The Wings of the Morning - Page 15/21

Though his eyes, like live coals, glowered with sullen fire at the

strip of sand and the rocks in front, his troubled brain paid

perfunctory heed to his task. The stern sense of duty, the ingrained

force of long years of military discipline and soldierly thought,

compelled him to keep watch and ward over his fortress, but he could

not help asking himself what would happen if Iris were seriously

wounded.

There was one enemy more potent than these skulking Dyaks, a foe more

irresistible in his might, more pitiless in his strength, whose

assaults would tax to the utmost their powers of resistance. In another

hour the sun would be high in the heavens, pouring his ardent rays upon

them and drying the blood in their veins.

Hitherto, the active life of the island, the shade of trees, hut or

cave, the power of unrestricted movement and the possession of water in

any desired quantity, robbed the tropical heat of the day of its chief

terrors. Now all was changed. Instead of working amidst grateful

foliage, they were bound to the brown rock, which soon would glow with

radiated energy and give off scorching gusts like unto the opening of a

furnace-door.

This he had foreseen all along. The tarpaulin would yield them some

degree of uneasy protection, and they both were in perfect physical

condition. But--if Iris were wounded! If the extra strain brought fever

in its wake! That way he saw nothing but blank despair, to be ended,

for her, by delirium and merciful death, for him by a Berserk rush

among the Dyaks, and one last mad fight against overwhelming numbers.

Then the girl's voice reached him, self-reliant, almost cheerful--

"You will be glad to hear that the cut has stopped bleeding. It is only

a scratch."

So a kindly Providence had spared them yet a little while. The cloud

passed from his mind, the gathering mist from his eyes. In that instant

he thought he detected a slight rustling among the trees where the

cliff shelved up from the house. Standing as he was on the edge of the

rock, this was a point he could not guard against.

When her welcome assurance recalled his scattered senses, he stepped

back to speak to her, and in the same instant a couple of bullets

crashed against the rock overhead. Iris had unwittingly saved him from

a serious, perhaps fatal, wound.

He sprang to the extreme right of the ledge and boldly looked into the

trees beneath. Two Dyaks were there, belated wanderers cut off from the

main body. They dived headlong into the undergrowth for safety, but one

of them was too late. The Lee-Metford reached him, and its

reverberating concussion, tossed back and forth by the echoing rocks,

drowned his parting scream.

In the plenitude of restored vigor the sailor waited for no counter

demonstration. He turned and crouchingly approached the southern end of

his parapet. Through his screen of grass he could discern the long

black hair and yellow face of a man who lay on the sand and twisted his

head around the base of the further cliff. The distance, oft measured,

was ninety yards, the target practically a six-inch bull's-eye. Jenks

took careful aim, fired, and a whiff of sand flew up.

Perhaps he had used too fine a sight and ploughed a furrow beneath the

Dyak's ear. He only heard a faint yell, but the enterprising head

vanished and there were no more volunteers for that particular service.

He was still peering at the place when a cry of unmitigated anguish

came from Iris--

"Oh, come quick! Our water! The casks have burst!"

It was not until Jenks had torn the tarpaulin from off their stores,

and he was wildly striving with both hands to scoop up some precious

drops collected in the small hollows of the ledge, that he realized the

full magnitude of the disaster which had befallen them.

During the first rapid exchange of fire, before the enemy vacated the

cliff, several bullets had pierced the tarpaulin. By a stroke of

exceeding bad fortune two of them had struck each of the water-barrels

and started the staves. The contents quietly ebbed away beneath the

broad sheet, and flowing inwards by reason of the sharp slope of the

ledge, percolated through the fault. Iris and he, notwithstanding their

frenzied efforts, were not able to save more than a pint of gritty

discolored fluid. The rest, infinitely more valuable to them than all

the diamonds of De Beers, was now oozing through the natural channel

cut by centuries of storm, dripping upon the headless skeleton in the

cave, soaking down to the very heart of their buried treasure.

Jenks was so paralyzed by this catastrophe that Iris became alarmed. As

yet she did not grasp its awful significance. That he, her hero, so

brave, so confident in the face of many dangers, should betray such

sense of irredeemable loss, frightened her much more than the incident

itself.

Her lips whitened. Her words become incoherent.

"Tell me," she whispered. "I can bear anything but silence. Tell me, I

implore you. Is it so bad?"

The sight of her distress sobered him. He ground his teeth together as

a man does who submits to a painful operation and resolves not to

flinch beneath the knife.

"It is very bad," he said; "not quite the end, but near it."

"The end," she bravely answered, "is death! We are living and

uninjured. You must fight on. If the Lord wills it we shall not die."

He looked in her blue eyes and saw there the light of Heaven.

"God bless you, dear girl," he murmured brokenly. "You would cheer any

man through the Valley of the Shadow, were he Christian or

Faint-heart."

Her glance did not droop before his. In such moments heart speaks to

heart without concealment.

"We still have a little water," she cried. "Fortunately we are not

thirsty. You have not forgotten our supply of champagne and brandy?"

There was a species of mad humor in the suggestion. Oh for another

miracle that should change the wine into water!

He could only fall in with her unreflective mood and leave the dreadful

truth to its own evil time. In their little nook the power of the sun

had not yet made itself felt. By ordinary computation it was about nine

o'clock. Long before noon they would be grilling. Throughout the next

few hours they must suffer the torture of Dives with one meager pint of

water to share between them. Of course the wine and spirit must be

shunned like a pestilence. To touch either under such conditions would

be courting heat, apoplexy, and death. And next day!

He tightened his jaws before he answered--

"We will console ourselves with a bottle of champagne for dinner.

Meanwhile, I hear our friends shouting to those left on this side of

the island. I must take an active interest in the conversation."

He grasped a rifle and lay down on the ledge, already gratefully warm.

There was a good deal of sustained shouting going on. Jenks thought he

recognized the chief's voice, giving instructions to those who had come

from Smugglers' Cove and were now standing on the beach near the

quarry.

"I wonder if he is hungry," he thought. "If so, I will interfere with

the commissariat."

Iris peeped forth at him.

"Mr. Jenks!"

"Yes," without turning his head. He knew it was an ordinary question.

"May I come too?"

"What! expose yourself on the ledge!"

"Yes, even that. I am so tired of sitting here alone."

"Well, there is no danger at present. But they might chance to see you,

and you remember what I--"

"Yes, I remember quite well. If that is all--" There was a rustle of

garments. "I am very mannish in appearance. If you promise not to look

at me I will join you."

"I promise."

Iris stepped forth. She was flushed a little, and, to cover her

confusion, may be, she picked up a Lee-Metford.

"Now there are two guns," she said, as she stood near him.

He could see through the tail of his eye that a slight but elegantly

proportioned young gentleman of the sea-faring profession had suddenly

appeared from nowhere. He was glad she had taken this course. It might

better the position were the Dyaks to see her thus.

"The moment I tell you, you must fall flat," he warned her. "No

ceremony about it. Just flop!"

"I don't know anything better calculated to make one flop than a

bullet," she laughed. Not yet did the tragedy of the broken kegs appeal

to her.

"Yes, but it achieves its purpose in two ways. I want you to adopt the

precautionary method."

"Trust me for that. Good gracious!"

The sailor's rifle went off with an unexpected bang that froze the

exclamation on her lips. Three Dyaks were attempting to run the

gauntlet to their beleaguered comrades. They carried a jar and two

wicker baskets. He with the jar fell and broke it. The others doubled

back like hares, and the first man dragged himself after them. Jenks

did not fire again.

Iris watched the wounded wretch crawling along the ground. Her eyes

grew moist, and she paled somewhat. When he vanished she looked into

the valley and at the opposing ledge; three men lay dead within twenty

yards of her. Two others dangled from the rocks. It took her some time

to control her quavering utterance sufficiently to say--

"I hope I may not have to use a gun. I know it cannot be helped, but if

I were to kill a human being I do not think I would ever rest again."

"In that case I have indeed murdered sleep today," was the unfeeling

reply.

"No! no! A man must be made of sterner stuff. We have a right to defend

ourselves. If need be I will exercise that right. Still it is horrid,

oh, so horrid!"

She could not see the sailor's grim smile. It would materially affect

his rest, for the better, were he able to slay every Dyak on the island

with a single shot. Yet her gentle protest pleased him. She could not

at the same time be callous to human suffering and be Iris. But he

declined the discussion of such sentiments.

"You were going to say something when a brief disturbance took place?"

he inquired.

"Yes. I was surprised to find how hot the ledge has become."

"You notice it more because you are obliged to remain here."

After a pause--

"I think I understand now why you were so upset by the loss of our

water supply. Before the day ends we will be in great straits, enduring

agonies from thirst!"

"Let us not meet the devil half-way," he rejoined. He preferred the

unfair retort to a confession which could only foster dismay.

"But, please, I am thirsty now."

He moved uneasily. He was only too conscious of the impish weakness,

common to all mankind, which creates a desire out of sheer inability to

satisfy it. Already his own throat was parched. The excitement of the

early struggle was in itself enough to engender an acute thirst. He

thought it best to meet their absolute needs as far as possible.

"Bring the tin cup," he said. "Let us take half our store and use the

remainder when we eat. Try to avoid breathing through your mouth. The

hot air quickly affects the palate and causes an artificial dryness. We

cannot yet be in real need of water. It is largely imagination."

Iris needed no second bidding. She carefully measured out half a pint

of the unsavory fluid--the dregs of the casks and the scourings of the

ledge.

"I will drink first," she cried.

"No, no," he interrupted impatiently. "Give it to me."

She pretended to be surprised.

"As a mere matter of politeness----"

"I am sorry, but I must insist."

She gave him the cup over his shoulder. He placed it to his lips and

gulped steadily.

"There," he said, gruffly. "I was in a hurry. The Dyaks may make

another rush at any moment."

Iris looked into the vessel.

"You have taken none at all," she said.

"Nonsense!"

"Mr. Jenks, be reasonable! You need it more than I. I d-don't want

to--live w-without--you."

His hands shook somewhat. It was well there was no call for accurate

shooting just then.

"I assure you I took all I required," he declared with unnecessary

vehemence.

"At least drink your share, to please me," she murmured.

"You wished to humbug me," he grumbled. "If you will take the first

half I will take the second."

And they settled it that way. The few mouthfuls of tepid water gave

them new life. One sense can deceive the others. A man developing all

the symptoms of hydrophobia has been cured by the assurance that the

dog which bit him was not mad. So these two, not yet aflame with

drought, banished the arid phantom for a little while.

Nevertheless, by high noon they were suffering again. The time passed

very slowly. The sun rose to the zenith and filled earth and air with

his ardor. It seemed to be a miracle--now appreciated for the first

time in their lives--that the sea did not dry up, and the leaves wither

on the trees. The silence, the deathly inactivity of all things, became

intolerable. The girl bravely tried to confine her thoughts to the task

of the hour. She displayed alert watchfulness, an instant readiness to

warn her companion of the slightest movement among the trees or by the

rocks to the north-west, this being the arc of their periphery assigned

to her.

Looking at a sunlit space from cover, and looking at the same place

when sweltering in the direct rays of a tropical sun, are kindred

operations strangely diverse in achievement. Iris could not reconcile

the physical sensitiveness of the hour with the careless hardihood of

the preceding days. Her eyes ached somewhat, for she had tilted her

sou'wester to the back of her head in the effort to cool her throbbing

temples. She put up her right hand to shade the too vivid reflection of

the glistening sea, and was astounded to find that in a few minutes the

back of her hand was scorched. A faint sound of distant shouting

disturbed her painful reverie.

"How is it," she asked, "that we feel the heat so much today? I have

hardly noticed it before."

"For two good reasons--forced idleness and radiation from this

confounded rock. Moreover, this is the hottest day we have experienced

on the island. There is not a breath of air, and the hot weather has

just commenced."

"Don't you think," she said, huskily, "that our position here is quite

hopeless?"

They were talking to each other sideways. The sailor never turned his

gaze from the southern end of the valley.

"It is no more hopeless now than last night or this morning," he

replied.

"But suppose we are kept here for several days?"

"That was always an unpleasant probability."

"We had water then. Even with an ample supply it would be difficult to

hold out. As things are, such a course becomes simply impossible."

Her despondency pierced his soul. A slow agony was consuming her.

"It is hard, I admit," he said. "Nevertheless you must bear up until

night falls. Then we will either obtain water or leave this place."

"Surely we can do neither."

"We may be compelled to do both."

"But how?"

In this, his hour of extremest need, the man was vouchsafed a shred of

luck. To answer her satisfactorily would have baffled a Talleyrand. But

before he could frame a feeble pretext for his too sanguine prediction,

a sampan appeared, eight hundred yards from Turtle Beach, and

strenuously paddled by three men. The vague hallooing they had heard

was explained.

The Dyaks, though to the manner born, were weary of sun-scorched rocks

and salt water. The boat was coming in response to their signals, and

the sight inspired Jenks with fresh hope. Like a lightning flash came

the reflection that if he could keep them away from the well and

destroy the sampan now hastening to their assistance, perhaps conveying

the bulk of their stores, they would soon tire of slaking their thirst,

on the few pitcher-plants growing on the north shore.

"Come quick," he shouted, adjusting the backsight of a rifle. "Lie down

and aim at the front of that boat, a little short if anything. It

doesn't matter if the bullets strike the sea first."

He placed the weapon in readiness for her and commenced operations

himself before Iris could reach his side. Soon both rifles were

pitching twenty shots a minute at the sampan. The result of their

long-range practice was not long in doubt. The Dyaks danced from seat

to seat in a state of wild excitement. One man was hurled overboard.

Then the craft lurched seaward in the strong current, and Jenks told

Iris to leave the rest to him.

Before he could empty a second magazine a fortunate bullet ripped a

plank out and the sampan filled and went down, amidst a shrill yell of

execration from the back of the cliff. The two Dyaks yet living

endeavored to swim ashore, half a mile through shark-invested reefs.

The sailor did not even trouble about them. After a few frantic

struggles each doomed wretch flung up his arms and vanished. In the

clear atmosphere the on-lookers could see black fins cutting the

pellucid sea.

This exciting episode dispelled the gathering mists from the girl's

brain. Her eyes danced and she breathed hard. Yet something worried

her.

"I hope I didn't hit the man who fell out of the boat," she said.

"Oh," came the prompt assurance, "I took deliberate aim at that chap.

He was a most persistent scoundrel."

Iris was satisfied. Jenks thought it better to lie than to tell the

truth, for the bald facts hardly bore out his assertion. Judging from

the manner of the Dyak's involuntary plunge he had been hit by a

ricochet bullet, whilst the sailor's efforts were wholly confined to

sinking the sampan. However, let it pass. Bullet or shark, the end was

the same.

They were quieting down--the thirst fiend was again slowly salting

their veins--when something of a dirty white color fluttered into sight

from behind the base of the opposite cliff. It was rapidly withdrawn,

to reappear after an interval. Now it was held more steadily and a

brown arm became visible. As Jenks did not fire, a turbaned head popped

into sight. It was the Mahommedan.

"No shoot it," he roared. "Me English speak it."

"Don't you speak Hindustani?" shouted Jenks in Urdu of the Higher

Proficiency.

"Hañ, sahib!"[Footnote: Yes, sir.] was the joyful response. "Will your

honor permit his servant to come and talk with him?"

"Yes, if you come unarmed."

"And the chief, too, sahib?"

"Yes, but listen! On the first sign of treachery I shoot both of you!"

"We will keep faith, sahib. May kites pick our bones if we fail!"

Then there stepped into full view the renegade Mussulman and his

leader. They carried no guns; the chief wore his kriss.

"Tell him to leave that dagger behind!" cried the sailor imperiously.

As the enemy demanded a parley he resolved to adopt the conqueror's

tone from the outset. The chief obeyed with a scowl, and the two

advanced to the foot of the rock.

"Stand close to me," said Jenks to Iris. "Let them see you plainly, but

pull your hat well down over your eyes."

She silently followed his instructions. Now that the very crisis of

their fate had arrived she was nervous, shaken, conscious only of a

desire to sink on her knees, and pray.

One or two curious heads were craned round the corner of the rock.

"Stop!" cried Jenks. "If those men do not instantly go away I will fire

at them."

The Indian translated this order and the chief vociferated some

clanging syllables which had the desired effect. The two halted some

ten paces in front of the cavern, and the belligerents surveyed each

other. It was a fascinating spectacle, this drama in real life. The

yellow-faced Dyak, gaudily attired in a crimson jacket and sky-blue

pantaloons of Chinese silk--a man with the beauté du diable,

young, and powerfully built--and the brown-skinned white-clothed

Mahommedan, bony, tall, and grey with hardship, looked up at the

occupants of the ledge. Iris, slim and boyish in her male garments, was

dwarfed by the six-foot sailor, but her face was blood-stained, and

Jenks wore a six weeks' stubble of beard. Holding their Lee-Metfords

with alert ease, with revolvers strapped to their sides, they presented

a warlike and imposing tableau in their inaccessible perch. In the path

of the emissaries lay the bodies of the slain. The Dyak leader scowled

again as he passed them.

"Sahib," began the Indian, "my chief, Taung S'Ali, does not wish to

have any more of his men killed in a foolish quarrel about a woman.

Give her up, he says, and he will either leave you here in peace, or

carry you safely to some place where you can find a ship manned by

white men."

"A woman!" said Jenks, scornfully. "That is idle talk! What woman is

here?"

This question nonplussed the native.

"The woman whom the chief saw half a month back, sahib."

"Taung S'Ali was bewitched. I slew his men so quickly that he saw

spirits."

The chief caught his name and broke in with a question. A volley of

talk between the two was enlivened with expressive gestures by Taung

S'Ali, who several times pointed to Iris, and Jenks now anathematized

his thoughtless folly in permitting the Dyak to approach so near. The

Mahommedan, of course, had never seen her, and might have persuaded the

other that in truth there were two men only on the rock.

His fears were only too well founded. The Mussulman salaamed

respectfully and said--

"Protector of the poor, I cannot gainsay your word, but Taung S'Ali

says that the maid stands by your side, and is none the less the woman

he seeks in that she wears a man's clothing."

"He has sharp eyes, but his brain is addled," retorted the sailor. "Why

does he come here to seek a woman who is not of his race? Not only has

he brought death to his people and narrowly escaped it himself, but he

must know that any violence offered to us will mean the extermination

of his whole tribe by an English warship. Tell him to take away his

boats and never visit this isle again. Perhaps I will then forget his

treacherous attempt to murder us whilst we slept last night."

The chief glared back defiantly, whilst the Mahommedan said--

"Sahib, it is beet not to anger him too much. He says he means to have

the girl. He saw her beauty that day and she inflamed his heart. She

has cost him many lives, but she is worth a Sultan's ransom. He cares

not for warships. They cannot reach his village in the hills. By the

tomb of Nizam-ud-din, sahib, he will not harm you if you give her up,

but if you refuse he will kill you both. And what is one woman more or

less in the world that she should cause strife and blood-letting?"

The sailor knew the Eastern character too well not to understand the

man's amazement that he should be so solicitous about the fate of one

of the weaker sex. It was seemingly useless to offer terms, yet the

native was clearly so anxious for an amicable settlement that he caught

at a straw.

"You come from Delhi?" he asked.

"Honored one, you have great wisdom."

"None but a Delhi man swears by the tomb on the road to the Kutub. You

have escaped from the Andamans?"

"Sahib, I did but slay a man in self-defence."

"Whatever the cause, you can never again see India. Nevertheless, you

would give many years of your life to mix once more with the

bazaar-folk in the Chandni Chowk, and sit at night on a charpoy near

the Lahore Gate?"

The brown skin assumed a sallow tinge.

"That is good speaking," he gurgled.

"Then help me and my friend to escape. Compel your chief to leave the

island. Kill him! Plot against him! I will promise you freedom and

plenty of rupees. Do this, and I swear to you I will come in a ship and

take you away. The miss-sahib's father is powerful. He has great

influence with the Sirkar."[Footnote: The Government of India.]

Taung S'Ali was evidently bewildered and annoyed by this passionate

appeal which he did not understand. He demanded an explanation, and the

ready-witted native was obliged to invent some plausible excuse. Yet

when he raised his face to Jenks there was the look of a hunted animal

in his eyes.

"Sahib," he said, endeavoring to conceal his agitation. "I am one among

many. A word from me and they would cut my throat. If I were with you

there on the rock I would die with you, for I was in the Kumaon

Rissala[Footnote: A native cavalry regiment.] when the trouble befell

me. It is of no avail to bargain with a tiger, sahib. I suppose you

will not give up the miss-sahib. Pretend to argue with me. I will help

in any way possible."

Jenks's heart bounded when this unlooked-for offer reached his ears.

The unfortunate Mahommedan was evidently eager to get away from the

piratical gang into whose power he had fallen. But the chief was

impatient, if not suspicious of these long speeches.

Angrily holding forth a Lee-Metford the sailor shouted--

"Tell Taung S'Ali that I will slay him and all his men ere tomorrow's

sun rises. He knows something of my power, but not all. Tonight, at the

twelfth hour, you will find a rope hanging from the rock. Tie thereto a

vessel of water. Fail not in this. I will not forget your services. I

am Anstruther Sahib, of the Belgaum Rissala."

The native translated his words into a fierce defiance of Taung S'Ali

and his Dyaks. The chief glanced at Jenks and Iris with an ominous

smile. He muttered something.

"Then, sahib. There is nothing more to be said. Beware of the trees on

your right. They can send silent death even to the place where you

stand. And I will not fail you tonight, on my life," cried the

interpreter.

"I believe you. Go! But inform your chief that once you have

disappeared round the rock whence you came I will talk to him only with

a rifle."

Taung S'Ali seemed to comprehend the Englishman's emphatic motions.

Waving his hand defiantly, the Dyak turned, and, with one parting

glance of mute assurance, the Indian followed him.

And now there came to Jenks a great temptation. Iris touched his arm

and whispered--

"What have you decided? I did not dare to speak lest he should hear my

voice."

Poor girl! She was sure the Dyak could not penetrate her disguise,

though she feared from the manner in which the conference broke up that

it had not been satisfactory.

Jenks did not answer her. He knew that if he killed Taung S'Ali his men

would be so dispirited that when the night came they would fly. There

was so much at stake--Iris, wealth, love, happiness, life itself--all

depended on his plighted word. Yet his savage enemy, a slayer of women,

a human vampire soiled with every conceivable crime, was stalking back

to safety with a certain dignified strut, calmly trusting to the white

man's bond.

Oh, it was cruel! The ordeal of that ghastly moment was more trying

than all that he had hitherto experienced. He gave a choking sob of

relief when the silken-clad scoundrel passed out of sight without even

deigning to give another glance at the ledge or at those who silently

watched him.

Iris could not guess the nature of the mortal struggle raging in the

sailor's soul.

"Tell me," she repeated, "what have you done?"

"Kept faith with that swaggering ruffian," he said, with an odd feeling

of thankfulness that he spoke truly.

"Why? Have you made him any promise?"

"Unhappily I permitted him to come here, so I had to let him go. He

recognized you instantly."

This surprised her greatly.

"Are you sure? I saw him pointing at me, but he seemed to be in such a

bad temper that I imagined that he was angry with you for exchanging a

prepossessing young lady for an ill-favored youth."

Jenks with difficulty suppressed a sigh. Her words for an instant had

the old piquant flavor.

Keeping a close watch on the sheltering promontory, he told her all

that had taken place. Iris became very downcast when she grasped the

exact state of affairs. She was almost certain when the Dyaks proposed

a parley that reasonable terms would result. It horrified her beyond

measure to find that she was the rock on which negotiations were

wrecked. Hope died within her. The bitterness of death was in her

breast.

"What an unlucky influence I have had on your existence!" she

exclaimed. "If it were not for me this trouble at least would be spared

you. Because I am here you are condemned. Again, because I stopped you

from shooting that wretched chief and his companions they are now

demanding your life as a forfeit. It is all my fault. I cannot bear

it."

She was on the verge of tears. The strain had become too great for her.

After indulging in a wild dream of freedom, to be told that they must

again endure the irksome confinement, the active suffering, the slow

horrors of a siege in that rocky prison, almost distracted her.

Jenks was very stern and curt in his reply.

"We must make the best of a bad business," he said. "If we are in a

tight place the Dyaks are not much better off, and eighteen of their

number are dead or wounded. You forget, too, that Providence has sent

us a most useful ally in the Mahommedan. When all is said and done,

things might be far worse than they are."

Never before had his tone been so cold, his manner so abrupt, not even

in the old days when he purposely endeavored to make her dislike him.

She walked along the ledge and timidly bent over him.

"Forgive me!" she whispered; "I did forget for the moment, not only the

goodness of Providence, but also your self-sacrificing devotion. I am

only a woman, and I don't want to die yet, but I will not live unless

you too are saved."

Once already that day she had expressed this thought in other words.

Was some shadowy design flitting through her brain? Suppose they were

faced with the alternatives of dying from thirst or yielding to the

Dyaks. Was there another way out? Jenks shivered, though the rock was

grilling him. He must divert her mind from this dreadful brooding.

"The fact is," he said with a feeble attempt at cheerfulness, "we are

both hungry and consequently grumpy. Now, suppose you prepare lunch. We

will feel ever so much better after we have eaten."

The girl choked back her emotion, and sadly essayed the task of

providing a meal which was hateful to her. In doing so she saw her

Bible, lying where she had placed it that morning, the leaves still

open at the 91st Psalm. She had indeed forgotten the promise it

contained--

"For He shall give His angels charge over thee, to keep thee in all thy

ways."

A few tears fell now and made little furrows down her soiled cheeks.

But they were helpful tears, tears of resignation, not of despair.

Although the "destruction that wasteth at noonday" was trying her

sorely she again felt strong and sustained.

She even smiled on detecting an involuntary effort to clear her stained

face. She was about to carry a biscuit and some tinned meat to the

sailor when a sharp exclamation from him caused her to hasten to his

side.

The Dyaks had broken cover. Running in scattered sections across the

sands, they were risking such loss as the defenders might be able to

inflict upon them during a brief race to the shelter and food to be

obtained in the other part of the island.

Jenks did not fire at the scurrying gang. He was waiting for one man,

Taung S'Ali. But that redoubtable person, having probably suggested

this dash for liberty, had fully realized the enviable share of

attention he would attract during the passage. He therefore discarded

his vivid attire, and, by borrowing odd garments, made himself

sufficiently like unto the remainder of his crew to deceive the sailor

until the rush of men was over. Among them ran the Mahommedan, who did

not look up the valley but waved his hand.

When all had quieted down again Jenks understood how he had been

fooled. He laughed so heartily that Iris, not knowing either the cause

of his merriment or the reason of his unlooked-for clemency to the

flying foe, feared the sun had affected him.

He at once quitted the post occupied during so protracted a vigil.

"Now," he cried, "we can eat in peace. I have stripped the chief of his

finery. His men can twit him on being forced to shed his gorgeous

plumage in order to save his life. Anyhow, they will leave us in peace

until night falls, so we must make the best of a hot afternoon."

But he was mistaken. A greater danger than any yet experienced now

threatened them, though Iris, after perusing that wonderful psalm,

might have warned him of it had she known the purpose of those long

bamboos carried by some of the savages.

For Taung S'Ali, furious and unrelenting, resolved that if he could not

obtain the girl he would slay the pair of them; and he had terrible

weapons in his possession--weapons that could send "silent death even

to the place where they stood."