CHAPTER XXIV.
ROB MAKES A DISCOVERY.
Rob, disconsolate and miserable, pa.s.sed a bad night, and rose early. As his captors were still asleep and had, apparently, made no effort to guard him, he decided to make a tour of the island himself. For one thing, he was by no means sure that Berghoff had been speaking the truth when he said that the place was uninhabited; and again he thought that some form of escape might present itself if only he investigated the place thoroughly.
So the lad tiptoed out of the camp, first taking the precaution to fill his pockets with food. He headed straight into the woods, planning to come out again when he had traveled a safe distance from the camp. He followed out this idea, pushing his way through the brush for a time, and then emerging on a strip of white beach that seemed to extend around the island.
He trudged along, keeping a bright lookout, but saw nothing that would further his prospects of getting away. All at once, though, as he came around the other side of the little spot of land, he saw another island lying at no great distance off. And on the beach of this island was a boat.
A more welcome sight could not have presented itself to the boy"s eyes just then. It meant that there was somebody on the island,--somebody who would surely be glad to help out a lad in his predicament.
"But how on earth am I to get over there?" mused the lad. "The tide is running like a mill race, and I don"t know whether I"m a strong enough swimmer to buck it."
Then another idea occurred to him. Just above him was a small point of land. By going into the water from the end of this, he would be some distance above the island he wished to gain, and the current, would, therefore, carry him down.
"If I only could get a log or something," thought the boy; "it wouldn"t take me long to get over there."
He started to hunt for a log that would suit his requirements; but logs didn"t seem very plentiful in that vicinity. In his search, he reentered the woods, and after looking about a bit succeeded in finding one that would just suit his purpose.
Stooping down, he lifted it, and then jumped back with a startled exclamation. A huge black snake had been coiled under the log, and now it struck at him, hissing and darting its red tongue in and out, and showing its vicious fangs!
Before Rob could avoid the creature"s attack, it had wrapped itself around his arm, fastening its fangs into his sleeve.
[Ill.u.s.tration: HE TOPPLED BACKWARD OVER THE BRINK AND PLUNGED DOWN INTO THE SWIFTLY FLOWING CURRENT BENEATH.]
Rob battled desperately with the reptile, which lashed its tail and hissed with vicious intonations. The feel of the creature"s grip was loathsome to the boy, and although its fangs had not penetrated his tough khaki coat, they might do so at any moment.
In the battle Rob backed out of the woods, striving all the time to free himself, and unconsciously stepped nearer and nearer to the water"s edge. Before he realized his position he toppled backward over the brink and plunged down into the swiftly flowing current beneath.
Down he went until it seemed he must strike the bottom! But his fall into the channel had had one good effect. The snake was not gripping his arm any more. When he shot to the surface he saw it swimming for its life, but being carried away from the sh.o.r.e.
In fact, the same thing was the case with Rob. The grip of the water drew him far from the island he had just vacated in such an unceremonious manner, and hurried him toward the spot of land where he had seen the boat. Striking out with all his might, the lad fought the current so as to reach the other island before the water hurried him past it. It was a hard fight even for a powerful swimmer like Rob. His clothes enc.u.mbered him cruelly, too; but at last, almost exhausted, he touched bottom and reeled ash.o.r.e.
For a time he could do nothing but lie there gasping. Had his life depended on it, he could not have moved hand or foot. But at length his youthful vitality came to his aid and he rose to his feet to look about him.
The current had landed him on a part of the beach from which the boat he had spied was not visible. But he knew in which direction it lay, and started out for it. As he rounded a small promontory he came upon it, a heavily-built, rickety-looking old thing, but still a boat.
Rob in his present situation would have taken anything that would float.
"I"ll examine it first and then go hunt up the owner and make a bargain with him for it," he thought.
With this intention he approached the craft, and the next instant received one of the cruellest shocks of his life.
The boat was a mere sh.e.l.l, falling to pieces from age and exposure to the hot sun. It must have been years since she had been used, and Rob"s experienced eye saw that she would have sunk like a stone the instant she was put in the water. It was a bitter blow to the lad, and for a time he sank down on the sand, completely knocked out.
But after a time he rallied his spirits.
"After all," he mused, "there may be somebody living on the island and that boat may be just an old one they have discarded. I"ll dry my clothes and then start out to investigate."
With the drying of his clothes, Rob made an alarming discovery. The food he had taken was most of it reduced to pulp by its immersion, some canned goods alone remaining edible.
"That makes it all the more urgent for me to find some aid," he said to himself; "I don"t think that bunch on the motor boat will trouble to look for me. I guess they"d be glad to leave me here if this is a deserted island. In that case, I might die here before aid came."
But thrusting all such thoughts as that aside, Rob determined to meet the situation like a brave Scout.
"I won"t give up till I"m at the last ditch," he said to himself with determination, as he put on his clothes. "I"ll fight it out to the end."
Somehow this resolution of his made the boy feel better. With renewed courage he set out to explore the island. But he made the circuit of it in vain. There was not a trace to be found of human habitation nor any indication, except the stranded, sun-dried boat, that anyone but himself had ever landed there.
So despondent did he feel over this discovery that had he possessed the strength to do so, he would have swum back to the other island and thrown himself on the mercy of his recent captors. But this was now out of the question.
Unless he could find some way out of his dilemma, it looked as if he would indeed be doomed to leave his bones on those sands. The thought was a dreadful one, and although it was a warm, almost tropical day, the boy shivered and cold sweat ran down his face.
If he were indeed to die there, n.o.body would ever know his fate, in all probability. He had failed in his mission to recover the papers, too.
Altogether he felt in a very miserable frame of mind. It was in this mood that, in order to keep his mind off his predicament, more than anything else, he fell to examining the old boat again. There might be some way to patch her up, he thought desperately, hoping against hope.
Suddenly he made a discovery that set his heart to beating wildly. On the stern board of the boat was cut the name "_Good Hope_!"
CHAPTER XXV.
THE DEAD MAN"S h.o.a.rD.
The "_Good Hope_!"
What a crowd of memories the name brought buzzing about the boy! The lone derelict, the figure in the mouldering cabin, the--the plan in his pocket!
With fingers that trembled Rob drew out the solution of the cryptogram and read it over.
Then he held his head in his hands a moment to keep it from whirling round.
Could it be possible that this was the island where the h.o.a.rd of century-old ivory was buried? Had he stumbled by a complete accident upon the cache that had sent one man to his death?
Then he recalled that on his trip of exploration he had noticed a big dead cypress on the other side of the island. But if this was the veritable island where the whalers had buried their ivory, why was the boat lying there mouldering on the beach? Why had they not left again?
The more the boy thought of it, the more mysterious and inexplicable the whole thing became. He resolved to go back to the dead cypress and follow the directions of the cryptic message of the captain of the _Good Hope_.
As has been said, the island was not a large one, and he was not long in reaching the gaunt, dead tree. Somehow he felt a chill go through him as he stood beneath its leafless gray limbs. It reminded him oddly of that skeleton in the deck house of the derelict.
But he pulled himself together and struck off into the woods in a direction that, by using his watch as a compa.s.s, he knew to be the west.
The undergrowth was thick, but after going a few paces, he reached an open s.p.a.ce.