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"I--I did not intend to offend her," he retracted. His ropy throat muscles seemed to convulse. His long face flamed hotly red. He burst out, as though unable to control himself: "My savvy allatime you no savvy! _Ni buh yao t[=i] na g hwa! Djan g chu, rang o dzou!_"
"_Lao-shu_," laughed Peter. "_Dang hsin!_"
CHAPTER XV
They came to Ichang next noon. Peter was on deck watching the somewhat hazardous procedure of transferring large gra.s.s-bound cases of tools from a tidewater steamer to the stern of the flat when he saw the Mongolian emerge from the companionway and walk to the rail, forward.
Peter gave him a full stare, but the man did not glance in his direction. He was looking down at the muddy river, and beckoning.
Peter observed a sampan coolie give an answering wave, and the sampan sidled alongside the flat.
The Mongolian returned a few minutes before the _Hankow_ hauled in her anchor. He retired to his stateroom and stayed there until late afternoon.
The river above Ichang was swifter, more dangerous, than in its lower course. Except for the junks and an occasional sampan, the _Hankow_ had the stream to herself. The yellow waters were tinged with red, dancing and sparkling to a fresh breeze under a fair blue sky. Great blue hills confined the swollen current. This was not the Yangtze of yesterday. It was a maddened millrace, gorged by the mountain rains.
Even the gurgle under the sharp-cut waters seemed to convey a menace.
Dikes were broken down. The brown waters had flowed out to right and left, forming quiet lakes where there had been fields of paddy and wheat. The junks from up-river were having a strenuous time of it.
Swarms of gibbering coolies manned the long sweeps, striving above all to keep their clumsy craft in safe mid-current.
They were pa.s.sing a long row of pyramids, green, brown and red. But Miss Vost was staring along the deck.
"The Mongolian!" she muttered. "How he is grinning at you!"
The Mongolian had come upon them, apparently unintentionally. He hesitated and paused when Peter looked up. Peter saw no grin upon his lips. They were set in a firm, straight line. His long arms were folded behind his back, and his eyes were empty of mirth--or malice.
They simply expressed nothing. He looked at Peter shortly, and favored Miss Vost with a long stare.
Her eyes faltered. Peter stepped forward.
But the Mongolian bowed, pa.s.sed them at a slow, meditative walk, and was lost from their sight behind the cabin's port side.
The idea took hold of Peter that the stalker had become the killer.
There was a telegraph station at Ichang through which ran the frail copper wires connecting the seventy millions of Szechwan Province with civilization. Had it been possible for the Mongolian to signal his master in Len Yang and receive an answer while the _Hankow_ lay at Ichang?
After dinner, curious and nervous, Peter went below. The light was burning over the table of weapons in the main cabin.
The Mongolian's door was slightly ajar, and as Peter descended the stairs, the door closed.
He waited. His heart thumped, louder than the thump of the laboring engine. He walked to his stateroom, opened the door, kicked the threshold, and--slammed the door! He hastened to the table, and hid behind it. Between the table legs he had a splendid view of both doors.
Holding a kris, point down, in front of him, the Mongolian slipped out, tried the adjacent door-k.n.o.b and entered Peter's room. When he came out, he looked perplexed and angry. He slid the dagger into his silk blouse and looked up the stairway, listening.
His expression of rage pa.s.sed away; now his look was inscrutable.
Stealing across the vestibule, he approached Miss Vost's door, and rapped.
Peter ran his fingers along the edge of the table until they encountered the hilt of a cutla.s.s. He waited.
The Mongolian rapped a little louder. There was no answer. Again he knocked, imperatively. Peter heard Miss Vost's sleepy voice pitched in inquiry. Her door opened an inch or two.
The Mongolian forced his way inside!
Miss Vost uttered a short, sharp scream, which was instantly smothered.
As Peter burst into the room, the Mongolian turned with a snarl, reaching for his silk blouse. Peter clapped his free hand to the muscled shoulder, and dragged him into the corridor.
Miss Vost, in a long, white nightgown, was framed in the doorway, staring sleepily. Her hand was clutched to her lips. Her hair tumbled about her bare shoulders in dark, silky cl.u.s.ters.
Bright steel flashed in the Mongolian's hand. "_Ha-li!_" he muttered.
Peter braced himself, and thrust straight upward, striking with fury.
He drove the sword through the Mongolian's right eye.
Miss Vost, a slender pillar of white, stared down at the floundering heap. She seemed to be going mad, with the green light of the electric glittering in her distended eyes.
Bobbie MacLaurin bounded down the steps.
"He tried to come into my room," said Miss-Vost. "He tried to come into my room!"
"I know. I know. But it's all right," soothed Peter, panting. "You must go back to bed. You must try to sleep." He talked as though she were a child. "He was a bad man. He had to--to be treated--this way!"
"You--you look like an Arab. The dark. And that beard. Where is Bobbie?"
"Right here. Right here beside you!"
"You're not hurt--either of you? You're both all right?"
"Yes. Yes. _Please_ go to bed!" begged Peter.
"Please!" implored Bobbie.
To them there was something unreligious, something terrible, in the notion of Miss Vost standing in the presence of the grim black heap in the shadow. Nor were her youth and her innocence intended to be bared before the eyes of men in this fashion.
As if a chill river wind had struck her, she shivered--closed the door.
The men carried the limp body, which was unaccountably heavy, to the deck. After a minute there--was a splash. The _Hankow_ had not been checked. On the Yangtze formal burial ceremonies are seldom performed.
Peter went to bed at once. He tried to sleep. He counted the revolutions of the propeller. He added up a stupendous number of sheep going through a hole in a stone wall. Every so often the sheep faded away, to be replaced by the fearful countenance of the Mongolian, who was now perhaps ten miles or more downstream.
After a while the engines were checked, turning at half speed for a number of revolutions, then ceasing as a bell rang. The only sound was the soughing gurgle of the water as it lapped along the steel plates, and the distant drone of the rapids.
He heard the splash of an anchor, accompanied by the rumble and clank of chains, forward; and a repet.i.tion of the sounds aft. Directly under him, it seemed a loud, prolonged sc.r.a.ping noise took place. The fires were being drawn.
The sounds could only mean that the _Hankow_ had reached the journey's end. The trip was over; the _Hankow_ was abreast Ching-Fu. She would lie in the current for a few days, before facing about and making for tidewater.
To-day would see the last of Miss Vost, a termination of that serio-humorous love affair of theirs, which, on the whole, had been one of his most delightful experiences. He wondered whether or not she would ask him to kiss her good-bye. He rather hoped she would.
On the other hand, he hoped she would do nothing of the kind. Distance was lending enchantment to Eileen Lorimer. He was sure this was not infatuation. She was not the first; he had had affairs; oh, numbers of them! But they were mere fragments of his adventurous life. They were milestones, shadowy and vague and very far away now. Dear little milestones, each of them!