I TURNED again and went on down towards
the sea. I found the hot stream broadened out
to a shallow, weedy sand, in which an abundance of
crabs and long-bodied, many-legged creatures started
from my footfall. I walked to the very edge of
the salt water, and then I felt I was safe. I
turned and stared, arms akimbo, at the thick green
behind me, into which the steamy ravine cut like a
smoking gash. But, as I say, I was too full of
excitement and (a true saying, though those who have
never known danger may doubt it) too desperate to
die.
Then it came into my head that there
was one chance before me yet. While Moreau and
Montgomery and their bestial rabble chased me through
the island, might I not go round the beach until I
came to their enclosure,—make a flank march
upon them, in fact, and then with a rock lugged out
of their loosely-built wall, perhaps, smash in the
lock of the smaller door and see what I could find
(knife, pistol, or what not) to fight them with when
they returned? It was at any rate something to
try.
So I turned to the westward and walked
along by the water’s edge. The setting
sun flashed his blinding heat into my eyes. The
slight Pacific tide was running in with a gentle ripple.
Presently the shore fell away southward, and the sun
came round upon my right hand. Then suddenly,
far in front of me, I saw first one and then several
figures emerging from the bushes,—Moreau,
with his grey staghound, then Montgomery, and two others.
At that I stopped.
They saw me, and began gesticulating
and advancing. I stood watching them approach.
The two Beast Men came running forward to cut me
off from the undergrowth, inland. Montgomery
came, running also, but straight towards me.
Moreau followed slower with the dog.
At last I roused myself from my inaction,
and turning seaward walked straight into the water.
The water was very shallow at first. I was thirty
yards out before the waves reached to my waist.
Dimly I could see the intertidal creatures darting
away from my feet.
“What are you doing, man?” cried Montgomery.
I turned, standing waist deep, and
stared at them. Montgomery stood panting at the
margin of the water. His face was bright-red
with exertion, his long flaxen hair blown about his
head, and his dropping nether lip showed his irregular
teeth. Moreau was just coming up, his face pale
and firm, and the dog at his hand barked at me.
Both men had heavy whips. Farther up the beach
stared the Beast Men.
“What am I doing? I am going to drown
myself,” said I.
Montgomery and Moreau looked at each other.
“Why?” asked Moreau.
“Because that is better than being tortured
by you.”
“I told you so,” said
Montgomery, and Moreau said something in a low tone.
“What makes you think I shall torture you?”
asked Moreau.
“What I saw,” I said. “And
those—yonder.”
“Hush!” said Moreau, and held up his hand.
“I will not,” said I. “They
were men: what are they now?
I at least will not be like them.”
I looked past my interlocutors.
Up the beach were M’ling, Montgomery’s
attendant, and one of the white-swathed brutes from
the boat. Farther up, in the shadow of the trees,
I saw my little Ape-man, and behind him some other
dim figures.
“Who are these creatures?”
said I, pointing to them and raising my voice more
and more that it might reach them. “They
were men, men like yourselves, whom you have infected
with some bestial taint,—men whom you have
enslaved, and whom you still fear.
“You who listen,” I cried,
pointing now to Moreau and shouting past him to the
Beast Men,—“You who listen!
Do you not see these men still fear you, go in dread
of you? Why, then, do you fear them? You
are many—”
“For God’s sake,” cried Montgomery,
“stop that, Prendick!”
“Prendick!” cried Moreau.
They both shouted together, as if
to drown my voice; and behind them lowered the staring
faces of the Beast Men, wondering, their deformed
hands hanging down, their shoulders hunched up.
They seemed, as I fancied, to be trying to understand
me, to remember, I thought, something of their human
past.
I went on shouting, I scarcely remember
what,—that Moreau and Montgomery could
be killed, that they were not to be feared: that
was the burden of what I put into the heads of the
Beast People. I saw the green-eyed man in the
dark rags, who had met me on the evening of my arrival,
come out from among the trees, and others followed
him, to hear me better. At last for want of breath
I paused.
“Listen to me for a moment,”
said the steady voice of Moreau; “and then say
what you will.”
“Well?” said I.
He coughed, thought, then shouted:
“Latin, Prendick! bad Latin, schoolboy Latin;
but try and understand. Hi non sunt homines;
sunt animalia qui nos habemus—vivisected.
A humanising process. I will explain.
Come ashore.”
I laughed. “A pretty story,”
said I. “They talk, build houses.
They were men. It’s likely I’ll come
ashore.”
“The water just beyond where
you stand is deep—and full of sharks.”
“That’s my way,” said I. “Short
and sharp. Presently.”
“Wait a minute.”
He took something out of his pocket that flashed back
the sun, and dropped the object at his feet.
“That’s a loaded revolver,” said
he. “Montgomery here will do the same.
Now we are going up the beach until you are satisfied
the distance is safe. Then come and take the
revolvers.”
“Not I! You have a third between you.”
“I want you to think over things,
Prendick. In the first place, I never asked
you to come upon this island. If we vivisected
men, we should import men, not beasts. In the
next, we had you drugged last night, had we wanted
to work you any mischief; and in the next, now your
first panic is over and you can think a little, is
Montgomery here quite up to the character you give
him? We have chased you for your good.
Because this island is full of inimical phenomena.
Besides, why should we want to shoot you when you
have just offered to drown yourself?”
“Why did you set—your
people onto me when I was in the hut?”
“We felt sure of catching you,
and bringing you out of danger. Afterwards we
drew away from the scent, for your good.”
I mused. It seemed just possible.
Then I remembered something again. “But
I saw,” said I, “in the enclosure—”
“That was the puma.”
“Look here, Prendick,” said Montgomery,
“you’re a silly ass!
Come out of the water and take these revolvers, and
talk.
We can’t do anything more than we could do now.”
I will confess that then, and indeed
always, I distrusted and dreaded Moreau; but Montgomery
was a man I felt I understood.
“Go up the beach,” said
I, after thinking, and added, “holding your
hands up.”
“Can’t do that,”
said Montgomery, with an explanatory nod over his
shoulder. “Undignified.”
“Go up to the trees, then,” said I, “as
you please.”
“It’s a damned silly ceremony,”
said Montgomery.
Both turned and faced the six or seven
grotesque creatures, who stood there in the sunlight,
solid, casting shadows, moving, and yet so incredibly
unreal. Montgomery cracked his whip at them,
and forthwith they all turned and fled helter-skelter
into the trees; and when Montgomery and Moreau were
at a distance I judged sufficient, I waded ashore,
and picked up and examined the revolvers. To
satisfy myself against the subtlest trickery, I discharged
one at a round lump of lava, and had the satisfaction
of seeing the stone pulverised and the beach splashed
with lead. Still I hesitated for a moment.
“I’ll take the risk,”
said I, at last; and with a revolver in each hand
I walked up the beach towards them.
“That’s better,”
said Moreau, without affectation. “As it
is, you have wasted the best part of my day with your
confounded imagination.” And with a touch
of contempt which humiliated me, he and Montgomery
turned and went on in silence before me.
The knot of Beast Men, still wondering,
stood back among the trees. I passed them as
serenely as possible. One started to follow me,
but retreated again when Montgomery cracked his whip.
The rest stood silent—watching.
They may once have been animals; but I never before
saw an animal trying to think.