On the following evening we once more
dined together, and Quatermain, after some pressure,
was persuaded to continue his story for
Good’s remark still rankled in his breast.
“At last,” he went on,
“a few minutes before sunset, the task was finished.
We had laboured at it all day, stopping only once for
dinner, for it is no easy matter to hew out five such
tusks as those which now lay before me in a white
and gleaming line. It was a dinner worth eating,
too, I can tell you, for we dined off the heart of
the great one-tusked bull, which was so big that the
man whom I sent inside the elephant to look for his
heart was forced to remove it in two pieces.
We cut it into slices and fried it with fat, and I
never tasted heart to equal it, for the meat seemed
to melt in one’s mouth. By the way, I examined
the jaw of the elephant; it never grew but one tusk;
the other had not been broken off, nor was it present
in a rudimentary form.
“Well, there lay the five beauties,
or rather four of them, for Gobo and another man were
engaged in sawing the grand one in two. At last
with many sighs I ordered them to do this, but not
until by practical experiment I had proved that it
was impossible to carry it in any other way.
One hundred and sixty pounds of solid ivory, or rather
more in its green state, is too great a weight for
two men to bear for long across a broken country.
I sat watching the job and smoking the pipe of contentment,
when suddenly the bush opened, and a very handsome
and dignified native girl, apparently about twenty
years of age, stood before me, carrying a basket of
green mealies upon her head.
“Although I was rather surprised
to see a native girl in such a wild spot, and, so
far as I knew, a long way from any kraal, the
matter did not attract my particular notice; I merely
called to one of the men, and told him to bargain
with the woman for the mealies, and ask her if there
were any more to be bought in the neighbourhood.
Then I turned my head and continued to superintend
the cutting of the tusk. Presently a shadow fell
upon me. I looked up, and saw that the girl was
standing before me, the basket of mealies still on
her head.
“‘Mareme, Mareme,’
she said, gently clapping her hands together.
The word Mareme among these Matuku (though she was
no Matuku) answers to the Zulu ‘Koos,’
and the clapping of hands is a form of salutation very
common among the tribes of the Basutu race.
“‘What is it, girl?’
I asked her in Sisutu. ’Are those mealies
for sale?’
“‘No, great white hunter,’
she answered in Zulu, ’I bring them as a gift.’
“‘Good,’ I replied; ‘set them
down.’
“‘A gift for a gift, white man.’
“‘Ah,’ I grumbled,
’the old story nothing for nothing
in this wicked world. What do you want beads?’
“She nodded, and I was about
to tell one of the men to go and fetch some from one
of the packs, when she checked me.
“‘A gift from the giver’s
own hand is twice a gift,’ she said, and I thought
that she spoke meaningly.
“‘You mean that you want me to give them
to you myself?’
“‘Surely.’
“I rose to go with her.
’How is it that, being of the Matuku, you speak
in the Zulu tongue?’ I asked suspiciously.
“‘I am not of the Matuku,’
she answered as soon as we were out of hearing of
the men. ’I am of the people of Nala, whose
tribe is the Butiana tribe, and who lives there,’
and she pointed over the mountain. ‘Also
I am one of the wives of Wambe,’ and her eyes
flashed as she said the name.
“‘And how did you come here?’
“‘On my feet,’ she answered laconically.
“We reached the packs, and undoing
one of them, I extracted a handful of beads.
‘Now,’ I said, ‘a gift for a gift.
Hand over the mealies.’
“She took the beads without
even looking at them, which struck me as curious,
and setting the basket of mealies on the ground, emptied
it.
“At the bottom of the basket
were some curiously-shaped green leaves, rather like
the leaves of the gutta-percha tree in shape,
only somewhat thicker and of a more fleshy substance.
As though by hazard, the girl picked one of these
leaves out of the basket and smelt it. Then she
handed it to me. I took the leaf, and supposing
that she wished me to smell it also, was about to
oblige her by doing so, when my eye fell upon some
curious red scratches on the green surface of the leaf.
“‘Ah,’ said the
girl (whose name, by the way, was Maiwa), speaking
beneath her breath, ‘read the signs, white man.’
“Without answering her I continued
to stare at the leaf. It had been scratched or
rather written upon with a sharp tool, such as a nail,
and wherever this instrument had touched it, the acid
juice oozing through the outer skin had turned a rusty
blood colour. Presently I found the beginning
of the scrawl, and read this in English, and covering
the surface of the leaf and of two others that were
in the basket.
“’I hear that a white
man is hunting in the Matuku country. This is
to warn him to fly over the mountain to Nala.
Wambe sends an impi at daybreak to eat him up, because
he has hunted before bringing hongo. For
God’s sake, whoever you are, try to help me.
I have been the slave of this devil Wambe for nearly
seven years, and am beaten and tortured continually.
He murdered all the rest of us, but kept me because
I could work iron. Maiwa, his wife, takes this;
she is flying to Nala her father because Wambe killed
her child. Try to get Nala to attack Wambe; Maiwa
can guide them over the mountain. You won’t
come for nothing, for the stockade of Wambe’s
private kraal is made of elephants’ tusks.
For God’s sake, don’t desert me, or I
shall kill myself. I can bear this no longer.
“‘John Every.’
“‘Great heavens!’
I gasped. ‘Every! why, it must
be my old friend.’ The girl, or rather
the woman Maiwa, pointed to the other side of the leaf,
where there was more writing. It ran thus ’I
have just heard that the white man is called Macumazahn.
If so, it must be my friend Quatermain. Pray
Heaven it is, for I know he won’t desert an old
chum in such a fix as I am. It isn’t that
I’m afraid of dying, I don’t care if I
die, but I want to get a chance at Wambe first.’
“‘No, old boy,’
thought I to myself, ’it isn’t likely that
I am going to leave you there while there is a chance
of getting you out. I have played fox before
now there’s still a double or two
left in me. I must make a plan, that’s
all. And then there’s that stockade of tusks.
I am not going to leave that either.’ Then
I spoke to the woman.
“‘You are called Maiwa?’
“‘It is so.’
“‘You are the daughter of Nala and the
wife of Wambe?’
“‘It is so.’
“‘You fly from Wambe to Nala?’
“‘I do.’
“’Why do you fly?
Stay, I would give an order,’ and
calling to Gobo, I ordered him to get the men ready
for instant departure. The woman, who, as I have
said, was quite young and very handsome, put her hand
into a little pouch made of antelope hide which she
wore fastened round the waist, and to my horror drew
from it the withered hand of a child, which evidently
had been carefully dried in the smoke.
“‘I fly for this cause,’
she answered, holding the poor little hand towards
me. ’See now, I bore a child. Wambe
was its father, and for eighteen months the child
lived and I loved it. But Wambe loves not his
children; he kills them all. He fears lest they
should grow up to slay one so wicked, and he would
have killed this child also, but I begged its life.
One day, some soldiers passing the hut saw the child
and saluted him, calling him the “chief who
soon shall be.” Wambe heard, and was mad.
He smote the babe, and it wept. Then he said that
it should weep for good cause. Among the things
that he had stolen from the white men whom he slew
is a trap that will hold lions. So strong is the
trap that four men must stand on it, two on either
side, before it can be opened.’”
Here old Quatermain broke off suddenly.
“Look here, you fellows,”
he said, “I can’t bear to go on with this
part of the story, because I never could stand either
seeing or talking of the sufferings of children.
You can guess what that devil did, and what the poor
mother was forced to witness. Would you believe
it, she told me the tale without a tremor, in the
most matter-of-fact way. Only I noticed that
her eyelid quivered all the time.
“‘Well,’ I said,
as unconcernedly as though I had been talking of the
death of a lamb, though inwardly I was sick with horror
and boiling with rage, ’and what do you mean
to do about the matter, Maiwa, wife of Wambe?’
“‘I mean to do this, white
man,’ she answered, drawing herself up to her
full height, and speaking in tones as hard as steel
and cold as ice ’I mean to work,
and work, and work, to bring this to pass, and to bring
that to pass, until at length it comes to pass that
with these living eyes I behold Wambe dying the death
that he gave to his child and my child.’
“‘Well said,’ I answered.
“’Ay, well said, Macumazahn,
well said, and not easily forgotten. Who could
forget, oh, who could forget? See where this dead
hand rests against my side; so once it rested when
alive. And now, though it is dead, now every
night it creeps from its nest and strokes my hair and
clasps my fingers in its tiny palm. Every night
it does this, fearing lest I should forget. Oh,
my child! my child! ten days ago I held thee to my
breast, and now this alone remains of thee,’
and she kissed the dead hand and shivered, but never
a tear did she weep.
“‘See now,’ she
went on, ’the white man, the prisoner at Wambe’s
kraal, he was kind to me. He loved the child
that is dead, yes, he wept when its father slew it,
and at the risk of his life told Wambe, my husband ah,
yes, my husband! that which he is!
He too it was who made a plan. He said to me,
“Go, Maiwa, after the custom of thy people, go
purify thyself in the bush alone, having touched a
dead one. Say to Wambe thou goest to purify thyself
alone for fifteen days, according to the custom of
thy people. Then fly to thy father, Nala, and
stir him up to war against Wambe for the sake of the
child that is dead.” This then he said,
and his words seemed good to me, and that same night
ere I left to purify myself came news that a white
man hunted in the country, and Wambe, being mad with
drink, grew very wrath, and gave orders that an impi
should be gathered to slay the white man and his people
and seize his goods. Then did the “Smiter
of Iron” (Every) write the message on the green
leaves, and bid me seek thee out, and show forth the
matter, that thou mightest save thyself by flight;
and behold, this thing have I done, Macumazahn, the
hunter, the Slayer of Elephants.’
“‘Ah,’ I said, ’I
thank you. And how many men be there in the impi
of Wambe?’
“‘A hundred of men and half a hundred.’
“‘And where is the impi?’
“’There to the north.
It follows on thy spoor. I saw it pass yesterday,
but myself I guessed that thou wouldst be nigher to
the mountain, and came this way, and found thee.
To-morrow at the daybreak the slayers will be here.’
“‘Very possibly,’
I thought to myself; ’but they won’t find
Macumazahn. I have half a mind to put some strychnine
into the carcases of those elephants for their especial
benefit though.’ I knew that they would
stop to eat the elephants, as indeed they did, to our
great gain, but I abandoned the idea of poisoning
them, because I was rather short of strychnine.”
“Or because you did not like
to play the trick, Quatermain?” I suggested
with a laugh.
“I said because I had not enough
strychnine. It would take a great deal of strychnine
to poison three elephants effectually,” answered
the old gentleman testily.
I said nothing further, but I smiled,
knowing that old Allan could never have resorted to
such an artifice, however severe his strait. But
that was his way; he always made himself out to be
a most unmerciful person.
“Well,” he went on, “at
that moment Gobo came up and announced that we were
ready to march. ‘I am glad that you are
ready,’ I said, ’because if you don’t
march, and march quick, you will never march again,
that is all. Wambe has an impi out to kill us,
and it will be here presently.’
“Gobo turned positively green,
and his knees knocked together. ’Ah, what
did I say?’ he exclaimed. ‘Fate walks
about loose in Wambe’s country.’
“’Very good; now all you
have to do is to walk a little quicker than he does.
No, no, you don’t leave those elephant tusks
behind I am not going to part with them
I can tell you.’
“Gobo said no more, but hastily
directed the men to take up their loads, and then
asked which way we were to run.
“‘Ah,’ I said to Maiwa, ‘which
way?’
“‘There,’ she answered,
pointing towards the great mountain spur which towered
up into the sky some forty miles away, separating the
territories of Nala and Wambe ’there,
below that small peak, is one place where men may
pass, and one only. Also it can easily be blocked
from above. If men pass not there, then they must
go round the great peak of the mountain, two days’
journey and half a day.’
“‘And how far is the peak from us?’
“’All to-night shall you
walk and all to-morrow, and if you walk fast, at sunset
you shall stand on the peak.’
“I whistled, for that meant
a five-and-forty miles trudge without sleep.
Then I called to the men to take each of them as much
cooked elephant’s meat as he could carry conveniently.
I did the same myself, and forced the woman Maiwa
to eat some as we went. This I did with difficulty,
for at that time she seemed neither to sleep nor eat
nor rest, so fiercely was she set on vengeance.
“Then we started, Maiwa guiding
us. After going for a half-hour over gradually
rising ground, we found ourselves on the further edge
of a great bush-clad depression something like the
bottom of a lake. This depression, through which
we had been travelling, was covered with bush to a
very great extent, indeed almost altogether so, except
where it was pitted with glades such as that wherein
I had shot the elephants.
“At the top of this slope Maiwa
halted, and putting her hand over her eyes looked
back. Presently she touched me on the arm and
pointed across the sea of forest towards a comparatively
vacant space of country some six or seven miles away.
I looked, and suddenly I saw something flash in the
red rays of the setting sun. A pause, and then
another quick flash.
“‘What is it?’ I asked.
“‘It is the spears of
Wambe’s impi, and they travel fast,’ she
answered coolly.
“I suppose that my face showed
how little I liked the news, for she went on
“’Fear not; they will
stay to feast upon the elephants, and while they feast
we shall journey. We may yet escape.’
“After that we turned and pushed
on again, till at length it grew so dark that we had
to wait for the rising of the moon, which lost us
time, though it gave us rest. Fortunately none
of the men had seen that ominous flashing of the spears;
if they had, I doubt if even I could have kept control
of them. As it was, they travelled faster than
I had ever known loaded natives to go before, so thorough-paced
was their desire to see the last of Wambe’s
country. I, however, took the precaution to march
last of all, fearing lest they should throw away their
loads to lighten themselves, or, worse still, the tusks;
for these kind of fellows would be capable of throwing
anything away if their own skins were at stake.
If the pious AEneas, whose story you were reading
to me the other night, had been a mongrel Delagoa Bay
native, Anchises would have had a poor chance of getting
out of Troy, that is, if he was known to have made
a satisfactory will.
“At moonrise we set out again,
and with short occasional halts travelled till dawn,
when we were forced to rest and eat. Starting
once more, about half-past five, we crossed the river
at noon. Then began the long toilsome ascent
through thick bush, the same in which I shot the bull
buffalo, only some twenty miles to the west of that
spot, and not more than twenty-five miles on the hither
side of Wambe’s kraal. There were
six or seven miles of this dense bush, and hard work
it was to get through it. Next came a belt of
scattered forest which was easier to pass, though,
in revenge, the ground was steeper. This was about
two miles wide, and we passed it by about four in
the afternoon. Above this scattered bush lay
a long steep slope of boulder-strewn ground, which
ran up to the foot of the little peak some three miles
away. As we emerged, footsore and weary, on to
this inhospitable plain, some of the men looking round
caught sight of the spears of Wambe’s impi advancing
rapidly not more than a mile behind us.
“At first there was a panic,
and the bearers tried to throw off their loads and
run, but I harangued them, calling out to them that
certainly I would shoot the first man who did so and
that if they would but trust in me I would bring them
through the mess. Now, ever since I had killed
those three elephants single-handed, I had gained great
influence over these men, and they listened to me.
So off we went as hard as ever we could go the
members of the Alpine Club would not have been in it
with us. We made the boulders burn, as a Frenchman
would say.
“When we had done about a mile
the spears began to emerge from the belt of scattered
bush, and the whoop of their bearers as they viewed
us broke upon our ears. Quick as our pace had
been before, it grew much quicker now, for terror
lent wings to my gallant crew. But they were
sorely tired, and the loads were heavy, so that run,
or rather climb, as we would, Wambe’s soldiers,
a scrubby-looking lot of men armed with big spears
and small shields, but without plumes, climbed considerably
faster. The last mile of that pleasing chase was
like a fox hunt, we being the fox, and always in view.
What astonished me was the extraordinary endurance
and activity shown by Maiwa. She never even flagged.
I think that girl’s muscles must have been made
of iron, or perhaps it was the strength of her will
that supported her. At any rate she reached the
foot of the peak second, poor Gobo, who was an excellent
hand at running away, being first.
“Presently I came up panting,
and glanced at the ascent. Before us was a wall
of rock about one hundred and fifty feet in height,
upon which the strata were laid so as to form a series
of projections sufficiently resembling steps to make
the ascent easy, comparatively speaking, except at
one spot, where it was necessary to climb over a projecting
angle of cliff and bear a little to the left.
It was not a really difficult place, but what made
it awkward was, that immediately beneath this projection
gaped a deep fissure or donga, on the brink of which
we now stood, originally dug out, no doubt, by the
rush of water from the peak and cliff. This gulf
beneath would be trying to the nerves of a weak-headed
climber at the critical point, and so it proved in
the result. The projecting angle once passed,
the remainder of the ascent was very simple.
At the summit, however, the brow of the cliff hung
over and was pierced by a single narrow path cut through
it by water, in such fashion that a single boulder
rolled into it at the top would make the cliff quite
impassable to men without ropes.
“At this moment Wambe’s
soldiers were about a thousand yards from us, so it
was evident that we had no time to lose. I at
once ordered the men to commence the ascent, the girl
Maiwa, who was familiar with the pass, going first
to show them the way. Accordingly they began to
mount with alacrity, pushing and lifting their loads
in front of them. When the first of them, led
by Maiwa, reached the projecting angle, they put down
their loads upon a ledge of rock and clambered over.
Once there, by lying on their stomachs upon a boulder,
they could reach the loads which were held to them
by the men beneath, and in this way drag them over
the awkward place, whence they were carried easily
to the top.
“But all of this took time,
and meanwhile the soldiers were coming up fast, screaming
and brandishing their big spears. They were now
within about four hundred yards, and several loads,
together with all the tusks, had yet to be got over
the rock. I was still standing at the bottom
of the cliff, shouting directions to the men above,
but it occurred to me that it would soon be time to
move. Before doing so, however, I thought that
it might be well to try and produce a moral effect
upon the advancing enemy. In my hand I held a
Winchester repeating carbine, but the distance was
too great for me to use it with effect, so I turned
to Gobo, who was shivering with terror at my side,
and handing him the carbine, took my express from him.
“The enemy was now about three
hundred and fifty yards away, and the express was
only sighted to three hundred. Still I knew that
it could be trusted for the extra fifty yards.
Running in front of Wambe’s soldiers were two
men captains, I suppose one of
them very tall. I put up the three hundred yard
flap, and sitting down with my back against the rock,
I drew a long breath to steady myself, and covered
the tall man, giving him a full sight. Feeling
that I was on him, I pulled, and before the sound
of the striking bullet could reach my ears, I saw the
man throw up his arms and pitch forward on to his
head. His companion stopped dead, giving me a
fair chance. I rapidly covered him, and fired
the left barrel. He turned round once, and then
sank down in a heap. This caused the enemy to
hesitate they had never seen men killed
at such a distance before, and thought that there
was something uncanny about the performance.
Taking advantage of the lull, I gave the express back
to Gobo, and slinging the Winchester repeater over
my back I began to climb the cliff.
“When we reached the projecting
angle all the loads were over, but the tusks still
had to be passed up, and owing to their weight and
the smoothness of their surface, this was a very difficult
task. Of course I ought to have abandoned the
tusks; often and often have I since reproached myself
for not doing so. Indeed, I think that my obstinacy
about them was downright sinful, but I was always obstinate
about such things, and I could not bear the idea of
leaving those splendid tusks which had cost me so
much pains and danger to come by. Well, it nearly
cost me my life also, and did cost poor Gobo his, as
will be seen shortly, to say nothing of the loss inflicted
by my rifle on the enemy. When I reached the
projection I found that the men, with their usual
stupidity, were trying to hand up the tusks point first.
Now the result of this was that those above had nothing
to grip except the round polished surface of the ivory,
and in the position in which they were, this did not
give them sufficient hold to enable them to lift the
weight. I told them to reverse the tusks and push
them up, so that the rough and hollow ends came to
the hands of the men above. This they did, and
the first two were dragged up in safety.
“At this point, looking behind
me, I saw the Matukus streaming up the slope in a
rough extended order, and not more than a hundred yards
away. Cocking the Winchester I turned and opened
fire on them. I don’t quite know how many
I missed, but I do know that I never shot better in
my life. I had to keep shifting myself from one
enemy to the other, firing almost without getting
a sight, that is, by the eye alone, after the fashion
of the experts who break glass balls. But quick
as the work was, men fell thick, and by the time that
I had emptied the carbine of its twelve cartridges,
for the moment the advance was checked. I rapidly
pushed in some more cartridges, and hardly had I done
so when the enemy, seeing that we were about to escape
them altogether, came on once more with a tremendous
yell. By this time the two halves of the single
tusk of the great bull alone remained to be passed
up. I fired and fired as effectively as before,
but notwithstanding all that I could do, some men
escaped my hail of bullets and began to ascend the
cliff. Presently my rifle was again empty.
I slung it over my back, and, drawing my revolver,
turned to run for it, the attackers being now quite
close. As I did so, a spear struck the cliff
close to my head.
“The last half of the tusk was
now vanishing over the rock, and I sung out to Gobo
and the other man who had been pushing it up to vanish
after it. Gobo, poor fellow, required no second
invitation; indeed, his haste was his undoing.
He went at the projecting rock with a bound. The
end of the tusk was still hanging over, and instead
of grasping the rock he caught at it. It twisted
in his hand he slipped he fell;
with one wild shriek he vanished into the abyss beneath,
his falling body brushing me as it passed. For
a moment we stood aghast, and presently the dull thud
of his fall smote heavily upon our ears. Poor
fellow, he had met the Fate which, as he declared,
walked about loose in Wambe’s country. Then
with an oath the remaining man sprung at the rock and
clambered over it in safety. Aghast at the awfulness
of what had happened, I stood still, till I saw the
great blade of a Matuku spear pass up between my feet.
That brought me to my senses, and I began to clamber
up the rock like a cat. I was half way round
it. Already I had clasped the hand of that brave
girl Maiwa, who came down to help me, the men having
scrambled forward with the ivory, when I felt some
one seize my ankle.
“‘Pull, Maiwa, pull,’
I gasped, and she certainly did pull. Maiwa was
a very muscular woman, and never before did I appreciate
the advantages of the physical development of females
so keenly. She tugged at my left arm, the savage
below tugged at my right leg, till I began to realize
that something must give way ere long. Luckily
I retained my presence of mind, like the man who threw
his mother-in-law out of the window, and carried the
mattress down-stairs, when a fire broke out in his
house. My right hand was still free, and in it
I held my revolver, which was secured to my wrist
by a leather thong. The pistol was cocked, and
I simply pointed it downwards and fired. The
result was instantaneous and so far as
I am concerned, most satisfactory. The bullet
hit the man beneath me somewhere, I am sure I don’t
know where; at any rate, he let go of my leg and plunged
headlong into the gulf beneath to join Gobo. In
another moment I was on the top of the rock, and going
up the remaining steps like a lamplighter. A
single other soldier appeared in pursuit, but one
of my boys at the top fired my elephant gun at him.
I don’t know if he hit him or only frightened
him; at any rate, he vanished whence he came.
I do know, however, that he very nearly hit me,
for I felt the wind of the bullet.
“Another thirty seconds, and
I and the woman Maiwa were at the top of the cliff
panting, but safe.
“My men, being directed thereto
by Maiwa, had most fortunately rolled up some big
boulders which lay about, and with these we soon managed
to block the passage through the overhanging ridge
of rock in such fashion that the soldiers below could
not possibly climb over it. Indeed, so far as
I could see, they did not even try to do so their
heart was turned to fat, as the Zulus say.
“Then having rested a few moments
we took up the loads, including the tusks of ivory
that had cost us so dear, and in silence marched on
for a couple of miles or more, till we reached a patch
of dense bush. And here, being utterly exhausted,
we camped for the night, taking the precaution, however,
of setting a guard to watch against any attempt at
surprise.”