Reading Work 2 – Part 3

November 18th, 2006




This intermittent rapid flushing prevented just in time the almost completed fording of the ditch. But it also flung here and there squads of the enemy vanguard simultaneously up the inner bank. These seemed to know their duty only too well, and lost no time accomplishing it. The air rang with the curses of bitten Indians. They had removed their shirts and pants to detect the quicker the upwards-hastening insects; when they saw one, they crushed it; and fortunately the onslaught as yet was only by skirmishers. Again and again, the water sank and rose, carrying leaves and drowned ants away with it. It lowered once more nearly to its bed; but this time the exhausted defenders waited in vain for the flush of destruction. Leiningen sensed disaster; something must have gone wrong with the machinery of the dam. Then a sweating peon tore up to him–

“They’re over!”

While the besieged were concentrating upon the defence of the stretch opposite the wood, the seemingly unaffected line beyond the wood had become the theatre of decisive action. Here the defenders’ front was sparse and scattered; everyone who could be spared had hurried away to the south.

Just as the man at the weir had lowered the water almost to the bed of the ditch, the ants on a wide front began another attempt at a direct crossing like that of the preceding day. Into the emptied bed poured an irresistible throng. Rushing across the ditch, they attained the inner bank before the slow-witted Indians fully grasped the situation. Their frantic screams dumfounded the man at the weir. Before he could direct the river anew into the safeguarding bed he saw himself surrounded by raging ants. He ran like the others, ran for his life.

When Leiningen heard this, he knew the plantation was doomed. He wasted no time bemoaning the inevitable. For as long as there was the slightest chance of success, he had stood his ground, and now any further resistance was both useless and dangerous. He fired three revolver shots into the air–the prearranged signal for his men to retreat instantly within the “inner moat.” Then he rode towards the ranch house.

This was two miles from the point of invasion. There was therefore time enough to prepare the second line of defence against the advent of the ants. Of the three great petrol cisterns near the house, one had already been half emptied by the constant withdrawals needed for the pumps during the fight at the water ditch. The remaining petrol in it was now drawn off through underground pipes into the concrete trench which encircled the ranch house and its outbuildings.

And there, drifting in twos and threes, Leiningen’s men reached him. Most of them were obviously trying to preserve an air of calm and indifference, belied, however, by their restless glances and knitted brows. One could see their belief in a favorable outcome of the struggle was already considerably shaken.

The planter called his peons around him.

“Well, lads,” he began, “we’ve lost the first round. But we’ll smash the beggars yet, don’t you worry. Anyone who thinks otherwise can draw his pay here and now and push off. There are rafts enough to spare on the river and plenty of time still to reach ‘em.”

Not a man stirred.

Leiningen acknowledged his silent vote of confidence with a laugh that was half a grunt. “That’s the stuff, lads. Too bad if you’d missed the rest of the show, eh? Well, the fun won’t start till morning. Once these blighters turn tail, there’ll be plenty of work for everyone and higher wages all round. And now run along and get something to eat; you’ve earned it all right.”

In the excitement of the fight the greater part of the day had passed without the men once pausing to snatch a bite. Now that the ants were for the time being out of sight, and the “wall of petrol” gave a stronger feeling of security, hungry stomachs began to assert their claims.

The bridges over the concrete ditch were removed. Here and there solitary ants had reached the ditch; they gazed at the petrol meditatively, then scurried back again. Apparently they had little interest at the moment for what lay beyond the evil-reeking barrier; the abundant spoils of the plantation were the main attraction. Soon the trees, shrubs and beds for miles around were hulled with ants zealously gobbling the yield of long weary months of strenuous toil.

As twilight began to fall, a cordon of ants marched around the petrol trench, but as yet made no move towards its brink. Leiningen posted sentries with headlights and electric torches, then withdrew to his office, and began to reckon up his losses. He estimated these as large, but, in comparison with his bank balance, by no means unbearable. He worked out in some detail a scheme of intensive cultivation which would enable him, before very long, to more than compensate himself for the damage now being wrought to his crops. It was with a contented mind that he finally betook himself to bed where he slept deeply until dawn, undisturbed by any thought that next day little more might be left of him than a glistening skeleton.

He rose with the sun and went out on the flat roof of his house. And a scene like one from Dante lay around him; for miles in every direction there was nothing but a black, glittering multitude, a multitude of rested, sated, but none the less voracious ants: yes, look as far as one might, one could see nothing but that rustling black throng, except in the north, where the great river drew a boundary they could not hope to pass. But even the high stone breakwater, along the bank of the river, which Leiningen had built as a defence against inundations, was, like the paths, the shorn trees and shrubs, the ground itself, black with ants.

So their greed was not glutted in razing that vast plantation? Not by a long shot; they were all the more eager now on a rich and certain booty–four hundred men, numerous horses, and bursting granaries.

At first it seemed that the petrol trench would serve its purpose. The besiegers sensed the peril of swimming it, and made no move to plunge blindly over its brink. Instead they devised a better maneuver; they began to collect shreds of bark, twigs and dried leaves and dropped these into the petrol. Everything green, which could have been similarly used, had long since been eaten. After a time, though, a long procession could be seen bringing from the west the tamarind leaves used as rafts the day before.

Since the petrol, unlike the water in the outer ditch, was perfectly still, the refuse stayed where it was thrown. It was several hours before the ants succeeded in covering an appreciable part of the surface. At length, however, they were ready to proceed to a direct attack.

Their storm troops swarmed down the concrete side, scrambled over the supporting surface of twigs and leaves, and impelled these over the few remaining streaks of open petrol until tlhey reached the other side. Then they began to climb up this to make straight for the helpless garrison.

During the entire offensive, the planter sat peacefully, watching them with interest, but not stirring a muscle. Moreover, he had ordered his men not to disturb in any way whatever the advancing horde. So they squatted listlessly along the bank of the ditch and waited for a sign from the boss. The petrol was now covered with ants. A few had climbed the inner concrete wall and were scurrying towards the defenders.

“Everyone back from the ditch!” roared Leiningen. The men rushed away, without the slightest idea of his plan. He stooped forward and cautiouslv dropped into the ditch a stone which split the floating carpet and its living freight, to reveal a gleaming patch of petrol. A match spurted, sank down to the oily surface–Leiningen sprang back; in a flash a towering rampart of fire encompassed the garrison.

This spectacular and instant repulse threw the Indians into ecstasy. They pplauded, yelled and stamped, like children at a pantomime. Had it not been for the awe in which they held the boss, they would infallibly have carried him shoulder high.

It was some time before the petrol burned down to the bed of the ditch, and the wall of smoke and flame began to lower. The ants had retreated in a wide circle from the devastation, and innumerable charred fragments along the outer bank showed that the flames had spread from the holocaust in the ditch well into the ranks beyond, where they had wrought havoc far and wide.

Yet the perseverance of the ants was by no means broken; indeed, each setback seemed only to whet it. The concrete cooled, the flicker of the dying flames wavered and vanished, petrol from the second tank poured into the trench–and the ants marched forward anew to the attack.

The foregoing scene repeated itself in every detail, except that on this occasion less time was needed to bridge the ditch, for the petrol was now already filmed by a layer of ash. Once again they withdrew; once again petrol flowed into the ditch. Would the creatures never learn that their self-sacriflce was utterly senseless? It really was senseless, wasn’t it? Yes, of course it was senseless–provided the defenders had an unlimited supply of petrol.

When Leiningen reached this stage of reasoning, he felt for the first time since the arrival of the ants that his confidence was deserting him. His skin began to creep; he loosened his collar. Once the devils were over the trench there wasn’t a chance in hell for him and his men. God, what a prospect, to be eaten alive like that!

For the third time the flames immolated the attacking troops, and burned down to extinction. Yet the ants were coming on again as if nothing had happened. And meanwhile Leiningen had made a discovery that chilled him to the bone-petrol was no longer flowing into the ditch. Something must be blocking the outflow pipe of the third and last cistern-a snake or a dead rat? Whatever it was, the ants could be held of3 no longer, unless petrol could by some method be led from the cistern into the ditch.

Then Leiningen remembered that in an outhouse nearby were two old disused fire engines. Spry as never before in their lives, the peons dragged them out of the shed, connected their pumps to the cistern, uncoiled and laid the hose. They were just in time to aim a stream of petrol at a column of ants that had already crossed and drive them back down the incline into the ditch. Once more an oily girdle surrounded the garrison, once more it was possible to hold the position–for the moment.

It was obvious, however, that this last resource meant only the postponement of defeat and death. A few of the peons fell on their knees and began to pray; others, shrieking insanely, fired their revolvers at the black, advancing masses, as if they felt their despair was pitiful enough to sway fate itself to mercy.

At length, two of the men’s nerves broke: Leiningen saw a naked Indian leap over the north side of the petrol trench, quickly followed by a second. They sprinted with incredible speed towards the river. But their fleetness did not save them; long before they could attain the rafts, the enemy covered their bodies from head to foot.

In the agony of their torment, both sprang blindly into the wide river, where enemies no less sinister awaited them. Wild screams of mortal anguish informed the breathless onlookers that crocodiles and sword-toothed piranhas were no less ravenous than ants, and even nimbler in reaching their prey.

In spite of this bloody warning, more and more men showed they were making up their minds to run the blockade. Anything, even a fight midstream against alligators, seemed better than powerlessly waiting for death to come and slowly consume their living bodies.

Leiningen flogged his brain till it reeled. Was there nothing on earth could sweep this devil’s spawn back into the hell from which it came?

Create a free edublog to get your own comment avatar (and more!)

  1.   jekkee says:

    Now I am no longer that sure that Len might win. Maybe the ants might win as Len is running out of ideas. I like the way this storey is stopped at this part. It is so suspenceful.

  2.   Melissa says:

    from the way this story is progressing, it seems as thought leningen is probably starting to get desperate. his workers already have no faith in him, and he also cant think up any tactics to stop the killer ants. and yes, the story makes the reader hang on in suspense.

  3.   Ling Ying says:

    there seems to be some contradiction as Leningen’s workers do not trust him any more yet they still follow his orders, why is that so? how long does it take for the ants to reproduce, for it seems that though Leningen has killed many, there are still many more. is it because the ants reporduce very fast or is it because there were actually lots and lots of ants already at first? if Leningen waited sopme more, would the ants reproduce so fast that their army will be stronger than before?

  4.   jekkee says:

    Ling Ying: Maybe… I wonder how the ants would be extinguished… Or how Len gets extinguished.

  5.   Wei Ting says:

    I think that Leningen would still win in the end. Since this is a battle of wits, he would probably ‘outsmart’ the ants.

    Ling Ying:
    Yeah…I hope that the ants would ‘run out’. Maybe Leningen’s workers have no other choice but to follow Leningen’s orders as there was no way they could try to escape from the ants but to battle them.

    I look forward to the rest of the story :)

  6.   Cassandra says:

    i think the ants will win . dn underestimate ants … ants are like , everywhere in the world ! probably Len killed many , but probably even minute there`s an ant born ! we are not talking about probably 10 ants , but thousands of them. maybe 1/3 of them could be reproducing every minute! its possible , noting the population. I just hope Len has a way…

    Maybe Leningen’s workers doesn’t have a choice but to follow . Or maybe they knew that was the only way out ?

  7.   Joshua says:

    the ants may just win, their pretty clever. Len and his worker are also out-numbered 1000 to 1!!!!!!!!Even the mightiest brain would be challenged.

  8.   Vera says:

    actually can’t they just send a bomb to the ants? and the bomb can be filled with flammable liquid so the ants that survived the bomb will be burnt to death…

  9.   Vera says:

    if len and his men and eaten alive by the ants, does anybody think that the author will give us the details of how the ants eat them up and all the other really gory details abt the process of len being eaten by ants? :) eh…just kidding…hee hee

  10.   Kenneth says:

    back from my 7days in taiwan! anyway, yea len is running out of ideas and the nest of the ants must be huge to have so many ants. only possible way i can think of for len to defeat the ants is… err…. nothing… lol. :P

  11.   An Yan says:

    I sure hope that there is a part where the ants digest len! It is his fault he interfered with nature

  12.   An Yan says:

    These ants are really cool. I wonder, maybe len catches a few hundred ants and pours them onto his enemies! How cool would that be?
    Of course, unless the enemy is me or any of you guys then that would be a totally different story altogether…

  13.   Isaac says:

    vera, if len sent a bomb, wouldn’t he set fire onto his own plantation?
    Sorry mr grosse if I am replying late, I just came back from Australia today.

  14.   jodie says:

    isaac, leningen’s plantation is already eaten by the ants, what’s there to lose if you set it on fire? i was thinking the same as vera couldn’t leningen just bomb the ants?

  15.   Darren says:

    If there is nothing to lose, why doesn’t len just abandon the whole thing and escape to somewhere safe? Hey i wonder if the ants could ever make an alliance with len…that would be wicked.

  16.   Jax Neo says:

    The ants must have come in millions and millions, or they would be intelligent enough to not sacrifice so many soldiers. Len sure is close to losing-how much petrol does he have left?

    Len sure has the audacity to ‘fight to the death’. He is smart, he prepared early, but yet losing? Well, it has to be put in the final verdict, who wins the battle?( I suppore Len)

  17.   Yu Teng says:

    Leningen is losing, both mentally and physically. His plantation is being destroyed and his peons are running away from him, their master. He is losing faith in himself obviously. But he seems determined to exterminate the pests- the ants. He has spirit, but it is ebbing away, unlike the first two parts which he seemed unafraid.
    I pity Leningen’s peons. They’ve got nowhere to run and they’re practically sitting ducks there. They are realising that their master can’t do much to save them anymore. I hope Leningen feels remorseful. If they die, he’d caused their deaths. It is only right that he stands with them and does not run away like a coward.
    How come there are so many ants? If they reproduce, the ants would still be babies and won’t be able to resist much. Moreover, I thought only the queen ant can give birth…
    I too look forward to reading more of the story.

  18.   Jin Kiat says:

    How much petrol did Leningen use, and how did he get so much money? Leningen seems so full of himself, then when he realises he is doomed, he still continues with his plans. I think there’s a lesson in this: Arrogance is dangerous. And even if he is prepared to take risks, he should do it with his own life. Not kill other innocent people who have no wish to kill themselves.

    Maybe Leningen should have been more flexible, done more things other than burn ants again and again. He should know that different tactics may do more damage, e.g. putting bottles full of petrol and throwing them into the ants. When the bottles of petrol have all burst and scattered petrol all over the war zone. Then Leningen could have thrown matches onto the “petrolled” spots and then made the ants there BURN!!!

    Well, maybe I am misjudging Leningen, because he was under great stress. All the same, I hope that Leningen will win! Humans rock!

  19.   Zi Bing says:

    Leningen’s are really pathetic- they don’t know whether to trust their master or run away. Well, even if they run away, I believe it is already too late. Thus, the two workers had no choice but to jump in.

    I believe the ants will win, though I would rather have Leningen win the battle. Actually if Leningen and workers had escaped before the ants come, he would only lose his plantation. Now, not only would he lose his plantation during the battle with the ants, but maybe even his life!

  20.   Kim says:

    Do you not feel that if Leningen wins, it would represent man’s superiority(sp?) over nature, and that you can beat nature with wits and technology?

    but… these ants may have mutated, so maybe they are a mutation of nature, therefore, do not represent a perfect analogy.

    (please do not argue with me over this, it is an opinion on my part, not a fact, and I do not want to argue back…)

  21.   Joel says:

    After reading this part of the story, i now think that Leiningen and his men would die. Because their petrol is in a limited supply, and would not last them forever, and before long they would not have enought petrol to pour into the ditch and the ants would be able to cross the ditch.

  22.   Joel says:

    After reading this part of the story, i now think that Leiningen and his men would die. Because their petrol is in a limited supply, and would not last them forever, and before long they would not have enough petrol to pour into the ditch and the ants would be able to cross the ditch.

  23.   Gary Lim says:

    Joel: Why are you repeating?
    How did Leiningen fund his plantation?
    If he used all his resources, even if he managed to save the plantation, how would he manage it?

  24.   Joshua says:

    I think Len and his men are doomed. There are millions of ants and the petrol supply is just postponing death (as said in the story).

    Why are Len and his men are still trying to survive when they already know there efforts are futile?

Leave a Reply

*
To prove you're a person (not a spam script), type the security word shown in the picture.
Anti-Spam Image

See also: