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Bones

Page 17

by Edgar Wallace


  They had reached a clearing where the grass was rich and luxuriant, where overshadowing branches formed an idyllic bower, where heavy white waxen flowers were looped from branch to branch holding the green boughs in their parasitical clutch. Hamilton followed the direction of his eyes. In the middle of the clearing was a long, sinuous shape, dark-brown, and violently coloured with patches of green and vermilion, that was swaying backward and forward, hissing angrily at some object before it.

  “Good God!” said Hamilton, and dropped his hand on his revolver, but before it was clear of his holster, there came a sharp crack, and the snake leapt up and fell back as a bullet went snip-snapping through the undergrowth. Then Hamilton saw Bones. Bones in his shirtsleeves, bareheaded, his big pipe in his mouth, who came hurriedly through the trees pistol in hand.

  “Naughty boy!” he said, reproachfully, and stooping, picked up a squalling brown object from the ground. “Didn’t Daddy tell you not to go near those horrid snakes? Daddy spank you–”

  Then he caught sight of the amazed Hamilton, clutched the baby in one hand, and saluted with the other.

  “Baby present and correct, sir,” he said, formally.

  “What are you going to do with it?” asked Hamilton, after Bones had indulged in the luxury of a bath and had his dinner.

  “Do with what, sir?” asked Bones.

  “With this.”

  Hamilton pointed to a crawling morsel who was at that moment looking up to Bones for approval.

  “What do you expect me to do, sir?” asked Bones, stiffly; “the mother is dead and he has no father. I feel a certain amount of responsibility about Henry.”

  “And who the dickens is Henry?” asked Hamilton. Bones indicated the child with a fine gesture. “Henry Hamilton Bones, sir,” he said grandly. “The child of the regiment,” he went on; “adopted by me to be a prop for my declining years, sir.”

  “Heaven and earth!” said Hamilton, breathlessly.

  He went aft to recover his nerve, and returned to become an unseen spectator to a purely domestic scene, for Bones had immersed the squalling infant in his own india-rubber bath, and was gingerly cleaning him with a mop.

  BONES AT M’FA

  Hamilton of the Houssas coming down to headquarters met Bosambo by appointment at the junction of the rivers.

  “O Bosambo,” said Hamilton, “I have sent for you to make a likambo because of certain things which my other eyes have seen and my other ears have heard.”

  To some men this hint of report from the spies of Government might bring dismay and apprehension, but to Bosambo, whose conscience was clear, they awakened only curiosity.

  “Lord, I am your eyes in the Ochori,” he said with truth, “and God knows I report faithfully.”

  Hamilton nodded. He was yellow with fever, and the hand that filled the briar pipe shook with ague. All this Bosambo saw.

  “It is not of you I speak, nor of your people, but of the Akasava and the N’gombi and the evil little men who live in the forest – now is it true that they speak mockingly of my lord Tibbetti?”

  Bosambo hesitated.

  “Lord,” said he, “what dogs are they, that they should speak of the mighty? Yet I will not lie to you, M’ilitani: they mock Tibbetti, because he is young and his heart is pure.”

  Hamilton nodded again, and stuck out his jaw in troubled meditation.

  “I am a sick man,” he said, “and I must rest, sending Tibbetti to watch the river, because the crops are good and there is fish for all men, and because the people are prosperous, for, Bosambo, in such times there is much boastfulness, and the tribes are ripe for foolish deeds deserving to appear wonderful in the eyes of woman.”

  “All this I know, M’ilitani,” said Bosambo, “and because you are sick, my heart and my stomach are sore. For though I do not love you as I love Sandi, who is more clever than you, yet I love you well enough to grieve. And Tibbetti also–”

  He paused.

  “He is young,” said Hamilton, “and not yet grown to himself – now you, Bosambo, shall check men who are insolent to his face, and, be to him as a strong right hand.”

  “On my head and my life,” said Bosambo, “yet, lord M’ilitani, I think that his day will find him, for it is written in the Sura of the Djin that all men are born three times, and the day will come when Bonzi will be born again.”

  He was in his canoe before Hamilton realised what he had said.

  “Tell me, Bosambo,” said he, leaning over the side of the Zaire, “what name did you call my lord Tibbetti?”

  “Bonzi,” said Bosambo, innocently, “for such I have heard you call him.”

  “Oh, dog of a thief!” stormed Hamilton. “If you speak without respect of Tibbetti, I will break your head.”

  Bosambo looked up with a glint in his big, black eyes.

  “Lord,” he said softly, “it is said on the river ‘speak only the words which high ones speak, and you can say no wrong,’ and if you, who are wiser than any, call my lord ‘Bonzi’ – what goat am I that I should not call him ‘Bonzi’ also?”

  Hamilton saw the canoe drift round, saw the flashing paddles dip regularly, and the chant of the Ochori boat song came fainter and fainter as Bosambo’s state canoe began its long journey northward.

  Hamilton reached headquarters with a temperature of 105, and declined Bones’ well-meant offers to look after him.

  “What you want, dear old officer,” said Bones, fussing around, “is careful nursin’. Trust old Bones and he’ll pull you back to health, sir. Keep up your pecker, sir, an’ I’ll bring you back so to speak from the valley of the shadow – go to bed an’ I’ll have a mustard plaster on your chest in half a jiffy.”

  “If you come anywhere near me with a mustard plaster,” said Hamilton, pardonably annoyed, “I’ll brain you!”

  “Don’t you think!” asked Bones anxiously, “that you ought to put your feet in mustard and water, sir – awfully good tonic for a feller, sir. Bucks you up an’ all that sort of thing, sir; uncle of mine who used to take too much to drink–”

  “The only chance for me,” said Hamilton, “is for you to clear out and leave me alone. Bones – quit fooling: I’m a sick man, and you’ve any amount of responsibility. Go up to the Isisi and watch things – it’s pretty hard to say this to you, but I’m in your hands.”

  Bones said nothing.

  He looked down at the fever-stricken man and thrust his hands in his pockets.

  “You see, old Bones,” said Hamilton, and now his friend heard the weariness and the weakness in his voice, “Sanders has a hold on these chaps that I haven’t quite got…and…and…well, you haven’t got at all. I don’t want to hurt your feelings, but you’re young, Bones, and these devils know how amiable you are.”

  “I’m an ass, sir,” muttered Bones, shakily, “an’ somehow I understand that this is the time in my jolly old career when I oughtn’t to be an ass… I’m sorry, sir.”

  Hamilton smiled up at him.

  “It isn’t for Sanders’ sake or mine or your own, Bones – but for – well, for the whole crowd of us – white folk. You’ll have to do your best, old man.”

  Bones took the other’s hand, snivelled a bit despite his fierce effort of restraint, and went aboard the Zaire.

  “Tell all men,” said B’chumbiri, addressing his impassive relatives, “that I go to a great day and to many strange lands.”

  He was tall and knobby-kneed, spoke with a squeak at the end of his deeper sentences, and about his tired eyes he had twisted a wire so tightly that it all but cut the flesh: this was necessary, for B’chumbiri had a headache which never left him day or night.

  Now he stood, his lank body wrapped in a blanket, and he looked with dull eyes from face to face.

  “I see you,” he said at last, and repeated his motto which had something to do with monkeys.

  They watched him go down the street towards the beach where the easiest canoe in the village was moored.

  “It is better
if we go after him and put out his eyes,” said his elder brother; “else who knows what damage he will do for which we must pay?”

  Only B’chumbiri’s mother looked after him with a mouth that drooped at the side, for he was her only son, all the others being by other wives of Mochimo.

  His father and his uncle stood apart and whispered, and presently when, with a great waving of arms, B’chumbiri had embarked, they went out of the village by the forest path and ran tirelessly till they struck the river at its bend.

  “Here we will wait,” panted the uncle, “and when B’chumbiri comes we will call him to land, for he has the sickness mongo.”

  “What of Sandi?” asked the father, who was no gossip.

  “Sandi is gone,” replied the other, “and there is no law.”

  Presently B’chumbiri came sweeping round the bend, singing in his poor, cracked voice about a land and a people and treasures…he turned his canoe at his father’s bidding, and came obediently to land…

  Overhead the sky was a vivid blue, and the water which moved quickly between the rocky channel of the Lower Isisi caught something of the blue, though the thick green of elephant grass by the water’s edge and the overhanging spread of gum trees took away from the clarity of reflection.

  There was, too, a gentle breeze and a pleasing absence of flies, so that a man might get under the red and striped awning of the Zaire and think or read or dream dreams, and find life a pleasant experience, and something to be thankful for.

  Such a day does not often come upon the river, but if it does, the deep channel of the Isisi focuses all the joy of it. Here the river runs as straight as a canal for six miles, the current swifter and stronger between the guiding banks than elsewhere. There are rocks, charted and known, for the bed of the river undergoes no change, the swift waters carry no sands to choke the fairway, navigation is largely a matter of engine power and rule of thumb. Going slowly up stream a little more than two knots an hour, the Zaire was for once a pleasure steamer. Her long-barrelled Hotchkiss guns were hidden in their canvas jackets, the Maxims were lashed to the side of the bridge out of sight, and Lieutenant Augustus Tibbetts, who sprawled in a big wicker-work chair with an illustrated paper on his knees, a nasal-toned phonograph at his feet, and a long glass of lemon squash at his elbow, had little to do but pass the pleasant hours in the most pleasant occupation he could conceive, which was the posting of a diary, which he hoped on some future occasion to publish.

  A shout, quick and sharp, brought him to his feet, a stiffly outstretched hand pointed to the waters.

  “What the dooce–” demanded Bones indignantly, and looked over the side… He saw the pitiful thing that rolled slowly in the swift current, and the homely face of Bones hardened.

  “Damn,” he said, and the wheel of the Zaire spun, and the little boat came broadside to the stream before the threshing wheel got purchase on the water.

  It was Bones’ sinewy hand that gripped the poor arm and brought the body to the side of the canoe into which he had jumped as the boat came round.

  “Um,” said Bones, seeing what he saw; “who knows this man?”

  “Lord,” said a wooding man, “this is B’chumbiri who was mad, and he lived in the village near by.”

  “There will we go,” said Bones, very gravely.

  Now all the people of M’fa knew that the father of B’chumbiri and his uncle had put away the tiresome youth with his headache and his silly talk, and when there came news that the Zaire was beating her way to the village there was a hasty likambo of the elder men.

  “Since this is neither Sandi nor M’ilitani who comes,” said the chief, an old man, N’jela (“the Bringer”), “but Moon-in-the-Eye, who is a child, let us say that B’chumbiri fell into the water so that the crocodiles had him, and if he asks us who slew B’chumbiri – for it may be that he knows – let none speak, and afterwards we will tell M’ilitani that we did not understand him.”

  With this arrangement all agreed; for surely here was a palaver not to be feared.

  Bones came with his escort of Houssas.

  From the dark interiors of thatched huts men and women watched his thin figure going up the street, and laughed.

  Nor did they laugh softly. Bones heard the chuckles of unseen people, divined that contempt, and his lips trembled. He felt an immense loneliness – all the weight of government was pressed down upon his head, it overwhelmed, it smothered him.

  Yet he kept a tight hold upon himself, and by a supreme effort of will showed no sign of his perturbation.

  The palaver was of little value to Bones; the village was blandly innocent of murder or knowledge of murder. More than this, all men stoutly swore that the thing that lay upon the foreshore for identification, surrounded by a crowd of frightened little boys lured by the very gruesomeness of the spectacle, was unknown, and laughed openly at the suggestion that it was B’chumbiri, who (said they) had gone a journey into the forest.

  There was little short of open mockery and defiance when they pointed out certain indications that went to prove that this man was not of the Akasava, but of the higher Isisi.

  So Bones’ visit was fruitless.

  He dismissed the palaver and walked back to his ship, and worked the river, village by village, with no more satisfactory result. That night in the little town of M’fa there was a dance and a jubilation to celebrate the cunning of a people who had outwitted and overawed the lords of the land, but the next day came Bosambo, who had established a system of espionage more far-reaching, and possibly more effective, than the service which the Government had instituted.

  Liberties they might take with Bones; but they sat discomforted in palaver before this alien chief, swathed in monkey tails, his shield in one hand, and his bunch of spears in the other.

  “All things I know,” said Bosambo, when they told him what they had to tell, “and it has come to me that you have spoken lightly of Tibbetti, who is my friend and my master, and is well beloved of Sandi. Also they tell me that you smiled at him. Now I tell you there will come a day when you will not smile, and that day is near at hand.”

  “Lord,” said the chief, “he made with us a foolish palaver, believing that we had put away B’chumbiri.”

  “And he shall return to that foolish palaver,” said Bosambo grimly, “and if he goes away unsatisfied, behind I will come, and I will take your old men, and I will hang them by hooks into a tree and roast their feet. For if there is no Sandi and no law, behold I am Sandi and I law, doing the will of a certain bearded king, Togi-tani.”

  He left the village of M’fa a little unhappy for the space of a day, when, native-like, they forgot all that he had said.

  In the meantime, up and down the river went Bones, palavers which lasted from sunrise to sunset being his portion.

  He had in his mind one vital fact, that for the honour of his race and for the credit of his administration he must bring to justice the man who slew the thing which he had found in the river. Chiefs and elders met him with scarcely concealed scorn, and waited expectantly to hear his strong, foreign language. But in this they were disappointed, for Bones spoke nothing but the language of the river, and little of it.

  He went on board the Zaire on the ninth night after his discovery, dispirited and sick at heart.

  “It seems to me, Ahmet,” he said to the Houssa sergeant who stood waiting silently by the table where his meagre dinner was laid, “that no man speaks the truth in this cursed land, and that they do not fear me as they fear Sandi.”

  “Lord, it is so,” said Ahmet; “for, as your lordship knows, Sandi was very terrible, and then, O Tibbetti, he is an older man, very wise in the ways of these people, and very cunning to see their heart. All great trees grow slowly, O my lord! and that which springs up in a night dies in a day.”

  Bones pondered this for a while, then: “Wake me at dawn,” he said. “I go back to M’fa for the last palaver, and if this palaver be a bad one, be sure you shall not see my face again up
on the river.”

  Bones spoke truly, his resignation, written in his sprawling hand, lay enveloped and sealed in his cabin ready for dispatch. He stopped his steamer at a village six miles from M’fa, and sent a party of Houssas to the village with a message.

  The chief was to summon all elder-men, and all men responsible to the Government, the wearers of medals and the holders of rights, all landmen and leaders of hunters, the captains of spears, and the first headmen. Even to the witch-doctors he called together.

  “O soldier!” said the chief, dubiously, “what happens to me if I do not obey his commands? For my men are weary, having hunted in the forest, and my chiefs do not like long palavers concerning law.”

  “That may be,” said Ahmet, calmly. “But when my lord calls you to palaver you must obey, otherwise I take you, I and my strong men, to the Village of Irons, there to rest for a while to my lord’s pleasure.”

  So the chief sent messengers and rattled his lokali to some purpose, bringing headmen and witch-doctors, little and great chiefs, and spearmen of quality, to squat about the palaver house on the little hill to the east of the village.

  Bones came with an escort of four men. He walked slowly up the cut steps in the hillside and sat upon the stool to the chief’s right; and no sooner had he seated himself than, without preliminary, he began to speak. And he spoke of Sanders, of his splendour and his power; of his love for all people and his land, and also M’ilitani, who these men respected because of his devilish blue eyes.

  At first he spoke slowly, because he found a difficulty in breathing, and then as he found himself, grew more and more lucid and took a larger grasp of the language.

  “Now,” said he, “I come to you, being young in the service of the Government, and unworthy to tread in my lord Sandi’s way. Yet I hold the laws in my two hands even as Sandi held them, for laws do not change with men, neither does the sun change whatever be the land upon which it shines. Now, I say to you and to all men, deliver to me the slayer of B’chumbiri that I may deal with him according to the law.”

 

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