Title Thumbnail

The Haunted Pagodas

The Quest of the Golden Pearl

9781465636799
201 pages
Library of Alexandria
Overview
Jack! I say, Jack! there's a row among the boatmen." A sturdy, thick-set young fellow of seventeen was Jack, with low-hung fists of formidable size, and a love for anything in the shape of a row that constantly led him into scrapes. Hot-headed though he was, he was one of the most good-humoured, well-meaning young fellows in the world, who, while he would not hurt a fly if he could help it, was always ready to fight in defence of his own or another's rights. His chum, Roydon Leigh—"Don" for short—was of an altogether different type of young manhood. Jack's senior by a year, he was tall for his age, standing five feet ten in his stockings. His lithe, wiry frame contrasted strongly with Jack's sturdier build, as did his Scotch "canniness" with that young gentleman's headlong impetuosity. "A row!" cried Jack delightedly, as he rushed to the taffrail. "Time, too; four weeks we've lain here, and never a hand in a single shindy!" His companion laughed. "As for that," said he, "you're not likely to have a hand in this, unless you take the boat and row off to the diving grounds. All the same, there's a jolly row on—look yonder." The schooner Wellington rode at anchor at the northern extremity of the Strait of Manaar, on the famous pearl-fishing grounds of Ceylon. On her larboard bow lay the coast—a string of low, white sand-hills, dotted with the dark-brown thatch of fisher huts and the vivid green of cocoa-nut palms. The hour was eight o'clock in the morning of a cloudless March day; the fitful land-breeze had died away, leaving the whole surface of the sea like billowy glass. Half-a-dozen cable's-lengths distant on the schooner's starboard quarter, a score or-more of native dhonies or diving-boats rose and dipped to the regular motion of the long ground-swell. It was towards these boats that Don pointed. That something unusual had occurred was evident enough. Angry shouts floated across the placid water; and the native boatmen could be seen hurriedly pulling the boats together into a compact group about one central spot where the clamour was loudest. "I say," cried Jack, after watching the boats for some time in silence, "they're making for the schooner." "I don't half like the look of it," replied Don uneasily; "they shouldn't leave the diving grounds, you know, until the signal gun's fired. I wish the guv was here." "Wishing's no good when he's ashore," said Jack philosophically. "You're the skipper pro tem., and you must make the most of your promotion, old fellow. We'll have some fun, anyhow. Whew! how those niggers pull, and what a jolly row they're making!" By this time the excited cries, which had first attracted the attention of those upon the schooner's deck, had been exchanged by the boatmen for a weird chant, to which every oar kept time. Erect in the stern of the foremost boat an old whiteheaded tyndal or "master" led the song, while at the end of each measure a hundred voices raised a chorus that seemed fairly to lift the boats clear of the water.