 CHAPTER 17 THE HOME OF THE HOLY FLOWER Half an hour or so passed, during which I was engaged alternately in thinking over our position and in listening to Stephen's rhapsodies. First he dilated on the loveliness of the holy flower that he had caught a glimpse of when he climbed the wall, and secondly on the beauty of the eyes of the young lady in white. Only by telling him that he might offend her did I persuade him not to attempt to break into the sacred enclosure where the orchid grew. As we were discussing the point, the gate opened and she appeared. "'Sirs,' she said, with a reverential bow, speaking slowly and in the droolest halting English, the mother and the father—yes, the father—ask will you feed?' We intimated that we would feed with much pleasure, and she led the way to the house, saying, "'Be not astonished at them, for they are very happy, too, and please forgive our unleavened bread.' Then, in the politest way possible, she took me by the hand, and followed by Stephen, we entered the house, leaving mevovo and hounds to watch outside. It consisted of but two rooms, one for living and one for sleeping. In the former we found Brother John and his wife seated on a kind of couch, gazing at each other in a rapt way. I noted that they both looked as though they had been crying, with happiness, I suppose. "'Elizabeth,' said John, as we entered, this is Mr. Alan Quartermain, through whose resource and courage we have come together again, and this young gentleman is his companion, Mr. Stephen Summers. She bowed, for she seemed unable to speak, and held out her hand which we shook. "'What would be resource and courage?' I heard her daughter whisper to Stephen. "'And why have you none, O Stephen Summers?' "'It would take a long time to explain,' he said, with his jolly laugh, after which I listened to no more of their nonsense. Then we sat down to the meal, which consisted of vegetables and a large bowl of hard-boiled duck's eggs, of which eatables and ample supply was carried out to Hans and Movovo by Stephen and Hope. This it seemed was the name that her mother had given to the girl when she was born in the hour of her black despair. It was an extraordinary story that Mrs. Eversly had to tell, and yet a short one. She had escaped from her San Ben Mohammed and of the slave traders, as the rescued slave told her husband at Zanzibar before he died, and, after days of wandering, been captured by some of the Pongo who were scouring the country upon dark business of their own, probably in search of captives. They brought her across the lake to Pongo land, and the former mother of a flower, Ann Albino, having died at a great age, installed her in the office on this island, which from that day she had never left. Hithers she was led by the Calubi of the time and some others who had passed the God. This brute, however, she had never seen. Although once she heard him roar, for it did not molest them or even appear upon their journey. Shortly after her arrival on the island her daughter was born, on which occasion some of the women at servants of the flower nursed her. From that moment both she and the child were treated with the utmost care and veneration. Since the mother of the flower and the flower itself being in some strange way looked upon as embodiments of the natural forces of fertility, this birth was held to be the best of omens for the dwindling Pongo race. Also it was hoped that in due course the child of the flower would succeed the mother in her office. So here they dwelt absolutely helpless and alone, occupying themselves with superintending the agriculture of the island. Most fortunately also when she was captured Mrs. Eversley had a small Bible in her possession which she had never lost. From this she was able to teach her child to read, and all that is to be learned in the pages of the holy writ. Often I have thought that if I were doomed to solitary confinement for life and allowed but one book I would choose the Bible since in addition to all its history and the splendor of its language it contains the record of the hope of man and therefore should be sufficient for him. So at least it had proved to be in this case. Oddly enough as she told us like her husband Mrs. Eversley during all those endless years had never lost some kind of belief that she would one day be saved otherwise than by death. I always thought that you still lived and that we should meet again John I heard her say to him. Also her own and her daughter's spirits were mysteriously supported for after the first shock and disturbance of our arrival we found them cheerful people. Indeed Miss Hope was quite a merry soul that then she had never known any other life and human nature is very adaptable. Further if I may say so she had grown up a lady in the true sense of the word. After all why should she not seeing that her mother the Bible and nature had been her only associates and sources of information. If we accept the poor slaves who waited on them most of whom were mutes. When Mrs. Eversley's story was done we told ours in a compressed form. It was strange to see the wonder with which these two ladies listened to its outlines but on that I need not dwell. When it was finished I heard Miss Hope say so it would see most even summers that it is you who are saviour to us certainly answered Stephen but why. Because you see the dry holy flower far away in England and you say I must be holy father to that flower. Then you pay down shekels here her Bible reading came in for the cost of the journey and hire brave hunter to kill devil god and bring my old whitehead parent with you. Oh yes you are saviour and she nodded her head at him very prettily. Of course replied Stephen with enthusiasm that is not exactly but it is all the same thing as I will explain later but Miss Hope meanwhile could you show us the flower. Oh holy mother must do that if you look thereon without her you die. Really said Stephen without alluding to his little feet of war climbing. Well the end of it was that after a good deal of hesitation the holy mother obliged saying that as the god was dead she supposed nothing else mattered. First however she went to the back of the house and clapped her hands whereon an old woman a mute and a very perfect specimen of an albino native appeared and stared at us wonderingly. To her Mrs. Eversley talked upon her fingers so rapidly that I could scarcely follow her movements. The woman bowed till her forehead nearly touched the ground, then rose and ran towards the water. I have sent her to fetch the paddles from the canoe," said Mrs. Eversley, and to put my mark upon it. Now none will dare to use it to cross the lake. That is very wise, I replied, as we don't want news of our whereabouts to get to the Mutombo. Next we went to the enclosure where Mrs. Eversley with a native knife cut a string of palm fibres that was sealed with clay onto the door and on one of its uprights in such a fashion that none could enter without breaking the string. The impression was made with a rude seal that she wore round her neck as a badge of office. It was a very curious object fashioned of gold and having deeply cut upon its face a rough image of an ape holding a flower in its right paw. As it was also ancient this seemed to show that the monkey god and the orchid had been from the beginning jointly worshipped by the pongo. When she had opened the door they appeared growing in the centre of the enclosure, the most lovely plant I should imagine that man ever saw. It measured some eight feet across and the leaves were dark green, long and narrow. From its various crowns rose the scapes of the bloom, and oh, those blooms, of which there were about twelve, expanded now in the flowering season. The measurements made from the dried specimen I have given already so I need not repeat them. I may say here, however, that the pongo augured the fertility or otherwise of each succeeding year from the number of blooms on the holy flower. If these were many the season would prove very fruitful. If few, less so, while if, as sometimes happened, the plant failed to flower. Drought and famine were always said to follow. Truly those were glorious blossoms standing as high as a man, with a back sheath of vivid white barred with black, their great pouches of burnished gold and their wide wings also of gold. Then in the center of each pouch appeared the ink mark that did indeed exactly resemble the head of a monkey. But if this orchid astonished me its effect upon Stephen, with whom this class of flower was a mania, may be imagined. Really he went almost mad. For a long while he glared at the plant and finally flung himself upon his knees, causing this hope to exclaim, What, O Stephen Summers, do you also make sacrifice to the holy flower? Rather, he answered, I'd—I'd—die for it. You are likely to, before all this is done, I remarked with energy, for I hate to see a grown man make a fool of himself. There's only one thing in the world which justifies that, and it isn't a flower. Movovo and Hans had followed us into the enclosure, and I overheard a conversation between them which amused me. The gist of it was that Hans explained to Movovo that the white people admired this weed, he called it a weed, because it was like gold, which was the god that they really worshipped, although that god was known among them by many names. Movovo, who was not at all interested in the affair, replied with a shrug that it might be so, though for his part he believed that the true reason to be that the plant produced some medicine which gave courage or strength, Zulus I may say do not care for flowers unless they bear a fruit that is good to eat. When I had satisfied myself with the splendor of these magnificent blooms, I asked Mrs. Eversley what certain little mounds might be that would dotted about the enclosure beyond the circle of cultivated peatly soil which surrounded the orchid's roots. They are the graves of the mothers of the holy flower, she answered. There are twelve of them, and here is the spot chosen for the thirteenth, which was to have been mine. To change the subject I asked another question, namely, if there were more such orchids growing in the country. No, she replied, or at least I never heard of any. Indeed, I have always been told that this one was brought from far away generations ago. Also under ancient law it is never allowed to increase. Any shoots it sends up beyond this ring must be cut off by me and destroyed with certain ceremonies. You see that seed pod which has been left to grow on the stalk of one of last year's blooms. It is now ripe, and on the night of the next moon when the kaloobe comes to visit me, I must with much ritual burn it in his presence, unless it is burst before he arrives. In which case I must burn any seedlings that may spring up with almost the same ritual. I don't think the kaloobe will come any more, at least not while you are here. Indeed, I am sure of it, I said. As we were leaving the place, acting on my general principle of making sure of anything of value when I get the chance, I broke off that ripe seed pod which was the size of an orange. No one was looking at the time, and as it went straight into my pocket no one missed it. Again, leaving Stephen and the young lady to admire this sipropidium, or each other, in the implosure we three elders returned to the house to discuss matters. John and Mrs. Eversley, I said, by heaven's mercy you are reunited after a terrible separation of over twenty years. But what is to be done now? The God it is true is dead, and therefore the passage of the forest will be easy, but beyond it is the water which we have no means of crossing, and beyond the water that old wizard the matombo sits in the mouth of his cave watching like a spider in its web, and beyond the matombo and his cave are Comba, the new Colubi, and his tribe of cannibals. Cannibals? Interrupted Mrs. Eversley, I never knew that they were cannibals. Indeed, I know little about the pongo whom I scarcely ever see. Then, madam, you must take my word for it, that they are. Also as I believe that they have every expectation of eating us, as I presume that you do not wish to spend the rest of your lives, which would probably be short upon this island. I want to ask how you proposed to escape safely out of the pongo country. They shook their heads, which were equally empty of ideas. Only John stroked his white beard and inquired mildly. What have you arranged, Alan? My dear wife and I are willing to leave the matter to you, who are so resourceful. Arranged? I stuttered. Really, John, under any other circumstances. Then after a moment's reflection I called to Hans and Movovo who came and squatted down upon the veranda. Now, I said, after I had put the case to them, what have you arranged? Being devoid of any feasible suggestions, I wished to pass on that intolerable responsibility. My father makes a mock of us, said Movovo solemnly. Can a rat in a pit arrange how it is to get out with the dog that is waiting at the top? So far we have come in safety, as the rat does into the pit. Now I see nothing but death. That's cheerful, I said. Your turn, Hans. Oh, boss, replied the hot-and-tot. For a while I grew clever again when I thought of putting the gun in tombie into the bamboo. But now my head is like a rotten egg, and when I try to shake wisdom out of it, my brain melts and washes from side to side like the stuff in the rotten egg. Yet, yet, I have a thought. Let us ask the Missy. Her brain is young and not tired, it may hit on something. To ask the boss, Stephen, is no good, for already he is lost in other things. And Hans grinned feebly. More to give myself time than for any other reason. I called to Miss Hope, who had just emerged from the sacred enclosure with Stephen, and put the riddle to her, speaking very slowly and clearly so that she might understand me. To my surprise, she answered at once. What is a God, all Mr. Allen? Is it not more than man? Can a God be bound in a pit for a thousand years, like Satan in Bible? If a God want to move, see new country, and so on, who can say no? I don't quite understand, I said, to draw her out further, although in fact I had more than a glimmering of what she meant. Oh, Allen, holy flower there, a God, and my mother, Priestess, if holy flower tired of this land, and want to grow somewhere else, why Priestess not carry it, and go to? Capital idea, I said, but you see, Miss Hope, there are, or were, two gods, one of which cannot travel. Oh, that very easy, too! Put skin of God of the woods onto this man, and she pointed to hands, and who know difference? Like as two brothers already, only he smaller. She's got it, but you go, she's got it, exclaimed Stephen in admiration. What Missy say, asked hands suspiciously, I told him. Oh, boss, exclaimed hands, think of the smell inside of that God's skin when the sun shines on it. Also the God was a very big God, and I am small. Then he turned and made a proposal to Movovo, explaining that his stature was much better suited to the job. First will I die, answered the great Zulu. Am I, who have high blood in my veins, and who am a warrior, to defile myself by wrapping the skin of a dead brute about me and appear as an ape before men? Propose it to me again, sported snake, and we shall quarrel. See here, Hans, I said, Movovo is right. He is a soldier, and very strong in battle. You also are very strong in your wits, and by doing this you will make fools of all the pongo. Also, Hans, it is better that you should wear the skin of a gorilla for a few hours than that I, your master, and all these, should be killed. Yes, boss, it is true, though for myself I almost think that, like Movovo, I would rather die. Yet it would be sweet to deceive these pongo once again, and, boss, I won't see you kill just to save myself another bad smell or two. So if you wish it, I will become a God. Thus, through the self-sacrifice of that good fellow Hans, who is the real hero of this history, that matter was settled. If anything could be looked on as settled in our circumstances, then we arranged that we should start upon our desperate adventure at dawn on the following morning. Meanwhile much remained to be done. First Mrs. Eversley summoned her attendants, who, to the number of twelve, soon appeared in front of the veranda. It was very sad to see these poor women, all of whom were albinos and unpleasant to look on, while quite half appeared to be deaf and dumb. To these, speaking as a priestess, she explained that the God who dwelt in the woods was dead, and that therefore she must take the holy flower, which was called the Wife of the God, and make report to them a tombo of this dreadful catastrophe. Meanwhile they must remain on the island, and continue to cultivate the fields. This order, through the poor creatures, who were evidently much attached to their mistress and her daughter, into a great state of consternation. The eldest of them all, a tall thin old lady with white wool and pink eyes who looked, as Stephen said, like an Angora rabbit, prostrated herself and, kissing the mother's foot, asked when she would return, since she and the daughter of the flower were all they had to love, and without them they would die of grief. Suppressing her evident emotion as best she could, the mother replied that she did not know. It depended on the will of heaven and the tombo. Then, to prevent further argument, she bade them bring their picks with which they worked the land, also poles, mats, and palm-string, and help to dig up the holy flower. This was done under the superintendents of Stephen, who here was thoroughly in his element, although the job proved far from easy. Also it was sad, for all these women wept as they worked, while some of them who were not dumb wailed aloud. Even Miss Hope cried, and I could see that her mother was affected with a kind of awe. For twenty years she had been guardian of this plant, with which I think she had at last, not unnaturally, come to look upon with the same veneration that was felt for it by the whole Pongo people. I fear, she said, lest this sacrilege should bring misfortune upon us. But Brother John, who held very definite views upon African superstitions, quoted the second commandment to her, and she became silent. We got the thing up at last, or most of it, with the sufficiency of earth to keep it alive, injuring the roots as little as possible in the process. Underneath it, at a depth of about three feet, we found several things. One of these was an ancient stone fetish that was rudely shaped to the likeness of a monkey, and wore a gold crown. This object, which was small, I still have. Another was a bed of charcoal, and amongst the charcoal was some partially burnt bones, including a skull that was very little injured. This may have belonged to a woman of a low type, perhaps the first mother of the flower, but its general appearance reminded me of that of a gorilla. I regret that there was neither time nor light to enable me to make a proper examination of these remains, which we found impossible to bring away. Mrs. Eversley told me afterwards, however, that the Kalubis had a tradition, that the God once possessed a wife which died before the pongo migrated to their present home. If so, these may have been the bones of that wife. When it was finally clear of the ground on which it had grown for so many generations, the great plant was lifted onto a large mat, and after it had been packed with wet moss by Stephen in a most skillful way, for he was a perfect artist at this kind of work. The mat was bound round the roots in such a fashion that none of the contents could escape. Also, each flowerscape was lashed to a thin bamboo, so as to prevent it from breaking on the journey. Then the whole bundle was secured onto a kind of bamboo stretcher that we made, and firmly secured to it by palm-fiber ropes. By this time it was growing dark, and all of us were tired. Bars, said Hans to me as we were returning to the house, would it not be well that Movovo and I should take some food and go sleep in the canoe? These women will not hurt us there, but if we do not, I, who have been watching them, fear less than the night they should make battles of sticks and row across the lake to warn the bongal. Although I did not like separating our party, I thought the idea so good that I consented to it, and presently Hans and Movovo armed with spears and carrying an ample supply of food departed to the lakeside. One more incident has impressed itself upon my memory and connection with that night. It was the formal baptism of hope by her father. I never saw a more touching ceremony, but it is one that I need not describe. Stephen and I slept in the enclosure by the packed flower, which he would not leave out of his sight. It was as well that we did so, since about twelve o'clock by the light of the moon I saw the door in the wall open gently, and the heads of some of the Albino women appear through the aperture. Doubtless they had come to steal away the holy plant they worshipped. I sat up, coughed, and lifted the rifle, whereupon they fled, and returned no more. Long before dawn, Brother John, his wife and daughter, up and making preparations for the march, packing a supply of food and so forth. Indeed, we breakfasted by moonlight, and at the first break of day after Brother John had first offered up a prayer for protection, we departed on our journey. It was a strange out-setting, and I noted that both Mrs. Eversley and her daughter seemed sad at bidding goodbye to the spot where they had dwelt in utter solitude and peace for so many years, where one of them indeed had been born and grown up to womanhood. However, I kept on talking to distract their thoughts, and at last we were off. I arranged that, although it was heavy for them, the two ladies whose white robes were covered with curious cloaks made of soft-prepared bark, should carry the plant as far as the canoe, thinking it was better that the holy flower should appear to depart in charge of its consecrated guardians. I went ahead with the rifle, then came the stretcher and the flower, while Brother John and Stephen carrying the paddles brought up the rear. We reached the canoe without accident, and to our great relief found a Movovo and Hans awaiting us. I learned, however, that it was fortunate they had slept in the boat, since during the night the Albino women arrived with the evident object of possessing themselves of it, and only ran away when they saw that it was guarded. As we were making ready the canoe, those unhappy slaves appeared in a body, and throwing themselves upon their faces with piteous words, or those of them who could not speak by signs, implored the mother not to desert them, till both she and hope began to cry. There was no help for it, so we pushed off as quickly as we could, leaving the Albino's weeping and wailing upon the bank. I confess that I too felt compunction at abandoning them thus, but what could we do? I could only trust that no harm came to them, but of course we never heard anything as to their fate. On the further side of the lake we hid away the canoe in the bushes, where we had found it, and began our march. Stephen and Movovo being the two strongest among us now carried the plant, and although Stephen never murmured at its weight how the Zulu did swear after the first few hours, I could fill a page with his objurations at what he considered an act of insanity, and if I had the space, should like to do so, for really some of them were most amusing. Had it not been for his friendship for Stephen, I think that he would have thrown it down. We crossed the Garden of the God, where Mrs. Eversley told me the Kaluubi must scatter the sacred seed twice a year, thus confirming the story that we had heard. It seems that it was then, as he made his long journey through the forest, that the treacherous and horrid brute which we had killed would attack the priest of whom it had grown weary, but, and to the shows the animals cunning, the onslaught always took place after he had sown the seed, which would in due season produce the food it ate. Our Kaluubi, it is true, was killed before we had reached the Garden, which seems an exception to the rule. Perhaps, however, the gorilla knew that his object in visiting it was not to provide for its needs, or perhaps our presence excited it to immediate action, who can analyse the motives of a gorilla. These attacks would generally spread over a year and a half. On the first occasion the God which always accompanied the priest to the Garden and back again, would show animosity by roaring at him. On the second he would seize his hand and bite off one of the fingers, as happened to our Kaluubi, a wound that generally caused death from blood poisoning. If, however, the priest survived, on the third visit it killed him, for the most part by crushing his head in its mighty jaws. When making these visits the Kaluubi was accompanied by certain dedicated youths, some of whom the God always put to death. Those who had made the journey six times without molestation were selected for further special trials, until it last only two remained who were declared to have passed or being accepted by the God. These youths were treated with great honour, as in the instance of Comba and on the destruction of the Kaluubi, one of them took his office, which he generally filled without much accident, for a minimum of ten years, though perhaps much longer. Mrs. Eversley knew nothing of the sacramental eating of the remains of the Kaluubi, or of the final burial of his bones in the wooden coffins that we had seen, for such things, although they undoubtedly happened, were kept from her. She added that each of the three Kaluubis whom she had known ultimately went almost mad through terror at his approaching end, especially after the preliminary warrings and the biting off of the finger. In truth uneasy lay the head that wore the crown in Pongirland, a crown that, mind you, might not be refused upon pain of death by torture. Personally I can imagine nothing more terrible than the haunted existence of these poor kings whose pomp and power must terminate in such a fashion. I asked her whether the Matombo ever visited the God, she answered yes, once in every five years. Then after many mystic ceremonies he spent a week in the forest at a time of full moon. One of the Kaluubis had told her that on this occasion he had seen the Matombo and the God sitting together under a tree, each with his arm round the other's neck and apparently talking like brothers. With the exception of certain tales of its almost supernatural cunning, this was all that I could learn about the God of the Pongos, which I have sometimes been tempted to believe was really a devil hidden in the body of a huge and ancient ape. No, there was one more thing which I quote because it bears out the Bemba story. It seems that captives from other tribes were sometimes turned into the forest that the God might amuse itself by killing them. This indeed was the fate to which we ourselves had been doomed in accordance with a hateful Pongo custom. Certainly thought I to myself when she had done, I did a good deed in sending that monster to whatever dim region it was destined to inhabit where I sincerely trust it found all the dead Kaluubis and its other victims ready to give it an appropriate welcome. After crossing the God's garden we came to the clearing of the fallen tree and found the brute skin pegged out as we had left it, though shrunken in size. Only it had evidently been visited by a horde of the forest ants which, fortunately for harms, had eaten away every particle of flesh while leading the hide itself absolutely untouched, I suppose because it was too tough for them. I never saw a neater job. Moreover, those industrious little creatures had devoured the beast itself. Nothing remained of it except the clean white bones lying in the exact position in which we had left the carcass. Atom by atom that marching myriad army had eaten all and departed on its way into the depths of the forest leaving the sign of their passage. How I wished that we could carry off the huge skeleton to add to my collection of trophies, but this was impossible. As Brother John said any museum would have been glad to purchase it for hundreds of pounds, for I do not suppose that its like exists in the world, but it was too heavy. All I could do was to impress its peculiarities upon my mind by a close study of the mighty bones. Also I picked out of the upper right arm and kept the bullet I had fired when it carried off the Kaluubi. This I found had sunk into and shattered the bone, but without absolutely breaking it. On we went again, bearing with us the God's skin, having first stuffed to the head, hands and feet these, I mean the hands and feet had been cleaned out by the ants, with wet moss in order to preserve their shape. It was no light burden, at least so declared Brother John and Hans, who bore it between them upon a dead bow from the fallen tree. Of the rest of our journey to the water's edge there is nothing to tell, except that notwithstanding our loads we found it easier to walk down that steep mountain side than it had been to ascend the same. Still our progress was but slow, and when at length we reached the burying-place only about an hour remained to sunset. There we sat down to rest and eat, also to discuss the situation. What was to be done? The arm of stagnant water lay near to us, but we had no boat with which to cross to the further shore, and what was that shore? A cave where a creature who seemed to be but half human sat watching like a spider in its web. Do not let it be supposed that this question of escape had been absent from our minds. On the contrary, we had even thought of trying to drag the canoe in which we crossed to and from the island of the flower through the forest. The idea was abandoned, however, because we found that being hollowed from a single log with a bottom four or five inches thick was impossible for us to carry it so much as fifty yards. What, then, could we do without a boat? Swimming seemed to be out of the question because of the crocodiles. Also on enquiry I discovered that of the whole party Stephen and I alone could swim. Further there was no wood of which to make a raft. I called to Hans and at leaving the rest in the graveyard where we knew that they were safe, we went down to the edge of the water to study the situation. Being careful to keep ourselves hidden behind the reeds and bushes of the mangrove tribe with which it was fringed. Not that there was much fear of our being seen for the day which had been very hot was closing in, and a great storm heralded by black and bellying clouds was gathering fast, conditions which must render us practically invisible at a distance. We looked at the dark, slimy water, also at the crocodiles, which sat upon its edge in dozens, waiting, eternally waiting. For what, I wondered. We looked at the sheer opposing cliff, but save where a black hole marked the cave mouth, far as the eye could see, the water came up against it, as that of a moat does against the wall of a castle. Obviously, therefore, the only line of escape ran through this cave. For, as I have explained, the channel by which I presume the Bemba reached the open lake was now impracticable. Lastly, we searched to see if there was any fallen log upon which we could possibly propel ourselves to the other side, and found nothing that could be made to serve. No, nor, as I have said, any dry reeds or brushwood out of which we might fashion a raft. Unless we can get a boat, here we must stay, I remarked to Hans, who was seated with me behind a screen of rushes at the water's edge. He made no answer, and as I thought, in a sort of subconscious way, I engaged myself in watching a certain tragedy of the insect world. Between two stout reeds, a forest spider of the very largest sort had spun a web as big as any lady's open parasol. There, in the midst of this web, of which the bottom strands almost touched the water, sat the spider waiting for its prey, as the crocodiles were waiting on the banks, as the great ape had waited for the kalubis, as death waits for life, as the matombo was waiting for God knows what. It rather resembled the matombo and his cave did that huge black spider with just a little patch of white upon its head, or so I thought fancifully enough. Then came the tragedy. A great white moth of the hawk species began to dart to and fro between the reeds, and presently struck the web on its lower side some three inches above the water. Like a flash that spider was upon it. It embraced the victim with its long legs to still its tremendous battlings. Next, descending below, it began to make the body fast, when something happened. From the still surface of the water beneath poked up the mouth of a very large fish, which quite quietly closed upon the spider, and sank again into the depths, taking with it a portion of the web, and thereby setting the big moth free. With a struggle it loosed itself, fell onto a piece of wood, and floated away, apparently little the worse for its encounter. Did you see that, boss? said Hans, pointing to the broken and empty web. While you were thinking I was brain-door-reverent father the predicant who taught me how to do it, and he has sent us a sign from the place of fire. Even then I could not help laughing to myself, as I pictured what my dear father's face would be like, if he were able to hear his converts' remarks. An analysis of Hans' religious views would be really interesting, and I only regret that I never made one, that sticking to business I merely asked, what sign? Boss, this sign, that web is the muttombos gave. The big spider is the muttombo. The white moth is us, boss, who are caught in the web and going to be eaten. Very pretty, Hans, I said, but what is the fish that came up and swallowed the spider, so that the moth fell on the wood and floated away? Boss, you are the fish, who come up softly, softly out of the water in the dark, and shoot the muttomba with a little rifle, and then the rest of us who are the moth fall into the canoe and float away. There is a storm about to break, boss, and who will see you swim the stream and the storm and the night? The crocodiles, I suggested. Boss, I don't see a crocodile eat the fish. I think the fish is laughing down there with the big fat spider in its stomach. Also, when there is a storm, crocodiles go to bed because they are afraid lest the lightning should kill them for their sins. Now I remembered that I had often heard, and indeed to some extent noted, that these great reptiles do vanish in disturbed weather, probably because their food hides away. However, that may be in an instant I made up my mind. As soon as it was quite dark I would swim the water, holding the little rifle in tombi above my head, and try to steal the canoe. If the old wizard was watching, which I hoped might not be the case, well, I must deal with him as best I could. I knew the desperate nature of the expedient, but there was no other way. If we could not get a boat, we must remain in that foodless forest until we starved. Or, if we return to the island of the flower, there ere long we should certainly be attacked and destroyed by Comba and the Pongos when they came to look for our bodies. I'll try at Hans, I said. Yes, boss, I thought you would. I'd come to only I can't swim, and when I was drowning I might make a noise, because one forgets oneself then, boss. But it will be all right. For if it were otherwise, I am sure that your reverent father would have shown a saw in the sign. The moth floated off quite comfortably on the wood, and just now I saw it spread its wings and fly away. And the fish, ah, how he laughs with that fat old spider in his stomach. End of Chapter 17. Chapter 18 of Alan and the Holy Flower. This Librivox recording is in the public domain. Alan and the Holy Flower by H. Ryder Haggard. Chapter 18. Fate Stabs. We went back to the others, whom we found crouched on the ground among the coffins, looking distinctly depressed. No wonder. Night was closing in, the thunder was beginning to growl and echo through the forest, and rain to fall in big drops. In short, although Stephen remarked that every cloud has a silver lining, a proverb which, as I told him, I seem to have heard before, in no sense could the outlook be considered bright. Well, Alan, what have you arranged? asked Brother John with a faint attempt at cheerfulness, as he let go of his wife's hand. In those days he always seemed to be holding his wife's hand. Oh, I answered, I am going to get the canoe so that we can all row over comfortably. They stared at me, and Miss Hope, who was seated by Stephen, asked in her usual biblical language, Have you the wings of a dove that you fly, oh, Mr. Alan? No, I answered, but I have the fins of a fish or something like them I can swim. Now there arose a chorus of expostulation. You shan't risk it, said Stephen. I can swim as well as you, and I am younger. I'll go, I want a bath. That you will have, oh Stephen, interrupted Miss Hope, as I thought in some alarm. The latter rain from heaven will make you clean. By now it was pouring. Yes, Stephen, you can swim, I said, but you will forgive me for saying that you are not particularly deadly with a rifle, and clean shooting may be the essence of this business. Now listen to me, all of you, I am going. I hope that I shall succeed, but if I fail, it does not so very much matter, for you will be no worse off than you were before. There are three pairs of you, John and his wife, Stephen and Miss Hope, Movovo and Hans. If the odd man of the party comes to grief, you will have to choose a new captain, that is all. But while I lead, I mean to be obeyed. Then Movovo, to whom Hans had been talking, spoke. My father Makumazahan is a brave man. If he lives, he will have done his duty. If he dies, he will have done his duty still better. And on the earth, or in the underworld, among the spirits of our fathers, his name shall be great forever. Yes, his name shall be a song. When brother John translated these words, which I thought fine, there was silence. Now, I said, come with me to the water's edge, all of you. You will be in less danger from the lightning, where there are no tall trees. And while I am gone, do you ladies dress up Hans in that gorilla's skin as best you can, lacing it onto him with some of that palm-fibre string which we've wrought with us, and filling out the hollows and the head with leaves or reeds. I want him to be ready when I come back with a canoe. Hans groaned audibly, but made no objection, and we started with our impedimenta down to the edge of the estuary where we hid behind a clump of mangrove bushes and tall feathery reeds. Then I took off some of my clothes, stripping in fact to my flannel shirt and the cottoned hands I wore, both of which were grey in colour, and therefore almost invisible at night. Now I was ready, and Hans handed me the little rifle. It is at full cock-bass with the catch on, he said, and carefully loaded. Also I have rubbed the lining of my hat, which is very full of grease, for the hair makes grease especially in hot weather, thus round the lock to keep away the wet from the cap and boudre. It is not dyed bass, only twisted. Give the rifle a shake, and it will fall off. I understand, I said, and gripped the gun with my left hand by the tongue just forward of the hammer, in such a fashion that the horrid greased rag from Hans's hat was held tight over the lock and cap. Then I shook hands with the others, and when I came to mis-hope I am proud to add that she spontaneously, and of her own accord, imprinted a kiss upon my medieval brow. I felt inclined to return it, but did not. It is the kiss of peace, O Alan, she said, may you go and return in peace. Thank you, I said, but get on with dressing Hans and his new clothes. Stephen muttered something about feeling ashamed of himself. Brother John put up a vigorous and well-directed prayer. Movovo saluted with a copper asagai, and began to give me Sabongo, or Zulu, titles of praise beneath his breath, and Mrs. Eversley said, Oh, I thank God that I have lived to see a brave English gentleman again, which I thought great compliment to my nation and myself, though when I afterwards discovered that she herself was English by birth it took off some of the polish. Next, just after a vivid flash of lightning, for the storm had broken and earnest now, I ran swiftly to the water's edge accompanied by Hans, who was determined to see the last of me. Yet back, Hans, before the lightning shows you, I said, and as I slid it gently from a mangrove route into that filthy stream, and tell them to keep my coat and trousers dry if you can. Goodbye, Bas, he murmured, and I heard that he was sobbing. Keep a good heart, or Bas, of Bas's. After this, this is nothing to the vultures of the hill of Slaughter. In Dombi pulled us through then, and so she will again, for she knows who can hold her straight. That was the last I heard of Hans, for if he said any more, the hiss of torrential rain smothered his words. Oh, I had tried to keep a good heart before the others, but it is beyond my powers to describe the deadly fright I felt, perhaps the worst of all my life, which is saying a great deal. Here I was, starting on one of the maddest ventures that was ever undertaken by man. I needn't put its points again, but that which appealed to me most at that moment was the crocodiles. I've always hated crocodiles since—well, never mind—and the place was full of them as the ponds at Ascension are of turtles. Still I swam on. The estuary was perhaps two hundred yards wide, not more, no great distance for a good swimmer as I was in those days. But then I had to hold the rifle above the water with my left hand at all cost, for at once it went beneath it would be useless. Also I was desperately afraid of being seen in the lightning flashes, although to minimise this risk I had kept my dark-coloured cloth hat upon my head. Lastly there was the lightning itself to fear, for it was fearful and continuous, and seemed to be striking along the water. It was a fact that a fireball or something of the sort hit the surface within a few yards of me, as though it had aimed at the rifle-barrel and just missed—or so I thought, though it may have been a crocodile rising at the moment. In one way or rather in two, however, I was lucky. The first was the complete absence of wind which must have raised waves that might have swamped me, and would at any rate have whetted the rifle. The second was that there was no fear of my losing my path, for in the mouth of the cave I could see the glow of the fires which burned on either side of the Matombo's seat. They served the same purpose to me as did the lamp of the lady called Hero to her lover Leander, when he swam the Hellespont to pay her clandestine visits at night. But he had something pleasant to look forward to, whereas I, still, there was another point in common between us. Hero, if I remember right, was a priestess of the Greek goddess of love, whereas the party who waited me was also in a religious line of business, only as I firmly believe he was a priest of the devil. I suppose that swim took me about a quarter of an hour, for I went slowly to save my strength, although the crocodiles suggested haste. But thank heaven they never appeared to complicate matters. Now I was quite near the cave, and now I was beneath the overhanging roof, and in the shallow water of the little bay that formed a harbour for the canoe. I stood upon my feet on the rock bottom, the water coming up to my breast, and peered about me, while I rested and worked my left arm, stiff with the upholding of the gun to and fro. The fires had burnt somewhat low, and until my eyes were freed from the raindrops, and were accustomed to the light of the place, I could not see clearly. I took the rag from round the lock of the rifle, wiped the wet off the barrel with it, and let it fall. Then I loosed the catch, and by touching a certain mechanism, made the rifle hair triggered. Now I looked again and began to make out things. There was the platform, and there, alas! On it sat the toad-like matombo. But his back was to me. He was gazing not toward the water, but down the cave. I hesitated for one fateful moment. Perhaps the priest was asleep. Perhaps I could get the canoe away without shooting. I did not like the job. Moreover, his head was held forward and invisible, and how was I to make certain of killing him with a shot in the back? Lastly, if possible, I wished to avoid firing because of the report. At that instant the matombo wheeled round. Some instinct must have warned him of my presence, for the silent was grave-like, save for the soft splash of the rain without. As he turned, the lightning blazed, and he saw me. It is the white man, he muttered to himself in his hissing whisper, while I waited through the following darkness with the rifle at my shoulder. The white man who shot me long, long ago, and again he has a gun. All fate stabs, doubtless the God is dead, and I too must die. Then, as if some doubt struck him, he lifted the horn to summon help. Again the lightning flashed and was accompanied by a fearful crack of thunder. With a prayerful skill I covered his head and fired by the glare of it, just as the trumpet touched his lips. It fell from his hand. He seemed to shrink together, and moved no more. Oh, thank God, thank God! In this supreme moment of trial, the art of which I am a master had not failed me. If my hand had shaken ever so little, if my nerves, strained to breaking point, had played me false in the least degree, if the rag from Hans's hat had not sufficed to keep away the damp from the cap and the powder. Well, this history would never have been written, and there would have been some more bones in the graveyard of the Calubis, that is all. For a moment I waited, expecting to see the women attendants dart from the doorways in the sides of the cave, and to hear them sound a shrill alarm. None appeared, and I guessed that the rattle of the thunder had swallowed up the crack of the rifle, a noise be it remembered that none of them had ever heard. For an unknown number of years this ancient creature, I suppose, had squatted day and night upon that platform, whence I dare say it was difficult for him to move. So after they had wrapped his furs round him at sunset, and made up the fires to keep him warm, why should his women come to disturb him unless he called them with his horn? Probably it was not even lawful that they should do so. Somewhat reassured I waited forward a few paces, and loosed the canoe which was tied by the prowl. Then I scrambled into it, and laying down the rifle, took one of the paddles, and began to push out of the creek. Just then the lightning flared once more, and by it I caught sight of the Matombos face that was now within a few feet of my own. It seemed to be resting almost on his knees, and its appearance was dreadful. In the centre of the ford was a blue mark where the bullet had entered, for I had made no mistake in that matter. The deep-set round eyes were open, and all their fire gone seemed to stare at me from beneath the overhanging brows. The massive jaw had fallen, and the red tongue hung out upon the pendulous lip. The leather-like skin of the bloated cheeks had assumed an ashen hue still streaked and mottled with brown. Oh, the thing was horrible! And sometimes when I am out of sorts it haunts me to this day. Yet that creature's blood does not lie heavy on my mind. Of it my conscience is not afraid. His end was necessary to save the innocent, and I am sure that it was well deserved. For he was a devil, akin to the great God-Ape I had slain on the forest, to whom by the way he bore a most remarkable resemblance in death. Indeed, if their heads had been laid side by side at a little distance, it would not have been easy to tell them apart with their projecting brows, beardless, retreating chins, and yellow tushes at the corners of the mouth. Presently I was clear of the cave. Still for a while I lay too at one side of it against the towering cliff, both to listen in case what I had done should be discovered, and for fear lest the lightning which was still bright, although the storm-centre was rapidly passing away, should reveal me to any watchers. For quite ten minutes I hid thus, and then, determining to risk it, paddled softly towards the opposite bank keeping, however, a little to the west of the cave, and taking my line by a certain very tall tree which, as I had noted, towered up against the sky at the back of the graveyard. As it happened my calculations were accurate, and in the end I directed the bow of the canoe into the rushes behind which I had left my companions. Just then the moon began to struggle out through the thinning rain clouds, and by its light they saw me, and I saw what for a moment I took to be the gorilla god himself waddling forward to seize the boat. There was the dreadful brute exactly as he had appeared in the forest, except that it seemed a little smaller. Then I remembered and laughed, and that laughed did me a world of good. "'Is that your boss?' said a muffled voice, speaking apparently from the middle of the gorilla. "'Are you a safe boss?' "'Of course,' I answered, or how should I be here, adding cheerfully. "'Are you comfortable in that nice warm skin on this wet night, Hans?' "'Or, boss,' answered the voice, tell me what happened, even in this stink I burned on all.' Death happened to the matombo-hans. "'Here, Stephen, give me your hand and my clothes, and Movovo hold the rifle and the canoe while I put them on.' Then I landed, and, stepping into the reeds, pulled off my wet shirt and pants, which I stuffed away into the big pockets of my shooting-coat, for I did not want to lose them, and put on the dry things that, although scratchy, were quite good enough clothing in that warm climate. After this I treated myself to a good sup of brandy from the flask, and ate some food which I seemed to require. Then I told them the story, and, cutting short their demonstrations of wonder and admiration, bade them, place the holy flower in the canoe, and get in themselves. Next, with the help of Hans, who poked out his fingers to the skin of the gorilla's arms, I carefully reloaded the rifle, setting the last cap on the nipple. This done I joined them in the canoe, taking my seat in the prow, and vidding Brother John and Stephen Paddle. Making a circuit to avoid observation as before, in a very short time we reached the mouth of the cave. I led forward and peeped round the western wall of rock. Nobody seemed to be stirring. There the fires burned dimly, there the huddled shape of the motombo still crouched upon the platform. Silently, silently we disembarked, and I formed our procession while the others looked to scans at the horrible face of the dead motombo. I headed it, then came the mother of the flower followed by Hans playing his part of the god of the forest, then Brother John and Stephen carrying the holy flower. After it walked hope, while Movovo brought up the rear. Near to one of the fires, as I had noted on our first passage of the cave, they are pile of torches which I have already mentioned. Will it some of them, and at a sign from me, Movovo dragged the canoe back into its little dock and tied the cord to its post. Its appearance there apparently undisturbed might, I thought, make our crossing of the water seem even more mysterious. All this while I watched the doors and the sides of the cave, expecting every moment to see the women rush out, but none came. Perhaps they slept, or perhaps they were absent, I do not know to this day. We started, and in solemn silence threaded our way down the windings of the cave, extinguishing our torches as soon as we saw light at its island outlet. At a few paces from its mouth stood a sentry. His back was towards the cave, and in the uncertain gleams of the moon struggling with the clouds, for a thin rain still fell, he never noted us till we were right on to him. Then he turned and saw, and at the awful sight of this procession of the gods of his land, threw up his arms, and without a word, fell senseless. Although I never asked, I think that Movovo took measures to prevent his awakening. At any rate, when I looked back later on, I observed that he was carrying a big pongo spear with a long shaft, instead of a copper weapon which he had taken from one of the coffins. On we marched towards Ricca town, following the easy path by which we had come. As I have said, the country was very deserted, and the inhabitants of such huts as we passed were evidently fast asleep. Also, there were no dogs in this land to awake them with their barking. Between the cave and Ricca we were not, I think, seen by a single soul. Through that long night we pushed on as fast as we could travel, only stopping now and again for a few minutes to rest the bearers of the holy flower. Indeed, at times Mrs. Eversly relieved her husband at this task, but Stephen, being very strong, carried his end of the stretcher throughout the whole journey. Hans, of course, was much oppressed by the great weight of the gorilla's skin, which, although it had shrunk a good deal, remained as heavy as ever. But he was a tough old fellow, and on the whole got on better than might have been expected, though by the time we reached the town he was sometimes obliged to follow the example of the god itself, and help himself forward with his hands, going on all fours as a gorilla generally does. We reached the broad long street of Ricca about half an hour before dawn, and proceeded down it till we were past the feast-house still quite unobserved, for as yet none were stirring on that wet morning. Indeed, it was not until we were within a hundred yards of the harbour that a woman possessed of the virtue or vice of early rising, who had come from a hut to work in her garden, saw us and raised an awful piercing scream. The gods, she screamed, the gods are leaving the land and taking the white men with them. Instantly there arose a hubbub in the houses, heads were thrust out of the doors, and people ran into the gardens, every one of whom began to yell till one might have thought that a massacre was in progress. But as yet no one came near us, for they were afraid. Push on, I cried, or all is lost. They answered nobly. Hans struggled forward on all fours, for he was nearly done and his hideous garment was choking him, while Stephen and Brother John, exhausted though they were with the weight of the great plant, actually broke into a feeble trot. We came to the harbour and there, tied to the wharf, was the same canoe in which we had crossed to Pongoland. We sprang into it and cut the fastenings with my knife, having no time to untie them, and pushed off from the wharf. By now hundreds of people among the many soldiers were hard upon and indeed around us, but still they seemed too frightened to do anything. So far the inspiration of Hans' disguise had saved us, and the midst of them by the light of the rising sun I recognized Combo, who ran up, a great spear in his hand, and for a moment halted amazed. Then it was that the catastrophe happened which nearly cost us all our lives. Hans, who was in the stern of the canoe, began to faint from exhaustion, and in his efforts to obtain air for the heat and stench of the skin were overpowering him, thrust his head out through the lacing of the hide beneath the reed-stuffed mask of the gorilla, which fell over languidly upon his shoulder. Combo saw his ugly little face and knew it again. It is a trick, he roared. These white devils have killed the god and stolen the holy flower and its priestess. The yellow man is wrapped in the skin of the god. To the boats! To the boats! Paddle! I shouted to Brother John and Stephen. Paddle for your lives! Movovo helped me get up the sail. As it chanced on that stormy morning the wind was blowing strongly towards the mainland. We laboured at the mast, shipped it and hauled up the mat sail, but slowly, for we were awkward at the business. By the time that it began to draw the paddles had propelled us about four hundred yards from the wharf, whence many canoes with their sails already set were starting in pursuit. Standing in the prow of the first of these, and roaring curses and vengeance at us, was Combo, the new colubi, who shook a great spear above his head. An idea occurred to me, who knew that unless something were done we might be overtaken and killed by these skilled boatmen. Leaving Movovo to attend the sail, I scrambled aft, and, thrusting aside the fainting harms, knelt down in the stern of the canoe. There was still one charge or rather one cap left, and I meant to use it. I put up the largest flap-site, lifted the little rifle and covered Combo, aiming at the point of his chin. In Tomby was not sighted for or meant to use at this great distance, and only by this means of allowing for the drop of the bullet could I hope to hit the man in the body. The sail was drawing well now, and steadied the boat, also being still under the shelter of the land, the water was smooth as that of a pond. So really, I had a very good firing platform. Moreover, weary though I was, my vital forces rose to the emergency, and I felt myself go rigid as a statue. Lastly, the light was good for the sun rose behind me, its level rays shining full on to my mark. I held my breath and touched the trigger. The charge exploded sweetly, and almost at the instant as the smoke drifted to one side, I saw Combo throw up his arms and fall backwards into the canoe. Then, quite a long while afterwards, or so it seemed, the breeze brought the faint sound of the thud of that fateful bullet to our ears. Though perhaps I ought not to say so, it was really a wonderful shot in all the circumstances, for as I learned afterwards the ball struck just where I hoped that it might, in the centre of the breast, piercing the heart. Indeed, taking everything into consideration, I think that those four shots which I fired in Pongoland are the real record of my career as a marksman. The first at night broke the arm of the guerrilla god, and would have killed him had not of the charge hung fire, and given him time to protect his head. The second did kill him in the midst of a great scrimmage when everything was moving. The third, fired by the glare of lightning after a long swim, slew them at Combo, and the fourth, loosed at this great distance from a moving boat, was the bane of that cold-blooded and treacherous man Combo, who thought that he had trapped us to Pongoland to be murdered and eaten as a sacrifice. Lastly there was always the consciousness that no mistake must be made, since with but four percussion caps it could not be retrieved. I am sure that I could not have done so well with any other rifle, however modern and accurate it might be. But to this little pretty weapon I had been accustomed from my youth, and that, as any marksman will know, means a great deal. I seem to know it, and it seemed to know me. It hangs on my wall to this day, although, of course, I never use it now in our breech-loading era. Unfortunately, however, a local gunsmith to whom I sent it to have the lock cleaned, rebround it and scraped and varnished the stock, etc., without authority, making it look almost new again. I preferred it in its worn and scratched condition. To return, the sound of the shot, like that of John Peel's horn, aroused harms from his sleep. He thrust his head between my legs, and saw come the fall. Oh, beautiful, Barst, beautiful, he said faintly. I am sure that the ghost of your reverend father cannot kill his enemies more nicely down there among the fires. Beautiful! And the silly old fellow fell to kissing my boots, or what remained of them, after which I gave him the last of the brandy. This brought him to himself again, especially when he was free from that filthy skin, and had washed his head and hands. The effect of the death of Comba upon the Pongos was very strange. All other canoes clustered round that in which he lay. Then, after a hurried consultation, they hauled down their sails and paddled back to the wharf. Why they did this I cannot tell. Perhaps they thought that he was bewitched, or only wounded, and required the attentions of a medicine-man. Perhaps it was not lawful for them to proceed except under the guidance of some reserve calubi who had passed to the god, and who was on shore. Perhaps it was necessary, according to their rites, that the body of their chief should be landed with certain ceremonies. I do not know. It is impossible to be sure as to the mysterious motives that actuate many of these remote African tribes. At any rate the result was that it gave us a great start and a chance of life who must otherwise have died upon the spot. Outside the bay the breeze blew merrily, taking us across the lake at a spanking pace, until about midday when it began to fall. Fortunately, however, it did not altogether drop till three o'clock by which time the coast of Mozituland was comparatively near. We could even distinguish a speck against the skyline, which we knew was the Union Jack that Stephen had set upon the crest of a little hill. During those hours of peace we ate the food that remained to us, washed ourselves as thoroughly as we could and rested. Well was it, in view of what followed that we had this time of repose. For just as the breeze was failing I looked aft and there, coming up behind us, still holding the wind, was the whole fleet of pongo canoes, thirty or forty of them perhaps, each carrying an average of about twenty men. We sailed on for as long as we could, for though our progress was but slow, it was quicker than what we could have made by paddling. Also it was necessary that we should save our strength for the last trial. I remember that hour very well, for in the nervous excitement of it every little thing impressed itself upon my mind. I remember even the shape of the clouds that floated over us, remnants of the storm of the previous night. One was like a castle with a broken down turret showing a staircase within. Another had a fantastic resemblance to a wrecked ship with a hole on her starboard bow. Two of her masts broken and one standing with some fragments of sail flapping from it, and so forth. Then there was the general aspect of the Great Lake, especially at a spot where two currents met causing little waves which seemed to fight with each other and fall backwards in curious curves. Also there were shoals of small fish, something like chub in shape with round miles and very white stomachs, which suddenly appeared upon the surface jumping at invisible flies. These attracted a number of birds that resembled gulls of a light build. They had coal-black heads, white backs, grayish wings, and slightly webbed feet, pink as coral, with which they seized of the small fish, uttering as they did so a peculiar and plaintive cry that ended with a long drawn, eeee. The father of the flock, whose head seemed to be white like his back, perhaps from age, hung above them, not troubling to fish himself. But from time to time forcing one of the company to drop what he had caught, which he retrieved before it reached the water. Such are some of the small things that come back to me, though there were others too numerous and trivial to mention. When the breeze failed us at last we were perhaps something over three miles from the shore, or rather from the great bed of reeds which at this spot grow in the shadows off the Mizzito coast to the breadth of seven or eight hundred yards, where the water becomes too deep for them. The pongas were then about a mile and a half behind, but as the wind favoured them for a few minutes more and having plenty of hands they could help themselves on by paddling. When it lasted to die to a complete calm the distance between us was not more than one mile. This meant that they must cover four miles of water, while we covered three. Letting down our now useless sail and throwing it and the mast overboard to lighten the canoe, since the sky showed us that there was no more hope of wind, we began to paddle as hard as we could. Fortunately the two ladies were able to take their share of this exercise since they had learned it upon the lake of the flower, where it seemed they kept a private canoe upon the other side of the island which was used for fishing. Hans, who was still weak, was set to steer with a paddle aft, which he did in a somewhat erratic fashion. A stern chase is proverbially a long chase, but still the enemy with their skilled rowers came up fast. When we were a mile from the reeds they were within half a mile of us, and as we tired the proportion of distance lessened. When we were two hundred yards from the reeds they were not more than fifty or sixty yards behind, and then the real struggle began. It was short, but terrible. We threw everything we could overboard, including the ballast stones at the bottom of the canoe and the heavy hide of the gorilla. This, as it proved, was fortunate, since the things sank but slowly, and of the foremost pongo boats halted a minute to recover so precious a relic, checking the others behind them a circumstance that helped us by twenty or thirty yards. Over with the plant, I said, but Stephen, looking quite old from exhaustion and with a sweat streaming from him as he laboured at his unaccustomed paddle, gasped for heaven's sake! No! After all we have gone through to get it! So I didn't insist. Indeed there was neither time nor breath for argument. Now we were in the reeds, for thanks to the wind which guided us we had struck the big hippopotamus lane exactly, and the pongos paddling like demons were about thirty yards behind. Thankful was I that those interesting people had never learned the use of bows and arrows, and that their spears were too heavy to throw. By now, or rather some time before, old Babimbo and the Mizzito had seen us, as had our Zulu hunters. Crowds of them were wading through the shallows towards its yelling encouragements as they came. The Zulus too opened a rather wild fire with the result that one of the bullets struck our canoe and another touched the brim of my hat. A third, however, killed a pongo which caused some confusion in the ranks of Tusculum. But we were done, and they came on remorselessly. When their leading boat was not more than ten yards from us and we were perhaps two hundred from the shore, I drove my paddle downwards and finding that the water was less than four feet deep shouted, Overboard! All! and wait! It is our last chance! We scrambled out of that canoe, the prow of which, as I left it to the last, I pushed round across the water lane to obstruct those of the pongo. Now I think all would have gone well had it not been for Stephen, who after he had floundered forward a few paces in the mud, but thought him of his beloved orchid. Not only did he return to try to rescue it, he also actually persuaded his friend Movovo to accompany him. They got back to the boat and began to lift the plant out when the pongo fell upon them, striking at them with their spears over the width of our canoe. Movovo struck back with the weapon he had taken from the pongo sentry at the cave mouth and killed or wounded one of them. Then someone hurled a ballast stone at him which caught him on the side of the head and knocked him down into the water. Once he rose and reeled back almost senseless till some of our people got hold of him and dragged him to the shore. So Stephen was left alone, dragging at the great orchid till a pongo reaching over the canoe drove a spear through his shoulder. He let go of the orchid because he must and tried to retreat. Too late. Half a dozen or more of the pongo pushed themselves between the stern or bow of our canoe and the reeds and waited forward to kill him. I could not help. For to tell the truth at the moment I was stuck in a mud-hole made by the hoof of a hippopotamus, while the Zulu hunters and the Mozito were as yet too far off. Surely he must have died had it not been for the courage of the girl Hope, who, while waiting shorewards a little in front of me, had turned and seen his plight. Back she came, literally bounding through the water like a leopard whose cubs are in danger. Reaching Stephen before the pongo she thrust herself between them and proceeded to address them with the utmost vigor in their own language, which of course she had learned from those of the albinos who were not mutes. What she said I could not exactly catch because of the shouts of the advancing Mozito. I gathered however that she was anathema-nising them in the words of some old and potent curse which was only used by the guardians of the Holy Flower, which consigned them body and spirit to a dreadful doom. The effect of this malediction, which by the way neither the young lady nor her mother would repeat to me afterwards, was certainly remarkable. Those men who heard it among them the would-be slayers of Stephen stayed their hands and even inclined their heads towards the young priestess, as though in reverence or deprecation, and thus remained for sufficient time for her to lead the wounded Stephen out of danger. This she did, wading backwards by his side in keeping her eyes fixed full upon the pongo. It was perhaps the most curious rescue that I ever saw. The Holy Flower I should add they recaptured and carried off, for I sought departing in one of their canoes. That was the end of my orchid hunt and of the money which I hoped to make by the sale of this floral treasure. I wonder what became of it. I have good reason to believe that it was never replanted on the island of the flower, so perhaps it was borne back to the dim and unknown land in the depths of Africa whence the pongo are supposed to have brought it when they migrated. After this incident of the wounding and the rescue of Stephen by the intrepid Miss Hope, whose interest in him was already strong enough to induce her to risk her life on his behalf, all we fugitives were dragged ashore somehow by our friends. Here Hans and I and the ladies collapsed exhausted, though Brother John still found sufficient strength to do what he could for the injured Stephen and Movovo. Then the battle of the reeds began and a fierce fray it was. The pongos who were about equal in numbers to our people came on furiously, for they were mad at the death of their God with his priest and the Motombo of which I think news had reached them and at the carrying off of the mother of the flower. Springing from their canoes because the waterway was too narrow for more than one of these to travel at a time, they plunged into the reeds with the intention of wading ashore. Here their hereditary enemies the Mozito attacked them under the command of Old Babamba. The struggle that ensued partook more of the nature of a series of hand-to-hand fights than of a set battle. It was extraordinary to see the heads of the combatants moving among the reeds as they stabbed at each other with the great spears till one went down. There were few wounded in that fray for those who fell sank in the mud and water and were drowned. On the whole the pongo who were operating in what was almost their native element were getting the best of it and driving the Mozito back. But what decided the day against them were the guns of our Zulu hunters. Although I could not lift a rifle myself I managed to collect these men round me and direct their fire which proved so terrifying to the pongos that after ten or a dozen of them had been knocked over they began to give back sullenly and were helped into their canoes by those men who were left in charge of them. Then at length, at a signal, they got out their paddles and, still shouting curses and defiance at us, rode away till they became but specks upon the bosom of the Great Lake and vanished. Two of the canoes we captured, however, and with them six or seven pongos. These the Mozito wished to put to death, but at the bidding of Brother John whose orders it will be remembered had the same authority in Mozito land as those of the King they bound their arms and made them prisoners instead. In about half an hour it was over, but of the rest of that day I cannot write, as I think I fainted from utter exhaustion which was not perhaps wonderful, considering all that we had undergone in the four and a half days that had elapsed since we first embarked upon the Great Lake. For constant strain, physical and mental, I recall no such four days during the whole of my adventurous life. It was indeed wonderful that we came through them alive. The last thing I remember was the appearance of Sammy looking very smart in his blue cotton smock, who, now that the fighting was over, emerged like a butterfly when the sun shines after rain. Oh, Mr. Quatermain, he said, I welcome you home again after arduous exertions and looking into the eyes of bloody war. All the days of absence and a good part of the night's tour while the mosquitoes hunted slumber, I prayed for your safety like one o'clock, and perhaps Mr. Quatermain that helped to do the trick for what, says poet, those who serve and wait are almost as good as those who cook dinner, such were the words which reached and oddly impressed themselves upon my darkening brain, or rather they were part of the words, excerpts from a long speech that there is no doubt Sammy had carefully prepared during our absence. When I came to myself again, it was to find that I had slept fifteen or sixteen hours, for the sun of a new day was high in the heavens. I was lying in a little shelter of boughs at the foot of that mound on which we flew the flag that guided us back over the waters of Lake Carua. Nearby was Hans consuming a gigantic meal of meat which he had cooked over a neighbouring fire. With him to my delight I saw Movovo, his head bound up, though otherwise but little the worse. The stone which probably would have killed a thin-skulled white man had done no more than knock him stupid and to break the skin of his scalp, perhaps because the force of it was lessened by the gunman's ring, which, like most zulus of certain age or dignity, he wore woven in his hair. The two tents we had brought with us to the lake were pitched not far away, and looked quite pretty and peaceful there in the sunlight. Hans, who was watching me out of the corner of his eye, ran to me with a large panicin of hot coffee which Sammy had made ready against my awakening, for they knew that my sleep was or had become of a natural order. I drank it to the last drop, and in all my life never did I enjoy anything more. Then, while I began upon some pieces of the toasted meat, I asked him what had happened. Not much, Bas, he answered, except that we are alive who should be dead. The mam and the Missy are still asleep in that tent, or at least the mam is, for the Missy is helping Dogita her father to nurse Bas Stephen, who has an ugly wound. The Pongos have gone, and I think will not return, for they have had enough of the white man's guns. The Missy too have buried those of their dead whom they could recover, and have sent their wounded, of whom there were only six, back to beset town on litters. That is all, Bas. Then, while I washed, and never did I need a bath more, and put on my underclothes, in which I had swum on the night of the killing of the Mutombo, that Hans had wrung out and dried in the sun, I asked that worthy how he was after his adventures. Oh, well enough, Bas, he answered, now that my stomach is full, except that my hands and wrists are sore with crawling around to the ground like a babian, baboon, and that I cannot get the stink of that God's skin out of my nose. Oh, you don't know what it was. If I had been a white man, it would have killed me. But Bas, perhaps you did well to take drunken old Hans with you on this journey after all, for I was clever about the little gun, wasn't I? Also about your swimming of the crocodile water, though it is true that the sign of the spider and the moth which your reverent father sent taught me that. And now we have got back safe except for the Mizzito, Jerry, who doesn't matter, for there are plenty more like him, and the wound in Bas' Stephen's shoulder, and that heavy flower which he thought better than Brandy. Yes, Hans, I said, I did well to take you, and you are clever, for had it not been for you we should now be cooked and eaten in Pongoland. I thank you for your help, old friend. But Hans, another time, please out the holes of your waistcoat pocket, for caps wasn't much, Hans. No, Bas, but it was enough, as they were all good ones. If there had been forty you could not have done much more. Oh, your reverent father knew all that. My departed parent had become a kind of patron saint to Hans, and did not wish this poor old hot-and-top to have more to carry than was needed. He knew you wouldn't miss, Bas, and that there were only one God, one Devil, and one man waiting to be killed. I laughed, for Hans's way of putting things was certainly original, and having got on my coat went to see Stephen. At the door of the tent I met Brother John, who shoulder was dreadfully sore from the rubbing of the orchid stretcher, as were his hands with paddling, but who otherwise was well enough and of course supremely happy. He told me that he had cleansed and sewn up Stephen's wound, which appeared to be doing well, though the spear had pierced right through the shoulder, luckily without cutting any artery. So I went in to see the patient, and found him cheerful enough, though weak from weariness and loss of blood, with Miss Hope feeding him with broth from a wooden native spoon. I didn't stop very long, especially after he got unto the subject of the lost orchid, about which he began to show signs of excitement. This I allayed as well as I could, by telling him that I had preserved a pod of the seed, news at which he was delighted. There, he said, to think that you, Alan, should have remembered to take that precaution when I, an orchidist, forgot all about it. Ah, my boy, I answered, I have lived long enough to learn never to leave anything behind that I can possibly carry away. Also, although not an orchidist, it occurred to me that there are more ways of propagating a plant than from the original root, which generally won't go into one's pocket. Then he began to give me elaborate instructions as to the preservation of the seed pod in a perfectly dry and airtight box, etc., at which point Miss Hope unceremoniously bundled me out of the tent. That afternoon we held a conference at which it was agreed that we should begin our return journey to Beesartown at once, as the place where we were camped was very malariaous, and there was always a risk of the pongo paying us another visit. So a litter was made with a mat stretched over it in which Stephen could be carried, since fortunately there were plenty of bearers, and our other simple preparations were quickly completed. Mrs. Eversley and Hope were mounted on the two donkeys. Brother John, whose hurt leg showed signs of renewed weakness, rode his white ox, which was now quite fat again. The wounded hero Stephen, as I have said, was carried, and I walked, comparing notes with Old Vivembo on the pongo, their manners, which I am bound to say were good, and their customs that, as the saying goes, were simply beastly. How delighted that ancient warrior was to hear again about the sacred cave, the crocodile river, the mountain forest, and its terrible god, of the death of which and of the matombo he made me tell him the story three times over. At the conclusion of the third recital he said quietly, My Lord Mokuma Zahan, you are a great man, and I am glad to have lived if only to know you, no one else could have done these deeds. Of course I was complimented, but felt bound to point out Hans' share in our joint achievement. Yes, yes, he answered, the spotted snake, in hood or two, has the cunning to scheme, but you have the power to do, and what is the use of a brain to plot without the arm to strike? The two do not go together because the plotter is not a striker, his mind is different. If the snake had the strength and the brain of the elephant, and the fierce courage of the buffalo, soon there would be but one creature left in the world, but the maker of all things knew this and kept them separate, My Lord Mokuma Zahan. I thought, and still think, that there was a great deal of wisdom in this remark, simple as it seems. Oh, surely many of these savages whom we white men despise are no fools. After about an hour's march we camped till the moon rose which it did at ten o'clock, when we went on again till near dawn, as I thought it better that Stephen should travel in the cool of the night. I remember that our cavalcade, escorted before, behind, and on either flank by the mozito-troops with their tall spears, looked picturesque and even imposing, as it wound over those wide downs and the lovely peaceful light of the moon. There is no need for me to set out the details of the rest of our journey which was not marked by any incident of importance. Stephen bore it very well, and Brother John, who was one of the best doctors I ever met, gave good reports of him. But I noted that he did not seem to get any stronger, although he ate plenty of food. Also, Miss Hope, who nursed him, for her mother seemed to have no taste that way, informed me that he slept but little, as indeed I found out for myself. Oh, Alan, she said, just before we reached Beezartown. On your son—she used to call him my son, I don't know why—is sick. The father says it is only the spear-hurt, but I tell you it is more than the spear-hurt. He is sick in himself. And the tears that filled her grey eyes showed me that she spoke what she believed. As a matter of fact she was right, for on the night after we reached the town Stephen was seized with an attack of some bad form of African fever, which in his weak state nearly cost him his life, contracted no doubt at that unhealthy crocodile river. Our reception at Beezartown was most imposing, for the whole population headed by old Bowsy himself came out to meet us with loud shouts of welcome, from which we had to ask them to desist for Stephen's sake. So in the end we got back to our huts with gratitude of heart. Indeed we should have been very happy there for a while had it not been for our anxiety about Stephen. But it is always thus in the world who was ever allowed to eat his pot of honey without finding a fly or perhaps a cockroach in his mouth. In all Stephen was really ill for about a month. On the tenth day after our arrival at Beezartown, according to my diary, which having little else to do I entered up fully at this time, we thought that he would surely die. Even brother John who attended him with the most constant skill, and who had ample quinine and other drugs at his command, for these we had brought with us from Durban in plenty, gave up the case. Day and night the poor fellow raved and awed about that confounded orchid, the loss of which seemed to weigh upon his mind as though it were a whole sackful of unrepented crimes. I really think that he owed his life to subterfuge or rather to a bold invention of hopes. One evening when he was at his very worst and going on like a mad creature about the lost plant, I was present in the hut at the time alone with him and her. She took his hand and pointing to a perfectly open space on the floor said, Look O Stephen, the flower has been brought back. He stared and stared and then to my amazement answered, By Jove so it has, but those beggars have broken off all the bloons except one. Yes, she echoed, but one remains and it is the finest of them all. After this he went quietly to sleep and slept for twelve hours, then took some food and slept again, and what is more his temperature went down too or a little below normal. When he finally woke up as it chanced I was again present in the hut with hope, who was standing on the spot which she had persuaded him was occupied by the orchid. He stared at this spot and he stared at her, me he could not see for I was behind him, then said in a weak voice, Didn't you tell me, Miss Hope, that the plant was where you are and that the most beautiful of the flowers was left? I wondered what on earth her answer would be, however she rose to the occasion. O Stephen, she replied in her soft voice and speaking in a way so natural that it freed her words from any boldness. It is here. For am I not its child? Her native appellation it will be remembered was child of the flower. And the fairest of the flowers is here too, for I am that flower which you found in the island of the lake, O Stephen. I pray you to trouble no more about a lost plant of which you have seed in plenty, but make thanks that you still live and that through you my mother and I still live, who if you had died would weep our eyes away. Through me, he answered, you mean through Alan and Hans. Also it was you who saved my life there in the water. Oh, I remember it all now. You are right, Hope, although I didn't know it. You are the true holy flower that I saw. She ran to him and kneeling by his side gave him her hand, which he pressed to his pale lips. Then I sneaked out of that hut and left them to discuss the lost flower that was found again. It was a pretty scene and one that, to my mind, gave a sort of spiritual meaning to the whole of an otherwise rather insane quest. He sought an ideal flower. He found the love of his life. After this, Stephen recovered rapidly, for such love is the best of medicines, if it be returned. I don't know what passed between the pair and brother John and his wife, for I never asked. But I noted that from this day forward they began to treat him as a son. The new relationship between Stephen and Hope seemed to be tacitly accepted without discussion. Even the natives accepted it, for Old Movovo asked me when they were going to be married and how many cows Stephen had promised to pay brother John for such a beautiful wife. It ought to be a large herd, he said, and a big breed of cattle. Sammy, too, alluded to the young lady in conversation with me as Mr. Summer's affianced spouse. Only Hans said nothing. Such a trivial matter as marrying and giving in marriage did not interest him. Or perhaps he looked upon the affair as a foregone conclusion and, therefore, unworthy of comment. We stayed at Bows's Crull for a full month longer whilst Stephen recovered his strength. I grew thoroughly bored with the place, and so did Movovo and the Zulus, but brother John and his wife did not seem to mind. Mrs. Eversly was a passive creature, quite content to take things as they came, and after so long an absence from civilization to bide a little longer among savages. Also she had her beloved John, at whom she would sit and gaze by the hour, like a cat sometimes does at a person to whom it is attached. Indeed, when she spoke to him her voice seemed to me to resemble a kind of blissful purr. I think it made the old boy rather fidgety sometimes, for after an hour or two of it he would rise and go and hunt for butterflies. To tell the truth the situation got on my nerves at last, for wherever I looked I seemed to see there Stephen and Hope making love to each other, or brother John and his wife admiring each other, which didn't leave me much spare conversation. Evidently they thought that Movovo, Hans, Sammy, Bowsy, Bbemba and Co were enough for me, that is, if they reflected on the matter at all. So they were, in a sense, for the Zulu hunters began to get out of hand in the midst of this idleness and plenty, eating too much, drinking too much native beer, smoking too much of the intoxicating ducca, a mischievous kind of help, and making too much love to the Mizitu women which of course resulted in the usual rouse that I had to settle. At last I struck and said that we must move on as Stephen was now fit to travel. Quite so, said brother John mildly. What have you arranged, Alan? With some irritation, for I hated that sentence of brother John's, I replied that I had arranged nothing, but that as none of them seemed to have any suggestions to make, I would go out and talk the matter over with Hans and Movovo, which I did. I need not chronicle the results of our conference, since other arrangements were being made for us at which I little guessed. It all came very suddenly, as great things in the lives of men and nations sometimes do. Although the Mizitu were of the Zulu family, their military organization had none of the Zulu Fareness. For instance, when I remonstrated with Bowsy and Old Babamba as to their not keeping up a proper system of outposts and intelligence, they laughed at me and answered that they had never been attacked, and now that the Pongo had learnt a lesson, were never likely to be. By the way, I see that I have not yet mentioned that at brother John's request, those Pongo who had been taken prisoners at the battle of the Reeds, were conducted to the shores of the lake, given one of the captured canoes, and told that they might return to their own happy land. To our astonishment, about three weeks later they reappeared at Biza town with this story. They said that they had crossed the lake and found Rika still standing, but utterly deserted. They then wandered through the country and even explored the Mutombo's cave. There they discovered the remains of the Mutombo, still crouched upon his platform, but nothing more. In one heart of a distant village, however, they came across an old and dying woman who informed them with her last breath that the Pongos, frightened by the iron tubes that vomited death and an obedience to some prophecy, had all gone back once they came in the beginning, taking with them the recaptured holy flower. She had been left with a supply of food because she was too weak to travel. So, perhaps that flower grows again in some unknown place in Africa, but its worshippers will have to provide themselves with another god of the forest, another mother of the flower, and another high priest to fill the office of the late Mutombo. These Pongo prisoners, having now no home and not knowing where their people had gone except that it was towards the north, asked for leave to settle among the Mizito which was granted them. Their story confirmed to me in my opinion that Pongo land is not really an island, but is connected on the further side with the continent by some ridge or swamp. If we had been obliged to stop much longer among the Mizito, I would have satisfied myself as to this matter by going to look. But that chance never came to me until some years later when, under curious circumstances, I was again destined to visit this part of Africa, to return to my story. On the day following this discussion as to our departure, we all breakfasted very early as there was a great deal to be done. There was a dense mist at that morning, such as in these Mizito uplands often precedes high, hot wind from the north at this season of the year, so dense indeed that it was impossible to see for more than a few yards. I suppose that this mist comes up from the great lake in certain conditions of the weather. We had just finished our breakfast and rather languidly for the thick, sultry air left me unenergetic. I told one of the Zulus to see that the two donkeys and the white ox which I had caused to be brought into town in view of our near departure and tied up by our huts were properly fed. Then I went to inspect all the rifles and ammunition which Hans had got out to be checked and overhauled. It was at this moment that I heard a far away and unaccustomed sound and asked Hans what he thought it was. A gun boss, he answered anxiously. Well mighty be anxious, for as we both knew no one in the neighborhood had guns except ourselves and all ours were accounted for. It is true that we had promised to give the majority of those we had taken from the slavers to Bausi when we went away and that I had been instructing some of his best soldiers in the use of them, but not one of these had as yet been left in their possession. I stepped to a gate in the fence and ordered the sentry there to run to Bausi and Babamba and make reports and inquiries, also to pray them to summon all the soldiers of whom as it happened there were at the time not more than three hundred in the town. As perfect peace prevailed the rest, according to their custom, had been allowed to go to their villages and attend to their crops. Then, possessed by a rather undefined nervousness at which the others were inclined to laugh, I caused the Zulus to arm and generally make a few arrangements to meet any unforeseen crisis. This done I sat down to reflect what would be the best course to take if we should happen to be attacked by a large force in that straggling native town of which I had often studied all the strategic possibilities. When I had come to my own conclusion I asked Hans and Movova what they thought and found that they agreed with me that the only defensible place was outside the town where the road to the south gate ran down to a rocky wooded ridge with somewhat steep flanks. It may be remembered that it was by this road and over this ridge that Brother John had appeared on his white ox when we were about to be shot to death with arrows at the posts in the marketplace. Whilst we were still talking two of the Mizitu captains appeared running hard and dragging between them a wounded herdsman who had evidently been hit in the arm by a bullet. This was his story. That he and two other boys were out herding the king's cattle about half a mile to the north of the town when suddenly they appeared a great number of men dressed in white robes all of whom were armed with guns. These men of whom he thought there must be three or four hundred began to take the cattle and seeing the three herds fired on them wounding him and killing his two companions. He then ran for his life and brought the news. He added that one of the men had called after him to tell the white people that they had come to kill them and the Mizitu who were their friends and to take away the white women. Hassan, Bed Mohammad and his slavers, I said, as Babamba appeared at the head of a number of soldiers crying out, The slave-dealing Arabs are here Lord Makumaz-e-Han. They have crept on us through the mist. A herald of theirs has come to the north gate demanding that we should give up you white people and your servants and with you a hundred young men and a hundred young women to be sold as slaves. If we do not do this, they say that they will kill all of us save the unmarried boys and girls and that you white people they will take and put to death by burning keeping only the two women alive. One Hassan sends this message. Indeed I answered quietly for in this fix I grew quite cool as was usual with me and does Baozi mean to give us up? How can Baozi give up Doggita who is his blood brother and you his friend? exclaimed the old general indignantly. Baozi sends me to his brother Doggita that he may receive the orders of the white man's wisdom spoken through your mouth Lord Makumaz-e-Han. Then there's a good spirit in Baozi I replied and these are Doggita's orders spoken through my mouth. Go to Hassan's messengers and ask him whether he remembers a certain letter which two white men left for him outside their camp in a cleft stick. Tell him that the time has now come for those white men to fulfill the promise they made in that letter and that before tomorrow he will be hanging on a tree. Then Babemba gather your soldiers and hold the north gate of the town for as long as you can defending it with bows and arrows. Afterwards retreat through the town joining us among the trees on the rocky slope that is opposite the south gate. Vid some of your men clear the town of all the aged and women and children and let them pass through the south gate and take refuge in the wooded country beyond the slope. Let them not tarry let them go at once. Do you understand? I understand everything in Lord Makumaz-e-Han. The words of Doggita shall be obeyed. All wood that we had listened to you and kept a better watch. He rushed off running like a young man and shouting orders as he went. Now I said we must be moving. We collected all the rifles and ammunition with some other things. I am sure I forget what they were and with the help of a few guards whom Babemba had left outside our gate started through the town leading with us the two donkeys and the white ox. I remember by an afterthought telling Sammy who was looking very uncomfortable to return to the huts and fetch some blankets and a couple of iron cooking pots which might become necessities to us. All Mr. Quartermain he answered I will obey you though with fear and trembling. He went and when a few hours afterwards I noted that he had never reappeared. I came to the conclusion with a sigh for I was very fond of Sammy in a way that he had fallen into trouble and been killed. Probably I thought his fear and trembling had overcome his reason and caused him to run in the wrong direction with the cooking pots. The first part of our march through the town was easy enough but after we had crossed the marketplace and emerged into the narrow way that ran between many lines of huts to the south gate it became more difficult since this path was already crowded with hundreds of terrified fugitives old people sick being carried little boys girls and women with infants at the breast it was impossible to control these poor folk all we could do was to fight our way through them. However we got out at last and climbing the slope took up the best position we could on and just beneath its crest where the trees and scattered boulders gave us very fair cover which we improved upon in every way feasible in the time at our disposal by building little breastworks of stone and so forth. The fugitives who had accompanied us and those who followed a multitude in all did not stop here but flowed on along the road and vanished into the wooded country behind i suggested to brother john that he should take his wife and daughter and the three beasts and go with them he seemed inclined to accept the idea needless to say for their sakes not for his own for he was a very fearless old fellow but the two ladies utterly refused to budge hope said that she would stop with steven and her mother declared that she had every confidence in me and prefer to remain where she was then i suggested that steven should go too but at this he grew so angry that i dropped the subject so in the end we established them in a pleasant little hollow by a spring just over the crest of the rise where unless our flank were turned or we were rushed they would be out of the reach of bullets moreover without saying anything more we gave to each of them a double barrelled and loaded pistol end of chapter 19