by Wilbur Smith
The darkness settled over him like the heavy velvet folds of a funeral
pall. It was so intense and complete that it seemed to have a physical
weight and texture. He could taste the darkness in his mouth as it
seemed to force its way into his body and suffocate him.
He ran again, wildly and blindly, losing all sense of direction in the
blackness. He crashed headlong into stone and fell again, stunned. He
could feel the warm tickle of blood running down his face, and he could
not breathe. He whimpered and gasped and slowly, lying on his side, he
curled himself into a ball like a foetus in the womb.
He wondered how long it would take him to die, and his soul quailed as
he knew that it might take days and even weeks. He moved slightly,
cuddling in closer to the stone object with which he had collided. In
the darkness he had no way of telling that it was the great sarcophagus
of Mamose that sheltered him. Thus he lay in the darkness of the tomb,
surrounded by the funeral treasures of an emperor, and waited for his
own slow but inexorable death.
he monastery of St. Frumentius was deserted.
The monks had heard the gunfire and the sounds of battle echoing down
the gorge, and had gathered up their treasures and fled.
Nicholas ran down the long, empty cloister, pausing to catch his breath
at the head of the staircase that led down to the level of the Nile and
the Epiphany shrine where he had stored the boats. Panting, he searched
the gloom of the deep basin below him into which the sunlight se! Clom
reached, but the moving clouds of silver spray from the twin waterfalls
screened the depths. He had no way of telling if Sapper and Royan were
down there waiting for him, or if they had run into trouble on the
trail.
He adjusted the tattered and bloodstained bandage around his chin, and
then started down. Then he heard her voice in the silver mist below him,
calling his name, and she came pelting up the slippery, slime-covered
stairs towards him.
"Nicholas! Oh, thank God! I thought you weren't coming." She would have
rushed into his embrace, but then she saw his bandaged and blood-smeared
face, and she stopped and stared at him, appalled.
Sweet Mary!" she whispered. "What happened to you, Nickyr
"A little tiff with Jake Helm. Just a scratch, but I am 4, not much good
at kissing right now," he mumbled, trying to grin around the bandage,
"You will have to wait for later."
He put one arm around her shoulders, almost swinging her off her feet,
as he turned her to face down the stairs again.
"Where are the others?" He hurried her down.
"They are all here," she told him. "Sapper and Mek are pumping the boats
and loading."
"Tessay?"
"She's safe."
They scrambled down the last flight of steps on to the jetty below the
Epiphany shrine. The Nile had risen ten feet since Nicholas had last
stood there. The river was full and angry, muddy and swift. He could
barely make out the cliffs on the far bank through the drifting clouds
of spray.
The five Avon boats were drawn up at the edge. Four of them were already
fully inflated, and the last one was billowing and swelling as the air
was released into it from the compressed air cylinder. Mek and Sapper
were packing the ammunition crates into the ready boats and strapping
them down under green nylon cargo nets.
Sapper looked up at Nicholas and a comical expression of astonishment
spread over his bluff features, "What the blue bleeding blazes happened
to your face?"
"Tell you about it one day," Nicholas promised, and turned to embrace
Mek.
"Thank you, old friend," he said sincerely, "Your men fought well, and
you waited for me." Nicholas glanced at the row of wounded guerrillas
that lay against the foot of the cliff. "How many casualties?"
"Three dead, and these six wounded. It could have been much worse if
Nogo's men had pushed us harder."
"Still, it's too many," said Nicholas.
"Even one is too many," Mek agreed gruffly.
"Where are the rest of your men?"
(on the run for the border. Kept just enough of them with me to handle
the boats." Mek stripped the filthy bandage from Nicholas's chin. Royan
gasped when she saw the injury, but Mek grinned.
"Looks as though you were chewed by a shark."
"That's right, I was,'Nicholas agreed.
WI BE, Mek shrugged. "It needs at least a dozen stitches." He shouted
for one of his men to bring his pack.
Sorry, no anaesthetic," -he warned Nicholas as he forced him to sit on
the transom of one of the boats and poured antiseptic straight from the
bottle.
Nicholas let out a gasp of pain. "Burns, doesn't it?" Mek agreed
complacently. "But just wait until I start sewing."
"This kindness will be written down against your name in the golden
book," Nicholas told him, and with an evil leer Mek broke the seal on a
suture pack.
As Mek worked on the wound, pulling the edges together and tugging the
thread tight, he spoke quietly so that Nicholas alone could hear. "Nogo,
has at least a full company of men guarding the river downstream. My
scouts tell me that he has placed them to cover the trails on both
banks."
"He doesn't know that we have boats to run the river, does he?" Nicholas
asked through gritted teeth.
"I think it is unlikely, but he knows a great deal about our movements.
Perhaps he had an informer amongst your workmen." Mek paused as he
pricked the needle into Nicholas's flesh, and then went on, "And Nogo
still has the helicopter. He will spot us on the river as soon as this
cloud breaks."
The river is our only escape route. Let's pray that the weather stays
socked in, like this."
By the time Mek had tied off the last knot and covered Nicholas's chin
with a Steri-Strip plaster, Sapper had finished inflating and loading
the last boat.
Four of Mek's men carried Tessay's litter to one of the boats. Mek
helped her aboard and settled her on the deck, making sure that she had
one of the safety straps close at hand. Then he left her and hurried to
where his wounded men lay in order to help them into the boats too. Most
of them could walk, but two had to be carried.
After that he came back to Nicholas. "I see you have found your radio,"
he said, as he glanced at the fibreglass case that Nicholas had slung
over his shoulder on its carrying strap.
"Without it we would be in big trouble." Nicholas patted the case
affectionately.
"I will take command of that boat, with Tessay."
"Good!" Nicholas agreed. "Royan will 90 with me in the lead boat."
"You had better let me lead,'Mek said.
"What do you know about river running?" Nicholas asked him. "I am the
only one of us who has ever shot this river before."
"That was twenty years ago," Mek pointed out.
"I am an even better man now than I was then," Nicholas grinned. "Don't
argue, Mek. You come next, and Sapper in the one behind you. Are there
any of your men who know the river to command the other two boats?"
"All my men know the river," Mek told him, and shouted his orders. Each
of them hurried to the Avon he had been allocated. Nicholas gave Royan a
boost over the gunwale of their boat, and then helped his men launch her
down the rocky bank. As soon as the hull floated free they scrambled
aboard and each man grabbed a paddle.
As they bent to their paddles, Nicholas Saw at once that every man of
his crew was indeed a riverman, as Mek had boasted. They pulled strongly
but smoothly, and the light inflatable craft shot out into the main
stream of the Nile.
The Avons were designed to accommodate sixteen, and were lightly loaded.
The ammunition cases that held the grave goods from the tomb were bulky
but weighed little, and there were not more than a dozen people in any
one boat. They all floated high and handled well.
"Bad water ahead," Nicholas told Royan grimly. "All the way to the
Sudanese border." He stood at the steering sweep in the stem, from where
he had a good forward view.
Royan crouched at his feet, clinging to on of the safety straps and
trying to keep out of the way of the oarsmen.
They cut across the current that was scouring the great stone basin
below the falls, and Nicholas lined up for the narrow heads through
which the river was escaping to the West. He looked up at the sky and
saw through the spray that the rain clouds were low and purple. They
seemed to sag down upon the tops of the tall cliffs.
"Luck starting to run our way," he told Royan. "Even with the helicopter
they won't be able to find us in this Weather."
He glanced at his Rolex and the spray was heading the glass. "Couple of
hours until nightfall. We should be able to put a few miles of river
behind us before we are forced to stop for the night."
He looked back over his stem and saw the rest of the little flotilla
bobbing along behind him. The Avons were reflective yellow in colour and
stood out brilliantly even in the mist and murk of the gorge. He lifted
his clenched fist high in the signal to advance, and from the following
boat Mek repeated the gesture and grinned at him through his beard.
The river grabbed them and they shot through its portals into the
narrow, twisted gut of the Nile. The men at the oars stopped paddling,
and let the river take them.
All they could do now was to help Nicholas to steer her through any
desperate moments, and they crouched ready along the gunwales.
The high water in the gorge had covered many of the reefs of rock, but
their presence below the surface was clearly marked by the waters that
humped up in standing waves or foamed white in the narrows between them.
The flood reached up high on either bank, dashing against the cliffs of
the sub-gorge. If an Avon overturned, or even if a crew member were
thrown overboard there would be no place on this river to heave-to and
pick up survivors.
658 95, Nicholas stood high and craned ahead. He had to pick his route
well in advance, and once committed he had to steer her through. It all
depended on his ability to read the river and judge her mods. He was out
of practice, and he had that tight, hard cannonball of fear in the pit
of his belly as he put the long sweep over and steered for the first run
of fast green water. They went swooping down it, Nicholas holding their
bows into it with delicate touches of the sweep, and came out into the
bottom of it with all the other boats following them down in sequence.
"Nothing to it!" Royan laughed up at him.
Don't say itV Nicholas pleaded with her. The bad angel is listening."
And he lined up for the head of the next set of rapids that raced
towards them with terrifying speed.
Nicholas steered through the gap between two outcrops of rock and they
shot the barrel, gaining speed down the chute. It was only when they
were halfway down that he saw the tall standing wave below them over
which the river leaped. He put the sweep across and tried to steer round
it, but the river had them firmly in its grip.
Like a hunter taking a fence they shot up the front of the standing
wave, and then with a sickening lurch plummeted down the far side into
the deep trough. The Avon folded across the middle, the bows almost
touching the stem as she tried to pull through the hole in the river
surface.
The crew were tumbled over each other and Nicholas would have been
catapulted overside if it had not been for his body line and his grip on
the steering sweep. Royan flung herself flat on the deck and hung on to
the safety strap with all her strength as the Avon's buoyancy exerted
itself and the boat bounded high in the air, whipping back elastically
into its original shape, then hovered a moment and almost capsized
before it crashed back, right side up.
One of the crew had been hurled overboard and was floundering alongside,
carried along at the same speed as the flying Avon, so his comrades were
able to lean out and haul him back on board. The cargo of ammunition
crates had tumbled and shifted, but the nets had prevented any of them
from being lost over the side.
"What did you do that for?" Royan yelled at him. "Just when I was
beginning to trust you."
"Just testing'he yelled back. "Wanted to see how tough you really are."
"I admit it, I am a sissy," she assured him. "You really don't need to
do it again."
Looking back, Nicholas saw Mek's boat crash through the trough just as
they had, but the following craft had enough warning to steer clear and
slip through the sides of the run.
He looked ahead again, and his whole existence became the wild waters of
the river. His universe was contained within the tall cliffs of the
sub-gorge as he battled to bring the racing Avon through. He did not
know whether it was spray or rain that stung his cheeks and his wounded
chin, and that flew horizontally into his eyes and half-blinded him. At
times it was a mixture of the two.
An hour later Nicholas misjudged the rapids again, and they went in
sideways and almost capsized. Two of his crew were hurled overboard.
Steering fine and leaning outboard they managed to pull one of them from
the river, but the other man struck a rock before they could reach him.
He went under and did not rise again. None of them spoke or mourned him,
for they were all too busy staying alive themselves.
Once Royan shouted up at Nicholas through the rattling spray and the
thunder of the river all around them, "Helicopter! Can you hear it?"
Half-deafened, he looked up at the lowering grey belly of the clouds
that hung at the level of the cliffs, and faintly made out the whistle
and flutter of the rotors.
"Above the cloud!" he shouted back, wiping the rain and the spray from
his eyes with the back of his hand.
"They will never spot us in this."
The onset of the African night was sped upon them by the low cloud. In
the gathering darkness another hazard leaped upon them with no warning
at all. One instant they were running hard and clear down a smooth
stretch of the river, and the next the waters opened ahead of them and
they were hurled out into space. It seemed that they fell for ever,
although it was a drop of not more than thirty feet, before they hit the
bottom and found themselves floating in a tangle of men and boats in the
pool below the falls. Here the river was stalled for a moment, revolving
upon itself while it gathered its strength for the next mad charge down
the gorge.
One of the Avons had capsized and was floating belly up - even its
highly stable hull had not been able to weather the down the falls,
The crews of the other ro boats gathered themselves and then paddled
across to drag the survivors from the water and to salvage the oars and
other floating equipment. It took the combined efforts of all of them to
right the overturned Avon, and then it was almost completely dark by the
time they had it back on even keel, "Count the crates!" Nicholas
ordered. "How many have we lost?"
He could hardly credit his good fortune when Sapper shouted back,
"Eleven still on board. All present and correct." The cargo nets were
holding well. But all of them, men and women, were exhausted and soaked
through and shivering with the cold., Any attempt to go on in darkness
would be suicidal. Nicholas looked across at Mek in the nearest boat and
shook his head.
"There is a bit of slack water in the angle of the cliff." Mek pointed
towards the tail of the pool. "We might be able to find moorings for the
night."
him-
There was a stunted but tough little tree growing out of the vertical
fissure in the rock, and they used this as a bollard and made a line
fast to it. Then they lashed all the Avons together in a line down the
cliff and settled in for the night. There was no chance of hot food or
drink, and they had to make do with some cold tinned rations eaten off
the blade of a bayonet, and a few chunks of soggy injera bread.
Mek scrambled over from his own boat and huddled down close beside
Nicholas with one arm over his shoulder and his lips close to his ear.
"I have made a roll call. Another man missing when we went over the
falls. We won't find him now."
"I am not doing too well," Nicholas admitted. "Perhaps you should lead
tomorrow."
"Not your fault." Mek squeezed his shoulders. "Nobody could have done