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Greatly to the joy of Moondah they managed to kill not a few wild pigs.
In a bit of scrub or bush about an acre in extent they were told one day that a panther was hid. This was a chance not to be missed. Stake nets were planted at the side next to the hill where doubtless the beast's cave lay, the guns were well positioned, and the beaters began their work. Mr Panther, however, did not see the fun of going into that net.
Disturbed at last, he quitted cover by making a wild rush at the beaters themselves; two were rolled over, and one severely lacerated in the leg. Fred was the nearest gun, and he wounded the panther in the shoulder, without stopping his way however. Well, a wounded panther must attack whatever with life in it happens to come his way. In this instance it was an old grey boar, who was coming round a corner, wondering to himself what all the row meant. The panther repented his rashness next minute, when the boar's tusks were fleshed in his neck.
It was a curious battle, brought to a speedy termination by Chisholm's bone-crusher. His monster bullet whizzed through the panther's body, and pierced the breast of the huge boar, and they fell as they fought.
"Now," said Lyell, "I do call that a good shot. Bravo! Chisholm."
CHAPTER FIFTEEN.
ELEPHANT HUNTING--THE ELEPHANT AND TIGER--THE TUSKER'S CHARGE--THE RUNAWAY ELEPHANT--THE MAN-EATING TIGRESS.
Those of my readers who have followed me so far in my history of the wanderings and adventures of our heroes cannot but have observed that in the character of Frank Willoughby there was a certain amount of what, to give it the right name, must be called foolhardiness. But poor Frank's last adventure in the Indian jungle taught him a lesson which he is not likely to forget while life lasts.
Elephant shooting seemed at first, to Frank and Fred at least, very cruel and unnecessary sport. Elephants are so sagacious and wise.
"Just think, for instance," said Frank, "of shooting a n.o.ble beast like poor old Jowser!"
"Ah, but," Lyell explained, "it isn't every elephant you'll find equal to Jowser. Moondah there will tell you of the immense destruction elephants cause to the maize and rice crops."
"Yes, yes, dat is so," said Moondah; "if they are not kill, and plenty kill too, they soon conquer all de country worse dan de Breetish."
Well, apart from the apparent cruelty of killing the elephant, which Sir Samuel Baker calls the "lord of all created animals," there is no sport in the world so exciting and dangerous as this, and none that requires greater hardihood or daring. No wonder then that our heroes spent over a month at it, meeting of course with many other wild adventures, but _seeking_ none other. Moondah it was who organised for them their army of beaters and trackers, and the scenery through which these men led them, was oftentimes grand and beautiful in the extreme; not that they had much time during the chase to admire the loveliness of nature, it was while riding homewards to their temporary camp in the cool of the evening, or stretched beneath the trees when dinner was over, that they could thoroughly enjoy quietly gazing on all things around them. This was indeed the _dolce far niente_.
Our heroes one day had an opportunity of witnessing a curious encounter, between an elephant and a tiger. They themselves were within fifty yards of the herd when it took place, and under cover; the elephants were quietly browsing on the plain, and evidently not suspecting that danger lurked on either hand. One young calf had strayed some little distance from the parent.
"So capital a chance as this," said a tiger to himself, "is seldom to be found; I would be a fool to miss it."
There was a scream from an elephant in the rear, and a wild rush from one in the van. The tiger seemed quite unable to check his speed in time, and next moment he was crushed to atoms under the terrible feet of the furious tusker. There was a crash and a scream, and a cloud of dust. Then the elephant could be seen gathering himself up from where he had literally fallen upon his foe.
Fred Freeman used to chaff Chisholm O'Grahame about the immensity of his rifle.
"I wouldn't carry such a tool as that for the world," Fred said one day.
"No," said Chisholm, laughing, "for, my dear boy, you couldn't.
Besides, its kicking would kill you."
Now, early next morning a rogue elephant was to be tracked, and if possible bagged. He was a wily old rascal this, who seldom cared to go with the other herds; he doubtless thought he fared better when all by himself. He was a murderous old rascal too; for on two separate occasions he had attacked men, and more than one death could be laid at his door. It was not the first time that some or other of our heroes had gone out against this Goliath. But though he had been wounded several times, he did not seem to mind it; it evidently did not spoil his appet.i.te, for on this particular morning they tracked him for miles through a bamboo brake, and at last could hear him on ahead, browsing on the branches as he marched.
"Now give me this shot," cried Fred, "all to myself."
"Have a care, then," said Lyell.
"Never fear for me," said Fred, and next minute he had crept into the bush and was out of sight; and his companions with a portion of the people sat down near a pool, left by some recent rain, to wait.
Presently the ring of a rifle was heard, then a shout, then back rushed Fred, faster far than he had gone away, and far less buoyant too, for behind him was the monster tusker, eyes aflame and ears erect, bent on revenge--bent on doing some one to death. Yes, but the pen has never yet been dipped in ink that can describe the fury of an angry tusker's charge.
Lyell fired quickly. Lyell missed. Now Chisholm's mighty rifle made the welkin ring, and down rolled the elephant on his head, raising a sheet of water that drenched every one of the party as a green sea would have done on ship-board.
"I took a temple shot at him," said Fred.
Lyell roared with laughter. "Yes," he said, "and you hit him through the nose. Ha! ha! ha! that accounts for the beggar charging with trunk in air, instead of curled close." [As they almost invariably do.]
"What do you think of my rifle now?" said Chisholm, quietly.
Fred smiled, but said nothing.
Tiger-shooting from howdahs they found excellent sport--just a little slow for Frank though, who would rather have been on horseback. But one day he had a ride he little expected; he was all by himself in Jowser's howdah. The gra.s.s was long and rough, but there were bushes about.
From one of these an enormous tiger tried to steal away. Chisholm, handy though he was in times of danger, wounded but didn't kill. Next moment the beast had settled on Jowser. "Come, come, none o' that,"
roared Jowser, setting off at the gallop. The tiger fell next moment, with a bullet from Frank's Express through his head. But Jowser was off; fairly off. Who would have thought it of Jowser? Two hours of that wild ride, ere Jowser brought up to rub his rump against a tree, and for a week after Frank felt as if he had no more bones than a jelly-fish.
A tigress had been fired at by a party of hors.e.m.e.n, and wounded; but man and horse went down before that fearful charge. Next moment she had seized the rider, and borne him away into the bush. It was her first taste of human blood; but not the last, for long after this she was known and feared by the natives as the most daring man-eater ever known.
She would even enter villages by night and carry people away.
Poor Frank! he seemed destined, although the youngest of the three, to have all the hard knocks and blows. He was one night asleep beneath a banian-tree when the man-eater entered, and attempted to seize a man.
Frank, _with unloaded rifle_, rushed to the rescue. Well it was for him that Fred Freeman was close at hand: that man-eating tigress drank no more blood. But Frank, how frightfully still he lay! Was he dead? All but, reader.
This was, indeed, a sad ending to their adventures in India; but life cannot be all sunshine. When camp was broken up a week after, and our heroes turned their faces once more seaward--Frank on a litter--one sorrowing heart at least was left behind. It beat in the breast of honest Moondah.
CHAPTER SIXTEEN.
PART VI--AUSTRALIA.
CONVALESCENT AT LAST--A RUN TO AUSTRALIA--SET OUT FOR THE INTERIOR--THE SCENERY--A QUEER MISTAKE--FRANK'S COUSINS.
Poor Frank Willoughby--for two long weeks his spirit hovered 'twixt life and death. It was a happy hour for his friends when he was p.r.o.nounced out of danger; and for Frank himself, when he was told that he had nothing now to do in the world but just to get well again. For many weeks longer he had to lie on his back, however. But he was in that weak, dreamy kind of a state, that he did not mind the confinement.
Every morning Chisholm brought him all the news, and read to him for hours. But how shall I describe the joy he felt the first day he went out for exercise? This getting well after a long illness in a foreign land is a pleasure that few ever know; but the joys of convalescence are sufficient reward to the invalid for all he has previously suffered.
Frank was borne about in a palanquin. He wondered whether he would ever again bestride a fiery steed, and go bounding along over the plains, as had been his wont. But he grew so rapidly strong and well, after he began to walk, that he ceased to wonder at anything; and when he and his friends embarked on board a saucy clipper bound for distant Australia, he felt nearly as strong as ever he was in his life.
Frank had cousins in Australia. They farmed sheep or something, Frank was not quite sure it mightn't be kangaroos; but they were good people, and had ornithorynchus soup and c.o.c.katoo pie for dinner as often as not, with cold black swan on the sideboard. So one of the boys had written him to say. Frank had the letter in his portfolio, and showed it to Lyell, and there was a deal of laughing over it. If I had that letter now I would just print it _in extenso_, to save myself the trouble of writing this chapter. Such a glowing account of Australian life was surely never penned before; and, if it could only be credited, what a life of wild adventure Frank's cousins must have led! Here were wonderful stories about emigrants and convicts, and settlers and savages, serpents and snakes, mixed up with emus, and kangaroos, and c.o.c.katoos, and any amount of other _oos_. And here were tales about bushrangers, and bush-riding, and buck-jumpers, and bullock-hunters; and the allusions to woomeras, and spears, and boomerangs, were as numerous as though they had been sprinkled in from a pepper-box.
Frank was himself again long ere the clipper reached Sydney, but he felt doubly himself when, a few days afterwards, mounted on a goodly horse, with valise strapped on the saddle, he and his friends, with guides and guards, left the smoke of Sydney far behind them, and cantered merrily away bushwards.
It was a long journey to the station or village where Frank's cousins lived. It took them quite a week to get there. They travelled princ.i.p.ally in the morning, and again at eventide, resting in the shade near their hobbled horses, during the time the sun was high.
They had not gone far from the capital ere they plunged into a deep, dark, silent forest--silent save for the strangely monotonous song of the cicala, and so for miles, and so for many leagues. Our heroes felt they would have given anything to listen, sometimes, to the cry of a bird, or even the howl of a wild beast. The inns at which they stayed at nights were rough in the extreme, but they soon got worse, then they gave them up, and preferred camping out, and whenever of an evening they reached some open glade, there they took up their abode. But forests grew less dense at last, and the scenery most charming. The blue gum-trees, with stripes of pendent bark, that Fred and Frank used to admire and marvel at, gave place to lighter timber. By night the whole air was alive with strange sounds and strange sights, especially when the camp was near the water. The snoring sound of the bull-frog, the cry of the flying fox and opossum, mingled with the cooing of wild birds.
But now they were nearing the home of Frank's cousins. They inquired one day at an inn if the Thompsons lived near.
"Certainly," said the man. "Jack," calling to an old black, "show these gentlemen where the Thompsons live."
"I'll go and prepare dem," said Jack.
And off he went. He was back again in half an hour, and then led the way through the wood.
"What sort of people are they?" asked Frank of Jack, the guide.
"Oh! ever so nice, _beautiful_ people, b-be-beautiful?"
"The old gentleman is my uncle," continued Frank.