THE MAGIC OF INDABA-ZIMBI
We gained the spot by the stream where
Stella had been taken. The natives looked at
the torn fragments of the dogs, and at the marks of
violence, and I heard them swearing to each other,
that whether the Star lived or died they would not
rest till they had exterminated every baboon on Babyan’s
Peak. I echoed the oath, and, as shall be seen,
we kept it.
We started on along the stream, following
the spoor of the baboons as we best could. But
the stream left no spoor, and the hard, rocky banks
very little. Still we wandered on. All night
we wandered through the lonely moonlit valleys, startling
the silence into a thousand echoes with our cries.
But no answer came to them. In vain our eyes searched
the sides of precipices formed of water-riven rocks
fantastically piled one upon another; in vain we searched
through endless dells and fern-clad crannies.
There was nothing to be found. How could we expect
to find two human beings hidden away in the recesses
of this vast stretch of mountain ground, which no
man yet had ever fully explored. They were lost,
and in all human probability lost for ever.
To and fro we wandered hopelessly,
till at last dawn found us footsore and weary nearly
at the spot whence we had started. We sat down
waiting for the sun to rise, and the men ate of such
food as they had brought with them, and sent to the
kraals for more.
I sat upon a stone with a breaking
heart. I cannot describe my feelings. Let
the reader put himself in my position and perhaps he
may get some idea of them. Near me was old Indaba-zimbi,
who sat staring straight before him as though he were
looking into space, and taking note of what went on
there. An idea struck me. This man had some
occult power. Several times during our adventures
he had prophesied, and in every case his prophecies
had proved true. He it was who, when we escaped
from the Zulu Impi, had told me to steer north, because
there we should find the place of a white man who
lived under the shadow of a great peak that was full
of baboons. Perhaps he could help in this extremity at
any rate it was worth trying.
“Indaba-zimbi,” I said,
“you say that you can send your spirit through
the doors of space and see what we cannot see.
At the least I know that you can do strange things.
Can you not help me now? If you can, and will
save her, I will give you half the cattle that we have
here.”
“I never said anything of the
sort, Macumazahn,” he answered. “I
do things, I do not talk about them. Neither
do I seek reward for what I do like a common witch-doctor.
It is well that you have asked me to use my wisdom,
Macumazahn, for I should not have used it again without
being asked no, not even for the sake of
the Star and yourself, whom I love, for if so my Spirit
would have been angry. In the other matters I
had a part, for my life was concerned as well as yours;
but in this matter I have no part, and therefore I
might not use my wisdom unless you thought well to
call upon my Spirit. However, it would have been
no good to ask me before, for I have only just found
the herb I want,” and he produced a handful
of the leaves of a plant that was unfamiliar to me.
It had prickly leaves, shaped very much like those
of the common English nettle.
“Now, Macumazahn,” he
went on, “bid the men leave us alone, and then
follow me presently to the little glade down there
by the water.”
I did so. When I reached the
glade I found Indaba-zimbi kindling a small fire under
the shadow of a tree by the edge of the water.
“Sit there, Macumazahn,”
he said, pointing to a stone near the fire, “and
do not be surprised or frightened at anything you see.
If you move or call out we shall learn nothing.”
I sat down and watched. When
the fire was alight and burning brightly, the old
fellow stripped himself stark naked, and, going to
the foot of the pool, dipped himself in the water.
Then he came back shivering with the cold, and, leaning
over the little fire, thrust leaves of the plant I
have mentioned into his mouth and began to chew them,
muttering as he chewed. Most of the remaining
leaves he threw on to the fire. A dense smoke
rose from them, but he held his head in this smoke
and drew it down his lungs till I saw that he was
exhibiting every sign of suffocation. The veins
in his throat and chest swelled, he gasped loudly,
and his eyes, from which tears were streaming, seemed
as though they were going to start from his head.
Presently he fell over on his side, and lay senseless.
I was terribly alarmed, and my first impulse was to
run to his assistance, but fortunately I remembered
his caution, and sat quiet.
Indaba-zimbi lay on the ground like
a person quite dead. His limbs had all the utter
relaxation of death. But as I watched I saw them
begin to stiffen, exactly as though rigor mortis
had set in. Then, to my astonishment, I perceived
them once more relax, and this time there appeared
upon his chest the stain of decomposition. It
spread and spread; in three minutes the man, to all
appearance, was a livid corpse.
I sat amazed watching this uncanny
sight, and wondering if any further natural process
was about to be enacted. Perhaps Indaba-zimbi
was going to fall to dust before my eyes. As
I watched I observed that the discoloration was beginning
to fade. First it vanished from the extremities,
then from the larger limbs, and lastly from the trunk.
Then in turn came the third stage of relaxation, the
second stage of stiffness or rigor, and the
first stage of after-death collapse. When all
these had rapidly succeeded each other, Indaba-zimbi
quietly woke up.
I was too astonished to speak; I simply
looked at him with my mouth open.
“Well, Macumazahn,” he
said, putting his head on one side like a bird, and
nodding his white lock in a comical fashion, “it
is all right; I have seen her.”
“Seen who?” I said.
“The Star, your wife, and the
little maid. They are much frightened, but unharmed.
The Babyan-frau watches them. She is mad, but
the baboons obey her, and do not hurt them. The
Star was sleeping from weariness, so I whispered in
her ear and told her not to be frightened, for you
would soon rescue her, and that meanwhile she must
seem to be pleased to have Hendrika near her.”
“You whispered in her ear?”
I said. “How could you whisper in her ear?”
“Bah! Macumazahn.
How could I seem to die and go rotten before your
eyes? You don’t know, do you? Well,
I will tell you one thing. I had to die to pass
the doors of space, as you call them. I had to
draw all the healthy strength and life from my body
in order to gather power to speak with the Star.
It was a dangerous business, Macumazahn, for if I had
let things go a little further they must have stopped
so, and there would have been an end of Indaba-zimbi.
Ah, you white men, you know so much that you think
you know everything. But you don’t!
You are always staring at the clouds and can’t
see the things that lie at your feet. You hardly
believe me now, do you, Macumazahn? Well, I will
show you. Have you anything on you that the Star
has touched or worn?”
I thought for a moment, and said that
I had a lock of her hair in my pocket-book. He
told me to give it him. I did so. Going to
the fire, he lit the lock of hair in the flame, and
let it burn to ashes, which he caught in his left
hand. These ashes he mixed up in a paste with
the juice of one of the leaves of the plant I have
spoken of.
“Now, Macumazahn, shut your eyes,” he
said.
I did so, and he rubbed his paste
on to my eyelids. At first it burnt me, then
my head swam strangely. Presently this effect
passed off, and my brain was perfectly clear again,
but I could not feel the ground with my feet.
Indaba-zimbi led me to the side of the stream.
Beneath us was a pool of beautifully clear water.
“Look into the pool, Macumazahn,”
said Indaba-zimbi, and his voice sounded hollow and
far away in my ears.
I looked. The water grew dark;
it cleared, and in it was a picture. I saw a
cave with a fire burning in it. Against the wall
of the cave rested Stella. Her dress was torn
almost off her, she looked dreadfully pale and weary,
and her eyelids were red as though with weeping.
But she slept, and I could almost think that I saw
her lips shape my name in her sleep. Close to
her, her head upon Stella’s breast, was little
Tota; she had a skin thrown over her to keep out the
night cold. The child was awake, and appeared
to be moaning with fear. By the fire, and in such
a position that the light fell full upon her face,
and engaged in cooking something in a rough pot shaped
from wood, sat the Baboon-woman, Hendrika. She
was clothed in baboon skins, and her face had been
rubbed with some dark stain, which was, however, wearing
off it. In the intervals of her cooking she would
turn on Stella her wild eyes, in which glared visible
madness, with an expression of tenderness that amounted
to worship. Then she would stare at the child
and gnash her teeth as though with hate. Clearly
she was jealous of it. Round the entrance arch
of the cave peeped and peered the heads of many baboons.
Presently Hendrika made a sign to one of them; apparently
she did not speak, or rather grunt, in order not to
wake Stella. The brute hopped forward, and she
gave it a second rude wooden pot which was lying by
her. It took it and went. The last thing
that I saw, as the vision slowly vanished from the
pool, was the dim shadow of the baboon returning with
the pot full of water.
Presently everything had gone.
I ceased to feel strange. There beneath me was
the pool, and at my side stood Indaba-zimbi, smiling.
“You have seen things,” he said.
“I have,” I answered,
and made no further remark on the matter. What
was there to say? “Do you know the path to
the cave?” I added.
For some almost
equally remarkable instances of Kaffir
magic the reader is
referred to a work named “Among the
Zulus,” by David
Leslie. Editor.
He nodded his head. “I
did not follow it all just now, because it winds,”
he said. “But I know it. We shall want
the ropes.”
“Then let us be starting; the men have eaten.”
He nodded his head again, and going
to the men I told them to make ready, adding that
Indaba-zimbi knew the way. They said that was
all right, if Indaba-zimbi had “smelt her out,”
they should soon find the Star. So we started
cheerfully enough, and my spirits were so much improved
that I was able to eat a boiled mealie cob or two as
we walked.
We went up the valley, following the
course of the stream for about a mile; then Indaba-zimbi
made a sudden turn to the right, along another kloof,
of which there were countless numbers in the base of
the great hill.
On we went through kloof after kloof.
Indaba-zimbi, who led us, was never at a loss, he
turned up gulleys and struck across necks of hills
with the certainty of a hound on a hot scent.
At length, after about three hours’ march, we
came to a big silent valley on the northern slope
of the great peak. On one side of this valley
was a series of stony koppies, on the other rose a
sheer wall of rock. We marched along the wall
for a distance of some two miles. Then suddenly
Indaba-zimbi halted.
“There is the place,”
he said, pointing to an opening in the cliff.
This opening was about forty feet from the ground,
and ellipse-shaped. It cannot have been more
than twenty feet high by ten wide, and was partially
hidden by ferns and bushes that grew about it in the
surface of the cliff. Keen as my eyes were, I
doubt if I should ever have noticed it, for there
were many such cracks and crannies in the rocky face
of the great mountain.
We drew near and looked carefully
at the place. The first thing I noticed was that
the rock, which was not quite perpendicular, had been
worn by the continual passage of baboons; the second,
that something white was hanging on a bush near the
top of the ascent.
It was a pocket-handkerchief.
Now there was no more doubt about
the matter. With a beating heart I began the
ascent. For the first twenty feet it was comparatively
easy, for the rock shelved; the next ten feet was
very difficult, but still possible to an active man,
and I achieved it, followed by Indaba-zimbi.
But the last twelve or fifteen feet could only be scaled
by throwing a rope over the trunk of a stunted tree,
which grew at the bottom of the opening. This
we accomplished with some trouble, and the rest was
easy. A foot or two above my head the handkerchief
fluttered in the wind. Hanging to the rope, I
grasped it. It was my wife’s. As I
did so I noticed the face of a baboon peering at me
over the edge of the cleft, the first baboon we had
seen that morning. The brute gave a bark and
vanished. Thrusting the handkerchief into my breast,
I set my feet against the cliff and scrambled up as
hard as I could go. I knew that we had no time
to lose, for the baboon would quickly alarm the others.
I gained the cleft. It was a mere arched passage
cut by water, ending in a gulley, which led to a wide
open space of some sort. I looked through the
passage and saw that the gulley was black with baboons.
On they came by the hundred. I unslung my elephant
gun from my shoulders and waited, calling to the men
below to come up with all possible speed. The
brutes streamed on down the gloomy gulf towards me,
barking, grunting, and showing their huge teeth.
I waited till they were within fifteen yards.
Then I fired the elephant gun, which was loaded with
slugs, right into the thick of them. In that
narrow place the report echoed like a cannon shot,
but its sound was quickly swallowed in the volley of
piercing human-sounding groans and screams that followed.
The charge of heavy slugs had ploughed through the
host of baboons, of which at least a dozen lay dead
or dying in the passage. For a moment they hesitated,
then they came on again with a hideous clamour.
Fortunately by this time Indaba-zimbi, who also had
a gun, was standing by my side, otherwise I should
have been torn to pieces before I could re-load.
He fired both barrels into them, and again checked
the rush. But they came on again, and notwithstanding
the appearance of two other natives with guns, which
they let off with more or less success, we should have
been overwhelmed by the great and ferocious apes had
I not by this time succeeded in re-loading the elephant
gun. When they were right on us, I fired, with
even more deadly effect than before, for at that distance
every slug told on their long line. The howls
and screams of pain and rage were now something inconceivable.
One might have thought that we were doing battle with
a host of demons; indeed in that light for
the overhanging arch of rock made it very dark the
gnashing snouts and sombre glowing eyes of the apes
looked like those of devils as they are represented
by monkish fancy. But the last shot was too much
for them; they withdrew, dragging some of their wounded
with them, and thus gave us time to get our men up
the cliff. In a few minutes all were there, and
we advanced down the passage, which presently opened
into a rocky gulley with shelving sides. This
gulley had a water-way at the bottom of it; it was
about a hundred yards long, and the slopes on either
side were topped by precipitous cliffs. I looked
at these slopes; they literally swarmed with baboons,
grunting, barking, screaming, and beating their breasts
with their long arms, in fury. I looked up the
water-way; along it, accompanied by a mob, or, as
it were, a guard of baboons, ran Hendrika, her long
hair flying, madness written on her face, and in her
arms was the senseless form of little Tota.
She saw us, and a foam of rage burst
from her lips. She screamed aloud. To me
the sound was a mere inarticulate cry, but the baboons
clearly understood it, for they began to roll rocks
down on to us. One boulder leaped past me and
struck down a Kaffir behind; another fell from the
roof of the arch on to a man’s head and killed
him. Indaba-zimbi lifted his gun to shoot Hendrika;
I knocked it up, so that the shot went over her, crying
that he would kill the child. Then I shouted to
the men to open out and form a line from side to side
of the shelving gulley. Furious at the loss of
their two comrades, they obeyed me, and keeping in
the water-way myself, together with Indaba-zimbi and
the other guns, I gave the word to charge.
Then the real battle began. It
is difficult to say who fought the most fiercely,
the natives or the baboons. The Kaffirs charged
along the slopes, and as they came, encouraged by
the screams of Hendrika, who rushed to and fro holding
the wretched Tota before her as a shield, the apes
bounded at them in fury. Scores were killed by
the assegais, and many more fell beneath our gun-shots;
but still they came on. Nor did we go scathless.
Occasionally a man would slip, or be pulled over in
the grip of a baboon. Then the others would fling
themselves upon him like dogs on a rat, and worry
him to death. We lost five men in this way, and
I myself received a bite through the fleshy part of
the left arm, but fortunately a native near me assegaied
the animal before I was pulled down.
At length, and all of a sudden, the
baboons gave up. A panic seemed to seize them.
Notwithstanding the cries of Hendrika they thought
no more of fight, but only of escape; some even did
not attempt to get away from the assegais of the Kaffirs,
they simply hid their horrible faces in their paws,
and, moaning piteously, waited to be slain.
Hendrika saw that the battle was lost.
Dropping the child from her arms, she rushed straight
at us, a very picture of horrible insanity. I
lifted my gun, but could not bear to shoot. After
all she was but a mad thing, half ape, half woman.
So I sprang to one side, and she landed full on Indaba-zimbi,
knocking him down. But she did not stay to do
any more. Wailing terribly, she rushed down the
gulley and through the arch, followed by a few of
the surviving baboons, and vanished from our sight.