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Bones!--who had ever dreamed of such a mess of bones?--big bones and little bones and skulls; old bones, dry and almost buried; mouldy bones; bones still half-covered with bits of flesh and gristle--the remnants of the leopard family's last meal.
At last all were sc.r.a.ped out and flung in a heap, three or four yards away from the entrance. Miss Leslie looked at the result of her labor with a satisfied glance, followed by a sigh of relief. Between the heat and her unwonted exercise, she was greatly fatigued. She stepped around to a shadier spot to rest.
With a start, she remembered the fire.
When she reached it there were only a few dying embers left. She gathered dead leaves and shreds of fibrous inner bark, and knelt beside the dull coals to blow them into life. She could not bear the thought of having to confess her carelessness to Blake.
The hot ashes flew up in her face and powdered her hair with their gray dust; yet she persisted, blowing steadily until a shred of bark caught the sparks and flared up in a tiny flame. A little more, and she had a strong fire blazing against the tree trunk.
She rested a short time, relaxing both mentally and physically in the satisfying consciousness that Blake never should know how near she had come to failing in her trust.
Soon she became aware of a keen feeling of thirst and hunger. She rose, piled a fresh supply of sticks on the fire, and hastened back through the cleft towards the spring. Around the baobab she came upon Winthrope, working in the shade of the great tree. The three leopard skins had been stretched upon bamboo frames, and he was resignedly sc.r.a.ping at their inner surfaces with a smooth-edged stone. Miss Leslie did not look too closely at the operation.
"Where is--he?" she asked.
Winthrope motioned down the cleft.
"I hope he hasn't gone far. I'm half famished. Aren't you?"
"Really, Miss Genevieve, it is odd, you know. Not an hour since, the very thought of food--"
"And now you're as hungry as I am. Oh, I do wish he had not gone off just at the wrong time!"
"He went to take a dip in the sea. You know, he got so messed up over the nastiest part of the work, which I positively refused to do--"
"What's that beyond the bamboos?--There's something alive!"
"Pray, don't be alarmed. It is--er--it's all right, Miss Genevieve, I a.s.sure you."
"But what is it? Such queer noises, and I see something alive!"
"Only the vultures, if you must know. Nothing else, I a.s.sure you."
"Oh!"
"It is all out of sight from the spring. You are not to go around the bamboos until the--that is, not to-day."
"Did Mr. Blake say that?"
"Why, yes--to be sure. He also said to tell you that the cutlets were on the top shelf."
"You mean --?"
"His way of ordering you to cook our dinner. Really, Miss Genevieve, I should be pleased to take your place, but I have been told to keep to this. It is hard to take orders from a low fellow,--very hard for a gentleman, you know."
Miss Leslie gazed at her shapely hands. Three days since she could not have conceived of their being so rough and scratched and dirty. Yet her disgust at their condition was not entirely unqualified.
"At least I have something to show for them," she murmured.
"I beg pardon," said Winthrope.
"Just look at my hands--like a servant's! And yet I am not nearly so ashamed of them as I would have fancied. It is very amusing, but do you know, I actually feel proud that I have done something--something useful, I mean."
"Useful?--I call it shocking, Miss Genevieve. It is simply vile that people of our breeding should be compelled to do such menial work. They write no end of romances about castaways; but I fail to see the romance in sc.r.a.ping skins Indian fashion, as this fellow Blake calls it."
"I suppose, though, we should remember how much Mr. Blake is doing for us, and should try to make the best of the situation."
"It has no best. It is all a beastly muddle," complained Winthrope, and he resumed his nervous sc.r.a.ping at the big leopard skin.
The girl studied his face for a moment, and turned away. She had been trying so hard to forget.
He heard her leave, and called after, without looking up: "Please remember. He said to cook some meat."
She did not answer. Having satisfied her thirst at the spring, she took one of the bamboo rods, with its haggled blackening pieces of flesh, and returned to the fire. After some little experimenting, she contrived a way to support the rod beside the fire so that all the meat would roast without burning.
At first, keen as was her hunger, she turned with disgust from the flabby sun-seared flesh; but as it began to roast, the odor restored her appet.i.te to full vigor. Her mouth fairly watered. It seemed as though Winthrope and Blake would never come. She heard their voices, and took the bamboo spit from the fire for the meat to cool. Still they failed to appear, and unable to wait longer, she began to eat. The cub meat proved far more tender than that of the old leopard. She had helped herself to the second piece before the two men appeared.
"Hold on, Miss Jenny; fair play!" sang out Blake. "You've set to without tooting the dinner-horn. I don't blame you, though. That smells mighty good."
Both men caught at the hot meat with eagerness, and Winthrope promptly forgot all else in the animal pleasure of satisfying his hunger. Blake, though no less hungry, only waited to fill his mouth before investigating the condition of the prospective tree ladder. The result of the attempt to burn the trunk did not seem encouraging to the others, and Miss Leslie looked away, that her face might not betray her, should he have an inkling of her neglect. She was relieved by the cheerfulness of his tone.
"Slow work, this fire business--eh? Guess, though, it'll go faster this afternoon. The green wood is killed and is getting dried out. Anyway, we've got to keep at it till the tree goes over. This spring leopard won't last long at the present rate of consumption, and we'll need the eggs to keep us going till we get the hang of our bows."
"What is that smoke back there?" interrupted Miss Leslie. "Can it be that the fire down the cleft has sprung up again?"
"No; it's your fumigation. You had plenty of brush on hand, so I heaved it into the hole, and touched it off. While it's burning out, you can put in time gathering gra.s.s and leaves for a bed."
"Would you and Mr. Winthrope mind breaking off some bamboos for me?"
"What for?"
Miss Leslie colored and hesitated. "I--I should like to divide off a corner of the place with a wall or screen."
Winthrope tried to catch Blake's eye; but the American was gazing at Miss Leslie's embarra.s.sed face with a puzzled look. Her meaning dawned upon him, and he hastened to reply.
"All right, Miss Jenny. You can build your wall to suit yourself. But there'll be no hurry over it. Until the rains begin, Win and I'll sleep out in the open. We'll have to take turn about on watch at night, anyway. If we don't keep up a fire, some other spotted kitty will be sure to come nosing up the gully."
"There must also be lions in the vicinity," added Winthrope.
Miss Leslie said nothing until after the last pieces of meat had been handed around, and Blake sprang up to resume work.
"Mr. Blake," she called, in a low tone; "one moment, please. Would it save much bother if a door was made, and you and Mr. Winthrope should sleep inside?"
"We'll see about that later," replied Blake, carelessly.
The girl bit her lip, and the tears started to her eyes. Even Winthrope had started off without expressing his appreciation. Yet he at least should have realized how much it had cost her to make such an offer.
By evening she had her tree-cave--house, she preferred to name it to herself--in a habitable condition. When the purifying fire had burnt itself out, leaving the place free from all odors other than the wholesome smell of wood smoke, she had asked Blake how she could rake out the ashes. His advice was to wet them down where they lay.