All through that terrible night Prince
Inga remained hidden in his tree. In the morning
he watched the great fleet of boats depart for their
own country, carrying his parents and his countrymen
with them, as well as everything of value the Island
of Pingaree had contained.
Sad, indeed, were the boy’s
thoughts when the last of the boats had become a mere
speck in the distance, but Inga did not dare leave
his perch of safety until all of the craft of the
invaders had disappeared beyond the horizon.
Then he came down, very slowly and carefully, for
he was weak from hunger and the long and weary watch,
as he had been in the tree for twenty-four hours without
food.
The sun shone upon the beautiful green
isle as brilliantly as if no ruthless invader had
passed and laid it in ruins. The birds still
chirped among the trees and the butterflies darted
from flower to flower as happily as when the land
was filled with a prosperous and contented people.
Inga feared that only he was left
of all his nation. Perhaps he might be obliged
to pass his life there alone. He would not starve,
for the sea would give him oysters and fish, and the
trees fruit; yet the life that confronted him was
far from enticing.
The boy’s first act was to walk
over to where the palace had stood and search the
ruins until he found some scraps of food that had been
overlooked by the enemy. He sat upon a block of
marble and ate of this, and tears filled his eyes
as he gazed upon the desolation around him. But
Inga tried to bear up bravely, and having satisfied
his hunger he walked over to the well, intending to
draw a bucket of drinking water.
Fortunately, this well had been overlooked
by the invaders and the bucket was still fastened
to the chain that wound around a stout wooden windlass.
Inga took hold of the crank and began letting the bucket
down into the well, when suddenly he was startled
by a muffled voice crying out:
“Be careful, up there!”
The sound and the words seemed to
indicate that the voice came from the bottom of the
well, so Inga looked down. Nothing could be seen,
on account of the darkness.
“Who are you?” he shouted.
“It’s I Rinkitink,”
came the answer, and the depths of the well echoed:
“Tink-i-tink-i-tink!” in a ghostly manner.
“Are you in the well?” asked the boy,
greatly surprised.
“Yes, and nearly drowned.
I fell in while running from those terrible warriors,
and I’ve been standing in this damp hole ever
since, with my head just above the water. It’s
lucky the well was no deeper, for had my head been
under water, instead of above it hoo, hoo,
hoo, keek, eek! under instead of over,
you know why, then I wouldn’t be talking
to you now! Ha, hoo, hee!” And the well
dismally echoed: “Ha, hoo, hee!”
which you must imagine was a laugh half merry and half
sad.
“I’m awfully sorry,”
cried the boy, in answer. “I wonder you
have the heart to laugh at all. But how am I
to get you out?”
“I’ve been considering
that all night,” said Rinkitink, “and I
believe the best plan will be for you to let down
the bucket to me, and I’ll hold fast to it while
you wind up the chain and so draw me to the top.”
“I will try to do that,”
replied Inga, and he let the bucket down very carefully
until he heard the King call out:
“I’ve got it! Now
pull me up slowly, my boy, slowly so
I won’t rub against the rough sides.”
Inga began winding up the chain, but
King Rinkitink was so fat that he was very heavy and
by the time the boy had managed to pull him halfway
up the well his strength was gone. He clung to
the crank as long as possible, but suddenly it slipped
from his grasp and the next minute he heard Rinkitink
fall “plump!” into the water again.
“That’s too bad!”
called Inga, in real distress; “but you were
so heavy I couldn’t help it.”
“Dear me!” gasped the
King, from the darkness below, as he spluttered and
coughed to get the water out of his mouth. “Why
didn’t you tell me you were going to let go?”
“I hadn’t time,” said Inga, sorrowfully.
“Well, I’m not suffering
from thirst,” declared the King, “for there’s
enough water inside me to float all the boats of Regos
and Coregos or at least it feels that way. But
never mind! So long as I’m not actually
drowned, what does it matter?”
“What shall we do next?” asked the boy
anxiously.
“Call someone to help you,” was the reply.
“There is no one on the island
but myself,” said the boy; “ excepting
you,” he added, as an afterthought.
“I’m not on it more’s
the pity! but in it,” responded Rinkitink.
“Are the warriors all gone?”
“Yes,” said Inga, “and
they have taken my father and mother, and all our
people, to be their slaves,” he added, trying
in vain to repress a sob.
“So so!” said
Rinkitink softly; and then he paused a moment, as if
in thought. Finally he said: “There
are worse things than slavery, but I never imagined
a well could be one of them. Tell me, Inga, could
you let down some food to me? I’m nearly
starved, and if you could manage to send me down some
food I’d be well fed hoo, hoo, heek,
keek, eek! well fed. Do you see the
joke, Inga?”
“Do not ask me to enjoy a joke
just now, Your Majesty,” begged Inga in a sad
voice; “but if you will be patient I will try
to find something for you to eat.”
He ran back to the ruins of the palace
and began searching for bits of food with which to
satisfy the hunger of the King, when to his surprise
he observed the goat, Bilbil, wandering among the marble
blocks.
“What!” cried Inga.
“Didn’t the warriors get you, either?”
“If they had,” calmly
replied Bilbil, “I shouldn’t be here.”
“But how did you escape?” asked the boy.
“Easily enough. I kept
my mouth shut and stayed away from the rascals,”
said the goat. “I knew that the soldiers
would not care for a skinny old beast like me, for
to the eye of a stranger I seem good for nothing.
Had they known I could talk, and that my head contained
more wisdom than a hundred of their own noddles, I
might not have escaped so easily.”
“Perhaps you are right,” said the boy.
“I suppose they got the old man?” carelessly
remarked Bilbil.
“What old man?”
“Rinkitink.”
“Oh, no! His Majesty is
at the bottom of the well,” said Inga, “and
I don’t know how to get him out again.”
“Then let him stay there,” suggested the
goat.
“That would be cruel. I
am sure, Bilbil, that you are fond of the good King,
your master, and do not mean what you say. Together,
let us find some way to save poor King Rinkitink.
He is a very jolly companion, and has a heart exceedingly
kind and gentle.”
“Oh, well; the old boy isn’t
so bad, taken altogether,” admitted Bilbil,
speaking in a more friendly tone. “But his
bad jokes and fat laughter tire me dreadfully, at
times.”
Prince Inga now ran back to the well,
the goat following more leisurely.
“Here’s Bilbil!”
shouted the boy to the King. “The enemy
didn’t get him, it seems.”
“That’s lucky for the
enemy,” said Rinkitink. “But it’s
lucky for me, too, for perhaps the beast can assist
me out of this hole. If you can let a rope down
the well, I am sure that you and Bilbil, pulling together,
will be able to drag me to the earth’s surface.”
“Be patient and we will make
the attempt,” replied Inga encouragingly, and
he ran to search the ruins for a rope. Presently
he found one that had been used by the warriors in
toppling over the towers, which in their haste they
had neglected to remove, and with some difficulty he
untied the knots and carried the rope to the mouth
of the well.
Bilbil had lain down to sleep and
the refrain of a merry song came in muffled tones
from the well, proving that Rinkitink was making a
patient endeavor to amuse himself.
“I’ve found a rope!”
Inga called down to him; and then the boy proceeded
to make a loop in one end of the rope, for the King
to put his arms through, and the other end he placed
over the drum of the windlass. He now aroused
Bilbil and fastened the rope firmly around the goat’s
shoulders.
“Are you ready?” asked the boy, leaning
over the well.
“I am,” replied the King.
“And I am not,” growled
the goat, “for I have not yet had my nap out.
Old Rinki will be safe enough in the well until I’ve
slept an hour or two longer.”
“But it is damp in the well,”
protested the boy, “and King Rinkitink may catch
the rheumatism, so that he will have to ride upon your
back wherever he goes.”
Hearing this, Bilbil jumped up at once.
“Let’s get him out,” he said earnestly.
“Hold fast!” shouted Inga
to the King. Then he seized the rope and helped
Bilbil to pull. They soon found the task more
difficult than they had supposed. Once or twice
the King’s weight threatened to drag both the
boy and the goat into the well, to keep Rinkitink company.
But they pulled sturdily, being aware of this danger,
and at last the King popped out of the hole and fell
sprawling full length upon the ground.
For a time he lay panting and breathing
hard to get his breath back, while Inga and Bilbil
were likewise worn out from their long strain at the
rope; so the three rested quietly upon the grass and
looked at one another in silence.
Finally Bilbil said to the King:
“I’m surprised at you. Why were you
so foolish as to fall down that well? Don’t
you know it’s a dangerous thing to do?
You might have broken your neck in the fall, or been
drowned in the water.”
“Bilbil,” replied the
King solemnly, “you’re a goat. Do
you imagine I fell down the well on purpose?”
“I imagine nothing,” retorted
Bilbil. “I only know you were there.”
“There? Heh-heh-heek-keek-eek!
To be sure I was there,” laughed Rinkitink.
“There in a dark hole, where there was no light;
there in a watery well, where the wetness soaked me
through and through keek-eek-eek-eek! through
and through!”
“How did it happen?” inquired Inga.
“I was running away from the
enemy,” explained the King, “and I was
carelessly looking over my shoulder at the same time,
to see if they were chasing me. So I did not
see the well, but stepped into it and found myself
tumbling down to the bottom. I struck the water
very neatly and began struggling to keep myself from
drowning, but presently I found that when I stood
upon my feet on the bottom of the well, that my chin
was just above the water. So I stood still and
yelled for help; but no one heard me.”
“If the warriors had heard you,”
said Bilbil, “they would have pulled you out
and carried you away to be a slave. Then you would
have been obliged to work for a living, and that would
be a new experience.”
“Work!” exclaimed Rinkitink.
“Me work? Hoo, hoo, heek-keek-eek!
How absurd! I’m so stout not
to say chubby not to say fat that
I can hardly walk, and I couldn’t earn my salt
at hard work. So I’m glad the enemy did
not find me, Bilbil. How many others escaped?”
“That I do not know,”
replied the boy, “for I have not yet had time
to visit the other parts of the island. When
you have rested and satisfied your royal hunger, it
might be well for us to look around and see what the
thieving warriors of Regos and Coregos have left us.”
“An excellent idea,” declared
Rinkitink. “I am somewhat feeble from my
long confinement in the well, but I can ride upon Bilbil’s
back and we may as well start at once.”
Hearing this, Bilbil cast a surly
glance at his master but said nothing, since it was
really the goat’s business to carry King Rinkitink
wherever he desired to go.
They first searched the ruins of the
palace, and where the kitchen had once been they found
a small quantity of food that had been half hidden
by a block of marble. This they carefully placed
in a sack to preserve it for future use, the little
fat King having first eaten as much as he cared for.
This consumed some time, for Rinkitink had been exceedingly
hungry and liked to eat in a leisurely manner.
When he had finished the meal he straddled Bilbil’s
back and set out to explore the island, Prince Inga
walking by his side.
They found on every hand ruin and
desolation. The houses of the people had been
pilfered of all valuables and then torn down or burned.
Not a boat had been left upon the shore, nor was there
a single person, man or woman or child, remaining
upon the island, save themselves. The only inhabitants
of Pingaree now consisted of a fat little King, a boy
and a goat.
Even Rinkitink, merry hearted as he
was, found it hard to laugh in the face of this mighty
disaster. Even the goat, contrary to its usual
habit, refrained from saying anything disagreeable.
As for the poor boy whose home was now a wilderness,
the tears came often to his eyes as he marked the
ruin of his dearly loved island.
When, at nightfall, they reached the
lower end of Pingaree and found it swept as bare as
the rest, Inga’s grief was almost more than he
could bear. Everything had been swept from him parents,
home and country in so brief a time that
his bewilderment was equal to his sorrow.
Since no house remained standing,
in which they might sleep, the three wanderers crept
beneath the overhanging branches of a cassa tree
and curled themselves up as comfortably as possible.
So tired and exhausted were they by the day’s
anxieties and griefs that their troubles soon faded
into the mists of dreamland. Beast and King and
boy slumbered peacefully together until wakened by
the singing of the birds which greeted the dawn of
a new day.