An unexpected discovery, and a bold,
reckless defiance, with its consequences—Plans
of escape, and heroic resolve.
When we returned to the shore and
related to our friend what had passed, he was greatly
distressed, and groaned in spirit; but we had not
sat long in conversation, when we were interrupted
by the arrival of Tararo on the beach, accompanied
by a number of followers bearing baskets of vegetables
and fruits on their heads.
We advanced to meet him, and he expressed,
through our interpreter, much pleasure in seeing us.
“And what is it that my friends
wish to say to me?” he inquired.
The teacher explained that we came
to beg that Avatea might be spared.
“Tell him,” said Jack,
“that I consider that I have a right to ask this
of him, having not only saved the girl’s life,
but the lives of his own people also; and say that
I wish her to be allowed to follow her own wishes,
and join the Christians.”
While this was being translated, the
chiefs brow lowered, and we could see plainly that
our request met with no favourable reception.
He replied with considerable energy, and at some length.
“What says he?” inquired Jack.
“I regret to say that he will
not listen to the proposal. He says he has pledged
his word to his friend that the girl shall be sent
to him, and a deputy is even now on this island awaiting
the fulfilment of the pledge.”
Jack bit his lip in suppressed anger.
“Tell Tararo,” he exclaimed with a flashing
eye, “that if he does not grant my demand it
will be worse for him. Say I have a big gun on
board my schooner that will blow his village into
the sea, if he does not give up the girl.”
“Nay, my friend,” said
the teacher gently, “I will not tell him that;
we must ‘overcome evil with good.’”
“What does my friend say?”
inquired the chief, who seemed nettled by Jack’s
looks of defiance.
“He is displeased,” replied the teacher.
Tararo turned away with a smile of
contempt, and walked towards the men who carried the
baskets of vegetables, and who had now emptied the
whole on the beach in an enormous pile.
“What are they doing there?” I inquired.
“I think that they are laying
out a gift which they intend to present to some one,”
said the teacher.
At this moment a couple of men appeared,
leading a young girl between them, and, going towards
the heap of fruits and vegetables, placed her on top
of it. We started with surprise and fear, for
in the young female before us we recognised the Samoan
girl Avatea.
We stood rooted to the earth with
surprise and thick-coming fears.
“Oh my dear young friend,”
whispered the teacher in a voice of deep emotion,
while he seized Jack by the arm, “she is to be
made a sacrifice even now!”
“Is she?” cried Jack with
a vehement shout, spurning the teacher aside, and
dashing over two natives who stood in his way, while
he rushed towards the heap, sprang up its side, and
seized Avatea by the arm. In another moment he
dragged her down, placed her back to a large tree,
and, wrenching a war-club from the hand of a native
who seemed powerless and petrified with surprise,
whirled it above his head, and yelled, rather than
shouted, while his face blazed with fury, “Come
on, the whole nation of you, an ye like it, and do
your worst!”
It seemed as though the challenge
had been literally accepted; for every savage on the
ground ran precipitately at Jack with club and spear,
and doubtless would speedily have poured out his brave
blood on the sod, had not the teacher rushed in between
them, and, raising his voice to its utmost, cried—
“Stay your hands, warriors!
It is not your part to judge in this matter.
It is for Tararo, the chief, to say whether or not
the young man shall live, or die.”
The natives were arrested; and I know
not whether it was the gratifying acknowledgment of
his superiority thus made by the teacher, or some
lingering feeling of gratitude for Jack’s former
aid in time of need, that influenced Tararo, but he
stepped forward, and, waving his hand, said to his
people, “Desist. The young man’s life
is mine.” Then, turning to Jack, he said,
“You have forfeited your liberty and life to
me. Submit yourself, for we are more numerous
than the sand upon the shore. You are but one;
why should you die?”
“Villain!” exclaimed Jack
passionately, “I may die, but assuredly I shall
not perish alone. I will not submit until you
promise that this girl shall not be injured.”
“You are very bold,” replied
the chief haughtily, “but very foolish.
Yet I will say that Avatea shall not be sent away—at
least, for three days.”
“You had better accept these
terms,” whispered the teacher entreatingly.
“If you persist in this mad defiance, you will
be slain, and Avatea will be lost. Three days
are worth having.”
Jack hesitated a moment, then lowered
his club, and throwing it moodily to the ground, crossed
his arms on his breast and hung down his head in silence.
Tararo seemed pleased by his submission,
and told the teacher to say that he did not forget
his former services, and therefore would leave him
free as to his person, but that the schooner would
be detained till he had further considered the matter.
While the teacher translated this,
he approached as near to where Avatea was standing
as possible, without creating suspicion, and whispered
to her a few words in the native language. Avatea,
who during the whole of the foregoing scene had stood
leaning against the tree perfectly passive, and seemingly
quite uninterested in all that was going on, replied
by a single rapid glance of her dark eye, which was
instantly cast down again on the ground at her feet.
Tararo now advanced, and taking the
girl by the hand, led her unresistingly away; while
Jack, Peterkin, and I returned with the teacher on
board the schooner.
On reaching the deck, we went down
to the cabin, where Jack threw himself, in a state
of great dejection, on a couch; but the teacher seated
himself by his side, and laying his hand upon his shoulder,
said—
“Do not give way to anger, my
young friend. God has given us three days, and
we must use the means that are In our power to free
this poor girl from slavery. We must not sit
in idle disappointment, we must act—”
“Act!” cried Jack, raising
himself and tossing back his hair wildly; “it
is mockery to talk of acting when one is bound hand
and foot. How can I act? I cannot fight
a whole nation of savages single-handed. Yes,”
he said with a bitter smile, “I can fight
them, but I cannot conquer them, or save Avatea.”
“Patience, my friend; your spirit
is not a good one just now. You cannot expect
that blessing which alone can ensure success unless
you are more submissive. I will tell you my plans
if you will listen.”
“Listen!” cried Jack eagerly:
“of course I will, my good fellow; I did not
know you had any plans. Out with them. I
only hope you will show me how I can get the girl
on board of this schooner, and I’d up anchor
and away in no time. But proceed with your plans.”
The teacher smiled sadly. “Ah,
my friend! if one fathom of your anchor chain were
to rattle as you drew it in, a thousand warriors would
be standing on your deck. No, no, that could
not be done. Even now your ship would be taken
from you were it not that Tararo has some feeling
of gratitude towards you. But I know Tararo well.
He is a man of falsehood, as all the unconverted savages
are. The chief to whom he has promised this girl
is very powerful, and Tararo must fulfil his
promise. He has told you that he would do nothing
to the girl for three days, but that is because the
party who are to take her away will not be ready to
start for three days. Still, as he might have
made you a prisoner during those three days, I say
that God has given them to us.”
“Well, but what do you propose
to do?” said Jack impatiently.
“My plan involves much danger,
but I see no other, and I think you have courage to
brave it. It is this. There is an island
about fifty miles to the south of this, the natives
of which are Christians, and have been so for two
years or more, and the principal chief is Avatea’s
lover. Once there, Avatea would be safe.
Now, I suggest that you should abandon your schooner.
Do you think that you can make so great a sacrifice?”
“Friend,” replied Jack,
“when I make up my mind to go through with a
thing of importance, I can make any sacrifice.”
The teacher smiled. “Well,
then, the savages could not conceive it possible that
for the sake of a girl you would voluntarily lose your
fine vessel; therefore as long as she lies here they
think they have you all safe: so I suggest that
we get a quantity of stores conveyed to a sequestered
part of the shore, provide a small canoe, put Avatea
on board, and you three would paddle to the Christian
island.”
“Bravo!” cried Peterkin,
springing up and seizing the teacher’s hand.
“Missionary, you’re a regular brick.
I didn’t think you had so much in you.”
“As for me,” continued
the teacher, “I will remain on board till they
discover that you are gone. Then they will ask
me where you are gone to, and I will refuse to tell.”
“And what’ll be the result of that?”
inquired Jack.
“I know not. Perhaps they
will kill me; but,” he added, looking at Jack
with a peculiar smile, “I, too, am not afraid
to die in a good cause!”
“But how are we to get hold of Avatea?”
inquired Jack.
“I have arranged with her to
meet us at a particular spot, to which I will guide
you to-night. We shall then arrange about it.
She will easily manage to elude her keepers, who are
not very strict in watching her, thinking it impossible
that she could escape from the island. Indeed,
I am sure that such an idea will never enter their
heads. But, as I have said, you run great danger.
Fifty miles in a small canoe, on the open sea, is
a great voyage to make. You may miss the island,
too, in which case there is no other in that direction
for a hundred miles or more; and if you lose your
way and fall among other heathens, you know the law
of Feejee—a castaway who gains the shore
is doomed to die. You must count the cost, my
young friend.”
“I have counted it,” replied
Jack. “If Avatea consents to run the risk,
most certainly I will; and so will my comrades also.
Besides,” added Jack, looking seriously into
the teacher’s face, “your Bible—our
Bible—tells of ONE who delivers those who
call on Him in the time of trouble; who holds the
winds in His fists, and the waters in the hollow of
His hand.”
We now set about active preparations
for the intended voyage; collected together such things
as we should require, and laid out on the deck provisions
sufficient to maintain us for several weeks, purposing
to load the canoe with as much as she could hold consistently
with speed and safety. These we covered with
a tarpaulin, intending to convey them to the canoe
only a few hours before starting. When night spread
her sable curtain over the scene, we prepared to land;
but first kneeling along with the natives and the
teacher, the latter implored a blessing on our enterprise.
Then we rowed quietly to the shore and followed our
sable guide, who led us by a long detour, in order
to avoid the village, to the place of rendezvous.
We had not stood more than five minutes under the
gloomy shade of the thick foliage when a dark figure
glided noiselessly up to us.
“Ah! here you are,” said
Jack, as Avatea approached.—“Now,
then, tell her what we’ve come about, and don’t
waste time.”
“I understan’ leetl English,” said
Avatea in a low voice.
“Why, where did you pick up
English?” exclaimed Jack in amazement; “you
were dumb as a stone when I saw you last.”
“She has learned all she knows
of it from me,” said the teacher, “since
she came to the island.”
We now gave Avatea a full explanation
of our plans, entering into all the details, and concealing
none of the danger, so that she might be fully aware
of the risk she ran. As we had anticipated, she
was too glad of the opportunity thus afforded her
to escape from her persecutors to think of the danger
or risk.
“Then you’re willing to go with us, are
you?” said Jack.
“Yis, I willing to go.”
“And you’re not afraid to trust yourself
out on the deep sea so far?”
“No, I not ’fraid to go. Safe with
Christian.”
After some further consultation, the
teacher suggested that it was time to return, so we
bade Avatea good-night, and having appointed to meet
at the cliff where the canoe lay on the following night,
just after dark, we hastened away—we to
row on board the schooner with muffled oars, Avatea
to glide back to her prison-hut among the Mango savages.