"Am I a hunter or am I not?"
They nodded, simply. He was a hunter all right. No one doubted that.
"Well then-I've been all over this island. By myself. If there were a
beast I'd have seen it Be frightened because you're like that-but there is
no beast in the forest"
Jack handed back the conch and sat down. The whole assembly applauded
him with relief. Then Piggy held out his hand.
"I don't agree with all Jack said, but with some. `Course there isn't a
beast in the forest How could there be? What would a beast eat?"
"Pig."
"We eat pig."
"Piggy!"
"I got the conch!" said Piggy indignantly. "Ralph- they ought to shut
up, oughtn't they? You shut up, you littluns! What I mean is that I don't
agree about this here fear. Of course there isn't nothing to be afraid of in
the forest Why-I been there myself! You'll be talking about ghosts and such
things next We know what goes on and if there's something wrong, there's
someone to put it right."
He took off his glasses and blinked at them. The sun had gone as if the
light had been turned off.
He proceeded to explain.
"If you get a pain in your stomach, whether it's a little one or a big
one-"
"Yours is a big one."
"When you done laughing perhaps we can get on with the meeting. And if
them littluns climb back on the twister again they'll only fall off in a
sec. So they might as well sit on the ground and listen. No. You have
doctors for everything, even the inside of your mind. You don't really mean
that we got to be frightened all the time of nothing? Life," said Piggy
expansively, "is scientific, that's what it is. In a year or two when the
war's over they'll be traveling to Mars and back. I know there isn't no
beast-not with claws and all that, I mean-but I know there isn't no fear,
either."
Piggy paused.
"Unless-"
Ralph moved restlessly.
"Unless what?"
"Unless we get frightened of people."
A sound, half-laugh, half-jeer, rose among the seated boys. Piggy
ducked his head and went on hastily.
"So lets hear from that littlun who talked about a beast and perhaps we
can show him how silly he is."
The littluns began to jabber among themselves, then one stood forward.
"What's your name?"
"Phil."
For a littlun he was self-confident, holding out his hands, cradling
the conch as Ralph did, looking round at them to collect their attention
before he spoke.
"Last night I had a dream, a horrid dream, fighting with things. I was
outside the shelter by myself, fighting with things, those twisty things in
the trees."
He paused, and the other littluns laughed in horrified sympathy.
"Then I was frightened and I woke up. And I was outside the shelter by
myself in the dark and the twisty things had gone away."
The vivid horror of this, so possible and so nakedly terrifying, held
them all silent. The child's voice went piping on from behind the white
conch.
"And I was frightened and started to call out for Ralph and then I saw
something moving among the trees, something big and horrid."
He paused, half-frightened by the recollection yet proud of the
sensation he was creating.
"That was a nightmare," said Ralph. "He was walking in his sleep."
The assembly murmured in subdued agreement.
The littlun shook his head stubbornly.
"I was asleep when the twisty things were fighting and when they went
away I was awake, and I saw something big and horrid moving in the trees."
Ralph held out his hands for the conch and the littlun sat down.
"You were alseep. There wasn't anyone there. How could anyone be
wandering about in the forest at night? Was anyone? Did anyone go out?"
There was a long pause while the assembly grinned at
the thought of anyone going out in the darkness. Then Simon stood up
and Ralph looked at him in astonishment
"You! What were you mucking about in the dark for?"
Simon grabbed the conch convulsively.
"I wanted-to go to a place-a place I know."
"What place?"
"Just a place I know. A place in the jungle."
He hesitated.
Jack settled the question for them with that contempt in his voice that
could sound so funny and so final.
"He was taken short"
With a feeling of humiliation on Simon's behalf, Ralph took back the
conch, looking Simon sternly in the face as he did so.
"Well, don't do it again. Understand? Not at night There's enough silly
talk about beasts, without the litthlus seeing you gliding about like a-"
The derisive laughter that rose had fear in it and condemnation. Simon
opened his mouth to speak but Ralph had the conch, so he backed to his seat
When the assembly was silent Ralph turned to Piggy.
"Well, Piggy?"
"There was another one. Him."
The littlums pushed Percival forward, then left him by himself. He
stood knee-deep in the central grass, looking at his hidden feet, trying to
pretend he was in a tent Ralph remembered another small boy who had stood
like this and he flinched away from the memory. He had pushed the thought
down and out of sight, where only some positive reminder like this could
bring it to the surface. There had been no further numberings of the
littluns, partly because there was no means of insuring that all of them
were accounted for and partly because Ralph knew the answer to at least one
question Piggy had asked on the mountain-top. There were little boys, fair,
dark, freckled, and all dirty, but their faces were all dreadfully free of
major blemishes. No one had seen the mulberry-colored birthmark again. But
that time Piggy had coaxed and bullied. Tacitly admitting that he remembered
the unmentionable, Ralph nodded to Piggy.
"Go on. Ask him."
Piggy knelt, holding the conch.
"Now then. What's your name?"
The small boy twisted away into his tent Piggy turned helplessly to
Ralph, who spoke sharply.
"What's your name?"
Tormented by the silence and the refusal the assembly broke into a
chant.
"What's your name? What's your name?"
"Quiet!"
Ralph peered at the child in the twilight
"Now tell us. What's your name?"
"Percival Wemys Madison, The Vicarage, Harcourt St. Anthony, Hants,
telephone, telephone, tele-"
As if this information was rooted far down in the springs of sorrow,
the littlun wept. His face puckered, the tears leapt from his eves, his
mouth opened till they could see a square black hole. At first he was a
silent effigy of sorrow; but then the lamentation rose out of him, loud and
sustained as the conch.
"Shut up, you! Shut up!"
Percival Wemys Madison would not shut up. A spring had been tapped, far
beyond the reach of authority or even physical intimidation. The crying went
on, breath after breath, and seemed to sustain him upright as if he were
nailed to it.
"Shut up! Shut up!"
For now the littluns were no longer silent. They were reminded of their
personal sorrows; and perhaps felt themselves to share in a sorrow that was
universal. They began to cry in sympathy, two of them almost as loud as
Percival.
Maurice saved them. He cried out.
"Look at me!"
He pretended to fall over. He rubbed his rump and sat on the twister so
that he fell in the grass. He clowned badly, but Percival and the others
noticed and sniffed and laughed. Presently they were all laughing so
absurdly that the biguns joined in.
Jack was the first to make himself heard. He had not got the conch and
thus spoke against the rules; but nobody minded.
"And what about the beast?"
Something strange was happening to Percival. He yawned and staggered,
so that Jack seized and shook him.
"Where does the beast live?"
Percival sagged in Jack's grip.
"That's a clever beast," said Piggy, jeering, "if it can hide on this
island."
"Jack's been everywhere-"
"Where could a beast live?"
"Beast my foot!"
Percival muttered something and the assembly laughed again. Ralph
leaned forward.
"What does he say?"
Jack listened to Percival's answer and then let go of him. Percival,
released, surrounded by the comfortable presence of humans, fell in the long
grass and went to sleep.
Jack cleared his throat then reported casually.
"He says the beast comes out of the sea."
The last laugh died away. Ralph turned involuntarily, a black, humped
figure against the lagoon. The assembly looked with him, considered the vast
stretches of water, the high sea beyond, unknown indigo of infinite
possibility, heard silently the sough and whisper from the reef.
Maurice spoke, so loudly that they jumped.
"Daddy said they haven't found all the animals in the sea yet"
Argument started again. Ralph held out the glimmering conch and Maurice
took it obediently. The meeting subsided.
"I mean when Jack says you can be frightened because people are
frightened anyway that's all right. But when he says there's only pigs on
this island I expect he's right but he doesn't know, not really, not
certainly I mean-' Maurice took a breath. "My daddy says there's things,
what d`you call'em that make ink-squids-that are hundreds or yards long and
eat whales whole." He paused again ana laughed gaily. "I don't believe in
the beast of course. As Piggy says, life's scientific, but we don't know, do
we? Not certainly, I mean-"
Someone shouted.
"A squid couldn't come up out of the water!"
"Could!"
"Couldn't!"
In a moment the platform was full of arguing, gesticulating shadows. To
Ralph, seated, this seemed the breaking up of sanity. Fear, beasts, no
general agreement that the fire was all-important: and when one tried to get
the thing straight the argument sheered off, bringing up fresh, unpleasant
matter.
He could see a whiteness in the gloom near him so he grabbed it from
Maurice and blew as loudly as he could. The assembly was shocked into
silence. Simon was close to him, laying hands on the conch. Simon felt a
perilous necessity to speak; but to speak in assembly was a terrible thing
to him.
"Maybe," he said hesitantly, "maybe there is a beast."
The assembly cried out savagely and Ralph stood up in amazement.
"You, Simon? You believe in this?"
"I don't know," said Simon. His heartbeats were choking him. "But ..."
The storm broke.
"Sit down!"
"Shut up!"
"Take the conch!"
"Sod you!"
"Shut up!"
Ralph shouted.
"Hear him! He's got the conch!"
"What I mean is . . . maybe it's only us."
"Nuts!"
That was from Piggy, shocked out of decorum. Simon want on.
"We could be sort of. . . ."
Simon became inarticulate in his effort to express mankind's essential
illness. Inspiration came to him.
"What's the dirtiest thing there is?"
As an answer Jack dropped into the uncomprehending silence that
followed it the one crude expressive syllable. Release was immense. Those
littluns who had climbed back on the twister fell off again and did not
mind. The hunters were screaming with delight
Simon's effort fell about him in ruins; the laughter beat him cruelly
and he shrank away defenseless to his seat.
At last the assembly was silent again. Someone spoke out of turn.
"Maybe he means it's some sort of ghost"
Ralph Lifted the conch and peered into the gloom. The lightest thing
was the pale beach. Surely the littluns were nearer? Yes-there was no doubt
about it, they were huddled into a tight knot of bodies in the central
grass. A flurry of wind made the palms talk and the noise seemed very loud
now that darkness and silence made it so noticeable. Two grey trunks rubbed
each other with an evil squeaking that no one had noticed by day.
Piggy took the conch out of his hands. His voice was indignant.
"I don't believe in no ghosts-ever!"
Jack was up too, unaccountably angry.
"Who cares what you believe--Fatty!"
"I got the conch!"
There was the sound of a brief tussle and the conch moved to and fro.
"You gimme the conch back!"
Ralph pushed between them and got a thump on the chest. He wrested the
conch from someone and sat down breathlessly.
"There's too much talk about ghosts. We ought to have left all this for
daylight."
A hushed and anonymous voice broke in.
"Perhaps that's what the beast is-a ghost."
The assembly was shaken as by a wind.
"There's too much talking out of turn," Ralph said, "because we can't
have proper assemblies if you don't stick to the rules."
He stopped again. The careful plan of this assembly had broken down.
"What d'you want me to say then? I was wrong to call this assembly so
late. Well have a vote on them; on ghosts I mean; and then go to the
shelters because we're all tired. No-Jack is it?-wait a minute. I'll say
here and now that I don t believe in ghosts. Or I don't think I do. But I
don't like the thought of them. Not now that is, in the dark. But we were
going to decide what's what."
He raised the conch for a moment
"Very well then. I suppose what's what is whether there are ghosts or
not-"
He thought for a moment, formulating the question.
"Who thinks there may be ghosts?"
For a long time there was silence and no apparent movement. Then Ralph
peered into the gloom and made out the hands. He spoke flatly.
"I see."
The world, that understandable and lawful world, was slipping away.
Once there was this and that; and now-and the ship had gone.
The conch was snatched from his hands and Piggy's voice shrilled.
"I didn't vote for no ghosts!"
He whirled round on the assembly.
"Remember that, all of you!"
They heard him stamp.
"What are we? Humans? Or animals? Or savages? What's grownups going to
think? Going off-hunting pigs-letting fires out-and now!"
A shadow fronted him tempestuously.
"You shut up, you fat slug!'
There was a moment's struggle and the glimmering conch jigged up and
down. Ralph leapt to his feet.
"Jack! Jack! You haven't got the conch! Let him speak."
Jack's face swam near him.
"And you shut up! Who are you, anyway? Sitting there telling people
what to do. You cant hunt, you can't sing-"
"I'm chief. I was chosen."
"Why should choosing make any difference? Just giving orders that don't
make any sense-"
"Piggy's got the conch."
That's right-favor Piggy as you always do-"
"Jack!"
"Jack's voice sounded in bitter mimicry.
"Jack! Jack!"
"The rules!" shouted Ralph. "You're breaking the rules!"
"Who cares?"
Ralph summoned his wits.
"Because the rules are the only thing we've got!"
But Jack was shouting against him.
"Bollocks to the rules! We're strong-we hunt! If there's a beast, we'll
hunt it down! Well close in and beat and beat and beat-!"
He gave a wild whoop and leapt down to the pale sand. At once the
platform was full of noise and excitement, scramblings, screams and
laughter. The assembly shredded away and became a discursive and random
scatter from the palms to the water and away along the beach, beyond
night-sight. Ralph found his cheek touching the conch and took it from
Piggy.
"What's grownups going to say?" cried Piggy again. "Look at 'em!"
The sound of mock hunting, hysterical laughter and real terror came
from the beach.
"Blow the conch, Ralph."
Piggy was so close that Ralph could see the glint of his one glass.
"There's the fire. Can't they see?"
"You got to be tough now. Make 'em do what you want."
Ralph answered in the cautious voice of one who rehearses a theorem.
"If I blow the conch and they don't come back; then we've had it. We
shan't keep the fire going. We'll be like animals. We'll never be rescued."
"If you don't blow, we'll soon be animals anyway. I can't see what
they're doing but I can hear."
The dispersed figures had come together on the sand and were a dense
black mass that revolved. They were chanting something and littluns that had
had enough were staggering away, howling. Ralph raised the conch to his lips
and then lowered it.
"The trouble is: Are there ghosts, Piggy? Or beasts?"
"Course there aren't."
"Why not?"
"'Cos things wouldn't make sense. Houses an` streets, an'-TV-they
wouldn't work."
The dancing, chanting boys had worked themselves away till their sound
was nothing but a wordless rhythm.
"But s'pose they don't make sense? Not here, on this island? Supposing
things are watching us and waiting?"
Ralph shuddered violently and moved closer to Piggy, so that they
bumped frighteningly.
"You stop talking like that! We got enough trouble, Ralph, an' I've had
as much as I can stand. If there is ghosts-"
"I ought to give up being chief. Hear 'em."
"Oh lord! Oh no!"
Piggy gripped Ralph's arm.
"If Jack was chief he'd have all hunting and no fire. We'd be here till
we died."
His voice ran up to a squeak.
"Who's that sitting there?"
"Me. Simon."
"Fat lot of good we are," said Ralph. "Three blind mice, I`ll give up."
"If you give up," said Piggy, in an appalled whisper, "what `ud happen
to me?"
"Nothing."
"He hates me. I dunno why. If he could do what he wanted-you're all
right, he respects you. Besides- you'd hit him."
"You were having a nice fight with him just now."
"I had the conch," said Piggy simply. "I had a right to speak."
Simon stirred in the dark.
"Go on being chief."
"You shut up, young Simon! Why couldn't you say there wasn't a beast?"
"I'm scared of him," said Piggy, "and that's why I know him. If you're
scared of someone you hate him but you can't stop thinking about him. You
Kid yourself he's all right really, an' then when you see him again; it's
like asthma an` you can't breathe. I tell you what. He hates you too,
Ralph-"
"Me? Why me?"
"I dunno. You got him over the fire; an` you're chief an` he isn't."
"But he's, he's, Jack Merridew!"
"I been in bed so much I done some thinking. I know about people. I
know about me. And him. He can't hurt you: but if you stand out of the way
he'd hurt the next thing. And that's me."
"Piggy's right, Ralph. There's you and Jack. Go on being chief."
"We're all drifting and things are going rotten. At home there was
always a grownup. Please, sir; please, miss; and then you got an answer. How
I wish!"
"I wish my auntie was here."
"I wish my father . . . Oh, what's the use?"
"Keep the fire going."
The dance was over and the hunters were going back to the shelters.
"Grownups know things," said Piggy. "They ain't afraid of the dark.
They'd meet and have tea and discuss. Then things 'ud be all right-"
"They wouldn't set fire to the island. Or lose-"
"They'd build a ship-"
The three boys stood in the darkness, striving unsuccessfully to convey
the majesty of adult life.
"They wouldn't quarrel-"
"Or break my specs-"
"Or talk about a beast-"
"If only they could get a message to us," cried Ralph desperately. "If
only they could send us something grown-up . . . a sign or something."
A thin wail out of the darkness chilled them and set them grabbing for
each other. Then the wail rose, remote and unearthly, and turned to an
inarticulate gibbering. Percival Wemys Madison, of the Vicarage, Harcourt
St. Anthony, lying in the long grass, was living through circumstances in
which the incantation of his address was powerless to help him.
CHAPTER SIX
Beast from Air
There was no light left save that of the stars. When they had
understood what made this ghostly noise and Percival was quiet again, Ralph
and Simon picked him up unhandily and carried him to a shelter. Piggy hung
about near for all his brave words, and the three bigger boys went together
to the next shelter. They lay restlessly and noisily among the dry leaves,
watching the patch of stars that was the opening toward the lagoon.
Sometimes a littlun cried out from the other shelters and once a bigun spoke
in the dark. Then they too fell asleep.
A sliver of moon rose over the horizon, hardly large enough to make a
path of light even when it sat right down on the water; but there were other
lights in the sky, that moved fast, winked, or went out, though not even a
faint popping came down from the battle fought at ten miles' neight. But a
sign came down from the world of grownups, though at the time there was no
child awake to read it. There was a sudden bright explosion and a corkscrew
trail across the sky; then darkness again and stars. There was a speck above
the island, a figure dropping swiftly beneath a parachute, a figure that
hung with dangling limbs. The changing winds of various altitudes took the
figure where they would. Then, three miles up, the wind steadied and bore it
in a descending curve round the sky and swept it in a great slant across the
reef and the lagoon toward the mountain. The figure fell and crumpled among
the blue flowers of the mountain-side, but now there was a gentle breeze at
this height too and the parachute flopped and banged and pulled. So the
figure, with feet that dragged behind it, slid up the mountain. Yard by
yard, puff by puff, the breeze hauled the figure through the blue flowers,
over the boulders and red stones, till it lay huddled among the shattered
rocks of the mountain-top. Here the breeze was fitful and allowed the
strings of the parachute to tangle and festoon; and the figure sat, its
helmeted head between its knees, held by a complication of lines. When the
breeze blew, the lines would strain taut and some accident of this pull
kited the bead and chest upright so that the figure seemed to peer across
the brow of the mountain. Then, each time me wind dropped, the lines would
slacken and the figure bow forward again, sinking its head between its
knees. So as the stars moved across the sky, the figure sat on the
mountain-top and bowed and sank and bowed again.
In the darkness of early morning there were noises by a rock a little
way down the side of the mountain. Two boys rolled out of a pile of
brushwood and dead leaves, two dim shadows talking sleepily to each other.
They were the twins, on duty at the fire. In theory one should have been
asleep and one on watch. But they could never manage to do things sensibly
if that meant acting independently, and since staying awake all night was
impossible, they had both gone to sleep. Now they approached the darker
smudge that had been the signal fire, yawning, rubbing their eyes, treading
with practiced feet When they readied it they stopped yawning, and one ran
quickly back for brushwood and leaves.
The other knelt down.
"I believe it's out."
He fiddled with the sticks that were pushed into his hands.
"No."
He lay down and put his lips close to the smudge and blew softly. His
face appeared, lit redly. He'stopped blowing for a moment.
"Sam-give us-"
"-tinder wood."
Eric bent down and blew softly again till the patch was bright Sam
poked the piece of tinder wood into the hot spot, then a branch. The glow
increased and the branch took fire. Sam piled on more branches.
"Don't burn the lot," said Eric, "you're putting on too much."
"Let's warm up."
"We'll only have to fetch more wood."
"I'm cold."
"So'm I."
"Besides, it's-"
"-dark. All right, then."
Eric squatted back and watched Sam make up the fire. He built a little
tent of dead wood and the fire was safety alight.
"That was near."
"He'd have been-"
"Waxy."
"Huh."
For a few moments the twins watched the fire in silence. Then Eric
sniggered.
"Wasn't he waxy?"
"About the-"
"Fire and the pig."
"Lucky he went for Jack, 'stead of us."
"Huh. Remember old Waxy at school?"
" 'Boy-you-are-driving-me-slowly-insane!'"
The twins shared their identical laughter, then remembered the darkness
and other things and glanced round uneasily. The flames, busy about the
tent, drew their eyes back again. Eric watched the scurrying woodlice that
were so frantically unable to avoid the flames, and thought of the first
fire-just down there, on the steeper side of the mountain, where now was
complete darkness. He did not tike to remember it, and looked away at the
mountain-top.
Warmth radiated now, and beat pleasantly on them. Sam amused himself by
fitting branches into the fire as closely as possible. Eric spread out his
hands, searching for the distance at which the heat was just bearable. Idly
looking beyond the fire, he resettled the scattered rocks from their fiat
shadows into daylight contours. Just there was the big rock, and the three
stones there, that split rock, and there beyond was a gap-just there-
"Sam."
"Huh?"
"Nothing."
The flames were mastering the branches, the bark was curling and
falling away, the wood exploding. The tent fell inwards and flung a wide
circle of light over the mountain-top.
"Sam-"
"Huh?"
"Sam! Sam!"
Sam looked at Eric irritably. The intensity of Eric's gaze made the
direction in which he looked terrible, for Sam had his back to it. He
scrambled round the fire, squatted by Eric, and looked to see. They became
motionless, gripped in each other's arms, four unwinking eyes aimed ana two
mouths open.
Far beneath them, the trees of the forest sighed, then roared. The hair
on their foreheads fluttered and flames blew out sideways from the fire.
Fifteen yards away from them came the plopping noise of fabric blown open.
Neither of the boys screamed but the grip of their arms tightened and
their mouths grew peaked. For perhaps ten seconds they crouched tike that
while the flailing fire sent smoke and sparks and waves of inconstant tight
over the top of the mountain.
Then as though they had but one terrified mind between them they
scrambled away over the rocks and fled.
Ralph was dreaming. He had fallen asleep after what seemed hours of
tossing and turning noisily among the dry leaves. Even the sounds of
nightmare from the other shelters no longer reached him, for he was back to
where he came from, feeding the ponies with sugar over the garden wall. Then
someone was shaking his arm, telling him that it was time for tea.
"Ralph! Wake up!"
The leaves were roaring tike the sea.
"Ralph, wake up!"
"What's the matter?"
"We saw-"
"-the beast-"
"-plain!"
"Who are you? The twins?"
"We saw the beast-"
"Quiet. Piggy!"
The leaves were roaring still. Piggy bumped into him and a twin grabbed
him as he made tor the oblong of paling stars.
"You can't go out-it's horrible!"
"Piggy-where are the spears?"
"I can hear the-"
"Quiet then. Lie still."
They lay there listening, at first with doubt but then with tenor to
the description the twins breathed at them between bouts of extreme silence.
Soon the darkness was full of daws, full of the awful unknown and menace. An
interminable dawn faded the stars out, and at last light, sad and grey,
filtered into the shelter. They began to stir though still tile world
outside the shelter was impossibly dangerous. The maze of the darkness
sorted into near and far, and at the high point of the sky the cloudlets
were warmed with color. A single sea bird flapped upwards with a hoarse cry
that was echoed presently, and something squawked in the forest Now streaks
of cloud near the horizon began to glow rosily, and the feathery tops of the
palms were green.
Ralph knelt in the entrance to the shelter and peered cautiously round
him.
"Sam `n Eric. Call them to an assembly. Quietly. Go on."
The twins, holding tremulously to each other, dared the few yards to
the next shelter and spread the dreadful news. Ralph stood up and walked for
the sake of dignity, though with his back pricking, to the platform. Piggy
and Simon followed him and the other boys came sneaking after.
Ralph took the conch from where it lay on the polished seat and held it
to his lips; but then he hesitated and did not blow. He held the shell up
instead and showed it to them and they understood.
The rays of the sun that were fanning upwards from below the horizon
swung downwards to eye-level Ralph looked for a moment at the growing slice
of gold that lit them from the right hand and seemed to make speech
possible. The circle of boys before him bristled with hunting spears.
He handed the conch to Eric, the nearest of the twins.
"We've seen the beast with our own eyes. No-we weren't asleep-"
Sam took up the story. By custom now one conch did for both twins, for
their substantial unity was recognized.
"It was furry. There was something moving behind its head-wings. The
beast moved too-"
"That was awful. It kind of sat up-"
"The fire was bright-"
"We'd just made it up-"
"-more sticks on-"
"There were eyes-"
"Teeth-"
"Claws-"
"We ran as fast as we could-"
"Bashed into things-"
The beast followed us-"
"I saw it slinking behind the trees-"
"Nearly touched me-"
Ralph pointed fearfully at Eric's face, which was striped with scars
where the bushes had torn him.
"How did you do that?"
Eric felt his face.
"I'm all rough. Am I bleeding?"
The circle of boys shrank away in horror. Johnny, yawning still, burst
into noisy tears and was slapped by Bill till he choked on them. The bright
morning was full of threats and the circle began to change. It faced out,
rather than in, and the spears of sharpened wood were like a fence. Jack
called them back to the center.
"This'll be a real hunt! Who'll come?"
Ralph moved impatiently.
"These spears are made of wood. Don't be silly."
Jack sneered at him.
"Frightened?"
" 'Course I'm frightened. Who wouldn't be?"
He turned to the twins, yearning but hopeless.
"I suppose you aren't pulling our legs?"
The reply was too emphatic for anyone to doubt them.
Piggy took the conch.
"Couldn't we-kind of-stay here? Maybe the beast won't come near us."
But for the sense of something watching them, Ralph would have shouted
at him.
"Stay here? And be cramped into this bit of the island, always on the
lookout? How should we get our food? And what about the fire?"
"Let's be moving," said Jack restlessly, "we're wasting time."
"No we're not. What about the littluns?" "Sucks to the littluns!''
"Someone's got to look after them."
"Nobody has so far."
"There was no need! Now there is. Piggy`ll look after them."
"That's right. Keep Piggy out of danger."
"Have some sense. What can Piggy do with only one eye?"
The rest of the boys were looking from Jack to Ralph, curiously.
"And another thing. You can't have an ordinary hunt because the beast
doesn't leave tracks. If it did you'd have seen them. For all we know, the
beast may swing through the trees like what's its name."
They nodded.
"So we've got to think."
Piggy took off his damaged glasses and cleaned the remaining lens.
"How about us, Ralph?"
"You haven't got the conch. Here."
"I mean-how about us? Suppose the beast comes when you're all away. I
can't see proper, and if I get scared-"
Jack broke in, contemptuously.
"You're always scared."
"I got the conch-"
"Conch! Conch!" shouted Jack. "We don't need the conch any more. We
know who ought to say things. What good did Simon do speaking, or Bill, or
Walter? It's time some people knew they've got to keep quiet and leave
deciding things to the rest of us."
Ralph could no longer ignore his speech. The blood was hot in his
cheeks.
"You haven't got the conch," he said. "Sit down."
Jack's face went so white that the freckles showed as clear, brown
flecks. He licked his lips and remained standing.
"This is a hunter's job."
The rest of the boys watched intently. Piggy, finding himself
uncomfortably embroiled, slid the conch to Ralph's knees and sat down. The
silence grew oppressive and Piggy held his breath.
"This is more than a hunter's job," said Ralph at last, "because you
can't track the beast And don't you want to be rescued?"
He turned to the assembly.
"Don't you all want to be rescued?"
He looked back at Jack.
"I said before, the fire is the main thing. Now the fire must be out-"
The old exasperation saved him and gave him the energy to attack.
"Hasn't anyone got any sense? We've got to relight that fire. You never
thought or that, Jack, did you? Or don't any of you want to be rescued?"
Yes, they wanted to be rescued, there was no doubt about that; and with
a violent swing to Ralph's side, the crisis passed. Piggy let out his breath
with a gasp, reached for it again and failed. He lay against a log, his
mouth gaping, blue shadows creeping round his lips. Nobody minded frim.
"Now think, Jack. Is there anywhere on the island you haven't been?"
Unwillingly Jack answered.
"There's only-but of course! You remember? The tail-end part, where the
rocks are all piled up. I've been near there. The rock makes a sort of
bridge. There's only one way up."
And the thing might live there."
All the assembly talked at once.
"Quite! All right That's where well look. If the beast isn't there
we'll go up the mountain and look; and light the fire."
"Let's go."
"We'll eat first. Then go." Ralph paused. "We'd better take spears."
After they had eaten, Ralph and the biguns set out along the beach.
They left Piggy propped up on the platform. This day promised, like the
others, to be a sunbath under a blue dome. The beach stretched away before
them in a gentle curve till perspective drew it into one with the forest;
for the day was not advanced enough to be obscured by the shifting veils of
mirage. Under Ralph's direction, they picked a careful way along the palm
terrace, rather than dare the hot sand down by the water. He let Jack lead
the way; and Jack trod with theatrical caution though they could have seen
an enemy twenty yards away. Ralph walked in the rear, thankful to have
escaped responsibility for a time.
Simon, walking in front of Ralph, felt a flicker of incredulity-a beast
with claws that scratched, that sat on a mountain-top, that left no tracks
and yet was not fast enough to catch Samneric. However Simon thought of the
beast, there rose before his inward sight the picture of a human at once
heroic and sick.
He sighed. Other people could stand up and speak to an assembly,
apparently, without that dreadful feeling of the pressure of personality;
could say what they would as though they were speaking to only one person.
He stepped aside and looked back. Ralph was coming along, holding his spear
over his shoulder. Diffidently, Simon allowed his pace to slacken until he
was walking side by side with Ralph and looking up at him through the coarse
black hair that now fell to his eyes. Ralph glanced sideways, smiled
constrainedly as though he had forgotten that Simon had made a fool of
himself, then looked away again at nothing. For a moment or two Simon was
happy to be accepted and then he ceased to think about himself. When he
bashed into a tree Ralph looked sideways impatiently and Robert sniggered.
Simon reeled and a white spot on his forehead turned red and trickled. Ralph
dismissed Simon and returned to his personal hell They would reach the
castle some time; and the chief would have to go forward.
Jack came trotting back.
"We're in sight now."
"All right. We'll get as close as we can."
He followed Jack toward the castle where the ground rose slightly. On
their left was at. impenetrable tangle of creepers and trees.
"Why couldn't there be something in that?"
"Because you can see. Nothing goes in or out."
"What about the castle then?"
"Look."
Ralph parted the screen of grass and looked out. There were only a few
more yards of stony ground and then the two sides of the island came almost
together so that one expected a peak of headland. But instead of this a
narrow ledge of rock, a few yards wide and perhaps fifteen long, continued
the island out into the sea. There lay another of those pieces of pink
squareness that underlay the structure of the island. This side of the
castle, perhaps a hundred feet high, was the pink bastion they had seen from
the mountain-top. The rock of the cliff was split and the top littered with
great lumps that seemed to totter.
Behind Ralph the tall grass had filled with silent hunters. Ralph
looked at Jack.
"You're a hunter."
Jack went red.
"I know. All right. Something deep in Ralph spoke for him."
"I'm chief. I'll go. Don t argue."
He turned to the others.
"You. Hide here. Wait for me."
He found his voice tended either to disappear or to come out too loud.
He looked at Jack.
"Do you-think?"
Jack muttered. I've been all over. It must be here."
"I see."
Simon mumbled confusedly: "I don't believe in the beast."
Ralph answered him politely, as if agreeing about the weather.
"No. 1 suppose not."
His mouth was tight and pale. He put back his hair very slowly.
"Well. So long."
He forced his feet to move until they had carried him out on to the
neck of land.
He was surrounded on all sides by chasms of empty air. There was
nowhere to hide, even if one did not nave to go on. He paused on the narrow
neck and looked down. Soon, in a matter of centuries, the sea would make an
island of the castle. On the right hand was the lagoon, troubled by the open
sea; and on the left-
Ralph shuddered. The lagoon had protected them from the Pacific: and
for some reason only Jack had gone right down to the water on the other
side. Now he saw the landsman's view of the swell and it seemed like the
breathing of some stupendous creature. Slowly the waters sank among the
rocks, revealing pink tables of granite, strange growths of coral, polyp,
and weed. Down, down, the waters went, whispering like the wind among the
heads of the forest. There was one flat rock there, spread like a table, and
the waters sucking down on the four weedy sides made them seem like cliffs.
Then the sleeping leviathan breathed out, the waters rose, the weed
streamed, and the water boiled over the table rock with a roar. There was no
sense of the passage of waves; only this minute-long fall and rise and fall.
Ralph turned away to the red cliff. They were waiting behind him in the
long grass, waiting to see what he would do. He noticed that the sweat in
his palm was cool now; realized with surprise that he did not really expect
to meet any beast and didn't know what he would do about it if he did.
He saw that he could climb the cliff but this was not necessary. The
squareness of the rock allowed a sort of plinth round it, so mat to the
right, over the lagoon, one could inch along a ledge and turn the corner out
of sight. It was easy going, and soon he was peering round the rock.
Nothing but what you might expect: pink, tumbled boulders with guano
layered on them like icing; and a steep slope up to the shattered rocks that
crowned the bastion.
A sound behind him made him turn. Jack was edging along the ledge.
Couldn't let you do it on your own."
Ralph said nothing. He led the way over the rocks, inspected a sort of
half-cave that held nothing more terrible than a clutch of rotten eggs, and
at last sat down, looking round him and tapping the rock with the butt of
his spear.
Jack was excited.
"What a place for a fort!"
A column of spray wetted them.
"No fresh water."
"What's that then?"
There was indeed a long green smudge half-way up the rock. They climbed
up and tasted the trickle of water.
"You could keep a coconut shell there, filling all the time."
"Not me. This is a rotten place."
Side by side they scaled the last height to where the diminishing pile
was crowned by the last broken rock. Jack struck the near one with his fist
and it grated slightly.
"Do you remember-?"
Consciousness of the bad times in between came to them both. Jack
talked quickly.
"Shove a palm trunk under that and if an enemy came -look!"
A hundred feet below them was the narrow causeway, then the stony
ground, then the grass dotted with heads, and behind that the forest.
"One heave," cried Jack, exulting, "and-wheee-!"
He made a sweeping movement with his hand. Ralph looked toward the
mountain.
"What's the matter?"
Ralph turned.
"Why?"
"You were looking-I don't know why."
"There's no signal now. Nothing to show."
"You're nuts on the signal."
The taut blue horizon encircled them, broken only by the mountain-top.
"That's all we've got"
He leaned his spear against the rocking stone and pushed back two
handfuls of hair.
"We'll have to go back and climb the mountain. That's where they saw
the beast."
"The beast won't be there."
"What else can we do?"
The others, waiting in the grass, saw Jack and Ralph unharmed and broke
cover into the sunlight. They forgot the beast in the excitement of
exploration. They swarmed across the bridge and soon were climbing and
shouting. Ralph stood now, one hand against an enormous red block, a block
large as a mill wheel that had been split off and hung, tottering. Somberly
he watched the mountain. He clenched his fist and beat hammer-wise on the
red wall at his right His lips were tightly compressed and his eyes yearned
beneath the fringe of hair.
"Smoke."
He sucked his bruised fist.
"Jack! Come on."
But Jack was not there. A knot of boys, making a great noise that he
had not noticed, were heaving and pushing at a rock. As he turned, the base
cracked and the whole mass toppled into the sea so that, a thunderous plume
of spray leapt half-way up the cliff.
"Stop it! Stop it!"
His voice struck a silence among them.
"Smoke."
A strange thing happened in his head. Something flittered there in
front of his mind like a bat's wing, obscuring his idea.
"Smoke."
At once the ideas were back, and the anger.
"We want smoke. And you go wasting your time. You roll rocks."
Roger shouted.
"We've got plenty of time!"
Ralph shook his head.
"We'll go to-the mountain."
The clamor broke out. Some of the boys wanted to go back to the beach.
Some wanted to roll more rocks. The sun was bright and danger had faded with
the darkness.
"Jack. The beast might be on the other side. You can lead again. You've
been."
"We could go by the shore. There's fruit."
Bill came up to Ralph.
"Why can't we stay here for a bit?"
"That's right."
"Let's have a fort."
"There's no food here," said Ralph, "and no shelter. Not much fresh
water."
"This would make a wizard fort"
"We can roll rocks-"
"Right onto the bridge-"
"I say we'll go on!" shouted Ralph furiously. "We've got to make
certain. We'll go now."
"Let's stay here-"
"Back to the shelter-"
"I'm tired-"
"No!"
Ralph struck the skin off his knuckles. They did not seem to hurt.
"I'm chief. We've got to make certain. Can't you see the mountain?
There's no signal showing. There may be a ship out there. Are you all off
your rockers?"
Mutinously, the boys fell silent or muttering.
Jack led the way down the rock and across the bridge.
CHAPTER SEVEN
Shadows and Tall Trees
The pig-run kept close to the jumble of rocks that lay down by the
water on the other side and Ralph was content to follow Jack along it. If
you could shut your ears to the slow suck down of the sea and boil of the
return, if you could forget how dun and unvisited were the ferny coverts on
either side, then there was a chance that you might put the beast out of
mind and dream for a while. The sun had swung over the vertical and the
afternoon heat was closing in on the island. Ralph passed a message forward
to Jack and when they next came to fruit the whole party stopped and ate.
Sitting, Ralph was aware of the heat for the first time that day. He
pulled distastefully at his grey shirt and wondered whether he might
undertake the adventure of washing it. Sitting under what seemed an unusual
heat, even for this island, Ralph planned his toilet. He would like to have
a pair of scissors and cut this hair-he flung the mass back-cut this filthy
hair right back to half an inch. He would like to have a bath, a proper
wallow with soap. He passed his tongue experimentally over his teeth and
They nodded, simply. He was a hunter all right. No one doubted that.
"Well then-I've been all over this island. By myself. If there were a
beast I'd have seen it Be frightened because you're like that-but there is
no beast in the forest"
Jack handed back the conch and sat down. The whole assembly applauded
him with relief. Then Piggy held out his hand.
"I don't agree with all Jack said, but with some. `Course there isn't a
beast in the forest How could there be? What would a beast eat?"
"Pig."
"We eat pig."
"Piggy!"
"I got the conch!" said Piggy indignantly. "Ralph- they ought to shut
up, oughtn't they? You shut up, you littluns! What I mean is that I don't
agree about this here fear. Of course there isn't nothing to be afraid of in
the forest Why-I been there myself! You'll be talking about ghosts and such
things next We know what goes on and if there's something wrong, there's
someone to put it right."
He took off his glasses and blinked at them. The sun had gone as if the
light had been turned off.
He proceeded to explain.
"If you get a pain in your stomach, whether it's a little one or a big
one-"
"Yours is a big one."
"When you done laughing perhaps we can get on with the meeting. And if
them littluns climb back on the twister again they'll only fall off in a
sec. So they might as well sit on the ground and listen. No. You have
doctors for everything, even the inside of your mind. You don't really mean
that we got to be frightened all the time of nothing? Life," said Piggy
expansively, "is scientific, that's what it is. In a year or two when the
war's over they'll be traveling to Mars and back. I know there isn't no
beast-not with claws and all that, I mean-but I know there isn't no fear,
either."
Piggy paused.
"Unless-"
Ralph moved restlessly.
"Unless what?"
"Unless we get frightened of people."
A sound, half-laugh, half-jeer, rose among the seated boys. Piggy
ducked his head and went on hastily.
"So lets hear from that littlun who talked about a beast and perhaps we
can show him how silly he is."
The littluns began to jabber among themselves, then one stood forward.
"What's your name?"
"Phil."
For a littlun he was self-confident, holding out his hands, cradling
the conch as Ralph did, looking round at them to collect their attention
before he spoke.
"Last night I had a dream, a horrid dream, fighting with things. I was
outside the shelter by myself, fighting with things, those twisty things in
the trees."
He paused, and the other littluns laughed in horrified sympathy.
"Then I was frightened and I woke up. And I was outside the shelter by
myself in the dark and the twisty things had gone away."
The vivid horror of this, so possible and so nakedly terrifying, held
them all silent. The child's voice went piping on from behind the white
conch.
"And I was frightened and started to call out for Ralph and then I saw
something moving among the trees, something big and horrid."
He paused, half-frightened by the recollection yet proud of the
sensation he was creating.
"That was a nightmare," said Ralph. "He was walking in his sleep."
The assembly murmured in subdued agreement.
The littlun shook his head stubbornly.
"I was asleep when the twisty things were fighting and when they went
away I was awake, and I saw something big and horrid moving in the trees."
Ralph held out his hands for the conch and the littlun sat down.
"You were alseep. There wasn't anyone there. How could anyone be
wandering about in the forest at night? Was anyone? Did anyone go out?"
There was a long pause while the assembly grinned at
the thought of anyone going out in the darkness. Then Simon stood up
and Ralph looked at him in astonishment
"You! What were you mucking about in the dark for?"
Simon grabbed the conch convulsively.
"I wanted-to go to a place-a place I know."
"What place?"
"Just a place I know. A place in the jungle."
He hesitated.
Jack settled the question for them with that contempt in his voice that
could sound so funny and so final.
"He was taken short"
With a feeling of humiliation on Simon's behalf, Ralph took back the
conch, looking Simon sternly in the face as he did so.
"Well, don't do it again. Understand? Not at night There's enough silly
talk about beasts, without the litthlus seeing you gliding about like a-"
The derisive laughter that rose had fear in it and condemnation. Simon
opened his mouth to speak but Ralph had the conch, so he backed to his seat
When the assembly was silent Ralph turned to Piggy.
"Well, Piggy?"
"There was another one. Him."
The littlums pushed Percival forward, then left him by himself. He
stood knee-deep in the central grass, looking at his hidden feet, trying to
pretend he was in a tent Ralph remembered another small boy who had stood
like this and he flinched away from the memory. He had pushed the thought
down and out of sight, where only some positive reminder like this could
bring it to the surface. There had been no further numberings of the
littluns, partly because there was no means of insuring that all of them
were accounted for and partly because Ralph knew the answer to at least one
question Piggy had asked on the mountain-top. There were little boys, fair,
dark, freckled, and all dirty, but their faces were all dreadfully free of
major blemishes. No one had seen the mulberry-colored birthmark again. But
that time Piggy had coaxed and bullied. Tacitly admitting that he remembered
the unmentionable, Ralph nodded to Piggy.
"Go on. Ask him."
Piggy knelt, holding the conch.
"Now then. What's your name?"
The small boy twisted away into his tent Piggy turned helplessly to
Ralph, who spoke sharply.
"What's your name?"
Tormented by the silence and the refusal the assembly broke into a
chant.
"What's your name? What's your name?"
"Quiet!"
Ralph peered at the child in the twilight
"Now tell us. What's your name?"
"Percival Wemys Madison, The Vicarage, Harcourt St. Anthony, Hants,
telephone, telephone, tele-"
As if this information was rooted far down in the springs of sorrow,
the littlun wept. His face puckered, the tears leapt from his eves, his
mouth opened till they could see a square black hole. At first he was a
silent effigy of sorrow; but then the lamentation rose out of him, loud and
sustained as the conch.
"Shut up, you! Shut up!"
Percival Wemys Madison would not shut up. A spring had been tapped, far
beyond the reach of authority or even physical intimidation. The crying went
on, breath after breath, and seemed to sustain him upright as if he were
nailed to it.
"Shut up! Shut up!"
For now the littluns were no longer silent. They were reminded of their
personal sorrows; and perhaps felt themselves to share in a sorrow that was
universal. They began to cry in sympathy, two of them almost as loud as
Percival.
Maurice saved them. He cried out.
"Look at me!"
He pretended to fall over. He rubbed his rump and sat on the twister so
that he fell in the grass. He clowned badly, but Percival and the others
noticed and sniffed and laughed. Presently they were all laughing so
absurdly that the biguns joined in.
Jack was the first to make himself heard. He had not got the conch and
thus spoke against the rules; but nobody minded.
"And what about the beast?"
Something strange was happening to Percival. He yawned and staggered,
so that Jack seized and shook him.
"Where does the beast live?"
Percival sagged in Jack's grip.
"That's a clever beast," said Piggy, jeering, "if it can hide on this
island."
"Jack's been everywhere-"
"Where could a beast live?"
"Beast my foot!"
Percival muttered something and the assembly laughed again. Ralph
leaned forward.
"What does he say?"
Jack listened to Percival's answer and then let go of him. Percival,
released, surrounded by the comfortable presence of humans, fell in the long
grass and went to sleep.
Jack cleared his throat then reported casually.
"He says the beast comes out of the sea."
The last laugh died away. Ralph turned involuntarily, a black, humped
figure against the lagoon. The assembly looked with him, considered the vast
stretches of water, the high sea beyond, unknown indigo of infinite
possibility, heard silently the sough and whisper from the reef.
Maurice spoke, so loudly that they jumped.
"Daddy said they haven't found all the animals in the sea yet"
Argument started again. Ralph held out the glimmering conch and Maurice
took it obediently. The meeting subsided.
"I mean when Jack says you can be frightened because people are
frightened anyway that's all right. But when he says there's only pigs on
this island I expect he's right but he doesn't know, not really, not
certainly I mean-' Maurice took a breath. "My daddy says there's things,
what d`you call'em that make ink-squids-that are hundreds or yards long and
eat whales whole." He paused again ana laughed gaily. "I don't believe in
the beast of course. As Piggy says, life's scientific, but we don't know, do
we? Not certainly, I mean-"
Someone shouted.
"A squid couldn't come up out of the water!"
"Could!"
"Couldn't!"
In a moment the platform was full of arguing, gesticulating shadows. To
Ralph, seated, this seemed the breaking up of sanity. Fear, beasts, no
general agreement that the fire was all-important: and when one tried to get
the thing straight the argument sheered off, bringing up fresh, unpleasant
matter.
He could see a whiteness in the gloom near him so he grabbed it from
Maurice and blew as loudly as he could. The assembly was shocked into
silence. Simon was close to him, laying hands on the conch. Simon felt a
perilous necessity to speak; but to speak in assembly was a terrible thing
to him.
"Maybe," he said hesitantly, "maybe there is a beast."
The assembly cried out savagely and Ralph stood up in amazement.
"You, Simon? You believe in this?"
"I don't know," said Simon. His heartbeats were choking him. "But ..."
The storm broke.
"Sit down!"
"Shut up!"
"Take the conch!"
"Sod you!"
"Shut up!"
Ralph shouted.
"Hear him! He's got the conch!"
"What I mean is . . . maybe it's only us."
"Nuts!"
That was from Piggy, shocked out of decorum. Simon want on.
"We could be sort of. . . ."
Simon became inarticulate in his effort to express mankind's essential
illness. Inspiration came to him.
"What's the dirtiest thing there is?"
As an answer Jack dropped into the uncomprehending silence that
followed it the one crude expressive syllable. Release was immense. Those
littluns who had climbed back on the twister fell off again and did not
mind. The hunters were screaming with delight
Simon's effort fell about him in ruins; the laughter beat him cruelly
and he shrank away defenseless to his seat.
At last the assembly was silent again. Someone spoke out of turn.
"Maybe he means it's some sort of ghost"
Ralph Lifted the conch and peered into the gloom. The lightest thing
was the pale beach. Surely the littluns were nearer? Yes-there was no doubt
about it, they were huddled into a tight knot of bodies in the central
grass. A flurry of wind made the palms talk and the noise seemed very loud
now that darkness and silence made it so noticeable. Two grey trunks rubbed
each other with an evil squeaking that no one had noticed by day.
Piggy took the conch out of his hands. His voice was indignant.
"I don't believe in no ghosts-ever!"
Jack was up too, unaccountably angry.
"Who cares what you believe--Fatty!"
"I got the conch!"
There was the sound of a brief tussle and the conch moved to and fro.
"You gimme the conch back!"
Ralph pushed between them and got a thump on the chest. He wrested the
conch from someone and sat down breathlessly.
"There's too much talk about ghosts. We ought to have left all this for
daylight."
A hushed and anonymous voice broke in.
"Perhaps that's what the beast is-a ghost."
The assembly was shaken as by a wind.
"There's too much talking out of turn," Ralph said, "because we can't
have proper assemblies if you don't stick to the rules."
He stopped again. The careful plan of this assembly had broken down.
"What d'you want me to say then? I was wrong to call this assembly so
late. Well have a vote on them; on ghosts I mean; and then go to the
shelters because we're all tired. No-Jack is it?-wait a minute. I'll say
here and now that I don t believe in ghosts. Or I don't think I do. But I
don't like the thought of them. Not now that is, in the dark. But we were
going to decide what's what."
He raised the conch for a moment
"Very well then. I suppose what's what is whether there are ghosts or
not-"
He thought for a moment, formulating the question.
"Who thinks there may be ghosts?"
For a long time there was silence and no apparent movement. Then Ralph
peered into the gloom and made out the hands. He spoke flatly.
"I see."
The world, that understandable and lawful world, was slipping away.
Once there was this and that; and now-and the ship had gone.
The conch was snatched from his hands and Piggy's voice shrilled.
"I didn't vote for no ghosts!"
He whirled round on the assembly.
"Remember that, all of you!"
They heard him stamp.
"What are we? Humans? Or animals? Or savages? What's grownups going to
think? Going off-hunting pigs-letting fires out-and now!"
A shadow fronted him tempestuously.
"You shut up, you fat slug!'
There was a moment's struggle and the glimmering conch jigged up and
down. Ralph leapt to his feet.
"Jack! Jack! You haven't got the conch! Let him speak."
Jack's face swam near him.
"And you shut up! Who are you, anyway? Sitting there telling people
what to do. You cant hunt, you can't sing-"
"I'm chief. I was chosen."
"Why should choosing make any difference? Just giving orders that don't
make any sense-"
"Piggy's got the conch."
That's right-favor Piggy as you always do-"
"Jack!"
"Jack's voice sounded in bitter mimicry.
"Jack! Jack!"
"The rules!" shouted Ralph. "You're breaking the rules!"
"Who cares?"
Ralph summoned his wits.
"Because the rules are the only thing we've got!"
But Jack was shouting against him.
"Bollocks to the rules! We're strong-we hunt! If there's a beast, we'll
hunt it down! Well close in and beat and beat and beat-!"
He gave a wild whoop and leapt down to the pale sand. At once the
platform was full of noise and excitement, scramblings, screams and
laughter. The assembly shredded away and became a discursive and random
scatter from the palms to the water and away along the beach, beyond
night-sight. Ralph found his cheek touching the conch and took it from
Piggy.
"What's grownups going to say?" cried Piggy again. "Look at 'em!"
The sound of mock hunting, hysterical laughter and real terror came
from the beach.
"Blow the conch, Ralph."
Piggy was so close that Ralph could see the glint of his one glass.
"There's the fire. Can't they see?"
"You got to be tough now. Make 'em do what you want."
Ralph answered in the cautious voice of one who rehearses a theorem.
"If I blow the conch and they don't come back; then we've had it. We
shan't keep the fire going. We'll be like animals. We'll never be rescued."
"If you don't blow, we'll soon be animals anyway. I can't see what
they're doing but I can hear."
The dispersed figures had come together on the sand and were a dense
black mass that revolved. They were chanting something and littluns that had
had enough were staggering away, howling. Ralph raised the conch to his lips
and then lowered it.
"The trouble is: Are there ghosts, Piggy? Or beasts?"
"Course there aren't."
"Why not?"
"'Cos things wouldn't make sense. Houses an` streets, an'-TV-they
wouldn't work."
The dancing, chanting boys had worked themselves away till their sound
was nothing but a wordless rhythm.
"But s'pose they don't make sense? Not here, on this island? Supposing
things are watching us and waiting?"
Ralph shuddered violently and moved closer to Piggy, so that they
bumped frighteningly.
"You stop talking like that! We got enough trouble, Ralph, an' I've had
as much as I can stand. If there is ghosts-"
"I ought to give up being chief. Hear 'em."
"Oh lord! Oh no!"
Piggy gripped Ralph's arm.
"If Jack was chief he'd have all hunting and no fire. We'd be here till
we died."
His voice ran up to a squeak.
"Who's that sitting there?"
"Me. Simon."
"Fat lot of good we are," said Ralph. "Three blind mice, I`ll give up."
"If you give up," said Piggy, in an appalled whisper, "what `ud happen
to me?"
"Nothing."
"He hates me. I dunno why. If he could do what he wanted-you're all
right, he respects you. Besides- you'd hit him."
"You were having a nice fight with him just now."
"I had the conch," said Piggy simply. "I had a right to speak."
Simon stirred in the dark.
"Go on being chief."
"You shut up, young Simon! Why couldn't you say there wasn't a beast?"
"I'm scared of him," said Piggy, "and that's why I know him. If you're
scared of someone you hate him but you can't stop thinking about him. You
Kid yourself he's all right really, an' then when you see him again; it's
like asthma an` you can't breathe. I tell you what. He hates you too,
Ralph-"
"Me? Why me?"
"I dunno. You got him over the fire; an` you're chief an` he isn't."
"But he's, he's, Jack Merridew!"
"I been in bed so much I done some thinking. I know about people. I
know about me. And him. He can't hurt you: but if you stand out of the way
he'd hurt the next thing. And that's me."
"Piggy's right, Ralph. There's you and Jack. Go on being chief."
"We're all drifting and things are going rotten. At home there was
always a grownup. Please, sir; please, miss; and then you got an answer. How
I wish!"
"I wish my auntie was here."
"I wish my father . . . Oh, what's the use?"
"Keep the fire going."
The dance was over and the hunters were going back to the shelters.
"Grownups know things," said Piggy. "They ain't afraid of the dark.
They'd meet and have tea and discuss. Then things 'ud be all right-"
"They wouldn't set fire to the island. Or lose-"
"They'd build a ship-"
The three boys stood in the darkness, striving unsuccessfully to convey
the majesty of adult life.
"They wouldn't quarrel-"
"Or break my specs-"
"Or talk about a beast-"
"If only they could get a message to us," cried Ralph desperately. "If
only they could send us something grown-up . . . a sign or something."
A thin wail out of the darkness chilled them and set them grabbing for
each other. Then the wail rose, remote and unearthly, and turned to an
inarticulate gibbering. Percival Wemys Madison, of the Vicarage, Harcourt
St. Anthony, lying in the long grass, was living through circumstances in
which the incantation of his address was powerless to help him.
CHAPTER SIX
Beast from Air
There was no light left save that of the stars. When they had
understood what made this ghostly noise and Percival was quiet again, Ralph
and Simon picked him up unhandily and carried him to a shelter. Piggy hung
about near for all his brave words, and the three bigger boys went together
to the next shelter. They lay restlessly and noisily among the dry leaves,
watching the patch of stars that was the opening toward the lagoon.
Sometimes a littlun cried out from the other shelters and once a bigun spoke
in the dark. Then they too fell asleep.
A sliver of moon rose over the horizon, hardly large enough to make a
path of light even when it sat right down on the water; but there were other
lights in the sky, that moved fast, winked, or went out, though not even a
faint popping came down from the battle fought at ten miles' neight. But a
sign came down from the world of grownups, though at the time there was no
child awake to read it. There was a sudden bright explosion and a corkscrew
trail across the sky; then darkness again and stars. There was a speck above
the island, a figure dropping swiftly beneath a parachute, a figure that
hung with dangling limbs. The changing winds of various altitudes took the
figure where they would. Then, three miles up, the wind steadied and bore it
in a descending curve round the sky and swept it in a great slant across the
reef and the lagoon toward the mountain. The figure fell and crumpled among
the blue flowers of the mountain-side, but now there was a gentle breeze at
this height too and the parachute flopped and banged and pulled. So the
figure, with feet that dragged behind it, slid up the mountain. Yard by
yard, puff by puff, the breeze hauled the figure through the blue flowers,
over the boulders and red stones, till it lay huddled among the shattered
rocks of the mountain-top. Here the breeze was fitful and allowed the
strings of the parachute to tangle and festoon; and the figure sat, its
helmeted head between its knees, held by a complication of lines. When the
breeze blew, the lines would strain taut and some accident of this pull
kited the bead and chest upright so that the figure seemed to peer across
the brow of the mountain. Then, each time me wind dropped, the lines would
slacken and the figure bow forward again, sinking its head between its
knees. So as the stars moved across the sky, the figure sat on the
mountain-top and bowed and sank and bowed again.
In the darkness of early morning there were noises by a rock a little
way down the side of the mountain. Two boys rolled out of a pile of
brushwood and dead leaves, two dim shadows talking sleepily to each other.
They were the twins, on duty at the fire. In theory one should have been
asleep and one on watch. But they could never manage to do things sensibly
if that meant acting independently, and since staying awake all night was
impossible, they had both gone to sleep. Now they approached the darker
smudge that had been the signal fire, yawning, rubbing their eyes, treading
with practiced feet When they readied it they stopped yawning, and one ran
quickly back for brushwood and leaves.
The other knelt down.
"I believe it's out."
He fiddled with the sticks that were pushed into his hands.
"No."
He lay down and put his lips close to the smudge and blew softly. His
face appeared, lit redly. He'stopped blowing for a moment.
"Sam-give us-"
"-tinder wood."
Eric bent down and blew softly again till the patch was bright Sam
poked the piece of tinder wood into the hot spot, then a branch. The glow
increased and the branch took fire. Sam piled on more branches.
"Don't burn the lot," said Eric, "you're putting on too much."
"Let's warm up."
"We'll only have to fetch more wood."
"I'm cold."
"So'm I."
"Besides, it's-"
"-dark. All right, then."
Eric squatted back and watched Sam make up the fire. He built a little
tent of dead wood and the fire was safety alight.
"That was near."
"He'd have been-"
"Waxy."
"Huh."
For a few moments the twins watched the fire in silence. Then Eric
sniggered.
"Wasn't he waxy?"
"About the-"
"Fire and the pig."
"Lucky he went for Jack, 'stead of us."
"Huh. Remember old Waxy at school?"
" 'Boy-you-are-driving-me-slowly-insane!'"
The twins shared their identical laughter, then remembered the darkness
and other things and glanced round uneasily. The flames, busy about the
tent, drew their eyes back again. Eric watched the scurrying woodlice that
were so frantically unable to avoid the flames, and thought of the first
fire-just down there, on the steeper side of the mountain, where now was
complete darkness. He did not tike to remember it, and looked away at the
mountain-top.
Warmth radiated now, and beat pleasantly on them. Sam amused himself by
fitting branches into the fire as closely as possible. Eric spread out his
hands, searching for the distance at which the heat was just bearable. Idly
looking beyond the fire, he resettled the scattered rocks from their fiat
shadows into daylight contours. Just there was the big rock, and the three
stones there, that split rock, and there beyond was a gap-just there-
"Sam."
"Huh?"
"Nothing."
The flames were mastering the branches, the bark was curling and
falling away, the wood exploding. The tent fell inwards and flung a wide
circle of light over the mountain-top.
"Sam-"
"Huh?"
"Sam! Sam!"
Sam looked at Eric irritably. The intensity of Eric's gaze made the
direction in which he looked terrible, for Sam had his back to it. He
scrambled round the fire, squatted by Eric, and looked to see. They became
motionless, gripped in each other's arms, four unwinking eyes aimed ana two
mouths open.
Far beneath them, the trees of the forest sighed, then roared. The hair
on their foreheads fluttered and flames blew out sideways from the fire.
Fifteen yards away from them came the plopping noise of fabric blown open.
Neither of the boys screamed but the grip of their arms tightened and
their mouths grew peaked. For perhaps ten seconds they crouched tike that
while the flailing fire sent smoke and sparks and waves of inconstant tight
over the top of the mountain.
Then as though they had but one terrified mind between them they
scrambled away over the rocks and fled.
Ralph was dreaming. He had fallen asleep after what seemed hours of
tossing and turning noisily among the dry leaves. Even the sounds of
nightmare from the other shelters no longer reached him, for he was back to
where he came from, feeding the ponies with sugar over the garden wall. Then
someone was shaking his arm, telling him that it was time for tea.
"Ralph! Wake up!"
The leaves were roaring tike the sea.
"Ralph, wake up!"
"What's the matter?"
"We saw-"
"-the beast-"
"-plain!"
"Who are you? The twins?"
"We saw the beast-"
"Quiet. Piggy!"
The leaves were roaring still. Piggy bumped into him and a twin grabbed
him as he made tor the oblong of paling stars.
"You can't go out-it's horrible!"
"Piggy-where are the spears?"
"I can hear the-"
"Quiet then. Lie still."
They lay there listening, at first with doubt but then with tenor to
the description the twins breathed at them between bouts of extreme silence.
Soon the darkness was full of daws, full of the awful unknown and menace. An
interminable dawn faded the stars out, and at last light, sad and grey,
filtered into the shelter. They began to stir though still tile world
outside the shelter was impossibly dangerous. The maze of the darkness
sorted into near and far, and at the high point of the sky the cloudlets
were warmed with color. A single sea bird flapped upwards with a hoarse cry
that was echoed presently, and something squawked in the forest Now streaks
of cloud near the horizon began to glow rosily, and the feathery tops of the
palms were green.
Ralph knelt in the entrance to the shelter and peered cautiously round
him.
"Sam `n Eric. Call them to an assembly. Quietly. Go on."
The twins, holding tremulously to each other, dared the few yards to
the next shelter and spread the dreadful news. Ralph stood up and walked for
the sake of dignity, though with his back pricking, to the platform. Piggy
and Simon followed him and the other boys came sneaking after.
Ralph took the conch from where it lay on the polished seat and held it
to his lips; but then he hesitated and did not blow. He held the shell up
instead and showed it to them and they understood.
The rays of the sun that were fanning upwards from below the horizon
swung downwards to eye-level Ralph looked for a moment at the growing slice
of gold that lit them from the right hand and seemed to make speech
possible. The circle of boys before him bristled with hunting spears.
He handed the conch to Eric, the nearest of the twins.
"We've seen the beast with our own eyes. No-we weren't asleep-"
Sam took up the story. By custom now one conch did for both twins, for
their substantial unity was recognized.
"It was furry. There was something moving behind its head-wings. The
beast moved too-"
"That was awful. It kind of sat up-"
"The fire was bright-"
"We'd just made it up-"
"-more sticks on-"
"There were eyes-"
"Teeth-"
"Claws-"
"We ran as fast as we could-"
"Bashed into things-"
The beast followed us-"
"I saw it slinking behind the trees-"
"Nearly touched me-"
Ralph pointed fearfully at Eric's face, which was striped with scars
where the bushes had torn him.
"How did you do that?"
Eric felt his face.
"I'm all rough. Am I bleeding?"
The circle of boys shrank away in horror. Johnny, yawning still, burst
into noisy tears and was slapped by Bill till he choked on them. The bright
morning was full of threats and the circle began to change. It faced out,
rather than in, and the spears of sharpened wood were like a fence. Jack
called them back to the center.
"This'll be a real hunt! Who'll come?"
Ralph moved impatiently.
"These spears are made of wood. Don't be silly."
Jack sneered at him.
"Frightened?"
" 'Course I'm frightened. Who wouldn't be?"
He turned to the twins, yearning but hopeless.
"I suppose you aren't pulling our legs?"
The reply was too emphatic for anyone to doubt them.
Piggy took the conch.
"Couldn't we-kind of-stay here? Maybe the beast won't come near us."
But for the sense of something watching them, Ralph would have shouted
at him.
"Stay here? And be cramped into this bit of the island, always on the
lookout? How should we get our food? And what about the fire?"
"Let's be moving," said Jack restlessly, "we're wasting time."
"No we're not. What about the littluns?" "Sucks to the littluns!''
"Someone's got to look after them."
"Nobody has so far."
"There was no need! Now there is. Piggy`ll look after them."
"That's right. Keep Piggy out of danger."
"Have some sense. What can Piggy do with only one eye?"
The rest of the boys were looking from Jack to Ralph, curiously.
"And another thing. You can't have an ordinary hunt because the beast
doesn't leave tracks. If it did you'd have seen them. For all we know, the
beast may swing through the trees like what's its name."
They nodded.
"So we've got to think."
Piggy took off his damaged glasses and cleaned the remaining lens.
"How about us, Ralph?"
"You haven't got the conch. Here."
"I mean-how about us? Suppose the beast comes when you're all away. I
can't see proper, and if I get scared-"
Jack broke in, contemptuously.
"You're always scared."
"I got the conch-"
"Conch! Conch!" shouted Jack. "We don't need the conch any more. We
know who ought to say things. What good did Simon do speaking, or Bill, or
Walter? It's time some people knew they've got to keep quiet and leave
deciding things to the rest of us."
Ralph could no longer ignore his speech. The blood was hot in his
cheeks.
"You haven't got the conch," he said. "Sit down."
Jack's face went so white that the freckles showed as clear, brown
flecks. He licked his lips and remained standing.
"This is a hunter's job."
The rest of the boys watched intently. Piggy, finding himself
uncomfortably embroiled, slid the conch to Ralph's knees and sat down. The
silence grew oppressive and Piggy held his breath.
"This is more than a hunter's job," said Ralph at last, "because you
can't track the beast And don't you want to be rescued?"
He turned to the assembly.
"Don't you all want to be rescued?"
He looked back at Jack.
"I said before, the fire is the main thing. Now the fire must be out-"
The old exasperation saved him and gave him the energy to attack.
"Hasn't anyone got any sense? We've got to relight that fire. You never
thought or that, Jack, did you? Or don't any of you want to be rescued?"
Yes, they wanted to be rescued, there was no doubt about that; and with
a violent swing to Ralph's side, the crisis passed. Piggy let out his breath
with a gasp, reached for it again and failed. He lay against a log, his
mouth gaping, blue shadows creeping round his lips. Nobody minded frim.
"Now think, Jack. Is there anywhere on the island you haven't been?"
Unwillingly Jack answered.
"There's only-but of course! You remember? The tail-end part, where the
rocks are all piled up. I've been near there. The rock makes a sort of
bridge. There's only one way up."
And the thing might live there."
All the assembly talked at once.
"Quite! All right That's where well look. If the beast isn't there
we'll go up the mountain and look; and light the fire."
"Let's go."
"We'll eat first. Then go." Ralph paused. "We'd better take spears."
After they had eaten, Ralph and the biguns set out along the beach.
They left Piggy propped up on the platform. This day promised, like the
others, to be a sunbath under a blue dome. The beach stretched away before
them in a gentle curve till perspective drew it into one with the forest;
for the day was not advanced enough to be obscured by the shifting veils of
mirage. Under Ralph's direction, they picked a careful way along the palm
terrace, rather than dare the hot sand down by the water. He let Jack lead
the way; and Jack trod with theatrical caution though they could have seen
an enemy twenty yards away. Ralph walked in the rear, thankful to have
escaped responsibility for a time.
Simon, walking in front of Ralph, felt a flicker of incredulity-a beast
with claws that scratched, that sat on a mountain-top, that left no tracks
and yet was not fast enough to catch Samneric. However Simon thought of the
beast, there rose before his inward sight the picture of a human at once
heroic and sick.
He sighed. Other people could stand up and speak to an assembly,
apparently, without that dreadful feeling of the pressure of personality;
could say what they would as though they were speaking to only one person.
He stepped aside and looked back. Ralph was coming along, holding his spear
over his shoulder. Diffidently, Simon allowed his pace to slacken until he
was walking side by side with Ralph and looking up at him through the coarse
black hair that now fell to his eyes. Ralph glanced sideways, smiled
constrainedly as though he had forgotten that Simon had made a fool of
himself, then looked away again at nothing. For a moment or two Simon was
happy to be accepted and then he ceased to think about himself. When he
bashed into a tree Ralph looked sideways impatiently and Robert sniggered.
Simon reeled and a white spot on his forehead turned red and trickled. Ralph
dismissed Simon and returned to his personal hell They would reach the
castle some time; and the chief would have to go forward.
Jack came trotting back.
"We're in sight now."
"All right. We'll get as close as we can."
He followed Jack toward the castle where the ground rose slightly. On
their left was at. impenetrable tangle of creepers and trees.
"Why couldn't there be something in that?"
"Because you can see. Nothing goes in or out."
"What about the castle then?"
"Look."
Ralph parted the screen of grass and looked out. There were only a few
more yards of stony ground and then the two sides of the island came almost
together so that one expected a peak of headland. But instead of this a
narrow ledge of rock, a few yards wide and perhaps fifteen long, continued
the island out into the sea. There lay another of those pieces of pink
squareness that underlay the structure of the island. This side of the
castle, perhaps a hundred feet high, was the pink bastion they had seen from
the mountain-top. The rock of the cliff was split and the top littered with
great lumps that seemed to totter.
Behind Ralph the tall grass had filled with silent hunters. Ralph
looked at Jack.
"You're a hunter."
Jack went red.
"I know. All right. Something deep in Ralph spoke for him."
"I'm chief. I'll go. Don t argue."
He turned to the others.
"You. Hide here. Wait for me."
He found his voice tended either to disappear or to come out too loud.
He looked at Jack.
"Do you-think?"
Jack muttered. I've been all over. It must be here."
"I see."
Simon mumbled confusedly: "I don't believe in the beast."
Ralph answered him politely, as if agreeing about the weather.
"No. 1 suppose not."
His mouth was tight and pale. He put back his hair very slowly.
"Well. So long."
He forced his feet to move until they had carried him out on to the
neck of land.
He was surrounded on all sides by chasms of empty air. There was
nowhere to hide, even if one did not nave to go on. He paused on the narrow
neck and looked down. Soon, in a matter of centuries, the sea would make an
island of the castle. On the right hand was the lagoon, troubled by the open
sea; and on the left-
Ralph shuddered. The lagoon had protected them from the Pacific: and
for some reason only Jack had gone right down to the water on the other
side. Now he saw the landsman's view of the swell and it seemed like the
breathing of some stupendous creature. Slowly the waters sank among the
rocks, revealing pink tables of granite, strange growths of coral, polyp,
and weed. Down, down, the waters went, whispering like the wind among the
heads of the forest. There was one flat rock there, spread like a table, and
the waters sucking down on the four weedy sides made them seem like cliffs.
Then the sleeping leviathan breathed out, the waters rose, the weed
streamed, and the water boiled over the table rock with a roar. There was no
sense of the passage of waves; only this minute-long fall and rise and fall.
Ralph turned away to the red cliff. They were waiting behind him in the
long grass, waiting to see what he would do. He noticed that the sweat in
his palm was cool now; realized with surprise that he did not really expect
to meet any beast and didn't know what he would do about it if he did.
He saw that he could climb the cliff but this was not necessary. The
squareness of the rock allowed a sort of plinth round it, so mat to the
right, over the lagoon, one could inch along a ledge and turn the corner out
of sight. It was easy going, and soon he was peering round the rock.
Nothing but what you might expect: pink, tumbled boulders with guano
layered on them like icing; and a steep slope up to the shattered rocks that
crowned the bastion.
A sound behind him made him turn. Jack was edging along the ledge.
Couldn't let you do it on your own."
Ralph said nothing. He led the way over the rocks, inspected a sort of
half-cave that held nothing more terrible than a clutch of rotten eggs, and
at last sat down, looking round him and tapping the rock with the butt of
his spear.
Jack was excited.
"What a place for a fort!"
A column of spray wetted them.
"No fresh water."
"What's that then?"
There was indeed a long green smudge half-way up the rock. They climbed
up and tasted the trickle of water.
"You could keep a coconut shell there, filling all the time."
"Not me. This is a rotten place."
Side by side they scaled the last height to where the diminishing pile
was crowned by the last broken rock. Jack struck the near one with his fist
and it grated slightly.
"Do you remember-?"
Consciousness of the bad times in between came to them both. Jack
talked quickly.
"Shove a palm trunk under that and if an enemy came -look!"
A hundred feet below them was the narrow causeway, then the stony
ground, then the grass dotted with heads, and behind that the forest.
"One heave," cried Jack, exulting, "and-wheee-!"
He made a sweeping movement with his hand. Ralph looked toward the
mountain.
"What's the matter?"
Ralph turned.
"Why?"
"You were looking-I don't know why."
"There's no signal now. Nothing to show."
"You're nuts on the signal."
The taut blue horizon encircled them, broken only by the mountain-top.
"That's all we've got"
He leaned his spear against the rocking stone and pushed back two
handfuls of hair.
"We'll have to go back and climb the mountain. That's where they saw
the beast."
"The beast won't be there."
"What else can we do?"
The others, waiting in the grass, saw Jack and Ralph unharmed and broke
cover into the sunlight. They forgot the beast in the excitement of
exploration. They swarmed across the bridge and soon were climbing and
shouting. Ralph stood now, one hand against an enormous red block, a block
large as a mill wheel that had been split off and hung, tottering. Somberly
he watched the mountain. He clenched his fist and beat hammer-wise on the
red wall at his right His lips were tightly compressed and his eyes yearned
beneath the fringe of hair.
"Smoke."
He sucked his bruised fist.
"Jack! Come on."
But Jack was not there. A knot of boys, making a great noise that he
had not noticed, were heaving and pushing at a rock. As he turned, the base
cracked and the whole mass toppled into the sea so that, a thunderous plume
of spray leapt half-way up the cliff.
"Stop it! Stop it!"
His voice struck a silence among them.
"Smoke."
A strange thing happened in his head. Something flittered there in
front of his mind like a bat's wing, obscuring his idea.
"Smoke."
At once the ideas were back, and the anger.
"We want smoke. And you go wasting your time. You roll rocks."
Roger shouted.
"We've got plenty of time!"
Ralph shook his head.
"We'll go to-the mountain."
The clamor broke out. Some of the boys wanted to go back to the beach.
Some wanted to roll more rocks. The sun was bright and danger had faded with
the darkness.
"Jack. The beast might be on the other side. You can lead again. You've
been."
"We could go by the shore. There's fruit."
Bill came up to Ralph.
"Why can't we stay here for a bit?"
"That's right."
"Let's have a fort."
"There's no food here," said Ralph, "and no shelter. Not much fresh
water."
"This would make a wizard fort"
"We can roll rocks-"
"Right onto the bridge-"
"I say we'll go on!" shouted Ralph furiously. "We've got to make
certain. We'll go now."
"Let's stay here-"
"Back to the shelter-"
"I'm tired-"
"No!"
Ralph struck the skin off his knuckles. They did not seem to hurt.
"I'm chief. We've got to make certain. Can't you see the mountain?
There's no signal showing. There may be a ship out there. Are you all off
your rockers?"
Mutinously, the boys fell silent or muttering.
Jack led the way down the rock and across the bridge.
CHAPTER SEVEN
Shadows and Tall Trees
The pig-run kept close to the jumble of rocks that lay down by the
water on the other side and Ralph was content to follow Jack along it. If
you could shut your ears to the slow suck down of the sea and boil of the
return, if you could forget how dun and unvisited were the ferny coverts on
either side, then there was a chance that you might put the beast out of
mind and dream for a while. The sun had swung over the vertical and the
afternoon heat was closing in on the island. Ralph passed a message forward
to Jack and when they next came to fruit the whole party stopped and ate.
Sitting, Ralph was aware of the heat for the first time that day. He
pulled distastefully at his grey shirt and wondered whether he might
undertake the adventure of washing it. Sitting under what seemed an unusual
heat, even for this island, Ralph planned his toilet. He would like to have
a pair of scissors and cut this hair-he flung the mass back-cut this filthy
hair right back to half an inch. He would like to have a bath, a proper
wallow with soap. He passed his tongue experimentally over his teeth and