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 hairโhe flung the mass backโcut 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 decided that a toothbrush would come in handy too. Then there were his nailsโ
Ralph turned his hand over and examined them. They were bitten down to the quick though he could not remember when he had restarted this habit nor any time when he indulged it.
โBe sucking my thumb nextโโ
He looked round, furtively. Apparently no one had heard. The hunters sat, stuffing themselves with this easy meal, trying to convince themselves that they got sufficient kick out of bananas and that other olive-grey, jelly-like fruit. With the memory of his sometime clean self as a standard, Ralph looked them over. They were dirty, not with the spectacular dirt of boys who had fallen into mud or been brought down hard on a rainy day. Not one of them was an obvious subject for a shower, and yetโhair, much too long, tangled here and there, knotted round a dead leaf or a twig; faces cleaned fairly well by the process of eating and sweating but marked in the less accessible angles with a kind of shadow; clothes, worn away, stiff like his own with sweat, put on, not for decorum or comfort but out of custom; the skin of the body, scurfy with brineโ
He discovered with a little fall of the heart that these were the conditions
he took as normal now and that he did not mind. He sighed and pushed away the stalk from which he had stripped the fruit. Already the hunters were stealing away to do their business in the woods or down by the rocks. He turned and looked out to sea.
Here, on the other side of the island, the view was utterly different. The filmy enchantments of mirage could not endure the cold ocean water and the horizon was hard, clipped blue. Ralph wandered down to the rocks. Down here, almost on a level with the sea, you could follow with your eye the ceaseless bulging passage of the deep sea waves. They were miles wide, apparently not breakers or the banked ridges of shallow water. They travelled the length of the island with an air of disregarding it and being set on other business; they were less a progress than a momentous rise and fall of the whole ocean. Now the sea would suck down, making cascades and waterfalls of retreating water, would sink past the rocks and plaster down the seaweed like shining hair; then, pausing, gather and rise with a roar, irresistibly swelling over point and outcrop, climbing the little cliff, sending at last an arm of surf up a gully to end a yard or so from him in fingers of spray.
Wave after wave, Ralph followed the rise and fall until something of the
remoteness of the sea numbed his brain. Then gradually the almost infinite size of this land forced itself on his attention. This was the divider, the barrier. On the other side of the island, swathed at midday with mirage, defended by the shield of the quiet lagoon, one might dream of rescue; but here, faced by the brute obtuseness of the ocean, the miles of division, one was clamped down, one was helpless, one was condemned, one wasโ
Simon was speaking almost in his ear. Ralph found that he had rock painfully gripped in both hands, found his body arched, the muscles of his neck stiff, his mouth strained open.
โYouโll get back to where you came from.โ
Simon nodded as he spoke. He was kneeling on one knee, looking down from a higher rock which he held with both hands; his other leg stretched down to Ralphโs level.
Ralph was puzzled and searched Simonโs face for a clue. โItโs so big, I meanโโ
Simon nodded.
โAll the same. Youโll get back all right. I think so, anyway.โ
Some of the strain had gone from Ralphโs body. He glanced at the sea and then smiled bitterly at Simon.
โGot a ship in your pocket?โ Simon grinned and shook his head. โHow do you know, then?โ
When Simon was still silent Ralph said curtly, โYouโre batty.โ
Simon shook his head violently till the coarse black hair flew backwards and forwards across his face.
โNo, Iโm not. I justย think youโll get back all rightโ.โ
For a moment nothing more was said. And then they suddenly smiled at each other.
Roger called from the coverts. โCome and see!โ
The ground was turned over near the pig-run and there were droppings that steamed. Jack bent down to them as though he loved them.
โRalphโwe need meat even if we are hunting the other thing.โ โIf you mean going the right way, weโll hunt.โ
They set off again, the hunters bunched a little by fear of the mentioned beast, while Jack quested ahead. They went more slowly than Ralph had bargained for; yet in a way he was glad to loiter, cradling his spear. Jack came up against some emergency of his craft and soon the procession stopped. Ralph leaned against a tree and at once the day-dreams came swarming up. Jack was in charge of the hunt and there would be time to get to the mountain
โ
*
Once, following his father from Chatham to Devonport, they had lived in a cottage on the edge of the moors. In the succession of houses that Ralph had known, this one stood out with particular clarity because after that house he had been sent away to school. Mummy had still been with them and Daddy had come home every day. Wild ponies came to the stone wall at the bottom of the garden, and it had snowed. Just behind the cottage there was a sort of shed and you could lie up there, watching the flakes swirl past. You could see the damp spot where each flake died; then you could mark the first flake that lay down without melting and watch the whole ground turn white. You could go indoors when you were cold and look out of the window, past that bright copper kettle and the plate with the little blue menโ
When you went to bed there was a bowl of cornflakes with sugar and cream. And the booksโthey stood on the shelf by the bed, leaning together with always two or three laid flat on top because he had not bothered to put them back properly. They were dog-eared and scratched. There was the bright, shining one about Topsy and Mopsy that he never read because it was about two girls; there was the one about the Magician which you read with a kind of tied-down terror, skipping page twenty-seven with the awful picture
of the spider; there was a book about people who had dug things up, Egyptian things; there was theย Boyโs Book of Trains,ย The Boyโs Book of Ships.ย Vividly they came before him; he could have reached up and touched them, could feel the weight and slow slide with which theย Mammoth Book for Boysย would come out and slither downโฆ. Everything was all right; everything was good- humoured and friendly.
*
The bushes crashed ahead of them. Boys flung themselves wildly from the pig track and scrabbled in the creepers, screaming. Ralph saw Jack nudged aside and fall. Then there was a creature bounding along the pig track towards him, with tusks gleaming and an intimidating grunt. Ralph found he was able to measure the distance coldly and take aim. With the boar only five yards away, he flung the foolish wooden stick that he carried, saw it hit the great snout and hang there for a moment. The boarโs note changed to a squeal and it swerved aside into the covert. The pig-run filled with shouting boys again, Jack came running back, and poked about in the undergrowth.
โThrough hereโโ โBut heโd do us!โ
โThrough here, I saidโโ
The boar was floundering away from them. They found another pig-run parallel to the first and Jack raced away. Ralph was full of fright and apprehension and pride.
โI hit him! The spear stuck inโโ
Now they came, unexpectedly, to an open space by the sea. Jack cast about on the bare rock and looked anxious.
โHeโs gone.โ
โI hit him,โ said Ralph again, โand the spear stuck in a bit.โ He felt the need of witnesses.
โDidnโt you see me?โ Maurice nodded.
โI saw you. Right bang on his snoutโWheee!โ Ralph talked on, excitedly.
โI hit him all right. The spear stuck in. I wounded him!โ
He sunned himself in their new respect and felt that hunting was good after all.
โI walloped him properly. That was the beast, I think!โ Jack came back.
โThat wasnโt the beast. That was a boar.โ
โI hit him.โ
โWhy didnโt you grab him? I triedโโ Ralphโs voice ran up.
โBut a boar!โ
Jack flushed suddenly.
โYou said heโd do us. What did you want to throw for? Why didnโt you wait?โ
He held out his arm. โLook.โ
He turned his left forearm for them all to see. On the outside was a rip; not much, but bloody.
โHe did that with his tusks. I couldnโt get my spear down in time.โ Attention focused on Jack.
โThatโs a wound,โ said Simon, โand you ought to suck it. Like Berengaria.โ Jack sucked.
โI hit him,โ said Ralph indignantly. โI hit him with my spear, I wounded him.โ
He tried for their attention.
โHe was coming along the path. I threw, like thisโโ
Robert snarled at him. Ralph entered into the play and everybody laughed.
Presently they were all jabbing at Robert who made mock rushes.
Jack shouted. โMake a ring!โ
The circle moved in and round. Robert squealed in mock terror, then in real pain.
โOw! Stop it! Youโre hurting!โ
The butt end of a spear fell on his back and he blundered among them. โHold him!โ
They got his arms and legs. Ralph, carried away by a sudden thick excitement, grabbed Ericโs spear and jabbed at Robert with it.
โKill him! Kill him!โ
All at once, Robert was screaming and struggling with the strength of frenzy. Jack had him by the hair and was brandishing his knife. Behind him was Roger, fighting to get close. The chant rose ritually, as the last moment of a dance or a hunt.
โKill the pig! Cut his throat! Kill the pig! Bash him in!โ
Ralph too was fighting to get near, to get a handful of that brown, vulnerable flesh. The desire to squeeze and hurt was over-mastering.
Jackโs arm came down; the heaving circle cheered and made pig-dying noises. Then they lay quiet, panting, listening to Robertโs frightened snivels.
He wiped his face with a dirty arm, and made an effort to retrieve his status. โOh, my bum!โ
He rubbed his rump ruefully. Jack rolled over. โThat was a good game.โ
โJust a game,โ said Ralph uneasily. โI got jolly badly hurt at rugger once.โ โWe ought to have a drum,โ said Maurice, โthen we could do it properly.โ Ralph looked at him.
โHow properly?โ
โI dunno. You want a fire, I think, and a drum, and you keep time to the drum.โ
โYou want a pig,โ said Roger, โlike a real hunt.โ
โOr someone to pretend,โ said Jack. โYou could get someone to dress up as a pig and then he could actโyou know, pretend to knock me over and all that
โโ
โYou want a real pig,โ said Robert, still caressing his rump, โbecause youโve got to kill him.โ
โUse a littlun,โ said Jack, and everybody laughed.
*
Ralph sat up.
โWell. We shanโt find what weโre looking for at this rate.โ One by one they stood up, twitching rags into place.
Ralph looked at Jack. โNow for the mountain.โ
โShouldnโt we go back to Piggy,โ said Maurice, โbefore dark?โ The twins nodded like one boy.
โYes, thatโs right. Letโs go up there in the morning.โ Ralph looked out and saw the sea.
โWeโve got to start the fire again.โ
โYou havenโt got Piggyโs specs,โ said Jack, โso you canโt.โ โThen weโll find out if the mountainโs clear.โ
Maurice spoke, hesitating, not wanting to seem a funk. โSupposing the beastโs up there?โ
Jack brandished his spear. โWeโll kill it.โ
The sun seemed a little cooler. He slashed with the spear. โWhat are we waiting for?โ
โI suppose,โ said Ralph, โif we keep on by the sea this way, weโll come out below the burnt bit and then we can climb the mountain.โ
Once more Jack led them along by the suck and heave of the blinding sea.
Once more Ralph dreamed, letting his skilful feet deal with the difficulties of the path. Yet here his feet seemed less skilful than before. For most of the way they were forced right down to the bare rock by the water and had to edge along between that and the dark luxuriance of the forest. There were little cliffs to be scaled, some to be used as paths, lengthy traverses where one used hands as well as feet. Here and there they could clamber over wave-wet rock, leaping across clear pools that the tide had left. They came to a gully that split the narrow foreshore like a defence. This seemed to have no bottom and they peered awe-stricken into the gloomy crack where water gurgled. Then the wave came back, the gully boiled before them and spray dashed up to the very creeper so that the boys were wet and shrieking. They tried the forest but it was thick and woven like a birdโs nest. In the end they had to jump one by one, waiting till the water sank; and even so, some of them got a second drenching. After that the rocks seemed to be growing impassable so they sat for a time, letting their rags dry and watching the clipped outlines of the rollers that moved so slowly past the island. They found fruit in a haunt of bright little birds that hovered like insects. Then Ralph said they were going too slowly. He himself climbed a tree and parted the canopy, and saw the square head of the mountain seeming still a great way off. Then they tried to hurry along the rocks and Robert cut his knee quite badly and they had to recognize that this path must be taken slowly if they were to be safe. So they proceeded after that as if they were climbing a dangerous mountain, until the rocks became an uncompromising cliff, overhung with impossible jungle and falling sheer into the sea.
Ralph looked at the sun critically.
โEarly evening. After tea-time, at any rate.โ
โI donโt remember this cliff,โ said Jack, crest-fallen, โso this must be the bit of the coast I missed.โ
Ralph nodded. โLet me think.โ
By now, Ralph had no self-consciousness in public thinking but would treat the dayโs decisions as though he were playing chess. The only trouble was that he would never be a very good chess player. He thought of the littluns and Piggy. Vividly he imagined Piggy by himself, huddled in a shelter that was silent except for the sounds of nightmare.
โWe canโt leave the littluns alone with Piggy. Not all night.โ The other boys said nothing but stood round, watching him. โIf we went back we should take hours.โ
Jack cleared his throat and spoke in a queer, tight voice.
โWe mustnโt let anything happen to Piggy, must we?โ Ralph tapped his teeth with the dirty point of Ericโs spear. โIf we go acrossโโ
He glanced round him.
โSomeoneโs got to cross the island and tell Piggy weโll be back after dark.โ Bill spoke, unbelieving.
โThrough the forest by himself? Now?โ โWe canโt spare more than one.โ
Simon pushed his way to Ralphโs elbow. โIโll go if you like. I donโt mind, honestly.โ
Before Ralph had time to reply, he smiled quickly, turned and climbed into the forest.
Ralph looked back at Jack, seeing him, infuriatingly, for the first time. โJackโthat time you went the whole way to the castle rock.โ
Jack glowered. โYes?โ
โYou came along part of this shoreโbelow the mountain, beyond there.โ โYes.โ
โAnd then?โ
โI found a pig-run. It went for miles.โ Ralph nodded. He pointed at the forest.
โSo the pig-run must be somewhere in there.โ Everybody agreed, sagely.
โAll right then. Weโll smash a way through till we find the pig-run.โ He took a step and halted.
โWait a minute though! Where does the pig-run go to?โ
โThe mountain,โ said Jack, โI told you.โ He sneered. โDonโt you want to go to the mountain?โ
Ralph sighed, sensing the rising antagonism, understanding that this was how Jack felt as soon as he ceased to lead.
โI was thinking of the light. Weโll be stumbling about.โ โWe were going to look for the beastโโ
โThere wonโt be enough light.โ
โI donโt mind going,โ said Jack hotly. โIโll go when we get there. Wonโt you? Would you rather go back to the shelters and tell Piggy?โ
Now it was Ralphโs turn to flush but he spoke despairingly, out of the new understanding that Piggy had given him.
โWhy do you hate me?โ
The boys stirred uneasily, as though something indecent had been said.
The silence lengthened.
Ralph, still hot and hurt, turned away first. โCome on.โ
He led the way and set himself as by right to hack at the tangles. Jack brought up the rear, displaced and brooding.
The pig-track was a dark tunnel, for the sun was sliding quickly towards the edge of the world and in the forest shadows were never far to seek. The track was broad and beaten and they ran along at a swift trot. Then the roof of leaves broke up and they halted, breathing quickly, looking at the few stars that pricked round the head of the mountain.
โThere you are.โ
The boys peered at each other doubtfully. Ralph made a decision. โWeโll go straight across to the platform and climb tomorrow.โ They murmured agreement; but Jack was standing by his shoulder. โIf youโre frightened of courseโโ
Ralph turned on him.
โWho went first on the castle rock?โ โI went too. And that was daylight.โ
โAll right. Who wants to climb the mountain now?โ Silence was the only answer.
โSamneric? What about you?โ โWe ought to go anโ tell Piggyโโ โโyes, tell Piggy thatโโ
โBut Simon went!โ
โWe ought to tell Piggyโin caseโโ โRobert? Bill?โ
They were going straight back to the platform now. Not, of course, that they were afraidโbut tired.
Ralph turned back to Jack. โYou see?โ
โIโm going up the mountain.โ
The words came from Jack viciously, as though they were a curse. He looked at Ralph, his thin body tensed, his spear held as if he threatened him.
โIโm going up the mountain to look for the beastโnow.โ Then the supreme sting, the casual, bitter word. โComing?โ
At that word the other boys forgot their urge to be gone and turned back to sample this fresh rub of two spirits in the dark. The word was too good, too bitter, too successfully daunting to be repeated. It took Ralph at low water when his nerve was relaxed for the return to the shelter and the still, friendly waters of the lagoon.
โI donโt mind.โ
Astonished, he heard his voice come out, cool and casual, so that the bitterness of Jackโs taunt fell powerless.
โIf you donโt mind, of course.โ โOh, not at all.โ
Jack took a step. โWell thenโโ
Side by side, watched by silent boys, the two started up the mountain. Ralph stopped.
โWeโre silly. Why should only two go? If we find anything, two wonโt be enoughโโ
There came the sound of boys scuttling away. Astonishingly, a dark figure moved against the tide.
โRoger?โ
โYes.โ
โThatโs three, then.โ
Once more they set out to climb the slope of the mountain.
The darkness seemed to flow round them like a tide. Jack, who said nothing, began to choke and cough; and a gust of wind set all three spluttering. Ralphโs eyes were blinded with tears.
โAshes. Weโre on the edge of the burnt patch.โ
Their footsteps and the occasional breeze were stirring up small devils of dust. Now that they stopped again, Ralph had time while he coughed to remember how silly they were. If there was no beastโand almost certainly there was no beastโin that case, well and good; but if there was something waiting on top of the mountainโwhat was the use of three of them, handicapped by the darkness and carrying only sticks?
โWeโre being fools.โ
Out of the darkness came the answer. โWindy?โ
Irritably Ralph shook himself. This was all Jackโs fault. โCourse I am. But weโre still being fools.โ
โIf you donโt want to go on,โ said the voice sarcastically, โIโll go up by myself.โ
Ralph heard the mockery and hated Jack. The sting of ashes in his eyes, tiredness, fear, enraged him.
โGo on then! Weโll wait here.โ There was silence.
โWhy donโt you go? Are you frightened?โ
A stain in the darkness, a stain that was Jack, detached itself and began to
draw away.
โAll right. So long.โ
The stain vanished. Another took its place.
Ralph felt his knee against something hard and rocked a charred trunk that was edgy to the touch. He felt the sharp cinders that had been bark push against the back of his knee and knew that Roger had sat down. He felt with his hands and lowered himself beside Roger, while the trunk rocked among invisible ashes. Roger, uncommunicative by nature, said nothing. He offered no opinion on the beast nor told Ralph why he had chosen to come on this mad expedition. He simply sat and rocked the trunk gently. Ralph noticed a rapid and infuriating tapping noise and realized that Roger was banging his silly wooden stick against something.
So they sat, the rocking, tapping, impervious Roger and Ralph, fuming; round them the close sky was loaded with stars, save where the mountain punched up a hole of blackness.
There was a slithering noise high above them, the sound of someone taking giant and dangerous strides on rock or ash. Then Jack found them, and was shivering and croaking in a voice they could just recognize as his.
โI saw a thing on top.โ
They heard him blunder against the trunk which rocked violently. He lay silent for a moment, then muttered.
โKeep a good lookout. It may be following.โ
A shower of ash pattered round them. Jack sat up. โI saw a thing bulge on the mountain.โ
โYou only imagined it,โ said Ralph shakily, โbecause nothing would bulge.
Not any sort of creature.โ
Roger spoke; they jumped for they had forgotten him. โA frog.โ
Jack giggled and shuddered.
โSome frog. There was a noise too. A kind of โplopโ noise. Then the thing bulged.โ
Ralph surprised himself, not so much by the quality of his voice, which was even, but by the bravado of its intention.
โWeโll go and look.โ
For the first time since he had known Jack, Ralph could feel him hesitate. โNowโ?โ
His voice spoke for him. โOf course.โ
He got off the trunk and led the way across the clinking cinders up into the dark, and the others followed.
Now that his physical voice was silent the inner voice of reason, and other voices too, made themselves heard. Piggy was calling him a kid. Another voice told him not to be a fool; and the darkness and desperate enterprise gave the night a kind of dentistโs chair unreality.
As they came to the last slope, Jack and Roger drew near, changed from ink-stains to distinguishable figures. By common consent they stopped and crouched together. Behind them, on the horizon, was a patch of lighter sky where in a moment the moon would rise. The wind roared once in the forest and pushed their rags against them.
Ralph stirred. โCome on.โ
They crept forward, Roger lagging a little. Jack and Ralph turned the shoulder of the mountain together. The glittering lengths of the lagoon lay below them and beyond that a long white smudge that was the reef. Roger joined them.
Jack whispered.
โLetโs creep forward on hands and knees. Maybe itโs asleep.โ
Roger and Ralph moved on, this time leaving Jack in the rear, for all his brave words. They came to the flat top where the rock was hard to hands and knees.
A creature that bulged.
Ralph put his hand in the cold, soft ashes of the fire and smothered a cry. His hand and shoulder were twitching from the unlooked-for-contact. Green lights of nausea appeared for a moment and ate into the darkness. Roger lay behind him and Jackโs mouth was at his ear.
โOver there, where there used to be a gap in the rock. A sort of humpโ see?โ
Ashes blew into Ralphโs face from the dead fire. He could not see the gap or anything else, because the green lights were opening again and growing, and the top of the mountain was sliding sideways.
Once more, from a distance, he heard Jackโs whisper. โScared?โ
Not scared so much as paralysed; hung up here immovable on the top of the diminishing, moving mountain. Jack slid away from him, Roger bumped, fumbled with a hiss of breath, and passed onwards. He heard them whispering.
โCan you see anything?โ โThereโโ
In front of them, only three or four yards away, was a rock-like hump where no rock should be. Ralph could hear a tiny chattering noise coming
from somewhereโperhaps from his own mouth. He bound himself together with his will, fused his fear and loathing into a hatred, and stood up. He took two leaden steps forward.
Behind them the sliver of moon had drawn clear of the horizon. Before them, something like a great ape was sitting asleep with its head between its knees. Then the wind roared in the forest, there was confusion in the darkness and the creature lifted its head, holding towards them the ruin of a face.
Ralph found himself taking giant strides among the ashes, heard other creatures crying out and leaping and dared the impossible on the dark slope; presently the mountain was deserted, save for the three abandoned sticks and the thing that bowed.