THE POLICE CAMP
The velvety darkness of a southern
night, with its sense of rich, luscious, breathing
intensity, lay over that romantic spot in Southern
Rhodesia where the grey walls of the Zimbabwe ruins,
with a sublime, imperturbable indifference, continue
to baffle the ingenuity and ravish the curiosity of
all who would read their story. Scientists, archaeologists,
tourists come and go, but the stern old walls, guarded
by the sentinel hills, give back no answer to eager
questioning, eager delving, eager surmise.
But in the meantime the Valley of
Ruins no longer lies alone and unheeded in the sunlight;
and no longer do the hills look down upon rich plains
left solely to the idle pleasure of a careless black
people. The forerunners of to-day’s great
civilising army have marched into the valley, and
beside the ancient walls there is now a police camp
of the British South Africa Police, presided over by
two robust young troopers.
In the velvety darkness on the night
in question there is a single bright light pouring
through the open doorway of a dwelling-hut. Through
the enfolding silence breaks the bizarre music of an
indifferent gramophone, recklessly mocking the sublime
grandeur of the age-old antiquities. Laughter
and gay music and devil-may-care colonists awaking
echoes that have been more or less silent to civilisation
for how many thousand years?
But on this particular evening it
is as though some shadow had fallen upon the little
camp. Nothing tangible nothing that
changed the general habits or surroundings but
a vague regret and introspective sadness upon the
faces of two young men, usually full of careless content.
Cecil Stanley, the more refined, a gentleman by birth
and education, lounged low in his chair, with his
hands behind his head and his feet on the table, and
ever and anon his eyes looked with pained regret into
the surrounding depths of night. Patrick Moore,
with a grave face, cleaned his gun in a deeper silence
than usual, proceeding with an occupation that was
his joy on many evenings, whether the gun needed cleaning
or not, rather as if it eased his mind to have his
hands busy.
“I wonder if the Major will
come through to-night?” he remarked, as if the
silence were growing over-oppressive.
“Sure to,” laconically.
“The moon will be up directly, and he can’t
be very far away.”
“I suppose he won’t have heard?”
“Not likely to have done.
Gad! I feel as if I’d give anything to have
had a chance to stand three hours in that queue.
It will hit him hard. If it’s bad for us,
who have at least known all along, it will be worse
for him, hearing it suddenly at this late hour.
Those newspapers to-day have made me feel like a kid
on his first day at boarding-school. I’d
like to cry if I weren’t ashamed to.”
“I liked that professor,”
said Moore, changing the subject. “Decent
old Johnny, wasn’t he? Jolly nice of him
to bring all those papers in case he came across anyone
glad of them.”
“Quite a good old bird.
That’s a rum theory of his about the corpses
in the temple being buried deeper than anyone has yet
dug, and hung with valuable ornaments. Wouldn’t
it be a jolly lark to dig down for one and have a
look at it!...”
He gave a low, half-hearted chuckle
over his gruesome suggestion, and lazily getting to
his feet, selected another tune for his gramophone.
Moore, busy still with his gun, gave
a corresponding chuckle, and remarked:
“Begorra, lad!... if we could
get a few out one at a time on moonlight nights, and
fill up the blooming holes again, we shouldn’t
want any blasted machinery for our gold mine, except
a pickaxe and a shovel.”
“We’d want a bit of pluck,
though. The ghosts of the corpses might come
dancing round to have their say in the matter.”
“We’d chance the ghosties.
Shure! if they’ve been hanging round for three
or four thousand years, they’d maybe like a new
sensation by this time.”
Stanley put on “The Stars and
Stripes,” wound up the gramophone, and slid
into his lounge chair again.
Moore glanced up as the music started.
“What!... that thing again!...
I’m beginning to feel like those old ghosts
about it. The same moth-eaten tune for three or
four thousand years. I’d like a new sensation.”
“It can’t be much staler than cleaning
that old gun.”
“Shure, she’s a daisy.”
The Irishman looked tenderly at his treasure.
“An’ she just loves me to be fondlin’
her like.”
“If it weren’t for the
Major I don’t know what is to prevent us proving
the old man’s theory,” said Stanley, evidently
harping again on his corpses.
“Him, and the bloomin’
Company! The old gentlemen sittin’ on the
Board in London suddenly find that the Yankees have
been snaffling a lot of valuable trinkets and things
from the ruins while they took forty winks, and then
they up and says no one’s to look for anything
more at all; not even a boney fidey Rhodesian,
sweating in the police camp outside the walls.”
“Still, it would be a rare lark
to find a corpse with gold ornaments on it, and say
nothing at all.”
“And what should you be doing
with the old corpse when you’ve taken the gold?”
“Oh! put him in the soup!”
And Stanley slid lower in his chair, with another
chuckle.
The gramophone ran down with a horrible
grind, but its owner only looked at it dully and took
no notice.
“Shall I wind up again?” Moore asked.
“No, let it rip. It sounds
all wrong to-night. Everything is all wrong.
The whole world gone awry. It’s like being
on another planet to be out here in this wilderness
at such a time. I don’t believe I’ve
ever felt exiled before, but, begad! I do to-night.
Let’s turn in. Probably he won’t
come now.”
Moore carried his gun into one of
the huts and stood it carefully beside his little
stretcher-bed. Stanley took the gramophone into
another hut, and planked it down somewhat roughly on
a table, evidently made by an amateur. Without
going outside again, he shouted “Good night,”
and after that no sound broke the silence, except sundry
mutterings from the Irishman, who had discovered an
enormous frog under his bed, and his beloved pointer
pup inside the blankets serenely sleeping.
All the next morning Stanley hung
about the camp as one who waited, but it was not until
three o’clock that Major Carew rode slowly up
to the huts. As he dismounted, briefly acknowledging
Stanley’s salute, there was a characteristic
absence of all superfluous words. The latter
waited until the soldier-servant had led away the mule
and another boy relieved the officer of his water-bottle,
which he always carried himself, and then he looked
hard at the thin, brown, resolute face, with an expression
in his eyes that made Carew ask shortly:
“Any news?”
“Bad news from England. I suppose you haven’t
heard?”
“I haven’t heard anything.”
For one pulsing second the two men
stood and looked at each other; and to a looker-on
it might have appeared that, however laconic and indifferent
their attitude, their relationship was not solely that
of officer and subordinate. The elder man, in
his gruff way, was the friend of the man under him.
The younger had acquired a respect that held something
deeper than casual liking, and his face showed it now
as he hesitated before breaking his news. Then
he said, very simply:
“The King is dead.”
A quick, incredulous expression filled Carew’s
eyes.
“The King?...” he repeated.
“Not ... surely not ...” He paused,
leaving his sentence unfinished.
“Yes. King Edward. After a few days’
illness.”
The man’s mouth grew rigid.
He stood like a figure of bronze, staring with unseeing
eyes to the far horizon. Stanley drew in his breath
a little sharply. Yes, he had been right, the
news had hit Carew very hard.
“When?...” came at last, abruptly.
“A fortnight ago. Just
after you left. The funeral took place yesterday.”
Carew made no comment. Evidently
it was true. Little else mattered. Nearly
all through this trek of his round those distant kraals
his King had been lying dead, and he had not known
it. Such a man as he is not stunned by tidings;
but he recedes still further into his shell, if possible.
There is no comment, no discussion, just a grim silence
sealing a deep pain that cannot express itself.
He stayed a moment longer, while Stanley
told him a few details, and then he went away into
his hut and shut his door to the sunlight one
of those exiles for whom the news had, as it were,
an added sorrow, because during the first shock he
had remained in ignorance, and had thus been prevented
joining in the loyal homage of grief that had been
offered by his countrymen from the four corners of
the earth.
It was thus with many of the far-off
Empire-builders. They heard so late, so unpreparedly,
so suddenly; and in the first shock, an exile which
had been a calmly accepted condition, became almost
a menace, seemed swiftly to develop a force.
The men in the far places felt their aloofness;
knew that their souls were beating vainly against
prison bars, for the longing to annihilate space and
stand beside the beloved dead. That quiet band
of men whom we sometimes call “The Pathfinders,”
and who go away across the world to bring the wilderness
into line; to smooth the rough, link the severed, subdue
the untamed, and carry prosperity to the waste places.
The men who cope with strange, deadly diseases; who
fight fever swamps, and compel them to carry a railroad
across their reluctant bosoms, though the swamps in
turn exact a heavy toll of human life; who make the
paths that the women and children will presently pass
over, though no such soul-stirring cry urges their
exhausting efforts.
But it is not usual to laud these
men, who win their colours at the dull, prosaic work
of path-finding, as it is to laud those who encounter
shot and shell in the lurid atmosphere of battle, and
one feels they do not ask it. Yet now and then
they must surely be glad to know that thoughtful women
and thoughtful men follow their work and bless them
in silence, sending across the world to them a homage
of praise that is, perhaps, richer than the plaudits
of the crowd. And not to them only, but also
to the mothers who bid them go, accepting their hard
part of lonely, anxious waiting without complaint.
And if they fall by the wayside, unrecognised,
unknown, but having carried the path forward, maybe
a mile, maybe a yard, maybe an inch, how great a thing
is that compared to the small happenings that of necessity
make up most men’s lives!
In the sultry midday heat Carew sat
alone in his hut, and certain memories, that for fifteen
years he had tried to crush out of his mind, crowded
back upon him with overwhelming force in the grip of
his sudden sorrow. For that sad event which had
plunged a great nation into grief had been to him
a personal loss. In the silence and shadow he
mourned deeply, not only the idol of his youth and
dear object of his heart’s best loyalty, but
the memory of a friend.
For long ago, or so it seemed, there
had been a moment when a royal hand had clasped his,
and a royal voice the royalty all lost in
the friend had said, “Perhaps you
are right. It is best to begin again. But
do not imagine your life is over and its aims purposeless.
Out there you will find renewing. Some day come
back and tell me about it.”
That was fifteen years ago, but he
had never gone back. Never sought the second
hand-clasp that would have been his. Never unfolded
to those interested ears his personal experiences
with the pioneer column that led the way to do the
path-finding in Rhodesia. In the hush of the
afternoon, with his head bowed on his arms, the years
between seemed to pass out of mind, and that which
once had been to stand alone, awaking within him an
infinite regret.
He saw again certain lovely park-lands the
woods and hills and dales of a rich inheritance
that should have been his. He saw himself, the
gay guardsman. He saw the dear face of the woman
for whom he had chosen to cross that arbitrary will
which would brook no disobedience, and sought to intimidate
him with disinheritance. Through his mind passed
in slurred detail the sordid story which had given
him a brother’s hate in return for a quixotic
championing of the weak a hate which proved
to have power enough behind it to draw a devastating
hand across the promise of his future.
Lastly and here in the
silence it was as though his head sank deeper in its
pain he saw that womans dear face, as he had last seen it, lying white upon the
heather dead.
Ah, the memories were terribly alive
to-day; not even fifteen years in a new life, with
new interests, had done anything but draw a thin curtain
of silence over the unforgettable pain. Would
anything ever ease it in reality? Had he for
a moment believed that it would? Or had he always
known, that just as surely as his hand had held the
gun which killed her, so to his last breath the tragedy
would cast a shadow over the whole of his life?
He might look out upon the world with
quiet eyes and firm lips and fearless mien, but the
gnawing ache would surely go with him to his grave.
And because of it he knew that he
had grown somewhat churlish; that men who did not
understand his unsociable ways and extreme reticence
looked at him askance. But what of it? How
little such things mattered! The tragedy was
his and the silence was his, and he had never asked
anyone to share either.
Only to-day, for just this one afternoon,
fifteen years was as yesterday, and he seemed to realise
thoroughly for the first time all that royal hand-clasp
had meant, before he went to his voluntary exile in
a far wilderness.
But after a time, when it grew cool
enough to walk, he came out into the sunshine and
started off towards the steep rock pathway that leads
to the summit of the Acropolis Hill, following an impulse
to seek comfort in the fresh hopefulness of a height,
and to lessen the pain in his heart by looking out
across a world still living and loving and striving.
So he climbed on up the winding pathway, enfolded with
mystery and romance concerning the feet that trod it
in the far-off centuries, and made his way between
the mighty natural boulders out on to the high platform,
where eyes, all those long centuries ago, must have
looked out even as his, across the lovely land.
Was it as lovely then?... Could
it have been less so?...
How the quiet beauty soothed and caressed
him! Surely there were moments when the wilderness,
tamed at last, like a lovely, wayward mistress become
entrancingly docile, fondles the hand, and ravishes
the senses of the strong man who conquered it.
Is this one of the rich rewards Life
holds in the palm of her hand for the path-finders?...
This glorious sense of ownership. This winsome
soothing of shy gratitude when the fierce first resistance
to conquest is overpast. A man may call England
his country because he was born there, and his father
before him; but, perhaps, after all, that is a small
thing compared to standing upon a high eminence, and
looking across a quiet world which is your country
because of all you yourself have given to it of hope
and faith and steadfast purpose.
In some such spirit soothing came
to the quiet man on the top of the Acropolis Hill,
whispering to him that, after all, this was his
country, and if the beloved dead did indeed seem so
far away in fact, in spirit he was perhaps nearer
to his Empire-builders than he had ever been before.
He turned his head at last, and his
eyes rested upon the circular wall, four hundred feet
below, that enclosed the temple ruins. Then for
a moment a wave of depression swept over him, blotting
out the landscape loveliness. Was it all, then,
vanity, this building and striving?... The making
of walls and fortifications for another race, centuries
afterwards, to look upon with cold wonder and curiosity?
Three thousand years ago perhaps another man had stood
even there and mourned his king that was dead.
And so soon ... so soon ... he also died, and the
massive walls became ruins, and the dynasty, or empire,
or era, passed away into oblivion. How soon might
a similar fate overtake his own great Empire!... and
the beloved King, Edward the Peacemaker, be perhaps
but a legend to some strange new race.
And then it was as though the land
to which he had given so much rose up to give in her
turn the might of hope and renewing. His eyes
wandered again to the distant mountains and over the
fertile plain lying between, and all the outspread
richness called to him that at least there was no
ruin here, no hopelessness, no decay.
Progress spoke to him from the rolling
plains and from the mysterious kopjes, and his blood
warmed to that glad sense of possession if
not in fact, at least in the fancy born of what he
had given. For it is when we give, and not when
we take, we become the truest possessors, rich owners
of so much that neither wealth, nor birth, nor striving
can buy.
In the quiet evening hour the stars
were just beginning to light their brilliant lamps,
and a glow like a rose-flush in the west marked the
passage of the departed sun. Carew prepared to
make the steep descent. And as he looked out
across this country, that seemed so intensely his
country, he felt himself heir of all the ages, the
strong product of long eons of careful development,
too rich in those vague splendours of the human and
the divine not to realise the weak futility of musing
sadly upon dead dynasties and bygone races.
On the northernmost point, ere the
path drops suddenly on its way to the valley, he stood
still once more and gazed steadily to the north where
England lay.
Then, thinking deep thoughts of love
and loyalty of the King who had been his friend, and
the friend who had been his King, he gravely gave
the salute.