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CHAPTER ELEVEN.
GRIM DANGER.
Brace felt an icy chill run through him, and for a few moments he was paralysed.
Not longer, for directly after a thrill of excitement set every nerve throbbing.
Laying down his gun, he s.n.a.t.c.hed his knife from its sheath, thrust the point inside the sleeve of his brother's flannel shirt, ripped it to the shoulder, and laid bare the great white biceps muscle, in which the head of an arrow was embedded, so nearly pa.s.sing through that as Brace placed his hand beneath the arm he could feel the point of the missile.
"Don't hesitate," whispered Sir Humphrey. "Poisoned or not poisoned, that arrow must be extracted. Will you cut down to it or shall I let Briscoe?"
"I'll do it," said Brace, through his set teeth; "but I can't help hurting you, Free: I must do that."
"Go on. Act," said his brother firmly. "_I'm_ not a child. Cut boldly."
Brace placed the point of the knife close to the shaft of the arrow, his hand trembling so that he could not keep the point still. Then he was as firm as a rock, for the thought came to him that he must be doing wrong to make so terrible a cut, and he knew that he risked dividing some important vessel.
The knife fell into the bottom of the boat with a loud jangling sound, for the right idea had come, and Brace played the surgeon as if he had been trained to the profession.
Keeping his left hand beneath his brother's arm just clear of the raised skin where the point of the arrow pressed, he seized the shaft firmly, gave a sudden thrust, and forced the arrow-head right through, keeping up the pressure till both barbs were well clear, and with them four or five inches of the thin bamboo.
"Now, one of you," he cried to Dan, "pick up my knife and cut through the arrow."
The man grasped the idea, and with one cut divided the shaft, while in less time than it takes to tell it Brace pulled with his left hand, and the part of the shaft in the wound was drawn right through, while the blood began to flow.
The next moment Brace's lips were applied to the wound, first on one side and then on the other, making it bleed more freely; and this he supplemented by holding his brother's arm over the side and bathing and pressing the wound.
"It may be a false alarm, lad," said Sir Humphrey, speaking slowly and calmly; "but it is as well to take the precaution."
"Yes, of course," said Brace huskily, and his heart sank low and the chill of dread increased, for as he sucked the wound where the arrow had entered he was conscious of a strange pungent acid taste, which clung to his lips and caused a stinging sensation at the tip of his tongue.
He scooped up a little water in the hollow of his hand and then s.n.a.t.c.hed it away, flinging the water over his brother's face, for he was conscious of a sharp p.r.i.c.king sensation as if he had scarified the skin against a thorn.
But he plunged his hand into the water again and raised it quickly to his mouth to wash away the bitter taste before applying his lips once more to the wounded arm.
This time the water reached his mouth, but he felt a repet.i.tion of the p.r.i.c.king in his fingers, and to his astonishment two tiny silvery fish fell into the bottom of the boat, while he found that two of his fingers were red.
But he had no time to think of self, and he worked hard bathing and encouraging the bleeding from both orifices of the wound and applying his lips to them again and again.
Sir Humphrey was sitting motionless in the bottom of the boat with his back against the side, bearing the pain he suffered patiently, and lighting bravely to master the mental agony which attacked him with suggestions of all the horrors that attend a poisoned wound.
Meanwhile Briscoe had not been idle. The keen inquisitiveness of his nature was now shown in a very different way, for his eyes were searching the depths of the forest as he peered through the gloom among the dimly-seen trunks again, and he fired twice in the direction from which the splashing of paddles had been heard.
He never turned his head nor shifted his eyes for a moment from that point, reloading by touch alone, while after he had fired the first shot he took upon himself to give orders to the sailors in a stern, firm voice.
"Get back to the brig as fast as you can, my lads."
It was not until he had a.s.sured himself of the fact that their enemy was in retreat that he turned for a moment to where Brace was busy with his amateur surgery.
"That's right," he said; "I shouldn't bandage it up yet. Let it bleed, in case the arrow was smeared with anything nasty. It's hardly likely that it was, though."
As he spoke he picked up the barbed head, glanced at it, and then slipped it into his pocket in the most indifferent way.
"I wouldn't fidget about that," he said to Sir Humphrey. "Most of the things we hear are old women's tales. Here, hold my gun," he added sharply to his man.
He thrust an arm round Sir Humphrey, just as his eyes were closing and he glided slowly along the side of the boat.
The next moment he too leaned over to scoop up some water and trickle it over the fainting man's face.
"Bah!" he e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed, "how sharp they are!" For a little silvery fish, which in company with a shoal had darted at his finger, fell with a pat on the wounded man's breast, and lay quivering and leaping till it disappeared through the grating at the bottom of the boat.
"Does that fainting mean danger?" cried Brace excitedly.
"Oh, no. Let his head go right down, and he'll soon come to."
"But you are of opinion that the arrow was poisoned," whispered Brace, in a whisper which was expressive of painful anxiety.
"It had been smeared with some stuff by an ignorant savage; but it may not be poisonous to human beings, and even if it were you've been drawing it all away from the wound."
"Oh, make haste, men; make haste," cried Brace excitedly.
"Let 'em be, my lad," said Briscoe; "they're doing their best. Come, keep cool, for your brother's sake."
"Oh, don't talk like that," cried Brace wildly. "Look at him: he's dying and we right away in the forest like this."
"You keep cool," said the American sternly. "He isn't dying nor anything like it. Only fainting from the shock, and he'll soon come to.
It won't help him for you to turn hysterical like a girl. You began right; now keep it up."
"What, shall I go on doing something to the wound?"
"No, I'd let that be now. You must have cleared it from anything that wiped off as the arrow pa.s.sed in, and he's a strong, brave fellow.
There, look: he's coming to."
Sir Humphrey's eyelids had begun to quiver, and at the end of a few minutes he had quite recovered consciousness.
He lay back gazing straight up at the boughs of the trees, beneath which they were pa.s.sing more quickly now, for they were gliding along with the current; but twice over he let his eyes rest upon those of his brother, and he lightly pressed the young man's hand.
"It's very unlucky," he said. "So unexpected and uncalled for. I hardly expected that we should have to encounter this."
"They're a treacherous lot," said Briscoe quietly. "It's enough to make a man fire upon them at sight. Wound hurt much?"
"It feels as if a red-hot iron had been thrust through it," said Sir Humphrey.
"Glad of it," said the American, who was taking the affair in a very calm manner.
"What!" exclaimed Brace, as he turned round quickly with flashing eyes.
"Glad of it, sir. Good sign. Fine, healthy pain. Now, if it had felt numb and dull I shouldn't have liked it, for it would have sounded as if something nasty was on the arrow. There, you keep a good heart, and we'll soon have you back on board. Then you can have a few hours'
sleep, and you'll be all right by night."