Hide and Seek

Chapter 19

I met with a priest at San Francisco, who told me that I should look a little less like a savage, if I wore a skull-cap like his, instead of a handkercher, when I got back into what he called the civilized world. So I took his advice, and bought this cap. I suppose it looks better than my old yellow handkercher; but it ain"t half as comfortable."

"But how did you lose your scalp?" asked Zack--"tell us all about it.

Upon my life, you"re the most interesting fellow I ever met with! And, I say, let"s walk about, while we talk. I feel steadier on my legs now; and it"s so infernally cold standing here."

"Which way can we soonest get out of this muck of houses and streets?"

asked Mat, surveying the London view around him with an expression of grim disgust. "There ain"t no room, even on this bridge, for the wind to blow fairly over a man. I"d just as soon be smothered up in a bed, as smothered up in smoke and stink here."

"What a delightful fellow you are! so entirely out of the common way!

Steady, my dear friend. The grog"s not quite out of my head yet; and I find I"ve got the hiccups. Here"s my way home, and your way into the fresh air, if you really want it. Come along; and tell me how you lost your scalp."

"There ain"t nothing particular to tell. What"s your name again?"

"Zack."

"Well, Zack, I was out on the tramp, dodging about after any game that turned up, on the banks of the Amazon--"

"Amazon? what"s that? a woman? or a place?"

"Did you ever hear of South America?"

"I can"t positively swear to it; but, to the best of my belief, I think I have."

"Well; the Amazon"s a longish bit of a river in those parts. I was out, as I told you, on the tramp."

"So I should think! you look like the sort of man who has tramped everywhere, and done everything."

"You"re about right there, for a wonder! I"ve druv cattle in Mexico; I"ve been out with a gang that went to find an overland road to the North Pole; I"ve worked through a season or two in catching wild horses on the Pampas; and another season or two in digging gold in California.

I went away from England, a tidy lad aboard s.h.i.+p; and here I am back again now, an old vagabond as hasn"t a friend to own him. If you want to know exactly who I am, and what I"ve been up to all my life, that"s about as much as I can tell you."

"You don"t say so! Wait a minute, though; there"s one thing--you"re not troubled with the hiccups, are you, after eating supper? (I"ve been a martyr to hiccups ever since I was a child.) But, I say, there"s one thing you haven"t told me yet; you haven"t told me what your other name is besides Mat. Mine"s Thorpe."

"I haven"t heard the sound of the other name you"re asking after for a matter of better than twenty year: and I don"t care if I never hear it again." His voice sank huskily, and he turned his head a little away from Zack, as he said those words. "They nicknamed me "Marksman," when I used to go out with the exploring gangs, because I was the best shot of all of them. You call me Marksman, too, if you don"t like Mat. Mister Mathew Marksman, if you please: everybody seems to be a "Mister" here.

You"re one, of course. I don"t mean to call you "Mister" for all that. I shall stick to Zack; it"s short, and there"s no bother about it."

"All right, old fellow! and I"ll stick to Mat, which is shorter still by a whole letter. But, I say, you haven"t told the story yet about how you lost your scalp."

"There"s no story in it, Do you know what it is to have a man dodging after you through these odds and ends of streets here? I dare say you do. Well, I had three skulking thieves of Indians dodging after me, over better than four hundred miles of lonesome country, where I might have bawled for help for a whole week on end, and never made anybody hear me. They wanted my scalp, and they wanted my rifle, and they got both at last, at the end of their man-hunt, because I couldn"t get any sleep."

"Not get any sleep. Why not?"

"Because they was three, and I was only one, to be sure! One of them kep" watch while the other two slept. I hadn"t n.o.body to keep watch for me; and my life depended on my eyes being open night and day. I took a dog"s snooze once, and was woke out of it by an arrow in my face. I kep" on a long time after that, before I give out; but at last I got the horrors, and thought the prairie was all a-fire, and run from it.

I don"t know how long I run on in that mad state; I only know that the horrors turned out to be the saving of my life. I missed my own trail, and struck into another, which was a trail of friendly Indians--people I"d traded with, you know. And I came up with "em somehow, near enough for the stragglers of their hunting party to hear me skreek when my scalp was took. Now you know as much about it as I do; I can"t tell you no more, except that I woke up like, in an Indian wigwam, with a crop of cool leaves on my head, instead of a crop of hair."

"A crop of leaves! What a jolly old Jack-in-the-Green you must have looked like! Which of those scars on your face is the arrow-wound, eh?

Oh, that"s it--is it? I say, old boy, you"ve got a black eye! Did any of those fellows in the Snuggery hit hard enough to hurt you?"

"Hurt me? Chaps like them _hurt Me!!"_ Tickled by the extravagance of the idea which Zack"s question suggested to him, Mat shook his st.u.r.dy shoulders, and indulged himself in a gruff chuckle, which seemed to claim some sort of barbarous relations.h.i.+p with a laugh.

"Ah! of course they haven"t hurt you;--I didn"t think they had," said Zack, whose pugilistic sympathies were deeply touched by the contempt with which his new friend treated the b.u.mps and bruises received in the fight. "Go on, Mat, I like adventures of your sort. What did you do after your head healed up?"

"Well, I got tired of dodging about the Amazon, and went south, and learnt to throw a la.s.so, and took a turn at the wild horses. Galloping did my head good."

"It"s just what would do my head good too. Yours is the sort of life, Mat, for me! How did you first come to lead it? Did you run away from home?"

"No. I served aboard s.h.i.+p, where I was put out, being too idle a vagabond to be kep" at home. I always wanted to run wild somewheres for a change; but I didn"t really go to do it, till I picked up a letter which was waiting for me in port, at the Brazils. There was news in that letter which sickened me of going home again; so I deserted, and went off on the tramp. And I"ve been mostly on the tramp ever since, till I got here last Sunday."

"What! have you only been in England since Sunday?"

"That"s all. I made a good time of it in California, where I"ve been last, digging gold. My mate, as was with me, got a talking about the old country, and wrought on me so that I went back with him to see it again.

So, instead of gambling away all my money over there" (Mat carelessly jerked his hand in a westerly direction), "I"ve come to spend it over here; and I"m going down into the country to-morrow, to see if anybody lives to own me at the old place."

"And suppose n.o.body does? What then?"

"Then I shall go back again. After twenty years among the savages, or little better, I"m not fit for the sort of thing as goes on among you here. I can"t sleep in a bed; I can"t stop in a room; I can"t be comfortable in decent clothes; I can"t stray into a singing-shop, as I did to-night, without a dust being kicked up all round me, because I haven"t got a proper head of hair like everybody else. I can"t shake up along with the rest of you, nohow; I"m used to hard lines and a wild country; and I shall go back and die over there among the lonesome places where there"s plenty of room for me." And again Mat jerked his hand carelessly in the direction of the American continent.

"Oh, don"t talk about going back!" cried Zack; "you"re sure to find somebody left at home--don"t you think so yourself, old fellow?"

Mat made no answer. He suddenly slackened; then, as suddenly, increased his pace; dragging young Thorpe with him at a headlong rate.

"You"re sure to find somebody," continued Zack, in his offhand, familiar way. "I don"t know--gently! we"re not walking for a wager--I don"t know whether you"re married or not?" (Mat still made no answer, and walked faster than ever.) "But if you havn"t got wife or child, every fellow"s got a father and mother, you know; and most fellows have got brothers or sisters--"

"Good night," said Mat, stopping short, and abruptly holding out his hand.

"Why! what"s the matter now?" asked Zack, in astonishment. "What do you want to part company for already? We are not near the end of the streets yet. Have I said anything that"s offended you?"

"No, you havn"t. You can come and talk to me if you like, the day after to-morrow. I shall be back then, whatever happens. I said I"d be like a brother to you; and that means, in my lingo, doing anything you ask.

Come and smoke a pipe along with me, as soon as I"m back again. Do you know Kirk Street? It"s nigh on the Market. Do you know a "bacco shop in Kirk Street? It"s got a green door, and Fourteen written on it in yaller paint. When I _am_ shut up in a room of my own, which isn"t often, I"m shut up there. I can"t give you the key of the house, because I want it myself."

"Kirk Street? That"s my way. Why can"t we go on together? What do you want to say good-night here for?"

"Because I want to be left by myself. It"s not your fault; but you"ve set me thinking of something that don"t make me easy in my mind. I"ve led a lonesome life of it, young "un; straying away months and months out in the wilderness, without a human being to speak to, I dare say that wasn"t a right sort of life for a man to take up with; but I _did_ take up with it; and I can"t get over liking it sometimes still. When I"m not easy in my mind, I want to be left lonesome as I used to be. I want it now. Good night."

Before Zack could enter his new friend"s address in his pocket-book, Mat had crossed the road, and had disappeared in the dark distance dotted with gaslights. In another moment, the last thump of his steady footstep died away on the pavement, in the morning stillness of the street.

"That"s rather an odd fellow"--thought Zack as he pursued his own road--"and we have got acquainted with each other in rather an odd way.

I shall certainly go and see him though, on Thursday; something may come of it, one of these days."

Zack was a careless guesser; but, in this case, he guessed right.

Something _did_ come of it.

CHAPTER II. THE PRODIGAL"S RETURN.

When Zack reached Baregrove Square, it was four in the morning. The neighboring church clock struck the hour as he approached his own door.

Immediately after parting with Mat, malicious Fate so ordained it that he pa.s.sed one of those late--or, to speak more correctly, early--public-houses, which are open to customers during the "small hours" of the morning. He was parched with thirst; and the hiccuping fit which had seized him in the company of his new friend had not yet subsided. "Suppose I try what a drop of brandy will do for me," thought Zack, stopping at the fatal entrance of the public-house.

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