Lord of the Flies
By William Golding
Day 9 Audio |
Now the painted group felt
the otherness of Samneric, felt the power in their own hands. They felled the
twins clumsily and excitedly. Jack was inspired. He knew that Ralph would
attempt a rescue. He struck in a humming circle behind him and Ralph only just
parried the blow. Beyond them the tribe and the twins were a loud and writhing
heap. Piggy crouched again. Then the twins lay, astonished, and the tribe stood
round them. Jack turned to Ralph and spoke between his teeth.
“See? They do
what I want.”
There was
silence again. The twins lay, inexpertly tied up, and the tribe watched Ralph to
see what he would do. He numbered them through his fringe, glimpsed the
ineffectual smoke.
His temper
broke. He screamed at Jack.
“You’re a
beast and a swine and a bloody, bloody thief!”
He charged.
Jack, knowing
this was the crisis, charged too. They met with a jolt and bounced apart. Jack
swung with his fist at Ralph and aught him on the ear. Ralph hit Jack in the
stomach and made him grunt. Then they were facing each other again, panting and
furious, but unnerved by each other’s ferocity. They became aware of the noise
that was the background to this fight, the steady shrill cheering of the tribe
behind them.
Piggy’s voice
penetrated to Ralph.
“Let me
speak.”
He was
standing in the dust of the fight, and as the tribe saw his intention the shrill
cheer changed to a steady booing.
Piggy held up
the conch and the booing sagged a little, then came up again to strength.
“I got the
conch!”
He shouted.
“I tell you, I
got the conch!”
Surprisingly,
there was silence now; the tribe were curious to hear what amusing thing he
might have to say.
Silence and
pause; but in the silence a curious air-noise, close by Ralphs head. He give it
half his attention-and there it was again; a faint “Zup!” Someone was throwing
stones: Roger was dropping them, his one hand still on the lever. Below him,
Ralph was a shock of hair and Piggy a bag of fat.
“I got this to
say. You’re acting like a crowd of lads.”
The booing
rose and died again as Piggy lifted the white, magic shell.
“Which is
better-to be a pack of painted Indians like you are, or to be sensible like
Ralph is?”
A great clamor
rose among the savages. Piggy shouted again.
“Which is
better-to have rules and agree, or to hunt and kill?”
Again the
clamor and again--”Zup!”
Ralph shouted
against the noise.
“Which is
better, law and rescue, or hunting and breaking things up?”
Now Jack was
veiling too and Ralph could no longer make himself heard. Jack had backed right
against the tribe and they were a solid mass of menace that bristled with
spears. The intention of a charge was forming among them; they were working up
to it and the neck would be swept clear. Ralph stood facing them, a little to
one side, his spear ready. By him stood Piggy still holding out the talisman,
the fragile, shining beauty of the shell. The storm of sound beat at them, an
incantation of hatred. High overhead, Roger, with a sense of delirious
abandonment, leaned all his weight on the lever.
Ralph heard
the great rock long before he saw it. He was aware of a jolt in the earth that
came to him through the soles of his feet, and the breaking sound of stones at
the top of the cliff. Then the monstrous red thing, bounded across the neck and
he flung himself fiat while the tribe shrieked.
The rock
struck Piggy a glancing blow from chin to knee; the conch exploded into a
thousand white fragments and ceased to exist. Piggy, saying nothing, with no
time for even a grunt, traveled through the air sideways from the rock, turning
over as he went. The rock bounded twice and was lost in the forest. Piggy fell
forty feet and landed on his back across that square red rock in the sea. His
head opened and stuff came out and turned red. Piggy’s arms and legs twitched a
bit, like a pig’s after it has been killed. Then the sea breathed again in a
long, slow sigh, the water boiled white and pink over the rock; and when it
went, sucking back again, the body of Piggy was gone.
This time the
silence was complete. Ralph’s lips formed a word but no sound came.
Suddenly Jack
bounded out from the tribe and began screaming wildly.
“See? See?
That’s what you’ll get! I meant that! There isn’t a tribe for you any morel The
conch is gone-”
He ran
forward, stooping.
“I’m chief!”
Viciously,
with full intention, he hurled his spear at Ralph. The point tore the skin and
flesh over Ralph’s ribs, then sheared off and fell in the water. Ralph stumbled,
feeling not pain but panic, and the tribe, screaming now like the chief, began
to advance. Another spear, a bent one that would not fly straight, went past his
face and one fell from on high where Roger was. The twins lay hidden behind the
tribe and the anonymous devils’ faces swarmed across the neck. Ralph turned and
ran. A great noise as of sea gulls rose behind him. He obeyed an instinct that
he did not know he possessed and swerved over the open space so that the spears
went wide. He saw the headless body of the sow and jumped in time. Then he was
crashing through foliage and small boughs and was hidden by the forest.
The chief
stopped by the pig, turned and held up his hands.
“Back! Back to
the fort!”
Presently the
tribe returned noisily to the neck where Roger joined them.
The chief
spoke to him angrily.
“Why aren’t
you on watch?”
Roger looked
at him gravely.
“I just came
down-”
The hangman’s
horror clung round him. The chief said no more to him but looked down at
Samneric.
“You got to
join the tribe.”
“You lemme
go-”
“-and me.”
The chief
snatched one of the few spears that were left and poked Sam in the ribs.
“What d’you
mean by it, eh?” said the chief fiercely, “What d’you mean by coming with
spears? What d’you mean by not joining my tribe?”
The prodding
became rhythmic. Sam yelled.
“That’s not
the way.”
Roger edged
past the chief, only just avoiding pushing him with his shoulder. The yelling
ceased, and Samneric lay looking up in quiet terror. Roger advanced upon them as
one wielding a nameless authority.
Cry of the Hunters
Ralph lay in a
covert, wondering about his wounds. The bruised flesh was inches in diameter
over his right ribs, with a swollen and bloody scar where the spear had hit him.
His hair was full of dirt and tapped like the tendrils of a creeper. All over he
was scratched and bruised from his flight through the forest. By the time his
breathing was normal again, he had worked out that bathing these injuries would
have to wait. How could you listen for naked feet if you were splashing in
water? How could you be safe by the little stream or on the open beach?
Ralph
listened. He was not really far from the Castle Rock, and during the first panic
he had thought he heard sounds of pursuit But the hunters had only sneaked into
the fringes of the greenery, retrieving spears perhaps, and then had rushed back
to the sunny rock as if terrified of the darkness under the leaves. He had even
glimpsed one of them, striped brown, black, and red, and had judged that it was
Bill. But really, thought Ralph, this was not Bill. This was a savage whose
image refused to blend with that ancient picture of a boy in shorts and shirt.
The afternoon
died away; the circular spots of sunlight moved steadily over green fronds and
brown fiber but no sound came from behind the rock. At last Ralph wormed out of
the ferns and sneaked forward to the edge of that impenetrable thicket that
fronted the neck of land. He peered with elaborate caution between branches at
the edge and could see Robert sitting on guard at the top of the cliff. He held
a spear in his left hand and was tossing up a pebble and catching it again with
the right. Behind him a column of smoke rose thickly, so that Ralph’s nostrils
flared and his mouth dribbled. He wiped his nose and mouth with the back of his
hand and for the first time since the morning felt hungry. The tribe must be
sitting round the gutted pig, watching the fat ooze and burn among the ashes.
They would be intent
Another
figure, an unrecognizable one, appeared by Robert and gave him something, then
turned and went back behind the rock. Robert laid his spear on the rock beside
him and began to gnaw between his raised hands. So the feast was beginning and
the watchman had been given his portion.
Ralph saw that
for the time being he was safe. He limped away through the fruit trees, drawn by
the thought of the poor food yet bitter when he remembered the feast. Feast
today, and then tomorrow. . . .
He argued
unconvincingly that they would let him alone, perhaps even make an outlaw of
him. But then the fatal unreasoning knowledge came to him again. The breaking of
the conch and the deaths of Piggy and Simon lay over the island like a vapor.
These painted savages would go further and further. Then there was that
indefinable connection between himself and Jack; who therefore would never let
him alone; never.
He paused,
sun-flecked, holding up a bough, prepared to duck under it A spasm of terror set
him shaking and he cried aloud.
“No. They’re
not as bad as that. It was an accident.”
He ducked
under the bough, ran clumsily, then stopped and listened.
He came to the
smashed acres of fruit and ate greedily. He saw two littluns and, not having any
idea of his own appearance, wondered why they screamed and ran.
When he had
eaten he went toward the beach. The sunlight was slanting now into the palms by
the wrecked shelter. There was the platform and the pool. The best thing to do
was to ignore this leaden feeling about the heart and rely on their common
sense, their daylight sanity. Now that the tribe had eaten, the thing to do was
to try again. And anyway, he couldn’t stay here all night in an empty shelter by
the deserted platform. His flesh crept and he shivered in the evening sun. No
fire; no smoke; no rescue. He turned and limped away through the forest toward
Jack’s end of the island.
The slanting
sticks of sunlight were lost among the branches. At length he came to a clearing
in the forest where rock prevented vegetation from growing. Now it was a pool of
shadows and Ralph nearly flung himself behind a tree when he saw something
standing in the center; but then he saw that the white face was bone and that
the pig’s skull grinned at him from the top of a stick. He walked slowly into
the middle of the clearing and looked steadily at the skull that gleamed as
white as ever the conch had done and seemed to jeer at him cynically. An
inquisitive ant was busy in one of the eye sockets but otherwise the thing was
lifeless.
Or was it?
Little
prickles of sensation ran up and down his back. He stood, the skull about on a
level with his face, and held up his hair with two hands. The teeth grinned, the
empty sockets seemed to hold his gaze masterfully and without effort.
What was it?
The skull
regarded Ralph like one who knows all the answers and won’t tell. A sick fear
and rage swept him. Fiercely he hit out at the filthy thing in front of him that
bobbed like a toy and came back, still grinning into his face, so that he lashed
and cried out in loathing. Then he was licking his bruised knuckles and looking
at the bare stick, while the skull lay in two pieces, its grin now six feet
across. He wrenched the quivering stick from the crack and held it as a spear
between him and the white pieces. Then he backed away, keeping his face to the
skull that lay grinning at the sky.
When the green
glow had gone from the horizon and night was fully accomplished, Ralph came
again to the thicket in front of the Castle Rock. Peeping through, he could see
that the height was still occupied, and whoever it was up there had a spear at
the ready.
He knelt among
the shadows and felt his isolation bitterly. They were savages it was true; but
they were human, and the ambushing fears of the deep night were coming on.
Ralph moaned
faintly. Tired though he was, he could not relax and fall into a well of sleep
for fear of the tribe. Might it not be possible to walk boldly into the fort,
say-”I’ve got pax,” laugh lightly and sleep among the others? Pretend they were
still boys, schoolboys who had said, “Sir, yes, Sir”-and worn caps? Daylight
might have answered yes; but darkness and the horrors of death said no. Lying
there in the darkness, he knew he was an outcast.
“ ‘Cos I had
some sense.”
He rubbed his
cheek along his forearm, smelling the acrid scent of salt and sweat and the
staleness of dirt. Over to the left, the waves of ocean were breathing, sucking
down, then boiling back over the rock.
There were
sounds coming from behind the Castle Rock Listening carefully, detaching his
mind from the swing of the sea, Ralph could make out a familiar rhythm.
“Kill the
beast! Cut his throat! Spill his blood!”
The tribe was
dancing. Somewhere on the other side of this rocky wall there would be a dark
circle, a glowing fire, and meat. They would be savoring food and the comfort of
safety.
A noise nearer
at hand made him quiver. Savages were clambering up the Castle Rock, right up to
the top, and he could hear voices. He sneaked forward a few yards and saw the
shape at the top of the rock change and enlarge. There were only two boys on the
island who moved or talked like that.
Ralph put his
head down on his forearms and accepted this new fact like a wound. Samneric were
part of the tribe now. They were guarding the Castle Rock against him. There was
no chance of rescuing them and building up an outlaw tribe at the other end of
the island. Samneric were savages like the rest; Piggy was dead, and the conch
smashed to powder.
At length the
guard climbed down. The two that remained seemed nothing more than a dark
extension of the rock. A star appeared behind them and was momentarily eclipsed
by some movement.
Ralph edged
forward, feeling his way over the uneven surface as though he were bund. There
were miles of vague water at his right and the restless ocean lay under his left
hand, as awful as the shaft of a pit. Every minute the water breathed round the
death rock and flowered into a field of whiteness. Ralph crawled until he found
the ledge of the entry in his grasp. The lookouts were immediately above him and
he could see the end of a spear projecting over the rock.
He called very
gently.
“Samneric-”
There was no
reply. To carry he must speak louder; and this would rouse those striped and
inimical creatures from their feasting by the fire. He set his teeth and started
to climb, finding the holds by touch. The stick that had supported a skull
hampered him but he would not be parted from his only weapon. He was nearly
level with the twins before he spoke again.
“Samneric-”
He heard a cry
and a flurry from the rock. The twins had grabbed each other and were gibbering.
“It’s me.
Ralph.”
Terrified that
they would run and give the alarm, he hauled himself up until his head and
shoulders stuck over the top. Far below his armpit he saw the luminous flowering
round the rock.
“It’s only me.
Ralph.”
At length they
bent forward and peered in his face.
“We thought it
was-”
“-we didn’t
know what it was-”
“-we thought-”
Memory of
their new and shameful loyalty came to them. Eric was silent but Sam tried to do
his duty.
“You got to
go, Ralph. You go away now-”
He wagged his
spear and essayed fierceness.
“You shove
off. See?”
Eric nodded
agreement and jabbed his spear in the air. Ralph leaned on his arms and did not
go.
“I came to see
you two.”
His voice was
thick. His throat was hurting him now though it had received no wound.
“I came to see
you two-”
Words could
not express the dull pain of these things. He fell silent, while the vivid stars
were spilt and danced all ways.
Sam shifted
uneasily.
“Honest,
Ralph, you’d better go.”
Ralph looked
up again.
“You two
aren’t painted. How can you-? If it were light-”
If it were
light shame would burn them at admitting these things. But the night was dark.
Eric took up; and then the twins started their antiphonal speech.
“You got to go
because it’s not safe-”
“-they made
us. They hurt us-”
“Who? Jack?”
“Oh no-”
They bent to
him and lowered their voices.
“Push off,
Ralph-’
“-it’s a
tribe-”
“-they made
us-”
“-we couldn’t
help it-”
When Ralph
spoke again his voice was low, and seemed breathless.
“What have I
done? I liked him-and I wanted us to be rescued-”
Again the
stars spilled about the sky. Eric shook his head, earnestly.
“Listen,
Ralph. Never mind what’s sense. That’s gone-”
“Never mind
about the chief-”
“-you got to
go for your own good.”
“The chief and
Roger-”
“-yes, Roger-”
“They hate
you, Ralph. They’re going to do you.”
“They’re going
to hunt you tomorrow.”
“But why?”
“I dunno. And
Ralph, Jack, the chief, says it’ll be dangerous-”
“-and we’ve
got to be careful and throw our spears like at a pig.”
“We’re going
to spread out in a line across the island-”
“-we’re going
forward from this end-”
“-until we
find you.”
“We’ve got to
give signals like this.”
Eric raised
his head and achieved a faint ululation by beating on his open mouth. Then he
glanced behind him nervously.
“Like that-”
“-only louder,
of course.”
“But I’ve done
nothing,” whispered Ralph, urgently. I only wanted to keep up a fire!”
He paused for
a moment, thinking miserably of the morrow. A matter of overwhelming importance
occurred to him.
“What are
you-?”
He could not
bring himself to be specific at first; but then fear and loneliness goaded him.
“When they
find me, what are they going to do?” The twins were silent. Beneath him, the
death rock flowered again.
“What are
they-oh God! I’m hungry-”
The towering
rock seemed to sway under him.
“Well-what-?”
The twins
answered his question indirectly.
“You got to go
now, Ralph.”
“For your own
good.”
“Keep away. As
far as you can.”
“Won’t you
come with me? Three of us-we’d stand a chance.”.
After a
moment’s silence, Sam spoke in a strangled voice.
“You don’t
know Roger. He’s a terror.”
“And the
chief-they’re both-”
“-terrors-”
“-only Roger-”
Both boys
froze. Someone was climbing toward them from the tribe.
“He’s coming
to see if we’re keeping watch. Quick, Ralph!”
As he prepared
to let himself down the cliff, Ralph snatched at the last possible advantage to
be wrung out of this meeting.
“I’ll lie up
close; in that thicket down there,” he whispered, “so keep them away from it.
They’ll never think to took so close-”
The footsteps
were still some distance away.
“Sam-I’m going
to be all right, aren’t I?”
The twins were
silent again.
“Here!” said
Sam suddenly. “Take this-”
Ralph felt a
chunk of meat pushed against him and grabbed it.
“But what are
you going to do when you catch me?”
Silence above.
He sounded silly to himself. He lowered himself down the rock.
“What are you
going to do-?”
From the top
of the towering rock came the incomprehensible reply.
“Roger
sharpened a stick at both ends.”
Roger
sharpened a stick at both ends. Ralph tried to attach a meaning to this but
could not. He used all the bad words he could think of in a fit of temper that
passed into yawning. How long could you go without sleep? He yearned for a bed
and sheets-but the only whiteness here was the slow spilt milk, luminous round
the rock forty feet below, where Piggy had fallen. Piggy was everywhere, was on
this neck, was become terrible in darkness and death. If Piggy were to come back
now out of the water, with his empty head-Ralph whimpered and yawned like a
littlun. The stick in his hand became a crutch on which he reeled.
Then he tensed
again. There were voices raised on the top of the Castle Rock. Samneric were
arguing with someone. But the ferns and the grass were near. That was the place
to be in, hidden, and next to the thicket that would serve for tomorrow’s
hide-out. Here-and his hands touched grass-was a place to be in for the night,
not far from the tribe, so that if the horrors of the supernatural emerged one
could at least mix with humans for the time being, even if it meant . . .
What did it
mean? A stick sharpened at both ends. What was there in that? They had thrown
spears and missed; all but one. Perhaps they would miss next time, too.
He squatted
down in the tall grass, remembered the meat that Sam had given him, and began to
tear at it ravenously. While he was eating, he heard fresh noises-cries of pain
from Samneric, cries of panic, angry voices. What did it mean? Someone besides
himself was in trouble, for at least one of the twins was catching it. Then the
voices passed away down the rock and he ceased to think of them. He felt with
his hands and found cool, delicate fronds backed against the thicket. Here then
was the night’s lair. At first light he would creep into the thicket, squeeze
between the twisted stems, ensconce himself so deep that only a crawler like
himself could come through, and that crawler would be jabbed. There he would
sit, and the search would pass him by, and the cordon waver on, ululating along
the island, and he would be free.
He pulled
himself between the ferns, tunneling in. He laid the stick beside him, and
huddled himself down in the blackness. One must remember to wake at first light,
in order to diddle the savages-and he did not know how quickly sleep came and
hurled him down a dark interior slope.
He was awake
before his eyes were open, listening to a noise that was near. He opened an eye,
found the mold an inch or so from his face and his fingers gripped into it,
light filtering between the fronds of fern. He had just time to realize that the
age-long nightmares of falling and death were past and that the morning was
come, when he heard the sound again.’ It was an ululation over by the seashore
-and now the next savage answered and the next. The cry swept by him across the
narrow end of the island from sea to lagoon, like the cry of a flying bird. He
took no time to consider but grabbed his sharp stick and wriggled back among the
ferns. Within seconds he was worming his way into the thicket; but not before he
had glimpsed the legs of a savage coming toward him. The ferns were thumped and
beaten and he heard legs moving in the long grass. The savage, whoever he was,
ululated twice; and the cry was repeated in both directions, then died away.
Ralph crouched still, tangled in the ferns, and for a time he heard nothing.
At last he
examined the thicket itself. Certainly no one could attack him here-and moreover
he had a stroke of luck. The great rock that had killed Piggy had bounded into
this thicket and bounced there, right in the center, making a smashed space a
few feet in extent each way. When Ralph had wriggled into this he felt secure,
and clever. He sat down carefully among the smashed stems and waited for the
hunt to pass. Looking up between the leaves he caught a glimpse of something
red. That must be the top of the Castle Rock, distant and unmenacing. He
composed himself triumphantly, to hear the sounds of the hunt dying away.
Yet no one
made a sound; and as the minutes passed, in the green shade, his feeling of
triumph faded.
At last he
heard a voice-Jack’s voice, but hushed.
“Are you
certain?”
The savage
addressed said nothing. Perhaps he made a gesture.
Roger spoke.
“If you’re
fooling us-”
Immediately
after this, there came a gasp, and a squeal of pain. Ralph crouched
instinctively. One of the twins was there, outside the thicket, with Jack and
Roger.
“You’re sure
he meant in there?”
The twin
moaned faintly and then squealed again.
“He meant he’d
hide in there?”
“Yes-yes-oh-!”
Silvery
laughter scattered among the trees.
So they knew.
Ralph picked
up his stick and prepared for battle. But what could they do? It would take them
a week to break a path through the thicket; and anyone who wormed his way in
would be helpless. He felt the point of his spear with his thumb and grinned
without amusement Whoever tried that would be stuck, squealing like a pig.
They were
going away, back to the tower rock. He could hear feet moving and then someone
sniggered. There came again that high, bird-like cry that swept along the line,
So some were still watching for him; but some-?
There was a
long, breathless silence. Ralph found that he had bark in his mouth from the
gnawed spear. He stood and peered upwards to the Castle Rock.
As he did so,
he heard Jack’s voice from the top.
“Heave! Heave!
Heave!”
The red rock
that he could see at the top of the cliff vanished like a curtain, and he could
see figures and blue sky. A moment later the earth jolted, there was a rushing
sound in the air, and the top of the thicket was cuffed as with a gigantic hand.
The rock bounded on, thumping and smashing toward the beach, while a shower of
broken twigs and leaves fell on him. Beyond the thicket, the tribe was cheering.
Silence again.
Ralph put his
fingers in his mouth and bit them. There was only one other rock up there that
they might conceivably move; but that was half as big as a cottage, big as a
car, a tank. He visualized its probable progress with agonizing clearness-that
one would start slowly, drop from ledge to ledge, trundle across the neck like
an outsize steam roller.
“Heave! Heave!
Heave!”
Ralph put down
his spear, then picked it up again. He pushed his hair back irritably, took two
hasty steps across the little space and then came back. He stood looking at the
broken ends of branches.
Still silence.
He caught
sight of the rise and fall of his diaphragm and was surprised to see how quickly
he was breathing. Just left of center his heart-beats were visible. He put the
spear down again.
“Heave! Heave!
Heave!”
A shrill,
prolonged cheer.
Something
boomed up on the red rock, then the earth jumped and began to shake steadily,
while the noise as steadily increased. Ralph was shot into the air, thrown down,
dashed against branches. At his right hand, and only a few feet away, the whole
thicket bent and the roots screamed as they came out of the earth together. He
saw something red that turned over slowly as a mill wheel. Then the red thing
was past and the elephantine progress diminished toward the sea.
Ralph knelt on
the plowed-up soil, and waited for the earth to come back. Presently the white,
broken stumps, the split sticks and the tangle of the thicket refocused. There
was a kind of heavy feeling in his body where he had watched his own pulse.
Silence again.
Yet not
entirely so. They were whispering out there; and suddenly the branches were
shaken furiously at two places on his right. The pointed end of a stick
appeared. In panic, Ralph thrust his own stick through the crack and struck with
all his might.
“Aaa-ah!”
His spear
twisted a little in his hands and then he withdrew it again.
“Ooh-ooh-”
Someone was
moaning outside and a babble of voices rose. A fierce argument was going on and
the wounded savage kept groaning. Then when there was silence, a single voice
spoke and Ralph decided that it was not Jack’s.
“See? I told
you-he’s dangerous.”
The wounded
savage moaned again.
What else?
What next?
Ralph fastened
his hands round the chewed spear and his hair fell. Someone was muttering, only
a few yards away toward the Castle Rock. He heard a savage say “No!” in a
shocked voice; and then there was suppressed laughter. He squatted back on his
heels and showed his teeth at the wall of branches. He raised his spear, snarled
a little, and waited.
Once more the
invisible group sniggered. He heard a curious trickling sound and then a louder
crepitation as if someone were unwrapping great sheets of cellophane. A stick
snapped and he stifled a cough. Smoke was seeping through the branches in white
and yellow wisps, the patch of blue sky overhead turned to the color of a storm
cloud, and then the smoke billowed round him.
Someone
laughed excitedly, and a voice shouted.
“Smoke!”
He wormed his
way through the thicket toward the forest, keeping as far as possible beneath
the smoke. Presently he saw open space, and the green leaves of the edge of the
thicket. A smallish savage was standing between him and the rest of the forest,
a savage striped red and white, and carrying a spear. He was coughing and
smearing the paint about his eyes with the back of his hand as he tried to see
through the increasing smoke. Ralph launched himself like a cat; stabbed,
snarling, with the spear, and the savage doubled up. There was a shout from
beyond the thicket and then Ralph was running with the swiftness of fear through
the undergrowth. He came to a pig-run, followed it for perhaps a hundred yards,
and then swerved off. Behind him the ululation swept across the island once more
and a single voice shouted three times. He guessed that was the signal to
advance and sped away again, till his chest was like fire. Then he flung himself
down under a bush and waited for a moment till his breathing steadied. He passed
his tongue tentatively over his teeth and lips and heard far off the ululation
of the pursuers.
There were
many things he could do. He could climb a tree; but that was putting all his
eggs in one basket. If he were detected, they had nothing more difficult to do
than wait.
If only one
had time to think!
Another double
cry at the same distance gave him a clue to their plan. Any savage balked in the
forest would utter the double shout and hold up the line till he was free again.
That way they might hope to keep the cordon unbroken right across the island.
Ralph thought of the boar that had broken through them with such ease. If
necessary, when the chase came too close, he could charge the cordon while it
was still thin, burst through, and run back. But run back where? The cordon
would turn and sweep again. Sooner or later he would have to sleep or eat-and
then he would awaken with hands clawing at him; and the hunt would become a
running down.
What was to be
done, then? The tree? Burst the line like a boar? Either way the choice was
terrible.
A single cry
quickened his heart-beat and, leaping up, be dashed away toward the ocean side
and the thick jungle till he was hung up among creepers; he stayed there for a
moment with his calves quivering. If only one could have quiet, a long pause, a
time to think!
And there
again, shrill and inevitable, was the ululation sweeping across the island. At
that sound he shied like a horse among the creepers and ran once more till he
was panting. He flung himself down by some ferns. The tree, or the charge? He
mastered his breathing for a moment, wiped his mouth, and told himself to be
calm. Samneric were somewhere in that line, and hating it. Or were they? And
supposing, instead of them, he met the chief, or Roger who carried death in his
hands?
Ralph pushed
back his tangled hair and wiped the sweat out of his best eye. He spoke aloud.
“Think.”
What was the
sensible thing to do?
There was no
Piggy to talk sense. There was no solemn assembly for debate nor dignity of the
conch.
“Think.”
Most, he was
beginning to dread the curtain that might waver in his brain, blacking out the
sense of danger, making a simpleton of him.
A third idea
would be to hide so well that the advancing line would pass without discovering
him.
He jerked his
head off the ground and listened. There was another noise to attend to now, a
deep grumbling noise, as though the forest itself were angry with him, a somber
noise across which the ululations were scribbled excruciatingly as on slate. He
knew he had heard it before somewhere, but had no time to remember.
Break the
line.
A tree.
Hide, and let
them pass.
A nearer cry
stood him on his feet and immediately he was away again, running fast among
thorns and brambles. Suddenly he blundered into the open, found himself again in
that open space-and there was the fathom-wide grin of the skull, no longer
ridiculing a deep blue patch of sky but jeering up into a blanket of smoke. Then
Ralph was running beneath trees, with the grumble of the forest explained. They
had smoked him out and set the island on fire.
Hide was
better than a tree because you had a chance of breaking the line if you were
discovered.
Hide, then.
He wondered it
a pig would agree, and grimaced at nothing. Find the deepest thicket, the
darkest hole on the island, and creep in. Now, as he ran, he peered about him.
Bars and splashes of sunlight flitted over him and sweat made glistening streaks
on his dirty body. The cries were far now, and faint.
At last he
found what seemed to him the right place, though the decision was desperate.
Here, bushes and a wild tangle of creeper made a mat that kept out all the light
of the sun. Beneath it was a space, perhaps a foot high, though it was pierced
everywhere by parallel and rising stems. If you wormed into the middle of that
you would be five yards from the edge, and hidden, unless the savage chose to
lie down and look for you; and even then, you would be in darkness-and if the
worst happened and he saw you, then you had a chance to burst out at him, fling
the whole line out of step and double back.
Cautiously,
his stick trailing behind him, Ralph wormed between the rising stems. When he
reached the middle of the mat he lay and listened.
The fire was a
big one and the drum-roll that he had thought was left so far behind was nearer.
Couldn’t a fire outrun a galloping horse? He could see the sun-splashed ground
over an area of perhaps fifty yards from where he lay, and as he watched, the
sunlight in every patch blinked at him. This was so like the curtain that
flapped in his brain that for a moment he thought the blinking was inside him.
But then the patches blinked more rapidly, dulled and went out, so that he saw
that a great heaviness of smoke lay between the island and the sun.
If anyone
peered under the bushes and chanced to glimpse human flesh it might be Samneric
who would pretend not to see and say nothing. He laid his cheek against the
chocolate-colored earth, licked his dry lips and closed his eyes. Under the
thicket, the earth was vibrating very slightly; or perhaps there was a sound
beneath the obvious thunder of the fire and scribbled ululations that was too
low to hear.
Someone cried
out. Ralph jerked his cheek off the earth and looked into the dulled light. They
must be near now, he thought, and his chest began to thump. Hide, break the
line, climb a tree-which was the best after all? The trouble was you only had
one chance.
Now the fire
was nearer; those volleying shots were great limbs, trunks even, bursting. The
fools! The fools! The fire must be almost at the fruit trees-what would they eat
tomorrow?
Ralph stirred
restlessly in his narrow bed. One chanced nothing! What could they do? Beat him?
So what? Kill him? A stick sharpened at both ends.
The cries,
suddenly nearer, jerked him up. He could see a striped savage moving hastily out
of a green tangle, and coming toward the mat where he hid, a savage who carried
a spear. Ralph gripped his fingers into the earth. Be ready now, in case.
Ralph fumbled
to hold his spear so that it was point foremost; and now he saw that the stick
was sharpened at both ends.
The savage
stopped fifteen yards away and uttered his cry.
Perhaps he can
hear my heart over the noises of the fire. Don’t scream. Get ready.
The savage
moved forward so that you could only see him from the waist down. That was the
butt of his spear. Now you could see him from the knee down. Don’t scream. A
herd of pigs came squealing out of the greenery behind the savage and rushed
away into the forest. Birds were screaming, mice shrieking, and a little hopping
thing came under the mat and cowered.
Five yards
away the savage stopped, standing right by the thicket, and cried out. Ralph
drew his feet up and crouched. The stake was in his hands, the stake sharpened
at both ends, the stake that vibrated so wildly, that grew long, short, light,
heavy, light again.
The ululation
spread from shore to shore. The savage knelt down by the edge of the thicket,
and there were lights flickering in the forest behind him. You could see a knee
disturb the mold. Now the other. Two hands. A spear.
A face.
The savage
peered into the obscurity beneath the thicket. You could tell that he saw light
on this side and on that, but not in the middle-there. In the middle was a blob
of dark and the savage wrinkled up his face, trying to decipher the darkness.
The seconds
lengthened Ralph was looking straight into the savage’s eyes.
Don’t scream.
You’ll get
back.
Now he’s seen
you. He’s making sure. A stick sharpened.
Ralph
screamed, a scream of fright and anger and desperation. His legs straightened,
the screams became continuous and foaming. He shot forward, burst the thicket,
was in the open, screaming, snarling, bloody. He swung the stake and the savage
tumbled over; but there were others coming toward him, crying out. He swerved as
a spear flew past and then was silent, running. All at once the lights
flickering ahead of him merged together, the roar of the forest rose to thunder
and a tall bush directly in his path burst into a great fan-shaped flame. He
swung to the right, running desperately fast, with the heat beating on his left
side and the fire racing forward like a tide. The ululation rose behind him and
spread along, a series of short sharp cries, the sighting call. A brown figure
showed up at his right and fell away. They were all running, all crying out
madly. He could hear them crashing in the undergrowth and on the left was the
hot, bright thunder of the fire. He forgot his wounds, his hunger and thirst,
and became fear; hopeless fear on flying feet, rushing through the forest toward
the open beach. Spots jumped before his eyes and turned into red circles that
expanded quickly till they passed out of sight. Below him someone’s legs were
getting tired and the desperate ululation advanced like a jagged fringe of
menace and was almost overhead.
He stumbled
over a root and the cry that pursued him rose even higher. He saw a shelter
burst into flames and the fire flapped at his right shoulder and there was the
glitter of water. Then he was down, rolling over and over in the warm sand,
crouching with arm up to ward off, trying to cry for mercy.
He staggered
to his feet, tensed for more terrors, and looked up at a huge peaked cap. It was
a white-topped cap, and above the green shade or the peak was a crown, an
anchor, gold foliage. He saw white drill, epaulettes, a revolver, a row of gilt
buttons down the front of a uniform.
A naval
officer stood on the sand, looking down at Ralph in wary astonishment. On the
beach behind him was a cutter, her bows hauled up and held by two ratings. In
the stern-sheets another rating held a sub-machine gun.
The ululation
faltered and died away.
The officer
looked at Ralph doubtfully for a moment, then took his hand away from the butt
of the revolver.
“Hullo.”
Squirming a
little, conscious of his filthy appearance, Ralph answered shyly.
“Hullo.”
The officer
nodded, as if a question had been answered.
“Are there any
adults-any grownups with you?”
Dumbly, Ralph
shook his head. He turned a half-pace on the sand. A semicircle of little boys,
their bodies streaked with colored clay, sharp sticks in their hands, were
standing on the beach making no noise at all.
“Fun and
games,” said the officer.
The fire
reached the coconut palms by the beach and swallowed them noisily. A flame,
seemingly detached, swung like an acrobat and licked up the palm heads on the
platfonn. The sky was black.
The officer
grinned cheerfully at Ralph.
“We saw your
smoke. What have you been doing? Having a war or something?”
Ralph nodded.
The officer
inspected the little scarecrow in front of him. The kid needed a bath, a
haircut, a nose-wipe and a good deal of ointment.
“Nobody
killed, I hope? Any dead bodies?”
“Only two. And
they’ve gone.”
The officer
leaned down and looked closely at Ralph.
“Two? Killed?”
Ralph nodded
again. Behind him, the whole island was shuddering with flame. The officer knew,
as a rule, when people were telling the truth. He whistled softly.
Other boys
were appearing now, tiny tots some of them, brown, with the distended bellies of
small savages. One of them came dose to the officer and looked up.
“I’m, I’m-”
But there was
no more to come. Percival Wemys Madison sought in his head for an incantation
that had faded clean away.
The officer
turned back to Ralph.
“We’ll take
you off. How many of you are there?”
Ralph shook
his head. The officer looked past him to the group of painted boys.
“Who’s boss
here?”
“I am,” said
Ralph loudly.
A little boy
who wore the remains of an extraordinary black cap on his red hair and who
carried the remains of a pair of spectacles at his waist, started forward, then
changed his mind and stood still.
“We saw your
smoke. And you don’t know how many of you there are?”
“No, sir.”
“I should have
thought,” said the officer as he visualized the search before him, “I should
have thought that a pack of British boys-you’re all British, aren’t you?-would
have been able to put up a better show than that-I mean-”
“It was like
that at first,” said Ralph, “before things-”
He stopped.
“We were
together then-”
The officer
nodded helpfully.
“I know. Jolly
good show. Like the Coral Island.”
Ralph looked
at him dumbly. For a moment he had a fleeting picture of the strange glamour
that had once invested the beaches. But the island was scorched up like dead
wood-Simon was dead-and Jack had. . . . The tears began to flow and sobs shook
him. He gave himself up to them now for the first time on the island; great,
shuddering spasms of grief that seemed to wrench his whole body. His voice rose
under the black smoke before the burning wreckage of the island; and infected by
that emotion, the other little boys began to shake and sob too. And in the
middle of them, with filthy body, matted hair, and unwiped nose, Ralph wept for
the end of innocence, the darkness of man’s heart, and the fall through the air
of the true, wise friend called Piggy.
The officer,
surrounded by these noises, was moved and a little embarrassed. He turned away
to give them time to pull themselves together; and waited, allowing his eyes to
rest on the trim cruiser in the distance.
THE END
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