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.Suddenly there was a great noise behind Lakamba's chair.It was that woman, who went for Willems.Ali says she was like a wild beast, but he twisted her wrist and made her grovel in the dust.Nobody knows exactly what it was about.Some say it was about that flag.He carried her off, flung her into a canoe, and went on board Abdulla's ship.After that Sahamin was the first to salaam to the flag.Others followed suit.Before noon everything was quiet in the settlement, and Ali came back and told me all this.«Almayer drew a long breath.Lingard stretched out his legs.»Go on!« he said.Almayer seemed to struggle with himself.At last he spluttered out:»The hardest is to tell yet.The most unheard-of thing! An outrage! A fiendish outrage!«Chapter Three»Well! Let's know all about it.I can't imagine.« began Lingard, after waiting for some time in silence.»Can't imagine! I should think you couldn't,« interrupted Almayer.»Why!.You just listen.When Ali came back I felt a little easier in my mind.There was then some semblance of order in Sambir.I had the Jack up since the morning and began to feel safer.Some of my men turned up in the afternoon.I did not ask any questions; set them to work as if nothing had happened.Towards the evening – it might have been five or half-past – I was on our jetty with the child when I heard shouts at the far-off end of the settlement.At first I didn't take much notice.By and by Ali came to me and says, ›Master, give me the child, there is much trouble in the settlement.‹ So I gave him Nina and went in, took my revolver, and passed through the house into the back courtyard.As I came down the steps I saw all the serving girls clear out from the cooking shed, and I heard a big crowd howling on the other side of the dry ditch which is the limit of our ground.Could not see them on account of the fringe of bushes along the ditch, but I knew that crowd was angry and after somebody.As I stood wondering, that Jim-Eng – you know the Chinaman who settled here a couple of years ago?«»He was my passenger; I brought him here,« exclaimed Lingard.»A first-class Chinaman that.«»Did you? I had forgotten.Well, that Jim-Eng, he burst through the bush and fell into my arms, so to speak.He told me, panting, that they were after him because he wouldn't take off his hat to the flag.He was not so much scared, but he was very angry and indignant.Of course he had to run for it; there were some fifty men after him – Lakamba's friends – but he was full of fight.Said he was an Englishman, and would not take off his hat to any flag but English.I tried to soothe him while the crowd was shouting on the other side of the ditch.I told him he must take one of my canoes and cross the river.Stop on the other side for a couple of days.He wouldn't.Not he.He was English, and he would fight the whole lot.Says he: ›They are only black fellows.We white men,‹ meaning me and himself, ›can fight everybody in Sambir.‹ He was mad with passion.The crowd quieted a little, and I thought I could shelter Jim-Eng without much risk, when all of a sudden I heard Willems' voice.He shouted to me in English: ›Let four men enter your compound to get that Chinaman!‹ I said nothing.Told Jim-Eng to keep quiet too.Then after a while Willems shouts again: ›Don't resist, Almayer.I give you good advice.I am keeping this crowd back.Don't resist them!‹ That beggar's voice enraged me; I could not help it.I cried to him: ›You are a liar!‹ and just then Jim-Eng, who had flung off his jacket and had tucked up his trousers ready for a fight; just then that fellow he snatches the revolver out of my hand and lets fly at them through the bush.There was a sharp cry – he must have hit somebody – and a great yell, and before I could wink twice they were over the ditch and through the bush and on top of us! Simply rolled over us! There wasn't the slightest chance to resist.I was trampled under foot, Jim-Eng got a dozen gashes about his body, and we were carried halfway up the yard in the first rush.My eyes and mouth were full of dust; I was on my back with three or four fellows sitting on me.I could hear Jim-Eng trying to shout not very far from me.Now and then they would throttle him and he would gurgle.I could hardly breathe myself with two heavy fellows on my chest.Willems came up running and ordered them to raise me up, but to keep good hold.They led me into the verandah.I looked round, but did not see either Ali or the child.Felt easier.Struggled a little.Oh, my God!«Almayer's face was distorted with a passing spasm of rage.Lingard moved in his chair slightly.Almayer went on after a short pause:»They held me, shouting threats in my face.Willems took down my hammock and threw it to them.He pulled out the drawer of this table, and found there a palm and needle and some sail-twine.We were making awnings for your brig, as you had asked me last voyage before you left.He knew, of course, where to look for what he wanted.By his orders they laid me out on the floor, wrapped me in my hammock, and he started to stitch me in, as if I had been a corpse, beginning at the feet.While he worked he laughed wickedly.I called him all the names I could think of.He told them to put their dirty paws over my mouth and nose.I was nearly choked.Whenever I moved they punched me in the ribs.He went on taking fresh needlefuls as he wanted them, and working steadily.Sewed me up to my throat.Then he rose, saying, ›That will do; let go.‹ That woman had been standing by; they must have been reconciled.She clapped her hands.I lay on the floor like a bale of goods while he stared at me, and the woman shrieked with delight.Like a bale of goods! There was a grin on every face, and the verandah was full of them.I wished myself dead – 'pon my word, Captain Lingard, I did! I do now whenever I think of it!«Lingard's face expressed sympathetic indignation.Almayer dropped his head upon his arms on the table, and spoke in that position in an indistinct and muffled voice, without looking up.»Finally, by his directions, they flung me into the big rocking-chair.I was sewed in so tight that I was stiff like a piece of wood.He was giving orders in a very loud voice, and that man Babalatchi saw that they were executed.They obeyed him implicitly.Meantime I lay there in the chair like a log, and that woman capered before me and made faces; snapped her fingers before my nose.Women are bad! – ain't they? I never saw her before, as far as I know
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