Native folk, at any rate, are but
children of a larger growth. In the main, their
delinquencies may be classified under the heading of
“naughtiness.” They are mischievous
and passionate, and they have a weakness for destroying
things to discover the secrets of volition. A
too prosperous nation mystifies less fortunate people,
who demand of their elders and rulers some solution
of the mystery of their rivals’ progress.
Such a ruler, unable to offer the necessary explanation,
takes his spears to the discovery, and sometimes discovers
too much for his happiness.
The village of Jumburu stands on the
edge of the bush country, where the lawless men of
all nations dwell. This territory is filled with
fierce communities, banded together against a common
enemy the law. They call this land
the B’wigini, which means “the Nationless,”
and Jumburu’s importance lies in the fact that
it is the outpost of order and discipline.
In Jumburu were two brothers, O’ka
and B’suru, who had usurped the chieftainship
of their uncle, the very famous K’sungasa, “very
famous,” since he had been in his time a man
of remarkable gifts, which he still retained to some
extent, and in consequence enjoyed what was left of
life.
He was, by all accounts, as mad as
a man could be, and in circumstances less favourable
to himself his concerned relatives would have taken
him a long journey into the forest he loved so well,
and they would have put out his eyes and left him
to the mercy of the beasts, such being the method
of dealing with lunacy amongst people who, all unknown
to themselves, were eugenists of a most inflexible
kind.
But to leave K’sungasa to the
beasts would have been equivalent to delivering him
to the care of his dearest friends, for he had an
affinity for the wild dwellers of the bush, and all
his life he had lived amongst them and loved them.
It is said that he could arrest the
parrot in the air by a “cl’k!” and
could bring the bird screeching and fluttering to his
hand. He could call the shy little monkeys from
the high branches where they hid, and even the fiercest
of buffaloes would at his word come snuffling and
nosing his brown arm.
So that, when he grew weak-minded,
his relatives, after a long palaver, decided that
for once the time-honoured customs of the land should
be overridden, and since there was no other method
of treating the blind but that prescribed by precedent,
he should be allowed to live in a great hut at the
edge of the village with his birds and snakes and
wild cats, and that the direction of village affairs
should pass to his nephews.
Mr. Commissioner Sanders knew all
this, but did nothing. His task was to govern
the territory, which meant to so direct affairs that
the territory governed itself. When the fate
of K’sungasa was in the balance, he sent word
to the chief’s nephews that he was somewhere
in the neighbourhood, and that the revival of the
bad old custom of blinding would be followed by the
introduction of the bad new custom of hanging; but
this had less effect upon the council of relatives to
whom Sanders’s message was not transmitted than
the strange friendship which K’sungasa had for
the forest folk.
The nephews might have governed the
village, exacted tribute, apportioned fishing rights,
and administered justice for all time, but for the
fact that there came a period of famine, when crops
were bad and fish was scarce, and when, remarkably
enough, the village of L’bini, distant no more
than a few hours’ paddling, had by a curious
coincident raised record crops, and had, moreover,
a glut of fish in their waters.
There was the inevitable palaver and
the inevitable solution. O’ka and B’suru
led ten canoes to the offending village, slaughtered
a few men and burnt a few huts. For two hours
the combatants pranced and yelled and thrust at one
another amidst a pandemonium of screaming women, and
then Lieutenant Tibbetts dropped from the clouds with
a most substantial platoon of Houssas, and there was
a general sorting out.
Sanders held a court on one of the
middle islands near the Residency, and B’suru
was sent to the Village of Irons for the term of his
natural life. O’ka, who had fled to the
bush, escaped, however, and with him a headman and
a few followers.
Lieutenant Tibbetts, who had spent
two profitable days in the village of Jumburu, came
back to the Residency a very thoughtful young man.
“What is the matter with Bones?” asked
Captain Hamilton.
His sister smiled over her book, but offered no other
comment.
“Do you know, Pat?” demanded Hamilton
sternly.
Sanders looked at the girl with a
twinkle in his grey eyes, and lit a cheroot.
The relationships between Patricia Hamilton and Bones
were a source of constant joy to him. Taciturn
and a thought dour as he was, Pat would never have
suspected the bubbling laughter which arose behind
that lean brown face, unmovable and, in his moments
of most intense enjoyment, expressionless.
“Bones and I have a feud,” said the girl.
Sanders smiled.
“Not as violent a feud as O’ka and I have,
I hope?” he said.
She frowned a little and looked at him anxiously.
“But you don’t worry about
the threats of the people you have punished?”
she asked.
“I haven’t punished O’ka,”
said Sanders, “and an expedition into the bush
would be too expensive an affair. He has apparently
settled with the B’wigini people. If they
take up his feud, they might give trouble. But
what is your trouble with Bones?”
“You must ask him,” she said.
Hamilton’s opportunity came next day, when Bones
applied for leave.
“Leave?” said Captain
Hamilton incredulously. “Leave, Bones?
What the dickens do you want leave for?”
Bones, standing as stiff as a ramrod
before the office table at which his superior sat,
saluted.
“Urgent private affairs, sir,” he said
gruffly.
“But you haven’t any private
affairs,” protested Hamilton. “Your
life is an open book you were bragging
about that fact yesterday.”
“Sir and brother-officer,”
said Bones firmly, “a crisis has arisen in my
young life. My word, sir, has been called into
doubt by your jolly old sister. I desire to vindicate
my honour, my reputation, an’ my veracity.”
“Pat has been pulling your leg!”
suggested Hamilton, but Bones shook his head.
“Nothin’ so indelicate,
sir. Your revered an’ lovely relative God
bless her jolly old heart! expressed her
doubt in re leopards an’ buffaloes.
I’m goin’ out, sir, into the wilds amidst
dangers, Ham, old feller, that only seasoned veterans
like you an’ me can imagine to bring
proof that I am not only a sportsman, but a gentleman.”
The timely arrival of Miss Patricia
Hamilton, very beautiful in dazzling white, with her
solar helmet perched at an angle, smote Bones to silence.
“What have you been saying to
Bones?” asked Hamilton severely.
“She said ”
“I said ”
They began and finished together.
“Bones, you’re a tell-tale,” accused
the girl.
“Go on,” said Bones recklessly.
“Don’t spare me. I’m a liar
an’ a thief an’ a murderer don’t
mind me!”
“I simply said that I didn’t
believe he shot the leopard the one whose
skin is in his hut.”
“Oh, no,” said Bones,
with heavy sarcasm, “I didn’t shoot it oh,
no! I froze it to death I poisoned
it!”
“But did you shoot it?” she asked.
“Did I shoot it, dear old Ham?” asked
Bones, with great calmness.
“Did you?” asked Hamilton innocently.
“Did I shoot at that leopard,”
Bones went on deliberately, “an’ was he
found next mornin’ cold an’ dead, with
a smile on his naughty old face?”
Hamilton nodded, and Bones faced the girl expectantly.
“Apologize, child,” he said.
“I shall do nothing of the kind,”
she replied, with some heat. “Did Bones
shoot the leopard?”
She appealed to her brother.
Hamilton looked from one to the other.
“When the leopard was found ”
he began.
“Listen to this, dear old sister,” murmured
Bones.
“When the leopard was found, with a spear in
its side ”
“Evidently done after death
by a wanderin’ cad of a native,” interposed
Bones hastily.
“Be quiet, Bones,” commanded
the girl, and Bones shrugged his shoulders and obeyed.
“When the leopard was found,”
continued Hamilton, “he was certainly beyond
human aid, and though no bullet mark was discovered,
Bones conclusively proved ”
“One moment, dear old officer,”
interrupted Bones. He had seen out of the tail
of his eye a majestic figure crossing the square.
“Will you allow me to produce
scientific an’ expert evidence?”
Hamilton assented gravely, and Bones
went to the door of the orderly room and roared a
name.
“I shall produce,” he
said quietly, but firmly, “the evidence of one
who enjoyed the confidence of dear old Professor What’s-his-name,
the eminent thigumy-ologist. Oh, Ali!”
Ali Abid, a solemn figure, salaamed in the doorway.
Not for nothing had he been factotum
to a great bacteriologist before the demise of his
master had driven him to service with a lieutenant
of Houssas. His vocabulary smelt of the laboratory,
his English was pure, undefiled, and unusual.
“Ali, you remember my leopard?”
“Sir,” said Ali, shaking his head, “who
can forget?”
“Did I kill him, Ali?” asked Bones.
“Tell the lady everything.”
Ali bowed to the girl.
“Miss or madame,”
he said, “the leopard (Felis pardus),
a wild beast of the Felidae family, is indigenous
to forest territory. The subject in question to
wit, the skin thereof exhibited by Sir Bones was
particularly ferocious, and departed this life as a
result of hunting conducted by aforesaid. Examination
of subject after demise under most scientific scrutiny
revealed that said leopard (Felis pardus) suffered
from weak heart, and primary cause of death was diagnosed
as shock occasioned by large ‘bang’ from
Sir Bones’s rifle.”
“What did I say?” asked Bones complacently.
“Do you mean to tell me,”
gasped the girl, “that you frightened
the leopard to death?”
Bones spread out his hands disparagingly.
“You have heard the evidence,
dear old sister,” he said; “there is nothing
to add.”
She threw back her head and laughed
until her grey eyes were swimming in tears.
“Oh, Bones, you humbug!” she laughed.
Bones drew himself up more stiffly
than ever, stuck his monocle in his eye, and turned
to his chief.
“Do I understand, sir,”
he said, “that my leave is granted?”
“Seven days,” said Hamilton,
and Bones swung round on his heel, knocked over Hamilton’s
stationery rack, stumbled over a chair, and strode
gloomily from the hut.
When Patricia Hamilton woke the next
morning, she found a note pinned to her pillow.
We may gloss over the impropriety
of the proceedings which led to this phenomenon.
Bones was an artist, and so small a matter as the
proprieties did not come into his calculations.
Patricia sat up in bed and read the letter.
“DEAR OLD FRIEND
AND DOUTTING THOS.”
(Bones’s spelling
was always perfectly disgraceful),
“When this reaches you, when
this reaches you, I shall be far, far away on
my long and dangerus journey. I may not come back,
I may not come back, for I and a faithful servant
are about to penetrate to the lares of the wild
beasts of the forest, of the forest. I am determined
to wipe out the reproach which you have made.
I will bring back, not a dead leppard, not a
dead leppard, but a live one, which I shall seeze
with my own hands. I may lose my life in this
rash and hazardus enterprise, but at least I shall
vindycate my honour. Farewell, dear
old Patrisia.
“Your
friend,
“B.”
“Which proves,” said Hamilton,
when he was shown the letter, “that Bones is
learning to spell. It only seems yesterday when
he was spelling ‘Hamilton’ with three
m’s. By the way, how did you get this letter?”
“I found it pinned to the door,” said
Patricia tactfully.
Bones went by the shortest route to
Jumburu, and was received without enthusiasm, for
he had left a new chief to rule over a people who were
near enough to the B’wigini to resent overmuch
discipline. But his business was with K’sungasa,
for the two days’ stay which Bones had made
in the village, and all that he had learnt of the old
tamer, had been responsible for his reckless promise
to Patricia Hamilton.
He came at a critical moment, for
K’sungasa, a thin and knobbly old man, with
dim eyes and an incessant chuckle, was very near his
end. He lay on a fine raised bed, a big yellow-eyed
wild cat at his feet, a monkey or two shivering by
the bedside, and a sprawling litter of kittens to
which the wild cat leapt in a tremble of rage when
Bones entered the hut crawling in the sunlight
which flooded the hut.
“Lord Tibbetti,” croaked
the old man, “I see you! This is a good
time, for to-morrow I should be dead.”
“K’sungasa,” said
Bones, seating himself gingerly, and looking about
for the snake which was usually coiled round the old
man’s stool, “that is foolish talk, for
you will see many floods.”
“That is fine talk for the river
folk,” grinned the old man, “but not for
we people of the forest, who never see flood and only
little-little rivers. Now, I tell you, lord,
that I am glad to die, because I have been full of
mad thoughts for a long time, but now my mind is clear.
Tell me, master, why you come.”
Bones explained his errand, and the
old man’s eyes brightened.
“Lord, if I could go with you
to the forest, I would bring to you many beautiful
leopards by my magic. Now, because I love Sandi,
I will do this for you, so that you shall know how
wise and cunning I am.”
In the woods about the village was
a wild plant, the seeds of which, when pounded and
boiled in an earthen vessel, produced, by a rough
method of distillation, a most pungent liquid.
Abid spoke learnedly of pimpinella anisum,
and probably he was right.
Bones and his assistant made many
excursions into the woods before they found and brought
back the right plant. Fortunately it was seed-time,
and once he was on the right track Bones had no difficulty
in securing more than a sufficient quantity for his
purpose.
He made his distillation under the
old man’s directions, the fire burning in the
middle of the hut. As the drops began to fall
from the narrow neck of his retort, a fault sweet
aroma filled the hut. First the cat, then the
monkeys began to show signs of extraordinary agitation.
Cat and kittens crouched as near the fire as they could,
their heads craned towards the brown vessel, mewing
and whimpering. Then the monkeys came, bright-eyed
and eager.
The scent brought the most unexpected
beasts from every hole and crevice in the hut brown
rats, squirrels, a long black snake with spade-shaped
head and diamond markings, little bush hares, a young
buck, which came crashing through the forest and prinked
timidly to the door of the hut.
The old man on the bed called them
all by name, and snapped his feeble fingers to them;
but their eyes were on the retort and the crystal
drops that trembled and fell from the lip of the narrow
spout.
A week later a speechless group stood
before the Residency and focussed their astonished
gaze upon the miracle.
“The miracle” was a half-grown
leopard cub, vividly marked. He was muzzled and
held in leash by a chain affixed to a stout collar,
and Bones, a picture of smug gratification, held the
end of the chain.
“But how how did you catch him?”
gasped the girl.
Bones shrugged his shoulders.
“It is not for me, dear old
friend, to tell of nights spent in the howlin’
forest,” he quavered, in the squeaky tone which
invariably came to him when he was excited. “I’m
not goin’ to speak of myself. If you expect
me to tell you how I trailed the jolly old leopard
to his grisly lair an’ fought with him single-handed,
you’ll be disappointed.”
“But did you track him to his
lair?” demanded Hamilton, recovering his speech.
“I beg of you, dear old officer,
to discuss other matters,” evaded Bones tactfully.
“Here are the goods delivered, as per mine of
the twenty-fourth instant.”
He put his hand to his pocket mechanically,
and the cub looked up with a quick eager stare.
“Bones, you’re a wonderful fellow,”
said Sanders quietly.
Bones bowed.
“And now,” he said, “if
you’ll excuse me, I’ll take my little friend
to his new home.”
Before they realized what he was doing,
he had slipped off the chain. Even Sanders stepped
back and dropped his hand to the automatic pistol
he carried in his hip pocket.
But Bones, unconcerned, whistled and
marched off to his hut, and the great cat followed
humbly at his heels.
That same night Bones strode across
from his hut to the Residency, resolved upon a greater
adventure yet. He would go out under the admiring
eyes of Patricia Hamilton, and would return from the
Residency woods a veritable Pied Piper, followed by
a trail of forest denizens.
In his pocket was a quart bottle,
and his clothes reeked with the scent of wild aniseed.
As a matter of fact, his secret would have been out
the moment he entered Sanders’s dining-room,
but it so happened that his programme was doomed to
interruption.
He was half-way across the square
when a dark figure rose from the ground and a harsh
voice grunted “Kill!”
He saw the flash of the spear in the
starlight and leapt aside. A hand clutched at
his jacket, but he wrenched himself free, leaving the
garment in his assailant’s hands.
He was unarmed, and there was nothing left but flight.
Sanders heard his yell, and sprang
out to the darkness of the verandah as Bones flew
up the steps.
He saw the two men racing in pursuit,
and fired twice. One man fell, the other swerved
and was lost in the shadows.
An answering shot came from the Houssa
sentry at the far end of the square. Sanders
saw a man running, and fired again, and again missed.
Then out of the darkness blundered
Ali Abid, his face grey with fear.
“Sir,” he gasped, “wild
animal (Felis pardus) has divested muzzlement
and proper restraint, and is chasing various subjects
outrageously.”
Even as he spoke a fourth figure sped
across the ground before the Residency, so close that
they could see the bundle he carried under his arm.
“My jacket!” roared Bones. “Hi,
stop him! Good Lord!”
Swift on the heels of the flying man came a streak
of yellow fur....
Whether O’ka of the Jumburu
outpaced the leopard, or the leopard overtook O’ka,
is not known, but until the rains came and washed away
the scent of crude aniseed, Bones dared not leave his
hut by night for fear of the strange beasts that came
snuffling at his hut, or sat in expectant and watchful
circles about his dwelling, howling dismally.