SHOWS THE DREADFUL DEPRAVITY OF MAN AND THE AMAZING EFFECTS OF ELECTRICAL TREATMENT ON
MAN AND BEAST.
Meanwhile Stumps went back to the
hotel to brood over his misfortunes, and hatch out
the plan which his rather unfertile brain had devised.
Seated on a chair, with his elbows
on his knees, his chin in his hands, and his nails
between his teeth, he stared at a corner of the room,
nibbled and meditated. There was nothing peculiar
about the corner of the room at which he stared, save
that there stood in it a portmanteau which Sam had
bought the day before, and in which were locked his
and Robin’s bags of treasure.
“If I could only manage to get
away by rail to-to-anywhere,
I’d do it,” he muttered.
Almost simultaneously he leaped from
his chair, reddened, and went to look-out at the window,
for some one had tapped at the door.
“Come in,” he said with some hesitation.
“Gen’l’man wants
you, sir,” said a waiter, ushering in the identical
captain who had stopped Stumps on the street that day.
“Excuse me, young man,”
he said, taking a chair without invitation, “I
saw you enter this hotel, and followed you.”
“Well, and what business had
you to follow me?” demanded Stumps, feeling
uneasy.
“Oh, none-none at
all, on’y I find I must sail this afternoon,
an’ I’ve took a fancy to you, an’
hope you’ve made up your mind to ship with me.”
Stumps hesitated a moment.
“Well, yes, I have,” he
said, with sudden resolution. “When must
I be on board?”
“At four, sharp,” said
the captain, rising. “I like promptitude.
All right. Don’t fail me.”
“I won’t,” said Stumps, with emphasis.
When the captain was gone, Stumps
went nervously to the door and peeped out. Nothing
was visible, save the tail of a waiter’s retiring
coat. Cautiously shutting and bolting the door,
he took up a strong walking-cane, and, after some
difficulty, forced the lock of the portmanteau therewith.
Abstracting from it the two bags containing the treasures
of his mates Robin and Sam, he wrapped them in a handkerchief,
and put them into a canvas bag, which he had purchased
for the reception of his own wardrobe. Taking
this under his arm he went quietly out of the hotel
into the street and disappeared.
He was closely followed by a waiter
who had taken the liberty of peeping through the key-hole
when he committed the robbery, and who never lost
sight of him till he had seen him embark in a vessel
in the harbour, named the Fairy Queen, and heard him
give his name as James Gibson. Then he returned
to the hotel, giving vent to his sentiments in the
following soliloquy-“Of course it
is no business of yours, John Ribbon, whether men
choose to open their comrades’ portmantys with
keys or walkin’-sticks, but it is well for you
to note the facts that came under your observation,
and to reveal them to them as they concern-for
a consideration.”
But the waiter did not at that time
obtain an opportunity to reveal his facts to those
whom they concerned, for Sam, Robin, Slagg, and Letta
did not return to the hotel, but sent a pencil note
to Stumps instead, to the effect that they had received
an invitation from a telegraph official to pay him
a visit at his residence up country; that, as he was
to carry them off in his boat to the other side of
the bay, they would not have an opportunity of calling
to bid him, Stumps, a temporary farewell; that he
was to make himself as happy as he could in Bombay
during their absence, keep on the rooms at the hotel,
and settle the bills, and that all expenses would
be paid by them on their return.
As the youth by whom this message
was sent knew nothing about the senders or whither
they had gone, and as Stumps did not again make his
appearance, the landlord seized the few things that
had been left by the supposed runaways.
The invitation that had thus suddenly
been given and accepted, was received from a gentleman
named Redpath, an official in the Indian telegraph
service. They had been introduced to him on board
of the Great Eastern by Sam’s friend, Frank
Hedley, and he became so interested in their adventurous
career that he begged them to visit his bungalow in
a rather out-of-the-way part of the country, even if
only for a few days.
“It won’t take us long
to get there,” he said, “for the railway
passes within thirty miles of it, and I’ll drive
you over as pretty a piece of country as you could
wish to see. I have a boat alongside, and must
be off at once. Do come.”
“But there are so many of us,” objected
Sam Shipton.
“Pooh! I could take a
dozen more of you,” returned the hospitable
electrician; “and my wife rejoices-absolutely
rejoices-when I bring home unexpected company.”
“What a pattern she must be,”
said Slagg; “but excuse me, sir, since you are
so good as to invite us all, may I make so bold as
to ax if you’ve got a servants’-’all?”
“Well, I’ve not got exactly
that,” replied Redpath, with an amused look;
“but I’ve got something of the same sort
for my servants. Why do you ask?”
“Because, sir, I never did sail
under false colours, and I ain’t agoin’
to begin now. I don’t set up for a gentleman,
and though circumstances has throwed me along wi’
two of ’em, so that we’ve bin hail-feller-well-met
for a time, I ain’t agoin’ to condescend
to consort wi’ them always. If you’ve
got a servants’-’all, I’ll come and
thank ‘ee; if not, I’ll go an’ keep
company wi’ Stumps till Mr Shipton comes back.”
“Very well, my good fellow,
then you shall come, and we’ll find you a berth
in the servants’-hall,” said Redpath, laughing.
“But what about Stumps?”
said Robin; “he will wonder what has come over
us. Could we not return to the hotel first?”
“Impossible,” said the
electrician; “I have not time to wait.
My leave has expired. Besides, you can write
him a note.”
So the note was written, as we have
shown, and the party set out on their inland journey.
Before starting, however, Frank Hedley,
the engineer, took Sam and Robin aside.
“Now, think over what I have
mentioned,” he said, “and make up your
minds. You see, I have some influence at head-quarters,
and am quite sure I can get you both a berth on board
to replace the men who have left us. I think
I can even manage to find a corner for Slagg, if he
is not particular.”
“We shall only be too happy
to go if you can manage it,” replied Robin;
“but Stumps, what about him? We can’t
leave Stumps behind, you know.”
“Well. I’ll try
to get Stumps smuggled aboard as a stoker or something,
if possible, but to say truth, I don’t feel quite
so sure about that matter,” replied Frank.
“But shall we have time for
this trip if you should prove successful?” asked
Sam.
“Plenty of time,” returned
his friend; “coaling is a slow as well as a
dirty process, and to ship thousands of tons is not
a trifle. I daresay we shall be more than a
week here before the shore-end is fixed and all ready
to start.”
“Well then, Frank,” said
Sam; “adieu, till we meet as shipmates.”
The railway soon conveyed our adventurers
a considerable distance into the interior of the country.
At the station where Redpath and his
guests got out, a vehicle was procured sufficiently
large to hold them all, and the road over which they
rapidly passed bore out the character which the electrician
had given to it. Every species of beautiful
scenery presented itself-from the low scrubby
plain, with clumps of tropical plants here and there,
to undulating uplands and hills.
“You must have some difficulties
in your telegraph operations here,” said Robin
to Redpath, “with which we have not to contend
in Europe.”
“A few,” replied his friend,
“especially in the wilder parts of the East.
Would you believe it,” he added, addressing
himself to Letta, “that wild animals frequently
give us great trouble? Whenever a wild pig,
a tiger, or a buffalo, takes it into his head to scratch
himself, he uses one of our telegraph-posts if he
finds it handy. Elephants sometimes butt them
down with their thick heads, by way of pastime, I
suppose, for they are not usually fond of posts and
wire as food. Then bandicoots and porcupines
burrow under them and bring them to the ground, while
kites and crows sit on the wires and weigh them down.
Monkeys, as usual, are most mischievous, for they lay
hold of the wires with tails and paws, swinging from
one to another, and thus form living conductors, which
tend to mix and confuse the messages.”
“But does not the electricity
hurt the monkeys?” asked Letta.
“O no! It does them no
injury; and birds sitting on the wires are never killed
by it, as many people suppose. The electricity
passes them unharmed, and keeps faithfully to the
wire. If a monkey, indeed, had a tail long enough
to reach from the wire to the ground, and were to wet
itself thoroughly, it might perhaps draw off some of
the current, but fortunately the tails of monkeys
are limited. We often find rows of birds lying
dead below our telegraph lines, but these have been
killed by flying against them, the wires being scarcely
visible among trees.”
“And what about savages, sir?”
asked Jim Slagg, who had become deeply interested
in the telegraphist’s discourse; “don’t
they bother you sometimes?”
“Of course they do,” replied
Redpath, with a laugh, “and do us damage at
times, though we bother them too, occasionally.”
“How do you manage that, sir?” asked Jim.
“Well, you must know we have
been much hindered in our work by the corruptness
and stupidity of Eastern officials in many places,
and by the destructive propensities and rapacity of
Kurds and wandering Arabs and semi-savages, who have
found our posts in the desert good for firewood and
our wires for arrow-heads or some such implements.
Some of our pioneers in wild regions have been killed
by robbers when laying the lines, while others have
escaped only by fighting for their lives. Superstition,
too, has interfered with us sadly, though sometimes
it has come to our aid.”
“There was one eccentric Irishman-one
of the best servants I ever had,” continued
Redpath, “who once made a sort of torpedo arrangement
which achieved wonderful success. The fellow
is with me still, and it is a treat to hear Flinn,
that’s his name, tell the story, but the fun
of it mostly lies in the expressive animation of his
own face, and the richness of his brogue as he tells
it.
“`I was away in the dissert
somewheres,’ he is wont to say, `I don’t
rightly remimber where, for my brain’s no better
than a sive at geagraphy, but it was a wild place,
anyhow-bad luck to it! Well, we had
sot up a line o’ telegraph in it, an’ wan
the posts was stuck in the ground not far from a pool
o’ wather where the wild bastes was used to
dhrink of a night, an’ they tuk a mighty likin’
to this post, which they scrubbed an’ scraped
at till they broke it agin an’ agin. Och!
it’s me heart was broke intirely wi’ them.
At last I putt me brains in steep an’ got up
an invintion. It wouldn’t be aisy
to explain it, specially to onscientific people.
No matter, it was an electrical arrangement, which
I fixed to the post, an’ bein’ curious
to know how it would work, I wint down to the pool
an’ hid mesilf in a hole of a rock, wid a big
stone over me an ferns all round about. I tuk
me rifle, av coorse, just for company, you
know, but not to shoot, for I’m not bloodthirsty,
by no means. Well, I hadn’t bin long down
whin a rustle in the laves towld me that somethin’
was comin’, an’ sure enough down trotted
a little deer- as purty a thing as you
could wish to see. It took a dhrink, tremblin’
all the time, an’ there was good cause, for another
rustlin’ was heard. Off wint the deer,
just as a panther o’ some sort jumped out o’
the jungle an’ followed it. Bad luck go
wid ye says I; but I’d scarce said it whin a
loud crashing in the jungle towld me a buffalo or an
elephant was comin’. It was an elephant.
He wint an’ took a long pull at the pool.
After that he goes straight to the post. Ha!
says I, it’s an owld friend o’ yours,
I see. When he putt his great side agin’
it, for the purpose of scratchin’, he got a
shock from my electrical contrivance that caused his
tail to stand upon end, and the hairs at its point
to quiver. Wid a grunt he stood back an’
gave the post a look o’ surprise, as much as
to say, Did ye do that a-purpose, ye spalpeen?
Then he tried it again, an’ got another shock
that sot up his dander, for he twisted his long nose
round the post, goin’ to pull it down, no doubt,
but he got another shock on the nose that made him
squeal an’ draw back. Then he lowered
his great head for a charge. It’s all over
wid ye now, me post, says I; but the baste changed
its mind, and wint off wid its tail an’ trunk
in the air, trumpetin’ as if it had got the toothache.
Well, after that nothin’ came for some time,
and I think I must have gone off to slape, for I was
awoke by a most tremendious roar. Lookin’
up I saw a tiger sprawlin’ on his back beside
the post! Av coorse the shock wasn’t enough
to have knocked the baste over. I suppose it
had tripped in the surprise. Anyhow it jumped
up and seized the post with claws an’ teeth,
whin av coorse it got another shock that caused
it to jump back about six yards, with its tail curled,
its hair all on end, all its claws out, an’
its eyes blazin’. You seem to feel it,
says I-into meself, for fear he’d
hear me. He didn’t try it again, but wint
away into the bush like a war-rocket. After
that, five or six little wild pigs came down, an’
the smallest wan wint straight up to the post an’
putt his nose to it. He drew back wid a jerk,
an’ gave a scream that seemed to rend all his
vitals. You don’t like it, thinks I; but,
faix, it looked as if I was wrong, for he tried
it again. Another shock he got, burst himself
a’most wid a most fearful yell, an’ bolted.
His brothers didn’t seem to understand it quite.
They looked after him in surprise. Then the
biggest wan gave a wriggle of his curly tail, an’
wint to the post as if to inquire what was the matter.
When he got it on the nose the effect was
surprisin’. The curl of his tail came
straight out, an’ it quivered for a minute all
over, wid its mouth wide open. The screech had
stuck in his throat, but it came out at last so fierce
that the other pigs had to join in self-defence.
I stuck my fingers in my ears and shut me eyes.
When I opened them again the pigs were gone.
It’s my opinion they were all dissolved, like
the zinc plates in a used-up battery; but I can’t
prove that. Well, while I was cogitatin’
on the result of my little invintion, what should walk
out o’ the woods but a man! At first I
tuk him for a big monkey, for the light wasn’t
very good, but he had a gun on his shoulder, an’
some bits o’ clothes on, so I knew him for a
human. Like the rest o’ them, he wint
up to the post an’ looked at it, but didn’t
touch it. Then he came to the pool an’
tuk a dhrink, an’ spread out his blanket, an’
began to arrange matters for spendin’ the rest
o’ the night there. Av coorse he pulled
out his axe, for he couldn’t do widout fire to
kape the wild bastes off. An’ what does
he do but go straight up to my post an’ lift
his axe for a good cut. Hallo! says I, pretty
loud, for I was a’most too late. Whew!
What a jump he gave-six futt if it was
an inch. Whin he came down he staggered with
his back agin the post. That was enough.
The jump he tuk before was nothin’ to what he
did after. I all but lost sight of him among
the branches. When he returned to the ground
it was flat on his face he fell, an’, rowlin’
over his head, came up on his knees with a roar that
putt the tigers and pigs to shame. Sarves you
right, says I, steppin’ out of my hole.
Av coorse he thought I was a divil of some sort,
for he turned as white in the face as a brown man
could, an’ bolted without so much as sayin’
farewell. The way that nigger laid his legs
along the ground was a caution. Ostriches are
a joke to it. I picked up his blanket an’
fetched it home as a keepsake, an’ from that
day to this the telegraph-posts have been held sacred
by man an’ baste all over that part of the country.’”
“I’d like to meet wi’
the feller that told that yarn,” said Jim Slagg.
“So should I,” said Letta, laughing.
“You shall both have your wish,
for there he stands,” said Redpath, as they
dashed round the corner of a bit of jungle, on the
other side of which lay as pretty a bungalow as one
could wish to see. A man-servant who had heard
the wheels, was ready at the gate to receive the reins,
while under the verandah stood a pretty little woman
to receive the visitors. Beside her was a black
nurse with a white baby.
“Here we are, Flinn,”
said Redpath, leaping to the ground. “All
well, eh?”
“Sure we’re niver anything
else here, sor,” replied Flinn, with a modest
smile.
“I’ve just been relating
your electrical experiences to my friends,”
said the master.
“Ah! now, it’s drawin’
the long bow you’ve been,” returned the
man; “I see it in their face.”
“I have rather diluted the dose
than otherwise,” returned Redpath. “Let
me introduce Mr Slagg. He wishes to see Indian
life in the `servants’-hall.’ Let
him see it, and treat him well.”
“Yours to command,” said
Flinn, with a nod as he led the horses away.
“This way, Mr Slug.”
“Slagg, if you please, Mr Flinn,”
said Jim. “The difference between a a
an’ a u ain’t much, but the results is
powerful sometimes.”
While Slagg was led away to the region
of the bungalow appropriated to the domestics, his
friends were introduced to pretty little Mrs Redpath,
and immediately found themselves thoroughly at home
under the powerful influence of Indian hospitality.
Although, being in the immediate neighbourhood
of a veritable Indian jungle, it was natural that
both Sam and Robin should wish to see a little sport
among large game, their professional enthusiasm rose
superior to their sporting tendencies, and they decided
next day to accompany their host on a short trip of
inspection to a neighbouring telegraph station.
Letta being made over to the care of the hostess,
was forthwith installed as assistant nurse to the white
baby, whom she already regarded as a delicious doll-so
readily does female nature adapt itself to its appropriate
channels.
Not less readily did Jim Slagg adapt
himself to one of the peculiar channels of man’s
nature. Sport was one of Slagg’s weaknesses,
though he had enjoyed very little of it, poor fellow,
in the course of his life. To shoot a lion,
a tiger, or an elephant, was, in Slagg’s estimation,
the highest possible summit of earthly felicity.
He was young, you see, at that time, and moderately
foolish! But although he had often dreamed of
such bliss, he had never before expected to be within
reach of it. His knowledge of sport, moreover,
was entirely theoretic. He knew indeed how to
load a rifle and pull the trigger, but nothing more.
“You haven’t got many
tigers in these parts, I suppose?” he said to
Flinn as they sauntered towards the house after seeing
the electrical party off. He asked the question
with hesitation, being impressed with a strange disbelief
in tigers, except in a menagerie, and feeling nearly
as much ashamed as if he had asked whether they kept
elephants in the sugar-basin. To his relief
Flinn did not laugh, but replied quite gravely-“Och!
yes, we’ve got a few, but they don’t often
come nigh the house. We have to thravel a bit
into the jungle, and camp out, whin we wants wan.
I heard master say he’d have a try at ’em
to-morrow, so you’ll see the fun, for we’ve
all got to turn out whin we go after tigers.
If you’re fond o’ sport in a small way,
howiver, I can give ye a turn among the birds an’
small game to-day.”
“There’s nothing I’d
like better,” said Slagg, jumping at the offer
like a hungry trout at a fly.
“Come along, then,” returned
the groom heartily; “we’ll take shot-guns,
an’ a spalpeen of a black boy to carry a spare
rifle an’ the bag.”
In a few minutes the two men, with
fowling-pieces on their shoulders, and a remarkably
attenuated black boy at their heels carrying a large
bore rifle, entered the jungle behind the electrician’s
bungalow.