returned,   more    or  less    dissatisfied,   some    five    days    later,  he  found   that    Haji    Äli
and his sons    had disappeared.    They    had fled    down    river   on  a   dark    night,  without
a   soul    being   made    aware   of  their   intended    departure.  They    had neither stayed  to
reap    their   crops,  which   now stood   ripening    in  the fields; to  sell    their   house   and
compound,   which   had been    bought  with    good    money,—'dollars of  the whitest,'
as  the Malay   phrase  has it,—nor yet to  collect their   debts.  This    is  a   fact;   and to
one who knows   the passion for wealth  and for property,   which   is  to  be  found   in
the breast  of  every   Sumatran    Malay,  it  is  perhaps the strangest   circumstance    of
all the weird   events, which   go  to  make    up  the drama   of  the Were-Tiger  of  Slim.
There   is, to  the European    mind,   only    one possible    explanation.    Haji    Äli and his
sons     had     been    the     victims     of  foul    play.   They    had     been    killed  by  the    simple
villagers    of  Slim,   and     a   cock-and-bull   story   trumped     up  to  account     for     their
disappearance.   This    is  a   very    good,   and     withal  a   very    astute  explanation,
showing as  it  does    a   profound    knowledge   of  human   nature, and I   should  be  more
than    half    inclined    to  accept  it  as  the correct one,    but for the fact    that    Haji    Äli and
his sons    turned  up  in  quite   another part    of  the Peninsula   some    months  later.  They
have    nothing out of  the way about   them    to  mark    them    from    their   fellows,    except
that    Haji    Äli goes    lame    on  his right   leg.
Footnotes:
[9] Isa =   The hour    of  evening prayer.