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<h2> CHAPTER XVI. EGA </h2>
<p>AT SIX o'clock in the morning of the 20th of July, Yaquita, Minha, Lina,
and the two young men prepared to leave the jangada.</p>
<p>Joam Garral, who had shown no intention of putting his foot on shore, had
decided this time, at the request of the ladies of his family, to leave
his absorbing daily work and accompany them on their excursion. Torres had
evinced no desire to visit Ega, to the great satisfaction of Manoel, who
had taken a great dislike to the man and only waited for an opportunity to
declare it.</p>
<p>As to Fragoso, he could not have the same reason for going to Ega as had
taken him to Tabatinga, which is a place of little importance compared to
this.</p>
<p>Ega is a chief town with fifteen hundred inhabitants, and in it reside all
those authorities which compose the administration of a considerable city—considerable
for the country; that is to say, the military commandant, the chief of the
police, the judges, the schoolmaster, and troops under the command of
officers of all ranks.</p>
<p>With so many functionaries living in a town, with their wives and
children, it is easy to see that hair-dressers would be in demand. Such
was the case, and Fragoso would not have paid his expenses.</p>
<p>Doubtless, however, the jolly fellow, who could do no business in Ega, had
thought to be of the party if Lina went with her mistress, but, just as
they were leaving the raft, he resolved to remain, at the request of Lina
herself.</p>
<p>"Mr. Fragoso!" she said to him, after taking him aside.</p>
<p>"Miss Lina?" answered Fragoso.</p>
<p>"I do not think that your friend Torres intends to go with us to Ega."</p>
<p>"Certainly not, he is going to stay on board, Miss Lina, but you wold
oblige me by not calling him my friend!"</p>
<p>"But you undertook to ask a passage for him before he had shown any
intention of doing so."</p>
<p>"Yes, and on that occasion, if you would like to know what I think, I made
a fool of myself!"</p>
<p>"Quite so! and if you would like to know what I think, I do not like the
man at all, Mr. Fragoso."</p>
<p>"Neither do I, Miss Lina, and I have all the time an idea that I have seen
him somewhere before. But the remembrance is too vague; the impression,
however, is far from being a pleasant one!"</p>
<p>"Where and when could you have met him? Cannot you call it to mind? It
might be useful to know who he is and what he has been."</p>
<p>"No—I try all I can. How long was it ago? In what country? Under
what circumstances? And I cannot hit upon it."</p>
<p>"Mr. Fragoso!"</p>
<p>"Miss Lina!"</p>
<p>"Stay on board and keep watch on Torres during our absence!"</p>
<p>"What? Not go with you to Ega, and remain a whole day without seeing you?"</p>
<p>"I ask you to do so!"</p>
<p>"Is it an order?"</p>
<p>"It is an entreaty!"</p>
<p>"I will remain!"</p>
<p>"Mr. Fragoso!"</p>
<p>"Miss Lina!"</p>
<p>"I thank you!"</p>
<p>"Thank me, then, with a good shake of the hand," replied Fragoso; "that is
worth something."</p>
<p>Lina held out her hand, and Fragoso kept it for a few moments while he
looked into her face. And that is the reason why he did not take his place
in the pirogue, and became, without appearing to be, the guard upon
Torres.</p>
<p>Did the latter notice the feelings of aversion with which he was regarded?
Perhaps, but doubtless he had his reasons for taking no account of them.</p>
<p>A distance of four leagues separated the mooring-place from the town of
Ega. Eight leagues, there and back, in a pirogue containing six persons,
besides two negroes as rowers, would take some hours, not to mention the
fatigue caused by the high temperature, though the sky was veiled with
clouds.</p>
<p>Fortunately a lovely breeze blew from the northwest, and if it held would
be favorable for crossing Lake Teffe. They could go to Ega and return
rapidly without having to tack.</p>
<p>So the lateen sail was hoisted on the mast of the pirogue. Benito took the
tiller, and off they went, after a last gesture from Lina to Fragoso to
keep his eyes open.</p>
<p>The southern shore of the lake had to be followed to get to Ega.</p>
<p>After two hours the pirogue arrived at the port of this ancient mission
founded by the Carmelites, which became a town in 1759, and which General
Gama placed forever under Brazilian rule.</p>
<p>The passengers landed on a flat beach, on which were to be found not only
boats from the interior, but a few of those little schooners which are
used in the coasting-trade on the Atlantic seaboard.</p>
<p>When the two girls entered Ega they were at first much astonished.</p>
<p>"What a large town!" said Minha.</p>
<p>"What houses! what people!" replied Lina, whose eyes seemed to have
expanded so that she might see better.</p>
<p>"Rather!" said Benito laughingly. "More than fifteen hundred inhabitants!
Two hundred houses at the very least! Some of them with a first floor! And
two or three streets! Genuine streets!"</p>
<p>"My dear Manoel!" said Minha, "do protect us against my brother! He is
making fun of us, and only because he had already been in the finest towns
in Amazones and Para!"</p>
<p>"Quite so, and he is also poking fun at his mother," added Yaquita, "for I
confess I never saw anything equal to this!"</p>
<p>"Then, mother and sister, you must take great care that you do not fall
into a trance when you get to Manaos, and vanish altogether when you reach
Belem!"</p>
<p>"Never fear," answered Manoel; "the ladies will have been gently prepared
for these grand wonders by visiting the principal cities of the Upper
Amazon!"</p>
<p>"Now, Manoel," said Minha, "you are talking just like my brother! Are you
making fun of us, too?"</p>
<p>"No, Minha, I assure you."</p>
<p>"Laugh on, gentlemen," said Lina, "and let us look around, my dear
mistress, for it is very fine!"</p>
<p>Very fine! A collection of houses, built of mud, whitewashed, and
principally covered with thatch or palm-leaves; a few built of stone or
wood, with verandas, doors, and shutters painted a bright green, standing
in the middle of a small orchard of orange-trees in flower. But there were
two or three public buildings, a barrack, and a church dedicated to St.
Theresa, which was a cathedral by the side of the modest chapel at
Iquitos. On looking toward the lake a beautiful panorama unfolded itself,
bordered by a frame of cocoanut-trees and assais, which ended at the edge
of the liquid level, and showed beyond the picturesque village of
Noqueira, with its few small houses lost in the mass of the old
olive-trees on the beach.</p>
<p>But for the two girls there was another cause of wonderment, quite
feminine wonderment too, in the fashions of the fair Egans, not the
primitive costume of the natives, converted Omaas or Muas, but the dress
of true Brazilian ladies. The wives and daughters of the principal
functionaries and merchants o the town pretentiously showed off their
Parisian toilettes, a little out of date perhaps, for Ega is five hundred
leagues away from Para, and this is itself many thousands of miles from
Paris.</p>
<p>"Just look at those fine ladies in their fine clothes!"</p>
<p>"Lina will go mad!" exclaimed Benito.</p>
<p>"If those dresses were worn properly," said Minha, "they might not be so
ridiculous!"</p>
<p>"My dear Minha," said Manoel, "with your simple gown and straw hat, you
are better dressed than any one of these Brazilians, with their headgear
and flying petticoats, which are foreign to their country and their race."</p>
<p>"If it pleases you to think so," answered Minha, "I do not envy any of
them."</p>
<p>But they had come to see. They walked through the streets, which contained
more stalls than shops; they strolled about the market-place, the
rendezvous of the fashionable, who were nearly stifled in their European
clothes; they even breakfasted at an hotel—it was scarcely an inn—whose
cookery caused them to deeply regret the excellent service on the raft.</p>
<p>After dinner, at which only turtle flesh, served up in different forms,
appeared, the Garral family went for the last time to admire the borders
of the lake as the setting sun gilded it with its rays; then they rejoined
their pirogue, somewhat disillusioned perhaps as to the magnificence of a
town which one hour would give time enough to visit, and a little tired
with walking about its stifling streets which were not nearly so pleasant
as the shady pathways of Iquitos. The inquisitive Lina's enthusiasm alone
had not been damped.</p>
<p>They all took their places in the pirogue. The wind remained in the
northwest, and had freshened with the evening. The sail was hoisted. They
took the same course as in the morning, across the lake fed by the black
waters of the Rio Teffe, which, according to the Indians, is navigable
toward the southwest for forty days' journey. At eight o'clock the priogue
regained the mooring-place and hailed the jangada.</p>
<p>As soon as Lina could get Fragoso aside—</p>
<p>"Have you seen anything suspicious?" she inquired.</p>
<p>"Nothing, Miss Lina," he replied; "Torres has scarcely left his cabin,
where he has been reading and writing."</p>
<p>"He did not get into the house or the dining-room, as I feared?"</p>
<p>"No, all the time he was not in his cabin he was in the bow of the raft."</p>
<p>"And what was he doing?"</p>
<p>"Holding an old piece of paper in his hand, consulting it with great
attention, and muttering a lot of incomprehensible words."</p>
<p>"All that is not so unimportant as you think, Mr. Fragoso. These readings
and writings and old papers have their interest! He is neither a professor
nor a lawyer, this reader and writer!"</p>
<p>"You are right!"</p>
<p>"Still watch him, Mr. Fragoso!"</p>
<p>"I will watch him always, Miss Lina," replied Fragoso.</p>
<p>On the morrow, the 27th of July, at daybreak, Benito gave the pilot the
signal to start.</p>
<p>Away between the islands, in the Bay of Arenapo, the mouth of the Japura,
six thousand six hundred feet wide, was seen for an instant. This large
tributary comes into the Amazon through eight mouths, as if it were
pouring into some gulf or ocean. But its waters come from afar, and it is
the mountains of the republic of Ecuador which start them on a course that
there are no falls to break until two hundred and ten leagues from its
junction with the main stream.</p>
<p>All this day was spent in descending to the island of Yapura, after which
the river, less interfered with, makes navigation much easier. The current
is not so rapid and the islets are easily avoided, so that there were no
touchings or groundings.</p>
<p>The next day the jangada coasted along by vast beaches formed by
undulating high domes, which served as the barriers of immense pasture
grounds, in which the whole of the cattle in Europe could be raised and
fed. These sand banks are considered to be the richest turtle grounds in
the basin of the Upper Amazon.</p>
<p>On the evening of the 29th of July they were securely moored off the
island of Catua, so as to pass the night, which promised to be dark.</p>
<p>On this island, as soon as the sun rose above the horizon, there appeared
a party of Muras Indians, the remains of that ancient and powerful tribe,
which formerly occupied more than a hundred leagues of the river bank
between the Teffe and the Madeira.</p>
<p>These Indians went and came, watching the raft, which remained stationary.
There were about a hundred of them armed with blow-tubes formed of a reed
peculiar to these parts, and which is strengthened outside by the stem of
a dwarf palm from which the pith has been extracted.</p>
<p>Joam Garral quitted for an instant the work which took up all his time, to
warn his people to keep a good guard and not to provoke these Indians.</p>
<p>In truth the sides were not well matched. The Muras are remarkably clever
at sending through their blow-tubes arrows which cause incurable wounds,
even at a range of three hundred paces.</p>
<p>These arrows, made of the leaf of the <i>"coucourite"</i> palm, are
feathered with cotton, and nine or ten inches long, with a point like a
needle, and poisoned with <i>"curare."</i></p>
<p>Curare, or <i>"wourah,"</i> the liquor "which kills in a whisper," as the
Indians say, is prepared from the sap of one of the euphorbiace� and the
juice of a bulbous strychnos, not to mention the paste of venomous ants
and poisonous serpent fangs which they mix with it.</p>
<p>"It is indeed a terrible poison," said Manoel. "It attacks at once those
nerves by which the movements are subordinated to the will. But the heart
is not touched, and it does not cease to beat until the extinction of the
vital functions, and besides no antidote is known to the poison, which
commences by numbness of the limbs."</p>
<p>Very fortunately, these Muras made no hostile demonstrations, although
they entertain a profound hatred toward the whites. They have, in truth,
no longer the courage of their ancestors.</p>
<p>At nightfall a five-holed flute was heard behind the trees in the island,
playing several airs in a minor key. Another flute answered. This
interchange of musical phrases lasted for two or three minutes, and the
Muras disappeared.</p>
<p>Fragoso, in an exuberant moment, had tried to reply by a song in his own
fashion, but Lina had clapped her hand on his mouth, and prevented his
showing off his insignificant singing talents, which he was so willingly
lavish of.</p>
<p>On the 2d of August, at three o'clock in the afternoon, the raft arrived
twenty leagues away from there at Lake Apoara, which is fed by the black
waters of the river of the same name, and two days afterward, about five
o'clock, it stopped at the entrance into Lake Coary.</p>
<p>This lake is one of the largest which communicates with the Amazon, and it
serves as a reservoir for different rivers. Five or six affluents run into
it, and there are stored and mixed up, and emerge by a narrow channel into
the main stream.</p>
<p>After catching a glimpse of the hamlet of Tahua-Miri, mounted on its piles
as on stilts, as a protection against inundation from the floods, which
often sweep up over these low sand banks, the raft was moored for the
night.</p>
<p>The stoppage was made in sight of the village of Coary, a dozen houses,
considerably dilapidated, built in the midst of a thick mass of orange and
calabash trees.</p>
<p>Nothing can be more changeable than the aspect of this village, for
according to the rise or fall of the water the lake stretches away on all
sides of it, or is reduced to a narrow canal, scarcely deep enough to
communicate with the Amazon.</p>
<p>On the following morning, that of the 5th of August, they started at dawn,
passing the canal of Yucura, belonging to the tangled system of lakes and
furos of the Rio Zapura, and on the morning of the 6th of August they
reached the entrance to Lake Miana.</p>
<p>No fresh incident occurred in the life on board, which proceeded with
almost methodical regularity.</p>
<p>Fragoso, urged on by Lina, did not cease to watch Torres.</p>
<p>Many times he tried to get him to talk about his past life, but the
adventurer eluded all conversation on the subject, and ended by
maintaining a strict reserve toward the barber.</p>
<p>After catching a glimpse of the hamlet of Tahua-Miri, mounted on its piles
as on stilts, as a protection against inundation from the floods, which
often sweep up and over these low sand banks, the raft was moored for the
night.</p>
<p>His intercourse with the Garral family remained the same. If he spoke
little to Joam, he addressed himself more willingly to Yaquita and her
daughter, and appeared not to notice the evident coolness with which he
was received. They all agreed that when the raft arrived at Manaos, Torres
should leave it, and that they would never speak of him again. Yaquita
followed the advice of Padre Passanha, who counseled patience, but the
good priest had not such an easy task in Manoel, who was quite disposed to
put on shore the intruder who had been so unfortunately taken on to the
raft.</p>
<p>The only thing that happened on this evening was the following:</p>
<p>A pirogue, going down the river, came alongside the jangada, after being
hailed by Joam Garral.</p>
<p>"Are you going to Manaos?" asked he of the Indian who commanded and was
steering her.</p>
<p>"Yes," replied he.</p>
<p>"When will you get there?"</p>
<p>"In eight days."</p>
<p>"Then you will arrive before we shall. Will you deliver a letter for me?"</p>
<p>"With pleasure."</p>
<p>"Take this letter, then, my friend, and deliver it at Manaos."</p>
<p>The Indian took the letter which Joam gave him, and a handful of reis was
the price of the commission he had undertaken.</p>
<p>No members of the family, then gone into the house, knew anything of this.
Torres was the only witness. He heard a few words exchanged between Joam
and the Indian, and from the cloud which passed over his face it was easy
to see that the sending of this letter considerably surprised him.</p>
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