“Better go easy on that, old man,” he advised. “It’s none of my business, but—”
“Oh, shut up!” Koreing snarled. “You’d need a bracer, too, if you’d been through what I have tonight.”
“Been robbing the local bank?” Cummins asked.
Koreing put down the glass and began to unlace his boots. “Worse than that. Sacrilege, I guess you’d call it, and—oh, well, accidents will happen.” He muttered the last.
Cummins sat up in instant alarm. “What do you mean, Koreing? What’s that thing on your bed?” Instead of replying, Koreing refilled his glass, lit his pipe, and after a moment’s hesitation handed over the object in question.
At first Cummins thought it was merely an ordinary West African curio, one of those grotesque representations of animals or reptiles that the savage loves to carve. But when he took it nearer to the light he saw that here was no toy or article of commerce.
It was an almost perfect model of a crocodile, made from some species of hardwood and colored the exact shade of greenish gray the saurian attains at maturity. The image was about three feet long, extremely heavy, and so lifelike Cummins could not repress a shudder of distaste.
Whoever had made it knew crocodiles. There was not a detail missing; scales, the many rows of teeth—the mouth was open—and squat, handlike paws; all were there.
“Just feel the thing,” Koreing urged. “If that isn’t the genuine goods, I’ll—I’ll eat it.”
It might have been imagination, but it seemed to Cummins that there was actually a clammy feeling to the light-shaded belly. Certainly there was a distinct odor of musk coming from the open throat.
“That’s what I’ve been wanting ever since I hit the Coast,” Koreing went on. “Something that was a bit more than a mere curio. This little chap mayn’t have much actual cash value—”
“How did you get it?” Cummins interrupted. “The natives up here don’t savvy money, and I know you haven’t any trade goods with you.”
“I’ll tell you all about it in the morning,” Koreing muttered.
“You’ll tell me now,” Cummins snapped. If the other had stolen it there might be a chance to restore the idol before the loss was discovered.
Koreing mixed himself a third drink, and this time Cummins did not remonstrate. Koreing’s tongue thickened.
“I had a hunch,” he said, “that that ju-ju house we passed had something out of the ordinary; at any rate, there was no harm in giving it the once-over. It was dark when I got there, but I had my flashlight, and crawled through the entrance hole. First time I was ever inside one of those fetish places. There was a lot of junk—skulls of animals, bones, and mummies. The old geezer was sitting in the middle of the floor, stark naked and mumbling to himself like—well, you know how they do when they’ve passed the whittling stage. The funny thing was that he didn’t look up or seem to notice me at all. Deaf and blind, I thought. But if he didn’t see me, something else did. I tell you I jumped when I saw what it was, and only a yard away from where I was squatted. Notice it?”
Cummins nodded. He was strangely conscious of the dull reptilian eyes of the image. The deadly, passionless glare of the hideous original had certainly been reproduced faithfully.
“That’s what I call art,” Koreing observed, grinning as he saw Cummins’ involuntary gesture of distaste.
“What did you have to pay for it?”
Koreing evaded the question. “Heaven knows my intentions were honorable enough when I entered that hut.”
“Just what do you mean?” Cummins was more and more alarmed by Koreing’s tone, from which the usual bluster was noticeably absent.
“I picked up this—this thing, and as soon as I did, the old boy showed signs of life. He gibbered at me, and I tell you those red-rimmed eyes of his made me nervous. ‘How much, Grandpa?’ I asked him, but he staggered to his feet and cussed me out. No mistake about that. He was peeved because I’d made him a bona-fide business proposition. I held out the flashlight, switching it on and off. If magic like that wouldn’t tempt him, nothing would.
“It didn’t. He rushed at me, with some kind of dagger in his hand. Naturally I struck out. With the torch. Not hard, but—well, the thing’s heavy, and—and that’s all rot about a native’s skull being so much thicker than a white man’s.”
THERE was a pause, pregnant with meaning. Cummins whispered, “You—fool, Koreing!”
“It was self-defense. And he was due to die these last twenty years, anyway.”
Cummins was silent, thinking hard. “We’d better beat it first thing in the morning. I’ll try to fix it up, but you’ve raised plenty hell.”
Koreing rolled into his cot, and in five minutes was snoring.
After breakfast, Twalo, the headman of the carriers, presented himself.
“Massa,” he began without preamble. “All dem boy walk for bush.” Cummins’ mouth hardened. This was serious. Translated, it meant that every one of their porters had deserted in the night. And an African does not sacrifice his hard-earned wages without cause.
“What name run away?” Cummins asked tersely.
Twalo hesitated and peered into the tent where Koreing lay still asleep.
“Ju-ju man live for die,” he muttered. “Dat bad too much. White man stealum ju-ju, dat—”
Words failed him; he was divided between his allegiance to his white masters and his horror of last night’s heinous crime. Cummins knew it would be fruitless to try to ascertain how Twalo and his men had got wind of the affair. This is one of the mysteries of Africa; natives can smell out news almost before the events take place.
“How about hiring a fresh gang from the village here?” Cummins suggested.
Twalo shook his head. “Dese feller no savvy safari; be canoemen. “Sides”—he looked fearfully around—“dey not like it when dey go look ju-ju house.”
Cummins knew what he meant. Harmless and the least pugnacious of men naturally, the West African is capable of being extremely nasty when his superstitious fears have been aroused. And the farther away from civilization a tribe is, the greater indifference it has for the white man’s power.
Koreing came outside rubbing his eyes. Cummins explained the trouble and suggested he slip back to the fetish temple and replace the image.
“Like hell I will!” Koreing growled. “Huh, I’ll get you some recruits.” He snatched up a hippo-hide whip and turned toward the village.
Cummins seized his arm. “You fool—you’ve made trouble enough! We’ll be lucky if we come out of this business with our lives.”
He pushed the other back into the tent, and for once Koreing put up no argument. Possibly he was beginning to realize that the situation might be really serious after all. Cummins was puzzled as to the best course to take. He would have liked to ask Twalo, but a white man does not seek advice of a native. Their destination, Akassi, was over a week’s march overland. By using the river they could travel by canoe a more roundabout and longer route. Cummins decided to take the water trail, although he knew that there would be difficulty in obtaining paddlers.
There was. Not a single native was visible in the village; the huts were deserted.
“Oh, the devil with ’em!” Koreing exclaimed after a fruitless search. “We’re foolish to waste time. We’ll paddle our own canoe.” He stepped into a small dugout drawn up on the river bank and started loading their possessions into it.
Twalo grunted assent. There was no alternative. It was impossible to carry much luggage; three men nearly filled the narrow craft, which was none too stable at the best of times. Cummins insisted that the tent and most of the provisions be left behind; they would be some payment for the canoe, he pointed out, and it was vitally necessary to travel light. But it took a long time to convince Koreing that the whiskey should be jettisoned with the rest of the equipment. Cummins was adamant, however.
“If you’re going to take that thing along”—he indicated the crocodile idol which his partner had rol
led up in a blanket—“you’d better not let Twalo see it.”
“Why not? Do I have to consult a servant about my luggage?”
“Listen, Koreing,” Cummins said, “Twalo’s a fairly intelligent chap, less superstitious than most Africans, but he’s no agnostic. Get what I mean? We’re dependent on him just now.”
Cummins was never likely to forget that trip up the Ogwan River. By day they paddled, sweating even in the chill of early morning from the unaccustomed work. Their hands were blistered, and every limb ached intolerably from the cramped positions they were forced to take. The heat during the day was almost unbearable. It seemed to press down on them like an unseen weight. Yet they had to carry on till sunset.
Koreing, although a heavy drinker and a man of gross body, appeared to suffer least. Gradually he shed his clothing, garment by garment, till he was practically naked. He had given up shaving and even washing. At their camps in the evening he had little to say; indeed, as the days dragged on he became morosely silent, only grunting when spoken to directly.
While Cummins had more serious things to consider than the appearance of his companion, it annoyed him to see Twalo eyeing Koreing curiously on several occasions. An almost nude white man with long matted hair and bloodshot eyes is not calculated to improve a native’s morale.
ONE evening he ordered Twalo to examine the fish-lines he had et, and when the headman was gone, took Koreing to task.
“We’ll be hitting some of the upriver villages tomorrow. How about brushing up a bit?” Receiving no reply, he went on. “You’d better come closer to the fire, old man; some croc is likely to swipe you out there. Lots of ’em round here, you know.”
“Let ’em,” Koreing grunted without moving. “I’m not scared of those things.”
“Well, how about a shaving and a wash?” Cummins ventured.
“What for?”
“Listen, Koreing. This kind of thing doesn’t go—not here in Africa We whites have to keep up a certain appearance for our own sakes.” Koreing’s only reply was to edge nearer the river.
Presently Twalo returned with a few fish. He began to clean them preparatory to broiling some over the fire. Koreing seemed annoyed by this. He lumbered clumsily to his feet, snatched a fish from the native’s hand, and while the other two stared in amazement, he devoured it raw, tearing at the flesh and crunching the bones. Cummins caught Twalo’s eye and looked hastily away.
Cummins awoke in the middle of the night and glanced at the spot where Koreing had been lying. There was no one visible in the camp but Twalo, some distance away, also awake.
“Where?” Cummins asked softly. Twalo grunted. “Massa Koreing live for water. Go swim.”
“Swim?”
“Yah. P’raps he catchum fish.” Odd, Cummins reflected. A little tingle of apprehension crawled down his spine. White men do not as a rule get up in the middle of the night to bathe in crocodile-infested African rivers. He examined the bundle of possessions his companion had been using for a pillow. The wooden fetish was gone.
“If he walk river, he live for die,” Cummins told Twalo. “Plenty jambuka stop longa there.”
“He no die; he takum de jambuka ju-ju longa him.”
CUMMINS pondered in silence. He had no idea of indulging in a religious argument with Twalo in the middle of the night. Instead, he crawled back under the cheese-cloth net, more annoyed by the swarm of mosquitoes he found there than by Koreing’s sudden penchant for moonlight swimming.
An hour later Koreing returned, but so silent that Cummins did not realize his presence till he heard a peculiar noise close by. Peering from under the net he saw Koreing squatting on the sand eating a large fish—alive. His eyes gleamed in the starlight, passing over the other two men as though they did not exist.
The same thing happened during the next two nights. By day Koreing would paddle, hunched up in the bow of the canoe, morose and silent; at night he went “fishing.” And always with him went the fetish. Cummins tried to believe that it was nothing more than a craving for flesh diet, and that in some way the carven image lured fish so that they might be caught by hand.
All very well, but that did not account for the overpowering stench of musk which had begun to emanate from Koreing. Cummins spoke to Koreing about this on one occasion, receiving a wordless snarl for answer.
Twalo kept as far away from Koreing as possible, and but for the fact that his interests lay with his white masters, there was no doubt that he would have deserted.
The affair came to a head on the third night when Cummins was awakened to find Twalo shivering in the dim moonlight.
“Massa, you come look.”
Without a question Cummins followed the native to the river bank. Crouching in the reeds, they saw through a break in the mangroves the coffee-colored stream gliding sluggishly through the jungle. Scattered about a mud flat were several objects resembling stranded logs.
“Jambuka,” Twalo whispered. “Crocodiles!”
Cummins did not answer; he was staring at Koreing, who, stark naked, had something silvery in his hands, a freshly caught fish. He was on the mud flat, and watching him, barely ten feet away, was a crocodile.
It was not a large one—perhaps six feet long—but quite large enough to be dangerous. Cummins was about to shout a warning when Koreing tossed the remnants of the fish to the Saurian and slid into the water.
Twalo clutched his master’s arm. “Look, massa, he takem ’long.”
Cummins supposed he meant the idol which he knew Koreing carried with him on these excursions, but at the moment he was more interested in the living reptile. It finished the morsel and floundered into the water also.
The situation was beyond Cummins. He had no gun with him, and to run back to where they had moored the canoe and paddle down in the darkness would have been useless. Too, he doubted whether Twalo would accompany him on such an errand. After peering uncertainly into the darkness for several minutes the watchers got to their feet without comment and returned to camp.
Twalo replenished the fire, glancing furtively at his master.
“You savvy this palaver?” Cummins asked.
It appeared that Twalo did savvy, or thought he did. The ancient at Banga, the village where the carriers had deserted, was a medicine man of some renown throughout that part of the country. He had specialized in the worship of reptiles—snakes, crocodiles, and lizards.
“S’posin’ he no like man, he makem ju-ju for dem man—jambuka ju-ju.”
“Well,” Cummins prompted as the other hesitated. “What happen—the man live for die?”
Twalo shook his head. “Be worse, too much worse.”
Cummins did not pursue the subject. There were worse things than death; even the superstitious black was able to perceive that.
Koreing was asleep when Cummins opened his eyes next morning. There was nothing about the man to denote he had not been there all night save the musk smell, which was stronger than usual. At breakfast Cummins remarked:
“We’ll be leaving the river this afternoon, Koreing. Have to go overland by boot then. Three days’ march across country.”
Koreing grinned mirthlessly. “I stop here. Like this river.”
The words came thickly as if speech hurt him; yet they were not like those of a drunken man. Cummins stared for a moment, then shrugged resignedly. At Agwasse, through which they would pass, was a government medical officer to whom he could report Koreing’s conduct. Plainly this was a case for a doctor.
Before leaving, it might not be a bad idea to steal the fetish. Cummins was beginning to believe that the thing was somehow connected with the man’s immunity from the river carnivores, however, and he took the first opportunity of mentioning the plan to Twalo.
“Massa, I beg you not,” the headman pleaded. “You lookum—” He gestured toward where Koreing was crouched, gazing dully across the river.
“Oh, rot! You fear too much, Twalo. Dem ju-ju man put smell on dem bit wood, that’s why jamb
uka don’t bite Massa Ko.”
Yet Cummins was relieved when he learned that there was a village two miles from their present camp on the river. He would ask some of the natives there to supply the ibo—the white man—with food, and incidentally to keep an eye on him, as he was “sick too much.”
THE doctor was away when Cummins and Twalo reached Agwasse, and the young district commissioner in charge did not seem to take the story very seriously.
“Maybe your friend’s gone fantee temporarily,” he surmised. “I’ve read about whites in India turning native, but this goes one better—palling up with the crocs. Wonder if he could induce one of his chums to come close enough for me to pot it?”
But he ceased to joke when they returned to the river. A crowd of natives met them with the news that a small child had been killed while filling a water-pot the evening before. At least, they supposed the youngster had been eaten by the crocodiles, but there was no trace of the body. The village oldsters threw out dark hints about an evil spirit in human form that had been seen in the neighborhood. As for the sick ibo—nothing had been seen of him.
Actual witness of the child’s disappearance was a small black boy name Yomba. Yes, he knew where his playmate had gone, and if the white men would give him a wire bracelet he could take them to the spot and explain how the tragedy had occurred.
The D.C. shrugged. “I’ll have to stay and calm down this mob. The kid’s probably been chopped by a croc, but you can’t get these blighters to believe it’s not black magic of some sort.”
Followed by Cummins, Yomba led the way to the river beach and pointed to several tracks in the mud, one of which had the appearance of having been made by a white man.
Seeing that this service was not enough to justify the reward, he pointed to a narrow opening in the mangroves. There he halted and refused to go any further. With none of his own people around him his boyish bravado had evaporated. It appeared the trail led to a ju-ju place and—
Cummins swore under his breath. Everywhere one ran up against this blank wall of native superstition. He pushed on alone.
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