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    Chapter 12 - Page 2

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    inhabited by dangerous animals, and it was
    prudent to be on their guard. In general, Pencroft, Herbert, and Neb walked
    first, preceded by Top, who poked his nose into every bush. The reporter
    and the engineer went together, Gideon Spilett ready to note every
    incident, the engineer silent for the most part, and only stepping aside to
    pick up one thing or another, a mineral or vegetable substance, which he
    put into his pocket, without making any remark.

    "What can he be picking up?" muttered Pencroft. "I have looked in vain
    for anything that's worth the trouble of stooping for."

    Towards ten o'clock the little band descended the last declivities of
    Mount Franklin. As yet the ground was scantily strewn with bushes and
    trees. They were walking over yellowish calcinated earth, forming a plain
    of nearly a mile long, which extended to the edge of the wood. Great blocks
    of that basalt, which, according to Bischof, takes three hundred and fifty
    millions of years to cool, strewed the plain, very confused in some places.
    However, there were here no traces of lava, which was spread more
    particularly over the northern slopes.

    Cyrus Harding expected to reach, without incident, the course of the
    creek, which he supposed flowed under the trees at the border of the plain,
    when he saw Herbert running hastily back, while Neb and the sailor were
    hiding behind the rocks.

    "What's the matter, my boy?" asked Spilett.

    "Smoke," replied Herbert. "We have seen smoke among the rocks, a hundred
    paces from us."

    "Men in this place?" cried the reporter.

    "We must avoid showing ourselves before knowing with whom we have to
    deal," replied Cyrus Harding. "I trust that there are no natives on this
    island; I dread them more than anything else. Where is Top?"

    "Top is on before."

    "And he doesn't bark?"

    "No."

    "That is strange. However, we must try to call him back."

    In a few moments, the engineer, Gideon Spilett, and Herbert had rejoined
    their two companions, and like them, they kept out of sight behind the
    heaps of basalt.

    From thence they clearly saw smoke of a yellowish color rising in the
    air.

    Top was recalled by a slight whistle from his master, and the latter,
    signing to his companions to wait for him, glided away among the rocks. The
    colonists, motionless, anxiously awaited the result of this exploration,
    when a shout from the engineer made them hasten forward. They soon joined
    him, and were at once struck with a disagreeable odor which impregnated the
    atmosphere.

    The odor, easily recognized, was enough for the engineer to guess what
    the smoke was which at first, not without cause, had startled him.

    "This fue," said he, "or rather, this smoke is
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