[In Search of the Okapi by Ernest Glanville]@TWC D-Link bookIn Search of the Okapi CHAPTER V 23/30
Bymby master go along in little boat, pick Muata up, eh? What you pay ?" and the boy chuckled softly. "Suppose I tell your white master, you rascal ?" "Wow! You tell, they kill poor Zanzibar boy." "Then clear out," said Compton, launching a kick; "and if I see any more of you I will tell." The boy turned sulky.
"Me guard--me stay." "You go," said Compton, "or I will call your masters, and let them deal with you." Growling under his breath, the self-styled "guard" slunk soft-footed out of the room.
Compton struck a match and looked around the apartment, then turned to Venning with a grin. "That is the game," he whispered. "I think I understand," Venning replied softly.
"That fellow was testing you ?" Compton nodded. "And you think Mr.Hume has not forgotten Muata ?" "I am sure he has not." They crept into their hammocks, but not to sleep, and they were wide awake when Mr.Hume entered noisily some two hours later. "To-morrow night," he shouted boisterously. "With pleasure, and the night after, for good visitors are rare," called the Belgian. "And good hosts also.
Touching those two men you promised as the crew for my boat ?" "They will be here to-morrow evening," said the senior officer, thrusting a head round the mat.
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