The Mysterious Island. Jules Verne

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The Mysterious Island - Jules Verne


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of the clouds, and, soon after, beneath a dark band of clouds, a luminous streak of light clearly outlined the water’s horizon. The crest of waves had a light brown glimmer and their foam was white. At the same time, on their left, the hilly parts of the coastline began to loom up vaguely, gray on black.

      At six o’clock, day broke. The clouds moved rapidly to a higher elevation. The sailor and his companions were then about six miles from the Chimneys. They followed a very flat shoreline bordered on the open sea by a line of rocks whose tops alone emerged. On the left, the land was composed of several uneven dunes bristling with thistles, offering a rather savage appearance in this vast sandy region. The shoreline was relatively flat and offered no barrier to the ocean other than an irregular chain of hillocks. Here and there, one or two twisted trees could be seen, which were leaning toward the west with their branches extending in this direction. Well behind them, in the southwest, appeared the edge of the forest.

      At this moment, Top gave obvious signs of agitation. He went on ahead and then returned to the sailor as if urging him to hasten his steps. The dog left the beach and, guided by his admirable instinct and without showing a moment’s hesitation, he ran into the dunes.

      They followed him. The country appeared to be absolutely deserted. Not a living creature anywhere.

      This very wide area of the dunes was composed of hillocks and scattered hills, like a miniature Switzerland in sand, and nothing less than a dog’s superb instinct was needed to find one’s way through it.

      Five minutes after having left the beach, the reporter and his companions arrived in front of a sort of excavation hollowed out in the rear of a high dune. There Top stopped and barked loud and clear. Spilett, Harbert, and Pencroff dashed into the cave.

      Neb was there, kneeling next to a body lying on a bed of grass … The body was that of the engineer Cyrus Smith.

       CHAPTER VIII

      Neb did not move. The sailor said only one word to him.

      “Living?” he shouted.

      Neb did not reply. Gideon Spilett and Pencroff turned pale. Harbert clasped his hands and remained still. But it was evident that the poor Negro, absorbed in his grief, had neither seen his companions nor heard the sailor’s words.

      The reporter knelt down next to the motionless body and placed his ear on the engineer’s chest after having half-opened his garment. A minute—a century!—passed, during which he tried to detect some heartbeat.

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       The body was that of the engineer.

      Neb had straightened up a bit and stared without seeing. Despair could not have changed a man’s face more. Neb was unrecognizable, exhausted by fatigue, broken by pain. He believed his master dead. Gideon Spilett got up after a long and careful examination.

      “He lives!” he said.

      Pencroff, in his turn, knelt next to Cyrus Smith; his ear also detected a heartbeat and some breath that escaped from the engineer’s lips.

      Harbert ran outside to look for water. A hundred feet away he found a clear stream, evidently very swollen by the rains of the previous evening, which filtered through the sand. But there was nothing he could use to carry this water, not a shell among these dunes. The boy had to content himself with dipping his handkerchief into the stream, and he ran back to the cave.

      Fortunately the soaked handkerchief was sufficient for Gideon Spilett who wanted only to wet the engineer’s lips. These molecules of cool water produced an immediate effect. A sigh escaped from Cyrus Smith’s chest and it even appeared that he was trying to say a few words.

      “We’ll save him!” said the reporter.

      At these words, Neb recovered hope. He removed his master’s clothing to see if the body showed any wound. Neither the head nor torso nor limbs had any contusions, not even scratches—a surprising thing, since the engineer must have been tossed around among the rocks. Even the hands were intact, and it was difficult to explain how the engineer showed no trace of the efforts he must have made to get past the reef.

      But the explanation of these circumstances would come later. When Cyrus Smith was able to speak, he would tell what happened. For the moment, they must recall him to life, and it was likely that vigorously rubbing his body might bring on this result. This is what was done with the sailor’s pea jacket. The engineer, warmed by this rough massage, moved his hands slightly, and his breathing began to be more regular. He was dying of exhaustion and no doubt, without the arrival of the reporter and his companions, it would have been all over for Cyrus Smith.

      “You thought that your master was dead?” the sailor asked Neb.

      “Yes! Dead!” replied Neb, “and if Top had not found you, if you hadn’t come, I would have buried my master, and I would have died beside him!”

      One could see on what Cyrus Smith’s life had depended!

      Neb related what had happened. The day before, after leaving the Chimneys at daybreak, he went along the coast in a northeasterly direction and reached the point on the shore that he had already visited. There, admittedly without any hope, Neb searched along the shore, among the rocks, on the sand, for the least indication to guide him. He had especially examined the part of the shore that the high tide had not reached because, on the beach, the rise and fall of the tide had erased all signs. Neb no longer hoped to find his master living. His purpose was to discover the engineer’s body, a cadaver that he wanted to bury with his own hands!

      Neb then decided to go up the coast for several miles. It was possible that currents carried the body to a point further up. When a cadaver floats a short distance from a low shore, it is rare that the waves do not push it up onto the beach sooner or later. Neb knew this and he wanted to see his master one last time.

      “I ran along the shore for two more miles. I visited the entire reef line at low tide, the entire beach at high tide, and I despaired of finding anything when yesterday, about five o’clock in the evening, I saw footprints in the sand.”

      “Footprints?” shouted Pencroff.

      “Yes!” replied Neb.

      “And did these footprints begin at the reef?” asked the reporter.

      “No,” replied Neb, “at the high water mark only, because those between the high water mark and the reef were washed away.”

      “Continue, Neb,” said Gideon Spilett.

      “When I saw these prints, I was nearly crazy with joy. They were very distinct and went toward the dunes. Running, I followed them for a quarter of a mile, taking care not to erase them. Five minutes later, as night was coming on, I heard a dog barking. It was Top, and Top led me here to my master.”

      Neb finished his recital by telling them about his grief on finding this inanimate body. He tried to detect some sign of life. Now that he had found him dead, he wanted him alive! All his efforts were useless. Nothing remained but to render the last rites to him whom he loved so much.

      Neb then thought of his companions. Doubtless they would want to see the unfortunate man for one last time. Top was there. Couldn’t he count on the shrewdness of the faithful animal? Neb pronounced the reporter’s name several times, the one that Top knew best of the engineer’s companions.


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