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He bent his ear, and listened with keen attention--in hopes of hearing what they said. He could only catch an occasional word. The roar of the cascade rising along with the voices hindered him from hearing them distinctly; and, notwithstanding his earnest desire to do so, he was unable to make out the matter of the conversation.
Only for a short while was he kept waiting. The _trialogue_ came to a close, followed by a brief interval of silence--at the end of which the canoe once more made its appearance upon the open water of the lagoon.
Two persons only were in it, Chakra and the Jew. Cynthia had stayed by the bottom of the cliff.
Cubina made this observation with some chagrin. It was a circ.u.mstance that promised to frustrate the design he had suddenly conceived: of following the myal-man to his lair. This he desired to do, in order to make himself acquainted with the hiding-place of the remarkable runaway.
That it was down in the Duppy's Hole there could be no doubt; and therefore the Maroon might at any time find him there.
This reflection would have contented him; but, on seeing the Jew ferried across the lagoon, he conjectured that he and Chakra were bent upon the completion of some horrid plot, which, by following, he, Cubina, might overhear, and, perhaps, be enabled to counteract.
The Maroon was aware of the difficulty of descending into the Duppy's Hole. He knew there was but one way--by the bushes that cl.u.s.tered along the face of the cliff at his feet. Once, while on the chase, he and his followers, aided by a rope-ladder, had gone down; and, in search of game, had explored the wooded covert beyond. At that time, however, Chakra had not been _executed_; and the hunter had found no trace of human presence in the solitary place.
He knew that he could follow the canoe by swimming; as in this way he had crossed before, but now that Cynthia barred the way, it would be impossible for him to reach the water un.o.bserved.
To follow the conspirators further was out of the question. His chance was cut off by the interposition of the mulatta. He could only remain on the cliff and await their return.
He was reflecting upon what course to pursue, when a rustling sound reached him from below. It was made by some one moving among the bushes that grew against the face of the precipice.
He caught one of the branches; and, supporting himself by it, craned his neck over the cliff. His eye fell upon the brilliant chequer of a _bandanna_, visible among the leaves. It was the toque upon the head of Cynthia. It was in motion; and he could see that she was ascending by the tree stairway he had already observed.
Without staying to witness the ascent, he turned back into the underwood by the side of the path; and, crouching down, he waited to see what the woman intended doing. Perhaps her part in the performance had been played out--at least, for that night--and she was on her way homeward?
That was what Cubina conjectured, as well as just what he would have wished.
His conjecture proved correct. The mulatta, on mounting to the crest of the cliff, stopped only for a moment, to adjust upon her arm a basket she had brought up--from the half-open lid of which protruded the neck of a bottle. Then, casting her eyes forward, she struck off into the shadowy forest path, and was soon out of sight.
The moment after she had pa.s.sed him, the Maroon glided silently forward to the edge of the cliff, and commenced descending the stair. Such feat was nothing to him; and in a few seconds he had reached the edge of the lagoon.
Here he paused--to make sure that the canoe had arrived at its destination, and that its late occupants had disembarked from it.
After a moment spent in this _reconnoissance_--looking sharply, and listening with all his ears--he became satisfied that the coast was clear; and, letting himself stealthily into the water, he swam for the opposite sh.o.r.e of the lagoon.
Upon only about two-thirds of the surface of the lagoon did the moonlight fall--the cliff casting its shadow upon the other third.
Keeping within the boundaries of this shadow, and swimming as silently as a fish, Cubina succeeded in reaching the opposite sh.o.r.e, without perceiving any sign that he had been observed.
Under the heavy timber, with which the upper half of the ravine was covered, the darkness was as deep as if not a ray of moonlight came down from the sky. Only on the stream itself, and here and there through a break in the umbrageous forest, could the moonbeams reach the surface of the earth. Elsewhere, from cliff to cliff, the obscurity was complete.
Cubina conjectured, and correctly, that there was a path leading from the anchorage of the canoe; and to find this was his first purpose.
Keeping around the edge of the lagoon, he soon came upon the craft-- empty, and anch.o.r.ed under a tree.
The moonlight, entering here from the open water, showed him the _embouchure_ of the path, where it entered the underwood; and, without losing a moment's time, he commenced moving along it.
Silently as a cat he stole onward, at intervals pausing to listen; but he could only bear the hissing sound of the upper cascade--to which he was now making approach.
There was a s.p.a.ce in front of the waterfall, where the trees stood thinly, and this opening was soon reached.
On arriving at its edge the Maroon again stopped to reconnoitre.
Scarcely a second of time did he need to pause. Light flashed in his eyes through the interstices of what appeared to be a sort of grating.
It was the bamboo door of the obeah hut. Voices, too, reverberated through the bars.
Within were the men upon whom it was his purpose to play eavesdropper.
In another instant Cubina was cowering under the cotton-tree, close up to the doorpost.
Volume Two, Chapter x.x.xI.
STRANGE DISCLOSURES.
The two plotters were palavering loud enough. In that place there was no need--at least, so thought they--for restrained speech; and the listener could have heard every word, but for the hoa.r.s.e hissing of the cataract. This, at times, hindered him from distinguis.h.i.+ng what was said; and only in detached portions could he pick up the thread of the discourse. Enough, however, heard he to cause him astonishment--the greatest of all, that in the Island of Jamaica, or upon the earth, existed two such villains as Chakra, the Coromantee, and Jessuron, the Jew!
He could see the conspirators as well as hear them. The c.h.i.n.ks between the bamboos enabled him to obtain a view of both.
The Jew, slightly blown with his long walk against the hill, had dropped into a sitting att.i.tude upon the truck-like bedstead; while the Coromantee stood before him, leaning against the b.u.t.tress of the tree which formed one side of his dwelling.
The conversation had commenced before Cubina came up. It could not have proceeded far. The lard lamp seemed recently lit. Besides, the Maroon knew that he had been only a few minutes behind them. The plot, therefore, whatever it was, had not yet made much progress.
So reasoned the listener; but it soon appeared that it was the continuation of a plot, and not its first conception, to which he was to become privy--a plot so demoniac as to include _murder_ in its design!
The Jew, when Cubina first got eyes on him, appeared as if he had just given utterance to some angry speech. His dark, weasel-like orbs were sparkling in their sunken sockets, with a fiendish light. The goggles were off, and the eyes could be seen. In his right hand the eternal umbrella was grasped, with a firm clutch, as if held in menace!
Chakra, on the other hand, appeared cowed and pleading. Though almost twice the size, and apparently twice the strength of the old Israelite, he looked at that moment as if in fear of him!
"Gorry, Ma.s.sr Jake!" said he, in an appealing tone; "how ebber wa' _I_ to know de Cussus warn a gwine so soon? A nebber speered ob dat; an'
you nebber tole me you wanted de obeah-spell to work fa.s.ser dan war safe. Ef a'd a know'd dat, a kud a fotch de dam Cussus out o' him boots in de shake ob a cat's tail--dat cud a a' did!"
"Ach!" exclaimed the Jew, with an air of unmistakable chagrin; "he's going to shlip us. S'help me, he will! And now, when I wants more ash ever the shpell upon him. I'sh heard something from thish girl Cynthy of a conshpiracy against myshelf. Sheesh heard them plotting in the summer-house in the Cushtos's garden."
"Wha' dey plot 'gain you, Ma.s.sr Jake? Who am dey dat go plottin'?"
"The Cushtos is one, the other ish that scamp son of Cubina, the Maroon--the young Cubina. You knowsh him?"
"Dat same a know well 'nuf."
"Ah! the proud Cushtos don't know--though he hash his sushpicions--that hish wife Quasheba wash the mishtress of a Maroon. Ha! ha! ha! And she luffed the mulatto better as ever she luffed Vanities Vochan! Ha! ha!
ha!"
"Dat am berry near de troof," observed the negro, with a thoughtful air.
"Little dosh the Cushtos think," continued Jessuron, without heeding the interpolation, "that thish young fellow, whosh a-helpin' him to conshpire againsht me, is a sort of a son to hish consheited wors.h.i.+p.
Ha! ha! ha!"
It was startling intelligence for the listener outside the door. It was the first intimation the young Maroon ever had as to who was his mother.
Some vague hints had been conveyed to him in early childhood; but his memory recalled them only as dreams; and he himself had never allowed them expression. His father he had known well--called, as himself, Cubina, the Maroon. But his mother, who or what she had been, he had never known.
Was it possible, then, that the quadroon, Quasheba--of whose fame he, too, had heard--was it true she was his own mother? That "Lilly Quasheba," the beautiful, the accomplished daughter of the Custos Vaughan, was his half-sister?