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Adventures of Captain Horn, The
Chapter 14. A Pile Of Fuel
Frank R Stockton
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       _ CHAPTER XIV. A PILE OF FUEL
       Four days had passed, and nothing had happened. The stone mound in the
       lake had not been visited, for there had been no reason for sending the
       black men away, and with one of them nearer than a mile the captain would
       not even look at his treasure. There was no danger that they would
       discover the mound, for they were not allowed to take the lantern, and no
       one of them would care to wander into the dark, sombre depths of the
       cavern without a light.
       The four white people, who, with a fair habitation in the rocks, with
       plenty of plain food to eat, with six servants to wait on them, and a
       climate which was continuously delightful, except in the middle of the
       day, and with all fear of danger from man or beast removed from their
       minds, would have been content to remain here a week or two longer and
       await the arrival of a vessel to take them away, were now in a restless
       and impatient condition of mind. They were all eager to escape from the
       place. Three of them longed for the return of Rynders, but the other one
       steadily hoped that they might get away before his men came back.
       How to do this, or how to take with him the treasure of the Incas, was a
       puzzling question with which the captain racked his brains by day and by
       night. At last he bethought himself of the Rackbirds' vessel. He
       remembered that Maka had told him that provisions were brought to them by
       a vessel, and there was every reason to suppose that when these
       miscreants went on some of their marauding expeditions they travelled by
       sea. Day by day he had thought that he would go and visit the Rackbirds'
       storehouse and the neighborhood thereabout, but day by day he had been
       afraid that in his absence Rynders might arrive, and when he came he
       wanted to be there to meet him.
       But now the idea of the boat made him brave this possible contingency,
       and early one morning, with Cheditafa and two other of the black fellows,
       he set off along the beach for the mouth of the little stream which,
       rising somewhere in the mountains, ran down to the cavern where it had
       once widened and deepened into a lake, and then through the ravine of the
       Rackbirds on to the sea. When he reached his destination, Captain Horn
       saw a great deal to interest him.
       Just beyond the second ridge of rock which Maka had discovered, the
       stream ran into a little bay, and the shores near its mouth showed
       evident signs that they had recently been washed by a flood. On points of
       rock and against the sides of the sand mounds, he saw bits of debris from
       the Rackbirds' camp. Here were sticks which had formed the timbers of
       their huts; there were pieces of clothing and cooking-utensils; and here
       and there, partly buried by the shifting sands, were seen the bodies of
       Rackbirds, already desiccated by the dry air and the hot sun of the
       region. But the captain saw no vessel.
       "Dat up here," said Cheditafa. "Dey hide dat well. Come 'long, captain."
       Following his black guide, the captain skirted a little promontory of
       rocks, and behind it found a cove in which, well concealed, lay the
       Rackbirds' vessel. It was a sloop of about twenty tons, and from the
       ocean, or even from the beach, it could not be seen. But as the captain
       stood and gazed upon this craft his heart sank. It had no masts nor
       sails, and it was a vessel that could not be propelled by oars.
       Wading through the shallow water,--for it was now low tide,--the captain
       climbed on board. The deck was bare, without a sign of spar or sail, and
       when, with Cheditafa's help, he had forced the entrance of the little
       companionway, and had gone below, he found that the vessel had been
       entirely stripped of everything that could be carried away, and when he
       went on deck again he saw that even the rudder had been unshipped and
       removed. Cheditafa could give him no information upon this state of
       things, but after a little while Captain Horn imagined the cause for this
       dismantled condition of the sloop. The Rackbirds' captain could not trust
       his men, he said to himself, and he made it impossible for any of them to
       escape or set out on an expedition for themselves. It was likely that the
       masts and sails had been carried up to the camp, from which place it
       would have been impossible to remove them without the leader knowing it.
       When he spoke to Cheditafa on the subject, the negro told him that after
       the little ship came in from one of its voyages he and his companions had
       always carried the masts, sails, and a lot of other things up to the
       camp. But there was nothing of the sort there now. Every spar and sail
       must have been carried out to sea by the flood, for if they had been left
       on the shores of the stream the captain would have seen them.
       This was hard lines for Captain Horn. If the Rackbirds' vessel had been
       in sailing condition, everything would have been very simple and easy for
       him. He could have taken on board not only his own party, but a large
       portion of the treasure, and could have sailed away as free as a bird,
       without reference to the return of Rynders and his men. A note tied to a
       pole set up in a conspicuous place on the beach would have informed Mr.
       Rynders of their escape from the place, and it was not likely that any of
       the party would have thought it worth while to go farther on shore. But
       it was of no use to think of getting away in this vessel. In its present
       condition it was absolutely useless.
       While the captain had been thinking and considering the matter, Cheditafa
       had been wandering about the coast exploring. Presently Captain Horn saw
       him running toward him, accompanied by the two other negroes.
       "'Nother boat over there," cried Cheditafa, as the captain approached
       him,--"'nother boat, but badder than this. No good. Cook with it,
       that's all."
       The captain followed Cheditafa across the little stream, and a hundred
       yards or so along the shore, and over out of reach of the tide, piled
       against a low sand mound, he saw a quantity of wood, all broken into
       small pieces, and apparently prepared, as Cheditafa had suggested, for
       cooking-fires. It was also easy to see that these pieces of wood had
       once been part of a boat, perhaps of a wreck thrown up on shore. The
       captain approached the pile of wood and picked up some of the pieces. As
       he held in his hand a bit of gunwale, not much more than a foot in
       length, his eyes began to glisten and his breath came quickly. Hastily
       pulling out several pieces from the mass of debris, he examined them
       thoroughly. Then he stepped back, and let the piece of rudder he was
       holding drop to the sand.
       "Cheditafa," said he, speaking huskily, "this is one of the Castor's
       boats. This is a piece of the boat in which Rynders and the men set out."
       The negro looked at the captain and seemed frightened by the expression
       on his face. For a moment he did not speak, and then in a trembling voice
       he asked, "Where all them now?"
       The captain shook his head, but said nothing. That pile of fragments was
       telling him a tale which gradually became plainer and plainer to him, and
       which he believed as if Rynders himself had been telling it to him. His
       ship's boat, with its eight occupants, had never gone farther south than
       the mouth of the little stream. That they had been driven on shore by the
       stress of weather the captain did not believe. There had been no high
       winds or storms since their departure. Most likely they had been induced
       to land by seeing some of the Rackbirds on shore, and they had naturally
       rowed into the little cove, for assistance from their fellow-beings was
       what they were in search of. But no matter how they happened to land,
       the Rackbirds would never let them go away again to carry news of the
       whereabouts of their camp. Almost unarmed, these sailors must have fallen
       easy victims to the Rackbirds.
       It was not unlikely that the men had been shot down from ambush without
       having had any intercourse or conversation with the cruel monsters to
       whom they had come to seek relief, for had there been any talk between
       them, Rynders would have told of his companions left on shore, and these
       would have been speedily visited by the desperadoes. For the destruction
       of the boat there was reason enough: the captain of the Rackbirds gave
       his men no chance to get away from him.
       With a heart of lead, Captain Horn turned to look at his negro
       companions, and saw them all sitting together on the sands, chattering
       earnestly, and holding up their hands with one or more fingers extended,
       as if they were counting. Cheditafa came forward.
       "When all your men go away from you?" he asked.
       The captain reflected a moment, and then answered, "About two weeks ago."
       "That's right! That's right!" exclaimed the negro, nodding violently as
       he spoke. "We talk about that. We count days. It's just ten days and
       three days, and Rackbirds go 'way, and leave us high up in rock-hole,
       with no ladder. After a while we hear guns, guns, guns. Long time guns
       shooting. When they come back, it almost dark, and they want supper
       bad. All time they eat supper, they talk 'bout shooting sharks. Shot
       lots sharks, and chuck them into the water. Sharks in water already
       before they is shot. We say then it no sharks they shot. Now we say it
       must been--"
       The captain turned away. He did not want to hear any more. There was no
       possible escape from the belief that Rynders and all his men had been
       shot down, and robbed, if they had anything worth taking, and then their
       bodies carried out to sea, most likely in their own boat, and thrown
       overboard.
       There was nothing more at this dreadful place that Captain Horn wished to
       see, to consider, or to do, and calling the negroes to follow him, he set
       out on his return.
       During the dreary walk along the beach the captain's depression of
       spirits was increased by the recollection of his thoughts about the
       sailors and the treasure. He had hoped that these men would not come back
       in time to interfere with his disposal, in his own way, of the gold he
       had found. They would not come back now, but the thought did not lighten
       his heart. But before he reached the caves, he had determined to throw
       off the gloom and sadness which had come upon him. Under the
       circumstances, grief for what had happened was out of place. He must keep
       up a good heart, and help his companions to keep up good hearts. Now he
       must do something, and, like a soldier in battle, he must not think of
       the comrade who had fallen beside him, but of the enemy in front of him.
       When he reached the caves he found supper ready, and that evening he said
       nothing to his companions of the important discoveries he had made,
       contenting himself with a general statement of the proofs that the
       Rackbirds and their camp had been utterly destroyed by the flood. _
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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