<h2>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
<p>That year, towards the breaking up of the south-west monsoon, disquieting
rumours reached Sambir. Captain Ford, coming up to Almayer’s
house for an evening’s chat, brought late numbers of the <i>Straits
Times</i> giving the news of Acheen war and of the unsuccessful Dutch
expedition. The Nakhodas of the rare trading praus ascending the
river paid visits to Lakamba, discussing with that potentate the unsettled
state of affairs, and wagged their heads gravely over the recital of
Orang Blanda exaction, severity, and general tyranny, as exemplified
in the total stoppage of gunpowder trade and the rigorous visiting of
all suspicious craft trading in the straits of Macassar. Even
the loyal soul of Lakamba was stirred into a state of inward discontent
by the withdrawal of his license for powder and by the abrupt confiscation
of one hundred and fifty barrels of that commodity by the gunboat <i>Princess
Amelia</i>, when, after a hazardous voyage, it had almost reached the
mouth of the river. The unpleasant news was given him by Reshid,
who, after the unsuccessful issue of his matrimonial projects, had made
a long voyage amongst the islands for trading purposes; had bought the
powder for his friend, and was overhauled and deprived of it on his
return when actually congratulating himself on his acuteness in avoiding
detection. Reshid’s wrath was principally directed against
Almayer, whom he suspected of having notified the Dutch authorities
of the desultory warfare carried on by the Arabs and the Rajah with
the up-river Dyak tribes.</p>
<p>To Reshid’s great surprise the Rajah received his complaints
very coldly, and showed no signs of vengeful disposition towards the
white man. In truth, Lakamba knew very well that Almayer was perfectly
innocent of any meddling in state affairs; and besides, his attitude
towards that much persecuted individual was wholly changed in consequence
of a reconciliation effected between him and his old enemy by Almayer’s
newly-found friend, Dain Maroola.</p>
<p>Almayer had now a friend. Shortly after Reshid’s departure
on his commercial journey, Nina, drifting slowly with the tide in the
canoe on her return home after one of her solitary excursions, heard
in one of the small creeks a splashing, as if of heavy ropes dropping
in the water, and the prolonged song of Malay seamen when some heavy
pulling is to be done. Through the thick fringe of bushes hiding
the mouth of the creek she saw the tall spars of some European-rigged
sailing vessel overtopping the summits of the Nipa palms. A brig
was being hauled out of the small creek into the main stream.
The sun had set, and during the short moments of twilight Nina saw the
brig, aided by the evening breeze and the flowing tide, head towards
Sambir under her set foresail. The girl turned her canoe out of
the main river into one of the many narrow channels amongst the wooded
islets, and paddled vigorously over the black and sleepy backwaters
towards Sambir. Her canoe brushed the water-palms, skirted the
short spaces of muddy bank where sedate alligators looked at her with
lazy unconcern, and, just as darkness was setting in, shot out into
the broad junction of the two main branches of the river, where the
brig was already at anchor with sails furled, yards squared, and decks
seemingly untenanted by any human being. Nina had to cross the
river and pass pretty close to the brig in order to reach home on the
low promontory between the two branches of the Pantai. Up both
branches, in the houses built on the banks and over the water, the lights
twinkled already, reflected in the still waters below. The hum
of voices, the occasional cry of a child, the rapid and abruptly interrupted
roll of a wooden drum, together with some distant hailing in the darkness
by the returning fishermen, reached her over the broad expanse of the
river. She hesitated a little before crossing, the sight of such
an unusual object as an European-rigged vessel causing her some uneasiness,
but the river in its wide expansion was dark enough to render a small
canoe invisible. She urged her small craft with swift strokes
of her paddle, kneeling in the bottom and bending forward to catch any
suspicious sound while she steered towards the little jetty of Lingard
and Co., to which the strong light of the paraffin lamp shining on the
whitewashed verandah of Almayer’s bungalow served as a convenient
guide. The jetty itself, under the shadow of the bank overgrown
by drooping bushes, was hidden in darkness. Before even she could
see it she heard the hollow bumping of a large boat against its rotten
posts, and heard also the murmur of whispered conversation in that boat
whose white paint and great dimensions, faintly visible on nearer approach,
made her rightly guess that it belonged to the brig just anchored.
Stopping her course by a rapid motion of her paddle, with another swift
stroke she sent it whirling away from the wharf and steered for a little
rivulet which gave access to the back courtyard of the house.
She landed at the muddy head of the creek and made her way towards the
house over the trodden grass of the courtyard. To the left, from
the cooking shed, shone a red glare through the banana plantation she
skirted, and the noise of feminine laughter reached her from there in
the silent evening. She rightly judged her mother was not near,
laughter and Mrs. Almayer not being close neighbours. She must
be in the house, thought Nina, as she ran lightly up the inclined plane
of shaky planks leading to the back door of the narrow passage dividing
the house in two. Outside the doorway, in the black shadow, stood
the faithful Ali.</p>
<p>“Who is there?” asked Nina.</p>
<p>“A great Malay man has come,” answered Ali, in a tone
of suppressed excitement. “He is a rich man. There
are six men with lances. Real Soldat, you understand. And
his dress is very brave. I have seen his dress. It shines!
What jewels! Don’t go there, Mem Nina. Tuan said not;
but the old Mem is gone. Tuan will be angry. Merciful Allah!
what jewels that man has got!”</p>
<p>Nina slipped past the outstretched hand of the slave into the dark
passage where, in the crimson glow of the hanging curtain, close by
its other end, she could see a small dark form crouching near the wall.
Her mother was feasting her eyes and ears with what was taking place
on the front verandah, and Nina approached to take her share in the
rare pleasure of some novelty. She was met by her mother’s
extended arm and by a low murmured warning not to make a noise.</p>
<p>“Have you seen them, mother?” asked Nina, in a breathless
whisper.</p>
<p>Mrs. Almayer turned her face towards the girl, and her sunken eyes
shone strangely in the red half-light of the passage.</p>
<p>“I saw him,” she said, in an almost inaudible tone, pressing
her daughter’s hand with her bony fingers. “A great
Rajah has come to Sambir—a Son of Heaven,” muttered the
old woman to herself. “Go away, girl!”</p>
<p>The two women stood close to the curtain, Nina wishing to approach
the rent in the stuff, and her mother defending the position with angry
obstinacy. On the other side there was a lull in the conversation,
but the breathing of several men, the occasional light tinkling of some
ornaments, the clink of metal scabbards, or of brass siri-vessels passed
from hand to hand, was audible during the short pause. The women
struggled silently, when there was a shuffling noise and the shadow
of Almayer’s burly form fell on the curtain.</p>
<p>The women ceased struggling and remained motionless. Almayer
had stood up to answer his guest, turning his back to the doorway, unaware
of what was going on on the other side. He spoke in a tone of
regretful irritation.</p>
<p>“You have come to the wrong house, Tuan Maroola, if you want
to trade as you say. I was a trader once, not now, whatever you
may have heard about me in Macassar. And if you want anything,
you will not find it here; I have nothing to give, and want nothing
myself. You should go to the Rajah here; you can see in the daytime
his houses across the river, there, where those fires are burning on
the shore. He will help you and trade with you. Or, better
still, go to the Arabs over there,” he went on bitterly, pointing
with his hand towards the houses of Sambir. “Abdulla is
the man you want. There is nothing he would not buy, and there
is nothing he would not sell; believe me, I know him well.”</p>
<p>He waited for an answer a short time, then added—</p>
<p>“All that I have said is true, and there is nothing more.”</p>
<p>Nina, held back by her mother, heard a soft voice reply with a calm
evenness of intonation peculiar to the better class Malays—</p>
<p>“Who would doubt a white Tuan’s words? A man seeks
his friends where his heart tells him. Is this not true also?
I have come, although so late, for I have something to say which you
may be glad to hear. To-morrow I will go to the Sultan; a trader
wants the friendship of great men. Then I shall return here to
speak serious words, if Tuan permits. I shall not go to the Arabs;
their lies are very great! What are they? Chelakka!”</p>
<p>Almayer’s voice sounded a little more pleasantly in reply.</p>
<p>“Well, as you like. I can hear you to-morrow at any time
if you have anything to say. Bah! After you have seen the
Sultan Lakamba you will not want to return here, Inchi Dain. You
will see. Only mind, I will have nothing to do with Lakamba.
You may tell him so. What is your business with me, after all?”</p>
<p>“To-morrow we talk, Tuan, now I know you,” answered the
Malay. “I speak English a little, so we can talk and nobody
will understand, and then—”</p>
<p>He interrupted himself suddenly, asking surprised, “What’s
that noise, Tuan?”</p>
<p>Almayer had also heard the increasing noise of the scuffle recommenced
on the women’s side of the curtain. Evidently Nina’s
strong curiosity was on the point of overcoming Mrs. Almayer’s
exalted sense of social proprieties. Hard breathing was distinctly
audible, and the curtain shook during the contest, which was mainly
physical, although Mrs. Almayer’s voice was heard in angry remonstrance
with its usual want of strictly logical reasoning, but with the well-known
richness of invective.</p>
<p>“You shameless woman! Are you a slave?” shouted
shrilly the irate matron. “Veil your face, abandoned wretch!
You white snake, I will not let you!”</p>
<p>Almayer’s face expressed annoyance and also doubt as to the
advisability of interfering between mother and daughter. He glanced
at his Malay visitor, who was waiting silently for the end of the uproar
in an attitude of amused expectation, and waving his hand contemptuously
he murmured—</p>
<p>“It is nothing. Some women.”</p>
<p>The Malay nodded his head gravely, and his face assumed an expression
of serene indifference, as etiquette demanded after such an explanation.
The contest was ended behind the curtain, and evidently the younger
will had its way, for the rapid shuffle and click of Mrs. Almayer’s
high-heeled sandals died away in the distance. The tranquillised
master of the house was going to resume the conversation when, struck
by an unexpected change in the expression of his guest’s countenance,
he turned his head and saw Nina standing in the doorway.</p>
<p>After Mrs. Almayer’s retreat from the field of battle, Nina,
with a contemptuous exclamation, “It’s only a trader,”
had lifted the conquered curtain and now stood in full light, framed
in the dark background on the passage, her lips slightly parted, her
hair in disorder after the exertion, the angry gleam not yet faded out
of her glorious and sparkling eyes. She took in at a glance the
group of white-clad lancemen standing motionless in the shadow of the
far-off end of the verandah, and her gaze rested curiously on the chief
of that imposing <i>cortége</i>. He stood, almost facing
her, a little on one side, and struck by the beauty of the unexpected
apparition had bent low, elevating his joint hands above his head in
a sign of respect accorded by Malays only to the great of this earth.
The crude light of the lamp shone on the gold embroidery of his black
silk jacket, broke in a thousand sparkling rays on the jewelled hilt
of his kriss protruding from under the many folds of the red sarong
gathered into a sash round his waist, and played on the precious stones
of the many rings on his dark fingers. He straightened himself
up quickly after the low bow, putting his hand with a graceful ease
on the hilt of his heavy short sword ornamented with brilliantly dyed
fringes of horsehair. Nina, hesitating on the threshold, saw an
erect lithe figure of medium height with a breadth of shoulder suggesting
great power. Under the folds of a blue turban, whose fringed ends
hung gracefully over the left shoulder, was a face full of determination
and expressing a reckless good-humour, not devoid, however, of some
dignity. The squareness of lower jaw, the full red lips, the mobile
nostrils, and the proud carriage of the head gave the impression of
a being half-savage, untamed, perhaps cruel, and corrected the liquid
softness of the almost feminine eye, that general characteristic of
the race. Now, the first surprise over, Nina saw those eyes fixed
upon her with such an uncontrolled expression of admiration and desire
that she felt a hitherto unknown feeling of shyness, mixed with alarm
and some delight, enter and penetrate her whole being.</p>
<p>Confused by those unusual sensations she stopped in the doorway and
instinctively drew the lower part of the curtain across her face, leaving
only half a rounded cheek, a stray tress, and one eye exposed, wherewith
to contemplate the gorgeous and bold being so unlike in appearance to
the rare specimens of traders she had seen before on that same verandah.</p>
<p>Dain Maroola, dazzled by the unexpected vision, forgot the confused
Almayer, forgot his brig, his escort staring in open-mouthed admiration,
the object of his visit and all things else, in his overpowering desire
to prolong the contemplation of so much loveliness met so suddenly in
such an unlikely place—as he thought.</p>
<p>“It is my daughter,” said Almayer, in an embarrassed
manner. “It is of no consequence. White women have
their customs, as you know Tuan, having travelled much, as you say.
However, it is late; we will finish our talk to-morrow.”</p>
<p>Dain bent low trying to convey in a last glance towards the girl
the bold expression of his overwhelming admiration. The next minute
he was shaking Almayer’s hand with grave courtesy, his face wearing
a look of stolid unconcern as to any feminine presence. His men
filed off, and he followed them quickly, closely attended by a thick-set,
savage-looking Sumatrese he had introduced before as the commander of
his brig. Nina walked to the balustrade of the verandah and saw
the sheen of moonlight on the steel spear-heads and heard the rhythmic
jingle of brass anklets as the men moved in single file towards the
jetty. The boat shoved off after a little while, looming large
in the full light of the moon, a black shapeless mass in the slight
haze hanging over the water. Nina fancied she could distinguish
the graceful figure of the trader standing erect in the stern sheets,
but in a little while all the outlines got blurred, confused, and soon
disappeared in the folds of white vapour shrouding the middle of the
river.</p>
<p>Almayer had approached his daughter, and leaning with both arms over
the rail, was looking moodily down on the heap of rubbish and broken
bottles at the foot of the verandah.</p>
<p>“What was all that noise just now?” he growled peevishly,
without looking up. “Confound you and your mother!
What did she want? What did you come out for?”</p>
<p>“She did not want to let me come out,” said Nina.
“She is angry. She says the man just gone is some Rajah.
I think she is right now.”</p>
<p>“I believe all you women are crazy,” snarled Almayer.
“What’s that to you, to her, to anybody? The man wants
to collect trepang and birds’ nests on the islands. He told
me so, that Rajah of yours. He will come to-morrow. I want
you both to keep away from the house, and let me attend to my business
in peace.”</p>
<p>Dain Maroola came the next day and had a long conversation with Almayer.
This was the beginning of a close and friendly intercourse which, at
first, was much remarked in Sambir, till the population got used to
the frequent sight of many fires burning in Almayer’s campong,
where Maroola’s men were warming themselves during the cold nights
of the north-east monsoon, while their master had long conferences with
the Tuan Putih—as they styled Almayer amongst themselves.
Great was the curiosity in Sambir on the subject of the new trader.
Had he seen the Sultan? What did the Sultan say? Had he
given any presents? What would he sell? What would he buy?
Those were the questions broached eagerly by the inhabitants of bamboo
houses built over the river. Even in more substantial buildings,
in Abdulla’s house, in the residences of principal traders, Arab,
Chinese, and Bugis, the excitement ran high, and lasted many days.
With inborn suspicion they would not believe the simple account of himself
the young trader was always ready to give. Yet it had all the
appearance of truth. He said he was a trader, and sold rice.
He did not want to buy gutta-percha or beeswax, because he intended
to employ his numerous crew in collecting trepang on the coral reefs
outside the river, and also in seeking for bird’s nests on the
mainland. Those two articles he professed himself ready to buy
if there were any to be obtained in that way. He said he was from
Bali, and a Brahmin, which last statement he made good by refusing all
food during his often repeated visits to Lakamba’s and Almayer’s
houses. To Lakamba he went generally at night and had long audiences.
Babalatchi, who was always a third party at those meetings of potentate
and trader, knew how to resist all attempts on the part of the curious
to ascertain the subject of so many long talks. When questioned
with languid courtesy by the grave Abdulla he sought refuge in a vacant
stare of his one eye, and in the affectation of extreme simplicity.</p>
<p>“I am only my master’s slave,” murmured Babalatchi,
in a hesitating manner. Then as if making up his mind suddenly
for a reckless confidence he would inform Abdulla of some transaction
in rice, repeating the words, “A hundred big bags the Sultan bought;
a hundred, Tuan!” in a tone of mysterious solemnity. Abdulla,
firmly persuaded of the existence of some more important dealings, received,
however, the information with all the signs of respectful astonishment.
And the two would separate, the Arab cursing inwardly the wily dog,
while Babalatchi went on his way walking on the dusty path, his body
swaying, his chin with its few grey hairs pushed forward, resembling
an inquisitive goat bent on some unlawful expedition. Attentive
eyes watched his movements. Jim-Eng, descrying Babalatchi far
away, would shake off the stupor of an habitual opium smoker and, tottering
on to the middle of the road, would await the approach of that important
person, ready with hospitable invitation. But Babalatchi’s
discretion was proof even against the combined assaults of good fellowship
and of strong gin generously administered by the open-hearted Chinaman.
Jim-Eng, owning himself beaten, was left uninformed with the empty bottle,
and gazed sadly after the departing form of the statesman of Sambir
pursuing his devious and unsteady way, which, as usual, led him to Almayer’s
compound. Ever since a reconciliation had been effected by Dain
Maroola between his white friend and the Rajah, the one-eyed diplomatist
had again become a frequent guest in the Dutchman’s house.
To Almayer’s great disgust he was to be seen there at all times,
strolling about in an abstracted kind of way on the verandah, skulking
in the passages, or else popping round unexpected corners, always willing
to engage Mrs. Almayer in confidential conversation. He was very
shy of the master himself, as if suspicious that the pent-up feelings
of the white man towards his person might find vent in a sudden kick.
But the cooking shed was his favourite place, and he became an habitual
guest there, squatting for hours amongst the busy women, with his chin
resting on his knees, his lean arms clasped round his legs, and his
one eye roving uneasily—the very picture of watchful ugliness.
Almayer wanted more than once to complain to Lakamba of his Prime Minister’s
intrusion, but Dain dissuaded him. “We cannot say a word
here that he does not hear,” growled Almayer.</p>
<p>“Then come and talk on board the brig,” retorted Dain,
with a quiet smile. “It is good to let the man come here.
Lakamba thinks he knows much. Perhaps the Sultan thinks I want
to run away. Better let the one-eyed crocodile sun himself in
your campong, Tuan.”</p>
<p>And Almayer assented unwillingly muttering vague threats of personal
violence, while he eyed malevolently the aged statesman sitting with
quiet obstinacy by his domestic rice-pot.</p>
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