7
We stood there, grouped about the
body of the dead Grabritin, looking futilely down
the river to where it made an abrupt curve to the
west, a quarter of a mile below us, and was lost to
sight, as though we expected to see the truant returning
to us with our precious launch—the thing
that meant life or death to us in this unfriendly,
savage world.
I felt, rather than saw, Taylor turn
his eyes slowly toward my profile, and, as mine swung
to meet them, the expression upon his face recalled
me to my duty and responsibility as an officer.
The utter hopelessness that was reflected
in his face must have been the counterpart of what
I myself felt, but in that brief instant I determined
to hide my own misgivings that I might bolster up
the courage of the others.
“We are lost!” was written
as plainly upon Taylor’s face as though his
features were the printed words upon an open book.
He was thinking of the launch, and of the launch
alone. Was I? I tried to think that I was.
But a greater grief than the loss of the launch could
have engendered in me, filled my heart—a
sullen, gnawing misery which I tried to deny—which
I refused to admit—but which persisted in
obsessing me until my heart rose and filled my throat,
and I could not speak when I would have uttered words
of reassurance to my companions.
And then rage came to my relief—rage
against the vile traitor who had deserted three of
his fellow countrymen in so frightful a position.
I tried to feel an equal rage against the woman,
but somehow I could not, and kept searching for excuses
for her—her youth, her inexperience, her
savagery.
My rising anger swept away my temporary
helplessness. I smiled, and told Taylor not
to look so glum.
“We will follow them,”
I said, “and the chances are that we shall overtake
them. They will not travel as rapidly as Snider
probably hopes. He will be forced to halt for
fuel and for food, and the launch must follow the
windings of the river; we can take short cuts while
they are traversing the detour. I have my map—thank
God! I always carry it upon my person—and
with that and the compass we will have an advantage
over them.”
My words seemed to cheer them both,
and they were for starting off at once in pursuit.
There was no reason why we should delay, and we set
forth down the river. As we tramped along, we
discussed a question that was uppermost in the mind
of each—what we should do with Snider when
we had captured him, for with the action of pursuit
had come the optimistic conviction that we should
succeed. As a matter of fact, we had to succeed.
The very thought of remaining in this utter wilderness
for the rest of our lives was impossible.
We arrived at nothing very definite
in the matter of Snider’s punishment, since
Taylor was for shooting him, Delcarte insisting that
he should be hanged, while I, although fully conscious
of the gravity of his offense, could not bring myself
to give the death penalty.
I fell to wondering what charm Victory
had found in such a man as Snider, and why I insisted
upon finding excuses for her and trying to defend
her indefensible act. She was nothing to me.
Aside from the natural gratitude I felt for her since
she had saved my life, I owed her nothing. She
was a half-naked little savage—I, a gentleman,
and an officer in the world’s greatest navy.
There could be no close bonds of interest between
us.
This line of reflection I discovered
to be as distressing as the former, but, though I
tried to turn my mind to other things, it persisted
in returning to the vision of an oval face, sun-tanned;
of smiling lips, revealing white and even teeth; of
brave eyes that harbored no shadow of guile; and of
a tumbling mass of wavy hair that crowned the loveliest
picture on which my eyes had ever rested.
Every time this vision presented itself
I felt myself turn cold with rage and hate against
Snider. I could forgive the launch, but if he
had wronged her he should die—he should
die at my own hands; in this I was determined.
For two days we followed the river
northward, cutting off where we could, but confined
for the most part to the game trails that paralleled
the stream. One afternoon, we cut across a narrow
neck of land that saved us many miles, where the river
wound to the west and back again.
Here we decided to halt, for we had
had a hard day of it, and, if the truth were known,
I think that we had all given up hope of overtaking
the launch other than by the merest accident.
We had shot a deer just before our
halt, and, as Taylor and Delcarte were preparing it,
I walked down to the water to fill our canteens.
I had just finished, and was straightening up, when
something floating around a bend above me caught my
eye. For a moment I could not believe the testimony
of my own senses. It was a boat.
I shouted to Delcarte and Taylor,
who came running to my side.
“The launch!” cried Delcarte;
and, indeed, it was the launch, floating down-river
from above us. Where had it been? How
had we passed it? And how were we to reach it
now, should Snider and the girl discover us?
“It’s drifting,”
said Taylor. “I see no one in it.”
I was stripping off my clothes, and
Delcarte soon followed my example. I told Taylor
to remain on shore with the clothing and rifles.
He might also serve us better there, since it would
give him an opportunity to take a shot at Snider should
the man discover us and show himself.
With powerful strokes we swam out
in the path of the oncoming launch. Being a
stronger swimmer than Delcarte, I soon was far in
the lead, reaching the center of the channel just
as the launch bore down upon me. It was drifting
broadside on. I seized the gunwale and raised
myself quickly, so that my chin topped the side.
I expected a blow the moment that I came within the
view of the occupants, but no blow fell.
Snider lay upon his back in the bottom
of the boat alone. Even before I had clambered
in and stooped above him I knew that he was dead.
Without examining him further, I ran forward to the
control board and pressed the starting button.
To my relief, the mechanism responded—the
launch was uninjured. Coming about, I picked
up Delcarte. He was astounded at the sight that
met his eyes, and immediately fell to examining Snider’s
body for signs of life or an explanation of the manner
in which he met his death.
The fellow had been dead for hours—he
was cold and still. But Delcarte’s search
was not without results, for above Snider’s
heart was a wound, a slit about an inch in length—
such a slit as a sharp knife would make, and in the
dead fingers of one hand was clutched a strand of
long brown hair—Victory’s hair was
brown.
They say that dead men tell no tales,
but Snider told the story of his end as clearly as
though the dead lips had parted and poured forth the
truth. The beast had attacked the girl, and
she had defended her honor.
We buried Snider beside the Rhine,
and no stone marks his last resting place. Beasts
do not require headstones.
Then we set out in the launch, turning
her nose upstream. When I had told Delcarte and
Taylor that I intended searching for the girl, neither
had demurred.
“We had her wrong in our thoughts,”
said Delcarte, “and the least that we can do
in expiation is to find and rescue her.”
We called her name aloud every few
minutes as we motored up the river, but, though we
returned all the way to our former camping place,
we did not find her. I then decided to retrace
our journey, letting Taylor handle the launch, while
Delcarte and I, upon opposite sides of the river, searched
for some sign of the spot where Victory had landed.
We found nothing until we had reached
a point a few miles above the spot where I had first
seen the launch drifting down toward us, and there
I discovered the remnants of a recent camp fire.
That Victory carried flint and steel
I was aware, and that it was she who built the fire
I was positive. But which way had she gone since
she stopped here?
Would she go on down the river, that
she might thus bring herself nearer her own Grabritin,
or would she have sought to search for us upstream,
where she had seen us last?
I had hailed Taylor, and sent him
across the river to take in Delcarte, that the two
might join me and discuss my discovery and our future
plans.
While waiting for them, I stood looking
out over the river, my back toward the woods that
stretched away to the east behind me. Delcarte
was just stepping into the launch upon the opposite
side of the stream, when, without the least warning,
I was violently seized by both arms and about the
waist—three or four men were upon me at
once; my rifle was snatched from my hands and my revolver
from my belt.
I struggled for an instant, but finding
my efforts of no avail, I ceased them, and turned
my head to have a look at my assailants. At
the same time several others of them walked around
in front of me, and, to my astonishment, I found myself
looking upon uniformed soldiery, armed with rifles,
revolvers, and sabers, but with faces as black as
coal.