Middy and Ensign - BestLightNovel.com
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The vessel was now steaming steadily down stream, not quickly, for there were too many turns, but sufficiently fast to bring them rapidly near their goal.
"Let's see; I want to have a talk to you, Tom Long, about a trip ash.o.r.e--shooting," said Bob.
"Silence there, young gentleman," said the officer of the watch sternly, and then Bob was called suddenly away, so that he had no opportunity for a quiet chat with the young ensign.
Meanwhile the heavy throb throb of the steamer was the only noise heard save some weird cry of animal or bird in the dense jungle on either side. But every now and then as the waves and wash of the steamer rolled ash.o.r.e, churning up the mud, they startled the dull, heavy alligators into activity, sending them scurrying off the muddy banks into deep water, to await the pa.s.sing of the, to them, large water monster, whose great bulk dwarfed them into insignificance the most extreme.
Lower and lower down stream went the steamer with the dense black line of jungle on either side, till at the suggestion of the Malay pilots the steam was turned off, a couple of boats lowered, and the position of the vessel being reversed, she was allowed to float down head to stream, for quite another half-hour, when the word having been given, a small anchor that had been hanging down in the water was let go, without so much as a plash, the stout hemp cable ran quietly out, and the vessel was checked just off the narrow mouth of a creek, which seemed to run up amidst the palms and undergrowth, for there were no mangroves till the tidal waters were reached.
There was a little rapid pa.s.sing to and fro here, and a couple of boats were silently lowered down, to go a quarter of a mile below to watch the other entrance to the creek, for the Malays were too fox-like not to have a hole for exit as well as one for entry. But everything was done in the most noiseless manner, so that when three more boats full of soldiers, marines, and sailors rowed off for the creek, no one would have imagined that they had slipped off on a deadly errand, or that the steamer was cleared for action, the guns shotted and every man ready to let loose a deadly hail that should cut down the jungle like a scythe amidst the corn.
But the British officers had yet to learn that the Malays were more than their equals in cunning. No sooner had the steamer pa.s.sed on into the bank of mist and darkness that overhung the river, than there was a rustle, a splash, the rattling noise of large oars being thrust out, and in a couple of minutes the two long snaky prahus they had pa.s.sed crammed with fighting men were gliding up stream towards the residency, where certainly there were sentries on guard, but no dread of an enemy at hand.
The boats then had pushed off from the steamer, which lay ready to help them, and rowing out of the swift waters of the river they began to ascend the dark and muddy creek, when Bob Roberts, who was with the lieutenant and part of the soldiers in the same boat suddenly whispered--
"Hark! wasn't that distant firing?"
They listened, but could hear nothing, and the lieutenant was about to order the men to pull more sharply, when Bob touched his arm again.
"I'm sure that's firing, sir," he said.
"Nonsense, Roberts! absurd! Sit still and be silent. What firing could it be? We are ten miles from the residency."
"I can't help it, sir, if we are twenty," said Bob, sharply. "I'm sure it was firing, and there it goes again."
"Silence, sir," said the lieutenant, angrily. "Give way, my lads, give way."
The s.h.i.+p's boats glided on over the smooth water, the men rowing with m.u.f.fled oars; and so steadily that the blades seemed to be dipping in without making a splash.
The creek grew narrower, so that they had to keep right in the middle to avoid letting the oar blades brush the reeds, and so they rowed on, but without seeing anything resembling a prahu.
As to their direction, that they could not tell, but the shape of the creek they believed to be that of a bow--at least so the Malays had described it; and as the two ends of the bow must rest upon the river, they were sure, unless they struck up some narrow tortuous way, to come out at the other mouth and join the boats.
They went on very cautiously, with the mids.h.i.+pman anxious to talk to Tom Long, who sat beside him, but forbidden now to utter so much as a whisper. The oars dipped and rose, dipped and rose, without a sound, and sometimes a reed or water plant rustled slightly as it brushed the sides of the boats.
That in which the lieutenant was in command led the weird procession, Captain Smithers being in the next, while the third, nearly full of marines, every man with his loaded rifle between his knees, was close behind.
Still there was no sign of the prahus, and to the lieutenant's great annoyance, he found that in the darkness they must have turned up the sluggish stream that flowed into the creek, and missed the continuation, which was probably masked with reeds.
He felt ready to stamp with vexation, but controlling himself he pa.s.sed the word, and the boats backed down the stream, that in which the officer in command was seated, naturally being the last of the three.
"Wouldn't it have been better to have brought the Malays, sir?" said Bob.
"Yes, of course; but the cowards were afraid to come, my good lad," said the lieutenant.
"There, sir," whispered Bob again, "isn't that firing?"
"If you say another word to me about your confounded firing," said the lieutenant sharply, "I'll have you gagged, sir."
"I don't want to talk about it, sir," grumbled Bob, "but I'm sure there's something wrong up yonder."
"And I'm sure there's something wrong here, Mr Roberts," said the lieutenant, "and that's enough for me to attend to."
They went back in silence for some time, and then Tom Long, whose eyes were unusually good, pointed to a part of the reed-bed on the right.
"Is not that the continuation of the creek, sir?"
"Yes, to be sure, so it is," said the lieutenant. "We can see it coming this way. It's masked by those trees the other way. Steady, my lads; steady. Let us go first."
The creek was wider here, so the boats turned, and retook their former positions; but still there was no sign of the prahus.
"Those scoundrels must have led us wrong," muttered the lieutenant; "there's nothing here. Why, yonder's the open river, isn't it; or is it a wider s.p.a.ce? Yes, thank goodness; there are the prahus after all."
He waited till the other boats closed up, and then whispered his final orders, appointing two boats to attack one of the prahus while he made for the other alone.
"Now then," he whispered, "are you all ready? A bold dash, my lads, and they are ours."
"Please, sir," said old d.i.c.k.
"What is it?" cried the lieutenant, angrily.
"Them's our own two boats. I'd swear to 'em."
"And I'm sure that's _firing_," cried Bob, aloud.
"Yes," said Tom Long, speaking excitedly; "those were the two prahus we pa.s.sed on the way down."
"And they are attacking the residency," cried Bob.
Even as he spoke there was a shot fired from the steamer to recall the boats, and the men bent to their stout ashen oars with all their might, the lieutenant as he leaped on board being met by Captain Horton with--
"These Malay tigers are a little too cunning for us, Johnson. Those were the prahus we pa.s.sed on the way down."
"Yes, sir, another slip; but we may have them yet."
CHAPTER SIXTEEN.
HOW PRIVATE SIM TOOK A NAP, AND FOUND IT UNPLEASANT.
A general feeling of uneasiness had been excited as soon as it was known that the "Startler" had left her moorings to go in search of the two escaped prahus. Mr Linton did not feel happy in his own mind, though he did not communicate his fears to a soul.
Still he might have spoken openly, for it would not have caused greater terrors in the b.r.e.a.s.t.s of his daughter and niece, who were for some reason or another too full of vague fears to retire to rest. It did not occur to them to a.s.sociate their sensations with the departure of the steamer. In fact if they had so done, they would not have harboured the thought for a moment, knowing as they did how well-protected they were by the st.u.r.dy little garrison of troops, only about a third of which had gone upon the expedition.
Both Tom Long and Bob Roberts might have been conceited enough to think that the uneasiness of the ladies was entirely upon their account, and they would have been terribly upset to know that not a single thought concerning them had crossed the minds of either since the departure.
It was, in fact, a vague feeling of general uneasiness, such as might have been suffered at any time by those who were comparatively alone in the midst of a notoriously hostile, and even treacherous people, some of whom were friendly to the English, though the majority bore them the most intense hate.