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    Chapter 48

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    CHAPTER XLVIII.

    JANUARY 19th.--All through the day the sky remained unclouded and
    the heat intense; and night came on without bringing much
    sensible moderation in the temperature. I was unable to get any
    sleep, and, towards morning, was disturbed by hearing an angry
    clamour going on outside the tent; it aroused M. Letourneur,
    Andre and Miss Herbey, as much as myself, and we were anxious to
    ascertain the cause of the tumult.

    The boatswain, Dowlas, and all the sailors were storming at each
    other in frightful rage; and Curtis, who had come forward from
    the stern, was vainly endeavouring to pacify them.

    "But who has done it? we must know who has done it," said
    Dowlas, scowling with vindictive passion on the group around him.

    "There's a thief," howled out the boatswain, "and he shall be
    found! Let's know who has taken it."

    "I haven't taken it!" "Nor I!" "Nor I!" cried the sailors one
    after another.

    And then they set to work again to ransack every quarter of the
    raft; they rolled every spar aside, they overturned everything on
    board, and only grew more and more incensed with anger as their
    search proved fruitless.

    "Can YOU tell us," said the boatswain, coming up to me, "who is
    the thief?"

    "Thief!" I replied. "I don't know what you mean."

    And while we were speaking the others all came up together, and
    told me that they had looked everywhere else, and that they were
    going now to search the tent.

    "Shame!" I said. "You ought to allow those whom you know to he
    dying of hunger at least to die in peace. There is not one of us
    who has left the tent all night. Why suspect us?"

    "Now just look here, Mr. Kazallon," said the boatswain, in a
    voice which he was endeavouring to calm down into moderation, "we
    are not accusing you of anything; we know well enough you, and
    all the rest of you, had a right to your shares as much as
    anybody; but that isn't it. It's all gone somewhere, every bit."

    "Yes," said Sandon gruffly; "it's all gone somewheres, and we are
    a going to search the tent."

    Resistance was useless, and Miss Herbey, M. Letourneur, and Andre
    were all turned out.


    I confess I was very fearful. I had a strong suspicion that for
    the sake of his son, for whom he was ready to venture anything,
    M. Letourneur had committed the theft; in that case I knew that
    nothing would have prevented the infuriated men from tearing the
    devoted father to pieces. I beckoned to Curtis for protection,
    and he came and stood beside me. He said nothing, but waited
    with his hands in his pockets, and I think I am not mistaken in
    my belief that there was some sort of a weapon in each.

    To my great relief the search was ineffectual. There was
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