Part 3 (1/2)

”I suspected as much,” he said finally. ”Never before have there been so many Arabs and Somalis from the interior at Berbera. Only yesterday a caravan of two thousand camels arrived from Harar in the Galla country.

Something is wrong, I have felt certain, and now Makar confirms my fears.”

A glimmering suspicion of the truth flashed over Guy's mind at this juncture, but he hesitated to speak.

”Now then,” continued Melton, ”this can mean nothing but a ma.s.sacre. The only soldiers in the place are about sixty of the Bombay infantry, who were sent down here from Zaila, and as for the fortifications, they are nothing but a few mud walls. There they lie yonder,” and he pointed to an English flag floating over the house-tops some distance away.

”We are only wasting time here,” he added. ”We'll look about a little and then I'll decide what to do. I don't want to raise any false alarm.”

They turned back to the main avenue. The crowds still surged up and down, and the tumult seemed as harsh and discordant as ever, but the place had nevertheless undergone a change since they had left it a short time before. Little bartering was going on, and but few Arabs and Somalis were to be seen. Those on the street were mostly harmless traders from Aden and Cairo.

”What has become of all the Arabs?” asked Guy.

”That is just what I want to know,” said Melton; ”I'll soon find out, though. Walk as fast as you can now, Chutney, and look as unconcerned as possible.”

Melton led the way down the street for a little distance, and, turning into a side pa.s.sage, soon stopped before a low, one-story building.

A dark-skinned fellow clad in ordinary Egyptian costume stood in the doorway, and with a cry of surprise Guy recognized Mombagolo, Forbes'

trusty savage servant, who did much good service for them when they were in Burma together.

Their greeting was brief and hasty.

”I have work for you, Momba,” said Melton. ”Something is going on in the town, I don't know just what. You can go anywhere without being suspected. Find out what you can, and then come down to the wharf. Don't return here.”

The man hastened away at once, and then Guy and Melton started for the sh.o.r.e.

”I won't give any alarm at the garrison,” said Forbes, as they hurried along. ”I'll wait till Momba reports. I don't suppose anything is contemplated before nightfall at the earliest, and, as the troops are scattered, it would only precipitate matters if I should have them called in.”

The last bale of goods was being unloaded from the steamer when they reached the wharf. The captain and officers were smoking cigars against the rail, and catching sight of Guy, the former called out:

”Don't forget now. Six o'clock sharp.”

Guy nodded, and followed Melton to one side, where the two sat down on a bale of cotton. Melton briefly explained how he came to be at Berbera.

After his return from Burma, he had been dispatched as war correspondent of the London _Post_ to Suakim, which town was at that time threatened by the Mahdi.

Mombagolo, or Momba as Melton now called him, had become his faithful servant, and a week ago, the war-scare at Suakim having subsided, Melton had come to Berbera to write up the great fair for his paper.

Then Guy, in his turn, simply stated that he had stopped off on his way to India to execute a commission at Zaila. He made no reference to the dispatches, feeling doubtful whether it would be proper or not, for a government secret is a thing of weighty importance.

The conversation drifted to their perilous adventures in Burma, and the time pa.s.sed on unheeded.

At last Melton glanced up.

”Do you observe how quiet it is?” he exclaimed. ”And look! There are but few people in sight.”

It was indeed quiet. A dead, oppressive calm had settled on the sea; not a breeze rustled, not a ripple broke the gla.s.sy surface of the water, and from the town, instead of the loud babel of cries, came only a low murmur like a distant waterfall. A strange calm indeed, the calm that serves as precursor to the unseen storm.

Suddenly, with startling abruptness, a rifle-shot broke the silence with its shuddering echoes. Guy and Melton sprang to their feet. The officers on the steamer crowded to the rail, up in the town dark figures ran to and fro, a soldier in bright uniform was seen speeding toward the garrison, and now plunging madly toward the wharf came a white clad figure, pursued by a howling group of Somali warriors, who brandished long spears and daggers. A shot from Melton's pistol brought them to a sudden halt, and Momba, for it was indeed he, ran a few paces and fell breathless at his master's feet.