<h2><SPAN name="chap17"></SPAN>XVII.<br/> A CATASTROPHE.</h2>
<p>Scarcely six weeks passed before I had lost every feeling but dislike and
abhorrence for this infamous experiment of Moreau’s. My one idea was to
get away from these horrible caricatures of my Maker’s image, back to the
sweet and wholesome intercourse of men. My fellow-creatures, from whom I was
thus separated, began to assume idyllic virtue and beauty in my memory. My
first friendship with Montgomery did not increase. His long separation from
humanity, his secret vice of drunkenness, his evident sympathy with the Beast
People, tainted him to me. Several times I let him go alone among them. I
avoided intercourse with them in every possible way. I spent an increasing
proportion of my time upon the beach, looking for some liberating sail that
never appeared,—until one day there fell upon us an appalling disaster,
which put an altogether different aspect upon my strange surroundings.</p>
<p>It was about seven or eight weeks after my landing,—rather more, I think,
though I had not troubled to keep account of the time,—when this
catastrophe occurred. It happened in the early morning—I should think
about six. I had risen and breakfasted early, having been aroused by the noise
of three Beast Men carrying wood into the enclosure.</p>
<p>After breakfast I went to the open gateway of the enclosure, and stood there
smoking a cigarette and enjoying the freshness of the early morning. Moreau
presently came round the corner of the enclosure and greeted me. He passed by
me, and I heard him behind me unlock and enter his laboratory. So indurated was
I at that time to the abomination of the place, that I heard without a touch of
emotion the puma victim begin another day of torture. It met its persecutor
with a shriek, almost exactly like that of an angry virago.</p>
<p>Then suddenly something happened,—I do not know what, to this day. I
heard a short, sharp cry behind me, a fall, and turning saw an awful face
rushing upon me,—not human, not animal, but hellish, brown, seamed with
red branching scars, red drops starting out upon it, and the lidless eyes
ablaze. I threw up my arm to defend myself from the blow that flung me headlong
with a broken forearm; and the great monster, swathed in lint and with
red-stained bandages fluttering about it, leapt over me and passed. I rolled
over and over down the beach, tried to sit up, and collapsed upon my broken
arm. Then Moreau appeared, his massive white face all the more terrible for the
blood that trickled from his forehead. He carried a revolver in one hand. He
scarcely glanced at me, but rushed off at once in pursuit of the puma.</p>
<p>I tried the other arm and sat up. The muffled figure in front ran in great
striding leaps along the beach, and Moreau followed her. She turned her head
and saw him, then doubling abruptly made for the bushes. She gained upon him at
every stride. I saw her plunge into them, and Moreau, running slantingly to
intercept her, fired and missed as she disappeared. Then he too vanished in the
green confusion. I stared after them, and then the pain in my arm flamed up,
and with a groan I staggered to my feet. Montgomery appeared in the doorway,
dressed, and with his revolver in his hand.</p>
<p>“Great God, Prendick!” he said, not noticing that I was hurt,
“that brute’s loose! Tore the fetter out of the wall! Have you seen
them?” Then sharply, seeing I gripped my arm, “What’s the
matter?”</p>
<p>“I was standing in the doorway,” said I.</p>
<p>He came forward and took my arm. “Blood on the sleeve,” said he,
and rolled back the flannel. He pocketed his weapon, felt my arm about
painfully, and led me inside. “Your arm is broken,” he said, and
then, “Tell me exactly how it happened—what happened?”</p>
<p>I told him what I had seen; told him in broken sentences, with gasps of pain
between them, and very dexterously and swiftly he bound my arm meanwhile. He
slung it from my shoulder, stood back and looked at me.</p>
<p>“You’ll do,” he said. “And now?”</p>
<p>He thought. Then he went out and locked the gates of the enclosure. He was
absent some time.</p>
<p>I was chiefly concerned about my arm. The incident seemed merely one more of
many horrible things. I sat down in the deck chair, and I must admit swore
heartily at the island. The first dull feeling of injury in my arm had already
given way to a burning pain when Montgomery reappeared. His face was rather
pale, and he showed more of his lower gums than ever.</p>
<p>“I can neither see nor hear anything of him,” he said.
“I’ve been thinking he may want my help.” He stared at me
with his expressionless eyes. “That was a strong brute,” he said.
“It simply wrenched its fetter out of the wall.” He went to the
window, then to the door, and there turned to me. “I shall go after
him,” he said. “There’s another revolver I can leave with
you. To tell you the truth, I feel anxious somehow.”</p>
<p>He obtained the weapon, and put it ready to my hand on the table; then went
out, leaving a restless contagion in the air. I did not sit long after he left,
but took the revolver in hand and went to the doorway.</p>
<p>The morning was as still as death. Not a whisper of wind was stirring; the sea
was like polished glass, the sky empty, the beach desolate. In my half-excited,
half-feverish state, this stillness of things oppressed me. I tried to whistle,
and the tune died away. I swore again,—the second time that morning. Then
I went to the corner of the enclosure and stared inland at the green bush that
had swallowed up Moreau and Montgomery. When would they return, and how? Then
far away up the beach a little grey Beast Man appeared, ran down to the
water’s edge and began splashing about. I strolled back to the doorway,
then to the corner again, and so began pacing to and fro like a sentinel upon
duty. Once I was arrested by the distant voice of Montgomery bawling,
“Coo-ee—Moreau!” My arm became less painful, but very hot. I
got feverish and thirsty. My shadow grew shorter. I watched the distant figure
until it went away again. Would Moreau and Montgomery never return? Three
sea-birds began fighting for some stranded treasure.</p>
<p>Then from far away behind the enclosure I heard a pistol-shot. A long silence,
and then came another. Then a yelling cry nearer, and another dismal gap of
silence. My unfortunate imagination set to work to torment me. Then suddenly a
shot close by. I went to the corner, startled, and saw Montgomery,—his
face scarlet, his hair disordered, and the knee of his trousers torn. His face
expressed profound consternation. Behind him slouched the Beast Man,
M’ling, and round M’ling’s jaws were some queer dark stains.</p>
<p>“Has he come?” said Montgomery.</p>
<p>“Moreau?” said I. “No.”</p>
<p>“My God!” The man was panting, almost sobbing. “Go back
in,” he said, taking my arm. “They’re mad. They’re all
rushing about mad. What can have happened? I don’t know. I’ll tell
you, when my breath comes. Where’s some brandy?”</p>
<p>Montgomery limped before me into the room and sat down in the deck chair.
M’ling flung himself down just outside the doorway and began panting like
a dog. I got Montgomery some brandy-and-water. He sat staring in front of him
at nothing, recovering his breath. After some minutes he began to tell me what
had happened.</p>
<p>He had followed their track for some way. It was plain enough at first on
account of the crushed and broken bushes, white rags torn from the puma’s
bandages, and occasional smears of blood on the leaves of the shrubs and
undergrowth. He lost the track, however, on the stony ground beyond the stream
where I had seen the Beast Man drinking, and went wandering aimlessly westward
shouting Moreau’s name. Then M’ling had come to him carrying a
light hatchet. M’ling had seen nothing of the puma affair; had been
felling wood, and heard him calling. They went on shouting together. Two Beast
Men came crouching and peering at them through the undergrowth, with gestures
and a furtive carriage that alarmed Montgomery by their strangeness. He hailed
them, and they fled guiltily. He stopped shouting after that, and after
wandering some time farther in an undecided way, determined to visit the huts.</p>
<p>He found the ravine deserted.</p>
<p>Growing more alarmed every minute, he began to retrace his steps. Then it was
he encountered the two Swine-men I had seen dancing on the night of my arrival;
blood-stained they were about the mouth, and intensely excited. They came
crashing through the ferns, and stopped with fierce faces when they saw him. He
cracked his whip in some trepidation, and forthwith they rushed at him. Never
before had a Beast Man dared to do that. One he shot through the head;
M’ling flung himself upon the other, and the two rolled grappling.
M’ling got his brute under and with his teeth in its throat, and
Montgomery shot that too as it struggled in M’ling’s grip. He had
some difficulty in inducing M’ling to come on with him. Thence they had
hurried back to me. On the way, M’ling had suddenly rushed into a thicket
and driven out an under-sized Ocelot-man, also blood-stained, and lame through
a wound in the foot. This brute had run a little way and then turned savagely
at bay, and Montgomery—with a certain wantonness, I thought—had
shot him.</p>
<p>“What does it all mean?” said I.</p>
<p>He shook his head, and turned once more to the brandy.</p>
<!--end chapter-->
<!--chapter-->
<h2><SPAN name="chap18"></SPAN>XVIII.<br/> THE FINDING OF MOREAU.</h2>
<p>When I saw Montgomery swallow a third dose of brandy, I took it upon myself to
interfere. He was already more than half fuddled. I told him that some serious
thing must have happened to Moreau by this time, or he would have returned
before this, and that it behoved us to ascertain what that catastrophe was.
Montgomery raised some feeble objections, and at last agreed. We had some food,
and then all three of us started.</p>
<p>It is possibly due to the tension of my mind, at the time, but even now that
start into the hot stillness of the tropical afternoon is a singularly vivid
impression. M’ling went first, his shoulder hunched, his strange black
head moving with quick starts as he peered first on this side of the way and
then on that. He was unarmed; his axe he had dropped when he encountered the
Swine-man. Teeth were <i>his</i> weapons, when it came to fighting. Montgomery
followed with stumbling footsteps, his hands in his pockets, his face downcast;
he was in a state of muddled sullenness with me on account of the brandy. My
left arm was in a sling (it was lucky it was my left), and I carried my
revolver in my right. Soon we traced a narrow path through the wild luxuriance
of the island, going northwestward; and presently M’ling stopped, and
became rigid with watchfulness. Montgomery almost staggered into him, and then
stopped too. Then, listening intently, we heard coming through the trees the
sound of voices and footsteps approaching us.</p>
<p>“He is dead,” said a deep, vibrating voice.</p>
<p>“He is not dead; he is not dead,” jabbered another.</p>
<p>“We saw, we saw,” said several voices.</p>
<p>“<i>Hul</i>-lo!” suddenly shouted Montgomery, “Hullo,
there!”</p>
<p>“Confound you!” said I, and gripped my pistol.</p>
<p>There was a silence, then a crashing among the interlacing vegetation, first
here, then there, and then half-a-dozen faces appeared,—strange faces,
lit by a strange light. M’ling made a growling noise in his throat. I
recognised the Ape-man: I had indeed already identified his voice, and two of
the white-swathed brown-featured creatures I had seen in Montgomery’s
boat. With these were the two dappled brutes and that grey, horribly crooked
creature who said the Law, with grey hair streaming down its cheeks, heavy grey
eyebrows, and grey locks pouring off from a central parting upon its sloping
forehead,—a heavy, faceless thing, with strange red eyes, looking at us
curiously from amidst the green.</p>
<p>For a space no one spoke. Then Montgomery hiccoughed, “Who—said he
was dead?”</p>
<p>The Monkey-man looked guiltily at the hairy-grey Thing. “He is
dead,” said this monster. “They saw.”</p>
<p>There was nothing threatening about this detachment, at any rate. They seemed
awestricken and puzzled.</p>
<p>“Where is he?” said Montgomery.</p>
<p>“Beyond,” and the grey creature pointed.</p>
<p>“Is there a Law now?” asked the Monkey-man. “Is it still to
be this and that? Is he dead indeed?”</p>
<p>“Is there a Law?” repeated the man in white. “Is there a Law,
thou Other with the Whip?”</p>
<p>“He is dead,” said the hairy-grey Thing. And they all stood
watching us.</p>
<p>“Prendick,” said Montgomery, turning his dull eyes to me.
“He’s dead, evidently.”</p>
<p>I had been standing behind him during this colloquy. I began to see how things
lay with them. I suddenly stepped in front of Montgomery and lifted up my
voice:—“Children of the Law,” I said, “he is <i>not</i>
dead!” M’ling turned his sharp eyes on me. “He has changed
his shape; he has changed his body,” I went on. “For a time you
will not see him. He is—there,” I pointed upward, “where he
can watch you. You cannot see him, but he can see you. Fear the Law!”</p>
<p>I looked at them squarely. They flinched.</p>
<p>“He is great, he is good,” said the Ape-man, peering fearfully
upward among the dense trees.</p>
<p>“And the other Thing?” I demanded.</p>
<p>“The Thing that bled, and ran screaming and sobbing,—that is dead
too,” said the grey Thing, still regarding me.</p>
<p>“That’s well,” grunted Montgomery.</p>
<p>“The Other with the Whip—” began the grey Thing.</p>
<p>“Well?” said I.</p>
<p>“Said he was dead.”</p>
<p>But Montgomery was still sober enough to understand my motive in denying
Moreau’s death. “He is not dead,” he said slowly, “not
dead at all. No more dead than I am.”</p>
<p>“Some,” said I, “have broken the Law: they will die. Some
have died. Show us now where his old body lies,—the body he cast away
because he had no more need of it.”</p>
<p>“It is this way, Man who walked in the Sea,” said the grey Thing.</p>
<p>And with these six creatures guiding us, we went through the tumult of ferns
and creepers and tree-stems towards the northwest. Then came a yelling, a
crashing among the branches, and a little pink homunculus rushed by us
shrieking. Immediately after appeared a monster in headlong pursuit,
blood-bedabbled, who was amongst us almost before he could stop his career. The
grey Thing leapt aside. M’ling, with a snarl, flew at it, and was struck
aside. Montgomery fired and missed, bowed his head, threw up his arm, and
turned to run. I fired, and the Thing still came on; fired again, point-blank,
into its ugly face. I saw its features vanish in a flash: its face was driven
in. Yet it passed me, gripped Montgomery, and holding him, fell headlong beside
him and pulled him sprawling upon itself in its death-agony.</p>
<p>I found myself alone with M’ling, the dead brute, and the prostrate man.
Montgomery raised himself slowly and stared in a muddled way at the shattered
Beast Man beside him. It more than half sobered him. He scrambled to his feet.
Then I saw the grey Thing returning cautiously through the trees.</p>
<p>“See,” said I, pointing to the dead brute, “is the Law not
alive? This came of breaking the Law.”</p>
<p>He peered at the body. “He sends the Fire that kills,” said he, in
his deep voice, repeating part of the Ritual. The others gathered round and
stared for a space.</p>
<p>At last we drew near the westward extremity of the island. We came upon the
gnawed and mutilated body of the puma, its shoulder-bone smashed by a bullet,
and perhaps twenty yards farther found at last what we sought. Moreau lay face
downward in a trampled space in a canebrake. One hand was almost severed at the
wrist and his silvery hair was dabbled in blood. His head had been battered in
by the fetters of the puma. The broken canes beneath him were smeared with
blood. His revolver we could not find. Montgomery turned him over. Resting at
intervals, and with the help of the seven Beast People (for he was a heavy
man), we carried Moreau back to the enclosure. The night was darkling. Twice we
heard unseen creatures howling and shrieking past our little band, and once the
little pink sloth-creature appeared and stared at us, and vanished again. But
we were not attacked again. At the gates of the enclosure our company of Beast
People left us, M’ling going with the rest. We locked ourselves in, and
then took Moreau’s mangled body into the yard and laid it upon a pile of
brushwood. Then we went into the laboratory and put an end to all we found
living there.</p>
<!--end chapter-->
<!--chapter-->
<h2><SPAN name="chap19"></SPAN>XIX.<br/> MONTGOMERY’S “BANK HOLIDAY.”</h2>
<p>When this was accomplished, and we had washed and eaten, Montgomery and I went
into my little room and seriously discussed our position for the first time. It
was then near midnight. He was almost sober, but greatly disturbed in his mind.
He had been strangely under the influence of Moreau’s personality: I do
not think it had ever occurred to him that Moreau could die. This disaster was
the sudden collapse of the habits that had become part of his nature in the ten
or more monotonous years he had spent on the island. He talked vaguely,
answered my questions crookedly, wandered into general questions.</p>
<p>“This silly ass of a world,” he said; “what a muddle it all
is! I haven’t had any life. I wonder when it’s going to begin.
Sixteen years being bullied by nurses and schoolmasters at their own sweet
will; five in London grinding hard at medicine, bad food, shabby lodgings,
shabby clothes, shabby vice, a blunder,—<i>I</i> didn’t know any
better,—and hustled off to this beastly island. Ten years here!
What’s it all for, Prendick? Are we bubbles blown by a baby?”</p>
<p>It was hard to deal with such ravings. “The thing we have to think of
now,” said I, “is how to get away from this island.”</p>
<p>“What’s the good of getting away? I’m an outcast. Where am
<i>I</i> to join on? It’s all very well for <i>you</i>, Prendick. Poor
old Moreau! We can’t leave him here to have his bones picked. As it
is—And besides, what will become of the decent part of the Beast
Folk?”</p>
<p>“Well,” said I, “that will do to-morrow. I’ve been
thinking we might make the brushwood into a pyre and burn his body—and
those other things. Then what will happen with the Beast Folk?”</p>
<p>“<i>I</i> don’t know. I suppose those that were made of beasts of
prey will make silly asses of themselves sooner or later. We can’t
massacre the lot—can we? I suppose that’s what <i>your</i> humanity
would suggest? But they’ll change. They are sure to change.”</p>
<p>He talked thus inconclusively until at last I felt my temper going.</p>
<p>“Damnation!” he exclaimed at some petulance of mine;
“can’t you see I’m in a worse hole than you are?” And
he got up, and went for the brandy. “Drink!” he said returning,
“you logic-chopping, chalky-faced saint of an atheist, drink!”</p>
<p>“Not I,” said I, and sat grimly watching his face under the yellow
paraffine flare, as he drank himself into a garrulous misery.</p>
<p>I have a memory of infinite tedium. He wandered into a maudlin defence of the
Beast People and of M’ling. M’ling, he said, was the only thing
that had ever really cared for him. And suddenly an idea came to him.</p>
<p>“I’m damned!” said he, staggering to his feet and clutching
the brandy bottle.</p>
<p>By some flash of intuition I knew what it was he intended. “You
don’t give drink to that beast!” I said, rising and facing him.</p>
<p>“Beast!” said he. “You’re the beast. He takes his
liquor like a Christian. Come out of the way, Prendick!”</p>
<p>“For God’s sake,” said I.</p>
<p>“Get—out of the way!” he roared, and suddenly whipped out his
revolver.</p>
<p>“Very well,” said I, and stood aside, half-minded to fall upon him
as he put his hand upon the latch, but deterred by the thought of my useless
arm. “You’ve made a beast of yourself,—to the beasts you may
go.”</p>
<p>He flung the doorway open, and stood half facing me between the yellow
lamp-light and the pallid glare of the moon; his eye-sockets were blotches of
black under his stubbly eyebrows.</p>
<p>“You’re a solemn prig, Prendick, a silly ass! You’re always
fearing and fancying. We’re on the edge of things. I’m bound to cut
my throat to-morrow. I’m going to have a damned Bank Holiday
to-night.” He turned and went out into the moonlight.
“M’ling!” he cried; “M’ling, old friend!”</p>
<p>Three dim creatures in the silvery light came along the edge of the wan
beach,—one a white-wrapped creature, the other two blotches of blackness
following it. They halted, staring. Then I saw M’ling’s hunched
shoulders as he came round the corner of the house.</p>
<p>“Drink!” cried Montgomery, “drink, you brutes! Drink and be
men! Damme, I’m the cleverest. Moreau forgot this; this is the last
touch. Drink, I tell you!” And waving the bottle in his hand he started
off at a kind of quick trot to the westward, M’ling ranging himself
between him and the three dim creatures who followed.</p>
<p>I went to the doorway. They were already indistinct in the mist of the
moonlight before Montgomery halted. I saw him administer a dose of the raw
brandy to M’ling, and saw the five figures melt into one vague patch.</p>
<p>“Sing!” I heard Montgomery shout,—“sing all together,
‘Confound old Prendick!’ That’s right; now again,
‘Confound old Prendick!’”</p>
<p>The black group broke up into five separate figures, and wound slowly away from
me along the band of shining beach. Each went howling at his own sweet will,
yelping insults at me, or giving whatever other vent this new inspiration of
brandy demanded. Presently I heard Montgomery’s voice shouting,
“Right turn!” and they passed with their shouts and howls into the
blackness of the landward trees. Slowly, very slowly, they receded into
silence.</p>
<p>The peaceful splendour of the night healed again. The moon was now past the
meridian and travelling down the west. It was at its full, and very bright
riding through the empty blue sky. The shadow of the wall lay, a yard wide and
of inky blackness, at my feet. The eastward sea was a featureless grey, dark
and mysterious; and between the sea and the shadow the grey sands (of volcanic
glass and crystals) flashed and shone like a beach of diamonds. Behind me the
paraffine lamp flared hot and ruddy.</p>
<p>Then I shut the door, locked it, and went into the enclosure where Moreau lay
beside his latest victims,—the staghounds and the llama and some other
wretched brutes,—with his massive face calm even after his terrible
death, and with the hard eyes open, staring at the dead white moon above. I sat
down upon the edge of the sink, and with my eyes upon that ghastly pile of
silvery light and ominous shadows began to turn over my plans. In the morning I
would gather some provisions in the dingey, and after setting fire to the pyre
before me, push out into the desolation of the high sea once more. I felt that
for Montgomery there was no help; that he was, in truth, half akin to these
Beast Folk, unfitted for human kindred.</p>
<p>I do not know how long I sat there scheming. It must have been an hour or so.
Then my planning was interrupted by the return of Montgomery to my
neighbourhood. I heard a yelling from many throats, a tumult of exultant cries
passing down towards the beach, whooping and howling, and excited shrieks that
seemed to come to a stop near the water’s edge. The riot rose and fell; I
heard heavy blows and the splintering smash of wood, but it did not trouble me
then. A discordant chanting began.</p>
<p>My thoughts went back to my means of escape. I got up, brought the lamp, and
went into a shed to look at some kegs I had seen there. Then I became
interested in the contents of some biscuit-tins, and opened one. I saw
something out of the tail of my eye,—a red figure,—and turned
sharply.</p>
<p>Behind me lay the yard, vividly black-and-white in the moonlight, and the pile
of wood and faggots on which Moreau and his mutilated victims lay, one over
another. They seemed to be gripping one another in one last revengeful grapple.
His wounds gaped, black as night, and the blood that had dripped lay in black
patches upon the sand. Then I saw, without understanding, the cause of my
phantom,—a ruddy glow that came and danced and went upon the wall
opposite. I misinterpreted this, fancied it was a reflection of my flickering
lamp, and turned again to the stores in the shed. I went on rummaging among
them, as well as a one-armed man could, finding this convenient thing and that,
and putting them aside for to-morrow’s launch. My movements were slow,
and the time passed quickly. Insensibly the daylight crept upon me.</p>
<p>The chanting died down, giving place to a clamour; then it began again, and
suddenly broke into a tumult. I heard cries of, “More! more!” a
sound like quarrelling, and a sudden wild shriek. The quality of the sounds
changed so greatly that it arrested my attention. I went out into the yard and
listened. Then cutting like a knife across the confusion came the crack of a
revolver.</p>
<p>I rushed at once through my room to the little doorway. As I did so I heard
some of the packing-cases behind me go sliding down and smash together with a
clatter of glass on the floor of the shed. But I did not heed these. I flung
the door open and looked out.</p>
<p>Up the beach by the boathouse a bonfire was burning, raining up sparks into the
indistinctness of the dawn. Around this struggled a mass of black figures. I
heard Montgomery call my name. I began to run at once towards this fire,
revolver in hand. I saw the pink tongue of Montgomery’s pistol lick out
once, close to the ground. He was down. I shouted with all my strength and
fired into the air. I heard some one cry, “The Master!” The knotted
black struggle broke into scattering units, the fire leapt and sank down. The
crowd of Beast People fled in sudden panic before me, up the beach. In my
excitement I fired at their retreating backs as they disappeared among the
bushes. Then I turned to the black heaps upon the ground.</p>
<p>Montgomery lay on his back, with the hairy-grey Beast-man sprawling across his
body. The brute was dead, but still gripping Montgomery’s throat with its
curving claws. Near by lay M’ling on his face and quite still, his neck
bitten open and the upper part of the smashed brandy-bottle in his hand. Two
other figures lay near the fire,—the one motionless, the other groaning
fitfully, every now and then raising its head slowly, then dropping it again.</p>
<p>I caught hold of the grey man and pulled him off Montgomery’s body; his
claws drew down the torn coat reluctantly as I dragged him away. Montgomery was
dark in the face and scarcely breathing. I splashed sea-water on his face and
pillowed his head on my rolled-up coat. M’ling was dead. The wounded
creature by the fire—it was a Wolf-brute with a bearded grey
face—lay, I found, with the fore part of its body upon the still glowing
timber. The wretched thing was injured so dreadfully that in mercy I blew its
brains out at once. The other brute was one of the Bull-men swathed in white.
He too was dead. The rest of the Beast People had vanished from the beach.</p>
<p>I went to Montgomery again and knelt beside him, cursing my ignorance of
medicine. The fire beside me had sunk down, and only charred beams of timber
glowing at the central ends and mixed with a grey ash of brushwood remained. I
wondered casually where Montgomery had got his wood. Then I saw that the dawn
was upon us. The sky had grown brighter, the setting moon was becoming pale and
opaque in the luminous blue of the day. The sky to the eastward was rimmed with
red.</p>
<p>Suddenly I heard a thud and a hissing behind me, and, looking round, sprang to
my feet with a cry of horror. Against the warm dawn great tumultuous masses of
black smoke were boiling up out of the enclosure, and through their stormy
darkness shot flickering threads of blood-red flame. Then the thatched roof
caught. I saw the curving charge of the flames across the sloping straw. A
spurt of fire jetted from the window of my room.</p>
<p>I knew at once what had happened. I remembered the crash I had heard. When I
had rushed out to Montgomery’s assistance, I had overturned the lamp.</p>
<p>The hopelessness of saving any of the contents of the enclosure stared me in
the face. My mind came back to my plan of flight, and turning swiftly I looked
to see where the two boats lay upon the beach. They were gone! Two axes lay
upon the sands beside me; chips and splinters were scattered broadcast, and the
ashes of the bonfire were blackening and smoking under the dawn. Montgomery had
burnt the boats to revenge himself upon me and prevent our return to mankind!</p>
<p>A sudden convulsion of rage shook me. I was almost moved to batter his foolish
head in, as he lay there helpless at my feet. Then suddenly his hand moved, so
feebly, so pitifully, that my wrath vanished. He groaned, and opened his eyes
for a minute. I knelt down beside him and raised his head. He opened his eyes
again, staring silently at the dawn, and then they met mine. The lids fell.</p>
<p>“Sorry,” he said presently, with an effort. He seemed trying to
think. “The last,” he murmured, “the last of this silly
universe. What a mess—”</p>
<p>I listened. His head fell helplessly to one side. I thought some drink might
revive him; but there was neither drink nor vessel in which to bring drink at
hand. He seemed suddenly heavier. My heart went cold. I bent down to his face,
put my hand through the rent in his blouse. He was dead; and even as he died a
line of white heat, the limb of the sun, rose eastward beyond the projection of
the bay, splashing its radiance across the sky and turning the dark sea into a
weltering tumult of dazzling light. It fell like a glory upon his
death-shrunken face.</p>
<p>I let his head fall gently upon the rough pillow I had made for him, and stood
up. Before me was the glittering desolation of the sea, the awful solitude upon
which I had already suffered so much; behind me the island, hushed under the
dawn, its Beast People silent and unseen. The enclosure, with all its
provisions and ammunition, burnt noisily, with sudden gusts of flame, a fitful
crackling, and now and then a crash. The heavy smoke drove up the beach away
from me, rolling low over the distant tree-tops towards the huts in the ravine.
Beside me were the charred vestiges of the boats and these five dead bodies.</p>
<p>Then out of the bushes came three Beast People, with hunched shoulders,
protruding heads, misshapen hands awkwardly held, and inquisitive, unfriendly
eyes and advanced towards me with hesitating gestures.</p>
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<h2><SPAN name="chap20"></SPAN>XX.<br/> ALONE WITH THE BEAST FOLK.</h2>
<p>I faced these people, facing my fate in them, single-handed
now,—literally single-handed, for I had a broken arm. In my pocket was a
revolver with two empty chambers. Among the chips scattered about the beach lay
the two axes that had been used to chop up the boats. The tide was creeping in
behind me. There was nothing for it but courage. I looked squarely into the
faces of the advancing monsters. They avoided my eyes, and their quivering
nostrils investigated the bodies that lay beyond me on the beach. I took
half-a-dozen steps, picked up the blood-stained whip that lay beneath the body
of the Wolf-man, and cracked it. They stopped and stared at me.</p>
<p>“Salute!” said I. “Bow down!”</p>
<p>They hesitated. One bent his knees. I repeated my command, with my heart in my
mouth, and advanced upon them. One knelt, then the other two.</p>
<p>I turned and walked towards the dead bodies, keeping my face towards the three
kneeling Beast Men, very much as an actor passing up the stage faces the
audience.</p>
<p>“They broke the Law,” said I, putting my foot on the Sayer of the
Law. “They have been slain,—even the Sayer of the Law; even the
Other with the Whip. Great is the Law! Come and see.”</p>
<p>“None escape,” said one of them, advancing and peering.</p>
<p>“None escape,” said I. “Therefore hear and do as I
command.” They stood up, looking questioningly at one another.</p>
<p>“Stand there,” said I.</p>
<p>I picked up the hatchets and swung them by their heads from the sling of my
arm; turned Montgomery over; picked up his revolver still loaded in two
chambers, and bending down to rummage, found half-a-dozen cartridges in his
pocket.</p>
<p>“Take him,” said I, standing up again and pointing with the whip;
“take him, and carry him out and cast him into the sea.”</p>
<p>They came forward, evidently still afraid of Montgomery, but still more afraid
of my cracking red whip-lash; and after some fumbling and hesitation, some
whip-cracking and shouting, they lifted him gingerly, carried him down to the
beach, and went splashing into the dazzling welter of the sea.</p>
<p>“On!” said I, “on! Carry him far.”</p>
<p>They went in up to their armpits and stood regarding me.</p>
<p>“Let go,” said I; and the body of Montgomery vanished with a
splash. Something seemed to tighten across my chest.</p>
<p>“Good!” said I, with a break in my voice; and they came back,
hurrying and fearful, to the margin of the water, leaving long wakes of black
in the silver. At the water’s edge they stopped, turning and glaring into
the sea as though they presently expected Montgomery to arise therefrom and
exact vengeance.</p>
<p>“Now these,” said I, pointing to the other bodies.</p>
<p>They took care not to approach the place where they had thrown Montgomery into
the water, but instead, carried the four dead Beast People slantingly along the
beach for perhaps a hundred yards before they waded out and cast them away.</p>
<p>As I watched them disposing of the mangled remains of M’ling, I heard a
light footfall behind me, and turning quickly saw the big Hyena-swine perhaps a
dozen yards away. His head was bent down, his bright eyes were fixed upon me,
his stumpy hands clenched and held close by his side. He stopped in this
crouching attitude when I turned, his eyes a little averted.</p>
<p>For a moment we stood eye to eye. I dropped the whip and snatched at the pistol
in my pocket; for I meant to kill this brute, the most formidable of any left
now upon the island, at the first excuse. It may seem treacherous, but so I was
resolved. I was far more afraid of him than of any other two of the Beast Folk.
His continued life was I knew a threat against mine.</p>
<p>I was perhaps a dozen seconds collecting myself. Then cried I, “Salute!
Bow down!”</p>
<p>His teeth flashed upon me in a snarl. “Who are <i>you</i> that I
should—”</p>
<p>Perhaps a little too spasmodically I drew my revolver, aimed quickly and fired.
I heard him yelp, saw him run sideways and turn, knew I had missed, and clicked
back the cock with my thumb for the next shot. But he was already running
headlong, jumping from side to side, and I dared not risk another miss. Every
now and then he looked back at me over his shoulder. He went slanting along the
beach, and vanished beneath the driving masses of dense smoke that were still
pouring out from the burning enclosure. For some time I stood staring after
him. I turned to my three obedient Beast Folk again and signalled them to drop
the body they still carried. Then I went back to the place by the fire where
the bodies had fallen and kicked the sand until all the brown blood-stains were
absorbed and hidden.</p>
<p>I dismissed my three serfs with a wave of the hand, and went up the beach into
the thickets. I carried my pistol in my hand, my whip thrust with the hatchets
in the sling of my arm. I was anxious to be alone, to think out the position in
which I was now placed. A dreadful thing that I was only beginning to realise
was, that over all this island there was now no safe place where I could be
alone and secure to rest or sleep. I had recovered strength amazingly since my
landing, but I was still inclined to be nervous and to break down under any
great stress. I felt that I ought to cross the island and establish myself with
the Beast People, and make myself secure in their confidence. But my heart
failed me. I went back to the beach, and turning eastward past the burning
enclosure, made for a point where a shallow spit of coral sand ran out towards
the reef. Here I could sit down and think, my back to the sea and my face
against any surprise. And there I sat, chin on knees, the sun beating down upon
my head and unspeakable dread in my mind, plotting how I could live on against
the hour of my rescue (if ever rescue came). I tried to review the whole
situation as calmly as I could, but it was difficult to clear the thing of
emotion.</p>
<p>I began turning over in my mind the reason of Montgomery’s despair.
“They will change,” he said; “they are sure to change.”
And Moreau, what was it that Moreau had said? “The stubborn beast-flesh
grows day by day back again.” Then I came round to the Hyena-swine. I
felt sure that if I did not kill that brute, he would kill me. The Sayer of the
Law was dead: worse luck. They knew now that we of the Whips could be killed
even as they themselves were killed. Were they peering at me already out of the
green masses of ferns and palms over yonder, watching until I came within their
spring? Were they plotting against me? What was the Hyena-swine telling them?
My imagination was running away with me into a morass of unsubstantial fears.</p>
<p>My thoughts were disturbed by a crying of sea-birds hurrying towards some black
object that had been stranded by the waves on the beach near the enclosure. I
knew what that object was, but I had not the heart to go back and drive them
off. I began walking along the beach in the opposite direction, designing to
come round the eastward corner of the island and so approach the ravine of the
huts, without traversing the possible ambuscades of the thickets.</p>
<p>Perhaps half a mile along the beach I became aware of one of my three Beast
Folk advancing out of the landward bushes towards me. I was now so nervous with
my own imaginings that I immediately drew my revolver. Even the propitiatory
gestures of the creature failed to disarm me. He hesitated as he approached.</p>
<p>“Go away!” cried I.</p>
<p>There was something very suggestive of a dog in the cringing attitude of the
creature. It retreated a little way, very like a dog being sent home, and
stopped, looking at me imploringly with canine brown eyes.</p>
<p>“Go away,” said I. “Do not come near me.”</p>
<p>“May I not come near you?” it said.</p>
<p>“No; go away,” I insisted, and snapped my whip. Then putting my
whip in my teeth, I stooped for a stone, and with that threat drove the
creature away.</p>
<p>So in solitude I came round by the ravine of the Beast People, and hiding among
the weeds and reeds that separated this crevice from the sea I watched such of
them as appeared, trying to judge from their gestures and appearance how the
death of Moreau and Montgomery and the destruction of the House of Pain had
affected them. I know now the folly of my cowardice. Had I kept my courage up
to the level of the dawn, had I not allowed it to ebb away in solitary thought,
I might have grasped the vacant sceptre of Moreau and ruled over the Beast
People. As it was I lost the opportunity, and sank to the position of a mere
leader among my fellows.</p>
<p>Towards noon certain of them came and squatted basking in the hot sand. The
imperious voices of hunger and thirst prevailed over my dread. I came out of
the bushes, and, revolver in hand, walked down towards these seated figures.
One, a Wolf-woman, turned her head and stared at me, and then the others. None
attempted to rise or salute me. I felt too faint and weary to insist, and I let
the moment pass.</p>
<p>“I want food,” said I, almost apologetically, and drawing near.</p>
<p>“There is food in the huts,” said an Ox-boar-man, drowsily, and
looking away from me.</p>
<p>I passed them, and went down into the shadow and odours of the almost deserted
ravine. In an empty hut I feasted on some specked and half-decayed fruit; and
then after I had propped some branches and sticks about the opening, and placed
myself with my face towards it and my hand upon my revolver, the exhaustion of
the last thirty hours claimed its own, and I fell into a light slumber, hoping
that the flimsy barricade I had erected would cause sufficient noise in its
removal to save me from surprise.</p>
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