<h2 id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI<br/> <small>TAMBA ON THE SHIP</small></h2>
<p class="cap">The sun was brightly shining when
Tamba, the tame tiger, awakened in his
bed at the dock. I call it a “bed” for he
had snuggled down on a pile of bags between
some boxes and bales, and this is as good a bed
as ever a tiger asks for. Often they are glad
enough to sleep on the bare boards of the circus
cages, and even in their jungle caves they never
have more than a pile of dried leaves or grass.</p>
<p>Tamba could look out through the cracks between
the boxes and bales and see the yellow sunshine
on the dock. The sunshine made yellow
stripes, almost the color of Tamba’s tawny coat.
He could feel the soft, warm wind blowing in on
him, and he could also smell the salt water.</p>
<p>“I am in the right place at last,” thought
Tamba. “But I must be careful. I do not want
to be caught when I am so near my jungle.”</p>
<p>You see Tamba did not know just how far it
was down the big salt river and across the big,
salt ocean to his jungle home. All he knew was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107"></SPAN>[107]</span>
that the salt water here smelled just as the salt
water had smelled when he was put on the ship,
to be brought away from his home in India.</p>
<p>And there were ships at the dock. Tamba
could see them, but he knew better than to run
out now and get on board one. For, now that it
was daylight, there were many men on the dock.
They were driving their wagons and drays about,
laden as they were with things to go on board the
ships, and Tamba knew that if he ran out, in
plain sight of these men, some of them would
chase him, and, perhaps, catch him.</p>
<p>“So I’ll just stay hidden here until it gets dark
again,” thought Tamba to himself. “Then I’ll
go on one of those big floating houses, which
Tum Tum says are called ships, and I’ll get back
to my jungle. If I wait until night no one will
see me, and then they can’t catch me to send me
back to the circus.”</p>
<p>So Tamba curled up in his snug little nest
among the boxes and barrels on the pier, and remained
hidden. Of course if men had come to
take away those particular boxes they would have
found Tamba, but, as it happened, they did not,
and so he was safe.</p>
<p>After a while, though, Tamba began to feel
hungry. Milk for a tiger, even though it happened
to be the full top of a can, is not enough.
He must have meat, and meat was what Tamba<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_108"></SPAN>[108]</span>
wanted just then. He sniffed and smelled
around among the boxes and bales which formed
his nest, but no meat smell came to his nose. If
one of the boxes had happened to have meat in
it, perhaps Tamba might have clawed it open
and gotten a meal. But, as it was, there was
nothing for him to eat.</p>
<p>“Never mind,” he thought to himself; “perhaps
to-night, when I get on the ship, I can find
something good to eat.”</p>
<p>But Tamba was to have something before then.
About noon the dock on the edge of the salty
river, where many ships were tied, became a very
busy place. Though Tamba did not know it,
the ships were being loaded with things to be
taken across the sea and sold.</p>
<p>The dock was crowded with wagons, horses,
automobiles and men, all being driven or hurrying
to and fro, to get the big ships ready to sail.
For there were two ships in this dock, one on
either side of the pier, and Tamba was in a place
called a warehouse, in between the two vessels.</p>
<p>So, as I say, the dock and warehouse was a
very busy place at noon. And as men must eat,
as well as tigers, when the twelve o’clock whistles
blew some of the drivers tied their horses wherever
they happened to be, put nose-bags of oats
on the horses’ necks, and then the men went to get
their own dinners.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_109"></SPAN>[109]</span></p>
<p>Now, as it happened, a wagon, with a load of
meat on it, was stopped by its driver near Tamba’s
place. The end of the wagon, which was
filled with big pieces of beef, pork, and mutton,
was near the hole among the boxes where the
tiger was hiding. And of course Tamba could
easily smell this meat. In fact, the smell of it
awakened him from a little sleep into which he
had fallen.</p>
<p>“Ha! What’s that?” asked the tiger of himself,
as he opened his eyes. He sniffed harder.
The meat smell became plainer. Then he
looked up. Right over his head was the end of
a big wagon, where the man driving it had
backed it to get it out of the way while he fed his
horses and went to get his own dinner. And on
the end of the wagon was some nice, juicy meat,
just the kind Tamba had been fed in the circus.
Only there was more meat than Tamba had ever
seen at one time before.</p>
<p>The meat, as I suppose you have guessed, was
to be put on board one of the ships to feed the
passengers and crew on its journey over the salty
sea. Of course Tamba did not know that. All
he knew was that he felt very hungry, and that
here was meat.</p>
<p>“Well, it was very kind of some one to bring
me so much meat,” thought the tiger to himself.
“I’m sure I’m much obliged to them. And they<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_110"></SPAN>[110]</span>
left me to myself to eat it, too. They didn’t stay
to stare and watch me, as the folks do in the circus.
This is very nice.”</p>
<p>So Tamba rose up on his hind legs, and, hidden
as he was in his snug nest, where no one saw
him, and with the end of the meat wagon so
easily within reach, the tame tiger made a good
meal. Of course he chewed the ends off several
nice pieces of meat that were meant to go on
board the ship, but it did not completely spoil
them, and, after all, the tame tiger was very
hungry.</p>
<p>“My, but this tastes good!” thought the tiger,
as he took bite after bite of juicy beef. “This is
even better than the circus. I can have as much
as I want, and there are no bones to hurt my
teeth. Of course I like to gnaw a bone now and
then, but when I am as hungry as I am now I
want just plain chunks of meat.”</p>
<p>And Tamba had all he wanted. He just stood
there and ate and ate from the back of the wagon,
and then, licking his jaws to make them clean,
he curled up in his nest again, and went to sleep
once more.</p>
<p>And when the man came back, after having
had his lunch, to take the oat-bags from the heads
of his horses, he was in such a hurry to get his
wagon unloaded, was this man, that he never
noticed where Tamba had chewed the meat.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_111"></SPAN>[111]</span></p>
<p>And it was not until some days later, when the
butcher on the ship was cutting up the meat,
that it was noticed that some of the pieces were
chewed as if by some animal.</p>
<p>“I guess the dock rats did it,” said the ship
butcher. And he never knew it was Tamba, any
more than the grocer knew it was a tiger that had
tipped over his can of milk.</p>
<p>After his good meal Tamba had a fine sleep,
and it was quite dark when he awoke again. He
peered out from between the boxes, barrels and
bales, and he saw that there were no men, horses
or drays at the dock. It was deserted and quiet.
But, over at one side, Tamba could still see the
ships, or “floating houses,” as he called them.</p>
<p>“Now if I can get on one of those ships I’ll
soon be back at my jungle,” thought Tamba to
himself. “But I wonder which one to go on?”</p>
<p>Carefully and quietly he slunk out of his hiding
place. He walked along until he came to
where a sort of bridge, which is called a gangplank,
led up to the deck of the ship. Here
Tamba smelled a smell that he very well knew.
It was a tiger smell—the smell of a wild beast.</p>
<p>“Ha! If there have been wild jungle animals
here, this is the very ship I want to go on,”
thought Tamba. “This must have come from
jungle-land. At no other place can I smell the
wild animal smell. This is the ship for me!<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_112"></SPAN>[112]</span>
I’ll get on, hide away, and have a nice ride back
to my jungle.”</p>
<p>So, seeing no one about, Tamba walked softly
up the plank, and stepped softly to the deck of
the big ship. And he managed to crawl down
into a hole without any one seeing him. Down
in a hole, among some boxes and barrels, just like
those on the dock, Tamba hid himself.</p>
<p>“Now for my jungle!” he said to himself as he
curled up.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_113"></SPAN>[113]</span></p>
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