COMING EVENTS, ETC.—WONDERFUL CHANGES AMONG
THE ISLANDS.
Some days after the wreck of the Sunshine,
as described in a previous chapter, Captain Roy and
his son stood on the coast of Java not far from the
ruins of Anjer. A vessel was anchored in the offing,
and a little boat lay on the shore.
All sign of elemental strife had passed,
though a cloud of smoke hanging over the remains of
Krakatoa told that the terrible giant below was not
dead but only sleeping—to awake, perchance,
after a nap of another 200 years.
“Well, father,” said our
hero with a modest look, “it may be, as you
suggest, that Winnie Van der Kemp does not care for
me more than for a fathom of salt water——”
“I did not say salt water, lad,
I said bilge—a fathom o’ bilge
water,” interrupted the captain, who, although
secretly rejoiced at the fact of his son having fallen
over head and ears in love with the pretty little
Cocos-Keeling islander, deemed it his duty, nevertheless,
as a sternly upright parent, to, make quite sure that
the love was mutual as well as deep before giving
his consent to anything like courtship.
“It matters not; salt or bilge
water makes little difference,” returned the
son with a smile. “But all I can say is
that I care for Winnie so much that her love is to
me of as much importance as sunshine to the world—and
we have had some experience lately of what the want
of that means.”
“Nonsense, Nigel,” returned
the captain severely. “You’re workin’
yourself into them up-in-the-clouds, reef-point-patterin’
regions again—which, by the way, should
be pretty well choked wi’ Krakatoa dust by this
time. Come down out o’ that if ye want to
hold or’nary intercourse wi’ your old
father. She’s far too young yet, my boy.
You must just do as many a young fellow has done before
you, attend to your dooties and forget her.”
“Forget her!” returned
the youth, with that amused, quiet expression which
wise men sometimes assume when listening to foolish
suggestions. “I could almost as easily
forget my mother!”
“A very proper sentiment, Nigel,
very—especially the ‘almost’
part of it.”
“Besides,” continued the
son, “she is not so very young—and
that difficulty remedies itself every hour. Moreover,
I too am young. I can wait.”
“The selfishness of youth is
only equalled by its presumption,” said the
captain. “How d’ee know she
will wait?”
“I don’t know, father,
but I hope she will—I—I—think
she will.”
“Nigel,” said the captain,
in a tone and with a look that were meant to imply
intense solemnity, “have you ever spoken to her
about love?”
“No, father.”
“Has she ever spoken to you?”
“No—at least—not with
her lips.”
“Come, boy, you’re humbuggin’
your old father. Her tongue couldn’t well
do it without the lips lendin’ a hand.”
“Well then—with neither,”
returned the son. “She spoke with her eyes—not
intentionally, of course, for the eyes, unlike the
lips, refuse to be under control.”
“Hm! I see—reef-point-patterin’
poetics again! An’ what did she say with
her eyes?”
“Really, father, you press me
too hard; it is difficult to translate eye-language,
but if you’ll only let memory have free play
and revert to that time, nigh quarter of a century
ago, when you first met with a certain real
poetess, perhaps—”
“Ah! you dog! you have me there.
But how dare you, sir, venture to think of marryin’
on nothin’?”
“I don’t think of doing
so. Am I not a first mate with a handsome salary?”
“No, lad, you’re not.
You’re nothin’ better than a seaman out
o’ work, with your late ship wrecked in a cocoa-nut
grove!”
“That’s true,” returned
Nigel with a laugh. “But is not the cargo
of the said ship safe in Batavia? Has not its
owner a good bank account in England? Won’t
another ship be wanted, and another first mate, and
would the owner dare to pass over his own son, who
is such a competent seaman—according to
your own showing? Come, father, I turn the tables
on you and ask you to aid rather than resist me in
this matter.”
“Well, I will, my boy, I will,”
said the captain heartily, as he laid his hand on
his son’s shoulder. “But, seriously,
you must haul off this little craft and clap a stopper
on your tongue—ay, and on your eyes too—till
three points are considered an’ made quite clear.
First, you must find out whether the hermit would
be agreeable. Second, you must look the matter
straight in the face and make quite sure that you mean
it. For better or for worse. No undoin’
that knot, Nigel, once it’s fairly tied!
And, third, you must make quite sure that Winnie is
sure of her own mind, an’ that—that—”
“We’re all sure all round,
father. Quite right. I agree with you.
’All fair an’ aboveboard’ should
be the sailing orders of every man in such matters,
especially of every seaman. But, will you explain
how I am to make sure of Winnie’s state of mind
without asking her about it?”
“Well, I don’t exactly
see my way,” replied the captain slowly.
“What d’ee say to my soundin’ her
on the subject?”
“Couldn’t think of it!
You may be first-rate at deep-sea soundings, father,
but you couldn’t sound the depths of a young
girl’s heart. I must reserve that for myself,
however long it may be delayed.”
“So be it, lad. The only
embargo that I lay upon you is—haul off,
and mind you don’t let your figurehead go by
the board. Meanwhile, here comes the boat.
Now, Nigel, none o’ your courtin’ till
everything is settled and the wind fair—dead
aft my lad, and blowin’ stiff. You and
the hermit are goin’ off to Krakatoa to-day,
I suppose?”
“Yes. I am just now waiting
for him and Moses,” returned Nigel.
“Is Winnie going?”
“Don’t know. I hope so.”
“Humph! Well, if we have
a fair wind I shall soon be in Batavia,” said
the captain, descending to business matters, “and
I expect without trouble to dispose of the cargo that
we landed there, as well as that part o’ the
return cargo which I had bought before I left for
Keeling—at a loss, no doubt, but that don’t
matter much. Then I’ll come back here by
the first craft that offers—arter which——.
Ay
shove her in here. Plenty
o’ water.”
The last remark was made to the seaman
who steered the boat sent from the vessel in the offing.
A short time thereafter Captain Roy
was sailing away for Batavia, while his son, with
Van der Kemp, Moses, Winnie, and Spinkie, was making
for Krakatoa in a native boat.
The hermit, in spite of his injuries,
had recovered his wonted appearance, if not his wonted
vigour. Winnie seemed to have suddenly developed
into a mature woman under her recent experiences, though
she had lost none of her girlish grace and attractiveness.
As for Moses—time and tide seemed to have
no effect whatever on his ebony frame, and still less,
if possible, on his indomitable spirit.
“Now you keep still,”
he said in solemn tones and with warning looks to
Spinkie. “If you keep fidgitin’ about
you’ll capsize de boat. You hear?”
Spinkie veiled his real affection
for the negro under a look of supreme indifference,
while Winnie went off into a sudden giggle at the idea
of such a small creature capsizing the boat.
Mindful of his father’s warning,
Nigel did his best to “haul off” and to
prevent his “figurehead” from going “by
the board.” But he found it uncommonly
hard work, for Winnie looked so innocent, so pretty,
so unconscious, so sympathetic with everybody and
everything, so very young, yet so wondrously wise
and womanly, that he felt an irresistible desire to
prostrate himself at her feet in abject slavery.
“Dear little thing,” said
Winnie, putting her hand on Spinkie’s little
head and smoothing him down from eyes to tail.
Spinkie looked as if half inclined
to withdraw his allegiance from Moses and bestow it
on Winnie, but evidently changed his mind after a moment’s
reflection.
“O that I were a monkey!”
thought Nigel, paraphrasing Shakespeare, “that
I might——” but it is not fair
to our hero to reveal him in his weaker moments!
There was something exasperating,
too, in being obliged, owing to the size of the boat,
to sit so close to Winnie without having a right to
touch her hand! Who has not experienced this,
and felt himself to be a very hero of self-denial
in the circumstances?
“Mos’ awrful hot!”
remarked Moses, wiping his forehead with the sleeve
of his shirt.
“You hot!” said
Nigel in surprise. “I thought nothing on
earth could be too hot for you.”
“Dat’s your ignerance,”
returned Moses calmly. “Us niggers, you
see, ought to suffer more fro’ heat dan you
whites.”
“How so?”
“Why, don’t your flossiphers
say dat black am better dan white for ‘tractin’
heat, an’ ain’t our skins black? I
wish we’d bin’ born white as chalk.
I say, Massa Nadgel, seems to me dat dere’s not
much left ob Krakatoa.”
They had approached near enough to
the island by that time to perceive that wonderful
changes had indeed taken place, and Van der Kemp, who
had been for some time silently absorbed in contemplation,
at last turned to his daughter and said—
“I had feared at first, Winnie,
that my old home had been blown entirely away, but
I see now that the Peak of Rakata still stands, so
perhaps I may yet show you the cave in which I have
spent so many years.”
“But why did you go to live
in such a strange place, dear father?” asked
the girl, laying her hand lovingly on the hermit’s
arm.
Van der Kemp did not reply at once.
He gazed in his child’s face with an increase
of that absent air and far-away look which Nigel, ever
since he met him, had observed as one of his characteristics.
At this time an anxious thought crossed him,—that
perhaps the blows which his friend had received on
his head when he was thrown on the deck of the Sunshine
might have injured his brain.
“It is not easy to answer your
question, dear one,” he said after a time, laying
his strong hand on the girl’s head, and smoothing
her luxuriant hair which hung in the untrammelled
freedom of nature over her shoulders. “I
have felt sometimes, during the last few days, as if
I were awaking out of a long long dream, or recovering
from a severe illness in which delirium had played
a prominent part. Even now, though I see and
touch you, I sometimes tremble lest I should really
awake and find that it is all a dream. I have
so often—so very often—dreamed
something like it in years gone by, but never so vividly
as now! I cannot doubt—it is sin to
doubt—that my prayers have been at last
answered. God is good and wise. He knows
what is best and does not fail in bringing the best
to pass. Yet I have doubted Him—again
and again.”
Van der Kemp paused here and drew
his hand across his brow as if to clear away sad memories
of the past, while Winnie drew closer to him and looked
up tenderly in his face.
“When your mother died, dear
one,” he resumed, “it seemed to me as if
the sun had left the heavens, and when you were
snatched from me, it was as though my soul had fled
and nought but animal life remained. I lived
as if in a terrible dream. I cannot recall exactly
what I did or where I went for a long long time.
I know I wandered through the archipelago looking
for you, because I did not believe at first that you
were dead. It was at this time I took up my abode
in the cave of Rakata, and fell in with my good faithful
friend Moses—”
“Your sarvint, massa,”
interrupted the negro humbly. “I’s
proud to be call your frind, but I’s only your
sarvint, massa.”
“Truly you have been my faithful
servant, Moses,” said Van der Kemp, “but
not the less have you been my trusted friend.
He nursed me through a long and severe illness, Winnie.
How long, I am not quite sure. After a time I
nearly lost hope. Then there came a very dark
period, when I was forced to believe that you must
be dead. Yet, strange to say, even during this
dark time I did not cease to pray and to wander about
in search of you. I suppose it was the force
of habit, for hope seemed to have died. Then,
at last, Nigel found you. God used him as His
instrument. And now, praise to His name, we are
reunited—for ever!”
“Darling father!” were
the only words that Winnie could utter as she laid
her head on the hermit’s shoulder and wept for
joy.
Two ideas, which had not occurred
to him before, struck Nigel with great force at that
moment. The one was that whatever or wherever
his future household should be established, if Winnie
was to be its chief ornament, her father must of necessity
become a member of it. The other idea was that
he was destined to possess a negro servant with a consequent
and unavoidable monkey attendant! How strange
the links of which the chain of human destiny is formed,
and how wonderful the powers of thought by which that
chain is occasionally forecast! How to convey
all these possessions to England and get them comfortably
settled there was a problem which he did not care
to tackle just then.
“See, Winnie,” said Van
der Kemp, pointing with interest to a mark on the
side of Rakata, “yonder is the mouth of my cave.
I never saw it so clearly before because of the trees
and bushes, but everything seems now to have been
burnt up.”
“Das so, massa, an’ what
hasn’t bin bu’nt up has bin blow’d
up!” remarked the negro.
“Looks very like it, Moses,
unless that is a haze which enshrouds the rest of
the island,” rejoined the other, shading his
eyes with his hands.
It was no haze, however; for they
found, on drawing nearer, that the greater part of
Krakatoa had, as we have already said, actually disappeared
from the face of the earth.
When the boat finally rounded the
point which hid the northern part of the island from
view, a sight was presented which it is not often given
to human eyes to look upon. The whole mountain
named the Peak of Rakata (2623 feet high) had been
split from top to bottom, and about one-half of it,
with all that part of the island lying to the northward,
had been blown away, leaving a wall or almost sheer
precipice which presented a grand section of the volcano.
Pushing their boat into a creek at
the base of this precipice, the party landed and tried
to reach a position from which a commanding view might
be obtained. This was not an easy matter, for
there was not a spot for a foot to rest on which was
not covered deeply with pumice-dust and ashes.
By dint of perseverance, however, they gained a ledge
whence the surrounding district could be observed,
and then it was clearly seen how wide-spread and stupendous
the effects of the explosion had been.
Where the greater part of the richly
wooded island had formerly flourished, the ocean now
rippled in the sunshine, and of the smaller islands
around it Lang Island had been considerably
increased in bulk as well as in height. Verlaten
Island had been enlarged to more than three times
its former size and also much increased in height.
The island named Polish Hat had disappeared
altogether, and two entirely new islets—afterwards
named Steers and Calmeyer Islands—had
arisen to the northward.
“Now, friends,” said Van
der Kemp, after they had noted and commented on the
vast and wonderful changes that had taken place, “we
will pull round to our cave and see what has happened
there.”
Descending to the boat they rowed
round the southern shores of Rakata until they reached
the little harbour where the boat and canoe had formerly
been kept.