“Go, now, and tell the king to come–for
I am his friend.”
The regent departed, but returned again alone. “Lord, he will not come,”
he said sullenly.
“Then I will go to him,” said Sanders.
King Peter, sitting before his hut, greeted Mr Commissioner with downcast
eyes, Sanders’ soldiers, spread in a semi-circle before the hut, kept the
rabble at bay.
“King,” said Sanders–he carried in his hand a rattan cane of familiar
shape, and as he spoke he whiffled it in the air, making a little humming
noise–“stand up!”
“Wherefore?” said Sato-Koto.
“That you shall see,” said Sanders.
The king rose reluctantly, and Sanders grabbed him by the scruff of his
neck.
Swish!
The cane caught him most undesirably, and he sprang into the air with a
yell.
Swish, swish, swish!
Yelling and dancing, throwing out wild hands to ward off the punishment,
King Peter blubbered for mercy.
“Master!” Sato-Koto, his face distorted with rage, reached for his spear.
“Shoot that man if he interferes,” said Sanders, without releasing the
king, The regent saw the levelled rifles and stepped back hastily, “Now,”
said Sanders, throwing down the cane, “now we will play a little game.”
“Wow-wow-oh, ko!” sobbed his majesty.
“I go back to the forest,” said Sanders. “By and by a messenger shall
come to you, saying that the Commissioner is on his way. Do you
understand?”
“Yi-hi!” sobbed the king.
“Then will you go out with your councillors and your old men and await my
coming according to custom. Is that clear?”
“Ye-es, master,” whimpered the boy.
“Very good,” said Sanders, and withdrew his troops.
In half an hour came a grave messenger to the king, and the court went
out to the little hill to welcome the white man, This was the beginning
of King Peter’s education, for thus was he taught obedience.
Sanders went into residence in the town of Isisi, and held court,
“Sato-Koto,” he said on the second day, “do you know the village of
Ikan?”
“Yes, master; it is two days’ journey into the bush.”
Sanders nodded. “You will take your wives, your children, your servants,
and your possessions to the village of Ikan, there to stay until I give
you leave to return. The palaver is finished.”
Next came the chief of the Akasava, very ill at ease. “Lord, if any man
says I did you wrong, he lies,” said the chief.
“Then I am a liar!” said Sanders. “For I say that you are an evil man,
full of cunning.”
“If it should be,” said the chief, “that you order me to go to my village
as you have ordered Sato-Koto, I will go, since he who is my father is
not pleased with me.”
“That I order,” said Sanders; “also, twenty strokes with a stick, for the
good of your soul. Furthermore, I would have you remember that down by
Tembeli on the great river there is a village where men labour in chains
because they have been unfaithful to the Government and have practised
abominations.” So the chief of the Akasava people went out to punishment.
There were other matters requiring adjustment, but they were of a minor
character, and when these were all settled to the satisfaction of
Sanders, but by no means to the satisfaction of the subjects, the
Commissioner turned his attention to the further education of the king.
“Peter,” he said, “tomorrow when the sun comes up I go back to my own
village, leaving you without councillors.”
“Master, how may I do without councillors, since I am a young boy?” asked
the king, crestfallen and chastened.
“By saying to yourself when a man calls for justice: ‘If I were this man
how should I desire the king’s justice?’”
The boy looked unhappy. “I am very young,” he repeated; “and today there
come many from outlying villages seeking redress against their enemies.”
“Very good,” said Sanders. “Today I will sit at the king’s right hand and
learn of his wisdom.” The boy stood on one leg in his embarrassment, and
eyed Sanders askance.
There is a hillock behind the town. A worn path leads up to it, and atop
is a thatched hut without sides. From this hillock you see the broad
river with its sandy shoals, where the crocodiles sleep with open mouth;
you see the rising ground toward Akasava, hills that rise one on top of
the other, covered with a tangle of vivid green. In this house sits the
king in judgment, beckoning the litigants forward. Sato-Koto was wont to
stand by the king, bartering justice. Today Sato-Koto was preparing to
depart and Sanders sat by the king’s side.
There were indeed many litigants.
There was a man who had bought a wife, giving no less than a thousand
rods and two bags of salt for her. He had lived for three months with
her, when she departed from his house.
“Because,” said the man philosophically, “she had a lover. Therefore,
Mighty Sun of Wisdom, I desire the return of my rods and my salt.”
“What say you?” said Sanders.
The king wriggled uncomfortably.
“What says the father?” he said hesitatingly, and Sanders nodded.
“That is a wise question,” he approved, and called the father, a voluble
and an eager old man.
“Now, king,” he said hurriedly, “I sold this woman, my daughter; how
might I know her mind? Surely I fulfil my contract when the woman goes to
the man. How shall a father control when a husband fails?” Sanders looked
at the king again, and the boy drew a long breath.
“It would seem, M’bleni, that the woman, your daughter, lived many years
in your hut, and if you do not know her mind you are either a great fool
or she is a cunning one. Therefore, I judge that you sold this woman
knowing her faults. Yet the husband might accept some risk also. You
shall take back your daughter and return 500 rods and a bag of salt, and
if it should be that your daughter marries again, you shall pay one-half
of her dowry to this man.” Very, very slowly he gave judgment,
hesitatingly, anxiously, glancing now and again to the white man for his
approval.
“That was good,” said Sanders, and called forward another pleader.
“Lord king,” said the new plaintiff, “a man has put an evil curse on me
and my family, so that they sicken.” Here was a little poser for the
little judge, and he puzzled the matter out in silence, Sanders offering
no help.
“How does he curse you?” at last asked the king.
“With the curse of death,” said the complainant in a hushed voice.
“Then you shall curse him also,” said the king, “and it shall be a
question of whose curse is the stronger.” Sanders grinned behind his
hand, and the king, seeing the smile, smiled also.
From here onward Peter’s progress was a rapid one, and there came to
headquarters from time to time stories of a young king who was a Solomon
in judgment.
So wise he was (who knew of the formula he applied to each case?), so
beneficent, so peaceable, that the chief of the Akasava, from whom was
periodically due, took advantage of the gentle administration, and sent
neither corn nor fish nor grain. He did this after a journey to faraway
Ikan, where he met the king’s uncle, Sato-Koto, and agreed upon common
action. Since the crops were good, the king passed the first fault, but
the second tribute became due, and neither Akasava nor Ikan sent, and the
people of Isisi, angry at the insolence, murmured, and the king sat down
in the loneliness of his hut to think upon a course which was just and
effective.
* * * * *
“I really am sorry to bother you,” wrote Sanders to the Administrator
again, “but I shall have to borrow your Houssas for the Isisi country.
There has been a tribute palaver, and Peter went down to Ikan and wiped
up his uncle; he filled in his spare time by giving the Akasava the worst
licking they have ever had. I thoroughly approve of all that Peter has
done, because I feel that he is actuated only by the keenest sense of
justice and a desire to do the right thing at the right time–and it was
time Sato-Koto was killed–though I shall have to reprimand Peter for the
sake of appearances. The Akasava chief is in the bush, hiding.” Peter
came back to his capital after his brief but strenuous campaign, leaving
behind him two territories that were all the better for his visit, though
somewhat sore.
The young king brought together his old men, his witch-doctors, and other
notabilities.
“By all the laws of white men,” he said, “I have done wrong to Sandi,
because he has told me I must not fight, and, hold, I have destroyed my
uncle, who was a dog, and I have driven the chief of the Akasava into the
forest. But Sandi told me also that I must do what was just, and that I
have done according to my lights, for I have destroyed a man who put my
people to shame. Now, it seems to me that there is only one thing to do,
and that is to go to Sandi, telling the truth and asking him to judge.”
“Lord king,” said the oldest of his councillors, “what if Sandi puts you
to the chain-gang?”
“That is with tomorrow,” quoth the king, and gave orders for preparations
to be made for departure.
Half-way to headquarters the two met; King Peter going down and Sanders
coming up. And here befell the great incident.
No word was spoken of Peter’s fault before sunset; but when blue smoke
arose from the fires of Houssa and warrior, and the little camp in the
forest clearing was all a-chatter, Sanders took the king’s arm and led
him along the forest path.
Peter told his tale and Sanders listened.
“And what of the chief of the Akasava?” he asked.
“Master,” said the king, “he fled to the forest cursing me, and with him
went many bad men.” Sanders nodded again gravely.
They talked of many things till the sun threw long shadows, and then they
turned to retrace their footsteps.
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