notice of Bastin, "I really don't know. My
expectation is,
however, that when we go to look tomorrow morning--and I suggest
that we should not do so before then in order that we may give
our minds time to clear--we shall find that sepulchre place quite
empty, even perhaps without the
crystal coffins we have imagined
to stand there."
"Perhaps we shall find that there isn't a cave at all and that
we are not sitting on a flat rock outside of it," suggested
Bastin with heavy sarcasm, adding, "You are clever in your way,
Bickley, but you can talk more
rubbish than any man I ever knew."
"They told us they would come back tonight or tomorrow," I
said. "If they do, what will you say then, Bickley?"
"I will wait till they come to answer that question. Now let us
go for a walk and try to change our thoughts. We are all
over-strained and scarcely know what we are saying."
"One more question," I said as we rose to start. "Did Tommy
suffer from hallucinations as well as ourselves?"
"Why not?" answered Bickley. "He is an animal just as we are,
or perhaps we thought we saw Tommy do the things he did."
"When you found that basket of fruit, Bastin, which the natives
brought over in the canoe, was there a bough covered with red
flowers lying on the top of it?"
"Yes, Arbuthnot, one bough only; I threw it down on the rock as
it got in the way when I was carrying the basket."
"Which flowering bough we all thought we saw the Sleeper Oro
carry away after Tommy had brought it to him."
"Yes; he made me pick it up and give it to him," said Bastin.
"Well, if we did not see this it should still be lying on the
rock, as there has been no wind and there are no animals here to
carry it away. You will admit that, Bickley?"
He nodded.
"Then if it has gone you will admit also that the presumption
is that we saw what we thought we did see?"
"I do not know how that
conclusion can be avoided, at any rate
so far as the
incident of the bough is
concerned," replied
Bickley with caution.
Then, without more words, we started to look. At the spot where
the bough should have been, there was no bough, but on the rock
lay several of the red flowers,
bitten off, I suppose, by Tommy
while he was carrying it. Nor was this all. I think I have
mentioned that the Glittering Lady wore sandals which were
fastened with red studs that looked like rubies or carbuncles. On
the rock lay one of these studs. I picked it up and we examined
it. It had been sewn to the sandal-strap with golden thread or
silk. Some of this substance hung from the hole drilled in the
stone which served for an eye. It was as
rotten as tinder,
apparently with
extreme age. Moreover, the hard gem itself was
pitted as though the passage of time had taken effect upon it,
though this may have been caused by other agencies, such as the
action of the radium rays. I smiled at Bickley who looked
disconcerted and even sad. In a way it is
painful to see the
effect upon an able and
earnest man of the up
setting of his
lifelong theories.
We went for our walk, keeping to the flat lands at the foot of
the
volcano cone, for we seemed to have had enough of wonders and
to desire to
reassure ourselves, as it were, by the study of
natural and familiar things. As it chanced, too, we were rewarded
by
sundry useful discoveries. Thus we found a place where the
bread-tree and other fruits, most of them now ripe, grew in
abundance, as did the yam. Also, we came to an inlet that we
noticed was
crowded with large and beautiful fish from the lake,
which seemed to find it a favourite spot. Perhaps this was
because a little
stream of excellent water ran in here,
overflowing from the great pool or mere which filled the crater
above.
At these finds we rejoiced greatly, for now we knew that we
need not fear
starvation even should our supply of food from the
main island be cut off. Indeed, by help of some palm-leaf stalks
which we wove together
roughly, Bastin, who was rather clever at
this kind of thing, managed to trap four fish weighing two or
three pounds
apiece, wading into the water to do so. It was
curious to observe with what ease he adapted himself to the
manners and customs of primeval man, so much so, indeed, that
Bickley remarked that if he could believe in re-incarnation, he
would be
absolutely certain that Bastin was a troglodyte in his
last
sojourn on the earth.
However this might be, Bastin's primeval instincts and
abilities were of the
utmost service to us. Before we had been
many days on that island he had built us a kind of native hut or
house roofed with palm leaves in which, until provided with a
better, as happened afterwards, we ate and he and Bickley slept,
leaving the tent to me. Moreover, he wove a net of palm fibre
with which he caught
abundance of fish, and made fishing-lines of
the same material (fortunately we had some hooks) which he baited
with freshwater mussels and the insides of fish. By means of
these he secured some
veritable monsters of the carp
species that
proved most excellent eating. His greatest
triumph, however, was
a decoy which he constructed of boughs,
wherein he trapped a
number of waterfowl. So that soon we kept a very good table of a
sort, especially after he had
learned how to cook our food upon
the native plan by means of hot stones. This suited us admirably,
as it enabled Bickley and myself to devote all our time to
archaeological and other studies which did not greatly interest
Bastin.
By the time that we got back to camp it was
drawing towards
evening, so we cooked our food and ate, and then, tho
roughlyexhausted, made ourselves as comfortable as we could and went to
sleep. Even our
marvelous experiences could not keep Bickley and
myself from
sleeping, and on Bastin such things had no effect. He
accepted them and that was all, much more
readily than we did,
indeed. Triple-armed as he was in the mail of a child-like faith,
he snapped his fingers at evil spirits which he
supposed the
Sleepers to be, and at everything else that other men might
dread.
Now, as I have mentioned, after our talk with Marama, although
we did not think it wise to ad
venture ourselves among them again
at present, we had lost all fear of the Orofenans. In this
attitude, so far as Marama himself and the majority of his people
were
concerned, we were quite justified, for they were our warm
friends. But in the case of the sorcerers, the priests and all
their rascally and
superstitiousbrotherhood, we were by no means
justified. They had not
forgiven Bastin his sacrilege or for his
undermining of their authority by the
preaching of new doctrines
which, if adopted, would destroy them as a hierarchy. Nor had
they
forgiven Bickley for shooting one of their number, or any of
us for our escape from the
vengeance of their god.
So it came about that they made a plot to seize us all and hale
us off to be sacrificed to a substituted image of Oro, which by
now they had set up. They knew exactly where we slept upon the
rock; indeed, our fire showed it to them and so far they were not
afraid to
venture, since here they had been accustomed for
generations to lay their offerings to the god of the Mountain.
Secretly on the
previous night, without the knowledge of Marama,
they had carried two more canoes to the borders of the lake. Now
on this night, just as the moon was
setting about three in the
morning, they made their attack, twenty-one men in all, for the
three canoes were large, relying on the following darkness to get
us away and
convey us to the place of sacrifice to be offered up
at dawn and before Marama could interfere.
The first we knew of the matter, for most
foolishly we had