“Who fired that shot?” inquired Durnovo, when there was no longer any necessity to shout.
“Joseph,” replied the man in the stern of the boat, indicating his companion. “Was it a near thing?”
“About as near as I care about—it threw up the dust between my legs.”
The man called Joseph grinned. Nature had given him liberally of the wherewithal for indulgence in that relaxation, and Durnovo smiled rather constrainedly. Joseph was grabbing at the long reedy grass, bringing the canoe to a standstill, and it was some moments before his extensive mouth submitted to control.
“I presume you are Mr. Durnovo,” said the man in the stern of the boat, rising leisurely from his recumbent position and speaking with a courteous savoir-faire which seemed slightly out of place in the wilds of Central Africa. He was a tall man with a small aristocratic head and a refined face, which somehow suggested an aristocrat of old France.
“Yes,” answered Durnovo.
The tall man stepped ashore and held out his hand.
“I am glad we have met you,” he said; “I have a letter of introduction to you from Maurice Gordon, of Loango.”
Victor Durnovo's dark face changed slightly; his eyes—bilious, fever-shot, unhealthy—took a new light.
“Ah!” he answered, “are you a friend of Maurice Gordon's?”