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THE EIGHTEENTH CHAPTER SMELLS OUR uncle must now be found," said
the Doctor — "that is the next thing — now that we know he wasn't thrown
into the sea."
Then Dab-Dab came up to him again and
whispered, "Ask the eagles to look for the
man. No living creature can see better than an eagle. When they are miles high
in the air they can count the ants crawling on the ground. Ask the
eagles." So the Doctor sent one of the swallows
off to get some eagles. And in about an hour the little bird
came back with six different kinds of eagles: a Black Eagle, a Bald Eagle, a
Fish Eagle, a Golden Eagle, an Eagle-Vulture, and a White-tailed Sea Eagle.
Twice as high as the boy they were, each one of them. And they stood on the
rail of the ship, like round-shouldered soldiers all in a row, stern and still
and stiff; while their great, gleaming, black eyes shot darting glances here
and there and everywhere. Gub-Gub was scared of them and got behind
a barrel. He said he felt as though those terrible eyes were looking right
inside of him to see what he had stolen for lunch. And the Doctor said to the eagles, "A man has been lost — a fisherman
with red hair and an anchor marked on his arm. Would you be so kind as to see
if you can find him for us? This boy is the man's nephew." Eagles do not talk very much. And all
they answered in their husky voices was, "You may be sure that we will do
our best — for John Dolittle." Then they flew off — and Gub-Gub came
out from behind his barrel to see them go. Up and up and up they went — higher
and higher and higher still. Then, when the Doctor could only just see them,
they parted company and started going off all different ways — North, East,
South and West, looking like tiny grains of black sand creeping across the
wide, blue sky. "My gracious!" said Gub-Gub in
a hushed voice. "What a height! I wonder they don't scorch their feathers
— so near the sun!" They were gone a long time. And when
they came back it was almost night. And the eagles said to the Doctor, "We have searched all the seas and
all the countries and all the islands and all the cities and all the villages
in this half of the world. But we have failed. In the main street of Gibraltar
we saw three red hairs lying on a wheelbarrow before a baker's door. But they
were not the hairs of a man — they were the hairs out of a fur-coat. Nowhere,
on land or water, could we see any sign of this boy's uncle. And if we could
not see him, then he is not to be seen. . . . For John Dolittle — we have done
our best." Then the six great birds flapped their
big wings and flew back to their homes in the mountains and the rocks. "Well," said Dab-Dab, after
they had gone, "what are we going to do now? The boy's uncle must be found
— there's no two ways about that. The lad isn't old enough to be knocking
around the world by himself. Boys aren't like ducklings — they have to be taken
care of till they're quite old. . . . I wish Chee-Chee were here. He would soon
find the man. Good old Chee-Chee! I wonder how he's getting on!" "If we only had Polynesia with
us," said the white mouse. "She would soon think of some way. Do you
remember how she got us all out of prison — the second time? My, but she was a
clever one!" "I don't think so much of those
eagle-fellows," said Jip. "They're just conceited. They may have very
good eyesight and all that; but when you ask them to find a man for you, they
can't do it — and they have the cheek to come back and say that nobody else
could do it. They're just conceited — like that collie in Puddleby. And I don't
think a whole lot of those gossipy old porpoises either. All they could tell us
was that the man isn't in the sea. We don't want to know where he isn't — we want
to know where he —" "Oh, don't talk so much," said
Gub-Gub. "It's easy to talk; but it isn't so easy to find a man when you
have got the whole world to hunt him in. Maybe the fisherman's hair has turned
white, worrying about the boy; and that was why the eagles didn't find him. You
don't know everything. You're just talking. You are not doing anything to help.
You couldn't find the boy's uncle any more than the eagles could — you couldn't
do as well." 'You stupid piece of warm bacon!' "Couldn't I?" said the dog.
"That's all you know, you stupid piece of warm bacon! I haven't begun to
try yet, have I? You wait and see!" Then Jip went to the Doctor and said, "Ask the boy if he has anything in
his pockets that belonged to his uncle, will you, please?" So the Doctor asked him. And the boy
showed them a gold ring which he wore on a piece of string around his neck
because it was too big for his finger. He said his uncle gave it to him when
they saw the pirates coming. Jip smelt the ring and said, "That's no good. Ask him if he has
anything else that belonged to his uncle." Then the boy took from his pocket a
great, big red handkerchief and said, "This was my uncle's too." As soon as the boy pulled it out, Jip
shouted, "Snuff, by Jingo! — Black Rappee
snuff. Don't you smell it? His uncle took snuff — Ask him, Doctor." The Doctor questioned the boy again; and
he said, "Yes. My uncle took a lot of snuff." "Fine!" said Jip. "The
man's as good as found. 'Twill be as easy as stealing milk from a kitten. Tell
the boy I'll find his uncle for him in less than a week. Let us go upstairs and
see which way the wind is blowing." "But it is dark now," said the
Doctor. "You can't find him in the dark!" "I don't need any light to look for
a man who smells of Black Rappee snuff," said Jip as he climbed the
stairs. "If the man had a hard smell, like string, now — or hot water, it
would be different. But snuff! — Tut, tut!" "Does hot water have a smell?"
asked the Doctor. "Certainly it has," said Jip.
"Hot water smells quite different from cold water. It is warm water — or
ice — that has the really difficult smell. Why, I once followed a man for ten
miles on a dark night by the smell of the hot water he had used to shave with —
for the poor fellow had no soap. . . . Now then, let us see which way the wind
is blowing. Wind is very important in long-distant smelling. It mustn't be too
fierce a wind — and of course it must blow the right way. A nice, steady, damp
breeze is the best of all. . . . Ha! — This wind is from the North." Then Jip went up to the front of the
ship and smelt the wind; and he started muttering to himself, "Tar; Spanish onions; kerosene oil;
wet raincoats; crushed laurel-leaves; rubber burning; lace-curtains being
washed — No, my mistake, lace-curtains hanging out to dry; and foxes — hundreds
of 'em — cubs; and — " "Can you really smell all those
different things in this one wind?" asked the Doctor. "Why, of course!" said Jip.
"And those are only a few of the easy smells — the strong ones. Any
mongrel could smell those with a cold in the head. Wait now, and I'll tell you
some of the harder scents that are coming on this wind — a few of the dainty ones." Then the dog shut his eyes tight, poked
his nose straight up in the air and sniffed hard with his mouth half-open. For a long time he said nothing. He kept
as still as a stone. He hardly seemed to be breathing at all. When at last he
began to speak, it sounded almost as though he were singing, sadly, in a dream.
"Bricks," he whispered, very
low — "old yellow bricks, crumbling with age in a garden-wall; the sweet
breath of young cows standing in a mountain-stream; the lead roof of a dovecote
— or perhaps a granary — with the mid-day sun on it; black kid gloves lying in
a bureau-drawer of walnut-wood; a dusty road with a horses' drinking-trough
beneath the sycamores; little mushrooms bursting through the rotting leaves;
and — and — and — " "Any parsnips?" asked Gub-Gub.
"No," said Jip. "You
always think of things to eat. No parsnips whatever. And no snuff — plenty of
pipes and cigarettes, and a few cigars. But no snuff. We must wait till the
wind changes to the South." "Yes, it's a poor wind, that,"
said Gub-Gub. "I think you're a fake, Jip. Who ever heard of finding a man
in the middle of the ocean just by smell! I told you you couldn't do it." "Look here," said Jip, getting
really angry. "You're going to get a bite on the nose in a minute! You
needn't think that just because the Doctor won't let us give you what you
deserve, that you can be as cheeky as you like!" "Stop quarreling!" said the
Doctor — "Stop it! Life's too short. Tell me, Jip, where do you think
those smells are coming from?" "From Devon and Wales — most of
them," said Jip — "The wind is coming that way." "Well, well!" said the Doctor.
"You know that's really quite remarkable — quite. I must make a note of
that for my new book. I wonder if you could train me to smell as well as that.
. . . But no — perhaps I'm better off the way I am. 'Enough is as good as a
feast,' they say. Let's go down to supper. I'm quite hungry." "So am I," said Gub-Gub. |