“You know very well that I can't get away without your help.”
“In that case you must humour an old man.
Read me another chapter.”
“Mr. Todd, I swear by anything you like that when I get to Manaos I will find someone to take my place.
I will pay a man to read to you all day.”
But I have no need of another man.
You read so well.”
“I have read for the last time.”
“I hope not,” said Mr. Todd politely.
That evening at supper only one plate of dried meat and farine was brought in and Mr. Todd ate alone.
Tony lay without speaking, staring at the thatch.
Next day at noon a single plate was put before Mr. Todd but with it lay his gun, cocked, on his knee, as he ate.
Tony resumed the reading of Martin Chuzzlewit where it had been interrupted.
Weeks passed hopelessly.
They read Nicholas Nickleby and Little Dorrit and Oliver Twist.
Then a stranger arrived in the savannah, a half-caste prospector, one of that lonely order of men who wander for a lifetime through the forests, tracing the little streams, sifting the gravel and, ounce by ounce, filling the little leather sack of gold dust, more often than not dying of exposure and starvation with five hundred dollars' worth of gold hung around their necks.
Mr. Todd was vexed at his arrival, gave him farine and tasso and sent him on his journey within an hour of his arrival, but in that hour Tony had time to scribble his name on a slip of paper and put it into the man's hand.
From now on there was hope.
The days followed their unvarying routine; coffee at sunrise, a morning of inaction while Mr. Todd pottered about on the business of the farm, farine and tasso at noon, Dickens in the afternoon, farine and tasso and sometimes some fruit for supper, silence from sunset to dawn with the small wick glowing in the beef fat and the palm thatch overhead dimly discernible; but Tony lived in quiet confidence and expectation.
Sometime, this year or the next, the prospector would arrive at a Brazilian village with news of his discovery.
The disasters of the Messinger expedition would not have passed unnoticed.
Tony could imagine the headlines that must have appeared in the popular press; even now probably there were search parties working over the country he had crossed; any day English voices must sound over the savannah and a dozen friendly adventurers come crashing through the bush.
Even as he was reading, while his lips mechanically followed the printed pages, his mind wandered away from his eager, crazy host opposite, and he began to narrate to himself incidents of his homecoming — the gradual re-encounters with civilization (he shaved and bought new clothes at Manaos, telegraphed for money, received wires of congratulation; he enjoyed the leisurely river journey to Belem, the big liner to Europe; savoured good claret and fresh meat and spring vegetables; he was shy at meeting Brenda and uncertain how to address her …
“Darling, you've been much longer than you said.
I quite thought you were lost …”)
And then Mr. Todd interrupted.
“May I trouble you to read that passage again?
It is one I particularly enjoy.”
The weeks passed; there was no sign of rescue but Tony endured the day for hope of what might happen on the morrow; he even felt a slight stirring of cordiality towards his jailer and was therefore quite willing to join him when, one evening after a long conference with an Indian neighbour, he proposed a celebration.
“It is one of the local feast days,” he explained, “and they have been making piwari.
You may not like it but you should try some.
We will go across to this man's home tonight.”
Accordingly after supper they joined a party of Indians that were assembled round the fire in one of the huts at the other side of the savannah.
They were singing in an apathetic, monotonous manner and passing a large calabash of liquid from mouth to mouth.
Separate bowls were brought for Tony and Mr. Todd, and they were given hammocks to sit in.
“You must drink it all without lowering the cup.
That is the etiquette.”
Tony gulped the dark liquid, trying not to taste it.
But it was not unpleasant, hard and muddy on the palate like most of the beverages he had been offered in Brazil, but with a flavour of honey and brown bread.
He leant back in the hammock feeling unusually contented.
Perhaps at that very moment the search party was in camp a few hours' journey from them.
Meanwhile he was warm and drowsy.
The cadence of song rose and fell interminably, liturgically.
Another calabash of piwari was offered him and he handed it back empty.
He lay full length watching the play of shadows on the thatch as the Pie-wies began to dance.
Then he shut his eyes and thought of England and Hetton and fell asleep.
He awoke, still in the Indian hut, with the impression that he had outslept his usual hour.
By the position of the sun he knew it was late afternoon. No one else was about.
He looked for his watch and found to his surprise that it was not on his wrist.
He had left it in the house, he supposed, before coming to the party.