The first barrel missed, but the
second brought them down to the water.
A dozen men sprang overboard and swam to the spot where the birds
struggled convulsively in their death-grip.
One of the men reached them, deftly wrung the neck of the hawk, and came
back to the boat.
The pigeon was dead–had probably died before the shots hit him. Round
one red leg was a rubber band and a torn piece of paper.
Sanders smoothed it out and read. It was in Arabic, and all that was left
consisted of three words:
“… Akasava…war…King.”
“H’m!” said Sanders.
He had a man watching the Akasava, a reliable spy whose judgment was
beyond doubt. There was urgency in the fact that the message had been
sent by carrier-pigeon, and Sanders put the nose of his steamer to the
north and prepared for the worst.
At two o’clock in the afternoon, two days’ steaming from headquarters, he
came to the junction of three rivers where, according to all plans, his
spy should have waited him with further intelligence.
But there was no sign of the man, and, though the steamer cruised about,
crossing from one bank to the other, the spy did not put in an
appearance. Sanders had no other course than to continue his voyage. He
arrived at the Akasava city at midnight, picking his way through the
shoals and sand-banks without difficulty, thanks to his new searchlight.
He “tied up” to one of the many middle islands in the centre of the river
and waited for light. At dawn the Zaire came sidling to the Akasava bank,
her soldiers sitting on the iron lower deck, their legs dangling over the
side, their loaded rifles at their knees.
Yet there was no sign of perturbation amongst the people. They flocked
down to the beach to watch the steamer come to her moorings, and in half
an hour Toloni, the King, came in state with his drummers, his spearmen
and his councillors–to pay their respects.
Sanders went ashore with an orderly, walked through the city’s street by
the King’s side, and listened to such news as he had to tell him.
Sanders made no inquiry as to his spy, because that would be futile, but
he kept a sharp look-out.
The scene was a peaceful one. The women ground corn before their huts,
naked babies strutted daringly in the streets, their shrill laughter
rising as hut called to hut, and, best of all, the men were in good
humour.
“Lord,” said the King as Sanders took his departure, “all things are
well, as you see, and my people are full of food and lazy. There is no
sickness, and no man injures another.”
“Thus it is,” said Sanders, who never failed to take advantage of any
opportunity for drawing a moral, “because my lord the king has given you
his protection so that every man may live fearless of his enemies.”
“That is so,” said the other humbly. “We are dogs before your presence,
and blinded by the bright face of the Great King our master.”
Sanders took a short cut to the Zaire.
There was a little path which led through the tall, rank, elephant grass.
“Lord,” said Toloni, hesitating at the entrance of the path, “this is not
a proper way for your greatness, for there is water in the path, and many
snakes who live in the marsh.”
“This is the way,” said Sanders briefly.
The Akasava monarch hesitated, then led the way.
It was, as he had said, an unpleasant road, for the rains had been very
heavy and in places the path was ankle-deep in ooze.
Sanders was regretting his obstinacy when, halfway to the beach, he came
upon a place where the earth had been recently dug, and there was a
raised mound.
“What man is buried here?” asked the Commissioner.
The King looked at him steadfastly.
“One Karama,” he said.
“This is not the place of burying,” said Sanders; “for if my memory
serves me your dead people sleep in one of the middle islands.”
“That is so, lord,” replied the chief, “yet this man was dead a long
time, and only his bones were left. And because my people feared his
spirit they buried him where he was found.”
The explanation was satisfactory and Sanders passed on, though the grave
was the grave of Alt Hazrah, a reliable spy of his, who had been caught
by the King’s men and speared to death whilst the pigeon he had just
released was still circling above in the blue sky.
“My lord goes far?” asked the King as he stood by the gangway of the
ship.
“I go north,” said Sanders. “Why do you ask?”
“There have been heavy rains,” said the King, “and many rivers are
swollen. And in such times strangers from the Frenchi and Portagasi lands
come into these territories; also, I have heard of an Arabi who is buying
people, ten days’ journey from here, on the Calali River.”
Was this the message Ali had sent? The possibility struck Sanders as
being a reasonable one.
The man might have heard something of the sort, sent his message, and
gone north in search of further news.
Sanders cast off, and, leaving the Isisi River on his right, took the
Calali–a little-known stream.
Toloni, the King, might be sending him on a fool’s errand, but he had to
take that chance. As it happened, the Akasava overlord had spoken the
truth for a certain purpose.
El Mahmud, a notorious trader, found his way into Sanders’ territory one
spring-time when the rivers were flooded and when certain streams were
navigable which had never before known canoe, much less El Mahmud’s gay
felucca.
He brought with him rich bales of merchandise, secret bottles of gin,
tobacco, hemp, and his own elegant person.
He was a sallow-faced man who sat under an awning on a silken cushion and
smoked, and he was possessed of an insatiable curiosity.
He had large ideas, and was a man of many schemes.
He was engaged in arming a Calali village with rifles which had rendered
good service to France in ‘75, when Sanders came suddenly upon him.
El Mahmud was warned, and put his craft, with all sails set, in the
direction of safety, which was represented by a creek four miles up
river, into which no steamer of the Zaire size could penetrate.
His little plan, admirable in intention, was somewhat upset by the
disconcerting fact that the Zaire had recently been re-equipped. The
first shot from Sanders’ new Hotchkiss gun smashed the side of the
felucca as a rifle bullet would smash a match-box. The second carried
away the roof of El Mahmud’s private cabin.
The Zaire swung up to the sinking felucca, and a rope being passed she
was towed to shallow water.
Taking all things into consideration. El Mahmud, who knew something of
the English-speaking people and their peculiar ways, would much rather
have seen his boat sunk.
“Sheik,” said his headman as the Zaire took the boat in tow, “there is
time to get rid of much that will do us harm when the Englishman inspects
this boat.”
El Mahmud was silent, and his headman drew a long knife from his belt and
tested its edge.
He looked inquiringly at his master, but El Mahmud shook his head.
“You are a fool! This Americano will hang you like a pig if he smells a
spot of blood. Let us wait–what is written must be.”
He had not long to wait. As soon as the Joy of Night–such was the
felicitous name of the craft–was beached, he was escorted before
Sanders.
“How came you here?” demanded the Commissioner, and El Mahmud explained
calmly and logically that owing to the heavy rains he had adventured
along a new river which had never before existed, and thus had come to
the Isisi. That was a good excuse, as Mahmud knew. It was more difficult
to explain the selling of rifles, for it is a practice which all
civilised nations very properly hold as unpardonable. Much more difficult
was it to account for twenty-one slaves discovered in the bottom of the
felucca. Yet the man had a permit to “recruit labour,” signed by one Dom
Reynaldo de Costa y Ferdinez, Portuguese governor of a coast colony.
Sanders had a horror of “complications,” especially with Portuguese
authorities, for complications meant long, long letters, reports,
minutes, memoranda, and eventually blue books. This meant years of
correspondence, official investigations, and a kick at the end, whether
he was right or wrong.
“By all laws. El Mahmud,” he said, “you have forfeited your life, yet I
accept part of your story, though, God knows, I believe you lie! My
steamer shall take you to a place which is twenty miles from the
Portuguese, and there you shall be set free with food and arms.”
“What of my ship and cargo?” asked El Mahmud.
“I shall burn the one and confiscate the other,” said Sanders.
El Mahmud shrugged his shoulders.
“All things are ordained,” he said.
Sanders took him on board and steamed to a place indicated by the
trader–it was nearer his camp–and released him with rifles and
ammunition for his followers and ten days’ supply of food.
“Go with God,” said Sanders in the vernacular.
El Mahmud stood on the bank and watched the steamer sweeping out to
mid-stream.
He waited till its nose was turned down-stream and Sanders was plainly to
be seen on the bridge, then sat down carefully, raised his rifle, taking
deliberate aim, and fired.
Sanders was giving instructions to Abiboo concerning the repacking of
Hotchkiss cartridges which had been laid on the deck in preparation for
eventualities.
“These–” he said, then stumbled forward.
Abiboo caught him in his arms, and lowered him to the deck.
“The man–do not let him escape,” said Sanders faintly.
Abiboo picked up a cartridge, opened the breech of the long-barrelled
Hotchkiss, and slipped it in.
El Mahmud was running swiftly toward the cover of the forest. He had two
hundred yards of bare ground to cover, and Abiboo was firing a gun which
was as accurately sighted as a rifle. Moreover, he had plenty of time,
and was not flurried.
The terrified followers of El Mahmud, returning that night to search for
their master, were constantly finding him.
The moon came up over the forest and fretted the river with silver, and
Toloni, King of the Akasava, watched from the shore for the omen which
Tilagi, the witch-doctor, had promised.
He had long to wait before he saw the ripple which a swimming crocodile
makes, but when it came into view, crossing the river in a straight line
from shore to shore, he had no eyes for aught else.
Straight as an arrow it sped, undeviating by a single curve from the true
line.
“That is a good omen,” said Toloni, and rose from the shadow of the bush
which hid him from view.
He waited a little while, then struck noiselessly into the forest,
swinging his spears.
He came upon his six councillors sitting patiently by the side of the
forest path.
“All is as should be,” he said. “Tilagi has spoken the truth, for the
crocodile crossed from bank to bank, and the day of the Akasava has
come.”
He led the way back to the sleeping city and gained his big hut. It was
empty, by his orders.
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