’Already the legend had gifted
him with supernatural powers. Yes, it was said,
there had been many ropes cunningly disposed, and a
strange contrivance that turned by the efforts of
many men, and each gun went up tearing slowly through
the bushes, like a wild pig rooting its way in the
undergrowth, but . . . and the wisest shook their heads.
There was something occult in all this, no doubt;
for what is the strength of ropes and of men’s
arms? There is a rebellious soul in things which
must be overcome by powerful charms and incantations.
Thus old Sura—a very respectable householder
of Patusan—with whom I had a quiet chat
one evening. However, Sura was a professional
sorcerer also, who attended all the rice sowings and
reapings for miles around for the purpose of subduing
the stubborn souls of things. This occupation
he seemed to think a most arduous one, and perhaps
the souls of things are more stubborn than the souls
of men. As to the simple folk of outlying villages,
they believed and said (as the most natural thing in
the world) that Jim had carried the guns up the hill
on his back—two at a time.
’This would make Jim stamp his
foot in vexation and exclaim with an exasperated little
laugh, “What can you do with such silly beggars?
They will sit up half the night talking bally rot,
and the greater the lie the more they seem to like
it.” You could trace the subtle influence
of his surroundings in this irritation. It was
part of his captivity. The earnestness of his
denials was amusing, and at last I said, “My
dear fellow, you don’t suppose I believe
this.” He looked at me quite startled.
“Well, no! I suppose not,” he said,
and burst into a Homeric peal of laughter. “Well,
anyhow the guns were there, and went off all together
at sunrise. Jove! You should have seen the
splinters fly,” he cried. By his side Dain
Waris, listening with a quiet smile, dropped his eyelids
and shuffled his feet a little. It appears that
the success in mounting the guns had given Jim’s
people such a feeling of confidence that he ventured
to leave the battery under charge of two elderly Bugis
who had seen some fighting in their day, and went to
join Dain Waris and the storming party who were concealed
in the ravine. In the small hours they began
creeping up, and when two-thirds of the way up, lay
in the wet grass waiting for the appearance of the
sun, which was the agreed signal. He told me
with what impatient anguishing emotion he watched the
swift coming of the dawn; how, heated with the work
and the climbing, he felt the cold dew chilling his
very bones; how afraid he was he would begin to shiver
and shake like a leaf before the time came for the
advance. “It was the slowest half-hour in
my life,” he declared. Gradually the silent
stockade came out on the sky above him. Men scattered
all down the slope were crouching amongst the dark
stones and dripping bushes. Dain Waris was lying
flattened by his side. “We looked at each
other,” Jim said, resting a gentle hand on his
friend’s shoulder. “He smiled at
me as cheery as you please, and I dared not stir my
lips for fear I would break out into a shivering fit.
’Pon my word, it’s true! I had been
streaming with perspiration when we took cover—so
you may imagine . . .” He declared, and
I believe him, that he had no fears as to the result.
He was only anxious as to his ability to repress these
shivers. He didn’t bother about the result.
He was bound to get to the top of that hill and stay
there, whatever might happen. There could be
no going back for him. Those people had trusted
him implicitly. Him alone! His bare word.
. . .
’I remember how, at this point,
he paused with his eyes fixed upon me. “As
far as he knew, they never had an occasion to regret
it yet,” he said. “Never. He
hoped to God they never would. Meantime—worse
luck!—they had got into the habit of taking
his word for anything and everything. I could
have no idea! Why, only the other day an old fool
he had never seen in his life came from some village
miles away to find out if he should divorce his wife.
Fact. Solemn word. That’s the sort
of thing. . . He wouldn’t have believed
it. Would I? Squatted on the verandah chewing
betel-nut, sighing and spitting all over the place
for more than an hour, and as glum as an undertaker
before he came out with that dashed conundrum.
That’s the kind of thing that isn’t so
funny as it looks. What was a fellow to say?—Good
wife?—Yes. Good wife—old
though. Started a confounded long story about
some brass pots. Been living together for fifteen
years—twenty years—could not
tell. A long, long time. Good wife.
Beat her a little—not much—just
a little, when she was young. Had to—for
the sake of his honour. Suddenly in her old age
she goes and lends three brass pots to her sister’s
son’s wife, and begins to abuse him every day
in a loud voice. His enemies jeered at him; his
face was utterly blackened. Pots totally lost.
Awfully cut up about it. Impossible to fathom
a story like that; told him to go home, and promised
to come along myself and settle it all. It’s
all very well to grin, but it was the dashedest nuisance!
A day’s journey through the forest, another
day lost in coaxing a lot of silly villagers to get
at the rights of the affair. There was the making
of a sanguinary shindy in the thing. Every bally
idiot took sides with one family or the other, and
one half of the village was ready to go for the other
half with anything that came handy. Honour bright!
No joke! . . . Instead of attending to their
bally crops. Got him the infernal pots back of
course—and pacified all hands. No trouble
to settle it. Of course not. Could settle
the deadliest quarrel in the country by crooking his
little finger. The trouble was to get at the
truth of anything. Was not sure to this day whether
he had been fair to all parties. It worried him.
And the talk! Jove! There didn’t seem
to be any head or tail to it. Rather storm a
twenty-foot-high old stockade any day. Much!
Child’s play to that other job. Wouldn’t
take so long either. Well, yes; a funny set out,
upon the whole—the fool looked old enough
to be his grandfather. But from another point
of view it was no joke. His word decided everything—ever
since the smashing of Sherif Ali. An awful responsibility,”
he repeated. “No, really—joking
apart, had it been three lives instead of three rotten
brass pots it would have been the same. . . .”
’Thus he illustrated the moral
effect of his victory in war. It was in truth
immense. It had led him from strife to peace,
and through death into the innermost life of the people;
but the gloom of the land spread out under the sunshine
preserved its appearance of inscrutable, of secular
repose. The sound of his fresh young voice—it’s
extraordinary how very few signs of wear he showed—floated
lightly, and passed away over the unchanged face of
the forests like the sound of the big guns on that
cold dewy morning when he had no other concern on earth
but the proper control of the chills in his body.
With the first slant of sun-rays along these immovable
tree-tops the summit of one hill wreathed itself,
with heavy reports, in white clouds of smoke, and the
other burst into an amazing noise of yells, war-cries,
shouts of anger, of surprise, of dismay. Jim
and Dain Waris were the first to lay their hands on
the stakes. The popular story has it that Jim
with a touch of one finger had thrown down the gate.
He was, of course, anxious to disclaim this achievement.
The whole stockade—he would insist on explaining
to you—was a poor affair (Sherif Ali trusted
mainly to the inaccessible position); and, anyway,
the thing had been already knocked to pieces and only
hung together by a miracle. He put his shoulder
to it like a little fool and went in head over heels.
Jove! If it hadn’t been for Dain Waris,
a pock-marked tattooed vagabond would have pinned him
with his spear to a baulk of timber like one of Stein’s
beetles. The third man in, it seems, had been
Tamb’ Itam, Jim’s own servant. This
was a Malay from the north, a stranger who had wandered
into Patusan, and had been forcibly detained by Rajah
Allang as paddler of one of the state boats.
He had made a bolt of it at the first opportunity,
and finding a precarious refuge (but very little to
eat) amongst the Bugis settlers, had attached himself
to Jim’s person. His complexion was very
dark, his face flat, his eyes prominent and injected
with bile. There was something excessive, almost
fanatical, in his devotion to his “white lord.”
He was inseparable from Jim like a morose shadow.
On state occasions he would tread on his master’s
heels, one hand on the haft of his kriss, keeping
the common people at a distance by his truculent brooding
glances. Jim had made him the headman of his establishment,
and all Patusan respected and courted him as a person
of much influence. At the taking of the stockade
he had distinguished himself greatly by the methodical
ferocity of his fighting. The storming party had
come on so quick—Jim said—that
notwithstanding the panic of the garrison, there was
a “hot five minutes hand-to-hand inside that
stockade, till some bally ass set fire to the shelters
of boughs and dry grass, and we all had to clear out
for dear life.”
’The rout, it seems, had been
complete. Doramin, waiting immovably in his chair
on the hillside, with the smoke of the guns spreading
slowly above his big head, received the news with
a deep grunt. When informed that his son was
safe and leading the pursuit, he, without another
sound, made a mighty effort to rise; his attendants
hurried to his help, and, held up reverently, he shuffled
with great dignity into a bit of shade, where he laid
himself down to sleep, covered entirely with a piece
of white sheeting. In Patusan the excitement was
intense. Jim told me that from the hill, turning
his back on the stockade with its embers, black ashes,
and half-consumed corpses, he could see time after
time the open spaces between the houses on both sides
of the stream fill suddenly with a seething rush of
people and get empty in a moment. His ears caught
feebly from below the tremendous din of gongs and drums;
the wild shouts of the crowd reached him in bursts
of faint roaring. A lot of streamers made a flutter
as of little white, red, yellow birds amongst the
brown ridges of roofs. “You must have enjoyed
it,” I murmured, feeling the stir of sympathetic
emotion.
’”It was . . . it was immense!
Immense!” he cried aloud, flinging his arms
open. The sudden movement startled me as though
I had seen him bare the secrets of his breast to the
sunshine, to the brooding forests, to the steely sea.
Below us the town reposed in easy curves upon the banks
of a stream whose current seemed to sleep. “Immense!”
he repeated for a third time, speaking in a whisper,
for himself alone.
’Immense! No doubt it was
immense; the seal of success upon his words, the conquered
ground for the soles of his feet, the blind trust of
men, the belief in himself snatched from the fire,
the solitude of his achievement. All this, as
I’ve warned you, gets dwarfed in the telling.
I can’t with mere words convey to you the impression
of his total and utter isolation. I know, of
course, he was in every sense alone of his kind there,
but the unsuspected qualities of his nature had brought
him in such close touch with his surroundings that
this isolation seemed only the effect of his power.
His loneliness added to his stature. There was
nothing within sight to compare him with, as though
he had been one of those exceptional men who can be
only measured by the greatness of their fame; and
his fame, remember, was the greatest thing around for
many a day’s journey. You would have to
paddle, pole, or track a long weary way through the
jungle before you passed beyond the reach of its voice.
Its voice was not the trumpeting of the disreputable
goddess we all know—not blatant—not
brazen. It took its tone from the stillness and
gloom of the land without a past, where his word was
the one truth of every passing day. It shared
something of the nature of that silence through which
it accompanied you into unexplored depths, heard continuously
by your side, penetrating, far-reaching—tinged
with wonder and mystery on the lips of whispering
men.’