Lord of the Flies (20 page)

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Authors: William Golding

Tags: #Fiction, #Classics

BOOK: Lord of the Flies
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"But tomorrow we'll hunt and when we've got meat we'll have a feast--"

           
Bill put up his hand.

           
"Chief."

           
"Yes?"

           
"What'll we use for lighting the fire?"

           
The chief's blush was hidden by the white and red clay. Into his uncertain silence the tribe spilled their murmur once more. Then the chief held up his hand.

           
"We shall take fire from the others. Listen. Tomorrow we'll hunt and get meat. Tonight I'll go along with two hunters--who'll come?"

           
Maurice and Roger put up their hands.

           
"Maurice--"

           
"Yes, Chief?"

           
"Where was their fire?"

           
"Back at the old place by the fire rock."

           
The chief nodded.

           
"The rest of you can go to sleep as soon as the sun sets. But us three, Maurice, Roger and me, we've got work to do. We'll leave just before sunset--"

           
Maurice put up his hand.

           
"But what happens if we meet--"
          

           
The chief waved his objection aside.

           
"We'll keep along by the sands. Then if he comes we'll do our, our dance again."

           
"Only the three of us?"

           
Again the murmur swelled and died away.

 

           
Piggy handed Ralph his glasses and waited to receive back his sight. The wood was damp; and this was the third time they had lighted it. Ralph stood back, speaking to himself.

           
"We don't want another night without fire."

           
He looked round guiltily at the three boys standing by. This was the first time he had admitted the double function of the fire. Certainly one was to send up a beckoning column of smoke; but the other was to be a hearth now and a comfort until they slept. Eric breathed on the wood till it glowed and sent out a little flame. A billow of white and yellow smoke reeked up. Piggy took back his glasses and looked at the smoke with pleasure.

           
"If only we could make a radio!"

           
"Or a plane--"

           
"--or a boat."

           
Ralph dredged in his fading knowledge of the world.

           
"We might get taken prisoner by the Reds."

           
Eric pushed back his hair.

           
"They'd be better than--"

           
He would not name people and Sam finished the sentence for him by nodding along the beach.

           
Ralph remembered the ungainly figure on a parachute.

           
"He said something about a dead man." He flushed painfully at this admission that he had been present at the dance. He made urging motions at the smoke and with his body. "Don't stop--go on up!"

           
"Smoke's getting thinner."

           
"We need more wood already, even when it's wet."

           
"My asthma--"

           
The response was mechanical.

           
"Sucks to your ass-mar."

           
"If I pull logs, I get my asthma bad. I wish I didn't, Ralph, but there it is."

           
The three boys went into the forest and fetched armfuls of rotten wood. Once more the smoke rose, yellow and thick.

           
"Let's get something to eat."

           
Together they went to the fruit trees, carrying their spears, saying little, cramming in haste. When they came out of the forest again the sun was setting and only embers glowed in the fire, and there was no smoke.

           
"I can't carry any more wood," said Eric. "I'm tired."

           
Ralph cleared his throat.
           

           
"We kept the fire going up there."

           
"Up there it was small. But this has got to be a big one."

           
Ralph carried a fragment to the fire and watched the smoke that drifted into the dusk.

           
"We've got to keep it going."

           
Eric flung himself down.

           
"I'm too tired. And what's the good?"

           
"Eric!" cried Ralph in a shocked voice. "Don't talk like that!"

           
Sam knelt by Eric.

           
"Well--what is the good?"

           
Ralph tried indignantly to remember. There was something good about a fire. Something overwhelmingly good.

           
"Ralph's told you often enough," said Piggy moodily. "How else are we going to be rescued?"

           
"Of course! If we don't make smoke--"

           
He squatted before them in the crowding dusk.

           
"Don't you understand? What's the good of wishing for radios and boats?"

           
He held out his hand and twisted the fingers into a fist. "There's only one thing we can do to get out of this mess. Anyone can play at hunting, anyone can get us meat--"

           
He looked from face to face. Then, at the moment of greatest passion and conviction, that curtain flapped in his head and he forgot what he had been driving at. He knelt there, his fist clenched, gazing solemnly from one to the other. Then the curtain whisked back.

           
"Oh, yes. So we've got to make smoke; and more smoke--"

           
"But we can't keep it going! Look at that!"

           
The fire was dying on them.

           
"Two to mind the fire," said Ralph, half to himself, "that's twelve hours a day."

           
"We can't get any more wood, Ralph--"

           
"--not in the dark--"

           
"--not at night--"

           
"We can light it every morning," said Piggy. "Nobody ain't going to see smoke in the dark."

           
Sam nodded vigorously.

           
"It was different when the fire was--"

           
"--up there."

           
Ralph stood up, feeling curiously defenseless with the darkness pressing in.

           
"Let the fire go then, for tonight."

           
He led the way to the first shelter, which still stood, though battered. The bed leaves lay within, dry and noisy to the touch. In the next shelter a littlun was talking in his sleep. The four biguns crept into the shelter and burrowed under the leaves. The twins lay together and Ralph and Piggy at the other end. For a while there was the continual creak and rustle of leaves as they tried for comfort.

           
"Piggy."

           
"Yeah?"

           
"All right?"

           
"S'pose so."

           
At length, save for an occasional rustle, the shelter was silent. An oblong of blackness relieved with brilliant spangles hung before them and there was the hollow sound of surf on the reef. Ralph settled himself for his nightly game of supposing. . . .

           
Supposing they could be transported home by jet, then before morning they would land at that big airfield in Wiltshire. They would go by car; no, for things to be perfect they would go by train; all the way down to Devon and take that cottage again. Then at the foot of the garden the wild ponies would come and look over the wall. . . .

           
Ralph turned restlessly in the leaves. Dartmoor was wild and so were the ponies. But the attraction of wildness had gone.

           
His mind skated to a consideration of a tamed town where savagery could not set foot. What could be safer than the bus center with its lamps and wheels?

           
All at once, Ralph was dancing round a lamp standard. There was a bus crawling out of the bus station, a strange bus. . . .

           
"Ralph! Ralph!"

           
"What is it?"

           
"Don't make a noise like that--"

           
"Sorry."

           
From the darkness of the further end of the shelter came a dreadful moaning and they shattered the leaves in their fear. Sam and Eric, locked in an embrace, were fighting each other.

           
"Sam! Sam!"

           
"Hey--Eric!"

           
Presently all was quiet again.

           
Piggy spoke softly to Ralph.

           
"We got to get out of this."

           
"What d'you mean?"

           
"Get rescued."

           
For the first time that day, and despite the crowding blackness, Ralph sniggered.

           
"I mean it," whispered Piggy. "If we don't get home soon we'll be barmy."

           
"Round the bend."

           
"Bomb happy."

           
"Crackers;"

           
Ralph pushed the damp tendrils of hair out of his eyes.

           
"You write a letter to your auntie."

           
Piggy considered this solemnly.

           
"I don't know where she is now. And I haven't got an envelope and a stamp. An' there isn't a mailbox. Or a postman."

           
The success of his tiny joke overcame Ralph. His sniggers became uncontrollable, his body jumped and twitched.

           
Piggy rebuked him with dignity.

           
"I haven't said anything all that funny."

           
Ralph continued to snigger though his chest hurt. His twitchings exhausted him till he lay, breathless and woebegone, waiting for the next spasm. During one of these pauses he was ambushed by sleep.

           
"Ralph! You been making a noise again. Do be quiet, Ralph--because."

           
Ralph heaved over among the leaves. He had reason to be thankful that his dream was broken, for the bus had been nearer and more distinct.

           
"Why--because?"

           
"Be quiet--and listen."

           
Ralph lay down carefully, to the accompaniment of a long sigh from the leaves. Eric moaned something and then lay still. The darkness, save for the useless oblong of stars, was blanket-thick.

           
"I can't hear anything."

           
"There's something moving outside."

           
Ralph's head prickled. The sound of his blood drowned all else and then subsided.

           
"I still can't hear anything."

           
"Listen. Listen for a long time."

           
Quite clearly and emphatically, and only a yard or so away from the back of the shelter, a stick cracked. The blood roared again in Ralph's ears, confused images chased each other through his mind. A composite of these things was prowling round the shelters. He could feel Piggy's head against his shoulder and the convulsive grip of a hand.

           
"Ralph! Ralph!"

           
"Shut up and listen."

           
Desperately, Ralph prayed that the beast would prefer littluns.

           
A voice whispered horribly outside.

           
"Piggy--Piggy--"

           
"It's come!" gasped Piggy. "It's real!"

           
He clung to Ralph and reached to get his breath.

           
"Piggy, come outside. I want you, Piggy."

           
Ralph's mouth was against Piggy's ear.

           
"Don't say anything."

           
"Piggy--where are you, Piggy?"

           
Something brushed against the back of the shelter. Piggy kept still for a moment, then he had his asthma. He arched his back and crashed among the leaves with his legs. Ralph rolled away from him.

           
Then there was a vicious snarling in the mouth of the shelter and the plunge and thump of living things. Someone tripped over Ralph and Piggy's corner became a complication of snarls and crashes and flying limbs. Ralph hit out; then he and what seemed like a dozen others were rolling over and over, hitting, biting, scratching. He was torn and jolted, found fingers in his mouth and bit them. A fist withdrew and came back like a piston, so that the whole shelter exploded into light. Ralph twisted sideways on top of a writhing body and felt hot breath on his cheek. He began to pound the mouth below him, using his clenched fist as a hammer; he hit with more and more passionate hysteria as the face became slippery. A knee jerked up between his legs and he fell sideways, busying himself with his pain, and the fight rolled over him. Then the shelter collapsed with smothering finality; and the anonymous shapes fought their way out and through. Dark figures drew themselves out of the wreckage and flitted away, till the screams of the littluns and Piggy's gasps were once more audible.

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