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She nodded, understanding the significance of his tone.
"There," he said, with an awkward laugh, "do you still believe in me?"
"Yes," she answered, still looking away.
There was a little pause. They were both sitting forward in their chairs looking towards the conservatory.
"It was not the money that tempted me," said Guy very deliberately; "it was you."
She rose from her chair as if to join her aunt and the horticultural old gentleman.
"You must not say that," she said, in little more than a whisper, and without looking round she went towards Lady Cantourne. Her eyes were gleaming with a singular suppressed excitement, such as one sees in the eyes of a man fresh from a mad run across country.
Guy Oscard rose also, and followed more deliberately. There was nothing for him to do but to take his leave.
"But," said Lady Cantourne graciously, "if you are determined to go away you must at least come and say good-bye before you leave."
"Thanks; I should like to do so, if I may."
"We shall be deeply disappointed if you forget," said Millicent, holding out her hand, with a smile full of light-heartedness and innocent girlish friends.h.i.+p.
CHAPTER VI. UNDER THE LINE
Enough of simpering and grimace, Enough of vacuity, trimmed with lace.
"Curse this country! Curse it--curse it!" The man spoke aloud, but there was no one near to hear. He shook his skinny yellow fist out over the broad river that crept greasily down to the equatorial sea.
All around him the vegetable kingdom had a.s.serted its sovereignty. At his back loomed a dense forest, impenetrable to the foot of man, defying his puny hand armed with axe or saw. The trees were not high, few of them being above twenty feet, but from their branches creepers and parasites hung in tangled profusion, interlaced, joining tree to tree for acres, nay for miles.
As far as the eye could reach either bank of the slow river was thus covered with rank vegetation--mile after mile without variety, without hope. The gla.s.sy surface of the water was broken here and there by certain black forms floating like logs half hidden beneath the wave.
These were crocodiles. The river was the Ogowe, and the man who cursed it was Victor Durnovo, employe of the Loango Trading a.s.sociation, whose business it was at that season to travel into the interior of Africa to buy, barter, or steal ivory for his masters.
He was a small-faced man, with a squarely aquiline nose and a black moustache, which hung like a valance over his mouth. From the growth of that curtain-like moustache Victor Durnovo's worldly prosperity might have been said to date. No one seeing his mouth had before that time been prevailed upon to trust him. Nature has a way of hanging out signs and then covering them up, so that the casual fail to see. He was a man of medium height, with abnormally long arms and a somewhat truculent way of walking, as if his foot was ever ready to kick anything or any person who might come in his way.
His movements were nervous and restless, although he was tired out and half-starved. The irritability of Africa was upon him--had hold over him--gripped him remorselessly. No one knows what it is, but it is there, and sometimes it is responsible for murder. It makes honourable European gentlemen commit crimes of which they blush to think in after days. The Powers may draw up treaties and sign the same, but there will never be a peaceful division of the great wasted land so near to Southern Europe. There may be peace in Berlin, or Brussels, or London, but because the atmosphere of Africa is not the same as that of the great cities, there will be no peace beneath the Equator. From the West Coast of Africa to the East men will fight and quarrel and bicker so long as human nerves are human nerves. The irritability lurks in the shades of boundless forests where men may starve for want of animal sustenance; it hovers over the broad bosoms of a hundred slow rivers haunted by the mysterious crocodile, the weird hippopotamus. It is everywhere, and by reason of it men quarrel about trifles and descend to brutal pa.s.sion over a futile discussion.
Victor Durnovo had sent his boatmen into the forest to find a few bananas, a few handsful of firewood, and while they were absent he gave vent to that wild unreasoning pa.s.sion which is inhaled into the white man's lungs with the air of equatorial Africa. For there are moral microbes in the atmosphere of different countries, and we must not judge one land by the laws of another. There is the fatalism of India, the restlessness of New York, the fear of the Arctic, the irritability of Africa.
"Curse this country!" he shouted, "curse it--curse it! River and tree--man and beast!"
He rose and slouched down to his boat, which lay moored to a snag alongside the bank, trodden hard to the consistency of asphalte by a hundred bare feet. He stepped over the gunwale and made his way aft with a practised balancing step. The after part of the canoe was decked in and closed with lock and key. The key hung at his watch-chain--a large chain with square links and a suggestive doubtfulness of colour. It might have been gold, but the man who wore it somehow imparted to it a suggestion of baser metal.
He opened the locker and took from it a small chest. From this he selected a bottle, and, rummaging in the recesses of the locker, he found an unwashed tumbler. Into half a gla.s.s of water he dropped a minute quant.i.ty from the bottle and drank off the mixture. The pa.s.sion had left him now, and quite suddenly he looked yellow and very weak. He was treating himself scientifically for the irritability to which he had given way. Then he returned to the bank and laid down at full length.
The skin of his face must have been giving him great pain, for it was scarlet in places and exuding from sun-blisters. He had long ago given up wiping the perspiration from his brow, and evidently did not care to wash his face.
Presently a peacefulness seemed to come over him, for his eyes lost their glitter and his heavy lids drooped. His arms were crossed behind his head--before him lay the river.
Suddenly he sat upright, all eagerness and attention. Not a leaf stirred. It was about five o'clock in the evening, the stillest hour of the twenty-four. In such a silence the least sound would travel almost any distance, and there was a sound travelling over the water to him.
It was nothing but a thud repeated with singular regularity; but to his practised ears it conveyed much. He knew that a boat was approaching, as yet hidden by some distant curve in the river. The thud was caused by the contact of six paddles with the gunwale of the canoe as the paddlers withdrew them from the water.
Victor Durnovo rose again and brought from the boat a second rifle, which he laid beside the double-barrelled Reilly which was never more than a yard away from him, waking or sleeping. Then he waited. He knew that no boat could reach the bank without his full permission, for every rower would be dead before they got within a hundred yards of his rifle.
He was probably the best rifle-shot but one in that country--and the other, the very best, happened to be in the approaching canoe.
After the s.p.a.ce of ten minutes the boat came in sight--a long black form on the still waters. It was too far away for him to distinguish anything beyond the fact that it was a native boat.
"Eight hundred yards," muttered Durnovo over the sight of his rifle.
He looked upon this river as his own, and he knew the native of equatorial Africa. Therefore he dropped a bullet into the water, under the bow of the canoe, at eight hundred yards.
A moment later there was a sound which can only be written "P-ttt"
between his legs, and he had to wipe a shower of dust from his eyes. A puff of blue smoke rose slowly over the boat and a sharp report broke the silence a second time.
Then Victor Durnovo leapt to his feet and waved his hat in the air. From the canoe there was an answering greeting, and the man on the bank went to the water's edge, still carrying the rifle from which he was never parted.
Durnovo was the first to speak when the boat came within hail.
"Very sorry," he shouted. "Thought you were a native boat. Must establish a funk--get in the first shot, you know."
"All right," replied one of the Europeans in the approaching craft, with a courteous wave of the hand, "no harm done."
There were two white men and six blacks in the long and clumsy boat. One of the Europeans lay in the bows while the other was stretched at his ease in the stern, reclining on the canvas of a neatly folded tent. The last-named was evidently the leader of the little expedition, while the manner and att.i.tude of the man in the bows suggested the servitude of a disciplined soldier slightly relaxed by abnormal circ.u.mstances.
"Who fired that shot?" inquired Durnovo, when there was no longer any necessity to shout.
"Joseph," replied the man in the stern of the boat, indicating his companion. "Was it a near thing?"
"About as near as I care about--it threw up the dust between my legs."
The man called Joseph grinned. Nature had given him liberally of the wherewithal for indulgence in that relaxation, and Durnovo smiled rather constrainedly. Joseph was grabbing at the long reedy gra.s.s, bringing the canoe to a standstill, and it was some moments before his extensive mouth submitted to control.
"I presume you are Mr. Durnovo," said the man in the stern of the boat, rising leisurely from his rec.u.mbent position and speaking with a courteous savoir-faire which seemed slightly out of place in the wilds of Central Africa. He was a tall man with a small aristocratic head and a refined face, which somehow suggested an aristocrat of old France.
"Yes," answered Durnovo.
The tall man stepped ash.o.r.e and held out his hand.
"I am glad we have met you," he said; "I have a letter of introduction to you from Maurice Gordon, of Loango."
Victor Durnovo's dark face changed slightly; his eyes--bilious, fever-shot, unhealthy--took a new light.
"Ah!" he answered, "are you a friend of Maurice Gordon's?"
There was another question in this, an unasked one; and Victor Durnovo was watching for the answer. But the face he watched was like a delicately carved piece of brown marble, with a courteous, impenetrable smile.