登陆注册
14923800000036

第36章 THE TERRIBLE SOLOMONS.(5)

"What I contended all along--the house-boys are not to be trusted.""It does look serious," Harriwell admitted, "but we'll come through it all right. What the sanguinary niggers need is a shaking up. Will you gentlemen please bring your rifles to dinner, and will you, Mr. Brown, kindly prepare forty or fifty sticks of dynamite. 'make the fuses good and short. We'll give them a lesson. And now, gentlemen, dinner is served."One thing that Bertie detested was rice and curry, so it happened that he alone partook of an inviting omelet. He had quite finished his plate, when Harriwell helped himself to the omelet. One mouthful he tasted, then spat out vociferously.

"That's the second time," McTavish announced ominously.

Harriwell was still hawking and spitting.

"Second time, what?" Bertie quavered.

"Poison," was the answer. "That cook will be hanged yet.""That's the way the bookkeeper went out at Cape March," Brown spoke up. "Died horribly. They said on the Jessie that they heard him screaming three miles away.""I'll put the cook in irons," sputtered Harriwell. "Fortunately we discovered it in time."Bertie sat paralyzed. There was no color in his face. He attempted to speak, but only an inarticulate gurgle resulted. All eyed him anxiously.

"Don't say it, don't say it," McTavish cried in a tense voice.

"Yes, I ate it, plenty of it, a whole plateful!" Bertie cried explosively, like a diver suddenly regaining breath.

The awful silence continued half a minute longer, and he read his fate in their eyes.

"Maybe it wasn't poison after all," said Harriwell, dismally.

"Call in the cook," said Brown.

In came the cook, a grinning black boy, nose-spiked and ear-plugged.

"Here, you, Wi-wi, what name that?" Harriwell bellowed, pointing accusingly at the omelet.

Wi-wi was very naturally frightened and embarrassed.

"Him good fella kai-kai," he murmured apologetically.

"Make him eat it," suggested McTavish. "That's a proper test."Harriwell filled a spoon with the stuff and jumped for the cook, who fled in panic.

"That settles it," was Brown's solemn pronouncement. "He won't eat it.""Mr. Brown, will you please go and put the irons on him?" Harriwell turned cheerfully to Bertie. "It's all right, old man, the Commissioner will deal with him, and if you die, depend upon it, he will be hanged.""Don't think the government'll do it," objected McTavish.

"But gentlemen, gentlemen," Bertie cried. "In the meantime think of me."Harriwell shrugged his shoulders pityingly.

"Sorry, old man, but it's a native poison, and there are no known antidotes for native poisons. Try and compose yourself and if--"Two sharp reports of a rifle from without, interrupted the discourse, and Brown, entering, reloaded his rifle and sat down to table.

"The cook's dead," he said. "Fever. A rather sudden attack.""I was just telling Mr. Arkwright that there are no antidotes for native poisons--""Except gin," said Brown.

Harriwell called himself an absent-minded idiot and rushed for the gin bottle.

"Neat, man, neat," he warned Bertie, who gulped down a tumbler two-thirds full of the raw spirits, and coughed and choked from the angry bite of it till the tears ran down his cheeks.

Harriwell took his pulse and temperature, made a show of looking out for him, and doubted that the omelet had been poisoned. Brown and McTavish also doubted; but Bertie discerned an insincere ring in their voices. His appetite had left him, and he took his own pulse stealthily under the table. There was no question but what it was increasing, but he failed to ascribe it to the gin he had taken. 'mcTavish, rifle in hand, went out on the veranda to reconnoiter.

"They're massing up at the cook-house," was his report. "And they've no end of Sniders. 'my idea is to sneak around on the other side and take them in flank.

Strike the first blow, you know. Will you come along, Brown?"Harriwell ate on steadily, while Bertie discovered that his pulse had leaped up five beats. Nevertheless, he could not help jumping when the rifles began to go off. Above the scattering of Sniders could be heard the pumping of Brown's and McTavish's Winchesters--all against a background of demoniacal screeching and yelling.

"They've got them on the run," Harriwell remarked, as voices and gunshots faded away in the distance.

Scarcely were Brown and McTavish back at the table when the latter reconnoitered.

"They've got dynamite," he said.

"Then let's charge them with dynamite," Harriwell proposed.

Thrusting half a dozen sticks each into their pockets and equipping themselves with lighted cigars, they started for the door. And just then it happened.

They blamed McTavish for it afterward, and he admitted that the charge had been a trifle excessive. But at any rate it went off under the house, which lifted up cornerwise and settled back on its foundations. Half the china on the table was shattered, while the eight-day clock stopped. Yelling for vengeance, the three men rushed out into the night, and the bombardment began.

When they returned, there was no Bertie. He had dragged himself away to the office, barricaded himself in, and sunk upon the floor in a gin-soaked nightmare, wherein he died a thousand deaths while the valorous fight went on around him. In the morning, sick and headachey from the gin, he crawled out to find the sun still in the sky and God presumable in heaven, for his hosts were alive and uninjured.

Harriwell pressed him to stay on longer, but Bertie insisted on sailing immediately on the Arla for Tulagi, where, until the following steamer day, he stuck close by the Commissioner's house. There were lady tourists on the outgoing steamer, and Bertie was again a hero, while Captain Malu, as usual, passed unnoticed. But Captain Malu sent back from Sydney two cases of the best Scotch whiskey on the market, for he was not able to make up his mind as to whether it was Captain Hansen or Mr Harriwell who had given Bertie Arkwright the more gorgeous insight into life in the Solomons.

同类推荐
  • 雪关禅师语录

    雪关禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 文房四谱

    文房四谱

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 元代奏议集录

    元代奏议集录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Autobiographies

    Autobiographies

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • The Categories

    The Categories

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 洪荒之云中仙

    洪荒之云中仙

    先有鸿钧后有天,我生洪荒三万年,道祖讲道不展颜,自称爷是云中仙。
  • 神鹿灵刀:鹿晗穿越记

    神鹿灵刀:鹿晗穿越记

    盘古灵玦,入灵天开。成帝之日,乘鹿归来。拥有千万粉丝的人气偶像鹿晗,在西湖录跑男节目时,忽然捡到一块神秘玉佩后便莫名穿越了。然而那是一片修炼杀气的神秘大陆,可是在这片以杀为尊强者为帝的大陆上,人气偶像鹿晗却阴差阳错成了和自己同名的废柴鹿家大少爷鹿晗。为了证明自己,为了回到地球,鹿晗一步步逆袭最终养成了大陆上最强的存在——杀帝……
  • 最强最霸道的修仙

    最强最霸道的修仙

    最强最霸道的修仙主要说了主人公是一个非常霸道的人,霸道占取独世美女,城主的小女儿,上官家的上官玉儿,杨家的杨妃姬等等。。。各种逆天,各种刺激。
  • 上清明堂玄丹真经

    上清明堂玄丹真经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 网管少年

    网管少年

    2016年的一天,江城的夜晚霓虹闪烁,车水马龙,姜尚伦独自一人,背着一个装满自己行李的双肩背包,走在宽阔亮堂的马路边,那看不见的阴暗小路上。回忆里父亲失望的怒吼和母亲绝望的嚎哭,让深陷黑暗的他只是更加沉默。那摔门而出的时候,父亲的怒吼:你永远也别再回来了,老子丢不起这个人!就当你死在外面了!那母亲顶着通红的眼睛,擦着永远也流不干的泪水,倚在门框紧盯着他的眼神,让他一辈子也忘不了了。可是,回不去了呀!黑夜中的天空如此广阔,却怎么容不下我的梦想呢?姜尚伦抬头望着黑暗的天空,眼角无意间看见一块大大的霓虹招牌:悦网咖。站在原地想了一会,他就这样走了进去。
  • 青城山人

    青城山人

    青城山酒家客栈里的纯新小萌坚毅波折的寻仙求道之路。混凡俗,乱九幽,落天仙,战群雄……寻道落根是为天极大道
  • 我的男友是先知

    我的男友是先知

    我有一个男朋友,他叫陈观水,他有点特别。他曾站在深渊,仰望天堂。但他站在天堂,却注视深渊。我们都是爱国者,只是我们爱国的方式不同。谁道神州无正气,东海还有陈观水。
  • 离人心上雪

    离人心上雪

    诛仙台的字字诛心,换来他的默默守护,从曾经的天真,到现在的狠决,是痴还念?是孽还是缘?是善还是恶?他是魔也是这世间独剩唯一的一个神,千万年的冰冷山,遇到她之后,他的世界出现了光明,皆说温柔乡英雄冢,他却甘之如饴,宁负天下人不负卿。她,穿越而来,本以为是意外,却不知是阴谋,信任的不再信任,喜欢的不再喜欢,昔日的信誓旦旦变成了笑话。岁月是把杀猪刀,j我们长大了,再也回不到曾经。
  • 天天营养百味:爽口美味菜

    天天营养百味:爽口美味菜

    《爽口美味菜》为您提供最常吃、最经典的家常美食做法,最全面、最深入的菜品解析,还为您讲解营养知识,烹饪技法,厨事窍门的运用,集权威专家与身边百姓共同的智慧,倾力打造出让您一学就会的家常菜谱!让您在短时间内就学会做一手爽口美味菜。
  • 妃本带毒,殿下吃不消

    妃本带毒,殿下吃不消

    她费尽心机,助夫君登上帝位,皇后之位却被自己庶姐姐取而代之,而她落得抛尸弃野,不得好死!梦回一生,她誓要报仇雪恨,扭转乾坤!庶姐,姨母乖乖受死!一朝穿越,看丞相府的窝囊四小姐变天才,惊华傲视群臣!半路上杀出个比她更妖媚的太子殿下,她只说了一句话,我怕死的,祸水才能活千年!