One night Sambo was looking on at a game of cards, in which all the rest in the room were engaged.Happening to laugh at some turn it took, one of them, a Malay, who was losing, was offended, and abused him.Others objected to his having fun without risking money, and required him to join in the game.This for some reason or other he declined, and when the whole party at length insisted, positively refused.Thereupon they all took umbrage, nor did most of them make many steps of the ascent from displeasure to indignation, wrath, revenge; and then ensued a row.Gibbie had been sitting all the time on his friend's knee, every now and then stroking his black face, in which, as insult followed insult, the sunny blood kept slowly rising, making the balls of his eyes and his teeth look still whiter.At length a savage from Greenock threw a tumbler at him.
Sambo, quick as a lizard, covered his face with his arm.The tumbler falling from it, struck Gibbie on the head--not severely, but hard enough to make him utter a little cry.At that sound, the latent fierceness came wide awake in Sambo.Gently as a nursing mother he set Gibbie down in a corner behind him, then with one rush sent every Jack of the company sprawling on the floor, with the table and bottles and glasses atop of them.At the vision of their plight his good humour instantly returned, he burst into a great hearty laugh, and proceeded at once to lift the table from off them.
That effected, he caught up Gibbie in his arms, and carried him with him to bed.
In the middle of the night Gibbie half woke, and, finding himself alone, sought his father's bosom; then, in the confusion between sleeping and waking, imagined his father's death come again.
Presently he remembered it was in Sambo's arms he fell asleep, but where he was now he could not tell: certainly he was not in bed.
Groping, he pushed a door, and a glimmer of light came in.He was in a closet of the room in which Sambo slept--and something was to do about his bed.He rose softly and peeped out, There stood several men, and a struggle was going on--nearly noiseless.Gibbie was half-dazed, and could not understand; but he had little anxiety about Sambo, in whose prowess he had a triumphant confidence.
Suddenly came the sound of a great gush, and the group parted from the bed and vanished.Gibbie darted towards it.The words, "O Lord Jesus!" came to his ears, and he heard no more: they were poor Sambo's last in this world.The light of a street lamp fell upon the bed: the blood was welling, in great thick throbs, out of his huge black throat.They had bent his head back, and the gash gaped wide.
For some moments Gibbie stood in ghastly terror.No sound except a low gurgle came to his ears, and the horror of the stillness overmastered him.He never could recall what came next.When he knew himself again, he was in the street, running like the wind, he knew not whither.It was not that he dreaded any hurt to himself;horror, not fear, was behind him.
His next recollection of himself was in the first of the morning, on the lofty chain-bridge over the river Daur.Before him lay he knew not what, only escape from what was behind.His faith in men seemed ruined.The city, his home, was frightful to him.Quarrels and curses and blows he had been used to, and amidst them life could be lived.If he did not consciously weave them into his theories, he unconsciously wrapped them up in his confidence, and was at peace.
But the last night had revealed something unknown before.It was as if the darkness had been cloven, and through the cleft he saw into hell.A thing had been done that could not be undone, and he thought it must be what people called murder.And Sambo was such a good man! He was almost as good a man as Gibbie's father, and now he would not breathe any more! Was he gone where Gibbie's father was gone? Was it the good men that stopped breathing and grew cold?
But it was those wicked men that had deaded Sambo! And with that his first vague perception of evil and wrong in the world began to dawn.