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Back There In The Grass
by
“No, sir, I am not. I know to the minute. You see, I’m a victim of hay-fever.”
“In that case,” I said, “expect me back about the time your nose begins to run.”
“Really?” And his whole face lighted up. “I’m delighted. Only six weeks. Why, then, if you’ll stay round for only five or six weeks more you’ll be here for the wedding.”
“I’ll make it if I possibly can,” I said. “I want to see if that girl’s really true.”
“Anything I can do to help you while you’re gone? I’ve got loads of spare time—-“
“If you knew anything about grasses—-“
“I don’t. But I’ll blow back into the interior and look around. I’ve been meaning to right along, just for fun. But I can never get any of them to go with me.”
“The natives?”
“Yes. Poor lot. They’re committing race suicide as fast as they can. There are more wooden gods than people in Batengo village, and the superstition’s so thick you could cut it with a knife. All the manly virtues have perished…. Aloiu!”
The boy who did Graves’s chores for him came lazily out of the house.
“Aloiu,” said Graves, “just run back into the island to the top of that hill–see?–that one over there–and fetch a handful of grass for this gentleman. He’ll give you five dollars for it.”
Aloiu grinned sheepishly and shook his head.
“Fifty dollars?”
Aloiu shook his head with even more firmness, and I whistled. Fifty dollars would have made him the Rockefeller-Carnegie-Morgan of those parts.
“All right, coward,” said Graves cheerfully. “Run away and play with the other children…. Now, isn’t that curious? Neither love, money, nor insult will drag one of them a mile from the beach. They say that if you go ‘back there in the grass’ something awful will happen to you.”
“As what?” I asked.
“The last man to try it,” said Graves, “in the memory of the oldest inhabitant was a woman. When they found her she was all black and swollen–at least that’s what they say. Something had bitten her just above the ankle.”
“Nonsense,” I said, “there are no snakes in the whole Batengo group.”
“They didn’t say it was a snake,” said Graves. “They said the marks of the bite were like those that would be made by the teeth of a very little–child.”
Graves rose and stretched himself.
“What’s the use of arguing with people that tell yarns like that! All the same, if you’re bent on making expeditions back into the grass, you’ll make ’em alone, unless the cable breaks and I’m free to make ’em with you.”
Five weeks later I was once more coasting along the wavering hills of Batengo Island, with a sharp eye out for a first sight of the cable station and Graves. Five weeks with no company but Kanakas and a pointer dog makes one white man pretty keen for the society of another. Furthermore, at our one meeting I had taken a great shine to Graves and to the charming young lady who was to brave a life in the South Seas for his sake. If I was eager to get ashore, Don was more so. I had a shot-gun across my knees with which to salute the cable station, and the sight of that weapon, coupled with toothsome memories of a recent big hunt down on Forked Peak, had set the dog quivering from stem to stern, to crouching, wagging his tail till it disappeared, and beating sudden tattoos upon the deck with his forepaws. And when at last we rounded on the cable station and I let off both barrels, he began to bark and race about the schooner like a thing possessed.
The salute brought Graves out of his house. He stood on the porch waving a handkerchief, and I called to him through a megaphone; hoped that he was well, said how glad I was to see him, and asked him to meet me in Batengo village.
Even at that distance I detected a something irresolute in his manner; and a few minutes later when he had fetched a hat out of the house, locked the door, and headed toward the village, he looked more like a soldier marching to battle than a man walking half a mile to greet a friend.