<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> AEPYORNIS ISLAND </h2>
<p>The man with the scarred face leant over the table and looked at my
bundle.</p>
<p>“Orchids?” he asked.</p>
<p>“A few,” I said.</p>
<p>“Cypripediums,” he said.</p>
<p>“Chiefly,” said I.</p>
<p>“Anything new? I thought not. <i>I</i> did these islands twenty-five—twenty-seven
years ago. If you find anything new here—well it’s brand new.
I didn’t leave much.”</p>
<p>“I’m not a collector,” said I.</p>
<p>“I was young then,” he went on. “Lord! how I used to fly
round.” He seemed to take my measure. “I was in the East
Indies two years, and in Brazil seven. Then I went to Madagascar.”</p>
<p>“I know a few explorers by name,” I said, anticipating a yarn.
“Whom did you collect for?”</p>
<p>“Dawsons. I wonder if you’ve heard the name of Butcher ever?”</p>
<p>“Butcher—Butcher?” The name seemed vaguely present in my
memory; then I recalled <i>Butcher</i> v. <i>Dawson</i>. “Why!”
said I, “you are the man who sued them for four years’ salary—got
cast away on a desert island ...”</p>
<p>“Your servant,” said the man with the scar, bowing. “Funny
case, wasn’t it? Here was me, making a little fortune on that
island, doing nothing for it neither, and them quite unable to give me
notice. It often used to amuse me thinking over it while I was there. I
did calculations of it—big—all over the blessed atoll in
ornamental figuring.”</p>
<p>“How did it happen?” said I. “I don’t rightly
remember the case.”</p>
<p>“Well.... You’ve heard of the Aepyornis?”</p>
<p>“Rather. Andrews was telling me of a new species he was working on
only a month or so ago. Just before I sailed. They’ve got a thigh
bone, it seems, nearly a yard long. Monster the thing must have been!”</p>
<p>“I believe you,” said the man with the scar. “It <i>was</i>
a monster. Sinbad’s roc was just a legend of ’em. But when did
they find these bones?”</p>
<p>“Three or four years ago—‘91, I fancy. Why?”</p>
<p>“Why? Because <i>I</i> found ’em—Lord!—it’s
nearly twenty years ago. If Dawsons hadn’t been silly about that
salary they might have made a perfect ring in ’em.... <i>I</i>
couldn’t help the infernal boat going adrift.”</p>
<p>He paused, “I suppose it’s the same place. A kind of swamp
about ninety miles north of Antananarivo. Do you happen to know? You have
to go to it along the coast by boats. You don’t happen to remember,
perhaps?”</p>
<p>“I don’t. I fancy Andrews said something about a swamp.”</p>
<p>“It must be the same. It’s on the east coast. And somehow
there’s something in the water that keeps things from decaying. Like
creosote it smells. It reminded me of Trinidad. Did they get any more
eggs? Some of the eggs I found were a foot-and-a-half long. The swamp goes
circling round, you know, and cuts off this bit. It’s mostly salt,
too. Well.... What a time I had of it! I found the things quite by
accident. We went for eggs, me and two native chaps, in one of those rum
canoes all tied together, and found the bones at the same time. We had a
tent and provisions for four days, and we pitched on one of the firmer
places. To think of it brings that odd tarry smell back even now. It’s
funny work. You go probing into the mud with iron rods, you know. Usually
the egg gets smashed. I wonder how long it is since these Aepyornises
really lived. The missionaries say the natives have legends about when
they were alive, but I never heard any such stories myself.[A] But
certainly those eggs we got were as fresh as if they had been new laid.
Fresh! Carrying them down to the boat one of my nigger chaps dropped one
on a rock and it smashed. How I lammed into the beggar! But sweet it was,
as if it was new laid, not even smelly, and its mother dead these four
hundred years, perhaps. Said a centipede had bit him. However, I’m
getting off the straight with the story. It had taken us all day to dig
into the slush and get these eggs out unbroken, and we were all covered
with beastly black mud, and naturally I was cross. So far as I knew they
were the only eggs that have ever been got out not even cracked. I went
afterwards to see the ones they have at the Natural History Museum in
London; all of them were cracked and just stuck together like a mosaic,
and bits missing. Mine were perfect, and I meant to blow them when I got
back. Naturally I was annoyed at the silly duffer dropping three hours’
work just on account of a centipede. I hit him about rather.”</p>
<p>A [ No European is known to
have seen a live Aepyornis, with the doubtful exception of MacAndrew, who
visited Madagascar in 1745.—H.G.W.]</p>
<p>The man with the scar took out a clay pipe. I placed my pouch before him.
He filled up absent-mindedly.</p>
<p>“How about the others? Did you get those home? I don’t
remember—”</p>
<p>“That’s the queer part of the story. I had three others.
Perfectly fresh eggs. Well, we put ’em in the boat, and then I went
up to the tent to make some coffee, leaving my two heathens down by the
beach—the one fooling about with his sting and the other helping
him. It never occurred to me that the beggars would take advantage of the
peculiar position I was in to pick a quarrel. But I suppose the centipede
poison and the kicking I had given him had upset the one—he was
always a cantankerous sort—and he persuaded the other.</p>
<p>“I remember I was sitting and smoking and boiling up the water over
a spirit-lamp business I used to take on these expeditions. Incidentally I
was admiring the swamp under the sunset. All black and blood-red it was,
in streaks—a beautiful sight. And up beyond the land rose grey and
hazy to the hills, and the sky behind them red, like a furnace mouth. And
fifty yards behind the back of me was these blessed heathen—quite
regardless of the tranquil air of things—plotting to cut off with
the boat and leave me all alone with three days’ provisions and a
canvas tent, and nothing to drink whatsoever, beyond a little keg of
water. I heard a kind of yelp behind me, and there they were in this canoe
affair—it wasn’t properly a boat—and, perhaps, twenty
yards from land. I realised what was up in a moment. My gun was in the
tent, and, besides, I had no bullets—only duck shot. They knew that.
But I had a little revolver in my pocket, and I pulled that out as I ran
down to the beach.</p>
<p>“‘Come back!’ says I, flourishing it.</p>
<p>“They jabbered something at me, and the man that broke the egg
jeered. I aimed at the other—because he was unwounded and had the
paddle, and I missed. They laughed. However, I wasn’t beat. I knew I
had to keep cool, and I tried him again and made him jump with the whang
of it. He didn’t laugh that time. The third time I got his head, and
over he went, and the paddle with him. It was a precious lucky shot for a
revolver. I reckon it was fifty yards. He went right under. I don’t
know if he was shot, or simply stunned and drowned. Then I began to shout
to the other chap to come back, but he huddled up in the canoe and refused
to answer. So I fired out my revolver at him and never got near him.</p>
<p>“I felt a precious fool, I can tell you. There I was on this rotten,
black beach, flat swamp all behind me, and the flat sea, cold after the
sunset, and just this black canoe drifting steadily out to sea. I tell you
I damned Dawsons and Jamrachs and Museums and all the rest of it just to
rights. I bawled to this nigger to come back, until my voice went up into
a scream.</p>
<p>“There was nothing for it but to swim after him and take my luck
with the sharks. So I opened my clasp-knife and put it in my mouth, and
took off my clothes and waded in. As soon as I was in the water I lost
sight of the canoe, but I aimed, as I judged, to head it off. I hoped the
man in it was too bad to navigate it, and that it would keep on drifting
in the same direction. Presently it came up over the horizon again to the
south-westward about. The afterglow of sunset was well over now and the
dim of night creeping up. The stars were coming through the blue. I swum
like a champion, though my legs and arms were soon aching.</p>
<p>“However, I came up to him by the time the stars were fairly out. As
it got darker I began to see all manner of glowing things in the water—phosphorescence,
you know. At times it made me giddy. I hardly knew which was stars and
which was phosphorescence, and whether I was swimming on my head or my
heels. The canoe was as black as sin, and the ripple under the bows like
liquid fire. I was naturally chary of clambering up into it. I was anxious
to see what he was up to first. He seemed to be lying cuddled up in a lump
in the bows, and the stern was all out of water. The thing kept turning
round slowly as it drifted—kind of waltzing, don’t you know. I
went to the stern, and pulled it down, expecting him to wake up. Then I
began to clamber in with my knife in my hand, and ready for a rush. But he
never stirred. So there I sat in the stern of the little canoe, drifting
away over the calm phosphorescent sea, and with all the host of the stars
above me, waiting for something to happen.</p>
<p>“After a long time I called him by name, but he never answered. I
was too tired to take any risks by going along to him. So we sat there. I
fancy I dozed once or twice. When the dawn came I saw he was as dead as a
doornail and all puffed up and purple. My three eggs and the bones were
lying in the middle of the canoe, and the keg of water and some coffee and
biscuits wrapped in a Cape <i>Argus</i> by his feet, and a tin of
methylated spirit underneath him. There was no paddle, nor, in fact,
anything except the spirit-tin that one could use as one, so I settled to
drift until I was picked up. I held an inquest on him, brought in a
verdict against some snake, scorpion, or centipede unknown, and sent him
overboard.</p>
<p>“After that I had a drink of water and a few biscuits, and took a
look round. I suppose a man low down as I was don’t see very far;
leastways, Madagascar was clean out of sight, and any trace of land at
all. I saw a sail going south-westward—looked like a schooner, but
her hull never came up. Presently the sun got high in the sky and began to
beat down upon me. Lord! It pretty near made my brains boil. I tried
dipping my head in the sea, but after a while my eye fell on the Cape <i>Argus</i>,
and I lay down flat in the canoe and spread this over me. Wonderful things
these newspapers! I never read one through thoroughly before, but it’s
odd what you get up to when you’re alone, as I was. I suppose I read
that blessed old Cape <i>Argus</i> twenty times. The pitch in the canoe
simply reeked with the heat and rose up into big blisters.</p>
<p>“I drifted ten days,” said the man with the scar. “It’s
a little thing in the telling, isn’t it? Every day was like the
last. Except in the morning and the evening I never kept a look-out even—the
blaze was so infernal. I didn’t see a sail after the first three
days, and those I saw took no notice of me. About the sixth night a ship
went by scarcely half a mile away from me, with all its lights ablaze and
its ports open, looking like a big firefly. There was music aboard. I
stood up and shouted and screamed at it. The second day I broached one of
the Aepyornis eggs, scraped the shell away at the end bit by bit, and
tried it, and I was glad to find it was good enough to eat. A bit flavoury—not
bad, I mean—but with something of the taste of a duck’s egg.
There was a kind of circular patch, about six inches across, on one side
of the yolk, and with streaks of blood and a white mark like a ladder in
it that I thought queer, but I did not understand what this meant at the
time, and I wasn’t inclined to be particular. The egg lasted me
three days, with biscuits and a drink of water. I chewed coffee berries
too—invigorating stuff. The second egg I opened about the eighth
day, and it scared me.”</p>
<p>The man with the scar paused. “Yes,” he said, “developing.”</p>
<p>“I dare say you find it hard to believe. <i>I</i> did, with the
thing before me. There the egg had been, sunk in that cold black mud,
perhaps three hundred years. But there was no mistaking it. There was the—what
is it?—embryo, with its big head and curved back, and its heart
beating under its throat, and the yolk shrivelled up and great membranes
spreading inside of the shell and all over the yolk. Here was I hatching
out the eggs of the biggest of all extinct birds, in a little canoe in the
midst of the Indian Ocean. If old Dawson had known that! It was worth four
years’ salary. What do <i>you</i> think?</p>
<p>“However, I had to eat that precious thing up, every bit of it,
before I sighted the reef, and some of the mouthfuls were beastly
unpleasant. I left the third one alone. I held it up to the light, but the
shell was too thick for me to get any notion of what might be happening
inside; and though I fancied I heard blood pulsing, it might have been the
rustle in my own ears, like what you listen to in a seashell.</p>
<p>“Then came the atoll. Came out of the sunrise, as it were, suddenly,
close up to me. I drifted straight towards it until I was about half a
mile from shore, not more, and then the current took a turn, and I had to
paddle as hard as I could with my hands and bits of the Aepyornis shell to
make the place. However, I got there. It was just a common atoll about
four miles round, with a few trees growing and a spring in one place, and
the lagoon full of parrot-fish. I took the egg ashore and put it in a good
place well above the tide lines and in the sun, to give it all the chance
I could, and pulled the canoe up safe, and loafed about prospecting. It’s
rum how dull an atoll is. As soon as I had found a spring all the interest
seemed to vanish. When I was a kid I thought nothing could be finer or
more adventurous than the Robinson Crusoe business, but that place was as
monotonous as a book of sermons. I went round finding eatable things and
generally thinking; but I tell you I was bored to death before the first
day was out. It shows my luck—the very day I landed the weather
changed. A thunderstorm went by to the north and flicked its wing over the
island, and in the night there came a drencher and a howling wind slap
over us. It wouldn’t have taken much, you know, to upset that canoe.</p>
<p>“I was sleeping under the canoe, and the egg was luckily among the
sand higher up the beach, and the first thing I remember was a sound like
a hundred pebbles hitting the boat at once, and a rush of water over my
body. I’d been dreaming of Antananarivo, and I sat up and holloaed
to Intoshi to ask her what the devil was up, and clawed out at the chair
where the matches used to be. Then I remembered where I was. There were
phosphorescent waves rolling up as if they meant to eat me, and all the
rest of the night as black as pitch. The air was simply yelling. The
clouds seemed down on your head almost, and the rain fell as if heaven was
sinking and they were baling out the waters above the firmament. One great
roller came writhing at me, like a fiery serpent, and I bolted. Then I
thought of the canoe, and ran down to it as the water went hissing back
again; but the thing had gone. I wondered about the egg then, and felt my
way to it. It was all right and well out of reach of the maddest waves, so
I sat down beside it and cuddled it for company. Lord! what a night that
was!</p>
<p>“The storm was over before the morning. There wasn’t a rag of
cloud left in the sky when the dawn came, and all along the beach there
were bits of plank scattered—which was the disarticulated skeleton,
so to speak, of my canoe. However, that gave me something to do, for,
taking advantage of two of the trees being together, I rigged up a kind of
storm-shelter with these vestiges. And that day the egg hatched.</p>
<p>“Hatched, sir, when my head was pillowed on it and I was asleep. I
heard a whack and felt a jar and sat up, and there was the end of the egg
pecked out and a rum little brown head looking out at me. ‘Lord!’
I said, ‘you’re welcome’; and with a little difficulty
he came out.</p>
<p>“He was a nice friendly little chap, at first, about the size of a
small hen—very much like most other young birds, only bigger. His
plumage was a dirty brown to begin with, with a sort of grey scab that
fell off it very soon, and scarcely feathers—a kind of downy hair. I
can hardly express how pleased I was to see him. I tell you, Robinson
Crusoe don’t make near enough of his loneliness. But here was
interesting company. He looked at me and winked his eye from the front
backwards, like a hen, and gave a chirp and began to peck about at once,
as though being hatched three hundred years too late was just nothing.
‘Glad to see you, Man Friday!’ says I, for I had naturally
settled he was to be called Man Friday if ever he was hatched, as soon as
ever I found the egg in the canoe had developed. I was a bit anxious about
his feed, so I gave him a lump of raw parrot-fish at once. He took it, and
opened his beak for more. I was glad of that, for, under the
circumstances, if he’d been at all fanciful, I should have had to
eat him after all. You’d be surprised what an interesting bird that
Aepyornis chick was. He followed me about from the very beginning. He used
to stand by me and watch while I fished in the lagoon, and go shares in
anything I caught. And he was sensible, too. There were nasty green warty
things, like pickled gherkins, used to lie about on the beach, and he
tried one of these and it upset him. He never even looked at any of them
again.</p>
<p>“And he grew. You could almost see him grow. And as I was never much
of a society man his quiet, friendly ways suited me to a T. For nearly two
years we were as happy as we could be on that island. I had no business
worries, for I knew my salary was mounting up at Dawsons’. We would
see a sail now and then, but nothing ever came near us. I amused myself,
too, by decorating the island with designs worked in sea-urchins and fancy
shells of various kinds. I put AEPYORNIS ISLAND all round the place very
nearly, in big letters, like what you see done with coloured stones at
railway stations in the old country, and mathematical calculations and
drawings of various sorts. And I used to lie watching the blessed bird
stalking round and growing, growing; and think how I could make a living
out of him by showing him about if I ever got taken off. After his first
moult he began to get handsome, with a crest and a blue wattle, and a lot
of green feathers at the behind of him. And then I used to puzzle whether
Dawsons had any right to claim him or not. Stormy weather and in the rainy
season we lay snug under the shelter I had made out of the old canoe, and
I used to tell him lies about my friends at home. And after a storm we
would go round the island together to see if there was any drift. It was a
kind of idyll, you might say. If only I had had some tobacco it would have
been simply just like Heaven.</p>
<p>“It was about the end of the second year our little paradise went
wrong. Friday was then about fourteen feet high to the bill of him, with a
big, broad head like the end of a pickaxe, and two huge brown eyes with
yellow rims, set together like a man’s—not out of sight of
each other like a hen’s. His plumage was fine—none of the
half-mourning style of your ostrich—more like a cassowary as far as
colour and texture go. And then it was he began to cock his comb at me and
give himself airs, and show signs of a nasty temper....</p>
<p>“At last came a time when my fishing had been rather unlucky, and he
began to hang about me in a queer, meditative way. I thought he might have
been eating sea-cucumbers or something, but it was really just discontent
on his part. I was hungry too, and when at last I landed a fish I wanted
it for myself. Tempers were short that morning on both sides. He pecked at
it and grabbed it, and I gave him a whack on the head to make him leave
go. And at that he went for me. Lord!...</p>
<p>“He gave me this in the face.” The man indicated his scar.
“Then he kicked me. It was like a cart-horse. I got up, and seeing
he hadn’t finished, I started off full tilt with my arms doubled up
over my face. But he ran on those gawky legs of his faster than a
racehorse, and kept landing out at me with sledge hammer kicks, and
bringing his pickaxe down on the back of my head. I made for the lagoon,
and went in up to my neck. He stopped at the water, for he hated getting
his feet wet, and began to make a shindy, something like a peacock’s,
only hoarser. He started strutting up and down the beach. I’ll admit
I felt small to see this blessed fossil lording it there. And my head and
face were all bleeding, and—well, my body just one jelly of bruises.</p>
<p>“I decided to swim across the lagoon and leave him alone for a bit,
until the affair blew over. I shinned up the tallest palm-tree, and sat
there thinking of it all. I don’t suppose I ever felt so hurt by
anything before or since. It was the brutal ingratitude of the creature. I’d
been more than a brother to him. I’d hatched him, educated him. A
great gawky, out-of-date bird! And me a human being—heir of the ages
and all that.</p>
<p>“I thought after a time he’d begin to see things in that light
himself, and feel a little sorry for his behaviour. I thought if I was to
catch some nice little bits of fish, perhaps, and go to him presently in a
casual kind of way, and offer them to him, he might do the sensible thing.
It took me some time to learn how unforgiving and cantankerous an extinct
bird can be. Malice!</p>
<p>“I won’t tell you all the little devices I tried to get that
bird round again. I simply can’t. It makes my cheek burn with shame
even now to think of the snubs and buffets I had from this infernal
curiosity. I tried violence. I chucked lumps of coral at him from a safe
distance, but he only swallowed them. I shied my open knife at him and
almost lost it, though it was too big for him to swallow. I tried starving
him out and struck fishing, but he took to picking along the beach at low
water after worms, and rubbed along on that. Half my time I spent up to my
neck in the lagoon, and the rest up the palm-trees. One of them was
scarcely high enough, and when he caught me up it he had a regular Bank
Holiday with the calves of my legs. It got unbearable. I don’t know
if you have ever tried sleeping up a palm-tree. It gave me the most
horrible nightmares. Think of the shame of it, too! Here was this extinct
animal mooning about my island like a sulky duke, and me not allowed to
rest the sole of my foot on the place. I used to cry with weariness and
vexation. I told him straight that I didn’t mean to be chased about
a desert island by any damned anachronisms. I told him to go and peck a
navigator of his own age. But he only snapped his beak at me. Great ugly
bird—all legs and neck!</p>
<p>“I shouldn’t like to say how long that went on altogether. I’d
have killed him sooner if I’d known how. However, I hit on a way of
settling him at last. It is a South American dodge. I joined all my
fishing-lines together with stems of seaweed and things and made a
stoutish string, perhaps twelve yards in length or more, and I fastened
two lumps of coral rock to the ends of this. It took me some time to do,
because every now and then I had to go into the lagoon or up a tree as the
fancy took me. This I whirled rapidly round my head, and then let it go at
him. The first time I missed, but the next time the string caught his legs
beautifully, and wrapped round them again and again. Over he went. I threw
it standing waist-deep in the lagoon, and as soon as he went down I was
out of the water and sawing at his neck with my knife ...</p>
<p>“I don’t like to think of that even now. I felt like a
murderer while I did it, though my anger was hot against him. When I stood
over him and saw him bleeding on the white sand, and his beautiful great
legs and neck writhing in his last agony ... Pah!</p>
<p>“With that tragedy loneliness came upon me like a curse. Good Lord!
you can’t imagine how I missed that bird. I sat by his corpse and
sorrowed over him, and shivered as I looked round the desolate, silent
reef. I thought of what a jolly little bird he had been when he was
hatched, and of a thousand pleasant tricks he had played before he went
wrong. I thought if I’d only wounded him I might have nursed him
round into a better understanding. If I’d had any means of digging
into the coral rock I’d have buried him. I felt exactly as if he was
human. As it was, I couldn’t think of eating him, so I put him in
the lagoon, and the little fishes picked him clean. I didn’t even
save the feathers. Then one day a chap cruising about in a yacht had a
fancy to see if my atoll still existed.</p>
<p>“He didn’t come a moment too soon, for I was about sick enough
of the desolation of it, and only hesitating whether I should walk out
into the sea and finish up the business that way, or fall back on the
green things....</p>
<p>“I sold the bones to a man named Winslow—a dealer near the
British Museum, and he says he sold them to old Havers. It seems Havers
didn’t understand they were extra large, and it was only after his
death they attracted attention. They called ’em Aepyornis—what
was it?”</p>
<p>“<i>Aepyornis vastus</i>,” said I. “It’s funny,
the very thing was mentioned to me by a friend of mine. When they found an
Aepyornis, with a thigh a yard long, they thought they had reached the top
of the scale, and called him <i>Aepyornis maximus</i>. Then someone turned
up another thighbone four feet six or more, and that they called <i>Aepyornis
Titan</i>. Then your <i>vastus</i> was found after old Havers died, in his
collection, and then a <i>vastissimus</i> turned up.”</p>
<p>“Winslow was telling me as much,” said the man with the scar.
“If they get any more Aepyornises, he reckons some scientific swell
will go and burst a bloodvessel. But it was a queer thing to happen to a
man; wasn’t it—altogether?”</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />