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<h2> CHAPTER XVII </h2>
<h3> THE SANCTUARY AND THE OATH </h3>
<p>That evening shortly after sundown the three of us started boldly from our
house wearing over our clothes the Kendah dresses which Ragnall had
bought, and carrying nothing save sticks in our hands, some food and the
lantern in our pockets. On the outskirts of the town we were met by
certain Kendah, one of whom I knew, for I had often ridden by his side on
our march across the desert.</p>
<p>"Have any of you arms upon you, Lord Macumazana?" he asked, looking
curiously at us and our white robes.</p>
<p>"None," I answered. "Search us if you will."</p>
<p>"Your word is sufficient," he replied with the grave courtesy of his
people. "If you are unarmed we have orders to let you go where you wish
however you may be dressed. Yet, Lord," he whispered to me, "I pray you do
not enter the cave, since One lives there who strikes and does not miss,
One whose kiss is death. I pray it for your own sakes, also for ours who
need you."</p>
<p>"We shall not wake him who sleeps in the cave," I answered enigmatically,
as we departed rejoicing, for now we had learned that the Kendah did not
yet know of the death of the serpent.</p>
<p>An hour's walk up the hill, guided by Hans, brought us to the mouth of the
tunnel. To tell the truth I could have wished it had been longer, for as
we drew near all sorts of doubts assailed me. What if Hans really had been
drinking and invented this story to account for his absence? What if the
snake had recovered from a merely temporary indisposition? What if it had
a wife and family living in that cave, every one of them thirsting for
vengeance?</p>
<p>Well, it was too late to hesitate now, but secretly I hoped that one of
the others would prefer to lead the way. We reached the place and
listened. It was silent as a tomb. Then that brave fellow Hans lit the
lantern and said:</p>
<p>"Do you stop here, Baases, while I go to look. If you hear anything happen
to me, you will have time to run away," words that made me feel somewhat
ashamed of myself.</p>
<p>However, knowing that he was quick as a weasel and silent as a cat, we let
him go. A minute or two later suddenly he reappeared out of the darkness,
for he had turned the metal shield over the bull's-eye of the lantern, and
even in that light I could see that he was grinning.</p>
<p>"It is all right, Baas," he said. "The Father of Serpents has really gone
to that land whither he sent Bena, where no doubt he is now roasting in
the fires of hell, and I don't see any others. Come and look at him."</p>
<p>So in we went and there, true enough, upon the floor of the cave lay the
huge reptile stone dead and already much swollen. I don't know how long it
was, for part of its body was twisted into coils, so I will only say that
it was by far the most enormous snake that I have ever seen. It is true
that I have heard of such reptiles in different parts of Africa, but
hitherto I had always put them down as fabulous creatures transformed into
and worshipped as local gods. Also this particular specimen was, I
presume, of a new variety, since, according to Ragnall, it both struck
like the cobra or the adder, and crushed like the boa-constrictor. It is
possible, however, that he was mistaken on this point; I do not know,
since I had no time, or indeed inclination, to examine its head for the
poison fangs, and when next I passed that way it was gone.</p>
<p>I shall never forget the stench of that cave. It was horrible, which is
not to be wondered at seeing that probably this creature had dwelt there
for centuries, since these large snakes are said to be as long lived as
tortoises, and, being sacred, of course it had never lacked for food.
Everywhere lay piles of cast bones, amongst one of which I noticed
fragments of a human skull, perhaps that of poor Savage. Also the
projecting rocks in the place were covered with great pieces of snake
skin, doubtless rubbed off by the reptile when once a year it changed its
coat.</p>
<p>For a while we gazed at the loathsome and still glittering creature, then
pushed on fearful lest we should stumble upon more of its kind. I suppose
that it must have been solitary, a kind of serpent rogue, as Jana was an
elephant rogue, for we met none and, if the information which I obtained
afterwards may be believed, there was no species at all resembling it in
the country. What its origin may have been I never learned. All the Kendah
could or would say about it was that it had lived in this hole from the
beginning and that Black Kendah prisoners, or malefactors, were sometimes
given to it to kill, as White Kendah prisoners were given to Jana.</p>
<p>The cave itself proved to be not very long, perhaps one hundred and fifty
feet, no more. It was not an artificial but a natural hollow in the lava
rock, which I suppose had once been blown through it by an outburst of
steam. Towards the farther end it narrowed so much that I began to fear
there might be no exit. In this I was mistaken, however, for at its
termination we found a hole just large enough for a man to walk in upright
and so difficult to climb through that it became clear to us that
certainly this was not the path by which the White Kendah approached their
sanctuary.</p>
<p>Scrambling out of this aperture with thankfulness, we found ourselves upon
the slope of a kind of huge ditch of lava which ran first downwards for
about eighty paces, then up again to the base of the great cone of the
inner mountain which was covered with dense forest.</p>
<p>I presume that the whole formation of this peculiar hill was the result of
a violent volcanic action in the early ages of the earth. But as I do not
understand such matters I will not dilate upon them further than to say
that, although comparatively small, it bore a certain resemblance to other
extinct volcanoes which I had met with in different parts of Africa.</p>
<p>We climbed down to the bottom of the ditch that from its general
appearance might have been dug out by some giant race as a protection to
their stronghold, and up its farther side to where the forest began on
deep and fertile soil. Why there should have been rich earth here and none
in the ditch is more than we could guess, but perhaps the presence of
springs of water in this part of the mount may have been a cause. At any
rate it was so.</p>
<p>The trees in this forest were huge and of a variety of cedar, but did not
grow closely together; also there was practically no undergrowth, perhaps
for the reason that their dense, spreading tops shut out the light. As I
saw afterwards both trunks and boughs were clothed with long grey moss,
which even at midday gave the place a very ghostly appearance. The
darkness beneath those trees was intense, literally we could not see an
inch before our faces. Yet rather than stand still we struggled on, Hans
leading the way, for his instincts were quicker than ours. The steep rise
of the ground beneath our feet told us that we were going uphill, as we
wished to do, and from time to time I consulted a pocket compass I carried
by the light of a match, knowing from previous observations that the top
of the Holy Mount lay due north.</p>
<p>Thus for hour after hour we crept up and on, occasionally butting into the
trunk of a tree or stumbling over a fallen bough, but meeting with no
other adventures or obstacles of a physical kind. Of moral, or rather
mental, obstacles there were many, since to all of us the atmosphere of
this forest was as that of a haunted house. It may have been the embracing
darkness, or the sough of the night wind amongst the boughs and mosses, or
the sense of the imminent dangers that we had passed and that still
awaited us. Or it may have been unknown horrors connected with this place
of which some spiritual essence still survived, for without doubt
localities preserve such influences, which can be felt by the sensitive
among living things, especially in favouring conditions of fear and gloom.
At any rate I never experienced more subtle and yet more penetrating
terrors than I did upon that night, and afterwards Ragnall confessed to me
that my case was his own. Black as it was I thought that I saw
apparitions, among them glaring eyes and that of the elephant Jana
standing in front of me with his trunk raised against the bole of a cedar.
I could have sworn that I saw him, nor was I reassured when Hans whispered
to me below his breath, for here we did not seem to dare to raise our
voices:</p>
<p>"Look, Baas. Is it Jana glowing like hot iron who stands yonder?"</p>
<p>"Don't be a fool," I answered. "How can Jana be here and, if he were here,
how could we see him in the night?" But as I said the words I remembered
Har�t had told us that Jana had been met with on the Holy Mount "in the
spirit or in the flesh." However this may be, next instant he was gone and
we beheld him or his shadow no more. Also we thought that from time to
time we heard voices speaking all around us, now here, now there and now
in the tree tops above our heads, though what they said we could not catch
or understand.</p>
<p>Thus the long night wore away. Our progress was very slow, but guided by
occasional glimpses at the compass we never stopped but twice, once when
we found ourselves apparently surrounded by tree boles and fallen boughs,
and once when we got into swampy ground. Then we took the risk of lighting
the lantern, and by its aid picked our way through these difficult places.
By degrees the trees grew fewer so that we could see the stars between
their tops. This was a help to us as I knew that one of them, which I had
carefully noted, shone at this season of the year directly over the cone
of the mountain, and we were enabled to steer thereby.</p>
<p>It must have been not more than half an hour before the dawn that Hans,
who was leading—we were pushing our way through thick bushes at the
time—halted hurriedly, saying:</p>
<p>"Stop, Baas, we are on the edge of a cliff. When I thrust my stick forward
it stands on nothing."</p>
<p>Needless to say we pulled up dead and so remained without stirring an
inch, for who could say what might be beyond us? Ragnall wished to examine
the ground with the lantern. I was about to consent, though doubtfully,
when suddenly I heard voices murmuring and through the screen of bushes
saw lights moving at a little distance, forty feet or more below us. Then
we gave up all idea of making further use of the lantern and crouched
still as mice in our bushes, waiting for the dawn.</p>
<p>It came at last. In the east appeared a faint pearly flush that by degrees
spread itself over the whole arch of the sky and was welcomed by the
barking of monkeys and the call of birds in the depths of the dew-steeped
forest. Next a ray from the unrisen sun, a single spear of light shot
suddenly across the sky, and as it appeared, from the darkness below us
arose a sound of chanting, very low and sweet to hear. It died away and
for a little while there was silence broken only by a rustling sound like
to that of people taking their seats in a dark theatre. Then a woman began
to sing in a beautiful, contralto voice, but in what language I do not
know, for I could not catch the words, if these were words and not only
musical notes.</p>
<p>I felt Ragnall trembling beside me and in a whisper asked him what was the
matter. He answered, also in a whisper:</p>
<p>"I believe that is my wife's voice."</p>
<p>"If so, I beg you to control yourself," I replied.</p>
<p>Now the skies began to flame and the light to pour itself into a misty
hollow beneath us like streams of many-coloured gems into a bowl, driving
away the shadows. By degrees these vanished; by degrees we saw everything.
Beneath us was an amphitheatre, on the southern wall of which we were
seated, though it was not a wall but a lava cliff between forty and fifty
feet high which served as a wall. The amphitheatre itself, however, almost
exactly resembled those of the ancients which I had seen in pictures and
Ragnall had visited in Italy, Greece, and Southern France. It was oval in
shape and not very large, perhaps the flat space at the bottom may have
covered something over an acre, but all round this oval ran tiers of seats
cut in the lava of the crater. For without doubt this was the crater of an
extinct volcano.</p>
<p>Moreover, in what I will call the arena, stood a temple that in its main
outlines, although small, exactly resembled those still to be seen in
Egypt. There was the gateway or pylon; there the open outer court with
columns round it supporting roofed cloisters, which, as we ascertained
afterwards, were used as dwelling-places by the priests. There beyond and
connected with the first by a short passage was a second rather smaller
court, also open to the sky, and beyond this again, built like all the
rest of the temple of lava blocks, a roofed erection measuring about
twelve feet square, which I guessed at once must be the sanctuary.</p>
<p>This temple was, as I have said, small, but extremely well proportioned,
every detail of it being in the most excellent taste though unornamented
by sculpture or painting. I have to add that in front of the sanctuary
door stood a large block of lava, which I concluded was an altar, and in
front of this a stone seat and a basin, also of stone, supported upon a
very low tripod. Further, behind the sanctuary was a square house with
window-places.</p>
<p>At the moment of our first sight of this place the courts were empty, but
on the benches of the amphitheatre were seated about three hundred
persons, male and female, the men to the north and the women to the south.
They were all clad in pure white robes, the heads of the men being shaved
and those of the women veiled, but leaving the face exposed. Lastly, there
were two roadways into the amphitheatre, one running east and one west
through tunnels hollowed in the encircling rock of the crater, both of
which roads were closed at the mouths of the tunnels by massive wooden
double doors, seventeen or eighteen feet in height. From these roadways
and their doors we learned two things. First, that the cave where had
lived the Father of Serpents was, as I had suspected, not the real
approach to the shrine of the Child, but only a blind; and, secondly, that
the ceremony we were about to witness was secret and might only be
attended by the priestly class or families of this strange tribe.</p>
<p>Scarcely was it full daylight when from the cells of the cloisters round
the outer court issued twelve priests headed by Har�t himself, who looked
very dignified in his white garment, each of whom carried on a wooden
platter ears of different kinds of corn. Then from the cells of the
southern cloister issued twelve women, or rather girls, for all were young
and very comely, who ranged themselves alongside of the men. These also
carried wooden platters, and on them blooming flowers.</p>
<p>At a sign they struck up a religious chant and began to walk forward
through the passage that led from the first court to the second. Arriving
in front of the altar they halted and one by one, first a priest and then
a priestess, set down the platters of offerings, piling them above each
other into a cone. Next the priests and the priestesses ranged themselves
in lines on either side of the altar, and Har�t took a platter of corn and
a platter of flowers in his hands. These he held first towards that
quarter of the sky in which swam the invisible new moon, secondly towards
the rising sun, and thirdly towards the doors of the sanctuary, making
genuflexions and uttering some chanted prayer, the words of which we could
not hear.</p>
<p>A pause followed, that was succeeded by a sudden outburst of song wherein
all the audience took part. It was a very sonorous and beautiful song or
hymn in some language which I did not understand, divided into four
verses, the end of each verse being marked by the bowing of every one of
those many singers towards the east, towards the west, and finally towards
the altar.</p>
<p>Another pause till suddenly the doors of the sanctuary were thrown wide
and from between them issued—the goddess Isis of the Egyptians as I
have seen her in pictures! She was wrapped in closely clinging draperies
of material so thin that the whiteness of her body could be seen beneath.
Her hair was outspread before her, and she wore a head-dress or bonnet of
glittering feathers from the front of which rose a little golden snake. In
her arms she bore what at that distance seemed to be a naked child. With
her came two women, walking a little behind her and supporting her arms,
who also wore feather bonnets but without the golden snake, and were clad
in tight-fitting, transparent garments.</p>
<p>"My God!" whispered Ragnall, "it is my wife!"</p>
<p>"Then be silent and thank Him that she is alive and well," I answered.</p>
<p>The goddess Isis, or the English lady—in that excitement I did not
reck which—stood still while the priests and priestesses and all the
audience, who, gathered on the upper benches of the amphitheatre, could
see her above the wall of the inner court, raised a thrice-repeated and
triumphant cry of welcome. Then Har�t and the first priestess lifted
respectively an ear of corn and a flower from the two topmost platters and
held these first to the lips of the child in her arms and secondly to her
lips.</p>
<p>This ceremony concluded, the two attendant women led her round the altar
to the stone chair, upon which she seated herself. Next fire was kindled
in the bowl on the tripod in front of the chair, how I could not see; but
perhaps it was already smouldering there. At any rate it burnt up in a
thin blue flame, on to which Har�t and the head priestess threw something
that caused the flame to turn to smoke. Then Isis, for I prefer to call
her so while describing this ceremony, was caused to bend her head
forward, so that it was enveloped in the smoke exactly as she and I had
done some years before in the drawing-room at Ragnall Castle. Presently
the smoke died away and the two attendants with the feathered head-dresses
straightened her in the chair where she sat still holding the babe against
her breast as she might have done to nurse it, but with her head bent
forward like that of a person in a swoon.</p>
<p>Now Har�t stepped forward and appeared to speak to the goddess at some
length, then fell back again and waited, till in the midst of an intense
silence she rose from her seat and, fixing her wide eyes on the heavens,
spoke in her turn, for although we heard nothing of what she said, in that
clear, morning light we could see her lips moving. For some minutes she
spoke, then sat down again upon the chair and remained motionless, staring
straight in front of her. Har�t advanced again, this time to the front of
the altar, and, taking his stand upon a kind of stone step, addressed the
priests and priestesses and all the encircling audience in a voice so loud
and clear that I could distinguish and understand every word he said.</p>
<p>"The Guardian of the heavenly Child, the Nurse decreed, the appointed
Nurturer, She who is the shadow of her that bore the Child, She who in her
day bears the symbol of the Child and is consecrated to its service from
of old, She whose heart is filled with the wisdom of the Child and who
utters the decrees of Heaven, has spoken. Hearken now to the voice of the
Oracle uttered in answer to the questions of me, Har�t, the head priest of
the Eternal Child during my life-days. Thus says the Oracle, the Guardian,
the Nurturer, marked like all who went before her with the holy mark of
the new moon. She on whom the spirit, flitting from generation to
generation, has alighted for a while. 'O people of the White Kendah,
worshippers of the Child in this land and descendants of those who for
thousands of years worshipped the Child in a more ancient land until the
barbarians drove it thence with the remnant that remained. War is upon
you, O people of the White Kendah. Jana the evil one; he whose other name
is Set, he whose other name is Satan, he who for this while lives in the
shape of an elephant, he who is worshipped by the thousands whom once you
conquered, and whom still you bridle by my might, comes up against you.
The Darkness wars against the Daylight, the Evil wars against the Good. My
curse has fallen upon the people of Jana, my hail has smitten them, their
corn and their cattle; they have no food to eat. But they are still strong
for war and there is food in your land. They come to take your corn; Jana
comes to trample your god. The Evil comes to destroy the Good, the Night
to Devour the Day. It is the last of many battles. How shall you conquer,
O People of the Child? Not by your own strength, for you are few in number
and Jana is very strong. Not by the strength of the Child, for the Child
grows weak and old, the days of its dominion are almost done, and its
worship is almost outworn. Here alone that worship lingers, but new gods,
who are still the old gods, press on to take its place and to lead it to
its rest.'</p>
<p>"How then shall you conquer that, when the Child has departed to its own
place, a remnant of you may still remain? In one way only—so says
the Guardian, the Nurturer of the Child speaking with the voice of the
Child; by the help of those whom you have summoned to your aid from far.
There were four of them, but one you have suffered to be slain in the maw
of the Watcher in the cave. It was an evil deed, O sons and daughters of
the Child, for as the Watcher is now dead, so ere long many of you who
planned this deed must die who, had it not been for that man's blood,
would have lived on a while. Why did you do this thing? That you might
keep a secret, the secret of the theft of a woman, that you might continue
to act a lie which falls upon your head like a stone from heaven.</p>
<p>"Thus saith the Child: 'Lift no hand against the three who remain, and
what they shall ask, that give, for thus alone shall some of you be saved
from Jana and those who serve him, even though the Guardian and the Child
be taken away and the Child itself returned to its own place.' These are
the words of the Oracle uttered at the Feast of the First-fruits, the
words that cannot be changed and mayhap its last."</p>
<p>Har�t ceased, and there was silence while this portentous message sank
into the minds of his audience. At length they seemed to understand its
ominous nature and from them all there arose a universal, simultaneous
groan. As it died away the two attendants dressed as goddesses assisted
the personification of the Lady Isis to rise from her seat and, opening
the robes upon her breast, pointed to something beneath her throat,
doubtless that birthmark shaped like the new moon which made her so sacred
in their eyes since she who bore it and she alone could fill her holy
office.</p>
<p>All the audience and with them the priests and priestesses bowed before
her. She lifted the symbol of the Child, holding it high above her head,
whereon once more they bowed with the deepest veneration. Then still
holding the effigy aloft, she turned and with her two attendants passed
into the sanctuary and doubtless thence by a covered way into the house
beyond. At any rate we saw her no more.</p>
<p>As soon as she was gone the congregation, if I may call it so, leaving
their seats, swarmed down into the outer court of the temple through its
eastern gate, which was now opened. Here the priests proceeded to
distribute among them the offerings taken from the altar, giving a grain
of corn to each of the men to eat and a flower to each of the women, which
flower she kissed and hid in the bosom of her robe. Evidently it was a
kind of sacrament.</p>
<p>Ragnall lifted himself a little upon his hands and knees, and I saw that
his eyes glowed and his face was very pale.</p>
<p>"What are you going to do?" I asked.</p>
<p>"Demand that those people give me back my wife, whom they have stolen.
Don't try to stop me, Quatermain, I mean what I say."</p>
<p>"But, but," I stammered, "they never will and we are but three unarmed
men."</p>
<p>Hans lifted up his little yellow face between us.</p>
<p>"Baas," he hissed, "I have a thought. The Lord Baas wishes to get the lady
dressed like a bird as to her head and like one for burial as to her body,
who is, he says, his wife. But for us to take her from among so many is
impossible. Now what did that old witch-doctor Har�t declare just now? He
declared, speaking for his fetish, that by our help alone the White Kendah
can resist the hosts of the Black Kendah and that no harm must be done to
us if the White Kendah would continue to live. So it seems, Baas, that we
have something to sell which the White Kendah must buy, namely our help
against the Black Kendah, for if we will not fight for them, they believe
that they cannot conquer their enemies and kill the devil Jana. Well now,
supposing that the Baas says that our price is the white woman dressed
like a bird, to be delivered over to us when we have defeated the Black
Kendah and killed Jana—after which they will have no more use for
her. And supposing that the Baas says that if they refuse to pay that
price we will burn all our powder and cartridges so that the rifles are no
use? Is there not a path to walk on here?"</p>
<p>"Perhaps," I answered. "Something of the sort was working in my mind but I
had no time to think it out."</p>
<p>Turning, I explained the idea to Ragnall, adding:</p>
<p>"I pray you not to be rash. If you are, not only may we be killed, which
does not so much matter, but it is very probable that even if they spare
us they will put an end to your wife rather than suffer one whom they look
upon as holy and who is necessary to their faith in its last struggle to
be separated from her charge of the Child."</p>
<p>This was a fortunate argument of mine and one which went home.</p>
<p>"To lose her now would be more than I could bear," he muttered.</p>
<p>"Then will you promise to let me try to manage this affair and not to
interfere with me and show violence?"</p>
<p>He hesitated a moment and answered:</p>
<p>"Yes, I promise, for you two are cleverer than I am and—I cannot
trust my judgment."</p>
<p>"Good," I said, assuming an air of confidence which I did not feel. "Now
we will go down to call upon Har�t and his friends. I want to have a
closer look at that temple."</p>
<p>So behind our screen of bushes we wriggled back a little distance till we
knew that the slope of the ground would hide us when we stood up. Then as
quickly as we could we made our way eastwards for something over a quarter
of a mile and after this turned to the north. As I expected, beyond the
ring of the crater we found ourselves on the rising, tree-clad bosom of
the mountain and, threading our path through the cedars, came presently to
that track or roadway which led to the eastern gate of the amphitheatre.
This road we followed unseen until presently the gateway appeared before
us. We walked through it without attracting any attention, perhaps because
all the people were either talking together, or praying, or perhaps
because like themselves we were wrapped in white robes. At the mouth of
the tunnel we stopped and I called out in a loud voice:</p>
<p>"The white lords and their servant have come to visit Har�t, as he invited
them to do. Bring us, we pray you, into the presence of Har�t."</p>
<p>Everyone wheeled round and stared at us standing there in the shadow of
the gateway tunnel, for the sun behind us was still low. My word, how they
did stare! A voice cried:</p>
<p>"Kill them! Kill these strangers who desecrate our temple."</p>
<p>"What!" I answered. "Would you kill those to whom your high-priest has
given safe-conduct; those moreover by whose help alone, as your Oracle has
just declared, you can hope to slay Jana and destroy his hosts?"</p>
<p>"How do they know that?" shouted another voice. "They are magicians!"</p>
<p>"Yes," I remarked, "all magic does not dwell in the hearts of the White
Kendah. If you doubt it, go to look at the Watcher in the Cave whom your
Oracle told you is dead. You will find that it did not lie."</p>
<p>As I spoke a man rushed through the gates, his white rob streaming on the
wind, shouting as he emerged from the tunnel:</p>
<p>"O Priests and Priestesses of the Child, the ancient serpent is dead. I
whose office it is to feed the serpent on the day of the new moon have
found him dead in his house."</p>
<p>"You hear," I interpolated calmly. "The Father of Snakes is dead. If you
want to know how, I will tell you. We looked on it and it died."</p>
<p>They might have answered that poor Savage also looked on it with the
result that <i>he</i> died, but luckily it did not occur to them to do so.
On the contrary, they just stood still and stared at us like a flock of
startled sheep.</p>
<p>Presently the sheep parted and the shepherd in the shape of Har�t appeared
looking, I reflected, the very picture of Abraham softened by a touch of
the melancholia of Job, that is, as I have always imagined those
patriarchs. He bowed to us with his usual Oriental courtesy, and we bowed
back to him. Hans' bow, I may explain, was of the most peculiar nature,
more like a <i>skulpat</i>, as the Boers call a land-tortoise, drawing its
wrinkled head into its shell and putting it out again than anything else.
Then Har�t remarked in his peculiar English, which I suppose the White
Kendah took for some tongue known only to magicians:</p>
<p>"So you get here, eh? Why you get here, how the devil you get here, eh?"</p>
<p>"We got here because you asked us to do so if we could," I answered, "and
we thought it rude not to accept your invitation. For the rest, we came
through a cave where you kept a tame snake, an ugly-looking reptile but
very harmless to those who know how to deal with snakes and are not afraid
of them as poor Bena was. If you can spare the skin I should like to have
it to make myself a robe."</p>
<p>Har�t looked at me with evident respect, muttering:</p>
<p>"Oh, Macumazana, you what you English call cool, quite cool! Is that all?"</p>
<p>"No," I answered. "Although you did not happen to notice us, we have been
present at your church service, and heard and seen everything. For
instance, we saw the wife of the lord here whom you stole away in Egypt,
her that, being a liar, Har�t, you swore you never stole. Also we heard
her words after you had made her drunk with your tobacco smoke."</p>
<p>Now for once in his life Har�t was, in sporting parlance, knocked out. He
looked at us, then turning quite pale, lifted his eyes to heaven and
rocked upon his feet as though he were about to fall.</p>
<p>"How you do it? How you do it, eh?" he queried in a weak voice.</p>
<p>"Never you mind how we did it, my friend," I answered loftily. "What we
want to know is when you are going to hand over that lady to her husband."</p>
<p>"Not possible," he answered, recovering some of his tone. "First we kill
you, first we kill her, she Nurse of the Child. While Child there, she
stop there till she die."</p>
<p>"See here," broke in Ragnall. "Either you give me my wife or someone else
will die. You will die, Har�t. I am a stronger man than you are and unless
you promise to give me my wife I will kill you now with this stick and my
hands. Do not move or call out if you want to live."</p>
<p>"Lord," answered the old man with some dignity, "I know you can kill me,
and if you kill me, I think I say thank you who no wish to live in so much
trouble. But what good that, since in one minute then you die too, all of
you, and lady she stop here till Black Kendah king take her to wife or she
too die?"</p>
<p>"Let us talk," I broke in, treading warningly upon Ragnall's foot. "We
have heard your Oracle and we know that you believe its words. It is said
that we alone can help you to conquer the Black Kendah. If you will not
promise what we ask, we will not help you. We will burn our powder and
melt our lead, so that the guns we have cannot speak with Jana and with
Simba, and after that we will do other things that I need not tell you.
But if you promise what we ask, then we will fight for you against Jana
and Simba and teach your men to use the fifty rifles which we have here
with us, and by our help you shall conquer. Do you understand?"</p>
<p>He nodded and stroking his long beard, asked:</p>
<p>"What you want us promise, eh?"</p>
<p>"We want you to promise that after Jana is dead and the Black Kendah are
driven away, you will give up to us unharmed that lady whom you have
stolen. Also that you will bring her and us safely out of your country by
the roads you know, and meanwhile that you will let this lord see his
wife."</p>
<p>"Not last, no," replied Har�t, "that not possible. That bring us all to
grave. Also no good, 'cause her mind empty. For rest, you come to other
place, sit down and eat while I talk with priests. Be afraid nothing; you
quite safe."</p>
<p>"Why should we be afraid? It is you who should be afraid, you who stole
the lady and brought Bena to his death. Do you not remember the words of
your own Oracle, Har�t?"</p>
<p>"Yes, I know words, but how <i>you</i> know them <i>that</i> I not know,"
he replied.</p>
<p>Then he issued some orders, as a result of which a guard formed itself
about us and conducted us through the crowd and along the passage to the
second court of the temple, which was now empty. Here the guard left us
but remained at the mouth of the passage, keeping watch. Presently women
brought us food and drink, of which Hans and I partook heartily though
Ragnall, who was so near to his lost wife and yet so far away, could eat
but little. Mingled joy because after these months of arduous search he
found her yet alive, and fear lest she should again be taken from him for
ever, deprived him of all appetite.</p>
<p>While we ate, priests to the number of about a dozen, who I suppose had
been summoned by Har�t, were admitted by the guard and, gathering out of
earshot of us between the altar and the sanctuary, entered on an earnest
discussion with him. Watching their faces I could see that there was a
strong difference of opinion between them, about half taking one view on
the matter of which they disputed, and half another. At length Har�t made
some proposition to which they all agreed. Then the door of the sanctuary
was opened with a strange sort of key which one of the priests produced,
showing a dark interior in which gleamed a white object, I suppose the
statue of the Child. Har�t and two others entered, the door being closed
behind them. About five minutes later they appeared again and others, who
listened earnestly and after renewed consultation signified assent by
holding up the right hand. Now one of the priests walked to where we were
and, bowing, begged us to advance to the altar. This we did, and were
stood in a line in front of it, Hans being set in the middle place, while
the priests ranged themselves on either side. Next Har�t, having once more
opened the door of the sanctuary, took his stand a little to the right of
it and addressed us, not in English but in his own language, pausing at
the end of each sentence that I might translate to Ragnall.</p>
<p>"Lords Macumazana and Igeza, and yellow man who is named
Light-in-Darkness," he said, "we, the head priests of the Child, speaking
on behalf of the White Kendah people with full authority so to do, have
taken counsel together and of the wisdom of the Child as to the demands
which you make of us. Those demands are: First, that after you have killed
Jana and defeated the Black Kendah we should give over to you the white
lady who was born in a far land to fill the office of Guardian of the
Child, as is shown by the mark of the new moon upon her breast, but who,
because for the second time we could not take her, became the wife of you,
the Lord Igeza. Secondly, that we should conduct you and her safely out of
our land to some place whence you can return to your own country. Both of
these things we will do, because we know from of old that if once Jana is
dead we shall have no cause to fear the Black Kendah any more, since we
believe that then they will leave their home and go elsewhere, and
therefore that we shall no longer need an Oracle to declare to us in what
way Heaven will protect us from Jana and from them. Or if another Oracle
should become necessary to us, doubtless in due season she will be found.
Also we admit that we stole away this lady because we must, although she
was the wife of one of you. But if we swear this, you on your part must
also swear that you will stay with us till the end of the war, making our
cause your cause and, if need be, giving your lives for us in battle. You
must swear further that none of you will attempt to see or to take hence
that lady who is named Guardian of the Child until we hand her over to you
unharmed. If you will not swear these things, then since no blood may be
shed in this holy place, here we will ring you round until you die of
hunger and of thirst, or if you escape from this temple, then we will fall
upon you and put you to death and fight our own battle with Jana as best
we may."</p>
<p>"And if we make these promises how are we to know that you will keep
yours?" I interrupted.</p>
<p>"Because the oath that we shall give you will be the oath of the Child
that may not be broken."</p>
<p>"Then give it," I said, for although I did not altogether like the
security, obviously it was the best to be had.</p>
<p>So very solemnly they laid their right hands upon the altar and "in the
presence of the Child and the name of the Child and of all the White
Kendah people," repeated after Har�t a most solemn oath of which I have
already given the substance. It called down on their heads a very dreadful
doom in this world and the next, should it be broken either in the spirit
or the letter; the said oath, however, to be only binding if we, on our
part, swore to observe their terms and kept our engagement also in the
spirit and the letter.</p>
<p>Then they asked us to fulfil our share of the pact and very considerately
drew out of hearing while we discussed the matter; Har�t, the only one of
them who understood a word of English, retiring behind the sanctuary. At
first I had difficulties with Ragnall, who was most unwilling to bind
himself in any way. In the end, on my pointing out that nothing less than
our lives were involved and probably that of his wife as well, also that
no other course was open to us, he gave way, to my great relief.</p>
<p>Hans announced himself ready to swear anything, adding blandly that words
mattered nothing, as afterwards we could do whatever seemed best in our
own interests, whereon I read him a short moral lecture on the heinousness
of perjury, which did not seem to impress him very much.</p>
<p>This matter settled, we called back the priests and informed them of our
decision. Har�t demanded that we should affirm it "by the Child," which we
declined to do, saying that it was our custom to swear only in the name of
our own God. Being a liberal-minded man who had travelled, Har�t gave way
on the point. So I swore first to the effect that I would fight for the
White Kendah to the finish in consideration of the promises that they had
made to us. I added that I would not attempt either to see or to interfere
with the lady here known as the Guardian of the Child until the war was
over or even to bring our existence to her knowledge, ending up, "so help
me God," as I had done several times when giving evidence in a court of
law.</p>
<p>Next Ragnall with a great effort repeated my oath in English, Har�t
listening carefully to every word and once or twice asking me to explain
the exact meaning of some of them.</p>
<p>Lastly Hans, who seemed very bored with the whole affair, swore, also
repeating the words after me and finishing on his own account with "so
help me the reverend Predikant, the Baas's father," a form that he utterly
declined to vary although it involved more explanations. When pressed,
indeed, he showed considerable ingenuity by pointing out to the priests
that to his mind my poor father stood in exactly the same relation to the
Power above us as their Oracle did to the Child. He offered generously,
however, to throw in the spirits of his grandfather and grandmother and
some extraordinary divinity they worshipped, I think it was a hare, as an
additional guarantee of good faith. This proposal the priests accepted
gravely, whereon Hans whispered into my ear in Dutch:</p>
<p>"Those fools do not remember that when pressed by dogs the hare often
doubles on its own spoor, and that your reverend father will be very
pleased if I can play them the same trick with the white lady that they
played with the Lord Igeza."</p>
<p>I only looked at him in reply, since the morality of Hans was past
argument. It might perhaps be summed up in one sentence: To get the better
of his neighbour in his master's service, honestly if possible; if not, by
any means that came to his hand down to that of murder. At the bottom of
his dark and mysterious heart Hans worshipped only one god, named Love,
not of woman or child, but of my humble self. His principles were those of
a rather sly but very high-class and exclusive dog, neither better nor
worse. Still, when all is said and done, there are lower creatures in the
world than high-class dogs. At least so the masters whom they adore are
apt to think, especially if their watchfulness and courage have often
saved them from death or disaster.</p>
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