Blue Lights: Hot Work in the Soudan by R. M. Ballantyne (famous ebook reader .txt) đ
- Author: R. M. Ballantyne
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âGod never lets âem come to grief in the sense that you mean,â returned the marine. âIf He kills His people, He takes them away from the evil to come, and death is but a door-way into glory. If he sends grief and suffering, it is that they may at last reach a higher state of joy.â
âPooh! according to that view, nothing can go wrong with them that you call His people,â said Simkin, with contempt.
âRight you are, comrade,â rejoined Stevenson; ânothing can go wrong with us; nothing can separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our lord; and you may be one of âusâ this minute if you will accept Godâs offer of free salvation in Christ.â
Silence followed, for Simkin was too angry, as well as worn out, to give his mind seriously to anything at that time, and the others were more or less uncertain as to the truth of what was advanced.
Sleep, profound and dreamless, soon banished these and all other subjects from their minds. Blessed sleep! so aptly as well as beautifully styled, âTired Natureâs sweet restorer.â That great host of dusky warriorsâsome unquestionably devout, many cruel and relentless, not a few, probably, indifferent to everything except self, and all bent on the extermination of their white-skinned foes,âlay down beside their weapons, and shared in that rest which is sent alike to the just and to the unjust, through the grand impartiality, forbearance, and love of a God whom many people apparently believe to be a ârespecter of persons!â
A few days later the little army came to the edge of a range of hills, beyond which lay the plains of the vast Nubian desert. At night they encamped at the base of the hill-country, through which they had been travelling, and the captives were directed to take up their position in front of an old ruined hut, where masses of broken stones and rubbish made the ground unsuitable for camping on.
âJust like them!â growled Simkin, looking about for a fairly level spot. âThereâs not a place big enough for a dog to lie on!â
Supper made Rattling Bill a little more amiable, though not much more forgiving to his foes. A three-quarters moon soon afterwards shed a faint light on the host, which, except the sentries, was sound asleep.
Towards midnight a solitary figure moved slowly towards the place where the captives lay and awakened Miles, who sat up, stared, winked, and rubbed his eyes two or three times before he could bring himself to believe that his visitor was no other than the chief of the hostâMohammed!
âRise. Com. I speak small Engleesh.â
Miles rose at once and followed the chief into the ruined hut.
âClear de ground,â he said, pointing to the centre of the floor.
Our hero obeyed, and, when the loose rubbish was cleared away, the moonbeams, shining through the ruined roof, fell on a ring bolt. Being ordered to pull it, he raised a cover or trap-door, and discovered beneath what appeared to be a cellar.
âNow,â said Mohammed, âlisten: you anâ friends go downâall. I shut door and cover upârubsh. When we all go âway, com out and go home. See, yonder is home.â
He pointed to the north-eastward, where a glowing star seemed to hang over the margin of the great level desert.
âYou are generousâyou are kind!â exclaimed Miles, with a burst of enthusiasm.
âMe grateful,â said Mohammed, extending his hand in European fashion, which Miles grasped warmly. âGo, wake you comerads. Tell what me say, and com quick!â
Miles was much too well-disciplined a soldier to hesitate, though he would have liked much to suggest that some of the troops might, before starting, take a fancy to explore the ruin, and to ask how long they should remain in the cellar before venturing out. Quietly awaking all his comrades, and drawing their surprised heads together, he whispered his tale in their wondering ears. After that they were quite prepared to act, and accompanied him noiselessly into the ruin.
âIs the cellar deep?â asked Miles, as he was about to descend.
âNo; not deep.â
âBut what about grubâwhittles, meat, anâ waterâyou know,â said Molloy, with difficulty accommodating his words to a foreigner. âWeâll starve if we go adrift on the desert with nothinâ to eat or drink.â
âHereâfood,â said Mohammed, unslinging a well-filled haversack from his shoulders and transferring it to those of the sailor. âStop there,â he continued, pointing to the cellar, âtill you hears gunsâshootânoise. I have make prepârations! After that, silence. Then, com out, anâ go home.â Once again he pointed towards the glowing star in the north-east.
âMohammed,â exclaimed Molloy, becoming suddenly impressed with the generous nature of the Arabâs action, âI donât know as youâre a descendant oâ the Prophet, but I do know that youâre a brick. Give us your flipper before we part!â
With a grave expression of kindliness and humour the chief shook hands with the seaman. Then the captives all descended into the hole, which was not more than four feet deep, after which the Arab shut the trap, covered it as before with a little rubbish, and went away.
âSuppose he has bolted the door!â suggested Moses.
âHold your tongue, man, and listen for the signal,â said Miles.
âI forget what he said the signal was to be,â observed Simkin.
âGunsâshootânoiseâafter that silence!â said Armstrong. âItâs a queer signal.â
âBut not difficult to recognise when we hear it,â remarked Miles.
The time seemed tremendously long as they sat there listeningâthe cellar was too low for them to standâand they began to fancy that all kinds of horrible shapes and faces appeared in the intense darkness around them. When they listened intensely, kept silent, and held their breath, their hearts took to beating the drums of their ears, and when a sudden breath or sigh escaped it seemed as if some African monster were approaching from the surrounding gloom.
âIs that you, Simkin, thatâs breathinâ like a grampus?â asked Molloy, after a long pause.
âI was just goinâ to ask you to stop snorinâ,â retorted the soldier.
âHush! Thereâs a shot!â
It was indeed a distant shot, followed immediately by several more. Then a rattle of musketry followedânearer at hand.
Instantly, as if the earth had just given birth to them, the host of dusky warriors sprang up with yells of surprise and defiance, and, spear in hand, rushed in the direction of the firing. For a few minutes the listeners in the cellar heard as it had been a mighty torrent surging past the ruined hut. Gradually the force of the rush began to abate, while the yells and firing became more distant; at last all sounds ceased, and the listeners were again oppressed by the beating on the drums of their ears.
âTheyâre all goneâevery motherâs son,â said Molloy at last, breaking the oppressive silence.
âThatâs so,â said Rattling Bill; âup wiâ the trap, Miles. Youâre under it, ainât you? Iâm suffocating in this hole.â
âIâm not under it. Molloy came down last,â said Miles.
âWhat if we canât find it?â suggested Stevenson.
âHorrible!â said Moses, in a hoarse whisper, âand this may be a huge cavern, with miles of space around us, instead of a small cellar!â
âHere it is!â cried the sailor, making a heave with his broad back. âI sayâit wonât move! Ah, I wasnât rightly under it. Yo! heave-o!â Up went the door with a crash, and the soft moonlight streamed in upon them.
A few seconds more and they stood outside the hutâapparently the only living beings in all that region, which had been so full of human life but a few minutes before.
âNow we must lose no time in getting away from this place, and covering as much of the desert as we can during the night,â said Miles, âfor it strikes me that weâll have to lie quiet during the day, for fear of being seen and chased.â
They spoke together in whispers for a few minutes, deciding the course they meant to pursue. Then Molloy shouldered the provision bag, Miles grasped his official lanceâthe only weapon they had among them,âand off they set on their journey across the desert, like a ship entering on an unknown sea, without the smallest idea of how far they were from the frontier of Egypt, and but a vague notion of the direction in which they ought to go.
A Horrible Situation.
All that night our fugitives walked steadily in the direction of their guiding-star, until the dawn of day began to absorb its light. Then they selected a couple of prominent bushes on the horizon, and, by keeping these always in their relative positions, were enabled to shape their course in what they believed to be the right direction. By repeating the process continuously they were enabled to advance in a fairly straight line.
Molloy, as we have said, carried the provision bag, and, although it was a very heavy one, he refused to let his comrades relieve him of it until breakfast-time. Then it was discovered that inside of the large bag there were rolled tight up four smaller bags with shoulder-straps to them.
âA knowinâ feller that Mohammed is,â said Jack Molloy, as he handed a bag to each; âhe understands how to manage things. Letâs see what sort oâ grub he has. Corn-cakes, I do believe, anâ dates, or some sort oâ dried fruit, anââwater-bottles! well, that is a comfort. Now then, boys, go ahead. We canât afford to waste time over our meals.â
The others so thoroughly agreed with their friend on this point that they began to eat forthwith, almost in silence. Then, the provisions having been distributed, they resumed their march, which was almost a forced one, so anxious were they to get as far away as possible from the Arab army.
Coming to a large mimosa bush in the course of the morning they halted and sat down to rest a little, and hold what the sailor called a âpalaver.â
âYou see, boys,â he said, âitâll be of no manner of use our scuddinâ away before the wind under a press oâ canvas like this, without some settled planââ
âAinât our plan to git away from the Arabs as fast as we can?â said Moses Pyne, who sat on a stone at the sailorâs feet.
âYes, Moses, but thatâs only part of it,â returned Molloy. âWe must keep away as well as get awayâanâ that wonât be quite so easy, for the country is swarminâ wiâ the dark-skinned rascals, as the many tracks we have already passed shows us. If we was to fall in wiâ a band of âemâeven a small oneâwe would be took again for sartinâ, for weâve got nothinâ to fight wiâ but our fists.â
âThese would offer but poor resistance to bullet and steel,â said Armstrong, âand that lance youâre so fond of, Miles, wouldnât be worth much.â
âNot much,â admitted Miles, surveying the badge of his late office, âbut better than nothing.â
âWhat if the Arabs should change their course and fall in with us again?â asked Moses.
âNo fear oâ that, seeinâ that Mohammed himself gave us our sailinâ orders, anâ laid our course for us; but it would never do to fall in wiâ other bands, so I proposes that we cast anchor where we are, for thereâs pretty good holdinâ ground among them bushes, keep quiet all day, anâ travel only at night. Iâve got the krect bearinâs just now, so wâen the stars come out weâll be able to fix on one layinâ in the right direction, and clap on all sail, slow and aloftâstuân sâls, sky-scrapers, anâ all the rest on it.â
âA good plan, Jack,â said Armstrong, âbut what if it should come cloudy and blot out the stars?â
âBesides,â added Miles, âyou forget that men of the desert are skilled in observing signs and in following tracks. Should any of them pass near this little clump of bushes, and observe our footsteps going towards it, they will at once come to see if we are still here.â
Molloy put his
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