It was spring in the South Seas when,
for the first time, I went ashore at Batengo, which
is the Polynesian village, and the only one on the
big grass island of the same name. There is a
cable station just up the beach from the village,
and a good-natured young chap named Graves had charge
of it. He was an upstanding, clean-cut fellow,
as the fact that he had been among the islands for
three years without falling into any of their ways
proved. The interior of the corrugated iron house
in which he lived, for instance, was bachelor from
A to Z. And if that wasn’t a sufficient alibi,
my pointer dog, Don, who dislikes anything Polynesian
or Melanesian, took to him at once. And they established
a romping friendship. He gave us lunch on the
porch, and because he had not seen a white man for
two months, or a liver-and-white dog for two years,
he told us the entire story of his young life, with
reminiscences of early childhood and plans for the
future thrown in.
The future was very simple. There
was a girl coming out to him from the States by the
next steamer but one; the captain of that steamer would
join them together in holy wedlock, and after that
the Lord would provide.
“My dear fellow,” he said,
“you think I’m asking her to share a very
lonely sort of life, but if you could imagine all the the
affection and gentleness, and thoughtfulness that
I’ve got stored up to pour out at her feet for
the rest of our lives, you wouldn’t be a bit
afraid for her happiness. If a man spends his
whole time and imagination thinking up ways to make
a girl happy and occupied, he can think up a whole
lot.... I’d like ever so much to show her
to you.”
He led the way to his bedroom, and
stood in silent rapture before a large photograph
that leaned against the wall over his dressing-table.
She didn’t look to me like the
sort of girl a cable agent would happen to marry.
She looked like a swell the real thing beautiful
and simple and unaffected.
“Yes,” he said, “isn’t she?”
I hadn’t spoken a word. Now I said:
“It’s easy to see why
you aren’t lonely with that wonderful girl to
look at. Is she really coming out by the next
steamer but one? It’s hard to believe because
she’s so much too good to be true.”
“Yes,” he said, “isn’t she?”
“The usual cable agent,”
I said, “keeps from going mad by having a dog
or a cat or some pet or other to talk to. But
I can understand a photograph like this being all-sufficient
to any man even if he had never seen the
original. Allow me to shake hands with you.”
Then I got him away from the girl,
because my time was short and I wanted to find out
about some things that were important to me.
“You haven’t asked me
my business in these parts,” I said, “but
I’ll tell you. I’m collecting grasses
for the Bronx Botanical Garden.”
“Then, by Jove!” said
Graves, “you have certainly come to the right
place. There used to be a tree on this island,
but the last man who saw it died in 1789 Grass!
The place is all grass: there are fifty kinds
right around my house here.”
“I’ve noticed only eighteen,”
I said, “but that isn’t the point.
The point is: when do the Batengo Island grasses
begin to go to seed?” And I smiled.
“You think you’ve got
me stumped, don’t you?” he said. “That
a mere cable agent wouldn’t notice such things.
Well, that grass there,” and he pointed “beach
nut we call it is the first to ripen seed,
and, as far as I know, it does it just six weeks from
now.”
“Are you just making things up to impress me?”
“No, sir, I am not. I know
to the minute. You see, I’m a victim of
hay-fever.”
“In that case,” I said,
“expect me back about the time your nose begins
to run.”
“Really?” And his whole
face lighted up. “I’m delighted.
Only six weeks. Why, then, if you’ll stay
round for only five or six weeks more you’ll
be here for the wedding.”
“I’ll make it if I possibly
can,” I said. “I want to see if that
girl’s really true.”
“Anything I can do to help you
while you’re gone? I’ve got loads
of spare time ”
“If you knew anything about grasses ”
“I don’t. But I’ll
blow back into the interior and look around. I’ve
been meaning to right along, just for fun. But
I can never get any of them to go with me.”
“The natives?”
“Yes. Poor lot. They’re
committing race suicide as fast as they can.
There are more wooden gods than people in Batengo village,
and the superstition’s so thick you could cut
it with a knife. All the manly virtues have perished....
Aloiu!”
The boy who did Graves’s chores
for him came lazily out of the house.
“Aloiu,” said Graves,
“just run back into the island to the top of
that hill see? that one over
there and fetch a handful of grass for this
gentleman. He’ll give you five dollars for
it.”
Aloiu grinned sheepishly and shook his head.
“Fifty dollars?”
Aloiu shook his head with even more
firmness, and I whistled. Fifty dollars would
have made him the Rockefeller-Carnegie-Morgan of those
parts.
“All right, coward,” said
Graves cheerfully. “Run away and play with
the other children.... Now, isn’t that
curious? Neither love, money, nor insult will
drag one of them a mile from the beach. They say
that if you go ‘back there in the grass’
something awful will happen to you.”
“As what?” I asked.
“The last man to try it,”
said Graves, “in the memory of the oldest inhabitant
was a woman. When they found her she was all black
and swollen at least that’s what
they say. Something had bitten her just above
the ankle.”
“Nonsense,” I said, “there
are no snakes in the whole Batengo group.”
“They didn’t say it was
a snake,” said Graves. “They said
the marks of the bite were like those that would be
made by the teeth of a very little child.”
Graves rose and stretched himself.
“What’s the use of arguing
with people that tell yarns like that! All the
same, if you’re bent on making expeditions back
into the grass, you’ll make ’em alone,
unless the cable breaks and I’m free to make
’em with you.”
Five weeks later I was once more coasting
along the wavering hills of Batengo Island, with a
sharp eye out for a first sight of the cable station
and Graves. Five weeks with no company but Kanakas
and a pointer dog makes one white man pretty keen
for the society of another. Furthermore, at our
one meeting I had taken a great shine to Graves and
to the charming young lady who was to brave a life
in the South Seas for his sake. If I was eager
to get ashore, Don was more so. I had a shot-gun
across my knees with which to salute the cable station,
and the sight of that weapon, coupled with toothsome
memories of a recent big hunt down on Forked Peak,
had set the dog quivering from stem to stern, to crouching,
wagging his tail till it disappeared, and beating sudden
tattoos upon the deck with his forepaws. And when
at last we rounded on the cable station and I let
off both barrels, he began to bark and race about
the schooner like a thing possessed.
The salute brought Graves out of his
house. He stood on the porch waving a handkerchief,
and I called to him through a megaphone; hoped that
he was well, said how glad I was to see him, and asked
him to meet me in Batengo village.
Even at that distance I detected a
something irresolute in his manner; and a few minutes
later when he had fetched a hat out of the house,
locked the door, and headed toward the village, he
looked more like a soldier marching to battle than
a man walking half a mile to greet a friend.
“That’s funny,”
I said to Don. “He’s coming to meet
us in spite of the fact that he’d much rather
not. Oh, well!”
I left the schooner while she was
still under way, and reached the beach before Graves
came up. There were too many strange brown men
to suit Don, and he kept very close to my legs.
When Graves arrived the natives fell away from him
as if he had been a leper. He wore a sort of sickly
smile, and when he spoke the dog stiffened his legs
and growled menacingly.
“Don!” I exclaimed sternly,
and the dog cowered, but the spines along his back
bristled and he kept a menacing eye upon Graves.
The man’s face looked drawn and rather angry.
The frank boyishness was clean out of it. He
had been strained by something or other to the breaking-point so
much was evident.
“My dear fellow,” I said, “what
the devil is the matter?”
Graves looked to right and left, and
the islanders shrank still farther away from him.
“You can see for yourself,”
he said curtly. “I’m taboo.”
And then, with a little break in his voice: “Even
your dog feels it. Don, good boy! Come here,
sir!”
Don growled quietly.
“You see!”
“Don,” I said sharply,
“this man is my friend and yours. Pat him,
Graves.”
Graves reached forward and patted
Don’s head and talked to him soothingly.
But although Don did not growl or
menace, he shivered under the caress and was unhappy.
“So you’re taboo!”
I said cheerfully. “That’s the result
of anything, from stringing pink and yellow shells
on the same string to murdering your uncle’s
grandmother-in-law. Which have you done?”
“I’ve been back there
in the grass,” he said, “and because because
nothing happened to me I’m taboo.”
“Is that all?”
“As far as they know yes.”
“Well!” said I, “my
business will take me back there for days at a time,
so I’ll be taboo, too. Then there’ll
be two of us. Did you find any curious grasses
for me?”
“I don’t know about grasses,”
he said, “but I found something very curious
that I want to show you and ask your advice about.
Are you going to share my house?”
“I think I’ll keep head-quarters
on the schooner,” I said, “but if you’ll
put me up now and then for a meal or for the night ”
“I’ll put you up for lunch
right now,” he said, “if you’ll come.
I’m my own cook and bottle-washer since the
taboo, but I must say the change isn’t for the
worse so far as food goes.”
He was looking and speaking more cheerfully.
“May I bring Don?”
He hesitated.
“Why yes of course.”
“If you’d rather not?”
“No, bring him. I want to make friends
again if I can.”
So we started for Graves’s house, Don very close
at my heels.
“Graves,” I said, “surely
a taboo by a lot of fool islanders hasn’t upset
you. There’s something on your mind.
Bad news?”
“Oh, no,” he said.
“She’s coming. It’s other things.
I’ll tell you by and by everything.
Don’t mind me. I’m all right.
Listen to the wind in the grass. That sound day
and night is enough to put a man off his feed.”
“You say you found something very curious back
there in the grass?”
“I found, among other things,
a stone monolith. It’s fallen down, but
it’s almost as big as the Flatiron Building in
New York. It’s ancient as days all
carved it’s a sort of woman, I think.
But we’ll go back one day and have a look at
it. Then, of course, I saw all the different
kinds of grasses in the world they’d
interest you more but I’m such a
punk botanist that I gave up trying to tell ’em
apart. I like the flowers best there’s
millions of ’em down among the grass....
I tell you, old man, this island is the greatest curiosity-shop
in the whole world.”
He unlocked the door of his house and stood aside
for me to go in first.
“Shut up, Don!”
The dog growled savagely, but I banged
him with my open hand across the snout, and he quieted
down and followed into the house, all tense and watchful.
On the shelf where Graves kept his
books, with its legs hanging over, was what I took
to be an idol of some light brownish wood say
sandalwood, with a touch of pink. But it was the
most lifelike and astounding piece of carving I ever
saw in the islands or out of them. It was about
a foot high, and represented a Polynesian woman in
the prime of life, say, fifteen or sixteen years old,
only the features were finer and cleaner carved.
It was a nude, in an attitude of easy repose the
legs hanging, the toes dangling the hands
resting, palms downward, on the blotter, the trunk
relaxed. The eyes, which were a kind of steely
blue, seemed to have been made, depth upon depth, of
some wonderful translucent enamel, and to make his
work still more realistic the artist had planted the
statuette’s eyebrows, eyelashes, and scalp with
real hair, very soft and silky, brown on the head
and black for the lashes and eyebrows. The thing
was so lifelike that it frightened me. And when
Don began to growl like distant thunder I didn’t
blame him. But I leaned over and caught him by
the collar, because it was evident that he wanted
to get at that statuette and destroy it.
When I looked up the statuette’s
eyes had moved. They were turned downward upon
the dog, with cool curiosity and indifference.
A kind of shudder went through me. And then,
lo and behold, the statuette’s tiny brown breasts
rose and fell slowly, and a long breath came out of
its nostrils.
I backed violently into Graves, dragging
Don with me and half-choking him. “My God
Almighty!” I said. “It’s alive!”
“Isn’t she!” said
he. “I caught her back there in the grass the
little minx. And when I heard your signal I put
her up there to keep her out of mischief. It’s
too high for her to jump and she’s
very sore about it.”
“You found her in the grass,”
I said. “For God’s sake! are
there more of them?”
“Thick as quail,” said
he, “but it’s hard to get a sight of ’em.
But you were overcome by curiosity, weren’t
you, old girl? You came out to have a look at
the big white giant and he caught you with his thumb
and forefinger by the scruff of the neck so
you couldn’t bite him and here you
are.”
The womankin’s lips parted and
I saw a flash of white teeth. She looked up into
Graves’s face and the steely eyes softened.
It was evident that she was very fond of him.
“Rum sort of a pet,” said Graves.
“What?”
“Rum?” I said. “It’s
horrible it isn’t decent it it
ought to be taboo. Don’s got it sized up
right. He he wants to kill it.”
“Please don’t keep calling
her It,” said Graves. “She wouldn’t
like it if she understood.”
Then he whispered words that were Greek to me, and
the womankin laughed aloud. Her laugh was sweet
and tinkly, like the upper notes of a spinet.
“You can speak her language?”
“A few words Tog ma Lao?”
“Na!”
“Aba Ton sug ato.”
“Nan Tane dom ud lon anea!”
It sounded like that only
all whispered and very soft. It sounded a little
like the wind in the grass.
“She says she isn’t afraid
of the dog,” said Graves, “and that he’d
better let her alone.”
“I almost hope he won’t,”
said I. “Come outside. I don’t
like her. I think I’ve got a touch of the
horrors.”
Graves remained behind a moment to
lift the womankin down from the shelf, and when he
rejoined me I had made up my mind to talk to him like
a father.
“Graves,” I said, “although
that creature in there is only a foot high, it isn’t
a pig or a monkey, it’s a woman, and you’re
guilty of what’s considered a pretty ugly crime
at home abduction. You’ve stolen
this woman away from kith and kin, and the least you
can do is to carry her back where you found her and
turn her loose. Let me ask you one thing what
would Miss Chester think?”
“Oh, that doesn’t worry
me,” said Graves. “But I am
worried worried sick. It’s early shall
we talk now, or wait till after lunch?”
“Now,” I said.
“Well,” said he, “you
left me pretty well enthused on the subject of botany so
I went back there twice to look up grasses for you.
The second time I went I got to a deep sort of valley
where the grass is waist-high that, by
the way, is where the big monolith is and
that place was alive with things that were frightened
and ran. I could see the directions they took
by the way the grass tops acted. There were lots
of loose stones about and I began to throw ’em
to see if I could knock one of the things over.
Suddenly all at once I saw a pair of bright little
eyes peering out of a bunch of grass I let
fly at them, and something gave a sort of moan and
thrashed about in the grass and then lay
still. I went to look, and found that I’d
stunned her. She came to and
tried to bite me, but I had her by the scruff of the
neck and she couldn’t. Further, she was
sick with being hit in the chest with the stone, and
first thing I knew she keeled over in the palm of my
hand in a dead faint. I couldn’t find any
water or anything and I didn’t want
her to die so I brought her home. She
was sick for a week and I took care of
her as I would a sick pup and
she began to get well and want to play and romp and
poke into everything. She’d get the lower
drawer of my desk open and hide in it or
crawl into a rubber boot and play house. And
she got to be right good company same as
any pet does a cat or a dog or
a monkey and naturally, she being so small,
I couldn’t think of her as anything but a sort
of little beast that I’d caught and tamed....
You see how it all happened, don’t you?
Might have happened to anybody.”
“Why, yes,” I said.
“If she didn’t give a man the horrors right
at the start I can understand making a
sort of pet of her but, man, there’s
only one thing to do. Be persuaded. Take
her back where you found her, and turn her loose.”
“Well and good,” said
Graves. “I tried that, and next morning
I found her at my door, sobbing horrible,
dry sobs no tears.... You’ve
said one thing that’s full of sense: she
isn’t a pig or a monkey she’s
a woman.”
“You don’t mean to say,”
said I, “that that mite of a thing is in love
with you?”
“I don’t know what else you’d call
it.”
“Graves,” I said, “Miss
Chester arrives by the next steamer. In the meanwhile
something has got to be done.”
“What?” said he hopelessly.
“I don’t know,” I said. “Let
me think.”
The dog Don laid his head heavily
on my knee, as if he wished to offer a solution of
the difficulty.
A week before Miss Chester’s
steamer was due the situation had not changed.
Graves’s pet was as much a fixture of Graves’s
house as the front door. And a man was never
confronted with a more serious problem. Twice
he carried her back into the grass and deserted her,
and each time she returned and was found sobbing horrible,
dry sobs on the porch. And a number
of times we took her, or Graves did, in the pocket
of his jacket, upon systematic searches for her people.
Doubtless she could have helped us to find them, but
she wouldn’t. She was very sullen on these
expeditions and frightened. When Graves tried
to put her down she would cling to him, and it took
real force to pry her loose.
In the open she could run like a rat;
and in open country it would have been impossible
to desert her; she would have followed at Graves’s
heels as fast as he could move them. But forcing
through the thick grass tired her after a few hundred
yards, and she would gradually drop farther and farther
behind sobbing. There was a pathetic
side to it.
She hated me; and made no bones about
it; but there was an armed truce between us.
She feared my influence over Graves, and I feared her well,
just as some people fear rats or snakes. Things
utterly out of the normal always do worry me, and
Bo, which was the name Graves had learned for her,
was, so far as I know, unique in human experience.
In appearance she was like an unusually good-looking
island girl observed through the wrong end of an opera-glass,
but in habit and action she was different. She
would catch flies and little grasshoppers and eat them
all alive and kicking, and if you teased her more than
she liked her ears would flatten the way a cat’s
do, and she would hiss like a snapping-turtle, and
show her teeth.
But one got accustomed to her.
Even poor Don learned that it was not his duty to
punish her with one bound and a snap. But he would
never let her touch him, believing that in her case
discretion was the better part of valor. If she
approached him he withdrew, always with dignity, but
equally with determination. He knew in his heart
that something about her was horribly wrong and against
nature. I knew it, too, and I think Graves began
to suspect it.
Well, a day came when Graves, who
had been up since dawn, saw the smoke of a steamer
along the horizon, and began to fire off his revolver
so that I, too, might wake and participate in his
joy. I made tea and went ashore.
“It’s her steamer,” he said.
“Yes,” said I, “and we’ve
got to decide something.”
“About Bo?”
“Suppose I take her off your
hands for a week or so till you
and Miss Chester have settled down and put your house
in order. Then Miss Chester Mrs. Graves,
that is can decide what is to be done.
I admit that I’d rather wash my hands of the
business but I’m the only white man
available, and I propose to stand by my race.
Don’t say a word to Bo just bring
her out to the schooner and leave her.”
In the upshot Graves accepted my offer,
and while Bo, fairly bristling with excitement and
curiosity, was exploring the farther corners of my
cabin, we slipped out and locked the door on her.
The minute she knew what had happened she began to
tear around and raise Cain. It sounded a little
like a cat having a fit.
Graves was white and unhappy.
“Let’s get away quick,” he said;
“I feel like a skunk.”
But Miss Chester was everything that
her photograph said about her, and more too, so that
the trick he had played Bo was very soon a negligible
weight on Graves’s mind.
If the wedding was quick and business-like,
it was also jolly and romantic. The oldest passenger
gave the bride away. All the crew came aft and
sang “The Voice That Breathed O’er E-den
That Earliest Wedding-Day” to the
tune called “Blairgowrie.” They had
worked it up in secret for a surprise. And the
bride’s dove-brown eyes got a little teary.
I was best man. The captain read the service,
and choked occasionally. As for Graves I
had never thought him handsome well, with
his brown face and white linen suit, he made me think,
and I’m sure I don’t know why, of St.
Michael that time he overcame Lucifer.
The captain blew us to breakfast, with champagne and
a cake, and then the happy pair went ashore in a boat
full of the bride’s trousseau, and the crew
manned the bulwarks and gave three cheers, and then
something like twenty-seven more, and last thing of
all the brass cannon was fired, and the little square
flags that spell G-o-o-d L-u-c-k were run up on the
signal halyards.
As for me, I went back to my schooner
feeling blue and lonely. I knew little about
women and less about love. It didn’t seem
quite fair. For once I hated my profession seed-gatherer
to a body of scientific gentlemen whom I had never
seen. Well, there’s nothing so good for
the blues as putting things in order.
I cleaned my rifle and revolver.
I wrote up my note-book. I developed some plates;
I studied a brand-new book on South Sea grasses that
had been sent out to me, and I found some mistakes.
I went ashore with Don, and had a long walk on the
beach in the opposite direction from Graves’s
house, of course and I sent Don into the
water after sticks, and he seemed to enjoy it, and
so I stripped and went in with him. Then I dried
in the sun, and had a match with my hands to see which
could find the tiniest shell. Toward dusk we
returned to the schooner and had dinner, and after
that I went into my cabin to see how Bo was getting
on.
She flew at me like a cat, and if
I hadn’t jerked my foot back she must have bitten
me. As it was, her teeth tore a piece out of my
trousers. I’m afraid I kicked her.
Anyway, I heard her land with a crash in a far corner.
I struck a match and lighted candles they
are cooler than lamps very warily one
eye on Bo. She had retreated under a chair and
looked out very sullen and angry. I
sat down and began to talk to her. “It’s
no use,” I said, “you’re trying to
bite and scratch, because you’re only as big
as a minute. So come out here and make friends.
I don’t like you and you don’t like me;
but we’re going to be thrown together for quite
some time, so we’d better make the best of it.
You come out here and behave pretty and I’ll
give you a bit of gingersnap.”
The last word was intelligible to
her, and she came a little way out from under the
chair. I had a bit of gingersnap in my pocket,
left over from treating Don, and I tossed it on the
floor midway between us. She darted forward and
ate it with quick bites.
Well, then, she looked up, and her
eyes asked just as plain as day: “Why
are things thus? Why have I come to live with
you? I don’t like you. I want to go
back to Graves.”
I couldn’t explain very well,
and just shook my head and then went on trying to
make friends it was no use. She hated
me, and after a time I got bored. I threw a pillow
on the floor for her to sleep on, and left her.
Well, the minute the door was shut and locked she began
to sob. You could hear her for quite a distance,
and I couldn’t stand it. So I went back and
talked to her as nicely and soothingly as I could.
But she wouldn’t even look at me just
lay face down heaving and sobbing.
Now I don’t like little creatures
that snap so when I picked her up it was
by the scruff of the neck. She had to face me
then, and I saw that in spite of all the sobbing her
eyes were perfectly dry. That struck me as curious.
I examined them through a pocket magnifying-glass,
and discovered that they had no tear-ducts. Of
course she couldn’t cry. Perhaps I squeezed
the back of her neck harder than I meant to anyway,
her lips began to draw back and her teeth to show.
It was exactly at that second that
I recalled the legend Graves had told me about the
island woman being found dead, and all black and swollen,
back there in the grass, with teeth marks on her that
looked as if they had been made by a very little child.
I forced Bo’s mouth wide open
and looked in. Then I reached for a candle and
held it steadily between her face and mine. She
struggled furiously so that I had to put down the
candle and catch her legs together in my free hand.
But I had seen enough. I felt wet and cold all
over. For if the swollen glands at the base of
the deeply grooved canines meant anything, that which
I held between my hands was not a woman but
a snake.
I put her in a wooden box that had
contained soap and nailed slats over the top.
And, personally, I was quite willing to put scrap-iron
in the box with her and fling it overboard. But
I did not feel quite justified without consulting
Graves.
As an extra precaution in case of
accidents, I overhauled my medicine-chest and made
up a little package for the breast pocket a
lancet, a rubber bandage, and a pill-box full of permanganate
crystals. I had still much collecting to do,
“back there in the grass,” and I did not
propose to step on any of Bo’s cousins or her
sisters or her aunts without having some
of the elementary first-aids to the snake-bitten handy.
It was a lovely starry night, and
I determined to sleep on deck. Before turning
in I went to have a look at Bo. Having nailed
her in a box securely, as I thought, I must have left
my cabin door ajar. Anyhow she was gone.
She must have braced her back against one side of the
box, her feet against the other, and burst it open.
I had most certainly underestimated her strength and
resources.
The crew, warned of peril, searched
the whole schooner over, slowly and methodically,
lighted by lanterns. We could not find her.
Well, swimming comes natural to snakes.
I went ashore as quickly as I could
get a boat manned and rowed. I took Don on a
leash, a shot-gun loaded, and both pockets of my jacket
full of cartridges. We ran swiftly along the
beach, Don and I, and then turned into the grass to
make a short cut for Graves’s house. All
of a sudden Don began to tremble with eagerness and
nuzzle and sniff among the roots of the grass.
He was “making game.”
“Good Don,” I said, “good boy hunt
her up! Find her!”
The moon had risen. I saw two
figures standing in the porch of Graves’s house.
I was about to call to them and warn Graves that Bo
was loose and dangerous when a scream shrill
and frightful rang in my ears. I saw
Graves turn to his bride and catch her in his arms.
When I came up she had collected her
senses and was behaving splendidly. While Graves
fetched a lantern and water she sat down on the porch,
her back against the house, and undid her garter,
so that I could pull the stocking off her bitten foot.
Her instep, into which Bo’s venomous teeth had
sunk, was already swollen and discolored. I slashed
the teeth-marks this way and that with my lancet.
And Mrs. Graves kept saying: “All right all
right don’t mind me do
what’s best.”
Don’s leash had wedged between
two of the porch planks, and all the time we were
working over Mrs. Graves he whined and struggled to
get loose.
“Graves,” I said, when
we had done what we could, “if your wife begins
to seem faint, give her brandy just a very
little at a time and I
think we were in time and for God’s
sake don’t ever let her know why she
was bitten or by what ”
Then I turned and freed Don and took off his leash.
The moonlight was now very white and
brilliant. In the sandy path that led from Graves’s
porch I saw the print of feet shaped just
like human feet less than an inch long.
I made Don smell them, and said:
“Hunt close, boy! Hunt close!”
Thus hunting, we moved slowly through
the grass toward the interior of the island.
The scent grew hotter suddenly Don began
to move more stiffly as if he had the rheumatism his
eyes straight ahead saw something that I could not
see the tip of his tail vibrated furiously he
sank lower and lower his legs worked more
and more stiffly his head was thrust forward
to the full stretch of his neck toward a thick clump
of grass. In the act of taking a wary step he
came to a dead halt his right forepaw just
clear of the ground. The tip of his tail stopped
vibrating. The tail itself stood straight out
behind him and became rigid like a bar of iron.
I never saw a stancher point.
“Steady, boy!”
I pushed forward the safety of my shot-gun and stood
at attention.
“How is she?”
“Seems to be pulling through. I heard you
fire both barrels. What luck?”