Men of Men b-2

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Men of Men b-2 Page 30

by Wilbur Smith


  Once again Zouga wondered idly that the men had not rebelled against the harsh measures of the new Diamond Trade Act, enforced by Colonel John Fry of the recently recruited Diamond Police, and aimed at stamping out I.D.B. on the fields.

  Nowadays the black workers were compounded behind barbed wire; there were new curfew regulations to keep them in the compounds after nightfall; and there were spot searches and checks of the compounds, of men on the streets even during daylight, and body searches of each shift coming out of the pit.

  Even the diggers, or at least a few of them, had protested at the most draconian of John Fry's new regurations. All black workers had been forced to go into the pit stark naked, so that they would not be able to hide stones in their clothing.

  John Fry had been amazed when Zouga and a dozen other diggers had demanded to see him.

  "Good Lord, Ballantyne, but they are a bunch of naked savages anyway. Modesty, forsooth!"

  in the end, with the cooperation of Rhodes, they had forced him to compromise.

  Grudgingly Fry had allowed every worker a strip of seamless cotton "limbo" to cover himself.

  Thus Bazo and his Matabele wore only a strip of loincloth each as they rode up beside Ralph in the skip. The wind threw an icy noose about them, and Bazo shivered as goose-bumps rose upon the smooth dark skin of his chest and upper arms.

  Above him stood Ralph Ballantyne, balancing easily on the rim of the steel skip, ignoring the wind and the deadly drop below him.

  Ralph glanced down at Bazo crouching below the side of the steel bucket, and on impulse slipped the scrap of stained canvas off his own shoulders. Under it Ralph wore an old tweed jacket and dusty cardigan.

  He dropped the canvas over Bazo's neck.

  "It's against the white man's law," Bazo demurred, and made as if to shrug it off.

  "There are no police in this skip," Ralph grunted, and Bazo hesitated a moment and then crouched lower and gratefully pulled the canvas over his head and shoulders.

  Ralph took the butt of a half-smoked cheroot from his breast pocket, and carefully reshaped it between his fingers; the dead ash flaked away on the wind and wafted down into the yawning depths below. He lit the butt and drew the smoke down deeply, exhaled and drew again, held the smoke and passed the butt to Bazo.

  "You are not only cold, but you are unhappy," Ralph said, and Bazo did not answer. He cupped the stubby cheroot in both hands and drew carefully upon it.

  "Is it Donsela?" Ralph asked. "He knew the law, Bazo.

  He knows what the law says of those who steal the stones."

  "It was a small stone," murmured Bazo, the words and blue smoke mingled on his lips. "And fifteen years is a long time."

  "He is alive," Ralph pointed out and took the cheroot that Bazo passed back to him. "In the old days before the Diamond Trade Act, he would be dead by now."

  "He might as well be dead," Bazo whispered bitterly.

  "They say that men work like animals, chained like monkeys, on the breakwater wall at Cape Town harbour., He drew again on the cheroot and it burned down with a fierce little glow that scorched his fingers. He crushed it out on the workhardened calluses of his palm and let the shreds of tobacco blow away.

  "And you, Henshaw, are you then so happy?" he asked quietly, and Ralph shrugged.

  "Happy? Who is happy?"

  "Is not this pit", with a gesture Bazo took in the mighty excavation over which they dangled, "is not this your prison, does it not hold you as surely as the chains that hold Donsela as he places the rocks on the breakwater over the sea?"

  They had almost reached the high stagings and Bazo slipped off his canvas covering before he could be spotted by one of the black constables who patrolled the area inside the new security fences.

  "You ask me if I am unhappy." Bazo stood up, and did not look at Ralph's face. "I was thinking of the land in which I am a prince of the House of Kumalo. In that land the calves I tended as a boy have grown into bulls and have bred calves which I have never seen. Once I knew every beast in my father's herds, fifteen thousand head of prime cattle, and I knew each of them, the season of its birth, the twist of its horns and the markings of its hide."

  Bazo sighed and came to stand beside Ralph on the rim of the skip.

  They were of a height, two tall young n, well formed, and each, in the manner of his race, becomely.

  "Ten times I have not been with my impi when it danced the Festival of Fresh Fruits, ten times I did not witness my king throw the war-spear and send us out on the red road."

  Bazo's sombre mood deepened, and his voice sank lower.

  "Boys have grown to men since I left, and some Of them wear the cowtails of valour on their legs and arms."

  Bazo glanced down at his own naked body with its single dirty rag at the waist. "Little girls have grown into maidens, with ripe bellies, ready to be claimed by the warriors who have won the honour on the red road of war." And both of them thought of the lonely nights when the phantoms came to haunt them. Then Bazo folded his arms across his wide chest and went on.

  "i think of my father, and I wonder if the snows of age have yet settled upon his head. Every man of my tribe that comes down the road from the north brings me the words of Juba, the Dove, who is my mother.

  She has twelve sons, but I am the first and the eldest of them."

  "Why have you stayed so long?" Ralph asked harshly.

  "Why have you stayed so long Henshaw?" The young Matabele challenged him quietly, and Ralph had no answer.

  "Have you found fame and riches in this hole?" Again they both glanced down into the pit, and from this height the off-shift waiting to come up in the skips were like columns of safari ants.

  "Do you have a woman with hair as long and pale as the winter grass to give you comfort in the night, Henshaw? Do you have the music of your sons" laughter to cheer you, Henshaw? What keeps you here?"

  Ralph lifted his eyes and stared at Bazo, but before he could find an answer the skip came level with the platform on the first ramp of the stagings. The jerk brought Ralph back to reality and he waved to his father on the platform above them.

  The roar of the steam winch subsided. The skip slowed and Bazo led the party of Matabele workers onto the ramp. Ralph saw them all clear before he jumped across the narrow gap to the wooden platform and felt it tremble under the combined weight of twenty men.

  Ralph signalled again. Then the winch growled, and the steel cable squealed in its sheaves. The heavy-laden skip ran on until it hit the striker blocks. Ralph and Bazo drove the jumper bars under it, and threw their full weight on them. The skip tipped over, and the load of gravel went roaring down the chute into the waiting cart.

  Ralph looked up to see his father's encouraging smile and to hear his shouted congratulations.

  "Well done, boy! Two hundred tons today!"

  But the staging was deserted. Zouga had gone.

  Zouga had packed a single chest, the chest that had belonged to Aletta and which had come up with her from the Cape. Now it was going back, and it was almost all that was going back.

  Zouga put Aletta's Bible in the bottom of the chest, and with it her diary and the trinket box which contained the remaining pieces of her jewellery. The more valuable pieces had long ago been sold, to support the dying dream.

  over these few mementoes he packed his own diaries and maps, and his books. When he came to the bundled pile of his unfinished manuscript, he paused to weigh it in his hand.

  "Perhaps I shall find time to finish it now," he murmured, and laid it gently in the chest.

  On top of that went his clothing, and there was so little of that, four shirts, a spare pair of boots, barely an armful.

  The chest was only half-full, and he carried it easily down the steps into the yard. That was all that he was taking, the rest of it, the meagre furnishings of the bungalow he had sold to one of the auctioneers in Market Square. Ten pounds the lot. As Rhodes had predicted, he was leaving as he had come.

  "Wher
e is Ralph?" he demanded of Jan Cheroot, and the little Hotten tot paused in chaining the cooking-pot and black iron kettle onto the tailboard of the cart.

  "Perhaps he stopped at Diamond Lil's. The boy has got a right to his thirst, he worked hard enough for it."

  Zouga let it pass, and instead ran an appraising eye over the cart. It was the newest and strongest of the three vehicles he owned. One cart had gone with Louise Sint John, and she had taken the best mules, but this rig would get them back to Cape Town, even under the additional burden that he was planning to put into it.

  Jan Cheroot ambled across to Zouga and took the other handle of the chest, ready to boost it up into the body of the cart.

  "Wait," Zouga told him. "That first." And he pointed to the roughly-hewn block of blue mottled rock that lay below the camel-thorn tree.

  "My mother -" Jan Cheroot gaped. "This I don't believe.

  In twenty-two years I've seen you do some stupid crazy things Zouga strode across to the block of blue ground that Ralph had brought up from the Devil's Own and put his foot on it. "We'll hoist it up with the block and tackle."

  He glanced at the sturdy branch above his head from which the sheave block and manila rope hung. "And we'll back the cart up under it."

  "That's it!" Jan Cheroot sat down on the chest and folded his arms. "This time I refuse. Once before I broke my back for you, but that was when I was young and stupid."

  "Come on, Jan Cheroot, you are wasting time."

  "What do you want with that, piece of ugly bloody stone? With another piece of thundering nonsense."

  "I have lost the bird, I need a household god."

  "I have heard of someone putting up a monument to a brave man, or a great battle, but to put up a stone to stupidity," Jan Cheroot mourried.

  "Back the cart up."

  "I refuse, this time I refuse. I won't do it. Not for anything. Not for any price."

  "When we get it loaded, you can have a bottle of smoke all to yourself to celebrate."

  Jan Cheroot sighed, and stood up. "That's my price."

  He shook his head and came across to stand beside Zouga. He glared at the block of blue stone venomously.

  "But don't expect me to like it."

  Zouga chuckled, for the first time in weeks, and in an unusual display of affection he put one arm around Jan Cheroot's shoulders.

  "Now that you have something to hate again, just think how happy it will make you," he said.

  "You have been drinking," Zouga said, and Ralph tossed his hat into the corner and agreed.

  "Yes, I have had a beer or two." He went to the black iron stove and warmed his hands. "I would have had more, if I had had the money."

  "i have been waiting for you," Zouga went on, and Ralph turned back to him truculently.

  "i give you every hour of my day, Papa, let me have a little time at the end of it."

  "i have something of great importance to tell you," Zouga nodded to the deal chair facing him. "Sit down, Ralph."

  Zouga rubbed his eyes with forefinger and thumb as he collected his words. He had tried so often in the last days to find an easy way to tell Ralph that it was over, that they were destitute, that all that toil and heartbreak had been in vain, but there was no easy way. There were only the stark hard words of reality.

  He dropped his hand, and looked at his son, and then slowly and carefully he told him, and when he had finished he waited for Ralph to speak. Ralph had not moved during the long recital, and now he stared at Zouga stonily.

  Zouga was forced to speak again. "We shall leave in the morning. Jan Cheroot and I have loaded the number 2 wagon and we shall need all the mules, double team it's a long haul."

  Again he waited, but there was still no reaction.

  "You will be wondering where we are going and what we shall do. Well, once we get back to the Cape we still have the Harkness cottage."

  "You gambled it all." Ralph spoke at last. "Without telling me. You, you, who are always preaching to me about gambling, and honesty."

  "Ralph!"

  "It wasn't yours, it belonged to all of us."

  "You are drunk," Zouga said flatly.

  "All these years I have listened to your promises. We shall go north, Ralph." He mimicked Zouga with a sudden savagery in his tone. "It's for all of us, Ralph. It's yours to share. There is a land waiting for us, Ralph. It will be yours as well as mine, Ralph., "It's not over, I still have the concession. When we get back to Cape Town-, "You, not me." Ralph's voice was flat, angry. "You go back to Cape Town. Go dream your old man's dreams. I am sick of them., "You dare to use that tone to me?"

  "Yes, I dare. And by God, I'll dare more than that. I'll dare what you are too weak or afraid to dare"

  "You insolent and stupid puppy!"

  "You toothless old dog!"

  Zouga threw himself half across the table, and his right arm lashed out. He caught Ralph open-handed across the face, and the crack of palm on flesh was stunning as a pistol shot.

  Ralph's head snapped back, and then slowly he brought it upright again. "That," he said, "is the last time you will strike me, ever."

  He stood up and strode towards the door, and there he turned. "Go dream your dreams I will go live mine out."

  "Go then," said Zouga, and the scar on his cheek was glassy and white as ice. "Go and be damned to you., "Remember I took nothing with me, Papa, not even your blessing," said Ralph, and stepped out into the night.

  Bazo woke instantly at the touch on his cheek, and reached for the assegai at his side, his eyes wide in the faint glow of the ashes. A hand closed on his wrist, holding his spear hand from the weapon, and a voice spoke softly above him.

  "Do you remember the road to Matabeleland, O Prince of Kurnalo?"

  It took Bazo a moment to gather his wits from where sleep had scattered them.

  "I remember every running ford and every green hill, every sweet watering place along the way," he whispered back, "as clearly as I remember my father's voice and my Mother's laughter."

  "Roll up your sleeping-mat, Bazo, the Axe, and show me the road," said Ralph.

  Diamond Lil did not smile so readily these days, not since the tooth that held the diamond had turned a dingy grey as the root died, and began to ache until Lil wept with the little explosion of agony against the top of her skull. The travelling dentist from the Cape had pulled the tooth and drained the virulent abscess beneath it.

  Relief had been immediate, but it left a black gap in her smile.

  She had put on flesh also, the consequence of good food and those little nips of gin which bolstered her day.

  Her breasts, always generous, had lost their individual definition and the cleavage that showed above the richly embroidered bodice was no longer a deeply sculptured crevasse but a thin line where abundant flesh packed against flesh.

  The hand that held the bone china teacup was pudgy and dimpled over the knuckles, the rings that adorned each plump little finger had sunk into the flesh, but the diamonds and rubies and emeralds sparkled in a royal show of Lil's wealth.

  Her hair was still lustrous gold, and crimped into long dangling ringlets with the hot-iron. Her skin was still smooth and rich as Devon cream, except around the eyes where it was just beginning to crack into little spider webs of lines.

  She sat at the corner of the verandah, on the second floor above the street, where the eaves of the roof were of intricate white wrought-iron mouldings, pretty as Madeira lace. Although there were other double-storeyed buildings in Kimberley these days, not even the offices of the Central Diamond Company across the wide unpaved street boasted such affluent adornment.

  Lil's chair was high-backed, and magnificently carved in dark red teak by oriental craftsmen, inlaid with mother-of-pearl and ivory and carried across the eastern oceans by the tall ships of the now long departed Dutch East India Company. It had cost her two hundred pounds, but from this throne she could watch every movement on the main thoroughfares that fed into Market Square, could sense the
pulse of the diamond city, could check each coming and going, the scurry of a buyer with a good scent in his nostrils, the swagger of a digger who had turned up a bright one. She could watch the front of the four canteens around the square, all of which she now owned, and judge the volume of trade going through their doors.

  Similarly, she could glance to her left, down De Beers Road to the red-brick cottage behind its white picket fence and discreet sign, "French Dressmakers. Haute Couture. Six Continental Seamstresses. Specialities for individual tastes." Business was always brisk there from noon to midnight. Her girls seldom lasted the pace for more than six months or so, before taking the coach southward again, exhausted but considerably richer.

  Lil herself worked her old trade only occasionally, perhaps once or twice a week with a favoured "regular", just for old times" sake, and because it got her blood going and made her sleep better at night. There was too much else that required her constant attention.

  Now she poured fresh tea from the rococo silver pot into the pretty bone china cups, hand-painted with pink roses and golden butterflies.

  "How many spoons?" she asked.

  Ralph sat on the cane-back chair opposite her. He smelled of shaving soap and cheap eau-de-Cologne. His chin shone with a burnish given it by the cut-throat razor, his shirt was so crisply ironed and starched that it and crackled at each movement.

  Lil studied him speculatively over the rim of her tea cup.

  "Does the good major know your plans?" she asked quietly, and Ralph shook his head. Lil thought on that a while and it gave her a ripple of pleasure to have the son of a foundation member of the Kimberley Club sitting on her verandah. Son of one of the Kimberley gentlemen who would not greet her on the street, who had returned her donation towards the new hospital, who had not even replied to her invitation to attend the stone-laying ceremony of her new building, oh, the list of humiliations was too long to recite now.

  "Why did you not go to your father?" she asked instead.

  "My father is not a rich man." Ralph would not say any more, too loyal to explain that Zouga was destitute, that he would soon leave Kimberley with a cartload of his meagre possessions. He did not want Lil to know that he and his father had turned from each other with harsh words.

 

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