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Home -> Jules Verne -> In Search of the Castaways or the Children of Captain Grant -> Chapter 16

In Search of the Castaways or the Children of Captain Grant - Chapter 16

1. Introduction

2. Book 1 - Chapter 1

3. Chapter 2

4. Chapter 3

5. Chapter 4

6. Chapter 5

7. Chapter 6

8. Chapter 7

9. Chapter 8

10. Chapter 9

11. Chapter 10

12. Chapter 11

13. Chapter 12

14. Chapter 13

15. Chapter 14

16. Chapter 15

17. Chapter 16

18. Chapter 17

19. Chapter 18

20. Chapter 19

21. Chapter 20

22. Chapter 21

23. Chapter 22

24. Chapter 23

25. Chapter 24

26. Chapter 25

27. Chapter 26

28. Book 2 - Chapter 1

29. Chapter 2

30. Chapter 3

31. Chapter 4

32. Chapter 5

33. Chapter 6

34. Chapter 7

35. Chapter 8

36. Chapter 9

37. Chapter 10

38. Chapter 11

39. Chapter 12

40. Chapter 13

41. Chapter 14

42. Chapter 15

43. Chapter 16

44. Chapter 17

45. Chapter 18

46. Chapter 19

47. Book 3 - Chapter 1

48. Chapter 2

49. Chapter 3

50. Chapter 4

51. Chapter 5

52. Chapter 6

53. Chapter 7

54. Chapter 8

55. Chapter 9

56. Chapter 10

57. Chapter 11

58. Chapter 12

59. Chapter 13

60. Chapter 14

61. Chapter 15

62. Chapter 16

63. Chapter 17

64. Chapter 18

65. Chapter 19

66. Chapter 20

67. Chapter 21







CHAPTER XVI

WHY THE "DUNCAN" WENT TO NEW ZEALAND


IT would be vain to attempt to depict the feelings of Glenarvan
and his friends when the songs of old Scotia fell on their ears.
The moment they set foot on the deck of the DUNCAN, the piper blew
his bagpipes, and commenced the national pibroch of the Malcolm clan,
while loud hurrahs rent the air.

Glenarvan and his whole party, even the Major himself, were crying
and embracing each other. They were delirious with joy.
The geographer was absolutely mad. He frisked about, telescope in hand,
pointing it at the last canoe approaching the shore.

But at the sight of Glenarvan and his companions, with their
clothing in rags, and thin, haggard faces, bearing marks of
horrible sufferings, the crew ceased their noisy demonstrations.
These were specters who had returned--not the bright,
adventurous travelers who had left the yacht three months before,
so full of hope! Chance, and chance only, had brought them
back to the deck of the yacht they never thought to see again.
And in what a state of exhaustion and feebleness.
But before thinking of fatigue, or attending to the imperious
demands of hunger and thirst, Glenarvan questioned Tom Austin
about his being on this coast.

Why had the DUNCAN come to the eastern coast of New Zealand? How was it
not in the hands of Ben Joyce? By what providential fatality had God
brought them in the track of the fugitives?

Why? how? and for what purpose? Tom was stormed with questions
on all sides. The old sailor did not know which to listen
to first, and at last resolved to hear nobody but Glenarvan,
and to answer nobody but him.

"But the convicts?" inquired Glenarvan. "What did you do with them?"

"The convicts?" replied Tom, with the air of a man who does
not in the least understand what he is being asked.

"Yes, the wretches who attacked the yacht."

"What yacht? Your Honor's?"

"Why, of course, Tom. The DUNCAN, and Ben Joyce, who came on board."

"I don't know this Ben Joyce, and have never seen him."

"Never seen him!" exclaimed Paganel, stupefied at the old
sailor's replies. "Then pray tell me, Tom, how it is that the DUNCAN
is cruising at this moment on the coast of New Zealand?"

But if Glenarvan and his friends were totally at a loss to understand
the bewilderment of the old sailor, what was their amazement when
he replied in a calm voice:

"The DUNCAN is cruising here by your Honor's orders."

"By my orders?" cried Glenarvan.

"Yes, my Lord. I only acted in obedience to the instructions
sent in your letter of January fourteenth."

"My letter! my letter!" exclaimed Glenarvan.

The ten travelers pressed closer round Tom Austin, devouring him
with their eyes. The letter dated from Snowy River had reached
the DUNCAN, then.

"Let us come to explanations, pray, for it seems to me I am dreaming.
You received a letter, Tom?"

"Yes, a letter from your Honor."

"At Melbourne?"

"At Melbourne, just as our repairs were completed."

"And this letter?"

"It was not written by you, but bore your signature, my Lord."

"Just so; my letter was brought by a convict called Ben Joyce."

"No, by a sailor called Ayrton, a quartermaster on the BRITANNIA."

"Yes, Ayrton or Ben Joyce, one and the same individual.
Well, and what were the contents of this letter?"

"It contained orders to leave Melbourne without delay, and go
and cruise on the eastern coast of--"

"Australia!" said Glenarvan with such vehemence that the old sailor
was somewhat disconcerted.

"Of Australia?" repeated Tom, opening his eyes. "No, but New Zealand."

"Australia, Tom! Australia!" they all cried with one voice.

Austin's head began to feel in a whirl. Glenarvan spoke
with such assurance that he thought after all he must have
made a mistake in reading the letter. Could a faithful,
exact old servant like himself have been guilty of such a thing!
He turned red and looked quite disturbed.

"Never mind, Tom," said Lady Helena. "God so willed it."

"But, no, madam, pardon me," replied old Tom. "No, it is impossible,
I was not mistaken. Ayrton read the letter as I did, and it was he,
on the contrary, who wished to bring me to the Australian coast."

"Ayrton!" cried Glenarvan.

"Yes, Ayrton himself. He insisted it was a mistake:
that you meant to order me to Twofold Bay."

"Have you the letter still, Tom?" asked the Major, extremely interested
in this mystery.

"Yes, Mr. McNabbs," replied Austin. "I'll go and fetch it."

V. IV Verne

He ran at once to his cabin in the forecastle. During his momentary
absence they gazed at each other in silence, all but the Major,
who crossed his arms and said:

"Well, now, Paganel, you must own this would be going a little too far."

"What?" growled Paganel, looking like a gigantic note of interrogation,
with his spectacles on his forehead and his stooping back.

Austin returned directly with the letter written by Paganel
and signed by Glenarvan.

"Will your Honor read it?" he said, handing it to him.

Glenarvan took the letter and read as follows:

"Order to Tom Austin to put out to sea without delay,
and to take the Duncan, by latitude 37 degrees to the eastern
coast of New Zealand!"

"New Zealand!" cried Paganel, leaping up.

And he seized the letter from Glenarvan, rubbed his eyes,
pushed down his spectacles on his nose, and read it for himself.

"New Zealand!" he repeated in an indescribable tone, letting the order
slip between his fingers.

That same moment he felt a hand laid on his shoulder,
and turning round found himself face to face with the Major,
who said in a grave tone:

"Well, my good Paganel, after all, it is a lucky thing you did
not send the DUNCAN to Cochin China!"

This pleasantry finished the poor geographer. The crew burst
out into loud Homeric laughter. Paganel ran about like
a madman, seized his head with both hands and tore his hair.
He neither knew what he was doing nor what he wanted to do.
He rushed down the poop stairs mechanically and paced the deck,
nodding to himself and going straight before without aim or object
till he reached the forecastle. There his feet got entangled
in a coil of rope. He stumbled and fell, accidentally catching
hold of a rope with both hands in his fall.

Suddenly a tremendous explosion was heard. The forecastle gun
had gone off, riddling the quiet calm of the waves with a volley
of small shot. The unfortunate Paganel had caught hold of the cord
of the loaded gun. The geographer was thrown down the forecastle
ladder and disappeared below.

A cry of terror succeeded the surprise produced by the explosion.
Everybody thought something terrible must have happened. The sailors
rushed between decks and lifted up Paganel, almost bent double.
The geographer uttered no sound.

They carried his long body onto the poop. His companions were
in despair. The Major, who was always the surgeon on great occasions,
began to strip the unfortunate that he might dress his wounds;
but he had scarcely put his hands on the dying man when he started
up as if touched by an electrical machine.

"Never! never!" he exclaimed, and pulling his ragged coat tightly
round him, he began buttoning it up in a strangely excited manner.

"But, Paganel," began the Major.

"No, I tell you!"

"I must examine--"

"You shall not examine."

"You may perhaps have broken--" continued McNabbs.

"Yes," continued Paganel, getting up on his long legs, "but what I
have broken the carpenter can mend."

"What is it, then?"

"There."

Bursts of laughter from the crew greeted this speech.
Paganel's friends were quite reassured about him now.
They were satisfied that he had come off safe and sound from
his adventure with the forecastle gun.

"At any rate," thought the Major, "the geographer is wonderfully bashful."

But now Paganel was recovered a little, he had to reply to a question
he could not escape.

"Now, Paganel," said Glenarvan, "tell us frankly all about it.
I own that your blunder was providential. It is sure and certain that
but for you the DUNCAN would have fallen into the hands of the convicts;
but for you we should have been recaptured by the Maories. But for my
sake tell me by what supernatural aberration of mind you were induced
to write New Zealand instead of Australia?"

"Well, upon my oath," said Paganel, "it is--"

But the same instant his eyes fell on Mary and Robert Grant,
and he stopped short and then went on:

"What would you have me say, my dear Glenarvan? I am mad,
I am an idiot, an incorrigible fellow, and I shall live and die
the most terrible absent man. I can't change my skin."

"Unless you get flayed alive."

"Get flayed alive!" cried the geographer, with a furious look.
"Is that a personal allusion?"

"An allusion to what?" asked McNabbs, quietly. This was all that passed.
The mystery of the DUNCAN'S presence on the coast was explained,
and all that the travelers thought about now was to get back to their
comfortable cabins, and to have breakfast.

However, Glenarvan and John Mangles stayed behind with Tom Austin
after the others had retired. They wished to put some further
questions to him.

"Now, then, old Austin," said Glenarvan, "tell me, didn't it
strike you as strange to be ordered to go and cruise on the coast
of New Zealand?"

"Yes, your Honor," replied Tom. "I was very much surprised, but it
is not my custom to discuss any orders I receive, and I obeyed. Could I
do otherwise? If some catastrophe had occurred through not carrying
out your injunctions to the letter, should not I have been to blame?
Would you have acted differently, captain?"

"No, Tom," replied John Mangles.

"But what did you think?" asked Glenarvan.

"I thought, your Honor, that in the interest of Harry Grant,
it was necessary to go where I was told to go. I thought that in
consequence of fresh arrangements, you were to sail over to New Zealand,
and that I was to wait for you on the east coast of the island.
Moreover, on leaving Melbourne, I kept our destination a secret,
and the crew only knew it when we were right out at sea,
and the Australian continent was finally out of sight.
But one circumstance occurred which greatly perplexed me."

"What was it, Tom?" asked Glenarvan.

"Just this, that when the quartermaster of the BRITANNIA
heard our destination--"

"Ayrton!" cried Glenarvan. "Then he is on board?"

"Yes, your Honor."

"Ayrton here?" repeated Glenarvan, looking at John Mangles.

"God has so willed!" said the young captain.

In an instant, like lightning, Ayrton's conduct, his long-planned
treachery, Glenarvan's wound, Mulrady's assassination, the sufferings
of the expedition in the marshes of the Snowy River, the whole past
life of the miscreant, flashed before the eyes of the two men.
And now, by the strangest concourse of events, the convict was
in their power.

"Where is he?" asked Glenarvan eagerly.

"In a cabin in the forecastle, and under guard."

"Why was he imprisoned?"

"Because when Ayrton heard the vessel was going to New Zealand, he was
in a fury; because he tried to force me to alter the course of the ship;
because he threatened me; and, last of all, because he incited my men
to mutiny. I saw clearly he was a dangerous individual, and I must
take precautions against him."

"And since then?"

"Since then he has remained in his cabin without attempting
to go out."

"That's well, Tom."

Just at this moment Glenarvan and John Mangles were summoned to the saloon
where breakfast, which they so sorely needed, was awaiting them.
They seated themselves at the table and spoke no more of Ayrton.

But after the meal was over, and the guests were refreshed
and invigorated, and they all went upon deck, Glenarvan acquainted
them with the fact of the quartermaster's presence on board,
and at the same time announced his intention of having him
brought before them.

"May I beg to be excused from being present at his examination?"
said Lady Helena. "I confess, dear Edward, it would be extremely
painful for me to see the wretched man."

"He must be confronted with us, Helena," replied Lord Glenarvan; "I beg
you will stay. Ben Joyce must see all his victims face to face."

Lady Helena yielded to his wish. Mary Grant sat beside her,
near Glenarvan. All the others formed a group round them, the whole party
that had been compromised so seriously by the treachery of the convict.
The crew of the yacht, without understanding the gravity of the situation,
kept profound silence.

"Bring Ayrton here," said Glenarvan.




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