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<h2> CHAPTER 30 </h2>
<p>‘He told me further that he didn’t know what made him hang on—but of
course we may guess. He sympathised deeply with the defenceless girl, at
the mercy of that “mean, cowardly scoundrel.” It appears Cornelius led her
an awful life, stopping only short of actual ill-usage, for which he had
not the pluck, I suppose. He insisted upon her calling him father—“and
with respect, too—with respect,” he would scream, shaking a little
yellow fist in her face. “I am a respectable man, and what are you? Tell
me—what are you? You think I am going to bring up somebody else’s
child and not be treated with respect? You ought to be glad I let you.
Come—say Yes, father. . . . No? . . . You wait a bit.” Thereupon he
would begin to abuse the dead woman, till the girl would run off with her
hands to her head. He pursued her, dashing in and out and round the house
and amongst the sheds, would drive her into some corner, where she would
fall on her knees stopping her ears, and then he would stand at a distance
and declaim filthy denunciations at her back for half an hour at a
stretch. “Your mother was a devil, a deceitful devil—and you too are
a devil,” he would shriek in a final outburst, pick up a bit of dry earth
or a handful of mud (there was plenty of mud around the house), and fling
it into her hair. Sometimes, though, she would hold out full of scorn,
confronting him in silence, her face sombre and contracted, and only now
and then uttering a word or two that would make the other jump and writhe
with the sting. Jim told me these scenes were terrible. It was indeed a
strange thing to come upon in a wilderness. The endlessness of such a
subtly cruel situation was appalling—if you think of it. The
respectable Cornelius (Inchi ‘Nelyus the Malays called him, with a grimace
that meant many things) was a much-disappointed man. I don’t know what he
had expected would be done for him in consideration of his marriage; but
evidently the liberty to steal, and embezzle, and appropriate to himself
for many years and in any way that suited him best, the goods of Stein’s
Trading Company (Stein kept the supply up unfalteringly as long as he
could get his skippers to take it there) did not seem to him a fair
equivalent for the sacrifice of his honourable name. Jim would have
enjoyed exceedingly thrashing Cornelius within an inch of his life; on the
other hand, the scenes were of so painful a character, so abominable, that
his impulse would be to get out of earshot, in order to spare the girl’s
feelings. They left her agitated, speechless, clutching her bosom now and
then with a stony, desperate face, and then Jim would lounge up and say
unhappily, “Now—come—really—what’s the use—you
must try to eat a bit,” or give some such mark of sympathy. Cornelius
would keep on slinking through the doorways, across the verandah and back
again, as mute as a fish, and with malevolent, mistrustful, underhand
glances. “I can stop his game,” Jim said to her once. “Just say the word.”
And do you know what she answered? She said—Jim told me impressively—that
if she had not been sure he was intensely wretched himself, she would have
found the courage to kill him with her own hands. “Just fancy that! The
poor devil of a girl, almost a child, being driven to talk like that,” he
exclaimed in horror. It seemed impossible to save her not only from that
mean rascal but even from herself! It wasn’t that he pitied her so much,
he affirmed; it was more than pity; it was as if he had something on his
conscience, while that life went on. To leave the house would have
appeared a base desertion. He had understood at last that there was
nothing to expect from a longer stay, neither accounts nor money, nor
truth of any sort, but he stayed on, exasperating Cornelius to the verge,
I won’t say of insanity, but almost of courage. Meantime he felt all sorts
of dangers gathering obscurely about him. Doramin had sent over twice a
trusty servant to tell him seriously that he could do nothing for his
safety unless he would recross the river again and live amongst the Bugis
as at first. People of every condition used to call, often in the dead of
night, in order to disclose to him plots for his assassination. He was to
be poisoned. He was to be stabbed in the bath-house. Arrangements were
being made to have him shot from a boat on the river. Each of these
informants professed himself to be his very good friend. It was enough—he
told me—to spoil a fellow’s rest for ever. Something of the kind was
extremely possible—nay, probable—but the lying warnings gave
him only the sense of deadly scheming going on all around him, on all
sides, in the dark. Nothing more calculated to shake the best of nerve.
Finally, one night, Cornelius himself, with a great apparatus of alarm and
secrecy, unfolded in solemn wheedling tones a little plan wherein for one
hundred dollars—or even for eighty; let’s say eighty—he,
Cornelius, would procure a trustworthy man to smuggle Jim out of the
river, all safe. There was nothing else for it now—if Jim cared a
pin for his life. What’s eighty dollars? A trifle. An insignificant sum.
While he, Cornelius, who had to remain behind, was absolutely courting
death by this proof of devotion to Mr. Stein’s young friend. The sight of
his abject grimacing was—Jim told me—very hard to bear: he
clutched at his hair, beat his breast, rocked himself to and fro with his
hands pressed to his stomach, and actually pretended to shed tears. “Your
blood be on your own head,” he squeaked at last, and rushed out. It is a
curious question how far Cornelius was sincere in that performance. Jim
confessed to me that he did not sleep a wink after the fellow had gone. He
lay on his back on a thin mat spread over the bamboo flooring, trying idly
to make out the bare rafters, and listening to the rustlings in the torn
thatch. A star suddenly twinkled through a hole in the roof. His brain was
in a whirl; but, nevertheless, it was on that very night that he matured
his plan for overcoming Sherif Ali. It had been the thought of all the
moments he could spare from the hopeless investigation into Stein’s
affairs, but the notion—he says—came to him then all at once.
He could see, as it were, the guns mounted on the top of the hill. He got
very hot and excited lying there; sleep was out of the question more than
ever. He jumped up, and went out barefooted on the verandah. Walking
silently, he came upon the girl, motionless against the wall, as if on the
watch. In his then state of mind it did not surprise him to see her up,
nor yet to hear her ask in an anxious whisper where Cornelius could be. He
simply said he did not know. She moaned a little, and peered into the
campong. Everything was very quiet. He was possessed by his new idea, and
so full of it that he could not help telling the girl all about it at
once. She listened, clapped her hands lightly, whispered softly her
admiration, but was evidently on the alert all the time. It seems he had
been used to make a confidant of her all along—and that she on her
part could and did give him a lot of useful hints as to Patusan affairs
there is no doubt. He assured me more than once that he had never found
himself the worse for her advice. At any rate, he was proceeding to
explain his plan fully to her there and then, when she pressed his arm
once, and vanished from his side. Then Cornelius appeared from somewhere,
and, perceiving Jim, ducked sideways, as though he had been shot at, and
afterwards stood very still in the dusk. At last he came forward
prudently, like a suspicious cat. “There were some fishermen there—with
fish,” he said in a shaky voice. “To sell fish—you understand.” . .
. It must have been then two o’clock in the morning—a likely time
for anybody to hawk fish about!</p>
<p>‘Jim, however, let the statement pass, and did not give it a single
thought. Other matters occupied his mind, and besides he had neither seen
nor heard anything. He contented himself by saying, “Oh!” absently, got a
drink of water out of a pitcher standing there, and leaving Cornelius a
prey to some inexplicable emotion—that made him embrace with both
arms the worm-eaten rail of the verandah as if his legs had failed—went
in again and lay down on his mat to think. By-and-by he heard stealthy
footsteps. They stopped. A voice whispered tremulously through the wall,
“Are you asleep?” “No! What is it?” he answered briskly, and there was an
abrupt movement outside, and then all was still, as if the whisperer had
been startled. Extremely annoyed at this, Jim came out impetuously, and
Cornelius with a faint shriek fled along the verandah as far as the steps,
where he hung on to the broken banister. Very puzzled, Jim called out to
him from the distance to know what the devil he meant. “Have you given
your consideration to what I spoke to you about?” asked Cornelius,
pronouncing the words with difficulty, like a man in the cold fit of a
fever. “No!” shouted Jim in a passion. “I have not, and I don’t intend to.
I am going to live here, in Patusan.” “You shall d-d-die h-h-here,”
answered Cornelius, still shaking violently, and in a sort of expiring
voice. The whole performance was so absurd and provoking that Jim didn’t
know whether he ought to be amused or angry. “Not till I have seen you
tucked away, you bet,” he called out, exasperated yet ready to laugh. Half
seriously (being excited with his own thoughts, you know) he went on
shouting, “Nothing can touch me! You can do your damnedest.” Somehow the
shadowy Cornelius far off there seemed to be the hateful embodiment of all
the annoyances and difficulties he had found in his path. He let himself
go—his nerves had been over-wrought for days—and called him
many pretty names,—swindler, liar, sorry rascal: in fact, carried on
in an extraordinary way. He admits he passed all bounds, that he was quite
beside himself—defied all Patusan to scare him away—declared
he would make them all dance to his own tune yet, and so on, in a
menacing, boasting strain. Perfectly bombastic and ridiculous, he said.
His ears burned at the bare recollection. Must have been off his chump in
some way. . . . The girl, who was sitting with us, nodded her little head
at me quickly, frowned faintly, and said, “I heard him,” with child-like
solemnity. He laughed and blushed. What stopped him at last, he said, was
the silence, the complete deathlike silence, of the indistinct figure far
over there, that seemed to hang collapsed, doubled over the rail in a
weird immobility. He came to his senses, and ceasing suddenly, wondered
greatly at himself. He watched for a while. Not a stir, not a sound.
“Exactly as if the chap had died while I had been making all that noise,”
he said. He was so ashamed of himself that he went indoors in a hurry
without another word, and flung himself down again. The row seemed to have
done him good though, because he went to sleep for the rest of the night
like a baby. Hadn’t slept like that for weeks. “But <i>I</i> didn’t
sleep,” struck in the girl, one elbow on the table and nursing her cheek.
“I watched.” Her big eyes flashed, rolling a little, and then she fixed
them on my face intently.’</p>
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