She concealed
her own agony of mind at the prospect of parting with him, because she
was a woman, and women are very extraordinary in their unselfishness.
“Perhaps he would let you go in,” she said wistfully. “I am sure he would
if he knew what it meant to us.”
Jordon shook his head a little ruefully.
“I don’t suppose that our position will have much influence with him.
Ammett says that he’s a very strict man and unpleasant to deal with.”
They went into the cost of the expedition. By selling up the furniture
and moving into lodgings it could be done. He could leave her fifty or
sixty pounds, sufficient to last her with economy for a year. The rest he
would sink into goods–a list of which the successful trader had given
him.
Some weeks later Jordon took the great step. He sailed from Liverpool
with a stock of gew-gaws and cloth, and, as the tiny figure of his
weeping girl-wife grew more and more indistinct on the quay, he realised,
as all men realise sooner or later, that death is not the most painful of
humanity’s trials.
He changed his ship at Grand Bassam for the accommodation of a small
steamer.
He did not confide his plans to the men he met on board–hard-drinking
men in white duck–but what he learnt of Sanders made his heart sink.
Sanders went down to the beach to meet the steamer, which usually brought
the mails.
A tall young man in white sprang from the boat and a portmanteau
followed. Sanders looked at the newcomer with suspicion. He did not love
strangers–his regulation in this respect was known from Dacca to
Mossamades and the phrase “Sanders’ Welcome” had become idiomatic.
“Good morning,” said Jordon, with his heart quaking.
“Good morning,” said Sanders; “do you want to see me? I am afraid you
will not have much time, the boat does not stay very long.”
The newcomer bit his lip.
“I am not going on yet,” he said, “I–I want to stay here.”
“Oh!” said Sanders, without enthusiasm.
In the cool of the verandah over an iced drink the young man spoke
without reserve.
“I’ve come out here to make a fortune, or at any rate a living,” he said,
and the thought of her he had left in her tiny lodging gave him courage.
“You’ve come to a very unlucky place,” said Sanders, smiling in spite of
his resentment at this intrusion on his privacy.
“That is why I came,” said the other with surprising boldness; “all the
likely places are used up, and I have got to justify my existence
somehow.” And without attempting to hide his own poverty or his
inexperience, he told his story.
The Commissioner was interested. This side of life, as the young man
recited it, was new to him; it was a life which he himself did not know
or understand, this struggle for existence in a great uncaring city.
“You seem to have had the average kind of bad luck,” he said simply. “I
can’t advise you to go back because you have burned your boats, and in
the second place because I am pretty sure that you would not go. Let me
think.”
He frowned at the police huts shimmering in the morning heat: he sought
inspiration in the glimpse of yellow sands and thundering seas which was
obtainable from whence he sat.
“I could find work for you,” he said, “if you spoke any of the languages,
which of course you do not, or if–” He was silent.
“I am supposed to have an assistant,” he said at last, “I could appoint
you–“
The young man shook his head.
“That’s good of you, sir,” he said, “but I’d be no use to you. Give me a
trader’s licence. I believe you’ve got authority to do so, in fact nobody
else seems to have that authority.”
Sanders grinned. There was a licence once issued by the Administrator’s
secretary to an Eurasian trader–but that story will keep.
“I’ll give you the licence,” he said after a pause, and the young man’s
heart leapt; “it will cost you a guinea to start with, all the money
you’ve got eventually, and in course of time you will probably add to the
bill of costs your health and your life.”
He issued the licence that day.
For a couple of weeks the young man remained his guest whilst his stores
came on from Sierra Leone.
Sanders found an interpreter and headman for him, and the young man
started off in his new canoe to wrestle with fortune, after a letter to
his wife in which he described Sanders as something between a Peabody and
an angel.
Before he went Sanders gave him a few words of advice.
“I do not like traders,” he said, “and I never issue a licence unless I
can help it: do not upset my people, do not make any kind of trouble.
Avoid the N’Gombi, who are thieves and the bush people, who are
chronically homicidal. The Isisi will buy salt with rubber–there is
plenty of rubber in the back country. The Ochori will buy cloth with
gum–by the way, Bosambo, the chief, speaks English and will try to
swindle you. Good-bye and good luck.”
He watched the canoe till it disappeared round the bluff, and went back
to his hut to record the departure in his diary.
After which he sat himself down to decipher a long despatch in Arabic
from one of his intelligence men–a despatch which dealt minutely with
three other strangers who had come to his land, and arriving
mysteriously, had as mysteriously disappeared.
These were three men who dwelt by the River, being of no village, and of
no denned race, for they were settled on the border-line between Akasava,
Isisi, and Ochori, and though one had the lateral face-marks of a Bogindi
man, yet there was little doubt that he was not of that people.
They lived in three huts set side by side and they fished and hunted. A
strange fact was that none of these men had wives.
For some reason which the psychologist will understand, the circumstances
isolated the three from their kind. Women avoided them, and when they
came to the adjacent village to sell or to buy, the girls and the young
matrons went into their huts and peered at them fearfully.
The chief of the three was named M’K-aroka–or so it sounded–and he was
a broad, tall man, of surly countenance, sparing of speech, and
unpleasant in dispute. He accounted himself outside of all the village
laws, though he broke none, and as he acted and thought so did his
fellows.
Their lives if strange were inoffensive, they did not steal nor abuse the
privileges which were theirs. They were honest in their dealings and
cleanly.
Sanders, who had made inquiries through channels which were familiar
enough to those who understand the means by which a savage country is
governed, received no ill-report, and left the three to their own
devices. They fished, hunted, grew a little maize in a garden they won
from the forest, sought for and prepared manioc for consumption, and
behaved as honest husbandmen should do.
One day they disappeared. They vanished as though the earth had opened
and swallowed them up. None saw their going. Their huts were left
untouched and unspoiled, their growing crops stood in the gardens they
had cultivated, the dying fish hung on lines between poles just as they
had placed them, and the solitary canoe they shared was left beached.
But the three had gone. The forest, impenetrable, unknown, had swallowed
them, and no more was heard of them.
Sanders, who was never surprised and took it for granted that the most
mysterious of happenings had a natural explanation, did no more than send
word to the forest villages asking for news of the three men. This was
not forthcoming, and the matter ended so far as the Commissioner was
concerned.
He heard of Jordon throughout the year. Letters addressed to his wife
came to headquarters, and were forwarded. His progress from village to
village was duly charted by Sanders’ agents. Such accounts as reached
Sanders were to the effect that the young man was finding it difficult to
make both ends meet.
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