’Brown’s object was to
gain time by fooling with Kassim’s diplomacy.
For doing a real stroke of business he could not help
thinking the white man was the person to work with.
He could not imagine such a chap (who must be confoundedly
clever after all to get hold of the natives like that)
refusing a help that would do away with the necessity
for slow, cautious, risky cheating, that imposed itself
as the only possible line of conduct for a single-handed
man. He, Brown, would offer him the power.
No man could hesitate. Everything was in coming
to a clear understanding. Of course they would
share. The idea of there being a fort—all
ready to his hand—a real fort, with artillery
(he knew this from Cornelius), excited him. Let
him only once get in and . . . He would impose
modest conditions. Not too low, though. The
man was no fool, it seemed. They would work like
brothers till . . . till the time came for a quarrel
and a shot that would settle all accounts. With
grim impatience of plunder he wished himself to be
talking with the man now. The land already seemed
to be his to tear to pieces, squeeze, and throw away.
Meantime Kassim had to be fooled for the sake of food
first—and for a second string. But
the principal thing was to get something to eat from
day to day. Besides, he was not averse to begin
fighting on that Rajah’s account, and teach
a lesson to those people who had received him with
shots. The lust of battle was upon him.
’I am sorry that I can’t
give you this part of the story, which of course I
have mainly from Brown, in Brown’s own words.
There was in the broken, violent speech of that man,
unveiling before me his thoughts with the very hand
of Death upon his throat, an undisguised ruthlessness
of purpose, a strange vengeful attitude towards his
own past, and a blind belief in the righteousness
of his will against all mankind, something of that
feeling which could induce the leader of a horde of
wandering cut-throats to call himself proudly the Scourge
of God. No doubt the natural senseless ferocity
which is the basis of such a character was exasperated
by failure, ill-luck, and the recent privations, as
well as by the desperate position in which he found
himself; but what was most remarkable of all was this,
that while he planned treacherous alliances, had already
settled in his own mind the fate of the white man,
and intrigued in an overbearing, offhand manner with
Kassim, one could perceive that what he had really
desired, almost in spite of himself, was to play havoc
with that jungle town which had defied him, to see
it strewn over with corpses and enveloped in flames.
Listening to his pitiless, panting voice, I could imagine
how he must have looked at it from the hillock, peopling
it with images of murder and rapine. The part
nearest to the creek wore an abandoned aspect, though
as a matter of fact every house concealed a few armed
men on the alert. Suddenly beyond the stretch
of waste ground, interspersed with small patches of
low dense bush, excavations, heaps of rubbish, with
trodden paths between, a man, solitary and looking
very small, strolled out into the deserted opening
of the street between the shut-up, dark, lifeless
buildings at the end. Perhaps one of the inhabitants,
who had fled to the other bank of the river, coming
back for some object of domestic use. Evidently
he supposed himself quite safe at that distance from
the hill on the other side of the creek. A light
stockade, set up hastily, was just round the turn
of the street, full of his friends. He moved
leisurely. Brown saw him, and instantly called
to his side the Yankee deserter, who acted as a sort
of second in command. This lanky, loose-jointed
fellow came forward, wooden-faced, trailing his rifle
lazily. When he understood what was wanted from
him a homicidal and conceited smile uncovered his
teeth, making two deep folds down his sallow, leathery
cheeks. He prided himself on being a dead shot.
He dropped on one knee, and taking aim from a steady
rest through the unlopped branches of a felled tree,
fired, and at once stood up to look. The man,
far away, turned his head to the report, made another
step forward, seemed to hesitate, and abruptly got
down on his hands and knees. In the silence that
fell upon the sharp crack of the rifle, the dead shot,
keeping his eyes fixed upon the quarry, guessed that
“this there coon’s health would never
be a source of anxiety to his friends any more.”
The man’s limbs were seen to move rapidly under
his body in an endeavour to run on all-fours.
In that empty space arose a multitudinous shout of
dismay and surprise. The man sank flat, face
down, and moved no more. “That showed them
what we could do,” said Brown to me. “Struck
the fear of sudden death into them. That was what
we wanted. They were two hundred to one, and
this gave them something to think over for the night.
Not one of them had an idea of such a long shot before.
That beggar belonging to the Rajah scooted down-hill
with his eyes hanging out of his head.”
’As he was telling me this he
tried with a shaking hand to wipe the thin foam on
his blue lips. “Two hundred to one.
Two hundred to one . . . strike terror, . . . terror,
terror, I tell you. . . .” His own eyes
were starting out of their sockets. He fell back,
clawing the air with skinny fingers, sat up again,
bowed and hairy, glared at me sideways like some man-beast
of folk-lore, with open mouth in his miserable and
awful agony before he got his speech back after that
fit. There are sights one never forgets.
’Furthermore, to draw the enemy’s
fire and locate such parties as might have been hiding
in the bushes along the creek, Brown ordered the Solomon
Islander to go down to the boat and bring an oar, as
you send a spaniel after a stick into the water.
This failed, and the fellow came back without a single
shot having been fired at him from anywhere.
“There’s nobody,” opined some of
the men. It is “onnatural,” remarked
the Yankee. Kassim had gone, by that time, very
much impressed, pleased too, and also uneasy.
Pursuing his tortuous policy, he had dispatched a
message to Dain Waris warning him to look out for the
white men’s ship, which, he had had information,
was about to come up the river. He minimised
its strength and exhorted him to oppose its passage.
This double-dealing answered his purpose, which was
to keep the Bugis forces divided and to weaken them
by fighting. On the other hand, he had in the
course of that day sent word to the assembled Bugis
chiefs in town, assuring them that he was trying to
induce the invaders to retire; his messages to the
fort asked earnestly for powder for the Rajah’s
men. It was a long time since Tunku Allang had
had ammunition for the score or so of old muskets
rusting in their arm-racks in the audience-hall.
The open intercourse between the hill and the palace
unsettled all the minds. It was already time
for men to take sides, it began to be said. There
would soon be much bloodshed, and thereafter great
trouble for many people. The social fabric of
orderly, peaceful life, when every man was sure of
to-morrow, the edifice raised by Jim’s hands,
seemed on that evening ready to collapse into a ruin
reeking with blood. The poorer folk were already
taking to the bush or flying up the river. A good
many of the upper class judged it necessary to go
and pay their court to the Rajah. The Rajah’s
youths jostled them rudely. Old Tunku Allang,
almost out of his mind with fear and indecision, either
kept a sullen silence or abused them violently for
daring to come with empty hands: they departed
very much frightened; only old Doramin kept his countrymen
together and pursued his tactics inflexibly. Enthroned
in a big chair behind the improvised stockade, he
issued his orders in a deep veiled rumble, unmoved,
like a deaf man, in the flying rumours.
’Dusk fell, hiding first the
body of the dead man, which had been left lying with
arms outstretched as if nailed to the ground, and then
the revolving sphere of the night rolled smoothly
over Patusan and came to a rest, showering the glitter
of countless worlds upon the earth. Again, in
the exposed part of the town big fires blazed along
the only street, revealing from distance to distance
upon their glares the falling straight lines of roofs,
the fragments of wattled walls jumbled in confusion,
here and there a whole hut elevated in the glow upon
the vertical black stripes of a group of high piles
and all this line of dwellings, revealed in patches
by the swaying flames, seemed to flicker tortuously
away up-river into the gloom at the heart of the land.
A great silence, in which the looms of successive
fires played without noise, extended into the darkness
at the foot of the hill; but the other bank of the
river, all dark save for a solitary bonfire at the
river-front before the fort, sent out into the air
an increasing tremor that might have been the stamping
of a multitude of feet, the hum of many voices, or
the fall of an immensely distant waterfall. It
was then, Brown confessed to me, while, turning his
back on his men, he sat looking at it all, that notwithstanding
his disdain, his ruthless faith in himself, a feeling
came over him that at last he had run his head against
a stone wall. Had his boat been afloat at the
time, he believed he would have tried to steal away,
taking his chances of a long chase down the river
and of starvation at sea. It is very doubtful
whether he would have succeeded in getting away.
However, he didn’t try this. For another
moment he had a passing thought of trying to rush the
town, but he perceived very well that in the end he
would find himself in the lighted street, where they
would be shot down like dogs from the houses.
They were two hundred to one—he thought,
while his men, huddling round two heaps of smouldering
embers, munched the last of the bananas and roasted
the few yams they owed to Kassim’s diplomacy.
Cornelius sat amongst them dozing sulkily.
’Then one of the whites remembered
that some tobacco had been left in the boat, and,
encouraged by the impunity of the Solomon Islander,
said he would go to fetch it. At this all the
others shook off their despondency. Brown applied
to, said, “Go, and be d—d to you,”
scornfully. He didn’t think there was any
danger in going to the creek in the dark. The
man threw a leg over the tree-trunk and disappeared.
A moment later he was heard clambering into the boat
and then clambering out. “I’ve got
it,” he cried. A flash and a report at the
very foot of the hill followed. “I am hit,”
yelled the man. “Look out, look out—I
am hit,” and instantly all the rifles went off.
The hill squirted fire and noise into the night like
a little volcano, and when Brown and the Yankee with
curses and cuffs stopped the panic-stricken firing,
a profound, weary groan floated up from the creek,
succeeded by a plaint whose heartrending sadness was
like some poison turning the blood cold in the veins.
Then a strong voice pronounced several distinct incomprehensible
words somewhere beyond the creek. “Let no
one fire,” shouted Brown. “What does
it mean?” . . . “Do you hear on the
hill? Do you hear? Do you hear?” repeated
the voice three times. Cornelius translated,
and then prompted the answer. “Speak,”
cried Brown, “we hear.” Then the
voice, declaiming in the sonorous inflated tone of
a herald, and shifting continually on the edge of
the vague waste-land, proclaimed that between the
men of the Bugis nation living in Patusan and the
white men on the hill and those with them, there would
be no faith, no compassion, no speech, no peace.
A bush rustled; a haphazard volley rang out.
“Dam’ foolishness,” muttered the
Yankee, vexedly grounding the butt. Cornelius
translated. The wounded man below the hill, after
crying out twice, “Take me up! take me up!”
went on complaining in moans. While he had kept
on the blackened earth of the slope, and afterwards
crouching in the boat, he had been safe enough.
It seems that in his joy at finding the tobacco he
forgot himself and jumped out on her off-side, as
it were. The white boat, lying high and dry,
showed him up; the creek was no more than seven yards
wide in that place, and there happened to be a man
crouching in the bush on the other bank.
’He was a Bugis of Tondano only
lately come to Patusan, and a relation of the man
shot in the afternoon. That famous long shot had
indeed appalled the beholders. The man in utter
security had been struck down, in full view of his
friends, dropping with a joke on his lips, and they
seemed to see in the act an atrocity which had stirred
a bitter rage. That relation of his, Si-Lapa
by name, was then with Doramin in the stockade only
a few feet away. You who know these chaps must
admit that the fellow showed an unusual pluck by volunteering
to carry the message, alone, in the dark. Creeping
across the open ground, he had deviated to the left
and found himself opposite the boat. He was startled
when Brown’s man shouted. He came to a
sitting position with his gun to his shoulder, and
when the other jumped out, exposing himself, he pulled
the trigger and lodged three jagged slugs point-blank
into the poor wretch’s stomach. Then, lying
flat on his face, he gave himself up for dead, while
a thin hail of lead chopped and swished the bushes
close on his right hand; afterwards he delivered his
speech shouting, bent double, dodging all the time
in cover. With the last word he leaped sideways,
lay close for a while, and afterwards got back to the
houses unharmed, having achieved on that night such
a renown as his children will not willingly allow
to die.
’And on the hill the forlorn
band let the two little heaps of embers go out under
their bowed heads. They sat dejected on the ground
with compressed lips and downcast eyes, listening
to their comrade below. He was a strong man and
died hard, with moans now loud, now sinking to a strange
confidential note of pain. Sometimes he shrieked,
and again, after a period of silence, he could be
heard muttering deliriously a long and unintelligible
complaint. Never for a moment did he cease.
’”What’s the good?”
Brown had said unmoved once, seeing the Yankee, who
had been swearing under his breath, prepare to go down.
“That’s so,” assented the deserter,
reluctantly desisting. “There’s no
encouragement for wounded men here. Only his
noise is calculated to make all the others think too
much of the hereafter, cap’n.” “Water!”
cried the wounded man in an extraordinarily clear
vigorous voice, and then went off moaning feebly.
“Ay, water. Water will do it,” muttered
the other to himself, resignedly. “Plenty
by-and-by. The tide is flowing.”
’At last the tide flowed, silencing
the plaint and the cries of pain, and the dawn was
near when Brown, sitting with his chin in the palm
of his hand before Patusan, as one might stare at
the unscalable side of a mountain, heard the brief
ringing bark of a brass 6-pounder far away in town
somewhere. “What’s this?” he
asked of Cornelius, who hung about him. Cornelius
listened. A muffled roaring shout rolled down-river
over the town; a big drum began to throb, and others
responded, pulsating and droning. Tiny scattered
lights began to twinkle in the dark half of the town,
while the part lighted by the loom of fires hummed
with a deep and prolonged murmur. “He has
come,” said Cornelius. “What?
Already? Are you sure?” Brown asked.
“Yes! yes! Sure. Listen to the noise.”
“What are they making that row about?”
pursued Brown. “For joy,” snorted
Cornelius; “he is a very great man, but all the
same, he knows no more than a child, and so they make
a great noise to please him, because they know no
better.” “Look here,” said Brown,
“how is one to get at him?” “He
shall come to talk to you,” Cornelius declared.
“What do you mean? Come down here strolling
as it were?” Cornelius nodded vigorously in the
dark. “Yes. He will come straight here
and talk to you. He is just like a fool.
You shall see what a fool he is.” Brown
was incredulous. “You shall see; you shall
see,” repeated Cornelius. “He is not
afraid—not afraid of anything. He
will come and order you to leave his people alone.
Everybody must leave his people alone. He is like
a little child. He will come to you straight.”
Alas! he knew Jim well—that “mean
little skunk,” as Brown called him to me.
“Yes, certainly,” he pursued with ardour,
“and then, captain, you tell that tall man with
a gun to shoot him. Just you kill him, and you
will frighten everybody so much that you can do anything
you like with them afterwards—get what you
like—go away when you like. Ha! ha!
ha! Fine . . .” He almost danced with
impatience and eagerness; and Brown, looking over his
shoulder at him, could see, shown up by the pitiless
dawn, his men drenched with dew, sitting amongst the
cold ashes and the litter of the camp, haggard, cowed,
and in rags.’