Blown to Bits: The Lonely Man of Rakata, the Malay Archipelago by R. M. Ballantyne (red novels TXT) đ
- Author: R. M. Ballantyne
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A certain contraction of the mouth, as he said this, and a gleam of the eyes, suggested to Nigel that revenge was not yet dead within the hermitâs breast, although it had been overcome.
âWhat was her name?â asked Nigel, willing to gain time to think how he ought to act, and being afraid of the effect that the sudden communication of the news might have on his friend.
âWinnieâdarling Winnieâafter her mother,â said the hermit with deep pathos in his tone.
A feeling of disappointment came over our hero. Winnie bore not the most distant resemblance to Kathleen!
âDid you ever, during your search,â asked Nigel slowly, âvisit the Cocos-Keeling Islands?â
âNever. They are too far from where the attack on us was made.â
âAnd you never heard of a gun-boat having captured a pirate junk andââ
âWhy do you ask, and why pause?â said the hermit, looking at his friend in some surprise.
Nigel felt that he had almost gone too far.
âWell, you knowââ he replied in some confusion, âyouâyou are right when you expect me to sympathise with your great sorrow, which I do most profoundly, andâandâin short, I would give anything to be able to suggest hope to you, my friend. Men should never give way to despair.â
âThank you. It is kindly meant,â returned the hermit, looking at the youth with his sad smile. âBut it is vain. Hope is dead now.â
They were interrupted at this point by the announcement that supper was ready. At the same time the sun sank, like the hermitâs hope, and disappeared beyond the dark forest.
It was not much supper that Nigel Roy ate that night. The excitement resulting from his supposed discovery reduced his appetite seriously, and the intense desire to open a safety-valve in the way of confidential talk with some one induced a nervously absent disposition which at last attracted attention.
âYou vant a goot dose of kvinine,â remarked Verkimier, when, having satiated himself, he found time to think of othersânot that the professor was selfish by any means, only he was addicted to concentration of mind on all work in hand, inclusive of feeding.
The hermit paid no attention to anything that was said. His recent conversation had given vent to a flood of memories and feelings that had been pent-up for many years.
After supper Nigel resolved to make a confidant of Moses. The negroâs fidelity to and love for his master would ensure his sympathy at least, if not wise counsel.
âMoses,â he said, when the professor had raised himself to the seventh heaven by means of tobacco fumes, âcome with me. I want to have a talk.â
âDas what Iâs allers wantinâ, Massa Nadgel; talkinâs my strong point, if I hab a strong point at all.â
They went together to the edge of a cliff on the hill-top, whence they could see an almost illimitable stretch of tropical wilderness bathed in a glorious flood of moonlight, and sat down.
On a neighbouring cliff, which was crowned with a mass of grasses and shrubs, a small monkey also sat down, on a fallen branch, and watched them with pathetic interest, tempered, it would seem, by cutaneous irritation.
âMoses, I am sorely in need of advice,â said Nigel, turning suddenly to his companion with ill-suppressed excitement.
âWell, Massa Nadgel, you does look like it, but Iâm sorry I ainât a doctor. Pârâaps de purfesser would help you better norââ
âYou misunderstand me. Can you keep a secret, Moses?â
âI kin tryâifâif heâs not too diffikilt to keep.â
âWell, then; listen.â
The negro opened his eyes and his mouth as if these were the chief orifices for the entrance of sound, and advanced an ear. The distant monkey, observing, apparently, that some unusual communication was about to be made, also stretched out its little head, cocked an ear, and suspended its other operations.
Then, in low earnest tones, Nigel told Moses of his belief that Van der Kempâs daughter might yet be alive and well, and detailed the recent conversation he had had with his master.
âNow, Moses; what dâye think of all that?â
Profundity unfathomable sat on the negroâs sable brow as he replied, âMassa Nadgel, I donât bery well know what to tâink.â
âBut remember, Moses, before we go further, that I tell you all this in strict confidence; not a word of it must pass your lips.â
The awful solemnity with which Nigel sought to impress this on his companion was absolutely trifling compared with the expression of that companionâs countenance, as, with a long-drawn argumentative and remonstrative Oh! he replied:â
âMassa Nadgel. Does you really tâink I would say or do any mortal tâing wâatsumiver as would injure my massa?â
âIâm sure you would not,â returned Nigel, quickly. âForgive me, Moses, I merely meant that you would have to be very cautiousâvery carefulâthat you do not let a word slipâby accident, you knowâI believe youâd sooner die than do an intentional injury to Van der Kemp. If I thought you capable of that, I think I would relieve my feelings by giving you a good thrashing.â
The listening monkey cocked its ear a little higher at this, and Moses, who had at first raised his flat nose indignantly in the air, gradually lowered it, while a benignant smile supplanted indignation.
âYouâre right dere, Massa Nadgel. Iâd die a tâousand times sooner dan injure massa. As to your last obserwation, it rouses two idees in my mind. First, I wonder how youâd manidge to gib me a târashinâ, anâ second, I wonder if your own moder would rikognise you arter youâd tried it.â
At this the monkey turned its other ear as if to make quite sure that it heard aright. Nigel laughed shortly.
âBut seriously, Moses,â he continued; âwhat do you think I should do? Should I reveal my suspicions to Van der Kemp?â
âCerânly not!â answered the negro with prompt decision. âWhat! wake up all his old hopes to hab âem all dashed to bits pâraps when you find dat youâs wrong!â
âBut I feel absolutely certain that Iâm not wrong!â returned Nigel, excitedly. âConsiderâthere is, first, the one-eyed pirate; second, there isââ
ââScuse me, Massa Nadgel, dereâs no occasion to go all ober it again. Iâll tell you what you do.â
âWell?â exclaimed Nigel, anxiously, while his companion frowned savagely under the force of the thoughts that surged through his brain.
âHereâs what youâll do,â said Moses.
âWell?â (impatiently, as the negro paused.)
âWeâre on our way home to Krakatoa.â
âYesâwell?â
âOne ob our men leabes us to-morrerâgoes to âis home on de coast. Kitch one ob de steamers datâs allers due about dis time.â
âWell, what of that?â
âWhat ob dat! why, youâll write a letter to your fadder. Itâll go by de steamer to Batavia. He gits it long before we gits home, so dereâs plenty time for âim to take haction.â
âBut what good will writing to my father do?â asked Nigel in a somewhat disappointed tone. âHe canât help us.â
âHo yes, he can,â said Moses with a self-satisfied nod. âSee here, Iâll tell you what to write. You begin, âDear fadderâor Dearest fadderââIâs not quite sure ob de strengtâ ob your affection. Pâraps de safest way.â
âOh! get on, Moses. Never mind that.â
âHo! itâs all bery well for you to say dat, but de ole genâlemanâll mind it. Howsâever, put it as you tâink bestââDear fadder, victual your ship; up anchor; hoisâ de sails, anâ steer for de Cocos-Keelinâ Islands. Go ashore; git hold ob do young âooman called Katâleen Hobbleben.ââ
âHolbein, Moses.â
âWhat! is she Moses too?â
âNo, no! get on, man.â
âWell, âDearest fadder, git a hold ob her, whateber her name is, anâ carry her off body and soul, anâ whateber else bâlongs to her. Take her to de town ob Anjer anâ wait dere for furder orders.â Ob course for de windinâ up oâ de letter you must appeal agin to de state ob your affections, for, asââ
âNot a bad idea,â exclaimed Nigel. âWhy, Moses, youâre a genius! Of course Iâll have to explain a little more fully.â
ââSplain what you please,â said Moses. âMy business is to gib you de bones ob de letter; yoursâbeinâ a scholarâis to clove it wid flesh.â
âIâll do it, Moses, at once.â
âI should like,â rejoined Moses, with a tooth-and-gum-disclosing smile, âto see your fadder when he gits dat letter!â
The picture conjured up by his vivid imagination caused the negro to give way to an explosive laugh that sent the eavesdropping monkey like a brown thunderbolt into the recesses of its native jungle, while Nigel went off to write and despatch the important letter.
Next day the party arrived at another village, where, the report of their approach having preceded them, they were received with much ceremonyâall the more that the professorâs power with the rifle had been made known, and that the neighbourhood was infested by tigers.
There can be little doubt that at this part of the journey the travellers must have been dogged all the way by tigers, and it was matter for surprise that so small a party should not have been molested. Possibly the reason was that these huge members of the feline race were afraid of white faces, being unaccustomed to them, or, perchance, the appearance and vigorous stride of even a few stalwart and fearless men had intimidated them. Whatever the cause, the party reached the village without seeing a single tiger, though their footprints were observed in many places.
The wild scenery became more and more beautiful as this village was neared.
Although flowers as a rule were small and inconspicuous in many parts of the great forest through which they passed, the rich pink and scarlet of many of the opening leaves, and the autumn-tinted foliage which lasts through all seasons of the year, fully made up for the want of themâat least as regards colour, while the whole vegetation was intermingled in a rich confusion that defies description.
The professor went into perplexed raptures, his mind being distracted by the exuberant wealth of subjects which were presented to it all at the same time.
âLook zere!â he cried, at one turning in the path which opened up a new vista of exquisite beautyââlook at zat!â
âAy, it is a Siamang apeânext in size to the orang-utan,â said Van der Kemp, who stood at his friendâs elbow.
The animal in question was a fine full-grown specimen, with long jet-black glancing hair. Its height might probably have been a few inches over three feet, and the stretch of its arms over rather than under five feet, but at the great height at which it was seenânot less than eighty feetâit looked much like an ordinary monkey. It was hanging in the most easy nonchalant way by one hand from the branch of a tree, utterly indifferent to the fact that to drop was to die!
The instant the Siamang observed the travellers it set up a loud barking howl which made the woods resound, but it did not alter its position or seem to be alarmed in any degree.
âVat a âstraordinary noise!â remarked the professor.
âIt is indeed,â returned the hermit, âand it has an extraordinary appliance for producing it. There is a large bag under its throat extending to its lips and cheeks which it can fill with air by means of a valve in the windpipe. By expelling this air in sudden bursts it makes the varied sounds you hear.â
âMosâ vonderful! A sort of natural air-gun! I vill shoot it,â said the professor, raising his deadly rifle, and there is no doubt that the poor Siamang would have dropped in another moment if Van der Kemp had not quietly and gravely touched his friendâs elbow just as the explosion took place.
âHah! you tooched me!â exclaimed the disappointed naturalist, looking fiercely round, while the amazed ape sent forth a bursting crack of its air-gun as it swung itself into the tree-top and made off.
âYes, I touched you, and if you will shoot when I am so close to you, you cannot wonder at itâespecially when you intend
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