried Jack with a start. &ldquo;By Jove, we've left him behind!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The wild hurry-scurry and excitement of the last half-hour had afforded
- Don scant opportunity for speaking of the captain's sad end&mdash;had,
- indeed, driven all thought of the old sailor from his mind, as it also had
- from Jack's. Now that the captain was mentioned, however, Jack, naturally
- enough, jumped to the conclusion that he had formed one of the rescue
- party, and had been overlooked in their recent precipitate flight. The
- time was now come when he must be undeceived; but when Don attempted to
- disclose the sad truth emotion choked his utterance, and he could not. But
- Jack, gazing into his convulsed face, instinctively read there what his
- lips refused to utter.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;When did it happen?&rdquo; he asked in a hushed, awed whisper. &ldquo;And how?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Controlling his voice with an effort, &ldquo;Only last night,&rdquo; faltered Don;
- &ldquo;the lascar did it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack turned away and buried his face in his hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He was strangled,&rdquo; Don presently resumed, &ldquo;strangled with that cord you
- see tied to the rope there. Afterwards, when the lascar gave me the slip,
- as he did in the night, he took the cord with him; but Bosin somehow
- recovered it and fetched it back. I little guessed how it would serve the
- lascar out when I used it to bridge the pit!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Retribution!&rdquo; cried Jack, flinging his hands impulsively away from his
- face. &ldquo;He's rightly served, the villain. Only&rdquo;&mdash;regretfully&mdash;&ldquo;I
- wish it had been me instead of the cord, that's all. But it's done,
- anyhow, so let's get out of this.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And it was time; for during this conversation the natives had not been
- idle. At this very moment, indeed, a number of them rushed shouting from
- the tunnel, bearing other planks with which to bridge the chasm. Don and
- his chum did not wait to see this done. Without further loss of time they
- set out for the creek, in which direction the blacks had already preceded
- them.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hardly had they entered the tunnel, however, when they encountered the
- blacks, running back full pelt; and before Don could inquire the cause of
- their precipitate return, a shout, reverberating up the vaulted corridor
- from the semi-darkness ahead, made inquiry unnecessary. While he and Jack
- had dallied in fancied security, the natives, skirting the pit by another
- route, had cut off their retreat.
- </p>
- <p>
- And, as if to increase the consternation caused by this discovery, at the
- same instant a chorus of yells in their rear announced that the party in
- pursuit had succeeded in bridging the pit anew.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIX.&mdash;ONE-TO-TWENTY GIVES TWENTY-TO-ONE THE WORST OF IT.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>emmed in!&rdquo; cried
- Don, as the desperate character of the situation flashed upon him. &ldquo;Shall
- we try to cut our way through the gang ahead, or fall back on the pit?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Back!&rdquo; was Jack's prompt rejoinder. &ldquo;Once prevent the niggers in our rear
- from crossing the pit, and we're all right. We'll have more fighting room
- there, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Back they ran, hustling the blacks before them. At the pit matters were
- even worse than they had feared. Half-a-dozen planks already spanned the
- chasm, each of them black with natives, who jostled each other in their
- eagerness to cross, supremely indifferent to the reptilian horrors that
- awaited them should they lose their balance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hurrah!&rdquo; shouted Jack, pouncing upon the 'bobbing end of the nearest
- plank. &ldquo;Tumble 'em in! To the crocodiles with the beggars!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Though the occupants of the plank could understand not a syllable of
- Jack's speech, they readily understood his intention; and crowding back
- upon each other with warning cries, by their combined weight they hastened
- the very catastrophe they desired to avert. The plank bent like a bow,
- snapped in twain, and launched its shrieking burden into the abyss. In
- their frantic efforts to escape, a number of the doomed wretches clutched
- at a second plank that happened to lie within reach. Already heavily
- overloaded, this also gave way, and added its quota to the horrible
- commotion of the pool. Two planks were thus accounted for.
- </p>
- <p>
- Meanwhile Don and the blacks had not been slow to second Jack's efforts.
- By their united strength a third plank was dislodged, and they were in the
- act of attacking the fourth when their energies were diverted into another
- channel.
- </p>
- <p>
- For at this juncture the detachment of natives who had cut off the retreat
- to the creek suddenly appeared upon the scene. The remaining planks, too,
- now began to pour the enemy upon the hither side of the pit in steady
- streams.
- </p>
- <p>
- The rocky shelf' that here flanked the chasm had, perhaps, a width of
- three yards, and that portion of it to the left of the creek-tunnel's
- mouth, where the unmolested planks lay, was speedily packed with natives,
- armed with formidable pikes and knives, who bore down upon the little
- group with furious outcries and all the weight of superior numbers. Jack
- was the first to perceive the danger.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To the right! It's all up with us if we're surrounded.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Suiting the action to the words, he darted to the right, closely followed
- by Don and the blacks. Here they stationed themselves side by side, the
- timid blacks in the rear, and prepared to meet their assailants.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Couldn't be better!&rdquo; was Jack's cheerful comment, as he took a hasty
- survey of their surroundings. &ldquo;Wall on our right; pit on left; enemy in
- front; and elbow-room behind. Say, we'll buckle to with the muskets first,
- and reserve the cutlasses till it comes to close quarters. Look out;
- they're coming!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- On came the howling, disorderly mob, maddened by the terrible fate of
- their comrades, and thirsting for vengeance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ready!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Together the muskets rose to the level.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't fire too high. Now, let 'em have it hot!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The walls of the narrow enclosure rocked with the thunderous report. The
- mob quailed, fell back: &ldquo;they had no stomach for cold lead.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's all right,&rdquo; said Jack coolly as they rapidly reloaded; &ldquo;but I wish
- we had breechloaders! A ball, quick!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The human wave in front, silent except for a sullen murmur that only
- waited for the rush to be renewed ere it swelled into fury, was again
- raising its ugly, threatening crest.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I doubt if we check it this time,&rdquo; said Don, watching it with anxious
- eyes; &ldquo;they've seen us reload, and know where they have the advantage.
- Better get your cutlass&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ready!&rdquo; cried his companion.
- </p>
- <p>
- The wave, broke. A hoarse roar, a tumultuous rusk such as it seemed no
- human power could withstand, and it was upon them. Again the walls leapt
- to the thunder of the muskets; again the serried ranks quailed. But before
- the smoke had left the muzzles of the muskets, the wave swept on again
- with redoubled fury, poured itself upon and around the brave lads, swept
- them off their feet For a moment it seemed as if the death-balance must
- kick the beam.
- </p>
- <p>
- But the &ldquo;final tussle&rdquo; was not to be just yet. Spottie and Puggles,
- terrified into momentary daring by the imminence of their own danger, now
- threw themselves into the fray with an energy-which, if it did little
- execution, at least served to divert many a blow from their masters. No
- mean help that&mdash;to take the blows meant for another.
- </p>
- <p>
- Nor were the masters themselves slow to recognise and profit by this fact.
- Right and left they slashed, dealing terrific swinging blows when, they
- could get them in, lunging desperately at the sinewy, half-naked forms
- about them when they could not, until British pluck and British muscle
- told, as they ever must in a righteous struggle for life and liberty, and
- One-to-twenty found itself clear of the <i>mêlée</i>, with a ghastly ridge
- of wounded at its feet, and fighting room behind.
- </p>
- <p>
- Well they had it! For the space of one deep breath the disconcerted rabble
- suspended hostilities, as if unable to believe that Twenty-to-one had got
- the worst of it. Then their ranks closed up into a solid mass of dusky,
- perspiring, blood-stained forms, and the onslaught was renewed&mdash;not
- hurriedly now, but with a watchful determination, a guarded, fierceness,
- that forced One-to-twenty back foot by foot until but little room was left
- for fighting, and none, in sooth, for quarter when it should come, as soon
- it must, to the sheer wall and the bitter end.
- </p>
- <p>
- Once more the blacks had slunk to the rear&mdash;had, in fact, already
- reached the wall, where, since they could get no farther, they cowered in
- miserable anticipation of speedy death. The &ldquo;final tussle&rdquo; was not far off
- now. Don and Jack had barely room to swing their cutlasses in. So much of
- the rocky ledge as might be measured by a single backward stride&mdash;only
- that separated them from the wall and the last scene of all. Inch by inch,
- their teeth hard set, their breath coming and going in quick, laboured
- gasps, they contested this narrow selvage of life. So the balance hung,
- when there came a second momentary lull in the deadly game of give and
- take. The dusky foe could now afford to breathe, being confident of the
- issue.
- </p>
- <p>
- Keeping a wary eye upon their movements, Don seized his chum by the hand.
- &ldquo;I never thought it would come to&mdash;to this, old fellow,&rdquo; he said
- huskily; &ldquo;God knows I didn't!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack swallowed hard several times before he could trust himself to reply.
- &ldquo;No more did I. But were not going to funk now, old fellow; and&mdash;and
- I'm glad it's to be together, anyhow!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- One mute, agonised look into each other's eyes; one last pressure of the
- hand, and again, shoulder to shoulder, they faced the foe and the
- inevitable end.
- </p>
- <p>
- At this instant, when it seemed that not a ghost of a chance remained,
- there arose on their immediate right a shrill chattering sound&mdash;a
- sound that, somehow, had in it a ring of joyousness so strangely out of
- keeping with the situation that Don turned with a start and a sudden
- thrill of hope towards the quarter whence it came. As he did so, his eyes
- fell upon Bosin, forgotten in the heat of the fray, and now perched&mdash;good
- God! upon what?
- </p>
- <p>
- Don clutched his companion's arm and pointed with unsteady finger.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Look!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XX.&mdash;THE LAST STRAW.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span> glance&mdash;more
- he did not dare bestow whilst confronted by that treacherous throng&mdash;showed
- Jack what he and Don had hitherto entirely failed (and no wonder!) to
- observe. In the extreme corner of the ledge on which they stood, a deep,
- narrow gash divided the towering side wall, and up this, clear to the
- summit of the rock, there ran a flight of steps. On these Bosin had
- perched himself. At their foot crouched the blacks, blind to everything
- except their own danger. .
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wake those niggers up, and start them on ahead up the steps!&rdquo; said Jack
- quickly. &ldquo;Look sharp! they're going to rush us again.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Falling on Spottie and Puggles, by dint of vigorous cuffing and shoving
- Don succeeded in getting them on the stairs. Rapidly as this was done, it
- produced an instantaneous effect upon the native rabble. They too had
- overlooked the existence of the stairway until Don's action recalled it to
- mind. A moment later the opening was besieged by a clamouring, infuriated
- throng.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Up with you, old fellow!&rdquo; cried Jack, turning on the natives with drawn
- cutlass after he had ascended some half-dozen steps, and thus covering his
- friend's retreat. &ldquo;You had your innings at the pit; now it's my turn.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Stationed on the steps as he was, Jack would have possessed no mean
- advantage over the natives but for one circumstance. The chain attached to
- his leg dangled down the steps, and the natives, discovering this,
- promptly seized it. In a twinkling Jack was dragged back into the midst of
- the furious rabble.
- </p>
- <p>
- Don was half-way up the steps when the uproar caused by this mishap
- reached his ears. He turned just in time to see his companion disappear.
- </p>
- <p>
- Down the steps he bounded, clearing half-a-dozen at a leap, until barely
- that number lay between him and the bottom, where, owing to Jack's
- desperate resistance, the natives had their hands too full to notice his
- approach. Gauging the distance with his eye, he took a flying leap from
- this height into the very midst of them, scattering them in all
- directions. As he intended, he overleapt his friend, who now quickly
- regained his feet. Before the natives had time to recover from the shock
- of Don's precipitate arrival in their midst, he and Jack were well up the
- steps again. One or two of the gang made as if to follow them, but turned
- tail when menaced with the cutlasses.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nick and go that time!&rdquo; cried Don, as he gained the top and threw himself
- exhausted upon the rock. &ldquo;Just for a minute I thought it was all U.P.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me too,&rdquo; said Jack, with more gravity than grammar; &ldquo;and, between
- ourselves, the sensation wasn't half pleasant, either. But, I say, are you
- hurt?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No; nothing worse than a scratch or two. And you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I'm all right. Though it's little short of a miracle that we weren't
- spitted on those beastly pikes. Say, do you think they'll try to rush us
- here?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hardly, after the lesson we've taught them; unless, indeed, there is a
- wider approach to the summit here than those steps. We ought to look about
- us at once so as to make sure.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Right you are,&rdquo; assented Jack. &ldquo;Let's load the muskets and leave the
- niggers in charge here while we take our bearin's like, as the captain
- used to say, poor old chap!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But when it came to charging the muskets&mdash;old-fashioned
- muzzle-loaders, it will be remembered&mdash;they made an unpleasant
- discovery. Don had lost his powder-flask in the fight.
- </p>
- <p>
- To make matters worse, Spottie, when called upon to produce his, confessed
- that he had left it on board the cutter in the hurry of the start. Only
- Pug's flask remained; but this, unfortunately, was nearly empty. There was
- barely enough powder left for three charges.
- </p>
- <p>
- This was but one of a series of disconcerting revelations which quickly
- followed the loading of the muskets.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the first place, the most careful search failed to disclose any other
- means of egress from the Rock. In all the length and breadth of its summit
- they could find no opening except the one by which they had ascended,
- while on every hand its sides fell away in declivities so steep and smooth
- that not even Bosin could have found a foothold upon them&mdash;-or in
- perpendicular precipices that made the head swim as one looked down from
- their dizzy height upon the town, or sands, or jungle, far below.
- </p>
- <p>
- With the bright sky above, and the free air of heaven all around them,
- they were as effectually hemmed in as when that bristling array of pikes
- forced them back to the blank wall. The jaws of the trap were a little
- wider; the effects of its deadly grip a little delayed&mdash;that was all.
- </p>
- <p>
- To add to the horrors of their position, absolute starvation stared them
- in the face in the event of a prolonged siege. Since early morning they
- had eaten nothing, and the day was now far advanced; they had brought no
- food with them, and none was procurable here. A small temple crowned the
- Rock; but when they penetrated it in the hope of finding fruit or other
- edible offerings, its dustladen shrine spoke only too plainly of long
- disuse. Even the thin clusters of dates upon the few palms that eked out a
- stunted existence in a shallow depression of the Rock were acrid,
- shrivelled, and wholly unfit for food. The pit, it is true, contained
- water; but this, even had it been drinkable, lay hopelessly beyond their
- reach.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No powder, no grub, no drink; it's a pretty, pickle to be in, anyhow,&rdquo;
- said Jack, ruefully summing up these calamitous discoveries as they
- rejoined the blacks at the head of the stairs. &ldquo;And, by Jove!&rdquo; pointing
- down the steps, &ldquo;they've gone and doubled the guard.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The waters the worst,&rdquo; he presently resumed, scanning the arid expanse of
- rock thirstily. &ldquo;We could hold out for days, if we only had a supply of
- that. As it is, I don't dare think what this place will be like under a
- midday sun&mdash;ugh!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All the more reason we should leave it, then,&rdquo; said Don.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don was silent. The question did not seem to admit of an answer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, see here, old' fellow,&rdquo; said Jack; &ldquo;I admit, of course, that U.P. is
- written large all over the face of things just now; but at the same time
- it strikes me there's more than one way of getting off our white
- elephant's back.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's only the tunnel to the creek,&rdquo; said Don, &ldquo;and that's not going to
- help us much while it's chock-full of natives, and we have no powder.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then why not go over the cliff?&rdquo; demanded Jack.
- </p>
- <p>
- This daring and seemingly absurd proposal Don greeted with a stare of
- utter incredulity. &ldquo;That would be facing death with a vengeance,&rdquo; was his
- far from encouraging comment. &ldquo;How high do you estimate the cliff to be,
- anyway?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A couple of hundred feet or so.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don laughed. &ldquo;You may as well say thousands, so far as our chances of
- reaching the base in safety are concerned.. The thing's a sheer
- impossibility, I tell you; Bosin himself couldn't do it. You're downright
- mad to think of it, Jack.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Am I? I admit the difficulty, but not the impossibility. What Bosin can't
- do, we can.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How, I should like to know?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;By making a rope. See here, did you notice those palm-trees we passed
- while making the round of the Rock?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I did; but 'pon my word I don't see what they've got to do with your
- proposal. Ropes don't grow on palm-trees.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, but they do, though. Do you mean to say that you never saw the
- natives make a rope out of the branches of a palm?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course I have. And what's more, I know how it's done. But say,&rdquo; his
- tone suddenly changing to one of anxiety, &ldquo;suppose the palm-leaves don't
- give, us enough material?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm not sure they will,&rdquo; said Jack doubtfully, &ldquo;unless we spin it, out
- pretty fine; and that, of course, increases the danger of breakage. Well,
- if we run short, we can make shift with the blacks' clothes and turbans.
- But it's going to take a jolly long time to make&mdash;though we ought to
- finish it easily by to-morrow night. Then, ho for the cliff! And now, old
- fellow, just lie down, will you, and take a snooze: you're completely done
- up. When the moon rises I'll call you, and we'll have a whack at the
- trees, while Pug and Spottie do sentry-go.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The blacks, poor fellows, were already sound asleep, with Bosin snuggled
- up between them; and Don was not long in following them into that realm of
- dreams, where waking cares, if they intrude at all, more often than not
- lie low and shadowy on the horizon. So Jack was left alone in the darkness
- and solitude of the Rock.
- </p>
- <p>
- Kicking off his shoes, and tucking the end of the chain beneath his belt
- to secure perfect noiselessness of movement, he shouldered a musket, and
- fell to pacing back and forth past the black orifice that marked the point
- where the stairway cleft the rocky floor. Monotonous work it was, and
- weird. The steely glint of the stars, the mournful sobbing of the surf
- upon the sands, sent an involuntary shiver through his frame. He crept
- softly to the extreme brink of the chasm and peered into its depths. Below
- all was pitchy blackness; he could distinguish nothing, save, far down, at
- an infinite depth as it seemed, the faint, fantastic reflection of a star
- on the surface of the pool. Occasionally a sound of lazy splashing floated
- up to where he stood, and he thought with creeping flesh of the horrible,
- ghoulish surfeit the crocodiles had had that day.
- </p>
- <p>
- To and fro beneath the steely stars&mdash;tramp, tramp, tramp, to the
- solemn dirge of the sea. Would the laggard moon never rise and put an end
- to his weird vigil?
- </p>
- <p>
- Hark! what was that? He paused and listened with suspended breath, his
- back towards the dim outline of the stairway; listened, but heard only the
- moaning of the surf and the regular, sonorous breathing of his sleeping
- companions.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;One of those gorged crocodile beasts got a nightmare,&rdquo; he muttered, with
- a smile at the comic aspect of his own fancy. &ldquo;Ha,&rdquo; catching sight of a
- faint, silvery glow in the east, &ldquo;there's the moon at last. Time to call
- our fellows; I've had enough of this death's watch, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- While uttering these words he made a step forward with the intention of
- calling Don and the blacks, when something whizzed swiftly through the
- air, he felt a sharp twinge, an intense burning sensation in his left arm,
- a deathly faintness stealing over him, and realised that he was wounded&mdash;wounded
- by a dexterously-thrown knife, which, had it not been for that timely
- forward stride, must have buried itself deep in his back. Luckily, in
- spite of the pain and giddiness, he retained his presence of mind. Quick
- as a flash he, wheeled, brought the hammer of the musket to full cock, and
- the musket itself to his shoulder. Above the yawning staircase the outline
- of a human figure showed indistinctly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;One for you,&rdquo; muttered Jack, and fired.
- </p>
- <p>
- The figure threw up its arms and fell backwards.
- </p>
- <p>
- The report of the musket brought Don to his feet. &ldquo;What's the row?&rdquo; he
- asked, running to his companion's side in alarm.
- </p>
- <p>
- The appearance of other figures in lieu of the first supplied a more
- pertinent answer to this question than Jack could have given. He snatched
- up one of the remaining muskets, Jack possessing himself of the other. By
- this time Spottie and Puggles were also up, but, like the dutiful servants
- they were, they kept well in the rear of their masters.
- </p>
- <p>
- The enemy were now literally swarming up the steps and sides of the
- stairway.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack gave the word&mdash;&ldquo;Blaze away!&rdquo; and a double report went hurtling
- wildly out over the sea.
- </p>
- <p>
- Clubbing their muskets, they then fell upon and began clubbing the
- escaladers with an energy that speedily choked the contracted avenue of
- approach to the summit of the Rock with a heaving, scrambling, trampling
- mass of natives, whose desperate struggles to regain their lost foothold
- upon the steps only served to facilitate their descent to the bottom. In
- five minutes' time the repulse was complete; the foe retreated into the
- dark security of the chasm, leaving some six or eight of their number
- lying upon the scene of the affray. Jack threw aside his musket and
- sprang: down the steps to where they lay.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What are you after now?&rdquo; cried Don, leaping down after him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Cloths,&rdquo; was Jack's laconic rejoinder, as he unceremoniously began to
- divest the natives of the long strips of country cotton that encircled
- their waists. &ldquo;We want these for our rope.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- On hearing this Don also set to work, and in a short time they had secured
- some half-dozen cloths, together with an equal number of turbans, which
- lay scattered all up and down the steps like enormous mushrooms. With this
- booty they returned in triumph to the summit of the rock.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They'll average twelve feet at least,&rdquo; said Jack, eyeing the tumbled heap
- critically. &ldquo;Let's see&mdash;twelve twelves make a hundred and forty-four;
- and by tearing them in two down the middle we'll get double length. Total,
- two hundred and eighty-eight feet. Hurrah, we've got our rope!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And a far safer one,&rdquo; observed Don, &ldquo;than if we had patched it up out of
- those palm-leaves. Well, it's an ill wind that&mdash;-&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He got no further, for Jack suddenly dropped at his feet as though he had
- been shot. He had fainted from loss of blood, as Don, to his horror,
- quickly discovered. As a matter of fact, the knife that had penetrated
- Jack's arm was still in the wound, and its projecting hilt was the first
- intimation Don received of his chum's hairbreadth escape. By the time he
- had removed the knife, ripped open the coat-sleeve, and bandaged the wound
- with a fragment torn from one of the cloths, Jack opened his eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why didn't you tell me about this?&rdquo; exclaimed Don reproachfully. &ldquo;How did
- it happen?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How? Oh, one of those treacherous niggers shot his knife at me&mdash;the
- old trick,&rdquo; said Jack, scrambling to his feet and shaking himself with
- nonchalant air, &ldquo;I'd have told you, only I forgot it in the scuffle,
- Nothing but a scratch, anyway; I'm all right.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don's look was rather dubious, for, in spite of his companion's assumption
- of <i>sang-froid</i>, he could not but foresee the possible effect of a
- badly-wounded arm upon their proposed descent of the cliff.
- </p>
- <p>
- The moon was now well above the horizon; so, setting the blacks to watch
- the stairs, they went to work on the rope at once&mdash;an easy task
- compared to what it must have been had they attempted to utilise the
- tough, fibrous palm-branches, as at first proposed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You haven't told me yet,&rdquo; Jack presently observed, pausing in his task of
- knotting together the long strips of cloth as Don tore them off ready to
- his hand; &ldquo;you haven't told me how you came to lay the lascar by the heels&mdash;in
- the creek, I think you said? Let's have the story now, old fellow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, there's a whole cable's-length of events leading up to that,&rdquo; said
- Don. &ldquo;I'd better begin at the beginning&mdash;with your disappearance, I
- mean.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- So there, beneath the stars, while the rope which was to ensure escape
- from the Rock grew under, their busy fingers, he recounted link by link
- the chain of events which the days and nights of Jack's absence had
- forged.
- </p>
- <p>
- Far into the night did the story spin itself out, for Jack had many
- questions to ask, many comments to make; until at last it came to that
- terrible moment when Don had sought to rouse the captain, and found him to
- be sleeping the sleep that knows no waking. His voice grew choked and
- husky then Jack bent low over his work, and tears glistened in the ghostly
- moonlight.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And in his jacket pocket I found this,&rdquo; concluded Don, producing the
- well-thumbed Prayer Book. &ldquo;On the fly-leaf&mdash;no, you can't make it out
- now, the light is so faint&mdash;but on the fly-leaf the dear old chap had
- written that whatever happened, he was to be buried at sea. So this
- morning, just before daybreak, we put off in the cutter, and gave him what
- he wished for&mdash;a seaman's burial.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack knew the whole sad story now, and for a time they fell into one of
- those silences which, somehow, are apt to follow the mention of the dead
- who have endeared themselves to us in life&mdash;silences eloquent, in
- their very stillness, of regret and grief.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There, it's done,&rdquo; said Jack at last, as he tied and tested the final
- knot. &ldquo;And now, hurrah for the cliff!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don had begun to coil the rope, when he suddenly paused in his task and
- exclaimed:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say, how are we going <i>to fasten the end?</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Fasten the end? Why, to&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; Jack came to an abrupt stop,
- adding blankly after a moment: &ldquo;Blest if I know what we <i>can</i> fasten
- it to!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nor I,&rdquo; Don acknowledged, as much taken aback as his companion by the
- appalling nature of this discovery. &ldquo;There are the palms, of course, and
- the temple; but they're too far from the cliff to be of any use. The rope
- will hardly reach as it is, I'm afraid.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, there must be some way of securing it,&rdquo; replied Jack incredulously,
- &ldquo;Surely there's a crack or something we can wedge one of the cutlasses
- into. Let's look, anyhow!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Look they did, but not with the result Jack had so confidently
- anticipated. From side to side, from end to end of the Rock, they searched
- and searched again, even going down on their hands and knees that they
- might perchance feel what had escaped the eye, But without avail. So far
- as the moonlight enabled them to discern&mdash;and it made the place
- nearly as light as day&mdash;neither crack nor projection marred the
- smooth surface of the stone. They gave it up at length, utterly
- disheartened. Even Jack felt this to be the last straw, and abandoned
- himself to despair.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's a bad job altogether,&rdquo; was the despondent comment with which he
- threw himself down beside the apparently useless coil of rope. &ldquo;God help
- us, we haven't a ghost of a chance left!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, things aren't quite so bad as that!&rdquo; replied his companion, with an
- assumption of hopefulness he was far from feeling. &ldquo;Who can say what may
- turn up? The darkest hour is just before the dawn, you know.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But,&rdquo; said Jack, &ldquo;suppose there isn't any dawn, what then?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXI. RIVALS FOR THE HONOURS OF DEATH.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span> night of dread
- foreboding, of weary watching for the day that seemed as if it would never
- come. With what tantalising slowness did the snail-like stars crawl across
- the black vault of the heavens! And when day came, what then?
- </p>
- <p>
- Hunger and thirst, danger and despair, and the certainty of death! But no
- need to await the dawn for these; already they were here. Comfortable
- bed-fellows, truly, and for a bed the bare, unyielding rock.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack lay with his head pillowed upon the coil of rope. Not that he found
- it a comfortable resting-place. The knowledge of what the rope could <i>not</i>
- do for them made it a pillow of thorns. He could not rest. The last thread
- of hope had broken, plunging him into the abyss of despair. Besides, his
- arm had become extremely painful within the last hour; he was restless,
- feverish. Fever goads the brain. Jack's brain was just then busier,
- perhaps, than it had ever been before. He felt none of the sharp gnawings
- of hunger, none of the insatiable cravings of thirst, though, as a matter
- of fact, these were even then conspiring with his wound to fever his blood
- and keep him awake, and make him think, think, think with: never an
- instant's pause. When thought is goaded like this, it speedily verges on
- delirium.
- </p>
- <p>
- To give way to despondency was not at all like Jack; and as he tossed from
- side to side and thought upon the &ldquo;whine&rdquo; (that was what he called it, in
- his own mind) in which he had indulged a little while ago when the utter
- desperateness of the situation first burst upon him&mdash;when he thought
- of this, he felt heartily ashamed of himself. He was a coward, a rank,
- out-and-out coward. He hated himself for his faint-hearted, babyish lack
- of spirit. But he would redeem his reputation yet. He would show them&mdash;meaning
- Don and the blacks&mdash;that he was no coward, anyhow!
- </p>
- <p>
- The blacks, as they crossed and recrossed each other on their noiseless
- beat, thought little and said less. They were desperately hungry, and
- hunger is the one fellow-feeling that does not make us wondrous kind.
- Every now and then they tightened their waist-cloths a little, but beyond
- this gave no outward sign or token of what they thought or felt.
- </p>
- <p>
- So the night wore on, and still Jack thought in restless silence. There
- was a deeper flush on his cheek, but it was no longer the flush of shame.
- The fever in his blood, the delirium in his brain, were rising. So was his
- resolution. He flung himself about restlessly, muttering. He would show
- them he was no coward, anyhow!
- </p>
- <p>
- So the night wore on, until by-and-by, as Don turned for the hundredth
- time upon his uneasy couch&mdash;for he, too, was unable to rest&mdash;his
- hand came into accidental contact with that of his chum. He started;
- Jack's hand was fiery hot.
- </p>
- <p>
- Housed by his companion's touch and movement, Jack sat bolt upright, and
- gazed about him in an excited, feverish fashion, muttering incoherently.
- His breath came and went in short, hurried catches, and in his eyes shone
- an unnatural wildness that struck terror to Don's heart. Knowing nothing
- of his chum's resolve, he thought him simply delirious.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Lie down,&rdquo; he said soothingly, placing his hand on Jack's shoulder, and
- attempting, with gentle force, to push him back into his former recumbent
- position.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack flung the hand aside petulantly. Whatever of delirium there might be
- in his eyes and manner, his words, though spoken rapidly and with
- excitement, were rational enough.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Look here, old fellow,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;it's all my fault, your being here in
- this fix; and I'm bound to do my level best to get you safe out of it,
- especially after the way I funked a while back. No, don't cut in and try
- to stop me&mdash;I know what I'm saying right enough, though I expect I do
- look a bit wild and that. Now, my arm here&mdash;I ain't said much about
- it&mdash;'tain't like me to whine, anyhow&mdash;at least not often&mdash;but
- all the same, my arm's getting jolly bad. Knotting the rope and that, you
- see, has made it a bit worse, and&mdash;well, the fact is, old fellow, I
- don't believe I could go down that rope to save my neck, even supposing it
- to be fastened, you understand.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I feared as much,&rdquo; said Don gravely.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes? Well, that's just how it stands,&rdquo; Jack went rapidly on. &ldquo;Tisn't that
- I'm afraid, you understand&mdash;there's no cliff hereabouts that would
- make me funk&mdash;it's simply that my arm's out of gear and won't work.
- Not even if the rope were fastened, you see, which it isn't. And that's
- what I'm coming at, old fellow. Look here, I'll tell you what we <i>can</i>
- do. Spottie and Pug can lower you away&mdash;over the cliff, you know&mdash;and
- then, when Pug and I have sent Spottie after you, I'll manage somehow to
- pay out the line while Pug follows. He's the lightest weight of the lot,
- anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All very well,&rdquo; demurred Don, who thought he saw a fatal objection to
- Jack's plan, &ldquo;but how will you get down yourself?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, my getting down isn't in the bill at all,&rdquo; said Jack; &ldquo;I mean to stay
- right here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- This announcement fairly took Don's breath away. He had supposed all along
- that Jack was holding the pith of his proposal in reserve; but never once
- had he so much as dreamed of such a climax as this.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What! stop here?&rdquo; he gasped. &ldquo;You don't know what you're saying&mdash;it's
- certain death.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hope I ain't such a duffer as not to know that,&rdquo; said Jack brusquely.
- &ldquo;All the same, I mean to stay.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't say that, Jack.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why not? Better one than four.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then I'll stop with you,&rdquo; said Don, with dogged determination. &ldquo;The
- blacks may have my chance and welcome. Nothing on earth will induce me to
- go.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His chum was silent for a long time after that&mdash;so long, indeed, that
- Don thought the matter settled for good and all. But in this he was
- mistaken.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say, old fellow,&rdquo; said Jack at last, &ldquo;tell you what I'll do; I'll toss
- you as to which of us is togo. What do you say?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; cried Don.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But why not? Where's the use of being such a softie over the matter?
- There are no end of reasons why I should stay, I tell you. For one thing,
- I've got no mother to consider.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's true enough,&rdquo; assented Don, gulping as he thought of his own
- mother.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And no sisters or brothers.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't,&rdquo; said Don huskily; &ldquo;you forget me, Jack.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, I don't,&rdquo; protested Jack; &ldquo;you are more to me than any brother could
- ever be, old man; but that's only an additional reason why I should see
- you safe out of this mess. Then there's another thing; you know how good
- the guv has always been to me&mdash;sent me to school, and treated me just
- as if I was his own son, you know.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes?&rdquo; said Don.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I've always felt that if ever I got the chance I should like to
- repay his kindness, don't you know; and now that the chance has come I
- don't mean to let it slip. Say, will you toss?&rdquo; Don wavered. It seemed
- terribly hard that they should all have to die like so many rats in a
- trap. Besides, once he and the blacks were off the Rock, they could fall
- back on the cutter, renew their stock of ammunition, and&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll toss you on one condition,&rdquo; he said suddenly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What condition's that?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, this. That after the die is cast we take no further steps until
- daylight, so as to make quite sure there's no way of securing the rope to
- the rock. Are you agreed?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For reply Jack held out his hand, and thus the compact was sealed. Then
- Don drew a rupee from his pocket and passed it to his companion... &ldquo;Tails,
- you go,&rdquo; said Jack, and tossed.
- </p>
- <p>
- A flash of silver in the moonlight, a mocking jingle, and the coin lay
- still. Eagerly the rivals for the honours of death bent over it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Tails!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I knew it!&rdquo; said Jack quietly; &ldquo;and what's more, I'm jolly glad it isn't
- heads.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His chum turned quickly away and bowed his head upon his knees, while a
- sound suspiciously like a stifled sob broke the stillness of the night.
- Jack crept close up to him and slipped an arm about his neck. So, for a
- long time, they sat in silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXII.&mdash;A REPORT FROM THE SEA.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">J</span>ack was the first
- to break the silence that followed the spinning of the fateful coin. He
- rose, stretched himself, and, pointing to a ruddy glow that had begun to
- light up the eastern horizon, exclaimed in a voice of undisguised relief:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Daybreak at last!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I only wish it would never come,&rdquo; his companion rejoined gloomily,
- turning his gaze upon the unwelcome light&mdash;of which, however, he had
- caught scarce a glimpse ere he sprang to his feet in sudden excitement.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's no daybreak, Jack! It's more like the reflection of a fire.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I believe you're right,&rdquo; assented Jack. &ldquo;It certainly <i>is</i> a fire;
- but where can it be, that we see only the reflection? Behind Haunted
- Pagoda Hill?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No; this side of the hill, I should say.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then it must be somewhere in the creek.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At mention of the creek Don started violently, a suspicion of the truth
- flashing upon him. He began to sniff the air. An odour of smoke floated to
- them on the fresh morning breeze, faint but pungent. Jack, catching a
- whiff of it, fell to sniffing too.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, what do you make of it?&rdquo; Don inquired anxiously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Tar!&rdquo; replied Jack, without hesitation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I thought so,&rdquo; said Don, with a queer catch in his voice. &ldquo;Jack, it's the
- cutter!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With this he set off at a run towards that part of the Rock which
- overlooked the creek. Advancing as far as the rapidly-increasing slope of
- the declivity, made it prudent to venture, he came to a stand. The glow of
- the fire was now brighter, though its source still remained hidden from
- view; but by edging his way well to the right, he at length succeeded in
- reaching a point whence the ruddy light that had excited his fears could
- be seen as a leaping, swaying column of smoke and flame, terminating, far
- down amid the darkness of the creek, in a single point of lurid red.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Just as I feared!&rdquo; he cried, as Jack rejoined him. &ldquo;The niggers have set
- fire to the <i>Jolly Tar</i>. I was afraid the rascals had smelt her out
- when I met the lascar in the creek the other morning. The old boat's done
- for, anyhow; so let me off my promise, Jack.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What for? I can't see that the burning of the cutter has anything to do
- with it. There are plenty of native boats to get away in.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, it isn't the getting away! You don't suppose I'd go off and leave you
- in the lurch, I hope? It's the powder that troubles me. There wasn't much
- on board the cutter, it's true; just about enough to fight my way back
- here with&mdash;as I meant to do, please God, had this not happened. I
- planned the whole thing out while we sat mooning yonder, you see. But
- now!&rdquo; and at thought of how this hope&mdash;the secret of his acquiescence
- in the outcome of that fatal toss&mdash;had vanished into thin air before
- his very eyes, Don's lips trembled and his voice choked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Never mind, old chap!&rdquo; said Jack, deeply touched by this new proof of his
- friend's generosity; &ldquo;I'll take the will for the deed. But, I say&mdash;you
- pledged me your word, you know; and at daybreak, if no way of anchoring
- the rope shows up, I shall expect you to go over the cliff like a man. We
- shan't have long to wait now. Look!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He pointed to a deep roseate hue which tinged the sky just above the ocean
- rim. And even as they stood watching it, the light came leaping up from
- the sea, and outshone the stars, and set the whole east aglow. A flush of
- dawn, and it was day.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said Jack, tightening his belt, &ldquo;let's make the round of the Rock
- again. If there's a shadow of a flaw anywhere we're bound to find it in
- this light.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Heaven grant we may!&rdquo; ejaculated Don, as they began the search.
- </p>
- <p>
- The cliff forming the Elephant's left side was out of it altogether. The
- native town lay directly at its base, rendering escape in that direction
- impracticable. So, too, with that part of the Rock abutting on the creek;
- its formation was such that no human being, rope or no rope, could have
- made his way down its face. There remained only the Elephant's right flank&mdash;overlooking
- the jungly back of the island&mdash;and the loftier head parts facing the
- western sea. To these, then, the search was necessarily confined.
- </p>
- <p>
- Again and yet again did they pace the dizzy heights, scanning every inch
- of the rocky surface for that crack or projection upon the existence of
- which Jack's life was staked. But, as before, the search ended in failure
- and despair. There was absolutely nothing&mdash;neither crevice, nor
- jutting point, nor friendly block of stone&mdash;in which, or to which,
- the rope's end could be made fast: nothing but Jack's body!
- </p>
- <p>
- To secure the rope to the palms or the masonry of the temple was an utter
- impossibility. It was too short by half.
- </p>
- <p>
- As a last hope Don approached the chasm in which lay the pool. But the
- hope was short-lived. The native guard had been trebled overnight. Hope&mdash;so
- far, at least, as Jack's life was concerned&mdash;stood on a par with the
- powder: not a grain was left.
- </p>
- <p>
- As a matter of fact, Don had all along indulged a secret conviction that
- &ldquo;something would turn Up.&rdquo; Now, when the terrible truth was at last forced
- upon him in such a manner that he could no longer shut his eyes to it, his
- distress was pitiable to witness.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had hazarded his friend's life on the toss of a coin&mdash;and lost!
- And now he must go over the cliff&mdash;over the cliff to safety and life&mdash;over
- the cliff by means of a rope, at the death-end of which stood his dearest
- friend. Given his choice, he would have taken that friend's place&mdash;oh,
- how gladly! But go he must, for his honour was-pledged, and the time was
- come!
- </p>
- <p>
- Ay, the time was come&mdash;the supreme moment of Jack's heroic resolve.
- And Jack was glad of it, ready for it. The fever in his blood had abated,
- leaving him cool, collected, and more firm in his resolve than ever. He
- had chosen his-course and he would stick to it, anyhow!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come,&rdquo; he said simply, laying a gentle hand on Don's shoulder, &ldquo;it is
- time for us to go.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;For us!&rdquo; The words, though kindly meant stabbed Don to the heart.
- </p>
- <p>
- Kicking the coil of rope before him like a ball, Jack approached the brink
- of the precipice. The blacks followed. There was little danger of their
- being missed by the native guard, unless the latter mounted the steps, and
- this they were not likely to do after the severe lesson they had received
- in the night. Last of all came Don&mdash;slowly, reluctantly. He looked
- and felt like one going to his execution.
- </p>
- <p>
- Without a word Jack picked up the loose end of the rope and knotted it
- securely about his friend's chest, beneath his arms. When he had uncoiled
- the rope to its full length, he fastened the other end about his own
- waist. Then he held out his hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good-bye, old fellow,&rdquo; he said, his voice shaking in spite of himself.
- &ldquo;Good-bye, and God bless you! Be sure and cast the rope loose when you
- reach the ground.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Jack, Jack! Must I go&mdash;must I?&rdquo; cried Don desperately, his voice
- full of agony.
- </p>
- <p>
- With unfaltering step Jack led him to the extreme brink of the cliff, left
- him there with his face set towards liberty and life, turned back, and
- beckoning to the blacks&mdash;who had purposely been kept in ignorance of
- Jack's resolve&mdash;prepared to pay out the line.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Over with you, old fellow! As gently as you can!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The rope tightened. Wheeling where he stood, Don cast one last imploring
- look at his friend, who pointed upwards and then motioned him to go. He
- obeyed.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0013" id="linkimage-0013"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0267.jpg" alt="0267 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0267.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- As the remorseless Rock closed above him, he let himself swing, neither
- seeing nor caring whither he was being lowered. The abyss below had no
- terrors for him&mdash;he even hoped that the rope might snap&mdash;why
- should he live since Jack must die? And when at last his feet touched
- earth, and he had flung the rope from him like a hated thing, he threw
- himself upon his face at the foot of the insurmountable cliff and burst
- into a passion of bitter, remorseful tears.
- </p>
- <p>
- After a time a gentle thud on the back aroused him. He looked up. It was
- the rope again, but empty! What did it mean? Where was Spottie? Why had he
- not been sent down? What had happened? A dozen questions such as these
- flashed through his brain, and with them a sudden wild hope. He started to
- his feet.
- </p>
- <p>
- A scrap of paper was secured to the rope by a half-knot. He snatched at
- it, drawing it to him with something of dread in the movement. It was a
- leaf from Jacks note-book, scrawled over with writing in Jack's familiar
- hand. His eyes devoured the words:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good news! A wonderful thing has happened. Was just going to lower
- Spottie away when the report of a gun came booming up from the sea. The
- schooner&mdash;the governor's schooner&mdash;is at anchor off the front of
- the island! I'd signal her, only I have no powder. I'm all in a daze,
- anyhow; but you'll know what to do.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- An exclamation of intense gratitude to Heaven burst from Don's lips, and
- crushing the scrap of paper in his hand, he set off at a run along the
- base of the cliff, in the direction of the Elephant's head.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXIII.&mdash;DON RUNS THE GAUNTLET.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>here was but one
- thing to be done: he must gain the schooner with all possible speed, at
- any risk, and take immediate steps for Jack's rescue.
- </p>
- <p>
- Instinctively he shaped his course for the Elephant's head. The
- precipitous cliff was there skirted by a narrow beach. He had seen it
- gleaming above the surf-line while rounding the island on the morning of
- their arrival. This beach would afford a short-cut to the front of the
- island, off which the schooner lay. Once there, he must swim for it. These
- were his thoughts as he ran.
- </p>
- <p>
- Tough work it was. True, the jungle did not grow close up to the base of
- the cliff; but here and there yawning <i>nullahs</i>, of considerable
- depth, and with sides almost as-steep as walls, had been cut across his
- pathway by the rains. At intervals, too, he encountered rugged, irregular
- heaps of stones, fallen from the cliff above, and studded thick with
- thorny clumps of prickly-pear.
- </p>
- <p>
- The cutlass at his side impeded his progress. He threw it away. Then on
- again.
- </p>
- <p>
- The sands at last! Close on his right lay the sea, close on his left rose
- the beetling cliff. There was not much room&mdash;just enough to run in.
- Away before him, like a narrow ribbon of burnished silver, stretched the
- smooth, hard sands, with never a living thing in sight on all their
- gleaming reach.
- </p>
- <p>
- Gradually the cliffs crept behind, and the seafront opened out before him.
- And now, of a sudden, he espied a group of natives making for the beach&mdash;a
- company of fishermen, laden with creels, and oars, and nets.
- </p>
- <p>
- Just ahead, a wedge-shaped gully split the low bank that bordered the
- beach on the landward side. Above this bank were the fishermen, heading
- for the gully. They were perhaps fifty yards short of it, while he, on the
- beach below the bank, was a full hundred. Should they reach it first, he
- would certainly be intercepted; whereas, could he but pass the point of
- danger ere' the natives gained it, he might succeed in eluding them. They
- did not see him yet. He darted under the bank, and ran as he had never run
- in all his life before.
- </p>
- <p>
- Seventy-five yards, fifty yards, twenty yards&mdash;and then the gully.
- Had the natives reached it? As he raced past he darted a swift sidelong
- glance at the <i>nullah</i>. The fishermen were already halfway down it.
- They saw him, dropped their fishing implements, and gave chase, yelling
- like a pack of fiends.
- </p>
- <p>
- On and on he ran, looking back but once to ascertain what start he had of
- the dusky gang. Twenty yards at least. They were just emerging from the
- bottom of the gully.
- </p>
- <p>
- And now, away to the right, he sighted the schooner, riding at anchor with
- half a mile of sea between her holding-ground and the shore. He could see
- her boats swinging at the davits. They had not sighted him, then. He
- wondered whether Jack could see him from the cliff.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack caught sight of Don as he raced past the gully. The fishermen, as it
- happened, were just then in the gully itself, and consequently invisible.
- Don's appearance he hailed with a shout.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hurrah! he hasn't lost much time, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- This exclamation brought both Spottie and Puggles to his side in hot
- haste. The stairs were thus left unguarded&mdash;a step the imprudence of
- which was wholly overlooked in the excitement of the moment.
- </p>
- <p>
- At sight of his master tearing along the beach below, a grim delight&mdash;not
- unmixed with anxiety&mdash;overspread Puggles' black countenance, while a
- chuckle of intense satisfaction welled up from the red abyss of his fat,
- shiny throat. Then, like the shadow of an April cloud driven swiftly
- across a sunlit meadow, a look of blank dismay eclipsed the grin, the
- chuckle died away in a gasp of alarm, and pointing to the beach with
- shaking finger, he cried:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sar! sar! black warmints done catch um, sar!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His alarm was well-founded. The fishermen had just tumbled out of the
- gully, at Don's very heels, as it seemed at this distance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They're after him, sure enough,&rdquo; cried Jack. &ldquo;By Jove, how he runs! Go
- it, old fellow! you've got the start of them, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Away went Don, running like a deer, and after him pelted the fishermen, in
- a headlong, rough-and-tumble, happy-go-lucky fashion, that, under
- circumstances less serious, must have provoked the spectators on the Rock
- to hearty laughter. No laughing matter this, however; for Don's pursuers,
- having thrown aside their fishing gear, and being moreover fresh in wind
- and limb, were seen to gain on him at every stride. The race could not
- prolong itself for many minutes now, and the finish&mdash;Jack shuddered,
- as he thought of what that must be.
- </p>
- <p>
- At this critical juncture, too, matters took an unexpected turn for the
- worse. A short distance up the beach a second party of natives appeared on
- the scene. Don ran straight on, apparently not perceiving them. They, on
- the contrary, saw him, and bore down upon him swiftly. Their cries,
- doubtless, warned him of his danger, for now he pulled up short, looked
- ahead, glanced quickly over his shoulder, and then&mdash;&mdash;-
- </p>
- <p>
- With a groan Jack turned away.
- </p>
- <p>
- A loud outcry from the blacks, however, drew his gaze seawards again, and
- as he looked his pulses thrilled. Don was making straight for the surf!
- </p>
- <p>
- As often happens on these coasts when the wind is but a whisper, and the
- sea glass-like in its placidity, a heavy ground-swell was rolling sullenly
- in from the outer bay. A stone's throw from the shore this swell was but a
- sinuous, almost imperceptible, undulation of the glassy surface; but as it
- swept towards the beach, where the water shoaled rapidly, of a sudden it
- reared aloft a crest of hissing foam, which curled higher and higher as it
- came on, until it overtopped the sands at the height of a boat's mast.
- Then with a mighty roar it broke, hurled itself far up the shelving sands,
- and retired, seething, to make room for the green battalions pressing
- shorewards in its wake.
- </p>
- <p>
- Straight towards this living wall of water Don ran. The two bands of
- natives, uniting their forces as they swerved aside like bloodhounds in
- pursuit, were close upon him. Before, above him, curled the mighty wave;
- and then, to his great horror, Jack saw him stumble and fall.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lucky fall! Ere the natives could throw themselves upon him, the combing
- wave broke, passed directly over his prostrate body, swept the niggers off
- their legs, and hurled them with irresistible force far up the beach.
- </p>
- <p>
- A moment later the breathless watchers on the cliff saw a black object
- floating on the surface of the water, yards from shore. It was Don. The
- under-tow had swept him out to sea, beyond his pursuers' reach.
- </p>
- <p>
- An expert and powerful swimmer, he lost no time in increasing the distance
- between himself and the disconcerted native crew, one or two of whom
- attempted to overtake him, but soon gave it up for a bad job.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then a boat put off from the schooner, and soon Jack had the satisfaction
- of seeing his plucky friend hauled' in over her side. A quarter of an hour
- later, when the boat had regained the schooner, the signal gun once more
- boomed out over the sea, and with feelings of devout thankfulness to
- Heaven Jack realised that Don was safe on board, and that the term of his
- own and his companions' imprisonment on the summit of the Rock was bounded
- by a few brief hours at the most.
- </p>
- <p>
- Even as he looked, as if by magic the schooner's canvas swelled to the
- breeze, and he caught the distant song of the lascars as they hove the
- anchor to the cathead.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hunger, thirst, his wound, the very enemy at the foot of the rock stairs&mdash;all
- had been forgotten in the breathless interest inspired by Don's race for
- life; were forgotten still as he and the blacks stood watching the
- schooner get under weigh.
- </p>
- <p>
- Till a sharp clank of metal, as of a spear carelessly let fall, recalled
- their roving thoughts, and brought, them swiftly to the right-about, to
- find the Rock in the immediate vicinity of the pit's mouth literally
- swarming with armed natives.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXIV.&mdash;IN THE NICK OF TIME.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he surprise had
- been cleverly executed. Another moment, and Jack and his black attendants
- would have been surrounded. As it was, the odds were dead against them.
- </p>
- <p>
- The unexpected appearance of the schooner had evidently wrought a complete
- change in the tactics of the enemy. So here they were.
- </p>
- <p>
- This sleek, corpulent native who led the escaladers was none other than
- old Salambo!
- </p>
- <p>
- Salambo, the shark-charmer, thief, and director-in-chief of the harassing
- attacks by which they, the party of adventurers in search of what was
- indisputably their own, had been baffled at every turn.
- </p>
- <p>
- By means of the lascar's murderous hand he had clutched at the captain's
- throat and taken the captain's life. And now that his tool was for ever
- wrenched from his grasp, he had come in person to add the finishing-stroke
- to his evil work. Jack's blood boiled as he thought of it. One swift
- glance around, and his course was taken.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The temple, Spottie! Point for the temple, Pug!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The natives, perceiving their intention, swerved aside and attempted to
- cut them off. But so unexpected was Jack's manouvre, so prompt the
- obedience of Spottie and Puggles, that the attempt proved unsuccessful. A
- wild, breathless dash, and they had turned the corner of the temple&mdash;whose
- door, as usual, faced east&mdash;and crossed its threshold.
- </p>
- <p>
- Old and neglected as the edifice was, stout wooden doors still swung upon
- the rust-eaten hinges. To slam these to and thrust the bolts home, top and
- bottom, was the work of but a moment. Bosin darted in as the great doors
- swung into place, narrowly escaping the amputation of his tail as the
- penalty of his tardiness. Scarcely had the last bolt been shot when up
- trooped the enemy, howling like hyenas, and commenced a determined assault
- upon the doors.
- </p>
- <p>
- At first they hurled themselves upon the barrier and attempted to force it
- in by sheer imposition of weight. Thud followed thud in furious
- succession, while Jack stood by with palpitating heart. His fears as to
- the stability of the doors, however, were soon set at rest. They creaked,
- yielded a little, but otherwise stood as firm as the solid masonry in
- which they were framed. The natives were not slow to discover this, and
- the ill-advised attempt was soon abandoned. In the brief lull that
- followed Jack looked about him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Inside here, beneath the cobwebbed, blackened roof of the outer temple,
- the light was funereal in its dimness. What little there was crept in
- through the cracks in the shrunken doors in a reluctant sort of way, as if
- it found the society of bats and spiders anything but agreeable; except at
- the further or western end of the temple, where there was a second
- chamber, smaller and somewhat better lighted than the first. Eight feet or
- so above the floor a small square window pierced the wall, and directly
- beneath this stood a sort of stone pediment or shrine, on which squatted a
- hideously distorted image. This was the temple <i>swami</i>, and <i>swami's</i>
- ugly head reached to within a couple of feet of the window.
- </p>
- <p>
- A second attempt was now made upon the doors, though not after the
- haphazard fashion of the first. The cracks in the shrunken woodwork
- attracting the attention of the natives, they fell to work on the widest
- of these, and with their spears began chipping away the plank splinter by
- splinter. But the extreme toughness of the material, seasoned as it was by
- unnumbered years of exposure to the elements, rendered the task of
- demolition both difficult and slow.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Take you a jolly long time to get your ugly head-pieces through that,
- anyhow!&rdquo; muttered Jack, as he watched&mdash;or rather listened to, for he
- could see little or nothing of what was going on outside&mdash;the fast
- and furious play of the spears. &ldquo;And when you do get 'em through, why then&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- To symbolise what would happen then, Jack did what was certainly quite
- excusable under the circumstances&mdash;spat in his palm, and with immense
- gusto decapitated an imaginary nigger.
- </p>
- <p>
- Still, given sufficient time for the spears to do their work, it was a
- foregone conclusion that the doors must fall. Would they hold out till the
- schooner cast anchor off the creek? He allowed an hour for that&mdash;an
- hour from the time the anchor was weighed.. Well, they&mdash;he and-the
- two blacks&mdash;had been in the temple the best part of an hour already.
- So that was all right.
- </p>
- <p>
- But then, the rescue party must make their way up the creek, and from the
- creek to the&mdash;summit of the Bock, along that passage by which Don and
- the blacks had entered on the previous day. This would consume another
- hour. He made the calculation with the utmost coolness; only, when it was
- finished, and he asked himself whether the doors would hold out that other
- hour, the reluctant &ldquo;No&rdquo; with which he was compelled to answer the
- question somehow stuck in his throat and nearly choked him. By way of
- relief, he slashed the head off another imaginary nigger.
- </p>
- <p>
- The second hour wore on. The gap in the door grew wider and wider beneath
- the ceaseless play of the spears, and still the natives showed no signs of
- desisting or of taking their departure.
- </p>
- <p>
- Presently a shadow darkened the little window at the rear of the temple.
- Jack turned on his heel expecting to see a native, but instead saw only
- Bosin. The monkey had clambered up the image, and so reached the window.
- The sight of the creature gave Jack a sudden inspiration.
- </p>
- <p>
- What was to hinder the blacks and himself from beating a noiseless retreat
- by way of this same window? The aperture was quite ample in size to admit
- of their squeezing through it. But&mdash;his wounded arm! And could the
- thing be done without attracting the attention of the gang about the
- doors?
- </p>
- <p>
- He climbed up the image and looked out. So far as he could discover the
- way was clear. Between that end of the temple and the stairs leading to
- the pit, not a single native was to be seen. True, his view was but
- limited at the best&mdash;the aperture was so narrow, and a straggling
- blackskin or two might, after all, have their eyes on the window, or,
- worse still, be guarding the stairs. Probably, though&mdash;and this
- seemed the more likely view&mdash;the entire force and attention of the
- belligerents were concentrated upon the temple doors. He would risk it,
- anyhow!
- </p>
- <p>
- Once gain the pit, and they were as good as saved; for by that time the
- rescue party could not be far off.
- </p>
- <p>
- A wilder shout from the besiegers recalled his thoughts and eyes to the
- doors. He scrambled down off the idols head and ran into the outer
- chamber.
- </p>
- <p>
- What was that peculiar crackling sound&mdash;this pungent odour with which
- the air had suddenly grown so heavy? Fire&mdash;smoke! They had set fire
- to the doors!
- </p>
- <p>
- He ran back into the inner chamber. The blacks were there, cowering in
- terror against the wall. In a few hurried words he directed them how to
- proceed. They pulled themselves together and prepared to obey the sahib's
- directions.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The window, lads! through the window! Quick now, you lazy beggars!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Spottie went first&mdash;somewhat unwillingly, it must be confessed, which
- was scarcely to be wondered at, considering that the drop from the window
- might land him in the arms of the enemy, or on the point of a spear. The
- smallness of the aperture, its height from the ground, and the necessity
- for going through it feet foremost, made a triple difficulty, too. But
- with Jack's assistance this was speedily overcome, and Spottie dropped out
- of sight. Barring the faint thud of his bare feet on the rock, no sound
- followed. Thus far, then, the stratagem had escaped detection. Jack began
- to breathe easier.
- </p>
- <p>
- After Spottie went Puggles&mdash;with even more difficulty, for, as the
- reader is aware, Puggles was extremely fat; and again all was still
- without. Within there was noise enough and to spare. The crackling of the
- burning doors had grown ominously loud. As Pug's black head disappeared,
- too, a tremendous shout burst from the rabble gathered about the entrance.
- Its significance Jack did not stop to inquire. Already he had scaled the
- image. A wry face or two at the pain of his wounded arm, and a moment
- later he stood beside the blacks.
- </p>
- <p>
- The moment of their flight was well chosen. The natives, to a man, were
- watching the doors with all their eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bidding the blacks follow close at his heels, he sped across the few yards
- of rock that separated the temple from the stairs, sprang down the steps,
- and fell insensible at the feet of his friend, Roydon Leigh.
- </p>
- <p>
- The rescue party had arrived in the very nick of time.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0025" id="link2HCH0025"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXV.&mdash;THE SHARK-CHARMER IS CAUGHT IN HIS OWN TRAP.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>fter all, Jack was
- but human. His fortitude, strung to a tense pitch by those terrible days
- and nights of danger, snapped, in presence of actual safety, like an
- overdrawn bow.
- </p>
- <p>
- A pitiful spectacle he presented, his clothes torn to ribbons, his hands
- and face grimy, bloodstained, yet ghastly in their pallor. Don uttered a
- cry and flung himself on his knees beside his chum. He thought him dead.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, not dead, thank God! Only done up. He'll be all right soon,&rdquo; said
- Captain Leigh, with his hand upon Jack's heart, which still beat, though
- faintly; and taking out a pocket-flask he poured a few drops of brandy
- between the drawn, bloodless lips of the unconscious lad.
- </p>
- <p>
- Under this stimulating treatment Jack soon came round. Needless to dwell
- on the confusion into which his thoughts were thrown by the sight of the
- familiar faces bending over him. His bewilderment, however, was but
- momentary. Memory returned with a rush and spurred him to action and
- speech. He sat bolt upright.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have you got the rascal?&rdquo; he demanded in eager tones..
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What rascal?&rdquo; asked Don.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The shark-charmer, to be sure. Who else should I mean? He's on the Rock,
- I tell you!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Him done stick his leg in trap, sa'b,&rdquo; interpolated Puggles, with
- appropriate action.
- </p>
- <p>
- Don started to his feet. Jack followed suit, somewhat unsteadily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is he above there?&rdquo; cried Captain Leigh.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, yes!&rdquo; said Jack eagerly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Up with you, boys!&rdquo; cried the captain to the <i>peons</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- Don had already acquainted his father with the shark-charmer's part in the
- tragic events of the past week, and the <i>peons</i> had overheard the
- story. They all knew the shark-charmer, and they followed their leader
- with enthusiasm. They carried carbines; these glinted in the sunshine, and
- clanked against the contracted walls of the rock stairway as they jostled
- each other in the ascent.
- </p>
- <p>
- A rush of many feet above, and the natives appeared at the stair-head.
- Only the moment before had they discovered the temple to be deserted, and
- become alive to the fact that they had lingered too long on the Rock. They
- were now in hot pursuit of the fugitives. But the sudden apparition of the
- red-sashed <i>peons</i>, the ominous glint and clash of the carbines,
- promised hotter pursuit than they had bargained for. A wave of
- consternation swept through their ranks. <i>Sauve qui peut!</i> In
- headlong flight they scattered in all directions.
- </p>
- <p>
- As before, the shark-charmer had led the gang. He almost ran into the arms
- of the <i>peons</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Rama! Rama!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the cry of a coward and miscreant who knows that his last hour of
- freedom, if not of life, has come: the hour of reckoning for his misdeeds.
- </p>
- <p>
- For as long as it took his half-paralysed tongue to frame the words, the
- shark-charmer faced his approaching doom. Then he turned and fled like a
- frightened cur.
- </p>
- <p>
- The voice of Captain Leigh rang out on the air clear and full as the note
- of a bugle:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;After him, lads! Never mind the others! Take the fellow alive!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Up scrambled the <i>peons</i> in obedience to the command, deploying to
- right and left in a long, semicircular line as they debouched upon the
- Rock.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Forward!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Off they went at the quick; then, with a wild cheer, broke into a loping
- run, the extremities of the semicircle closing in as they advanced.
- </p>
- <p>
- The shark-charmer ran towards the Elephant's head, where the precipice was
- the loftiest and dizziest of the four, the beach lying full three hundred
- feet below. Whatever chance of escape he possessed, it assuredly did not
- lie in that direction. To all human seeming his escape was an utter
- impossibility. So thought the <i>peons</i>, and slackened speed, though
- the extremities of the living, steel-crested semicircle still closed in
- and in. Between, and somewhat ahead, ran the shark-charmer. He could not
- run much farther; the brink of the precipice was only a few yards away. He
- was caught!
- </p>
- <p>
- What the thoughts of the guilty, hunted wretch were during those awful
- moments, God alone knows.
- </p>
- <p>
- The <i>peons</i> had slowed down to a walk now&mdash;a walk confident, yet
- timid. They were altogether sure of the shark-charmer, and not a little
- afraid of the precipice. Not so the fugitive; for him all fear lay behind.
- He advanced to the very brink of the cliff. His arms dropped at his sides.
- </p>
- <p>
- In upon him closed his pursuers with cat-like tread and alert eyes. They
- had no desire to be dashed over the cliff. Besides, was he not as good as
- caught? A mere span of rock divided him from their grasp. He stood
- motionless, half-turned towards them, apparently resigned to his fate.
- </p>
- <p>
- Suddenly, however, hurling upon the close-drawn ranks a swift look of
- defiance, he wheeled full-face to the sea; wheeled, and drew his arms up
- and back.
- </p>
- <p>
- Captain Leigh was the first to perceive the significance of the movement.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Seize him!&rdquo; he shouted, dashing through the line of <i>peons</i>; &ldquo;quick,
- or he'll be over!... Good God!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He fell back appalled. A stifled cry of horror broke from the <i>peons</i>.
- The shark-charmer had leapt into mid-air.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0026" id="link2HCH0026"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXV.&mdash;BRINGS THE QUEST TO AN END.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>ilent and pale as
- death, Don turned and stood for a moment facing Haunted Pagoda Hill, with
- head bared. His thoughts were with the captain as he had seen him on that
- terrible evening of the murder. Plainer than words his attitude cried:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Avenged!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The other natives had taken advantage of the opportunity afforded by the
- pursuit of the shark-charmer to make good their escape. Captain Leigh
- accordingly ordered the <i>peons</i> back to the schooner. Their mission
- was at an end.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the head of the stairs they came upon Bosin. The monkey at once
- clambered on to Don's shoulder, happier far than his new master.
- </p>
- <p>
- Here, too, as they were about to turn their backs upon the spot where
- death had hovered in ever-narrowing circles about their heads through the
- hopeless hours of that awful night and day, Jack and Don joined hands and
- silently renewed the friendship which had here been put to so crucial a
- test. Our boy-friendships seldom pass the boundary line of youth and
- manhood; or, if they do, too often become tarnished and neglected things
- in which we find no pleasure. Theirs, just then, seemed fit to last a
- lifetime.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say!&rdquo; cried Jack abruptly, when he had done wringing his chunks hand,
- &ldquo;what about the pearls, old fellow? You're surely not going off without
- them after all the trouble we've had? I'm not, anyhow!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack was nothing if not practical.
- </p>
- <p>
- Captain Leigh, who was standing by, overheard the words, and approached
- with a curious, not to say mysterious, smile on his lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What! not had enough of it yet, Jack?&rdquo; said he, in bantering tones.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not I, sir! Where's the use of being half cut to bits if one doesn't get
- what one's after? I shan't be content till I handle the shiners.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And where do you purpose looking for them?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack's face fell.. It was not easy to find an answer to this question.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Perhaps I can assist you,&rdquo; continued Captain Leigh, with a repetition of
- his mysterious smile. &ldquo;This quest of yours, boys, has been a string of
- surprises from the very start, judging by what I have heard and seen of
- it. So, just to keep the ball rolling, we'll wind up with the biggest
- surprise of all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And slipping his fingers into his waistcoat pocket, to the astonishment of
- the young men he drew therefrom the identical wash-leather case which they
- had all along, and with good reason, supposed to be in the shark-charmer's
- possession.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why&mdash;how&mdash;?&rdquo; Don began, hardly able to believe his eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack interrupted him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't you see how it is?&rdquo; cried he. &ldquo;The governor's running a rig on us.
- Old Salambo took the pearls, but left the bag; it's empty, of course!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Captain Leigh quietly turned the pouch upside-down, and poured into the
- palm of his left hand a little silvery heap with a shimmer of pale gold in
- its midst. This he pushed into full view with his finger. It was the
- Golden Pearl.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You don't mean to say we've been on a wild-goose chase all this time?&rdquo;
- gasped Jack.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A downright fool's errand!&rdquo; muttered Don, in tones of intense disgust.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No; neither one nor the other,&rdquo; interposed Captain Leigh. &ldquo;Don't go
- scattering self-accusations of that sort about before you hear my
- explanation&mdash;though it's a queer business, I must acknowledge,&rdquo; he
- added, with a laugh. &ldquo;Will you hear it out now or wait till we go on
- board?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Tell us one thing,&rdquo; put in Don; &ldquo;were the pearls stolen at all?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, they were not, or I should not be able to produce them. But the
- shark-charmer was none the less a thief, for all that. But I see you're on
- tenterhooks to hear all about it, so I'll read you the riddle at once.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carefully restoring the pearls to the pouch, he handed the treasure to
- Don, and then resumed:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It goes without saying, of course, that you remember the evening you
- brought the pearls on board. Well, shortly after you had placed them in
- the locker&mdash;you had just turned in, I think&mdash;I got an uneasy
- sort of feeling that they were not as safe there as they should be&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So you took them into your state-room!&rdquo; interrupted Don, who thought he
- began to see light.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Exactly. The companion door was open, you recollect, and the
- shark-charmer, I suppose, must have been hanging about at the moment and
- seen me. Very imprudently, as it turned out, I left my door on the latch,
- though I took the precaution to put the pearls under my pillow. You
- remember, perhaps, my paying off some of the men that afternoon? Well,
- when I turned in I left the bag of rupees&mdash;or rather what remained of
- them, about two hundred in all, I should think&mdash;on the sofa opposite
- my berth, and my gold chronometer on the stand at my head, as I always do.
- I slept like a top until I was called at three, when we got under weigh.
- At this time, you understand, I was under the impression that you two were
- snug between the sheets. The schooner was a dozen miles down the coast
- before I found out my mistake. Being due in Colombo the following day, you
- see, I couldn't put back. Neither could I make head nor tail of your
- disappearance until the carrier brought your letter, Don. That made the
- whole matter plain enough. You had found the locker empty, supposed that
- the shark-charmer had stolen the pearls, and had given chase.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then,&rdquo; cried Jack, &ldquo;what I said a minute ago was right enough, after all.
- The pearls were safe, and we've been on a jolly wild-goose chase.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, no; that doesn't follow. The shark-charmer left the schooner far from
- empty-handed. He stole the bag of rupees and the watch.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, but what about the handkerchief the pearls were tied up in?&rdquo; asked
- Don. &ldquo;I fished it out of the water off the island here. How do you account
- for that?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I must have thrown the handkerchief on the sofa. Probably the fellow
- snatched it up with the bag of rupees, thinking that it still contained
- the pearls.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And threw it away when he found that it didn't,&rdquo; chuckled Jack. &ldquo;Well,
- the shiners are all right, anyhow!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Nightfall found the schooner bowling towards the open sea under full sail.
- Three figures stood grouped on her deck in the fading twilight.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was just about here,&rdquo; said Don in a choked voice:
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- &ldquo;Here, a sheer hulk, lies poor Tom Bowling,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- The darling of our crew;
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- No more he'll hear the tempest howling,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- For death has broached him to.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- His form was of the manliest beauty,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- His heart was kind and soft;
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- Faithful below he did his duty,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- But now he's gone aloft.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- All three uncovered and stood with bowed heads until the old sailor's
- resting-place was left far behind.
- </p>
- <h3>
- THE END.
- </h3>
- <div style="height: 6em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
-<pre xml:space="preserve">
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-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
- <head>
- <title>
- The Haunted Pagodas--the Quest of the Golden Pearl, by J. E. Hutchinson
- </title>
- <link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" />
- <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Haunted Pagodas--The Quest of the
-Golden Pearl, by J. E. Hutchinson
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Haunted Pagodas--The Quest of the Golden Pearl
-
-Author: J. E. Hutchinson
-
-Illustrator: Hume Nisbet
-
-Release Date: January 11, 2016 [EBook #50897]
-Last Updated: March 15, 2018
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HAUNTED PAGODAS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
- <div style="height: 8em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h1>
- THE HAUNTED PAGODAS
- </h1>
- <h1>
- THE QUEST OF THE GOLDEN PEARL
- </h1>
- <h2>
- By J. E. Hutchinson
- </h2>
- <h3>
- Illustrated by Hume Nisbet
- </h3>
- <h4>
- London: Ward and Downey
- </h4>
- <h3>
- 1897
- </h3>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0001" id="linkimage-0001"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0001.jpg" alt="0001 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0001.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0002" id="linkimage-0002"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0008.jpg" alt="0008 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0008.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0003" id="linkimage-0003"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0009.jpg" alt="0009 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0009.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- <b>CONTENTS</b>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> QUEST OF THE GOLDEN PEARL. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I.&mdash;THE SHARK-CHARMER WALKS THE
- PLANK. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II. A STROKE OF LUCK AND AN AFTER-STROKE.
- </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III.&mdash;THE QUEST BEGINS. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV.&mdash;INTRODUCES BOSIN, AND TELLS HOW
- CAPTAIN MANGO PROVED HIMSELF A TRUMP. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V.&mdash;THE LASCAR GETS HIS KNIFE BACK.
- </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI.&mdash;IN THE THICK OF IT. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII.&mdash;&ldquo;FUN OR FIGHTING, I'M READY,
- ANYHOW!&rdquo; </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII.&mdash;AT THE HAUNTED PAGODAS. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX.&mdash;WAS IT JACK? </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X.&mdash;IN WHICH THE OLD SAW, &ldquo;OUT OF
- THE FRYING-PAN, INTO THE FIRE,&rdquo; IS REVERSED WITH STARTLING EFFECT. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI.&mdash;INTO THE HEART OF THE HILL.
- </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII.&mdash;RELATES HOW A WRONG ROAD LED
- TO THE RIGHT PLACE. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII.&mdash;CAPTAIN MANGO &ldquo;GOES ALOFT.&rdquo;
- </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV.&mdash;SHROUDED IN A HAMMOCK. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV.&mdash;THE CROCODILE PIT. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI.&mdash;DON SETS A DEATH-TRAP FOR THE
- LASCAR. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII.&mdash;THE BLAST OF A CONCH-SHELL.
- </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII.&mdash;BETWEEN LIFE AND DEATH. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX.&mdash;ONE-TO-TWENTY GIVES
- TWENTY-TO-ONE THE WORST OF IT. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX.&mdash;THE LAST STRAW. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI. RIVALS FOR THE HONOURS OF DEATH.
- </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER XXII.&mdash;A REPORT FROM THE SEA. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER XXIII.&mdash;DON RUNS THE GAUNTLET. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER XXIV.&mdash;IN THE NICK OF TIME. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0025"> CHAPTER XXV.&mdash;THE SHARK-CHARMER IS CAUGHT IN
- HIS OWN TRAP. </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0026"> CHAPTER XXV.&mdash;BRINGS THE QUEST TO AN END.
- </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h1>
- QUEST OF THE GOLDEN PEARL.
- </h1>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER I.&mdash;THE SHARK-CHARMER WALKS THE PLANK.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">J</span>ack! I say, Jack!
- there's a row among the boatmen.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A sturdy, thick-set young fellow of seventeen was Jack, with low-hung
- fists of formidable size, and a love for anything in the shape of a row
- that constantly led him into scrapes. Hot-headed though he was, he was one
- of the most good-humoured, well-meaning young fellows in the world, who,
- while he would not hurt a fly if he could help it, was always ready to
- fight in defence of his own or another's rights.
- </p>
- <p>
- His chum, Roydon Leigh&mdash;&ldquo;Don&rdquo; for short&mdash;was of an altogether
- different type of young manhood. Jack's senior by a year, he was tall for
- his age, standing five feet ten in his stockings. His lithe, wiry frame
- contrasted strongly with Jack's sturdier build, as did his Scotch
- &ldquo;canniness&rdquo; with that young gentleman's headlong impetuosity.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A row!&rdquo; cried Jack delightedly, as he rushed to the taffrail. &ldquo;Time, too;
- four weeks we've lain here, and never a hand in a single shindy!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His companion laughed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;As for that,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;you're not likely to have a hand in this, unless
- you take the boat and row off to the diving grounds. All the same, there's
- a jolly row on&mdash;look yonder.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The schooner <i>Wellington</i> rode at anchor at the northern extremity of
- the Strait of Manaar, on the famous pearl-fishing grounds of Ceylon. On
- her larboard bow lay the coast&mdash;a string of low, white sand-hills,
- dotted with the dark-brown thatch of fisher huts and the vivid green of
- cocoa-nut palms. The hour was eight o'clock in the morning of a cloudless
- March day; the fitful land-breeze had died away, leaving the whole surface
- of the sea like billowy glass. Half-a-dozen cable's-lengths distant on the
- schooner's starboard quarter, a score or-more of native <i>dhonies</i> or
- diving-boats rose and dipped to the regular motion of the long
- ground-swell.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was towards these boats that Don pointed.
- </p>
- <p>
- That something unusual had occurred was evident enough. Angry shouts
- floated across the placid water; and the native boatmen could be seen
- hurriedly pulling the boats together into a compact group about one
- central spot where the clamour was loudest.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I say,&rdquo; cried Jack, after watching the boats for some time in silence,
- &ldquo;they're making for the schooner.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't half like the look of it,&rdquo; replied Don uneasily; &ldquo;they shouldn't
- leave the diving grounds, you know, until the signal gun's fired. I wish
- the guv was here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wishing's no good when he's ashore,&rdquo; said Jack philosophically. &ldquo;You're
- the skipper <i>pro tem</i>., and you must make the most of your promotion,
- old fellow. We'll have some fun, anyhow. Whew! how those niggers pull, and
- what a jolly row they're making!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- By this time the excited cries, which had first attracted the attention of
- those upon the schooner's deck, had been exchanged by the boatmen for a
- weird chant, to which every oar kept time. Erect in the stern of the
- foremost boat an old whiteheaded <i>tyndal</i> or &ldquo;master&rdquo; led the song,
- while at the end of each measure a hundred voices raised a chorus that
- seemed fairly to lift the boats clear of the water.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What are they singing, anyway?&rdquo; demanded Jack. &ldquo;There's something about a
- diver and a shark in it, but I can't half make it out, can you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We'll call Puggles&mdash;he'll be able to tell us. Pug! Hi, Pug! come
- here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Coming, sa'b!&rdquo; answered a voice from the cook's galley; and almost
- simultaneously there appeared on deck the plumpest, shiniest, most
- good-natured looking black boy that ever displayed two raws of pearly
- teeth. Nature had, apparently, pulled him into the world by the nose, and
- then, as a sort of finishing touch to the job, had given that organ a
- sharp upward tweak and left it so. It was to this feature that Puggles
- owed his name.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pug,&rdquo; said his master, &ldquo;tell us what those boatmen yonder are singing.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The black boy cocked his ears and listened for a moment with parted lips.
- &ldquo;Boat-wallahs this way telling, sa'b,&rdquo; said he; and, catching the strain
- of the chant, he repeated the words of each line as it fell from the lips
- of the old <i>tyndal</i>:
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- &ldquo;Salambo selling the diver one charm,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- Salaam, Alii kum!
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- Old shark, he telling, then do no harm,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- Salaam, Alii kum!
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- One spotted shark come out the south,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- Salaam, Alii kum!
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- He taking diver's leg in his mouth,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- Salaam, Alii kum!
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- Me big liking got, he telling, for you,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- Salaam, Alii kum!
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- So he biting diver clean in two,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- Salaam, Alii kum!
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- The lying charmer we take to the ship,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- Salaam, Alii kum!
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- There he feeling bite of the sahib's whip,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- Salaam, Alii kum!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, this Salambo must be the chap the guv had whipped off the grounds
- last season, eh, Pug?&rdquo; cried Don excitedly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Same black rascal, sa'b. His skin getting well, he coming back. Dey bring
- him 'board ship, make his skin sore two times,&rdquo; explained Puggles,
- grinning.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ha, ha!&rdquo; laughed Jack. &ldquo;We'll oblige 'em! We'll trice the fellow up!
- Hullo, here they come!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The boats having now reached the schooner, the chant ceased abruptly, the
- heavy oars were noisily shipped, and, amid a perfect Babel of voices, the
- boatmen came swarming up the sides, until the deck was one mass of wildly
- gesticulating, dusky humanity. The uproar was terrific.
- </p>
- <p>
- The old <i>tyndal</i>, who towered a full head and shoulders above his
- comrades, pushed his way to the front, and commanding silence among his
- followers, addressed himself to Don, who was always-recognised as master
- in his fathers absence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sab.&rdquo; said he in pigeon English, &ldquo;one year back big sa'b ordering Salambo
- eat plenty blows for selling charm to diver-man. All same, this season he
- done come back and sell plenty charm, telling diver-man he put charm round
- neck, shark no eat him up. He telling plenty lie&mdash;this morning one
- shark done come, eat diver, charm, all!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let him stand forward,&rdquo; said Don, beginning to enter as much into the
- novelty of the thing as Jack himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- The culprit, a sleek old fellow with shaven head, crafty eyes, and a
- rosary of wooden beads about his neck, was shoved to the front.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Are you the chap who was whipped off the grounds last year for selling
- chaims?&rdquo; demanded Don.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your honour speaking true words.&rdquo; whined the shark-charmer, salaaming
- until his shaven head almost touched the deck; &ldquo;I same rascal.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I say, Jack,&rdquo; whispered Don, &ldquo;I shan't have him whipped, you know. We'll,
- make him walk the plank.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Capital! Hell funk, certain, and there'll be no end of fun.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well do it, then,&rdquo; said Don decidedly. &ldquo;Go forward and order two of the
- lascars to take the boat and lie under the schooner's quarter&mdash;-this
- side, you know&mdash;ready to pick him up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In high glee Jack departed to execute this commission, while Don again
- turned to the shark-doctor.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you happen to have one of those charms about you?&rdquo; he asked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;One here got, sa'b,&rdquo; said the fellow, producing from the folds of his
- waist-cloth an <i>ola</i> or fragment of palm-leaf, covered with
- cabalistic characters. &ldquo;Sa'b no look at him?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Keep it yourself,&rdquo; said Don; &ldquo;you'll soon need it. Hi, lascar!&rdquo; to one of
- the schooner's crew who stood near. &ldquo;Fetch a plank here and run it out
- over the side.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- By the time the plank was brought and run out until one-half its length
- projected over the water, Jack came up chuckling, and by a sign intimated
- that the boat was in readiness. The crowd of natives, guessing that
- something unusual was afoot, craned their necks eagerly, while Puggles
- executed a comic <i>pas seul</i> in his delight. But the shark-charmer, as
- Jack had predicted, &ldquo;funked&rdquo; miserably.
- </p>
- <p>
- Knowing that with the boat in waiting there was absolutely no danger to
- the shark-charmer's life, Don turned a deaf ear to his pleadings, and made
- a signal to the lascars to proceed.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0004" id="linkimage-0004"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0022.jpg" alt="0022 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0022.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- Willing hands seized the quaking wretch and dragged him to the schooner's
- side, where he was placed upon, the plank, Puggles standing on the
- deck-end to keep it down.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Steady, Puggles!&rdquo; cried Don. &ldquo;One, two, three&mdash;let him slide!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Puggles jumped aside, the deck-end of the plank rose high in air, then
- descended with a crash; and with a scream of terror the shark-charmer
- disappeared over the side.
- </p>
- <p>
- A tremendous shout rose from the natives on deck, and with a common
- impulse they one and all rushed to the schooner's side, which they reached
- just as the shark-charmer's head reappeared above the surface. Another
- moment, and he was dragged into the boat, where, catching sight of the
- laughing faces ranged along the rail above, he shook his fist in mute
- menace, and so was rowed to shore.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Teach the beggar a lesson he won't forget in a hurry,&rdquo; said Don, as he
- watched the boat recede. &ldquo;Good-bye, old boy; we're not likely to meet
- again.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But in this sanguine forecast of the future he was mistaken, as events
- speedily proved.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER II. A STROKE OF LUCK AND AN AFTER-STROKE.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>t was the
- afternoon of the day on which the shark-charmer so unwillingly walked the
- plank. The breeze was so light and fitful that it barely ruffled the
- surface of the sea about the schooner. Weary of the narrow limits of the
- deck, Don and his chum dropped into the boat and rowed ashore&mdash;Puggles,
- as a matter of course, bearing them company.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;These beastly sands are like an oven!&rdquo; growled Don, lifting his helmet to
- cool his dripping forehead. &ldquo;Where shall we go, Jack?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Bazaar,&rdquo; replied Jack laconically; &ldquo;always some fun to be had there. Pug,
- point for the bazaar.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me pointing, sar,&rdquo; puffed the black boy, setting his dumpy legs in
- motion.
- </p>
- <p>
- Puggles was never so much in his element as when thus strutting pompously
- in advance, warning common nigger humanity of the white sahibs' approach.
- At such times the disdainful tilt of his nose, the supreme
- self-complaisance of his expansive grin, were as good as a show.
- </p>
- <p>
- A gay and animated scene did the bazaar present. Back and forth through
- the temporary street surged an endless throng of natives of every shade of
- complexion and variety of costume&mdash;buying, selling, shouting,
- jabbering, drinking with friends or fighting with enemies.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Much cry and little wool,&rdquo; laughed Jack. &ldquo;There's a big black fellow
- yonder auctioning off some pearl oysters; let's have a go at the next
- lot.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right,&rdquo; assented Don; &ldquo;perhaps we'll have a stroke of luck. The guv
- knew a poor half-caste once who bid in just such a chance lot as this, and
- in one of them he found sixty-eight thumping big pearls. Cleared thousands
- of pounds by that one bid, the guv says. Pug! here, Pug!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Coming, sa'b,&rdquo; gasped a faint voice, and Puggles wriggled his way from
- amongst the bystanders, shining with abundant perspiration and squeezed
- well-nigh flat by the pressure of the crowd.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Pug,&rdquo; said his master, &ldquo;up on this creel with you, and when that big
- black fellow yonder puts up his next lot, bid 'em in.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Up went Puggles, nothing loth to escape further squeezing, and up went the
- auctioneer's next lot. In five minutes' time the few dozens of oysters
- composing the lot were knocked down to the black boy at an absurdly low
- figure.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Here you are,&rdquo; said Don, handing him the coin. &ldquo;Pass that over, and fetch
- the things away till we see what's inside them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Making a dive for the oysters, Puggles scrambled them into his cloth, and
- followed the sahibs to the outskirts of the crowd, blowing like a
- porpoise. Finding a convenient patch of shade beneath a banyan tree within
- a few yards of the lazy surf, they proceeded to ascertain, without further
- delay, whether the shells contained anything of value.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Him plenty smell got, anyhow,&rdquo; commented Puggles, as he arranged the
- oysters, which had been several days out of the water, in a small pyramid.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack threw himself on the sand, and surveyed the rough, discoloured heap
- with unqualified disgust. &ldquo;They don't look very promising, I must say,&rdquo; he
- cried. &ldquo;Try that big one on top, Don.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Inserting the blade of his pocket-knife between the shells of the bivalve,
- Don prized it open and carefully examined its contents. It contained
- nothing of any value.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack looked listlessly on, while his companion opened shell after shell
- with no other result than the finding of two or three miserable specimens
- of pearls, so small that, as Jack laughingly said, &ldquo;one might stick them
- in ones eye and forget the moment after where one had put them.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Only three or four shells now remained unopened, and Don was on the point
- of abandoning the search in disgust, when Jack, who had edged himself on
- his elbow as close to the heap as the villainous odour of the decomposed
- oysters would allow, snatched up a shell of large size, and said:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let me have the knife a moment, will you? This looks promising&mdash;it's
- the biggest of the whole lot, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There you are, then; I've had enough of them myself,&rdquo; said Don, tossing
- him the knife and walking off.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had not proceeded half-a-dozen yards, however, when a loud shout
- brought him back at a run. Jack and Puggles were eagerly bending over the
- opened oyster.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; he asked breathlessly, going down on his knees beside them.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack thrust the half-shell towards him. It was literally filled with
- magnificent pearls. *
- </p>
-<pre xml:space="preserve">
- * In 1828 no less than sixty-seven pearls were taken from a
- single oyster on these grounds.&mdash;J. K. H.
-</pre>
- <p>
- Not a word was spoken as the glistening, priceless globules were carefully
- abstracted from their unsightly case and laid upon Pug's coffee-coloured
- palm. Twenty-five pearls of matchless size and brilliancy did Jack count
- out ere the store was exhausted. So taken up were they with their good
- fortune that not one of the three observed a native creep stealthily
- towards them under cover of the tree.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's been nothing like it known on the grounds for years!&rdquo; cried Don
- excitedly. &ldquo;Any more, Jack?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No more,&rdquo; said Jack, and was about to throw the shell away, when Puggles
- caught his arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stop, sar, stop! Me see something yellow in shell. Stick knife in the
- meat, sar, that side.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With the point of the blade Jack prodded the substance of the oyster at
- the point indicated, and presently laid bare the queen of the royal family
- of pearls on which they had stumbled. Larger by far than any of the
- twenty-five already taken from the shell, this latest addition to the
- number was in shape like a pear, in lustre of the purest pale yellow.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Him gold pearl, sa'b!&rdquo; cried Puggles gleefully, grinning from ear to ear.
- &ldquo;Other only silver. Gold pearl plenty price fetching.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Jack, old fellow,&rdquo; cried Don, thumping his companion on the back,
- &ldquo;Puggles is right; we're in luck. I've heard the guv say that a golden
- pearl isn't found once in twenty years. The priests are ready to give
- simply any sum you like for a really fine specimen.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The native who had concealed himself behind the trunk of the banyan tree,
- leaned eagerly forward. So close was he to the absorbed group that he
- could distinctly hear every word of their conversation. As he listened, an
- avaricious glitter shone in his crafty eyes, and he rubbed his hands
- unctuously together, as though he were rubbing pearls between them.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How much do you suppose the lot is worth; Don?&rdquo; Jack inquired.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Some thousands of pounds, I should say. But the guv will be able to tell
- us. Say, I'd better put them in this.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Taking out his watch, he drew off the soft chamois leather case, and
- carefully transferred the output of the mammoth oyster from Pugs palm to
- this temporary receptacle.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; cried Jack, leaping to his feet, &ldquo;let's make for the schooner. The
- sun's set, and besides, I shan't feel easy until the golden 'un is in a
- safer place than a waistcoat pocket.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's so,&rdquo; assented Don. &ldquo;Point, Pug!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When they had disappeared in the crowded bazaar, the shark-charmer emerged
- from behind the tree, and took the road to that part of the beach where
- the boats lay.
- </p>
- <p>
- By the time Don and his companions reached the schooner, the brief
- twilight had deepened into the gray darkness of early night. The pearls
- were at once shown to Captain Leigh, who confirmed his son's estimate of
- their value. It would, he said, run well into four figures, if not into
- five. The golden pearl he pronounced to be of special value.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not that it would fetch anything in England,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;but wealthy
- natives&mdash;and more especially priests&mdash;stop at nothing to secure
- a pearl like that. I mean that in a double sense, my lads; so you had
- better stow your find away in a safe place.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In the locker under the cabin clock, accordingly, the chamois leather bag
- with its precious contents was placed. On closing the locker, however, to
- his annoyance Don found the key to be missing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I shall put it in the little locker under the cabin clock,&rdquo; said Don. &ldquo;It
- locks, and there isn't a safer place on board the schooner.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0005" id="linkimage-0005"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0031.jpg" alt="0031 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0031.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wrap your handkerchief round the bag, so it won't be noticed if any one
- opens the locker,&rdquo; suggested Jack. &ldquo;It will be safe enough then,
- especially as nobody ever comes here except ourselves and Pug.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But on quitting the cabin, to their amazement they came face to face with
- the shark-charmer! He stood at the very bottom of the companionway, within
- a yard of the cabin door, and directly opposite the clock and locker.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What are you doing here?&rdquo; cried Don, advancing upon him angrily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nothing, sab, nothing!&rdquo; protested the native, dropping a running salvo of
- salaams as he backed up the steps. &ldquo;Me only wanting to see big sa'b.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then be off about your business, or you'll get the whipping you missed
- this morning. Do you hear?&rdquo; And, without further ado, Salambo made for the
- deck, where they saw him disappear over the side.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you think he saw us at the locker, Jack?&rdquo; Don asked uneasily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I should think not. But even if he did he wouldn't be any the wiser. He
- knows nothing about the pearls.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;True enough,&rdquo; said Don, and so the subject dropped.
- </p>
- <p>
- The cabin clock indicated the hour of ten when they turned in for the
- night. Somehow Don found himself unable to sleep. In spite of every effort
- he could make to the contrary, his thoughts <i>would</i> run on the
- pearls. At last he could stand it no longer. Leaping out of his berth, he
- struck a light and crept noiselessly into the main cabin. The companion
- door stood open to admit the night air, and his candle flared in the
- draught.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll get to sleep, perhaps, if I take a look at them,&rdquo; he said to himself
- as he made his way to the locker.
- </p>
- <p>
- An exclamation of alarm burst from his lips. His hand shook so violently
- that it was with difficulty he could hold the candle. The lid of the
- locker stood wide open!
- </p>
- <p>
- Advancing the light, he peered into the receptacle. It contained nothing.
- Handkerchief, bag, pearls&mdash;all had disappeared!
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER III.&mdash;THE QUEST BEGINS.
- </h2>
- <p>
- For a moment the discovery paralysed him, body and mind. Then he turned
- and hurried to Jack's cabin. Jack was snoring. Don shook him fiercely by
- the shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wake up! The pearls are gone!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack was awake and on his feet in a twinkling. &ldquo;You're dreaming, old
- fellow,&rdquo; said he, seeing Don in his night-clothes. &ldquo;You're only half
- awake.&rdquo; Don did not argue the matter. He simply seized Jack by the arm and
- dragged him into the main cabin. There the empty locker placed the truth
- of his assertion beyond dispute.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's to be done?&rdquo; gasped Jack.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let us call Pug,&rdquo; suggested Don. &ldquo;He may know something about this.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Puggles slept on deck. In two minutes they were by his side, and he was
- stretching his jaws in a mighty yawn. Great was his astonishment when he
- heard of the loss. But he could throw no light on the matter. He had
- neither seen nor heard anything suspicious. As for Puggles himself, he was
- above suspicion.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come down and let us have another look,&rdquo; said Jack. &ldquo;It's just possible,
- you know, that some one may have been to the locker and accidentally
- dropped or knocked the case out upon the floor. I can't believe it's
- gone.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Just as they reached the bottom of the companion-way, Puggles, who was
- slightly in advance of his master, stopped short, and called their
- attention to an object dangling from the handle of the door. Jack caught
- it up and ran to the table, where the lighted candle stood.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Merely a string of wooden beads,&rdquo; said he, tossing the object on the
- table.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A native rosary!&rdquo; cried Don, snatching it up. &ldquo;I've seen this before
- somewhere.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sa'b,&rdquo; broke in Puggles, his eyes the size and colour of Spanish onions,
- &ldquo;him shark-charmer rosilly, sa'b!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The very same!&rdquo; cried Don. &ldquo;I recollect seeing it round his neck this
- morning.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And I recollect seeing it there this evening,&rdquo; added Jack.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;When we bundled him out of the companionway?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then how do you account for our finding it on the door-knob, and for its
- being broken as it is now?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't you see? The fellow returned, of course.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Returned? When?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;After we saw him over the side; he never went ashore. He sneaked back,
- and then made off in a tremendous hurry. The position, not to say the
- condition, in which we found the rosary proves that. Jove! what a pair of
- fools we've been. That rascally shark-charmer has diddled us out of the
- pearls.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don stared at his friend open-mouthed, yet unable to utter a single word
- either of assent or doubt, so great was the consternation produced in his
- mind by Jack's daring theory as to the disappearance of the pearls, and
- the consequences which must follow if it held good.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You may take it to be a dead certainty,&rdquo; resumed Jack, following up his
- idea, &ldquo;that when Salambo actually left the ship, the pearls went with him.
- We made the rascal walk the plank this morning, and he's bound to resent
- that, of course. In fact, the way in which he shook his fist at us when he
- went off in the boat shows that he <i>did</i> resent it. Very well, then,
- there's a readymade motive for you&mdash;revenge.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's all right,&rdquo; said Don, finding his tongue at last, &ldquo;I'm not
- boggling over the motive: the value of the pearls is enough motive for any
- nigger. What puzzles me is this: How did he know we had them in our
- possession at all?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, that's as plain as the nose on your face,&rdquo; replied Jack; &ldquo;the fellow
- was on shore at the same time we were, was he not?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He was.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, then, suppose he saw us buy the shells, watched us open them, and,
- in short, discovered that we had met with a stroke of luck. Then he
- follows us back here&mdash;you saw him yourself, didn't you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I did,&rdquo; said Don.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And you see this, don't you?&rdquo; dangling the rosary before Don's eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I do; I'm not blind.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then what the dickens more do you want?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The pearls,&rdquo; said Don, laughing. &ldquo;I'm convinced, old fellow, so no more
- palaver. Our business now is to run the shark-charmer down. What's the
- time?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Eleven o'clock to the minute.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And what start of us do you think he has got?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was about nine when we caught him sneaking, and we turned in at ten.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And out again half an hour later. Then the locker must have been rifled
- between ten and halfpast. That would give him, say, forty-five minutes'
- start if we were on his track at this identical moment, which we&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
- What was that? I heard a noise overhead.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Some one at the skylight,&rdquo; said Jack in a whisper. &ldquo;S-s-sh! I'll slip on
- deck and see who it is.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The skylight referred to was situated directly over the cabin table, so
- that, its sash being then raised some six inches to admit the night air,
- it afforded a ready means of eavesdropping. Springing lightly up the cabin
- steps in his stocking feet, Jack took a cautious survey of the deck. The
- awning had been taken in at nightfall, and a full moon shone overhead,
- making the whole deck as light as day. Close beside the skylight, lashed
- against the cabin, stood a water-butt; and bending carelessly over this he
- saw one of the native crew. Calling out sharply, he bade him go forward,
- and the fellow, muttering some half-audible excuse about wanting a drink,
- slunk away.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A lascar after water; I don't think he was spying,&rdquo; said Jack, diving
- below again. &ldquo;All the same, we'll keep an eye aloft; that rascally Salambo
- may have an accomplice among the crew.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Very likely; but as I was saying,&rdquo; resumed Don, in a lower key, &ldquo;the
- thief has had ample time to make himself scarce. Now the thing is&mdash;how
- are we to nab him?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There are the <i>peons</i>. * Why not get the guv to set them on the
- fellow's track?&rdquo;
- </p>
-<pre xml:space="preserve">
- * Native attendants; pronounced <i>pewns</i>.&mdash;J..R. H.
-</pre>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, there's just the difficulty,&rdquo; said Don, with a despairing gesture.
- &ldquo;They all sleep ashore except one or two; and by the time we woke the
- governor, explained matters to him, and got the fellows started, there'd
- be no end of delay. Besides, the rascal would naturally be on the look-out
- for the <i>peons</i>, and either give them the slip or bribe them to let
- him off.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's so; whatever's done must be done sharp.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Just what I was going to say,&rdquo; continued Don. &ldquo;The schooner, you see,
- sails for Colombo in two or three days' time at the most, and it would put
- the governor to no end of inconvenience to despatch half-a-dozen <i>peons</i>
- on an errand like this just now. Fact is, I doubt if he'd do it at all,
- and we might go whistle for our pearls. No, I've a better plan than that
- to propose. There's no need to trouble the guv at all; we'll go ashore and
- capture the thief ourselves.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Capital!&rdquo; cried Jack; &ldquo;I'd like nothing better. When shall we start?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;At once. There's a bright moon, the fellow has only about an hour's
- start, and with ordinary luck we ought to run him down by daybreak at the
- very&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hist!&rdquo; said Jack suddenly; &ldquo;there's some one at the skylight again. Wait
- a minute&mdash;I'll soon put an end to his spying.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Clearing the ladder at a bound, he emerged upon the deck before the
- listener was aware of his approach. The spy was actually bending over the
- open skylight. He was there for no good or friendly purpose&mdash;that was
- evident.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're not after water this time, anyhow,&rdquo; said Jack, hauling him off the
- cabin with scant ceremony. &ldquo;Didn't I tell you to go forward? You'll obey
- orders next time, perhaps;&rdquo; and drawing off, he felled him to the deck
- with a single blow.
- </p>
- <p>
- The lascar picked himself up and scuttled forward, muttering curses
- beneath his breath.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There,&rdquo; said Jack quietly, as he rejoined those below, &ldquo;we'll not be
- spied upon again to-night, I fancy. Now, Don, for the rest of your plan.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's soon told. I propose that we follow the thief at once. The only
- difficulty will be to get on his track.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Marster going take me?&rdquo; queried Puggles anxiously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, of course,&rdquo; said Don; &ldquo;we couldn't manage without you, Pug.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then,&rdquo; said Puggles, grinning, &ldquo;me soon putting on track; me knowing
- place Salambo sleeping plenty nights.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good; there's something in that,&rdquo; said Don. &ldquo;He is sure to go straight to
- his den on leaving the schooner, though it's hardly likely he'll remain
- there to sleep. Still, he might. 'Twill give us a clue to his whereabouts,
- at all events. And now, Jack, ready's the word.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- No time was to be lost, and quietly and quickly their preparations were
- completed. These were by no means extensive: they fully expected to return
- to the schooner by break of day. A revolver, half-a-dozen rounds of
- ammunition, and a few rupees-disposed in their pockets, they stole
- noiselessly on deck. The night was one of breathless calm, and the watch
- lay stretched upon their backs, snoring away the sultry hours of duty.
- Save our three adventurers, not a living thing was astir; not a sound
- broke the stillness of the night; and high overhead the moon floated in
- ghostly splendour.
- </p>
- <p>
- The boat, as it chanced, lay on that side of the schooner farthest from
- the shore; and in order to shape their course for the beach it was
- necessary to round the vessel's bows. Puggles held the tiller-ropes, but
- in doing this he miscalculated his distance, and ran the boat full tilt
- against the schooners cable.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Keep her off, Pug!&rdquo; cried his master in suppressed, half-angry tones.
- &ldquo;Can't you see where you're steering?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In the momentary confusion a figure appeared for a moment above the
- schooner's bulwarks. Then a glittering object hurtled through the moonlit
- air and struck the gun'le of the boat immediately abaft the thwait on
- which Jack sat. Jack uttered a stifled cry and dropped his oar.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the matter?&rdquo; said Don impatiently, as the boat swung clear of the
- cable. &ldquo;Pull, old fellow; we've no time to lose.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Better lose a little time than one's life,&rdquo; muttered Jack through his set
- teeth. &ldquo;Look here!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Turning in his seat Don saw, still quivering in the gun'le of the boat
- where its point had stuck, a sailor's heavy sheath-knife. In its passage
- it had slashed open the shoulder of Jack's coat, grazing the flesh so
- closely as to draw blood&mdash;the first shed in the quest of the golden
- pearl.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack passed it off with an air of indifference.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A mere scratch,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;but a close shave all the same. The work of
- that treacherous lascar I knocked down a while back. Saw his ugly
- head-piece above the rail just now, don't you know. There's no time to pay
- him out now, but if ever he interferes with me again he'll get his knife
- back, anyhow!&rdquo; and wrenching the formidable weapon free of the plank, he
- thrust it into his belt and again bent to his oar.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If that fellow's an accomplice of the shark-charmer, it looks as though
- they meant business,&rdquo; commented Don, seconding his companion's stroke.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So do we, if it comes to that,&rdquo; was Jacks significant retort,
- </p>
- <p>
- For some time they pulled in silence, the creaking of the oars in the
- rowlocks and the soft purling of the water about the boat's prow being the
- only sounds audible. When within a couple of hundred yards of the gleaming
- surfline, Don suddenly broke the silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hold hard, Jack! Do you make out anything astern there&mdash;anything
- black on the water?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nothing,&rdquo; said Jack, after a moment's hesitation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's gone now, but I saw it quite plainly. Struck me it looked like a
- man's head. Must have been a dugong.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Or the lascar,&rdquo; suggested Jack. &ldquo;He's safe to follow us if he's an
- accomplice.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hardly safe with so many sharks about,&rdquo; rejoined Don, &ldquo;unless his master
- has provided him with an extra potent charm.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Five minutes later, the boat having meanwhile been beached upon the
- deserted sands, Puggles was rapidly &ldquo;pointing&rdquo; for the bazaar, where the
- shark-charmer slept o' nights. That they should find him there to-night,
- however, was almost too much to hope. He had probably &ldquo;made tracks&rdquo; with
- all speed after securing the pearls. All the same, a visit to the bazaar
- might furnish some clue to his present whereabouts.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stop!&rdquo; said Don, when within fifty yards of the spot. &ldquo;The whole place
- will be astir in two minutes if we show ourselves, Jack. We'd better send
- Pug on ahead to reconnoitre while we wait here. Do you know the hut he
- usually sleeps in, Pug?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me finding with me eyes shut, sa'b.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good! Now listen. Make your way to this hut as quietly as you can, and
- ascertain whether he's there or not. If he's there, don't wake him, but
- come back here as fast as your legs can carry you. If he's not there, try
- and find out where he's gone.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Put your cloth over your head so he won't recognise you, and say you've
- come on business,&rdquo; put in Jack. &ldquo;Pretend you want a charm, or something of
- that sort.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not a bad idea,&rdquo; assented Don. &ldquo;You understand, Pug?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me understanding, sa'b.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then be off with you, sharp!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Puggles promptly disappeared.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the course of ten minutes he returned, accompanied by a native muffled
- from head to heel in a blanket.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Surely he can't have induced the old fellow to return with him!&rdquo;
- whispered Jack excitedly.
- </p>
- <p>
- But in this surmise he was wrong. It was not the shark-charmer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dis one bery nice black man; plenty talk got,&rdquo; said Puggles, by way of
- introduction, when he reached the spot where his master and Jack were
- waiting. &ldquo;Him telling shark-charmer no here; he going one village.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Just as I feared,&rdquo; said Don. &ldquo;How far is it to this village, Pug!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Him telling one two legs,&rdquo; replied Puggles, meaning leagues. &ldquo;Village
- 'long shore; marster giving one rupee, dis'black man showing way.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Without further parley the rupee was transferred from Don's pocket to the
- stranger's outstretched palm, and off they started. After following the
- beach for about a mile, their guide turned his back upon the sea and
- struck inland, leading them a tortuous course amid ghostly, interminable
- sand-hills, where the mournful sighing of the night-wind through the tall
- silver-grass, and the howling of predatory jackals, added to the weird
- loneliness of the scene. A blurred furrow in the yielding sand formed the
- only footpath. So slow was their progress that when at last the guide
- pointed out the village a halfmile ahead, Don, on consulting his watch,
- found it to be three o'clock. They had wasted fully two hours in walking
- six miles.
- </p>
- <p>
- While they were still some little distance short of the village, the guide
- stopped, and pointing out a pool of water which shone like a boss of
- polished silver amid the sand-hills, asked leave to go and slake his
- thirst. His request granted, he disappeared amid the dunes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Do you know,&rdquo; said Jack, while they were impatiently awaiting his return,
- &ldquo;I fancy I've seen that fellow before, though I can't for the life of me
- recall where.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The guide not returning, they at length went in search of him. But Pug's
- &ldquo;bery nice black man&rdquo; was nowhere to be seen.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Looks as if he meant to leave us in the lurch,&rdquo; Jack began, when a shout
- of &ldquo;Him here got, sa'b!&rdquo; from Puggles, brought them back to the footpath
- at a run.
- </p>
- <p>
- The new-comer, however, was not the missing guide, but a stranger. He had
- been belated at the bazaar, he told them, and was now making his way home
- to the village close by. In answer to inquiries concerning the
- shark-charmer, he imparted a startling piece of news.
- </p>
- <p>
- The shark-charmer had indeed taken his departure from the bazaar, but not
- to this village. He had, the stranger asserted, embarked in a coasting
- vessel bound for the opposite side of the Strait.
- </p>
- <p>
- Don uttered an exclamation of impatience and dismay.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He will be safe on the Madras coast by daybreak!&rdquo; he cried.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Him there coming from, sa'b,&rdquo; put in Puggles.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And that lying guide,&rdquo; added Jack savagely, &ldquo;was an accomplice, left
- behind to throw us off the scent. Don't you remember you saw some one
- swimming after the boat? I'll lay any odds 'twas the lascar. He got to the
- bazaar ahead of us&mdash;he could easily manage that, you know, by running
- along the sands&mdash;muffled himself up so that I shouldn't recognise
- him, and then led us on this fool's errand while his master made off.
- Well, good-bye to the golden pearl!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not a bit of it!&rdquo; cried Don resolutely. &ldquo;I, for one, shan't relinquish
- the quest, come what may. Back we go to the schooner! Then, with the
- governor's consent, we'll go further. Point, Pug!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack seconding this proposal heartily, they rewarded the communicative
- native, and with unflagging determination retraced their steps. By four
- o'clock they had traversed something more than half the distance. The dawn
- star was now high above the eastern horizon. A rosy flush in the same
- quarter warned them that day was rapidly approaching. Suddenly, out of the
- gray distance ahead, a dull booming sound floated to their ears.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The schooner's signal gun!&rdquo; exclaimed Don. &ldquo;Why, it's too early yet by a
- good hour for the boats to put out. What's the governor about, I wonder?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There it goes again!&rdquo; cried Jack. &ldquo;I never knew it to be fired twice of a
- morning, did you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Never,&rdquo; said Don uneasily. &ldquo;Come, let us get on!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Off again at their best speed, until at length the heavy path was
- exchanged for the smooth, hard sand of the beach. On this it was possible
- to make better time, and by five o'clock they were within half a mile or
- so of the bazaar. It was now daylight; but a sharp bend in the coast-line,
- and the sand-hills which here rose steeply from the beach on their left,
- as yet concealed both the landing-place and the schooner from view.
- </p>
- <p>
- Puggles, who in spite of his shortness of limb had throughout maintained
- the lead by several rods, suddenly stopped, and fell to shouting and
- gesticulating wildly. Breaking into a run, Don and Jack speedily came up
- with him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Look, sa'b, look!&rdquo; gasped Puggles, pointing down the coast with shaking
- hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- Far away on the horizon appeared the white canvas of a vessel bowling
- along before the fresh land breeze, with a fleet of fishing-boats
- spreading their fustian-hued wings in her wake.
- </p>
- <p>
- The spot where our adventurers had last seen the schooner at anchor was
- deserted. She was gone!
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IV.&mdash;INTRODUCES BOSIN, AND TELLS HOW CAPTAIN MANGO PROVED
- HIMSELF A TRUMP.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he schooner had
- sailed!
- </p>
- <p>
- When the dismay caused by this unlooked-for turn of events had somewhat
- abated, Jack, catching sight of the black boy's lugubrious face, fell to
- laughing heartily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;After all,&rdquo; said Don, following his chum's example, &ldquo;it's no use crying
- over spilt milk. I'm not sure but this is the best thing that could have
- happened, Jack.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My opinion exactly. We began the quest without the guv's knowledge, and
- <i>nolens volens</i> we must continue it without his consent. What's the
- next piece on the programme, old fellow?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don pondered for a moment.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, first,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;we must ascertain whether that fellow told us the
- truth about the shark-charmer's having gone across the Strait. If it turns
- out that he has, then I'm not exactly clear yet as to what our next move
- will be, though I've an idea. You shall hear what it is later on.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right,&rdquo; said Jack &ldquo;whatever course you decide on, I'm with you heart
- and fist, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Arrived in the vicinity of the bazaar, Puggles was at once despatched to
- learn what he could of the shark-charmer's movements. In half an hour he
- returned. His report confirmed that which they had already heard. The
- shark-charmer had undoubtedly sailed for the opposite side of the Strait.
- </p>
- <p>
- Throwing himself upon his back in the shade of the banyan tree which had
- witnessed the discovery of the pearls, Don drew his helmet over his eyes,
- and pondered long and deeply.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Jack,&rdquo; said he at length, &ldquo;how much money have you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack turned out his pockets.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Barely a rupee and a half,&rdquo; said he,
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And I,&rdquo; added Don, turning out his own, &ldquo;have four and a half.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Here one rupee got, sa'b,&rdquo; cried Puggles, tugging at his waist-cloth. &ldquo;Me
- giving him heart and fist, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That makes seven rupees, then,&rdquo; said his master, laughing; &ldquo;not much to
- continue the quest on, eh, Jack?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We'll manage,&rdquo; said Jack hopefully. &ldquo;But, I say, you haven't told us your
- plans yet, old fellow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, our course is as plain as a pikestaff. We'll hire a native boat, and
- follow the shark-charmer across the Strait. The only question is, where's
- enough money to come from?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't know,&rdquo; said Jack, &ldquo;unless we try to borrow it in the bazaar.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At this juncture there occurred an interruption which, unlikely though it
- may seem, was destined to lead to a most satisfactory solution of this
- all-important and perplexing question.
- </p>
- <p>
- While this conversation was in progress Puggles had seated himself at a
- short distance behind his master, and throwing his turban aside, proceeded
- to untie and dress the one tuft of hair which adorned the back of his
- otherwise cleanly shaven head.
- </p>
- <p>
- Directly above the spot where he sat there extended far out from the trunk
- of the banyan a branch of great size, from which dangled numerous
- rope-like air-roots, which, reaching to-within a few feet of the ground,
- swayed to and fro in the morning breeze. Out along this branch crept a
- large black monkey, which, after taking a cautious survey of Puggles and
- his unconscious neighbours, glided noiselessly down one of the swinging
- roots, and from its extremity dropped lightly to the ground within a yard
- of the discarded turban. Cautiously, with his cunning ferret-eyes fastened
- on the preoccupied Puggles, the monkey approached the coveted prize,
- snatched it up, and with a shrill cry of triumph turned tail and fled.
- </p>
- <p>
- Looking quickly round at the cry, Puggles took in the situation at a
- glance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sa'b! Sar!&rdquo; he shouted, invoking the aid of both his master and Jack in
- one breath, &ldquo;one black debil monkey me turban done hooking;&rdquo; and leaping
- to his feet he gave chase.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; said Jack, &ldquo;the little beast is making a bee-line for the old fort.
- It must be Bosin, Captain Mango's pet monkey.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Captain Mango!&rdquo; cried Don, as though seized with some sudden inspiration.
- &ldquo;Never thought of him until this minute!&rdquo; and, clapping on his helmet, he
- set off at a run after Puggles and the monkey.
- </p>
- <p>
- Away like the wind went the monkey, the stolen turban trailing after him
- through the sand like a great serpent; and away went Puggles, his back
- hair flying. But while Puggles was short of wind, the monkey was nimble of
- foot. The race was, therefore, unequal from the start, its finish more
- summary than satisfactory; for as Puggles ran, with his eyes glued upon
- the scurrying monkey, and his mouth wide-stretched, his foot unluckily
- came in contact with a tree-root, which lay directly across his path.
- Immediately beyond was a bed of fine soft sand, and into this he pitched,
- head foremost. Just then his master came up, with Jack at his heels.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sa'b! Sar!&rdquo; spluttered Puggles, knuckling his eyes and spitting sand
- right and left, &ldquo;debil monkey done stole turban. Where him going, sa'b?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come on, Pug,&rdquo; his master called out as he ran past; &ldquo;your headgear's all
- right&mdash;the monkey's taken it into the fort.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The structure known as &ldquo;the fort&rdquo; occupied the summit of a sandy knoll,
- about which grew a thick plantation of cocoanut palms, seemingly as
- ancient as the fort itself. The walls of the enclosure had so crumbled
- away in places as to afford glimpses of the buildings within. These were
- two in number&mdash;one an ancient <i>godown</i>, as dilapidated as the
- surrounding wall; the other, a bungalow in excellent repair, blazing in
- all the glory of abundant whitewash.
- </p>
- <p>
- Towards this building, after passing the tumble-down gateway, with its
- turreted side-towers alive with pigeons, Don and his companion shaped
- their course; for this was by no means their first visit to the fort. A
- broad, low-eaved verandah shaded the front of the bungalow, and upon this
- opened two or three low windows and a door. As they drew near a shadow
- suddenly darkened the doorway, and there emerged upon the verandah an
- individual whose pea-jacket and trousers of generous nautical cut
- unmistakably proclaimed him to be a seafaring man. About his throat a
- neckerchief of a deep marine blue was tied in a huge knot; while from
- beneath the left leg of his wide pantaloons there projected the end of a
- stout wooden substitute for the real limb.
- </p>
- <p>
- On catching sight of his visitors an expression of mingled astonishment
- and pleasure overspread his honest, bronzed features.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0006" id="linkimage-0006"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0057.jpg" alt="0057 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0057.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shiver my binnacle!&rdquo; roared he, advancing with a series of hitches and
- extended hand to meet them. &ldquo;Shiver my binnacle if it ain't Master Don and
- Master Jack made port again! An' split my topsails, yonder's the little
- nigger swab a-bearin' down under full sail out o' the offin! Lay alongside
- the old hulk, my hearties, an' tell an old shipmate what may be the
- meaning of it all. Where away might the schooner be, I axes?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To tell you the truth, Captain Mango,&rdquo; said Don, shaking the old sailor
- by the hand in hearty fashion, &ldquo;on that point we're as much at sea as
- yourself. We pulled ashore last night on a little matter of business of
- our own&mdash;without the skipper's knowledge, you understand&mdash;and
- when we returned here this morning the schooner had sailed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shiver my figger-head if ever I hear'd any yarn to beat that!&rdquo; roared the
- captain, gripping Jack by the hand in turn. &ldquo;An' d'ye mean to say now, as
- ye ain't atween decks, sound asleep in your bunks, when the wessel gets
- under weigh?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not we,&rdquo; cried Jack, laughing at the captain's puzzled face and earnest
- manner; &ldquo;we were miles down the coast just then.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Belay there!&rdquo; sang out the captain, rubbing his stubbly chin in greater
- perplexity than ever. &ldquo;Blow me if I'm able to make out what tack you're
- on, lad. For, d'ye see, I lays alongside o' the wessel somewheres about
- eight bells&mdash;arter they fires the signal gun, d'ye see&mdash;to pay
- my 'specks to the master like, and shiver my bulk-head, when I axes what
- might <i>your</i> bearin's be, lads, he ups an' says, 'The younkers be
- below decks,' says he; an' so he weighs anchor, an' shapes his course for
- Colombie.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's plain there's been a double misunderstanding,&rdquo; said Don; &ldquo;<i>we</i>
- knew nothing of the guv's intention to sail this morning, and <i>he</i>
- knew nothing of our absence from the schooner. He, of course, thought we
- were below, and so sailed without us. As I hinted just now, we're ashore
- on business of our own. Fact is, we're in a fix, and we want your advice.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Adwice is it?&rdquo; cried the captain, leading his visitors indoors; &ldquo;fire
- away, lads, till I hears what manner o' stuff you wants, and the wery best
- a water-logged old seaman can give ye, ye shall have&mdash;shiver my
- figger-head if ye shan't! Howsomedever, afore we lays our heads together
- like, I'll pipe the cook and order ye some wittles.&rdquo; This hospitable duty
- performed, the captain threw himself into a chair with his &ldquo;main-brace,&rdquo;
- as he jocosely termed his wooden leg, extended before him, and, bidding
- Don proceed with what he had to say, composed himself to listen. Whereupon
- Don recounted the cause and manner of the shark-charmer's punishment, the
- discovery and subsequent loss of the pearls, together with their reasons
- for suspecting the shark-charmer of the theft, as well as how they had
- been tricked by the latter's supposed accomplice, and on making their way
- back to the beach had found, not the schooner as they expected, but a
- deserted roadstead.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The thief has crossed the Strait, there's no doubt about that,&rdquo; he
- concluded. &ldquo;<i>We</i> want to hire a boat and go in pursuit of him; but
- the governor's sudden departure has placed us in a dilemma. The fact is,
- captain, we haven't enough cash to&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Belay there!&rdquo; roared the captain, stumping across the room to a
- side-table. &ldquo;Hold hard, lads, till I has a whiff o' the fragrant! Shiver
- my maintop! there's nothing like tobackie for ilin' up a seaman's runnin'
- gear, says you!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Filling a meerschaum pipe of high colour and huge dimensions from a pouch
- almost as large as a sailor's bag, the captain reseated himself, and for
- some minutes puffed away in silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shiver my smokestack!&rdquo; cried he at last, slapping his thigh energetically
- with his disengaged hand, &ldquo;the thing's as easy as boxin' the compass,
- lads! You axes me for adwice: my adwice is, up anchor and away as soon as
- ye can. Supplies is low, says you. What o' that? I axes. There's a canvas
- bag in the old sea-chest yonder as'll charter all the boats hereabouts, if
- so be as they're wanted, which they ain't, d'ye mind me. Ye can dror on
- the canvas bag, lads, an' welcome&mdash;why not? I axes. An' there's as
- tight a leetle cutter in the boat-house below as ever ye clapped eyes on&mdash;which
- the <i>Jolly Tar's</i> her name&mdash;what's at your sarvice, shiver my
- main-brace if it ain't! An' blow me, as the fog-horn says to the
- donkey-engine, I'll ship along with ye, lads!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- &ldquo;An' a-sailin' we'll go, we'll go;
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- An' a-sailin' we will go-o-o!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- he concluded, with a stave of a rollicking old sea-song.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hurrah! You're a trump, captain, and no mistake!&rdquo; cried Jack, while Don
- sprang forward and gripped the old sailor's hand with a heartiness that
- showed how thoroughly he appreciated this generous offer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, y'see, lads,&rdquo; explained the captain apologetically, &ldquo;'twould be ekal
- to a-sendin' of ye to Davy Jones if I was to let ye go pokin&rdquo; round this
- 'ere Strait alone. Now me&mdash;rope-yarn an' marlin-spikes!&mdash;there
- ain't a reef, nor a shool, nor yet a crik atween Colombie an' Jafna P'int
- but what's laid down on this 'ere old chart o' mine,&rdquo; tapping his forehead
- significantly. &ldquo;An' besides I'm a-spilin' for a bit o' the briny, so with
- you I ships&mdash;an' why not? I axes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And right glad of your company and assistance we'll be, captain,&rdquo; said
- Don. &ldquo;The main difficulty will be, of course, to discover to what part of
- the Indian coast the thief has gone.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The captain puffed thoughtfully at his pipe.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, as for that,&rdquo; said he at length, &ldquo;I've an idee as I knows his
- reckonin', shiver my binnacle if I ain't! But that's neither here nor
- there at this present speakin'. Ballast's the first consideration, lads;
- so dror up your cheers an' tackle the perwisions.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- When they had complied with this welcome invitation to the entire
- satisfaction of the captain and their own appetites, &ldquo;Now, lads,&rdquo; said the
- old sailor gaily, &ldquo;do ye turn in an' snatch a wink o' sleep, whiles I goes
- an' gets the cutter ready for puttin' to sea. For, says you, look alive's
- the word if so be as we wants to overhaul the warmint as took the treasure
- in tow. Spike my guns!&mdash;we'll make him heave to in no time!
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- &ldquo;For all things is ready, an' nothing we want,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- To fit out our ship as rides so close by;
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- Both wittles an' weapons, they be nothing scant,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- Like worthy sea-dogs ourselves we will try!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- Trolling this ditty, the captain stumped away, while his guests made
- themselves as comfortable as they could, and sought the slumber of which
- they stood so much in need.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was late in the afternoon when they woke. Puggles had disappeared.
- Proceeding to the beach, they found the captain, assisted by a small army
- of native servants, busily engaged in putting the-finishing touches to his
- preparations for the proposed voyage. Just above the surf-line lay the <i>Jolly
- Tar</i>&mdash;a trim little craft, fitted with mast-and sprit, whose
- sharp, clean-cut lines betokened possibilities in the way of speed that
- promised well for the issue of their enterprise. In the cuddy, amid a
- bewildering array of pots, pans, and pannkins, Puggles had already
- installed himself, his shining face a perfect picture of self-complacent
- good-nature, whilst Bosin, newly released from durance vile, sat in the
- stern-sheets, cracking nuts-and jabbering defiance at his black rival.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A purty craft!&rdquo; chuckled the captain, checking for a moment the song that
- was always on his lips, as he led his visitors to the cutters side; &ldquo;stave
- my water-butt if there's anything can pull ahead of her in these 'ere
- parts. Everything shipshape 'an' ready to hand, d'ye see&mdash;wittles for
- the woyage, an' drink for the woyagers. Likewise ammunitions o' war,&rdquo;
- cried he proudly, pointing out a number of muskets and shining cutlasses,
- which a servant just then brought up and placed on board.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- &ldquo;Bath, wittles an' weapons, they be nothing scant,
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- So like worthy sea-dogs ourselves we will try.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What with the cutlasses and guns, and the captain's wooden leg, to say
- nothing of our small-arms, Don,&rdquo; said Jack, &ldquo;we'd better set up for
- buccaneers at once.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shiver my main-brace! a wooden leg ain't sich a bad article arter all,&rdquo;
- rejoined the captain; &ldquo;specially when a seaman falls overboard. With a
- life-buoy o' that nater rove on to his starn-sheets, he's sartin to keep
- one leg above water, says you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No doubt of that, even if he goes down by the head,&rdquo; assented Don,
- laughing. &ldquo;But, I say, captain, what's in the keg&mdash;spirits?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Avast there!&rdquo; replied the captain, half shutting one eye and
- contemplating the keg with the other, &ldquo;that 'ere keg, lads, has stuff in
- its hold what's a sight better'n spurts. Gunpowder, lads, that's what it
- is; and spike my guns if we don't broach the same to the health of old
- Salambo when we falls in with him. What say you, lads?
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- &ldquo;We always be ready,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- Steady, lads, steady;
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- We'll fight an' we'll conquer agin an' agin.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I hope we shan't have to do that, captain,&rdquo; said Jack gravely. &ldquo;But
- powder or no powder, we'll pay the beggar out, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Right, lad; so we'll just take the keg along with us in case of
- emargencies like. Shiver my compass, there's no telling aforehand what
- this 'ere wenture may lead to.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- To whatever the venture was destined to lead, preparations for its
- successful inception went on apace, and by nightfall all was in readiness.
- The captain declaring that he &ldquo;couldn't abide the ways o' them 'ere
- jabbering nigger swabs when afloat,&rdquo; the only addition to their numbers
- was a single trusty servant of the old sailor's, who was taken along
- rather with a view to the cutter's safety when they should be ashore than
- because his assistance was required in sailing her.
- </p>
- <p>
- Don having despatched an overland messenger with a letter to his father,
- explaining their absence and proposed undertaking, as the full moon rose
- out of the eastern sea the cutter was launched.
- </p>
- <p>
- Half an hour later, with her white sails bellying before the freshening
- land-breeze, she bore away for the opposite shore of the Strait, on that
- quest from which one at least of those on board was destined never to
- return.
- </p>
- <p>
- While her sails were yet visible in the moonlit offing, a native crept
- down to the deserted beach. He was a dark-skinned, evil-featured fellow;
- and the moonlight, falling upon his face, showed his left temple to be
- swollen and discoloured as from a recent blow. On his shoulder he carried
- a paddle-and a boathook.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The wind will drop just before dawn,&rdquo; he muttered, as he stood a moment
- noting the strength and direction of the breeze. &ldquo;Then, you white-devil,
- then!&rdquo; and he patted the boathook affectionately, as if between him and it
- there existed some secret, dark understanding.
- </p>
- <p>
- Selecting a <i>ballam</i> or &ldquo;dug-out&rdquo; from amongst a number that lay
- there, he placed the boathook carefully in the bottom of the frail skiff,
- and launched it almost in the furrow which the cutter's keel had ploughed
- in the yielding sand. Then springing in, and plying his paddle with rapid
- strokes, he quickly disappeared in the cutter's wake.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0007" id="linkimage-0007"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0067.jpg" alt="0067 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0067.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER V.&mdash;THE LASCAR GETS HIS KNIFE BACK.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>er light sails
- winged to catch every breath of the light but steady breeze that chased
- her astern, the cutter for some hours bowled through the water merrily. In
- the cabin Puggles and the captain's Black servant snored side by side;
- whilst Don and Jack lolled comfortably just abaft the mast-, where the
- night wind, soft and spicy as the breath of Eden, would speedily have
- lulled them to slumber but for the excitement that fired their blood. The
- Captain was at the tiller, Bosin curled up by his side.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;If this 'ere wind holds, lads,&rdquo; exclaimed the old sailor abruptly, after
- a prolonged silence on his part, &ldquo;we'd orter make the island agin sunrise,
- shiver my forefoot if we don't!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don looked up with half-sleepy interest. &ldquo;Island, captain? I thought we
- were heading straight for the Indian coast.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ay, so we be, straight away. But, y'see, lad, as I hinted a while back, I
- has a sort o' innard idee, so to say, as the old woman ain't on the
- mainland.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What old woman?&rdquo; queried Jack, yawning. &ldquo;Didn't know there was one in the
- case, captain.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The old sailor burst into a roar of laughter. &ldquo;An' no more there ain't,
- lad,&rdquo; chuckled he; &ldquo;an' slit my hammock if we wants one, says you. Forty
- odd year has I sailed the seas, an' hain't signed articles with any on 'em
- yet. A tight leetle wessel's the lass for me, lads; for, unship my helm!
- <i>she</i> never takes her own head for it, says you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then what about the old woman you mentioned captain?&rdquo; said Don
- banteringly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Avast there now! An' d'ye mean to say,&rdquo; demanded the captain
- incredulously, &ldquo;as you ain't ever hear'd tell o' the fish what sails under
- that 'ere name? And a wicious warmint he is, too, shiver my keelson!
- Hysters is his wittles, an' pearls his physic; he lives on 'em, so to say;
- an' so I calls the cove as took them pearls o' your'n in tow an old woman;
- an' why not, I axes?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But what about the island you spoke of just now, captain?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, d'ye see, it's this way, lads; there's an island off the coast
- ahead, a sort o' holy place like, where them thievin' natives goes once a
- year an' gets salwation from their sins. Howsomedever, that's neither here
- nor there, says you; the p'int's this, lads: Somewheres about the month o'
- March, which is this same month, says you, here the priests flocks from
- all parts, an' here they stays until they gets a purty pocketful o' cash.
- Now, my idee's this, d'ye see: the old woman&mdash;which I means Salambo&mdash;lays
- alongside the schooner an' takes them pearls o' your'n in tow. What for?
- says you. Cash, says I. An' so, shiver my main-brace, he shapes his course
- for this 'ere island, an' sells 'em to the priests.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Very likely,&rdquo; assented Don. &ldquo;He's bound to carry them to the best market,
- of course.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And equally of course the best market is where the most priests are. By
- Jove, you <i>have</i> a headpiece, captain!&rdquo; put in Jack.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm afraid, though,&rdquo; resumed Don, after a moment's silence, &ldquo;I'm afraid
- it's not going to be so easy to come at the old fellow as we think. You
- say this island's a sort of holy place; well, it's bound to be packed with
- natives to the very surf-line in that case. Rather ticklish work, I should
- think, taking the old fellow among so many pals. There's the getting
- ashore, too; what's to prevent their sighting us?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Belay there!&rdquo; roared the captain, vigorously thumping the bottom of the
- boat with his wooden leg. &ldquo;Shiver my main-brace! what sort o' craft do ye
- take me for, I axes? A island's a island the world over&mdash;a lump o'
- land what's floated out to sea. Wery good, that bein' so&mdash;painters
- an' boathooks!&mdash;ain't it as easy a-boardin' of her through the
- starn-ports as along o' the forechains?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, you mean to make the back of the island, and steal a march on old
- Salambo from the rear, then?&rdquo; cried Don. &ldquo;A capital idea!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You're on the right tack there, lad,&rdquo; assented the captain. &ldquo;There's as
- purty a leetle cove at the backside o' that island as ever wessel cast
- anchor in, an' well I knows it, shiver my binnacle! Daylight orter put us
- into it, if so be&mdash;&mdash; Split my sprit-sail, lads, if it ain't
- a-fallin' calm!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0008" id="linkimage-0008"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0074.jpg" alt="0074 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0074.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- An ominous flapping of the cutter's sails confirmed the captain's words.
- During the half-hour over which this conversation extended the wind had
- gradually died away until scarcely a movement of the warm night air could
- be felt. The cutter, losing her headway, rolled lazily to the motion of
- the long, glassy swell. Consulting his watch, Don announced it to be three
- o'clock.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This 'ere's the lull at ween the sea-breeze an' the land-breeze,&rdquo;
- observed the captain complacently, working the tiller from side to side as
- if trying to coax renewed life into the cutter. &ldquo;How-somedever, it hadn't
- orter last long. Stow my sea-chest!&mdash;we'll turn in an' catch a wink
- o' sleep atween whiles. Here, Master Jack, lad! take a turn at the tiller,
- will 'ee?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Settling himself in the captain's place, with instructions to call that
- worthy sea-dog should the wind freshen, Jack began his first watch.
- Becalmed as they were, the tiller was useless, so he let it swing,
- contenting himself with keeping a bright look-out. But soon he concluded
- even this to be an unnecessary precaution. Not a sail was to be seen on
- the moonlit expanse of ocean; and even had a score been in sight, there
- would still have been no danger whatever, in the absence of wind, of their
- interfering with the cutter. In fine, so secure did he consider their
- position, and so soporific an influence did the comfortable snoring of Don
- and the captain exercise upon him, that in a very short time his head sank
- upon his breast, and he fell asleep.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had slept soundly for perhaps an hour, when a cold, touch upon the
- cheek startled him into consciousness.
- </p>
- <p>
- Rousing himself, he found Bosin at his elbow. The monkey for some reason
- had left his masters side, and it was his clammy paw, Jack now perceived,
- that had awakened him. It almost looked as if the monkey had purposely
- interrupted his slumber. But what had roused the monkey? Jack rose to his
- feet, stretched himself, and looked about him.
- </p>
- <p>
- The night was, if anything, more breathlessly calm than when he had
- relieved the captain. Upon the unruffled, deserted sea the moonlight
- shimmered with a brilliancy uncanny in its ghostliness. From the cutter
- straight away to and around the horizon not an object, so far as he could
- make out, darkened the surface of the water, except under the cutter's
- larboard bow, where the moon-cast shadow of the sail fell. He fancied he
- saw something move there, close under the bow where the shadow lay
- blackest. The next instant it had disappeared.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, Bosin, old chap,&rdquo; said he, stroking the monkeys back; &ldquo;a false
- alarm this time&mdash;back to your quarters, old fellow!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The monkey, as if reassured by these words, crept away to his master's
- side, whilst Jack resumed his seat, and again dozed off.
- </p>
- <p>
- Not for long, however. It was not the monkey this time, but a sudden and
- by no means gentle thud against the cutters side that roused him. Awake in
- an instant, he sprang to his feet with a startled exclamation. Close under
- the cutter's quarter lay a canoe, and in the canoe there stood erect a
- native, with what appeared to be a boathook poised above his head. All
- this Jack took in at a glance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Boat ahoy! Who's that?&rdquo; he cried sharply, his hand instinctively seeking
- the knife at his belt.
- </p>
- <p>
- For answer came a savage, muttered imprecation; and the boathook, impelled
- with all the strength of the native's muscular arms, descended swiftly
- through the air. Starting aside, Jack received the blow' upon his left
- arm, off which the heavy, iron-shod weapon glanced, striking the gun'le of
- the boat with a resounding crash.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The lascar!&rdquo; muttered Jack between his teeth, as he stepped back a pace
- and whipped out his knife in anticipation of a renewal of the attack.
- </p>
- <p>
- But the lascar, baffled in his attempt to take his enemy by surprise, did
- not repeat the blow. Instead, he drew off, and with all his strength drove
- the iron point of the boathook through the cutter's side below the
- water-line.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;By Heaven!&rdquo; cried Jack, as he perceived his intention, &ldquo;I'll soon settle
- scores with you, my fine fellow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Springing lightly upon the gunle, at a single bound he cleared the few
- yards of open water intervening between the cutter and the canoe, and with
- all the impetus of his leap drove the knife into the lascar's shoulder up
- to the very hilt.
- </p>
- <p>
- The lascar went overboard like a log. The canoe overturning at the same
- instant, Jack followed him.
- </p>
- <p>
- The noise of the scuffle having roused the sleepers, all was now wild
- commotion on board the cutter; Captain Mango roaring out his strange
- nautical oaths, and stumping hither and thither in search of something
- with which to stop the leak; Don shouting wildly at Jack, as he hastily
- threw off shoes and coat to swim to his assistance. Before either well
- knew what had actually happened, Jack was alongside.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the matter? Are you hurt?&rdquo; Don inquired anxiously, giving him a
- hand over the side.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hurt? No, not a scratch,&rdquo; said Jack lightly, scrambling inboard, and
- proceeding to wring the water from his dripping garments. &ldquo;A narrow
- squeak, though. That lascar villain has got his knife back, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Who?&rdquo; cried Don in amazement; for, amid the confusion, neither he nor the
- captain had seen the native.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The lascar. What else do you suppose I went over the side for? I dozed
- off, you see, captain,&rdquo; said Jack, as the old sailor came stumping up with
- extended hand, &ldquo;and that lascar dog, who must have seen us sail and
- paddled after us, stole a march on me, and tried to crack my nut with a
- boathook. Lucky for me, he ran his canoe against the side and woke me up.
- Got on my feet just in time to dodge the blow. Then he smashed the
- boathook through the side. By Jove! I forgot that. We must stop the leak,
- or we'll fill in no time.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stave my quarter!&rdquo; roared the captain, detaining him as he was about to
- rush aft. &ldquo;The leak's stopped, lad; but blow me if ever I hear'd anything
- to beat this 'ere yarn o' your'n, so spin us the rest on it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's soon done,&rdquo; resumed Jack. &ldquo;When I found the fellow wouldn't give
- me a fair show, I boarded him, captain, and treated him to a few inches of
- cold steel. He won't trouble us again, I reckon!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Scarcely had he finished speaking when Don gripped his arm and pointed to
- where, a dozen yards away, the bottom of the canoe glistened in the
- moonlight. A dark object had suddenly appeared alongside the overturned
- skiff. Presently a surging splash was heard.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shiver my keelson if he ain't righted the craft!&rdquo; roared the captain,
- snatching up one of the muskets as the lascar was seen to scramble into
- the canoe and paddle slowly away.
- </p>
- <p>
- Don laid a quick hand upon the old sailor's arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let the beggar go,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;He'll never reach land with that knife in
- him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Maybe not, lad,&rdquo; replied the captain, shaking off the hold upon his arm
- and taking the best aim he could, considering the motion of the boat.
- &ldquo;Bloodshed's best awoided, says you. Wery good; all' the best way to awoid
- it, d'ye mind me, is to send yon warmint to Davy Jones straight away.
- Consequential, the quality o' marcy shan't be strained on this 'ere
- occasion, as the whale says when he swallied the school o' codlings.&rdquo; And
- with that he fired.
- </p>
- <p>
- The lascar was seen to discontinue the use of his paddle for a moment, and
- then to make off faster than before.
- </p>
- <p>
- The old sailor's face fell.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Spike my guns, I've gone and missed the warmint!&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;Howsomedever,
- we'll meet again, as the shark's lower jaw says to the upper 'un when they
- parted company to accomidate the sailor. An' blow me, lads, here comes the
- wind!
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- &ldquo;Ay, here's a master excelleth in skill,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- An' the master's mate he is not to seek;
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- An' here's a Bjsin ull do our good will,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- An' a ship, d'ye see, lads, as never had leak.
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- So lustily, lustily, let us sail forth!
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- Our sails he right trim an' the wind's to the north!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- It was now five o'clock, and as day broke the cutter, with a freshening
- breeze on her starboard quarter, bore away for the island, now in full
- view. When about a mile short of it, however, the captain laid the boat's
- head several points nearer the wind, and shaped his course as though
- running past it for the mainland, which lay like a low bank of mist on the
- horizon. In the cuddy Puggles was busy with preparations for breakfast,
- whilst Don lolled on the rail, watching the shore, and idly trailing one
- hand in the water.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hullo! what's this?&rdquo; he exclaimed suddenly, examining with interest a
- fragment of dripping cloth that had caught on his hand. &ldquo;Jack, come here!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack happened to be forward just then, hanging out his drenched clothes to
- dry upon an improvised line, but hearing Don's exclamation, he sprang aft.
- Somehow he was always expecting surprises now.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Look here,&rdquo; said Don, rapidly spreading out the soaked cloth upon his
- knee, &ldquo;have you ever seen this before?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not likely!&mdash;a mere scrap of rag that some greasy native&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- Jack began, eyeing the said scrap of rag contemptuously. But suddenly his
- tone changed, and he gasped out: &ldquo;By Jove, old fellow, it's not the
- handkerchief, is it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The very same!&rdquo; replied-Don, rising and hurrying aft to where the captain
- stood at the tiller. &ldquo;I say, captain, you remember my telling you how I
- tied a handkerchief round that bag of pearls? Well, here's the identical
- 'wipe.' with my initials on it as large as life. Just fished it out of the
- water.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For full a minute the old sailor stared at him open-mouthed. Then: &ldquo;Flush
- my scuppers,&rdquo; roared he, &ldquo;if this 'ere ain't the tidiest piece o' luck as
- ever I run agin. We've got the warmint safe in the maintop, so to say,
- where he can't run away&mdash;shiver my main-brace if we ain't!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thanks to your clear head, captain,&rdquo; said Don. &ldquo;It certainly does look as
- if he had come straight to the island here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We'll purty soon know for sartin; we're a-makin' port hand over fist,&rdquo;
- rejoined the captain, bringing the cutter's head round, and running under
- the lee of the island.
- </p>
- <p>
- This side, unlike the wind-swept seaward face, was thickly clad in jungle,
- above which at intervals towered a solitary palm like a sentinel on duty.
- No traces of human habitation were to be seen; for a rocky backbone or
- ridge, running lengthwise of the island, isolated its frequented portion
- from this jungly half. Midway between the extremities of this ridge rose
- two hills: one a symmetrical, cone-shaped elevation, clad in a mantle of
- jungle green; the other a vast mass of naked rock, towering hundreds of
- feet in air, and in its general-outline somewhat resembling a colossal
- kneeling elephant. As if to heighten the resemblance, there was perched
- upon the lofty back a native temple, which looked for all the world like a
- gigantic howdah.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;D'ye see them elewations, lads?&rdquo; cried the captain, heading the cutter
- straight for what-appeared to be an unbroken line of jungle. &ldquo;A. brace o'
- twins, says you. Wery good; atween 'em lies as purty a leetle cove as
- wessel ever cast anchor in&mdash;slip my cable if it ain't!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Are you sure you're not out of your reckoning, captain?&rdquo; said Jack,
- scanning the shore-line with dubious eye. &ldquo;It's no thoroughfare, so far as
- I can see.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Avast there! What d'ye say to that, now?&rdquo; chuckled the captain, as the
- cutter, in obedience to a movement of the tiller, swept round a tiny eyot
- indistinguishable in its mantle of green from, the shore itself, and
- entered a narrow, land-locked creek, whose precipitous sides were
- completely covered from summit to water-line with a rank growth of
- vegetation. &ldquo;Out with the oars, lads! a steam-whistle couldn't coax a wind
- into the likes o' this place, says you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The oars run out, they pulled for some distance through this remarkable
- rift in the hills, the cutter's mast in places sweeping the overhanging
- jungle; until at last a spot was reached where a side ravine cleft the
- cliff upon their left, terminating at the water's edge in a strip of sandy
- beach, thickly shaded with cocoa-nut palms.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stow my cargo!&rdquo; chuckled the captain, as he ran the cutter bow-on into
- the sand, &ldquo;a nautical sea-sarpent himself couldn't smell us out here, says
- you. So here we heaves to, and here we lies until&mdash;&mdash;swabs an'
- slush-buckets, what's this?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For the captain had already scrambled ashore, and as he uttered these
- words he stooped and intently examined the sand at his feet. In it were
- visible recent footprints, and a long trailing furrow that started from
- the water's edge and ran for several yards straight up the beach. Where
- the furrow terminated there lay a native <i>ballam</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack was first to espy the canoe. Guessing the cause of the captain's
- sudden excitement, he ran up the sands to the spot where the rude vessel
- lay. The <i>ballam</i> was still dripping sea-water; and in it, amid a
- pool of blood, lay a sailors sheath-knife.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The lascar!&rdquo; he shouted, snatching up the blood-stained weapon, and
- holding it out at arms length, as Don and the captain hurried up; &ldquo;we've
- landed in his very tracks!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VI.&mdash;IN THE THICK OF IT.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">E</span>ither the lascar's
- wound had not proved as serious as Jack surmised, or the fellow was
- endowed with as many lives as a cat. At all events, he had reached land
- before them, and in safety.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sharks an' sea-sarpents!&rdquo; fumed the captain, Stumping excitedly round and
- round the canoe. &ldquo;The warmint had orter been sent to Davy Jones as I ad
- wised. Howsomedever, bloodshed's best awoided, says you, Master Don, lad;
- an' so, shiver my keelson! here we lies stranded. What's the course to be
- steered now, I axes? That's a matter o' argyment, says you; so here's for
- a whiff o' the fragrant!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Bidding his servant fetch pipe and tobacco, the captain seated himself
- upon the canoe and fell to puffing meditatively, his companions meanwhile
- discussing the situation and a project of their own, with many anxious
- glances in the direction of the adjacent jungle, where, for anything they
- knew to the contrary, the lascar might even then be stealthily watching
- their movements.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shiver my smokestack! d'ye see that, now?&rdquo; exclaimed the captain at last,
- following with half-closed eye and tarry finger the ascent of a perfect
- smoke-ring that had just left his lips. &ldquo;An' what's a ring o' tobackie
- smoke? says you. A forep'intin' to ewents to come, says I. A ring means
- surrounded, d'ye see; an'&mdash;grape-shot an' gun-swabs!&mdash;surrounded
- means fightin', lads!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Fun or fighting, I'm ready, anyhow!&rdquo; cried Jack, flourishing his knife.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ay, ay, lad; an' me, too, for the matter o' that,&rdquo; replied the old
- sailor, presenting his pipe at an imaginary foe like a pistol; &ldquo;but when
- our situation an' forces is beknownst to the enemy, we're sartin to be
- surprised, d'ye mind me. An' so I gets an idee!
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- &ldquo;Go palter to lubbers an' swabs, d'ye see?
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- 'Bout danger, an' fear, an' the like;
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- A tight leetle boat an' good sea-room give me,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- An' it ain't to a leetle I'll strike!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Out with the idea then, captain!&rdquo; cried Don.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shiver my cutlass, lads!&mdash;we must carry the war into the camp o' the
- enemy, dye see'. Wery good, that bein' so, what we wants, d'ye mind me, is
- a safe, tidy place to fall back on, as can't be took, or looted, or burnt,
- like the cutter here, whiles we're away on the rampage, so to say.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why not entrench ourselves on the hill just above?&rdquo; suggested Jack.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stow my sea-chest!&mdash;the wery identical plan I perposes,&rdquo; promptly
- replied the captain. &ldquo;An' why? you naterally axes. Because it's ha'nted,
- says I.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Because it's what?&rdquo; cried the two young men in chorus. &ldquo;Haunted?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ay, the abode o' spurts,&rdquo; continued the captain. &ldquo;There's a old ancient
- temple aloft on yon hill, d'ye see, as they calls the 'Ha'nted Pagodas'&mdash;which
- they say as it's a tiger-witch or summat inhabits it, d'ye see&mdash;an'
- shiver my binnacle if a native'll go a-nigh it day or night!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Admirable! But what about the cutter, captain?&rdquo; said Don.
- </p>
- <p>
- The captain sucked for a moment at his pipe as if seeking to draw a
- suitable idea therefrom.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What o' the cutter? you axes,&rdquo; said he presently. &ldquo;Why, we'll wrarp her
- down the crik a bit, d'ye see, an' stow her away out o' sight where the
- wegitation's thickish-like on the face o' the cliff; copper my bottom if
- we won't!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The stores, of course, must be carried up the hill,&rdquo; said Jack, entering
- readily into the captain's plans. &ldquo;We should set about the job at once.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Avast there, lad! What's to perwent the jungle hereabouts a-usin' of its
- eyes? I axes. The wail o' night, says you. So, when the wail o' night
- unfurls, as the poic says, why, up the hill they goes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- This being unanimously agreed to, and Puggles at that moment announcing
- breakfast, our trio of adventurers adjourned to the cutter.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Captain,&rdquo; said Don, after delighting the black boy's heart by a ravenous
- attack upon the eatables, &ldquo;like you, I've got an idee&mdash;Hullo, you,
- Pug! What are you grinning at?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nutting, sa'b,&rdquo; replied Puggles, clapping his hand over his mouth; &ldquo;only
- when marster plenty eating, he sometimes bery often one idee getting.
- Plenty food go inside, he kicking idee out!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Just double reef those lips of yours, Pug, and tell us where do <i>your</i>
- ideas come from?&rdquo; said Jack, laughing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me tinking him here got, sar,&rdquo; said Puggles, gravely patting his
- waistband, at which the old sailor nearly choked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And a pretty stock of them you have, too, judging by the size of your
- apple-cart!&rdquo; said his master, shying a biscuit at his head. &ldquo;Well, as I
- was saying, captain, I have an idea&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Flush my scuppers!&rdquo; gasped the old sailor, swallowing a brimming pannikin
- of coffee to clear his throat. &ldquo;Let's hear more on it then, lad.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, it's this. Jack and I are going over to the town&mdash;where the
- temples are, you understand&mdash;to see if we can't sight old Salambo. A
- bit of reconnoitring may be of use to us later, you see.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A-goin'&mdash;over&mdash;to&mdash;the&mdash;town!&rdquo; roared the captain in
- amazement, separating the words as though each were a reluctant step in
- the direction proposed. &ldquo;Scuttle my cutter, lads! ye'll have the whole
- pack o' waimints down on ye in a brace o' shakes!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You won't say so when you see us in full war-paint,&rdquo; retorted Jack, as he
- and Don rose and disappeared in the cuddy.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the course of half an hour the cuddy door was thrown open, and two
- stalwart young natives, in full country dress, confronted the old sailor.
- With the assistance of Puggles and the captain's &ldquo;boy,&rdquo; not to mention
- soot from the cuddy pots, the two young fellows had cleverly &ldquo;made up&rdquo; in
- the guise of Indian pilgrims. At first sight of them, the captain,
- thinking old Salambo's crew were upon him, seized a musket and threw
- himself into an attitude of defence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Blow me!&rdquo; he roared, when a loud burst of laughter apprised him of his
- mistake, &ldquo;if this ain't the purtiest go as ever I see. Scrapers an'
- holystones, ye might lay alongside the old woman himself, lads, an' him
- not know ye from a reglar, genewine brace o' lying niggers. What tack are
- ye on now, lads? I axes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Off to the town, captain,&rdquo; replied Don, &ldquo;to search for old Salambo among
- his idols. That is, if you'll let Spottie here come with us as pilot.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Spottie&rdquo; was the nickname with which they had dubbed the captain's black
- servant, whose face was deeply pitted from smallpox.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Right, lads; he's been here afore, an' knows the lay o' the land; so take
- him in tow, and welcome,&rdquo; was the captain's hearty rejoinder. &ldquo;An' stow
- your knives away amidships, in case of emargency like; though blow me if
- they ever take ye for aught but genewine lying niggers!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Concealing their knives about their persons in accordance with this
- advice, they launched the lascar's <i>ballam</i> upon the creek&mdash;which
- the captain assured them expanded a little further inland into a broad
- lagoon, too deep to ford&mdash;and so set out.. The paddle had been
- removed; but as the creek appeared to have nowhere, in its upper reaches
- at any rate, a greater depth than half-a-dozen feet, the boathook served
- admirably as, a substitute for propelling the canoe.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the line for, Spottie?&rdquo; Jack asked, seeing their guide throw a
- coil of small rope into the canoe, which he afterwards boarded in person
- and shoved off.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Turkle, sar,&rdquo; replied Spottie. &ldquo;Plenty time me catching big turkle asleep
- on sand. He no come in <i>ballam</i>, so me taking rope to tow him astern.
- Him bery nice soup making, sar,&rdquo; said Spottie, who had always an eye to
- anything.
- </p>
- <p>
- Little as they guessed it then, this line was to play a more unique and
- serviceable part in the day's adventures than that indicated by the
- soup-loving Spottie.
- </p>
- <p>
- The creek, as the captain had intimated, presently expanded into a lagoon
- fully a quarter of a mile wide, and so shallow in parts that the canoe
- almost touched the amber-coloured sands over which it passed. Arrived at
- the further side, they drew the canoe upon the beach, and continued their
- route to the town by way of a steep jungle-path, which, in the course of
- some fifteen minutes' hard climbing, led them to the crest of the rocky
- ridge. Here they paused a moment to look about them.
- </p>
- <p>
- To the left lay Haunted Pagoda Hill; on their right the colossal Elephant
- Rock; and, nestling at its base, the native town, with its sea of dun
- roofs and gleaming white temples. The stirring ramp of tom-toms, and the
- hoarse roar of the multitude, floated up to them as they stood
- contemplating the scene.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now for it!&rdquo; cried Jack, heading the descent. &ldquo;We'll soon be in the thick
- of it, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A few minutes more and they stood on the outskirts of the town.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Make for the chief temple, Spottie,&rdquo; said Don to their guide; &ldquo;and
- whatever you do, don't call us sahib or sir. We're only pilgrims like
- yourself, you understand. And say, Spottie, do you know old Salambo, the
- shark-charmer, when you see him?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- By a nod Spottie intimated that he did.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good! He's the chap we're after, you understand. Keep a sharp look-out,
- and if you happen to get your eye on him&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Or on a lascar with a knife-wound in his shoulder,&rdquo; put in Jack.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Just pull my cloth, will you?&rdquo; concluded Don.
- </p>
- <p>
- Again the trusty Spottie nodded, and at a signal led the way into the
- main-street, where they immediately found themselves in the midst of a
- noisy, surging crowd of natives.
- </p>
- <p>
- So perfect was their disguise, however, that Don could not detect a single
- suspicious glance directed towards them.
- </p>
- <p>
- The natives who thronged the street were, to a man, heading for the
- temples. Into these, if nothing was seen of the shark-charmer outside, Don
- was resolved to penetrate.
- </p>
- <p>
- As no English foot is ever allowed&mdash;in Southern India, at least&mdash;to
- cross the threshold of a Hindu shrine, this was a step attended with
- tremendous risk. Detection would mean fighting for their lives against
- overwhelming odds.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We'll do it, however,&rdquo; said Don resolutely. &ldquo;The temple's the place to
- look for him, since he's a priest, and in this disguise the pearls are
- worth the risk.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- That this was also Jack's opinion was plain from the resolute, nonchalant
- manner in which he pressed forward.
- </p>
- <p>
- Owing to the congested state of the thoroughfare, progress was necessarily
- slow. They were more than an hour in gaining the open <i>maidan</i> in
- which the street terminated.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the centre of this open space lay a sacred tank, flanked, on that side
- nearest the Elephant Rock, by a vast semicircle of temples. Midway in this
- line stood the chief temple. Here, if at all, the shark-charmer would most
- likely be found.
- </p>
- <p>
- But to reach the chief temple was no easy task. Vast crowds of pilgrims
- surrounded the sacred tank, awaiting their turn to bathe in its stagnant
- green waters.
- </p>
- <p>
- At last, after much elbowing and pushing, they reached the steps of the
- chief temple. Thus far they had seen nothing of Salambo. As they had
- already made the entire circuit of the tank, there was nothing for it but
- to seek him in the sacred edifice itself.
- </p>
- <p>
- Spottie led the way, since for him there was absolutely no risk. Following
- close upon his heels, past the hideous stone monsters which flanked the
- entrance, the mock pilgrims found themselves in the temple court. Here the
- crush was even greater than without.
- </p>
- <p>
- They had now reached the crucial point of their adventure.
- </p>
- <p>
- A single unguarded word or action on their part, and each man of these
- teeming thousands would instantly become a mortal enemy!
- </p>
- <p>
- Don strove to appear unconcerned, but his pulses throbbed madly at the
- mere thought of detection. As for Jack, the careless poise of his right
- hand at his belt showed him to be on his guard, though he looked as cool
- as a sea-breeze.
- </p>
- <p>
- Over the heads of the multitude, on the opposite side of the court, could
- be seen an inner shrine, where offerings were being made. Selecting this
- as his goal, Don began to edge his way slowly but steadily towards it,
- closely followed by Spottie and the undaunted Jack.
- </p>
- <p>
- Suddenly he felt a hand tugging at his cloth. Unable to turn himself about
- in the crush, he twisted his head round and caught Spottie's eye. By a
- quick, almost imperceptible movement of hand and head, the black directed
- his attention towards the left. Looking in the direction thus indicated,
- Don saw, but a few yards away, the portly person of the shark-charmer.
- </p>
- <p>
- By dint of persistent pushing, he presently succeeded in approaching so
- near to his man that, had he so wished, he could have laid a hand upon his
- shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- The shark-charmer was evidently bent upon gaining the inner shrine at the
- opposite side of the court. Inch by inch he pummelled his way through the
- dense crowd, unconscious that the sahibs whom he had robbed were dogging
- his steps. Once when he turned his head his eyes actually rested upon
- Don's face. But he failed to recognise him, and so went on again, greatly
- to Don's relief.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then of a sudden the limit of the crush was reached, and they emerged upon
- a comparatively clear space immediately in front of the shrine. This the
- shark-charmer crossed without hesitation, but Don hung back, uncertain
- whether it would be prudent to venture further. However, seeing a group of
- natives about to approach the shrine with offerings, he joined them, and
- in company with Jack ascended the steps.
- </p>
- <p>
- The shark-charmer had already disappeared within.
- </p>
- <p>
- Fumbling in his cloth for some small coin, to present as an offering, Don
- crossed the threshold, and was in the very act of penetrating the dimly
- lighted, incense-clouded chamber just beyond, when a guarded exclamation
- from Jack caused him to glance quickly over his shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- Following them with the stealthy tread of a panther was a swarthy,
- evil-looking native.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The lascar!&rdquo; said Jack, in a low, breathless whisper. &ldquo;Back, old fellow,
- for your life! Once in the crowd, we're safe.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0009" id="linkimage-0009"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0099.jpg" alt="0099 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0099.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- Back they darted towards the entrance, but the lascar, anticipating this
- manouvre, was on his guard. As Jack dashed past, the cunning spy thrust
- out his foot and sent him sprawling on the flagstones. Don, hearing the
- noise, turned back to his friend's assistance, and by the time Jack
- regained his feet the lascar had reached the entrance mid raised the
- hue-and-cry.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This way!&rdquo; cried Don, making for a narrow side door, as the lascar's
- shouts began to echo through the precincts of the temple. &ldquo;Get your knife
- ready, he's raised the alarm!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Through the door they dashed, only to find themselves in the court, hemmed
- in on every side. The frenzied cries of the lascar continued to ring
- through the enclosure; but, fortunately for the mock pilgrims, so vast was
- the concourse of natives, and so deafening the uproar, that only those
- nearest the shrine understood, his words, while even they failed, as yet
- to penetrate the clever disguise of the intruders. This gave them time to
- draw breath, and look about them.
- </p>
- <p>
- Close, on their left Jack's quick eye discovered an exit, about which the
- crowd was less dense than elsewhere. The great doors stood wide open,
- disclosing a narrow street. Between this exit and the spot where they
- stood at bay, a number of sacred bulls were quietly feeding off a great
- heap of corn which the devotees had poured out upon the flags of the
- court. All this Jack's eyes took in at a glance.
- </p>
- <p>
- A roar, terrific as that of ten thousand beasts of prey, burst from the
- surging multitude. The lascars words were understood. Glancing quickly
- over his shoulder, Jack saw that this man, from his place upon the steps
- of the shrine, was pointing them out.
- </p>
- <p>
- Another instant, and their disguise would avail them nothing; the
- maddened, fanatical crowd would be upon them.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don,&rdquo; he said, in rapid, husky tones, as he grasped his friend's hand for
- what he believed to be the last time, &ldquo;there's but one chance left us, and
- that's a slim one. You see the door on our left, and those bulls? Do you
- take one of the two big fellows feeding side by side, and I'll take the
- other. Use your knife to guide the brute, and with God's help&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A tremendous roar of voices and a thunderous rush-of feet cut his words
- short.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now for it, old fellow!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With one swift backward glance at the furious human wave sweeping down
- upon them, they darted towards the bulls, of which the two largest,
- accustomed to the daily tumult of town and temple, were still composedly
- feeding, their muzzles buried deep in the mound of corn.
- </p>
- <p>
- Before the animals had time to lift their heads, the mock pilgrims were on
- their backs and plying knives and heels upon their sleek flanks.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bellowing with pain and terror, the bulls, with tails erect and heads
- lowered, charged the throng about the doorway, bowling them over in all
- directions like so many ninepins. Before the infuriated crowd in their
- rear understood the meaning of this unexpected manoeuvre, the mock
- pilgrims were in the street.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a side street, fortunately, separated from the densely-packed <i>maidan</i>
- by a high brick wall, and but few natives were about. Those who followed
- them out of the temple, too, they soon distanced, for their ungainly
- steeds made capital time.
- </p>
- <p>
- But now a new, if less serious, danger menaced them. Apart from the
- difficulty of clinging to the round, arched backs of the bulls, once
- started, the maddened animals could not be stopped. Fortunately, they took
- the direction of the hill-path.
- </p>
- <p>
- On they tore, bellowing madly, and scattering showers of foam and sand
- right and left, until, in an amazingly brief space of time, they reached
- the outskirts of the town. Here, as if divining that their services were
- no longer required, the bulls stopped abruptly, shooting their riders off
- their backs into the sand with scant ceremony.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Regular buck-jumpers!&rdquo; groaned Jack, rubbing his lacerated shins
- ruefully. &ldquo;Glad we're safe out of it, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So am I. But I wonder where Spottie is?&rdquo; said Don, fanning himself with
- the loosened end of his turban.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack started up. &ldquo;Never once thought of Spottie since we entered the
- shrine,&rdquo; cried he. &ldquo;Come, we must go back and look him up.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Their uneasiness on Spottie's account, however, was at that instant set at
- rest by the precipitate appearance on the scene of Spottie himself. Seeing
- his masters charge the crowd on the bulls' backs, he had extricated
- himself from the crush, and followed them with all possible speed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dey coming, sar!&rdquo; he panted, as he ran up, &ldquo;Lascar debil done fetching
- plenty black man!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And there swelled up from the street below a tumult of voices that left no
- doubt as to the accuracy of his statement.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VII.&mdash;&ldquo;FUN OR FIGHTING, I'M READY, ANYHOW!&rdquo;
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">D</span>ey coming, sar!&rdquo;
- groaned Spottie; and even as he spoke the leaders of the mob came tearing
- round the corner.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is it fight or run, Don?&rdquo; said Jack quietly, adjusting his turban with
- one hand and laying the other significantly upon his knife.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No two ways about that! We could never stand against such odds; so we'll
- run first and fight afterwards.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And reverse the old saying, eh?&rdquo; laughed Jack. &ldquo;I should dearly love to
- have a whack at them; but if you say run, why&mdash;run it is, so here
- goes!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Shaking his fist at the howling mob, he sprang up the steep hill-path,
- followed closely by Don. Spottie had already made good use of his legs,
- but they soon caught him up, whereupon Jack seized the terrified native by
- the arm and dragged him over the brow of the ridge.
- </p>
- <p>
- Down the further side they dashed, breathing easier now, for their
- movements were here well concealed by the dense jungle through which the
- pathway ran. As they emerged panting upon the sandy shore of the lagoon, a
- yell from the hill behind told them that their pursuers had gained the
- crest of the ridge. At the same instant Don pulled up abruptly, and being
- too much out of breath to speak, pointed in the direction of the canoe.
- Beside it stood a couple of natives, who, on seeing them, turned and fled
- towards the jungle.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The tall fellow!&rdquo; shouted Jack. &ldquo;Stop him! He's got the boathook!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The boathook was their only means of propelling the canoe. That gone, they
- were practically at the mercy of their enemies.
- </p>
- <p>
- After the flying natives they dashed, Jack leading. He quickly came up
- with the hinder-most, whom he dealt a blow that stretched him senseless in
- the sand. But the fellow who carried the boathook was long of leg and
- fresh of wind; while Jack was still a dozen yards in his rear, he gained
- the jungle and disappeared.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No good!&rdquo; groaned Jack, as he relinquished the pursuit and turned back.
- &ldquo;There's nothing for it but to fight. I say, Don, what's up?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don lay sprawling in the sand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Tripped over that lazy beast,&rdquo; said Don, picking himself up and aiming a
- kick at an enormous turtle which was already heading for the water.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Him bery nice soup making, sar!&rdquo; cried Spottie, rubbing his brown hands
- unctuously. But just then a fierce tumult of voices, rolling down from the
- jungle path, put other thoughts than soup into Spottie's pate.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The rope! Fetch the rope, Spottie!&rdquo; cried Jack, throwing himself on the
- turtle's back.
- </p>
- <p>
- Don dragged him off.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come away!&rdquo; cried he. &ldquo;There's no time to fetch that beast along. Are you
- out of your senses?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack's only reply was to snatch the rope from Spottie's hands, rapidly
- reeve a running knot at one end, and slip the loop around the body of the
- giant chelonian, which had by this time reached the water's edge.
- </p>
- <p>
- All this had occupied much less time than it takes to relate.
- </p>
- <p>
- The shouts of the mob now sounded ominously near. Without loss of time the
- canoe was launched, and at once Jack's purpose became apparent.
- </p>
- <p>
- Seating himself in the bow of the canoe, he drew in the slack of the rope
- until the turtle was within easy reach, and, holding it firmly so, prodded
- it with his knife. This was a cruel act, but the stern necessity of the
- moment outweighed all other considerations.
- </p>
- <p>
- The turtle at once began making frantic efforts to escape from its
- tormentor; and as its weight could not have been less than three or four
- hundred pounds, and its strength in proportion, it easily and rapidly drew
- the canoe through the water.
- </p>
- <p>
- In a few minutes they were a stone's throw from shore&mdash;and not a
- moment too soon, for at that instant the mob of natives rushed out of the
- jungle path, and finding themselves outwitted, gave utterance to a furious
- howl of disappointment and rage.
- </p>
- <p>
- The canoe, thanks to the efforts of the turtle, was soon so far from shore
- that Jack considered it safe to alter their course and steer for the
- creek. No sooner did he do so than the natives set off at a run in the
- same direction.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dey there canoe got, maybe,&rdquo; observed Spottie, who had now recovered from
- his fright.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In that case we may have some fun yet,&rdquo; laughed Jack, lashing the turtle
- with the rope's end, as if anxious to be in time for the anticipated
- sport.
- </p>
- <p>
- By the time the creek was reached, however, not a native was to be seen;
- so, congratulating themselves on having given their pursuers the slip,
- they reached the cutter.
- </p>
- <p>
- Here the old sailor, to say nothing of Puggles, was most anxiously
- watching for their return.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shiver my mizzen!&rdquo; shouted he, as they ran under the cutter's stern; &ldquo;ha'
- ye gone an' took a mermaid in tow, lads?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No; one of Spottie's turkles has taken us in tow, captain,&rdquo; replied Jack,
- setting the turtle free with a slash of his knife, in spite of Spottie's
- protestations that the creature would make &ldquo;bery nice soup.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ugh, you cannibal!&rdquo; he added, with a glance of disgust at the black's
- chagrined face, &ldquo;you wouldn't eat the beast after he has saved your life,
- would you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Belay there! what's this 'ere yarn about the warmint a-savin' o' your
- lives, lads?&rdquo; sang out the captain. &ldquo;Hours ago,&rdquo; continued he, as the two
- young men, leaving Spottie to beach the canoe, scrambled on board the
- cutter, &ldquo;hours ago I says to myself, 'Mango, my boy,' says I, 'may I never
- set tooth to salt junk agin if they younkers ain't all dead men afore
- this.' says I. Howsomedever, here ye be safe an' sound; so let's hear the
- whole on it, lads.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In compliance with this request Don began to relate the adventures which
- had befallen them since morning; but scarcely had he got fairly launched
- upon his narrative, when:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sharks an' sea'-sarpents!&rdquo; interrupted the captain, rising to his feet
- with a lurch, and pointing up the creek, &ldquo;what sort o' craft's this 'ere
- a-bearin' down on us? I axes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A canoe, laden to the water's edge with natives, appeared round a bend in
- the creek. Presently other canoes, to the number of half-a-dozen, hove in
- sight in rapid succession, whose occupants, perceiving their approach to
- be discovered, set up a shout that made the cliffs ring.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Spottie was right,&rdquo; cried Jack, catching up a musket, while Don and the
- captain followed suit; &ldquo;they've found canoes, and mean to board us.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Fire my magazine, but we'll give 'em a right warm welcome, then,&rdquo; said
- the captain. &ldquo;Look to the primin', lads, an' hold hard when I says fire,
- for blow me, these 'ere old muskets kicks like a passel o' lubberly
- donkeys, d'ye see!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Captain,&rdquo; Don hastily interposed, &ldquo;why not draw the bullets and load up
- with shot? The canoes are so deep in the water that a smart volley of shot
- right into the midst of the rascals is sure to make them flop over. We've
- just time to do it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- This suggestion tickled the captain immensely, and without delay the
- change was made. The canoes were now within easy range.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ready, lads,&rdquo; cried the captain:
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- &ldquo;We always be ready,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- Steady, lads, steady!
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- We'll fight an' we'll conquer agin and agin!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- Up went the muskets. At sight of them the natives rested on their oars, or
- rather paddles, and the canoes slowed down.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Fire!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The cliffs trembled beneath the treble report. Jack, who in his excitement
- had forgotten the captain's caution, went sprawling backwards over the
- thwarts.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ho, ho, ho! flint-locks an' small-shot, a wolley's the thing, lads,&rdquo;
- roared the captain, pointing up the creek as the smoke rolled, away.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- &ldquo;We ne'er see our foes but we wants 'em to stay,
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- An' they never see us but they wants us away;
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- When they runs, why, we follows an' runs 'em ashore,
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- For if they won't fight us, we can't do no more!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- The &ldquo;wolley&rdquo; had told. Driven frantic by the stinging shot, the natives
- had leapt to their feet and overturned four out of the seven deeply-laden
- canoes, whose late occupants were now struggling in the water.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They've a softer berth of it than I, anyway,&rdquo; said Jack from the bottom
- of the boat, as he rubbed his shoulder ruefully. &ldquo;I shall get at the
- muzzle end of your thundering old blunderbuss next time, captain. Hullo,
- there's that rascally&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The remainder of the exclamation was drowned in the creek, for as he
- uttered it Jack took a header over the stern.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shift my ballast, what's the young dog arter now? I axes,&rdquo; cried the
- captain, gazing aghast at the spot where Jack had disappeared.
- </p>
- <p>
- His speedy reappearance solved the riddle. By the queue he grasped a
- dripping, half-naked native, whom he dragged after him to the beach. It
- was the lascar.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hurrah! he's got him this time,&rdquo; shouted Don, leaping out upon the sands
- to lend a hand in landing the prize.
- </p>
- <p>
- At first the lascar struggled fiercely for liberty; but as Jack was by no
- means particular to keep his head above water, he soon quieted down, and
- presently, with Dons assistance, was hauled out on the sands, where he
- fell on his knees and began whining piteously for mercy.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Your revolver, Don,&rdquo; gasped Jack, with a watery side-wink at his friend.
- &ldquo;He shall tell us what he knows of the pearls, or die like the dog he is.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don placed the revolver in his hand, ready cocked. The lascar grovelled in
- the sand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sa'b, sa'b!&rdquo; he whined, &ldquo;you no shoot, me telling anyting.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No doubt you will,&rdquo; replied Jack significantly, pressing the muzzle of
- the weapon to his forehead; &ldquo;but what I want is the truth. Now, then, has
- old Salambo sold the pearls yet? Come, out with it!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He n-n-no selling, sa'b,&rdquo; stammered the terrified native, shrinking as
- far away from the pistol as Jack's hold on his queue would permit &ldquo;Where
- are they, then? Come, look sharp!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He d-d-done hiding in Elephant Rock, s-s-sa'b,&rdquo; confessed the lascar,
- apparently on the point of fainting with terror.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don! Captain! Do you hear that?&rdquo; cried Jack, half-turning, in the
- excitement produced by this disclosure, towards his friends. &ldquo;He says old
- Salambo's hid the pearls in the &mdash;&mdash; &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
- Phew!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He stopped, with a shrill whistle of dismay. By a quick upward stroke of
- his arm the lascar had sent the revolver spinning, and at the same instant
- wrenched himself free from his captor's grasp. Ere Jack could stir hand or
- foot, he had plunged headlong into the creek.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Let him go,&rdquo; said Jack tranquilly, as the water closed over the fellow's
- heels; &ldquo;we've got an important clue out of him, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The captain slowly lowered the musket he had raised for a shot at the
- fugitive should he comet to the surface within range, and said
- approvingly:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Right, lad! Spike my guns, I've heard tell as how that 'ere Elephant
- Rock's riddled from main-deck to keelson, so to say, with gangways, and
- air-wents, an' sich. Howsomedever, that's matter for arter reflection, as
- the whale said to himself when he swallied Jonah. The warmints astarn
- there&rdquo;&mdash;indicating that part of the creek where the occupants of the
- canoes had taken their involuntary bath&mdash;&ldquo;the warmints astarn ha'
- sheered off a p'int or two; so now, lads, let's tackle the perwisions
- afore the wail o' night descends, an' then to work!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The &ldquo;wail o' night&rdquo; was not long in descending, for the sun had
- disappeared with the lascar. Ere they had done justice to the ample meal
- which Puggles set before them, and exchanged the draggled pilgrim garb for
- their everyday clothes, the shadows had crept silently from their
- hiding-places beneath thicket and cliff, and blotted out the last
- lingering touch of day from the bosom of the creek. Save the musical
- chirping of some amorous tree-frog to his mate, or the lazy swish of wings
- as some belated flying-fox swung slowly past, unbroken silence reigned
- between the darkling cliffs.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the captain's opinion, no immediate repetition of the recent attack was
- to be feared. But the events of the day had made it only too plain that
- their present position was far from being-one of security. To remain on
- board the cutter would be to invite daily skirmishes with the natives,
- which would not only deter the quest of the golden pearl, but prove a
- source of constant annoyance and danger.
- </p>
- <p>
- So far as the captain knew, the island afforded no safer retreat than the
- hill of the Haunted Pagodas.
- </p>
- <p>
- The natives of the island, he said, believed this hill to be the abode of
- a witch in the form of a ferocious tiger, merely to look upon which meant
- death. For this reason they would on no account venture near it.
- </p>
- <p>
- So upon the Haunted Pagodas they resolved to fall back without delay. But
- here an unforeseen difficulty arose.
- </p>
- <p>
- With the path to the summit of the hill none of the party was acquainted
- except the captain, and he was unwilling that the precious cutter should
- be entrusted to the care of any one except himself while the several
- journeys necessary for the removal of the stores were being made.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shiver my main-brace!&rdquo; roared he, thumping the bottom of the boat with
- his wooden leg after they had talked it all over. &ldquo;Shiver my mainbrace!
- I'll go the first trip with ye, lads, an' trust the old cutter to luck.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;See here, captain,&rdquo; said Jack persuasively &ldquo;why not trust her to me? It's
- for only one trip, as you say; and besides, there's not much danger of an
- attack to-night. You said so yourself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- To this arrangement the old sailor finally agreed. So Don, Spottie, and
- Puggles loaded up with the stores and other necessaries for their proposed
- sojourn on the summit of the hill, and a start was made, the captain
- leading with musket and lantern.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good-bye, Jack!&rdquo; Don called back, as he struck into the jungle at the
- captain's heels. &ldquo;'Fire a gun if you want help.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All right, old fellow,&rdquo; was Jack's careless reply. &ldquo;Good-bye till I see
- you again!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- 'So, with no other companion than Bosin, he was left alone to guard the
- cutter.
- </p>
- <p>
- And now the difficulties of the captain's party began in earnest. The path
- before them was, it is true, scarce half a mile in length, but so
- precipitous was the hillside, so overgrown the track, that every furlong
- seemed a league. The tangled, overhanging jungle growth not only
- completely shut out the rays of the moon, but by its thickness impeded
- their progress at every step, as though determined to guard the abode of
- the witch-tiger from all human intrusion. To make matters worse, they had
- neglected to provide themselves with an axe.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shiver my main-brace!&rdquo; the captain cried, as his wooden leg stuck fast in
- a tangled mass of creepers. &ldquo;These 'ere land trips be a pesky sight worse
- nor a sea woyage, says you! Blow me! I'd ruther round the Horn in
- mid-winter than wade through such wegetation as this 'ere in midnight
- darkness! Howsomedever, the port's afore us, so up we goes, as Jonah says
- to the whale when he bid the warmint adoo.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Up they went accordingly, and after much stumbling and tough climbing,
- reached the summit and the Haunted Pagodas. Finding here a clear space and
- bright moonlight, they quickly relieved themselves of their loads.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' now, lads,&rdquo; cried the captain, &ldquo;wear ship an' back to the cutter,
- says you. Fire my magazine! what's that? I axes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Sharp and distinct upon the night air there floated up from the darkness
- of the ravine the report of a gun.
- </p>
- <p>
- Don felt his heart stand still with dread, then race at lightning speed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An attack!&rdquo; he cried hoarsely; &ldquo;and Jack alone! Hurry, captain!&mdash;for
- God's sake hurry!
- </p>
- <p>
- Easier said than done. Haste only added to the difficulties of the way. It
- seemed to Don that he should never shake off the retarding clutch of the
- jungle.
- </p>
- <p>
- At last their weary feet pressed again the sands of the little beach. But
- now a new terror seized them. The beach was illuminated by a ruddy, fitful
- glow..The cutter was on fire!
- </p>
- <p>
- Don cleared the sands almost at a bound.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Jack!&rdquo; he shouted, leaping the cutter's rail, and with lightning glance
- scanning the bottom of the boat, and then the cuddy, for some sign of his
- friend. &ldquo;Jack, where are you? Captain, he's not here! and&mdash;my God!
- look at this!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Upon the bottom of the boat, showing darkly crimson in the ruddy
- firelight, lay a pool of blood, and beside it a discharged musket.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VIII.&mdash;AT THE HAUNTED PAGODAS.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he fire,
- fortunately, had gained so little headway that a few bucketfuls of water
- sufficed to put the <i>Jolly Tar</i> cut of danger. Then the captain
- stumped up to Don, where he sat disconsolate on the cutter's gun'le, and
- laid a sympathetic hand upon his shoulder.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Cheer up, my hearty! They warmints ain't done for Master Jack yet, not by
- a long chalk, says I. Flush my scuppers, lad!&rdquo; he roared in stentorian
- tones, as he turned the light of the lantern upon the pool of blood, &ldquo;this
- 'ere sanguinary gore as dyes the deck bain't his'n at all. It's the blood
- o' some native warmint, what he's gone an' let daylight into, d'ye mind
- me, an' here's the musket as done the trick.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then you think he's not&mdash;not dead?&rdquo; asked Don, steadying his voice
- with an effort.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dead? Not him! Alive he is, and alive he remains,&rdquo; cried the old sailor.
- &ldquo;An' why so? you naterally axes. To begin with, as the shark says when he
- nipped the seaman's leg off, because the keg o' powder's gone. Spurts, the
- warmints thinks to theirselves, an' so they makes away with <i>it.</i>
- Secondly&rdquo;&mdash;and here the old sailor's voice grew husky&mdash;&ldquo;because
- that 'ere imp of a Besin's gone. 'I'll stand hard by Master Jack,' says
- he, so off <i>he</i> goes. Sharks an' sea-sarpents, lad, can't ye see as
- the lubbers have only gone an' took Master Jack in tow?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But I can't understand,&rdquo; persisted Don, &ldquo;why they should do it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ransom, lad, that's what the lubbers is arter. Master Jack's life's worth
- a sight more'n a bag o' pearls, an' well they knows it.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- &ldquo;Avast there, an' don't be a milksop so soft,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- To be taken for trifles aback;
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- There's a Providence, lad, as sits up aloft
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- To watch for the life of poor Jack.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- Trolling out this sailorly reproof of Don's fears, the captain stretched
- himself in the bottom of the boat, and drawing a tai paulin over his nose,
- was soon sleeping off the effects of his recent exertions ashore. But upon
- Don's heart his chum's fate lay like a leaden weight. He could not rest.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good-bye, old fellow, till I see you again.&rdquo; These, Jack's last careless
- words, repeated themselves in every me urnful sigh of the night-wind; and
- as he lay, hour after hour, watching the stars climb the heavens; he
- wondered, with a keen pain at his heart, when that &ldquo;again&rdquo; was to be.
- </p>
- <p>
- As the night wore on, however, he found more and more comfort in the old
- sailor's words. It was so much easier to believe that Jack had been
- kidnapped than to believe him dead. This view of his disappearance, too,
- was altogether in keeping with the shark-charmer's cunning. As for
- himself, he would gladly have cried quits with old Salambo then and there,
- if by so doing he could have recalled Jack to his side.
- </p>
- <p>
- At length he fell into a troubled sleep, unconscious of the fact that
- another brain than his was busy with Jack's fate. Had he but known it,
- Bosin deserved more than a passing thought that night.
- </p>
- <p>
- By daybreak they were again astir, and within an hour the cutter lay
- snugly ensconced in the shelter of a deep, vine-draped cavern beneath the
- cliff, some hundred yards down the creek, of which the captain knew. In
- carrying out this part of the old sailor's plan, the canoe, for which an
- effective paddle was improvised out of an old oar, proved of signal
- service; and when the smaller skiff had in its turn been hidden away in
- the dense jungle bordering the beach, they loaded up with the remaining
- stores, and took the pathway to the Haunted Pagodas, which they eventually
- reached just as the sun, like a huge ball of fire, rolled up out of the
- eastern sea.
- </p>
- <p>
- As the captain had said, the Haunted Pagodas was indeed &ldquo;a tidy spot to
- fall back upon.&rdquo; Ages before, a circle of massive temples had crowned the
- summit of this island hill; but for full a thousand years had Nature
- searched out with silent, prying fingers the minutest crevices of the
- closer-cemented stones, ruthlessly destroying what man had so proudly
- reared, until nothing save a confusion of tumble down walls and broken
- pillars, grotesquely draped with climbing vines and like parasitic
- growths, remained to mark the site of the erstwhile stately cloisters. A
- shuddery spot it was!&mdash;a likely lurking-place for reptile or wild
- beast, so uncanny in its weird union of jungle wildness and dead men's
- work, that one would scarcely have been surprised had the terrible
- witch-tiger of the native legend suddenly leapt out upon one from some
- dark pit or sunless recess.
- </p>
- <p>
- In one spot alone had the walls successfully resisted the action of the
- insinuating roots. This was a sort of cloister with a floor of stone, upon
- which the roof had fallen. But when the <i>debris</i> had been cleared
- away, and the stores scattered about in its stead, this corner of the
- ruins looked positively homelike and comfortable&mdash;especially when
- Puggles, taking possession of one of its angles, converted it into a
- kitchen, and began active preparations for breakfast. The captain dubbed
- their new retreat &ldquo;the fo'csle.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- All that day the old sailor was in an unusually thoughtful mood. Every
- half-hour or so he would produce his pipe and take a number of slow,
- meditative &ldquo;whiffs o' the fragrant,&rdquo; after which he would slap his thigh
- energetically with one horny hand, and stump back and forth amid the ruins
- in a state of high excitement, until, something going wrong with his train
- of thought, the pipe had to be relighted, and the difficulty, like the
- tobacco, smoked out again.
- </p>
- <p>
- This characteristic process of &ldquo;ilin' up his runnin' gear&rdquo; he continued
- far on into the afternoon, when he abruptly laid the huge meerschaum
- aside, took a critical survey of sea and sky, and, bearing down on Don,
- where he sat cleaning the muskets, without further ado planted a
- resounding thump on that young gentleman's back.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Blow me!&rdquo; he burst out, as if Don was already initiated into his train of
- thought, &ldquo;the wery identical thing, lad. An what's that? you naterally
- axes. Why, d'ye see, I've been splicin' o' my idees together a bit, so to
- say, an' shiver my main-brace if I ain't gone an' rescued Master Jack!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Edging away a little lest the captain's rising excitement should again
- culminate in one of his well-meant, but none the less undesirable thumps,
- &ldquo;You mean, I suppose,&rdquo; said Don, &ldquo;that you've hit upon a plan for his
- rescue.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ay, lad,&rdquo; assented the captain, &ldquo;but an idee well spun is a deed half
- done, d'ye mind me. Howsomedever, let's take our bearin's afore we runs
- for port, says you. An' to begin with, as the shark said&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- What the shark said, as well as what the captain was about to say, was
- doomed to remain for ever a matter of conjecture, for at that instant
- Puggles set up a shout that effectually interrupted the conversation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sa'b! sar! me done see um, sa'b. Him done come back, sar.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Naturally enough, Don's first thought was of Jack. He sprang to his feet,
- his heart giving a wild leap of joy, and then standing still with
- suspense. For in all the clearing no human form appeared.
- </p>
- <p>
- Puggles had now reached his master's side. &ldquo;Him there got, sa'b, there!&rdquo;
- he reiterated, pointing towards the narrow break in the jungle which
- indicated the starting-point of the pathway to the creek. Between this
- point and the spot where they stood, the jungle grass grew thick and tall.
- </p>
- <p>
- As they looked they saw it sway in a long, wavy undulation, as if some
- living thing were rapidly making its way towards them. In another moment
- the rank covert parted, and there appeared, not Jack, but Bosin.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Knots an' marlinspikes!&rdquo; ejaculated the delighted captain, as the monkey
- scrambled chattering upon his knee. &ldquo;What's this 'ere as the imp o'
- darkness's been an' made a prize of? I axes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Around the monkey's neck a shred of draggled, blood-stained linen was
- securely bound. Already Don was fumbling at the knot, his face whiter than
- the rag itself.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A message from Jack!&rdquo; he announced joyfully, when at length the
- tightly-drawn knot yielded, and a scrap of paper fluttered to the ground.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shiver my main-brace!&rdquo; roared the captain, bringing his hand down on that
- unoffending member as if about to give a practical demonstration of his
- words, &ldquo;ain't I said as much all along, lad? Alive he is, an' alive he
- remains. An' blow me if ever I see anything to beat this 'ere method o'
- excommunicating atween friends, says I. So let's hear what Master Jack has
- got to say for hisself.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don had already run his eye over the pencilled writing. &ldquo;He's all right,
- thank God!&rdquo; he exclaimed, in a tone of intense relief. &ldquo;Wounded, as I
- feared&mdash;a mere scratch, he says&mdash;but you shall hear for
- yourself:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Don't be cut up, old fellow,'&rdquo; he read aloud, &ldquo;'it will all come light
- in the end. The niggers pounced down on me before I heard them. Just had
- time to let off one of the captain's old kickers, when a crack on the head
- laid me out. I'm in a village on the sea-shore, and by great good luck I
- can see the hill and the smoke of what, I suppose, is your fire, from the
- window of the hut they've stuck me in. It doesn't seem quite so bad when I
- look at that.... Bosin just turned up. Am writing in hopes he'll carry
- this safely to you. Close prisoner. Have to scribble when the beggars
- aren't watching me. Overheard them palavering just now. They take me to
- the E. R. to-night&mdash;'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Which he means the Elephant Rock!&rdquo; cried the captain, interrupting. &ldquo;Blow
- me! I knowed as that 'ere Elephant 'ud go an' make wittles of him, d'ye
- see?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don nodded and read on:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;'Old Salambo's work this. He means to make terms for the pearls&mdash;&mdash;'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Copper my bottom, lad! Them's the wery identical words as I've stood by
- all along!&rdquo; the captain broke in again.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wait!&rdquo; said Don impatiently. &ldquo;There's something important here. I
- couldn't make it out before, the writing's so scrawly towards the end.
- Listen to this: 'There's a streak down the face of the hill, that looks
- like a path to the village here. If Bosin's in time, come early. Don't let
- the hdkf.(sp) alarm you; it's a mere scratch.'&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Reading off these last words rapidly, Don pointed to the sun, already
- half-hidden by the western horizon.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's no time to lose, captain! He must be set free before he's taken
- to the Rock.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Right, lad; so let's tumble out and man the guns!&rdquo; cried the captain,
- lurching to his feet and giving his pantaloons a determined hitch-up.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- &ldquo;We always be ready!
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- Steady, lad, steady!
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- We'll fight an' we'll conquer agin and agin!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That we will,&rdquo; assented Don heartily; &ldquo;but first we must get the bearings
- of this village, captain. Where's the glass? Spottie! Hi, Spottie!&mdash;the
- glass here!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In response to the summons, Puggles ran up with the captain's telescope.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Spottie done go fetch water, sa'b,&rdquo; he explained.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There is a village,&rdquo; Don announced, after adjusting the instrument and
- carefully sweeping the sea-shore. &ldquo;Just there, in that clump of trees; the
- only one within range, so far as I can see. Do you make it out, captain?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; said the captain, taking the glass; &ldquo;there's a willage below, sure
- as sharks is sharks.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The next thing, then,&rdquo; continued Don, &ldquo;is to find this path Jack speaks
- of. 'Twould take us two good hours at least to go round by way of the
- creek. Do you know, I've a notion the path to the spring is the one we
- want. Suppose we try it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The captain making no demur, Don caught up a musket and led the way to the
- spring. This spring was Spottie's discovery. It lay to the left of the
- creek path, about fifty yards down the hillside. The jungle had almost
- obliterated the path by which it was approached, but this the black had in
- some degree remedied by a vigorous use of the axe during the day, and, as
- Puggles had intimated, he was now at the spring, replenishing the water
- bucket.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hardly had Don and the captain got fairly into the path when there rose
- from the depths of the jungle immediately below them a series of frantic
- yells. The voice was undoubtedly Spottie's, and, judging from the manner
- in which he used it, Sputtie stood&mdash;or believed he stood&mdash;in
- sore need of assistance. Quickening his pace to a run, Don soon came upon
- him, making for the open, minus bucket and turban, his eyes protruding
- from their sockets, and altogether in a terrible state of fright.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the matter?&rdquo; cried Don, catching him by the arm and shaking him
- until he was fain to cease his bellowing.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;De t-t-tiger-witch, sa'b!&rdquo; said Spottie, his teeth chattering. &ldquo;Me done
- see um, sa'b!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Just then the captain came up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He's seen a monkey or something, and thinks it's the tiger-witch,&rdquo;
- explained Don, laughing at the poor fellows piteous face. &ldquo;Whereabouts is
- it, Spottie?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Spottie pointed fearfully down the shadowy pathway, where a faint snapping
- of twigs could be heard in the underbrush.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Blow me!&rdquo; said the captain, after listening intently a moment, &ldquo;yon
- warmint bain't no monkey, lad. So let's lay alongside an' diskiver what
- quarter o' the animile kingdom he hails from, says you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And with that he started off in the direction of the sound.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bidding Spottie remain where he was, Don followed. The captain was,
- perhaps, ten paces in advance. Suddenly the jungle parted with a loud
- swish, and a tawny body shot through the air and alighted full upon the
- captain's back, bearing him to the ground ere he could utter so much as a
- cry.
- </p>
- <p>
- Don stood petrified. Then a savage, guttural growling, accompanied by a
- sickening crunching sound, roused him to the old sailors danger. There was
- just sufficient light left to show the two figures on the ground&mdash;the
- tiger atop, his fangs buried in the captains thigh. Priming the musket
- rapidly with some loose powder he happened to have in his pocket, Don
- sprang to the captain's aid. The tiger lifted its head at his approach
- with an angry snarl, but this was no time to think of his own danger.
- Quick as thought he thrust the muzzle of the musket between the beast's
- jaws and fired.
- </p>
- <p>
- An instant later and he was on his back. The tiger had sprung clean over
- him, knocking him down in its passage, and now lay some yards away,
- writhing in the death struggle. Don picked himself up and ran to the old
- sailor's side. As he reached the spot where he lay, the captain struggled
- into a sitting posture, and stared about him bewilderedly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stave my bulkhead!&rdquo; roared he, &ldquo;if this bain't the purtiest go as ever I
- see. An' what quarter o' the animile kingdom might the warmint hail from?
- I axes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A tiger, captain; a genuine man-eater. But, I say, are you hurt?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hurt is it?&rdquo; demanded the captain. &ldquo;Why, dye see, lad,&rdquo; first adjusting
- his neckcloth, and then proceeding to feel himself carefully over,
- &ldquo;barrin' this 'ere bit of a chafe to my figgerhead, I hain't started a
- nail, d'ye see. Avast there! Shiver my main-brace, what's this? I axes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Just where the &ldquo;main-brace&rdquo; was spliced upon the thigh, a sad rent in the
- captain's broad pantaloons showed the wooden portion of his anatomy to be
- deeply indented and splintered. At this discovery he stopped aghast in the
- process of feeling for broken bones.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, don't you see how it is?&rdquo; laughed Don. &ldquo;The brute has tried to make
- a meal off your wooden leg, captain.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The captain burst into one of his tremendous guffaws. &ldquo;Blow me if I don't
- admire the warmint's taste,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;An uncommon affectionate un he is,
- says you, so let's pay our respec's to him 'ithout delay, lad.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The tiger proved to be a magnificent specimen of his tribe; and, as he
- stood over the 'tawny carcase in the waning light, Don could not repress a
- feeling of pardonable pride at thought of his own share in the adventure
- which had ended so disastrously for the superb creature at his feet.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Captain,&rdquo; said he presently, when that worthy had inspected and admired
- the striped monster to his heart's content, &ldquo;Captain, it strikes me as
- being somewhat of a rare thing to run against a fullblown tiger on an
- island like this. Don't you think so?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ay, that it is,&rdquo; assented the captain; &ldquo;rare as sea-sarpents.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That explains it, then: the tiger-witch story, I mean. This chap's great
- size, and the fact that man-eaters aren't often met with on these little
- nutshell islands, have made him the terror of the whole community, you
- see. He's their witch, I'll be bound. Now.&rdquo; he ran on, seeing the captain
- express his approval of this likely explanation by a series of emphatic
- nods, &ldquo;now I'll tell you what I mean to do. Dear old Jack's a prisoner,
- and we're bound to get him out of limbo if we can. His captors&mdash;those
- native beggars&mdash;go in mortal terror of this beast here. Good! Why
- shouldn't Pug and I carry the creature's skin down to the village yonder&mdash;where
- Jack is, you know&mdash;use it to impersonate the witch-tiger, and terrify
- the niggers&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He got no farther with his explanation, for the captain, having already
- grasped the idea, at this point grasped its originator by the hand, and
- cut in with: &ldquo;Spike my guns, the wery identical thing, lad! Blow me, the
- lubberly swabs'll tumble into the jungle like a lot o' porpoises when they
- sees that 'ere tiger-skin a-hangin' on your recreant limbs. An' then
- hooray for Master Jack, says you! Why not? I axes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IX.&mdash;WAS IT JACK?
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>hat a night it
- was! Overhead one glorious; maze of scintillating stars; in the jungle
- ebon: blackness, shot with the soft glow of myriad fireflies, that flashed
- their tiny lamps only to leave-the spot they had illumined more intensely
- black than before.
- </p>
- <p>
- Don's surmise as to the spring path proved correct&mdash;it extended quite
- to the foot of the hill, where it merged almost imperceptibly into the
- scantier vegetation fringing the sea-shore. After a hard fight with the
- difficulties of the way&mdash;increased in no small degree by the dead
- weight of the tiger-skin&mdash;he and Puggles at length reached the limits
- of the jungle and paused for breath. The utmost caution was now necessary
- in order to avoid untimely discovery.
- </p>
- <p>
- The moon was not yet up, and the cocoa-nut <i>tope</i> in which, but a
- stoned throw away, nestled the village that formed at once their
- destination and Jack's place of imprisonment, lay wrapped in gloom so
- impenetrable that not a single outline of tree or hut could be
- distinguished from where they stood. Excepting a faint glow, which at
- infrequent intervals flickered amid the lofty branches of the palm-trees,
- there was nothing to show that the spot was tenanted by any human being.
- This light&mdash;or, to speak more correctly, this reflection of a light&mdash;Don
- attributed to a fire in the village street.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They done lighting um for company, maybe,&rdquo; suggested Puggles. &ldquo;Plenty
- people going feast, black man 'fraid got, making fire keep tiger-witch
- off.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So much the better for us,&rdquo; said his master; &ldquo;especially if everybody's
- at the town except the fellows in charge of Jack. But shut up, Pug; it
- won't do to risk their overhearing our palaver.&rdquo; With stealthy steps they
- advanced, pausing often to listen, until they gained the deeper shade of
- the trees close under the rear of the huts. Leaving the black boy here,
- Don skirted the nearer row of cabins and took a cautious view of the
- street.
- </p>
- <p>
- The huts stood in two irregular rows, one facing the other, and midway
- down the open space or street between was a smouldering fire of brushwood,
- about which, in listless, drowsy attitudes, there lolled a group of
- perhaps twenty natives. Save for these the place, so far as he could make
- out, was quite deserted. The doors of the huts were closed, and no glimmer
- of lamp or fire shone through them to indicate that any occupants were
- within. A little to one side of the fire the light fell upon an object at
- sight of which Don started violently. It was the stolen keg of powder.
- Jack could not be far off, then!
- </p>
- <p>
- Quitting the spot as noiselessly as he had approached it, he made his way
- back to the rear of the huts, and with the assistance of Puggles, adjusted
- the limp tigers pelt upon his back, shoulders, and head. Next he gave the
- black boy his orders. He was to lie close until the natives about the fire
- took to flight&mdash;which, if they fled at all, would, in the ordinary
- course of events, be in the direction of the other extremity of the street&mdash;when
- he was to join his master in searching the huts.
- </p>
- <p>
- All was now in readiness, and Don, gripping the defunct tiger's ears at
- either side of his head to hold the skin in position, once more skirted
- the row of huts, Puggles in close attendance. His former post of
- observation gained, he went down upon all-fours, and when Puggles had
- readjusted the skin to his satisfaction, in this attitude he boldly
- advanced into the street.
- </p>
- <p>
- The distance to be traversed in order to reach the group about the fire
- was not less than fifty yards. He had covered a third of the ground
- unobserved, when one of the natives rose to his feet and threw a fresh
- bundle of faggots on the smouldering embers. Fanned by the breeze, the
- fire blazed up fiercely, illuminating the street from end to end. The
- tiger-witch uttered a terrific roar.
- </p>
- <p>
- When this sound fell upon the ears of the native, he wheeled and peered
- fearfully into the semi-darkness in which Don's end of the street lay. A
- second roar brought a second native to his feet. He was followed by
- another and another, till all were on the alert. The witch-tiger was now
- in full view.
- </p>
- <p>
- For a little while the group about the fire hesitated. Should they stand
- their ground or decamp? As the intruder advanced, and the ruddy firelight
- threw its gruesome outlines into stronger relief, they suddenly perceived
- what manner of apparition this was that had stolen up an them out of the
- darkness. To them the tiger-witch, with its swift, silent visitations of
- death, had doubtless long been a dread reality. The island held but one
- tiger&mdash;and here it was! With frantic outcries they turned and fled
- pell-mell down the village street.
- </p>
- <p>
- This was just what Don desired&mdash;what he had calculated upon. Until
- the heels of the hindermost had quite disappeared in the darkness, he
- sustained his rôle. Thus far the ruse had succeeded admirably. But the
- real business of the night had as yet only begun. Shaking the clammy skin
- from off his back, he rose to his feet and made a dash for the door of the
- nearest hut. Just as he reached it, Puggles, who had watched the rout of
- the natives with shaking sides, came trotting up.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Look alive, Pug!&rdquo; cried his master, bursting in the frail door with a
- crash. &ldquo;Search the huts on the left, while I take these on the right. Look
- alive, I say&mdash;they may come back at any minute.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Puggles needed no urging. He was only too well aware of the danger that
- threatened his master and his own precious self should the fugitives think
- better of their cowardice and reappear on, the scene. He set to work with
- a will.
- </p>
- <p>
- Into hut after hut they forced their way, peering into every nook and
- corner, and calling upon Jack as loudly as they dared; only to receive for
- answer the dull echoes of their own shouts. Nowhere was there any sign of
- Jack. &ldquo;Had he been already removed?&rdquo; Don asked himself desperately, as he
- sped from door to door. It almost seemed so; but while a single hut
- remained unsearched there was still hope.
- </p>
- <p>
- Half-a-dozen only were left, when the catastrophe he had all along been
- dreading actually occurred. The natives came trooping back. To their
- infinite relief, no doubt, the witch-tiger had vanished, and in its stead
- appeared two human figures darting from hut to hut. The natives raised a
- shout of defiance and pressed forward to the attack, catching up as
- weapons whatever came first to hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- Crossing the street at a bound, Don joined the black boy, just as the
- latter emerged from the doorway of a hut, and thrust into his hands one of
- two pistols with which he had come provided. Backing against the door of
- the hut, with pistols drawn they awaited the attack. It began with a
- rattling volley of missiles, but the low, projecting thatch of the native
- dwelling, jutting out as it did several feet from the wall, served to
- somewhat break the force of the stony hail.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't fire till I give the word,&rdquo; said Don between his teeth. &ldquo;We can't
- afford to waste a shot. The beggars are drawing their knives.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The words had barely left his lips when, with a shout and a disorderly
- rush, the crowd broke for the spot where they stood.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ready, Pug. Fire!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Simultaneously with the sharp crack of the pistols, there leapt skyward
- from mid-street a sudden, blinding flash of lurid light, accompanied by
- dense volumes of sulphurous smoke, and a thunderous shock that shook the
- walls of the huts to their foundations. Don and his companion were dashed
- violently through the door against which they stood, and hurled upon the
- floor within. A thick shower of sand and stones rattled about and upon
- them. But of this fact they were unconscious. The shock had stunned them.
- </p>
- <p>
- When Don came to himself he found Puggles seated on the ground by his
- side, blubbering dismally.
- </p>
- <p>
- Not only was the roof ablaze, but showers of glowing sparks fell thickly
- upon them. The floor of the hut was a bed of fire, the heat intolerable.
- Puggs, dazed &ldquo;by the recent shock, and stupefied with fright, seemed to
- comprehend not a word that was said to him. Don accordingly seized him by
- the arm and dragged him into the street.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What's the matter? Where are the natives?&rdquo; he demanded, struggling to his
- feet, and scanning the interior of the hut with bewildered eyes. &ldquo;Hullo,
- the roof's on fire!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0010" id="linkimage-0010"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0143.jpg" alt="0143 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0143.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- Here the scene was appalling indeed. How long he had lain insensible he
- could not tell; but the time thus spent upon the floor of the hut must
- have been considerable, for from end to end the double line of thatched
- dwellings was wrapped in flames that shot high into the inky air, and
- there united in one roaring, swirling canopy of fire above the narrow
- thoroughfare. As if to render the spectacle more awful, here and there lay
- stretched upon the ground the mangled, blackened body of a native. Through
- one of these a sharp splinter of wood had been driven. Don examined it
- curiously. Then&mdash;he had been too dazed to realise it before&mdash;the
- truth flashed upon him. The keg of powder had exploded!
- </p>
- <p>
- Whilst crossing the street to Pug's side he had noticed, he remembered
- now, that the head, of the keg was stove in. It then lay close beside the
- fire, within a few feet of the scene of the attack. It was not there now,
- but in its stead was a shallow, blackened cavity. That told the whole
- story of the explosion. A handful of powder carelessly scattered, a wisp
- of straw kicked into the fire amid the rush of feet, a chance spark even,
- and&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;-
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sa'b, sa'b, the huts done tumble in!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Puggles was tugging at his sleeve, and pointing fearfully down the street.
- For an instant Don gazed into the black boy's face blankly, not grasping
- the import of his words. Then, like a repetition of that lurid flash of
- light which had burnt itself into his very brain, came the recollection of
- Jack.
- </p>
- <p>
- The sudden return of the natives had left but half-a-dozen huts
- unsearched. These were situated at the extreme end of the street&mdash;the
- end opposite to that from which Don and Puggles had approached the
- village. Towards these the former now ran, only to discover, to his
- consternation, that the fire was before him. For in this direction the
- wind blew, and the unsearched huts, like the rest, were a seething mass of
- flames. Of all save one the roofs had already given way, while at the very
- moment he ran up that also crashed in.
- </p>
- <p>
- As the blood-red flames shot skyward, an agonised, inarticulate shriek
- rose from within the glowing walls.
- </p>
- <p>
- Was it Jack?
- </p>
- <p>
- Shielding his face with his hands, Don attempted to force an entrance, but
- the heat of the furnace-like doorway drove him back. In frantic accents he
- called his chum by name&mdash;called again and again&mdash;to be answered
- only by the hissing of the pitiless flame-tongues that licked the black
- heavens.
- </p>
- <p>
- Was it Jack? Had the natives who escaped&mdash;if, indeed, any did&mdash;the
- deadly effects of the explosion, carried him with them in their flight
- from the burning village, or had he been mercilessly abandoned to a fiery
- grave within his prison walls?
- </p>
- <p>
- It was a terrible question; but not that night, nor for many nights to
- come, was he to know whether those unnumbered moments of unconsciousness
- had consigned his chum to continued captivity or to death.
- </p>
- <p>
- One thing only was certain: their mission to the village had reached a
- disastrous climax. To remain longer where they were was useless; to follow
- the trail of the natives who had escaped, impossible. No course was left
- but immediate return to the camp.
- </p>
- <p>
- Weary, dejected, with aching bodies and aching hearts&mdash;for even
- light-hearted Puggles, heathen though he was, felt crushed by their sad
- misadventure&mdash;they sought the spot where, the axe and lantern had
- been left, and then set their blackened faces towards the hill.
- </p>
- <p>
- By this time the moon had risen, making the task of finding the footpath
- an easy one. Just as they turned their backs upon the beach and the
- burning village, out upon the tense stillness of the night&mdash;a
- stillness softened rather than broken by the music of the surf&mdash;from
- the shadowy hill above rang the sharp report of a gun.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Something wrong up there, I'm afraid,&rdquo; said Don, rousing himself and
- pausing to listen. &ldquo;Hullo!&rdquo; as a second report broke the stillness, &ldquo;there
- goes another! Come, Pug, we must pull ourselves together a bit and get
- over the ground faster. The captain's not a man to waste powder; those
- reports mean danger.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Him maybe another lubberly warmint shooting, sa'b,&rdquo; Pug suggested.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Unless I'm very much mistaken, there's something a jolly sight worse
- afoot,&rdquo; was his master's uneasy rejoinder as they began the ascent.
- </p>
- <p>
- Here and there upon the hillside were spots where the rains of many
- summers had so washed away the thin surface-soil as to lay bare the rock
- beneath and leave little or no roothold for vegetation. As he paused for a
- brief breathing space in one of these clearings, Don's attention was drawn
- to a dull red glare, which, though but a short distance in advance of the
- spot where he stood, had up to that moment been quite concealed by the
- intervening jungle.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say, Pug, what do you make of that light?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The black boy knuckled his eyes vigorously, as if to assure himself they
- were playing him no trick.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me linking there one fire got, sa'b,&rdquo; said he, after a long look at the
- mysterious light.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;In that case we'd better stir our stumps. The breeze seems to be
- freshening, and once the fire gets a hold on this tindery jungle, why,
- there's no knowing&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There another got, sa'b!&rdquo; broke in Puggles, pointing excitedly to the
- right.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Phew! And, by Jove, there's a third beyond that again! And the wind's
- blowing straight for the camp, too! Now I understand why the captain fired
- those shots! The hill's on fire! Point, Pug!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Up the hillside they bounded, panting, stumbling. There was light enough
- now and to spare, for the fire towards which they were advancing had made
- more headway than at first sight appeared. The wonder was that they had
- not observed it sooner; but this perhaps was sufficiently accounted for by
- the fact that the thoughts of both had lagged behind in the burning
- village.
- </p>
- <p>
- The point of danger was soon reached. The fire had not yet crossed the
- path, but only a few yards of tindery underbrush separated the swaying
- wall of flame-shot smoke from the narrow trail, while every instant the
- margin grew perceptibly less.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now for it, Pug!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don raced past with head lowered, the greedy flames licking his face.
- Half-blinded, he stumbled on for a dozen yards or so before turning to
- ascertain how Puggles had stood the ordeal. To his horror he then
- discovered that the fire had swallowed up the pathway at a single bound,
- and that Puggles was nowhere to be seen.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER X.&mdash;IN WHICH THE OLD SAW, &ldquo;OUT OF THE FRYING-PAN, INTO THE
- FIRE,&rdquo; IS REVERSED WITH STARTLING EFFECT.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">B</span>ack he ran,
- battling with the flames and sparks that rolled in volumes up the
- hillside, until, half-stifled and well-nigh fainting from the heat, he was
- forced to turn and flee for his life before the swiftly advancing flames.
- </p>
- <p>
- Whether Puggles, terrified by the close proximity of the fire, had hung
- back at the last moment, or whether he had attempted to follow his master
- and paid for his devotion with his life, heaven alone knew.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Poor chap!&rdquo; gasped Don, as he stumbled free of the smoke and turned for a
- last look at the fiery veil so suddenly drawn over his faithful servant's
- fate. &ldquo;God help him!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The rapid advance of the fire, however, allowed little time for the
- indulgence of emotion. The long rainless months had scorched the face of
- the hill until the thick-set bamboo copse was as dry as tinder,
- inflammable as shavings. The wind and the steepness of the hillside, too,
- proved powerful allies of the flames. On and up they swept, leaping from
- point to point with such rapidity that Don found it necessary to strain
- every nerve to avoid being overtaken by the greedy holocaust. Glad indeed
- was he when, the scene of his recent adventure passed, he at length
- emerged upon the comparatively open ground abreast of the encampment.
- </p>
- <p>
- Stumping uneasily to and fro, &ldquo;abaft the fo'csle,&rdquo; with Bosin perched
- contentedly upon his shoulder, was the old sailor&mdash;the jerky creak,
- creak of his wooden leg showing him to be in an unusually disturbed state
- of mind.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Right glad I am to clap eyes on ye, lad!&rdquo; he sang out cheerily on
- catching sight of the returned wanderer. &ldquo;An' whereaway's Master Jack an'
- the leetle nigger, I axes?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The captain paused abruptly, both in his walk and speech, for the pained
- look on Don's blackened but ghastly face told him at a glance that
- something more than ordinary was amiss.
- </p>
- <p>
- Slowly setting down the lantern, which he had all along retained in his
- grasp&mdash;most fortunately, as it turned out&mdash;Don threw himself on
- the trampled grass, and, as rapidly as his shortness of breath would
- permit, summed up the disastrous results of his village expedition. In
- open-mouthed silence, as was his wont, the old sailor listened; but when
- he learned of the dark uncertainty that overhung the fate of Jack and
- Puggles, he hastily brushed aside a tear that straggled down his
- weather-beaten cheek, and, in a voice husky with emotion, burst into one
- of his characteristic snatches of song:
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- &ldquo;Why, what's that to you if my eyes I'm a-wipin'?
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- A tear is a pleasure, d'ye see, in its way.
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- 'Tis nonsense for trifles, I owns, to be pipin',
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- But they as hain't pily&mdash;why, I pities they!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- And having delivered himself of this sailorly apology for his weakness, he
- added in his usual voice:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Blow me!&mdash;as the speakin trumpet says to the skipper&mdash;if ever I
- heard any yarn as beats this 'un, lad. Howsomedever, when the ship's
- a-sinkin', pipin' your eye ain't a-goin' to stop the leak, d'ye mind me;
- an' so, just to bear away on the off tack a bit, what d'ye make o' this
- 'ere confleegration, I axes?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I can tell you better what it came jolly near making of me, captain, and
- that's cinders! But what do <i>you</i> make of it?&mdash;and, by the way,
- what were those shots for? You don't think there's any danger here, do
- you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ay,&rdquo; replied the captain, with an emphatic tug at his neckerchief, &ldquo;that
- I does, lad! An' why? you naterally axes. Because, d'ye mind me, the
- hill's ablaze from stem to starn&mdash;blow me if it bain t!
- Howsomedever,&rdquo; leading the way towards a jagged remnant of wall that stood
- out in ghostly solitude amid the ruins, &ldquo;go aloft an' cast an eye out to
- lee'ard, lad.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The captain's ominous words prepared Don for an unpleasant surprise; yet,
- when he had scaled the pile of masonry, an involuntary cry of alarm broke
- from him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good heavens, captain, we're surrounded by fire!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Right, lad! an' the confleegration's gettin' uncommon clost under our
- weather bow; says you. An hour back, d'ye see, I sights the first on 'em
- alongside o' the path below, an' fires the gun to signal ye to put about.
- An' then, flush, my scuppers! what does I see but a hull sarcle o'
- confleegrations, as it may be a cable's len'th apart, clean round the
- hill; lad! an' so I fires the second wolley.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This is the work of those cowardly niggers!&rdquo; said Don, clenching his
- fists. &ldquo;They daren't come here to fight us, so they mean to scorch us
- out!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The wery identical words as I says to myself when first I sights the
- fires, lad,&rdquo; rejoined the captain; &ldquo;an' a purty lot o' tobackie it cost me
- afore I overhauled the idee, says you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's likely to cost us more than a few pipes of tobacco, I'm afraid,
- captain,&rdquo; said Don uneasily, leaping down from his post of observation.
- &ldquo;The fire's close upon us, and once this grass catches, why, good-bye to
- the stores! I say, where's Spottie?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Belay there!&rdquo; chuckled the captain, who, somehow, seemed remarkably
- cheerful, considering the gravity of the situation. &ldquo;Whereaway's the
- nigger, you axes? Why, d'ye mind me, lad, this 'ere old hulk ain't been
- a-lyin' on her beam-ends all this time, not by a long chalk. The nigger's
- with the stores, d'ye see; an' stow my cargo, where should the stores be
- but safe and snug under hatches?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With that he seized his perplexed companion by the arm, skirted the
- dilapidated wall, and presently halted on the very brink of a black chasm
- that yawned to the stars close under its rear. Little else was to be seen,
- for the wall cut off the light of both the fire and the moon. From the
- depths of the cavity proceeded a sound suspiciously like snoring. The
- captain indulged in another chuckle, and then, shaping his hands into a
- sort of speaking-trumpet, he bent over the hole and shouted loudly for
- Spottie. The snoring suddenly ceased, and in half a minute or so up the
- black tumbled, rubbing his eyes. The captain bade him fetch the lantern,
- adding strict injunctions that he should replenish the store of oil before
- lighting it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And now, lad, let's go below,&rdquo; said he, when Spottie had fulfilled his
- mission.
- </p>
- <p>
- So down they went, the captain leading. First came a dozen or more
- moss-grown steps, littered with blocks of stone, which, ages before,
- perhaps, had fallen and found a resting-place here. At the foot of the
- steps there opened out a subterranean passage, of height sufficient to
- admit of Don's standing erect in it with ease. Upon the floor lay the
- stores; beyond these again all was blank darkness. To all appearance the
- passage extended far into the bowels of the hill.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Blow me!&rdquo; chuckled the captain, turning a triumphant gaze upon the
- massive walls, &ldquo;electric lightnin' itself ud never smell us out in sich a
- tidy berth as this, says you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It certainly is a snug spot,&rdquo; assented Don; &ldquo;though I wish&rdquo;&mdash;glancing
- round at their sadly depleted numbers&mdash;&ldquo;I wish that Jack and Pug were
- as safe, poor fellows.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Cheer up, my hearty. As I says afore, there's a Providence, lad, as sits
- up aloft to keep watch for the life of poor Jack.' Ay, an for the nigger's
- too, d'ye mind me, lad,&rdquo; rejoined the captain, blowing his nose loudly.
- &ldquo;So let's turn out an' see what manner o' headway the confleegrations
- makin'.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Brief as was their absence from &ldquo;the glimpses of the moon,&rdquo; the fire had
- made alarming progress in the interval. Viewed from the centre of the
- swiftly-narrowing cordon of flame, the scene was awesome in the extreme.
- The rear column of the invader advanced the more slowly of the two, but
- even it was now within a stone's throw of that godsend, the captain's
- &ldquo;tidy berth.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- On the seaward side the flames had overleapt the jungle's edge, and seized
- with unsated greed upon the luxuriant grass that everywhere grew amid the
- ruins. Nearer still, the dense, parasitic growth upon the remnant of wall,
- ignited by the dense clouds of sparks which the wind drove far ahead of
- the actual fire, was blazing fiercely. The heat was stifling; the air,
- choked with smoke and showers of glowing sparks, unbreathable. They
- retreated precipitately to the cooler shelter of the underground chamber.
- </p>
- <p>
- Even here the noise of the flames could be distinctly heard. Indeed, they
- had been barely ten minutes below when the fiery sea rolled with a sullen
- roar over their heads, the fierce heat driving them back from the
- entrance.
- </p>
- <p>
- Some hours must pass before it would be either safe or practicable to
- venture into the open air. Accordingly, following the captain's example,
- Don made himself as comfortable for the night as circumstances permitted.
- A quantity of dried grass, which Spottie had thoughtfully collected and
- deposited beside the stores, afforded an excellent bed, and soon the deep
- breathing of all three told that sleep too had made this long untenanted
- nook her refuge.
- </p>
- <p>
- Upwards of an hour had passed when a tremendous grinding crash shook the
- passage from roof to floor, and brought Don and the captain to their feet.
- They had fallen asleep surrounded by a subdued glow of firelight; they
- woke to find themselves in pitchy darkness. Bosin and the scarcely more
- courageous Spottie began to whimper.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Avast there!&rdquo; the captain sang out at the latter. &ldquo;Is this a time to
- begin a-pipin' of your eye like a wench, I axes? Belay that, ye lubberly
- swab, an' light the binnacle lamp till we takes our bearin's.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- This order Spottie obeyed with an alacrity which, it is but due to him to
- explain, sprang rather from a dread of his master's heavy boot than from
- his fear of the dark. In the light thus thrown on the situation, the cause
- of the recent crash became only too apparent. So, too, did its effect.
- </p>
- <p>
- The ruined wall which overtopped their place of refuge had fallen,
- completely blocking the exit with huge stones, still glowing hot from the
- action of the fire.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Batten&mdash;my&mdash;hatches, lad!&rdquo; ejaculated the old sailor, as the
- full significance of the catastrophe flashed upon him. &ldquo;We're prisoners,
- says you!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XI.&mdash;INTO THE HEART OF THE HILL.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>here was no
- denying the truth of the captain's disconcerting announcement. So far as
- concerned the ancient flight of steps, egress from the underground chamber
- was wholly cut off. In the space of a single moment their refuge had
- become a prison. For, to begin with, the stones which blocked the entrance
- were glowing hot; while, to end with, these were of such a size, and so
- tightly wedged between the walls of the narrow opening, as to render any
- attempt at removing them, in the absence of suitable implements, utterly
- futile. If ever there existed a dilemma worthy the consumption of the
- captain's tobacco, here was one. The huge meerschaum was lighted
- forthwith.
- </p>
- <p>
- And never, perhaps, in all its long and varied history, did the pipe
- perform its task of &ldquo;'ilin' up&rdquo; the old sailors &ldquo;runnin' gear&rdquo; so promptly
- and satisfactorily as now. For scarcely had he taken half-a-dozen &ldquo;w'hiffs
- o' the fragrant,&rdquo; when, &ldquo;Blow me, lad!&rdquo; he exclaimed, triumphantly
- following with the stem of the pipe the course of a blue spiral which had
- just left his lips, &ldquo;d'ye see that, now? No sooner I lets it out than away
- it scuds!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Under other circumstances this observation would have sounded commonplace;
- here it was significant. The fragrant spiral, after wavering an instant as
- if uncertain what course to take, broke and floated slowly towards the
- wall of <i>débris</i> which blocked the entrance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wery good!&rdquo; resumed the captain, when this became apparent; &ldquo;an' what o'
- that? you naterally axes. Why, do ye mind me, lad, when smoke sheers off
- to lee'ard in that 'ere fashion, it sinnifies a drorin'; and a drorin',
- dye see, sinnifies a current o' atmospheric air; and&mdash;as the
- maintop-gallan's'l says when it sights the squall&mdash;-blow me! if a
- current o' atmospheric air don't sinnify as this 'ere subterraneous
- ramification's got a venthole in it somewheres, d'ye see!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, as for that,&rdquo; said Don, &ldquo;I noticed a draught drawing up the steps,
- as soon as I set foot on them. The entrance seemed to act like a sort of
- flue; and, come to think of it, it couldn't do that, in spite of the
- heated air above, unless there was an inlet somewhere below, could it?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ay, inlet's the wery nautical tarm I was a-tryin' to overhaul, lad,&rdquo;
- replied the captain complacently. &ldquo;An'&mdash;shiver my binnacle!&mdash;for
- that inlet we runs. Legs we has, light we has!&mdash;so why not? I axes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;More grope than run, I fancy,&rdquo; said Don, peering into the darkness of the
- tunnel. &ldquo;But there's no help for it, I suppose; though Heaven only knows
- where or what it may lead to! The stores, of course, remain here for the
- present; they're safe enough, at any rate.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Seizing the lantern, he led off without further parley. Spottie&mdash;haunted
- in the dark by an ever-pursuing fear of spooks&mdash;made a close second;
- while the old sailor brought up the rear with Bosin on his shoulder. Here
- and there a lizard, alarmed by the hollow echo of their footsteps, or by
- the glare of the passing light, scurried across their path.
- </p>
- <p>
- For a considerable distance the passage continued on the level, then
- dipped suddenly in a steep flight of steps. After this came other level
- bits, succeeded by other descents, the number of steps in each successive
- flight&mdash;or, rather, fall&mdash;increasing as they proceeded.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Looks as if we were bound for the foot of the hill,&rdquo; remarked Don,
- pausing to allow the captain to overtake him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' well I knows it, lad!&rdquo; replied that worthy, as he accomplished the
- descent of that particular flight of steps with a sigh of relief like the
- blowing of a small whale. &ldquo;Sleepin' in the open an' that, d'ye see, 's
- made my jints a bit stiff like&mdash;'specially the wooden one!
- Howsomedever, let's get on again&mdash;as the seaman says when the
- lubberly donkey rose by the starn an' hove him by the board.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- On they accordingly went, and down, the level intervals growing less and
- less frequent, the seemingly interminable tiers of steps more precipitous.
- Even the captain, level-headed old sailor though he was, detected himself
- in the act of clutching at the wall, so suggestive of utter bottomlessness
- was the black chasm yawning ever at their feet. The very echoes hurried
- back to them as if fearful of venturing the abysmal depths. What it would
- have been to have penetrated the tunnel without a lantern Don dared not
- think.
- </p>
- <p>
- And now the roof and walls contracted until they seemed to press with an
- insupportable weight upon their shoulders. The steps, too, at first equal
- in height and even of surface, became irregular and slippery. Ooze of a
- vivid prismatic green glistened on either hand; water gathered in
- pellucid, elongated drops overhead, shivered for an instant as if startled
- by the unwonted light, then glinted noiselessly down upon the dank,
- mould-carpeted steps, which no human foot apparently had pressed for ages.
- Suppose their advance, when they got a little lower, should be cut off by
- the water, as retreat was already cut off by the fallen wall!
- </p>
- <p>
- A level footing at last! Twenty yards on through the darkness, and no
- steps. Had these come to an end? It almost seemed so.
- </p>
- <p>
- Suddenly the captain stopped. On the rock floor a tiny pool shimmered like
- crystal in the lantern-light. He scooped up a little of the water in his
- broad palm and tasted it, &ldquo;Stave my water-butt, lad!&rdquo; cried he, smacking
- his lips with immense gusto. &ldquo;This 'ere aqueous fluid what's a-washin'
- round in the scuppers ain't no bilge-water, d'ye mind me! Reg'lar genewine
- old briny's what it is, an' well I knows the taste on it! We're under the
- crik&mdash;blow me if we bain't!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Shouldn't wonder,&rdquo; said Don, consulting his watch. &ldquo;It's now three
- o'clock; we've been on the grope just three-quarters of an hour. A jolly
- nice fix we'll be in if we reach daylight on the far side of the creek&mdash;with
- no means of crossing it, I mean. But wherever this mole-hole leads to,
- let's get to the end of it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- More steps, but this time ascending. The walls, too, became perceptibly
- drier, the narrow limits and musty air of the vaulted way less oppressive.
- With elastic steps and light hearts they pressed forward, assured that
- release was now close at hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- It came sooner than they anticipated, for presently the tunnel veered
- sharply to the left, and as Don rounded the angle of wall a low, musical
- lapping of waves fell on his ears.
- </p>
- <p>
- The captain was right in his conjecture; the passage had conducted them
- directly under the creek, and it was on that side of the ravine
- immediately adjacent to the Elephant Rock that they now emerged into the
- fresh night air.
- </p>
- <p>
- Here the tunnel terminated in a platform of rock, escarped from the solid
- cliff, and draped by a curtain of vines similar to, though somewhat
- thinner than, that which concealed the hiding-place of the <i>Jolly Tar</i>.
- The platform itself lay wrapped in deepest shade, but through the
- interstices of the natural curtain overhanging it they could see the
- moonlight shimmering on the surface of the creek.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Blow me, lad!&rdquo; cried the captain, after peering about him for some
- seconds: &ldquo;this 'ere cove as we're hove-to in orter lay purty nigh abreast
- o' the <i>Jolly Tar</i>, says you. Belay that, ye lubber!&rdquo; making a dive
- after the monkey, who, with a shrill cry, had swung down from his shoulder
- and scuttled to the edge of the platform.
- </p>
- <p>
- Don gripped the old sailor by the arm and forcibly held him back. &ldquo;Hist!&rdquo;
- he cried in suppressed, excited tones. &ldquo;Did you hear that?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- A moment of strained silence; then, from the direction of the creek came a
- faint plashing sound, such as might have been produced by the regular dip
- of paddles. Releasing his hold on the captain's arm, Don crossed the rocky
- floor on tiptoe, parted the trailing vines with cautious hand, and took a
- rapid survey of the moonlit creek. Then he hastily seized the monkey and
- darted back to the captains side.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Canoes!&rdquo; he whispered. &ldquo;Two of them, packed with natives, and heading
- straight for us. Back into the passage! And, Spottie! douse that light.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XII.&mdash;RELATES HOW A WRONG ROAD LED TO THE RIGHT PLACE.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>hey had barely
- gained the shelter of the tunnel and extinguished the light, when the
- prows of the canoes grated against the rock, and a number of natives
- scrambled out upon the platform, jabbering loudly.
- </p>
- <p>
- Would they remain there, or enter the tunnel where the little band of
- unarmed adventurers&mdash;for the captain had neglected to fetch a musket,
- and Don to load his pistols&mdash;lay concealed? It was a moment of
- breathless suspense. Then a torch was lighted, and 'the intruders, to the
- number of perhaps a score, filed off to the right and disappeared.
- </p>
- <p>
- When the last echo of their footsteps had died away, the captain heaved a
- sigh of relief, and bade Spottie relight the lantern.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not that I be afear'd o' the warmints, dye mind me, lad,&rdquo; said he, as if
- in apology for the sigh; &ldquo;only&mdash;spike my guns!&mdash;a couple o'
- brace o' fists 'ud be short rations to set under the noses o' sich a
- rampageous crew, d'ye see. Howsome-dever, the way's clear at last, as the
- shark says when he'd swallied the sailor; so beat up to wind'ard a bit,
- till we diskiver whereaway the warmints's bound for.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's another passage, most likely,&rdquo; observed Don, holding the lantern
- aloft at arm's length as they left the tunnel behind and reemerged upon
- the rock platform. &ldquo;Ha! there it is, captain; yonder, in the far corner.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Right ye are, lad,&rdquo; replied the captain with a chuckle. &ldquo;We'll
- inwestigate into this 'ere subterraneous ramification, says you; so forge
- ahead, my hearty.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The entrance to the second tunnel was quickly gained, and into it, as
- nothing was either to be seen or heard of the natives, they &ldquo;inwestigated&rdquo;&mdash;to
- use the captain's phraseology&mdash;-as far as a flight of steps which
- extended upwards for an unknown distance beyond the limits of the
- lantern's rays. Here the captain paused, and bending forward:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Scrapers an' holystones, lad!&rdquo; cried he with a chuckle; &ldquo;the quarterdeck
- of a ship-o'-the-line itself ain't cleaner'n these 'ere steps. Native feet
- goin' aloft and a-comin' down continual, that's what's scraped 'em, says
- you; an' so I gets an idee. This 'ere subterraneous carawan as we've been
- an' diskivered is the tail o' the 'Elephant'!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The what, captain?&rdquo; cried Don.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, d'ye mind me, lad,&rdquo; the captain proceeded to explain, &ldquo;when them
- lubberly land-swabs as pilots elephants&mdash;which I means mahouts, d'ye
- see&mdash;when they wants to go aloft, so to say, how does they manage the
- business? I axes. They lays hold on the warmint's tail, says you, and up
- they goes over the starn. Wery good! This 'ere's a Elephant Rock as we're
- at the present moment inwestigatin' into, d'ye mind me, an' when betimes
- the lubberly crew as mans it is ordered aloft onto the animile's back,
- why, up these 'ere steps they goes. An' so I calls 'em the tail o' the
- 'Elephant'&mdash;an' why not? I axes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don gripped the old sailor's hand impulsively.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hurrah! this discovery's worth a dozen hours' groping underground,
- captain!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;For if the natives can gain the Elephant Rock by
- following this passage, why can't we do the same? Jack, old boy, if you're
- still alive&mdash;which you are, please God!&mdash;we'll find you yet!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ay, at the risk of our wery lives, if need be!&rdquo; responded the captain, in
- tones that lost none of their heartiness through being a bit husky. &ldquo;An'
- the bag o' pearls, too, for the matter o' that, lad,&rdquo; he added; &ldquo;for, d'ye
- see, as the old song says:
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- We always be ready,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- Steady, lad, steady!
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- We'll fight an' we'll conquer agin and agin!
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Howsomedever, fightin' without wittles ain't to be thought of, no more'n
- without powder, says you; so 'bout ship an' bear away for the Ha'nted
- Pagodas!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Thank Heaven for the fire and that tumbledown wall!&rdquo; ejaculated Don as
- they retraced their steps to the platform. &ldquo;Chance has done for us what no
- planning&mdash;or fighting either, for the matter of that&mdash;could ever
- have done. We started on a wrong road, but, all the same, it has led us to
- the right place.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ay, lad, only chance bain't the right word for it, d'ye see. There's a
- Providence, lad, as sits up aloft,&rdquo; said the captain, lifting his cap
- reverently. &ldquo;I bain't, so to say, a religious cove; but, storm or calm,
- them's the wery identical words as I always writes in my log. An', d'ye
- mind me, lad, 'tis the hand o' the Good Pilot as has guided us here
- to-night.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I don't doubt it,&rdquo; replied Don gravely, &ldquo;any more than I doubt that the
- same Good Pilot will guide us safely into port. Bearing that in mind, we
- have only to mature our plans and end the whole thing at a stroke. Here we
- are, and now for the creek,&rdquo; he concluded, crossing the platform and
- thrusting aside the pendent vines. &ldquo;We'll borrow one of the canoes those
- niggers came in. Hullo, they're gone!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Some of the lubberly crew stopped aboard and rowed off agin, belike,&rdquo;
- observed the captain. &ldquo;Blow me, if we shan't have to take to the water, as
- the sailors said when they'd swallied all the rum.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don made no reply, but rapidly divesting himself of his coat and shoes, he
- slipped into the water before the old sailor well knew what he was about.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm off for the canoe we hid in the jungle,&rdquo; he called back as he struck
- out for the other shore.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ay, ay, lad!&rdquo; responded the captain; &ldquo;an' here's to your speedy retarn,
- as the shark says when they hoisted the sailor into the ship's gig.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Swimming the creek was, after all, an insignificant feat for a
- sturdy-limbed young fellow like Don. The water was warm and refreshing,
- the distance far from great. A dozen vigorous strokes, and he was well
- within the deep shadow of the opposite cliff, for he deemed it prudent to
- avoid the moonlight, lest by any chance the natives who had removed the
- canoes should be in the vicinity.
- </p>
- <p>
- Once, indeed, he fancied he actually heard a faint splashing in the water
- a short distance ahead. He floated for a moment, motionless and alert; but
- as the noise was not repeated, he swam on again. He had made scarce
- half-a-dozen strokes, however, when he suddenly felt himself gripped from
- below by the leg. His first thought was of sharks; his next, that he was
- in the clutches of a human foe, for a vice-like hand was at his throat.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIII.&mdash;CAPTAIN MANGO &ldquo;GOES ALOFT.&rdquo;
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>elf-preservation
- is the first law of life, and no sooner did Don feel that iron grip
- compressing his throat, and dragging him down into the depths of the
- creep, than he struck out to such good purpose that the hold of his
- unknown assailant quickly relaxed. As he shot up to the surface he found
- himself confronted by the dripping head and shoulders of a native. A brief
- cessation of hostilities followed; each glared at the other defiantly, the
- native's tense breathing and watchful eye indicating that, though baffled
- for the moment by his opponents prompt defensive measures, he was in no
- two minds about renewing the struggle.
- </p>
- <p>
- Suddenly, by a lightning-like movement of the hand, he dashed a blinding
- jet of spray into Don's eyes, instantly followed up the advantage thus
- treacherously gained, grappled with him, and pinioned his arms tightly at
- his sides. Then, to his horror, Don felt his head thrust violently back,
- felt the fellow's hot, quick breath on his neck, and his teeth gnashing
- savagely at his throat.
- </p>
- <p>
- Luckily for himself Don was no mean athlete, and knew how to use his fists
- to advantage when occasion demanded. Wrenching his arms free, he seized
- the native by the throat, and in spite of his eel-like slipperiness and
- desperate struggles, by an almost superhuman effort forced him slowly
- backwards until he had him at effective striking distance, when, suddenly
- loosing his hold, he let him have a tremendous &ldquo;one-two&rdquo; straight from the
- shoulder, that stretched the native senseless and bleeding on the water.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You would have it!&rdquo; he panted, surveying the native's sinewy proportions
- with grim satisfaction. &ldquo;Next time you won't wait to be knocked out, I
- reckon. But 'twon't do to let you drown, though you richly deserve it; so
- come along, you black cub!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Seizing the black by the convenient tuft of hair at the back of his
- bullet-head, he towed him to the strip of beach, and there hauled him out
- upon the sand, directly into a patch of moonlight, as it happened, that
- came slanting down through a rift in the canopy of palm-leaves overhead.
- Something in the appearance of the upturned features caused him to drop on
- his knees at the natives side.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hullo!&rdquo; he cried, peering into the fellow's face, &ldquo;Jack's lascar, as I'm
- alive! By Jove, you are a prize! We'll keep you with us longer than we did
- last time, my friend. Ha, ha! won't the captain chuckle, though!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With his belt he proceeded to strap the lascar's hands securely behind his
- back; but when it came to fastening his legs, a difficulty cropped up.
- That is to say, the strap could not be used for both, and he had no
- substitute. Fortunately the lascar wore about his loins the regulation
- length of strong country cotton&mdash;his only covering&mdash;and this Don
- was in the act of removing when a knife fell out of its folds.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Lucky thing I didn't run against you in the water,&rdquo; he soliloquised,
- picking the weapon up. &ldquo;Why, it's the very knife the lascar shot at Jack
- from the schooner's deck; the one he let the fellow have back for sending
- the boathook through the cutter's side; and that we afterwards found lying
- in the <i>ballam</i> here. And yet Jack certainly had it on him when those
- niggers carried him off. So, old chap,&rdquo; apostrophising the insensible
- owner of the much-bandied knife, &ldquo;so you had a hand in kidnapping him too,
- had you? All the more reason for caring for you now that we've got you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Following up this idea, he knotted the cloth tightly about the lascar's
- legs, dragged him well up the beach, and went in search of the canoe.
- This, fortunately, had not been molested in their absence; in a few
- minutes he had it in the water. Then, seizing the paddle, he propelled the
- light skiff swiftly in the direction of the rock platform, where he found
- the old sailor stumping his beat in a terrible state of uneasiness over
- his prolonged absence.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Spike my guns, lad!&rdquo; cried he, bearing down upon the young man with
- outstretched hand and a smile as broad as the cutter's mainsail, &ldquo;they
- warmints's been an' done for Master Don this hitch, I says to myself when
- the half-hour fails to bring ye. An' what manner o' mishap's kept ye
- broached-to all this while? I axes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Fact is, captain, I was attacked by the enemy. Came within an ace of
- being captured, too. But, as good luck would have it, I managed to get in
- a thundering broadside, boarded the enemy&mdash;there was only one,
- luckily&mdash;spiked his guns, and towed him ashore, where he's waiting to
- pay his respects to you now. But get in and see for yourself what a
- valuable prize I've taken.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The captain got in with all despatch, and, as soon as the canoe touched
- the opposite beach, got out again without delay, so eager was he to
- inspect, the captive. As it was now daylight, he recognised the fellow the
- moment he set eyes on him. His delight knew no bounds. Bound and round the
- luckless lascar he stumped, chuckling as he always did when he was
- pleased, and every now and then prodding him in the ribs with his wooden
- leg, as if to reassure himself that he laboured under no delusion.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sharks an' sea-sarpents, lad!&rdquo; he roared, when quite satisfied as to the
- lascar's identity, &ldquo;we'll keep the warmint fast in the bilboes a while,
- says you; for, d'ye mind me, he's old Salambo's right-hand man, is this
- lubber, as comes an' goes at his beck an' call, an' executes the orders as
- he gives. So in the bilboes he remains; why not? I axes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;My idea precisely, captain. He can't be up to any of his little games so
- long as he has a good stout strap to hug him; and, what's more, he'll have
- a capital chance to recover from that nasty slash Jack gave him the other
- night. By the way, I've often wondered, do you know, how he managed to
- pull through that affair so easily. Suppose we turn him over and have a
- look at his shoulder?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- No sooner said than done, notwithstanding the captive's snarling protests;
- but, to their great amazement, his shoulder showed neither wound nor scar.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, this beats me!&rdquo; exclaimed Don incredulously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;An' is this the wery identical swab, an' no mistake? I axes,&rdquo; demanded
- the captain.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Mistake? None whatever, unless Jack was mistaken in the fellow the other
- day, which isn't at all likely. Besides, I've seen him twice before
- myself; once in the temple, and again on the sands here. I'd know that
- hang-dog look of his among a thousand. Then there's Spottie; he saw him as
- well. Stop! let's see what Spottie makes of this.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Spottie was summoned, and, without being informed of the point in dispute,
- unhesitatingly identified the captive as the lascar.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then,&rdquo; said Don, &ldquo;Jack must have supposed he stabbed the fellow when he
- didn't; that's the most I can make of it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Belay there!&rdquo; objected the captain. &ldquo;What about the blood in the canoe
- and on the knife when arterwards found? I axes.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There you have me. This fellow's the lascar fast enough; but how he's the
- lascar and yet doesn't show the wound Jack gave him, I know no more than
- the man in the moon. Ugh! what a greasy beast he is! I'd better take the
- strap up another hole to make sure of him.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- So, for a time, the puzzling question of the lascar's identity dropped.
- </p>
- <p>
- No food being procurable here, they decided to push oh to the Haunted
- Pagodas ere the sun became too hot, and there endeavour to clear a passage
- to the immured stores. Accordingly, when the canoe had been dragged back
- to its former place of concealment, they set out, Don taking charge of the
- lascar, who, clad in Spottie's upper-cloth, and having his legs only at
- liberty, led as quietly as a lamb.
- </p>
- <p>
- Two-thirds of the way up they came upon that portion of the hill which had
- been ravaged by the fire. For the most part this had now burnt itself out,
- leaving the summit of the elevation one vast bed of ghastly gray ashes,
- with here and there a smouldering stump or cluster of bamboo stems still
- smoking.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the Haunted Pagodas two surprises awaited them. The first of these was
- no other than Puggles himself, alive and lachrymose. On the floor of the
- otherwise empty &ldquo;fo'csle&rdquo; he sat, blubbering dolefully. Comical indeed was
- the spectacle he presented, with his woebegone face thickly begrimed with
- a mixture of ashes and tears&mdash;a sort of fortuitous whitewash,
- relieved in the funniest fashion by the black skin showing in patches
- through its lighter veneer, and by the double line of vivid red,
- stretching half-way from ear to ear, that marked the generous expanse of
- his mouth.
- </p>
- <p>
- The explanation of his sudden disappearance proved simple enough. He had
- stumbled in the very act of following his master past the
- swiftly-advancing fire, and crawling back on hands and knees to a place of
- safety, had there passed the night alone in the jungle. On reaching the
- encampment and finding it deserted, he jumped to the conclusion that the
- fire had, as he put it, &ldquo;done eat sahibs up,&rdquo; stores and all. Hence his
- tearful condition on their return.
- </p>
- <p>
- The second surprise was one of an equally pleasing nature, since it
- concerned the stores. The mass of <i>debris</i> which blocked the tunnel's
- mouth had subsided to such an extent in cooling as to admit of their
- reaching the imprisoned stores with but little difficulty.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All the same, captain,&rdquo; remarked Don, when presently they began a
- vigorous attack on the provisions, &ldquo;I'm jolly glad our fear of being
- buried alive drove us to the far end of the hole. We've got the key to the
- Elephant Rock, and, what's more, we've got a grip on old Salambo's right
- hand,&rdquo; nodding towards the lascar, who was again bound hand and foot,
- &ldquo;that's safe to stand us in good stead when it comes to the final tussle
- for Jack and the pearls.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Right ye are, lad,&rdquo; said the captain in tones as hearty as his appetite;
- &ldquo;an', blow me!&mdash;as the fog-horn says to the donkey-ingin&mdash;arter
- we snatches a wink o' sleep, d'ye mind me, we'll lay our heads together a
- bit an' detarmine on the best course to be steered.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- On the stone floor of the &ldquo;fo'csle&rdquo; the blacks were already sleeping the
- sleep of repletion; and, their meal finished, Don and the captain lost no
- time in following their example&mdash;for thirty-six hours of almost
- unremitting exertion and danger had told heavily upon their powers of
- endurance. Dead tired as they were, they gave little heed to the lascar
- beyond assuring themselves by a hasty glance that his bonds were secure.
- To all appearance he was wrapped in profound slumber.
- </p>
- <p>
- The sun was at the zenith when they stretched themselves upon the flags of
- the &ldquo;fo'csle&rdquo;; slowly it burnt its way downward to the western horizon,
- and still they slept. Don was the first to stir. He raised himself upon
- his elbow with a yawn, rubbed his eyes, gazed about him in momentary
- bewilderment. Twilight had already crept out of the ravine and invaded the
- ghostly, fire-scathed ruins. This was the first-thing he noticed. Then the
- recollection of the events of the past day and night rushed upon him, and
- he turned abruptly, with a sudden vague sense of dread, to the spot where
- the lascar lay.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lay? No; that place was empty!
- </p>
- <p>
- He could scarcely believe the evidence of his senses. Had the fellow
- somehow managed to shift his position, and roll out of sight behind one of
- the numerous blocks of stone that lay about? Or had he&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- With a cry of alarm he threw himself upon an object that lay where the
- lascar had lain. It was the leathern belt with which he had bound the
- fellow's arms. The tongue of the buckle was broken. He recollected now,
- and almost cursed his folly for not recollecting before, that the buckle
- had long been weak. Too late! The lascar had escaped!
- </p>
- <p>
- Dashing the traitorous belt upon the stones, he hurried to where the old
- sailor lay asleep, with Bosin curled up by his side, and shook him roughly
- by the shoulder. He was in no gentle mood just then.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Captain! Captain! Wake up! The lascars off!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- No response. No movement. Only the monkey awoke suddenly and fell to
- whimpering.
- </p>
- <p>
- The captain lay at full length upon his back, his bronzed hands clasped
- upon his broad chest, his blue sailor's cap drawn well over his eyes.
- Something in the pose of the figure at his feet, in its stillness&mdash;something,
- too, in the plaintive half-human wail the monkey uttered at the moment&mdash;struck
- a sudden chill to Don's heart. He dropped upon his knees, lifted the cap,
- peered into the upturned face. It was distorted, purple. He started back
- with a fearful cry:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not dead! Oh, my God, not dead!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIV.&mdash;SHROUDED IN A HAMMOCK.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>hat was a fearful
- moment for Don. The quest of the golden pearl, entered upon with all the
- love of adventure and sanguine hope natural to young hearts, began to wear
- a serious aspect indeed. Even had Jack been there to share the heartbreak
- of it, this sudden, numbing blow would still have been terribly hard to
- bear. But Jack was gone&mdash;whither, Heaven alone knew&mdash;and the
- captain was dead.
- </p>
- <p>
- Ay, the &ldquo;Providence that sits up aloft&rdquo; had at last looked out a snug
- berth for the old sailor, and shipped him for the Eternal Voyage. Kneeling
- by his side in the solemn twilight, with aching heart Don recalled all his
- quaint ways and quainter sayings, his large-hearted generosity, his
- rollicking good-nature, his rough but ever-ready sympathy&mdash;and sealed
- the kindly eyes with such tears as are wrung from us but once or twice in
- a lifetime, and recalled with sadness often, with shame never.
- </p>
- <p>
- But for him the captain would never have undertaken this disastrous
- venture. This was the bitterest, the sorest thought of all.
- </p>
- <p>
- At last Bosin's low wailing broke in upon his sad reverie. Well-nigh human
- did the monkey seem, as with tender, lingering touch he caressed his
- master's face, and sought to rouse him from this strange sleep of which he
- felt but could not understand the awful meaning. Then, failing to win from
- the dumb lips the response he craved, he turned his eyes upon his master's
- friend with a look of pathetic appeal fairly heartbreaking in its mute
- intensity.
- </p>
- <p>
- No sooner did he succeed in attracting Don's attention, however, than his
- manner underwent a complete change. The plaintive wail became a hiss, the
- puny, lithe hands tore frantically at something that showed like a thin,
- dark streak about the dead man's neck. What with the waning light and the
- shock of finding the captain dead, Don had not noticed this streak before.
- He looked at it closely now, and as he looked a horrified intelligence
- leapt into his face. The dark streak was a cord: the captain had been
- strangled!
- </p>
- <p>
- Oh, the horror of that discovery! Hitherto he had suspected no foul play,
- no connection of any kind, indeed, between the captain's death and the
- lascar's escape; for had he not taken the precaution to disarm the native?
- But now he remembered seeing that cord about the fellow's middle. He had
- thought it harmless. Harmless! Ah, how different was the mute witness
- borne by the old sailor's lifeless form! In the lascar's hands the cord
- had proved an instrument of death as swift and sure as any knife.
- </p>
- <p>
- But why had the captain been singled out as the victim? Was the lascar
- merely bent on wreaking vengeance on those who had injured him? Or was he
- a tool in other and invisible hands?
- </p>
- <p>
- Feverishly he asked himself these questions as he removed the fatal cord,
- and composed the distorted features into a semblance of what they had been
- in life; asked, but could not answer them. Only, back of the whole
- terrible business, he seemed to see the cunning, unscrupulous
- shark-charmer, bent on retaining the pearls at any cost, fanning the
- lascar's hatred into fiercer flame, guiding his ready hand in its work of
- death.
- </p>
- <p>
- Could he, alone and all but unaided, cope with the cunning of this enemy
- who, while himself unseen, made his devilish power felt at every turn? The
- responsibility thrown upon his shoulders by the captain's murder involved
- other and weightier issues than the mere recovery of a few thousand
- pounds' worth of stolen pearls. Jack must be rescued, if indeed he was
- still alive; while, if he too was dead, his and the captain's murderers
- must be brought to justice. This was the task before him; no light one for
- a youth of eighteen, with only a brace of timid native servants at his
- back. Yet he addressed himself to it with all the passionate determination
- born of his love for the chum and his grief for the friend who had stood
- by him &ldquo;through thick and thin.&rdquo; There was no hesitation, no wavering. &ldquo;Do
- or die!&rdquo; It was come to that now.
- </p>
- <p>
- The captain's burial must be his first consideration; for Don had lived
- long enough in the East to know how remorseless is the climate in its
- treatment of the dead. Morning at the latest must snatch the old sailor's
- familiar form for ever from his sight.
- </p>
- <p>
- A tarpaulin lay in the &ldquo;fo'csle,&rdquo; and with this he determined to hide the
- lascar's dread handiwork from view before waking the blacks, who still
- slept. While he was disposing this appropriate pall above the corpse, the
- captain's jacket fell open, and in an inside pocket he caught sight of a
- small volume.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Perhaps he has papers about him that ought to be preserved,&rdquo; thought Don.
- &ldquo;I'll have a look.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Drawing the volume from its resting-place with reverent touch, he found it
- to be a copy of the Book of Common Prayer, sadly worn and battered, like
- its owner, by long service. Here and there a leaf was turned down, or a
- passage marked by the dent of a heavy thumb-nail&mdash;the sailor's
- pencil. But what arrested his attention were these words written on the
- yellow fly-leaf in a bold, irregular hand, and in ink so faded as to make
- it evident that many years had elapsed since they were penned:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To all and sundry as sights these lines, when-somedever it may please the
- Good Skipper to tow this 'ere old hulk safe into port, widelicit. If so be
- as I'm spared to go aloft when on the high-seas, wery good! the loan of a
- hammock and a bit o' ballast is all I axes. But if so be as I'm ewentually
- stranded on shore, why then, d'ye mind me, who-somedever ye be as sights
- these 'ere lines, I ain't to be battened down like a lubberly landsman,
- d'ye see, but warped off-shore an' shipped for the Eternal V'yage as a
- true seaman had ought to be. And may God have mercy on my soul.&mdash;Amen.
- The last Log and Testament of me,
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;(Signed) John Mango, A.B.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The faded characters grew blurred and misty before Don's eyes as he
- scanned them. Closing the book, he grasped the captain's cold hand
- impulsively, and in tones choked with emotion, cried:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You shall have your wish, dear old friend! We'll warp you off-shore and
- ship you for the Eternal Voyage in a way befitting the true seaman that
- you are.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And the mute lips seemed to smile back their approval, as though they
- would say:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ay, ay, wrhy not, I axes? An' cheer up, my hearty, for, d'ye mind me,
- lad, pipin' your eye won't stop the leak when the ship's a-sinkin'.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- What boots it to linger over the noisy, but none the less genuine grief,
- of the faithful Spottie when he learned the sad truth? Nor is it necessary
- to describe at length the sad preparations for consigning the dead captain
- to his long home beneath the waves that had been his home so long in life.
- Suffice it to say that without loss of time a rude bier was constructed on
- which to convey the remains to the beach, and that while this was
- preparing there occurred an event so remarkable, and withal of so
- important a bearing upon the future of the quest, as to merit something
- more than mere passing mention.
- </p>
- <p>
- It happened while the three were in the jungle cutting materials for the
- litter, and it concerned the fatal cord.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Until the lascar's paid out, I'll keep this as a reminder of what I owe
- him,&rdquo; Don had said grimly, just before starting; and taking the lascars
- knife from his belt he stuck it into a crevice in the &ldquo;fo'csle&rdquo; wall, and
- hung the snake-like cord upon it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Spottie and Puggles being too timid to leave with the dead, or to send
- alone into the jungle in quest of materials for the bier&mdash;for was it
- not at nightfall that shadowy spooks walked abroad?&mdash;Don was forced
- to bear them company. There was no help for it; the captain's body must be
- left unguarded in their absence&mdash;except, indeed, for such watch-care
- as puny Bosin was able to give it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Up to the moment of their setting out the monkey had not for a single
- instant left his master's side. This fact served to render all the more
- extraordinary the discovery they made on their return&mdash;namely, that
- the monkey had quitted his post. What could have induced him to abandon
- his master at such a moment was a mystery.
- </p>
- <p>
- And the mystery deepened when Don, wanting the knife, sought it in the
- &ldquo;fo'csle,&rdquo; for, to his astonishment, neither knife nor cord was to be
- found.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Dey spooks done steal urn, sar,&rdquo; cried Spottie, with chattering teeth.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Huh,&rdquo; objected Puggles, between whom and Spottie there had grown up a
- sharp rivalry during their brief acquaintance, &ldquo;why they no steal dead
- sahib? I axes.&rdquo; Then to his master: &ldquo;Lascar maybe done come back, sahib.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- This suggestion certainly smacked more of plausibility than that offered
- by Spottie, since it not only accounted for the disappearance of the cord
- and knife, but of Bosin as well. Was it too much to believe that the
- faithful creature's hatred, instinctively awakened by the lascar's
- stealthy return, had outweighed affection for his dead master and impelled
- him to abandon the one that he might track the other? Remembering the
- intelligence exhibited by the monkey in the past, Don at least was
- satisfied that this explanation was the true one.
- </p>
- <p>
- By midnight all was in readiness, and with heavy hearts they took up their
- dead and began the toilsome descent to the creek. This reached, the <i>Jolly
- Tar</i> was drawn from her place of concealment, and the captain's body
- lashed in a tarpaulin. Then, with white wings spread, the cutter bore
- silently away from the creek's mouth in quest of a last resting-place for
- the master whose behest she was never again to obey.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;This will do,&rdquo; said Don, when a half-hour's run had put them well
- off-shore. &ldquo;Take the tiller, Pug, and keep her head to the wind for a
- little.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With bowed head he opened the well-worn Prayer Book, and, while the waves
- chanted a solemn funeral dirge, read in hushed tones the office for the
- burial of the dead at sea. A pause, a tear glinting in the moonlight, a
- splash&mdash;and just as the morning star flashed out like a beacon above
- the eastern sea-rim, the old sailor began the Eternal Voyage.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And now,&rdquo; said Don, as he brought the cutters head round in the direction
- of the creek; &ldquo;now for the last tussle and justice for the dead. Let me
- only come face to face once more with that murderous lascar or his master,
- and no false notions of mercy shall stay my hand&mdash;so help me Heaven!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And surely not Heaven itself could deem that vow unrighteous.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XV.&mdash;THE CROCODILE PIT.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he last melancholy
- duty to the captain discharged, Don threw himself heart and fist&mdash;as
- Jack would have said&mdash;into the work cut out for him; and by the time
- the <i>Jolly Tar</i> was again rubbing her nose against the inner wall of
- the grotto, he had decided to abandon the Haunted Pagodas and to make this
- secluded spot&mdash;next door to the back entrance of the Elephant Rock&mdash;his
- base of operations.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Up to now it's been all take and no give,&rdquo; he said to himself; &ldquo;but now
- we've got to act, and act like a steel trap, sharp and sure. What is it
- the old school motto says?&mdash;'<i>bis dat qui cito dat</i>,' 'a quick
- blow's as good as two any day.' The old Roman who strung that together
- knew what he was talking about, anyhow, and I'll put his old saw to the
- test before another sun sets.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- In the letter of which Bosin had been the bearer Jack had said&mdash;&ldquo;They
- take me to the Elephant Rock to-night.&rdquo; Twice since then had night come
- and gone; and if his chum had not perished in the village holocaust, in
- the Elephant Rock he was probably to be found. Hurrah for the finding!
- </p>
- <p>
- The muskets were still at the &ldquo;fo'csle,&rdquo; for that sad midnight descent of
- the hill had left their hands too full for weapons. Besides, none were
- needed then. They were needed now, however, so there was nothing for it
- but to climb the hill after them. This, and the time necessarily consumed
- in snatching a hasty meal, delayed the start by a good two hours.
- </p>
- <p>
- At length all was ready, and tumbling into the canoe they pushed off. To
- stick to the literal truth, Spottie did the tumbling. In spite of all his
- efforts to assume a dignity of carriage in keeping with his weapons and
- the occasion, the cutlass at Spottie's belt would persist in getting at
- crosspurposes with his long, thin legs, and so throw him, physically
- speaking, off his balance. Once seated in the canoe, however, with the
- point of the cutlass in dangerous proximity to Puggles's back, and the old
- flint-lock so disposed upon his knees as to hit Don to a dead certainty if
- by any mischance it went off, Spottie looked exceedingly fierce&mdash;in
- fact, an out-and-out swashbuckler.
- </p>
- <p>
- Not so Puggles. No weapons could make him look other than what nature had
- made him&mdash;a happy-go-lucky, fun-and-food loving, sunny-faced lump of
- oily blackness. The extra broad grin that tugged at the far corners of bis
- expansive mouth proclaimed him at peace with all the world&mdash;especially
- with that important section of it bounded by his swelling waistband&mdash;and
- gave the lie direct to his warlike equipment.
- </p>
- <p>
- Of crossing the creek Don made short work, and soon they stood upon the
- rock platform, where, but little more than twenty-four hours before, the
- landing and sudden disappearance of the native crew had put them in
- possession of the key which was now, if fortune favoured them, to unlock
- the secret of Jack's fate, and, haply, the door of his prison-house.
- </p>
- <p>
- Yonder on the right&mdash;for the spot was light enough by day, despite
- its curtain of vegetation&mdash;could be seen the black mouth of the
- tunnel running under the creek, and so to the summit of Haunted Pagoda
- Hill; here, on the left, that by which the natives had taken their
- departure. It was with this that Don's business lay now; and as he led the
- way into it he recalled with a sorrowful smile that quaint fancy of the
- captain's which made this approach to the Rook &ldquo;the tail o' the Elephant.&rdquo;
- And here was the very spot where he had uttered the words. He almost
- fancied he could see the old sailor standing there still, his wooden leg
- thrust well forward, his cap well back, and Bosin perched contentedly upon
- his broad shoulder. Alas for fancy!
- </p>
- <p>
- But what was this that came leaping down the dim vista of steps? No
- creature of fancy surely, but actual flesh and blood. Only flesh and blood
- in the form of a monkey, it is true, but what mattered that, since the
- monkey was none other than Bosin himself?
- </p>
- <p>
- A jubilant shout from Puggles greeted his appearance&mdash;a shout which
- Don, fearful of discovery, immediately checked&mdash;while Spottie made as
- if to catch the returned truant. But the impish Bosin would have none of
- him; eluding the grasp of the black, he sprang upon Don's shoulder. Only
- then did Don observe that the monkey was not empty-handed. He carried
- something hugged tightly against his breast.
- </p>
- <p>
- Like all his tribe, Bosin had a pretty <i>penchant</i> for annexing any
- chance article that happened to take his fancy, without regard to ordinary
- rights of property.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Prigging again, eh?&rdquo; said Don, as he gently disengaged the monkey's booty
- from his grasp. &ldquo;What have you got this time?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- To his astonishment he saw that he held in his hands the lascar's cord,
- and&mdash;surely he was not mistaken?&mdash;the fellow to that half of
- Jack's handkerchief in which his letter had been wrapped up when
- despatched from the village per monkey post.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bosin's mysterious disappearance, then, was explained. In quitting his
- dead master's side so unaccountably he had had a purpose in view&mdash;a
- monkeyish, unreasoning purpose, doubtless, but none the less a purpose&mdash;which
- was none other than to track the lascar to his lair and regain possession
- of the cord. Not that he knew in the least the value to Don of the yard of
- twisted hemp, or the significance of the scrap of crumpled, bloodstained
- cambric he was at such pains to filch. With only blind instinct for his
- guide, he had been guided better than he knew; for while the cord proved
- the Elephant Rock to be the hiding-place of the lascar, the handkerchief
- proved, or seemed to prove, that Jack was still alive and that the
- lascar's hiding-place was his prison.
- </p>
- <p>
- Don's heart leapt at the discovery.
- </p>
- <p>
- Perhaps Jack, unable for some reason to scribble even so much as a word,
- had entrusted the handkerchief to the monkey's care, knowing that the
- sight of it would assure his chum of his safety, if it did no more. Or
- perhaps Bosin had carried it off while Jack slept?
- </p>
- <p>
- A thousand conjectures flashed through Don's brain, but he thrust them
- hastily aside, since mere conjecture could not release his chum; and
- calling to the blacks to follow, he sprang up the steps with a lighter
- heart. The monkey swung himself down from his perch and took the lead, as
- if instinctively divining the object of their quest; chattering gleefully
- when the trio pressed close upon his heels&mdash;impatiently when they
- lagged behind.
- </p>
- <p>
- The steps surmounted, they discovered an offshoot from the main tunnel,
- from which point of division the latter dwindled straight away into a mere
- dot of light in the distance. In the main tunnel itself the light was
- faint enough; but as they advanced it increased in brilliancy till
- presently&mdash;the distance being actually much less than the unbroken
- perspective of chiselled rock made it appear&mdash;they emerged suddenly
- into the broad light of day, streaming down through an oblong cleft or
- gash cut deep into the solid heart of the Rock.
- </p>
- <p>
- The light itself was more welcome than what it revealed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Directly across their path, at their very feet indeed, extended a yawning
- chasm, of depth unknown&mdash;but, as the first glance served to show, of
- such breadth as to effectually bar their further progress.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVI.&mdash;DON SETS A DEATH-TRAP FOR THE LASCAR.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>o be sure,
- skirting the end wall on the extreme left was a ledge along which the
- agile monkey made his way to the opposite side of the pit with little or
- no difficulty; but, as for following him, by that road at least, why, the
- thing was an utter impossibility. The ledge was a mere thread. Scarce a
- handbreadth of rock lay between the smooth-cut upper wall and the
- perpendicular face of the pit.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Blow me!&rdquo; muttered Don, unconsciously echoing the phrase he had so often
- heard on the captains lips, &ldquo;if this ain't the purtiest go as ever I see!&rdquo;
- Which assertion was purely figurative; for as he was only too well aware
- it was &ldquo;no go&rdquo; at all, so far as the pit was concerned.
- </p>
- <p>
- Peering over the brink of the chasm he found it to be partially filled
- with water, between which and the spot where he stood intervened perhaps
- thirty feet of sheer wall. An uninviting pool it looked, lying as green
- and putrescent within its sunken basin as if the bones of unnumbered dead
- men were rotting in its depths. The very sunshine that fell in great
- golden blotch upon its surface seemed to shrink from its foul touch.
- </p>
- <p>
- But what struck Don as the strangest feature of this noisome pool was the
- constant agitation of its waters. To what was it due? What were those
- black, glistening objects floating here and there upon its surface? And
- those others, ranged along the half-submerged ledge on the far side? A
- small fragment of stone chanced to lie near him. He picked it up and aimed
- it at one of these curious objects. To his astonishment the black mass
- slowly shifted its position and plunged with a wallowing splash into the
- pool. Puggles, who had been looking on with mouth agape, raised a shout.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Him corkadile, sa'b! Me sometimes bery often seeing um in riber. Him
- plenty appetite got!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ugh, the monsters!&rdquo; muttered his master, watching with a sort of horrible
- fascination the movements of the hulking reptiles, which lifted their
- ugly, square snouts towards him as if scenting prey. &ldquo;Here's a pretty
- kettle of fish! Crossing this hole is hound to be a tough job at the best&mdash;but,
- as if that wasn't enough, these brutes must turn up and add danger to
- difficulty. Plenty appetite? I should think so, indeed, in such a hole as
- this! However, crocodile or no crocodile, it's got to be crossed.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Until now he had rather wondered, to tell the truth, why it was that not a
- single native had crossed their path. He had expected to find the passage
- guarded. The pit, not to say the crocodiles, shed a flood of light&mdash;not
- very cheering light, he was forced to admit&mdash;upon this point. No
- doubt the natives considered themselves in little danger from intrusion,
- so long as they were guarded by a dozen feet of sheer pit, with a dozen
- brace or so of healthy crocodiles at the bottom of it.
- </p>
- <p>
- And probably they were right so far as concerned intruders of their own
- colour and pluck; but Don was made of sturdier stuff than native clay.
- Beyond the crocodile pit lay his chum, a prisoner. Cross it he must, and
- would. Therefore, to borrow the expressive phrase of an American humorist,
- he &ldquo;rose to the emergency and caved the emergency's head in.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Was the pit too wide to leap? Spanning it with his eye, he estimated its
- width at a dozen feet; certainly not less. A tremendous leap that, and
- fraught with fearful risk. And even should he be able to take it, what of
- Spottie and Puggles? They would never dare face it. And what, too, of the
- muskets and cutlasses?
- </p>
- <p>
- Suddenly he descried, just where the continuation of the tunnel pierced
- the wall on the far side of the pit, an object that inspired him with
- fresh hope and determination. True, it was nothing more than a plank, but
- once that plank was in his hands, he could, perhaps, bridge the pit.
- </p>
- <p>
- A dozen feet at the very least! Could he clear it? To jump short of the
- opposite ledge, to reach it, even, and then slip, meant certain and
- horrible death at the jaws of the crocodiles. Should he venture? Jack had
- ventured much for him. He slipped off his shoes&mdash;his stockinged feet
- would afford a surer foothold&mdash;and quietly bade the blacks stand
- aside. Sauntering carelessly into the tunnel&mdash;that by which they had
- approached the pit&mdash;a distance of forty paces or so, he turned, drew
- a deep breath, threw all his lithe strength into the short run, his whole
- soul into the leap, and&mdash;&mdash; Would he clear it?
- </p>
- <p>
- No&mdash;yes! A horrified shriek from the blacks, and he was over, the pit
- a scant handbreadth behind him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dragging the plank from its place of partial concealment, he was delighted
- to find a short piece of rope attached to it. Good; it would facilitate
- the bridging of the chasm. Standing on the brink, he coiled the rope&mdash;not
- without a misgiving that it was too short for his purpose&mdash;and,
- calling to Spottie to catch the end, threw it out over the pit
- sailor-fashion. It fell short.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Stop!&rdquo; cried he. &ldquo;This will make it right;&rdquo; and drawing the lascar's cord
- from his pocket, he knotted it to the rope. This time Spottie succeeded in
- grasping the end; and so, with the aid of the lascar's cord, the plank was
- drawn across. Its length was such that it bridged the pit from wall to
- wall, with a foot of spring-way to spare at either end.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the time Don thought nothing of this apparently trivial incident; yet,
- had he but known it, with that cord he had laid a death-trap for
- the-captain's murderer.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVII.&mdash;THE BLAST OF A CONCH-SHELL.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he rest was easy.
- In five minutes the blacks had crawled across, with many fearful glances
- at the upturned snouts of the huge reptiles below; and Don, treading the
- springy length of plank with sure foot, had transferred muskets and
- cutlasses to what he mentally termed &ldquo;Jack's side&rdquo; of the chasm. They were
- now ready for a fresh start.
- </p>
- <p>
- All this time Bosin had watched their movements with an expression of
- mingled shrewdness and approval in his restless eyes that seemed to say:
- &ldquo;Ha! the very thing I'd do myself were I in the fix you're in.&rdquo; Again he
- took the lead, like one who had travelled the road before, and was quite
- satisfied in his own mind that he knew all its little ins and outs.
- </p>
- <p>
- His knowledge of the way became more apparent still when, after
- penetrating the heart of the rock for some distance, the tunnel split into
- three distinct branches. This point Don hesitated to pass; but not so
- Bosin. Without a pause he took the passage to the right, glancing back as
- if to assure himself that he was followed. Off this gallery others opened,
- until it became evident that, as the captain had once affirmed, the rock
- was honeycombed &ldquo;from maindeck to keelson.&rdquo; But for the monkey's guidance
- Don must have found himself utterly at a loss amid so perplexing a
- labyrinth. As it was, he pressed forward with confidence.
- </p>
- <p>
- Danger of discovery, owing to the multiplicity of passages, now increased
- momentarily. Any of these ghostly corridors might afford concealment to an
- enemy who, warned of danger by the muffled echo of approaching steps,
- might steal away, silently and unobserved, and so raise the alarm. Though
- still in his stocking feet, Don instinctively found himself treading on
- tip-toe, while the bare-footed blacks&mdash;who were even less inclined
- for a brush with the enemy than he&mdash;purposely did the same. Even then
- their movements, well-nigh noiseless though they were, caused commotion
- amongst the bats that clung in patches of living fungi to the vaulted
- roof, and sent them wheeling hither and thither in swift, startled flight.
- </p>
- <p>
- To succeed in finding his chum, and to liberate him ere discovery came,
- was almost more than Don dared hope for. For come it must, sooner or
- later. Only, once Jack was by his side, he cared little how soon or in
- what manner it came. True, the natives possessed the seeming advantage of
- overwhelming numbers; but in these rock corridors the nozzle of a single
- musket was better than a hundred men.
- </p>
- <p>
- To do him justice, he had thrust the pearls entirely out of his thoughts
- in his eagerness to set Jack at liberty. &ldquo;Time enough to think about the
- pearls afterwards,&rdquo; he said to himself&mdash;forgetting that &ldquo;afterwards&rdquo;
- was at the best but a blind alley, full of unknown pitfalls.
- </p>
- <p>
- They were now well into the heart of the Elephant Bock, where any moment
- might bring them face to face with Jack or his captors, or both.
- </p>
- <p>
- At this point the monkey, who was some yards in advance, suddenly stopped
- and uttered a peculiar hissing sound. Once before&mdash;when, on the rock
- platform, Bosin had given warning of the approach of the canoes&mdash;had
- Don heard that hiss. There was no mistaking its significance. He motioned
- to the blacks to halt, and with stealthy tread crept forward alone.
- </p>
- <p>
- Just ahead a sharp bend in the passage limited his view to a few yards of
- indifferently lighted wall. Hugging the inner side of this bend, he
- presently gained the jutting shoulder of rock which formed the dividing
- line between the vista of gallery behind and that ahead, and from this
- point of vantage peered cautiously round the projection in search of the
- cause of Bosin's alarm.
- </p>
- <p>
- This was not far to seek. Immediately beyond the bend the passage expanded
- into a sort of vestibule, communicating, by means of a lofty portal, with
- a spacious, well-lighted chamber. It was not this discovery, however, that
- riveted his gaze, but a dusky figure crouched on the floor of the
- vestibule&mdash;the figure of a native, reclining on a mat, with his back
- to the spot where Don stood. By his side lay a sword of curious
- workmanship, and a huge conch-shell, the pearly pink of its inner surface
- contrasting strangely with the native's coffee-coloured skin. The weapon
- and the shell told their own tale: the native was doing &ldquo;sentry-go.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Over what or whom? With swift glance Don scanned every nook and corner of
- the vestibule, and as much of the interior chamber as lay within range of
- his vision. So far as he could see both were empty, barring only the dusky
- sentinel. Then he fancied he heard the faint clanking of a chain, though
- from what direction the sound proceeded it was impossible to determine.
- Listening with bated breath, he heard it again, and now it seemed to come
- from the larger chamber. His pulses thrilled, and a determined light shone
- in his eyes as he turned them once more upon the sentinel.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll jolly soon fix you, old chap,&rdquo; he said to himself; and noiselessly
- clubbing the musket he carried, he prepared to advance.
- </p>
- <p>
- But for the monkey's vigilance he must have come upon the recumbent guard
- without the slightest warning, for not more than ten paces separated the
- shoulder of rock&mdash;Don's post of observation&mdash;from the mat on
- which the native reclined.
- </p>
- <p>
- To fire upon him was out of the question, since that would fulfil the very
- purpose for which he, with his conch-shell trumpet, was stationed there&mdash;namely,
- to send a thousand wild echoes hurtling through chamber and galleries, and
- so apprise his comrades of impending danger. Moreover, Don had a wholesome
- horror of bloodshed, which at most times effectually held his trigger
- finger in check.
- </p>
- <p>
- A swift, sure blow&mdash;that would be the best means of keeping the
- native's lips from the nozzle of his conch-trumpet. A blow&mdash;ay, there
- was the-rub! For, though the native's back was towards-him, the space by
- which they two were divided must be crossed; and these walls, dumb as they
- looked, had hidden tongues, which would echo and re-echo the faintest
- sound. Could he, then, get near enough to strike?
- </p>
- <p>
- Inch by inch he crept towards the unconscious sentinel, slowly raising the
- butt of the musket as he advanced. So intense was the suspense of those
- few brief moments that he hardly breathed. It seemed as if the very
- beating of his heart must reach the native's ears. Inch by inch, foot by
- foot, until&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0011" id="linkimage-0011"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0213.jpg" alt="0213 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0213.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- The native turned his head; but before he could spring to his feet, or
- even utter a cry, the musket crashed upon his shaven pate, and he rolled
- over on his side without a sound.
- </p>
- <p>
- Don did not stop to ascertain the extent of his injuries. Neither did he
- summon the blacks. Again the clanking of chains rang in his ears, and at a
- bound he crossed the threshold of the larger chamber, An unkempt human
- figure started up in the far corner.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Jack!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And is it really you, old fellow?&rdquo; cried Jack joyfully. &ldquo;Give us your
- hand; and how did you find your way here, I want to know?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You have Bosin to thank for that,&rdquo; replied Don, returning his chum's'
- grip with interest. &ldquo;When I saw your handkerchief&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, the monkey stole it, then! I missed it, don't you know, but never
- imagined that Bosin took it, though he paid me a visit early this morning.
- Well, he did me a good turn that time, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And a better one when he led us back here. But,&rdquo; continued Don in
- hurried, suppressed tones, &ldquo;don't let us waste time palavering, Jack.
- There's not a moment to lose. I've done for old conchy yonder&mdash;knocked
- him on the head&mdash;but the rest may swoop down on us any minute. Say,
- how are you tethered?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Leg,&rdquo; said Jack laconically, rattling a chain which secured him to the
- wall. &ldquo;Stop!&rdquo;&mdash;as Don unslung his cutlass with the intention of
- hacking at the links&mdash;&ldquo;I'll show you a trick worth two of that. You
- see that ring-bolt the chain's fastened to? Well, it's set in lead&mdash;not
- very securely as it happens&mdash;and I've managed to work it so loose
- that I fancy a good hard tug ought to bring it away. Meant to make off on
- my own account, you see, if you hadn't turned up, old fellow. But lay hold
- and let's have a pull for it, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Quick, then!&rdquo; said Don. &ldquo;I thought I heard footsteps.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Throwing their combined weight upon the chain, they pulled for dear life.
- The ring-bolt yielded little by little, and presently came away from its
- setting bodily, like an ancient tooth, and Jack was free. The chain, it is
- true, was still attached to his leg; but as it encircled only one ankle,
- this did not so much matter.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't let it rattle,&rdquo; said Don breathlessly, &ldquo;I'm positive I heard
- footsteps. And here, take this,&rdquo; thrusting the cutlass into Jack's
- disengaged hand. &ldquo;Now, come on!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Barely had he uttered the words when a hollow, prolonged blast, like that
- of a gigantic trumpet with a cold in its throat, filled the chamber with
- deafening clamour. And as the echoes leapt from wall to wall, and buffeted
- each other into silence, another sound succeeded them, faint and far away,
- but swelling momentarily into ominous loudness and nearness.
- </p>
- <p>
- Don clutched his companion's arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The fellow I knocked on the head&mdash;he's come to!&rdquo; he said thickly.
- &ldquo;That was the blast of his conch; and this&rdquo;&mdash;pausing with uplifted
- hand and bated breath until that other sound broke clearly on their ears&mdash;&ldquo;this
- is the tread of heaven only knows how many native feet. Jack, we're
- discovered!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVIII.&mdash;BETWEEN LIFE AND DEATH.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">F</span>our galleries
- centred on the rock-chamber, and the confused, tumultuous rush of feet
- which followed the blast of the conch-shell like an ominous echo,
- proceeded from that particular gallery opposite the vestibule.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Seems to be a rare lot of them; but we needn't stop to reckon 'em up,&rdquo;
- said Jack, with a constrained laugh. &ldquo;Lead the way, old fellow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Into the smaller chamber they dashed, to find the exit blocked by the
- sentinel with sword drawn. Rapidly reversing his musket, Don bore down
- upon him&mdash;he, to do him justice, standing his ground bravely,&mdash;and
- with the butt-end of the weapon dealt the nigger a blow in the stomach
- that doubled him up like a broken bulrush.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Where are the others?&rdquo; cried Jack, as they rounded the shoulder of rock
- separating the antechamber from the passage. &ldquo;You never came alone!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No; I left them just here&mdash;told them to wait,&rdquo; said Don, peering
- about in search of the blacks. &ldquo;They must have gone back; thought they'd
- save their skins while they could, I suppose, the chicken-hearted beggars!
- Ha, here's Bosin, at any rate.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Swinging the monkey upon his shoulder, he set off at a run down the
- passage, Jack following as close as the weight of the chain would allow
- him, to do. They had proceeded only a short distance when a faint,
- sepulchral shout brought them to a stand. The sound seemed to proceed from
- a gallery on their immediate right. The way out did not lie in that
- direction.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's Pug's wheeze,&rdquo; said Don. &ldquo;They've taken the wrong turning;&rdquo; and he
- drew a deep breath to answer the call.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack interposed quickly. &ldquo;Stop! The natives will be down on us soon enough
- without, that. Off with you, old fellow, and fetch' pur party back. I'll
- wait here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Already Don was racing down the side passage. Presently Jack heard him
- jitter a cautious &ldquo;hullo.&rdquo; A short silence followed then the echoes told
- him that the fugitives were hastily retracing their steps. At the same
- moment a confused uproar burst on his ears from the direction of the
- chamber in his rear. The pursuing mob had turned the angle of the passage
- and were actually in sight. The chain attached to Jack's leg clanked
- impatiently. He fairly danced with excitement. That ill-advised move on
- the part of the blacks had almost proved fatal to their sole chance of
- escape.
- </p>
- <p>
- But not quite; for now Don and the blacks came up, Jack joined them, and,
- with the oncoming thunder of many feet loud in their ears, away they sped,
- running as they alone can run who know that death is at their heels.
- </p>
- <p>
- Two circumstances favoured them so long as the race was confined to the
- cramped limits of the corridors: the smallness of their own number, and
- the multitude of their pursuers. Where four could run with ease, forty
- wasted their breath in fighting each other for running room.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;We must put the pit between us and-these howling demons while they're
- tumbling over each other in the passage here,&rdquo; cried Don.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was their only hope. Racing on by Jack's side, close on-the heels of
- the blacks, he rapidly explained to his chum&mdash;who knew nothing of the
- pit, having been brought into the rock by a more circuitous route&mdash;the
- nature of the contemplated manoeuvre; and gave Spottie and Puggles their
- instructions how to act, backed up by a wholesome threat of summary
- abandonment to the enemy should they shirk when it came to the crucial
- point, the plank. The blacks were to cross first, Jack next; while he,
- Don, would cover their retreat as best he could. To this arrangement Jack
- could raise no demur. He was too seriously handicapped by the chain.
- </p>
- <p>
- A final spurt, and they cleared the tunnel and reached the pit. The plank
- lay where they had left it. Across it ran their only road to safety. At a
- significant signal from Don Spottie led off, and, when he had reached the
- further side in safety, Puggles followed in his tracks. Doffs threat,
- coupled with the ominous uproar belched forth by the mouth of the tunnel,
- eclipsed all fear of the crocodiles.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, Jack,&rdquo; cried Don, ere the plank had ceased to vibrate under
- Puggles's tread, &ldquo;after you.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack crossed, and Don was in the act of stepping on the unstable bridge,
- when the foremost of the native gang burst from the gallery. One swift
- backward glance&mdash;a glance that stowed him how alarmingly narrow was
- the margin between escape and capture&mdash;and with outstretched arms he
- balanced himself on the handbreadth of plank&mdash;it was scarcely more&mdash;and
- began the perilous passage. Swift as was this backward glance, it sufficed
- to show him, too, that the leader of the pursuit was none other than the
- escaped lascar; and ere he had traversed half the plank's length, he felt
- it yield and rebound beneath the quick tread of the fellows feet. At the
- same instant Jack raised a warning shout.
- </p>
- <p>
- There are moments when the strongest nerve quails, the steadiest head
- swings a little off its balance, the surest foot slips. Such a moment did
- this prove for Don. The disconcerting vibration of the plank, the
- knowledge that the lascar was at his very back, Jack's sudden shout&mdash;these
- for an instant conspired against and overcame his natural cool-headedness.
- He made a hurried step or two, staggered, and, his foot catching in the
- rope where it encircled the plank a short distance from the end, he
- stumbled and fell.
- </p>
- <p>
- Fell! but in falling dislodged the end of the plank which lay behind him,
- and on which the lascar stood, from its hold upon the further brink of the
- pit. The lascar, throwing up his arms with a despairing shriek, plunged
- headlong into the pool, where he was instantly seized upon by the ravenous
- crocodiles and torn limb from limb.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0012" id="linkimage-0012"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0223.jpg" alt="0223 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0223.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- And now, if ever, did the &ldquo;Providence that sits up aloft&rdquo; watch over Don.
- Almost miraculously, as it seemed, instead of plunging into the horrible
- death-trap below, he fell astride the plank, the hither end of which still
- retained its hold upon the rock at an angle of perhaps sixty-five degrees;
- and up this steep incline&mdash;whither Bosin had already preceded him&mdash;with
- Jack's assistance he managed to scramble. Then they laid hold upon the
- plank and dragged it from the pit, amid the furious howling of the baffled
- rabble debouching from the tunnel opposite.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Safe over, at any rate,&rdquo; panted Don. &ldquo;But&mdash;good heavens! what's
- become of the lascar?&rdquo; For, suspended as he had been between life and
- death, he had neither heard the lascar's shriek nor witnessed the horrible
- manner in which he had received his quietus at the jaws of the crocodiles.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack pointed out a bright crimson blotch on the surface of the pool.
- &ldquo;We've seen the last of him, poor devil,&rdquo; said he with a shudder. &ldquo;Say,
- did I tell you&mdash;no, of course I didn't&mdash;that this fellows not <i>my</i>
- lascar?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What, not the lascar who's been hounding us all this time?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The lascar who's been hounding us on the island here&mdash;yes; but not
- the one who tried to brain me on board the cutter and got the knife for
- his pains. <i>That</i> chap kicked the bucket shortly after he got ashore;
- this fellow's his brother. They're as like as two peas.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don vented his astonishment in a shrill whistle. &ldquo;Then that accounts for
- it,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;for there being no scar on his shoulder, I mean.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Precisely; and it came jolly near accounting for yours truly as well,&rdquo;
- said Jack, with a queer little laugh and a significant shrug of the
- shoulders. &ldquo;This fellow, you see&mdash;the one who was just now eaten by
- the crocodiles&mdash;raised a sort of vendetta against us when his brother
- died, and of course he wanted to try his hand on me first, since it was I
- who gave his brother his death-blow. He'd have done it, too, if it hadn't
- been for old Salambo. But the old man put his foot down&mdash;I overheard
- their talk last night, and that's how I know&mdash;and said he wouldn't
- allow any violence, lucky for me. He was hoping for overtures from you, I
- suppose. But I say, what's this about the scar? How do <i>you</i> know
- there was none on the fellow's shoulder?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How do I know? Why, you see, it was this way. I was swimming the creek
- yesterday morning&mdash;you shall hear how that came about later on, by
- the way&mdash;when the lascar,&rdquo; indicating the crimson blotch on the pool,
- &ldquo;tried to throttle me. I had to knock him on the head to quiet him. Then I
- towed him ashore, and the captain and I&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The captain!&rdquo; cried Jack with a start. &ldquo;By Jove, we've left him behind!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The wild hurry-scurry and excitement of the last half-hour had afforded
- Don scant opportunity for speaking of the captain's sad end&mdash;had,
- indeed, driven all thought of the old sailor from his mind, as it also had
- from Jack's. Now that the captain was mentioned, however, Jack, naturally
- enough, jumped to the conclusion that he had formed one of the rescue
- party, and had been overlooked in their recent precipitate flight. The
- time was now come when he must be undeceived; but when Don attempted to
- disclose the sad truth emotion choked his utterance, and he could not. But
- Jack, gazing into his convulsed face, instinctively read there what his
- lips refused to utter.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;When did it happen?&rdquo; he asked in a hushed, awed whisper. &ldquo;And how?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Controlling his voice with an effort, &ldquo;Only last night,&rdquo; faltered Don;
- &ldquo;the lascar did it.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack turned away and buried his face in his hands.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;He was strangled,&rdquo; Don presently resumed, &ldquo;strangled with that cord you
- see tied to the rope there. Afterwards, when the lascar gave me the slip,
- as he did in the night, he took the cord with him; but Bosin somehow
- recovered it and fetched it back. I little guessed how it would serve the
- lascar out when I used it to bridge the pit!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Retribution!&rdquo; cried Jack, flinging his hands impulsively away from his
- face. &ldquo;He's rightly served, the villain. Only&rdquo;&mdash;regretfully&mdash;&ldquo;I
- wish it had been me instead of the cord, that's all. But it's done,
- anyhow, so let's get out of this.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And it was time; for during this conversation the natives had not been
- idle. At this very moment, indeed, a number of them rushed shouting from
- the tunnel, bearing other planks with which to bridge the chasm. Don and
- his chum did not wait to see this done. Without further loss of time they
- set out for the creek, in which direction the blacks had already preceded
- them.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hardly had they entered the tunnel, however, when they encountered the
- blacks, running back full pelt; and before Don could inquire the cause of
- their precipitate return, a shout, reverberating up the vaulted corridor
- from the semi-darkness ahead, made inquiry unnecessary. While he and Jack
- had dallied in fancied security, the natives, skirting the pit by another
- route, had cut off their retreat.
- </p>
- <p>
- And, as if to increase the consternation caused by this discovery, at the
- same instant a chorus of yells in their rear announced that the party in
- pursuit had succeeded in bridging the pit anew.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIX.&mdash;ONE-TO-TWENTY GIVES TWENTY-TO-ONE THE WORST OF IT.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>emmed in!&rdquo; cried
- Don, as the desperate character of the situation flashed upon him. &ldquo;Shall
- we try to cut our way through the gang ahead, or fall back on the pit?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Back!&rdquo; was Jack's prompt rejoinder. &ldquo;Once prevent the niggers in our rear
- from crossing the pit, and we're all right. We'll have more fighting room
- there, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Back they ran, hustling the blacks before them. At the pit matters were
- even worse than they had feared. Half-a-dozen planks already spanned the
- chasm, each of them black with natives, who jostled each other in their
- eagerness to cross, supremely indifferent to the reptilian horrors that
- awaited them should they lose their balance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hurrah!&rdquo; shouted Jack, pouncing upon the 'bobbing end of the nearest
- plank. &ldquo;Tumble 'em in! To the crocodiles with the beggars!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Though the occupants of the plank could understand not a syllable of
- Jack's speech, they readily understood his intention; and crowding back
- upon each other with warning cries, by their combined weight they hastened
- the very catastrophe they desired to avert. The plank bent like a bow,
- snapped in twain, and launched its shrieking burden into the abyss. In
- their frantic efforts to escape, a number of the doomed wretches clutched
- at a second plank that happened to lie within reach. Already heavily
- overloaded, this also gave way, and added its quota to the horrible
- commotion of the pool. Two planks were thus accounted for.
- </p>
- <p>
- Meanwhile Don and the blacks had not been slow to second Jack's efforts.
- By their united strength a third plank was dislodged, and they were in the
- act of attacking the fourth when their energies were diverted into another
- channel.
- </p>
- <p>
- For at this juncture the detachment of natives who had cut off the retreat
- to the creek suddenly appeared upon the scene. The remaining planks, too,
- now began to pour the enemy upon the hither side of the pit in steady
- streams.
- </p>
- <p>
- The rocky shelf' that here flanked the chasm had, perhaps, a width of
- three yards, and that portion of it to the left of the creek-tunnel's
- mouth, where the unmolested planks lay, was speedily packed with natives,
- armed with formidable pikes and knives, who bore down upon the little
- group with furious outcries and all the weight of superior numbers. Jack
- was the first to perceive the danger.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;To the right! It's all up with us if we're surrounded.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Suiting the action to the words, he darted to the right, closely followed
- by Don and the blacks. Here they stationed themselves side by side, the
- timid blacks in the rear, and prepared to meet their assailants.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Couldn't be better!&rdquo; was Jack's cheerful comment, as he took a hasty
- survey of their surroundings. &ldquo;Wall on our right; pit on left; enemy in
- front; and elbow-room behind. Say, we'll buckle to with the muskets first,
- and reserve the cutlasses till it comes to close quarters. Look out;
- they're coming!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- On came the howling, disorderly mob, maddened by the terrible fate of
- their comrades, and thirsting for vengeance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ready!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Together the muskets rose to the level.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't fire too high. Now, let 'em have it hot!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The walls of the narrow enclosure rocked with the thunderous report. The
- mob quailed, fell back: &ldquo;they had no stomach for cold lead.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's all right,&rdquo; said Jack coolly as they rapidly reloaded; &ldquo;but I wish
- we had breechloaders! A ball, quick!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The human wave in front, silent except for a sullen murmur that only
- waited for the rush to be renewed ere it swelled into fury, was again
- raising its ugly, threatening crest.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I doubt if we check it this time,&rdquo; said Don, watching it with anxious
- eyes; &ldquo;they've seen us reload, and know where they have the advantage.
- Better get your cutlass&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ready!&rdquo; cried his companion.
- </p>
- <p>
- The wave, broke. A hoarse roar, a tumultuous rusk such as it seemed no
- human power could withstand, and it was upon them. Again the walls leapt
- to the thunder of the muskets; again the serried ranks quailed. But before
- the smoke had left the muzzles of the muskets, the wave swept on again
- with redoubled fury, poured itself upon and around the brave lads, swept
- them off their feet For a moment it seemed as if the death-balance must
- kick the beam.
- </p>
- <p>
- But the &ldquo;final tussle&rdquo; was not to be just yet. Spottie and Puggles,
- terrified into momentary daring by the imminence of their own danger, now
- threw themselves into the fray with an energy-which, if it did little
- execution, at least served to divert many a blow from their masters. No
- mean help that&mdash;to take the blows meant for another.
- </p>
- <p>
- Nor were the masters themselves slow to recognise and profit by this fact.
- Right and left they slashed, dealing terrific swinging blows when, they
- could get them in, lunging desperately at the sinewy, half-naked forms
- about them when they could not, until British pluck and British muscle
- told, as they ever must in a righteous struggle for life and liberty, and
- One-to-twenty found itself clear of the <i>mêlée</i>, with a ghastly ridge
- of wounded at its feet, and fighting room behind.
- </p>
- <p>
- Well they had it! For the space of one deep breath the disconcerted rabble
- suspended hostilities, as if unable to believe that Twenty-to-one had got
- the worst of it. Then their ranks closed up into a solid mass of dusky,
- perspiring, blood-stained forms, and the onslaught was renewed&mdash;not
- hurriedly now, but with a watchful determination, a guarded, fierceness,
- that forced One-to-twenty back foot by foot until but little room was left
- for fighting, and none, in sooth, for quarter when it should come, as soon
- it must, to the sheer wall and the bitter end.
- </p>
- <p>
- Once more the blacks had slunk to the rear&mdash;had, in fact, already
- reached the wall, where, since they could get no farther, they cowered in
- miserable anticipation of speedy death. The &ldquo;final tussle&rdquo; was not far off
- now. Don and Jack had barely room to swing their cutlasses in. So much of
- the rocky ledge as might be measured by a single backward stride&mdash;only
- that separated them from the wall and the last scene of all. Inch by inch,
- their teeth hard set, their breath coming and going in quick, laboured
- gasps, they contested this narrow selvage of life. So the balance hung,
- when there came a second momentary lull in the deadly game of give and
- take. The dusky foe could now afford to breathe, being confident of the
- issue.
- </p>
- <p>
- Keeping a wary eye upon their movements, Don seized his chum by the hand.
- &ldquo;I never thought it would come to&mdash;to this, old fellow,&rdquo; he said
- huskily; &ldquo;God knows I didn't!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack swallowed hard several times before he could trust himself to reply.
- &ldquo;No more did I. But were not going to funk now, old fellow; and&mdash;and
- I'm glad it's to be together, anyhow!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- One mute, agonised look into each other's eyes; one last pressure of the
- hand, and again, shoulder to shoulder, they faced the foe and the
- inevitable end.
- </p>
- <p>
- At this instant, when it seemed that not a ghost of a chance remained,
- there arose on their immediate right a shrill chattering sound&mdash;a
- sound that, somehow, had in it a ring of joyousness so strangely out of
- keeping with the situation that Don turned with a start and a sudden
- thrill of hope towards the quarter whence it came. As he did so, his eyes
- fell upon Bosin, forgotten in the heat of the fray, and now perched&mdash;good
- God! upon what?
- </p>
- <p>
- Don clutched his companion's arm and pointed with unsteady finger.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Look!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XX.&mdash;THE LAST STRAW.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span> glance&mdash;more
- he did not dare bestow whilst confronted by that treacherous throng&mdash;showed
- Jack what he and Don had hitherto entirely failed (and no wonder!) to
- observe. In the extreme corner of the ledge on which they stood, a deep,
- narrow gash divided the towering side wall, and up this, clear to the
- summit of the rock, there ran a flight of steps. On these Bosin had
- perched himself. At their foot crouched the blacks, blind to everything
- except their own danger. .
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Wake those niggers up, and start them on ahead up the steps!&rdquo; said Jack
- quickly. &ldquo;Look sharp! they're going to rush us again.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Falling on Spottie and Puggles, by dint of vigorous cuffing and shoving
- Don succeeded in getting them on the stairs. Rapidly as this was done, it
- produced an instantaneous effect upon the native rabble. They too had
- overlooked the existence of the stairway until Don's action recalled it to
- mind. A moment later the opening was besieged by a clamouring, infuriated
- throng.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Up with you, old fellow!&rdquo; cried Jack, turning on the natives with drawn
- cutlass after he had ascended some half-dozen steps, and thus covering his
- friend's retreat. &ldquo;You had your innings at the pit; now it's my turn.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Stationed on the steps as he was, Jack would have possessed no mean
- advantage over the natives but for one circumstance. The chain attached to
- his leg dangled down the steps, and the natives, discovering this,
- promptly seized it. In a twinkling Jack was dragged back into the midst of
- the furious rabble.
- </p>
- <p>
- Don was half-way up the steps when the uproar caused by this mishap
- reached his ears. He turned just in time to see his companion disappear.
- </p>
- <p>
- Down the steps he bounded, clearing half-a-dozen at a leap, until barely
- that number lay between him and the bottom, where, owing to Jack's
- desperate resistance, the natives had their hands too full to notice his
- approach. Gauging the distance with his eye, he took a flying leap from
- this height into the very midst of them, scattering them in all
- directions. As he intended, he overleapt his friend, who now quickly
- regained his feet. Before the natives had time to recover from the shock
- of Don's precipitate arrival in their midst, he and Jack were well up the
- steps again. One or two of the gang made as if to follow them, but turned
- tail when menaced with the cutlasses.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nick and go that time!&rdquo; cried Don, as he gained the top and threw himself
- exhausted upon the rock. &ldquo;Just for a minute I thought it was all U.P.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Me too,&rdquo; said Jack, with more gravity than grammar; &ldquo;and, between
- ourselves, the sensation wasn't half pleasant, either. But, I say, are you
- hurt?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No; nothing worse than a scratch or two. And you?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, I'm all right. Though it's little short of a miracle that we weren't
- spitted on those beastly pikes. Say, do you think they'll try to rush us
- here?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hardly, after the lesson we've taught them; unless, indeed, there is a
- wider approach to the summit here than those steps. We ought to look about
- us at once so as to make sure.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Right you are,&rdquo; assented Jack. &ldquo;Let's load the muskets and leave the
- niggers in charge here while we take our bearin's like, as the captain
- used to say, poor old chap!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- But when it came to charging the muskets&mdash;old-fashioned
- muzzle-loaders, it will be remembered&mdash;they made an unpleasant
- discovery. Don had lost his powder-flask in the fight.
- </p>
- <p>
- To make matters worse, Spottie, when called upon to produce his, confessed
- that he had left it on board the cutter in the hurry of the start. Only
- Pug's flask remained; but this, unfortunately, was nearly empty. There was
- barely enough powder left for three charges.
- </p>
- <p>
- This was but one of a series of disconcerting revelations which quickly
- followed the loading of the muskets.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the first place, the most careful search failed to disclose any other
- means of egress from the Rock. In all the length and breadth of its summit
- they could find no opening except the one by which they had ascended,
- while on every hand its sides fell away in declivities so steep and smooth
- that not even Bosin could have found a foothold upon them&mdash;-or in
- perpendicular precipices that made the head swim as one looked down from
- their dizzy height upon the town, or sands, or jungle, far below.
- </p>
- <p>
- With the bright sky above, and the free air of heaven all around them,
- they were as effectually hemmed in as when that bristling array of pikes
- forced them back to the blank wall. The jaws of the trap were a little
- wider; the effects of its deadly grip a little delayed&mdash;that was all.
- </p>
- <p>
- To add to the horrors of their position, absolute starvation stared them
- in the face in the event of a prolonged siege. Since early morning they
- had eaten nothing, and the day was now far advanced; they had brought no
- food with them, and none was procurable here. A small temple crowned the
- Rock; but when they penetrated it in the hope of finding fruit or other
- edible offerings, its dustladen shrine spoke only too plainly of long
- disuse. Even the thin clusters of dates upon the few palms that eked out a
- stunted existence in a shallow depression of the Rock were acrid,
- shrivelled, and wholly unfit for food. The pit, it is true, contained
- water; but this, even had it been drinkable, lay hopelessly beyond their
- reach.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No powder, no grub, no drink; it's a pretty, pickle to be in, anyhow,&rdquo;
- said Jack, ruefully summing up these calamitous discoveries as they
- rejoined the blacks at the head of the stairs. &ldquo;And, by Jove!&rdquo; pointing
- down the steps, &ldquo;they've gone and doubled the guard.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The waters the worst,&rdquo; he presently resumed, scanning the arid expanse of
- rock thirstily. &ldquo;We could hold out for days, if we only had a supply of
- that. As it is, I don't dare think what this place will be like under a
- midday sun&mdash;ugh!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All the more reason we should leave it, then,&rdquo; said Don.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don was silent. The question did not seem to admit of an answer.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now, see here, old' fellow,&rdquo; said Jack; &ldquo;I admit, of course, that U.P. is
- written large all over the face of things just now; but at the same time
- it strikes me there's more than one way of getting off our white
- elephant's back.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There's only the tunnel to the creek,&rdquo; said Don, &ldquo;and that's not going to
- help us much while it's chock-full of natives, and we have no powder.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then why not go over the cliff?&rdquo; demanded Jack.
- </p>
- <p>
- This daring and seemingly absurd proposal Don greeted with a stare of
- utter incredulity. &ldquo;That would be facing death with a vengeance,&rdquo; was his
- far from encouraging comment. &ldquo;How high do you estimate the cliff to be,
- anyway?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A couple of hundred feet or so.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don laughed. &ldquo;You may as well say thousands, so far as our chances of
- reaching the base in safety are concerned.. The thing's a sheer
- impossibility, I tell you; Bosin himself couldn't do it. You're downright
- mad to think of it, Jack.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Am I? I admit the difficulty, but not the impossibility. What Bosin can't
- do, we can.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How, I should like to know?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;By making a rope. See here, did you notice those palm-trees we passed
- while making the round of the Rock?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I did; but 'pon my word I don't see what they've got to do with your
- proposal. Ropes don't grow on palm-trees.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, but they do, though. Do you mean to say that you never saw the
- natives make a rope out of the branches of a palm?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Of course I have. And what's more, I know how it's done. But say,&rdquo; his
- tone suddenly changing to one of anxiety, &ldquo;suppose the palm-leaves don't
- give, us enough material?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'm not sure they will,&rdquo; said Jack doubtfully, &ldquo;unless we spin it, out
- pretty fine; and that, of course, increases the danger of breakage. Well,
- if we run short, we can make shift with the blacks' clothes and turbans.
- But it's going to take a jolly long time to make&mdash;though we ought to
- finish it easily by to-morrow night. Then, ho for the cliff! And now, old
- fellow, just lie down, will you, and take a snooze: you're completely done
- up. When the moon rises I'll call you, and we'll have a whack at the
- trees, while Pug and Spottie do sentry-go.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The blacks, poor fellows, were already sound asleep, with Bosin snuggled
- up between them; and Don was not long in following them into that realm of
- dreams, where waking cares, if they intrude at all, more often than not
- lie low and shadowy on the horizon. So Jack was left alone in the darkness
- and solitude of the Rock.
- </p>
- <p>
- Kicking off his shoes, and tucking the end of the chain beneath his belt
- to secure perfect noiselessness of movement, he shouldered a musket, and
- fell to pacing back and forth past the black orifice that marked the point
- where the stairway cleft the rocky floor. Monotonous work it was, and
- weird. The steely glint of the stars, the mournful sobbing of the surf
- upon the sands, sent an involuntary shiver through his frame. He crept
- softly to the extreme brink of the chasm and peered into its depths. Below
- all was pitchy blackness; he could distinguish nothing, save, far down, at
- an infinite depth as it seemed, the faint, fantastic reflection of a star
- on the surface of the pool. Occasionally a sound of lazy splashing floated
- up to where he stood, and he thought with creeping flesh of the horrible,
- ghoulish surfeit the crocodiles had had that day.
- </p>
- <p>
- To and fro beneath the steely stars&mdash;tramp, tramp, tramp, to the
- solemn dirge of the sea. Would the laggard moon never rise and put an end
- to his weird vigil?
- </p>
- <p>
- Hark! what was that? He paused and listened with suspended breath, his
- back towards the dim outline of the stairway; listened, but heard only the
- moaning of the surf and the regular, sonorous breathing of his sleeping
- companions.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;One of those gorged crocodile beasts got a nightmare,&rdquo; he muttered, with
- a smile at the comic aspect of his own fancy. &ldquo;Ha,&rdquo; catching sight of a
- faint, silvery glow in the east, &ldquo;there's the moon at last. Time to call
- our fellows; I've had enough of this death's watch, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- While uttering these words he made a step forward with the intention of
- calling Don and the blacks, when something whizzed swiftly through the
- air, he felt a sharp twinge, an intense burning sensation in his left arm,
- a deathly faintness stealing over him, and realised that he was wounded&mdash;wounded
- by a dexterously-thrown knife, which, had it not been for that timely
- forward stride, must have buried itself deep in his back. Luckily, in
- spite of the pain and giddiness, he retained his presence of mind. Quick
- as a flash he, wheeled, brought the hammer of the musket to full cock, and
- the musket itself to his shoulder. Above the yawning staircase the outline
- of a human figure showed indistinctly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;One for you,&rdquo; muttered Jack, and fired.
- </p>
- <p>
- The figure threw up its arms and fell backwards.
- </p>
- <p>
- The report of the musket brought Don to his feet. &ldquo;What's the row?&rdquo; he
- asked, running to his companion's side in alarm.
- </p>
- <p>
- The appearance of other figures in lieu of the first supplied a more
- pertinent answer to this question than Jack could have given. He snatched
- up one of the remaining muskets, Jack possessing himself of the other. By
- this time Spottie and Puggles were also up, but, like the dutiful servants
- they were, they kept well in the rear of their masters.
- </p>
- <p>
- The enemy were now literally swarming up the steps and sides of the
- stairway.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack gave the word&mdash;&ldquo;Blaze away!&rdquo; and a double report went hurtling
- wildly out over the sea.
- </p>
- <p>
- Clubbing their muskets, they then fell upon and began clubbing the
- escaladers with an energy that speedily choked the contracted avenue of
- approach to the summit of the Rock with a heaving, scrambling, trampling
- mass of natives, whose desperate struggles to regain their lost foothold
- upon the steps only served to facilitate their descent to the bottom. In
- five minutes' time the repulse was complete; the foe retreated into the
- dark security of the chasm, leaving some six or eight of their number
- lying upon the scene of the affray. Jack threw aside his musket and
- sprang: down the steps to where they lay.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What are you after now?&rdquo; cried Don, leaping down after him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Cloths,&rdquo; was Jack's laconic rejoinder, as he unceremoniously began to
- divest the natives of the long strips of country cotton that encircled
- their waists. &ldquo;We want these for our rope.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- On hearing this Don also set to work, and in a short time they had secured
- some half-dozen cloths, together with an equal number of turbans, which
- lay scattered all up and down the steps like enormous mushrooms. With this
- booty they returned in triumph to the summit of the rock.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They'll average twelve feet at least,&rdquo; said Jack, eyeing the tumbled heap
- critically. &ldquo;Let's see&mdash;twelve twelves make a hundred and forty-four;
- and by tearing them in two down the middle we'll get double length. Total,
- two hundred and eighty-eight feet. Hurrah, we've got our rope!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And a far safer one,&rdquo; observed Don, &ldquo;than if we had patched it up out of
- those palm-leaves. Well, it's an ill wind that&mdash;-&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He got no further, for Jack suddenly dropped at his feet as though he had
- been shot. He had fainted from loss of blood, as Don, to his horror,
- quickly discovered. As a matter of fact, the knife that had penetrated
- Jack's arm was still in the wound, and its projecting hilt was the first
- intimation Don received of his chum's hairbreadth escape. By the time he
- had removed the knife, ripped open the coat-sleeve, and bandaged the wound
- with a fragment torn from one of the cloths, Jack opened his eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why didn't you tell me about this?&rdquo; exclaimed Don reproachfully. &ldquo;How did
- it happen?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;How? Oh, one of those treacherous niggers shot his knife at me&mdash;the
- old trick,&rdquo; said Jack, scrambling to his feet and shaking himself with
- nonchalant air, &ldquo;I'd have told you, only I forgot it in the scuffle,
- Nothing but a scratch, anyway; I'm all right.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don's look was rather dubious, for, in spite of his companion's assumption
- of <i>sang-froid</i>, he could not but foresee the possible effect of a
- badly-wounded arm upon their proposed descent of the cliff.
- </p>
- <p>
- The moon was now well above the horizon; so, setting the blacks to watch
- the stairs, they went to work on the rope at once&mdash;an easy task
- compared to what it must have been had they attempted to utilise the
- tough, fibrous palm-branches, as at first proposed.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You haven't told me yet,&rdquo; Jack presently observed, pausing in his task of
- knotting together the long strips of cloth as Don tore them off ready to
- his hand; &ldquo;you haven't told me how you came to lay the lascar by the heels&mdash;in
- the creek, I think you said? Let's have the story now, old fellow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, there's a whole cable's-length of events leading up to that,&rdquo; said
- Don. &ldquo;I'd better begin at the beginning&mdash;with your disappearance, I
- mean.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- So there, beneath the stars, while the rope which was to ensure escape
- from the Rock grew under, their busy fingers, he recounted link by link
- the chain of events which the days and nights of Jack's absence had
- forged.
- </p>
- <p>
- Far into the night did the story spin itself out, for Jack had many
- questions to ask, many comments to make; until at last it came to that
- terrible moment when Don had sought to rouse the captain, and found him to
- be sleeping the sleep that knows no waking. His voice grew choked and
- husky then Jack bent low over his work, and tears glistened in the ghostly
- moonlight.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And in his jacket pocket I found this,&rdquo; concluded Don, producing the
- well-thumbed Prayer Book. &ldquo;On the fly-leaf&mdash;no, you can't make it out
- now, the light is so faint&mdash;but on the fly-leaf the dear old chap had
- written that whatever happened, he was to be buried at sea. So this
- morning, just before daybreak, we put off in the cutter, and gave him what
- he wished for&mdash;a seaman's burial.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack knew the whole sad story now, and for a time they fell into one of
- those silences which, somehow, are apt to follow the mention of the dead
- who have endeared themselves to us in life&mdash;silences eloquent, in
- their very stillness, of regret and grief.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;There, it's done,&rdquo; said Jack at last, as he tied and tested the final
- knot. &ldquo;And now, hurrah for the cliff!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Don had begun to coil the rope, when he suddenly paused in his task and
- exclaimed:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say, how are we going <i>to fasten the end?</i>&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Fasten the end? Why, to&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo; Jack came to an abrupt stop,
- adding blankly after a moment: &ldquo;Blest if I know what we <i>can</i> fasten
- it to!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Nor I,&rdquo; Don acknowledged, as much taken aback as his companion by the
- appalling nature of this discovery. &ldquo;There are the palms, of course, and
- the temple; but they're too far from the cliff to be of any use. The rope
- will hardly reach as it is, I'm afraid.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, there must be some way of securing it,&rdquo; replied Jack incredulously,
- &ldquo;Surely there's a crack or something we can wedge one of the cutlasses
- into. Let's look, anyhow!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Look they did, but not with the result Jack had so confidently
- anticipated. From side to side, from end to end of the Rock, they searched
- and searched again, even going down on their hands and knees that they
- might perchance feel what had escaped the eye, But without avail. So far
- as the moonlight enabled them to discern&mdash;and it made the place
- nearly as light as day&mdash;neither crack nor projection marred the
- smooth surface of the stone. They gave it up at length, utterly
- disheartened. Even Jack felt this to be the last straw, and abandoned
- himself to despair.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It's a bad job altogether,&rdquo; was the despondent comment with which he
- threw himself down beside the apparently useless coil of rope. &ldquo;God help
- us, we haven't a ghost of a chance left!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, things aren't quite so bad as that!&rdquo; replied his companion, with an
- assumption of hopefulness he was far from feeling. &ldquo;Who can say what may
- turn up? The darkest hour is just before the dawn, you know.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But,&rdquo; said Jack, &ldquo;suppose there isn't any dawn, what then?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXI. RIVALS FOR THE HONOURS OF DEATH.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span> night of dread
- foreboding, of weary watching for the day that seemed as if it would never
- come. With what tantalising slowness did the snail-like stars crawl across
- the black vault of the heavens! And when day came, what then?
- </p>
- <p>
- Hunger and thirst, danger and despair, and the certainty of death! But no
- need to await the dawn for these; already they were here. Comfortable
- bed-fellows, truly, and for a bed the bare, unyielding rock.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack lay with his head pillowed upon the coil of rope. Not that he found
- it a comfortable resting-place. The knowledge of what the rope could <i>not</i>
- do for them made it a pillow of thorns. He could not rest. The last thread
- of hope had broken, plunging him into the abyss of despair. Besides, his
- arm had become extremely painful within the last hour; he was restless,
- feverish. Fever goads the brain. Jack's brain was just then busier,
- perhaps, than it had ever been before. He felt none of the sharp gnawings
- of hunger, none of the insatiable cravings of thirst, though, as a matter
- of fact, these were even then conspiring with his wound to fever his blood
- and keep him awake, and make him think, think, think with: never an
- instant's pause. When thought is goaded like this, it speedily verges on
- delirium.
- </p>
- <p>
- To give way to despondency was not at all like Jack; and as he tossed from
- side to side and thought upon the &ldquo;whine&rdquo; (that was what he called it, in
- his own mind) in which he had indulged a little while ago when the utter
- desperateness of the situation first burst upon him&mdash;when he thought
- of this, he felt heartily ashamed of himself. He was a coward, a rank,
- out-and-out coward. He hated himself for his faint-hearted, babyish lack
- of spirit. But he would redeem his reputation yet. He would show them&mdash;meaning
- Don and the blacks&mdash;that he was no coward, anyhow!
- </p>
- <p>
- The blacks, as they crossed and recrossed each other on their noiseless
- beat, thought little and said less. They were desperately hungry, and
- hunger is the one fellow-feeling that does not make us wondrous kind.
- Every now and then they tightened their waist-cloths a little, but beyond
- this gave no outward sign or token of what they thought or felt.
- </p>
- <p>
- So the night wore on, and still Jack thought in restless silence. There
- was a deeper flush on his cheek, but it was no longer the flush of shame.
- The fever in his blood, the delirium in his brain, were rising. So was his
- resolution. He flung himself about restlessly, muttering. He would show
- them he was no coward, anyhow!
- </p>
- <p>
- So the night wore on, until by-and-by, as Don turned for the hundredth
- time upon his uneasy couch&mdash;for he, too, was unable to rest&mdash;his
- hand came into accidental contact with that of his chum. He started;
- Jack's hand was fiery hot.
- </p>
- <p>
- Housed by his companion's touch and movement, Jack sat bolt upright, and
- gazed about him in an excited, feverish fashion, muttering incoherently.
- His breath came and went in short, hurried catches, and in his eyes shone
- an unnatural wildness that struck terror to Don's heart. Knowing nothing
- of his chum's resolve, he thought him simply delirious.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Lie down,&rdquo; he said soothingly, placing his hand on Jack's shoulder, and
- attempting, with gentle force, to push him back into his former recumbent
- position.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack flung the hand aside petulantly. Whatever of delirium there might be
- in his eyes and manner, his words, though spoken rapidly and with
- excitement, were rational enough.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Look here, old fellow,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;it's all my fault, your being here in
- this fix; and I'm bound to do my level best to get you safe out of it,
- especially after the way I funked a while back. No, don't cut in and try
- to stop me&mdash;I know what I'm saying right enough, though I expect I do
- look a bit wild and that. Now, my arm here&mdash;I ain't said much about
- it&mdash;'tain't like me to whine, anyhow&mdash;at least not often&mdash;but
- all the same, my arm's getting jolly bad. Knotting the rope and that, you
- see, has made it a bit worse, and&mdash;well, the fact is, old fellow, I
- don't believe I could go down that rope to save my neck, even supposing it
- to be fastened, you understand.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I feared as much,&rdquo; said Don gravely.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes? Well, that's just how it stands,&rdquo; Jack went rapidly on. &ldquo;Tisn't that
- I'm afraid, you understand&mdash;there's no cliff hereabouts that would
- make me funk&mdash;it's simply that my arm's out of gear and won't work.
- Not even if the rope were fastened, you see, which it isn't. And that's
- what I'm coming at, old fellow. Look here, I'll tell you what we <i>can</i>
- do. Spottie and Pug can lower you away&mdash;over the cliff, you know&mdash;and
- then, when Pug and I have sent Spottie after you, I'll manage somehow to
- pay out the line while Pug follows. He's the lightest weight of the lot,
- anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;All very well,&rdquo; demurred Don, who thought he saw a fatal objection to
- Jack's plan, &ldquo;but how will you get down yourself?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, my getting down isn't in the bill at all,&rdquo; said Jack; &ldquo;I mean to stay
- right here.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- This announcement fairly took Don's breath away. He had supposed all along
- that Jack was holding the pith of his proposal in reserve; but never once
- had he so much as dreamed of such a climax as this.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What! stop here?&rdquo; he gasped. &ldquo;You don't know what you're saying&mdash;it's
- certain death.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hope I ain't such a duffer as not to know that,&rdquo; said Jack brusquely.
- &ldquo;All the same, I mean to stay.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't say that, Jack.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why not? Better one than four.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then I'll stop with you,&rdquo; said Don, with dogged determination. &ldquo;The
- blacks may have my chance and welcome. Nothing on earth will induce me to
- go.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His chum was silent for a long time after that&mdash;so long, indeed, that
- Don thought the matter settled for good and all. But in this he was
- mistaken.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say, old fellow,&rdquo; said Jack at last, &ldquo;tell you what I'll do; I'll toss
- you as to which of us is togo. What do you say?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; cried Don.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;But why not? Where's the use of being such a softie over the matter?
- There are no end of reasons why I should stay, I tell you. For one thing,
- I've got no mother to consider.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's true enough,&rdquo; assented Don, gulping as he thought of his own
- mother.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And no sisters or brothers.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't,&rdquo; said Don huskily; &ldquo;you forget me, Jack.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, I don't,&rdquo; protested Jack; &ldquo;you are more to me than any brother could
- ever be, old man; but that's only an additional reason why I should see
- you safe out of this mess. Then there's another thing; you know how good
- the guv has always been to me&mdash;sent me to school, and treated me just
- as if I was his own son, you know.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes?&rdquo; said Don.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, I've always felt that if ever I got the chance I should like to
- repay his kindness, don't you know; and now that the chance has come I
- don't mean to let it slip. Say, will you toss?&rdquo; Don wavered. It seemed
- terribly hard that they should all have to die like so many rats in a
- trap. Besides, once he and the blacks were off the Rock, they could fall
- back on the cutter, renew their stock of ammunition, and&mdash;&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I'll toss you on one condition,&rdquo; he said suddenly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What condition's that?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why, this. That after the die is cast we take no further steps until
- daylight, so as to make quite sure there's no way of securing the rope to
- the rock. Are you agreed?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- For reply Jack held out his hand, and thus the compact was sealed. Then
- Don drew a rupee from his pocket and passed it to his companion... &ldquo;Tails,
- you go,&rdquo; said Jack, and tossed.
- </p>
- <p>
- A flash of silver in the moonlight, a mocking jingle, and the coin lay
- still. Eagerly the rivals for the honours of death bent over it.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Tails!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I knew it!&rdquo; said Jack quietly; &ldquo;and what's more, I'm jolly glad it isn't
- heads.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His chum turned quickly away and bowed his head upon his knees, while a
- sound suspiciously like a stifled sob broke the stillness of the night.
- Jack crept close up to him and slipped an arm about his neck. So, for a
- long time, they sat in silence.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXII.&mdash;A REPORT FROM THE SEA.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">J</span>ack was the first
- to break the silence that followed the spinning of the fateful coin. He
- rose, stretched himself, and, pointing to a ruddy glow that had begun to
- light up the eastern horizon, exclaimed in a voice of undisguised relief:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Daybreak at last!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I only wish it would never come,&rdquo; his companion rejoined gloomily,
- turning his gaze upon the unwelcome light&mdash;of which, however, he had
- caught scarce a glimpse ere he sprang to his feet in sudden excitement.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;That's no daybreak, Jack! It's more like the reflection of a fire.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I believe you're right,&rdquo; assented Jack. &ldquo;It certainly <i>is</i> a fire;
- but where can it be, that we see only the reflection? Behind Haunted
- Pagoda Hill?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No; this side of the hill, I should say.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then it must be somewhere in the creek.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- At mention of the creek Don started violently, a suspicion of the truth
- flashing upon him. He began to sniff the air. An odour of smoke floated to
- them on the fresh morning breeze, faint but pungent. Jack, catching a
- whiff of it, fell to sniffing too.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Well, what do you make of it?&rdquo; Don inquired anxiously.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Tar!&rdquo; replied Jack, without hesitation.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I thought so,&rdquo; said Don, with a queer catch in his voice. &ldquo;Jack, it's the
- cutter!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- With this he set off at a run towards that part of the Rock which
- overlooked the creek. Advancing as far as the rapidly-increasing slope of
- the declivity, made it prudent to venture, he came to a stand. The glow of
- the fire was now brighter, though its source still remained hidden from
- view; but by edging his way well to the right, he at length succeeded in
- reaching a point whence the ruddy light that had excited his fears could
- be seen as a leaping, swaying column of smoke and flame, terminating, far
- down amid the darkness of the creek, in a single point of lurid red.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Just as I feared!&rdquo; he cried, as Jack rejoined him. &ldquo;The niggers have set
- fire to the <i>Jolly Tar</i>. I was afraid the rascals had smelt her out
- when I met the lascar in the creek the other morning. The old boat's done
- for, anyhow; so let me off my promise, Jack.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What for? I can't see that the burning of the cutter has anything to do
- with it. There are plenty of native boats to get away in.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, it isn't the getting away! You don't suppose I'd go off and leave you
- in the lurch, I hope? It's the powder that troubles me. There wasn't much
- on board the cutter, it's true; just about enough to fight my way back
- here with&mdash;as I meant to do, please God, had this not happened. I
- planned the whole thing out while we sat mooning yonder, you see. But
- now!&rdquo; and at thought of how this hope&mdash;the secret of his acquiescence
- in the outcome of that fatal toss&mdash;had vanished into thin air before
- his very eyes, Don's lips trembled and his voice choked.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Never mind, old chap!&rdquo; said Jack, deeply touched by this new proof of his
- friend's generosity; &ldquo;I'll take the will for the deed. But, I say&mdash;you
- pledged me your word, you know; and at daybreak, if no way of anchoring
- the rope shows up, I shall expect you to go over the cliff like a man. We
- shan't have long to wait now. Look!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He pointed to a deep roseate hue which tinged the sky just above the ocean
- rim. And even as they stood watching it, the light came leaping up from
- the sea, and outshone the stars, and set the whole east aglow. A flush of
- dawn, and it was day.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said Jack, tightening his belt, &ldquo;let's make the round of the Rock
- again. If there's a shadow of a flaw anywhere we're bound to find it in
- this light.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Heaven grant we may!&rdquo; ejaculated Don, as they began the search.
- </p>
- <p>
- The cliff forming the Elephant's left side was out of it altogether. The
- native town lay directly at its base, rendering escape in that direction
- impracticable. So, too, with that part of the Rock abutting on the creek;
- its formation was such that no human being, rope or no rope, could have
- made his way down its face. There remained only the Elephant's right flank&mdash;overlooking
- the jungly back of the island&mdash;and the loftier head parts facing the
- western sea. To these, then, the search was necessarily confined.
- </p>
- <p>
- Again and yet again did they pace the dizzy heights, scanning every inch
- of the rocky surface for that crack or projection upon the existence of
- which Jack's life was staked. But, as before, the search ended in failure
- and despair. There was absolutely nothing&mdash;neither crevice, nor
- jutting point, nor friendly block of stone&mdash;in which, or to which,
- the rope's end could be made fast: nothing but Jack's body!
- </p>
- <p>
- To secure the rope to the palms or the masonry of the temple was an utter
- impossibility. It was too short by half.
- </p>
- <p>
- As a last hope Don approached the chasm in which lay the pool. But the
- hope was short-lived. The native guard had been trebled overnight. Hope&mdash;so
- far, at least, as Jack's life was concerned&mdash;stood on a par with the
- powder: not a grain was left.
- </p>
- <p>
- As a matter of fact, Don had all along indulged a secret conviction that
- &ldquo;something would turn Up.&rdquo; Now, when the terrible truth was at last forced
- upon him in such a manner that he could no longer shut his eyes to it, his
- distress was pitiable to witness.
- </p>
- <p>
- He had hazarded his friend's life on the toss of a coin&mdash;and lost!
- And now he must go over the cliff&mdash;over the cliff to safety and life&mdash;over
- the cliff by means of a rope, at the death-end of which stood his dearest
- friend. Given his choice, he would have taken that friend's place&mdash;oh,
- how gladly! But go he must, for his honour was-pledged, and the time was
- come!
- </p>
- <p>
- Ay, the time was come&mdash;the supreme moment of Jack's heroic resolve.
- And Jack was glad of it, ready for it. The fever in his blood had abated,
- leaving him cool, collected, and more firm in his resolve than ever. He
- had chosen his-course and he would stick to it, anyhow!
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Come,&rdquo; he said simply, laying a gentle hand on Don's shoulder, &ldquo;it is
- time for us to go.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;For us!&rdquo; The words, though kindly meant stabbed Don to the heart.
- </p>
- <p>
- Kicking the coil of rope before him like a ball, Jack approached the brink
- of the precipice. The blacks followed. There was little danger of their
- being missed by the native guard, unless the latter mounted the steps, and
- this they were not likely to do after the severe lesson they had received
- in the night. Last of all came Don&mdash;slowly, reluctantly. He looked
- and felt like one going to his execution.
- </p>
- <p>
- Without a word Jack picked up the loose end of the rope and knotted it
- securely about his friend's chest, beneath his arms. When he had uncoiled
- the rope to its full length, he fastened the other end about his own
- waist. Then he held out his hand.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good-bye, old fellow,&rdquo; he said, his voice shaking in spite of himself.
- &ldquo;Good-bye, and God bless you! Be sure and cast the rope loose when you
- reach the ground.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, Jack, Jack! Must I go&mdash;must I?&rdquo; cried Don desperately, his voice
- full of agony.
- </p>
- <p>
- With unfaltering step Jack led him to the extreme brink of the cliff, left
- him there with his face set towards liberty and life, turned back, and
- beckoning to the blacks&mdash;who had purposely been kept in ignorance of
- Jack's resolve&mdash;prepared to pay out the line.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Over with you, old fellow! As gently as you can!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The rope tightened. Wheeling where he stood, Don cast one last imploring
- look at his friend, who pointed upwards and then motioned him to go. He
- obeyed.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0013" id="linkimage-0013"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0267.jpg" alt="0267 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0267.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- As the remorseless Rock closed above him, he let himself swing, neither
- seeing nor caring whither he was being lowered. The abyss below had no
- terrors for him&mdash;he even hoped that the rope might snap&mdash;why
- should he live since Jack must die? And when at last his feet touched
- earth, and he had flung the rope from him like a hated thing, he threw
- himself upon his face at the foot of the insurmountable cliff and burst
- into a passion of bitter, remorseful tears.
- </p>
- <p>
- After a time a gentle thud on the back aroused him. He looked up. It was
- the rope again, but empty! What did it mean? Where was Spottie? Why had he
- not been sent down? What had happened? A dozen questions such as these
- flashed through his brain, and with them a sudden wild hope. He started to
- his feet.
- </p>
- <p>
- A scrap of paper was secured to the rope by a half-knot. He snatched at
- it, drawing it to him with something of dread in the movement. It was a
- leaf from Jacks note-book, scrawled over with writing in Jack's familiar
- hand. His eyes devoured the words:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Good news! A wonderful thing has happened. Was just going to lower
- Spottie away when the report of a gun came booming up from the sea. The
- schooner&mdash;the governor's schooner&mdash;is at anchor off the front of
- the island! I'd signal her, only I have no powder. I'm all in a daze,
- anyhow; but you'll know what to do.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- An exclamation of intense gratitude to Heaven burst from Don's lips, and
- crushing the scrap of paper in his hand, he set off at a run along the
- base of the cliff, in the direction of the Elephant's head.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXIII.&mdash;DON RUNS THE GAUNTLET.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>here was but one
- thing to be done: he must gain the schooner with all possible speed, at
- any risk, and take immediate steps for Jack's rescue.
- </p>
- <p>
- Instinctively he shaped his course for the Elephant's head. The
- precipitous cliff was there skirted by a narrow beach. He had seen it
- gleaming above the surf-line while rounding the island on the morning of
- their arrival. This beach would afford a short-cut to the front of the
- island, off which the schooner lay. Once there, he must swim for it. These
- were his thoughts as he ran.
- </p>
- <p>
- Tough work it was. True, the jungle did not grow close up to the base of
- the cliff; but here and there yawning <i>nullahs</i>, of considerable
- depth, and with sides almost as-steep as walls, had been cut across his
- pathway by the rains. At intervals, too, he encountered rugged, irregular
- heaps of stones, fallen from the cliff above, and studded thick with
- thorny clumps of prickly-pear.
- </p>
- <p>
- The cutlass at his side impeded his progress. He threw it away. Then on
- again.
- </p>
- <p>
- The sands at last! Close on his right lay the sea, close on his left rose
- the beetling cliff. There was not much room&mdash;just enough to run in.
- Away before him, like a narrow ribbon of burnished silver, stretched the
- smooth, hard sands, with never a living thing in sight on all their
- gleaming reach.
- </p>
- <p>
- Gradually the cliffs crept behind, and the seafront opened out before him.
- And now, of a sudden, he espied a group of natives making for the beach&mdash;a
- company of fishermen, laden with creels, and oars, and nets.
- </p>
- <p>
- Just ahead, a wedge-shaped gully split the low bank that bordered the
- beach on the landward side. Above this bank were the fishermen, heading
- for the gully. They were perhaps fifty yards short of it, while he, on the
- beach below the bank, was a full hundred. Should they reach it first, he
- would certainly be intercepted; whereas, could he but pass the point of
- danger ere' the natives gained it, he might succeed in eluding them. They
- did not see him yet. He darted under the bank, and ran as he had never run
- in all his life before.
- </p>
- <p>
- Seventy-five yards, fifty yards, twenty yards&mdash;and then the gully.
- Had the natives reached it? As he raced past he darted a swift sidelong
- glance at the <i>nullah</i>. The fishermen were already halfway down it.
- They saw him, dropped their fishing implements, and gave chase, yelling
- like a pack of fiends.
- </p>
- <p>
- On and on he ran, looking back but once to ascertain what start he had of
- the dusky gang. Twenty yards at least. They were just emerging from the
- bottom of the gully.
- </p>
- <p>
- And now, away to the right, he sighted the schooner, riding at anchor with
- half a mile of sea between her holding-ground and the shore. He could see
- her boats swinging at the davits. They had not sighted him, then. He
- wondered whether Jack could see him from the cliff.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack caught sight of Don as he raced past the gully. The fishermen, as it
- happened, were just then in the gully itself, and consequently invisible.
- Don's appearance he hailed with a shout.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Hurrah! he hasn't lost much time, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- This exclamation brought both Spottie and Puggles to his side in hot
- haste. The stairs were thus left unguarded&mdash;a step the imprudence of
- which was wholly overlooked in the excitement of the moment.
- </p>
- <p>
- At sight of his master tearing along the beach below, a grim delight&mdash;not
- unmixed with anxiety&mdash;overspread Puggles' black countenance, while a
- chuckle of intense satisfaction welled up from the red abyss of his fat,
- shiny throat. Then, like the shadow of an April cloud driven swiftly
- across a sunlit meadow, a look of blank dismay eclipsed the grin, the
- chuckle died away in a gasp of alarm, and pointing to the beach with
- shaking finger, he cried:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Sar! sar! black warmints done catch um, sar!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- His alarm was well-founded. The fishermen had just tumbled out of the
- gully, at Don's very heels, as it seemed at this distance.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;They're after him, sure enough,&rdquo; cried Jack. &ldquo;By Jove, how he runs! Go
- it, old fellow! you've got the start of them, anyhow.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Away went Don, running like a deer, and after him pelted the fishermen, in
- a headlong, rough-and-tumble, happy-go-lucky fashion, that, under
- circumstances less serious, must have provoked the spectators on the Rock
- to hearty laughter. No laughing matter this, however; for Don's pursuers,
- having thrown aside their fishing gear, and being moreover fresh in wind
- and limb, were seen to gain on him at every stride. The race could not
- prolong itself for many minutes now, and the finish&mdash;Jack shuddered,
- as he thought of what that must be.
- </p>
- <p>
- At this critical juncture, too, matters took an unexpected turn for the
- worse. A short distance up the beach a second party of natives appeared on
- the scene. Don ran straight on, apparently not perceiving them. They, on
- the contrary, saw him, and bore down upon him swiftly. Their cries,
- doubtless, warned him of his danger, for now he pulled up short, looked
- ahead, glanced quickly over his shoulder, and then&mdash;&mdash;-
- </p>
- <p>
- With a groan Jack turned away.
- </p>
- <p>
- A loud outcry from the blacks, however, drew his gaze seawards again, and
- as he looked his pulses thrilled. Don was making straight for the surf!
- </p>
- <p>
- As often happens on these coasts when the wind is but a whisper, and the
- sea glass-like in its placidity, a heavy ground-swell was rolling sullenly
- in from the outer bay. A stone's throw from the shore this swell was but a
- sinuous, almost imperceptible, undulation of the glassy surface; but as it
- swept towards the beach, where the water shoaled rapidly, of a sudden it
- reared aloft a crest of hissing foam, which curled higher and higher as it
- came on, until it overtopped the sands at the height of a boat's mast.
- Then with a mighty roar it broke, hurled itself far up the shelving sands,
- and retired, seething, to make room for the green battalions pressing
- shorewards in its wake.
- </p>
- <p>
- Straight towards this living wall of water Don ran. The two bands of
- natives, uniting their forces as they swerved aside like bloodhounds in
- pursuit, were close upon him. Before, above him, curled the mighty wave;
- and then, to his great horror, Jack saw him stumble and fall.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lucky fall! Ere the natives could throw themselves upon him, the combing
- wave broke, passed directly over his prostrate body, swept the niggers off
- their legs, and hurled them with irresistible force far up the beach.
- </p>
- <p>
- A moment later the breathless watchers on the cliff saw a black object
- floating on the surface of the water, yards from shore. It was Don. The
- under-tow had swept him out to sea, beyond his pursuers' reach.
- </p>
- <p>
- An expert and powerful swimmer, he lost no time in increasing the distance
- between himself and the disconcerted native crew, one or two of whom
- attempted to overtake him, but soon gave it up for a bad job.
- </p>
- <p>
- Then a boat put off from the schooner, and soon Jack had the satisfaction
- of seeing his plucky friend hauled' in over her side. A quarter of an hour
- later, when the boat had regained the schooner, the signal gun once more
- boomed out over the sea, and with feelings of devout thankfulness to
- Heaven Jack realised that Don was safe on board, and that the term of his
- own and his companions' imprisonment on the summit of the Rock was bounded
- by a few brief hours at the most.
- </p>
- <p>
- Even as he looked, as if by magic the schooner's canvas swelled to the
- breeze, and he caught the distant song of the lascars as they hove the
- anchor to the cathead.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hunger, thirst, his wound, the very enemy at the foot of the rock stairs&mdash;all
- had been forgotten in the breathless interest inspired by Don's race for
- life; were forgotten still as he and the blacks stood watching the
- schooner get under weigh.
- </p>
- <p>
- Till a sharp clank of metal, as of a spear carelessly let fall, recalled
- their roving thoughts, and brought, them swiftly to the right-about, to
- find the Rock in the immediate vicinity of the pit's mouth literally
- swarming with armed natives.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXIV.&mdash;IN THE NICK OF TIME.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>he surprise had
- been cleverly executed. Another moment, and Jack and his black attendants
- would have been surrounded. As it was, the odds were dead against them.
- </p>
- <p>
- The unexpected appearance of the schooner had evidently wrought a complete
- change in the tactics of the enemy. So here they were.
- </p>
- <p>
- This sleek, corpulent native who led the escaladers was none other than
- old Salambo!
- </p>
- <p>
- Salambo, the shark-charmer, thief, and director-in-chief of the harassing
- attacks by which they, the party of adventurers in search of what was
- indisputably their own, had been baffled at every turn.
- </p>
- <p>
- By means of the lascar's murderous hand he had clutched at the captain's
- throat and taken the captain's life. And now that his tool was for ever
- wrenched from his grasp, he had come in person to add the finishing-stroke
- to his evil work. Jack's blood boiled as he thought of it. One swift
- glance around, and his course was taken.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The temple, Spottie! Point for the temple, Pug!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The natives, perceiving their intention, swerved aside and attempted to
- cut them off. But so unexpected was Jack's manouvre, so prompt the
- obedience of Spottie and Puggles, that the attempt proved unsuccessful. A
- wild, breathless dash, and they had turned the corner of the temple&mdash;whose
- door, as usual, faced east&mdash;and crossed its threshold.
- </p>
- <p>
- Old and neglected as the edifice was, stout wooden doors still swung upon
- the rust-eaten hinges. To slam these to and thrust the bolts home, top and
- bottom, was the work of but a moment. Bosin darted in as the great doors
- swung into place, narrowly escaping the amputation of his tail as the
- penalty of his tardiness. Scarcely had the last bolt been shot when up
- trooped the enemy, howling like hyenas, and commenced a determined assault
- upon the doors.
- </p>
- <p>
- At first they hurled themselves upon the barrier and attempted to force it
- in by sheer imposition of weight. Thud followed thud in furious
- succession, while Jack stood by with palpitating heart. His fears as to
- the stability of the doors, however, were soon set at rest. They creaked,
- yielded a little, but otherwise stood as firm as the solid masonry in
- which they were framed. The natives were not slow to discover this, and
- the ill-advised attempt was soon abandoned. In the brief lull that
- followed Jack looked about him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Inside here, beneath the cobwebbed, blackened roof of the outer temple,
- the light was funereal in its dimness. What little there was crept in
- through the cracks in the shrunken doors in a reluctant sort of way, as if
- it found the society of bats and spiders anything but agreeable; except at
- the further or western end of the temple, where there was a second
- chamber, smaller and somewhat better lighted than the first. Eight feet or
- so above the floor a small square window pierced the wall, and directly
- beneath this stood a sort of stone pediment or shrine, on which squatted a
- hideously distorted image. This was the temple <i>swami</i>, and <i>swami's</i>
- ugly head reached to within a couple of feet of the window.
- </p>
- <p>
- A second attempt was now made upon the doors, though not after the
- haphazard fashion of the first. The cracks in the shrunken woodwork
- attracting the attention of the natives, they fell to work on the widest
- of these, and with their spears began chipping away the plank splinter by
- splinter. But the extreme toughness of the material, seasoned as it was by
- unnumbered years of exposure to the elements, rendered the task of
- demolition both difficult and slow.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Take you a jolly long time to get your ugly head-pieces through that,
- anyhow!&rdquo; muttered Jack, as he watched&mdash;or rather listened to, for he
- could see little or nothing of what was going on outside&mdash;the fast
- and furious play of the spears. &ldquo;And when you do get 'em through, why then&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- To symbolise what would happen then, Jack did what was certainly quite
- excusable under the circumstances&mdash;spat in his palm, and with immense
- gusto decapitated an imaginary nigger.
- </p>
- <p>
- Still, given sufficient time for the spears to do their work, it was a
- foregone conclusion that the doors must fall. Would they hold out till the
- schooner cast anchor off the creek? He allowed an hour for that&mdash;an
- hour from the time the anchor was weighed.. Well, they&mdash;he and-the
- two blacks&mdash;had been in the temple the best part of an hour already.
- So that was all right.
- </p>
- <p>
- But then, the rescue party must make their way up the creek, and from the
- creek to the&mdash;summit of the Bock, along that passage by which Don and
- the blacks had entered on the previous day. This would consume another
- hour. He made the calculation with the utmost coolness; only, when it was
- finished, and he asked himself whether the doors would hold out that other
- hour, the reluctant &ldquo;No&rdquo; with which he was compelled to answer the
- question somehow stuck in his throat and nearly choked him. By way of
- relief, he slashed the head off another imaginary nigger.
- </p>
- <p>
- The second hour wore on. The gap in the door grew wider and wider beneath
- the ceaseless play of the spears, and still the natives showed no signs of
- desisting or of taking their departure.
- </p>
- <p>
- Presently a shadow darkened the little window at the rear of the temple.
- Jack turned on his heel expecting to see a native, but instead saw only
- Bosin. The monkey had clambered up the image, and so reached the window.
- The sight of the creature gave Jack a sudden inspiration.
- </p>
- <p>
- What was to hinder the blacks and himself from beating a noiseless retreat
- by way of this same window? The aperture was quite ample in size to admit
- of their squeezing through it. But&mdash;his wounded arm! And could the
- thing be done without attracting the attention of the gang about the
- doors?
- </p>
- <p>
- He climbed up the image and looked out. So far as he could discover the
- way was clear. Between that end of the temple and the stairs leading to
- the pit, not a single native was to be seen. True, his view was but
- limited at the best&mdash;the aperture was so narrow, and a straggling
- blackskin or two might, after all, have their eyes on the window, or,
- worse still, be guarding the stairs. Probably, though&mdash;and this
- seemed the more likely view&mdash;the entire force and attention of the
- belligerents were concentrated upon the temple doors. He would risk it,
- anyhow!
- </p>
- <p>
- Once gain the pit, and they were as good as saved; for by that time the
- rescue party could not be far off.
- </p>
- <p>
- A wilder shout from the besiegers recalled his thoughts and eyes to the
- doors. He scrambled down off the idols head and ran into the outer
- chamber.
- </p>
- <p>
- What was that peculiar crackling sound&mdash;this pungent odour with which
- the air had suddenly grown so heavy? Fire&mdash;smoke! They had set fire
- to the doors!
- </p>
- <p>
- He ran back into the inner chamber. The blacks were there, cowering in
- terror against the wall. In a few hurried words he directed them how to
- proceed. They pulled themselves together and prepared to obey the sahib's
- directions.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The window, lads! through the window! Quick now, you lazy beggars!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Spottie went first&mdash;somewhat unwillingly, it must be confessed, which
- was scarcely to be wondered at, considering that the drop from the window
- might land him in the arms of the enemy, or on the point of a spear. The
- smallness of the aperture, its height from the ground, and the necessity
- for going through it feet foremost, made a triple difficulty, too. But
- with Jack's assistance this was speedily overcome, and Spottie dropped out
- of sight. Barring the faint thud of his bare feet on the rock, no sound
- followed. Thus far, then, the stratagem had escaped detection. Jack began
- to breathe easier.
- </p>
- <p>
- After Spottie went Puggles&mdash;with even more difficulty, for, as the
- reader is aware, Puggles was extremely fat; and again all was still
- without. Within there was noise enough and to spare. The crackling of the
- burning doors had grown ominously loud. As Pug's black head disappeared,
- too, a tremendous shout burst from the rabble gathered about the entrance.
- Its significance Jack did not stop to inquire. Already he had scaled the
- image. A wry face or two at the pain of his wounded arm, and a moment
- later he stood beside the blacks.
- </p>
- <p>
- The moment of their flight was well chosen. The natives, to a man, were
- watching the doors with all their eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bidding the blacks follow close at his heels, he sped across the few yards
- of rock that separated the temple from the stairs, sprang down the steps,
- and fell insensible at the feet of his friend, Roydon Leigh.
- </p>
- <p>
- The rescue party had arrived in the very nick of time.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0025" id="link2HCH0025"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXV.&mdash;THE SHARK-CHARMER IS CAUGHT IN HIS OWN TRAP.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>fter all, Jack was
- but human. His fortitude, strung to a tense pitch by those terrible days
- and nights of danger, snapped, in presence of actual safety, like an
- overdrawn bow.
- </p>
- <p>
- A pitiful spectacle he presented, his clothes torn to ribbons, his hands
- and face grimy, bloodstained, yet ghastly in their pallor. Don uttered a
- cry and flung himself on his knees beside his chum. He thought him dead.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, not dead, thank God! Only done up. He'll be all right soon,&rdquo; said
- Captain Leigh, with his hand upon Jack's heart, which still beat, though
- faintly; and taking out a pocket-flask he poured a few drops of brandy
- between the drawn, bloodless lips of the unconscious lad.
- </p>
- <p>
- Under this stimulating treatment Jack soon came round. Needless to dwell
- on the confusion into which his thoughts were thrown by the sight of the
- familiar faces bending over him. His bewilderment, however, was but
- momentary. Memory returned with a rush and spurred him to action and
- speech. He sat bolt upright.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Have you got the rascal?&rdquo; he demanded in eager tones..
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What rascal?&rdquo; asked Don.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;The shark-charmer, to be sure. Who else should I mean? He's on the Rock,
- I tell you!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Him done stick his leg in trap, sa'b,&rdquo; interpolated Puggles, with
- appropriate action.
- </p>
- <p>
- Don started to his feet. Jack followed suit, somewhat unsteadily.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Is he above there?&rdquo; cried Captain Leigh.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Yes, yes!&rdquo; said Jack eagerly.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Up with you, boys!&rdquo; cried the captain to the <i>peons</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- Don had already acquainted his father with the shark-charmer's part in the
- tragic events of the past week, and the <i>peons</i> had overheard the
- story. They all knew the shark-charmer, and they followed their leader
- with enthusiasm. They carried carbines; these glinted in the sunshine, and
- clanked against the contracted walls of the rock stairway as they jostled
- each other in the ascent.
- </p>
- <p>
- A rush of many feet above, and the natives appeared at the stair-head.
- Only the moment before had they discovered the temple to be deserted, and
- become alive to the fact that they had lingered too long on the Rock. They
- were now in hot pursuit of the fugitives. But the sudden apparition of the
- red-sashed <i>peons</i>, the ominous glint and clash of the carbines,
- promised hotter pursuit than they had bargained for. A wave of
- consternation swept through their ranks. <i>Sauve qui peut!</i> In
- headlong flight they scattered in all directions.
- </p>
- <p>
- As before, the shark-charmer had led the gang. He almost ran into the arms
- of the <i>peons</i>.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Rama! Rama!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- It was the cry of a coward and miscreant who knows that his last hour of
- freedom, if not of life, has come: the hour of reckoning for his misdeeds.
- </p>
- <p>
- For as long as it took his half-paralysed tongue to frame the words, the
- shark-charmer faced his approaching doom. Then he turned and fled like a
- frightened cur.
- </p>
- <p>
- The voice of Captain Leigh rang out on the air clear and full as the note
- of a bugle:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;After him, lads! Never mind the others! Take the fellow alive!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Up scrambled the <i>peons</i> in obedience to the command, deploying to
- right and left in a long, semicircular line as they debouched upon the
- Rock.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Forward!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Off they went at the quick; then, with a wild cheer, broke into a loping
- run, the extremities of the semicircle closing in as they advanced.
- </p>
- <p>
- The shark-charmer ran towards the Elephant's head, where the precipice was
- the loftiest and dizziest of the four, the beach lying full three hundred
- feet below. Whatever chance of escape he possessed, it assuredly did not
- lie in that direction. To all human seeming his escape was an utter
- impossibility. So thought the <i>peons</i>, and slackened speed, though
- the extremities of the living, steel-crested semicircle still closed in
- and in. Between, and somewhat ahead, ran the shark-charmer. He could not
- run much farther; the brink of the precipice was only a few yards away. He
- was caught!
- </p>
- <p>
- What the thoughts of the guilty, hunted wretch were during those awful
- moments, God alone knows.
- </p>
- <p>
- The <i>peons</i> had slowed down to a walk now&mdash;a walk confident, yet
- timid. They were altogether sure of the shark-charmer, and not a little
- afraid of the precipice. Not so the fugitive; for him all fear lay behind.
- He advanced to the very brink of the cliff. His arms dropped at his sides.
- </p>
- <p>
- In upon him closed his pursuers with cat-like tread and alert eyes. They
- had no desire to be dashed over the cliff. Besides, was he not as good as
- caught? A mere span of rock divided him from their grasp. He stood
- motionless, half-turned towards them, apparently resigned to his fate.
- </p>
- <p>
- Suddenly, however, hurling upon the close-drawn ranks a swift look of
- defiance, he wheeled full-face to the sea; wheeled, and drew his arms up
- and back.
- </p>
- <p>
- Captain Leigh was the first to perceive the significance of the movement.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Seize him!&rdquo; he shouted, dashing through the line of <i>peons</i>; &ldquo;quick,
- or he'll be over!... Good God!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- He fell back appalled. A stifled cry of horror broke from the <i>peons</i>.
- The shark-charmer had leapt into mid-air.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0026" id="link2HCH0026"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXV.&mdash;BRINGS THE QUEST TO AN END.
- </h2>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>ilent and pale as
- death, Don turned and stood for a moment facing Haunted Pagoda Hill, with
- head bared. His thoughts were with the captain as he had seen him on that
- terrible evening of the murder. Plainer than words his attitude cried:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Avenged!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- The other natives had taken advantage of the opportunity afforded by the
- pursuit of the shark-charmer to make good their escape. Captain Leigh
- accordingly ordered the <i>peons</i> back to the schooner. Their mission
- was at an end.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the head of the stairs they came upon Bosin. The monkey at once
- clambered on to Don's shoulder, happier far than his new master.
- </p>
- <p>
- Here, too, as they were about to turn their backs upon the spot where
- death had hovered in ever-narrowing circles about their heads through the
- hopeless hours of that awful night and day, Jack and Don joined hands and
- silently renewed the friendship which had here been put to so crucial a
- test. Our boy-friendships seldom pass the boundary line of youth and
- manhood; or, if they do, too often become tarnished and neglected things
- in which we find no pleasure. Theirs, just then, seemed fit to last a
- lifetime.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Say!&rdquo; cried Jack abruptly, when he had done wringing his chunks hand,
- &ldquo;what about the pearls, old fellow? You're surely not going off without
- them after all the trouble we've had? I'm not, anyhow!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack was nothing if not practical.
- </p>
- <p>
- Captain Leigh, who was standing by, overheard the words, and approached
- with a curious, not to say mysterious, smile on his lips.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;What! not had enough of it yet, Jack?&rdquo; said he, in bantering tones.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Not I, sir! Where's the use of being half cut to bits if one doesn't get
- what one's after? I shan't be content till I handle the shiners.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And where do you purpose looking for them?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack's face fell.. It was not easy to find an answer to this question.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Perhaps I can assist you,&rdquo; continued Captain Leigh, with a repetition of
- his mysterious smile. &ldquo;This quest of yours, boys, has been a string of
- surprises from the very start, judging by what I have heard and seen of
- it. So, just to keep the ball rolling, we'll wind up with the biggest
- surprise of all.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- And slipping his fingers into his waistcoat pocket, to the astonishment of
- the young men he drew therefrom the identical wash-leather case which they
- had all along, and with good reason, supposed to be in the shark-charmer's
- possession.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Why&mdash;how&mdash;?&rdquo; Don began, hardly able to believe his eyes.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jack interrupted him.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Don't you see how it is?&rdquo; cried he. &ldquo;The governor's running a rig on us.
- Old Salambo took the pearls, but left the bag; it's empty, of course!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Captain Leigh quietly turned the pouch upside-down, and poured into the
- palm of his left hand a little silvery heap with a shimmer of pale gold in
- its midst. This he pushed into full view with his finger. It was the
- Golden Pearl.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;You don't mean to say we've been on a wild-goose chase all this time?&rdquo;
- gasped Jack.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;A downright fool's errand!&rdquo; muttered Don, in tones of intense disgust.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No; neither one nor the other,&rdquo; interposed Captain Leigh. &ldquo;Don't go
- scattering self-accusations of that sort about before you hear my
- explanation&mdash;though it's a queer business, I must acknowledge,&rdquo; he
- added, with a laugh. &ldquo;Will you hear it out now or wait till we go on
- board?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Tell us one thing,&rdquo; put in Don; &ldquo;were the pearls stolen at all?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;No, they were not, or I should not be able to produce them. But the
- shark-charmer was none the less a thief, for all that. But I see you're on
- tenterhooks to hear all about it, so I'll read you the riddle at once.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Carefully restoring the pearls to the pouch, he handed the treasure to
- Don, and then resumed:
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It goes without saying, of course, that you remember the evening you
- brought the pearls on board. Well, shortly after you had placed them in
- the locker&mdash;you had just turned in, I think&mdash;I got an uneasy
- sort of feeling that they were not as safe there as they should be&mdash;&mdash;&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;So you took them into your state-room!&rdquo; interrupted Don, who thought he
- began to see light.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Exactly. The companion door was open, you recollect, and the
- shark-charmer, I suppose, must have been hanging about at the moment and
- seen me. Very imprudently, as it turned out, I left my door on the latch,
- though I took the precaution to put the pearls under my pillow. You
- remember, perhaps, my paying off some of the men that afternoon? Well,
- when I turned in I left the bag of rupees&mdash;or rather what remained of
- them, about two hundred in all, I should think&mdash;on the sofa opposite
- my berth, and my gold chronometer on the stand at my head, as I always do.
- I slept like a top until I was called at three, when we got under weigh.
- At this time, you understand, I was under the impression that you two were
- snug between the sheets. The schooner was a dozen miles down the coast
- before I found out my mistake. Being due in Colombo the following day, you
- see, I couldn't put back. Neither could I make head nor tail of your
- disappearance until the carrier brought your letter, Don. That made the
- whole matter plain enough. You had found the locker empty, supposed that
- the shark-charmer had stolen the pearls, and had given chase.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Then,&rdquo; cried Jack, &ldquo;what I said a minute ago was right enough, after all.
- The pearls were safe, and we've been on a jolly wild-goose chase.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Oh, no; that doesn't follow. The shark-charmer left the schooner far from
- empty-handed. He stole the bag of rupees and the watch.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;Ah, but what about the handkerchief the pearls were tied up in?&rdquo; asked
- Don. &ldquo;I fished it out of the water off the island here. How do you account
- for that?&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;I must have thrown the handkerchief on the sofa. Probably the fellow
- snatched it up with the bag of rupees, thinking that it still contained
- the pearls.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;And threw it away when he found that it didn't,&rdquo; chuckled Jack. &ldquo;Well,
- the shiners are all right, anyhow!&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- Nightfall found the schooner bowling towards the open sea under full sail.
- Three figures stood grouped on her deck in the fading twilight.
- </p>
- <p>
- &ldquo;It was just about here,&rdquo; said Don in a choked voice:
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- &ldquo;Here, a sheer hulk, lies poor Tom Bowling,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- The darling of our crew;
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- No more he'll hear the tempest howling,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- For death has broached him to.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- His form was of the manliest beauty,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- His heart was kind and soft;
- </p>
- <p class="indent15">
- Faithful below he did his duty,
- </p>
- <p class="indent20">
- But now he's gone aloft.&rdquo;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br />
- </p>
- <p>
- All three uncovered and stood with bowed heads until the old sailor's
- resting-place was left far behind.
- </p>
- <h3>
- THE END.
- </h3>
- <div style="height: 6em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
-<pre xml:space="preserve">
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