He waited for a little while, and then gave orders for
more food to be placed on the ground.
“Poor devil!” said Sanders, and gave the order to march. He himself had
taken half a dozen steps, when he stopped. At his feet something
glittered in the fading light. He stooped and picked it up. It was an
exploded cartridge. He examined it carefully, smelt it–it had been
recently fired. Then he found another. They were Lee-Metford, and bore
the mark “07,” which meant that they were less than a year old.
He was still standing with the little brass cylinders in his band, when
Abiboo came to him.
“Master,” said the Houssa, “who ties monkeys to trees with ropes?”
“Is that a riddle?” asked Sanders testily, for his mind was busy on this
matter of cartridges.
Abiboo for answer beckoned him.
Fifty yards from the hut was a tree, at the foot of which, whimpering and
chattering and in a condition of abject terror, were two small black
monkeys tethered by ropes.
They spat and grinned ferociously as Sanders approached them. He looked
from the cartridges to the monkeys and back to the cartridges again, then
he began searching the grass. He found two more empty shells and a
rusting lancet, such as may be found in the pocket-case of any explorer.
Then he walked back to the hut before which the fire burnt, and called
softly–“Mr Cuthbert!” There was no answer, and Sanders called again–“Mr
Cuthbert!”
From the interior of the hut came a groan.
“Leave me alone. I have come here to die!” said a muffled voice.
“Come out and be civil,” said Sanders coolly; “you can die afterwards.”
After a few moments’ delay there issued from the door of the hut the
wreck of a man, with long hair and a month-old beard, who stood sulkily
before the Commissioner.
“Might I ask,” said Sanders, “what your little game is?”
The other shook his head wearily. He was a pitiable sight. His clothes
were in tatters; he was unwashed and grimy.
“Sleeping sickness,” he said wearily. “Felt it coming on–seen what
horrible thing it was–didn’t want to be a burden. Oh, my God! What a
fool I’ve been to come to this filthy country!”
“That’s very likely,” said Sanders. “But who told you that you had
sleeping sickness?”
“Know it–know it,” said the listless man.
“Sit down,” said Sanders. The other obeyed, and Sanders applied the
superficial tests.
“If you’ve got sleeping sickness,” said Sanders, after the examination,
“I’m suffering from religious mania–man, you’re crazy!”
Yet there was something in Cuthbert’s expression that was puzzling. He
was dull, heavy, and stupid. His movements were slow and lethargic.
Sanders watched him as he pulled a black wooden pipe from his ragged
pocket, and with painful slowness charged it from a skin pouch.”
“It’s got me, I tell you,” muttered Cuthbert, and lit the pipe with a
blazing twig from the fire. “I knew it (puff) as soon as that fellow
Torrington (puff) described the symptoms (puff);–felt dull and
sleepy–got a couple of monkeys and injected my blood (puff)–they went
drowsy, too–sure sign–“
“Where did you get that tobacco from?” demanded Sanders quickly.
Cuthbert took time to consider his answer.
“Fellow gave it me–chief fellow, Bosambo. Native tobacco, but not
bad–he gave me a devil of a lot.”
“So I should say,” said Sanders, and reaching over took the pouch and put
it in his pocket.
When Sanders had seen Mr Cuthbert safe on board a homeward-bound steamer,
he took his twenty Houssas to the Ochori country to arrest Bosambo, and
expected Bosambo would fly; but the imperturbable chief awaited his
coming, and offered him the customary honours.
“I admit I gave the white man the hemp,” he said. “I myself smoke it,
suffering no ill. How was I to know that it would make him sleep?”
“Why did you give it him?” demanded Sanders.
Bosambo looked the Commissioner full in the face.
“Last moon you came, lord, asking why I gave him the Isisi country and
the rights of the little river, because these were not mine to give. Now
you come to me saying why did I give the white man native tobacco–Lord,
that was the only thing I gave him that was mine.”
Sanders of the River (1911)
CHAPTER V - The Special Commissioner
The Hon. George Tackle had the good fortune to be the son of his father;
otherwise I am free to confess he had no claim to distinction. But his
father, being the proprietor of the Courier and Echo (with which are
incorporated I don’t know how many dead and gone stars of the Fleet
Street firmament), George had a “pull” which no amount of competitive
merit could hope to contend with, and when the stories of atrocities in
the district of Lukati began to leak out and questions were asked in
Parliament, George opened his expensively-bound Gazetteer, discovered
that the district of Lukati was in British territory, and instantly
demanded that he should be sent out to investigate these crimes, which
were a blot upon our boasted civilization.
His father agreed, having altogether a false appreciation of his son’s
genius, and suggested that George should go to the office and ‘get all
the facts’ regarding the atrocities. George, with a good-natured smile of
amusement at the bare thought of anybody instructing him in a subject on
which he was so thoroughly conversant, promised; but the Courier and Echo
office did not see him, and the librarian of the newspaper, who had
prepared a really valuable dossier of newspaper cuttings, pamphlets,
maps, and health hints for the young man’s guidance, was dismayed to
learn that the confident youth had sailed without any further instruction
in the question than a man might secure from the hurried perusal of the
scraps which from day to day appeared in the morning press.
As a special correspondent, I adduce, with ill-suppressed triumph, the
case of the Hon. George Tackle as an awful warning to all newspaper
proprietors who allow their parental affections to overcome their good
judgment.
All that the Hon. George knew was that at Lukati there had been four well
authenticated cases of barbarous acts of cruelty against natives, and
that the Commissioner of the district was responsible for the whippings
and the torture. He thought, did the Hon.
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