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<h2> CHAPTER XIV </h2>
<h3> THE CHASE </h3>
<p>I suppose that I swooned for a minute or two. At any rate I remember a
long and very curious dream, such a dream as is evolved by a patient under
laughing gas, that is very clear and vivid at the time but immediately
afterwards slips from the mind's grasp as water does from the clenched
hand. It was something to the effect that all those hundreds of skeleton
elephants rose and marshalled themselves before me, making obeisance to me
by bending their bony knees, because, as I quite understood, I was the
only human being that had ever escaped from Jana. Moreover, on the
foremost elephant's skull Hans was perched like a mahout, giving words of
command, to their serried ranks and explaining to them that it would be
very convenient if they would carry their tusks, for which they had no
further use, and pile them in a certain place—I forget where—that
must be near a good road to facilitate their subsequent transport to a
land where they would be made into billiard balls and the backs of ladies'
hair-brushes. Next, through the figments of that retreating dream, I heard
the undoubted voice of Hans himself, which of course I knew to be absurd
as Hans was lost and doubtless dead, saying:</p>
<p>"If you are alive, Baas, please wake up soon, as I have finished reloading
Intombi, and it is time to be going. I think I hit Jana in the eye, but so
big a beast will soon get over so little a thing as that and look for us,
and the bullet from Intombi is too small to kill him, Baas, especially as
it is not likely that either of us could hit him in the other eye."</p>
<p>Now I sat up and stared. Yes, there was Hans himself looking just the same
as usual, only perhaps rather dirtier, engaged in setting a cap on to the
nipple of the little rifle Intombi.</p>
<p>"Hans," I said in a hollow voice, "why the devil are you here?"</p>
<p>"To save you from the devil, of course, Baas," he replied aptly. Then,
resting the gun against the stone, the old fellow knelt down by my side
and, throwing his arms around me, began to blubber over me, exclaiming:</p>
<p>"Just in time, Baas! Only just in time, for as usual Hans made a mess of
things and judged badly—I'll tell you afterwards. Still, just in
time, thanks be to your reverend father, the Predikant. Oh! if he had
delayed me for one more minute you would have been as flat as my nose,
Baas. Now come quickly. I've got the camel tied up there, and he can carry
two, being fat and strong after four days' rest with plenty to eat. This
place is haunted, Baas, and that king of the devils, Jana, will be back
after us presently, as soon as he has wiped the blood out of his eye."</p>
<p>I didn't make any remark, having no taste for conversation just then, but
only looked at poor Mar�t, who lay by me as though he was sleeping.</p>
<p>"Oh, Baas," said Hans, "there is no need to trouble about him, for his
neck is broken and he's quite dead. Also it is as well," he added
cheerfully. "For, as your reverend father doubtless remembered, the camel
could never carry three. Moreover, if he stops here, perhaps Jana will
come back to play with him instead of following us."</p>
<p>Poor Mar�t! This was his requiem as sung by Hans.</p>
<p>With a last glance at the unhappy man to whom I had grown attached in a
way during our time of joint captivity and trial, I took the arm of the
old Hottentot, or rather leant upon his shoulder, for at first I felt too
weak to walk by myself, and picked my path with him through the stones and
skeletons of elephants across the plateau eastwards, that is, away from
the lake. About two hundred yards from the scene of our tragedy was a
mound of rock similar to that on which Jana had appeared, but much
smaller, behind which we found the camel, kneeling as a well-trained beast
of the sort should do and tethered to a stone.</p>
<p>As we went, in brief but sufficient language Hans told me his story. It
seemed that after he had shot the Kendah general it came into his cunning,
foreseeing mind that he might be of more use to me free than as a
companion in captivity, or that if I were killed he might in that case
live to bring vengeance on my slayers. So he broke away, as has been
described, and hid till nightfall on the hill-side. Then by the light of
the moon he tracked us, avoiding the villages, and ultimately found a
place of shelter in a kind of cave in the forest near to Simba Town, where
no people lived. Here he fed the camel at night, concealing it at dawn in
the cave. The days he spent up a tall tree, whence he could watch all that
went on in the town beneath, living meanwhile on some food which he
carried in a bag tied to the saddle, helped out by green mealies which he
stole from a neighbouring field.</p>
<p>Thus he saw most of what passed in the town, including the desolation
wrought by the fearful tempest of hail, which, being in their cave, both
he and the camel escaped without harm. On the next evening from his post
of outlook up the tree, where he had now some difficulty in hiding himself
because the hail had stripped off all its leaves, he saw Mar�t and myself
brought from the guest-house and taken away by the escort. Descending and
running to the cave, he saddled the camel and started in pursuit, plunging
into the forest and hiding there when he perceived that the escort were
leaving us.</p>
<p>Here he waited until they had gone by on their return journey. So close
did they pass to him that he could overhear their talk, which told him
they expected, or rather were sure, that we should be destroyed by the
elephant Jana, their devil god, to whom the camelmen had been already
sacrificed. After they had departed he remounted and followed us. Here I
asked him why he had not overtaken us before we came to the cemetery of
elephants, as I presumed he might have done, since he stated that he was
close in our rear. This indeed was the case, for it was the head of the
camel I saw behind the thorn trees when I looked back, and not the trunk
of an elephant as I had supposed.</p>
<p>At the time he would give me no direct answer, except that he grew muddled
as he had already suggested, and thought it best to keep in the background
and see what happened. Long afterwards, however, he admitted to me that he
acted on a presentiment.</p>
<p>"It seemed to me, Baas," he said, "that your reverend father was telling
me that I should do best to let you two go on and not show myself, since
if I did so we should all three be killed, as one of us must walk whom the
other two could not desert. Whereas if I left you as you were, one of you
would be killed and the other escape, and that the one to be killed would
not be <i>you</i>, Baas. All of which came about as the Spirit spoke in my
head, for Mar�t was killed, who did not matter, and—you know the
rest, Baas."</p>
<p>To return to Hans' story. He saw us march down to the borders of the lake,
and, keeping to our right, took cover behind the knoll of rock, whence he
watched also all that followed. When Jana advanced to attack us Hans crept
forward in the hope, a very wild one, of crippling him with the little
Purdey rifle. Indeed, he was about to fire at the hind leg when Mar�t made
his run for life and plunged into the lake. Then he crawled on to lead me
away to the camel, but when he was within a few yards the chase returned
our way and Mar�t was killed.</p>
<p>From that moment he waited for an opportunity to shoot Jana in the only
spot where so soft a bullet would, as he knew, have the faintest chance of
injuring him vitally—namely, in the eye—for he was sure that
its penetration would not be sufficient to reach the vitals through that
thick hide and the mass of flesh behind. With an infinite and wonderful
patience he waited, knowing that my life or death hung in the balance.
While Jana held his foot over me, while he felt me with his trunk, still
Hans waited, balancing the arguments for and against firing upon the
scales of experience in his clever old mind, and in the end coming to a
right and wise conclusion.</p>
<p>At length his chance came, the brute exposed his eye, and by the light of
the clear moon Hans, always a very good shot at a distance when it was not
necessary to allow for trajectory and wind, let drive and <i>hit</i>. The
bullet did not get to the brain as he had hoped; it had not strength for
that, but it destroyed this left eye and gave Jana such pain that for a
while he forgot all about me and everything else except escape.</p>
<p>Such was the Hottentot's tale as I picked it up from his laconic,
colourless, Dutch <i>patois</i> sentences, then and afterwards; a very
wonderful tale I thought. But for him, his fidelity and his bushman's
cunning, where should I have found myself before that moon set?</p>
<p>We mounted the camel after I had paused a minute to take a pull from a
flask of brandy which remained in the saddlebags. Although he loved strong
drink so well Hans had saved it untouched on the mere chance that it might
some time be of service to me, his master. The monkey-like Hottentot sat
in front and directed the camel, while I accommodated myself as best I
could on the sheepskins behind. Luckily they were thick and soft, for
Jana's pinch was not exactly that of a lover.</p>
<p>Off we went, picking our way carefully till we reached the elephant track
beyond the mound where Jana had appeared, which, in the light of faith, we
hoped would lead us to the River Tava. Here we made better progress, but
still could not go very fast because of the holes made by the feet of Jana
and his company. Soon we had left the cemetery behind us, and lost sight
of the lake which I devoutly trusted I might never see again.</p>
<p>Now the track ran upwards from the hollow to a ridge two or three miles
away. We reached the crest of this ridge without accident, except that on
our road we met another aged elephant, a cow with very poor tusks,
travelling to its last resting place, or so I suppose. I don't know which
was the more frightened, the sick cow or the camel, for camels hate
elephants as horses hate camels until they get used to them. The cow
bolted to the right as quickly as it could, which was not very fast, and
the camel bolted to the left with such convulsive bounds that we were
nearly thrown off its back. However, being an equable brute, it soon
recovered its balance, and we got back to the track beyond the cow.</p>
<p>From the top of the rise we saw that before us lay a sandy plain lightly
clothed in grass, and, to our joy, about ten miles away at the foot of a
very gentle slope, the moonlight gleamed upon the waters of a broad river.
It was not easy to make out, but it was there, we were both sure it was
there; we could not mistake the wavering, silver flash. On we went for
another quarter of a mile, when something caused me to turn round on the
sheepskin and look back.</p>
<p>Oh Heavens! At the very top of the rise, clearly outlined against the sky,
stood Jana himself with his trunk lifted. Next instant he trumpeted, a
furious, rattling challenge of rage and defiance.</p>
<p>"Allemagte! Baas," said Hans, "the old devil is coming to look for his
lost eye, and has seen us with that which remains. He has been travelling
on our spoor."</p>
<p>"Forward!" I answered, bringing my heels into the camel's ribs.</p>
<p>Then the race began. The camel was a very good camel, one of the real
running breed; also, as Hans said, it was comparatively fresh, and may,
moreover, have been aware that it was near to the plains where it had been
bred. Lastly, the going was now excellent, soft to its spongy feet but not
too deep in sand, nor were there any rocks over which it could fall. It
went off like the wind, making nothing of our united weights which did not
come to more than two hundred pounds, or a half of what it could carry
with ease, being perhaps urged to its top speed by the knowledge that the
elephant was behind. For mile after mile we rushed down the plain. But we
did not go alone, for Jana came after us like a cruiser after a gunboat.
Moreover, swiftly as we travelled, he travelled just a little swifter,
gaining say a few yards in every hundred. For the last mile before we came
to the river bank, half an hour later perhaps, though it seemed to be a
week, he was not more than fifty paces to our rear. I glanced back at him,
and in the light of the moon, which was growing low, he bore a strange
resemblance to a mud cottage with broken chimneys (which were his ears
flapping on each side of him), and the yard pump projecting from the upper
window.</p>
<p>"We shall beat him now, Hans," I said looking at the broad river which was
now close at hand.</p>
<p>"Yes, Baas," answered Hans doubtfully and in jerks. "This is very good
camel, Baas. He runs so fast that I have no inside left, I suppose because
he smells his wife over that river, to say nothing of death behind him.
But, Baas, I am not sure; that devil Jana is still faster than the camel,
and he wants to settle for his lost eye, which makes him lively. Also I
see stones ahead, which are bad for camels. Then there is the river, and I
don't know if camels can swim, but Jana can as Mar�t learned. Do you
think, Baas, that you could manage to sting him up with a bullet in his
knee or that great trunk of his, just to give him something to think about
besides ourselves?"</p>
<p>Thus he prattled on, I believe to occupy my mind and his own, till at
length, growing impatient, I replied:</p>
<p>"Be silent, donkey. Can I shoot an elephant backwards over my shoulder
with a rifle meant for springbuck? Hit the camel! Hit it hard!"</p>
<p>Alas! Hans was right! There <i>were</i> stones at the verge of the river,
which doubtless it had washed out in periods of past flood, and presently
we were among them. Now a camel, so good on sand that is its native heath,
is a worthless brute among stones, over which it slips and flounders. But
to Jana these appeared to offer little or no obstacle. At any rate he came
over them almost if not quite as fast as before. By the time that we
reached the brink of the water he was not more than ten yards behind. I
could even see the blood running down from the socket of his ruined eye.</p>
<p>Moreover, at the sight of the foaming but shallow torrent, the camel, a
creature unaccustomed to water, pulled up in a mulish kind of way and for
a moment refused to stir. Luckily at this instant Jana let off one of his
archangel kind of trumpetings which started our beast again, since it was
more afraid of elephants than it was of water.</p>
<p>In we went and were presently floundering among the loose stones at the
bottom of the river, which was nowhere over four feet deep, with Jana
splashing after us not more than five yards behind. I twisted myself round
and fired at him with the rifle. Whether I hit him or no I could not say,
but he stopped for a few seconds, perhaps because he remembered the effect
of a similar explosion upon his eye, which gave us a trifling start. Then
he came on again in his steam-engine fashion.</p>
<p>When we were about in the middle of the river the inevitable happened. The
camel fell, pitching us over its head into the stream. Still clinging to
the rifle I picked myself up and began half to swim half to wade towards
the farther shore, catching hold of Hans with my free hand. In a moment
Jana was on to that camel. He gored it with his tusks, he trampled it with
his feet, he got it round the neck with his trunk, dragging nearly the
whole bulk of it out of the water. Then he set to work to pound it down
into the mud and stones at the bottom of the river with such a persistent
thoroughness, that he gave us time to reach the other bank and climb up a
stout tree which grew there, a sloping, flat-topped kind of tree that was
fortunately easy to ascend, at least for a man. Here we sat gasping,
perhaps about thirty feet above the ground level, and waited.</p>
<p>Presently Jana, having finished with the camel, followed us, and without
any difficulty located us in that tree. He walked all round it considering
the situation. Then he wound his huge trunk about the bole of the tree
and, putting out his strength, tried to pull it over. It was an anxious
moment, but this particular child of the forest had not grown there for
some hundreds of years, withstanding all the shocks of wind, weather and
water, in order to be laid low by an elephant, however enormous. It shook
a little—no more. Abandoning this attempt as futile, Jana next began
to try to dig it up by driving his tusk under its roots. Here, too, he
failed because they grew among stones which evidently jarred him.</p>
<p>Ceasing from these agricultural efforts with a deep rumble of rage, he
adopted yet a third expedient. Rearing his huge bulk into the air he
brought down his forefeet with all the tremendous weight of his great body
behind them on to the sloping trunk of the tree just below where the
branches sprang, perhaps twelve or thirteen feet above the ground. The
shock was so heavy that for a moment I thought the tree would be uprooted
or snapped in two. Thank Heaven! it held, but the vibration was such that
Hans and I were nearly shaken out of the upper branches, like autumn
apples from a bough. Indeed, I think I should have gone had not the
monkey-like Hans, who had toes to cling with as well as fingers, gripped
me by the collar.</p>
<p>Thrice did Jana repeat this manoeuvre, and at the third onslaught I saw to
my horror that the roots were loosening. I heard some of them snap, and a
crack appeared in the ground not far from the bole. Fortunately Jana never
noted these symptoms, for abandoning a plan which he considered
unavailing, he stood for a while swaying his trunk and lost in gentle
thought.</p>
<p>"Hans," I whispered, "load the rifle quick! I can get him in the spine or
the other eye."</p>
<p>"Wet powder won't go off, Baas," groaned Hans. "The water got to it in the
river."</p>
<p>"No," I answered, "and it is all your fault for making me shoot at him
when I could take no aim."</p>
<p>"It would have been just the same, Baas, for the rifle went under water
also when we fell from the camel, and the cap would have been damp, and
perhaps the powder too. Also the shot made Jana stop for a moment."</p>
<p>This was true, but it was maddening to be obliged to sit there with an
empty gun, when if I had but one charge, or even my pistol, I was sure
that I could have blinded or crippled this satanic pachyderm.</p>
<p>A few minutes later Jana played his last card. Coming quite close to the
trunk of the tree he reared himself up as before, but this time stretched
out his forelegs so that these and his body were supported on the broad
bole. Then he elongated his trunk and with it began to break off boughs
which grew between us and him.</p>
<p>"I don't think he can reach us," I said doubtfully to Hans, "that is,
unless he brings a stone to stand on."</p>
<p>"Oh! Baas, pray be silent," answered Hans, "or he will understand and
fetch one."</p>
<p>Although the idea seemed absurd, on the whole I thought it well to take
the hint, for who knew how much this experienced beast did or did not
understand? Then, as we could go no higher, we wriggled as far as we dared
along our boughs and waited.</p>
<p>Presently Jana, having finished his clearing operations, began to lengthen
his trunk to its full measure. Literally, it seemed to expand like a
telescope or an indiarubber ring. Out it came, foot after foot, till its
snapping tip was waving within a few inches of us, just short of my foot
and Han's head, or rather felt hat. One final stretch and he reached the
hat, which he removed with a flourish and thrust into the red cavern of
his mouth. As it appeared no more I suppose he ate it. This loss of his
hat moved Hans to fury. Hurling horrible curses at Jana he drew his
butcher's knife and made ready.</p>
<p>Once more the sinuous brown trunk elongated itself. Evidently Jana had got
a better hold with his hind legs this time, or perhaps had actually
wriggled himself a few inches up the tree. At any rate I saw to my dismay
that there was every prospect of my making a second acquaintance with that
snapping tip. The end of the trunk was lying along my bough like a huge
brown snake and creeping up, up, up.</p>
<p>"He'll get us," I muttered.</p>
<p>Hans said nothing but leaned forward a little, holding on with his left
hand. Next instant in the light of the rising sun I saw a knife flash, saw
also that the point of it had been driven through the lower lip of Jana's
trunk, pinning it to the bough like a butterfly to a board.</p>
<p>My word! what a commotion ensued! Up the trunk came a scream which nearly
blew me away. Then Jana, with a wriggling motion, tried to unnail himself
as gently as possible, for it was clear that the knife point hurt him, but
could not do so because Hans still held the handle and had driven the
blade deep into the wood. Lastly he dragged himself downwards with such
energy that something had to go, that something being the skin and muscle
of the lower lip, which was cut clean through, leaving the knife erect in
the bough.</p>
<p>Over he went backwards, a most imperial cropper. Then he picked himself
up, thrust the tip of his trunk into his mouth, sucked it as one does a
cut finger, and finally, roaring in defeated rage, fled into the river,
which he waded, and back upon his tracks towards his own home. Yes, off he
went, Hans screaming curses and demands that he should restore his hat to
him, and very seldom in all my life have I seen a sight that I thought
more beautiful than that of his whisking tail.</p>
<p>"Now, Baas," chuckled Hans, "the old devil has got a sore nose as well as
a sore eye by which to remember us. And, Baas, I think we had better be
going before he has time to think and comes back with a long stick to
knock us out of this tree."</p>
<p>So we went, in double-quick time I can assure you, or at any rate as fast
as my stiff limbs and general condition would allow. Fortunately we had
now no doubt as to our direction, since standing up through the mists of
dawn with the sunbeams resting on its forest-clad crest, we could clearly
see the strange, tumulus-shaped hill which the White Kendah called the
Holy Mount, the Home of the Child. It appeared to be about twenty miles
away, but in reality was a good deal farther, for when we had walked for
several hours it seemed almost as distant as ever.</p>
<p>In truth that was a dreadful trudge. Not only was I exhausted with all the
terrors I had passed and our long midnight flight, but the wound where
Jana had pinched out a portion of my frame, inflamed by the riding, had
now grown stiff and intolerably sore, so that every step gave me pain
which sometimes culminated in agony. Moreover, it was no use giving in,
foodless as we were, for Mar�t had carried the provisions, and with the
chance of Jana returning to look us up. So I stuck to it and said nothing.</p>
<p>For the first ten miles the country seemed uninhabited; doubtless it was
too near the borders of the Black Kendah to be popular as a place of
residence. After this we saw herds of cattle and a few camels, apparently
untended; perhaps their guards were hidden away in the long grass. Then we
came to some fields of mealies that were, I noticed, quite untouched by
the hailstorm, which, it would seem, had confined its attentions to the
land of the Black Kendah. Of these we ate thankfully enough. A little
farther on we perceived huts perched on an inaccessible place in a kloof.
Also their inhabitants perceived us, for they ran away as though in a
great fright.</p>
<p>Still we did not try to approach the huts, not knowing how we should be
received. After my sojourn in Simba Town I had become possessed of a love
of life in the open.</p>
<p>For another two hours I limped forward with pain and grief—by now I
was leaning on Hans' shoulder—up an endless, uncultivated rise
clothed with euphorbias and fern-like cycads. At length we reached its top
and found ourselves within a rifle shot of a fenced native village. I
suppose that its inhabitants had been warned of our coming by runners from
the huts I have mentioned. At any rate the moment we appeared the men, to
the number of thirty or more, poured out of the south gate armed with
spears and other weapons and proceeded to ring us round and behave in a
very threatening manner. I noticed at once that, although most of them
were comparatively light in colour, some of these men partook of the negro
characteristics of the Black Kendah from whom we had escaped, to such an
extent indeed that this blood was clearly predominant in them. Still, it
was also clear that they were deadly foes of this people, for when I
shouted out to them that we were the friends of Har�t and those who
worshipped the Child, they yelled back that we were liars. No friends of
the Child, they said, came from the country of the Black Kendah, who
worshipped the devil Jana. I tried to explain that least of all men in the
world did we worship Jana, who had been hunting us for hours, but they
would not listen.</p>
<p>"You are spies of Simba's, the smell of Jana is upon you" (this may have
been true enough), they yelled, adding: "We will kill you, white-faced
goat. We will kill you, little yellow monkey, for none who are not enemies
come here from the land of the Black Kendah."</p>
<p>"Kill us then," I answered, "and bring the curse of the Child upon you.
Bring famine, bring hail, bring war!"</p>
<p>These words were, I think, well chosen; at any rate they induced a pause
in their murderous intentions. For a while they hesitated, all talking
together at once. At last the advocates of violence appeared to get the
upper hand, and once more a number of the men began to dance about us,
waving their spears and crying out that we must die who came from the
Black Kendah.</p>
<p>I sat down upon the ground, for I was so exhausted that at the time I did
not greatly care whether I died or lived, while Hans drew his knife and
stood over me, cursing them as he had cursed at Jana. By slow degrees they
drew nearer and nearer. I watched them with a kind of idle curiosity,
believing that the moment when they came within actual spear-thrust would
be our last, but, as I have said, not greatly caring because of my mental
and physical exhaustion.</p>
<p>I had already closed my eyes that I might not see the flash of the falling
steel, when an exclamation from Hans caused me to open them again.
Following the line of the knife with which he pointed, I perceived a troop
of men on camels emerging from the gates of the village at full speed. In
front of these, his white garments fluttering on the wind, rode a bearded
and dignified person in whom I recognized Har�t, Har�t himself, waving a
spear and shouting as he came. Our assailants heard and saw him also, then
flung down their weapons as though in dismay either at his appearance or
his words, which I could not catch. Har�t guided his rushing camel
straight at the man who I presume was their leader, and struck at him with
his spear, as though in fury, wounding him in the shoulder and causing him
to fall to the ground. As he struck he called out:</p>
<p>"Dog! Would you harm the guests of the Child?"</p>
<p>Then I heard no more because I fainted away.</p>
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