“Well, major, what are your
orders for the day?” asked Tom Brown one fine
morning after breakfast, while they were enjoying their
usual pipe under the shade of a large umbrageous tree.
“You’d better try the
river that we have just come to,” said the major.
“Do you think me amphibious,
that you should always assign me that work?”
asked Tom.
“Not exactly, Tom, but I know
you are fond of telling fibs, and perhaps the amphibious
animals may afford you some scope in that way.
At all events they are capable of such astonishing
feats that if you merely relate the truth about them
you will be sure to get credit in England for telling
fibs like poor Mungo Park, who was laughed
at all his life for a notorious drawer of the long-bow,
although there never was a more truthful man.”
“People won’t judge us
so harshly, major,” said Wilkins; “for
so many African travellers have corroborated Mungo
Park’s stories that the truth is pretty well
known and believed by people of average education.
But pray is it your lordship’s pleasure that
I should accompany Tom? You know he cannot take
care of himself, and no one of the party can act so
powerfully as a check on his inveterate propensity
to inordinate smoking as myself.”
“You must have studied Johnson’s
dictionary very closely in your boyhood,” said
Tom, puffing a prolonged cloud as a termination to
the sentence.
“But, major, if you do condemn
me to his company, please let us have Mafuta again,
for Wilkins and I are like two uncongenial stones,
and he acts as lime to keep us together.”
“Don’t you think that
Hicks had better be consulted before we make arrangements?”
suggested Pearson.
“Hear, hear,” cried Ogilvie;
“and I should like to know what is to be done
with Brand and Anson, for they are both very much down
with fever of some sort this morning.”
“Leave Jumbo with them,”
said Tom Brown; “he’s better at nursing
than hunting. By the way, was it not he who
nursed the native that died last night in the kraal?”
“It was, and they say he killed
the poor nigger by careless treatment,” said
Pearson.
“What nigger do you refer to?” asked Ogilvie.
“The one who died but,
I forgot, you were out after that hyena when it happened,
and so I suppose have not heard of it,” said
Pearson. “We had a funeral in the village
over there last night, and they say that our fellow
Jumbo, who it seems was once a friend of the sick man,
offered to sit up with him last night. There
is a rumour that he was an enemy of Jumbo’s,
and that our cowardly scoundrel made this offer in
order to have an opportunity of killing him in a quiet
way. Hicks even goes the length of saying he
is sure that Jumbo killed him, for when he saw the
sick man last he was under the impression what he had
got the turn, and gave him a powder that would have
been certain to cure ”
“Or kill,” interrupted
Tom Brown; “I’ve no faith in Hicks’s
skill as a practitioner.”
“Of course not,” said
Wilkins, “proverbial philosophy asserts and
requires that doctors should disagree.”
“Be that as it may,” continued
Pearson, “the native did die and was buried,
so that’s an end of him, and yonder sits Jumbo
eating his breakfast at the camp-fire as if he had
done a most virtuous action. The fact is, I don’t
believe the reports. I cannot believe that poor
Jumbo, coward though he is, would be guilty of such
an act.”
“Perhaps not,” said the
major, rising, “but there’s no possibility
of settling the question now, and here comes Hicks,
so I’ll go and make arrangements with him about
the day’s proceedings.”
“They have a primitive mode
of conducting funerals here,” said Tom Brown
when the major had left. “I happened to
be up at the kraal currying favour with the chief
man, for he has the power of bothering us a good deal
if he chooses, and I observed what they did with this
same dead man. I saw that he was very low as
I passed the hut where he lay, and stopped to look
on. His breath was very short, and presently
he fell into what either might have been a profound
sleep, or a swoon, or death; I could not be quite
sure which, not being used to black fellows.
I would have examined the poor man, but the friends
kicked up a great row and shoved me off. Before
the breath could have been well out of his body, they
hoisted him up and carried him away to burial.
I followed out of mere curiosity, and found that
the lazy rascals had shoved the body into an ant-eater’s
hole in order to save the trouble of digging a grave.”
While Tom and his friends were thus
conversing over their pipes, their attention was attracted
by a peculiar cry or howl of terror, such as they
had never heard from any animal of those regions.
Starting up they instinctively grasped their guns
and looked about them. The utterer of the cry
was soon obvious in the person of Jumbo, who had leaped
up suddenly overturning his breakfast in
the act and stood gazing before him with
his eyes starting out of their sockets, his teeth rattling
together like a pair of castanets, his limbs quivering,
and in fact his whole person displaying symptoms of
the most abject terror of which the human frame is
capable.
The major and Hicks, who stood not
far from him, were both unusually pale in the face,
as they gazed motionless before them.
The fixedness of their looks directed
the eyes of Tom Brown and his comrades towards a neighbouring
thicket, where they beheld an object that was well
calculated to inspire dread. It appeared to be
a living skeleton covered with a black skin of the
most ghastly appearance, and came staggering towards
them like a drunken man. As it drew nearer Jumbo’s
limbs trembled more and more violently and his face
became of a leaden blue colour. At last he became
desperate, turned round, dashed right through the
embers of the fire, and fled wildly from the spot with
a howl that ended in a shriek of terror.
“No wonder he’s terrified,”
observed Tom Brown to his alarmed comrades; “I
felt more than half certain the nigger was not dead
last night, and now it is beyond question that they
had buried him alive. Jumbo evidently thinks
it’s his ghost!”
“Won’t he give
his friend a fright?” said Wilkins, on observing
that the poor man went staggering on in the direction
of the kraal.
“He will,” said Hicks,
laughing; “but they’ll make up for their
haste by taking good care of him now. I declare
I thought for a moment or two that it was a real ghost!
Come now, gentlemen, if you want good sport you’ve
got the chance before you to-day. The last party
that passed this way left an old boat on the river.
I dare say it won’t be very leaky. Some
of you had better take it and go after the ’potimusses.
There’s plenty of buffalo and elephants in this
region also, and the natives are anxious to have a
dash at them along with you. Divide yourselves
as you choose, and I’ll go up to make arrangements
with the old chief.”
In accordance with the trader’s
advice the party was divided. Tom Brown, Wilkins,
and Mafuta, as on a former occasion, determined to
stick together and take to the boat. The others,
under the major, went with Hicks and the natives after
elephants.
“Another capital stream,”
remarked Tom to his companion as they emerged from
the bushes on the banks of a broad river, the surface
of which was dotted here and there with log-like hippopotami,
some of which were floating quietly, while others
plunged about in the water.
“Capital!” exclaimed Wilkins,
“now for the boat! According to directions
we must walk upstream till we find it.”
As they advanced, they came suddenly
on one of the largest crocodiles they had yet seen.
It was lying sound asleep on a mud-bank, not dreaming,
doubtless, of the daring bipeds who were about to disturb
its repose.
“Hallo!” exclaimed Wilkins,
cocking and levelling his gun, “what a splendid
chance!”
It was indeed a splendid chance, for
the brute was twenty feet long at least; the rugged
knobs of its thick hide showed here and there through
a coat of mud with which it was covered, and its partially
open jaws displayed a row of teeth that might have
made the lion himself shrink. The mud had partially
dried in the sun, so that the monster, as it lay sprawling,
might have been mistaken for a dead carcass, had not
a gentle motion about the soft parts of his body given
evidence of life.
Before Wilkins could pull the trigger,
Mafuta seized him by the arm with a powerful grip.
“Hold on!” he cried with
a look of intense anxiety, “what you go do?
Fright all de ’potimus away for dis yer
crackodl. Oh fy! go away.”
“That’s true, Bob,”
said Tom Brown, who, although he had prepared to fire
in case of need, intended to have allowed his friend
to take the first shot; “’twould be a
pity to lose our chance of a sea-cow, which is good
for food, for the sake of a monster which at the best
could only give us a fine specimen-head for a museum,
for his entire body is too big to haul about through
the country after us.”
Well, be it so, said Wilkins, somewhat
disappointed, “but I’m determined to kick
him up anyhow.”
Saying this he advanced towards the
brute, but again the powerful hand of Mafuta seized
him.
“What you do? want git kill
altogidder? You is a fool! (the black had lost
temper a little). Him got nuff strong in hims
tail to crack off de legs of ’oo like stem-pipes.
Yis, kom back?”
Wilkins felt a strong tendency to
rebel, and the Caffre remonstrated in so loud a voice
that the crocodile awoke with a start, and immediately
convinced the obstinate hunter that he had at least
been saved broken bones by Mafuta, for he never in
his life before had seen anything like the terrific
whirl that he gave his tail, as he dashed into the
water some fifteen yards ahead. Almost immediately
afterwards he turned round, and there, floating like
a log on the stream, took a cool survey of the disturbers
of his morning’s repose!
“It’s hard to refuse such
an impudent invitation to do one’s worst,”
said Wilkins, again raising his gun.
“No, you mustn’t,”
cried Tom Brown, grasping his friend’s arm; “come
along, I see the bow of the boat among the rushes not
far ahead of us, and yonder is a hippopotamus, or
sea-cow as they call it here, waiting to be shot.”
Without further delay they embarked
in the boat, which, though small, was found to be
sufficiently tight, and rowed off towards the spot
where the hippopotamus had been seen. Presently
his blunt ungainly head rose within ten feet of them.
Wilkins got such a start that he tripped over one
of the thwarts in trying to take aim, and nearly upset
the boat. He recovered himself, however, in
a moment, and fired sending a ball into
the brute which just touched the brain and stunned
it. He then fired his second barrel, and while
he was loading Tom put two more balls into it.
It proved hard to kill, however, for they fired alternately,
and put sixteen bullets seven to the pound into
different parts of its head before they succeeded
in killing it.
They towed their prize to the shore,
intending to land and secure it, when a calf hippopotamus
shoved its blunt nose out of the water close at hand,
gazed stupidly at them and snorted. Tom at once
shot it in the head, and it commenced to bellow lustily.
Instantly the mother’s head cleft the surface
of the water as she came up to the rescue and rushed
at the boat, the gunwale of which she seized in her
mouth and pulled it under.
“Quick!” shouted Tom,
as he fired his second barrel into her ear.
Wilkins did not require to be urged,
as the water was flowing into the boat like a deluge.
He delivered both shots into her almost simultaneously,
and induced her to let go! Another shot from
Tom in the back of her neck entered the spine and
killed her.
By this time a large band of natives
had collected, and were gazing eagerly on the proceedings.
They had come down from the kraal to enjoy the
sport and get some of the meat, of which they are particularly
fond. They were not disappointed in their expectations,
for the hippopotami were very numerous in that place,
and the sportsmen shot well. Four other animals
fell before their deadly guns before another hour had
passed, and as the bay was shallow the natives waded
in to drag them ashore.
This was a very amusing scene, because
crocodiles were so numerous that it was only possible
for them to accomplish the work safely by entering
the water together in large numbers, with inconceivable
noise, yelling and splashing, in order to scare them
away. They would not have ventured in singly,
or in small numbers, on any account whatever; but on
the present occasion, being numerous, they were very
courageous, and joining hands, so as to form a line
from the shore to the floating animals, soon dragged
them out.
As the carcasses belonged to Hicks
the trader, these black fellows knew well enough that
they were not at liberty to do with them as they pleased,
so they waited as patiently as they could for the glorious
feast which they fondly hoped was in store for them.
When the sportsmen at last landed
to look after their game, they found four fine sea-cows
and the calf drawn up on the banks, side by side,
with upwards of a hundred Caffres gazing at them longingly!
Nothing could be more courteous than the behaviour
of these savages when Mafuta cut off such portions
as his party required; but no sooner was the remainder
of the spoil handed over to them than there ensued
a scene of indescribable confusion. They rushed
at the carcasses like vultures, with assegais, knives,
sticks, and axes, hallooing, bellowing, shoving, and
fighting, in a manner that would have done credit to
the wildest of the wild beasts by which they were
surrounded! Yet there was a distinct sense of
justice among them. It was indeed a desperate
fight to obtain possession, but no one attempted to
dispossess another of what he had been fortunate enough
to secure. The strongest savages got at the
carcasses first, and cut off large lumps, which they
hurled to their friends outside the struggling circle.
These caught the meat thus thrown, and ran with it,
each to a separate heap, on which he deposited his
piece and left it in perfect security.
In order to introduce a little more
fair play, however, for the benefit of the weaker
brethren, Mafuta dashed in among them with a terrible
sjambok, or whip, of rhinoceros hide, which he laid
about him with wonderful effect. In a very short
time the whole of the meat was disposed of, not a
scrap being left large enough to satisfy the cravings
of the smallest conceivable crocodile that ever dwelt
in that river!
The effects of this upon the native
mind was immediate and satisfactory. That night
the sportsmen received from the kraal large
and gratifying gifts of eggs, bread, rice, beer, pumpkins,
and all the produce of the land.
But we must not forestall. Before
these dainties were enjoyed that night the other members
of the expedition had to come in with the result of
their day’s hunt. Let us therefore turn
for a little to follow their footsteps.