Part 25 (2/2)
In this ”al-fresco” feast the poor captive was not forgotten, but was supplied among the rest--the colossal Quaco administering to his wants with an air of quizzical compa.s.sion.
The young Englishman desired enlightenment about the character of his hosts; but delicacy forbade any direct inquiries. Could they be robbers--brigands with black skins? Their arms and accoutrements gave colour to the supposition. _Maroons_ they called themselves, but the name was new, and helped not Herbert in his perplexity. ”If robbers,”
thought he, ”they are the gentlest of their calling.”
Breakfast over, the Maroons gathered up their traps, and prepared to depart from the spot.
Already the wild boar had been butchered, cut up into portable flitches, and packed away in the cutacoos.
The wales upon the back of the runaway had been anointed by the hand of Quaco with some balsamic cerate; and by gestures the unfortunate youth was made to understand that he was to accompany the party. Instead of objecting to this, his eyes sparkled with a vivid joy. From the courtesy he had already received at their hands, he could not augur evil.
The Maroons, out of respect to their chief--whom they appeared to treat with submissive deference--had moved some distance away, leaving Captain Cubina alone with his English guest. The latter, with his gun shouldered, stood ready to depart.
”You are a stranger in the island?” said the Maroon, half interrogatively. ”I fancy you have not been living long with your uncle?”
”No,” answered Herbert. ”I never saw my uncle before yesterday afternoon.”
”_Crambo_!” exclaimed the hunter-captain in some surprise; ”you have just arrived, then? In that case, Master Vaughan--and that is why I have made bold to ask you--you will scarce be able to find your way back to Mount Welcome. One of my people will go with you?”
”No, thank you. I think I can manage it alone.”
Herbert hesitated to say that he was not going to Mount Welcome.
”It is a crooked path,” urged the Maroon; ”though straight enough to one who knows it. You need not take the guide so far as the great house; though Mr Vaughan, I believe, does not object to our people going on his grounds, as some other planters do. You can leave the man when you get within sight of the place. Without a guide, I fear you will not be able to find the path.”
”In truth, Captain Cubina,” said Herbert, no longer caring what idea his words might communicate to his Maroon acquaintance, ”I don't wish to find the path you speak of. I'm not going that way.”
”Not to Mount Welcome?”
”No.”
The Maroon remained for a moment silent, while a puzzled expression played over his features. ”Only arrived yesterday--out all night in the woods--not going back! Something strange in all this.”
Such were the quick reflections that pa.s.sed through his mind.
He had already noticed an air of distraction--of dejection, too--in the countenance of the stranger. What could it mean? The gay ribbon knotted in the b.u.t.ton-hole of his coat--what could that mean?
Captain Cubina was of the age--and perhaps just then in the very temper--to observe all matters that appeared indications of a certain soft sentiment; and both the blue ribbon and the thoughtful att.i.tude were of that signification. He knew something of the white denizens of Mount Welcome--more, perhaps, of those with a coloured skin. Could the odd behaviour of the young Englishman be attributed to some family difficulty that might have arisen there?
The Maroon mentally answered this interrogatory for himself: with the reflection that something of the kind had occurred.
Perhaps Captain Cubina was not merely guessing! Perhaps he had already listened to some whisper of plantation gossip: for electricity itself can scarce travel faster than news in the negro _quarter_!
If the hunter-captain had any suspicions as to the real position of his woodland guest, he was polite enough not to express them. On the contrary, he waived the opportunity given him by Herbert's ambiguous rejoinder, and simply said--
”If you are going elsewhere, you will need a guide all the same. This glade is surrounded by a wide stretch of tangled woods. There is no good path leading anywhere.”
”You are very kind,” answered Herbert, touched by the delicate solicitude of this man with a coloured skin. ”I wish to reach Montego Bay; and if one of your men would set me on the main road, I should certainly feel under great obligations. As to rewarding him for his trouble, beyond thanking him, I am sorry to say that circ.u.mstances just now have placed it out of my power.”
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