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<h2> CHAPTER SIX </h2>
<p>"Lend me your gun, Almayer," said Willems, across the table on which a
smoky lamp shone redly above the disorder of a finished meal. "I have a
mind to go and look for a deer when the moon rises to-night."</p>
<p>Almayer, sitting sidewise to the table, his elbow pushed amongst the dirty
plates, his chin on his breast and his legs stretched stiffly out, kept
his eyes steadily on the toes of his grass slippers and laughed abruptly.</p>
<p>"You might say yes or no instead of making that unpleasant noise,"
remarked Willems, with calm irritation.</p>
<p>"If I believed one word of what you say, I would," answered Almayer
without changing his attitude and speaking slowly, with pauses, as if
dropping his words on the floor. "As it is—what's the use? You know
where the gun is; you may take it or leave it. Gun. Deer. Bosh! Hunt deer!
Pah! It's a . . . gazelle you are after, my honoured guest. You want gold
anklets and silk sarongs for that game—my mighty hunter. And you
won't get those for the asking, I promise you. All day amongst the
natives. A fine help you are to me."</p>
<p>"You shouldn't drink so much, Almayer," said Willems, disguising his fury
under an affected drawl. "You have no head. Never had, as far as I can
remember, in the old days in Macassar. You drink too much."</p>
<p>"I drink my own," retorted Almayer, lifting his head quickly and darting
an angry glance at Willems.</p>
<p>Those two specimens of the superior race glared at each other savagely for
a minute, then turned away their heads at the same moment as if by
previous arrangement, and both got up. Almayer kicked off his slippers and
scrambled into his hammock, which hung between two wooden columns of the
verandah so as to catch every rare breeze of the dry season, and Willems,
after standing irresolutely by the table for a short time, walked without
a word down the steps of the house and over the courtyard towards the
little wooden jetty, where several small canoes and a couple of big white
whale-boats were made fast, tugging at their short painters and bumping
together in the swift current of the river. He jumped into the smallest
canoe, balancing himself clumsily, slipped the rattan painter, and gave an
unnecessary and violent shove, which nearly sent him headlong overboard.
By the time he regained his balance the canoe had drifted some fifty yards
down the river. He knelt in the bottom of his little craft and fought the
current with long sweeps of the paddle. Almayer sat up in his hammock,
grasping his feet and peering over the river with parted lips till he made
out the shadowy form of man and canoe as they struggled past the jetty
again.</p>
<p>"I thought you would go," he shouted. "Won't you take the gun? Hey?" he
yelled, straining his voice. Then he fell back in his hammock and laughed
to himself feebly till he fell asleep. On the river, Willems, his eyes
fixed intently ahead, swept his paddle right and left, unheeding the words
that reached him faintly.</p>
<p>It was now three months since Lingard had landed Willems in Sambir and had
departed hurriedly, leaving him in Almayer's care.</p>
<p>The two white men did not get on well together. Almayer, remembering the
time when they both served Hudig, and when the superior Willems treated
him with offensive condescension, felt a great dislike towards his guest.
He was also jealous of Lingard's favour. Almayer had married a Malay girl
whom the old seaman had adopted in one of his accesses of unreasoning
benevolence, and as the marriage was not a happy one from a domestic point
of view, he looked to Lingard's fortune for compensation in his
matrimonial unhappiness. The appearance of that man, who seemed to have a
claim of some sort upon Lingard, filled him with considerable uneasiness,
the more so because the old seaman did not choose to acquaint the husband
of his adopted daughter with Willems' history, or to confide to him his
intentions as to that individual's future fate. Suspicious from the first,
Almayer discouraged Willems' attempts to help him in his trading, and then
when Willems drew back, he made, with characteristic perverseness, a
grievance of his unconcern. From cold civility in their relations, the two
men drifted into silent hostility, then into outspoken enmity, and both
wished ardently for Lingard's return and the end of a situation that grew
more intolerable from day to day. The time dragged slowly. Willems watched
the succeeding sunrises wondering dismally whether before the evening some
change would occur in the deadly dullness of his life. He missed the
commercial activity of that existence which seemed to him far off,
irreparably lost, buried out of sight under the ruins of his past success—now
gone from him beyond the possibility of redemption. He mooned
disconsolately about Almayer's courtyard, watching from afar, with
uninterested eyes, the up-country canoes discharging guttah or rattans,
and loading rice or European goods on the little wharf of Lingard &
Co. Big as was the extent of ground owned by Almayer, Willems yet felt
that there was not enough room for him inside those neat fences. The man
who, during long years, became accustomed to think of himself as
indispensable to others, felt a bitter and savage rage at the cruel
consciousness of his superfluity, of his uselessness; at the cold
hostility visible in every look of the only white man in this barbarous
corner of the world. He gnashed his teeth when he thought of the wasted
days, of the life thrown away in the unwilling company of that peevish and
suspicious fool. He heard the reproach of his idleness in the murmurs of
the river, in the unceasing whisper of the great forests. Round him
everything stirred, moved, swept by in a rush; the earth under his feet
and the heavens above his head. The very savages around him strove,
struggled, fought, worked—if only to prolong a miserable existence;
but they lived, they lived! And it was only himself that seemed to be left
outside the scheme of creation in a hopeless immobility filled with
tormenting anger and with ever-stinging regret.</p>
<p>He took to wandering about the settlement. The afterwards flourishing
Sambir was born in a swamp and passed its youth in malodorous mud. The
houses crowded the bank, and, as if to get away from the unhealthy shore,
stepped boldly into the river, shooting over it in a close row of bamboo
platforms elevated on high piles, amongst which the current below spoke in
a soft and unceasing plaint of murmuring eddies. There was only one path
in the whole town and it ran at the back of the houses along the
succession of blackened circular patches that marked the place of the
household fires. On the other side the virgin forest bordered the path,
coming close to it, as if to provoke impudently any passer-by to the
solution of the gloomy problem of its depths. Nobody would accept the
deceptive challenge. There were only a few feeble attempts at a clearing
here and there, but the ground was low and the river, retiring after its
yearly floods, left on each a gradually diminishing mudhole, where the
imported buffaloes of the Bugis settlers wallowed happily during the heat
of the day. When Willems walked on the path, the indolent men stretched on
the shady side of the houses looked at him with calm curiosity, the women
busy round the cooking fires would send after him wondering and timid
glances, while the children would only look once, and then run away
yelling with fright at the horrible appearance of the man with a red and
white face. These manifestations of childish disgust and fear stung
Willems with a sense of absurd humiliation; he sought in his walks the
comparative solitude of the rudimentary clearings, but the very buffaloes
snorted with alarm at his sight, scrambled lumberingly out of the cool mud
and stared wildly in a compact herd at him as he tried to slink
unperceived along the edge of the forest. One day, at some unguarded and
sudden movement of his, the whole herd stampeded down the path, scattered
the fires, sent the women flying with shrill cries, and left behind a
track of smashed pots, trampled rice, overturned children, and a crowd of
angry men brandishing sticks in loud-voiced pursuit. The innocent cause of
that disturbance ran shamefacedly the gauntlet of black looks and
unfriendly remarks, and hastily sought refuge in Almayer's campong. After
that he left the settlement alone.</p>
<p>Later, when the enforced confinement grew irksome, Willems took one of
Almayer's many canoes and crossed the main branch of the Pantai in search
of some solitary spot where he could hide his discouragement and his
weariness. He skirted in his little craft the wall of tangled verdure,
keeping in the dead water close to the bank where the spreading nipa palms
nodded their broad leaves over his head as if in contemptuous pity of the
wandering outcast. Here and there he could see the beginnings of
chopped-out pathways, and, with the fixed idea of getting out of sight of
the busy river, he would land and follow the narrow and winding path, only
to find that it led nowhere, ending abruptly in the discouragement of
thorny thickets. He would go back slowly, with a bitter sense of
unreasonable disappointment and sadness; oppressed by the hot smell of
earth, dampness, and decay in that forest which seemed to push him
mercilessly back into the glittering sunshine of the river. And he would
recommence paddling with tired arms to seek another opening, to find
another deception.</p>
<p>As he paddled up to the point where the Rajah's stockade came down to the
river, the nipas were left behind rattling their leaves over the brown
water, and the big trees would appear on the bank, tall, strong,
indifferent in the immense solidity of their life, which endures for ages,
to that short and fleeting life in the heart of the man who crept
painfully amongst their shadows in search of a refuge from the unceasing
reproach of his thoughts. Amongst their smooth trunks a clear brook
meandered for a time in twining lacets before it made up its mind to take
a leap into the hurrying river, over the edge of the steep bank. There was
also a pathway there and it seemed frequented. Willems landed, and
following the capricious promise of the track soon found himself in a
comparatively clear space, where the confused tracery of sunlight fell
through the branches and the foliage overhead, and lay on the stream that
shone in an easy curve like a bright sword-blade dropped amongst the long
and feathery grass.</p>
<p>Further on, the path continued, narrowed again in the thick undergrowth.
At the end of the first turning Willems saw a flash of white and colour, a
gleam of gold like a sun-ray lost in shadow, and a vision of blackness
darker than the deepest shade of the forest. He stopped, surprised, and
fancied he had heard light footsteps—growing lighter—ceasing.
He looked around. The grass on the bank of the stream trembled and a
tremulous path of its shivering, silver-grey tops ran from the water to
the beginning of the thicket. And yet there was not a breath of wind.
Somebody kind passed there. He looked pensive while the tremor died out in
a quick tremble under his eyes; and the grass stood high, unstirring, with
drooping heads in the warm and motionless air.</p>
<p>He hurried on, driven by a suddenly awakened curiosity, and entered the
narrow way between the bushes. At the next turn of the path he caught
again the glimpse of coloured stuff and of a woman's black hair before
him. He hastened his pace and came in full view of the object of his
pursuit. The woman, who was carrying two bamboo vessels full of water,
heard his footsteps, stopped, and putting the bamboos down half turned to
look back. Willems also stood still for a minute, then walked steadily on
with a firm tread, while the woman moved aside to let him pass. He kept
his eyes fixed straight before him, yet almost unconsciously he took in
every detail of the tall and graceful figure. As he approached her the
woman tossed her head slightly back, and with a free gesture of her
strong, round arm, caught up the mass of loose black hair and brought it
over her shoulder and across the lower part of her face. The next moment
he was passing her close, walking rigidly, like a man in a trance. He
heard her rapid breathing and he felt the touch of a look darted at him
from half-open eyes. It touched his brain and his heart together. It
seemed to him to be something loud and stirring like a shout, silent and
penetrating like an inspiration. The momentum of his motion carried him
past her, but an invisible force made up of surprise and curiosity and
desire spun him round as soon as he had passed.</p>
<p>She had taken up her burden already, with the intention of pursuing her
path. His sudden movement arrested her at the first step, and again she
stood straight, slim, expectant, with a readiness to dart away suggested
in the light immobility of her pose. High above, the branches of the trees
met in a transparent shimmer of waving green mist, through which the rain
of yellow rays descended upon her head, streamed in glints down her black
tresses, shone with the changing glow of liquid metal on her face, and
lost itself in vanishing sparks in the sombre depths of her eyes that,
wide open now, with enlarged pupils, looked steadily at the man in her
path. And Willems stared at her, charmed with a charm that carries with it
a sense of irreparable loss, tingling with that feeling which begins like
a caress and ends in a blow, in that sudden hurt of a new emotion making
its way into a human heart, with the brusque stirring of sleeping
sensations awakening suddenly to the rush of new hopes, new fears, new
desires—and to the flight of one's old self.</p>
<p>She moved a step forward and again halted. A breath of wind that came
through the trees, but in Willems' fancy seemed to be driven by her moving
figure, rippled in a hot wave round his body and scorched his face in a
burning touch. He drew it in with a long breath, the last long breath of a
soldier before the rush of battle, of a lover before he takes in his arms
the adored woman; the breath that gives courage to confront the menace of
death or the storm of passion.</p>
<p>Who was she? Where did she come from? Wonderingly he took his eyes off her
face to look round at the serried trees of the forest that stood big and
still and straight, as if watching him and her breathlessly. He had been
baffled, repelled, almost frightened by the intensity of that tropical
life which wants the sunshine but works in gloom; which seems to be all
grace of colour and form, all brilliance, all smiles, but is only the
blossoming of the dead; whose mystery holds the promise of joy and beauty,
yet contains nothing but poison and decay. He had been frightened by the
vague perception of danger before, but now, as he looked at that life
again, his eyes seemed able to pierce the fantastic veil of creepers and
leaves, to look past the solid trunks, to see through the forbidding gloom—and
the mystery was disclosed—enchanting, subduing, beautiful. He looked
at the woman. Through the checkered light between them she appeared to him
with the impalpable distinctness of a dream. The very spirit of that land
of mysterious forests, standing before him like an apparition behind a
transparent veil—a veil woven of sunbeams and shadows.</p>
<p>She had approached him still nearer. He felt a strange impatience within
him at her advance. Confused thoughts rushed through his head, disordered,
shapeless, stunning. Then he heard his own voice asking—</p>
<p>"Who are you?"</p>
<p>"I am the daughter of the blind Omar," she answered, in a low but steady
tone. "And you," she went on, a little louder, "you are the white trader—the
great man of this place."</p>
<p>"Yes," said Willems, holding her eyes with his in a sense of extreme
effort, "Yes, I am white." Then he added, feeling as if he spoke about
some other man, "But I am the outcast of my people."</p>
<p>She listened to him gravely. Through the mesh of scattered hair her face
looked like the face of a golden statue with living eyes. The heavy
eyelids dropped slightly, and from between the long eyelashes she sent out
a sidelong look: hard, keen, and narrow, like the gleam of sharp steel.
Her lips were firm and composed in a graceful curve, but the distended
nostrils, the upward poise of the half-averted head, gave to her whole
person the expression of a wild and resentful defiance.</p>
<p>A shadow passed over Willems' face. He put his hand over his lips as if to
keep back the words that wanted to come out in a surge of impulsive
necessity, the outcome of dominant thought that rushes from the heart to
the brain and must be spoken in the face of doubt, of danger, of fear, of
destruction itself.</p>
<p>"You are beautiful," he whispered.</p>
<p>She looked at him again with a glance that running in one quick flash of
her eyes over his sunburnt features, his broad shoulders, his straight,
tall, motionless figure, rested at last on the ground at his feet. Then
she smiled. In the sombre beauty of her face that smile was like the first
ray of light on a stormy daybreak that darts evanescent and pale through
the gloomy clouds: the forerunner of sunrise and of thunder.</p>
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