[Rujub, the Juggler by G. A. Henty]@TWC D-Link book
Rujub, the Juggler

CHAPTER VIII
25/31

"I gave orders to my man to begin to warm up the food as soon as he heard a gun fired, and I will guarantee he has got everything ready by this time." After a hearty meal and a cigar they lay down for a few hours' sleep, and at daybreak rode back to Deennugghur, the two subalterns rather crestfallen at their failure to have taken any active part in killing the tiger that had so long been a terror to the district.
"It was an awful sell missing him, Miss Hannay; I wanted to have had the claws mounted as a necklace; I thought you would have liked it." "I am very much obliged to you, Mr.Wilson, but I would much rather not have had them.

If the tiger hadn't been a man eater I should not have minded, but I should never have worn as an ornament claws that had killed lots of people--women and children too." "No, I never thought of that, Miss Hannay; it wouldn't have been pleasant, now one thinks of it; still, I wish I had put a bullet into him." "No doubt you will do better next time, Mr.Wilson.The Doctor has been telling me that it is extremely difficult to hit an animal in the dark when you are not accustomed to that sort of shooting.

He says he was in a great fright all the time he was lying in the cage, and that it was an immense relief to him when he heard your rifles go off, and found that he wasn't hit." "That is too bad of him, Miss Hannay," Wilson laughed; "we were not such duffers as all that.

I don't believe he really did think so." "I am sure he was in earnest, Mr.Wilson.He said he should have felt quite safe if it had been daylight, but that in the dark people really can't see which way the rifles are pointed, and that he remembered he had not told you to put phosphorus on the sights." "It was too bad of him," Wilson grumbled; "it would have served him right if one of the bullets had hit a timber of the cage and given him a start; I should like to have seen the Doctor struggling in the dark to get his second rifle from under the woman, with the tiger clawing and growling two feet above him." "The Doctor didn't tell me about that," Isobel laughed; "though he said he had a woman and child with him to attract the tiger." "It would have frightened any decent minded tiger, Miss Hannay, instead of attracting it; for such dismal yells as that woman made I never listened to.

I nearly tumbled off the tree at the first of them, it made me jump so, and it gave me a feeling of cold water running down my back.
As to the child, I don't know whether she pinched it or the doctor stuck pins into it, but the poor little brute howled in the most frightful way.


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