For a moment the two stood in silence;
Bulan tortured by thoughts of the bitter humiliation
that he must suffer when the girl should learn his
identity; Virginia wondering at the sad lines that
had come into the young man’s face, and at his
silence.
It was the girl who first spoke.
“Who are you,” she asked, “to whom
I owe my safety?”
The man hesitated. To speak
aught than the truth had never occurred to him during
his brief existence. He scarcely knew how to
lie. To him a question demanded but one manner
of reply—the facts. But never before
had he had to face a question where so much depended
upon his answer. He tried to form the bitter,
galling words; but a vision of that lovely face suddenly
transformed with horror and disgust throttled the
name in his throat.
“I am Bulan,” he said, at last, quietly.
“Bulan,” repeated the
girl. “Bulan. Why that is a native
name. You are either an Englishman or an American.
What is your true name?”
“My name is Bulan,” he insisted doggedly.
Virginia Maxon thought that he must
have some good reason of his own for wishing to conceal
his identity. At first she wondered if he could
be a fugitive from justice—the perpetrator
of some horrid crime, who dared not divulge his true
name even in the remote fastness of a Bornean wilderness;
but a glance at his frank and noble countenance drove
every vestige of the traitorous thought from her mind.
Her woman’s intuition was sufficient guarantee
of the nobility of his character.
“Then let me thank you, Mr.
Bulan,” she said, “for the service that
you have rendered a strange and helpless woman.”
He smiled.
“Just Bulan,” he said.
“There is no need for Miss or Mister in the
savage jungle, Virginia.”
The girl flushed at the sudden and
unexpected use of her given name, and was surprised
that she was not offended.
“How do you know my name?” she asked.
Bulan saw that he would get into deep
water if he attempted to explain too much, and, as
is ever the way, discovered that one deception had
led him into another; so he determined to forestall
future embarrassing queries by concocting a story
immediately to explain his presence and his knowledge.
“I lived upon the island near
your father’s camp,” he said. “I
knew you all—by sight.”
“How long have you lived there?”
asked the girl. “We thought the island
uninhabited.”
“All my life,” replied Bulan truthfully.
“It is strange,” she mused.
“I cannot understand it. But the monsters—how
is it that they followed you and obeyed your commands?”
Bulan touched the bull whip that hung
at his side.
“Von Horn taught them to obey this,” he
said.
“He used that upon them?” cried the girl
in horror.
“It was the only way,”
said Bulan. “They were almost brainless—
they could understand nothing else, for they could
not reason.”
Virginia shuddered.
“Where are they now—the balance of
them?” she asked.
“They are dead, poor things,”
he replied, sadly. “Poor, hideous, unloved,
unloving monsters—they gave up their lives
for the daughter of the man who made them the awful,
repulsive creatures that they were.”
“What do you mean?” cried the girl.
“I mean that all have been killed
searching for you, and battling with your enemies.
They were soulless creatures, but they loved the
mean lives they gave up so bravely for you whose father
was the author of their misery— you owe
a great deal to them, Virginia.”
“Poor things,” murmured
the girl, “but yet they are better off, for
without brains or souls there could be no happiness
in life for them. My father did them a hideous
wrong, but it was an unintentional wrong. His
mind was crazed with dwelling upon the wonderful discovery
he had made, and if he wronged them he contemplated
a still more terrible wrong to be inflicted upon me,
his daughter.”
“I do not understand,” said Bulan.
“It was his intention to give
me in marriage to one of his soulless monsters—to
the one he called Number Thirteen. Oh, it is
terrible even to think of the hideousness of it; but
now they are all dead he cannot do it even though
his poor mind, which seems well again, should suffer
a relapse.”
“Why do you loathe them so?”
asked Bulan. “Is it because they are hideous,
or because they are soulless?”
“Either fact were enough to
make them repulsive,” replied the girl, “but
it is the fact that they were without souls that made
them totally impossible— one easily overlooks
physical deformity, but the moral depravity that must
be inherent in a creature without a soul must forever
cut him off from intercourse with human beings.”
“And you think that regardless
of their physical appearance the fact that they were
without souls would have been apparent?” asked
Bulan.
“I am sure of it,” cried
Virginia. “I would know the moment I set
my eyes upon a creature without a soul.”
With all the sorrow that was his,
Bulan could scarce repress a smile, for it was quite
evident either that it was impossible to perceive
a soul, or else that he possessed one.
“Just how do you distinguish
the possessor of a soul?” he asked.
The girl cast a quick glance up at him.
“You are making fun of me,” she said.
“Not at all,” he replied.
“I am just curious as to how souls make themselves
apparent. I have seen men kill one another as
beasts kill. I have seen one who was cruel to
those within his power, yet they were all men with
souls. I have seen eleven soulless monsters die
to save the daughter of a man whom they believed had
wronged them terribly—a man with a soul.
How then am I to know what attributes denote the
possession of the immortal spark? How am I to
know whether or not I possess a soul?”
Virginia smiled.
“You are courageous and honorable
and chivalrous— those are enough to warrant
the belief that you have a soul, were it not apparent
from your countenance that you are of the higher type
of mankind,” she said.
“I hope that you will never
change your opinion of me, Virginia,” said the
man; but he knew that there lay before her a severe
shock, and before him a great sorrow when they should
come to where her father was and the girl should learn
the truth concerning him.
That he did not himself tell her may
be forgiven him, for he had only a life of misery
to look forward to after she should know that he,
too, was equally a soulless monster with the twelve
that had preceded him to a merciful death. He
would have envied them but for the anticipation of
the time that he might be alone with her before she
learned the truth.
As he pondered the future there came
to him the thought that should they never find Professor
Maxon or von Horn the girl need never know but that
he was a human being. He need not lose her then,
but always be near her. The idea grew and with
it the mighty temptation to lead Virginia Maxon far
into the jungle, and keep her forever from the sight
of men. And why not? Had he not saved her
where others had failed? Was she not, by all
that was just and fair, his?
Did he owe any loyalty to either her
father or von Horn? Already he had saved Professor
Maxon’s life, so the obligation, if there was
any, lay all against the older man; and three times
he had saved Virginia. He would be very kind
and good to her. She should be much happier and
a thousand times safer than with those others who
were so poorly equipped to protect her.
As he stood silently gazing out across
the jungle beneath them toward the new sun the girl
watched him in a spell of admiration of his strong
and noble face, and his perfect physique. What
would have been her emotions had she guessed what
thoughts were his! It was she who broke the silence.
“Can you find the way to the
long-house where my father is?” she asked.
Bulan, startled at the question, looked
up from his reverie. The thing must be faced,
then, sooner than he thought. How was he to tell
her of his intention? It occurred to him to
sound her first—possibly she would make
no objection to the plan.
“You are anxious to return?” he asked.
“Why, yes, of course, I am,”
she replied. “My father will be half mad
with apprehension, until he knows that I am safe.
What a strange question, indeed.” Still,
however, she did not doubt the motives of her companion.
“Suppose we should be unable
to find our way to the long-house?” he continued.
“Oh, don’t say such a
thing,” cried the girl. “It would
be terrible. I should die of misery and fright
and loneliness in this awful jungle. Surely you
can find your way to the river— it was
but a short march through the jungle from where we
landed to the spot at which you took me away from
that fearful Malay.”
The girl’s words cast a cloud
over Bulan’s hopes. The future looked less
roseate with the knowledge that she would be unhappy
in the life that he had been mapping for them.
He was silent—thinking. In his breast
a riot of conflicting emotions were waging the first
great battle which was to point the trend of the man’s
character—would the selfish and the base
prevail, or would the noble?
With the thought of losing her his
desire for her companionship became almost a mania.
To return her to her father and von Horn would be
to lose her— of that there could be no
doubt, for they would not leave her long in ignorance
of his origin. Then, in addition to being deprived
of her forever, he must suffer the galling mortification
of her scorn.
It was a great deal to ask of a fledgling
morality that was yet scarcely cognizant of its untried
wings; but even as the man wavered between right and
wrong there crept into his mind the one great and
burning question of his life—had he a soul?
And he knew that upon his decision of the fate of
Virginia Maxon rested to some extent the true answer
to that question, for, unconsciously, he had worked
out his own crude soul hypothesis which imparted to
this invisible entity the power to direct his actions
only for good. Therefore he reasoned that wickedness
presupposed a small and worthless soul, or the entire
lack of one.
That she would hate a soulless creature
he accepted as a foregone conclusion. He desired
her respect, and that fact helped him to his final
decision, but the thing that decided him was born
of the truly chivalrous nature he possessed—he
wanted Virginia Maxon to be happy; it mattered not
at what cost to him.
The girl had been watching him closely
as he stood silently thinking after her last words.
She did not know the struggle that the calm face
hid; yet she felt that the dragging moments were big
with the question of her fate.
“Well?” she said at length.
“We must eat first,” he
replied in a matter-of-fact tone, and not at all as
though he was about to renounce his life’s happiness,
“and then we shall set out in search of your
father. I shall take you to him, Virginia, if
man can find him.”
“I knew that you could,”
she said, simply, “but how my father and I ever
can repay you I do not know—do you?”
“Yes,” said Bulan, and
there was a sudden rush of fire to his eyes that kept
Virginia Maxon from urging a detailed explanation
of just how she might repay him.
In truth she did not know whether
to be angry, or frightened, or glad of the truth that
she read there; or mortified that it had awakened
in her a realization that possibly an analysis of
her own interest in this young stranger might reveal
more than she had imagined.
The constraint that suddenly fell
upon them was relieved when Bulan motioned her to
follow him back down the trail into the gorge in search
of food. There they sat together upon a fallen
tree beside a tiny rivulet, eating the fruit that
the man gathered. Often their eyes met as they
talked, but always the girl’s fell before the
open worship of the man’s.
Many were the men who had looked in
admiration at Virginia Maxon in the past, but never,
she felt, with eyes so clean and brave and honest.
There was no guile or evil in them, and because of
it she wondered all the more that she could not face
them.
“What a wonderful soul those
eyes portray,” she thought, “and how perfectly
they assure the safety of my life and honor while
their owner is near me.”
And the man thought: “Would
that I owned a soul that I might aspire to live always
near her—always to protect her.”
When they had eaten the two set out
once more in search of the river, and the confidence
that is born of ignorance was theirs, so that beyond
each succeeding tangled barrier of vines and creepers
they looked to see the swirling stream that would
lead them to the girl’s father.
On and on they trudged, the man often
carrying the girl across the rougher obstacles and
through the little streams that crossed their path,
until at last came noon, and yet no sign of the river
they sought. The combined jungle craft of the
two had been insufficient either to trace the way
that they had come, or point the general direction
of the river.
As the afternoon drew to a close Virginia
Maxon commenced to lose heart—she was confident
that they were lost. Bulan made no pretence
of knowing the way, the most that he would say being
that eventually they must come to the river.
As a matter-of-fact had it not been for the girl’s
evident concern he would have been glad to know that
they were irretrievably lost; but for her sake his
efforts to find the river were conscientious.
When at last night closed down upon
them the girl was, at heart, terror stricken, but
she hid her true state from the man, because she knew
that their plight was no fault of his. The strange
and uncanny noises of the jungle night filled her
with the most dreadful forebodings, and when a cold,
drizzling rain set in upon them her cup of misery
was full.
Bulan rigged a rude shelter for her,
making her lie down beneath it, and then he removed
his Dyak war-coat and threw it over her, but it was
hours before her exhausted body overpowered her nervous
fright and won a fitful and restless slumber.
Several times Virginia became obsessed with the idea
that Bulan had left her alone there in the jungle,
but when she called his name he answered from close
beside her shelter.
She thought that he had reared another
for himself nearby, but even the thought that he might
sleep filled her with dread, yet she would not call
to him again, since she knew that he needed his rest
even more than she. And all the night Bulan
stood close beside the woman he had learned to love—
stood almost naked in the chill night air and the cold
rain, lest some savage man or beast creep out of the
darkness after her while he slept.
The next day with its night, and the
next, and the next were but repetitions of the first.
It had become an agony of suffering for the man to
fight off sleep longer. The girl read part of
the truth in his heavy eyes and worn face, and tried
to force him to take needed rest, but she did not
guess that he had not slept for four days and nights.
At last abused Nature succumbed to
the terrific strain that had been put upon her, and
the giant constitution of the man went down before
the cold and the wet, weakened and impoverished by
loss of sleep and insufficient food; for through the
last two days he had been able to find but little,
and that little he had given to the girl, telling
her that he had eaten his fill while he gathered hers.
It was on the fifth morning, when
Virginia awoke, that she found Bulan rolling and tossing
upon the wet ground before her shelter, delirious
with fever. At the sight of the mighty figure
reduced to pitiable inefficiency and weakness, despite
the knowledge that her protector could no longer protect,
the fear of the jungle faded from the heart of the
young girl—she was no more a weak and trembling
daughter of an effete civilization. Instead she
was a lioness, watching over and protecting her sick
mate. The analogy did not occur to her, but
something else did as she saw the flushed face and
fever wracked body of the man whose appeal to her
she would have thought purely physical had she given
the subject any analytic consideration; and as a realization
of his utter helplessness came to her she bent over
him and kissed first his forehead and then his lips.
“What a noble and unselfish
love yours has been,” she murmured. “You
have even tried to hide it that my position might
be the easier to bear, and now that it may be too
late I learn that I love you—that I have
always loved you. Oh, Bulan, my Bulan, what a
cruel fate that permitted us to find one another only
to die together!”
16