第59章 VI THE JABIZRI(2)(1 / 3)

"I think this is written in blood," said the Doctor at last. "It turns that color when it's dry. Somebody pricked his finger to make these pictures. It's an old dodge when you're short of ink-- but highly unsanitary--What an extraordinary thing to find tied to a beetle's leg! I wish I could talk beetle language, and find out where the Jabizri got it from."

"But what is it?" I asked--"Rows of little pictures and signs.

What do you make of it, Doctor?"

"It's a letter," he said--"a picture letter. All these little things put together mean a message--But why give a message to a beetle to carry--and to a Jabizri, the rarest beetle in the world?-- What an extraordinary thing!"

Then he fell to muttering over the pictures.

"I wonder what it means: men walking up a mountain; men walking into a hole in a mountain; a mountain falling down--it's a good drawing, that; men pointing to their open mouths; bars--prison-bars, perhaps; men praying; men lying down--they look as though they might be sick; and last of all, just a mountain--a peculiar-shaped mountain."

All of a sudden the Doctor looked up sharply at me, a wonderful smile of delighted understanding spreading over his face.

"LONG ARROW!" he cried, "don't you see, Stubbins?--Why, of course! Only a naturalist would think of doing a thing like this: giving his letter to a beetle--not to a common beetle, but to the rarest of all, one that other naturalists would try to catch--Well, well! Long Arrow!--A picture-letter from Long Arrow.