Though the ship would still take hours to reach the island, he hurried, breathless and flushed with excitement. Expert now, Nemo used his flint and steel to strike sparks, and within minutes, the bonfire was ablaze, a dazzling signal that raised smoke into the sky. The ship had had to see him. He was saved! to see him. He was saved!
For the first time in years, Nemo thought of rescue, of fellow human beings. The young man didn"t even know if regular society would accept him anymore. Some poor wretches -- such as William Dampier, the original inspiration for Robinson Crusoe Robinson Crusoe -- had become more like animals than men after being stranded on desert islands. -- had become more like animals than men after being stranded on desert islands.
But Nemo could learn again. He had the imagination and the drive. Once back to civilization, he could be cleaned up and dressed in finery. He could return to France, give speeches, wave at the crowds, an adventurer and hero. He would see Caroline again, and Jules. Nemo hurried down the counter-weighted elevator into Granite House. Oh, the stories he would tell!
Then the waiting began. Hour after hour. He found it agonizing. All day, Nemo continued to feed his blazing bonfire in an unmistakable call for help.
By late afternoon, the strange ship had grown close, angling in from the west. In the orange-tinted sky of sunset, the details of her three-masted form were clear enough in silhouette.
Nemo stared through his rockface window, using a crude spygla.s.s he had constructed out of bamboo tubes, the lens from his magnifying gla.s.s and a second lens painstakingly ground from the bottom of a salvaged brandy bottle he"d found in the original jetsam that had washed ash.o.r.e. Now he realized with a growing cold sensation in his chest that he knew this ship. Knew it too well.
The Coralie. Coralie.
Nemo could never forget the vessel on which he had become a seaman, where he"d learned the ways of rigging and sails and the currents of the seven seas. There could be no mistake. Led by the hideous Captain Noseless, the brigands must have taken the Coralie Coralie as their own, killing all crew aboard who refused to join them. For years now, the marauders had used Captain Grant"s brig as if it were their own. as their own, killing all crew aboard who refused to join them. For years now, the marauders had used Captain Grant"s brig as if it were their own.
And now that pirate crew had arrived at the island. His His island. island.
Thanks to the signal fire, they would know that some poor castaway lived here. Now the pirates would come after him him and take everything he"d managed to h.o.a.rd for his survival. Then they would delight in killing him. and take everything he"d managed to h.o.a.rd for his survival. Then they would delight in killing him.
Swallowing hard, knowing the enemy would come in with the morning tide, Nemo set about preparing his defenses. This would be his chance to avenge what the pirates had done to him, to the Coralie Coralie crew, and to Captain Grant. crew, and to Captain Grant.
Maybe it would be worth all the suffering.
viii
On the clearing above the cliffs, he let his bonfire fade to embers, but it was already too late.
Engrossed in the slim possibility of rescue, he had never planned or built military defenses. Even from the shelter of Granite House, Nemo had no way to drive back a hundred armed and bloodthirsty pirates. He"d already seen how these men fought, how they killed without compunction. Not even Captain Grant, the brawny Ned Land, and the seasoned English sailors aboard the Coralie Coralie had been able to drive them back. had been able to drive them back.
And Nemo was just one man. How could he possibly succeed where the others had failed?
But he had time, and resources, and ingenuity on his side. He would never run and hide. He had to protect what he could and inflict all possible damage -- if only in honor of Captain Grant"s memory.
During the night he returned to the plateau and loosed his goats from the corral. The pirates would slaughter any animals they found and take the meat back to their ship. Bleating, the goats ran into the forest, where at least they had a chance to escape. If he got through this, Nemo could round up most of them again. He could not save his vegetable garden, nor the outdoor huts where he stored the supplies he"d acc.u.mulated over the years.
Nemo secured himself inside Granite House. He drew up the ladders, severed the baskets of his elevator, and set fire to his bamboo stairway so that it fell off the cliffside in smoking cinders. Safely isolated, he ate and drank his fill, then tried to doze. He would need all of his energy the following day.
He meant to kill as many pirates as possible. For Captain Grant.
A long pa.s.sage in the rear of Granite House led through winding caves up to the mountainside. The entire island was honeycombed with underground tunnels, covered by jungle-overgrown openings. If forced to run, Nemo could hide in the wilderness. . . but if the pirates decided to set up a permanent base, he would have a long battle ahead of him. Sooner or later, he intended to wipe them out. They all deserved to die.
At dawn, he went to the cave opening and looked out to sea. The Coralie Coralie had sailed into the lagoon with the tide and had anch.o.r.ed not far from sh.o.r.e. Squinting through his spygla.s.s, Nemo could just make out the hideous Captain Noseless standing on the quarterdeck and watching his crew. Already, two longboats filled with men were being lowered over the sides. Once in the water, the pirates rowed toward the base of the cliff where he had set his bonfire. had sailed into the lagoon with the tide and had anch.o.r.ed not far from sh.o.r.e. Squinting through his spygla.s.s, Nemo could just make out the hideous Captain Noseless standing on the quarterdeck and watching his crew. Already, two longboats filled with men were being lowered over the sides. Once in the water, the pirates rowed toward the base of the cliff where he had set his bonfire.
Anger simmered within Nemo as he remembered how this ferocious pirate had coldly executed Captain Grant. Now he"d dispatched his henchmen to explore while he remained safe aboard the Coralie Coralie. Apparently, Noseless would not venture into danger until he discovered who waited for them on this island.
The longboats came ash.o.r.e where Nemo hoped they would, and he loosed his first desperate defense before the marauders expected anything. For just a moment, he had the advantage of surprise.
Eight pirates climbed from each longboat and stood on the sh.o.r.e. Two brigands pointed at the signs of habitation on the cliffside. The men made their way toward a slope of broken rock jarred loose by recent seismic tremors.
From his southernmost window opening, Nemo pushed several boulders he had lined up. The heavy rocks tumbled down the cliffs, striking more boulders on the steep slope, ricocheting and gaining momentum, carrying others along with them in a building avalanche.
The pirate sh.o.r.e party looked up as countless chunks of stone fell and bounced with a cracking, roaring sound. The brigands scattered on the beach. One boulder crushed a pirate like a c.o.c.kroach under a bootheel; the rest of the rockfall plunged down the cliff, across the beach, and into the sea. Several large stones splintered and sank one of the longboats.
Nemo had struck the first blow, and he found it very satisfying.
He looked over to see the Coralie Coralie"s gunports opening up. So, the pirate captain had been watching. He retreated deep into his caves as Captain Noseless launched a full broadside from the ship. An instant after he heard the boom, cannonb.a.l.l.s pounded the cliffside. The front of Granite House splintered, and the main chamber filled with smoke and rock dust. As the air cleared, Nemo saw that the cliff face had been blasted away, leaving him vulnerable.
Below, the sh.o.r.e party cheered, then ran howling as debris rained down from the cliffs above. Noseless would be preparing a second broadside, and so Nemo ducked deeper into the back tunnels heading for escape onto the plateau.
The landing party, frustrated because Nemo had destroyed his stairs and ladders, ran along the beach, searching for a different way up. From the Coralie Coralie, Noseless launched a third longboat, and more brigands swarmed ash.o.r.e.
Panting, smeared with smoke and rock dust, Nemo tried to plan what to do next. He was running for his life.
ix
The raiding parties landed at different points on the coast and crawled upland. The marauders, enraged by his first attack, drew their cutla.s.ses as they climbed the steep slopes, fought through the jungles -- and searched for Nemo.
He knew it had been years since this band had come to the island. Did they know the terrain, or was this just an occasional stopping point? Though jungle thickets might have hidden him better, he fled higher up the volcano"s slope. He preferred room to move, a vantage from which he could see his enemies coming. He had to outsmart them.
Breathing hard, Nemo worked his way up the rugged hillside toward the heights of the crater, careful to stay hidden among the boulders. From time to time he looked down at the Coralie Coralie still anch.o.r.ed in the lagoon. More longboats came ash.o.r.e. When he saw smoke curling into the sky from the vicinity of his home, he realized they had set fire to his corral and his storage sheds. By now the pirates would have lowered themselves with ropes into Granite House. They would smash his hand-made furniture and destroy his belongings. More destruction, more loss. still anch.o.r.ed in the lagoon. More longboats came ash.o.r.e. When he saw smoke curling into the sky from the vicinity of his home, he realized they had set fire to his corral and his storage sheds. By now the pirates would have lowered themselves with ropes into Granite House. They would smash his hand-made furniture and destroy his belongings. More destruction, more loss.
Yes, they all deserved to die. Rage simmered within him. He had hidden some supplies, and he could always rebuild . . . but he hadn"t antic.i.p.ated the extent of damage Captain Noseless and his men would inflict. Nemo vowed to stop them, to strike back in every way he could.
When he saw seven men climbing up from the plateau, Nemo moved behind tall rocks, where he could observe the invaders and yet be out of their line of sight. The pirates wove back and forth, searching for his trail. He raised his head to get a better view, secure in the shelter the rocks afforded him -- He heard the crack of a flintlock pistol, and a ball shattered with a white starburst against the stone a yard to his left. Four more pirates charging toward him from the opposite side of the slope. He hadn"t even noticed them coming.
Nemo ducked as one of the men jerked a pistol from his belt and fired a wild shot, which drew the attention of the first party of seven. He ran as both groups charged toward him from opposite directions. He could never fight them all.
Three more pistol shots rang out, though the b.a.l.l.s each missed him by an arm"s-length. Nemo took heart from the wasted shots, since the pursuing pirates would have no time for the tedious muzzle-reloading process. And Nemo didn"t intend to let them get close enough to use cutla.s.ses. The pirates might have been murderous, but they were not smart.
Unfortunately, the gunfire might rally the other brigands on the island, and Nemo could find himself trapped before long. But he knew exactly where to run. It wasn"t far.
Nemo had survived by his wits for years, and he wouldn"t give up now. He scrambled down a slope, threading his way through a labyrinth of rocks. As he neared the thermal areas, the ground felt hot through the soles of his seal-hide moccasins.
Soon he reached the most perilous part of his flight: a stony clearing where sulfurous steam hissed from fumaroles in the ground. He had very little cover, and if the pirates had kept any of their pistols loaded, a lead ball could catch him in the back.
Hearing the pursuers behind him, he put on a burst of speed, wishing he could fight them face to face, one at a time. But before he could go far, the ground bucked and shook with a heavy tremor that jarred the mountainside in the most powerful earthquake Nemo had yet experienced. He stumbled and sprawled on his face, cutting palms, arms, and chin on the sharp lava rock. The raiders shouted, terrified by what was happening.
Then with a tearing sound and a rumble from deep beneath the surface, part of the steep hillside caved in. The crust of the mountain dropped away and rocks sloughed aside, leaving a yawning black door -- the entrance to a cave that had been sealed until the quake shattered it open. Humid, swampy smells came from the new cave, as if an entire subterranean world were hidden within the mountain. A pallid glow of eerie phosph.o.r.escence leaked out of the dark hole.
Nemo scrambled backward as he heard something deep in the cavern: footsteps like mallets pounding against rock, an explosive exhalation of breath, a loud and hungry snort.
The pirates, however, had no interest in the phenomenon. Their only concern was killing him. Intent on their victim, the men pa.s.sed the broad cave mouth. Their shadows fell across the sunlit opening.
The noises from within grew louder . . . hungrier.
Nemo staggered to a halt as he saw a reptilian shape emerge from the cave. The pirates backed up and shrieked as the enormous beast lumbered out. Its hide was covered with scales, and it had huge, muscular back legs, a lashing tail, and a head barely large enough to contain its yawning rack of jaws. Scarlet, glittering eyes fastened on its prey.
When reading the science magazines Verne had shared in Nantes, Nemo had become familiar with paleontology debates, the remarkable discoveries of the French naturalist Baron Cuvier Georges and the meticulous restorations of the American paleontologist Othniel Charles Marsh. He had seen sketches of enormous skeletons on display in museums, as well as artists" renderings of how the beasts might have looked before some catastrophe had made them extinct.
Dinosaurs, they had been called.
"It"s a dragon!" one of the pirates screamed.
Nemo sprinted across the sulfurous clearing toward the distant rocks. As the marauding party scrambled for cover, the predatory dinosaur moved clumsily after them, sniffing and squinting in the bright island sunshine. The creature"s nostrils flared as it scented fresh meat. It opened its mouth and emitted a honking roar -- then set out after the prey.
Though its front claws looked small and delicate, the monster snagged the red-and-white striped shirt of the closest pirate. Before the man could even scream, the beast tucked him inside its gigantic shovel-shaped maw, bit down with a crunch of bone, and swallowed the morsel in a spray of blood.
Nemo disregarded the pirates, hoping they would all be slain. He had to get down off this rugged slope to the gra.s.sy plateau above the lagoon. The screaming men fled after him, as if hoping Nemo might lead them to safety.
Two scrawny, blue-shirted men ran pell-mell next to each other; with a wild look, the man on the right reached over and shoved his companion, who stumbled and sprawled on his face. When the dinosaur paused to gobble up the unfortunate man, the first raced ahead -- but the monster caught up with him in a moment, and soon two torn and bloodied blue shirts dangled in shreds from its long fangs.
One bearded pirate turned, braced his legs, and pointed his flintlock pistol. He pulled the trigger, a spark flared the powder, and the ball flew -- but the bullet made only a red mark on the dinosaur"s hide. The beast noticed the shot no more than a buzzing gnat. The bearded pirate fired a second pistol shot, but the dinosaur responded by devouring him with two swift crunches.
A one-eyed brute stopped running and turned about, drawing a curved cutla.s.s in each hand. With greasy sweat glistening on his bald pate, he turned to face the dinosaur. His scarlet silk pantaloons rippled in the breeze.
As the monster advanced, he screamed a counterpoint yell to the dinosaur"s roar and slashed with both blades, nicking the armored hide. The gigantic reptile bent forward to grab him. The bald pirate continued to stab and slash the tender meat inside the monster"s mouth even as the jaws crushed him. Two b.l.o.o.d.y swords clattered to the rocky ground.
Roaring so that the sky trembled and Nemo"s ears ached, the dinosaur threw the mangled swordsman down without even eating him. It stomped the corpse of the bald man into a mess with one huge hind foot, then charged forward on a more furious rampage.
Nemo dropped down the steep hill until he reached the gra.s.sy plateau. Without pausing, he made for the rocks at the edge of the cliff. Foolishly, the pirates followed, seeing hope light up Nemo"s face.
The dinosaur sprang forward with its muscular back legs, using its tail as a counterweight so that it landed, completely balanced, on the meadow below. The pirates threw knives, stones, and empty pistols at it, but nothing slowed down the monster.
Nemo rushed to the sheer dropoff where he had weighted down his glider the day before. He uprooted the ropes, grabbed the kite-wing handholds, and took a running start. He didn"t have time to tie himself in. He leaped out into open s.p.a.ce, clinging to his glider supports as the winds pulled him up and away from the mountainside.
The doomed pirates staggered to a halt, howling with surprise as he left them behind. Now they were trapped, with no hope of escape. The cliff dropped to foam-battered rocks far below. Nemo soared away, feeling no pity for these vicious men. If only Captain Noseless could have been among them. . .
The dinosaur stomped toward its cornered prey. Some of the pirates drew their swords, making a stand, while others hurled themselves off the cliff rather than be devoured by the dinosaur. When the last victims could not make up their minds, the beast chose for them.
Flying on the winds, Nemo watched the hapless victims, remembering how they themselves had slaughtered the good men aboard the Coralie Coralie.
Nemo banked and drifted over the thick jungles, eluding pursuit. He landed out in the inaccessible wilderness, where he intended to hide until he could hurt the pirates again. These vile men would no longer take him lightly.
x
For the next day, taking advantage of whatever cover he could find, Nemo crept through the jungles to the sh.o.r.eline. He knew this island well enough to take back paths to the sheltered lagoon where the Coralie Coralie had anch.o.r.ed. had anch.o.r.ed.
Nemo didn"t know how many men Captain Noseless had kept on board while raiding parties scoured the island. Fewer and fewer of the roaming brigands survived, though, as the dinosaur continued to hunt through the night. And Nemo hunted too, looking for means to harm the pirates.
He stood shin-deep in a mangrove swamp, watching for snakes, but more interested in keeping himself hidden from view as he spied on the three-masted brig. The pirate ship was just across the dark waters of the lagoon. Anger and hatred simmered within his heart.
The scarred captain paced the quarterdeck. His remaining men talked amongst themselves, subdued with fear. Nemo fixed his gaze on Noseless, despising the pirate. As the sun sank into the west, painting the sky tangerine and scarlet, Noseless glanced toward the swamps, as if he could sense the young man glaring at him from the deepening shadows.
Nemo wracked his brain for a way to strike at the pirates who had twice destroyed his life. How he hated them! As dusk settled in, accompanied by the night songs of insects, the stillness began to lull Nemo into complacency.
All at once the island grew ominously silent.
The dinosaur"s roar split the gloom. The beast crashed through trees, just behind the closer yells of men. Two of the surviving brigands howled in panic as they broke out of the jungle cover by the lagoon. "Help, help!"
On board the Coralie Coralie, pirates began to mill about. The men on sh.o.r.e shouted toward the anch.o.r.ed ship, but Noseless just stood on the quarterdeck, hands on hips. His face looked more cadaverous than ever, cold and calculating.
As the terrified pirates stumbled across the beach, the trees behind them bent aside. The bloodstained dinosaur pushed its way into the clearing, and its scarlet gaze locked onto the men crossing the swatch of sand. The pirates beckoned for their captain to send help, to launch another longboat, but Noseless made no move to a.s.sist them.
One of the pirates fell to his knees in an abject expression of prayerful penitence, while the other raced out into the shallow water, sloshing up to his knees and then his waist, as if he could swim out to the Coralie Coralie in time. in time.
The dinosaur stepped over the huddled form of the praying man, batting him to the sand with a powerful sweep of its tail, then lunged into the water and scooped down like a pelican catching a fish. The swimming pirate wailed, only to fall abruptly silent as the creature crunched its jaws. Next, the monster turned back to the beach, where it daintily bit the praying man in half.
Nemo watched from his hiding place, stunned by the cold-blooded att.i.tude of Captain Noseless on board the ship. Dozens of pirates remained on the Coralie Coralie, and all had refused to help their comrades. The young man"s nostrils flared, and he grew angrier by the moment.
From the beach, the dinosaur stared at the ship, defiant, as if its tiny brain knew that its main enemy lay out there. Its roar split the twilight.
In response, Captain Noseless"s command echoed across the water. "Fire!"
The dinosaur roared again as a volley of blasts rang out. Every cannon on the port side of the pirate ship fired. Eight of the b.a.l.l.s went wide, striking the rocks, the sand, or the jungle -- but five hammered into the beast, blasting huge wounds in its ma.s.sive body. The dinosaur was knocked backward, thrashing.
The remaining men on the Coralie Coralie surged to the port sides, cheering. surged to the port sides, cheering.
The monster staggered, wailing and honking. Blood poured in gouts from mangled holes in its hide. It clacked its huge shovel jaws together. Two more cannons fired, and both b.a.l.l.s struck, shattering the dinosaur"s spine and ribs.
At that moment Nemo saw his chance. While Noseless concentrated on his extravagant destruction, the young man slipped into the water. If ever he hoped for an opportunity to get aboard the ship, it was now while the pirates were cheering the dinosaur"s death throes.
The dying beast twitched, thrashed, and collapsed onto the bloodied sands. Its monstrous primeval body had been ruined as easily as a defenseless cargo ship, another victim of the pirates.
As the tropical dusk darkened into night, Nemo stroked through the calm lagoon, crossing the distance without a splash. He approached opposite from the gathered pirates and clung to the Coralie Coralie"s barnacled hull at the water line.