The movement could be checked, might indeed be
destroyed, if Ofalikari were laid by the heels, but the “missioner” had
vanished and there was no reliable word as to his whereabouts.
Somewhere in the country he directed the operations of the society.
There was a lull; a sudden interval of inactivity That was bad, as bad as
it could be.
Sanders reviewed the position and saw no good in it; he remembered the
Commissioner who brought war to the Niger and shivered, for he loved the
country and he loved his work.
There were two days of heavy rains, and these were followed by two days
of sweltering heat–and then Bosambo, a native chief, with all a native’s
malignity and indifference to suffering grafted to knowledge of white
men, sent a message to Sanders.
Two fast paddlers brought the messenger, and he stood up in his canoe to
deliver his word.
“Thus said our lord Bosambo,” he shouted, keeping a respectful distance
from the little boat. “‘Go you to Sandi, but go not on board his ship on
your life. Say to Sandi: The White Goat dies, and the people of these
lands come back to wisdom before the moon is full.’”
“Come to the ship and tell me more,” called Sanders. The man shook his
head.
“Lord, it is forbidden,” he said, “for our lord was very sure on that
matter; and there is nothing to tell you, for we are ignorant men, only
Bosambo being wiser than all men save your lordship.”
Sanders was puzzled. He knew the chief well enough to believe that he did
not prophesy lightly, and yet–
“Go back to your chief,” he said, “tell him that I have faith in him.”
Then he sat down at the junction of the Isisi and Calali Rivers for
Bosambo to work miracles.
Bosambo, chief of the Ochori, had had in his time many gods. Some of
these he retained for emergencies or because their possession added to
his prestige. He neither loved nor feared them. Bosambo loved or feared
no man, save Sanders.
The White Goats might have the chief of the Ochori in a cleft stick; they
might seduce from their allegiance half and more than half of his people,
as they had done, but Bosambo, who knew that weak men who acquire
strength of a sudden, invariably signalise their independence by
acquiring new masters, accepted the little troubles which accompany the
chieftainship of such a tribe as his with pleasing philosophy.
It was a trying time for him, and it was a period not without some
excitement for those who tried him.
A dish of fish came to him from his chief cook one morning. Bosambo ate a
little, and sent for the same cook, who was one of his titular wives.
“Woman,” said Bosambo, “if you try to poison me, I will burn you alive,
by Ewa!”
She was speechless with terror and fell on her knees before him.
“As matters are,” said Bosambo, “I shall not speak of your sin to Sandi,
who is my sister’s own child by a white father, for if Sandi knew of
this, he would place you in boiling water till your eyes bulged like a
fish. Go now, woman, and cook me clean food.”
Other attempts were made on his life. Once a spear whizzed past his head
as he walked alone in the forest. Bosambo uttered a shriek and fell to
the ground and the thrower, somewhat incautiously, came to see what
mischief he had wrought, and if need be to finish the good work…
Bosambo returned from his walk alone. He stopped by the river to wash his
hands and scour his spears with wet sand, and that was the end of the
adventure so far as his assailant was concerned.
But the power of the society was growing. His chief councillor was slain
at meat, another was drowned, and his people began to display a marked
insolence.
The air became electric. The Akasava had thrown off all disguise, the
influence of the White Goat predominated. Chiefs and headmen obeyed the
least of their hunters, or themselves joined in the lewd ritual
celebrated nightly in the forest. The chief who had brought about the
arrest of Ofalikari was pulled down and murdered in the open street by
the very men who had lodged complaints, and the first to strike was his
own son.
All these things were happening whilst Sanders waited at the junction of
the Isisi and Calali Rivers, his Houssas sleeping by the guns.
Bosambo saw the end clearly. He had no illusions as to his ultimate fate.
“To-morrow, light of my eyes,” he said to his first wife, “I send you in
a canoe to find Sandi, for men of the White Goat come openly–one man
from every tribe, calling upon me to dance and make sacrifice.”
His wife was a Kano woman; tall and straight and comely. “Lord,” she said
simply, “at the end you will take your spear and kill me, for here I sit
till the end. When you die, life is death to me.”
Bosambo put his strong arm about her and patted her head.
The following day he sat at palaver, but few were the applicants for
justice. There was a stronger force abroad in the land; a higher
dispenser of favour.
At the moment he had raised his hand to signify the palaver was finished
a man came running from the forest. He ran unsteadily, like one who was
drunken, throwing out his arms before him as though he was feeling his
way.
He gained the village street, and came stumbling along, his sobbing
breath being audible above the hum of the Ochoris’ wondering talk.
Then suddenly a shrill voice cried a word in fear, and the people went
bolting to their huts–and there was excuse, for this wanderer with the
glazed eyes was sick to death, and his disease was that dreaded bush
plague which decimates territories. It is an epidemic disease which makes
its appearance once in twenty years; it has no known origin and no
remedy.
Other diseases: sleeping sickness, beri-beri, malaria, are called by
courtesy the sickness-mongo–“The Sickness Itself”–but this mysterious
malady alone is entitled to the description.
The man fell flat on the ground at the foot of the little hill where
Bosambo sat in solitude–his head-men and councillors fleeing in panic at
the sick man’s approach.
Bosambo looked at him thoughtfully.
“What may I do for you, my brother?” he asked.
“Save me,” moaned the man.
Bosambo was silent. He was a native, and a native mind is difficult to
follow. I cannot explain its psychology. The coils were tightening on
him, death faced him as assuredly as it stared hollow-eyed on the Thing
that writhed at his feet.
“I can cure you,” he said softly, “by certain magic. Go you to the far
end of the village, there you will find four new huts and in each hut
three beds. Now you shall lie down on each bed and after you shall go
into the forest as fast as you can walk and wait for my magic to work.”
Thus spake Bosambo, and the man at his feet, with death’s hand already
upon his shoulder, listened eagerly.
“Lord, is there any other thing I must do?” he asked in the thin
whistling tone which is characteristic of the disease.
“This you must also do,” said Bosambo, “you must go to these huts
secretly so that none see you; and on each bed you shall lie so long as
it will take a fish to die.”
Watched from a hundred doorways, the sick man made his way back to the
forest; and the men of the village spat on the ground as he passed.
Bosambo sent his messengers to Sanders then and there, and patiently
awaited the coming of the emissaries of the Goat.
At ten o’clock that night, before the moon was up, they arrived
dramatically. Simultaneously twelve lights appeared, at twelve points
about the village, then each light advanced at slow pace and revealed a
man bearing a torch.
They advanced at solemn pace until they arrived together at a meeting
place, and that place the open roadway before Bosambo’s hut. In a blazing
semicircle they stood before the chief–and the chief was not impressed.
For these delegates were a curious mixture.
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