NIGEL MAKES A CONFIDANT OF MOSES—UNDERTAKES
A LONELY WATCH AND SEES SOMETHING WONDERFUL.
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.
“You vant a goot dose of kvinine,”
remarked Verkimier, when, having satiated himself,
he found time to think of others—not 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 negro’s fidelity
to and love for his master would ensure his sympathy
at least, if not wise counsel.
“Moses,” he said, when
the professor had raised himself to the seventh heaven
by means of tobacco fumes, “come with me.
I want to have a talk.”
“Das what I’s allers wantin’,
Massa Nadgel; talkin’s my strong point if I
hab a strong point at all.”
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.
“Moses, I am sorely in need
of advice,” said Nigel, turning suddenly to
his companion with ill-suppressed excitement.
“Well, Massa Nadgel, you does
look like it, but I’m sorry I ain’t a
doctor. Pra’ps de purfesser would help you
better nor me.”
“You misunderstand me. Can you keep a secret,
Moses?”
“I kin try—if—if he’s
not too diffikilt to keep.”
“Well, then; listen.”
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 Kemp’s
daughter might yet be alive and well, and detailed
the recent conversation he had had with his master.
“Now, Moses; what d’ ye think of all that?”
Profundity unfathomable sat on the
negro’s sable brow as he replied, “Massa
Nadgel, I don’t bery well know what to
t’ink.”
“But remember, Moses, before
we go further, that I tell you all this in strict
confidence; not a word of it must pass your lips.”
The awful solemnity with which Nigel
sought to impress this on his companion was absolutely
trifling compared with the expression of that companion’s
countenance, as, with a long-drawn argumentative and
remonstrative Oh! he replied:—“Massa—Nadgel.
Does you really t’ink I would say or do any
mortal t’ing w’atsumiver as would injure
my massa?”
“I’m sure, you
would not,” returned Nigel, quickly. “Forgive
me, Moses, I merely meant that you would have to be
very cautious—very careful—that
you do not let a word slip—by accident,
you know. I believe you’d 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.”
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.
“You’re right dere, Massa
Nadgel. I’d die a t’ousand times sooner
dan injure massa. As to your last obserwation,
it rouses two idees in my mind. First, I wonder
how you’d manidge to gib me a t’rashin’,
an’ second, I wonder if your own moder would
rikognise you arter you’d tried it.”
At this the monkey turned its other
ear as if to make quite sure that it heard aright.
Nigel laughed shortly.
“But seriously, Moses,”
he continued; “what do you think I should do?
Should I reveal my suspicions to Van der Kemp?”
“Cer’nly not!” answered
the negro with prompt decision. “What! wake
up all his old hopes to hab ’em all dashed to
bits p’raps when you find dat you’s wrong!”
“But I feel absolutely certain
that I’m not wrong!” returned Nigel,
excitedly. “Consider—there is,
first, the one-eyed pirate; second, there is—”
“’Scuse me, Massa Nadgel,
dere’s no occasion to go all ober it again.
I’ll tell you what you do.”
“Well?” exclaimed Nigel,
anxiously, while his companion frowned savagely under
the force of the thoughts that surged through his brain.
“Here’s what you’ll do,” said
Moses.
“Well?” (impatiently, as the negro paused.)
“We’re on our way home to Krakatoa.”
“Yes—well?”
“One ob our men leabes us to-morrer—goes
to ’is home on de coast. Kitch one ob de
steamers dat’s allers due about dis time.”
“Well, what of that?”
“What ob dat! why, you’ll
write a letter to your fadder. It’ll go
by de steamer to Batavia. He gits it long before
we gits home, so dere’s plenty time for ’im
to take haction.”
“But what good will writing
to my father do?” asked Nigel in a somewhat
disappointed tone. “He can’t help
us.”
“Ho yes, he can,” said
Moses with a self-satisfied nod. “See here,
I’ll tell you what to write. You begin,
’Dear fadder—or Dearest fadder—I’s
not quite sure ob de strengt’ ob your affection.
P’raps de safest way—.”
“Oh! get on, Moses. Never mind that.”
“Ho! it’s all bery well
for you to say dat, but de ole gen’leman’ll
mind it. Hows’ever, put it as you t’ink
best—’Dear fadder, victual your ship;
up anchor; hois’ de sails, an’ steer for
de Cocos-Keelin’ Islands. Go ashore; git
hold ob de young ‘ooman called Kat’leen
Hobbleben—’”
“Holbein, Moses.”
“What! is she Moses too?”
“No, no! get on, man.”
“Well, ‘Dearest fadder,
git a hold ob her, whateber her name is, an’
carry her off body and soul, an’ whateber else
b’longs to her. Take her to de town ob
Anjer an’ wait dere for furder orders.’
Ob course for de windin’ up o’ de letter
you must appeal agin to de state ob your affections,
for, as—”
“Not a bad idea,” exclaimed
Nigel. “Why, Moses, you’re a genius!
Of course I’ll have to explain a little more
fully.”
“’Splain what you please,”
said Moses. “My business is to gib you de
bones ob de letter; yours—bein’ a
scholar—is to clove it wid flesh.”
“I’ll do it, Moses, at once.”
“I should like,” rejoined
Moses, with a tooth-and-gum-disclosing smile, “to
see your fadder when he gits dat letter!”
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 ceremony—all
the more that the professor’s 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 them—at 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.
“Look zere!” he cried,
at one turning in the path which opened up a new vista
of exquisite beauty—“look at zat!”
“Ay, it is a Siamang ape—next
in size to the orang-utan,” said Van der Kemp,
who stood at his friend’s 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 seen—not less than
eighty feet—it 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.
“Vat a ’straordinary noise!” remarked
the professor.
“It is indeed,” returned
the hermit, “and 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.”
“Mos’ vonderful!
A sort of natural air-gun! I vill shoot it,”
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 friend’s elbow
just as the explosion took place.
“Hah! you tooched me!”
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.
“Yes, I touched you, and if
you will shoot when I am so close to you, you
cannot wonder at it—especially when you
intend to take life uselessly. The time now at
the disposal of my friend Nigel Roy will not permit
of our delaying long enough to kill and preserve large
specimens. To say truth, my friend, we must press
on now, as fast as we can, for we have a very long
way to go.”
Verkimier was not quite pleased with
this explanation, but there was a sort of indescribable
power about the hermit, when he was resolved to have
his way, that those whom he led found it impossible
to resist.
On arriving at the village they were
agreeably surprised to find a grand banquet, consisting
chiefly of fruit, with fowl, rice, and Indian corn,
spread out for them in the Balai or public hall, where
also their sleeping quarters were appointed.
An event had recently occurred, however, which somewhat
damped the pleasure of their reception. A young
man had been killed by a tiger. The brute had
leaped upon him while he and a party of lads were
traversing a narrow path through the jungle, and had
killed him with one blow of its paw. The other
youths courageously rushed at the beast with their
spears and axes, and, driving it off, carried the
body of their comrade away.
“We have just buried the young
man,” said the chief of the village, “and
have set a trap for the tiger, for he will be sure
to visit the grave.”
“My friends would like to see
this trap,” said the hermit, who, of course,
acted the part of interpreter wherever they went, being
well acquainted with most of the languages and dialects
of the archipelago.
“There will yet be daylight
after you have finished eating,” said the chief.
Although anxious to go at once to
see this trap, they felt the propriety of doing justice
to what had been provided for them, and sat down to
their meal, for which, to say truth, they were quite
ready.
Then they went with a large band of
armed natives to see this curious tiger-trap, the
bait of which was the grave of a human being!
The grave was close to the outskirts
of the village, and, on one side, the jungle came
up to within a few yards of it. The spot was surrounded
by a strong and high bamboo fence, except at one point
where a narrow but very conspicuous opening had been
left. Here a sharp spear was so arranged beside
the opening that it could be shot across it at a point
corresponding with the height of a tiger’s heart
from the ground—as well, at least, as that
point could be estimated by men who were pretty familiar
with tigers. The motive power to propel this spear
was derived from a green bamboo, so strong that it
required several powerful men to bend it in the form
of a bow. A species of trigger was arranged to
let the bent bow fly, and a piece of fine cord passed
from this across the opening about breast-high for
a tiger. The intention was that the animal, in
entering the enclosure, should become its own executioner—should
commit unintentional suicide, if we may so put it.
“I have an ambition to shoot
a tiger,” said Nigel to Van der Kemp that evening.
“Do you think the people would object to my getting
up into a tree with my rifle and watching beside the
grave part of the night?”
“I am sure that they would not.
But your watch will probably be in vain, for tigers
are uncommonly sagacious creatures and seem to me to
have exceptional powers for scenting danger.”
“No matter, I will try.”
Accordingly, a little before dark
that evening our hero borrowed the professor’s
double-barrelled rifle, being more suitable for large
game than his own gun, and sauntered with Moses down
to the grave where he ensconced himself in the branches
of a large tree about thirty feet from the ground.
The form of the tree was such, that among its forks
Nigel could form a sort of nest in which he could
sit, in full view of the poor youth’s grave,
without the risk of falling to the ground even if he
should chance to drop asleep.
“Good-night, massa Nadgel,”
said Moses as he turned to leave his companion to
his solitary vigil. “See you not go to sleep.”
“No fear of that!” said Nigel.
“An’ whateber you do, don’t miss.”
“I’ll do my best—Good-night.”
While there was yet a little daylight,
our hunter looked well about him; took note of the
exact position of the fence, the entrance to the enclosure,
and the grave; judged the various distances of objects,
and arranged the sights of the rifle, which was already
loaded with a brace of hardened balls. Then he
looked up through the tree-tops and wished for darkness.
It came sooner than he expected.
Night always descends more suddenly in tropical than
in temperate regions. The sun had barely dipped
below the horizon when night seemed to descend like
a pall over the jungle, and an indescribable sensation
of eerieness crept over Nigel’s spirit.
Objects became very indistinct, and he fancied that
he saw something moving on the newly-made grave.
With a startled feeling he grasped his weapon, supposing
that the tiger must have entered the enclosure with
cat-like stealth. On second thoughts, however,
he discarded the idea, for the entrance was between
him and the grave, and still seemed quite visible.
Do what he would, however, the thought of ghosts insisted
on intruding upon him! He did not believe in
ghosts—oh no!—had always scouted
the idea of their existence. Why, therefore,
did he feel uncomfortable? He could not tell.
It must simply be the excitement natural to such a
very new and peculiar situation. He would think
of something else. He would devote his mind to
the contemplation of tigers! In a short time the
moon would rise, he knew—then he would
be able to see better.
While he was in this very uncomfortable
state of mind, with the jungle wrapped in profound
silence as well as gloom, there broke on the night
air a wail so indescribable that the very marrow in
Nigel’s bones seemed to shrivel up. It
ceased, but again broke forth louder than before,
increasing in length and strength, until his ears seemed
to tingle with the sound, and then it died away to
a sigh of unutterable woe.
“I have always,” muttered
Nigel, “believed myself to be a man of ordinary
courage, but now—I shall write myself
a coward, if not an ass!”
He attempted to laugh at this pleasantry,
but the laugh was hollow and seemed to freeze in his
gullet as the wail broke forth again, ten times more
hideous than at first. After a time the wail became
more continuous, and the watcher began to get used
to it. Then a happy thought flashed into his
mind—this was, perhaps, some sort of mourning
for the dead! He was right. The duty of the
father of the poor youth who had been killed was,
for several days after the funeral, to sit alone in
his house and chant from sunset till daybreak a death-dirge,
or, as it is called, the Tjerita bari.
It was not till next day that this was told to him,
but meanwhile the surmise afforded him instantaneous
relief.
As if nature sympathised with his
feelings, the moon arose at the same time and dispelled
the thick darkness, though it was not till much later
that, sailing across a clear sky, she poured her bright
beams through the tree-tops and finally rested on
the dead man’s grave.
By that time Nigel had quite recovered
his equanimity, and mentally blotted out the writing
of “coward” and “ass” which
he had written against himself. But another trouble
now assailed him. He became sleepy! Half-a-dozen
times at least within half-an-hour he started wide
awake under the impression that he was falling off
the tree.
“This will never do,”
he exclaimed, rising to his feet, resting his rifle
in a position of safety, and then stretching himself
to his utmost extent so that he became thoroughly
awake. After this “rouser,” as he
called it, he sat down again, and almost immediately
fell fast asleep.
How long he sat in this condition
it is impossible to say, but he opened his eyes at
length with an indescribable sensation that something
required attention, and the first thing they rested
on (for daylight was dawning) was an enormous tiger
not forty yards away from him, gliding like a shadow
and with cat-like stealth towards the opening of the
enclosure. The sight was so sudden and so unexpected
that, for the moment, he was paralysed. Perhaps
he thought it was a dream. Before he could recover
presence of mind to seize his rifle, the breast of
the animal had touched the fatal line; the trigger
was drawn; the stout bamboo straightened with a booming
sound, and the spear—or, rather, the giant
arrow—was shot straight through the tiger’s
side!
Then occurred a scene which might
well have induced Nigel to imagine that he dreamt,
for the transfixed creature bounded into the enclosure
with a terrific roar that rang fearfully through the
arches of the hitherto silent forest. Rushing
across the grave, it sprang with one tremendous bound
right over the high fence, carrying the spear along
with it into the jungle beyond.
By that time Nigel was himself again,
with rifle in hand, but too late to fire. The
moment he heard the thud of the tiger’s descent,
he slid down the tree, and, forgetful or regardless
of danger, went crashing into the jungle, while the
yells and shouts of hundreds of aroused natives suggested
the peopling of the region with an army of fiends.
But our hero had not to go far.
In his haste he almost tumbled over the tiger.
It was lying stone dead on the spot where it had fallen!
A few minutes more and the natives
came pouring round him, wild with excitement and joy.
Soon he was joined by his own comrades.
“Well, you’ve managed
to shoot him, I see,” said Van der Kemp as he
joined the group.
“Alas! no. I have not fired
a shot,” said Nigel, with a half disappointed
look.
“You’s got de better ob
him anyhow,” remarked Moses as he pushed to the
front.
“The spear got the better of him, Moses.”
“Veil now, zat is a splendid
animal. Lat me see,” said the professor,
pulling out his tape-measure.
It was with difficulty that the man
of science made and noted his measurements, for the
people were pressing eagerly round the carcase to
gratify their revenge by running their spears into
the still warm body. They dipped the points in
the blood and passed their krisses broadside over
the creature that they might absorb the courage and
boldness which were supposed to emanate from it!
Then they skinned it, and pieces of the heart and
brain were eaten raw by some of those whose relatives
had been killed by tigers. Finally the skull
was hacked to pieces for the purpose of distributing
the teeth, which are used by the natives as charms.