There it was! The abrupt
liberation of sound! As he timed it with his watch, Bassett likened
it to the trump of an archangel. Walls of cities, he meditated,
might well fall down before so vast and compelling a summons. For
the thousandth time vainly he tried to analyse the tone-quality of
that enormous peal that dominated the land far into the
strong-holds of the surrounding tribes. The mountain gorge which
was its source rang to the rising tide of it until it brimmed over
and flooded earth and sky and air. With the wantonness of a sick
man's fancy, he likened it to the mighty cry of some Titan of the
Elder World vexed with misery or wrath. Higher and higher it arose,
challenging and demanding in such profounds of volume that it
seemed intended for ears beyond the narrow confines of the solar
system. There was in it, too, the clamour of protest in that there
were no ears to hear and comprehend its utterance.
- Such the sick man's fancy. Still he strove to analyse the
sound. Sonorous as thunder was it, mellow as a golden bell, thin
and sweet as a thrummed taut cord of silver--no; it was none of
these, nor a blend of these. There were no words nor semblances in
his vocabulary and experience with which to describe the totality
of that sound.
Time passed. Minutes merged into quarters of hours, and quarters
of hours into half-hours, and still the sound persisted, ever
changing from its initial vocal impulse yet never receiving fresh
impulse--fading, dimming, dying as enormously as it had sprung into
being. It became a confusion of troubled mutterings and babblings
and colossal whisperings. Slowly it withdrew, sob by sob, into
whatever great bosom had birthed it, until it whimpered deadly
whispers of wrath and as equally seductive whispers of delight,
striving still to be heard, to convey some cosmic secret, some
understanding of infinite import and value. It dwindled to a ghost
of sound that had lost its menace and promise, and became a thing
that pulsed on in the sick man's consciousness for minutes after it
had ceased. When he could hear it no longer, Bassett glanced at his
watch. An hour had elapsed ere that archangel's trump had subsided
into tonal nothingness.
Was this, then, HIS dark tower?--Bassett pondered, remembering
his Browning and gazing at his skeleton-like and fever-wasted
hands. And the fancy made him smile--of Childe Roland bearing a
slug-horn to his lips with an arm as feeble as his was. Was it
months, or years, he asked himself, since he first heard that
mysterious call on the beach at Ringmanu? To save himself he could
not tell. The long sickness had been most long. In conscious count
of time he knew of months, many of them; but he had no way of
estimating the long intervals of delirium and stupor. And how fared
Captain Bateman of the blackbirder Nari? he wondered; and had
Captain Bateman's drunken mate died of delirium tremens yet?
From which vain speculations, Bassett turned idly to review all
that had occurred since that day on the beach of Ringmanu when he
first heard the sound and plunged into the jungle after it. Sagawa
had protested. He could see him yet, his queer little monkeyish
face eloquent with fear, his back burdened with specimen cases, in
his hands Bassett's butterfly net and naturalist's shot-gun, as he
quavered, in Beche-de-mer English: "Me fella too much fright along
bush. Bad fella boy, too much stop'm along bush."
Bassett smiled sadly at the recollection. The little New Hanover
boy had been frightened, but had proved faithful, following him
without hesitancy into the bush in the quest after the source of
the wonderful sound. No fire-hollowed tree-trunk, that, throbbing
war through the jungle depths, had been Bassett's conclusion.
Erroneous had been his next conclusion, namely, that the source or
cause could not be more distant than an hour's walk, and that he
would easily be back by mid-afternoon to be picked up by the Nari's
whale-boat.
"That big fella noise no good, all the same devil-devil," Sagawa
had adjudged. And Sagawa had been right. Had he not had his head
hacked off within the day? Bassett shuddered. Without doubt Sagawa
had been eaten as well by the "bad fella boys too much" that
stopped along the bush. He could see him, as he had last seen him,
stripped of the shot-gun and all the naturalist's gear of his
master, lying on the narrow trail where he had been decapitated
barely the moment before. Yes, within a minute the thing had
happened. Within a minute, looking back, Bassett had seen him
trudging patiently along under his burdens. Then Bassett's own
trouble had come upon him. He looked at the cruelly healed stumps
of the first and second fingers of his left hand, then rubbed them
softly into the indentation in the back of his skull. Quick as had
been the flash of the long handled tomahawk, he had been quick
enough to duck away his head and partially to deflect the stroke
with his up-flung hand. Two fingers and a hasty scalp-wound had
been the price he paid for his life. With one barrel of his ten-
gauge shot-gun he had blown the life out of the bushman who had so
nearly got him; with the other barrel he had peppered the bushmen
bending over Sagawa, and had the pleasure of knowing that the major
portion of the charge had gone into the one who leaped away with
Sagawa's head. Everything had occurred in a flash. Only himself,
the slain bushman, and what remained of Sagawa, were in the narrow,
wild-pig run of a path. From the dark jungle on either side came no
rustle of movement or sound of life. And he had suffered distinct
and dreadful shock. For the first time in his life he had killed a
human being, and he knew nausea as he contemplated the mess of his
handiwork.
Then had begun the chase. He retreated up the pig-run before his
hunters, who were between him and the beach. How many there were,
he could not guess. There might have been one, or a hundred, for
aught he saw of them. That some of them took to the trees and
travelled along through the jungle roof he was certain; but at the
most he never glimpsed more than an occasional flitting of shadows.
No bow-strings twanged that he could hear; but every little while,
whence discharged he knew not, tiny arrows whispered past him or
struck tree-boles and fluttered to the ground beside him. They were
bone-tipped and feather shafted, and the feathers, torn from the
breasts of humming-birds, iridesced like jewels.
Once--and now, after the long lapse of time, he chuckled
gleefully at the recollection--he had detected a shadow above him
that came to instant rest as he turned his gaze upward. He could
make out nothing, but, deciding to chance it, had fired at it a
heavy charge of number five shot. Squalling like an infuriated cat,
the shadow crashed down through tree-ferns and orchids and thudded
upon the earth at his feet, and, still squalling its rage and pain,
had sunk its human teeth into the ankle of his stout tramping boot.
He, on the other hand, was not idle, and with his free foot had
done what reduced the squalling to silence. So inured to savagery
has Bassett since become, that he chuckled again with the glee of
the recollection.
What a night had followed! Small wonder that he had accumulated
such a virulence and variety of fevers, he thought, as he recalled
that sleepless night of torment, when the throb of his wounds was
as nothing compared with the myriad stings of the mosquitoes. There
had been no escaping them, and he had not dared to light a fire.
They had literally pumped his body full of poison, so that, with
the coming of day, eyes swollen almost shut, he had stumbled
blindly on, not caring much when his head should be hacked off and
his carcass started on the way of Sagawa's to the cooking fire.
Twenty-four hours had made a wreck of him--of mind as well as body.
He had scarcely retained his wits at all, so maddened was he by the
tremendous inoculation of poison he had received. Several times he
fired his shot-gun with effect into the shadows that dogged him.
Stinging day insects and gnats added to his torment, while his
bloody wounds attracted hosts of loathsome flies that clung
sluggishly to his flesh and had to be brushed off and crushed
off.
Once, in that day, he heard again the wonderful sound, seemingly
more distant, but rising imperiously above the nearer war-drums in
the bush. Right there was where he had made his mistake. Thinking
that he had passed beyond it and that, therefore, it was between
him and the beach of Ringmanu, he had worked back toward it when in
reality he was penetrating deeper and deeper into the mysterious
heart of the unexplored island. That night, crawling in among the
twisted roots of a banyan tree, he had slept from exhaustion while
the mosquitoes had had their will of him.
Followed days and nights that were vague as nightmares in his
memory. One clear vision he remembered was of suddenly finding
himself in the midst of a bush village and watching the old men and
children fleeing into the jungle. All had fled but one. From close
at hand and above him, a whimpering as of some animal in pain and
terror had startled him. And looking up he had seen her--a girl, or
young woman rather, suspended by one arm in the cooking sun.
Perhaps for days she had so hung. Her swollen, protruding tongue
spoke as much. Still alive, she gazed at him with eyes of terror.
Past help, he decided, as he noted the swellings of her legs which
advertised that the joints had been crushed and the great bones
broken. He resolved to shoot her, and there the vision terminated.
He could not remember whether he had or not, any more than could he
remember how he chanced to be in that village, or how he succeeded
in getting away from it.
Many pictures, unrelated, came and went in Bassett's mind as he
reviewed that period of his terrible wanderings. He remembered
invading another village of a dozen houses and driving all before
him with his shot-gun save, for one old man, too feeble to flee,
who spat at him and whined and snarled as he dug open a ground-oven
and from amid the hot stones dragged forth a roasted pig that
steamed its essence deliciously through its green-leaf wrappings.
It was at this place that a wantonness of savagery had seized upon
him. Having feasted, ready to depart with a hind-quarter of the pig
in his hand, he deliberately fired the grass thatch of a house with
his burning glass.
But seared deepest of all in Bassett's brain, was the dank and
noisome jungle. It actually stank with evil, and it was always
twilight. Rarely did a shaft of sunlight penetrate its matted roof
a hundred feet overhead. And beneath that roof was an aerial ooze
of vegetation, a monstrous, parasitic dripping of decadent life-
forms that rooted in death and lived on death. And through all this
he drifted, ever pursued by the flitting shadows of the
anthropophagi, themselves ghosts of evil that dared not face him in
battle but that knew that, soon or late, they would feed on him.
Bassett remembered that at the time, in lucid moments, he had
likened himself to a wounded bull pursued by plains' coyotes too
cowardly to battle with him for the meat of him, yet certain of the
inevitable end of him when they would be full gorged. As the bull's
horns and stamping hoofs kept off the coyotes, so his shot- gun
kept off these Solomon Islanders, these twilight shades of bushmen
of the island of Guadalcanal.
Came the day of the grass lands. Abruptly, as if cloven by the
sword of God in the hand of God, the jungle terminated. The edge of
it, perpendicular and as black as the infamy of it, was a hundred
feet up and down. And, beginning at the edge of it, grew the
grass--sweet, soft, tender, pasture grass that would have delighted
the eyes and beasts of any husbandman and that extended, on and on,
for leagues and leagues of velvet verdure, to the backbone of the
great island, the towering mountain range flung up by some ancient
earth-cataclysm, serrated and gullied but not yet erased by the
erosive tropic rains. But the grass! He had crawled into it a dozen
yards, buried his face in it, smelled it, and broken down in a fit
of involuntary weeping.
And, while he wept, the wonderful sound had pealed forth--if by
PEAL, he had often thought since, an adequate description could be
given of the enunciation of so vast a sound melting sweet. Sweet it
was, as no sound ever heard. Vast it was, of so mighty a resonance
that it might have proceeded from some brazen-throated monster. And
yet it called to him across that leagues-wide savannah, and was
like a benediction to his long-suffering, pain racked spirit.
He remembered how he lay there in the grass, wet-cheeked but no
longer sobbing, listening to the sound and wondering that he had
been able to hear it on the beach of Ringmanu. Some freak of air
pressures and air currents, he reflected, had made it possible for
the sound to carry so far. Such conditions might not happen again
in a thousand days or ten thousand days, but the one day it had
happened had been the day he landed from the Nari for several
hours' collecting. Especially had he been in quest of the famed
jungle butterfly, a foot across from wing-tip to wing-tip, as
velvet-dusky of lack of colour as was the gloom of the roof, of
such lofty arboreal habits that it resorted only to the jungle roof
and could be brought down only by a dose of shot. It was for this
purpose that Sagawa had carried the ten-gauge shot-gun.
Two days and nights he had spent crawling across that belt of
grass land. He had suffered much, but pursuit had ceased at the
jungle- edge. And he would have died of thirst had not a heavy
thunderstorm revived him on the second day.
And then had come Balatta. In the first shade, where the
savannah yielded to the dense mountain jungle, he had collapsed to
die. At first she had squealed with delight at sight of his
helplessness, and was for beating his brain out with a stout forest
branch. Perhaps it was his very utter helplessness that had
appealed to her, and perhaps it was her human curiosity that made
her refrain. At any rate, she had refrained, for he opened his eyes
again under the impending blow, and saw her studying him intently.
What especially struck her about him were his blue eyes and white
skin. Coolly she had squatted on her hams, spat on his arm, and
with her finger-tips scrubbed away the dirt of days and nights of
muck and jungle that sullied the pristine whiteness of his
skin.
And everything about her had struck him especially, although
there was nothing conventional about her at all. He laughed weakly
at the recollection, for she had been as innocent of garb as Eve
before the fig-leaf adventure. Squat and lean at the same time,
asymmetrically limbed, string-muscled as if with lengths of
cordage, dirt-caked from infancy save for casual showers, she was
as unbeautiful a prototype of woman as he, with a scientist's eye,
had ever gazed upon. Her breasts advertised at the one time her
maturity and youth; and, if by nothing else, her sex was advertised
by the one article of finery with which she was adorned, namely a
pig's tail, thrust though a hole in her left ear-lobe. So lately
had the tail been severed, that its raw end still oozed blood that
dried upon her shoulder like so much candle-droppings. And her
face! A twisted and wizened complex of apish features, perforated
by upturned, sky-open, Mongolian nostrils, by a mouth that sagged
from a huge upper-lip and faded precipitately into a retreating
chin, by peering querulous eyes that blinked as blink the eyes of
denizens of monkey-cages.
Not even the water she brought him in a forest-leaf, and the
ancient and half-putrid chunk of roast pig, could redeem in the
slightest the grotesque hideousness of her. When he had eaten
weakly for a space, he closed his eyes in order not to see her,
although again and again she poked them open to peer at the blue of
them. Then had come the sound. Nearer, much nearer, he knew it to
be; and he knew equally well, despite the weary way he had come,
that it was still many hours distant. The effect of it on her had
been startling. She cringed under it, with averted face, moaning
and chattering with fear. But after it had lived its full life of
an hour, he closed his eyes and fell asleep with Balatta brushing
the flies from him.
When he awoke it was night, and she was gone. But he was aware
of renewed strength, and, by then too thoroughly inoculated by the
mosquito poison to suffer further inflammation, he closed his eyes
and slept an unbroken stretch till sun-up. A little later Balatta
had returned, bringing with her a half-dozen women who, unbeautiful
as they were, were patently not so unbeautiful as she. She
evidenced by her conduct that she considered him her find, her
property, and the pride she took in showing him off would have been
ludicrous had his situation not been so desperate.
Later, after what had been to him a terrible journey of miles,
when he collapsed in front of the devil-devil house in the shadow
of the breadfruit tree, she had shown very lively ideas on the
matter of retaining possession of him. Ngurn, whom Bassett was to
know afterward as the devil-devil doctor, priest, or medicine man
of the village, had wanted his head. Others of the grinning and
chattering monkey-men, all as stark of clothes and bestial of
appearance as Balatta, had wanted his body for the roasting oven.
At that time he had not understood their language, if by LANGUAGE
might be dignified the uncouth sounds they made to represent ideas.
But Bassett had thoroughly understood the matter of debate,
especially when the men pressed and prodded and felt of the flesh
of him as if he were so much commodity in a butcher's stall.
Balatta had been losing the debate rapidly, when the accident
happened. One of the men, curiously examining Bassett's shot-gun,
managed to cock and pull a trigger. The recoil of the butt into the
pit of the man's stomach had not been the most sanguinary result,
for the charge of shot, at a distance of a yard, had blown the head
of one of the debaters into nothingness.
Even Balatta joined the others in flight, and, ere they
returned, his senses already reeling from the oncoming
fever-attack, Bassett had regained possession of the gun.
Whereupon, although his teeth chattered with the ague and his
swimming eyes could scarcely see, he held on to his fading
consciousness until he could intimidate the bushmen with the simple
magics of compass, watch, burning glass, and matches. At the last,
with due emphasis, of solemnity and awfulness, he had killed a
young pig with his shot-gun and promptly fainted.
Bassett flexed his arm-muscles in quest of what possible
strength might reside in such weakness, and dragged himself slowly
and totteringly to his feet. He was shockingly emaciated; yet,
during the various convalescences of the many months of his long
sickness, he had never regained quite the same degree of strength
as this time. What he feared was another relapse such as he had
already frequently experienced. Without drugs, without even
quinine, he had managed so far to live through a combination of the
most pernicious and most malignant of malarial and black-water
fevers. But could he continue to endure? Such was his everlasting
query. For, like the genuine scientist he was, he would not be
content to die until he had solved the secret of the sound.
Supported by a staff, he staggered the few steps to the
devil-devil house where death and Ngurn reigned in gloom. Almost as
infamously dark and evil-stinking as the jungle was the devil-devil
house--in Bassett's opinion. Yet therein was usually to be found
his favourite crony and gossip, Ngurn, always willing for a yarn or
a discussion, the while he sat in the ashes of death and in a slow
smoke shrewdly revolved curing human heads suspended from the
rafters. For, through the months' interval of consciousness of his
long sickness, Bassett had mastered the psychological simplicities
and lingual difficulties of the language of the tribe of Ngurn and
Balatta and Vngngn--the latter the addle-headed young chief who was
ruled by Ngurn, and who, whispered intrigue had it, was the son of
Ngurn.
"Will the Red One speak to-day?" Bassett asked, by this time so
accustomed to the old man's gruesome occupation as to take even an
interest in the progress of the smoke-curing.
With the eye of an expert Ngurn examined the particular head he
was at work upon.
"It will be ten days before I can say 'finish,'" he said. "Never
has any man fixed heads like these."
Bassett smiled inwardly at the old fellow's reluctance to talk
with him of the Red One. It had always been so. Never, by any
chance, had Ngurn or any other member of the weird tribe divulged
the slightest hint of any physical characteristic of the Red One.
Physical the Red One must be, to emit the wonderful sound, and
though it was called the Red One, Bassett could not be sure that
red represented the colour of it. Red enough were the deeds and
powers of it, from what abstract clues he had gleaned. Not alone,
had Ngurn informed him, was the Red One more bestial powerful than
the neighbour tribal gods, ever athirst for the red blood of living
human sacrifices, but the neighbour gods themselves were sacrificed
and tormented before him. He was the god of a dozen allied villages
similar to this one, which was the central and commanding village
of the federation. By virtue of the Red One many alien villages had
been devastated and even wiped out, the prisoners sacrificed to the
Red One. This was true to-day, and it extended back into old
history carried down by word of mouth through the generations. When
he, Ngurn, had been a young man, the tribes beyond the grass lands
had made a war raid. In the counter raid, Ngurn and his fighting
folk had made many prisoners. Of children alone over five score
living had been bled white before the Red One, and many, many more
men and women.
The Thunderer was another of Ngurn's names for the mysterious
deity. Also at times was he called The Loud Shouter, The God-
Voiced, The Bird-Throated, The One with the Throat Sweet as the
Throat of the Honey-Bird, The Sun Singer, and The Star-Born.
Why The Star-Born? In vain Bassett interrogated Ngurn. According
to that old devil-devil doctor, the Red One had always been, just
where he was at present, for ever singing and thundering his will
over men. But Ngurn's father, wrapped in decaying grass-matting and
hanging even then over their heads among the smoky rafters of the
devil-devil house, had held otherwise. That departed wise one had
believed that the Red One came from out of the starry night, else
why--so his argument had run--had the old and forgotten ones passed
his name down as the Star-Born? Bassett could not but recognize
something cogent in such argument. But Ngurn affirmed the long
years of his long life, wherein he had gazed upon many starry
nights, yet never had he found a star on grass land or in jungle
depth--and he had looked for them. True, he had beheld shooting
stars (this in reply to Bassett's contention); but likewise had he
beheld the phosphorescence of fungoid growths and rotten meat and
fireflies on dark nights, and the flames of wood- fires and of
blazing candle-nuts; yet what were flame and blaze and glow when
they had flamed and blazed and glowed? Answer: memories, memories
only, of things which had ceased to be, like memories of matings
accomplished, of feasts forgotten, of desires that were the ghosts
of desires, flaring, flaming, burning, yet unrealized in
achievement of easement and satisfaction. Where was the appetite of
yesterday? the roasted flesh of the wild pig the hunter's arrow
failed to slay? the maid, unwed and dead ere the young man knew
her?
A memory was not a star, was Ngurn's contention. How could a
memory be a star? Further, after all his long life he still
observed the starry night-sky unaltered. Never had he noted the
absence of a single star from its accustomed place. Besides, stars
were fire, and the Red One was not fire--which last involuntary
betrayal told Bassett nothing.
"Will the Red One speak to-morrow?" he queried.
Ngurn shrugged his shoulders as who should say.
"And the day after?--and the day after that?" Bassett
persisted.
"I would like to have the curing of your head," Ngurn changed
the subject. "It is different from any other head. No devil-devil
has a head like it. Besides, I would cure it well. I would take
months and months. The moons would come and the moons would go, and
the smoke would be very slow, and I should myself gather the
materials for the curing smoke. The skin would not wrinkle. It
would be as smooth as your skin now."
He stood up, and from the dim rafters, grimed with the smoking
of countless heads, where day was no more than a gloom, took down a
matting-wrapped parcel and began to open it.
"It is a head like yours," he said, "but it is poorly
cured."
Bassett had pricked up his ears at the suggestion that it was a
white man's head; for he had long since come to accept that these
jungle-dwellers, in the midmost centre of the great island, had
never had intercourse with white men. Certainly he had found them
without the almost universal beche-de-mer English of the west South
Pacific. Nor had they knowledge of tobacco, nor of gunpowder. Their
few precious knives, made from lengths of hoop-iron, and their few
and more precious tomahawks from cheap trade hatchets, he had
surmised they had captured in war from the bushmen of the jungle
beyond the grass lands, and that they, in turn, had similarly
gained them from the salt-water men who fringed the coral beaches
of the shore and had contact with the occasional white men.
"The folk in the out beyond do not know how to cure heads," old
Ngurn explained, as he drew forth from the filthy matting and
placed in Bassett's hands an indubitable white man's head.
Ancient it was beyond question; white it was as the blond hair
attested. He could have sworn it once belonged to an Englishman,
and to an Englishman of long before by token of the heavy gold
circlets still threaded in the withered ear-lobes.
"Now your head . . . " the devil-devil doctor began on his
favourite topic.
"I'll tell you what," Bassett interrupted, struck by a new idea.
"When I die I'll let you have my head to cure, if, first, you take
me to look upon the Red One."
"I will have your head anyway when you are dead," Ngurn rejected
the proposition. He added, with the brutal frankness of the savage:
"Besides, you have not long to live. You are almost a dead man now.
You will grow less strong. In not many months I shall have you here
turning and turning in the smoke. It is pleasant, through the long
afternoons, to turn the head of one you have known as well as I
know you. And I shall talk to you and tell you the many secrets you
want to know. Which will not matter, for you will be dead."
"Ngurn," Bassett threatened in sudden anger. "You know the Baby
Thunder in the Iron that is mine." (This was in reference to his
all-potent and all-awful shotgun.) "I can kill you any time, and
then you will not get my head."
"Just the same, will Vngngn, or some one else of my folk get
it," Ngurn complacently assured him. "And just the same will it
turn here in the and turn devil-devil house in the smoke. The
quicker you slay me with your Baby Thunder, the quicker will your
head turn in the smoke."
And Bassett knew he was beaten in the discussion.
What was the Red One?--Bassett asked himself a thousand times in
the succeeding week, while he seemed to grow stronger. What was the
source of the wonderful sound? What was this Sun Singer, this
Star-Born One, this mysterious deity, as bestial-conducted as the
black and kinky-headed and monkey-like human beasts who worshipped
it, and whose silver-sweet, bull-mouthed singing and commanding he
had heard at the taboo distance for so long?
Ngurn had he failed to bribe with the inevitable curing of his
head when he was dead. Vngngn, imbecile and chief that he was, was
too imbecilic, too much under the sway of Ngurn, to be considered.
Remained Balatta, who, from the time she found him and poked his
blue eyes open to recrudescence of her grotesque female
hideousness, had continued his adorer. Woman she was, and he had
long known that the only way to win from her treason of her tribe
was through the woman's heart of her.
Bassett was a fastidious man. He had never recovered from the
initial horror caused by Balatta's female awfulness. Back in
England, even at best the charm of woman, to him, had never been
robust. Yet now, resolutely, as only a man can do who is capable of
martyring himself for the cause of science, he proceeded to violate
all the fineness and delicacy of his nature by making love to the
unthinkably disgusting bushwoman.
He shuddered, but with averted face hid his grimaces and
swallowed his gorge as he put his arm around her dirt-crusted
shoulders and felt the contact of her rancidoily and kinky hair
with his neck and chin. But he nearly screamed when she succumbed
to that caress so at the very first of the courtship and mowed and
gibbered and squealed little, queer, pig-like gurgly noises of
delight. It was too much. And the next he did in the singular
courtship was to take her down to the stream and give her a
vigorous scrubbing.
From then on he devoted himself to her like a true swain as
frequently and for as long at a time as his will could override his
repugnance. But marriage, which she ardently suggested, with due
observance of tribal custom, he balked at. Fortunately, taboo rule
was strong in the tribe. Thus, Ngurn could never touch bone, or
flesh, or hide of crocodile. This had been ordained at his birth.
Vngngn was denied ever the touch of woman. Such pollution, did it
chance to occur, could be purged only by the death of the offending
female. It had happened once, since Bassett's arrival, when a girl
of nine, running in play, stumbled and fell against the sacred
chief. And the girl-child was seen no more. In whispers, Balatta
told Bassett that she had been three days and nights in dying
before the Red One. As for Balatta, the breadfruit was taboo to
her. For which Bassett was thankful. The taboo might have been
water.
For himself, he fabricated a special taboo. Only could he marry,
he explained, when the Southern Cross rode highest in the sky.
Knowing his astronomy, he thus gained a reprieve of nearly nine
months; and he was confident that within that time he would either
be dead or escaped to the coast with full knowledge of the Red One
and of the source of the Red One's wonderful voice. At first he had
fancied the Red One to be some colossal statue, like Memnon,
rendered vocal under certain temperature conditions of sunlight.
But when, after a war raid, a batch of prisoners was brought in and
the sacrifice made at night, in the midst of rain, when the sun
could play no part, the Red One had been more vocal than usual,
Bassett discarded that hypothesis.
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