<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER FIVE </h2>
<p>"It was the writing on his forehead," said Babalatchi, adding a couple of
small sticks to the little fire by which he was squatting, and without
looking at Lakamba who lay down supported on his elbow on the other side
of the embers. "It was written when he was born that he should end his
life in darkness, and now he is like a man walking in a black night—with
his eyes open, yet seeing not. I knew him well when he had slaves, and
many wives, and much merchandise, and trading praus, and praus for
fighting. Hai—ya! He was a great fighter in the days before the
breath of the Merciful put out the light in his eyes. He was a pilgrim,
and had many virtues: he was brave, his hand was open, and he was a great
robber. For many years he led the men that drank blood on the sea: first
in prayer and first in fight! Have I not stood behind him when his face
was turned to the West? Have I not watched by his side ships with high
masts burning in a straight flame on the calm water? Have I not followed
him on dark nights amongst sleeping men that woke up only to die? His
sword was swifter than the fire from Heaven, and struck before it flashed.
Hai! Tuan! Those were the days and that was a leader, and I myself was
younger; and in those days there were not so many fireships with guns that
deal fiery death from afar. Over the hill and over the forest—O!
Tuan Lakamba! they dropped whistling fireballs into the creek where our
praus took refuge, and where they dared not follow men who had arms in
their hands."</p>
<p>He shook his head with mournful regret and threw another handful of fuel
on the fire. The burst of clear flame lit up his broad, dark, and
pock-marked face, where the big lips, stained with betel-juice, looked
like a deep and bleeding gash of a fresh wound. The reflection of the
firelight gleamed brightly in his solitary eye, lending it for a moment a
fierce animation that died out together with the short-lived flame. With
quick touches of his bare hands he raked the embers into a heap, then,
wiping the warm ash on his waistcloth—his only garment—he
clasped his thin legs with his entwined fingers, and rested his chin on
his drawn-up knees. Lakamba stirred slightly without changing his position
or taking his eyes off the glowing coals, on which they had been fixed in
dreamy immobility.</p>
<p>"Yes," went on Babalatchi, in a low monotone, as if pursuing aloud a train
of thought that had its beginning in the silent contemplation of the
unstable nature of earthly greatness—"yes. He has been rich and
strong, and now he lives on alms: old, feeble, blind, and without
companions, but for his daughter. The Rajah Patalolo gives him rice, and
the pale woman—his daughter—cooks it for him, for he has no
slave."</p>
<p>"I saw her from afar," muttered Lakamba, disparagingly. "A she-dog with
white teeth, like a woman of the Orang-Putih."</p>
<p>"Right, right," assented Babalatchi; "but you have not seen her near. Her
mother was a woman from the west; a Baghdadi woman with veiled face. Now
she goes uncovered, like our women do, for she is poor and he is blind,
and nobody ever comes near them unless to ask for a charm or a blessing
and depart quickly for fear of his anger and of the Rajah's hand. You have
not been on that side of the river?"</p>
<p>"Not for a long time. If I go . . ."</p>
<p>"True! true!" interrupted Babalatchi, soothingly, "but I go often alone—for
your good—and look—and listen. When the time comes; when we
both go together towards the Rajah's campong, it will be to enter—and
to remain."</p>
<p>Lakamba sat up and looked at Babalatchi gloomily.</p>
<p>"This is good talk, once, twice; when it is heard too often it becomes
foolish, like the prattle of children."</p>
<p>"Many, many times have I seen the cloudy sky and have heard the wind of
the rainy seasons," said Babalatchi, impressively.</p>
<p>"And where is your wisdom? It must be with the wind and the clouds of
seasons past, for I do not hear it in your talk."</p>
<p>"Those are the words of the ungrateful!" shouted Babalatchi, with sudden
exasperation. "Verily, our only refuge is with the One, the Mighty, the
Redresser of . . ."</p>
<p>"Peace! Peace!" growled the startled Lakamba. "It is but a friend's talk."</p>
<p>Babalatchi subsided into his former attitude, muttering to himself. After
awhile he went on again in a louder voice—</p>
<p>"Since the Rajah Laut left another white man here in Sambir, the daughter
of the blind Omar el Badavi has spoken to other ears than mine."</p>
<p>"Would a white man listen to a beggar's daughter?" said Lakamba,
doubtingly.</p>
<p>"Hai! I have seen . . ."</p>
<p>"And what did you see? O one-eyed one!" exclaimed Lakamba, contemptuously.</p>
<p>"I have seen the strange white man walking on the narrow path before the
sun could dry the drops of dew on the bushes, and I have heard the whisper
of his voice when he spoke through the smoke of the morning fire to that
woman with big eyes and a pale skin. Woman in body, but in heart a man!
She knows no fear and no shame. I have heard her voice too."</p>
<p>He nodded twice at Lakamba sagaciously and gave himself up to silent
musing, his solitary eye fixed immovably upon the straight wall of forest
on the opposite bank. Lakamba lay silent, staring vacantly. Under them
Lingard's own river rippled softly amongst the piles supporting the bamboo
platform of the little watch-house before which they were lying. Behind
the house the ground rose in a gentle swell of a low hill cleared of the
big timber, but thickly overgrown with the grass and bushes, now withered
and burnt up in the long drought of the dry season. This old rice
clearing, which had been several years lying fallow, was framed on three
sides by the impenetrable and tangled growth of the untouched forest, and
on the fourth came down to the muddy river bank. There was not a breath of
wind on the land or river, but high above, in the transparent sky, little
clouds rushed past the moon, now appearing in her diffused rays with the
brilliance of silver, now obscuring her face with the blackness of ebony.
Far away, in the middle of the river, a fish would leap now and then with
a short splash, the very loudness of which measured the profundity of the
overpowering silence that swallowed up the sharp sound suddenly.</p>
<p>Lakamba dozed uneasily off, but the wakeful Babalatchi sat thinking
deeply, sighing from time to time, and slapping himself over his naked
torso incessantly in a vain endeavour to keep off an occasional and
wandering mosquito that, rising as high as the platform above the swarms
of the riverside, would settle with a ping of triumph on the unexpected
victim. The moon, pursuing her silent and toilsome path, attained her
highest elevation, and chasing the shadow of the roof-eaves from Lakamba's
face, seemed to hang arrested over their heads. Babalatchi revived the
fire and woke up his companion, who sat up yawning and shivering
discontentedly.</p>
<p>Babalatchi spoke again in a voice which was like the murmur of a brook
that runs over the stones: low, monotonous, persistent; irresistible in
its power to wear out and to destroy the hardest obstacles. Lakamba
listened, silent but interested. They were Malay adventurers; ambitious
men of that place and time; the Bohemians of their race. In the early days
of the settlement, before the ruler Patalolo had shaken off his allegiance
to the Sultan of Koti, Lakamba appeared in the river with two small
trading vessels. He was disappointed to find already some semblance of
organization amongst the settlers of various races who recognized the
unobtrusive sway of old Patalolo, and he was not politic enough to conceal
his disappointment. He declared himself to be a man from the east, from
those parts where no white man ruled, and to be of an oppressed race, but
of a princely family. And truly enough he had all the gifts of an exiled
prince. He was discontented, ungrateful, turbulent; a man full of envy and
ready for intrigue, with brave words and empty promises for ever on his
lips. He was obstinate, but his will was made up of short impulses that
never lasted long enough to carry him to the goal of his ambition.
Received coldly by the suspicious Patalolo, he persisted—permission
or no permission—in clearing the ground on a good spot some fourteen
miles down the river from Sambir, and built himself a house there, which
he fortified by a high palisade. As he had many followers and seemed very
reckless, the old Rajah did not think it prudent at the time to interfere
with him by force. Once settled, he began to intrigue. The quarrel of
Patalolo with the Sultan of Koti was of his fomenting, but failed to
produce the result he expected because the Sultan could not back him up
effectively at such a great distance. Disappointed in that scheme, he
promptly organized an outbreak of the Bugis settlers, and besieged the old
Rajah in his stockade with much noisy valour and a fair chance of success;
but Lingard then appeared on the scene with the armed brig, and the old
seaman's hairy forefinger, shaken menacingly in his face, quelled his
martial ardour. No man cared to encounter the Rajah Laut, and Lakamba,
with momentary resignation, subsided into a half-cultivator, half-trader,
and nursed in his fortified house his wrath and his ambition, keeping it
for use on a more propitious occasion. Still faithful to his character of
a prince-pretender, he would not recognize the constituted authorities,
answering sulkily the Rajah's messenger, who claimed the tribute for the
cultivated fields, that the Rajah had better come and take it himself. By
Lingard's advice he was left alone, notwithstanding his rebellious mood;
and for many days he lived undisturbed amongst his wives and retainers,
cherishing that persistent and causeless hope of better times, the
possession of which seems to be the universal privilege of exiled
greatness.</p>
<p>But the passing days brought no change. The hope grew faint and the hot
ambition burnt itself out, leaving only a feeble and expiring spark
amongst a heap of dull and tepid ashes of indolent acquiescence with the
decrees of Fate, till Babalatchi fanned it again into a bright flame.
Babalatchi had blundered upon the river while in search of a safe refuge
for his disreputable head.</p>
<p>He was a vagabond of the seas, a true Orang-Laut, living by rapine and
plunder of coasts and ships in his prosperous days; earning his living by
honest and irksome toil when the days of adversity were upon him. So,
although at times leading the Sulu rovers, he had also served as Serang of
country ships, and in that wise had visited the distant seas, beheld the
glories of Bombay, the might of the Mascati Sultan; had even struggled in
a pious throng for the privilege of touching with his lips the Sacred
Stone of the Holy City. He gathered experience and wisdom in many lands,
and after attaching himself to Omar el Badavi, he affected great piety (as
became a pilgrim), although unable to read the inspired words of the
Prophet. He was brave and bloodthirsty without any affection, and he hated
the white men who interfered with the manly pursuits of throat-cutting,
kidnapping, slave-dealing, and fire-raising, that were the only possible
occupation for a true man of the sea. He found favour in the eyes of his
chief, the fearless Omar el Badavi, the leader of Brunei rovers, whom he
followed with unquestioning loyalty through the long years of successful
depredation. And when that long career of murder, robbery and violence
received its first serious check at the hands of white men, he stood
faithfully by his chief, looked steadily at the bursting shells, was
undismayed by the flames of the burning stronghold, by the death of his
companions, by the shrieks of their women, the wailing of their children;
by the sudden ruin and destruction of all that he deemed indispensable to
a happy and glorious existence. The beaten ground between the houses was
slippery with blood, and the dark mangroves of the muddy creeks were full
of sighs of the dying men who were stricken down before they could see
their enemy. They died helplessly, for into the tangled forest there was
no escape, and their swift praus, in which they had so often scoured the
coast and the seas, now wedged together in the narrow creek, were burning
fiercely. Babalatchi, with the clear perception of the coming end, devoted
all his energies to saving if it was but only one of them. He succeeded in
time. When the end came in the explosion of the stored powder-barrels, he
was ready to look for his chief. He found him half dead and totally
blinded, with nobody near him but his daughter Aissa:—the sons had
fallen earlier in the day, as became men of their courage. Helped by the
girl with the steadfast heart, Babalatchi carried Omar on board the light
prau and succeeded in escaping, but with very few companions only. As they
hauled their craft into the network of dark and silent creeks, they could
hear the cheering of the crews of the man-of-war's boats dashing to the
attack of the rover's village. Aissa, sitting on the high after-deck, her
father's blackened and bleeding head in her lap, looked up with fearless
eyes at Babalatchi. "They shall find only smoke, blood and dead men, and
women mad with fear there, but nothing else living," she said, mournfully.
Babalatchi, pressing with his right hand the deep gash on his shoulder,
answered sadly: "They are very strong. When we fight with them we can only
die. Yet," he added, menacingly—"some of us still live! Some of us
still live!"</p>
<p>For a short time he dreamed of vengeance, but his dream was dispelled by
the cold reception of the Sultan of Sulu, with whom they sought refuge at
first and who gave them only a contemptuous and grudging hospitality.
While Omar, nursed by Aissa, was recovering from his wounds, Babalatchi
attended industriously before the exalted Presence that had extended to
them the hand of Protection. For all that, when Babalatchi spoke into the
Sultan's ear certain proposals of a great and profitable raid, that was to
sweep the islands from Ternate to Acheen, the Sultan was very angry. "I
know you, you men from the west," he exclaimed, angrily. "Your words are
poison in a Ruler's ears. Your talk is of fire and murder and booty—but
on our heads falls the vengeance of the blood you drink. Begone!"</p>
<p>There was nothing to be done. Times were changed. So changed that, when a
Spanish frigate appeared before the island and a demand was sent to the
Sultan to deliver Omar and his companions, Babalatchi was not surprised to
hear that they were going to be made the victims of political expediency.
But from that sane appreciation of danger to tame submission was a very
long step. And then began Omar's second flight. It began arms in hand, for
the little band had to fight in the night on the beach for the possession
of the small canoes in which those that survived got away at last. The
story of that escape lives in the hearts of brave men even to this day.
They talk of Babalatchi and of the strong woman who carried her blind
father through the surf under the fire of the warship from the north. The
companions of that piratical and son-less Aeneas are dead now, but their
ghosts wander over the waters and the islands at night—after the
manner of ghosts—and haunt the fires by which sit armed men, as is
meet for the spirits of fearless warriors who died in battle. There they
may hear the story of their own deeds, of their own courage, suffering and
death, on the lips of living men. That story is told in many places. On
the cool mats in breezy verandahs of Rajahs' houses it is alluded to
disdainfully by impassive statesmen, but amongst armed men that throng the
courtyards it is a tale which stills the murmur of voices and the tinkle
of anklets; arrests the passage of the siri-vessel, and fixes the eyes in
absorbed gaze. They talk of the fight, of the fearless woman, of the wise
man; of long suffering on the thirsty sea in leaky canoes; of those who
died. . . . Many died. A few survived. The chief, the woman, and another
one who became great.</p>
<p>There was no hint of incipient greatness in Babalatchi's unostentatious
arrival in Sambir. He came with Omar and Aissa in a small prau loaded with
green cocoanuts, and claimed the ownership of both vessel and cargo. How
it came to pass that Babalatchi, fleeing for his life in a small canoe,
managed to end his hazardous journey in a vessel full of a valuable
commodity, is one of those secrets of the sea that baffle the most
searching inquiry. In truth nobody inquired much. There were rumours of a
missing trading prau belonging to Menado, but they were vague and remained
mysterious. Babalatchi told a story which—it must be said in justice
to Patalolo's knowledge of the world—was not believed. When the
Rajah ventured to state his doubts, Babalatchi asked him in tones of calm
remonstrance whether he could reasonably suppose that two oldish men—who
had only one eye amongst them—and a young woman were likely to gain
possession of anything whatever by violence? Charity was a virtue
recommended by the Prophet. There were charitable people, and their hand
was open to the deserving. Patalolo wagged his aged head doubtingly, and
Babalatchi withdrew with a shocked mien and put himself forthwith under
Lakamba's protection. The two men who completed the prau's crew followed
him into that magnate's campong. The blind Omar, with Aissa, remained
under the care of the Rajah, and the Rajah confiscated the cargo. The prau
hauled up on the mud-bank, at the junction of the two branches of the
Pantai, rotted in the rain, warped in the sun, fell to pieces and
gradually vanished into the smoke of household fires of the settlement.
Only a forgotten plank and a rib or two, sticking neglected in the shiny
ooze for a long time, served to remind Babalatchi during many months that
he was a stranger in the land.</p>
<p>Otherwise, he felt perfectly at home in Lakamba's establishment, where his
peculiar position and influence were quickly recognized and soon submitted
to even by the women. He had all a true vagabond's pliability to
circumstances and adaptiveness to momentary surroundings. In his readiness
to learn from experience that contempt for early principles so necessary
to a true statesman, he equalled the most successful politicians of any
age; and he had enough persuasiveness and firmness of purpose to acquire a
complete mastery over Lakamba's vacillating mind—where there was
nothing stable but an all-pervading discontent. He kept the discontent
alive, he rekindled the expiring ambition, he moderated the poor exile's
not unnatural impatience to attain a high and lucrative position. He—the
man of violence—deprecated the use of force, for he had a clear
comprehension of the difficult situation. From the same cause, he—the
hater of white men—would to some extent admit the eventual
expediency of Dutch protection. But nothing should be done in a hurry.
Whatever his master Lakamba might think, there was no use in poisoning old
Patalolo, he maintained. It could be done, of course; but what then? As
long as Lingard's influence was paramount—as long as Almayer,
Lingard's representative, was the only great trader of the settlement, it
was not worth Lakamba's while—even if it had been possible—to
grasp the rule of the young state. Killing Almayer and Lingard was so
difficult and so risky that it might be dismissed as impracticable. What
was wanted was an alliance; somebody to set up against the white men's
influence—and somebody who, while favourable to Lakamba, would at
the same time be a person of a good standing with the Dutch authorities. A
rich and considered trader was wanted. Such a person once firmly
established in Sambir would help them to oust the old Rajah, to remove him
from power or from life if there was no other way. Then it would be time
to apply to the Orang Blanda for a flag; for a recognition of their
meritorious services; for that protection which would make them safe for
ever! The word of a rich and loyal trader would mean something with the
Ruler down in Batavia. The first thing to do was to find such an ally and
to induce him to settle in Sambir. A white trader would not do. A white
man would not fall in with their ideas—would not be trustworthy. The
man they wanted should be rich, unscrupulous, have many followers, and be
a well-known personality in the islands. Such a man might be found amongst
the Arab traders. Lingard's jealousy, said Babalatchi, kept all the
traders out of the river. Some were afraid, and some did not know how to
get there; others ignored the very existence of Sambir; a good many did
not think it worth their while to run the risk of Lingard's enmity for the
doubtful advantage of trade with a comparatively unknown settlement. The
great majority were undesirable or untrustworthy. And Babalatchi mentioned
regretfully the men he had known in his young days: wealthy, resolute,
courageous, reckless, ready for any enterprise! But why lament the past
and speak about the dead? There is one man—living—great—not
far off . . .</p>
<p>Such was Babalatchi's line of policy laid before his ambitious protector.
Lakamba assented, his only objection being that it was very slow work. In
his extreme desire to grasp dollars and power, the unintellectual exile
was ready to throw himself into the arms of any wandering cut-throat whose
help could be secured, and Babalatchi experienced great difficulty in
restraining him from unconsidered violence. It would not do to let it be
seen that they had any hand in introducing a new element into the social
and political life of Sambir. There was always a possibility of failure,
and in that case Lingard's vengeance would be swift and certain. No risk
should be run. They must wait.</p>
<p>Meantime he pervaded the settlement, squatting in the course of each day
by many household fires, testing the public temper and public opinion—and
always talking about his impending departure.</p>
<p>At night he would often take Lakamba's smallest canoe and depart silently
to pay mysterious visits to his old chief on the other side of the river.
Omar lived in odour of sanctity under the wing of Patalolo. Between the
bamboo fence, enclosing the houses of the Rajah, and the wild forest,
there was a banana plantation, and on its further edge stood two little
houses built on low piles under a few precious fruit trees that grew on
the banks of a clear brook, which, bubbling up behind the house, ran in
its short and rapid course down to the big river. Along the brook a narrow
path led through the dense second growth of a neglected clearing to the
banana plantation and to the houses in it which the Rajah had given for
residence to Omar. The Rajah was greatly impressed by Omar's ostentatious
piety, by his oracular wisdom, by his many misfortunes, by the solemn
fortitude with which he bore his affliction. Often the old ruler of Sambir
would visit informally the blind Arab and listen gravely to his talk
during the hot hours of an afternoon. In the night, Babalatchi would call
and interrupt Omar's repose, unrebuked. Aissa, standing silently at the
door of one of the huts, could see the two old friends as they sat very
still by the fire in the middle of the beaten ground between the two
houses, talking in an indistinct murmur far into the night. She could not
hear their words, but she watched the two formless shadows curiously.
Finally Babalatchi would rise and, taking her father by the wrist, would
lead him back to the house, arrange his mats for him, and go out quietly.
Instead of going away, Babalatchi, unconscious of Aissa's eyes, often sat
again by the fire, in a long and deep meditation. Aissa looked with
respect on that wise and brave man—she was accustomed to see at her
father's side as long as she could remember—sitting alone and
thoughtful in the silent night by the dying fire, his body motionless and
his mind wandering in the land of memories, or—who knows?—perhaps
groping for a road in the waste spaces of the uncertain future.</p>
<p>Babalatchi noted the arrival of Willems with alarm at this new accession
to the white men's strength. Afterwards he changed his opinion. He met
Willems one night on the path leading to Omar's house, and noticed later
on, with only a moderate surprise, that the blind Arab did not seem to be
aware of the new white man's visits to the neighbourhood of his dwelling.
Once, coming unexpectedly in the daytime, Babalatchi fancied he could see
the gleam of a white jacket in the bushes on the other side of the brook.
That day he watched Aissa pensively as she moved about preparing the
evening rice; but after awhile he went hurriedly away before sunset,
refusing Omar's hospitable invitation, in the name of Allah, to share
their meal. That same evening he startled Lakamba by announcing that the
time had come at last to make the first move in their long-deferred game.
Lakamba asked excitedly for explanation. Babalatchi shook his head and
pointed to the flitting shadows of moving women and to the vague forms of
men sitting by the evening fires in the courtyard. Not a word would he
speak here, he declared. But when the whole household was reposing,
Babalatchi and Lakamba passed silent amongst sleeping groups to the
riverside, and, taking a canoe, paddled off stealthily on their way to the
dilapidated guard-hut in the old rice-clearing. There they were safe from
all eyes and ears, and could account, if need be, for their excursion by
the wish to kill a deer, the spot being well known as the drinking-place
of all kinds of game. In the seclusion of its quiet solitude Babalatchi
explained his plan to the attentive Lakamba. His idea was to make use of
Willems for the destruction of Lingard's influence.</p>
<p>"I know the white men, Tuan," he said, in conclusion. "In many lands have
I seen them; always the slaves of their desires, always ready to give up
their strength and their reason into the hands of some woman. The fate of
the Believers is written by the hand of the Mighty One, but they who
worship many gods are thrown into the world with smooth foreheads, for any
woman's hand to mark their destruction there. Let one white man destroy
another. The will of the Most High is that they should be fools. They know
how to keep faith with their enemies, but towards each other they know
only deception. Hai! I have seen! I have seen!"</p>
<p>He stretched himself full length before the fire, and closed his eye in
real or simulated sleep. Lakamba, not quite convinced, sat for a long time
with his gaze riveted on the dull embers. As the night advanced, a slight
white mist rose from the river, and the declining moon, bowed over the
tops of the forest, seemed to seek the repose of the earth, like a wayward
and wandering lover who returns at last to lay his tired and silent head
on his beloved's breast.</p>
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