Chapter Thirty Two.
On Duty.
“I didn’t expect this,” said Murray to himself, as after sweeping the shore of the bay he once more fixed his eyes upon the well-manned boat in front; and then he started in wonder, for Tom May, who sat close to him astern, said in a low voice—
“I didn’t expect that the captain would send us off again directly, Mr Murray, sir.”
“Neither did I, Tom; and, what is more, I did not expect to hear you say that you were thinking just the same as I did.”
“Was you, sir?”
“Yes. You didn’t want to come, I suppose, after going through so much?”
“Not want to come, sir? I just did! But what sort of a game is this going to be?”
“I don’t know, Tom,” replied Murray gruffly, “only that we’ve got to watch this Mr Allen.”
“Don’t mean no games, do he, sir?”
“I think not; but I look to you to keep your eyes open.”
“Which I just will, sir. But I say, look at that.”
“Look at what, Tom?”
“That there little creek opening out, sir. Seems to me as if they’ve got little rivers all round the bay ready for going up or coming out on. It’s just as if they shut ’em up and no one could see ’em afterwards.”
Some little time later the planter’s boat, which was only a short distance ahead, turned off at right angles in obedience to a pull at the starboard line, and seemed to disappear through a beautiful screen of tropic growth, and as the cutter was steered in after her it was to pass along a soft green tunnel, flecked with golden sunlight, into a smooth lake, at one side of which, standing back a short distance from the silver sandy shore, with its open windows, green shading jalousies, sheltering trees, and scarlet creepers, was as perfect a little Eden of a home as mortal eye ever looked upon. There was nothing to suggest slavery, sorrow, or suffering in any shape, but everywhere Nature decked the place with her richest beauties, and as the middy sprang up involuntarily, a low murmur of admiration ran through the crew. Then, as if ashamed of the habit in which he was indulging, Tom May doffed his straw hat, placed it upon his knees, thrust his crooked index finger into his capacious mouth, and hooked out from his left cheek a disgusting-looking quid of well-chewed tobacco, which dropped into the crown of the hat and was quickly tossed out, to fall plop into the deep still water of the lake. The next moment a golden-scaled fish made a rush for what suggested itself to its ignorance as a delicacy, which it took, delivered a couple of strokes with its tail which sent it to the surface, flying out and falling back again with a heavy splash, and then disappeared beneath the glittering rings which began to open out and widen more and more towards the borders of the little mirrorlike lake.
“And sarve you jolly well right too,” growled the big sailor, as if talking to himself. “What call had you to meddle with luxuries as is on’y sootable for eddicated people?”
Murray suppressed a smile and looked as serious as he could, giving orders to the men to pull a few strokes with their oars, sufficient to send the cutter into the place that had been occupied by the planter’s boat, which was now gliding away from the great bamboo piles driven in by the rustic steps and platform upon which their guide had landed, while he now stood resting upon a rail beneath the verandah, which offered ample shade for the cutter and her crew.
Murray gave a few further orders, sprang out and stepped to the planter’s side as the feeble invalid signed to him to come.
“I heard the commands given to you, sir,” he said, “and you will, I hope, forgive me if I do not seem hospitable.”
“I know you are ill, sir,” said Murray coldly, “so you need not trouble at all about me and my men.”
“I thank you,” said the planter, “and of course I know enough of the Navy and its discipline not to proffer drink to your men.”
“Certainly not,” said Murray stiffly.
“Still,” continued the planter, “in this hot climate the shelter will be acceptable. There is a spring of excellent water in the rockery behind the house, of which I beg you will make every use you desire. I am going to lie down in the room to the left. You have only to ring, and my slaves—well, servants,” said the planter, smiling sadly as he saw the lad’s brow knit—“my servants will attend to your summons directly, and bring fruit—oranges, and what your men will no doubt appreciate, fresh green cocoanuts. They will make you fresh coffee and bring anything else you desire, sir.”
“I am much obliged,” said Murray, rather distantly, “but you must recollect that I am on duty.”
“I do not forget that, sir,” replied the planter, smiling; “but you will not find your duty a very hard one—to guard a poor feeble creature such as I. There, sir, you and your superiors are masters here, and I am, I know, only a prisoner.”
“I shall make your position as little irksome as I can, sir,” said Murray; and then, feeling a certain amount of pity for the wretched man, he added, “Not a very terrible-looking prison, this.”
“No,” replied the planter, “and when you begin to go amongst the slave-huts, you will, as a stranger, begin to wonder at their aspect, for the simplest shelter made with a few bamboos is soon turned by Nature into a home of beauty.”
“But all the same it is a slave’s prison,” replied Murray.
“We had better not discuss that question, young gentleman,” said the planter bitterly, “for I am sure that I could not convince you that I have tried for years past to render the slaves’ lot more bearable.”
“Nothing could make it more bearable,” said Murray sternly.
“Certainly not,” said the other sadly, “as matters are here.”
He raised his broad-brimmed Panama hat and turned to leave the bamboo platform, but, misjudging his strength, he reeled and would have fallen headlong into the placid water if it had not been for Murray’s prompt action. For, starting forward, he flung his arm round the sick man’s waist, and supported him to the doorway that had been pointed out beneath the broad verandah.
“Thank you! Thank you!” panted the sick man; and with a painful smile he continued, “Ah, it is a great thing to be young and strong, with the world before you and nothing to repent.—If you please, through that door to the left.”
They were standing now in a simply but handsomely furnished hall, whose principal decorations caught the lad’s eyes at once, being, as they were, sporting and defensive weapons of all kinds, and of the best manufacture, hung about the walls; but for the moment Murray had no opportunity for inspecting these objects of interest, his attention being taken up by the planter, who availed himself of his guardian’s help to pass through the door upon their left, where he sank upon a couch at one side of the room and closed his eyes.
“Would you like to see our doctor, sir?” asked Murray.
“No, no; thank you, no; it is only weakness,” was the reply. “I have often been like this, and it will soon pass off. I shall go off to sleep before many minutes have passed, and wake up rested and refreshed.”
“Then you would like me to leave you for a while?” asked Murray.
“I should be most grateful, sir,” was the reply, “and I shall sleep in peace now, feeling safe in the knowledge that I have the protection of a guard.”
The planter had opened his eyes to speak, and now closed them tightly, leaving his guardian to glance round the room, which had but the one door, that by which they had entered; while the window was open save that one widely arranged green jalousie shut out some of the sunshine and subdued the light that floated in.
Murray stepped out, after noticing that an oblong, shallow, brass-bound box lay upon a side-table—a box whose configuration had but one meaning for the lad, and that was of a warlike or self-protective character, an idea which was strengthened by the fact that an ordinary military sword was hung above the mantelpiece.
“Sword and pistols,” thought the lad. “What does he want with so many weapons? I should have considered that there were enough in the hall without these.”
He noticed that there was a hand-bell upon the side-table, a fact which suggested that a servant was within reach, and as the lad stood in the hall once more he looked about him, and then, feeling that he had entered upon a special charge, he crossed to the next door, that facing the one he had just left, and upon thrusting it open found himself in what was evidently used as a dining-room, being about double the size of the other, and having two windows whose lath-like shutters half darkened the room.
“I don’t want to play spy all over the house,” said Murray to himself, “but I am in charge of this planter fellow, and I ought to know who is about the place. But I don’t know,” he muttered; “it isn’t the duty of a naval officer.”
Frowning slightly, he stepped out on to the bamboo platform again and signed to the big sailor to follow him back to the door.
“Here, Tom,” he said, and glancing down at the man’s bare feet, he added, in a low tone, “You have no shoes on, so just go quietly through the bottom of the building and see what rooms there are and what black servants are about.”
“Ay, ay, sir!” said the man softly.
“Go quietly,” added Murray; “the owner is ill and has dropped asleep.”
“Ay, ay, sir!” replied the sailor, and in regular able-seaman swing upon the points of his toes he stepped out of the hall-like central room of the place, taking in the little armoury the while, and left his officer alone, the door closing behind him as silently as he stepped.
“How still it all is,” thought the middy, and he went cautiously back to the little room which he looked upon as the planter’s study, pressed the door slightly open, and peered in, to see that the occupant had not stirred, while his deep breathing now sounded plainly, till Murray let the door fall to and went back towards that through which Tom May had passed upon his mission.
As the middy approached, it was drawn open again.
“Hallo, Tom!” said the lad. “Back already?”
“Ay, ay, sir! There’s on’y two cabins to look at there, and one’s a cook’s galley, and t’other’s stooard’s pantry.”
“Did you see the black servants?”
“No, sir, and there ain’t no white uns neither.”
“Sort of summer-house,” thought Murray; and then in connection with his duty he told the sailor to go up-stairs and examine the bedrooms.
“Which way does the cabin ladder lie, sir?” asked the man.
“I don’t know, Tom,” was the reply. “Try that door.”
He pointed to one that was on the far side of the hall and had struck him at first as a movable panel to close up a fire-place; but upon the light cane frame being drawn out it revealed a perpendicular flight of steps, up which the sailor drew himself lightly and lowered himself down again.
“Well?”
“Arn’t no rooms there, sir,” whispered the man, with rather an uneasy look in his eyes.
“What do you mean?”
“It’s just the ship’s hold, sir, turned upside down like. Sort o’ cock loft of bamboo spars jyned together at the top—rafters, don’t they call ’em, sir?”
“Yes, of course.”
“That’s right, then, sir, and they’re all thatched and caulked with palm leaves.”
“Not a bedroom at all, then, Tom.”
“No, sir, but it’s a sort o’ sleeping accommodation all the same, ’cause there’s a couple o’ netting sort o’ hammocks slung all ready; but I shouldn’t like to have my quarters there,” continued the man uneasily.
“Why not? It must be cool and pleasant.”
“Cool, sir, but not kinder pleasant.”
“What do you mean?”
“Well, you see, sir, it’s so plaguey dark.”
“What of that? So’s the sloop’s hold.”
“Yes, sir, but this here’s so unked dark.”
“Well, you don’t mind the dark?”
“No, sir, I dunno as I do so long as I’ve got my messmates nigh at hand.”
“Look here, Tom, I don’t understand you,” said Murray. “You’re keeping something back. Why are you hesitating? You don’t mind the dark.”
“No, sir; it’s the rustling sounds as I don’t like.”
“Pooh! Rats,” said Murray.
“Nay, nay, sir. I knows what a rat can do in a ship’s hold as well as any one who has been to sea. What I heered arn’t no rats.”
“Birds, then.”
“Tchah, sir! That arn’t no birds.”
“What is it, May, since you seem to know?”
“Some’at oncanny, sir.”
“Uncanny? What can it be uncanny?”
“I dunno, sir. Some’at as arn’t real.”
“What do you mean?”
“I dunno, sir, and I ’spects—”
“Suspect what? Why, Tom, you don’t mean to tell me that a great strong sailor like you fancies that the place is haunted?”
“Oh no, sir, I don’t go so far as to say that,” said the man.
“Then what do you mean?”
“That’s what I can’t exackly tell you, sir. All I knows is that as soon as I got my head and shoulders well up among them bamboos there was a roosh as if half-a-dozen people was a-comin’ at me, and then some one whispered something to the others, and they whispered back. It was jest for all the world, sir, as if some one said ‘Hist! It ain’t him,’ and t’others whispered back and that settled ’em into going on talking together oneasy like; and then I come down.”
“Without making out what it was, Tom,” said Murray, laughing softly.
“Nay, sir; I seemed to know right enough; and it arn’t nothing to laugh at.”
“What is it, then, Tom?”
“Why, sir, I don’t go for to say as it is, but it sounded to me like oneasy slaves as had met their ends aboard some o’ they slaving craft, and couldn’t rest.”
“Tom May!” said the middy; and he would have burst out laughing, but for the thought that he might awaken the sick man in the room where he had lain down to rest. “Come out here.”
“It’s of no use to say anything to the lads outside,” grumbled the big sailor, “for they think just the same as I do, sir.”
“Why, you haven’t spoken to them,” said Murray.
“Not to-day, sir, but we often have talked about it, sir, and what might happen to them fellows as man the slaving schooners. Something must come to ’em some time or another after what they’ve done to the niggers. Stands to reason, sir, as they can’t go on always as they do.”
“I’m not going to argue about that at a time like this, but I do wonder at a big sensible fellow like you are, Tom—a sailor I always feel proud of—beginning to talk about ghosts and rooms being haunted, just like some silly superstitious old woman.”
Tom May drew himself up proudly and smiled at the first portion of his young officer’s speech, but frowned at the latter and shook his head.
“Ah, it’s all very well, sir, for a young gentleman like you to talk that how, and you and Mr Roberts, sir, has been at me before and laughed at me and my messmates; but, you see, we’re a deal older than you are, and been at sea two or three times as long. We’ve seen bad storms, and all sorts o’ wonders such as young people don’t come across.”
“No doubt, Tom,” said Murray quietly; “but come along outside. I want to station my posts.”
“Ay, ay, sir!” said the man, with a sigh of relief; but before he followed his officer he stepped on tiptoe to the opening leading up to the loft, and made an offer, so to speak, shrank back, then advanced again, and ended by sharply and shrinkingly closing the screen-like door and backing away with a sigh of relief.
“Feel better, Tom?” said the middy, with mock seriousness, as they stood out in the full light of day again.
“Ah, you’re a-laughing at me, sir,” said the big sailor, shaking his head. “I know, sir, though you’re a-pretending to look as serious as a judge.”
“Enough to make me look serious, Tom. But are you sure that any of the restless ones didn’t slip down after you before you shut the door?”
“Eh? What, sir?” whispered the man hurriedly.
“You don’t think as—” He looked behind and round about him, before continuing. “Why, of course I am, sir. You’re a-making fun of a fellow, sir. But if you’d been up yonder and heered ’em—”
“I should have poked about with the barrel of my musket and found that the rustling was made by birds or rats.”
“Nay, sir,” said the man confidently, “’twarn’t neither o’ they things. If it had been they’d ha’ skilly wiggled away at once. And besides, sir, they wouldn’t ha’ made a man feel so ’orrid squirmy like. I felt all of a shudder; that’s what made me know that they were something as didn’t ought to be.”
“Snakes, perhaps, Tom.”
The man started, stared, snatched off his straw hat, and gave his head a vicious rub, before having another good look back at the thatch-roofed summer-house of a place.
“Say, Mr Murray, sir,” he said at last, “did you say snakes?”
“Yes, Tom; perhaps poisonous ones.”
The man gave his head another rub, and then ejaculated in a strange long-drawn way the one word—
“Well!”
“I’ve read that in places like this they creep in under the flooring, and then make their way up the holes and into the thatch after the birds or rats upon which they live.”
“Do they now, sir?” said the man excitedly.
“Yes, and some of them are horribly poisonous; so you must take care how you deal with them.”
“Poisonous, sir?” continued Tom. “Them sort as if they bite a man it’s all over with him and the doctor arn’t able to save his life?”
“Yes, Tom,” continued Murray; “in one of these islands particularly the people call the serpent the fer de lance, a bite from which is very often fatal.”
“Kills a man, sir?”
“I believe so.”
“Then I arn’t surprised at them calling it so, sir. Nothing could be too bad for it. That’s it, sir, and now I arn’t a bit surprised at my feeling as I did, sir. I wondered what made me come so all-overish like and fancy there was something about as oughtn’t to be. I arn’t a chap as gets skeared about a bit o’ danger, sir; now, am I, sir?”
“No, Tom; I believe you to be a brave fellow that your officers can always trust.”
“Thankye, sir; that’s what I want to be—chap as can stand a bit o’ fire, sir, eh?” said the man, with a broad grin.
“Yes, Tom, and that’s what made me feel vexed at your being so superstitious.”
“Sooperstitious, sir?” said the man, giving his head another rub. “That’s what you call it, is it, sir? Well, but arn’t it enough to make a fellow feel a bit creepy, sir, to have them dry-land eels squirming about overhead ready to give him a nip as means Dr Reston shaking his head all over you and calling your messmates to sew you up in your hammock with a twenty-four pound shot at your feet, and the skipper reading the sarvice over you before the hatch upon which you lays is tilted up, and then splash, down you goes out o’ sight at gunfire. I don’t see, sir, as a fellow has much to be ashamed of in being a bit shivery.”
“Nor I, Tom, if he shivered from an instinctive fear of a poisonous serpent. But you were not afraid of that, eh?”
Tom May screwed up his face again with a comical grin, shook his head, and then, after a glance here and there at his messmates who were to be stationed as sentries—
“Well, not azackly, sir,” he said. “I was reg’larly skeared at something, and I did not know what; but I see now, sir. It was my natur’ to—what you called ’stinctive.”
“Well, we’ll leave it there, Tom,” said Murray smiling, “but I’m not quite satisfied. I’ll go and have a look by and by.”
“Ah! But Mr Murray, sir, you won’t go and think I was a bit—”
“Never mind what I thought, Tom; and now come on. I want to see about the positions the men are to be in. To begin with, I should like the two men in the cutter to lie off a bit further.”
The order was given, and a fresh position was taken up before the middy walked carefully all round the planter’s rest-house and carefully stationed his men on duty, adding a few words about keeping a sharp lookout for the approach of danger, and at a whisper from the big sailor, including snakes.
This done, the lad began to amuse himself by examining the attempts that had been made to render the place beautiful, and it was while thus engaged, and noting that the forest all round the clearing and cultivation was apparently impenetrable, giving the idea that the cottage could only be approached by water, that Tom followed up three or four rather peculiar sniffs by one that was most suggestive of a desire to call his officer’s attention to something he wished to say.
Murray, who was pretty well acquainted with the sailor’s peculiarities, turned upon him at last sharply—
“Well, Tom,” he said, “what is it?”
“Oh, nothing, sir, on’y I didn’t want to seem imperent.”
“I’m glad to hear it, my lad; but what did you want to say?”
“I was on’y thinking, sir.”
“What about?”
“Why, sir, it seemed to me as if we was taking so much trouble to keep watch over this here sick gentleman.”
“Well, go on; don’t hesitate so.”
“Beg pardon, sir; I hesitate like ’cause I don’t want to seem imperent.”
“Then I’ll forgive you if it is, Tom. Now then, what were you going to say?”
“Only this, sir; wouldn’t it have been handier like to ha’ kep’ him aboard the Seafowl where the watches are going on reg’lar, and the doctor could ha’ looked in upon him now and then?”
“Perhaps it would, Tom,” replied Murray, “but Captain Kingsberry and the first lieutenant may have had special reasons for what they are doing.”
“Of course, sir; azackly, sir; but somehow this here does seem a bit quiet like after what we was doing before.”
“Less exciting, Tom?”
“Yes, sir. Don’t think it likely, do you, sir, that the Yankee chap who has been giving the gent inside so much trouble and nearly wherriting his life out over the slaver, may drop in to see him, do you, sir?”
“No, Tom, I don’t,” said the middy shortly. “Neither do you.”
Tom May shook his head and looked very hard at his officer.
“Beg pardon, sir, but you arn’t quite right like, because that’s just what I was thinking, and that you might like for us all to be quite ready for him if he did come.”
“What more could I do, Tom?” said the lad anxiously, for the man’s words made him think that he had been neglecting some precaution. “A good lookout is being kept, isn’t it?”
“Seaward, sir,” replied the man, “but I was thinking as the lads round the back arn’t in sight of one another.”
“Oh!” cried Murray. “And you think that the enemy might come stealing down one of the paths through the forest?”
“Didn’t see no paths, sir,” said the man, looking at him wonderingly.
“Neither did I, Tom.”
“O’ course not, sir,” said the man, giving himself a punch in the ribs with his doubled fist. “Here, I don’t know what I could be thinking of.”
“Nor do I, Tom. Mine’s rather a curious duty, namely, to take care that this gentleman does not leave this place, and to treat him as it seems to me so that while he is a prisoner he shall not in his state of health fancy that he is one.”
“Skipper wants to keep friends with him so as he’ll show us where all the niggers are, sir, and give us a chance to make a good haul of prize money?”
“Perhaps so, Tom.”
“Well, sir, captain knows best, and the first luff knows what’s second best. I dunno about Mr Munday, sir, but I wish some un else had my watch, that I do, sir. Our job burning out the black chief’s place over yonder was a bit too hot a job, but I’d rather have orders to do the same sort o’ thing again than be doing this here. It’s too sleepy for me. Can’t you set me ’sploring, sir, or something of that kind? For I’m no good at all onless I’m on active sarvice.”
“You’ll have plenty to do by and by, Tom, depend upon it.”
“Hope so, sir, but I want something to do now. Couldn’t do a bit o’ fishing, could I, sir?”
“No, Tom; we have no hooks and lines.”
“That’s a pity, sir. Seems to me that one might catch a good dish for the gunroom mess, and a few over for the men, judging from the way they bit out in the lagoon there, sir.”
“We’re on duty, Tom.”
“O’ course, sir. What do you say to me and a couple of the lads cutting bamboos and routing out the snakes I heered yonder in the roof. Too dangerous, perhaps, sir?”
“Much, Tom, and I don’t think it would accord with our duty here.”
“No, sir; o’ course not, but you’ll excuse me, sir?”
Murray nodded, and then, feeling hot and drowsy with the heat and silence, he suddenly recalled what the planter had said about summoning the servants if he wanted anything.
“Fruit!” he said to himself. “Well, I’ll begin with a good drink of water.—I’m going to have a look round, Tom,” he said quietly.
“Thankye, sir; I’m glad of it,” said the man eagerly; and he followed his officer promptly as he walked round the cottage, and said a few words to his sentries, who seemed to gladly welcome the coming of some one to relieve the silence and monotony of their task.
As he passed round the extreme pale of the garden-like clearing, Murray noted more than ever how the grounds were enclosed by a natural hedge of the densest kind, so that it was like a wall of verdure which was admirably tended and for the most part of the tropical kind, being kept clipped and intertwined to such an extent that it would have been impossible for wild creatures if they haunted the island to pass through.
Returning to the front, and after glancing at his boat, Murray signed to the big sailor to follow him, and entered through the verandah and the porch into the armoury-like hall, where he stood listening for a few moments before making a gesture to silence his man, who was about to speak. For Tom stood with wrinkled brow gazing hard at the screen which covered the way up to where the hammocks hung, as if rather uneasy in his mind about what that screen covered.
“I’ll be back directly, Tom,” said Murray, and then he went on tiptoe into the room he had mentally dubbed the study, and found that apparently the planter had not stirred, but was plunged in the deep sleep of exhaustion.
“I will not wake him,” thought the lad, and after gazing down at the worn and wasted countenance before him, his eyes again wandered over the walls and their decorations. He again noted the case upon the table, and then stepped back to where his man stood musket in hand watching the screen.
“Well, Tom,” said the lad; “heard anything of the snakes?”
“No, sir, and I’ve been listening for ’em for all I’m worth. I don’t think they’ll stir onless they hear the way up shook. Seems a rum place to get up and sleep. I should expect to find the snakes had took the hammocks first.”
“Well, we’re not going to disturb them, my lad; but come into that other room; I want a glass of water, and I suppose you could manage a drink too.”
“Thankye, sir; I just could—a big one. I should ha’ ventured to ask if I might get one, only I’m pretty sure that lake water’s as salt as brine.”
“There must be a spring somewhere,” said the lad, and making his way into the room that was used for meals, he advanced to the table at one side, where there was another hand-bell. “I don’t want to awaken our prisoner, Tom,” he said. “Here, take up the bell and go through to the back where the pantry place is, and ring gently.”
“Ay, ay, sir!” And the man softly raised the bell, thrusting in his hand so as to secure the tongue, and then the pair stepped back into the hall and through the door at the back, Murray closing it after them, before he signed to his follower to ring.
The man obeyed, at first gently, but as there was no reply he rang more loudly, and followed up his summons by thrusting the bell through a window at the back and sounding it vigorously.
“Can’t be no one at home, sir,” said the big sailor, turning to gaze at his officer.
“So it seems,” said Murray, as he stood in the intense silence listening; “but that Mr Allen said that his servants would come and attend to any of my wants.”
“Them chaps as rowed was all his servants or slaves, I suppose, sir?” said the man.
“Yes; but it is the hottest time, and these people out here always sleep in the middle of the day. Go out and follow up the side of that stream where they poled up the boat.”
Tom May looked at him in a peculiar way.
“Well, what are you waiting for?” said Murray.
“I warn’t with you when the blacks pulled the boat away.”
Murray started, and stared at his man in turn.
“Neither was I there,” he said, with a strange feeling of being puzzled assailing him.
“You said poled up the stream, not pulled, sir,” said the man. “I didn’t think when I spoke.”
“How absurd!” said Murray. “Here, let’s go out this way round to the front and hail the cutter. The boat-keepers will know.”
“It’s all right, sir,” said May, for there was a rustling sound at the back and light steps, and the man exclaimed, “Here’s one of them.”
“Why, it’s one of our lads,” said Murray excitedly.
“There’s a bell ringing somewhere, sir,” said the sailor, who now came out of the deep shadow at the back of the cottage. “Was it you, messmate?”
“Yes, my lad,” said Tom, speaking to his brother sailor, but staring hard at his officer the while. “This here’s the bell, lad, and it was me.”
Chapter Thirty Three.
Boiling over.
“Have you seen any of the black servants about?” asked Murray.
He was going to say slaves, but the word sounded so repugnant that he changed it.
“Them black chaps, sir?” replied the man. “You mean them as rowed the boat?”
“Yes, or any other ones about the place.”
“No, sir, only them as rowed, sir, and I was wondering where they got to. They seemed to go out, boat and all, like a match. I see ’em one minute, and the next they’d gone in amongst the trees; but where it was I couldn’t make out, and when I asked one of my messmates he didn’t seem to know neither.”
“Go back to your post, my lad,” said Murray. “Keep a sharp lookout, and report everything you see.”
“Ay, ay, sir!” said the man, saluting and going back amongst the trees, watched by Murray and May till he disappeared, when their eyes met in a questioning look.
The sailor was the first to speak.
“Yes, sir!” he said. “Was you saying anything?”
“No, Tom; I thought you were going to speak.”
“No, sir. I was only thinking it seemed precious queer.”
“Yes, it does—queer is the word, Tom. I can’t quite make it out.”
“That’s what’s the matter with me, sir. Seems so lonesome like. Makes me feel as if somebody was dead here, and I was precious glad when you spoke. Something arn’t right somehow.”
“The place is lonely because the people have taken fright at our coming and gone off into the forest, I suppose. It is a lonely place, as we found out for ourselves when we had lost our way.”
“Oh, that’s it, is it, sir? Well, I’m glad to know it, but somehow that don’t seem quite enough for me. I still keep feeling as something’s wrong, and as I said sir,—don’t laugh at me, sir, ’cause I can’t help it. I arn’t got a head like you as eggsplains everything for you. I get a bit silly and puzzled like sometimes, and just now it seems to me like a man might feel if some one was dead here.”
As the sailor spoke he pushed his straw hat back from his forehead and wiped the big drops of perspiration away.
“Tom,” said Murray sharply, “you’re about the most superstitious fellow I ever ran against. You’re frightened of shadows.”
“Yes, sir, you’re right,” whispered the man eagerly, and he glanced sharply about him. “Shadders—that’s it, sir; that’s just what I am: things as I can’t understand and feel like. I allers was, sir, and fell foul o’ myself for it; but then, as I says to myself, I ain’t ’fraid o’ nothing else. I’m pretty tidy and comf’table in the wussest o’ storms, and I never care much if one’s under fire, or them black beggars is chucking their spears at you, because you’ve got some’at to shoot at again.”
“No, Tom; you’re stout enough then.”
“Thankye, sir; I am, arn’t I? But at a time like this, when you’ve got pyson sarpents crawling about over your head, and what’s worse, the sort o’ feeling comes over you that you’re in a place where as we know, sir, no end of them poor niggers as was torn away from their homes has come to a bad end, I’m that sooperstitious, as you call it, that I don’t know which end of me’s up’ards and which down. I don’t like it, Mr Murray, sir, and you may laugh at me, sir, but I’m sure as sure that there’s something wrong—some one dead, I believe, and pretty close to us too.”
“Not that Mr Allen, Tom?” said Murray, starting, and in spite of his fair share of common sense, lowering his voice, as for the moment he seemed to share the sailor’s fancies.
“Him, sir?” whispered the man. “Like as not, sir. He looked bad enough to be on his way for the locker.”
“Yes,” agreed Murray; “he looked bad enough. But pooh! Nonsense!”
“Pooh! Nonsense it is, sir. But mightn’t it be as well to go in and see how he is, sir, and ask him ’bout where the black servants is?”
“Wake the poor fellow up from a comfortable sleep just because you have taken a silly notion into your head, Tom? Why, you are going to make me as fanciful as you are yourself!”
“Yes, sir, I wish you was,” said the man. “I should feel a deal better then.”
“But I don’t know, Tom,” said Murray suddenly. “I don’t want to disturb him; still, as he told me to do just as I pleased here, and when I wanted anything to ring for the servants—”
“Yes, sir, and they don’t obey orders, sir, as they should; it’s like doing him a good turn, sir, to let him know that his crew’s a bit mutinous, being on’y slaves, you know, and like us, sir, agen him.”
“Come with me, Tom,” said the lad, yielding to a sudden resolve. “I will just wake him and ask a question or two.”
“Come with you, sir!” said the man to himself. “I just think I will! You don’t ketch me letting you leave me all alone by myself in this here unked old place;” and after a sharp glance in the direction of the way up, he followed his young officer on tiptoe into the room where they had left the planter asleep; and then both started back in astonishment, to stare one at the other. For the couch was vacant, and for a few minutes the surprise sealed the middy’s lips.
“Why, Tom,” he said at last, “we left that Mr Allen there asleep!”
“He’d got his eyes shut, sir,” said the sailor dubiously.
“And now he has gone, Tom.”
“Well, he arn’t here ’t all events, sir.”
“But where can he be?” cried Murray. “I did not see him come out.”
“No, sir, I didn’t neither,” said the man, shaking his head very solemnly.
“I—I can’t understand it, Tom. Can he have—”
“Gone up-stairs to get a nap there, sir, ’cause the hammocks is more comf’table?” suggested the man.
“Impossible.”
“I dunno, sir. He’s used to snakes, o’ course, and they knows him.”
“But we must have seen him go, Tom. We have been about all the time.”
“Must ha’ been when we was out at the back, sir, ringing the bell. That’s it, sir; you woke him up, and he turned grumpy like and went somewheres else so as not to be disturbed.”
“That must be it, Tom, and you have hit the mark. There, slip up the stairs quietly and see if he is in one of the hammocks.”
The sailor’s face crinkled up till it resembled the shell of a walnut; then he twisted his shoulders first to the left, then to the right, and followed up that movement by hitching up his trousers, staring hard at his young officer the while.
“Well, Tom, look sharp!” cried the latter.
“Ay, ay, sir!” replied the sailor.
“Why don’t you go?” cried Murray severely. “What are you thinking of?”
“Snakes, sir,” said the man laconically.
“Bah!”
“And I was a-thinking, sir, that p’raps you’d do it easier than me.”
“Why, Tom,” cried Murray angrily, “that is disobeying your officer’s orders.”
“Disobeying, sir?” said the man sharply. “Nay, sir; not me. Only you see, sir, you was a-telling me about the way in which them snakes pricked a man with their tails.”
“Tails! Nonsense, man! Teeth.”
“I didn’t ’member for sartin, sir, which end it was; but you said they did it so sharp, sir, that it killed a man out-and-out before the doctor could ’stract the sting.”
“Yes, I did tell you something of the kind, Tom.”
“Nay, sir, not something of the kind,” cried the sailor reproachfully; “that’s what it was azackly. And then you see, sir, I don’t want to brag, but you telled me yourself another time that I was a werry useful man.”
“That must have been a mistake, Tom, for you are not proving it now,” said Murray, speaking sternly but feeling amused by the man’s evasions all the while. “Why, Tom, I thought you were not afraid of anything that was solid.”
“No, sir, but you can’t call them squirmy tie-theirselves-up-in-a-knot things solid; now, can you?”
“Tom May, you’re a sham, sir,” said Murray sternly. “There, I am deceived in you. I’ll go myself;” and he made for the screen quickly.
But the man was quicker, and sprang before him.
“Nay, you don’t, sir! I am mortal skeared of snakes and sarpints, but I arn’t going to let my officer think me a coward and call me a sham. Case I do get it badly, sir, would you mind ’membering to tell Dr Reston, sir, as they say whiskey’s the best cure for bites? And as there’s no whiskey as I knows on aboard, p’raps he wouldn’t mind trying rum.”
“I’m sure the doctor wouldn’t like me meddling with his prescribing, Tom,” said Murray shortly. “Now then, up with you!”
“Ay, ay, sir!” cried the man, in tones which sounded like gasps; and Murray stood by, dirk in hand, ready to make a chop at any reptile which might appear, while Tom drew himself up into the shadowy loft, and after a good look round lowered himself down again with a sigh of relief.
“No Mr Allen’s up there, sir,” he said.
“Then where can he be?” cried the middy excitedly, and he ran back across the hall and into the study, to pass his hand over the couch, which still felt slightly warm.
“P’raps he’s gone into the gunroom, sir,” said Tom respectfully.
“What, the hall where the guns and things are?”
“Nay, nay, sir; I meant the eating quarters—the dinin’-room, as you call it.”
Murray ran back across the hall to see at a glance that no one was beyond, and he turned upon his follower again.
“Tom,” he exclaimed angrily, “what do you make of this?”
The man shook his head.
“But he can’t have come out of the study while we were looking out at the back.”
“That’s so, sir,” said the man, shaking his head the while. “It’s quite onpossible, sir, but he did.”
“Tut, tut, tut!” ejaculated Murray quickly. “We must visit all the posts and see if any one saw him pass.”
“They couldn’t, sir, ’cause if they had they’d have challenged and stopped him.”
“Of course they would,” cried the lad excitedly. “Here, let’s have another look round the study. He must be there.”
“That’s just what I’m a-thinking, sir,” cried the man solemnly.
“Then where is he? Don’t stand staring at me like a figure-head! Haven’t you anything to say?”
“No, sir; only you ’member how all-overish I come, sir.”
“Yes, when you declared it was as if there was a dead man in the place.”
“Yes, sir; I knowed there was something wrong.”
“Well, then, stupid,” cried the lad, in a passion, “there’s no live man here.”
“No, sir,” said Tom, shaking his head.
“Well, then,” cried Murray, passionately, striking his open palm with the blue and gold inlaid blade of his dirk, “where’s your dead man?”
“Can’t say, sir,” replied the man, speaking very slowly. “Seems to me it’s a mystery.”
“A mystery?” cried the middy, looking round at the pictures and other decorations of the place and addressing them as if they were sentient, listening creatures. “Here’s a big six-foot strongly-built British sailor talking to his officer like an old charwoman about mysteries! You, Tom May, if ever you dare to talk such nonsense to me again, I’ll punch your silly head.”
“Beg pardon, your honour,” said the man coolly, “but don’t the articles o’ war say something ’bout officers not being allowed to strike their men?”
“Bother the articles of war!” roared Murray, leaping at the man, seizing him by the shoulders, and shaking him to and fro with all his might. “Bother the articles of war!” he repeated, breathless from his exertions. “They don’t say anything about knocking an idiot’s head off!”
“No, sir,” said the man humbly and respectfully; “not as I knows on.”
“Then I feel disposed to do it,” cried the middy passionately. Then stooping to pick up the dirk, which had slipped from his hand, to fall with a loud jingle upon the polished floor, “No, I don’t,” cried the lad, in a vexed, appealing way. “I couldn’t help it, Tom! Look here, old lad; you’ve always been a good stout fellow, ready to stand by me in trouble.”
“Ay, ay, sir, I have,” said the man quietly, “and will again.”
“Then help me now, Tom. Can’t you see what a mess I’m in? Here has the captain entrusted me with the care of this prisoner—for prisoner he is, and you can’t make anything else of him.”
“Ay, ay, sir; prisoner he is, and you can’t make nowt else of him.”
“That’s right, Tom,” cried the lad, growing quite despairing in his tones. “Sooner or later Mr Anderson or Mr Munday will be coming to relieve me of my charge, and the first question whoever it is will ask me will be, Where’s your prisoner?”
“Ay, ay, sir! That’s right enough.”
“There, there! Look at it in a straightforward business-like way,” cried the lad, and to his disgust the man slowly turned his eyes all about the place.
“Bah!” cried Murray angrily. “What are you thinking of? Can’t you understand that I want you to help me?”
“Ay, ay, sir, and I’m a-trying as hard as nails, sir,” said the man, rousing himself up to speak more sharply; “but somehow my head don’t seem as if it would go.”
“Think, man—think!” cried the middy appealingly.
“That’s what I’m a-doing of, sir, but nothing comes.”
“He must be somewhere, Tom.”
“Yes, to be sure, sir; that’s it,” cried the man excitedly. “You’ve hit it now. I couldn’t have thought that myself.”
“Oh-h-h-h!” groaned Murray. “Was ever poor wretch so tormented! What shall I do?”
“Lookye here, sir, I want to help you.”
“Oh, I feel as if I could knock your silly old head off!” cried the middy, with a stamp upon the floor.
“Well, sir, do. You just do it if you think it will help you. I won’t mind.”
“Oh, Tom, Tom!” groaned Murray. “This is the worst day’s work I ever did.”
“Think it’s any good to sarch the place again, sir?”
“But there’s nothing to search, Tom.”
“Well, there arn’t much, sir, sartainly, but it’ll be more satisfactory to go over it once more.”
“Come along, then,” said the middy. “Anything’s better than standing still here.”
“Ay, sir, so it is,” said the big sailor; and together the pair went from room to room, Tom May insisting upon looking under the couch in the study, under the table, and then lifting up the square of Turkey carpet that half covered the well-made parqueterie floor, which glistened with the polishing given to it by busy slave labour.
But there was no sign of him whom they sought, and a careful examination of the garden and plantation was only followed by the discovery which they had made before, that the place was thoroughly closed in by a dense natural growth of hedge, ablaze with flowers in spite of the fact that it had been closely clipped and had grown dense in an impassable way.
“Let’s get the boat here,” said Murray, at last; and going to the platform, Tom May hailed the cutter where it swung from its grapnel.
“Now then, you two,” cried the middy angrily, “you have been asleep!”
“Nay, sir,” cried the men, in a breath.
“What, you deny it?”
“Yes, sir,” said one. “It was so hot that I did get precious drowsy once.”
“There, I knew I was right!”
“Beg pardon, sir; just as I was going off my mate here shoves a pin into me and rouses me up with a yell. I was never asleep.”
“And you are ready to say the same?” cried the middy.
“Jes’ the same sir,” said the other man, “only not quite. It was the same pin, sir, but he jobbed it into me further. We was both awake all the time, sir.”
“Then you must have seen that Mr Allen come out of the cottage and be rowed away.”
“What, to-day, sir?” said the first boat-keeper.
“Do you think I meant to-morrow, sir?” cried Murray, who was boiling over with rage and despair.
“No, sir, of course not,” replied the man, in an injured tone; “but you might ha’ meant yesterday, sir.”
“Of course,” cried Murray—“when you were not on duty here?”
“We done our best, sir, both on us.”
“Yes, yes, of course, my lads. Here, paddle May and me along the edge of the lagoon.”
The man paddled the boat slowly along, and it was not until several blind lead places, where the boat could be thrust in amongst the bamboos, had been explored, that a more satisfactory portion of the surrounding watery maze was found, in the shape of a narrow way opening into another lagoon which looked wonderfully attractive and proved to be more interesting from the fact that no less than six ways out were discovered.
“Try that one,” said Murray, and the boat’s nose was thrust in, when Tom May held up his hand.
“Well, what have you to say against it?” cried the middy.
“I only thought, sir, as we might be trying this here one twice if we didn’t mark it somehow.”
“To be sure,” cried Murray. “Don’t you pretend to be stupid again, Tom. Now, then, how are you going to mark it?”
“Only so how, sir,” said the man, with a grin; and as he stood up in the boat he bent down some of the over-arching graceful grasses and tied them together in a knot. “These here places are so all alike, sir, and it may save time.”
This waterway wound in and out and doubled upon itself for what must have been several hundred yards, but the middy felt encouraged, for more and more it struck him as being a way that was used. Every now and then too it excited the lad’s interest, for there was a rush or splash, and the water in front was stirred up and discoloured, evidently by a reptile or large fish; but whether those who used it had any connection with the missing man it was impossible to say.
“Shouldn’t be a bit surprised, sir, if we come upon that Mr Planter’s boat, sir, and his niggers. Looks the sort o’ spot where they might have built a boathouse to hide their craft in when they didn’t want it.”
“At all events, my lad, it is one of their places, and—”
“Well, I’m blest, sir!”
“Eh? What do you mean? Why don’t you go on?”
“Why, can’t you see, sir?” said the big sailor sharply.
“No, Tom. Why, you don’t mean to say that—”
“Yes, I do, sir,” grunted the man; and he took off his straw hat to have a good puzzling scratch at his closely-cropped hair, while the middy stood up to examine two lissome tufts of leafy cane which had been bent over and tied together.
“Oh,” cried Murray, “anybody might have done that who wanted to mark the place, my lad.”
“Yes, sir,” said the sailor, grunting, “but anybody wouldn’t ha’ thought to make a clove hitch, same as I did a bit ago. That’s my mark, sir—T.M.’s own. I’m T.M., sir.”
“Don’t laugh, man,” said the lad passionately. “I suppose you’re right; but it’s horrible, for we’ve been wasting so much time, and come out again in the same spot that we went in.”
“Can’t see as it’s wasted time, sir,” growled the man. “I say it’s time saved, for if it hadn’t been for my knot we might have gone on round again.”
“Don’t talk so much, sir. Give way, my lads. Get back into the lagoon, and we’ll try another of these wretched cuts.”
Another was soon found and duly marked by breaking down a few of the bamboos level with the water, and plaiting them this time in an unmistakable way, the result at the end of close upon an hour proving to be just the same.
“Never mind,” said the middy, speaking through his set teeth. “It’s horribly disappointing, Tom, but these blind water alleys haven’t been made for nothing. They prove to me that there must be a special one which we have to hit, and when we do we shall find that it leads to some hiding-place—perhaps to where the planter has gone, and we must trace him.”
“I don’t see what good it will do, sir, if we do,” said the big sailor, puckering up his brows.
“We must find him, Tom, and take him aboard as a regular prisoner this time, for he has been deceiving the captain, and all that he has said can’t be true. Give way, my lads.”
After further search which led to their passing another opening twice over, a spot was found where the growth seemed to be very thick; but it proved to be yielding enough at last, for the boat’s prow glided through with a rush, and they passed into another tiny lagoon, where as the large reeds closed in behind them, Tom May slapped his knee loudly.
“I do call it artful, sir,” he cried. “Why, who’s going to show me which is the way out again? I’ve got my eye fixed on it, but if I shut it up I shouldn’t be able to find it again. It’s just this,” he continued. “You holds the bamboos down or on one side, and as soon as you’re gone by up they springs again; and that’s why they’re called bamboos, I s’pose—because they bamboozle you. Now for another way of marking this here one.”
“Yes, let’s have no more mistakes, Tom.”
“No, sir,” said the man, tightening up his lips as he pulled out his jack knife, before picking out of the biggest giant reeds, one of a tuft which towered up some five-and-twenty feet. Through this he drove his blade, the thick, rich, succulent grass yielding easily, and after keeping the wound open by the help of a messmate’s knife he cut a slip, and thrusting it through the reed, he drew out the two knives so that the wound closed up tightly upon the green wedge.
“You are taking a great deal of trouble, Tom,” said Murray impatiently.
“It’s wuth it, sir—trust me if it arn’t,” said the man. “Saves time in the end; and I’m beginning to think as we’re in the right cut at last.”
“Give way, then, my men, and let’s prove it,” cried the middy impatiently, for the time was passing swiftly, and the horrible feeling grew upon him that before long some one would appear from the Seafowl to demand where the prisoner was.
The men thrust the boat swiftly across the pondlike place, for on the other side the reeds seemed to have been lately disturbed; but here there was another disappointment, for though the bamboos which rose up had certainly been broken away recently, they grew together so densely that all efforts to pass through were vain, and Tom May declared at last that it was only another blind meant to deceive.
“Let’s try t’other side, sir,” he said, screwing up his face.
“No, no; that looks so easy,” said Murray.
“That’s some one’s artfulness, sir. Let’s try; it won’t take long.”
Murray was ready enough to try any advice now so long as it seemed good, and the word being given, the two boat-keepers placed their oars in the rowlocks and rowed straight at the indicated place, with the result that they had to unship their oars, for the boat glided right through the light reeds, which gave way readily here, and almost directly after the rowing was resumed again, and they found themselves in comparatively open water for a couple of hundred yards.
“This won’t want no marking, sir,” whispered Tom.
“Mark it all the same, my lad, when we pass out.”
“I will, sir, but we’ve hit the right way at last. Look how it rounds to starboard at the end, sir. I believe we’re going into big water directly.—There you are, sir,” added the man in a whisper, as, after rowing swiftly onward for nearly a quarter of a mile, the boat glided round a bend, where, to the midshipman’s great delight, they came in sight of what was pretty evidently the long narrow barge in which the planter had paid his visit to the Seafowl.
The well-made, nattily painted craft was lying well away from the reeds which shut in the open water, moored by a rope whose grapnel was sunk not far distant, and Murray held up his hand to impress the need for silence.
“See the crew ashore anywhere, sir?” asked Tom May.
“No; I believe they’re all on board asleep. Run her up quietly.”
The men obeyed, and so cautiously that the next minute the cutter was close alongside, and there lay the black crew, sleeping profoundly in the hot sunshine, eyes tightly closed, mouths widely open, and quite a crowd of busy flies flitting and buzzing overhead, settling upon the sleepers in a way that would have proved maddening to ordinary people, but which seemed to have not the slightest effect upon the negroes.
“Hook on, Tom,” whispered Murray excitedly. “Take care they don’t slip away.”
The big sailor picked up the boat-hook, and was in the act of reaching out to take hold of the boat’s bow, when one of the sleepers closed his mouth, slowly opened it again in a wide yawn, and at the same time unclosed his eyes, saw the big sailor reaching towards him, and then, showing the whites of his eyes in a stare of horror and dismay, he uttered a yell which awoke the rest of the crew, who sprang up as one man, to follow their companion’s example, for the first awakened as he uttered his yell bounded out of the boat and disappeared.
“No, you don’t, my black friend,” cried Tom, making a thrust with the boat-hook, and getting hold of the startled man by his waist-cloth, he brought him up again, kicking, splashing and plunging to the surface, and drew him hand over hand along the pole of the boat-hook till he had him alongside the now rocking cutter, when a tremendous lurch freed him. He would have got away but for the help rendered by the boat-keepers, one of whom took hold of a leg, the other of a wrist, when he was hauled in over the side, praying for mercy in very fair English, for the fact that the big sailor planted a bare foot upon his chest and pressed him down into the bottom of the cutter quite convinced him that his time had come.
“Hold your row, you black pig!” growled Tom. “Think it’s killing time and you’re going to be scalded and scraped?”
“Oh, massa! Oh, massa! Poor black niggah, sah!” wailed the shivering captive.
“Be quiet, or—”
Tom May turned the boat-hook pole downwards as if he were going to plunge it at the poor fellow, and his shouting came to an end.
“No use to go ashore after the rest, sir, eh?” said Tom enquiringly.
“Not the slightest,” replied Murray, as the last of the crew reached the fringing bamboos and plunged in, to disappear. “But don’t let that one go.”
“No, sir; he’s right enough. Better let him know that we’re not going to kill him, though.”
“Be quiet, sir!” cried Murray, stepping alongside to where May had his foot upon the shivering slave’s chest. “No one is going to hurt you.”
“Oh, massa! Oh, massa! Poor niggah, sah!” sobbed the poor fellow, and he placed his hands together as if in prayer.
“Hold your tongue! Be quiet!” cried Murray. “Now then, speak out. Where’s your master?”
“Oh, massa! You massa now!” sobbed the poor wretch, shivering violently.
“Be quiet, sir!” cried Murray. “Don’t be afraid to speak. Now then, tell me. Where is your master?” It was some minutes before the poor fellow could grasp the fact that he was not going to be killed outright, and in the meantime his companions had begun to show themselves, a face here and a face there, around the edge of the long winding lake, horribly frightened to a man, but fascinated and held to the spot by their strong desire to see what became of their companion.
“See ’em, sir?” whispered Tom May.
“Oh yes, I see them; but I want to try and get some information out of this poor shivering wretch.”
“We might ketch the rest on ’em, sir,” said the big sailor, “by using this one as a bait. Shall we try, sir?”
“No, no; this one will know all they could tell, if we can make him speak.”
“Shall I try, sir?”
“No, no, Tom; you’re too big and—”
“Ugly, sir?” said the man, with a grim smile, for Murray had stopped speaking.
“Too ugly to him,” said the middy, laughing.
“Here, you sir,” he added gently, as he bent down and tapped his prisoner upon the shoulder.
“Oh, massa! Poor niggah, sah!”
“Yes, yes; you said that before,” cried Murray.
“Poor beggars, sir, they’ve been so ill-used that they think every white man is going to murder ’em.”
“Well, let’s show the poor fellow that we are not all savages; but we’ve begun pretty roughly, Tom, to win this one’s confidence. You did give it him pretty hard.”
“Well, yes, sir, I was a bit rough to him; but if I hadn’t been he’d have got away.”
“Now then, let me try. Here, my lad, I want your master.”
“Massa, sah?” cried the shivering prisoner. “Yes, sah. Massa, sah!” And as he spoke eagerly he made a snatch at the midshipman’s ankle, caught it between both hands, and raising the lad’s foot placed it quickly upon his forehead.
“Hullo! What do you mean by that?”
“Massa! Massa now, sah. Poor niggah massa.”
“Oh, bother! Nonsense!” cried Murray. “No, no. Where’s your master, Mr Allen?”
“Massa Allen, sah. Good massa, sah. Sick man; go die soon.”
“Good master?”
“Yes, sah! Good massa, sick bad, sah. Die, sah.”
“Well, where is he—Massa Allen?”
“House, sah. Go sleep, sah,” said the man, growing eager and excited, and making an effort to replace Murray’s foot upon his head.
“No, no; don’t do that,” cried the lad impatiently. “Now tell me, where is your master?”
“Massa Allen, sah. House, sah. Go sleep, sah.”
“It’s very evident he does not know, Tom,” said Murray. “What’s to be done? Do you think we could get anything out of the others?”
“No, sir. If he don’t know they don’t.”
“Well, what is best to be done?”
“Try t’others, sir. I don’t think it’s any good, but we might try.”
“But we must catch them first.”
“Oh, that’s soon done, sir.”
“But how?”
The big sailor laughed.
“When I was a youngster, sir, we boys used to get out in one of the Newlyn boats, sir—in Mount’s Bay, sir, and trail a line behind to get a few mack’rel, sir, for our mothers. Well, sir, it was easy enough to trail the line and hook, but it warn’t so easy always to get the bait; for we used to think the best bait was a lask.”
“A what, Tom?”
“Lask, sir, and that’s a strip out of the narrowest part of a mackerel, cut with a sharp knife down to the bone, so that when the hook was put through one end one side was raw fish and the other was bright and silvery.”
“I see, Tom,” said Murray.
“Nay, sir, you only fancy you can see it. If you could see it twirling and wiggling in the water when it was dragged after the boat and we pulled fast, you’d see it looked just like a little live fish, and the mack’rel shoot theirselves after it through the water and hook theirselves. That’s the best bait for a mack’rel, and after the same fashion one nigger’s the best bait to catch more niggers.”
“Then you think we can get hold of more of the boat’s crew by—”
“Yes, sir,” said Tom, interrupting and grinning the while, “but without cutting a piece out of him with either a knife or a whip. Poor chaps, they get that often enough, I’ll be bound. You only want to let this one see that he won’t be hurt, and he’ll soon bring the others up.”
“But we’ve been so rough with him already. I’m afraid it will be a hard task.”
“Not it, sir. They get so knocked about that a good word or two soon puts matters right again. You try, sir.”
“Why not you, Tom? You seem to know their ways better than I do.”
“Nay, sir, you try. See how he’s watching of us, sir; he’s trying to make out what we want him for, and he knows a lot of plain English. You try him, sir.”
“What shall I say, Tom?”
“Oh, anything you like, sir. You’re cleverer than I am, sir. Here, I know—tell him you want the other chaps to man the boat. They’ll come fast enough if he calls ’em.”
“Here goes, then, Tom; but I don’t believe I shall do any good.—Here, Sambo!” he cried.
The man showed his glistening white teeth in a very broad grin and shook his head.
“Not Sambo?” said Murray. “Well, then, what is your name?”
“Caesar, sah—July Caesar.”
“Well, Caesar, then. I want your master, Mr Allen.”
“In de house, sah. De lilly house;” and the black pointed in the direction of the cottage. “Sick, bad, sah.”
“Not there now, Caesar,” said Murray.
“Big house, Plantashum,” said the black sharply, and he pointed in quite another direction.
“Oh, at the plantation house?” said Murray.
“Yes, sah.”
“Call your fellows, then, to row the boat to where he is,” said the middy.
The black looked at him doubtfully.
“Boys run away, sah. ’Fraid massa take ’em sell to bad massa.”
“Oh no,” said Murray, reaching forward to pat the man upon the shoulder; but the poor fellow’s action told its own tale. He started violently, shrinking right away with a look of dread in his eyes. “There, don’t do that,” Murray continued, “I’m not going to hurt you;” and following the man he patted his shoulder softly, when the look of horror faded away, to give place to a faint smile, one which broadened into a grin.
“Massa no take and sell boys away?”
“No; tell them we come to set them free,” said Murray.
“Set niggah free?” cried the black excitedly.
“Yes; that’s why my ship has come.”
“Massa Huggin say come catch all de boy an’ flog ’em heart out.”
“Did your overseer tell you that, boy?” growled Tom May; and the man winced at the deep fierce voice of the sailor.
“Yes, sah; flog ’em all, sah.”
“Then you tell your Massa Huggin he’s a liar,” growled the big sailor.
The black showed his teeth in a wider grin than ever as he shook his head.
“No tell um,” he said. “Massa Huggin kill um dead.”
“Where is he now?” said Murray sharply.
“Massa Allen sick, sah.”
“No, no; Mr Huggins!”
“Massa sailor captain tell Massa Huggin—”
“No, no; I’m not going to tell your overseer anything.”
The black looked at the speaker searchingly for a few moments, glanced round as if to see whether they were likely to be overheard; and then, as if gaining confidence, he leaned towards the midshipman and whispered—
“Massa overseer go to get men from schooner—fighting men come and kill sailor and burn up ship. Big fire. Burn ship. Burn, kill sailor. Massa no tell what Caesar say?”
“Oh no; I shall not tell Master Huggins, Caesar,” said Murray, smiling. “Now tell your men to come back and row your boat. I want to find Mr Allen.”
The black looked searchingly in the midshipman’s face once more, and then apparently gaining confidence, he turned sharply upon the big sailor, when that which he had gained seemed to be dying out again and he glanced at the shore of the lagoon, and Tom read so plainly that the black was thinking again of flight that he gave him a sharp slap on the shoulder, making him wince violently and utter a low sob.
“Why, you are a pretty sort of fellow,” cried the sailor, his face opening out into a jovial smile. “You seem to have a nice idee of a British sailor!”
“Bri’sh sailor?” said the black, slowly repeating the tar’s words. “You Bri’sh sailor, hey?”
“To be sure I am, my lad—leastwise I hope so.”
“Bri’sh sailor no hurt poor niggah?”
“Not a bit of it, darkie. Can’t you understand we’ve come to set the slaves free?”
“No,” said the black sadly. “Massa Huggin say—”
“Massa Huggin say!” growled the big sailor, frowning fiercely. “You tell your Massa Huggins that the British sailor is going to—See here, you benighted heathen. I want to make you understand some’at. There, hold still; I’m not going to hurt you. Now see.”
As the sailor spoke he untied the knot of his neckerchief and threw it round the black’s neck, made a fresh slip-knot and drew it tight, and with horrible realism held up one end of the silken rope, while with a low wail the poor shivering wretch sank unresistingly upon his knees in the bottom of the boat.
“Don’t, don’t, Tom! You’re frightening the poor fellow to death.”
“Nay, sir; he’ll understand it directly. It’s all right, darkie,” he continued, with a broad grin at the black’s fear. “I want to show you what a British sailor means to do with your Massa Huggins.”
“Massa Huggin? No kill Caesar?”
“Kill Caesar, darkie?” cried the sailor. “No, no. Hang—yard-arm—Massa Huggins. We’ll teach him to talk about burning his Majesty’s Ship Seafowl. There, now do you understand?” cried Tom, slipping off the black silk handkerchief and knotting it properly about his own brawny neck, while as he gave the black another hearty clap on the shoulder the poor fellow’s shiny black face seemed to have become the mirror which reflected a good deal of the tar’s jovial smile. “There, sir,” continued the big sailor; “that’s our Mr Dempsey’s way o’ teaching a man anything he don’t understand. ‘Show him how it’s done,’ he says, ‘with your fisties, and then he can see, and he never forgets it again.’”
“That’s all very well, Tom,” said Murray, smiling, “but it’s rather a rough style of teaching, and you nearly made the poor fellow jump overboard.”
“That was afore he began to grasp it, sir. He’s got it now. You can see now; eh, darkie?”
“Bri’sh sailor kill Massa Huggin, no kill poor niggah,” cried the black.
“There, sir, what did I say?” cried Tom. “British tar’s the niggers’ friend, eh, what’s your name?”
The black sprang up and executed two or three steps of what he meant most probably for a triumphal dance.
“Steady, my lad, or you’ll have one of them stick-in-a-brick pretty little foots of yours through the bottom planks of the boat.”
Plop! went the black, letting himself down, not upon his feet, but upon his knees, and laying his head between the sailor’s feet he caught one by the ankle, raised it and began to plant it upon his woolly head.
“What game does he call that, sir?” cried Tom, in astonishment.
“He’s following up your style of teaching by an object-lesson, Tom,” cried the middy merrily. “It’s to show you he’s your slave and friend for ever.”
“Ho!” ejaculated the big sailor. “That’s it, is it? Well, that’ll do, darkie; we understand one another; but recklect this, you arn’t civilised enough yet for object-lessons. Here, what are you up to now?”
For the black had shuffled upon his knees to the side of the boat, to hold his hands to the sides of his capacious mouth, while he sent forth a cry wonderfully like the blast given trumpet-like through a conch shell to call slaves to plantation work in the fields.
No sooner did the deep tone float across the water than there was a movement amongst the giant reeds, and first in one place and then in another and from both sides, black faces and woolly heads began to appear, while the black who had uttered the cry made for one of the oars, passed it through the rowlock astern and began to paddle the boat along cleverly enough towards his fellows, who one by one began to take to the water like so many large black dogs, springing in with heavy splash after splash and beginning to swim.
This went on, to the amusement of the sailors, till every member of the boat’s black crew had been dragged into, or by his own effort had climbed into, the planter’s boat.
“Better be on the lookout, my lads,” said the middy. “They may play us false and row off.”
“Not they, sir,” said Tom confidently. “You may depend upon it they’ve been squinting at us through them bamboozling reeds, and took all my lesson in right up to the heft. I begin to think, sir, that when Mr Huggins shows his ugly yellow phiz to us again he’ll find that we’ve been making a few friends among the niggers.”
“I hope so, Tom; but all this time we’ve not been thinking about our prisoner that we were set to watch.”
“Yes, sir, and that’s bad; but just you cheer up, sir, and all will come right yet.”
“But the prisoner, Tom—the prisoner,” cried Murray sadly.
“Wait a bit, sir. Anyhow we’ve got his boat and his crew; and they knows his ways, and perhaps ’ll find out his whereabouts a good deal better than we could.”
“Yes, Tom, but—”
“Nothing like patience, sir,” said the man. “You mark my words.”