<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER IX </h2>
<h3> THE MEETING IN THE DESERT </h3>
<p>Now I do not propose to describe all our journey to Kendahland, or at any
rate the first part thereof. It was interesting enough in its way and we
met with a few hunting adventures, also some others. But there is so much
to tell of what happened to us after we reached the place that I have not
the time, even if I had the inclination to set all these matters down. Let
it be sufficient, then, to say that although owing to political events the
country happened to be rather disturbed at the time, we trekked through
Zululand without any great difficulty. For here my name was a power in the
land and all parties united to help me. Thence, too, I managed to dispatch
three messengers, half-bred border men, lean fellows and swift of foot,
forward to the king of the Mazitu, as Hans had suggested that I should do,
advising him that his old friends, Macumazana, Watcher-by-Night, and the
yellow man who was named Light-in-Darkness and Lord-of-the-Fire, were
about to visit him again.</p>
<p>As I knew we could not take the wagons beyond a certain point where there
was a river called the Luba, unfordable by anything on wheels, I requested
him, moreover, to send a hundred bearers with whatever escort might be
necessary, to meet us on the banks of that river at a spot which was known
to both of us. These words the messengers promised to deliver for a fee of
five head of cattle apiece, to be paid on their return, or to their
families if they died on the road, which cattle we purchased and left in
charge of a chief, who was their kinsman. As it happened two of the poor
fellows did die, one of them of cold in a swamp through which they took a
short cut, and the other at the teeth of a hungry lion. The third,
however, won through and delivered the message.</p>
<p>After resting for a fortnight in the northern parts of Zululand, to give
time to our wayworn oxen to get some flesh on their bones in the warm
bushveld where grass was plentiful even in the dry season, we trekked
forward by a route known to Hans and myself. Indeed it was the same which
we had followed on our journey from Mazituland after our expedition in
search for the Holy Flower.</p>
<p>We took with us a small army of Zulu bearers. This, although they were
difficult to feed in a country where no corn could be bought, proved
fortunate in the end, since so many of our cattle died from tsetse bite
that we were obliged to abandon one of the wagons, which meant that the
goods it contained must be carried by men. At length we reached the banks
of the river, and camped there one night by three tall peaks of rock which
the natives called "The Three Doctors," where I had instructed the
messengers to tell the Mazitu to meet us. For four days we remained here,
since rains in the interior had made the river quite impassable. Every
morning I climbed the tallest of the "Doctors" and with my glasses looked
over its broad yellow flood, searching the wide, bush-clad land beyond in
the hope of discovering the Mazitu advancing to meet us. Not a man was to
be seen, however, and on the fourth evening, as the river had now become
fordable, we determined that we would cross on the morrow, leaving the
remaining wagon, which it was impossible to drag over its rocky bottom, to
be taken back to Natal by our drivers.</p>
<p>Here a difficulty arose. No promise of reward would induce any of our Zulu
bearers even to wet their feet in the waters of this River Luba, which for
some reason that I could not extract from them they declared to be <i>tagati</i>,
that is, bewitched, to people of their blood. When I pointed out that
three Zulus had already undertaken to cross it, they answered that those
men were half-breeds, so that for them it was only half bewitched, but
they thought that even so one or more of them would pay the penalty of
death for this rash crime.</p>
<p>It chanced that this happened, for, as I have said, two of the poor
fellows did die, though not, I think, owing to the magical properties of
the waters of the Luba. This is how African superstitions are kept alive.
Sooner or later some saying of the sort fulfils itself and then the
instance is remembered and handed down for generations, while other
instances in which nothing out of the common has occurred are not heeded,
or are forgotten.</p>
<p>This decision on the part of those stupid Zulus put us in an awkward fix,
since it was impossible for us to carry over all our baggage and
ammunition without help. Therefore glad was I when before dawn on the
fifth morning the nocturnal Hans crept into the wagon, in the after part
of which Ragnall and I were sleeping, and informed us that he heard men's
voices on the farther side of the river, though how he could hear anything
above that roar of water passed my comprehension.</p>
<p>At the first break of dawn again we climbed the tallest of the "Doctor"
rocks and stared into the mist. At length it rolled away and there on the
farther side of the river I saw quite a hundred men who by their dress and
spears I knew to be Mazitu. They saw me also and raising a cheer, dashed
into the water, groups of them holding each other round the middle to
prevent their being swept away. Thereupon our silly Zulus seized their
spears and formed up upon the bank. I slid down the steep side of the
"Great Doctor" and ran forward, calling out that these were friends who
came.</p>
<p>"Friends or foes," answered their captain sullenly, "it is a pity that we
should walk so far and not have a fight with those Mazitu dogs."</p>
<p>Well, I drove them off to a distance, not knowing what might happen if the
two peoples met, and then went down to the bank. By now the Mazitu were
near, and to my delight at the head of them I perceived no other than my
old friend, their chief general, Babemba, a one-eyed man with whom Hans
and I had shared many adventures. Through the water he plunged with great
bounds and reaching the shore, greeted me literally with rapture.</p>
<p>"O Macumazana," he said, "little did I hope that ever again I should look
upon your face. Welcome to you, a thousand welcomes, and to you too,
Light-in-Darkness, Lord-of-the-Fire, Cunning-one whose wit saved us in the
battle of the Gate. But where is Dogeetah, where is Wazeela, and where are
the Mother and the Child of the Flower?"</p>
<p>"Far away across the Black Water, Babemba," I answered. "But here are two
others in place of them," and I introduced him to Ragnall and Savage by
their native names of Igeza and Bena.</p>
<p>He contemplated them for a moment, then said:</p>
<p>"This," pointing to Ragnall, "is a great lord, but this," pointing to
Savage, who was much the better dressed of the two, "is a cock of the
ashpit arrayed in an eagle's feathers," a remark I did not translate, but
one which caused Hans to snigger vacuously.</p>
<p>While we breakfasted on food prepared by the "Cock of the Ashpit," who
amongst many other merits had that of being an excellent cook, I heard all
the news. Bausi the king was dead but had been succeeded by one of his
sons, also named Bausi, whom I remembered. Beza-Town had been rebuilt
after the great fire that destroyed the slavers, and much more strongly
fortified than before. Of the slavers themselves nothing more had been
seen, or of the Pongo either, though the Mazitu declared that their
ghosts, or those of their victims, still haunted the island in the lake.
That was all, except the ill tidings as to two of our messengers which the
third, who had returned with the Mazitu, reported to us.</p>
<p>After breakfast I addressed and sent away our Zulus, each with a handsome
present from the trade goods, giving into their charge the remaining wagon
and our servants, none of whom, somewhat to my relief, wished to accompany
us farther. They sang their song of good-bye, saluted and departed over
the rise, still looking hungrily behind them at the Mazitu, and we were
very pleased to see the last of them without bloodshed or trouble.</p>
<p>When we had watched the white tilt of the wagon vanish, we set to work to
get ourselves and our goods across the river. This we accomplished safely,
for the Mazitu worked for us like friends and not as do hired men. On the
farther bank, however, it took us two full days so to divide up the loads
that the bearers could carry them without being overladen.</p>
<p>At length all was arranged and we started. Of the month's trek that
followed there is nothing to tell, except that we completed it without
notable accidents and at last reached the new Beza-Town, which much
resembled the old, where we were accorded a great public reception. Bausi
II himself headed the procession which met us outside the south gate on
that very mound which we had occupied in the great fight, where the bones
of the gallant Mavovo and my other hunters lay buried. Almost did it seem
to me as though I could hear their deep voices joining in the shouts of
welcome.</p>
<p>That night, while the Mazitu feasted in our honour, we held an <i>indaba</i>
in the big new guest house with Bausi II, a pleasant-faced young man, and
old Babemba. The king asked us how long we meant to stay at Beza-Town,
intimating his hope that the visit would be prolonged. I replied, but a
few days, as we were travelling far to the north to find a people called
the Kendah whom we wished to see, and hoped that he would give us bearers
to carry our goods as far as the confines of their country. At the name of
Kendah a look of astonishment appeared upon their faces and Babemba said:</p>
<p>"Has madness seized you, Macumazana, that you would attempt this thing? Oh
surely you must be mad."</p>
<p>"You thought us mad, Babemba, when we crossed the lake to Rica Town, yet
we came back safely."</p>
<p>"True, Macumazana, but compared to the Kendah the Pongo were but as the
smallest star before the face of the sun."</p>
<p>"What do you know of them then?" I asked. "But stay—before you
answer, I will speak what I know," and I repeated what I had learned from
Hans, who confirmed my words, and from Har�t and Mar�t, leaving out,
however, any mention of their dealings with Lady Ragnall.</p>
<p>"It is all true," said Babemba when I had finished, "for that old woman of
whom Light-in-the-Darkness speaks, was one of the wives of my uncle and I
knew her well. Hearken! These Kendah are a terrible nation and countless
in number and of all the people the fiercest. Their king is called Simba,
which means Lion. He who rules is always called Simba, and has been so
called for hundreds of years. He is of the Black Kendah whose god is the
elephant Jana, but as Light-in-Darkness has said, there are also the White
Kendah who are Arab men, the priests and traders of the people. The Kendah
will allow no stranger within their doors; if one comes they kill him by
torment, or blind him and turn him out into the desert which surrounds
their country, there to die. These things the old woman who married my
uncle told me, as she told them to Light-in-Darkness, also I have heard
them from others, and what she did not tell me, that the White Kendah are
great breeders of the beasts called camels which they sell to the Arabs of
the north. Go not near them, for if you pass the desert the Black Kendah
will kill you; and if you escape these, then their king, Simba, will kill
you; and if you escape him, then their god Jana will kill you; and if you
escape him, then their white priests will kill you with their magic. Oh!
long before you look upon the faces of those priests you will be dead many
times over."</p>
<p>"Then why did they ask me to visit them, Babemba?"</p>
<p>"I know not, Macumazana, but perhaps because they wished to make an
offering of you to the god Jana, whom no spear can harm; no, nor even your
bullets that pierce a tree."</p>
<p>"I am willing to make trial of that matter," I answered confidently, "and
any way we must go to see these things for ourselves."</p>
<p>"Yes," echoed Ragnall, "we must certainly go," while even Savage, for I
had been translating to them all this while, nodded his head although he
looked as though he would much rather stay behind.</p>
<p>"Ask him if there are any snakes there, sir," he said, and foolishly
enough I put the question to give me time to think of other things.</p>
<p>"Yes, O Bena. Yes, O Cock of the Ashpit," replied Babemba. "My uncle's
Kendar wife told me that one of the guardians of the shrine of the White
Kendah is such a snake as was never seen elsewhere in the world."</p>
<p>"Then say to him, sir," said Savage, when I had translated almost
automatically, "that shrine ain't a church where <i>I</i> shall go to say
my prayers."</p>
<p>Alas! poor Savage little knew the future and its gifts.</p>
<p>Then we came to the question of bearers. The end of it was that after some
hesitation Bausi II, because of his great affection for us, promised to
provide us with these upon our solemnly undertaking to dismiss them at the
borders of the desert, "so that they might escape our doom," as he
remarked cheerfully.</p>
<p>Four days later we started, accompanied by about one hundred and twenty
picked men under the command of old Babemba himself, who, he explained,
wished to be the last to see us alive in the world. This was depressing,
but other circumstances connected with our start were calculated to weigh
even more upon my spirit. Thus the night before we left Hans arrived and
asked me to "write a paper" for him. I inquired what he wanted me to put
in the paper. He replied that as he was going to his death and had
property, namely the �650 that had been left in a bank to his credit, he
desired to make a "white man's will" to be left in the charge of Babemba.
The only provision of the said will was that I was to inherit his
property, if I lived. If I died, which, he added, "of course you must,
Baas, like the rest of us," it was to be devoted to furnishing poor black
people in hospital with something comforting to drink instead of the
"cow's water" that was given to them there. Needless to say I turned him
out at once, and that testamentary deposition remained unrecorded. Indeed
it was unnecessary, since, as I reminded him, on my advice he had already
made a will before we left Durban, a circumstance that he had quite
forgotten.</p>
<p>The second event, which occurred about an hour before our departure, was,
that hearing a mighty wailing in the market-place where once Hans and I
had been tied to stakes to be shot to death with arrows, I went out to see
what was the matter. At the gateway I was greeted by the sight of about a
hundred old women plastered all over with ashes, engaged in howling their
loudest in a melancholy unison. Behind these stood the entire population
of Beza-Town, who chanted a kind of chorus.</p>
<p>"What the devil are they doing?" I asked of Hans.</p>
<p>"Singing our death-song, Baas," he replied stolidly, "as they say that
where we are going no one will take the trouble to do so, and it is not
right that great lords should die and the heavens above remain uninformed
that they are coming."</p>
<p>"That's cheerful," I remarked, and wheeling round, asked Ragnall straight
out if he wished to persevere in this business, for to tell the truth my
nerve was shaken.</p>
<p>"I must," he answered simply, "but there is no reason why you and Hans
should, or Savage either for the matter of that."</p>
<p>"Oh! I'm going where you go," I said, "and where I go Hans will go. Savage
must speak for himself."</p>
<p>This he did and to the same effect, being a very honest and faithful man.
It was the more to his credit since, as he informed me in private, he did
not enjoy African adventure and often dreamed at nights of his comfortable
room at Ragnall whence he superintended the social activities of that
great establishment.</p>
<p>So we departed and marched for the matter of a month or more through every
kind of country. After we had passed the head of the great lake wherein
lay the island, if it really was an island, where the Pongo used to dwell
(one clear morning through my glasses I discerned the mountain top that
marked the former residence of the Mother of the Flower, and by contrast
it made me feel quite homesick), we struck up north, following a route
known to Babemba and our guides. After this we steered by the stars
through a land with very few inhabitants, timid and nondescript folk who
dwelt in scattered villages and scarcely understood the art of cultivating
the soil, even in its most primitive form.</p>
<p>A hundred miles or so farther on these villages ceased and thenceforward
we only encountered some nomads, little bushmen who lived on game which
they shot with poisoned arrows. Once they attacked us and killed two of
the Mazitu with those horrid arrows, against the venom of which no remedy
that we had in our medicine chest proved of any avail. On this occasion
Savage exhibited his courage if not his discretion, for rushing out of our
thorn fence, after missing a bushmen with both barrels at a distance of
five yards—he was, I think, the worst shot I ever saw—he
seized the little viper with his hands and dragged him back to camp. How
Savage escaped with his life I do not know, for one poisoned arrow went
through his hat and stuck in his hair and another just grazed his leg
without drawing blood.</p>
<p>This valorous deed was of great service to us, since we were able through
Hans, who knew something of the bushmen's language, to explain to our
prisoner that if we were shot at again he would be hung. This information
he contrived to shout, or rather to squeak and grunt, to his amiable
tribe, of which it appeared he was a kind of chief, with the result that
we were no more molested. Later, when we were clear of the bushmen
country, we let him depart, which he did with great rapidity.</p>
<p>By degrees the land grew more and more barren and utterly devoid of
inhabitants, till at last it merged into desert. At the edge of this
desert which rolled away without apparent limit we came, however, to a
kind of oasis where there was a strong and beautiful spring of water that
formed a stream which soon lost itself in the surrounding sand. As we
could go no farther, for even if we had wished to do so, and were able to
find water there, the Mazitu refused to accompany us into the desert, not
knowing what else to do, we camped in the oasis and waited.</p>
<p>As it happened, the place was a kind of hunter's paradise, since every
kind of game, large and small, came to the water to drink at night, and in
the daytime browsed upon the saltish grass that at this season of the year
grew plentifully upon the edge of the wilderness.</p>
<p>Amongst other creatures there were elephants in plenty that travelled
hither out of the bushlands we had passed, or sometimes emerged from the
desert itself, suggesting that beyond this waste there lay fertile
country. So numerous were these great beasts indeed that for my part I
hoped earnestly that it would prove impossible for us to continue our
journey, since I saw that in a few months I could collect an enormous
amount of ivory, enough to make me comparatively rich, if only I were able
to get it away. As it was we only killed a few of them, ten in all to be
accurate, that we might send back the tusks as presents to Bausi II. To
slaughter the poor animals uselessly was cruel, especially as being
unaccustomed to the sight of man, they were as easy to approach as cows.
Even Savage slew one—by carefully aiming at another five paces to
its left.</p>
<p>For the rest we lived on the fat of the land and, as meat was necessary to
us, had as much sport as we could desire among the various antelope.</p>
<p>For fourteen days or so this went on, till at length we grew thoroughly
tired of the business, as did the Mazitu, who were so gorged with flesh
that they began to desire vegetable food. Twice we rode as far into the
desert as we dared, for our horses remained to us and had grown fresh
again after the rest, but only to return without information. The place
was just a vast wilderness strewn with brown stones beautifully polished
by the wind-driven sand of ages, and quite devoid of water.</p>
<p>After our second trip, on which we suffered severely from thirst, we held
a consultation. Old Babemba said that he could keep his men no longer,
even for us, as they insisted upon returning home, and inquired what we
meant to do and why we sat here "like a stone." I answered that we were
waiting for some of the Kendah who had bid me to shoot game hereabouts
until they arrived to be our guides. He remarked that the Kendah to the
best of his belief lived in a country that was still hundreds of miles
away and that, as they did not know of our presence, any communication
across the desert being impossible, our proceedings seemed to be foolish.</p>
<p>I retorted that I was not quite so sure of this, since the Kendah seemed
to have remarkable ways of acquiring information.</p>
<p>"Then, Macumazana, I fear that you will have to wait by yourselves until
you discover which of us is right," he said stolidly.</p>
<p>Turning to Ragnall, I asked him what he would do, pointing out that to
journey into the desert meant death, especially as we did not know whither
we were going, and that to return alone, without the stores which we must
abandon, through the country of the bushmen to Mazituland, would also be a
risky proceeding. However, it was for him to decide.</p>
<p>Now he grew much perturbed. Taking me apart again he dwelt earnestly upon
his secret reasons for wishing to visit these Kendah, with which of course
I was already acquainted, as indeed was Savage.</p>
<p>"I desire to stay here," he ended.</p>
<p>"Which means that we must all stay, Ragnall, since Savage will not desert
you. Nor will Hans desert me although he thinks us mad. He points out that
I came to seek ivory and here about is ivory in plenty for the trouble of
taking."</p>
<p>"I might remain alone, Quatermain——" he began, but I looked at
him in such a way that he never finished the sentence.</p>
<p>Ultimately we came to a compromise. Babemba, on behalf of the Mazitu,
agreed to wait three more days. If nothing happened during that period we
on our part agreed to return with them to a stretch of well-watered bush
about fifty miles behind us, which we knew swarmed with elephants, that by
now were growing shy of approaching our oasis where there was so much
noise and shooting. There we would kill as much ivory as we could carry,
an operation in which they were willing to assist for the fun of it, and
then go back with them to Mazituland.</p>
<p>The three days went by and with every hour that passed my spirits rose, as
did those of Savage and Hans, while Lord Ragnall became more and more
depressed. The third afternoon was devoted to a jubilant packing of loads,
for in accordance with the terms of our bargain we were to start backwards
on our spoor at dawn upon the morrow. Most happily did I lay myself down
to sleep in my little bough shelter that night, feeling that at last I was
rid of an uncommonly awkward adventure. If I thought that we could do any
good by staying on, it would have been another matter. But as I was
certain that there was no earthly chance of our finding among the Kendah—if
ever we reached them—the lady who had tumbled in the Nile in Egypt,
well, I was glad that Providence had been so good as to make it impossible
for us to commit suicide by thirst in a desert, or otherwise. For,
notwithstanding my former reasonings to the contrary, I was now convinced
that this was what had happened to poor Ragnall's wife.</p>
<p>That, however, was just what Providence had not done. In the middle of the
night, to be precise, at exactly two in the morning, I was awakened by
Hans, who slept at the back of my shanty, into which he had crept through
a hole in the faggots, exclaiming in a frightened voice,</p>
<p>"Open your eyes and look, Baas. There are two <i>spooks</i> waiting to see
you outside, Baas."</p>
<p>Very cautiously I lifted myself a little and stared out into the
moonlight. There, seated about five paces from the open end of the hut
were the "spooks" sure enough, two white-robed figures squatting silent
and immovable on the ground. At first I was frightened. Then I bethought
me of thieves and felt for my Colt pistol under the rug that served me as
a pillow. As I got hold of the handle, however, a deep voice said:</p>
<p>"Is it your custom, O Macumazana, Watcher-by-Night, to receive guests with
bullets?"</p>
<p>Now thought I to myself, who is there in the world who could see a man
catch hold of the handle of a pistol in the recesses of a dark place and
under a blanket at night, except the owner of that voice which I seemed to
remember hearing in a certain drawing-room in England?</p>
<p>"Yes, Har�t," I answered with an unconcerned yawn, "when the guests come
in such a doubtful fashion and in the middle of the night. But as you are
here at last, will you be so good as to tell us why you have kept us
waiting all this time? Is that your way of fulfilling an engagement?"</p>
<p>"O Lord Macumazana," answered Har�t, for of course it was he, in quite a
perturbed tone, "I offer to you our humble apologies. The truth is that
when we heard of your arrival at Beza-Town we started, or tried to start,
from hundreds of miles away to keep our tryst with you here as we promised
we would do. But we are mortal, Macumazana, and accidents intervened.
Thus, when we had ascertained the weight of your baggage, camels had to be
collected to carry it, which were grazing at a distance. Also it was
necessary to send forward to dig out a certain well in the desert where
they must drink. Hence the delay. Still, you will admit that we have
arrived in time, five, or at any rate four hours before the rising of that
sun which was to light you on your homeward way."</p>
<p>"Yes, you have, O Prophets, or O Liars, whichever you may be," I exclaimed
with pardonable exasperation, for really their knowledge of my private
affairs, however obtained, was enough to anger a saint. "So as you are
here at last, come in and have a drink, for whether you are men or devils,
you must be cold out there in the damp."</p>
<p>In they came accordingly, and, not being Mohammedans, partook of a tot of
square-face from a bottle which I kept locked in a box to put Hans beyond
the reach of temptation.</p>
<p>"To your health, Har�t and Mar�t," I said, drinking a little out of the
pannikin and giving the rest to Hans, who gulped the fiery liquor down
with a smack of his lips. For I will admit that I joined in this unholy
midnight potation to gain time for thought and to steady my nerve.</p>
<p>"To your health, O Lord Macumazana," the pair answered as they swallowed
their tots, which I had made pretty stiff, and set down their pannikins in
front of them with as much reverence as though these had been holy
vessels.</p>
<p>"Now," I said, throwing a blanket over my shoulders, for the air was
chilly, "now let us talk," and taking the lantern which Hans had
thoughtfully lighted, I held it up and contemplated them.</p>
<p>There they were, Har�t and Mar�t without doubt, to all appearance totally
unchanged since some years before I had seen them at Ragnall in England.
"What are you doing here?" I asked in a kind of fiery indignation inspired
by my intense curiosity. "How did you get out of England after you had
tried to steal away the lady to whom you sent the necklace? What did you
do with that lady after you had beguiled her from the boat at Abu-Simbel?
In the name of your Holy Child, or of Shaitan of the Mohammedans, or of
Set of the Egyptians, answer me, lest I should make an end of both of you,
which I can do here without any questions being asked," and I whipped out
my pistol.</p>
<p>"Pardon us," said Har�t with a grave smile, "but if you were to do as you
say, Lord Macumazana, many questions would be asked which <i>you</i> might
find it hard to answer. So be pleased to put that death-dealer back into
its place, and to tell us before we reply to you, what you know of Set of
the Egyptians."</p>
<p>"As much or as little as you do," I replied.</p>
<p>Both bowed as though this information were of the most satisfactory order.
Then Har�t went on: "In reply to your requests, O Macumazana, we left
England by a steamboat and in due course after long journeyings we reached
our own country. We do not understand your allusions to a place called
Abu-Simbel on the Nile, whence, never having been there, we have taken no
lady. Indeed, we never meant to take that lady to whom we sent a necklace
in England. We only meant to ask certain questions of her, as she had the
gift of vision, when you appeared and interrupted us. What should we want
with white ladies, who have already far too many of our own?"</p>
<p>"I don't know," I replied, "but I do know that you are the biggest liars I
ever met."</p>
<p>At these words, which some might have thought insulting, Har�t and Mar�t
bowed again as though to acknowledge a great compliment. Then Har�t said:</p>
<p>"Let us leave the question of ladies and come to matters that have to do
with men. You are here as we told you that you would be at a time when you
did not believe us, and we here to meet <i>you</i>, as we told you that we
would be. How we knew that you were coming and how we came do not matter
at all. Believe what you will. Are you ready to start with us, O Lord
Macumazana, that you may bring to its death the wicked elephant Jana which
ravages our land, and receive the great reward of ivory? If so, your camel
waits."</p>
<p>"One camel cannot carry four men," I answered, avoiding the question.</p>
<p>"In courage and skill you are more than many men, O Macumazana, yet in
body you are but one and not four."</p>
<p>"If you think that I am going with you alone, you are much mistaken, Har�t
and Mar�t," I exclaimed. "Here with me is my servant without whom I do not
stir," and I pointed to Hans, whom they contemplated gravely. "Also there
is the Lord Ragnall, who in this land is named Igeza, and his servant who
here is named Bena, the man out of whom you drew snakes in the room in
England. They also must accompany us."</p>
<p>At this news the impassive countenances of Har�t and Mar�t showed, I
thought, some signs of disturbance. They muttered together in an unknown
tongue. Then Har�t said:</p>
<p>"Our secret land is open to you alone, O Macumazana, for one purpose only—to
kill the elephant Jana, for which deed we promise you a great reward. We
do not wish to see the others there."</p>
<p>"Then you can kill your own elephant, Har�t and Mar�t, for not one step do
I go with you. Why should I when there is as much ivory here as I want, to
be had for the shooting?"</p>
<p>"How if we take you, O Macumazana?"</p>
<p>"How if I kill you both, O Har�t and Mar�t? Fools, here are many brave men
at my command, and if you or any with you want fighting it shall be given
you in plenty. Hans, bid the Mazitu stand to their arms and summon Igeza
and Bena."</p>
<p>"Stay, Lord," said Har�t, "and put down that weapon," for once more I had
produced the pistol. "We would not begin our fellowship by shedding blood,
though we are safer from you than you think. Your companions shall
accompany you to the land of the Kendah, but let them know that they do so
at their own risk. Learn that it is revealed to us that if they go in
there some of them will pass out again as spirits but not as men."</p>
<p>"Do you mean that you will murder them?"</p>
<p>"No. We mean that yonder are some stronger than us or any men, who will
take their lives in sacrifice. Not yours, Macumazana, for that, it is
decreed, is safe, but those of two of the others, which two we do not
know."</p>
<p>"Indeed, Har�t and Mar�t, and how am I to be sure that any of us are safe,
or that you do not but trick us to your country, there to kill us with
treachery and steal our goods?"</p>
<p>"Because we swear it by the oath that may not be broken; we swear it by
the Heavenly Child," both of them exclaimed solemnly, speaking with one
voice and bowing till their foreheads almost touched the ground.</p>
<p>I shrugged my shoulders and laughed a little.</p>
<p>"You do not believe us," went on Har�t, "who have not heard what happens
to those who break this oath. Come now and see something. Within five
paces of your hut is a tall ant-heap upon which doubtless you have been
accustomed to stand and overlook the desert." (This was true, but how did
they guess it, I wondered.) "Go climb that ant-heap once more."</p>
<p>Perhaps it was rash, but my curiosity led me to accept this invitation.
Out I went, followed by Hans with a loaded double-barrelled rifle, and
scrambled up the ant-heap which, as it was twenty feet high and there were
no trees just here, commanded a very fine view of the desert beyond.</p>
<p>"Look to the north," said Har�t from its foot.</p>
<p>I looked, and there in the bright moonlight five or six hundred yards
away, ranged rank by rank upon a slope of sand and along the crest of the
ridge beyond, I saw quite two hundred kneeling camels, and by each camel a
tall, white-robed figure who held in his hand a long lance to the shaft of
which, not far beneath the blade, was attached a little flag. For a while
I stared to make sure that I was not the victim of an illusion or a
mirage. Then when I had satisfied myself that these were indeed men and
camels I descended from the ant-heap.</p>
<p>"You will admit, Macumazana," said Har�t politely, "that if we had meant
you any ill, with such a force it would have been easy for us to take a
sleeping camp at night. But these men come here to be your escort, not to
kill or enslave you or yours. And, Macumazana, we have sworn to you the
oath that may not be broken. Now we go to our people. In the morning,
after you have eaten, we will return again unarmed and alone."</p>
<p>Then like shadows they slipped away.</p>
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