The rubber that arrived at irregular intervals for
shipment was not of the best quality, and one load of gum was lost in the
river by the overturning of a canoe. Sanders, knowing the young man’s
story, was worried, and caused word to go up river that patronage of the
trader would be pleasing to the Commissioner.
Then one day, a year after he had set forth, he unexpectedly turned up at
headquarters, thinner, burnt black by the sun, and the possessor of a
straggling beard.
He came in an old canoe with four paddlers, and he brought nothing with
him save his rifle, his cooking pots and bedding.
His clothes were patched and soiled, he wore clumsy moccasins of skins,
and a helmet which was no longer white and was considerably battered.
He had learnt something and greeted Sanders fluently in the Bomongo
dialect.
“Chasi o!” he said, with a bitter little laugh, as he stepped from the
canoe, and that word meant “finished” in a certain River dialect.
“As bad as that?” said Sanders.
“Pretty nearly,” replied the other. “I’m no trader, Mr. Sanders, I’m a
born philanthropist.”
He laughed again and Sanders smiled in sympathy.
“I’ve seen a lot of life,” he said, “but it doesn’t pay dividends.”
Sanders took him to the residency and found a suit that nearly fitted
him.
“I’ll have just one more try,” Jordon went on, “then I light out for
another field.”
There were letters awaiting him–letters of infinite sweetness and
patience. Letters filled with heroic lies–but too transparent to deceive
anybody.
The young man read them and went old-looking.
There were remittances from his agent at Sierra Leone–very small indeed
these were, after commission and the like had been subtracted.
Still there was enough to lay in a fresh trading stock, and three weeks
later the young man again disappeared into the unknown.
His departure from headquarters coincided with the return of one of the
mysterious three.
He came back alone to the place by the River. The huts had disappeared,
the garden was again forest, the canoe rotted on the beach–for none had
dared disturb it.
He set to work to rebuild a hut. He cleared the garden unaided, and
settled down in solitude to the routine of life. He was the chief of the
three men, M’Karoka, and like the two men who had disappeared, a man of
splendid physique.
Sanders heard of his return and the next time he passed that way he
landed.
The man was squatting before his fire, stirring the contents of a
steaming pot as Sanders came into sight round the hut which had screened
his landing.
He leapt to his feet nimbly, looked for a moment as though he would run
away, thought better of it, and raised his hand palm outward in salute.
“Inkoos,” he said in a deep booming voice.
It was an unusual greeting, yet dimly familiar.
“I bring happiness,” said Sanders, using a form of speech peculiar to the
Ochori. “Yet since you are a stranger I would ask you what you do, and
why do you dwell apart from your own people, for I am the King’s eye and
see for him?”
The man spoke slowly, and it was evident to Sanders that the Ochori was
not his speech, for he would sometimes hesitate for a word and sometimes
fill the deficiency with a word of Swaheli.
“I am from a far country, lord chief,” he said, “and my two cousins. Many
moons we journeyed, and we came to this place. Then for certain reasons
we returned to our land. And when we did that which we had to do, we
started to come back. And one named Vellim was killed by a lion and
another died of sickness, and I came alone and here I sit till the
appointed time.”
There was a ring of truth in the man’s speech.
Sanders had an instinct for such truth, and he knew that he had not lied.
“What are your people?” he asked; “for it is plain to me that your are a
foreigner and like none that I know save one race, the race of the great
one Ketchewayo.”
“You have spoken, lord,” said the man gravely; “for though I eat fish, I
am of the Zulu people, and I have killed men.”
Sanders eyed him in silence. It was an astounding statement the man made,
that he had walked four thousand miles across desert and river and
forest, through a hundred hostile nations, had returned thence four
thousand miles with his companions and again covered the distance. Yet he
was indisputably a Zulu–Sanders knew that much from the moment he had
raised his hand in salute and greeted him as a “prince.”
“Rest here,” he said, “keep the law and do ill to none, and you shall be
as free as any man–it is finished.”
Sanders pursued a leisurely way down the river, for no pressing matter
called him, either to headquarters or to any particular village.
He passed Jordon’s canoe going up stream, and megaphoned a cheery
greeting. The young man, though the reverse of cheerful, responded,
waving his hand to the white-clad figure on the bridge of the Zaire.
It was with a heavy heart he went on. His stock was dwindling, and he had
little to show for his labours. Not even the most tempting and the most
gaudy of Manchester goods had induced the lazy Isisi to collect rubber.
They offered him dried fish, tiny chickens and service for his desirable
cloth and beads, but rubber or gum they were disinclined to collect.
Night was coming on when he made the hut of the solitary stranger.
He directed his paddlers to the beach and landed for the night. Whilst
his four men lit a fire he went on to the hut.
M’Karoka with folded arms watched his approach. No other man on the river
but would have hastened forward to pay tribute, for black is black and
white is white, whether the white man be commissioner or trader.
Jordon had been long enough on the River to see in the attitude of
indifference a hint of ungraciousness. Yet the man was polite.
Together they sat and haggled over the price of a piece of
cloth–M’Karoka had no use for beads–and when Jordon set his little tent
up on the shore, the man was helpful and seemed used to the peculiar ways
of tents.
But the most extraordinary circumstance was that M’Karoka had paid for
his purchase in money. He had entered his hut when the bargain had been
completed and reappeared with a golden sovereign.
He paid four times the value of the cloth, because the negotiations were
conducted on a gum basis.
Jordon was thinking this matter out when he retired for the night. It
puzzled him, because money, as he knew, was unknown on the River.
He went to sleep to dream of a suburban home and the pale face of his
pretty wife. He woke suddenly. It was still night. Outside he could hear
the swish-swish of the river and the faint murmur of trees. But these had
not awakened him.
There were voices outside the tent, voices that spoke in a language he
could not understand.
He pulled on his mosquito boots and opened the fly of the tent.
There was a moon, and he saw M’K-aroka standing before his hut and with
him was another. They were quarrelling and the fierce voice of the
newcomer was raised in anger. Then of a sudden, before Jordon could reach
his revolver, the stranger stepped back a pace and struck twice at
M’Karoka.
Jordon saw the gleam of steel in the moonlight, stooped and found his
revolver, and dashed out of the tent. M’Karoka lay upon the ground, and
his assailant had dashed for the river.
He leapt into Jordon’s canoe.
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