Part 16 (1/2)
”It had been so awfully cold that none had dared venture out hunting.
”It was my day for being cook, and as soon as the joint was done we carried it into the cabin, which was warmed with a stove.”
”Well, go on, man,” exclaimed our hero, for the sailor had suddenly stopped in his narrative, as if some distant sound had caught his ear.
”Beg pardon, sir. Well, in spite of the stove, the meat was no sooner cut in slices than it was cold.
”I took mine back to the fire and rewarmed it.
”There was still a good supply of rum, and I took a swig at the bottle, and then, whether because of the cold or the rum, I don't know, but I fell sound asleep in front of the blaze.
”I woke up numbed with cold.
”The fire was nearly out, and the first thing I did was to make it up.
”Then, after heating myself a drop of grog, I fell to wondering what had become of my comrades.
”I stumbled along the pa.s.sage, which felt as cold as the grave, and there, just as you see them now, sat our cap'n and his crew, frozen to death.
”The fire in the stove was out, and the companion door open.
”I took up one of the bodies, after I had recovered my nerve a bit, and dragged it along the pa.s.sage into the kitchen.
”But I could not restore it to life, though I tried hard.
”So you see, sir, here have I been--Heaven in mercy! what's that?”
The sick sailor had risen to his feet.
Bob and Jack had done the same.
Bok crouched near the fire, with a horror-struck look in his eyes.
”It's the dead walking, maybe,” he gasped.
A m.u.f.fled thump, thump, thump! was again heard.
A minute or more pa.s.sed.
Then our hero again seized a brand, and made a rush along the cabin pa.s.sage.
Jack followed, and after him Bok.
A glance sufficed.
The body from the head of the table had disappeared.
”What can it mean?” exclaimed Jack. ”I don't think I am a coward, but this is horrible.”
”Something in that sick man's face tells me he has not spoken all the truth. We must have it out of him,” said our hero.