THE DOOM POOL
Fortune showed itself strangely favourable
to the plans of Nahoon and Nanea. One of the
Zulu captain’s perplexities was as to how he
should lull the suspicions and evade the vigilance
of his own companions, who together with himself had
been detailed by the king to assist Hadden in his
hunting and to guard against his escape. As it
chanced, however, on the day after the incident of
the visit of Maputa, a messenger arrived from no less
a person than the great military Induna, Tvingwayo
ka Marolo, who afterwards commanded the Zulu
army at Isandhlwana, ordering these men to return
to their regiment, the Umcityu Corps, which was to
be placed upon full war footing. Accordingly Nahoon
sent them, saying that he himself would follow with
Black Heart in the course of a few days, as at present
the white man was not sufficiently recovered from
his hurts to allow of his travelling fast and far.
So the soldiers went, doubting nothing.
Then Umgona gave it out that in obedience
to the command of the king he was about to start for
Ulundi, taking with him his daughter Nanea to be delivered
over into the Sigodhla, and also those fifteen
head of cattle that had been lobola’d
by Nahoon in consideration of his forthcoming marriage,
whereof he had been fined by Cetywayo. Under
pretence that they required a change of veldt, the
rest of his cattle he sent away in charge of a Basuto
herd who knew nothing of their plans, telling him
to keep them by the Crocodile Drift, as there the grass
was good and sweet.
All preparations being completed,
on the third day the party started, heading straight
for Ulundi. After they had travelled some miles,
however, they left the road and turning sharp to the
right, passed unobserved of any through a great stretch
of uninhabited bush. Their path now lay not far
from the Pool of Doom, which, indeed, was close to
Umgona’s kraal, and the forest that was
called Home of the Dead, but out of sight of these.
It was their plan to travel by night, reaching the
broken country near the Crocodile Drift on the following
morning. Here they proposed to lie hid that day
and through the night; then, having first collected
the cattle which had preceded them, to cross the river
at the break of dawn and escape into Natal. At
least this was the plan of his companions; but, as
we know, Hadden had another programme, whereon after
one last appearance two of the party would play no
part.
During that long afternoon’s
journey Umgona, who knew every inch of the country,
walked ahead driving the fifteen cattle and carrying
in his hand a long travelling stick of black and white
umzimbeet wood, for in truth the old man was
in a hurry to reach his journey’s end. Next
came Nahoon, armed with a broad assegai, but naked
except for his moocha and necklet of baboon’s
teeth, and with him Nanea in her white bead-bordered
mantle. Hadden, who brought up the rear, noticed
that the girl seemed to be under the spell of an imminent
apprehension, for from time to time she clasped her
lover’s arm, and looking up into his face, addressed
him with vehemence, almost with passion.
Curiously enough, the sight touched
Hadden, and once or twice he was shaken by so sharp
a pang of remorse at the thought of his share in this
tragedy, that he cast about in his mind seeking a means
to unravel the web of death which he himself had woven.
But ever that evil voice was whispering at his ear.
It reminded him that he, the white Inkoos, had
been refused by this dusky beauty, and that if he found
a way to save him, within some few hours she would
be the wife of the savage gentleman at her side, the
man who had named him Black Heart and who despised
him, the man whom he had meant to murder and who immediately
repaid his treachery by rescuing him from the jaws
of the leopard at the risk of his own life. Moreover,
it was a law of Hadden’s existence never to deny
himself of anything that he desired if it lay within
his power to take it a law which had led
him always deeper into sin. In other respects,
indeed, it had not carried him far, for in the past
he had not desired much, and he had won little; but
this particular flower was to his hand, and he would
pluck it. If Nahoon stood between him and the
flower, so much the worse for Nahoon, and if it should
wither in his grasp, so much the worse for the flower;
it could always be thrown away. Thus it came
about that, not for the first time in his life, Philip
Hadden discarded the somewhat spasmodic prickings
of conscience and listened to that evil whispering
at his ear.
About half-past five o’clock
in the afternoon the four refugees passed the stream
that a mile or so down fell over the little precipice
into the Doom Pool; and, entering a patch of thorn
trees on the further side, walked straight into the
midst of two-and-twenty soldiers, who were beguiling
the tedium of expectancy by the taking of snuff and
the smoking of dakka or native hemp. With
these soldiers, seated on his pony, for he was too
fat to walk, waited the Chief Maputa.
Observing that their expected guests
had arrived, the men knocked out the dakka
pipe, replaced the snuff boxes in the slits made in
the lobes of their ears, and secured the four of them.
“What is the meaning of this,
O King’s soldiers?” asked Umgona in a
quavering voice. “We journey to the kraal
of U’Cetywayo; why do you molest us?”
“Indeed. Wherefore then
are your faces set towards the south. Does the
Black One live in the south? Well, you will journey
to another kraal presently,” answered the
jovial-looking captain of the party with a callous
laugh.
“I do not understand,” stammered Umgona.
“Then I will explain while you
rest,” said the captain. “The Chief
Maputa yonder sent word to the Black One at Ulundi
that he had learned of your intended flight to Natal
from the lips of this white man, who had warned him
of it. The Black One was angry, and despatched
us to catch you and make an end of you. That
is all. Come on now, quietly, and let us finish
the matter. As the Doom Pool is near, your deaths
will be easy.”
Nahoon heard the words, and sprang
straight at the throat of Hadden; but he did not reach
it, for the soldiers pulled him down. Nanea heard
them also, and turning, looked the traitor in the
eyes; she said nothing, she only looked, but he could
never forget that look. The white man for his
part was filled with a fiery indignation against Maputa.
“You wicked villain,”
he gasped, whereat the chief smiled in a sickly fashion,
and turned away.
Then they were marched along the banks
of the stream till they reached the waterfall that
fell into the Pool of Doom.
Hadden was a brave man after his fashion,
but his heart quailed as he gazed into that abyss.
“Are you going to throw me in
there?” he asked of the Zulu captain in a thick
voice.
“You, White Man?” replied
the soldier unconcernedly. “No, our orders
are to take you to the king, but what he will do with
you I do not know. There is to be war between
your people and ours, so perhaps he means to pound
you into medicine for the use of the witch-doctors,
or to peg you over an ant-heap as a warning to other
white men.”
Hadden received this information in
silence, but its effect upon his brain was bracing,
for instantly he began to search out some means of
escape.
By now the party had halted near the
two thorn trees that hung over the waters of the pool.
“Who dives first,” asked the captain of
the Chief Maputa.
“The old wizard,” he replied,
nodding at Umgona; “then his daughter after
him, and last of all this fellow,” and he struck
Nahoon in the face with his open hand.
“Come on, Wizard,” said
the captain, grasping Umgona by the arm, “and
let us see how you can swim.”
At the words of doom Umgona seemed
to recover his self-command, after the fashion of
his race.
“No need to lead me, soldier,”
he said, shaking himself loose, “who am old
and ready to die.” Then he kissed his daughter
at his side, wrung Nahoon by the hand, and turning
from Hadden with a gesture of contempt walked out
upon the platform that joined the two thorn trunks.
Here he stood for a moment looking at the setting
sun, then suddenly, and without a sound, he hurled
himself into the abyss below and vanished.
“That was a brave one,”
said the captain with admiration. “Can you
spring too, girl, or must we throw you?”
“I can walk my father’s
path,” Nanea answered faintly, “but first
I crave leave to say one word. It is true that
we were escaping from the king, and therefore by the
law we must die; but it was Black Heart here who made
the plot, and he who has betrayed us. Would you
know why he has betrayed us? Because he sought
my favour, and I refused him, and this is the vengeance
that he takes a white man’s vengeance.”
“Wow!” broke in
the chief Maputa, “this pretty one speaks truth,
for the white man would have made a bargain with me
under which Umgona, the wizard, and Nahoon, the soldier,
were to be killed at the Crocodile Drift, and he himself
suffered to escape with the girl. I spoke him
softly and said ‘yes,’ and then like a
loyal man I reported to the king.”
“You hear,” sighed Nanea.
“Nahoon, fare you well, though presently perhaps
we shall be together again. It was I who tempted
you from your duty. For my sake you forgot your
honour, and I am repaid. Farewell, my husband,
it is better to die with you than to enter the house
of the king’s women,” and Nanea stepped
on to the platform.
Here, holding to a bough of one of
the thorn trees, she turned and addressed Hadden,
saying:
“Black Heart, you seem to have
won the day, but me at least you lose and the
sun is not yet set. After sunset comes the night,
Black Heart, and in that night I pray that you may
wander eternally, and be given to drink of my blood
and the blood of Umgona my father, and the blood of
Nahoon my husband, who saved your life, and whom you
have murdered. Perchance, Black Heart, we may
yet meet yonder in the House of the Dead.”
Then uttering a low cry Nanea clasped
her hands and sprang upwards and outwards from the
platform. The watchers bent their heads forward
to look. They saw her rush headlong down the
face of the fall to strike the water fifty feet below.
A few seconds, and for the last time, they caught
sight of her white garment glimmering on the surface
of the gloomy pool. Then the shadows and mist-wreaths
hid it, and she was gone.
“Now, husband,” cried
the cheerful voice of the captain, “yonder is
your marriage bed, so be swift to follow a bride who
is so ready to lead the way. Wow! but you are
good people to kill; never have I had to do with any
who gave less trouble. You ”
and he stopped, for mental agony had done its work,
and suddenly Nahoon went mad before his eyes.
With a roar like that of a lion the
great man cast off those who held him and seizing
one of them round the waist and thigh, he put out all
his terrible strength. Lifting him as though he
had been an infant, he hurled him over the edge of
the cliff to find his death on the rocks of the Pool
of Doom. Then crying:
“Black Heart! your turn, Black
Heart the traitor!” he rushed at Hadden, his
eyes rolling and foam flying from his lips, as he passed
striking the chief Maputa from his horse with a backward
blow of his hand. Ill would it have gone with
the white man if Nahoon had caught him. But he
could not come at him, for the soldiers sprang upon
him and notwithstanding his fearful struggles they
pulled him to the ground, as at certain festivals
the Zulu regiments with their naked hands pull down
a bull in the presence of the king.
“Cast him over before he can
work more mischief,” said a voice. But the
captain cried out, “Nay, nay, he is sacred; the
fire from Heaven has fallen on his brain, and we may
not harm him, else evil would overtake us all.
Bind him hand and foot, and bear him tenderly to where
he can be cared for. Surely I thought that these
evil-doers were giving us too little trouble, and
thus it has proved.”
So they set themselves to make fast
Nahoon’s hands and wrists, using as much gentleness
as they might, for among the Zulus a lunatic is accounted
holy. It was no easy task, and it took time.
Hadden glanced around him, and saw
his opportunity. On the ground close beside him
lay his rifle, where one of the soldiers had placed
it, and about a dozen yards away Maputa’s pony
was grazing. With a swift movement, he seized
the Martini and five seconds later he was on the back
of the pony, heading for the Crocodile Drift at a gallop.
So quickly indeed did he execute this masterly retreat,
that occupied as they all were in binding Nahoon,
for half a minute or more none of the soldiers noticed
what had happened. Then Maputa chanced to see,
and waddled after him to the top of the rise, screaming:
“The white thief, he has stolen
my horse, and the gun too, the gun that he promised
to give me.”
Hadden, who by this time was a hundred
yards away, heard him clearly, and a rage filled his
heart. This man had made an open murderer of him;
more, he had been the means of robbing him of the girl
for whose sake he had dipped his hands in these iniquities.
He glanced over his shoulder; Maputa was still running,
and alone. Yes, there was time; at any rate he
would risk it.
Pulling up the pony with a jerk, he
leapt from its back, slipping his arm through the
rein with an almost simultaneous movement. As
it chanced, and as he had hoped would be the case,
the animal was a trained shooting horse, and stood
still. Hadden planted his feet firmly on the
ground and drawing a deep breath, he cocked the rifle
and covered the advancing chief. Now Maputa saw
his purpose and with a yell of terror turned to fly.
Hadden waited a second to get the sight fair on his
broad back, then just as the soldiers appeared above
the rise he pressed the trigger. He was a noted
shot, and in this instance his skill did not fail
him; for, before he heard the bullet tell, Maputa flung
his arms wide and plunged to the ground dead.
Three seconds more, and with a savage
curse, Hadden had remounted the pony and was riding
for his life towards the river, which a while later
he crossed in safety.