<SPAN name="chap12"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER XII </h3>
<h4>
I MEET AN OLD ACQUAINTANCE
</h4>
<p>I remained rooted to the spot. The droning chant went on. How far the
singer was from me, it was impossible to estimate; for a voice carries
far at night—he might be anything from twenty to a hundred yards away.
There was nothing to do but retire;.... in that clammy, steamy darkness
any idea of stalking a man was out of the questions.</p>
<p>All the events of the past week came tumbling into my brain. They had
tracked me down, then, and now I was at grips with El Cojo's famous
organisation.... But this was no time for speculation or surmise. I
could think matters out afterwards; for the moment I must keep my mind
clear and concentrate on getting out of this dense jungle quietly and
quickly.</p>
<p>Now the humming had ceased. Did it mean that the singer was moving
forward? I strained my ears but could catch no sound other than the
rustle of the leaves as they dripped moisture. To move in silence
through the clinging undergrowth was, I knew, a thing impossible. An
old memory of capercailzie shooting in Russia came to my aid. One
stalked the male bird perched on a tree-top as he uttered his love-call
to the females at the foot. When he called one moved; when he stopped,
one halted.</p>
<p>The droning recommenced. Did my ears mislead me? It certainly sounded
nearer now. My compass lying flat in my left palm, I moved swiftly
forward, heading for the west. When the humming ceased, I stood still
and pushed on again as soon as it was resumed.</p>
<p>A horrid thought assailed me. Was the singer the spy whose unseen
presence had impressed itself on Carstairs that evening? Or were there
others? Had the cordon let me through only to draw in upon me as I
returned? I had no weapon; for I had given Carstairs my revolver to
clean and oil on our return from camp that evening after our wetting.</p>
<p>The crooning chant had grown much fainter. I must be drawing away from
it. I paused an instant to wipe away the sweat which was pouring into
my eyes. Then came a sudden crash in the undergrowth close to hand. I
steeled myself to the encounter, getting my back to a tree and
striving—but how vainly?—to pierce with my eyes that bewildering pall
of darkness. Another heavy crash, a frightened squawk, and I breathed
again. It was only one of the island pigs whose nocturnal rambles I
had disturbed.</p>
<p>And now for full five minutes I had heard the singer no more. The
forest was getting lighter, and like blissful music there came to my
ears the distant surge of the sea. Presently, without further
incident, I stepped out on the beach not more than twenty paces from
our cave.</p>
<p>A black shape rose out of the darkness at my feet. It was Carstairs.
I put my hand over his mouth and drew him into the cave. The place
re-echoed with Garth's rhythmic snoring.</p>
<p>"You were quite right, Carstairs," I whispered. "There is someone in
the woods back there! Have you heard or seen anything?"</p>
<p>"No, sir!" the man returned. "But I was that certain sure there was
somebody round the place that I nipped in and got a pistol to sit up
and wait for you...."</p>
<p>He showed me the automatic in his hand.</p>
<p>"I don't like the look of things at all, Carstairs," said I, "and
that's a fact. I'm not getting the wind up over a lot of shadows; but
I don't propose to risk having the camp rushed. You've got some
bread-bags and the like, haven't you? Well, get one of the shovels and
start filling 'em with sand, will you? If we can run up a bit of cover
round the entrance to the cave, one man ought to be able to hold it
against all-comers. Meanwhile, I'll wake Sir Alexander here!...."</p>
<p>It is a little embarrassing to rouse a man up out of his beauty sleep
and tell him you have been keeping essential facts from his knowledge.
However, I could at least honestly claim that, until that moment, I had
nothing stronger than suspicions to go upon.</p>
<p>Propped up on his elbow, Garth heard my whole tale just as I have set
it down here, from the moment that John Bard identified Black Pablo
with the man who had kept watch outside Adams' hut down to the strange
happening in the woods that night.</p>
<p>"Just what we are up against, Sir Alexander," I concluded, "I don't
know. But we're here for a specific purpose and I feel sure you will
agree with me that we should not allow a band of filthy cut-throats to
deter us from it!"</p>
<p>"Certainly not, my boy, certainly not!" declared the baronet. "As a
matter of fact, I cannot really believe that these fellows really
intend us any harm. After all, we're British subjects and a little of
Britain goes the deuce of a long way in these parts...."</p>
<p>"Very possibly, sir," I replied, "but you must remember we do not know
how strong this party is. Force is the ultimate sanction of the law,
they say; but on this particular island British prestige is backed up
by exactly three very imperfectly armed Britishers...."</p>
<p>"If you'll allow me to say so," Garth broke in pompously, "you go
rather fast. From the accident that you overheard on an island which
we previously believed to be uninhabited a song you heard sung (in
peculiar circumstances, I grant you) at Rodriguez, you appear to assume
that the men who murdered Adams have landed on this island. Your song
may be a popular favourite in Rodriguez; everybody may be singing it.
Have you thought of that?</p>
<p>"If this figure you saw at the grave and this man whom you heard
humming in the forest belong to this mysterious gang led by El
What's-his-name, then they must have followed us here. But how did
they come? We have seen no steamer. If, on the other hand, the song
incident is capable of some simple explanation such as I have
suggested, your last valid link of evidence connecting these mysterious
visitors of Cock Island with El Thingumybob's gang snaps."</p>
<p>This was very ingenious. But it didn't convince me. The intonation of
the singer in the forest was identical with that of the man in the
lane. Of that I was sure. Besides, in the back of my mind lurked a
half-formed suspicion about Custrin which I had not as yet thought
proper to communicate to the worthy cotton-spinner. And, as for having
seen no steamer, I recollected that launch which had put out from
Rodriguez after us.</p>
<p>"I'll tell you something else," Garth resumed, "that perhaps you don't
know, major. Many of these Pacific islands do contain treasure; not
doubloons but something almost equally valuable; phosphates.
Adventurers are always roaming about the Pacific prospecting for guano
deposits and mighty shy they are, many of 'em, of casual visitors. Now
you mark my words, these chaps who have been behaving so oddly are in
all probability just a band of shysters from Rodriguez—without any
concession, of course—dropped here by a ship to look for phosphates.
They think we've come to jump their claim...."</p>
<p>I felt very perplexed. Garth was a hard-headed Lancashire business man
and there seemed to be a good deal of horse sense in what he said. And
yet somehow....</p>
<p>I walked to the entrance of the cave and looked out. In awe-inspiring
majesty the sun came rolling up from the east and the glistening beach
was dyed in the hues of the morning. A few paces away Carstairs was
shovelling sand for dear life. Already he had filled a dozen stout
cotton bags.</p>
<p>"You may be right, Sir Alexander," I said at length. "I hope you are.
But even if these gentry are concession-hunters we have to bear in mind
that they are a cut-throat lot. They are quite capable of shooting
first and of asking your name afterwards. I'm going to run up a little
sand-bag parapet at the mouth of this cave. It commands a fine field
of fire and will allow you or Carstairs to challenge anybody who comes
within thirty yards. As soon as we've put the place in a proper state
of defence I'm going out to do a little reconnoitring on my own...."</p>
<p>"My dear fellow," remarked Garth, sitting up in bed and nursing his
toes, "to hear you talk you'd think the blessed old British Empire had
ceased to count in the world. Foreigners can't go about murdering
British subjects, you know. They'd have the Foreign Office on them
damned quick, send a cruiser and all that sort of thing. However," he
finished indulgently, "I'm quite prepared to hold the fort while you
have a look round. I'm not sorry to have a lazy morning for, to tell
you the truth, I'm so stiff from our climb yesterday that I can
scarcely move!"</p>
<p>Rather with the air of Daddy helping his little boy to build
sand-castles, Garth assisted me to erect a parapet at the mouth of the
cave. There were not many sand-bags, but we helped out with some cases
of tinned provisions, putting the sand-bags on top and then a layer of
sand scooped out from the foot of our fortification. The screen of
creeper across the entrance to the cave, while it obscured the view
from outside, was not so dense as to prevent anybody within from
commanding the approach to our stronghold.</p>
<p>Carstairs brought coffee and sandwiches and at my request filled my
flask with brandy and brought me my automatic pistol and a couple of
charges of ammunition. Then, turning my back on the sea, I once more
struck out into the woods.</p>
<p>My plan was to make for the grave in the clearing. This should be the
test. If our mysterious visitors were after the treasure I made sure I
would come upon them in the vicinity of the grave. For, as far as I
knew, the grave was the only indication they had to guide them in their
hunt. It was still very early, and if I could gain the clearing
unobserved, I would post myself at some convenient point, perhaps on
the high ground beyond the grave, and await events.</p>
<p>I went forward very cautiously, my pistol cocked in my hand. I stopped
repeatedly and listened; but, save for the hubbub of the birds in the
trees, all was still around me. The burbling stream that fell from the
high ground of the island to the beach gave me my direction.</p>
<p>I had reached a narrow ravine at the end of which was that flat rock
whence, on the previous evening, Garth had described the ruined hut.
On a slab which formed a convenient step to mount the boulder something
white caught my eye as I came down the nullah. To my unbounded
surprise it proved to be one of those cheap cigar-holders made of
cardboard which so many Germans use.</p>
<p>I stooped to examine it. The holder with its quill mouth-piece, was
quite clean and obviously brand-new. Therefore, it was no relic of the
former visitors to the island. <i>And it had not been there yesterday</i>.
I had mounted by this very slab to stand by Garth on the flat rock and
if the holder had been there, I could not possibly have failed to see
it.</p>
<p>It looked as though it might have dropped out of a man's pocket as he
was scrambling up the rock. The name of a popular firm of
cigar-merchants, with branches all over Germany, was printed on it.
"Loeser und Wolff, Berlin. S.W. Friedrich-Strasse," I read. I knew
the shop well. I had bought cigars there scores of times in the
past....</p>
<p>A sudden feeling of uneasiness, an acute sense of danger, came over me.
To be shadowed is an almost everyday experience on our job and one
develops a kind of sixth sense in detecting it. I had the distinct
impression that somebody was watching me.</p>
<p>My brain worked swiftly. I was in the open, without cover, liable to
be shot down with impunity from the edge of the ravine. To keep
perfectly calm, to show no signs of fluster and, above all things, to
spot your man without his knowing that he has been seen, is the only
safe course in moments like this. My grip tightened on my pistol as,
very slowly, I began to raise my head....</p>
<p>The top of the rock above me was level with my eyes. As I lifted them
my gaze fell upon a monstrous mis-shapen boot, projecting awkwardly
over the edge. For the moment, I had no eyes for the huge figure that
stood there resting on the rubber-shod stick. I could only stare, like
one transfigured, at that sinister club-foot, as a voice, a
well-remembered voice that for months had haunted me in dreams, cried
out sharply:</p>
<p>"Stay as you are and raise your hands! Quick! And drop that gun!"</p>
<p>I glanced up and as I lifted my arms, my pistol rattled noisily on the
slab below.</p>
<p>Over the barrel of a great automatic clasped in a huge hairy hand, the
Man With the Clubfoot was looking at me.</p>
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