with the wild animals she loved, her companions; and having no
fear of them, for she did not know that they had it in their
minds to turn their little
poisonous arrows against herself, she
was
constantly in the woods frustrating them; and the animals, in
league with her, seemed to understand her note of
warning and hid
themselves or took to
flight at the approach of danger. At
length their
hatred and fear grew to such a degree that they
determined to make away with her, and one day, having matured a
plan, they went to the wood and spread themselves two and two
about it. The couples did not keep together, but moved about or
remained concealed at a distance of forty or fifty yards apart,
lest she should be missed. Two of the
savages, armed with
blow-pipes, were near the border of the forest on the side
nearest to the village, and one of them, observing a
motion in
the
foliage of a tree, ran
swiftly and
cautiously towards it to
try and catch a
glimpse of the enemy. And he did see her no
doubt, as she was there watching both him and his companions, and
blew an arrow at her, but even while in the act of blowing it he
was himself struck by a dart that buried itself deep in his flesh
just over the heart. He ran some distance with the fatal barbed
point in his flesh and met his comrade, who had
mistaken him for
the girl and shot him. The wounded man threw himself down to
die, and dying
related that he had fired at the girl sitting up
in a tree and that she had caught the arrow in her hand only to
hurl it
instantly back with such force and
precision that it
pierced his flesh just over the heart. He had seen it all with
his own eyes, and his friend who had
accidentally slain him
believed his story and
repeated it to the others. Rima had seen
one Indian shoot the other, and when she told her
grandfather he
explained to her that it was an accident, but he guessed why the
arrow had been fired.
From that day the Indians hunted no more in the wood; and at
length one day Nuflo, meeting an Indian who did not know him and
with whom he had some talk, heard the strange story of the arrow,
and that the
mysterious girl who could not be shot was the
offspring of an old man and a Didi who had become enamoured of
him; that, growing tired of her
consort, the Didi had returned to
her river, leaving her half-human child to play her malicious
pranks in the wood.
This, then, was Nuflo's story, told not in Nuflo's manner, which
was
infinitely prolix; and think not that it failed to move
me--that I failed to bless him for what he had done, in spite of
his
selfish motives.
CHAPTER XVI
We were eighteen days travelling to Riolama, on the last two
making little progress, on
account of
continuous rain, which made
us
miserable beyond
description. Fortunately the dogs had found,
and Nuflo had succeeded in killing, a great ant-eater, so that we
were well supplied with excellent, strength-giving flesh. We
were among the Riolama mountains at last, and Rima kept with us,
apparently expecting great things. I expected nothing, for
reasons to be stated by and by. My
belief was that the only
important thing that could happen to us would be starvation.
The afternoon of the last day was spent in skirting the foot of a
very long mountain, crowned at its southern
extremity with a
huge, rocky mass resembling the head of a stone sphinx above its
long, couchant body, and at its highest part about a thousand
feet above the
surrounding level. It was late in the day,
raining fast again, yet the old man still toiled on,
contrary to
his usual practice, which was to spend the last
daylight hours in
gathering
firewood and in constructing a shelter. At length,
when we were nearly under the peak, he began to
ascend. The rise
in this place was gentle, and the
vegetation,
chieflycomposed of
dwarf thorn trees rooted in the clefts of the rock, scarcely
impeded our progress; yet Nuflo moved obliquely, as if he found
the
ascent difficult, pausing frequently to take
breath and look
round him. Then we came to a deep,
ravine-like cleft in the side
of the mountain, which became deeper and narrower above us, but
below it broadened out to a
valley; its steep sides as we looked
down were clothed with dense,
thornyvegetation, and from the
bottom rose to our ears the dull sound of a
hidden torrent.
Along the border of this
ravine Nuflo began toiling
upwards, and
finally brought us out upon a stony
plateau on the mountain-side.
Here he paused and, turning and
regarding us with a look as of
satisfied
malice in his eyes, remarked that we were at our
journey's end, and he trusted the sight of that
barrenmountain-side would
compensate us for all the discomforts we had
suffered during the last eighteen days.
I heard him with
indifference. I had already recognized the
place from his own exact
description of it, and I now saw all
that I had looked to see--a big,
barren hill. But Rima, what had
she expected that her face wore that blank look of surprise and
pain? "Is this the place where mother appeared to you?" she
suddenly cried. "The very place--this! This!" Then she added:
"The cave where you tended her--where is it?"
"Over there," he said, pointing across the
plateau, which was
partially overgrown with dwarf trees and bushes, and ended at a
wall of rock, almost
vertical and about forty feet high.
Going to this
precipice, we saw no cave until Nuflo had cut away
two or three tangled bushes, revealing an
opening behind, about
half as high and twice as wide as the door of an ordinary
dwelling-house.
The next thing was to make a torch, and aided by its light we
groped our way in and explored the
interior. The cave, we found,
was about fifty feet long, narrowing to a mere hole at the
extremity; but the anterior
portion formed an oblong chamber,
very lofty, with a dry floor. Leaving our torch burning, we set
to work cutting bushes to supply ourselves with wood enough to
last us all night. Nuflo, poor old man, loved a big fire dearly;
a big fire and fat meat to eat (the ranker its flavour, the
better he liked it) were to him the greatest blessings that man
could wish for. In me also the
prospect of a
cheerful blaze put
a new heart, and I worked with a will in the rain, which
increased in the end to a blinding downpour.
By the time I dragged my last load in, Nuflo had got his fire
well
alight, and was heaping on wood in a most
lavish way. "No
fear of burning our house down tonight," he remarked, with a
chuckle--the first sound of that
description he had emitted for a
long time.
After we had satisfied our
hunger, and had smoked one or two
cigarettes, the unaccustomed
warmth, and dryness, and the
firelight
affected us with drowsiness, and I had probably been
nodding for some time; but starting at last and
opening my eyes,
I missed Rima. The old man appeared to be asleep, although still
in a sitting
posture close to the fire. I rose and
hurried out,
drawing my cloak close around me to protect me from the rain; but
what was my surprise on emerging from the cave to feel a dry,
bracing wind in my face and to see the desert spread out for
leagues before me in the
brilliant white light of a full moon!
The rain had
apparently long ceased, and only a few thin white
clouds appeared moving
swiftly over the wide blue
expanse of
heaven. It was a
welcome change, but the shock of surprise and
pleasure was
instantly succeeded by the maddening fear that Rima
was lost to me. She was
nowhere in sight beneath, and
running to
the end of the little
plateau to get free of the thorn trees, I
turned my eyes towards the
summit, and there, at some distance
above me, caught sight of her
standingmotionless and gazing
upwards. I quickly made my way to her side,
calling to her as I
approached; but she only half turned to cast a look at me and did
not reply.
"Rima," I said, "why have you come here? Are you actually
thinking of climbing the mountain at this hour of the night?"
"Yes--why not?" she returned, moving one or two steps from me.
"Rima--sweet Rima, will you listen to me?"