Part 15 (1/2)

They started at once, Miss Leslie in the lead. As they rounded the point, she caught sight of the smoke still rising from the cleft. A little later she noticed the vultures which were streaming down out of the sky from all quarters other than seaward. Their focal point seemed to be the trees at the foot of the cleft. A nearer view showed that they were alighting in the thorn bushes on the south border of the wood.

Of Blake there was nothing to be seen until Miss Leslie, still in the lead, pushed in among the trees. There they found him crouched beside a small fire, near the edge of the pool. He did not look up. His eyes were riveted in a hungry stare upon several pieces of flesh, suspended over the flames on spits of green twigs.

”h.e.l.lo!” he sang out, as he heard their footsteps. ”Just in time, Miss Jenny. Your broiled steak'll be ready in short order.”

”Oh, build up the fire! I'm simply ravenous!” she exclaimed, between impatience and delight.

Winthrope was hardly less keen; yet his hunger did not altogether blunt his curiosity.

”I say, Blake,” he inquired, ”where did you get the meat?”

”Stow it, Win, my boy. This ain't a packing house. The stuff may be tough, but it's not--er--the other thing. Here you are, Miss Jenny. Chew it off the stick.”

Though Winthrope had his suspicions, he took the piece of half-burned flesh which Blake handed him in turn, and fell to eating without further question. As Blake had surmised, the roast proved far other than tender. Hunger, however, lent it a most appetizing flavor. The repast ended when there was nothing left to devour. Blake threw away his empty spit, and rose to stretch. He waited for Miss Leslie to swallow her last mouthful, and then began to chuckle.

”What's the joke?” asked Winthrope.

Blake looked at him solemnly.

”Well now, that was downright mean of me,” he drawled; ”after robbing them, to laugh at it!”

”Robbing who?”

”The buzzards.”

”You've fed us on leopard meat! It's--it's disgusting!”

”I found it filling. How about you, Miss Jenny?”

Miss Leslie did not know whether to laugh or to give way to a feeling of nausea. She did neither.

”Can we not find the spring of which you spoke?” she asked. ”I am thirsty.”

”Well, I guess the fire is about burnt out,” a.s.sented Blake. ”Come on; we'll see.”

The cleft now had a far different aspect from what it had presented on their first visit. The largest of the trees, though scorched about the base, still stood with unwithered foliage, little harmed by the fire.

But many of their small companions had been killed and partly destroyed by the heat and flames from the burning brush. In places the fire was yet smouldering.

Blake picked a path along the edge of the rill, where the moist vegetation, though scorched, had refused to burn. After the first abrupt ledge, up which Blake had to drag his companions, the ascent was easy. But as they climbed around an outjutting corner of the steep right wall of the cleft, Blake muttered a curse of disappointment. He could now see that the cleft did not run to the top of the cliff, but through it, like a tiny box canyon. The sides rose sheer and smooth as walls. Midway, at the highest point of the cleft, the baobab towered high above the ridge crest, its gigantic trunk filling a third of the breadth of the little gorge. Unfortunately it stood close to the left wall.

”Here's luck for you!” growled Blake. ”Why couldn't the blamed old tree have grown on the other side? We might have found a way to climb it.

Guess we'll have to smoke out another leopard. We're no nearer those birds' nests than we were yesterday.”

”By Jove, look here!” exclaimed Winthrope. ”This is our chance for antelope! Here by the spring are bamboos--real bamboos,--and only half the thicket burned.”

”What of them?” demanded Blake.

”Bows--arrows--and did you not agree that they would make knives?”

”Umph--we'll see. What is it, Miss Jenny?”