.. -*- encoding: utf-8 -*-

.. meta::
   :PG.Id: 41366
   :PG.Title: The Flying Boat
   :PG.Released: 2012-11-14
   :PG.Rights: Public Domain
   :PG.Producer: Al Haines
   :DC.Creator: Herbert Strang
   :MARCREL.ill: T. C. Dugdale
   :DC.Title: The Flying Boat
              A Story of Adventure and Misadventure
   :DC.Language: en
   :DC.Created: 1912
   :coverpage: images/img-cover.jpg

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THE FLYING BOAT
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   .. _`Cover`:

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      :alt: Cover

      Cover

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   .. _`MR. TING ASTONISHES THE SCHOOL`:

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      :alt: MR. TING ASTONISHES THE SCHOOL   *See page* 14

      MR. TING ASTONISHES THE SCHOOL   *See page* 14

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      THE FLYING BOAT

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      *A STORY OF ADVENTURE
      AND MISADVENTURE*

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      BY
      HERBERT STRANG

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      *ILLUSTRATED BY T. C. DUGDALE*

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      LONDON
      HENRY FROWDE
      HODDER AND STOUGHTON
      1912

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      RICHARD CLAY & SONS, LIMITED,
      BRUNSWICK STREET, STAMFORD STREET, S.E.,
      AND BUNGAY, SUFFOLK.

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   CONTENTS

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   CHAPTER THE FIRST
   `ENTER MR. TING`_
   
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   CHAPTER THE SECOND
   `ERRINGTON MAKES A FRIEND`_
   
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   CHAPTER THE THIRD
   `A MOVE UP COUNTRY`_
   
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   CHAPTER THE FOURTH
   `RIVER PIRATES`_
      
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   CHAPTER THE FIFTH
   `DIVIDED WAYS`_
      
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   CHAPTER THE SIXTH
   `MR. TING SPEAKS OUT`_
      
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   CHAPTER THE SEVENTH
   `A DISCOVERY IN THE SWAMP`_
      
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   CHAPTER THE EIGHTH
   `CROWDED MOMENTS`_
      
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   CHAPTER THE NINTH
   `SU FING'S PRISONER`_
      
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   CHAPTER THE TENTH
   `LO SAN'S PILGRIMAGE`_
      
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   CHAPTER THE ELEVENTH
   `REINHARDT SHOWS HIS COLOURS`_
      
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   CHAPTER THE TWELFTH
   `THE PRICE OF A MOUSTACHE`_
      
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   CHAPTER THE THIRTEENTH
   `RECONCILIATION`_
      
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   CHAPTER THE FOURTEENTH
   `"MY BROTHER!"`_
      
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   CHAPTER THE FIFTEENTH
   `REINHARDT IN THE TOILS`_
      
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   CHAPTER THE SIXTEENTH
   `A LITTLE LUNCHEON PARTY`_
   
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   CHAPTER THE SEVENTEENTH
   `THE DASH FROM THE YAMEN`_
   
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   CHAPTER THE EIGHTEENTH
   `WINGED`_
   
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   CHAPTER THE NINETEENTH
   `HIDE AND SEEK`_
   
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   CHAPTER THE TWENTIETH
   `WILL-O'-THE-WISP`_
   
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   CHAPTER THE TWENTY-FIRST
   `THE END OF THE CHASE`_
      
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   CHAPTER THE TWENTY-SECOND
   `MR. TING EXPLAINS`_
   
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   LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

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`MR. TING ASTONISHES THE SCHOOL`_ (see `page 14`_) . . . . . . Frontispiece

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`A BRUSH WITH RIVER PIRATES`_

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`A CRITICAL MOMENT`_

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`REINHARDT AVENGES HIS LOSS`_

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`ERRINGTON HITS OUT`_

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`RUNNING THE GAUNTLET`_


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.. _`ENTER MR. TING`:

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   CHAPTER I


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   ENTER MR. TING

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The term was drawing to its close, and
all Cheltonia, from the senior prefect to the
smallest whipper-snapper of the fourth form,
was in the playing-field, practising for the
sports.  The centre of the greatest interest
was perhaps the spot where certain big
fellows of the sixth were engaged in a friendly
preliminary rivalry for the high jump.  There
was Reginald Hattersley-Carr, who stood
six feet two in his socks--a strapping
young giant whom small boys gazed up at
with awe, the despair of the masters,
the object of a certain dislike among the
prefects for his swank.  There was Pierce
Errington, who beside the holder of the
double-barrelled name looked small, though
his height was five feet ten.  He was the
most popular fellow in the school--dangerously
popular for one of his temperament,
for he was easy-going, mercurial, speaking
and acting impulsively, too often rash,
with a streak of the gambler in his
composition--though, to be sure, he had little
chance of being unduly speculative on his
school pocket-money.  And there was Ted
Burroughs, Errington's particular chum,
equally tall, almost equally popular, but
as different in temperament as any man
could be.  Burroughs was popular because
he was such a downright fellow, open as
the day, a fellow everybody trusted.  He
always thought before he spoke, and acted
with deliberation.  He held very strong
views as to what he or others should do or
should not do, and carried out his principles
with a firm will.  As was natural, he did not
easily make allowances for other men's
weaknesses, except in the case of Errington,
to whom he would concede more than to
any one else.

It was known that the high jump would
fall to one of these three, and their
performances at the bar were watched with
keen appreciation by a small crowd of boys
in the lower school.  Hattersley-Carr had
just cleared five feet three, and Errington
was stripping off his sweater, in preparation
for taking his run, when the school porter
came up, an old soldier as stiff as a ramrod,
and addressed him.

"A gentleman to see you," he said.

"Oh, bother!" said Errington.  "Who
is it, Perkins?"

"A stranger to me; a sort of foreigner by
the look of him: in fact, what you might call
a heathen Chinee."

"Bless my aunt!" Errington ejaculated,
with a droll look at Burroughs.  "Did you
tell him where I was?"

"I said as how you were jumping, most
like; and he said as how he'd like to see;
not much of a sport, either, by the looks of him."

Now hospitality to visitors was a tradition
at Cheltonia, and with the eyes of the small
boys upon him Errington knew that he must
accept the inevitable.  But it was the law
of the place that an afternoon visitor should
be invited to tea at the prefects' table, and
Errington, with a school-boy's susceptibility,
at once foresaw a good deal of quizzing and
subsequent "chipping" at the embarrassing
presence of a Chinaman.

"Rotten nuisance!" he said, in an
undertone.  "Still!"--and with a half-humorous
shrug he put on his sweater and blazer and
walked across to the school-house.

A few minutes afterwards there was a
buzz of excitement all over the field when
he was seen returning with his visitor.  It
was an unprecedented spectacle.  Beside
the tall athletic form of Errington walked
with quick and springy steps a little
Chinaman, not much above five feet in height,
slight, thin, with a very long pigtail, and a
keen, alert countenance that wore an expression
of vivid curiosity.  There was a tittering
and nudging among the smaller boys, who,
however, did not desist from their occupations,
and only shot an occasional side-long
glance at the stranger.  The members of the
sixth looked on with a carefully cultivated
affectation of indifference.  Errington led
the Chinaman to the spot where Burroughs
and Hattersley-Carr were standing together,
and with a pleasant smile introduced his
school-fellows.

"This is Burroughs--you've heard of
him.  They call him the Mole here.
Hats--Hattersley-Carr, our strong man--Mr. Ting."

Burroughs shook hands with the
Chinaman, who shot a keen look at him, as if
trying to discover why, his name being
Burroughs, he was called the Mole.
Hattersley-Carr had his hands behind him, gave
the visitor the faintest possible acknowledgment,
and then looked over his head, as if
he no longer existed.  Errington afterwards
declared that he sniffed.  Burroughs caught
a twinkle of amusement in Mr. Ting's face,
as, glancing up at the supercilious young giant
towering above him, he said, in a
high-pitched jerky voice, but an unexceptionable
accent--

"Once a servant of Mr. Ellington's father, sir."

Hattersley-Carr paid no attention.  Errington
flushed, and was on the point of rapping
out something that would hardly have been
pleasant, when Burroughs interposed.

"Buck up, Pidge; we've both cleared
half-an-inch higher," he said.  "The
tea-bell will ring in a jiffy."

Whether it was that Errington was in
specially good form, or that he was spurred
on by Hattersley-Carr's impoliteness, it is
a fact that during the next twenty minutes
he twice outdid his two competitors by
half-an-inch.  Mr. Ting was as keen a spectator
as any boy in the crowd, which, now that
the jumping furnished a pretext, had grown
much larger by the afflux of many who were
more interested in the Chinaman.  The bar
stood at five feet five, and Hattersley-Carr
had just failed to clear it at the third attempt,
when Mr. Ting turned to Burroughs at his
side, and said--

"Most intelesting.  Is it allowed for visitors to tly?"

"Why, certainly," replied Burroughs,
hiding his astonishment with an effort.
"But----"  He glanced down at the
clumsy-looking Chinese boots.

"I should like to tly," said the Chinaman,
and, lifting his feet one after the other, he
took off his boots, tucked up his robe about
his loins, and walked to the spot where
Hattersley-Carr had begun his run.

There was what the reporters call a
"sensation" among the crowd.  The idea
of this little foreigner, a Chinaman, actually
with a pigtail, and without running shorts,
attempting a jump at which Hats had failed,
seemed to them the best of jokes, and they
lined up on each side, prepared to laugh,
and pick up the little man when he fell, and
give him an ironical cheer.  Hattersley-Carr
stood by one post, his hands on his
hips, his lips wrinkled in a sneer.  Errington
and the Mole stood together near him, the
former's face shaded with annoyance, for
it was bad enough to have to entertain a
Chinaman at all, without the additional
ridicule which a sorry failure at the
jumping bar would entail.  The expression on
Burroughs' countenance was simply one
of sober amusement.

.. _`page 14`:

A dead silence fell upon the crowd.
Mr. Ting had halted, and was tucking up the
long sleeves of his tunic, and putting on a
pair of spectacles.  He began to run, his
feet twinkling over the grass.  His pace
quickened; within three yards of the bar
he seemed to crouch almost to the ground;
then up he flew, his pigtail flying out
behind him, the eyes and mouths of the
small boys opening wider with amazement.
There was the bar, steady in its
sockets; and there was Mr. Ting, standing
erect on the other side, his features rippling
with a Chinese smile.

Then the cheers broke out.  "Good old
Chinaman!" "Well *done*, sir!" "Ripping
old sport!"  (Mr. Ting was thirty-five.)
A dozen rushed forward to shake hands with
him; a score flung their caps into the air;
a hundred roared and yelled like Red
Indians.  Errington grinned at Hattersley-Carr;
Burroughs stepped forward quietly
with Mr. Ting's boots; and Hattersley-Carr
stood in the same attitude, with the same
supercilious curl of the lip.

The warning bell rang; there was a quarter
of an hour for changing before tea, and the
throng trooped off, some to the changing-rooms,
the idle onlookers to talk over the
Chinaman's performance.  Burroughs led
Mr. Ting towards the house, Errington and
Hattersley-Carr following together.

"You *silly* ass!" said Errington.

"How much?"

"He was my father's comprador--confidential
secretary, factotum, almost partner."

"Well, he said servant: how was I to
know your rotten Chinese ways?"

"Anyhow, you shouldn't be such a beastly snob."

And at that Hattersley-Carr turned on
his heel and strode alone out of the field,
and out of this history.





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.. _`ERRINGTON MAKES A FRIEND`:

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   CHAPTER II


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   ERRINGTON MAKES A FRIEND

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Pierce Errington, known at school as
Pidge, was the son of a Shanghai merchant
who at one time had been reputed to be
the wealthiest European in China.  But
Mr. Errington was his own worst enemy.
Generous and impulsive, he lacked balance; and
though he had a positive genius for business,
at times his business faculties seemed to
desert him, and he showed a rashness and
audacity in speculative ventures that amazed
his friends.  While his wife lived, this trait
was not allowed to over-assert itself, but
after her death he became more and more
reckless, and ultimately lost almost all his
fortune in one black year.  When he died
suddenly of heart failure, it was found that
he had left just enough to complete his only
son's education, and to provide the boy
with a trifle of pocket-money when he went
out into the world.

Pierce was twelve years old, and at a
preparatory school in England, at the time
of his father's death.  He was committed
to the guardianship of a distant relative,
a merchant in the City, who fulfilled his
trust with scrupulous honour, but with no
excess of kindness.  Pierce became very
sick of hearing from his guardian, at least
once a term and more often during the
holidays, that he had no prospects, and
must look to himself for his future.  "I'm
a self-made man," the merchant would say
proudly; and Pierce, when he was a public
school-boy and began to have ideas of his
own, would think: "A precious bad job you
made of it."

Mr. Errington's oldest friend was a fellow
merchant in Shanghai.  John Burroughs was
a plodder.  He might never be so rich as
Errington, but certainly he would never be so
poor.  He had often tried to check his friend's
wildest speculations, and then Errington
would laugh, and thank him, and say that
it was no good.  The two men were about
the same age, and their sons were born
within a few months of each other.  When
the time came for them to go to England for
education, the boys were sent to the same
preparatory school, and entered at the same
public school.  They had been companions
since babyhood, and the friendship between
the fathers seemed to be only intensified in
the sons.  They were the greatest chums,
and being equally good at sports and their
books, they had kept pace with each other
through the schools, and reached the sixth
and the dignity of prefect at Cheltonia
together.  Each was now in his eighteenth
year, and neither had been back to China
since they left it, eight years before.

During those eight years, Errington had
received very regular letters from a
correspondent who signed himself Ting Chuh.  At
first these letters bored him; as he grew older
they amused him; and latterly they had
given rise to a certain perplexed curiosity.
Why did Ting Chuh take so great an interest
in him?  Why was he continually poking
his funny old proverbs at him?  "An ox
with a ring in his nose--so is the steady man."
"Remember never to feel after a pin on the
bottom of the ocean."  "It is folly to covet
another man's horse and to lose your own
ox."  Sentences like these occurred in all
Mr. Ting's letters--all warning him against
attempting impossibilities, or leaving the
substance for the shadow, or letting his
impulses run away with him.  Of course
Errington knew that Mr. Ting had occupied
a special position in his father's household,
and he remembered vaguely that he had
been quite fond of Tingy in his early years;
but he was at a loss to understand why the
Chinaman appeared to have constituted
himself his moral guardian--why he sent for
copies of all his school reports, and wrote
him such exceedingly dull comments on
them.  "But he's a good sort," he would
say to himself, and forget the homily and
Mr. Ting until the next letter arrived.

Ting Chuh had made money while
Mr. Errington lost it, through sheer native
shrewdness and industry.  The relations
between master and man were very close and
confidential.  On Mr. Errington's death,
Mr. Ting set up for himself in business, and
acquired wealth with wonderful rapidity;
everybody trading on the China coast knew
him and trusted him, except some few
"mean whites" who were incapable of any
decent feeling towards a Chinaman.  He had
now taken advantage of a business visit to
London to call upon the boy in whose welfare
he was more deeply interested than the boy
himself knew.  The time was approaching
when Errington must leave school, and
Mr. Ting had certain private reasons for wishing
to judge by personal observation what
manner of man had developed from the little
boy of ten whom he had last seen on the deck
of a home-going liner.

Errington's uneasy forebodings as to the
result of the Chinaman's appearance at the
tea-table were agreeably dispelled.  Mr. Ting
was the hero of the hour.  He talked fluently,
with an occasional quaintness of expression
that lent a charm to his conversation; and
when it came out casually that his business
in England had involved several interviews
with the Foreign Secretary, he went up as
high in the estimation of the prefects as
his athletic feat had carried him with the
younger boys.  Moreover, at his departure
he showed himself very generous and
discriminating in the way of tips, and he was
voted a jolly good sort by the school.  He
was particularly cordial in his good-bye to
Ted Burroughs.

"I hope to see you again befo'e long," he
said, "and I thank you for yo' kindness."

The summer ran its course.  Just before
the holidays Errington and Burroughs each
received a letter from China that filled them
at once with regret and with excitement.
Mr. Burroughs wrote that Ted was to return
to Shanghai and take his place in the
business.  Errington's letter was from Mr. Ting.

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   MY DEAR LAD,

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You have now completed your book learning,
and it is time to fill your own kettle with rice, as
we say.  With approval of your guardian, I have
obtained for you a post in the great company of Ehrlich
Söhne, who have manifold activities, and lots of
branches in all parts of China.  With them you will
gain valuable experience of intrinsic excellence.  You
will not be blind fowl picking after worms.  Your
friend Mole is to come to China next month; I vote
you come with him, for pleasant company shortens
the longest road.  You will have liberal allowance for
outfit, for as your proverb says, do not spoil ship for
ha'porth of tar.  Until I see you, then, I write myself
your true friend,

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   TING CHUH.

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No boy likes to leave school, but the
regrets of the two friends were tempered by
their anticipation of novel scenes and fresh
experiences.  They were delighted at the
prospect of going out together, and found
themselves looking forward eagerly to the
end of the term.  One day an advertisement
of the North German Lloyd caught
Errington's eye.

"I say, Moley, I vote we go out on a
German ship," he said to Burroughs.  "It
will be a jolly sight more interesting than a
British ship, and we shall get a good deal of
sport in studying the funny foreigner."

Burroughs agreed, and in due time they
booked their passage on the *Prinz Eitel
Friedrich*.  It did not occur to them that
the "funny foreigner" might also find some
interest in studying them; but after certain
exciting experiences which befell them during
the next two years, they remarked on the
strange consequences that came of a single
advertisement in the *Times*.

They joined the vessel at Plymouth, and
would perhaps have attracted no attention
among their fellow-passengers but for a
somewhat unusual object among their
belongings.  Burroughs, unlike Errington, had
always enjoyed plenty of pocket-money, and
being fond of boating, he had bought first
a skiff for use on the river during holidays
and then a small motor launch.  Just before
leaving school he had happened to see a
hydroplane in the Solent, and it occurred to
him that he and Errington, when they got
to China, would find such a vessel useful,
or at least exciting, on the Yang-tse-kiang.
Accordingly he exchanged his launch for a
small speedy hydroplane of the best type:
and the novel vessel aroused a certain
curiosity in some of the passengers as they
saw it lowered into the hold.

For a day or two after quitting port they
kept pretty much to themselves, exchanging
notes about their fellow-passengers, and
finding some amusement in watching their
deportment in the dining-saloon.  One man
in particular engaged their attention.  He
was a German of florid aspect, with hair cut
short and standing up brush-like, and a
thick brown moustache which he evidently
took some pains in training à la Kaiser.
This was not so uncommon as to mark him
out for special notice; but the boys observed,
after a few days, that this man, though
possessing the most engaging manners,
seemed to be somewhat shunned by the rest
of the German passengers.  They did not
actually cut him, but they appeared to hold
themselves aloof.  He belonged to none of
the sets into which passengers on a long
voyage invariably split up; he was never
invited to join their card-parties.  The vague
impression formed by the boys was that the
Germans felt a sort of distrust for their
compatriot.  The only man on board who
appeared to admit him to terms of intimacy
was a German major-general who was
proceeding to Kiau-chou, the German
settlement.  These two were often to be seen of
an evening under the awning on the
foredeck, remote from the other passengers,
conversing in low tones, though with no
appearance of secrecy.

One evening, after dinner, the boys were
leaning over the rail, idly watching the
incandescent play upon the surface of the
sea, when the German sauntered past them,
turned, and made a pleasant remark about
the charming weather.  He spoke English
very well, with scarcely anything to reveal
his nationality except the customary
difficulty with the *th*.  There was something
attractive about the man, and Errington,
seeing that he seemed disposed to continue
the conversation, offered him a cigarette,
and invited him to place a deck-chair beside
those which the boys had opened for themselves.

"I zink I may almost call myself an old
friend," said the German.  "Am I mistaken,
or are you ze son of ze late Mr. Herbert
Errington, of Shanghai?"

"Yes; did you know him?" asked Errington.

"He was a great friend of mine: you are
very much like him.  His death" (he
pronounced the word "dess") "was a blow to
me.  And you, Mr. Burroughs--I hope I
may call myself a friend also, if your fazer
is Mr. John Burroughs of ze same town."

"Yes," said the Mole simply.

"I am charmed to meet you," said the
German cordially.  "Your fazer's firm is
concurrent wiz mine.  You have been long
absent, at school, no doubt; and you,
Mr. Errington, will not remember me; ze
years wipe out early impressions; but when
you were a child I saw you often when I
visited my old friend, your fazer.  My name
is Conrad Reinhardt."

"I don't recall it," said Errington, "but
then I was only a kid when I left Shanghai.
We've been at school, as you guessed,
Mr. Reinhardt, and we're going back now to
start work."

"Ah yes, ze days of school must end.  Zey
are good days, especially ze sport.  You will
find good golf in Shanghai.  No doubt you
go to join Mr. Burroughs?"

"The Mole does--Ted, you know: we
called him the Mole at school because he's
Burroughs; but I'm going to a German
firm: of course you know them--Ehrlich Söhne."

Burroughs was a trifle annoyed that his
companion was so communicative: but
"It's just like Pidge," he said to himself.

"Indeed!" said the German, in response
to Errington's last remark.  "Zat is my own
firm.  I am delighted zat I shall have you
for a colleague.  It is a good firm: naturally
I say so; but every one says ze same.  You
will have opportunities zat few ozer firms
can offer.  Zere are great prospects."

He proceeded to dilate upon the vast
business conducted by his firm; their
transactions in silk and cotton and grass-cloth
fibre; their difficulties with the Customs
and with river pirates, and so on, incidentally
giving many descriptions of the ways of
Chinamen, which the boys listened to with
interest.

"You know Mr. Ting, of course?" said
Errington presently.

"Ting Chuh? oh yes, of course," replied
the German; and Burroughs, closely
observant, noticed a scarcely perceptible
constraint in his manner.  "An excellent man
of business; a little difficult, perhaps.  I
remember, he was your fazer's comprador,
Mr. Errington.  You have nozink now to do
wiz him?"

"Not officially, if that's what you mean:
but he's kept up a correspondence with me,
and it was he that got me this crib with
your firm."

"Indeed!  Zen zat is a great compliment
to ze firm, and, if I may say so, also to you.
Ting is a good man of business, highly
respected.  To place you wiz us shows zat
he has a great opinion of us, and also of you.
Zis information interests me extremely."

From this time forth Mr. Reinhardt was
often in the boys' company.  He was always
very pleasant, and they wondered more and
more why the majority of the passengers
avoided him.  But when he began to teach
Errington some card games of which he had
never before heard, Burroughs felt uneasy.
On the first occasion, when he was asked to
join them, he declined, and they did not ask
him again.  Knowing how easily Errington
was led, and remembering indications of his
having inherited his father's propensity for
speculation, he ventured one night to enter
a mild protest.

"I say, Pidge," he said, "I don't think
I'd play cards much with Reinhardt if I
were you."

"Why on earth not?  Sixpence is our
highest stake: are you afraid of my ruining
myself?"

"Of course not, but--well, Reinhardt
isn't liked on board; there may be something
shady about him."

"Come, that's dashed unfair.  You know
nothing against the man.  For goodness'
sake, don't get starchy and puritanical."

The natural boy's horror of seeming
preachy or priggish kept Burroughs from
saying more; but his manner towards the
German grew chilly, and he could not help
noticing that Errington was somewhat
nettled at his friendly warning.  One day,
for his own satisfaction, he put a question
bluntly to the captain, with whom he was
on good terms.

"Do you know anything against Herr
Reinhardt?" he asked.

The Captain fingered his beard before he
replied.

"No," he said slowly, "I *know* nothing.
But don't let your friend become too thick
with him."

Burroughs went away less satisfied than
before, and watched the growing intimacy
with more and more uneasiness.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`A MOVE UP COUNTRY`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER III


.. class:: center medium

   A MOVE UP COUNTRY

.. vspace:: 2

The two young fellows settled down easily
to their new life at Shanghai.  Though
they had been absent from China so long,
the impressions of their early years had not
been obliterated, but were only overlaid by
the later impressions received in England.
Thus they felt little of the sense of strangeness
which a man feels on coming into contact
with what is absolutely new to him.  The
narrow dirty streets, half the width of an
ordinary room, paved with stone slabs, and
crowded all day long with people chaffering
in shrill voices, and picking their way through
immense heaps of fish, pork and vegetables;
the low open shops, displaying silks and
porcelain, ornaments and bronzes, and a
thousand other varieties of merchandise
more or less costly; the numerous tea-shops
and dining-rooms, more frequent even than
public-houses in the east end of London; the
immense variety of smells, in which Shanghai
surely outrivals Cologne: all these features
of the native city soon ceased to have the
charm of novelty; and the clean, well-paved,
well-tended quarters of the European
community differed little in general
characteristics from the towns of the west.

The boys met with nothing but the
friendliness which Europeans settled abroad
always extend to new-comers, and Errington
in particular became a great favourite.
Mr. Burroughs insisted that he should live with
him and his family.  Somewhat to Errington's
surprise, he saw little of Mr. Ting.
The Chinaman had met him at the quay on
the boat's arrival, but after inquiring about
the voyage, and promising to give him any
assistance he needed, he left him to
Mr. Burroughs.  Reinhardt passed the group as
he walked off the gangway, and Ted
Burroughs noticed that he gave Mr. Ting a
markedly effusive greeting, which the
Chinaman returned politely and with an
inscrutable smile.

Burroughs was vastly relieved when he
learnt that Reinhardt was not permanently
stationed in Shanghai.  The German was
in charge of a branch establishment of his
firm at Sui-Fu, a populous treaty port many
miles up the river, and paid only occasional
visits to head-quarters.  Errington never
alluded to him, and Burroughs felt that he
had perhaps been a little over-hasty in
misjudging a mere shipboard acquaintance.
His uneasiness returned, however, when,
during a visit of a fortnight in Shanghai,
Reinhardt invited Errington to several
card-parties, from which he returned flushed
and excited.  Remembering the result of
his former expostulation, Burroughs said
nothing; he felt that he could not play the
grandmother with his friend; but his
disapproval was easily seen, and for a day or
two there was a slight coolness between them.

One day Mr. Ting met Errington in the
street as if by chance: in reality he had
waylaid him.

"Getting on nicely?" he said.

"First chop," replied Errington, with a
laugh: he had picked up some pidgin English.

"That is good.  You have many flends,"
said the Chinaman.  "Good flends are a
delight in plospelity, and a stay in advessity.
Bad flends--but of course you have none.
Leinhadt is, of course, no flend of yours."

"I rather think he is," said Errington,
nettled at once.  "Why do you say that?"

"Well, you may eat with a flend, and talk
to a flend, and play cards with flends, at
home; but the men you play cards with
away from home, they are not often flends."

"Look here, Mr. Ting, I don't understand
what you are driving at.  I play cards
with Mr. Reinhardt: you seem to know it;
have you got anything to say against it?
Is he a card-sharper?  Has he swindled you
or any one else?  If he has, you'd better
say so, and then I shall know what to do."

"He has not swindled me, or any one else,
that I can prove."

"Well then," cried the lad hotly, "I'll
thank you to mind your own business.  You
bored me with your sermons when I was a
kid at school; but I'm no longer a schoolboy,
and I tell you flatly I won't be watched
and preached at by you, if you were ten times
my father's friend.  I'm quite able to take
care of myself."

"I could wish nothing better," said the
Chinaman quietly.  "I was your father's
flend, and I hope I shall always be yours."

Errington had already repented of his
outburst, and Mr. Ting's dignified reception
of it made him feel ashamed of himself.

"Of course you are," he said.  "I was
always a hot-tempered brute; I'm sorry."

And the two parted on the best of terms.

After about a year, when both Errington
and Burroughs had began to get a grip of
their work, the former came home from the
office one evening, and seeking his chum in
the little den they shared, said in a tone of
elation--

"I say, old man, I'm getting on.  They're
going to raise my screw and transfer me to Sui-Fu.

"Under Reinhardt?" asked Burroughs quickly.

"Yes.  I shouldn't wonder if he got me
the crib.  He has to be away a great deal,
and though there's a capable comprador,
they seem to think a European ought to
be on the spot.  I wish you were coming too."

"I should like it.  It's a lift for you, Pidge,
and I'm glad."

Errington talked on in his impulsive way
about what he would do, and how he would
make things hum, while Burroughs listened
and said little.  He had already made up
his mind to go with Errington if possible;
scarcely confessing it even to himself, he
wanted to keep an eye on his friend when
he came directly under the influence of the
German; but he did not wish to hint at the
possibility of arranging a transfer for himself
until he had spoken to his father.

Late that night, when the rest had retired,
he went to his father's study.

"Well, Ted, what is it?" said Mr. Burroughs,
looking up from some papers.

"I'd like to go up with Pidge if you can
manage it, Dad," replied the boy, coming
straight to the point.

"You would, eh?  What an excitable
fellow he is, Ted!  He talked about nothing
else at dinner--or hardly anything, and it's
all done so pleasantly you can't resent it.
Well, you want to go: any particular
reason?"

"Well, you see, we've always been together,
and ... Dad, why do people dislike Reinhardt?"

"Off at a tangent, aren't you?  I think
it's a case of 'I do not like thee, Dr. Fell;
the reason why I cannot tell.'  Some say
he's got a brute of a temper behind his
pleasant manner, and he's rather fond of
cards; but I never heard any definite charge
against him."

"Well, I detest the fellow, and I don't
like to think of Pidge constantly in his
company.  You've seen enough of Pidge to
know what I mean, dad, so I'm not giving
him away.  He's a jolly good sort, the best of
pals, wouldn't do a dirty trick to any one;
but he's hasty, makes friends too easily,
thinks every one is as decent as himself----"

"In short, you think he wants looking after."

"Oh, I'm not ass enough to want to hold
him on a lead; but I do think if I were
with him I might be useful.  You see, if
Reinhardt is a bad egg, and Pidge finds it
out, he'll never look at him again--if he
doesn't give him a kicking by way of
good-bye.  If I'm on the spot, I can keep my eye
on the fellow, and perhaps open Pidge's eyes
in time.  Can't you shift me to your branch there?"

"You would have gone there anyhow in
course of time, so if you're set on it I shan't
raise any objection.  It won't do you any
harm to be in charge of a branch, and with
Sing Wen there--a capital fellow--you won't
have the chance to make many mistakes.
We'll consider that settled, then."

"Thanks, Dad; I thought you'd agree.
Pidge will be glad: he said he wished I was
coming too."

"He won't resent the curb, eh?"

"He won't feel it if I can help it.  He's
very touchy, and I learnt a lesson on the
boat.  Good-night, Dad."

"Good-night, old man.  By the way, in
case I forget it when you go, always carry
a revolver with you up there, but never use
it except as a last resort.  That's a good
working rule for a European in an up-river
district.  Good-night."

Another person besides Ted Burroughs was
uneasy at the prospective transference of
Errington to Sui-Fu.  Mr. Ting, who knew
everything that was going on, or at least as
much as he wished to know, heard of it as
soon as it was decided, and would have taken
some trouble to prevent it if he could have
urged anything definite against the character
of Reinhardt.  But he was a very discreet
person.  He had reasons of his own for
maintaining cordial relations with Errington,
and reflected that even at a distance he could
still find means of looking after him.  And
when he learnt that Burroughs was to
accompany his chum he felt more at ease;
he had great confidence in the steady,
down-right Mole.

Reinhardt invited the boys to go up river
in his motor-launch, a very powerful vessel
in which he made his journeys between
Shanghai and Sui-Fu.  The launch had been
bought out of the German navy as a
condemned vessel; but some people remarked
that if the Germans could afford to condemn
vessels of this kind, their navy must be even
more "tip-top" than was supposed.  As
the boys intended to take their hydroplane
to their new quarters, they declined Reinhardt's
invitation, resolving to follow in the
wake of the launch and test the relative speed
of the two vessels.

The hydroplane was now by no means
identical in appearance with the vessel that
had roused a passing curiosity at Plymouth.
During the year they had been in China the
boys had devoted all their spare time to
turning it into a hydro-aeroplane.  They
replaced the original hull with a much lighter
frame of canvas, fitting a kite-shaped
half-keel under its forward part.  They kept their
engine, but adapted it to work two propellers,
one at the stern, below the water-line, for
driving the vessel through the water; the
other raised some feet above the forepart,
for driving it through the air.  To the sides
they fitted floats, and large planes, capable
of being folded back when the vessel was to
be used as a hydroplane, and adjustable at
various angles.  By means of differential
gearing they contrived that the power of the
water screw could be gradually reduced, while
the air tractor gained in the same proportion.
The effect of their arrangements was that as
the speed in the water increased, the vessel
rose a little; then, bringing into play an
elevator and the tractor, they made the
vessel rise completely out of the water and
behave in all respects as an aeroplane.

The flying boat, as it came to be known in
Shanghai, gave them at first as much trouble
as it gave amusement to their friends.  Their
early experiments with the new model were
exasperating.  They found that they could
rise above the water for a short distance,
but then fell, not always gently, and
sometimes with anything but pleasant
consequences to themselves and the machine.
More than once they had diverted the
spectators on the bank by having to swim
for it, and subsequently to fish up the machine
from the bottom.  They had never yet risked
a flying experiment in deep water; but the
good-humoured advice of their friends to
let the boat remain a boat only made them
the more determined to succeed.

The journey up the great "outside old
river," as their Chinese servants called it,
was full of interest to the young traders.
At first so wide as to seem rather a sea than
a river, six hundred miles from its mouth
it was still nearly a mile wide, crowded with
fine cargo steamers, and innumerable native
junks, rafts, lorchas and cormorant boats,
conveying the produce of the interior to the
various treaty ports.  They passed large
riverside villages teeming with an industrious
population: then came into vast stretches
of swamp choked with reed-beds, beyond
which the country for miles presented an
unbroken vista of forest, or of luxuriant
crops.  Here clustered a village almost at
the edge of the stream, the quaint
pagoda-like houses raised several feet above the
level, behind stone or brick embankments,
necessary in time of flood.  At another place
the houses were perched on a cliff, nestling
picturesquely among trees and shrubs.
Between Ichang and Chung-king they entered
a region of rock-strewn rapids, which,
however, were now partly obscured by the
summer floods.  The river here swirled
seaward at the rate of from seven to ten knots,
forming dangerous whirlpools, and needing
skilful navigation.  Reinhardt had
performed the journey many times, and his
crew were familiar with every part of the
course.  The launch thrashed its way against
the current, and the hydroplane had no
difficulty in following in its wake, escaping
the full force of the enormous volume of
water by skimming the surface.  In mere
speed it was the superior craft.

Reinhardt had not been very well pleased
when he learnt that Burroughs was to join
his friend.  He was too astute not to be
aware that the boy disliked him; but he
was also too astute to betray his consciousness
of it, and his manner towards Burroughs
was if anything even more conciliatory and
gracious than to other people.  On the day
of their departure, when they met at the
quayside, he greeted him with the effusiveness
of an old friend; and after their arrival
at Sui-Fu, seemed to lay himself out to
please.  But the more pleasant he was, the
more distrustful Burroughs became; and
the younger man was always annoyed with
himself because he feared he only imperfectly
concealed his real feelings.

Sui-Fu was a large city at the junction of
the Min and the Chin-sha rivers, which unite
to form the Yang-tse-kiang.  It was a busy
place, and contained a considerable European
community, whose houses stood in wooded
grounds on the river bank.  After spending a
few days in the English consul's bungalow,
the two friends started a little chummery near
the river--a sitting-room, and a bedroom
apiece, with a compound and outbuildings
for their native servants.  In addition to a
cook and a man-of-all-work, they had each a
personal servant.  The two Chinamen soon
cordially hated each other, as is the rule in
such cases; but neither had any dislike for
the other's master.  Lo San, Errington's man,
was just as attentive and respectful to
Burroughs as his own man, Chin Tai.  The
Englishmen more than once had to intervene
between the two Chinamen when they were
fighting with their feet and nails, and they
threatened at last to dismiss them both if they
could not keep the peace.  The threat was
effective so far as it prevented fights and
shrill abuse; but the masters would have been
amused, perhaps, if they could have seen how
the servants in their own quarters managed
to express their hate without making a noise.

There was a difference between the
positions of the two boys at Sui-Fu,
inasmuch as Burroughs was nominally head of
his branch, whereas Errington was only an
assistant to Reinhardt.  But it turned out
that the German was very often absent,
travelling inland in various directions.  He
appeared to have an extensive acquaintance
among Chinese viceroys and other high
officials, and had a very large personal
correspondence, which apparently had no
relationship to the business of his firm.
The result was that a great deal of the routine
work of the office was left to Errington, who
in a short time had practically as much
responsibility as Burroughs.  The two branches
were in a sense competitors--that is to say,
they dealt in the same class of goods, and
bargained with the same merchants and
dealers.  But thanks to the personal relationship
between the two Englishmen, their firms,
so far as the branches at Sui-Fu were
concerned, acted in concert, to their mutual
benefit, because the Chinese merchants were
unable to play one off against the other.

One day, after the conclusion of a certain
transaction between Burroughs and a
cotton-grower, Reinhardt remarked dryly to
Errington that Ehrlich Söhne had lost a chance of
making a considerable profit.

"I dare say," said Errington quickly, "but
Burroughs and I must either work together,
or definitely work against each other.  If we
are going to cut each other's throats I'd
better go back to Shanghai."

"Nonsense, my dear fellow: nozink farzer
from my soughts.  You do very well; only
I am vexed to lose good business."

The matter dropped.  Reinhardt found
Errington too useful to be willing to quarrel
with him.  But a little later he let fall a hint
that if Errington held his tongue, it would be
possible to carry through certain business
deals from time to time without Burroughs'
knowledge.  Vague as the hint was, it
disgusted Errington, and he felt a dawning
distrust of Reinhardt; but the German, quick
to read him, laughed it off as a joke, saying
that no one could suppose that Damon and
Pythias could for a moment be separated.
Errington did not mention these matters
to his friend, from a reluctance to admit
that Burroughs' opinion of Reinhardt was
justified.

It was soon evident to them both that
Reinhardt, however much he might be
disliked by the community at Shanghai, enjoyed
somewhat unusual privileges.  His frequent
absences were known to his principals, and
he made many visits to Shanghai and
Kiauchou--visits which Errington, who had
good means of judging, knew were not
connected with the business.  A little light
was thrown on the matter by Burroughs'
comprador, who told his master one day
that he had a brother whose brother-in-law
kept an opium den at a small town a few
miles up the river.  Opium-smoking was
forbidden in China, but, like gambling and
lotteries and other prohibited things, it was
winked at by the local mandarins in many
parts of the country, in consideration of
heavy bribes.  Reinhardt's launch was often
seen anchored off the place, sometimes when
he had gone there ostensibly to transact
business with a cloth-dealer, at other times
as a stage in his longer journeys.  He had
not the appearance of a victim of the opium
habit, and Burroughs concluded that he
gave way to occasional bouts, of which the
effects were temporary.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`RIVER PIRATES`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER IV


.. class:: center medium

   RIVER PIRATES

.. vspace:: 2

One day Errington had occasion to go
some sixty or seventy miles up river, to
look after a consignment of goods which
had been wrecked in one of the native junks.
He had some reason to suspect that the wreck
had not been merely an accident.  There was
a good deal of unrest in that part of the
country.  Various cases of piracy had been
reported both up and down the river, and in
Reinhardt's absence Errington thought he
had better run up himself, see that the
cargo was safe, and make a few inquiries into
the state of affairs generally.

Burroughs and he had devoted much of
their spare time to their flying boat, which
they were determined should thoroughly
deserve the name by the time they visited
Shanghai again.  The journey offered an
opportunity of testing it over a longer
distance and in deeper water than hitherto, so
Burroughs was nothing loath to accept his
friend's invitation to accompany him, and
took a day off for the purpose.  They
employed the vessel as a hydroplane on the way
up, being reluctant to run any risks until
Errington's business had been attended to.

On arriving at the scene of the wreck,
Errington found that to all appearance this
had been purely accidental.  He arranged
for the salvage of the goods, and the
forwarding of them in another junk, and then
set off in the early afternoon on the return
journey.

It was a brilliant day, with very little
wind; and having no further anxieties on
the score of business, they felt free to
experiment with the vessel in the air.  They had
no doubt of the power of the motor to
generate sufficient speed to lift the
hydroplane from the surface; their only concern
was the stability of it when flying.  Opening
out the planes, which lay folded close to the
vessel, like the wings of a dragonfly, when
not required for aerial use, they fixed the
collapsible stays and switched their motor
on to the air tractor at the bows.  The
vessel was already planing under the stern
propeller; she now rose from the water and
sailed along for some time within a few feet
of the surface.  Then, tempted by the
apparently favourable conditions, they rose
gradually to a greater height, and felt very
well pleased with their success.

Unluckily, however, they came suddenly
upon an air pocket, caused no doubt by the
difference between the temperature of the
air above the banks and that of the cooler
air above the river.  The machine dropped
with a rapidity that took them both by
surprise, for as yet they were not very expert
airmen.  It plunged heavily into the water.
They had provided themselves with air-bags,
so that the immersion lasted only a few
seconds; but the ignition of the engine was
stopped, and they found themselves in the
unfortunate position of being unable to use
the vessel now even as a hydroplane.

With some difficulty they managed, with
the help of their Chinese engineer, to get the
machine to the bank.  Recognizing the
awkwardness of their situation if they should
find themselves overtaken by night so far
from home, they set to work energetically
to overhaul the engine.  It was a long time
before they could make it work again.
Meanwhile dusk was drawing on, and they were
at least fifty miles from Sui-Fu.  When
at last they were satisfied that the engine
would work well enough to propel them
through the water, they knew that it would
be quite dark before they reached home.

They pressed on with all the speed of which
the engine was capable, keeping well out in
the broad river in order to avoid the masses
of reeds that fringed the banks.  The sky
grew darker and darker, though there was a
little more light on the water than over the
surrounding country.  Suddenly their
attention was attracted by a continuous whistling,
evidently from the siren of a steamer some
distance down stream.  They felt some
curiosity as to the reason of so prolonged a
noise; but they had already learnt that in
China people do such inconceivable things
at such unusual times, looked at from the
Western standpoint, that their interest was
not seriously engaged.

"Some old buffer of a Chinaman amusing
himself, I suppose," said Errington.  "They
seem to like to hear how much row they can
kick up."

They were travelling at the rate of about
twenty-five knots, and the whistling grew
louder moment by moment.  As they steered
somewhat nearer to the bank, to take a short
cut round a bend, they suddenly came in
sight of a small steamer about three hundred
yards ahead of them.  It was now so nearly
dark that the vessel was not very clearly
distinguishable.

Almost as soon as they caught sight of it,
the scream of the siren suddenly ceased; but
immediately they became aware of a shrill
babel of voices--cries and shouts in the high
tones that Chinamen invariably employ.
And as they drew swiftly nearer, they
perceived that the vessel was surrounded by a
number of sampans, the low punt-like boats
used by the lightermen of the ports, and also
by the pirates who infested the river.

A moment later they recognized the
steamer.  There were few vessels of the
kind in these high reaches of the
Yang-tse-kiang, and they had lived long enough
at Sui-Fu to be able easily to distinguish them.

"It's Ting's vessel," said Errington.

Scarcely had he spoken when two or three
pistol shots rang out.  There was not a
doubt that the steamer was being attacked.
Burroughs, at the wheel, steered straight for
it.  Errington snatched up his revolver,
but an uneasy suspicion suggesting itself to
him, he snapped it, and found that its
immersion had rendered it useless.

Only a few seconds had passed since they
had first caught sight of the steamer.
Unarmed as they were, they meant to take a
hand in behalf of Mr. Ting.  Each seized a
heavy spanner from their tool chest, and
Burroughs, telling the engineer to tie the
machine to the steamer's stern rail, shut off
the engine and drove the hydroplane among
the sampans, sinking two of them by the impact.

Then seizing the stern rail, the two lads
drew themselves up, and vaulted on deck.
There was no one at the wheel, but a crowd
of struggling forms was to be seen scrambling
up the narrow gangways to the bridge, where
there or four men were striving desperately
to force the assailants back.  At a glance
Errington saw that the men on the bridge
were the officers and crew of the vessel, and
shouting to Burroughs to take the port
gangway, he himself made a dash towards the
starboard one, and fell upon the rear of the
crowd.

The darkness, the excitement, the noise of
the fight, had prevented the attackers from
discovering the approach of the hydroplane,
so that the sudden onslaught of the two white
men, wielding heavy iron tools with the
vigour of sturdy youth, took them completely
by surprise.  Both Errington and Burroughs
were very "fit" through much exercise, and
three or four of the crowd at each gangway
had gone down under their vigorous blows
before those in front became aware of their
danger.  When they turned and found that
their new opponents numbered only two,
they rushed upon them with yells of rage.
But they had now to reckon with the men
on the bridge, who instantly took advantage
of the diversion, and springing down the
gangways, threw themselves upon what was
now the rear of their assailants.

But for this rapid movement, the fight
would have gone badly for the Englishmen.
One or two pistols were snapped at them,
and they had already received several gashes
from the ugly knives of the pirates.  But
it was evident from what happened now that
the men on the bridge had been husbanding
their ammunition.  Shots fell thick among
the pirates huddled on the gangways and the
deck adjacent.  One slightly built Chinaman,
his pigtail streaming behind him, flung
himself down from the bridge towards the spot
where Burroughs, half stunned by a blow
from a burly ruffian, had been beaten to the
deck.  This little man carried a knife in
each hand, and used these weapons with
such demoniacal fury that in a second or
two he cleared the space between him and
the fallen Englishman.

The sudden turning of the tables took all
the spirit out of the pirates, who, though they
were still three to one, sprang overboard on
both sides of the vessel, and swimming to
their sampans, scuttled away like rats shoreward.

"A velly good fight," said Mr. Ting,
wiping his knives and raising Burroughs from
the deck.  "No bones bloken?"

"It's nothing," said Burroughs.  "I got a
whack over the head that made me see stars.
Jolly glad you came to the rescue, sir, or
there wouldn't have been much left of me."

"Hai!  I think it is all vice vessa.  Without
you and Pierce, where should I be?  You
got a whack, Pierce?"

"Oh, a baker's dozen or so, but I've had
worse at rugger," said Errington coming
up.  "No: hang it! they've cut me, I see;
we don't use knives in our scrums.  What's
it all about, Mr. Ting?"

"As you see, these pilate hogs attacked
me.  I was going back after doing a little
business--plomised myself I would dine with
you.  But let us see who these pigs are."

.. _`A BRUSH WITH RIVER PIRATES`:

.. figure:: images/img-048.jpg
   :align: center
   :alt: A BRUSH WITH RIVER PIRATES

   A BRUSH WITH RIVER PIRATES

His crew had already thrown overboard
two dead bodies, and collected several
wounded at the foot of the gangway.  A
lamp was lighted, and one of the prisoners,
whose head bore plain marks of contact
with Errington's spanner, was recognized
by Mr. Ting's engineer as a notorious bandit
and pirate named Su Fing.

"The blessings of Heaven descend upon
the just," murmured Mr. Ting.  "This man
is the worst water-lat of the liver.  He is
plotected by one of the seclet societies that
are the cuss of this countly, and all the
mandalins and plefects and likin[#] officers
are aflaid of him, and hate him as much.
Suppose we take him to the yamen and
accuse him befo' the mandalin, he would
be aflaid to pass sentence upon him.  Why?
Because he would be killed dead by the
assassins of the seclet society.  No: we will
take him to the Consular Court at Sui-Fu;
there we shall have justice.  Of course his
punishment will not be so heavy as if he was
condemned by a mandalin.  Then he would
have his head cut off, or stand in the cage,
after a beating with the bamboo or the
leather.  The consuls do not punish thus.
But when you cannot get the moon, a cheese
is velly acceptable: that is what we will do."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left smaller

   [#] Customs house.

.. vspace:: 2


The pirate captain and his wounded men
were conveyed on the steamer to Sui-Fu, and
Mr. Ting accompanied the boys to the
consul's court to see the matter through.  The
consul declared, however, that since the
crime had been committed against a
Chinaman, he as an Englishman had no
jurisdiction, and the prisoners had to be brought
before the local mandarin.  The result was
as Mr. Ting had foreseen.  The evidence was
so clear that it was impossible, even for a
Chinese magistrate, to decide in favour of the
pirates.  He condemned them all to be beaten
on the cheeks with the leather, and then to
stand tiptoe in the cage, with their heads
held up at the top so that they could get no
ease from the intolerable pain.  But the
administrators of the beating laid their
strokes on very lightly, and the custodians
of the cages left the fastenings conveniently
loose, so that within a few hours the men
were at large.  They remained quiet for a
few weeks, while their wounds healed: then
it was evident, from reports brought down the
river, that they were at their old trade again.

"A nice country this is," said Errington
in disgust.  "We'll take care in future, old
man, to keep our revolvers dry."





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`DIVIDED WAYS`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER V


.. class:: center medium

   DIVIDED WAYS

.. vspace:: 2

With the coming of winter the two
Englishmen found fewer opportunities of
employing their leisure time.  They both
paid short visits to Shanghai, but could not
long be spared from their branches.  The
intense cold made hydroplaning or flying a
pastime of doubtful pleasure, and they had
to fall back on their own resources, or on
the recreations afforded by the European
society of the town.

Burroughs did not care for what he called
"racketing."  He was fond of reading, and
preferred an evening with his books to social
functions.  He joined Errington in games
of draughts, chess or dominoes; but these
sedentary amusements had few attractions
for the more active and restless member of
the chummery, who could not find in reading,
either, a substitute for his usual recreations.
Occasionally they went out shooting
together: the reed-beds of the river abounded
in wild fowl; but the country was becoming
more and more disturbed; the unrest which
is always fermenting in out-of-the-way parts
of China broke out in riots and other
disorders; and one day they received a polite
request from the viceroy of the province to
keep within the precincts of the settlement.
The viceroy had a nervous dread lest they
should come to some harm, and their
Government cause trouble, which would result
possibly in his dismissal from office and the
consequent loss of opportunities of enriching
himself, or even, if the matter were very
serious, in the loss of his buttons.  As
peaceable traders they had no option but to comply
as gracefully as possible with this request:
though if they had had no business interests
to consider, they would have been prepared
to take the risk of the attacks to which small
parties of Europeans are frequently exposed
in the remoter provinces, especially during
periods of popular excitement.

The result of this enforced idleness on
Errington was that he fell more readily than
he might otherwise have done to the
temptation of Reinhardt's card-parties, which
became during the winter a nightly
institution.  Reinhardt was now seldom absent,
and with one or two other Germans in the
settlement he spent the long evenings over
cards.  Errington would sometimes rise from
his seat in the little sitting-room he shared
with Burroughs, pace the floor restlessly,
then, with a glance at his companion
engrossed in a book, slip out, more or less
shamefacedly at first, but afterwards with
scanter offers to justify himself, and make
his way to Reinhardt's bungalow, where
he was always assured of a warm welcome.

It was unfortunate that he should find
himself possessed of an unusual aptitude for
cards: still more unfortunate that for a time
he had the luck that proverbially attends
beginners.  The card-players played for
stakes, and as the season advanced, the
amount of the stakes, as so frequently
happens, advanced too.  Errington never
deliberately intended to play high, but he
was almost insensibly led on by the example
of the older men; and having begun, he
lacked the firmness to withdraw, and shrank
from appearing less of a sportsman than the others.

As was only to be expected, the luck
presently turned against him, and one night,
after long play, he found himself not only
stripped of all his money, but in debt to
Reinhardt.  This position was irksome to
a high-spirited temperament.  The idea of
owing money to his superior was unendurable,
and after a restless night, during which
he slept little, he resolved to borrow from his
chum enough to clear him.

"Got a few dollars to spare, old chap?"
he said with an assumed light-heartedness at
breakfast.

Burroughs flushed, and cast his eyes upon
his plate: an onlooker would have thought
from his manner that he was the culprit.
He knew very well what was coming, and
felt instinctively what Errington had suffered
inwardly before he could have brought
himself to this point.

"You can have what you like, Pidge--in
reason, of course."

"Thanks.  I could do with twenty or
thirty dollars just now.  Sorry to trouble you."

"Oh, hang it, man, don't talk such rot.
What's mine's yours any time you like."

Errington pocketed the money hastily, and
spoke of something else.  His discomfort was
so obvious that Burroughs hoped he would
drop the card-playing forthwith.  Until the
monthly cheque for his salary arrived, indeed,
Errington absented himself from Reinhardt's
parties.  He repaid Burroughs at once, and
for a week or two never went out in the
evening.  But then the old restlessness crept
upon him; once more he joined the jolly
party; then not an evening passed without
his leaving the chummery as soon as it was
dark, not to return until long past midnight.
His losses became more serious, and he
played again in an attempt to retrieve them,
only to plunge deeper still.

One morning, with pale face and stammering
lips, quite unlike his wonted self, he asked
Burroughs for the loan of a hundred dollars.

"All right, old man," said his friend,
determinedly cheerful, "but aren't you going
the pace rather?"

"What do you mean?" demanded Errington
hotly, his old resentment at restraint
flaming forth.

"Well, it's no affair of mine, of course, but
it's a pity, don't you think, to let that fellow
Reinhardt get the whip hand of you?"

"Confound you, why are you always
girding at Reinhardt?  What's he done to you?
Anybody would think he's an ogre, waiting
to crunch my bones, to hear you talk."  He
ignored the fact that for months Burroughs
had not once opened his mouth on the
subject.  "What's a fellow to do if he can't
enjoy a harmless game?  It's all straight; you
don't suppose I'd play with sharpers; and one
can't always win.  You don't want me to
shirk it when I lose, I suppose?  I tell you
what it is: you're getting mean and miserly;
you're afraid you won't get your beastly
money back."

"You know me better than that, Pidge,"
said Burroughs quietly.  "You're a bit off
colour, old chap.  Here's your hundred; pay
me when you like."

If Errington had obeyed his impulse at
that moment he would have apologized to
Burroughs, and renounced Reinhardt and all
his works once and for ever.  But shame, the
sense of being in the wrong, false pride, and
above all the gambler's perpetual hope of
success, tied his tongue, and the precious
moment slipped away.

Burroughs was very much surprised to get
his money back within a few days--before,
as he knew, Errington had received any
further remittances from Shanghai.

"Much obliged, Moley," Errington said
as he laid the notes beside his friend's plate
one morning.

Burroughs glanced up, but Errington
would not meet his eye; so with a "Thanks,
old man!" as casual as Errington's own
remark, he put the notes into his pocket and
began cheerfully to talk shop.  But he was
much disturbed in mind.  If his chum had
won the money, it would encourage him to
go on gambling.  If he had not won it, how
had he obtained it so soon?  Burroughs
hoped with all his heart that he had not
borrowed of Reinhardt or any other German
of the set.  It was bad enough that
Reinhardt should entice his subordinate to play
at all; and the low opinion that Burroughs
held of him fell still lower.

He would have been even more perturbed
had he known the real source of Errington's
money.  Restive under the disapproval, of
which he was conscious, though Burroughs
never again uttered it, the lad was foolish
enough to apply to the Chinese money-lenders.
They were ready to oblige a young
Englishman, and fixed their interest to
match the risk, as they said: which meant
that they would squeeze as much as
possible out of him by working on his fears of
exposure and disgrace.

The nightly card-parties went on, and
Errington became a constant attendant.
There grew up a constraint between the two
friends.  Burroughs was anxious and worried,
and could not help showing it.  Errington,
in his own worried state of mind, was annoyed
at his friend's manner, all the more because
he knew very well that he himself was in the
wrong.  His high spirits gave way to
moodiness and irritability, and after a time he
avoided Burroughs.  It was a trying position
for both of them, inmates of one lodging.
They saw less and less of each other, and
when they could not but meet, what conversation
passed between them was almost confined
to business matters.

Naturally the affairs of the few Europeans
in the town were freely discussed by
their native servants and their cronies.
Vague rumours came to Burroughs' ears,
after a long round, of what went on at
Reinhardt's card-parties.  It appeared that
Reinhardt himself was frequently the winner
when the stakes were high, and Burroughs
became less and less tolerant of a man who
ought to have been particularly scrupulous
in keeping his subordinate out of mischief.
Reinhardt was always very polite and
pleasant when he met Burroughs, but on more
than one occasion the latter was rude to him.
There were no half measures with Burroughs.

One day, talking shop because they seemed
to have now no other common topic,
Burroughs mentioned to Errington that he was
negotiating a very large transaction with a
Chinese broker, and stated the terms on which
the consignment of goods was to change hands.
Errington congratulated him on the prospect
of doing a good stroke of business, and
the subject dropped.

Next day, however, at the last moment,
the negotiations fell through, to Burroughs'
great annoyance.  It was a loss to his branch,
and incidentally to himself, for both he and
Errington had a small interest in the
turnover of their branches, as well as a salary.
He was also vexed at having mentioned the
matter to Errington, when it was so unlike
him to talk about things that were still
uncertain.

What was his surprise and irritation a few
days later to hear from his comprador that
the transaction in which he had failed had
been completed by Errington, who had overbid him.

"Nonsense!  Absolute rot!" he said to the
man, feeling indignant on his friend's behalf.

The comprador spread out his hands
deprecatingly and said--

"Allo lightee savvy all same, sah.  Mass'
Ellington he go buy all jolly lot."

"Shut up; I don't believe it."

The Chinaman shrugged: surely his master
was very short this morning!  But he said
no more.  Two days after, however, he
brought Burroughs the order for the goods,
written on the official paper of Ehrlich Söhne,
and signed with Errington's initials.  At
this, even a friend of long standing might well
be staggered.  Burroughs remembered that
his chum had been looking more and more
worried of late.  He came to breakfast with
a pale face and weary eyes, and the look of
a man who had not slept.  Could it be that,
in his urgent need of money, he had fallen to
the temptation of snatching this business
out of the hands of the other house?  If it
had been Reinhardt, Burroughs would not
have been at all surprised; but that Errington
had taken advantage of the information
casually given him to steal a march on his
friend was inconceivable.  Burroughs knew
perfectly well that at the time when
negotiations were in progress with him, Feng Wai,
the Chinese merchant, had made no overtures
to the German firm, so that there was no
question of the firms being played off against
each other.  Besides, it had always been an
understanding between the two old school-fellows
that, a price having once been named,
each should abide by it.

The position was unendurable to
Burroughs, who at once stepped over to
Errington's office, and walked, as he had always
been accustomed to do, though not
frequently of late, straight into his room.  Once,
Errington would have sprung up from his
seat with a hearty word of greeting: now he
remained sitting, with a look of embarrassment.

"I say, Pidge," began Burroughs, trying
to speak in an ordinary tone, "what's this
I hear about Feng Wai doing better with
you than with me?  I told you, you remember,
that I had practically concluded the deal."

Burroughs was but a poor actor, and his
manner, rather than his tone, told Errington
that he was labouring under some strong
feeling.  Nervous and irritable as he was,
Errington at once took offence.

"I shouldn't listen to gossip, if I were
you," he said; "next time come straight to me."

"As it happens, I have come straight to
you as soon as I had seen with my own eyes
what I wouldn't believe when I heard it.  I
don't want any more information than your
signature."

"Look here, do you mean to be offensive,
or can't you help it?  Say straight out that
you think I've gone behind your back, if you
do think it."

"Well then, if you want it straight, you
shall have it," said Burroughs, losing his
temper.  "I've seen your order, signed with
your initials.  After our agreement it would
have been bad enough if I'd said nothing to
you; but having myself given you the terms,
in confidence, as I supposed----"

"That's enough!" cried Errington, springing
up, his eyes ablaze with anger.  "You've
been looking accusations against me for
months past, and I've had enough of it.
You always had the makings of a fine prig.
Until you beg my pardon, I swear I'll have
nothing more to do with you."

And flinging out of the office, he slammed
the door behind him.

Burroughs was as much hurt as enraged.
This was the first serious row between them
since their early school-days.  But he was not
inclined to apologize.  He felt that he had
asked for information in a perfectly civil way;
and though, in his heart, he could not help
suspecting that there was possibly some
mistake, the sarcasm of his old friend had
wounded him too bitterly for him to hold out
the olive branch.

When he went home to the chummery, the
gravity of the quarrel was proved by the
fact that Errington had removed all his
personal belongings.

"Where's Mr. Errington?" he asked of
Chin Tai, his servant.

"He gone wailo Mass' Leinhadt," said
the man, grinning.  He was glad to have seen
the back of Lo San, Errington's man.

And next morning, when Lo San brought
an envelope containing a remittance for the
entire amount that Errington owed him,
Burroughs felt still more deeply incensed.
To repay him with money borrowed from the
German seemed the finishing stroke to their
old friendship.  In the old days, a quiet talk
would have set matters right instantly; but
the previous coolness between them, due to
Errington's gambling, rendered that course
now impossible.

The explanation was exceedingly simple.
Errington had received an inquiry from Feng
Wai immediately after he had heard from
Burroughs of the negotiation in progress.
He had quoted exactly the same terms, and
the bargain was struck.  But the Chinaman
found that, the rates having gone up slightly,
he was unable to supply the goods, and went
to the office to ask to be released from his
contract.  It happened that Errington was
out at the time, but Reinhardt was there.
Scenting a chance of raising a difference
between the two friends, Reinhardt agreed
to give the enhanced price, merely altering
the figures in the contract note, taking care
to make the new figures as like Errington's
as possible.  The Chinese merchant is usually
as good as his word; but Feng Wai had had
only a verbal understanding with Burroughs,
and thought himself justified in concluding
the transaction at the higher price.  Reinhardt
stipulated that the extra price should
not be disclosed; but Burroughs' comprador
often got information through private
channels, and it was not long before he was aware
of the terms of the bargain.

The appearance of Errington at his bungalow
that evening, in a towering rage, told
Reinhardt that his scheme had succeeded,
but he was scarcely prepared for the
completeness of the breach between the friends.
He owed Burroughs the grudge which a mean
and dishonourable man often owes a more
honourable one for no other reason than that
he is more honourable.  He was now anxious
that Errington should not discover the
change of price, for he knew that, if he heard
of it, he would at once seek to put himself
right with his friend.  Errington was too
angry at first to give any explanation of the
quarrel; but presently he said--

"What's all this tosh about outbidding
Burroughs with Feng Wai?  Nothing in it,
is there?"

"Of course not.  You initialled ze contract
yourself, didn't you?"

"Yes."

"Ze invoice will prove it: I show you zat
to-morrow when we go to ze office."

Before night he had made a private
arrangement with Feng Wai that the goods
should be invoiced at the original price, and
that the difference should be made up by
Reinhardt himself.  His intention was to
recoup himself by an adjustment in his
private ledger under what an Englishman
would call "squeeze."  The invoice,
consequently, satisfied Errington that there was
no foundation for Burroughs' suspicion, and
he nourished a deep resentment against his
old friend for harbouring it.  Reinhardt was,
of course, careful to file the altered contract
note among his private papers: to alter the
figures back again could hardly be done so
neatly as to escape the notice of one so keen
as Errington.

Thus Errington became an inmate of
Reinhardt's house, and the breach between the
two friends widened.  In a place where there
is only a small community of white men, a
disagreement of this kind is at once set right, or
it becomes far more acute.  With Errington,
the mere idea that he could be suspected by
his friend of such a trick as he had accused
him of rankled more and more as time went
on.  He found himself harbouring bitter
thoughts, not only of him, but of Mr. Ting;
for in his perverted state of mind he was
ready to listen to Reinhardt's suggestions
that the Chinaman had profited by his father's
losses, and was actually enjoying a wealth
which, if right were done, would be his own.

By and by his bitterness of spirit was if
possible aggravated by the suspicion that
Reinhardt cheated at cards.  Being more
continuously in the German's company, he
noticed little things, slight manifestations
of character, which had before escaped him.
He watched his host more and more carefully,
and though he was unable to bring the matter
home to him, he grew at length almost
convinced that Reinhardt was a swindler.
This, coming upon the loss of his friend,
which in his better moments he felt deeply,
so worked upon him that he found his
situation unendurable, and applied to his
firm for a transfer still farther up the river.
The managers at first hesitated, but his
threat to resign unless his application was
granted, coupled with reports of his business
aptitude from all with whom he had come
in contact, produced the result he desired.
Rather than lose his services, the firm put
him in charge of a small sub-branch at Chia-ling Fu.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`MR. TING SPEAKS OUT`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER VI


.. class:: center medium

   MR. TING SPEAKS OUT

.. vspace:: 2

During the whole of the winter there had
been much speculation among the European
residents in the treaty ports as to the cause
of the unrest disturbing many different parts
of the country.  Disorder of one kind or
another is always smouldering in China.
Sometimes it is due to the oppression of
the officials, sometimes to hatred of the
foreigners, often to obscure causes which
not even the older white residents in the
country can understand.

For some time past there had been risings
in various districts which puzzled even the
acutest and most experienced.  A rumour
had gradually arisen that they were due
partly to the secret societies which supported
predatory bands in many parts of the
empire, partly to direct incitement from
without.  Germany had always expected
far greater things from her possession of
Kiauchou than had actually sprung from
it.  Her appetite for colonial extension had
grown by what it fed on, and been whetted
especially by her successful deals with France
over Morocco.  Her colonial party hungered
after a big slice of the Middle Kingdom, but
while China was at peace with herself and
the rest of the world, there was little that
Germany could do, without risking armed
opposition on the part of other interested Powers.

From time immemorial it has been the
custom of strong states desiring territorial
aggrandisement to make an opportunity of
fishing in troubled waters.  Many people in
China now said that German agents were at
work in more than one part of the empire,
stirring up the forces of disruption which were
always latent in the country.  Whether
rightly or wrongly, Burroughs had begun to
suspect, from various small matters that fell
under his observation, that Reinhardt was
such an agent.  His comprador reported that
the German had been seen in communication
with the river pirate who had been captured
in the attack on Mr. Ting.  He said that it
was whispered in native circles that German
money had bribed the officials to connive at
the bandit's escape.  At first Burroughs merely
smiled at these reports, but they were so
persistent that, taken in connection with
Reinhardt's frequent unexplained absences, they
at last made an impression upon him.
Perhaps there was something in them after all.

From the newspapers which he received
regularly from Shanghai he learnt that the
German fleet in Chinese waters was to be
strengthened by the addition of several river
gunboats, for the protection of German
subjects who might be threatened by the growing
disorder.  Inasmuch as the disturbances were
not as yet serious--no more alarming than
the outbreaks that occur about every five
years in one part or another--Burroughs
shrewdly suspected that in this case the wish
was father to the thought.  It was becoming
a favourite move of German diplomacy to
send a gunboat to some centre of disorder,
which could only be removed by some one
paying compensation.  When, therefore, the
smouldering disaffection broke into an active
rising about a hundred and fifty miles up the
river from Sui-Fu, a German gunboat was
moved up as far as she could proceed with
safety, and several launches were sent still
farther.

The total German population for whose
lives the German Government professed to
have such a tender regard consisted of
Reinhardt and two or three compatriots at
Sui-Fu, together with about an equal number
at stations on other parts of the river.  No
similar move had been considered necessary
by any of the other Powers.  The Chinese
Government protested, explaining that the
disorders were slight, and would be at once
suppressed.  But the Germans refused to go
back, and China was not certain enough of
the unanimity of the other powers to risk a
war with Germany unaided.

The Chinese officials saw that it was of the
greatest importance to keep the peace along
the river, so that the Germans should have
absolutely no excuse for intervening.

When the movement of the German vessels
took place, Reinhardt was absent from
Sui-Fu.  Errington had been established for
some weeks at Chia-ling Fu.  On Reinhardt's
reappearance at his station it was rumoured
among the Chinese that he had actually been
in the camp of the revolutionaries, whose
leader was none other than the river pirate
of Mr. Ting's adventure.  There was a very
persistent report that the insurgents were
well supplied with money, a circumstance
sufficiently remarkable in itself to lend
support to the suspicion that the Germans were
secretly backing the insurrection.

Errington meanwhile, in his new position
at Chia-ling Fu, had gone from bad to worse.
The city itself was more attractive than
Sui-Fu; it was situated at the junction of the
Min with two other rivers, amidst very fertile
and picturesque country.  Errington might
have found much to interest him if he had
cared to make friends with the missionaries,
or with the Englishmen in the town.  But
his connection with a German firm brought
him necessarily into closer contact with the
little German colony, among whom there was
a careless, card-playing section.  Cards were
practically the only recreation; and Errington,
deprived of any steadying influence, fell
more and more under the fascination of
gambling.  Absence for a time from
Reinhardt dulled his suspicions of that
gentleman's honesty, and when the German paid
occasional visits to Chia-ling Fu he found
Errington as ready as ever to associate with
him.  At the card-parties luck was steadily
against the Englishman, and in course of
time he was heavily in debt to Reinhardt and
others.  He went to the money-lenders again;
but they declined to give him any further
assistance, and began to press him in regard
to the amounts he already owed them.

Reinhardt also happened to be pressed for
money.  An American globe-trotter of great
means came to Sui-Fu, and was persuaded
by Reinhardt to join his card-parties.  He
proved more than a match for the German,
who, piqued at his losses, played higher and
higher, until at the end of a fortnight he was
many hundred dollars to the bad.

One day he ran up to Chia-ling Fu in his
launch, and called on Errington.  After a
little general conversation, he said casually--

"By ze way, zose little sums you owe
me--will it be convenient to pay up?"

"I'm rather stoney just now," replied
Errington, with an uneasy laugh.  "Can you
give me a little time?"

"Sorry, my boy, I would if I could; but
I also am stoney.  I must have ze money.
But zere is a way for you.  Why not go to
Mr. Ting?  I do not say it is true, but zere
are many who believe zat Ting has still
moneys of your late fazer, my old friend.  A
compatriot of mine, a man I know, once
heard your fazer say in ze Shanghai Club
zat whatever happened to him, ze boy--zat
is you, naturally--would be provided for.
Ting, said he, would see well to zat."

"My guardian in England told me I had
next to nothing," said Errington, much
surprised; "and my education was so
expensive that by the time I came of age
there'd be precious little left."

"I know nozink about zat.  I know only
what my friend told me.  How stands ze
matter?  You owe me five hundred dollars;
I cannot afford in zese times to wait for ze
money; zerefore I say, apply to Mr. Ting."

Errington thought over the suggestion.
The suspicions already planted by Reinhardt
had not taken very deep root, but this fresh
hint that Mr. Ting might be actually turning
to his own use money that did not belong to
him made Errington resolve to broach the
matter at the first opportunity.

Mr. Ting at intervals travelled up the river
on business.  It happened that he came to
Chia-ling Fu a few days after Reinhardt
had made his suggestion.  He called on
Errington, as he had often done before,
gave him news of friends in Shanghai, and
showed no sign of any change of feeling
towards his old employer's son.

Errington was restless and ill at ease all
through the interview.  His natural pride
revolted against the course he was forcing
himself to take.  At last, just as Mr. Ting
was leaving, he said hesitatingly and with a
shamefaced air--

"Could you--would you mind lending me
a thousand dollars?"

The Chinaman showed no surprise.

"You find your pay not enough?" he
said.  "It was incleased, was it not?"

"Yes, but----"

"And you are a young man," Mr. Ting
went on.  "You have no wife nor pickins.
I think with your pay, and your commission--velly
good, if I hear tlue--you can live
velly well.  Plaps you tell me what you
want so much money for."

Errington began to walk up and down the
room.  He was struggling with himself:
should he make a clean breast of it?  Shame,
an ill conscience, and the suggestions of
Reinhardt combined to tie his tongue.

"Betting?" said Mr. Ting quietly.  He
put on his spectacles, a curious trick of his
at serious moments.

"No, I don't bet."

"Card-playing?"

"There's no harm in an occasional rubber,
is there?" said Errington, his temper rising.

"Gambling?" went on the remorseless Chinaman.

And then the storm burst.

"What right have you to question me?"
demanded the boy furiously.  "You are not
my guardian.  You profess to be a friend of
mine, and when I ask you for a slight favour
you preach at me.  You're rolling in money,
and won't lift a finger to help a fellow.  I
don't want your money, though if what
people say is true, the amount I asked you
for is a precious small portion of what I
might claim from you as a right, and no favour."

"Hai!  What fo' you talkee so fashion?
What foolo pidgin you talkee this time?"
cried Mr. Ting.  In his indignation at what
was in truth a charge of bad faith the
Chinaman lapsed for a moment into the pidgin
English of his childhood.  Then, recovering
his composure, he said with quiet dignity:
"You are the son of a gentleman who was
my master and my flend, and I cannot say
to you what I would say to any other man
who insulted me so.  I do not gludge the sum
that you wish to bollow, but I am solly that
you want money for leasons that you will
not tell, and which I must think are no cledit
to you.  But I tell you now, I will lend you
enough money to pay all you owe, if you will
give me a plomise, the word of a gentleman,
that you will make no more debts in the same
fashion."

Errington looked at him for a moment;
then, muttering "Pledge my freedom to a
Chinaman!" he flung out of the room in a rage.





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.. _`A DISCOVERY IN THE SWAMP`:

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   CHAPTER VII


.. class:: center medium

   A DISCOVERY IN THE SWAMP

.. vspace:: 2

The situation of the young fellow was now
pitiable in the extreme.  He did not know
where to turn.  There were six other white
men in the place, of whom only two were
English; and as he canvassed them one by
one in his mind, he recognized that it was
hopeless to apply to any of them.  Remorse,
bitter self-reproach for his folly, mingled
with the harrowing fear of ruin and exposure.
He thought of the pleasant months he had
spent in Mr. Burroughs' house; the kindness
all had shown him; the confidence they had
put in him; and the thought of losing the
good opinion of his friends was agony.  He
felt that he had kicked away the supports
that might have been his.  A word to the
Mole would, he knew, bring his old friend
to his help; but there was that miserable
difference between them.  A simple promise
to Mr. Ting would save him; but pride held
him back, and the suspicions that were
poisoning his mind.  Feeling utterly lost, he
went to his room, and buried his aching head
on the pillow.

Reinhardt came to him next day.

"Well, did Ting shell out?" he said.

"No," replied Errington.  "Give me a
week, Reinhardt; I'll pay you in a week, or----"

"Do nozink foolish, my boy.  Zat's all
right; I will wait a week; in a week anyzink
may happen."

On Errington's part it was a mere staving-off
of the evil day--a clutching at a straw;
the last desperate hope of the gambler that
time was on his side.

But how to kill time?  He could not
attend to his business; there was little else
to be done except play cards, and besides
having no money, he hated cards now with a
savage hatred.  Hearing, however, from one
of the Englishmen in the place that there
was good duck-shooting some few miles up
the river, he resolved to go for a day's sport.
The Viceroy's request that the Europeans
would not venture beyond their own settlement
was forgotten, in spite of the fact that
it had lately been repeated with some
urgency.  The country was disturbed, and
the swamps haunted by the wild fowl were
in the midst of the district affected.  They
surrounded a number of small villages which
were known to be the nests of river pirates,
and hot-beds of the insurrectionary movement.
To the ordinary traveller the villages
were almost unapproachable, being situated
on dry tracts encompassed by the reedy
marshes that extended for some miles inland
from the banks of the river.

One morning Errington started in a native
sampan with his Chinese servant.  On
approaching the spot of which he had been
told, he noticed that Lo San looked uneasily
at some large Chinese characters painted in
white on a rock at the river-side.

"Well, what is it?" he asked.

"Ho tao pu ching," replied the man.
"Way no flee."

"Not free!  Not clear, I suppose you
mean.  Why not?  There's plenty of room
between the rocks."

"Pilates, sah; plenty bad fellas."

"Hang the pirates!  It's very kind of the
billposter, but we've nothing worth scooping.  Go on."

But game appeared to be scarce.  Duck
were seen in the distance, but Errington
could never get within range.  Determined
not to return empty-handed, he went farther
into the swamp, and was punting towards
a thick growth of reeds fringing a piece of
open water, on the far side of which he had
noticed some birds, when his eye was caught
by a boat floating apparently towards this
open water down a narrow and irregular
channel from the Yang-tse.  The channel was so
much overgrown with reeds and rushes that
it was not easy to distinguish the nature of
the approaching craft.  Errington took up
his binocular and scanned it, expecting to
discover that it was a sampan, like that in
which he was himself travelling.  But on
closer inspection it proved to be more like
a dinghy, and probably belonged to some
vessel anchored in the neighbourhood.

It was too far off for him to see clearly
the two men in the dinghy; they had their
backs to him, but their general appearance
suggested Chinamen.  All at once a slight
turn in their course revealed what had
previously not been visible, they were towing an
object of much larger size.  It was impossible
to distinguish it; it might be a raft or a large
sampan loaded with goods.

Reckless as his mood was, Errington was
not utterly rash, or disposed to court danger
out of pure wilfulness.  While he was
watching the boats, he drew the sampan within
the shelter of the clump of reeds through
which he was making his way.

"Take a look," he said, handing the binocular
to his servant, who, however, preferred
to use his own eyes.

"China fellas, sah," he said in a low voice.
"My tinkee better go back chop-chop."

The man had felt all along that his master
was foolish to come alone into these parts, so
far from the town; but he knew the Englishman's
temper, and the rejection of his former
word of warning had kept him silent since.
Now, however, the sight of a strange boat,
manned by Chinamen, near the haunts of
the pirates, induced him to offer more
definite advice.

But in vain.  Errington was not the man
to be scared by actual dangers, still less
imaginary ones.  The moving boats had
frightened away the ducks, so that there
was no present chance of sport.  And having
nothing better to do for the moment, he
drove the sampan quietly still farther among
the reeds, bade Lo San keep still, and settled
to watch the strangers.

As they drew nearer, he noticed something
that piqued his curiosity.  The men in the
boat, whom he now knew to be Chinamen,
looked cautiously around, as if to make sure
that they were not observed.  Screened
though he was by the reeds, Errington had
the curious sensation which watchers often
have, that those whom he could see also saw
him.  But the men gave no sign of uneasiness;
the dinghy passed behind the further
edge of the clump of reeds, and disappeared.

Errington was now sufficiently interested
to determine to wait.  Ten or twelve minutes
afterwards, the nose of the dinghy emerged
from the rushes; the men turned it round,
and made off in the direction from which
they had come.  But Errington saw at a
glance that there was now no object astern of
them.  He wondered what it was, and where
it had been left.  Probably the circumstance
would not have held his attention for a
moment but for the men's cautious look
around; their manner suggested that they
were hiding something.  It might be no
business of his; on the other hand, it struck
him that, since the incident had happened
in a district infested by pirates, some of
these pests had recently made a haul of
goods.  He felt that at all hazards he must
satisfy himself; not that there appeared to
be any danger, but he could not tell but that,
behind the screen of reeds at the farther end
of the open water, there might be an
encampment of the water-rats, as these gentry
were called by the Englishmen.  The object
with which Errington had set out was
forgotten; duck-shooting was an exciting sport,
but it did not challenge his imagination as
did the possibility of a contest of wits or
activity with men; and with nerves braced
he resolved to investigate.

Venturesome as he was in ordinary
circumstances, Errington was not without the
instinctive cautiousness of the born scout.
He did not, therefore, head straight across
the pool, as any one who knew him slightly,
and argued only from his impulsiveness, might
have expected him to do.  Instead, he forced
the sampan slowly and with some difficulty
through the margin of rushes bordering the
pool.  Many other channels besides that on
which the boat had come, led from the open
water to the river.  Coming to one of these
narrower passages, he glanced up and down
before crossing it, to make sure that there
were no other men who might see him and
interfere with his movements.  His object
was to reach the wider channel, and then
follow the course that had been taken by
the dinghy.

It occurred to him that the dinghy, when
it disappeared among the rushes, might have
towed the second craft to a pirate encampment;
and as the direction in which it had
gone was on his right-hand side, he took the
left-hand side of the pool, and punted slowly
along until he came to a spot where the
broad channel was open to his view for a
considerable distance.  He looked in the
direction in which the dinghy was going when
he last saw it.  It was no longer in sight.
With another cautious glance round, pausing
for a few moments to listen, he crept out
into the pool, and set out for the other side.
It was not very difficult to find the narrow
opening in the reeds through which the
dinghy had passed with the other vessel in
tow.  But when he had once entered it, he
saw how almost impossible it would have
been to find his way had he not carefully
noted the exact place of entry.  Reeds grew
out of the water on every side.  There was
no real passage; apparently it was not a
regular waterway, and he ceased to expect
to see any human habitation at the further
end, wherever that might be.  The water
was shallow, and the only indication that it
was navigable at all was afforded by the
bent rushes where the two craft had previously passed.

After proceeding for a few yards, however,
he found that the water became slightly
deeper, and there were some signs of the reeds
having been cut.  An attempt had apparently
been made to clear a channel.  His former
idea returned to him; perhaps it led to an
encampment after all.  He drove the sampan
on with even greater caution, becoming more
and more interested as he noticed how the
channel wound this way and that among the
thickest beds of rushes.

Threading this tortuous channel for
perhaps a hundred yards, he came with startling
suddenness upon the object of his search.
The reeds came to an end, and on a stretch
of firm ground, rising three or four feet above
the level of the swamp, four or five low
ramshackle huts, constructed of poles and
matting, stood about thirty yards back from
the edge of the water.  The space between
them and the water was littered with an
extraordinary miscellany of objects, all of
them of a more or less imperishable character--pots
and pans, vases, tiles, native images,
and other things, which from their arrangement
in bales, bundles, or stacks, appeared
to be articles of merchandise, but not in
actual use here.

With his knowledge of the kind of thing
that went on in these swamps, Errington
at once guessed that these objects were the
spoil of trading vessels captured by the
river pirates and brought to this cunningly
devised or carefully sought hiding-place.
There were black rings here and there on the
ground that were without doubt the marks
of camp-fires.  But the place had a deserted,
a neglected, look.  The huts were boarded
up, except where they were so tumbledown
that no such precaution was possible.  Three
or four old and rickety sampans were drawn
up at the brink.  But the object which had
been towed by the dinghy was floating,
secured by a rope to one of the uprights of a
ruined hut close to the shore.

Errington looked at it curiously.  It
appeared from its shape to be a boat of some
kind, but being completely covered with
matting its outlines were indistinguishable.
Wondering what its contents could be, to be
so carefully covered up, Errington punted
the sampan alongside, and lifted a corner of
the matting.  What he saw gave him a
surprise comparable only to a galvanic
shock.  Underneath was a stretch of canvas
that exactly resembled a wing of the flying
boat, folded back, as Burroughs' custom
was when the vessel was not in use.  Lifting
the matting further, Errington had no more
doubt.  The object before him, shapeless
and ungainly as it was under its cover, was
indeed the flying boat.

Lo San's astonishment was equal to his
own.  The Chinaman uttered a smothered
"Hai!" then looked fearfully around, as if
expecting that the sound would bring a
crew of the dreaded pirates yelling about
them.  But there was no sound, no sign of life.

Errington's first impulse was to tow the
vessel out, and convey it to his own station.
Then a doubt crossed his mind.  The dinghy
which had brought it to this spot had been
unmistakably of European build.  The
vessel from which it had come was probably
not far distant.  Perhaps Burroughs himself
was on it.  Errington puzzled his brain to
hit upon any reason why his old friend
should have wished to conceal his
hydroplane in this swamp.  Had he come up on
business, or pleasure?  Could it be that
Mr. Ting, in his journey down-stream, had
called at Sui-Fu, informed Burroughs of the
mess into which Errington had got, and
persuaded him to come up and attempt to set
matters right?  The thought made him
angry.  He flushed hot at what, in his
perverted imagination, he looked upon as a
breach of confidence.

"Hanged if I'll interfere!" his thoughts
ran.  "I'm not the keeper of the thing,
confound it!"  (This was the vessel in which
he and Burroughs had spent so many pleasant
hours.)  "A pretty ass I should look if I
took it back, and found that the Mole
intended it to be hidden.  The place is
evidently deserted.  No, I'm dashed if I do
anything.  It's no concern of mine."

Dropping the matting back, he swung the
sampan round, and begun to punt somewhat
savagely towards the pool.  The old sore
was reopened.  The occupation and excitement
had for a time banished all recollection
of his wretched circumstances; but
everything now came back to him; the weight
bore down again upon his spirit.

"Makee too muchee bobbely,[#] sah!"
murmured Lo San anxiously.

.. vspace:: 2

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   [#] Noise.

.. vspace:: 2

The warning recalled Errington's caution.
He was still within the pirates' hunting-ground.
He took care to urge the sampan
less violently; but, on coming safely to the
river, resumed his energetic movements.  It
was a long pull back, and he was tired when,
late in the afternoon, he again reached the town.





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.. _`CROWDED MOMENTS`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER VIII


.. class:: center medium

   CROWDED MOMENTS

.. vspace:: 2

Feverishly anxious not to be left alone
with his thoughts, Errington was glad to
accept an invitation to dinner that evening
with an Englishman with whom he had
lately become rather friendly.  They were
sitting over their coffee when a third member
of the little community came in.

"Sit down, Hamilton," said Errington's
host, whose name was Stevens.  "Have a
cigar?  You look as if you'd hurried up.
Anything wrong?"

"Same old thing.  The rebels have licked
the Government troops, and are marching
on Cheng Tu.  The same performance will
be gone through, I suppose: riot and
burning, a bit of a massacre, a scare among the
Europeans; then the Viceroy will take it in
hand; he'll pay for the capture of Su Fing;
his head will fly, and then we'll have peace
for a year or two.  All comes of education,
Stevens; you don't agree with me, I know;
but if they weren't so desperately fond of
examinations and remained in their primal
ignorance, I believe there'd be no rebellions.
Su Fing has passed more examinations than
any other man in the province."

"Well, let's be thankful they're so far
away.  They won't trouble us."

"I'm not so sure.  You know young
Burroughs of Sui-Fu?  You know him, of
course, Errington?"

"Yes."

Errington had never spoken of Burroughs
or his intimacy with him: the subject was
too sore.

"Well, that flying boat of his of which
we've heard accounts has disappeared.  I
don't know the particulars, but we got a
wire an hour ago asking us to keep a look-out."

"A trick of the river pirates, I suppose,"
said Mr. Stevens: "nothing to do with the
rebellion."

"Perhaps not; but Su Fing owes
Burroughs a grudge for his interference in
that affair with Ting Chuh.  By the way,
weren't you in that too, Errington?"

"I lent a hand."

"If Su Fing isn't in it himself, you may
be sure some of his people are, and it looks
as if we shall have trouble all up the Min."

"You're not going, Errington?" said
Mr. Stevens, as his guest rose.

"If you don't mind.  I've a bit of a headache,
and mean to turn in early."

"Sorry.  Well, come up to-morrow, and
we'll have a rubber.  Good-night."

The headache was not feigned, but Errington's
principal reason for leaving early was
that he wished to think over the news he
had just heard.  The flying boat had been
stolen, then!  He could hardly explain to
himself why he had said nothing of his
discovery; unconsciously, no doubt, he felt
that to speak would have opened up the
matter of his lost friendship with
Burroughs--a matter which he could not have
discussed.

"What a fool I was not to bring it away!"
he thought.  "Yet why should I bother
myself?  The Mole's no pal of mine now.
Let him look after his own property."

But this attitude did not last.  The roots
of the old comradeship remained, though
the leaves had withered.  In the night
recollections of former days crowded upon
his mind, and his thoughts of the Mole
became more kindly.

"Hanged if I don't fetch it, and send it
back to him," he said to himself.

He got up about four o'clock in the
morning, called Lo San, and told him to put
some chapatties and soda water into the
sampan.

"We're going to fetch Mr. Burroughs'
flying boat," he said.

"No this time, sah," said the servant,
anxiously.  "No belongey leason.[#]  Plenty
bad fellas longside ribber."

.. vspace:: 2

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   [#] It's unreasonable.

.. vspace:: 2

"Sa-ni kow-tow[#]!" cried Errington, using
a phrase often employed by the common
people.  "You no come, I go all-same alone.  Savvy?"

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left smaller

   [#] I'll cut off your head.

.. vspace:: 2

But Lo San, like most of his kind, had a
sense of loyalty.  He made no further protest,
but went sullenly about the preparations
for the journey.

Errington, now that he had made up his
mind to get the flying boat, determined to
leave nothing undone to ensure success.  He
took a rifle as well as his revolver, and gave
similar weapons to his "boy."  It occurred
to him that he would have done more
prudently in enlisting help among the other
Englishmen; but he took a sort of grim
pleasure in setting out unaided; it would be
heaping coals of fire on Burroughs' head, he
thought, to restore the flying boat to him.
And he did not mean him to know to whom
he was indebted for its recovery.

They left the town before sunrise, when
nobody was about.  In his pursuit of sport
on the previous day Errington had been led
on so insensibly that he had not taken
particular note of the course; and as Lo
San, with the China boy's usual indifference,
had left everything to his master, they were
some hours in discovering the channel through
the swamp.  Then, however, they proceeded
rapidly, though with great caution.  On
arriving at the broad pool, they moved
slowly round it, prying up and down the
channels opening from it, to make sure that
no other craft was in sight.  Then they
crept into the tortuous passage to the right
among the reeds, and silently approached the
shore where they had seen the flying boat.

Errington had reason to bless his circumspection
when, on rounding the last curve, he
caught sight of six or eight sampans drawn
up on the shoaling ground.  He instantly
checked his own craft and withdrew a few
yards into the reed-bed, where he could see,
without being seen.  Two or three of the better
shanties, which on the day before had been
boarded up, were now open.  A wizened old
Chinawoman was cooking fish at a small stove
in the open space in front--no doubt a late
breakfast for the crews of the sampans, who
were resting after nocturnal prowlings.

Errington considered what he should do.
In his decision impulse and calculation had
an equal share.  An alarm would bring
perhaps a score of pirates after him, and it
would be impossible to tow the flying boat
fast enough to escape the pursuit of the
pirates' sampans.  Even with nothing in
tow, he could not propel his craft so rapidly
as these men who lived on the river.  Nor
could he bring the boat away by its own
power, for the engine could not be started
without noise; and supposing he got away in
time to escape the rifles of the pirates, he
would almost certainly stick in a reed-bed
and fall an easy prey.  Besides, the engine
might not be in working order.  If the
flying boat was to be brought away,
swiftness and silence were equally necessary.
There was little doubt that as soon as the
meal was cooked, the Chinawoman would
rouse her employers.

The bow of the flying boat touched the
shore, where, as Errington had noticed on
the previous day, it was held by a rope
attached to a ruined hut.  The stern was
partially concealed by a thin clump of
rushes.  Errington made up his mind that
he must get on board, approaching through
these rushes, and discover whether the
engine was in working order, and whether
there was any petrol on board.  If the
engine was workable, Lo San must tow the
vessel out until he reached clear water, while
he himself got ready to run it under its own power.

It was a chilly morning, but Lo San was
shivering rather with fright than with cold.
He looked aghast when his master told him
in a rapid whisper the plan he had formed.
But he knew that his best chance of saving
his skin was to do as he was told, and at
Errington's order he gently propelled the
sampan until it lay within the shelter of the
reeds near the stern of the flying boat.
Telling him to remain perfectly still,
Errington let himself gently down over the side,
carrying a rope; then, keeping the flying
boat as much as possible between himself
and the old Chinawoman, he waded the few
yards that separated him from the stern of
the vessel.  To this he made fast the rope;
then, gently lifting the matting a foot or
two, he clambered as quietly as possible over
the side and into the hull.

A little light filtered through the meshes
of the mats, but not enough for his purpose.
Accordingly he took out his knife and cut a
slit in the covering on the side away from the
huts.  Then, crouching low so that the
matting should not be disturbed by his
movements, he crept to the engine.

He found that the petrol tank was nearly
empty, but luckily there were two or three
unbroached cans of the spirit.  One of these
he opened, and poured the petrol in a slow
noiseless trickle into the tank.  It was
impossible without noise to test the
machinery, but he examined it as carefully as he
could in the dim light: everything appeared
to be in order.

Now crawling into the fore part of the
boat, he slipped his hand between the
matting and the gunwale, and cautiously
cut through the mooring-rope.  It fell into
the water with a dull splash; fortunately the
vessel was so low built that the rope had
only a foot or two to fall.  Waiting until
the unbroken silence without assured him
that the old woman had not taken alarm,
he crept back again towards the stern,
lowered himself into the water as silently as
he had raised himself before, and began to
haul very gently.  The shore was soft, so
that the movement of the keel over it made
no sound; on the other hand, the soil clung
to the keel, and to move the vessel required
more force than Errington expected.  But
it slid inch by inch towards the water, and
might have floated in absolute silence had
Errington been able to see what he was
doing.  But just at the critical moment,
when the most minute care was needed, he
pulled a little harder than he should have
done, and the bow dropped into the water
with a splash.

Errington, hidden behind the stern, did
not see the little contretemps which might
have provoked a smile from Lo San, if he
had had any sense of humour, and had not
been quaking with fright.  At the splash
the old woman looked up from her cooking,
in the direction of the waterway through
which the sampans had come.  Seeing
nothing there, she muttered a malediction,
and was turning to her stove again, when she
happened to notice that the mat-covered
craft a few yards away was floating free,
and that the mooring-rope lay on the shore.
Without any suspicion other than that the
vessel had somehow worked loose, she
dropped the fish she had been preparing, and
hobbled down the shore with the intention
of tying the boat up again.  Quickening her
steps as she saw that it was moving away,
she leant forward to clutch it, missed her
footing, and plunged headlong into the water
with a stifled scream.

Hitherto Errington had carefully kept out
of sight; but at the double sound of scream
and splash he could not refrain from peeping
round the side of the boat.  The old woman
was floundering in the effort to regain her
feet.  The water was no more than three
feet deep, but the bottom was muddy, and
the woman, scared by what was probably the
first immersion of her life, could not stand
up, but was still on hands and knees, only
her head showing.  Errington had never
heard such screaming.  Fearing that the
old creature would be drowned, he rushed
forward in his impulsive way to help her.

His chivalry deserved a better reward.
The old crone, as soon as she saw him, let
out a series of even more piercing shrieks
than before, and, finding her feet at last,
scrambled ashore, and with a limping trot
like that of an aged cab-horse, fled towards
the huts.  "Fan-kwei!  Fan-kwei[#]!" she
screamed, rubbing her wet face with her fishy
fingers.

.. vspace:: 2

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   [#] Foreign devil.

.. vspace:: 2

Even as he had reached her, Errington
repented of his impulse, for the woman's
shrieks had already drawn a grimy head to
the entrance of one of the huts.  The pirate
was presumably too sleepy, or too much
confused at the sudden awakening, to see
clearly what was going on, for he gave
Errington time to dash back to the stern of
the boat.  Hauling it through the reed-bed--and
it required little force now that the
vessel was afloat---he fastened the stern to the
sampan with a few turns of the rope, telling
Lo San to paddle with all his might towards
the water-way.

The Chinaman needed no second bidding.
The huts were already discharging their
fierce-eyed occupants.  Lo San paddled with
an energy of which he had never shown
himself capable in the service of his master.
Errington waded beside the flying boat,
doing what he could to fend it off the reed
banks.  He was already out of sight of the
huts, but the yells and execrations behind
showed only too clearly that the pirates were
launching their sampans in pursuit.  Had
he got sufficient start of them to gain the pool?

"Ossoty! ossoty[#]!" he cried to Lo San,
and the panting Chinaman put still more
force into his strokes.  Errington looked
behind, but the windings of the channel, and
the encumbering reeds, prevented him from
seeing how near the pursuers had come.
His momentary turn caused the boat to
jam against a clump of rushes, and a few
seconds were lost while he went to the bows
and with a heave of the shoulder sent the
vessel once more into the stream.

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left smaller

   [#] Make haste.

.. vspace:: 2

In a few seconds more, Lo San gave a
jubilant shout of "Hai galaw!"  He had
come to the pool.  Instantly Errington sprang
into the flying boat and, telling the boy still
to paddle hard, flung off the matting and
switched on the current.  To his intense
relief the sparking was instantaneous.

"Stop!" he yelled.

Lo San dropped his paddle.  The propeller
was whirling round, and Errington with his
hand on the wheel turned the vessel towards
the open channel.  A sampan shot out from
the network of reeds behind them.  The
man in it uttered a shout, threw down his
paddle, lifted his rifle, and fired.  Lo San
tumbled into the bottom of the sampan,
which was now being towed by the
hydroplane.  Errington did not see him; his
eyes were glued on the channel in front.
He dared not as yet put the engine at full
speed; the reed-beds on either side projected
here and there too far into the water-way;
if the propeller became entangled the game
would be up.  More sampans emerged from
the rushes; more shots were fired; but the
pirates' marksmanship was wild, and seeing
that the hydroplane was going at a slow
pace, they ceased firing and paddled
frantically on, hoping to overtake the vessel
before it came clear of the channel into the
main stream.

.. _`A CRITICAL MOMENT`:

.. figure:: images/img-096.jpg
   :align: center
   :alt: A CRITICAL MOMENT

   A CRITICAL MOMENT

The foremost sampan was within a few
yards of the little craft in which Lo San,
quite unhurt, lay cowering in the bottom,
when Errington at last considered it safe
to open his throttle.  The hydroplane shot
forward at a pace that seemed to snatch
the following sampan out of the very hands
of the pursuers.  From this time the chase
was hopeless.  The pirates paddled on a
short distance further, then stopped, yelling
with rage, and firing after their quarry with
blind fury.  Not a shot took effect.  The
hydroplane was soon out of sight, if not out
of range.

Errington looked behind.  Lo San was
not to be seen.  With a qualm lest the boy
had been hurt, Errington slowed down,
stopped, and waited anxiously until the
sampan came up by its own momentum.

"Are you hurt?" he cried, seeing the boy inert.

"No, sah: velly muchee funk," replied
Lo San, without offering to rise.

"Then get up, you owl, and come aboard,"
said Errington.  "Lug the sampan up after
you.  First chop numpa one fightee man
*you* are."

"My no likee fightee pidgin," mumbled the
boy, as he clambered up.

"You belongey chow-chow pidgin,"[#] said
Errington.  "Sit down."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left smaller

   [#] You're better at eating.

.. vspace:: 2

And starting the engine again he ran into
the open river, and rushed up-stream against
a strong current at the rate of twenty-five knots.

On arriving below the town, he steered the
vessel into a narrow unfrequented creek,
lowered the sampan, and finished the journey
as he had begun it.

"Don't say a word about this, or I'll sack
you," he said to Lo San.

He walked up the town, to the office of the
local agent of Mr. Burroughs.

"Mr. Ted has lost his flying boat, I hear,"
he said unconcernedly.

"Yes," replied the agent.  "It was stolen
yesterday."

"Well, the thieves apparently didn't know
what to do with it.  You'll find it in the
creek just below Mr. Stevens' wharf."

"You don't say so, Mr. Errington!  That's
extraordinary.  I'll wire to Sui-Fu at
once."

"You had better say that you'll send it
down in tow of the first steamer.  That'll
be safe enough, I think."

"I'll do that; but maybe Mr. Ted will
come up and fetch it himself.  I'm glad it's
so soon found, any way."

"Yes.  And oh!--I say, you needn't mention
me," said Errington as he walked out of
the office.

The agent telegraphed the bare news of
the recovery of the vessel, and asked for
instructions.  But thinking over the matter,
he felt a little puzzled at Errington's manner,
and made a shrewd guess that he had
somehow gained possession of the stolen vessel.
He wrote next day to Burroughs, mentioning
his suspicion.

Burroughs, who had himself housed the
flying boat on the night preceding the
disappearance, and heard of the theft early
next morning, was naturally delighted to
hear that his vessel had been recovered.
But he felt somewhat surprised that it had
been found at such a distance up the river.
He had at once suspected that the theft
was the work of river pirates, but so far as
he knew they were quite unfamiliar with the
working of a petrol motor, and they could
hardly have towed the vessel so far against
a strong current in the time which had
elapsed between its loss and its recovery.
He telegraphed to his agent to report how
much petrol there was on board, and the
reply that the tank was nearly full, and that
there were two unopened cans besides,
confirmed his belief that the boat had not
travelled under its own power.

This made him suspect that it had been
carried up on some larger vessel; but no
steamer had gone in that direction, nor was
it in any case likely that the boat would have
been put on board any of the regular
steamers--unless some one had purloined it
for a joke.  That was inconceivable.  He
mentioned the matter to his comprador,
Sing Wen, who said that he would make inquiries.

Later in the day, the comprador reported
that Reinhardt's motor launch had been seen
within a few miles of the port, shortly before
dark on the evening of the theft.  A
telegram to his agent brought the news that
the launch had passed Chia-ling Fu on the
following morning.  Putting these two facts
together, Burroughs came to the conclusion
that the German had been concerned in the
theft, though for what motive he could not
imagine.

His agent's letter, suggesting that Errington
had at least played some part in its
recovery, gave him a good deal of pleasure.
The severance of their friendship had
troubled him, and Errington's complete
silence since his removal to Chia-ling Fu had
inflicted a deep wound.  To him, looking
back upon it, the cause of the quarrel
appeared too trumpery to justify a
permanent breach; but knowing his old friend's
temper, he had hesitated to take the first
step towards a reconciliation.  And being
somewhat stiff-necked himself when he
believed that he was in the right, he could not
bring himself to apologize for a wrong which
he had not done.

Now, however, there seemed to be an
opening, and he wrote to Errington the
following note:--

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left smaller

   "MY DEAR PIDGE,

.. class:: left smaller

"I've just heard that I owe the recovery of
the old flier to you.  Many thanks.  I'm burning to
know more about it, and would run up if I weren't
too busy just now.  When I can find time I shall
come, and give you a call.  I hope you like your new
quarters.

.. class:: left smaller

   "Yours ever,
   "THE MOLE."

.. vspace:: 2

Errington read the note with a curling lip.

"He thinks I've forgotten, does he?" he thought.

And he tore the note across, and threw it
petulantly into the waste-paper basket.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`SU FING'S PRISONER`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER IX


.. class:: center medium

   SU FING'S PRISONER

.. vspace:: 2

Four days after Burroughs dispatched
his letter to Errington, when the lapse of
time showed pretty plainly that it was not
likely to get an answer, he received a visit
from Mr. Ting.  The merchant, though he
had refused Errington's request for help,
had not done so out of hard-heartedness or
stinginess, but from a wish that the boy
should learn a severe lesson, that would
leave an enduring stamp.  But when he
had gone a few days' journey down the river
his heart smote him.  He was young enough
himself to understand the racking anxiety
which his old friend's son was suffering;
and his knowledge of the desperate
expedients to which harassed young fellows
sometimes resorted, made him decide to return
to Chia-ling Fu, so that he might be at
hand to rescue Errington from the worst
consequences of his folly.

He had called at Sui-Fu on his way up
a few days before, intending to find out
from Burroughs more precise details of
Errington's circumstances; for as yet he
had not heard of the split between the two
friends.  But Burroughs chanced to be
absent up country, and they did not meet.
On this second occasion, however, Burroughs
was in his office when the Chinaman called.

"How d'you do, Mr. Ting?" he said;
"sorry I wasn't in the other day.  All well
at Shanghai?"

"Yes, when I left.  That is now some
days ago.  You are doing well, your father says."

"Rubbing along, you know.  These
disturbances up the river aren't good for
business."

"That is tlue.  And your flend Pidge--I
have his school name, you see--will know
that even better than you.  I saw him a
few days ago."

Burroughs did not reply, and Mr. Ting's
observant eyes detected an air of constraint
in his manner.

"You do not see him so often now, of
course," the Chinaman went on.  "That
is a pity, when you are such good flends.
It is a pity, too, that he is so fa' away.
He did not look well: do you know what
tloubles him?"

"He hasn't said anything to me," said
Burroughs, looking still more uncomfortable.

"He has not sent you a letter lately?"

"No," said Burroughs, adding hastily:
"but I wrote to him a few days ago."

"And you have heard of no tlouble he
is in?" Mr. Ting persisted.

Burroughs hesitated: it was his way to
think before he spoke.  He had heard only
gossip about the card-playing that went on
at Chia-ling Fu, and it seemed hardly fair
to Errington to discuss his personal matters
merely on hearsay.  Mr. Ting, of course,
was his friend; all the more reason, thought
Burroughs, for not telling what Errington
himself had evidently not told.  But
Mr. Ting seemed to divine what was passing in
the boy's mind.

"I think you had better tell me all about
it," he said quietly.  "I have a good leason
for asking: we are both his flends.  Tlouble
neglected becomes still more tloublesome,
as we say.  Tell me, then."

"The truth is," said Burroughs, won
over by the Chinaman's evident sincerity,
"Pidge and I have had a row.  A ridiculous
cause.  He thought I doubted his honour;
I lost my wool----"

"Your wool!  I do not understand: is
it not cotton?"

"My temper, I mean," said Burroughs,
with a smile.  "A silly thing to do, because
you always say more than you mean."

"Ah yes!  Anger is a little fire: if it is
not checked, it burns down a lofty pile.
Well?"

"We parted on bad terms, and haven't
spoken since.  He said he wouldn't have
anything to do with me till I apologized."

"And the apology?  You sent it in your letter?"

"No, I'm sorry to say I didn't.  Idiotic
pride on my part, for of course I never really
doubted him; only after you've had a row
it's jolly hard to say so--to a fellow like me,
at any rate."

"Then you come with me, and you shall
be flends again.  The yielding tongue
endures: the stubborn teeth pelish.  Now
you have had confidence in me, I will be
open too.  Pidge has been gambling."

"I know," said Burroughs gloomily.

"And he owes a thousand dollars or
mo'e.  We must save him flom the men
who have led him away, and turn him flom
gambling.  I asked him to plomise not to
gamble again: he would not; plaps for you
he will."

"I don't know," said Burroughs.  "He
is so touchy, you know; can't bear to be
advised.  We shall have to go very carefully
to work.  But there's a hope in what has
happened lately.  He can't really bear me
a serious grudge, because he took the trouble
to recover my flying boat and send it back to me."

"Hai!  How was that?"

Burroughs told of the theft of the vessel,
and of what had happened since.  Mr. Ting
listened attentively, and then related a
curious story.

On his way up the river he had met the
captain of a junk whom he occasionally
employed, and in conversation with him
learnt of a strange experience that had
befallen him not far above Sui-Fu.  He had
been sailing down in his junk, and called
at a riverside village to take on some goods.
Having stowed his cargo, and wishing that
the junk should reach Sui-Fu before night,
for fear of the river pirates, he sent her on
under charge of his mate, while he remained
to negotiate a certain business transaction
with an up-country merchant whose arrival
at the village had been delayed.

On the completion of his business, just
before sunset, he started in a sampan
manned by two men, expecting to overtake
the junk before she anchored for the night.
Much to his alarm, when only three or four
miles above the port, he discovered that a
boat was dogging him.  He did not know
whether the crew were pirates or police:
it was now too dark to distinguish; but as
a matter of precaution he ordered his men
to pull into the bank, and wait until the
boat passed.

When he got within the shadow of some
trees overhanging the stream, he was more
alarmed than ever: the pursuers were also
making for the bank.  He was quaking in
his shoes; but the boat, instead of coming
directly towards him, passed by at a distance
of some thirty yards, and disappeared.

He waited until it had had time to get
out of earshot, and resumed his journey.
But he had hardly gone a quarter-mile down
stream, when he heard a low hail, and then
the sound of several voices.  Steering again
into the bank, he looked down the river,
upon which a crescent moon was throwing
a pale light.  And then he saw the boat
re-appear, towing what looked like a launch
into mid-stream.  At the same moment
he heard the throbbing of a motor vessel,
and from round a bend in the river there
came a large launch, which hove to as it
reached the boat.

In a few minutes the motor launch was
again under way, and as it passed rapidly
up stream, the captain of the junk, being
well acquainted with all the motor vessels
on the river, recognized it at once as that
belonging to Reinhardt.  But it was not
alone.  It had in tow the smaller craft
which had been drawn out from the bank.
This smaller vessel would perhaps not have
attracted the captain's attention had it
not been somewhat curious in shape, owing,
as he supposed, to a full cargo which was
concealed under matting.

"There's not much doubt it was my
boat," said Burroughs, when Mr. Ting had
ended his story.  His face had gone pale,
and there was a twitching of his nostrils;
but his tone of voice was perhaps even more
equable than usual.  Mr. Ting noted how
he differed from Errington in that respect.

"It looks as if Mr. Reinhardt wanted to
pick a quarrel," he added.

"Velly culious," said Mr. Ting, reflectively.
"What you call a plactical joke, plaps."

"A kind of joke I don't appreciate," said
Burroughs shortly.  "I think Pidge must
have understood that.  He's thick with
Reinhardt, who probably told him of the
trick, and learnt that he had gone a trifle
too far.  Are you going up to Chia-ling
Fu to-day, sir?"

"If you will come with me.  A word of
advice, if I may.  Say nothing to Leinhadt
about the matter until you know.  One
egg is better than ten cackles."

Burroughs discussed a few business matters
with his comprador; his boy Chin Tai
meanwhile packed his bag; and in an hour
he was ready to accompany the merchant
to his launch.  They had crossed the
gang-way, and were waiting for the skipper to
cast off, when they saw an old steam launch
coming swiftly down from the direction of
Chia-ling Fu.

"Do you mind holding on a few minutes?"
said Burroughs.  "She may have a letter
from Pidge on board."

"Velly well," said Mr. Ting, putting on
his spectacles.  "Lot of passengers, you
see: velly culious."

The deck of the launch did, indeed, present
an unusual appearance.  Instead of the one
or two white passengers who might have
been expected at this hour--for the vessel
must have left Chia-ling Fu very early in
the morning--there was a considerable crowd
of men, women and children.  Every inch
of standing room appeared to be occupied.
And as the launch drew nearer, it was plain
that the passengers were of all
nationalities--German, English and Japanese traders
with their families, English and French
missionaries conspicuous among the rest by
their Chinese garments.

"Looks like a general exodus," said
Burroughs, his eyes narrowing.  "Something is wrong."

"Yes," said Mr. Ting: "velly much long."

He recrossed the gangway to the quay.
Burroughs, shading his eyes against the
sunlight, remained on the boat, searching
the crowd for the familiar tall form of
Errington.

The launch drew in, and the merchants
on board, recognizing Mr. Ting, began to
shout to him; but all speaking together in
their respective languages, it was impossible
to make out what any of them said.  As
soon as they had landed, however, Burroughs,
who had now returned to the quay, was
singled out by his agent, and told of the
exciting events which had happened at
Chia-ling Fu.

For several days the European community
had been in a state of nervous tension
owing to reports of the successes of the
rebels further north.  Despite all the efforts
of the ill-armed, ill-disciplined rabble that
so frequently masquerades as an army in
the interior of China, the insurgents had
made great headway.  They had captured
Cheng Tu, and an attempt to retake the
place had been defeated, with considerable
loss to the so-called regular troops.  The
success of the rebels had brought, as is
always the case, large accessions to their
numbers.  All the restless and turbulent
elements of the province for two hundred
miles round had flocked to the captured
city.  There were no Europeans there except
a few French missionaries who were reported
to be held prisoners, but to have suffered
no ill-usage.

This news put every one at Chia-ling Fu
on the alert.  Arrangements were made to
move down river at short notice.  The
Europeans recognized that, whatever might
be the treatment of the missionary prisoners,
the lives of any white men captured by the
insurgents must always be in jeopardy.
Even where their leaders desired, from
policy, to protect their prisoners, the
blood-thirstiness and anti-foreign prejudices of
their ignorant following were always likely
to force their hand.

It had been expected at Chia-ling Fu,
however, that news of any southward
movement of the rebels would be reported by
native spies in time to enable the Europeans
to make their escape.  But just before
dawn on this morning, they had been
wakened by the sound of shots and a great
hubbub.  They sprang up, pulled on their
clothes hurriedly, seized their arms, and
sallied out to see what was afoot.  They
found the city already in the hands of the
insurgents.  Making a wide circuit by night,
an immense force had crept upon the place
from the landward side, and at the same
time a large fleet of vessels of all descriptions,
including two or three steamers captured
at Cheng Tu, had come down the river and
anchored at some little distance above the
city.  The sleepy sentinels at all the gates
had been surprised and overpowered, the
rabble poured in, and the place fell without
striking a blow.

All these details were not known until
afterwards: the confusion at dawn had been
so great that the Europeans knew nothing
except the bare fact that the city was
captured, and that they were prisoners.
To their great surprise, in a few hours they
were all released, told to collect their
belongings, and conveyed to the steamer
which had just brought them down the river.
Clearly the leaders of the insurgents intended
to show that the rising was a purely domestic
one; they did not wish to provoke action
by the foreign Powers.

All the time that Burroughs was listening
to the story told him by his agent, he kept
his eyes on the gangway, hoping to see
Errington step off.  He recognized several
acquaintances among the passengers, but
his old friend did not appear.

"Where's Mr. Errington?" he asked his agent.

"Upon my word, Mr. Burroughs, I
don't know.  I never thought of him.  I
suppose----"

"Mr. Stevens, was Errington on the
boat?" asked Burroughs, stepping towards
the gangway and taking the merchant by
the sleeve.

"Errington!  Of course he was.  That
is, I suppose so.  We are all here; but such
a crowd of us that we were very much mixed
up.  Hamilton, did you see Errington?"

"Surely: but no, now I come to think
of it, I didn't.  Isn't he here?"

Answers of the same kind came from all
the passengers who were interrogated.  In
the confusion and excitement, in their
preoccupation with themselves and their
families, they hardly knew who had been
among them, and who not.  It was very
soon certain, however, that Errington was
not among those who left the vessel.

"What can have happened to him?"
Burroughs said to Mr. Ting anxiously.  "He's
such a hot-headed chap that it would be
just like him to show fight."

Mr. Ting looked more troubled than
Burroughs had ever before seen him.

"I hope he is safe," he said.  "Plaps he
escaped in a sampan, and will come by and
by.  We must wait and see."

But though several vessels came down in
the course of the day, bringing native
merchants who had fled from the city, Errington
was not in any of them, nor did his boy
appear.  Mr. Ting's journey up-stream was
necessarily abandoned.  With the rebels in
possession of the river no one would be
safe.  It was with very anxious hearts that
Burroughs and the Chinaman awaited the
dawn of another day.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`LO SAN'S PILGRIMAGE`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER X


.. class:: center medium

   LO SAN'S PILGRIMAGE

.. vspace:: 2

Startled from sleep by the mingled din
of shots and yells, Errington sprang from
his bed, and seizing his revolver, rushed to
the door of his little bungalow and unlocked
it.  It was thrown back in his face, and
before he could recover himself, the weapon
was knocked from his hand, and he found
himself on the floor, with a dozen
villainous-looking, ragged and dirty Chinamen on top
of him, screeching at the pitch of their voices.
He understood not a word of what they
said; none of them could speak even
pidgin-English: had he known Chinese he would
have learnt that the "foreign devil" was
destined to be carried to the arch-leader
of the insurrection.  Su Fing had an old
grudge to pay off against him.  The brigand
had taken particular trouble to ascertain
the dwelling of the young Englishman to
whom he owed a deep scar on his learned
brow, and a period of imprisonment which,
though short, had left a rankling sore in
his aspiring soul.

Errington made his captors understand
by signs that he preferred not to face the
world in his pyjamas, and was allowed to
dress himself in their presence, amid a battery
of remarks more or less offensive, but
luckily incomprehensible to him.  His hands
were then tied behind him, and he was
hurried down to the quay, placed on board
a gunboat, and carried up the river.

His captors, squatting about him with
their spears held upright in their hands,
may perhaps have been surprised at the
smile upon the young Englishman's face.
Errington was, in fact, amused at his
situation--rather relieved than dismayed.  This
was the very day on which he had promised
to pay his debt to Reinhardt--the end of
the week of grace.  He had gone to bed
feeling that next day he would be ruined
and shamed; to find himself the prisoner
of Chinese rebels, who were carrying him
he knew not where, but certainly out of
Reinhardt's reach, struck him as a comical
trick of fate.  At that moment he felt
almost affectionate towards the ugly ruffians
who were squinting at him.

Meanwhile some of the rebel band were
making themselves very free with his
belongings.  They ransacked his wardrobe,
appropriated his rifle, his silver cups and
other trophies of athletic prowess, tossed
about his papers and a pack of cards they
discovered in a drawer, and gathered up into
bundles all that they deemed worth looting.
One of them, passing into the out-buildings
at the back, caught Lo San by the pigtail,
and soundly thrashed him for being so
evil-disposed as to serve a European master.
The cook and the other domestics had
already seen the error of their ways and left
without notice.

It would perhaps have surprised any one
who had seen Lo San only on the occasion
of the adventure in the swamp, to find that
he alone of Errington's household had not
fled at this climax of his master's
misfortunes.  But Lo San was made of good stuff.
He might tremble before a pirate, but his
soul was staunch to the master who had
been kind to him and paid him well.  The
devotion of his native servant is a gift which
many an Englishman in the East has learnt
to prize.

Lo San hung about the house, having
received his thrashing meekly, until the
looters had stripped it bare.  When they
had gone away, he wandered disconsolately
through the disordered rooms; nothing of
value was left, but he collected the scattered
papers and the pack of cards: "Massa velly
muchee likee he," he murmured.

Then he sat down to think.  He was very
sore, in body and mind; and very poor, for
his castigator had snatched away the little
bag, hung at his waist, in which he kept his
store of cash.  "Massa Ellington" was gone,
and it seemed to Lo San that he would know
no peace of mind until he at least discovered
his master's fate.  "Supposey he come back
sometime," he thought, "and look-see my
belongey 'nother massa!  My no catchee
plopa pidgin[#] that time, galaw!"  And after
an hour's solemn meditation he got up,
groaning as the movement reminded him of
his stripes, and went out into the town.

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left smaller

   [#] That won't be good business.

.. vspace:: 2

Outside a mean little eating-house he saw
a group of insurgents eating a breakfast (for
which they had not paid) of fat pork, rice
and beans, washed down with tea.  He
looked at them hard; none of the looters of
his master's bungalow were among them;
and it occurred to him that, as he had
probably a long journey before him, it was sound
sense to fortify himself with a meal.  But
he had no money; and though he guessed,
by the lugubrious countenance of the
eating-house keeper in the background, that the
eaters had none either, or at any rate would
not part with any, he was shy of joining
himself to them uninvited.  All at once a
happy thought struck him.  He put on an
engaging air of cheerful humility, and
addressing the group in the terms of flowery
compliment that come natural to a Chinaman,
he offered to show them a little magic
in return for food.  Being as comfortable
and content as men may be who have fed
well at another's expense, they gave a glad
assent, and Lo San, squatting before them,
produced the pack of cards.  He was a very
watchful and observant person, and, silent
and unnoticed in his master's room, had
looked on sometimes when Errington amused
his company with those tricks that seem to
the uninitiated such marvels of thought-reading.
He had picked up the secrets of one
or two, and now for a good hour he amazed
and mystified the rebels with simple tricks
which he had to repeat over and over again.

Thus establishing himself in their good
graces, he accepted with unctuous gratitude
the food which they dealt out to him--somewhat
meagrely, as a sea-beach audience
rewards its entertainers; and then, praising
their valour, generously buttering them, he
led them on to talk of the doings of the day.
It was not long before he had heard more
than enough about the exceeding greatness
of Su Fing, their august chief, whose Chinese
virtues shone with the lustre of the sun:
and with quick wit he jumped to the
conclusion that his master had been captured
by emissaries of Su Fing, who to be sure had
reason to remember his only meeting with
the Englishman.  The prisoner had without
doubt been carried to the rebel chief's
headquarters at Meichow, higher up the river;
and Lo San made up his mind that it was his
plain duty to journey to Meichow and
discover what his master's fate was to be.

Putting up the cards very carefully, for
they had a new value for him, he kow-towed
to his illustrious benefactors, as he
called the sorry ruffians, and took his way
to the riverside.  The river was crowded
with various craft of the insurgents, and
some distance down stream the launch on
which the Europeans had been placed was
puffing towards Sui-Fu.  Lo San, primed
with information gleaned from his late hosts,
found it now an easy matter to pass himself
off as a rebel, especially as he contrived to
get possession of a spear which had been
incautiously laid down by its owner.
Swaggering with a truculent air among the crowd,
he soon discovered from their talk that the
Europeans had been released, and supposed
that his master was among them.  But just
as he was considering which of the sampans
lying at the shore he should appropriate
for a night journey to Sui-Fu, he was unlucky
enough to catch the eye of a seller of wood,
whom he had kicked from the house a day
or two before for asking an absurd price.
This man also had armed himself with a
spear, and letting out a fierce "Hai yah!"
he sprang towards Lo San to avenge himself
for his kicking, at the same time acquainting
people at large with the fact that the wretch
was the impudent wind-inflated hireling of
a foreign devil.  The unhappy consequence
was that Lo San was set upon by a dozen
others besides the wood-seller, and soundly
thrashed a second time for the same offence,
an injustice that wounded his soul even
more poignantly than the spear-butts his body.

But there was compensation even in this,
for while his persecutors were belabouring
him, they let their tongues wag freely with
abuse and objurgation, and the wood-seller
taunted him with the loss of his master,
who would soon, he said, be "sliced" for the
amusement of the august Su Fing.  Lo San,
when left to himself, reflected that but for
this second beating he might have gone
down uselessly to Sui-Fu, when his master
had been carried in a quite contrary
direction.  "Even in the blackest thunderstorm
there is a flash of lightning," he said to
himself, resolving to journey up-stream as soon
as he ached less.

His misfortunes, however, made him wary.
If he purloined a sampan and paddled up
the river, he would certainly meet many
rebels; and with his self-confidence shaken
he could not face the risk of another
thrashing.  So he resolved to perform the journey
to Meichow on foot.  He found a secluded
nook where he might rest a while; then,
still sore, and beginning to feel hungry again,
he set off on his long tramp.

It is not necessary to describe his journey
at length.  There was no beaten road; he
had to find his way over fields of mustard and
beans, through woods, and across streams
lined with bamboos.  He passed the night,
cold and hungry, perched in the lower
branches of an oak, and started again as
soon as it was light.  When he came to a
village, he procured food by exhibiting his
magical skill with the cards; but he avoided
the more populous places, and walked for
hours together without seeing a human being.
It was a very weary, tattered, woebegone
object that at length stole into Meichow.

Here again he put the cards to profitable
use at an eating-house.  He learnt that Su
Fing was absent, having gone westward with
a large force to deal with the regular troops
that were said to be marching from Tibet.
Everybody knew that an English prisoner
had been brought in the day before, and was
now incarcerated in the yamen of the prefect,
who had fled when Su Fing raided the town.
It was a commodious mansion, standing in
excellently laid-out grounds, with a large
piece of ornamental water on which the
prefect had been wont to paddle his pagoda-boat
of an evening, feeding his swans.  In
Su Fing's absence, the place was occupied
by his personal retainers.

Footsore and exceedingly depressed, Lo
San dragged himself to the yamen, and stood
like a humble mendicant at the gate,
watching the stream of people that went in and
out.  If only he had had his bag of cash, he
might have been able to convey a message
to the prisoner within; door-keepers, and
more important officials, in China will do
much for money.  But he had no money;
even his pack of cards was useless now, and
Lo San limped sorrowfully away.

Once more giving himself to meditation,
his thoughts turned to "Massa Bullows."  He
knew of the rift between the friends;
he knew its cause; there is little
concerning his master that a Chinese "boy"
does not know.  He liked Burroughs; the
only thing in his disfavour was that he
employed a wretched creature named Chin
Tai.  It occurred to Lo San that "Massa
Bullows" ought at least to know of "Massa
Ellington's" whereabouts.  So it happened
that under cover of night the Chinaman
loosed a sampan from its moorings, steered
it into the river, and allowed himself to be
carried down by the stream towards
Chia-ling Fu and Sui-Fu beyond.  There was
not the same risk in going down the river
as there would have been in coming up, and
Lo San, paddling as soon as he was out of
earshot, was soon speeding along at a rapid
rate towards Sui-Fu.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`REINHARDT SHOWS HIS COLOURS`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XI


.. class:: center medium

   REINHARDT SHOWS HIS COLOURS

.. vspace:: 2

Early next morning, Burroughs, lying
awake, thinking about getting up, and
worrying about Errington, heard sounds of a
violent altercation in the compound outside his
windows.  He recognized the voice of his
boy Chin Tai, raised to an indignant squeal,
mingled with tones less shrill indeed, but
quite as angry.  The disputants were raging
at each other in Chinese, the words following
one upon another like the magnified twittering
of birds, or, as Burroughs thought with
mild amusement, like the click of typewriters.

Knowing no Chinese, he was unable to
follow the furious dialogue, and listened
drowsily, expecting that the noise would
soon subside.  But presently he heard the
sound of blows; the war of words had led
to active hostilities.  Springing out of bed,
he went to the window, and saw Chin Tai
wrestling with a Chinaman of most
disreputable appearance--some beggar,
perhaps, who had proved too importunate.

A moment afterwards Chin Tai flung his
opponent to the ground, knelt upon him, and
clasping his hands about the man's throat
was proceeding to knock his head against
the ground, when Burroughs called sharply
from the window.

"Get up!" he said.  "What for you makee
all this bobbely?"

Chin Tai rose at once, trembling with rage,
and for the moment unable to express
himself.  Released from his clutches, the other
man staggered to his feet as soon as he had
regained his breath; and Burroughs
recognized him, with a start of amazement, as
Lo San, Errington's boy.

"He come this side makee bobbely, sah,"
shouted Chin Tai.  "He hab catchee plenty
muck, no plopa come look-see massa so-fashion."

"Get out of it," cried Burroughs.  "Where
did you come from, Lo San?  Where's Mr. Errington?"

"Massa Ellington he Meichow side, sah.
He belongey plison Su Fing.  My come this
side tellum massa; Chin Tai he belongey
too-muchee sassy[#]; he say no can see massa;
my come long long wailo nightey-time, velly
sick inside.  What time my stlong, my
smash Chin Tai he ugly facee."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left smaller

   [#] Saucy.

.. vspace:: 2

"That'll do.  I'll be down in a minute.
Stay where you are."

Burroughs made a hasty toilet, ran down
into the compound, and eagerly questioned
the man, who he could see was half dead with
fatigue and hunger.  He shouted a peremptory
order to Chin Tai to bring some food,
which the boy obeyed with a very bad grace.
Lo San told his story, and produced the pack
of cards, now bent, torn and indescribably dirty.

His news gave Burroughs a great shock.
He had half convinced himself that
Errington had escaped from Chia-ling Fu at the
first alarm, and probably made his way down
stream with the idea of taking refuge on
Reinhardt's launch, which had been seen off
Pa-tang.  There was just a chance that he
had shown fight, and been overpowered; but
the fact that the other Europeans had suffered
no ill-treatment reassured Burroughs as to
Errington's ultimate safety.  The knowledge
that he had been deliberately captured by
Su Fing's orders and carried to the rebel's
head-quarters was alarming.  It seemed that
Su Fing's personal grudge against the
Englishman had prevailed over his wish to avoid
any act that would call for intervention by a
European Power.

Burroughs at once sent for his comprador,
Sing Wen.  He wished that he could have
consulted Mr. Ting, but the merchant had
gone down-stream to urge on preparations
for an expedition to recapture Chia-ling Fu.
A few hundred soldiers had come into
Sui-Fu on the previous day, and a small Chinese
gunboat was expected to arrive shortly; but
it was generally known that two or three
weeks must elapse before it was possible to
bring up a force large enough to cope with the
insurgents.  Meanwhile what was to become
of Errington?  Lo San had reported the
wood-seller's boast that Su Fing would
"slice" his prisoner; and though it was
incredible to Burroughs that the rebel chief
should dare to commit so monstrous a crime,
he felt very uneasy: there were many
indignities short of actual torture or death that
his old friend might suffer by Chinese
ingenuity.  It was important, if anything was
to be done for Errington, that it should be
done at once.

Having put all this to his comprador,
Burroughs asked for his advice.  Sing Wen
was a solid, hard-headed man of forty, who
had many connections of a business kind up
the river.  But he had to confess that in
this emergency he was at a loss.  Burroughs
suggested the bribing of the guards at Su
Fing's yamen before Su Fing himself
returned; but Sing Wen, while admitting
that money would work wonders sometimes,
pointed out that the present case was
exceptional.  The rebel chief's underlings
would scarcely be persuaded to connive at
the prisoner's escape, knowing that on Su
Fing's return they would certainly be put
to the torture.  Sing Wen quoted the maxim
of the famous bandit Ah Lum

   |   "Virtue is best: hold Knavery in dread;
   |   A Thief gains nothing if he lose his Head."
   |

Still, it would be something to open up
communications with the insurgents; and
Sing Wen in the last resort mentioned his
brother's brother-in-law, the keeper of the
opium den at Pa-tang, who had an extensive
acquaintance among Chinamen of doubtful
reputation, and could learn, better than
any other man he knew, what were the
possibilities of bringing influence to bear
at Meichow.

Pa-tang was not quite half-way between
Sui-Fu and Chia-ling Fu.  It was likely to
escape annoyance by the rebels because it
contained the only well-equipped opium
establishment in the district, and would
be visited indifferently by insurgents and
Government troops as neutral ground.
Burroughs decided to run up there with
the comprador in his hydroplane.  Sing Wen
pointed out that caution would be necessary,
because the river between Pa-tang and
Chia-ling Fu would certainly be well patrolled by
the rebels, and there was some risk of being
snapped up if the vessel were discovered out
of bounds, so to speak.  Burroughs, however,
made light of this.  His machine was
in perfect order, and he was confident of
being able to escape danger from anything
less than a shot from a gunboat.

They started before noon, and ran into the
little harbour of Pa-tang without attracting
much attention.  Burroughs remained on the
boat while Sing Wen visited his brother's
brother-in-law.  The comprador returned
in the course of an hour, and reported that,
as he had expected, his brother's brother-in-law
knew one of Su Fing's most trusted
retainers.  He was ready to go up river
himself and see what could be done to arrange
the escape of the prisoner.

Sing Wen, however, looked so downcast
that Burroughs asked him what was the
inside matter.

"My no likee pidgin so-fashion," replied
the man.  "My velly 'spectable fella, catchee
bad namee supposey fellas see my walkee
inside smokee houso."

Burroughs agreed, but pointed out that
an Englishman's life was at least as valuable
as a Chinaman's good name.  Since, however,
he wished to see the brother's brother-in-law
himself, it was arranged that the three should
meet at a little inn at the head of a creek
below the town, into which the hydroplane
could be run.

Thither the comprador brought his
relative, a man of perfectly respectable
appearance.  Burroughs told him to offer
five hundred dollars down to his friend at
Pa-tang, and promise a further two thousand,
to be paid in Shanghai, if the prisoner was
permitted to escape.  For his work as honest
broker the opium-house keeper should
receive five hundred dollars.  This
arrangement having been made, Burroughs returned
to Sui-Fu, promising to run up to the inn
from time to time to meet the man on his
return, the date of which would depend
on circumstances.

Burroughs found it difficult to control
his impatience.  During the next three
days he ran to Pa-tang and back several
times--more often than his comprador
thought wise.  On the afternoon of the
fourth day the negotiator returned, only to
report failure.  The man he had hoped to
bribe was, if not too faithful, at least too
fearful to undertake the job: Su Fing had
shown himself swift and terrible in his
punishments.  Endeavours to open up
negotiations in other directions had almost ended
in discovery, and the emissary had received
from his friend a hint that he was in
imminent danger.  He flatly refused to venture a
second time within the lion's jaws.

While they were speaking at the door of
the inn, they heard the sound of a launch
coming down the river.  The inn stood on a
slight eminence, from which the river could
be seen for some distance in each direction.
Sing Wen closely scanned the approaching
vessel, and in a few moments recognized it
as Reinhardt's launch.  It drew to the side
and entered the harbour.  A European was
seen to land.

"That massa Leinhadt," said the brother's
brother-in-law.  "My savvy he come my
shop.  He velly good customer.  My
belongey go chop-chop, no can keep he waitin'.
He no likee pipe got leady 'nother fella.
Velly solly, sah; no good this time."

He went away, and Burroughs was left
to digest the loss of five hundred dollars, and
to face the problem over again.  It seemed
quite hopeless.  If two thousand dollars
would not tempt the rebel, nothing would.
To most Chinamen up-country, such a sum
represented affluence beyond their wildest
dreams.  But Burroughs was one of those
men who never let go.  At school he had
been a plodder; all his successes had been
won by dogged perseverance; and he
returned to Sui-Fu determined to find
some means or other of securing the safety
of his friend.

An idea occurred to him later in the day.
Reinhardt had been coming down the river,
from the direction of Chia-ling Fu.  That
fact suggested that he was at any rate on
good terms with the rebels; indeed, it
reawakened Burroughs' suspicion that, behind
the scenes, the German was taking some
part in the insurrection.  He wondered
whether Reinhardt knew of Errington's
capture and imprisonment, and decided
that it was impossible, for the German, if
he had any influence with the rebels, would
certainly have taken immediate steps to
liberate a servant of his own firm, and one
who had been so closely associated with
himself.  Burroughs caught at the idea that
Reinhardt, as soon as he knew of Errington's
plight, would at once communicate with
the rebels on his behalf.

Reinhardt was at Pa-tang.  Burroughs
considered whether he should go there and
call upon him.  But reflecting that he would
find him at the opium-shop, he came to the
conclusion that it would be imprudent and
possibly useless to open the matter to him
there.  He was thinking of sending him a
note when, from his window, he saw the
motor launch coming down-stream, and
steering towards the town.  Reinhardt must have
paid only a passing call at Pa-tang, he thought.

He sent Chin Tai down to the harbour to
discover if the German landed from the
vessel.  In twenty minutes the man returned
with the news that Reinhardt had gone to
his own bungalow.  Instantly putting on
his hat, Burroughs hurried to see the German.

"Ah, Mr. Burroughs, zis is an honour,"
said Reinhardt, as his visitor was shown in.
"It is ze first time you visit my little house;
I hope it will not be ze last."

"Thanks, I'm sure," said Burroughs.
"I've come on a private matter of
importance, Mr. Reinhardt.  You've heard about
Errington?"

"What!  Has he apsconded?"

"Absconded!  What on earth do you
mean?  He's shut up in Su Fing's yamen
at Meichow."

"Indeed!  Zat surprise me.  Zat is a
little awkward for your friend."

"Your friend too, Mr. Reinhardt," said
Burroughs bluntly.  "I am glad you didn't
know it.  I came to ask if you would use
your influence with Su Fing to get the poor
chap released."

"My influence!  Wiz Su Fing!  Himmel,
do you not know zat Su Fing is ze leader, ze
motor spirit, of zis insurrection?  Zat he
violates law and order?  And you speak of
me, a German, having influence wiz him?
My dear boy," he went on, laying his hand
on Burroughs' arm, "you are young, wiz
not much experience; zerefore I forgive ze
insult."

Burroughs drew his arm away, and was
on the point of blurting out the common
talk of the place; but his habit of
self-restraint came to his aid.

"I didn't intend any insult," he said.
"If you take it so, I apologize.  But
anyhow, Mr. Reinhardt, don't you think that
strong representations on your part, on
behalf of Ehrlich Söhne, might prove very
effectual?  Even Su Fing has a wholesome
respect for the Kaiser, you may be sure."

"Wizout doubt, but zat enters not into
ze business.  It is not a matter zat concerns
Ehrlich Söhne: your friend no longer is in
zeir employ."

"What?"

"I am sorry," said the German, with a
shrug; "but it must be.  He was so very
irregular, you know; let ze business go all
to pieces; piled up debts--I beg your pardon?"

In his honest indignation Burroughs had
let fall a word, but pulled himself up in
time: it was not his cue at present to quarrel
with the German.

"Ze firm could not stand no more," Reinhardt
went on, "so zey have dismissed him:
I have ze cheque for his zree munce salary."

"It's an unfortunate affair," said
Burroughs, as calmly as he could.  "Still, even
though he is no longer a servant of your
firm, you have yourself been so thick with
him that I'm sure you will do all you can, as
a merely personal matter."

"So zick!  Yes; and what is ze
consequence?  He is in my debt; he bleed me,
sir: he owe me five hundred dollars and
more.  He promised to pay me wizin a
week; ze week is past: he did not pay; and
now he is a prisoner: I never see my money.
You say, do somezink for him; what has he
done for me?  You ask me to spend my
money, risk my life, for a young fool wiz no
principle, no backbone, as you say--for a
fellow zat sponge on me, and zen cheat
me----"

The German was working up to a fine heat
of spurious indignation; but he was suddenly
checked by an abrupt movement on
Burroughs' part.  White with anger the young
Englishman had clenched his fist and raised
his arm to strike.  But he curbed himself as
Reinhardt shrank back.

"This is your house," he said, in a fierce
low tone, "and for the moment I am your
guest.  You may think yourself lucky.  If
I hear of your repeating any of the lies you
have just uttered, I swear I'll thrash you
within an inch of your life--you mean hound!"

He could not help catching the man by the
collar and shaking him.  Then, flinging him
off, he hurried out of the house.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`THE PRICE OF A MOUSTACHE`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XII


.. class:: center medium

   THE PRICE OF A MOUSTACHE

.. vspace:: 2

A man in a rage cannot think clearly;
and Burroughs was in such a heat of
indignation with Reinhardt that it was some time
before he was able to devote himself calmly
to the still unsolved problem.  The solution
came to him presently in a flash: he must
save Errington himself.  He could not leave
his friend to an unknown fate; something
must be done; he alone could do it.  His
flying boat was the fastest craft on the river.
He must fly up to Meichow, get Errington
out of the yamen by hook or crook, and bring
him back.  If he were discovered and
pursued, his speed, whether on the water or in
the air, would give him at least a good chance
of escape.

He sent for his comprador.

"I'm going up to Meichow, Sing Wen," he
said.  "You'll be in charge during my
absence.  If any one inquires for me, tell
nothing."

"Hai galaw!  No can do!" cried the
astonished Chinaman.  "Fly boatee velly
good: no can get inside plison; China fellas
look-see Yinkelis[#] man; makee plenty
bobbely, catchee all-same."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left smaller

   [#] English.

.. vspace:: 2

"Could you make me look like a Chinaman?"

"Plaps can do," said the comprador,
doubtfully.  "Yinkelis man no can talkee Chinee
all-same; he no smart inside."

"That's true.  I wish I could talk Chinese
like Reinhardt.  But look here: why
shouldn't I go as a German?  Mr. Errington's
firm is German; and if there is any
hanky-panky between the Germans and the
rebels I shall be all right in Meichow; at any
rate I can bluff it out."

"My no aglee all same."

"I don't want you to agree; you've
nothing to do with it."

"Supposey you catchee tlouble, what my
tellum boss Shanghai side?  He say my no
do plopa pidgin let you go wailo."

"I'll leave a note saying that I went
against your advice, so that in case anything
happens to me my father won't hold you
responsible.  You needn't say any more:
it's fixed.  You must make me look as much
like a German as you can; darken my
eyebrows, crop my hair.  I can't grow a
moustache, worse luck."

Feeling that an awkward situation might
arise if he made any change in his appearance
at Sui-Fu, he decided to run up to the
creek below Pa-tang, and do on board the boat
what little was possible to disguise himself.
He set off when the Europeans were taking
their midday meal, accompanied by Sing
Wen, who would leave him at Pa-tang, and
by Chin Tai and Lo San, the latter because
he had already visited Meichow, and knew
something of the conditions there.

Very reluctantly the comprador proceeded
to carry out his master's instructions.  An
hour's work with burnt cork and scissors
changed the Englishman's appearance
passably to that of a young German.

While Sing Wen was putting the finishing
touches to his work, Burroughs saw
Reinhardt's launch pass the mouth of the creek
in the direction of Pa-tang.

"Not after me?" he said.  "He's probably
going for his smoke; don't you think so?"

"Yes, sah: Massa Leinhadt velly fond smokee."

"Well, I only wish I had his moustache.
I'd give a hundred dollars down for one like it."

He felt that all that was wanted to
complete his transformation was a thick
moustache like the one that Reinhardt
brushed and tended with such affectionate care.

"It's a pity he has come, though," he went
on.  "I mustn't start before dark, in case
he sees the boat, or hears it.  And I ought
to keep that opium fellow's mouth shut.
Sing Wen, you'd better go and tell your
disreputable relative that it'll pay him to say
nothing about me."

"Velly good, sah," said the comprador.
"Hai!  My fo'get one ting.  No hab got
no chow-chow.[#]"

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left smaller

   [#] Food.

.. vspace:: 2

"Well, bring some back with you.  Make
your brother's brother-in-law understand
clearly."

The comprador went ashore.  He was
absent much longer than Burroughs
anticipated.  When he at length returned, his
usually inexpressive face wore a look of smug
satisfaction hardly to be accounted for by
his purchases of food.

"What a time you have been!" said
Burroughs.  "Have you made it all right
with your brother's brother-in-law?"

"Yes, sah, allo lightee," replied the man,
with a gleam of suppressed amusement.

He laid his bundles in the boat, then
approached his master, fumbled in the little
bag he wore at his waist, and drew from it a
small packet done up in rice paper, which he
handed to Burroughs.

"Allo lightee, sah," he repeated.

Burroughs opened the packet with a mild
curiosity, and started.  There lay a thick
brown moustache, brushed up and waxed at
each end, and neatly attached to a strip of
light flexible gauze.

"Where on earth did you get this?" he
asked, fingering the stiff hair.

"Pa-tang, sah.  My catchee he fo' hundled dolla."

"I hadn't any idea you could buy such
things here.  Where did you buy it?"

The comprador smiled an enigmatical smile.

"My makee allo plopa Toitsche,[#]" he
said, and, taking from his pouch a small
bottle of gum, he proceeded to fix the
moustache upon his master's upper lip.
When this was done to his satisfaction, he
produced a small cracked mirror which he had
obtained in the town, and held it before
Burroughs' face.

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left smaller

   [#] German.

.. vspace:: 2

"By George!  It's almost exactly like
Reinhardt's," he said; "a shade darker,
perhaps.  It's the very thing, Sing Wen;
you shall have the money when I get back.
I could almost venture to start now, but I
suppose I had better wait until night."

There being three or four hours to spare,
he decided to employ part of the time in
thoroughly overhauling the engine.  His
Chinese engineer was supposed to have seen
that everything was in order, but Burroughs
always examined things for himself, and had
only omitted to do so in the hurry of starting.
The engineer had been left behind as an
unnecessary encumbrance.  All the parts had
been well cleaned; there was plenty of
petrol; but Burroughs saw to his annoyance
that the lubricating oil was low.  Luckily
there was still time to supply the deficiency.
He sent Chin Tai into the town to buy some
castor oil, warning him not to talk, and to
be very careful not to bring any one upon his track.

It was nearly dark before the man returned.
Then he ran up in great excitement.

"My hab catchee plenty muchee fun, sah,"
he said breathlessly.  "My go longside
opium houso.  Hai! boss he come outside
chop-chop; bang!  Knock my velly hard,
makee my spill plenty oil.  Whitey man he
come bust 'long after boss, catchee he,
catchee pigtail, whack, whack, velly hard.
He say all time: 'What fo' you steal my
moustachee?  What fo' you piecee devil steal
my moustachee?'  Boss he makee plenty
bobbely; he call p'liceman; two piecee
p'liceman he come, catchee boss, catchee
whitey man all same, makee he belongey
chop-chop inside yamen.  My belongey
inside too--What fo' you pinch my?" he
cried, suddenly turning on the comprador,
who had sidled up to him.

.. _`REINHARDT AVENGES HIS LOSS`:

.. figure:: images/img-140.jpg
   :align: center
   :alt: REINHARDT AVENGES HIS LOSS

   REINHARDT AVENGES HIS LOSS

"You talkee plenty too muchee all same,"
said Sing Wen, indignantly.  "Massa no
wantchee listen foolo talkee."

"Let him alone," said Burroughs.  "Go
on, Chin Tai."

"My go inside yamen," the boy continued,
while the comprador sidled away, gained the
gangway unobserved, and presently slipped
ashore.  "Plenty men inside.  White man
he say he go sleep inside houso little time,
wake up, no can find moustachee.  He velly
angly; he say mandalin makee opium boss
smart.  Mandalin say boss muss find
moustachee.  Boss say no can do.  He say:
'Hon'ble fan-kwei[#] he belongey plenty big
moustachee what time he come inside houso;
no belongey what time he go wailo.  Two
piecee man inside all same; he look-see
fan-kwei sleep; my look-see other side; hai! he
shave moustachee, fan-kwei no savvy all
same.  My no savvy nuffin."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left smaller

   [#] Foreign devil.

.. vspace:: 2

"Mandalin he say, 'You plenty bad fella:
you pay hundled dolla.'  Boss he cly he velly
poor man; mandalin say he catchee plenty
big stick: boss he pay all same.  Massa
Leinhadt----"

"Sing Wen!" called Burroughs.

But the comprador had disappeared.

Burroughs was at once amused and
concerned at the story.  He could hardly return
the moustache; he guessed that Reinhardt
would hardly be pleased if he did.  The
trick was one of which he would not have
believed his staid comprador capable; but
he could only admire the dexterity with
which the stolen moustache had been
mounted by some ingenious Chinese barber.
He felt rather sorry for the brother's
brother-in-law, who had had to disgorge the hundred
dollars he had earned at the expense of
Reinhardt's future patronage.  Considering the
matter seriously, he felt that he had better
use the ornament that so materially improved
his disguise.  Perhaps he might regard it as
a set-off against the loan of the hydroplane.
And Reinhardt could not expect much
sympathy after his callous refusal to aid the
man whom he had helped to ruin.

The rage into which Reinhardt had been
thrown by the loss of his cherished moustache
made it the more necessary not to start up
the river until late.  Burroughs filled the
interval by carefully coaching the two
servants in the parts they were to play.  The
story he concocted did some credit to his
ingenuity.  He was the younger brother of
Reinhardt, and had just come from Kiauchou
to find his brother, and hand over to him the
hydroplane and a sum of money, to be placed
at the service of Su Fing, of course secretly.
Having missed his brother somewhere on
the river, he had pushed on rather than
wait and delay the gifts of his government.
In order to relieve the German authorities
from the suspicion of acting in concert with
the rebels, Burroughs would suggest that
these latter should arrest him, and place
him in the same prison as the Englishman
whom they had already captured.  By
meting out the same treatment to a supposed
German, they would certainly avert
suspicion.  Naturally the imprisonment would
be only a pretence: he must be allowed
freedom to come and go; but the pretence
must be kept up with a reasonable show of
determination.

Such was the story with which Burroughs
primed Chin Tai and Lo San.  He warned
them that difficulties might arise; he could
not foresee events at Meichow; but they
must employ all their wits to support the
fiction, and above all things they were to
remember that he was Lieutenant Eitel
Reinhardt of the German gunboat *Kaiser
Wilhelm*, which, as Burroughs was aware, was
then in Chinese waters.

"And there's one thing more," he said
sternly in conclusion.  "If you two boys
squabble, I shall first knock your heads
together, and then put you ashore and leave
you.  Mr. Errington's life may depend on
us; when we know that he is safe you can
black each other's eyes if you like, so long as
you don't make a row."

The Chinamen both protested that they
loved each other like brothers, scowling all
the time.

Having purchased the silence of the
inn-keeper, Burroughs borrowed a sampan from
him; and as soon as darkness fell over the
river, the two servants towed the hydroplane
down the creek and for some distance up
stream.  Reinhardt's launch still lay off the
town: the German was apparently spending
the night on board.  Burroughs guessed that
he would shrink from facing his friends
in Sui-Fu and the ordeal of their
interrogations.  But of course the story of the
moustache would be all over the district in a
day or two, and Burroughs was somewhat
anxious lest it should penetrate to Meichow,
and give rise to suspicion.

The hydroplane was thus towed up until
the port had been left some distance behind.
Then, when there was no danger of the throb
of the engine being heard and provoking
awkward inquiries, the sampan was hoisted
on board, the engine was started, and the
light craft skimmed up the river at the rate
of twenty-five knots against the current.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`RECONCILIATION`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XIII


.. class:: center medium

   RECONCILIATION

.. vspace:: 2

It was midnight when the hydroplane
came in sight of Chia-ling Fu.  The river
was thronged with junks and other vessels
moored for the night, and as many of these
no doubt had their crews sleeping on board,
Burroughs thought it desirable again to tow
the hydroplane.  It was necessary that no
alarm should be given which might have the
effect of causing uneasiness at Meichow.  He
wished that Su Fing had selected a smaller
and less busy place than Meichow for his
head-quarters; the larger the population,
the greater the risk that the hydroplane
would be recognized; for it was quite on
the cards that some of the river boatmen
had seen it skimming or flying on the
lower reaches of the Yang-tse.  But it was
probably known that the vessel had once
been stolen from its rightful owner at Sui-Fu,
in which case any suspicious person might
perhaps be persuaded that the theft had been
repeated, with more success.

They got safely past Chia-ling Fu, and
then Burroughs moored the hydroplane for a
time, so that he might not arrive at Meichow
before morning.  As he waited, he pondered
deeply on the knotty problem that would
face him next day.  The silence of a cold
winter night does not conduce to over-confidence,
and Burroughs was at no time one
who saw things in too rosy a light.  His
story was plausible enough, if he had not
made an egregious mistake in supposing
that Reinhardt was more or less in league
with the rebels.  But the bubble would be
pricked if Reinhardt were to follow him
speedily up the river.  Much depended also
on whether Su Fing was still absent, for the
rebel chief was no fool, and the slightest slip
might land him in a quagmire from which
there would be no escape.  As he sat leaning
his arms on the gunwale, and watching the
dark water swirling by, Burroughs was
conscious of many qualms; but in the
background of his mind there was always the
image of his old-time friend eating his heart
out in captivity, and for the sake of his friend
he was ready to dare all, to risk all,
disregarding the consequences to himself.

He had made up his mind what to do on
reaching Meichow; beyond that moment
all must be left to the course of
circumstances.  When, in the early dawn, he came
in sight of the town, he ordered Chin Tai to
hail the landing-stage as soon as he was near
enough, and command a rope to be thrown.
His only safety lay in boldness.  The rope
having been thrown, Chin Tai was to say
that his master had come on a visit to Su
Fing, and demand a guide.

Just before arriving at the landing-stage,
they passed a river gunboat lying off the
town.  The sight of this craft somewhat
surprised him, until he learnt later that
it had been employed by the Chinese
Government in policing the upper reaches of
the Yang-tse-kiang, and fallen a prey to
the rebels.

There was no sign of the morning bustle
that was usually to be seen at a riverside
town.  The seizure of the place by Su Fing
had put a stop to trade for the time being.
The man on the landing-stage responded
somewhat sleepily to Chin Tai's order; but
the boy, being jealous of Lo San's enterprise
in previously visiting the town, was
determined to show that he also was a man of
mettle, and hurled such a torrent of abuse
at the sluggard as caused him to hurry.
The hydroplane was moored; Burroughs
stepped on to the landing-stage, assuming a
mien as like Reinhardt's as he could muster;
and Chin Tai, with the self-importance
natural to the servant of an august
personage, demanded that his honourable master
should be instantly led to the chief.  The
man said something in reply.

"He say hon'ble Su Fing no belongey
Meichow this time," Chin Tai reported.

"Ask him who is in charge."

"He say hon'ble Fen Ti," said Chin Tai,
after questioning the man; "all same Fen
Ti gone wailo; he takee tousand fightee men
help Su Fing Cheng Tu side."

"Tell him not to waste time; who is in
charge now?"

It was at length explained that the man at
present in command was one Chung Pi.

"He no muchee big fella," said Chin Tai
scornfully; "one time he mafoo[#]; he
belongey good fightee man; this time he
tinkee numpa one topside fella."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left smaller

   [#] Horse-boy.

.. vspace:: 2

"Does he live in the yamen?"

The reply was that Chung Pi was not a big
enough man to occupy the yamen, but was
living in a small house hard by.

"Then I'll go and see Chung Pi," said
Burroughs.

A guide was called up, and Burroughs was
led through an extraordinary succession of
narrow lanes and by-ways to a small house
a few yards from the gate of the yamen.
Chin Tai accompanied his master, Lo San
remaining on the boat, with strict orders to
sound the siren if he saw any vessel of
importance approaching.

On arriving at the house, Chin Tai learnt
from the door-keeper that his honourable
master was still in bed.  Burroughs was in
ordinary circumstances courtesy itself; but
he felt that he would lose a point now if he
allowed himself to be kept waiting.
Accordingly, with a curtness that went much
against the grain, he bade Chin Tai tell the
man that his honourable master must be
immediately roused.  His manner impressed
the servant; the servant evidently conveyed
the impression to his master; for in a few
minutes there appeared at the door,
kow-towing in the manner of an inferior humbly
inviting an august visitor to enter his
unworthy dwelling, a stout jolly-looking
Chinaman, whose appearance strangely
reminded Burroughs of a well-fed lord mayor's
coachman.  The horse-boy had grown in
girth; his prowess as a fighting man might
have won for him his present position; but
at bottom he was a horse-boy still, with all
the cheerfulness and ready good-humour of
his kind.

Burroughs felt so much attracted to the
man that he had some compunction about
deceiving him; but he hoped that he could
serve his friend without doing Chung Pi any
harm.  Accepting his invitation to enter
his insignificant abode, Burroughs made a
few complimentary remarks, which he
ordered Chin Tai to translate scrupulously,
and then plunged into his story, wishing
that he could tell it himself in Chinese.  But
Chin Tai evidently did not diminish his
master's importance; Chung Pi looked more
and more impressed; and to do honour to
his guest he ordered in breakfast, and regaled
him with melon seeds, pea-nuts, fat pork
boiled with rice, and weak tea.

Burroughs ventured to ask him whether
he knew his brother.

"No," replied the man, "but I have seen
him.  He has a moustache like your
honourable excellency's.  Our fighting men envy
that moustache.  Not one of them has a
moustache like your excellency's honourable
brother.  Theirs are long and silky, like mine;
but, as you perceive, they turn downwards.
Yours and your honourable brother's are
firm and stiff like your noble hearts; they
turn up, surely a sign of greatness and
majesty."

This was very comforting to Burroughs.
He had not before imagined that so much
virtue could reside in a moustache.

It was now time to make the suggestion
that he should be arrested and imprisoned
with the Englishman.  At this his host
looked troubled.

"I am a poor unworthy captain," he said,
trying to draw in his waist.  "It is not for
me to meddle with the arrangements made
in the yamen of my august master Su Fing.
Nobody but Su Fing himself, or his
honourable lieutenant, Fen Ti, could do that."

Burroughs felt bound to put on an air of
extreme indignation.

"Do you mean to tell me," he said, "that
you will endanger the success of your master's
mighty enterprise, lose the support of the
greatest nation in the world, and compel me
to return with the swift boat and the
thousand dollars I carry?  Of a truth, when
your august chief returns he will think that
the honourable captain he left to fill his place
ought to have shown more discretion.  Do
you not see that if it is known I am
supporting your master it may lead to war between
Germany and England?  My country, of
course, has no fear of failure in such a war.
but it suits our purpose at present to avoid
it.  It must be told in the ports up-river
that your chief is arresting Germans as well
as Englishmen."

Chung Pi, being no politician, was properly
impressed by the possible momentous
consequences of his refusal to have greatness
thrust upon him.  After some further talk,
he came round to the view that it was his
duty to serve Germans and English alike,
and he went off to the yamen to make the
necessary arrangements.  On his return he
explained that the room in which the
Englishman was confined was at his honourable
guest's service, and it would give him great
pleasure to shut the two foreign devils up
together.  At this Burroughs feared that he
had perhaps pressed the point too far: to be
strictly confined would not suit him at all,
So he carefully explained that the prison
was a detail of no importance: all that was
necessary was that it should be given out
that a German had been arrested.  The
rumour would be carried down the river, and
come to the ears of the English; whereupon
the German emperor and the English king
would be so much occupied in disputing
which should have his man out first, that Su
Fing would have plenty of time to overrun
the whole province and make good his
position with the aid of German gold.

Before he left Chung Pi's house for the
yamen, he asked that the boat should be
carefully guarded during his absence,
promising to give the Chinaman a trip in the
vessel before it was formally handed over
to his chief.  The transfer could not properly
be made except to Su Fing himself, but he
felt that his government would warmly
approve of his handing a hundred dollars to
so trusty a lieutenant as Chung Pi.  He
passed the notes to the gratified captain with
a flowery compliment which Chin Tai took
pains to embellish; and Chung Pi, well
satisfied with himself and his guest, sent for
his chair and an escort, put a rope round
Burroughs' neck for form's sake, and was
carried to the yamen, his prisoner following
among the escort.

Burroughs did not much like the look of
the rebel soldiers.  They were the ugliest set
of ruffians he had ever set eyes on.  Their
uniforms were as dirty as they were gaudy:
cummerbunds about their waists, enormous
turbans of yellow and scarlet on their heads.
Some had spears, some rifles or muskets;
all had immense knives thrust through their
sashes.

He was surprised, however, agreeably in
one respect, disagreeably in another, at the
appearance of the yamen.  It stood within
a large enclosure, surrounded by a wall ten
feet high and five thick.  The gate opened
upon a courtyard, beyond which stood a
palatial mansion, consisting of several lofty
halls rising one behind another, their walls
of brick, their tiled roofs supported on
massive wooden pillars.  The grounds were
laid out in groves and terraced gardens, and
Burroughs caught a glimpse between the
trees of the large ornamental water or
fish-pond of which Lo San had spoken.  It was
surrounded by a stone quay, and crossed by
a zigzag bridge of quaintly carved stone.
Excellently picturesque as a residence, the
yamen was, however, not pleasant to
contemplate as a prison, for every gate was
guarded by sentries as ruffianly as the
captain's escort, and when the gates were
closed, it would be an almost impossible feat
to climb the stout walls.

Chung Pi descended from his chair at the
entrance of the yamen, and speaking in a
hectoring tone that consorted ill with his
jolly friendly countenance, ordered his escort
to conduct the prisoner to the inner room in
which the Englishman was confined.  He
himself brought up the rear.  Burroughs
protested violently against the indignity a
German suffered in being shut up with an
Englishman; and Chung Pi, obviously
relishing the joke, declared with a chuckle that
brown pigs and black often occupied the same
sty.  The door of the room was opened,
Burroughs was thrust in, and the door having
been shut and locked, Chung Pi walked away
rolling his bulky form with enjoyment.

Errington, sitting on a small stool, looking
disconsolately out through a barred window
upon the pleasant garden, was suddenly
startled from a reverie by the sound of a
voice which, muffled as it came through the
door, seemed to him to be that of the Mole.
He turned about eagerly, then felt a keen
pang of disappointment when he saw enter
the tall straight figure of a moustachioed
German.  But the German was smiling at
him; and puzzled as he was at the fiercely
aggressive moustache, he could not mistake
the steady honest eyes of his old chum.  He
sprang up, and rushed forward with
outstretched hand--then drew back suddenly,
muttering with a cloudy face---

"I was forgetting."

"It's the apology, is it?" cried
Burroughs.  "Well then, I apologize--you old
fathead!"

They shook hands--and when English
boys shake hands the action has a meaning
beyond the conventional.  The past was
buried: they were chums again.

"You've come to get me out; it's jolly
good of you," said Errington.  "But why
are you got up like this?  Where did you
get your moustache?  You look a regular
German."

"Like Reinhardt, eh?"

"Don't mention the fellow.  What a fool
I've been!  But I mustn't say anything
against him: I owe him five hundred
dollars; and to tell you the truth, I was in so
much of a funk that I was actually glad the
brigands collared me: it staved off the evil day."

"We'll settle with Reinhardt by and by.
This moustache is his: it cost me a hundred
dollars--cheap at the price."

He told the story of his comprador's
enterprise, and Errington was much tickled at the
opium-house keeper's having to disgorge
as a fine the sum he had received for shaving
off the moustache.  Burroughs checked his
laughter; the guards at the door must not
suspect that the Englishman and the
supposed German were fraternizing.  He then
related how Lo San had trudged the weary
miles to find his master, and explained why
he had come disguised as a German, and the
means by which he had gained admittance
to Errington's room.  Errington was troubled.

"I didn't suspect that," he said.  "You're
running a fearful risk.  If that fellow Su Fing
catches you here, we shall both be in the
same cart: he owes you the same grudge as me."

"Let's hope he won't come back in a
hurry.  He sent for more of his ruffians,
which looks as if he's got his hands full.
We'll get away together, old man.  Chung
Pi is such a genial ass that we shall be able
to get over him.  You haven't tried to bolt?"

"No.  Not much chance with the window
barred and four blackguards at the door--not
to speak of a ten-foot wall, and absolute
ignorance of the lie of the land.  You had
better leave it to the consul, hadn't you?"

"Not I.  Everything has worked out well
so far, and with a little luck we'll dish Su Fing."

"Look here, old Mole, there's a thing I
must say.  Since I've been here I've had
plenty of time to think things over, and I
see now what a thundering ass and
ungrateful beast I've----"

"Shut up!"

"No, I've got to get it out.  I chucked
away my money on those cards, got into debt
all round, went to the Chinky moneylenders
like a fool, and cut up rough when you and
Ting tried to put the brake on----"

"Oh, chuck it!  Wasn't I juggins enough
to wonder if you'd done me over that deal
with Feng Wai?  We'll cry quits, old man."

"Ting asked me to promise not to gamble
again, and I let out at him.  But if you'll
take the promise I'll be glad.  If we get out
of this I'll never play for money again."





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`"MY BROTHER!"`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XIV


.. class:: center medium

   'MY BROTHER!'

.. vspace:: 2

The two friends sat for a long time
discussing their situation.  The problem of
escape was a thorny one.  The yamen was
at some distance from the landing-stage, and
the labyrinth of narrow ways by which
Burroughs had come to it would puzzle
anybody but a Chinaman acquainted with the
town.  Even if they contrived to elude the
sentinels they might easily lose their way,
especially in darkness--and they had already
come to the conclusion that only by night
could they hope to reach the river safely.
The appearance of two Europeans in a
town where there were no European residents
would at once attract a curious crowd, and
detection must be inevitable.  And the first
step of all, the escape from the room in which
they were, was itself at present utterly
baffling.  Time was of the utmost
importance.  Su Fing might return any day; it
was scarcely possible that a man whose
mental powers were attested by the passing
of so many examinations would be imposed
on as the simple Chung Pi had been; and
there was no knowing what summary
methods he might use in dealing with the
two Englishmen to whom he owed a grudge.

Burroughs examined the bars of the
window.  They were so deeply imbedded in the
masonry that to loosen them within a
reasonable time seemed a hopeless undertaking.
The chances of succeeding in a rush through
the doorway, when the door was opened,
seemed slight.  Burroughs had his revolver;
Errington was unarmed; and though Chin
Tai, who was waiting without to act as
interpreter between Chung Pi and his German
visitor, had his knife, it was not very likely
that Burroughs and he could overpower the
four sentinels on guard at the door.  Even
if they were taken by surprise, the sound of
the scuffle would quickly bring up others
from the gates and courtyards between the
room and the outer wall.  The more they
thought of the problem, the more thoroughly
were they convinced that violent measures
were doomed to failure; they must have
recourse to stratagem.  But puzzle as they
might, neither had the glimmering of a notion
what the first move in the game must be.

They were so deeply immersed in talk that
they did not notice the flight of time, and
both were surprised when the door was
opened, and a Chinese cook brought in their
breakfast.

"Rice and beans again, I suppose!"
said Errington, with a groan.  "I've had
nothing else."

An idea occurred to Burroughs.

"Take care not to seem friendly with me,"
he said, twirling his moustache--Reinhardt's
moustache!--and turning his back on
Errington with true Germanic disdain.  "Hai!
Chin Tai, tell these fellows that I demand to
see the captain at once."

He had some doubt whether his demand
would be acceded to, but Chung Pi had
apparently anticipated something of the
sort, for one of the sentinels called up a man
from the courtyard, and sent him with the
message to the captain.

When Chung Pi appeared, it was evident
that he was much amused.  He laughed as
he spoke to Chin Tai.

"He say massa hab catchee too plenty
muchee plison," said Chin Tai.

"It's all very well," said Burroughs,
frowning haughtily.  "I asked you to arrest
me, for form's sake, but I didn't say I'd
agree to be starved.  Is this the fare to put
before a German?  It is good enough for
the Englishman, but it won't do for me."

He glanced scornfully at Errington, who,
taking the cue, assumed an air of dejection
and humility.

"I am sorry," said Chung Pi contritely.
"It was a mere oversight on my part.  The
cook naturally provided for the second
prisoner as for the first.  He did not know of
the understanding between your honourable
excellency and my unworthy self.  I will at
once have a dinner prepared worthy of your
august eminence."

"That is well," said Burroughs.  "When
I have finished my meal, I shall give myself
the pleasure of showing to you the boat
which lies at the landing-stage."

"I must sleep a little first," said Chung
Pi.  "I have eaten so many melon seeds
that my belt is exceedingly tight."

"At any time your excellency pleases,"
said Burroughs, with a bow.

The captain retired, after giving orders to
the cook.  Presently the servant returned,
bringing a right royal feast--pickled duck's
eggs, bean curd, pork patties, chopped
cucumber, millet cakes soaked in treacle,
fried cabbage--all very tastily dressed,
together with water melons and tea.

As soon as the door was shut, the two
prisoners fell to with a will.

"You'll want something better than rice
and beans if we're to have any bother,"
said Burroughs.  "This is very good; I
only wish they didn't use quite so much
garlic and oil."

When they had finished their dinner,
Burroughs knocked at the door, and ordered
Chin Tai, who meanwhile had had to satisfy
himself with rice, to let the captain know
that he was ready.  It was some time before
Chung Pi appeared, cracking and eating
melon seeds.  What explanation he gave to
the sentinels of his indulgence to the second
prisoner, or whether he condescended to give
any explanation at all, Burroughs never
knew.  He accompanied Chung Pi to the
outer gate, where chairs were waiting, and
when they had entered these antiquated
vehicles, each was lifted by four chai-jen or
yamen runners, and carried through crooked
and unsavoury streets, too narrow to admit
of more than one passing at a time, down
to the landing-stage.  Two chai-jen went in
advance, clearing a way with their sticks
through the crowd.  Chin Tai followed.

Lo San's face beamed at the sight of
"Massa Bullows."  He had begun to fear
that some mishap had befallen him, and saw
another beating in prospect.

Burroughs invited the captain to step
into the hydroplane, but Chung Pi excused
himself with many apologies, regretting that
the present state of his health--by which
Burroughs understood a surfeit of melon
seeds--rendered it inadvisable for him to
undergo any excitement.  Leaving Chin Tai
on the landing-stage, as a guarantee of good
faith, Burroughs accordingly embarked alone,
and for the space of a quarter of an hour or
so exhibited the qualities of the vessel as a
hydroplane, skimming up and down the river
at full speed.  Its flying powers, however, he
refrained from showing.

Chung Pi was so much impressed and
delighted with the marvellous vessel that he
overcame his squeamishness, and consented
to try a short trip up-stream.  A few miles
above the town, Burroughs caught sight
of a small launch coming down swiftly on
the current, and ran up to meet it, intending
to turn and race it, with the object of still
further impressing the captain.  But in a
few moments Lo San, interpreting a sentence
of his passenger, informed him that the
launch was one of Su Fing's dispatch boats,
and was probably bringing a message from
the chief to Chung Pi.

Feeling somewhat alarmed, Burroughs
slowed down, and ran the hydroplane
alongside the launch.  A sashed and turbaned
officer on deck shouted a greeting to Chung
Pi, and told him that Su Fing was now on his
way down the river with the bulk of his force,
and might be expected to arrive before sunset.

"He say you velly happy this time," Lo
San interpreted.  "Su Fing he come look-see
boat, say he velly good, numpa one boat."

Burroughs was anything but happy.  He
forced a smile, but felt most unphilosophically
irritated when the ends of Reinhardt's
moustache tickled his cheeks.  He listened
unheeding to the monotonous voice of Lo San
translating the encomiums passed by Chung
Pi on the admirable vessel, and steered
mechanically down-stream towards Meichow,
whither the captain said they must return at
once in order to make preparations for Su
Fing's fitting reception.  Sufficiently alive to
the necessity of sparing petrol, he did not drive
the vessel at full speed, much to the
disappointment of Chung Pi, who was looking
forward to a dashing reappearance before the eyes
of the thousands of admiring spectators now,
beyond doubt, congregated at the riverside.

The imminent return of Su Fing threatened
to put a bar to any plan that might be
evolved for releasing Errington.  As yet,
think as hard as he might, Burroughs had
been quite unable to form any likely scheme.
On the way down the river he bent his brains
exclusively on the problem, blind to the
probability that Chung Pi might become
suspicious of his lack of exhilaration at the
prospect of a speedy meeting with the chief.
The more he puzzled, the more hopeless the
situation appeared.  He knew that the
coming of Su Fing would draw the whole
population into the narrow contorted alley-ways
that served as streets, so that, even if he got
Errington out of the yamen, the chances of
gaining the landing-stage undetected were
naught.  He tried to think of some means of
persuading Chung Pi to bring Errington to
the hydroplane; indeed, he ventured to hint
that it would be a fine thing to meet the chief
far up the river, and offer the prisoner to
him as a sort of slave to grace his triumph.
But Chung Pi would not hear of it.  He
objected that the orders he had received were
strict: the Englishman was to be closely
guarded; and it was as much as his rank was
worth to disobey commands so explicit.
Burroughs would not excite suspicion by
pressing the point; and, indeed, he liked the
fat simpleton so well as to wish to avoid
getting him into hot water.

Thus uneasy, depressed, more nervous
than he had ever been in his life before, he
was running towards the landing-stage, not
giving a glance beyond, when an exclamation
from Lo San caused him to lift his eyes.
Then he saw something that shot a cold
shiver through him.  This was the last
straw.  A quarter of a mile beyond the
landing-stage, coming round a bend in the
river, was the nose of a launch which he
instantly recognized as Reinhardt's.  It
would reach the stage about the same time
as his own vessel.  The game was up!
Reinhardt was certainly on board; the
launch had never been seen on the river
without him.  He would certainly betray
the pseudo-German.  There had never been
any love lost between them.  They had
parted in anger.  And with a man of
Reinhardt's temperament the "rape of the lock,"
the explanation of which would flash upon
him the moment he caught sight of it adorning
Burroughs' lip, would supply the fiercest
motive for revenge.

Burroughs turned his head away from
Chung Pi; he could no longer keep up the
forced smile, which he felt must have become
an awful grimace.  Always a little slow of
thought, he did not remember, for a moment
or two, that in his story to Chung Pi he had
unwittingly provided himself with an avenue
of safety.  All at once the recollection
flashed upon him: he was Lieutenant Eitel
Reinhardt, of the gunboat *Kaiser Wilhelm*.
The moustacheless German was his brother!

"My brother! my brother!" he shouted
excitedly.

Lo San looked at him in amazement.  Was
his master mad?  Then he, too, remembered.

"My honourable master's brother," he
exclaimed to Chung Pi.

The captain's broad face gleamed with
interest and satisfaction.  This new arrival
was the very man who had arranged the
gifts for Su Fing, whom his brother had so
unfortunately missed, of whose money he
himself had a hundred dollars safely tucked
into his pouch.

"Brothers are as double cherries," he said.
"The coming of your august relative is as
the shining of the morning sun on the closed
petals of a rose."

Burroughs bowed as Lo San translated,
feeling that another word would make him shout
with maniacal laughter.  With a turn of
the wrist he ran the boat alongside the
landing-stage, just a second or two before the
launch came up at the farther end.  With
Chung Pi he stepped off, observing that
Reinhardt was standing at his gangway, waiting
for his heavier and more cumbersome vessel
to be brought alongside.  And almost
wishing that the planks might part, and plunge
him into the water and oblivion, he walked
forward to meet his fate.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`REINHARDT IN THE TOILS`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XV


.. class:: center medium

   REINHARDT IN THE TOILS

.. vspace:: 2

Burroughs and the smiling captain were
still some few yards away from Reinhardt's
gangway; Reinhardt was staring with puzzled
curiosity at the tall German with the
moustache so like his own lost treasure; when
Burroughs whispered to Lo San--

"Say to the captain: 'That is the launch,
but where is my brother?  My brother wears
a moustache like mine.  Do not the English
shave the lip?  Ask him who he is.'"

Chung Pi was a horse-boy turned captain;
like many great men sprung from humble
origin, he was apt to stand upon his dignity.
Advancing towards the stranger as he stepped
on to the landing-stage, he introduced
himself with a grave pomposity, and asked
Reinhardt to what Meichow owed the honour
of his visit.

The German's eyes were fixed in a puzzled
stare on Burroughs, who had taken off his
cap as in respectful salutation.  The
close-cropped hair, the pencilled eyebrows, the
stiff perpendicularity of his waxed
moustache-ends, had so much altered his
appearance that Reinhardt, though he felt that he
had seen him somewhere before, did not
recognize him.  Germanic though his aspect
was, there was a nameless something about
him that put Reinhardt on his guard.  Turning
to Chung Pi, he replied courteously, in
Chinese, that he was a German employed by
his government to keep in touch with the
august Su Fing, and that his honourable
questioner without doubt knew the name of
Reinhardt as a friend and ally of his chief.

Lo San was quick-witted.  He saw that
there was no time to translate the conversation
to Burroughs, and for the moment held
his peace.  Burroughs could only stand in
a commanding attitude with folded arms,
accusation in his frown.  He bethought
himself of his moustache, and gave it a cautious
twirl.  And all the time he wished with
desperate anxiety that he could understand
what Reinhardt was saying.

Chung Pi looked at the German with
fatuous indecision.  Burroughs felt that
another moment might seal his fate.  He
was beating his brains for a possible move
if his stratagem failed, when Lo San
interrupted Reinhardt as he was asking whether
Su Fing had returned to the town.

"You see, honourable captain," he said,
"that this man who calls himself a German
has no moustache!"

And now the pen of the narrator fails:
only a gramophone and a cinematograph
could faithfully record the scene.  Imagine
the three men: the magnified horse-boy,
bewildered between a furious German,
shouting in Chinese, and a calm but quaking
Englishman, standing like a judge about to
condemn; with a shrill-voiced China boy
at his side, screaming into Chung Pi's very
ear; the men on the landing-stage gaping;
the motley crowd at the shoreward end
watching keenly, like the spectators at a
boxing-match.  Chung Pi, Reinhardt, Lo San,
were all talking at once.  Reinhardt,
incoherent with rage, yelled "I am a
German."  Chung Pi asked him not to shout.  Lo San,
determined to make himself heard, screamed
"He is an Englishman.  As your excellency
knows, the friend of Su Fing wears a
moustache; it is the custom in his country; look
at my august master."

Chung Pi, a peasant beneath his uniform,
was slow, tenacious and pig-headed.  He
had seen Reinhardt once or twice, and carried
away an impression of a moustache and little
more.  If this was Reinhardt, where was
the moustache?  He felt that he was being
played with--he, the lieutenant of Su Fing,
was bemocked by a man whose upper lip
was even cleaner than that of the Englishman
in the yamen.  And when Burroughs, taking
advantage of Reinhardt's vociferous abuse,
whispered to Lo San to suggest that the man
should be put with the other Englishman,
and Lo San yelled the suggestion into the
captain's ear, Chung Pi's simple mind was
made up.  Beckoning to some of his ruffians
who stood expectantly by, he ordered them
to seize the pig of an Englishman and carry
him to the yamen.  The chief should deal
with him.

For a few seconds a whirling mass gyrated
at the edge of the landing-stage.  The centre
of it was Conrad Reinhardt; the circumference
was formed by a dozen Chinese legs.
Yells of rage and derision arose from the
variegated crowd of spectators as they
watched the supposed Englishman--as much
as they could see of him--struggling in the
grasp of the spearmen.  The scuffle ceased
as suddenly as it had begun.  Reinhardt
appeared to bethink himself of his dignity.
He made no further resistance, but allowed
the insurgents to lead him away.

That procession is probably a cherished
memory in Meichow to this day.  It was led
by the lictors--if the ragged ruffians may
be dignified with that name for the
nonce--who thrust back the shouting people that
flocked from every alley to see the sight.
Then came the prisoner amid the spearmen.
A few paces behind marched the two sets
of chairmen, carrying Burroughs and Chung
Pi, with Chin Tai stepping beside.  More
spearmen brought up the rear.  Lo San had
returned to the hydroplane.

At the gate of the yamen Burroughs got
out of his chair and approached that of the
captain, beckoning Chin Tai forward to
interpret.

"Your honourable presence," he said,
"has no doubt great preparations to make
for the reception of the august Su Fing.  I
feel that it would ill beseem me to take up
more of your time.  For myself, I think I
ought to follow the prisoner.  Who knows
what conspiracy he may not hatch with the
other if I am not there to keep an eye on them!"

"But you may be in danger from their
violence," said Chung Pi.  "You saw how
the Englishman fought and kicked."

"Yes, he behaved very badly," replied
Burroughs; "but with four of your brave
warriors outside the door, the prisoners
would not dare to molest me."

And with ceremonious salutations they parted.

Meanwhile Reinhardt had been marched
through the courtyards, and taken to the
room where Errington was wondering
anxiously what had happened to his friend.
The door was thrown open, and the German
thrust inside.  The spearmen reported by
and by to their captain that on entering the
room, the new prisoner advanced towards
the other, holding out his hand, and saying
some few words of greeting.  The first
prisoner neither took his hand nor replied to
him.  Chung Pi had sufficient intelligence to
explain this incident satisfactorily to
himself.  The new-comer was undoubtedly
English.  He had recognized the prisoner, who,
however, was more prudent, and pretended
not to know him.  Chung Pi plumed himself
on his sagacity, and basked in the anticipated
light of Su Fing's countenance when he
should return and find two birds in his cage.

Reinhardt had made up his mind, while
walking up to the yamen, to accept with as
good a grace as possible the temporary
inconvenience which he owed to the loss of
his moustache--also temporary: he felt his
upper lip, and discovered proofs of a new
crop.  By keeping his temper under
control he would give himself the best chance of
dealing with circumstances as they arose.
Of course, when Su Fing returned all would
be set right; and he promised himself that
the ass of a captain who had so stupidly
mistaken him should have cause to regret
his imbecility.  But he was a good deal
puzzled.  Who was this man, ostensibly a
German, who had stood by indifferent while
a compatriot of his own was being shamed?
And who was the Chinaman who had uttered
such abominable things about him?  He
was something like Lo San, Errington's boy.
And then a light flashed upon him: it *was*
Lo San; Errington, he knew, had been
captured; no doubt he was the "other
Englishman" who had been mentioned;
and the whole affair was a plot on Lo San's
part to bring his master and Reinhardt
together, in the hope that the German might
be persuaded to plead for him with the chief.

This thought comforted Reinhardt.  Lo
San was evidently a clever fellow; and as
Errington's career was of course ended, his
boy would probably be quite willing to enter
the service of a new master.  The German
was therefore prepared, when he was pushed
forward into the room, to find Errington
waiting with open arms to receive him.

He was surprised when Errington refused
to speak to him.

"Come, my friend," he said, "zis is not
kind.  Here am I, come at great cost to
serve you, and you cut me!  Zere is some
big mistake; ze fool of a captain supposes
me to be English, and makes me a prisoner.
We are two prisoners togezer.  Zis is not ze
time for coldness between friends.  Wizout
you, I should not be here at zis
moment."  Reinhardt was unaware how truly he had
spoken.  "You owe me much.  But you
are young, and like many young men, you
do not know your best friends."

Errington, on his part, was thoroughly
amazed when he saw Reinhardt enter the
room.  Hearing footsteps outside the door,
he had expected to see Burroughs again.
The entrance of a man whom, after his recent
interview with Burroughs, he distrusted and
despised gave him a shock.  Instinctively
he refused him his hand.  But now, at the
German's explanation, strange as it was, he
began to wonder whether he had not done
him a double injustice.  Perhaps the man
had repented of his refusal of Burroughs'
appeal, and after all had come up the river
to his assistance.

He was wavering, on the point of asking
Reinhardt whether he had seen Burroughs,
when the German began to speak again.

"Yes, when your own countrymen do
nozink for you, behold me, a German,
putting my head into ze lion's mouse on
your behalf.  I ask you, why should I do
so?  You owe me five hundred dollars:
bah!  I zink nozink of zat.  You are to me
nozink but a friend----"

"And a servant of your firm," Errington
blurted out, resenting the reference to his
debt, and desperately uneasy now that it
was clear that Burroughs and the German
had not met.

"Not so," said Reinhardt complacently.
"Zere is no reason why I should come to
help you--nozink but friendship.  You are
no longer employed by my firm."

This took Errington's breath away.  He
listened in stony silence as Reinhardt proceeded.

"Zey pay you zree munce salary instead
of notice.  I have ze cheque in my pocket.
Now you see what a friend I am, when you
are no longer wiz me in business, and owe
me five hundred dollars.  Which is ze friend,
Conrad Reinhardt, or Burroughs, ze man
what preach, ze man who is what you call
a smug, who eats and drinks merry when
his old friend is----"

Errington could stand no more.  Springing
to his feet, he hit out a swinging blow that
sent the German spinning across the room.

Reinhardt's hand flew to his breast pocket.
He whipped out a revolver, and was taking
a snapshot at Errington when his arm was
struck up from behind; the weapon exploded
harmlessly, and next moment was wrenched
from his grasp and flung across the room.
Unseen, unheard, Burroughs had quietly
entered the room and taken in the situation
at a glance.

No word had been spoken.  While a man
might count three there was a dead silence
in the room.  Then Burroughs, stepping to
the still open door, confronted the sentinels
and Chin Tai, who were pressing forward,
alarmed by the shot.

"Bind that man!" cried Burroughs, pointing
to the German, now slowly rising to his feet.

.. _`ERRINGTON HITS OUT`:

.. figure:: images/img-176.jpg
   :align: center
   :alt: ERRINGTON HITS OUT

   ERRINGTON HITS OUT

There was no hesitation among the men.
They understood by this time that the
supposed detention of Burroughs was only a
move in their chief's policy.  They did not
understand it, but it was no affair of theirs.
There were no ropes at hand, but they
stripped off their cummerbunds; and in a
few minutes Reinhardt, glowering from
Burroughs to Errington, and from Errington to
Burroughs, lay on the floor, trussed with
bonds of yellow and red.





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`A LITTLE LUNCHEON PARTY`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XVI


.. class:: center medium

   A LITTLE LUNCHEON PARTY

.. vspace:: 2

"What's the row, Pidge?" asked Burroughs,
when the sentinels and Chin Tai had
been dismissed, and the door closed behind them.

"Oh, he'd been telling a heap of lies, and
when he started abusing you, I knocked him down."

Reinhardt started when he heard
Burroughs speak in his natural voice.  The
disguise as it were fell off: his vague
misgiving was justified; the cropped hair, the
thickened eyebrows, the upturned moustache,
no longer imposed upon him, and he writhed
in his bonds.

Burroughs gave him a contemptuous stare.

"I don't care, personally," he said very
quietly, "what lies you tell about me.
There never has been any love lost between
us.  All I regret is that, among Chinamen,
I should have had to treat a European--even
such a European as you are--with such
indignity.  But you've brought it on
yourself.  You're a dangerous man.  You're in
league with these rebels; I know it, you
needn't protest; in spite of that, in spite of
my appeal to you, you wouldn't move a
finger in Errington's behalf.  I must treat
you as an enemy--a secret enemy, and take
the precautions that fit the case.  Errington
and I have matters to discuss, and owing
to the action of your friends the rebels, we
have to discuss them here.  Your company
has been forced upon us, so I'll take the
liberty of relieving you from the necessity
of overhearing our conversation."

"I protest," the German began, blusteringly.
"I don't want to hear your
conversation.  Speak in ze corner; whisper."

Burroughs paid him no attention, but
opened the door and called to Chin Tai.

"Stuff up Mr. Reinhardt's ears," he said.

Chin Tai produced a dirty rag from the
pouch at his waist.

"No, not that," said Errington impulsively.
"Haven't you a handkerchief, Ted?"

Burroughs gave his handkerchief to the
Chinaman, who tore it in strips, and rolled
up two wads which he placed in the German's ears.

"Wait outside, and let me know if the
captain comes."

As soon as the door was shut, Burroughs
took Errington to the window.

"The position's this, old man," he said.
"Su Fing is coming down river.  It's all up
with us if he finds us here.  Reinhardt
won't stick at a trifle.  We must get away
somehow or other before evening.  How it's
to be done beats me."

"Where did you go when you left me?"

"I showed off the boat to Chung Pi.  He'd
eaten so many melon seeds that he wouldn't
venture on board at first; but I got him on
after a bit.  I only did it to heighten my
importance.  It was when we were going
up-stream that we met a launch of Su Fing's,
and heard that the chief would be here to-night."

"You didn't fly?"

"No.  Chung Pi is sure to have heard of
the flying boat, and he'd have smelt a rat.  Why?"

"I've just had an idea," said Errington eagerly.

"Gently, old chap.  I'm not at all sure
that Reinhardt can't hear if you raise your
voice.  What is it?"

In a low tone, but with great animation,
Errington explained the plan which had
suddenly suggested itself.  For some time the
two discussed it together.  It was a strange
conversation, conducted under the eyes of
the German, glaring at them as he lay fierce
and helpless on the floor.

They were interrupted by the entrance of
the cook man bringing the midday meal.
It was a generous repast; the cook had taken
a hint from what happened at breakfast-time,
and provided food in even greater variety
than before.  Burroughs and Errington took
their chop-sticks and sat on the floor in front
of the pots and pans.  Errington glanced
at Reinhardt.

"We can't feed while he goes hungry," he said.

"Speak for yourself," said Burroughs.
"I've not the slightest objection."

"But they've brought grub for him.  He'd
better have his share."

"Just like you!  All right; but he'll be a
sort of skeleton at the feast."

"A substantial skeleton!  He won't
depress me.  But it's a rummy go, when you
come to think of it."

Burroughs went to the German and released him.

"Some of this food is for you," he said,
speaking close to Reinhardt's ear.  "Errington
suggests that you should join us."

He went back to his place beside Errington.
For some seconds Reinhardt made no
movement beyond sitting up and stretching
himself, with a sullen stare at Burroughs.  Then
either the matter-of-fact consideration that
he was hungry, or something in the humour
of the situation, caused him to banish his
sulks.  He crossed the room, and squatted
heavily opposite the Englishmen.

"Whatever happens to any of us, this is
certainly the last time we three are likely to
have a meal together," said Errington.

The situation was certainly novel.  Men
have sat down at table with murder in their
hearts; quarrels have arisen at the board;
but it is not common for two men to eat
with a third whom one has just knocked
down, and whose moustache the other is wearing.

There was naturally a constraint upon the
party--upon Errington more particularly,
for he could not forget that he had once
been Reinhardt's friend, nor that he owed
him money.  He might suspect that the
German had cheated him, but a debt is a
debt.  Yet to eat in silence was impossible,
and presently Burroughs broke the ice.

"Have some of this," he said to Reinhardt,
looking into one of the pans.

"I beg pardon," said Reinhardt.  "I am
a little hard of hearing."

The Englishmen glanced at each other.

"Better go the whole hog and do it
decently while we are about it," said
Errington.

"Perhaps you can do something to cure
yourself," said Burroughs in a loud tone to
the German.

Reinhardt removed the wads from his
ears, and looking at them doubtfully for a
moment, laid them down on the floor beside him.

"Zanks," he said.  "Now I am all attention."

"Not at all," said Burroughs.  "Have
some of this--I don't know what it is."

He ladled a sort of stew on to Reinhardt's
plate.  For a few moments there was silence
as they plied their chop-sticks.  Then
Reinhardt, glancing up under his eyebrows, said
gravely--

"I zink it is chow--puppy-dog, you know."

The others held their chop-sticks suspended.

"I'll try something else," said Burroughs,
looking suspiciously into another pan.

"In China one must not inquire too much,"
the German went on.  "One must have
faith.  Once I was at an inn, deep in ze
country.  I demand dinner; zey say zere is
none.  Naturally I must have dinner, and
I command ze innkeeper very loud.  Zat is
effective.  Soon he bring me a ragout--excellent;
I eat it wiz gusto.  Afterwards I
discover it is rats."

The Englishmen's faces expressed their
disgust, and again there was silence.

"China is a great country for rats," said
Errington lamely.

"Zat is true; zere are rats all up ze
Yang-tse."

"Water-rats," suggested Burroughs.

"So; four legs--and two," said the German.

"Tails--and pigtails," said Burroughs.

"I make a study of zem all."

"My boy says that rats' whiskers are
lucky," said Errington after a pause.

"White rats!" added Burroughs.

Reinhardt's eyelids flickered.  He seemed
to avert his gaze with an effort from
Burroughs' moustache.

"I zink he is perhaps mistaken," he said.

Then he appeared to feel that he was
skating on thin ice, towards a danger-mark.
An observant onlooker might have discovered
a resemblance between these three men,
talking so quietly over their meal, and
fencers, warily feeling for each other, but
careful not to engage.  Each was trying to
"make" conversation, and found, almost in
spite of himself, that it trended towards the
personal.  Reinhardt, the keenest and most
experienced of the three, was the first to
feel the tendency, and to attempt to divert it.

"Ze Chinese," he went on, "zey are very
superstitious.  Zey believe in spells and
charms, zings which Europe dismissed
hundred years ago, and more.  Zey talk always
of luck."

"Don't you see that men make their own
luck," said Burroughs.

"Perhaps, but not at cards," said
Reinhardt.  "Zat is skill."  He pulled himself
up suddenly.  "Ze Chinese are indeed
extremely skilful.  As you English say, zey
will catch a weasel asleep."

"And skin him!" said Errington artlessly.

"I have heard of that too," said Burroughs,
catching Reinhardt's eyes again fixed
on his moustache.

"Is zere any more cabbage?" asked the
German, bending forward over the pan.

"No, but there is some parsley," replied
Burroughs, in best phrase-book style; and
a minute or two afterwards the meal and
the difficult conversation came to an end
together.

During the pauses each of the party had
been busily thinking: Burroughs and
Errington of the scheme which they had partially
discussed, Reinhardt of the extraordinary
circumstances in which he found himself.
For once, at any rate, the German felt that
he had no trumps.  He saw through
Burroughs' imposture; and he was pretty sure
that the moustache which had fascinated
his eyes during the meal was his own.
Inwardly boiling with indignation and
outraged vanity, he was sportsman enough to
enter into the spirit of the situation so far
as speech was concerned; his brain was
cogitating an exemplary vengeance, and he
hugged himself with the thought that the
hour of revenge was at hand.  The apparent
coolness of the Englishmen amazed him.
With Su Fing already on his way down the
river, their heads were as good as gone.
Yet nobody watching them, or listening to
their talk, could ever have imagined that
their lives hung on a thread.

At the conclusion of the meal, Burroughs
said politely--

"I regret the necessity of tying you up again."

"And I," said the German, with equal
courtesy, though his eyes were blazing, "I
regret to be ze cause of so much trouble."

Burroughs called in his servant and the
sentinels, and by their hands Reinhardt was
again bound.  Chin Tai caught sight of the
ear-wads lying beside the German's plate.

"He wantchee he 'nother time all-same?"
he asked his master.

"Your conversation--is it not finished?"
the German interposed.  "One is incomplete
wizout ears."

"I'm afraid you must remain incomplete
for a while," said Burroughs.  "Put them
in, Chin Tai; then tell those fellows they can
clear away the food and eat what's left.  I
want you."

As soon as the door was closed behind the
guard, Burroughs took Errington and Chin
Tai to the window, and the three remained
for some minutes in earnest conversation.

"Now," said Burroughs at last to the
servant, "you know what you have to do.
First of all, cut off to the captain; he has
finished his luncheon by this time--and say
that I request the honour of waiting upon
him on a matter of great urgency."

"Allo lightee, sah; my talkee he allo plopa."

And he went with an air of much
self-importance to fulfil his errand, reflecting
with a chuckle that Lo San was out of this.





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.. _`THE DASH FROM THE YAMEN`:

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   CHAPTER XVII


.. class:: center medium

   THE DASH FROM THE YAMEN

.. vspace:: 2

Chin Tai returned in about twenty minutes.

"Captain he say hon'ble genelum come
this time; he velly glad look-see."

"Good luck," said Errington as Burroughs
got up.  "If there's any hitch, don't mind
about me."

Burroughs mumbled something and went
out with his servant.  The chair was awaiting
him at the outer gate.  Ordering two of
the guards there to accompany him for
appearance' sake, he had himself carried to
the captain's quarters hard by.  On the
way he noticed, without any appearance of
concern, a large number of wild-looking
warriors assembling to form, as he guessed,
a guard of honour for the chief on his return.
Many of the men scowled at him as he passed.
They did not distinguish one "foreign
devil" from another.  To many of the
lower orders of Chinamen, all foreigners are
poison.

Chung Pi had evidently been indulging
freely in the pleasures of the table.  He was
breathing rather hard; melon seeds are
very "filling"; and the number of thimblefuls
of hot sam-shu, a fiery drink made of
millet, which he had consumed had reddened
his face and put him on very good terms
with himself.

"Honourable stranger," he said, when
Burroughs entered, "your honourable face
is like the sun at noon-day.  You have fed well?"

"Excellently, noble captain."

"You cracked many melon seeds?"

"Not a great number."

"Then you will never be fat.  Will you
take a little sam-shu?"

"Thank you, not now.  Better reserve
that until your august chief returns.  There
has been no further message from him?"

"No; but I have made preparations for
greeting him.  The bannermen and
gong-beaters will go down to the river in due
time, and we shall issue forth to greet the
illustrious Su Fing with bands of music."

"Would it not be fitting, noble captain,
a deed worthy of your high renown, to meet
your chief on the marvellous vessel of whose
speed you have already made trial?  Su
Fing returns victorious; he would feel
himself duly honoured if his trusty lieutenant
met him while still a great way from the
town, offering for his acceptance this
matchless gift from a great nation."

"You speak well, illustrious stranger.  The
gift is indeed a noble one.  But I fear that
I cannot dispense with my afternoon nap.
Sleep after meat is a gift of the gods."

"I would not deprive you of it for worlds.
I must go down to the boat, to see that all
is in order for the journey we propose to
make.  I will do that while you sleep."

"Not so.  The boat pleases me, and drowsy
though I am, I am disposed to accompany
you.  Perhaps Su Fing may give the vessel
into my charge; it will be well, then, that I
understand something of its qualities.  I
shall thereby be superior to any other officer
of my chief's, and the way of promotion will
be open to me."

"By all means, noble captain."

"Yes.  To be well fed is vain without
true understanding.  But tell me, what of
the Englishmen?  It was told me that one
of them was so daring and wicked as to fire
a shot at the other.  The guards ought to
have searched him; I have given orders that
when the rejoicings are over they shall be
soundly beaten with the leather."

"The man who attempted the crime is
bound hand and foot.  He can do no more
mischief."

"It is well.  I am fortunate in having
another Englishman for Su Fing.  He hates
all Englishmen, because they do not
approve of his warlike deeds.  Furthermore,
he was wounded by an Englishman, and
taken captive, and he suffered stripes and
the cage.  His heart will laugh when he
knows that another of the hated race lies
bound in his yamen.  Now let us go."

He summoned his chairmen and armed
escort, and was carried along with Burroughs
down to the landing-stage, and on to the
vessel.  There he watched curiously as the
Englishman overhauled the engine, and filled
his petrol tank.  When this was done,
Burroughs took from the end of his watch-chain
an Indian charm which had been given him
by his mother, and made a few meaningless
passes with it over the throttle.

"Why do you do that?" Chung Pi asked.

"To ward off evil spirits," replied
Burroughs.  "We must have a lucky voyage."

"You do well.  I myself, as you perceive,
have a thread of red silk braided in my
queue for the same purpose; and I wear a
charm attached to a red string within my
shirt.  So we shall be doubly secure."

Burroughs, having satisfied himself that
everything was in working order, was at
leisure to answer the innumerable questions
about the hydroplane with which the
Chinaman plied him.  They were such futile
questions as a simple ignorant peasant might
put.  Burroughs felt that he was answering
a fool according to his folly, and again had
compunctions about making this guileless
ignoramus his accomplice.  It was clear that
Chung Pi's vanity was flattered by the idea
of showing a new importance before the
populace.  The machine had become an
obsession with him, and as he grew more and
more wonder-struck at what Burroughs told
him, the approaching arrival of his chief
became of less interest to him than the
prospect of making an impression on the
home-coming warriors.

Time slipped away.  Burroughs felt
restless and impatient.  Chung Pi had told him
that the approach of the chief's launch would
be signalled by a man stationed on the roof
of the yamen, which rose high above the
surrounding country, and from which another
signal station could be seen many miles
distant.  Burroughs dared not start until
the signal was given; yet he felt that time
was being wasted.

At last, turning to Chung Pi, he said that
he had one great surprise in store for him.
He had in fact two, but the second was to
be revealed at the proper time.

"You have seen, noble captain," he said,
"with what marvellous speed this vessel
skims the water, but you have yet to see
that it can also fly--even as a duck, which
swims ordinarily on the surface, can at need
raise itself upon its wings and take the air.
But a duck cannot fly so well as this vessel."

"What end is there to the marvels you
tell me!" exclaimed the captain.  "In
truth I have heard of a flying boat, belonging
to an Englishman at Sui-Fu; but I mocked
at the tale, for men are liars."

"It is true.  This boat is even as that
of the Englishman; it flies quite as well."

"But how can a boat fly without wings?"

"I will show you."

Burroughs unfolded and spread out the
canvas planes at the sides of the boat.

"Wonderful!" said the Chinaman.  "It
is very like a butterfly."

"How fine a thing it would be to fly to
meet Su Fing, noble captain!  That would
indeed show at once the matchless qualities
of this vessel, and the courage of the
illustrious officer who so well fills the place of
the chief here."

Chung Pi's simple face expressed the
longing and the terror which a child shows when
he is invited for the first time to taste some
new experience--the first ride on an elephant,
or on a hobby-horse at the village fair.

"If you would show me first," he said.

He stepped on to the landing-stage, and
stood fascinated as the vessel, skimming the
surface until it attained its lifting speed, rose
into the air, circled, and returning, alighted
gently at the very spot whence it had
started.  Beyond measure delighted, Chung
Pi hesitated no longer.  Making sure that
the red string sustaining his charm was
securely about his neck, he entered the boat,
and uttered childish exclamations of
wonderment and pleasure as the vessel once more
performed the same flight.  On landing, he
bore himself with a vainglorious swagger
before the crowd of excited onlookers.  He
insisted on taking Burroughs back to his own
house for a few melon seeds and cups of tea,
and talked incessantly of the sensation he
would make when he flew to meet Su Fing.

While they were at tea, with Chin Tai
in attendance as interpreter, Lo San, enjoying
a certain prestige as the servant of the kind
German who had brought so precious a gift,
was entertained by the captain's escort.
They were exchanging notes with him when
the long-expected message was signalled:
the watchman on the roof of the yamen had
seen a signal on a hill two miles away; the
signaller there had received the message from
another, and he from another.  Su Fing was
little more than an hour's journey distant.
At once there was a ringing of bells and
beating of gongs.  Chung Pi, trembling with
eagerness, came forth with Burroughs; a
procession was formed, and with an armed
escort before and behind the chairmen carried
their burdens down to the river.

At the landing-stage Lo San approached
Burroughs, and said in an undertone--

"Su Fing he no lick all-same.  Fellas he
say Su Fing hab catchee numpa one beatin'
Cheng Tu side.  He belongey velly bad temper."

Rumour, flying swiftly through the country,
had brought news that the chief, so far from
being victorious, had been driven headlong
from Cheng Tu by regular forces summoned
from Tibet, and was now falling back on
Meichow to recoup his losses.  There was no
doubt that Chung Pi had heard the news;
but Burroughs guessed that it was as much
as his place was worth to greet his master
otherwise than as a conqueror.

This information, strange as it may
appear, rendered Burroughs the more anxious
to set off on his trip up-river.  Chung Pi
was equally eager, for a different reason.
They entered the boat, followed by Chin Tai
and Lo San.  The ropes were cast off;
Burroughs started the engine, and amid loud
shouts from the assembled soldiery drawn
up on the shore and about the landing-stage
in anticipation of the chief's arrival,
and from the rag-tag populace swarming
on every patch of open space, the vessel ran
a few yards up the river, planed as it gathered
speed, and finally soared smoothly into the air.

Burroughs flew low, so that the trees that
edged the river might prevent the spectators
at the harbour from following too closely the
direction of his flight.  Chung Pi was as
happy as a lark.  He sat, beaming a bland
smile, in the seat which Errington had so
often occupied.  What visions of greatness
shone before his soaring soul!  He wished that
the honourable stranger would rise higher, so
that he might descend upon his chief like
a celestial benediction.  But the honourable
stranger's mood seemed to have changed
since he left the town.  There, he was affable,
condescending, communicative; he had a
pleasant smile; now he was silent, his lips
were pressed together, his moustache
appeared stern and forbidding.  Chung Pi
reflected that he naturally felt his responsibility.

For some two miles Burroughs headed
straight up the river.  Then, well clear of
the town, he suddenly altered his course,
leaving the river, flying inland, rising as he
did so, in order to clear the tree-tops and to
get a complete view of the city.  The flying
boat was describing a circle; presently it was
heading on a straight course for Su Fing's
yamen, that stood, bright and picturesque,
a conspicuous object on its elevated site.

"But what is this?" said Chung Pi
anxiously.  "We are going back!"

Burroughs did not turn his head or open
his lips.  But Chin Tai, squatting a little
in the rear of the captain, remembered the
instructions which his master had impressed
upon him in that quiet talk by the window
of the prisoner's room.

"Be not alarmed, noble captain," he said
with obsequious reverence.  "My august
master has forgotten the little charm which
he carries to keep off the evil spirits of the air.
It would be terrible to start on so important
a journey without this necessary talisman."

"But we have already started," Chung Pi
objected.  "And have I not the red silk in
my queue, and my own charm about my
neck?  Will they not suffice, O foolish one?"

"Heaven-born excellency," replied Chin
Tai in still more submissive tones, "you
perceive that we have started to return to
the yamen.  We shall begin our real journey
from there."

"But your illustrious master has the
charm.  He showed it me long ago."

For a moment Chin Tai was staggered;
but ready wit coming to his aid, he said--

"This is another charm, noble captain--a
better one.  My august master must have
left it in the yamen.  Even the great are at
times foolish."

"That is true," said Chung Pi, thinking
of Su Fing.  "Your illustrious master does
well to be quite safe, but we waste much time."

"Very little, illustrious captain.  Are we
not flying swift as any bird?  Your excellency
will be amazed to see how fast we can
go, before our flight is finished."

Chung Pi was pacified.  Indeed, he began
to revel in his sensations.  How smoothly
the vessel flew!  How delightful was the
scene below--the tree-tops never beheld
yet except by the birds of the air, the rolling
river, the woods and vales beyond; the city,
so rapidly approaching, in its new aspect no
longer a labyrinth of mean streets, but a
picturesque pattern of masonry!  Su Fing,
with all his examinations, had never learnt
these secrets of the air; Chung Pi began to
wonder whether so ignorant a man was fitted
to be chief.

Burroughs steered straight for the yamen.
It was a severe test of his airmanship to
alight on the narrow piece of ornamental
water that graced the gardens, and to avoid
the bridge that zigzagged across it from
shore to shore.  He shaved it almost by a
hair-breadth, and came safely down upon
the lake's unruffled surface.  Then he ran
the vessel to the end nearest the yamen,
and brought it up against the stone parapet
of a terrace on which Su Fing was wont to
walk of an evening, watching the graceful
movements of his swans, and meditating his
projects against tyranny.

And now Burroughs found his tongue.
Speaking with a curt brevity that somewhat
offended the captain's sense of what was due
to his new-born dignity, he ordered--for it
was more an order than a request--Chung Pi
to remain in the boat with Lo San; he
himself with his servant would proceed to the
yamen and fetch the charm.  Lo San was
nervous.  He had made up his mind to
throttle the captain if any harm befell
"Massa Bullows," or if he attempted in any
way to interfere.  But looking at the big
man, his muscular limbs, his sword and
dagger, he felt that the task might prove
to be beyond his powers.

"Massa Bullows" had ordered him to turn
the vessel round, so that its head pointed
towards the river, and to be ready to throw
the engine into first speed as soon as he gave
the word on his return.  Having brought
the boat again alongside the parapet, he sat
waiting, with his eyes fixed on Chung Pi's
half-sullen face.

Burroughs, meanwhile, had hurried with
Chin Tai through the garden, crossed the
rising terraces, and come round to the
entrance of the yamen.  The guards stood
aside to let him pass.  Without any
appearance of haste he entered, and reached the
door of the room in which Errington and
Reinhardt were still confined.  The sentinels
were clustered about a window at one end
of the passage, gazing with curiosity at the
boat in which their captain sat.  Chin Tai
hailed them, and pointing to Chung Pi,
ordered the men to enter the room, release
the bound prisoner, and march him down
to the vessel.  Burroughs watched them
nervously, asking himself whether his scheme
would succeed.  It was at this point that it
threatened to break down.  He had calculated
that all four men would flock into the
room together, but only three did so, the
fourth remaining outside.

"Watch this man," said Burroughs to
Chin Tai, following the three men into the room.

They were stooping over the German,
fumbling with the knots which they had
themselves tied, when Errington, who had
moved unconcernedly towards the door,
suddenly darted out.  At the same moment
Burroughs stepped back into the passage,
pulled the door after him, and shot the bolt;
and Chin Tai sprang at the bewildered
sentinel, caught him by the throat, and
held on until he was half strangled.  Then
Burroughs drew from his pocket some cords
and a piece of canvas he had brought from
the boat, and with Errington's assistance
gagged and bound the man.

Before this was done, the sentinels bolted
in the room had begun to yell, hammering on
the door with the butts of their spears.  The
sounds attracted two or three servants of
the yamen, who had nothing to do until
their master returned.  They came running
into the passage from the outer courtyard,
just in time to see the two foreigners, and the
Chinaman, leap from the window on to the
walk beneath.  Instead of opening the door
of the prisoner's room, the servants ran
yelling towards the outer gate, to inform the
guards that the English prisoner had escaped,
and was being pursued by the German and
his boy.  The guards rushed up to the walk
beneath the window, from which they could
see Errington spring like a deer from terrace
to terrace, with the two others close behind
as if chasing him.

Burroughs had calculated that, even if
Chung Pi should catch sight of them the
moment they left the house, he would scarcely
be able to grasp and grapple with the
situation during the few seconds in which
they were sprinting across the eighty yards
of terraces that separated the yamen from
the lakeside.  They expected that his first
movement would be to spring ashore, and
Lo San had been ordered to lay the boat at
the steps leading up to the parapet so as to
give him an opportunity of doing so.  But
they had not reckoned with the effect of
their startling actions upon the captain's
wits, or with the clamour that had sprung up
behind them.  The whole population of the
yamen was streaming out into the grounds,
yelling at the top of their voices, many of
them without knowing why.  Su Fing's
wife and children were drawn from their
secluded quarters; cooks, scullions, hair-dressers,
nurses, gardeners, all the personnel
of the chief's establishment were out of doors.

Chung Pi, who had been sitting in
impatient dudgeon in the boat, rose to his feet
at this extraordinary hullabaloo, and gazed
in consternation up towards the yamen,
missing the three men, who were nearer to
him, but partially hidden by the shrubbery
of the terraces.  When they pulled themselves
up sharply at the stone parapet, leapt
down the stairs, and stepped gingerly, as
became the light framework of the craft, into
the canvas boat, he sank, utterly unstrung,
on to one of the thwarts.

This unhappy consequence of a surfeit
of melon seeds and sam-shu very much
simplified the matter for Burroughs and
Errington.  They had discussed in the room
in the yamen what they should do if the
genial warrior showed fight, and had come
reluctantly to the conclusion that it might
be necessary to tumble him into the lake.
It was shallow, and there was no danger of
so buoyant a man drowning.  The fugitives
were much relieved to find that it was
unnecessary to adopt a violent course with him.
It went against the grain to discommode
physically so friendly a simpleton, to say
nothing of the unwisdom of engaging in a
tussle when a score or two pursuers were
within a few yards of them.

At the moment of reaching the lakeside
Burroughs signed to Lo San to put the engine
at full speed.  Then dashing past the
bewildered captain, he seized the steering-wheel
as the vessel moved out.  For a few
yards the boat planed, but by the time it
had gathered way, and Burroughs adjusted
the elevator and switched the engine on to
the air tractor, the bridge was perilously
near.  But for the zigzag construction of the
bridge, the boat could hardly have been
prevented from dashing into it.  But a slight
movement of the rudder caused it to clear the
bridge where it dropped down towards the
approach on the lakeside, and it soared over
the stonework with the narrowest of margins.
From that point the grounds of the yamen
were open for the space of more than a
hundred yards, except for some clumps of
shrubbery which were easily avoided.  Free now
to employ the elevating planes, Burroughs
sent the vessel aloft, cleared the outer walls,
dodged the trees beyond, and set his course
straight for the river.

By this time Chung Pi had partially
regained his composure.  Not a word had
been spoken; everything had happened in
the space of a minute or two.  The captain's
dominating feeling was annoyance that the
stranger had dared to bring the prisoner
from the yamen without consulting him;
indeed, in defiance of the contrary wish he
had expressed earlier in the day.  But he
put it down to an ambitious desire to cut
a figure before the chief; and since he, Chung
Pi, would share in the glory of the feat, he
decided to overlook the presumption and
content himself by and by with a reprimand.

His feeling changed, however, to
amazement, suspicion and foreboding, when he
saw that the flying boat, instead of turning
up-river, skimmed over the tops of the houses
in the contrary direction.  He heard the
shouts of the crowds below, the ringing of
bells, the beating of gongs, and glancing to
the right he saw with dismay the smoke
of the chief's launch high up the river.

"We are going the wrong way!" he cried
in desperation.  "Su Fing is at hand!"

"Be at ease, noble captain," said Lo San
pleasantly.  "We shall soon be at Sui-Fu!"

He flattered himself that the shock of this
announcement would give Chung Pi "pins
and needles inside," as he said afterwards;
little foreseeing that he himself was to have
a succession of very unpleasant shocks before
night.





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.. _`WINGED`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XVIII


.. class:: center medium

   WINGED

.. vspace:: 2

For the first time in twenty-four hours
Burroughs felt at ease; Errington was with
him, Meichow was already far behind, and
there was little more to fear from the enemy.
Su Fing's launch was an old steamer,
incapable of effective pursuit.  The only vessel
of any speed at Meichow was Reinhardt's
motor launch, though even in the water that
could not vie with the flying boat.  No
doubt by this time the door of Errington's
room in the yamen had been opened, and
Reinhardt might have convinced the sentinel
that a trick had been played upon their
captain, and that he, not the insolent
stranger, was the true German.  But it was
unlikely that he would be wholly liberated
until the chief's arrival, and then it would
be too late even to attempt pursuit.

But all depended on the possibility of
keeping the machine in good running order, and
Burroughs soon began to be anxious on this
score.  When flying, it consumed a great deal
more petrol than when used as a hydroplane,
and the trial trips and the false start had
deplenished his supply.

"I doubt whether we've got enough to
carry us to Sui-Fu," he said to Errington at
his side.

"Chia-ling Fu is still in the hands of the rebels?"

"It was yesterday.  We shan't be safe
until we reach Sui-Fu."

"You had better drop, then, and run in
the water.  We've come too far already for
them to overtake us."

This seemed good advice, and Burroughs
shut off the tractor and let the vessel drop
gently into the water.  Assisted by the
current, and with the engine at little more
than half speed, it skimmed along at the rate
of at least twenty-five knots.

"I think I had better go and have a word
with Chung Pi," said Burroughs to Errington.
"He's in a terrible stew by the look of him."

"He's done for with Su Fing, beyond
doubt.  Go and smooth him down as well
as you can, old man."

Burroughs left Errington to navigate the
boat, and sat down at Chung Pi's feet, calling
Chin Tai to interpret.

"Have the evil spirits taken possession
of the thing?" asked the unhappy captain.
"But no; I see that you are not perturbed
in mind, honourable stranger.  What is the
meaning of this?  Did you not see the chief's
launch?  Why do you not give him the
boat, and the thousand dollars that your
august mandarins sent to support him?"

"I owe you a humble apology, noble
captain," replied Burroughs.  "I will confess
all to you, and when you have heard me, I
hope you will pardon me.  The prisoner
there is my friend."

"But you are a German!" Chung Pi interrupted.

"No.  I am an Englishman."  Chung Pi
groaned.  "My friend, as you know, had the
ill-fortune to interfere with your chief in a
little fight down-stream, and your chief very
naturally got even with him as soon as he
could.  Since he could be released in no other
way, I came up on this vessel to see what I
could do.  Imagine, then, my dismay when,
on returning with you from our little trip,
I saw the launch of a man, a German, who
had been a bad friend to my friend there, and
had refused to help him, though I begged
him to do so, knowing his relations with your
chief."

"Ah!  It is ill to catch a fish, and throw
away the net," said Chung Pi sententiously.
"But you say he is a German.  Where, then,
is his moustache?"

"Here!" said Burroughs solemnly, pointing
to his upper lip.

The Chinaman gasped.  Bending forward,
he examined the moustache closely.

"Such a thing I never heard of," he cried.
"Are you speaking the truth?  You have
deceived me once and twice."

"I know--I'm sorry I had to do it.
The moustache was shaved from the German
in an opium house, and a skilful countryman
of yours fitted it to my own hairless lip."

The Chinaman smiled; then he appeared
to reflect.

"It was well done," he said presently.
"Will you tell me where I can find that man?"

"My comprador can tell you," Burroughs
replied.  "Are you thinking of employing him?"

"I should like my moustache to grow up
instead of down," said Chung Pi simply.
"Yours is so much more becoming to a
warrior."

"If it didn't tickle so!  But, noble
captain, we must consider your position."

Chung Pi's look of anxiety returned; in
his preoccupation with this wonderful matter
of the moustache he had forgotten that he
too was a fugitive.

"Su Fing has a very hasty temper, by all
accounts," Burroughs went on.  "The loss
of his prisoner, and your treatment of his
German friend, will make him very angry
with you; he will believe, no doubt, that you
are a party to the whole scheme, and I'm
very much afraid that it won't be safe for
you to show your face at Meichow again."

"Su Fing would chop off my head," said
the captain ruefully.

"And that would be an irreparable loss,"
said Burroughs.  ("Not like the loss of a
moustache," added Chin Tai in translating.)  "We
are going to Sui-Fu.  Will you come
with us, or shall we put you down somewhere
near Chia-ling Fu, and leave you to make
your peace with the chief?"

"Not that," said Chung Pi decisively.
"A fish may sport in the kettle, but his life
will not be long.  I will go with you to
Sui-Fu.  And then----"

He fell into a train of deep reflection.
Burroughs waited, expecting him to reveal
something of what was passing in his mind;
but after some minutes' silence, he said--

"I feel that I have treated you very
shabbily, noble captain; but perhaps if you
consider what you yourself would have done
in the same circumstances----"

"Say no more, illustrious stranger," Chung
Pi interrupted, with a smile which Burroughs
at the time was at a loss to understand.  "I
feel that I am hanging on the tail of a
beautiful horse."

"What does he mean?" asked Burroughs
of Chin Tai, who grinned as he translated the
captain's remark.

"Hai!  He say he catchee tailo numpa
one hoss," said the man; "that tell he tink
he belongey some time topside fella."

"Get a rise in the world?  I don't quite see it."

"Massa no unastand this time; some time
massa savvy pidgin all same," said Chin Tai.

The explanation was as obscure as the
original statement; but Burroughs did not
press the matter; he had caught sight of
Chia-ling Fu in the distance.

His intention was to run past the town at
full speed.  It was in the occupation of the
rebels: the river was no doubt crowded with
their sampans and other small craft; but the
speed of the hydroplane was so great that it
ought to be easy to slip past almost before
the rebels were aware of their approach.
When once they had run by, there was
nothing in the harbour that could catch
them.  Then, with evening closing upon
them, the remainder of the journey down to
Sui-Fu would be free from peril.

The Englishmen were, however, much
startled when, on drawing nearer to the town,
they saw, apparently anchored in mid-stream,
one of the gunboats which had been lying
early that morning in the river above
Mei-chow.  Burroughs remembered now that
when he had accompanied Chung Pi down to
the landing-stage the vessel had left its
moorings.  He had supposed that it had
gone up-stream to meet the chief; but it
seemed probable that it had been sent
downstream to announce at Chia-ling Fu the
victory which Su Fing wished his supporters
to believe that he had won.

"This is rather awkward," said Errington.
"That's the very boat that took me to Mei-chow.
If they see me here they'll smell a rat."

"You can duck down: then they won't
see you.  Besides, if they see Chung Pi they'll
never dream there's anything wrong."

"There's something in that; but it looks
to me as if they are waiting for us.  If they
are they may fire before we are near enough
for them to see Chung Pi."

They knew the vessel well.  She had been
employed for some time in patrolling the
river, before she was captured by the pirates.
She carried a ten-pounder and a couple of
machine guns.  Su Fing, on arriving at his
headquarters and learning what had
happened, had at once telegraphed to Chia-ling
Fu, ordering the gunboat to intercept the
hydroplane.

Almost as soon as Errington had spoken,
there was a spurt of flame from the bows of
the vessel, and a heavy splash in the water
only twenty or thirty yards behind them.
No further proof was needed that the
gunboat had been lying in wait for them, and
that the gunners had got the range to a
nicety.  Only the great speed of the
hydroplane had saved it.

Burroughs did not lose a moment in
meeting this emergency.  Throwing the
differential gearing into action, he set the
air tractor in motion, and managed to lift
the vessel above the surface just as a second
shot dashed up a shower of spray beneath
him.  He glanced at the banks right and
left: the country was too open to give any
shelter from the enemy's fire, and no matter
in which direction he steered, he could hardly
be safe against the gun for several minutes,
when he should have succeeded in rising to
an altitude at which only high-angle fire
could be effective.  And to make matters
worse, the machine guns were brought into
action, and a stream of bullets rattled and
hissed around him.

Chung Pi and the other Chinamen had
at the first shot thrown themselves face
downwards in the bottom of the boat.

"Straight forward, Ted; right over their
heads," cried Errington, "it's the only
chance.  They can't use their guns then,
and I'll give odds against their doing any
damage with rifles."

Clearly this was the best thing to be done.
The next few moments were tense with
excitement.  The vessel rose, but it seemed
to Burroughs that she had never answered so
slowly to the elevating lever.  Above the
hum of the tractor could be heard the zip
of bullets as they tore their way through the
canvas of the planes and the sides of the boat.
Burroughs felt a nervous dread lest a shot
should reach the petrol tank or the cylinders.
But the boat still rose; it was drawing rapidly
nearer to the enemy, and the Englishmen
held their breath with suspense.

.. _`RUNNING THE GAUNTLET`:

.. figure:: images/img-213.jpg
   :align: center
   :alt: RUNNING THE GAUNTLET

   RUNNING THE GAUNTLET

There fell a sudden silence.  Burroughs'
intention had been seen by the gunners, and
as they could not lift their pieces high enough
to take aim at the vessel now that it was
rising, and the range altering every moment,
the gunboat was slewing round as if to head
down-stream.  It was broadside against the
stream when the flying boat flashed by at a
height of sixty feet.  The occupants heard
the reports of several rifles; but they were
now travelling at the rate of fifty or sixty
miles an hour, and nothing but a shower of
bullets from the machine guns had any
likelihood of striking them.

"All right now," said Errington, with a
gasp of relief, when the flying boat was a
good two hundred yards down-stream, and
the gunboat was still turning.

"I hope so," replied Burroughs.

He glanced from right to left, undecided
whether it would not be advisable to strike
inland and return to the river lower down;
for the channel was pretty straight for a long
distance, and the vessel, if it flew directly
forward, would still be in danger from the
guns.  In a few moments, however, he decided
that there was even more risk in leaving
the river if any mischance should happen to
the boat.  For one thing, the longer he flew,
the more petrol he consumed; for another,
if the engine failed, and he was forced to
descend, on land he would be at the mercy
of any wandering predatory band, whereas
on the water he could always drift on the
current, with some chance of safety if he did
not happen to be observed.  Accordingly
he flew straight ahead, intending to sink
upon the surface as soon as a bend in the
river hid the vessel from view.

In another half-minute the machine guns
recommenced firing.  The aim of the
gunners appeared to be even wilder than before.
Chung Pi and the servants had recovered
courage enough to rise to their knees and
peer over the edge of the canvas side at the
gunboat far behind.  The captain laughed
as he heard the report of the guns, and made
a jocular remark about the paltry skill of
Su Fing's gunners.  There was no longer the
whistle of bullets flying around, nor the
slight ripping sound of the shots passing
through the planes.  It seemed that all
danger was over.

The flying boat was now skirting the edge
of the swamp in which it had been concealed
by the river pirates, and Errington
remembered that Burroughs had never heard the
full story of that strange episode.  He had
been tempted to refer to the matter during
the lunch with Reinhardt, but the German
was in a sense their guest; and since
Burroughs did not mention it, Errington said
nothing.  After all it was Burroughs' affair.
The story would keep until they reached Sui-Fu.

They were now about three-quarters of a
mile from the gunboat, and Burroughs, with
his eye on a bend in the course a short
distance ahead, just where the painted rocks
gave warning that the water-way was not
clear, was congratulating himself that at that
point he might safely descend.  Suddenly
the firing behind redoubled in fury; it seemed
that the gunners had realized that in a few
seconds their chance would be gone.  Bullets
sang around; the Chinamen again ducked
their heads below the gunwale; and once or
twice there were the ominous sounds of
bullets tearing through the planes, or
flattening themselves against the metal parts of
the framework.

They were within a hundred yards of
safety when a double catastrophe happened.
Almost at the same instant the engine ceased
to work and one of the stays was cut clean
through.  In the excitement and anxiety of
the moment Burroughs was unaware that
he was wounded, and a cry uttered by Chung
Pi passed quite unnoticed.  The vessel tilted;
for a terrible second it seemed that it must
turn completely over; but Burroughs by a
dexterous movement succeeded in partially
righting it, at the same time shifting the
rudder so as to steer to the right over the
swamp.  He had at once recognized that to
fall into the river would have thrown the
whole party into the hands of the rebels.
Flight and hydroplaning were equally
impossible; and the only chance of evading
capture was to steer over the swamp.  He had
seen at a glance that the intricate network
of channels, overgrown with weeds, might
furnish a temporary refuge until the vessel's
injuries had been examined and if possible
repaired.

The momentum of the boat carried it
perhaps a quarter of a mile after the accident
happened.  Burroughs was able to bring it
safely to the surface of one of the channels.

"Here's a pretty look-out!" he said to
Errington.  "They'll see what has happened,
run down at full speed, and be up with us
in ten minutes at the most.  Luckily the
gunboat can't follow us into this swamp;
they'll have to lower boats to find us; we've
got a few minutes to discover a hiding-place."

"That's all right, old man," said Errington
cheerfully.  "I know this swamp.  We'll
give them a chase at any rate."





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`HIDE AND SEEK`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XIX


.. class:: center medium

   HIDE AND SEEK

.. vspace:: 2

At this point Errington assumed the
direction of affairs--much to the contentment
of Burroughs, who had now learnt by
the pain in his shoulder that he had not run
the gauntlet unscathed.  But Errington was
by no means happy.  It was one thing to
enter the swamp by the broad channel from
the river, and quite another to come down
into it from the air.  He had at once thought
of seeking out the deep reed-screened recess
where he had discovered the flying boat.
The huts, of course, might be occupied; in
that case some other hiding-place must be
found; but the fact that they had been
empty on the occasion of his first visit seemed
to show that they were inhabited only
occasionally, and by good fortune they might
be deserted now.  It was scarcely probable
that the crew of the gunboat were the same
men who had been engaged in Reinhardt's
little act of piracy, so that only by the most
extraordinary coincidence would they
spontaneously make for the same hiding-place.
If he could only discover it, Errington hoped
that the boat might remain concealed while
the necessary repairs were made.

But it was nearly dark.  In such a
labyrinth of waterways one might go hither
and thither perhaps for hours without coming
into the channel leading to the clear pool.
Still the attempt must be made; and there
was a chance that even if the former
hiding-place were not discovered, some other
secluded spot might be found that would
serve equally well.  The danger was that two
or three boats would be employed in
searching for them, one or another of which might
be lucky.

There was no time to be lost.  The first
thing was to fold back the planes, which
were an encumbrance to the vessel at all times
on the water, and especially among the
reed-beds.  The next thing was to get out the
punting poles with which the boat was
provided, and propel it up the channel; the
farther they got from the river the better.

The Chinese servants plied the poles, while
Errington steered, and Burroughs sat near
Chung Pi, condoling with him on his
misfortune in being wounded at the eleventh hour.

"It is a mark of honour for the captain
to be wounded when the private escapes,"
said Chung Pi; but as it was difficult for
either Lo San or Chin Tai to interpret while
attending to their task, the two wounded
men relapsed into silence, regarding each
other with mutual sympathy.

An altercation sprang up between the two
punters.  Each declared that the other was
a fool, and would wreck the boat.  Lo San,
presuming on his acquaintance with the
swamp, let fall slighting remarks on Chin
Tai's ignorance, which exasperated his
fellow-servant.  But mindful of Errington's threats
on a former occasion, they subdued their
voices; and since they spoke in Chinese, the
Englishmen never knew what insults they
hurled at each other.

Errington thought his best course was to
steer straight up the channel into which the
boat had fallen, rather than diverge to right
or left into the cross channels to which he
came at frequent intervals.  The sky was
growing darker and darker; it would soon
be impossible to proceed, and the prospect
of spending the night in comparatively open
water, with the chance of being stumbled
upon by the pursuers, or spied in the
morning, was exceedingly damping to the spirits.
A very few minutes after the vessel had been
got under way, the throb of the gunboat's
engine was distinctly heard; and Errington,
ordering the men to keep silent, shortly
afterwards caught the sound of voices and
then the thud of oars from the direction of
the river.  There was little doubt that two,
if not three, boats had been lowered from the
gunboat, and were already coming at a good
pace into the swamp.  This was, however,
so broad that the fugitives were fairly safe
for the present.  The pursuers might, indeed,
by some unlucky chance, know of the
hiding-place which Errington was seeking; but
they could not have any reason to guess that
Errington knew of it, unless they had among
them some of the men from whom he had
escaped before; and in any case the growing
darkness would render it as difficult for them
as for Errington to make their way there.

For some time the vessel was punted
slowly along; the sounds of pursuit drew
nearer; and Errington almost despaired of
succeeding in his quest when Lo San gave
a low exclamation, and signed eagerly to his
master to steer to the right.  In another
minute the boat emerged into the pool.
To cross it was the work of only a few
seconds, and Errington recognized with great
relief the opening of the narrow, tortuous
passage through which the boat had been
towed.  Leaving the steering wheel, he got
over the side into the water, and went to the
nose of the boat, so that he might the more
easily prevent it from sticking in the
reed-beds.  Thus, wading and punting, they
forced the vessel through the passage until
they came within a few yards of the patch of
dry land.

Here they stopped for a few minutes,
while Errington stole forward and
reconnoitred.  There were the huts, just
distinguishable in the darkness.  All was quiet.
The same few broken sampans were drawn
up on the shore.  In the midst of the open
space was the cooking-stove at which the old
Chinawoman had been broiling fish.
Errington, with many a cautious look around,
stepped on to the shore and walked rapidly
but stealthily up to the huts.  He paused at
each, listening.  No voices, no snores, came
from within them.  The place was deserted.

Returning to the boat, he brought it from
out its shelter among the reeds, and soon had
it drawn up for a few feet on the muddy
shore.  Every one of the party breathed more
freely.  They sat on the sampans to rest.
For some little time no one spoke; they all
listened intently: would the pursuers come
to the same spot?  They could hear voices,
faint in the distance; but the sounds seemed
to be receding.  It appeared certain that,
whether they knew of it or not, the pursuers
were not at present rowing in the direction of
the hiding-place.  Presently absolute silence
reigned; and Errington reckoned that they
were lucky in having approached so late in
the evening, when the wild fowl had settled
themselves; otherwise they might have been
betrayed by the birds' flight.

"We can't see what's wrong with the
machine in the darkness," said Burroughs
at length, in a whisper; "and we daren't
strike a light."

"No; the only thing we can do is to wait
for morning," replied Errington.  "We shall
pass a wretched night, old man."

"It might be worse.  I only wish I hadn't
got this whack in the shoulder; it stings
horribly."

"I can bathe it and tie it up; hope it's
not serious; but if we can get the machine
mended we shan't be long running down to
Sui-Fu in the morning, and then we'll soon
put you to rights."

Errington took a dipper down to the water,
filled it, and returned to bathe Burroughs'
wound.  Lo San met him.

"Captin he glumble velly much," he said.
"He say wantchee chow-chow; long time
he hab catchee nuffin to eat."

Burroughs had brought a little food from
Sui-Fu--enough to provide himself and the
two Chinamen with meals for a day.  A
portion of these provisions still remained; but
knowing Chung Pi's appetite, he doubted
whether the captain would be satisfied if the
food were divided.

"Tell him he can have a crust of bread, a
sausage end, and a mug of beer," he said.
"We haven't got any melon seeds or sam-shu."

Chung Pi gobbled the food with great
celerity, but drank the beer in slow sips,
having been assured that he could have no
more.  He still grumbled very much, and it
struck Burroughs suddenly that cold and
hunger might so work on the captain that
he might be tempted to betray them.
Henceforth he would be a marked man so
far as the rebels were concerned; and the
chance to reinstate himself in the favour of
his chief, Su Fing, might prevail over the
prospect of advancement at which he had
mysteriously hinted.

"You two men keep your eye on Chung
Pi," said Burroughs to the servants.  "He's
not to stir from the sampan he's on.  Show
him a knife if he objects, but don't use it."

Burroughs need not have been alarmed.
Chung Pi slept through the greater part of
the night; and in the intervals of wakefulness
he comforted himself for the cold and hunger
he felt by blissful imaginings of plenty of
sam-shu and melon seeds in a not distant future.

It was a wearisome, comfortless night for
the two Englishmen.  The cold was intense,
and the want of food rendered them the less
able to bear it.  Burroughs' shoulder, too,
gave him much pain, and became very stiff.
During that long darkness the friends talked
of many things--of old times, of recent
experiences, of the future.  Errington
related the full story of his recovery of the
flying boat; Burroughs in return told at
greater length than he had done in the yamen
the pilgrimage which Lo San had undertaken
for his master.  Errington said nothing to
Lo San at the time; but he resolved to
requite his servant's devotion substantially
if they got safe home.

They discussed one matter about which
Errington was troubled.  His dismissal from
the service of Ehrlich Söhne was in one sense
a relief; he wished to have nothing more to
do with Reinhardt, and remembering that
the German held a cheque for three months'
salary, he was glad to think that here was a
means of liquidating his debt.  But he felt
much depressed about the future.  His late
firm was of good standing, and to be
dismissed by them for what Reinhardt called
"irregularities" made him fear that other
employers would hesitate to take him into
their service.

"That's absolute rot," said Burroughs,
when Errington spoke of his fears.  "Nobody
will think any the worse of you in the
end.  Making an ass of yourself----"

"Rub it in!" interrupted Errington gloomily.

"Well, we all do it some time or other;
and making an ass of yourself isn't a crime,
or the prisons would be pretty full.  There
are plenty of firms as good as Ehrlich; if I
didn't know how touchy you are I'd suggest
your joining us; the pater----"

"Dry up!  D'you think I'll ask your
governor for a crib when I'm a rank failure,
a regular rotter?  A pretty fine thing that
'ud be, in return for all his kindness!"

"There you are!  I knew that's how
you'd take it.  A failure!  Why, you're no
end better at business than I am.  Everybody
knows it.  Look here, just shut down
on those idiotic notions of yours.  Chuck
'em away.  A fellow that never made a
mistake never made anything, somebody
said.  It's jolly well true.  Of course, if a
fellow goes on making mistakes, can't learn,
hasn't got the sense or the will-power to
pull up, he is a rotter, and there's no good
disguising it.  But many a juggins has
turned out a jolly fine chap; in a year or two
you'll laugh at yourself, and----"

"And thank my stars I had such a pal as
the Mole, even if he does lecture a bit.  Why
didn't you say all that and other things before?"

"Well, you know--I--well, I suppose I
was a juggins too, but you'd have shied a
brick at my head if I had, wouldn't you?"

What more they said need not be told.
That talk in the dead of night, under the
silent stars, knit them closer together in a
friendship which neither time nor
circumstance will ever break asunder.

.. vspace:: 2

As soon as there was a glimmer of light
they inspected the vessel.  The damage was
greater than they supposed.  The petrol
pipe union had been snapped; one of the
stays of the starboard plane was broken in
two; and a bullet had pierced a hole near
the bottom of one of the petrol cans, the
contents of which had almost entirely
trickled away.  They had only another half
can of the spirit left.  This was a very
disturbing discovery, but it suggested at the
same time what a lucky escape they had had.
They might well have expected that the heat
caused by the impact of the bullet would set
the petrol on fire.

"Rather a long job before us," said
Errington; "that is, if we try to mend the stay."

"The pipe won't take long," said
Burroughs.  "There's a bit of rubber tubing
in the locker.  We can stick the broken ends
of the pipe into that.  The stay is a different
matter."

"Couldn't we leave that alone, and trust
to our speed on the water?" Errington
suggested.

"Rather risky.  Unless the blackguards
have got sick of waiting all night and sheered
off, they'll spot us as soon as we take the
river, and another shot might do for us
altogether.  No; we must mend the stay
somehow, and then fly inland until we're out
of harm's way--until the petrol gives out."

"But the stay must be welded; and we
can't do that without hammering.  If the
gunboat's crew are anywhere about they are
sure to hear the row, and find us out in no time."

"We'll have to chance that," said
Burroughs.  "A worse thing is the want of
proper tools.  There's a hammer in the
locker, but we haven't got a forge.  We can
make a fire in that old stove there; but
we've no bellows, and we can never get heat
enough without."

"Never say die.  Where there's a stove
there ought to be bellows.  I'm going to look
round.  But work before breakfast, and no
supper the night before, doesn't make you
feel amiable, does it?"

"While you are looking for the bellows
I'll stroll along the shore and find out what
sort of a place we're on.  It's just as well to
know something about our whereabouts."

Burroughs walked past the sampan where
Chung Pi had passed the night.  A thick
white mist lay over the swamp, through
which nothing was visible beyond two or
three yards.  Chung Pi was sitting in the
sampan with his arms tightly folded.  He
seemed to have shrunk; Lo San and Chin
Tai also were blue with hunger and cold.
Burroughs felt sorry for them all.

"I regret having been compelled to inflict
these inconveniences on you, noble captain,"
he said; "it is a pity our charms have not
availed."

"Ah!  If you had not gone back for the
second talisman we should have been safe,"
said Chung Pi mournfully.

Burroughs had heard nothing about the
second talisman, but he did not ask for an
explanation, merely promising that Chung
Pi should enjoy a substantial feast as soon
as they reached Sui-Fu.

Proceeding along the shore, picking his
way carefully because of the mist, he had
walked for about a quarter of a mile when he
came suddenly upon a sampan, and halted,
fearing that it might belong to the enemy.
But as he stood there surrounded by the
clinging fog, he heard Errington's voice
apparently only a few yards away.  The
explanation flashed upon him at once.  They
were on a small island, encompassed by a
continuous screen of reeds.  This was in a
measure reassuring, for it diminished the risk
of being discovered.

He moved forward.  Errington saw a
figure looming through the mist, and
instantly challenged.

"It's all right, Pidge.  I've made a
tour of the place; it's an island.  Any luck?"

"Yes, I've found a cranky pair of bellows,
very Chinese, in one of the huts.  We can
start our forge at once....  Hullo!"

The exclamation was provoked by the
sound of a shot in the distance.

"What's that mean, I wonder?" said Burroughs.

"Don't know.  Shooting a duck for breakfast,
perhaps.  It's pretty clear that the
beggars haven't given us up.  When we
start hammering they'll hear us and are sure
to find us out."

"Better carry the stove into one of the
huts and shut yourself up there.  The sound
will be deadened then.  I wish now I'd
brought my engineer; he'd have made a
better job of it than you and Lo San; I can't
help, I'm sorry to say; my wretched arm is
as stiff as a poker."

"I've taken off the broken stay; half-an-hour's
work ought to finish the job as soon
as we get the fire going.  This mist is a
godsend; they can't see our smoke."

"Well, you take the two boys to lend a
hand in the hut, while I keep an eye on
Chung Pi and listen for the enemy."

The servants carried the stove and the
broken stay into the largest of the huts.
One of the others furnished plenty of wood
for the fire, and in a few minutes they had a
good blaze, and began the work of welding
the stay.  Burroughs was disconcerted to
find that although the hut was shut up as
closely as the ramshackle timbers allowed,
the sound of hammering was distinctly
audible outside.  He sat on the sampan
beside the dejected figure of Chung Pi, peering
through the mist, and listening intently.

By and by he fancied he heard voices from
the direction of the channel, and a few
minutes afterwards the muffled splash of
paddles struck his ear.  He waited until he
was no longer in doubt that the sounds were
approaching; then, taking Chung Pi by the
sleeve, he hurried him up to the hut where
the work was going on.

"They're coming this way, Pidge," he
said.  "Better knock off until we know
what's happening."

"I'll take Lo San down to the shore," said
Errington.  "Let us hope they'll miss the place."

At the shore Errington and the Chinaman
stood listening in silence.  The sound of
paddles was now distinctly audible, growing
louder every moment.  Presently there were
mingled with it the high-toned voices of
Chinamen.

"Can you hear what they say?" Errington whispered.

Lo San bent forward.

"He say 'Come this side,'" he whispered.
"He savvy this place all same."

"How many boats?"

"My tinkee two piecee sampan.  Hai!
He say: 'This side bobbely; muss belongey
place where tings belongey pilates.'"

Such fragments as these were alarming.
The boats could not be more than thirty
yards away, and it seemed as though one of
the men knew of the pirates' lair, and having
suspected that the hammering had proceeded
thence, was trying to guide the party towards
it.  But gradually the sounds receded.  Lo
San heard one man suggest that they should
go back to the ship.  Apparently they had
failed to find their way in the mist.  A more
distant voice seemed to acquiesce in the
suggestion, and the sounds died away until
there was again complete silence.

Then Errington returned to the hut and
resumed work on the stay, while Burroughs,
this time leaving Chung Pi behind, went
down to the shore to keep watch.  The mist
was gradually lifting; the screen of reeds
facing the island first became visible, then
a short stretch of the waterway that cut it
in two.  Little by little the whole prospect
became clear; from behind came the dull
hammering.

It was perhaps half-an-hour after Errington
had recommenced work when Burroughs
again caught the distant splash of oars.  He
instantly ran up to the hut and gave the
word to cease work; then returned with
Errington and Lo San to the shore.  Nearer
and nearer drew the sounds.  There was no
doubt that the pursuers were making in the
direction of the island.

The watchers dropped down behind one of
the stranded sampans and peered anxiously
over the edge.  If the approaching boat or
boats came within sight of the island, to
escape discovery was impossible.  The
Englishmen thought dismally of their chances
if it came to a fight.  They had a couple of
revolvers; the Chinamen had their knives;
but the pursuers, besides being more
numerous, were without doubt completely armed.
There could be only one end to the struggle,
and there was no means of avoiding it.
The stay was not completely repaired; it
had to be refitted to the plane; and if the
pursuers' boat held on its present course, as
indicated by the growing sound, it must
come within sight of the island long before
the hydroplane could be got ready.

The voices of the approaching men now
sounded so near that the watchers expected
every moment their boat to glide into view
on the waterway.  They heard even the
swishing of the rushes as the craft pushed its
way among them.  Suddenly there was a
change.  The sounds appeared to take a
slightly different direction.

"He say, 'Muss belongey this side,'"
whispered Lo San.

A few moments passed, during which the
sounds grew somewhat fainter.  Then they
ceased abruptly: it was as if the men had
suddenly found that which they sought.
The silence continued, and Errington became
alarmed.  What were the pursuers about?
He felt that he must know.  Whispering
his intention to Burroughs, he stepped into
the water, waded noiselessly across to the
nearest bed of reeds, skirted the outer edge,
and disappeared from view.

He had not gone more than a dozen yards
when he guessed what had happened.  The
man who had professed to know the island
had lost his way, as was very natural in a
passage that had many bewildering turns,
with openings here and there among the
reeds, which it must be difficult to
distinguish one from another.  The course
which the boat had taken was plainly
indicated by the bent and broken reeds among
which it had been forced.  Wading very
cautiously in the same direction, and bending
low, so that he was almost completely
concealed, Errington in a few seconds saw with
great surprise the nose of an empty boat
projecting above the reeds, and apparently
resting on dry land.  The stern of the boat
was hidden.

Instantly the explanation flashed upon
him.  The pursuers had lighted upon
another patch of firm land, of which there were
many dotted about the swamp, and imagining
it to be the island of which they were
in search, had gone ashore to explore the place.

Errington wondered how large the patch
of dry land might be.  If it were no longer
than the island on which the hydroplane
was beached, the men would soon discover
their mistake, return to the boat, and
continue their search.  It was almost incredible
that they should then fail to find the other
island, within thirty yards of them.  Was it
possible in any way to check them?

A sudden idea occurred to him.  Retracing
his steps through the icy cold water, he came
to the shore where Burroughs was anxiously
awaiting his return, and waded to the
hydroplane.  From this he took the boat-hook, a
long light pole of bamboo.  Then putting his
fingers to his lips, he set off again through the
water, in nervous dread lest, short as his
absence had been, the pursuers had had time
to come back to their boat.

To his great relief, when he reached the
spot, nobody was in sight.  The boat
remained as he had left it.  Standing
concealed among the reeds, he thrust the
boat-hook forward, and after a few seconds'
groping caught the hidden stern of the boat
and drew it gently towards him--slowly and
carefully, so as to make the least possible
noise.  The boat had not been tied up.  It
slid down the shelving bank inch by inch
until it floated.  Errington drew it on,
through the reeds, which rustled unavoidably
as it passed through them; then, turning
his back, he towed it as rapidly as he could
up the waterway towards his own island.

"Marooned, old chap," he said cheerfully
to Burroughs, who started up in amazement.
"But the water's deadly cold!"





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`WILL-O'-THE-WISP`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XX


.. class:: center medium

   WILL-O'-THE-WISP

.. vspace:: 2

Six men had landed from the boat,
convinced that they had come to the island
from which the sound of hammering had
proceeded.  Their guide was somewhat
perplexed at the absence of huts, but concluded
that he had come to another part of the
island, and led his companions through a
tangle of shrubs and brushwood, expecting
to come upon the huts from the rear.  But
ten minutes' search over the ground proved
him to be mistaken, and the party retraced
their steps, intending to proceed farther in
their boat.

They stood rooted in consternation when,
reaching the spot where they had left the
boat, they discovered its disappearance.
But it did not occur to them at first that any
stealthy hand had been concerned.  One
reviled another for not having drawn the
boat high enough up the shore, supposing
that it had slipped down by its own weight.
The strange thing was that, there being
little or no current, it had so completely
disappeared.  They ran up and down the
banks peering into the rushes, becoming
more and more angry and perplexed as the
suspicion dawned upon them that the boat
had been stolen.

Meanwhile Errington had explained to
Burroughs what had happened.  They were
congratulating themselves on having at least
won a respite, during which the repairing
of the stay might be finished, when they
heard a loud shout from the men who had
thus been marooned.

"There were two boats last night," said
Errington.  "They're calling to the other."

The shout was repeated, several men
calling together.  And then came a faint
call in answer.

"My tinkee 'nother boat come this side
chop-chop," said Lo San.

Again the shout was raised, and an answer
came, a little less faintly, from somewhere
in the distance.

"We shall have the others on us in no
time," said Burroughs.  "How long will
the job take now?"

"Ten minutes to get the fire up again and
finish welding, five to fix it," replied Errington.

"There's just a chance then, if you hurry
up," said Burroughs.  "They may be some
time finding the fellows you have marooned.
When they do find them, they'll search the
whole neighbourhood, and there isn't the
ghost of a chance of their not finding us,
especially with the hammering going on again."

"I tell you what," said Errington.  "D'you
think you could manage to lend a hand while
Chin Tai finishes the job?  He can't do it
alone, or Lo San either; but with you to
keep an eye on it I think he could."

"I could do that.  Why?"

"Because I could then lead the beggars
off the scent.  Lo San and I can use this
boat.  My idea is to row out a little way and
hide in the reeds until the second boat has
come up and taken off the men; then to
show ourselves and make them chase us
into the main channel.  We both know the
swamp pretty well, and we could lead them
such a dance that you'd have plenty of time
to get things finished here.  You may be
sure that when they see it's their boat they'll
be keen enough to overtake us."

"But they know there are more than two
of us," Burroughs objected; "and when they
hear the hammering again, they will very
likely drop you for the bigger game."

"Don't begin the hammering at once.
Wait till you hear me coo-ee, which won't be
until I've drawn them pretty far away.  All
we want is a quarter of an hour's grace, and
it'll be strange if I can't play them so long."

"And what about us?  Are we to fly out
and pick you up?"

"Better wait for me.  I'll get back here.
When the repairs are finished it won't take
a minute to get the boat afloat, and as you
can't possibly get up enough speed among
these rushes to fly, I'd better be here: I
know the place, you don't."

"All right, then.  And the sooner you
start the better; the second boat is coming
up pretty fast, judging by the shouts."

Errington got into the boat with Lo San,
and pulled off quietly.  He was in something
of a quandary.  He wished the Chinamen to
see him as soon as they had taken off their
stranded companions, but until then to
remain undiscovered by both parties.  This
was difficult to manage, because the only
point from which he would be visible from
the shore where he had found the boat was
the entrance of the narrow cross passage
from the wider waterway leading to the
island.  If he took up his position there, he
would be seen first by the crew of the second boat.

To overcome the difficulty both he and
Lo San had to get into the water and lug
the boat through a mass of reeds, behind
which they could see without being seen.
They had hardly concealed themselves when
the second boat came round a bend in the
winding waterway, and, guided by the
shouts of the marooned crew, swung round
to the right.  The moment they were out
of sight, Errington and Lo San dragged their
boat back through the reeds, and lay to,
waiting until they should hear that the men
had been taken off.

There was a tremendous hubbub of explanations
when the two parties of Chinamen met.

"What are they saying?" asked Errington,
as he paddled gently towards the
entrance of the passage up which the boat
had disappeared.

"My no can tell," said Lo San.  "He
piecee fella makee plenty too muchee bobbely."

At a slight diminution in the uproar
Errington guessed that the explanations,
whatever they were, were over, and that
the men were being taken into the boat.
With a stroke of the paddle he brought the
nose of his boat to the edge of the reed-bed,
where, by stretching forward, he could see
what was going on.  There were eight men
in the boat; two were still on the bank,
waiting until room was made for them.
Errington smiled: the boat thus overloaded
would not be difficult to outdistance.

The last man was stepping into the boat.
The moment had come.  Whispering to
Lo San to make as much noise with his
paddle as possible, he gave the word to go.
The two paddles struck the water together
with a loud splash, and the boat shot ahead
in full view of the Chinamen, making directly
for the main channel leading to the river.
Terrific yells escaped the pursuers when they
saw their boat dashing away from them with
a white man on board.  Errington had little
doubt that his stratagem had succeeded.

The passage wound so frequently, and the
reeds grew so high, that it was impossible
to see whether the Chinamen were actually
in pursuit unless he waited for them.  He
stopped paddling at a spot where about ten
yards of the waterway was visible behind,
In a minute or two the nose of the pursuing
boat emerged from behind the reeds.
Instantly Errington started again, and was
out of sight in five seconds.  The Chinamen
broke into fierce yells when they saw him;
one of them snapped a rifle, but the shot only
disturbed the water-fowl.  Errington
wondered with a little anxiety whether a third
boat was in the swamp ahead of him, or
would be lowered from the gunboat at the
sound of the shot; but the only course
possible at present was to go straight ahead.
He had seen by the sluggish movement of
the pursuing boat, and its depth in the
water, that he would be an easy winner in the race.

Thus the chase went on down the winding
channel.  Every now and then Errington
slackened his pace, so that the pursuers
might have a glimpse of him--not long
enough to take aim--and be drawn farther
and farther from Burroughs.  They were so
intent on recovering their boat that they had
apparently forgotten the hydroplane and the
other members of its crew.

At last Errington came out into the pool.
He paddled quickly across it, in a direction
away from the river, satisfying himself by
a rapid glance around that no other boat was
in sight.  Just as he reached the farther
side, the Chinamen's boat shot out from
among the reeds.  They stopped paddling,
looking round for their quarry, and catching
sight of him near a reed-bed about three
hundred yards away, they opened fire.  The
bullets passed unpleasantly close, and
Errington at once drove the boat into one
of the many narrow channels, and was out
of sight in a few seconds.  Thereupon the
Chinamen gave chase again; but when they
reached the other side of the pool, and saw
that the enemy had disappeared, they
apparently recognized that they were
outmatched, and stopped to consider what they
should do.

At this moment a loud and prolonged
coo-ee sounded from the midst of the swamp.
Whether they recognized it as a signal or
not, it roused them to desperate energy.
Concealed by the reeds, Errington listened
to a violent altercation among them.  They
were disputing which of them should enter
the water and so lighten the boat.  It ended
in three of the six who had been marooned
slipping over the side and wading slowly
towards a small dry patch, where they posted
themselves, holding their rifles ready to shoot
at the fugitives if they should reappear.
The remaining men drove their boat rather
more rapidly than before in the direction
from which the coo-ee had come.

Errington had not seen what had been
done, but hearing the boat approaching, he
started again, paddling easily until the
pursuers came into view.  The fact that
they had lightened the boat did not trouble
him.  His boat was of about the same size,
and Lo San and he could easily keep ahead.
But he was somewhat anxious lest he should
presently find himself in a blind alley.  He
did not know the part of the swamp to
which he had now come, and it was quite
possible that, entering a passage that seemed
free, he would come upon an impenetrable
belt of reeds that would form an effectual
barrier.  If at such a moment the enemy
were in sight, he might well be overhauled
before he could get free.

The pursuing boat, although no longer
burdened with a double crew, was lower in
the water than that in which Errington and
Lo San were.  It flashed upon Errington
that if he could only find a channel where
the depth of water was not more than
sufficient to allow the passage of his boat,
the other might stick in the mud and relieve
him of further trouble.  He remembered
that, when circling the pool with Lo San, he
had come to very shallow water at the end
farthest from the river, and wondered
whether he could find his way there now.

Turning at a venture into a channel at
his right hand, comparatively free from reeds,
he struck out rapidly, splashing with the
paddles in order to lead the enemy on.
By great good fortune, the channel led by a
tortuous course to the upper end of the pool.
A little search discovered the shallow part,
and marking it carefully in his mind by the
adjacent reed clumps, he backed to the
entrance of the channel down which he had
just come, ready to dash ahead the moment
the pursuers came in sight.

They gave a loud shout when they saw
him; the distance between the boats was
very little; and as Errington's moved away,
the pursuers came on with redoubled energy.
He led them straight for the shallows,
hoping that they would follow directly in
his wake.  There was nothing to make them
suspicious.  They paddled hard, shouting
with triumph when they saw that they were
gaining.  Foot by foot they neared the
danger point; Errington held his breath in
suspense.  Then there came suddenly from
the Chinamen a cry of a different kind.
The boat, driving into the mud, had thrown
them one upon another.  One lost his
paddle.  When they recovered their balance,
it was to find their boat stuck hopelessly in
a mud-bank, and the other darting obliquely
across the pool.  Howling with rage, they
seized their rifles.  At the same moment
there came shots from the patch of dry
ground beyond the lower end, where the
three men had caught sight of the fugitives
speeding back to the channel from which
they had first come.  Their marksmanship
at the moving target was bad.  The shots
from both parties fell harmlessly; and
Errington disappeared from view.

"My tinkee topside pidgin, galaw!" cried
Lo San gleefully.  "One piecee lot this side,
'nother piecee lot that side" (he waved
his arm towards the upper and the lower
ends of the pool in succession).  "No can
do anyting.  Massa Bullows he belongey bust
laughin' what time you tellum."





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.. _`THE END OF THE CHASE`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XXI


.. class:: center medium

   THE END OF THE CHASE

.. vspace:: 2

Ten minutes' paddling brought the boat
to the island.  Burroughs stood on the shore
with Chung Pi and Chin Tai, waiting in
great anxiety.

"O.K.," shouted Errington, the moment
he saw his friend.  "They've divided forces--two
parties, nearly three-quarters of a mile apart."

"Good man!" cried Burroughs as Errington
stepped ashore.  "You can tell me all
about it presently.  I was uneasy when I
heard the shots.  We've got everything
ready.  The welding isn't very good, but
I think the stay will last long enough to get
us home.  The only difficulty is the petrol.
I don't think we've enough for more than
thirty miles on the water.  Less than twenty,
probably, in the air.  In any case we shall
have to run the gauntlet again."

"Yes, it looks awkward.  I must tell
you this much.  Seven men are at the upper
end of the pool, dragging their boat out of
the mud; no doubt they've done it by this
time.  Three more are posted on a dry patch
below the lower end.  I think they'll not
attempt to pursue us again; but the boat
will probably run down to the gunboat,
and they'll be on the watch for us.  If we
start the engine the sound will give them
notice: the best thing we can do is to tow
the hydroplane into the pool, then set her
running, get up enough speed to fly, and
cut off to the river at an angle, so that we
reach it some way lower down.  Of course
we shall be heard, and it would be a thousand
times better if we could fly overland the
whole way; but we are at least sixty miles
from Sui-Fu, and we simply daren't use up
our petrol."

"I can't think of any other plan," said
Burroughs.  "As it is, we shall have to
trust entirely to the current for the last
thirty miles or so, and everything depends
on how far they venture to pursue us.  It's
time some government boats came up
stream; but it looks as if they are relying
entirely on the regiments from Tibet to put
down the rising.  We must simply take
our chance."

The hydroplane was launched, and the
tow-rope fastened to the boat, which Lo San
and Chin Tai were to paddle to the pool.
Chung Pi, much depressed for want of his
customary nourishment, inquired anxiously
what it was proposed to do, and looked
troubled on hearing that it was necessary
again to approach the river.

"I am a land fighter," he said mournfully;
"in these movements on the water and in the
air I am not myself.  I should feel happier
if I could find some melon garden, and fortify
myself against the perils we shall meet."

"Well, we'll drop you into the first melon
garden we see, if you like," said Burroughs
bluntly.

"No, no, illustrious Englishman; I did
but utter a pious wish.  I must still hang
on to the tail of my horse, though he no
longer seems as beautiful as he did."

They set off along the waterway, Errington
instructing Lo San to stop at the opening
into the pool, and report, before paddling
farther, whether he saw any sign of the
enemy.  On reaching this point, they found
neither boat nor men; it was clear that
Errington had guessed rightly.

As soon as the hydroplane was well out
on the pool, the tow-rope was cast off, the
planes were outspread, and Errington started
the engine, setting the vessel straight
towards the channel leading to the river.
When it had gathered speed, a touch on the
elevator sent it aloft, and Errington steered
to the right, intending to strike the river
about half-a-mile lower down than the mouth
of the channel.  He kept fairly low, so that
the flying boat should be concealed from the
gunboat by the intervening trees.

They came to the river, and instantly
saw with alarm that their precaution was
futile.  In a recess of the opposite bank, with
black smoke pouring from its funnel, lay
the gunboat.  The small boat was at that
moment being taken on board.  The rebels
had chosen this position to lie in wait, partly
to be out of the current, partly to cut off
the escape of the hydroplane down the river
if it eluded the search parties.

Errington at once steered the machine
back towards the land.  He dared not risk
a straight flight down-stream, within range
of the guns; another mishap might put the
engine wholly out of action, and in spite of
the expenditure of petrol, flying must be
kept up for some minutes longer.  That he
did wisely was immediately proved.  A
fusillade broke out from the deck of the
gunboat, and in another half-minute the
machine guns opened fire.  Luckily they
had been trained hurriedly, and the shots
went wide of the mark.  Before they could be
fired again the flying boat was out of sight
behind the trees.

It was some minutes before Errington
ventured to direct his course again towards
the river.  Everybody on board the flying
boat expected that the rebels would by this
time have come to the conclusion that pursuit
was hopeless.  The vessel alighted safely
on the stream, and bearing in mind the
necessity of husbanding the petrol, Errington
thought he might now let it drift along on
the current.

But he was disabused in a very short time.
For some miles the river wound with such
frequent curves that only short stretches
of it were visible in either direction.  Thus
it was with a shock of surprise that the
occupants of the flying boat discovered,
on nearing the end of a straight reach, that
the gunboat was coming down at full speed
scarcely half-a-mile behind them.  Errington
at once started the engine; the vessel cut
round the curve, and planed along at a rate
far exceeding the maximum of which the
gunboat was capable.

"We can easily keep ahead as long as
the petrol lasts," said Burroughs; "but it
seems as if the beggars know by instinct that
we're running short.  The worst of it is that
we've several long straight reaches to
navigate a little lower down, and there they can
fire at us as they please."

"Wouldn't it be better to go ahead full
speed until the petrol gives out?" said
Errington.  "We could gain at least a
dozen miles on the gunboat."

"And still be forty from Sui-Fu, absolutely
helpless."

"Why not run up some creek, then, and
hide until she has passed or given it up?"

"No good.  We've passed one or two
sampans already, and the farther we go the
more traffic we shall meet; some one would
obligingly inform the honourable ruffians
of our whereabouts.  No: we'd better go
as we are going; use our engine for spurts
when we are hard pressed, and drift when
we are not."

Very soon afterwards they encountered a
difficulty which they might have foreseen.
The river narrowed to little more than a
gorge, through which the water poured in
swift swirling volume.  A junk was being
hauled against the current by a hundred
"trackers" on the bank.  The channel on
one side was obstructed by the tow-ropes;
on the other there was not room for the flying
boat to pass, because of the rocks that
projected into the stream, even though the
planes had been folded back.  There was
nothing for it but to draw into the side, and
wait until the vessel had passed.

This wasted five minutes of valuable time.
The gunboat would, of course, be delayed in
the same way; but the gorge was fairly
straight, and if she gained the upper end
before the fugitives had escaped at the lower,
the flying boat would be at the mercy of her guns.

Almost immediately after the boat had
run in to the bank a shot whistled overhead.
Luckily the junk had now passed.  Its deck
was crowded with Chinamen gazing curiously
at the flying boat.  At the sound of the
shot they yelled with fright, and ran for
shelter beneath the port gunwale.  A second
shot from the gunboat struck away one of
the junk's yards, many of the trackers
dropped their ropes and ran for their lives,
and the unwieldy vessel fell away towards
mid-stream, forming an effective screen
against the guns.

Profiting by this diversion, Errington
again put the engine at speed, and the flying
boat raced down the river, out of the gorge,
into a broad straight reach that extended
apparently for miles.  Burroughs glanced
into the petrol tank: it was almost empty.
All that they had remaining was a little in
the bottom of the can which had been
pierced by the bullet.  Lo San poured this
into the tank.

Up to this time the Englishmen had
retained their confidence; but the
accumulated misfortunes of the last few minutes
plunged them in desperate anxiety.  The
drifting of the junk across the stream might
be expected to check the gunboat for at least
ten minutes, during which they would be
safe from gunfire.  But as soon as the
gunboat got clear, she would have a free field,
and unless the flying boat could arrive at
the farther end of the long straight reach
before the guns could be brought into action,
she could hardly escape.

Only one course was possible: to use up
all the remaining petrol for a last flight.
Then the issue was in the hands of Fate.
The planes were thrown back.  Running on
at full speed, the vessel skimmed the surface,
rose into the air, and flew along at the rate
of fifty miles an hour.  The occupants of
various sampans, fishermen casting their
nets from the banks, men and women at
work in the paddy fields beyond, gazed with
amazement at the strange object flying over
the middle of the river.  Before it came to
the end of the straight reach the petrol was
all consumed; the vessel sank upon the
surface; and behind, the gunboat could be
seen steaming after it in full career.

Errington steered round the bend.  It
was a short one; in five minutes the river
again stretched straight in front.  He was
familiar enough with the neighbourhood to
know that Sui-Fu was still nearly thirty
miles distant.  There was now no engine
power to rely on; they could but drift.
Once more the idea of running into a creek
occurred to them, only to be abandoned,
for the sampans in this part of the river were
more numerous, and some one would certainly
think it worth while to betray their presence.

They were at their wits' end.  During
their flight they had gained several miles
on the gunboat, but the very fact that they
had descended would inform the rebels
that they could fly no longer.  The pursuit
would be kept up; they must be overtaken
within twenty minutes at the most, unless
some unforeseen incident intervened.

The boat drifted on, and came to another
bend; the gunboat had not yet hove in sight,
but they could distinctly hear the throbbing
of its engines.  Again the river straightened,
and though there were slight curves which
would hide them from the pursuers for some
few moments at a time, the general course
was so direct that for at least five minutes
they would afford a target for the guns.
Looking anxiously back, Burroughs saw the
gunboat come into the straight, perhaps a
mile behind.  Errington steered near the
left bank, in order to gain what cover the
occasional slight windings would afford.  A
minute afterwards they heard a report, but
they did not see the shot, nor discover where
it fell.  Half-a-minute later a shot plunged
into the water a yard or two behind; the
gunners had the range.  A tree-clad bluff
hid them for another minute; as soon as the
boat again came into the open, a third shot
fell some distance ahead, and the gunboat
was rapidly overhauling them.  Disregarding
the risk of striking a submerged rock,
Errington hugged the bank, losing time by
following the curves, but gaining what was
much more precious in this crisis, fitful
protection from the guns.

They came to the end of the reach.  Turning
the corner, they suddenly caught sight
of the smoke of a steamer ahead of them,
coming up-stream.  Their feeling at the
moment was that they were caught between
two fires, though an instant's reflection
showed them the scant probability of the
approaching vessel belonging to the rebels.
They were tense with excitement, anxiety,
hope.  The nose of the gunboat behind came
into view, only to disappear again as the
flying boat rounded a slight curve.  The
vessel ahead was not as yet visible; merely its
smoke could be seen over the right bank.
In another minute both vessels came into
sight simultaneously, at almost equal
intervals from the smaller craft drifting
downstream.  But the gunboat was with the
current; the vessel approaching, which
appeared to be a gunboat also, against it.  The
former opened fire again; shots churned up
the water around the flying boat; one carried
away the elevator, another shivered the
air tractor into a thousand fragments; and
all on board expected every moment that the
little vessel would be sunk or shattered--when
suddenly the firing ceased.  The
Englishmen looked round eagerly.  Their
pursuer was swinging round.

"Hai yah!  He wailo!" cried Lo San,
springing up and clapping his hands frantically.

The chase was over.

Quivering with relief from the strain,
Errington steered into the bank, and lay to
until the gunboat came up.  She carried no
colours, but there were several figures in
the bows whose aspect and costume marked
them out unmistakably as Germans.  The
vessel hove to, and one of the officers,
catching sight of Burroughs, gave a salute and
called to him in German.  Burroughs grinned.

"I am an Englishman," he said.

"English!" cried the officer; "but you
look not so.  You very like a compatriot.
Vat happen?"

Burroughs in his downright way was
about to answer, but Errington caught him
by the sleeve, saying--

"Hold hard, old chap."

His quicker mind saw that the Germans
would be glad of a pretext for intervention,
and though he had no love for the rebels,
he loved the Germans and their methods less.

"You have been attack by ze pirates?"
the officer continued.  "If zat is so, and
you give me note demanding assistance, I
go up to Meichow, and land men; zey shall
learn----"

"Nothing to speak of, sir," said Errington
cheerfully.  "They were having a little firing
practice, and we got in the way."

"But surely you vill make complaint!"
said the German, his face falling.

"Oh, not at all," replied Errington airily.
"We're used to that kind of thing.  It would
get 'em into trouble.  They're not a bad lot.
I believe this man was one"--with a jerk
of the thumb towards Chung Pi--"a jolly
sort of chap, you know."

The officer glanced from one to another
of the flying boat's crew; Burroughs with
inscrutable face, Errington with an easy
smile, the fat Chinaman stolid, the two
servants unmistakably grinning.  He was
puzzled, suspicious; was the Englishman
fencing with him?  Did he dare to play with
a German?

"Vell, gentlemen," said the officer, now
thoroughly irate, "you vill accompany me
to Sui-Fu.  I shall report zat my gunboat
interrupt to protect you from ze rebels.
You will do me ze honour to step up board."

"It's really very kind of you," said
Errington, with a charming smile, "but we're in
a hurry, thank you, and will go down under
our own power!"

He cast off, the vessel came into the
current, and politely doffing their hats the
Englishmen waved a smiling farewell.

"We're well out of that," said Burroughs.

"Yes," said Errington, "it would hardly
do for our little affair to be made the pretext
for a German landing in force and all the
rest of it.  It's the very thing they've been
looking for.  But I say, *would* you mind
taking off that moustache?"





.. vspace:: 4

.. _`MR. TING EXPLAINS`:

.. class:: center large

   CHAPTER XXII


.. class:: center medium

   MR. TING EXPLAINS

.. vspace:: 2

The adventures and misadventures of the
flying boat are, for the present, ended;
but there are certain scenes in the history
of the human characters of this little drama
which may perhaps have an interest for
those who have followed their fortunes
hitherto.

.. vspace:: 2

On the day after the arrival of Burroughs
and Errington in Sui-Fu, very early in the
morning, Chin Tai came to his master's
bedroom door and knocked with much more
vigour than usual.

"What is it?" Burroughs shouted from within.

"Time fo' gettee up, sah," called the man,
grinning at the can of shaving water he
carried.

"What time is it?"

"No savvy allo plopa; time fo' gettee up
all-same."

"It's hardly light, confound you!  Didn't
I tell you I wanted a long sleep?"

"Plenty muchee solly, sah; time fo' gettee
up.  One piecee fella outside come look-see
Massa Bullows; he say he no can wailo[#] befo'
he hab talkee cash pidgin[#] 'long-side Massa
Bullows."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left smaller

   [#] Go away.

.. vspace:: 1

.. class:: left smaller

   [#] Money matters.

.. vspace:: 2

"Send him to Sing Wen.  You know
perfectly well I don't do business in bed,
you ass.  Any more of this foolo pidgin and
you'll get the sack."

"Massa no unastan'," cried Chin Tai
excitedly.  "This piecee man he say he come
look-see Sing Wen evely day-lo; Sing Wen
say he no can makee anyting fo' he; he
muss waitee fo' massa come back."

"Who is the blackguard?"

"He velly 'spectable fella, sah; he
belongey opium shop-lo Pa-tang side."

"Oh!  That's quite enough.  Tell him
to get out; I've nothing to do with him or
his opium."

"My tellum all that, sah; he say he stop
plenty longee time; massa no look-see he,
ch'hoy! he cut float on door-step all-same."

Extravagant as this threat might appear,
Burroughs knew that it was by no means
unheard-of for a Chinaman, smarting under
a sense of injustice, to commit suicide on
the threshold of the man who had injured
him.  He was considering whether he had
not better get up and prevent the horrid
deed, when Errington, who occupied the next
room, came in by the communicating door.

"You're in for it, old chap," he said,
laughing.  "The receiver's as bad as the thief,
you know, and there's going to be trouble
about that moustache of yours."

He picked up the moustache from the
dressing-table, and dangled it before
Burroughs' disgusted eyes.

"Hang it all!" cried Burroughs, "I had
absolutely nothing to do with it.  Sing Wen
is the culprit."

"Qui facit per alium----"

"Oh, shut up!  He wasn't my agent."

"You'll find it hard to prove that after
giving him a hundred dollars.  Better see
the fellow and save scandal.  I'll stand by
you, Moley."

Burroughs got out of bed, muttering
anathemas, threw on his dressing-gown, and
went to the door, followed by Errington.
The sight of the grinning China boy waiting
there with his shaving-can exasperated him,
and Chin Tai shrank against the wall before
his master's glare.

They went down-stairs.  On the step at
the outer door squatted the sleek form of
the highly respectable brother-in-law of Sing
Wen's brother.  He rose and kow-towed humbly.

"Now, what do you want?" said Burroughs sternly.

"My velly solly come this time wakee up
hon'ble genelum," said the man.  "My
catchee plenty smart inside.  Sing Wen he
pay-lo hantun[#] dolla fo' Toitsche genelum
moustachee.  Mandalin he makee my pay-lo
hantun dolla squeeze.[#]  My catchee nuffin,
losee my numpa one cutsoma; he no belongey
my shop no mo'e.  Hai! plenty bad pidgin.
Wuss pidgin all-same.  My pay-lo barber
fella tin[#] dolla fo' fixee moustachee.  My
losee hantun dolla one time, 'nother time tin
dolla; my tinkee hon'ble genelum pay-lo tin
dolla, my wailo all plopa inside."

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left smaller

   [#] Hundred.

.. vspace:: 2

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   [#] Fine.

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left smaller

   [#] Ten.

.. vspace:: 2

"That's only fair," said Errington in a
laughing undertone to Burroughs.  "You
don't want the poor chap to be absolutely
out of pocket over the business."

"It might be worse," growled Burroughs.
"I'll give you a chit[#] to Sing Wen to pay you
ten dollars.  That'll satisfy you?"

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left smaller

   [#] Note.

.. vspace:: 2

"My savvy hon'ble genelum numpa one
fella," cried the delighted man, bowing to
the ground.

"I say, what'll you give me for this?"
asked Errington, producing the moustache
from behind his back.

The Chinaman stared.  His eyes gleamed.

"Hai!  My pay-lo fifty dolla," he
exclaimed.  "Takee wailo tin dolla, forty
dolla lef behind."  He opened his money
pouch and counted out the notes.  "My
savvy catchee plenty good pidgin, galaw!"

"Don't offer it to Mr. Reinhardt, you
know," said Errington, as the man pocketed
the moustache.

"My savvy plopa pidgin," said the man
with a leer, and shuffled away.

.. vspace:: 2

Reinhardt had a very unpleasant quarter
of an hour with Su Fing on the chief's arrival
at Meichow.  Explain, protest as he might,
the rebel refused to believe him, and accused
him (unkindest cut of all) of voluntarily
transferring his moustache to Burroughs for
the purpose of deception.  But Reinhardt
was a German, and therefore personally
inviolate.  Su Fing sent him ignominiously
down the river, expressing with ironic
courtesy his ardent wish that his moustache
would never grow less.

Reinhardt would gladly have gone into
retirement until he could once more show
a German face to the world.  Unhappily,
within a week a peremptory message from
his firm summoned him to Shanghai.  His
appearance in the European quarter was the
reverse of triumphant.  Some old acquaintances
affected not to recognize him; others
addressed him in such tones of mournful
sympathy that he could hardly control his
rage.  The story had already got about, and
when he entered the Club (for he did not lack
courage) the air of kindly commiseration
with which he was greeted drove him frantic.
The younger members of the club talked
among themselves of getting up a subscription
for the purchase of a new moustache.
In a few days his dressing-table was littered
with a great variety of infallible
hair-growers.  The directors of Ehrlich Söhne
said very unpleasant things of the ridicule
he was reflecting on the firm.  There were
bets in the Club that he would stand it for
ten days; but nobody grudged paying up
when, at the end of a week, it was known
that he had taken passage for Hamburg.
There was a vast crowd to see him off, and
this evidence of his popularity gained him
the good-will of the uninformed passengers
until the story leaked out on board the liner.
His voyage home was not pleasant.

The last that was heard of Conrad
Reinhardt was a story from the German
Cameroons.  He had got into bad odour with the
natives, and one day disappeared.  Several
persons, probably innocent, were punished;
but he was soon forgotten.

.. vspace:: 2

Lo San and Chin Tai had behaved very
well during the time of stress in which their
lives and their masters' hung in the balance.
But when they returned to the routine of
service at Sui-Fu, their daily bickerings
were resumed.  Chin Tai's animosity was
fed by the substantial present with which
Errington rewarded Lo San's devotion.
Lo San, it must be confessed, was very
exasperating.  In the midst of a wordy war
with his fellow-servant he would twit him
with his ignorance and want of enterprise.
He took a delight in displaying to the cook
and other domestics, in Chin Tai's presence,
the card tricks by means of which he had
paid his way to Meichow.

On one of these occasions the two came to
blows, which in China does not mean
fist-play in the approved British style, but
includes the use of finger-nails and boots,
and very painful handling of the pigtail.
The yells of combatants and spectators in
the kitchen reached the ears of the masters
in the dining-room.

"We shall really have to sack those
fellows," said Burroughs.  "It is getting
intolerable."

"Let us go and knock their heads together
first," said Errington.  "I should be
sorry to lose Lo San."

"He's not a patch on Chin Tai at looking
after one's clothes," said Burroughs, loyal
to his man.

"But Lo San's heaps better in serving at table."

"He can't polish boots."

"Chin Tai can't clean a gun."

"Well, hadn't we better have it out
ourselves first?" said Burroughs, laughing.
"Great Scott! there'll be murder soon.
Come on, Pidge."

They hastened to the kitchen.  The two
boys had each other by the pigtail with one
hand, and with the other were drawing
streaks on each other's face.  Burroughs
dragged them apart.

"Hai!  You piecee ruffians!  What fo'
you makee this infernal bobbely?" he said.

"He call me foolo!"

"He say my plenty muchee fathead!"

"He say my no can do card-pidgin!"

"He say my tellum plenty lies, talkee
foolo pidgin all time."

"Hold your tongues, both of you!" cried
Burroughs.  "Chin Tai, if you can't keep
the peace, I'll cut off your pigtail and send
you home to your grandmother."

"Massa say muss belongey good up
outside olo ribber, can do plenty fightee
wailo Sui-Fu," Chin Tai protested with an
aggrieved air.

"But I said you were to fight quietly,
not yell the house down.  Now I forbid you
to fight at all, do you understand?"

"You too, Lo San," said Errington.  "No
more of it, or off you go."

"My fightee he inside," said Lo San.

"My callee he plenty bad namee--inside,"
said Chin Tai.

"Well, what you do inside is nothing to
me," said Burroughs, repressing a smile.
"Perhaps if you take care to behave outside,
you'll be friends inside by and by."

There was no more fighting; the peace
of the house was no more disturbed; but
while China boys are China boys, Lo San and
Chin Tai will never cease to look jealously
upon each other as long as they serve two
masters whom they equally respect.

.. vspace:: 2

Some three weeks after the escape from
Su Fing's yamen, a pleasant little party sat
at table in the dining-room of Mr. Burroughs'
house at Shanghai.  Mr. Burroughs and his
family were there; the only guests were
Pierce Errington and Mr. Ting.  They were
all very merry.  Four of the party heard the
full story of the flying boat's adventures for
the first time, and as Errington had a pretty
art of humorous narrative, there was much
laughter at the tale of Reinhardt's moustache
and the vicissitudes in the career of Chung Pi.

When Mrs. Burroughs and her daughter--whom
Errington looked on very kindly--had
left the men to themselves, Mr. Ting
put on his spectacles.

"Look out!" Errington whispered to
Burroughs.  "There's something in the wind
when Tingy puts on the goggles."

Mr. Ting glanced benevolently round the
table, his eyes resting with peculiar intensity
on Errington--the old Pidge whom everybody
loved, with not a care upon his clear,
fresh countenance.  Lighting a cigarette, the
Chinaman said quietly--

"I have something to say.  It is a stlange
stoly; it concerns Pidge, but he will not
mind, I know, if I speak befo' his flends."

Errington looked a little uneasy.

"Look out!" whispered Burroughs slyly.

"Ten years ago," Mr. Ting went on,
"when Pidge was a little boy of nine, my
flend and master, Mr. Ellington, called me
into his loom one day and said to me, 'We
have done well over that deal in cotton,
Ting.  I've made a velly fine thing out of it.
But you know what I am.  I am a lich man
to-day, but I can't cure myself of this mania
for speculation, and as likely as not I'll be
a poor man to-mollow.  I want you to help
me.  Here's ten thousand pounds, put it
away; never lemind me of it; if I ask you
fol it, don't give it me.  I hand it to you in
tlust fo' me and my son.  If I'm blought
to beggaly, pay me the intelest; if I die,
hold it fo' my boy.  Watch over him, bling
him out here for a year or two; if then you
see that he inhelits my fatal weakness, pay
over the intelest, but never let him touch
the plincipal.'"

He paused.  The three men's eyes were
fixed on him; a flush had mantled Errington's
cheek.

"'But if my boy, when he leaves school,'"
Mr. Ting continued, "'turns out well, the
sort of fellow that can be tlusted to make
good use of the money, give it him; it
will give him a good start.'  That is what
my flend said to me.

"I have done what he wished.  You
wondered, Pierce, why I sent you such
velly tilesome letters; you thought Ting
a nuisance----"

"Sir!" Errington expostulated, but the
Chinaman smiled and raised his hand for
silence.

"I was doing what I thought my flend
would like.  But that is over; the school-days
are past.  I have kept the tlust; the
money is well invested, it is nearly twenty
thousand now; the time has come fo' me to
give account of it."

"Perhaps you had rather be left alone
with Mr. Ting, my lad," said Mr. Burroughs
kindly.

"No, sir; please stay.  You were my
father's friend too, and the Mole-----"

Mr. Ting noted the look that was exchanged
between the two--a look in which spoke
affection and perfect confidence.

"No one else knows of this," he said.
"I only made plovision for the devolution
of the tlust if I should die; I ventured to
tlansfer it to you, Mr. Bullows."

"I appreciate your confidence, Mr. Ting,"
said Mr. Burroughs warmly.

"But I have made up my mind that it
is the ploper time to tlansfer the money to
Pidge himself.  He has been here more than
a year; he has a good head fo' business,
evely one says so; and I think his father
would applove my action.  A little while--may
I say it?"--Errington answered with a
glance--"a little while I was aflaid that I
might still have to hold the money, and pay
only the intelest; but I think--I am light,
am I not?----"

"I promised Ted," murmured Errington.

Mr. Ting's spectacles seemed to gleam
with satisfaction and benevolence.  He took
from his pocket a large envelope which he
handed to Errington.

"There is your father's tlust-deed," he
said.  "It is flom this day cancelled.  There
is also sclip, value nearly twenty thousand
pounds.  The best of blessings is a good son."

He took off his spectacles and carefully
replaced them in their case.  The silence
was broken by Mr. Burroughs.

"I congratulate you with all my heart,"
he said, reaching out his hand to Errington.

"Jolly glad, old chap!" said the Mole.

Errington took the envelope, and shook
hands with his friends, in the confusion of
utter amazement.  He laid the envelope
beside his plate, then rose with the impulsive
haste so characteristic of him, walked round
the table, and clasped the hand of Mr. Ting.

"Forgive me, sir.  I don't know what to
say.  You and the Mole are the best friends
any man could have, and--and----"

He could say no more.

.. vspace:: 2

Lying wakeful that night, Errington
thought over the past, and looked humbly
into the future.  What was he to do with
this fortune which the love of a father and
the loyalty of a friend had secured to him?
Before he slept he had made up his mind.
Mr. Burroughs was a sound, plodding man of
business; not wealthy; unable to develop his
business for want of capital.  What better
could he do than invest the money with
him, as the price of a partnership?  He
knew his own capacity; he had never a
doubt that the work he could put in would
justify itself; and if only Mr. Burroughs
would consent, Errington was sure that
the future would prove the wisdom of his step.

So it fell out.  The style of the firm
became Burroughs & Errington.  The two
younger partners managed jointly the branch
at Sui-Fu, and the business grew by leaps
and bounds.  Their friendship was never
clouded by the least shadow, though in course
of time Burroughs declared one day in jest
that his nose would soon be put out of
joint--when Mrs. Errington appeared on the scene.
Lo San looked forward to this event with
the most ardent approval, for when "Massa
Bullows" left the house, he hoped to see the
last of Chin Tai.

.. vspace:: 2

One day, Chin Tai announced a visitor.
"Velly big fat China fella, sah," he said,
with a gravity behind which his master
detected a sly amusement "inside."

"Show him in," he said.

The door opened to admit Chung Pi,
bigger and more prosperous-looking than
ever, and--what was this?--actually
sporting a mandarin's buttons.  He greeted
Burroughs with great heartiness, and a touch
of the self-importance that beseemed his
new rank.  After complimentary salutations,
he addressed Burroughs in a speech of some
length, not giving Chin Tai time to translate
as he went along.

"What's it all about?" asked Burroughs,
when he came to an end.

"He say he tank hon'ble genelum velly
muchee.  No can tink what fo' he belongey
flend one time that mislable olo outside fella
Su Fing.  He velly big glanty[#] fightee man;
empelor say he muss wailo catchee Su Fing,
fightee bad fella all plopa.  Chung Pi he go
makee what empelor say, catchee Su Fing
Cheng Tu side, killum tousan hantun bad
fella, hab catchee topside button allo lightee.
He say he hangee on tailo booful
hoss--booful!--booful!"

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: left smaller

   [#] Grand.

.. vspace:: 4

.. class:: center white-space-pre-line

   \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*      \*

.. vspace:: 4

.. class:: center large

   HERBERT STRANG'S ROMANCES OF MODERN INVENTION

.. vspace:: 2

ROUND THE WORLD IN SEVEN DAYS.  3/6

"The most stimulating, as it is certainly the breeziest he has
ever given us."--*Observer*.

.. vspace:: 2

KING OF THE AIR;

or, To Morocco on an Aeroplane.  2/6

"Much the best book of its kind now in existence."--*Manchester
Guardian*.

"The flights of the airship and final rescue of the imprisoned
diplomat are brilliantly told."--*Journal of Education*.

"The story goes with a fine zest and gusto, and few writers have
known as well as Herbert Strang the exact proportions to allow of
amusement and information."--*Bookman*.

.. vspace:: 2

LORD OF THE SEAS:

the Story of a Submarine.  2/6

"Mr. Herbert Strang has struck a new vein with remarkable
success, and has narrated a series of exciting adventures in the
South Seas in an effective and admirably sustained tone of
humour."--*Notts Guardian*.

"A rattling good story, full of life and go."--*Record*.

.. vspace:: 2

SWIFT AND SURE:

the Story of a Hydroplane.  2/6

"A grand yarn about a hydroplane, in which Mr. Strang shows
that he is a new Jules Verne."--*Hearth and Home*.

"The excitement increases from chapter to chapter."--*Literary
World*.

.. vspace:: 2

THE CRUISE OF THE GYRO-CAR:

A Story of Adventure in Albania.  2/6

"One of the most readable motoring books we have ever
handled.  It should have an enormous sale."--*The Road*.

.. vspace:: 2

.. class:: center

   HENRY FROWDE AND HODDER & STOUGHTON

.. vspace:: 6

.. pgfooter::
