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1899
Almayer's Folly:
A Story of an Eastern River
by
Joseph Conrad
"Kaspar! Makan!"
The well-known shrill voice startled Almayer from his dream of splendid
future into the unpleasant realities of the present hour. An unpleasant
voice too. He had heard it for many years, and with every year he liked it
less. No matter; there would be an end to all this soon.
He shuffled uneasily, but took no further notice of the call. Leaning with
both his elbows on the balustrade of the verandah, he went on looking
fixedly at the great river that flowed— indifferent and hurried—before
his eyes. He liked to look at it about the time of sunset; perhaps because
at that time the sinking sun would spread a glowing gold tinge on the
waters of the Pantai, and Almayer's thoughts were often busy with gold;
gold he had failed to secure; gold the others had secured— dishonestly,
of course—or gold he meant to secure yet, through his own honest
exertions, for himself and Nina. He absorbed himself in his dream of
wealth and power away from this coast where he had dwelt for so many
years, forgetting the bitterness of toil and strife in the vision of a
great and splendid reward. They would live in Europe, he and his daughter.
They would be rich and respected. Nobody would think of her mixed blood in
the presence of her great beauty and of his immense wealth. Witnessing her
triumphs he would grow young again, he would forget the twenty-five years
of heart-breaking struggle on this coast where he felt like a prisoner.
All this was nearly within his reach. Let only Dain return! And return
soon he must—in his own interest, for his own share. He was now more than
a week late! Perhaps he would return to-night. Such were Almayer's
thoughts as, standing on the verandah of his new but already decaying
house—that last failure of his life— he looked on the broad river. There
was no tinge of gold on it this evening, for it had been swollen by the
rains, and rolled an angry and muddy flood under his inattentive eyes,
carrying small drift-wood and big dead logs, and whole uprooted trees with
branches and foliage, amongst which the water swirled and roared angrily.
One of those drifting trees grounded on the shelving shore, just by the
house, and Almayer, neglecting his dream, watched it with languid
interest. The tree swung slowly round, amid the hiss and foam of the
water, and soon getting free of the obstruction began to move down stream
again, rolling slowly over, raising upwards a long, denuded branch, like a
hand lifted in mute appeal to heaven against the river's brutal and
unnecessary violence. Almayer's interest in the fate of that tree
increased rapidly. He leaned over to see if it would clear the low point
below. It did; then he drew back, thinking that now its course was free
down to the sea, and he envied the lot of that inanimate thing now growing
small and indistinct in the deepening darkness. As he lost sight of it
altogether he began to wonder how far out to sea it would drift. Would the
current carry it north or south? South, probably, till it drifted in sight
of Celebes, as far as Macassar, perhaps!
Macassar! Almayer's quickened fancy distanced the tree on its imaginary
voyage, but his memory lagging behind some twenty years or more in point
of time saw a young and slim Almayer, clad all in white and
modest-looking, landing from the Dutch mail-boat on the dusty jetty of
Macassar, coming to woo fortune in the godowns of old Hudig. It was an
important epoch in his life, the beginning of a new existence for him. His
father, a subordinate official employed in the Botanical Gardens of
Buitenzorg, was no doubt delighted to place his son in such a firm. The
young man himself too was nothing loth to leave the poisonous shores of
Java, and the meagre comforts of the parental bungalow, where the father
grumbled all day at the stupidity of native gardeners, and the mother from
the depths of her long easy-chair bewailed the lost glories of Amsterdam,
where she had been brought up, and of her position as the daughter of a
cigar dealer there.
Almayer had left his home with a light heart and a lighter pocket,
speaking English well, and strong in arithmetic; ready to conquer the
world, never doubting that he would.
After those twenty years, standing in the close and stifling heat of a
Bornean evening, he recalled with pleasurable regret the image of Hudig's
lofty and cool warehouses with their long and straight avenues of gin
cases and bales of Manchester goods; the big door swinging noiselessly;
the dim light of the place, so delightful after the glare of the streets;
the little railed-off spaces amongst piles of merchandise where the
Chinese clerks, neat, cool, and sad-eyed, wrote rapidly and in silence
amidst the din of the working gangs rolling casks or shifting cases to a
muttered song, ending with a desperate yell. At the upper end, facing the
great door, there was a larger space railed off, well lighted; there the
noise was subdued by distance, and above it rose the soft and continuous
clink of silver guilders which other discreet Chinamen were counting and
piling up under the supervision of Mr. Vinck, the cashier, the genius
presiding in the place—the right hand of the Master.
In that clear space Almayer worked at his table not far from a little
green painted door, by which always stood a Malay in a red sash and
turban, and whose hand, holding a small string dangling from above, moved
up and down with the regularity of a machine. The string worked a punkah
on the other side of the green door, where the so-called private office
was, and where old Hudig—the Master—sat enthroned, holding noisy
receptions. Sometimes the little door would fly open disclosing to the
outer world, through the bluish haze of tobacco smoke, a long table loaded
with bottles of various shapes and tall water-pitchers, rattan easy-chairs
occupied by noisy men in sprawling attitudes, while the Master would put
his head through and, holding by the handle, would grunt confidentially to
Vinck; perhaps send an order thundering down the warehouse, or spy a
hesitating stranger and greet him with a friendly roar, "Welgome, Gapitan!
ver' you gome vrom? Bali, eh? Got bonies? I vant bonies! Vant all you got;
ha! ha! ha! Gome in!" Then the stranger was dragged in, in a tempest of
yells, the door was shut, and the usual noises refilled the place; the
song of the workmen, the rumble of barrels, the scratch of rapid pens;
while above all rose the musical chink of broad silver pieces streaming
ceaselessly through the yellow fingers of the attentive Chinamen.
At that time Macassar was teeming with life and commerce. It was the point
in the islands where tended all those bold spirits who, fitting out
schooners on the Australian coast, invaded the Malay Archipelago in search
of money and adventure. Bold, reckless, keen in business, not disinclined
for a brush with the pirates that were to be found on many a coast as yet,
making money fast, they used to have a general "rendezvous" in the bay for
purposes of trade and dissipation. The Dutch merchants called those men
English pedlars; some of them were undoubtedly gentlemen for whom that
kind of life had a charm; most were seamen; the acknowledged king of them
all was Tom Lingard, he whom the Malays, honest or dishonest, quiet
fishermen or desperate cut-throats, recognised as "the Rajah-Laut"—the
King of the Sea.
Almayer had heard of him before he had been three days in Macassar, had
heard the stories of his smart business transactions, his loves, and also
of his desperate fights with the Sulu pirates, together with the romantic
tale of some child— a girl—found in a piratical prau by the victorious
Lingard, when, after a long contest, he boarded the craft, driving the
crew overboard. This girl, it was generally known, Lingard had adopted,
was having her educated in some convent in Java, and spoke of her as "my
daughter." He had sworn a mighty oath to marry her to a white man before
he went home and to leave her all his money. "And Captain Lingard has lots
of money," would say Mr. Vinck solemnly, with his head on one side, "lots
of money; more than Hudig!" And after a pause—just to let his hearers
recover from their astonishment at such an incredible assertion— he would
add in an explanatory whisper, "You know, he has discovered a river."
That was it! He had discovered a river! That was the fact placing old
Lingard so much above the common crowd of sea-going adventurers who traded
with Hudig in the daytime and drank champagne, gambled, sang noisy songs,
and made love to half-caste girls under the broad verandah of the Sunda
Hotel at night. Into that river, whose entrances himself only knew,
Lingard used to take his assorted cargo of Manchester goods, brass gongs,
rifles and gunpowder. His brig Flash, which he commanded himself, would on
those occasions disappear quietly during the night from the roadstead
while his companions were sleeping off the effects of the midnight
carouse, Lingard seeing them drunk under the table before going on board,
himself unaffected by any amount of liquor. Many tried to follow him and
find that land of plenty for gutta-percha and rattans, pearl shells and
birds' nests, wax and gum-dammar, but the little Flash could outsail every
craft in those seas. A few of them came to grief on hidden sandbanks and
coral reefs, losing their all and barely escaping with life from the cruel
grip of this sunny and smiling sea; others got discouraged; and for many
years the green and peaceful-looking islands guarding the entrances to the
promised land kept their secret with all the merciless serenity of
tropical nature. And so Lingard came and went on his secret or open
expeditions, becoming a hero in Almayer's eyes by the boldness and
enormous profits of his ventures, seeming to Almayer a very great man
indeed as he saw him marching up the warehouse, grunting a "how are you?"
to Vinck, or greeting Hudig, the Master, with a boisterous "Hallo, old
pirate! Alive yet?" as a preliminary to transacting business behind the
little green door. Often of an evening, in the silence of the then
deserted warehouse, Almayer putting away his papers before driving home
with Mr. Vinck, in whose household he lived, would pause listening to the
noise of a hot discussion in the private office, would hear the deep and
monotonous growl of the Master, and the roared-out interruptions of
Lingard—two mastiffs fighting over a marrowy bone. But to Almayer's ears
it sounded like a quarrel of Titans—a battle of the gods.
After a year or so Lingard, having been brought often in contact with
Almayer in the course of business, took a sudden and, to the onlookers, a
rather inexplicable fancy to the young man. He sang his praises, late at
night, over a convivial glass to his cronies in the Sunda Hotel, and one
fine morning electrified Vinck by declaring that he must have "that young
fellow for a supercargo. Kind of captain's clerk. Do all my quill-driving
for me." Hudig consented. Almayer, with youth's natural craving for
change, was nothing loth, and packing his few belongings, started in the
Flash on one of those long cruises when the old seaman was wont to visit
almost every island in the archipelago. Months slipped by, and Lingard's
friendship seemed to increase. Often pacing the deck with Almayer, when
the faint night breeze, heavy with aromatic exhalations of the islands,
shoved the brig gently along under the peaceful and sparkling sky, did the
old seaman open his heart to his entranced listener. He spoke of his past
life, of escaped dangers, of big profits in his trade, of new combinations
that were in the future to bring profits bigger still. Often he had
mentioned his daughter, the girl found in the pirate prau, speaking of her
with a strange assumption of fatherly tenderness. "She must be a big girl
now," he used to say. "It's nigh unto four years since I have seen her!
Damme, Almayer, if I don't think we will run into Sourabaya this trip."
And after such a declaration he always dived into his cabin muttering to
himself, "Something must be done—must be done." More than once he would
astonish Almayer by walking up to him rapidly, clearing his throat with a
powerful "Hem!" as if he was going to say something, and then turning
abruptly away to lean over the bulwarks in silence, and watch, motionless,
for hours, the gleam and sparkle of the phosphorescent sea along the
ship's side. It was the night before arriving in Sourabaya when one of
those attempts at confidential communication succeeded. After clearing his
throat he spoke. He spoke to some purpose. He wanted Almayer to marry his
adopted daughter. "And don't you kick because you're white!" he shouted,
suddenly, not giving the surprised young man the time to say a word. "None
of that with me! Nobody will see the colour of your wife's skin. The
dollars are too thick for that, I tell you! And mind you, they will be
thicker yet before I die. There will be millions, Kaspar! Millions I say!
And all for her—and for you, if you do what you are told."
Startled by the unexpected proposal, Almayer hesitated, and remained
silent for a minute. He was gifted with a strong and active imagination,
and in that short space of time he saw, as in a flash of dazzling light,
great piles of shining guilders, and realised all the possibilities of an
opulent existence. The consideration, the indolent ease of life—for which
he felt himself so well fitted—his ships, his warehouses, his merchandise
(old Lingard would not live for ever), and, crowning all, in the far
future gleamed like a fairy palace the big mansion in Amsterdam, that
earthly paradise of his dreams, where, made king amongst men by old
Lingard's money, he would pass the evening of his days in inexpressible
splendour. As to the other side of the picture—the companionship for life
of a Malay girl, that legacy of a boatful of pirates—there was only
within him a confused consciousness of shame that he a white man— Still,
a convent education of four years!—and then she may mercifully die. He
was always lucky, and money is powerful! Go through it. Why not? He had a
vague idea of shutting her up somewhere, anywhere, out of his gorgeous
future. Easy enough to dispose of a Malay woman, a slave, after all, to
his Eastern mind, convent or no convent, ceremony or no ceremony.
He lifted his head and confronted the anxious yet irate seaman.
"I—of course—anything you wish, Captain Lingard."
"Call me father, my boy. She does," said the mollified old adventurer.
"Damme, though, if I didn't think you were going to refuse. Mind you,
Kaspar, I always get my way, so it would have been no use. But you are no
fool."
He remembered well that time—the look, the accent, the words, the effect
they produced on him, his very surroundings. He remembered the narrow
slanting deck of the brig, the silent sleeping coast, the smooth black
surface of the sea with a great bar of gold laid on it by the rising moon.
He remembered it all, and he remembered his feelings of mad exultation at
the thought of that fortune thrown into his hands. He was no fool then,
and he was no fool now. Circumstances had been against him; the fortune
was gone, but hope remained.
He shivered in the night air, and suddenly became aware of the intense
darkness which, on the sun's departure, had closed in upon the river,
blotting out the outlines of the opposite shore. Only the fire of dry
branches lit outside the stockade of the Rajah's compound called fitfully
into view the ragged trunks of the surrounding trees, putting a stain of
glowing red half-way across the river where the drifting logs were
hurrying towards the sea through the impenetrable gloom. He had a hazy
recollection of having been called some time during the evening by his
wife. To his dinner probably. But a man busy contemplating the wreckage of
his past in the dawn of new hopes cannot be hungry whenever his rice is
ready. Time he went home, though; it was getting late.
He stepped cautiously on the loose planks towards the ladder. A lizard,
disturbed by the noise, emitted a plaintive note and scurried through the
long grass growing on the bank. Almayer descended the ladder carefully,
now thoroughly recalled to the realities of life by the care necessary to
prevent a fall on the uneven ground where the stones, decaying planks, and
half-sawn beams were piled up in inextricable confusion. As he turned
towards the house where he lived—"my old house" he called it— his ear
detected the splash of paddles away in the darkness of the river. He stood
still in the path, attentive and surprised at anybody being on the river
at this late hour during such a heavy freshet. Now he could hear the
paddles distinctly, and even a rapidly exchanged word in low tones, the
heavy breathing of men fighting with the current, and hugging the bank on
which he stood. Quite close, too, but it was too dark to distinguish
anything under the overhanging bushes.
"Arabs, no doubt," muttered Almayer to himself, peering into the solid
blackness. "What are they up to now? Some of Abdulla's business; curse
him!"
The boat was very close now.
"Oh, ya! Man!" hailed Almayer.
The sound of voices ceased, but the paddles worked as furiously as before.
Then the bush in front of Almayer shook, and the sharp sound of the
paddles falling into the canoe rang in the quiet night. They were holding
on to the bush now; but Almayer could hardly make out an indistinct dark
shape of a man's head and shoulders above the bank.
"You Abdulla?" said Almayer, doubtfully.
A grave voice answered—
"Tuan Almayer is speaking to a friend. There is no Arab here."
Almayer's heart gave a great leap.
"Dain!" he exclaimed. "At last! at last! I have been waiting for you every
day and every night. I had nearly given you up."
"Nothing could have stopped me from coming back here," said the other,
almost violently. "Not even death," he whispered to himself.
"This is a friend's talk, and is very good," said Almayer, heartily. "But
you are too far here. Drop down to the jetty and let your men cook their
rice in my campong while we talk in the house."
There was no answer to that invitation.
"What is it?" asked Almayer, uneasily. "There is nothing wrong with the
brig, I hope?"
"The brig is where no Orang Blanda can lay his hands on her," said Dain,
with a gloomy tone in his voice, which Almayer, in his elation, failed to
notice.
"Right," he said. "But where are all your men? There are only two with
you."
"Listen, Tuan Almayer," said Dain. "To-morrow's sun shall see me in your
house, and then we will talk. Now I must go to the Rajah."
"To the Rajah! Why? What do you want with Lakamba?"
"Tuan, to-morrow we talk like friends. I must see Lakamba to-night."
"Dain, you are not going to abandon me now, when all is ready?" asked
Almayer, in a pleading voice.
"Have I not returned? But I must see Lakamba first for your good and
mine."
The shadowy head disappeared abruptly. The bush, released from the grasp
of the bowman, sprung back with a swish, scattering a shower of muddy
water over Almayer, as he bent forward, trying to see.
In a little while the canoe shot into the streak of light that streamed on
the river from the big fire on the opposite shore, disclosing the outline
of two men bending to their work, and a third figure in the stern
flourishing the steering paddle, his head covered with an enormous round
hat, like a fantastically exaggerated mushroom.
Almayer watched the canoe till it passed out of the line of light. Shortly
after the murmur of many voices reached him across the water. He could see
the torches being snatched out of the burning pile, and rendering visible
for a moment the gate in the stockade round which they crowded. Then they
went in apparently. The torches disappeared, and the scattered fire sent
out only a dim and fitful glare.
Almayer stepped homewards with long strides and mind uneasy. Surely Dain
was not thinking of playing him false. It was absurd. Dain and Lakamba
were both too much interested in the success of his scheme. Trusting to
Malays was poor work; but then even Malays have some sense and understand
their own interest. All would be well—must be well. At this point in his
meditation he found himself at the foot of the steps leading to the
verandah of his home. From the low point of land where he stood he could
see both branches of the river. The main branch of the Pantai was lost in
complete darkness, for the fire at the Rajah's had gone out altogether;
but up the Sambir reach his eye could follow the long line of Malay houses
crowding the bank, with here and there a dim light twinkling through
bamboo walls, or a smoky torch burning on the platforms built out over the
river. Further away, where the island ended in a low cliff, rose a dark
mass of buildings towering above the Malay structures. Founded solidly on
a firm ground with plenty of space, starred by many lights burning strong
and white, with a suggestion of paraffin and lamp-glasses, stood the house
and the godowns of Abdulla bin Selim, the great trader of Sambir. To
Almayer the sight was very distasteful, and he shook his fist towards the
buildings that in their evident prosperity looked to him cold and
insolent, and contemptuous of his own fallen fortunes.
He mounted the steps of his house slowly.
In the middle of the verandah there was a round table. On it a paraffin
lamp without a globe shed a hard glare on the three inner sides. The
fourth side was open, and faced the river. Between the rough supports of
the high-pitched roof hung torn rattan screens. There was no ceiling, and
the harsh brilliance of the lamp was toned above into a soft half-light
that lost itself in the obscurity amongst the rafters. The front wall was
cut in two by the doorway of a central passage closed by a red curtain.
The women's room opened into that passage, which led to the back courtyard
and to the cooking shed. In one of the side walls there was a doorway.
Half obliterated words—"Office: Lingard and Co."—were still legible on
the dusty door, which looked as if it had not been opened for a very long
time. Close to the other side wall stood a bent-wood rocking-chair, and by
the table and about the verandah four wooden armchairs straggled
forlornly, as if ashamed of their shabby surroundings. A heap of common
mats lay in one corner, with an old hammock slung diagonally above. In the
other corner, his head wrapped in a piece of red calico, huddled into a
shapeless heap, slept a Malay, one of Almayer's domestic slaves—"my own
people," he used to call them. A numerous and representative assembly of
moths were holding high revels round the lamp to the spirited music of
swarming mosquitoes. Under the palm-leaf thatch lizards raced on the beams
calling softly. A monkey, chained to one of the verandah supports—retired
for the night under the eaves— peered and grinned at Almayer, as it swung
to one of the bamboo roof sticks and caused a shower of dust and bits of
dried leaves to settle on the shabby table. The floor was uneven, with
many withered plants and dried earth scattered about. A general air of
squalid neglect pervaded the place. Great red stains on the floor and
walls testified to frequent and indiscriminate betel-nut chewing. The
light breeze from the river swayed gently the tattered blinds, sending
from the woods opposite a faint and sickly perfume as of decaying flowers.
Under Almayer's heavy tread the boards of the verandah creaked loudly. The
sleeper in the corner moved uneasily, muttering indistinct words. There
was a slight rustle behind the curtained doorway, and a soft voice asked
in Malay, "Is it you, father?"
"Yes, Nina. I am hungry. Is everybody asleep in this house?"
Almayer spoke jovially and dropped with a contented sigh into the armchair
nearest to the table. Nina Almayer came through the curtained doorway
followed by an old Malay woman, who busied herself in setting upon the
table a plateful of rice and fish, a jar of water, and a bottle half full
of genever. After carefully placing before her master a cracked glass
tumbler and a tin spoon she went away noiselessly. Nina stood by the
table, one hand lightly resting on its edge, the other hanging listlessly
by her side. Her face turned towards the outer darkness, through which her
dreamy eyes seemed to see some entrancing picture, wore a look of
impatient expectancy. She was tall for a half-caste, with the correct
profile of the father, modified and strengthened by the squareness of the
lower part of the face inherited from her maternal ancestors—the Sulu
pirates. Her firm mouth, with the lips slightly parted and disclosing a
gleam of white teeth, put a vague suggestion of ferocity into the
impatient expression of her features. And yet her dark and perfect eyes
had all the tender softness of expression common to Malay women, but with
a gleam of superior intelligence; they looked gravely, wide open and
steady, as if facing something invisible to all other eyes, while she
stood there all in white, straight, flexible, graceful, unconscious of
herself, her low but broad forehead crowned with a shining mass of long
black hair that fell in heavy tresses over her shoulders, and made her
pale olive complexion look paler still by the contrast of its coal-black
hue.
Almayer attacked his rice greedily, but after a few mouthfuls he paused,
spoon in hand, and looked at his daughter curiously.
"Did you hear a boat pass about half an hour ago Nina?" he asked.
The girl gave him a quick glance, and moving away from the light stood
with her back to the table.
"No," she said, slowly.
"There was a boat. At last! Dain himself; and he went on to Lakamba. I
know it, for he told me so. I spoke to him, but he would not come here
to-night. Will come to-morrow, he said."
He swallowed another spoonful, then said—
"I am almost happy to-night, Nina. I can see the end of a long road, and
it leads us away from this miserable swamp. We shall soon get away from
here, I and you, my dear little girl, and then —"
He rose from the table and stood looking fixedly before him as if
contemplating some enchanting vision.
"And then," he went on, "we shall be happy, you and I. Live rich and
respected far from here, and forget this life, and all this struggle, and
all this misery!"
He approached his daughter and passed his hand caressingly over her hair.
"It is bad to have to trust a Malay," he said, "but I must own that this
Dain is a perfect gentleman—a perfect gentleman," he repeated.
"Did you ask him to come here, father?" inquired Nina, not looking at him.
"Well, of course. We shall start on the day after to-morrow," said
Almayer, joyously. "We must not lose any time. Are you glad, little girl?"
She was nearly as tall as himself, but he liked to recall the time when
she was little and they were all in all to each other.
"I am glad," she said, very low.
"Of course," said Almayer, vivaciously, "you cannot imagine what is before
you. I myself have not been to Europe, but I have heard my mother talk so
often that I seem to know all about it. We shall live a—a glorious life.
You shall see."
Again he stood silent by his daughter's side looking at that enchanting
vision. After a while he shook his clenched hand towards the sleeping
settlement.
"Ah! my friend Abdulla," he cried, "we shall see who will have the best of
it after all these years!"
He looked up the river and remarked calmly:
"Another thunderstorm. Well! No thunder will keep me awake to-night, I
know! Good-night, little girl," he whispered, tenderly kissing her cheek.
"You do not seem to be very happy to-night, but to-morrow you will show a
brighter face. Eh?"
Nina had listened to her father with her face unmoved, with her
half-closed eyes still gazing into the night now made more intense by a
heavy thunder-cloud that had crept down from the hills blotting out the
stars, merging sky, forest, and river into one mass of almost palpable
blackness. The faint breeze had died out, but the distant rumble of
thunder and pale flashes of lightning gave warning of the approaching
storm. With a sigh the girl turned towards the table.
Almayer was in his hammock now, already half asleep.
"Take the lamp, Nina," he muttered, drowsily. "This place is full of
mosquitoes. Go to sleep, daughter."
But Nina put the lamp out and turned back again towards the balustrade of
the verandah, standing with her arm round the wooden support and looking
eagerly towards the Pantai reach. And motionless there in the oppressive
calm of the tropical night she could see at each flash of lightning the
forest lining both banks up the river, bending before the furious blast of
the coming tempest, the upper reach of the river whipped into white foam
by the wind, and the black clouds torn into fantastic shapes trailing low
over the swaying trees. Round her all was as yet stillness and peace, but
she could hear afar off the roar of the wind, the hiss of heavy rain, the
wash of the waves on the tormented river. It came nearer and nearer, with
loud thunder-claps and long flashes of vivid lightning, followed by short
periods of appalling blackness. When the storm reached the low point
dividing the river, the house shook in the wind, and the rain pattered
loudly on the palm-leaf roof, the thunder spoke in one prolonged roll, and
the incessant lightning disclosed a turmoil of leaping waters, driving
logs, and the big trees bending before a brutal and merciless force.
Undisturbed by the nightly event of the rainy monsoon, the father slept
quietly, oblivious alike of his hopes, his misfortunes, his friends, and
his enemies; and the daughter stood motionless, at each flash of lightning
eagerly scanning the broad river with a steady and anxious gaze.
When, in compliance with Lingard's abrupt demand, Almayer consented to wed
the Malay girl, no one knew that on the day when the interesting young
convert had lost all her natural relations and found a white father, she
had been fighting desperately like the rest of them on board the prau, and
was only prevented from leaping overboard, like the few other survivors,
by a severe wound in the leg. There, on the fore-deck of the prau, old
Lingard found her under a heap of dead and dying pirates, and had her
carried on the poop of the Flash before the Malay craft was set on fire
and sent adrift. She was conscious, and in the great peace and stillness
of the tropical evening succeeding the turmoil of the battle, she watched
all she held dear on earth after her own savage manner, drift away into
the gloom in a great roar of flame and smoke. She lay there unheeding the
careful hands attending to her wound, silent and absorbed in gazing at the
funeral pile of those brave men she had so much admired and so well helped
in their contest with the redoubtable "Rajah-Laut."
The light night breeze fanned the brig gently to the southward, and the
great blaze of light got smaller and smaller till it twinkled only on the
horizon like a setting star. It set: the heavy canopy of smoke reflected
the glare of hidden flames for a short time and then disappeared also.
She realised that with this vanishing gleam her old life departed too.
Thenceforth there was slavery in the far countries, amongst strangers, in
unknown and perhaps terrible surroundings. Being fourteen years old, she
realised her position and came to that conclusion, the only one possible
to a Malay girl, soon ripened under a tropical sun, and not unaware of her
personal charms, of which she heard many a young brave warrior of her
father's crew express an appreciative admiration. There was in her the
dread of the unknown; otherwise she accepted her position calmly, after
the manner of her people, and even considered it quite natural; for was
she not a daughter of warriors, conquered in battle, and did she not
belong rightfully to the victorious Rajah? Even the evident kindness of
the terrible old man must spring, she thought, from admiration for his
captive, and the flattered vanity eased for her the pangs of sorrow after
such an awful calamity. Perhaps had she known of the high walls, the quiet
gardens, and the silent nuns of the Samarang convent, where her destiny
was leading her, she would have sought death in her dread and hate of such
a restraint. But in imagination she pictured to herself the usual life of
a Malay girl—the usual succession of heavy work and fierce love, of
intrigues, gold ornaments, of domestic drudgery, and of that great but
occult influence which is one of the few rights of half-savage womankind.
But her destiny in the rough hands of the old sea-dog, acting under
unreasoning impulses of the heart, took a strange and to her a terrible
shape. She bore it all—the restraint and the teaching and the new
faith—with calm submission, concealing her hate and contempt for all that
new life. She learned the language very easily, yet understood but little
of the new faith the good sisters taught her, assimilating quickly only
the superstitious elements of the religion. She called Lingard father,
gently and caressingly, at each of his short and noisy visits, under the
clear impression that he was a great and dangerous power it was good to
propitiate. Was he not now her master? And during those long four years
she nourished a hope of finding favour in his eyes and ultimately becoming
his wife, counsellor, and guide.
Those dreams of the future were dispelled by the Rajah Laut's "fiat,"
which made Almayer's fortune, as that young man fondly hoped. And dressed
in the hateful finery of Europe, the centre of an interested circle of
Batavian society, the young convert stood before the altar with an unknown
and sulky-looking white man. For Almayer was uneasy, a little disgusted,
and greatly inclined to run away. A judicious fear of the adopted
father-in-law and a just regard for his own material welfare prevented him
from making a scandal; yet, while swearing fidelity, he was concocting
plans for getting rid of the pretty Malay girl in a more or less distant
future. She, however, had retained enough of conventual teaching to
understand well that according to white men's laws she was going to be
Almayer's companion and not his slave, and promised to herself to act
accordingly.
So when the Flash freighted with materials for building a new house left
the harbour of Batavia, taking away the young couple into the unknown
Borneo, she did not carry on her deck so much love and happiness as old
Lingard was wont to boast of before his casual friends in the verandahs of
various hotels. The old seaman himself was perfectly happy. Now he had
done his duty by the girl. "You know I made her an orphan," he often
concluded solemnly, when talking about his own affairs to a scratch
audience of shore loafers—as it was his habit to do. And the approbative
shouts of his half-intoxicated auditors filled his simple soul with
delight and pride. "I carry everything right through," was another of his
sayings, and in pursuance of that principle he pushed the building of
house and godowns on the Pantai River with feverish haste. The house for
the young couple; the godowns for the big trade Almayer was going to
develop while he (Lingard) would be able to give himself up to some
mysterious work which was only spoken of in hints, but was understood to
relate to gold and diamonds in the interior of the island. Almayer was
impatient too. Had he known what was before him he might not have been so
eager and full of hope as he stood watching the last canoe of the Lingard
expedition disappear in the bend up the river. When, turning round, he
beheld the pretty little house, the big godowns built neatly by an army of
Chinese carpenters, the new jetty round which were clustered the trading
canoes, he felt a sudden elation in the thought that the world was his.
But the world had to be conquered first, and its conquest was not so easy
as he thought. He was very soon made to understand that he was not wanted
in that corner of it where old Lingard and his own weak will placed him,
in the midst of unscrupulous intrigues and of a fierce trade competition.
The Arabs had found out the river, had established a trading post in
Sambir, and where they traded they would be masters and suffer no rival.
Lingard returned unsuccessful from his first expedition, and departed
again spending all the profits of the legitimate trade on his mysterious
journeys. Almayer struggled with the difficulties of his position,
friendless and unaided, save for the protection given to him for Lingard's
sake by the old Rajah, the predecessor of Lakamba. Lakamba himself, then
living as a private individual on a rice clearing, seven miles down the
river, exercised all his influence towards the help of the white man's
enemies, plotting against the old Rajah and Almayer with a certainty of
combination, pointing clearly to a profound knowledge of their most secret
affairs. Outwardly friendly, his portly form was often to be seen on
Almayer's verandah; his green turban and gold-embroidered jacket shone in
the front rank of the decorous throng of Malays coming to greet Lingard on
his returns from the interior; his salaams were of the lowest, and his
hand-shakings of the heartiest, when welcoming the old trader. But his
small eyes took in the signs of the times, and he departed from those
interviews with a satisfied and furtive smile to hold long consultations
with his friend and ally, Syed Abdulla, the chief of the Arab trading
post, a man of great wealth and of great influence in the islands.
It was currently believed at that time in the settlement that Lakamba's
visits to Almayer's house were not limited to those official interviews.
Often on moonlight nights the belated fishermen of Sambira saw a small
canoe shooting out from the narrow creek at the back of the white man's
house, and the solitary occupant paddle cautiously down the river in the
deep shadows of the bank; and those events, duly reported, were discussed
round the evening fires far into the night with the cynicism of expression
common to aristocratic Malays, and with a malicious pleasure in the
domestic misfortunes of the Orang Blando—the hated Dutchman. Almayer went
on struggling desperately, but with a feebleness of purpose depriving him
of all chance of success against men so unscrupulous and resolute as his
rivals the Arabs. The trade fell away from the large godowns, and the
godowns themselves rotted piecemeal. The old man's banker, Hudig of
Macassar, failed, and with this went the whole available capital. The
profits of past years had been swallowed up in Lingard's exploring craze.
Lingard was in the interior—perhaps dead—at all events giving no sign of
life. Almayer stood alone in the midst of those adverse circumstances,
deriving only a little comfort from the companionship of his little
daughter, born two years after the marriage, and at the time some six
years old. His wife had soon commenced to treat him with a savage contempt
expressed by sulky silence, only occasionally varied by a flood of savage
invective. He felt she hated him, and saw her jealous eyes watching
himself and the child with almost an expression of hate. She was jealous
of the little girl's evident preference for the father, and Almayer felt
he was not safe with that woman in the house. While she was burning the
furniture, and tearing down the pretty curtains in her unreasoning hate of
those signs of civilisation, Almayer, cowed by these outbursts of savage
nature, meditated in silence on the best way of getting rid of her. He
thought of everything; even planned murder in an undecided and feeble sort
of way, but dared do nothing—expecting every day the return of Lingard
with news of some immense good fortune. He returned indeed, but aged, ill,
a ghost of his former self, with the fire of fever burning in his sunken
eyes, almost the only survivor of the numerous expedition. But he was
successful at last! Untold riches were in his grasp; he wanted more
money—only a little more torealise a dream of fabulous fortune. And Hudig
had failed! Almayer scraped all he could together, but the old man wanted
more. If Almayer could not get it he would go to Singapore—to Europe
even, but before all to Singapore; and he would take the little Nina with
him. The child must be brought up decently. He had good friends in
Singapore who would take care of her and have her taught properly. All
would be well, and that girl, upon whom the old seaman seemed to have
transferred all his former affection for the mother, would be the richest
woman in the East—in the world even. So old Lingard shouted, pacing the
verandah with his heavy quarter-deck step, gesticulating with a
smouldering cheroot; ragged, dishevelled, enthusiastic; and Almayer,
sitting huddled up on a pile of mats, thought with dread of the separation
with the only human being he loved—with greater dread still, perhaps, of
the scene with his wife, the savage tigress deprived of her young. She
will poison me, thought the poor wretch, well aware of that easy and final
manner of solving the social, political, or family problems in Malay life.
To his great surprise she took the news very quietly, giving only him and
Lingard a furtive glance, and saying not a word. This, however, did not
prevent her the next day from jumping into the river and swimming after
the boat in which Lingard was carrying away the nurse with the screaming
child. Almayer had to give chase with his whale-boat and drag her in by
the hair in the midst of cries and curses enough to make heaven fall. Yet
after two days spent in wailing, she returned to her former mode of life,
chewing betel-nut, and sitting all day amongst her women in stupefied
idleness. She aged very rapidly after that, and only roused herself from
her apathy to acknowledge by a scathing remark or an insulting exclamation
the accidental presence of her husband. He had built for her a riverside
hut in the compound where she dwelt in perfect seclusion. Lakamba's visits
had ceased when, by a convenient decree of Providence and the help of a
little scientific manipulation, the old ruler of Sambir departed this
life. Lakamba reigned in his stead now, having been well served by his
Arab friends with the Dutch authorities. Syed Abdulla was the great man
and trader of the Pantai. Almayer lay ruined and helpless under the
close-meshed net of their intrigues, owing his life only to his supposed
knowledge of Lingard's valuable secret. Lingard had disappeared. He wrote
once from Singapore saying the child was well, and under the care of a
Mrs. Vinck, and that he himself was going to Europe to raise money for the
great enterprise. "He was coming back soon. There would be no
difficulties," he wrote; "people would rush in with their money."
Evidently they did not, for there was only one letter more from him saying
he was ill, had found no relation living, but little else besides. Then
came a complete silence. Europe had swallowed up the Rajah Laut
apparently, and Almayer looked vainly westward for a ray of light out of
the gloom of his shattered hopes. Years passed, and the rare letters from
Mrs. Vinck, later on from the girl herself, were the only thing to be
looked to to make life bearable amongst the triumphant savagery of the
river. Almayer lived now alone, having even ceased to visit his debtors
who would not pay, sure of Lakamba's protection. The faithful Sumatrese
Ali cooked his rice and made his coffee, for he dared not trust any one
else, and least of all his wife. He killed time wandering sadly in the
overgrown paths round the house, visiting the ruined godowns where a few
brass guns covered with verdigris and only a few broken cases of
mouldering Manchester goods reminded him of the good early times when all
this was full of life and merchandise, and he overlooked a busy scene on
the river bank, his little daughter by his side. Now the up-country canoes
glided past the little rotten wharf of Lingard and Co., to paddle up the
Pantai branch, and cluster round the new jetty belonging to Abdulla. Not
that they loved Abdulla, but they dared not trade with the man whose star
had set. Had they done so they knew there was no mercy to be expected from
Arab or Rajah; no rice to be got on credit in the times of scarcity from
either; and Almayer could not help them, having at times hardly enough for
himself. Almayer, in his isolation and despair, often envied his near
neighbour the Chinaman, Jim-Eng, whom he could see stretched on a pile of
cool mats, a wooden pillow under his head, an opium pipe in his nerveless
fingers. He did not seek, however, consolation in opium—perhaps it was
too expensive—perhaps his white man's pride saved him from that
degradation; but most likely it was the thought of his little daughter in
the far-off Straits Settlements. He heard from her oftener since Abdulla
bought a steamer, which ran now between Singapore and the Pantai
settlement every three months or so. Almayer felt himself nearer his
daughter. He longed to see her, and planned a voyage to Singapore, but put
off his departure from year to year, always expecting some favourable turn
of fortune. He did not want to meet her with empty hands and with no words
of hope on his lips. He could not take her back into that savage life to
which he was condemned himself. He was also a little afraid of her. What
would she think of him? He reckoned the years. A grown woman. A civilised
woman, young and hopeful; while he felt old and hopeless, and very much
like those savages round him. He asked himself what was going to be her
future. He could not answer that question yet, and he dared not face her.
And yet he longed after her. He hesitated for years.
His hesitation was put an end to by Nina's unexpected appearance in
Sambir. She arrived in the steamer under the captain's care. Almayer
beheld her with surprise not unmixed with wonder. During those ten years
the child had changed into a woman, black-haired, olive-skinned, tall, and
beautiful, with great sad eyes, where the startled expression common to
Malay womankind was modified by a thoughtful tinge inherited from her
European ancestry. Almayer thought with dismay of the meeting of his wife
and daughter, of what this grave girl in European clothes would think of
her betel-nut chewing mother, squatting in a dark hut, disorderly, half
naked, and sulky. He also feared an outbreak of temper on the part of that
pest of a woman he had hitherto managed to keep tolerably quiet, thereby
saving the remnants of his dilapidated furniture. And he stood there
before the closed door of the hut in the blazing sunshine listening to the
murmur of voices, wondering what went on inside, wherefrom all the
servant-maids had been expelled at the beginning of the interview, and now
stood clustered by the palings with half-covered faces in a chatter of
curious speculation. He forgot himself there trying to catch a stray word
through the bamboo walls, till the captain of the steamer, who had walked
up with the girl, fearing a sunstroke, took him under the arm and led him
into the shade of his own verandah: where Nina's trunk stood already,
having been landed by the steamer's men. As soon as Captain Ford had his
glass before him and his cheroot lighted, Almayer asked for the
explanation of his daughter's unexpected arrival. Ford said little beyond
generalising in vague but violent terms upon the foolishness of women in
general, and of Mrs. Vinck in particular.
"You know, Kaspar," said he, in conclusion, to the excited Almayer, "it is
deucedly awkward to have a half-caste girl in the house. There's such a
lot of fools about. There was that young fellow from the bank who used to
ride to the Vinck bungalow early and late. That old woman thought it was
for that Emma of hers. When she found out what he wanted exactly, there
was a row, I can tell you. She would not have Nina—not an hour longer—in
the house. Fact is, I heard of this affair and took the girl to my wife.
My wife is a pretty good woman—as women go—and upon my word we would
have kept the girl for you, only she would not stay. Now, then! Don't
flare up, Kaspar. Sit still. What can you do? It is better so. Let her
stay with you. She was never happy over there. Those two Vinck girls are
no better than dressed-up monkeys. They slighted her. You can't make her
white. It's no use you swearing at me. You can't. She is a good girl for
all that, but she would not tell my wife anything. If you want to know,
ask her yourself; but if I was you I would leave her alone. You are
welcome to her passage money, old fellow, if you are short now." And the
skipper, throwing away his cigar, walked off to "wake them up on board,"
as he expressed it.
Almayer vainly expected to hear of the cause of his daughter's return from
his daughter's lips. Not that day, not on any other day did she ever
allude to her Singapore life. He did not care to ask, awed by the calm
impassiveness of her face, by those solemn eyes looking past him on the
great, still forests sleeping in majestic repose to the murmur of the
broad river. He accepted the situation, happy in the gentle and protecting
affection the girl showed him, fitfully enough, for she had, as she called
it, her bad days when she used to visit her mother and remain long hours
in the riverside hut, coming out as inscrutable as ever, but with a
contemptuous look and a short word ready to answer any of his speeches. He
got used even to that, and on those days kept quiet, although greatly
alarmed by his wife's influence upon the girl. Otherwise Nina adapted
herself wonderfully to the circumstances of a half-savage and miserable
life. She accepted without question or apparent disgust the neglect, the
decay, the poverty of the household, the absence of furniture, and the
preponderance of rice diet on the family table. She lived with Almayer in
the little house (now sadly decaying) built originally by Lingard for the
young couple. The Malays eagerly discussed her arrival. There were at the
beginning crowded levees of Malay women with their children, seeking
eagerly after "Ubat" for all the ills of the flesh from the young Mem
Putih. In the cool of the evening grave Arabs in long white shirts and
yellow sleeveless jackets walked slowly on the dusty path by the riverside
towards Almayer's gate, and made solemn calls upon that Unbeliever under
shallow pretences of business, only to get a glimpse of the young girl in
a highly decorous manner. Even Lakamba came out of his stockade in a great
pomp of war canoes and red umbrellas, and landed on the rotten little
jetty of Lingard and Co. He came, he said, to buy a couple of brass guns
as a present to his friend the chief of Sambir Dyaks; and while Almayer,
suspicious but polite, busied himself in unearthing the old popguns in the
godowns, the Rajah sat on an armchair in the verandah, surrounded by his
respectful retinue waiting in vain for Nina's appearance. She was in one
of her bad days, and remained in her mother's hut watching with her the
ceremonious proceedings on the verandah. The Rajah departed, baffled but
courteous, and soon Almayer began to reap the benefit of improved
relations with the ruler in the shape of the recovery of some debts, paid
to him with many apologies and many a low salaam by debtors till then
considered hopelessly insolvent. Under these improving circumstances
Almayer brightened up a little. All was not lost perhaps. Those Arabs and
Malays saw at last that he was a man of some ability, he thought. And he
began, after his manner, to plan great things, to dream of great fortunes
for himself and Nina. Especially for Nina! Under these vivifying impulses
he asked Captain Ford to write to his friends in England making inquiries
after Lingard. Was he alive or dead? If dead, had he left any papers,
documents; any indications or hints as to his great enterprise? Meantime
he had found amongst the rubbish in one of the empty rooms a note-book
belonging to the old adventurer. He studied the crabbed handwriting of its
pages and often grew meditative over it. Other things also woke him up
from his apathy. The stir made in the whole of the island by the
establishment of the British Borneo Company affected even the sluggish
flow of the Pantai life. Great changes were expected; annexation was
talked of; the Arabs grew civil. Almayer began building his new house for
the use of the future engineers, agents, or settlers of the new Company.
He spent every available guilder on it with a confiding heart. One thing
only disturbed his happiness: his wife came out of her seclusion,
importing her green jacket, scant sarongs, shrill voice, and witch-like
appearance, into his quiet life in the small bungalow. And his daughter
seemed to accept that savage intrusion into their daily existence with
wonderful equanimity. He did not like it, but dared say nothing.
The deliberations conducted in London have a far-reaching importance, and
so the decision issued from the fog-veiled offices of the Borneo Company
darkened for Almayer the brilliant sunshine of the Tropics, and added
another drop of bitterness to the cup of his disenchantments. The claim to
that part of the East Coast was abandoned, leaving the Pantai river under
the nominal power of Holland. In Sambir there was joy and excitement. The
slaves were hurried out of sight into the forest and jungle, and the flags
were run up to tall poles in the Rajah's compound in expectation of a
visit from Dutch man-of-war boats.
The frigate remained anchored outside the mouth of the river, and the
boats came up in tow of the steam launch, threading their way cautiously
amongst a crowd of canoes filled with gaily dressed Malays. The officer in
command listened gravely to the loyal speeches of Lakamba, returned the
salaams of Abdulla, and assured those gentlemen in choice Malay of the
great Rajah's—down in Batavia—friendship and goodwill towards the ruler
and inhabitants of this model state of Sambir.
Almayer from his verandah watched across the river the festive
proceedings, heard the report of brass guns saluting the new flag
presented to Lakamba, and the deep murmur of the crowd of spectators
surging round the stockade. The smoke of the firing rose in white clouds
on the green background of the forests, and he could not help comparing
his own fleeting hopes to the rapidly disappearing vapour. He was by no
means patriotically elated by the event, yet he had to force himself into
a gracious behaviour when, the official reception being over, the naval
officers of the Commission crossed the river to pay a visit to the
solitary white man of whom they had heard, no doubt wishing also to catch
a glimpse of his daughter. In that they were disappointed, Nina refusing
to show herself; but they seemed easily consoled by the gin and cheroots
set before them by the hospitable Almayer; and sprawling comfortably on
the lame armchairs under the shade of the verandah, while the blazing
sunshine outside seemed to set the great river simmering in the heat, they
filled the little bungalow with the unusual sounds of European languages,
with noise and laughter produced by naval witticisms at the expense of the
fat Lakamba whom they had been complimenting so much that very morning.
The younger men in an access of good fellowship made their host talk, and
Almayer, excited by the sight of European faces, by the sound of European
voices, opened his heart before the sympathising strangers, unaware of the
amusement the recital of his many misfortunes caused to those future
admirals. They drank his health, wished him many big diamonds and a
mountain of gold, expressed even an envy of the high destinies awaiting
him yet. Encouraged by so much friendliness, the grey-headed and foolish
dreamer invited his guests to visit his new house. They went there through
the long grass in a straggling procession while their boats were got ready
for the return down the river in the cool of the evening. And in the great
empty rooms where the tepid wind entering through the sashless windows
whirled gently the dried leaves and the dust of many days of neglect,
Almayer in his white jacket and flowered sarong, surrounded by a circle of
glittering uniforms, stamped his foot to show the solidity of the
neatly-fitting floors and expatiated upon the beauties and convenience of
the building. They listened and assented, amazed by the wonderful
simplicity and the foolish hopefulness of the man, till Almayer, carried
away by his excitement, disclosed his regret at the non-arrival of the
English, "who knew how to develop a rich country," as he expressed it.
There was a general laugh amongst the Dutch officers at that
unsophisticated statement, and a move was made towards the boats; but when
Almayer, stepping cautiously on the rotten boards of the Lingard jetty,
tried to approach the chief of the Commission with some timid hints anent
the protection required by the Dutch subject against the wily Arabs, that
salt water diplomat told him significantly that the Arabs were better
subjects than Hollanders who dealt illegally in gunpowder with the Malays.
The innocent Almayer recognised there at once the oily tongue of Abdulla
and the solemn persuasiveness of Lakamba, but ere he had time to frame an
indignant protest the steam launch and the string of boats moved rapidly
down the river leaving him on the jetty, standing open-mouthed in his
surprise and anger. There are thirty miles of river from Sambir to the
gem-like islands of the estuary where the frigate was awaiting the return
of the boats. The moon rose long before the boats had traversed half that
distance, and the black forest sleeping peacefully under her cold rays
woke up that night to the ringing laughter in the small flotilla provoked
by some reminiscence of Almayer's lamentable narrative. Salt-water jests
at the poor man's expense were passed from boat to boat, the
non-appearance of his daughter was commented upon with severe displeasure,
and the half-finished house built for the reception of Englishmen received
on that joyous night the name of "Almayer's Folly" by the unanimous vote
of the lighthearted seamen.
For many weeks after this visit life in Sambir resumed its even and
uneventful flow. Each day's sun shooting its morning rays above the
tree-tops lit up the usual scene of daily activity. Nina walking on the
path that formed the only street in the settlement saw the accustomed
sight of men lolling on the shady side of the houses, on the high
platforms; of women busily engaged in husking the daily rice; of naked
brown children racing along the shady and narrow paths leading to the
clearings. Jim-Eng, strolling before his house, greeted her with a
friendly nod before climbing up indoors to seek his beloved opium pipe.
The elder children clustered round her, daring from long acquaintance,
pulling the skirts of her white robe with their dark fingers, and showing
their brilliant teeth in expectation of a shower of glass beads. She
greeted them with a quiet smile, but always had a few friendly words for a
Siamese girl, a slave owned by Bulangi, whose numerous wives were said to
be of a violent temper. Well-founded rumour said also that the domestic
squabbles of that industrious cultivator ended generally in a combined
assault of all his wives upon the Siamese slave. The girl herself never
complained—perhaps from dictates of prudence, but more likely through the
strange, resigned apathy of half-savage womankind. From early morning she
was to be seen on the paths amongst the houses—by the riverside or on the
jetties, the tray of pastry, it was her mission to sell, skilfully
balanced on her head. During the great heat of the day she usually sought
refuge in Almayer's campong, often finding shelter in a shady corner of
the verandah, where she squatted with her tray before her, when invited by
Nina. For "Mem Putih" she had always a smile, but the presence of Mrs.
Almayer, the very sound of her shrill voice, was the signal for a hurried
departure.
To this girl Nina often spoke; the other inhabitants of Sambir seldom or
never heard the sound of her voice. They got used to the silent figure
moving in their midst calm and white-robed, a being from another world and
incomprehensible to them. Yet Nina's life for all her outward composure,
for all the seeming detachment from the things and people surrounding her,
was far from quiet, in consequence of Mrs. Almayer being much too active
for the happiness and even safety of the household. She had resumed some
intercourse with Lakamba, not personally, it is true (for the dignity of
that potentate kept him inside his stockade), but through the agency of
that potentate's prime minister, harbour master, financial adviser, and
general factotum. That gentleman—of Sulu origin—was certainly endowed
with statesmanlike qualities, although he was totally devoid of personal
charms. In truth he was perfectly repulsive, possessing only one eye and a
pockmarked face, with nose and lips horribly disfigured by the small-pox.
This unengaging individual often strolled into Almayer's garden in
unofficial costume, composed of a piece of pink calico round his waist.
There at the back of the house, squatting on his heels on scattered
embers, in close proximity to the great iron boiler, where the family
daily rice was being cooked by the women under Mrs. Almayer's
superintendence, did that astute negotiator carry on long conversations in
Sulu language with Almayer's wife. What the subject of their discourses
was might have been guessed from the subsequent domestic scenes by
Almayer's hearthstone.
Of late Almayer had taken to excursions up the river. In a small canoe
with two paddlers and the faithful Ali for a steersman he would disappear
for a few days at a time. All his movements were no doubt closely watched
by Lakamba and Abdulla, for the man once in the confidence of Rajah Laut
was supposed to be in possession of valuable secrets. The coast population
of Borneo believes implicitly in diamonds of fabulous value, in gold mines
of enormous richness in the interior. And all those imaginings are
heightened by the difficulty of penetrating far inland, especially on the
north-east coast, where the Malays and the river tribes of Dyaks or
Head-hunters are eternally quarrelling. It is true enough that some gold
reaches the coast in the hands of those Dyaks when, during short periods
of truce in the desultory warfare, they visit the coast settlements of
Malays. And so the wildest exaggerations are built up and added to on the
slight basis of that fact.
Almayer in his quality of white man—as Lingard before him—had somewhat
better relations with the up-river tribes. Yet even his excursions were
not without danger, and his returns were eagerly looked for by the
impatient Lakamba. But every time the Rajah was disappointed. Vain were
the conferences by the rice-pot of his factotum Babalatchi with the white
man's wife. The white man himself was impenetrable—impenetrable to
persuasion, coaxing, abuse; to soft words and shrill revilings; to
desperate beseechings or murderous threats; for Mrs. Almayer, in her
extreme desire to persuade her husband into an alliance with Lakamba,
played upon the whole gamut of passion. With her soiled robe wound tightly
under the armpits across her lean bosom, her scant grayish hair tumbled in
disorder over her projecting cheek-bones, in suppliant attitude, she
depicted with shrill volubility the advantages of close union with a man
so good and so fair dealing.
"Why don't you go to the Rajah?" she screamed. "Why do you go back to
those Dyaks in the great forest? They should be killed. You cannot kill
them, you cannot; but our Rajah's men are brave! You tell the Rajah where
the old white man's treasure is. Our Rajah is good! He is our very
grandfather, Datu Besar! He will kill those wretched Dyaks, and you shall
have half the treasure. Oh, Kaspar, tell where the treasure is! Tell me!
Tell me out of the old man's surat where you read so often at night"
On those occasions Almayer sat with rounded shoulders bending to the blast
of this domestic tempest, accentuating only each pause in the torrent of
his wife's eloquence by an angry growl, "There is no treasure! Go away,
woman!" Exasperated by the sight of his patiently bent back, she would at
last walk round so as to face him across the table, and clasping her robe
with one hand she stretched the other lean arm and claw-like hand to
emphasise, in a passion of anger and contempt, the rapid rush of scathing
remarks and bitter cursings heaped on the head of the man unworthy to
associate with brave Malay chiefs. It ended generally by Almayer rising
slowly, his long pipe in hand, his face set into a look of inward pain,
and walking away in silence. He descended the steps and plunged into the
long grass on his way to the solitude of his new house, dragging his feet
in a state of physical collapse from disgust and fear before that fury.
She followed to the head of the steps, and sent the shafts of
indiscriminate abuse after the retreating form. And each of those scenes
was concluded by a piercing shriek, reaching him far away. "You know,
Kaspar, I am your wife! your own Christian wife after your own Blanda
law!" For she knew that this was the bitterest thing of all; the greatest
regret of that man's life.
All these scenes Nina witnessed unmoved. She might have been deaf, dumb,
without any feeling as far as any expression of opinion went. Yet oft when
her father had sought the refuge of the great dusty rooms of "Almayer's
Folly," and her mother, exhausted by rhetorical efforts, squatted wearily
on her heels with her back against the leg of the table, Nina would
approach her curiously, guarding her skirts from betel juice besprinkling
the floor, and gaze down upon her as one might look into the quiescent
crater of a volcano after a destructive eruption. Mrs. Almayer's thoughts,
after these scenes, were usually turned into a channel of childhood
reminiscences, and she gave them utterance in a kind of monotonous
recitative—slightly disconnected, but generally describing the glories of
the Sultan of Sulu, his great splendour, his power, his great prowess; the
fear which benumbed the hearts of white men at the sight of his swift
piratical praus. And these muttered statements of her grandfather's might
were mixed up with bits of later recollections, where the great fight with
the "White Devil's" brig and the convent life in Samarang occupied the
principal place. At that point she usually dropped the thread of her
narrative, and pulling out the little brass cross, always suspended round
her neck, she contemplated it with superstitious awe. That superstitious
feeling connected with some vague talismanic properties of the little bit
of metal, and the still more hazy but terrible notion of some bad Djinns
and horrible torments invented, as she thought, for her especial
punishment by the good Mother Superior in case of the loss of the above
charm, were Mrs. Almayer's only theological luggage for the stormy road of
life. Mrs. Almayer had at least something tangible to cling to, but Nina,
brought up under the Protestant wing of the proper Mrs. Vinck, had not
even a little piece of brass to remind her of past teaching. And listening
to the recital of those savage glories, those barbarous fights and savage
feasting, to the story of deeds valorous, albeit somewhat bloodthirsty,
where men of her mother's race shone far above the Orang Blanda, she felt
herself irresistibly fascinated, and saw with vague surprise the narrow
mantle of civilised morality, in which good-meaning people had wrapped her
young soul, fall away and leave her shivering and helpless as if on the
edge of some deep and unknown abyss. Strangest of all, this abyss did not
frighten her when she was under the influence of the witch-like being she
called her mother. She seemed to have forgotten in civilised surroundings
her life before the time when Lingard had, so to speak, kidnapped her from
Brow. Since then she had had Christian teaching, social education, and a
good glimpse of civilised life. Unfortunately her teachers did not
understand her nature, and the education ended in a scene of humiliation,
in an outburst of contempt from white people for her mixed blood. She had
tasted the whole bitterness of it and remembered distinctly that the
virtuous Mrs. Vinck's indignation was not so much directed against the
young man from the bank as against the innocent cause of that young man's
infatuation. And there was also no doubt in her mind that the principal
cause of Mrs. Vinck's indignation was the thought that such a thing should
happen in a white nest, where her snow-white doves, the two Misses Vinck,
had just returned from Europe, to find shelter under the maternal wing,
and there await the coming of irreproachable men of their destiny. Not
even the thought of the money so painfully scraped together by Almayer,
and so punctually sent for Nina's expenses, could dissuade Mrs. Vinck from
her virtuous resolve. Nina was sent away, and in truth the girl herself
wanted to go, although a little frightened by the impending change. And
now she had lived on the river for three years with a savage mother and a
father walking about amongst pitfalls, with his head in the clouds, weak,
irresolute, and unhappy. She had lived a life devoid of all the decencies
of civilisation, in miserable domestic conditions; she had breathed in the
atmosphere of sordid plottings for gain, of the no less disgusting
intrigues and crimes for lust or money; and those things, together with
the domestic quarrels, were the only events of her three years' existence.
She did not die from despair and disgust the first month, as she expected
and almost hoped for. On the contrary, at the end of half a year it had
seemed to her that she had known no other life. Her young mind having been
unskilfully permitted to glance at better things, and then thrown back
again into the hopeless quagmire of barbarism, full of strong and
uncontrolled passions, had lost the power to discriminate. It seemed to
Nina that there was no change and no difference. Whether they traded in
brick godowns or on the muddy river bank; whether they reached after much
or little; whether they made love under the shadows of the great trees or
in the shadow of the cathedral on the Singapore promenade; whether they
plotted for their own ends under the protection of laws and according to
the rules of Christian conduct, or whether they sought the gratification
of their desires with the savage cunning and the unrestrained fierceness
of natures as innocent of culture as their own immense and gloomy forests,
Nina saw only the same manifestations of love and hate and of sordid greed
chasing the uncertain dollar in all its multifarious and vanishing shapes.
To her resolute nature, however, after all these years, the savage and
uncompromising sincerity of purpose shown by her Malay kinsmen seemed at
last preferable to the sleek hypocrisy, to the polite disguises, to the
virtuous pretences of such white people as she had had the misfortune to
come in contact with. After all it was her life; it was going to be her
life, and so thinking she fell more and more under the influence of her
mother. Seeking, in her ignorance, a better side to that life, she
listened with avidity to the old woman's tales of the departed glories of
the Rajahs, from whose race she had sprung, and she became gradually more
indifferent, more contemptuous of the white side of her descent
represented by a feeble and traditionless father.
Almayer's difficulties were by no means diminished by the girl's presence
in Sambir. The stir caused by her arrival had died out, it is true, and
Lakamba had not renewed his visits; but about a year after the departure
of the man-of-war boats the nephew of Abdulla, Syed Reshid, returned from
his pilgrimage to Mecca, rejoicing in a green jacket and the proud title
of Hadji. There was a great letting off of rockets on board the steamer
which brought him in, and a great beating of drums all night in Abdulla's
compound, while the feast of welcome was prolonged far into the small
hours of the morning. Reshid was the favourite nephew and heir of Abdulla,
and that loving uncle, meeting Almayer one day by the riverside, stopped
politely to exchange civilities and to ask solemnly for an interview.
Almayer suspected some attempt at a swindle, or at any rate something
unpleasant, but of course consented with a great show of rejoicing.
Accordingly the next evening, after sunset, Abdulla came, accompanied by
several other grey-beards and by his nephew. That young man—of a very
rakish and dissipated appearance— affected the greatest indifference as
to the whole of the proceedings. When the torch-bearers had grouped
themselves below the steps, and the visitors had seated themselves on
various lame chairs, Reshid stood apart in the shadow, examining his
aristocratically small hands with great attention. Almayer, surprised by
the great solemnity of his visitors, perched himself on the corner of the
table with a characteristic want of dignity quickly noted by the Arabs
with grave disapproval. But Abdulla spoke now, looking straight past
Almayer at the red curtain hanging in the doorway, where a slight tremor
disclosed the presence of women on the other side. He began by neatly
complimenting Almayer upon the long years they had dwelt together in
cordial neighbourhood, and called upon Allah to give him many more years
to gladden the eyes of his friends by his welcome presence. He made a
polite allusion to the great consideration shown him (Almayer) by the
Dutch "Commissie," and drew thence the flattering inference of Almayer's
great importance amongst his own people. He—Abdulla—was also important
amongst all the Arabs, and his nephew Reshid would be heir of that social
position and of great riches. Now Reshid was a Hadji. He was possessor of
several Malay women, went on Abdulla, but it was time he had a favourite
wife, the first of the four allowed by the Prophet. And, speaking with
well-bred politeness, he explained further to the dumbfounded Almayer
that, if he would consent to the alliance of his offspring with that true
believer and virtuous man Reshid, she would be the mistress of all the
splendours of Reshid's house, and first wife of the first Arab in the
Islands, when he—Abdulla—was called to the joys of Paradise by Allah the
All-merciful. "You know, Tuan," he said, in conclusion, "the other women
would be her slaves, and Reshid's house is great. From Bombay he has
brought great divans, and costly carpets, and European furniture. There is
also a great looking-glass in a frame shining like gold. What could a girl
want more?" And while Almayer looked upon him in silent dismay Abdulla
spoke in a more confidential tone, waving his attendants away, and
finished his speech by pointing out the material advantages of such an
alliance, and offering to settle upon Almayer three thousand dollars as a
sign of his sincere friendship and the price of the girl.
Poor Almayer was nearly having a fit. Burning with the desire of taking
Abdulla by the throat, he had but to think of his helpless position in the
midst of lawless men to comprehend the necessity of diplomatic
conciliation. He mastered his impulses, and spoke politely and coldly,
saying the girl was young and as the apple of his eye. Tuan Reshid, a
Faithful and a Hadji, would not want an infidel woman in his harem; and,
seeing Abdulla smile sceptically at that last objection, he remained
silent, not trusting himself to speak more, not daring to refuse
point-blank, nor yet to say anything compromising. Abdulla understood the
meaning of that silence, and rose to take leave with a grave salaam. He
wished his friend Almayer "a thousand years," and moved down the steps,
helped dutifully by Reshid. The torch- bearers shook their torches,
scattering a shower of sparks into the river, and the cortege moved off,
leaving Almayer agitated but greatly relieved by their departure. He
dropped into a chair and watched the glimmer of the lights amongst the
tree trunks till they disappeared and complete silence succeeded the tramp
of feet and the murmur of voices. He did not move till the curtain rustled
and Nina came out on the verandah and sat in the rocking-chair, where she
used to spend many hours every day. She gave a slight rocking motion to
her seat, leaning back with half-closed eyes, her long hair shading her
face from the smoky light of the lamp on the table. Almayer looked at her
furtively, but the face was as impassible as ever. She turned her head
slightly towards her father, and, speaking, to his great surprise, in
English, asked—
"Was that Abdulla here?"
"Yes," said Almayer—"just gone."
"And what did he want, father?"
"He wanted to buy you for Reshid," answered Almayer, brutally, his anger
getting the better of him, and looking at the girl as if in expectation of
some outbreak of feeling. But Nina remained apparently unmoved, gazing
dreamily into the black night outside.
"Be careful, Nina," said Almayer, after a short silence and rising from
his chair, "when you go paddling alone into the creeks in your canoe. That
Reshid is a violent scoundrel, and there is no saying what he may do. Do
you hear me?"
She was standing now, ready to go in, one hand grasping the curtain in the
doorway. She turned round, throwing her heavy tresses back by a sudden
gesture.
"Do you think he would dare?" she asked, quickly, and then turned again to
go in, adding in a lower tone, "He would not dare. Arabs are all cowards."
Almayer looked after her, astonished. He did not seek the repose of his
hammock. He walked the floor absently, sometimes stopping by the
balustrade to think. The lamp went out. The first streak of dawn broke
over the forest; Almayer shivered in the damp air. "I give it up," he
muttered to himself, lying down wearily. "Damn those women! Well! If the
girl did not look as if she wanted to be kidnapped!"
And he felt a nameless fear creep into his heart, making him shiver again.
That year, towards the breaking up of the south-west monsoon, disquieting
rumours reached Sambir. Captain Ford, coming up to Almayer's house for an
evening's chat, brought late numbers of the Straits Times giving the news
of Acheen war and of the unsuccessful Dutch expedition. The Nakhodas of
the rare trading praus ascending the river paid visits to Lakamba,
discussing with that potentate the unsettled state of affairs, and wagged
their heads gravely over the recital of Orang Blanda exaction, severity,
and general tyranny, as exemplified in the total stoppage of gunpowder
trade and the rigorous visiting of all suspicious craft trading in the
straits of Macassar. Even the loyal soul of Lakamba was stirred into a
state of inward discontent by the withdrawal of his license for powder and
by the abrupt confiscation of one hundred and fifty barrels of that
commodity by the gunboat Princess Amelia, when, after a hazardous voyage,
it had almost reached the mouth of the river. The unpleasant news was
given him by Reshid, who, after the unsuccessful issue of his matrimonial
projects, had made a long voyage amongst the islands for trading purposes;
had bought the powder for his friend, and was overhauled and deprived of
it on his return when actually congratulating himself on his acuteness in
avoiding detection. Reshid's wrath was principally directed against
Almayer, whom he suspected of having notified the Dutch authorities of the
desultory warfare carried on by the Arabs and the Rajah with the up-river
Dyak tribes.
To Reshid's great surprise the Rajah received his complaints very coldly,
and showed no signs of vengeful disposition towards the white man. In
truth, Lakamba knew very well that Almayer was perfectly innocent of any
meddling in state affairs; and besides, his attitude towards that much
persecuted individual was wholly changed in consequence of a
reconciliation effected between him and his old enemy by Almayer's
newly-found friend, Dain Maroola.
Almayer had now a friend. Shortly after Reshid's departure on his
commercial journey, Nina, drifting slowly with the tide in the canoe on
her return home after one of her solitary excursions, heard in one of the
small creeks a splashing, as if of heavy ropes dropping in the water, and
the prolonged song of Malay seamen when some heavy pulling is to be done.
Through the thick fringe of bushes hiding the mouth of the creek she saw
the tall spars of some European-rigged sailing vessel overtopping the
summits of the Nipa palms. A brig was being hauled out of the small creek
into the main stream. The sun had set, and during the short moments of
twilight Nina saw the brig, aided by the evening breeze and the flowing
tide, head towards Sambir under her set foresail. The girl turned her
canoe out of the main river into one of the many narrow channels amongst
the wooded islets, and paddled vigorously over the black and sleepy
backwaters towards Sambir. Her canoe brushed the water-palms, skirted the
short spaces of muddy bank where sedate alligators looked at her with lazy
unconcern, and, just as darkness was setting in, shot out into the broad
junction of the two main branches of the river, where the brig was already
at anchor with sails furled, yards squared, and decks seemingly untenanted
by any human being. Nina had to cross the river and pass pretty close to
the brig in order to reach home on the low promontory between the two
branches of the Pantai. Up both branches, in the houses built on the banks
and over the water, the lights twinkled already, reflected in the still
waters below. The hum of voices, the occasional cry of a child, the rapid
and abruptly interrupted roll of a wooden drum, together with some distant
hailing in the darkness by the returning fishermen, reached her over the
broad expanse of the river. She hesitated a little before crossing, the
sight of such an unusual object as an European-rigged vessel causing her
some uneasiness, but the river in its wide expansion was dark enough to
render a small canoe invisible. She urged her small craft with swift
strokes of her paddle, kneeling in the bottom and bending forward to catch
any suspicious sound while she steered towards the little jetty of Lingard
and Co., to which the strong light of the paraffin lamp shining on the
whitewashed verandah of Almayer's bungalow served as a convenient guide.
The jetty itself, under the shadow of the bank overgrown by drooping
bushes, was hidden in darkness. Before even she could see it she heard the
hollow bumping of a large boat against its rotten posts, and heard also
the murmur of whispered conversation in that boat whose white paint and
great dimensions, faintly visible on nearer approach, made her rightly
guess that it belonged to the brig just anchored. Stopping her course by a
rapid motion of her paddle, with another swift stroke she sent it whirling
away from the wharf and steered for a little rivulet which gave access to
the back courtyard of the house. She landed at the muddy head of the creek
and made her way towards the house over the trodden grass of the
courtyard. To the left, from the cooking shed, shone a red glare through
the banana plantation she skirted, and the noise of feminine laughter
reached her from there in the silent evening. She rightly judged her
mother was not near, laughter and Mrs. Almayer not being close neighbours.
She must be in the house, thought Nina, as she ran lightly up the inclined
plane of shaky planks leading to the back door of the narrow passage
dividing the house in two. Outside the doorway, in the black shadow, stood
the faithful Ali.
"Who is there?" asked Nina.
"A great Malay man has come," answered Ali, in a tone of suppressed
excitement. "He is a rich man. There are six men with lances. Real Soldat,
you understand. And his dress is very brave. I have seen his dress. It
shines! What jewels! Don't go there, Mem Nina. Tuan said not; but the old
Mem is gone. Tuan will be angry. Merciful Allah! what jewels that man has
got!"
Nina slipped past the outstretched hand of the slave into the dark passage
where, in the crimson glow of the hanging curtain, close by its other end,
she could see a small dark form crouching near the wall. Her mother was
feasting her eyes and ears with what was taking place on the front
verandah, and Nina approached to take her share in the rare pleasure of
some novelty. She was met by her mother's extended arm and by a low
murmured warning not to make a noise.
"Have you seen them, mother?" asked Nina, in a breathless whisper.
Mrs. Almayer turned her face towards the girl, and her sunken eyes shone
strangely in the red half-light of the passage.
"I saw him," she said, in an almost inaudible tone, pressing her
daughter's hand with her bony fingers. "A great Rajah has come to
Sambir—a Son of Heaven," muttered the old woman to herself. "Go away,
girl!"
The two women stood close to the curtain, Nina wishing to approach the
rent in the stuff, and her mother defending the position with angry
obstinacy. On the other side there was a lull in the conversation, but the
breathing of several men, the occasional light tinkling of some ornaments,
the clink of metal scabbards, or of brass siri-vessels passed from hand to
hand, was audible during the short pause. The women struggled silently,
when there was a shuffling noise and the shadow of Almayer's burly form
fell on the curtain.
The women ceased struggling and remained motionless. Almayer had stood up
to answer his guest, turning his back to the doorway, unaware of what was
going on on the other side. He spoke in a tone of regretful irritation.
"You have come to the wrong house, Tuan Maroola, if you want to trade as
you say. I was a trader once, not now, whatever you may have heard about
me in Macassar. And if you want anything, you will not find it here; I
have nothing to give, and want nothing myself. You should go to the Rajah
here; you can see in the daytime his houses across the river, there, where
those fires are burning on the shore. He will help you and trade with you.
Or, better still, go to the Arabs over there," he went on bitterly,
pointing with his hand towards the houses of Sambir. "Abdulla is the man
you want. There is nothing he would not buy, and there is nothing he would
not sell; believe me, I know him well."
He waited for an answer a short time, then added—
"All that I have said is true, and there is nothing more."
Nina, held back by her mother, heard a soft voice reply with a calm
evenness of intonation peculiar to the better class Malays—
"Who would doubt a white Tuan's words? A man seeks his friends where his
heart tells him. Is this not true also? I have come, although so late, for
I have something to say which you may be glad to hear. To-morrow I will go
to the Sultan; a trader wants the friendship of great men. Then I shall
return here to speak serious words, if Tuan permits. I shall not go to the
Arabs; their lies are very great! What are they? Chelakka!"
Almayer's voice sounded a little more pleasantly in reply.
"Well, as you like. I can hear you to-morrow at any time if you have
anything to say. Bah! After you have seen the Sultan Lakamba you will not
want to return here, Inchi Dain. You will see. Only mind, I will have
nothing to do with Lakamba. You may tell him so. What is your business
with me, after all?"
"To-morrow we talk, Tuan, now I know you," answered the Malay. "I speak
English a little, so we can talk and nobody will understand, and then—"
He interrupted himself suddenly, asking surprised, "What's that noise,
Tuan?"
Almayer had also heard the increasing noise of the scuffle recommenced on
the women's side of the curtain. Evidently Nina's strong curiosity was on
the point of overcoming Mrs. Almayer's exalted sense of social
proprieties. Hard breathing was distinctly audible, and the curtain shook
during the contest, which was mainly physical, although Mrs. Almayer's
voice was heard in angry remonstrance with its usual want of strictly
logical reasoning, but with the well-known richness of invective.
"You shameless woman! Are you a slave?" shouted shrilly the irate matron.
"Veil your face, abandoned wretch! You white snake, I will not let you!"
Almayer's face expressed annoyance and also doubt as to the advisability
of interfering between mother and daughter. He glanced at his Malay
visitor, who was waiting silently for the end of the uproar in an attitude
of amused expectation, and waving his hand contemptuously he murmured—
"It is nothing. Some women."
The Malay nodded his head gravely, and his face assumed an expression of
serene indifference, as etiquette demanded after such an explanation. The
contest was ended behind the curtain, and evidently the younger will had
its way, for the rapid shuffle and click of Mrs. Almayer's high-heeled
sandals died away in the distance. The tranquillised master of the house
was going to resume the conversation when, struck by an unexpected change
in the expression of his guest's countenance, he turned his head and saw
Nina standing in the doorway.
After Mrs. Almayer's retreat from the field of battle, Nina, with a
contemptuous exclamation, "It's only a trader," had lifted the conquered
curtain and now stood in full light, framed in the dark background on the
passage, her lips slightly parted, her hair in disorder after the
exertion, the angry gleam not yet faded out of her glorious and sparkling
eyes. She took in at a glance the group of white-clad lancemen standing
motionless in the shadow of the far-off end of the verandah, and her gaze
rested curiously on the chief of that imposing cortege. He stood, almost
facing her, a little on one side, and struck by the beauty of the
unexpected apparition had bent low, elevating his joint hands above his
head in a sign of respect accorded by Malays only to the great of this
earth. The crude light of the lamp shone on the gold embroidery of his
black silk jacket, broke in a thousand sparkling rays on the jewelled hilt
of his kriss protruding from under the many folds of the red sarong
gathered into a sash round his waist, and played on the precious stones of
the many rings on his dark fingers. He straightened himself up quickly
after the low bow, putting his hand with a graceful ease on the hilt of
his heavy short sword ornamented with brilliantly dyed fringes of
horsehair. Nina, hesitating on the threshold, saw an erect lithe figure of
medium height with a breadth of shoulder suggesting great power. Under the
folds of a blue turban, whose fringed ends hung gracefully over the left
shoulder, was a face full of determination and expressing a reckless
good-humour, not devoid, however, of some dignity. The squareness of lower
jaw, the full red lips, the mobile nostrils, and the proud carriage of the
head gave the impression of a being half-savage, untamed, perhaps cruel,
and corrected the liquid softness of the almost feminine eye, that general
characteristic of the race. Now, the first surprise over, Nina saw those
eyes fixed upon her with such an uncontrolled expression of admiration and
desire that she felt a hitherto unknown feeling of shyness, mixed with
alarm and some delight, enter and penetrate her whole being.
Confused by those unusual sensations she stopped in the doorway and
instinctively drew the lower part of the curtain across her face, leaving
only half a rounded cheek, a stray tress, and one eye exposed, wherewith
to contemplate the gorgeous and bold being so unlike in appearance to the
rare specimens of traders she had seen before on that same verandah.
Dain Maroola, dazzled by the unexpected vision, forgot the confused
Almayer, forgot his brig, his escort staring in open-mouthed admiration,
the object of his visit and all things else, in his overpowering desire to
prolong the contemplation of so much loveliness met so suddenly in such an
unlikely place—as he thought.
"It is my daughter," said Almayer, in an embarrassed manner. "It is of no
consequence. White women have their customs, as you know Tuan, having
travelled much, as you say. However, it is late; we will finish our talk
to-morrow."
Dain bent low trying to convey in a last glance towards the girl the bold
expression of his overwhelming admiration. The next minute he was shaking
Almayer's hand with grave courtesy, his face wearing a look of stolid
unconcern as to any feminine presence. His men filed off, and he followed
them quickly, closely attended by a thick-set, savage-looking Sumatrese he
had introduced before as the commander of his brig. Nina walked to the
balustrade of the verandah and saw the sheen of moonlight on the steel
spear-heads and heard the rhythmic jingle of brass anklets as the men
moved in single file towards the jetty. The boat shoved off after a little
while, looming large in the full light of the moon, a black shapeless mass
in the slight haze hanging over the water. Nina fancied she could
distinguish the graceful figure of the trader standing erect in the stern
sheets, but in a little while all the outlines got blurred, confused, and
soon disappeared in the folds of white vapour shrouding the middle of the
river.
Almayer had approached his daughter, and leaning with both arms over the
rail, was looking moodily down on the heap of rubbish and broken bottles
at the foot of the verandah.
"What was all that noise just now?" he growled peevishly, without looking
up. "Confound you and your mother! What did she want? What did you come
out for?"
"She did not want to let me come out," said Nina. "She is angry. She says
the man just gone is some Rajah. I think she is right now."
"I believe all you women are crazy," snarled Almayer. "What's that to you,
to her, to anybody? The man wants to collect trepang and birds' nests on
the islands. He told me so, that Rajah of yours. He will come to-morrow. I
want you both to keep away from the house, and let me attend to my
business in peace."
Dain Maroola came the next day and had a long conversation with Almayer.
This was the beginning of a close and friendly intercourse which, at
first, was much remarked in Sambir, till the population got used to the
frequent sight of many fires burning in Almayer's campong, where Maroola's
men were warming themselves during the cold nights of the north-east
monsoon, while their master had long conferences with the Tuan Putih—as
they styled Almayer amongst themselves. Great was the curiosity in Sambir
on the subject of the new trader. Had he seen the Sultan? What did the
Sultan say? Had he given any presents? What would he sell? What would he
buy? Those were the questions broached eagerly by the inhabitants of
bamboo houses built over the river. Even in more substantial buildings, in
Abdulla's house, in the residences of principal traders, Arab, Chinese,
and Bugis, the excitement ran high, and lasted many days. With inborn
suspicion they would not believe the simple account of himself the young
trader was always ready to give. Yet it had all the appearance of truth.
He said he was a trader, and sold rice. He did not want to buy
gutta-percha or beeswax, because he intended to employ his numerous crew
in collecting trepang on the coral reefs outside the river, and also in
seeking for bird's nests on the mainland. Those two articles he professed
himself ready to buy if there were any to be obtained in that way. He said
he was from Bali, and a Brahmin, which last statement he made good by
refusing all food during his often repeated visits to Lakamba's and
Almayer's houses. To Lakamba he went generally at night and had long
audiences. Babalatchi, who was always a third party at those meetings of
potentate and trader, knew how to resist all attempts on the part of the
curious to ascertain the subject of so many long talks. When questioned
with languid courtesy by the grave Abdulla he sought refuge in a vacant
stare of his one eye, and in the affectation of extreme simplicity.
"I am only my master's slave," murmured Babalatchi, in a hesitating
manner. Then as if making up his mind suddenly for a reckless confidence
he would inform Abdulla of some transaction in rice, repeating the words,
"A hundred big bags the Sultan bought; a hundred, Tuan!" in a tone of
mysterious solemnity. Abdulla, firmly persuaded of the existence of some
more important dealings, received, however, the information with all the
signs of respectful astonishment. And the two would separate, the Arab
cursing inwardly the wily dog, while Babalatchi went on his way walking on
the dusty path, his body swaying, his chin with its few grey hairs pushed
forward, resembling an inquisitive goat bent on some unlawful expedition.
Attentive eyes watched his movements. Jim-Eng, descrying Babalatchi far
away, would shake off the stupor of an habitual opium smoker and,
tottering on to the middle of the road, would await the approach of that
important person, ready with hospitable invitation. But Babalatchi's
discretion was proof even against the combined assaults of good fellowship
and of strong gin generously administered by the open-hearted Chinaman.
Jim-Eng, owning himself beaten, was left uninformed with the empty bottle,
and gazed sadly after the departing form of the statesman of Sambir
pursuing his devious and unsteady way, which, as usual, led him to
Almayer's compound. Ever since a reconciliation had been effected by Dain
Maroola between his white friend and the Rajah, the one-eyed diplomatist
had again become a frequent guest in the Dutchman's house. To Almayer's
great disgust he was to be seen there at all times, strolling about in an
abstracted kind of way on the verandah, skulking in the passages, or else
popping round unexpected corners, always willing to engage Mrs. Almayer in
confidential conversation. He was very shy of the master himself, as if
suspicious that the pent-up feelings of the white man towards his person
might find vent in a sudden kick. But the cooking shed was his favourite
place, and he became an habitual guest there, squatting for hours amongst
the busy women, with his chin resting on his knees, his lean arms clasped
round his legs, and his one eye roving uneasily—the very picture of
watchful ugliness. Almayer wanted more than once to complain to Lakamba of
his Prime Minister's intrusion, but Dain dissuaded him. "We cannot say a
word here that he does not hear," growled Almayer.
"Then come and talk on board the brig," retorted Dain, with a quiet smile.
"It is good to let the man come here. Lakamba thinks he knows much.
Perhaps the Sultan thinks I want to run away. Better let the one-eyed
crocodile sun himself in your campong, Tuan."
And Almayer assented unwillingly muttering vague threats of personal
violence, while he eyed malevolently the aged statesman sitting with quiet
obstinacy by his domestic rice-pot.
At last the excitement had died out in Sambir. The inhabitants got used to
the sight of comings and goings between Almayer's house and the vessel,
now moored to the opposite bank, and speculation as to the feverish
activity displayed by Almayer's boatmen in repairing old canoes ceased to
interfere with the due discharge of domestic duties by the women of the
Settlement. Even the baffled Jim-Eng left off troubling his muddled brain
with secrets of trade, and relapsed by the aid of his opium pipe into a
state of stupefied bliss, letting Babalatchi pursue his way past his house
uninvited and seemingly unnoticed.
So on that warm afternoon, when the deserted river sparkled under the
vertical sun, the statesman of Sambir could, without any hindrance from
friendly inquirers, shove off his little canoe from under the bushes,
where it was usually hidden during his visits to Almayer's compound.
Slowly and languidly Babalatchi paddled, crouching low in the boat, making
himself small under his as enormous sun hat to escape the scorching heat
reflected from the water. He was not in a hurry; his master, Lakamba, was
surely reposing at this time of the day. He would have ample time to cross
over and greet him on his waking with important news. Will he be
displeased? Will he strike his ebony wood staff angrily on the floor,
frightening him by the incoherent violence of his exclamations; or will he
squat down with a good-humoured smile, and, rubbing his hands gently over
his stomach with a familiar gesture, expectorate copiously into the brass
siri-vessel, giving vent to a low, approbative murmur? Such were
Babalatchi's thoughts as he skilfully handled his paddle, crossing the
river on his way to the Rajah's campong, whose stockades showed from
behind the dense foliage of the bank just opposite to Almayer's bungalow.
Indeed, he had a report to make. Something certain at last to confirm the
daily tale of suspicions, the daily hints of familiarity, of stolen
glances he had seen, of short and burning words he had overheard exchanged
between Dain Maroola and Almayer's daughter.
Lakamba had, till then, listened to it all, calmly and with evident
distrust; now he was going to be convinced, for Babalatchi had the proof;
had it this very morning, when fishing at break of day in the creek over
which stood Bulangi's house. There from his skiff he saw Nina's long canoe
drift past, the girl sitting in the stern bending over Dain, who was
stretched in the bottom with his head resting on the girl's knees. He saw
it. He followed them, but in a short time they took to the paddles and got
away from under his observant eye. A few minutes afterwards he saw
Bulangi's slave-girl paddling in a small dug-out to the town with her
cakes for sale. She also had seen them in the grey dawn. And Babalatchi
grinned confidentially to himself at the recollection of the slave-girl's
discomposed face, of the hard look in her eyes, of the tremble in her
voice, when answering his questions. That little Taminah evidently admired
Dain Maroola. That was good! And Babalatchi laughed aloud at the notion;
then becoming suddenly serious, he began by some strange association of
ideas to speculate upon the price for which Bulangi would, possibly, sell
the girl. He shook his head sadly at the thought that Bulangi was a hard
man, and had refused one hundred dollars for that same Taminah only a few
weeks ago; then he became suddenly aware that the canoe had drifted too
far down during his meditation. He shook off the despondency caused by the
certitude of Bulangi's mercenary disposition, and, taking up his paddle,
in a few strokes sheered alongside the water-gate of the Rajah's house.
That afternoon Almayer, as was his wont lately, moved about on the
water-side, overlooking the repairs to his boats. He had decided at last.
Guided by the scraps of information contained in old Lingard's
pocket-book, he was going to seek for the rich gold-mine, for that place
where he had only to stoop to gather up an immense fortune and realise the
dream of his young days. To obtain the necessary help he had shared his
knowledge with Dain Maroola, he had consented to be reconciled with
Lakamba, who gave his support to the enterprise on condition of sharing
the profits; he had sacrificed his pride, his honour, and his loyalty in
the face of the enormous risk of his undertaking, dazzled by the greatness
of the results to be achieved by this alliance so distasteful yet so
necessary. The dangers were great, but Maroola was brave; his men seemed
as reckless as their chief, and with Lakamba's aid success seemed assured.
For the last fortnight Almayer was absorbed in the preparations, walking
amongst his workmen and slaves in a kind of waking trance, where practical
details as to the fitting out of the boats were mixed up with vivid dreams
of untold wealth, where the present misery of burning sun, of the muddy
and malodorous river bank disappeared in a gorgeous vision of a splendid
future existence for himself and Nina. He hardly saw Nina during these
last days, although the beloved daughter was ever present in his thoughts.
He hardly took notice of Dain, whose constant presence in his house had
become a matter of course to him now they were connected by a community of
interests. When meeting the young chief he gave him an absent greeting and
passed on, seemingly wishing to avoid him, bent upon forgetting the hated
reality of the present by absorbing himself in his work, or else by
letting his imagination soar far above the tree-tops into the great white
clouds away to the westward, where the paradise of Europe was awaiting the
future Eastern millionaire. And Maroola, now the bargain was struck and
there was no more business to be talked over, evidently did not care for
the white man's company. Yet Dain was always about the house, but he
seldom stayed long by the riverside. On his daily visits to the white man
the Malay chief preferred to make his way quietly through the central
passage of the house, and would come out into the garden at the back,
where the fire was burning in the cooking shed, with the rice kettle
swinging over it, under the watchful supervision of Mrs. Almayer. Avoiding
that shed, with its black smoke and the warbling of soft, feminine voices,
Dain would turn to the left. There, on the edge of a banana plantation, a
clump of palms and mango trees formed a shady spot, a few scattered bushes
giving it a certain seclusion into which only the serving women's chatter
or an occasional burst of laughter could penetrate. Once in, he was
invisible; and hidden there, leaning against the smooth trunk of a tall
palm, he waited with gleaming eyes and an assured smile to hear the faint
rustle of dried grass under the light footsteps of Nina.
From the very first moment when his eyes beheld this—to him— perfection
of loveliness he felt in his inmost heart the conviction that she would be
his; he felt the subtle breath of mutual understanding passing between
their two savage natures, and he did not want Mrs. Almayer's encouraging
smiles to take every opportunity of approaching the girl; and every time
he spoke to her, every time he looked into her eyes, Nina, although
averting her face, felt as if this bold-looking being who spoke burning
words into her willing ear was the embodiment of her fate, the creature of
her dreams—reckless, ferocious, ready with flashing kriss for his
enemies, and with passionate embrace for his beloved—the ideal Malay
chief of her mother's tradition.
She recognised with a thrill of delicious fear the mysterious
consciousness of her identity with that being. Listening to his words, it
seemed to her she was born only then to a knowledge of a new existence,
that her life was complete only when near him, and she abandoned herself
to a feeling of dreamy happiness, while with half- veiled face and in
silence—as became a Malay girl—she listened to Dain's words giving up to
her the whole treasure of love and passion his nature was capable of with
all the unrestrained enthusiasm of a man totally untrammelled by any
influence of civilised self-discipline.
And they used to pass many a delicious and fast fleeting hour under the
mango trees behind the friendly curtain of bushes till Mrs. Almayer's
shrill voice gave the signal of unwilling separation. Mrs. Almayer had
undertaken the easy task of watching her husband lest he should interrupt
the smooth course of her daughter's love affair, in which she took a great
and benignant interest. She was happy and proud to see Dain's infatuation,
believing him to be a great and powerful chief, and she found also a
gratification of her mercenary instincts in Dain's open-handed generosity.
On the eve of the day when Babalatchi's suspicions were confirmed by
ocular demonstration, Dain and Nina had remained longer than usual in
their shady retreat. Only Almayer's heavy step on the verandah and his
querulous clamour for food decided Mrs. Almayer to lift a warning cry.
Maroola leaped lightly over the low bamboo fence, and made his way
stealthily through the banana plantation down to the muddy shore of the
back creek, while Nina walked slowly towards the house to minister to her
father's wants, as was her wont every evening. Almayer felt happy enough
that evening; the preparations were nearly completed; to-morrow he would
launch his boats. In his mind's eye he saw the rich prize in his grasp;
and, with tin spoon in his hand, he was forgetting the plateful of rice
before him in the fanciful arrangement of some splendid banquet to take
place on his arrival in Amsterdam. Nina, reclining in the long chair,
listened absently to the few disconnected words escaping from her father's
lips. Expedition! Gold! What did she care for all that? But at the name of
Maroola mentioned by her father she was all attention. Dain was going down
the river with his brig to-morrow to remain away for a few days, said
Almayer. It was very annoying, this delay. As soon as Dain returned they
would have to start without loss of time, for the river was rising. He
would not be surprised if a great flood was coming. And he pushed away his
plate with an impatient gesture on rising from the table. But now Nina
heard him not. Dain going away! That's why he had ordered her, with that
quiet masterfulness it was her delight to obey, to meet him at break of
day in Bulangi's creek. Was there a paddle in her canoe? she thought. Was
it ready? She would have to start early—at four in the morning, in a very
few hours.
She rose from her chair, thinking she would require rest before the long
pull in the early morning. The lamp was burning dimly, and her father,
tired with the day's labour, was already in his hammock. Nina put the lamp
out and passed into a large room she shared with her mother on the left of
the central passage. Entering, she saw that Mrs. Almayer had deserted the
pile of mats serving her as bed in one corner of the room, and was now
bending over the opened lid of her large wooden chest. Half a shell of
cocoanut filled with oil, where a cotton rag floated for a wick, stood on
the floor, surrounding her with a ruddy halo of light shining through the
black and odorous smoke. Mrs. Almayer's back was bent, and her head and
shoulders hidden in the deep box. Her hands rummaged in the interior,
where a soft clink as of silver money could be heard. She did not notice
at first her daughter's approach, and Nina, standing silently by her,
looked down on many little canvas bags ranged in the bottom of the chest,
wherefrom her mother extracted handfuls of shining guilders and Mexican
dollars, letting them stream slowly back again through her claw-like
fingers. The music of tinkling silver seemed to delight her, and her eyes
sparkled with the reflected gleam of freshly-minted coins. She was
muttering to herself: "And this, and this, and yet this! Soon he will give
more—as much more as I ask. He is a great Rajah—a Son of Heaven! And she
will be a Ranee—he gave all this for her! Who ever gave anything for me?
I am a slave! Am I? I am the mother of a great Ranee!" She became aware
suddenly of her daughter's presence, and ceased her droning, shutting the
lid down violently; then, without rising from her crouching position, she
looked up at the girl standing by with a vague smile on her dreamy face.
"You have seen. Have you?" she shouted, shrilly. "That is all mine, and
for you. It is not enough! He will have to give more before he takes you
away to the southern island where his father is king. You hear me? You are
worth more, granddaughter of Rajahs! More! More!"
The sleepy voice of Almayer was heard on the verandah recommending
silence. Mrs. Almayer extinguished the light and crept into her corner of
the room. Nina laid down on her back on a pile of soft mats, her hands
entwined under her head, gazing through the shutterless hole, serving as a
window at the stars twinkling on the black sky; she was awaiting the time
of start for her appointed meeting-place. With quiet happiness she thought
of that meeting in the great forest, far from all human eyes and sounds.
Her soul, lapsing again into the savage mood, which the genius of
civilisation working by the hand of Mrs. Vinck could never destroy,
experienced a feeling of pride and of some slight trouble at the high
value her worldly-wise mother had put upon her person; but she remembered
the expressive glances and words of Dain, and, tranquillised, she closed
her eyes in a shiver of pleasant anticipation.
There are some situations where the barbarian and the, so-called,
civilised man meet upon the same ground. It may be supposed that Dain
Maroola was not exceptionally delighted with his prospective
mother-in-law, nor that he actually approved of that worthy woman's
appetite for shining dollars. Yet on that foggy morning when Babalatchi,
laying aside the cares of state, went to visit his fish-baskets in the
Bulangi creek, Maroola had no misgivings, experienced no feelings but
those of impatience and longing, when paddling to the east side of the
island forming the back-water in question. He hid his canoe in the bushes
and strode rapidly across the islet, pushing with impatience through the
twigs of heavy undergrowth intercrossed over his path. From motives of
prudence he would not take his canoe to the meeting-place, as Nina had
done. He had left it in the main stream till his return from the other
side of the island. The heavy warm fog was closing rapidly round him, but
he managed to catch a fleeting glimpse of a light away to the left,
proceeding from Bulangi's house. Then he could see nothing in the
thickening vapour, and kept to the path only by a sort of instinct, which
also led him to the very point on the opposite shore he wished to reach. A
great log had stranded there, at right angles to the bank, forming a kind
of jetty against which the swiftly flowing stream broke with a loud
ripple. He stepped on it with a quick but steady motion, and in two
strides found himself at the outer end, with the rush and swirl of the
foaming water at his feet.
Standing there alone, as if separated from the world; the heavens, earth;
the very water roaring under him swallowed up in the thick veil of the
morning fog, he breathed out the name of Nina before him into the
apparently limitless space, sure of being heard, instinctively sure of the
nearness of the delightful creature; certain of her being aware of his
near presence as he was aware of hers.
The bow of Nina's canoe loomed up close to the log, canted high out of the
water by the weight of the sitter in the stern. Maroola laid his hand on
the stem and leaped lightly in, giving it a vigorous shove off. The light
craft, obeying the new impulse, cleared the log by a hair's breadth, and
the river, with obedient complicity, swung it broadside to the current,
and bore it off silently and rapidly between the invisible banks. And once
more Dain, at the feet of Nina, forgot the world, felt himself carried
away helpless by a great wave of supreme emotion, by a rush of joy, pride,
and desire; understood once more with overpowering certitude that there
was no life possible without that being he held clasped in his arms with
passionate strength in a prolonged embrace.
Nina disengaged herself gently with a low laugh.
"You will overturn the boat, Dain," she whispered.
He looked into her eyes eagerly for a minute and let her go with a sigh,
then lying down in the canoe he put his head on her knees, gazing upwards
and stretching his arms backwards till his hands met round the girl's
waist. She bent over him, and, shaking her head, framed both their faces
in the falling locks of her long black hair.
And so they drifted on, he speaking with all the rude eloquence of a
savage nature giving itself up without restraint to an overmastering
passion, she bending low to catch the murmur of words sweeter to her than
life itself. To those two nothing existed then outside the gunwales of the
narrow and fragile craft. It was their world, filled with their intense
and all-absorbing love. They took no heed of thickening mist, or of the
breeze dying away before sunrise; they forgot the existence of the great
forests surrounding them, of all the tropical nature awaiting the advent
of the sun in a solemn and impressive silence.
Over the low river-mist hiding the boat with its freight of young
passionate life and all-forgetful happiness, the stars paled, and a
silvery-grey tint crept over the sky from the eastward. There was not a
breath of wind, not a rustle of stirring leaf, not a splash of leaping
fish to disturb the serene repose of all living things on the banks of the
great river. Earth, river, and sky were wrapped up in a deep sleep, from
which it seemed there would be no waking. All the seething life and
movement of tropical nature seemed concentrated in the ardent eyes, in the
tumultuously beating hearts of the two beings drifting in the canoe, under
the white canopy of mist, over the smooth surface of the river.
Suddenly a great sheaf of yellow rays shot upwards from behind the black
curtain of trees lining the banks of the Pantai. The stars went out; the
little black clouds at the zenith glowed for a moment with crimson tints,
and the thick mist, stirred by the gentle breeze, the sigh of waking
nature, whirled round and broke into fantastically torn pieces, disclosing
the wrinkled surface of the river sparkling in the broad light of day.
Great flocks of white birds wheeled screaming above the swaying tree-tops.
The sun had risen on the east coast.
Dain was the first to return to the cares of everyday life. He rose and
glanced rapidly up and down the river. His eye detected Babalatchi's boat
astern, and another small black speck on the glittering water, which was
Taminah's canoe. He moved cautiously forward, and, kneeling, took up a
paddle; Nina at the stern took hers. They bent their bodies to the work,
throwing up the water at every stroke, and the small craft went swiftly
ahead, leaving a narrow wake fringed with a lace-like border of white and
gleaming foam. Without turning his head, Dain spoke.
"Somebody behind us, Nina. We must not let him gain. I think he is too far
to recognise us."
"Somebody before us also," panted out Nina, without ceasing to paddle.
"I think I know," rejoined Dain. "The sun shines over there, but I fancy
it is the girl Taminah. She comes down every morning to my brig to sell
cakes—stays often all day. It does not matter; steer more into the bank;
we must get under the bushes. My canoe is hidden not far from here."
As he spoke his eyes watched the broad-leaved nipas which they were
brushing in their swift and silent course.
"Look out, Nina," he said at last; "there, where the water palms end and
the twigs hang down under the leaning tree. Steer for the big green
branch."
He stood up attentive, and the boat drifted slowly in shore, Nina guiding
it by a gentle and skilful movement of her paddle. When near enough Dain
laid hold of the big branch, and leaning back shot the canoe under a low
green archway of thickly matted creepers giving access to a miniature bay
formed by the caving in of the bank during the last great flood. His own
boat was there anchored by a stone, and he stepped into it, keeping his
hand on the gunwale of Nina's canoe. In a moment the two little nutshells
with their occupants floated quietly side by side, reflected by the black
water in the dim light struggling through a high canopy of dense foliage;
while above, away up in the broad day, flamed immense red blossoms sending
down on their heads a shower of great dew-sparkling petals that descended
rotating slowly in a continuous and perfumed stream; and over them, under
them, in the sleeping water; all around them in a ring of luxuriant
vegetation bathed in the warm air charged with strong and harsh perfumes,
the intense work of tropical nature went on: plants shooting upward,
entwined, interlaced in inextricable confusion, climbing madly and
brutally over each other in the terrible silence of a desperate struggle
towards the life-giving sunshine above—as if struck with sudden horror at
the seething mass of corruption below, at the death and decay from which
they sprang.
"We must part now," said Dain, after a long silence. "You must return at
once, Nina. I will wait till the brig drifts down here, and shall get on
board then."
"And will you be long away, Dain?" asked Nina, in a low voice.
"Long!" exclaimed Dain. "Would a man willingly remain long in a dark
place? When I am not near you, Nina, I am like a man that is blind. What
is life to me without light?"
Nina leaned over, and with a proud and happy smile took Dain's face
between her hands, looking into his eyes with a fond yet questioning gaze.
Apparently she found there the confirmation of the words just said, for a
feeling of grateful security lightened for her the weight of sorrow at the
hour of parting. She believed that he, the descendant of many great
Rajahs, the son of a great chief, the master of life and death, knew the
sunshine of life only in her presence. An immense wave of gratitude and
love welled forth out of her heart towards him. How could she make an
outward and visible sign of all she felt for the man who had filled her
heart with so much joy and so much pride? And in the great tumult of
passion, like a flash of lightning came to her the reminiscence of that
despised and almost forgotten civilisation she had only glanced at in her
days of restraint, of sorrow, and of anger. In the cold ashes of that
hateful and miserable past she would find the sign of love, the fitting
expression of the boundless felicity of the present, the pledge of a
bright and splendid future. She threw her arms around Dain's neck and
pressed her lips to his in a long and burning kiss. He closed his eyes,
surprised and frightened at the storm raised in his breast by the strange
and to him hitherto unknown contact, and long after Nina had pushed her
canoe into the river he remained motionless, without daring to open his
eyes, afraid to lose the sensation of intoxicating delight he had tasted
for the first time.
Now he wanted but immortality, he thought, to be the equal of gods, and
the creature that could open so the gates of paradise must be his—soon
would be his for ever!
He opened his eyes in time to see through the archway of creepers the bows
of his brig come slowly into view, as the vessel drifted past on its way
down the river. He must go on board now, he thought; yet he was loth to
leave the place where he had learned to know what happiness meant. "Time
yet. Let them go," he muttered to himself; and he closed his eyes again
under the red shower of scented petals, trying to recall the scene with
all its delight and all its fear.
He must have been able to join his brig in time, after all, and found much
occupation outside, for it was in vain that Almayer looked for his
friend's speedy return. The lower reach of the river where he so often and
so impatiently directed his eyes remained deserted, save for the rapid
flitting of some fishing canoe; but down the upper reaches came black
clouds and heavy showers heralding the final setting in of the rainy
season with its thunderstorms and great floods making the river almost
impossible of ascent for native canoes.
Almayer, strolling along the muddy beach between his houses, watched
uneasily the river rising inch by inch, creeping slowly nearer to the
boats, now ready and hauled up in a row under the cover of dripping
Kajang-mats. Fortune seemed to elude his grasp, and in his weary tramp
backwards and forwards under the steady rain falling from the lowering
sky, a sort of despairing indifference took possession of him. What did it
matter? It was just his luck! Those two infernal savages, Lakamba and
Dain, induced him, with their promises of help, to spend his last dollar
in the fitting out of boats, and now one of them was gone somewhere, and
the other shut up in his stockade would give no sign of life. No, not even
the scoundrelly Babalatchi, thought Almayer, would show his face near him,
now they had sold him all the rice, brass gongs, and cloth necessary for
his expedition. They had his very last coin, and did not care whether he
went or stayed. And with a gesture of abandoned discouragement Almayer
would climb up slowly to the verandah of his new house to get out of the
rain, and leaning on the front rail with his head sunk between his
shoulders he would abandon himself to the current of bitter thoughts,
oblivious of the flight of time and the pangs of hunger, deaf to the
shrill cries of his wife calling him to the evening meal. When, roused
from his sad meditations by the first roll of the evening thunderstorm, he
stumbled slowly towards the glimmering light of his old house, his
half-dead hope made his ears preternaturally acute to any sound on the
river. Several nights in succession he had heard the splash of paddles and
had seen the indistinct form of a boat, but when hailing the shadowy
apparition, his heart bounding with sudden hope of hearing Dain's voice,
he was disappointed each time by the sulky answer conveying to him the
intelligence that the Arabs were on the river, bound on a visit to the
home-staying Lakamba. This caused him many sleepless nights, spent in
speculating upon the kind of villainy those estimable personages were
hatching now. At last, when all hope seemed dead, he was overjoyed on
hearing Dain's voice; but Dain also appeared very anxious to see Lakamba,
and Almayer felt uneasy owing to a deep and ineradicable distrust as to
that ruler's disposition towards himself. Still, Dain had returned at
last. Evidently he meant to keep to his bargain. Hope revived, and that
night Almayer slept soundly, while Nina watched the angry river under the
lash of the thunderstorm sweeping onward towards the sea.
Dain was not long in crossing the river after leaving Almayer. He landed
at the water-gate of the stockade enclosing the group of houses which
composed the residence of the Rajah of Sambir. Evidently somebody was
expected there, for the gate was open, and men with torches were ready to
precede the visitor up the inclined plane of planks leading to the largest
house where Lakamba actually resided, and where all the business of state
was invariably transacted. The other buildings within the enclosure served
only to accommodate the numerous household and the wives of the ruler.
Lakamba's own house was a strong structure of solid planks, raised on high
piles, with a verandah of split bamboos surrounding it on all sides; the
whole was covered in by an immensely high-pitched roof of palm-leaves,
resting on beams blackened by the smoke of many torches.
The building stood parallel to the river, one of its long sides facing the
water-gate of the stockade. There was a door in the short side looking up
the river, and the inclined plank-way led straight from the gate to that
door. By the uncertain light of smoky torches, Dain noticed the vague
outlines of a group of armed men in the dark shadows to his right. From
that group Babalatchi stepped forward to open the door, and Dain entered
the audience chamber of the Rajah's residence. About one-third of the
house was curtained off, by heavy stuff of European manufacture, for that
purpose; close to the curtain there was a big arm-chair of some black
wood, much carved, and before it a rough deal table. Otherwise the room
was only furnished with mats in great profusion. To the left of the
entrance stood a rude arm-rack, with three rifles with fixed bayonets in
it. By the wall, in the shadow, the body-guard of Lakamba—all friends or
relations—slept in a confused heap of brown arms, legs, and
multi-coloured garments, from whence issued an occasional snore or a
subdued groan of some uneasy sleeper. An European lamp with a green shade
standing on the table made all this indistinctly visible to Dain.
"You are welcome to your rest here," said Babalatchi, looking at Dain
interrogatively.
"I must speak to the Rajah at once," answered Dain.
Babalatchi made a gesture of assent, and, turning to the brass gong
suspended under the arm-rack, struck two sharp blows.
The ear-splitting din woke up the guard. The snores ceased; outstretched
legs were drawn in; the whole heap moved, and slowly resolved itself into
individual forms, with much yawning and rubbing of sleepy eyes; behind the
curtains there was a burst of feminine chatter; then the bass voice of
Lakamba was heard.
"Is that the Arab trader?"
"No, Tuan," answered Babalatchi; "Dain has returned at last. He is here
for an important talk, bitcharra—if you mercifully consent."
Evidently Lakamba's mercy went so far—for in a short while he came out
from behind the curtain—but it did not go to the length of inducing him
to make an extensive toilet. A short red sarong tightened hastily round
his hips was his only garment. The merciful ruler of Sambir looked sleepy
and rather sulky. He sat in the arm-chair, his knees well apart, his
elbows on the arm-rests, his chin on his breast, breathing heavily and
waiting malevolently for Dain to open the important talk.
But Dain did not seem anxious to begin. He directed his gaze towards
Babalatchi, squatting comfortably at the feet of his master, and remained
silent with a slightly bent head as if in attentive expectation of coming
words of wisdom.
Babalatchi coughed discreetly, and, leaning forward, pushed over a few
mats for Dain to sit upon, then lifting up his squeaky voice he assured
him with eager volubility of everybody's delight at this long-looked-for
return. His heart had hungered for the sight of Dain's face, and his ears
were withering for the want of the refreshing sound of his voice.
Everybody's hearts and ears were in the same sad predicament, according to
Babalatchi, as he indicated with a sweeping gesture the other bank of the
river where the settlement slumbered peacefully, unconscious of the great
joy awaiting it on the morrow when Dain's presence amongst them would be
disclosed. "For"—went on Babalatchi—"what is the joy of a poor man if
not the open hand of a generous trader or of a great—"
Here he checked himself abruptly with a calculated embarrassment of
manner, and his roving eye sought the floor, while an apologetic smile
dwelt for a moment on his misshapen lips. Once or twice during this
opening speech an amused expression flitted across Dain's face, soon to
give way, however, to an appearance of grave concern. On Lakamba's brow a
heavy frown had settled, and his lips moved angrily as he listened to his
Prime Minister's oratory. In the silence that fell upon the room when
Babalatchi ceased speaking arose a chorus of varied snores from the corner
where the body-guard had resumed their interrupted slumbers, but the
distant rumble of thunder filling then Nina's heart with apprehension for
the safety of her lover passed unheeded by those three men intent each on
their own purposes, for life or death.
After a short silence, Babalatchi, discarding now the flowers of polite
eloquence, spoke again, but in short and hurried sentences and in a low
voice. They had been very uneasy. Why did Dain remain so long absent? The
men dwelling on the lower reaches of the river heard the reports of big
guns and saw a fire-ship of the Dutch amongst the islands of the estuary.
So they were anxious. Rumours of a disaster had reached Abdulla a few days
ago, and since then they had been waiting for Dain's return under the
apprehension of some misfortune. For days they had closed their eyes in
fear, and woke up alarmed, and walked abroad trembling, like men before an
enemy. And all on account of Dain. Would he not allay their fears for his
safety, not for themselves? They were quiet and faithful, and devoted to
the great Rajah in Batavia—may his fate lead him ever to victory for the
joy and profit of his servants! "And here," went on Babalatchi, "Lakamba
my master was getting thin in his anxiety for the trader he had taken
under his protection; and so was Abdulla, for what would wicked men not
say if perchance - "
"Be silent, fool!" growled Lakamba, angrily.
Babalatchi subsided into silence with a satisfied smile, while Dain, who
had been watching him as if fascinated, turned with a sigh of relief
towards the ruler of Sambir. Lakamba did not move, and, without raising
his head, looked at Dain from under his eyebrows, breathing audibly, with
pouted lips, in an air of general discontent.
"Speak! O Dain!" he said at last. "We have heard many rumours. Many nights
in succession has my friend Reshid come here with bad tidings. News
travels fast along the coast. But they may be untrue; there are more lies
in men's mouths in these days than when I was young, but I am not easier
to deceive now."
"All my words are true," said Dain, carelessly. "If you want to know what
befell my brig, then learn that it is in the hands of the Dutch. Believe
me, Rajah," he went on, with sudden energy, "the Orang Blanda have good
friends in Sambir, or else how did they know I was coming thence?"
Lakamba gave Dain a short and hostile glance. Babalatchi rose quietly,
and, going to the arm-rack, struck the gong violently.
Outside the door there was a shuffle of bare feet; inside, the guard woke
up and sat staring in sleepy surprise.
"Yes, you faithful friend of the white Rajah," went on Dain, scornfully,
turning to Babalatchi, who had returned to his place, "I have escaped, and
I am here to gladden your heart. When I saw the Dutch ship I ran the brig
inside the reefs and put her ashore. They did not dare to follow with the
ship, so they sent the boats. We took to ours and tried to get away, but
the ship dropped fireballs at us, and killed many of my men. But I am
left, O Babalatchi! The Dutch are coming here. They are seeking for me.
They are coming to ask their faithful friend Lakamba and his slave
Babalatchi. Rejoice!"
But neither of his hearers appeared to be in a joyful mood. Lakamba had
put one leg over his knee, and went on gently scratching it with a
meditative air, while Babalatchi, sitting cross-legged, seemed suddenly to
become smaller and very limp, staring straight before him vacantly. The
guard evinced some interest in the proceedings, stretching themselves full
length on the mats to be nearer the speaker. One of them got up and now
stood leaning against the arm-rack, playing absently with the fringes of
his sword-hilt.
Dain waited till the crash of thunder had died away in distant mutterings
before he spoke again.
"Are you dumb, O ruler of Sambir, or is the son of a great Rajah unworthy
of your notice? I am come here to seek refuge and to warn you, and want to
know what you intend doing."
"You came here because of the white man's daughter," retorted Lakamba,
quickly. "Your refuge was with your father, the Rajah of Bali, the Son of
Heaven, the 'Anak Agong' himself. What am I to protect great princes? Only
yesterday I planted rice in a burnt clearing; to-day you say I hold your
life in my hand."
Babalatchi glanced at his master. "No man can escape his fate," he
murmured piously. "When love enters a man's heart he is like a
child—without any understanding. Be merciful, Lakamba," he added,
twitching the corner of the Rajah's sarong warningly.
Lakamba snatched away the skirt of the sarong angrily. Under the dawning
comprehension of intolerable embarrassments caused by Dain's return to
Sambir he began to lose such composure as he had been, till then, able to
maintain; and now he raised his voice loudly above the whistling of the
wind and the patter of rain on the roof in the hard squall passing over
the house.
"You came here first as a trader with sweet words and great promises,
asking me to look the other way while you worked your will on the white
man there. And I did. What do you want now? When I was young I fought. Now
I am old, and want peace. It is easier for me to have you killed than to
fight the Dutch. It is better for me."
The squall had now passed, and, in the short stillness of the lull in the
storm, Lakamba repeated softly, as if to himself, "Much easier. Much
better."
Dain did not seem greatly discomposed by the Rajah's threatening words.
While Lakamba was speaking he had glanced once rapidly over his shoulder,
just to make sure that there was nobody behind him, and, tranquillised in
that respect, he had extracted a siri-box out of the folds of his
waist-cloth, and was wrapping carefully the little bit of betel-nut and a
small pinch of lime in the green leaf tendered him politely by the
watchful Babalatchi. He accepted this as a peace- offering from the silent
statesman—a kind of mute protest against his master's undiplomatic
violence, and as an omen of a possible understanding to be arrived at yet.
Otherwise Dain was not uneasy. Although recognising the justice of
Lakamba's surmise that he had come back to Sambir only for the sake of the
white man's daughter, yet he was not conscious of any childish lack of
understanding, as suggested by Babalatchi. In fact, Dain knew very well
that Lakamba was too deeply implicated in the gunpowder smuggling to care
for an investigation the Dutch authorities into that matter. When sent off
by his father, the independent Rajah of Bali, at the time when the
hostilities between Dutch and Malays threatened to spread from Sumatra
over the whole archipelago, Dain had found all the big traders deaf to his
guarded proposals, and above the temptation of the great prices he was
ready to give for gunpowder. He went to Sambir as a last and almost
hopeless resort, having heard in Macassar of the white man there, and of
the regular steamer trading from Singapore—allured also by the fact that
there was no Dutch resident on the river, which would make things easier,
no doubt. His hopes got nearly wrecked
against the stubborn loyalty of Lakamba arising from well-understood
self-interest; but at last the young man's generosity, his persuasive
enthusiasm, the prestige of his father's great name, overpowered the
prudent hesitation of the ruler of Sambir. Lakamba would have nothing to
do himself with any illegal traffic. He also objected to the Arabs being
made use of in that matter; but he suggested Almayer, saying that he was a
weak man easily persuaded, and that his friend, the English captain of the
steamer, could be made very useful—very likely even would join in the
business, smuggling the powder in the steamer without Abdulla's knowledge.
There again Dain met in Almayer with unexpected resistance; Lakamba had to
send Babalatchi over with the solemn promise that his eyes would be shut
in friendship for the white man, Dain paying for the promise and the
friendship in good silver guilders of the hated Orang Blanda. Almayer, at
last consenting, said the powder would be obtained, but Dain must trust
him with dollars to send to Singapore in payment for it. He would induce
Ford to buy and smuggle it in the steamer on board the brig. He did not
want any money for himself out of the transaction, but Dain must help him
in his great enterprise after sending off the brig. Almayer had explained
to Dain that he could not trust Lakamba alone in that matter; he would be
afraid of losing his treasure and his life through the cupidity of the
Rajah; yet the Rajah had to be told, and insisted on taking a share in
that operation, or else his eyes would remain shut no longer. To this
Almayer had to submit. Had Dain not seen Nina he would have probably
refused to engage himself and his men in the projected expedition to
Gunong Mas—the mountain of gold. As it was he intended to return with
half of his men as soon as the brig was clear of the reefs, but the
persistent chase given him by the Dutch frigate had forced him to run
south and ultimately to wreck and destroy his vessel in order to preserve
his liberty or perhaps even his life. Yes, he had come back to Sambir for
Nina, although aware that the Dutch would look for him there, but he had
also calculated his chances of safety in Lakamba's hands. For all his
ferocious talk, the merciful ruler would not kill him, for he had long ago
been impressed with the notion that Dain possessed the secret of the white
man's treasure; neither would he give him up to the Dutch, for fear of
some fatal disclosure of complicity in the treasonable trade. So Dain felt
tolerably secure as he sat meditating quietly his answer to the Rajah's
bloodthirsty speech. Yes, he would point out to him the aspect of his
position should he—Dain—fall into the hands of the Dutch and should he
speak the truth. He would have nothing more to lose then, and he would
speak the truth. And if he did return to Sambir, disturbing thereby
Lakamba's peace of mind, what then? He came to look after his property.
Did he not pour a stream of silver into Mrs. Almayer's greedy lap? He had
paid, for the girl, a price worthy of a great prince, although unworthy of
that delightfully maddening creature for whom his untamed soul longed in
an intensity of desire far more tormenting than the sharpest pain. He
wanted his happiness. He had the right to be in Sambir.
He rose, and, approaching the table, leaned both his elbows on it; Lakamba
responsively edged his seat a little closer, while Babalatchi scrambled to
his feet and thrust his inquisitive head between his master's and Dain's.
They interchanged their ideas rapidly, speaking in whispers into each
other's faces, very close now, Dain suggesting, Lakamba contradicting,
Babalatchi conciliating and anxious in his vivid apprehension of coming
difficulties. He spoke most, whispering earnestly, turning his head slowly
from side to side so as to bring his solitary eye to bear upon each of his
interlocutors in turn. Why should there be strife? said he. Let Tuan Dain,
whom he loved only less than his master, go trustfully into hiding. There
were many places for that. Bulangi's house away in the clearing was best.
Bulangi was a safe man. In the network of crooked channels no white man
could find his way. White men were strong, but very foolish. It was
undesirable to fight them, but deception was easy. They were like silly
women—they did not know the use of reason, and he was a match for any of
them—went on Babalatchi, with all the confidence of deficient experience.
Probably the Dutch would seek Almayer. Maybe they would take away their
countryman if they were suspicious of him. That would be good. After the
Dutch went away Lakamba and Dain would get the treasure without any
trouble, and there would be one person less to share it. Did he not speak
wisdom? Will Tuan Dain go to Bulangi's house till the danger is over, go
at once?
Dain accepted this suggestion of going into hiding with a certain sense of
conferring a favour upon Lakamba and the anxious statesman, but he met the
proposal of going at once with a decided no, looking Babalatchi meaningly
in the eye. The statesman sighed as a man accepting the inevitable would
do, and pointed silently towards the other bank of the river. Dain bent
his head slowly.
"Yes, I am going there," he said.
"Before the day comes?" asked Babalatchi.
"I am going there now," answered Dain, decisively. "The Orang Blanda will
not be here before to-morrow night, perhaps, and I must tell Almayer of
our arrangements."
"No, Tuan. No; say nothing," protested Babalatchi. "I will go over myself
at sunrise and let him know."
"I will see," said Dain, preparing to go.
The thunderstorm was recommencing outside, the heavy clouds hanging low
overhead now.
There was a constant rumble of distant thunder punctuated by the nearer
sharp crashes, and in the continuous play of blue lightning the woods and
the river showed fitfully, with all the elusive distinctness of detail
characteristic of such a scene. Outside the door of the Rajah's house Dain
and Babalatchi stood on the shaking verandah as if dazed and stunned by
the violence of the storm. They stood there amongst the cowering forms of
the Rajah's slaves and retainers seeking shelter from the rain, and Dain
called aloud to his boatmen, who responded with an unanimous "Ada! Tuan!"
while they looked uneasily at the river.
"This is a great flood!" shouted Babalatchi into Dain's ear. "The river is
very angry. Look! Look at the drifting logs! Can you go?"
Dain glanced doubtfully on the livid expanse of seething water bounded far
away on the other side by the narrow black line of the forests. Suddenly,
in a vivid white flash, the low point of land with the bending trees on it
and Almayer's house, leaped into view, flickered and disappeared. Dain
pushed Babalatchi aside and ran down to the water-gate followed by his
shivering boatmen.
Babalatchi backed slowly in and closed the door, then turned round and
looked silently upon Lakamba. The Rajah sat still, glaring stonily upon
the table, and Babalatchi gazed curiously at the perplexed mood of the man
he had served so many years through good and evil fortune. No doubt the
one-eyed statesman felt within his savage and much sophisticated breast
the unwonted feelings of sympathy with, and perhaps even pity for, the man
he called his master. From the safe position of a confidential adviser, he
could, in the dim vista of past years, see himself—a casual
cut-throat—finding shelter under that man's roof in the modest
rice-clearing of early beginnings. Then came a long period of unbroken
success, of wise counsels, and deep plottings resolutely carried out by
the fearless Lakamba, till the whole east coast from Poulo Laut to Tanjong
Batu listened to Babalatchi's wisdom speaking through the mouth of the
ruler of Sambir. In those long years how many dangers escaped, how many
enemies bravely faced, how many white men successfully circumvented! And
now he looked upon the result of so many years of patient toil: the
fearless Lakamba cowed by the shadow of an impending trouble. The ruler
was growing old, and Babalatchi, aware of an uneasy feeling at the pit of
his stomach, put both his hands there with a suddenly vivid and sad
perception of the fact that he himself was growing old too; that the time
of reckless daring was past for both of them, and that they had to seek
refuge in prudent cunning. They wanted peace; they were disposed to
reform; they were ready even to retrench, so as to have the wherewithal to
bribe the evil days away, if bribed away they could be. Babalatchi sighed
for the second time that night as he squatted again at his master's feet
and tendered him his betel-nut box in mute sympathy. And they sat there in
close yet silent communion of betel-nut chewers, moving their jaws slowly,
expectorating decorously into the wide-mouthed brass vessel they passed to
one another, and listening to the awful din of the battling elements
outside.
"There is a very great flood," remarked Babalatchi, sadly.
"Yes," said Lakamba. "Did Dain go?"
"He went, Tuan. He ran down to the river like a man possessed of the
Sheitan himself."
There was another long pause.
"He may get drowned," suggested Lakamba at last, with some show of
interest.
"The floating logs are many," answered Babalatchi, "but he is a good
swimmer," he added languidly.
"He ought to live," said Lakamba; "he knows where the treasure is."
Babalatchi assented with an ill-humoured grunt. His want of success in
penetrating the white man's secret as to the locality where the gold was
to be found was a sore point with the statesman of Sambir, as the only
conspicuous failure in an otherwise brilliant career.
A great peace had now succeeded the turmoil of the storm. Only the little
belated clouds, which hurried past overhead to catch up the main body
flashing silently in the distance, sent down short showers that pattered
softly with a soothing hiss over the palm-leaf roof.
Lakamba roused himself from his apathy with an appearance of having
grasped the situation at last.
"Babalatchi," he called briskly, giving him a slight kick.
"Ada Tuan! I am listening."
"If the Orang Blanda come here, Babalatchi, and take Almayer to Batavia to
punish him for smuggling gunpowder, what will he do, you think?"
"I do not know, Tuan."
"You are a fool," commented Lakamba, exultingly. "He will tell them where
the treasure is, so as to find mercy. He will."
Babalatchi looked up at his master and nodded his head with by no means a
joyful surprise. He had not thought of this; there was a new complication.
"Almayer must die," said Lakamba, decisively, "to make our secret safe. He
must die quietly, Babalatchi. You must do it."
Babalatchi assented, and rose wearily to his feet. "To-morrow?" he asked.
"Yes; before the Dutch come. He drinks much coffee," answered Lakamba,
with seeming irrelevancy.
Babalatchi stretched himself yawning, but Lakamba, in the flattering
consciousness of a knotty problem solved by his own unaided intellectual
efforts, grew suddenly very wakeful.
"Babalatchi," he said to the exhausted statesman, "fetch the box of music
the white captain gave me. I cannot sleep."
At this order a deep shade of melancholy settled upon Babalatchi's
features. He went reluctantly behind the curtain and soon reappeared
carrying in his arms a small hand-organ, which he put down on the table
with an air of deep dejection. Lakamba settled himself comfortably in his
arm-chair.
"Turn, Babalatchi, turn," he murmured, with closed eyes.
Babalatchi's hand grasped the handle with the energy of despair, and as he
turned, the deep gloom on his countenance changed into an expression of
hopeless resignation. Through the open shutter the notes of Verdi's music
floated out on the great silence over the river and forest. Lakamba
listened with closed eyes and a delighted smile; Babalatchi turned, at
times dozing off and swaying over, then catching himself up in a great
fright with a few quick turns of the handle. Nature slept in an exhausted
repose after the fierce turmoil, while under the unsteady hand of the
statesman of Sambir the Trovatore fitfully wept, wailed, and bade good-bye
to his Leonore again and again in a mournful round of tearful and endless
iteration.
The bright sunshine of the clear mistless morning, after the stormy night,
flooded the main path of the settlement leading from the low shore of the
Pantai branch of the river to the gate of Abdulla's compound. The path was
deserted this morning; it stretched its dark yellow surface, hard beaten
by the tramp of many bare feet, between the clusters of palm trees, whose
tall trunks barred it with strong black lines at irregular intervals,
while the newly risen sun threw the shadows of their leafy heads far away
over the roofs of the buildings lining the river, even over the river
itself as it flowed swiftly and silently past the deserted houses. For the
houses were deserted too. On the narrow strip of trodden grass intervening
between their open doors and the road, the morning fires smouldered
untended, sending thin fluted columns of smoke into the cool air, and
spreading the thinnest veil of mysterious blue haze over the sunlit
solitude of the settlement. Almayer, just out of his hammock, gazed
sleepily at the unwonted appearance of Sambir, wondering vaguely at the
absence of life. His own house was very quiet; he could not hear his
wife's voice, nor the sound of Nina's footsteps in the big room, opening
on the verandah, which he called his sitting-room, whenever, in the
company of white men, he wished to assert his claims to the commonplace
decencies of civilisation. Nobody ever sat there; there was nothing there
to sit upon, for Mrs. Almayer in her savage moods, when excited by the
reminiscences of the piratical period of her life, had torn off the
curtains to make sarongs for the slave-girls, and had burnt the showy
furniture piecemeal to cook the family rice. But Almayer was not thinking
of his furniture now. He was thinking of Dain's return, of Dain's
nocturnal interview with Lakamba, of its possible influence on his
long-matured plans, now nearing the period of their execution. He was also
uneasy at the non-appearance of Dain who had promised him an early visit.
"The fellow had plenty of time to cross the river," he mused, "and there
was so much to be done to-day. The settling of details for the early start
on the morrow; the launching of the boats; the thousand and one finishing
touches. For the expedition must start complete, nothing should be
forgotten, nothing should—"
The sense of the unwonted solitude grew upon him suddenly, and in the
unusual silence he caught himself longing even for the usually unwelcome
sound of his wife's voice to break the oppressive stillness which seemed,
to his frightened fancy, to portend the advent of some new misfortune.
"What has happened?" he muttered half aloud, as he shuffled in his
imperfectly adjusted slippers towards the balustrade of the verandah. "Is
everybody asleep or dead?"
The settlement was alive and very much awake. It was awake ever since the
early break of day, when Mahmat Banjer, in a fit of unheard-of energy,
arose and, taking up his hatchet, stepped over the sleeping forms of his
two wives and walked shivering to the water's edge to make sure that the
new house he was building had not floated away during the night.
The house was being built by the enterprising Mahmat on a large raft, and
he had securely moored it just inside the muddy point of land at the
junction of the two branches of the Pantai so as to be out of the way of
drifting logs that would no doubt strand on the point during the freshet.
Mahmat walked through the wet grass saying bourrouh, and cursing softly to
himself the hard necessities of active life that drove him from his warm
couch into the cold of the morning. A glance showed him that his house was
still there, and he congratulated himself on his foresight in hauling it
out of harm's way, for the increasing light showed him a confused wrack of
drift-logs, half-stranded on the muddy flat, interlocked into a shapeless
raft by their branches, tossing to and fro and grinding together in the
eddy caused by the meeting currents of the two branches of the river.
Mahmat walked down to the water's edge to examine the rattan moorings of
his house just as the sun cleared the trees of the forest on the opposite
shore. As he bent over the fastenings he glanced again carelessly at the
unquiet jumble of logs and saw there something that caused him to drop his
hatchet and stand up, shading his eyes with his hand from the rays of the
rising sun. It was something red, and the logs rolled over it, at times
closing round it, sometimes hiding it. It looked to him at first like a
strip of red cloth. The next moment Mahmat had made it out and raised a
great shout.
"Ah ya! There!" yelled Mahmat. "There's a man amongst the logs." He put
the palms of his hand to his lips and shouted, enunciating distinctly, his
face turned towards the settlement: "There's a body of a man in the river!
Come and see! A dead—stranger!"
The women of the nearest house were already outside kindling the fires and
husking the morning rice. They took up the cry shrilly, and it travelled
so from house to house, dying away in the distance. The men rushed out
excited but silent, and ran towards the muddy point where the unconscious
logs tossed and ground and bumped and rolled over the dead stranger with
the stupid persistency of inanimate things. The women followed, neglecting
their domestic duties and disregarding the possibilities of domestic
discontent, while groups of children brought up the rear, warbling
joyously, in the delight of unexpected excitement.
Almayer called aloud for his wife and daughter, but receiving no response,
stood listening intently. The murmur of the crowd reached him faintly,
bringing with it the assurance of some unusual event. He glanced at the
river just as he was going to leave the verandah and checked himself at
the sight of a small canoe crossing over from the Rajah's landing-place.
The solitary occupant (in whom Almayer soon recognised Babalatchi)
effected the crossing a little below the house and paddled up to the
Lingard jetty in the dead water under the bank. Babalatchi clambered out
slowly and went on fastening his canoe with fastidious care, as if not in
a hurry to meet Almayer, whom he saw looking at him from the verandah.
This delay gave Almayer time to notice and greatly wonder at Babalatchi's
official get-up. The statesman of Sambir was clad in a costume befitting
his high rank. A loudly checkered sarong encircled his waist, and from its
many folds peeped out the silver hilt of the kriss that saw the light only
on great festivals or during official receptions. Over the left shoulder
and across the otherwise unclad breast of the aged diplomatist glistened a
patent leather belt bearing a brass plate with the arms of Netherlands
under the inscription, "Sultan of Sambir." Babalatchi's head was covered
by a red turban, whose fringed ends falling over the left cheek and
shoulder gave to his aged face a ludicrous expression of joyous
recklessness. When the canoe was at last fastened to his satisfaction he
straightened himself up, shaking down the folds of his sarong, and moved
with long strides towards Almayer's house, swinging regularly his long
ebony staff, whose gold head ornamented with precious stones flashed in
the morning sun. Almayer waved his hand to the right towards the point of
land, to him invisible, but in full view from the jetty.
"Oh, Babalatchi! oh!" he called out; "what is the matter there? can you
see?"
Babalatchi stopped and gazed intently at the crowd on the river bank, and
after a little while the astonished Almayer saw him leave the path, gather
up his sarong in one hand, and break into a trot through the grass towards
the muddy point. Almayer, now greatly interested, ran down the steps of
the verandah. The murmur of men's voices and the shrill cries of women
reached him quite distinctly now, and as soon as he turned the corner of
his house he could see the crowd on the low promontory swaying and pushing
round some object of interest. He could indistinctly hear Babalatchi's
voice, then the crowd opened before the aged statesman and closed after
him with an excited hum, ending in a loud shout.
As Almayer approached the throng a man ran out and rushed past him towards
the settlement, unheeding his call to stop and explain the cause of this
excitement. On the very outskirts of the crowd Almayer found himself
arrested by an unyielding mass of humanity, regardless of his entreaties
for a passage, insensible to his gentle pushes as he tried to work his way
through it towards the riverside.
In the midst of his gentle and slow progress he fancied suddenly he had
heard his wife's voice in the thickest of the throng. He could not mistake
very well Mrs. Almayer's high-pitched tones, yet the words were too
indistinct for him to understand their purport. He paused in his
endeavours to make a passage for himself, intending to get some
intelligence from those around him, when a long and piercing shriek rent
the air, silencing the murmurs of the crowd and the voices of his
informants. For a moment Almayer remained as if turned into stone with
astonishment and horror, for he was certain now that he had heard his wife
wailing for the dead. He remembered Nina's unusual absence, and maddened
by his apprehensions as to her safety, he pushed blindly and violently
forward, the crowd falling back with cries of surprise and pain before his
frantic advance.
On the point of land in a little clear space lay the body of the stranger
just hauled out from amongst the logs. On one side stood Babalatchi, his
chin resting on the head of his staff and his one eye gazing steadily at
the shapeless mass of broken limbs, torn flesh, and bloodstained rags. As
Almayer burst through the ring of horrified spectators, Mrs. Almayer threw
her own head-veil over the upturned face of the drowned man, and,
squatting by it, with another mournful howl, sent a shiver through the now
silent crowd. Mahmat, dripping wet, turned to Almayer, eager to tell his
tale.
In the first moment of reaction from the anguish of his fear the sunshine
seemed to waver before Almayer's eyes, and he listened to words spoken
around him without comprehending their meaning. When, by a strong effort
of will, he regained the possession of his senses, Mahmat was saying—
"That is the way, Tuan. His sarong was caught in the broken branch, and he
hung with his head under water. When I saw what it was I did not want it
here. I wanted it to get clear and drift away. Why should we bury a
stranger in the midst of our houses for his ghost to frighten our women
and children? Have we not enough ghosts about this place?"
A murmur of approval interrupted him here. Mahmat looked reproachfully at
Babalatchi.
"But the Tuan Babalatchi ordered me to drag the body ashore"—he went on
looking round at his audience, but addressing himself only to
Almayer—"and I dragged him by the feet; in through the mud I have dragged
him, although my heart longed to see him float down the river to strand
perchance on Bulangi's clearing—may his father's grave be defiled!"
There was subdued laughter at this, for the enmity of Mahmat and Bulangi
was a matter of common notoriety and of undying interest to the
inhabitants of Sambir. In the midst of that mirth Mrs. Almayer wailed
suddenly again.
"Allah! What ails the woman!" exclaimed Mahmat, angrily. "Here, I have
touched this carcass which came from nobody knows where, and have most
likely defiled myself before eating rice. By orders of Tuan Babalatchi I
did this thing to please the white man. Are you pleased, O Tuan Almayer?
And what will be my recompense? Tuan Babalatchi said a recompense there
will be, and from you. Now consider. I have been defiled, and if not
defiled I may be under the spell. Look at his anklets! Who ever heard of a
corpse appearing during the night amongst the logs with gold anklets on
its legs? There is witchcraft there. However," added Mahmat, after a
reflective pause, "I will have the anklet if there is permission, for I
have a charm against the ghosts and am not afraid. God is great!"
A fresh outburst of noisy grief from Mrs. Almayer checked the flow of
Mahmat's eloquence. Almayer, bewildered, looked in turn at his wife, at
Mahmat, at Babalatchi, and at last arrested his fascinated gaze on the
body lying on the mud with covered face in a grotesquely unnatural
contortion of mangled and broken limbs, one twisted and lacerated arm,
with white bones protruding in many places through the torn flesh,
stretched out; the hand with outspread fingers nearly touching his foot.
"Do you know who this is?" he asked of Babalatchi, in a low voice.
Babalatchi, staring straight before him, hardly moved his lips, while Mrs.
Almayer's persistent lamentations drowned the whisper of his murmured
reply intended only for Almayer's ear.
"It was fate. Look at your feet, white man. I can see a ring on those torn
fingers which I know well."
Saying this, Babalatchi stepped carelessly forward, putting his foot as if
accidentally on the hand of the corpse and pressing it into the soft mud.
He swung his staff menacingly towards the crowd, which fell back a little.
"Go away," he said sternly, "and send your women to their cooking fires,
which they ought not to have left to run after a dead stranger. This is
men's work here. I take him now in the name of the Rajah. Let no man
remain here but Tuan Almayer's slaves. Now go!"
The crowd reluctantly began to disperse. The women went first, dragging
away the children that hung back with all their weight on the maternal
hand. The men strolled slowly after them in ever forming and changing
groups that gradually dissolved as they neared the settlement and every
man regained his own house with steps quickened by the hungry anticipation
of the morning rice. Only on the slight elevation where the land sloped
down towards the muddy point a few men, either friends or enemies of
Mahmat, remained gazing curiously for some time longer at the small group
standing around the body on the river bank.
"I do not understand what you mean, Babalatchi," said Almayer. "What is
the ring you are talking about? Whoever he is, you have trodden the poor
fellow's hand right into the mud. Uncover his face," he went on,
addressing Mrs. Almayer, who, squatting by the head of the corpse, rocked
herself to and fro, shaking from time to time her dishevelled grey locks,
and muttering mournfully.
"Hai!' exclaimed Mahmat, who had lingered close by. "Look, Tuan; the logs
came together so," and here he pressed the palms of his hands together,
"and his head must have been between them, and now there is no face for
you to look at. There are his flesh and his bones, the nose, and the lips,
and maybe his eyes, but nobody could tell the one from the other. It was
written the day he was born that no man could look at him in death and be
able to say, 'This is my friend's face.'"
"Silence, Mahmat; enough!" said Babalatchi, "and take thy eyes off his
anklet, thou eater of pigs flesh. Tuan Almayer," he went on, lowering his
voice, "have you seen Dain this morning?"
Almayer opened his eyes wide and looked alarmed. "No," he said quickly;
"haven't you seen him? Is he not with the Rajah? I am waiting; why does he
not come?"
Babalatchi nodded his head sadly.
"He is come, Tuan. He left last night when the storm was great and the
river spoke angrily. The night was very black, but he had within him a
light that showed the way to your house as smooth as a narrow backwater,
and the many logs no bigger than wisps of dried grass. Therefore he went;
and now he lies here." And Babalatchi nodded his head towards the body.
"How can you tell?" said Almayer, excitedly, pushing his wife aside. He
snatched the cover off and looked at the formless mass of flesh, hair, and
drying mud, where the face of the drowned man should have been. "Nobody
can tell," he added, turning away with a shudder.
Babalatchi was on his knees wiping the mud from the stiffened fingers of
the outstretched hand. He rose to his feet and flashed before Almayer's
eyes a gold ring set with a large green stone.
"You know this well," he said. "This never left Dain's hand. I had to tear
the flesh now to get it off. Do you believe now?"
Almayer raised his hands to his head and let them fall listlessly by his
side in the utter abandonment of despair. Babalatchi, looking at him
curiously, was astonished to see him smile. A strange fancy had taken
possession of Almayer's brain, distracted by this new misfortune. It
seemed to him that for many years he had been falling into a deep
precipice. Day after day, month after month, year after year, he had been
falling, falling, falling; it was a smooth, round, black thing, and the
black walls had been rushing upwards with wearisome rapidity. A great
rush, the noise of which he fancied he could hear yet; and now, with an
awful shock, he had reached the bottom, and behold! he was alive and
whole, and Dain was dead with all his bones broken. It struck him as
funny. A dead Malay; he had seen many dead Malays without any emotion; and
now he felt inclined to weep, but it was over the fate of a white man he
knew; a man that fell over a deep precipice and did not die. He seemed
somehow to himself to be standing on one side, a little way off, looking
at a certain Almayer who was in great trouble. Poor, poor fellow! Why
doesn't he cut his throat? He wished to encourage him; he was very anxious
to see him lying dead over that other corpse. Why does he not die and end
this suffering? He groaned aloud unconsciously and started with affright
at the sound of his own voice. Was he going mad? Terrified by the thought
he turned away and ran towards his house repeating to himself, I am not
going mad; of course not, no, no, no! He tried to keep a firm hold of the
idea.
Not mad, not mad. He stumbled as he ran blindly up the steps repeating
fast and ever faster those words wherein seemed to lie his salvation. He
saw Nina standing there, and wished to say something to her, but could not
remember what, in his extreme anxiety not to forget that he was not going
mad, which he still kept repeating mentally as he ran round the table,
till he stumbled against one of the arm-chairs and dropped into it
exhausted. He sat staring wildly at Nina, still assuring himself mentally
of his own sanity and wondering why the girl shrank from him in open-eyed
alarm. What was the matter with her? This was foolish. He struck the table
violently with his clenched fist and shouted hoarsely, "Give me some gin!
Run!" Then, while Nina ran off, he remained in the chair, very still and
quiet, astonished at the noise he had made.
Nina returned with a tumbler half filled with gin, and found her father
staring absently before him. Almayer felt very tired now, as if he had
come from a long journey. He felt as if he had walked miles and miles that
morning and now wanted to rest very much. He took the tumbler with a
shaking hand, and as he drank his teeth chattered against the glass which
he drained and set down heavily on the table. He turned his eyes slowly
towards Nina standing beside him, and said steadily—
"Now all is over, Nina. He is dead, and I may as well burn all my boats."
He felt very proud of being able to speak so calmly. Decidedly he was not
going mad. This certitude was very comforting, and he went on talking
about the finding of the body, listening to his own voice complacently.
Nina stood quietly, her hand resting lightly on her father's shoulder, her
face unmoved, but every line of her features, the attitude of her whole
body expressing the most keen and anxious attention.
"And so Dain is dead," she said coldly, when her father ceased speaking.
Almayer's elaborately calm demeanour gave way in a moment to an outburst
of violent indignation.
"You stand there as if you were only half alive, and talk to me," he
exclaimed angrily, "as if it was a matter of no importance. Yes, he is
dead! Do you understand? Dead! What do you care? You never cared; you saw
me struggle, and work, and strive, unmoved; and my suffering you could
never see. No, never. You have no heart, and you have no mind, or you
would have understood that it was for you, for your happiness I was
working. I wanted to be rich; I wanted to get away from here. I wanted to
see white men bowing low before the power of your beauty and your wealth.
Old as I am I wished to seek a strange land, a civilisation to which I am
a stranger, so as to find a new life in the contemplation of your high
fortunes, of your triumphs, of your happiness. For that I bore patiently
the burden of work, of disappointment, of humiliation amongst these
savages here, and I had it all nearly in my grasp."
He looked at his daughter's attentive face and jumped to his feet
upsetting the chair.
"Do you hear? I had it all there; so; within reach of my hand."
He paused, trying to keep down his rising anger, and failed.
"Have you no feeling?" he went on. "Have you lived without hope?" Nina's
silence exasperated him; his voice rose, although he tried to master his
feelings.
"Are you content to live in this misery and die in this wretched hole? Say
something, Nina; have you no sympathy? Have you no word of comfort for me?
I that loved you so."
He waited for a while for an answer, and receiving none shook his fist in
his daughter's face.
"I believe you are an idiot!" he yelled.
He looked round for the chair, picked it up and sat down stiffly. His
anger was dead within him, and he felt ashamed of his outburst, yet
relieved to think that now he had laid clear before his daughter the inner
meaning of his life. He thought so in perfect good faith, deceived by the
emotional estimate of his motives, unable to see the crookedness of his
ways, the unreality of his aims, the futility of his regrets. And now his
heart was filled only with a great tenderness and love for his daughter.
He wanted to see her miserable, and to share with her his despair; but he
wanted it only as all weak natures long for a companionship in misfortune
with beings innocent of its cause. If she suffered herself she would
understand and pity him; but now she would not, or could not, find one
word of comfort or love for him in his dire extremity. The sense of his
absolute loneliness came home to his heart with a force that made him
shudder. He swayed and fell forward with his face on the table, his arms
stretched straight out, extended and rigid. Nina made a quick movement
towards her father and stood looking at the grey head, on the broad
shoulders shaken convulsively by the violence of feelings that found
relief at last in sobs and tears.
Nina sighed deeply and moved away from the table. Her features lost the
appearance of stony indifference that had exasperated her father into his
outburst of anger and sorrow. The expression of her face, now unseen by
her father, underwent a rapid change. She had listened to Almayer's appeal
for sympathy, for one word of comfort, apparently indifferent, yet with
her breast torn by conflicting impulses raised unexpectedly by events she
had not foreseen, or at least did not expect to happen so soon. With her
heart deeply moved by the sight of Almayer's misery, knowing it in her
power to end it with a word, longing to bring peace to that troubled
heart, she heard with terror the voice of her overpowering love commanding
her to be silent. And she submitted after a short and fierce struggle of
her old self against the new principle of her life. She wrapped herself up
in absolute silence, the only safeguard against some fatal admission. She
could not trust herself to make a sign, to murmur a word for fear of
saying too much; and the very violence of the feelings that stirred the
innermost recesses of her soul seemed to turn her person into a stone. The
dilated nostrils and the flashing eyes were the only signs of the storm
raging within, and those signs of his daughter's emotion Almayer did not
see, for his sight was dimmed by self-pity, by anger, and by despair.
Had Almayer looked at his daughter as she leant over the front rail of the
verandah he could have seen the expression of indifference give way to a
look of pain, and that again pass away, leaving the glorious beauty of her
face marred by deep-drawn lines of watchful anxiety. The long grass in the
neglected courtyard stood very straight before her eyes in the noonday
heat. From the river-bank there were voices and a shuffle of bare feet
approaching the house; Babalatchi could be heard giving directions to
Almayer's men, and Mrs. Almayer's subdued wailing became audible as the
small procession bearing the body of the drowned man and headed by that
sorrowful matron turned the corner of the house. Babalatchi had taken the
broken anklet off the man's leg, and now held it in his hand as he moved
by the side of the bearers, while Mahmat lingered behind timidly, in the
hopes of the promised reward.
"Lay him there," said Babalatchi to Almayer's men, pointing to a pile of
drying planks in front of the verandah. "Lay him there. He was a Kaffir
and the son of a dog, and he was the white man's friend. He drank the
white man's strong water," he added, with affected horror. "That I have
seen myself."
The men stretched out the broken limbs on two planks they had laid level,
while Mrs. Almayer covered the body with a piece of white cotton cloth,
and after whispering for some time with Babalatchi departed to her
domestic duties. Almayer's men, after laying down their burden, dispersed
themselves in quest of shady spots wherein to idle the day away.
Babalatchi was left alone by the corpse that laid rigid under the white
cloth in the bright sunshine.
Nina came down the steps and joined Babalatchi, who put his hand to his
forehead, and squatted down with great deference.
"You have a bangle there," said Nina, looking down on Babalatchi's
upturned face and into his solitary eye.
"I have, Mem Putih," returned the polite statesman. Then turning towards
Mahmat he beckoned him closer, calling out, "Come here!"
Mahmat approached with some hesitation. He avoided looking at Nina, but
fixed his eyes on Babalatchi.
"Now, listen," said Babalatchi, sharply. "The ring and the anklet you have
seen, and you know they belonged to Dain the trader, and to no other. Dain
returned last night in a canoe. He spoke with the Rajah, and in the middle
of the night left to cross over to the white man's house. There was a
great flood, and this morning you found him in the river."
"By his feet I dragged him out," muttered Mahmat under his breath. "Tuan
Babalatchi, there will be a recompense!" he exclaimed aloud.
Babalatchi held up the gold bangle before Mahmat's eyes. "What I have told
you, Mahmat, is for all ears. What I give you now is for your eyes only.
Take."
Mahmat took the bangle eagerly and hid it in the folds of his waist-cloth.
"Am I a fool to show this thing in a house with three women in it?" he
growled. "But I shall tell them about Dain the trader, and there will be
talk enough."
He turned and went away, increasing his pace as soon as he was outside
Almayer's compound.
Babalatchi looked after him till he disappeared behind the bushes. "Have I
done well, Mem Putih?" he asked, humbly addressing Nina.
"You have," answered Nina. "The ring you may keep yourself."
Babalatchi touched his lips and forehead, and scrambled to his feet. He
looked at Nina, as if expecting her to say something more, but Nina turned
towards the house and went up the steps, motioning him away with her hand.
Babalatchi picked up his staff and prepared to go. It was very warm, and
he did not care for the long pull to the Rajah's house. Yet he must go and
tell the Rajah—tell of the event; of the change in his plans; of all his
suspicions. He walked to the jetty and began casting off the rattan
painter of his canoe.
The broad expanse of the lower reach, with its shimmering surface dotted
by the black specks of the fishing canoes, lay before his eyes. The
fishermen seemed to be racing. Babalatchi paused in his work, and looked
on with sudden interest. The man in the foremost canoe, now within hail of
the first houses of Sambir, laid in his paddle and stood up shouting—
"The boats! the boats! The man-of-war's boats are coming! They are here!"
In a moment the settlement was again alive with people rushing to the
riverside. The men began to unfasten their boats, the women stood in
groups looking towards the bend down the river. Above the trees lining the
reach a slight puff of smoke appeared like a black stain on the brilliant
blue of the cloudless sky.
Babalatchi stood perplexed, the painter in his hand. He looked down the
reach, then up towards Almayer's house, and back again at the river as if
undecided what to do. At last he made the canoe fast again hastily, and
ran towards the house and up the steps of the verandah.
"Tuan! Tuan!" he called, eagerly. "The boats are coming. The man-of-war's
boats. You had better get ready. The officers will come here, I know."
Almayer lifted his head slowly from the table, and looked at him stupidly.
"Mem Putih!" exclaimed Babalatchi to Nina, "look at him. He does not hear.
You must take care," he added meaningly.
Nina nodded to him with an uncertain smile, and was going to speak, when a
sharp report from the gun mounted in the bow of the steam launch that was
just then coming into view arrested the words on her parted lips. The
smile died out, and was replaced by the old look of anxious attention.
From the hills far away the echo came back like a long-drawn and mournful
sigh, as if the land had sent it in answer to the voice of its masters.
The news as to the identity of the body lying now in Almayer's compound
spread rapidly over the settlement. During the forenoon most of the
inhabitants remained in the long street discussing the mysterious return
and the unexpected death of the man who had become known to them as the
trader. His arrival during the north-east monsoon, his long sojourn in
their midst, his sudden departure with his brig, and, above all, the
mysterious appearance of the body, said to be his, amongst the logs, were
subjects to wonder at and to talk over and over again with undiminished
interest. Mahmat moved from house to house and from group to group, always
ready to repeat his tale: how he saw the body caught by the sarong in a
forked log; how Mrs. Almayer coming, one of the first, at his cries,
recognised it, even before he had it hauled on shore; how Babalatchi
ordered him to bring it out of the water. "By the feet I dragged him in,
and there was no head," exclaimed Mahmat, "and how could the white man's
wife know who it was? She was a witch, it was well known. And did you see
how the white man himself ran away at the sight of the body? Like a deer
he ran!" And here Mahmat imitated Almayer's long strides, to the great joy
of the beholders. And for all his trouble he had nothing. The ring with
the green stone Tuan Babalatchi kept. "Nothing! Nothing!" He spat down at
his feet in sign of disgust, and left that group to seek further on a
fresh audience.
The news spreading to the furthermost parts of the settlement found out
Abdulla in the cool recess of his godown, where he sat overlooking his
Arab clerks and the men loading and unloading the up-country canoes.
Reshid, who was busy on the jetty, was summoned into his uncle's presence
and found him, as usual, very calm and even cheerful, but very much
surprised. The rumour of the capture or destruction of Dain's brig had
reached the Arab's ears three days before from the sea-fishermen and
through the dwellers on the lower reaches of the river. It had been passed
up-stream from neighbour to neighbour till Bulangi, whose clearing was
nearest to the settlement, had brought that news himself to Abdulla whose
favour he courted. But rumour also spoke of a fight and of Dain's death on
board his own vessel. And now all the settlement talked of Dain's visit to
the Rajah and of his death when crossing the river in the dark to see
Almayer.
They could not understand this. Reshid thought that it was very strange.
He felt uneasy and doubtful. But Abdulla, after the first shock of
surprise, with the old age's dislike for solving riddles, showed a
becoming resignation. He remarked that the man was dead now at all events,
and consequently no more dangerous. Where was the use to wonder at the
decrees of Fate, especially if they were propitious to the True Believers?
And with a pious ejaculation to Allah the Merciful, the Compassionate,
Abdulla seemed to regard the incident as closed for the present.
Not so Reshid. He lingered by his uncle, pulling thoughtfully his neatly
trimmed beard.
"There are many lies," he murmured. "He has been dead once before, and
came to life to die again now. The Dutch will be here before many days and
clamour for the man. Shall I not believe my eyes sooner than the tongues
of women and idle men?"
"They say that the body is being taken to Almayer's compound," said
Abdulla. "If you want to go there you must go before the Dutch arrive
here. Go late. It should not be said that we have been seen inside that
man's enclosure lately."
Reshid assented to the truth of this last remark and left his uncle's
side. He leaned against the lintel of the big doorway and looked idly
across the courtyard through the open gate on to the main road of the
settlement. It lay empty, straight, and yellow under the flood of light.
In the hot noontide the smooth trunks of palm trees, the outlines of the
houses, and away there at the other end of the road the roof of Almayer's
house visible over the bushes on the dark background of forest, seemed to
quiver in the heat radiating from the steaming earth. Swarms of yellow
butterflies rose, and settled to rise again in short flights before
Reshid's half-closed eyes. From under his feet arose the dull hum of
insects in the long grass of the courtyard. He looked on sleepily.
From one of the side paths amongst the houses a woman stepped out on the
road, a slight girlish figure walking under the shade of a large tray
balanced on its head. The consciousness of something moving stirred
Reshid's half-sleeping senses into a comparative wakefulness. He
recognised Taminah, Bulangi's slave-girl, with her tray of cakes for
sale—an apparition of daily recurrence and of no importance whatever. She
was going towards Almayer's house. She could be made useful. He roused
himself up and ran towards the gate calling out, "Taminah O!" The girl
stopped, hesitated, and came back slowly.
Reshid waited, signing to her impatiently to come nearer.
When near Reshid Taminah stood with downcast eyes. Reshid looked at her a
while before he asked—
"Are you going to Almayer's house? They say in the settlement that Dain
the trader, he that was found drowned this morning, is lying in the white
man's campong."
"I have heard this talk," whispered Taminah; "and this morning by the
riverside I saw the body. Where it is now I do not know."
"So you have seen it?" asked Reshid, eagerly. "Is it Dain? You have seen
him many times. You would know him."
The girl's lips quivered and she remained silent for a while, breathing
quickly.
"I have seen him, not a long time ago," she said at last. "The talk is
true; he is dead. What do you want from me, Tuan? I must go."
Just then the report of the gun fired on board the steam launch was heard,
interrupting Reshid's reply. Leaving the girl he ran to the house, and met
in the courtyard Abdulla coming towards the gate.
"The Orang Blanda are come," said Reshid, "and now we shall have our
reward."
Abdulla shook his head doubtfully. "The white men's rewards are long in
coming," he said. "White men are quick in anger and slow in gratitude. We
shall see."
He stood at the gate stroking his grey beard and listening to the distant
cries of greeting at the other end of the settlement. As Taminah was
turning to go he called her back
"Listen, girl," he said: "there will be many white men in Almayer's house.
You shall be there selling your cakes to the men of the sea. What you see
and what you hear you may tell me. Come here before the sun sets and I
will give you a blue handkerchief with red spots. Now go, and forget not
to return."
He gave her a push with the end of his long staff as she was going away
and made her stumble.
"This slave is very slow," he remarked to his nephew, looking after the
girl with great disfavour.
Taminah walked on, her tray on the head, her eyes fixed on the ground.
From the open doors of the houses were heard, as she passed, friendly
calls inviting her within for business purposes, but she never heeded
them, neglecting her sales in the preoccupation of intense thinking. Since
the very early morning she had heard much, she had also seen much that
filled her heart with a joy mingled with great suffering and fear. Before
the dawn, before she left Bulangi's house to paddle up to Sambir she had
heard voices outside the house when all in it but herself were asleep. And
now, with her knowledge of the words spoken in the darkness, she held in
her hand a life and carried in her breast a great sorrow. Yet from her
springy step, erect figure, and face veiled over by the everyday look of
apathetic indifference, nobody could have guessed of the double load she
carried under the visible burden of the tray piled up high with cakes
manufactured by the thrifty hands of Bulangi's wives. In that supple
figure straight as an arrow, so graceful and free in its walk, behind
those soft eyes that spoke of nothing but of unconscious resignation,
there slept all feelings and all passions, all hopes and all fears, the
curse of life and the consolation of death. And she knew nothing of it
all. She lived like the tall palms amongst whom she was passing now,
seeking the light, desiring the sunshine, fearing the storm, unconscious
of either. The slave had no hope, and knew of no change. She knew of no
other sky, no other water, no other forest, no other world, no other life.
She had no wish, no hope, no love, no fear except of a blow, and no vivid
feeling but that of occasional hunger, which was seldom, for Bulangi was
rich and rice was plentiful in the solitary house in his clearing. The
absence of pain and hunger was her happiness, and when she felt unhappy
she was simply tired, more than usual, after the day's labour. Then in the
hot nights of the south-west monsoon she slept dreamlessly under the
bright stars on the platform built outside the house and over the river.
Inside they slept too: Bulangi by the door; his wives further in; the
children with their mothers. She could hear their breathing; Bulangi's
sleepy voice; the sharp cry of a child soon hushed with tender words. And
she closed her eyes to the murmur of the water below her, to the whisper
of the warm wind above, ignorant of the never-ceasing life of that
tropical nature that spoke to her in vain with the thousand faint voices
of the near forest, with the breath of tepid wind; in the heavy scents
that lingered around her head; in the white wraiths of morning mist that
hung over her in the solemn hush of all creation before the dawn.
Such had been her existence before the coming of the brig with the
strangers. She remembered well that time; the uproar in the settlement,
the never-ending wonder, the days and nights of talk and excitement. She
remembered her own timidity with the strange men, till the brig moored to
the bank became in a manner part of the settlement, and the fear wore off
in the familiarity of constant intercourse. The call on board then became
part of her daily round. She walked hesitatingly up the slanting planks of
the gangway amidst the encouraging shouts and more or less decent jokes of
the men idling over the bulwarks. There she sold her wares to those men
that spoke so loud and carried themselves so free. There was a throng, a
constant coming and going; calls interchanged, orders given and executed
with shouts; the rattle of blocks, the flinging about of coils of rope.
She sat out of the way under the shade of the awning, with her tray before
her, the veil drawn well over her face, feeling shy amongst so many men.
She smiled at all buyers, but spoke to none, letting their jests pass with
stolid unconcern. She heard many tales told around her of far-off
countries, of strange customs, of events stranger still. Those men were
brave; but the most fearless of them spoke of their chief with fear. Often
the man they called their master passed before her, walking erect and
indifferent, in the pride of youth, in the flash of rich dress, with a
tinkle of gold ornaments, while everybody stood aside watching anxiously
for a movement of his lips, ready to do his bidding. Then all her life
seemed to rush into her eyes, and from under her veil she gazed at him,
charmed, yet fearful to attract attention. One day he noticed her and
asked, "Who is that girl?" "A slave, Tuan! A girl that sells cakes," a
dozen voices replied together. She rose in terror to run on shore, when he
called her back; and as she stood trembling with head hung down before
him, he spoke kind words, lifting her chin with his hand and looking into
her eyes with a smile. "Do not be afraid," he said. He never spoke to her
any more. Somebody called out from the river bank; he turned away and
forgot her existence. Taminah saw Almayer standing on the shore with Nina
on his arm. She heard Nina's voice calling out gaily, and saw Dain's face
brighten with joy as he leaped on shore. She hated the sound of that voice
ever since.
After that day she left off visiting Almayer's compound, and passed the
noon hours under the shade of the brig awning. She watched for his coming
with heart beating quicker and quicker, as he approached, into a wild
tumult of newly-aroused feelings of joy and hope and fear that died away
with Dain's retreating figure, leaving her tired out, as if after a
struggle, sitting still for a long time in dreamy languor. Then she
paddled home slowly in the afternoon, often letting her canoe float with
the lazy stream in the quiet backwater of the river. The paddle hung idle
in the water as she sat in the stern, one hand supporting her chin, her
eyes wide open, listening intently to the whispering of her heart that
seemed to swell at last into a song of extreme sweetness. Listening to
that song she husked the rice at home; it dulled her ears to the shrill
bickerings of Bulangi's wives, to the sound of angry reproaches addressed
to herself. And when the sun was near its setting she walked to the
bathing-place and heard it as she stood on the tender grass of the low
bank, her robe at her feet, and looked at the reflection of her figure on
the glass-like surface of the creek. Listening to it she walked slowly
back, her wet hair hanging over her shoulders; laying down to rest under
the bright stars, she closed her eyes to the murmur of the water below, of
the warm wind above; to the voice of nature speaking through the faint
noises of the great forest, and to the song of her own heart.
She heard, but did not understand, and drank in the dreamy joy of her new
existence without troubling about its meaning or its end, till the full
consciousness of life came to her through pain and anger. And she suffered
horribly the first time she saw Nina's long canoe drift silently past the
sleeping house of Bulangi, bearing the two lovers into the white mist of
the great river. Her jealousy and rage culminated into a paroxysm of
physical pain that left her lying panting on the river bank, in the dumb
agony of a wounded animal. But she went on moving patiently in the
enchanted circle of slavery, going through her task day after day with all
the pathos of the grief she could not express, even to herself, locked
within her breast. She shrank from Nina as she would have shrunk from the
sharp blade of a knife cutting into her flesh, but she kept on visiting
the brig to feed her dumb, ignorant soul on her own despair. She saw Dain
many times. He never spoke, he never looked. Could his eyes see only one
woman's image? Could his ears hear only one woman's voice? He never
noticed her; not once.
And then he went away. She saw him and Nina for the last time on that
morning when Babalatchi, while visiting his fish baskets, had his
suspicions of the white man's daughter's love affair with Dain confirmed
beyond the shadow of doubt. Dain disappeared, and Taminah's heart, where
lay useless and barren the seeds of all love and of all hate, the
possibilities of all passions and of all sacrifices, forgot its joys and
its sufferings when deprived of the help of the senses. Her half-formed,
savage mind, the slave of her body—as her body was the slave of another's
will—forgot the faint and vague image of the ideal that had found its
beginning in the physical promptings of her savage nature. She dropped
back into the torpor of her former life and found consolation—even a
certain kind of happiness—in the thought that now Nina and Dain were
separated, probably for ever. He would forget. This thought soothed the
last pangs of dying jealousy that had nothing now to feed upon, and
Taminah found peace. It was like the dreary tranquillity of a desert,
where there is peace only because there is no life.
And now he had returned. She had recognised his voice calling aloud in the
night for Bulangi. She had crept out after her master to listen closer to
the intoxicating sound. Dain was there, in a boat, talking to Bulangi.
Taminah, listening with arrested breath, heard another voice. The
maddening joy, that only a second before she thought herself incapable of
containing within her fast-beating heart, died out, and left her shivering
in the old anguish of physical pain that she had suffered once before at
the sight of Dain and Nina. Nina spoke now, ordering and entreating in
turns, and Bulangi was refusing, expostulating, at last consenting. He
went in to take a paddle from the heap lying behind the door. Outside the
murmur of two voices went on, and she caught a word here and there. She
understood that he was fleeing from white men, that he was seeking a
hiding-place, that he was in some danger. But she heard also words which
woke the rage of jealousy that had been asleep for so many days in her
bosom. Crouching low on the mud in the black darkness amongst the piles,
she heard the whisper in the boat that made light of toil, of privation,
of danger, of life itself, if in exchange there could be but a short
moment of close embrace, a look from the eyes, the feel of light breath,
the touch of soft lips. So spoke Dain as he sat in the canoe holding
Nina's hands while waiting for Bulangi's return; and Taminah, supporting
herself by the slimy pile, felt as if a heavy weight was crushing her
down, down into the black oily water at her feet. She wanted to cry out;
to rush at them and tear their vague shadows apart; to throw Nina into the
smooth water, cling to her close, hold her to the bottom where that man
could not find her. She could not cry, she could not move. Then footsteps
were heard on the bamboo platform above her head; she saw Bulangi get into
his smallest canoe and take the lead, the other boat following, paddled by
Dain and Nina. With a slight splash of the paddles dipped stealthily into
the water, their indistinct forms passed before her aching eyes and
vanished in the darkness of the creek.
She remained there in the cold and wet, powerless to move, breathing
painfully under the crushing weight that the mysterious hand of Fate had
laid so suddenly upon her slender shoulders, and shivering, she felt
within a burning fire, that seemed to feed upon her very life. When the
breaking day had spread a pale golden ribbon over the black outline of the
forests, she took up her tray and departed towards the settlement, going
about her task purely from the force of habit. As she approached Sambir
she could see the excitement and she heard with momentary surprise of the
finding of Dain's body. It was not true, of course. She knew it well. She
regretted that he was not dead. She should have liked Dain to be dead, so
as to be parted from that woman—from all women. She felt a strong desire
to see Nina, but without any clear object. She hated her, and feared her
and she felt an irresistible impulse pushing her towards Almayer's house
to see the white woman's face, to look close at those eyes, to hear again
that voice, for the sound of which Dain was ready to risk his liberty, his
life even. She had seen her many times; she had heard her voice daily for
many months past. What was there in her? What was there in that being to
make a man speak as Dain had spoken, to make him blind to all other faces,
deaf to all other voices?
She left the crowd by the riverside, and wandered aimlessly among the
empty houses, resisting the impulse that pushed her towards Almayer's
campong to seek there in Nina's eyes the secret of her own misery. The sun
mounting higher, shortened the shadows and poured down upon her a flood of
light and of stifling heat as she passed on from shadow to light, from
light to shadow, amongst the houses, the bushes, the tall trees, in her
unconscious flight from the pain in her own heart. In the extremity of her
distress she could find no words to pray for relief, she knew of no heaven
to send her prayer to, and she wandered on with tired feet in the dumb
surprise and terror at the injustice of the suffering inflicted upon her
without cause and without redress.
The short talk with Reshid, the proposal of Abdulla steadied her a little
and turned her thoughts into another channel. Dain was in some danger. He
was hiding from white men. So much she had overheard last night. They all
thought him dead. She knew he was alive, and she knew of his hiding-place.
What did the Arabs want to know about the white men? The white men want
with Dain? Did they wish to kill him? She could tell them all—no, she
would say nothing, and in the night she would go to him and sell him his
life for a word, for a smile, for a gesture even, and be his slave in
far-off countries, away from Nina. But there were dangers. The one-eyed
Babalatchi who knew everything; the white man's wife—she was a witch.
Perhaps they would tell. And then there was Nina. She must hurry on and
see.
In her impatience she left the path and ran towards Almayer's dwelling
through the undergrowth between the palm trees. She came out at the back
of the house, where a narrow ditch, full of stagnant water that overflowed
from the river, separated Almayer's campong from the rest of the
settlement. The thick bushes growing on the bank were hiding from her
sight the large courtyard with its cooking shed. Above them rose several
thin columns of smoke, and from behind the sound of strange voices
informed Taminah that the Men of the Sea belonging to the warship had
already landed and were camped between the ditch and the house. To the
left one of Almayer's slave-girls came down to the ditch and bent over the
shiny water, washing a kettle. To the right the tops of the banana
plantation, visible above the bushes, swayed and shook under the touch of
invisible hands gathering the fruit. On the calm water several canoes
moored to a heavy stake were crowded together, nearly bridging the ditch
just at the place where Taminah stood. The voices in the courtyard rose at
times into an outburst of calls, replies, and laughter, and then died away
into a silence that soon was broken again by a fresh clamour. Now and
again the thin blue smoke rushed out thicker and blacker, and drove in
odorous masses over the creek, wrapping her for a moment in a suffocating
veil; then, as the fresh wood caught well alight, the smoke vanished in
the bright sunlight, and only the scent of aromatic wood drifted afar, to
leeward of the crackling fires.
Taminah rested her tray on a stump of a tree, and remained standing with
her eyes turned towards Almayer's house, whose roof and part of a
whitewashed wall were visible over the bushes. The slave-girl finished her
work, and after looking for a while curiously at Taminah, pushed her way
through the dense thicket back to the courtyard. Round Taminah there was
now a complete solitude. She threw herself down on the ground, and hid her
face in her hands. Now when so close she had no courage to see Nina. At
every burst of louder voices from the courtyard she shivered in the fear
of hearing Nina's voice. She came to the resolution of waiting where she
was till dark, and then going straight to Dain's hiding-place. From where
she was she could watch the movements of white men, of Nina, of all Dain's
friends, and of all his enemies. Both were hateful alike to her, for both
would take him away beyond her reach. She hid herself in the long grass to
wait anxiously for the sunset that seemed so slow to come.
On the other side of the ditch, behind the bush, by the clear fires, the
seamen of the frigate had encamped on the hospitable invitation of
Almayer. Almayer, roused out of his apathy by the prayers and importunity
of Nina, had managed to get down in time to the jetty so as to receive the
officers at their landing. The lieutenant in command accepted his
invitation to his house with the remark that in any case their business
was with Almayer—and perhaps not very pleasant, he added. Almayer hardly
heard him. He shook hands with them absently and led the way towards the
house. He was scarcely conscious of the polite words of welcome he greeted
the strangers with, and afterwards repeated several times over again in
his efforts to appear at ease. The agitation of their host did not escape
the officer's eyes, and the chief confided to his subordinate, in a low
voice, his doubts as to Almayer's sobriety. The young sub-lieutenant
laughed and expressed in a whisper the hope that the white man was not
intoxicated enough to neglect the offer of some refreshments. "He does not
seem very dangerous," he added, as they followed Almayer up the steps of
the verandah.
"No, he seems more of a fool than a knave; I have heard of him," returned
the senior.
They sat around the table. Almayer with shaking hands made gin cocktails,
offered them all round, and drank himself, with every gulp feeling
stronger, steadier, and better able to face all the difficulties of his
position. Ignorant of the fate of the brig he did not suspect the real
object of the officer's visit. He had a general notion that something must
have leaked out about the gunpowder trade, but apprehended nothing beyond
some temporary inconveniences. After emptying his glass he began to chat
easily, lying back in his chair with one of his legs thrown negligently
over the arm. The lieutenant astride on his chair, a glowing cheroot in
the corner of his mouth, listened with a sly smile from behind the thick
volumes of smoke that escaped from his compressed lips. The young
sub-lieutenant, leaning with both elbows on the table, his head between
his hands, looked on sleepily in the torpor induced by fatigue and the
gin. Almayer talked on—
"It is a great pleasure to see white faces here. I have lived here many
years in great solitude. The Malays, you understand, are not company for a
white man; moreover they are not friendly; they do not understand our
ways. Great rascals they are. I believe I am the only white man on the
east coast that is a settled resident. We get visitors from Macassar or
Singapore sometimes—traders, agents, or explorers, but they are rare.
There was a scientific explorer here a year or more ago. He lived in my
house: drank from morning to night. He lived joyously for a few months,
and when the liquor he brought with him was gone he returned to Batavia
with a report on the mineral wealth of the interior. Ha, ha, ha! Good, is
it not?"
He ceased abruptly and looked at his guests with a meaningless stare.
While they laughed he was reciting to himself the old story: "Dain dead,
all my plans destroyed. This is the end of all hope and of all things."
His heart sank within him. He felt a kind of deadly sickness.
"Very good. Capital!" exclaimed both officers. Almayer came out of his
despondency with another burst of talk.
"Eh! what about the dinner? You have got a cook with you. That's all
right. There is a cooking shed in the other courtyard. I can give you a
goose. Look at my geese—the only geese on the east coast—perhaps on the
whole island. Is that your cook? Very good. Here, Ali, show this Chinaman
the cooking place and tell Mem Almayer to let him have room there. My
wife, gentlemen, does not come out; my daughter may. Meantime have some
more drink. It is a hot day."
The lieutenant took the cigar out of his mouth, looked at the ash
critically, shook it off and turned towards Almayer.
"We have a rather unpleasant business with you," he said.
"I am sorry," returned Almayer. "It can be nothing very serious, surely."
"If you think an attempt to blow up forty men at least, not a serious
matter you will not find many people of your opinion," retorted the
officer sharply.
"Blow up! What? I know nothing about it" exclaimed Almayer. "Who did that,
or tried to do it?"
"A man with whom you had some dealings," answered the lieutenant. "He
passed here under the name of Dain Maroola. You sold him the gunpowder he
had in that brig we captured."
"How did you hear about the brig?" asked Almayer. "I know nothing about
the powder he may have had."
"An Arab trader of this place has sent the information about your goings
on here to Batavia, a couple of months ago," said the officer. "We were
waiting for the brig outside, but he slipped past us at the mouth of the
river, and we had to chase the fellow to the southward. When he sighted us
he ran inside the reefs and put the brig ashore. The crew escaped in boats
before we could take possession. As our boats neared the craft it blew up
with a tremendous explosion; one of the boats being too near got swamped.
Two men drowned—that is the result of your speculation, Mr. Almayer. Now
we want this Dain. We have good grounds to suppose he is hiding in Sambir.
Do you know
where he is? You had better put yourself right with the authorities as
much as possible by being perfectly frank with me. Where is this Dain?"
Almayer got up and walked towards the balustrade of the verandah. He
seemed not to be thinking of the officer's question. He looked at the body
laying straight and rigid under its white cover on which the sun,
declining amongst the clouds to the westward, threw a pale tinge of red.
The lieutenant waited for the answer, taking quick pulls at his
half-extinguished cigar. Behind them Ali moved noiselessly laying the
table, ranging solemnly the ill-assorted and shabby crockery, the tin
spoons, the forks with broken prongs, and the knives with saw-like blades
and loose handles. He had almost forgotten how to prepare the table for
white men. He felt aggrieved; Mem Nina would not help him. He stepped back
to look at his work admiringly, feeling very proud. This must be right;
and if the master afterwards is angry and swears, then so much the worse
for Mem Nina. Why did she not help? He left the verandah to fetch the
dinner.
"Well, Mr. Almayer, will you answer my question as frankly as it is put to
you?" asked the lieutenant, after a long silence.
Almayer turned round and looked at his interlocutor steadily. "If you
catch this Dain what will you do with him?" he asked.
The officer's face flushed. "This is not an answer," he said, annoyed.
"And what will you do with me?" went on Almayer, not heeding the
interruption.
"Are you inclined to bargain?" growled the other. "It would be bad policy,
I assure you. At present I have no orders about your person, but we
expected your assistance in catching this Malay."
"Ah!" interrupted Almayer, "just so: you can do nothing without me, and I,
knowing the man well, am to help you in finding him."
"This is exactly what we expect," assented the officer. "You have broken
the law, Mr. Almayer, and you ought to make amends."
"And save myself?"
"Well, in a sense yes. Your head is not in any danger," said the
lieutenant, with a short laugh.
"Very well," said Almayer, with decision, "I shall deliver the man up to
you."
Both officers rose to their feet quickly, and looked for their side-arms
which they had unbuckled. Almayer laughed harshly.
"Steady, gentlemen!" he exclaimed. "In my own time and in my own way.
After dinner, gentlemen, you shall have him."
"This is preposterous," urged the lieutenant. "Mr. Almayer, this is no
joking matter. The man is a criminal. He deserves to hang. While we dine
he may escape; the rumour of our arrival—"
Almayer walked towards the table. "I give you my word of honour,
gentlemen, that he shall not escape; I have him safe enough."
"The arrest should be effected before dark," remarked the young sub.
"I shall hold you responsible for any failure. We are ready, but can do
nothing just now without you," added the senior, with evident annoyance.
Almayer made a gesture of assent. "On my word of honour," he repeated
vaguely. "And now let us dine," he added briskly.
Nina came through the doorway and stood for a moment holding the curtain
aside for Ali and the old Malay woman bearing the dishes; then she moved
towards the three men by the table.
"Allow me," said Almayer, pompously. "This is my daughter. Nina, these
gentlemen, officers of the frigate outside, have done me the honour to
accept my hospitality."
Nina answered the low bows of the two officers by a slow inclination of
the head and took her place at the table opposite her father. All sat
down. The coxswain of the steam launch came up carrying some bottles of
wine.
"You will allow me to have this put upon the table?" said the lieutenant
to Almayer.
"What! Wine! You are very kind. Certainly, I have none myself. Times are
very hard."
The last words of his reply were spoken by Almayer in a faltering voice.
The thought that Dain was dead recurred to him vividly again, and he felt
as if an invisible hand was gripping his throat. He reached for the gin
bottle while they were uncorking the wine and swallowed a big gulp. The
lieutenant, who was speaking to Nina, gave him a quick glance. The young
sub began to recover from the astonishment and confusion caused by Nina's
unexpected appearance and great beauty. "She was very beautiful and
imposing," he reflected, "but after all a half-caste girl." This thought
caused him to pluck up heart and look at Nina sideways. Nina, with
composed face, was answering in a low, even voice the elder officer's
polite questions as to the country and her mode of life. Almayer pushed
his plate away and drank his guest's wine in gloomy silence.
"Can I believe what you tell me? It is like a tale for men that listen
only half awake by the camp fire, and it seems to have run off a woman's
tongue."
"Who is there here for me to deceive, O Rajah?" answered Babalatchi.
"Without you I am nothing. All I have told you I believe to be true. I
have been safe for many years in the hollow of your hand. This is no time
to harbour suspicions. The danger is very great. We should advise and act
at once, before the sun sets."
"Right. Right," muttered Lakamba, pensively.
They had been sitting for the last hour together in the audience chamber
of the Rajah's house, for Babalatchi, as soon as he had witnessed the
landing of the Dutch officers, had crossed the river to report to his
master the events of the morning, and to confer with him upon the line of
conduct to pursue in the face of altered circumstances. They were both
puzzled and frightened by the unexpected turn the events had taken. The
Rajah, sitting crosslegged on his chair, looked fixedly at the floor;
Babalatchi was squatting close by in an attitude of deep dejection.
"And where did you say he is hiding now?" asked Lakamba, breaking at last
the silence full of gloomy forebodings in which they both had been lost
for a long while.
"In Bulangi's clearing—the furthest one, away from the house. They went
there that very night. The white man's daughter took him there. She told
me so herself, speaking to me openly, for she is half white and has no
decency. She said she was waiting for him while he was here; then, after a
long time, he came out of the darkness and fell at her feet exhausted. He
lay like one dead, but she brought him back to life in her arms, and made
him breathe again with her own breath. That is what she said, speaking to
my face, as I am speaking now to you, Rajah. She is like a white woman and
knows no shame."
He paused, deeply shocked. Lakamba nodded his head. "Well, and then?" he
asked.
"They called the old woman," went on Babalatchi, "and he told them
all—about the brig, and how he tried to kill many men. He knew the Orang
Blanda were very near, although he had said nothing to us about that; he
knew his great danger. He thought he had killed many, but there were only
two dead, as I have heard from the men of the sea that came in the
warship's boats."
"And the other man, he that was found in the river?" interrupted Lakamba.
"That was one of his boatmen. When his canoe was overturned by the logs
those two swam together, but the other man must have been hurt. Dain swam,
holding him up. He left him in the bushes when he went up to the house.
When they all came down his heart had ceased to beat; then the old woman
spoke; Dain thought it was good. He took off his anklet and broke it,
twisting it round the man's foot. His ring he put on that slave's hand. He
took off his sarong and clothed that thing that wanted no clothes, the two
women holding it up meanwhile, their intent being to deceive all eyes and
to mislead the minds in the settlement, so that they could swear to the
thing that was not, and that there could be no treachery when the
white-men came. Then Dain and the white woman departed to call up Bulangi
and find a hiding-place. The old woman remained by the body."
"Hai!" exclaimed Lakamba. "She has wisdom."
"Yes, she has a Devil of her own to whisper counsel in her ear," assented
Babalatchi. "She dragged the body with great toil to the point where many
logs were stranded. All these things were done in the darkness after the
storm had passed away. Then she waited. At the first sign of daylight she
battered the face of the dead with a heavy stone, and she pushed him
amongst the logs. She remained near, watching. At sunrise Mahmat Banjer
came and found him. They all believed; I myself was deceived, but not for
long. The white man believed, and, grieving, fled to his house. When we
were alone I, having doubts, spoke to the woman, and she, fearing my anger
and your might, told me all, asking for help in saving Dain."
"He must not fall into the hands of the Orang Blanda," said Lakamba; "but
let him die, if the thing can be done quietly."
"It cannot, Tuan! Remember there is that woman who, being half white, is
ungovernable, and would raise a great outcry. Also the officers are here.
They are angry enough already. Dain must escape; he must go. We must help
him now for our own safety."
"Are the officers very angry?" inquired Lakamba, with interest.
"They are. The principal chief used strong words when speaking to me—to
me when I salaamed in your name. I do not think," added Babalatchi, after
a short pause and looking very worried—"I do not think I saw a white
chief so angry before. He said we were careless or even worse. He told me
he would speak to the Rajah, and that I was of no account."
"Speak to the Rajah!" repeated Lakamba, thoughtfully. "Listen, Babalatchi:
I am sick, and shall withdraw; you cross over and tell the white men."
"Yes," said Babalatchi, "I am going over at once; and as to Dain?"
"You get him away as you can best. This is a great trouble in my heart,"
sighed Lakamba.
Babalatchi got up, and, going close to his master, spoke earnestly.
"There is one of our praus at the southern mouth of the river. The Dutch
warship is to the northward watching the main entrance. I shall send Dain
off to-night in a canoe, by the hidden channels, on board the prau. His
father is a great prince, and shall hear of our generosity. Let the prau
take him to Ampanam. Your glory shall be great, and your reward in
powerful friendship. Almayer will no doubt deliver the dead body as Dain's
to the officers, and the foolish white men shall say, 'This is very good;
let there be peace.' And the trouble shall be removed from your heart,
Rajah."
"True! true!" said Lakamba.
"And, this being accomplished by me who am your slave, you shall reward
with a generous hand. That I know! The white man is grieving for the lost
treasure, in the manner of white men who thirst after dollars. Now, when
all other things are in order, we shall perhaps obtain the treasure from
the white man. Dain must escape, and Almayer must live."
"Now go, Babalatchi, go!" said Lakamba, getting off his chair. "I am very
sick, and want medicine. Tell the white chief so."
But Babalatchi was not to be got rid of in this summary manner. He knew
that his master, after the manner of the great, liked to shift the burden
of toil and danger on to his servants' shoulders, but in the difficult
straits in which they were now the Rajah must play his part. He may be
very sick for the white men, for all the world if he liked, as long as he
would take upon himself the execution of part at least of Babalatchi's
carefully thought-of plan. Babalatchi wanted a big canoe manned by twelve
men to be sent out after dark towards Bulangi's clearing. Dain may have to
be overpowered. A man in love cannot be expected to see clearly the path
of safety if it leads him away from the object of his affections, argued
Babalatchi, and in that case they would have to use force in order to make
him go. Would the Rajah see that trusty men manned the canoe? The thing
must be done secretly. Perhaps the Rajah would come himself, so as to
bring all the weight of his authority to bear upon Dain if he should prove
obstinate and refuse to leave his hiding-place. The Rajah would not commit
himself to a definite promise, and anxiously pressed Babalatchi to go,
being afraid of the white men paying him an unexpected visit. The aged
statesman reluctantly took his leave and went into the courtyard.
Before going down to his boat Babalatchi stopped for a while in the big
open space where the thick-leaved trees put black patches of shadow which
seemed to float on a flood of smooth, intense light that rolled up to the
houses and down to the stockade and over the river, where it broke and
sparkled in thousands of glittering wavelets, like a band woven of azure
and gold edged with the brilliant green of the forests guarding both banks
of the Pantai. In the perfect calm before the coming of the afternoon
breeze the irregularly jagged line of tree-tops stood unchanging, as if
traced by an unsteady hand on the clear blue of the hot sky. In the space
sheltered by the high palisades there lingered the smell of decaying
blossoms from the surrounding forest, a taint of drying fish; with now and
then a whiff of acrid smoke from the cooking fires when it eddied down
from under the leafy boughs and clung lazily about the burnt-up grass.
As Babalatchi looked up at the flagstaff over-topping a group of low trees
in the middle of the courtyard, the tricolour flag of the Netherlands
stirred slightly for the first time since it had been hoisted that morning
on the arrival of the man-of-war boats. With a faint rustle of trees the
breeze came down in light puffs, playing capriciously for a time with this
emblem of Lakamba's power, that was also the mark of his servitude; then
the breeze freshened in a sharp gust of wind, and the flag flew out
straight and steady above the trees. A dark shadow ran along the river,
rolling over and covering up the sparkle of declining sunlight. A big
white cloud sailed slowly across the darkening sky, and hung to the
westward as if waiting for the sun to join it there. Men and things shook
off the torpor of the hot afternoon and stirred into life under the first
breath of the sea breeze.
Babalatchi hurried down to the water-gate; yet before he passed through it
he paused to look round the courtyard, with its light and shade, with its
cheery fires, with the groups of Lakamba's soldiers and retainers
scattered about. His own house stood amongst the other buildings in that
enclosure, and the statesman of Sambir asked himself with a sinking heart
when and how would it be given him to return to that house. He had to deal
with a man more dangerous than any wild beast of his experience: a proud
man, a man wilful after the manner of princes, a man in love. And he was
going forth to speak to that man words of cold and worldly wisdom. Could
anything be more appalling? What if that man should take umbrage at some
fancied slight to his honour or disregard of his affections and suddenly
"amok"? The wise adviser would be the first victim, no doubt, and death
would be his reward. And underlying the horror of this situation there was
the danger of those meddlesome fools, the white men. A vision of
comfortless exile in far-off Madura rose up before Babalatchi. Wouldn't
that be worse than death itself? And there was that half-white woman with
threatening eyes. How could he tell what an incomprehensible creature of
that sort would or would not do? She knew so much that she made the
killing of Dain an impossibility. That much was certain. And yet the
sharp, rough-edged kriss is a good and discreet friend, thought
Babalatchi, as he examined his own lovingly, and put it back in the
sheath, with a sigh of regret, before unfastening his canoe. As he cast
off the painter, pushed out into the stream, and took up his paddle, he
realised vividly how unsatisfactory it was to have women mixed up in state
affairs. Young women, of course. For Mrs. Almayer's mature wisdom, and for
the easy aptitude in intrigue that comes with years to the feminine mind,
he felt the most sincere respect.
He paddled leisurely, letting the canoe drift down as he crossed towards
the point. The sun was high yet, and nothing pressed. His work would
commence only with the coming of darkness. Avoiding the Lingard jetty, he
rounded the point, and paddled up the creek at the back of Almayer's
house. There were many canoes lying there, their noses all drawn together,
fastened all to the same stake. Babalatchi pushed his little craft in
amongst them and stepped on shore. On the other side of the ditch
something moved in the grass.
"Who's that hiding?" hailed Babalatchi. "Come out and speak to me."
Nobody answered. Babalatchi crossed over, passing from boat to boat, and
poked his staff viciously in the suspicious place. Taminah jumped up with
a cry.
"What are you doing here?" he asked, surprised. "I have nearly stepped on
your tray. Am I a Dyak that you should hide at my sight?"
"I was weary, and—I slept," whispered Taminah, confusedly.
"You slept! You have not sold anything to-day, and you will be beaten when
you return home," said Babalatchi.
Taminah stood before him abashed and silent. Babalatchi looked her over
carefully with great satisfaction. Decidedly he would offer fifty dollars
more to that thief Bulangi. The girl pleased him.
"Now you go home. It is late," he said sharply. "Tell Bulangi that I shall
be near his house before the night is half over, and that I want him to
make all things ready for a long journey. You understand? A long journey
to the southward. Tell him that before sunset, and do not forget my
words."
Taminah made a gesture of assent, and watched Babalatchi recross the ditch
and disappear through the bushes bordering Almayer's compound. She moved a
little further off the creek and sank in the grass again, lying down on
her face, shivering in dry-eyed misery.
Babalatchi walked straight towards the cooking-shed looking for Mrs.
Almayer. The courtyard was in a great uproar. A strange Chinaman had
possession of the kitchen fire and was noisily demanding another saucepan.
He hurled objurgations, in the Canton dialect and bad Malay, against the
group of slave-girls standing a little way off, half frightened, half
amused, at his violence. From the camping fires round which the seamen of
the frigate were sitting came words of encouragement, mingled with
laughter and jeering. In the midst of this noise and confusion Babalatchi
met Ali, an empty dish in his hand.
"Where are the white men?" asked Babalatchi.
"They are eating in the front verandah," answered Ali. "Do not stop me,
Tuan. I am giving the white men their food and am busy."
"Where's Mem Almayer?"
"Inside in the passage. She is listening to the talk."
Ali grinned and passed on; Babalatchi ascended the plankway to the rear
verandah, and beckoning out Mrs. Almayer, engaged her in earnest
conversation. Through the long passage, closed at the further end by the
red curtain, they could hear from time to time Almayer's voice mingling in
conversation with an abrupt loudness that made Mrs. Almayer look
significantly at Babalatchi.
"Listen," she said. "He has drunk much."
"He has," whispered Babalatchi. "He will sleep heavily to-night."
Mrs. Almayer looked doubtful.
"Sometimes the devil of strong gin makes him keep awake, and he walks up
and down the verandah all night, cursing; then we stand afar off,"
explained Mrs. Almayer, with the fuller knowledge born of twenty odd years
of married life.
"But then he does not hear, nor understand, and his hand, of course, has
no strength. We do not want him to hear to-night."
"No," assented Mrs. Almayer, energetically, but in a cautiously subdued
voice. "If he hears he will kill."
Babalatchi looked incredulous.
"Hai Tuan, you may believe me. Have I not lived many years with that man?
Have I not seen death in that man's eyes more than once when I was younger
and he guessed at many things. Had he been a man of my own people I would
not have seen such a look twice; but he—"
With a contemptuous gesture she seemed to fling unutterable scorn on
Almayer's weak-minded aversion to sudden bloodshed.
"If he has the wish but not the strength, then what do we fear?" asked
Babalatchi, after a short silence during which they both listened to
Almayer's loud talk till it subsided into the murmur of general
conversation. "What do we fear?" repeated Babalatchi again.
"To keep the daughter whom he loves he would strike into your heart and
mine without hesitation," said Mrs. Almayer. "When the girl is gone he
will be like the devil unchained. Then you and I had better beware."
"I am an old man and fear not death," answered Babalatchi, with a
mendacious assumption of indifference. "But what will you do?"
"I am an old woman, and wish to live," retorted Mrs. Almayer. "She is my
daughter also. I shall seek safety at the feet of our Rajah, speaking in
the name of the past when we both were young, and he—"
Babalatchi raised his hand.
"Enough. You shall be protected," he said soothingly.
Again the sound of Almayer's voice was heard, and again interrupting their
talk, they listened to the confused but loud utterance coming in bursts of
unequal strength, with unexpected pauses and noisy repetitions that made
some words and sentences fall clear and distinct on their ears out of the
meaningless jumble of excited shoutings emphasised by the thumping of
Almayer's fist upon the table. On the short intervals of silence, the high
complaining note of tumblers, standing close together and vibrating to the
shock, lingered, growing fainter, till it leapt up again into tumultuous
ringing, when a new idea started a new rush of words and brought down the
heavy hand again. At last the quarrelsome shouting ceased, and the thin
plaint of disturbed glass died away into reluctant quietude.
Babalatchi and Mrs. Almayer had listened curiously, their bodies bent and
their ears turned towards the passage. At every louder shout they nodded
at each other with a ridiculous affectation of scandalised propriety, and
they remained in the same attitude for some time after the noise had
ceased.
"This is the devil of gin," whispered Mrs. Almayer. "Yes; he talks like
that sometimes when there is nobody to hear him."
"What does he say?" inquired Babalatchi, eagerly. "You ought to
understand."
"I have forgotten their talk. A little I understood. He spoke without any
respect of the white ruler in Batavia, and of protection, and said he had
been wronged; he said that several times. More I did not understand.
Listen! Again he speaks!"
"Tse! tse! tse!" clicked Babalatchi, trying to appear shocked, but with a
joyous twinkle of his solitary eye. "There will be great trouble between
those white men. I will go round now and see. You tell your daughter that
there is a sudden and a long journey before her, with much glory and
splendour at the end. And tell her that Dain must go, or he must die, and
that he will not go alone."
"No, he will not go alone," slowly repeated Mrs. Almayer, with a
thoughtful air, as she crept into the passage after seeing Babalatchi
disappear round the corner of the house.
The statesman of Sambir, under the impulse of vivid curiosity, made his
way quickly to the front of the house, but once there he moved slowly and
cautiously as he crept step by step up the stairs of the verandah. On the
highest step he sat down quietly, his feet on the steps below, ready for
flight should his presence prove unwelcome. He felt pretty safe so. The
table stood nearly endways to him, and he saw Almayer's back; at Nina he
looked full face, and had a side view of both officers; but of the four
persons sitting at the table only Nina and the younger officer noticed his
noiseless arrival. The momentary dropping of Nina's eyelids acknowledged
Babalatchi's presence; she then spoke at once to the young sub, who turned
towards her with attentive alacrity, but her gaze was fastened steadily on
her father's face while Almayer was speaking uproariously.
" . . . disloyalty and unscrupulousness! What have you ever done to make
me loyal? You have no grip on this country. I had to take care of myself,
and when I asked for protection I was met with threats and contempt, and
had Arab slander thrown in my face. I! a white man!"
"Don't be violent, Almayer," remonstrated the lieutenant; "I have heard
all this already."
"Then why do you talk to me about scruples? I wanted money, and I gave
powder in exchange. How could I know that some of your wretched men were
going to be blown up? Scruples! Pah!"
He groped unsteadily amongst the bottles, trying one after another,
grumbling to himself the while.
"No more wine," he muttered discontentedly.
"You have had enough, Almayer," said the lieutenant, as he lighted a
cigar. "Is it not time to deliver to us your prisoner? I take it you have
that Dain Maroola stowed away safely somewhere. Still we had better get
that business over, and then we shall have more drink. Come! don't look at
me like this."
Almayer was staring with stony eyes, his trembling fingers fumbling about
his throat.
"Gold," he said with difficulty. "Hem! A hand on the windpipe, you know.
Sure you will excuse. I wanted to say—a little gold for a little powder.
What's that?"
"I know, I know," said the lieutenant soothingly.
"No! You don't know. Not one of you knows!" shouted Almayer. "The
government is a fool, I tell you. Heaps of gold. I am the man that knows;
I and another one. But he won't speak. He is—"
He checked himself with a feeble smile, and, making an unsuccessful
attempt to pat the officer on the shoulder, knocked over a couple of empty
bottles.
"Personally you are a fine fellow," he said very distinctly, in a
patronising manner. His head nodded drowsily as he sat muttering to
himself.
The two officers looked at each other helplessly.
"This won't do," said the lieutenant, addressing his junior. "Have the men
mustered in the compound here. I must get some sense out of him. Hi!
Almayer! Wake up, man. Redeem your word. You gave your word. You gave your
word of honour, you know."
Almayer shook off the officer's hand with impatience, but his ill-humour
vanished at once, and he looked up, putting his forefinger to the side of
his nose.
"You are very young; there is time for all things," he said, with an air
of great sagacity.
The lieutenant turned towards Nina, who, leaning back in her chair,
watched her father steadily.
"Really I am very much distressed by all this for your sake," he
exclaimed. "I do not know;" he went on, speaking with some embarrassment,
"whether I have any right to ask you anything, unless, perhaps, to
withdraw from this painful scene, but I feel that I must—for your
father's good—suggest that you should—I mean if you have any influence
over him you ought to exert it now to make him keep the promise he gave me
before he—before he got into this state."
He observed with discouragement that she seemed not to take any notice of
what he said sitting still with half-closed eyes.
"I trust—" he began again.
"What is the promise you speak of?" abruptly asked Nina, leaving her seat
and moving towards her father.
"Nothing that is not just and proper. He promised to deliver to us a man
who in time of profound peace took the lives of innocent men to escape the
punishment he deserved for breaking the law. He planned his mischief on a
large scale. It is not his fault if it failed, partially. Of course you
have heard of Dain Maroola. Your father secured him, I understand. We know
he escaped up this river. Perhaps you—"
"And he killed white men!" interrupted Nina.
"I regret to say they were white. Yes, two white men lost their lives
through that scoundrel's freak."
"Two only!" exclaimed Nina.
The officer looked at her in amazement.
"Why! why! You- " he stammered, confused.
"There might have been more," interrupted Nina. "And when you get
this—this scoundrel will you go?"
The lieutenant, still speechless, bowed his assent.
"Then I would get him for you if I had to seek him in a burning fire," she
burst out with intense energy. "I hate the sight of your white faces. I
hate the sound of your gentle voices. That is the way you speak to women,
dropping sweet words before any pretty face. I have heard your voices
before. I hoped to live here without seeing any other white face but
this," she added in a gentler tone, touching lightly her father's cheek.
Almayer ceased his mumbling and opened his eyes. He caught hold of his
daughter's hand and pressed it to his face, while Nina with the other hand
smoothed his rumpled grey hair, looking defiantly over her father's head
at the officer, who had now regained his composure and returned her look
with a cool, steady stare. Below, in front of the verandah, they could
hear the tramp of seamen mustering there according to orders. The
sub-lieutenant came up the steps, while Babalatchi stood up uneasily and,
with finger on lip, tried to catch Nina's eye.
"You are a good girl," whispered Almayer, absently, dropping his
daughter's hand.
"Father! father!" she cried, bending over him with passionate entreaty.
"See those two men looking at us. Send them away. I cannot bear it any
more. Send them away. Do what they want and let them go."
She caught sight of Babalatchi and ceased speaking suddenly, but her foot
tapped the floor with rapid beats in a paroxysm of nervous restlessness.
The two officers stood close together looking on curiously.
"What has happened? What is the matter?" whispered the younger man.
"Don't know," answered the other, under his breath. "One is furious, and
the other is drunk. Not so drunk, either. Queer, this. Look!"
Almayer had risen, holding on to his daughter's arm. He hesitated a
moment, then he let go his hold and lurched half-way across the verandah.
There he pulled himself together, and stood very straight, breathing hard
and glaring round angrily.
"Are the men ready?" asked the lieutenant.
"All ready, sir."
"Now, Mr. Almayer, lead the way," said the lieutenant
Almayer rested his eyes on him as if he saw him for the first time.
"Two men," he said thickly. The effort of speaking seemed to interfere
with his equilibrium. He took a quick step to save himself from a fall,
and remained swaying backwards and forwards. "Two men," he began again,
speaking with difficulty. "Two white men—men in uniform—honourable men.
I want to say—men of honour. Are you?"
"Come! None of that," said the officer impatiently. "Let us have that
friend of yours."
"What do you think I am?" asked Almayer, fiercely.
"You are drunk, but not so drunk as not to know what you are doing. Enough
of this tomfoolery," said the officer sternly, "or I will have you put
under arrest in your own house."
"Arrest!" laughed Almayer, discordantly. "Ha! ha! ha! Arrest! Why, I have
been trying to get out of this infernal place for twenty years, and I
can't. You hear, man! I can't, and never shall! Never!"
He ended his words with a sob, and walked unsteadily down the stairs. When
in the courtyard the lieutenant approached him, and took him by the arm.
The sub-lieutenant and Babalatchi followed close.
"That's better, Almayer," said the officer encouragingly. "Where are you
going to? There are only planks there. Here," he went on, shaking him
slightly, "do we want the boats?"
"No," answered Almayer, viciously. "You want a grave."
"What? Wild again! Try to talk sense."
"Grave!" roared Almayer, struggling to get himself free. "A hole in the
ground. Don't you understand? You must be drunk. Let me go! Let go, I tell
you!"
He tore away from the officer's grasp, and reeled towards the planks where
the body lay under its white cover; then he turned round quickly, and
faced the semicircle of interested faces. The sun was sinking rapidly,
throwing long shadows of house and trees over the courtyard, but the light
lingered yet on the river, where the logs went drifting past in midstream,
looking very distinct and black in the pale red glow. The trunks of the
trees in the forest on the east bank were lost in gloom while their
highest branches swayed gently in the departing sunlight. The air felt
heavy and cold in the breeze, expiring in slight puffs that came over the
water.
Almayer shivered as he made an effort to speak, and again with an
uncertain gesture he seemed to free his throat from the grip of an
invisible hand. His bloodshot eyes wandered aimlessly from face to face.
"There!" he said at last. "Are you all there? He is a dangerous man."
He dragged at the cover with hasty violence, and the body rolled stiffly
off the planks and fell at his feet in rigid helplessness.
"Cold, perfectly cold," said Almayer, looking round with a mirthless
smile. "Sorry can do no better. And you can't hang him, either. As you
observe, gentlemen," he added gravely, "there is no head, and hardly any
neck."
The last ray of light was snatched away from the tree-tops, the river grew
suddenly dark, and in the great stillness the murmur of the flowing water
seemed to fill the vast expanse of grey shadow that descended upon the
land.
"This is Dain," went on Almayer to the silent group that surrounded him.
"And I have kept my word. First one hope, then another, and this is my
last. Nothing is left now. You think there is one dead man here? Mistake,
I 'sure you. I am much more dead. Why don't you hang me?" he suggested
suddenly, in a friendly tone, addressing the lieutenant. "I assure, assure
you it would be a mat—matter of form altog—altogether."
These last words he muttered to himself, and walked zigzaging towards his
house. "Get out!" he thundered at Ali, who was approaching timidly with
offers of assistance. From afar, scared groups of men and women watched
his devious progress. He dragged himself up the stairs by the banister,
and managed to reach a chair into which he fell heavily. He sat for awhile
panting with exertion and anger, and looking round vaguely for Nina; then
making a threatening gesture towards the compound, where he had heard
Babalatchi's voice, he overturned the table with his foot in a great crash
of smashed crockery. He muttered yet menacingly to himself, then his head
fell on his breast, his eyes closed, and with a deep sigh he fell asleep.
That night—for the first time in its history—the peaceful and
flourishing settlement of Sambir saw the lights shining about "Almayer's
Folly." These were the lanterns of the boats hung up by the seamen under
the verandah where the two officers were holding a court of inquiry into
the truth of the story related to them by Babalatchi. Babalatchi had
regained all his importance. He was eloquent and persuasive, calling
Heaven and Earth to witness the truth of his statements. There were also
other witnesses. Mahmat Banjer and a good many others underwent a close
examination that dragged its weary length far into the evening. A
messenger was sent for Abdulla, who excused himself from coming on the
score of his venerable age, but sent Reshid. Mahmat had to produce the
bangle, and saw with rage and mortification the lieutenant put it in his
pocket, as one of the proofs of Dain's death, to be sent in with the
official report of the mission. Babalatchi's ring was also impounded for
the same purpose, but the experienced statesman was resigned to that loss
from the very beginning. He did not mind as long as he was sure, that the
white men believed. He put that question to himself earnestly as he left,
one of the last, when the proceedings came to a close. He was not certain.
Still, if they believed only for a night, he would put Dain beyond their
reach and feel safe himself. He walked away fast, looking from time to
time over his shoulder in the fear of being followed, but he saw and heard
nothing.
"Ten o'clock," said the lieutenant, looking at his watch and yawning. "I
shall hear some of the captain's complimentary remarks when we get back.
Miserable business, this."
"Do you think all this is true?" asked the younger man.
"True! It is just possible. But if it isn't true what can we do? If we had
a dozen boats we could patrol the creeks; and that wouldn't be much good.
That drunken madman was right; we haven't enough hold on this coast. They
do what they like. Are our hammocks slung?"
"Yes, I told the coxswain. Strange couple over there," said the sub, with
a wave of his hand towards Almayer's house.
"Hem! Queer, certainly. What have you been telling her? I was attending to
the father most of the time."
"I assure you I have been perfectly civil," protested the other warmly.
"All right. Don't get excited. She objects to civility, then, from what I
understand. I thought you might have been tender. You know we are on
service."
"Well, of course. Never forget that. Coldly civil. That's all."
They both laughed a little, and not feeling sleepy began to pace the
verandah side by side. The moon rose stealthily above the trees, and
suddenly changed the river into a stream of scintillating silver. The
forest came out of the black void and stood sombre and pensive over the
sparkling water. The breeze died away into a breathless calm.
Seamanlike, the two officers tramped measuredly up and down without
exchanging a word. The loose planks rattled rhythmically under their steps
with obstrusive dry sound in the perfect silence of the night. As they
were wheeling round again the younger man stood attentive.
"Did you hear that?" he asked.
"No!" said the other. "Hear what?"
"I thought I heard a cry. Ever so faint. Seemed a woman's voice. In that
other house. Ah! Again! Hear it?"
"No," said the lieutenant, after listening awhile. "You young fellows
always hear women's voices. If you are going to dream you had better get
into your hammock. Good-night."
The moon mounted higher, and the warm shadows grew smaller and crept away
as if hiding before the cold and cruel light.
"It has set at last," said Nina to her mother pointing towards the hills
behind which the sun had sunk. "Listen, mother, I am going now to
Bulangi's creek, and if I should never return—"
She interrupted herself, and something like doubt dimmed for a moment the
fire of suppressed exaltation that had glowed in her eyes and had
illuminated the serene impassiveness of her features with a ray of eager
life during all that long day of excitement— the day of joy and anxiety,
of hope and terror, of vague grief and indistinct delight. While the sun
shone with that dazzling light in which her love was born and grew till it
possessed her whole being, she was kept firm in her unwavering resolve by
the mysterious whisperings of desire which filled her heart with impatient
longing for the darkness that would mean the end of danger and strife, the
beginning of happiness, the fulfilling of love, the completeness of life.
It had set at last! The short tropical twilight went out before she could
draw the long breath of relief; and now the sudden darkness seemed to be
full of menacing voices calling upon her to rush headlong into the
unknown; to be true to her own impulses, to give herself up to the passion
she had evoked and shared. He was waiting! In the solitude of the secluded
clearing, in the vast silence of the forest he was waiting alone, a
fugitive in fear of his life. Indifferent to his danger he was waiting for
her. It was for her only that he had come; and now as the time approached
when he should have his reward, she asked herself with dismay what meant
that chilling doubt of her own will and of her own desire? With an effort
she shook off the fear of the passing weakness. He should have his reward.
Her woman's love and her woman's honour overcame the faltering distrust of
that unknown future waiting for her in the darkness of the river.
"No, you will not return," muttered Mrs. Almayer, prophetically.
"Without you he will not go, and if he remains here—" She waved her hand
towards the lights of "Almayer's Folly," and the unfinished sentence died
out in a threatening murmur.
The two women had met behind the house, and now were walking slowly
together towards the creek where all the canoes were moored. Arrived at
the fringe of bushes they stopped by a common impulse, and Mrs. Almayer,
laying her hand on her daughter's arm, tried in vain to look close into
the girl's averted face. When she attempted to speak her first words were
lost in a stifled sob that sounded strangely coming from that woman who,
of all human passions, seemed to know only those of anger and hate.
"You are going away to be a great Ranee," she said at last, in a voice
that was steady enough now, "and if you be wise you shall have much power
that will endure many days, and even last into your old age. What have I
been? A slave all my life, and I have cooked rice for a man who had no
courage and no wisdom. Hai! I! even I, was given in gift by a chief and a
warrior to a man that was neither. Hai! Hai!"
She wailed to herself softly, lamenting the lost possibilities of murder
and mischief that could have fallen to her lot had she been mated with a
congenial spirit. Nina bent down over Mrs. Almayer's slight form and
scanned attentively, under the stars that had rushed out on the black sky
and now hung breathless over that strange parting, her mother's shrivelled
features, and looked close into the sunken eyes that could see into her
own dark future by the light of a long and a painful experience. Again she
felt herself fascinated, as of old, by her mother's exalted mood and by
the oracular certainty of expression which, together with her fits of
violence, had contributed not a little to the reputation for witchcraft
she enjoyed in the settlement.
"I was a slave, and you shall be a queen," went on Mrs. Almayer, looking
straight before her; "but remember men's strength and their weakness.
Tremble before his anger, so that he may see your fear in the light of
day; but in your heart you may laugh, for after sunset he is your slave."
"A slave! He! The master of life! You do not know him, mother."
Mrs. Almayer condescended to laugh contemptuously.
"You speak like a fool of a white woman," she exclaimed. "What do you know
of men's anger and of men's love? Have you watched the sleep of men weary
of dealing death? Have you felt about you the strong arm that could drive
a kriss deep into a beating heart? Yah! you are a white woman, and ought
to pray to a woman-god!"
"Why do you say this? I have listened to your words so long that I have
forgotten my old life. If I was white would I stand here, ready to go?
Mother, I shall return to the house and look once more at my father's
face."
"No!" said Mrs. Almayer, violently. "No, he sleeps now the sleep of gin;
and if you went back he might awake and see you. No, he shall never see
you. When the terrible old man took you away from me when you were little,
you remember—"
"It was such a long time ago," murmured Nina.
"I remember," went on Mrs. Almayer, fiercely. "I wanted to look at your
face again. He said no! I heard you cry and jumped into the river. You
were his daughter then; you are my daughter now. Never shall you go back
to that house; you shall never cross this courtyard again. No! no!"
Her voice rose almost to a shout. On the other side of the creek there was
a rustle in the long grass. The two women heard it, and listened for a
while in startled silence. "I shall go," said Nina, in a cautious but
intense whisper. "What is your hate or your revenge to me?"
She moved towards the house, Mrs. Almayer clinging to her and trying to
pull her back.
"Stop, you shall not go!" she gasped.
Nina pushed away her mother impatiently and gathered up her skirts for a
quick run, but Mrs. Almayer ran forward and turned round, facing her
daughter with outstretched arms.
"If you move another step," she exclaimed, breathing quickly, "I shall cry
out. Do you see those lights in the big house? There sit two white men,
angry because they cannot have the blood of the man you love. And in those
dark houses," she continued, more calmly as she pointed towards the
settlement, "my voice could wake up men that would lead the Orang Blanda
soldiers to him who is waiting—for you."
She could not see her daughter's face, but the white figure before her
stood silent and irresolute in the darkness. Mrs. Almayer pursued her
advantage.
"Give up your old life! Forget!" she said in entreating tones. "Forget
that you ever looked at a white face; forget their words; forget their
thoughts. They speak lies. And they think lies because they despise us
that are better than they are, but not so strong. Forget their friendship
and their contempt; forget their many gods. Girl, why do you want to
remember the past when there is a warrior and a chief ready to give many
lives—his own life— for one of your smiles?"
While she spoke she pushed gently her daughter towards the canoes, hiding
her own fear, anxiety, and doubt under the flood of passionate words that
left Nina no time to think and no opportunity to protest, even if she had
wished it. But she did not wish it now. At the bottom of that passing
desire to look again at her father's face there was no strong affection.
She felt no scruples and no remorse at leaving suddenly that man whose
sentiment towards herself she could not understand, she could not even
see. There was only an instinctive clinging to old life, to old habits, to
old faces; that fear of finality which lurks in every human breast and
prevents so many heroisms and so many crimes. For years she had stood
between her mother and her father, the one so strong in her weakness, the
other so weak where he could have been strong. Between those two beings so
dissimilar, so antagonistic, she stood with mute heart wondering and angry
at the fact of her own existence. It seemed so unreasonable, so
humiliating to be flung there in that settlement and to see the days rush
by into the past, without a hope, a desire, or an aim that would justify
the life she had to endure in ever-growing weariness. She had little
belief and no sympathy for her father's dreams; but the savage ravings of
her mother chanced to strike a responsive chord, deep down somewhere in
her despairing heart; and she dreamed dreams of her own with the
persistent absorption of a captive thinking of liberty within the walls of
his prison cell. With the coming of Dain she found the road to freedom by
obeying the voice of the new-born impulses, and with surprised joy she
thought she could read in his eyes the answer to all the questionings of
her heart. She understood now the reason and the aim of life; and in the
triumphant unveiling of that mystery she threw away disdainfully her past
with its sad thoughts, its bitter feelings, and its faint affections, now
withered and dead in contact with her fierce passion.
Mrs. Almayer unmoored Nina's own canoe and, straightening herself
painfully, stood, painter in hand, looking at her daughter.
"Quick," she said; "get away before the moon rises, while the river is
dark. I am afraid of Abdulla's slaves. The wretches prowl in the night
often, and might see and follow you. There are two paddles in the canoe."
Nina approached her mother and hesitatingly touched lightly with her lips
the wrinkled forehead. Mrs. Almayer snorted contemptuously in protest
against that tenderness which she, nevertheless, feared could be
contagious.
"Shall I ever see you again, mother?" murmured Nina.
"No," said Mrs. Almayer, after a short silence. "Why should you return
here where it is my fate to die? You will live far away in splendour and
might. When I hear of white men driven from the islands, then I shall know
that you are alive, and that you remember my words."
"I shall always remember," returned Nina, earnestly; "but where is my
power, and what can I do?"
"Do not let him look too long in your eyes, nor lay his head on your knees
without reminding him that men should fight before they rest. And if he
lingers, give him his kriss yourself and bid him go, as the wife of a
mighty prince should do when the enemies are near. Let him slay the white
men that come to us to trade, with prayers on their lips and loaded guns
in their hands. Ah!"—she ended with a sigh—"they are on every sea, and
on every shore; and they are very many!"
She swung the bow of the canoe towards the river, but did not let go the
gunwale, keeping her hand on it in irresolute thoughtfulness.
Nina put the point of the paddle against the bank, ready to shove off into
the stream.
"What is it, mother?" she asked, in a low voice. "Do you hear anything?"
"No," said Mrs. Almayer, absently. "Listen, Nina," she continued,
abruptly, after a slight pause, "in after years there will be other
women—"
A stifled cry in the boat interrupted her, and the paddle rattled in the
canoe as it slipped from Nina's hands, which she put out in a protesting
gesture. Mrs. Almayer fell on her knees on the bank and leaned over the
gunwale so as to bring her own face close to her daughter's.
"There will be other women," she repeated firmly; "I tell you that,
because you are half white, and may forget that he is a great chief, and
that such things must be. Hide your anger, and do not let him see on your
face the pain that will eat your heart. Meet him with joy in your eyes and
wisdom on your lips, for to you he will turn in sadness or in doubt. As
long as he looks upon many women your power will last, but should there be
one, one only with whom he seems to forget you, then—"
"I could not live," exclaimed Nina, covering her face with both her hands.
"Do not speak so, mother; it could not be."
"Then," went on Mrs. Almayer, steadily, "to that woman, Nina, show no
mercy."
She moved the canoe down towards the stream by the gunwale, and gripped it
with both her hands, the bow pointing into the river.
"Are you crying?" she asked sternly of her daughter, who sat still with
covered face. "Arise, and take your paddle, for he has waited long enough.
And remember, Nina, no mercy; and if you must strike, strike with a steady
hand."
She put out all her strength, and swinging her body over the water, shot
the light craft far into the stream. When she recovered herself from the
effort she tried vainly to catch a glimpse of the canoe that seemed to
have dissolved suddenly into the white mist trailing over the heated
waters of the Pantai. After listening for a while intently on her knees,
Mrs. Almayer rose with a deep sigh, while two tears wandered slowly down
her withered cheeks. She wiped them off quickly with a wisp of her grey
hair as if ashamed of herself, but could not stifle another loud sigh, for
her heart was heavy and she suffered much, being unused to tender
emotions. This time she fancied she had heard a faint noise, like the echo
of her own sigh, and she stopped, straining her ears to catch the
slightest sound, and peering apprehensively towards the bushes near her.
"Who is there?" she asked, in an unsteady voice, while her imagination
peopled the solitude of the riverside with ghost-like forms. "Who is
there?" she repeated faintly.
There was no answer: only the voice of the river murmuring in sad monotone
behind the white veil seemed to swell louder for a moment, to die away
again in a soft whisper of eddies washing against the bank.
Mrs. Almayer shook her head as if in answer to her own thoughts, and
walked quickly away from the bushes, looking to the right and left
watchfully. She went straight towards the cooking-shed, observing that the
embers of the fire there glowed more brightly than usual, as if somebody
had been adding fresh fuel to the fires during the evening. As she
approached, Babalatchi, who had been squatting in the warm glow, rose and
met her in the shadow outside.
"Is she gone?" asked the anxious statesman, hastily.
"Yes," answered Mrs. Almayer. "What are the white men doing? When did you
leave them?"
"They are sleeping now, I think. May they never wake!" exclaimed
Babalatchi, fervently. "Oh! but they are devils, and made much talk and
trouble over that carcase. The chief threatened me twice with his hand,
and said he would have me tied up to a tree. Tie me up to a tree! Me!" he
repeated, striking his breast violently.
Mrs. Almayer laughed tauntingly.
"And you salaamed and asked for mercy. Men with arms by their side acted
otherwise when I was young."
"And where are they, the men of your youth? You mad woman!" retorted
Babalatchi, angrily. "Killed by the Dutch. Aha! But I shall live to
deceive them. A man knows when to fight and when to tell peaceful lies.
You would know that if you were not a woman."
But Mrs. Almayer did not seem to hear him. With bent body and outstretched
arm she appeared to be listening to some noise behind the shed.
"There are strange sounds," she whispered, with evident alarm. "I have
heard in the air the sounds of grief, as of a sigh and weeping. That was
by the riverside. And now again I heard—"
"Where?" asked Babalatchi, in an altered voice. "What did you hear?"
"Close here. It was like a breath long drawn. I wish I had burnt the paper
over the body before it was buried."
"Yes," assented Babalatchi. "But the white men had him thrown into a hole
at once. You know he found his death on the river," he added cheerfully,
"and his ghost may hail the canoes, but would leave the land alone."
Mrs. Almayer, who had been craning her neck to look round the corner of
the shed, drew back her head.
"There is nobody there," she said, reassured. "Is it not time for the
Rajah war-canoe to go to the clearing?"
"I have been waiting for it here, for I myself must go," explained
Babalatchi. "I think I will go over and see what makes them late. When
will you come? The Rajah gives you refuge."
"I shall paddle over before the break of day. I cannot leave my dollars
behind," muttered Mrs. Almayer.
They separated. Babalatchi crossed the courtyard towards the creek to get
his canoe, and Mrs. Almayer walked slowly to the house, ascended the
plankway, and passing through the back verandah entered the passage
leading to the front of the house; but before going in she turned in the
doorway and looked back at the empty and silent courtyard, now lit up by
the rays of the rising moon. No sooner she had disappeared, however, than
a vague shape flitted out from amongst the stalks of the banana
plantation, darted over the moonlit space, and fell in the darkness at the
foot of the verandah. It might have been the shadow of a driving cloud, so
noiseless and rapid was its passage, but for the trail of disturbed grass,
whose feathery heads trembled and swayed for a long time in the moonlight
before they rested motionless and gleaming, like a design of silver sprays
embroidered on a sombre background.
Mrs. Almayer lighted the cocoanut lamp, and lifting cautiously the red
curtain, gazed upon her husband, shading the light with her hand.
Almayer, huddled up in the chair, one of his arms hanging down, the other
thrown across the lower part of his face as if to ward off an invisible
enemy, his legs stretched straight out, slept heavily, unconscious of the
unfriendly eyes that looked upon him in disparaging criticism. At his feet
lay the overturned table, amongst a wreck of crockery and broken bottles.
The appearance as of traces left by a desperate struggle was accentuated
by the chairs, which seemed to have been scattered violently all over the
place, and now lay about the verandah with a lamentable aspect of
inebriety in their helpless attitudes. Only Nina's big rocking-chair,
standing black and motionless on its high runners, towered above the chaos
of demoralised furniture, unflinchingly dignified and patient, waiting for
its burden.
With a last scornful look towards the sleeper, Mrs. Almayer passed behind
the curtain into her own room. A couple of bats, encouraged by the
darkness and the peaceful state of affairs, resumed their silent and
oblique gambols above Almayer's head, and for a long time the profound
quiet of the house was unbroken, save for the deep breathing of the
sleeping man and the faint tinkle of silver in the hands of the woman
preparing for flight. In the increasing light of the moon that had risen
now above the night mist, the objects on the verandah came out strongly
outlined in black splashes of shadow with all the uncompromising ugliness
of their disorder, and a caricature of the sleeping Almayer appeared on
the dirty whitewash of the wall behind him in a grotesquely exaggerated
detail of attitude and feature enlarged to a heroic size. The discontented
bats departed in quest of darker places, and a lizard came out in short,
nervous rushes, and, pleased with the white table-cloth, stopped on it in
breathless immobility that would have suggested sudden death had it not
been for the melodious call he exchanged with a less adventurous friend
hiding amongst the lumber in the courtyard. Then the boards in the passage
creaked, the lizard vanished, and Almayer stirred uneasily with a sigh:
slowly, out of the senseless annihilation of drunken sleep, he was
returning, through the land of dreams, to waking consciousness. Almayer's
head rolled from shoulder to shoulder in the oppression of his dream; the
heavens had descended upon him like a heavy mantle, and trailed in starred
folds far under him. Stars above, stars all round him; and from the stars
under his feet rose a whisper full of entreaties and tears, and sorrowful
faces flitted amongst the clusters of light filling the infinite space
below. How escape from the importunity of lamentable cries and from the
look of staring, sad eyes in the faces which pressed round him till he
gasped for breath under the crushing weight of worlds that hung over his
aching shoulders? Get away! But how? If he attempted to move he would step
off into nothing, and perish in the crashing fall of that universe of
which he was the only support. And what were the voices saying? Urging him
to move! Why? Move to destruction! Not likely! The absurdity of the thing
filled him with indignation. He got a firmer foothold and stiffened his
muscles in heroic resolve to carry his burden to all eternity. And ages
passed in the superhuman labour, amidst the rush of circling worlds; in
the plaintive murmur of sorrowful voices urging him to desist before it
was too late—till the mysterious power that had laid upon him the giant
task seemed at last to seek his destruction. With terror he felt an
irresistible hand shaking him by the shoulder, while the chorus of voices
swelled louder into an agonised prayer to go, go before it is too late. He
felt himself slipping, losing his balance, as something dragged at his
legs, and he fell. With a faint cry he glided out of the anguish of
perishing creation into an imperfect waking that seemed to be still under
the spell of his dream.
"What? What?" he murmured sleepily, without moving or opening his eyes.
His head still felt heavy, and he had not the courage to raise his
eyelids. In his ears there still lingered the sound of entreating
whisper.—"Am I awake?—Why do I hear the voices?" he argued to himself,
hazily.—"I cannot get rid of the horrible nightmare yet.—I have been
very drunk.—What is that shaking me? I am dreaming yet—I must open my
eyes and be done with it. I am only half awake, it is evident."
He made an effort to shake off his stupor and saw a face close to his,
glaring at him with staring eyeballs. He closed his eyes again in amazed
horror and sat up straight in the chair, trembling in every limb. What was
this apparition?—His own fancy, no doubt.—His nerves had been much tried
the day before—and then the drink! He would not see it again if he had
the courage to look.—He would look directly.—Get a little steadier
first.— So.—Now.
He looked. The figure of a woman standing in the steely light, her hands
stretched forth in a suppliant gesture, confronted him from the far-off
end of the verandah; and in the space between him and the obstinate
phantom floated the murmur of words that fell on his ears in a jumble of
torturing sentences, the meaning of which escaped the utmost efforts of
his brain. Who spoke the Malay words? Who ran away? Why too late—and too
late for what? What meant those words of hate and love mixed so strangely
together, the ever-recurring names falling on his ears again and
again—Nina, Dain; Dain, Nina? Dain was dead, and Nina was sleeping,
unaware of the terrible experience through which he was now passing. Was
he going to be tormented for ever, sleeping or waking, and have no peace
either night or day? What was the meaning of this?
He shouted the last words aloud. The shadowy woman seemed to shrink and
recede a little from him towards the doorway, and there was a shriek.
Exasperated by the incomprehensible nature of his torment, Almayer made a
rush upon the apparition, which eluded his grasp, and he brought up
heavily against the wall. Quick as lightning he turned round and pursued
fiercely the mysterious figure fleeing from him with piercing shrieks that
were like fuel to the flames of his anger. Over the furniture, round the
overturned table, and now he had it cornered behind Nina's chair. To the
left, to the right they dodged, the chair rocking madly between them, she
sending out shriek after shriek at every feint, and he growling
meaningless curses through his hard set teeth. "Oh! the fiendish noise
that split his head and seemed to choke his breath.—It would kill
him.—It must be stopped!" An insane desire to crush that yelling thing
induced him to cast himself recklessly over the chair with a desperate
grab, and they came down together in a cloud of dust amongst the
splintered wood. The last shriek died out under him in a faint gurgle, and
he had secured the relief of absolute silence.
He looked at the woman's face under him. A real woman! He knew her. By all
that is wonderful! Taminah! He jumped up ashamed of his fury and stood
perplexed, wiping his forehead. The girl struggled to a kneeling posture
and embraced his legs in a frenzied prayer for mercy.
"Don't be afraid," he said, raising her. "I shall not hurt you. Why do you
come to my house in the night? And if you had to come, why not go behind
the curtain where the women sleep?"
"The place behind the curtain is empty," gasped Taminah, catching her
breath between the words. "There are no women in your house any more,
Tuan. I saw the old Mem go away before I tried to wake you. I did not want
your women, I wanted you."
"Old Mem!" repeated Almayer. "Do you mean my wife?"
She nodded her head.
"But of my daughter you are not afraid?" said Almayer.
"Have you not heard me?" she exclaimed. "Have I not spoken for a long time
when you lay there with eyes half open? She is gone too."
"I was asleep. Can you not tell when a man is sleeping and when awake?"
"Sometimes," answered Taminah in a low voice; "sometimes the spirit
lingers close to a sleeping body and may hear. I spoke a long time before
I touched you, and I spoke softly for fear it would depart at a sudden
noise and leave you sleeping for ever. I took you by the shoulder only
when you began to mutter words I could not understand. Have you not heard,
then, and do you know nothing?"
"Nothing of what you said. What is it? Tell again if you want me to know."
He took her by the shoulder and led her unresisting to the front of the
verandah into a stronger light. She wrung her hands with such an
appearance of grief that he began to be alarmed.
"Speak," he said. "You made noise enough to wake even dead men. And yet
nobody living came," he added to himself in an uneasy whisper. "Are you
mute? Speak!" he repeated.
In a rush of words which broke out after a short struggle from her
trembling lips she told him the tale of Nina's love and her own jealousy.
Several times he looked angrily into her face and told her to be silent;
but he could not stop the sounds that seemed to him to run out in a hot
stream, swirl about his feet, and rise in scalding waves about him,
higher, higher, drowning his heart, touching his lips with a feel of
molten lead, blotting out his sight in scorching vapour, closing over his
head, merciless and deadly. When she spoke of the deception as to Dain's
death of which he had been the victim only that day, he glanced again at
her with terrible eyes, and made her falter for a second, but he turned
away directly, and his face suddenly lost all expression in a stony stare
far away over the river. Ah! the river! His old friend and his old enemy,
speaking always with the same voice as he runs from year to year bringing
fortune or disappointment happiness or pain, upon the same varying but
unchanged surface of glancing currents and swirling eddies. For many years
he had listened to the passionless and soothing murmur that sometimes was
the song of hope, at times the song of triumph, of encouragement; more
often the whisper of consolation that spoke of better days to come. For so
many years! So many years! And now to the accompaniment of that murmur he
listened to the slow and painful beating of his heart. He listened
attentively, wondering at the regularity of its beats. He began to count
mechanically. One, two. Why count? At the next beat it must stop. No heart
could suffer so and beat so steadily for long. Those regular strokes as of
a muffled hammer that rang in his ears must stop soon. Still beating
unceasing and cruel. No man can bear this; and is this the last, or will
the next one be the last?—How much longer? O God! how much longer? His
hand weighed heavier unconsciously on the girl's shoulder, and she spoke
the last words of her story crouching at his feet with tears of pain and
shame and anger. Was her revenge to fail her? This white man was like a
senseless stone. Too late! Too late!
"And you saw her go?" Almayer's voice sounded harshly above her head.
"Did I not tell you?" she sobbed, trying to wriggle gently out from under
his grip. "Did I not tell you that I saw the witchwoman push the canoe? I
lay hidden in the grass and heard all the words. She that we used to call
the white Mem wanted to return to look at your face, but the witchwoman
forbade her, and—"
She sank lower yet on her elbow, turning half round under the downward
push of the heavy hand, her face lifted up to him with spiteful eyes.
"And she obeyed," she shouted out in a half-laugh, half-cry of pain. "Let
me go, Tuan. Why are you angry with me? Hasten, or you shall be too late
to show your anger to the deceitful woman."
Almayer dragged her up to her feet and looked close into her face while
she struggled, turning her head away from his wild stare.
"Who sent you here to torment me?" he asked, violently. "I do not believe
you. You lie."
He straightened his arm suddenly and flung her across the verandah towards
the doorway, where she lay immobile and silent, as if she had left her
life in his grasp, a dark heap, without a sound or a stir.
"Oh! Nina!" whispered Almayer, in a voice in which reproach and love spoke
together in pained tenderness. "Oh! Nina! I do not believe."
A light draught from the river ran over the courtyard in a wave of bowing
grass and, entering the verandah, touched Almayer's forehead with its cool
breath, in a caress of infinite pity. The curtain in the women's doorway
blew out and instantly collapsed with startling helplessness. He stared at
the fluttering stuff.
"Nina!" cried Almayer. "Where are you, Nina?"
The wind passed out of the empty house in a tremulous sigh, and all was
still.
Almayer hid his face in his hands as if to shut out a loathsome sight.
When, hearing a slight rustle, he uncovered his eyes, the dark heap by the
door was gone.
In the middle of a shadowless square of moonlight, shining on a smooth and
level expanse of young rice-shoots, a little shelter-hut perched on high
posts, the pile of brushwood near by and the glowing embers of a fire with
a man stretched before it, seemed very small and as if lost in the pale
green iridescence reflected from the ground. On three sides of the
clearing, appearing very far away in the deceptive light, the big trees of
the forest, lashed together with manifold bonds by a mass of tangled
creepers, looked down at the growing young life at their feet with the
sombre resignation of giants that had lost faith in their strength. And in
the midst of them the merciless creepers clung to the big trunks in
cable-like coils, leaped from tree to tree, hung in thorny festoons from
the lower boughs, and, sending slender tendrils on high to seek out the
smallest branches, carried death to their victims in an exulting riot of
silent destruction.
On the fourth side, following the curve of the bank of that branch of the
Pantai that formed the only access to the clearing, ran a black line of
young trees, bushes, and thick second growth, unbroken save for a small
gap chopped out in one place. At that gap began the narrow footpath
leading from the water's edge to the grass-built shelter used by the night
watchers when the ripening crop had to be protected from the wild pigs.
The pathway ended at the foot of the piles on which the hut was built, in
a circular space covered with ashes and bits of burnt wood. In the middle
of that space, by the dim fire, lay Dain.
He turned over on his side with an impatient sigh, and, pillowing his head
on his bent arm, lay quietly with his face to the dying fire. The glowing
embers shone redly in a small circle, throwing a gleam into his wide-open
eyes, and at every deep breath the fine white ash of bygone fires rose in
a light cloud before his parted lips, and danced away from the warm glow
into the moonbeams pouring down upon Bulangi's clearing. His body was
weary with the exertion of the past few days, his mind more weary still
with the strain of solitary waiting for his fate. Never before had he felt
so helpless. He had heard the report of the gun fired on board the launch,
and he knew that his life was in untrustworthy hands, and that his enemies
were very near. During the slow hours of the afternoon he roamed about on
the edge of the forest, or, hiding in the bushes, watched the creek with
unquiet eyes for some sign of danger. He feared not death, yet he desired
ardently to live, for life to him was Nina. She had promised to come, to
follow him, to share his danger and his splendour. But with her by his
side he cared not for danger, and without her there could be no splendour
and no joy in existence.
Crouching in his shady hiding-place, he closed his eyes, trying to evoke
the gracious and charming image of the white figure that for him was the
beginning and the end of life. With eyes shut tight, his teeth hard set,
he tried in a great effort of passionate will to keep his hold on that
vision of supreme delight. In vain! His heart grew heavy as the figure of
Nina faded away to be replaced by another vision this time—a vision of
armed men, of angry faces, of glittering arms—and he seemed to hear the
hum of excited and triumphant voices as they discovered him in his
hiding-place. Startled by the vividness of his fancy, he would open his
eyes, and, leaping out into the sunlight, resume his aimless wanderings
around the clearing. As he skirted in his weary march the edge of the
forest he glanced now and then into its dark shade, so enticing in its
deceptive appearance of coolness, so repellent with its unrelieved gloom,
where lay, entombed and rotting, countless generations of trees, and where
their successors stood as if mourning, in dark green foliage, immense and
helpless, awaiting their turn. Only the parasites seemed to live there in
a sinuous rush upwards into the air and sunshine, feeding on the dead and
the dying alike, and crowning their victims with pink and blue flowers
that gleamed amongst the boughs, incongruous and cruel, like a strident
and mocking note in the solemn harmony of the doomed trees.
A man could hide there, thought Dain, as he approached a place where the
creepers had been torn and hacked into an archway that might have been the
beginning of a path. As he bent down to look through he heard angry
grunting, and a sounder of wild pig crashed away in the undergrowth. An
acrid smell of damp earth and of decaying leaves took him by the throat,
and he drew back with a scared face, as if he had been touched by the
breath of Death itself. The very air seemed dead in there—heavy and
stagnating, poisoned with the corruption of countless ages. He went on,
staggering on his way, urged by the nervous restlessness that made him
feel tired yet caused him to loathe the very idea of immobility and
repose. Was he a wild man to hide in the woods and perhaps be killed
there—in the darkness—where there was no room to breathe? He would wait
for his enemies in the sunlight, where he could see the sky and feel the
breeze. He knew how a Malay chief should die. The sombre and desperate
fury, that peculiar inheritance of his race, took possession of him, and
he glared savagely across the clearing towards the gap in the bushes by
the riverside. They would come from there. In imagination he saw them now.
He saw the bearded faces and the white jackets of the officers, the light
on the levelled barrels of the rifles. What is the bravery of the greatest
warrior before the firearms in the hand of a slave? He would walk toward
them with a smiling face, with his hands held out in a sign of submission
till he was very near them. He would speak friendly words—come nearer
yet—yet nearer—so near that they could touch him with their hands and
stretch them out to make him a captive. That would be the time: with a
shout and a leap he would be in the midst of them, kriss in hand, killing,
killing, killing, and would die with the shouts of his enemies in his
ears, their warm blood spurting before his eyes.
Carried away by his excitement, he snatched the kriss hidden in his
sarong, and, drawing a long breath, rushed forward, struck at the empty
air, and fell on his face. He lay as if stunned in the sudden reaction
from his exaltation, thinking that, even if he died thus gloriously, it
would have to be before he saw Nina. Better so. If he saw her again he
felt that death would be too terrible. With horror he, the descendant of
Rajahs and of conquerors, had to face the doubt of his own bravery. His
desire of life tormented him in a paroxysm of agonising remorse. He had
not the courage to stir a limb. He had lost faith in himself, and there
was nothing else in him of what makes a man. The suffering remained, for
it is ordered that it should abide in the human body even to the last
breath, and fear remained. Dimly he could look into the depths of his
passionate love, see its strength and its weakness, and felt afraid.
The sun went down slowly. The shadow of the western forest marched over
the clearing, covered the man's scorched shoulders with its cool mantle,
and went on hurriedly to mingle with the shadows of other forests on the
eastern side. The sun lingered for a while amongst the light tracery of
the higher branches, as if in friendly reluctance to abandon the body
stretched in the green paddy-field. Then Dain, revived by the cool of the
evening breeze, sat up and stared round him. As he did so the sun dipped
sharply, as if ashamed of being detected in a sympathising attitude, and
the clearing, which during the day was all light, became suddenly all
darkness, where the fire gleamed like an eye. Dain walked slowly towards
the creek, and, divesting himself of his torn sarong, his only garment,
entered the water cautiously. He had had nothing to eat that day, and had
not dared show himself in daylight by the water-side to drink. Now, as he
swam silently, he swallowed a few mouthfuls of water that lapped about his
lips. This did him good, and he walked with greater confidence in himself
and others as he returned towards the fire. Had he been betrayed by
Lakamba all would have been over by this. He made up a big blaze, and
while it lasted dried himself, and then lay down by the embers. He could
not sleep, but he felt a great numbness in all his limbs. His restlessness
was gone, and he was content to lay still, measuring the time by watching
the stars that rose in endless succession above the forests, while the
slight puffs of wind under the cloudless sky seemed to fan their twinkle
into a greater brightness. Dreamily he assured himself over and over again
that she would come, till the certitude crept into his heart and filled
him with a great peace. Yes, when the next day broke, they would be
together on the great blue sea that was like life—away from the forests
that were like death. He murmured the name of Nina into the silent space
with a tender smile: this seemed to break the spell of stillness, and far
away by the creek a frog croaked loudly as if in answer. A chorus of loud
roars and plaintive calls rose from the mud along the line of bushes. He
laughed heartily; doubtless it was their love-song. He felt affectionate
towards the frogs and listened, pleased with the noisy life near him.
When the moon peeped above the trees he felt the old impatience and the
old restlessness steal over him. Why was she so late? True, it was a long
way to come with a single paddle. With what skill and what endurance could
those small hands manage a heavy paddle! It was very wonderful—such small
hands, such soft little palms that knew how to touch his cheek with a feel
lighter than the fanning of a butterfly's wing. Wonderful! He lost himself
lovingly in the contemplation of this tremendous mystery, and when he
looked at the moon again it had risen a hand's breadth above the trees.
Would she come? He forced himself to lay still, overcoming the impulse to
rise and rush round the clearing again. He turned this way and that; at
last, quivering with the effort, he lay on his back, and saw her face
among the stars looking down on him.
The croaking of frogs suddenly ceased. With the watchfulness of a hunted
man Dain sat up, listening anxiously, and heard several splashes in the
water as the frogs took rapid headers into the creek. He knew that they
had been alarmed by something, and stood up suspicious and attentive. A
slight grating noise, then the dry sound as of two pieces of wood struck
against each other. Somebody was about to land! He took up an armful of
brushwood, and, without taking his eyes from the path, held it over the
embers of his fire. He waited, undecided, and saw something gleam amongst
the bushes; then a white figure came out of the shadows and seemed to
float towards him in the pale light. His heart gave a great leap and stood
still, then went on shaking his frame in furious beats. He dropped the
brushwood upon the glowing coals, and had an impression of shouting her
name—of rushing to meet her; yet he emitted no sound, he stirred not an
inch, but he stood silent and motionless like chiselled bronze under the
moonlight that streamed over his naked shoulders. As he stood still,
fighting with his breath, as if bereft of his senses by the intensity of
his delight, she walked up to him with quick, resolute steps, and, with
the appearance of one about to leap from a dangerous height, threw both
her arms round his neck with a sudden gesture. A small blue gleam crept
amongst the dry branches, and the crackling of reviving fire was the only
sound as they faced each other in the speechless emotion of that meeting;
then the dry fuel caught at once, and a bright hot flame shot upwards in a
blaze as high as their heads, and in its light they saw each other's eyes.
Neither of them spoke. He was regaining his senses in a slight tremor that
ran upwards along his rigid body and hung about his trembling lips. She
drew back her head and fastened her eyes on his in one of those long looks
that are a woman's most terrible weapon; a look that is more stirring than
the closest touch, and more dangerous than the thrust of a dagger, because
it also whips the soul out of the body, but leaves the body alive and
helpless, to be swayed here and there by the capricious tempests of
passion and desire; a look that enwraps the whole body, and that
penetrates into the innermost recesses of the being, bringing terrible
defeat in the delirious uplifting of accomplished conquest. It has the
same meaning for the man of the forests and the sea as for the man
threading the paths of the more dangerous wilderness of houses and
streets. Men that had felt in their breasts the awful exultation such a
look awakens become mere things of to-day—which is paradise; forget
yesterday—which was suffering; care not for to-morrow—which may be
perdition. They wish to live under that look for ever. It is the look of
woman's surrender.
He understood, and, as if suddenly released from his invisible bonds, fell
at her feet with a shout of joy, and, embracing her knees, hid his head in
the folds of her dress, murmuring disjointed words of gratitude and love.
Never before had he felt so proud as now, when at the feet of that woman
that half belonged to his enemies. Her fingers played with his hair in an
absent-minded caress as she stood absorbed in thought. The thing was done.
Her mother was right. The man was her slave. As she glanced down at his
kneeling form she felt a great pitying tenderness for that man she was
used to call—even in her thoughts—the master of life. She lifted her
eyes and looked sadly at the southern heavens under which lay the path of
their lives—her own, and that man's at her feet. Did he not say himself
is that she was the light of his life? She would be his light and his
wisdom; she would be his greatness and his strength; yet hidden from the
eyes of all men she would be, above all, his only and lasting weakness. A
very woman! In the sublime vanity of her kind she was thinking already of
moulding a god from the clay at her feet. A god for others to worship. She
was content to see him as he was now, and to feel him quiver at the
slightest touch of her light fingers. And while her eyes looked sadly at
the southern stars a faint smile seemed to be playing about her firm lips.
Who can tell in the fitful light of a camp fire? It might have been a
smile of triumph, or of conscious power, or of tender pity, or, perhaps,
of love.
She spoke softly to him, and he rose to his feet, putting his arm round
her in quiet consciousness of his ownership; she laid her head on his
shoulder with a sense of defiance to all the world in the encircling
protection of that arm. He was hers with all his qualities and all his
faults. His strength and his courage, his recklessness and his daring, his
simple wisdom and his savage cunning—all were hers. As they passed
together out of the red light of the fire into the silver shower of rays
that fell upon the clearing he bent his head over her face, and she saw in
his eyes the dreamy intoxication of boundless felicity from the close
touch of her slight figure clasped to his side. With a rhythmical swing of
their bodies they walked through the light towards the outlying shadows of
the forests that seemed to guard their happiness in solemn immobility.
Their forms melted in the play of light and shadow at the foot of the big
trees, but the murmur of tender words lingered over the empty clearing,
grew faint, and died out. A sigh as of immense sorrow passed over the land
in the last effort of the dying breeze, and in the deep silence which
succeeded, the earth and the heavens were suddenly hushed up in the
mournful contemplation of human love and human blindness.
They walked slowly back to the fire. He made for her a seat out of the dry
branches, and, throwing himself down at her feet, lay his head in her lap
and gave himself up to the dreamy delight of the passing hour. Their
voices rose and fell, tender or animated as they spoke of their love and
of their future. She, with a few skilful words spoken from time to time,
guided his thoughts, and he let his happiness flow in a stream of talk
passionate and tender, grave or menacing, according to the mood which she
evoked. He spoke to her of his own island, where the gloomy forests and
the muddy rivers were unknown. He spoke of its terraced fields, of the
murmuring clear rills of sparkling water that flowed down the sides of
great mountains, bringing life to the land and joy to its tillers. And he
spoke also of the mountain peak that rising lonely above the belt of trees
knew the secrets of the passing clouds, and was the dwelling-place of the
mysterious spirit of his race, of the guardian genius of his house. He
spoke of vast horizons swept by fierce winds that whistled high above the
summits of burning mountains. He spoke of his forefathers that conquered
ages ago the island of which he was to be the future ruler. And then as,
in her interest, she brought her face nearer to his, he, touching lightly
the thick tresses of her long hair, felt a sudden impulse to speak to her
of the sea he loved so well; and he told her of its never-ceasing voice,
to which he had listened as a child, wondering at its hidden meaning that
no living man has penetrated yet; of its enchanting glitter; of its
senseless and capricious fury; how its surface was for ever changing, and
yet always enticing, while its depths were for ever the same, cold and
cruel, and full of the wisdom of destroyed life. He told her how it held
men slaves of its charm for a lifetime, and then, regardless of their
devotion, swallowed them up, angry at their fear of its mystery, which it
would never disclose, not even to those that loved it most. While he
talked, Nina's head had been gradually sinking lower, and her face almost
touched his now. Her hair was over his eyes, her breath was on his
forehead, her arms were about his body. No two beings could be closer to
each other, yet she guessed rather than understood the meaning of his last
words that came out after a slight hesitation in a faint murmur, dying out
imperceptibly into a profound and significant silence: "The sea, O Nina,
is like a woman's heart."
She closed his lips with a sudden kiss, and answered in a steady voice—
"But to the men that have no fear, O master of my life, the sea is ever
true."
Over their heads a film of dark, thread-like clouds, looking like immense
cobwebs drifting under the stars, darkened the sky with the presage of the
coming thunderstorm. From the invisible hills the first distant rumble of
thunder came in a prolonged roll which, after tossing about from hill to
hill, lost itself in the forests of the Pantai. Dain and Nina stood up,
and the former looked at the sky uneasily.
"It is time for Babalatchi to be here," he said. "The night is more than
half gone. Our road is long, and a bullet travels quicker than the best
canoe."
"He will be here before the moon is hidden behind the clouds," said Nina.
"I heard a splash in the water," she added. "Did you hear it too?"
"Alligator," answered Dain shortly, with a careless glance towards the
creek. "The darker the night," he continued, "the shorter will be our
road, for then we could keep in the current of the main stream, but if it
is light—even no more than now—we must follow the small channels of
sleeping water, with nothing to help our paddles."
"Dain," interposed Nina, earnestly, "it was no alligator. I heard the
bushes rustling near the landing-place."
"Yes," said Dain, after listening awhile. "It cannot be Babalatchi, who
would come in a big war canoe, and openly. Those that are coming, whoever
they are, do not wish to make much noise. But you have heard, and now I
can see," he went on quickly. "It is but one man. Stand behind me, Nina.
If he is a friend he is welcome; if he is an enemy you shall see him die."
He laid his hand on his kriss, and awaited the approach of his unexpected
visitor. The fire was burning very low, and small clouds—precursors of
the storm—crossed the face of the moon in rapid succession, and their
flying shadows darkened the clearing. He could not make out who the man
might be, but he felt uneasy at the steady advance of the tall figure
walking on the path with a heavy tread, and hailed it with a command to
stop. The man stopped at some little distance, and Dain expected him to
speak, but all he could hear was his deep breathing. Through a break in
the flying clouds a sudden and fleeting brightness descended upon the
clearing. Before the darkness closed in again, Dain saw a hand holding
some glittering object extended towards him, heard Nina's cry of "Father!"
and in an instant the girl was between him and Almayer's revolver. Nina's
loud cry woke up the echoes of the sleeping woods, and the three stood
still as if waiting for the return of silence before they would give
expression to their various feelings. At the appearance of Nina, Almayer's
arm fell by his side, and he made a step forward. Dain pushed the girl
gently aside.
"Am I a wild beast that you should try to kill me suddenly and in the
dark, Tuan Almayer?" said Dain, breaking the strained silence. "Throw some
brushwood on the fire," he went on, speaking to Nina, "while I watch my
white friend, lest harm should come to you or to me, O delight of my
heart!"
Almayer ground his teeth and raised his arm again. With a quick bound Dain
was at his side: there was a short scuffle, during which one chamber of
the revolver went off harmlessly, then the weapon, wrenched out of
Almayer's hand, whirled through the air and fell in the bushes. The two
men stood close together, breathing hard. The replenished fire threw out
an unsteady circle of light and shone on the terrified face of Nina, who
looked at them with outstretched hands.
"Dain!" she cried out warningly, "Dain!"
He waved his hand towards her in a reassuring gesture, and, turning to
Almayer, said with great courtesy—
"Now we may talk, Tuan. It is easy to send out death, but can your wisdom
recall the life? She might have been harmed," he continued, indicating
Nina. "Your hand shook much; for myself I was not afraid."
"Nina!" exclaimed Almayer, "come to me at once. What is this sudden
madness? What bewitched you? Come to your father, and together we shall
try to forget this horrible nightmare!"
He opened his arms with the certitude of clasping her to his breast in
another second. She did not move. As it dawned upon him that she did not
mean to obey he felt a deadly cold creep into his heart, and, pressing the
palms of his hands to his temples, he looked down on the ground in mute
despair. Dain took Nina by the arm and led her towards her father.
"Speak to him in the language of his people," he said. "He is grieving—as
who would not grieve at losing thee, my pearl! Speak to him the last words
he shall hear spoken by that voice, which must be very sweet to him, but
is all my life to me."
He released her, and, stepping back a few paces out of the circle of
light, stood in the darkness looking at them with calm interest. The
reflection of a distant flash of lightning lit up the clouds over their
heads, and was followed after a short interval by the faint rumble of
thunder, which mingled with Almayer's voice as he began to speak.
"Do you know what you are doing? Do you know what is waiting for you if
you follow that man? Have you no pity for yourself? Do you know that you
shall be at first his plaything and then a scorned slave, a drudge, and a
servant of some new fancy of that man?"
She raised her hand to stop him, and turning her head slightly, asked—
"You hear this Dain! Is it true?"
"By all the gods!" came the impassioned answer from the darkness— "by
heaven and earth, by my head and thine I swear: this is a white man's lie.
I have delivered my soul into your hands for ever; I breathe with your
breath, I see with your eyes, I think with your mind, and I take you into
my heart for ever."
"You thief!" shouted the exasperated Almayer.
A deep silence succeeded this outburst, then the voice of Dain was heard
again.
"Nay, Tuan," he said in a gentle tone, "that is not true also. The girl
came of her own will. I have done no more but to show her my love like a
man; she heard the cry of my heart, and she came, and the dowry I have
given to the woman you call your wife."
Almayer groaned in his extremity of rage and shame. Nina laid her hand
lightly on his shoulder, and the contact, light as the touch of a falling
leaf, seemed to calm him. He spoke quickly, and in English this time.
"Tell me," he said—"tell me, what have they done to you, your mother and
that man? What made you give yourself up to that savage? For he is a
savage. Between him and you there is a barrier that nothing can remove. I
can see in your eyes the look of those who commit suicide when they are
mad. You are mad. Don't smile. It breaks my heart. If I were to see you
drowning before my eyes, and I without the power to help you, I could not
suffer a greater torment. Have you forgotten the teaching of so many
years?"
"No," she interrupted, "I remember it well. I remember how it ended also.
Scorn for scorn, contempt for contempt, hate for hate. I am not of your
race. Between your people and me there is also a barrier that nothing can
remove. You ask why I want to go, and I ask you why I should stay."
He staggered as if struck in the face, but with a quick, unhesitating
grasp she caught him by the arm and steadied him.
"Why you should stay!" he repeated slowly, in a dazed manner, and stopped
short, astounded at the completeness of his misfortune.
"You told me yesterday," she went on again, "that I could not understand
or see your love for me: it is so. How can I? No two human beings
understand each other. They can understand but their own voices. You
wanted me to dream your dreams, to see your own visions—the visions of
life amongst the white faces of those who cast me out from their midst in
angry contempt. But while you spoke I listened to the voice of my own
self; then this man came, and all was still; there was only the murmur of
his love. You call him a savage! What do you call my mother, your wife?"
"Nina!" cried Almayer, "take your eyes off my face."
She looked down directly, but continued speaking only a little above a
whisper.
"In time," she went on, "both our voices, that man's and mine, spoke
together in a sweetness that was intelligible to our ears only. You were
speaking of gold then, but our ears were filled with the song of our love,
and we did not hear you. Then I found that we could see through each
other's eyes: that he saw things that nobody but myself and he could see.
We entered a land where no one could follow us, and least of all you. Then
I began to live."
She paused. Almayer sighed deeply. With her eyes still fixed on the ground
she began speaking again.
"And I mean to live. I mean to follow him. I have been rejected with scorn
by the white people, and now I am a Malay! He took me in his arms, he laid
his life at my feet. He is brave; he will be powerful, and I hold his
bravery and his strength in my hand, and I shall make him great. His name
shall be remembered long after both our bodies are laid in the dust. I
love you no less than I did before, but I shall never leave him, for
without him I cannot live."
"If he understood what you have said," answered Almayer, scornfully, "he
must be highly flattered. You want him as a tool for some incomprehensible
ambition of yours. Enough, Nina. If you do not go down at once to the
creek, where Ali is waiting with my canoe, I shall tell him to return to
the settlement and bring the Dutch officers here. You cannot escape from
this clearing, for I have cast adrift your canoe. If the Dutch catch this
hero of yours they will hang him as sure as I stand here. Now go."
He made a step towards his daughter and laid hold of her by the shoulder,
his other hand pointing down the path to the landing-place.
"Beware!" exclaimed Dain; "this woman belongs to me!"
Nina wrenched herself free and looked straight at Almayer's angry face.
"No, I will not go," she said with desperate energy. "If he dies I shall
die too!"
"You die!" said Almayer, contemptuously. "Oh, no! You shall live a life of
lies and deception till some other vagabond comes along to sing; how did
you say that? The song of love to you! Make up your mind quickly."
He waited for a while, and then added meaningly—
"Shall I call out to Ali?"
"Call out," she answered in Malay, "you that cannot be true to your own
countrymen. Only a few days ago you were selling the powder for their
destruction; now you want to give up to them the man that yesterday you
called your friend. Oh, Dain," she said, turning towards the motionless
but attentive figure in the darkness, "instead of bringing you life I
bring you death, for he will betray unless I leave you for ever!"
Dain came into the circle of light, and, throwing his arm around Nina's
neck, whispered in her ear—"I can kill him where he stands, before a
sound can pass his lips. For you it is to say yes or no. Babalatchi cannot
be far now."
He straightened himself up, taking his arm off her shoulder, and
confronted Almayer, who looked at them both with an expression of
concentrated fury,
"No!" she cried, clinging to Dain in wild alarm. "No! Kill me! Then
perhaps he will let you go. You do not know the mind of a white man. He
would rather see me dead than standing where I am. Forgive me, your slave,
but you must not." She fell at his feet sobbing violently and repeating,
"Kill me! Kill me!"
"I want you alive," said Almayer, speaking also in Malay, with sombre
calmness. "You go, or he hangs. Will you obey?"
Dain shook Nina off, and, making a sudden lunge, struck Almayer full in
the chest with the handle of his kriss, keeping the point towards himself.
"Hai, look! It was easy for me to turn the point the other way," he said
in his even voice. "Go, Tuan Putih," he added with dignity. "I give you
your life, my life, and her life. I am the slave of this woman's desire,
and she wills it so."
There was not a glimmer of light in the sky now, and the tops of the trees
were as invisible as their trunks, being lost in the mass of clouds that
hung low over the woods, the clearing, and the river.
Every outline had disappeared in the intense blackness that seemed to have
destroyed everything but space. Only the fire glimmered like a star
forgotten in this annihilation of all visible things, and nothing was
heard after Dain ceased speaking but the sobs of Nina, whom he held in his
arms, kneeling beside the fire. Almayer stood looking down at them in
gloomy thoughtfulness. As he was opening his lips to speak they were
startled by a cry of warning by the riverside, followed by the splash of
many paddles and the sound of voices.
"Babalatchi!" shouted Dain, lifting up Nina as he got upon his feet
quickly.
"Ada! Ada!" came the answer from the panting statesman who ran up the path
and stood amongst them. "Run to my canoe," he said to Dain excitedly,
without taking any notice of Almayer. "Run! we must go. That woman has
told them all!"
"What woman?" asked Dain, looking at Nina. Just then there was only one
woman in the whole world for him.
"The she-dog with white teeth; the seven times accursed slave of Bulangi.
She yelled at Abdulla's gate till she woke up all Sambir. Now the white
officers are coming, guided by her and Reshid. If you want to live, do not
look at me, but go!"
"How do you know this?" asked Almayer.
"Oh, Tuan! what matters how I know! I have only one eye, but I saw lights
in Abdulla's house and in his campong as we were paddling past. I have
ears, and while we lay under the bank I have heard the messengers sent out
to the white men's house."
"Will you depart without that woman who is my daughter?" said Almayer,
addressing Dain, while Babalatchi stamped with impatience, muttering,
"Run! Run at once!"
"No," answered Dain, steadily, "I will not go; to no man will I abandon
this woman."
"Then kill me and escape yourself," sobbed out Nina.
He clasped her close, looking at her tenderly, and whispered, "We will
never part, O Nina!"
"I shall not stay here any longer," broke in Babalatchi, angrily. "This is
great foolishness. No woman is worth a man's life. I am an old man, and I
know."
He picked up his staff, and, turning to go, looked at Dain as if offering
him his last chance of escape. But Dain's face was hidden amongst Nina's
black tresses, and he did not see this last appealing glance.
Babalatchi vanished in the darkness. Shortly after his disappearance they
heard the war canoe leave the landing-place in the swish of the numerous
paddles dipped in the water together. Almost at the same time Ali came up
from the riverside, two paddles on his shoulder.
"Our canoe is hidden up the creek, Tuan Almayer," he said, "in the dense
bush where the forest comes down to the water. I took it there because I
heard from Babalatchi's paddlers that the white men are coming here."
"Wait for me there," said Almayer, "but keep the canoe hidden."
He remained silent, listening to Ali's footsteps, then turned to Nina.
"Nina," he said sadly, "will you have no pity for me?"
There was no answer. She did not even turn her head, which was pressed
close to Dain's breast.
He made a movement as if to leave them and stopped. By the dim glow of the
burning-out fire he saw their two motionless figures. The woman's back
turned to him with the long black hair streaming down over the white
dress, and Dain's calm face looking at him above her head.
"I cannot," he muttered to himself. After a long pause he spoke again a
little lower, but in an unsteady voice, "It would be too great a disgrace.
I am a white man." He broke down completely there, and went on tearfully,
"I am a white man, and of good family. Very good family," he repeated,
weeping bitterly. "It would be a disgrace . . . all over the islands, . .
. the only white man on the east coast. No, it cannot be . . . white men
finding my daughter with this Malay. My daughter!" he cried aloud, with a
ring of despair in his voice.
He recovered his composure after a while and said distinctly—
"I will never forgive you, Nina—never! If you were to come back to me
now, the memory of this night would poison all my life. I shall try to
forget. I have no daughter. There used to be a half-caste woman in my
house, but she is going even now. You, Dain, or whatever your name may be,
I shall take you and that woman to the island at the mouth of the river
myself. Come with me."
He led the way, following the bank as far as the forest. Ali answered to
his call, and, pushing their way through the dense bush, they stepped into
the canoe hidden under the overhanging branches. Dain laid Nina in the
bottom, and sat holding her head on his knees. Almayer and Ali each took
up a paddle. As they were going to push out Ali hissed warningly. All
listened.
In the great stillness before the bursting out of the thunderstorm they
could hear the sound of oars working regularly in their row-locks. The
sound approached steadily, and Dain, looking through the branches, could
see the faint shape of a big white boat. A woman's voice said in a
cautious tone—
"There is the place where you may land white men; a little higher
—there!"
The boat was passing them so close in the narrow creek that the blades of
the long oars nearly touched the canoe.
"Way enough! Stand by to jump on shore! He is alone and unarmed," was the
quiet order in a man's voice, and in Dutch.
Somebody else whispered: "I think I can see a glimmer of a fire through
the bush." And then the boat floated past them, disappearing instantly in
the darkness.
"Now," whispered Ali, eagerly, "let us push out and paddle away."
The little canoe swung into the stream, and as it sprung forward in
response to the vigorous dig of the paddles they could hear an angry
shout.
"He is not by the fire. Spread out, men, and search for him!"
Blue lights blazed out in different parts of the clearing, and the shrill
voice of a woman cried in accents of rage and pain—
"Too late! O senseless white men! He has escaped!"
"That is the place," said Dain, indicating with the blade of his paddle a
small islet about a mile ahead of the canoe—"that is the place where
Babalatchi promised that a boat from the prau would come for me when the
sun is overhead. We will wait for that boat there."
Almayer, who was steering, nodded without speaking, and by a slight sweep
of his paddle laid the head of the canoe in the required direction.
They were just leaving the southern outlet of the Pantai, which lay behind
them in a straight and long vista of water shining between two walls of
thick verdure that ran downwards and towards each other, till at last they
joined and sank together in the far-away distance. The sun, rising above
the calm waters of the Straits, marked its own path by a streak of light
that glided upon the sea and darted up the wide reach of the river, a
hurried messenger of light and life to the gloomy forests of the coast;
and in this radiance of the sun's pathway floated the black canoe heading
for the islet which lay bathed in sunshine, the yellow sands of its
encircling beach shining like an inlaid golden disc on the polished steel
of the unwrinkled sea. To the north and south of it rose other islets,
joyous in their brilliant colouring of green and yellow, and on the main
coast the sombre line of mangrove bushes ended to the southward in the
reddish cliffs of Tanjong Mirrah, advancing into the sea, steep and
shadowless under the clear, light of the early morning.
The bottom of the canoe grated upon the sand as the little craft ran upon
the beach. Ali leaped on shore and held on while Dain stepped out carrying
Nina in his arms, exhausted by the events and the long travelling during
the night. Almayer was the last to leave the boat, and together with Ali
ran it higher up on the beach. Then Ali, tired out by the long paddling,
laid down in the shade of the canoe, and incontinently fell asleep.
Almayer sat sideways on the gunwale, and with his arms crossed on his
breast, looked to the southward upon the sea.
After carefully laying Nina down in the shade of the bushes growing in the
middle of the islet, Dain threw himself beside her and watched in silent
concern the tears that ran down from under her closed eyelids, and lost
themselves in that fine sand upon which they both were lying face to face.
These tears and this sorrow were for him a profound and disquieting
mystery. Now, when the danger was past, why should she grieve? He doubted
her love no more than he would have doubted the fact of his own existence,
but as he lay looking ardently in her face, watching her tears, her parted
lips, her very breath, he was uneasily conscious of something in her he
could not understand. Doubtless she had the wisdom of perfect beings. He
sighed. He felt something invisible that stood between them, something
that would let him approach her so far, but no farther. No desire, no
longing, no effort of will or length of life could destroy this vague
feeling of their difference. With awe but also with great pride he
concluded that it was her own incomparable perfection. She was his, and
yet she was like a woman from another world. His! His! He exulted in the
glorious thought; nevertheless her tears pained him.
With a wisp of her own hair which he took in his hand with timid reverence
he tried in an access of clumsy tenderness to dry the tears that trembled
on her eyelashes. He had his reward in a fleeting smile that brightened
her face for the short fraction of a second, but soon the tears fell
faster than ever, and he could bear it no more. He rose and walked towards
Almayer, who still sat absorbed in his contemplation of the sea. It was a
very, very long time since he had seen the sea—that sea that leads
everywhere, brings everything, and takes away so much. He had almost
forgotten why he was there, and dreamily he could see all his past life on
the smooth and boundless surface that glittered before his eyes.
Dain's hand laid on Almayer's shoulder recalled him with a start from some
country very far away indeed. He turned round, but his eyes seemed to look
rather at the place where Dain stood than at the man himself. Dain felt
uneasy under the unconscious gaze.
"What?" said Almayer.
"She is crying," murmured Dain, softly.
"She is crying! Why?" asked Almayer, indifferently.
"I came to ask you. My Ranee smiles when looking at the man she loves. It
is the white woman that is crying now. You would know."
Almayer shrugged his shoulders and turned away again towards the sea.
"Go, Tuan Putih," urged Dain. "Go to her; her tears are more terrible to
me than the anger of gods."
"Are they? You will see them more than once. She told me she could not
live without you," answered Almayer, speaking without the faintest spark
of expression in his face, "so it behoves you to go to her quick, for fear
you may find her dead."
He burst into a loud and unpleasant laugh which made Dain stare at him
with some apprehension, but got off the gunwale of the boat and moved
slowly towards Nina, glancing up at the sun as he walked.
"And you go when the sun is overhead?" he said.
"Yes, Tuan. Then we go," answered Dain.
"I have not long to wait," muttered Almayer. "It is most important for me
to see you go. Both of you. Most important," he repeated, stopping short
and looking at Dain fixedly.
He went on again towards Nina, and Dain remained behind. Almayer
approached his daughter and stood for a time looking down on her. She did
not open her eyes, but hearing footsteps near her, murmured in a low sob,
"Dain."
Almayer hesitated for a minute and then sank on the sand by her side. She,
not hearing a responsive word, not feeling a touch, opened her eyes—saw
her father, and sat up suddenly with a movement of terror.
"Oh, father!" she murmured faintly, and in that word there was expressed
regret and fear and dawning hope.
"I shall never forgive you, Nina," said Almayer, in a dispassionate voice.
"You have torn my heart from me while I dreamt of your happiness. You have
deceived me. Your eyes that for me were like truth itself lied to me in
every glance—for how long? You know that best. When you were caressing my
cheek you were counting the minutes to the sunset that was the signal for
your meeting with that man—there!"
He ceased, and they both sat silent side by side, not looking at each
other, but gazing at the vast expanse of the sea. Almayer's words had
dried Nina's tears, and her look grew hard as she stared before her into
the limitless sheet of blue that shone limpid, unwaving, and steady like
heaven itself. He looked at it also, but his features had lost all
expression, and life in his eyes seemed to have gone out. The face was a
blank, without a sign of emotion, feeling, reason, or even knowledge of
itself. All passion, regret, grief, hope, or anger—all were gone, erased
by the hand of fate, as if after this last stroke everything was over and
there was no need for any record.
Those few who saw Almayer during the short period of his remaining days
were always impressed by the sight of that face that seemed to know
nothing of what went on within: like the blank wall of a prison enclosing
sin, regrets, and pain, and wasted life, in the cold indifference of
mortar and stones.
"What is there to forgive?" asked Nina, not addressing Almayer directly,
but more as if arguing with herself. "Can I not live my own life as you
have lived yours? The path you would have wished me to follow has been
closed to me by no fault of mine."
"You never told me," muttered Almayer.
"You never asked me," she answered, "and I thought you were like the
others and did not care. I bore the memory of my humiliation alone, and
why should I tell you that it came to me because I am your daughter? I
knew you could not avenge me."
"And yet I was thinking of that only," interrupted Almayer, "and I wanted
to give you years of happiness for the short day of your suffering. I only
knew of one way."
"Ah! but it was not my way!" she replied. "Could you give me happiness
without life? Life!" she repeated with sudden energy that sent the word
ringing over the sea. "Life that means power and love," she added in a low
voice.
"That!" said Almayer, pointing his finger at Dain standing close by and
looking at them in curious wonder.
"Yes, that!" she replied, looking her father full in the face and noticing
for the first time with a slight gasp of fear the unnatural rigidity of
his features.
"I would have rather strangled you with my own hands," said Almayer, in an
expressionless voice which was such a contrast to the desperate bitterness
of his feelings that it surprised even himself. He asked himself who
spoke, and, after looking slowly round as if expecting to see somebody,
turned again his eyes towards the sea.
"You say that because you do not understand the meaning of my words," she
said sadly. "Between you and my mother there never was any love. When I
returned to Sambir I found the place which I thought would be a peaceful
refuge for my heart, filled with weariness and hatred—and mutual
contempt. I have listened to your voice and to her voice. Then I saw that
you could not understand me; for was I not part of that woman? Of her who
was the regret and shame of your life? I had to choose—I hesitated. Why
were you so blind? Did you not see me struggling before your eyes? But,
when he came, all doubt disappeared, and I saw only the light of the blue
and cloudless heaven—"
"I will tell you the rest," interrupted Almayer: "when that man came I
also saw the blue and the sunshine of the sky. A thunderbolt has fallen
from that sky, and suddenly all is still and dark around me for ever. I
will never forgive you, Nina; and to-morrow I shall forget you! I shall
never forgive you," he repeated with mechanical obstinacy while she sat,
her head bowed down as if afraid to look at her father.
To him it seemed of the utmost importance that he should assure her of his
intention of never forgiving. He was convinced that his faith in her had
been the foundation of his hopes, the motive of his courage, of his
determination to live and struggle, and to be victorious for her sake. And
now his faith was gone, destroyed by her own hands; destroyed cruelly,
treacherously, in the dark; in the very moment of success. In the utter
wreck of his affections and of all his feelings, in the chaotic disorder
of his thoughts, above the confused sensation of physical pain that
wrapped him up in a sting as of a whiplash curling round him from his
shoulders down to his feet, only one idea remained clear and definite—not
to forgive her; only one vivid desire—to forget her. And this must be
made clear to her—and to himself—by frequent repetition. That was his
idea of his duty to himself—to his race—to his respectable connections;
to the whole universe unsettled and shaken by this frightful catastrophe
of his life. He saw it clearly and believed he was a strong man. He had
always prided himself upon his unflinching firmness. And yet he was
afraid. She had been all in all to him. What if he should let the memory
of his love for her weaken the sense of his dignity? She was a remarkable
woman; he could see that; all the latent greatness of his nature—in which
he honestly believed—had been transfused into that slight, girlish
figure. Great things could be done! What if he should suddenly take her to
his heart, forget his shame, and pain, and anger, and—follow her! What if
he changed his heart if not his skin and made her life easier between the
two loves that would guard her from any mischance! His heart yearned for
her. What if he should say that his love for her was greater than . . .
"I will never forgive you, Nina!" he shouted, leaping up madly in the
sudden fear of his dream.
This was the last time in his life that he was heard to raise his voice.
Henceforth he spoke always in a monotonous whisper like an instrument of
which all the strings but one are broken in a last ringing clamour under a
heavy blow.
She rose to her feet and looked at him. The very violence of his cry
soothed her in an intuitive conviction of his love, and she hugged to her
breast the lamentable remnants of that affection with the unscrupulous
greediness of women who cling desperately to the very scraps and rags of
love, any kind of love, as a thing that of right belongs to them and is
the very breath of their life. She put both her hands on Almayer's
shoulders, and looking at him half tenderly, half playfully, she said—
"You speak so because you love me."
Almayer shook his head.
"Yes, you do," she insisted softly; then after a short pause she added,
"and you will never forget me."
Almayer shivered slightly. She could not have said a more cruel thing.
"Here is the boat coming now," said Dain, his arm outstretched towards a
black speck on the water between the coast and the islet.
They all looked at it and remained standing in silence till the little
canoe came gently on the beach and a man landed and walked towards them.
He stopped some distance off and hesitated.
"What news?" asked Dain.
"We have had orders secretly and in the night to take off from this islet
a man and a woman. I see the woman. Which of you is the man?"
"Come, delight of my eyes," said Dain to Nina. "Now we go, and your voice
shall be for my ears only. You have spoken your last words to the Tuan
Putih, your father. Come."
She hesitated for a while, looking at Almayer, who kept his eyes steadily
on the sea, then she touched his forehead in a lingering kiss, and a
tear—one of her tears—fell on his cheek and ran down his immovable face.
"Goodbye," she whispered, and remained irresolute till he pushed her
suddenly into Dain's arms.
"If you have any pity for me," murmured Almayer, as if repeating some
sentence learned by heart, "take that woman away."
He stood very straight, his shoulders thrown back, his head held high, and
looked at them as they went down the beach to the canoe, walking enlaced
in each other's arms. He looked at the line of their footsteps marked in
the sand. He followed their figures moving in the crude blaze of the
vertical sun, in that light violent and vibrating, like a triumphal
flourish of brazen trumpets. He looked at the man's brown shoulders, at
the red sarong round his waist; at the tall, slender, dazzling white
figure he supported. He looked at the white dress, at the falling masses
of the long black hair. He looked at them embarking, and at the canoe
growing smaller in the distance, with rage, despair, and regret in his
heart, and on his face a peace as that of a carved image of oblivion.
Inwardly he felt himself torn to pieces, but Ali—who now aroused—stood
close to his master, saw on his features the blank expression of those who
live in that hopeless calm which sightless eyes only can give.
The canoe disappeared, and Almayer stood motionless with his eyes fixed on
its wake. Ali from under the shade of his hand examined the coast
curiously. As the sun declined, the sea-breeze sprang up from the
northward and shivered with its breath the glassy surface of the water.
"Dapat!" exclaimed Ali, joyously. "Got him, master! Got prau! Not there!
Look more Tanah Mirrah side. Aha! That way! Master, see? Now plain. See?"
Almayer followed Ali's forefinger with his eyes for a long time in vain.
At last he sighted a triangular patch of yellow light on the red
background of the cliffs of Tanjong Mirrah. It was the sail of the prau
that had caught the sunlight and stood out, distinct with its gay tint, on
the dark red of the cape. The yellow triangle crept slowly from cliff to
cliff, till it cleared the last point of land and shone brilliantly for a
fleeting minute on the blue of the open sea. Then the prau bore up to the
southward: the light went out of the sail, and all at once the vessel
itself disappeared, vanishing in the shadow of the steep headland that
looked on, patient and lonely, watching over the empty sea.
Almayer never moved. Round the little islet the air was full of the talk
of the rippling water. The crested wavelets ran up the beach audaciously,
joyously, with the lightness of young life, and died quickly,
unresistingly, and graciously, in the wide curves of transparent foam on
the yellow sand. Above, the white clouds sailed rapidly southwards as if
intent upon overtaking something. Ali seemed anxious.
"Master," he said timidly, "time to get house now. Long way off to pull.
All ready, sir."
"Wait," whispered Almayer.
Now she was gone his business was to forget, and he had a strange notion
that it should be done systematically and in order. To Ali's great dismay
he fell on his hands and knees, and, creeping along the sand, erased
carefully with his hand all traces of Nina's footsteps. He piled up small
heaps of sand, leaving behind him a line of miniature graves right down to
the water. After burying the last slight imprint of Nina's slipper he
stood up, and, turning his face towards the headland where he had last
seen the prau, he made an effort to shout out loud again his firm resolve
to never forgive. Ali watching him uneasily saw only his lips move, but
heard no sound. He brought his foot down with a stamp. He was a firm
man—firm as a rock. Let her go. He never had a daughter. He would forget.
He was forgetting already.
Ali approached him again, insisting on immediate departure, and this time
he consented, and they went together towards their canoe, Almayer leading.
For all his firmness he looked very dejected and feeble as he dragged his
feet slowly through the sand on the beach; and by his side—invisible to
Ali—stalked that particular fiend whose mission it is to jog the memories
of men, lest they should forget the meaning of life. He whispered into
Almayer's ear a childish prattle of many years ago. Almayer, his head bent
on one side, seemed to listen to his invisible companion, but his face was
like the face of a man that has died struck from behind—a face from which
all feelings and all expression are suddenly wiped off by the hand of
unexpected death.
They slept on the river that night, mooring their canoe under the bushes
and lying down in the bottom side by side, in the absolute exhaustion that
kills hunger, thirst, all feeling and all thought in the overpowering
desire for that deep sleep which is like the temporary annihilation of the
tired body. Next day they started again and fought doggedly with the
current all the morning, till about midday they reached the settlement and
made fast their little craft to the jetty of Lingard and Co. Almayer
walked straight to the house, and Ali followed, paddles on shoulder,
thinking that he would like to eat something. As they crossed the front
courtyard they noticed the abandoned look of the place. Ali looked in at
the different servants' houses: all were empty. In the back courtyard
there was the same absence of sound and life. In the cooking-shed the fire
was out and the black embers were cold. A tall, lean man came stealthily
out of the banana plantation, and went away rapidly across the open space
looking at them with big, frightened eyes over his shoulder. Some vagabond
without a master; there were many such in the settlement, and they looked
upon Almayer as their patron. They prowled about his premises and picked
their living there, sure that nothing worse could befall them than a
shower of curses when they got in the way of the white man, whom they
trusted and liked, and called a fool amongst themselves. In the house,
which Almayer entered through the back verandah, the only living thing
that met his eyes was his small monkey which, hungry and unnoticed for the
last two days, began to cry and complain in monkey language as soon as it
caught sight of the familiar face. Almayer soothed it with a few words and
ordered Ali to bring in some bananas, then while Ali was gone to get them
he stood in the doorway of the front verandah looking at the chaos of
overturned furniture. Finally he picked up the table and sat on it while
the monkey let itself down from the roof-stick by its chain and perched on
his shoulder. When the bananas came they had their breakfast together;
both hungry, both eating greedily and showering the skins round them
recklessly, in the trusting silence of perfect friendship. Ali went away,
grumbling, to cook some rice himself, for all the women about the house
had disappeared; he did not know where. Almayer did not seem to care, and,
after he finished eating, he sat on the table swinging his legs and
staring at the river as if lost in thought.
After some time he got up and went to the door of a room on the right of
the verandah. That was the office. The office of Lingard and Co. He very
seldom went in there. There was no business now, and he did not want an
office. The door was locked, and he stood biting his lower lip, trying to
think of the place where the key could be. Suddenly he remembered: in the
women's room hung upon a nail. He went over to the doorway where the red
curtain hung down in motionless folds, and hesitated for a moment before
pushing it aside with his shoulder as if breaking down some solid
obstacle. A great square of sunshine entering through the window lay on
the floor. On the left he saw Mrs. Almayer's big wooden chest, the lid
thrown back, empty; near it the brass nails of Nina's European trunk shone
in the large initials N. A. on the cover. A few of Nina's dresses hung on
wooden pegs, stiffened in a look of offended dignity at their abandonment.
He remembered making the pegs himself and noticed that they were very good
pegs. Where was the key? He looked round and saw it near the door where he
stood. It was red with rust. He felt very much annoyed at that, and
directly afterwards wondered at his own feeling. What did it matter? There
soon would be no key—no door—nothing! He paused, key in hand, and asked
himself whether he knew well what he was about. He went out again on the
verandah and stood by the table thinking. The monkey jumped down, and,
snatching a banana skin, absorbed itself in picking it to shreds
industriously.
"Forget!" muttered Almayer, and that word started before him a sequence of
events, a detailed programme of things to do. He knew perfectly well what
was to be done now. First this, then that, and then forgetfulness would
come easy. Very easy. He had a fixed idea that if he should not forget
before he died he would have to remember to all eternity. Certain things
had to be taken out of his life, stamped out of sight, destroyed,
forgotten. For a long time he stood in deep thought, lost in the alarming
possibilities of unconquerable memory, with the fear of death and eternity
before him. "Eternity!" he said aloud, and the sound of that word recalled
him out of his reverie. The monkey started, dropped the skin, and grinned
up at him amicably.
He went towards the office door and with some difficulty managed to open
it. He entered in a cloud of dust that rose under his feet.
Books open with torn pages bestrewed the floor; other books lay about
grimy and black, looking as if they had never been opened. Account books.
In those books he had intended to keep day by day a record of his rising
fortunes. Long time ago. A very long time. For many years there has been
no record to keep on the blue and red ruled pages! In the middle of the
room the big office desk, with one of its legs broken, careened over like
the hull of a stranded ship; most of the drawers had fallen out,
disclosing heaps of paper yellow with age and dirt. The revolving office
chair stood in its place, but he found the pivot set fast when he tried to
turn it. No matter. He desisted, and his eyes wandered slowly from object
to object. All those things had cost a lot of money at the time. The desk,
the paper, the torn books, and the broken shelves, all under a thick coat
of dust. The very dust and bones of a dead and gone business. He looked at
all these things, all that was left after so many years of work, of
strife, of weariness, of discouragement, conquered so many times. And all
for what? He stood thinking mournfully of his past life till he heard
distinctly the clear voice of a child speaking amongst all this wreck,
ruin, and waste. He started with a great fear in his heart, and feverishly
began to rake in the papers scattered on the floor, broke the chair into
bits, splintered the drawers by banging them against the desk, and made a
big heap of all that rubbish in one corner of the room.
He came out quickly, slammed the door after him, turned the key, and,
taking it out, ran to the front rail of the verandah, and, with a great
swing of his arm, sent the key whizzing into the river. This done he went
back slowly to the table, called the monkey down, unhooked its chain, and
induced it to remain quiet in the breast of his jacket. Then he sat again
on the table and looked fixedly at the door of the room he had just left.
He listened also intently. He heard a dry sound of rustling; sharp cracks
as of dry wood snapping; a whirr like of a bird's wings when it rises
suddenly, and then he saw a thin stream of smoke come through the keyhole.
The monkey struggled under his coat. Ali appeared with his eyes starting
out of his head.
"Master! House burn!" he shouted.
Almayer stood up holding by the table. He could hear the yells of alarm
and surprise in the settlement. Ali wrung his hands, lamenting aloud.
"Stop this noise, fool!" said Almayer, quietly. "Pick up my hammock and
blankets and take them to the other house. Quick, now!"
The smoke burst through the crevices of the door, and Ali, with the
hammock in his arms, cleared in one bound the steps of the verandah.
"It has caught well," muttered Almayer to himself. "Be quiet, Jack," he
added, as the monkey made a frantic effort to escape from its confinement.
The door split from top to bottom, and a rush of flame and smoke drove
Almayer away from the table to the front rail of the verandah. He held on
there till a great roar overhead assured him that the roof was ablaze.
Then he ran down the steps of the verandah, coughing, half choked with the
smoke that pursued him in bluish wreaths curling about his head.
On the other side of the ditch, separating Almayer's courtyard from the
settlement, a crowd of the inhabitants of Sambir looked at the burning
house of the white man. In the calm air the flames rushed up on high,
coloured pale brick-red, with violet gleams in the strong sunshine. The
thin column of smoke ascended straight and unwavering till it lost itself
in the clear blue of the sky, and, in the great empty space between the
two houses the interested spectators could see the tall figure of the Tuan
Putih, with bowed head and dragging feet, walking slowly away from the
fire towards the shelter of "Almayer's Folly."
In that manner did Almayer move into his new house. He took possession of
the new ruin, and in the undying folly of his heart set himself to wait in
anxiety and pain for that forgetfulness which was so slow to come. He had
done all he could. Every vestige of Nina's existence had been destroyed;
and now with every sunrise he asked himself whether the longed-for
oblivion would come before sunset, whether it would come before he died?
He wanted to live only long enough to be able to forget, and the tenacity
of his memory filled him with dread and horror of death; for should it
come before he could accomplish the purpose of his life he would have to
remember for ever! He also longed for loneliness. He wanted to be alone.
But he was not. In the dim light of the rooms with their closed shutters,
in the bright sunshine of the verandah, wherever he went, whichever way he
turned, he saw the small figure of a little maiden with pretty olive face,
with long black hair, her little pink robe slipping off her shoulders, her
big eyes looking up at him in the tender trustfulness of a petted child.
Ali did not see anything, but he also was aware of the presence of a child
in the house. In his long talks by the evening fires of the settlement he
used to tell his intimate friends of Almayer's strange doings. His master
had turned sorcerer in his old age. Ali said that often when Tuan Putih
had retired for the night he could hear him talking to something in his
room. Ali thought that it was a spirit in the shape of a child. He knew
his master spoke to a child from certain expressions and words his master
used. His master spoke in Malay a little, but mostly in English, which he,
Ali, could understand. Master spoke to the child at times tenderly, then
he would weep over it, laugh at it, scold it, beg of it to go away; curse
it. It was a bad and stubborn spirit. Ali thought his master had
imprudently called it up, and now could not get rid of it. His master was
very brave; he was not afraid to curse this spirit in the very Presence;
and once he fought with it. Ali had heard a great noise as of running
about inside the room and groans. His master groaned. Spirits do not
groan. His master was brave, but foolish. You cannot hurt a spirit. Ali
expected to find his master dead next morning, but he came out very early,
looking much older than the day before, and had no food all day.
So far Ali to the settlement. To Captain Ford he was much more
communicative, for the good reason that Captain Ford had the purse and
gave orders. On each of Ford's monthly visits to Sambir Ali had to go on
board with a report about the inhabitant of "Almayer's Folly." On his
first visit to Sambir, after Nina's departure, Ford had taken charge of
Almayer's affairs. They were not cumbersome. The shed for the storage of
goods was empty, the boats had disappeared, appropriated—generally in
night-time—by various citizens of Sambir in need of means of transport.
During a great flood the jetty of Lingard and Co. left the bank and
floated down the river, probably in search of more cheerful surroundings;
even the flock of geese—"the only geese on the east coast"—departed
somewhere, preferring the unknown dangers of the bush to the desolation of
their old home. As time went on the grass grew over the black patch of
ground where the old house used to stand, and nothing remained to mark the
place of the dwelling that had sheltered Almayer's young hopes, his
foolish dream of splendid future, his awakening, and his despair.
Ford did not often visit Almayer, for visiting Almayer was not a pleasant
task. At first he used to respond listlessly to the old seaman's
boisterous inquiries about his health; he even made efforts to talk,
asking for news in a voice that made it perfectly clear that no news from
this world had any interest for him. Then gradually he became more
silent—not sulkily—but as if he was forgetting how to speak. He used
also to hide in the darkest rooms of the house, where Ford had to seek him
out guided by the patter of the monkey galloping before him. The monkey
was always there to receive and introduce Ford. The little animal seemed
to have taken complete charge of its master, and whenever it wished for
his presence on the verandah it would tug perseveringly at his jacket,
till Almayer obediently came out into the sunshine, which he seemed to
dislike so much.
One morning Ford found him sitting on the floor of the verandah, his back
against the wall, his legs stretched stiffly out, his arms hanging by his
side. His expressionless face, his eyes open wide with immobile pupils,
and the rigidity of his pose, made him look like an immense man-doll
broken and flung there out of the way. As Ford came up the steps he turned
his head slowly.
"Ford," he murmured from the floor, "I cannot forget."
"Can't you?" said Ford, innocently, with an attempt at joviality: "I wish
I was like you. I am losing my memory—age, I suppose; only the other day
my mate—"
He stopped, for Almayer had got up, stumbled, and steadied himself on his
friend's arm.
"Hallo! You are better to-day. Soon be all right," said Ford, cheerfully,
but feeling rather scared.
Almayer let go his arm and stood very straight with his head up and
shoulders thrown back, looking stonily at the multitude of suns shining in
ripples of the river. His jacket and his loose trousers flapped in the
breeze on his thin limbs.
"Let her go!" he whispered in a grating voice. "Let her go. To- morrow I
shall forget. I am a firm man, . . . firm as a . . . rock, . . . firm . .
."
Ford looked at his face—and fled. The skipper was a tolerably firm man
himself—as those who had sailed with him could testify- -but Almayer's
firmness was altogether too much for his fortitude.
Next time the steamer called in Sambir Ali came on board early with a
grievance. He complained to Ford that Jim-Eng the Chinaman had invaded
Almayer's house, and actually had lived there for the last month.
"And they both smoke," added Ali.
"Phew! Opium, you mean?"
Ali nodded, and Ford remained thoughtful; then he muttered to himself,
"Poor devil! The sooner the better now." In the afternoon he walked up to
the house.
"What are you doing here?" he asked of Jim-Eng, whom he found strolling
about on the verandah.
Jim-Eng explained in bad Malay, and speaking in that monotonous,
uninterested voice of an opium smoker pretty far gone, that his house was
old, the roof leaked, and the floor was rotten. So, being an old friend
for many, many years, he took his money, his opium, and two pipes, and
came to live in this big house.
"There is plenty of room. He smokes, and I live here. He will not smoke
long," he concluded.
"Where is he now?" asked Ford.
"Inside. He sleeps," answered Jim-Eng, wearily. Ford glanced in through
the doorway. In the dim light of the room he could see Almayer lying on
his back on the floor, his head on a wooden pillow, the long white beard
scattered over his breast, the yellow skin of the face, the half-closed
eyelids showing the whites of the eye only. . . .
He shuddered and turned away. As he was leaving he noticed a long strip of
faded red silk, with some Chinese letters on it, which Jim-Eng had just
fastened to one of the pillars.
"What's that?" he asked.
"That," said Jim-Eng, in his colourless voice, "that is the name of the
house. All the same like my house. Very good name."
Ford looked at him for awhile and went away. He did not know what the
crazy-looking maze of the Chinese inscription on the red silk meant. Had
he asked Jim-Eng, that patient Chinaman would have informed him with
proper pride that its meaning was: "House of heavenly delight."
In the evening of the same day Babalatchi called on Captain Ford. The
captain's cabin opened on deck, and Babalatchi sat astride on the high
step, while Ford smoked his pipe on the settee inside. The steamer was
leaving next morning, and the old statesman came as usual for a last chat.
"We had news from Bali last moon," remarked Babalatchi. "A grandson is
born to the old Rajah, and there is great rejoicing."
Ford sat up interested.
"Yes," went on Babalatchi, in answer to Ford's look. "I told him. That was
before he began to smoke."
"Well, and what?" asked Ford.
"I escaped with my life," said Babalatchi, with perfect gravity, "because
the white man is very weak and fell as he rushed upon me." Then, after a
pause, he added, "She is mad with joy."
"Mrs. Almayer, you mean?"
"Yes, she lives in our Rajah's house. She will not die soon. Such women
live a long time," said Babalatchi, with a slight tinge of regret in his
voice. "She has dollars, and she has buried them, but we know where. We
had much trouble with those people. We had to pay a fine and listen to
threats from the white men, and now we have to be careful." He sighed and
remained silent for a long while. Then with energy:
"There will be fighting. There is a breath of war on the islands. Shall I
live long enough to see? . . . Ah, Tuan!" he went on, more quietly, "the
old times were best. Even I have sailed with Lanun men, and boarded in the
night silent ships with white sails. That was before an English Rajah
ruled in Kuching. Then we fought amongst ourselves and were happy. Now
when we fight with you we can only die!"
He rose to go. "Tuan," he said, "you remember the girl that man Bulangi
had? Her that caused all the trouble?"
"Yes," said Ford. "What of her?"
"She grew thin and could not work. Then Bulangi, who is a thief and a
pig-eater, gave her to me for fifty dollars. I sent her amongst my women
to grow fat. I wanted to hear the sound of her laughter, but she must have
been bewitched, and . . . she died two days ago. Nay, Tuan. Why do you
speak bad words? I am old—that is true—but why should I not like the
sight of a young face and the sound of a young voice in my house?" He
paused, and then added with a little mournful laugh, "I am like a white
man talking too much of what is not men's talk when they speak to one
another."
And he went off looking very sad.
The crowd massed in a semicircle before the steps of "Almayer's Folly,"
swayed silently backwards and forwards, and opened out before the group of
white-robed and turbaned men advancing through the grass towards the
house. Abdulla walked first, supported by Reshid and followed by all the
Arabs in Sambir. As they entered the lane made by the respectful throng
there was a subdued murmur of voices, where the word "Mati" was the only
one distinctly audible. Abdulla stopped and looked round slowly.
"Is he dead?" he asked.
"May you live!" answered the crowd in one shout, and then there succeeded
a breathless silence.
Abdulla made a few paces forward and found himself for the last time face
to face with his old enemy. Whatever he might have been once he was not
dangerous now, lying stiff and lifeless in the tender light of the early
day. The only white man on the east coast was dead, and his soul,
delivered from the trammels of his earthly folly, stood now in the
presence of Infinite Wisdom. On the upturned face there was that serene
look which follows the sudden relief from anguish and pain, and it
testified silently before the cloudless heaven that the man lying there
under the gaze of indifferent eyes had been permitted to forget before he
died.
Abdulla looked down sadly at this Infidel he had fought so long and had
bested so many times. Such was the reward of the Faithful!
Yet in the Arab's old heart there was a feeling of regret for that thing
gone out of his life. He was leaving fast behind him friendships, and
enmities, successes, and disappointments—all that makes up a life; and
before him was only the end. Prayer would fill up the remainder of the
days allotted to the True Believer! He took in his hand the beads that
hung at his waist.
"I found him here, like this, in the morning," said Ali, in a low and awed
voice.
Abdulla glanced coldly once more at the serene face.
"Let us go," he said, addressing Reshid.
And as they passed through the crowd that fell back before them, the beads
in Abdulla's hand clicked, while in a solemn whisper he breathed out
piously the name of Allah! The Merciful! The Compassionate!
Digital Edition
©2014 Murray Altheim. All Rights Reserved.
Revision: 2014-10-30
Almayer's Folly: A Story of an Eastern River
by Joseph Conrad
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