The Third R. Austin Freeman Megapack. R. Austin Freeman
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“I take it,” replied Osmond, “that they have gorged the bait. Apparently, a party has managed to crawl across the bridge to attack the bamboo thicket from the front while the other force, which ferried across the river, attacked from the rear, and that each party is mistaking the other for us. The trifling error ought to keep them amused for quite a long time; in fact until we are beyond reach of pursuit.”
Stockbridge chuckled softly. “You are an ingenious beggar, Cook,” he declared with conviction; “and how you managed to keep your wits about you in that hurly-burly, I can’t imagine. However, I think we are safe enough now.” With this comfortable conclusion, he snuggled down into his hammock and settled himself for a night’s rest.
“Oh, Jim, dear,” whispered Betty, “how like you! To think out your plans calmly with the bullets flying around and everybody else in a hopeless twitter. It reminds me of the ‘phantom mate’ on the dear old Speedwell. By the way, how did you happen to be there in that miraculously opportune fashion?”
Osmond chuckled. “Well,” he exclaimed, “you are a pretty cool little fish, Betty. You drop down from the clouds and then inquire how I happened to be there. How did you happen to be there?”
“Oh, that is quite simple,” she replied. “I got Daddy’s permission to take a trip from Accra across the Akwapim Mountains to Akuse; and when I got there I thought I should like to have a look at the Country where the bobbery was going on. So I crossed the river and was starting off gaily towards the Krepi border when an interfering though well-meaning old chief stopped me and said I mustn’t go any farther because of war-palaver. I wanted to go on, but my carriers wouldn’t budge; so back I came, taking the road for Quittah, and by good luck dropped into a little war-palaver after all.”
“Why were you going to Quittah?”
“Now, Jim, don’t ask silly questions. You know perfectly well. Of course I was going to run over to Adaffia to call on my friend Captain J.; and by the same token, I shouldn’t have found him there. Now tell me how you came to be in the bush at this particular time.”
Osmond stated baldly the ostensible purpose of his expedition, to which Betty listened without comment. She had her suspicions as to the ultimate motive, but she asked no questions. The less said on that subject, the better.
This was evidently Osmond’s view, for he at once plunged into an account of the loss of the Speedwell and of Captain Hartup’s testamentary arrangements. Betty was deeply affected, both by the loss of the ship and the death of the worthy but cross-grained little skipper.
“How awfully sad!” she exclaimed, almost in tears. “The dear old ship, where I spent the happiest days of my life! And poor Captain Hartup! I always liked him, really. He was quite nice to me, in spite of his gruff manner. I used to feel that he was just a little human porcupine with india-rubber quills. And now I love him because, in his perverse little heart, he understood and appreciated my Captain Jim. May I come, one day, and put a wreath on his grave?”
“Yes, do, Betty,” he replied. “I buried him next to Osmond’s new grave, and I put up an oaken cross which I made out of some of the planking of the old Speedwell. He was very fond of his ship. And I have kept a couple of her beams—thought you might like to have something made out of one of them.”
“How sweet of you, Jim, to think of it!” she exclaimed, nestling close to him and slipping her hand round his arm, “and to know exactly what I should like! But we do understand each other, don’t we, Jim, dear?
“I think we do, Betty, darling,” he replied, pressing the little hand that had stolen into his own.
For a long time nothing more was said. After the turmoil and the alarms of the escape, it was very peaceful to sit in the gently-swaying canoe and listen to the voices of the night; the continuous “chirr” of countless cicadas, punctuated by the soft swish of the canoe-poles as they were drawn forward for another stroke; the deep-toned, hollow whistle of the great fox-bats, flapping slowly across the river; the long drawn cry, or staccato titter, of far-away hyenas, and now and again, the startling shriek of a potto in one of the lofty trees by the river-bank. It was more soothing than absolute silence. The sounds seemed so remote and unreal, so eloquent of utter solitude; of a vast, unseen wilderness with its mysterious population of bird and beast, living on its strange, primeval life unchanged from the days when the world was young.
After a long interval, Betty spoke again. “It seems,” she said, reflectively, “dreadfully callous to be so perfectly happy. I wonder if it is.”
“Why should it be?” her companion asked.
“I mean,” she explained, “with poor Mr. Westall lying there dead, only a few feet away.”
Osmond felt inwardly that Westall had not only thrown away his own life but jeopardized the lives of the others which were in his custody. But he forbore to express what he felt and answered, simply: “I don’t suppose the poor chap would grudge us our happiness. It won’t last very long.”
“Why shouldn’t it, Jim?” she exclaimed. “Why should we part again and be miserable for the want of one another? Oh, Jim, darling, my own mate, won’t you try to put away your scruples—your needless scruples, though I love and respect you for having them? But don’t let them spoil our lives. Forget John Osmond. He is dead and buried. Let him rest. I am yours, Jim, and you know it; and you are mine, and I know it. Those are the realities, which we could never change if we should live for a century. Let us accept them and forget what is past and done with. Life is short enough, dear, and our youth is slipping away. If we make a false move, we shall never get another chance. Oh, say it, Jim. Say you will put away the little things that don’t matter and hold fast to the reality of our great love and the happiness that is within our reach. Won’t you, Jim?”
He was silent for a while. This was what he had dreaded. To have freely offered, yet again, the gift beside which all the treasures of the earth were to him as nothing; and, even worse, to be made to feel that he, himself, had something to give which he must yet withhold; it was an agony. The temptation to yield—to shut his eyes to the future and snatch at the golden present—was almost irresistible. He knew that Betty was absolutely sincere. He knew quite well that whatever might befall in the future, she would hold him blameless and accept all mischances as the consequences of her own considered choice. His confidence in her generosity was absolute, nor did he undervalue her judgment. He even admitted that she was probably right. John Osmond was dead. The pursuit was at an end and the danger of discovery negligible. In a new country and in a new character he was sure that he could make her life all that she hoped. Then why not forget the past and say “yes”?
It was a great temptation. One little word, and they would possess all that they wished for, all that mattered to either of them. And yet—“Betty,” he said at length, in a tone of the deepest gravity, “you have said that we understand one another. We do; perfectly; absolutely. There is no need for me to tell you that I love you, or that if there were any sacrifice that I could make for you, I would make it joyfully and think it an honour and a privilege. You know that as well as I do. But there is one thing that I cannot do. Whatever I may be or may have done, I cannot behave like a cad to the woman I love. And that is what I should do if I married you. I should accept your sterling gold and give you base metal in exchange. You would be the wife of an outlaw, you would live under the continual menace of scandal and disaster. Your children would be the children of a nameless man and would grow up to the inheritance of an ancestry that could not be spoken of.
“Those are the realities, Betty. I realize, and I reverence, your great and noble love for me, unworthy as I am. But I should be a selfish brute