THE VILLAGE OF YOKA
For several minutes Barbara Harding
lay where she had collapsed after the keen short sword
of the daimio had freed her from the menace of his
lust.
She was in a half-stupor that took
cognizance only of a freezing terror and exhaustion.
Presently, however, she became aware of her contact
with the corpse beside her, and with a stifled cry
she shrank away from it.
Slowly the girl regained her self-control
and with it came the realization of the extremity
of her danger. She rose to a sitting posture
and turned her wide eyes toward the doorway to the
adjoining room—the women and children seemed
yet wrapped in slumber. It was evident that
the man’s scream had not disturbed them.
Barbara gained her feet and moved
softly to the doorway. She wondered if she
could cross the intervening space to the outer exit
without detection. Once in the open she could
flee to the jungle, and then there was a chance at
least that she might find her way to the coast and
Theriere.
She gripped the short sword which
she still held, and took a step into the larger room.
One of the women turned and half roused from sleep.
The girl shrank back into the darkness of the chamber
she had just quitted. The woman sat up and looked
around. Then she rose and threw some sticks upon
the fire that burned at one side of the dwelling.
She crossed to a shelf and took down a cooking utensil.
Barbara saw that she was about to commence the preparation
of breakfast.
All hope of escape was thus ended,
and the girl cautiously closed the door between the
two rooms. Then she felt about the smaller apartment
for some heavy object with which to barricade herself;
but her search was fruitless. Finally she bethought
herself of the corpse. That would hold the door
against the accident of a child or dog pushing it open—it
would be better than nothing, but could she bring herself
to touch the loathsome thing?
The instinct of self-preservation
will work wonders even with a frail and delicate woman.
Barbara Harding steeled herself to the task, and
after several moments of effort she succeeded in rolling
the dead man against the door. The scraping
sound of the body as she dragged it into position
had sent cold shivers running up her spine.
She had removed the man’s long
sword and armor before attempting to move him, and
now she crouched beside the corpse with both the swords
beside her—she would sell her life dearly.
Theriere’s words came back to her now as they
had when she was struggling in the water after the
wreck of the Halfmoon: “but, by George,
I intend to go down fighting.” Well, she
could do no less.
She could hear the movement of several
persons in the next room now. The voices of
women and children came to her distinctly. Many
of the words were Japanese, but others were of a tongue
with which she was not familiar.
Presently her own chamber began to
lighten. She looked over her shoulder and saw
the first faint rays of dawn showing through a small
aperture near the roof and at the opposite end of
the room. She rose and moved quickly toward it.
By standing on tiptoe and pulling herself up a trifle
with her hands upon the sill she was able to raise
her eyes above the bottom of the window frame.
Beyond she saw the forest, not a hundred
yards away; but when she attempted to crawl through
the opening she discovered to her chagrin that it
was too small to permit the passage of her body.
And then there came a knocking on the door she had
just quitted, and a woman’s voice calling her
lord and master to his morning meal.
Barbara ran quickly across the chamber
to the door, the long sword raised above her head
in both hands. Again the woman knocked, this
time much louder, and raised her voice as she called
again upon Oda Yorimoto to come out.
The girl within was panic-stricken.
What should she do? With but a little respite
she might enlarge the window sufficiently to permit
her to escape into the forest, but the woman at the
door evidently would not be denied. Suddenly
an inspiration came to her. It was a forlorn
hope, but well worth putting to the test.
“Hush!” she hissed through
the closed door. “Oda Yorimoto sleeps.
It is his wish that he be not disturbed.”
For a moment there was silence beyond
the door, and then the woman grunted, and Barbara
heard her turn back, muttering to herself. The
girl breathed a deep sigh of relief—she
had received a brief reprieve from death.
Again she turned to the window, where,
with the short sword, she commenced her labor of enlarging
it to permit the passage of her body. The work
was necessarily slow because of the fact that it must
proceed with utter noiselessness.
For an hour she worked, and then again
came an interruption at the door. This time
it was a man.
“Oda Yorimoto still sleeps,”
whispered the girl. “Go away and do not
disturb him. He will be very angry if you awaken
him.”
But the man would not be put off so
easily as had the woman. He still insisted.
“The daimio has ordered that
there shall be a great hunt today for the heads of
the sei-yo-jin who have landed upon Yoka,” persisted
the man. “He will be angry indeed if we
do not call him in time to accomplish the task today.
Let me speak with him, woman. I do not believe
that Oda Yorimoto still sleeps. Why should I
believe one of the sei-yo-jin? It may be that
you have bewitched the daimio,” and with that
he pushed against the door.
The corpse gave a little, and the
man glued his eyes to the aperture. Barbara
held the sword behind her, and with her shoulder against
the door attempted to reclose it.
“Go away!” she cried.
“I shall be killed if you awaken Oda Yorimoto,
and, if you enter, you, too, shall be killed.”
The man stepped back from the door,
and Barbara could hear him in low converse with some
of the women of the household. A moment later
he returned, and without a word of warning threw his
whole weight against the portal. The corpse
slipped back enough to permit the entrance of the
man’s body, and as he stumbled into the room
the long sword of the Lord of Yoka fell full and keen
across the back of his brown neck.
Without a sound he lunged to the floor,
dead; but the women without had caught a fleeting
glimpse of what had taken place within the little
chamber, even before Barbara Harding could slam the
door again, and with shrieks of rage and fright they
rushed into the main street of the village shouting
at the tops of their voices that Oda Yorimoto and
Hawa Nisho had been slain by the woman of the sei-yo-jin.
Instantly, the village swarmed with
samurai, women, children, and dogs. They rushed
toward the hut of Oda Yorimoto, filling the outer
chamber where they jabbered excitedly for several
minutes, the warriors attempting to obtain a coherent
story from the moaning women of the daimio’s
household.
Barbara Harding crouched close to
the door, listening. She knew that the crucial
moment was at hand; that there were at best but a
few moments for her to live. A silent prayer
rose from her parted lips. She placed the sharp
point of Oda Yorimoto’s short sword against
her breast, and waited— waited for the
coming of the men from the room beyond, snatching
a few brief seconds from eternity ere she drove the
weapon into her heart.
Theriere plunged through the jungle
at a run for several minutes before he caught sight
of the mucker.
“Are you still on the trail?”
he called to the man before him.
“Sure,” replied Byrne.
“It’s dead easy. They must o’
been at least a dozen of ’em. Even a mutt
like me couldn’t miss it.”
“We want to go carefully, Byrne,”
cautioned Theriere. “I’ve had experience
with these fellows before, and I can tell you that
you never know when one of ’em is near you till
you feel a spear in your back, unless you’re
almighty watchful. We’ve got to make all
the haste we can, of course, but it won’t help
Miss Harding any if we rush into an ambush and get
our heads lopped off.”
Byrne saw the wisdom of his companion’s
advice and tried to profit by it; but something which
seemed to dominate him today carried him ahead at
reckless, breakneck speed—the flight of
an eagle would have been all too slow to meet the
requirements of his unaccountable haste.
Once he found himself wondering why
he was risking his life to avenge or rescue this girl
whom he hated so. He tried to think that it
was for the ransom—yes, that was it, the
ransom. If he found her alive, and rescued her
he should claim the lion’s share of the booty.
Theriere too wondered why Byrne, of
all the other men upon the Halfmoon the last that
he should have expected to risk a thing for the sake
of Miss Harding, should be the foremost in pursuit
of her captors.
“I wonder how far behind Sanders
and Wison are,” he remarked to Byrne after they
had been on the trail for the better part of an hour.
“Hadn’t we better wait for them to catch
up with us? Four can do a whole lot more than
two.”
“Not wen Billy Byrne’s
one of de two,” replied the mucker, and continued
doggedly along the trail.
Another half-hour brought them suddenly
in sight of a native village, and Billy Byrne was
for dashing straight into the center of it and “cleaning
it up,” as he put it, but Theriere put his foot
down firmly on that proposition, and finally Byrne
saw that the other was right.
“The trail leads straight toward
that place,” said Theriere, “so I suppose
here is where they brought her, but which of the huts
she’s in now we ought to try to determine before
we make any attempt to rescue her. Well, by
George! Now what do you think of that?”
“Tink o’ wot?” asked
the mucker. “Wot’s eatin’ yeh?”
“See those three men down there
in the village, Byrne?” asked the Frenchman.
“They’re no more aboriginal headhunters
than I am—they’re Japs, man.
There must be something wrong with our trailing,
for it’s as certain as fate itself that Japs
are not head-hunters.”
“There ain’t been nothin’
fony about our trailin’, bo,” insisted
Byrne, “an’ whether Japs are bean collectors
or not here’s where de ginks dat copped de doll
hiked fer, an if dey ain’t dere now it’s
because dey went t’rough an’ out de odder
side, see.”
“Hush, Byrne,” whispered
Theriere. “Drop down behind this bush.
Someone is coming along this other trail to the right
of us,” and as he spoke he dragged the mucker
down beside him.
For a moment they crouched, breathless
and expectant, and then the slim figure of an almost
nude boy emerged from the foliage close beside and
entered the trail toward the village. Upon
his head he bore a bundle of firewood.
When he was directly opposite the
watchers Theriere sprang suddenly upon him, clapping
a silencing hand over the boy’s mouth.
In Japanese he whispered a command for silence.
“We shall not harm you if you
keep still,” he said, “and answer our
questions truthfully. What village is that?”
“It is the chief city of Oda
Yorimoto, Lord of Yoka,” replied the youth.
“I am Oda Iseka, his son.”
“And the large hut in the center
of the village street is the palace of Oda Yorimoto?”
guessed Theriere shrewdly.
“It is.”
The Frenchman was not unversed in
the ways of orientals, and he guessed also that if
the white girl were still alive in the village she
would be in no other hut than that of the most powerful
chief; but he wished to verify his deductions if possible.
He knew that a direct question as to the whereabouts
of the girl would call forth either a clever oriental
evasion or an equally clever oriental lie.
“Does Oda Yorimoto intend slaying
the white woman that was brought to his house last
night?” asked Theriere.
“How should the son know the
intentions of his father?” replied the boy.
“Is she still alive?” continued Theriere.
“How should I know, who was
asleep when she was brought, and only heard the womenfolk
this morning whispering that Oda Yorimoto had brought
home a new woman the night before.”
“Could you not see her with
your own eyes?” asked Theriere.
“My eyes cannot pass through
the door of the little room behind, in which they
still were when I left to gather firewood a half hour
since,” retorted the youth.
“Wot’s de Chink sayin’?”
asked Billy Byrne, impatient of the conversation,
no word of which was intelligible to him.
“He says, in substance,”
replied Theriere, with a grin, “that Miss Harding
is still alive, and in the back room of that largest
hut in the center of the village street; but,”
and his face clouded, “Oda Yorimoto, the chief
of the tribe, is with her.”
The mucker sprang to his feet with
an oath, and would have bolted for the village had
not Theriere laid a detaining hand upon his shoulder.
“It is too late, my friend,”
he said sadly, “to make haste now. We
may, if we are cautious, be able to save her life,
and later, possibly, avenge her wrong. Let us
act coolly, and after some manner of plan, so that
we may work together, and not throw our lives away
uselessly. The chance is that neither of us
will come out of that village alive, but we must minimize
that chance to the utmost if we are to serve Miss Harding.”
“Well, wot’s de word?”
asked the mucker, for he saw that Theriere was right.
“The jungle approaches the village
most closely on the opposite side—the side
in rear of the chief’s hut,” pointed out
Theriere. “We must circle about until we
can reach that point undetected, then we may formulate
further plans from what our observations there develop.”
“An’ dis?” Byrne shoved a thumb
at Oda Iseka.
“We’ll take him with us—it
wouldn’t be safe to let him go now.”
“Why not croak him?” suggested Byrne.
“Not unless we have to,”
replied Theriere; “he’s just a boy—we’ll
doubtless have all the killing we want among the men
before we get out of this.”
“I never did have no use fer
Chinks,” said the mucker, as though in extenuation
of his suggestion that they murder the youth.
For some unaccountable reason he had felt a sudden
compunction because of his thoughtless remark.
What in the world was coming over him, he wondered.
He’d be wearing white pants and playing lawn
tennis presently if he continued to grow much softer
and more unmanly.
So the three set out through the jungle,
following a trail which led around to the north of
the village. Theriere walked ahead with the
boy’s arm in his grasp. Byrne followed
closely behind. They reached their destination
in the rear of Oda Yorimoto’s “palace”
without interruption or detection. Here they
reconnoitered through the thick foliage.
“Dere’s a little winder
in de back of de house,” said Byrne.
“Dat must be where dem guys cooped up de little
broiler.”
“Yes,” said Theriere,
“it would be in the back room which the boy
described. First let’s tie and gag this
young heathen, and then we can proceed to business
without fear of alarm from him,” and the Frenchman
stripped a long, grass rope from about the waist of
his prisoner, with which he was securely trussed up,
a piece of his loin cloth being forced into his mouth
as a gag, and secured there by another strip, torn
from the same garment, which was passed around the
back of the boy’s head.
“Rather uncomfortable, I imagine,”
commented Theriere; “but not particularly painful
or dangerous—and now to business!”
“I’m goin’ to make
a break fer dat winder,” announced the mucker,
“and youse squat here in de tall grass wid yer
gat an’ pick off any fresh guys dat get gay
in back here. Den, if I need youse you can come
a-runnin’ an’ open up all over de shop
wid de artillery, or if I gets de lizzie outen de jug
an’ de Chinks push me too clost youse’ll
be here where yeh can pick ’em off easy-like.”
“You’ll be taking all
the risk that way, Byrne,” objected Theriere,
“and that’s not fair.”
“One o’ us is pretty sure
to get hurted,” explained the mucker in defense
of his plan, “an, if it’s a croak it’s
a lot better dat it be me than youse, fer the girl
wouldn’t be crazy about bein’ lef’
alone wid me—she ain’t got no use
fer the likes o’ me. Now youse are her
kin, an’ so youse stay here w’ere yeh
can help her after I git her out—I don’t
want nothing to do wid her anyhow. She gives
me a swift pain, and,” he added as though it
were an after-thought, “I ain’t got no
use fer dat ransom eider—youse can have
dat, too.”
“Hold on, Byrne,” cried
Theriere; “I have something to say, too.
I do not see how I can expect you to believe me; but
under the circumstances, when one of us and maybe both
are pretty sure to die before the day is much older,
it wouldn’t be worth while lying. I do
not want that damned ransom any more, either.
I only want to do what I can to right the wrong that
I have helped to perpetrate against Miss Harding.
I—I— Byrne, I love her.
I shall never tell her so, for I am not the sort
of man a decent girl would care to marry; but I did
want the chance to make a clean breast to her of all
my connection with the whole dirty business, and get
her forgiveness if I could; but first I wanted to
prove my repentance by helping her to civilization
in safety, and delivering her to her friends without
the payment of a cent of money. I may never be
able to do that now; but if I die in the attempt,
and you don’t, I wish that you would tell her
what I have just told you. Paint me as black
as you can—you couldn’t commence to
make me as black as I have been—but let
her know that for love of her I turned white at the
last minute. Byrne, she is the best girl that
you or I ever saw—we’re not fit to
breathe the same air that she breathes. Now
you can see why I should like to go first.”
“I t’ought youse was soft
on her,” replied the mucker, “an’
dat’s de reason w’y youse otter not go
first; but wot’s de use o’ chewin’,
les flip a coin to see w’ich goes an w’ich
stays— got one?”
Theriere felt in his trousers’
pocket, fishing out a dime.
“Heads, you go; tails, I go,”
he said and spun the silver piece in the air, catching
it in the flat of his open palm.
“It’s heads,” said
the mucker, grinning. “Gee! Wot’s
de racket?”
Both men turned toward the village,
where a jabbering mob of half-caste Japanese had suddenly
appeared in the streets, hurrying toward the hut of
Oda Yorimoto.
“Somepin doin’, eh?”
said the mucker. “Well, here goes—
s’long!” And he broke from the cover of
the jungle and dashed across the clearing toward the
rear of Oda Yorimoto’s hut.