They were soon in the forest.
It required care and caution to make their way through
the tangled growth of climbing canes and vines.
Some of these were armed with terrible thorns, and
as they had no hatchets to chop their way through
them they were often obliged to make detours to escape
these obstacles. Orchids of brilliant colours
and fantastic shapes grew thickly on the trees, ants
in countless numbers swarmed up and down the trunks,
and many an angry exclamation was wrung from the seamen
as a bite as sharp as the sting of a wasp told that
some of these insects had crawled up the legs of their
trousers or made their way down their neck.
“Unless we are going to live
on ants,” the mate said ruefully as he gave a
savage slap at his leg, “it seems to me we are
likely to starve, for I have seen nothing whatever
to eat since we entered the wood. Even if some
of the trees did bear fruit I don’t see how we
are going to get at it, for one would be eaten alive
by these little brutes before we reached the top.”
“I vote we turn back, Mr. Towel,”
one of the men said. “I would rather put
to sea and take my chance than keep on being stung
by these ants, when there doesn’t seem the least
hope of our finding anything.”
“There doesn’t seem much
chance here, Nixon. I think we had best get out
of the wood and follow the edge along. We may
come to some place where it is more open, and may
even strike on a stream. If we could do that we
might patch up the boat and pull up stream a bit.
Anyhow, I don’t think it is any use pushing
on here. My jacket is torn in a dozen places already
by the thorns.”
“One of them has nearly taken
my eye out,” another grumbled; and indeed all
were bleeding from the gashes they had received from
the thorns. They made their way back carefully,
and there was a general exclamation of satisfaction
when the light could be seen ahead through the trees.
As soon as they were out on the sands shirts were
hastily pulled off and a hunt for ants carried out.
“It is lucky the bites don’t
swell up,” Joyce said, “or I should be
a mass of bumps. It is as bad as if one had been
attacked by a swarm of bees. Yet there is only
a little red spot to show for each bite.”
As soon as they had freed themselves
from the ants they started along the edge of the forest.
After walking for two miles they gave a shout of joy,
for a river some fifty yards wide issued from the forest.
The sand-hills had hidden it from sight until they
were close upon it.
“Thank God, we sha’n’t
die of thirst,” the mate said. “It
will be a hard job to get our boat here, but it has
got to be done. Even if we could launch it through
the surf there would be no getting in through the
rollers on the bar, at least I should not like to try
it. So we have got to drag her here somehow.
It will be a tough job, but as there seems no chance
of getting food in any other way we must undertake
it. Hurrah!” he exclaimed suddenly, “there
are some cocoa-nut trees on the other side of the
river. That settles it. Let us be off back
again at once.”
They returned in much better spirits
than they had before felt. On the way they went
a short distance into the forest, and cut off a number
of thorns some two inches long and seemingly as hard
as iron. They breakfasted on a biscuit, with
a full allowance of water, and then set to work at
the boat. The thorns answered their purpose as
nails admirably, and the planks soon were securely
fastened into their places against the stem; but without
nails to clench the planks together, it was evident
to them all that the boat would not float five minutes.
They stood looking at it discontentedly.
“What is to be done with it?”
said Mr. Towel. “Can anyone make a suggestion?”
“I should think, sir,”
Stephen said, “that if we could get some strong
fibre, or some of those thin climbers that barred our
way-they were not thicker than string,
but there was no breaking them, and I should think
that they would do-that with them we could
sew the planks together and caulk them afterwards
with the threads from a bit of the leg of one of our
drill trousers.”
“A capital idea, Stephen.
At any rate, it would be worth trying.”
“I will go and fetch some of
those climbers, sir, and some long thorns to make
the holes with.”
“We may as well all go, Stephen;
we have nothing to do here, and at any rate it is
cooler in the forest than it is on the sands.
We shall want a good stock of thorns, for we are sure
to break lots of them in making the holes.”
“I have a thing in my knife
that will do for that, sir,” Joyce said; and
he produced from his pocket a knife with many blades,
one of them being a long pricker. “It was
given to me the day before we sailed, and I have always
wondered what use that thing could ever be. Here
is a use for it at last.”
“Capital, Joyce! That is
just the thing. There is flint and steel, and
a tinder-box in the locker, and our best plan will
be to make a fire and heat that pricker of yours red-hot.
It would make the work a great deal easier, and there
will be less risk of breaking it or of splitting the
wood. So now we will collect dry wood and creepers
and leave the thorns alone.”
This was done; but when they returned
to the edge of the forest all agreed that they should
lie down there in the shade until the sun had lost
its power, for their position being almost on the
equator the heat out on the sand was unbearable.
“It will be as well for one
to keep a watch, lads,” the mate said. “We
have seen no signs of natives, but there may be some
about. The sun is nearly overhead, so it will
be another four or five hours before we can set to
work. I will take the first watch. In an
hour I will wake Mr. Joyce; Mr. Embleton will follow
him; then you, Nixon; that will take us on till it’s
time to move.”
These arrangements were carried out,
and as the sun sank towards the horizon the party
went down to the beach. Some rotten wood was crumbled
up and a fire quickly made, then the work of boring
the holes began, and was kept up all night. As
it was necessary to put them very closely together,
and the piercer had to be heated two or three times
for each hole, two worked by turns while the rest
slept, and by sunrise the holes were all finished.
Then the work of sewing the planks together began,
the boat being turned on its side to allow the string,
as they called it, to be passed backwards and forwards.
In two hours their work was completed. Stephen
cut off four or five inches of duck from the bottom
of each leg of his trousers, and unravelling the thread
he and the mate pressed it into the seams as fast
as the sewing was completed.
“I think that that will do,”
the mate said, looking with a satisfied air at the
work. “Now, what it wants is a little tallow
to rub in; but there is no candle handy.”
“When I was on watch, sir, I
saw lots of bees flying in and out of the trees.
If we could light on a hive the wax would do first-rate.”
“So it would, Steve. However,
until we can find one I fancy we shall get on well
enough. Five minutes’ bailing occasionally
will keep her dry enough, I am sure, at any rate for
river work. Now we have got the big job before
us; let us have a try how we can move her.”
The nine men put their strength to
the boat, but they found that the deep keel buried
itself in the sand, and that they could not drag her
along. Then they tried carrying her, the mate,
the two boys, and two men on one side, and the other
four men on the other. She was a heavy weight,
but they could just manage it, and carried her for
some twenty yards before they put her down.
“This will never do,”
the mate said. “We can’t use our strength
to advantage, else the weight would not be too great
for us. Let us go up to the wood, lads, and chop
four poles, turn her over, and lay her down on them.
In that way I don’t think we shall have much
difficulty about it.”
It took them longer than they expected,
for the wood was so tough that their cutlasses produced
but little impression upon it. After an hour’s
hard work, however, they cut four poles, each about
twelve feet long. With these they returned to
the boat, laid the poles down on the sand at equal
distances apart, and turned the boat over upon them;
then a man took each end of a pole, the two boys taking
one end together, and at a word lifted the boat with
comparative ease. It was very hard work under
the blazing sun, and they had to stop every hundred
yards or so to rest their arms. Still they were
successful, and after three hours’ toil they
reached the river. The oars had been lost when
they landed, and they determined to take the bottom
boards out and cut them into paddles. The first
thing, however, was to bathe.
“Don’t go far out,”
the mate said, “there may be sharks or alligators
in the river for aught we know.”
Greatly refreshed by their dip, they
took the boards out of the boat, carried them up into
the shade of the trees, and with their jack-knives
fashioned them into rude paddles, with thin creepers
strips of wood tying down the handles to add to their
strength. This took them all the afternoon.
When the sun had lost its power they put the boat into
the water, and made an experimental trip in her, and
were glad to see that the seams were almost water-tight,
and that it would need but an occasional use of the
bailer to keep her clear. They at once paddled
across the river to the opposite side, and then pulling
the boat up made a rush for the cocoa-nut trees that
they had seen the day before.
“How are we to get up?”
Joyce inquired, looking with dismay at the smooth
trunks.
“I learnt that on the west coast
of Africa,” the mate replied. “I was
there two years and got to know, I think, all there
was to know with regard to steering a boat in a surf;
climbing a cocoa-nut tree is easy work in comparison.
Fetch the head-rope of the boat.”
This was done, and he asked who volunteered
for the first climb.
“I will try it, Mr. Towel,”
Joyce said, “if you will show me how.”
“Stand by the side of the tree,
Joyce. Now I will put this rope round you and
round the tree, leaving a certain amount of slack in
the loop. Now you get a grip of the tree with
your knees. Then with your hands you shift the
loop up as high as you can, and lean against it.
Get a sort of purchase, and so shift your knees a
bit higher. No doubt you will feel it awkward
at first, but after a little practice you will find
no difficulty whatever in going up at a fair rate
of speed.”
In spite of his experience aloft Joyce
found it hard work to climb the tree. As soon
as he was at the top he broke off the nuts and dropped
them; when he had picked two nuts for each of the
party he descended.
“They are not a bit like cocoa-nuts,”
Stephen remarked as the first came to the ground.
“They look more like queer-shaped gourds.”
“They do, lad,” the mate
agreed. “But you see they are not ripe yet,
while those we get in England are over-ripe; instead
of the inside nut being enveloped in fibre the whole
thing is soft, and, you see”-here
he suited the action to the word-“you
can cut a hole down right through, and then all that
you have got to do is to drink the milk.”
The men followed the officer’s
example, and were soon taking long draughts of the
sweet, cool liquor, which differs widely indeed from
that of the ripe cocoa-nut.
“How is it that the milk is so cool, sir?”
Steve asked.
“That is more than I can tell
you, for no matter how hot the weather, the milk of
fresh cocoa-nuts is always cool; why it should be so
I have no idea.”
After they had drunk the milk they
broke open the nuts and scraped the soft cream-like
paste which lined the inside, and which, when the nut
ripened, would have become hard and solid.
“You will find them of different
degrees of ripeness,” the mate said, “Some
of them will furnish us with drink, some with food,
and as there are trees along here as far as we can
see, we need not worry ourselves as to victuals.
Well, we have done our work for the day and will make
this our camp, and talk over what is the best thing
to do next.”
After much deliberation it was decided
that they should paddle up the river the next day,
leaving two of their number at the edge of the forest
to keep a look-out for the ship.
“It is as well to see what there
is on the river,” the mate said. “Of
course if we come to a village we shall let ourselves
drop down quietly again. And we must keep a sharp
look-out as we go; it would never do to let them get
a sight of us, for none of the natives of these islands
are to be trusted, and I am sure that none of us wish
to have our heads used as a decoration in their huts.
What I hope to come upon is the site of an abandoned
village. These people often shift their quarters.
They have no belongings to speak of to move, and a
couple of days’ labour is enough for them to
put up fresh huts. But in the places they have
occupied we are sure to find bananas; and if we can
but get a boat-load of them we shall be victualled
for a voyage, and after waiting long enough to give
the ship a chance of finding us, the sooner we are
off the better. Many of these islands are inhabited
by tribes that spare no one who falls into their hands,
and it would be better to take our chance on the sea
than to remain here. There are a good many little
Dutch settlements scattered about. What we have
got to do is to light upon one of these. There
is no mistaking them for native villages, and once
we can get a point of departure we shall have no difficulty
in laying our course either for Timor or Java.
Stephen, I shall leave you as the junior officer here
to-morrow. Wilcox will stay with you. If
you see the ship you will light a big fire and throw
green leaves on it to make as big a smoke as possible.
They would know at once that it was a signal, for
the natives would do nothing to attract notice, especially
if their intentions were hostile.”
“All right, sir! We will
keep a sharp look-out. You won’t be away
many hours, I suppose?”
“Certainly not. We don’t
want to do any exploring. All we want to do is
to look for food, and the most likely food for us
to find is a troop of monkeys among the trees overhanging
the river. As a rule, I should not like to shoot
the beasts. They are too much like human beings.
But if we can get a supply of meat it will be welcome,
no matter what it may be. Of course we should
not shoot many, for a couple of days would be the outside
that meat would keep good here.”
“But might not firing a gun
bring the natives down on you, sir?” Stephen
said.
“Oh, we have seen no signs of
natives!” the mate said impatiently, “and
there mayn’t be any within miles and miles of
us, probably not nearer than those hills; for I believe
it is there that they principally do what cultivation
there is-in the first place, because it
is cooler, and in the next place because there are,
we know, tremendous swamps in the low land of Sumatra,
though whether this is Sumatra or not I cannot say.”
The next morning the boat started
as soon as a supply of cocoa-nuts, sufficient for
the day, had been thrown down, two or three of the
sailors adopting the means the mate had taught Joyce,
and going up the trees very much more quickly than
he had done.
“What do you think of this ’ere
business, Master Stephen?” Wilcox said as they
watched the boat making its way slowly against the
current.
“I don’t know, Wilcox, what to think of
it.”
“I calls it a risky affair,”
the sailor said after a pause. “Mr. Towel
is a good officer, I don’t say as he isn’t,
but I would rather see an older head on his shoulders
just at present. It is all very well for him to
say as there may be no natives within twenty miles;
but how is he to know that? There may be a village
just round the turn of the river. All these chaps
are pirates when they get a chance, every mother’s
son of them, and there may be half a dozen war-canoes
lying a mile up this river. It would be natural
that they should be somewhere near its mouth, ready
to start out if a sail is sighted, or news is brought
to them that there is a ship anchored off a coast
village within a few hours’ row. As to firing
a gun, in my opinion it is just madness. As he
says himself, meat won’t keep two days, and
it is just flying in the face of Providence to risk
attracting the attention of the natives, for the sake
of a day’s rations of fresh meat.
“It was all very well to bring
the boat up here so as to lie out of sight of any
canoes that happened to be passing along the shore;
but I would much rather have left her where she was,
though I allows it would have been risky. I would
have just chucked the sail over her and covered that
with an inch or so of sand, so that it would not have
been noticed by a boat a short way out. But if
there is a village up here, why, a boat might come
down any moment to do some fishing, and there we should
be caught at once; as for getting away with them makeshift
paddles, it would not be worth even thinking of.
I hope our chaps will come back without having seen
a monkey or a village, or as much as a banana, then
the mate won’t be hankering to go up again;
and I should make free to advise him to get the boat
up amongst the trees here till we have decided that
the ship won’t come, and agree to make a start.”
“I am with you to some extent,
Wilcox, and I do think that it is a risky thing going
up the river. If we were to fill up with cocoa-nuts
they would last us for a week anyhow, and then when
we saw another grove of them we could land and load
up again.”
“You can’t take an observation,
I suppose, Mr. Stephen, and find out in a rough way
whereabouts we are?”
Steve shook his head. “No,
Wilcox. If I had had my quadrant I might have
got near enough to have made a rough guess, for I have
got that watch I bought in my pocket, and I have timed
it every day with the chronometers, and find that
it does not gain more than half a minute a day, so
that at the present moment it is not much more than
a minute out by them, and if I had had the quadrant
I could have made a pretty close calculation.
We were about a degree and a half south at noon before
that cyclone struck us, but I don’t see that
that would help us now.”
“It is a pity, sir,” the
sailor said, “for it would help us wonderful
if we could find out our position within fifty miles
or so.”
“I wish we could, Wilcox;”
and Stephen sat for some time thinking. At last
he said, “I might, anyhow, find out in a rough
sort of way whether we have been blown north or south.
We will see if we can find a perfectly straight stick,
ten or twelve feet long. If I fix that upright
in sand the shadow would help us. It was the
25th of March yesterday, and the sun at noon would
therefore be exactly overhead of the line at twelve
o’clock. Therefore, if we have been blown
north, we should get a very short shadow to the south
at twelve o’clock; whereas if we have been blown
south, there would be a shadow north. It might
not be more than an inch long; but even that would
tell us something.”
They selected a long straight stick,
drove it deeply into the sand, walked round it several
times so as to assure themselves that it was perfectly
upright, and then returned again to the shelter of
the trees. An hour later the sound of a gun came
to their ears.
“He has found some of them monkeys,” Wilcox
growled.
Three more shots were heard.
“How far are they off, do you think?” Stephen
asked.
“I dunno, sir. If it was
on the open sea and calm like this, I should say they
might be two or three miles, but in this ’ere
forest there ain’t no saying at all. I
don’t reckon they would be above two miles anyhow,
that is if the stream is as strong up there as it
is here. They were making very slow way against
it when they started. I reckon they have been
gone about an hour, and they would not have got more
than two miles away against this stream. Well,
I hope that they will be content now and turn back
again.”
Half an hour passed, then they heard
a gun again; it was quickly followed by another and
another.
“More monkeys,” Wilcox exclaimed in a
tone of disgust.
“I hope it is monkeys,”
Stephen said. “Listen. There are four
more shots close together.”
The sailor leapt to his feet.
“I believe you are right, sir, that cussed firing
has brought the natives down upon them. They would
not want to keep on firing at the monkeys. We
shall hear in a minute if they fire again. They
have all emptied their pieces. If they load quick
and fire again it will be a bad sign. There they
are!” he broke off as two shots were heard.
“I am afraid that settles it, sir, and settles
us too, for if they are attacked there ain’t
a ghost of a chance of their getting away, and there
won’t be much more chance of our doing so.”
Four more shots were heard, and then
all was quiet. “Now, sir, we will be getting
pretty deep in among these trees, keeping close to
the bank, so that we can look through the bushes without
being seen. If the boat comes along all right,
there ain’t no harm done; if it don’t come
along after a bit, we shall know what has happened.”
Picking up his gun, Wilcox was about
to turn off into the wood when Stephen said:
“We had better take three or
four cocoa-nuts each, Wilcox. There is no saying
whether we shall come back to this place, and it is
as well to have something to eat.”
Each tied some nuts together, threw
them over their shoulders, and started along the river
bank. The stream was bordered by a thick undergrowth,
which afforded an effectual screen for anyone behind
it. After going for about a quarter of a mile
they stopped to listen. There was a faint throbbing
sound in the air.
“Paddles!” Steve exclaimed.
“Ay, and native paddles, sir.
Our men don’t paddle like that, and I fancy,”
he went on after listening again, “there is more
than one canoe. That settles it, sir. There
isn’t a chance of our ever seeing our mates
again.”
“Oh, don’t say that, Wilcox!
Even if some have been killed, the others may have
been taken prisoners. I can’t believe they
have all been murdered.”
“Well, I hope not, sir, but
it looks very black. If they had pounced upon
them sudden, and there had been no fighting, they might
have kept them prisoners a day or two till they made
a grand feast and killed them; but that firing we
heard settles it to my mind. I should say there
ain’t no manner of doubt that our fellows will
have killed some of the niggers, and I expect that
the two canoes closed in on them, and then it would
be all over in a minute.”
When the canoes were within a quarter
of a mile the rowers broke into a sort of chant, with
occasional wild shouts and yells.
“There they come,” Wilcox
said as two long canoes, paddling abreast, rounded
a turn in the river a short distance away. “There
must be something like fifty men in each canoe.”
In a short time the canoes came along
at a high rate of speed. The sailor gave a sudden
exclamation of fury.
“What is it?” Steve asked.
“Don’t you see, sir, in
the stern of each of the canoes, piled up by the steering
oar, there are some heads.”
“I can’t look at them,”
Steven said, drawing back from his peep-hole through
the leaves.
“They are whites,” the
sailor muttered. “There ain’t no doubt
about it. I would give all my pay for the voyage
to have the Tiger’s crew here, that we
might give them murdering villains a volley.”
But Stephen did not hear him; he had
thrown himself down, and the tears were running down
his cheeks. The loss of the second mate, who had
always been cheery and kind, and of his fellow apprentice,
Joyce, completely unnerved him. Up to now he
had hoped, but what before had been doubt as to their
fate had now been converted into certainty.
“Don’t give way, Master
Steve,” the sailor said, stooping over him and
laying his hand on his shoulder. “It is
a bad job, there ain’t no denying it. What
happened to them half an hour ago may happen to us
before long; we have got to be up and doing, sir.”
“You are right, Wilcox,”
Steve said, as he rose to his feet. “In
the first place, could you count the heads?”
“No; there was a pile of them
in each boat; there may have been three, there may
have been four in each.”
“Well, one thing is certain,
Wilcox; we must find out if any of them are still
alive, and if so we must try and get them out of the
Malays’ hands.”
“I am ready to try, sir.
When a chap sees such a thing as that he don’t
seem to care much for his life; and at least if we
are caught we can polish off a few of the villains
before we go under, so I am game to do anything you
may order.”
“It is not for me to order,
Wilcox; I am only a young apprentice, and you are
an experienced sailor; and now that we are alone and
in danger together, it is for you to lead.”
“Well, if that is the way you
look at it, sir, I am willing to do all I can; and
if we find there is any of our mates alive we will
get them out if it is possible, never fear.”
“Do you think those canoes are
going to put to sea?” Steve asked.
“Not they; they have just gone
down to the mouth of the river to see whether that
boat came from a ship lying off the shore or whether
it was alone. There, do you hear those yells?
They have got out of the canoes, and found the place
where we camped last night. We walked about there
a good bit, and it ain’t likely they will be
able to find out whether there was seven or nine of
us. Besides, I don’t think they will look
much, for they would take it for certain we should
all go up the river together; and so we should have
done if it had not been that you and I were left behind
to look out for a sail.”
In half an hour the two canoes came
back again. They both kept well over to the opposite
side of the river to avoid the full force of the current,
and the sailor and Stephen attempted to count the heads
in their sterns. They could not make out the
number, but were inclined to agree that the two dark
masses were about the same size.
“I think there can only be three
in each boat,” Steven said. “In that
case one man may have been made prisoner; at any rate,
Wilcox, we will go on and see.”
As soon as the canoes had gone round
the bend of the river, they proceeded on their way.
The ground presently became exceedingly swampy, and
they could see by the pieces of dead wood and litter
caught among the bushes, that in times of flood the
river must overflow its banks and extend a long distance
into the forest. From time to time they had to
wade waist-deep across channels by which the water
from the marsh was draining slowly into the river.
Before crossing these, at Wilcox’s suggestion
they each cut down a bush and beat the water with
it.
“I expect there are no end of
alligators in this swamp,” the sailor said;
“and I know that the natives, before they cross
streams where the brutes are likely to be hiding,
beat the water with sticks or bushes to frighten them
away.”
It was hard work walking, for they
often sunk knee-deep in the wet soil, but after toiling
for nearly an hour they heard a confused noise ahead,
and could ere long make out the beating of drums and
the wild shouts of Malays, mingled with a deep roaring
sound made by horns. They now went on more cautiously,
and presently could make out through the trees a large
native village standing upon rising ground by the side
of the river. Creeping cautiously to the edge
of the bush they could see that a large number of
men, women, and children were assembled in an open
space between the houses and the water. The women
were bringing bundles of wood, and a column of smoke
rising in the centre of the crowd showed that the
preparation for a feast had begun.
“If we had but one of our ten-pounders
loaded with grape with us,” Wilcox said, “I
would pour a volley into those black devils if it cost
me my life afterwards.”
“What do you think they are going to do, Wilcox?”
“I reckon there ain’t
much doubt about it,” the sailor replied; “they
are going to make a feast of our mess-mates.”
Stephen uttered an exclamation of
horror and disgust. “Do you mean to say
that they are cannibals, Wilcox?”
“In course I can’t say
for certain, Master Steve. Some of these tribes
are cannibals and some ain’t, and I reckon by
what I see going on that those villains are.
Are you a good climber, sir?”
“Do you mean climbing a tree.
I have never had much practice at that, Wilcox, but
I dare say I could manage it.”
“Well, sir, you are lighter
and more active than I am, and I was thinking that
if you could get up to the top of this tree you would
have a view down over the village. The leaves
are pretty thick, and as the niggers are busy there
is not much chance of their looking about for a man
up a tree. You see the village ain’t above
a hundred and fifty yards away, and the ground ain’t
more than twenty feet above the river. I should
say that this tree was seventy or eighty feet high,
so that from the top you can get a view pretty well
over the place; if there is one of our chaps there
he may be lying tied up somewhere. Of course
he might be in a hut, but it is much more likely that
they would have just chucked him down until they wanted
him. I think if you got on my shoulder you would
be able to get hold of that lowest branch where it
bends down, and climb along it to the trunk; after
that the branches come pretty thick together.”
“I think I could manage that easily enough.”
“Well, then, here goes,”
the sailor said, and took up his post beneath where
the bough was lowest. “If you can’t
reach it from my shoulder, sir, you step on my head.
I can hold you easy enough. You keep the trunk
as far as possible between you and the village.”
“The leaves are thick up high,”
Steve said, looking up at the tree; “directly
it gets above the level of these smaller trees it spreads
its branches out well.”
“Now, jump upon my back, sir,
and then climb upon my shoulders. You had best
take hold of my hands to steady yourself.”
It was necessary, as the sailor had
suggested, for Steve to stand upon his supporter’s
head before he could get hold of a branch sufficiently
strong to bear his weight. As soon as he did
so he drew himself up, and was soon climbing the main
trunk. The higher he got the more convinced was
he that he would not be observed by the natives, for
the trees behind him formed a background, and therefore
he could not be seen against the sky. He kept,
however, as the sailor had told him, on the other side
of the trunk, and when he had gained the smaller branches
at the top of the tree he looked out through an opening
in the foliage. The village seemed to lie almost
at his feet, and he could see every object on the
ground. It was not long before he perceived a
figure lying full length in front of one of the huts,
close to the spot where the people were gathered.
It was certainly an European, and from the whiteness
of the trousers he felt sure that it was either the
mate or Joyce. He counted the number of huts,
and found that the one beside which the figure was
lying was the eighth in the line facing the river.
There were two lines of huts with a sort of street
between them. Behind the second row the rise on
which the village was situated fell rapidly away and
the jungle grew almost up to the back of the huts.
Those in the second line stood somewhat further apart
than those in the first, and he observed that the
sixth house in the back line was opposite the eighth
in the front. Having gathered this information
he descended the tree.
“What news, sir?” the
sailor asked, as Stephen dropped from the bough to
his side.
“There is one of our comrades
lying by the huts, Wilcox. I can tell by his
white ducks that it is either Mr. Towel or Joyce; whether
he is alive or dead, of course I can’t say.
I did not see him move, but no doubt he would be tied
hand and foot. I saw nothing of the others, and
there would be no reason why he should be treated
differently from them if he were dead.”
“You may be sure of that.
Well, that is better than I had hoped. If we can
save one it will be something.”
“I have been examining the ground,”
Stephen went on, “and we could work round close
up to the second row of huts. We must count six
of them, then go along by the side of the sixth and
cross the street to the hut opposite. The prisoner
is lying in front of that, I mean on the river side
of it. Of course, there is no doing anything until
the sun has set, except that we might work round to
that hut. It will be easier to get through this
horrid swamp before it gets dark than afterwards, and
there will be less fear of our stumbling and breaking
a branch. What time do you think it is now?”
“I don’t think it is more
than eight bells yet,” Wilcox said. “It
is a lot of hours to wait, and I would give a good
bit to be out of the swamp before it gets dark.
Howsomever, if we keep along by the river coming back
we can’t lose our way, that is one comfort.
Well, let us work round at once, and then we shall
see how the land lies. It is like enough that
as soon as they have got a big fire made up, and the
cooking begun, they will most of them turn in for
a sleep till the heat of the day is over, and begin
their feast after sundown. They generally do sleep
half the day, and then keep it up half the night.”
Accordingly they started through the
wood, and in a quarter of an hour found themselves
at the foot of the rising ground on which the village
stood. They had counted the huts, and now crawled
up through the thick bushes and stood within a few
yards of the sixth hut. The swamp had been very
deep on the way, and they had had the greatest difficulty
in getting through it. Stephen had once sunk
below his waist in the mud, and would have been unable
to extricate himself, had not the sailor held on by
a young tree with one hand while he stretched out
the other to him.
“I am all right now as far as
colour goes, Wilcox. Now, do you stay here and
I will crawl along by the side of the hut and have
a look up and down the street. I did not see
a soul between the row of huts when I was in the tree.”
When Stephen peeped out by the side
of the hut he saw that there were several people about,
apparently returning from the spot where they had
congregated. He rejoined his companion, and they
waited an hour. By this time perfect silence
had fallen on the village. The heat was intense,
and even in the forest all sound had ceased, as if
birds and insects were alike indulging in a mid-day
sleep.
“I will go and have a look again
now,” Stephen said. “If I find no
one about I will cross the street and try to cut the
ropes, and bring him here at once. If there is
a guard over him I will come back again to you.
We ought to be able to silence the guard without his
giving the alarm, especially as he is likely to be
half-asleep.”
“You had better leave your pistols
here, Master Steve, and take your cutlass. A
pistol-shot now would bring the whole village down
on us, and we should have no chance of getting through
the swamp with a hundred of those fellows after us.
You had better draw your sword, and leave the scabbard
and belt here. In the first place, it is handier
to have the sword ready; and it is not so likely to
knock against anything when you have got it in your
hand as it would be trailing behind you as you crawl
along. I shall be on the look-out, sir, and shall
be by your side in a brace of shakes if you hail.”
Stephen parted the bushes, and then
stepped lightly to the corner of the hut. Not
a soul was to be seen moving about, and he dashed across
to the house opposite, crawled along by its side,
and then looked round. The great fire had burned
low, and Stephen shuddered as his eye fell upon the
mass of embers and thought of what was lying below
them. There was no one about-the whole
of the natives had retired to their huts. In another
moment he was beside the prisoner. It was Joyce.
Bands of cord-like creepers were wrapped round his
legs; his wrists were tied together, and from them
a rope went to a peg four feet beyond him, extending
his arms at full length beyond his head. A similar
fastening from his ankles kept his legs at full stretch
in the other direction. Fastened thus, the Malays
evidently considered that there was no necessity for
a guard over him.
“Joyce, old fellow,” Stephen
whispered in his ear, “are you conscious?”
The lad opened his closed eyes with a start.
“Don’t speak,” Stephen went on.
“Is it really you, Steve, or am I dreaming?”
“You are awake enough, Tom.
I am here with Wilcox and will soon get these things
off you.” Drawing his jack-knife he cut
the bonds. “Do you think that you can walk,
Tom?”
“Yes, the things were not very
tight, only being pegged out like this I could not
move an inch.”
Stephen was lying down by his side
while he cut the fastenings. He now looked round
again.
“There is no one in sight, Tom,
but you had better wriggle yourself along until you
get to the corner of the hut.”
As soon as they were round the corner
they stood up. As they did so, the sailor put
his head out through the bushes and waved them a silent
cheer. Stephen went first, and as soon as he
saw that the street was empty he beckoned to his companion,
and they ran across to the other side; a moment later
they joined the sailor. The latter gave a grip
to Joyce’s hand, and then held out to him a
cocoa-nut he had just cut open in readiness. This
he seized eagerly and took a long drink.
“I was choking with thirst,”
Joyce gasped, as he finished the contents of the nut.
“Take care how you go through
the bushes,” the sailor whispered, as he turned
and led the way; “everything is so quiet that
a rustle might be heard.”
They went along with the greatest
caution. Their bare feet fell noiselessly on
the spongy soil, but sometimes as they sank into the
mud the suck of the air as they drew them out made
a sound that startled them. At last they reached
the tree where they had left all the cocoa-nuts with
the exception of the one that the sailor had brought
on. When they stopped, Joyce threw himself down
and burst into tears.
“Leave me alone,” he said,
as Stephen began to speak to him, “I shall be
better directly, but it has been awful. I will
tell you about it afterwards. I tried to make
up my mind to stand it bravely, and it is the getting
out of it when there did not seem to be a chance in
the world that has upset me.”
In five minutes he rose again to his
feet. “I am ready to go on now,” he
said.
“Yes, I think it is time to
be moving, sir. As soon as those beggars wake
up and find you have gone, they will set out in chase,
and the longer start we get the better.”