IN WHICH THE PROFESSOR DISTINGUISHES HIMSELF.
Leaving this village immediately after
the slaying of the tiger, the party continued to journey
almost by forced marches, for not only was Nigel Roy
very anxious to keep tryst with his father, and to
settle the question of Kathleen’s identity by
bringing father and daughter together, but Van der
Kemp himself, strange to say, was filled with intense
and unaccountable anxiety to get back to his island
home.
“I don’t know how it is,”
he said to Nigel as they walked side by side through
the forest, followed by Moses and the professor, who
had become very friendly on the strength of a certain
amount of vacant curiosity displayed by the former
in regard to scientific matters—“I
don’t know how it is, but I feel an unusually
strong desire to get back to my cave. I have
often been absent from home for long periods at a time,
but have never before experienced these strange longings.
I say strange, because there is no such thing as an
effect without a cause.”
“May not the cause be presentiment?”
suggested Nigel, who, knowing what a tremendous possibility
for the hermit lay in the future, felt a little inclined
to be superstitious. It did not occur to him just
then that an equally, if not more, tremendous possibility
lay in the future for himself—touching
his recent discovery or suspicion!
“I do not believe in presentiments,”
returned the hermit. “They are probably
the result of indigestion or a disordered intellect,
from neither of which complaints do I suffer—at
least not consciously!”
“But you have never before left
home in such peculiar circumstances,” said Nigel.
“Have you not told me that this is the first
time for about two hundred years that Krakatoa has
broken out in active eruption?”
“True, but that cannot be to
me the cause of longings or anxieties, for I have
seen many a long-dormant crater become active without
any important result either to me or to any one else.”
“Stop, stop!” cried Professor
Verkimier in a hoarse whisper at that moment; “look!
look at zee monkeys!”
Monkeys are very abundant in Sumatra,
but the nest of them which the travellers discovered
at that time, and which had called forth the professor’s
admiration, was enough—as Moses said—to
make a “renocerus laugh.” The trees
around absolutely swarmed with monkeys; those of a
slender form and with very long tails being most numerous.
They were engaged in some sort of game, swinging by
arms, legs, and tails from branches, holding on to
or chasing each other, and taking the most astonishing
leaps in circumstances where a slip would have no doubt
resulted in broken limbs or in death.
“Stand still! Oh! do
stand still—like you vas petrivied,”
said the professor in a low voice of entreaty.
Being quite willing to humour him,
the whole party stood immovable, like statues, and
thus avoided attracting the attention of the monkeys,
who continued their game. It seemed to be a sort
of “follow my leader,” for one big strong
fellow led off with a bound from one branch to another
which evidently tried the nerves of his more timid
and less agile companions. They all succeeded,
however, from the largest even to the smallest—which
last was a very tiny creature with a pink face, a sad
expression, and a corkscrew tail.
For a time they bounded actively among
the branches, now high now low, till suddenly the
big leader took a tremendous leap, as if for the express
purpose of baffling or testing his companions.
It was immensely amusing to see the degrees of trepidation
with which the others followed. The last two
seemed quite unable to make up their minds to the
leap, until the others seemed about to disappear, when
one of them took heart and bounded wildly across.
Thus little pink-face with the corkscrew tail was
left alone! Twice did that little monkey make
a desperate resolution to jump, and twice did its
little heart fail as it measured the distance between
the branches and glanced at the abyss below.
Its companions seemed to entertain a feeling of pity
for it. Numbers of them came back, as if to watch
the jump and encourage the little one. A third
time it made an abortive effort to spring, and looked
round pitifully, whereupon Moses gave vent to an uncontrollable
snort of suppressed laughter.
“Vat you mean by zat?” growled the professor
angrily.
The growl and snort together revealed
the intruders, and all the monkeys, except pink-face,
crowding the trees above the spot where they stood,
gazed down upon them with expressions in which unparalleled
indignation and inconceivable surprise struggled for
the mastery.
Then, with a wild shriek, the whole
troop fled into the forest.
This was too much for poor, half-petrified
pink-face with the twisted tail. Seeing that
its comrades were gone in earnest, it became desperate,
flung itself frantically into the air with an agonising
squeak, missed its mark, went crashing through the
slender branches and fell to the ground.
Fortunately these branches broke its
fall so that it arose unhurt, bounded into a bush,
still squeaking with alarm, and made after its friends.
“Why did you not shoot it, professor?”
asked Nigel, laughing as much at Verkimier’s
grave expression as at the little monkey’s behaviour.
“Vy did I not shot it?”
echoed the professor. “I vould as soon shot
a baby. Zee pluck of zat leetle creature is admirable.
It vould be a horrible shame to take his life.
No! I do love to see ploock vezer in man or beast!
He could not shoomp zat. He knew he could
not shoomp it, but he tried to shoomp it.
He vould not be beat, an’ I vould not kill him—zough
I vant ’im very mooch for a specimen.”
It seemed as if the professor was
to be specially rewarded for his generous self-denial
on this occasion, for while he was yet speaking, a
soft “hush!” from Van der Kemp caused the
whole party to halt in dead silence and look at the
hermit inquiringly.
“You are in luck, professor,”
he murmured, in a soft, low voice—very
different from that hissing whisper which so many people
seem to imagine is an inaudible utterance. “I
see a splendid Argus pheasant over there making himself
agreeable to his wife!”
“Vare? oh! vare?” exclaimed
the enthusiast with blazing eyes, for although he
had already seen and procured specimens of this most
beautiful creature, he had not yet seen it engage in
the strange love-dance—if we may so call
it—which is peculiar to the bird.
“You’ll never get near
enough to see it if you hiss like a serpent,”
said the hermit. “Get out your binoculars,
follow me, and hold your tongue, all of you—that
will be the safest plan. Tread lightly.”
It was a sight to behold the professor
crouching almost double in order to render himself
less conspicuous, with his hat pushed back, and the
blue glasses giving him the appearance of a great-eyed
seal. He carried his butterfly-net in one hand,
and the unfailing rifle in the other.
Fortunately the hermit’s sharp
and practised eye had enabled him to distinguish the
birds in the distance before their advance had alarmed
them, so that they were able to reach a mound topped
with low bushes over which they could easily watch
the birds.
“Zat is very koorious an’
most interesting,” murmured the professor after
a short silence.
He was right. There were two
Argus pheasants, a male and female—the
male alone being decorated superbly. The Argus
belongs to the same family as the peacock, but is
not so gaudy in colouring, and therefore, perhaps,
somewhat more pleasing. Its tail is formed chiefly
by an enormous elongation of the two tail quills,
and of the secondary wing feathers, no two of which
are exactly the same, and the closer they are examined
the greater is seen to be the extreme beauty of their
markings, and the rich varied harmony of their colouring.
When a male Argus wishes to show off
his magnificence to his spouse—or when
she asks him to show it off, we know not which—he
makes a circle in the forest some ten or twelve feet
in diameter, which he clears of every leaf, twig,
and branch. On the margin of this circus there
is invariably a projecting branch, or overarching
root a few feet above the ground, on which the female
takes her place to watch the exhibition. This
consists of the male strutting about, pluming his feathers,
and generally displaying his gorgeous beauty.
“Vat ineffable vanity!”
exclaimed the professor, after gazing for some time
in silence.
His own folly in thus speaking was
instantly proved by the two birds bringing the exhibition
to an abrupt close and hastily taking wing.
Not long after seeing this they came
to a small but deep and rapid river, which for a time
checked their progress, for there was no ford, and
the porters who carried Verkimier’s packages
seemed to know nothing about a bridge, either natural
or artificial. After wandering for an hour or
so along its banks, however, they found a giant tree
which had fallen across the stream and formed a natural
bridge.
On the other side of the stream the
ground was more rugged and the forest so dense that
they had to walk in a sort of twilight—only
a glimpse of blue sky being visible here and there
through the tree-tops. In some places, however,
there occurred bright little openings which swarmed
with species of metallic tiger-beetles and sand-bees,
and where sulphur, swallow-tailed, and other butterflies
sported their brief life away over the damp ground
by the water’s edge.
The native forest path which they
followed was little better than a tunnel cut through
a grove of low rattan-palms, the delicate but exceedingly
tough tendrils of which hung down in all directions.
These were fringed with sharp hooks which caught their
clothing and tore it, or held on unrelentingly, so
that the only way of escape was to step quietly back
and unhook themselves. This of itself would have
rendered their progress slow as well as painful, but
other things tended to increase the delay. At
one place they came to a tree about seven feet in
diameter which lay across the path and had to be scrambled
over, and this was done with great difficulty.
At another, a gigantic mud-bath—the wallowing
hole of a herd of elephants—obstructed the
way, and a yell from one of the porters told that in
attempting to cross it he had fallen in up to the
waist. A comrade in trying to pull him out also
fell in and sank up to the armpits. But they got
over it—as resolute men always do—somehow!
“Zis is horrible!” exclaimed
the professor, panting from his exertions, and making
a wild plunge with his insect-net at some living creature.
“Hah! zee brute! I have ’im.”
The man of science was flat on his
stomach as he spoke, with arm outstretched and the
net pressed close to the ground, while a smile of
triumph beamed through the mud and scratches on his
face.
“What have you got?” asked
Nigel, doing his best to restrain a laugh.
“A splendid Ornit’optera
a day-flying moss’,” said Verkimier as
he cautiously rose, “vich mimics zee Trepsichrois
mulciber. Ant zis very morning I caught von
Leptocircus virescens, vich derives protection
from mimicking zee habits ant appearance of a dragon-fly.”
“What rubbish dat purfesser
do talk!” remarked Moses in an undertone to
the hermit as they moved on again.
“Not such rubbish as it sounds
to you, Moses. These are the scientific names
of the creatures, and you know as well as he does that
many creatures think they find it advantageous to
pretend to be what they are not. Man himself
is not quite free from this characteristic. Indeed,
you have a little of it yourself,” said the hermit
with one of his twinkling glances. “When
you are almost terrified of your wits don’t you
pretend that there’s nothing the matter with
you?”
“Nebber, massa, nebber!”
answered the negro with remonstrative gravity.
“When I’s nigh out ob my wits, so’s
my innards feels like nuffin’ but warmish water,
I gits whitey-grey in de chops, so I’s told,
an’ blue in de lips, an’ I pretends
nuffin’—I don’t care who
sees it!”
The track for some distance beyond
this point became worse and worse. Then the nature
of the ground changed somewhat—became more
hilly, and the path, if such it could be styled, more
rugged in some places, more swampy in others, while,
to add to their discomfort, rain began to fall, and
night set in dark and dismal without any sign of the
village of which they were in search. By that
time the porters who carried Verkimier’s boxes
seemed so tired that the hermit thought it advisable
to encamp, but the ground was so wet and the leeches
were so numerous that they begged him to go on, assuring
him that the village could not be far distant.
In another half-hour the darkness became intense, so
that a man could scarcely see his fellow even when
within two paces of him. Ominous mutterings and
rumblings like distant thunder also were heard, which
appeared to indicate an approaching storm. In
these circumstances encamping became unavoidable,
and the order was given to make a huge fire to scare
away the tigers, which were known to be numerous,
and the elephants whose fresh tracks had been crossed
and followed during the greater part of the day.
The track of a rhinoceros and a tapir had also been
seen, but no danger was to be anticipated from those
creatures.
“Shall we have a stormy night,
think you?” asked Nigel, as he assisted in striking
a light.
“It may be so,” replied
the hermit, flinging down one after another of his
wet matches, which failed to kindle. “What
we hear may be distant thunder, but I doubt it.
The sounds seem to me more like the mutterings of
a volcano. Some new crater may have burst forth
in the Sumatran ranges. This thick darkness inclines
me to think so—especially after the new
activity of volcanic action we have seen so recently
at Krakatoa. Let me try your matches, Nigel,
perhaps they have escaped—mine are useless.”
But Nigel’s matches were as
wet as those of the hermit. So were those of
the professor. Luckily Moses carried the old-fashioned
flint and steel, with which, and a small piece of
tinder, a spark was at last kindled, but as they were
about to apply it to a handful of dry bamboo scrapings,
an extra spirt of rain extinguished it. For an
hour and more they made ineffectual attempts to strike
a light. Even the cessation of the rain was of
no avail.
“Vat must ve do now?”
asked the professor in tones that suggested a wo-begone
countenance, though there was no light by which to
distinguish it.
“Grin and bear it,” said
Nigel, in a voice suggestive of a slight expansion
of the mouth—though no one could see it.
“Dere’s nuffin’
else left to do,” said Moses, in a tone which
betrayed such a very wide expansion that Nigel laughed
outright.
“Hah! you may laugh, my yoong
frond, hot if zee tigers find us out or zee elephants
trample on us, your laughter vill be turned to veeping.
Vat is zat? Is not zat vonderful?”
The question and exclamation were
prompted by the sudden appearance of faint mysterious
lights among the bushes. That the professor viewed
them as unfriendly lights was clear from the click
of his rifle-locks which followed.
“It is only phosphoric light,”
explained Van der Kemp. “I have often seen
it thus in electric states of the atmosphere.
It will probably increase—meanwhile we
must seat ourselves on our boxes and do the best we
can till daylight. Are you there, boys?”
This question, addressed to the bearers
in their native tongue, was not answered, and it was
found, on a feeling examination, that, in spite
of leeches, tigers, elephants, and the whole animal
creation, the exhausted porters had flung themselves
on the wet ground and gone to sleep while their leaders
were discussing the situation.
Dismal though the condition of the
party was, the appearances in the forest soon changed
the professor’s woe into eager delight, for the
phosphorescence became more and more pronounced, until
every tree-stem blinked with a palish green light,
and it trickled like moonlight over the ground, bringing
out thick dumpy mushrooms like domes of light.
Glowing caterpillars and centipedes crawled about,
leaving a trail of light behind them, and fireflies
darting to and fro peopled the air and gave additional
animation to the scene.
In the midst of the darkness, thus
made singularly visible, the white travellers sat
dozing and nodding on their luggage, while the cries
of metallic-toned horned frogs and other nocturnal
sounds peculiar to that weird forest formed their
appropriate lullaby.
But Moses neither dozed nor nodded.
With a pertinacity peculiarly his own he continued
to play a running accompaniment to the lullaby with
his flint and steel, until his perseverance was rewarded
with a spark which caught on a dry portion of the
tinder and continued to burn. By that time the
phosphoric lights had faded, and his spark was the
only one which gleamed through intense darkness.
How he cherished that spark!
He wrapped it in swaddling clothes of dry bamboo scrapings
with as much care as if it had been the essence of
his life. He blew upon it tenderly as though
to fan its delicate brow with the soft zephyrs of
a father’s affection. Again he blew more
vigorously, and his enormous pouting lips came dimly
into view. Another blow and his flat nose and
fat cheeks emerged from darkness. Still another—with
growing confidence—and his huge eyes were
revealed glowing with hope. At last the handful
of combustible burst into a flame, and was thrust
into a prepared nest of twigs. This, communicating
with a heap of logs, kindled a sudden blaze which
scattered darkness out of being, and converted thirty
yards of the primeval forest into a chamber of glorious
light, round which the human beings crowded with joy
enhanced by the unexpectedness of the event, and before
which the wild things of the wilderness fled away.
When daylight came at last, they found
that the village for which they had been searching
was only two miles beyond the spot where they had
encamped.
Here, being thoroughly exhausted,
it was resolved that they should spend that day and
night, and, we need scarcely add, they spent a considerable
portion of both in sleep—at least such parts
of both as were not devoted to food. And here
the professor distinguished himself in a way that
raised him greatly in the estimation of his companions
and caused the natives of the place to regard him
as something of a demi-god. Of course we do not
vouch for the truth of the details of the incident,
for no one save himself was there to see, and although
we entertained the utmost regard for himself, we were
not sufficiently acquainted with his moral character
to answer for his strict truthfulness. As to the
main event, there was no denying that. The thing
happened thus:—
Towards the afternoon of that same
day the travellers began to wake up, stretch themselves,
and think about supper. In the course of conversation
it transpired that a tiger had been prowling about
the village for some days, and had hitherto successfully
eluded all attempts to trap or spear it. They
had tethered a goat several times near a small pond
and watched the spot from safe positions among the
trees, with spears, bows and arrows, and blow-pipes
ready, but when they watched, the tiger did not come,
and when they failed to watch, the tiger did come
and carried off the goat. Thus they had been baffled.
“Mine frond,” said the
professor to the hermit on hearing this. “I
vill shot zat tiger! I am resolved. Vill
you ask zee chief to show me zee place ant zen tell
his people, on pain of def, not to go near it all
night, for if zey do I vill certainly shot zem—by
accident of course!”
The hermit did as he was bid, but
advised his sanguine friend against exposing himself
recklessly. The chief willingly fell in with his
wishes.
“Won’t you tell us what
you intend to do, professor?” asked Nigel, “and
let us help you.”
“No, I vill do it all by mineself—or
die! I vill vant a shofel or a spade of some
sort.”
The chief provided the required implement,
conducted his visitor a little before sunset to the
spot, just outside the village, and left him there
armed with his rifle, a revolver, and a long knife
or kriss, besides the spade.
When alone, the bold man put off his
glasses, made a careful inspection of the ground,
came to a conclusion—founded on scientific
data no doubt—as to the probable spot whence
the tiger would issue from the jungle when about to
seize the goat, and, just opposite that spot, on the
face of a slope about ten yards from the goat, he dug
a hole deep enough to contain his own person.
The soil was sandy easy to dig, and quite dry.
It was growing dusk when the professor crept into this
rifle-pit, drew his weapons and the spade in after
him, and closed the mouth of the pit with moist earth,
leaving only a very small eye-hole through which he
could see the goat standing innocently by the brink
of the pool.
“Now,” said he, as he
lay resting on his elbows with the rifle laid ready
to hand and the revolver beside it; “now, I know
not vezer you can smell or not, but I have buried
mineself in eart’, vich is a non-conductor of
smell. Ve shall see!”
It soon became very dark, for there
was no moon, yet not so dark but that the form of
the goat could be seen distinctly reflected in the
pond. Naturally the professor’s mind reverted
to the occasion when Nigel had watched in the branches
of a tree for another tiger. The conditions were
different, and so, he thought, was the man!
“Mine yoong frond,” he
said mentally, “is brav’, oondoubtedly,
but his nerves have not been braced by experience
like mine. It is vell, for zere is more dancher
here zan in a tree. It matters not. I am
resolf to shot zat tigre—or die!”
In this resolute and heroic frame
of mind he commenced his vigil.
It is curious to note how frequently
the calculations of men fail them—even
those of scientific men! The tiger came indeed
to the spot, but he came in precisely the opposite
direction from that which the watcher expected, so
that while Verkimier was staring over the goat’s
head at an opening in the jungle beyond the pond, the
tiger was advancing stealthily and slowly through
the bushes exactly behind the hole in which he lay.
Suddenly the professor became aware
of something! He saw nothing consciously,
he heard nothing, but there stole over him, somehow,
the feeling of a dread presence!
Was he asleep? Was it nightmare?
No, it was night-tiger! He knew it, somehow;
he felt it—but he could not see it.
To face death is easy enough—according
to some people—but to face nothing at all
is at all times trying. Verkimier felt it to be
so at that moment. But he was a true hero and
conquered himself.
“Come now,” he said mentally,
“don’t be an ass! Don’t lose
your shance by voomanly fears. Keep kviet.”
Another moment and there was a very
slight sound right over his head. He glanced
upwards—as far as the little hole would
permit—and there, not a foot from him,
was a tawny yellow throat! with a tremendous paw moving
slowly forward—so slowly that it might have
suggested the imperceptible movement of the hour-hand
of a watch, or of a glacier. There was indeed
motion, but it was not perceptible.
The professor’s perceptions
were quick. He did not require to think.
He knew that to use the rifle at such close quarters
was absolutely impossible. He knew that the slightest
motion would betray him. He could see that as
yet he was undiscovered, for the animal’s nose
was straight for the goat, and he concluded that either
his having buried himself was a safeguard against
being smelt, or that the tiger had a cold in its head.
He thought for one moment of bursting up with a yell
that would scare the monster out of his seven senses—if
he had seven—but dismissed the thought
as cowardly, for it would be sacrificing success to
safety. He knew not what to do, and the cold perspiration
consequent upon indecision at a supreme moment broke
out all over him. Suddenly he thought of the
revolver!
Like lightning he seized it, pointed
it straight up and fired. The bullet—a
large army revolver one—entered the throat
of the animal, pierced the root of the tongue, crashed
through the palate obliquely, and entered the brain.
The tiger threw one indescribable somersault and fell—fell
so promptly that it blocked the mouth of the pit, all
the covering earth of which had been blown away by
the shot, and Verkimier could feel the hairy side
of the creature, and hear the beating of its heart
as it gasped its life away. But in his cramped
position he could not push it aside. Well aware
of the tenacity of life in tigers, he thought that
if the creature revived it would certainly grasp him
even in its dying agonies, for the weight of its body
and its struggles were already crushing in the upper
part of the hole.
To put an end to its sufferings and
his own danger, he pointed the revolver at its side
and again fired. The crash in the confined hole
was tremendous—so awful that the professor
thought the weapon must have burst. The struggles
of the, tiger became more violent than ever, and its
weight more oppressive as the earth crumbled away.
Again the cold perspiration broke out all over the
man, and he became unconscious.
It must not be supposed that the professor’s
friends were unwatchful. Although they had promised
not to disturb him in his operations, they had held
themselves in readiness with rifle, revolver, and spear,
and the instant the first shot was heard, they ran
down to the scene of action. Before reaching
it the second shot quickened their pace as they ran
down to the pond—a number of natives yelling
and waving torches at their heels.
“Here he is,” cried Moses,
who was first on the scene, “dead as mutton!”
“What! the professor?” cried Nigel in
alarm.
“No; de tiger.”
“Where’s Verkimier?” asked the hermit
as he came up.
“I dun know, massa,” said Moses, looking
round him vacantly.
“Search well, men, and be quick,
he may have been injured,” cried Van der Kemp,
seizing a torch and setting the example.
“Let me out!” came at
that moment from what appeared to be the bowels of
the earth, causing every one to stand aghast gazing
in wonder around and on each other.
“Zounds! vy don’t you let me out?”
shouted the voice again.
There was an indication of a tendency
to flight on the part of the natives, but Nigel’s
asking “Where are you?” had the
effect of inducing them to delay for the answer.
“Here—oonder zee tigre! Kveek,
I am suffocat!”
Instantly Van der Kemp seized the
animal by the ’tail, and, Avith a force worthy
of Hercules, heaved it aside as if it had been a dead
cat, revealing the man of science underneath—alive
and well, but dishevelled, scratched, and soiled—also,
as deaf as a door-post!