登陆注册
15483300000048

第48章 CHAPTER XII KIDNAPED!(3)

With the two beasts trotting after us, we returned to where we had left Juag. Here I had the dickens' own time keeping the female from Juag's throat. Of all the venomous, wicked, cruel-hearted beasts on two worlds, I think a female hyaenodon takes the palm.

But eventually she tolerated Juag as she had Dian and me, and the five of us set out toward the coast, for Juag had just completed his labors on the thag when we arrived. We ate some of the meat before starting, and gave the hounds some. All that we could we carried upon our backs.

On the way to the canoe we met with no mishaps.

Dian told me that the fellow who had stolen her had come upon her from behind while the roaring of the thag had drowned all other noises, and that the first she had known he had disarmed her and thrown her to the back of his lidi, which had been lying down close by waiting for him. By the time the thag had ceased bellowing the fellow had got well away upon his swift mount. By holding one palm over her mouth he had prevented her calling for help.

"I thought," she concluded, "that I should have to use the viper's tooth, after all."

We reached the beach at last and unearthed the canoe. Then we busied ourselves stepping a mast and rigging a small sail--Juag and I, that is--while Dian cut the thag meat into long strips for drying when we should be out in the sunlight once more.

At last all was done. We were ready to embark. I had no difficulty in getting Raja aboard the dugout; but Ranee--as we christened her after I had explained to Dian the meaning of Raja and its feminine equivalent--positively refused for a time to follow her mate aboard. In fact, we had to shove off without her.

After a moment, however, she plunged into the water and swam after us.

I let her come alongside, and then Juag and I pulled her in, she snapping and snarling at us as we did so; but, strange to relate, she didn't offer to attack us after we had ensconced her safely in the bottom alongside Raja.

The canoe behaved much better under sail than I had hoped--infinitely better than the battle-ship Sari had--and we made good progress almost due west across the gulf, upon the opposite side of which I hoped to find the mouth of the river of which Juag had told me.

The islander was much interested and impressed by the sail and its results. He had not been able to understand exactly what I hoped to accomplish with it while we were fitting up the boat; but when he saw the clumsy dugout move steadily through the water without paddles, he was as delighted as a child. We made splendid headway on the trip, coming into sight of land at last.

Juag had been terror-stricken when he had learned that I intended crossing the ocean, and when we passed out of sight of land be was in a blue funk. He said that he had never heard of such a thing before in his life, and that always he had understood that those who ventured far from land never returned; for how could they find their way when they could see no land to steer for?

I tried to explain the compass to him; and though he never really grasped the scientific explanation of it, yet he did learn to steer by it quite as well as I. We passed several islands on the journey--islands which Juag told me were entirely unknown to his own island folk. Indeed, our eyes may have been the first ever to rest upon them. I should have liked to stop off and explore them, but the business of empire would brook no unnecessary delays.

I asked Juag how Hooja expected to reach the mouth of the river which we were in search of if he didn't cross the gulf, and the islander explained that Hooja would undoubtedly follow the coast around. For some time we sailed up the coast searching for the river, and at last we found it. So great was it that I thought it must be a mighty gulf until the mass of driftwood that came out upon the first ebb tide convinced me that it was the mouth of a river. There were the trunks of trees uprooted by the undermining of the river banks, giant creepers, flowers, grasses, and now and then the body of some land animal or bird.

同类推荐
  • 论语学案

    论语学案

    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。
  • Beyond

    Beyond

    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 Deliverance

    The Deliverance

    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。
  • ABC's of Science

    ABC's of Science

    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。
  • 佛说庄严菩提心经

    佛说庄严菩提心经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 残缺的小队

    残缺的小队

    一个是被母亲利用的独子,一个是被政治暗杀未遂的公主,他在寻找自我存在的价值,她在寻找复仇夺位的机会。当两人相遇,他发现可以实现自己的价值,而她觉得可以实现自己的目的。他是队员,她是队长。残缺人格的人组成了残缺的小队,也就有了以下残缺的故事。。。
  • 游戏王ARCV之超科学少年

    游戏王ARCV之超科学少年

    “榊游矢,不要沉浸于微笑世界中去,否则,你永远打不败我。。。”一位白发少年死死盯着游矢,一张卡在他面前:是“真冰瞳灵摆龙”。。。
  • 仙自永恒

    仙自永恒

    少年被迫离乡,携家传之物拜入修仙门下。此时妖魔横行,正道式微之际。风云悸动,大势将起,修仙之人该何去何从?身陷天下大势,不小心就有可能身消道毁,少年该是明哲自保,还是迎难而上?PS:本书前期会比较慢热,而且主角的性格会慢慢改变。
  • 凤舞兵皇

    凤舞兵皇

    她,是男尊女卑世界的女皇–紫玉卿,她是一朵可笑的奇葩,一副容貌奇丑无比,却贵为一国之君。燕紫太后为了她用尽手段掳来天下最出色的美男子,而她却也受尽他们的欺负最终轻生。听说各国女子都来燕紫购买燕紫国君代言的东西……听说燕紫国的美女越来越多了……听说燕紫国君退位让贤了,不干了,去闯江湖了……听说……
  • 玖重凰天皠月当空

    玖重凰天皠月当空

    她是澜沧三大势力之一皠月宫宫主,亦是万年难见的修炼天才,可她却不知,她,究竟是谁,来自哪里,去往何方。当她遇上他,不仅是一场旷世佳话,尘封多年的往事,也就此拉开序幕……
  • 天问之男儿行

    天问之男儿行

    《天问之男儿行》是《天问之学会坚强——奈何》的继续,这篇文章反复构思由原先的《天问之学会坚强——成长》转变成现在的《天问之男儿行》很大一部分原因是笔者近一年的社会生活阅历发生了一些变化。虽然故事预设的人物背景不会发生变化,但故事情节会有些许改动,会显得更加像是一个真实发生的玄幻故事。
  • 梦魇,只是一场复仇

    梦魇,只是一场复仇

    她,本是豪门世家,却因为一场车祸,离奇的车祸,让她的待遇有了天壤之别,所以,她决定了她要复仇,为她的妈妈报仇,让她们付出惨痛的代价!这只是一场复仇,一场计划。
  • 真仙真指语录

    真仙真指语录

    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。
  • 神之逆行

    神之逆行

    上古菩提老祖说:“别跟你的兄弟出去砍人了,本神仙回报你一个万古逍遥的大神之位。”至高守护之神说:“放弃你的兄弟!那些云神、水神、冰神、缪斯、纳斯等等如花似玉的漂亮女神统统归你。”无上主宰大神说:“…………”神圣光明之神说:“…………”雷电魔狼之神说:“…………”风锋说:“滚!兄弟在旁,生死何妨?神躯可灭,神位可逆,神格可夺!”…………洪义社排名第三十七的副扛把子“夜叉”被上古老神棍阴了一把,转生到了神之位面。天生懒散的他,跟他那些不靠谱的兄弟,无奈、无语、抓狂的应对着位面大神接二连三的威胁、许诺、拉拢、利用、暗杀……
  • 冷魅校草恋上轻狂女王

    冷魅校草恋上轻狂女王

    十八岁,她彻底对爱情死了心。不为别的,只因为她曾深爱过的男人狠狠的伤害了她。