Maori and Settler: A Story of The New Zealand War

By G. A. Henty

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Title: Maori and Settler
       A Story of The New Zealand War

Author: G. A. Henty

Illustrator: Alfred Pearse

Release Date: September 3, 2010 [EBook #33619]

Language: English


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[Illustration]

MAORI and
SETTLER

A STORY OF THE NEW ZEALAND WAR

BY G. A. HENTY


Maori and Settler




G.A. HENTY'S BOOKS

Illustrated by Eminent Artists

_Uniform with this Edition_


Beric the Briton: A Story of the Roman Invasion of Britain.

Bonnie Prince Charlie: A Tale of Fontenoy and Culloden.

Both Sides the Border: A Tale of Hotspur and Glendower.

By Conduct and Courage: A Story of the Days of Nelson.

By England's Aid: The Freeing of the Netherlands.

By Pike and Dyke: A Tale of the Rise of the Dutch Republic.

Facing Death: A Tale of the Coal-mines.

In the Heart of the Rockies: A Story of Adventure in Colorado.

Maori and Settler: A Story of the New Zealand War.

St. Bartholomew's Eve: A Tale of the Huguenot Wars.

St. George for England: A Tale of Cressy and Poitiers.

The Cat of Bubastes: A Story of Ancient Egypt.

The Dragon and the Raven: The Days of King Alfred.

The Treasure of the Incas: A Tale of Adventure in Peru.

Under Wellington's Command: A Tale of the Peninsular War.

With Lee in Virginia: A Story of the American Civil War.

With Wolfe in Canada; or, The Winning of a Continent.

Wulf the Saxon: A Story of the Norman Conquest.

LONDON: BLACKIE AND SON, LTD., 50 OLD BAILY, E.C.

[Illustration: "DROP THAT OR I FIRE!"

_Page 227_]




 Maori and Settler

 A STORY OF

 THE NEW ZEALAND WAR

 BY

 G.A. HENTY

 Author of "Redskin and Cowboy" "In Freedom's Cause"
 "Bonnie Prince Charlie" &c.

 _ILLUSTRATED_

 BLACKIE AND SON LIMITED
 LONDON GLASGOW AND BOMBAY
 _Printed in Great Britain_


PREFACE TO THE ORIGINAL EDITION


In the following story I have made no attempt to give anything like a
general history of the long struggle between the brave tribes of New
Zealand and the forces of England and the colony. That struggle lasted
over a period of some years, and to do justice to its numerous incidents
in the course of a single volume would have left no space whatever
available for the telling of a story. It was divided into two distinct
epochs. In the first the natives of the north of the islands fought for
their independence and their right to have a king, and be governed by
their own laws. Nothing could exceed the courage with which they
struggled for these ends, and it needed a very strong force of British
troops to storm their pahs or fortified camps, and overcome their
resistance. The second epoch embraces the struggle brought about by the
conversion of a portion of the tribes to the fanatical belief called the
Pai Marire (literally "good and peaceful"), whose votaries were
generally known as the Hau-Haus. During the earlier war the natives
behaved with great moderation, and there were but few cases of the
murder of outlying settlers. The slaying of all whites was, however, the
leading feature of the Hau-Hau religion, and many cold-blooded
massacres occurred during the struggle. The British troops had been for
the most part withdrawn before the commencement of the Hau-Hau troubles,
and the war was carried on by bodies of constabulary raised by the
colonists, and with the aid of tribes that remained friendly to us. The
massacre of Poverty Bay, which forms the leading feature of my story,
and the events that followed it, are all strictly in accordance with
facts.

G.A. HENTY




CONTENTS.


 CHAP.                                                    Page

 I. A HOME BROKEN UP,                                       11

 II. THE EMBARKATION,                                       30

 III. THE VOYAGE,                                           49

 IV. A ROW ON SHORE,                                        64

 V. A BOAT EXPEDITION,                                      81

 VI. PUTTING IN THE REFIT,                                 104

 VII. A SAVAGE SURPRISE,                                   126

 VIII. THE END OF THE VOYAGE,                              144

 IX. THE NEW ZEALAND WAR,                                  165

 X. THE GLADE,                                             184

 XI. THE HAU-HAUS,                                         205

 XII. THE FIRST ALARM,                                     224

 XIII. THE ATTACK ON THE GLADE,                            244

 XIV. FRESH TROUBLES,                                      263

 XV. THE MASSACRE AT POVERTY BAY,                          282

 XVI. THE PURSUIT OF TE KOOTI,                             302

 XVII. BACK AT THE FARM,                                   321

 XVIII. IN ENGLAND,                                        340




ILLUSTRATIONS


                                                          Facing
                                                          Page

 "DROP THAT OR I FIRE!"                             _Frontispiece_

 A DOZEN SPEARS STRUCK THE WATER ROUND HER                 104

 WILFRID AND THE GRIMSTONES FIND IT HARD WORK              192

 MR. ATHERTON KEEPS THE MOUTH OF THE DEFILE                296

 "I AM AFRAID I AM HEAVY ON A HORSE STILL, WILFRID"        328

        *       *       *       *       *

 Map of Hawke Bay, Poverty Bay, and surrounding Country     16




MAORI AND SETTLER.




CHAPTER I.

A HOME BROKEN UP.


"Well, mother, one thing is certain--something has got to be done. It is
no use crying over spilt milk, that I can see. It is a horribly bad
business, but grieving over it won't make it any better. What one has
got to do is to decide on some plan or other, and then set to work to
carry it out."

The speaker, Wilfrid Renshaw, was a boy between fifteen and sixteen
years old. He was standing with his back to an empty fireplace, his feet
well apart, his hands deep in his pockets. He was rather short for his
age, but very squarely built. His hair was dark, cut rather short, and
so ruffled over his head that there were no signs of a parting; his
eyebrows were heavy, his eyes bright but rather deeply set; his chin was
square and his jaw heavy; his nose was a little upturned, and this
together with his eyes gave a merry expression to a face that would
otherwise have been heavy and stern.

At school Wilfrid Renshaw had been regarded as rather a queer fellow.
He was full of quiet fun, and saw a humorous side in everything. He did
not take a very leading part in the various school sports, though there
was a general idea that if Renshaw only chose to exert himself he could
excel in any of them. In point of actual strength, although there were
several boys in the school older than himself, it was generally admitted
that he was by far the strongest there. But he always went his own way
and always knew his own mind, and when he had once given his decision
every one knew that it was of no use attempting to alter it; indeed, his
reputation for obstinacy was so great that when he had once said "I
won't" or "I will," no one ever attempted to argue with him.

He was given to long walks and to collecting insects or flowers. He
could never be persuaded to make one of the cricket eleven; but in
winter, when there was little scope for his favourite pursuit, he threw
himself into football; and although he absolutely refused to accept the
captaincy when unanimously elected to that honour, he was considered by
far the most valuable member of the team. He was scarcely popular among
the boys of his own age; for although his fun and general good temper
were appreciated by them, his determination to go his own way, and his
entire disregard for the opinion of others, caused him to be considered
an unsociable sort of fellow, an impression increased by the fact that
he had no particular chums.

Among the smaller boys he was greatly liked. He would never allow any
bullying when he was present; and although his interference was often
resented by some of the elders, his reputation for strength and
obstinacy was so great that he had never been called upon to take active
measures to support his decisively expressed opinions. His father lived
in a pretty house a quarter of a mile outside Reading; and as Wilfrid
attended the grammar-school there, he was much more free to indulge his
own tastes and go his own way than if he had been in a boarding-school.
His chief companion in his rambles was his only sister Marion, who was a
year his senior, although strangers would not have taken her to be so,
either from her appearance or manner. She had an active lithe figure,
and was able to keep up with him even during his longest excursions.
They were in fact great chums and allies, and Marion would have
indignantly scouted the idea had anyone suggested to her that her
brother was either obstinate or unsociable.

Mr. Renshaw had been intended for the bar, and had indeed been called to
that profession; but shortly afterwards he came into a fortune at the
death of his father, and at once abandoned all idea of practising. After
travelling for a few years on the Continent and in the East, he married
and settled down near Reading. His time was for the most part devoted to
archæology. He had a rare collection of ancient British, Saxon, and
Norman arms, ornaments, and remains of all sorts; had written several
books on the antiquities of Berkshire and Oxfordshire; was an authority
upon tumuli and stone weapons; and was regarded by his acquaintances as
a man of much learning.

The management of the house and children, and indeed of all affairs
unconnected with his favourite hobby, he left to his wife, who was,
fortunately for him, a clear-headed and sensible woman. Mr. Renshaw was,
in fact, an eminently impractical man, weak and easy in disposition,
averse to exertion of any kind, and without a shadow of the decision of
character that distinguished his son. Except when away upon antiquarian
excursions he passed his time entirely in his own study, engaged upon a
work which, he anticipated, would gain for him a very high position
among the antiquarians of the country, the subject being the exact spot
at which Julius Cæsar landed in Britain.

He made his appearance only at meal-times, and then paid but little
attention to what was going on around him, although he was kind to his
children in a gentle indifferent sort of way. For many years he had been
engaged in making up his mind as to the school to which Wilfrid should
be sent; and the boy had at first only been sent to the grammar-school
at the suggestion of his mother as a temporary measure until the
important decision should be arrived at. This had been six years before,
and Mr. Renshaw had postponed his decision until it was too late for
Wilfrid to enter at any of the great public schools.

Knowing from long experience what would be the result were he consulted
as to Marion's education, Mrs. Renshaw had, when the girl was nine years
old, engaged a governess for her without any previous consultation with
her husband, simply telling him of the arrangement after it was
concluded, saying: "I know, Alfred, that you have not yet decided
whether an education at home or at school is best for a girl, and I have
consequently arranged with a young lady to come as governess until you
can come to a conclusion upon the point."

Wilfrid Renshaw was extremely fond of his mother. His father he regarded
with a somewhat contemptuous kind of affection. He did not doubt that he
was a very learned man, but he had small patience with his inability to
make up his mind, his total want of energy, and his habit of leaving
everything for his wife to decide upon and carry out.

"It would do father an immense deal of good if something were to happen
that would wake him up a bit and get him to take an interest in things,"
he had said over and over again to Marion. "I cannot understand a man
having no opinion of his own about anything."

"I do not think you ought to speak in that sort of way, Wil, about
father."

"Oh, that is all nonsense, Marion. One cannot be blind about a person
even if he is one's own father. Of course he is very kind and very
indulgent, but it would be very much pleasanter if he were so because he
wished to give us pleasure, instead of because it is the easiest thing
to do. I should be downright pleased if sometimes when I ask him for
anything he would say positively I could not have it."

Now the something that Wilfrid had hoped might occur to rouse his father
had taken place, and had come in a form very unpleasantly violent and
unexpected. The papers a week before had brought the news of the failure
of the bank in which the greater portion of Mr. Renshaw's property was
invested, and a letter had the following morning been received from a
brother of Mrs. Renshaw, who was also a shareholder in the bank, saying
that the liabilities were very large, and that the shareholders would
undoubtedly be called upon to pay even their last penny to make up the
deficiency. This news had been confirmed, and there could be no doubt
absolute ruin had fallen upon them.

Mr. Renshaw had been completely overwhelmed by the tidings, and had
taken to his bed. Wilfrid's holidays had begun a few days before, and
his mother at once acquainted him with the misfortune that had befallen
them, and she now told him that the calls that would be made upon the
shares would more than swallow up the rest of their fortune.

"There will be absolutely nothing remaining, Wilfrid, except a thousand
pounds that I had at my marriage, and which were fortunately settled
upon me. This cannot be touched. Everything else will have to go."

"Well, it's a bad business, mother. I will go for a walk and think it
over. Marion, put on your hat and come out with me."

They had been for their walk--a long one, and he was now expressing the
result at which they had arrived.

"One thing is certain--something has got to be done."

"Yes," Mrs. Renshaw replied with a faint smile. "The question is, What
is it?"

"Well, mother, it is quite certain that we four cannot live on the
interest of a thousand pounds unless we go into a hovel and live on
bread and water."

"I quite see that, Wilfrid; but I am sure I do not see how we are to
earn money. It is far too late for your father to go back to the bar
now, and it might be years before he got a brief. At any rate, we could
not afford to live in London till he does so. I have been thinking I
might open a little school somewhere."

[Illustration: Sketch Map of WAIROA AND POVERTY BAY DISTRICTS NORTH
ISLAND, NEW ZEALAND]

The boy waved his hand.

"No, mother, you are not going to take us all on to your shoulders. You
have got to look after father; that will be a full share of the work, I
am sure. Marion and I have been talking it over, and the only possible
thing we can see is for us to emigrate."

"To emigrate!" Mrs. Renshaw repeated in astonishment. "Why, my dear boy,
what should we be fit for in the colonies more than here?"

"A good deal, mother. A thousand pounds is nothing here, and it would be
a good deal out there. It would be horrible to come down to live in a
little cottage like working people here, after living like this; but it
would be nothing out there. We could buy land for next to nothing in New
Zealand, and could employ a couple of men to work with me to clear it
and cultivate it; and get a few cows and sheep to start with, and still
have a little money in hand. You and Marion could look after things
indoors; I should look after things out of doors."

"You don't seem to count your father at all," Mrs. Renshaw said a little
reproachfully.

"No, mother, I don't," Wilfrid said bluntly. "You know as well as I do
that father would be of no use to speak of in a life like that. Still, I
think he could make himself happy out there as well as here. He could
take all his books with him, and could inquire into the manners and
customs of the natives, who are every bit as good as the ancient
Britons; better, I should say. But whatever we do, mother, whether it is
here or anywhere else, we must settle upon it and do it. Of course we
must consult him; but we must quite make up our minds before we do so.
If you wait a few weeks for father to make up his mind what we had
better do, we shall wait till this thousand pounds is spent and there is
nothing to do but to go into the workhouse.

"I am sure that my plan is the best for us. I am as strong as a great
many men; and anyhow, out there, there ought to be no fear about our
keeping ourselves. I have no doubt that when we get out there father
will be able to help in many ways, though I do not know at present what
they are. Anyhow, we shall have a house to live in, even if it is only a
log hut, and I have no doubt have plenty to eat and drink; and that is
more than we shall do if we stay here. I could not earn anything to
speak of here: the most I could expect to get would be ten shillings a
week as an office-boy. And as to your idea of a school, you might be
years before you got pupils; and, besides, when there are two men in a
family it would be shameful to depend upon a woman to keep them."

"Why do you think of New Zealand more than Canada, Wil?"

"Because, in the first place, the climate is a great deal pleasanter,
and, in the second place, I believe that as the passage-money is higher
the emigrants are of a better class, and we are likely to have more
pleasant neighbours--people that you and father can associate with--than
we should have if we went to a backwood clearing in Canada. Tom Fairfax
has an uncle in New Zealand, and I have heard him say there are lots of
officers in the army and people of that sort who have settled there. Of
course I know it is going to be hard work, and that it will be very
rough for you and father when we land at first, but I expect it will be
better after a time; and anyhow, mother, I do not think we can starve
there, and I feel sure that it will come to that if we stop here. At any
rate, you had better think it over.

"Of course if you hit on anything better I shall be ready to agree at
once; but whatever it is we must quite make up our minds together and
then tell father. But when we do tell him we shall have to say that we
are quite convinced that the plan we have fixed on is the only one that
offers a hope of success. Of course I do not expect that he will see it
as we do, but if we put it that if he can suggest anything better to be
done we will set about it at once, I think he's pretty certain to let
things go on as we arrange. I do not mean to speak disrespectfully of
father," he went on seeing that his mother's face was a little clouded
"but you know, mother, that people who are learned, scientific, and all
that sort of thing are very often bad hands at everyday matters. Sir
Isaac Newton, and lots of other fellows I have read about, were like
that; and though father is a splendid hand at anything to do with the
Britons or Danes, and can tell you the story of every old ruin in the
kingdom, he is no good about practical matters. So that we take all the
trouble off his hands, I think he will be quite ready to agree to do
whatever you think is the best. At any rate, mother, I think my plan is
well worth thinking over, and the sooner we make up our minds the
better; after all it is a great thing having something to look forward
to and plan about."

Three or four days later Mrs. Renshaw told Wilfrid that think as she
would she could see no better plan for utilizing her little capital than
for them to emigrate.

"It is putting great responsibility on your shoulders, my boy," she
said; "for I do not disguise from myself that it is upon you that we
must principally depend. Still you will be sixteen by the time we can
arrive there, and I think we should be able to manage. Besides, as you
say, we can hire a man or two to help, and shall have some money to fall
back upon until things begin to pay. There are plenty of women who
manage even without the assistance of a son, and I do not know why I
should not be able to get on with you and Marion to help me, especially
as farming is a comparatively simple business, in a new country. At any
rate, as you say, with two or three cows and plenty of ducks and hens,
and what we can grow on the ground, there will be no fear of our
starving."

The next day Mr. Renshaw came downstairs for the first time since he had
heard of the misfortune. He had received a letter that morning saying
that a call was at once to be made on each shareholder for the amount
still standing on each share, and this sum was in itself more than he
could meet even after the sale of his house and its contents. He was in
a state of profound depression. He had, while upstairs, been
endeavouring to think of some means of supporting his family, but had
been wholly unable to think of any plan whatever. He knew that at his
age he should find it next to impossible to obtain employment, even as
a clerk at the lowest salary; his knowledge of archæology would be
absolutely useless to him, for the books he had already published had
not even paid the expenses of printing.

Few words were spoken at breakfast, but when the meal was finished Mrs.
Renshaw began: "My dear Alfred, Wilfrid and I have been talking over
what we had better do under the circumstances. I have told him that the
failure of the bank involves the loss of all our property, that the
house will have to be sold, and that, in fact, there remains nothing but
the thousand pounds of my settlement. We have talked it over in every
light, and have quite arrived at the conclusion as to what we think the
best thing to be done if you see matters in the same light and will
consent to our plan. I had at first thought of starting a little
school."

"I would never agree to that," Mr. Renshaw said; "never. I must do
something, my dear, though I have not made up my mind in what direction.
But whatever it is, it is for me to work, and not for you."

"Well, we have already given up the idea," Mrs. Renshaw went on.
"Wilfrid was sure that you would not like it, and, as he pointed out,
the money might be spent before I could obtain sufficient pupils to pay.
Besides, he is anxious to be of use; but the difficulty struck us of
obtaining any kind of remunerative work here."

"That is what I have been thinking," Mr. Renshaw said. "I shall be
willing to work at anything in my power, but I don't see what possible
work I can get."

"Quite so, my dear. In this country it is of course terribly difficult
for anyone to get employment unless he has been trained in some
particular line, therefore Wil and I are agreed that the very best plan,
indeed the only plan we can think of, is for us to go out to a new
country. My little money will take us to New Zealand, buy a good-sized
piece of land there, and suffice to enable us to clear it and stock it
to some extent. The life will no doubt be rough for us all for a time;
but none of us will care for that, and at any rate we are sure to be
able to keep the wolf from the door."

"To New Zealand!" Mr. Renshaw repeated aghast. "That is a terrible
undertaking. Besides, I know nothing whatever about farming, and I fear
that I am quite unfit for hard work."

"I do not think it will be at all necessary for you to work yourself,
Alfred. Of course we can hire men there just as we can in England. I
believe the natives are willing to work at very low rates of pay, so we
need have no difficulty on that score. Wilfrid is growing up now, and
will soon be able to relieve you of all responsibility, and then you
will be able to devote yourself to your favourite studies; and I should
think that a book from your hand upon native manners and customs would
be sure to be a great success. Accustomed as you are to tracing things
up from small remains, and with your knowledge of primitive peoples,
your work would be very different from those written by men without any
previous acquaintance with such matters."

"The idea certainly pleases me," Mr. Renshaw said; "but, of course, I
shall want time to think over your startling proposal, Helen."

"Of course, my dear. In the meantime we will go on packing up and
preparing to move at once from here, as you say that there must be a
sale of everything; then you can think the matter over, and if you
decide upon any better scheme than ours we can carry that out. If not,
we shall be ready to put ours into execution."

The next month was a busy one. There was great sympathy evinced by all
the Renshaw's neighbours and acquaintances when it was heard that their
whole fortune was swept away by the failure of the bank. There were
farewell visits to be paid, not only to these, but to their poorer
neighbours. In answer to inquiries as to their plans, Mr. Renshaw always
replied that at present nothing whatever was settled. Mrs. Renshaw
hinted that, although their plans were not definitely fixed, she thought
it probable that they would go abroad; while Wilfrid and Marion both
informed their friends confidently that they were going to New Zealand.

The work of packing went on. A few articles of furniture that were
special favourites with them all were packed up and sent to be
warehoused in London, in order that they might some day be forwarded to
them when they had made themselves a home; but nothing else was taken
beyond their clothes, a good selection of books for their general
reading, a large box of those which Mr. Renshaw declared absolutely
indispensable to himself, and a few nick-nacks specially prized.
Everything else was handed over for sale for the benefit of the
creditors of the bank. During these weeks Mr. Renshaw continued to speak
as if he regarded the New Zealand project as wholly impracticable, and
on each occasion when he did so his wife replied cheerfully: "Well, my
dear, we are in no way wedded to it, and are quite ready to give it up
and adopt any plan you may decide upon. The matter is entirely in your
hands."

But Mr. Renshaw could hit upon no other scheme; and, indeed, his wife's
suggestion as to a book on the natives of New Zealand had much taken his
fancy. Certainly he, a trained antiquarian, should be able to produce a
book upon such a subject that would be of vastly greater value than
those written by settlers and others having no training whatever that
would qualify them for such work. It was probable that he should be able
to throw some entirely new light upon the origin and history of the
Maoris or natives of New Zealand, and that his book would greatly add to
his reputation, and would sell well. Really the idea was not such a very
bad one, and, for himself, he should certainly prefer a life in a new
country to shabby lodgings in some out-of-the-way place, after having
for so many years been a personage of importance in his own
neighbourhood.

"I see one great objection to your scheme, Helen, and that is that there
is a war going on with the Maoris."

"I know there is," Mrs. Renshaw, who had talked the matter over with
Wilfrid, replied; "but it is confined to two or three of the tribes, and
the settlers in other parts have been in no way disturbed. The troops
have taken most of their strongholds, and the troubles are considered to
be approaching an end; therefore I do not think there is any occasion
to be uneasy on that score. Besides, in some respects the trouble will
be advantageous, as we should probably be able to buy land cheaper than
we otherwise should have done, and the land will rapidly rise in value
again when the disturbances are over. But, of course, we should not go
to the disturbed districts. These are round Auckland and New Plymouth,
and the troubles are confined to the tribes there. Everything is
perfectly peaceable along the other parts of the coast."

It was not until two or three days before the move was to be made from
the house that Mrs. Renshaw recurred to the subject.

"You have not said yet, Alfred, what plans you have decided upon. As we
shall leave here in three days it is quite time that we made up our
minds about it, as, of course, our movements must depend on your
decision. If you have fixed upon any place for us to settle down in, it
would be cheaper for us to move there at once instead of wasting money
by going up to London first. Another reason I have for asking is, that
Robert and William Grimstone, the gardener's sons, who have got an idea
from something Wilfrid said to them that we might be going abroad, have
asked him to ask you if you would take them with you. They have been
working in the garden under their father for the last two or three
years, and are strong active young fellows of nineteen and twenty. As
their father has worked here ever since we came, and we have known the
young fellows since they were children, such an arrangement would have
been a very pleasant one had you liked my plan of emigrating, as it
would have been much more agreeable having two young fellows we knew
with us instead of strangers. Of course I told Wilfrid to tell them that
nothing whatever was settled, and that our plans were not in any way
formed, and that they had better, therefore, look out for situations
about here, and that I was sure you would give them good letters of
recommendation."

Mr. Renshaw was silent. "I really do not see that there is any occasion
to come to a decision in a hurry," he said irritably.

"Not in a hurry, Alfred," his wife said quietly. "You see, we have had a
month to think it over, and I do not see that we shall be more likely to
settle upon an advantageous scheme at the end of six months than we are
now. From the day we leave here and hand over everything to the receiver
of the bank we shall be drawing on our little capital, and every pound
is of importance. I think, therefore, Alfred, that you and I should make
up our minds before we leave here as to what course we are going to
adopt. As I have said, I myself see no scheme by which we are likely to
be able to maintain ourselves in England, even in a very humble way. A
life in the colonies would, to me, be very much more pleasant than the
struggle to make ends meet here.

"It would afford an opening for Wilfrid, and be vastly more advantageous
for him than anything we should hope to get for him here; and I think it
will be far better for Marion too. Of course, if we decided to emigrate,
we could, should you prefer it, go to Canada, Australia, or the United
States in preference to New Zealand. I only incline to New Zealand
because I have heard that there is a larger proportion of officers and
gentlemen there than in other colonies, and because I believe that the
climate is a particularly pleasant one. But, of course, this is merely a
suggestion at present, and it is for you to decide."

"If we are to emigrate at all," Mr. Renshaw replied, "I should certainly
prefer New Zealand myself. The Maoris are a most interesting people.
Their origin is a matter of doubt, their customs and religion are
peculiar, and I have no doubt that I should, after studying them, be
able to throw much new and valuable light upon the subject. Personally,
I am sure that I am in no way fitted for the life of a settler. I know
nothing of farming, and could neither drive a plough nor wield an axe;
but if I could make the native subject my own, I might probably be able
to do my share towards our expenses by my books, while Wilfrid could
look after the men. The offer of these two young fellows to go with us
has removed several of my objections to the plan, and I agree with you
that it would be more advantageous for Wilfrid and Marion than to be
living in wretched lodgings. Therefore, my dear, I have decided to fall
in with your plan, and only hope that it will turn out as well as you
seem to expect. It will be a great change and a great trial; but since
you seem to have set your heart upon it, I am willing to adopt your
plans instead of my own, and we will therefore consider it settled that
we will go to New Zealand."

Mrs. Renshaw was too wise a woman to point out that her husband had not,
so far as she was aware, any plans whatever of his own, and she
contented herself by saying quietly: "I am glad you have decided so, my
dear. I do think it is the best thing for us all, and I am quite sure it
is the best for Wilfrid and Marion. If it had not been for them I should
have said let us take a tiny cottage near some town where I might add to
our income by giving lessons in music or other things, and you might
have the companionship of people of your own tastes; but, being as it
is, I think it far better to give them a start in a new country,
although I know that such a life as we shall lead there must entail, at
any rate at first, some hardships, and the loss of much to which we have
been accustomed."

Wilfrid and Marion were delighted when they heard from their mother that
the matter was settled. Both had had great hopes that Wilfrid's scheme
would be finally accepted, as there did not seem any other plan that was
possible. Still Wilfrid knew the difficulty that his father would have
in making up his mind, and feared there might be a long delay before he
could bring himself to accept the plan proposed to him. Mrs. Renshaw,
who was a good business woman, lost no time in arranging with Robert and
William Grimstone as to their accompanying them. Their passage-money was
to be paid, and they were to bind themselves to remain for three years
in Mr. Renshaw's service on wages similar to those they would have
obtained at home; after that, they were to be paid whatever might be the
colonial rate of wages.

The excitement that the prospect of emigration caused to the young
people lessened their pain at leaving the house where they had been born
and brought up, with all its pleasant associations and material
comforts. It was, however, very trying to them when they bade good-bye
for the last time to their surroundings and shook hands with their old
servants.

"If ever we get rich in New Zealand, father," Wilfrid said, "we will
come back and buy the house again."

Mr. Renshaw shook his head. Just at present he was disposed to regard
himself as a martyr, and considered that he had made an unprecedented
sacrifice of his own wishes and comforts for the sake of his children,
and that no good could be expected to arise from the plan to which he
had consented. A good many friends had gathered at the station to say
good-bye, and it was some time after the train had started on its way to
London before any of the party felt themselves inclined to speak.

On arriving in town they went at once to lodgings they had engaged in
Eastbourne Terrace, facing the station. Once settled there, no time was
lost in making preparations for their voyage. The files of the
advertisements had already been searched and the names of the vessels
sailing for New Zealand and the addresses of their owners noted, and
after paying a visit to several shipping offices the choice of vessels
remained at last between the _Flying Scud_ and the _Mayflower_. They
were vessels of about the same size, both bore a good reputation as
sailers, and they heard excellent accounts of the captains who commanded
them.

The _Mayflower_ was to sail direct to Wellington round the Cape. The
_Flying Scud_ was taking in cargo for Rio and Buenos-Ayres, and would
proceed thence via Cape Horn. Her rates of passage were somewhat lower
than those of the _Mayflower_, as the route via the Cape of Good Hope
was that more generally used, and the number of passengers who had
secured berths by her were very much smaller than those who intended to
travel by the _Mayflower_. It was this that principally decided them in
choosing the western route; Mr. Renshaw was in a depressed and nervous
state, and his wife considered that he would be far more comfortable
with a comparatively small number of fellow-passengers than in a crowded
ship.

Marion quite agreed with her mother; and Wilfrid was also in favour of
the _Flying Scud_, as he thought it would be pleasant to break the
passage by putting into the great South American ports and getting a
glimpse of their inhabitants. Mr. Renshaw himself was quite satisfied to
accept his wife's decision, whatever it might be. The _Flying Scud_ was
therefore selected, and passages for the party secured in her.




CHAPTER II.

THE EMBARKATION.


The _Flying Scud_ was to sail in ten days; and this was ample time for
their preparations, for Mrs. Renshaw wisely decided that it was better
to buy all that was requisite for starting their new life, in New
Zealand.

"We have none of us the least idea what will be required," she said. "It
will be far better to pay somewhat higher prices for what we really do
want out there than to cumber ourselves with all sorts of things that
may be useless to us. We have already a considerable amount of baggage.
There are our clothes, linen, and books, your father's two
double-barrelled guns, which, by the way, I do not think he has ever
used since we have been married. The only thing we had better get, as
far as I see, will be four rifles, which no doubt we can buy cheap
second-hand, and four revolvers.

"I do not for a moment suppose we shall ever want to use them, but as we
may be often left in the house alone I think it would be pleasant to
know that we are not altogether defenceless. We had better lay in a good
stock of ammunition for all these weapons. Besides the clothes we have
we had better get serge dresses and suits for the voyage, and a few
strong servicable gowns and suits for rough work out there. Beyond this
I do not think that we need spend a penny. We can certainly get
everything we shall want for our new life at Wellington, which is a
large place."

On the morning of the day on which they were to embark the Grimstones
came up from Reading. All the heavy luggage had been sent on board ship
on the previous day, and at twelve o'clock two cabs drove up to the side
of the _Flying Scud_ in St. Catherine's Docks. The one contained Mr. and
Mrs. Renshaw, Marion, and a vast quantity of small packets inside.
Wilfrid was on the box with the driver, and the roof was piled high with
luggage. The other cab contained the two Grimstones and the rest of the
luggage. The Renshaws were already acquainted with the ship in which
they were to sail, having paid her a visit four days previously to see
their cabins. The parents had a comfortable cabin to themselves. Marion
was berthed in a cabin with two other ladies, who, she learned, were
sisters, the elder about her own age, and Wilfrid found he would have
but one fellow-passenger. The Grimstones were in the steerage forward.

The vessel was in a state of bustle, and what to the travellers seemed
confusion. Numbers of other passengers were arriving, and the deck was
littered with, their luggage until it could be sorted and sent down to
their cabins; late cargo was being swung on board and lowered into the
hold. On the deck aft were gathered the cabin passengers, with relatives
and friends who had come to see them off. An hour later the bell rang as
a signal for all visitors to go ashore. There were sad partings both
fore and aft as the bell clanged out its impatient signal.

"I am very glad, mother, that we have no friends to say good-bye to us
here, and that we got that all over at Reading."

"So am I, Wil. I think it much better myself that these partings should
be got through before people leave home. It is natural of course that
relatives and friends should like to see the last of each other, but I
think it is a cruel kindness, and am glad, as you say, that we had no
dear friends in London. Those at home have already shown their
thoughtfulness and friendship." For indeed during the last few days
hampers of presents of all kinds had arrived in a steady flow at
Eastbourne Terrace. There had been great feeling of commiseration among
all their acquaintances at the misfortune that had befallen the
Renshaws; and the manner in which they had at once surrendered
everything for the benefit of the shareholders of the bank, and the
calmness with which they had borne their reverses, had excited
admiration, and scarce a friend or acquaintance but sent substantial
tokens of their good-will or sympathy.

As soon as it was publicly known that the Renshaws were about to sail
for New Zealand, the boys and masters of the grammar-school between them
subscribed and sent a handsome double-barrelled gun, a fishing-rod, and
all appurtenances, to Wilfrid. Mr. Renshaw received two guns, several
fishing-rods, two crates of crockery, and several cases of portable
furniture of various kinds, besides many small articles. Mrs. Renshaw
was presented with a stove of the best construction and a crate full of
utensils of every kind, while Marion had work-boxes and desks sufficient
to stock a school, two sets of garden tools, and innumerable nick-nacks
likely to be more or less useful to her in her new life. Besides these
there were several boxes of books of standard literature.

"Every one is very kind," Mrs. Renshaw said as the crates and hampers
arrived; "but if it goes on like this we shall have to charter a ship to
ourselves, and how we are to move about there when we get out with all
these things I have not the least idea."

At last the good-byes were all finished, the visitors had left the ship,
the hawsers were thrown off, and the vessel began to move slowly towards
the dock gates. As soon as she had issued through these she was seized
by a tug, and proceeded in tow down the crowded river. There was a last
waving of handkerchiefs and hats to the group of people standing at the
entrance to the docks, and then the passengers began to look round and
examine each other and the ship. Sailors were hard at work--the last
bales and boxes were being lowered into the hold, ropes were being
coiled up, and tidiness restored to the deck. Parties of seamen were
aloft loosening some of the sails, for the wind was favourable, and the
captain had ordered some of the canvas to be set to assist the tug.

"Now, Marion," Mrs. Renshaw said, "we had better go below and tidy up
things a bit. Wil, you may as well come down and help me get the trunks
stowed away under the berths, and put some hooks in for the brush-bags
and other things we have brought; the hooks and gimlet are in my
hand-bag."

Wilfrid assisted to set his mother's cabin in order, and then went to
his own. It was a good-sized cabin, and when the ship was full
accommodated four passengers; but the two upper bunks had now been taken
down, and there was, Wilfrid thought, ample room for two. On his own
bunk were piled his two portmanteaus, a gun-case, a bundle of
fishing-rods, and other odds and ends, and a somewhat similar collection
of luggage was on that opposite. Wilfred read the name on the labels.
"Atherton," he said; "I wonder what he is like. I do hope he will be a
nice fellow."

Scarcely had the thought passed through his mind when a figure appeared
at the cabin door. It was that of a tall stout man, with immensely broad
shoulders. His age Wilfrid guessed to be about thirty-five. He had a
pleasant face, and there was a humorous twinkle in his eye as the lad
looked round in astonishment at the figure completely blocking up the
doorway.

"So you are Renshaw?" the big man said. "I congratulate myself and you
that your dimensions are not of the largest. My name is Atherton, as I
daresay you have seen on my luggage. Suppose we shake hands, Renshaw? It
is just as well to make friends at once, as we have got to put up with
each other for the next five or six months. Of course you are a little
appalled at my size," he went on, as he shook hands with the lad. "Most
people are at first, but nobody is so much appalled as I am myself.
Still it has its amusing side, you know. I don't often get into an
omnibus, because I do not think it is fair; but if I am driven to do so,
and there happen to be five people on each side, the expression of alarm
on those ten faces when I appear at the door is a picture, because it is
manifestly impossible that they can make room for me on either side."

"What do you do, sir?" Wilfrid asked laughing.

"I ask one of them to change sides. That leaves two places vacant, and
as I make a point of paying for two, we get on comfortably enough. It is
fortunate there are only two of us in this cabin. If I have the bad luck
to travel in a full ship I always wait until the others are in bed
before I turn in, and get up in the morning before they are astir; but I
think you and I can manage pretty comfortably."

"Then you have travelled a good deal, sir?" Wilfrid said.

"I am always travelling," the other replied. "I am like the fidgetty
Phil of the story-book, who could never keep still. Most men of my size
are content to take life quietly, but that is not so with me. For the
last twelve or thirteen years I have been always on the move, and I
ought to be worn down to a thread paper; but unfortunately, as you see,
that is not the effect of travel in my case. I suppose you are going out
to settle?"

"Yes, sir. I have my father, mother, and sister on board."

"Lucky fellow!" Mr. Atherton said; "I have no relations worth speaking
of."

"Are you going to settle at last, sir?" Wilfrid asked.

"No, I am going out to botanize. I have a mania for botany, and New
Zealand, you know, is in that respect one of the most remarkable regions
in the world, and it has not yet been explored with anything approaching
accuracy. It is a grand field for discovery, and there are special
points of interest connected with it, as it forms a sort of connecting
link between the floras of Australia, Asia, and South America, and has a
flora of its own entirely distinct from any of these. Now let me advise
you as to the stowing away of your traps. There is a good deal of knack
in these things. Have you got your portmanteaus packed so that one
contains all the things you are likely to require for say the first
month of your voyage, and the other as a reserve to be drawn on
occasionally? because, if not, I should advise you to take all the
things out and to arrange them in that way. It will take you a little
time, perhaps, but will save an immense amount of trouble throughout the
voyage."

Wilfrid had packed his trunks with things as they came to hand, but he
saw the advantage of following his fellow-passenger's advice, and
accordingly opened his portmanteaus and piled the whole of their
contents upon his berth. He then repacked them, Mr. Atherton sitting
down on his berth and giving his advice as to the trunk in which each
article should be placed.

The work of rearrangement occupied half-an-hour, and Wilfrid often
congratulated himself during the voyage upon the time so spent. When all
was complete and the cabin arranged tidily, Wilfrid looked in at the
next cabin. This was occupied by two young men of the name of Allen.
They were friends of an acquaintance of Mr. Renshaw, who, hearing that
they were journeying by the same ship to New Zealand, had brought them
down to Eastbourne Terrace and introduced them to Mr. Renshaw and his
family. The two were occupied in arranging their things in the cabin.

"Well, Renshaw," James, the elder of them, said when he entered, "I am
afraid I cannot congratulate you on your fellow-passenger. We saw him go
into your cabin. He is a tremendous man. He would be magnificent if he
were not so stout. Why, you will scarce find room to move!"

"He is a capital fellow," Wilfrid said. "I think we shall get on
splendidly together. He is full of fun, and makes all sorts of jokes
about his own size. He has travelled a tremendous lot, and is up to
everything. He is nothing like so old as you would think, if you have
not seen his face. I do not think he is above thirty-five or so. Well,
as I see you have just finished, I will go up and see how we are getting
on."

When Wilfrid reached the deck he found the vessel was off Erith, and was
greeted by his sister.

"You silly boy, you have been missing the sight of all the shipping, and
of Greenwich Hospital. The idea of stopping below all this time. I
should have come to call you up if I had known which was your room."

"Cabin, you goose!" Wilfrid said; "the idea of talking of rooms on board
a ship. I would have come up if I had thought of it; but I was so busy
putting things to right and making the acquaintance of the gentleman in
the cabin with me that I forgot altogether we were moving down the
river."

"Which is he, Wilfrid?"

Wilfrid laughed and nodded in the direction of Mr. Atherton, who was
standing with his back towards them a short distance away.

Marion's eyes opened wide.

"Oh, Wil, what a big man! He must quite fill up the cabin."

"He seems an awfully good fellow, Marion."

"I daresay he may be, Wil; but he will certainly take up more than his
share of the cabin."

"It is awkward, isn't it, young lady?" Mr. Atherton said, suddenly
turning round on his heel, to Marion's horror, while Wilfrid flushed
scarlet, for he had not the least idea that his words could be heard. "I
have capital hearing, you see," Mr. Atherton went on with a laugh, "and
a very useful sense it is sometimes, and has stood me in good service
upon many occasions, though I own that it effectually prevents my
cherishing any illusion as to my personal appearance. This is your
sister, of course, Renshaw; in fact, anyone could see that at a glance.
There is nothing like making acquaintances early on the voyage; the
first day is in that respect the most important of all."

"Why is that?" Marion asked.

"Because as a rule the order in which people sit down to table on the
first day of the voyage is that in which they sit the whole time. Now,
if one happens to sit one's self down by people who turn out
disagreeable it is a very great nuisance, and therefore it is very
important to find out a little about one's fellow-passengers the first
day, so as to take a seat next to someone whom you are not likely to
quarrel with before you have been a week at sea."

"Then they do not arrange places for you, Mr. Atherton?"

"Oh no; the captain perhaps settles as to who are to sit up by him. If
there is anyone of special importance, a governor or vice-governor or
any other big-wig, he and his wife, if he has got one, will probably sit
next to the captain on one side, if not, he will choose someone who has
been specially introduced to him or who has sailed with him before, and
the steward, before the party sit down, puts their names on their
plates; everyone else shifts for themselves. Renshaw, I shall be glad if
you will introduce me to your father and mother, and if we get on well I
will go down below and arrange that we get places together. I have been
chatting with the first officer, who is a very pleasant fellow; I have
sailed with him before. The rule is he sits at the end of the table
facing the captain, and my experience is that when the first officer
happens to be a good fellow, which is not always the case, his end of
the table is the most pleasant place. There is generally more fun and
laughing at that end than there is at the other; for all the people who
fancy that they are of importance make a point of getting seats as near
as they can to the captain, and important people are not, as a rule,
anything like as pleasant as the rest of us."

Wilfrid walked across the deck with Mr. Atherton to the point where his
father and mother were sitting. "Mother, this is Mr. Atherton, who is in
my cabin." Mr. Atherton shook hands with Mr. and Mrs. Renshaw.

"I asked your son to introduce me at once, Mrs. Renshaw, because, as I
have been telling him, a good deal of the comfort of the voyage depends
upon making a snug little party to sit together at meals. There is
nothing I dread more than being put down between two acidulated women,
who make a point of showing by their manner every time one sits down
that they consider one is taking up a great deal more than one's share
of the seat."

Mrs. Renshaw smiled. "I should think people were not often as rude as
that."

"I can assure you that it is the rule rather than the exception, Mrs.
Renshaw. I am not a particularly sensitive man, I think; but I make a
point of avoiding crowded railway-carriages, being unable to withstand
the expression of blank dismay that comes over the faces of people when
I present myself at the door. I have thought sometimes of hiring a
little boy of about four years old to go about with me, as the two of us
would then only take up a fair share of space. I have been looking to
the cabin arrangements, and find that each seat holds three. Your son
and daughter are neither of them bulky, so if they won't mind sitting a
little close they will be conferring a genuine kindness upon me."

"We shall not mind at all," Wilfrid and Marion exclaimed together, for
there was something so pleasant about Mr. Atherton's manner they felt
that he would be a delightful companion.

"Very well, then; we will regard that as settled. Then we five will
occupy the seats on one side of the chief officer."

"We will get the two Allens opposite," Wilfrid put in.

"I will look about for three others to make up what I may call our
party. Who do you fancy, Mrs. Renshaw? Now look round and fix on
somebody, and I will undertake the duty of engineering the business."

"There are two girls, sisters, in my cabin," Marion said. "I think they
seem nice. They are going out alone to join their father and mother in
New Zealand."

"In that case, Mrs. Renshaw, I had better leave the matter in your
hands."

"That will be very simple, Mr. Atherton, as I have already spoken to
them," and she at once got up and moved across to two girls of about
thirteen and seventeen respectively, who were standing together watching
the passing ships, and entered into conversation with them. When she
proposed that, as they were in the same cabin with Marion, they should
sit near each other at table, they gladly agreed, saying, however, that
they had been placed under the special care of the captain, and as he
had said that he would keep them under his eye, they were afraid he
might want them to sit near him.

"I will speak to the captain myself," Mrs. Renshaw said. "I daresay he
will be rather glad to have the responsibility taken off his hands,
especially if I propose, which I will if you like, to take you under my
general charge."

"Oh, we should like that very much," the elder of the two girls said.
"It seems so very strange to us being here among so many people without
any lady with us. We should be so much obliged to you if you would take
us under your wing."

"I can quite understand your feelings, my dears, and will speak to the
captain directly. I see that he is disengaged. If we were under sail
there would not be much chance of getting a word with him; but as the
tug has us in charge, I see that he has time to chat to the passengers."

A few minutes later the captain left the gentleman with whom he was
speaking and came along the deck. The Renshaws had made his acquaintance
when they first came down to see their cabins.

"How are you, Mrs. Renshaw?" he said as he came up to her. "We have fine
weather for our start, have we not? It is a great thing starting fair,
as it enables people to settle down and make themselves at home."

"I have been chatting with the Miss Mitfords, captain; they are in the
cabin with my daughter. They tell me that they are under your special
charge."

"Yes, they are among the number of my responsibilities," the captain
said smiling.

"They naturally feel rather lonely on board from having no lady with
them, and have expressed their willingness to put themselves under my
charge if you will sanction it. It will be pleasant both for them and my
daughter, and they can sit down with us at meals, and make a party
together to work or read on deck."

"I shall be extremely glad, Mrs. Renshaw, if you will accept the
responsibility. A captain's hands are full enough without having to look
after women. There are four or five single ladies on board, on all of
whom I have promised to keep a watchful eye, and I shall be delighted to
be relieved of the responsibility of two of them."

So the matter was arranged, and going down into the cabin a few minutes
before the bell rang for dinner, the party succeeded in getting the
places they desired. Mr. Atherton was next to the chief officer. Wilfrid
sat next to him, Marion between her brother and Mrs. Renshaw, and Mr.
Renshaw next. The two Allens faced Mr. Atherton and Wilfrid; the Miss
Mitfords came next, facing Marion and her mother. A Captain Pearson and
his wife were next to the Mitfords, while a civil engineer, Mr.
Halbrook, occupied the vacant seat next to Mr. Renshaw. Once seated, the
Renshaws speedily congratulated themselves on the arrangements that they
had made as they saw the hesitating way in which the rest of the
passengers took their places, and the looks of inquiry and doubt they
cast at those who seated themselves next to them. For a time the meal
was a silent one, friends talking together in low voices, but nothing
like a general conversation being attempted. At the first officers' end
of the table, however, the sound of conversation and laughter began at
once.

"Have you room, Miss Renshaw? or do you already begin to regret your
bargain?"

"I have plenty of room, thank you," Marion replied. "I hope that you
have enough?"

"Plenty," Mr. Atherton answered. "I have just been telling your brother
that if he finds I am squeezing him he must run his elbow into my ribs.
Let me see, Mr. Ryan; it must be three years since we sat together."

"Just about that," the mate replied with a strong Irish accent. "You
went with us from Japan to Singapore, did you not?"

"That was it, and a rough bout we had of it in that cyclone in the China
Seas. You remember that I saved the ship then?"

"How was that, Mr. Atherton?" Wilfrid asked.

The first officer laughed. "Mr. Atherton always took a deal more credit
to himself than we gave him. When the cyclone struck the ship and
knocked her right down on her beam-ends, he happened to be sitting up to
windward, and he always declared that if it hadn't been for his weight
the ship would never have righted itself."

There was a general laugh at the mate's explanation.

"I always plant myself to windward in a gale," Mr. Atherton said
gravely. "Shifting ballast is a most useful thing, although they have
abolished it in yacht-racing. I was once in a canoe, down by Borneo,
when a heavy squall struck us. I was sitting in the bottom of the boat
when we saw it coming, and had just time to get up and sit on the
weather gunwale when it struck us. If it had not been for me nothing
could have saved the boat from capsizing. As it was it stood up as stiff
as a rock, though, I own, I nearly drowned them all when the blow was
over, for it stopped as suddenly as it began, and the boat as nearly as
possible capsized with my weight. Indeed it would have done so
altogether if it hadn't heeled over so sharply that I was chucked
backwards into the sea. Fortunately the helmsman made a grab at me as I
went past, and I managed to scramble on board again. Not that I should
have sunk for I can float like a cork; but there are a good many sharks
cruising about in those waters, and it is safer inside a boat than it is
out. You see, Miss Renshaw, there are advantages in being stout. I
should not wonder if your brother got just my size one day. My figure
was very much like his once."

"Oh, I hope not!" Marion exclaimed. "That would be dreadful! No; I don't
mean that," she went on hurriedly as Mr. Atherton's face assumed an
expression of shocked surprise. "I mean that, although of course there
may be many advantages in being stout, there are advantages in being
thin too."

"I admit that," Mr. Atherton agreed; "but look at the disadvantages. A
stout man escapes being sent trotted about on messages. Nobody would
think of asking him to climb a ladder. He is not expected to dance. The
thin man is squeezed into any odd corner; and is not treated with half
the consideration that is given to a fat man. He worries about trifles,
and has none of the quiet contentment that characterizes stout people.
A stout man's food always agrees with him, or else he would not be
stout; while the thin man suffers indigestion, dyspepsia, and perhaps
jaundice. You see, my dear young lady, that almost all the advantages
are on our side. Of course you will say I could not climb a ladder, but
then I do not want to climb a ladder. I could not make the ascent of
Matterhorn; but it is much more pleasant to sit at the bottom and see
fools do it. I could not very well ride a horse unless it were a
dray-horse; but then I have no partiality for horse exercise. Altogether
I think I have every reason to be content. I can travel wherever I like,
see whatever I want to see, and enjoy most of the good things of life."

"And hould your own in a scrimmage," Mr. Ryan put in laughing. "I can
answer for that."

"If I am pushed to it," Mr. Atherton said modestly, "of course I try to
do my best."

"Have you seen Mr. Atherton in a scrimmage?" Tom Allen asked the mate.

"I have; and a sharp one it was while it lasted."

"There is no occasion to say anything about it, Ryan," Mr. Atherton said
hastily.

"But no reason in life why I should not," the mate replied. "What do you
say, ladies and gentleman?"

There was a chorus of "Go on please, do let us hear about it," and he
continued:

"I don't give Mr. Atherton the credit of saving our ship in the squall,
but it would have gone badly with us if he hadn't taken part in the row
we had. You see, we had a mixed crew on board, for the most part
Chinamen and a few Lascars; for we were three years in the China Seas,
and English sailors cannot well stand the heat out there, and besides
don't like remaining in ships stopping there trading. So when, after we
arrived at Shanghai, we got orders to stop and trade out there, most of
them took their discharge, and we filled up with natives. Coming down
from Japan that voyage there was a row. I forget what their pretext was
now, but I have no doubt it was an arranged thing, and that they
intended to take the ship and run her ashore on some of the islands,
take what they fancied out of her, and make off in boats, or perhaps
take her into one of those nests of pirates that abound among the
islands.

"They felt so certain of overpowering us, for there were only the three
officers, the boatswain, and two cabin passengers, that instead of
rising by night, when they would no doubt have succeeded, they broke
into mutiny at dinner-time--came aft in a body, clamouring that their
food was unfit to eat. Then suddenly drawing weapons from beneath their
clothes they rushed up the gangways on to the poop; and as none of us
were armed, and had no idea of what was going to take place, they would
have cut us down almost without resistance had it not been for our
friend here. He was standing just at the top of the poop ladder when
they came up, headed by their seraing. Mr. Atherton knocked the
scoundrel down with a blow of his fist, and then, catching him by the
ankles, whirled him round his head like a club and knocked the fellows
down like ninepins as they swarmed up the gangway, armed with knives and
creases.

"The captain, who was down below, had slammed and fastened the door
opening on to the waist on seeing the fellows coming aft, and handed up
to us through the skylight some loaded muskets, and managed, by standing
on the table and taking our hands, to get up himself. Then we opened
fire upon them, and in a very few minutes drove them down. We shot six
of them. The seraing of course was killed, four of the others had their
skulls fairly broken in by the blows that they had received, and five
were knocked senseless. We chucked them down the hatchway to the others,
had up four or five of the men to work the ship, and kept the rest
fastened below until we got to Singapore and handed them over to the
authorities. They all got long terms of penal servitude. Anyhow, Mr.
Atherton saved our lives and the ship, so I think you will agree with me
that he can hold his own in a scrimmage."

"It was very hot work," Mr. Atherton said with a laugh, "and I did not
get cool again for two or three days afterwards. The idea of using a man
as a club was not my own. Belzoni put down a riot among his Arab
labourers, when he was excavating ruins somewhere out in Syria, I think
it was, by knocking the ringleader down and using him as a club. I had
been reading the book not long before, and it flashed across my mind as
the seraing went down that he might be utilized. Fists are all very
well, but when you have got fellows to deal with armed with knives and
other cutting instruments it is better to keep them at a distance if you
can."

"That was splendid!" Wilfrid exclaimed. "How I should like to have seen
it!"

"It was good for the eyes," the mate said; "and bate Donnybrook
entirely. Such a yelling and shouting as the yellow reptiles made you
never heard."

By this time the meal was finished, and the passengers repaired on deck
to find that the ship was just passing Sheerness.

"Who would have thought," Wilfrid said to his sister as he looked at Mr.
Atherton, who had taken his seat in a great Indian reclining chair he
had brought for his own use, and was placidly smoking a cigar, "that
that easy, placid, pleasant-looking man could be capable of such a thing
as that! Shouldn't I like to have been there!"

"So should I," Marion agreed; "though it must have been terrible to look
at. He doesn't look as if anything would put him out. I expect Samson was
something like him, only not so stout. He seems to have been very
good-tempered except when people wanted to capture him; and was always
ready to forgive that horrid woman who tried to betray him to his
enemies. Well, everything is very nice--much nicer than I expected--and
I feel sure that we shall enjoy the voyage very much."




CHAPTER III

THE VOYAGE.


In addition to those already named, the _Flying Scud_ carried some
twenty other cabin passengers. She took no emigrants forward, as she was
full of cargo, and was not, moreover, going direct to New Zealand.
There were therefore only three or four young men in addition to the
Grimstones forward. The fine weather that had favoured the start
accompanied them down the channel and across the bay. Life went on
quietly on board. It was early in May when they started; and the
evenings were still too chilly to permit of any sojourn on deck after
sunset. Each day, however, the weather grew warmer, and by the time the
vessel was off the coast of Portugal the evenings were warm and balmy.

"This is not at all what I expected," Marion Renshaw said, as she sat in
a deck-chair, to Mr. Atherton, who was leaning against the bulwark
smoking a cigar. "I thought we were going to have storms, and that every
one was going to be sea-sick. That is what it is like in all the books I
have read; and I am sure that I have not felt the least bit ill from the
time we started."

"You have had everything in your favour. There has been just enough
breeze to take us along at a fair rate with all our light canvas set,
and yet not enough to cause more than a ripple on the sea. The ship has
been as steady as if in port; but you must not flatter yourself this is
going to last all the time. I think we shall have a change before long.
The glass has fallen a little, and the wind has shifted its quarter two
or three times during the day. The sky, too, does not look so settled as
it has done. I think we shall have a blow before long."

"What! A storm, Mr. Atherton?"

"No, I don't say that; but wind enough to get up a bit of sea, and to
make landsmen feel very uncomfortable."

"But I suppose we should not be ill now even if it were rough, after
being a week at sea?"

"I do not think you would be likely to be ill so long as you might have
been had you encountered a gale directly we got out of the river, but I
think that if it comes on rough all those addicted to sea-sickness are
likely to suffer more or less. Some people are ill every time rough
weather comes along, however long the voyage. I suppose you don't know
yet whether you are a good sailor or not?"

Marion shook her head. "We have been at the seaside almost every year,
but we have never gone out in boats much there. Papa was always too busy
to go, and I don't think he likes it. Mother gets a bad headache, even
if she isn't ill. So I very seldom went out, and never when it was the
least rough."

Mr. Atherton's predictions turned out well founded. The wind got up
during the night and was blowing freshly in the morning, and only two or
three of the lady passengers made their appearance at breakfast; and
several of the gentlemen were also absent. Wilfrid, to his great
satisfaction, felt so far no symptoms whatever of impending illness. The
two Allens were obliged to keep on deck during the meal, being unable to
stand the motion below; but they were well enough to enjoy the cup of
tea and plate of cold meat Wilfrid carried up to them. An hour or two
later they went below. The wind was rising and the sea hourly getting
up. Marion came up after breakfast, and for some time afterwards walked
up and down on the deck with Wilfrid enjoying the brisk air, and
considering it great fun to try to walk straight up and down the swaying
deck. Presently, however, her laugh became subdued and her cheeks lost
their colour.

"I am afraid I am going to be ill, Wilfrid; but I shall stay on deck if
I can. Both the Mitfords are ill, I am sure, for neither of them got up,
though they declared that they felt nothing the matter with them. I have
made up my mind to stay on deck as long as I possibly can."

"That is the best way," Mr. Atherton said as he joined them in their
walk, and caught the last sentence. "There is nothing like keeping up as
long as possible; because if you do so it will sometimes pass off after
a short time, whereas if you give up and take to your berth it is sure
to run its course, which is longer or shorter according to
circumstances--sometimes two days and sometimes five; but I should say
that people who are what you may call fair sailors generally get over it
in two days, unless the weather is very bad. So fight against it as long
as you can, and when you cannot bear it any longer I will wrap you up in
rugs, and you shall have my great chair to curl up in close by the lee
bulwark. But determination goes a long way, and you may get over it yet.
You take my arm, you won't throw me off my balance; while if the vessel
gives a sharper roll than usual, you and your brother may both lose your
feet together."

As soon as they started on their walk Mr. Atherton began an amusing
story of some adventure of his in the Western States of America, and
Marion was so interested that she forgot all about her uncomfortable
sensation, and was astonished when on hearing the lunch-bell ring she
discovered she was getting perfectly well.

"Where is Wilfrid?" she asked.

"There he is, leaning over the lee bulwark; the fiend of sea-sickness
has him in its grip."

"Only think of Wilfrid being unwell and me being all right! You have
quite driven it away, Mr. Atherton, for I was feeling very poorly when I
began to walk with you."

"I will go down and get you some luncheon and bring it up here to you.
Curl yourself up in my chair until I return, and do not think more about
the motion than you can help. You had better not go near your
brother--people who are ill hate being pitied."

An hour later Wilfrid went below. In the evening, however, the wind
dropped considerably, and the next morning the sea was sparkling in the
sunlight, and the _Flying Scud_ was making her way along with a scarcely
perceptible motion. Thenceforth the weather was delightful throughout
the voyage to Rio. The passengers found upon closer acquaintance that
they all got on well together, and the days passed away pleasantly. In
the evenings the piano was brought up from the cabin on to the deck, and
for two or three hours there was singing, varied by an occasional dance
among the young people.

From the day of their leaving England Mr. Atherton had been the leading
spirit on board the ship. If a misunderstanding arose he acted as
mediator. He was ever ready to propose pastimes and amusements to
lighten the monotony of the voyage, took the leading part in the
concerts held on deck when the evenings were calm and clear, and was
full of resource and invention. With the four or five children on board
he was prime favourite, and Mr. Renshaw often wondered at the patience
and good temper with which he submitted to all their whims, and was
ready to give up whatever he was doing to submit himself to their
orders. He had, before they had been ten days at sea, talked over with
Mr. Renshaw the latter's plans, and advised him upon no account to be in
a hurry to snap up the first land offered to him.

"Half the people who come out to the colonies," he said, "get heavily
bit at first by listening to the land-agents, and allowing themselves to
be persuaded into buying property which, when they come to take
possession of it, is in a majority of the cases almost worthless. I
should advise you when you get there to hire a house in Wellington,
where you can leave your wife and daughter while you examine the various
districts and see which offer the greatest advantages. If you do not
feel equal to it yourself, let your son go in your place. He is, I
think, a sharp young fellow, and not likely to be easily taken in. At
any rate, when he has made his report as to the places that seem most
suitable, you can go and see their relative advantages before
purchasing.

"'There is no greater mistake than buying land in a locality of which
you know nothing. You may find that the roads are impracticable and that
you have no means of getting your produce to market, and after a while
you will be glad to sell your place for a mere song and shift to another
which you might at first have obtained at a price much lower than you
gave for your worthless farm. I have knocked about in the States a good
deal, and have known scores of men ruined by being too hasty in making a
choice. You want to be in a colony six months at least before investing
your money in land, so as to know something of the capabilities and
advantages of each district. To a young man I should say--travel about
in the colony, working your way, and making a stay of a month here and a
month there. Of course in your case this is out of the question; but a
personal examination of the places offered to you, which in nine cases
out of ten men are ready to sell for less than they have cost them, will
ensure you against absolute swindling."

"What are you going to do yourself, Mr. Atherton?"

"I have come out simply to study the botany of the island. I may stay in
the colony for a month or for a year. At any rate, if you depute Wilfrid
to travel about to examine the various districts where land can be
bought, I shall be glad to accompany him, as I myself shall also be on
the look-out."

"You are not thinking of farming, Mr. Atherton?"

"No. My own idea is to take a bit of land on one of the rivers, to get
up a hut to serve as my head-quarters, and to spend much of my time in
travelling about. I am very fortunately placed. I have ample funds to
enable me to live in comfort, and I am free to indulge my fancy for
wandering as I please. I consider that I have been spoiled by being my
own master too young. I think it is bad for a young man to start in life
with a competence; but when it comes to one in middle age, when one has
learned to spend it rationally, it is undoubtedly a very great comfort
and advantage. I suppose, however, that the time will come when I shall
settle down. I am thirty-five, and I ought to 'range myself,' as the
French say."

Mr. Atherton had not been long upon the voyage when he discovered that
the chances of success of the Renshaw party as settlers would be small
indeed if they depended upon the exertions of the head of the family. He
had not been more than a day or two on board before Mr. Renshaw began to
discuss his favourite hobby with him, and confided to him that he
intended thoroughly to investigate the history, customs, and religion of
the Maoris, and to produce an exhaustive work on the subject. "An
excellent idea, very," the stout man said encouragingly, "but one
demanding great time and investigation; and perhaps," he added
doubtfully, "one more suited to a single man, who can go and live among
the natives and speak their language, than for a married man with a
family to look after."

Mr. Renshaw waved the remark aside lightly. "I shall, of course, set to
work immediately I arrive to acquire a thorough knowledge of the
language, and indeed have already begun with a small dictionary and a
New Testament in the Maori language, brought out by the Missionary
Society. As to my family, my exertions in the farming way will be of no
use whatever to them. My wife and daughter will look after the house,
and Wilfrid will undertake the management of the men out of doors. The
whole scheme is theirs, and I should be of no assistance to them
whatever. My bent lies entirely in the direction of archæology, and
there can be little doubt that my thorough acquaintance with all
relating to the habits, and, so far as is known, of the language of the
ancient Britons, Saxons, Danes, and the natives of the northern part of
the island, will be of inestimable advantage in enabling me to carry out
the subject I have resolved to take up. There are analogies and
similarities between the habits of all primitive peoples, and one
accustomed to the study of the early races of Europe can form a general
opinion of the habits and mode of living of a tribe merely from the
inspection of an ancient weapon or two, a bracelet, and a potsherd."

Mr. Atherton looked down upon his companion with half-closed eyes, and
seemed to be summing him up mentally; after a short conversation he
turned away, and as he filled his pipe muttered to himself: "It is well
for the family that the mother seems a capable and sensible woman, and
that the lad, unless I am mistaken, has a dogged resolution about him as
well as spirit and courage. The girl, too, is a bright sensible lass,
and they may get on in spite of this idiot of a father. However, the man
shows that he possesses a certain amount of sense by the confidence with
which he throws the burden of the whole business of providing a living
for the family on their shoulders.

"Of course they would be much better without him, for I can foresee he
will give them an awful lot of trouble. He will go mooning away among
the natives, and will be getting lost and not heard of for a tremendous
time. Still, I don't know that he will come to much harm. The Maoris
have fine traits of character, and though they have been fighting about
what they call the king question, they have seldom been guilty of any
acts of hostility to isolated settlers, and a single white man going
among them has always been received hospitably; besides, they will
probably think him mad, and savages have always a sort of respect for
madmen. Still, he will be a terrible worry to his family. I have taken a
fancy to the others, and if I can do them a good turn out there in any
way I will."

As the voyage went on Mr. Atherton's liking for Mrs. Renshaw, her son
and daughter, increased greatly, while his contempt for Mr. Renshaw
became modified as he came to know him better. He found that he was
really a capable man in his own particular hobby, and that although weak
and indecisive he was very kind and affectionate with his wife and
children, and reposed an almost childlike confidence in his wife's good
sense.

Madeira had been sighted lying like a great cloud on the horizon, and
indeed the young Renshaws had difficulty when they came up on deck in
the morning in believing that it was really land they saw. No stay was
made here, nor did they catch a glimpse of the Canary Islands, being too
far to the west to see even the lofty peak of Teneriffe. The first time
the ship dropped anchor was at St. Jago, one of the Cape de Verde
Islands; here they took in a supply of fresh water, meat, and
vegetables. The passengers all landed, but were much disappointed with
the sandy and uninteresting island, and it was no consolation for them
to learn from the captain that parts of the island were much more
fertile, although the vegetables and fruit came for the most part from
the other islands. "Now," he said, "if all goes well you will see no
land again till you get to Rio. We shall keep to the east of St. Paul,
and unless we get blown out of our course we shall not go near
Ascension."

As the wind continued favourable the ship kept her course, and at twelve
o'clock one day the captain, after taking his observations, told them
that he expected to be in Rio on the following evening. The next morning
when they came up on deck land was in sight, and in the evening they
dropped anchor in the harbour of Rio, one of the finest ports in the
world.

"Yes, it is a splendid harbour," Mr. Atherton agreed as he listened to
the exclamations of delight of the Renshaws. "I do not know that it is
the finest, but it is certainly equal to any I have ever seen. As a
harbour New York is better, because even more landlocked. San Francisco
is, both in that respect and in point of scenery, superb. Bombay is a
grand harbour, but exposed to certain winds. Taken altogether, I think I
should give the palm to San Francisco."

A few minutes after the anchor had dropped a number of shore-boats came
alongside filled with luscious fruit, and rowed for the most part by
negroes, who chatted and shouted and gesticulated, making such a din
that it was impossible to distinguish a single word amid the uproar.
Wilfrid, the Allens, and others quickly ran down the ladders, and
without troubling themselves to bargain returned with quantities of
fruit. Several negresses soon followed them on to the deck, and going up
to the ladies produced cards and letters testifying that they were good
washerwomen and their terms reasonable. The captain had the evening
before told them it would take him three or four days to discharge his
cargo for Rio, and that they had better take advantage of the
opportunity if they wanted any washing done. They had, therefore, got
everything in readiness, and in a few minutes numerous canvas bags
filled with linen were deposited in the boats.

In addition to the fruit several great bouquets of gorgeous flowers had
been purchased, and the cabin that evening presented quite a festive
appearance. After it became dark and the lights of Rio sparkled out, all
agreed that the scene was even more beautiful than by daylight. The air
was deliciously balmy and soft, the sea as smooth as glass. The moon was
nearly full, and the whole line of the shore could be distinctly seen.
Boats flitted about between the vessels and the strand; fishing-boats,
with their sails hanging motionless, slowly made their way in by the aid
of oars. The sounds of distant music in the city came across the water.

There was no singing or dancing on board the _Flying Scud_ that evening.
All were content to sit quiet and enjoy the scene, and such conversation
as there was was carried on in low tones, as if they were under a spell
which they feared to break. The next morning all went ashore soon after
breakfast; but upon their assembling at dinner it was found that the
general impression was one of disappointment. It was a fine city, but
not so fine as it looked from the water. Except the main thoroughfares
the streets were narrow, and, as the ladies declared, dirty. The young
people, however, were not so critical; they had been delighted with the
stir and movement, the bright costumes, the variety of race and colour,
and the novelty of everything they saw.

"The negroes amuse me most," Marion said. "They seem to be always
laughing. I never saw such merry people."

"They are like children," her father said. "The slightest thing causes
them amusement. It is one of the signs of a low type of intellect when
people are given to laugh at trifles."

"Then the natives ought to be very intelligent," Marion said, "for as a
whole they appeared to me to be a serious race. Of course I saw many of
them laughing and chattering, but most of them are very quiet in manner.
The old people seem to be wrinkled in a wonderful way. I never saw
English people so wrinkled."

"All southern races show age in that way," Mr. Atherton said. "You see
marvellous old men and women in Spain and Italy. People who, as far as
looks go, might be a hundred and fifty--little dried-up specimens of
humanity, with faces more like those of monkeys than men."

"Are the negroes slaves, Mr. Atherton? They still have slavery in
Brazil, do they not? They certainly are not at all according to my idea
of slaves."

"The estates are mostly worked by negro slaves," Mr. Atherton said, "and
no doubt many of those you saw to-day are also slaves. Household slavery
is seldom severe, and I believe the Brazilians are generally kind
masters. But probably the greater portion of the negroes you saw are
free. They may have purchased their freedom with their savings, or may
have been freed by kind masters. It is no very unusual thing for a
Brazilian at his death to leave a will giving freedom to all his slaves.
Government is doing its best to bring about the entire extinction of
slavery. I believe that all children born after a certain date have been
declared free, and have no doubt that in time slavery will be abolished.
Great changes like this take some time to carry out, and even for the
sake of the slaves themselves it is better to proceed quietly and
gradually. I suppose nobody inclines to go on shore again to-night?"

There was a general negative. The day had been very warm, and having
been walking about for hours no one felt any inclination to make a fresh
start. The following morning the vessel began to unload her cargo. Some
of the older passengers declared that they had had enough of shore, and
should not land--at any rate until the afternoon. The rest went ashore;
but the greater part of them returned at lunch-time, and the heat in the
afternoon was so great that none cared to land again.

In the evening the two Allens and Wilfrid agreed to go ashore to visit a
theatre. Mr. Atherton said that as he had no inclination to melt away
all at once he would not join them, but would land with them and stroll
about for a time, and see the town in its evening aspect. Several other
parties were made up among the male passengers, and one or two of the
ladies accompanied their husbands.

Wilfrid and the Allens did not stay out the performance. The heat was
very great, and as they did not understand a word of the dialogue they
soon agreed that it would be more pleasant to stroll about, or to sit
down in the open air before a café and sip iced drinks.

Accordingly after walking about for a while they sat down before a café
in the Grand Square, and as they sipped iced lemonade looked on with
much amusement at the throng walking up and down.

"It is later than I thought," James Allen said, looking at his watch.
"It is nearly twelve o'clock, and high time for us to be on board."

They started to make what they thought would prove a short cut down to
the landing-place; but as usual the short cut proved delusive, and they
soon found themselves wandering in unknown streets. They asked several
persons they met the way down to the water, but none of them understood
English, and it was a considerable time before they emerged from the
streets on to the line of quays.

"We are ever so much too far to the right," James Allen said as they
looked round. "I fancy that is the ship's light not far from the shore
half a mile away on the left. I hope we shall find some boatmen to take
us off; it would be rather awkward finding ourselves here for the night
in a place where no one understands the language."

"I think we should manage all right," Wilfrid said. "We know the way
from the place where we landed up into the part where the hotels are,
and are sure to find people there who understand English. Still I hope
it will not come to that. They would be in a great fidget on board if we
were not to turn up to-night."

"I do not think they would be alarmed," James Allen replied. "Every one
is in bed and asleep long ago, and we should be on board in the morning
before the steward went to our cabin and found that we were missing. I
consider we are quite safe in that respect, but Atherton might be doing
something if he found we did not come back."

"He might do something, perhaps," Wilfrid said; "but I am quite sure he
would not alarm my father and mother about it. He is the last sort of
fellow to do that."




CHAPTER IV.

A ROW ON SHORE.


While Wilfrid and the Allens were talking they were walking briskly in
the direction of their landing-place. They had arrived within a hundred
yards of it, when a party of four men who were lying among a pile of
timber got up and came across towards them. They were rough-looking
fellows, and James Allen said, "I do not like the look of these chaps. I
think they mean mischief. Look out!" As he spoke the men rushed at them.
James Allen gave a loud shout for help and then struck a blow at a man
who rushed at him. The fellow staggered backwards, and with a fierce
exclamation in Portuguese drew a knife. A moment later Allen received a
sharp stab on the shoulder, and was knocked to the ground. The other two
after a short struggle had also been overpowered and borne down, but in
their case the robbers had not used their knives.

They were feeling in their pockets when the step of a man approaching at
full speed was heard. One of the robbers was about to run off, when
another exclaimed: "You coward! It is but one man, which means more
booty. Out with your knives and give him a taste of them as he comes
up!" A moment later the man ran up. The leader stepped forward to meet
him, knife in hand; but as he struck his wrist was grasped, and a
tremendous blow was delivered in his face, hurling him stunned and
bleeding to the ground. With a bound the new-comer threw himself upon
two of the other men. Grasping them by their throats he shook them as if
they had been children, and then dashed their heads together with such
tremendous force that when he loosened his grasp both fell insensible on
the ground. The other robber took to his heels at the top of his speed.
All this had passed so quickly that the struggle was over before Wilfrid
and the Allens could get to their feet.

"Not hurt, I hope?" their rescuer asked anxiously.

"Why, Mr. Atherton, is it you?" Wilfrid exclaimed. "You arrived at a
lucky moment indeed. No, I am not hurt that I know of, beyond a shake."

"Nor I," Bob Allen said.

"I have got a stab in my shoulder," James Allen answered. "I don't know
that it is very deep, but I think it is bleeding a good deal, for I feel
very shaky. That fellow has got my watch," and he pointed to the man who
had been first knocked down.

"Look in his hand, Wilfrid. He won't have had time to put it in his
pocket. If you have lost anything else look in the other fellows' hands
or on the ground close to them."

He lifted James Allen, who was now scarcely able to stand, carried him
to the wood pile, and seated him on a log with his back against another.
Then he took off his coat and waistcoat, and tore open his shirt. "It is
nothing serious," he said. "It is a nasty gash and is bleeding freely,
but I daresay we can stop that; I have bandaged up plenty of worse
wounds in my time." He drew the edge of the wound together, and tied his
handkerchief and that of Wilfrid tightly round it. "That will do for the
present," he said. "Now I will carry you down to the boat," and lifting
the young fellow up as though he were a feather he started with him.

"Shall we do anything with these fellows, Mr. Atherton?" Wilfrid asked.

"No, leave them as they are; what they deserve is to be thrown into the
sea. I daresay their friend will come back to look after them
presently."

In a couple of minutes they arrived at the landing-place, where two men
were sitting in a boat.

"But how did you come to be here, Mr. Atherton?" Wilfrid asked when they
had taken their seats.

"I came to look after you boys, Wilfrid. I got on board about eleven,
and on going down to the cabin found you had not returned, so I thought
I would smoke another cigar and wait up for you. At twelve o'clock the
last party returned, and as I thought you might have some difficulty in
getting on board after that, I got into the boat and rowed ashore, and
engaged the men to wait as long as I wanted them. I thought perhaps you
had missed your way, and did not feel uneasy about you, for there being
three of you together it was scarcely likely you had got into any bad
scrape. I was beginning at last to think you had perhaps gone to an
hotel for the night, and that it was no use waiting any longer, when I
heard your voices coming along the quays. The night is so quiet that I
heard your laugh some distance away, and recognized it. I then strolled
along to meet you, when I saw those four fellows come out into the
moonlight from a shadow in the wood. I guessed that they were up to
mischief, and started to run at once, and was within fifty yards of you
when I saw the scuffle and caught the glint of the moon on the blade of
a knife. Another five or six seconds I was up, and then there was an end
of it. Now we are close to the ship. Go up as quietly as you can, and do
not make a noise as you go into your cabins. It is no use alarming
people. I will carry Jim down."

"I can walk now, I think, Mr. Atherton."

"You might do, but you won't, my lad; for if you did you would probably
start your wound bleeding afresh. You two had best take your shoes off
directly you get on deck."

James Allen was carried down and laid on his berth. Mr. Atherton went
and roused the ship's doctor, and then lighted the lamp in the cabin.

"What is all this about?" the surgeon asked as he came in.

"There has been a bit of a scrimmage on shore," Mr. Atherton replied;
"and, as you see, Allen has got a deepish slash from the shoulder down
to the elbow. It has been bleeding very freely, and he is faint from
loss of blood; but I do not think it is serious at all."

"No, it is a deep flesh wound," the doctor said, examining him; "but
there is nothing to be in the slightest degree uneasy about. I will get
a bandage from my cabin, and some lint, and set it all right in five
minutes."

When the arm was bandaged, Mr. Atherton said: "Now I must get you to do
a little plastering for me doctor."

"What! are you wounded, Mr. Atherton?" the others exclaimed in surprise.

"Nothing to speak of, lads; but both those fellows made a slash at me as
I closed with them. I had but just finished their leader and could do no
more than strike wildly as I turned upon them." As he spoke he was
taking off his waistcoat and shirt.

"By Jove, you have had a narrow escape!" the doctor said; "and how you
take it so coolly I cannot make out. Except as to the bleeding, they are
both far more serious than Allen's."

One of the wounds was in the left side, about three inches below the
arm. The man had evidently struck at the heart, but the quickness with
which Mr. Atherton had closed with him had disconcerted his aim; the
knife had struck rather far back, and glancing behind the ribs had cut a
deep gash under the shoulder-blade. The other wound had been given by a
downright blow at the right side, and had laid open the flesh from below
the breast down to the hip.

"It is only a case for plaster," Mr. Atherton said. "It is useful to
have a casing of fat sometimes. It is the same thing with a whale--you
have got to drive a harpoon in very deep to get at the vitals. You see
this wound in front has bled very little."

"You have lost a good deal of blood from the other cut," the surgeon
said. "I will draw the edges of the wounds together with a needle and
thread, and will then put some bandages on. You will have to keep quiet
for some days. Your wounds are much too serious to think of putting
plaster on at present."

"I have had a good deal more serious wounds than these," Mr. Atherton
said cheerfully, "and have had to ride seventy or eighty miles on the
following day. However I will promise you not to go ashore to-morrow;
and as the captain says he expects to be off the next morning, I shall
be able to submit myself to your orders without any great privation."

"Why did you not say that you were wounded, Mr. Atherton?" Wilfrid said
reproachfully as they went to their own cabin and prepared to turn in.

"To tell you the truth, Wilfrid, I hardly thought the wounds were as
deep as they are. My blood was up, you see, and when that is the case
you are scarcely conscious of pain. I felt a sharp shooting sensation on
both sides as I grasped those fellows by the throat, and afterwards I
knew I was bleeding a bit at the back, for I felt the warmth of the
blood down in my shoe; but there was nothing to prevent my carrying
young Allen, and one person can carry a wounded man with much more ease
to him than two can do, unless of course they have got a stretcher."

The next morning there was quite a stir in the ship when it was known
that two of the passengers were wounded, and Mr. and Mrs. Renshaw were
greatly alarmed when they heard of the risk Wilfrid had run. Neither of
the wounded men appeared at breakfast, as the surgeon insisted that both
should lie quiet for at least one day. Mr. Renshaw had paid a visit to
Mr. Atherton directly he had heard from Wilfrid his story of the fray,
and thanked him most warmly for his intervention on behalf of his son.
"Wilfrid said he has very little doubt that they all three would have
been stabbed if you had not come up."

"I do not say they might not," Mr. Atherton said, "because their
resistance had raised the men's anger; and in this country when a man is
angry he generally uses his knife. Besides, dead men raise no alarm.
Still they might have contented themselves with robbing them. However, I
own that it was lucky I was on the spot."

"But it was not a question of luck at all," Mr. Renshaw insisted. "You
were there because you had specially gone ashore to look after these
foolish young fellows, and your being there was the result of your own
thoughtfulness for them, and not in any way of chance."

"There is quite a crowd on the quay, Mr. Renshaw," the captain said when
that gentleman went on deck, "I suppose they have found stains of blood
in the road and conclude that a crime has been committed. Oh, here is
our boat putting out from the landing-place. The steward has been on
shore to get fresh fruit for breakfast; he will tell us what is going
on."

The steward had gone ashore before the news of the encounter had been
spread by the surgeon.

"What is the excitement about on shore?" the captain asked him as he
stepped on deck.

"Well, sir, as far as I could learn from a chap who spoke a little
English, there have been bad doings on shore in the night. Two men were
found this morning lying dead there. There is nothing uncommon about
that; but they say there are no wounds on them, except that their skulls
are stove in, as if they had both been struck by a beam of wood at the
back of the head. But besides that there were two or three pools of
blood in the road. It seems one man walked back into the town, for there
are marks of his feet as if he stepped in the blood before starting in
that direction. Then there is a line of blood spots down to the
landing-place and down the steps, as if somebody had got into a boat.
Nobody seems to make head nor tail of the business."

"Well, we must keep this quiet if we can," the captain said, turning to
Mr. Renshaw. "If it were known that any of our people were concerned in
this affair they might keep us here for three weeks or a month while it
is being investigated, or insist upon Mr. Atherton and your son and the
Allens remaining behind as witnesses. Mr. Ryan," he called to the
first-mate, "just come here a moment. This matter is more serious than
we thought. It seems that Mr. Atherton, who, as we have heard, dashed
the heads of two of these fellows together, killed them on the spot."

"Sure and I thought as much when young Allen was telling me about it,"
the mate said. "I have seen Mr. Atherton at work before this, and I
thought to myself that unless those fellows' skulls were made of iron,
and thick at that, they must have gone in when he brought them
together."

"The worst of it is," the captain went on, "they have traced marks of
blood down to the landing-stage, and of course have suspicion that
someone concerned in the affair took a boat, and either came off to one
of the ships or went away in one of the fishing craft. You know what
these fellows are; if they find out that anyone on board is mixed up in
the matter, they will keep the ship here for a month."

"That is true enough, sir. It is mighty lucky we would be if we got away
in a month."

"The first thing is to see about the boatmen," the captain said. "Of
course if they tell the authorities they brought a wounded man on board
here late last night there is an end of it; but if they hold their
tongues, and we all keep our own council, the thing may not leak out
to-day, and we will have our anchor up and get out this evening if we
can. You had better tell all the crew that not a word is to be said
about the matter, and I will impress the same on the passengers. When
they know that a careless word may lead to a month's detention, you may
be sure there will be no talking. But before you speak to them I will go
down and see Mr. Atherton, and hear what he says about the boatmen." He
returned in two or three minutes. "I hope it will be all right," he
said. "Atherton gave them a pound apiece, and told them to hold their
tongues. He thinks it is probable they will do so, for they would know
well enough that they would, as likely as not, be clapped into prison
and kept there while the investigation was going on. So there is a
strong hope that it may not leak out through them. You must stop all
leave ashore, Mr. Ryan. Tell the men whose turn it is to go, they shall
have their spree at Buenos Ayres. If they were to get drunk it would be
as likely as not to slip out."

"I will see to it, sir."

Directly breakfast was over the captain took a boat and went ashore. He
had duly impressed upon all the passengers the absolute necessity for
silence, and several of these went ashore with him. He returned half an
hour later, having been up to the British Consulate.

"The affair is making quite a stir in the town. Not on account of two
men being found dead, there is nothing uncommon in that, especially as
they have been recognized as two notorious ruffians; but the whole
circumstances of the affair puzzle them.

"The doctors who have examined the bodies have arrived pretty well at
the truth, and say that both men have been gripped by the throat, for
the marks of the fingers are plainly visible, and their heads dashed
together. But although this is, as we know, perfectly true, no one
believes it; for the doctors themselves admit that it does not appear to
them possible that any man would have had the strength requisite to
completely batter in the skulls of two others, as has been done in this
case. The police are searching the town for the man whose footsteps led
in that direction, and as they know all the haunts of these ruffians and
their associates it is likely enough that they will find him, especially
as his face is sure to bear marks of Atherton's handiwork. Still, if
they do find him, and he tells all he knows of the business, they will
not be much nearer to tracing the actors in it to this ship. It is not
probable that he recovered his senses until long after they were on
board the boat, and can only say that while engaged in attempting to rob
some passers-by he was suddenly knocked down. But even this they are not
likely to get out of him first, for he will know that he used a knife,
and is not likely to put himself in the way of punishment if he can help
it. I came off at once, because I heard at the Consulate that the police
are going to search every ship in the harbour to see if they can find
some wounded man, or get some clue to the mystery, so I must ask the
doctor if his two patients are fit to be dressed and go up on deck."

The doctor on being consulted said that he should certainly have
preferred that they should have remained quiet all day, but he did not
know that it would do them any harm to get on deck for a bit. And
accordingly in half an hour Mr. Atherton and James Allen came up. The
doctor, who had assisted them to dress, accompanied them.

"Now, Mr. Atherton, you had better seat yourself in that great
deck-chair of yours with the leg-rest. If you sit there quietly reading
when they come on board they are not likely to suspect you of being a
desperate character, or to appreciate your inches and width of shoulder.
Allen had better sit quiet till they get alongside, and then slip that
sling into his pocket and walk up and down talking to one of the ladies,
with his thumb in his waistcoat so as to support his arm. He looks pale
and shaky; but they are not accustomed to much colour here, and he will
pass well enough."

As soon as Mr. Atherton had taken his seat Mrs. Renshaw and Marion came
up to him. "How can we thank you enough, Mr. Atherton, for the risks you
have run to succour Wilfrid, and for your kind consideration in going on
shore to wait for him?"

"It was nothing, Mrs. Renshaw. I own to enjoying a scrimmage when I can
go into one with the feeling of being in the right. You know that I am a
very lazy man, but it is just your lazy men who do enjoy exerting
themselves occasionally."

"It was grand!" Marion broke in; "and you ought not to talk as if it was
nothing, Mr. Atherton. Wilfrid said that he thought it was all over with
him till he saw a big man flying down the road."

"A perfect colossus of Rhodes!" Mr. Atherton laughed.

"It is not a thing to joke about," Marion went on earnestly. "It may
seem very little to you, Mr. Atherton, but it is everything to us."

"Don't you know that one always jokes when one is serious, Miss Renshaw?
You know that in church any little thing that you would scarcely notice
at any other time makes you inclined to laugh. Some day in the far
distance, when you become a woman, you will know the truth of the
saying, that smiles and tears are very close to each other."

"I am getting to be a woman now," Marion said with some dignity; for Mr.
Atherton always persisted in treating her as if she were a child, which,
as she was nearly seventeen, was a standing grievance to her.

"Age does not make a woman, Miss Renshaw. I saw you skipping three days
ago with little Kate Mitford and your brother and young Allen, and you
enjoyed it as much as any of them."

"We were trying which could keep up the longest," Marion said; "Wilfrid
and I against the other two. You were looking on, and I believe you
would have liked to have skipped too."

"I think I should," Mr. Atherton agreed. "You young people do not skip
half as well as we used to when I was a boy; and I should have given you
a lesson if I had not been afraid of shaking the ship's timbers to
pieces."

"How absurd you are, Mr. Atherton!" Marion said pettishly. "Of course
you are not thin, but you always talk of yourself as if you were
something monstrous."

Mr. Atherton laughed. His diversion had had the desired effect, and had
led them away from the subject of the fight on shore.

"There is a galley putting off from shore with a lot of officials on
board," the captain said, coming up at this moment. "They are rowing to
the next ship, and I suppose they will visit us next."

A quarter of an hour later the galley came alongside, and three
officials mounted the gangway. The captain went forward to meet them.
"Is there anything I can do for you, gentlemen?"

"There has been a crime committed on shore," the leader of the party
said, "and it is suspected that some of those concerned in the matter
are on board one of the ships in the harbour. I have authority to make a
strict search on board each."

"You are perfectly welcome to do so, sir," the captain said. "One of
our officers will show you over the ship."

"I must trouble you to show me your list of passengers and crew, and to
muster the men on deck. But first I must ask you, Did any of your boats
return on board late?"

"No," the captain replied. "Our last boat was hauled up to the davits at
half-past nine. There was a heavy day's work before the men to-day, and
I therefore refused leave on shore."

The men were ordered to be mustered, and while they were collecting the
second-mate went round the ship with the officials, and they saw that no
one was below in his berth. The men's names were called over from the
list, and the officials satisfied that all were present and in good
health.

"Now for the passengers," he said

"I cannot ask them to muster," the captain observed, "but I will walk
round with you and point out those on the list. There are some eight or
ten on shore. They will doubtless be off to lunch; and if you leave an
officer on board he will see that they are by no means the sort of
people to take part in such an affair as that which has happened on
shore."

The officials went round the deck, but saw nothing whatever to excite
their suspicion. Marion Renshaw was laughing and talking with Mr.
Atherton, Miss Mitford walking up and down the poop in conversation with
James Allen. After they had finished their investigations, the officials
left one of their party to inspect the remaining passengers as they came
on board, and to check them off the list. They then again took their
seats in the galley and were rowed to the next ship.

By dint of great exertions the cargo was got out by sunset, the sails
were at once loosened and the anchor weighed, and before the short
twilight had faded away the _Flying Scud_ was making her way with a
gentle breeze towards the mouth of the harbour.

"We are well out of that," Mr. Atherton said as he looked back at the
lights of the city.

"I think you are very well out of it indeed, in more senses than one,"
said the surgeon, who was standing next to him; "but you have had a
wonderfully close shave of it, Mr. Atherton. Another inch and either of
those blows might have been fatal. Besides, had you been detained for a
month or six weeks, it is as likely as not that, what with the heat and
what with the annoyance, your wound would have taken a bad turn. Now,
you must let me exercise my authority and order you to your berth
immediately. You ought not to have been out of it. Of the two evils,
getting up and detention, I chose the least; but I should be glad now if
you would go off at once. If you do not, I can assure you I may have you
on my hands all the rest of the voyage."

"I will obey orders, doctor. The more willingly because for the last
hour or two my back has been smarting unmercifully. I do not feel the
other wound much."

"That is because you have been sitting still. You will find it hurt you
when you come to walk. Please go down carefully; a sudden movement might
start your wounds again."

It was two or three days before Mr. Atherton again appeared on deck. His
left arm was bandaged tightly to his body so as to prevent any movement
of the shoulder-blade, and he walked stiffly to the deck-chair, which
had been piled with cushions in readiness.

"I am glad to be out again, Mrs. Renshaw," Mr. Atherton said as she
arranged the cushions to suit him. "Your husband, with Wilfrid and the
two Allens, have kept me company, one or other of them, all the time, so
I cannot say I have been dull. But it was much hotter below than it is
here. However, I know the doctor was right in keeping me below, for the
slightest movement gave me a great deal of pain. However, the wounds are
going on nicely, and I hope by the time we get to Buenos Ayres I shall
be fit for a trip on shore again."

"I hardly think so, Mr. Atherton; for if the weather continues as it is
now--it is a nice steady breeze, and we have been running ever since we
left Rio--I think we shall be there long before you are fit to go
ashore."

"I do not particularly care about it," Mr. Atherton said. "Buenos Ayres
is not like Rio, but is for the most part quite a modern town, and even
in situation has little to recommend it. Besides, we shall be so far off
that there will be no running backwards and forwards between the ship
and the shore as there was at Rio. Of course it depends a good deal on
the amount of the water coming down the river, but vessels sometimes
have to anchor twelve miles above the town."

"I am sure I have no desire to go ashore," Mrs. Renshaw said, "and after
the narrow escape Wilfrid had at Rio I should be glad if he did not set
foot there again until we arrive at the end of the voyage."

"He is not likely to get into a scrape again," Mr. Atherton said. "Of
course it would have been wiser not to have stopped so late as they did
in a town of whose ways they knew nothing; but you may be sure he will
be careful another time. Besides, I fancy from what I have heard things
are better managed there, and the population are more peaceable and
orderly than at Rio. But, indeed, such an adventure as that which befell
them might very well have happened to any stranger wandering late at
night in the slums of any of our English seaports."

There was a general feeling of disappointment among the passengers when
the _Flying Scud_ dropped anchor in the turbid waters of the La Plata.
The shore was some five or six miles away, and was low and
uninteresting. The towers and spires of the churches of Buenos Ayres
were plainly visible, but of the town itself little could be seen. As
soon as the anchor was dropped the captain's gig was lowered, and he
started for shore to make arrangements for landing the cargo. The next
morning a steam tug brought out several flats, and the work of unloading
commenced. A few passengers went ashore in the tug, but none of the
Renshaws left the ship. Two days sufficed for getting out the goods for
Buenos Ayres. The passengers who had been staying at hotels on shore
came off with the last tug to the ship. Their stay ashore had been a
pleasant one, and they liked the town, which, in point of cleanliness
and order, they considered to be in advance of Rio.




CHAPTER V.

A BOAT EXPEDITION.


"Well I am not sorry we are off again," Marion Renshaw said as the men
ran round with the capstan bars and the anchor came up from the shallow
water. "What a contrast between this and Rio!"

"It is, indeed," Mr. Atherton, who was standing beside her, replied. "I
own I should have liked to spend six months in a snug little craft going
up the La Plata and Parana, especially the latter. The La Plata runs
through a comparatively flat and--I will not say unfertile country,
because it is fertile enough, but--a country deficient in trees, and
offering but small attraction to a botanist; but the Parana flows north.
Paraguay is a country but little visited by Europeans, and ought to be
well worth investigation; but, as you say, I am glad enough to be out of
this shallow water. In a short time we shall be looking out our wraps
again. We shall want our warmest things for doubling Cape Horn, or
rather what is called doubling Cape Horn, because in point of fact we do
not double it at all."

"Do you mean we do not go round it?" Marion asked in surprise.

"We may, and we may not, Miss Renshaw. It will depend upon the weather,
I suppose; but most vessels now go through the Straits which separate
Cape Horn itself from Tierra del Fuego."

"Those are the Straits of Magellan, are they not?"

"Oh, no!" Mr. Atherton replied. "The Straits of Magellan lie still
further to the north, and separate Tierra del Fuego from the mainland. I
wish that we were going through them, for I believe the scenery is
magnificent."

"But if they lie further north that must surely be our shortest way, so
why should we not go through them?"

"If we were in a steamer we might do so, Miss Renshaw; but the channels
are so narrow and intricate, and the tides and currents run with such
violence, that sailing-vessels hardly ever attempt the passage. The
straits we shall go through lie between Tierra del Fuego and the group
of islands of which the Horn is the most southerly."

"Is the country inhabited?"

"Yes, by races of the most debased savages, with whom, I can assure you,
I have no desire whatever to make any personal acquaintance."

"Not even to collect botanical specimens, Mr. Atherton?" the girl asked,
smiling.

"Not even for that purpose, Miss Renshaw. I will do a good deal in
pursuance of my favourite hobby, but I draw the line at the savages of
Tierra del Fuego. Very few white men have ever fallen into their hands
and lived to tell the tale, and certainly I should have no chance
whatever."

"Why would you have less chance than other people, Mr. Atherton?"

"My attractions would be irresistible," Mr. Atherton replied gravely. "I
should furnish meat for a whole tribe."

"How horrible!" Marion exclaimed. "What! are they cannibals?"

"Very much so indeed; and one can hardly blame them, for it is the only
chance they have of getting flesh. Their existence is one long struggle
with famine and cold. They are not hunters, and are but poor fishermen.
I firmly believe that if I were in their place I should be a cannibal
myself."

"How can you say such things?" Marion asked indignantly. "I never know
whether you are in earnest, Mr. Atherton. I am sure you would never be a
cannibal."

"There is no saying what one might be if one were driven to it," he
replied placidly. "Anyhow, I trust that I shall never be driven to it.
In my various journeyings and adventures I am happy to say that I have
never been forced to experience a prolonged fast, and it is one of the
things I have no inclination to try. This weather is perfection, is it
not?" he went on, changing the subject. "The _Flying Scud_ is making
capital way. I only hope it may last. It is sad to think that we shall
soon exchange these balmy breezes for a biting wind. We are just saying,
Wilfrid," he went on as the lad strolled up to them, "that you will soon
have to lay aside your white flannels and put on a greatcoat and
muffler."

"I shall not be sorry," Wilfrid replied. "After a month of hot weather
one wants bracing up a bit, and I always enjoy cold."

"Then you should have gone out and settled in Iceland instead of New
Zealand."

"I should not have minded that, Mr. Atherton. There is splendid
fishing, I believe, and sealing, and all that sort of thing. But I do
not suppose the others would have liked it. I am sure father would not.
He cannot bear cold, and his study at home used always to be kept up at
almost the temperature of an oven all the winter. I should think New
Zealand would exactly suit him."

Before the sun set they had the satisfaction of sailing out of the muddy
water of the La Plata, and of being once more in the bright blue sea.
For the next week the _Flying Scud_ sailed merrily southward without
adventure. The air grew sensibly cooler each day, and the light garments
of the tropics were already exchanged for warmer covering.

"Do you always get this sort of weather down here, captain?" Mrs.
Renshaw asked.

"Not always, Mrs. Renshaw. The weather is generally fine, I admit, but
occasionally short but very violent gales sweep down from off the land.
They are known as pamperos; because, I suppose, they come from the
pampas. They are very dangerous from the extreme suddenness with which
they sweep down. If they are seen coming, and the vessel can be stripped
of her canvas in time, there is little danger to be apprehended, for
they are as short as they are violent."

"We have been wonderfully fortunate altogether so far," Mrs. Renshaw
said. "We have not had a single gale since we left England. I trust that
our good luck will continue to the end."

"I hope so too," the captain said. "I grant that a spell of such weather
as we have been favoured with is apt to become a little monotonous, and
I generally find my passengers have a tendency after a time to become
snappish and quarrelsome from sheer want of anything to occupy their
minds. Still I would very much rather put up with that than with the
chances of a storm."

"People must be very foolish to get out of temper because everything is
going on well," Mrs. Renshaw said. "I am sure I find it perfectly
delightful sailing on as we do."

"Then you see, madam, you are an indefatigable worker. I never see your
hands idle; but to people who do not work, a long voyage of unbroken
weather must, I can very well understand, be monotonous. Of course with
us who have duties to perform it is different. I have often heard
passengers wish for what they call a good gale, but I have never heard a
sailor who has once experienced one express such a wish. However staunch
the ship, a great gale is a most anxious time for all concerned in the
navigation of a vessel. It is, too, a time of unremitting hardship.
There is but little sleep to be had; all hands are constantly on deck,
and are continually wet to the skin. Great seas sweep over a ship, and
each man has literally his life in his hand, for he may at any moment be
torn from his hold and washed overboard, or have his limbs broken by
some spar or hen-coop or other object swept along by the sea. It always
makes me angry when I hear a passenger express a wish for a gale, in
thoughtless ignorance of what he is desiring. If a storm comes we must
face it like men; and in a good ship like the _Flying Scud_, well
trimmed and not overladen, and with plenty of sea-room, we may feel
pretty confident as to the result; but that is a very different thing
from wishing to have one."

By the time they were a fortnight out from Buenos Ayres, Mr. Atherton
and James Allen were both off the sick-list; indeed the latter had been
but a week in the doctor's hands. The adventure had bound the little
party more closely together than before. The Allens had quite settled
that when their friends once established themselves on a holding, they
would, if possible, take one up in the neighbourhood; and they and the
young Renshaws often regretted that Mr. Atherton was only a bird of
passage, and had no intention of fixing himself permanently in the
colony. The air had grown very much colder of late, and the light
clothes they had worn in the tropics had already been discarded, and in
the evening all were glad to put on warm wraps when they came on deck.

"I think," the captain said as Mr. Renshaw came up for his customary
walk before breakfast, "we are going to have a change. The glass has
fallen a good deal, and I did not like the look of the sun when it rose
this morning."

"It looks to me very much as usual," Mr. Renshaw replied, shading his
eyes and looking at the sun, "except perhaps that it is not quite so
bright."

"Not so bright by a good deal," the captain said. "There is a change in
the colour of the sky--it is not so blue. The wind has fallen too, and I
fancy by twelve o'clock there will be a calm. Of course we cannot be
surprised if we do have a change. We have had a splendid spell of
weather, and we are getting into stormy latitudes now."

When the passengers went up after breakfast they found that the _Flying
Scud_ was scarcely moving through the water. The sails hung idly against
the masts, and the yards creaked as the vessel rose and fell slightly on
an almost invisible swell.

"This would be a good opportunity," the captain said cheerfully, "to get
down our light spars; the snugger we are the better for rounding the
Horn. Mr. Ryan, send all hands aloft, and send down all spars over the
topmast."

The crew swarmed up the rigging, and in two hours the _Flying Scud_ was
stripped of the upper yards and lofty spars.

"She looks very ugly," Marion Renshaw said. "Do you not think so, Mary?"

"Hideous," Mary Mitford agreed.

"She is in fighting trim now," Mr. Atherton said.

"Yes, but who are we going to fight?" Marion asked.

"We are going to have a skirmish with the weather, I fancy, Miss
Renshaw. I don't say we are going to have a storm," he went on as the
girls looked anxiously up at the sky, "but you can see for yourselves
that there is a change since yesterday. The wind has dropped and the sky
is dull and hazy, the sea looks sullen, the bright little waves we were
accustomed to are all gone, and as you see by the motion of the vessel
there is an underground swell, though we can scarcely notice it on the
water."

"Which way do you think the wind will come from, Mr. Atherton?" Mary
Mitford asked.

"I fancy it will come from the west, or perhaps north-west. Look at
those light streaks of cloud high up in the air; they are travelling to
the southeast."

"Look how fast they are going," Mary Mitford said as she looked up, "and
we have not a breath of wind here."

"We shall have it soon," Mr. Atherton said. "You see that dark line on
the water coming up from the west. I am glad to see it. It is very much
better to have the wind freshen up gradually to a gale than to lie
becalmed until it strikes you suddenly."

The girls stood at the poop-rail watching the sailors engaged in putting
lashings on to every movable object on deck. In ten minutes the dark
line came up to them, and the _Flying Scud_ began to move through the
water. The courses were brailed up and stowed. The wind rapidly
increased in strength, and the captain presently requested the
passengers to go below, or at any rate to give up their seats.

"There is nothing like having the deck cleared," he said. "If it comes
on to blow a bit and there is any movement, the chairs would be charging
about from side to side, and will not only break themselves up, but
perhaps break someone's leg."

Four sailors folded up the chairs, piled them together, and passing
cords over them lashed them to two ring-bolts.

"Now, Mr. Ryan, we will get the topsails reefed at once. There is a
heavy bank there to windward, and we had best get everything as snug as
possible before that comes up to us."

The dark bank of mist rose rapidly, and the sailors had but just
reached the deck after closely reefing the topsails before it was close
upon them.

"Now, ladies, please go below," the captain said sharply. "There is rain
as well as wind in the clouds; it will come down in bucketfuls when it
does come."

This had the desired effect of sending most of the male passengers down
as well as the ladies. A few remained near the companion ready to make a
dive below when the squall struck them. Suddenly the wind ceased and the
topsails flapped against the masts. There was a confused roaring sound
astern, and a broad white line came along at race-horse speed towards
the vessel.

"Get below, lads," Mr. Atherton said as he led the way, "or you will be
drenched in a moment."

They had but just reached the cabin when there was a deafening roar
overhead, and almost at the same moment the vessel started as if struck
by a heavy blow.

"Rain and wind together!" Mr. Atherton shouted in reply to the chorus of
questions from those below. "Now, all you have got to do is to make
yourselves comfortable, for there will be no going up again for some
time."

For five minutes the tremendous downpour continued, and then ceased as
suddenly as it commenced. The wind had dropped too; and the silence
after the uproar was startling. It lasted but a few seconds; then the
wind again struck the ship with even greater force than before,
although, as she had not lost her way, the blow was less felt by those
below. In five minutes the captain came below with his oil-skin coat and
sou'-wester streaming with wet.

"I have just looked down to tell you," he said cheerfully, "that
everything is going on well. The first burst of these gales is always
the critical point, and we can congratulate ourselves that we have got
through it without losing a spar or sail--thanks to our having had
sufficient warning to get all snug, and to the gale striking us
gradually. I am afraid you won't have a very comfortable time of it for
the next day or two; but there is nothing to be at all uneasy about. The
gale is off the land, and we have sea-room enough for anything. Now we
have got rid of half our cargo the ship is in her very best trim, and
though we may get her decks washed a bit by and by, she will be none the
worse for that."

So saying he again went up on deck. For the next three days the gale
blew with fury. There were no regular meals taken below, for the vessel
rolled so tremendously that nothing would have remained on the plates
and dishes; and the passengers were forced to content themselves with
biscuit, with an occasional cup of coffee or basin of soup that the cook
managed to warm up for them. The ladies for the most part kept their
cabins, as did many of the male passengers, and the absence of regular
meals was the less felt as the majority were suffering from
sea-sickness. Wilfrid was occasionally ill, but managed to keep up, and
from time to time went on deck for a few minutes, while Marion spent
most of her time on a seat at the top of the companion, looking out on
the sea.

It was a magnificent sight. Tremendous waves were following the ship,
each as it approached lifting her stern high in the air and driving her
along at a speed that seemed terrific, then passing on and leaving her
to sink down into the valley behind it. The air was thick with flying
spray torn from the crest of the waves. At first it seemed as if each
sea that came up behind the vessel would break over her stern and drive
her head-foremost down; but as wave passed after wave without damage the
sense of anxiety passed off, and Marion was able to enjoy the grandeur
of the sea. Wilfrid, Mr. Atherton, and the Allens often came in to sit
with her, and to take shelter for a time from the fury of the wind. But
talking was almost impossible; the roar of the wind in the rigging, the
noise of the waves as they struck the ship, and the confused sound of
the battle of the elements being too great to allow a voice to be heard,
except when raised almost to shouting point.

But Marion had no inclination for talking. Snugly as Mr. Atherton had
wedged her in with pillows and cushions, it was as much as she could do
to retain her seat, as the vessel rolled till the lower yards almost
touched the water, and she was too absorbed in the wild grandeur of the
scene to want companionship.

"The captain says the glass is beginning to rise," Mr. Atherton said as
he met her the fourth morning of the gale; "and that he thinks the worst
is over."

"I shall be glad for the sake of the others," Marion replied, "for the
sea to go down. Father and mother are both quite worn out; for it is
almost impossible for them to sleep, as they might be thrown out of
their berths if they did not hold on. For myself, I am in no hurry for
the gale to be over, it is so magnificently grand. Don't you think so,
Mr. Atherton?"

"It is grand, lassie, no doubt," Mr. Atherton said; "but I have rather a
weakness for dry clothes and comfortable meals--to say nothing of being
able to walk or sit perpendicularly, and not being obliged constantly to
hold on for bare life. This morning I feel that under happier
circumstances I could enjoy a steak, an Irish stew, and a couple of
eggs, but a biscuit and a cup of coffee are all I can hope for."

"I believe you enjoy it as much as I do, Mr. Atherton," the girl said
indignantly; "else why do you stay upon deck all the time in spite of
the wind and spray?"

"Well, you see, Miss Renshaw, you ladies have an objection to my smoking
my pipe below; and besides, what with the groans and moans from the
cabins, and the clatter of the swinging trays, and the noise of the
waves, and one thing and another, there is little to tempt me to stay
below. But really I shall be very glad when it is over. The ship has been
doing splendidly; and as the wind has blown from the same quarter the
whole time, the sea though very high is regular, and everything is going
on well. Still a gale is a gale, and you can never answer for the
vagaries of the wind. If it were to veer round to another quarter, for
instance, you would in a few hours get a broken sea here that would
astonish you, and would try all the qualities of the _Flying Scud_. Then
again we have been running south with tremendous speed for the last
three days, and if it were to go on for a few days longer we might find
ourselves down among the ice. Therefore, I say, the sooner the gale is
over the better I shall be pleased."

Towards evening there was a sensible abatement in the force of the wind,
and the following morning the gale had so far abated that the captain
prepared to haul his course for the west.

"We have been running south at the rate of fully three hundred miles a
day," he said, "and are now very far down. The moment this warm wind
drops and we get it from the south you will find that you will need
every wrap you have to keep you warm. If the gale had lasted I had made
up my mind to try to get her head to it, and to lie to. We are a great
deal too close to the region of ice to be pleasant."

The change in the course of the vessel was by no means appreciated by
the passengers, for the motion was very much rougher and more unpleasant
than that to which they had now become accustomed. However, by the
following morning the wind had died away to a moderate breeze, and the
sea had very sensibly abated. The topsails were shaken out of their
reefs; and although the motion was still violent most of the passengers
emerged from their cabins and came on deck to enjoy the sun, which was
now streaming brightly through the broken clouds. The captain was in
high glee; the ship had weathered the gale without the slightest damage.
Not a rope had parted, not a sail been blown away, and the result fully
justified the confidence he felt in his ship and her gear.

"It is a comfort," he remarked, "to sail under liberal owners. Now, my
people insist on having their ships as well found as possible, and if I
condemn spars, sails, ropes, or stays, they are replaced without a
question. And it is the cheapest policy in the long run. There is
nothing so costly as stinginess on board a ship. The giving way of a
stay may mean the loss of the mast and all its gear, and that may mean
the loss of a ship. The blowing away of a sail at a critical moment may
mean certain disaster; and yet there are many owners who grudge a fathom
of new rope or a bolt of canvas, and who will risk the safety of their
vessels for the petty economy of a few pounds."

The next day the wind had dropped entirely. The topgallant masts were
sent up with their yards and sails, and by dinner-time the _Flying Scud_
looked more like herself. As soon as the wind lulled all on board were
conscious of a sudden fall of temperature. Bundles of wraps were undone
and greatcoats and cloaks got out, and although the sun was still
shining brightly the poop of the _Flying Scud_ soon presented a wintry
appearance. There was no sitting about now. Even the ladies had
abandoned their usual work, and by the sharp walking up and down on deck
it was evident that even the warm wraps were insufficient in themselves,
and that brisk exercise was necessary to keep up the circulation.

"Well, what do you think of this, Mrs. Renshaw?" Mr. Atherton asked.

"I like it," she said decidedly; "but it is certainly a wonderfully
sudden change from summer to winter. My husband does not like it at all.
We never agreed on the subject of temperature. He liked what I call a
close study, while I enjoy a sharp walk well wrapped up on a winter's
day."

"I agree with you," Mr. Atherton said. "I can bear any amount of cold,
but heat completely knocks me up. But then, you see, the cold never has
a chance of penetrating to my bones."

"Which course shall we take now, do you suppose? South of Cape Horn or
through the Straits?"

"It will depend upon the winds we meet with, I imagine," Mr. Atherton
replied. "If the wind continues from the south, I should say the captain
would keep well south of the Horn; but if it heads us from the west at
all, we may have to go through the Straits, which, personally, I own
that I should prefer. It has gone round nearly a point since I came on
deck this morning. If it goes round a bit more we certainly shall not be
able to lay our course round the Horn, for I do not think we are far to
the south of it now."

By evening the wind had hauled farther to the west, and the ship's head
pointed more to the north than it had done in the morning. The
passengers enjoyed the change, for the temperature had risen rapidly,
and many of the warm wraps that had been got up were laid aside. At
twelve o'clock the captain had taken observations, and found that the
ship's position was nearly due south of the Falkland Isles.

"We had a narrow squeak of it, Mr. Ryan," he said to the first-mate.
"All the time we were running before that gale I had that group of
islands on my mind."

"So had I, sir," the mate replied. "I was praying all the time that the
wind would keep a bit to the west of north, for I knew that when it
began our position was, as near as may be, due north of them. I guessed
what you were thinking of when you told the man at the wheel to edge
away to the east as much as he dared, though that was mighty little."

"By my reckoning," the captain said, "we could not have passed more than
thirty miles to the east of them. We have made about eighty miles of
westing since we got on our course, and we are now just on the longitude
of the westermost point of the islands. They are about a hundred miles
to the north of us."

The wind continued from the same quarter, and on taking his observation
on the following day the captain announced that if there were no change
he reckoned upon just making the mouth of the Straits between Tierra del
Fuego and the islands. On going on deck two mornings later land was seen
on the port bow.

"There is Cape Horn," the captain said; "that lofty peak covered with
snow. The island nearest to us is Herschel Island. The large island not
far from the Horn is Wollaston Island. As you see, there are several
others. It is not the sort of place one would like to come down upon in
a gale, and if I had had my choice I would rather have gone a hundred
miles south of the Horn. But the wind would not allow us to lie that
course, and after the gale we had the other day we have a right to
reckon upon finer weather, and in light winds it might have taken us
another two or three days beating round."

"The wind is very light now," Mr. Renshaw remarked.

"Yes, and I am afraid it will be lighter still presently," the captain
said.

The vessel made but slow way, and in the afternoon the wind dropped
altogether. The _Flying Scud_ was now two or three miles from the coast
of Tierra del Fuego, and the passengers examined the inhospitable-looking
coast through their glasses. At one or two points light wreaths of smoke
were seen curling up, telling of encampments of the natives.

"I think, Mr. Ryan," the captain said, "I will take her in and anchor in
one of the bays This breath of air might be enough to move her through
the water if she were going free, but it is nearly dead ahead of us now.
I do not like the idea of drifting all night along this coast. Besides,
we may be able to get some fish from the natives, which will be a change
for the passengers."

The vessel's head was turned towards the shore, and now that the light
air was well on the beam it sufficed to enable the vessel to steal
through the water at the rate of about a knot an hour. At about four
o'clock the anchor was dropped in a bay at a distance of half a mile
from land, the sails were furled, and the passengers watched the shores
in hopes that some native craft might make its appearance; but there was
no sign of life.

"Either the natives have no fish to sell, or rather exchange," the
captain said, "for, of course, money is of no use to them, or they are
afraid of us. Maybe they have been massacring some shipwrecked crew, and
believe we are a ship-of-war come down to punish them. At any rate, they
seem determined not to show."

The next morning the sea was as smooth as glass, and there was not a
breath of air.

"Would you let us have a boat, captain?" Mr. Atherton asked. "It will
make a pleasant change, and perhaps some of the natives might come off
and sell us fish, as they would not be afraid of us as they might be of
the ship."

"Yes, if you like to make up a party, Mr. Atherton, you can have a boat;
but you must not land. The natives are very treacherous, and it would
not be safe to set foot on shore. Mr. Ryan, will you get the cutter into
the water after breakfast? You had better take with you two or three
muskets. I do not think there is any fear of an attack, and besides you
could out-row the native craft, still it is always as well to be
prepared."

Mr. Atherton soon made up his party. Wilfrid and the two Allens were
delighted at the offer, and Marion and the Miss Mitfords also petitioned
to be allowed to go, although Mr. Atherton had not intended to take
ladies with him. Two other young men named Hardy and Wilson were also
invited to join, and this made up the complement that the cutter could
carry in comfort. The crew consisted of six sailors at the oars, and Mr.
Ryan himself took the helm.

"You had better wrap up well," Mr. Atherton said to the girls, "for you
will find it cold sitting in a boat. The thermometer must be down near
freezing-point."

Mr. Atherton was the last to take his seat, and he brought with him his
rifle.

"Why, what are you going to shoot, Mr. Atherton?" Marion asked.

"I do not know that I am going to shoot anything," he replied; "but it
is always well to be prepared. You see I have made preparations in other
ways," he added as the steward handed him down a large basket, which he
placed in the stern-sheets.

"But we are only going for an hour or two, Mr. Atherton," Wilfrid
remarked. "We cannot want anything to eat when we have only just
finished breakfast."

"I do not think it at all likely we shall want to open the hamper,
Wilfrid; but you see it is always best to be prepared. The weather looks
perfectly settled, but, like the natives of these parts, it is
treacherous. As I proposed this expedition I feel a sort of
responsibility, and have therefore, you see, taken precautions against
every contingency."

"I do not think there is any chance of a change," Mr. Ryan said. "It
looks as if the calm might last for a week. Still, one can never be
wrong in preparing for the worst. Besides, this cold weather gives one a
wonderful appetite, and a drop of the cratur never comes amiss."

By this time the boat was fairly away from the ship, and the sailors,
who like the passengers regarded the expedition as a pleasant change,
stretched out to their oars. The mate steered for the headland to the
west, and after passing it kept the boat at a distance of a few hundred
yards from the shore.

"Is there any current here, Mr. Ryan?" Wilfrid asked as he watched the
rocks and low stunted trees.

"Very little," the mate replied. "Sometimes it runs very strongly here,
but at present it is not much to speak of. I do not think it was running
more than a quarter of a mile an hour past the ship, but no doubt there
is a good deal more farther out."

To the disappointment of those on board there were no signs of natives.

"It will be very tiresome if they do not come out," Marion said. "I want
to see a real cannibal."

"I do not so much care about the cannibals, Miss Renshaw, but I want to
see their fish. I have not tasted a really decent fish since I left
England; but in these cold waters they ought to be as good as they are
at home. I believe the natives catch them by spearing them by
torch-light, and in that case they ought to be good-sized fellows." The
men after the first start had dropped into a long, steady stroke, and as
the boat glided along past bay and headland no one paid any attention to
time, until the mate, looking at his watch, said:

"Faith, we have been gone an hour and a half; I clean forgot all about
time. I think we had better be turning. It will be dinner-time before we
reach the ship as it is." The boat's head was turned. "I think," the
mate went on, "we may as well steer from headland to headland, instead
of keeping round the bays. It will save a good bit of distance, and the
natives evidently do not mean to show themselves."

"They are very provoking," Miss Mitford said. "I can see smoke among the
trees over there, and I have no doubt that they are watching us although
we cannot see them."

"You ought to have waved your handkerchief as we came along, Miss
Mitford," James Allen remarked; "or to have stood up and shown
yourselves. They would no doubt have come off then and offered presents
in token of admiration."

The girls laughed. "I do not suppose they would appreciate our charms,"
Miss Mitford said. "They are not in their line, you see."

"That they certainly are not, Miss Mitford," the mate laughed. "I saw
some of them the last time I came through here, and hideous-looking
creatures they are, and wear no clothes to speak of."

So laughing and chatting with their eyes fixed on the shore the party
never looked seaward, until a sudden exclamation from the mate called
their attention to that direction.

"Be Jabers!" he exclaimed, "here is a sea-fog rolling down on us from
the south!"

They looked and saw what seemed like a wall of white smoke rolling along
the water towards them. At this moment the boat was about half-way
between two headlands, which were a mile and a half apart, and the shore
abreast of it was three-quarters of a mile distant. The sun was shining
brightly upon the rolling mist, and the girls uttered an exclamation of
admiration.

"How fast it comes!" Marion said. "Why, it will be here directly!"

The mate put the tiller a-starboard. "Row, men!" he said in a sharp
voice; for they had for a moment ceased to pull.

"Have you a compass?" Mr. Atherton asked in low tones.

The mate shook his head. "I am no better than an idiot to have come
without one," he said. "But who could have dreamt we should want it?"

A minute later a light wreath of mist crossed the boat, and almost
immediately the great fog-bank rolled over it. An exclamation broke
from several of those on board. So sudden was the change of temperature
that it seemed as if an icy hand had been laid upon them.

"It is fortunate that we are not far from shore," Mr. Atherton said to
the mate. "There is nothing for it but to coast along close in."

"That is the only thing to do," Mr. Ryan replied. "But it will be an
awkward business; for, as we noticed when we came along, the shore is in
many places studded with rocks. However, we must risk that, and by going
on slowly and carefully we may get off with slight damage even if we hit
one. It is not as if the water was rough."

The fog was so thick that they could scarcely see the ends of the
oar-blades.

"How are we to find the ship?" Marion asked.

"There will be no difficulty about that, Miss Renshaw. They will be sure
to be firing guns as signals for us. There!" he broke off as the boom of
a cannon came across the water. "Besides, with the land on our right
hand and this icy breeze from the south, we cannot go far out of our
way."

"Row easy, men," the mate commanded. "We cannot be far from shore now,
and we must begin to look out sharp for rocks. Row light and aisy, and
do not make more noise with your oars than you can help. The natives may
be listening for us; and we do not want a shower of spears in the boat.
Mr. Allen, will you go forward into the bows, and keep a sharp look-out
for rocks?"

James Allen went forward, and two or three minutes later cried, "Easy
all! Hold her up!" Quickly as the order was obeyed the boat's stem
grated on the shore before her way was lost.

"Back her off, lads!" the mate cried. As the boat glided off into deep
water again there was a yell from the shore, and a dozen spears struck
the water round her. Fortunately none of them struck her, for she was
invisible to the natives, who had been guided to the spot by the sound
of the oars.

"Not an encouraging reception," Mr. Atherton remarked quietly. "Well,
ladies, you have not seen the cannibals as yet, but you have heard them.
I think the best plan, Mr. Ryan, will be to tear up one of these rugs
and muffle the oars."

"I think we may as well do so," the mate replied "However, their sharp
ears are sure to hear us if we are close inshore, and we dare not go far
out or we might lose our bearings altogether."

"I do not think we can do that. In the first place, you see, there is
the breeze that brought down the fog to guide us, and in the second the
guns of the ship. We cannot go far wrong with them; and I should say
that when we once get out as far as we believe the headland to lie, the
best thing will be to steer direct for the ship. The danger in that way
would certainly be far less than it is from rocks and savages if we keep
near the shore."

"I think you are right. We will row straight out against the wind for a
quarter of an hour, that will take us clear of the headland, and we will
then shape our course direct for the guns."




CHAPTER VI.

PUTTING IN THE REFIT.


The boat rowed steadily in the course that was believed would take them
straight out to sea, the mate listening attentively for the sound of the
distant guns. The reports came up every two or three minutes, their
sound muffled by the fog. "Sure it's mighty difficult to tell where the
sound comes from, but I think it is well over there on our beam. Do not
you think so?" the mate asked Mr. Atherton.

"I think so; yes, I feel sure that we are rowing nearly due south. Even
without the sound of the guns I should feel sure that we cannot at
present be far out of that course. I noticed that as we came along you
hardly had to use any helm, and that the strength on both sides was very
evenly balanced. So that starting out as we did from the shore, we must
be travelling pretty straight. Of course in the long run we should be
sure to sweep round one way or the other and lose our bearings
altogether were it not for the guns. Wilfrid, we will appoint you
time-keeper."

"What am I to keep time of, Mr. Atherton?"

"You are to keep time of the guns. I think they are firing about every
three minutes, but you had better time the first two or three. If you
find them three minutes apart, it will be your duty a quarter of a
minute before the gun is due to say in a loud voice 'Stop,' then all
conversation is to cease till we hear the report. Unless we are all
silent and listening, it is very difficult to judge the exact
direction from which the sound comes, and it is important to keep as
straight a line as we can. There is the gun now, begin to count."

[Illustration: A DOZEN SPEARS STRUCK THE WATER ROUND HER

_Page 103_]

"I think we can turn our head in that direction now," the mate said. "It
is just twenty minutes since we left the shore, and we ought to be fully
a mile out beyond the headland."

"I quite agree with you. We have certainly a clear course now to the
ship if we do not make any blunder in keeping it."

The mate put the tiller a-starboard.

"I wonder how long I am to keep it over?" he said. "It is a queer
sensation steering without having an idea which way you are going."

"The next gun will tell us whether we have gone too far round or not far
enough," Mr. Atherton observed.

"Well, we will try that," the mate said after a short pause. "I should
think we ought to have made half a turn now."

"Stop!" Wilfrid exclaimed a minute later. "Easy rowing, lads, and listen
for the gun."

The mate ordered silence in the boat. Half a minute later the report of
the gun was again heard. There was a general exclamation of surprise,
for instead of coming, as they expected, from a point somewhere ahead,
it seemed to them all that the sound was almost astern of them.

"Now, who would have thought that?" the mate said. "I had no idea she
had gone round so far. Well, we must try again, and go to work more
gently this time. Row on, men!"

The tiller was put slightly a-port, and the boat continued her way. The
talk that had gone on among the passengers was now hushed. Mr. Atherton
had been chatting gaily with the girls from the time the fog came on,
and except at the moment when they went ashore and were attacked by the
natives, no uneasiness had been felt, for the sound of the guns had
seemed to all an assurance that there could be no difficulty in
rejoining the ship. The discovery that for a moment they had been
actually going away from the ship had, for the first time since they
rowed away from the shore, caused a feeling of real uneasiness, and when
Wilfrid again gave notice that the report would soon be heard, all
listened intently, and there was a general exclamation of satisfaction
when the sound was heard nearly ahead.

"We have got it now," the mate said. "Row on, lads; a long steady stroke
and we shall be in before dinner is cold yet."

The conversation now recommenced.

"Is it any use my stopping here any longer?" Jim Allen cried from the
bow; "because if not I will come aft to you. It is a good deal warmer
sitting together than it is out here by myself."

"Yes, you may as well come aft," the mate replied. "As long as we keep
the guns ahead we know that we are clear of rocks. It certainly has come
on bitterly cold." There was a general chorus of assent.

"I should think it would be a good thing, Ryan, to get the sail aft and
unlash it from the gaff and put it over our legs, it will make a lot of
difference in the warmth."

"I think that that is a very good idea," the mate assented. "Lay in your
oar for a minute, Johnson, and get that sail aft."

The sail was passed aft, unlashed from the yard, and spread out, adding
considerably to the comfort of all those sitting astern; and now that
the ship's guns were booming ahead, and they had become accustomed to
the thick curtain of cloud hanging round them, the feeling of uneasiness
that the girls had felt was entirely dissipated, and Mr. Atherton had no
longer any occasion to use his best efforts to keep up their spirits.
All laughed and chatted over their adventure, which, as they said, far
exceeded in interest anything they had been promised when they started
from the ship. The only drawback, as they all agreed, was the cold,
which was indeed really severe.

"We do not seem to come up to the guns as we ought to," Mr. Atherton
said to the mate after the boat had been rowing for some time.

"That is just what I was thinking," Mr. Ryan replied. "I fancy we must
have got a strong current out here against us."

"I expect we have. Ryan, I tell you what. The men have been rowing for
some hours now since they left the ship, I think it would be a good
thing if our youngsters were to relieve some of them for a spell. What
do you say, lads?"

Wilfrid, the Allens, Hardy, and Wilson all exclaimed that they should be
delighted to take a turn, as it would warm their blood. "We shall be
able to give them all a spell," Mr. Atherton said, "for there are just
six of us."

"I am certainly not going to let you pull, and you scarcely out of the
doctor's hand," the mate said bluntly. "Why, you must be mad to think of
such a thing! Here, do you take the tiller and I will row the
stroke-oar. Easy all, lads; put on your jackets. Four of you come aft,
and the other two go into the bows."

"I wish we could row," Marion said regretfully, as the new crew bent to
their oars. "I have done a lot of rowing at home, Mr. Atherton, and they
say I row very fairly."

"I am afraid you would not be of much assistance here, young lady," Mr.
Atherton said. "It's one thing to work a light well-balanced oar such as
you use in a gig up the river, but it is a very different one to tug
away at one of these heavy oars in a sea-going boat like this with ten
sitters in her. We shall want all our strength to get back, you may be
sure. There must be a strong current against us, and there is little
chance of our being back, as we hoped, by dinner-time."

After the men had had half an hour's rest Mr. Ryan told them to take
their seats and double bank the oars.

"We shall travel all the faster," he said to Mr. Atherton, "and now that
they have got their wind again it is far better that they should be
rowing than sitting still. The guns are a good deal nearer now. I do not
think that the ship can be more than a mile or a mile and a half away."

"I do not suppose she is," Mr. Atherton replied. "I think I will fire
off my rifle two or three times. They ought to be able to hear it now,
and it will relieve their minds."

He discharged his rifle four or five times, and they fancied that they
heard shots in return.

"Hullo!" Mr. Atherton exclaimed suddenly. "Easy all! Hold her up hard
all!" Although the order was entirely unexpected it was given so sharply
that it was instantly obeyed, and the boat was brought to a stand-still
before she had advanced another length. Then the rowers looked round to
see what had been the occasion of the sudden order. In front of them,
scarce ten feet away, towered up a dark mass of rock. They could only
see it ahead of the boat, and how high it was or how far it extended on
either side they knew not.

"Why, what is this?" the mate said in astonishment. "We did not notice
any islands as we came along. It has been a narrow escape, for at the
rate at which we were going through the water we should have stove in
our bow had we run on it."

"We have had a narrower escape than we deserve," Mr. Atherton said. "I
cannot think how we can have been so foolish."

"What do you mean?" the mate asked.

"Why we have been steering straight for the guns, have we not?"

"Of course we have."

"Well, we ought not to have done so. If the ship had been lying well out
from the land it would have been all right; but she is lying in a deep
bay, and of course a straight course to her from the point we started
from would take us just where we are, that is ashore, on the other side
of the headland."

"Of course it would. We ought to have kept well to seaward of the guns
till they bore right on our beam, and then headed in to her. Well,
fortunately no harm has been done, but we have had a mighty narrow
escape. If the fog had been as thick as it was when it first came down
upon us we should have gone right into it before we saw it."

The boat was turned and rowed out to sea for some distance, then they
again headed her in the direction in which they wished to go, but
keeping the guns well in shore of them until they judged by the sound
that they were nearly opposite to her, then they rowed straight towards
her. The sound of their oars was heard, and a loud hail informed them of
the exact position of the ship, and two or three minutes later a dark
image loomed up in front of the boat.

"All well, Mr. Ryan?" the captain shouted.

"All well, sir."

"You have given us a great fright," the captain went on. "We expected
you back at least two hours ago, thinking of course you would have
returned when the fog set in, even if you had not done so before."

"We had turned, sir, before the fog rolled in; but what with losing our
way, and the difficulty of keeping our course in the fog, and the fact
that there is, we think, a strong current that was running against us
further out, we have been a long time coming back. So, you see, we have
double banked all the oars."

By this time they were lying by the gangway. It was found that the girls
in spite of their wraps were so stiff with the cold that they had to be
assisted up the gangway to the deck. Exercise warmed the blood of the
rest, and they were soon on deck. Mr. Atherton, who alone of the men
had not been rowing, had some little difficulty in getting up, although,
as he said, he had no more right to feel cold than a walrus, protected
as he was by nature.

There had been much anxiety on board until the shots fired by Mr.
Atherton were heard. The captain had ordered plenty of hot soup to be
got ready, and the girls soon felt in a comfortable glow. Mr. Atherton
gave a comical account of their adventures, but he did not conceal the
fact that at one time their position had been really a perilous one, and
that if they had not been pretty vigilant they might have fallen into
the hands of the natives.

"Well, all is well that ends well," Mr. Renshaw said, "but I think we
will have no more boat excursions as long as we are in the neighbourhood
of cannibals. Of course no one could have foreseen the fog coming on so
suddenly, but you have evidently all had a narrow escape."

Those who had taken part in the adventure, however, were highly pleased
with their share in it, and agreed that although perhaps at the time it
was unpleasant it was very exciting, and was an incident that they
should never forget all their lives.

The fog continued for three days, at the end of which time an easterly
wind set in and the air cleared, and the _Flying Scud_ weighed her
anchor and proceeded on her voyage. Ten days later a gale set in from
the south. The cold was intense, and the spray as it flew from her bows
cased her fore-rigging and deck with ice. The wind increased hourly in
fury, and the captain decided to run before it. "We have plenty of
sea-room," he said, "and shall get out of this bitter cold as we get
further north. It will not last long, I daresay."

Day after day, however, the gale continued, seeming to increase rather
than diminish in force. On the morning of the sixth day after it had
begun the passengers heard a tremendous crash on deck. Wilfrid ran up
the companion and looked out, and reported that the mainmast and the
fore-top-mast had gone overboard. Fortunately the gust that had done this
damage proved to be the climax of the gale; by nightfall its force had
sensibly abated, and two days later it fell to a calm, and all hands set
to work to repair damages.

"I have no spar that will be of any use for a mainmast," the captain
said. "We must content ourselves with getting up a fore-top-mast and
then under what sail we can set upon that and the mizzen make for one of
the islands and try to get a good-sized spar for the mainmast. I reckon
that we are not more than two hundred and fifty miles from the Austral
Group. We have been blown nearly twenty degrees north."

Three days later land was seen ahead, and this the captain, after taking
an observation, declared to be Malayta, one of the largest islands of
the group.

"I would rather have gone on under this reduced sail," he said to Mr.
Atherton, in whom he had great confidence, "if we had been sure of fine
weather; but that we cannot reckon upon at this time of year, and I
should not like to be caught in another gale in this crippled state so
near the islands. So of the two evils I consider it the least to go in
and try and get a spar that will do for our purpose."

"What is the evil of going in?" Mr. Atherton asked.

"The natives," the captain replied shortly. "They are a treacherous lot
in all these islands; but the Australs bear a particularly bad
reputation, and we shall have to be very careful in our dealings with
them."

"Well, as we are forewarned they are not likely to take us by surprise,
captain; and as with the crew and passengers we can muster a pretty
strong force, we ought to be able to beat off any open attack."

"Yes, I think we could do that," the captain agreed. "If I did not think
so I would not put in, but would take the chance of our making our way,
crippled as we are, to New Zealand. The thing we shall have to guard
against is a sudden and treacherous onslaught; the crews of many ships
have been massacred owing to carelessness and over-confidence. However,
we will not be caught napping, and I therefore hope to get off
unscathed."

As they neared the land the passengers were delighted with the aspect of
the shore. Groves of trees came down to the very edge of the water; in
the interior the land was high, but was covered to the summit of the
hills with foliage. As they approached, and the captain gave orders to
prepare for anchoring, they could see a number of natives gathered on
the narrow strip of sands close to the water. They were waving boughs of
trees in token of friendship, and were, as far as could be seen by the
aid of a telescope, unarmed.

"They look friendly, mother," Marion said after watching them through
the glass. "Won't it be nice to land and take a walk among those
feathery-looking trees. There will be no fear of fogs or cold here, the
temperature is quite perfect."

"You will not land, I can assure you, young lady," the captain, who was
passing by and overheard her, said. "Those fellows look friendly enough,
I agree, but there are no more treacherous rascals among the islanders
of the Pacific. I shall give them as wide a berth as I can, and get them
if possible to cut a spar and tow it out to us, instead of sending a
party on shore to fetch it. No one will leave this ship with my
permission, unless it be a boat's party armed to the teeth to fetch
water. These fellows are as treacherous as the natives of Tierra del
Fuego, and vastly more warlike and dangerous."

"Are they cannibals, captain?" Mrs. Renshaw asked.

"That I cannot tell you for certain, Mrs. Renshaw. They are thieves and
murderers, but whether they eat human flesh is more than I can tell. It
does not concern me greatly whether if they kill me they eat me
afterwards or not; but I do not mean to give them the chance of killing
me or any of us, I can assure you."

"After the character you have given me of them I have no longer the
slightest inclination to land, captain."

As soon as the vessel came to an anchor a number of canoes put out,
laden with yams, cocoa-nuts, and other vegetables and fruit for
exchange. Had they been allowed they would have come alongside and
climbed up to the deck, but the captain would not permit them to come
within thirty or forty yards. Although there was no one on board who
could speak their language, his emphatic gestures were understood by
the natives, and were sufficient to show them that he was not to be
trifled with. Two boats only were allowed to approach at a time, and a
guard of six sailors with muskets were placed on deck with orders to
prevent anyone coming up, and to cover those who descended the gangway.
The younger passengers thought that the captain was unnecessarily timid;
but ready as he was to oblige them on ordinary occasions, they saw that
this time it would be no use to try to change his determination that
none should go on shore. Going down the gangway they bargained with the
natives, giving little articles in exchange for fruit.

Mr. Atherton was evidently of the captain's opinion as to the necessity
for prudence, and had stationed himself with his rifle near the gangway.

"They look quite peaceful and cheerful," Marion Renshaw said to him. "Do
you think there is really any use in all these precautions, Mr.
Atherton?"

"I do indeed, Miss Renshaw. I do not think one can be too careful when
dealing with people who are notoriously so treacherous."

"Are you a good shot with a rifle, Mr. Atherton?"

"Yes; although I say it myself, I am an exceptionally good shot. I have
practised a great deal with the rifle, and have, I suppose, a natural
aptitude for it; for when I fire I am morally certain of hitting my
mark, though I am hardly conscious of taking aim."

When the contents of a few boats had been taken on board the captain
made signs that he required no more, and the natives, with looks of
evident discontent, paddled back to the shore.

"We shall have some chiefs off in the morning," the captain said.
"To-day they have kept in the background, but seeing that we are wary
and on our guard they will probably come off to-morrow to view matters
for themselves. I shall let them perceive that I am well prepared, and
it may be when they see this they will be inclined to do a little honest
trading, and to bring off a strong spar with which we can at anyrate
make a shift for our mainmast. We will keep watch and watch as if we
were at sea. It is as likely as not some of their canoes may be coming
out in the night to see if we are to be caught napping."

"It is horrid," Kate Mitford said, as she with her sister, Marion, and
several of the younger passengers stood together that evening on the
poop looking towards the shore. The young moon was sinking in the west,
the stars shone with great brilliancy, and the water was as smooth as
glass. The outline of the palms could be made out against the sky, and
in several places the light of fires could be perceived, and the
stillness of the evening was broken by the hum of distant voices. "It is
really a shame that we cannot go ashore. I am sure the savages looked
civil and friendly, and it would be delightful to wander about in such a
wood as that."

Two or three voices were raised in assent.

"Have you heard the little story of the spider and the fly, Miss Kate?"
Mr. Atherton said, moving across from the other side of the deck, where
he was smoking a cigar. "In that case, you know, it was the prettiest
little bower that ever you did espy, and perhaps the fly admired it just
as much as you admire that grove ashore. The result of a visit would be
identical in both cases. Those on board other ships have been taken in
by the peaceful appearance of the natives and the loveliness of the
islands, and the result was fatal to them. Personally, I should feel
much more comfortable if I saw those savages putting out in a body in
their canoes to attack the ship than I do now while they are keeping up
this pretence of friendliness. An open danger one can meet, but when you
know that treachery is intended, but have no idea what form it will take
or when the mask of friendship will be thrown off, it is trying to the
nerves. Fortunately we know their character, and may hope to be ready
when the danger comes. Still the waiting is trying."

"And you really feel that, Mr. Atherton?" Marion Renshaw asked.

"I do indeed, Miss Renshaw. We may get away without trouble; but if so,
it will be solely because the natives see that we are prepared for them
and are not to be taken by surprise. Seeing our crippled state, my own
opinion is, that the natives will not let us go off without making at
least one attempt to surprise us."

Mr. Atherton spoke strongly, for he thought that it was possible that
some of the youngsters might, unless thoroughly roused to a sense of
danger, do something foolish and rash. His words had the effect desired.
His share in the affair at Rio had caused him to be regarded with
respect and admiration by the young men on board, and they felt that if
in his opinion the danger was grave it was not for them to doubt its
reality. A vigilant watch was kept all night, and loaded muskets were
served out to the watch on deck. The guns had been loaded before they
anchored, and the spare muskets were placed so as to be handy for the
watch below should they be suddenly called up. After the moon went down
a light mist rose on the surface of the sea. Several times during the
night faint sounds were heard near the ship, but immediately the officer
of the watch challenged, silence reigned for a considerable time.

"How has the night passed, Ryan?" Mr. Atherton asked the first officer
as soon as he came on deck, just as daylight was breaking.

"There have been some of them near us all night," Mr. Ryan replied. "I
do not think they were in force, but they wanted to see whether we kept
a sharp watch; and I think we have satisfied them as to that, for
everytime the slightest noise was heard we hailed at once. I should like
to have sent a musket-ball in the direction of the sound, but as we must
get a spar, if possible, and shall be all the better for a score or two
casks of fresh water, it won't do to begin to quarrel with them. Once we
get what we want on board the beggars may attack us as soon as they
like. It would do them a world of good to get handsomely thrashed, and
to be taught that vessels are not to be plundered with impunity."

"As you say, it might do them good, but I hope there will be no trouble.
I have no doubt whatever that we should beat them off, but we might lose
some lives in doing it; besides, we have ladies on board."

"I hope so too; and, prepared as we are, I should feel quite safe if it
was not for that mast being gone. They know that we are comparative
cripples, and no doubt looked upon us as lawful booty when they saw us
making in; and I do not think they will let themselves be balked of
their prey without an effort."

"That is just my view of the matter, and I mean to keep a sharp look-out
while we are here. You will all have your hands full, and I will get two
or three of the young fellows to join with me in keeping a sharp watch
over their doings."

"That is a good plan," the mate agreed. "There will, as you say, be
plenty for us to do, and it worries one to have to attend to work and to
keep one's eyes at the back of one's head at the same time. Of course we
shall always have a watch set whatever we are doing, still I have more
faith in your look-out than in that of half a dozen fo'castle hands."

When the two Allens and Wilfrid came on deck Mr. Atherton drew them
aside. "Look here, lads," he began. "You heard what I said last night. I
meant it, and I am sure I was not wrong, for there have been canoes
hovering about us all night. Now, in a short time the officers and crew
will be seeing about getting water on board, and if the natives bring
out a spar that will do as a jury mainmast there will be the work of
trimming it, getting it into its place, and rigging it. My own opinion
is, that now the natives see we are suspicious and on the watch they
will for some time make a show of being extremely friendly so as to
throw us off our guard, and as the officers and sailors will be busy
they may possibly relax their precautions a little. Now I propose that
you and I shall constitute an amateur watch from sunrise to dark. After
that the men's work will be done, and there will be no fear of their
being taken by surprise. The real danger is, I think, in the daytime.
Wilfrid and I will take the second-mate's watch, and do you two take the
first-mate's--that is, if you agree to my proposal."

The three young fellows at once expressed their willingness to do as he
directed them.

"During our respective watches," Mr. Atherton went on, "we must keep our
attention directed solely to the natives. There must be no watching what
is going on on board, no talking and laughing with the other passengers;
we must consider ourselves as if on duty. One of us must take his place
on the fo'castle, the other in the waist. The natives are sure to hang
round the ship in their canoes watching what we are doing, and offering
things for sale. It will be our duty to keep a vigilant eye upon them,
to watch every movement, to give instant warning if their number is at
any time larger than usual, and, in fact, to prevent the possibility of
their closing suddenly in upon us and taking us by surprise. Remember,
it is a case of absolute duty; I have volunteered to the first officer
to undertake it, and he will, relying upon our vigilance, give his
attention to his work."

"Shall we be armed, Mr. Atherton?" James Allen asked.

"Yes, James, I think that it will be as well to have our guns beside us
while on duty. Of course there is no occasion to have them on our
shoulders like sentries, but it will be well to have them always within
reach of the hand in case of sudden danger. The report of a musket would
give the alarm far quicker and more effectually than a shout would do,
especially if men are at work on deck and making a noise. Well, as you
agree, we will begin after breakfast."

"How about meals, sir?" Tom Allen asked. "If they mean to make an attack
I should think they would be likely to choose meal-time, when the
passengers are all below and the deck will be comparatively deserted."

"We must keep watch then also," Mr. Atherton said decidedly. "I will
speak to Mr. Ryan and ask him to tell the steward that two of us will
require something put on the table for them after the others have done.
I do not think that he himself is likely to leave the deck when the
captain is below, and the two of us who happen to be on duty can have
our meals when he does. Of course whenever those on duty come down for
this purpose the others will take their places until they return. We
will change about each day. This is supposed to be your watch, Allen,
from four to eight. Wilfrid and I will begin the work at that hour. You
will relieve us at twelve, and we shall take the watch from four to
eight. To-morrow we will take the early watch, and so on."

"I will tell the Grimstones," Wilfrid, who had always gone for a daily
chat with the men forward, said; "they will be glad to join us in the
watch, and I should think the other men forward would do so too. I know
they all find it very hard work to get through the day."

The Grimstones at once agreed to keep watch, as did the other three men
who occupied the fore cabin with them. Mr. Atherton got muskets and
ammunition for them from Mr. Ryan, and the two Grimstones were
appointed to his watch, the other men to that of the Allens.

At seven bells most of the passengers came on deck to enjoy the fresh
morning air for an hour before breakfast.

"You are not going to enjoy the pleasure of Wilfrid's or my company at
breakfast, Mrs. Renshaw," Mr. Atherton said, smiling, to that lady as
she stood with the three girls round her on the poop.

"Why not, Mr. Atherton?" she asked in surprise.

"He and the Allens and myself are going to do amateur sentry work as
long as we lie here, Mrs Renshaw. The crew will be all busy refitting
the ship, and so I have volunteered to undertake, with their assistance,
the duty of keeping a sharp eye on those tricky gentlemen ashore."

"Are you in earnest, Mr. Atherton?"

"Quite in earnest that we are going to do so, Mrs. Renshaw. There may be
no absolute occasion for it, but there is nothing like keeping on the
safe side; and as we cannot go ashore, and one cannot talk continuously
for fifteen or sixteen hours, we may just as well pass a portion of our
time in playing at sentinels."

"But when will you get breakfast?" Marion asked. "Shall I bring it up to
you, Mr. Atherton?"

"No, thank you, Miss Renshaw. We have arranged to have it with Mr. Ryan
afterwards. I am much obliged to you for your offer just the same. It is
a very kind one, especially since you will, for once, particularly enjoy
your breakfast, as you will have room for your elbows."

"You are laughing at me again, Mr. Atherton. One would really think
that you take me to be about ten years old."

"I think a little teasing does you good, Miss Renshaw. It is one of the
privileges of us old fellows to try to do good to our young friends; and
girls of your age lord it so over their brothers and their brothers'
friends, that it is good for them to be teased a little by their
elders."

"Would not you think, mother," Marion appealed, "that Mr. Atherton by
his talk was somewhere about eighty and that I was quite a child?"

"I agree with him that it is rather a good thing for girls of your age,
Marion, to be snubbed a little occasionally; especially on a voyage like
this, when there are several young fellows on board who have nothing
better to do than to wait upon you and humour your whims."

There was a general laugh. Before a fresh subject was started the
breakfast bell rang and the passengers went below. Mr. Atherton fetched
his rifle from his cabin, and Wilfrid was going to unpack his
double-barrelled gun when his friend said: "I should not bother about
that now, Wilfrid; take one of the ship's muskets. It will make just as
much noise if you have to fire it, and you will not be alarming the
passengers by bringing your gun backwards and forwards from your cabin.
I am going to hang up my rifle when I come off guard in Ryan's cabin on
deck, where it will be handy. You take the fo'castle, your two men can
be in the waist, one on each side, and I will take the poop. Just at
present our duty will be a nominal one, as the canoes have not put out,
but I expect they will be here before long."

Before breakfast was over, indeed, a large canoe was brought down from
the woods and placed in the water, and a number of natives appeared on
the shore. The first officer at once summoned the captain on deck.

"Tell all the men to have their arms handy, Mr. Ryan," the captain said
as he looked at the gathering on shore. "I do not suppose they mean to
attack us in this open way, still we may as well be upon our guard.
Order the men not to show their arms, but to go about their work as
usual. We do not wish to appear afraid of them, or to take up a position
of hostility. I hope the chiefs are coming off for a friendly palaver."

In a few minutes the canoes put off from the shore. First came the great
canoe, which was paddled by thirty men. In the bow and stern were
hideous images. Four natives, evidently of superior rank, were seated
near the stern, and in the bow stood a man beating his hands in time to
the stroke of the paddles and singing a song, which was responded to by
a deep exclamation from the rowers at every stroke. Another man stood by
the side of the singer waving a green bough. Behind this great canoe
followed a score of smaller ones.

"We will receive them in state, Mr. Ryan. Evidently they intend to keep
up an appearance of friendliness at present. We will meet them in the
same spirit. Fasten the signal flags on to the halyards and run them up
to the masthead, let half a dozen men with cutlasses take their place at
the gangway as a sort of guard of honour, let the rest go on with their
work but keep their arms handy for action."

When the great canoe approached the vessel the men stopped paddling,
and one of the chiefs standing up made an address to the captain, who
was standing at the top of the gangway. Not a word that he said was
understood, but the address seemed to be of a friendly nature, and the
chief held up some cocoa-nuts and yams as if to show his desire to
trade. When he had finished the captain took off his hat and also spoke,
and by gestures invited the chiefs to come on board. By this time all
the passengers had come on deck, and were watching the proceedings with
great interest.

"Do you think it safe to let them on board?" the first officer asked Mr.
Atherton, who was intently watching the natives in the smaller canoes.

"Quite safe," he replied. "So long as only a few of their followers come
with them there is no fear of their attempting anything. While the
chiefs are in our hands they act, as it were, as hostages for the good
conduct of their people. So far their intentions are clearly peaceful.
Whether that will last will depend upon whether they think there is a
chance of success or not. At present all we have to do is to take
advantage of it, and to get what we want on board."

By this time the canoe was approaching the side of the ship. The four
chiefs ascended the ladder, followed by four or five of lower rank who
had been seated near them. As they reached the deck the principal chief
turned round and shouted an order in a loud voice. Its effect was
immediate. The canoe in which they had arrived at once paddled away to a
short distance, while the smaller craft, which had before been drifting
slowly towards the vessel, also retired and lay huddled behind the large
canoe.




CHAPTER VII.

A SAVAGE SURPRISE.


The captain led the way on to the poop, the chiefs and the natives with
them following, while the first officer with the six sailors with sabres
kept in their rear. Once on the quarter-deck Mr. Ryan ranged three of
the men by the bulwark on either side, telling them to sheath their
cutlasses, but to be prepared for instant action in case of treachery.
The chiefs preserved a stolid demeanour, scarce glancing at the
passengers, who were gathered on the poop. At the captain's orders the
steward brought up a number of cushions and placed them on the deck in a
circle. The captain seated himself on one and motioned to the chiefs to
follow his example, which they did without hesitation. Mr. Ryan now
brought up a number of things as presents for the chiefs, and each was
presented with a hand mirror, a roll of scarlet cloth, and some
trinkets, as a small supply of these had been brought on board for trade
with the natives in case of the necessity arising.

The head chief was in addition presented with an axe, and rolls of
coloured cotton strings of glass beads and some brass rings were given
to the inferior chiefs. The natives appeared pleased with their
presents. The captain then addressed them, and endeavoured to explain
that he wanted a supply of water. An empty barrel was brought up and
some water poured into this, and the captain then pointed to the shore,
and by gestures intimated that he wished the barrels to be taken ashore
and filled. The chiefs evidently understood the explanation, and nodded
their assent. The captain then led them to the stump of the mainmast,
pointed to the shore, and taking an axe imitated the action of chopping,
and showed that he wanted them to fell a tree and bring it off to the
vessel. The chief pointed to the boats hanging on the davits, placed the
axe in the hands of one of the men, and clearly signified that the crew
could go ashore and cut down a tree if they chose. The captain shook his
head and placed the axe in the hands of one of the chiefs. Their leader,
however, went up to the foremast, and by spreading out his arms
signified that it was a great size, and then held out the small axe the
captain had presented to him with an action of disdain.

"The beggar means that with one axe they would never cut down a tree of
that size," the first officer said.

"That is all humbug, Ryan; they can bring down the biggest trees for the
construction of their canoes. I believe they bring them down by fire.
However, it is as well to humour them. Tell the carpenter to bring half
a dozen axes."

This was done, and the axes laid down on the deck. There was now a
consultation between the natives. After a while they nodded, and then
made signs that someone must go ashore with them to choose the tree.

"What do you say, Ryan?" the captain asked. "It is of importance that we
should get a stick that will suit us. The question is whether it will be
safe to trust a man on shore with these scoundrels?"

"I will go ashore if you like, captain," Mr. Ryan replied.

"I do not like it, Ryan," the captain said. "You see, they would make
mincemeat of an armed crew in no time."

"I should not propose to take a crew, sir; they could afford no
protection against a number of natives. I do not think the beggars would
assault a single man. You see, there would be nothing to gain by it; and
if they did it would put the ship on its guard, and their game at
present is evidently to be friendly. I do not think there is any danger
in the affair. If I did not go they might send off some stick that would
be of no use at all to us, and as we came in on purpose to get a mast it
is worth while risking something."

"Well, Ryan," the captain said after a moment's deliberation, "I think
perhaps you are right, and that one man would be safe with them. It is
certainly of great importance for us to get the sort of stick we want,
so as you are ready to volunteer I do not think myself justified in
refusing your offer." The captain then put his hand on the chief
officer's shoulder and intimated to the natives that he would accompany
them on shore. The party then returned to the poop, and the steward
brought up some tumblers and two or three bottles of rum. The chiefs'
eyes glistened as the liquor was poured out, and each swallowed a half
tumbler of the spirit with an air of the deepest satisfaction.

"That is the present they like best," the captain said; "and I suppose I
had better give them some for consumption on shore. At any rate it will
keep them in a good temper until Ryan is back again." Accordingly two
bottles of rum were presented to the leading chief, a bottle to the
three next in rank, and two or three bottles among the others. The great
canoe was hailed, the natives again took their places in it, accompanied
by the first officer, and the boat then started for the shore. Some of
the smaller craft now came alongside, and the process of barter was
again commenced. Yams, bread-fruit, and other products of the island
were obtained for the use of the ship in exchange for beads, empty
bottles, and small mirrors, while the passengers succeeded in obtaining
many curiously carved weapons, calabashes, woven cloths, and other
mementoes of their visit. Only two or three of the canoes were allowed
alongside at a time, and a vigilant look-out was maintained to see that
the others did not approach the ship. The captain walked restlessly up
and down the poop, constantly turning his glass upon the shore.

An hour after the great canoe had reached it he exclaimed in a tone of
intense satisfaction, "There is Ryan coming down to the beach. Thank
heaven he is safe!" The first-mate was seen to take his place in a small
canoe, which at once rowed off to the ship. The captain shook him
heartily by the hand as he stepped on deck. "Thank heaven you have got
back safely, Ryan! it has been a hazardous business, and I shall take
care to let the owners know how you have risked your life by going
ashore in their service. Well, how have you succeeded?"

"I found a grand pine growing within thirty or forty yards of the water,
about a quarter of a mile beyond that point to the left. As I expected,
the natives had no idea of using the axes for such a purpose. When I
left them a party were piling wood round the foot of the tree, and I
have no doubt they will soon get it down in their own way. I suppose
they will waste ten or twelve feet at the base, but that is of no
consequence, for the tree is long enough and to spare to make us a
fair-sized mainmast."

"That is right; and as it is so close to the water we can send a boat to
see how they are getting on. How about water?"

"They showed me a spring about fifty yards from the beach, nearly facing
us. There is plenty of water there, and it is perfectly fresh and sweet,
for I tasted it. If they make any bother about bringing it off, a couple
of boats with well-armed parties could fetch it without difficulty as
the distance is so short."

"That is capital, Ryan. I hope our difficulties are pretty well over,
and that we shall get off without any trouble with these fellows."

"I hope so, sir. They certainly seemed friendly enough with me on
shore."

In the evening Mr. Ryan, with a crew of six men, went in the captain's
gig to see how the natives were getting on with the tree. The men had
their muskets and cutlasses laid under the thwarts in readiness for
action. The natives, however, appeared perfectly friendly. The crews of
several of the canoes near which they passed shouted some sort of
greeting, but paid no other attention to them. On rounding the point the
first officer steered straight for the tree he had chosen. A light smoke
was ascending from its foot, and half a dozen natives were gathered
there. When close to the spot he ordered the men to turn the boat round
and back her ashore.

"I am going to land, lads," he said, "and see how they are getting on. I
do not think that there is the least danger, but you had best keep in
readiness to row off the instant I jump on board."

Mr. Ryan then proceeded to the tree. He found that a circle of small
fires had been built against it. These were fed with dry wood, and were
slowly but steadily eating their way into the tree, and he saw that only
two or three feet of the base would be injured by their action. He
nodded approvingly to the natives, but muttered to himself: "It's a
mighty slow way of bringing down a tree. It is not much above three feet
and a half in diameter, even at the base, and a couple of men with axes
would bring it down in an hour, while there is no saying how long they
will be with these fires of theirs. However, I should say that they will
get through it to-night or some time to-morrow. It is a fine stick, and
runs up as straight as an arrow, and is thick enough for fifty feet for
our purpose."

He walked quietly back to the boat, took his seat, and was rowed back to
the ship, where he reported that the natives were carrying out their
promise, and that by the next day the tree would be down. On visiting
the spot again on the following morning it was found that the tree had
fallen.

"The fellows know their business," Mr. Ryan said to the man who rowed
the stroke-oar. "You see that they managed so that it should fall
towards the water. Now, lads, you can take to the axes we have brought
with us and chop it through at the point where we want it cut; it will
save the trouble of getting off the upper branches, and render it much
more handy for getting afloat."

Leaving two of the men in the boat, Mr. Ryan and the other four leapt
ashore, and were not long in cutting through the tree. Another half-hour
sufficed to lop off all the branches below this point, and the trunk was
then ready for launching. The natives stood round watching the work with
exclamations of surprise at the speed with which the keen axes did their
work. Mr. Ryan had brought with him from the ship a number of presents,
and these he distributed among the party who had been engaged in felling
the tree.

"I do not know," he said to the captain when he returned, "whether they
mean to get the stick in the water and bring it here, or whether they
expect we shall do that part of the business ourselves."

"I think we will wait until to-morrow morning, Mr. Ryan. If we hear
nothing of them by then you had better take two boats--one with men to
do the work, the other to lie just off and protect them while they do
it."

There was, however, no occasion for this, for early the next morning
seven or eight canoes were seen coming round the point with much beating
of tom-toms and sounding of conch horns.

"Here comes the spar!" the captain exclaimed; "the worst of our
difficulties is over, thank goodness!"

"I would keep an eye open, Ryan, if I were you," Mr. Atherton said as
the mate passed him to give orders for preparing to get the spar on
deck. "There are a good many other canoes coming off from the shore,
and they might take the opportunity for making a sudden attack."

"Right you are," the mate said. "Let the starboard watch," he shouted,
"keep their arms handy! Four men with muskets take their place at the
top of the gangway, but do not show the arms unless you get orders to do
so!"

The trunk was towed alongside the ship. Mr. Atherton and the party who
had placed themselves under his orders kept a vigilant watch on the
canoes to see if the occupants were armed. There was a deal of talking
and gesticulating going on among them, but no arms could be seen, and
Mr. Atherton soon concluded that if treachery was intended the present
was not the time at which it would be shown. The crew were all on deck,
and the natives must have known their arms were close at hand, for each
day a few of those who came to trade had been permitted to come on deck,
partly to show confidence on the part of those on board, partly that the
visitors might see the arms lying in readiness for use, and be able to
report on shore that the ship was not to be taken by surprise.

No sooner was the spar alongside than a couple of sailors lowered
themselves down and passed ropes round it. These ropes were then passed
through blocks and taken to the capstan. The bars were fitted and seized
by a dozen men. The boatswain's whistle sounded, and starting their
anchor song the men tramped round and round, the ropes tightened, and
the heavy spar was parbuckled up on to the deck. No sooner was it got
on board than the four chiefs who had before visited the ship came
alongside. There was another talk, and they were presented with a
considerable number of presents for themselves and followers as a reward
for their service in sending off the spar. Mr. Atherton and Wilfrid did
not approach the group of passengers round the chiefs, keeping their
attention vigilantly upon the boats, from which the danger, if it
existed, would come.

The Allens, however, in accordance with Mr. Atherton's instructions,
watched the natives closely, and noticed as they came on deck they cast
quick and scrutinizing glances round them as if to see what were the
chances of a surprise. Mr. Ryan, however, had, when he saw the great
canoe approaching, placed ten men with muskets on guard, and the chiefs
doubtless perceived that a surprise could not be effected. After a stay
of about a quarter of an hour the chiefs departed with their presents,
of which, by the care they took of it, it was evident that they
considered a case of rum to be by far the most precious. No sooner was
the trunk of the pine fairly on board than a gang of men provided with
adzes began, under the direction of the carpenter, to prepare it. The
bark was chipped off, the stumps of the branches shaved close, and they
then began to chip it down to the required thickness from end to end.

"It will make a fine spar," the captain said in a tone of great
satisfaction, after he had examined it. "I think it will do for her
permanent mast. If it will it will save us a lot of trouble when we get
into Wellington."

"I think it will be a little light, sir," Mr. Ryan said, "by the time we
have got it perfectly smooth and even. Still, I have seen lighter spars
in a ship of this size, and I certainly think we are most fortunate in
getting such a stick. When do you think you will get it ready, Watson?"

"I should say we shall have it nearly ready for getting into its place
by to-morrow night, Mr. Ryan," the carpenter replied, "though we may not
quite finish it until next day; for, you see, when it comes to getting
it smoothed, I and my mate must do it by ourselves."

"I should not be particular about smoothing it," the captain said, "but
of course you must make it so that it will take the spare irons we have
got for the topmast. We shall have plenty of time to put the finishing
touches to it when we get to Wellington. I begin to think these natives
are not so black as they are painted, Mr. Ryan."

"Perhaps not, sir; but maybe if they had not seen that we were so ready
for them there would be a different tale to tell."

"That is so," the captain agreed. "There is no doubt that the best way
of dealing with natives is never to give them a chance."

The carpenter's gang continued steadily at their work, while the first
officer got up the sheer-legs and hoisted the stump of the mainmast from
its place. The butt of the new mainmast was cut to match this, and on
the second day after it arrived alongside it was hoisted into its
position. The whole of the stays and rigging of the mainmast had been
cut away as soon as it went overboard; but there was plenty of spare
rope on board, and before evening the new mast was firmly stayed in its
place, and all was in readiness for hoisting the spar that was to serve
as topmast.

The natives had watched the proceedings with great interest. Quite a
crowd of canoes gathered round the ship, and were greatly surprised at
seeing the heavy spar raised by the sheers and dropped into its place;
and they replied to the hearty cheers that rose from the crew and
passengers when this was accomplished by wild yells and cries and the
sounding of their horns.

"I begin to think," the captain said to Mr. Atherton, "that the natives
have got a worse name than they deserve. I do not mean, of course, that
they have not perpetrated several atrocious massacres, but I expect
these must have been the result of extreme carelessness on the part of
those on ships, or perhaps of rough treatment, for some captains treat
the natives of islands like these like dogs. As far as they could have
told there was an excellent chance of attacking the ship to-day, though
we know that we kept up a vigilant watch all the time, and yet nothing
could have been more friendly than they were."

"There is no doubt something in what you say, captain," Mr. Atherton
agreed. "Many of the captains of the ships who trade among these islands
are certainly rough fellows, who would think nothing of knocking a
native down, and others again are so culpably careless as to offer
almost an inducement to the natives to grasp what is to them untold
wealth. Still, I think it is as well to be cautious."

"Of course we shall be cautious," the captain replied; "but I really do
not think that you and the others need bother yourselves to be always
standing on sentry."

"It is no trouble," Mr. Atherton said, "and I think we will keep it up
until we are fairly under weigh."

Mr. Atherton was not pleased at seeing that the captain the next day
relaxed somewhat in the strictness of the rules he laid down, and the
crew were allowed to trade freely with the natives.

"We must be more vigilant than ever," he said to Wilfrid and the Allens.
"The captain is so pleased at having got his mast on board that he is
disposed to view the natives with friendly eyes, which, if they mean
treachery, is just what they want. Finding that we were too much on the
watch to be taken by surprise, they would naturally try to lull us with
a sense of false security."

In the afternoon the chief again came off and formally invited the
captain to a feast on shore. He accepted the invitation, and went back
with them, accompanied by three or four of the passengers who had
scoffed at the idea of danger. After a stay of two or three hours they
returned on board.

"I think, Mr. Ryan," the captain said that evening, "you had better take
a couple of boats in the morning and go ashore for water. We shall have
everything ready for getting up our anchor after dinner. Of course your
crew will be well armed and take every precaution, but I do not think
that there is the slightest danger."

"Very well, sir. You may be sure I will keep my weather-eye open."

Mr. Atherton shook his head when in the morning he saw the boats being
lowered, and heard from the first officer the orders he had received.

"From what you say there is water enough to last us to Wellington if we
are all put on somewhat shorter allowance, and that would be infinitely
better than running the risk of your going ashore."

"The water might last if all goes well," the mate said, "but if we were
to get becalmed for some time, which is likely enough in these
latitudes, we should be in an awkward fix. I shall keep a sharp look-out
on shore, never fear. The distance to the spring is, as I told you, not
above fifty yards, and I will keep half the men filling and the other
half on guard. If they should mean mischief we will give it them hot."

"How many men will you take?"

"Sixteen--ten in the cutter and six in the gig."

"That would only leave us ten on board," Mr. Atherton said. "If they
attack you they will attack us too, that is a moral certainty. At any
rate, I will hint to some of the passengers that they had better keep
their arms in readiness while you are away."

Mr. Atherton refused to go down to breakfast when the Allens came up to
relieve him after finishing their meal.

"We will have both watches on deck this morning," he said. "We shall be
very short-handed while Ryan and his party are away. Unfortunately the
captain is convinced there is not the slightest danger. He snubbed me
this morning quite smartly when I said casually that I supposed that he
would not let any of the natives on board while Ryan was away."

As the rest of the passengers came up from breakfast, Mr. Atherton spoke
to some of those with whom he had been most intimate on the voyage, and
told them that he thought it would be just as well for them to bring
their arms on deck and keep them close at hand until the watering party
returned.

"It is no great trouble," he said, "and it is just as well to be ready
in case the natives mean mischief. I know that some of the youngsters
consider me to be an alarmist, and I will give them free leave to laugh
at me when we are once safely out at sea, but the stake is too heavy to
admit of carelessness; there are not only our own lives but those of the
ladies to be thought of."

Three or four of the passengers followed this advice and brought their
muskets or double-barrelled guns on deck. They were a good deal laughed
at by the rest, who asked them if they had joined Atherton's army, as
the little party who had kept watch were called. However, when the boats
pushed off with the empty casks, and the passengers saw how large was
the complement of the crew who had left them, three of the others
strolled down to the cabin and got their guns. In half an hour the great
canoe with the chiefs came off, and as it approached the ship Mr.
Atherton told Wilfrid to go forward, and tell the five men there to come
aft and be in readiness to mount to the poop the moment they saw any
sign of trouble. "If there is a row," he said, "we have to hold the
poop. There are only the two ladders to defend, and we can do that; but
it would be useless to try to hold the whole of the ship."

As the captain left the poop and went down into the waist to receive the
chiefs, Mr. Atherton went up to where Mrs. Renshaw was sitting.

"Will you take my advice, Mrs. Renshaw?"

"Certainly I will," she said, smiling; "for I am sure it will be good,
whatever it is."

"Then, Mrs. Renshaw, I advise you at once to go below with your daughter
and the Miss Mitfords. I do not say that we are going to have trouble,
but if we are this is the time. Pray oblige me by doing as I ask."

Mrs. Renshaw at once rose, called Marion and the other two girls, who
were gaily chatting with a group of the passengers, and asked them to go
below with her. Wilfrid and the two Allens were now on the poop, as Mr.
Atherton had told them that they had better remain there instead of
placing themselves at other points. The Grimstones and the three other
passengers forward were gathered near the ladders.

As usual the chiefs accompanied the captain on to the poop, followed by
half a dozen of the minor chiefs; and Mr. Atherton noticed that several
of the others, instead of sitting quietly in the canoe, slipped up after
them on to the deck. The flotilla of small canoes, which had as usual
put out in the train of the large one, was edging in towards the vessel.
Mr. Atherton leant over the poop rail and spoke to the second officer,
who was engaged in the waist with the men.

"Mr. Rawlins, I do not quite like the look of things. I think that it
would be as well if you were to gather as many of the hands as you can
at the foot of the ladder here, without, of course, alarming the
natives, as it may be only my fancy."

The second-mate nodded, and at once told the men with him to knock off
from their work. "Get hold of your cutlasses quietly," he said, "and
gather near the foot of the starboard port ladder." Then going to the
gangway he stopped a native who was just climbing up from the canoe, and
motioned to them that no more were to come on board.

The talk with the chiefs was a short one. The stewards brought up two
cases of rum, and when these were handed over to them the natives rose
as if to go. Suddenly the leader drew his axe from his girdle, and with
a loud yell buried it deep in the captain's head.

The yell was echoed from some hundred throats, the crew of the canoe
leapt to their feet and began to clamber up the side of the vessel,
while those in the smaller craft dashed their paddles into the water and
urged their boats towards it. At the same moment the natives on board
all drew concealed weapons. So quick had been the action of the chief
that Mr. Atherton had not time to prevent it, but before the body of the
captain touched the deck that of the chief was stretched beside it with
a bullet through the brain.

Wilfrid and the Allens seeing the natives rise to go had thought the
danger over, and two passengers had been struck down before they brought
their rifles to their shoulders. They were within a few feet of the
chiefs, and each of their shots told. For a minute or two there was a
scene of wild confusion. The natives in the waist fell furiously upon
the sailors, but these, fortunately put upon their guard, received the
attack with determination. The sound of the lads' rifles was followed
almost instantly by the sharp cracks of a revolver Mr. Atherton
produced from his pocket, and each shot told with fatal effect. When the
revolver was empty not a native remained alive on the poop.

The other passengers had been taken so completely by surprise that even
those who had brought up their arms did not join in the fray until the
poop was cleared. "Keep them back there!" Mr. Atherton shouted as the
natives came swarming up the ladder on the port side. Several shots were
fired, but the passengers were too startled for their aim to be true.

"Give me your musket, Renshaw!" Mr. Atherton exclaimed, snatching the
piece the latter had just discharged from his hands, "my rifle is too
good for this work." He then clubbed the weapon, and whirling it round
his head as if it had been a straw fell upon the natives, who were just
pouring up on to the poop, shouting to the passengers, "Fire on the mass
below! I will keep these fellows at bay!" Every blow that fell stretched
a man lifeless on deck, until those who had gained the poop, unable to
retreat owing to the pressure of those behind them, and terrified by the
destruction wrought by this giant, sprang over the bulwark into the sea.
Just as they did so the little party of sailors and steerage passengers,
finding themselves unable to resist the pressure, made their way up to
the poop by the starboard ladder, hotly pressed by the natives.

By this time several of the male passengers who had rushed below for
their weapons ran up, and Wilfred and the Allens having reloaded, such a
discharge was poured into the natives on the port ladder that the
survivors leapt down on to the deck below, and the attack for a moment
ceased. The whole of the forward portion of the ship was by this time
in the hands of the natives. Three sailors who were at work there had
been at once murdered, only one of the party having time to make his
escape up the fore rigging. Spears now began to fly fast over the poop.

"We must fall back a bit, Mr. Rawlins, or we shall be riddled," Mr.
Atherton said. "Your men had better run down and get muskets; we will
keep these fellows at bay. I do not think they will make a rush again
just at present. Will you see that the door leading out on to the waist
is securely barricaded, and place two or three men there? Mr. Renshaw,
will you and some of the other passengers carry down those ladies who
have fainted, and assure them all that the danger is really over."

Mr. Atherton had so naturally taken the command that the second mate at
once obeyed his instructions. Most of the ladies had rushed below
directly the fray began, but two or three had fainted, and these were
soon carried below. The male passengers, eighteen in all, were now on
deck. Several of them looked very pale and scared, but even the most
timid felt that his life depended on his making a fight for it. A
perfect shower of spears were now flying over the poop from the natives
in the canoes alongside, and from the ship forward.

"We had best lie down, gentlemen," Mr. Atherton said. "If the natives
make a rush up the ladders we must be careful not to fire all at once or
we should be at their mercy. Let those by the bulwarks fire first, and
the others take it up gradually while the first reload. Of course if
they make a really determined rush there will be nothing to do but to
meet them and drive them back again."

Unfortunately the four cannon of the _Flying Scud_ were all amidships,
and were therefore not available for the defence.

"If we could make a breastwork, Mr. Atherton, so that we could stand up
behind it and fire down into the waist we might drive these fellows
out," the second officer suggested.

"A very good idea. Wilfrid, will you run down and ask the ladies to get
up to the top of the companion all the mattrasses, trunks, and other
things that would do to form a barricade? It will be a good thing for
them to have something to do. Mr. Rawlins, will you send down the
stewards to help? they might get some cases and barrels up. As fast as
they bring them up we will push them along the deck and form a
breastwork."




CHAPTER VIII.

THE END OF THE VOYAGE.


When Wilfred went below to get materials for a barricade, he found the
ladies kneeling or sitting calm and quiet, although very pale and white,
round the table, while Mrs. Renshaw was praying aloud. She concluded her
prayer just as he came down. There was a general chorus of questions.

"Everything is going on well," Wilfrid said cheerfully; "but we want to
make a breastwork, for the spears are flying about so, one cannot stand
up to fire at them. I have come to ask you all to carry up mattrasses
and pillows and cushions and portmanteaus, and anything else that will
make a barricade. The steward will open the lazaret and send up barrels
and things. Please set to work at once."

Not a moment was lost; the ladies carried the things rapidly up the
companion, two of the passengers passed them outside, and others lying
in a line pushed them forward from one to another until they arrived at
those lying, rifle in hand, twenty feet aft of the poop rails. There was
soon a line of mattrasses four deep laid across the deck.

"That will do to begin with," Mr. Atherton said. "Now, let us push these
before us to the end of the poop, and we can then commence operations.
The sailors, Wilfrid Renshaw, the Allens, and myself will first open
fire. Will the rest of you please continue to pass things along to add
to the height of our barricade? I wish we knew how they are getting on
on shore." For almost immediately after the struggle had begun on board
the sound of musketry had broken out from that quarter, and they knew
that the watering party had been attacked directly the natives knew that
their chiefs had commenced the massacre on board ship.

Several times, in spite of the danger from the flying spears, Mr.
Atherton had gone to the stern and looked towards the shore. The boats
lay there seemingly deserted, and the fight was going on in the wood. A
number of canoes had placed themselves so as to cut off the return of
the boats should the sailors succeed in making their way to them.

As soon as the line of mattrasses was pushed forward to the edge of the
poop a steady fire was opened upon the natives, who had already taken
off the hatches, and were engaged in bringing their plunder up on deck,
deferring the dangerous operation of carrying the poop for the present.

As soon, however, as the fire opened upon them they seized their spears
and tomahawks, and, led by one of their chiefs, made a rush at the two
poop ladders. Mr. Atherton gave a shout, and the whole of the passengers
seizing their muskets sprang to their feet and ran forward to the
barricade, and so heavy a fire was poured into the natives as they tried
to ascend the ladders, that they fell back again and contented
themselves with replying to the fire with volleys of spears. The
passengers at once renewed their work of passing the materials for the
barricade forward, and this was continued until it rose breast high.
They then took their places closely together behind it, and joined its
defenders in keeping up a heavy fire upon the natives. So deadly was its
effect that the latter began to lose heart and to jump over into the
canoes alongside.

A cheer broke from the passengers as they saw the movement of retreat.
It was no longer necessary for any to reserve their fire, and this was
redoubled. The natives were discouraged by the want of leaders; their
principal chiefs had all been killed on the poop, and any other who
attempted to rally them and lead them again to an attack was instantly
shot down by Mr. Atherton, who, as Wilfrid, who was standing next to
him observed, never once failed to bring down the man he aimed at.

"I think we might go at them, sir, now," the second officer said to Mr.
Atherton; "the fight is all out of them."

"I think so too, Rawlins. Now, gentlemen, give them one last volley and
then pull down the barricade across the ends of the ladders and charge
them." The volley was given, and then with a ringing cheer the barricade
was thrust aside, and, led on one side by Mr. Atherton and on the other
by the second officer, the defenders of the poop sprang down the ladders
and rushed forward. The natives did not stop to await them, but sprung
overboard with the greatest precipitation, and the _Flying Scud_ was
once again in the hands of its lawful owners.

"Now, Rawlins, do you and the sailors work the guns, we will pepper them
with our rifles," Mr. Atherton said. "Mr. Renshaw, will you go aft and
tell the ladies that all is over?"

But this they had already learned. Marion, after the things had been
passed up, had taken her place at the top of the companion, occasionally
peering out to see what was going on, and running down with the news to
them below, and as the loud cheer which preceded the charge had broken
from those on deck, she had called out to the ladies below that the
natives were beaten. The shower of spears from the boats had ceased as
soon as the natives saw their friends leaping overboard, and as Mr.
Renshaw ascended the poop to deliver the message the ladies were
flocking out on deck, each anxious to ascertain whether those most dear
to them had suffered in the fray. Marion run forward and threw herself
into his arms.

"Not hurt, father?"

"No, my dear, thank God. Some of us have got spear wounds more or less
awkward, but nobody has been killed except those who were struck down at
the beginning." As he spoke the four cannon boomed out one after
another, for they had been loaded some days before, and a hail of
bullets and pieces of iron with which they had been crammed tore through
the canoes, while terrible yells rose from the natives. Three of the
canoes were instantly sunk, and half the paddlers in the large boat of
the chief were killed or disabled. Almost the same instant a dropping
fire of musketry was opened, the passengers firing as soon as they had
reloaded their pieces.

"Give another dose to that big fellow!" the second officer shouted to
the men at the two guns at that side of the ship. "Shove a ball in, men,
and a bagful of bullets--take steady aim, and remember the poor
captain!" A minute later the guns were fired. A terrible cry was heard,
and almost instantaneously the great canoe disappeared below the water.

"Get the other two guns over to this side," Mr. Rawlins said; "we must
lend a hand now to the party ashore. Load all the guns with grape, and
aim at those canoes between us and them." These, following the example
of those around the ship, were already moving towards the shore, and the
discharge of the four guns sunk two of them and sent the others off in
headlong flight.

"What had we better do now, Mr. Atherton?"

"I should load with round shot now, Rawlins, and open fire into the wood
on both sides of the landing-place. The sound of the shot crashing among
the trees will demoralize the scoundrels even if you do not hit anyone."

Three or four rounds were fired, and then those on board gave a cheer as
they saw the sailors issue out from among the trees and take their
places in the boats. Half a minute later they were rowing towards the
vessel, unmolested by the natives. Mr. Ryan stood up in the stern of his
boat as soon as they were within hailing distance and shouted--"How has
it gone with you?"

"We have beaten them off, as you see," the second officer shouted back;
"but the ship was pretty nearly in their hands for a time. The captain
is killed, I am sorry to say; four of our men, and two of the
passengers. How have you done?"

"We have lost three men," Mr. Ryan replied, "and most of us are
wounded."

The boats were soon alongside, and Mr. Ryan, after hearing what had
taken place on board, related his experience. "We had got about half the
casks filled when we heard a rifle shot on board a ship, followed
directly by the yells of the black divils. I ordered the men to drop the
casks and take to their guns, but I had scarcely spoken when a volley of
spears fell among us. Two men were killed at once. I had intended to
take to the boats and come off to lend you a hand, but by the yelling
and the shower of spears I saw that the spalpeens were so thick round us
that if we had tried we should pretty well all be killed before we
could get fairly out, so I told the men to take to the trees and keep up
a steady fire whenever the natives tried to make a rush at us. I was, of
course, terribly anxious about you all at first, and I knew that if the
ship was taken they must have us all sooner or later. After the first
few shots there was silence for a time, and I feared the worst."

"The spears were flying so thick we could not stand up to fire," the
second officer put in.

"Ah! that was it. Well, I was afraid you had all been massacred, and you
may imagine how relieved I was when I heard a dropping fire of musketry
begin; I knew then that they had failed to take you by surprise. The
fire at last got so heavy I was sure that most of you had escaped the
first attack, and we then felt pretty hopeful, though I did not see how
we were to get down to the boats and get off to you. When we heard the
first cannon shot we gave a cheer that must have astonished the natives,
for we knew you must have cleared the deck of the scoundrels. I had set
a man at the edge of the trees by the water to let us know how you were
going on, and he soon shouted that the canoes were drawing off! Then we
heard the big canoe was sunk, and that you had driven off the craft that
were lying between us and the ship. A minute later the round shot came
crashing among the trees, and almost immediately the yelling round us
ceased, and we felt sure they must be drawing off. We waited until you
had fired a couple more rounds, and then as all seemed quiet we fell
back to the boats, and, as you saw, got off without a single spear
being thrown at us. I am awfully sorry for the poor captain. If he had
but taken your advice, Mr. Atherton, all this would not have happened;
but at last he got to trust these treacherous scoundrels, and this is
the result."

"Well, Mr. Ryan, you are in command now," Mr. Atherton said, "and we are
all ready to carry out any orders that you will give us."

"First of all then, Mr. Atherton, I must, in the name of the owners of
this ship, of myself, the officers and crew, thank you for having saved
it and us from the hands of these savages. From what Mr. Rawlins tells
me, and from what I know myself, I am convinced that had it not been for
your vigilance, and for the part you have taken in the defence of the
ship, the natives would have succeeded in their treacherous design of
massacring all on board almost without resistance."

A cheer broke from the passengers and crew, and Mr. Renshaw said when it
had subsided: "I, on the part of the passengers, endorse all that Mr.
Ryan has said; we owe it to you, Atherton, that by God's mercy we and
those dear to us have escaped from death at the hands of these savages.
It was you who put some of us on our guard; it was your marvellous
shooting with the revolver that first cleared the poop; and your
extraordinary strength, that enabled you single-handed to check the
onslaught of the natives and give us time to rally from our first
surprise, and saved the ship and us."

"Do not let us say anything more about it," Mr. Atherton said; "we have
all done our duty to the best of our power, and have reason to be
heartily thankful to God that we have got out of this scrape without
heavier loss than has befallen us. Now, Mr. Ryan, please give your
orders."

"The first thing, undoubtedly, is to clear the deck of these bodies,"
Mr. Ryan said.

"What about the wounded?" Mr. Renshaw asked, "no doubt some of the poor
wretches are still alive."

"They do not deserve any better fate than to be tossed overboard with
the others; still, as that would go against the grain, we will see what
we can do." He looked over the side. "There is a good-sized canoe
floating there fifty yards away. I suppose the fellows thought it would
be safer to jump overboard and swim ashore. Four of you men get out the
gig and tow the canoe alongside. We will put any wounded we find into it
and send it adrift; they will come out and pick it up after we are
fairly off."

The bodies of sixty natives who had been killed outright were thrown
overboard, and eighteen who were found to be still alive were lowered
into the canoe. "I do not think we are really doing them much kindness,
though of course we are doing the best we can for them," Mr. Atherton
said to Mr. Renshaw. "I doubt if one of them will live. You see, all who
were able to drag themselves to the side jumped overboard, and were
either drowned or hauled into the canoes."

As soon as the operation was over the casks of water were got on board
and the boats hoisted to the davits. The anchor was then hove up and
some of the sails shaken out, and with a gentle breeze the vessel began
to draw off the land. As soon as this was done all hands set to work
washing down the decks; and in two or three hours, except for the bullet
marks on the deck and bulwarks, there were no signs left of the
desperate conflict that had raged on board the _Flying Scud_. At sunset
all hands gathered on the poop, and the bodies of the captain and two
passengers, and of the sailors who had fallen, were reverently delivered
to the deep, Mr. Ryan reading the funeral service.

The ladies had retired below after the boats had come alongside, and did
not come up until all was ready for the funeral. Mrs. Renshaw and three
or four of the others had been employed in dressing the wounds of those
who had been injured. Four out of the six sailors who had survived the
massacre on board had been more or less severely wounded before they won
their way on the quarter-deck, and six of the watering party were also
wounded. Eight of the passengers had been struck with the flying spears;
but only two of these had received wounds likely to cause anxiety. After
the funeral was over more sail was hoisted, the breeze freshened, and
the _Flying Scud_ proceeded briskly on her way.

The rest of the voyage was uneventful. Thankful as all were for their
escape, a gloom hung over the ship. The death of the captain was much
felt by all. He had been uniformly kind and obliging to the passengers,
and had done everything in his power to make the voyage a pleasant one.
One of the passengers who was killed was a young man with none on board
to mourn him, but the other had left a widow and two children, whose
presence in their midst was a constant reminder of their narrow escape
from destruction.

The voyage had produced a very marked change in Mr. Renshaw. It had
brought him in far closer connection with his children than he had ever
been before, with results advantageous to each. Hitherto they had
scarcely ever seen him except at meals, and even at these times his
thoughts were so wholly taken up with the writings on which he was
engaged that he had taken but little part in the general conversation
beyond giving a willing assent to any request they made, and evincing no
interest whatever in their plans and amusements.

Now, although for four or five hours a day he worked diligently at his
study of the Maori language, he was at other times ready to join in what
was going on. He often walked the deck by the hour with Wilfrid and
Marion, and in that time learned far more of their past life, of their
acquaintances and amusements at their old home, than he had ever known
before. He was genial and chatty with all the other passengers, and the
astonishment of his children was unbounded when he began to take a
lively part in the various amusements by which the passengers whiled
away the long hours, and played at deck quoits and bull. The latter game
consists of a board divided into twelve squares, numbered one to ten,
with two having bulls' heads upon them; leaden discs covered with canvas
are thrown on to this board, counting according to the number on which
they fall, ten being lost for each quoit lodged on a square marked by a
bull's head.

On the evening of the day before the shores of New Zealand came in
sight Mr. Renshaw was sitting by his wife. "The voyage is just finished,
Helen," he said. "It has been a pleasant time. I am sorry it is over."

"A very pleasant time, Alfred," she replied, "one of the most pleasant I
have ever spent."

"I see now," he went on, "that I have made a mistake of my life, and
instead of making an amusement of my hobby for archæology have thrown
away everything for it. I have been worse than selfish. I have utterly
neglected you and the children. Why, I seem only to have made an
acquaintance with them since we came on board a ship. I see now, dear,
that I have broken my marriage vows to you. I have always loved you and
always honoured you, but I have altogether failed to cherish you."

"You have always been good and kind, Alfred," she said softly.

"A man may be good and kind to a dog, Helen; but that is not all that a
wife has a right to expect. I see now that I have blundered miserably. I
cannot change my nature altogether, dear; that is too late. I cannot
develop a fund of energy by merely wishing for it; but I can make the
happiness of my wife and children my first thought and object, and my
own pursuits the second. I thought the loss of our money was a terrible
misfortune. I do not think so now. I feel that I have got my wife again
and have gained two children, and whatever comes of our venture here I
shall feel that the failure of the bank has brought undeserved happiness
to me."

"And to me also," Mrs. Renshaw said softly as she pressed her husband's
hand. "I feel sure that we shall all be happier than we have ever been
before. Not that we have been unhappy, dear, very far from it; still you
have not been our life and centre, and it has been so different since
the voyage began."

"He is not half a bad fellow, after all," Mr. Atherton said, as leaning
against the bulwark smoking his cigar he had glanced across at the
husband and wife seated next to each other talking in low tones, and
evidently seeing nothing of what was passing around them. "He has
brightened up wonderfully since we started. Of course he will never be a
strong man, and is no more fit for a settler's life than he is for a
habitation in the moon. Still, he is getting more like other people. His
thoughts are no longer two or three thousand years back. He has become a
sociable and pleasant fellow, and I am sure he is very fond of his wife
and children. It is a pity he has not more backbone. Still, I think the
general outlook is better than I expected. Taking it altogether it has
been as pleasant a voyage as I have ever made. There is the satisfaction
too that one may see something of one's fellow-passengers after we land.
This northern island is not, after all, such a very big place. That is
the worst of homeward voyages. People who get to know and like each
other when they arrive in port scatter like a bomb-shell in every
direction, and the chances are against your ever running up against any
of them afterwards."

Somewhat similar ideas occupied the mind of most of the passengers that
evening. The voyage had been a pleasant one, and they were almost sorry
that it was over; but there was a pleasurable excitement at the thought
that they should next day see the land that was to be their home, and
the knowledge that they should all be staying for a few days at
Wellington seemed to postpone the break-up of their party for some
little time.

No sooner was the anchor dropped than a number of shore boats came off
to the ship. Those who had friends on shore and were expecting to be met
watched anxiously for a familiar face, and a cry of delight broke from
the two Mitfords as they saw their father and mother in one of these
boats. After the first joyful greeting was over the happy little party
retired to the cabin, where they could chat together undisturbed, as all
the passengers were on deck. Half an hour later they returned to the
deck, and the girls led their father and mother up to Mrs. Renshaw.

"I have to thank you most heartily, Mrs. Renshaw, for your great
kindness to my girls. They tell me that you have throughout the voyage
looked after them as if they had been your own daughters."

"There was no looking after required, I can assure you," Mrs. Renshaw
said. "I was very pleased, indeed, to have them in what I may call our
little party, and it was a great advantage and pleasure to my own girl."

"We are going ashore at once," Mr. Mitford said. "My girls tell me that
you have no acquaintances here. My own place is hundreds of miles away,
and we are staying with some friends while waiting the arrival of the
ship, and therefore cannot, I am sorry to say, put you up; but in any
other way in which we can be of assistance we shall be delighted to give
any aid in our power. The girls say you are thinking of making this
your head-quarters until you decide upon the district in which you mean
to settle. In that case it will, of course, be much better for you to
take a house, or part of a house, than to stop at an hotel; and if so it
will be best to settle upon one at once, so as to go straight to it and
avoid all the expenses of moving twice. It is probable that our friends,
the Jacksons, may know of some suitable place, but if not I shall be
glad to act as your guide in house-hunting."

Mr. Renshaw here came up and was introduced to Mr. Mitford, who repeated
his offer.

"We shall be extremely glad," Mr. Renshaw replied; "though I really
think that it is most unfair to take you even for a moment from your
girls after an absence of five years."

"Oh, never mind that," Mr. Mitford said; "we shall land at once, and
shall have all the morning to talk with them. If you and Mrs. Renshaw
will come ashore at four o'clock in the afternoon my wife and I will
meet you at the landing-place. Or if, as I suppose you would prefer to
do, you like to land this morning and have a look at Wellington for
yourselves, this is our address, and if you will call at two o'clock, or
any time later, we shall be at your service. I would suggest, though,
that if you do land early, you should first come round to us, because
Jackson may know some place to suit you; and if not, I am sure that he
will be glad to accompany you and act as your guide."

"I should not like to trouble--" Mr. Renshaw began.

"My dear sir, you do not know the country. Everyone is glad to help a
new chum--that is the name for fresh arrivals--to the utmost of his
power if he knows anything whatever about him, and no one thinks
anything of trouble."

"In that case," Mr. Renshaw said smiling, "we will gladly avail
ourselves of the offer. We should all have been contented if the voyage
had lasted a month longer; but being here, we all, I suppose, want to
get ashore as soon as possible. Therefore we shall probably call at your
address in the course of an hour or so after you get there."

Wilfrid and Marion were indeed in such a hurry to get ashore that a very
few minutes after the Mitfords left the side of the ship, the Renshaws
took a boat and started for the shore. Most of the other passengers also
landed.

"We shall go in alongside the quays in an hour's time," the captain said
as they left; "so you must look for us there when you have done
sight-seeing. We shall begin to get the baggage up at once for the
benefit of those who are in a hurry to get away to the hotels; but I
shall be glad for you all to make the ship your home until to-morrow."

For an hour after landing the Renshaws wandered about Wellington, which
they found to be a pretty and well-built town with wide streets.

"Why, it is quite a large place!" Wilfrid exclaimed in surprise.
"Different, of course, from towns at home, with more open spaces. I
expected it would be much rougher than it is."

"It is the second town of the island, you see," Mr. Renshaw said; "and
is an important place. Well, I am glad we did not cumber ourselves by
bringing everything out from England, for there will be no difficulty
in providing ourselves with everything we require here."

After wandering about for an hour they proceeded to the address Mr.
Mitford had given them. It was a house of considerable size, standing in
a pretty garden, a quarter of a mile from the business part of the town.
They were warmly received by the Mitfords, and introduced to Mr. and
Mrs. Jackson.

"Mr. Mitford has been telling me that you want to get a house, or part
of a house, for a few weeks till you look about you and decide where you
will settle down," Mr. Jackson said. "I am a land and estate agent,
besides doing a little in other ways. We most of us turn our hands to
anything that presents itself here. I have taken a holiday for this
morning and left my clerk in charge, so I am quite at your service. You
will find it difficult and expensive if you take a whole house, so I
should advise you strongly to take lodgings. If you were a large party
it would be different, but you only want a sitting-room and three
bed-rooms."

"We could do with a sitting-room, a good-sized bed-room for my wife and
myself, and a small one for my daughter," Mr. Renshaw said; "and take a
bed-room out for a few nights for Wilfrid, as he will be starting with a
friend to journey through the colony and look out for a piece of land to
suit us."

"Then there will be no difficulty at all. You will find lodgings rather
more expensive than in England. I do not mean more expensive than a
fashionable watering-place, but certainly more expensive than in a town
of the same kind at home. House rent is high here; but then, on the
other hand, your living will cost you less than at home."

After an hour's search lodgings were found in a house at no great
distance from that of Mr. Jackson. It was a small house, kept by the
widow of the owner and captain of a small trading ship that had been
lost a year previously. The ship had fortunately been insured, and the
widow was able to keep on the house in which she lived, adding to her
income by letting a portion of it to new arrivals who, like the
Renshaws, intended to make a stay of some little time in Wellington
before taking any steps to establish themselves as settlers.

"I think," Mr. Jackson said when this was settled, "you are doing wisely
by letting your son here take a run through the colony. There is no
greater mistake than for new-comers to be in a hurry. Settle in haste
and repent at leisure is the rule. Mr. Mitford was saying that he hoped
that you might settle down somewhere in his locality; but at any rate it
will be best to look round first. There is plenty of land at present to
be obtained anywhere, and there are many things to be considered in
choosing a location. Carriage is of course a vital consideration, and a
settler on a river has a great advantage over one who has to send his
produce a long distance to market by waggon. Then, again, some people
prefer taking up virgin land and clearing it for themselves, while
others are ready to pay a higher sum to take possession of a holding
where much of the hard work has already been done, and a house stands
ready for occupation.

"At present no one, of course, with a wife and daughter would think of
settling in the disturbed district, although farms can be bought there
for next to nothing. The war is, I hope, nearly at an end, now that we
have ten British regiments in the island. They have taken most of the
enemy's pahs, though they have been a prodigious time about it, and we
colonists are very discontented with the dilatory way in which the war
has been carried on, and think that if things had been left to ourselves
we could have stamped the rebellion out in half the time. The red-coats
were much too slow; too heavily weighted and too cautious for this sort
of work. The Maoris defend their pahs well, inflict a heavy loss upon
their assailants, and when the latter at last make their attack and
carry the works the Maoris manage to slip away, and the next heard of
them is they have erected a fresh pah, and the whole thing has to be
gone through again. However, we need not discuss that now. I take it
that anyhow you would not think of settling down anywhere in the
locality of the tribes that have been in revolt."

"Certainly not," Mr. Renshaw said. "I am a peaceful man, and if I could
get a house and land for nothing and an income thrown into the bargain,
I should refuse it if I could not go to bed without the fear that the
place might be in flames before the morning."

"I am bound to say that the natives have as a whole behaved very well to
the settlers; it would have been easy in a great number of cases for
them to have cut them off had they chosen to do so. But they have fought
fairly and well according to the rules of what we may call honourable
warfare. The tribesmen are for the most part Christians, and have
carried out Christian precepts.

"In one case, hearing that the troops assembling to attack one of their
pahs were short of provisions, they sent down boat-loads of potatoes and
other vegetables to them, saying that the Bible said, 'If thine enemy
hunger feed him.' Still, in spite of instances of this kind, I should
certainly say do not go near the disturbed districts, for one cannot
assert that if hostilities continue they will always be carried on in
that spirit. However, things are at present perfectly peaceable
throughout the provinces of Wellington and Hawke Bay, and it may be
hoped it may continue so. I have maps and plans of all the various
districts, and before your son starts will give him all the information
I possess as to the advantages and disadvantages of each locality, the
nature of the soil, the price at which land can be purchased, and the
reputation of the natives in the neighbourhood."

The next day the Renshaws landed after breakfast and took up their abode
in the new lodgings. These were plainly but comfortably furnished, and
after one of the trunks containing nick-nacks of all descriptions had
been opened, and some of the contents distributed, the room assumed a
comfortable home-like appearance. A lodging had been obtained close by
for the two Grimstones. The young fellows were heartily glad to be on
shore again, for life among the steerage passengers during a long voyage
is dull and monotonous. Mr. Renshaw had looked after them during the
voyage, and had supplied them from his own stores with many little
comforts in the way of food, and with books to assist them to pass their
time; still they were very glad the voyage was over.

When he now told them it was probable that a month or even more might
pass after their arrival in the colony before he could settle on a piece
of land, and that during that time they would remain at Wellington, they
at once asked him to get them work of some kind if he could. "We should
be learning something about the place, sir; and should probably get our
food for our work, and should be costing you nothing, and we would much
rather do that than loiter about town doing nothing."

Mr. Renshaw approved of their plan, and mentioned it to Mr. Jackson,
who, on the very day after their landing, spoke to a settler who had
come in from a farm some twenty miles in the interior.

"They are active and willing young fellows and don't want pay, only to
be put up and fed until the man who has brought them out here with him
gets hold of a farm."

"I shall be extremely glad to have them," the settler said. "This is a
very busy time with us, and a couple of extra hands will be very useful.
They will learn a good deal as to our ways here in the course of a
month, and, as you say, it would be far better for them to be at work
than to be loafing about the place doing nothing."

Accordingly, the next morning the two Grimstones went up country and set
to work.




CHAPTER IX.

THE NEW ZEALAND WAR.


For a few days the greater part of the passengers who had arrived by the
_Flying Scud_ remained in Wellington. Mr. Atherton and the two Allens
had put up at the same hotel. The latter intended to go out as shepherds
or in any other capacity on a farm, for a few months at any rate, before
investing in land. They had two or three letters of introduction to
residents in Wellington, and ten days after the arrival of the ship they
called at the Renshaws' to say good-bye, as they had arranged to go for
some months with a settler up the country. They promised to write
regularly to Wilfrid and tell him all about the part to which they were
going.

"Mr. Atherton has promised to write to us," they said, "and tell us
about the districts he visits with you, and if you and he discover
anything particularly inviting we shall at any rate come and see you, if
you will give us an invitation when you are settled, and look round
there before buying land anywhere else. It would be very pleasant to be
somewhere near you and him."

"We shall be very glad, indeed, to see you," Mrs. Renshaw said; "still
more glad if you take up a piece of ground near us. Having friends near
is a very great point in such a life as this, and it would be most
agreeable having a sort of little colony of our own."

"We should have liked very much," James Allen said, "to say good-bye to
the Miss Mitfords, but as we do not know their father and mother it
might seem strange for us to call there."

"I do not think they are at all people to stand on ceremony," Mrs.
Renshaw said; "but I will put on my bonnet and go round with you at once
if you like."

This was accordingly done. Mr. Mitford had heard of the young men as
forming part of the little group of passengers on board the _Flying
Scud_, and gave them a hearty invitation to pay him a visit if they
happened to be in his neighbourhood, and the next day they started for
the farm on which they had engaged themselves. Two days later there was
a general break up of the party, for Mr. and Mrs. Mitford started with
their daughters in a steamer bound to Hawke Bay.

"Will you tell me, Mr. Jackson, what all the trouble in the north has
been about," Wilfrid asked that evening, "for I have not been able to
find out from the papers?"

"It is a complicated question, Wilfrid. When New Zealand was first
colonized the natives were very friendly. The early settlers confidently
pushed forward into the heart of native districts, bought tracts of land
from the chiefs, and settled there. Government purchased large blocks of
land, cut off by intervening native territory from the main settlements,
and sold this land to settlers without a suspicion that they were
thereby dooming them to ruin. The settlers were mostly small farmers,
living in rough wooden houses scattered about the country, and
surrounded by a few fields; the adjoining land is usually fern or forest
held by the natives. They fenced their fields, and turned their cattle,
horses, and sheep at large in the open country outside these fences,
paying rent to the natives for the privilege of doing so.

"This led to innumerable quarrels. The native plantations of wheat,
potatoes, or maize are seldom fenced in, and the cattle of the settlers
sometimes committed much devastation among them; for the Maori fields
were often situated at long distances from their villages, and the
cattle might, therefore, be days in their patches before they were found
out. On the other hand, the gaunt long-legged Maori pigs, which wander
over the country picking up their own living, were constantly getting
through the settlers' fences, rooting up their potatoes, and doing all
sorts of damage.

"In these cases the settlers always had the worst of the quarrel. They
either had no weapons, or, being isolated in the midst of the natives,
dared not use them; while the Maoris, well armed and numerous, would
come down waving their tomahawks and pointing their guns, and the
settlers, however much in the right, were forced to give way. The
natural result was that the colonists were continually smarting under a
sense of wrong, while the Maoris grew insolent and contemptuous, and
were filled with an overweening confidence in their own powers, the
result of the patience and enforced submission of the settlers. The
authority of the queen over the natives has always been a purely nominal
one. There was indeed a treaty signed acknowledging her government, but
as none of the chiefs put their name to this, and the men who signed
were persons of inferior rank with no authority whatever to speak for
the rest, the treaty was not worth the paper on which it was written.

"The Maoris from the first exhibited a great desire for education. They
established numerous schools in their own districts and villages; in
most cases accepted nominally if not really the Christian religion, and
studied history with a good deal of intelligence. Some of them read that
the Romans conquered England by making roads everywhere through the
island, and the natives therefore determined that no roads should be
constructed through their lands, and every attempt on the part of
government to carry roads beyond the lands it had bought from them was
resisted so firmly and angrily that the attempt had to be abandoned. The
natives were well enough aware that behind the despised settlers was the
power of England, and that if necessary a numerous army could be sent
over, but they relied absolutely upon their almost impassable swamps,
their rivers, forests, and mountains.

"Here they thought they could maintain themselves against any force that
might be sent against them, and relying upon this they became more and
more insolent and overbearing, and for some time before the outbreak in
1860 every one saw that sooner or later the storm would burst, and the
matter have to be fought out until either we were driven from the island
or the natives became thoroughly convinced of their inability to oppose
us.

"At first the natives had sold their land willingly, but as the number
of the European settlers increased they became jealous of them, and
every obstacle was thrown in the way of land sales by the chiefs.
Disputes were constantly arising owing to the fact that the absolute
ownership of land was very ill defined, and perhaps a dozen or more
persons professed to have claims of some sort or other on each piece of
land, and had to be individually settled with before the sale could be
effected. When as it seemed all was satisfactorily concluded, fresh
claimants would arise, and disputes were therefore of constant
occurrence, for there were no authorities outside the principal
settlements to enforce obedience to the law.

"Even in Auckland itself the state of things was almost unbearable.
Drunken Maoris would indulge in insolent and riotous behaviour in the
street; for no native could be imprisoned without the risk of war, and
with the colonists scattered about all over the country the risk was too
great to be run. In addition to the want of any rule or authority to
regulate the dealings of the natives with the English, there were
constant troubles between the native tribes.

"Then began what is called the king movement. One of the tribes invited
others to join in establishing a central authority, who would at once
put a stop to these tribal feuds and enforce something like law and
order, and they thought that having a king of their own would improve
their condition--would prevent land from being sold to the whites and be
a protection to the people at large, and enable them to hold their own
against the settlers. Several of the tribes joined in this movement.
Meetings were held in various parts in imitation of the colonial
assemblies. The fruit of much deliberation was that a chief named
Potatau, who was held in the highest esteem, not only by the tribes of
Waikato, but throughout the whole island, as one of the greatest of
their warriors and wisest of their chiefs, was chosen as king.

"The movement excited much apprehension in Auckland and the other
settlements, for it was plain that if the Maoris were governed by one
man and laid aside their mutual enmities they would become extremely
formidable. At the great meeting that was held, the Bishop of New
Zealand, the head of the Wesleyan body, and several other missionaries
were present, and warned the Maoris of the dangers that would arise from
the course they were taking.

"The warning was in vain, and Potatau was chosen king. Mr. Fenton, a
government official, went on a tour among the natives. He found that
there was still what was called a queen's party, but the king's party
was very much the strongest. For two years, however, things went on
somewhat as before, and it was not until 1860, when a quarrel arose over
some land in the province of Taranaki, that troubles fairly began. In
this district a chief named Wiremu-Kingi had established a sort of land
league, and given notice to the governor that he would not permit any
more land to be sold in the district. A native named Teira, who owned
some land at Waiteira, offered it for sale to the government. After
examining his title, and finding that it was a valid one, the land was
purchased.

"In the spring of 1860 the governor tried to take possession.
Wiremu-Kingi forcibly resisted, the troops were called out, and war
began. Wiremu-Kingi had unquestionably certain rights on Teira's land,
for he and his tribe were amicably settled upon it, had built houses,
and were making plantations; but of these facts the government were
ignorant when they bought the land. Wiremu-Kingi at once joined the king
movement, from which he had previously stood aloof. A meeting was held
at the Waikato. Chief Wiremu-Kingi and Mr. M'Lean, the native secretary,
both addressed the meeting, and Potatau and many of the chiefs were of
opinion that the English had acted fairly in the case. Many of the
younger chiefs, however, took the part of the Taranaki natives, and
marched away and joined them.

"Unfortunately, in the first fight that took place, our troops were
driven back in an attack upon a pah, and the news of this success so
fired the minds of all the fighting men of the Waikato, and neighbouring
tribes, that they flocked down to Taranaki and joined in plundering the
deserted homes of the settlers, and in the attacks upon the troops.
Potatau and his council did all they could to stop their men from going,
but the desire to distinguish themselves and to take part in the
victories over the Pakehas, which is what the natives call the whites,
were too strong for them. In the midst of all this turmoil Potatau died,
and his son Matu-Taera was made king.

"In the fighting that went on in Taranaki discipline and training soon
began to make themselves felt. The troops in the colony were largely
reinforced, and pah after pah were captured. The war went on. But though
English regiments with a strong force of artillery were engaged in it,
it cannot be said that the natives have been conquered, and General
Cameron, who came out and assumed the command, found the task before
him a very difficult one.

"There was for a time a pause in hostilities when Sir George Grey came
out as governor in the place of Governor Brown, but the natives
recommenced hostilities by a treacherous massacre near New Plymouth, and
fighting began again at once.

"The native pah near the Katikara river was attacked by a column of
infantry with artillery, and shelled by the guns of a ship of war, and
the Maoris were driven out of a position that they believed impregnable.
The Waikatos now rose and murdered and plundered many of the settlers,
and a force marched for the first time into their country, carried a
formidable pah at Koheroa, and, although unprovided with artillery,
defeated the Maoris in a fight in the thick bush. The very formidable
position at Merimeri, which lay surrounded by swamps near the Waikato
river, was next captured, although held by eleven hundred Maoris, led by
their great chief Wiremu-Tamehana, called by the missionaries William
Thompson.

"The next attack was upon a strongly-fortified position at Rangiriri,
lying between the Waikato river and Waikare lake. This was successful,
and the nation were next thrashed at Rangiawhia, at Kaitake, on the 25th
of last March. Thus, you see, in almost all of these fights we succeeded
in capturing the enemy's pah or in defeating them if they fought in the
open. Unfortunately, although these engagements showed the natives that
in fair fighting they were no match for our troops, they have done
little more. When their pahs were captured they almost invariably
managed to make their way through the dense bush, and it can scarcely be
said that we do more than hold the ground occupied by our soldiers. And
so matters still go on. The fighting has been confined to the Taranaki
and Auckland provinces, and we may hope that it will go no further."

"Well, it is quite evident," Mr. Renshaw said, "that neither the Waikato
country nor Taranaki are fit places for quiet people to settle at the
present time, and I suppose the northern part of Wellington is not much
better?"

"No, I cannot say it is," Mr. Jackson said. "The Wanganui tribe on the
river of that name are in alliance with the Taranaki people, and have
joined them in fighting against us, and I believe that General Cameron
will shortly undertake a campaign against them. I should strongly advise
you to turn your attention to the eastern side of this province, or to
the province of Hawke Bay, higher up, where they have had no trouble
whatever, and where, as you know, our friends the Mitfords are settled."

"What is this that I have heard about a new religion that has been
started among the Maoris?"

"There is but little known about it, and if it were not that should this
religion spread it will add to our difficulties, no one would think
anything about it one way or the other. There was a fellow named Te Ua,
who had always been looked upon as a harmless lunatic. No doubt he is a
lunatic still, though whether he will be harmless remains to be seen.
However, he some little time ago gave out that the archangel Michael,
the angel Gabriel, and hosts of minor spirits visited him and gave him
permission to preach a new religion, and bestowed on him great power.

"The religion was to be called Pai Marire, which interpreted literally
means good and peaceful; and it is also called Hau-Hau, the meaning of
which is obscure, but it is a special word of power that Te Ua professes
to have specially received from the angel Gabriel. As far as we have
been able to learn the Hau-Haus have no special belief or creed, except
that their leader has a divine mission, and that all he says is to be
implicitly obeyed. Certainly the religion has spread quickly among the
tribes, and has latterly taken the form of hostility to us. Still, we
may hope that it will soon die out. It is said that Te Ua has told his
followers that they are invulnerable, but if they try conclusions with
us they will very speedily find that he has deceived them, and are not
likely to continue their belief in him."

"Then the colonists themselves, Mr. Jackson, have taken but little share
in the fighting so far?"

"Oh, yes, they have. There have been several corps of Rangers which have
done capital service. The corps led by Majors Atkinson, Von Tempsky, and
M'Donnell have done great service, and are far more dreaded by the
natives than are the slow-moving regular troops. They fight the natives
in their own manner--make raids into their country and attack their
positions at night, and so much are they dreaded that the natives in
villages in their vicinity are in the habit of leaving their huts at
night and sleeping in the bush lest they should be surprised by their
active enemy. The general opinion among us colonists is that ten
companies like Von Tempsky's would do a great deal more than ten British
regiments towards bringing the matter to a conclusion.

"In the first place, the officers and troops of the regular army cannot
bring themselves to regard the natives with the respect they deserve as
foes. Their movements are hampered by the necessity of a complicated
system of transport. Their operations, accompanied as they are by
artillery and a waggon train, are slow in the extreme, and do what they
will the natives always slip through their hands. The irregular corps,
on the other hand, thoroughly appreciate the activity and bravery of the
Maoris. They have lived among them, and know their customs and ways.
They have suffered from the arrogance and insolence of the natives
before the outbreak of the war, and most of them have been ruined by the
destruction of their farms and the loss of years of patient labour. Thus
they fight with a personal feeling of enmity against their foes, and
neither fatigue nor danger is considered by them if there is a chance of
inflicting a blow upon their enemy. I am convinced that at last the
imperial government will be so disgusted at the failure of the troops to
bring the war to a conclusion, and at the great expense and loss of life
entailed by the operations, that they will recall the regulars and leave
the colonists to manage the affair themselves, in which case I have no
fear whatever as to their bringing it to a prompt conclusion. Looking at
the matter from a business point of view, there is no doubt, Mr.
Renshaw, that those who, like yourself, come out at the present time
will benefit considerably. You will get land at a quarter the price you
would have had to pay for it had it not been for these troubles, and as
soon as the war is over the tide of emigration will set in again more
strongly than before, and land will go to prices far exceeding those
that ruled before the outbreak began."

Upon the following morning Mr. Atherton and Wilfrid embarked in the
schooner. They had been furnished by Mr. Jackson with a number of
letters of introduction to settlers in every district they were to
visit. "These will really only be of use to you in the small towns," he
said, "for in the country districts every house is open, and you have
generally only to ride up to a door, put up your horses, and walk in,
and you are almost sure to meet with a hearty welcome. Still, as you are
new-comers, and have not rubbed off your old country ideas, it will be
more pleasant for you to take letters. At the ports, such as they are,
you may really find them useful, for you will not find any inns. You can
strike out anywhere into the back country without the least fear of
being inconvenienced by natives."

The two friends spent a pleasant fortnight touching at the settlements,
situated for the most part at the mouths of the rivers, and spending the
time the vessel remained there in short excursions into the interior.
They were most pleased with the Wairarapa Valley, running up from
Palliser Bay; but this being near Wellington the land was all taken up,
and there were many flourishing villages and small towns.

"This is very nice," Wilfrid said, "but the price of land is far too
high for us, and we might almost as well have taken to farming in
England."

The eastern coast of the province was dotted by little settlements,
lying for the most part at the mouths of small rivers, and several of
these offered favourable facilities for settlement. Passing on, they
found that the coast was bolder along the province of Hawke Bay. They
stopped at Clive, at the mouth of the bay, for a day or two, and went up
the Tukataki river in a canoe to the town of Waipawa. But here they
found the farms thick and land comparatively expensive. They left the
schooner at Napier, the chief town of the province, and after making
several excursions here went up in a coasting craft to the mouth of the
river Mohaka, which runs into the sea a short distance to the south of
the boundary line between Hawke Bay and the province of Auckland. A few
miles up this river was the farm of Mr. Mitford. Hiring a boat they
proceeded up the river, and landed in front of the comfortable-looking
farmhouse of the settler.

Mr. Mitford, seeing strangers approaching, at once came down to meet
them, and received them with the greatest cordiality as soon as he saw
who they were.

"I am heartily glad to see you!" he exclaimed, "and the girls will be
delighted. They have been wondering ever since we got here when you
would arrive. You have not, I hope, fixed upon any land yet, for they
have set their heart upon your settling down as our neighbours. This is
as pretty a valley as there is in the island, and you will have no
difficulty in getting land at the lowest government price. There being
no settlement of any size at the mouth of the river has deterred
emigrants from coming here to search for land. But we can talk about
that afterwards. Come straight up to the house. I will send down one of
my native boys to bring up your baggage."

They spent a very pleasant evening at the farmhouse. Mr. Mitford owned a
considerable extent of land, and was doing very well. He reared cattle
and horses, which he sent down for sale to Wellington. The house was
large and comfortable, and bore signs of the prosperity of its owner.
The girls were delighted at the place. They had been left in care of
relatives at home when their father and mother came out six years before
to settle in New Zealand, and everything was as new to them as to
Wilfrid. They had taken to riding as soon as they arrived, and had
already made excursions far up the valley with their father.

"We were at a place yesterday, Wilfrid," the eldest girl said, "that we
agreed would suit your father admirably. It is about ten miles up the
river. It was taken up only last year, father says, by a young
Englishman, who was going to make a home for someone he was engaged to
in England. A few days since he was killed by a tree he was cutting down
falling upon him. He lived twenty-four hours after the accident, and
father rode out to him when he heard of it. He directed him to sell the
land for whatever it would fetch, and to send the money over to England.
There are two hundred acres on the river and a comfortable log hut,
which could of course be enlarged. He had about fifteen acres cleared
and cultivated. The scenery is beautiful, much prettier than it is here,
with lots of lovely tree-ferns; and there are many open patches, so
that more land can be cleared for cultivation easily. Mabel and I agreed
when we rode over there two days ago that it would be just the place for
you."

"It sounds first-rate," Wilfrid said; "just the sort of place that will
suit us."

"But how about me, Miss Mitford?" Mr. Atherton asked. "Have you had my
interest at heart as well as those of Wilfrid and his people?"

"You can take up the next bit of land above it," Mr. Mitford said.
"Langston's was the last settlement on the river, so you can take up any
piece of land beyond it at the government upset price, and do as much
fishing and shooting as you like, for I hear from my daughters that you
are not thinking of permanently settling here, but are only a bird of
passage. Anyhow, it would not be a bad investment for you to buy a
considerable acreage, for as soon as the troubles are over there is sure
to be a rush of emigration; and there are very few places now where land
is to be had on a navigable river, so that when you are tired of the
life you will be able to sell out at considerable profit."

"It sounds tempting, Mr. Mitford, and I will certainly have a look at
the ground. How much would this piece of land be of Mr. Langston's?"

"The poor fellow told me to take anything that I could get. He said he
knew that at present it was very difficult to sell land, as no new
settlers were coming out, and that he should be very glad if I get what
he gave for it, which was ten shillings an acre, and to throw in the
improvements he had made; so that a hundred pounds would buy it all. I
really don't think that Mr. Renshaw could do better if he looked all
through the island. With a cow or two, a pen of pigs, and a score or two
of fowls, he would practically be able to live on his land from the hour
he settled there."

Wilfrid was greatly pleased at the idea. He knew that his father and
mother had still eight hundred pounds untouched; two hundred pounds,
together with the proceeds of his mother's trinkets and jewels, and the
sale of the ponies and pony carriage, which had been her own property,
having sufficed to pay for the passage of themselves and their two
labourers, and for all expenses up to the time of their arrival at
Wellington. "If we could get another piece of two hundred acres
adjoining it at the same price, I think my father would like to take
it," he said; "it would give more room for horses and cattle to graze.
Of course we should not want it at first; but if as we got on we wanted
more land, and had neighbours all round us and could not get it, it
would be a nuisance."

"I agree with you," Mr. Mitford said. "Two hundred acres is more than
you want if you are going to put it under the plough; it is not enough
if you are going to raise cattle and horses. I should certainly
recommend you to take up another two hundred. The next land on this side
is still vacant. Poor Langston chose the spot because it happened to be
particularly pretty, with an open glade down to the river, but the land
for fully two miles on this side is unoccupied. You can get it at ten
shillings an acre at present. I will see about it for you if you make up
your mind after seeing Langston's place, to take it."

"Of course I cannot settle it by myself, sir, not absolutely. I can only
recommend it to my father as the best place that I have seen. If it is
as you describe it they will be delighted."

"Well, we will ride over to-morrow and have a look at it. The only
possible objection I have is loneliness; but that will improve in time;
the natives here are perfectly peaceful, and we have never had the
slightest trouble with them."

"We are a good large party to begin with, you see," Wilfrid said.
"Having the two men with us will take away the feeling of loneliness,
especially if Mr. Atherton decides upon taking the piece of land next to
us. Then there are the two Allens who came out with us. I promised to
write and tell them if I found any nice place; and they said
particularly that they wanted ground on a river if they could get it, as
they are fond of boating and fishing, and fancied that if there were
other farms round that they could, until their own place paid, help to
keep themselves by taking their neighbours' crops down to market."

"Yes, it might pay if they got a large flat-boat capable of carrying
cargo; but as far as light goods, letters, and groceries from town are
concerned, the Indians could do it cheaper in their canoes. However, at
present there is no market for them to come down to. I keep what I call
a grocery store for the benefit of the two or three score of settlers
there are on the river. I do not make any profit out of the matter, but
each season get a hogshead or two of sugar, a couple of tons of flour,
some barrels of molasses, a few chests of tea, and an assortment of odds
and ends, such as pickles, &c., with a certain amount of rum and
whisky, and sell them at the price they stand me in at. I do not know
what they would do without it here. I only open the store on the first
Monday of each month, and they then lay in what stores they require, so
it gives me very little trouble. I generally take produce in return. My
bills run on until they get up to the value of something a customer
wants to sell--a horse, or two or three dozen sheep. That suits me just
as well as money, as I send a cargo off to Wellington every two or three
months.

"In time no doubt a settlement will spring up somewhere near the mouth
of the river, and we shall have a trader or two establishing themselves
there; but at present I am the purveyor of the district, and manage most
of the business of the settlers in the way of buying and selling at
Wellington. So, you see, if you establish yourself here you will have no
choice but to appoint me your grocer."

Wilfrid laughed. "It will be a great advantage to us to be able to get
our things so close at hand. I was wondering how people did in the back
settlements."

"They generally send their drays every two or three months down to the
nearest store, which may, of course, be fifty miles off, or even more.
Here, fortunately, you will not be obliged at first to have a dray, but
can send any produce you have to sell down by water, which is a far
cheaper and more convenient mode of carriage. You will not have much to
send for some time, so that will not trouble you at present."

"Oh, no. We shall be quite content if we can live on the produce of our
farm for the next year or two," Wilfrid laughed.

"It is," Mr. Mitford said, "an immense advantage to settlers when they
have sufficient funds to carry them on for the first two or three years,
because in that case they gain the natural increase of their animals
instead of having to sell them off to pay their way. It is wonderful how
a flock of sheep or a herd of cattle will increase if there is no
selling. You may take it that under favourable circumstances a herd of
cattle will nearly double itself every two years, allowing, of course, a
large proportion of the bull calves to be sold off as soon as they
arrive at maturity. Sheep will increase even faster. If you can do
without selling, you will be surprised, if you start with say fifty
sheep or ten cows, in how short a time you will have as many animals as
your land will carry."

"But what are we to do then, sir?"

"Well, you will then, providing the country has not in the meantime
become too thickly settled, pay some small sum to the natives for the
right of grazing your cattle on their unoccupied ground. They cultivate
a mere fraction of the land. In this way you can keep vastly larger
herds than your own ground could carry. However, it is time to be
turning in for the night. To-morrow we will start the first thing after
breakfast to inspect Langston's land."




CHAPTER X.

THE GLADE.


When the party assembled at breakfast the next morning, Mr. Atherton's
first question was:

"Is there such a thing as a boat or a good-sized canoe to be had, Mr.
Mitford? If you had an elephant here I might manage, but as I suppose
you do not keep such an animal in your stud I own that I should greatly
prefer going by water to running the risk of breaking a horse's back and
my own neck. If such a thing cannot be obtained I will get you, if you
will, to let me have a native as guide, and I will walk, taking with me
some small stock of provisions. I can sleep at this hut of Langston's,
for I say frankly that I should not care about doing the distance there
and back in one day."

"I have a boat," Mr. Mitford said smiling, "and you shall have a couple
of natives to paddle you up. I will give orders for them to be ready
directly after breakfast. You will scarcely be there as soon as we are,
but you will be there long before we leave. Of course we shall spend
some time in going over the ground, and we shall take a boy with us with
a luncheon basket, so you will find refreshment awaiting you when you
get there."

"That will suit me admirably." Mr. Atherton said. "A boating excursion
up an unknown river is just the thing I like--that is, when the boat is
a reasonable size. I was once fool enough on the Amazon to allow myself
to be persuaded that a canoe at most two feet wide would carry me, and
the tortures I suffered during that expedition, wedged in the bottom of
that canoe, and holding on to the sides, I shall never forget. The
rascally Indians made matters worse by occasionally giving sly lurches
to the boat, and being within an ace of capsizing her. I had two days of
that work before I got to a village where I could obtain a craft of
reasonable size, and I should think I must have lost two stone in weight
during the time. You think that that was rather an advantage I can see,
Miss Mitford," he broke off, seeing a smile upon the girl's face. "Well,
yes, I could spare that and more, but I should prefer that it was
abstracted by other means than that of agony of mind; besides, these
improvements are not permanent."

After a hearty breakfast the party prepared for their start. Mrs.
Mitford had already said that she should not accompany them, the
distance being longer than she cared to ride; and four horses were
therefore brought round. Mr. Atherton was first seen fairly on his way
in a good-sized boat, paddled by two powerful Maoris. Mr. Mitford, his
daughters, and Wilfrid then mounted; the lad had already been asked if
he was accustomed to riding.

"Not lately," he replied, "but I used to have a pony and rode a good
deal when I was a small boy, and I daresay I can stick on."

Wilfrid was delighted with his ride through the forest. In his other
trips ashore their way had led through an open country with low scrub
bush, and this was his first experience of a New Zealand forest. Ferns
were growing everywhere. The tree-ferns, coated with scales, rose from
thirty to forty feet in the air. Hymenophylla and polypodia, in
extraordinary variety, covered the trunks of the forest trees with
luxuriant growth. Smaller ferns grew between the branches and twigs, and
a thick growth of ferns of many species extended everywhere over the
ground.

The trees were for the most part pines of different varieties, but
differing so widely in appearance from those Wilfrid had seen in
England, that had not Mr. Mitford assured him that they were really
pines he would never have guessed they belonged to that family. Mr.
Mitford gave him the native names of many of them. The totara matai were
among the largest and most beautiful. The rimu was distinguished by its
hanging leaves and branches, the tanekaha by its parsley-shaped leaves.
Among them towered up the poplar-shaped rewarewa and the hinau, whose
fruit Mr. Mitford said was the favourite food of the parrots.

Among the great forest trees were several belonging to the families of
the myrtles and laurels, especially the rata, whose trunk often measured
forty feet in circumference, and on whose crown were branches of scarlet
blossoms. But it was to the ferns, the orchids, and the innumerable
creepers, which covered the ground with a natural netting, coiled round
every stem, and entwined themselves among the topmost branches, that the
forest owed its peculiar features. Outside the narrow cleared track
along which they were riding it would have been impossible for a man to
make his way unless with the assistance of knife and hatchet, especially
as some of the climbers were completely covered with thorns.

And yet, although so very beautiful, the appearance of the forest was
sombre and melancholy. A great proportion of the plants of New Zealand
bear no flowers, and except high up among some of the tree-tops no gay
blossoms or colour of any kind meet the eye to relieve the monotony of
the verdure. A deep silence reigned. Wilfrid did not see a butterfly
during his ride, or hear the song or even the chirp of a single bird. It
was a wilderness of tangled green, unrelieved by life or colour. Mr.
Mitford could give him the names of only a few of the principal trees;
and seeing the infinite variety of the foliage around him, Wilfrid no
longer wondered Mr. Atherton should have made so long a journey in order
to study the botany of the island, which is unique, for although many of
the trees and shrubs can be found elsewhere, great numbers are entirely
peculiar to the island.

"Are there any snakes?" Wilfrid asked.

"No; you can wander about without fear. There is only one poisonous
creature in New Zealand, and that is found north of the port of
Tauranga, forty or fifty miles from here. They say it exists only there
and round Potaki, near Cook's Strait. It is a small black spider, with a
red stripe on its back. The natives all say that its bite is poisonous.
It will not, they say, cause death to a healthy person, though it will
make him very ill; but there are instances of sickly persons being
killed by it. Anyhow, the natives dread it very much. However, as the
beast is confined to two small localities, you need not trouble about
it. The thorns are the only enemies you have to dread as you make your
way through the forest."

"That is a comfort, anyhow," Wilfrid said; "it would be a great nuisance
to have to be always on the watch against snakes."

The road they were traversing had been cleared of trees from one
settler's holding to another, and they stopped for a few minutes at
three or four of the farmhouses. Some of these showed signs of comfort
and prosperity, while one or two were mere log cabins.

"I suppose the people here have lately arrived?" Wilfrid remarked as
they rode by one of these without stopping.

"They have been here upwards of two years," Mr. Mitford replied; "but
the place is not likely to improve were they to be here another ten.
They are a thriftless lazy lot, content to raise just sufficient for
their actual wants and to pay for whisky. These are the sort of people
who bring discredit on the colony by writing home declaring that there
is no getting on here, and that a settler's life is worse than a dog's.

"People who come out with an idea that a colony is an easy place to get
a living in are completely mistaken. For a man to succeed he must work
harder and live harder here than he would do at home. He is up with the
sun, and works until it is too dark to work longer. If he employs men he
must himself set an example to them. Men will work here for a master who
works himself, but one who thinks that he has only to pay his hands and
can spend his time in riding about the country making visits, or in
sitting quietly by his fire, will find that his hands will soon be as
lazy as he is himself. Then the living here is rougher than it is at
home for one in the same condition of life. The fare is necessarily
monotonous. In hot weather meat will not keep more than a day or two,
and a settler cannot afford to kill a sheep every day; therefore he has
to depend either upon bacon or tinned meat, and I can tell you that a
continuance of such fare palls upon the appetite, and one's meals cease
to be a pleasure. But the curse of the country, as of all our colonies,
is whisky. I do think the monotony of the food has something to do with
it, and that if men could but get greater variety in their fare they
would not have the same craving for drink. It is the ruin of thousands.
A young fellow who lands here and determines to work hard and to abstain
from liquors--I do not mean totally abstain, though if he has any
inclination at all towards drink the only safety is total abstinence--is
sure to get on and make his way, while the man who gives way to drink is
equally certain to remain at the bottom of the tree. Now we are just
passing the boundary of the holding you have come to see. You see that
piece of bark slashed off the trunk of that tree? That is what we call a
blaze, and marks the line of the boundary."

After riding a few minutes further the trees opened, and they found
themselves in a glade sloping down to the river. A few acres of land had
been ploughed up and put under cultivation. Close by stood the hut, and
beyond a grassy sward, broken by a few large trees, stretched down to
the river.

"That's the place," Mr. Mitford said, "and a very pretty one it is. Poor
young Langston chose his farm specially for that bit of scenery."

"It is pretty," Wilfrid agreed; "I am sure my father and mother will be
delighted with it. As you said, it is just like a piece of park land at
home."

The hut was strongly built of logs. It was about thirty feet long by
twenty wide, and was divided into two rooms; the one furnished as a
kitchen and living-room, the other opening from it as a bed-room.

"There is not much furniture in it," Mr. Mitford said; "but what there
is is strong and serviceable, and is a good deal better than the
generality of things you will find in a new settler's hut. He was
getting the things in gradually as he could afford them, so as to have
it really comfortably furnished by the time she came out to join him. Of
course the place will not be large enough for your party, but you can
easily add to it; and at any rate it is vastly better coming to a shanty
like this than arriving upon virgin ground and having everything to do."

"I think it is capital," Wilfrid said.

"Now we will take a ride over the ground, and I will show you what that
is like. Of course it will give you more trouble clearing away the
forest than it would do if you settled upon land without trees upon it.
But forest land is generally the best when it is cleared; and I think
that to people like your father and mother land like this is much
preferable, as in making the clearings, clumps and belts of trees can be
left, giving a home-like appearance to the place. Of course upon bare
land you can plant trees, but it is a long time before these grow to a
sufficient size to give a character to a homestead. Besides, as I told
you, there are already several other natural clearings upon the ground,
enough to afford grass for quite as many animals as you will probably
start with."

After an hour's ride over the holding and the lands adjoining it, which
Mr. Mitford advised should be also taken up, they returned to the hut. A
shout greeted them as they arrived, and they saw Mr. Atherton walking up
from the river towards the hut.

"A charming site for a mansion," he said as they rode up. "Mr. Mitford,
I think I shall make you a bid for this on my own account, and so cut
out my young friend Wilfrid."

"I am afraid you are too late," Mr. Mitford laughed. "I have already
agreed to give him the option of it, keeping it open until we can
receive a reply from his father."

"I call that too bad," Mr. Atherton grumbled. "However, I suppose I must
move on farther. But really this seems a charming place, and I am sure
Mrs. Renshaw will be delighted with it. Why, there must be thirty acres
of natural clearing here?"

"About that," Mr. Mitford replied; "and there are two or three other
patches which amount to about as much more. The other hundred and forty
are bush and forest. The next lot has also some patches of open land, so
that altogether out of the four hundred acres there must be about a
hundred clear of bush."

"And how about the next lot, Mr. Mitford?"

"I fancy that there is about the same proportion of open land. I have
only once been up the river higher than this, but if I remember right
there is a sort of low bluff rising forty or fifty feet above the river
which would form a capital site for a hut."

"I will set about the work of exploration this afternoon," Mr. Atherton
said, "and if the next lot is anything like this I shall be very well
contented to settle down upon it for a bit. I have always had a fancy
for a sort of Robinson Crusoe life, and I think I can get it here,
tempered by the change of an occasional visit to our friends when I get
tired of my own company."

The men had by this time brought up the basket of provisions, and the
two girls were spreading a cloth on the grass in the shade of a tree at
a short distance from the hut, for all agreed that they would rather
take their lunch there than in the abode so lately tenanted by young
Langston. After the meal was over the party mounted their horses and
rode back. One of the natives who had come up from the boat remained
with Mr. Atherton, the others started back in the boat, as Mr. Atherton
declared himself to be perfectly capable of making the journey on foot
when he had finished his explorations. He returned two days later, and
said he was quite satisfied with the proposed site for his hut and with
the ground and forest.

"I regard myself as only a temporary inhabitant," he said, "and shall be
well content if, when I am ready for another move, I can get as much for
the ground as I gave for it. In that way I shall have lived rent free
and shall have had my enjoyment for nothing, and, I have no doubt, a
pleasant time to look back upon."

"Do you never mean to settle down, Mr. Atherton?" Mrs. Mitford asked.

[Illustration: WILFRID AND THE GRIMSTONES FIND IT HARD WORK

_Page 197_]

"In the dim future I may do so," he replied. "I have been wandering ever
since I left college, some fifteen years ago. I return to London
periodically, spend a few weeks and occasionally a few months there,
enjoy the comforts of good living and club-life for a bit; then the
wandering fit seizes me and I am off again. Nature altogether made a
mistake in my case. I ought to have been a thin wiry sort of man, and in
that case I have no doubt I should have distinguished myself as an
African explorer or something of that sort. Unfortunately she placed my
restless spirit in an almost immovable frame of flesh, and the
consequence is the circle of my wandering is to a certain extent
limited."

"You make yourself out to be much stouter than you are, Mr. Atherton. Of
course you are stout, but not altogether out of proportion to your
height and width of shoulders. I think you put it on a good deal as an
excuse for laziness."

Mr. Atherton laughed. "Perhaps you are right, Mrs. Mitford, though my
weight is really a great drawback to my carrying out my views in regard
to travel. You see, I am practically debarred from travelling in
countries where the only means of locomotion is riding on horses. I
could not find animals in any foreign country that would carry me for
any distances. I might in England, I grant, find a weight-carrying cob
capable of conveying twenty stone along a good road, but I might search
all Asia in vain for such a horse, while as for Africa, it would take a
dozen natives to carry me in a hammock. No, I suppose I shall go on
wandering pretty nearly to the end of the chapter, and shall then settle
down in quiet lodgings somewhere in the region of Pall Mall."

Upon the day after his return from the inspection of the farm Wilfrid
wrote home to his father describing the location, and saying that he
thought it was the very thing to suit them. It would be a fortnight
before an answer could be received, and during that time he set to work
at Mr. Mitford's place to acquire as much knowledge as possible of the
methods of farming in the colony. The answer arrived in due course, and
with it came the two Grimstones. Wilfrid had suggested in his letter
that if his father decided to take the farm the two men should be sent
up at once to assist in adding to the hut and in preparing for their
coming, and that they should follow a fortnight later. Mrs. Mitford also
wrote, offering them a warm invitation to stay for a time with her until
their own place should be ready for their occupation.

Mr. Mitford had an inventory of the furniture of the hut, and this was
also sent, in order that such further furniture as was needed might be
purchased at Wellington. As soon as the letter was received, inclosing,
as it did, a cheque for a hundred pounds, Wilfrid went over with the two
Grimstones and took possession. Mr. Mitford, who was the magistrate and
land commissioner for the district, drew up the papers of application
for the plot of two hundred acres adjoining the farm, and sent it to
Wellington for Mr. Renshaw's signature, and said that in the meantime
Wilfrid could consider the land as belonging to them, as it would be
theirs as soon as the necessary formalities were completed and the money
paid.

When Wilfrid started, two natives, whom Mr. Mitford had hired for him,
accompanied him, and he also lent him the services of one of his own
men, who was a handy carpenter. The Grimstones were delighted with the
site of their new home.

"Why, it is like a bit of England, Master Wilfrid! That might very well
be the Thames there, and this some gentleman's place near Reading; only
the trees are different. When we get up a nice house here, with a garden
round it, it will be like home again."

During the voyage the Renshaws had amused themselves by drawing a plan
of their proposed house, and although this had to be somewhat modified
by the existence of the hut, Wilfrid determined to adhere to it as much
as possible. The present kitchen should be the kitchen of the new house,
and the room leading from it should be allotted to the Grimstones.
Adjoining the kitchen he marked out the plan of the house. It was to
consist of a sitting-room twenty feet square; beyond this was Mr. and
Mrs. Renshaw's bed-room; while behind it were two rooms, each ten feet
square, for himself and Marion. The roof was to project four feet in
front of the sitting-room, so as to form a verandah there.

A boat-load of supplies was sent up from Mr. Mitford's stores. These
consisted of flour, sugar, tea, molasses, and bacon, together with half
a sheep. It was arranged that while the building was going on Wilfrid
and the two Grimstones should occupy the bed-room, and that the natives
should sleep in the kitchen. The Grimstones had brought with them the
bedding and blankets with which they had provided themselves on board
ship, while Wilfrid took possession of the bed formerly occupied by the
young settler. Mr. Mitford himself came over next morning and gave
general instructions as to the best way of setting about the building of
the house. He had already advised that it should be of the class known
as log-huts.

"They are much cooler," he said, "in the heat of summer than frame-huts,
and have the advantage that in the very improbable event of troubles
with the natives they are much more defensible. If you like, afterwards,
you can easily face them outside and in with match-board and make them
as snug as you like; but, to begin with, I should certainly say build
with logs. My boy will tell you which trees you had better cut down for
the work. It will take you a week to fell, lop, and roughly square them,
and this day week I will send over a team of bullocks with a native to
drag them up to the spot."

The work was begun at once. Half a dozen axes, some adzes, and other
tools had been brought up with the supplies from the stores, and the
work of felling commenced.

Wilfrid would not have any trees touched near the hut.

"There are just enough trees about here," he said, "and it would be an
awful pity to cut them down merely to save a little labour in hauling.
It will not make any great difference whether we have the team for a
week or a fortnight."

Wilfrid and the two young Englishmen found chopping very hard work at
first, and were perfectly astounded at the rapidity with which the
Maoris brought the trees down, each of them felling some eight or ten
before the new hands had managed to bring one to the ground.

"I would not have believed it if I had not seen it," Bob, the elder of
the two brothers, exclaimed as he stood breathless with the perspiration
streaming from his forehead, "that these black chaps could have beaten
Englishmen like that! Half a dozen strokes and down topples the tree,
while I goes chop, chop, chop, and don't seem to get any nearer to it."

"It will come in time," Wilfrid said. "I suppose there is a knack in it,
like everything else. It looks easy enough, but it is not easy if you
don't know how to do it. It is like rowing; it looks the easiest thing
in the world until you try, and then you find that it is not easy at
all."

When work was done for the day Wilfrid and the Grimstones could scarcely
walk back to the hut. Their backs felt as if they were broken, their
arms and shoulders ached intolerably, their hands smarted as if on fire;
while the Maoris, who had each achieved ten times the result, were as
brisk and fresh as they were at starting. One of them had left work an
hour before the others, and by the time they reached the hut the flat
cakes of flour and water known as dampers had been cooked, and a large
piece of mutton was frizzling over the fire. Wilfrid and his companions
were almost too tired to eat, but they enjoyed the tea, although they
missed the milk to which they were accustomed. They were astonished at
the Maoris' appetite, the three natives devouring an amount of meat
which would have lasted the others for a week.

"No wonder they work well when they can put away such a lot of food as
that," Bob Grimstone said, after watching them for some time in silent
astonishment. "Bill and me was always considered as being pretty good
feeders, but one of these chaps would eat twice as much as the two of
us. I should say, Mr. Wilfrid, that in future your best plan will be to
let these chaps board themselves. Why, it would be dear to have them
without pay if you had to feed them!"

"Mutton is cheap out here," Wilfrid said. "You can get five or six
pounds for the price which one would cost you at home; but still, I do
not suppose they give them as much meat as they can eat every day. I
must ask Mr. Mitford about it."

He afterwards learned that the natives received rations of flour and
molasses and tobacco, and that only occasionally salt pork or fresh meat
were issued to them. But Mr. Mitford advised that Wilfrid should, as
long as they were at this work, let them feed with the men.

"You will get a good deal more out of them if they are well fed and in
good humour. When your people arrive the natives will of course have a
shanty of their own at some distance from your house, and then you will
put things on regular footing and serve out their rations to them
weekly. I will give you the scale usually adopted in the colony."

The second day Wilfrid and the Grimstones were so stiff that they could
at first scarcely raise their axes. This gradually wore off, and at the
end of three or four days they found that they could get through a far
greater amount than at first with much less fatigue to themselves; but
even on the last day of the week they could do little more than a third
of the amount performed by the natives. By this time an ample supply of
trees had been felled. The trunks had been cut into suitable lengths and
roughly squared. The bullocks arrived from Mr. Mitford's, and as soon as
the first logs were brought up to the house the work of building was
commenced. The Maori carpenter now took the lead, and under his
instructions the walls of the house rose rapidly. The logs were mortised
into each other at the corners; openings were left for the doors and
windows. These were obtained from Mr. Mitford's store, as they were
constantly required by settlers.

At a distance of four feet in front of the house holes were dug and
poles erected, and to these the framework of the roof was extended. This
point was reached ten days after the commencement of the building, and
the same evening a native arrived from Mr. Mitford's with a message that
the party from Wellington had arrived there and would come over the next
day. He also brought a letter to Wilfrid from the Allens, in answer to
one he had written them soon after his arrival, saying that they were so
pleased with his description of the district they should come down at
once, and, if it turned out as he described it, take up a tract of land
in his neighbourhood.

While Wilfrid had been at work he had seen Mr. Atherton several times,
as that gentleman had, upon the very day after his first trip up the
river, filled up the necessary papers, hired half a dozen natives, and
started up the river in a boat freighted with stores to his new
location. Wilfrid had not had time to go over to see him there, but he
had several times sauntered over from his place, which was half a mile
distant, after the day's work was over. He had got up his hut before
Wilfrid fairly got to work.

It was, he said, a very modest shanty with but one room, which would
serve for all purposes; his cooking being done by a native, for whom he
had erected a small shelter twenty yards away from his own.

"I have not quite shaken down yet," he said, "and do not press you to
come over to see me until I have got everything into order. I am sure
you feel thankful to me that I do not expect you to be tramping over to
see me after your long day's work here. By the time your people arrive I
shall have everything in order. I am expecting the things I have written
for and my own heavy baggage in a few days from Wellington."

Glad as he was to hear that his father and mother had arrived, Wilfrid
would have preferred that their coming should have been delayed until
the house was finished and ready for them, and after his first greeting
at the water side he said: "You must not be disappointed, mother, at
what you will see. Now everything is in confusion, and the ground is
covered with logs and chips. It looked much prettier, I can assure you,
when I first saw it, and it will do so again when we have finished and
cleared up."

"We will make all allowances, Wilfrid," his mother replied as he helped
her from the boat; "but I do not see that any allowance is necessary.
This is indeed a sweetly pretty spot, and looks as you said like a park
at home. If the trees had been planted with a special view to effect
they could not have been better placed."

"You have done excellently, Wilfrid," his father said, putting his hand
on his shoulder. "Mr. Mitford here has been telling me how energetically
you have been working, and I see that the house has made wonderful
progress."

Marion had, after the first greeting, leapt lightly from the boat and
run up to the house, towards which the others proceeded at a more
leisurely pace, stopping often and looking round at the pleasant
prospect. Marion was full of questions to Wilfrid when they arrived. Why
were the walls made so thick? How were they going to stop up the
crevices between the logs? Where were the windows and doors coming from?
What was the roof going to be made of? Was there going to be a floor, or
was the ground inside going to be raised to the level of the door-sill?
When did he expect to get it finished, and when would they be ready to
come in? Couldn't they get some creepers to run up and hide these ugly
logs? Was it to be painted or to remain as it was?

Wilfrid answered all these questions as well as he was able. There was
to be a floor over all the new portion of the building; Mr. Mitford was
getting up the requisite number of planks from a saw-mill at the next
settlement. The crevices were to be stopped with moss. It would be for
their father to decide whether the logs should be covered with
match-boarding inside or out, or whether they should be left as they
were for the present. It would probably take another fortnight to finish
the roof, and at least a week beyond that before the place would be fit
for them to move in.

"You see, Marion, I have built it very much on the plan we decided upon
on board the ship, only I was obliged to make a change in the position
of the kitchen and men's room. The two Grimstones are going to set to
work to-morrow to dig up a portion of the ploughed land behind the house
and sow vegetable seeds. Things grow very fast here, and we shall soon
get a kitchen-garden. As to flowers, we shall leave that to be decided
when you come here."

"I wish I could come over and live here at once and help," Marion said.

"There is nothing you can help in at present, Marion, and it will be
much more useful for you to spend a month in learning things at Mr.
Mitford's. You undertook to do the cooking; and I am sure that will be
quite necessary, for father and mother could never eat the food our
Maori cook turns out. And then you have got to learn to make butter and
cheese and to cure bacon. That is a most important point, for we must
certainly keep pigs and cure our own as Mr. Mitford does, for the stuff
they have got at most of the places we touched at was almost uneatable.
So, you see, there is plenty to occupy your time until you move in here,
and our comfort will depend a vast deal upon the pains you take to learn
to do things properly."

"What are you going to roof it with, Wilfrid?" Mr. Renshaw asked.

"We are going to use these poles, father. They will be split in two and
nailed with the flat side down on the rafters, and the shingles are
going to be nailed on them. That will give a good solid roof that will
keep out a good deal of heat. Afterwards if we like we can put beams
across the room from wall to wall and plank them, and turn the space
above into a storeroom. Of course that will make the house cooler and
the rooms more comfortable, but as it was not absolutely necessary I
thought it might be left for a while."

"I think, Wilfrid, I should like to have the rooms done with boards
inside at once. The outside and the ceiling you speak of can very well
wait, but it will be impossible to get the rooms to look at all neat and
tidy with these rough logs for walls."

"It certainly will be more comfortable," Wilfrid agreed. "Mr. Mitford
will get the match-boards for you. I will measure up the walls this
evening and let you know how much will be required. And now shall we
take a walk round the place?" The whole party spent a couple of hours in
going over the property, with which Mr. and Mrs. Renshaw were greatly
pleased. Luncheon had been brought up in the boat, and by the time they
returned from their walk Mrs. Mitford and her daughters, who had not
accompanied them, had lunch ready and spread out on the grass. The meal
was a merry one. Mr. Renshaw was in high spirits at finding things so
much more home-like and comfortable than he had expected. His wife was
not only pleased for herself, but still more so at seeing that her
husband evinced a willingness to look at matters in the best light, and
to enter upon the life before him without regret over the past.

"What are you going to call the place, Mr. Renshaw?" Mrs. Mitford asked.
"That is always an important point."

"I have not thought about it," Mr. Renshaw replied. "What do you think?"

"Oh, there are lots of suitable names," she replied, looking round. "We
might call it Riverside or The Park or The Glade."

"I think The Glade would be very pretty," Marion said; "Riverside would
suit so many places."

"I like The Glade too," Mrs. Renshaw said. "Have you thought of
anything, Wilfrid?"

"No, mother, I have never given it a thought. I think The Glade will do
nicely." And so it was settled, and success to The Glade was thereupon
formally drunk in cups of tea.

A month later the Renshaws took possession of their new abode. It looked
very neat with its verandah in front of the central portion, and the
creepers which Wilfrid had planted against the walls on the day after
their visit, promised speedily to cover the logs of which the house was
built. Inside the flooring had been planed, stained a deep brown and
varnished, while the match-boarding which covered the walls was stained
a light colour and also varnished. The furniture, which had arrived the
day before from Hawke's Bay was somewhat scanty, but Wilfrid and Marion,
who had come over for the purpose, had made the most of it. A square of
carpet and some rugs gave a cosy appearance to the floor, white curtains
hung before the windows and a few favourite pictures and engravings,
which they had brought with them from home, broke the bareness of the
walls. Altogether it was a very pretty and snug little abode of which
Mr. and Mrs. Renshaw took possession.




CHAPTER XI.

THE HAU-HAUS.


The next three months made a great change in the appearance of The
Glade. Three or four plots of gay flowers cut in the grass between the
house and the river gave a brightness to its appearance. The house was
now covered as far as the roof with greenery, and might well have been
mistaken for a rustic bungalow standing in pretty grounds on the banks
of the Thames. Behind, a large kitchen-garden was in full bearing. It
was surrounded by wire network to keep out the chickens, ducks, and
geese, which wandered about and picked up a living as they chose,
returning at night to the long low shed erected for them at some
distance from the house, receiving a plentiful meal on their arrival to
prevent them from lapsing into an altogether wild condition.

Forty acres of land had been reploughed and sown, and the crops had
already made considerable progress. In the more distant clearings a
dozen horses, twenty or thirty cows, and a small flock of a hundred
sheep grazed, while some distance up the glade in which the house stood
was the pig-sty, whose occupants were fed with refuse from the garden,
picking up, however, the larger portion of their living by rooting in
the woods.

Long before Mr. and Mrs. Renshaw moved into the house, Wilfrid, whose
labours were now less severe, had paid his first visit to Mr. Atherton's
hut. He was at once astonished and delighted with it. It contained
indeed but the one room, sixteen feet square, but that room had been
made one of the most comfortable dens possible. There was no flooring,
but the ground had been beaten until it was as hard as baked clay, and
was almost covered with rugs and sheep-skins; a sort of divan ran round
three sides of it, and this was also cushioned with skins. The log walls
were covered with cow-hides cured with the hair on, and from hooks and
brackets hung rifles, fishing-rods, and other articles, while horns and
other trophies of the chase were fixed to the walls.

While the Renshaws had contented themselves with stoves, Mr. Atherton
had gone to the expense and trouble of having a great open fireplace,
with a brick chimney outside the wall. Here, even on the hottest day,
two or three logs burnt upon old-fashioned iron dogs. On the wall above
was a sort of trophy of oriental weapons. Two very large and comfortable
easy chairs stood by the side of the hearth, and in the centre of the
room stood an old oak table, richly carved and black with age. A
book-case of similar age and make, with its shelves well filled with
standard works, stood against the one wall unoccupied by the divan.

Wilfrid stood still with astonishment as he looked in at the door, which
Mr. Atherton had himself opened in response to his knock.

"Come in, Wilfrid. As I told you yesterday evening I have just got
things a little straight and comfortable."

"I should think you had got them comfortable," Wilfrid said. "I should
not have thought that a log cabin could have been made as pretty as
this. Why, where did you get all the things? Surely you can never have
brought them all with you?"

"No, indeed," Mr. Atherton laughed; "the greatest portion of them are
products of the country. There was no difficulty in purchasing the
skins, the arms, and those sets of horns and trophies. Books and a few
other things I brought with me. I have a theory that people very often
make themselves uncomfortable merely to effect the saving of a pound or
two. Now, I rather like making myself snug, and the carriage of all
those things did not add above five pounds to my expenses."

"But surely that table and book-case were never made in New Zealand?"

"Certainly not, Wilfrid. At the time they were made the natives of this
country hunted the Moa in happy ignorance of the existence of a white
race. No, I regard my getting possession of those things as a special
stroke of good luck. I was wandering in the streets of Wellington on the
very day after my arrival, when I saw them in a shop. No doubt they had
been brought out by some well-to-do emigrant, who clung to them in
remembrance of his home in the old country. Probably at his death his
place came into the hands of some Goths, who preferred a clean deal
table to what he considered old-fashioned things. Anyhow, there they
were in the shop, and I bought them at once; as also those arm-chairs,
which are as comfortable as anything of the kind I have ever tried. By
the way, are you a good shot with the rifle, Wilfrid?"

"No, sir; I never fired a rifle in my life before I left England, nor a
shot-gun either."

"Then I think you would do well to practise, lad; and those two men of
yours should practise too. You never can say what may come of these
native disturbances; the rumours of the progress of this new religion
among them are not encouraging. It is quite true that the natives on
this side of the island have hitherto been perfectly peaceable, but if
they get inoculated with this new religious frenzy there is no saying
what may happen. I will speak to your father about it. Not in a way to
alarm him; but I will point out that it is of no use your having brought
out firearms if none of you know how to use them, and suggest that it
will be a good thing if you and the men were to make a point of firing a
dozen shots every morning at a mark. I shall add that he himself might
just as well do so, and that even the ladies might find it an amusement,
using, of course, a light rifle, or firing from a rest with an ordinary
rifle with light charges, or that they might practice with revolvers.
Anyhow, it is certainly desirable that you and your father and the men
should learn to be good shots with these weapons. I will gladly come
over at first and act as musketry instructor."

Wilfrid embraced the idea eagerly, and Mr. Atherton on the occasion of
his first visit to The Glade in a casual sort of way remarked to Mr.
Renshaw that he thought every white man and woman in the outlying
colonies ought to be able to use firearms, as, although they might never
be called upon to use them in earnest, the knowledge that they could do
so with effect would greatly add to their feeling of security and
comfort. Mr. Renshaw at once took up the idea and accepted the other's
offer to act as instructor. Accordingly, as soon as the Renshaws were
established upon their farm, it became one of the standing rules of the
place that Wilfrid and the two men should fire twelve shots at a mark
every morning before starting for their regular work at the farm.

The target was a figure roughly cut out of wood, representing the size
and to some extent the outline of a man's figure.

"It is much better to accustom yourself to fire at a mark of this kind
than to practise always at a target," Mr. Atherton said. "A man may
shoot wonderfully well at a black mark in the centre of a white square,
and yet make very poor practice at a human figure with its dull shades
of colour and irregular outline."

"But we shall not be able to tell where our bullets hit," Wilfrid said;
"especially after the dummy has been hit a good many times."

"It is not very material where you hit a man, Wilfrid, so that you do
hit him. If a man gets a heavy bullet, whether in an arm, a leg, or the
body, there is no more fight in him. You can tell by the sound of the
bullet if you hit the figure, and if you hit him you have done what you
want to. You do not need to practise at distances over three hundred
yards; that is quite the outside range at which you would ever want to
do any shooting, indeed from fifty to two hundred I consider the useful
distance to practise at. If you get to shoot so well that you can with
certainty hit a man between those ranges, you may feel pretty
comfortable in your mind that you can beat off any attack that might be
made on a house you are defending.

"When you have learnt to do this at the full-size figure you can put it
in a bush so that only the head and shoulders are visible, as would be
those of a native standing up to fire. All this white target-work is
very well for shooting for prizes, but if troops were trained to fire at
dummy figures at from fifty to two hundred yards distance, and allowed
plenty of ammunition for practice and kept steadily at it, you would see
that a single company would be more than a match for a whole regiment
trained as our soldiers are."

With steady practice every morning, Wilfrid and the two young men made
very rapid progress, and at the end of three months it was very seldom
that a bullet was thrown away. Sometimes Mr. Renshaw joined them in
their practice, but he more often fired a few shots some time during the
day with Marion, who became quite an enthusiast in the exercise. Mrs.
Renshaw declined to practise, and said that she was content to remain a
non-combatant, and would undertake the work of binding up wounds and
loading muskets. On Saturday afternoons, when the men left off work
somewhat earlier than usual, there was always shooting for small prizes.
Twelve shots were fired by each at a figure placed in the bushes a
hundred yards away, with only the head and shoulders visible. After each
had fired, the shot-holes were counted and then filled up with mud, so
that the next marks made were easily distinguishable.

Mr. Renshaw was uniformly last. The Grimstones and Marion generally ran
each other very close, each putting eight or nine of their bullets into
the figure. Wilfrid was always handicapped two shots, but as he
generally put the whole of his ten bullets into the mark, he was in the
majority of cases the victor. The shooting party was sometimes swelled
by the presence of Mr. Atherton and the two Allens, who had arrived a
fortnight after the Renshaws, and had taken up the section of land next
below them. Mr. Atherton was incomparably the best shot of the party.
Wilfrid, indeed, seldom missed, but he took careful and steady aim at
the object, while Mr. Atherton fired apparently without waiting to take
aim at all. Sometimes he would not even lift his gun to his shoulder,
but would fire from his side, or standing with his back to the mark
would turn round and fire instantaneously.

"That sort of thing is only attained by long practice," he would say in
answer to Wilfrid's exclamations of astonishment. "You see, I have been
shooting in different parts of the world and at different sorts of game
for some fifteen years, and in many cases quick shooting is of just as
much importance as straight shooting."

But it was with the revolver that Mr. Atherton most surprised his
friends. He could put six bullets into half a sheet of note-paper at a
distance of fifty yards, firing with such rapidity that the weapon was
emptied in two or three seconds.

"I learned that," he said, "among the cow-boys in the West. Some of them
are perfectly marvellous shots. It is their sole amusement, and they
spend no inconsiderable portion of their pay on cartridges. It seems to
become an instinct with them, however small the object at which they
fire they are almost certain to hit it. It is a common thing with them
for one man to throw an empty meat-tin into the air and for another to
put six bullets in before it touches the ground. So certain are they of
their own and each others' aim, that one will hold a halfpenny between
his finger and thumb for another to fire at from a distance of twenty
yards, and it is a common joke for one to knock another's pipe out of
his mouth when he is quietly smoking.

"As you see, though my shooting seems to you wonderful, I should be
considered quite a poor shot among the cow-boys. Of course, with
incessant practice such as they have I should shoot a good deal better
than I do; but I could never approach their perfection, for the simple
reason that I have not the strength of wrist. They pass their lives in
riding half-broken horses, and incessant exercise and hard work harden
them until their muscles are like steel, and they scarcely feel what to
an ordinary man is a sharp wrench from the recoil of a heavily-loaded
Colt."

Life was in every way pleasant at The Glade. The work of breaking up the
land went on steadily, but the labour, though hard, was not excessive.
In the evening the Allens or Mr. Atherton frequently dropped in, and
occasionally Mr. Mitford and his daughters rode over, or the party came
up in the boat. The expense of living was small. They had an ample
supply of potatoes and other vegetables from their garden, of eggs from
their poultry, and of milk, butter, and cheese from their cows. While
salt meat was the staple of their food, it was varied occasionally by
chicken, ducks, or a goose, while a sheep now and then afforded a week's
supply of fresh meat.

Mr. Renshaw had not altogether abandoned his original idea. He had
already learnt something of the Maori language from his studies on the
voyage, and he rapidly acquired a facility of speaking it from his
conversations with the two natives permanently employed on the farm. One
of these was a man of some forty years old named Wetini, the other was a
lad of sixteen, his son, whose name was Whakapanakai, but as this name
was voted altogether too long for conversational purposes he was
re-christened Jack.

Wetini spoke but a few words of English, but Jack, who had been educated
at one of the mission schools, spoke it fluently. They, with Wetini's
wife, inhabited a small hut situated at the edge of the wood, at a
distance of about two hundred yards from the house. It was Mr. Renshaw's
custom to stroll over there of an evening, and seating himself by the
fire, which however hot the weather the natives always kept burning, he
would converse with Wetini upon the manners and customs, the religious
beliefs and ceremonies, of his people.

In these conversations Jack at first acted as interpreter, but it was
not many weeks before Mr. Renshaw gained such proficiency in the tongue
that such assistance was no longer needed.

But the period of peace and tranquillity at The Glade was but a short
one. Wilfrid learnt from Jack, who had attached himself specially to
him, that there were reports among the natives that the prophet Te Ua
was sending out missionaries all over the island. This statement was
true. Te Ua had sent out four sub-prophets with orders to travel among
the tribes and inform them that Te Ua had been appointed by an angel as
a prophet, that he was to found a new religion to be called Pai Marire,
and that legions of angels waited the time when, all the tribes having
been converted, a general rising would take place, and the Pakeha be
annihilated by the assistance of these angels, after which a knowledge
of all languages and of all the arts and sciences would be bestowed upon
the Pai Marire.

Had Te Ua's instructions been carried out, and his agents travelled
quietly among the tribes, carefully abstaining from all open hostility
to the whites until the whole of the native population had been
converted, the rising when it came would have been a terrible one, and
might have ended in the whole of the white population being either
destroyed or forced for a time to abandon the island. Fortunately the
sub-prophets were men of ferocious character. Too impatient to await the
appointed time, they attacked the settlers as soon as they collected
sufficient converts to do so, and so they brought about the destruction
of their leaders' plans.

These attacks put the colonists on their guard, enabled the authorities
to collect troops and stand on the defensive, and, what was still more
important, caused many of the tribes which had not been converted to the
Pai Marire faith to range themselves on the side of the English. Not
because they loved the whites, but because from time immemorial the
tribes had been divided against each other, and their traditional
hostility weighed more with them than their jealousy with the white
settlers.

Still, although these rumours as to the spread of the Pai Marire or
Hau-Hau faith reached the ears of the settlers, there were few in the
western provinces who believed that there was any real danger. The
Maoris had always been peaceful and friendly with them, and they could
not believe that those with whom they had dwelt so long could suddenly
and without any reason become bloodthirsty enemies.

Wilfrid said nothing to his parents as to what he had heard from Jack,
but he talked it over with Mr. Atherton and the Allens. The latter were
disposed to make light of it, but Mr. Atherton took the matter
seriously.

"There is never any saying how things will go with the natives," he
said. "All savages seem to be alike. Up to a certain point they are
intelligent and sensible; but they are like children; they are easily
excited, superstitious in the extreme, and can be deceived without the
slightest difficulty by designing people. Of course to us this story of
Te Ua's sounds absolutely absurd, but that is no reason why it should
appear absurd to them. These people have embraced a sort of
Christianity, and they have read of miracles of all sorts, and will have
no more difficulty in believing that the angels could destroy all the
Europeans in their island than that the Assyrian army was miraculously
destroyed before Jerusalem.

"Without taking too much account of the business, I think, Wilfrid, that
it will be just as well if all of us in these outlying settlements take
a certain amount of precautions. I shall write down at once to my agent
at Hawke Bay asking him to buy me a couple of dogs and send them up by
the next ship. I shall tell him that it does not matter what sort of
dogs they are so that they are good watch-dogs, though, of course, I
should prefer that they should be decent dogs of their sort, dogs one
could make companions of. I should advise you to do the same.

"I shall ask Mr. Mitford to get me up at once a heavy door and shutters
for the window strong enough to stand an assault. Here again I should
advise you to do the same. You can assign any reason you like to your
father. With a couple of dogs to give the alarm, with a strong door and
shutters, you need not be afraid of being taken by surprise, and it is
only a surprise that you have in the first place to fear. Of course if
there were to be anything like a general rising we should all have to
gather at some central spot agreed upon, or else to quit the settlement
altogether until matters settle down. Still, I trust that nothing of
that sort will take place. At any rate, all we have to fear and prepare
against at present is an attack by small parties of fanatics."

Wilfrid had no difficulty in persuading his father to order a strong oak
door and shutters for the windows, and to get a couple of dogs. He began
the subject by saying: "Mr. Atherton is going to get some strong
shutters to his window, father. I think it would be a good thing if we
were to get the same for our windows."

"What do we want shutters for, Wilfrid?"

"For just the same reason that we have been learning to use our
firearms, father. We do not suppose that the natives, who are all
friendly with us, are going to turn treacherous. Still, as there is a
bare possibility of such a thing, we have taken some pains in learning
to shoot straight. In the same way it would be just as well to have
strong shutters put up. We don't at all suppose we are going to be
attacked, but if we are the shutters would be invaluable, and would
effectually prevent anything like a night surprise. The expense wouldn't
be great, and in the unlikely event of the natives being troublesome in
this part of this island we should all sleep much more soundly and
comfortably if we knew that there was no fear of our being taken by
surprise. Mr. Atherton is sending for a couple of dogs too. I have
always thought that it would be jolly to have a dog or two here, and if
we do not want them as guards they would be pleasant as companions when
one is going about the place."

A few days after the arrival of two large watch-dogs and of the heavy
shutters and door, Mr. Mitford rode in to The Glade. He chatted for a
few minutes on ordinary subjects, and then Mrs. Renshaw said: "Is
anything the matter, Mr. Mitford? you look more serious than usual."

"I can hardly say that anything is exactly the matter, Mrs. Renshaw; but
I had a batch of newspapers and letters from Wellington this morning,
and they give rather stirring news. The Hau-Haus have come into
collision with us again. You know that a fortnight since we had news
that they had attacked a party of our men under Captain Lloyd and
defeated them, and, contrary to all native traditions, had cut off the
heads of the slain, among whom was Captain Lloyd himself. I was afraid
that after this we should soon hear more of them, and my opinion has
been completely justified. On the 1st of May two hundred of the Ngataiwa
tribe, and three hundred other natives under Te Ua's prophet Hepanaia
and Parengi-Kingi of Taranaki, attacked a strong fort on Sentry Hill,
garrisoned by fifty men of the 52d Regiment under Major Short.

"The Ngataiwa took no part in the action, but the Hau-Haus charged with
great bravery. The garrison, fortunately being warned by their yells of
what was coming, received them with such a heavy fire that their leading
ranks were swept away, and they fell back in confusion. They made a
second charge, which was equally unsuccessful, and then fell back with a
loss of fifty-two killed, among whom were both the Hau-Hau prophet and
Parengi-Kingi.

"The other affair has taken place in the Wellington district. Matene,
another of the Hau-Hau prophets, came down to Pipiriki, a tribe of the
Wanganui. These people were bitterly hostile to us, as they had taken
part in some of the former fighting, and their chief and thirty-six of
his men were killed. The tribe at once accepted the new faith. Mr.
Booth, the resident magistrate, who was greatly respected among them,
went up to try to smooth matters down, but was seized, and would have
been put to death if it had not been for the interference in his favour
of a young chief named Hori Patene, who managed to get him and his wife
and children safely down in a canoe to the town of Wanganui. The
Hau-Haus prepared to move down the river to attack the town, and sent
word to the Ngatihau branch of the tribe who lived down the river to
join them. They and two other of the Wanganui tribes living on the lower
part of the river refused to do so, and also refused to let them pass
down the river, and sent a challenge for a regular battle to take place
on the island of Moutoa in the river.

"The challenge was accepted. At dawn on the following morning our
natives, three hundred and fifty strong, proceeded to the appointed
ground. A hundred picked men crossed on to the island, and the rest
remained on the banks as spectators. Of the hundred, fifty, divided into
three parties each under a chief, formed the advance guard, while the
other fifty remained in reserve at the end of the island two hundred
yards away, and too far to be of much use in the event of the advance
guard being defeated. The enemy's party were a hundred and thirty
strong, and it is difficult to understand why a larger body was not sent
over to the island to oppose them, especially as the belief in the
invulnerability of the Hau-Haus was generally believed in, even by the
natives opposed to them.

"It was a curious fight, quite in the manner of the traditional warfare
between the various tribes before our arrival on the island. The lower
tribesmen fought, not for the defence of the town, for they were not
very friendly with the Europeans, having been strong supporters of the
king party, but simply for the prestige of the tribe. No hostile war
party had ever forced the river, and none ever should do so. The
Hau-Haus came down the river in their canoes and landed without
opposition. Then a party of the Wanganui advance guard fired. Although
the Hau-Haus were but thirty yards distant none of them fell, and their
return volley killed the chiefs of two out of the three sections of the
advance guard and many others.

"Disheartened by the loss of their chiefs, the two sections gave way,
shouting that the Hau-Haus were invulnerable. The third section, well
led by their chief, held their ground, but were driven slowly back by
the overwhelming force of the enemy. The battle appeared to be lost,
when Tamehana, the sub-chief of one of the flying sections, after vainly
trying to rally his men, arrived on the ground, and, refusing to obey
the order to take cover from the Hau-Haus' fire, dashed at the enemy and
killed two of them with his double-barrelled gun. The last of the three
leaders was at this moment shot dead. Nearly all his men were more or
less severely wounded, but as the Hau-Haus rushed forward they fired a
volley into them at close quarters, killing several. But they still came
on, when Tamehana again rushed at them. Seizing the spear of a dead man
he drove it into the heart of a Hau-Hau. Catching up the gun and
tomahawk of the fallen man, he drove the latter so deeply into the head
of another foe that in wrenching it out the handle was broken. Finding
that the gun was unloaded, he dashed it in the face of his foes, and
snatching up another he was about to fire, when a bullet struck him in
the arm. Nevertheless he fired and killed his man, but the next moment
was brought to the ground by a bullet that shattered his knee.

"At this moment Hainoma, who commanded the reserve, came up with them,
with the fugitives whom he had succeeded in rallying. They fired a
volley, and then charged down upon the Hau-Haus with their tomahawks.
After a desperate fight the enemy were driven in confusion to the upper
end of the island, where they rushed into the water and attempted to
swim to the right bank. The prophet was recognized among the swimmers.
One of the Wanganui plunged in after him, overtook him just as he
reached the opposite bank, and in spite of the prophet uttering the
magic words that should have paralysed his assailant, killed him with
his tomahawk and swam back with the body to Hainoma."

"They seem to have been two serious affairs," Mr. Renshaw said; "but as
the Hau-Haus were defeated in each we may hope that we have heard the
last of them, for as both the prophets were killed the belief in the
invulnerability of Te Ua's followers must be at an end."

"I wish I could think so," Mr. Mitford said; "but it is terribly hard to
kill a superstition. Te Ua will of course say that the two prophets
disobeyed his positive instructions and thus brought their fate upon
themselves, and the incident may therefore rather strengthen than
decrease his influence. The best part of the business in my mind is that
some of the tribes have thrown in their lot on our side, or if not
actually on our side at any rate against the Hau-Haus. After this we
need hardly fear any general action of the natives against us. There are
all sorts of obscure alliances between the tribes arising from
marriages, or from their having fought on the same side in some far-back
struggle. The result is that the tribes who have these alliances with
the Wanganui will henceforth range themselves on the same side, or will
at any rate hold aloof from this Pai Marire movement. This will also
force other tribes, who might have been willing to join in a general
movement, to stand neutral, and I think now, that although we may have a
great deal of trouble with Te Ua's followers, we may regard any absolute
danger to the European population of the island as past.

"There may, I fear, be isolated massacres, for the Hau-Haus, with their
cutting off of heads and carrying them about, have introduced an
entirely new and savage feature into Maori warfare. I was inclined to
think the precautions you and Atherton are taking were rather
superfluous, but after this I shall certainly adopt them myself.
Everything is perfectly quiet here, but when we see how readily a whole
tribe embrace the new religion as soon as a prophet arrives, and are
ready at once to massacre a man who had long dwelt among them, and for
whom they had always evinced the greatest respect and liking, it is
impossible any longer to feel confident that the natives in this part of
the country are to be relied upon as absolutely friendly and
trustworthy.

"I am sorry now that I have been to some extent the means of inducing
you all to settle here. At the time I gave my advice things seemed
settling down at the other end of the island, and this Hau-Hau movement
reached us only as a vague rumour, and seemed so absurd in itself that
one attached no importance to it."

"Pray do not blame yourself, Mr. Mitford; whatever comes of it we are
delighted with the choice we have made. We are vastly more comfortable
than we had expected to be in so short a time, and things look
promising far beyond our expectations. As you say, you could have had no
reason to suppose that this absurd movement was going to lead to such
serious consequences. Indeed you could have no ground for supposing that
it was likely to cause trouble on this side of the island, far removed
as we are from the scene of the troubles. Even now these are in fact
confined to the district where fighting has been going on for the last
three or four years--Taranaki and its neighbourhood; for the Wanganui
River, although it flows into the sea in the north of the Wellington
district, rises in that of Taranaki, and the tribes who became Hau-Haus
and came down the river had already taken part in the fighting with our
troops. I really see no reason, therefore, for fearing that it will
spread in this direction."

"There is no reason whatever," Mr. Mitford agreed; "only, unfortunately,
the natives seldom behave as we expect them to do, and generally act
precisely as we expect they will not act. At any rate I shall set to
work at once to construct a strong stockade at the back of my house. I
have long been talking of forming a large cattle-yard there, so that it
will not in any case be labour thrown away, while if trouble should come
it will serve as a rallying-place to which all the settlers of the
district can drive in their horses and cattle for shelter, and where
they can if attacked hold their own against all the natives of the
districts."

"I really think you are looking at it in almost too serious a light, Mr.
Mitford; still, the fact that there is such a rallying-place in the
neighbourhood will of course add to our comfort in case we should hear
alarming rumours."

"Quite so, Mr. Renshaw. My idea is there is nothing like being prepared,
and though I agree with you that there is little chance of trouble in
this remote settlement, it is just as well to take precautions against
the worst."




CHAPTER XII.

THE FIRST ALARM.


One morning Mr. and Mrs. Renshaw went down to spend a long day with the
Mitfords. The latter had sent up the boat over-night, and they started
the first thing in the morning. For the two or three days previous Jack,
the young native, had more than once spoken to Wilfrid of the propriety
of the hands keeping near the house, but Wilfrid had failed to obtain
from him any specific reasons for the warning.

"Bad men come down from Waikato," he said. "Much talkee talkee among
natives."

"But what do they talk about, Jack?"

Jack shook his head. "Jack no hear talkee. Men come to hut and talk with
father. Other Maoris on land steal in and talk too, but no talk before
Jack; always turn him out or send him on errand. But Jack hear sometimes
a word, and think that trouble come. Young master better not go far away
by himself, and tell two white men to keep close to hut. Perhaps nothing
come, but better to be on guard."

"Very well, Jack; I am obliged to you for the warning. I will tell the
Grimstones not to go out to the outlying clearings, but to occupy
themselves with what they can find to do near home."

Jack nodded. "That best, Master Wilfrid, but no talk too much with me.
If my people thought I speak to you then trouble come to Jack."

Wilfrid nodded, and without saying anything to his father and mother
told the Grimstones to keep near the house. "After you have done
shooting of a morning," he said, "instead of bringing your guns into the
house as usual take them down with you to the place where you are at
work, so that they will be handy in case of necessity. Most likely there
is no danger whatever; but I have heard a rumour that some people from
Waikato have come into this neighbourhood, and if so no doubt they are
trying to get the tribes here to join the Hau-Haus. I do not think that
there is much chance of their succeeding, for the natives have always
been very friendly, and there has been no dispute about land or any
other grievance; but when one knows how suddenly they have risen in
other places, it is better to take precautions."

After breakfast on the morning when his father and mother had started,
Wilfrid strolled out on to the verandah, and stood for some little time
hesitating what he should do. The Grimstones had just started to look up
some cattle in one of the distant clearings, one of the native hands
having reported the evening before two of the animals were missing.

"I will go not far till they come back," he said to himself. "The garden
wants hoeing. Weeds grow as fast here as they do at home. That will be
just the job for me." He was about to turn to enter the house, when he
saw four natives emerge from the trees and make towards him.

"Marion," he said through the open door, "get the guns down from the
rack, and see that they are capped and ready. There are four natives
coming towards the house. I daresay they are friendly, and are probably
only on the way down the river to look for work, still as we are alone
you cannot be too careful."

Hearing Marion reply "All right, Wilfrid!" the lad leant against the
door in a careless attitude, and awaited the coming of the natives. As
they approached he saw they were all strangers to him, although he knew
most of the natives in the neighbourhood by sight, for these not
infrequently came in to barter a pig or a sheep for tobacco, sugar, or
other things necessary to them. The natives as they came up gave the
usual salutation of good-day, to which Wilfrid replied.

"We are hungry," a tall Maori, who by his dress appeared to be a chief,
said.

"I will get you something to eat," Wilfrid answered.

The Maoris would have followed into the house, but he stopped and said
sharply, "We do not allow strangers in the house. Those we know are free
to enter and depart as they choose, but I have not seen any of you
before. If you will sit down on that bench outside I will bring you
food."

He soon reappeared with a dish of maize and boiled pork, for a supply
was generally kept in readiness in case any of the natives should come
in.

"Shuffle about and make a noise," he said to Marion as she got the dish
from the cupboard. "They cannot know who are inside, and if they mean
mischief--and honestly I do not like their looks--they will be more
likely to try it on if they think that I am alone."

The Maoris took the food in silence, and as they ate it Wilfrid was
amused to hear Marion stamping heavily about inside, and occasionally
speaking as if to her father. He could see that the men were listening,
and they exchanged words in a low tone with each other.

Presently the leader of the party said, "Drink!" Wilfrid went in and
brought out a pitcher of water. "Gin!" the chief said shortly. "I have
no gin to give you," Wilfrid replied; "we do not keep spirits."

The natives rose to their feet. "We will come in and see," the leader
said.

"No you won't!" Wilfrid said firmly. "I have given you what food there
is in the house, and you are welcome to it; but strangers don't come
into the house unless they are invited."

The native laid his hand on Wilfrid's shoulder to push him aside, but
four months of chopping and digging had hardened every muscle in the
lad's body. He did not move an inch, but jerked the Maori's hand off his
shoulder.

With an exclamation of anger the native drew a heavy knobbed stick from
the girdle round his waist, but before he could raise it to strike
another figure appeared at the door. Marion held a gun in her hand which
she raised to her shoulder. "Drop that," she said in a clear ringing
voice, "or I fire!"

Taken by surprise, and seeing the rifle pointed full at his head, the
chief instantly dropped his club. At the same instant Wilfrid sprang to
the door, exclaiming "Go in, Marion!" and before the natives had
recovered from their surprise the door was shut and barred.

They had not been deceived by Marion's attempt to personate a man, and
their sharp ears had told them while eating their meal that there was
but one person in the house, and that it was a girl. They knew that
there was no other about, having watched the house for some time, and
had therefore anticipated that the work of murder and plunder would be
accomplished without difficulty. The instant the door was closed they
bounded away at the top of their speed to the shelter of the bush,
expecting every moment to hear the report of a rifle behind them; but
the Renshaws had not thought of firing.

"Well done, Marion!" Wilfrid exclaimed as soon as the door was fastened.
"I was on the point of springing upon him when I heard your voice behind
me; I think that I could have tripped him backwards, but if I had done
so the others would have been upon me with their clubs. Now, let us
close and fasten the shutters, though I do not think we need have any
fear of their coming back. In each case we have heard of they have
always fallen on the settlers suddenly and killed them before they had
time for resistance, and I do not think there is a chance of their
trying to attack us now that they know we are ready for them. I expect
that they were passing down to some of their people below, and seeing,
as they thought, a defenceless hut, thought it would be an easy business
to plunder it and knock on the head anyone they might find here. Now
that they have failed they will probably go on their journey again."

"I was horribly frightened, Wilfrid," Marion said when they joined each
other in the sitting-room after making all the fastenings secure.

"You did not look frightened a bit, Marion; and you certainly gave that
fellow a tremendous scare. Didn't he drop his club sharp? And now, what
do you think we had better do? The first thing is to get the Grimstones
in. Those fellows may have been watching for some time and saw them go
out."

"But they have got their guns with them, Wilfrid. The natives would
surely not think of attacking two men with guns when they have nothing
but their clubs."

"No, they certainly would not think of doing that, Marion. But the
chances are that they have got guns, and that they left them in the bush
when they sallied out, as they wanted to look peaceful and take us by
surprise."

"I did not think of that, Wilfrid. Yes, perhaps they have guns. Well,
you know, it has always been agreed that in case of danger three shots
should be fired as a warning to those who might be out. If we fire and
they hear it they will hurry back."

"Yes, but they might be shot as they make their way down to the house;
that is what I am afraid of."

Marion was silent for a minute. "Do you know where they have gone to,
Wilfrid?"

"They have gone in the first place to the clearing with those two big
trees standing in the centre, but I cannot say where they may go to
afterwards, for they had to look for four or five of the cattle that had
strayed away."

"I can slip out from the window in the men's room and get into the bush
and work round to the clearing, Wilfrid, and fire three shots there;
that would bring them to me at once. You see, the natives couldn't cross
the clearing here without your having them under your gun."

"No, Marion," Wilfrid said decidedly; "that is not to be thought of. If
they saw you going they could work up through the bush on their side to
the top of the clearing, and then follow you. No; I think I will fire
the three shots. We have talked it over several times, you know, and the
Grimstones have been told that if they heard the alarm they must make
their way cautiously to the top of the clearing and see what is going on
before they venture to make for the house. As soon as I see them I can
shout to them to keep to the bush on their left till they get opposite
the house. Everything is so still that one can hear a shout a long way,
and I feel sure I could make them understand as far off as the end of
the clearing. It isn't as if we were sure that these fellows were still
hanging about ready to attack us; the probabilities are all the other
way. They would have murdered us if they could have taken us by
surprise, but that is a different thing altogether to making an attack
now they know we are armed and ready."

Taking three of the rifles, Wilfrid opened one of the shutters at the
back of the house and fired them, with an interval of about five seconds
between each shot, then he stood at the window and watched the upper
end of the glade. "Dear me!" he exclaimed suddenly, "I am sorry we
fired."

"Why?" Marion asked in surprise.

"Because Mr. Atherton is sure to hear it if he is at home, and will come
hurrying over; and if these fellows are still there he may come right
into the middle of them."

"I do not think he would do that, Wilfrid," Marion said, after thinking
for a moment or two. "Mr. Atherton is not like the Grimstones. He has
been in all sorts of adventures, and though I am sure he will come to
our help as soon as he can, I think he would take every precaution. He
would know that the natives will be likely to come from above, and
therefore be between him and us, and would come along carefully so as
not to be surprised."

"I hope so, I am sure," Wilfrid said; "for he is an awfully good fellow.
Still, as you say, he is sure to keep his eyes opened, and unless they
surprise him I should back him against the four of them."

In a quarter of an hour they heard a shout from the edge of the
clearing. "There are the Allens!" Wilfrid exclaimed as he leapt to the
door. "I forgot about them, although of course they are nearer than Mr.
Atherton. All right!" he shouted; "you can come on." The two Allens ran
across the open space between the wood and the house.

"What is it, Wilfrid?" they exclaimed as they came up. "You fired the
alarm-signal, did you not?" Both were breathless with the speed at which
they had run. They had been engaged in felling when they heard the
shot, and had thrown down their axes, run into the hut for their guns,
and made for The Glade at the top of their speed. In a few words Wilfrid
explained what had happened, and that there was every reason to believe
that four hostile neighbours were lurking in the bush on the opposite
side of the glade. The Allens at once volunteered to go up to the head
of the clearing to warn the Grimstones. Returning to the point where
they had left the forest, they made their way among the trees until they
reached the upper end of the clearing; then they sat down and listened.
In a few minutes they heard the sound of breaking twigs. "Here come the
men," the elder Allen said; "the Maoris would come along noiselessly."
Two or three minutes later the Grimstones came up at a run, accompanied
by their two dogs.

"This way," James Allen said.

"What is it, sir?" Bob Grimstone gasped. "We were a long way in the
woods when we thought we heard three shots. We were not quite sure about
it, but we started back as fast as we could come. There is nothing
wrong, I hope?"

"Fortunately nothing has happened," James Allen replied; "but four
strange Maoris came up to the house, and would certainly have murdered
Mr. Wilfrid and his sister if they had not been prepared for them.
Whether they are in the bush now or not I do not know; but we have come
up to warn you not to go up the clearing, as, if they are there, they
might pick you off as you did so. We must come down under shelter of the
trees till we are opposite the house."

In ten minutes they reached the house. Just as they did so Mr. Atherton
appeared at the edge of the wood which they had just left.

"Thank God you are all safe!" he said as he strolled up to the house.
"Your three shots gave me a fright; but as I heard no more I was
relieved, for the signal told that you had not been taken by surprise,
and as there was no more firing it was clear they had drawn off."

"But how did you get to that side of the clearing, Mr. Atherton?"

"I followed the wood till within a few hundred yards of the clearing, as
I made sure if there were hostile natives about they would be at the
edge of the bush. Then I got down into the river and waded along the
edge. The bank in front here was not high enough to hide me, though I
stooped as much as I could; but I reckoned that all eyes would be fixed
on the house, and it was not likely I should be noticed. And now, what
is it all about? I am sure you would not have fired the signal unless
there had been good cause for the alarm." Wilfrid related what had taken
place.

"Well done, Miss Marion!" Mr. Atherton said when he had finished. "It
was lucky for your brother that you did not go with your father and
mother this morning.

"It was lucky," Wilfrid agreed; "but at the same time, if I had been
quite alone I should have closed the shutters and door as they came up,
and kept indoors. I only ventured to meet them outside because I knew
that Marion had a gun ready to hand to me the moment I wanted it."

"Yes; but you see there was not time to hand you the gun, Wilfrid, as
it turned out, and you would have been knocked on the head to a
certainty if your sister had not come to your rescue."

"That I certainly should; and I know that I owe Marion my life. What do
you think we had better do now?"

"I do not think we can do anything, Wilfrid, beyond trying to find out
whether the fellows who came here were alone, or were part of a larger
party. Where are your natives?"

"The three men are chopping, and Jack went out with the Grimstones to
look for the cattle."

"Was he with you when you heard the shots fired, Bob?"

"He was with us a minute or two before, and was following a track. After
we heard the signal we did not think anything more about him, and
whether he followed us or went on looking after the cattle I do not
know."

"If you go to the door, Wilfrid, and give a loud cooey it will bring him
in if he is within hearing. You may be sure that he heard the signal,
for his ears are keener than those of your men; but he would not rush
straight back, but would come cautiously through the woods according to
his nature."

Wilfrid went to the door and gave a loud cooey. A minute later the Maori
issued from the bush, nearly opposite the house, and ran in.

"That's just where the natives took to the bush," Wilfrid said. "Perhaps
he will be able to tell us something about them."

"I expect he has been scouting," Mr. Atherton said, "and his coming
boldly out from that point is a pretty sure proof that the natives have
made off. Well, Jack, so you heard our signal?"

Jack nodded.

"And what have you been doing since?" Wilfrid asked.

"Jack went through the bush fast till he got near house, then, as the
guns were not going off, he knew there could be no attack; but thought
black man might be lying in bush, so he crept and crawled. Presently he
heard man talk, and then saw four Maori walking fast away from house. He
only heard them say as he passed, 'No use now; too many Pakehas. Come
another day and finish them all.' Jack was coming straight to house when
he heard cooey."

"You have seen nothing of your father and the other two men, Jack?"

The Maori boy shook his head. "They chop wood; perhaps not heard
signal."

"More likely they heard, but thought it better to stay away," Wilfrid
said.

"No got guns; they not fighting-men," Jack said, as if in excuse.

"There is something in that," Mr. Atherton said. "The Hau-Haus have
always proved themselves even more merciless towards the friendly
natives than towards the whites; and these men, being unarmed, might,
even with the best disposition in the world, be afraid to come to the
house. At any rate, I am glad those fellows have made off. You see, they
were in a position to shoot any of us if they got the chance, while we
were scarce in a position to return the compliment."

"Why not?" James Allen asked.

"Because, although we could have now no doubt whatever as to their
intentions, they have committed no actual assault. They tried their best
to push their way into the house, and when Wilfrid opposed them one of
them drew his club; but they might say this was only done to frighten
him, and that they had no thought of using it. If they had fired a shot,
we should of course be justified in killing them; but were we to begin
the shooting, the whole tribe they belong to would take it up, and there
would be a cry for vengeance; and even if nothing were done at once, we
should be marked down to be wiped out at the first opportunity.

"We shall learn in a day or two whether the matter was serious or not,"
Mr. Atherton went on. "If there is anything like a general defection of
the natives in these parts yours will not have been the only place
threatened, and we shall hear of attacks on other settlers. If we do not
hear of such attacks we can safely put it down that these four fellows
were mere haphazard passers, like tramps at home, who were tempted by
the fact that the house contained only two persons. In that case we need
feel no further anxiety; for as you would be able to recognize them if
you met them anywhere, they would not be likely to come near this part
of the district again. At any rate I will set off with the boy here and
one of the dogs, and will follow up their tracks and see if they have
gone well away. I have no doubt they have done so; still, it will be
more comfortable to make certain of it."

"By the way, Bob," Wilfrid said, "don't you take those two dogs out
again. I don't think they would be any good for hunting cattle, and
would be much more likely to frighten and hunt them away than to help
you to drive them in. At any rate they were bought as guards, and are to
remain about the house. Shall I go with you, Mr. Atherton?"

"No, thank you, Wilfrid; Jack will be enough to help me follow the
tracks, for what he heard them say is almost proof that they have gone.
I shall go round to my own place when I have followed them fairly off
the land, but will come round here to-morrow morning, when we will hold
a general council of war. It is no use my coming back again this
evening, as your father and the others will not be here before that
time. It is possible that they will bring us some news from the
Mitfords. If there is any trouble anywhere along the river Mitford is
sure to be the first to hear of it. I will send a message back by Jack
when he has gone as far as necessary for our purpose."

Two hours later Jack returned with the news that the Maoris had gone
straight on without making a stop. Mr. and Mrs. Renshaw were expected
back at about ten o'clock. They were to breakfast early at the Mitfords
and to come up with their light canoe. They arrived, however, soon after
eight o'clock.

"Is all well?" Mr. Renshaw shouted as he stepped from the boat.

"All well, father," Marion replied, running down to meet them. "We had a
little unpleasantness yesterday, but nothing of consequence. What brings
you back so early? You must have started before daylight."

"Bad news came in yesterday evening, and we should have come straight
over if it had been possible, but Mr. Mitford would not let us leave
till morning. We have been very anxious about you."

"What is the news?" Wilfrid asked.

"The natives murdered two settlers at a farm some four miles from Mr.
Mitford's. Yesterday he received letters both from Poverty Bay and
Napier saying that the natives were in a very disturbed state, that
Hau-Hau prophets had been going about among them, and that in both
districts there had been several murders. Corps of volunteers are being
raised at Napier, and they have sent to Wellington for a company of the
constabulary. The settlers at Poverty Bay are also making preparations
for defence. Mr. Mitford was asked to get all the colonists on this
river to arm and prepare for an attack. Of course this news was very
alarming in itself, and when two or three hours later the news came in
of the murders in our own settlement we were naturally most anxious
about you. However, as we could not come over in the dark through the
forest, and as Mitford pointed out that the house was well prepared for
defence, and that you would certainly be on the alert and had the dogs,
who would give you notice of any body of men coming, we consented to
remain if he would send us home in the canoe at five o'clock in the
morning. And now, what is it that happened here yesterday?"

"It was nothing very alarming, father. Four natives came up and asked
for food, which of course I gave them. Then they wanted gin, and seeing
that I was alone tried to push their way into the house I tried to stop
them. The fellow snatched at his club. As he did so Marion appeared at
the door with a levelled rifle, and the fellows, who had no guns with
them, took to their heels. We gave the alarm-signal, and the Allens and
Mr. Atherton came over at once, and the Grimstones ran in from their
work. However, the natives had made their way off, and I do not suppose
we shall hear any more of them."

"I don't know, Wilfrid," his father said. "If it had been only this
affair I should not have thought much about it. The natives are often
rude and insolent, and these men might not have meant to do more than
help themselves to a bottle of spirits, but taken with these accounts
from Napier and Poverty Bay, and with the murders yesterday, I think it
is very serious."

"Mr. Atherton and the Allens promised to come over at ten o'clock,
father, to chat the matter over with you, and hear whether you had
brought news of any troubles elsewhere. So we shall have quite a
council. And now let us have breakfast. We were just going to sit down
when we heard your call, and I am sure you must be as hungry as hunters
after your three hours on the water."

Breakfast was scarcely finished when Mr. Atherton and the Allens
arrived, and were made acquainted with the news of the murder of the two
settlers on the previous day.

"It is clear," Mr. Atherton said, "that the affair here yesterday was
not, as I hoped, a mere incident, such as might happen anywhere if a
party of ruffianly fellows arrived at a lonely house which they thought
they could rob with impunity. This sad business you tell us of shows
that there is a general movement among the natives, the result, I
suppose, of the arrival of some emissary from the Hau-Haus. It is an
awkward business. What is Mr. Mitford's opinion on the subject?"

"He thinks it will be well that all settlers on the river capable of
bearing arms should be enrolled as a volunteer corps, and be in
readiness to turn out at a moment's notice. He is of opinion that all
those whose farms lie at a distance from the main body should drive in
their animals and bring in such goods as they can carry to his station,
as one of the most central. Huts could be got up there, and the animals
all kept at night in his large stockaded yard. In case the natives seem
inclined to make a regular attack the women and children could be sent
down the river in boats or put on board a ship and sent to Napier.
Fortunately, there is seldom a week without a craft of some sort putting
into the river."

"There is no doubt that this would be the safest plan," Mr. Atherton
said, "but it would be a serious thing for the settlers to abandon their
crops and houses to the natives unless it was certain that the danger
was very great."

"That is my opinion," Mr. Renshaw said. "I am certainly not disposed to
have the results of our labour destroyed without a struggle."

Wilfrid looked alike surprised and pleased. "I am glad to hear you say
so, father. It would be an awful nuisance and loss to have all our crops
destroyed and our house burnt down, and to have to begin the whole thing
over again. I don't see what would have been the use of getting
everything ready for defence if we are all to run away directly there
is danger; but I think it would be a good thing to send the animals down
to Mr. Mitford's, as he is good enough to offer to take them. We might
send down the three natives to look after them, as of course they will
have to go out to graze in the daytime, and keep Jack here. I do not
know about the other men, and one doesn't seem able to trust the natives
in the slightest; but I feel sure of Jack, and he would be useful to us
in many ways in the house, besides being able to scout in the woods far
better than we could do."

"I think that you are right, Mr. Renshaw," Mr. Atherton said. "I should
propose as an addition that the Allens here and I make this our
head-quarters while the scare lasts. We could run up a light shanty with
a few hours' work just behind the house. The Allens could go over to
their work during the day and return here at night, and I should wander
about the woods with my gun as usual. I do not think we need fear any
attack in the daytime. If it comes at all it will be at night or at
early morning. The natives will know from the men who were here that you
are well armed, and will try to catch you napping. We won't be any more
trouble to you than we can help, and with the addition of our three guns
I think we could defend ourselves against any number of natives. What do
you think of my proposal, lads?"

The Allens said at once that they thought it was an excellent one, if
Mr. and Mrs. Renshaw were willing to have the trouble of them.

"It will be no trouble at all," Mrs. Renshaw said, "and will be a very
great comfort. With seven men to protect us Marion and I shall feel
perfectly safe, and it will be in all ways pleasant to have you here
with us. I do not see that you need build a hut outside at all. There
will be no difficulty in making up beds here and in the kitchen, and
then we shall be all together."

"But I do not propose that you should cook for us, Mrs. Renshaw. If we
had a hut of our own our boys could do that for us. You see, we are
coming up here for our own defence as well as yours."

"I should not think of such a thing," Mrs. Renshaw said decidedly.
"There is no more trouble in cooking for nine than there is for six;
and, as I have said, it will be a real pleasure to us to have you
stopping here."

"Very well. Then in that case, Mrs. Renshaw, we will accept your
invitation. I will bring over my belongings to-day and store them in
your loft above, and the Allens had better bring over anything they do
not want burnt by the natives. I still hope that these outrages are the
work of a few ruffians, and that the natives in general will not allow
themselves to be persuaded into hostilities against us; still, if the
worst comes to the worst, I am convinced that we can hold this house
against quite as strong a force as they are likely to bring to attack
it. There is one precaution I should advise you to take at once, and
that is to lay in a store of water. I daresay you have got some empty
molasses and pork casks, that is if you do not burn them as soon as you
empty them. If not we must set to work and make a strong wooden tank. In
case we were really besieged, it would be fatal to us if we were caught
without a supply of water."

Fortunately there were three or four empty casks. These were taken down
to the river and thoroughly washed, filled with water and rolled up to
the house. While this was being done, Wilfrid, with the Grimstones and
the natives, had gone out and driven in all the animals from the
clearings, and as soon as they were brought in Wilfrid with the natives
started to drive them to Mr. Mitford's. Mr. Atherton went over to his
hut, and before night his two natives had brought over all his most
valuable property, and the next day his hut was completely stripped. The
Allens only brought over a few things. Their furniture was rough and
heavy, and they contented themselves by carrying it out into the forest
near and hiding it in the undergrowth. Wilfrid returned to The Glade in
the evening. He said that many of the settlers had come in, and were
erecting shelters of hides, canvas, and wood near Mr. Mitford's house.
The men were all being enrolled. Officers had been appointed, and the
natives were likely to meet with a stout resistance if they ventured on
hostilities.

Mrs. Mitford had sent an earnest invitation to Mrs. Renshaw and Marion
to take up their abode with her. Mr. Mitford had approved of their
intention of holding the house. He knew its capabilities of defence and
thought that, unless taken by surprise, they would be able to hold it.

"It will be a sort of outpost for the colony," he said, "and will add to
our safety; for if any strong body of natives were approaching they
would probably attack you before coming on here. The instant we hear
that you are attacked we will come up to aid you. We shall be able to
muster in all something like fifty mounted men--a strength sufficient to
meet any number of natives likely to assemble in these parts."




CHAPTER XIII.

THE ATTACK ON THE GLADE.


For three days things went on quietly at The Glade. The first thing in
the morning Jack went out with two of the dogs and scouted in the bush.
As soon as he returned with the news that he could find no signs of
natives the household broke up. The Allens went through the bush to
their clearing and continued their work of felling trees. Mr. Atherton
sauntered off with his two dogs into the forest in search of plants.
Wilfrid and the Grimstones pursued their work of digging and planting in
the upper part of the glade. Jack and the two dogs were on watch round
the house. Mr. Renshaw worked at his Maori vocabulary, and his wife and
daughter carried on the business of the house.

At night two of the dogs were chained up outside; the other two slept in
the kitchen, while Jack was allowed to sleep up in the loft. At daybreak
on the fourth day the party were awoke by a growl from one of the dogs
outside. Each of the occupants of the house had been allotted his post,
and in a minute all were standing, rifle in hand, at the windows they
were to guard. Mr. Atherton opened the front door and went out,
followed by Jack. It was just getting light enough to make out objects
in the clearing. Everything seemed quiet.

"What is it, Ponto?" he said to his dog, who was standing with his eyes
fixed upon the bush to the right, his ears pricked and his hair
bristling. "What do you hear, old fellow?"

The dog uttered another deep growl. A moment later there was a loud
yell. A number of dark figures leapt from the edge of the bush and ran
towards the house. They had made out Mr. Atherton's figure, and knew
that their hope of surprising the place was at an end. Mr. Atherton
levelled his rifle and fired, and one of the natives fell dead. Then
stooping he quietly unfastened the dog's chain from his collar, telling
Jack to do the same to the other dog, "Come into the house, sir," he
ordered; "it's no use your being here to be shot."

His shot had been answered by a dozen rifles, but fired in haste as the
men were running none of the bullets struck him. Four shots were fired
almost simultaneously from the windows looking towards the bush, and
three more natives fell. This proof of the accuracy of the defenders'
shooting staggered the Maoris and they paused for a moment, then, moved
by the exhortations of their chief, they again rushed forward. The whole
of the defenders were now gathered at the windows facing them, and seven
shots were fired in quick succession. Three natives fell dead. Four
others were wounded, two so seriously that they had to be carried off by
their comrades, who at once ran back to the bush, and from its edge
opened a straggling fire against the house. The shutters that had been
thrown open at the two windows were at once closed.

"This is what I call beating them off handsomely," Mr. Atherton said.
"Now you see the advantage, Wilfrid, of the pains you have taken to
learn to shoot straight. There have been only eleven shots fired, and I
fancy there are at least ten casualties among them. I call that a very
pretty average for young hands."

"What will they do next, do you think?" Mr. Renshaw asked.

"They will not try another open attack, I fancy. We may expect them to
try to work round us. Jack, do you go to the other side of the house and
keep a sharp look-out on the bush there. Wilfrid, you take post at the
windows we fired from, and peep out from time to time through the
loopholes in the shutters. Between times keep yourself out of the line
of fire. The betting is a thousand to one against a bullet coming
through, still there is no use in running any risk if it can be avoided.
Jim Allen, you and I will take up our place at the back of the house;
they may try to work up among the crops. In fact, I expect that is the
course they will take unless they have had enough of it already. Bob
Grimstone, you keep watch at one of the front windows. I don't think
there is much chance of attack from that side, but it is as well to keep
a look-out. Some of them may attempt to cross to the opposite bush,
keeping down by the river. The other three guns will be in reserve."

"Don't you think they are likely to go away now that they have suffered
so much loss?" Mrs. Renshaw asked.

"No, I cannot say I think so, Mrs. Renshaw. The Maoris, from what I have
heard, always try to get revenge for the death of a kinsman or
fellow-tribesman. Of course it depends how many of them there are. I
should judge that there were about thirty showed themselves. If that is
all there are of them I should say they would not attack again at
present. They must know by our firing that there are seven or eight of
us here. But I should not rely altogether even upon that, for the
natives regard themselves as fully a match, man for man, with the
whites, and in their fights with our troops we were often greatly
superior in numbers. Still, it is one thing to defend a strong pah and
another to attack resolute men snugly sheltered behind bullet-proof
logs. They may try again, but if there are any more of their people
within reasonable distance I fancy they will be more likely to send for
them and keep a sharp watch round us until they come up. Now I will go
to my post."

For a quarter of an hour the two watchers at the back of the house saw
no signs of life. Then Mr. Atherton said: "There is a movement among
that corn, Jim. Do you see, there--just in a line with that big tree at
the other end of the clearing? It is moving in several places. Call your
brother and young Grimstone to this side of the house, and do you all
take steady aim at these moving patches. I will fire first. I think I
can pretty well mark the spot where one of the fellows is making his way
down. If I hit him the others are likely enough to start up. Then will
be your time for taking a shot at them."

As soon as the others were in position and ready Mr. Atherton fired.
There was a yell. A dark figure sprang up, stood for an instant, and
then fell back. Almost at the same instant half a dozen others leapt to
their feet and dashed away. Three rifles were fired. Two of the natives
fell, but one almost immediately rose again and followed the others.

"You ought to have done better than that at a hundred yards," Mr.
Atherton said. "You two lads ought to have practised a little more
steadily than you have. It was Grimstone brought down that man. His
rifle went off a second before yours, and the man was falling when you
fired. The great thing in firing at natives is that every shot should
tell. It is the certainty of the thing that scares them. If they hear
bullets singing about with only occasionally a man dropping they gain
confidence, but a slow, steady fire with every shot telling shakes their
nerves, and makes them very careful of showing themselves."

Half an hour later Jack reported he could see figures moving in the bush
on his side, and soon afterwards a fire was opened on the hut from that
direction.

"They have worked round the end of the clearing," Mr. Atherton said.
"Now it is our turn to begin to fire. We have let them have their own
way long enough, and there is plenty of light now, and I think we shall
soon be able to put a stop to this game. Now, Wilfrid, do you with one
of the Grimstones take up your place at the loopholes at that end of the
house, and I with the other will take up mine on the right. Keep a sharp
look-out, and do not throw away a shot if you can help it. As we have
not answered their fire they have probably got careless, and are sure
to expose themselves as they stand up to fire. Now, Bob," he went on, as
he took his place at the loophole, "I will take the first who shows
himself. I do not think you would miss, but I am sure that I shall not,
and it is important not to make a mistake the first time."

Half a minute later a native showed his head and shoulders over a bush
as he rose to fire. Before he could raise his gun to his shoulder he
fell with a bullet through his head from Mr. Atherton's unerring rifle.
That gentleman quietly reloaded.

"You had better take the next again, sir," Bob Grimstone said quietly.
"I do not suppose I should miss, but I might do. I do not reckon on
hitting a small mark more than eight out of twelve times."

It was nearly four minutes before another native showed himself.

"I think, sir, there is one standing behind that big tree twenty yards
in the bush. I thought I saw something move behind it just now."

"I will watch it, Bob," Mr. Atherton said, raising his rifle to his
shoulder and looking along it through the loophole.

Two minutes passed, and then a head and shoulder appeared from behind
the tree. Instantaneously Mr. Atherton's rifle cracked, and the native
fell forward, his gun going off as he did so.

"We need not stand here any longer," Mr. Atherton said quietly, "there
will be no more shooting from that side for some time."

Mr. Atherton went to the other end of the house.

"How are you getting on, Wilfrid?"

"We have had three shots. I fired twice and Bill once. I think I missed
once altogether, the other time the native went down. Bill wounded his
man--hit him in the shoulder, I think. They haven't fired since."

"Then you can put down your guns for the present. Mrs. Renshaw has just
told me that breakfast is ready." Mrs. Renshaw and Marion had indeed
gone quietly about the work of preparing breakfast for their defenders.

"So you are a non-combatant this morning, Miss Marion?" Mr. Atherton
said as he took his place with the rest of the party, with the exception
of the Grimstones, who were placed on the watch, at the table.

"Yes," the girl replied; "if I thought there were any danger of the
natives fighting their way into the house, of course I should do my best
to help defend it; but I do not think that there is the least fear of
such a thing, so I am quite content to leave it to you. It does not seem
to me that a woman has any business to fight unless absolutely driven to
do so in defence of her life. If the natives really do come on and get
up close to the house, I think that I ought to help to keep them out;
but it is a dreadful thing to have to shoot anyone--at least it seems so
to me."

"It is not a pleasant thing when considered in cold blood; but when men
go out of their way to take one's life, I do not feel the slightest
compunction myself in taking theirs. These natives have no cause of
complaint whatever against us. They have assembled and attacked the
settlement in a treacherous manner, and without the slightest warning of
their intentions. Their intention is to slay man, woman, and child
without mercy, and I therefore regard them as human tigers, and no more
deserving of pity. At the same time I can quite enter into your
feelings, and think you are perfectly right not to take any active part
in the affair unless we are pressed by the savages. Then, of course, you
would be not only justified, but it would, I think, be your absolute
duty to do your best to defend the place."

"Do you think that it is all over now, Mr. Atherton?" Mrs. Renshaw
asked. "We regard you as our commanding officer, for you are the only
one here who ever saw a shot fired in anger before our voyage out, and
your experience is invaluable to us now. Indeed, both my husband and
myself feel that it is to your suggestion that we should put up the
strong shutters and doors that we owe the lives of our children; for had
it not been for that, those men who came first might have taken the
house when they found them alone in it."

"I cannot accept your thanks for that, Mrs. Renshaw. It may be if this
goes on that the shutters will be found of the greatest use, and indeed
they have probably stopped a good many balls from coming in and so saved
some of our lives, but on the first occasion Wilfrid and your daughter
owed their lives to their being prepared and armed, while the natives
relying upon surprising them had left their guns in the wood. The
shutters were not closed until after they made off, and had they not
been there those four natives could never have passed across the
clearing and reached the house under the fire of two cool and steady
marksmen.

"As to your first question, whether it is all over, it depends entirely
upon whether the party who attacked us are the main force of the
natives. If so, I do not think they will renew the attack at present.
They have suffered terribly, and know now that it is almost certain
death for any of them to show themselves within range of our guns. They
have lost fourteen or fifteen men, and I do not think they numbered
above forty at first. But if they are only a detached party, and a main
body of the tribe is making an attack elsewhere, perhaps upon the
settlers at Mitford's, a messenger will by this time have been
despatched to them, and we may all have a much more serious attack to
encounter to-night or to-morrow morning.

"I have no idea what tribe these fellows belong to; but there are few of
the tribes that cannot put five hundred men on the field, while some can
put five times that number. So, you see, we are entirely in the dark. Of
course things will depend a good deal as to how the main body, if there
is a main body, has fared. If they have been, as I feel sure they will
be if they venture to attack Mitford's place, roughly handled, the whole
body may return home. The natives have proved themselves through the war
admirable in defence; but they have by no means distinguished themselves
in the attack, and have not, so far as I remember, succeeded in a single
instance in capturing a position stoutly held.

"It is one thing to fight behind strong palisades, defended by interior
works skilfully laid out, and quite another to advance across the open
to assault a defended position; and my belief is that, if they are
beaten at Mitford's as well as here, we shall hear no more of them at
present. Mind, I do not say that after this I think that it would be
safe to continue to live in an outlying station like this until matters
have again settled down in this part of the island. No doubt, as soon as
the news is known at Napier and Wellington a force will be sent here, or
perhaps to Poverty Bay, which is only some twenty miles higher up the
coast, and is, I think, from what I hear, better suited as the base of
operations than this river would be.

"This force will no doubt make an expedition inland to punish the tribes
connected with this affair, for it is of course most important to let
the natives on this side of the island see that they cannot attack our
settlements with impunity. After that is done it will no doubt be safe
to recommence operations here; but at present I fear you will find it
necessary for a time to abandon the place, and either take up your abode
at the Mitfords', or go down to Napier or Wellington. This will, of
course, involve the loss of the crops you have planted, and possibly of
your house; but as you have saved all your animals, the loss will be
comparatively small and easily repaired."

"Whether large or small," Mr. Renshaw said, "we cannot hesitate over it.
It will, as you say, be out of the question to live here exposed at any
instant to attack, and never knowing what the day or night may bring
forth. The house has not cost above a hundred pounds, and we must put up
with that loss. We are fortunately in a very much better position than
most settlers in having a reserve to fall back upon, so there will be
no hesitation on my part in taking this step. The furniture is worth
more than the hut, but I suppose that must go too."

"Not necessarily, Mr. Renshaw. We cannot get away now; for although we
can defend ourselves well enough here, we could not make our way down
through the woods to Mitford's without great risks. They are accustomed
to bush fighting, and as they are still five to one against us, it would
be a very serious matter to try to fight our way down. I think that we
have no choice but to remain where we are until we are either relieved
or are perfectly certain that they have made off. In either case we
should then have ample time to make our preparations for retiring, and
could strip the house and send everything down in boats or
bullock-carts, and might even get up the potatoes, and cut such of the
crops as are ripe, or nearly ripe, and send them down also.

"The corps that has been got up among the settlers will be sure to join
in the expedition for the punishment of these scoundrels, and indeed it
is most probable that all able-bodied settlers will be called out. In
any case I think I shall chip in, as the Americans say. I shall have an
opportunity of going into little explored tracts in the interior and
adding to my collections; and to tell you the truth, I feel anxious to
take a part in revenging the massacres that these treacherous natives
have committed. Unless they get a sharp lesson the lives of the settlers
in all the outlying districts in the colony will be unsafe."

Wilfrid glanced at Mr. Atherton and nodded, to intimate that he should
be willing and ready to join in such an expedition; but he thought it
better to say nothing at present. The two Allens, however, said at once
that if obliged to quit their clearing they would join one of the
irregular corps for the defence of the colony.

"We shall get pay and rations," James Allen said, "and that will keep us
going until things get settled; and I should certainly like to lend a
hand in punishing these treacherous natives. It is horrible to think of
their stealing upon defenceless people at night and murdering men,
women, and children. It is as bad as the Sepoy mutiny. And now the
troops have been almost all withdrawn, and the colony has been left to
shift for itself, I think it is no more than the duty of all who have no
special ties to aid in the defence against these fanatical Hau-Haus."

"Very well, then, James; we will march side by side, and when you see me
give out you shall carry me."

"That would be worse than fighting the natives," James Allen replied
with a laugh. "If I were you, Mr. Atherton, I should engage ten natives
to accompany me with poles and a hammock."

"That is not a bad idea," Mr. Atherton said calmly, "and possibly I may
adopt it; but in that case I shall have to go as a free lance, for I
fear it would scarcely be conducive to military discipline to see one of
an armed band carried along in the ranks."

None would have thought from the cheerful tone of the conversation that
the party were beleaguered by a bloodthirsty enemy. But Mr. Atherton
purposely gave a lively tone to the conversation to keep up their
spirits. He felt, as he expressed himself, perfectly confident that
they could beat off any attack in the daytime; but he knew that if their
assailants were largely reinforced, and the place attacked by night, the
position would be a very serious one. Even then he was convinced that
the assailants would not be able to force their way in, but they would
assuredly try to fire the house; and although the solid logs would be
difficult to ignite, the match-board covering and the roof would both
readily catch fire. However, his hope lay in preventing the natives from
firing it, as it would be difficult in the extreme to bring up burning
branches under the fire of the defenders.

"It is a pity now, Wilfrid," he said to the lad after breakfast was
over, and they had taken up their place together at one of the windows,
"that we did not dissuade your father from putting that boarding to the
logs. You did not intend to have it at first, and now it adds a good
deal to our danger. The only thing I am afraid of is fire, though I own
I do not think that there is much chance of any of them getting up with
a lighted brand under the fire of our rifles. If the natives were not in
the bush at the present moment, I should say that the best thing by far
to do would be for all hands to set to work to tear off the
match-boarding, and to get down the whole of the covering of the roof;
they could not well hurt us then."

"Shall we do it at once, Mr. Atherton?"

"They would shoot us down at their leisure, Wilfrid. No, that is not to
be thought of. We must run the risk of fire now; and I feel, as I said,
pretty confident that we are too good shots to let men with fire get up
to the walls. I wish we could send down word to Mitford's that we are
besieged here. Of course, if he is attacked himself he could not help
us, but if he is not I know he would come out at once with a strong
party to our relief. I wonder whether that native boy of yours would try
to carry a message. None of us would have a chance of getting through,
but these fellows can crawl like snakes; and by working up through the
crops to the upper end of the glade he might gain the bush unobserved."

"I will ask him anyhow," Wilfrid said.

Jack on being promised a new suit of clothes and a present in money if
he would carry a note through to Mr. Mitford, at once undertook the
mission. Mr. Renshaw, on being told what was arranged, wrote a note
stating their position, and Jack, divesting himself of the greater
portion of his clothes, crept out through the door at the back of the
house, and lying down at once began to crawl through the potato patch
towards the upper end of the clearing. From the loopholes of the windows
the defenders watched his progress. Although aware of his approximate
position they were soon unable to trace his progress.

"He will do," Mr. Atherton said; "if we, knowing the line he is taking,
can see nothing move you may be sure that those fellows in the bush will
not be able to make him out. Well, we shall have assistance in four or
five hours if Mitford's hands are free."

A quarter of an hour passed and all was still quiet.

"He is in the bush by this time," Mr. Atherton said; "now we can take
matters easy."

An occasional shot was fired from the bush, and shouts raised which Mr.
Renshaw interpreted to be threats of death and extermination.

"They say that all the white men are to be driven into the sea; not one
left alive on the island."

"Well, we shall see about that," Mr. Atherton said; "they are not
getting on very fast at present."

As time went on it was only the occasional crack of a gun, accompanied
by the thud of a bullet against the logs, that told that the natives
were still present. They now never raised themselves to fire, but kept
well back in the bush, shifting their position after each shot. Time
passed somewhat slowly inside, until about four o'clock in the afternoon
the sharp crack of a rifle was heard.

"There is Mitford!" Mr. Atherton exclaimed, "that is not a Maori gun.
Man the loopholes again! we must prevent any of the fellows on the other
side crossing to the assistance of their friends, and give it to the
others hot if they are driven out of the shelter of the bush."

The rifle shot was speedily followed by others, and then came the deeper
report of the Maori muskets. English shouts were heard, mingled with the
yells of the natives. The fight was evidently sharp, for Jack had led
the relieving party down upon the rear of the natives engaged in
attacking the house from the left. The latter began to fall back, and
the defenders of the house presently caught sight of their figures as
they flitted from tree to tree.

"We must be careful," Mr. Atherton said, "for every bullet that misses
might strike our friends. I think that you had all better reserve your
fire till they make a break across the open. You can see by the
direction they are firing, and the sound of the rifles, Mitford is
closing in on both their flanks so as to drive them out of the bush. I
can trust myself not to miss, and will pick them off when I see any of
them sheltering on this side of the trees. There is a fellow there just
going to fire." His rifle cracked, and the native fell among the bushes.

This completed the scare of the natives, who had already been much
disconcerted at the unexpected attack made upon them. The leader of the
party shouted an order, and the whole of them made a sudden rush through
the bush down towards the river. Three or four fell beneath the rifles
of the whites on that side of them, but the rest burst through and
continued their course down to the river, and, plunging in, swam to the
other side without once giving the defenders of the house the chance of
a shot at them.

"Now we can sally out," Mr. Renshaw said.

The door was opened, and they hurried out just as a party of whites
issued from the wood and ran towards the house.

"Thanks for your speedy aid, Mitford!" Mr. Renshaw exclaimed as he wrung
the hand of the settler.

"You are heartily welcome, my dear sir. A party was just setting off to
see how you had fared when your native boy arrived with your note, and
it was a great relief to us to know that you had repulsed their attack
with such heavy loss to them; I am afraid that several others have not
fared so well. Two or three native servants have come in this morning
with news of massacres of whole families, they themselves having
managed to make their escape in the confusion; and I am afraid that we
shall hear of other similar cases. Your gallant defence of your station
has been of most important service to us all. There is no doubt that it
saved us from an attack at our place. There were a good many natives in
the bush round us this morning yelling and shouting, but they did not
venture on an attack; and I have no doubt they were waiting for the
arrival of the party told off to attack your place on their way. Do you
think that there are any of them still in the bush on the other side?"

"I should hardly think so," Mr. Atherton replied. "There must have been
fully half of them in the party you attacked, and the others are hardly
likely to have waited after they saw you had defeated their friends; but
I think that it would be as well for a party of us to ascertain, for if
they are still lurking there some of us may be shot down as we move
about outside the house. We are quite strong enough now to venture upon
such a step."

"I think so too," Mr. Mitford agreed. "There are ten men beside myself
and your party. We had better leave four here, the rest of us will make
a dash down to the edge of the bush and then skirmish through it."

Mr. Renshaw, the two Grimstones, and one of the settlers were appointed
to remain behind to guard the house, and the rest of the party then
dashed at full speed across the glade to the edge of the bush. Not a
shot was fired as they did so, and having once gained the shelter they
advanced through the trees. After pushing forward for half a mile they
came to the conclusion that the Maoris had retreated. Many signs were
seen of their presence. There were marks of blood here and there, and
the bushes were broken down where they had carried off those who had
fallen killed or wounded in the bush; the bodies of those who had fallen
in the open still remained there.

Upon the return of the party Mr. Mitford was informed of the
determination that had been arrived at. This met with his cordial
approval.

"I think, Mrs. Renshaw," he said, "that the best plan will be for you
and your husband and daughter to return at once with me. I will leave a
couple of my men here with your garrison, and in the morning will come
out with a strong party and three or four bullock drays to fetch in all
your portable property. They can make another trip for your potatoes and
such of your crops as can be got in. After the sharp lesson the natives
have had here they are not likely to venture in this neighbourhood again
for some time; and, indeed, now that they find that the whole settlement
is aroused and on its guard I doubt whether we shall hear anything more
of them at present, and possibly you may, when matters settle down
again, find your house just as it is left."

Mr. and Mrs. Renshaw agreed to the plan proposed, and in a quarter of an
hour the party started, leaving The Glade under the protection of the
garrison of eight men. The night passed off quietly, and at daybreak all
set to work to get up the potatoes and to cut down the crops that were
sufficiently ripe. At nine o'clock the waggons arrived, and the
furniture and stores were loaded up. By twelve o'clock next day the work
in the fields was completed and the waggons again loaded. The house was
then locked up and the whole party proceeded to the settlement. They
found on their arrival that a strong stockade had been erected near Mr.
Mitford's house, and that rough tents and huts had been got up there for
the use of the settlers; the whole of the animals belonging to the
various farmers on the river had been driven into the stockaded
inclosure behind the house.

Here it was decided that all the settlers should remain until help
arrived from Wellington or Napier, but in the meantime five and twenty
of the younger men were enrolled as a volunteer corps; a Mr. Purcell,
who had served for some years as an officer in the army, being
unanimously elected in command. There still remained enough men capable
of bearing arms to defend the stockade in case of attack during the
absence of the corps. Wilfrid and the two Allens were among those who
enrolled themselves. Mr. Atherton said that he fully intended to
accompany them if possible upon any expedition they might make, but that
he should not become a member of the corps.

"You may have long marches," he said, "through the bush, or may, when
the reinforcements arrive, be called upon to make an expedition into the
hill country to punish the natives. I could not possibly keep up with
you during a heavy day's marching, so I shall, like Hal of the Wynd,
fight for my own sword. I daresay I shall be there or there about when
there is any work to be done, but I must get there in my own way and in
my own time. I shall have my own commissariat train. I have had my share
of living on next to nothing, and have become somewhat of an epicure,
and I know that the sort of rations you are likely to get on a march
through a rough country would not suit my constitution. But, as I said
before, I hope if there is any fighting done to be somewhere in the
neighbourhood."




CHAPTER XIV.

FRESH TROUBLES.


Three days later a small steamer arrived from Napier, bringing a reply
to the urgent request that had been sent for the despatch of a body of
constabulary for the protection of the settlers. Sir Donald M'Lean, the
superintendent of the province, sent word that this was impossible at
present, as the alarming news had just been received that the notorious
chief Te Kooti, who had been captured and imprisoned at Chatham Island,
had effected his escape with the whole of the natives confined in the
island, had captured a schooner, and had, it was reported, landed near
Poverty Bay.

"It is probable," Sir Donald wrote, "that it is the news of his landing
which has excited one of the tribes of the neighbourhood to make an
attack upon you. A strong expedition will be fitted out, and we shall
doubtless have to supply a contingent. I can only advise you to organize
yourselves into a militia, and to stand for the present on the
defensive. As soon as operations begin from Poverty Bay you will be
relieved from all further danger, as the attention of the hostile
tribes will be fully occupied in that direction."

Hitherto the province of Hawke Bay had been comparatively free from the
troubles that had so long disturbed Auckland, Taranaki, and the northern
portion of Wellington. Only one rising had taken place, and this had
been so promptly crushed that the tribes had since remained perfectly
quiet. In October 1866 a party of a hundred fighting men had suddenly
appeared near the Meanee village. Their principal chief had hitherto
borne a very high character, and had been employed by the government to
improve the mail road between Napier and Taupo. Colonel Whitmore, who
was in command of the colonial forces--for the regular troops had now
been almost entirely withdrawn from the island--had just returned from
punishing some natives who had committed massacres higher up on the
coast, and was, fortunately, at Napier; he at once despatched a company
of colonists under Major Fraser, with thirty or forty friendly natives,
to hold the natives in check.

Just as they had been sent off the news came that another and more
numerous body of Hau-Haus were advancing by way of Petane to attack
Napier. Major Fraser and his company were sent off to check these, while
Colonel Whitmore, with one hundred and eighty of the colonial militia,
marched against the smaller force, and M'Lean, with two hundred friendly
natives, established himself in the rear of the village they occupied.
An officer was sent in to summon them to surrender, and as no answer
could be obtained from them the colonists advanced. The enemy fought
with resolution, but the colonists opened a cross-fire upon them, and
after fighting for some time the natives were driven out of their cover.
Finding no mode of retreat open to them they laid down their arms, some
who endeavoured to escape being cut off and also captured. The native
loss was twenty-three killed and twenty-eight wounded--many of them
mortally; forty-four taken prisoners. Only two or three of the whole
party escaped. Upon the same day Major Fraser's little force attacked
the other party of Hau-Haus, killed their chief with twelve of his
followers, and put the rest to flight.

From that time peace had been unbroken in Hawke Bay; but there had been
several outbreaks at Poverty Bay, which lay just north of the province,
and massacres at Opotaki and other places further to the north, and
almost continuous fighting in the northern districts of Wellington. The
news of Te Kooti's escape and of his landing at Poverty Bay naturally
caused considerable alarm among the settlers, but hopes were entertained
that the whites at Poverty Bay, aided by the friendly natives, would be
able to recapture Te Kooti and his followers before they could do any
harm.

The next day a small vessel came down from Poverty Bay with a message
from Major Biggs, who commanded at that settlement, to ask for
assistance if it could be spared him. A consultation was held and it was
agreed that the best plan of defending their own settlement was to aid
in the recapture of Te Kooti, and that the little force of twenty men
should at once go up to aid the settlers under Major Biggs. Accordingly
they embarked without delay, Mr. Atherton making a separate bargain
with the captain of the craft for his passage, and the next morning they
arrived in Poverty Bay.

Major Biggs had, as soon as the news reached him, raised a force of a
hundred Europeans and natives. He found Te Kooti's party, a hundred and
ninety strong, holding a very strong position near the sea, and sent a
chief to them to say that if they would lay down their arms he would try
and smooth matters over with government. A defiant answer was returned,
and Major Biggs gave orders to commence the attack. But the natives, who
formed the bulk of his force, refused to move, saying that the Hau-Haus
were too numerous and too strongly posted. Under these circumstances an
attack was impossible, for had the little body of whites been defeated
the whole settlement would have been open to ravage and destruction.

During the night Te Kooti and his men started for the interior, carrying
with them all the stores and provisions they had taken from the
schooner. When it was found they had escaped Major Biggs ordered Mr.
Skipwith to follow with some friendly natives, pressing on their rear
until he ascertained their line of retreat, when he was to cut across
country and join the main body who were to march to Paparatu, a point
which Te Kooti would in all probability pass in his retreat. The arrival
of the coaster with the little band from the Mohaka River was hailed
with joy by the Poverty Bay settlers. They arrived just in time to join
Major Biggs, and raised his force to fifty white men, who, with thirty
Maoris, started for Paparatu and arrived there on the following
morning. The Europeans were commanded by Captains Westrupp and Wilson.
In the afternoon Mr. Atherton arrived with a party of four natives whom
he had hired to carry his store of provisions, ammunition, and baggage.

"So I am in plenty of time," he said when he came up. "I could not bring
myself to undertake a night march, but as those fellows have got to lug
all the stores they have captured over the mountains I felt pretty sure
that I should be in time."

"I am glad you are in time, Mr. Atherton," Wilfrid said. "The assistance
of your rifle is not to be despised. The sooner the natives come now the
better, for we have only brought four days' provisions in our
haversacks. I hear that a reserve force is to come up in two days with
rations and ammunition; but one can never calculate upon these natives."

The camp was pitched in a hollow to avoid the observation of the enemy,
but it was proposed to fight at a point a mile distant, in a position
commanding the spur of the hill, up which the natives must advance after
crossing a ford on the Arai River. Four days passed and there was no
news of the convoy with the provisions, and the supply in camp was
almost exhausted. That evening Major Biggs started to bring up the
supplies with all speed, as otherwise starvation would compel the force
to retreat. The same day Mr. Skipwith had arrived with news that Te
Kooti was undoubtedly marching on Paparatu, but was making slow progress
owing to the heavy loads his men were carrying.

The fifth day passed slowly. The men being altogether without food Mr.
Atherton divided his small stock of provisions and wine among them, and
then taking his rifle went out among the hills, accompanied by two of
his natives. Late in the evening he returned, the natives bearing an old
boar which he had shot. This was a great piece of luck, for the island
contained no wild animals fit for eating, and the boar had probably
escaped from some settler's farm or native clearing when young and taken
to the woods. It was at once cut up and divided among the hungry men.
The next day Mr. Skipwith, with two natives, went out to reconnoitre,
and soon returned at full speed, saying that the natives were crossing
the river. Captain Wilson, with twenty men, took possession of a hill on
the right flank--an almost impregnable position, while Captain Westrupp,
with the main body, marched to support the picket which had been placed
on the position which it had been arranged they should occupy; but
before they could arrive there Te Kooti, with overwhelming numbers, had
driven the picket from the ground and occupied the hill.

"This is going to be an awkward business, Wilfrid," Mr. Atherton said.
"We have only thirty rounds of ammunition a man, and we have had nothing
to eat for the last forty-eight hours but a mouthful of meat. We have
suffered the natives to take the position we fixed on. We are
outnumbered three to one, and there are not ten men in the force who
have had any experience in fighting. If the worst comes to the worst,
Wilfrid, do you and the Allens take to the bush. Mind, it is no use
trying to run from the natives. If the men were all like our party the
other day we could keep these fellows at bay for any time; but they are
most of them young hands. They will blaze away their ammunition, and may
be seized with a panic. I shall keep close to you, and if things do go
badly we will keep together and sell our lives dearly."

"We must retake that place if possible, lads," Captain Westrupp said at
that moment. "Spread out in skirmishing order and take advantage of any
cover you can find, but let there be no stopping or lagging behind. We
must all get up there together and carry it with a rush."

There was no time lost. The men spread out, and with a cheer started up
the hill. They were received with a storm of bullets; but the natives
from their eminence fired high, and without suffering loss they reached
a small ridge near the summit, about twelve yards from the enemy, and
separated from them by a narrow gully. Here they threw themselves down,
and their fire at once caused the Hau-Haus to throw themselves down
among the bushes on their side of the gully. The position of the
colonists was a fairly strong one. On their right flank the ground was
open, with a few scattered bushes here and there, but the left was
covered by a steep ravine, which fell away sharply. The Hau-Haus kept up
a heavy fire, to which the colonists replied but seldom, their officer
continually impressing upon them the necessity for husbanding their
ammunition. Mr. Atherton had arrived breathless in the rear of the
party, and had thrown himself down by Wilfrid's side, the two Allens
lying next in order. For some minutes Mr. Atherton did not speak, but
lay panting heavily.

"This is a nice preparation for shooting," he said presently. "However,
I suppose my hand will steady itself after a bit. I have seen a fellow's
head show under that bush there twice, and each time his bullet came
just over our heads. I will have a talk with him as soon as I get my
wind back again. This is not a bad position after all, providing they
don't work round to our right."

Ten minutes later Wilfrid, who had his eyes fixed on a bush from which
four or five shots had been fired, waiting for another puff of smoke to
indicate the exact position in which the man was lying, heard the sharp
report of Mr. Atherton's rifle.

"You have got him, I suppose?"

"Of course, lad; there is one less of the yelling rascals to deal with.
I wish we could see Biggs and his people coming along the road behind.
If we could get a square meal all round and a good supply of ammunition
I think we should be able to turn the tables on these fellows. The men
are all fighting very steadily, and are husbanding their ammunition
better than I expected to see them do."

The fight went on for four hours. Then a number of the Hau-Haus leapt to
their feet and made a rush towards the settlers, but the volley they
received proved too much for them. Several fell, and the rest bolted
back into shelter. Again and again this was tried, but each time without
success. At three in the afternoon some men were seen coming along the
road behind towards the deserted camp. Captain Westrupp at once wrote a
note and sent it down by one of the men, but to the disappointment of
the settlers he soon returned with the news that the new arrivals
consisted of only nine Maoris carrying rations. They had opened the rum
bottles on their way, and most of them were excessively drunk. Two of
them who were sufficiently sober came up to help in the defence, but one
was shot dead almost immediately, one of the settlers being killed and
many wounded more or less severely.

Just as evening was coming on the force was startled by hearing a
Hau-Hau bugle in their rear, and presently made out a party of the enemy
moving towards the camp through the broken ground on the left rear. It
was now evident that either the enemy must be driven off the hill in
front or the party must retire to a position on the hill behind the
camp. Captain Westrupp determined to try the former alternative first.
Calling upon the men to follow him, he dashed across the gully and up on
to the crest held by the Maoris. The men followed him gallantly; but the
fire from the Maoris hidden among the bushes was so heavy that they were
forced to fall back again, seven more of their number being wounded.
They now retired in good order down to the camp and up the hill behind
it, and were here joined by Captain Wilson with his twenty men.

It was now determined to throw up a sort of intrenchment and hold this
position until help came; but the settlers, who had hitherto fought
well, were dispirited by their want of success, and by the non-arrival
of the reinforcement, and were weak with their long fast. As soon as it
became dark they began to steal off and to make their way back towards
their homes, and in an hour half the force had retreated. The officers
held a council. It was evident the position could not long be held, and
that want of food and ammunition would compel a retreat in the morning.
It was therefore decided to fall back under cover of the darkness.

The chief of the friendly natives, who had behaved admirably through the
fight, offered to guide the party across the country. The officers were
obliged to leave their horses, and the party of forty half-starved men,
of whom a fourth were wounded--two so severely that it was necessary to
carry them--set out. It was a terrible march for the exhausted men, up
the bed of a mountain creek, often waist-deep in water, and over steep
fern-covered hills, until, just as day was breaking, they reached an
out-station. Here they managed to get two sheep, and just as they had
cooked and eaten these Colonel Whitmore, the commander of the colonial
forces, arrived with thirty volunteers from Napier, who had reached the
bay on the previous day.

He at once paraded the men, thanked them for their behaviour on the
previous day, and warned them to be ready to start in pursuit of the
enemy at once. One of the settlers, acting as spokesman for the rest,
stepped forward, pointed out that they had been fighting without
intermission for twenty-four hours, that they had been for the last
forty-eight hours almost without food, and that it was impossible for
them to set out on a fresh march until they had taken some rest. Colonel
Whitmore was a hot-tempered man, and expressed himself so strongly that
he caused deep offence among the settlers.

They remained firm in their determination not to move until the
following day, and the forward movement was therefore necessarily
abandoned. On the day previous to the fight Lieutenant Gascoigne had
been despatched by Major Biggs to Te Wairoa with despatches for Mr.
Deighton, who commanded at that station, warning him to muster all the
force at his disposal, and prepare to intercept Te Kooti at the Waihau
Lakes in case he should fight his way through Captain Westrupp's force.
Orders were sent to the friendly Mahia tribe to muster, and a hundred
men at once assembled; but as they had only four rounds of ammunition
apiece, nothing could be done until three casks of ammunition were
obtained from some of the Wairoa chiefs.

Two days were lost in consequence, and this gave time to Te Kooti; they
then started--eighteen European volunteers and eighty natives; a larger
body of natives preparing to follow as soon as possible. After being met
by messengers with several contradictory orders, they arrived at Waihau,
and just before dark Te Kooti was seen crossing the hills towards them
with his whole force. Captain Richardson determined to fight them in the
position he occupied, but the native chief, with sixty of his followers,
at once bolted. Captain Richardson was therefore obliged with the
remainder to fall back, and, unfortunately, in the retreat one of the
natives fell; his gun went off and, bursting, injured his hand. This was
considered by the natives a most unfortunate omen, and dissipated what
little courage remained in the Wairoa tribe.

At eleven o'clock next morning the enemy advanced and the action began;
but the Wairoa chief, with fifty of his men, again bolted at the first
shot. Captain Richardson with the remainder held the position until four
in the afternoon, when the ammunition being almost exhausted, he retired
quietly. The force fell back to Wairoa, where it was reorganized and
increased to two hundred men. In the meantime Colonel Whitmore had been
toiling on over a terrible country in Te Kooti's rear, having with him
in all about two hundred men, as he had been joined by Major Fraser with
fifty of the No. 1 Division Armed Constabulary.

But when they arrived at the boundary of the Poverty Bay district the
settlers belonging to it, who had not recovered from their indignation
at Colonel Whitmore's unfortunate remarks, refused to go further, saying
that the militia regulations only obliged them to defend their own
district. Colonel Whitmore, therefore, with a hundred and thirty men, of
whom but a handful were whites, marched on to attack two hundred and
twenty Hau-Haus posted in a very strong position in the gorge of a
river. Twelve of the little party from the Mohaka River still remained
with the column, one had been killed, four wounded, while five had
remained behind completely knocked up by the fatigues they had
encountered.

Mr. Atherton had not gone on with them after the arrival of Colonel
Whitmore. "It is of no use, my dear lad," he said to Wilfrid. "I know
Colonel Whitmore well by reputation, and the way in which he blew us up
this morning because, exhausted as we were, we were physically unable to
set out for a fresh march, confirms what I have heard of him. He is a
most gallant officer, and is capable of undergoing the greatest fatigue
and hardships, and is of opinion that everyone else is as tireless and
energetic as he is. He will drive you along over mountain, through
rivers, with food or without food, until you come up to Te Kooti, and
then he will fight, regardless of odds or position, or anything else. It
isn't the fighting I object to; but I never could keep up with the
column on such a march. It would be a physical impossibility, and I am
not going to attempt it. I shall take a week to recover from my fatigues
of last night, and shall go down and stay quietly at the settlement. If
Te Kooti takes it into his head to come down there, I shall have great
pleasure in doing my best towards putting a stop to his rampaging over
the country. If he does not come down I shall, as they say, await
developments, and shall find plenty to do in the way of botanizing."

Mr. Atherton had not exaggerated the fatigues and hardships that the
force would be called upon to undergo, and they were worn out and
exhausted when at last they came upon the track of the Hau-Haus. When
they were resting for a short halt Captain Carr, late R.A., who was with
the force as a volunteer, reconnoitred a short distance ahead and found
the enemy's fire still burning. The news infused fresh life into the
tired and hungry men, and they again went forward. The track led up the
bed of a river which ran between low, steep cliffs impossible to climb,
and the men had to advance in single file. After marching for some
distance they reached a bend in the river, where a narrow track ran
through a break in the cliff and up the spur of a hill. The advanced
guard, consisting of six men, led by Captain Carr, were within fifty
yards of this point, when a heavy fire was opened upon them. Just where
they were the river bank was sufficiently low to enable them to climb it
and take cover in the thick scrub above, whence they replied vigorously
to the Hau-Haus, who were within a few yards of them. In the meantime
the enemy had opened fire from the base of the hill at the river bend
upon the main body, who, standing in single file in the river, were
unable to reply or to scale the steep bank and take covering in the
scrub. Colonel Whitmore and Captain Tuke tried to lead the men up to
charge, but this could only be done in single file, and the fire of the
enemy was so hot that those who attempted this were killed or wounded,
Captain Tuke being severely hurt. The rest found what shelter they could
among the boulders in the river bed, and remained here until the
advanced guard fell back, hard pressed by the enemy, and reported the
death of Captain Carr and Mr. Canning, another volunteer.

The natives now pressed through the scrub above the cliffs to cut off
the retreat. The friendly natives, who were well behind, were ordered to
scale the cliff then, and hold the enemy in check. One of them was
wounded, and the rest hastily retreated down the river; the constabulary
and settlers, altogether about fifty strong, fell back to an island
about half a mile to the rear, and here calmly awaited the attack of the
enemy. These, however, drew off without disturbing them, disheartened by
the fact that Te Kooti had received a wound in the foot, and the troops
then retired. Only a few of the strongest men reached the camp that
night; the rest, knocked up by want of food and fatigue, lay down in
the pouring rain and did not get in until the following morning.

The result of this fight was most unfortunate. Even Colonel Whitmore saw
that, with the force at his disposal, nothing could be done against Te
Kooti, who was daily becoming more powerful, and was being joined by the
tribes in the vicinity. He believed that Te Kooti would carry out his
expressed intention of marching north to Waikato, and after collecting
there all the tribes of the island, march against Auckland. Thinking,
therefore, that Poverty Bay was not likely to be disturbed, he left the
settlement and went round by sea to Auckland to confer with government
as to the steps to be taken to raise a force capable of coping with what
appeared to be the greatest danger that had as yet threatened the
island. Te Kooti did not, however, move north, but remained in his camp
near the scene of the fight from the 8th of August to the 28th of
October, sending messages all over the island with the news of the
defeat he had inflicted upon the whites, and proclaiming himself the
saviour of the Maori people.

From the position he occupied, about equidistant from the settlements at
Wairoa and Poverty Bay, he was able to attack either by a sudden march
of two or three days, and yet there was no great uneasiness among the
settlers. The force that had operated against Te Kooti had been
disbanded, the Napier volunteers had returned, the constabulary
withdrawn, and the party of settlers from the Mohaka river had returned
home. Wilfrid Renshaw had not gone with them. He had been shot through
the leg in the fight in the river, and had been carried down to the
settlement. Here Mr. Atherton, who was lodging in one of the settler's
houses, had taken charge of him and nursed him assiduously.

Unfortunately the effect of the wound was aggravated by the exhaustion
caused by fatigue and insufficient food, and for weeks the lad lay in a
state of prostration, wasted by a low fever which at one time seemed as
if it would carry him off. It was not until the middle of October that
matters took a turn, and he began slowly to mend. For the last three
weeks his mother had been by his bedside. For some time Mr. Atherton in
his letters had made light of the wound, but when the lad's condition
became very serious he had written to Mrs. Renshaw saying that he
thought she had better come herself to help in the nursing, as Wilfrid
was now suffering from a sharp attack of fever brought on by his
hardships.

Mrs. Renshaw, on her arrival, was dismayed at the state in which she
found her son. She agreed, however, that it was best not to alarm them
in her letters home. The events on the attack of the settlement had much
shaken Mr. Renshaw, and he was, when she left him, in a nervous and
excited state. She saw that Wilfrid would need every moment of her time,
and that were her husband to come it would probably do him harm and
seriously interfere with her own usefulness. He was, when she left, on
the point of returning to the farm with Marion, as there had been no
further renewal of troubles in the settlement.

It had been arranged that the two Allens should take up their residence
at The Glade, and that four men belonging to a small force that had
been raised among the friendly natives should also be stationed there.
This would, it was thought, render it quite safe against sudden attack.
Mr. Renshaw was looking eagerly forward to being at home again, and his
wife thought that the necessity of superintending the operations at the
farm would soothe his nerves and restore him to health. She, therefore,
in her letters made the best of things, although admitting that Wilfrid
was prostrated by a sort of low fever, and needed care and nursing.

At the end of another fortnight Wilfrid was enabled to sit up and take
an interest in what was going on around him. The house was the property
of a settler named Sampson, and had been erected by a predecessor of the
farmer; it was a good deal larger than he required, though its capacity
was now taxed to the utmost by the addition of three lodgers to his
family.

"How are things going on, Mr. Atherton?" Wilfrid asked one day when his
mother was not present.

"People here seem to think that they are going on very well, Wilfrid."

"But you do not think so, Mr. Atherton?" the lad asked, struck by the
dry tone in which the answer was given.

"No, Wilfrid, I cannot say I do. It seems to me that the people here are
living in a fool's paradise; and as for Major Biggs I regard him as an
obstinate fool."

"How is that?" Wilfrid asked, amused at his friend's vehemence.

"Well, Wilfrid, as far as I can see there is nothing in the world to
prevent Te Kooti coming down and cutting all our throats whenever he
pleases."

"You don't say so, Mr. Atherton!"

"I do, indeed; it is known that he has sent messages down to the natives
here to remain apparently loyal, get what arms they can from the whites,
and prepare to join him. I will say for Biggs that he has repeatedly
represented the unprotected position of the bay to government, and has
obtained permission to place an officer and nine men on pay as scouts to
watch the roads leading to the settlements. Gascoigne is in charge of
them. There are two roads by which the natives can come; the one a short
one, and this is being watched, the other a much longer and more
difficult one, and this is entirely open to them if they choose to use
it.

"The fact is, Biggs relies on the fact that Colonel Lambert is at
Wairoa, and is collecting a force of 600 men there to attack Te Kooti,
and he believes that he shall get information from him and from some
spies he has in the neighbourhood of Te Kooti's camp long before any
movement is actually made. Of course he may do so, but I consider it is
a very risky thing to trust the safety of the whole settlement to
chance. He ought to station four mounted men on both tracks as near as
he dare to Te Kooti's camp. In that case we should be sure to get news
in plenty of time to put all the able-bodied men under arms before the
enemy could reach the settlement."

"Have they got a stockade built?"

"No, it was proposed at a meeting of some of the settlers that this
should be done, but Biggs assured them it was altogether unnecessary. I
do not know how it is, Wilfrid, but take us all together we Englishmen
have fully a fair share of common sense. I have observed over and over
again that in the majority of cases when an Englishman reaches a certain
rank in official life, he seems to become an obstinate blockhead. I have
often wondered over it, but cannot account for it. Anyhow the state of
affairs here is an excellent example of this. I suppose in the whole
settlement there is not, with the exception of the man in authority, a
single person who does not perceive that the situation is a dangerous
one, and that no possible precaution should be omitted; and yet the man
who is responsible for the safety of all throws cold water on every
proposal, and snubs those who are willing to give up time and labour in
order to ensure the safety of the place.

"I suppose he considers that the tone he adopts shows him to be a man
superior to those around him, possessing alike far greater knowledge of
the situation, and a total freedom from the cowardly fears of his
neighbours. Well, well, I hope that events will justify his course, but
I own that I sleep with my rifle and revolvers loaded and ready to hand.
Mind, I do not say that the chances may not be ten to one against Te
Kooti's making a raid down here; but I say if they were a hundred to one
it would be the height of folly not to take every possible precaution to
ensure the safety of all here."

"Don't you think, Mr. Atherton, that it would be better for mother to go
home? I am getting all right now, and can get on very well without
her."

"I am sure your mother would not leave you at present, Wilfrid, and I
don't think you will be fit to be moved for another fortnight yet. Te
Kooti has done nothing for two months, and may not move for as much
more. Your mother knows nothing of what I have told you, and I should
not make her anxious or uncomfortable by giving her even a hint that I
considered there is danger in the air."




CHAPTER XV.

THE MASSACRE AT POVERTY BAY.


Another week passed and Wilfrid was able to walk about the house and
garden. A ship was going down in three days, and Mr. Atherton had
arranged with the captain to put into the Mohaka river and land them
there. No change had taken place in the situation. There had been a
meeting of the settlers and friendly natives. The latter had offered to
erect the stockades for a small fort if the settlers would do the
earthworks. This they had agreed to, but the project was abandoned, as
Major Biggs again declared it to be wholly unnecessary. Some of the
settlers, dissatisfied with the result, formed themselves into a
vigilance committee to watch the ford of the Waipaoa River.

This was done for several nights, but Major Biggs again interfered, and
told them he considered the act to be absurd. The vigilance committee,
therefore, ceased to act. A few nights later Te Kooti's people crossed
at this very ford. Late in the evening of the 4th of November Mr.
Atherton was about to go up to bed when he heard a growl from a dog
chained up outside. He listened, and made out the voices of men talking
in low tones. The lower windows had shutters, and these Mr. Atherton had
with some difficulty persuaded Mr. Sampson, who was himself incredulous
as to the possibility of attack, to have fastened up of a night. Mr.
Atherton ran upstairs, knocked at the doors of Wilfrid's and the
settler's rooms, and told them to get up instantly, as something was
wrong. Then he threw up his window.

"Who is there?" he asked.

"Open the door," a native replied, "we have a message for you."

"You can give me the message here. I shall not come down until I know
who you are."

"The message is that you are to open the door and come out. Te Kooti
wants you."

Mr. Atherton could just make out the figure of the speaker in the
darkness.

"That is my answer," he said as he fired.

A fierce yell from twenty throats rose in the air, and there was a rush
towards the door, while two or three shots were fired at the window. Mr.
Atherton had, however, stepped back the instant he had discharged his
rifle, and now, leaning out, discharged the chambers of his revolver in
quick succession among the natives gathered round the door. Shrieks and
yells arose from them, and they bounded away into the darkness, and
again several musket-shots were fired at the window. By this time the
settler and Wilfrid had both joined Mr. Atherton, having leapt from
their beds, seized their arms, and ran out when the first shot was
fired.

"It is Te Kooti's men," Mr. Atherton said. "They have come at last. I
expect there will be a few minutes before they attack again. You had
better throw on some clothes at once and tell the ladies to dress
instantly. We may have to leave the house and try to escape across
country."

Wilfrid and the settler gave the messages, and then returned.

"How many of them do you think there are?" Wilfrid asked.

"About twenty of them, I should say, and we could rely upon beating them
off; but no doubt there are parties told off to the attack of all the
outlying settlers, and when the others have done their work they may
gather here."

"Where are they now?" Wilfrid asked as he gazed into the darkness.

"I fancy they are behind that shed over there. They are no doubt
arranging their plan of attack. I expect they will try fire. There! do
you see? That is the flash of a match."

A minute later a light was seen to rise behind the shed, and there was
the sound of breaking wood. The light grew brighter and brighter.

"They will be coming soon," Mr. Atherton said. "Do not throw away a
shot. The shingles on this roof are as dry as tinder, and if a burning
brand falls on them the place will be in a blaze in five minutes. Now!"
As he spoke a number of natives, each carrying a flaming brand, appeared
from behind the wood shed. The three rifles cracked out, and as many
natives fell. The farmer began to reload his rifle, while Mr. Atherton
and Wilfrid handed theirs to Mrs. Renshaw, who at that moment joined
them, and opened fire with their revolvers. Only two of Wilfrid's shots
told, but Mr. Atherton's aim was as steady as when firing at a mark. Two
of the natives fell, and four others, throwing down their brands, ran
back wounded to the shelter of the wood shed. Their companions, after a
moment's hesitation, followed their example. There were now but six
unwounded men out of the twenty who attacked the house.

"There is one of them off for assistance!" Wilfrid exclaimed as he
caught sight of a figure running at full speed from the shed. In another
moment he was lost in the darkness.

"Now is the time for us to make our escape," Mr. Atherton said, turning
from the window. "We have succeeded so far, but there may be three times
as many next time, and we must be off. We will get out by a window at
the back of the house and try and make our way across country to the
Mahia tribe. We shall be safe there."

"But Wilfrid cannot walk a hundred yards," Mrs. Renshaw said.

"Then we must carry him," Mr. Atherton replied cheerfully. "He is no
great weight, and we can make a litter when we get far enough away. Take
a loaf of bread, Mrs. Sampson, a bottle or two of water, and a flask of
spirits. You will find one full on my table. Please hurry up, for there
is not a moment to lose. I will stay here to the last moment and fire an
occasional shot at the shed to let them know that we are still here."

As the course Mr. Atherton advised was evidently the best, the others
followed his instructions without discussion, and three minutes later
stepped out from the back window into the garden. Mr. Atherton had been
told that they were ready, and after firing a last shot from the window
and reloading his rifle joined them. Mrs. Sampson had a small basket on
one arm, and her child, who was ten years old, grasping her hand. Mrs.
Renshaw had taken charge of Wilfrid's rifle, and had offered him her
arm, but the excitement had given him his strength for the moment, and
he declared himself perfectly capable of walking without assistance.

"Go on as quietly as you can," Mr. Atherton said. "I will keep a bit
behind first. They may possibly have put somebody on the watch on this
side of the house, although I do not expect they have. They have been
taken too much by surprise themselves."

The little party went on quietly and noiselessly about three hundred
yards, and then Mr. Atherton joined them. Wilfrid was breathing heavily
and leaning against a tree.

"Now jump up upon my back, Wilfrid," Mr. Atherton said; "your weight
will not make much difference to me one way or the other. That is right;
lend him a hand, Sampson, and get him on to my shoulders. It will be
easier for both of us, for I have got no hips for his knees to catch
hold of. That is right. Now if you will take my gun we shall get along
merrily."

They walked fast for about two miles. Wilfrid several times offered to
get down, saying that he could walk again for a bit, but Mr. Atherton
would not hear of it. At the end of two miles they reached the spot
where the country was covered with low scrub.

"We are pretty safe now," Mr. Atherton said, "we can turn off from the
track and take to the scrub for shelter, and there will be little chance
of their finding us. Now, Wilfrid, I will set you down for a bit. This
is fine exercise for me, and if I were to carry you a few miles every
day I should fine down wonderfully. Ah! the others have come up;" he
broke off as the sound of a native yell sounded on the still night air,
and looking round they saw a bright light rising in the direction from
which they had come.

"They have set fire to the house," the settler said; "there goes the
result of six years' work. However, I need not grumble over that, now
that we have saved our lives."

"We had best be moving on," Mr. Atherton said. "No doubt they opened a
heavy fire before they set fire to the shingles with their brands, but
the fact that we did not return their fire must have roused their
suspicions, and by this time they must have woke up to the fact that we
have escaped. They will hunt about for a bit, no doubt, round the house,
and may send a few men some distance along the tracks, but they will
know there is very little chance of catching us until daylight. Now,
Sampson, let us join arms, your right and my left. Wilfrid can sit on
them and put his arms round our necks. We carry our rifles on our other
shoulders, and that will balance matters. That is right. Now on we go
again." With occasional halts they went on for another four hours. By
this time the ladies and the little girl were completely exhausted from
stumbling over roots and low shrubs in the darkness and the two men also
were thoroughly fatigued; for the night was extremely hot, and the work
of carrying Wilfrid in addition to the weight of their ammunition, told
upon them. They had long since lost the path, but knew by the stars that
they were keeping in the right direction.

"Now we will have a few hours' halt," Mr. Atherton said. "We may
consider ourselves as perfectly safe from pursuit, though we shall have
to be cautious, for there may be parties of these scoundrels wandering
about the country. We may hope that a good many of the settlers heard
the firing and made off in time, but I fear we shall hear some sad
stories of this night's work."

Lying down the whole party were in a few minutes fast asleep. Wilfrid
had offered to keep watch, saying that he had done no walking and could
very well keep awake, but Mr. Atherton said that nothing would be gained
by it. "You could see nothing, and you would hear nothing until a party
of natives were quite close, and unless they happened by sheer accident
to stumble upon us they could not find us; besides, though you have done
no absolute walking, the exertion of sitting up and holding on has been
quite as much for you in your weak state as carrying you has been for
us. No, we had best all take a rest so as to start fresh in the
morning."

Mr. Atherton woke as soon as daylight broke, and rousing himself,
cautiously looked round. There was nothing in sight, and he decided to
let the party sleep for a few hours longer. It was eight o'clock and the
sun was high before the others opened their eyes.

Mr. Atherton was standing up. "There is a horseman coming across the
plain," he said; "no doubt he is following the track; by the line he is
taking he will pass a little to our right. I will go out to hear the
news. I think you had better remain where you are, he may be followed."

Mr. Atherton walked through the bush until he reached the track just as
the rider came along.

"Ah! you have escaped, Mr. Atherton; I am glad of that. Have all your
party got away?"

"Yes, thank God!" Mr. Atherton said; "and now what is the news?"

"I cannot tell all," the settler said, "but there has been a terrible
massacre. I was pressing wool for Dodd and Peppard, whose station, you
know, lies some distance from any other. I rode up there just as day was
breaking and went to the wool shed. Nobody came, and I heard the dog
barking angrily; so I went up to the house to see what was the matter. I
found the back-door open and the two men lying dead inside, evidently
killed by natives. I then galloped off to the Mission Station and warned
them there, and then to the stations of Hawthorne and Strong. I found
they had already been warned, and were just about to start; then I rode
to Matawhero to warn the settlers there. Most of them had already made
off. I passed Bigg's house on the way; there were a number of natives
round it evidently in possession, and as I passed Mann's house I saw
him and his wife and child lying outside dead. How many more have been
murdered I do not know. It is an awful business. Where are your
friends?"

"They are in the scrub there. We are making our way to the Mahia."

"Most of the settlers who have escaped have made for the old redoubt at
Taranganui, and I fancy they will be able to beat off any attack made on
them. I am riding for Wairoa. I cannot think what they can have been
about there to let Te Kooti slip away without sending us a warning. He
must have come by the long road and been six or seven days on the
march."

"Have you seen any natives since you started?" Mr. Atherton asked.

"I saw a party of about twenty of them moving across the country about
two miles back. They were scattered about in the bush, and were, I
expect, in search of fugitives. They were moving across the line I was
going, and were half a mile away; but when they come on this path they
may follow it, knowing that those who made their escape and did not go
to the redoubt would be likely to try to reach the Mahia country."

"Thank you! then we will be moving on without delay," Mr. Atherton said;
and the settler at once rode on with his message to the force at Wairoa.
As soon as Mr. Atherton joined the party and told them what he had heard
they again set out. After walking for four miles they reached the edge
of the plain, and the path here ascended a sharp rise and entered a
narrow defile.

Wilfrid, who was sitting on Mr. Atherton's shoulders, looked back for
the twentieth time as they ascended the rise. "They are following us!"
he exclaimed. "There are a party of fifteen or twenty coming along the
path at a run. They are not more than a mile behind at the outside."

"Then I will put you down, Wilfrid," Mr. Atherton said quietly; "that
will give me time to cool down a bit before they arrive. They could not
have come up at a better place for us. It is no use our trying to hide,
they would track us directly. We must make a stand at the mouth of this
defile. It is a good place for defence, and if it were not for this
rascally bush we should have no difficulty in keeping them off. Even as
it is I think we can make a good fight of it. Now, Mrs. Renshaw, will
you and Mrs. Sampson and the child go a little way in and sit down. I
have no doubt we shall be able to beat these fellows back, and if we do
that we can hope to make the rest of our journey without further
molestation."

"Could I be of any use in loading the rifles, Mr. Atherton?"

"I think not, Mrs. Renshaw; it may be a long skirmish, and we shall have
plenty of time to load; and your being here with us and running the risk
of being hit would make us nervous. I think, if you do not mind, we
would much rather know that you are in safety behind us."

"Very well," Mrs. Renshaw said quietly; "I will do what you think best.
We shall be praying for your success until it is over."

Mr. Atherton looked round after the two ladies had gone on. "There is a
bush with a wide ledge of flat ground behind it," he said, pointing to a
little clump of underwood some ten feet above them on the side of the
ravine. "I think, with my help, you can manage to clamber up there,
Wilfrid. Lying down you will be able to fire under the bush and be in
fair shelter. Mr. Sampson and I will hold the path here. If they make a
rush you will be able to help us with your revolver. Up there you will
have the advantage of being able to see movements among the bushes
better than we shall, and can fire down at them; and if it comes to a
hand-to-hand fight will be of more use there than down here."

Wilfrid at once assented. "Stand on my hand and I will hoist you up."
Mr. Atherton raised Wilfrid until he was able to get on to the ledge of
rock behind the bushes. Wilfrid laid himself down there, and with his
knife cut off a few of the lower twigs so that he was able to get a good
view ahead. "Keep yourself well back, lad, and do not raise your head
except to fire. Do you see anything of them?"

"Yes, they are not more than a quarter of a mile away and are scattering
among the bushes. No doubt they caught sight of us as we came up here,
and think it possible we may intend to defend the defile."

"I will let them know we are here;" and Mr. Atherton made two steps
forward to the mouth of the defile. Almost at the same instant he
levelled his rifle and fired, and one of the Maoris threw up his arms
and fell back, the rest throwing themselves down instantaneously among
the bushes, whence a moment later two or three shots were fired. But Mr.
Atherton had stepped back, and he and the settler, lying down on the
ground, worked themselves forward until by raising their heads they
could command a view of the slope up to the mouth of the ravine.

For a time all was silent. Presently Wilfrid's rifle spoke out, and a
yell testified to the fact that the quick aim he had taken at a dark
figure stealing among the bushes had been true. It was followed quickly
by a general discharge of their pieces by the natives. The bullets
rattled thickly against the rock, and cut leaves from the bushes behind
which Wilfrid was lying, but he had drawn himself back a foot or two the
moment he fired, and the balls passed harmlessly over him. Not so the
missive despatched by Mr. Atherton in the direction of a puff of smoke
from a bush some forty yards away, for the figure behind it remained
still and immovable while the fray went on. For upwards of an hour the
exchange of shots continued, and then the assailants were joined by
fifteen other natives, who had been attracted to the spot by the sound
of firing.

"I expect they will pluck up their courage to make a rush now, Wilfrid,"
Mr. Atherton said. "If it had not been for these new arrivals I think
they would have soon drawn off, for we must have diminished their
numbers very considerably. Don't fire again for a bit; we had best keep
our rifles loaded so as to be ready for them when they pluck up courage
to charge. When they do, be sure you keep your revolver as a reserve for
the critical moment."

Five minutes later a tremendous yell rose in the air. The natives leaped
to their feet from behind the bushes, fired their guns at their hidden
foes, and then, tomahawk in hand, rushed forward.

Three shots rang out almost simultaneously from the mouth of the defile
and three of the natives dropped dead in their tracks. The rest rushed
forward in a body. Mr. Atherton and the settler leapt to their feet, and
the former opened fire with his Colt's revolver when the leading natives
were within ten yards of him. His aim was as accurate as when directed
against a mark stuck against a tree, and a man fell at each shot. But
the natives' blood was thoroughly up now, and in spite of the slaughter
they rushed forward. There was no room in the narrow defile for two men
to swing their rifles, and Mr. Atherton and the settler stepped forward
to meet the foe with their clubbed rifles in their hands. Two crashing
blows were delivered with effect, but before the settler could again
raise his weapon three Maoris were upon him. One tomahawk struck him in
the shoulder and the rifle fell from his hands. Another raised his
tomahawk to brain him, but fell with a bullet from Wilfrid's revolver
through his chest; but the third native brought his weapon down with
terrible force upon the settler's head, and he fell in a heap upon the
ground. The tremendous strength of Mr. Atherton stood him in good stead
now. The first blow he had dealt had smashed the stock of his rifle, but
he whirled the iron barrel like a light twig round his head, dealing
blows that broke down the defence of the natives as if their tomahawks
had been straw, and beating them down as a flail would level a wheat
stalk. Those in front of him recoiled from a strength which seemed to
them superhuman, while whenever one tried to attack him in the rear
Wilfrid's revolver came into play with fatal accuracy. At last, with a
cry of terror, the surviving natives turned and retreated at the top of
their speed.

"Hot work, Wilfrid," Mr. Atherton said as he lowered his terrible weapon
and wiped the streaming perspiration from his face; "but we have given
the rascals such a lesson that we can journey on at our leisure. This is
a bad business of poor Sampson's. I will help you down first and then we
will see to him. Recharge your revolver, lad," he went on as Wilfrid
stood beside him; "some of these fellows may not be dead, and may play
us an ugly trick if we are not on the look-out."

Wilfrid reloaded his pistol, and Mr. Atherton then stooped over the
fallen man.

"He is desperately hurt," he said, "but he breathes. Hand me that
revolver, Wilfrid, and run back and tell Mrs. Sampson her husband is
hurt."

Wilfrid had gone but a yard or two when he met his mother and the
settler's wife, who, hearing the cessation of the firing, were no longer
able to restrain their anxiety as to what was going forward. Mrs.
Renshaw gave a cry of joy at seeing Wilfrid walking towards her.

"Is it all over, my boy, and are you unhurt?"

"It is all over, mother, and they have bolted. I have not had a scratch,
for I have been lying down all the time in shelter; but I am sorry to
say, Mrs. Sampson, that your husband is badly hurt.

"No; he is not dead," he continued in answer to the agonized expression
of inquiry in her eyes. "He has been stunned by the blow of a tomahawk,
and is, as I said, badly hurt; but he will, I trust, get over it."

Mrs. Sampson ran forward and threw herself on her knees by her husband's
side, uttering a suppressed cry as she saw the terrible wound on his
head.

"Wilfrid, there is a bottle of water untouched in the basket," Mr.
Atherton said.

"I will fetch it," Mrs. Renshaw broke in, hurrying away. "No, Milly,"
she said, as the child who had been ordered to stay with the basket came
running to meet her. "You must stay here for a little while. The natives
have all run away, but your father is hurt and for a time must be kept
quite quiet. I will send Wilfrid to sit with you."

Taking a bottle of water and a cloth which covered the basket, Mrs.
Renshaw hurried back. "Wilfrid," she said, "do you go and sit with the
little one. You can do no good here, and look completely worn out. You
will be making yourself useful if you amuse Milly and keep her away from
here for the present."

Mr. Atherton poured a little of the water into the cover of his flask,
added some brandy, and poured a little of it between the wounded man's
lips. Then he saturated the cloth with water and handed it to Mrs.
Sampson, who wiped the blood from her husband's head and face, then
poured a little water from the bottle on to his forehead. Some more
brandy and water was poured between his lips and he uttered a faint
groan.

"I will examine his wound now, Mrs. Sampson. I have had some experience
that way in my journeyings about the world." Kneeling down he
carefully examined the wound.

[Illustration: MR. ATHERTON KEEPS THE MOUTH OF THE DEFILE

_Page 294_]

"It is better than I hoped, Mrs. Sampson," he said cheerfully. "I expect
the thick hat turned the tomahawk a little and it fell obliquely on the
side of the head. It has carried away a goodish slice of the hair and
scalp, and has starred the bone, but it has not crushed it in, and I
think that with care and nursing your husband will not be long before he
gets over it. You had better fold up that cloth again, pour some fresh
water over it, and then bandage it over the wound with a slip of stuff
torn off from the bottom of your petticoat. You had better tear off two
slips, for his arm will require bandaging too. I will look to that as
soon as you have done his head. No," he went on, when he saw that Mrs.
Sampson's trembling fingers were quite incapable of fixing the bandage
properly, "I do not think that will do. If you will allow me I will do
it for you."

He took Mrs. Sampson's place, and while Mrs. Renshaw supported the
settler's head he wound the bandage tightly and skilfully round it. "Now
for his arm," he said, and drawing out his knife cut the sleeve up the
shoulder. "It has narrowly missed the artery," he went on; "but though
it is an ugly-looking gash it is not serious. I wish we had some more
water, but as we haven't we must do without it, and I daresay we shall
come across a stream soon." When the operation of bandaging was complete
Mr. Atherton stood up.

"What are we to do next?" Mrs. Renshaw asked him.

"We must cut a couple of saplings and make a litter," he said. "If one
of you ladies can spare a petticoat, please take it off while I cut the
poles." He went away and returned in a few minutes with two poles ten or
eleven feet long.

"Here is the petticoat," Mrs. Renshaw said. The settler's wife was too
absorbed by her grief and anxiety to hear Mr. Atherton's request. "What
is to be done with it?"

"In the first place it must be taken out of that band, or whatever you
call it," Mr. Atherton replied, "and then split right down. Here is my
knife."

When the garment had been operated upon there remained a length of
strong calico nearly three feet wide and three yards long. "That will do
well," he said. "Now we have to fasten this to the poles. How would you
do that? It is more in your way than mine."

"I should roll it twice round the pole and then sew it, if I had a
needle and thread. If I had not that I should make holes in every six
inches and tie it with string; but unfortunately we have no string
either."

"I think we can manage that," Mr. Atherton said; and he walked rapidly
away and returned in a few minutes with some long stalks that looked
like coarse grass.

"This is the very thing, Mrs. Renshaw," he said; "this is what is called
New Zealand flax, and I have no doubt it will be strong enough for our
purpose." In a quarter of an hour the litter was completed. Just as it
was finished Mrs. Sampson uttered an exclamation of joy, and turning
round, they saw that her husband had opened his eyes and was looking
round in a dazed, bewildered way.

"It is all right, Sampson," Mr. Atherton said cheerfully; "we have
thrashed the natives handsomely; they have bolted, and there is no fear
of their coming back again. You have had a clip on the head with a
tomahawk, but I do not think that you will be much the worse for it at
the end of a week or two. We have just been manufacturing a litter for
you, and now we will lift you on to it. Now, ladies, I will take him by
the shoulders; will you take him by the feet, Mrs. Renshaw; and do you,
Mrs. Sampson, support his head? That is the way. Now, I will just roll
up my coat and put it under his head, and then I think he will do; lay
our rifles beside him. Now, I will take the two handles at his head; do
you each take one at his feet. The weight will not be great, and you can
change about when your arms get tired. Yes, I see what you are thinking
about, Mrs. Renshaw. We must go along bit by bit. We will carry our
patient here for half a mile, then I will come back and fetch Wilfrid up
to that point, then we will go on again, and so on."

"All the hard work falls on you, Mr. Atherton; it is too bad," Mrs.
Renshaw said with grateful tears in her eyes.

"It will do me a world of good, Mrs. Renshaw. I must have lost over a
stone weight since yesterday. If this sort of thing were to go on for a
few weeks I should get into fighting condition. Now, are you both ready?
Lift."

In a short time they came to the point where Wilfrid and the child were
sitting down together. Wilfrid had been impressing upon her that her
father was hurt, and that she must be very good and quiet, and walk
along quietly by her mother's side. So when they came along she got up
and approached them with a subdued and awe-struck air. She took the hand
her mother held out to her.

"Is father very bad, mother?" she asked in a low tone.

"He is better than he was, dear, and we must hope and pray that he will
soon be well again; but at present you must not speak to him. He must be
kept very quiet and not allowed to talk."

"You sit where you are, Wilfrid, I will come back for you in half an
hour," Mr. Atherton said.

"That you won't Mr. Atherton," Wilfrid said, getting up. "I have had a
long rest, for, except for pulling my trigger and loading, I have done
nothing since the first short walk when we started this morning. All
this excitement has done me a lot of good, and I feel as if I could walk
ever so far."

"Well, put your rifle in the litter, then," Mr. Atherton said; "its
weight will make no difference to us, and it will make a lot of
difference to you; when you are tired say so."

Wilfrid struggled on resolutely, refusing to stop until they reached a
stream two miles from the starting-place. Here they rested for an hour.
The settler's wounds were washed and rebandaged, the others partook of a
meal of bread and water, and they then continued the journey. At the end
of another half-mile Wilfrid was obliged to own that his strength could
hold out no longer, but he refused positively to accept Mr. Atherton's
proposal to come back for him.

"I will not hear of it, Mr. Atherton," he said. "From what Mrs. Sampson
says it is another eight or ten miles to the Mahia country. There is not
the least fear of any of the Hau-Haus following on our track. The best
way by far is this: I will go a hundred yards into the bush and lie
down. You push on. It will be dark before you finish your journey as it
is, you would not get there till to-morrow morning if you had to keep on
coming back for me; besides, you would never get on with the litter
after it is dark. Leave me a piece of bread, a bottle of water, my rifle
and revolver, and I shall be as comfortable among the bushes there as if
I were in bed. In the morning you can send out a party of Mahias to
fetch me in. If you break down a small bough here by the side of the
way, that will be quite sufficient to tell the natives where they are to
turn off from the path to look for me."

"Well, I really think that is the best plan, Wilfrid. There is, as you
say, no real danger in your stopping here alone. It would be a long job
coming back for you every time we halt, and it is of importance to get
Mr. Sampson laid down and quiet as soon as possible."

Mrs. Renshaw did not like leaving Wilfrid alone; but she saw that she
could be of no real assistance to him, and her aid was absolutely
required to carry the wounded man. She therefore offered no objections
to the proposal.

"Don't look downcast, mother," Wilfrid said as he kissed her. "The
weather is fine, and there is no hardship whatever in a night in the
bush, especially after what we went through when we were following Te
Kooti."

Wilfrid made his way a hundred yards back into the bush and then threw
himself down under a tree-fern, and in a very few minutes he was sound
asleep. The next time he awoke all was dark around him.

"I must have slept a good many hours," he said. "I feel precious
hungry." He ate a hunch of bread, took a drink of water from the bottle,
and soon fell asleep again. The morning was breaking when he again woke.
A quarter of an hour later he heard voices, and cocking his rifle and
lying down full length on the grass, waited. In another minute to his
joy he heard Mr. Atherton's voice shouting, "Where are you, Wilfrid?
Where have you hidden yourself?"




CHAPTER XVI.

THE PURSUIT OF TE KOOTI.


He leapt to his feet and ran forward. Mr. Atherton was approaching,
accompanied by a party of six natives.

"Why, Mr. Atherton, I was not expecting you for another three hours."

"Well, you see, Wilfrid, your mother was anxious about you. She did not
say anything, for she is a plucky woman, and not given to complaining or
grumbling, still I could see she was anxious, so I arranged with these
natives to be ready to start three hours before daybreak, so as to get
here just as the sun was rising."

"It is awfully kind of you, Atherton; but surely the natives would have
been able to find me without your troubling yourself to come all this
way again. I am sure you must have been dreadfully tired after all your
work yesterday."

"Well, Wilfrid, perhaps I was just a little bit anxious myself about
you, and should have fussed and fidgeted until you got back, so you see
the quickest way to satisfy myself was to come with the natives."

"What time did you get in last night?"

"About eight o'clock in the evening, I think. We were all pretty well
knocked up, but the two ladies bore it bravely, so you see I had no
excuse for grumbling."

"I am sure you would not have grumbled anyhow," Wilfrid laughed; "but I
know that when one is carrying anyone the weight at the head is more
than double the weight at the feet, and that was divided between them,
while you had the heavy end all to yourself. And how is Sampson?"

"I think he will do, Wilfrid. The natives took him in hand as soon as he
got there, and put leaf poultices to his wounds. They are very good at
that sort of thing; and so they ought to be, considering they have been
breaking each other's heads almost from the days of Adam. Well, let us
be off. We have brought the stretcher with us, and shall get you back in
no time."

Wilfrid lay down upon the stretcher. Four of the natives lifted it and
went off at a light swinging pace. From time to time changes were made,
the other two natives taking their share. Had they been alone the
natives could have made the ten miles' journey under the two hours, but
Mr. Atherton reduced their speed directly after they had started.

"I have not been killed by the Hau-Haus, Wilfrid, and I do not mean to
let myself be killed by friendly natives. Three miles an hour is my
pace, and except in a case of extreme emergency I never exceed it. I
have no wish, when I get back to England, to be exhibited as a walking
skeleton.

"It is good to hear you laugh again, lad," he went on as Wilfrid burst
into a shout of laughter, to the astonishment of his four bearers. "I
was afraid six weeks back that we should never hear you laugh again."

"Oh, Mr. Atherton!" Wilfrid exclaimed a few minutes later, "were there
any other of the Poverty Bay people there last night; and have you heard
what took place and whether many besides those we know of have lost
their lives?"

"Yes; I am sorry to say it has been a very bad business. As we heard
from Butters, Dodd and Reppart were killed, and there is no doubt that
their shepherd was also slaughtered. Major Biggs, poor fellow, has paid
for his obstinacy and over-confidence with his life. His wife, baby, and
servant were also killed. The news of this was brought by a boy employed
in the house, who escaped by the back-door and hid in a flax bush.
Captain Wilson, his wife, and children have all been murdered. M'Culloch
was killed with his wife and baby; the little boy managed to escape, and
got to the redoubt at Taranganui. Cadel was also killed. Fortunately
Firmin heard the sound of musketry in the night. He started at dawn to
see what was the matter. He met a native, who told him that the
Hau-Haus were massacring the whites, and at once rode off and warned
Wylie, Stevenson, Benson, Hawthorne, and Strong; and these all escaped
with their families, and with Major Westrupp got safely to the Mahia
people.

"The boy who escaped from Major Biggs's house reached Bloomfields, and
all the women and children there managed to escape. How they did it
heaven only knows, for the Hau-Haus were all round. That is all we know
at present, and we hope that the rest of the settlers of the outlying
stations round Matawhero succeeded in getting into Taranganui. Whether
the Hau-Haus will be satisfied with the slaughter they have effected, or
will try to penetrate further into the settlement or attack Taranganui,
remains to be seen. Of course the people who have escaped are, like
ourselves, ignorant of everything that has taken place except what
happened in their immediate neighbourhood. I should fancy, myself, that
however widespread the massacre may have been, the Hau-Haus started last
night on their way back. They would know that as soon as the news
reached Wairoa the force there will be on the move to cut them off."

"Do you think they will succeed?" Wilfrid asked eagerly.

"I do not think so, Wilfrid. If Colonel Whitmore were there they would
have routed out Te Kooti long ago, but Colonel Lambert seems a man of a
different stamp altogether. Why, I heard last night that he marched six
days ago to Whataroa, quite close to Te Kooti's place, and that a
prisoner they took gave them positive information that the Hau-Haus
there had all left to assist Te Kooti in a raid upon Poverty Bay. It
seems they did not believe the news; at anyrate, although a mail left
for Poverty Bay on the day after they returned to Wairoa, they sent no
news whatever of the report they had heard. If they had done so there
would have been plenty of time for the settlers to prepare for the
attack.

"It is one of the most scandalous cases of neglect that I ever heard of,
and Lambert ought to be tried by court-martial, though that would not
bring all these people to life again. However there is one thing
certain, the news of this affair will create such a sensation throughout
the island that even the incapable government at Auckland, who have
disregarded all the urgent requests for aid against Te Kooti, will be
forced to do something, and I sincerely hope they will despatch Whitmore
with a strong force of constabulary to wipe out Te Kooti and his band.
It is curious how things come about. Almost all these poor fellows who
have been killed belonged to the Poverty Bay militia, who refused to
press on with Whitmore in pursuit of Te Kooti. Had they done so, the
addition of thirty white men to his force might have made all the
difference in that fight you had with him, and in that case Te Kooti
would have been driven far up the country, and this massacre would never
have taken place."

It was a great relief to Mrs. Renshaw when Wilfrid reached the village.
She was not given to idle fears, and felt convinced that he was running
no real danger; for she knew Mr. Atherton would not have left him by
himself had he not been perfectly convinced there was no danger of
pursuit. Still she felt a weight lifted off her mind when she saw the
party entering the village.

"Well, mother, you must have had a terrible journey of it yesterday,"
Wilfrid said, after he had assured her that he felt none the worse for
what had passed, and was indeed stronger and better than he had been two
days before.

"It was a terrible journey, Wilfrid. Fourteen miles does not seem such a
very long distance to walk, though I do not suppose I ever walked as far
since I was a girl; but the weight of the stretcher made all the
difference. It did not feel much when we started, but it soon got
heavier as we went on; and though we changed sides every few minutes it
seemed at last as if one's arms were being pulled out of their sockets.
We could never have done it if it had not been for Mr. Atherton. He kept
us cheery the whole time. It seems ridiculous to remember that he has
always been representing himself as unequal to any exertion. He was
carrying the greater part of the weight, and indeed five miles before we
got to the end of our journey, seeing how exhausted we were becoming, he
tied two sticks six feet long to our end of the poles, and in that way
made the work a great deal lighter for us, and of course a great deal
heavier for himself. He declared he hardly felt it, for by that time I
had torn two wide strips from the bottom of my dress, tied them
together, and put them over his shoulders and fastened them to the two
poles; so that he got the weight on his shoulders instead of his hands.
But in addition to Mr. Sampson's weight he carried Milly perched on his
shoulder the last eight miles. He is a noble fellow."

"He did not say anything about carrying Milly," Wilfrid said, "or of
taking all the weight of the litter. He is a splendid fellow, mother."

"He was terribly exhausted when he got in," Mrs. Renshaw said; "and was
looking almost as pale as death when we went into the light in the hut
where the other fugitives had assembled. As soon as the others relieved
him of the weight of the litter, and lifted Milly down from his
shoulder, he went out of the hut. As soon as I had seen Mr. Sampson well
cared for, I went out to look for him, and found he had thrown himself
down on the ground outside, and was lying there, I thought at first
insensible, but he wasn't. I stooped over him and he said, 'I am all
right, Mrs. Renshaw, but I was not up to answering questions. In half an
hour I shall be myself again, but I own that I feel washed out at
present.' I took him out a glass of brandy and water, he drank it and
said, 'I feel ashamed at being waited on by you, Mrs. Renshaw, when you
must be as tired as I am. Please do not bother any more about me, but if
you will ask one of the others to get a native blanket to throw over me
to keep off the dew I shall be all right in the morning; but I do not
feel as if I could get on my feet again to-night if a fortune depended
on it.' Of course I did as he asked me, and I was perfectly stupefied
this morning when I heard that he had been up at two o'clock and had
gone off with a party of natives to bring you in."

"It was awfully good of him," Wilfrid said, "and he never said a word to
me about it. Where is he?" and he looked round. But Mr. Atherton had
disappeared.

"Have you seen Mr. Atherton?" they asked Mr. Wylie, as he came out of a
large hut that had been given up for the use of the fugitives.

"He has just had a glass of spirits and water--unfortunately we had no
tea to offer him--and a piece of bread, and has taken a blanket and has
gone off to an empty hut; he said he intended to sleep until to-morrow
morning," and indeed it was not until next day that Mr. Atherton again
appeared.

Several friendly natives arrived one after another at the village. They
brought the news that the Hau-Haus had attacked only the colonists round
Matawairo, and that all the rest of the settlers were gathered at
Taranganui; but the Hau-Haus were plundering all the deserted houses,
and were shooting down all the natives who refused to join them. It was
afterwards found indeed that the natives had suffered even more severely
than the whites, for while thirty-three of the latter were murdered
thirty-seven of the natives were killed. Major Westrupp had left by ship
for Napier to obtain assistance, Lieutenant Gascoyne had made his way
safely through the Hau-Haus to Taranganui, and had sent a whale-boat out
to a schooner that was seen passing down the coast. She at once came
into the port, and the women and children were sent off to Napier. The
garrison of the fort had been reinforced by the friendly natives under
their chief Henare Potare, and were awaiting the expected attack by Te
Kooti.

A week later news came that Major Westrupp and Captain Tuke had arrived
from Napier with three hundred natives, and that the Hau-Haus had
retired with their plunder. The party at Te Mahia at once started for
the coast accompanied by some thirty men of the Mahia tribe. A waggon
had been procured for the transport of the women and children, and a
march of twenty-four miles took them to Taranganui. They found that
parties had been out the day before to bury the dead, and had brought in
two persons who were supposed to have been murdered. As one of the
parties were going along they saw a small poodle dog run into a bush,
and recognized it as having belonged to Captain Wilson. They called and
whistled to it in vain, and came to the conclusion that someone must be
in hiding there. After half an hour's search they discovered little
James Wilson with the dog tightly held in his arms; the boy was too
frightened to distinguish friend from foe, and was greatly delighted
when he recognized one of the party. He told them that his mother was
alive, and was lying wounded in an out-house at their place. He had lost
his way while trying to reach Taranganui to bring help to her.

Captain Wilson had defended his house with a revolver until the natives
brought fire to burn him out. As they offered to spare the lives of all
within if they surrendered, Captain Wilson, thinking that there was a
possibility of their keeping their word, while those within would
certainly be burned if they resisted, surrendered. The prisoners were
being led along by their captors, Captain Wilson carrying the little
boy, when the natives fell upon them. Captain Wilson was shot through
the back, his servant, Morau, tomahawked, and Mrs. Wilson and the other
children bayoneted. Captain Wilson, when shot, fell into a bush, and the
little boy in the confusion crawled away unnoticed into the scrub. He
had wandered about sleeping in out-houses for several nights, often
close to the enemy, and at last found his way back to what had been his
home, and found the bodies of his father, brothers, and sisters, and on
going into an out-house for shelter found his mother alive there.

She had been bayoneted in several places and beaten on the head with the
butt of a rifle until they thought her dead. Later in the day she had
recovered consciousness and crawled back to the house, where she got
some water and then took refuge in the out-house, where two or three
days later she was found by her son. She had since been kept alive by
eggs and other things the child found by foraging round; but he had at
last started to try to get assistance for her.

After hearing the child's story the party had galloped on to Captain
Wilson's, and the poor lady had been found and carried to Taranganui. A
few days later she was sent down to Napier by ship, but expired shortly
after from the effects of her wounds.

In the week that elapsed between the date of the massacre and their
return to the settlement Wilfrid had regained his strength wonderfully,
and the bracing air of the hills and the excitement of the events
through which he passed had acted as a complete restorative. Mr.
Atherton too had completely recovered from his fatigue, and, indeed,
professed himself to have benefited greatly by them, as he maintained
that in three days he had lost as many stone of flesh. The morning after
their return to Taranganui they had a long talk about their plans. It
was settled that Mrs. Renshaw should at once return home. She was most
anxious that Wilfrid should accompany her; but this he would not consent
to.

"No, mother," he said; "it is my duty, and everyone's duty, to aid in
hunting down these murderous scoundrels. They have massacred a number
of people who were very kind to me when I first became ill, and I will
do my best to punish them; besides, until Te Kooti's band is destroyed
there will be no peace or safety for any of the outlying settlements,
and they are just as likely to make an attack on our settlement as any
other; indeed, we are the nearest to them, therefore in fighting here I
am fighting for the protection of our home."

Mr. Atherton also announced his intention of accompanying the column in
pursuit of Te Kooti.

"I dislike fatigue amazingly," he said; "but for several reasons I feel
myself bound to see this affair through to the end. In the first place
they have attacked me and caused me to undergo great fatigue; in the
second, they have murdered a number of my acquaintances; in the third
place I have to look after this boy and see that he gets into no
mischief; and, lastly, it really seems to me that a month or two of this
sort of thing will absolutely reduce me to ordinary dimensions, a thing
which I have for years given up even hoping for."

"Well, Wilfrid," Mrs. Renshaw said at last, "I suppose you must have
your way. I do think that, as you say, it is the duty of everyone to do
all that he can to punish the people who have committed these massacres
upon defenceless people, and it is necessary for the safety of the
settlement that Te Kooti's band shall be destroyed. It is very hard on
us to know that our only son is fighting; but other men as well have to
leave perhaps wives and children behind, and if only those without ties
were to go the force would be a small one indeed. It is a comfort to me,
Mr. Atherton, that you have made up your mind to go too. It sounds
selfish of me to say so; but I suppose all mothers are selfish when
their sons are concerned."

"I understand your feeling, Mrs. Renshaw, and it is quite natural. I do
think that everyone who can carry a musket ought to join in this
expedition, and I flatter myself that Wilfrid's rifle and mine are
allies not to be despised. Anyhow, Mrs. Renshaw, I promise you that we
will not do what are called rash things. We won't try to capture Te
Kooti single-handed, and I think that we can be much more useful
covering an attack than leading an assault."

Accordingly, two days later Mrs. Renshaw embarked on a coaster for the
Mohaka River, and Mr. Atherton and Wilfrid announced to Lieutenant
Gascoyne that they would accompany his force as volunteers.

"I am heartily glad to hear it," that officer replied. "I have heard
from Wylie of your defence of that pass against the Hau-Haus, and
yesterday I had a talk with Sampson, who is getting round now, and he
gave me the history of the affair, and from what he says you and Renshaw
must have killed at least twenty Hau-Haus, for Sampson admits that he is
not much of a shot and had a very small share in the total."

"Yes; we can both shoot indifferently well," Mr. Atherton said
carelessly, "and can both be trusted to hit a Maori if we see him within
about four hundred yards of us. I fancy that we may be of service to you
in keeping down the fire of the enemy if you are attacking a pah. There
is nothing cows fellows so much as finding that it is certain death to
raise their heads from behind shelter to take aim. Of course we shall be
ready generally to obey orders, but that is the special work we join
for. You see, Renshaw is but just recovering from illness, and my build
unsuits me for violent exertion. So if you want to storm a steep hill
you must not count on us being with you except so far as shooting goes."

"Well, I will take you on your own terms," Lieutenant Gascoyne said
smiling. "Mrs. Sampson told me yesterday how disinclined you were for
violent exertion, and how she had to help you along on that journey to
Te Mahia."

Mr. Atherton laughed. "There are exceptions to all rules," he said. "I
am a peaceful botanist, but I had to fight. I hate exertion, but on that
occasion I was forced to make an effort, and terribly knocked up I was
over it. If it becomes absolutely necessary I may have to make an effort
again, but I consider it altogether outside my province."

The expedition started on the following morning, the 20th of November.
It consisted of nearly six hundred natives belonging to the Napier
tribes, the Mahia and Marsuwai tribes. The next day they came upon the
rear-guard of the Hau-Hau tribes of Patutahi and shot two of them. Great
quantities of booty which the Hau-Haus were unable to carry away were
found there, together with the bodies of several friendly natives. The
next day another encampment was come upon, and here the carts taken from
the plundered farms were found. At dusk on the 23d the column came up
with the main body of the enemy, who were encamped on the Te Karetua
Creek.

A heavy fire was opened on both sides, and the natives then charged, but
were driven back with a loss of five killed and twelve wounded. Mr.
Atherton and Wilfrid, who were walking leisurely in the rear of the
column when it came on the enemy, arrived too late to take any part in
the fight. After the repulse the friendly natives took up a position on
a ridge overlooking the Hau-Hau positions, and distant twelve hundred
yards from it. Rifle-pits were dug, and for the next week firing was
kept up by both sides, with occasional skirmishes as one party or the
other tried to take the offensive, but neither cared to try a determined
attack on the other.

The Hau-Haus had lost twenty men during the first day's fighting and
suffered more in the distant firing, especially whenever they gathered
as if for an attack, than did the friendlies. This was owing in no small
degree to the accuracy of Mr. Atherton's fire. He had got some of the
natives to dig a rifle-pit three or four hundred yards down the hill in
front of their position, and here he and Wilfrid ensconced themselves
every morning before daybreak, taking down with them their provisions
for the day, and from this point they galled the Hau-Haus greatly with
their fire. Wilfrid knew that his shooting could not be depended upon at
this distance; but Mr. Atherton had been accustomed to fire at long
ranges, and although at eight hundred yards his rifle was not accurate
he did considerable execution, and so alarmed the Hau-Haus that they
scarcely dared to move by daylight from one part of their intrenchment
to the other. The friends always left their shelter and retired to camp
as soon as the sun set.

The Hau-Haus were not, however, idle. A party of sixty men made a long
circuit and came down in rear of the column, captured the depot at
Patutahi with eight kegs of ammunition and a great quantity of
provisions, and also seized a number of pack animals on the way up. On
the 3d of December the force was strengthened by the arrival of the
chiefs Rapata and Hotene, with three hundred and seventy men from Te
Wairoa. These chiefly belonged to the Ngatiporou tribe, who were far
better fighters than the Napier or Mahia men.

As soon as the reinforcements had arrived it was decided at once to
dislodge the enemy from a hill of which they had possession, and then to
make a general attack on the intrenchments. Forty men of the Wairoa
tribe under Mr. Preece made a dashing attack on the hill, and just as
they carried it Rapata sent a message to him to say that his tribesmen
were annoyed by the enemy's shot falling into their camp, and were
therefore determined to attack at once. That tribe sallying out, carried
two of the enemy's outworks with a rush, and drove the Hau-Haus back to
their last line of rifle-pits near the river. Here they were attacked by
the Wairoa men on the left, Rapata in the centre, and the tribesmen from
Napier on the right. The assailants carried the intrenchment and drove
the Hau-Haus across the river, these suffering heavy loss from the
firing of the left column, who from their position commanded the course
of the stream.

Unfortunately this fire, though destructive to the enemy, was to a
certain extent in their favour, for it prevented the close pursuit of
Rapata's men. Thirty-four Hau-Haus, including three of their fighting
chiefs, were found dead. Te Kooti himself had a narrow escape. He was
still suffering from his wound in the ankle, and was carried up the bed
of the creek on a woman's back. A great quantity of the loot taken from
the settlers was recaptured, and many of the friendly natives held
prisoners by the Hau-Haus escaped during the fight. Mr. Atherton and
Wilfrid had joined Rapata's men in their charge, and after the fight
was over the former said: "Well, Wilfrid, it is a satisfaction to have
got some natives with us at last who will fight. It seemed at first as
if all the plucky natives had joined the enemy; but Rapata's men are
first-rate fellows, though I wish that they had rather an easier name,
for Ngatiporou is a crack-jaw word to pronounce."

Unfortunately a quarrel arose after the battle between Rapata's men and
the Napier tribesmen, and three hundred of the latter went off. The next
morning Rapata and his tribe, with the remaining Wairoa men, marched out
to attack the position the enemy occupied on the top of a hill two miles
away. Mr. Preece led the advanced party, and found the defences
consisted of two lines of strong earthworks extending across a flat
shoulder, either end resting on a cliff. Mr. Preece halted his men until
Rapata came up with the main body. Wilfrid and Mr. Atherton had attached
themselves to the Ngatiporou. Just as they joined Mr. Preece one of the
men fired off a gun, and the enemy answered with a heavy volley.
Instantly a panic set in, and the whole force, with the exception of
some sixteen or eighteen men, bolted. One of the chiefs under Mr. Preece
followed and managed to stop them, and persuaded them to wait until
Rapata could return to them. This they agreed to do, but refused
positively to return to the attack.

Mr. Preece returned to Rapata, who was in a state of fury at the
defection of his tribe. "We will go on and attack the place by
ourselves," he said. "Perhaps the cowards will come up when they hear we
are fighting." Mr. Preece at once agreed, and the party, consisting of
the two leaders, Mr. Atherton and Wilfrid, and fourteen of Rapata's
men, worked back through the low scrub until between twenty-five yards
of the first line of earthworks, when they opened fire upon the enemy.

"This is rather close work, Wilfrid," Mr. Atherton said. "We have the
best of it in some respects, because they cannot make out our position
among the bushes, and they are obliged to stand up and show their heads
above the parapet when they fire. We ought never to miss them at this
distance, and we will soon teach them that it is fatal to pause a moment
to take aim, so at the worst they will only blaze away at random."

For some time the fight continued, and then Rapata requested Mr. Preece
to go down the hill and bring up some more men. Only nine men would
follow Mr. Preece, and Rapata was so disgusted that he himself went down
for some distance and managed to get thirty more. One of the men had
brought a bill up with him, and with this shallow rifle-pits were dug
among the bushes, affording a shelter to the men as they lay flat while
loading. At three o'clock in the afternoon the chief called on his
tribesmen to follow him, and, leaping up, they dashed at one of the
outposts and carried it. A man took the news down the hill, and a chief
and thirty more men came up and joined in the fight.

At dusk Rapata requested Mr. Preece to return to camp and try to get the
main body back with ammunition, as their own was almost exhausted. Mr.
Preece could not induce the natives to start, but they said they would
go in the morning. All night the fight went on, but before dawn Rapata,
having expended his last round of ammunition, retired, having lost six
men killed and four wounded. As he and his men came down they strode
through the camp in single file, not deigning to take the slightest
notice of the fugitives, and passing on, camped apart half a mile
further on. The main body, ashamed of their cowardly conduct, were
afraid to go near the chief. As it was necessary to ascertain what he
meant to do, one of the white officers went to see him.

For some time the chief would make no reply. At last he said, "My men
have betrayed me, and I will have nothing further to do with them. I
intend to return home and get other men, and when I get back I will
attack the Napier tribe who deserted me." The same day he marched for
the coast, followed at a distance by the abashed fugitives. On the way
down they met Colonel Whitmore, who with three hundred constabulary had
just arrived by ship from the scene of operations on the other side of
the island.

The colonel begged Rapata to return with him, but the chief said, "I
never break my word. I have said I will go home, and I will; but I will
return with other men and attack the Napier tribes." After much
persuasion Colonel Whitmore got him to promise that he would not
interfere with the Napier men; but nothing could persuade him to fight
again with those men of his own tribe who had deserted him. Such being
the case, a steamer was placed at his disposal in order that he might
make the voyage and return as soon as possible.

After Rapata had left Colonel Whitmore sent out a skirmishing party to
ascertain whether the enemy retained their position. The scouts returned
with the news that there were great fires on the crest of the hill, and
they believed that the Hau-Haus were burning their huts preparatory to
returning into the interior. Colonel Whitmore believed the report, and
considering that the Hau-Haus would leave the neighbourhood of the
settlement altogether, he ordered the constabulary to march down to the
coast again as soon as possible and re-embark there, as their presence
was urgently required in the north of the province of Wellington, which
had been left open to the attack of the enemy there by their withdrawal.

Fortunately before they re-embarked Te Kooti showed his hand. He had no
idea of retreating from his position, and the fires were caused by the
clearing off of the scrub which had afforded shelter to Rapata's force.
No sooner did he hear that Colonel Whitmore had marched away than he
sent a party down against one of the outlying settlements, where they
murdered Mr. Ferguson, Mr. Wylie's son, and a friendly native. Colonel
Whitmore, on receiving news of the raid, marched rapidly to cut off the
retreat of the Hau-Haus; but they managed to evade him and to retire to
their main body.

On the 27th of December Colonel Whitmore's force occupied a high ridge a
mile distant from Te Kooti's position. Here the colonel received news
that Rapata had just landed with three hundred and seventy men, and
messenger after messenger was sent down urging him to hurry up. The
chief, who was seriously ill, was much annoyed by these messages,
especially by the last, that if he did not come soon Whitmore would take
the place without him. Rapata replied: "Very well, I have tried and
failed; it is his turn now;" and immediately ordered his men to camp for
the day.

The next morning Colonel Whitmore came down himself, having been advised
that the only way to succeed with Rapata was to treat him in a
conciliatory way. The chief's first words were, "Have you taken the
place?"

"No," Colonel Whitmore replied. "I am waiting for you, Rapata."

"Very good," Rapata said; "I will be with you to-morrow morning." The
Ngatiporou performed a great war-dance, and as no one stumbled or fell,
they considered the omen to be a good one, and marched on and joined
Colonel Whitmore's force that night.




CHAPTER XVII.

BACK AT THE FARM.


The position of the Hau-Haus was naturally a very strong one, being at
the top of a high conical peak rising abruptly from low bush-covered
hills to a height of two thousand feet. On the face, which had been
before attacked, the ground sloped gradually up to the summit, but on
the right and left the slope was very steep, and at one point there had
been a landslip leaving a perpendicular face twenty feet high, and below
that, for fifty feet, it was so steep that it was difficult to get a
footing. The ground in rear of the position narrowed into a razor-backed
ridge down which a track led, with rope-ladders to aid the descent of
the rock terraces.

The position in front, where alone it could be attacked, was defended by
three lines of earthworks with high parapets, and with ditches in front
abutting at either end on the steep slopes. The two lower works were
seven feet high, the upper work was nearly fourteen feet high, with
sandbag loopholes to enable the defenders to fire through. Each line was
connected with the one above it by covered ways. Operations commenced by
the advance of the Arawa division of the constabulary, and a portion of
the Ngatiporou under Rapata. Advancing quietly and cautiously they came
upon a party of the enemy engaged in carrying up water. They drove them
up to the pah and took possession of the only water available.

Rifle-pits were now dug and pushed forward gradually until within a
hundred yards of the enemy's first lines of defence. Number seven
division of the constabulary were now sent up, and these threw up a long
line of trenches parallel to the enemy's works; and the artillerymen
having with great exertion brought up a mortar, a vertical shell-fire
was opened upon the enemy's position with great effect; although to get
them to the spot these shells had to be carried on the men's backs for
three miles over some terrific ravines. A hundred constabulary under
Colonel Fraser and a hundred Ngatiporou were sent round to cut off the
enemy's retreat in rear. Another division of constabulary under Major
Roberts connected the two parties, and thus all escape of the enemy was
cut off, with the exception of the small piece of cliff, seventy yards
in length, which was believed impossible to descend, and was moreover
exposed to a flanking fire from Rapata's force in front and that of
Colonel Fraser in the rear.

For some days heavy firing went on, and the hardships suffered by the
force were great, for the rain fell without intermission. There were
many casualties on both sides. Captain Brown of the constabulary was
killed, and Captain Cabel of the same corps severely wounded. Colonel
Fraser's men pushed up the ridge in the enemy's rear, and formed
rifle-pits near the summit from which the Hau-Haus made desperate but
vain attempts to repel them. On the 4th of January Rapata, after
consultation with Colonel Whitmore, determined to storm the lower line
of earthworks.

He told off fifty picked men, and sent them round with instructions to
scale the cliff at the point where the parapet ended. The work was a
dangerous and difficult one, for the cliff was very steep and gravelly,
and the Hau-Haus crowded to the end of the trench and fired down,
wounding five of the stormers. But to do this they had to expose
themselves, and suffered severely from the fire of the men told off to
cover the attack. Finally the Ngatiporou succeeded in climbing up under
the outer face of the parapet, which they cut through with their spades,
and opening a raking fire upon the Hau-Haus drove them out and took
possession of the first line of defence.

All night a sap was carried upwards towards the second line, with the
intention of blowing up the earthworks and storming the main works next
morning, and two hundred picked men were assembled in the trenches ready
to attack at daybreak. But at two o'clock in the morning a woman cried
out from within the pah that the Hau-Haus had all left leaving only some
wounded men and women and children. Her words were not at first
believed, and they were considered to be only a ruse to induce the
assailants to advance up the hill under the enemy's fire. But at
daybreak it was found that the news was true, that the whole of the
Hau-Haus had escaped, by means of ropes, down the face of the
perpendicular cliff.

Rapata with his men started in pursuit. He followed the Hau-Hau trail
for some distance, and then scattered his men in small parties as he
guessed that the enemy would scatter in search of food. A hundred and
twenty of the Hau-Haus were overtaken and killed, and Rapata returned
after an absence of two days. By this time the whites and constabulary
had left, as the work had now been done and the constabulary were
urgently needed elsewhere. Rapata marched back by a circuitous way,
captured eighty more prisoners, men, women, and children, whom he
brought alive down into the settlement. Te Kooti had lost altogether
during the siege and pursuit a hundred and fifty of his men, but he was
still believed in by the natives, three tribes joining him at once, more
than making up for the loss he had suffered.

Mr. Atherton and the other volunteers with Colonel Whitmore's force had
taken but small share in the second attack upon Te Kooti's position, not
being attached to any regular force. Rapata had been greatly struck with
the coolness of Mr. Atherton and Wilfrid in his first attack, and
astonished at the accuracy of their shooting, and had greeted them very
heartily on his return, and invited them to act with his force. They
had, therefore, during the siege taken up their position in some
rifle-pits in the rear of his party, and from here had done great
service to the Ngatiporou by covering them from the enemy's fire, for
the Hau-Haus soon learned that it was almost certain death to stand up
to take a steady aim above the parapet.

After the defeat of the Hau-Haus many of the natives of Poverty Bay who
had joined Te Kooti, and taken a prominent part in the massacres,
deserted him, and calmly returned to the settlement as if nothing had
taken place, and the authorities allowed them to remain unmolested. The
settlers, justly indignant that men who had so lately murdered women and
children should be allowed to come down among them with impunity, formed
themselves into a vigilance committee, and some of them who had lost
relatives in the massacre bound themselves by oath to shoot the next
party of ruffians who made their appearance.

An opportunity soon offered. A native who had assisted in murdering Mr.
Wylie's son came in, and was shot by Mr. Benson. The following morning,
to his astonishment, Benson was warned to attend as juryman at the
inquest of his victim. In vain he assured the native constable that he
was the man who had done the deed, and that he ought not therefore to
sit. The constable refused to entertain the excuse, and so Benson not
only sat on his own trial but gave evidence against himself, and the
jury, among whom was Mr. Atherton, having heard his statement, brought
in the following verdict: "We find that the deceased was shot by some
person unknown, and served him right."

The day after this verdict was returned Mr. Atherton and Wilfrid, who
had been waiting ten days for a coasting craft, sailed for the Mohaka
river, and, landing at Mr. Mitford's, borrowed two horses from him, and
were soon at The Glade.

"I am afraid I am heavy on a horse still, Wilfrid," Mr. Atherton said as
they started, "but this animal may be thankful that I did not ride him
the last time I was here. I calculate I must be at least four stone
lighter than I was."

"You certainly have lost a good deal of flesh, Mr. Atherton. I almost
wonder that you did not continue with our friend Rapata. He declares
that he will follow up Te Kooti till he catches him if it takes him a
couple of years."

"No, no, Wilfrid," Mr. Atherton laughed, "it is possible to have too
much of a good thing. I might jog along with a colonial force well
enough and benefit by it, but Rapata and his men would kill me in a
week. I do not think those fellows know what it is to be tired. No, I am
very well contented, and I intend to do no end of work in the woods and
keep myself down to my present weight. There is an immense deal to be
done in the way of botanizing. I have already found twelve new sorts of
ferns, and I have only just begun, and have not even looked at the
orchids yet or the mosses."

"I should have thought, Mr. Atherton, that it would have been well worth
your while to go in for collecting and sending home rare and new plants,
instead of merely drying specimens for your herbarium. I know new
orchids fetch a tremendous price, because a gentleman near us at home
had a large house full of them, and I know he used to pay what seemed to
me prodigious prices for little scraps of plants not a bit more
beautiful than the others, simply because they were rare."

"The idea is a very good one, Wilfrid, and I will think it over. I have
never gone in for collecting in that way, for my income has been amply
sufficient for my wants, but there can be no doubt that in these days,
when people are ready to give such large sums for rare plants, a
botanist like myself might make a really good thing of it out here. The
woods are literally crowded with rare plants, and it would add to the
interest of my excursions. As it is now I simply look for new species,
and even here these are hard to discover; but if I took to getting rare
specimens for sending home, there would be an unlimited field of work
for me. Of course the difficulty is getting them home alive, for in a
country like this, where there is practically no winter, they are never
in an entirely quiescent state, and would require the most careful
packing in cases specially constructed for them, and would need
attention on the voyage. Still all this might be managed, and a steward
might be paid well to take them under his charge.

"Well, I will think it over, Wilfrid. Your idea certainly seems a good
one, and if it pays the great horticulturalists to send out skilled men
to collect plants for them from all parts of the world, it should
certainly pay me, who am living in the centre of one of the most varied
groups of vegetation in the world, to send home consignments."

Ten minutes later they rode into the clearing. A loud whoop of welcome
was heard as they appeared, and Jack came tearing down from the house to
meet them. A moment later Marion appeared at the door, and she too came
flying towards them. Mr. and Mrs. Renshaw also appeared on the verandah.

"I need not ask you how you are, my boy," Mr. Renshaw said as Wilfrid,
who had leapt from his horse as Marion ran up, hastened forward with her
to the house. "Your mother has told us so much about your illness that I
hardly anticipated seeing you looking a picture of health. Mr. Atherton,
I am delighted to see you. My wife has told me how much we all owe to
you both for your care of Wilfrid and for having brought him and my wife
safely out of the hands of the natives."

"I am very glad that I was able to be of some little service, Mr.
Renshaw. It is quite as pleasant, you know, to be able to aid as it is
to be aided, so we will look upon the obligation as mutual. Wilfrid has
invited me to take up my quarters here for a day or two until my shanty
is put in order again."

"It would be a pleasure to us if you would take up your abode here
permanently," Mr. Renshaw said as Mr. Atherton dismounted from his horse
and the two men rung each other's hands warmly. "Jack, take the two
horses round to the shed. And now come in. Fortunately dinner is just
ready, and I have no doubt you are ready too."

Wilfrid was struck with the change that had come over his father since
he had been away. He looked better and stronger than he had ever seen
him before, and spoke with a firmness and decision quite new to him. Mr.
Renshaw, finding the whole responsibility of the farm upon his
shoulders, had been obliged to put aside his books and to throw himself
into the business with vigour. At first the unusual exertion involved by
being out all day looking after things had tried him a good deal, but he
had gained strength as he went on, and had even come to like the work.
The thought that his wife and Wilfrid would be pleased to find
everything going on well had strengthened him in his determination to
stick to it, and Marion had, as far as the house work allowed her, been
his companion when about the farm, and had done her best to make the
evenings cheerful and pleasant. They had had a terribly anxious time of
it during the week between the arrival of the news of the massacre at
Poverty Bay and Mrs. Renshaw's return; but after that their life had
gone on quietly, although, until the news of the capture of Te
Kooti's fortress had arrived, they had naturally been anxious about
Wilfrid's safety.

[Illustration: "I AM AFRAID I AM HEAVY ON A HORSE STILL, WILFRID"

_Page 325_]

"You are looking wonderfully well and sunburnt, father," the lad said as
they sat at dinner.

"Your father has been out from morning until night, Wilfrid, managing
the farm," Mrs. Renshaw said with a glad smile, "and I do think the
exercise has done him a great deal of good."

"I am sure it has, mother," Wilfrid agreed. "I am afraid the book has
not made much progress, father, since I have been away."

"It has made no progress at all, Wilfrid, and I do not suppose it ever
will. Science is all very well when a man can afford to make it his
hobby, but I have come to the conclusion that a man has no right to ride
a hobby while his family have to work to make a living."

"But we were all glad to work, father," Wilfrid said. "And now I am back
again there is no reason why you should not return to your work."

"No, Wilfrid. I have been selfish a great deal too long, and indeed, now
that I have broken myself into an active life out of doors, I have at
present, at anyrate, no inclination to take to the pen again. I feel
better than I have done for years, and am astonished myself at the work
I can get through. As to my appetite, I eat twice as much as I used to,
and really enjoy my food. Since the day we heard of the failure of the
bank the burden has all been on your shoulders, Wilfrid, and your
mother's. I am going to take my share of it in the future. As to the
book, someone else must write it. I do not suppose it would ever have
really paid. I almost wonder now how I could have thought that I out
here could have derived any satisfaction from knowing that my work was
praised by scientific men at home; besides, to do it properly a man must
live among the natives, must travel all over the island and gather the
traditions current in every tribe. That I could not do, and if I could
have no inclination for it. I have been thinking that I shall ask Mr.
Atherton to teach me a little botany, so that I can enjoy a little more
intelligently than I can now do the wonders of our forest."

"That I will gladly do, Mr. Renshaw. I am sure it would add greatly to
the enjoyment of your life here to become acquainted with the secrets of
the marvellous vegetation around. It is extraordinary to me that men
should be content to remain in ignorance of the names of even the
principal trees and shrubs that meet their eye at every turn. There is
not one settler in a hundred can tell you the names of a score of trees
in the island. While I have been away I have tried to get the native
names of many of the trees that are mostly to be met with, and only in
one or two cases could I get any information, although some of the
settlers have been living for years among them."

"And now, Mr. Atherton, about what I was saying just now, do not you
think it would be more pleasant for you to erect a fresh hut close to
ours instead of living by yourself away in the woods? It would be a
great pleasure to all of us to have you with us. Your society would
brighten our life here. We should have the assistance of your rifle in
case the natives broke out again. You would, of course, live with us,
but you would have your own hut to retire to when you liked to be alone.
What do you say?"

"I say that it is a very kind offer, Mr. Renshaw, and it would certainly
be very much more pleasant for me than living out there by myself at
the mercy of a native cook. On the condition that you will allow me to
pay my share of the expenses of housekeeping I will gladly accept your
offer."

"The expenses of housekeeping are next to nothing, Mr. Atherton," Mrs.
Renshaw laughed; "but if you make it a condition we must of course agree
to your terms, and you shall be permitted to pay your quota to the
expenses of the establishment; but I warn you that the amount will not
be a heavy one."

"Heavy or light, I shall be glad to pay it, Mrs. Renshaw. The
arrangement would be a delightful one for me, for although as a
traveller I have necessarily been much alone, I am a gregarious animal,
and fond of the company of mankind."

And so two days later a party of natives were set to work, and a hut was
erected for Mr. Atherton twenty yards away from the house, and was soon
fitted up as his other had been. Wilfrid had at once taken up his own
work at the farm, but was now his father's right hand, instead of
having, as before, everything on his shoulders.

The natives in the neighbourhood had now settled down again. From time
to time news came that showed that the Hau-Hau rebellion was almost
crushed. Colonel Whitmore, having finally completely subdued the Hau-Hau
tribes in the north of Wellington and Taranaki, had marched with a
strong force divided into four columns and severely punished all the
tribes that had joined Te Kooti in the north-eastern part of the island.
Te Kooti himself, after perpetrating several other massacres of
settlers, was a fugitive, hotly hunted by Rapata, who gave him no rest,
surprising him several times, and exterminating the last remnants of
the band who had escaped with him from the Chatham Islands. Te Kooti
himself was now believed to be hiding somewhere in the Waikato country;
but he was no longer dangerous, his schemes had utterly failed, his
pretensions had even in the native eyes been altogether discredited, and
all who had adhered to him had either been killed or punished by the
destruction of their villages and clearings. There was not the slightest
chance that he would ever again trouble the community.

The settlement on the Mohaka river had grown, and in six months after
Wilfrid's return the whole of the land lying between the Allens' farm
and Mr. Mitford's was taken up, and two or three families had settled
beyond Mr. Atherton's holding. At The Glade everything went on
prosperously--the animals multiplied, the crops were excellent, and,
owing to the many settlers arriving and requiring food until they could
raise it for themselves, much better prices were obtained for the
produce, and it was no longer necessary to ship it to Napier or
Wellington.

Although Mr. Atherton had not gone through any such fatigues as those
that he had endured at Poverty Bay, he had continued steadily to
decrease in weight. Feeling himself so much lighter and more active on
the return from the expedition, he had continued to stick to long and
regular exercise, and was out every day, with a native to carry his tin
collecting-boxes, his presses, axe, and trowel, from breakfast-time
until dark. As he steadily refused to take any food with him, and fasted
from breakfast-time till supper, the prolonged exercise in the close
heat of the woods did its work rapidly, and at the end of a year from
the date of his taking up his abode at The Glade he could no longer be
called a stout man, and new-comers looked with admiration at his broad
shoulders and powerful figure.

"When I first came to New Zealand," he said, "I thought it probable that
I should only stay here a few weeks, or at most a few months, and I had
a strong doubt whether it would repay my trouble in coming out here. Now
I am sure that it was the very best step I ever took. I weighed the
other day at Mitford's, and I did not turn eighteen stone, which is
nothing out of the way for a man of my height and size. Last time I
weighed I pulled down six-and-twenty. When I go back to England I shall
stick to my two meals a day, and go in regularly for racquets and horse
exercise."

"And when is that going to be, Mr. Atherton?" Wilfrid asked.

"I have not settled yet, Wilfrid. I have been longer stationary here
than I have been in any place since I left college. Occasionally I get a
fit of longing to be back in London again, but it seldom lasts long.
However, I suppose I shall yield to it one of these days."

"You are doing very well here, Mr. Atherton. You said only the other day
that your consignment of plants had sold wonderfully, and that you
expected to make nearly a thousand pounds this year."

"That is true enough, Wilfrid; but you see, unfortunately or
fortunately, whichever way you like to put it, the thousand pounds are
of no importance to me one way or the other. I am really what is
generally considered to be a rich man, and from the day I left England,
now just two years ago, my income has been simply accumulating, for
beyond the two or three pounds a month your mother lets me pay her I
spend absolutely nothing."

"It must be very dull for you here, Mr. Atherton, accustomed as you have
been to be always either travelling or in London, to be cut off from the
world with only just our society, and that of the Allens and Mitfords,
and two or three neighbours."

"I do not look dull, do I, Mrs. Renshaw?" Mr. Atherton laughed.

"No; I have never seen you dull since I knew you, Mr. Atherton, not even
when you were toiling along exhausted and worn out with that child on
your shoulders and the weight of the helpless man on your arms. We shall
miss you awfully when you do go; shall we not, Marion?" Marion was now
nineteen, and had developed, as Wilfrid told her in some surprise--for
brothers seldom think their sisters good-looking--into a very pretty
girl.

"It is not coming just yet," Mr. Atherton said; "but I have, I think,
pretty well exhausted the forest for a distance of fifty miles round,
and now that things are settling down I shall take more extensive trips
to the mountains in the north-east and the Waikato country, and the
strip of land lying north of Auckland. I have never been absent above
two or three days at a time; but in future I may be away for weeks. But
this will always be my head-quarters, Mrs. Renshaw. You see, your
husband is becoming a formidable rival of mine here, so I must be off to
pastures new."

"You know he did not want to send things home, Mr. Atherton. It was only
because you insisted that he did so."

"I am very glad that I did insist, Mrs. Renshaw. As you know, I only
went into the trade of plants to give me something to do on my rambles
besides looking for new species; but I am sure it has been a capital
thing for him. He has always been accustomed to use his brain, and
although he now takes a lively interest in farm work, he would in time
have found a certain void if he had not taken up this new hobby. As it
is, it gives him plenty of out-door work, and is not only interesting,
but pays well; and now that he is thoroughly acquainted with the botany
of this part of the island, and knows which things are worth sending
home, and the price he can depend upon getting for them, he will make a
far larger income out of it than he could do from farming. Wilfrid will
be quite capable of looking after the interests of the farm."

Another year passed. The clearings at The Glade had been greatly
enlarged; but clumps of bush had been judiciously left so as to preserve
its sylvan appearance, the long operation of fencing in the whole
property had been accomplished, and the number of horses, cattle, and
sheep had so increased that the greater part were now sent to graze on
Maori land, a small rate per head being paid to the natives. Mr.
Atherton had come and gone many times, and had now almost completed his
study of the botany of the island. Mr. Renshaw had altogether abandoned
the management of the farm to Wilfrid, and devoted himself entirely to
the collection of ferns, orchids, and other plants, receiving handsome
cheques in return for the consignment sent to England by each vessel
that sailed from Wellington or Napier. He had agents at each of these
towns, who made arrangements with the stewards of the ships for taking
care of the plants on their way home, their remuneration being dependent
upon the state in which the consignment arrived in England.

Settlers were now established on both sides of the river for miles above
The Glade, and as among these were several who had been officers in the
army, or professional men who had come out for the benefit of their
families, there was now much cheerful society, and The Glade occupied
the same leading position in that part of the settlement that Mr.
Mitford's had done on the lower river when they first arrived.

James Allen had now been a year married to the eldest of the Miss
Mitfords. His brother had been decidedly refused by Marion when he
proposed to her, much to the surprise of her father and mother, who had
seen from the frequent visits of their neighbour during the past year
how things were going with him, while Wilfrid had been quite indignant
at her rejection of his friend.

"Girls are extraordinary creatures," he said to his sister. "I had quite
made up my mind for the last six months that you and Bob were going to
make a match of it, and thought what a jolly thing it would be to have
you settled next to us. I am sure I do not know what you want more. You
have known him for three years. He is as steady as possible, and safe to
get on well, and as nice a fellow as I know."

"He is all that, Wilfrid, but you see I don't want to marry him. I like
him very much in the same way you like him, but I don't like him well
enough for that."

"Oh, I suppose you want a wandering prince in disguise," Wilfrid
grumbled. "That is the way with girls; they always want something that
they cannot get."

"My dear Wilfrid," Marion said with spirit, "when I take to lecturing
you as to whom you are to marry it will be quite time for you to take to
lecturing me; but until I do I cannot allow that you have any right in
the matter."

It was seldom indeed that brother and sister differed in opinion about
anything, and seeing a tear in Marion's eye Wilfrid at once gave in and
admitted himself to be wrong.

"Of course it is no business of mine, Marion, and I beg your pardon. I
am sure I should not wish for a moment that you should marry anyone but
the man that you choose for yourself. I should certainly have liked you
to have married Bob Allen, but, if you do not fancy him, of course there
is an end of it."

This was not the only offer that Marion had received during the year,
for there were several young settlers who would have been glad to have
installed her as the mistress of their homesteads; but they had each met
with the same fate that had now befallen Bob Allen.

The next time Mr. Atherton came back he said, "I have taken my last
ramble and gathered my last plant."

"What! are you going home?" Mrs. Renshaw exclaimed.

"Yes, I am going home," he said more seriously than he usually spoke. "I
have been away three years now, and have pretty thoroughly ransacked the
island. I have discovered nearly eighty new species of plants and two or
three entirely new families, so I have done enough for honour; besides,
I am wanted at home. An old aunt has died and has left me a considerable
sum of money, just because I had plenty of my own before, I suppose. It
is another instance of female perversity. So I have had a letter from my
solicitor saying that I am really wanted; but in any case I should have
gone now or in another month or two. I begin to feel that I have had
enough of wandering, and at thirty-eight it is time to settle down if
you are ever going to do so."

There was a silence round the table as he ceased speaking, for all felt
that the loss would be a serious one, and although Mr. Atherton had
tried to speak lightly they could see that he too felt the approaching
end of their close friendship.

"Are you going to start at once?" Mr. Renshaw asked.

"No, I shall give myself a fortnight or three weeks before I sail. I
have all the plants I gathered this time to dry and prepare properly;
besides, I should like a quiet stay with you before I say good-bye. You
see, I have not seen much of you during the last year."

Nothing further was said on the subject, which none of them liked to
touch on. For the next two days the house seemed strangely quiet.

"By the way, what has become of young Allen?" Mr. Atherton said at
dinner on the third day. "You told me every one was well, so I suppose
he is away from home, as I have not seen him since I came, and he used
to be a very regular visitor." There was a momentary silence and then
Mrs. Renshaw said:

"I do not think he is away from home, though he may be, for he was
talking the other day of looking out for a fresh piece of land for
himself. Now that his brother is married I suppose it is only natural
that he should think of setting up for himself. The farm is of course
their joint property, but I suppose they will make some arrangement for
his brother to take over his share."

"Naturally," Mr. Atherton agreed, "young Allen would not care about
remaining now that his brother is married. When one of two partners
marries it generally breaks up the partnership, and besides, he will of
course be wanting to have a place of his own, and the holding is not
large enough to divide."

After dinner Wilfrid strolled out with Mr. Atherton.

"I daresay you saw, Mr. Atherton, that your question about Bob Allen
fell rather as a bomb-shell among us. There is no reason why you, who
are a great friend, should not know the truth. The fact is, to my
astonishment, Marion has thought proper to refuse Bob Allen. I was never
more surprised in my life. I had always looked upon it as certain that
she would accept him, especially as she has refused three or four good
offers this year. One never can understand girls."

Mr. Atherton was silent for a minute or two. Then he said:

"I thought too, Wilfrid, that it would have come off. I have always
thought so. Well, well." Then after a pause he went on: "I had intended
to go over in the morning to see him. I like the lad, and had an idea of
offering to advance him a sum of money to set up in a place of his own
without loss of time. Then the young couple would have had a fair start
in life without having to wait two or three years or to go through the
rough work at the first start in a settler's life. The money would of
course have been nothing to me, and it would have been satisfactory to
have lent a helping hand towards seeing your sister married and happy.
And so she has refused him. Well, I will take a turn by myself,
Wilfrid."

And to the young fellow's surprise Mr. Atherton turned off and started
at a brisk pace up the glade.

"He is evidently as vexed at Marion's throwing over Bob Allen as I am,"
Wilfrid said to himself as he looked after him. "I wish he would give
her a good talking to, she would think more of his opinion than she does
of mine."




CHAPTER XVIII.

IN ENGLAND.


"I suppose you have not settled yet as to what ship you will return by,
Atherton?" Mr. Renshaw asked as the party were gathered in the verandah
in the evening.

"No," Mr. Atherton replied, absently watching the smoke of his cigar as
it curled up, "nothing is at all settled; my plans seem to be quite
vague now."

"What do you mean, Mr. Atherton?" Mrs. Renshaw asked in surprise, for
Mr. Atherton's plans were generally mapped out very decidedly. "How is
it that your plans are vague? I thought you said two days ago that you
should go down to Wellington about the 20th."

"I did not mean to say that they were vague, Mrs. Renshaw; did I really
say so?"

"Why, of course you did," Mrs. Renshaw said; "and it is not often that
you are vague about anything."

"That shows that you do not understand my character, Mrs. Renshaw," Mr.
Atherton said in his usual careless manner. "I am the vaguest of men--a
child of chance, a leaf blown before the wind."

Wilfrid laughed. "It would have taken a very strong wind when we first
knew you."

"I am speaking metaphorically, Wilfrid. I am at London, and the idea
occurs to me to start for the Amazon and botanize there for a few
months. I pack up and start the next morning. I get there and do not
like the place, and say to myself it is too hot here, let me study the
Arctic flora at Spitzbergen. If I act upon an idea promptly, well and
good, but if I allow any time to elapse between the idea striking me and
my carrying the thing into execution, there is never any saying whether
I may not go off in an entirely different groove during the interval."

"And is there any chance of your going off in any other groove now,
Atherton?" Mr. Renshaw asked.

"No, I think not; just a remote possibility perhaps, but not more than
that. It is so indefinitely small, indeed, that you may--yes, I think
you may safely calculate upon my starting on the day I said, or if I
find a ship at Wellington going on a trading excursion among the
islands, or up to the Straits, or to Japan, I may likely enough take a
passage in her."

"But I thought you said that your business required you to be at home,
Mr. Atherton?"

"Yes, I suppose that is so, Wilfrid; but I daresay my solicitor would
manage it just as well if I did not turn up. Solicitors are people who,
as far as I can see, consider it their duty to bother you, but if they
find that you pay no attention to their letters they manage somehow or
other to get on very well without you. I believe they go into a court
and make affidavits, and get an order authorizing them to sign for you.
I do not know how it generally is done, but that is my experience of
them so far."

Marion had said little that evening, and had indeed been very quiet for
the last few days. She was somewhat indignant at Wilfrid's interference
in what she considered her affairs, and felt that although her father
and mother had said nothing, they too were somewhat disappointed, and
would have been glad had she accepted Bob Allen. Besides she had reasons
of her own for being out of spirits. After breakfast the next morning
Mr. Atherton said: "Marion, when you have finished your domestic duties
and can be spared, suppose you put on your hat and come for a ramble
with me."

There was nothing unusual in the request, for the girl often accompanied
him in his rambles when he was not going far into the forest.

"I shall be ready in half an hour, if your highness can wait so long."

"I am in no hurry, child, and will smoke a pipe on the verandah until
you are ready."

Marion always enjoyed these walks with Mr. Atherton. He was at all times
a pleasant companion, and when alone with her always exerted himself to
amuse her, though he sometimes vexed her by talking to her as if she
were a child. To-day he was much more silent than usual, and more than
once she looked up in wonder at his face as he walked along puffing at
his pipe, with his hands deep in his jacket pockets and his eyes bent on
the ground.

"A penny for your thoughts, Mr. Atherton," she said at last with a
laugh. "It seems to me that you would have got on just as well without
me."

"Well, I was just thinking that I was a fool to ask you to come with me,
child." Marion opened her eyes in surprise. "You see, my dear," he went
on, "we all make fools of ourselves sometimes. I started in life by
making a fool of myself. I fell in love with a woman whom I thought
perfection. She was an arrant flirt, and was only amusing herself with
me till she hooked a young lord for whom she was angling. That was what
sent me roaming for the first time; and, as you know, having once
started I have kept it up ever since, that is till I came out here. I
had intended to stay six months; I have been here three years. Why have
I stopped so long? Simply, child, because I have again made a fool of
myself. I do not think I was conscious of it for the first two years,
and it was only when I saw, as I thought, that young Allen would win
you, that I recognized that I, a man of thirty-seven, was fool enough to
love a child just eighteen years younger than myself. At the same time I
was not fool enough to think that I had the smallest chance. I could not
stop here and watch another winning you, and at the same time I was so
weak that I could not go away altogether; and so you see I compromised
matters by going away for weeks and sometimes months at a time,
returning with the expectation each time of hearing that it was settled.
Now I hear that you have refused him, and, just as a drowning man grasps
at a straw, I resolved to have my fate absolutely settled before I sail.
Don't be afraid of saying 'no,' dear. I have never for a moment looked
for any other answer, but I think that I would rather have the 'no' than
go away without it, for in after years I might be fool enough to come to
think that possibly, just possibly, the answer, had I asked the
question, might have been 'yes.'"

He had stopped in his walk when he began to speak, and stood facing
Marion, who had not raised her eyes while he was speaking. Then she
looked frankly up in his face.

"Do you think I did not know," she said softly, "and didn't you really
know too? You are not so wise a man as I thought you. Why, ever since I
have known you it seems to me that--that--"

"That you have loved me, Marion; is it possible?" he said taking her
hand.

"Of course it is possible," she said almost pettishly "how could I help
it, I should like to know?"

Dinner had been waiting for some time before Mr. Atherton and his
companion returned from their ramble.

"Twenty minutes late!" Wilfrid shouted as they approached the house;
"have you been losing yourselves in the bush?"

"I think that it has been just the other way, Wilfrid," Mr. Atherton
said as he came up to the group gathered in the verandah.

"How do you mean?" Wilfrid asked.

"I mean we have been finding each other."

"Finding each other," Wilfrid repeated vaguely. "Why, were you both
lost?"

"I was, Wilfrid. Mrs. Renshaw, I have found your daughter, and am going,
with your permission and that of her father, to keep her. I am a good
bit older than she is, but as she says she does not mind that, I hope
that you will not, and at least I can promise to do all in my power to
make her happy."

"I am surprised, Mr. Atherton; surprised and glad too," Mrs. Renshaw
said, while Mr. Renshaw grasped Mr. Atherton's hand and shook it
heartily.

"My dear sir, there is no one in the world to whom I could intrust
Marion's happiness so gladly and heartily. I own that it is a surprise
to me, as well as to her mother, but we are both delighted at the choice
she has made."

By this time Marion and her mother had gone indoors together. Wilfrid
had not yet spoken, his surprise was still too great for words.

"Well, Wilfrid," Mr. Atherton said, turning to him, "I hope your
disapproval of Marion's conduct on this occasion is not so great as it
was when you were talking to me yesterday."

"I hardly know what to say yet, you have taken me so by surprise; but I
am awfully glad--you know that, don't you? There is no one in the world
I should like Marion to marry so much, only somehow it never occurred to
me."

"That is natural enough, Wilfrid. However, now that it has occurred to
you, and you approve of it, we must hope that Marion will be restored to
your good graces again."

"I have been making an ass of myself," Wilfrid said penitently; "but you
believe that I am awfully glad, don't you? I was disappointed about Bob,
but then, you see, I never thought about you. Why, you must know, Mr.
Atherton, what I think of you and how I care for you, and how I look up
to you. Somehow it never seemed possible to me that a man like you could
fall in love."

"And much more improbable still, Wilfrid, that your sister would fall in
love with me. I understand you, lad. We have been very close friends for
the last three years, haven't we? I have been something like a very big
and very old brother to you, and now we are going to be brothers in
earnest;" and their hands closed in a grip that spoke volumes for the
sincerity and depth of their feelings. Then Wilfrid ran into the house
and threw his arms round his sister.

"I have been an awful fool, Marion," he said; "but you see, I never
dreamt of this."

"And you are really pleased, Wilfrid?"

"Pleased! I am delighted. Why, you know, I think he is the finest fellow
in the world; and has he not done everything for us, and stood by me
and nursed me, and carried me for miles, and saved mother's life and
mine? But it never entered my mind that you had fallen in love with each
other."

"I do not know why it shouldn't, Wilfrid. Why shouldn't I think as much
of him as you do?"

"I do not know, I am sure, Marion; but I confess I never did think of
it. Did you, mother?"

"Once or twice, Wilfrid. About a year ago it did cross my mind once or
twice, but that was all. They say mothers are keen-sighted as far as
their daughters are concerned; but either I am less keen-sighted than
mothers in general, or Marion is deeper than other girls."

"Well, mother, we shall have lots of time to talk this over," Wilfrid
said. "Dinner has been waiting nearly an hour, and even this wonderful
business cannot have taken away all our appetites. Everything is ready;
shall I call them in?" Wilfrid had, however, still a few minutes to
wait, for the two men were engaged in earnest conversation outside.

When they came in at last Mr. Renshaw kissed his daughter fondly. "God
bless you, my child!" he said. "You have made a wise choice indeed, and
I am sure that you will be a very happy woman."

It was a quiet meal, for all were too happy to talk much. After it was
over the two men strolled out together and renewed their conversation,
and Mr. Renshaw presently called to his wife to join them. Marion had
gone to her room, and Wilfrid was about to start to the other end of the
farm when Mr. Atherton called him.

"Come and join our consultation, Wilfrid. You are as much concerned in
it as any of us, and I rely upon your assistance to bring round these
two very obstinate people to my side of the question. I should say our
side, for of course Marion is one with me in the matter. You see, I am a
rich man, Wilfrid--really a rich man, and I naturally wish that Marion
should be made as happy as possible. I do not think she would be as
happy as possible if she were in England with me, with a nice place in
the country, and a town-house, and most things that money could bring
her, if she knew that her father and mother were out here living a life
which, although they have admirably adapted themselves to it, is yet
very different to that to which they have been all their lives
accustomed.

"Now, owing to this absurd freak of my aunt in making me her heir when
my income was already five times as much as I could spend, I have the
nuisance of a large landed estate on my hands. There is a large house
upon it which I suppose Marion and I will have to occupy occasionally;
and there is another house, which is known as the dower house, and which
is a very snug and comfortable abode. Now, it is quite clear that I am
the last sort of man to look after an estate. It would worry me most out
of my mind, and would be a perpetual annoyance.

"What I propose is that your father and mother shall come home and take
possession of the dower house, and that your father should act as my
agent. Living on the spot, he would be able to keep an eye on the
tenants, receive rents, and that sort of thing, and still be able to
devote a considerable portion of his time to his favourite pursuits. I
should have the advantage of having an agent I could absolutely rely
upon, and Marion and I would have the comfort of having her father and
mother close at hand. It would be a little lonely for you for a bit,
Wilfrid; but you are nearly nineteen now, and will, unless I am
mistaken, ere many years have passed be bringing a mistress to The
Glade. I fancy you go over to Mitford's a good deal oftener than there
is any absolute occasion for, and although Kate is only sixteen yet, I
have a shrewd suspicion that you have both pretty well made up your
minds about the future."

Wilfrid coloured and laughed. "I don't know that we are as far advanced
as that; but I do hope that some day it may be as you say. But about
this other affair. What do my father and mother say? It seems to me it
would be a splendid arrangement."

"Of course it would, Wilfrid; a splendid arrangement, for Marion and me
especially. That is what I am trying to persuade them; but your mother
has developed quite a new line of obstinacy, and your father is just as
bad."

"Don't you see, Wilfrid," Mrs. Renshaw said with tears in her eyes, "it
is only an excuse on Mr. Atherton's--"

"Harry, my dear madam, Harry," Mr. Atherton interrupted. "We have
arranged it is to be Harry in future."

"On Harry's part," Mrs. Renshaw went on, "to provide an income for us."

"But I have got to provide an income for someone," Mr. Atherton said.
"There must be an agent to look after the property for me; necessarily
that agent must have a salary; and why in the name of good sense should
not your husband be that agent as well as anyone else?"

"But you are offering a great deal too high a salary," Mr. Renshaw
urged. "You could get an excellent agent for less than half the sum you
are talking about."

"Not at all," Mr. Atherton replied; "I must have a gentleman, both for
my own sake and that of the tenants, and to get a gentleman of high
character and perfectly trustworthy, I must necessarily pay him a good
salary. I shall be a good deal in town, and my representative must
therefore be able to occupy a good position in the county; besides, as I
have told you, my income now, with this absurd addition, amounts to
something like six thousand a year. Why, in the name of goodness, should
I not be allowed, if I choose, to pay two or three hundred a year over
market price to my agent when it will afford my wife the gratification
of having her parents near her, and me the pleasure of having two dear
friends as my next neighbours. Besides, The Glade will not be a bit too
large for you when you marry, Wilfrid, and in that case either you will
have to start in a fresh place and begin all your work over again, or
your father would have to turn out to make room for you. I consider it
preposterous. What do you say, Wilfrid?"

"I do think it would be a splendid arrangement, mother," Wilfrid
answered. "You know well enough that I shall be very sorry to lose you
and father; but it would be awfully nice for Marion, and I do think that
though, as Mr. Atherton says, you and father have fallen in splendidly
with your life here, the other would be in every way better suited to
you. I can understand your feelings in the matter; but the same time I
think that after Mr. Atherton having saved your life and mine, his
feelings and wishes should influence you very much."

"If you hesitate any longer," Mr. Atherton said, "I shall go in and
fetch Marion out. I have not told her about my plan yet, for in fact we
had other things to talk about; but when I tell her, and she adds her
voice to ours, I am sure you will not be able to refuse any longer."

Mrs. Renshaw exchanged a look with her husband. "It is not necessary,"
she said in a broken voice. "We accept, Harry."

"That is right," Mr. Atherton said as he wrung Mr. Renshaw's hand
warmly, and then affectionately kissed Mrs. Renshaw. "Now we are going
to be a very happy and united family. Now, go in and tell Marion."

"Tell her yourself," Mrs. Renshaw smiled, wiping her eyes; and Mr.
Atherton took his way to the house.

Marion was indeed delighted with the news. The thought of leaving her
mother and father behind had been the one drawback to her happiness. She
had been her mother's right hand and her father's companion. She had
thought how terribly they would miss her, and how, as years went on,
they would, far more than now, feel the difference between their present
life and that they had formerly led. The news that they would be always
near her and settled in a comfortable home filled her with delight. A
few minutes after Mr. Atherton entered the house she ran out to her
father and mother and threw her arms fondly around them. "Is it not
happiness, mother," she cried, "to think that we shall still be
together?"

"If you are not a happy woman, child, it will be your own fault," her
father said. "I consider you a marvellously lucky girl."

"As if I did not know that!" she replied, laughing through her tears.

Mr. Atherton did not sail quite so soon as he had intended. A church had
recently been erected at the central settlement, and a clergyman
established there, and a month after matters were settled between him
and Marion their wedding was celebrated, almost every settler on the
Mohaka being present. The newly-married couple returned to The Glade for
a week, Mr. and Mrs. Renshaw and Wilfrid remaining as the guests of Mr.
Mitford. At the end of that time they returned, and with Mr. and Mrs.
Renshaw sailed for Napier, where they took ship for England.

"What would you have done if I had sailed away for England without ever
mustering up courage to speak to you, Marion?" Mr. Atherton said as he
stood by the bulwark with her that evening taking their last look at New
Zealand.

"I should not have let you go, sir," his wife said saucily; "didn't I
know that you cared for me, and had I not refused all sorts of offers
for your sake? I don't know what I should have done, or what I should
have said, but I am quite sure I should not have let you go unless I
found that I had been making a mistake all along. It would have been
ridiculous indeed to have sacrificed the happiness of two lives merely
because you had some absurd ideas about your age."

"I never thought you cared for me, Marion, never."

"That is because you never took the trouble to find out," his wife
retorted. "Men are foolish creatures sometimes, even the wisest of
them."

Marion Atherton's life was one of almost perfect happiness. Mr. Atherton
entirely gave up his wanderings abroad, and by dint of devotion to
racquets and tennis in summer, and of hunting and shooting in winter, he
kept down his tendency towards corpulence. He was an energetic
magistrate, and one of the most popular men in the county. Mr. Renshaw
resumed his former studies in archæology, but they were now the
amusement instead of being the object of his life, and he made an
excellent agent to his son-in-law. Standing in the relation he did to
Mr. and Mrs. Atherton, he and Mrs. Renshaw shared in their popularity,
and occupied a good position in the county.

Three years after their return to England they received the news that
Kate Mitford had changed her name, and was installed as mistress at The
Glade. Every five years Wilfrid and his wife, and as time went on his
family, paid a visit to England. He became one of the leading men of the
colony. A few years after his marriage Mr. and Mrs. Mitford had returned
to England for good, and James Allen and Wilfrid succeeded to his
business as a trader, and carried it on with energy and success, Mr.
Atherton advancing Wilfrid sufficient capital to enable them to extend
their business largely. In time The Glade became Wilfrid's summer
residence only, the head-quarters of the firm being established at
Napier. It is now conducted by his sons, he himself having returned home
with his wife and daughters with a fortune amply sufficient to enable
them to live at ease. Marion was pleased when, two years after her
arrival in England, she heard from Wilfrid that Bob Allen had married
the daughter of an officer settled on the Mohaka. The Grimstones both
did well, and became prosperous farmers. Jack remained in Wilfrid's
service until he left the colony, and is now a trusted agent of his sons
in their dealings with the natives.

       *       *       *       *       *

PRINTED AND BOUND IN GREAT BRITAIN

_By Blackie & Son, Limited, Glasgow_





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