HENSLEY’S NEXT-OF-KIN.
It is a strange, and I suppose a wholesomely-humiliating
thing that we are appointed to go through life learning
how little we know ourselves. Here was I, a man
no longer young, with considerable experience of the
ways of the world, rough and smooth, and under the
fixed impression that if there was one man in the
said wide and wicked world whom I knew thoroughly,
in and out, from the crown of his hat to the soles
of his boots or velschoenen, as
the case might be that man was Godfrey
Glanton, trader in the Zulu. And yet I had lived
to learn that I didn’t know him at all.
For instance the happy-go-lucky, free-and-easy,
semi-lonely life that had satisfied me for so many
years seemed no longer satisfying; yet why not, seeing
that all its conditions prevailed as before?
I had enough for my needs, and if I didn’t make
a fortune out of my trade, whether stationary or from
time to time peripatetic, I had always made a steady
profit. Now, however, it came home to me that
this was a state of things hardly the best for a man
to live and die in.
Again why not? I had seen contemporaries
of my own men circumstanced like myself
who had come to the same conclusion. They had
left it only to come to grief in unfamiliar
undertakings. Or they had married; only to find
that they had better have elected to go through the
rest of life with a chain and ball hung round their
necks, than strapped to some nagging woman full of
affectations and ailments and raising a
brood of progeny far more likely to prove a curse
to them than anything else; thanks to the holy and
gentle maternal influence aforesaid. All this
I had seen, and yet, here I was, feeling restless
and unsatisfied because for several days the recollection
of a certain sweet and refined face, lit up by a pair
of large, appealing eyes, had haunted my solitary
hours.
It was that time since I had seen
my neighbours. I had heard of them through my
usual sources of information, and they seemed to me
to be getting along all right; wherefore I had forborne
to pay another visit lest it might have the appearance
of “hanging around.” And by way of
combating an inclination to do so now, I made up my
mind to carry out a deferred intention, viz.,
pay a visit to Hensley’s place.
Tyingoza had been over to see me a
couple of times, but made no allusion whatever to
Falkner Sewin’s act of boyish idiocy: presumably
rating it at its proper standard. But, I noticed
that he wore a new head-ring. However, I hoped
that was an incident forgotten; and as I heard nothing
to the contrary, and my trade ran on as usual, I made
no further reference to it either to Tyingoza or anybody
else.
I arrived at the scene of Hensley’s
disappearance about mid-day. The homestead stood
in a long, narrow valley, thickly bushed. Behind,
and almost overhanging it, was a great krantz whose
smooth ironstone wall glowed like a vast slab of red-hot
metal. The place was wild and picturesque to
a degree, but oh so hot!
Two men in shirts and trousers were
playing quoits as I came up. I didn’t
know either of them by sight.
“Good day,” said one of
them, knocking off his play, and coming up. “Off-saddle
won’t you? Dashed hot, isn’t it?”
“Thanks. I’m Glanton,
from Isipanga,” I said in answer to his look
of enquiry.
“Oh. Glad to know you,
Glanton. I’m Kendrew, from nowhere in
particular, at least not just now, price of transport
being too sleg for anything.”
“Oh, you ride transport then? How many
waggons?”
“Three in good times one
in bad; none in worse as in the present
case. This is Sergeant Simcox, of the N.M.P.,”
introducing the other man, whom I noticed wore uniform
trousers and boots. “He’s been helping
me to look for my poor old uncle, you know.”
“Oh, Hensley was your uncle, was he?”
“Rather. But I’m
next-of-kin so if he’s not found I
take. See?” with a comprehensive wink
and jerk of the head which took in the surroundings.
I couldn’t help laughing at
his coolness. He was a tall, rather good-looking
young fellow, all wire and whipcord, with a chronically
whimsical expression. The police sergeant was
a hard bitten looking customer, typical of his line
in life.
“Now what do you think of the
affair?” I said. “Did you know Hensley
well?”
“Hanged if I did. He didn’t like
me. Did you?”
“Not very. I used to ride
over and look him up now and again. But I can’t
imagine him doing anything mysterious. In fact
I should say he’d be the last man in the world
to do it.”
“Ja. I don’t
know what to think of it. I’ve been running
the place since I heard of the affair luckily
I wasn’t on the road just then so was able to.
You’ll stop and have some scoff of course you
too, sergeant?”
“Wish I could,” said the
latter, “but it’s against rules.
Must get back to my camp.”
“Hang rules. Who’s to know?
Glanton here won’t split.”
He was right, wherefore I forbear
to say whether Sergeant Simcox made the third at that
festive board or not.
We talked of trade and transport-riding
and frontier matters generally, but surprisingly little
of the matter that had brought me there. In
fact Kendrew rather seemed to shirk the subject; not
in any sort of suspicious manner let me explain, but
rather as if he thought the whole thing a bore, and
a very great one at that.
“You see, Glanton,” he
explained, presumably detecting a surprised look on
my face, called there by the exceedingly light way
in which he was taking things. “You see
it isn’t as if we had had a lot to do with each
other. Of course I don’t for a moment hope
that the poor old boy has come to grief, in fact I
can’t help feeling that he may turn up any moment
and want to know what the devil I’ve taken up
my quarters at his place for, in this free and easy
way.”
After a good dinner, washed down with
a glass or so of grog, we went to look at the place
where the missing man had slept. This didn’t
help towards any theory. If there had been foul
play, whoever had been concerned in it had removed
all traces long ago.
“A good hound, requisitioned
at first, would have done something towards clearing
up the mystery,” I said.
“Yes, but you might as well
have requisitioned a good elephant, for all you’d
get either round here,” laughed Kendrew.
“Well, I shall just give it up as a bad job
and leave it to Simcox. That’s what he
draws his pay for. I’ll just sit tight
and boss up things so long. That’s my job.”
“I’d like to have a word
or two with the boy who saw him last,” I said.
“Alone I mean.”
“Think you can get him to talk,
eh? Well perhaps you may I’ve
heard of you, Glanton, and what a chap you are for
managing Kafirs. All right, stop on till this
evening, the boy’s out herding now. Then
you can indaba him to your heart’s content
after supper. You’ll stay the night of
course.”
But I urged that such was not in my
programme, and in fact I had some business to attend
to next day irrespective of mere retail trade in the
store. So we compromised by my consenting to
remain till evening. There was sufficient moon
for me to ride home by even if it rose somewhat late.
I suggested that we should ride out into the veldt
in the afternoon and I could interview the boy there.
He would talk more freely that way, and Kendrew agreed.
The boy was a quiet, decent looking
youngster, and was herding his flock in most exemplary
fashion. I asked him his name.
“Pecamane, ’Nkose!”
“Have I seen you before?”
“More than once, Nkose.
At Isipanga, at the store. Then again, when
we danced and ate beef.”
“Ah. You were there then? Who is
your chief?”
“Tyingoza, Nkose.”
Kendrew had ridden on, leaving me alone with the boy.
“Well then,” I said, “if
Tyingoza is your chief you will be safe in telling
me the story of your master’s `who is
no longer here.’”
“Ou! Nkose.
The only story I have to tell is what I told to the
Amapolise, and he who now sits here” meaning
Kendrew. “But it is no story.”
He was right there, in that like the
tale of the empty bottle there was nothing in it.
His master had given him some final orders after supper,
and he had gone over to the huts for the night.
He was employed in the stable then.
And no one had opened the stable?
No, it was locked, and his master
had the key. They had been obliged to break
open the door in the morning to get at the horses.
There you see, there was nothing in
this story, but then I had never expected there would
be. What I wanted was to watch the face and note
the manner of its narrator. This I had done,
and keenly, with the result that I felt convinced
that the boy knew no more about Hensley’s disappearance
than I did myself. Upon this the police sergeant
subsequently waxed somewhat superior. He resented
the idea that what had baffled the wit of the police
and native detectives combined might stand the slightest
chance of being cleared up by me. However I didn’t
take offence, although my opinion of the abilities
of his force was but medium, and that of the native
detectives nowhere, though this applied more to their
morality than ingenuity. It happened that I was
in a position to know something of the methods of
the latter in “getting up” cases.
“Well good-bye, Glanton,”
said Kendrew, as we shook hands. “Devilish
glad you came over in a friendly way. And, I
say mind you repeat the operation and that
often. I like a jolly, good sort of neighbourly
neighbour.”
I promised him I would, as I climbed
into the saddle and the great krantz seemed
to echo back our cheery good-bye in ghostly refrain.
I liked Kendrew, I decided as I rode
along. He struck me as a lively, cheery sort
of fellow with lots of fun in him, and not an atom
of harm. Decidedly as a neighbour he would be
an improvement on his poor old relative, who although
a good chap enough had always been a bit of a fossil.
That’s one of the advantages of the up-country
or frontier life, you take a man as you find him and
no make believe, or stiffness or ceremony. If
he’s a good fellow he is, and all the better.
If he isn’t why then he isn’t, and you
needn’t have any more to do with him than you
want, or make any pretence about it.
In the solitude as I took my way through
the thorns the recollection of Hensley came upon me
again, and I confess, as I thought upon it there,
under the midnight moon for I had started
back rather later than I had intended a
sort of creepy feeling came over me. What the
deuce had become of the man? If he had got a
fit of mental aberration, and taken himself off, he
would have left some spoor, yet no sign of any had
been lighted upon by those who had again and again
made diligent search. I looked around.
The bush sprays seemed to take on all manner of weird
shapes; and once my horse, shying and snorting at a
big hare, squatting up on its haunches like a big
idiot, bang in the middle of the path, gave me quite
an unpleasant start. The black brow of the krantz
cut the misty, star-speckled skyline now receding
on my left behind and then
my horse gave forth another snort and at the same time
shied so violently as to have unseated me, but that
my nerves were again I confess it at
something of an abnormal tension.
A figure was stealing along in the
not very distinct moonlight; a human figure or was
it? Suddenly it stopped, half in shadow.
“Hi! Hallo! Who’s that,”
I sung out.
There was no answer. Then I
remembered that with my mind running upon Hensley
I had used English. Yet the figure was that of
a native. It wanted not the blackness of it
in the uncertain light; the stealthy, sinuous movement
of it was enough to show that. Yet, this certainty
only enhanced the mystery. Natives are not wont
to prowl about after dark with no apparent object,
especially alone. In the first place they have
a very whole-hearted dread of the night side of Nature in
the next such a proceeding is apt to gain for them
more than a suspicion of practising the arts of witchcraft a
fatal reputation to set up yonder beyond the river,
and, I hesitate not to assert, a very dangerous one
to gain even here on the Queen’s side.
The figure straightened up, causing
my fool of a horse to snort and describe further antics.
Then a voice:
“Inkose! Iqalaqala.
Be not afraid. It is only Ukozi, who watches
over the world while the world sleeps ah ah!
while the world sleeps.”
I must own to feeling something of
a thrill at the name. This Ukozi was a diviner,
or witch doctor, whose reputation was second to none
among the Natal border tribes ay and a
great deal wider and that is saying a good
deal. Now of course the very mention of a witch
doctor should arouse nothing but contemptuous merriment;
yet the prétentions of the class are not all
humbug by any means, indeed I have known a good few
white men hard bitten, up-country going
men with no nonsense or superstition about them who
never fail to treat a genuine native witch doctor
with very real consideration indeed.
“Greeting, father of mystery,”
I answered, with some vague idea that the meeting
all so unexpected and somewhat weird, might yet be
not without its bearings on the fate of Hensley.
“You are bent upon muti indeed, when
the world is half through its dark time and the moon
is low.”
“M-m!” he hummed.
“The moon is low. Just so, Iqalaqala.
You will not go home to-night.”
“Not go home!” I echoed,
meaning to humour him, and yet, in my innermost self,
conscious that there was a very real note of curiosity
that could only come of whole, or partial, belief in
the question. “And why should I not go
home to-night?”
He shrugged his shoulders impressively. Then
he said:
“Who may tell? But you will
not.”
I tried to laugh good-humouredly,
but it was not genuine. Yet was not the thing
absurd? Here was I, letting myself be humbugged almost
scared by an old charlatan of a witch doctor,
a fellow who made a comfortable living out of his
credulous countrymen by fooling them with charms and
spells and omens, and all sorts of similar quackery I,
a white man, with I haven’t mentioned
it before an English public school education.
“Here, my father,” I said,
producing a goodly twist of roll tobacco. “This
is good always good whether by
a comfortable fire, or searching for muti materials
under the moon.”
He received it, in the hollow of both
hands, as the native way is. I saw before me
in the moonlight what was not at all the popular conception
of the witch doctor a little shrivelled
being with furtive, cunning looks, and snaky eyes.
No. This was a middle-aged man of fine stature,
and broadly and strongly built: destitute too
of charms or amulets in the way of adornments.
His head-ring glistened in the moonlight, and for
all clothing he wore the usual mutya.
In fact the only peculiarity about him was that he
had but one eye.
“What has become of Nyamaki?”
I said, filling and lighting my pipe.
“U’ Nyamaki? Has
he gone then?” was the answer which, of course,
was a bit of assumed ignorance.
“Now how can the father of wisdom
ask such a question?” I said. “He
to whom nothing is dark!”
Ukozi’s face was as a mask.
He uttered a single grunt that was all.
“The whites will offer large
reward to the man who finds him,” I went on.
“Will he who sits yonder” meaning
my recent entertainer “offer large
reward?” was the answer, a sudden whimsical flash
illuminating the dark, impassive face.
“That I cannot say. But
I should think it probable. And now you are
seeking midnight muti so as to obtain such reward.
Take care,” I went on, chaffing him.
“To wander at midnight would not be safe la
pa,” pointing in the direction of the Zulu
country. “But here we are under the Queen.”
“The Queen! Au! Even the Queen
cannot do everything.”
“She just about can though,” I answered
decisively.
“Can she find Nyamaki?” he said, putting
his head on one side.
This was a facer. I didn’t
know what the deuce to answer. While I was hesitating
he went on:
“Au! Well, Iqalaqala,
turn back and make your bed with him yonder, for you
will not go home to-night Hamba gahle.”
“Hlala gahle, father
of mystery,” I answered lightly touching my horse
with the spur.
You will think it strange I should make so light of his warning, yet as I
resumed my way up the valley, no thought of material danger came into my mind as
I pondered over it. I would show him that wise as he was, and great his
reputation, yet he did not know everything. I would have the crow of him
next time we met, when
My horse had suddenly cocked his ears,
then uttering a loud snort he stopped dead so
suddenly indeed that I as nearly as possible pitched
over his head. Yet, there was nothing in sight.
The path, here rather steep, narrowed
between high thick bush, just over which on either
hand, rose two straight but entirely insignificant
krantzes.
“He has seen a snake, a big
mamba perhaps,” I decided. “Well,
let the brute crawl away, as he’s sure to do
if alarmed. Then we’ll get on again.”
But we didn’t. I shouted
a little, and swished at the bushes with my whip.
Then I spurred my horse forward again. The confounded
animal wouldn’t budge.
“Here, this won’t do,”
I said to myself feeling angry. Then I got off.
If the fool wouldn’t go in the ordinary way perhaps
he would lead. Would he? Not a bit of it;
on the contrary he rucked back at his bridle so violently
as nearly to tear it out of my hand. I got into
the saddle again.
“Now you’ve got to go,
damn it!” I growled, letting him have both
rowels till I thought I could hear the bones squeak.
In response he first plunged violently,
then kicked, then reared, finally slewing round so
quickly as nearly to unseat me. And now I became
aware of a strange sickly scent, almost like that of
a drug yet how could it be? Then,
as it grew stronger, it took on a vile effluvium as
of something dead. Yet; I had passed over that
very spot but a few hours back, and nothing of the
kind had been there then. The horse was now
standing quite still, his head towards the way we had
come, all in a sweat and trembling violently.
And now I own that some of his scare
began to take hold of me. What did it mean what
the very deuce did it mean? What infernal witchcraft
was this that could hold me up here on a path I had
ridden several times before, on this identical horse
too? Yet, here in the still ghostly midnight
hour alone, the affair began to grow dashed creepy.
I made one more attempt, and that a half-hearted
one then giving the horse the rein let
him take his own way, and that way was straight back
to Kendrew’s.
Some thought of making a detour,
and passing the bewitched point by taking a wide sweep,
came into my mind, but that would have involved some
infernally rough travelling, besides the moon wouldn’t
last much longer, and who could say whether the result
might not turn out the same, for by now the witch
doctor’s declaration had carried its full weight.
So I was soon knocking Kendrew out of his first sleep,
with literally a lame excuse to the effect that my
steed had gone lame, and it was no use trying to get
over two hours of rough road with him that night.
“All right, old chap,”
sung out Kendrew, in a jolly voice, as he let me in.
“Have a glass of grog first, and then we’ll
take him round to the stable. You can turn in
in any room you like.”
I hoped he wouldn’t notice that
neither then nor on the following morning did my horse
show the slightest sign of lameness. But I had
made up my mind to say no word to him of what had occurred and
didn’t.