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Adventures of Captain Horn, The
Chapter 10. The Captain Explores
Frank R Stockton
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       _ CHAPTER X. THE CAPTAIN EXPLORES
       Captain Horn had heard the story of Cheditafa, he walked away from the
       rest of the party, and stood, his eyes upon the ground, still
       mechanically holding his gun. He now knew that the great danger he had
       feared had been a real one, and far greater than he had imagined. A
       systematic attack by all the Rackbirds would have swept away his single
       resistance as the waters had swept them and their camp away. As to parley
       or compromise with those wretches, he knew that it would have been
       useless to think of it. They allowed no one to go forth from their hands
       to reveal the place of their rendezvous.
       But although he was able to appreciate at its full force the danger with
       which they had been threatened, his soul could not immediately adjust
       itself to the new conditions. It had been pressed down so far that it
       could not easily rise again. He felt that he must make himself believe in
       the relief which had come to them, and, turning sharply, he called out to
       Cheditafa:
       "Man, since you have been in this part of the country, have you ever
       seen or heard of any wild beasts here? Are there any jaguars or pumas?"
       The African shook his head. "No, no," said he, "no wild beasts. Everybody
       sleep out of doors. No think of beasts--no snakes."
       The captain dropped his gun upon the ground. "Miss Markham!" he
       exclaimed. "Mrs. Cliff! I truly believe we are out of all
       danger--that we--"
       But the two ladies had gone inside, and heard him not. They appreciated
       to the full the danger from which they had been delivered. Ralph, too,
       had gone. The captain saw him on his post of observation, jamming the end
       of his flagpole down between two rocks.
       "Hello!" cried the boy, seeing the captain looking up at him, "we might
       as well have this flying here all the time. There is nobody to hurt us
       now, and we want people to know where we are."
       The captain walked by the little group of Africans, who were sitting on
       the ground, talking in their native tongue, and entered the passage. He
       climbed over the barrier, and went to the lake. He did not wish to talk
       to anybody, but he felt that he must do something, and now was a good
       time to carry out his previous intention to cross over the empty bed of
       the lake and to look out of the opening on the other side. There was no
       need now to do this for purposes of vigilance, but he thought that if he
       could get out on the other side of the cave he might discover some clew
       to the disappearance of the lake.
       He had nearly crossed the lake bottom, when suddenly he stopped, gazing
       at something which stood before him, and which was doubtless the object
       he had struck when swimming. The sun was now high and the cave well
       lighted, and with a most eager interest the captain examined the slimy
       and curious object on which his feet had rested when it was submerged,
       and from which he had fallen. It was not the horizontal trunk of a tree
       with a branch projecting from it at right angles. It was nothing that was
       natural or had grown. It was plainly the work of man. It was a machine.
       At first the captain thought it was made of wood, but afterwards he
       believed it to be of metal of some sort. The horizontal portion of it
       was a great cylinder, so near the bottom of the lake that he could
       almost touch it with his hands, and it was supported by a massive
       framework. Prom this projected a long limb or bar, which was now almost
       horizontal, but which the captain believed to be the thick rod which had
       stood upright when he clutched it, and which had yielded to his weight
       and had gone down with him. He knew now what it was: it was a handle
       that had turned.
       He hurried to the other end of the huge machine, where it rested against
       the rocky wall of the cavern. There he saw in the shadow, but plain
       enough now that he was near it, a circular aperture, a yard or more in
       diameter. Inside of this was something which looked like a solid wheel,
       very thick, and standing upright in the opening. It was a valve. The
       captain stepped back and gazed for some minutes at this great machine
       which the disappearance of the water had revealed. It was easy for him to
       comprehend it now.
       "When I slipped and sank," he said to himself, "I pulled down that lever,
       and I opened the water-gate and let out the lake."
       The captain was a man whose mind was perfectly capable of appreciating
       novel and strange impressions, but with him such impressions always
       connected themselves, in one way or another, with action: he could not
       stand and wonder at the wonderful which had happened--it always suggested
       something he must do. What he now wanted to do was to climb up to the
       great aperture which lighted the cavern, and see what was outside. He
       could not understand how the lake could have gone from its basin without
       the sound of the rushing waters being heard by any one of the party.
       With some difficulty, he climbed up to the cleft and got outside. Here he
       had a much better view of the topography of the place than he had yet
       been able to obtain. So far as he had explored, his view toward the
       interior of the country had been impeded by rocks and hills. Here he had
       a clear view from the mountains to the sea, and the ridge which he had
       before seen to the southward he could now examine to greater advantage.
       It was this long chain of rocks which had concealed them from their
       enemies, and on the other side of which must be the ravine in which the
       Rackbirds had made their camp.
       Immediately below the captain was a little gorge, not very deep nor wide,
       and from its general trend toward the east and south the captain was sure
       that it formed the upper part of the ravine of the Rackbirds. At the
       bottom of it there trickled a little stream. To the northeast ran another
       line of low rock, which lost itself in the distance before it blended
       into the mountains, and at the foot of this must run the stream which had
       fed the lake.
       In their search for water, game, or fellow-beings, no one had climbed
       these desolate rocks, apparently dry and barren. But still the captain
       was puzzled as to the way the water had gone out of the lake. He did not
       believe that it had flowed through the ravine below. There were no signs
       that there had been a flood down there. Little vines and plants were
       growing in chinks of the rocks close to the water. And, moreover, had a
       vast deluge rushed out almost beneath the opening which lighted the cave,
       it must have been heard by some of the party. He concluded, therefore,
       that the water had escaped through a subterranean channel below the rocks
       from which he looked down.
       He climbed down the sides of the gorge, and walked along its bottom for
       two or three hundred yards, until around a jutting point of rock he saw
       that the sides of the defile separated for a considerable distance, and
       then, coming together again below, formed a sort of amphitheatre. The
       bottom of this was a considerable distance below him, and he did not
       descend into it, but he saw plainly that it had recently contained water,
       for pools and puddles were to be seen everywhere.
       At the other end of it, where the rocks again approached each other, was
       probably a precipice. After a few minutes' cogitation, Captain Horn felt
       sure that he understood the whole matter: a subway from the lake led to
       this amphitheatre, and thus there had been no audible rush of the waters
       until they reached this point, where they poured in and filled this great
       basin, the lower end of which was probably stopped up by accumulations of
       sand and deposits, which even in that country of scant vegetation had
       accumulated in the course of years. When the waters of the lake had
       rushed into the amphitheatre, this natural dam had held them for a while,
       but then, giving way before the great pressure, the whole body of water
       had suddenly rushed down the ravine to the sea.
       "Yes," said the captain, "now I understand how it happened that although
       I opened the valve at noon, the water did not reach the Rackbirds until
       some hours later, and then it came suddenly and all at once, which would
       not have been the case had it flowed steadily from the beginning through
       the outlet made for it."
       When the captain had returned and reported his discoveries, and he and
       his party had finished their noonday meal, which they ate outside on the
       plateau, with the fire burning and six servants to wait on them, Mrs.
       Cliff said:
       "And now, captain, what are we going to do? Now that our danger is past,
       I suppose the best thing for us is to stay here in quiet and
       thankfulness, and wait for Mr. Rynders. But, with the provisions we have,
       we can't wait very long. When there were but five of us, we might have
       made the food hold out for a day or two longer, but now that we are ten,
       we shall soon be without anything to eat."
       "I have been talking to Maka about that," said the captain, "and he says
       that Cheditafa reports all sorts of necessary things in the Rackbirds'
       storehouse, and he proposes that he and the rest of the black fellows go
       down there and bring us some supplies. They are used to carrying these
       stores, and six of them can bring us enough to last a good while. Now
       that everything is safe over there, I can see that Maka is very anxious
       to go, and, in fact, I would like to go myself. But although there
       doesn't seem to be any danger at present, I do not want to leave you."
       "As for me," said Miss Markham, "I want to go there. There is nothing I
       like better than exploring."
       "That's to my taste, too," said the captain, "but it will be better for
       us to wait here and see what Maka has to say when he gets back. Perhaps,
       if Mr. Rynders doesn't turn up pretty soon, we will all make a trip down
       there. Where is Ralph? I don't want him to go with the men."
       "He is up there on his lookout, as he calls it," said his sister, "with
       his spy-glass."
       "Very good," said the captain. "I will send the men off immediately. Maka
       wants to go now, and they can come back by the light of the young moon.
       When they have loads to carry, they like to travel at night. We shall
       have to get our own supper, and that will give Ralph something to do."
       The party of Africans had not gone half-way from the plateau to the beach
       before they were discovered by the boy on the outlook rock, and he came
       rushing down to report that the darkies were running away. When he was
       told the business on which they had gone, he was very much disappointed
       that he was not allowed to go with them, and, considerably out of temper,
       retired to his post of observation, where, as it appeared, he was
       dividing his time between the discovery of distant specks on the horizon
       line of the ocean and imaginary jaguars and pumas on the foot-hills. _
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本书目录

Chapter 1. An Introductory Disaster
Chapter 2. A New Face In Camp
Chapter 3. A Change Of Lodgings
Chapter 4. Another New Face
Chapter 5. The Rackbirds
Chapter 6. Three Wild Beasts
Chapter 7. Gone!
Chapter 8. The Alarm
Chapter 9. An Amazing Narration
Chapter 10. The Captain Explores
Chapter 11. A New Hemisphere
Chapter 12. A Tradition And A Waistcoat
Chapter 13. "Mine!"
Chapter 14. A Pile Of Fuel
Chapter 15. The Cliff-Maka Scheme
Chapter 16. On A Business Basis
Chapter 17. "A Fine Thing, No Matter What Happens"
Chapter 18. Mrs. Cliff Is Amazed
Chapter 19. Left Behind
Chapter 20. At The Rackbirds' Cove
Chapter 21. In The Gates
Chapter 22. A Pack-Mule
Chapter 23. His Present Share
Chapter 24. His Fortune Under His Feet
Chapter 25. At The Palmetto Hotel
Chapter 26. The Captain's Letter
Chapter 27. Edna Makes Her Plans
Chapter 28. "Home, Sweet Home"
Chapter 29. A Committee Of Ladies
Chapter 30. At The Hotel Boileau
Chapter 31. Waiting
Chapter 32. A Mariner's Wits Take A Little Flight
Chapter 33. The "Miranda" Takes In Cargo
Chapter 34. Burke And His Chisel
Chapter 35. The Captain Writes A Letter
Chapter 36. A Horse-Dealer Appears On The Scene
Chapter 37. The "Arato"
Chapter 38. The Coast Of Patagonia
Chapter 39. Shirley Spies A Sail
Chapter 40. The Battle Of The Golden Wall
Chapter 41. The "Arato" Anchors Nearer Shore
Chapter 42. Inkspot Has A Dream Of Heaven
Chapter 43. Mok As A Vocalist
Chapter 44. Mr. Banker's Speculation
Chapter 45. Mental Turmoils
Chapter 46. A Problem
Chapter 47. A Man-Chimpanzee
Chapter 48. Enter Captain Horn
Chapter 49. A Golden Afternoon
Chapter 50. A Case Of Recognition
Chapter 51. Banker Does Some Important Business
Chapter 52. The Captain Takes His Stand
Chapter 53. A Little Gleam Afar