One member of the Braddock household
was not included in the general staff, being a mere
appendage of the Professor himself. This was a
dwarfish, misshapen Kanaka, a pigmy in height, but
a giant in breadth, with short, thick legs, and long,
powerful arms. He had a large head, and a somewhat
handsome face, with melancholy black eyes and a fine
set of white teeth. Like most Polynesians, his
skin was of a pale bronze and elaborately tattooed,
even the cheeks and chin being scored with curves
and straight lines of mystical import. But the
most noticeable thing about him was his huge mop of
frizzled hair, which, by some process, known only
to himself, he usually dyed a vivid yellow. The
flaring locks streaming from his head made him resemble
a Peruvian image of the sun, and it was this peculiar
coiffure which had procured for him the odd name of
Cockatoo. The fact that this grotesque creature
invariably wore a white drill suit, emphasized still
more the suggestion of his likeness to an Australian
parrot.
Cockatoo had come from the Solomon
Islands in his teens to the colony of Queensland,
to work on the plantations, and there the Professor
had picked him up as his body servant. When Braddock
returned to marry Mrs. Kendal, the boy had refused
to leave him, although it was represented to the young
savage that he was somewhat too barbaric for sober
England. Finally, the Professor had consented
to bring him over seas, and had never regretted doing
so, for Cockatoo, finding his scientific master a
true friend, worshipped him as a visible god.
Having been captured when young by Pacific black-birders,
he talked excellent English, and from contact with
the necessary restraints of civilization was, on the
whole, extremely well behaved. Occasionally,
when teased by the villagers and his fellow-servants,
he would break into childish rages, which bordered
on the dangerous. But a word from Braddock always
quieted him, and when penitent he would crawl like
a whipped dog to the feet of his divinity. For
the most part he lived entirely in the museum, looking
after the collection and guarding it from harm.
Lucy who had a horror of the creature’s
uncanny looks objected to Cockatoo waiting
at the table, and it was only on rare occasions that
he was permitted to assist the harassed parlormaid.
On this night the Kanaka acted excellently as a butler,
and crept softly round the table, attending to the
needs of the diners. He was an admirable servant,
deft and handy, but his blue-lined face and squat
figure together with the obtrusively golden halo, rather
worried Mrs. Jasher. And, indeed, in spite of
custom, Lucy also felt uncomfortable when this gnome
hovered at her elbow. It looked as though one
of the fantastical idols from the museum below had
come to haunt the living.
“I do not like that Golliwog,”
breathed Mrs. Jasher to her host, when Cockatoo was
at the sideboard. “He gives me the creeps.”
“Imagination, my dear lady,
pure imagination. Why should we not have a picturesque
animal to wait upon us?”
“He would wait picturesquely
enough at a cannibal feast,” suggested Archie,
with a laugh.
“Don’t!” murmured
Lucy, with a shiver. “I shall not be able
to eat my dinner if you talk so.”
“Odd that Hope should say what
he has said,” observed Braddock confidently
to the widow. “Cockatoo comes from a cannibal
island, and doubtless has seen the consumption of
human flesh. No, no, my dear lady, do not look
so alarmed. I don’t think he has eaten any,
as he was taken to Queensland long before he could
participate in such banquets. He is a very decent
animal.”
“A very dangerous one, I fancy,”
retorted Mrs. Jasher, who looked pale.
“Only when he loses his temper,
and I’m always able to suppress that when it
is at its worst. You are not eating your meat,
my dear lady.”
“Can you wonder at it, and you talk of cannibals?”
“Let us change the conversation
to cereals,” suggested Hope, whose appetite
was of the best “wheat, for instance.
In this queer little village I notice the houses are
divided by a field of wheat. It seems wrong somehow
for corn to be bunched up with houses.”
“That’s old Farmer Jenkins,”
said Lucy vivaciously; “he owns three or four
acres near the public-house and will not allow them
to be built over, although he has been offered a lot
of money. I noticed myself, Archie, the oddity
of finding a cornfield surrounded by cottages.
It’s like Alice in Wonderland.”
“But fancy any one offering
money for land here,” observed Hope, toying
with his claret glass, which had just been refilled,
by the attentive Cockatoo, “at the Back-of-Beyond,
as it were. I shouldn’t care to live here the
neighborhood is so desolate.”
“All the same you do live here!”
interposed Mrs. Jasher smartly, and with a roguish
glance at Lucy.
Archie caught the glance and saw the
blush on Miss Kendal’s face.
“You have answered your question
yourself, Mrs. Jasher,” he said,
smiling. “I have the inducement you hint
at to remain here, and certainly, as a landscape painter,
I admire the marshes and sunsets. As an artist
and an engaged man I stop in Gartley, otherwise I should
clear out. But I fail to see why a lady of your
attractions should ”
“I may have a sentimental reason
also,” interrupted the widow, with a sly glance
at the absent-minded Professor, who was drawing hieroglyphics
on the table-cloth with a fork; “also, my cottage
is cheap and very comfortable. The late Mr. Jasher
did not leave me sufficient money to live in London.
He was a consul in China, you know, and consuls are
never very well paid. I will come in for a large
income, however.”
“Indeed,” said Lucy politely,
and wondering why Mrs. Jasher was so communicative.
“Soon I hope.”
“It may be very soon. My
brother, you know a merchant in Pekin.
He has come home to die, and is unmarried. When
he does die, I shall go to London. But,”
added the widow, meditatively and glancing again at
the Professor, “I shall be sorry to leave dear
Gartley. Still, the memory of happy hours spent
in this house will always remain with me. Ah me!
ah me!” and she put her handkerchief to her
eyes.
Lucy telegraphed to Archie that the
widow was a humbug, and Archie telegraphed back that
he quite agreed with her. But the Professor, whom
the momentary silence had brought back to the present
century, looked up and asked Lucy if the dinner was
finished.
“I have to do some work this
evening,” said the Professor.
“Oh, father, when you said that
you would take a holiday,” said Lucy reproachfully.
“I am doing so now. Look
at the precious minutes I am wasting in eating, my
dear. Life is short and much remains to be done
in the way of Egyptian exploration. There is
the sepulchre of Queen Tahoser. If I could only
enter that,” and he sighed, while helping himself
to cream.
“Why don’t you?”
asked Mrs. Jasher, who was beginning to give up her
pursuit of Braddock, for it was no use wooing a man
whose interests centered entirely in Egyptian tombs.
“I have yet to discover it,”
said the Professor simply; then, warming to the congenial
theme, he glanced around and delivered a short historical
lecture. “Tahoser was the chief wife and
queen of a famous Pharaoh the Pharaoh of
the Exodus, in fact.”
“The one who was drowned in
the Red Sea?” asked Archie idly.
“Why, yes but that
happened later. Before pursuing the Hebrews, if
the Mosaic account is to be believed, this
Pharaoh marched far into the interior of Africa, the
Libya of the ancients, and conquered the
natives of Upper Ethiopia. Being deeply in love
with his queen, he took her with him on this expedition,
and she died before the Pharaoh returned to Memphis.
From records which I discovered in the museum of Cairo,
I have reason to believe that the Pharaoh buried her
with much pomp in Ethiopia, sacrificing, I believe,
many prisoners at her gorgeous funeral rites.
From the wealth of that Pharaoh for wealthy
he must have been on account of his numerous victories and
from the love he bore this princess, I am confident confident,”
added Braddock, striking the table vehemently, “that
when discovered, her tomb will be filled with riches,
and may also contain documents of incalculable value.”
“And you wish to get the money?”
asked Mrs. Jasher, who was rather bored.
The Professor rose fiercely.
“Money! I care nothing for money. I
desire to obtain the funeral jewelry and golden masks,
the precious images of the gods, so as to place them
in the British Museum. And the scrolls of papyrus
buried with the mummy of Tahoser may contain an account
of Ethiopian civilization, about which we know nothing.
Oh, that tomb, that tomb!” Braddock
began to walk the room, quite forgetting that he had
not finished his dinner. “I know the mountains
whose entrails were pierced to form the sepulchre.
Were I able to go to Africa, I am certain that I should
discover the tomb. Ah, with what glory would
my name be covered, were I so fortunate!”
“Why don’t you go to Africa, sir, and
try?” asked Hope.
“Fool!” cried the Professor
politely. “To fit out an expedition would
take some five thousand pounds, if not more. I
would have to penetrate through a hostile country
to reach the chain of mountains I speak of, where
I know this precious tomb is to be found. I need
supplies, an escort, guns, camels, and all the rest
of it. A leader must be obtained to manage the
fighting men necessary to pass through this dangerous
zone. It is no easy task to find the tomb of Tahoser.
And yet if I could if I could only get
the money,” and he walked up and down with his
head bent on his breast.
Mrs. Jasher was used to Braddock’s
vagaries by this time, and merely continued to fan
herself placidly.
“I wish I could help you with
the expedition,” she said quietly. “I
should like to have some of that lovely Egyptian jewelry
myself. But I am quite a pauper, until my brother
dies, poor man. Then ” She hesitated.
“What then?” asked Braddock, wheeling.
“I shall aid you with pleasure.”
“It’s a bargain!” Braddock stretched
out his hand.
“A bargain,” said Mrs.
Jasher, accepting the grasp somewhat nervously, for
she had not expected to be taken so readily at her
word. A glance at Lucy revealed her nervousness.
“Do sit down, father, and finish
your dinner,” said that young lady. “I
am sure you will have more than enough to do when the
mummy arrives.”
“Mummy what mummy?”
murmured Braddock, again beginning to eat.
“The Inca mummy.”
“Of course. The mummy of
Inca Caxas, which Sidney is bringing from Malta.
When I strip that corpse of its green bandages I shall
find ”
“Find what?” asked Archie,
seeing that the Professor hesitated.
Braddock cast a swift look at his questioner.
“I shall find the peculiar mode
of Peruvian embalming,” he replied abruptly,
and somehow the way in which he spoke gave Hope the
impression that the answer was an excuse. But
before he could formulate the thought that Braddock
was concealing something, Mrs. Jasher spoke frivolously.
“I hope your mummy has jewels,” she said.
“It has not,” replied
Braddock sharply. “So far as I know, the
Inca race never buried their dead with jewels.”
“But I have read in Prescott’s
History that they did,” said Hope.
“Prescott! Prescott!”
cried the Professor contemptuously, “a most
unreliable authority. However, I’ll promise
you one thing, Hope, that if there are any jewels,
or jewelry, you shall have the lot.”
“Give me some, Mr. Hope,” cried the widow.
“I cannot,” laughed Archie; “the
green mummy belongs to the Professor.”
“I cannot accept such a gift,
Hope. Owing to circumstances I have been obliged
to borrow the money from you; otherwise the mummy would
have been acquired by some one else. But when
I find the tomb of Queen Tahoser, I shall repay the
loan.”
“You have repaid it already,” said Hope,
looking at Lucy.
Braddock’s eyes followed his
gaze and his brows contracted. “Humph!”
he muttered, “I don’t know if I am right
in consenting to Lucy’s marriage with a pauper.”
“Oh, father!” cried the girl, “Archie
is not a pauper.”
“I have enough for Lucy and
me to live on,” said Hope, although his face
had flushed, “and, had I been a pauper I could
not have given you that thousand pounds.”
“You will be repaid you
will be repaid,” said Braddock, waving his hand
to dismiss the subject. “And now,”
he rose with a yawn, “if this tedious feast
is at an end, I shall again seek my work.”
Without a word of apology to the disgusted
Mrs. Jasher, he trotted to the door, and there paused.
“By the way, Lucy,” he
said, turning, “I had a letter to-day from Random.
He returns in his yacht to Pierside in two or three
days. In fact, his arrival will coincide with
that of The Diver.”
“I don’t see what his
arrival has to do with me,” said Lucy tartly.
“Oh, nothing at all nothing
at all,” said Braddock airily, “only I
thought that is, but never mind, never mind.
Cockatoo, come down with me. Good night!
Good night!” and he disappeared.
“Well,” said Mrs. Jasher,
drawing along breath, “for rudeness and selfishness,
commend me to a scientist. We might be all mud,
for what notice he takes of us.”
“Never mind,” said Miss
Kendal, rising, “come to the drawing-room and
have some music. Archie, will you stop here?”
“No. I don’t care
to sit over my wine alone,” said that young gentleman,
rising. “I shall accompany you and Mrs.
Jasher. And Lucy,” he stopped her at the
door, through which the widow had already passed, “what
did your father mean by his hints concerning Random?”
“I think he regrets giving his
consent to my marriage with you,” she whispered
back. “Did you not hear him talk about that
tomb? He desires to get money for the expedition.”
“From Random? What rubbish!
Sooner than that if our marriage is stopped
by the beastly business I’ll sell
out and ”
“You’ll do nothing of
the sort,” interrupted the girl imperiously;
“we must live if we marry. You have given
my father enough.”
“But if Random lends money for this expedition?”
“He does so at his own risk.
I am not going to marry Sir Frank because of my step-father’s
requirements. He has no rights over me, and, whether
he consents or not, I marry you.”
“My darling!” and Archie
kissed her before they followed Mrs. Jasher into the
drawing-room. All the same, he foresaw trouble.