When the Lion Feeds [047 4.8]

By Wilbur Smith

Synopsis

Into the wilds of Natal in the 1870s are born Sean an Garick Courtney,
the twin brothers who could not be more different.  Fate, war and the
jealous schemes of a woman are to drive them even further apart.  But as
history unfolds a continent is awakening.  And on its horizon is the
promise of fortune, adventure, destiny and love.

The Courtney Novels:

When the Lion Feeds

The Sound of Thunder

A Sparrow Falls

The Burning Shore

Power of the Sword

Rage

A Time to Die

The Ballantyne Novels:

A Falcon Flies

Men of Men

The .  Angels Weep

The Leopard Hunts in Darkness

Also: The Dark of the Sun

Shout at the Devil

Gold Mine

The Diamond Hunters

The Sunbird Eagle in the Sky

The Eye of the Tiger

Cry Wolf

Hungry as the Sea

Wild justice

Golden Fox

Elephant Song

When the Lion Feeds

Wilbur Smith was born in Central Africa in 1933.  He was educated at
Michaelhouse and Rhodes University.

He became a full-time writer in 1964 after the successful publication of
When the Lion Feeds, and has since written twenty novels, meticulously
researched on his numerous expeditions worldwide.

He normally travels from November to February, often spending a month
skiing in Switzerland, and visiting Australia and New Zealand for sea
fishing.  During his summer break, he visits environments as diverse as
Alaska and the dwindling wilderness of the African interior.  He has an
abiding concern for the peoples and wildlife of his native continent, an
interest strongly reflected in his novels.

He is married to Danielle, to whom his last nineteen books have been
dedicated.

WILBUR SMITH When the Lion Feeds

This book is for Elfreda and Herbert James Smith with love

Published in the United Kingdom in 1997 by Mandarin Paperbacks

Copyright 0 Wilbur Smith 1964

The right of Wilbur Smith to be identified as the author of this work
has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and
Patents Act, 1988

This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of
trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out, or otherwise circulated
without the publisher's prior consent in any form of binding or cover
other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition
including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser

First published in the United Kingdom in 1964 by V.  Siliam Heinemann
Mandarin Paperbacks Random House UK limited 2o Vauxhall Bridge Road,
London SW I! 2SA Random House Australia (Pty) Limited 2o Alfred Street,
Milsons Point, Sydney New South Wales 2o6i, Australia Random House New
Zealand Limited I 8 Poland Road, Glenfield, Auckland I o, New Zealand
Random House South Africa (Pty) Limited Endulini, 5a Jubilee Road,
Parklown 2193, South Africa Random House UK

Untited Reg.  No.  954oog A CIP catalogue record for

this book is available from the British Library

Papers used by Random House UK Limited are natural, recyclable products
made from wood grown in sustainable forests.  The manufacturing
processes conform to the environmental regulations of the country of
origin

Printed and bound in Great Britain by Cox g Wyman Ltd, Reading,
Berkshire ISBN 0 7493 o639 6 Natal I I I WHEN THE LION FEEDS

BY WILBUR SMITH

A single wild pheasant FLEW up the side of the hill almost brushing the
tips of the grass in its flight.  It drooped its wings and hung its legs
as it reached the crest and then dropped into cover.  Two boys and a dog
followed it up from the valley: the dog led, with his tongue flopping
pink from the corner of his mouth, and the twins ran shoulder to
shoulder behind him.  Both of them were sweating in dark patches through
their khaki shirts, for the African sun still had heat although it stood
half-mast down the sky.

The dog hit the scent of the bird and it stopped him quivering: for a
second he stood sucking it up through his nostrils, and then he started
to quarter.  He worked fast, back and forth, swinging at the end of each
tack, his head down and only his back and his busy tail showing above
the dry brown grass.  The twins came up behind him.  They were gasping
for breath, for it had been a hard pull up the curve of the hill.  Keep
out to the side, you'll get in my way Sean panted at his brother and
Garrick moved to obey.  Sean was his senior by four inches in height and
twenty pounds in weight: this gave him the right to command.  Sean
transferred his attention back to the dog.  Put him up, Tinker.  Seek
him up, boy Tinker's tail acknowledged Sean's instructions, but he held
his nose to the ground.  The twins followed him, tensed for the bird to
rise.  They carried their throwing sticks ready and moved forward a
stealthy pace at a time, fighting to control their breathing.  Tinker
found the bird crouched flat in the grass; he jumped forward giving
tongue for the first time, and the bird rose.  It came up fast on noisy
wings, whirling out of the grass.

Sean threw; his kerrie whipped past it.  The pheasant swung away from
the stick, clawing at the air with frantic wings and Garrick threw.  His
kerrie cartwheeled up, hissing, until it smacked into the pheasant's fat
brown body.

The bird toppled, feathers flurried from it and it fell.  They went
after it.  The pheasant scurried broken-winged through the grass ahead
Of them, and they shouted with excitement as they chased it.  Sean got a
hand to it.  He broke its neck and stood laughing, holding the warm
brown body in his hands, and waited for Garrick to reach him.
Ring-a-ding-a-doody, Garry, you sure gave that one a beauty! Tinker
jumped up to smell the bird and Sean stooped and held it so he could get
his nose against it.  Tinker snuffled it, then tried to take it in his
mouth, but Sean pushed his head away and tossed the bird to Garrick.
Garrick hung it with the others on his belt.

, How far do you reckon that was, fifty feet?  Garrick asked.  nOT as
much as that Sean gave his opinion.  More like thirty I reckon it was at
least fifty.  I reckon it was farther than any you've hit today. Success
had made Garrick bold.  The smile faded from Sean's face.

, Yeah?  he asked.

, Yeah!  SAid Garrick.  Sean pushed the hair off his forehead with the
back of his hand, his hair was black and soft and it kept falling into
his eyes.

What about that one down by the river?  That was twice as far.  Yeah?
asked Garrick.

Yeah!  said Sean truculently.  Well, if you're so good, how did you miss
this one hey?  You threw first.  How come you missed, hey?  Sean's
already flushed face darkened and Garrick realized suddenly that he had
gone too far.  He took a step backwards.

You'd like to bet?  demanded Sean.  It was not quite clear to Garrick on
what Sean wished to bet, but from past experience he knew that whatever
it was the issue would be settled by single combat.  Garrick seldom won
bets from Sean.  It's too late.  We'd better be getting home.  Pa will
clobber us if we're late for dinner.  Sean hesitated and Garrick turned,
ran back to pick up his kerrie then set off in the direction of home.
Sean trotted after him, caught up with him and passed him.  Sean always
led.  Having proved conClusively his superior prowess with the throwing
sticks Sean was prepared to be forgiving.  Over his shoulder he asked,
what colour do you Reckon Gypsy's foal will be?

Garrick accepted the peace-offering with relief and they fell into a
friendly discussion of this and a dozen other equally important
subjects.  They kept running: except for an hour, when they had stopped
in a shady place by the river to roast and eat a couple of their
pheasants, they had run all day.

Up here on the plateau it was grassland that rose and fell beneath them
as they climbed the low round hills and dropped into the valleys.  The
grass around them moved with the wind: waist-high grass, soft dry grass
the colour of ripe wheat.  Behind them and on each side the grassland
rolled away to the full range of the eye, but suddenly in front of them
was the escarpment.  The land cascaded down into it, steeply at first
then gradually levelling out to become the Tugela flats.  The Tugela
river was twenty miles away across the flats, but today there was a haze
in the air so they could not see that far.  Beyond the river, stretched
far to the north and a hundred miles east to the sea, was Zululand.  The
river was the border.  The steep side of the escarpment was cut by
vertical gulleys and in the gulleys grew dense, olive-green bush.

Below them, two miles out on the flats, was the homestead of Theunis
Kraal.  The house was a big one, Dutchgabled and smoothly thatched with
combed grass.  There were horses in the small paddock: many horses, for
the twins, father was a wealthy man.  Smoke from the cooking fires blued
the air over the servants quarters and the sound of someone chopping
wood carried faintly up to them.

Sean stopped on the rim of the escarpment and sat down in the grass.  He
took hold of one of his grimy bare feet and twisted it up into his lap.
There was a hole in the ball of his heel from which he had pulled a
thorn earlier in the day and now it was plugged with dirt.  Garrick sat
down next to him.  Man, is that going to hurt when Ma puts iodine on itV
gloated Garrick.  She'll have to use a needle to get the dirt out.  I
bet you yell, I bet you yell your head off!

Sean ignored him.  He picked a stalk of grass and started probing it
into the wound.  Garrick watched with interest.

Twins could scarcely have been less alike.  Sean was already taking on
the shape of a man: his shoulders were thickening, and there was hard
muscle forming in his puppy fat.  His colouring was vivid: black hair,
skin brown from the sun, lips and cheeks that glowed with the fresh
young blood beneath their surface, and blue eyes, the dark indigo-blue
of cloud shadow on mountain lake.

Garrick was slim, with the wrists and ankles of a girl.

His hair was an undecided brown that grew wispy down the back of his
neck, his skin was freckled, his nose and the rims of his pale blue eyes
were pink with persistent hay fever.  He was fast losing interest in
Sean's surgery.  He reached across and fiddled with one of Tinker's
pendulous ears, and this broke the rhythm of the dog's panting; he
gulped twice and the saliva dripped from the end of his tongue.  Garrick
lifted his head and looked down the slope.

A little below where they were sitting was the head of one of the bushy
gullies.  Garrick caught his breath.

Sean, look there, next to the bush!  His whisper trembled with
excitement.

What's it!  Sean looked up startled.  Then he saw it.  Hold Tinker.
Garrick grabbed the dog's collar and pulled his head around to prevent
him seeing and giving chase.  He's the biggest old inkonka in the world,
breathed Garrick.  Sean was too absorbed to answer.

The bushbuck was picking its way warily out of the thick cover.  A big
ram, black with age; the spots on his haunches were faded like old chalk
marks.  his ears pricked up and his spiral horns held high, big as a
pony, but stepping daintily, he came out into the open.  He stopped and
swung his head from side to side, searching for danger, thEn he trotted
diagonally down the hill and disappeared into another of the gullies.
For a moment after he had gone the twins were still, then they burst out
together.  Did you see him, hey, did you see them horns?  So close to
the house and we never knew he was there -They scrambled to their feet
jabbering at each other, and Tinker was infected with their excitement.
He barked around them in a circle.  After the first few moments of
confusion Sean took control simply by raising his voice above the
opposition.  I bet he hides up in the gulley every day.  I bet he stays
there all dAy and comes out only at night.  Let's go and have a look.

Sean led the way down the slope.

On the fringe of the bush, in a small cave of vegetation that was dark
and cool and carpeted with dead leaves, they found the ram's
hiding-P'lace.  The ground was trampled by his hooves and scattered with
his droppings and there was the mark of his body where he had lain.  A
few loose hairs, tipped with grey, were left on the bed of leaves.  Sean
knelt down and picked one up.  How are we going to get him?  We could
dig a hole and put sharpened sticks in it, suggested Garrick eagerly.

Who's going to dig it, you?  Sean asked.

, You could help.  it would have to be a pretty big hole, said Sean
doubtfully.  There was silence while both of them considered the amount
of labour involved in digging a trap.  Neither of them mentioned the
idea again.  We could get the other kids from town and have a drive with
kerries, said Sean.  How many hunts have we been on with them? Must be
hundreds by now, and we haven't even bagged one lousy duiker, let alone
a bushbuck.  Garrick hesitated and then went on.  Besides, remember what
that inkonka did to Frank van Essen, hey?  When it finished sticking him
they had to push all his guts back into the hole in his stomach!

, Are you scared?  asked Sean.  I am not, so!  said Garrick indignantly,
then quickly, Gee, its almost dark.

We'd better run.

They went down the valley.

Sean lay in the darkness and stared across the room at the grey Oblong
of the window.  There was a slice of moon in the sky outside.  Sean
could not sleep: he was thinking about the bushbuck.  He heard his
parents pass the door of the bedroom; his stepmother said something and
his father laughed: Waite Courtney had a laugh as deep as distant
thunder.

Sean heard the door of their room close and he sat up in bed.  Garry.
No answer.  Garry He picked up a boot and threw it; there was a grunt.
Garry.

What you want?  Garrick's voice was sleepy and irritable.  I was just
thinking, tomorrow's Friday SO?  Ma and Pa will be going into town.
They'll be away all day.  We could take the shotgun and go lay for that
old inkonka Garrick's bed creaked with alarm.  You're mad!  Garrick
could not keep the shock out of his voice.  Pa would kill us if he
caught us with the shotgun.  Even as he said it he knew he would have to
find a stronger argument than that to dissuade his brother.  Sean
avoided punishment if possible, but a chance at a bushbuck ram was worth
all his father's right arm could give.

Garrick lay rigid in his bed, searching for words.  Besides, Pa keeps
the cartridges locked up it was a good try, but Sean countered it.

I know where there are, two buckshots that he has forgotten about:
they're in the big vase in the dining-room.  They've been there over a
month.

Garrick was sweating.  He could almost feel the siambok curling round
his buttocks, and hear his father counting the strokes: eight, nine,
ten.

Please, Sean, let's think of something else.  .  .  .  .

Across the room Sean settled back comfortably on his pillows.  The
decision had been made.

Waite Courtney handed his wife UP into the front seat of the buggy.  He
patted her arm affectionately then walked around to the driver's side,
Pausing to fondle the horses and settle his hat down over his bald head.
He was a big man the buggy dipped under his weight as he climbed up into
the seat.  He gathered up the reins, then he turned and his eyes laughed
over his great hooked nose at the twins standing together on the
veranda.  I would esteem it a favour if you two gentlemen could arrange
to stay out of trouble for the few hours that your mother and I will be
away Yes, Pa, in dutiful chorus.  Sean, if You get the urge to climb the
big blue gum tree again then fight it, man fight itAll right, Pa.
Garrick, let us have no more experiments in the manufacture of
gunpowder, agreed?  Yes, PaAnd don't look so innocent.  That really
frightens the hell out of me!

Waite touched the whip to the shiny round rumps in front of him and the
buggy started forward, out along the road to Lady-burg.  He didn't say
anything about not taking the shotgun whispered Sean virtuously.  Now
you go and see if all the servants are out of the way, if they see us,
they'll kick up a fuss.  Then come round to the bedroom window and I'll
pass it out to you Sean and Garrick argued all the way to the foot of
the escarpment.  Sean was carrying the shotgun across one shoulder,
hanging onto the butt with both hands.

It was my idea, wasn't it!  he demanded.  But I saw the inkonka first,
protested Garrick.  Garrick was bold again: with every yard put between
him and the house his fear of reprisal faded.  That doesn't count, Sean
informed him.  I thought of the shotgun, so I do the shooting.  How come
you always have the fun?  asked Garrick, and Sean was outraged at the
question.

When you found the hawk's nest by the river, I let you climb for it.
Didn't I?  When you found the baby duiker, I let you feed it.  Didn't I?
he demanded.

, All right.  So I saw the inkonka first, why don't you let me take the
shot?

Sean was silent in the face of such stubbornness, but his grip on the
butt of the shotgun tightened.  In order to win the argument Garrick
would have to get it away from him, this Garrick knew and he started to
sulk.  Sean stopped among the trees at the foot of the escarpment and
looked over his shoulder at his brother.  Are you going to help, or must
I do it alone?  Garrick looked down at the ground and kicked at a twig.
He sniffed wetly; his hay-fever was always bad in the mornings.  Well?
asked Sean.  What do you want me to do?  Stay here and count to a
thousand Slowly.

I'm going to circle up the slope and wait where the inkonka crossed
yesterday.  When You finish counting Come UP the gulley.

Start shouting when you are about halfway up.  The inkonka will break
the same way as yesterday, all right?

Garrick nodded reluctantly.  Did you bring Tinker's chain?  Garrick
pulled it from his pocket, and at the sight of it the dog backed away.
Sean grabbed his collar, and Garrick slipped it on.  Tinker laid his
ears flat and looked at them reproachfully.

Don't let him go.  That old inkonka will rip him up.

Now start counting, said Sean and began climbing.  He kept well out to
the left of the gulley.  The grass on the slope was slippery under his
feet the gun was heavy and there were sharp lumps of rock in the grass.
He stubbed his toe and it started to bleed, but he kept on upwards.

There was a dead tree on the edge of the bush that Sean had used to mark
the bushbuck's hide.  Sean climbed above it and stopped just below the
crest of the slope where the moving grass would break up the silhouette
of his head on the skyline.  He was panting.  He found a rock the size
of a beer barrel to use as a rest for the gun, and he crouched behind
it.  He laid the stock of the gun on the rock, aimed back down the hill
and traversed the barrels left and right to make sure his field of fire
was clear.  He iMAgined the bushbuck running in his sights and he felt
excitement shiver along his forearms, across his shoulders and up the
back of his neck.  I won't lead on him, he'll be moving fairly slowly,
trotting most probably.  I'll go straight at his shoulders, he
whispered.

He opened the gun, took the two cartridges out of his shirt pocket, slid
them into the breeches and snapped the gun closed.  It took all the
strength of both his hands to pull back the big fancy hammers, but he
managed it and the gun was double-loaded and cocked.  He laid it on the
rock in front of him again and stared down the slope.  On his left the
gulley was a dark-green smear on the hillside, directly below him was
open grass where the bushbuck would cross.  He pushed impatiently at the
hair on his forehead: it was damp with sweat and stayed up out of his
eyes.

The minutes drifted by.

rWhat the hell is Garry doing?  He's so stupid sometimes!  Sean muttered
and almost in answer he heard Garrick shout below him.  It was a small
sound, far down the slope and muffled by the bush.  Tinker barked once
without enthusiasm; he was also Sulking, he didn't like the chain.  Sean
waited with his forefinger on one trigger, staring down at the edge of
the bush.  Garrick shouted again, and the bushbuck broke from cover.

it came fast into the open with its nose up and its long horns held flat
against its back.  Sean moved his body sideways swinging the gun with
its run, riding the pip of the foresight on its black shoulder.  He
fired the left barrel and the recoil threw him off balance; his ears
hummed with the shot and the burnt powder smoke blew back into his face.
He struggled to his feet still holding the gun.  The bushbuck was down
in the grass, bleating like a lamb and kicking as it died.  I got him,
screamed Sean.  I got him first shot! Garry, Garry!  I got him, I got
him!

Tinker came pelting out of the bush dragging Garry behind him by the
chain and, still screaming, Sean ran down to join them.  A stone rolled
under his foot and he fell.  The shotgun flew out of his hand and the
second barrel fired.  The sound of the explosion was very loud.

When Sean scrambled onto his feet again Garrick was sitting in the grass
whimpering,-whimpering and staring at his leg.  The blast of the shotgun
had smashed into it and churned the flesh below the knee into tatters,
bursting it open so the bone chips showed white in the wound and the
blood pumped dark and strong and thick as custard.  I didn't mean it.  .
.  .  Oh God, Garry, I didn't mean it.  I slipped.  Honest, I slipped.
Sean was staring at the leg also.  There was no colour in his face, his
eyes were big and dark with horror.  The blood pumped out onto the
grass.

Stop it bleeding!  Sean, please stop it.  Oh, it's sore Oh!

Sean, please stop itV Sean stumbled across to him.  He wanted to vomit.
He unbuckled his belt and strapped it round the leg and the blood was
warm and sticky On his hands.  He used his sheathed knife to twist the
belt tight.  The pumping slowed and he twisted harder.  Oh, Sean, it's
sore!  It's sore. Garrick's face was waxy-white and he was starting to
shiver as the cold hand of shock closed on him.  I'll get Joseph, Sean
stammered.  We'll come back quickly as we can.  Oh, God, I'm sorry! Sean
jumped up and ran.  He fell, rolled to his feet and kept running.

They came within an hour.  Sean was leading three of the Zulu servants.
Joseph, the cook, had brought a blanket.  He wrapped Garrick and lifted
him and Garrick fainted as his leg swung loosely.  As they started back
down the hill, Sean looked out across the flats: there was a little puff
of dust on the Lady-burg road.  One Of the grooms was riding to fetch
Waite Courtney.

They were waiting on the veranda of the homestead when Waite Courtney,
came back to Theunis Kraal.  Garrick was conscious again.  He lay on the
couch: his face was white and the blood had soaked through the blanket.

There was blood on Joseph's uniform and blood had dried black on Sean's
hands.  Waite Courtney ran up onto the veranda; he stooped over Garrick
and drew back the blanket.  For a second he stood staring at the leg and
then very gently he covered it again.

Waite lifted Garrick and carried him down to the buggy.

Joseph went with him and they settled Garrick on the back seat.  Joseph
held his body and Garrick's stepmother took the leg on her lap to stop
it twisting.  Waite Courtney climbed quickly into the driver's seat: he
picked up the reins, then he turned his head and looked at Sean still
Standing on the veranda.  He didn't speak, but his eyes were terrible,
Sean could not meet them.  Waite Courtney used the whip on the horses
and drove them back along the road to Lady-burg: he drove furiously with
the wind streaming his beard back from his face.

Sean watched them go.  After they had disappeared among the trees he
remained standing alone on the veranda; then suddenly he turned and ran
back through the house.  He ran out of the kitchen door and across the
yard to the saddle-room, snatched a bridle down from the rack and ran to
the paddock.  He picked a bay mare and worked her into a corner of the
fence until he could slip his arm around her neck.  He forced the bit
into her mouth, buckled the chin strap and swung up onto her bare back.

He kicked her into a run and put her to the gate, swaying back as her
body heaved up under him and falling forward on her neck as she landed.
He gathered himself and turned her head towards the Lady-burg road.

It was eight miles to town and the buggy reached it before Sean.  He
found it outside Doctor Van Rooyen's surgery: the horses were blowing
hard, and their bodies were dark with sweat.  Sean slid down off the
mare's back; he went up the steps to the surgery door and quietly pushed
it open.  There was the sweet reek of chloroform in the room.  Garrick
lay on the table, Waite and his wife stood on each side of him, and the
doctor was washing his hands in an enamel basin against the far wall.
Ada Courtney was crying silently, her face blurred with tears.

They all looked at Sean standing in the doorway.  Come here, said Waite
Courtney, his voice flat and expressionless.  Come and stand here beside
me.  They're going to cut off your brother's leg and, by Christ, I'm
going to make you watch every second of itV

They brought Garrick back to Theunis Kraal in the night.

Waite Courtney drove the buggy very slowly and carefully and Sean
trailed a long way behind it.  He was cold in his thin khaki shirt, and
sick in the stomach with what he had seen.  There were bruises on his
upper arm where his father had held him and forced him to watch.

The servants had lanterns burning on the veranda.  They were standing in
the shadows, silent and anxious.  As Waite carried the blanket-wrapped
body up the front steps one of them called softly in the Zulu tongue.
The leg?

It is gone, Waite answered gruffly.

They sighed softly all together and the voice called again.  He is well?
He is alive, said Waite.

He carried Garrick through to the room that was set aside for guests and
sickness.  He stood in the centre of the floor holding the boy while his
wife put fresh sheets on the bed; then he laid him down and covered him.

Is there anything else we can do?  asked Ada.  We can wait.  Ada groped
for her husband's hand.  Please, God, let him live, she whispered.  He's
so young It's Sean's fault!  Waite's anger flared up suddenly.  Garry
would never have done it On his own.  He tried to disengage Ada's hand.

What are You going to do?  she asked.  I'm going to beat him!  I'm going
to thrash the skin off him!  Don't, please don't!  What do you mean?  He
had enough.  Didn't you see his face?  Waite's shoulders sagged wearily
and he sat down on the armchair beside the bed.  Ada touched his cheek.
I'll stay here with Garry.  You go and try to get some sleep, my dear.
No, Waite said. She sat down on the side of the chair and Waite put his
arm around her waist.  After a long while they slept, huddled together
on the chair beside the bed.

The days that followed were bad.  Garrick's mind escaped from the
harness of sanity and ran wild into the hot land of delirium.  He panted
and twisted his fever-flushed face from side to side; he cried and
whimpered in the big bed; the stump of his leg puffed up angrily and the
stitches were drawn so tight it seemed they must tear out of the swollen
flesh.  The infection oozed yellow and foul-smelling onto the sheets.

Ada stayed by him all that time.  She swabbed the sweat from his face
and changed the dressings on his stump, she held the glass for him to
drink and gentled him when he raved.  Her eyes sunk darkly into their
sockets with fatigue and worry, but she would not leave him.  Waite
could not bear it.  He had the masculine dread of suffering that
threatened to suffocate him if he stayed in the room: every half hour or
so he came in and stood next to the bed and then he turned away and went
back to his restless wandering around the house.  Ada could hear his
heavy tramp along the corridors.

Sean stayed in the house also: he sat in the kitchen or at the far end
of the veranda.  No one would speak to him, not even the servants; they
chased him when he tried to sneak into the bedroom to see Garrick.  He
was lonely with the desolate loneliness of the guilty, for Garry was
going to die, he knew it by the evil silence that hung over Theunis
Kraal.  There was no chatter nor pot-clatter from the kitchens, no rich
deep laughter from his father: even the dogs were subdued.  Death was at
Theunis Kraal.  He could smell it on the soiled sheets that were brought
through to the kitchen from Garrick's room; it was a musky smell, the
smell of an animal.  Sometimes he could almost see it: even in bright
daylight sitting on the veranda.  he sensed it crouched near him like a
shadow on the edge of his vision.  it had no form as yet.  It was a
darkness, a coldness that was gradually building up around the house,
gathering its strength until it could take his brother.

On the third day Waite Courtney came roaring out of Garrick's room.  He
ran through the house and out into the stable yard.  Karlie!  Where are
you?  Get a saddle onto Rooiberg!  Hurry, man, hurry, damn you.  He's
dying, do you hear me, he's dying!  Sean did not move from where he sat
against the wall next to the back door.  His arm tightened around
Tinker's neck and the dog touched his cheek with a cold nose; he watched
his father jump up onto the stallion's back and ride.  The hooves beat
away towards Lady-burg and when they were gone he stood up and slipped
into the house: he listened outside Garrick's door and then he opened it
quietly and went in.  Ada turned towards him, her face was tired.  She
looked much older than her thirty-five years, but her black hair was
drawn back behind her head into a neat bun and her dress was fresh and
clean.  she was still a beautiful woman despite her exhaustion- There
was a gentleness about her, a goodness that suffering and worry could
not destroy.  She held out her hand to Sean and he crossed and stood
beside her chair and looked down at Garrick.  Then he knew why Ins
father had gone to fetch the doctor.  Death was in the room, strong and
icy cold hovered over the bed.  Garrick lay very still: his face was
yellow, his eyes were closed and his lips were cracked and dry.

the loneliness and the guilt came swelling up into Sean's throat and
choked him into sobs, sobs that forced him to his knees and he put his
face into Ada's lap and cried.  He cried for the last time in his life,
he cried as a man cries, painfully, each sob tearing something inside
him.

Waite Courtney came back from Lady-burg with the doctor.  Once more Sean
was driven out and the door closed.  That night he heard them working in
Garrick's room, the murmuring of their voices and the scuff of feet on
the yellow wood floor.  In the morning it was over.  The fever was
broken and Garrick was alive.  Only just alive his eyes were sunk into
dark holes like those of a skull.

His body and his mind were never to recover completely from that brutal
pruning.

It was slow, a week before he was strong enough to feed himself.  His
first need was for his brother, before he was able to talk above a
whisper it was, Where's Sean?  And Sean, still chastened, sat with him
for hours at a time.  Then when Garrick slept Sean escaped from the
room, and with a fishing-rod or his hunting sticks and Tinker barking
behind him went into the veld.  It was a measure of Sean's repentance
that he allowed himself to be contained within the sick-room for such
long periods.

It chafed him like ropes on a young colt: no one would ever know what it
cost him to sit quietly next to Garrick's bed while his body itched and
burned with unexpended energy and his mind raced restlessly.

Then Sean had to go back to school.  He left on a Monday morning while
it was still dark.  Garrick listened to the sounds of departure, the
whicker of the horses outside on the driveway and Ada's voice reciting
last minute instructions: I've put a bottle of cough mixture under your
shirts, give it to Friulein as soon as you unpack.

Then she'll see that you take it at the first sign of a cold.  Yes, Ma.
There are six vests in the small case, use a new one every day.  Vests
are sissy things u will do as you're told, Young man.  Waite's voice,
Hurry up with your porridge, we've got to get going if I'm to have u in
town by seven o'clock.  Can I say goodbye to Garry?  You said goodbye
last night, he'll still be asleep now.  Garrick opened his mouth to call
out, but he knew his voice would not carry.  He lay quietly and listened
to the chairs scraping back from the dining-room table, the procession
of footsteps out onto the veranda, voices raised in farewells and at
last the wheels of the buggy crunching gravel as they moved away down
the drive.  it was very quiet after Sean had left with his father.

After that the weekends were, for Garrick, the only bright spots in the
colourless passage of time.  He longed for them to come and each one was
an eternity after the last, time passes slowly for the young and the
sick.  Ada and Waite knew a little of how he felt.  They moved the
centre of the household to his room: they broughtt two of the fat
leather armchairs from the lounge and put them on each side of his bed
and they spent the evenings there.

Waite with his pipe in his mouth and a glass of brandy at his elbow,
whittling at the wooden leg he was making and laughing his deep laugh,
Ada with her knitting and the two of them trying to reach him.  Perhaps
it was this conscious effort that was the cause of their failure, or
perhaps it is impossible to reach back down the years to a small boy.
There is always that reserve, that barrier between the adult and the
secret world of youth.  Garrick laughed with them and they talked
together, but it was not the same as having Sean there.  During the day
Ada had the running of a large household and there were fifteen thousand
acres of land and two thousand head of cattle that needed Waite's
attention.  That was the loneliest time for Garrick.  if it had not been
for the books, he .  might not have been able to bear it.  He read
everything that Ada brought to him: Stevenson, Swift, Defoe, Dickens and
even Shakespeare.  Much of it he didn't understand, but he read hungrily
and the Opium Of the printed word helped him through the long days until
Sean came home each Friday.

When Sean came home it was like a big wind blowing through the house.
Doors slammed, dogs barked, servants scolded and feet clattered up and
down the passages.  Most of the noise was Sean's, but not all of it.
There were Sean's followers: youngsters from his class at the village
school.

They accepted Sean's authority as willingly as did Garrick, and it was
not only Sean's fists that won this acceptance but also the laughter and
the sense of excitement that went with him.  They came out to Theunis
Kraal in droves that summer, sometimes as many as three on one
bare-backed pony: sitting like a row of sparrows on a fence rail.  They
came for the added attraction of Garry's stump.

Sean was very proud of it.  That's where the doc sewed it up, pointing
to the row of stitch marks along the pink fold of scar tissue.  Can I
touch it, man?  Not too hard or it'll burst open.

Garrick had never received attention like this in his life before.  He
beamed round the circle of solemn, wide-eyed faces.  It feels funny,
sort of hot.  Was it sore?  How did he chop the bone, with an axe?  No.
Sean was the only one in a position to answer technical questions of
this nature.  With a saw.  just like a piece of wood.  He made the
motions with his open hand.

But even this fascinating subject couldn't hold them for long and
presently there would be a restlessness amongst them.  Hey, Sean, Karl
and I know where there's a nest of squawkers, you wanta have a look?  or
Let's go and catch frogs, and Garrick would cut in desperately.

You can have a look at my stamp collection if you like.

It's in the cupboard there.  Now, we saw it last week.  Let's go.  This
was when Ada, who had been listening to the conversation through the
open kitchen door, brought in the food.  Koeksusters fried in honey,
chocolate cakes with peppermint icing, watermelon konfyt and half a
dozen other delicacies.

She knew they wouldn't leave until it was finished and she knew also
that there'd be upset stomachs when it was, but that was preferable to
Garrick lying alone and listening to the others riding off into the
hills.

The weekends were short, gone in a breathless blur.

Another long week began for Garrick.  There were eight of them, eight
dreary weeks before Doctor Van Rooyen agreed to let him sit out on the
veranda during the day.

Then suddenly the prospect of being well again became a reality for
Garrick.  The leg that Waite was making was nearly finished: he shaped a
leather bucket to take the stump and fitted it to the wood with
flat-headed copper nails; he worked carefully, moulding the leather and
adjusting the straps that would hold it in place.  Meanwhile, Garrick
exercised along the veranda, hopping beside Ada with an Arm around her
shoulder, his jaws clenched with concentration and the freckles very
prominent on his face that had been without the sun for so long.  Twice
a day Ada sat on a cushion in front of Garrick's chair and massaged the
stump with methylated spirits to toughen it for its first contact with
the stiff leather bucket.  I bet old Sean will be surprised, hey?  When
he sees me walking around.  Everyone will, Ada agreed.  She looked up
from his leg and smiled.  Can't I try it now?  Then I can go out fishing
with him when he comes on Saturday.  You mustn't expect too much, Garry,
it's not going to be easy at first.  You will have to learn to use it.
Like riding a horse, you remember how often you fell off before you
learned to ride?  But can I start now?  Ada reached for the spirits
bottle, Poured a little into her cupped hand and spread it on the stump.
We'll have to wait until Doctor Van Rooyen tells us you're ready.  It
won't be long now It wasn't.  After his next visit Doctor Van Rooyen
spoke to Waite as they walked together to the doctor's trap.  You can
try him with the peg-leg, it'll give him something to work for.  Don't
let him overtire himself and watch the stump doesn't get rubbed raw.  We
don't want another infection.  Peg-leg.  Waite's mind echoed the ugly
word as he watched the trap out of sight.  Peg-leg': he clenched his
fists at his sides, not wanting to turn and see the pathetically eager
face behind him on the veranda.

The you sure thats comfortable!  Waite squatted in front of Garrick's
chair adjusting the leg and Ada stood next to him.  Yes, yes, let me try
it now.  Gee, old Sean will be surprised , hey?  I'll be able to go back
with him on Monday, wont I?  Garrick was trembling with eagerness.

, We'll see Waite grunted noncommittally.  He stood up and moved round
beside the chair.

, Ada, my dear, take his other arm.  Now listen, Garry!  I want you to
get the feel of it first.  We'll help you up and you can just stand on
it and get your balance.  Do you understand?

Garrick nodded vigorously.

, All right, then up you come.  Garrick drew the leg towards him and the
tip scraped across the wooden floor.  They lifted him and he put his
weight on it.

, Look at me, I'm standing on it.  Hey, look I'm standing on it His face
glowed.  Let me walk, come on, Let me walk.  Ada glanced at her husband
and he nodded.  Together they led Garrick forward.  He stumbled twice
but they held him.  Klunk and klunk again the peg rang on the floor
boards.  Before they reached the end of the veranda Garrick had learned
to lift the leg high as he swung it forward.

on the way back They turned and he stumbled only once to the chair.

That's fine, Garry, you're doing fine laughed Ada.

You'll be on your own in no time, Waite grinned!  with relief.  He had
hardly dared to hope it would be so easy, and Garrick fastened on his
words.  Let me stand on my own now.  Not this time, boy, you've done
well enough for one day.  Oh, gee, Pa.  Please.  I won't try and walk,
I'll just stand.

You and Ma can be ready to catch me.  Please, Pa, please.  Waite
hesitated and Ada added her entreaty.  Let him, dear, he's done so well.
It'll help build up his confidence, Very well.  But don't try to move,
Waite agreed.

Are you ready, Garry?  Let him go!  They took their hands off him
cautiously.  He teetered slightly and their hands darted back.  I'm all
right, leave me.  He grinned at them confidently and once more they
released him.  He stood straight and steady for a moment and then he
looked down at the ground.  The grin froze on his face.  He was alone on
a high mountain, Ins stomach turned giddily within him and he was
afraid, desperately unreasonably afraid.  He lurched violently and the
first shriek tore from him before they could hold him.  I'm falling.
Take it off!  Take it off!

They sat him in the chair with one swift movement.  Take it off!  I'm
going to fall!  The terrified screams racked Waite as he tore at the
straps that held the leg.

it's off, Garry, you're safe.  I'm holding you.  Waite took him to his
chest and held him, trying to quieten him with the strength of his arms
and the security of his own big body, but Garrick's terrified struggling
and his shrieks continued.

Take him to the bedroom, get him inside Ada spoke and Waite ran with
him, still holding him against his chest.

Then for the first time Garrick found his hiding-place.

At the moment when his terror became too great to bear he felt something
move inside his head, fluttering behind his eyes like the wings of a
moth.  His vision greyed as though he was in a mist bank.  The mist
thickened and blotted out all sight and sound.  It was warm in the mist
and safe.  No one could touch him here for it wrapped and protected him.
He was safe.

I think he's asleep, Waite whispered to his wife, but there was a
puzzled expression in his voice.  He looked carefully at the boy's face
and listened to his breathing.  It happened so quickly though, it isn't
natural.

And yet, and yet he looks all right Do you think, we should call the
doctor2 Ada asked.  No.  Waite shook his head.  I'll just cover him up
and stay with him until he wakes.  He woke in the early evening, sat up
and smiled at them as though nothing had happened.  Relaxed and shyly
cheerful, he ate a big supper and no one mentioned the leg.  It was
almost as though Garrick had forgotten about it.

Sean came home on the following Friday afternoon.  He had a black eye,
not a fresh one; it was already turning green round the edges of the
bruise.  Sean was very reticent on the subject of how he had obtained
it.  He brought with him also a clutch of fly catchers, eggs which he
gave to Garrick, a five red-lipped.  snake in a cardboard box which Ada
immediately condemned to death despite Sean's impassioned speech in its
defence, and a bow carved from M'senga wood which was, in sean's
opinion, the best wood for a bow.

His arrival wrought the usual change in the household of Theunis Kraal,
more noise, more movement and more laughter.

There was a huge roast for dinner that evening, with potatoes baked in
their jackets.  These were seans favourite foods and he ate like a
hungry python.  Don't put so much in Your mouth, Waite remonstrated from
the head of the table, but there was a fondness in his voice.  It was
hard not to show favouritism with his sons.  Sean accepted the rebuke in
the spirit it was given.Frikkie Oberholster's bitch had pups this week,
six of them No, said Ada firmly.  Gee, Ma, just one.  You heard your
mother, Sean poured gravy over his meat, cut a potato in half and lifted
one piece to his mouth.  It had been worth a try.  He hadn't really
expected them to agree.  What did you learn this week?  Ada asked.  This
was a nasty question.  Sean had learned as much as was necessary to
avoid trouble, no more.  Oh, lots of things, he replied airily and then
to change the subject.  Have you finished Garry's new leg yet, Pa?

There was a silence.  Garrick's face went expressionless and he dropped
his eyes to his plate.  Sean put the other half of the potato in his
mouth and spoke around it.

If you have., me and Garry can go fishing up at the falls tomorrow.  ,
Don't talk with your mouth full, snapped Waite with unnecessary
violence.  You've got the manners of a pig.  Sorry, Pa, Sean muttered.
The rest of the meal passed in uneasy silence and as soon as it finished
Sean escaped to the bedroom.  Garry went with him hopping along the
passage with one hand on the wall to balance himself.

What's Pa so mad about?  Sean demanded resentfully as soon as they were
alone.

I don't know Garrick sat on the bed.  Sometimes he just gets mad for
nothing, you know that.  Sean pulled his shirt off over his head,
screwed it into a ball and threw it against the far wall.

$You'd better pick it up, else there'll be trOuble, Garrick warned
mildly.  Sean dropped his pants and kicked them after the shirt.  This
show of defiance put him in a better mood.  He walked across and stood
naked in front of Garrick.

, Look he said with pride.  Hairs!  hairs.

Garrick inspected them.  indisputably they were hairs.

, There aren't very many.  Garrick couldn't disguise the envy in his
voice.  I bet I've got more than you have, Sean challenged, Let's count
them.  But Garrick knew himself to be an outright loser; he slipped off
the bed and hopped across the room.  Steadying himself against the wall
he stooped and picked up Sean's discarded clothing he brought it back
and dropped it in the soiled linen basket beside the door.  Sean watched
him and it reminded him of his unanswered question.  Has Pa finished
your leg yet, Garry?

Garry turned slowly, he swallowed and nodded once, a quick jerky
movement.  What's it like?  Have you tried it yet?

The fear was on Garrick again.  He twisted his face from side to side as
though seeking an escape.  There were footsteps in the passage outside
the door.  Sean dived at his bed and snatching up his nightgown pulled
it over his head as he slid between the sheets.  Garrick was still
standing beside the clothes basket when Waite Courtney came into the
room.  Come on, Garry, what's holding you up?

Garrick hurried across to his bed and Waite looked at Sean.  Sean
grinned at him with all the charm of his good looks and Waite's face
softened into a grin also.  Nice to have you home again, boy.  It was
impossible to be angry with Sean for long.

He reached out and took a handful of Sean's thick black hair.  Now I
don't want to hear any talking in here after the lamp's out, do you
understand?

He tugged Sean's head from side to side gently, embarrassed by the
strength of his feeling for his son.  The next morning Waite Courtney
rode back to the homestead for his breakfast when the sun was high.  One
of the grooms took his horse and led it away to the paddock and Waite
stood in front of the saddle room and looked around him.  He looked at
the neat white posts of the paddock, at the well-swept yard, at his
house filled with fine furniture.  It was a good feeling to be rich,
especially when you knew what it was like to be poor.  Fifteen thousand
acres of good grassland, as many cattle as the land would carry, gold in
the bank.  Waite smiled and started across the yard.

He heard Ada singing in the dairy.  How rides the farmer Sit, sit, so
Sit, sit, so, tra la The Capetown girls say Kiss me quick Kiss me quick,
tra la.

She had a clear sweet voice and Waite's smile broadened, it was a good
feeling to be rich and to be in love.

He stopped at the door of the dairy; because of the thick stone walls
and heavy thatch it was cool and dark in the room.  Ada stood with her
back to the door, her body moving in time to the song and the turning of
the butter churn.  Waite watched her a moment, then he walked up behind
her and put his arms around her waist.

Startled, she turned within his arms and he kissed her on the mouth.
Good morning, my pretty maid.

She relaxed against him.  Good morning, sir, she said.  What's for
breakfast?  Ah!  what a romantic fool I married!  She sighed, Come
along, let's go and see.  She took off her apron, hung it behind the
door, patted her hair into place and held her hand out to him.  They
walked hand-in-hand across the yard and into the kitchen.

Waite sniffed loudly.  Smells all right.  Where are the boys?  Joseph
understood English though he could not speak it.  He looked up from the
stove.  Nkosi, they are on the front veranda Joseph had the typical
moon-round face of the Zulu, when he smiled his teeth were big and white
against the black of his skin.  They are playing with Nkosizana Garry's
wooden leg Waite's face flushed.  How did they find it?  Nkosianq Sean
asked me where it was and I told him you had put it in the linen
cupboard You bloody fool!  roared Waite.  He dropped Ada's hand and ran.
As he reached the lounge he heard Sean shout and immediately there was
the sound of someone falling heavily on the veranda.  He stopped in the
middle of the lounge floor; he couldn't bear to go out and face
Garrick's terror.  He felt sick with dread and with his anger at Sean.

Then he heard Sean laugh.  Get off me, man, don't just lie there.  And
then, incredibly, Garrick's voice.  Sorry, it caught in the floor
boards.  Waite walked across to the window and looked out onto the
veranda.  Sean and Garrick lay in a heap together near the far end. Sean
was still laughing and on Garrick's face was a set nervous smile.  Sean
scrambled up.  Come on.

Get up.

He gave Garrick his hand and dragged him to his feet.

They stood clinging to each other, Garrick balancing precariously on his
peg.  I bet if it was me I could just walk easy as anything, said Sean.

, I bet you couldn't, it's jolly difficult.  Sean let go of him and
stood back with his arms spread ready to catch him.  Come on.  Sean
walked backwards in front of him and Garrick followed unsteadily, his
arms flapping out sideways as he struggled to keep his balance, his face
rigid with concentration.  He reached the end of the veranda and caught
onto the rail with both hands.  This time he joined in Sean's laughter.

Waite became aware that Ada was standing beside him; he glanced sideways
at her and her lips formed the words come away.  She took his arm.

At the end of June 1876 Garrick went back to school with Sean.  It was
almost four months since the shooting.  Waite drove them.  The road to
Lady-burg was through open forest, two parallel tracks with the grass
growing in between, it brushed the bottom of the buggy.  The horses
trotted in the tracks, their hooves silent on the thick powder dust.  At
the top of the first rise Waite slowed the horses and turned in his seat
to look back at the homestead.  The early sun gave the whitewashed walls
of Theunis Kraal an orange glow and the lawns around the house were
brilliant green.  Everywhere else the grass was dry in the early winter
and the leaves of the trees were dry also.

The sun was not yet high enough to rob the veld of its colour and light
it only with the flat white glare of midday.  The leaves were golden and
russet and redbrown, the same red-brown as the bunches of Afrikander
cattle that grazed among the trees.  Behind it all was the back-drop of
the escarpment, striped like a zebra with the green black bush that grew
in its gullies.  Look, there's a hoopoe, Sean!  Yeah, I saw it long ago.
That's a male.  The bird flew up from in front of the horses.  chocolate
and black and white wings, its head crested like an Etruscan helmet.

How do you know?  challenged Garrick.

"Cause of the white in its wings.  They've all got white in their wings.
They haven't, only the males.  Well, all the ones I've seen got white in
their wings, said Garrick dubiously.  Perhaps you've never seen a
female.  They're jolly rare.

They don't come out of their nests much.

Waite Courtney smiled and turned back in his seat.  Garry's right, Sean,
you can't tell the difference by their feathers.  The male's a little
bigger, that's all.

, I told you, said Garrick, brave under his father's protection.

, You know everything, muttered Sean sarcastically.  I suppose you read
it in all those books, hey?  there's the train.  Garrick smiled
complacently.  Look, there It was coming down the escarpment, dragging a
long grey plume of smoke behind it.  Waite started the horses into a
trot.  They went down to the concrete bridge over the Baboon Stroom.

I saw a Yellow fish.  It was a stick, I saw it too.  The river was the
boundary of Waite's land.  They crossed the bridge and went up the other
side.  In front of them was Lady-burg.  The train was running into the
town past the cattle sale pens; it whistled and shot a puff of steam
high into the air.  The town was spread out, each house padded around by
its orchard and garden.  A thirty-six ox team could turn in any one of
the wide streets.  The houses were burnt brick or whitewashed, thatched
or with corrugated-iron roofs painted green or dull red.  The square was
in the centre and the spire of the church was the hub of Lady-burg.

The school was on the far side of town.

Waite trotted the horses along Main Street.  There were a few people on
the side walks; they moved with early morning stiffness beneath the
flamboyant trees that lined the street and every one of them called a
greeting to Waite.  He waved his whip at the men and lifted his hat to
the women, but not high enough to expose the bald dome of his head.  In
the centre of town the shops were open, and standing on long thin legs
in front of his bank was David Pye.  He was dressed in black like an
undertaker.  Morning, Waite.  Morning, David, called Waite a little too
heartily.  it was not six months since he had paid off the last mortgage
on Theunis Kraal and the memory of debt was too fresh in his mind; he
felt as embarrassed as a newly released prisoner meeting the prison
governor on the street.  Can you come in and see me after you've dropped
off your boys?  Have the coffee ready, agreed Waite.  It was well known
that no one was ever offered coffee when they called on David Pye.  They
went on down the street, turned left at the far end of Church Square,
passed the courthouse and down the dip to the school hostel.

There were half a dozen Scotch carts and four-wheelers standing in the
yard.  Small boys and girls swarmed over them unloading their luggage.
Their fathers stood in a group at one end of the yard, brown-faced men,
with carefully brushed beards, uncomfortable in their suits which still
showed the creases of long hanging.  These men lived too far out for
their children to make the daily journey into school.  Their land
sprawled down to the banks of the Tugela or across the plateau halfway
to Pietermaritzburg.

Waite stopped the buggy, climbed down and loosened the harness on his
horses and Sean jumped from the outside seat to the ground and ran to
the nearest bunch of boys.  Waite walked across to the men; their ranks
opened for him, they smiled their welcomes and in turn reached for his
right hand.  Garrick sat alone on the front seat of the buggy, his leg
stuck out stiffly in front of him and his shoulders hunched as though he
were trying to hide.

After a while Waite glanced back over his shoulder.  He saw Garrick
sitting alone and he made as if to go to him, but stopped immediately.
His eyes quested among the swirl of small bodies until they found Sean.
Sean!

Sean paused in the middle of an animated discussion.  Yes, Pa.  Give
Garry a hand with his case.  Aw, gee, Pa, I'm talking Sean!  Waite
scowled with both face and voice.  All right, I'm going.  Sean hesitated
a moment longer and then went back to the buggy.  Come on, Garry.  Pass
the cases down. Garrick roused himself and climbed awkwardly over the
back of the seat. He handed the luggage down to Sean who stacked it
beside the wheel, then turned to the group that had followed him across.
Karl, you carry that.  Dennis, take the brown bag.  Don't drop it, men
it's got four bottles of jam in it.  Sean issued his instructions.  Come
on, Garry.  They started off towards the hostel and Garrick climbed down
from the buggy and limped quickly after them.

know what, Sean?  said Karl loudly.  Pa let me start using his rifle.
Sean stopped dead, and then more with hope than conviction, He did not!
He did, Karl said happily.  Garrick caught up with them and they all
stared at Karl.  How many shots did you have?  asked someone in an awed
voice.

Karl nearly said, Six, but changed it quickly.  Oh, lots, as many as I
wanted.  You'll get gun-shy, my Pa says if you start too soon you'll
never be a good shot.  I never missed once, flashed Karl.  Come on, said
Sean and started off once more, he had never been so jealous in his
life.  Karl hurried after him.  I bet you've never shot with a rifle,
Sean, I bet you haven't, hey?  Sean smiled mysteriously while he
searched for some new topic; he could see that Karl was going to kick
the subject to death.

From the veranda of the hostel a girl ran to meet him.

It's Anna, said Garrick.

She had long brown legs, skinny; her skirts fussed about them as she
ran.  Her hair was black, her face was small with a pointed chin. Hello,
Sean Sean grunted.  She fell in beside him, skipping to keep pace with
him.  Did you have a nice holiday?  Sean ignored her, always coming and
trying to talk to him, even when his friends were watching.  I've got a
whole tin of shortbread, Sean.  Would you like some?  There was a flash
of interest in Sean's eyes; he half turned his head towards her, for Mrs
Van Essen's shortbread was rightly famous throughout the district, but
he caught himself and kept grimly on towards the hostel.  Can I sit next
to you in class this term, Sean?  Sean turned furiously on her.  No, you
can't.  Now go away, I'm busy.  He went up the steps.  Ann, stood at the
bottom; she looked as though she was going to cry and Garrick stopped
shyly beside her.

You can sit next to me if you like, he said softly.

She glanced at him, looking down at his leg.  The tears cleared and she
giggled.  She was pretty.  She leaned towards him.

Peg-leg, she said and giggled again.  Garrick blushed so vividly, and
suddenly his eyes watered.  Anna put both hands to her mouth and giggled
through them, then she turned and ran to join her friends in front of
the girls, section of the hostel.  Still blushing, Garrick went up the

steps after Sean; he steadied himself on the banisters.

Friulein stood at the door of the boys, dormitory.  Her steel-rimmed
spectacles and the iron grey of her hair gave her face an exaggerated
severity, but this was relieved by the smile with which she recognized
Sean.

JAh, my Sean, you have come.  What she actually said was, Ach, mein
Sean, you haf goM.  Hello, FrAulein.  Sean gave her his number one very
best smile.  Again you have grown, FrAulein measured him with her eyes.
All the time you grow, already you are the biggest boy in the school.
Sean watched her warily, ready to take evasive action if she attempted
to embrace him as she did sometimes when she could no longer contain her
feelings.  Sean's blend of charm, good looks and arrogance had
completely captured her Teutonic heart.

Quickly, you must unpack.  school is just now starting She turned her
attention to her other charges and Sean, with relief, led his men
through into the dormitory.

Pa says that next weekend I can use his rifle for hunting, not just
targets, Karl steered the conversation back.

Dennis, put Garry's case on his bed.  Sean pretended not to hear.

There were thirty beds arranged along the walls, each with a locker
beside it.  The room was as neat and cheerless as a prison or a school.
At the far end a group of five or six boys sat talking.  They looked up
as they came in but no greetings were exchanged, they were the
opposition.

Sean sat down on his bed and bounced experimentally, it was hard as a
plank, Garrick's peg thumped as he walked down the dormitory and Ronny
Pye, the leader of the opposition, whispered something to his friends
and they all laughed, watching Garrick.  Garrick blushed again and sat
down quickly on his bed to hide his leg.

I guess I'll shoot duiker first before Pa lets me shoot kudu or bushbuck
Karl stated and Sean frowned.

What's the new teacher like?  he asked.  He looks all right one of the
others answered.  Jimmy and I saw him at the station yesterday.  He's
thin and got a mustache.  He doesn't smile much.  I suppose next
holiday Pa will take me shooting across the Tugela, Karl said
aggressively.  I hope he's not too keen on spelling and things, Sean
declared.  I hope he doesn't start all that decimal business again, like
old Lizard did.  There was a round of agreement and then Garrick made
his first contribution.  Decimals are easy.

There was a silence while they all looked at him.

I might even shoot a lion, said Karl.

There was a single schoolroom to accommodate the youngest upwards of
both sexes.  Double desks; on the walls a few maps, a large set of
multiplication tables and a picture of Queen Victoria.  From the dais Mr
Anthony Clark surveyed his new pupils.  There was a hushed anticipation;
one of the girls giggled nervously and Mr Clark's eyes sought the sound,
but it stopped before he found it.  It is my unfortunate duty to attempt
your education, he announced.  He wasn't joking.  Long ago his sense of
vocation had been swamped by an intense dislike for the young: now he
taught only for the salary.  It is your no more pleasant duty to submit
to this with all the fortitude you can muster, he went on, looking with
distaste at their shining faces.  What's he saying?  whispered Sean
without moving his lips.

Shh, said Garrick.

Mr Clark's eyes swivelled quickly and rested on Garrick.  He walked
slowly down the aisle between the desks and stopped beside him; he took
a little of the hair that grew at Garrick's temple between his thumb and
his forefinger and jerked it upwards.  Garrick squeaked and Mr Clark
returned slowly to his dais.  We will now proceed.  Standard Ones kindly
open your spelling books at page one.  Standard Twos turn to page
fifteen.  .  .  .  He went on allocating their work.  Did he hurt you?
breathed Sean.  Garrick nodded almost imperceptibly and Sean conceived
an immediate and intense hatred for the man.  He stared at him.

Mr Clark was a little over thirty years old, thin, and his tight
three-piece suit emphasized this fact.  He had a pale face made sad by
his drooping mustache, and his nose was upturned to such a degree that
his nostrils were exposed; they pointed out of his face like the muzzle
of a double-barrelled shotgun.  He lifted his head from the list he held
in his hand and aimed his nostrils straight at Sean.  For a second they
stared at each other.  Trouble, thought Mr Clark; he could pick them
unerringly.

Break him before he gets out of control, You, boy, what's your name?

Sean turned elaborately and looked over his shoulder.

When he turned back there was a little colour in Mr Clark's cheeks.
Stand up.  Who, me?  Yes, you.

Sean stood.  What's your name?  Courtney.  Sir!  Courtney, sir.  They
looked at each other.  Mr Clark waited for Sean to drop his eyes but he
didn't.  Big trouble, much bigger than I thought, he decided and said
aloud, All right, sit down.  There was an almost audible relaxation of
tension in the room.  Sean could sense the respect of the others around
him; they were proud of the way he had carried it off.  He felt a touch
on his shoulder.  It was Anna, the seat behind him was as close as she
could sit to him.  Ordinarily her presumption would have annoyed him,
but now that small touch on his shoulder added to his glow of
self-satisfaction.

An hour passed slowly for Sean.  He drew a picture of a rifle in the
margin of his spelling book then rubbed it out carefully, he watched
Garrick for a while until his brother's absorption with his work
irritated him.

Swat, he whispered, but Garrick ignored him.

Sean was bored.  He shifted restlessly in his seat and looked at the
back of Karl's neck, there was a ripe pimple on it.  He picked up his
ruler to prod it.  Before he could do so Karl lifted his hand as if to
scratch his shoulder but there was a scrap of paper between his fingers.
Sean put down the ruler and surreptitiously reached for the note.

He held it in his lap, on it was written one word.

Mosquitoes Sean grinned.  Sean's imitation of a mosquito was one of the
many reasons why the previous schoolmaster had resigned.  For six months
old Lizard had believed that there were mosquitoes in the room, then for
the next six months he had known there were not.  He had tried every
ruse he could think of to catch the culprit, and in the end it had got
him. Every time the monotonous hum began the tic in the corner of his
mouth became more noticeable.

Now Sean cleared his throat and started to hum.

Instantly the room was tense with suppressed laughter.

Every head, including Sean's, was bent studiously over a book.  Mr
Clark's hand hesitated in writing on the blackboard but then went on
again evenly.

It was a clever imitation; by lowering and raising the volume Sean gave
the effect of an insect moving about the room.  A slight trembling at
his throat was the only sign that he was responsible.

Mr Clark finished writing and turned to face the room.

Sean did not make the mistake of stopping, he allowed the mosquito to
fly a little longer before settling.

Mr Clark left his dais and walked down the row of desks furthest from
Sean.  Once or twice he paused to check the work of one of his pupils.
He reached the back of the room and moved across to Sean's row.  He
stopped at Anna's desk.

It is unnecessary to loop your L's like that, he told her.Let me show
you.  He took her pencil and wrote, You see what I mean.  To show off
when writing is as bad as showing off in your everyday behaviour.  He
handed her back her pencil and then pivoting on one foot he hit Sean a
mighty crack across the side of the head with his open hand.  Sean's
head was knocked sideways and the sound of the blow was very loud in the
quiet room.

There was a mosquito sitting on your ear, said Mr Clark.

in the following two years Sean and Garrick made the change from child
to young manhood.  It was like riding a strong current, being swept with
speed along the river of life.

There were parts of the river that flowed steadily: Ada was one of
these.  Always understanding, with the ability to give her understanding
expression, unchanging in her love for her husband and the family she
had taken as her own.

Waite was another.  A little more grey in his hair but big as ever in
body, laugh and fortune.

There were parts of the river that ran faster: There were landmarks
along the course of the river.  Some of them small as a pile of rocks in
shallow water: Some of the landmarks were big as headlands: And at the
end the river plunged over the last waterfall and swept them into the
sea.  of manhood.

Garrick's reliance on Sean.  He needed him more strongly each month that
passed, for Sean was his shield.

if Sean was not there to protect him when he was threatened, then he
used his final refuge: he crawled back into himself, into-the warm dark
mists of his mind.

They went to steal peaches: the twins, Karl, Dennis and two others.
There was a thick hedge around Mr Pye's orchard and the peaches that
grew on the other side of it were as big as a man's fist.  They were
sweet as honey but tasted even sweeter when taken on the plunder
account.

You reached the orchard through a plantation of wattle trees.  Don't
take too many off one tree!  Sean ordered.  Old Pye will notice it as
sure as anything.

They came to the hedge and Sean found the hole.  Garry, you stay here
and keep cats for us.  If anyone comes give a whistle.  Garrick tried
not to show his relief, he had no stomach for the expedition.

Sean went on.  We'll pass the peaches out to you, and don't eat any
until we're finished.  Why doesn't he come with us?  asked Karl.

"Cause he can't run, that's why.  If he gets caught they'll know who the
rest of us are for sure and we'll all get it Karl was satisfied.  Sean
went down on his hands and knees and crawled into the hole in the hedge
and one at a time the others followed him until Garrick was left alone.

He stood close to the hedge, drawing comfort from its protecting bulk.
The minutes dragged by and Garrick fidgeted nervously, they were taking
an awfully long time.

Suddenly there were voices, someone was coming through the plantation
towards him.  Panic beat up inside him and he shrank back into the
hedge, trying to hide;

the idea of giving a warning never even entered his head.

The voices were closer and then through the trees he recognized Ronny
Pye: with him were two of his friends.

Each of them was armed with a slingshot and they walked with their heads
thrown back, searching the trees for birds.

For a time it seemed they would not notice Garrick in the hedge; but
then, when they had almost passed, Ronny turned his head and saw him.
They stared at each other, ten paces apart, Garrick crouched against the
hedge and Ronny's expression of surprise slowly changing to one of
cunning.  He looked around quickly, to make sure that Sean was not
there.  It's old Hobble-dee-hoy, he announced and his friends came back
and stood on each side of him.  What're you doing, Peg-leg? Rats got
your tongue, Peg-leg?

No, termites got his leg!  , laughter aimed to hurt.  Talk to us,
Peg-leg.  Ronny Pye had ears that stood out on each side of his head
like a pair of fans.  He was small for his age which made him vicious
and his hair was ginger.  Come on.  Talk to us, Peg-leg.  Garrick
moistened his lips with his tongue, already there were tears in his
eyes.  Hey, Ronny, make him walk for us, like this.

the others gave a graphic imitation of Garrick's limp.

laughter, louder now, more confident and they closed in on him.

Garrick swung his head from side to side searching for an escape.  Your
brother's not here, crowed Ronny.  No good looking for him, Peg-leg.  He
caught a hold of Garrick's shirt and pulled him out of the hedge.

Show us how you walk.

Garrick plucked ineffectually at Ronny's hand.  Leave me, I'll tell
Sean.  I'll tell Sean unless you leave me.

All right, I'll leave you, agreed Ronny and with both hands shoved him
in the chest.  Don't come my way, go that way!  Garrick stumbled
backwards.

One of the others was ready for him.  Don't come my way, go that way and
pushed him in the back.  They formed a ring around him and kept him
staggering between them.  Go that way!  Go that way!  The tears were
streaked down his cheeks now.  Please, please stop.

, please, please, they mimicked him.

Then, with a rush of relief, Garrick felt the fluttering start behind
his eyes, their faces dimmed, he hardly felt their hands upon him.  He
fell and his face hit the ground, but there was no pain.  Two of them
stooped over him to lift him, and there was dirt mixed with the tears on
his cheeks.

Sean came through the hedge behind them; the front of his shirt bulged
with peaches.  For a second he crouched on his hands and knees while he
took in what was happening, then he came out of his crouch at a run.
Ronny heard him, dropped Garrick and turned.  You've been pinching Pa's
peaches, he shouted.  I'll tell Sean's fist hit him on the nose and he
sat down. Sean swung towards the other two but they were already
running, he chased them a few paces and then came back for Ronny, but he
was too late.  Ronny was dodging away between the trees holding his face
and his nose was bleeding onto his shirt.  Are you all right, Garry?
Sean knelt beside him, trying to wipe the dirt off his face with a
grubby handkerchief.

Sean helped him to his feet, and Garrick stood swaying slightly with his
eyes open but a remote and vacant smile on his lips.

Waite Courtney looked at Sean across the breakfast table at Theunis
Kraal.  The fork-load of egg and grilled gammon stopped on the way to
his mouth.  Turn your face towards the window, he commanded
suspiciously.  Sean obeyed.  What the hell is that on your face?

rWhat?  Sean ran his hand over his cheek.  When did you last bath? Don't
be silly, my dear.  Ada touched his leg under the table.  It isn't dirt,
it's whiskers.  Whiskers, are they?  Waite peered closely at Sean and
started to grin, he opened his mouth to speak and Ada knew instantly
that he was going to make a joke, one of those ponderous jokes of his,
as subtle as an enraged all-formed dinosaur, that would wound Sean deep
in his half-formed manhood.  Quickly she cut in, I think you should buy
him a razor, don't you, Waite?  Waite lost the thread of his joke, he
grunted and put the egg into his mouth.

I don't want to cut them, said Sean and flushed scarlet.

They'll grow quicker if you shave them a bit at first, Ada told him.

Across the table from her Garrick fingered his jowls wistfully.

Waite fetched them from school at the beginning of the December
holidays.  In the confusion of loading their cases onto the buggy and
shouting farewells to Friulein and to their friends, some of whom they
would not see for another six weeks, the twins did not notice that Waite
was acting strangely.

It was only later when the horses were heading for home at twice their
normal speed that Sean asked, What's the hurry, Pa?

You'll see, said Waite, and both Garrick and Sean looked at him with
sudden interest.  It had been an idle question of Sean's but Waite's
answer had them immediately intrigued.  Waite grinned at the bombardment
of questions but he kept his answers vague.  He was enjoying himself. By
the time they reached Theunis Kraal the twins were in a frenzy of
curiosity.

Waite pulled the horses up in front of the house and one of the grooms
ran to take the reins.  Ada was waiting on the veranda and Sean jumped
down and ran up the steps to her.  He kissed her quickly.  What's
happening?  he pleaded.  Pa won't tell us- but we know it's
something.Garrick hurried up the steps also.  Go on, tell us.  He caught
hold of her arm and tugged it.

I don't know what you're talking about, Ada laughed.  You'd better ask
your father again.

Waite climbed up after them, put one arm around Ada's waist and squeezed
her.

I don't know where they got this idea from, said Waite, but why not tell
them to go and have a look in their bedroom?  They might as well have
their Christmas presents a bit earlier this year.  Sean beat Garrick to
the lounge and was far in the lead by the time he reached the door of
their bedroom.

Wait for me, called Garrick desperately.  Please wait for me.  Sean
stopped in the doorway.

Jesus Christ, he whispered, they were the strongest words he knew.
Garrick came up behind him and together they stared at the pair of
leather cases that lay on the table in the middle of the room, long flat
cases, heavy polished leather with the corners bound in brass.

Rifles!  said Sean.  He walked slowly to the table as though he were
stalking the cases, expecting them at any moment to vanish.

Look!  Sean reached out to touch with one finger the gold lettering
stamped into the lid of the nearest case.  Our names on them even.  He
sprung the locks and lifted the lid.  In a nest of green baize, perfumed
with gun oil, glistened a poem in steel and wood.

Jesus Christ, said Sean again.  Then he looked over his shoulder at
Garrick.  Aren't you going to open yours?

Garrick limped up to the table trying to hide his disappointment : he
had wanted a set of Dickens so badly.

In the river there were whirlpools:

The last week of the Christmas holidays and Garrick was in bed with one
of his colds.  Waite Courtney had gone to Pietermaritzburg for a meeting
of the Beef GrowersAssociation and there was very little work to do on
the farm that day.  After Sean had dosed the sick cattle in the
sanatorium paddock and ridden an inspection around the South section he
returned to the homestead and spent an hour talking to the stableboys,
then he drifted up to the house.  Garry was asleep and Ada was in the
dairy making butter.  He asked for and got an early lunch from Joseph
and ate it standing in the kitchen.  While he ate he thought over the
problem of how to fill the afternoon.  He weighed the alternatives
carefully.  Take the rifle and try for duiker along the edge of the
escarpment or ride to the pools above the White Falls and fish for eels.
He was still undecided after he had finished eating so he crossed the
yard and looked into the cool dimness of the dairy.

Ada smiled at him across the churn.  Hello, Sean, I suppose you want
your lunch.  Joseph gave it to me already, thanks, Ma.  Joseph has
already given it to me, Ada corrected mildly.  Sean repeated it after
her and sniffed the dairy smell, he liked the cheesy warmth of new
butter and the tang of the cow dung smeared on the earth floor.

What are you going to do this afternoon?

I came to ask you if you wanted venison or eels, I don't know if I want
to go fishing or shooting.  Eels would be nice, we could jelly -them and
have them for dinner tomorrow when your father comes home.  I'll get you
a bucket full.  He saddled the pony, hung his tin of worms on the saddle
and with his pole over his shoulder rode towards Lady-burg.  He crossed
the Baboon Stroorn bridge and turned off the road to follow the stream
up to the falls.

As he skirted the wattle plantation below the Van Essensplace he
realized he had made a mistake in picking this route.  Anna, with her
skirts held up to her knees, came pelting out from among the trees. Sean
kicked the pony into a trot and looked straight ahead.

Sean, hey, Sean.  She was ahead of him, running to intercept him; there
was no chance of evading her so he stopped the pony.

Hello, Sean.  She was panting and her face was flushed.  Hello, he
gruffed.  Where are you going?  There and back to see how far it is.
You're going fishing, may I come with you?  She smiled appealingly.  Her
teeth were small and white.  No, you talk too much; you'll frighten the
fish He started the pony.  Please, I'll be quiet; honest I will.  She
was running next to him.

No.  He flicked the reins and pulled away from her.  He rode for a
hundred yards then looked round and she was still following with her
black hair streaming out behind her.  He stopped the pony and she caught
up with him.

I knew you'd stop, she told him through her gasps.

Will you go home?  I don't want you following me.  honest I will I'll be
quiet as anything He knew she'd follow him right up to the top of the
escarpment and he gave in.  all right, but if you say a word, just one
single word, I'll send you home!  promise, help me up, please.  He
dragged her onto the pony's rump and she sat sideways with her arms
round his waist.  They climbed the escarpment.  The path ran close
beside the White Falls and they could feel the spray blowing off them
fine as mist.

Anna kept her promise until she was sure they'd gone too far for Sean to
send her back alone.  She started talking again.  When she wanted an
answer from him, which wasn't very often, she squeezed his waist and
Sean grunted .  Sean knee-haltered the pony, and left him among the
trees above the pools.  He hid his saddle and bridle in an ant-bear hole
and they walked down through the reeds to the water.  Anna ran ahead of
him and when he came out on to the sandbank she was throwing pebbles
into the pool.  Hey, stop that!  You'll frighten the fish, Sean shouted.
Oh.  I'm sorry.  I forgot.

She sat down and wriggled her bare toes into the sand.

Sean baited his hook and lobbed it out into the green water, the current
drifted his float in a wide circle under the far bank and they both
watched it solemnly.  It doesn't seem as though there are any fish here,
Anna said.  You've got to be patient, you can't expect to catch one
right away.  Anna drew patterns in the sand with her toes and five lutes
passed slowly.  Sean ssh!

Another five minutes.  Fishing's a silly old thing.  Nobody asked you to
come, Sean told her.  It's hot here!

Sean didn't answer The high reed beds shut out any breeze and the white
sand threw the sun's heat back at them.  Anna stood up and wandered
restlessly across the sand to the edge of the reeds.  She picked a
handful of the long spear-shaped leaves and plaited them together.

I'm bored, she announced.  Well, go home thenAnd I'm hot.  Sean pulled
his line in, inspected the worms and cast them out again.  Anna stuck
her tongue out at his back.

Let's have a swim, she suggested.

Sean ignored her.  He stuck the butt of his rod into the sand, pulled
his hat down to shield his eyes from the glare and leaned back on his
elbows with his legs stretched out in front of him.  He could hear the
sand crunching as she moved and then there was another silence.  He
started to worry what she was doing but if he looked around it would be
a show of weakness.

Girls!  he thought bitterly.

There was the sound of running feet just behind him.

He sat up quickly and started to turn.  Her white body flashed past him
and hit the water, with a smack like a rising trout.  Sean jumped up.
Hey, what're you doing?  I'm swimming laughed Anna, waist-deep in green
water, with her hair slicked wetly down her shoulders and over her
breasts.  Sean looked at those breasts, white as the flesh of an apple
and nippled in dark pink, almost red.  Anna dropped onto her back and
kicked the water white.

Voet sak, little fishes!  Scat, little fishes, she gurgled.  Hey, you
mustn't do that, Sean said halfheartedly.

He wanted her to stand up again, those breasts gave him a strange tight
feeling in his stomach, but Anna knelt with the water up to her chin. He
could see them through the water.  He wanted her to stand up.  It's
lovely!  Why don't you come in? She rolled on her stomach and ducked her
head under the water; the twin ovals of her bottom broke the surface and
Sean's stomach tightened again.  Are You coming in?  she demanded,
rubbing the water out of her eyes with both hands.  Sean stood
bewildered within a few seconds his feelings towards her had undergone a
major revolution.  He wanted very much to be in the water with all those
mysterious white bulges, but he was shy.  You're scared!  Come on, I
give you guts to come in She teased him.  The challenge pricked him.
I'm not scaredWell, come on then He hesitated a few seconds longer, then
he threw off his hat and unbuttoned his shirt.  He turned his back on
her while he dropped his pants then spun round and dived into the Pool,
thankful for the cover it gave him.  His head came out and Anna pushed
it under again.  He groped and caught her legs, straightened up and
threw her on her back.  He dragged her towards the shallows, where the
water wouldn't cover her. She was thrashing her arms to keep her head
out and screaming delightedly.  Sean's heels snagged a rock and he fell,
letting go of her; before he could recover she had leapt on him and
straddled his back.

He could have thrown her off, but he liked the feel of her flesh on his
back, warm through the cool water, slippery with wetness.  She picked up
a handful of sand and rubbed it into his hair.  Sean struggled gently.
She threw her arms round his neck and he could feel the whole length of
her body along his back.  The tightness in his stomach moved up into his
chest and he wanted to hold her.  He rolled over and reached for her but
she twisted out of his hands and dived back into the deep again.  Sean
splashed after her but she kept out of his reach, laughing at him.

At last they faced each other, still chin deep, and Sean was getting
angry.  He wanted to hold her.  She saw the change of his mood and she
waded to the bank, walked to his clothes and picked up his shirt.  She
dried her face on it, standing naked and unashamed, she had too many
brothers for modesty.  Sean watched the way her breasts changed shape as
she lifted her arms, he looked at the lines of her body and saw that her
once skinny legs had filled out; her thighs touched each other all the
way UP to the base of her belly and there she wore the dark triangular
badge of womanhood.  She spread the shirt out on the sand and sat down
upon it, then she looked at him.  Are you coming out?  He came out
awkwardly, coverig himself with his hands.  Anna moved over on the
shirt.  You can sit down, if you like He sat hurriedly and drew his
knees up under his chin.

He watched her from the corner of his eye.  There were little
goose-pimples round her nipples from the cold water.  She was aware that
he was watching her and she pulled back her shoulders, enjoying it. Sean
felt bewildered again, she was so clearly in control now.

Before she had been someone to growl at but now she was giving the
orders and he was obeying.  You've got hairs on your chest, Anna said,
turning to look at him.  Sparse and silky though they were, Sean was
glad that he had them.  He straightened out his legs.

And you're much bigger there than Frikkie.  Sean tried to Pull up his
knees again but she put her hand on his leg and stopped him.  Can I
touch you?  Sean tried to speak but his throat had closed and no sound
came through it.  Anne did not wait for an answer.

oh, look!  It's getting all cheeky, just like Caribou's.  Caribou was Mr
Van Essen's stallion.

I always know when Pa is going to let Caribou service a mare, he tells
me to go and visit Aunt Lettie.  I just hide in the plantation.  You can
see the paddock jolly well from the plantation.  Anna's hand was soft
and restless, Sean could think of nothing else.  Do you know that people
service, just like horses do?  she asked.

Sean nodded, he had attended the biology classes conducted by Messrs
Daffel and Company in the school latrines.  They were quiet for a while,
then Anna whispered.  Sean, would you service me?  I don't know how,
croaked Sean.

I bet horses don't either the first time, nor people for that matter,
Anna said.  We could find out.

They rode home in the early evening, Anna sitting up behind Sean, her
Arms tight round his waist and the side of her face pressed between his
shoulders.  He dropped her at the back of the plantation.

I'll see you at school on Monday, she said and turned to go.

Yes.  is it still sore?  No, and then, after a moment's thought, it
feels nice She turned and ran into the wattle trees.

Sean rode slowly home.  He was empty inside; it was a sad feeling and it
puzzled him.

rWhere are the fish?  asked Ada.  They weren't biting.  Not even one?
Sean shook his head and crossed the kitchen.  sean!

Yes, Ma.  Is something wrong?  No,- quick denial -'No, I'm fine.  He
slipped into the passage.

Garrick was sitting up in bed.  The skin around his nostrils was
inflamed and chapped; he lowered the book he was reading and smiled at
Sean as he came into the room.  Sean went to his own bed and sat on it.

Where have you been?  Garrick's voice was thick with cold.  Up at the
pools above the falls.  fishing?  Sean didn't answer, he leaned forward
on the bed with his elbows on his knees.  I met Anna, she came with me.
Garrick's interest -quickened at the mention of her name and he watched
Sean's face.  Sean still had that slightly puzzled expression.

Garry, he hesitated; he had to talk about it.  Garry, I screwed Anna
Garrick drew in his breath with a small hiss.  He went very pale, only
his nose was still red and sore-looking.

I mean, Sean spoke slowly as though he were trying to explain it to
himself, I mean really screwed her, just like we've talked about.  just
like.  .  .  .  He made a helpless gesture with his hands, unable to
find the words.  Then he lay back on the bed.

Did she let you?  Garrick's voice was almost a whisper.

She asked me to, Sean said.  It was slippery, sort of warm and slippery.

And then later, long after the lamp was out and they were both in bed,
Sean heard Garrick's soft movements in the darkness.  He listened for a
while until he was certain.  Garry!  He accused him loudly.  I wasn't, I
wasn't.  You know what Pa told us.  Your teeth will fall out and you'll
go mad.  I wasn't, I wasn't.  Garrick's voice was choked with his cold
and his tears.  I heard you, said Sean.  I was just scratching my leg.
Honestly, honestly, I was.

Mr -Clark had not been able to break Sean.  He had provoked instead a
bitter contest in which he knew himself to be slowly losing ground, and
now he was afraid of Sean.  He no longer made Sean stand, for Sean was
as tall as he was.  The contest had been on for two years; they had
explored each other's weaknesses and knew how to exploit them.

Mr Clark could not bear the sound of anyone sniffing; perhaps
subconsciously he took it as mockery of his own deformed nose.  Sean had
a repertoire that varied from a barely audible connoisseur
testing-the-bouquet-of-brandy sniff to a loud hawking in the back of his
throat.  Sorry, sir, I can't help it.  I've got a bit of a cold.  But
then, to even the score, Mr Clark had realized that Sean was vulnerable
through Garrick.  Hurt Garrick even a little and you were inflicting
almost unbearable agony on Sean.

It had been a bad week for Mr Clark.  his liver, weakened by persistent
bouts of malaria, had been troubling him.  He had suffered with a
bilious headache for three days now; there had been unpleasantness with
the Town Council about the terms on which his contract was to be
renewed; Sean had been in good sniffing form the day before and Mr Clark
had had about as much as he was prepared to take.

He came into the schoolroom and took his place on the dais; he let his
eyes move slowly over his pupils until they came to Sean.

, just let him start, thought Mr Clark.  Just let him start today and
I'll kill him.  The seating had been rearranged in the last two years.

Sean and Garrick had been separated and Garrick was now at the front of
the room where Mr Clark could reach him easily.  Sean was near the back.

English Readers, said Mr Clark.  Standard Ones turn to page five.
Standard Twos turn to Garrick sniffed wetly, hayfever Mr Clark shut his
book with a snap.

Damn you!  he said softly, and then, his voice rising, Damn you!  Now he
was shaking with rage, the edges of his nostrils were white and flared
open.

He came down from the dais to Garrick's desk.  Damn you!  Damn you, you
bloody little cripple, he screamed and hit Garrick across the face with
his open hand.  Garrick cupped both hands over his cheek and stared at
him.

You dirty little swine, Mr.  Clark mouthed at him.  Now you're starting
it too.  He caught a handful of Garrick's hair and pulled his head down
so that -his forehead hit the top of the desk.  I'll teach you.  By God,
I'll teach you!  I'll show you.  Bump.

I'll teach you Bump.

It took Sean that long to reach them.  He grabbed Mr Clark's arm and
pulled him backwards.  Leave him alone!

He didn't do anything!

Mr Clark saw Sean's face in front of him, he was passed all reason, the
face that had tormented him for two long years.  He bunched his fist and
lashed out at it.

Sean staggered back from the blow, the sting of it made his eyes water.
For a second he lay sprawled across one of the desks, watching Clark and
then he growled.

The sound sobered Clark, he backed away but only two paces before Sean
was on him.  Hitting with both hands, grunting with each punch, Sean
drove him against the blackboard.  Clark tried to break away but Sean
caught the collar of his shirt and dragged him back, the collar tore
half loose in his hand and Sean hit him again.  Clark slid down the wall
until he was sitting against it and Sean stood panting over him.

Get out, said Clark.  His teeth were stained pink by the blood in his
mouth and a little of it spilled out onto his lips.  His collar stood up
at a jaunty angle under one ear.

There was no sound in the room except Sean's breathing Get out, said
Clark again and the anger drained out of Sean leaving him trembling with
reaction.  He walked to the door.

YOU too, Clark pointed at Garrick.  Get out and don't come back!  Come
on, Garry, said Sean.

Garrick stood up from his desk and limped across to Sean and together
they went out into the school yard.

What are we going to do now?  There was a big red lump on Garrick's
forehead.

I suppose we'd better go home.  What about our things?  asked Garrick.

We can't carry all that, we'll have to send for them later.  Come on.
They walked out through the town and along the road to the farm.  They
had almost reached the bridge on the Baboon Stroorn before either of
them spoke again.

what do you reckon Pa will do?  asked Garrick.  He was only putting into
words the problem that had occupied them both since they left the
school.  Well, whatever he does, it was worth it.  Sean grinned.

Did you see me clobber him, hey?  Smackeroo, right in the chops.  You
shouldn't have done it, Sean.  Pa's going to kill us!

Me too and I didn't do anything You sniffed, Sean reminded him.

They reached the bridge and leaned over the parapet side by side to
watch the water.

How's your leg?  asked Sean.

It's sore, I think we should rest a bit.  All right, if you say so, Sean
agreed.

There was a long silence, then, I.  wish you hadn't done it, Sean.

Well, wishing isn't going to help.  Old Nose-Holes is as punched up as
he'll ever be and all we can do is think of something to tell Pa.  He
hit me, said Garrick.  He might have killed me.  Yes, agreed Sean
righteously, and he hit me too.  They thought about it for a while.

Perhaps we should just go away, suggested Garrick.

You mean without telling Pa?  The idea had attraction.

Yeah, we could go to sea or something, Garrick brightened.

You'd get seasick, you even get sick in a train.  Once more they applied
their minds to the problem.

Then Sean looked at Garrick, Garrick looked at Sean and as though by
agreement they straightened up and started off once more for Theunis
Kraal.

Ada was in front of the house.  She had on a wide-brimmed straw hat that
kept her face in shadow and over one arm she carried a basket of
flowers.  Busy with her garden, she didn't notice them until they were
halfway across the lawn and when she did she stood motionless.  She was
steeling herself, trying to get her emotions under control; from
experience she had learned to expect the worst from her stepsons and be
thankful when it wasn't as bad as that.

As they came towards her they lost momentum and finally halted like a
pair of clockwork toys running down.  Hello, said Ada.  Hello, they
answered her together.

Garrick fumbled in his pocket, drew out a handkerchief and blew his
nose.  Sean stared up at the steep Dutchgabled roof of Theunis Kraal as
though he had never seen it before.  Yes?  Ada kept her voice calm.

Mr Clark said we were to go home, announced Garrick.

rWhy?  Ada's calm was starting to crack.

Well?  Garrick glanced at Sean for support.  Sean's attention was still
riveted on the roof.

Well .  .  .  You see Sean sort of punched him in the head until he fell
down.  I didn't do anything.  Ada moaned softly, Oh, no!  She took a
deep breath.  all right.

Start at the beginning and give me the whole story.

They told it in relays, a garbled rush of words, interrupting each other
and arguing over the details.

When they had finished Ada said, You better go to your room.  Your
father is working in the home section today and he'll be back for his
lunch soon.  I'll try and prepare him a little.  The room had the cheery
atmosphere of a condemned cell.

How much do you reckon he'll give us?  asked Garrick.

I reckon until he gets tired, then he'll rest and give us some more,
Sean answered.

They heard Waite's horse come into the yard.  He said something to the
stable boy and they heard him laugh; the kitchen door slammed and there
was half a minute of suspense before they heard Waite roar.  Garrick
jumped nervously.

For another ten minutes they could hear Waite and Ada talking in the
kitchen, the alternate rumble and soothing murmur.  Then the tap of
Ada's feet along the passage and she came into the room.  Your father
wants to see you, he's in the study.  Waite stood in front of the
fireplace.  His beard was powdered with dust and his forehead as
corrupted as a ploughed land with the force of his scowl.

Come in, he bellowed when Sean knocked and they filed in and stood in
front of him.  Waite slapped his riding-whip against his leg and the
dust puffed out of his breeches.

Come here, he said to Garrick and took a handful of his hair.  He
twisted Garrick's face up and looked at the bruise on his forehead.

Hmm, he said.  He let go of Garrick's hair and it stood up in a tuft. He
threw the riding-whip on the stinkwood desk.

Come here, he said to Sean.  Hold out your hands no, Palms down The skin
on both hands was broken and one knuckle was swollen and puffy looking.

HMM" he said again.  He turned to the shelf beside the fireplace, took a
pipe out of the rack and filled it from the stone jar of tobacco.

You're a pair of bloody fools, he said, but I'll take a chance and start
you on five shillings a week all found.

Go and get your lunch .  .  .  we've got work to do this afternoon.

They stared at him a moment in disbelief and then back towards the door.

Sean.  Sean stopped, he knew it was too good to be true.  Where did you
hit him?

All over, Pa, anywhere I could reach That's no good, Waite said.  You
must go for the side of his head, here, he tapped the point of his jaw
with his pipe, and keep your fists closed tight or you'll, break every
finger in Your hands before you're much older.  Yes, Pa.

The door closed softly behind him and Waite allowed himself to grin.

They've had enough book learning anyway, he said aloud and struck a
match to his pipe; when it was drawing evenly he blew out smoke.

Christ, I wish I could have watched it.  That little penpusher will know
better than to tangle with my boy again Now Sean had a course along
which to race.  He was born to run and Waite Courtney led him out of the
stall in which he had fretted and gave him his lead.  Sean ran, unsure
of the prize, unsure of the distance; yet he ran with joy, he ran with
all his strength.

Before dawn, standing with his father and Garrick in the kitchen,
drinking coffee with hands cupped around the mug, Sean felt excitement
for each coming day.  Sean, take 7-ama and N'duti with you and make sure
there are no strays in the thick stuff along the river.  I'll only take
one herdboy, Pa, you'll need NIduti at the dipping tankAll right, then.
Try and meet us back at the tank before midday, we've got to push
through a thousand head today!

Sean gulped the remains of his coffee and buttoned his jacket.  I'll get
going then A groom held his horse at the kitchen door.  Sean slid his
rifle into the scabbard and went up into the saddle without putting his
foot into the steel; he lifted a hand and grinned at Waite, then he
swung the horse and rode across the yard.  The morning was still dark
and cold.

Waite watched him from the doorway.  So goddamned sure of himself,
thought Waite.  Yet he had the son he had hoped for and he was proud.

What you want me to do, Garrick asked beside him.

Well, there are those heifers in the sick paddock, Waite stopped.  No.
You'd better come with me, Garry.

Sean worked in the early morning when the sunlight was tinted as a stage
effect, all golden and gay, and the shadows were long and black.  He
worked in the midday sun and sweated in the heat; in the rain; in the
mist that swirled down grey and damp from the plateau; in the short
African twilight, and came home in the dark.  He loved every minute of
it.

He learned to know cattle.  Not by name, for only the trek oxen were
named, but by their size and colour and markings, so that by running his
eye over one of the herds he knew which animals were missing.

Zama, the old cow with the crooked horn.  Where is she?  Nkosi, no
longer the diminutive Nkosizana, little lord.  Nkosi, yesterday I took
her to the sick paddock, she has the worm in her eye.

He learned to recognize disease almost before it started.

The way a beast moved and held its head.  He learned the treatment for
them.  Screw worm, kerosene poured into the wound until the maggots fell
out like a shower of rice.

Ophthalmia, rinse the eye with permanganate.  Anthrax and quarter-evil,
a bullet and a bonfire for the carcass.

He delivered his first calf among the acacia trees on the bank of the
Tugela; he did it alone with his sleeves rolled up above the elbows and
the soapy feel of the slime on his hands.  Afterwards, while the mother
licked it and it staggered at each stroke of the tongue, Sean felt a
choking sensation in his throat.

All this was not enough to burn up his energy.  He played while he
worked.

Practising his horsemanship: swinging from the saddle and running beside
his horse, up again and over the other side, standing on the saddle at
full gallop and then opening his legs and smacking down on his backside,
his feet finding the stirrups without groping.

Practising with his rifle until he could hit a running jackal at a
hundred and fifty paces, cutting the fox-terriersized body in half with
the heavy bullet.

Then there was much of Garrick's work to do also.  I don't feel very
well, Sean.  What's, wrong?  My leg's sore, you know how it chafes if I
ride too much.  Why don't you go home, then?  Pa says I've got to fix
the fence round the Number Three dip tank.  Garrick leaned forward on
his horse to rub his leg giving a brave little smile.

You fixed it last week, Sean protested.  Yes, but the wires sort of came
loose again.  There was always a strange impermanency about any repairs
that Garrick effected.  Have you got the wire cutters?  and Garrick
produced them with alacrity from his saddle bag.

I'll do it, said Sean.

Hell, man, thanks a lot, and then a second's hesitation.  You won't tell
Pa, will you?  No, you can't help it if your leg's sore, and Garrick
rode home, sneaked through to his bedroom and escaped with Jim Hawkins
into the pages of Treasure Island.

From this work came a new emotion for Sean.  When the rain brought the
grass out in green and filled the shallow pans on the plateau with water
it was no longer simply a sign that the birdnesting season had begun and
that the fishing in the Baboon Stroorn would improve now it meant that
they could take cattle up from the valley, it meant that there would be
fat on the herds they drove into the sale pens at Lady-burg it meant
that another winter had ended and again the land was rich with life and
the promise of life.  This new emotion extended to the cattle also.  It
was a strong almost savage feeling of possession, It was in the late
afternoon.  Sean was sitting on his horse among trees, looking out
across open vleiland at the small herd that was strung out before him.
They were feeding, heads down, tails flicking lazily.  Between Sean and
the main body of cattle was a calf, it was three days old, still
pale-beige in colour and unsure of its legs.  It was trying them out,
running clumsy circles in the short grass.

From the herd a cow lowed and the calf stopped dead and stood with its
legs splayed awkwardly under it and its ears up.  Sean grinned and
picked up the reins from his horse's neck; it was time to start back for
the homestead.

At that moment he saw the lammergeyer: it had already begun its stoop at
the calf, dropping big and dark brown from the sky, wings cocked back
and its talons reaching for the strike.  The wind rustled against it
with the speed of its dive.

Sean sat paralysed and watched.  The eagle hit the calf and Sean heard
bone break, sharp as the snap of a dry stick, and then the calf was down
in the grass struggling feebly with the eagle crouched on top of it.

For a second longer Sean sat, dazed with the speed at which it had
happened.  Then hatred came on him.  It came with a violence that
twisted his stomach.  He hit his horse with his heels and it jumped
forward.  He drove it at the eagle and as he rode he screamed at it, a
high-pitched formless Sound, an animal expression of hate.

The eagle turned its head, looking at him sideways with one eye.  it
opened its great yellow beak and answered his scream, then it loosed its
claws from the calf and launched itself into the air.  its wings flogged
heavily and it moved low along the ground, gaining speed, lifting,
drawing away from Sean.

Sean pulled his rifle from the scabbard and hauled his horse back onto
its haunches.  He threw himself out of the saddle and levered open the
breech of the rifle.

The eagle was fifty yards ahead of him rising fast now.

Sean slipped a cartridge into the breech, closed it and brought the
rifle up in one continuous movement.

it was a difficult shot.  Moving away from him and rising, the beat of
its wings jerking its body.  Sean fired.

The rifle jumped back into his shoulder and the gunsmoke whipped away on
the wind, so he could watch the bullet connect.

The eagle collapsed in the air.  It burst like a pillow in a puff of
feathers and fell with its six-feet-long wings fluttering limply.
Before it hit the ground Sean was running.

It was dead when he reached it, but he reversed his rifle: holding it by
the muzzle, he swung the butt down from above his head onto its body. At
the third blow the butt of his rifle broke off, but he kept on hitting.
He was sobbing with fury.

When he stopped and stood panting the sweat was running down his face
and his body was trembling.  The eagle was a squashy mess of broken
flesh and feathers.

The calf was still alive.  The rifle was jammed.  Sean knelt beside it
with tears of anger burning his eyes and killed it with his
hunting-knife.

So strong was this new feeling that Sean could hate even Garrick.  He
did not hate for long, though.  Sean's anger and his hatred were quick
things, with flames like those of a fire in dry grass: hot and high but
soon burnt out and afterwardsihe ashes dead with no smouldering.

Waite was away when it happened.  For three consecutive years Waite
Courtney had been nominated for the chairmanship of the Beef Growers
Association and each time he had stood down.  He was human enough to
want the prestige the office carried with it, but he was also sensible
to the fact that his farm would suffer from his frequent absences.  Sean
and Garrick had been working for two years when the annual election of
office bearers came around again.

The night before Waite left for the meeting in Pietermaritzburg he spoke
to Ada.  I had a letter from Bernard last week, my dear, he was standing
before the mirror in their bedroom trimming his beard.  They insist that
I stand for the chair this year.  Very wise of them, said Ada.  They'd
have the best men if you did.  Waite frowned with concentration as he
snipped at his whiskers.  She believed so unquestioningly in him that he
seldom doubted himself.  Now looking at his face in the mirror he
wondered how much of his success was owed to Ada's backing.  You can do
it, Waite.  Not a challenge, not a question, but a calm statement of
fact.  When she said it he believed it.

He laid the scissors down on the chest of drawers and turned to her. She
sat cross-legged on the bed in a white nightgown, her hair was down in a
dark mass around her shoulders.  I think Sean can look after things
here, she said, and then quickly, and of course Garry.  Sean's learning
fast, Waite agreed.  Are you going to take the job?

Waite hesitated.  yes, he nodded and Ada smiled.

Come here, she held out her hands to him.

Sean drove Waite and Ada to the station at Lady-burg: at the last minute
Waite had insisted that she go with him, for he wanted her to be there
to share it with him.

Sean put their luggage into the coach and waited while they talked with
the small group of cattlemen who were going up to the meeting.  The
whistle blew and the travellers scattered to their compartments.  Ada
kissed Sean and climbed up.  Waite stayed a second longer on the
platform.  Sean, if you need any help go across to Mr Erasmus at Lion
Kop.  I'll be back on Thursday.  I won't need any help, Pa.  Waite's
mouth hardened.  Then you must be God, he's the only one who never needs
help, Waite said harshly.  Don't be a bloody fool, if you run into
trouble ask Erasmus.  He climbed up after Ada.  The train jerked,
gathered speed and ran out towards the escarpment.  Sean watched it
dwindle, then he walked back to the buggy. He was master of Theunis
Kraal and he liked the feeling.  The small crowd on the platform was
dispersing and out of it came Anna.  Hello, Sean.  She had on a green
cotton dress that was faded with washing, her feet were bare.  She
smiled with her small white teeth and watched his face.  Hello, Anna.
Aren't you going up to Pietermaritzburg?  No, I've got to look after the
farm , oh?

They waited in silence, uncomfortable before so many people.  Sean
coughed and scratched the side of his nose.  Anna, come on.  We've got
to get home.  One of her brothers called from in front of the ticket
office and Anna leaned towards Sean.

Will I see you on Sunday?  she whispered.

I'll come if I can.  But I don't know, I've got to look after the farm.
Please try, Sean.  Her face was earnest.  I'll be waiting for you, I'll
take some lunch and wait all day.  Please come, even if it's only for a
little while.  all right, I'll come.  Promise?  Promise.  She smiled with
relief.  I'll wait for you on the path above the waterfall.  She turned
and ran to join her family and Sean drove back to Theunis Kraal. Garrick
was lying on his bed reading.  I thought Pa told you to get on with the
branding of those new cattle we bought on Wednesday Garrick laid down
his book and sat up.  I told Zama to keep them in the kraal until you
got backPa told you to get on with it.  You can't keep them there all
day without feed or water.  I hate branding, muttered Garrick.  I hate
it when they moo like that as you burn them, and I hate the stink of
burning hair and skin, it gives me a headache, Well someone's got to do
it.  I can't, I've got to go down and mix new dip into the tanks for
tomorrow.  Sean was losing his temper.  Hell, Garry, why are you always
so damn helpless?  I can't help it, I can't help it if I've only got one
leg Garrick was close to tears again.  The reference to his leg had the
desired effect, Sean's temper steadied instantly.  I'm sorry, Sean
smiled his irresistible smile.  I tell you what.  I'll do the branding,
you fix the tanks.  Get the drums of dip loaded onto the Scotch cart,
take a couple of the stable boys with you to help.  Here are the keys of
the storeroom.  He tossed the bunch onto the bed beside Garrick.  You
should be finished before dark.

At the door he turned.  Garry, don't forget to do all six tanks, not
just the ones near the house.  So Garrick loaded six drums of dip onto
the Scotch cart and went off down the hill.  He was home well before
dark.  The front of his breeches was stained with the dark, tarry
chemical and some of it had soaked into the leather of his single
riding-boot.  As he came out of the kitchen into the passage Sean
shouted from the study.  Hey, Garry, did you finish them?  Garrick was
startled.  Waite's study was a sacred place, the inner sanctum of
Theunis Kraal.  Even Ada knocked before going into it and the twins went
there only to receive punishment.  Garrick limped along the passage and
pushed open the door.

Sean sat with his boots on top of the desk and his ankles neatly
crossed.  He leaned back in the swivel chair.

Pa will kill you, Garrick's voice was shaky.

Pa's in Pietermaritzburg, said Sean.

Garrick stood in the doorway and looked around the room.  It was the
first time he had really seen it.  On every previous visit he had been
too preoccupied with the violence to come and the only item in the room
he had studied closely was the seat of the big leather easy chair as he
bent over the arm of it and exposed his backside to the sjambok.

Now he looked at the room.  The walls were panelled to the ceiling, the
wood was dark yellow and polished.

The ceiling was fancy plaster, in a pattern of oak leaves.

A single lamp hung from the centre of it on a brass chain.

You could walk into the fireplace of brown chipped stone and there were
logs laid ready for the match.

Pipes and tobacco jar on the ledge beside the fireplace, guns in a rack
along one wall, a bookcase of green and maroon leather bound volumes:
encyclopaedias, dictionaries, books on travel and farming, but no
fiction.  There was an oil painting of Ada on the wall opposite the
desk, the artist had captured a little of her serenity: she wore a white
dress and carried her hat in her hand.  A magnificent set of Cape
buffalo horns above the fireplace dominated the room with their great
crenellated bosses and wide sweep to the tips.

It was a man's room, with loose dog-hairs on the Ieopard-skin rugs, and
the presence of the man strongly there - it even smelled of Waite.  It
was as distinctively his as the tweed coat and Terai hat that hung
behind the door.

Next to where Sean sat the cabinet was open and a bottle of brandy stood
on top of it.  Sean had a goblet in his hand.

You're drinking Pa's brandy, Garrick accused.  It's not bad Sean lifted
the glass and inspected the liquid, he took a careful sip and held it in
his mouth, preparing himself to swallow.  Garrick watched him with awe
and Sean tried not to blink as it went down his throat.  Would you like
some?  Garrick shook his head and the fumes came up Sean's nose and his
eyes ran.

Pa will kill you!  said Garrick.  Sit down, ordered Sean, his voice
husky from the brandy.  I want to work out a plan for the time Pa's
away.  Garrick advanced on the armchair, but before he reached it he
changed his mind, the associations were too painful.  He went to the
sofa instead and sat on the edge.  Tomorrow, Sean held up one finger,
we'll dip all the cattle in the home section.  I've told Zama to start
bringing them early, you did do the tanks, didn't you?

Garrick nodded and Sean went on.  On Saturday Sean held up his second
finger, we'll burn fire breaks along the top of the escarpment.  The
grass is dry as hell up there.  You take one gang and start near the
falls, I'll ride down to the other end, near Fredericks Kloof.

On Sunday.  .  .  Sean said and then paused.  On Sunday Anna.  I want to
go to church on Sunday, said Garrick quickly.  That's fine, agreed Sean.
You go to church.  Are you going to come?  No, said Sean.

Garrick looked down at the leopard-skin rugs that covered the floor, he
didn't try to persuade Sean for Anna would be at the service.  Perhaps
afterwards, if Sean wasn't there to distract her, he could drive her
home in the buggy.  He started a day dream and wasn't listening as Sean
went on talking.

In the morning it was full daylight by the time Sean reached the dip
tank.  He pushed a small herd of stragglers before him and they came out
through the trees and stirrup high grass into the wide area of trampled
earth around the tank.  Garrick had started running cattle through the
dip and there were about ten head already in the draining kraal at the
far end, standing wet and miserable, their bodies dark with dip.

Sean drove his herd through the gates of the entrance kraal into the
solid pack of brown bodies that were already there.  N'duti slid the
bars of the gate back into place to hold them.  I see you, Nkosi.  I see
you, N'duti.  Plenty of work today!  Plenty, agreed N'duti, always
plenty of work.  Sean rode around the kraal and tied his horse beneath
one of the trees, then walked across to the tank.  Garrick was standing
by the parapet and leaning against one of the columns that supported the
roof.  Hello, Garry, how's it going? Fine.  Sean leaned over the parapet
next to Garry.  The tank was twenty feet long and eight wide, the
surface of the liquid was below ground level.  Around the tank was a low
wall and over it a roof of thatch to prevent rain diluting the contents.

The herdboys drov, 2 the cattle up to the edge and each beast hesitated
on the brink.  Elyapi, Elyapi, screamed the herdboys and the push of
bodies behind it forced it to jump.  If one was stubborn, Zama leaned
over the railing of the kraal, grabbed its tail and bit it.

Each beast jumped with its nose held high and its forefeet gathered up
under its chest; it disappeared completely under the oil black surface
and came up again swimming frantically along the tank until its hooves
touched the Sloping bottom at the far end and it could lumber up into
the draining kraal.

Keep them moving, Zama, shouted Sean.

Zama grinned at him and bit with big white teeth into a reluctant tail.

The ox was a heavy animal and it splashed a drop up onto Sean's cheek as
he leaned over the wall.  Sean did

not bother to wipe it off, he went on watching.  Well, if we don't get
top prices for this lot at the next sale then the buyers don't know good
cattle, he said to Garry.

They're all right, agreed Garry.  All right?  They're the fattest oxen
in the district.  Sean was about to enlarge on the theme, but suddenly
he was aware of discomfort, the drop of dip was burning his cheek.  He
wiped it off with his finger and held it to his nose; the smell of it
stung his nostrils.  For a second he stared at it stupidly and the spot
on his cheek burned like fire.

He looked up quickly.  The cattle in the draining kraal were milling
restlessly and as he looked one of them staggered sideways and bumped
against the railing.

Zama!  shouted Sean, and the Zulu looked up.  Stop them.  For God's sake
don't let any more through.  There was another ox poised on the edge.
Sean snatched off his hat and jumped up onto the wall, he beat the ox in
the face with his hat trying to drive it back, but it sprang out into
the tank.  Sean caught hold of the railing and stepped into the space it
had left on the edge of the tank.  Stop them, he shouted.  Get the bars
in, don't let any more through.  He spread his arms across the entrance,
holding onto the railing on each side, kicking at the faces of the
cattle in front of him.  Hurry, djunn you, get the bars in, he shouted.
The oxen pressed towards him, a wall of homed heads.  Pushed forward by
those behind and held back by Sean they started to panic; one of them
tried to jump over the railing.

As it swung its head its horn raked Sean's chest, up across the ribs,
ripping his shirt.

Behind him Sean felt the wooden bars being dropped into place, blocking
the entrance to the tank, and then Zamma's hands on his arm pulling him
up out of the confusion of horns and hooves.  Two of the herdboys helped
him over the railing and Sean shrugged their hands off as soon as he was
on the ground.

Come on, he ordered and ran to his horse.  Nkosi, you are bleeding.
Blood had splotched the front of Sean's shirt but he felt no pain.  The
cattle that had been through the dip were now in terrible distress. They
charged about the kraal, bellowing pitifully; one of them fell and when
it got to its feet again its legs were shaking so that it could barely
stand.

The river, shouted Sean, get them down to the river.

Try and wash it off.  Zama, open the gate.  The Baboon Stroom.  was a
mile away.  One of the oxen died before they could get them out of the
kraal, another ten before they reached the river.  They died in
convulsions, with their bodies shuddering and their eyes turned back
into their heads.

Sean drove those that remained down the bank into the river.  The water
was clear and as each beast went into it, the dip washed off in a dark
brown cloud.  Stand here, Don't let them come out.  Sean swam his horse
to the far bank and turned back the oxen that were trying to climb it.
Nkosi, one is drowning, called N'duti and Sean looked across the river.
A young ox was in convulsions in the shallows: its head was under water
and its feet thrashed the surface.

Sean slid off his horse and waded out to it.  The water was up to his
armpits.  He tried to hold its head out and drag it to the bank.  Help
me, N'duti, he shouted, and the Zulu came into the river.  it was a
hopeless task: each time the ox lunged it pulled them both under with
it.  By the time they got the ox to the bank it was dead.

Sean sat in the mud beside the body of the ox: he was exhausted and his
lungs ached with the water he had breathed.  Bring them out, Zama, he
gasped.  The survivors were standing in the shallows or swimming in
aimless circles.  How many? asked Sean.  How many are dead?

Two more while you were in the water.  Altogether thirteen, Nkosi.
Where's my horse?  It ran, and I let it go.  It will be back at the
house Sean nodded.  Bring them up to the sick paddock.  We must watch
them for a few days.  Sean stood up and started walking back towards the
dip tank.  Garrick was gone, and the main herd was still in the kraal.
Sean opened the gate and turned them loose.

He felt better by then, and as his strength returned with it came his
anger and his hatred.  He started along the track towards the homestead.
His boots squelched as he walked and he hated Garrick more strongly with
each step.  Garrick had mixed the dip.  Garrick had killed his cattle
and Sean hated him, As Sean came up the slope below the house he saw
Garrick standing in the yard.  Garrick saw him also; he disappeared into
the kitchen and Sean started to run.  He went in through the kitchen
door and nearly knocked down one of the servants, Garrick, shouted Sean.
Damn it, where are you?  He searched the house; once quickly and then
again thoroughly.  Garrick was gone, but the window of their bedroom was
open and there was a dusty boot print on the sill.  Garrick had gone
over it.  You bloody coward, howled Sean and scrambled out after him. He
stood a second, with his head swinging from side to side and his fists
opening and closing.  I'll find out, he howled- again.  I'll find you
wherever you're hiding.  He started across the yard towards the stables
and halfway there he saw the door of the dairy was closed.  When he
tried it he found it was locked from inside. Sean backed away from it
and then charged it with his shoulder, the lock burst and the door flew
open.  Sean skidded across the room and came up against the far wall.
Garrick was trying to climb out of the window, but it was small and high
up.  Sean caught him by the seat of his pants and pulled him down.
Whatcha do to the dip, hey?  Whatcha do to it!  He shouted in Garrick's
face.

I didn't mean to.  I didn't know it'd kill them.  Tell me what you did.
Sean had hold of the front of his shirt and was dragging him towards the
door.

I didn't do anything.  Honest I didn't know, i'm going to hammer you
anyway, so you might as well tell me.  Please, Sean, I didn't know. Sean
jammed Garrick against the doorway and held him there with his left
hand, his right hand he drew back with the fist bunched.  No, Sean.
Please, no.  And suddenly the anger was gone from Sean, his hands sank
back to his sides.

All right, just tell me what you did, he said coldly.

His anger was gone but not his hatred.  I was tired and it was getting
late and my leg was hurting, whispered Garrick, and there were still
four more tanks to do, and I knew you'd check that all the drums were
empty, and it was so late .  .  .  and .  .  .

And?  And so I emptied all the dip into the one tank .  .  .  but I
didn't know it would kill them, truly I didn't Sean turned away from him
and started walking slowly back towards the house.  Garrick stumbled
after him.

I'm sorry, Sean, honest I'm sorry.  I didn't know that.  .  .

Sean walked ahead of him into the kitchen and slammed the door in his
face.  He went through into Waite's study.  From the bookshelf he lifted
down the heavy leather-covered stock register and carried it to the
desk.

He opened the book, picked up a pen and dipped it.  For a moment he
stared at the page and then in the deathscolumn he wrote the number 13
and after it the wordsdip poisoning.  He pressed down so hard with the
pen that the nib cut the paper.

It took Sean and the herdboys all the rest of that day and the next to
bale out the tank, refill it with clean water and mix in fresh dip.  He
saw Garrick only at meals and they didn't speak.

The next day was Sunday.  Garrick went into town early, for the church
service started at eight o'clock.  When he had gone Sean began his
preparations.  He shaved leaning close to the mirror and handling the
cut-throat gingerly, shaping his side burns and clearing the hair from
the rest of his face until his skin was smooth and freshlooking.  Then
he went through to the master-bedroom and helped himself to a generous
portion of his father's brilliantine, taking care to screw the lid back
on the bottle and replace it exactly as he had found it.  He rubbed the
brilliantine into his hair and sniffed its perfume appreciatively.  He
combed his hair over his forehead, parted it down the centre and
polished it into a gloss with Waite's silver-backed brushes.  Then a
clean white shirt, breeches worn only once before, boots as shiny as his
hair, and Sean was ready.

The clock on the mantelpiece in the lounge assured him that he was well
ahead of time.  To be exact, he was two hours early.  Eight o'clock now:
church didn't end until nine and it would be another hour before Anna
could escape from under the eyes of her family and reach the rendezvous
above the falls.  He settled down to wait.  He read the latest copy of
the Natal Farmer.  He had read it three times before for it was a month
old, and now even the excellent article on Stomach parasites in Cattle
and Sheep, had lost much of its punch.  Sean's attention wandered, he
thought about the day ahead and felt the familiar movement within his
breeches.  This necessitated a rearrangement for the breeches were tight
fitting.

Then fantasy palled; Sean was a doer not a thinker, and he went through
to the kitchen to solicit a cup of coffee from Joseph.  When he had
finished it, there was still half an hour to go.

The hell with it, said Sean and shouted for his horse.

He climbed the escarpment, letting his horse move diagonally up the
slope and at the top he dismounted and let it blow.  Today he could see
the course of the Tugela river out across the plain, it was a belt of
dark green.  He could count the roofs of the houses in Lady-burg and the
church spire, Popper clad, shone in the sunlight like a beacon fire.

He mounted again and rode along the edge of the plateau until he reached
the Baboon Stroom above the falls.

He followed it back and forded it at a shallow place, lifting his feet
up on the saddle in front of him to keep his boots dry.  He off-saddled
next to the pools and knee-haltered his horse, then he followed the path
until it dropped over the edge of the plateau into the thick forest that
surrounded the falls.  It was cool and damp in the forest with moss
growing on the trees, for the roof of leaves and creepers shut out the
sun.  There was a bottle-bird in the undergrowth.  Glug, glug glug, it
said, like water poured from a bottle, and its call was almost drowned
in the ceaseless thunder of the falls.

Sean spread his handkerchief on a rock beside the path, sat down on it
and waited.  Within five minutes he was fidgeting impatiently, within
half an hour he was grumbling aloud.  I'll count to five hundred.  .  .
.  If she hasn't come by then I'm not going to wait.  He counted and
when he reached the promised figure he stopped and peered anxiously down
the path.  There was no sign of Anna.  I'm not going to sit here all
day, he announced and made no effort to stand up.  A fat yellow
caterpillar caught his eye; it was on the trunk of a tree farther down
the slope.  He picked up a pebble and threw it.  It bounced off the tree
an inch above the caterpillar.  Close, Sean -encouraged himself and
stooped for another stone.  After a while he had exhausted the supply of
pebbles around his feet and the caterpillar was still moving leisurely
up the trunk.  Sean was forced to go out on a foraging expedition for
more pebbles.  He came back with both hands full and once more took up
his position on the rock.  He piled the pebbles between his feet and
reopened the bombardment.  He aimed each throw with the utmost
concentration and with his third pebble he hit squarely and the
caterpillar popped in a spurt of green her.  You shouldn't say things
like that about your Pa.

You should respect him.  And Anna had looked at him calmly and asked,
Why?  which was a difficult question.  But now she changed the subject.
Do you want to eat yet?  No, said Sean and reached for her. She fought
back, shrieking demurely until Sean held her down and kissed her.  Then
she lay quietly, answering his kisses.  If you stop me now I'm going to
get mad, whispered Sean and deliberately unfastened the top, button of
her dress.  She watched his face with solemn eyes and her hands stayed
on his shoulders until he had undone her blouse down to the waist and
then with her fingers she traced the bold black curves of his eyebrows.
No, Sean, I won't stop you.  I want to as well, I want to as much as you
do.  There was so much to discover and each thing was strange and
wonderful and they were the first to find it.

The way the muscles stood out down the side of his chest beneath his
arms and yet left a place where she could see the outline of his ribs.
The texture of her skin, smooth and white with the faint blue suggestion
of veins beneath.

The deep hollow down the centre of his back, pressing her fingers into
it she could feel his spine.  The down on her cheeks, so pale and fine
he could see it only in the sunlight.  The way their lips felt against
each other and the tiny flutter of tongues between.  The smell of their
bodies, one milky warm and the other musky and vigorous.  The hair that
covered his chest and grew thicker under his arms, and hers: startlingly
dark against white skin, a small silky nest of it.  Each time there was
something new to find and greet with soft sounds of delight.

Now, kneeling before her as she lay with her head thrown back and her
-arms half-raised to receive him, Sean suddenly bowed his head and
touched her with his mouth.  The taste of her was clean as the taste of
the sea.

Her eyes flew open.  Sean, no, you mustn't, oh no, you mustn't.  There
were lips within lips and a bud as softly resilient as a tiny green
grape.  Sean found it with the tip of his tongue.  Oh, Sean, you can't
do that.  Please, please, please. And her hands were in the thick hair
at the back of his head holding him there.  I can't stand it any more,
come over me .  .  . quickly, quickly, Sean.  Filling.  like a sail in a
hurricane, swollen and hard and tight, stretched beyond its limit until
it burst and was blown to shreds in the wind and was gone.  Everything
gone.  The wind and the sail, the tension and the wanting, all gone.
There was left only the great nothingness which is peace.  Perhaps a
kind of death; perhaps death is like that.  But, like death, not an
ending, for even death contains the seeds of resurrection.  So they came
back from peace to a new beginning slowly at first and then faster until
they were two people again.  Two people on a blanket among reeds with
the sunlight white on the sand about them.  Each time it's better and
better, isn't it, Sean?  Ah! Sean stretched, arching his back and
spreading his arms.  Sean, you do love me, don't you?  Sure.  Sure I
love you.  I think you must love me to have done, - she hesitated to do
what you did. I just said so, didn't I?  Sean's attention wandered to
the basket.  He selected an apple and polished it on the blanket.  Tell
me properly.  Hold me tight and tell me.  Hell, Anna, how many times
have I got to say it?

Sean bit on the apple.  Did you bring any of your Mais shortbread?

it was coming on night when Sean got back to Theunis Kraal.  He turned
his horse over to one of the grooms and went into the house.  His body
tingled from the sun, and he felt the emptiness and sadness of
after-love, but it was a good sadness, like the sadness of old memories.

Garrick was in the dining-room, eating alone.  Sean walked into the room
and Garrick looked up nervously.  Hello, Garry. Sean smiled at him and
Garrick was momentarily dazzled by it.  Sean sat down in the chair
beside him and punched him lightly on the arm.

Have you left any for me?  His hatred was gone.  There's plenty, Garrick
nodded eagerly.  Try some of the potatoes, they're jolly good.  They say
the Governor sent for your Pa while he was in Pietermaritzburg.  Had him
alone for nearly two hours.  Stephen Erasmus took the pipe out of his
mouth and spat down onto the railway lines.  In his brown homespun and
veldschoen he did not look like a rich cattleman.  Well, we don't need a
prophet to tell us what it was about, do we?  No, sir, Sean agreed
vaguely.  The train was late and Sean wasn't listening.  He had an entry
in the stock register to explain to his father and he was mentally
rehearsing his speech.  Ja, we know what it's about all right.  Old
Erasmus put the pipe back between his teeth and spoke around it.  It's
been two weeks now since the British Agent was recalled from Cetewayo's
kraal at Gingindhlovu.  Liewe Here!  in the old days we'd have called
out the Commando long ago.  He packed his pipe, pushing down onto the
glowing tobacco with a calloused forefinger.  Sean noticed that the
finger was twisted and scarred by the trigger-guards of a hundred heavy
rifles.  You've never been on commando have you, Jong? No, sir.  About
time you did then, said Erasmus, about bledy time.

Up on the escarpment the train whistled and Sean started guiltily.

There she is.  Erasmus stood up from the bench on which they were
sitting and the station master came out from his office with a rolled
red flag in his hand.  Sean felt his stomach sink slowly until it
stopped somewhere just above his knees.

The train ran in past them, whooshing steam and brakewhining.  The
single passenger coach stopped precisely opposite the wooden platform.
Erasmus came forward and took Waite's hand.  Goeie More, Steff.  More,
Waite.  They tell me you're the new chairman now.  Well done, man.
Thanks.  Did you get my telegram?  Waite spoke in Afrikaans.  Ja.  I got
it.  I told the others, we'll all be out at Theunis Kraal tomorrow.
Good, Waite nodded.  You'll stay for lunch, of course.

We've got a lot to talk about.  Is it what I think it is?  Erasmus
grinned wickedly.  The tobacco had stained his beard yellow around his
mouth and his face was brown and wrinkled.  I tell you all about it
tomorrow, Steff .  Waite winked at him, but in the meantime you'd better
get that old muzzle-loader of yours out of moth-balls.  They laughed,
one deep down and the other a rusty old laugh.  Grab the bags, Sean.
Let's get home.  Waite took Ada's Arm and they walked with Erasmus to
the buggy.  Ada had on a new dress, blue with leg o'mutton sleeves and a
picture hat.  she looked lovely but a little worried as she listened to
them talking.  It's strange how women can never face the prospect of war
with the same boyish enthusiasm as their men.  Sean!  Waite Courtney's
roar carried clearly from his study along the corridor and through the
closed door of the sitting-room.  Ada dropped her knitting into her lap
and her features set into an expression of unnatural calm.

Sean stood up from his chair.  You should have told him earlier, Garrick
said in a small voice.  You should have told him during lunchI didn't
get a chance.  Sean!  Another blast from the study.

What's happened now?  asked Ada quietly.  It's nothing, Ma.  Don't worry
about it Sean crossed to the door.  Sean, Garrick's stricken voice,
Sean, you won't, I mean you don't have to tell - He stopped and sat
hunched in his chair, his eyes full of desperate appeal.  It's all
right, Garry, I'll fix it.  Waite Courtney stood over the desk.  Between
his clenched fists the stock register lay open.  He looked up as Sean
came in and closed the door.  What's this?  He prodded the page with a
huge squaretipped finger.

Sean opened his mouth and then closed it again.  Come on.  I'm
listening.  Well, Pa, Well, Pa.  , he buggered. just tell me how you've
managed to massacre half the cattle on this farm in a little over a
week?  It's not half the cattle, it's only thirteen. Sean was stung by
the exaggeration.  Only thirteen, bellowed Waite, only thirteen.  God
Almighty, shall I tell you how much that is in cash? Shall I tell you
how much that is in hard work and time and worry?  I know, Pa.  You
know, Waite was panting.  Yes, you know everything. There's nothing
anyone can tell you, is there?  Not even how to kill thirteen ead o
prime oxen.  Pa -'Don't Pa me, by Jesus.  Waite slammed the heavy book
closed.  Just explain to me how you managed it.  What's

"dip poisoning"?  What the bloody hell is "dip poisoning"?

Did you give it to them to drink?  Did you stick it up their arses?  The
dip was too strong, said Sean.  And why was the dip too strong?  How
much did you put in?  Sean took a deep breath, I put in four drums.
There was silence and then Waite asked softly, How muchPFour drums.  Are
you mad?  Are you raving bloody madVI didn't think it would harm them.
His carefully rehearsed speech forgotten, Sean unconsciously repeated
the words he had heard from Garrick.  It.  was getting late and my leg
was -- Sean bit the sentence off and Waite stared at him, then the
confusion cleared from Ins face.

, Garry!  he said.  No, shouted Sean.  It wasn't him, I did it You're
lying to me.  Waite came round from behind the desk.  There was a note
of disbelief in his voice.  To his knowledge it was the first time it
had ever happened.

He stared at Sean and then his anger was back more violently than
before.  He had forgotten the oxen, it was the lie that concerned him
now.  By Christ, I'll teach you to tell the truth.  He snatched up his
sjambok from the desk.

Don't hit me, Pa, Sean warned him, backing away.

Waite threw up the'sjambok and swung it down overarm.

It hissed softly and Sean twisted away from it, but the tip of the lash
caught his shoulder.  Sean gasped at the pain and lifted his hand to it.
You lying little bastard!  shouted Waite and swung the whip sideways as
though he were scything wheat, and this time it curled around Sean's
chest under his uplifted arm.  it split his shirt like a razor cut and
the cloth fell away to expose the red ridged welt across His ribs and
around his backHere's some m'ore!  Waite lifted the siambok again and as
he stood with his arm thrown back and his body turned off balance he
knew he had made a mistake.  Sean was no longer clutching the whip
marks; his hands were held low and his fists were bunched.  At the
corners his eyebrows were lifted, giving an expression of satanical fury
to his face.  He was pale and his lips were drawn back tight, showing
his teeth.  His eyes, no longer blue but burning black, were on a level
with Waite's.  He's coming for me.  Waite's surprise slowed his
reflexes, he couldn't bring his whip-arm down before Sean was on him-.
Sean hit him, standing solidly on both feet, bringing the full weight of
his body into the punch, hurling it into the middle of Waite's exposed
chest.

Heart punched, strength oozing out of him, Waite staggered back against
the desk.  The siambok fell out of his hand and Sean went after him.
Waite had the sensation of being a beetle in a saucer of treacle: he
could see and think but he could barely move.  He saw Sean take three
quick paces forward, saw his right hand cocked like a loaded rifle, saw
it aimed at his defenceless face.

In that instant, while his body moved in slow motion but his mind raced,
the scales of paternal blindness dropped from Waite Courtney's eyes and
he realized that he was fighting a man who matched him in strength and
height, and who was Ins superior in speed.  His only advantage lay in
the experience he had gathered in forty years of brawling.

Sean threw his punch: it had all the power of the first one and Waite
knew that he could not survive that in his face, and yet he could not
move to avoid it.  He dropped his chin onto -his chest and took Sean's
fist on the top of his head.  The force of it flung him backwards over
the desk, but as it hit he heard the brittle crackle of Sean's fingers
breaking.

Waite dragged himself to his knees, using the corner of the desk as a
support, and looked at his son.  Sean was doubled up with pain, holding
his broken hand against his stomach.  Waite pulled himself to his feet
and sucked in big breaths of air, he felt his strength coming back.

All right, he said, if you want to fight, then we fight.

He came round the desk, moving slowly, his hands ready, no longer
underestimating his man.  I am going to knock the daylights out of you,
Announced Waite.  Sean straightened up and looked at him. There was
agony in his face now, but the anger was there also. Something surged up
inside Waite when he saw it.

He can fight and he's game.  Now we'll see if he can take a beating.
Rejoicing silently Waite moved in on him, watching Sean's left hand,
disregarding the broken right for he knew what pain was in it.  He knew
that no man could use a hand in that condition.

He shot out his own left hand, measuring with it, trying to draw Sean.
Sean side-stepped, moving in past it.  Waite was wide open for Sean's
right, his broken right, the hand he could not possibly use, and Sean
used it with all his strength into Waite's face.

Waite's brain burst into bright colours and darkness, he spun sideways,
falling hitting the leopard-skin rug with his shoulder and sliding with
it across the floor into the fireplace.  Then in the darkness he felt
Sean's hands on him and heard Sean's voice.  Pa, oh, my God, Pa.  Are
you all right? The darkness cleared a little and he saw Sean's face, the
anger gone from it and in its place worry that was almost panic.  Pa,
oh, my God!  Please, Pa.  Waite tried to sit up, but he could not make
it.  Sean had to help him.  He knelt next to Waite holding him, fumbling
helplessly with his face, trying to brush the hair back off his
forehead, stroking the rumpled beard into place.  I'm sorry, Pa, truly
I'm sorry.  Let me help you to the chair.

Waite sat in the chair and massaged the side of his jaw.

Sean hovered over him, his own hand forgotten.

what you want to do, kill me?  asked Waite ruefully.  I didn't mean it.
I just lost my temper.  I noticed, said Waite, I just happened to notice
that.  To, about Garry.  You don't have to say anything to him, do you?
Waite dropped his hand from his face and looked at Sean steadily.  I'll
make a bargain with you, he said, I'll leave Garry out of it if you'll
promise me two things.  One: You never lie to me again.

Sean nodded quickly.  Two: if anybody ever takes a whip to you again you
swear to me you'll give him the same as you just gave me.  Sean started
to smile and Waite went on gruffly.  Now let's have a look at your hand.
Sean held it out and Waite examined it, moving each finger in turn.
Sean winced.  Sore?  asked Waite.  He hit me with that. Sweet Jesus,
I've bred me a wild one.

A little.  Sean was white-faced again.  It's a mess, said Waite.  You'd
better get into town right away and let Doctor Van have a go at it.

Sean moved towards the door.  Hold on Sean stopped and Waite pulled
himself out of his chair.  I'll come with you.  I'll be all right, Pa,
you stay and rest.

Waite ignored this and walked towards him.  Really, Pa, I'll be all
right on my own.  I'm coming with you, Waite said harshly; and then
softly, almost inaudibly, I want to, dammit.  He lifted his arm as
though to put it around Sean's shoulders, but before it touched him he
let it drop back to his side and together they went out into the
corridor.

With two fingers in splints Sean handled his knife awkwardly at lunch
the next day, but his appetite was unimpaired.  As was only right and
fitting he took no part in the conversation except on the rare occasions
that a remark was addressed directly to him.  But he listened, his jaws
chewing steadily and his eyes moving from speaker to speaker.  He and
Garry sat side by side in a backwater of the luncheon board while the
guests were grouped in order of seniority around Waite.

Stephen Erasmus by age and wealth was in the right hand seat; opposite
him Tim Hope-Brown, just as wealthy but ten years younger; below him
Gunther Niewenhuizen, Sam Tingle and Simon Rousseau.  If you added it
all together you could say that Waite Courtney had about a hundred
thousand acres of land and half a million sterling sitting around his
table.  They were brown men, brown clothing, brown boots and big brown,
calloused, hands.

Their faces were brown and battered-looking and now that the meal was-in
its closing stages their usual reserve was gone and there was a tendency
among them to talk all.  at the same time and to perspire profusely.
This was not entirely a consequence of the dozen bottles of good Cape
Mossel that Waite had provided nor of the piles of food they had eaten,
it was more than that.  There was a sense of expectancy among them, an
eagerness they were finding it difficult to suppress.  Can I tell the
servants to clear away, Waite?  Ada asked from the end of the table.
Yes, thank you, my dear.  We'll have coffee in here, please.  He stood
up and fetched a box of cigars from the sideboard and carried it to each
of his guests in turn.  When the ends were cut and the tips were
glowing, every man leaning back in his chair with a recharged glass and
a cup of coffee in front of him, Ada slipped out of the room and Waite
cleared his throat for silence.  Gentlemen.  They were all watching him.
Last Tuesday I spent two hours with the Governor.  We discussed the
recent developments across the Tugela Waite lifted his glass and sipped
at it, then held it by the stem and rolled it between his fingers as he
went on.  Two weeks ago the British Agent at the Zulu king's kraal was
recalled.  Recalled is perhaps the wrong word the king offered to smear
him with honey, and tie him over an ant-hill, an offer that Her
Britannic Majesty's Agent declined with thanks.  Shortly thereafter he
packed his bags and made for the border.

There was a small ruffle of laughter.  Since then Cetewayo has collected
all his herds which were grazing near the Tugela and driven them into
the north; he has commanded a buffalo hunt for which he has decided he
will need all his impis, twenty thousand spears.  This hunt is to be
held along the banks of the Tugela, where the last buffalo was seen ten
years ago.  Waite sipped at his glass, watching their faces.  And he has
ordered that all wounded game is to be followed across the border. There
was a sigh then, a murmur from them.  They all knew that this was the
traditional Zulu declaration of war.  So, man, what are we going to do
about it.  Must we sit here and wait for them to come and burn us out?

Erasmus leaned forward watching Waite.

Sir battle Frere met Cetewayo's Indunas a week ago.

He has given them an ultimatum.  They have until January the eleventh to
disband the impis and take the Queen s Agent back into Zululand.  In the
event that Cetewayo disregards the ultimatum, Lord Chelmsford is a
punitive column of regulars and militia.

to command The force is being assembled now and will leave
Pietermaritzburg within the next ten days.  He is to cross the Tugela at
Rorke's Drift and engage the impis before they break out.  It is
intended to end this constant threat to our border and break the Zulu
nation for ever as a military power.

It's about bledy time, said Erasmus.  His Excellency has gazetted me
full colonel and ordered me to raise a commando from the Lady-burg
district.  I have promised him at least forty men fully armed, mounted
and provisioned who will be ready to join Chelmsford at the Tugela.
Unless any of you object I am appointing you gentlemen as my captains
and I know I can rely upon you to help me make good my promise to His
Excellency.  Suddenly Waite dropped his stilted manner and grinned at
them.  You will collect your own pay.  It will be in cattle, as usual.
How far north has Cetewayo driven his herds?  asked Tim Hope-Brown.

Not far enough, I'll warrant, cackled Stephen Erasmus.  A toast, said
Simon Rousseau jumping to his feet and holding up his glass.  "I give
you a toast: the Queen, Lord Chelmsford and the Royal Herds of Zululand.
They all stood and drank it, and then suddenly embarrassed by their
display they sat down again, coughing awkwardly and shuffling their
feet, All right, said Waite, let's get down to details.  Steff, you'll
be coming and your two eldest boys?  Ja, three of us and my brother and
his son.  Put down five, Erasmus.  Good.  What about you Gunther?  They
began the planning.  Men, horses and wagons were marshalled on paper;
each of the captains was allotted a series of tasks.  There was
question, answer and argument that filled the hours before the guests
left Theunis Kraal.

They rode in a bunch, trippling their horses, sitting slack and
long-legged in the saddles, moving up the far slope along the road to
Lady-burg.  Waite and his sons stood on the front step and watched them
go.

Garry tried tentatively for Waite's attention.  Yes, boy?  Waite kept
his eyes on the group.  Steff Erasmus turned in the saddle and waved his
hat above his head, Waite waved back.  Why do we have to fight them, Pa?
If the Governor just sent somebody to talk to them, then we wouldn't
have to fight.

Waite glanced at him, frowning slightly.

Anything worth having is worth fighting for, Garry.

Cetewayo has raised twenty thousand spears to take this from us - Waite
swept his arm in a circle that took in the whole of Theunis Kraal.  I
think it's worth fighting for, don't you, Sean?  You bet, Sean nodded
eagerly.  But couldn't we just make a treaty with them Gaarry persisted.

Another cross on a piece of paper.  Waite spoke with fierce disdain.
They found one like that on Piet Retrieps body, hell of a lot of good it
did him Waite walked back into the house with his sons following him.

He lowered himself into his armchair, stretched his legs out in front of
him and smiled at Ada.  Damn good lunch, dear.  He clasped his hands
over his stomach, belched MY involuntarily and was immediately contrite.
I beg your pardon, it just slipped out.

Ada bent her head over her sewing to hide her smile.  We've got a lot to
do in the next few days He turned his attention back to his sons.  We'll
take one mule wagon and a pair of horses each.  Now about ammunition.  .
.  But, Pa, couldn't we just -!  Garry started, Shut up, said Waite, and
Garry subsided miserably into one of the other chairs.

I've been thinking, announced Sean.  Not you as well, growled Waite.
Damn it to hell, here's your chance to win your own cattle and.  .  .
That's just what I've been thinking, Sean cut in.

Everybody will have more cattle than they know what to do with.  The
prices will drop way down.  They will at first, admitted Waite, but in a
year or two they'll climb back again.  Shouldn't we sell now?  Sell
everything except the bulls and breeding cows, then after the war we'll
be able to buy back at half the price.  For a moment Waite sat stunned
and then slowly his expression changed.  My God, I never thought of
that.  And Pa, Sean was twisting his hands together in his enthusiasm,
we'll need more land. When we bring the herds back across the Tugela
there won't be enough grazing to go round.

Mr Pye has called the mortgages on Mount Sinai and Mahoba's Kloof.  He's
not using the land.

Couldn't we lease them from him now before everybody starts looking for
grazing?  We had a lot to do before you started thinking, said Waite
softly, but now we've really got to work.  He searched his pockets,
found his pipe and while he filled it with tobacco he looked at Sean. He
tried to keep his face neutral but the pride kept showing.

You keep thinking like that and you'll be a richm an one day.  Waite
could not know how true his prophecy would prove, the time was still
remote when Sean could drop the purchase price of Theunis Kraal across a
gaming table, and laugh at the loss.

The Commando was moving out on New Year's Day.

New Year's Eve was set down for a double celebration.  Welcome 1879, and
God speed the Lady-burg Mounted Rifles.  The whole district was coming
into town for the braaivleis and dancing that was being held in the
square.

Feast the warriors, - laugh, dance and sing, then form them up and march
them out to war.

Sean and Garry rode in early.  Ada and Waite were to follow later in the
afternoon.  It was one of those bright days of a Natal summer: no wind
and no clouds, the kind of day when the dust from a wagon hangs heavy in
the air.  They crossed the Baboon Stroom and from the farther ridge
looked down across the town and saw the wagon dust on every road leading
into Lady-burg.  Look at them come, said Sean; he screwed up his eyes
inst the glare and stared at the north road.  That will be the Erasmus
wagon.  Karl will be with them.

The wagons looked like beads on a string.  That's the Petersens', said
Garry, or the Niewehuisens.  Come on, shouted Sean, and slapped the free
end of his reins across his horse's neck.  They galloped down the road.
The horses they rode were big glossy animals, with their manes cropped
like English hunters.

They passed a wagon.  There were two girls sitting beside mama on the
box seat, the Petersen sisters.  Dennis Petersen and his father were
riding ahead of the wagon.

Sean whooped as he rode past the wagon and the girls laughed and shouted
some that was lost in the wind.  Come on, Dennis, howled Sean as he
swept past the two sedately trotting outriders. Dennis's horse reared
and then settled in to run, chasing Sean.  Garry trailed them both.

They reached the cross roads, lying flat along their horses necks,
pumping the reins like jockeys.  The Erasmus wagon was trundling down to
meet them.  Karl, Sean called as he held his horse a little to stand in
the stirrups.  Karl.  Come on, man catch a wayo, Cetewayo!

They rode into Lady-burg in a bunch.  They were all flush-faced and
laughing excited and happy at the prospect of dancing and killing.

The town was crowded, its streets congested with wagons and horses and
men and women and girls and dogs and servants.  I've got to stop at
Pye's store, said Karl, come with me, it won't take long.  They hitched
their horses and went into the store; Sean, Dennis and Karl walked
noisily and talked aloud.  They were men, big sunburned raw-boned men,
muscled from hard work, but uncertain of the fact that they were men.

Therefore, walk with a swagger and laugh too loud, swear when Pa isn't
listening and no one will know you have your doubts.

What are you going to buy, Karl?  Boots.  That'll take all day, you'll
have to try them on.  We'll miss half the fun.  There'll be nothing
doing for another couple hours, protested Karl.  Wait for me, you chaps.
Karl sitting on the counter, trying boots on his large feet, was not a
spectacle that could hold Sean's interest for long.  He drifted away
amongst the piles of merchandise that cluttered Pye's store.  There were
stacks of pick handles, piles of blankets, bins of sugar and salt and
flour, shelves of groceries and clothing overcoats and women's dresses
and hurricane-lamps and saddles hinging from the roof, and all of it was
permeated by the peculiar smell of a general dealer's store: a mixture
of paraffin, soap and new cloth.

Pigeon to its coop, iron to magnet.  .  .  .  Sean's feet led him to the
rack of rifles against the far wall of the room.

He lifted down one of the Lee Metford carbines and worked the action; he
stroked the wood with his fingertips, then he weighed it in his hands to
feel the balance and finally brought it up to his shoulder.  Hello,
Sean.  His ritual interrupted, Sean looked up at the shy voice.  It's
Strawberry Pie, he said smiling.  How's school? I've left school now.  I
left last term Audrey Pye had the family colouring but with a subtle
difference, instead of carrot her hair was smoked copper with glints in
it.  She was not a pretty girl, her face was too broad and flat, but she
had that rare skin that too seldom goes with red hair: creamy unfreckled
purity.

Do you want to buy anything, Sean?

Sean placed the carbine back in the rack.  Just looking he said.  Are
you working in the store now?  Yes She dropped her eyes from Sean's
scrutiny.  It was a year since he'd last seen her.  A lot can change in
a year; she now had that within her blouse which proved she was no
longer a child.  Sean eyed it appreciatively and she glanced up and saw
the direction of his eyes; the cream of her skin clouded red.  She
turned quickly towards the trays of fruit.  would you like a peach?
Thanks, said Sean and took one.

How's Anna?  asked Audrey.

Why ask me?  Sean frowned.  You're her beau, aren't you?  Who told you
that!  Sean's frown became a scowl.  Everybody knows that.  Well,
everybody's wrong.  Sean was irritated by the suggestion that he was one
of Anna's possessions.  I'm nobody's beau.  Oh!  Audrey was silent a
moment, then, I suppose Anna will be at the dance tonightVMost probably.
Sean bit into the furry golden peach and studied Audrey.  Are you going,
Strawberry Pie?  No, Audrey answered wistfully.  Pa won't let me.

How old was she?  Sean made a quick calculation .  .  .

three years younger than he was.  That made her sixteen.

Suddenly Sean was sorry she wouldn't be at the dance.

That's a pity, he said.  We could have had some fun.  Linking them
together, with the plural we, Sean threw her into confusion again.  She
said the first words she could think of, Do you like the peach?  It's
from our orchard.  I thought I recognized the flavour.  Sean grinned and
Audrey laughed.  Her mouth was wide and friendly when she laughed.  I
knew you used to pinch them.  Pa knew it was you.  He used to say he'd
set a man-trap in that hole in the hedge!  didn't know he'd found that
hole, we used to cover it up each time.  Oh, yes, Audrey assured him, we
knew about it all the time.  It's still there.  Some nights when I can't
sleep I climb out of my bedroom window and go down through the orchard,
through the hedge into the wattle plantation.

It's so dark and quiet in the plantation at night, scary, but I like it.
You know something, Sean spoke thoughtfully.  if you couldn't sleep
tonight and came down to the hedge at ten o'clock, you might catch me
pinching peaches again It took a few seconds for Audrey to realize what
he had said.  Then the colour flew up her face again and she tried to
speak but no words came.  She turned with a swirl of skirt and darted
away among the shelves.  Sean bit the last of the flesh off the peach
pip and dropped it on the floor.

He was smiling as he walked across to join the others.  Hell's teeth,
Karl, how much longer are you going to be?

There were fifty or more wagons outspanned around the perimeter of the
square but the centre was left open, and here the braaivleis pits were
burning, the flames already sinking to form glowing beds. Trestle-tables
stood in two lines near the fires and the women worked at them cutting
meat and boerwors, buttering bread, arranging platoons of pickle
bottles, piling the food on trays and sweetening the evening with their
voices and laughter.

In a level place a huge buck-sail was spread for the dancing and at each
corner a lantern hung on a pole.  The band was tuning with squeaks from
the fiddles and preliminary asthma from the single concertina.

The men gathered in knots amongst the wagons or squatted beside the
braaivleis pits, and here and there a jug pointed its base briefly at
the sky.  I don't like to be difficult, Waite, Petersen came across to
where Waite was standing with his captains, but I see you've put Dennis
in Gunther's troop.  That's right. Waite offered him the jug and
Petersen took it and wiped the neck with his sleeve.  It's not you,
Gunther, Petersen smiled at Gunther Niewehuisen, but I would be much
happier if I could have Dennis in the same troop as myself.  Keep an eye
on him, you know.

They all looked at Waite to hear what he would say.  None of the boys
are riding with their fathers.  We've purposely arranged it that way.
Sorry, Dave.  Why?

Waite Courtney looked away, over the wagons at the furious red sunset
that hung above the escarpment.  This isn't going to be a bushbuck
shoot, Dave.  You may find that you'll be called upon to make decisions
that will be easier for you if you're not making them about your own
son.  There was a murmur of agreement and Steff Erasmus took his pipe
out of his mout and spat into the fire.

There are some things it is not pretty for a man to see.

They are too hard for him to forget.  He should not see his son kill his
first man, also he should not see his son die.  They were silent then,
knowing this truth.  They had not spoken of it before because too much
talk softens a man's stomach, but they knew death and understood what
Steff had said.  One by one their heads turned until they were all
staring across the square at the gathering of youngsters.  beyond the
fires.  Dennis Petersen said something but they could not catch the
words and his companions, laughed.

in order to live a man must occasionally kill said Waite, but when he
kills too young; he loses something .  .  .  a respect for life: he
makes it cheap.  It is the same with a woman, a man should never have
his first woman until he understands about it.  Otherwise that too
becomes cheap.  I had my first when I was fifteen, said Tim HopeBrown. I
can't say it made them any cheaper; in fact I've known them to be bloody
expensive.

Waite's big boom led the laughter.  I know your old man pays you a pound
a week but what about us, Sean?  protested Dennis, we aren't all
millionaires.  All right, then, Sean agreed, five shillings in the pool.

Winner takes the lot.  Five bob is reasonable, Karl opened, but let's
get the rules clear so there's no argument afterwards Kills only,
woundings don't count, said Sean.  And they have to be witnessed,
insisted Frikkie Van Essen.  He was older than the others; his eyes were
already a little bloodshot for he had made a start on the evening's
drinking.

all right, dead Zulus only and a witness to each kill.

The highest score takes the pool.  Sean looked around the circle of
faces for their assent.  Garry was hinging back on the fringe.  Garry
will be banker.  Come on, Garry, hold out your hat.  They paid the money
into Garrick's hat and he counted it.  Two pounds, from eight of us.
That's correctHell, the winner will be able to buy his own farm.

They laughed.  I've got a couple of bottles of smoke hidden in my saddle
bags, Frikkie said.  Let's go and try them.  The hands of the clock on
the church tower showed quarter before ten.  There were silver-edged
clouds around the moon, and the night had cooled.  Rich meaty smelling
steam from the cooking pits drifted across the dancers, fiddles sawed
and the concertina bawled the beat, dancers danced and the watchers
clapped in time and called encouragement to them.  Someone whooped like
a Highlander in the feverish pattern of movement, in the fever of fun.
Dam the dribble of minutes with laughter, hold the hour, lay siege
against the dawn!  Where are you going, Sean?  I'll be back just now.
But where are you going?  Do you want me to tell you, Anna, do you
really want to know?  Oh, I see.  Don't be long.  I'll wait for you by
the band. Dance with Karl.  No, I'll wait for you, Sean.  Please don't
be long. We've got such a little time left.  Sean slipped through the
circle of wagons, he kept in the tree shadow along the sidewalk, round
the side of Pye's store and down the lane, running now, jumped the ditch
and through the barbed wire fence.  It was dark in the plantation and
quiet as she had said; dead leaves rustled and a twig popped under his
feet.  Something ran in the darkness, scurry of small feet.  Sean's
stomach flopped over: nerves, only a rabbit.  He came to the hedge and
searched for the hole, missed it and turned back, found it and through
into the orchard.  He stood with his back against the wall of vegetation
and waited.  The trees were moon grey and black below.  He could see the
roof of the house beyond them.  He knew she'd come of course.  He had
told her to.

The church clock chimed the hour and then later the single stroke of the
quarter hour.  Angry now, damn her!

He went up through the orchard, cautiously staying in shadow.  There was
a light in one of the side windows, he could see it spilling out into a
yellow square on the lawn.

He circled the house softly.

She was at the window with the lamp behind her.  Her face was dark but
lamplight lit the edges of her hair into a coppery halo.  There was
something of yearning in her attitude, leaning forward over the sill. He
could see the outline of her shoulders through the white cloth of her
gown.

Sean whistled, pitching it low to reach her only, and she started at the
sound.  A second longer she stared out from light into the dark and then
she shook her head, slowly and regretfully from side to side.  She
closed the curtains and through them Sean saw her shadow move The Lamp
went out.

away.

Sean went back through the orchard and the plantation.

He was trembling with anger.  From the lane he heard the music in the
square and he quickened his pace.  He turned the corner and saw the
lights and movement.  Silly little fool, he said out loud, anger still
there but something else as well.  Affection?  Respect?

Where have you been?  I've waited nearly an hour Possessive Anna.

logThere and back to see how far it is.  Funny!  Sean Courtney, where
have you been?  Do you want to dance?  No.  All right, don't then.

Karl and some of the others were standing by the cooking pits.  Sean
started for them.  Sean, Sean, I'm sorry.  Penitent Anna.  I'd love to
dance, please They danced, jostled by other dancers, but neither of them
spoke until the band stopped to wipe their brows and wet dry throats.
I've got something for you, Sean.  What is it? Come, I'll show you.  She
led him from the light among the wagons and stopped by a pile of saddles
and blankets.  She knelt and opened one of the blankets and stood up
again with the coat in her hands.  I made it for you.  I hope you like
it Sean took it from her.  It was sheepskin, tanned and polished,
stitched with love, the inside wool bleached snowy white.  It's
beautiful, Sean said.  He recognized the Tabour that had gone into it.
it made him feel guilty: gifts always made him feel guilty.

Thank you verery much.  Try it on, Sean.  Warm, snug at the waist, room
to move in the shoulders; it enhanced his considerable bulk.  Anna stood
close to him, the collar.  You look nice in it, she said.  Smug pleasure
of the giver.

He kissed her and the mood changed.  She held him tight around the neck.
Oh, Sean, I wish you weren't going.  Let's say goodbye properly.  Where?
MY wagon.  )What about your parents?  They've gone back to the farm.
Pa's coming in tomorrow morning.

Garry and I are sleeping here No, Sean, there are too many people.  We
can't.  1You don't want to Sean whispered.  It's a pity because it might
be the last time ever.  What do you mean?  She was suddenly still and
small in his arms.  I'm going away tomorrow.  You know what might
happen?  No. Don't talk like that.  Don't even think itIt's true.  No,
Sean, don't. Please don't.

Sean smiled in the darkness.  So easy, so very easy.

Let's go to my wagon- He took her hand.

Breakfast in the dark, cooking fires around the square, voices quiet,
men standing with their wives, holding the small children in farewell.
The horses saddled, rifles in the scabbards and blanket rolls behind,
four wagons drawn up in the centre of the square with the mules in the
traces.

To should be here any minute.  It's nearly five o'clock, said Garry.
They're all waiting for him, agreed Sean.  He shrugged at the weight of
the bandolier strapped over his shoulder.  Mr Niewehuizen has made me
one of the wagon drivers.

I know, said Sean.  Can you handle it?  I think so.

Jane Petersen came towards them.  Hello, Jane.  Is your brother ready
yet?  Nearly.  He's just saddling up.

She stopped in front of Sean and shyly held out a scrap of
green-and-yellow silk.  I've made you a cockade for your hat, Sean.
Thanks, Jane.  Won't you put it on for me?  She pinned up the brim of
Sean's hat; he took it back from her and set it at a jaunty angle on his
head.  I look like a general now, he said and she laughed at him.  How
about a goodbye kiss, Jane?  You're terrible, said little Jane and went
away quickly, blushing.  Not so little, Sean noticed.  There were so
many of them you hardly knew where to start.

Here's Pa, announced Garry, as Waite Courtney rode.

into the square.  Come on, said Sean and untied his horse.  From all
around the square, men were leading out their horses.  See you later,
said Garry and limped off towards one of the waiting mule wagons.

Waite rode at the head of the column.  Four troops of fifteen men in
double file, four wagons behind them, and then the loose horses driven
by black servants.

They moved out across the square, through the litter of the night's
festivities, and into the main street.  The women watched them in
silence, standing motionless with the children gathered around them.
These women had seen men ride out before against the tribes; they did
not cheer for they too were wise in the ways of death, they had learned
that there is no room for glory in the grave.

Anna waved to Sean.  He did not see her for his horse was skittish and
he was past her before he had it under control.  She let her hand drop
back to her side and watched him go.  He wore the skeepskin coat.

Sean did see the coppery flash and the swiftly-blown kiss from the
upstairs window of Pye's store.  He saw it because he was looking for
it.  He forgot his injured pride sufficiently to grin and wave his hat.

Then they were out of the town, and at last even the small boys and dogs
that ran beside them fell back and the column trotted out along the road
to Zululand.

The sun came up and dried the dew.  The dust rose from under the hooves
and drifted out at an angle from the road.  The column lost its rigidity
as men spurred ahead or dropped back to ride with their friends.  They
rode in groups and straggles, relaxed and cheerfully chatting, as
informal as a party out for a day's shooting.  Each man had taken to the
field in clothing he considered most suitable.  Steff Erasmus wore his
church suit, but he was the most formally attired of the group.  They
had only one standard item of uniform among them: this was the
green-and-yellow cockade.  However, even here there was scope for
individual taste: some wore them on their hats, some on their sleeves
and others on their chests.  They were farmers, not fighting men, but
their rifle scabbards were battered with use, their bandoliers worn with
easy familiarity and the wood of their gun butts was polished from the
caress of their hands.

It was middle afternoon before they reached the Tugela.  My God, look at
that!  whistled Sean.  I've never seen so many people in one place in my
life before.  They say there are four thousand, said Karl.  I know there
are four thousand.  Sean ran his eyes over the camp.  I didn't know four
thousand was that many!

The column was riding down the last slope to Rorke's Drift.  The river
was muddy brown and wide, rippling over the shallows of the crossing
place.  The banks were open and grassy with a cluster of stone-walled
buildings on the near side.  In a quarter-mile radius around the
buildings Lord Chelmsford's army was encamped.  The tents were laid out
in meticulous lines, row upon row with the horses picketed between them.
The wagons were marshalled by the drift, five hundred at least, and the
whole area swarmed with men.

The Lady-burg Mounted Rifles, in a solid bunch that overflowed the road
behind their Colonel, came down to the perimeter of the camp and found
their passage blocked by a sergeant in a dress coat and with a fixed
bayonet.  And who be you, may I ask?  Colonel Courtney, and a detachment
of the Lady-burg Mounted Rifles.  What's that?  Didn't catch it.  Waite
Courtney stood in his stirrups and turned to face his men.  Hold on
there, gentlemen.  We can't all talk at once.  The hubbub of
conversation and comment behind him faded and this time the sergeant
heard him.  Ho!  Beg your pardon, sir. I'll call the orderly officer.

The orderly officer was an aristocrat and a gentleman.

He came and looked at them.  Colonel Courtney?  There was a note of
disbelief in his voice.  Hello, said Waite with a friendly smile.  I
hope we are not too late for the fun.  No, I don't believe you are.  The
officer's eyes fastened on Steff Erasmus.  Steff lifted his top hat
politely.  More, Meneer.  The bandoliers of ammunition looked a little
out of place slung across his black frockcoat.

The officer tore his eyes away from him.  You have your own tents,
Colonel?  Yes, we've got everything we need.  I'll get the sergeant here
to show you where to make camp.

Thank you, said Waite.

The officer turned to the sergeant.  So carried away was he that he took
the man by the arm.  Put them far away.

Put them on the other side of the Engineers - he whispered frantically.
If the General sees this lot.  .  .  .  .  He shuddered, but in a
genteel fashion.

Garrick first became conscious of the smell.  Thinking about it served
as a rallying point for his attention and he could start to creap out of
the hiding-place in his mind.

For Garrick, these returns to reality were always eightaccompanied by a
feeling of light-headednessand a hid ening of the senses.  Colours were
vivid, skin sensitive to the touch, tastes and smells sharp and clear.

He lay on a straw mattress.  The sun was bright, but he was in shade. He
lay on the veranda of the stone-walled hospital above Rorke's Drift.  He
thought about the smell that had brought him back.  It was a blending of
corruption and sweat and dung, the smell of ripped bowels and congeahng
blood.

He recognized it as the smell of death.  Then his vision came into focus
and he saw the dead.  They were piled along the wall of the yard where
the cross-fire from the store and the hospital had caught them; they
were scattered between the, buildings, and the burial squads were busy
loading them onto the wagons.  They were lying down the slope to the
drift, they were in the water and on the far bank.  Dead Zulus, with
their weapons and shields strewn about them.  Hundreds of them, Garrick
thought with astonishment: no, thousands of them.

Then he was aware that there were two smells; but both of them were the
smells of death.  There was the stink of the black, balloon-bellied
corpses swelling in the sun and there was the smell from his own body
and the bodies of the men about him, the same smell of pain and
putrefaction but mixed with the heaviness of disinfectant.

Death wearing antiseptic, the way an unclean girl tries to cover her
menstrual odour.

Garrick looked at the men around him, They lay in a long row down the
veranda, each on his own mattress.

Some were dying and many were not but on all of them the bandages were
stained with blood and iodine.  Garrick looked at his own body.  His
left arm was strapped across his bare chest and he felt the ache start
beating within him, slow and steady as a funeral drum.  There were
bandages around his head.  I'm wounded, again he was astonished.  How?
But how?  You've come back to us, Cocky, cheerful Cockney from beside
him.  We thought you'd gone clean bonkers Garrick turned his head and
looked at the speaker; he was a small monkey-faced man in a pair of
flannel underpants and a mummy suit of bandages.

el)ac said it was shock.  He said you'd come out of it soon enough The
little man raised his voice, Hey, Doc, the hero is completely mentos
again.  The doctor came quickly, tired-looking, dark under the eyes, old
with overwork.  You'll do, he said, having groped and prodded.  Get some
rest.  They're sending you back home tomorrow.  He moved away for there
were many wounded, but then he stopped and looked back.  He smiled
briefly at Garrick, I doubt it will ease the pain at all but you've been
recommended for the Victoria Cross.  The General endorsed your citation
yesterday.  I think you'll get it.  Garrick stared at the doctor as
memory come back patchily, There was fighting Garrick said.  You're
bloody well tooting there was!  the little man beside him guffawed. Sean
!  said Garrick.  My, brother!  What happened to my brother?  There was
silence then and Garrick saw the quick shadow of regret in the doctor's
eyes.  Garrick struggled into a sitting position.  And my Pa.  What
happened to my father?

I'm sorry, said the doctor with simplicity, I'm afraid they were both
killed.  Garrick lay on his mattress and looked down at the Drift.  They
were clearing the corpses out of the shallows now, splashing as they
dragged them to the bank.  He remembered the splashing as Chelmsford's
army had crossed.  Sean and his father had been among the scouts who had
led the column, three troops of the Lady-burg Mounted Rifles and sixty
men of the Natal Police.

Chelmsford had used these men who knew the country over which the
initial advance was to be made.

Garrick had watched them go with relief.  He could hardly believe the
good fortune that had granted him.  a squirting dysentery the day before
the ultimatum expired and the army crossed the Tugela.  The lucky
bastards, protested one of the other sick as they watched them go.
Garrick was without envy: he did not want to go to war, he was content
to wait here with thirty other sick men and a garrison of sixty more to
hold the Drift while Chelmsford took his army into Zululand.

Garrick had watched the scouts fan out from the Drift and disappear into
the rolling grassland, and the main body of men and wagons follow them
until they too had crawled like a python into the distance and left a
wellwom road behind them through the grass.

He remembered the slow slide of days while they waited at the Drift.  He
remembered grumbling with the others when they were made to fortify the
store and the hospital with bags and biscuit tins filled with sand.  He
remembered the boredom.

Then, his stomach tightening, he remembered the messenger.  Horseman
coming.  Garrick had seen him first.  Recovered from his dysentery he
was doing sentry duty above the Drift.  The General's left his
toothbrush behind, sent someone back for it, said his companion. Neither
of them stood up.  They watched the speck coming across the plain
towards the river.  Coming fast, said Garrick.  You'd better go and call
the Captain.  I suppose so, agreed the other sentry.  He trotted up the
slope to the store and Garrick stood up and walked down to the edge of
the river.  His peg sank deep into the mud.  Captain says to send him up
to the store when he gets here. Garrick's companion came back and stood
beside him.  Something funny about the way he's riding, said Garrick, he
looks tired.  He must be drunk.  He's falling about in the saddle like
it's Saturday night.  Garrick gasped suddenly, He's bleeding, he's
wounded The horse plunged into the Drift and the rider fen forward onto
its neck; the side of his shirt was shiny black with blood, his face was
pale with pain and dust.  They caught his horse as it came out of the
water and the rider tried to shout but his voice was a croak.  In the
name of God prepare yourselves.  The Column's been surrounded and wiped
out.  They're coming, the whole black howling pack of them.  They'll be
here before nightfall.  My brother, said Garrick.  .  What happened to
my brother?  Dead, said the min.  Dead, they're all dead.  He slid
sideways off his horse.

They came, the impis of Zulu in the formation of the bull, the great
black bull whose head and loins filled the plain and whose horns circled
left and right across the river to surround them.  The pull stamped with
twenty thousand feet and sang with ten thousand throats until its voice
was the sound of the sea on a stormy day.  The sunlight reflected
brightly from the spear blades as it came singing to the Tugela.  Look!
Those in front are wearing the helmets of the Hussars, one of the
watchers in the hospital exclaimed.  They've been looting Chelmsford's
dead.  There's one wearing a dress coat and some are carrying carbines.
It was hot in the hospital for the roof was corrugatediron and the
windows were blocked with sandbags.  The rifle slits let in little air.
The men stood at the slits, some in pyjamas, some stripped to the waist
and sweating in the heat.  It's true then, the Column has been
massacredThat's enough talking.  Stand to your posts and keep your
mouths shut.  The impis of Zulu crossed the Tugela on a front five
hundred yards wide.  They churned the surface to white with their
crossing.  My God!  Oh, my God!  whispered Garrick as he watched them
come.  We haven't got a chance, there are so many of them. Shut up. Damn
you, snapped the sergeant at the Gatling machine-gun beside him and
Garry covered his mouth with his hand.

Grabbed O'Riley by the neck Shoved his head in a pail of water Rammed
that pistol up his sang one of the malaria cases in delirium and
somebody else laughed, shrill hysteria in the sound.  Here they come!
Load!  The metallic clashing of rifle mechanism.  Hold your fire, men.
Fire on command only.  The voice of the bull changed from a deep
sonorous chant to the shrill ululation of the charge, high-pitched T
frenzy of the blood squeal.  Steady, men.  Steady.  Hold it.  Hold your
fire.  Oh, my God!  whispered Garrick softly, watching them come black
up the slope.  Oh, my God!  please don't let me die.  Ready!  The van
had reached the wall of the hospital yard.  Their plumed head-dresses
were the frothy crest of a black wave as they came over the wall.  Aim!
Sixty rifles lifted and held, aimed into the press of bodies.  FireV
Thunder, then the strike of bullets into flesh, a sound as though a
handful of gravel had been flung into a puddle of mud.  The ranks reeled
from the blow.  The clustered barrels of the Gatling machine-gun jump,
jump, jumped as they swung, cutting them down so they fell upon each
other, thick along the wall.  The stench of burnt black powder was
painful to breathe.  Load!  The bullet-ravaged ranks were re-forming as
those from behind came forward into the gaps.  AimV

They were coming again, solid black and screaming halfway across the
yard.  Fire!  Garrick sobbed in the shade of the veranda and pressed the
fingers of his right hand into his eye sockets to squeeze out the
memory.

What's the trouble, Cocky?  The Cockney rolled painfully onto his side
and looked at Garrick.

Nothing!  said Garrick quickly.  Nothing!  Coming back to you, is it?
"What happened?  I can only remember pieces of it.  What happened!  The
man echoed his question, What didn't happen!  The doctor said - Garrick
looked up quickly, He said the General had endorsed my citation.  That
means Chelmsford's alive.  My brother and my father, they must be alive
as well!  No such luck, Cocky.  The Doc's taken a fancy to you you with
one leg doing what you did, so he made inquiries about your folk.  It's
no use.  Why?  asked Garrick desperately.  Surely if Chelmsford's alive
they must be too?  The little man shook his head.  Chelmsford's made a
base camp at a place called Isandhlwana.  He left a garrison there with
all the wagons and supplies.  He took a flying column out to raid, but
the Zulus circled around him and attacked the base camp, then they came
on here to the Drift.  As you know, we held them for two days until
Chelmsford's flying column came to help us, My folk, what happened to
them?  Your father was at the Isandhlwana camp.  He didn't escape.  Your
brother was with Chelmsford's colhimn but he was cut off and killed in
one of the skirmishes before the m-gin battle.  Sean dead?  Garrick
shook his head.  No, it's not possible.  They couldn't have killed him.
You'd be surprised how easily they did it, said the Cockney.  A few
inches of blade in the right place is enough for the best of them.  But
not Sean, you didn't know him.  You couldn't understand.  He's dead,
Cocky.  Him and your Pa and seven hundred others.  The wonder is we
aren't too.  The man wriggled into a more comfortable position on his
mattress.  The General made a speech about our defence here.  Finest
feat of arms in the annals of British courage, or something like that He
winked at Garrick.  Fifteen citations for the old V.  C.

you's one of them.  I ask you, Cocky, isn't that something?  What's your
girl friend going to do when you come home with a mucking great gong
clanking around on your chest, hey?  He stared at Garrick and saw the
tears oozing in oily lines down his cheeks.  Come on, Cock.  You're a
bloody hero.  He looked away from Garrick's grief.  Do you remember that
part, do you remember what you did?  No, Garrick's voice was husky.
Sean.  You can't leave me alone.  What am I going to do, now that you're
gone?  I was next to you. I saw it all.  I'll tell you about it said the
Cockney.

As he talked so the events came back and fitted into sequence in
Garrick's mind.  It was on the second day, we'd held off twenty-three
charges.

Twenty-three, was it as many, as that?  Garrick had lost count; it might
have been but a single surging horror.

Even now he could taste the fear in the back of his throat and smell it
rancid in his own sweat.  Then they piled wood against the hospital wall
and set fire to it.  Zulus coming across the yard carrying bundles of
faggots, falling to the rifles, others picking up the bundles and
bringing them closer until they too died and yet others came to take
their place.  Then flames pale yellow in the sunlight, a dead Zulu lying
on the bonfire his face and the smell of him mingled with the smoke.

chaffing, We knocked a hole in the back wall and started to move the
sick and wounded out through it and across to the store The boy with the
assegai through his spine had shrieked like a girl as they lifted him.
Them bloody savages came again as soon as they saw we were pulling out.
They from that side.  He pointed with his bandaged arm, where the chaps
in the store couldn't reach them, and there was only you and I and a
couple of others at the loopholes, everyone else was carrying the
wounded There had been a Zulu with the blue heron feathers of an Induna
in his head-dress.  He had led the charge, His shield was dried oxhide
dappled black and white, and at his wrists and ankles were bunches of
war rattles.  Garrick had fired at the instant the Zulu half-turned to
beckon to his warriors, the bullet sliced across the tensed muscles of
his belly and unzipped it like a purse.  The Zulu went down on his hands
and knees with his entrails bulging out in a pink and purple mass.  They
reached the door of the hospital and we couldn't fire on them from the
angle of the windows.  The wounded Zulu started to crawl towards
Garrick, his mouth moving and his eyes fastened on Garrick's face.

He still had his assegai in his hand.  The other Zulus were beating at
the door and one of them ran his spear blade through a crack in the
woodwork and lifted the bar.  The door was open.

Garrick watched the Zulu crawling towards him through the dust with his
pink wet bowels swinging like a pendulum under him.  The sweat was
running down Garrick's cheeks and dripping off the end of his chin, his
lips were trembling.  He lifted his rifle and aimed into the Zulu's
face.  He could not fire.  That's when you moved, Cocky.  I saw the bar
lifted out of its brackets and I knew that in the next second there'd be
a mob of them in through the door and we'd stand no chance against their
spears at close range.  Garrick let go his rifle and it rattled on the
concrete floor.  He turned away from the window.  He could not watch
that crippled, crawling thing.  He wanted to run, to hide.  That was it
;.  - to hide.  He felt the fluttering start behind his eyes, and his
sight began to grey.  You were nearest to the door.  You did the only
thing that could have saved us.  Though I know I wouldn't have had the
guts to do it.  The floor was covered with cartridge cases, brass
cylinders shiny and treacherous under foot. Garrick stumbled;

as he fell he put out his arm.  Christ the little Cockney shuddered, to
put your arm into the brackets like that, I wouldn't have done -it.
Garrick felt his arm snap as the mob of Zulus threw themselves against
the door.  He hung there staring at his twisted Arm, watching the door
tremble and shake as they beat against it.  There was no pain and after
a while everything was grey and warm and safe.  We fired through the
door until we had cleared them away from the other side.  Then we were
able to get your arm free, but you were out cold.  Been that way ever
since.  Garrick stared out across the river.  He wondered if they had
buried Sean or left him in the grass for the birds.

Lying on his side Garrick drew his legs up against his chest, his body
was curled.  Once as a brutal small boy he had cracked the shell of a
hermit crab.  Its soft fat abdomen was so vulnerable that its vitals
showed through the transparent skin.

It curled its body into the same defensive attitude.

I reckon you'll get your gong, said the Cockney.  Yes, said Garrick.  He
didn't want it.  He wanted Sean back.

Doctor Van Rooyen gave Ada Courtney his arm as she stepped down from the
buggy.  In fifty years he had not obtained immunity from other people's
sorrow.  He had learned only to conceal it: no trace of it in his eyes,
or his mouth, or his lined and whiskered face.  He's well, Ada.  They
did a good job on his arm: that is, for military surgeons.  It will set
straight.  When did they arrive?  asked Ada.  About four hours ago.

They sent all the Lady-burg wounded back in two wagons.  Ada nodded, and
he looked at her with the professional shield of indifference, hiding
the shock he felt at the change in her appearance.  Her skin was as dry
and lifeless as the petals of a pressed flower, her mouth had set
determinedly against her grief and her widow's weeds had doubled her
age.  He's waiting for you inside.  They walked up the steps of the
church and the small crowd opened to let them pass.  There were subdued
greetings for Ada and the usual funereal platitudes.  There were other
women there wearing black, with swollen eyes.

Ada and the doctor went into the cool gloom of the church.  The pews had
been pushed against the wall to make room for the mattresses.  Women
were moving about between them and men lay on them.  I'm keeping the bad
ones here, where I can watch them, the doctor told her.  There's Garry.
Garrick stood up from the bench on which he was sitting.  His arm was
slung awkwardly across his chest.  He limped forward to meet them, his
peg tapped loudly on the stone floor.  Ma, I'm he stopped.  Sean and Pa
I've come to take you home, Garry.  Ada spoke quickly, flinching at the
sound of those two names.  They can't just let them lie out there, they
shouldPlease, Garry.

Let's go home, said Ada.  We can talk about it later.  We are all very
proud of Garry, said the doctor.  Yes, said Ada.  Please, let's go home,
Garry.

She could feel it there just below the surface and she held it in: so
much sorrow confined in so small a place.  She turned back towards the
door, she mustn't let them see it.  She mustn't cry here in front of
them, she must get back to out to the buggy and Ada took the reins.
Neither of them spoke again until they crossed the ridge and looked down
at the homestead.  You're the master of Theunis Kraal now, Garry, said
Ada softly and Garrick stiffed uneasily on the seat beside her.  He
didn't want it, he didn't want the medal.  He wanted Sean.

Theunis Kraal.

Willing hands carried Garrick, hope you don't mind me coming, said Anna,
but I had to talk to you.  No.  I'm glad you did.  Truly I'm glad,
Garrick assured her earnestly.  It's so good to see you again, Anna.  It
feels like forever since we left.  I know, and so much, so much has
happened.  My Pa and yours.  And, and Sean.  She stopped.  Oh, Garry, I
just can't believe it yet.  They've told me and told me but I can't
believe it.  He was so, so alive.  Yes said Garrick, he was so alive. He
talked about dying the night before he left.  I hadn't even thought
about it until then.  Anna shook her head in disbelief, and I never
dreamed it could happen to him.

Oh, Garry, what am I going to do?

Garrick turned and looked at Anna.  The AnnA he loved, Sean's Anna.  But
Sean was dead.  He felt an idea move within him, not yet formed in
words, but real enough to cause a sick spasm of conscience.  He shied
away from it.

Oh, Garry.  What can I do?

She was asking for help, the appeal was apparent in her voice.  Her
father killed at Isandhlwana, her elder brothers still with Chelmsford
at Tugela, her mother and the three small children to feed.  How blind
of him not to see it!  Anna, can I help you?  just tell me.  No, Garry.
I don't think anyone can.  If it's money -'He hesitated discreetly.  I'm
a rich man now.  Pa left the whole of Theunis Kraal to Sean and 1, and
Sean isn't, I She looked at him without answering.  I can lend you some
to tide you over blushed Garrick, as much as you need.  She went on
staring at him while her mind adjusted itself.  Garrick master of
Theunis Kraal, he was rich, twice as rich as Sean would have been.  And
Sean was dead.  Please, Anna.  Let me help you.  I want to, really I do.
He loved her, it was pathetically obvious, and Sean was dead.  You will
let me, Anna?  She thought of hunger and bare feet, dresses washed until
you could see through them when you held them to the light, petticoats
patched and cobbled.  And always the fear, the uncertainty you must live
with when you are poor.  Garry was rich and alive, Sean was dead.
Please tell me you will.  Garrick leaned forward and took her arm, he
gripped it fiercely in his agitation and she looked into his face.  You
could see the resemblance, she thought, but Sean had strength where here
there was softness and uncertainty.  The colour was wrong also, pale
sand and paler blue instead of brutal black and indigo.  it was as
though an artist had taken a portrait and with a few subtle strokes had
altered its meaning completely so entirely different picture.  She did
as to make it into an not want to think about his leg.

it's sweet of you, Garry, she said, but we've got a little in the bank
and the plot is free of debt.  We've got the horses; we can sell them if
we have to.  what is it then?  Please tell me.  She knew then what she
was going to do.  She could not lie to him, it was too late for that.
She would have to tell him, but she knew that the truth would not make
any difference to him.  Well, perhaps a little, but not enough to
prevent her getting what she wanted.  She wanted to be rich, and she
wanted a father for the child she carried within her.  Garry, I'm going
to have a baby.  Garrick's chin jerked up and his breathing jammed and
then started again.  A baby?  Yes, Garrick.  I'm pregnant.  Whose?
Sean's?  Yes, Garry.  I'm going to have Sean's baby.  How do you know,
are you sure?  I'm sure.  Garrick pulled himself out of his chair and
limped across the veranda.  He stopped against the railing and gripped
it with his good hand; the other was still in the sling.  His back was
turned to Anna and he stared out across the lawns of Theunis Kraal to
the lightly-forested slope beyond.

Sean's baby.  The idea bewildered him.  He knew that Sean and Anna did
that together.  Sean had told him and Garrick had not resented it.  He
was jealous, but only a little, for Sean had let him share in it by
telling him and so some of it had belonged to him also.  But a baby.
Sean's baby.

Slowly the full implication came to him.  Sean's baby would be a living
part of his brother, the part that had not been cut down by the Zulu
blades.  He had not completely lost Sean.  Anna, she must have a father
for her child, it was unthinkable that she could go another month
without marrying.  He could have both of them, everything he loved in
one package.  Sean and Anna.  She must marry him, she had no other
choice.  Triumph surged up within him and he turned to her.

What will you do, Anna?  He felt sure of her now.  Sean's dead.  What
will you do?  I don't know.  You can't have the baby.  It would be a
bastard.  He saw her wince at the word.  He felt very certain of her.
I'll have to go away, to Port Natal.  She spoke without expression in
her voice. Looking calmly at him, knowing what he would say, I'll leave
soon, she said, I'll be all right.  I'll find some way out.  Garrick
watched her face as she spoke.  Her head was small on shoulders wide for
a girl, her chin was pointed, her teeth were slightly crooked but white,
she was very pretty despite the catlike set of her eyes.  I love you,
Anna, he said. You know that, don't you?  She nodded slowly and her hair
moved darkly on her shoulders.  The cat eyes softened contentedly.  Yes,
I know, Garry.  Will you marry me?  He said it breathlessly.  You don't
mind? You don't mind about Sean's baby?

she said, knowing he did not.  I love you, Anna.  He came towards her
clumsily and she looked up at his face.  She did not want to think about
the leg.  I love you, nothing else matters.  He reached for her and she
let him hold her.

Will you marry me, Anna?  He was trembling.  Yes.  Her hands were
quiescent on his shoulders.  He sobbed softly and her expression changed
to one of distaste, she made the beginnings of a movement to push him
away but stopped herself.  My darling, you won't regret it.  I swear you
won't, she whispered.  We must do it quickly, Garry.  Yes.  I'll go into
town this afternoon and speak to Padre No!  Not here in Lady-burg, Anna
cut in sharply.  People will have too much to say.  I couldn't stand it.
We'll go up to Pietermaritzburg, Garrick acquiesced.  When, Garry?  soon
as you like.  Tomorrow, she said.  We'll go tomorrow.

The Cathedral in Pietermaritzburg stands on Church Street.  Grey stone
with a bell-tower and iron railings between the street and the lawns.
Pigeons strut puff- kchested on the grass.

Anna and Garrick went up the paved path and into the semi-dark of the
Cathedral.  The stained glass window had the sun behind it, making the
interior glow weirdly with colour.  Because they were both nervous they
held hands as they stood in the aisle.

There's no one here, whispered Garrick.  There must be, Anna whispered
back.  Try through that door there.  What shall I say?  Just tell him we
want to get married.

Garrick hesitated.  Go on.  Anna still whispered, pushing him gently
towards the door of the vestry.  You come with me, said Garrick.  I
don't know what to say.  The priest was a thin men with steel-rimmed
spectacles.  He looked over the top of them at the nervous pair in the
doorway and shut the book on the desk in front of him.  We want to get
married, Garrick said and blushed crimson.  Well, said the priest drily,
you have the right address.

come in.

He was surprised at their haste and they argued a little, then he sent
Garrick down to the Magistrates Court for a special licence.  He married
them, but the ceremony was hollow and unreal.  The drone of the priest's
voice was almost lost in the immense cavern of the Cathedral as they
stood small and awed before him.  Two old ladies who came in to pray
stayed on gleefully to witness for them, and afterwards they both kissed
Anna and the priest shook Garrick's hand.  Then they went out again into
the sunlight.  The pigeons still strutted on the lawn and a mule wagon
rattled down Church Street with the coloured driver singing and cracking
his whip.  It was as though nothing had happened.

We're married, said Garrick doubtfully.  Yes, agreed Anna, but she
sounded as though she didn't believe it either.

They walked back to the hotel side by side.  They didn't talk or touch
each other.  Their luggage had been taken up to their room and the
horses had been stabled.  Garrick signed the register and the clerk
grinned at him.

I've put you in Number Twelve, sir, it's our honeymoon suite.  One of
his eyelids drooped slightly and Garrick stammered in confusion.

After dinner, an excellent dinner, Anna went up to the room and Garrick
sat on in the lounge drinking coffee.  It was almost an hour later that
he mustered the courage to follow her.  He crossed the drawing-room of
their suite, hesitated at the bedroom door then went in.  Anna was in
bed.  She had pulled the bedclothes up to her chin and she looked at him
with her inscrutable cat's eyes.  I've put your nightshirt in the
bathroom, on the table, she said.

Thank you, said Garrick.  He stumbled against a chair as he crossed the
room.  He closed the door behind him, undressed quickly and leaning
naked over the basin splashed water onto his face; then he dried and
pulled the nightshirt over his head.  He went back into the bedroom:
Anna lay with her face turned away from him.  Her hair was loose on the
pillow, shining in the lamplight.

Garrick sat on the edge of the chair.  He lifted the hem of his
nightshirt above his knee and unfastened the straps of his leg, laid,
the peg carefully beside the chair and massaged the stump with both
hands.  It felt stiff.  He heard the bed creak softly and he looked up.
Anna was watching him, staring at his leg.  Hurriedly Garrick pulled
down his nightshirt to cover the protruding slightly enlarged end with
its folded line of scar-tissue.  He stood up, balancing, and then hopped
one-legged across to the bed.  He was blushing again.

He lifted the edge of the blankets and slipped into the bed and Anna
jerked violently away from.  him.

Don't touch me, she said hoarsely.  Anna.  Please don't be scared, I'm
pregnant, you mustn't touch me.  I won't.  I swear I won't.  She was
breathing hard, making no attempt to hide her revulsion.

Do you want me to sleep in the drawing-room, Anna?

I will if you say so.  Yes, she said, I want you to.  He gathered his
dressing-gown from the chair and stooping picked up his leg.  He hopped
to the door and turned back to face her.  She was watching him still.
I'm sorry, Anna, I didn't mean to frighten you She did not answer him
and he went on.  I love you.  I swear I love you more than anything in
the world.  I wouldn't hurt you, you know that, don't you?

You know I wouldn't hurt you?  Still she did not answer and he made a
small gesture of appeal, the wooden leg clutched in his hand and the
tears starting to fill his eyes.  Anna.  I'd kill myself rather than
frighten you!  He went quickly through the door and closed it behind
him.  Anna scrambled out of the bed and with her nightdress flurrying
around her legs she ran across the room to the door and turned the key
in the lock.

In the morning Garrick was bewildered to find Anna in a mood of girlish
gaiety.  She had a green ribbon in her hair and her green frock was
faded but pretty.  She chattered happily through breakfast and while
they were having there coffee she leaned across the table and touched
Garrick's hand.

What shall we do today, Garry?

Garrick looked surprised, he hadn't thought that far ahead.  I suppose
we'd better catch the afternoon train back to Lady-burg, he said.

oh, Garry Anna pouted effectively.  Don't you love me enough to give me
a honeymoon?  I suppose - Garrick hesitated and then of course, I didn't
think of it He grinned excitedly.  Where can we go?

We could take the mail boat down the coast to capetown, Anna suggested.
Yes!  Garrick adopted the idea immediately.  It'll be fun.  But, Garry -
Anna's eagerness faded.  I only have two Old dresses with me.  She
touched her clothes.  Garrick sobered also while he grappled with this
new problem.

Then he found the solution.  We'll buy you some more!  Oh, Garry, could
we?  Could we really?

We'll buy you all you can use, more than you can use.

Come on, finish your coffee and we'll go into town and see what they
have.  I'm finished.  Ann, stood up from the table ready to go.

They had a stateroom on the Dunottax Castle from Port Natal to Capetown.
There were other young people aboard.  Anna, in her elegant new clothing
and sparkling with excitement, formed the centrepiece of a gay little
group that played deck games, dined, danced and flirted as the mailboat
drove south through the sunny, golden days of early autumn.

At first Garrick was content to stay unobtrusively close to Anna.  He
was there to hold her coat, fetch a book or carry a rug.  He watched her
fondly, revelling in her success, hardly jealous when she almost
disappeared behind a palisade of attentive young men, not resenting the
sofa which formed his uncomfortable bed in the drawing-room of their
suite.

Then gradually there came a realization among their travelling
companions that Garrick was paying for most of the refreshments and
other little expenses that came up each day.  They became aware of him
and of the fact that he appeared to be the richest of the group.  From
there it needed only a small adjustment to their thinking to admit
Garrick to the circle.  The men addressed remarks directly at him and
some of the other girls flirted with him openly and sent him on small
errands.  Garrick was at once overjoyed and appalled by these
attentions, for he could not cope with the lightning exchange of banter
that flickered around him and left him stammering and blushing.  Then
Garrick found how easy it really was.  Have a dram, old chap?  No,
really.  I don' t, you knowNonsense, everybody does.  Steward, bring my
friend here a whisky.  Really, no really I won't.  And of course Garrick
did.  It tasted foul and he spilt a little on Anna's evening dress;
while he wiped it up with his handkerchief she whispered a barbed
reprimand and then laughed gaily at a joke from the moustached gentleman
on her right. Garrick shrank miserably back in his chair and forced down
the rest of the whisky.  Then slowly and exquisitely the glow came upon
him, starting deep down inside him and spreading out warmly to the very
tips of his fingers.

Have another one, Mr Courtney?  Yes, thanks.  I'll have the same again,
but I think it's my round He had the next drink.  They were sitting in
deck-chairs on the upper deck in the shelter of the superstructure,
there was a moon and the night was warm Someone was talking about
Chelmsford's Zulu campaign.

You're wrong on that point, Garrick said clearly.

There was a small silence.

I beg your pardon!  the speaker glanced at him with surprise.  Garrick
leaned forward easily in his chair and began talking.  There was a
stiffness at first but he made a witticism and two of the women laughed.
Garrick's voice strengthened.  He gave a quick and deep-sighted resumi
of the causes and effects of the war.  One of the men asked a question.
It was a sharp one but Garrick saw the essence of it and answered
neatly.  It was all very clear and he found the words without effort.

YOU must have been there, one of the girls hazarded.  My husband was at
Rorke's Drift, said Ann, quietly, looking at him as though he were a
stranger.  Lord Chelmsford has cited him for the award of the Victoria
Cross.  We are waiting to hear from London The party was silent again,
but with new respect.  I think it's my round, Mr Courtney.  Yours is
whisky, isn't it?  Thank you.  The dry musty taste of the whisky was
less offensive this time; he sipped it thoughtfully and found that there
was a faint sweetness in the dry.

As they went down to their staterooms later that night Garrick put his
arm around Anna's waist.

What fun you were tonight!  she said.  Only a reflection of your charm,
my darling, I am your mirror.  He kissed her cheek and she pulled away,
but not violently.  You're a tease, Garry Courtney.  Garrick slept on
his back on the sofa with a smile on his face and no dreams, but in the
morning his skin felt tight and dry and there was a small ache behind
his eyes.

He went through to the bathroom and cleaned his teeth; it helped a
little but the ache behind his eyes was still there.  He went back to
the drawing-room and rang for the cabin steward.  Good morning, sir.
Can you bring me a whisky and soda? Garry asked hesitantly.  Certainly,
sir.  Garry did not put the soda into it but drank it neat, like
medicine.  Then afterwards miraculously the glow was L there again,
warming him.  He had hardly dared to hope for it.

He went through to Anna's cabin.  She was rosy with sleep, her hair a
joyous tangle on the pillow.  Good morning, my darling.  Garrick stooped
over her and kissed her, and his hand moved to cover one of her breasts
through the silk of her gown.  Garry, you naughty boy.  She slapped his
wrist, but jokingly.

There was another honeymoon couple aboard returning to their farm near
Capetown, seventy-five acres of the finest vines on the whole of the
Cape Peninsula, the man's own words.  Anna and Garrick were forced by
sheer persistence to accept their invitation to stay with them.

Peter and Jane Hugo were a delightful pair.  Very much in love, rich
enough, popular and in demand with Capetown society.

With them Anna and Garrick spent an enchanted six weeks.

They went racing at Milnerton.

They swam at Muizenberg in the warm Indian Ocean.

They picnicked at Clifton and ate crayfish, fresh caught and grilled
over open coals.  They rode to hounds with the Cape Hunt and caught two
jackals after a wild day's riding over the Hottentots Holland.  They
dined at the Fort and Anna danced with the Governor.

They went shopping in the bazaars that were filled with treasures and
curiosities from India and the orient, Whatever Anna wanted she was
given.  Garry bought himself something as well, a silver flask,
beautifully worked and set with comelians.  It fitted into the inside
pocket of his coat without showing a bulge.  With its help Garrick was
able to keep pace with the rest of the company.

Then the time came for them to leave.  The last night there were only
the four of them for dinner and it was sad with the regret of present
parting, but happy with the memory of shared laughter.

Jane Hugo cried a little when she kissed Anna goodnight.  Garry and
Peter lingered on downstairs until the bottle was finished and then they
walked upstairs together and shook hands outside Garry's bedroom.  Peter
spoke gruffly.  Sorry to see you two go.  We've got used to having you
round.  I'll wake you early and we can go out for a last early morning
ride before the boat leaves.

Garry changed quietly in the bathroom and went through to the bedroom.
His peg made no sound on the heavily carpeted floor.  He crossed to his
own bed and sat down to unstrap his peg.

Garry, Anna whispered.  Hullo, I thought you were asleep.  There was a
stirring and Anna's hand came out from under the bedclothes, held
towards him in invitation.  I was waiting to say goodnight to you.

Garry crossed to her bed, suddenly awkward again.  Sit down for a
minute, said Anna and he perched on the edge of her bed.  Garry, you
don't know how much I've enjoyed these last weeks.  They've been the
happiest days of my whole life.  Thank you so much, my husband.  She
reached up and touched his cheek.  She looked small and warm curled up
in the bed.  Kiss me goodnight, Garry.  He leaned forward to touch her
forehead with his lips but she moved quickly and took it full on her
mouth.  You can come in, if you like, she whispered, her mouth still
against his.  She opened the bedclothes with one hand.

So Garry came to her when the bed was warm, and the wine still sang a
little in her head and she was ready in the peculiar passion of early
pregnancy.  it should have been so wonderfully good.

Impatient now, ready to lead him, she reached down to touch and then
stilled into surprised disbelief.  Where there should have been
hardness, male and arrogant, there was slackness and uncertainty.

Ann, started to laugh.  Not even the shotgun blast had hurt as deeply as
that laugh.  Get out, she said through the cruel laughter.  Go to your
own bed.  Anna and Garrick had been married two full months when they
came back to Theunis Kraal.  Garrick's arm was out of plaster, Peter
Hugo's doctor had fixed that for him.

They took the road that by-passed the village and crossed the Baboon
Stroorn bridge.  At the top of the rise Garry pulled the horses to a
halt and they looked out across the farm.  I can't understand why Ma
moved into town, said Garrick.  She didn't have to do that.  There's
plenty of room for everybody at Theunis Kraal.  Ann, sat silently and
contentedly beside him.  She had been relieved when Ada had written to
them at Port Natal after they had telegraphed her the news of their
marriage.

Young as she was Anna was woman enough to recognize the fact that Ada
had never liked her.  Oh, she was sweet enough when they met, but Anna
found those big dark eyes of hers disconcerting.  They looked too deep
and she knew they found the things she was trying to hide.  We'll have
to go and see her as soon as we can.  She must come back to the farm,
after all Theunis Kraal is her home too, Garrick went on.  Annn moved
slightly in her seat, let her stay in the house in Lady-burg, let her
rot there, but her voice was mild as she answered, Theunis Kraal belongs
to you now, Garry, and I'm your wife.  Perhaps your stepmother knows
what's best. Anna touched his arm and smiled at him, Anyway we'll talk
about it some other time.  Let's get home now, it's been a long drive
and I'm very tired.  Immediately concerned, Garrick turned to her.  I'm
terribly sorry, my dear.  How thoughtless of me.  He touched the horses
with the whip and they went down the slope towards the homestead.

The lawns of Theunis Kraal were green and there were cannas in bloom,
red and pink and yellow.

It's beautiM, thought Anna, and it's mine.  I'm not poor any more.  She
looked at the gabled roof and the heavy yellow wood shutters on the
windows as the carriage rolled up the drive.

There was a man standing in the shade of the veranda.

Anm and Garrick saw him at the same time.  He was tall with shoulders as
wide and square as the crosstree of a gallows, he stepped out of the
shadow and came down the front steps into the sunlight.  He was smiling
with white teeth in a brown burnt face; it was the old irresistible
smile.

Sean, whispered Anna.

Sean really noticed him for the first time when they stopped to water
the horses.  They had left Chelmsford's Column the previous noon to
scout towards the northeast.  It was a tiny patrol, four mounted white
men and a half-a-dozen Nongaai, the loyal Native troops from Natal.

He took the reins from Sean's hands.  I will hold your horse while you
drink.  His voice had a resonance to it and Sean's interest quickened.
He looked at the man's face and liked it immediately.  The whites of the
eyes had no yellow in them and the nose was more Arabic than negroid.
His colour was dark amber and his skin shone with oil.

Sean nodded.  There is no word in the Zulu language for thank you, just
as there are no words for I am sorry.

Sean knelt beside the stream and drank.  The water tasted sweet for he
was thirsty; when he stood again there were damp patches on his knees
and water dripping from his chin.

He looked at the man who was holding his horse.  He wore only a small
kilt of civet-cat tails: no rattles nor cloak, no head-dress.  His
shield was black rawhide and he carried two short stabbing spears.  How
are you called?  Sean asked, noticing the breadth of the man's chest and
the way his belly muscles stood out like the static ripples on a
windswept beach.

Mbejane.  Rhinoceros.  For your horn?  l The -an chuckled with delight,
his masculine vanity tickled.  How are you called, Nkosi?  Sean
Courtney. Mbejane's lips formed the name silently and then he shook his
head.

ZIt is a difficult name.  He never said Sean's name, not once in all the
years that were to follow.

Mount up, called Steff Erasmus.  Let's get moving.

They swung up onto the horses, gathered the reins and loosened the
rifles in the scabbards.  The Nongaai who had been stretched out resting
on the bank stood up.

Come on, said Steff.  He splashed through the stream.

His horse gathered itself and bounded up the far bank and they followed
him.  They moved in line abreast across the grassland, sitting loose and
relaxed in their saddles, the horses trippling smoothly.

At Sean's right stirrup ran the big Zulu, his long extended stride
easily pacing Sean's horse.  Once in a while Sean dropped his eyes from
the horizon and looked down at Mbejane, it was a strangely comforting
feeling to have him there.

They camped that night in a shallow valley of grass.

There were no cooking fires; they ate biltong for supper, the black
strips of dried salt meat, and washed it down with cold water.  We're
wasting our time.  There hasn't been a sign of Zulu in two days riding,
grumbled Bester Klein, one of the troopers.  I say we should turn back
and rejoin the Column, We're getting farther and farther away from the
centre of things, we're going to miss the fun when it starts.  Steff
Erasmus wrapped his bLanket more closely about his shoulders: the
night's first chill was on them.  Fun, is it?  He spat expertly into the
darkness.  Let them have the fun, if we find the cattle.  Don't you mind
missing the fighting?  Look, you, I've hunted bushmen in the Karroo and
the Kalahari, I've fought Xhosas and Fingoes along the Fish river, I
went into the mountains after Moshesh and his Basutos.  Matabele, Zulu,
Bechuana, I've had fun with all of them.  Now four or five hundred head
of prime cattle will be payment enough for any fun we miss.  Steff lay
back and adjusted his saddle behind his head. Anyway what makes you
think there won't be guards on the herds when we find them.  You'll get
your fun, I promise you.

How do you know they've got the cattle up here?

insisted Sean.  They're here, said Steff, and we'll find them.  He
turned his head towards Sean.  You've got the first watch, keep your
eyes open.  He tilted his top hat forward over his face, groped with his
right hand to make sure his rifle lay beside him and then spoke from
under the hat, Goodnight The others settled down into their blankets:
fully dressed, boots on, guns at hand.  Sean moved out into the darkness
to check the Nongaai pickets.

There was no moon, but the stars were fat and close to earth; they lit
the land so that the four grazing horses were dark blobs against the
pale grass.  Sean circled the camp and found two of his sentries awake
and attentive.

He had posted Mbejane on the north side and now he went there.  Fifty
yards in front of him he picked up the shape of the small bush beside
which he had left Mbejane.

Suddenly Sean smiled and sank down onto his hands and knees, he cradled
his rifle across the crooks of his elbows and began his stalk.  Moving
flat along the ground silently, slowly he closed in on the bush.  Ten
paces from it he stopped and lifted his head, careful to keep the
movement inchingly slow.  He stared, trying to find the shape of the
Zulu among the scraggy branches and bunches of leaves.

The point of a stabbing spear pricked him below the ear in the soft of
his neck behind the jaw bone.  Sean froze but his eyes rolled sideways
and in the starlight he saw Mbejane kneeling over him holding the spear.
Does the Nkosi seek me? asked Mbejane solemnly, but there was laughter
deep down in his voice. Sean sat up and rubbed the place where the spear
had stung him.

only a night ape sees in the dark, Sean protested.  And only a fresh
caught catfish flops on its belly, chuckled Mbejane, You are Zulu, Sean
stated, recognizing the arrogance, although he had known immediately
from the man's face and body that he was not one of the bastard Natal
tribes who spoke the Zulu language but were no more Zulu than a
tabby-cat is a leopard.  Of Chaka's blood, agreed Mbejane, reverence in
his voice as he said the old king's name.  And now you carry the spear
against Cetewayo, your king?  My king?  The laughter was gone from
Mbejane's voice.  My king?  he repeated scornfully.

There was silence and Sean waited.  Out in the darkness a jackal barked
twice and one of the horses whickered softly.  There was another who
should have been king, but he died with a sharpened stick thrust up into
the secret opening of his body, until it pierced his gut and touched his
heart.  That man was my father, said Mbejane.  He stood up and went back
into the shelter of the bush and Sean followed him.  They squatted side
by side, silent but watchful. The jackal cried again up above the camp
and Mbejane's head turned towards the sound.

Some jackals have two legs, he whispered thoughtfully.  Sean felt the
tingle along his forearms.

Zulus?  he asked.  Mbejane shrugged, a small movement in the darkness.
Even if it is, they will not come for us in the night.  In the dawn,
yes, but never in the night Mbejane shifted the spear in his lap.  The
old one with the tan hat and grey beard understands this.  Years have
made him wise, that's why he sleeps so sweetly now but mounts up and
moves in the darkness before each dawn Sean relaxed slightly.  He
glanced sideways at Mbejane.  The old one thinks that some of the herds
are hidden near here.  Years have made him wise, repeated Mbejane.
Tomorrow we will find the land more broken, there are hills and thick
Thorn bush.  The cattle will be hidden among themDo you think we'll find
them?  Cattle are difficult to hide from a man who knows where to look.
Will there be many guards with the herds? I hope so answered Mbejane,
his voice a purr.

His hand crept to the shaft of his assegai and caressed it.  I hope
there will be very many.  -You would kill your own people, your
brothers, your cousins?  asked Sean.  I would kill them as they killed
my father. Mbejane's voice was savage now.  They are not my people.  I
have no people.  i have no brothers, I have nothing.  Silence settled
between them again, but slowly the ughness of Mbejane's mood evaporated
and in its place came a sense of companionship.  Each of them felt
comforted by the other's presence.  They sat on into the night.

Mbejane reminded Sean of Tinker working a bird, he had the same
half-crouched gait and the same air of complete absorption.  The white
men sat their horses in silence watching him.  The sun was well up
already and Sean unbuttoned his sheepskin coat and pulled it off.  He
strapped it onto the blanket roll behind him.

Mbejane had moved out about fifty yards from them and now he was working
slowly back towards them.  He stopped and minutely inspected a wet pat
of cow dung.  Hierdie Kaffir verstaan wat by doen, opined Steff Erasmus
approvingly, but no one else spoke.  Bester Klein fidgeted with the
hammer of his carbine; his red face was already sweaty in the rising
heat.

Mbejane had proved right, they were in hilly country.

Not the smoothly rounded hills of Natal but bills with rocky crests,
deeply gullied and ravined between.  There was thorn forest and
euphorbia.  covering the sides of the hills with a lattice work of
reptile grey trunks, and the grass was coarse and tall.  I could use a
drink, said Frikkie Van Essen and wiped his knuckles across his lips.
Chee peep, chee peep, a barbet called stridently in the branches of the
kaffir boom tree under which they waited.

Sean looked up; the bird was brown and red among the scarlet flowers
which covered the tree.  How many?  asked Steff and Mbejane came to
stand at his horse's head.

Fifty, no more, he answered.  When?  Yesterday, after the heat of the
day they moved slowly down the valley.  They were grazing.  They cannot
be more than half an hour's ride ahead of us.

Steff nodded.  Fifty head only, but there would be more.  How many men
with them?  Mbejane clucked his tongue disgustedly.  Two umfaans.  He
pointed with his spear at a dusty place where the print of a half grown
boy's bare foot showed clearly.  There are no men.  Good said Steff.
Follow them.  They told us that if we found anything we must go back and
report, protested Bester Klein quickly.  They said we shouldn't start
anything on our own.  , Steff turned in his saddle, Are you frightened
of two umfaans?  he asked coldly.  I'm not frightened of anything, it's
just what they told us.  Klein flushed redder in his already red face.

i know what they told us, thank you, said Steff.  I'm not going to start
anything, we're just going to have a look.  I know you burst out Klein.
If you see cattle you'll go mad for them.  All of you, you're greedy for
cattle like some men are for drink.  Once you see them you won't stop
Klein was a railway ganger.

Steff turned away from him.  Come on, let's go.  They rode out of the
shade of the kaffir boom tree into the sunlight, Klein muttering softly
to himself and Mbejane leading them down the valley.

The floor of the valley sloped gradually and on each side of them the
ground rose steep and rocky.  They travelled quickly with Mbejane and
the other Nongaai thrown out as a screen and the horsemen cantering in a
fine with their stirrups almost touching.

Sean levered open the breech of his rifle and drew out the cartridge.
He changed it for another from the bandoher across his chest.

Fifty head is only ten apiece, complained Frikkie.  That's a hundred
quid, as much as you earn in six months.  Sean laughed with excitement
and Frikkie laughed with him.  You two keep your mouths shut and your
eyes open. Steff's voice was phlegmatic, but he couldn't stop the
excitement from sparkling in his eyes.  I knew you were going to raid,
sulked Klein.  I knew it, sure as fate.  You shut up also, said Steff
and grinned at Sean.

They rode for ten minutes; then Steff called softly to the Nongaai and
the patrol halted.  No one spoke and every man stood with his head alert
and his ears straining.  Nothing, said Steff at last.  How close are we?

Very close, Mbejane answered.  We should have heard them from here.
Mbejane's exquisitely muscled body was shiny with sweat and the pride of
his stance set him apart from the other Nongaai.  There was a restrained
eagerness about him, for the excitement was irifectious.  All right,
follow them, said Steff.  Mbejane settled the rawhide shield securely on
Ins shoulder and started forward i , Twice more they stopped to listen
and each time Sean and Frikkie were more restless and Inpatient.  Sit
still, snapped Steff. How can we hear anything with you moving aboutV
Sean opened Ins -mouth, but before he could answer they all heard an ox
low mournfully ahead of them among the trees.

That's it!  We've got them!  Come on!  No, wait!  Steff ordered.  Sean,
take my farlookers; and climb up that tree.  Tell me what you can see.
We're wasting time, argued Sean.  We should We should learn to do as
we're damn well told said Steff.  Get up that tree With the binoculars
slung around his neck, Sean climbed upwards until he sat high in a
crotch of two branches.  He reached out and broke off a twig which
obscured his vision, then exclaimed immediately, There they are, right
ahead of us!

How many?  Steff called up to him.  A small herd, two herdboys with
them.  Are they among the trees?  No, said Sean, they're in the open.
Looks like a patch of swamp.  Make sure there aren't any other Zulus
with them No - Sean started to answer but Steff cut him short.  Use the
glasses, dammit.  They'll be hiding if they're there.  Sean brought up
the glasses and focused them.  The cattle were fat and sleek skinned,
big homed and bodies dappled black on white.  A cloud of white
tick-birds hovered over them.  The two herdboys were completely naked,
youngsters with the thin legs and the disproportionately large genitals
of the Africans.  Sean turned the glasses slowly back and forth
searching the patch of swamp and the surrounding bush.  At last he
lowered them.

only the two herdboys, he said.

Come down then, Steff told him.

The herdboys fled as soon as the patrol rode out into the open.  They
disappeared among the fever trees on the far side of the swamp.

Let them go laughed Steff.  The poor little buggers are going to be in
enough trouble as it is.  He spurred his horse forward into the vivid
green patch of swamp grass.  It was lush: thick and tall enough to reach
his saddle.

The others followed him in with the mud squelching and sucking at the
hooves of the horses.  They could see the backs of the cattle showing
above the grass a hundred yards ahead of them.  The tick-birds circled
squawking.  you and Frikkie cut around to the left!  Steff spoke over
his shoulder and before he could finish the grass around them was full
of Zulus, at least a hundred of them in full war dress.  Ambush!  yelled
Steff.  Don't try and fight, too many of them.  Get out!  and they
dragged him off his horse.

Horses panicked in the mud, whinnying as they reared.

The bang of Klein's rifle was almost drowned in the triumphant roar of
the warriors.  Mbejane jumped to catch the bridle of Sean's horse; he
dragged its head around.

, Ride, Nkosi, quickly.  Do not wait Klein was dead, an assegai in his
throat and the blood bursting brightly from the corners of his mouth as
he fen backwards.  Hold on to my stirrup leather.  Sean felt
surprisingly calm. A Zulu came at him from the side; Sean held his rifle
across his lap and fired with the muzzle almost in the Tn:an's face.  It
cut the top off his head.  Sean ejected the cartridge case and reloaded.
Ride, NkosiI, Mbejane shouted again. He had made no effort to obey Sean:
his shield held high he barged into two of the attackers and knocked
them down into the mud.  His assegai rose and fell, rose and fell.

Ngi Dhla!  howled Mbejane.  I have eaten.  Fighting madness on him, he
jumped over the bodies and charged.

A man stood to meet him and Mbejane hooked the edge of his shield under
his and jerked it aside, exposing the man's left flank to his blade.
Ngi Dhla, Mbejane howled He had torn an opening in the ring of attackers
and Sean rode for it, his horse churning heavily through the mud.  A
Zulu caught at his reins and Sean fired with his muzzle touching the
man's chest.  The Zulu screamed.  Mbejane, shouted Sean.  Take my
stirrupp Frikkie Van Essen was finished; his horse was down and Zulus
swarmed over him with red spears.

Leaning out of the saddle Sean circled Mbejane's waist with his arm and
plucked him out of the mud.  He struggled wildly but Sean held him.  The
ground firmed under his horse's hooves, they were moving faster. Another
Zulu stood in their way with his assegai ready.  With Mbejane kicking
indignantly under one arm and Ins empty rifle in his other hand Sean was
helpless to defend himself.  He shouted an obscenity at the Zulu as he
rode down on him.  The Zulu dodged to one side and darted in again. Sean
felt the sting of the blade across his shin and then the shock as it
went on into his horse's chest.  They were through, out of the swamp and
into the trees.

Sean's horse carried him another mile before it fell.  The assegai had
gone in deep.  It fell heavily but Sean was able to kick his feet out of
the irons and jump clear.  He and Mbejane stood looking down at the
carcass, both of them were panting.

Can you run in those boots?  asked Mbejane urgently.

Yes They were light veldschoen.  Those breeches will hold your legs,
Mbejane knelt swiftly and with his assegai cut away the cloth until
Sean's legs were bare from the thighs down.  He stood up again and
listened for the first sounds of pursuit.  NotHing.

Leave your rifle, it is too heavy.  Leave your hat and your bandolier I
must take my rifle, protested Sean.  Take it then, Mbejane flashed
Unpatiently.  Take it and die.  If you carry that they'll catch you
before noon Sean hesitated a second longer and then he changed his grip,
holding the rifle by the barrel like an axe.  He swung it against the
trunk of the nearest tree.  The butt shattered and he threw it from him.

Now we must go, said Mbejane.

Sean glanced quickly across at his dead horse, the leather thongs held
his sheepskin coat onto the saddle.

All Anna's hard work wasted, he thought wryly.  Then following Mbejane
he started to run.

The first hour was bad; Sean had difficulty matching his step to that of
Mbejane.  He ran with his body tensed and soon had a stabbing stitch in
his side.  Mbejane saw his pain and they stopped for a few minutes while
Mbejane showed him how to relax it away.  Then they went on with Sean
running smoothly.  Another hour went by and Sean had found his second
wind.  How long will it take us to get back to the main army?

grunted Sean.

Two days perhaps.  .  .  .  don't talk, answered Mbejane.

The land changed slowly about them as they ran.  The hills not so steep
and jagged, the forest thinned and again they were into the rolling
grassland.  It seems we are not being followed.  It was half an hour
since Sean had last spoken.  Perhaps, Mbejane was non-committal.  It is
too soon yet to tell.  They ran on side by side, in step so their feet
slapped in unison on the hard-baked earth.

Christ, I'm thirsty, said Sean.  No water, said Mbejane, but we'll stop
to rest a while at the top of the next rise.  They looked back from the
crest.  Sean's shirt was soaked with sweat and he was breathing deeply
but easily.  No one following us, Sean's voice was relieved.

We can slow down a bit now.  Mbejane did not answer.  He also was
sweating heavily but the way he moved and held his head showed he was
not yet beginning to tire.  He carried his shield on his shoulder and
the blade of the assegai in his other hand was caked with black, dry
blood.  He stared out along the way they had come for fully five minutes
before he growled angrily and pointed with his assegai.  There!  Close
to that clump of trees.  Can you see them?  Oh, hell!  Sean saw them:
about four miles behind, on the edge of the forest where it thinned out,
a black pencil line drawn on the brown parchment of grassland.  But the
line was moving.

How many of them?  asked Sean.  Fifty, hazarded Mbejane.  Too many.  I
wish I had brought my rifle, muttered Sean.  If you had they would be
much closer now, and one gun against fifty!  Mbejane left it unfinished.

all right, let's get going again, said Sean.  We must rest a little
longer.  This is the last time we can stop before nightfall.  Their
breathing had slowed.  Sean took stock of himself: he was aching a
little in the legs, but it would he hours yet before he was really
tired.  He hawked a glob of the thick gummy saliva out of his throat and
spat it into the grass.  He wanted a drink but knew that would be fatal
folly.  Oh!  exclaimed Mbejane.  They have seen us.  How do you know?
asked Sean.  Look, they are sending out their chasers From the head of
the line a trio of specks had detached themselves and were drawing
ahead.

What do you mean?  Sean scratched the side of his nose uneasily.  For
the first time he was feeling the fear of the hunted, vulnerable,
unarmed, with the pack closing in.  They are sending their best runners
ahead to force us beyond our strength.  They know that if they push us
hard enough, even though they break their own wind while they do it, we
will fall easily to the others that follow Good God!  Sean was now truly
alarmed.  What are we going to do about it?  For every trick, there is a
trick, said Mbejane. But now we have rested enough, let us go.  Sean
took off down the hill like a startled duiker, but Mbejane pulled him up
sharply.  That is what they want.  Run as before. And once again they
fell into the steady lope, swinging long-legged and relaxed.  They're
closer, said Sean when they reached the top of the next hill.  Three
specks were now well ahead of the others.  Yes.  Mbejane's voice was
expressionless.  They went over the crest and down the other side, the
slap-slap-slap of their feet together and their breathing an unaltering
rhythm: suck blow, suck blow.

There was a tiny stream in the bottom of the valley, clean water
rippling over white sand.  Sean jumped it with only a single longing
glance and they started up the far slope.  They were just short of the
crest when behind them they heard a thin distant shout.  He and Mbejane
looked round.  on the top of the hill they had just left, only a half a
mile away, were the three Zulu runners, and as Sean watched they plunged
down the slope towards him with their tall feather head-dresses bobbing
and their leopardtail kilts swirling about their legs.  They had thrown
aside their shields, but each man carried an assegai.  Look at their
legs, exulted Mbejane.  Sean saw that they ran with the slack,
blundering steps of exhaustion.  They are finished, they have run too
hard MbeJane laughed.  Now we must show them how afraid we are: we must
run like the wind, run as though a hundred Tokoloshe* breathe on our
necks.  It was only twenty paces to the crest of the slope and they
pelted panic-stricken up and over the top.  But the instant they were
out of sight Mbejane caught Sean's arm and held him.  Get down, he
whispered.  They sank into the grass and then crawled back on their
stomachs until they lay just below the crest.

Mbejane held his assegai pointed forward, his legs were gathered up
under him and his lips were drawn back in a half grin.

Sean searched in the grass and found a rock the size of an orange.  It
fitted neatly into his right hand.

A chimera of Zulu mythology.

They heard the Zulus coming, their horny bare feet pounding up the hill
and then their breathing, hoarse hissing gasps, closer and closer until
suddenly they came up over the crest.  Their momentum carried them down
to where Sean and Mbejane stood up out of the grass to meet them.  Their
fatigue-grey faces crumbled into expressions of complete disbelief; they
had expected to find their quarry half a mile ahead of them.  Mbejane
killed one with his assegai, the man did not even lift his arms to parry
the thrust; the point came out between his shoulders.

Sean hurled the rock into the face of another.  It made a sound like a
ripe pumpkin dropped on a stone floor; he fell backwards with his
assegai spinning from his hand.

The third man turned to run and Mbejane landed heavily on his back, bore
him down and then sat astride his chest, pushed his chin back and cut
his throat.

Sean looked down at the man he had hit; he had lost his head-dress an
his face had changed shape.  His jaw hung lopsided, he was still moving
feebly.

I have killed three men today, thought Sean, and it was so easy.

Without emotion he watched Mbejane come across to his victim.  Mbejane
stooped over him and the man made a small gasping sound then lay still.
Mbejane straightened up and looked at Sean.  Now they cannot catch us
before dark.  And only a night ape can see in the dark!

said Sean.

Remembering the joke, Mbejane smiled; the smile made his face younger.
He picked up a bunch of dry grass and wiped his hands on it.

The night came only just in time to save them.  Sean had run all day and
at last his body was stiffening in protest; his breathing wheezed
painfully and he had no moisture left to sweat with. A little longer,
just a little longer.

Mbejane whispered encouragement beside him.

The pack was spread out, the stronger runners pressing a scant mile
behind them and the others dwindling back into the distance.  The sun is
going; soon you can rest.  Mbejane reached out and touched his shoulder,
strangely, Sean drew strength from that brief physical contact.  His
legs steadied slightly and he stumbled less frequently as they went down
the next slope.  Swollen and red, the sun lowered itself below the land
and the valleys were full of shadow.  Soon now, very soon Mbejane's
voice was almost crooning.  He looked back.  the figures of the nearest
Zulu were indistinct.  Sean's ankle twisted under him and he fell
heavily; he felt the earth graze the skin from his cheek and he lay on
his chest with his head down.  Get up, Mbejane's voice was desperate.
Sean vomited painfully, a cupful of bitter bile.  Get up, Mbejane's
hands were on him, dragging him to his knees.  Stand up or die here,
threatened Mbejane.  He took a handful of Sean's hair and twisted it
mercilessly.  Tears of pain ran down Sean's eyes and he swore and lashed
out at Mbejane.

Get up, goaded Mbejane and Sean heaved to his feet.  Run, said Mbejane,
half-pushing him and he's legs began to move mechanically under him.
MbeJane looked back once more.  The nearest Zulu was very close but
almost merged into the fading twilight.  They ran on, Mbejane steadying
Sean when he staggered, Sean grunting in his throat with each step, his
mouth hanging open, sucking air across a swollen tongue.

Then quickly, in the sudden African transition from day to night, all
colour was gone from the land and the darkness shut down in a close
circle about them.

Mbejane's eyes flicked restlessly back and forth, picking up shapes in
the gloom, judging the intensity of the light.

Sean reeled unseeing beside him.  We will try now, decided Mbejane
aloud.  He checked Sean's run and turned him right at an acute angle on
their original track, now they were heading back towards the hunters at
a tangent that would take them close past them but out of sight in the
darkness.

They slowed to a walk, Mbejane holding Sean' s arm across his shoulders
to steady him, carrying his assegai ready in his other hand.  Sean
walked dully, his head hanging.

They heard the leading pursuers passing fifty paces away in the darkness
and a voice called in Zulu, Can you see them?  Albo!  l Negative
answered another.  Spread out, they, may try to turn in the dark.
Yeh-ho!  l Affirmative.

Then the voices were passed and silence and night closed about them once
more.  Mbejane made Sean keep walking.  A little bit of moon came up and
gave them light and they kept going with Mbejane gradually working back
onto a course towards the southeast.  They came to a stream at last with
trees along its bank.  Sean drank with difficulty, for his throat was
swollen and sore.  Afterwards they curled together for warmth on the
carpet of leaves beneath the trees and they slept.

They found Chelmsford's last camp on the following afternoon: the neat
lines of black camp fires and the flattened areas where the tents had
stood, the stakes which had held the horse pickets and the piles of
empty bully-beef tins and five-pound biscuit tins.

They left two days ago, said Mbejane.

Sean nodded, not doubting the correctness of this.  Which way did they
go?  Back towards the main camp at Isandhlwana.

Sean looked puzzled.  I wonder why they did that.  MbeJane shrugged.
They went in haste, the horsemen galloped ahead of the infantry.  We'll
follow them, said Sean.

The spoor was a wide road for a thousand men had passed along it and the
wagons and gun carriages had left deep ruts.

They slept hungry and cold beside the spoor and the next morning there
was frost in the low places when they started out.

A little before noon they saw the granite dome of Isandhlwana standing
out against the sky and unconsciously they quickened their pace.
Isandhlwana, the Hill of the Little Hand.  Sean was limping for his boot
had rubbed the skin from one heel.  His hair was thick and matted with
sweat and his face was plastered with dust.  Even army bully beef is
going to taste good, said Sean in English, and Mbejane did not answer
for he did not understand, but he was looking ahead with a vaguely
worried frown on his face.

INkosi, we have seen no one for two days, march.  it comes to me that we
should have met patrols from the camp before now.  We might have missed
them, said Sean without much interest, but Mbejane shook his head.  In
silence they went on.  The hill was closer now so they could make out
the detail of ledge and fissure that covered the dome in a lacework
pattern. No smoke from the camp, said Mbejane.  He lifted his eyes and
started visibly.

What is it?  Sean felt the first tingle of alarm.  N'yoni, said MbeJane
softly and Sean saw them.  A dark pall, turning like a wheel slowly,
high above the hill of Isandhlwana, still so far off that they could not
distinguish the individual birds: only a shadow, a thin dark shadow in
the sky.  Watching it Sean was suddenly cold in the hot noonday sun.  He
started to run.

There was movement below them on the plain.  The torn canvas of an
overturned wagon flapped like a wounded bird, the scurry and scuffle of
the jackals and higher up the slope of the kopje the hunch-shouldered
trot of a hyena.  Oh, my God!  whispered Sean.  Mbejane leaned on his
spear; his face was calm and withdrawn but his eyes moved slowly over
the field.  Are they dead?  Are they all dead?  The question required no
answer.  He could see the dead men in the grass, thick about the wagons
and then scattered more thinly back up the slope. They looked very small
and inconsequential.  Mbejane stood quietly waiting.  A big black kolbes
vulture planed across their front, the feathers in its wing-tips flated
like the fingers of a spread hand.  Its legs dropped, touched and it
hopped heavily to rest among the dead, a swift transformation from
beautiful flight to obscene crouching repose. It bobbed its head,
ruffled its feathers and waddled to dip its beak over a corpse that wore
the green Hunting Tartan of the Gordons.  Where is Chelmsford?  Was he
caught here also?

Mbejane shook his head.  He came too late.  Mbejane pointed with his
spear at the wide spoor that skirted the battlefield and crossed the
shoulder of Isandhlwana towards the Tugela.  He has gone back to the
river.  He has not stopped even to bury his dead.  Sean and Mbejane
walked down towards the field.  On the outskirts they picked their way
through the debris of Zulu weapons and shields; there was rust forming
on the blades of the assegais.  The grass was flattened and stained
where the dead had lain, but the Zulu dead were gone sure sign of
victory.

They came to the English lines.  Sean gagged when he saw what had been
done to them.  They lay piled upon each other, faces already black, and
each one of them had been disemboweled.  The flies crawled in their
empty stomach cavities.  Why do they do that?  he asked.  Why do they
have to hack them up like thatF He walked on heavily past the wagons.
Cases of food and drink had been smashed open and scattered in the
grass, clothing and paper and cartridge cases lay strewn around the
dead, but the rifles were gone.  The smell of putrefaction was so thick
that it coated his throat and tongue like castor oil.

I must find Pa, Sean spoke quietly in almost a conversational tone.

Mbejane walked a dozen paces behind him.

They came to the lines where the Volunteers had camped.

The tents had been slashed to tatters and trampled into the dust.  The
horses had been stabbed while still tethered to their picket lines, they
were massively bloated.  Sean recognized Gypsy, his father's mare.  He
crossed to her.  Hello, girl, he said.  The birds had taken her eyes
out; she lay on her side, her stomach so swollen that it was as high as
Sean's waist.  He walked around her.  The first of the Lady-burg men lay
just beyond.  He recognized all fifteen of them although the birds had
been at them also.

They lay in a rough circle, facing outwards.  Then he found a sparse
trail of corpses leading up towards the shoulder of the mountain.  He
followed the attempt that the Volunteers had made to fight their way
back towards the Tugela and it was like following a paper chase.  Along
the trail, thick on each side of it, were the marks where the Zulus had
fallen.  At least twenty of them for every one of us, whispered Sean,
with a tiny Ricker of pride.  He climbed on up and at the top of the
shoulder, close under the sheer rock cliff of Isandhlwana, he found his
father.

There were four of them, the last four: Waite Courtney, Tim Hope-Brown,
Hans and Nile Erasmus.  They lay close together.  Waite was on his back
with his arms spread open, the birds had taken his face away down to the
bone, but they had left his beard and it stirred gently on his chest as
the wind touched it.  The flies, big metallic green flies, crawled thick
as swarming bees in the open pit of his belly.

Sean sat down beside his father.  He picked up a discarded felt hat that
lay beside him and covered his terribly mutilated face.  There was a
green-and-yellow silk cockade on the hat, strangely gay in the presence
of so much death.  The flies buzzed sullenly and some came to settle on
Sean's face and lips.  He brushed them away.

You know this man?  asked Mbejane.

My father, said Sean, without looking up.  You too.  Compassion and
understanding in his voice, Mbejane turned away and left them alone.  I
have nothing, Mbejane had said.  Now Sean also had nothing.  There was
hollowness: no anger, no sorrow, no ache, no reality even.  Staring down
at this broken thing, Sean could not make himself believe that this was
a man.

Meat only; the man had gone.

Later Mbejane came back.  He had cut a sheet of canvas from one of the
unburned wagons and they wrapped Waite in it.  They dug his grave.  It
was hard work for the soil was thick with rock and shale.  They laid
Waite in the grave, with his arms still widespread in rigor mortis
beneath the canvas for Sean could not bring himself to break them.  They
covered him gently and piled rocks upon the place.  They stood together
at the head of the grave.  Well, Pa - Sean's voice sounded unnatural.
He could not make himself believe he was talking to his father.  Well,
Pa - he started again, mumbling selfconsciously.  I'd like to say thanks
for everything you've done for me.  He stopped and cleared his throat. I
reckon you know I'll look after Ma and the farm as best I can, and Garry
also.  His voice trailed away once more and he turned to Mbejane.

there is nothing to say.  Sean's voice was surprised, hurt almost.  No,
agreed Mbejane.  There is nothing to say.  For a few minutes long-a Sean
stood snuggling to grapple with the enormity of death, trying to grasp
the utter finality of it, then he turned away and started walking
towards the Tugela.  Mbejane walked a little to one side and a pace
behind him.  It will be dark bare we reach the river, thought Sean.  He
was very tired and he limped from his blistered heel.

Not much farther, said Dennis Petersen.  No, Sean granted.  He was
irritated at the statement of the obvious; when you come out of Mahobals
Kloof and have the Baboon Stroom next to the road on your left hand,
then it is five miles to Lady-burg.  As Dennis had said: not much
farther.

Dennis coughed in the dust.  That first beer is going to turn to steam
in my throat.  I think we can ride ahead now.  Sean wiped at his face,
smearing the dust.  Mbejane and the other servants can bring them in the
rest of the way.  I was going to suggest it.  Dennis was obviously
relieved.  They had almost a thousand head of cattle crowding the road
ahead of them and raising dust for them to breathe.  it had been two
days drive from Rorkes Drift where the Commando had disbanded.  We'll
hold them in the sale pens tonight and send them out tomorrow morning,
I'll tell Mbejane Sean clapped his heels into his horse and swung across
to where the big Zulu trotted at the heels of the herd.  A few minutes,
talk and then Sean signalled to Dennis.

They circled out on each side of the herd and met on the road ahead of
it.

They've lost a bit of condition, grumbled Dennis looking back.  Bound
to, sad Sean.  We've pushed them hard for two days.  A thousand head of
cattle, five men's share of Cetewayo Is herds, Dennis and his father,
Waite, Sean and Garrick, for even dead men drew a full share.  How far
ahead of the others do you reckon we are?

asked Dennis.  Dunno, said Sean.  It wasn't important and any answer
would be only a guess: pointless question is just as irritating as
obvious statement.  It suddenly occurred to Sean that but a few months
previously a question like that would have started a discussion and
argument that might have lasted half an hour.  What did that mean?  It
meant that he had changed.  Having answered his own question, Sean
grinned sardonically.

What're you laughing at!  asked Dennis.  I was just thinking that a lot
has changed in the last few months.  Ja, said Dennis and then silence
except for the broken beat of their hooves.  It's going to seem funny
without Pa, Dennis said wistfully.  Mr Petersen had been at IsandhIwana.
It's going to seem funny being just Ma, the girls and me on the farm.
They didn't speak again for a while.  They were thinking back across the
brief months and the events that had changed their lives.

Neither of them yet twenty years of age, but already head of his family,
a holder of land and cattle, initiated into grief and a killer of men.
Sean was older now with new lines in his face, and the beard he wore was
square and spade-shaped.  They had ridden with the Commandos who had
burnd and plundered to avenge Isandhlwana.

At Ulundi they had sat their horses behind the ranks of Chelmsford's
infantry in the hot sun, quietly waiting as Cetewayo massed his impis
and sent them across open ground to overwhelm the frail square of men.
They had waited through the din of the regular, unhurried volleys and
watched the great black bull of Zulu tearing itself to shreds against
the square.  Then at the end the ranks of infantry had opened and they
had ridden out, two thousand horsemen strong, to smash for ever the
power of the Zulu empire.  They had chased and hunted until the darkness
had stopped them and they had not kept score of the kill.

There's the church steeple, said Dennis.

Sean came back slowly out of the past.  They were at Lady-burg.  Is your
stepmother out at Theunis Kraal?  asked Dennis.  No, she's moved into
town, the cottage on Protea Street.  I suppose she doesn't want to be in
the way now that Anna and Garry are married, said Dennis.

Sean frowned quickly, How do you like old Garry getting Anna?  Dennis
chuckled and shook his head.  I reckon you could have got twenty-to-one
odds he didn't have a chance Sean's frown became a scowl.  Garry had
made him look such a dAmn fool, Sean hadn't finished with Anna.  Have
you heard from them yet?  When are they coming home?  The last time we
heard was from Pietermaritzburg;

they sent a wire to Ma just to say they were married.

She got it a couple of days before I arrived home from Isandhlwana. That
was two months ago; as far as I know we haven't heard since.  I suppose
Garry's so firmly settled on the nest they'll have to prise him off with
a crowbar.  Dennis chuckled again, lewdly.  Sean had a sudden and
shockingly vivid mental picture of Garry on top of Anna; her knees were
up high, her head was thrown back and her eyes were closed; she was
making that little mewing sound.

Shut up, you dirty bastard, snarled Sean.

Dennis blinked.  Sorry, I was only joking.  Don't joke about my family,
he's my brother And she was your girl, hey?  murmured Dennis.  Do you
want a Punch?  Cool down, man, I was joking.  I don't like that kind of
joke, see!

all right.  All right.  Cool down.  It's dirty, that's dirty talk.

Sean was trying desperately to shut out the picture of Anna, she was in
wild orgasm, her hands pleading at the small of Garrick's back.

Jesus, since when have you become a saint?  asked Dennis and, urging his
horse into a gallop, drew ahead of Sean; he kept going along the main
street towards the hotel.  Sean considered calling him back, but finally
let him go.

Sean turned right into a shady side street.  The cottage was the third
house down, Waite had purchased it three years before as an investment.
It was a charming little place, set among trees in a small green garden
with flowers: thatched, whitewashed and surrounded by a wooden picket
fence.  Sean hitched his horse at the gate and went up the path.

There were two women in the sitting-room when he pushed the door open.
They both stood up, surprise instantly becoming delight as they
recognized him.  It warmed him inside to see it, it's good to be
welcome.

Oh Sean, we weren't expecting you.  Ada came quickly to him.  He kissed
her and saw that sorrow had left its marks on her.  He felt vaguely
guilty that Waite's death had not wrought so obvious a change in him. He
held her away at arm's length.

You're beautiful, he said.  She was thin.  Her eyes were too big for her
face and the grief was in them like shadows in the forest, but she
smiled and laughed at him.

We thought you'd be back on Friday.  I'm so glad you've come earlier.
Sean looked past Ada.

Hello, Strawberry Pie.  She was hovering impatiently for his attention.

Hello, Sean.  She blushed a little with his eyes on her, but she did not
drop hers.

You look older, she said, hardly noticing the dust that caked his skin,
powdered his hair and eyelashes, and reddened his eyes.

You've just forgotten what I look like, he said, turning back to Ada.

No, I'd never do that, whispered Audrey so softly that neither of them
heard her.  She felt swollen up inside her chest.

Sit down, Sean.  Ada led him to the big armchair across from the
fireplace.  There was a daguerreotype of Waite on the mantel.  I'll get
you a cup of tea.  How about a beer, Ma?  Sean sank into the chair.  Of
course, I'll get it.  No.  Audrey flew across the room towards the
kitchen.  I'll get it.  They're in the pantry, Audrey, Ada called after
her, and then to Sean, She's such a sweet child.  Look again, Sean
smiled.

She's no child!  wish Garry - Ada cut herself short.

What do you wish?  Sean prompted her.  She was quiet for a moment,
wishing that Garrick could have found a girl like Audrey instead of
Nothing, she said to Sean and came to sit near him.Have you heard from
Garry again?  asked Sean.No.  Not yet, but Mr Pye says he had a cheque
come through the bank, cashed in Capetown Capetown?  Sean raised a dusty
eyebrow.  Our boy's living life to the hilt.  Yes, said Ada, remembering
the size of that cheque.  He is.  Audrey came back into the room: she
had a large bottle and a glass on a tray.  She crossed to Sean's chair.
Sean touched the bottle; it was cold.

Quickly, wench, Sean encouraged her.  I'm dying of thirst The first
glass emptied in three swallows, Audrey poured again and, with the
replenished glass in his fist, Sean settled back comfortably in the
chair.  Now, said Ada, tell us all about it.  In the warmth of their
welcome, his muscles aching pleasantly, the glass in his hand, it was
good to talk.  He had not realized that there was so much to tell.  At
the first hint of slackening in his flow of speech either Ada or Audrey
was ready with a question to keep him going.  Oh, my goodness, gasped
Audrey at last.  It's nearly dark outside, I must go.  Sean, Ada stood
up.  Will you see that she gets home safely?  They walked side by side
in the half darkness, under the flamboyants.  They walked in silence
until Audrey spoke.  Sean, were you in love with Anna?  She blurted out
the question and Sean experienced his standard reaction: quick anger. He
opened his mouth to blast her, then checked.  It was a nice question.
Had he been in love with Anna?  He thought about it now for the first
time, phrasing the question with care that he might answer it with
truth.  He felt a sudden rush of relief and he was smiling when he told
her.  No, Strawberry Pie, no, I was never in love with Anna.  The tone
of Ins voice was right, he wasn't lying.  She walked on happily beside
him.  Don't bother to come up to the house. She noticed for the first
time his stained and dirty clothing that might embarrass him in front of
her parents.  She wanted it to be right from the start.

I'll watch you till you get to the door, said Sean.

I suppose you'll be going out to Theunis Kraal tomorrow?  she asked.
First thing in the morning, Sean assured her.  There's a hell of a lot
of work to do.  But you'll be coming to the store!  Yes!  said Sean and
the way he looked at her made her blush and hate her redhead's skin
which betrayed her so easily.  She went quickly up the path and then
stopped and looked back.  Sean, please don't call me Strawberry Pie any
more. Sean chuckled.  All right, Audrey, I'll try to remember.  Six
weeks had gone since his return from the Zulu Campaign, Sean reflected,
six weeks that had passed in a blur of speed.  He sipped coffee from a
mug the size of a German beer stein, sitting in the centre of his bed
with his nightshirt hitched up to his waist and his legs crossed in
comfortable Buddha fashion.  The coffee was hot; he sipped noisily and
then exhaled steam from his mouth.

The last six weeks had been full, too full for brooding grief or regret,
although in the evenings, when he sat in the study with Waite's memory
all about him, the ache was still there.

The days seemed to pass before they had fairly begun.

There were three farms now: Theunis Kraal and the other two rented from
old min Pye.  He had stocked them with the looted cattle and the
purchases he had made since his return.  The price of prime beef had
dropped to a new low, with nearly a hundred thousand cattle brought back
from Zululand and Sean could afford to be selective in His buying.  He
could also afford to wait while the price climbed up again.

Sean swung his legs off the bed and walked across the room to the
washstand.  He poured water from the jug into the basin and tested it
tentatively with one finger.  It was so cold it stung.  He stood
hesitating in his ridiculously feminine nightshirt, with dark chest
hairs curling out above the elaborately embroidered front.  Then be
mustered his courage and plunged his face into the basin; he scooped
water with both hands and poured it over the back of his neck, massaged
it into his hair with hooked fingers and emerged at last blowing heavily
with water dripping down onto his nightshirt.  He towelled, stripped off
the damp garment and stood naked peering out of the window.  It had
lightened enough for him to make out the smoky swirl of drizzle and mist
beyond the pane.  A hell of a day, he grumbled aloud, but his tone was
deceptive.  He felt excitement for this day; he was fresh and
sharp-edged, hungry for breakfast, ready to go for there was work to do.

He dressed, hopping on one leg as he got into his breeches, stuffing in
the tails of his shirt and then sitting on the bed to pull on his boots.
Now he was thinking about Audrey, he must try and get into town tomorrow
to see her.

Sean had decided on matrimony.  He had three good reasons.  He had found
that it was easier to get into the Bank of England's vaults than to get
under Audrey's petticoats without marrying her.  When Sean wanted
something no price was too high to pay.

Living at Theunis Kraal with Garry and Anna, Sean had decided that it
would be pleasant to have his own woman to cook for him, mend his
clothes and listen to his stories, for Sean was feeling a little left
out.

The third consideration, by no means the least significant, was Audrey's
connections with the local bank.  She was one of the very few weaknesses
in old man Pye's armour.  He might even weigh in with Mahobals Kloof
Farm as a wedding present, though even the optimist in Sean realized
that this hope was extravagant.  Pye and his money were not easily
parted.

Yes, Sean decided, he would have to find time to get into town and tell
Audrey, in Sean's mird it wasn't a question of asking her.  Sean brushed
his hair, combed his beard, winked at himself in the mirror and went out
into the passage.  He could smell breakfast cooking and his mouth
started to water.

Anna was in the kitchen.  Her face was flushed from the heat of the
stove.  What's for breakfast, little sister?  She turned to him, quickly
brushing the hair off her forehead with the back of her hand.  I'm not
your sister, she said, I wish you wouldn't call me that.  Where's Garry?
Sean asked as though he had not heard her protest.  He's not up yet. The
poor boy's exhausted, no doubt. Sean grinned at her and she turned away
in confusion.  Sean looked at her bottom without desire.  Strange that
Anna being Garry's wife should kill his appetite for her.  Even the
memory of what they had done before was vaguely obscene, incestuous.
You're getting fat, he said noticing the new heaviness of her body.  She
ducked her head but did not answer and Sean went on, I'll have four
eggs, please, and tell Joseph not to dry them out completely.  Sean went
through into the dining-room and Garry came in through the side door at
the same moment.  His face was still vacant from sleep.  Sean got a
whiff of his breath; it smelled of stale liquor.  Good morning Romeo,
said Sean and Garry grinned sheepishly.  His eyes were bloodshot and he
hadn't shaved.

Hello, Sean.  How did you sleep?  Beautifully, thank you.  I take it
that you did also Sean sat down and spooned porridge from the tureen.

Have some!  he asked Garry.  Thanks.  Sean passed him the plate.  He
noticed how Garry's hand shook.  I'll have to talk to him about letting
up on the bottle a trifle.  Hell, I'm hungry.  They talked the jerky,
disconnected conversation of the breakfast table.  Anna came through and
joined them.  Joseph brought the coffee.  Have you told Sean yet, Garry?
Anns spoke suddenly, clearly and with decision.  No.  Garry was taken by
surprise, he spluttered his coffee.  Told me what!  Sean asked.  They
were silent and Garrick fluttered his hand nervously.  This was the
moment he had been dreading, what if Sean guessed, what if he knew it
was his baby and took them away, Anna and the baby, took them away and
left Garry with nothing.

Haunted by wild unreasonable fears, Garrick stared fixedly across the
table at his brother.

Tell him, Garry, commanded Anna.  Anna's going to have a baby, he said.
He watched Sean's face, saw the surprise change slowly to delight, felt
Sean's arm close round his shoulders in a painful hug almost crushing
him.

That' s great Sean exulted!  that's wonderful.  We'll have the house
full of kids in no time if you keep that up, Garry.  I'm proud of you.
Grinning stupidly with relief Garrick watched Sean hug Anna more gently
and kiss her forehead.

WeLl done, Anna, make sure it's a boy.  We need cheap labour around
here.  He hasn't guessed, thought Garrick, he doesn't know and it will
be mine, No one can take it away from me now.

That day they worked in the south section.  They stayed together, Garry
laughing in happy confusion at Sean's banter.  It was delightful to have
Sean give him so much attention.  They finished early; for once Sean was
in no mood for work.  My reproductive brother, every barrel loaded with
buck-shot.  Sean leaned across and punched Garry's shoulder.  Let's
knock it off and go into town.  We can have a few quick ones to
celebrate at the hotel and then go and tell Ada.  Sean stood up in the
stirrup and yelled above the moo and mill of the herd.

Mbejane, bring those ten sick ones up to the house and don't forget that
tomorrow we are going to fetch cattle from the sale pens.  Mbejane waved
in acknowledgement and Sean turned back to Garrick.  Come on, let's get
the hell out of here.  They rode side by side, globules of moisture
covering their oilskins and shining on Sean's beard.  it was still cold
and the escarpment was hidden in the wet mist.  It's real
brandy-drinking weather, said Sean and Garrick did not answer.  He was
lightened again.  He didn't want to tell Ada.  She would guess.  She
guessed everything, she would know it was Sean's child.  You couldn't
lie to her.  The horses hooves plopped wetly in the mud.  They reached
the spot where the road forked and climbed over the ridge to Lady-burg.
Ada's going to love being a grandma, chuckled Sean, and at that moment
Ins horse stumbled slightly, broke its gait and started favouring its
near fore.  Sean dismounted, lifted the hoof and saw the splinter driven
deep into the frog.  Damn it to hell, he swore.  He bent his head,
gripped the hilt of the splinter with his teeth and drew it out.  Well,
we can't go into Lady-burg now, that leg will be sore for days.  Garry-
was relieved; it put off the time when he must tell Ada.  Your horse
isn't lame.  Off you go, man!  give her my love.  Sean looked up at him.
We can tell her some other time.  Let's get back home Garry demurred. Go
on, Garry, it's your baby.  Go and tell her Garrick argued until he saw
Sean's temper rising, then with a sigh of resignation he went and Sean
led his own horse back to Theunis Kraal. Now that he was walking the
oilskin was uncomfortably hot and heavy, Sean took it off and slung it
over the saddle.

Anna was standing on the stoep as he came up to the homestead.

Where's Garry?  she called.  Don't worry.  He's gone into town to see
Ada.  He'll be back by supper-time One of the stable boys came to take
Sean's horse.  They talked together and then Sean stooped to lift the
injured hoof.  His breeches tightened across his buttocks and enhanced
the long moulded taper of his legs.  Anna looked at him.  He
straightened up and his shoulders were wide beneath the damp white linen
of his shirt.  He smiled at her as he came up the steps of the stoep.
The rain had made his beard curl and he looked like a mischievous
pirate.  You must take better care of yourself now He put his hand on
her upper arm to lead her aside.  You can't stand around in the cold any
more.  They went in through the glass doors.  Anna looked up at him, the
top of her head on a level with his shoulder.  You're a dAArnn fine
woman, Anna, and I'm sure you're going to make a fine baby.  It was a
mistake, for as he said it his eyes softened and his face turned down
towards her.  He let his arm drop around her shoulders.

Sean!  She said his name as though it were an exclamation of pain.  She
moved quickly, fiercely within the circle of his arm, her body flattened
itself against his and her hands went up to catch in the thick hair at
the back of his head.  She pulled his head down and her mouth opened
warm and wet across his lips, her back arched and thrust her thighs
against his legs.  She moaned softly as she kissed him.  For startled
seconds Sean stood imprisoned in her embrace, then he tore his face
away.  Are you mad?  He tried to push her from him, but she fought her
way back through his fending hands.  she locked her arms around him and
pressed her face against his chest.  I love you.  Please, please.  I
love you.  just let me hold you.  I just want to hold you.  Her voice
was muffled by the damp cloth of his shirt.  She was shivering.  Get
away from me.  Roughly Sean broke her hold and almost threw her
backwards onto the couch beside the fireplace.  You're Garry's wife now,
and you'll soon be the mother of his child.  Keep your hot little body
for him.  Sean stood back from her with his anger starting to mount.
But I love you, Sean. Oh, my God, if I could only make you understand
how I've suffered, living here with you and not being able to touch you
even, Sean strode across to where she sat.  Listen to me.  His voice was
harsh, I don't want you.  I never loved you, but now I could no more
touch you than I could go with my own mother.  She could see the
revulsion in his face.  You're Garry's wife; if ever again you look at
another man I'll kill you.  He lifted his hands holding them with the
fingers crooked ready.  I'll kill you with my bare hands.  His face was
close to hers.  She could not bear the expression in his eyes: she
lashed out at him.  He pulled back in time to save his eyes, but her
nails gouged bloody lines across his cheek and down the side of his
nose.  He caught her wrists and held her while a thin trickle of blood
dribbled down into his beard.  She twisted in his hands, jerking her
body from side to side, and she screamed at him.  You swine, you dirty,
dirty swine.  Garry's wife, you say.  Garry's baby, you say.  She threw
her head back and laughed wildly through her screaming.  Now I'll tell
you the truth.  What I have within me you gave me.  It's yours!

Not Garry's!  Sean let go her wrists and backed away from her.

It can't be, he whispered, you must be lying.  She followed him.  Don't
you remember how you said goodbye to me before you went to war?  Don't
you remember that night in the wagon?  Don't you remember, don't you?
Don't you?  She was talking quietly now, using her words to wound him.

That was months ago.  It can't be true, Sean stammered, still moving
away from her.  Three and a half months, she told him.  Your brother's
baby will be a little early, don't you think?  But lots of people have
premature babies - Her voice droned on steadily, she was shivering
uncontrollably now and her face was ghostly pale.  Sean could stand it
no longer.  Leave me, leave me alone.  I've got to think.  I didn't
know.  He brushed past her and went out into the passage.

She heard the door of Waite's study slam shut and she stood still in the
centre of the floor.  Gradually her panting came under control and the
storm surf of her anger abated to expose the black reefs of hatred
beneath.  She crossed the floor, went down the passage and into her own
bedroom.  She stood in front of the mirror and looked at herself.

I hate him, her lips formed the words in the nodffor.

Her face was still pale.  There's one thing I can take from him. Garry's
mine now, not his.  She pulled the pins from her hair and let them drop
onto the floor; her hair fell down her back.  She shook it onto her
shoulders then lifted her hands and tangled it into confusion.  Her
teeth closed on her own lips, she bit until she tasted blood.  Oh, God,
I hate him, I hate him, she whispered through the pain.  Her hands came
down onto the front of her dress.  She tore it open, then in the mirror
looked without interest at the round bosses of her nipples that were
already darkening with the promise of fruition.  She kicked off her
shoes.

I hate him.  She stooped and her hands went up under her skirts into the
petticoats.  She loosened her pantaloons and stepped out of them; she
held them across her chest to tear them, then threw them next to the
bed.  She swept her arm across the top of her dressing-table: one of the
bowls hit the floor and burst with a splash of face-powder and there was
the sudden pungent reek of spilled perfume.

She crossed to the bed and dropped onto it.  She lifted her knees and
her petticoats fell back like the petals of a flower: her white legs and
lower body were the stamen.

just before nightfall there was a shy knock an her door.

What is it?  she asked.  The Nkosikazi has not told me what I should
cook for dinner, Old Joseph's voice was raised respectfully.  There will
be no dinner tonight.  You and all the servants may go.  Very well,
Nkosikazi Garrick came home in the dark.  He had been drinking; she
heard him stagger as he crossed the stoep, and his voice slur as he
called.  Hallo.  Where's everybody?  Anna!  Anna!  I'm back Silence for
a while as he lit one of the lamps and then the hurried thump, thump of
his peg along the passage and his voice again edged with alarm.  Anna,
Anna, where are you?

He Pushed the door open and stood with the lamp in his hand.  Anna
rolled away from the light, pressing her face into the pillow and
hunching her shoulders.  She heard him set the lamp down on the
dressing-table, felt his hands pulling down her skirts to cover Her
nakedness, then gently turn her to face him.  She looked into his face
andsaw the uncomprehending horror in it.  MY darling Oh Anna, my
darling, what's happened?  He stared at her broken lips and her breasts.
Bewildered he turned his head and looked at the bottles on the floor, at
her torn pantaloons.  His face hardened and came back to her.

Are you hurt?  She shook her head.  Who?  Tell me who did it She turned
away from him again, hiding her face.

My darling my poor darling.  Who was it, one of the servants?  No, her
voice stifled with shame.  Please tell me, Anna.  What happened?

She sat up quickly and threw her arms about him, holding him hard so her
lips were near his ear.  you know, Garry.  You know who did itNo, I
swear I don't, please tell me Anna drew her breath in deep, held it a
second then breathed it out.  Sean!  Garrick's body convulsed in her
arms, she heard him grunt as though he had been hit.  Then he spoke.
This too.  Now this too He loosened her hands from his neck and pushed
her gently down onto the pillows.  He crossed to the cupboard, opened
one of the drawers and took out Waites service pistol.

He's going to kill Sean, she thought.  Garrick went out of the room
without looking at her again.  She waited with her hands clenched at her
sides and her whole body stretched tightly.  When the shot came at last
it was surprisingly muted and un-warlike.  Her body relaxed, her hands
opened and she began to cry softly.

Garry limped down the passage.  The pistol was heavy and the checkered
grip rough in his hand.  There was light showing under the study door at
the end of the passage.

It was unlocked.  Garrick went in.

Sean sat with his elbows on the desk and his face in his hands but he
looked up as Garrick came in through the door.  The scratches had
already dried black across his cheek, but the flesh around them was red
and inflamed.

He looked at the pistol in Garrick's hand.  She has told you.  There was
no question or expression in his voice.  Yes.  I hoped that she
wouldn't, said Sean.  I wanted her to spare you that at leastSpare me?
Garrick asked.  What about her? Did you think of her?  Sean did not
answer, instead he shrugged and laid back tiredly in his chair.  I never
realized before what a merciless swine you are, choked Garrick.  I have
come to kill you!  Yes.  Sean watched the pistol come up.  Garrick was
holding it with both hands, his sandy hair hung forward onto his
forehead.  My poor Garry, Sean said softly and immediately the pistol
started to shake.  It sank until Garrick held it, still with both hands
between his knees.  He crouched over it, blubbering, chewing at his lips
to stop himself.  Sean started out of his chair to go to him, but
Garrick recoiled against the door-jamb.  Keep away from me!  he yelled,
don't touch me. He threw the pistol, the sharp edge of the hammer cut
across Sean's forehead, jerking his head back.  The pistol glanced off
and hit the wall behind him.  It fired and the bullet splintered the
panelled woodwork.

We're finished, Garrick screamed.  We're finished for ever.  He groped
wildly for the door and stumbled out into the passage, through the
kitchens into the rain.  He fell many times as the grass caught his peg
but each time he scrambled up and kept running.  He sobbed with each
step in the utter darkness of the night.

At last the growl of the rain-engorged Baboon Stroorn blocked his way.
He stood on the bank with the drizzle blowing into his face.  Why me,
why always me?  He screamed his agony into the darkness.  Then with a
rush of relief as strong as the torrent in the river-bed below him he
felt the moth flutter its wings behind his eyes.  The warmth and the
greyness closed about him and he sank down onto his knees in the mud.

Sean took very little with him: his bedroll, a rifle and a spare horse.
Twice in the darkness he lost the path to Mbejane's kraal but each time
his horse found it again.

Mbejane had built his big grass beehive hut well away from the quarters
of the other servants, for he was Zulu of royal blood.  When at last
Sean came to it there were a few minutes of sleepy stirring and
muttering within before Mbejane, with a blanket draped around his
shoulders and an old paraffin lamp in his hand, came out to Sean's
shouts.

What is it, Nkosi?  I am going, Mbejane.  Where to?  Wherever the roads
lead.  Will you follow?  I will get my spears, said Mbejane.

Old man Pye was still in his office behind the bank when they reached
Lady-burg.  He was counting the sovereigns and stacking them in neat
golden piles and his hands were as gentle on them as a man's hands on
the body of the woman he loves, but he reached quickly for the open
drawer at his side as Sean shouldered the door open.  You don't need
that, said Sean and Pye lifted his hand guiltily off the pistol.  Good
gracious!  I didn't recognize you, my boy.  How much have I got credited
to my account!  Sean cut through the pleasantries.  This isn't banking
hours, you know.  Look here, Mr Pye, I'm in a hurry.  How much have I
got?

Pye climbed out of his chair and crossed to the big iron safe. Shielding
it with his body he tumbled the combination and swung open the door.  He
brought the ledger across to the desk.  Carter, Cloete, Courtney, he
muttered as he turned the pages.  Ah, Ada, Garrick, Sean.  Here we are.

Twelve hundred and ninety-six pounds eight and eight pence; of course,
there are last month's accounts at the store still unpaid.  Call it
twelve hundred then, said Sean.  I want it now and while you are
counting it you can give me pen and paper.  Help yourself, there on the
desk.  Sean sat at the desk, pushed the piles of gold out of his way,
dipped the pen and wrote.  When he had finished he looked up at old Pye.

Witness that, please.  Pye took the paper and read it through.  His face
went limp with surprise.  You're giving your half share of Theunis Kraal
and all the cattle to your brother's first born!  he exploded.  That's
right, please witness it.  You must be mad, protested Pye.  That's a
fortune you're giving away.  Think what you're doing, think of your
future.  I had hoped that you and Audrey -'He stopped himself and went
on.  Don't he a fool, manPlease witness it, Mr Pye, said Sean and,
muttering under his breath, Pye signed quickly.  Thank you.  Sean folded
the document, slipped it-into an envelope and sealed it.  He put it away
inside his coat.

Where's the money?  he asked.

Pye pushed a canvas bag across to him.  His expression was one of
disgust; he wanted no truck with fools.

Count it, he said.  I'll take your word for it, said Sean and signed the
receipt.

Sean rode out past the sale-pens and up the escarpment along the road to
Pietermaritzburg.  Mbejane trotted at his stirrup leading the spare
horse.  They stopped at the top of the escarpment.  The wind had blown
the clouds open and the starlight came through.  They could see the town
below them with here and there a lighted window.

I should have said goodbye to Ada, Sean thought.  He looked down the
valley towards Theunis Kraal.  He could see no light.  He touched the
letter in the inside pocket of Witwatersrand his coat.  I'll post it to
Garry from Pietermaritzburg, he spoke aloud.

Nkosi?  asked Mbejane.  I said, "It's a long road, let us begin.  "'Yes,
agreed Mbejane.  Let us begin.  They turned north from Pietermaritzburg
and climbed steadily up across bleak grassland towards the mountains.

On the third day they saw the Drakensberg, jagged and black as the teeth
of an ancient shark along the skyline.

It was cold; wrapped in his kaross Mbejane trailed far behind Sean. They
had exchanged perhaps two dozen words since they left Pietermaritzburg
for Sean had his thoughts and they were evil company.  Mbejane was
keeping discreetly out of his way.  Mbejane felt no resentment, for a
man who had just left his home and his cattle was entitled to brood.
Mbejane was with sadness himself, he had left a fat woman in his bed to
follow Sean.

Mbejane unplugged his small gourd snuff-box, picked a pinch and sniffed
it delicately.  He looked up at the mountains.  The snows upon them were
turning pink in the sunset and in a little while now they would make
camp, and then again perhaps they would not.  It made no difference.

Sean rode on after dark.  The road crossed another fold in the veld and
they saw the lights in the valley below.

Dundee, Sean thought without interest.  He made no effort to hasten his
horse but let it amble down towards the town.  Now he could smell the
smoke from the coal mine, tarry and thick in the back of his throat.
They entered the main street.  The town seemed deserted in the cold.
Sean did not intend stopping, he would camp on the far side; but when he
reached the hotel he hesitated.

There was warmth in there and laughter and the sound of men's voices and
he was suddenly aware that his fingers were stiff with cold.

Mbejane, take my horse.  Find a place to camp beyond the town and make a
fire so I won't miss you in the dark.  Sean climbed down and walked into
the bar.  The room was full, miners most of them, he could see the grey
coal dust etched into their skins.  They looked at him incuriously as he
crossed to the counter and ordered a brandy.  He drank it slowly, making
no attempt to join the loud talk around him.

The drunk was a short man but built like Table Mountain, low, square and
solid.  He had to stand on tiptoe to put his arm around Sean's neck.
Have a drink with me, Boetie.  His breath smelt sour and old.

No thanks.  Sean was in no mood for drunks.  Come on, come on, the drunk
insisted; he staggered and Sean's drink slopped onto the counter.

Leave me alone.  Sean shrugged the arm away.  You've got something
against me?  No.  I just feel like drinking alone.  You don't like my
face, maybe?  The drunk held it close to Sean's.  Sean didn't like it.
Push off, there's a good fellow.

The drunk slapped the counter.  Charlie, give this big ape a drink. Make
it a double.  If he don't drink it, I ram it down his throat.  Sean
ignored the proffered glass.  He swallowed what remained in his own and
turned for the door.  The drunk threw the brandy in his face.  The
spirit burned his eyes and he hit the man in the stomach.  As his head
came down Sean hit him again, in the face.  The drunk spun sideways,
fell and lay bleeding from his nose.  What you hit him for? Another
miner was helping the drunk into a sitting position.  It wouldn't cost
you nothing to have a drink with him.

Sean felt the hostility in the room; he was the outsider.  This boy is
looking for troubleIgoHe's a tough monkey.  We know how to handle tough
monkeysCome on, let's sort this bastard out Sean had hit the man as a
reflex action.  He was sorry now, but his guilt evaporated as he saw
them gathering against him.  Gone too was his mood of depression and in
its place was a sense of relief.  This was what he needed.

There were six of them moving in on him in a pack.

Six was a fairly well-rounded number.  One of them had a bottle in his
hand and Sean started to smile.  They were talking loudly, spreading
courage and waiting for one of their fellows to start it.

Sean saw movement out of the side of his eye and jumped back to cover it
with his hands ready.  Steady on there, a very English voice soothed
him.  I have come to offer my services.  It seems to me you have
adversaries and to spare.  The speaker had stood up from one of the
tables behind Sean.  He was tall, with a gauntly ravage d face and an
immaculate grey suit.

I want them all, said Sean.

Damned unsporting.  The newcomer shook his head.

I'll buy the three gentlemen on the left if your price is reasonable.
Take two as a gift and consider yourself lucky.  Sean grinned at him and
the man grinned back.  They had almost forgotten the impending action in
the pleasure of meeting'Very decent of you.  May I introduce myself,
Dufford Charleywood.  He shifted the light cane into his left hand and
extended his right to Sean.

Sean Courtney.  Sean accepted the hand.  Are you bastards going to fight
or what!  protested one of the miners impatiently.

rWe are, dear boy, we are, said Duff and moved lightly as a dancer
towards him, swinging the cane.  Thin as it was it made a noise like a
well-hit baseball along the man's head.

Then there were five, said Duff.  He flicked the cane and, weighted with
lead, it made a most satisfactory swish.  Like a swordsman he lunged
into the throat of the second miner.  The man lay on the floor and made
a strangling noise.

,The rest are yours, Mr Courtney, said Duff regretfully.

Sean dived in low, spreading his arms to scoop up all n the pile of
bodies four pairs of legs at once.  He sat up i and started punching and
kicking.

Messy, very messy, murmured Duff disapprovingly.

The yelps and thuds gradually petered into silence and Sean stood up.
His lip was bleeding and the lapel was torn off his jacket.

Drink?  asked Duff.

Brandy, please.  Sean smiled at the elegant figure against the bar.  I
won't refuse another drink this evening.  They took the glasses to
Duff's table, stepping over the bodies as they went.

Mud in your eye!

Down the old red lane!

Then they studied each other with frank interest, ignoring the clearing
up operations being conducted around them.

,You are travelling?  asked Duff.

Yes, are you?  No such luck.  I am in the permanent employ of Dundee
Collieries Ltd.  You work here!  Sean looked incredulous for Duff was a
peacock among pigeons.

Assistant Engineer, nodded Duff.  But not for long; the taste of
coal-dust sticks in my craw.  May I suggest something to wash it outV

A splendid idea, agreed Duff.

Sean brought the drinks to the table.

Where are you headed?  asked Duff.

I was facing north when I started, shrugged Sean, I just kept going that
way.  Where did you start from?  South.  Sean answered abruptly.

Sorry, I didn't mean to pry.  Duff smiled.  Yours is brandy, isn't it?
The Barman came round from behind the counter and crossed to their
table.

Hello, Charlie, Duff greeted him.  I take it you require compensation
for the damage to your fittings and furniture?

Don't worry about it, Mr Charleywood.  Not often we have a good barney
like that.  We don't mind the odd table and chair as long as it's worth
watching.  Have it on the house.  That's extremely good of you.  That's
not what I came across for, Mr Charleywood.

I've got something I'd like you to take a look at, you being a mining
chap and all.  Could you spare a minute, sir?  Come on, Sean.

Let's see what Charlie's got for us.  My guess is it's a beautiful
woman.  It's not actually, sir, said Charlie seriously and led the way
through into the back room.  Charlie reached up and took a lump of rock
down from one of the shelves.  He held it out to Duff.  What do you make
of that?

Duff took it and weighed it in his hand, then peered closely at it.  It
was glassy grey, blotched with white and dark-red and divided by a broad
black stripe.

Some sort of conglomerate.  Duff spoke without enthusiasm.  What's the
mystery?  Friend of mine brought it down from Kruger's Republic on the
other side of the mountains.  He says it's gold bearing.

They've made a big strike at a place called Witwatersrand just outside
Pretoria.  Of course, I don't put much store by these rumours cos you
hear them all the time: diamonds and gold, gold and diamonds Charlie
laughed and wiped his hands on his apron.

Anyway my friend says the Boers are selling licences to them as want to
dig for the stuff.  Thought I'd just get you to have a look.  I'll take
this with me, Charlie, and pan it in the inoming.  Right now my friend
and I are drinking.  Sean opened his eyes the next morning to find the
sun burning in through the window above his bed.  He closed them again
hurriedly and tried to remember where he was.  There was a pain in his
head that distracted him and a noise.  The noise was a regular croaking
rattle; it sounded as though someone was dying.  Sean opened his eyes
and turned his head slowly.  Someone was in the bed across the room.
Sean groped for a boot and threw it; there was a snort and Duff's head
came up.  For a second he regarded Sean through eyes as red as a winter
sunset and then he subsided gently back into the blankets.  Keep it down
to a bellow, whispered Sean.  You are in the presence of grave illness.

A long time later a servant brought coffee.

'Send word to my office that I am sick, commanded Duff.  I have done so.
The servant clearly understood his master.  He went on, There is one
outside who seeks the other Nkosi!  He glanced at Sean.  He is greatly
worried IMbejane.  Tell him to wait, said Sean.

They drank coffee in silence, sitting on the edge of their beds.

How did I get here?  asked Sean.  Laddie, if you don't know, then nobody
does Duff stood up and crossed the room to find fresh clothing.  He was
naked and Sean saw that although he was slim as a boy his body was
finely muscled.

My God, what does Charlie put in his liquor?  complained Duff as he
picked up his jacket.

He found the lump of rock in the pocket, brought it out and tossed it
onto the packing-case that served as a table.

He regarded it sourly as he finished dressing then he went to the great
pile of bachelor debris that filled one corner of the room.  He
scratched around and came out with a steel pestle-and-mortar and a
battered black gold pan.  I feel very old this morning, he said as he
started to crush the rock to powder in the mortar.  He poured the powder
into the pan, carried it out to the corrugated iron water tank beside
the front door and filled the pan from the tap.

Sean followed him and they sat together on the front step.  Duff worked
the pan, using a practised dip and swing that set the contents spinning
like a whirlpool and slopped a little over the front lip with each turn.
He filled it again with clean water.

Suddenly Sean felt Duff stiffen beside him.  He glanced at his face and
saw that his hangover had gone; his lips were shut in a thin line and
his bloodshot eyes were fastened on the pan.

Sean looked down and saw the gleam through the water, like the flash of
a trout's belly as it turns to take the fly.  He felt the excitement
prickle up his arms and lift the hair on his neck.

Quickly Duff splashed fresh water into the pan; three more turns and he
flicked it out again.  They sat still, not speaking staring at the
golden tail curved round the bottom of the pan.  How much money have you
got?  Duff asked without looking up.

little over a thousand.  As much as that.  Excellent!  I can raise about
five hundred but I'll throw in my mining experience.  Equal partners, do
you agree?  Yes.  Then why are we sitting here?  I'm going down.  to the
bank.  Meet me on the edge of town in half an hour.  What about your
job?  Sean asked.

I hate the smell of coal, the hell with my job.  What about Charlie?
Charlie is a poisoner, the hell with Charlie.  They camped that night in
the mouth of the pass with the mountains standing up before them.  They
had pushed the pace all that afternoon and the horses were tired they
turned their tails to the wind and cropped at the dry winter grass.

Mbejane built a fire in the shelter of a red stone outcrop and they
huddled beside it brewing coffee, trying to keep out of the snow-cold
wind, but it came down off the mountains and blew a plume of sparks from
the fire.  They ate; then Mbejane curled up beside the fire, pulled his
kaross over his head and did not move again until morning.

How far is it to this place?  Sean asked.  I don't know, Duff admitted.
We'll go up through the pass tomorrow, fifty or sixty miles through the
mountains, and then we'll be out into the high veld.  Perhaps another
week's riding after that.  Are we chasing rainbows?  Sean poured more
coffee into the mugs.

I'll tell you when we get there Duff picked up his mug and cupped his
hands around it.  One thhing is certain that sample was stinking with
gold.  If there's much of that stuff around somebody's going to get
rich.  Us, perhaps?  I've been on gold stampedes before.  The first ones
in make the killings.  We might find the ground for fifty miles around
as thick with claim pegs as quills on a porcupine's back.

Duff sipped noisily at his coffee.  But we've got money, that's our ace
in the hole.  If we peg a proposition we've got capital to work it.  If
we're too late we can buy claims from the brokers.  If we can't, well,
there're other ways of getting gold than grubbing for it, a store, a
saloon, a transport business, take your pick.  Duff flicked the coffee
grounds out of his mug.  With money in your pocket you're somebody;
without it anyone can kick you in the teeth.  He took a long black
cheroot out of his top pocket and offered it to Sean.  Sean shook his
head and Duff bit the tip from the cheroot and spat it into the fire. He
picked up a burning twig and lit it, sucking with content.  Where did
you learn mining, Duff?  Canada. The wind whipped the smoke away from
his mouth as Duff exhaled.  You've been around?  I have, laddie.  It's
too damn cold to sleep; we'll talk instead.  For a guinea I'll tell you
the story of my life.  Tell me first, I'll see if it's worth it!  Sean
pulled the blanket up around his shoulders and waited.  Your credit is
good, agreed Duff.  He paused dramatically.  I was born thirty-one years
ago, fourth and youngest son to the sixteenth Baron Roxby, that is, not
counting the others who never made it to puberty Blue blood, said Sean.
Of course, just look at my nose.  But please don't interrupt.  Very
early in the game my father, the sixteenth Baron, dispelled with a
horsewhip any natural affection we may have owed him.  Like Henry the
Eighth he preferred children in the abstract.  We kept out of his way
and that suited everybody admirably.  A sort of armed truce.  Dear
father had two great passions in life: horses and women.  During his
sixty-two glorious years he acquired a fine collection of both.  My
fifteen-year-old cousin, a comely wench as I recall, was his last and
unattained ambition.  He took her riding every day and fingered her most
outrageously as he helped her in and out of the saddle.  She told me
about it with giggles.  However father's horse, a commendably moral
creature, cut short the pursuit by kicking father on the head,
presumably in the middlle of one of these touching scenes.

Poor father was never the same again.  In fact so much was he altered by
this experience that two days later, to the doleful clangour of bells
and a collective sigh of relief from his sons and his neighbours who
owned daughters, they buried him.  Dufford leaned forward and prodded
the fire.

It was all very sad.  I or any of my brothers could have told father
that not only was my cousin comely but she had the family sporting
instincts developed to a remarkable degree After all who should know
better than we?

We were her cousins and you know how cousins will be cousins.  Anyway
father never found out and to this day I feel guilty, I should have told
him.  He would have died happier .  .  .  Do I bore you?  No, go on.
I've had half a guinea's worth already, Sean laughed.

Father's untimely decease made no miraculous changes in my life.  The
seventeenth Baron, brother Tom, once he had the title was every bit as
tight-fisted and unpleasant as father had been.  There I was at nineteen
on an allowance too small to enable me to pursue the family hobbies,
gathering mould in a grim old castle forty miles from London, with the
development of my sensitive soul being inhibited by the undiluted
company of my barbaric brothers.

I left with three months advance allowance clutched in my sweaty palm
and the farewells of my brothers ringing in my ears.  The most
sentimental of these was

"don't bother to write!

Everybody was going to Canada: it seemed like a good idea so I went too.
I made money and spent it.  I made women and spent them also, but the
cold got to me in the end.  Duff's cheroot had died; he re-lit it and
looked at Sean.

It was so cold you couldn't urinate without getting frostbite on your
equipment, so I began to think of lands trropical, of white beaches and
sun, of exotic fruits and even more exotic maidens.  The peculiar
circumstances that finally decided me to leave are painful to recall and
we will not dwell upon them.  I left, to say the least, under a cloud.
So here you see me freezing slowly to death, with a bearded ruffian for
company and not an exotic maiden within a day's ride.  'A stirring tale,
well told, applauded Sean.

One story deserves another, let's hear your tale of woe.  Sean's smile
slid off his face.  Born and bred here in Natal.  Left home a week or so
ago, also in painful circumstances!  A woman?  asked Duff with deep
compassion.  A woman, agreed Sean.  The sweet bitches, sighed Duff.  How
I love them.

The pass ran like a twisted gut through the Drakensberg.

The mountains stood up sheer and black on each side of them, so they
rode in shadow and saw the sun only for a few hours in the middle of the
day.  Then the mountains dropped away and they were out into the open.

Open was the word for the high veld.  It stretched away flat and empty,
grass and brown grass dwindling to a distant meeting with the pale empty
sky.  But the loneliness could not blunt the edge of their excitement:
each mile covered, each successive camp along the ribbon road ground it
sharper until at last they saw the name in writing for the first time.
Forlorn as a scarecrow in a ploughed land the signpost pointed right and
said, Pretoria, pointed left and said, Witwatersrand.

The Ridge of White Waters, whispered Sean.  It had a ring to it that
name, a ring like a hundred millions in gold.

We're not the first, muttered Duff.  The left-hand fork of the road was
deeply scored by the passage of many wagons.

No time to worry about that.  Sean had the gold sickness on him now.

There's a little speed left in these makes, let's use it.  It came up on
the horizon as a low line above the emptiness, a ridge of hills like a
hundred others they had crossed.  They went up it and from the top
looked down.

Two ridges ran side by side, north and south, four miles or so apart. In
the shallow valley between they could see the flash of the sun off the
swamp pools that gave the hills their name.

Look at them, groaned Sean.

The tents and wagons were scattered along the length of the valley and
in between them the prospect trenches were raw wounds through the grass.
The trenches were concentrated along a line down the centre of the
valley.

That's the strike of the reef, said Duff, and we're too late, it's all
pegged!  How do you know?  protested Sean.  Use your eyes, laddie.  It's
all gone.  There might be some they've overlooked These boys overlook
nothing.  Let's go down and I'll show you.  Duff prodded his horse and
they started down.

He spoke over his shoulder to Sean.  Look up there near that stream,
they aren't wasting time.  They've got a mill going already.  It's a
four-stamp rig by the looks of it They rode into one of the Luger
encampments of tents and wagons; there were women at work around the
fires and the smell of food brought saliva jetting from under Sean's
tongue.  There were men also, sitting among the wagons waiting for their
suppers.

I'm going to ask some of these characters what's going on here, said
Sean.  He climbed down off his horse and tossed the reins to Mbejane.
Duff watched him with a wry grin as he tried in succession to engage
three different men in conversation.  Each time Sean's victim avoided
his eyes, mumbled vaguely and withdrew.  Sean finally gave up and came
back to the horses.

What's wrong with me, he asked plaintively.  Have I got a contagious
clap?  Duff chuckled.  They've got gold sickness he said.You're a
potential rival.  You could die of thirst and not one of them would spit
on you, lest it gave you strength to crawl out and peg something they
hadn't noticed.  He sobered We're wasting time.  There's an hour left
before dark, let's go and have a look for ourselves They trotted out
towards the area of mauled earth.  Men were working pick and shovel in
the trenches, some of them lean and tough-looking with a dozen natives
working beside them; others fat from an office stool, sweating and
gritting teeth against the pain of blistered palms, their faces and arms
burnt angry red by the sun.  All of them greeted Sean and Duff with the
same suspicious hostility.

They rode slowly towards the north and every hundred yards with
sickening regularity they came across a claim peg with a cairn of stones
around its foot and the scrap of canvas nailed to it.  Printed in crude
capitals on the canvas was the owner's name and his licence number.

Many of the claims were as yet untouched and on these Duff dismounted
and searched in the grass, picking up pieces of rock and peering at them
before discarding them again.  Then once more they moved on with sinking
spirits and increasing exhaustion.  They camped after dark on the open
windy ridge and while the coffee brewed they talked.

We're too late.  Sean scowled into the fire.

We've got money, laddie, just remember that.  Most of these gentlemen
are broke, they are living on hope, not beef and potatoes.  Look at
their faces and you'll see despair starting to show.  It takes capital
to work reef gold: you need machinery and money for wages, you have to
pipe in water and pile rock, you need wagons and time.  Money's no good
without a claim to work, brooded Sean.

Stay with me, laddie.  Have you noticed how many of these claims haven't
been touched yet?  They belong to speculators and my guess is that they
are for sale.  In the next few weeks you'll see the men sorted out from
the boys!  feel like packing up.  This isn't what I expected.  You're
tired.  Sleep well tonight and tomorrow we'll see how far this reef
runs, then we'll start some scheming.

Duff lit one of his cheroots, and sucked on it: in the firelight his
face was as punt as a Red Indian's.  They sat on in silence for a while,
then Sean spoke.

What's that noise?  It was a dull torn-torn beat in the darkness.
You'll get used to that if you stay around here much longer, said Duff.
It's the stamps on that mill we saw from the high ground. It's a mile or
so farther up the valley; we'll pass it in the morning.

They were on the move again before the sun was up and they came to the
mill in the morning's uncertain light.  The mill crouched black and ugly
on the smooth curve of the ridge, defiant as a quixotic monster.  Its
jaws thumped sullenly as it chewed the rock; it snorted steam and
screeched metallically.

I didn't realize it was so big, said Sean.  It's big all right, agreed
Duff, and they cost money, they don't give them away.  Not many men
around here can afford a set-up like that.  There were men moving around
the mill, tending its needs, feeding it rock and fussing about the
copper tables over which its gold-laden faeces poured.  One of the men
came forward to offer them the usual hospitality.  This is private
ground.  We don't want sightseers around here keep on going.  He was a
dapper little man with a round brown face and a derby hat pulled down to
his ears.  His mustache bristled like the whiskers of a fox terrier.
Listen, Francois, you miserable bloody earthworm, if you talk to me like
that I'll push your face around the back of your head, Duff told him,
and the dapper one blinked uncertainly and came closer, peering up at
them.

Who are you?  Do I know you?

Duff pushed his hat back so the man could see his face.  Duff!  crowed
the little man delightedly.  It's old Duff.  He bounced forward to take
Duff's hand as he dismounted.  Sean watched the orgy of reunion with
amusement.  It lasted until Duff managed to bring it under control and
lead the little Afrikander across to make the introduction.

Sean, this is Francois du Toit.  He's an old friend of mine from the
Kimberley diamond fields.  Francois greeted Sean and then relapsed once
more into the excited chorus of Gott, it's good to see you old Duff.

He pounded Duff's back despite the nimble footwork that Duff was using
to spoil his aim.  Another few minutes of this passed before Francois
composed himself to make his first coherent statement.

Listen, old Duff, I'm just in the middle of cleaning the amalgam tables.
you and your friend go down to my tent.

I'll be with you in half an hour, tell my servant to make breakfast.  I
won't be long, man.  Gott, man, it's you some good to see you.

An old lover of yours?  asked Sean when they were alone.

Duff laughed.  We were on the diamond fields together.

I did him a favour once, Pulled him Out Of a caving drive when the rock
fall had broken his legs- He's a good little guy and meeting him here is
the proverbial answer to a prayer.  What he can't tell us about this
goldfield no one else can.  Francois came bustling into the tent well
under the promised half hour and during breakfast Sean was an outsider
in a conversation where every exchange began, you remember -?  or what
happened to old so and so?

Then, when the plates were empty and the coffee mugs filled, Duff asked,
so, what are you doing here, Franz?  Is this your own outfit?  No, I'm
still with the Company.  Not that whoreson Hradsky?  Duff registered
mock alarm.  That, that that's ta, to, terrible, he imitated a stutter.
Cut it out, Duff.  Francois looked nervous.  Don't do that, you want me
to lose my job?  Duff turned to Sean with an explanation-'Norman Hradsky
and God are equals, but in this part of the world God takes his orders
from Hradsky.

Cut it out, Duff.  Francois was deeply shocked but Duff went on
imperturbably.The organization through which Hradsky exercises his
divine powers is referred to with reverently hated breath as "The
Company".  In actual fact its full and resounding title is The South
African Mining and Lands Company.

Do you get the picture?  Sean nodded smiling and Duff added as an
afterthought, Hradsky is a bastard and he stutters.It was too much for
Francois.  He leaned across and caught Duff's arm.  Please, man.  My
servant understands English, cut it out, Duff.  So the Company has
started on these fields, hey?  Well, well, it must be pretty big, mused
Duff and Francois followed with relief onto safer ground.  It is!  You
just wait and see, it's going to make the diamond fields look like a
church bazaar!

Tell me about it, said Duff.They call it the Rotten Reef or the Banket
or the Heidelberg Reef, but in fact there are three reefs, not one. They
run side by side like layers in a sandwich cake.  All three have pay
gold?  Duff shot the question and Francois shook his head.  There was a
light in his eyes; he was happy talking gold and No, you can forget
about the outer reef, just traces there.  Then there's the Main Reef.
That's a bit better, it's as much as six feet thick in places and giving
good values, but it's patchy.  Francois leaned eagerly across the table;
in his excitement his thick Afrikaans accent was very noticeable.The
bottom reef is the winner, we call it the Leader Reef.  It's only a few
inches thick and some places it fades out altogether, but it's rich.
There's gold in it like plums in a pudding.  It's rich, Duff, I'm
telling you that you won't believe it until you see itV 'I'll believe
you, said Duff.  Now tell me where I can get some of this Leader Reef
for myself. Francois sobered instantly, a shutter dropped over his eyes
and hid the light that had shone there a moment before.  It's gone. It's
all gone, he said defensively.  It's all been pegged, you've come too
late.  Well, that's that, said Duff and a big silence settled on the
gathering.  Francois fidgeted on his stool, chewing at the ends of his
mustache and scowling into his mug.

Duff and Sean waited quietly; it was obvious that Francois was wrestling
with himself, two loyalties tearing him down the middle.  Once he opened
his mouth and then closed it again; he blew on his coffee to cool it and
the heat came off it in steam.Have you got any money?  He fired the
question with startling violence.

Yes, said Duff.  Mr Hradsky has gone down to Capetown to raise money. He
has a list of a hundred and forty claims that he will buy when he gets
back.  Francois paused guiltily.  I'm only telling you this because of
what I owe you.  Yes, I know!  Duff spoke softly.  Francois took an
audible breath and went on.  On the top of Mr Hradsky's list is a block
of claims that belongs to a woman.  She is willing to sell and they are
the most likely-looking propositions on the whole field.  Yes?  Duff
encouraged him.  This woman has started an eating-house about two miles
from here on the banks of the Natal Spruit. Her name is Mrs Rautenbach,
she serves good food.  You could go and have a meal there.  Thanks,
Francois.  I owed it to you, Francois said gruffly, then his mood
changed quickly and he chuckled.  You'll like her, Duff, she's a lot of
woman.

Sean and Duff went to eat lunch at Mrs Rautenbach's.

It was an unpainted corrugated-iron building on a wooden frame and the
sign above the veranda said in letters of red and gold Candy's Hotel.
High-class cuisine.  Free toilet facilities.  No drunks or horses
admitted.  Proprietor Mrs Candella Rautenbach.They washed off the dust
in the enamel basin which stood on the veranda, dried themselves on the
free towel and combed in the free mirror on the wall.

How do I look!  asked Duff.

Ravishing, said Sean, but you don't smell so good.

When did you last bath?  They went into the dining-room and found it
almost full, but there was an empty table against the far wall.

The room was hot and thick with pipe smoke and the smell of cabbage.
Dusty, bearded men laughed and shouted or ate silently and hungrily.
They crossed the room to the table and a coloured waitress came to them.

Yes?  she asked.  Her dress was damp at the armpits.  May we have the
menu?  The girl looked at Duff with faint amusement.  Today we got steak
and mashed potatoes with pudding afterwards.  We'll have it, Duff
agreed.  You sure as hell won't get nothing else, the girl assured him
and trotted back to the kitchen.  The service is good, Duff enthused. We
can only hope that the food and the proprietress are of the same high
standard The meat was tough but well flavoured and the coffee was strong
and sweet.  They ate with appreciation until Sean who was facing the
kitchen stopped his fork on its way to his mouth.  A hush was on the
room.

Here she is, he said.

Candy Rautenbach was a tall and bright, shiny blonde and her skin was
Nordic flawlessness as yet unspoiled by the sun.  She filled the front
of her blouse and the back of her skirt with a pleasant abundance.  She
was well aware of and yet not disconcerted by the fact that every eye in
the room was on one of those areas.  She carried a ladle which she
twitched threateningly at the first hand that reached out to pinch her
rump, the hand withdrew and Candy smiled sweetly and moved on among the
tables.

She stopped occasionally to chat with her customers and it was clear
that many of these lonely men came here not only to eat.  They watched
her avidly, grinning with pleasure when she spoke to them.  She reached
their table and Sean and Duff stood up.  Candy blinked with surprise.

Sit down, please.  The small courtesy had touched her.  You are new
here?  We got in yesterday, Duff smiled at her.  And the way you cook a
steak makes me feel as though I were home again.  Where are you from!
Candy looked at the two of them with perhaps just a shade more than
professional interest.  We've come up from Natal to have a look around.
This is Mr Courtney, he is interested in new investments and he thought
that these goldfields might provide an outlet for some of his capital.
Sean just managed to stop his jaw dropping open and then quickly assumed
the slightly superior air of a big financier as Duff went on.  My name
is Charleywood.  I am Mr Courtney's mining adviser.  Pleased to meet
you.  I am Candy Rautenbach.  She was impressed.  Won't you join us for
a few minutes, Mrs Rautenbach?

Duff drew back a chair for her and Candy hesitated.  I have to check up
in the kitchen, perhaps later.  Do you always lie so smoothly?  Sean
spoke with admiration when Candy had gone.

I spoke no untruths, Duff defended himself.  No, but the way you tell
the truth!  How the hell am I going to play up to the role you have
created for me?  You'll learn to live with it, don't worry.  just look
wise and keep your mouth shut, Duff advised.  "What do you think of her
anyway?  Toothsome, said Sean.

Decidedly palatable, agreed Duff.

When Candy came back Duff kept the conversation light and general for a
while, but when Candy started asking some sharp questions it was
immediately apparent that her knowledge of geology and mining was well
above average and Duff remarked on it.  Yes, my husband was in the game.
I picked it up from him.  She reached into one of the pockets of her
blue and white checked skirt and brought out a small handful of rock
samples. She put them down in front of Duff.  Can you name those?  she
asked.  It was the direct test, she was asking him to prove himself
Kimberlite. Serpentine.  Feldspar.

Duff reeled them off and Candy relaxed visibly.  As it happens I have a
number of claims pegged along the Heidelberg Reef.  Perhaps Mr Courtney
would care to have a look at them.  Actually, I am negotiating at the
moment with The South African Mining and Lands Company who are very
interested.  Sean made his solitary but valuable contribution to the
conversation.  Ah yes, he nodded sagely.  Good old Norman.  Candy was
shaken, not many men used Hradsky's Christian name.  Will tomorrow
morning be convenient?
she asked.

That afternoon they bought a tent from a disillusioned hopeful who had
thrown up his job on the Natal Railways to make the pilgrimage to
Witwatersrand and now needed money to get home.  They pitched it near
the Hotel and went down to the Natal Spruit to take a long overdue bath.
That night they held a mild celebration on the half bottle of brandy
that Duff produced from his saddlebag and the next morning Candy took
them out to the claims.

she had twenty of them pegged right along the Banket.

She led them to a spot where the reef out iT leave you two to look
around.  If you're interested we can talk about it when you come to the
Hotel.  I've got to get back now, there'll be hungry mouths to feed.
Duff escorted Candy to her horse, giving her his arm across the rough
ground and helping her into the saddle in a manner he must have learned
from his father.  He watched her ride away then came back to Sean.  He
was elated.  Tread lightly, Mr Courtney, walk with reverence for beneath
your feet lies our fortune.  They went over the ground, Sean like a
friendly bloodhound and Duff cruising with the restless circling of a
tiger shark.  They inspected the claim notices paced out the boundaries
and filled their pockets with chips of rock, then they rode back to
their tent and Duff brought out his pestle, mortar and pan.  They took
them down to the bank of the Natal Spruit and all afternoon crushed the
rock and worked the pan.  When they had tested the last sample Duff gave
his judgement.

Well, theres gold, and I'd say it's payable gold.  It's not nearly as
rich as the one we panned at Dundee but that must have been a selected
piece of the Leader Reef!  He paused and looked seriously at Sean.  I
think it's worth a try.  If the Leader Reef is there we'll find it and
in the meantime we won't lose money by working the main reef.  Sean
picked up a pebble and tossed it into the stream in front of him.  He
was learning for the first time the alternate thrill and depression of
gold sickness when one minute you rode the lightning and the next you
dropped abruptly into the depths.  The yellow tails in the pan had
looked pathetically thin and undernourished to him.  Supposing you're
right and supposing we talk Candy into selling her claims, how do we go
about it?  That fourstamp mill looked a devilishly complicated and
expensive bit of machinery to me, not the kind of thing you can buy over
the counter in every dealer's store Duff punched his shoulder and smiled
lopsidedly at him.  You've got your Uncle Duff looking after you.

Candy will sell her claims, she trembles when I touch her, a day or two
more and she'll be eating out of my hand.  As for the mill .  .  .  When
I came out to this country I fell in with a rich Cape farmer whose
lifelong ambition had been to have his own gold mine.  He selected a
ridge which in his undisputed wisdom as a grower of grapes he considered
to be an ideal place for his mine.  He hired me to run it for him,
purchased a mill of the latest and most expensive vintage and prepared
himself to flood the market with gold.  After six months when we had
processed vast quantities of assorted quartz, schist and earth and
recovered sufficient gold to fit into a mouse's ear without touching the
sides, my patron's enthusiasm was somewhat dampened and he dispensed
with my invaluable service s and closed the circus down.  I left for the
diamond fields and as far as I know the machinery is still lying there
waiting for the first buyer with a couple of hundred pounds to come and
pick it up.  Duff stood up and they walked back towards the tent.
However, first things first.

Do you agree that I should continue the negotiations with Mrs
Rautenbach?  I suppose so.  Sean was feeling more cheerful again.  But
are you sure your interest in Mrs Rautenbach is strictly line of duty?

Duff was shocked.  Don't think for a minute that my intentions are
anything but to further the interests of our partnership.  You can't
believe that my animal appetite plays any part in what I intend doing?
No, of course not, Sean assured him.  I hope you can force yourself to
go through with it.  Duff laughed.  While we are on the subject I think
this is as good a time as any for you to develop a stomach ailment and
retire to your lonely bed.  From now on until we've got the agreement
signed your boyish charm will be of no great value in the proceedings.
I'll tell Candy that you've given me authority to act on your behalf.
Duff combed his curls, put on the clothes that Mbejane had washed for
him and disappeared in the direction of Candy's Hotel.  Time passed
slowly for Sean; he sat and chatted with Mbejane, drank a little coffee
and when the sun went down retired to his tent.  He read one of Duff's
books by the light of the hurricane lamp but could not concentrate on
it; his mind kept straying to thoughts of blonde hair.  When someone
scratched on the canvas door he leapt up with a confused hope that Candy
had decided to come and deal with him direct.  It was the coloured girl
from the Hotel, her crinkly black hair at odds with what he had been
thinking.  Madame says she's sorry to hear about your sickness and to
tell you to have two spoons of this, she told him and offered Sean the
bottle of castor oil.  Tell your mistress, thank you very much.  Sean
accepted the medicine and started to close the tent flapMadame told me
to stay and make sure that you took two full spoons, I have to take the
bottle back and show her how much you've had.  Sean's stomach cringed.
He looked at the coloured girl standing resolute in the doorway,
determined to carry out her instructions.  He thought of poor Duff doing
his duty like a man, he could do no less.  He swallowed down the thick
clinging oil with his eyes closed then went back to his book.  He slept
uneasily starting up occasionally to look at the empty bed across the
tent.  The medicine drove him out into the cold at half past two in the
morning.

Mbejane was curled up next to the fire and Sean scowled at him.  His
regular contented snoring seemed a calculated mockery.  A jackal yelped
miserably up on the ridge, expressing Sean's feelings exactly, and the
night wind fanned his bare buttocks.

Duff came home in the dawning.  Sean was wide awake.

Well, what happened?  he demanded.

Duff yawned.  At one stage I began to doubt whether I was man enough.
However, it worked out to the satisfaction of all concerned.  What a
woman!  He pulled off his shirt and Sean saw the scratches across his
back.

Did she give you any castor oil?  Sean asked bitterly.

I m sorry about that Duff smiled at him sympathetically.  I tried to
dissuade her, truly I did.  She's a very motherly person.  Most
concerned about your stomachYou still haven't answered my question.  Did
you make any progress with the claims?  Oh that -, Duff pulled the
blankets up under his chin.  We disposed of that early on in the
proceedings.  She'll take a down payment of ten pounds each on them and
give us an option to buy the lot at any time during the next two years
for ten thousand.  We arranged that over dinner.  The rest of the time
was devoted, in a manner of speaking, to shaking hands over the deal.
Tomorrow afternoon, or rather this afternoon, you and I'll ride across
to Pretoria and get a lawyer to write up an agreement for her to sign.
But right now I need some sleep.  Wake me at lunch time.  Goodnight,
laddie.  Duff and Sean brought the agreement back from Pretoria the
following evening.  It was an impressive four-page document full of in
so much as and party of the first part.  Candy led them to her bedroom
and they sat around anxiously while she read it through twice.

She looked up at last and said, That seems all right but there is just
one other thing.  Sean's heart sank and even Duff's smile was strained.
It had all been too easy so far.

Candy hesitated and Sean saw with faint surprise that she was blushing.
It was a pleasant thing to see the peach of her cheeks turning to ripe
apple and they watched it with interest, their tension lessening
perceptibly.  I want the mine named after me.

They nearly shouted with relief.  An excellent idea!  How about the
Rautenbach Reef Mine?  Candy shook her head.  I'd rather not he reminded
of him, we'll leave him out of it Very well, let's call it the Candy
Deep.  A little premature, I suppose, as we are still at ground level,
but pessimism never pays, suggested Duff.  Yes, that's lovely, Candy
enthused, flushing again but this time with pleasure.  She scrawled her
name across the bottom of the document while Sean fired out the cork of
the champagne which Duff had bought in Pretoria.  They clinked glasses
and Duff gave the toast To Candy and the Candy Deep, may one grow
sweeter and the other deeper with each passing day.  We'll need labour,
about ten natives to start with.  That'll be your problem, Duff told
Sean.  It was the following morning and they were eating breakfast in
front of the tent.  Sean nodded but didn't try to answer until he had
swallowed his mouthful of bacon.  I'll get Mbejane onto that right away.
He'll be able to get us Zulus, even if he has to drive them here with a
spear at their backs.  Good, in the meantime you and I'll ride back to
Pretoria again to buy the basic equipment.  Picks, shovels, dynamite and
the like.  Duff wiped his mouth and filled his coffee cup.  I'll show
you how to start moving -the overburden and stacking the ore in a dump.
We'll pick a site for the mill and then I'll leave you to get on with it
while I head south for the Cape to see my farmer friend.  God and.  the
weather permitting ours will be the second mill working on these fields.
They brought their purchases back from Pretoria in a small ox wagon.
Mbejane had done his work well.  There were a dozen Zulus lined up for
Sean's approval next to the tent with Mbejane standing guard over them
like a cheerful sheepdog.  Sean walked down the line stopping to ask
each man his name and joke with him in his own language.  He came to the
last in the line.  How are you called?  My name is Blubi, Nkosi.  Sean
pointed at the man's well-rounded paunch bulging out above his
loincloth.  If you come to work for me, we'll soon have you delivered of
your child They burst out in delighted laughter and Sean smiled at them
affectionately: proud simple people, tall and bigmuscled, completely
defenceless against a well-timed jest.  Through his mind flashed the
picture of a hill in Zululand, a battlefield below it and the flies
crawling in the pit of an empty stomach.  He shut the picture out
quickly and shouted above their laughter.  So be it then, sixpence a day
and all the food you can eat.  Will you sign on to work for me?  They
chorused their assent and climbed up onto the back of the wagon.  Sean
and Duff took them out to the candy Deep and they laughed and chattered
like children going on a picnic.

it took another week for Duff to instruct Sean in the use of dynamite,
to explain how he wanted the first trenches dug and to mark out the site
for the mill and the dump.  They moved the tent up to the mine and
worked twelve hours every day.  At night they rode down to Candy's Hotel
to eat a full meal and then Sean rode Home alone.  He was so tired by
evening that he hardly envied Duff the comfort of Candy's bedroom;
instead he found himself admiring Duff's stamina Each morning he looked
for signs of fatigue in his partner but, although his face was lean and
punt as ever, his eyes were just as clear and his lopsided smile just as
cheerful.  How you do it beats me, Sean told him the day they finished
marking out the mill site.

Duff winked at him.  Years of practice, laddie, but between you and me
the ride down to the Cape Will be a welcome rest!

When are you going?  Sean asked.  Quite frankly I think that every day I
stay on here increases the risk of someone else getting in before us.

Mining machinery is going to be at a premium from now on.  You have got
things well in hand now .  .  .  What do you say?  I was starting to
think along the same lines, Sean agreed.  They walked back to the tent
and sat down in the camp chairs, from where they could look down the
length of the valley.  The week before about two dozen wagons had been
outspanned around Candy's Hotel, but now there were at least two hundred
and from where they sat they could count another eight or nine
encampments, some even larger than the one around Candy's place.

Wood and iron buildings were beginning to replace the canvas tents and
the whole veld was crisscrossed with rough roads along which mounted men
and wagons moved without apparent purpose.

The restless movement, the dust clouds raised by the passage of men and
beasts, and the occasional deep crump, crump of dynamite firing in the
workings along the Banket, all heightened the air of excitement, of
almost breathless expectancy that hung over the whole goldfleld.

I'll leave at first light tomorrow, Duff decided.  Ten days, riding to
the railhead at Colesberg and another four days by train will get me
there.  With luck I'll be back under two months.  He wriggled round in
his chair and looked directly at Sean.  After paying Candy her two
hundred pounds and with what I spent in Pretoria I've only got about a
hundred and fifty left.  Once I get to Paarl I'll have to pay out three
or four hundred for the Mill, then I'll need to hire twenty or thirty
wagons to bring it up here, say eight hundred pounds altogether to be on
the safe side.  Sean looked at him.  He had known this men a few short
weeks.  Eight hundred was the average man's earnings for three years.
Africa was a big land, a man could disappear easily.  Sean loosened his
belt and dropped it onto the table; he unbuttoned the money pouch.

Give me a hand to count it out, he told Duff.  Thanks, said Duff and he
was not talking about the money.  With trust asked for so simply and
given so spontaneously the last reservations in their friendship
shrivelled and died.

When Duff had gone Sean drove himself and his men without mercy.  They
stripped the overburden off the Reef and exposed it across the whole
length of the Candy claims, then they broke it up and started stacking
it next to the mill site.  The dump grew bigger with every twelve-hour
day worked.  There was still no trace of the Leader Reef but Sean found
little time to worry about that.  At night he climbed into bed and slept
away his fatigue until another morning called him back to the workings.
On Sundays he rode across to Francois's tent and they talked mining and
medicines.  Francois had an enormous chest of patent medicines and a
book titled The Home Physician.  His health was his hobby and he was
treating himself for three major ailments simultaneously.  Although he
was occasionally unfaithful, his true love was sugar diabetes.

The page in The Home Physician which covered this subject was limp and
grubby from the touch of his fingers.

He could recite the symptoms from memory and he had all of them.  His
other favourite was tuberculosis of the bone; this moved around his body
with alarming rapidity taking only a week to leave his hip and reach his
wrist.

Despite his failing health, however, he was an expert on mining and Sean
picked his brain shamelessly.  Francois's sugar diabetes did not prevent
him from sharing a bottle of brandy with Sean on Sunday evenings.  Sean
kept away from Candy's Hotel, that shiny blonde hair and peach skin
would have been too much temptation.  He couldn't trust himself not to
wreck his new friendship with Duff by another importunate affair, so
instead he sweated away his energy in the trenches of the Candy Deep.

Every morning he set his Zulus a task for the day, always just a little
more than the day before.  They sang as they worked and it was very
seldom that the task was not complete by nightfall.  The days blurred
into each other and turned to weeks which quadrupled like breeding
amoebae and became months.  Sean began to imagine Duff giving the
Capetown girls a whirl with his eight hundred pounds.  One evening he
rode south for miles along the Cape road, stopping to question every
traveller he met and when he finally gave up and returned to the
goldfields he went straight to one of the canteens to look for a fight.
He found a big, yellow-haired German miner to oblige him.  They went
outside and for an hour they battered each other beneath a crisp
Transvaal night sky surrounded by a ring of delighted spectators.  Then
he and the German went back into the canteen, shook each others bleeding
hands, drank a vow of friendship together and Sean returned to the Candy
Deep with his devil exorcized for the time being The next afternoon Sean
was working near the north boundary of the claims, at this point they
had burrowed down about fifteen feet to keep contact with the reef.

Sean had just finished marking the shot holes for the next blast and the
Zulus were standing around him taking snuff and spitting on their hands
before attacking the rock once more.  Mush, you shag-eared villains.
What's going on here, a trade union meeting?  The familiar voice came
from above their heads, Duff was looking down at them.  Sean scrambled
straight up the side of the trench and seized him in a bear hug.  Duff
was thinner, his jowls covered with a pale stubble and his curly hair
white with dust.

When the fury of greeting had subsided a little Sean demanded, Well,
where's the present you went to fetch me?  Duff laughed, Not far behind,
all twenty-five wagons full of it.  You got it then?  Sean roared.
You're damn right I did!  Come with me and I'll show you.  # Duff's
convoy was strung out four miles across the veld, Most Of the wagons
double-teamed against the enormous weight of the machinery.  Duff
pointed to a rust-streaked cylinder that completely filled one of the
leading wagons.  That is my particular cross, seven tons of the most
spiteful, stubborn and evil boiler in the world.  if it's broken the
wagon axle once it's broken it a dozen times since we left Colesberg,
not to mention the two occasions on which it capsized itself, once right
in the middle of a river.

They rode along the line of wagons.  Good God!  I didn't realize there'd
be so much.  Sean shook his head dubiously.  Are you sure you know how
it all fits together?  Leave it to your Uncle Duff.  Of course, it's
going to need a bit of work done on it, after all it's been lying out in
the open for a couple of years.  Some of it was rusted up solid, but the
judicious use of grease, new paint and the Charleywood brain will see
the Candy Deep plant breaking rock and spitting out gold within a month.
Duff broke off and waved to a horseman coming towards them.  This is the
transport contractor.  Frikkie Malan, Mr Courtney, my partner.  The
contractor pulled up next to, them and acknowledged the introduction. He
wiped the dust off his face with the sleeve of his shirt.  Gott, man, Mr
Charleywood, I don't mind telling you that this is the hardest money
I've ever worked for.

Nothing personal, but I'll be vragtig glad to see the last of this load.
Duff was wrong, it took much longer than a month.  The rust had eaten
deep into parts of the machinery and each bolt they twisted open was red
with the scaly cancer.

They worked the usual twelve-hour day chipping and scraping filing and
greasing, knuckles knocked raw against steel and palms wet and red where
the blisters had burst.

Then one day suddenly and miraculously they were finished.  Along the
ridge of the Candy Deep, neat and sweet smelling in its new paint, thick
with yellow grease and waiting only to be fitted together, lay the
dismembered mill.

How long has it taken us so far?  Duff asked.  It seems like a hundred
years.  Is that all?  Duff feigned surprise.  Then I declare a holiday,
two day's of meditation.  You meditate, brother, I'm going to do some
carousing.  , That's an excellent alternative, let's go!  They started
at Candy's place but she threw them out after the third fight so they
moved on.  There were a dozen places to drink at and they tried them
all.  Others were celebrating, because the day before old Kruger, the
President of the Republic, had given official recognition to the
goldfields.  This had the sole effect of diverting the payments for
mining licences from the pockets of the farmers who owned the land into
the Government coffers.  No one worried about that, except possibly the
farmers.  Rather it was an excuse for a party.  The canteens were packed
with swearing, sweating men.  Duff and Sean drank with them.

The Crown and Anchor boards were doing a steady business in every bar
and the men who crowded around them were the new population of the
goldfields.  Diggers bare to the waist and caked with dirt, salesmen
with loud clothes and louder voices selling everything from dynamite to
dysentery cure, an evangelist peddling salvation, gamblers mining
pockets, gentlemen trying to keep the tobacco juice off their boots,
boys new-flown from home and wishing themselves back, Boers bearded and
drabsuited, drinking little but watching with inscrutable eyes the
invaders of their land.  Then there were the others, the clerks and
farmers, the rogues and contractors listening greedily to the talk of
gold.

The coloured girl, Martha, came to find Sean and Duff on the afternoon
of the second day.  They were in a mudbrick and thatch hut called The
Tavern of the Bright Angels.  Duff was doing a solo exhibition of the
Dashing White Sergeant partnered by a chair; Sean and the fifty or so
other customers were beating the rhythm on the bar counter with glasses
and empty bottles.

Martha skittered across to Sean, slapping at the hands that tried to
dive up her skirts and squealing sharply every time her bottom was
pinched.  She arrived at Sean's side flushed and breathless.  Madame
says you must come quickly, there's big trouble, she gasped and started
to run the gauntlet back to the door. Someone flipped up her dress
behind and a concerted masculine roar approved the fact that she wore
nothing under the petticoats.

Duff was so engrossed in his dancing that Sean had to carry him bodily
out of the bar and dip Ins head in the horse through outside before he
could gain his attention.  What the hell did you do that for? spluttered
Duff and swung a round-arm punch at Sean's head.  Sean ducked under it
and caught him about the body to save him falling on his back. Candy
wants us, she says there's big trouble.  Duff thought about that for a
few seconds, frowning with concentration, then he threw back his head
and sang to the tune of London's Burning, Candy wants us, Candy wants us
We don't want Candy, we want brandy.

He broke out of Sean's grip and headed back for the bar.

Sean caught him again and pointed him in the direction of the Hotel.
Candy was in her bedroom.  She looked at the two of them as they swayed
arm-in-arm in the doorway.  Did you enjoy your debauch?  she asked
sweetly.

Duff mumbled and tried to straighten his coat.  Sean tried to steady him
as his feet danced an involuntary sideways jig.  What happened to your
eye?  she asked Sean and he fingered it tenderly; it was puffed and
blue.  Candy didn't wait an answer but went on, still sweetly:Well, if
you two beauties want to own a mine by tomorrow you'd better sober up.
They stared at her and Sean spoke deliberately but nevertheless
indistinctly.  Why, what's the matter?  They're going to jump the
claims, that's the matter.

This new proclamation of a State goldfield has given the drifters the
excuse they've been waiting for.  About a hundred of them have formed a
syndicate.  They claim that the old titles aren't legal any more; they
are going to pull out the pegs and put in their own.  Duff walked
without a stagger across to the washbasin beside Candy's bed; he
splashed his face, towelled it vigorously then stooped and kissed her.
Thanks, my sweet.  Duff, please be careful, Candy called after them.

Let's see if we can't hire a few mercenaries, Sean suggested.  Good
idea, we'll try and find a few sober characters there should be some in
Candy's dining-room.  They made a short detour on their way back, to the
mine and stopped at Francois's tent; it was dark by then and Francois
came out in a freshly ironed nightshirt.  He raised an eyebrow when he
saw the five heavily armed men with Sean and Duff.

You going hunting?  he asked.

Duff told him quickly and Francois was hopping with agitation before he
had finished.  Steal my claims, the thunders, the stinking thunders!

He rushed into his tent and came out again with a doublebarrelled
shotgun.  We'll see, man, we'll see how they look full of
buckshotFrancois, listen to me, Sean shouted him down.  We don't know
which claims they'll go to first.  Get your men ready and if you hear
shooting our way come and give us a hand, we'll do the same for you. Ja,
ja, we'll come all right, the dirty thunders.  His nightshirt flapping
around his legs Francois trotted off to call his men.  Mbejane and the
other Zulus were cooking dinner, squatting round the three-legged pot.
Sean rode up to them.  Get your spears, he told them.  They ran for
their huts and almost immediately came crowding back.

Nkosi, where's the fight!  they pleaded, food forgotten.  Come on, I'll
show you.  They placed the hired gunmen amongst the mill machinery from
where they could cover the track which led up to the mine.  The Zulus
they hid in one of the prospect trenches.  If it developed into a
hand-to-hand fight the syndicate was in for a surprise.  Duff and Sean
walked a little way down the slope to make sure their defenders were all
concealed.

How much dynamite have we got?  Sean asked thoughtfully.  Duff stared at
him a second, then he grinned.  Sufficient, I'd say.  You're full of
bright ideas this evening He led the way back to the shed which they
used as a storeroom.

In the middle of the track a few hundred yards down the slope they
buried a full case of explosive and placed an old tin can on top of it
to mark the spot.  They went back to the shed and spent an hour making
grenades out of bundles of dynamite sticks, each with a detonator and a
very short fuse.  Then they settled down huddled into their sheepskin
coats, rifles in their laps and waited.

They could see the lights of the encampments straggled down the valley
and hear an occasional faint burst of singing from the canteens, but the
moonlit road up to the mine remained deserted.  Sean and Duff sat side
by side with their backs against the newly painted boiler.  How did
Candy find out about this, I wonder?  Sean asked.

She knows everything.  That hotel of hers is the centre of this
goldfield and she keeps her ears open.  They relapsed into silence again
while Sean formed his next question.  She's quite a girl, our Candy.
Yes, agreed Duff.  Are you going to marry her, Duff?  VGood God!  Duff
straightened up as though someone had stuck a knife into him.  You going
mad, laddie, or else that was a joke in the worst possible taste.  She
dotes on you and from what I've seen you're fairly well disposed towards
her.  Sean was relieved at Duffs quick rejection of -the idea.  He was
jealous, but not of the waYes, we've got a common interest, that I won't
deny but marriage!

Duff shivered slightly, not altogether from the cold.  Only a fool makes
the same mistake twice.  Sean turned to him with surprise.  You've been
married before?  he asked.  With a vengeance.  She was half Spanish and
the rest Norwegian, a smoking bubbly mixture of cold fire and hot ice.
Duff's voice went dreamy.  The memory has cooled sufficiently for me to
think of it with a tinge of regret.  What happened?  I left her yWe only
did two things well together and one of them was fight.  If I close my
eyes I can still see the way she used to pout with those lovely lips and
bring them close to my ear before she hissed out a particularly foul
word, then, hey ho!  back to bed for the reconciliation.  Perhaps you
made the wrong choice.  You look around, you'll see millions of happily,
married people Name me one, challenged Duff and the silence lengthened
as Sean thought.

Then Duff went on, There's only one good reason for marriage, and that's
children.  And companionship, that's another good reason.  Companionship
from a woman?  Duff cut in incredulously.  Like perfume from garlic.
They're incapable of it.

I suppose it's the training they get from their mothers, who are after
all women themselves, but how can you be friends with someone who
suspicions every little move you make, who takes your every action and
weighs it on the balance of he loves me, he loves me not?  Duff shook
his head unhappily.  How long can a friendship last when it needs an
hourly declaration of love to nourish it?  The catechism of matrimony,
"Do you love me, darling?

"Yes, darling of course I do, my sweet.  " It's got to sound convincing
every time otherwise tears.

Sean chuckled.  All right, it's funny, it's hilarious until you have to
live with it, Duff mourned.  Have you ever tried to talk to a woman
about anything other than love?  The same things that interest you leave
them cold.  It comes as a shock the first time you try talking sense to
them and suddenly you realize that their attention is not with you -
they get a slightly fixed look in their eyes and you know they are
thinking about that new dress or whether to invite Men Van der Hum to
the party, so you stop talking and that's another mistake.  That's a
sign; marriage is full of signs that only a wife can read.  I hold no
brief for matrimony, Duff, but aren't you being a little unfair, judging
everything by your own unfortunate experience?  Select any woman slap a
ring on her third finger and she becomes a wife.  First she takes you
into her warm, soft body, which is pleasant, and then she tries to take
you into her warm, soft mind, which is not so pleasant.

She does not share, she possesses, she clings and she smothers.  The
relation of man to woman is uninteresting in that it conforms to an
inescapable pattern, nature has made it so for the very good reason that
it requires us to reproduce; but in order to obtain that result every
love, Romeo and Juliet, Bonaparte and Josephine not excepted, must lead
up to the co-performance of a simple biological function.  It's such a
small thing, such a short-lived, trivial little experience.  Apart from
that xnan and woman think differently, feel differently and are
interested in different things.  Would you call that companionship?  No,
but is that a true picture?  Is that all there is between them?  Sean
asked.

You'll find out one day.  Nature in her preoccupation with reproduction
has planted in the mind of man a barricade; it has sealed him off from
the advice and experience of his fellowmeni inoculated him against it.
When your time comes you'll go to the gallows with a song on your lips.
You frighten me.  It's the sameness of it all that depresses me, the
goddqmn monotony of it.  Duff shifted his seat restlessly then settled
back against the boiler.  The interesting relationships are those in
which sex the leveller takes no hand brothers, enemies, master and
servant, father and son, man and man.  Homosexuals?  No, that's merely
sex out of step and you're back to the original trouble.  When a man
takes a friend he does it not from an uncontrollable compulsion but in
his own free choice.  Every friendship is different, ends differently or
goes on for ever.  No chains bind it, no ritual or written contract.
There is no question of forsaking all others, no obligation to talk
about it, mouth it up and gloat on it the whole time.  Duff stood up
stiffly.  It's one of the good things in life.  How late is it?  Sean
pulled out his watch and tilted its face to catch the moonlight.  After
midnight, it doesn't look as if they're coming.  ?  They'll come,
there's gold here, another uncontrollable compulsion.

They'll come.  The question is when.  The lights along the valley faded
out one by one, the deep singsong voices of the Zulus in the prospect
trench stilled and a small cold wind came up and moved the grass along
the ridge of the Candy Deep.  Sitting together, sometimes drowsing
sometimes talking quietly, they waited the night away.  The sky paled,
then pinked prettily.  A dog barked over near Hospital Hill and another
joined it.  Sean stood up and stretched, he glanced down the valley
towards Ferrieras Camp and saw them.  A black moving blot of horsemen,
overflowing the road, lifting no dust from the dew-damp earth, spreading
out to cross the Natal Spruit then bunching together on the near bank
before coming on.  Mr Charleywood, we have company.

Duff jumped up.  They might miss us and go onto the Jack and Whistle
first We'll see which road they take when they come to the fork.  In the
meantime let's get ready.  Mbejane, Sean shouted and the black head
popped out of the trench.  Nkosi?  Are you awake They are coming.  The
blackness parted in a white smile.  We are awake.  Then get down and
stay down until I give the word.

The five mercenaries were lying belly down in the grass, each with a
newly-opened packet of cartridges at his elbow.  Sean hurried back to
Duff and they crouched behind the boiler.  The tin can shows up clearly
from here.  Do you think you can hit it?  With my eyes closed, said
Sean.

The horsemen reached the fork and turned without hesitation towards the
Candy Deep, quickening their paces as they came up the ridge.  Sean
rested his rifle across the top of the boiler and picked up the speck of
silver in his sights.  What's the legal position, Duff?  he asked out of
the corner of his mouth.  They've just crossed our boundary, they are
now officially trespassers, Duff pronounced solemnly.

One of the leading horses kicked over the tin can and Sean fired at the
spot on which it had stood.  The shot was indecently loud in the quiet
morning and every head in the syndicate lifted with alarm towards the
ridge, then the ground beneath them jumped up in a brown cloud to meet
the sky.  When the dust cleared there was a struggling tangle of downed
horses and men.  The screams carried clearly up to the crest of the
ridge.

My God, breathed Sean, appalled at the destruction.  Shall we let them
have it, boss?  called one of the hired men.  No, Duff answered him
quickly.  They've had enough.  The flight started, riderless horses,
mounted men and others on foot were scattering back down the valley.
Sean was relieved to see that they left only half a dozen men and a few
horses lying in the road.  Well, that's the easiest fiver you've ever
earned, Duff told one of the mercenaries.  I think you can go home now
and have some breakfast.  Voit, Duff.  Sean pointed.  -the survivors of
the explosion had reached the road junction again and there they were
being stopped by two men on horseback.  Those two are trying to rally
them Let's change their minds, they're still within rifle range!  They
are not on our property any more, disagreed Sean.  Do you want to wear a
rope?  They watched while those of the syndicate who had had enough
fighting for one day disappeared down the road to the camps and the rest
coagulated into a solid mass at the crossroad.  We should have shot them
up properly while we had the chance, grumbled one of the mercenaries
uneasily.  Now they'll come back, look at that bastard talking to them
like a Dutch uncle.  They left their horses and spread out, then they
started moving cautiously back up the slope.  They hesitated just below
the line of boundary pegs then ran forward, tearing up the pegs as they
came.  All together, gentlemen, if you please, called Duff politely and
the seven rifles fired.  The range was long and the thirty or so
attackers ran doubled up and dodging.

The bullets had little effect at first, but as the distance shortened
men started falling.  There was a shallow donga running diagonally down
the slope and as each of the attackers reached it he jumped down into it
and from its safety started a heated reply to the fire of Sean's men.

Bullets sponged off the machinery, leaving bright scars where they
struck.

Mbejane's Zulus were adding their voices to the confusion.  Let us go
down to them now, Nkosi.  They are close, let us go.  Quiet down, you
madmen, you'd not go a hundred paces against those rifles, Sean snarled
impatiently.  Sean, cover me, whispered Duff.  I'm going to sneak round
the back of the ridge, rush them from the side and lob a few sticks of
dynamite into that donga.  . Sean caught his arm, his fingers dug into
it so that Duff winced.  You take one step and I'll break a rifle butt
over your head, you're as bad as those Blacks.  Now keep shooting and
let me think. Sean peered over the top of the boiler but ducked again as
a bullet rang loudly against it, inches from his ear.  He stared at the
new paint in front of his nose, put his shoulder against it; the boiler
rocked slightly.  He looked up and Duff was watching him.  We'll walk
down together and lob that dynamite, Sean told him.  Mbejane and his
bloodthirsty heathens will roll the boiler in front of us.  These other
gentlemen will cover us, we'll do this thing in style.  Sean called the
Zulus out of the trench and explained to them.  They chorused their
approval of the scheme and jostled each other to find a place to push
against the boiler.  Sean and Duff filled the front of their shirts with
the dynamite grenades and lit a short length of tarred rope each.

Sean nodded to Mbejane.

Where are the children of Zulu?  sang Mbejane, shrilling his voice in
the ancient rhetorical question.  Here, answered his warriors braced
ready against the boiler.  JWhere are the spears of Zulu?  Here.  How
bright are the spears of Zulu?  Brighter than the Sun.

How hungry are the spears of Zulu?  Hungrier than the locust.  Then let
us take them to the feeding.  Tehho.  Explosive assent and the boiler
revolved slowly to the thrust of black shoulders.

Teh-ho.  Another reluctant revolution.

Teh-ho.  It --moved more readily.

Teh-ho.  Gravity caught it.  Ponderously it bumped down the slope and
they ran behind it.  The fire from the donga doubled its volume,
rattling like hail against the huge metal cylinder.  The singing of the
Zulus changed its tone also; the deep-voiced chanting quickened, climbed
excitedly, and became the blood trill.  That insane, horrible squealing
made Sean's skin crawl, tickled his spine with the ghost fingers of
memory, but it inflamed him also.  His mouth opened and he squealed with
them.  He touched the first grenade with the burning rope then flung it
in a high spluttering sparking arc.  It burst in the air above the
donga.  He threw again.  Crump, crump.  Duff was using his explosive as
well.  The boiler crashed over the lip of the donga and came to rest in
a cloud of dust; the Zulus followed it in, spreading out, still
shrieking, and now their assegais were busy.  The white men broke,
clawed frantically out of the ravine and fled, the Zulus hacking at them
as they ran.

When Francois arrived with fifty armed diggers following him the fight
was over.  Take your boys down to the camps.  Comb them out carefully.
We want every one of those that got away, Duff told him.  It's about
time we had a little law and order on this field.  How will we pick out
the ones that were in on it?

asked Francois.

By their white faces and the sweat on their shirts you will know them.
, Duff answered.

Francois and his men went, leaving Sean and Duff to clean up the
battlefield.  It was a messy job, the stabbing spears had made it so.
They destroyed those horses that the blast had left still half alive and
they gleaned more than a dozen corpses from the donga and the slope
below it.  Two of them were Zulus.  The wounded, and there were many,
they packed into a wagon and took them down to Candy's Hotel.

It was early afternoon by the time they arrived.  They threaded the
wagon through the crowd and stopped it in front of the Hotel.  It seemed
the entire population of the goldfield was there, packed around the
small open space in which Francois was holding his prisoners.

Francois was almost hysterical with excitement.  He was sweeping the
shotgun around in dangerous circles as he harangued the crowd.  Then he
darted back to prod one of the prisoners with the twin muzzles.  You
thunders, he screamed. Steal our claims, hey steal our claims.

At that moment he caught sight of Duff and Sean bringing the wagon
through the press.  Duff, Duff.  We got them.  We got the whole lot of
them.  The crowd backed respectfully away from the menace of that
circling shotgun and Sean flinched as it pointed directly at him for a
second.  .  I see, Francois, Duff assured him.  in fact, I have seldom
seen anyone more completely had.

Francois's prisoners were swathed in ropes; they could move only their
heads and as additional security a digger with a loaded rifle stood over
each of them.  Duff climbed down off the wagon.

don't you think you should slacken those ropes a little?  Duff asked
dubiously.

And have them escape?  Francois was indignant.  Do you think they'd get
very far?  tNo, I don't suppose so.  Well, another half hour and they'll
all have gangrene look at that one's hand already, a beautiful shade of
blue.  Reluctantly Francois conceded and told his men to untie them.

Duff pushed his way through the crowd and climbed the steps of the
Hotel.  From there he held up his hands for silence.  There have been a
lot of men killed today, we don't want it to happen again.  One way we
can prevent it is to make sure that this lot get what they deserve
Cheers were led by Francois.  But we must do it properly.  I suggest we
elect a committee to deal with this affair and with any other problems
that crop up on these fields.  Say ten members and a chairman.

More cheers.  Call it the Diggers Committee, shouted someone and the
crowd took up the name enthusiastically.  All right, the Diggers
Committee it is.  Now we want a chairman, any suggestions?

Mr Charleywood, shouted Francois.  Yes, Duff, he'll do.  Yes, Duff
Charleywood.  Any other suggestions?

No, roared the crowd.  Thank you, gentlemen.  Duff smiled at them.  I am
sensible of the honour.  Now, ten members Jock and Trevor Heyns.  Karl
Lochtkamper.  Francois du Toit.  Sean Courtney.  There were fifty
nominations.  Duff baulked at counting votes so the committee was
elected by applause.  He called the names one at a time and judged the
strength of the response to each.  Sean and Francois were among those
elected.  Chairs and a table were brought out onto the veranda and Duff
took his seat.  With a water-jug he hamInered for silence, declared the
first session of the DiggersCommittee open and then immediately fined
three members of the crowd ten pounds each for discharging firearms
during a meeting, gross contempt of Committee.  The fines were paid and
a proper air of solemnity achieved.

I'll ask Mr Courtney to open the case for the, prosecution.

Sean stood up and gave a brief description of the morning's battle,
ending You were there, Your Honour, so you know all about it anyway.  So
I was, agreed Duff.  Thank you, Mr Courtney.  I think that was a very
fair picture you presented.  Now, he looked at the prisoners, who speaks
for you?  There was a minute of shuffling and whispering then one of
them was pushed forward.  He pulled off his hat and blushed purple.
Your Worship, he began, then stopped, wriggling with embarrassment. Your
worship.  You've said that already.  I don't rightly know where to
begin, Mr Charleywood I mean Your Honour, sir.

Duff looked at the prisoners again.  Perhaps you'd like to reconsider
your choice.  Their first champion was withdrawn in disgrace and a fresh
one sent forward to face the Committee.  He had more fire.  You bastards
got no right to do this to us, he started and Duff promptly fined him
ten pounds.  His next attempt was more polite.  Your Honour, you can't
do this to us.  We had our rights, you know, that new proclamation and
all, I mean, them old titles wasn't legal no more now, was they?  We
just came along as peaceful as you please, the old titles not being
legal, we got a right to do what we done.  Then you bastards, I mean
Your Honour, dynamited us and like we had a right to protect ourselves,
I mean after all, didn't we, sir?  A brilliant defence most ably
conducted.  Your fellows should be grateful to you, Duff complimented
him, then turned to his Committee. Well now, how say you merry
gentlemen.  Guilty or not guilty?  Guilty. They spoke together and
Francois added for emphasis, the dirty thunders. We will now consider
sentence.  String them up, shouted someone and instantly the mood
changed.  The mob growled: an ugly sound.  I'm a carpenter, I'll whip
you up a handsome set of gallows in no time at all.  Don't waste good
wood on them.  Use a treeGet the ropes.  String them up.  The crowd
surged in, lynch mad.  Sean snatched Franco is's shotgun and jumped up
onto the table.  So help me God, I'll shoot the first one of you that
touches them before this court says so.  They checked and Sean pressed
his advantage.  At this range I can't miss.

Come on, try me, there's two loads of buckshot in here.

Someone will get cut in half.  They fell back still muttering.  Perhaps
you've forgotten, but there's a police force in this country and there's
a law against killing.  Hang them today and it'll be your turn tomorrow!
You're right, Mr Courtney, it'll be cruel heartless murder.  That it
will, wailed the spokesman.  Shut up, you bloody fool, Duff snarled at
him and someone in the crowd laughed.  The laughter caught on and Duff
sighed silently with relief.  That had been very close.  Give them the
old tar and feathers.  Duff grinned.  Now you're talking sense.  Who's
got a few barrels of tar for sale!  He looked round.  What, no offers?
Then we'll have to think of something else! We got ten drums of red
paint, thirty shillings each, good imported brand. Duff recognized the
speaker as a trader who had opened a general dealer's store down at
Ferrieras Camp.  Mr Tarry suggests paint.  What about it?  No, it comes
off too easily, that's no goodI'll let you have it cheap, twenty-five
shillings a drum No, stick your ruddy paint, the crowd booed him.  Give
them a twist on Satan's Roulette Wheel, shouted another voice, and the
crowd clamoured agreement.  That's it, give them the wheel.  Round and
round and round she goes, where she stops nobody knows, roared a
black-bearded digger from the roof of the shanty across the road.  The
crowd howled.

Sean watched Duff's expression, the smile had gone.

He was weighing it up.  If he stopped them again they might lose all
patience and risk the shotgun.  He couldn't chance it.  All right.  If
that's what you want.  He faced the terrified cluster of prisoners.  The
sentence of this court is that you play roulette with the devil for one
hour and that you then leave this goldfield, if we catch you back here
again you'll get another hour of it.  The wounded are excused the first
half of the sentence.  I think they've had enough.  Mr du Toit will
supervise the punishment.  We'd prefer the paint, Mr Charleywood,
pleaded the spokesman again.  I bet you would, said Duff softly, but the
crowd was carrying them away already, out towards the open veld beyond
the Hotel. Most of them had staked claims of their own and they didn't
like claim jumpers.  Sean climbed down off the table.

Let's go and have a drink, Duff said to him.

Aren't you going to watch?  asked Sean.  I've seen it done once before
down in the Cape.  That was enough.  What do they do?  Go and have a
look, I'll be waiting for you at the Bright Angels.  I'll be surprised
if you stay the full hour.  By the time Sean joined the crowd most of
the wagons had been gathered from the camps and drawn up in a line.

Men swarmed round them fitting jacks under the axles to lift the big
back wheels clear of the ground.  Then the prisoners were hustled
forward, one to each wheel.  Eager hands lifted them and held them while
their wrists and ankles were lashed to the rim of the wheel with the hub
in the middle of their backs and their arms and legs spread-eagled like
stranded starfish.  Francois hurried along the line checking the ropes
and placing four diggers at each wheel, two to start it and another two
to take over when those were tired.  He reached the end, came back to
the centre again, pulled his watch from his pocket, checked the time,
then shouted.  All right, turn them, kerels The wheels started moving,
slowly at first then faster as they built up momentum. The bodies
strapped to them blurred with the speed.  Round and round and round she
goes, round and round and round she goes, chanted the crowd gleefully.

Within minutes there was a burst of laughter from the end of the line of
wagons.  Someone had started vomiting, it sprayed from him like yellow
sparks from a Catherine wheel.  Then another and another joined in, Sean
could hear them retching and gasping as the centrifugal force flung the
vomit up against the back of their throats and out of their noses.  He
waited a few more minutes but when their bowels started to empty he
turned away gagging and headed for the Bright Angel.

Did you enjoy it?  asked Duff.

Give me a brandy, answered Sean.

With the Diggers Committee dispensing rough justice a semblance of order
came to the camps.  President Kruger wanted no part in policing the nest
of ruffians and cutthroats which was growing up just outside his Capital
and he contented himself with placing his spies among them and leaving
them to work out their own salvation.  After all, the field was far from
proved and the chances were that in another year the veld would again be
as deserted as it had been nine months before.  He could afford to wait;
in the meantime the Diggers Committee had his tar-it sanction.

While the ants worked, cutting down into the reef with pick and with
dynamite, the grasshoppers waited in the bars and shanties.  So far only
the Jack and Whistle min was turning out gold, and only Hradsky and
Francois du Toit knew how much gold was coming out of it.  Hradsky was
still in Capetown crusading for capital and Francois spoke to no one,
not even to Duff, about the mill's productivity.

The rumours flew like sand in a whirlwind.  One day it seemed that the
reef had pinched out fifty feet below the surface, and the next the
canteens buzzed with the news that the Heyns brothers had gone down a
hundred feet and were pulling out nuggets the size of musket balls.

Nobody knew but everybody was prepared to guess.

Up at the Candy Deep, Duff and Sean worked on relentlessly.  The mill
took shape on its concrete platform, its jaws open for the first bite at
the rock.  The boiler was swung up onto its cradle by twenty sweating,
singing Zulus.  The copper tables were fitted up ready to be smeared
with quicksilver.  There was no time to worry about the reef nor the
dwindling store of money in Sean's cash belt.  They worked and they
slept, there was nothing else.  Duff took to sharing Sean's tent up on
the ridge and Candy had her featherbed to herself again.

On the twentieth of November they fired the boiler for the first time.
Tired and horny-handed, their bodies lean and tempered hard with toil,
they stood together and watched the needle creek up round the pressure
gauge until it touched the red line at the top.

Duff grunted.  Well, at least we've got power now.  Then he punched
Sean's shoulder What the hell are you standing here for, do you think
this is a Sunday School picnic?  There's work to do, laddie.  On the
second of December they fed the mill its first meal and watched the
powdered rock flow across the amalgam tables.

Sean threw his arm round Duff's neck in an affectionate half-Nelson,
Duff hit him in the stomach and pulled his hat down over his eyes, they
drank a glass of brandy each at supper and laughed a little but that was
all.  They were too tired to celebrate.  From now on one of them must be
in constant attendance on that iron monster.  Duff took the first night
shift and when Sean went up to the mill, next morning he found him
weaving on his feet, his eyes sunk deep in dark sockets.  By my
reckoning we've run ten tons of rock through her.  Time to clean the
tables and see just how much gold we've picked up.  You go and get some
sleep, said Sean and Duff ignored him.

Mbejane, bring a couple of your savages here, we're going to change the
tables.  Listen, Duff, it can wait an hour or two.  Go and get your head
down.  Please stop drivelling, you're as bad as a wife Sean shrugged.
Have it your own way, show me how you do it then.  They switched the
flow of powdered rock onto the second table that was standing ready;
then with a broad bladed spatula Duff scraped the mercury off the copper
top of the first table, collecting it in a ball the size of a coconut.
The mercury picks up the tiny particles of gold, he explained to Sean as
he worked, and lets the grains of rock wash across the table and fall
off into the dump.  Of course it doesn't collect it all, some of it goes
to waste.  How do you get the gold out again?  You put the whole lot in
a retort and boil off the mercury, the gold stays behind. Hell of a
waste of mercury, isn't it?  No, you catch it as it condenses and use it
again.  Come on, I'l show you.  Duff carried the ball of amalgam down to
the shed, placed it in the retort and lit the blow-lamp. With the heat
on it the ball dissolved and started to bubble.  Silently they stared at
it.  The level in the retort fell.

Where's the gold?  Sean asked at last.  Oh, shut up, Duff snapped
impatiently, and then, repentant, Sorry, laddie, I feel a bit jaded this
morning.  The last of the mercury steamed off and there it was, glowing
bright, molten yellow.  A drop of gold the size of a pea.  Duff shut off
the blow-lamp and neither of them spoke for a while.  , Then Sean asked,
Is that all?  That, my friend, is all, agreed Duff wearily.  rWhat do
you want to do with it, fill a tooth?  He turned towards the door with a
droop to his whole body.  Keep the mill running we might as well go down
with our colours flying.

It was a miserable Christmas dinner.  They ate it at Candy's Hotel. They
had credit there.  She gave Duff a gold signet ring and Sean a box of
cigars.  Sean had never smoked before but now the sting of it in his
lungs gave him a certain masochistic pleasure.  The dining-room roared
with men's voices and cutlery clatter, the air was thick with the smell
of food and tobacco smoke while in one corner, marooned on a little
island of gloom, sat Sean, Duff and Candy.

Once Sean lifted his glass at Duff and spoke like an undertaker's clerk.
Happy Christmas Duff's lips twitched back in a dead m in's grin.  And
the same to you.  They drank.  Then Duff roused himself to speak.  Tell
me again, how much have we got left?  I like to hear you say it; you
have a beautiful voice, you should have played Shakespeare.  Three
pounds and sixteen shillings.  Yes, yes, you got it just right that
time, three pounds and sixteen shillings, now to really make me feel
Christmassy, tell me how much we owe.  Have another drink, Sean changed
the subject.

Yes, I think I will, thank you, Oh please, you two, let's just forget
about it for today, pleaded Candy.  I planned for it to be such a nice
party look, there's Francois!  Hey, Francois, over here!

The dapper du Toit bustled across to their table.  Happy Christmas,
kerels, let me buy you a drinkIt's nice to see you.  Candy gave him a
kiss.  How are you?  You're looking fine.  Francois sobered instantly.
It's funny you should say that, Candy.  As a matter of fact I'm a bit
worried.  He tapped his chest and sank down into an empty chair.  My
heart, you know, I've been waiting for it to happen, and then yesterday
I was up at the mill, just standing there, you understand, when suddenly
it was as though a vice was squeezing my chest.  I couldn't breathe,
well, not very well anyway.  Naturally I hurried back to my tent and
looked it up.  Page eighty-three.  Under "Diseases of the Heart".  He
shook his head sadly.  It's very worrying.

You know I wasn't a well man before, but now this.  Oh, no, wailed
Candy.  I can't stand it, not you too.

I'M sorry, have I said something wrong?  Just in keeping with the
festive spirit at this table.  She pointed at Duff and Sean.  Look at
their happy faces, if you'll excuse me I'm going to check up in the
kitchen.

She went.  What's wrong; old Duff V Duff flashed his death's head grin
across the table at Sean.  The man wants to know what's wrong, tell
himThree pounds sixteen shillings, said Sean and Francois looked
puzzled.  I don't understand.  He means we're broke, flat broke. Gott,
I'm sorry to hear that, Duff, I thought you were going good.  I've heard
the mill running all this month, I thought you'd be rich by now. The
mill's been running all right and we've recovered enough gold to block a
flea's backside.  But why, man?  You are working the Leader Reef, aren't
YOU?

I'm beginning to think this Leader Reef of yours is a bedtime story.

Francois peered into his glass thoughtfully.  How deep are you?  We've
got one incline shaft down about fifty feet.  No sign of the Leader?
Duff shook his head and Francois went on.  You know when I first spoke
to you a lot of what I said was just guessing.

Duff nodded.  Well, I know a bit more about it now.  What I am going to
tell you is- for you alone, I'll lose my job if it gets out, you
understand?

Duff nodded again.  So far the Leader Reef has only been found at two
places.  We've got it on the Jack and Whistle and I know the Heyns
brothers have struck it on the Cousin Jock Mine.  Let me draw it for
you.  He picked up a knife and drew in the gravy on the bottom of Sean's
plate.  This is the Main Reef running fairly straight.  Here I am, here
is the Cousin Jock and here you are in between us.  Both of us have
found the Leader and you haven't.  My guess is it's there all right, you
just don't know where to look.

At the far end of the Jack and Whistle claims the Main Reef and the
Leader are running side by side two feet apart but by the time they
reach the boundary nearest to the Candy Deep they've opened up to
seventy feet apart.  Now on the boundary of the Cousin Jock they're back
to fifty feet apart.  To me it seems that the two reefs form the shape
of a long bow, like this.  He drew it in.  The Main Reef is the string
and the Leader Reef is the wood.  I'm telling you, Duff, if you cut a
trench at right-angles to the Main Reef you'll find it, and when you do
you can buy me a drink They listened gravely and when Francois finished
Duff leaned back in his chair.  If we'd known this a month ago!

Now how are we going to raise the money to cut this new trench and still
keep the mill running?

We could sell some of our equipment, suggested Sean.  We need it, every
scrap of it, and besides if we sold one spade the creditors would be on
us like a pack of wolves, bowling for their money.  I'd make you a loan
if I had it, but with what Mr Hradsky pays me -'Francois shrugged.
You'll need about two hundred pounds.  I haven't got it.  Candy came
back to the table in time to hear Francois's last remark.  What's this
all about?  Can I tell her, Francois?  If you think it will do any good.
Candy listened, then thought for a moment. Well, I've just bought ten
plots of ground in Johannesburg this new Government village down the
valley, so I'm short myself.

But I could let you have fifty pounds if that would help We.  never
borrowed money from a lady before, it'll be a new experience.  Candy, I
love you.  I wish you meant that said Candy, but luckily for Duff his
hearing failed him completely just as Candy spoke.  He went on
hurriedly.  We'll need another hundred and fifty or so, let's hear your
suggestions, gentlemen!

There was a long silence, then Duff started to smile and he was looking
at Sean.

Don't tell me, let me guess, Sean forestalled him.  You're going to put
me out to stood?  Close, but not quite right.  How are you feeling,
laddie?  Thank you, I'm all right.  Istrong?  lYes.  Brave?  Come on,
Duff, let's have it.  I don't like that look in your eye.

Duff pulled a notebook out of his pocket and wrote in it with a stump of
pencil.  Then he tore out the page and handed it to Sean.  We'll have
posters like this put up in every canteen on the goldfields.  Sean read
it: ON NEW YEAR'S DAY MR SEAN COURTNEY HEAVYWEIGHT CHAMPION OF THE
TRANSVAAL REPUBLIC WILL STAND TO MEET ALL COMERS IN FRONT OF CANDY'S
HOTEL FOR

A PURSE OF FIFTY POUNDS ASIDE.

Spectators Fee, 2s.  All Welcome.

Candy was reading it over his shoulder.  She squeaked.  That's
wonderful.  I'll have to hire extra waiters to serve drinks and I'll run
a buffet luncheon.  I suppose I could charge two shillings a head?  I'll
fix the posters, Francois was not to be outdone, and I'll send a couple
of my chaps down to put up a ring.  We'll close the mill down until New
Year, Sean will have to get a lot of rest.  We'll put him on light
training only.  No drinking, of course, and plenty of sleep, said Duff.
It's all arranged then, is it?  asked Sean.  All I've got to do is go in
there and get beaten to a pulp?  We're doing this for you, laddie, so
that you can be rich and famous.  Thank you, thank you very muchYou like
to fight, don't you?  When I'm in the mood.  Don't worry, I'll think up
some dirty names to call you get you worked up in no time. How are you
feeling?  Duff asked for the sixth time that morning.

No change since five minutes ago, Sean reassured him.

Duff pulled out his watch, stared at it, held it to his ear and looked
surprised that it was still ticking.  We've got the challengers lined up
on the veranda.  I've told Candy to serve them free drinks, as much as
they want.  Every minute we can wait here gives them a little longer to
take on a load of alcohol.  Francois is collecting the gate money in my
valise; as you win each bout the stakes will go into it as well.  I've
got Mbejane stationed at the mouth of the alley beside the Hotel.  If
there's a riot one of us will throw the bag to him and he'll head for
the long grass.  Sean was stretched out on Candy's bed with his hands
behind his head.  He laughed.  I can find no fault with your planning.
Now for pity's sake calm down, man.  You're making me nervous.  The door
burst open and Duff leapt out of his chair at the crash.  It was
Francois, he stood in the doorway holding his chest. My heart!  he
panted.  This is doing my heart no good.  What's happening outside? Duff
demanded.

we've collected over fifty pounds gate money already.

There's a mob up on the roof that haven't paid, but every time I go near
them they throw bottles at me Francois cocked his head on one side.
Listen to them.  The noise of the crowd was barely softened by the
flimsy walls of the Hotel.  They won't wait much longer, you'd better
come out before they start looking for you.  Sean stood up.  I'm ready.

Francois hesitated.  Duff, you remember Fernandes, that Portuguese from
Kimberley?  Oh no!  Duff anticipated him.  Don't tell me he's here.
Francois nodded.  I didn't want to alarm you but some of the local boys
clubbed in and telegraphed south for him.  He arrived on the express
coach half an hour ago.  I had hoped he wasn't going to make it in time,
but - He shrugged.

Duff looked at Sean sadly.  Bad luck, laddie.  Francois tried to soften
the blow.  I told him it was first come first served.  He's sixth in the
line so Sean will be able to make a couple of hundred quid anyway, then
we can always say he's had enough and close the contest.  Sean was
listening with interest.  This Fernandes is dangerous?  They were
thinking of him when they invented that word, Duff told him.  Let's go
and have a look at him Sean led the way out of Candy's room and down the
passage.  Did you get hold of a scale to weigh them with?  Duff asked
Francois as they hurried after Sean.  No, there's not one on the fields
that goes over a hundred and fifty pounds, but I have Gideon Barnard
outside.  How does that help us?  He's a cattle dealer, all his life
he's been judging animals on the hoof.  He'll give us the weights to
within a few pounds Duff chuckled.  That'll have to do then.  Besides I
doubt we'll be claiming any world titles Then they were out on the
veranda blinking in the brightness of the sun and the thunder of the
crowd.  Which is the Portuguese?  whispered Sean, he needn't have asked.
The man stood out like a gorilla in a cage of monkeys.  A shaggy coating
of hair began on his shoulders and continued down his back and chest,
completely hiding his nipples and exaggerating the bulge of his enormous
belly.

The crowd opened a path for Sean and Duff and they walked along it to
the ring.  Hands slapped Sean's back but the well-wishes were drowned in
the churning sea of sound.  Jock Heyns was the referee, he helped Sean
through the ropes and ran his hands over his pockets.  Just checking he
apologized.  We don't want any scrap iron in the ring.  Then he beckoned
to a tall, brown-faced fellow who was leaning on the ropes chewing
tobacco.  This is Mr Barnard our weighing steward.  Well, what do you
say, Gideon?  The steward hosed a little juice from the side of his
mouth.  Two hundred and ten.  Thank you Jock held up his hands and after
a few minutes was rewarded with a comparative silence.  Ladies and
Gentlemen. -Vho you talking to, Guvnor?

We are privileged to have with us today, Mr Sean Courtney.  Wake up,
Boet, he's been with us for months.  The heavyweight champion of the
Republic.  Why not make it the world, cock, he's got just as much right
to that title.  Who will fight six bouts , if it lasts that long.  - for
his title and a purse of fifty pounds each.

Sustained cheering. -The first challenger, at two hundred and ten pounds
Mr Anthony -'Hold on, Sean shouted, who says he's first?

lock Heyns had taken a deep breath to bellow the name.

He let it escape with a hiss.  It was arranged by Mr du Toit.

If I fight them, then I pick them, I want the Port.  .

Duff's hand whipped over Sean's mouth and his whisper was desperate.
Don't be a bloody fool, take the easy ones first.  Use your head, we
aren't doing this for fun, we're trying to finance a mine, remember?

Sean clawed Duff's hand off his mouth.  I want the Portuguese, he
shouted.  He's joking, Duff assured the crowd, then turned on Sean
fiercely.  Are you mad?  That dago's a man-eater, we're fifty pounds
poorer before you start!  I want the Portuguese, repeated Sean with all
the logic of a small boy picking the most expensive toy in the shop.
Let him have the dago, shouted the gentlemen on the hotel roof and Jock
Heyns eyed them nervously; it was clear that they were about to add a
few more bottles to the argument.  All right, he agreed hastily.  The
first challenger, at he glanced at Barnard and repeated after him, two
hundred and fifty-five pounds, Mr Felezardo da Silva Fernandes.  In a
storm of hoots and applause the Portuguese waddled down off the veranda
and into the ring. Sean had seen Candy at the dining-room window and he
waved to her.

She blew him a two-handed kiss and at that instant Trevor Heyns, the
timekeeper, hit the bucket which served as a gong and Sean heard Duff's
warning shout.

Instinctively he started to duck.  There was a flash of lightning inside
his skull and he found himself sitting in amongst the legs of the first
line of spectators.  The bastard King hit me, Sean complained loudly. He
shook his head and was surprised to find it still attached to his body.
Someone poured a glass of beer over him and it steadied him.  He felt
his anger flaming up through his body.

Six, counted Jock Heyns.

The Portuguese was standing at the ropes.  Come back, Leetle Sheet, I
hal some more for you, not half.

Sean's anger jumped in his throat.  Seven, eight.

Sean gathered his legs under him.  I kiss your mother.  Fernandes
puckered his lips and smacked them.  I love your sister, like this.  He
demonstrated graphically.

Sean charged.  With the full weight of his run behind it, his fist
thudded into the Portuguese's mouth, then the ropes caught Sean and
catapulted him back into the crowd once more.

You weren't even in the ring, how could you hit him?

protested one of the spectators who had broken Sean's fall.  He had
money on Fernandes.

Like this!  I Sean demonstrated.  The man sat down heavily and had
nothing further to say.  Sean hurdled the ropes.

lock Heyns was halfway through his second count when Sean interrupted
him by lifting the reclining Portuguese to his feet, using the tangled
bush of his hair as a handle.

He balanced the man on his unsteady legs and hit himOne, two, three.
resignedly Jock Heyns began his third count, this time he managed to
reach ten.

There was a howl of protest from the crowd and Jock Heyns struggled to
make himself heard above it.  Does anyone want to lodge a formal
objection?

It seemed that there were those who did.  Very well, please step into
the ring.  I can't accept shouted comments.  Jock's attitude was
understandable he stood to lose a considerable sum if his decision were
reversed.  But Sean was patrolling the ropes as hungrily as a lion at
feeding time.  Jock waited a decent interval, then held up Sean's right
arm.

, The winner, ten minutes for refreshments before the next bout.  Will
the keepers please come and fetch their property He gestured towards the
Portuguese.  Nice going laddie, unorthodox perhaps but beautiful to
watch Duff took Sean's arm and led him to a chair on the veranda.  Three
more to go, then we can call it a day.  He handed Sean a glass.  What's
this?  Orange juice.  I'd prefer something a little stronger Later,
laddie.  Duff collected the Portuguese purse and dropped it into the
valise while that gentleman was being carried from the ring by his
straining sponsors and laid to rest at the far end of the veranda.

Mr Anthony Blair was next.  His heart was not in the encounter.  He
moved Prettily enough on his feet but always in the direction best
calculated to keep him out of reach of Sean's fists.  The boy's a
natural long-distance champWatch it, Courtney, he'll run you to
deathLast lap, Blair, once more round the ring and you've done five
miles.  The chase ended when Sean, now sweating gently, herded him in a
corner and there dispatched him.

The third challenger had by this time developed a pain in his chest.  It
hurts like you wouldn't believe it, he announced through gritted teeth.
Does it sort of gurgle in your lungs as you breatheV

asked Francois.  Yes, that's it, gurgles like you wouldn't believe
itPleurisy, diagnosed du Toit with more than a trace of envy in his
voice.

Is that bad?  theman asked anxiously.  Yes it is.  Page one hundred and
Sixteen.  The treatment I won't be able to fight, Hell, thats bad luck
the invalid complained cheerfully It's exceptionally bad luck, agreed
Duff.  It means you'll have to forfeit your purse money.  You wouldn't
take advantage of a sick man?  Try me Duff suggested pleasantly The
fourth contestant was a German.  Big, blond and happy-faced.  He
stumbled three or four times on his way to the ring, tripped over the
rones and crawled to his corner on hands and knees; once there he was
able to regain his feet with a little help from the ring post.  Jock
went close to him to smell his breath and before he could dodge, the
German caught him in a bear hug and led him into the opening steps of a
waltz.  The crowd loved it and there were no objections when at the end
of the dance lock declared Sean the winner on a technical knockout.

More correctly the decision should have gone to Candy who had provided
the free drinks.  We can close down the circus now if you want to,
laddie, Duff told Sean.  You've made enough to keep the Candy Deep
afloat for another couple of months.  I haven't had a single good fight
out of the lot of them.

But I like the looks of this last one.  The others were for business;
this one I'll have just for the hell of it.  You've been magnificent,
now you deserve a little fun, agreed Duff.

Mr Timothy Curtis.  Heavyweight champion of Georgia, U.  S.  A.  Jock
introduced him.

Gideon Barnard put his weight at two hundred and ten pounds, the same as
Sean's.  Sean shook his hand and from the touch of it knew he was not
going to be disappointed.  Glad to know you.  The American's voice was
as soft as his grip was hardY our servant, sir, said Sean and hit the
air where the man's head had been an instant before.  He grunted as a
fist slogged into his chest under his raised right arm and backed away
warily.  A soft sigh blew through the crowd and they settled down
contentedly.  This was what they had come to see.

The red wine was served early; it flew in tiny drops every time a punch
was thrown or received.  The fight flowed smoothly around the square of
trampled grass.  The sound of bone on flesh was followed immediately by
the growl of the crowd and the seconds between were filled with the
hoarse breathing of the two men and the slither, slither of their feet.
Yaaaa!  Through the tense half silence ripped a roar like that of a
mortally wounded foghorn.  Sean and the American jumped apart startled,
and turned with everyone else to face Candy's Hotel.  Fernandes was with
them again; his mountain-wide hairiness seemed to fill the whole
veranda.  He picked up one of Candy's best tables and holding it across
his chest tore off two of its legs as though they were the wings of a
roasted chicken.  Francois, the bag! shouted Sean.  Francois snatched it
up and threw it high over the heads of the crowd.  Sean held his breath
as he followed its slow trajectory, then he blew out again with relief
as he saw Mbejane field the pass and vanish around the corner of the
Hotel.  Yaaaa!  Femandes gave tongue again.  With a table leg in each
hand he charged the crowd that stood between him and Sean; it scattered
before him.  Do you mind if we finish this some other time?  Sean asked
the American of course not.  Any time at all.  I was just about to leave
myself Duff reached through the ropes and caught Sean's arm.  There's
someone looking for you, or had you noticed?  It might just be his way
of showing friendliness.  I wouldn't bet on it, are you coming?

Fernandes nimbled to a halt, braced himself and threw.

The table leg whirred like a rising pheasant an inch over Sean's head,
ruffling his hair with the wind of its passage.  Lead on, Duff.  Sean
was uncomfortably conscious of the fact that Fernandes was again m
motion towards him, still armed with a long oak, and that three very
thin ropes were all that stood between them.  The speed that Sean and
Duff turned on then made Mr Blair's earlier exhibition seem like that of
a man with both legs in plaster, Fernandes, carrying top weight as he
was, never looked like catching them.

Francois came up to the Candy Deep just after midday with the news that
the Portuguese, after beating three of his sponsors into insensibility,
had left on the noon coach back to Kimberley.

Duff uncocked his rifle.  Thanks, Franz, we were waiting lunch for him.
I thought he might call on us.  Have you counted the takings?  Yes, your
commission is in that paper bag on the table.  Thanks, man, let's go
down and celebrate.  You go and have one for us.  Hey, Duff, you
promised - Sean started.  I said later, in three or four weeks time. Now
we've got a little work to do, like digging a trench fifty feet deep and
three hundred yards long.  rWe could start first thing tomorrow. You
want to be rich, don't you?  asked Duff.

Sure, but You want nice things, like English suits, French champagne
andYes, butWell, stop arguing, get off your fat arse and come with me!

The Chinese use firecrackers to keep the demons away.

Duff and Sean applied the same principle.  They kept the mill running;
as long as its clunking carried across the valley to the ears of their
creditors all was well.  Everyone accepted the fact that they were
working a payable reef and left them alone, but the money they fed into
the front of the mill had halved its value by the time it came out of
the other side in those pathetic little yellow pellets.

In the meantime they cut their trench, teaxiing into the earth in a race
against Settlement Day.  They fired dynamite and as the last stones
dropped back out of the sky they were in again, coughing with the fumes,
to clear the loosened rock and start drilling the next set of holes.  it
was summer, the days were long, and while it was light they worked. Some
evenings they lit the last fuses by lantern light.

Sand fell through the hour-glass faster than they had bargained for, the
money dribbled away and on the fifteenth of February Duff shaved
himself, changed his shirt and went to see Candy about another loan.
Sean watched him walk away down the slope.  They had sold the horses a
week before, and he said a small prayer, the first for many years.

Duff came back in the late morning.  He stood on the edge of the trench
and watched Sean tamping in the charges for the next cut.  Sean's back
was shiny with sweat; each individual muscle standing out in relief,
swelling and subsiding as he moved.  That's the stuff, laddie, keep at
it Sean looked up with dust-reddened eyes.  How much?
he asked.  Another fifty, and this is the last, or so she threatens.
Sean's eyes fastened on the package Duff held under his arm.  What's
thatV He could see the stains seeping through the brown paper and the
saliva flooded out from under his tongue.  Prime beef chops, no mealie
meal porridge for lunch today Duff grinned at him.  Meat.  Sean caressed
the word.  Underdone, bleeding a little as you bite it, a trace of
garlic, just enough salt. And you beside me, singing in the wilderness,
agreed Duff.  Cut out the poetry, light those fuses and let's go and
eat.  An hour later they walked side by side along the bottom of their
trench, Mbejane and his Zulus crowding behind them.  Sean belched.  Ah,
pleasant memory, I'll never be able to look another plate of mealie meal
in the face again. They reached the end, where the freshly broken earth
and rock lay piled. Sean felt the thrill start in his hands, tingle up
his arms and squeeze his lungs.  Then Duff's fingers were biting into
his shoulder; he could feel them trembling.

It looked like a snake, a fat grey python crawling down one wall of the
trench, disappearing under the heap of new rabble and out the other
side.

Duff moved first, he knelt and picked up a piece of the reef, a big grey
mottled lump of it and he kissed it.

It must be it, hey, Duff?  It must be the Leader?  It's the end of the
rainbow.  No more mealie meal, Sean said softly and Duff laughed.  Then
Sean laughed.  Wildly, crazily, together they howled their triumph.

Let me hold it again, said Sean.

Duff passed it across to him.  Hell, it's heavy There'snothing heavier,
agreed Duff.  Must be all of fifty pounds.  Sean held the bar in two
hands, it was the size of a cigar box.  More!  We've retrieved all our
losses in two days working.  And some to spare, I'd say.  Sean placed
the gold bar on the table between them.  It shone with little yellow
smiles in the lantern light and Duff leaned forward and stroked it; its
surface felt knobbly from the rough casting.

I can't keep my hands off it, he confessed sheepishly.  I can't either!
Sean reached out to touch it.  We'll be able to pay Candy out for the
claims in another week or two Duff started.  What you say?  I said we'd
be able to pay Candy out.  I thought I wasn't hearing things Duff patted
his arm indulgently.  Listen to me, laddie, I'll try and put it simply.
How long have we got the option on these claims for?  Three years.
Correct, now the next question.  How many people on these fields have
any money?

Sean looked mystified.  Well, we have now and and .  .  .

No one else, that is until Hradsky gets back, Duff finished for him.
What about the Heyns brothers?

They've cut open the Leader Reef.  Certainly, but it won't do them any
good, not until their machinery arrives from England.  Go on!  Sean
wasn't quite sure where Duff was leading.  Instead of paying Candy out
now we are going to use this, , he patted the gold bar, land all its
little brothers to buy up every likely claim we can lay, our hands on.

For a start there are Doc Sutherland's claims between us and the Jack
and Whistle.  Then we are going to order a couple of big ten-stamp mills
and when those are spilling out gold we'll use it to buy land, finance
brick works, engineering shops, transport companies and the rest.  I've
told you before there are more ways of making gold than digging for it
Sean was staring at him silently.

Have you got a head for heights?  asked Duff.

Sean nodded.  You're going to need it, because we are going up where the
eagles fly, you are about to be a party to the biggest financial killing
this country has ever seen.  Sean lit one of Candy's cigars; his hand
was a little unsteady.  Don't you think it would be best to, well, not
try and go too quickly.  Hell, Duff, we've only been working the Leader
for two daysAnd we've made a thousand pounds, Duff interrupted him.
Listen to me, Sean, all my life I've been waiting for an opportunity
like this.  We're the first in on this field, it's as wide open as the
legs of a whore.  We're going to go in and take it.  The next morning
Duff had the good fortune to find Doc Sutherland early enough to talk
business with him, before he began the day's drinking.  Another hour
would have been too late.  As it was Doc knocked over his glass and fell
out of his chair before he finally signed away twenty-five claims to
Sean and Duff.  The ink was hardly dry on the agreement before Duff was
riding down to Fereira's Camp to look for Ted Reynecke who held the
claims on the other side of the Cousin Jock.  Up on the Candy Deep Sean
nursed the mill and bit his nails.  Within seven days Duff had bought
over one hundred claims and committed them to forty thousand pounds in
debts.  Duff, you're going mad.  Sean pleaded with him.  We'll lose
everything again.  How much have we pulled out of the Candy Deep so far?
Four thousand.  Ten percent of what we owe in ten days, and with a
miserable little four-stamp mill at that.  Hold on to your hat, laddie,
tomorrow I'm going to sign up for the forty claims on the other side of
the Jack and Whistle.  I would have had them today but that damned Greek
is holding out for a thousand pounds apiece.  I'll have to give it to
him, I suppose Sean clutched his temples.  Duff, please, man, we're in
over our necks already!  Stand back, laddie, and watch the wizard
workIng!  going to bed, I suppose I'll have to take your shift again in
the morning if you're determined to spend tomorrow ruining us.  That's
not necessary, I've hired that Yankee, Curtis.

You know, your sparring partner.  It turns out he's a miner and he's
willing to work for thirty a month.  So you can come to town with me and
watch me make you rich.  I'm meeting the Greek at Candy's Hotel at nine
o'clock.

Duff was talking and Sean sat silently on the edge of his chair; at ten
the Greek had still not put in an appearance, Duff was moody and Sean
was garrulous with relief.  At eleven Sean wanted to go back to the
mine.  It's an omen, Duff, God looked down and he saw us sitting here
all ready to make a terrible mistake.  "No, " he said, , I can't let
them do it, i'll have the Greek break a leg, I can't let it happen to
such nice boys.  " Why don't you go and join a Trappist monastery?  Duff
checked his watch. Come on, let's go!  Yes, sir!  Sean stood up with
alacrity.  We'll get back in plenty of time to clean the tables before
lunch.  we're not going home, we're going to look for the Greek.  Now
listen, Duff I'll listen later, come on.  They rode across to the Bright
Angels, left the horses outside and walked in together.  It was dark in
the canteen after the sunshine-outside, but even in the gloom a group at
one of the tables caught their attention immediately.

The Greek sat with his back to them; the line of his parting seemed to
be drawn with white chalk and a ruler through the oily black waves of
his hair.  Sean's eyes switched from him to the two men that sat across
the table from him.  Jews, there was no mistaking it, but there any
similarity ended.  The younger one was thin with smooth olive skin drawn
tight across the bold bones of his cheeks; his lips were very red and
his eyes, fringed with girl's lashes, were toffee-brown and melting.  In
the chair beside him was a man with a body that had been shaped in wax
then held near a hot flame.  Shoulders rounded to the verge of deformity
drooped down over a pearshaped body; with difficulty they supported the
great Taj Mahal domed head.  His hair was styled in the fashion of Friar
Tuck, thick only around the ears.  But the eyes, the flickering yellow
eyes, there was nothing comical about them.  Hradsky, hissed Duff, then
his expression changed.  He smiled as he walked across to the table.
Hello, Nikky, I thought we had an appointment The Greek twisted quickly
in his chair.  Mr Charleywood, I'm sorry, I was held up.  So I see, the
woods are full of highway-men.  Sean saw the flush start -to come up out
of Hradsky's collar then sink back again.

Have you sold?  Duff asked.

The Greek nodded nervously.  I'm sorry, Mr Charleywood, but Mr Hradsky
paid my price and no haggling, cash money, too!

Duff let his eyes wander across the table.  Hello, Norman.  How's your
daughter?  This time the flush escaped from Hradsky's shirt and flooded
over his face.  He opened his mouth, his tongue clucked twice, then he
closed it again.

Duff smiled, he looked at the younger Jew.  Say it for him, Max.  The
toffee eyes dropped to the table top.  Mr Hradsky's daughter is very
well.  I believe she married soon after my involuntary departure from
Kimberley.  That is correct.  Wise move, Norman, much wiser than having
your bully boys run me out of town.  That wasn't very nice of you.

No one spoke.  We must get together some time and have a chat about old
times.  Until then, Fa, fa, fare ye we, we, well On the way back to the
mine Sean asked, He's got a daughter?  If she looks like him you were
lucky to escape.  She didn't, she was like a bunch of ripe grapes with
the bloom on them.  I can hardly credit it.  Neither could 1.  The only
conclusion I could reach was that Max did that job for him as well
rWhat's the story about MaxVHe's the Court Jester.  Rumour has it that
after Hradsky has finished hanging it out, Max shakes it for him.  Sean
laughed and Duff went on, But don't underestimate Hradsky.  His stutter
is his only weakness and with Max to talk for him he's overcome that.
Beneath that monumental skull is a brain as quick and merciless as a
guillotine.  Now that he's arrived on this goldfield there's going to be
some action; we'll have to gallop to keep up with him.  Sean thought for
a few seconds, then, Talking about action, Duff, now that we've lost the
Greek's claims and won't have to use all our ready money satisfying him,
let's give some thought to ordering new machinery to work the claims we
have got.

Duff grinned at him.  I sent a telegram to London last week.  There'll
be a pair of brand new ten-stamp mills on the water to us before the end
of the month.  Good God, why didn't you tell me?  You were worried
enough as it was, I didn't want to break your heart Sean opened his
mouth to blast Duff out of the saddle, Duff winked at him before he
could talk and Sean's lips trembled.  He felt the laughter in his
throat, he tried to stop it but it swamped him.  How much is it going to
cost us?  he howled through his mirth.  If you ask that question once
more, I'll strangle you, Duff laughed back at him.  Rest content in the
knowledge that if we're going to have enough to honour the bills of
lading when those mills arrive at Port Natal, we'll have to run a
mountain of Leader Reef through our little rig during the next few
weeks.  What about the payments on the new claims?  That's my
department, I'll worry about that And so their partnership crystallized;
their relationship was established over the weeks that followed.  Duff
with his magic tongue and his charming, lopsided grin was the one who
negotiated, who poured the oil on the storm waters churned up by
impatient creditors.  He was the storehouse of mining knowledge which
Sean tapped daily, he was the conceiver of schemes, some wild, others
brilliant.  But his fleeting nervous energy was not designed to bring
them to fruition.  He lost interest quickly and it was Sean who finally
rejected the least likely Charleywood brain children and adopted the
others that were more deserving; once he had made himself stepfather to
them he reared them as though they were his own.  Duff was the theorist,
Sean the practician.  Sean could see why Duff had never found success
before, but at the same time he recognized that without him he would be
helpless.  He watched with profound admiration the way that Duff used
the barely sufficient flow of gold from the Candy Deep to keep the mill
running, pay the tradesmen, meet the claim monies as they fell due and
still save enough for the new machinery.  He was a man juggling with
live coals: hold one too long and it burns, let one fall and all fall.
And Duff, deep-down-uncertain Duff, had a wall to put his back against.
His speech never showed it but his eyes did when he looked at Sean.
Sometimes he felt small next to Sean's big body and bigger
determination, but it was a good feeling: like being on a friendly
mountain.

They put up new buildings around the mill: storerooms, a smelting house
and cabins for Sean and Curtis.

Duff was sleeping at the Hotel again.  The location for the Natives
sprawled haphazard down the back slope of the ridge, retreating a little
each week as the white mountain of the mine dump grew and pushed it
back.  The whole valley was changing.  Hradsky's new mills arrived and
stood up along the ridge, tall and proud until their own dumps dwarfed
them.  Johannesburg, at first a mere pattern of surveyors pegs, sucked
the scattered encampments onto her grassy chequerboard and arranged them
in a semblance of order along her streets.

The Diggers Committee, its members tired of having to scrape their boots
every time they went indoors, decreed public latrines be erected.  Then,
flushed with their own audacity, they built a bridge across the Natal
Spruit, purchased a water cart to lay the dust on the streets of
Johannesburg and passed a law prohibiting burials within half a mile of
the city centre.  Sean and Duff as members of the Committee felt it
their duty to demonstrate their faith in the goldfield, so they bought
twenty five plots of ground in Johannesburg, five pounds each to be paid
within six months.  Candy recruited all her customers and in one weekend
of frantic effort they razed her Hotel to the ground, packed every plank
and sheet of iron onto their wagons, carried it a mile down the valley
and re-erected it on her own land in the centre of the township.  During
the party she gave them on that Sunday night they nearly succeeded in
dismantling it for the second time.  Each day the roads from Natal and
the Cape fed more wagons, more men into the Witwatersrand goldfield.
Duff's suggestion that the Diggers Committee levy a guinea a head from
all newcomers to help finance the public works was reluctantly rejected,
the general feeling being that if it led to civil rebellion there were
more newcomers than Committee members and no one fancied being on the
losing side.

One morning, when he came out to the mine, Duff brought a telegram with
him.  He handed it to Sean without comment.  Sean read it.  The
machinery had arrived.

Good God, it's three weeks early.  They must have had a downhill sea, or
a following wind or whatever it is that makes ships go faster muttered
Duff.

Have we got enough to pay the bill?  asked Sean.  No.  What are we going
to do?  I'll go and see the little man at the bank, He'll throw you out
in the street!  I'll get him to give us a loan on the claims!  How the
hell are you going to do that, we haven't paid for them yet.  That's
what you call financial genius.  I'll simply point out to him that
they're worth five times what we bought them for.  Duff grinned.  Can
you and Curtis carry on here without me for today while I go and arrange
it?  You arrange it and I'll happily give you a month's holiday.  When
Duff came back that afternoon he carried a paper with him.  It had a red
wax seal in the bottom corner, across the top it said Letter of Credit,
and in the middle, standing out boldly from the mass of small print, was
a figure that ended in an impressive string of noughts.

You're a bloody marvel, said Sean.

Yes, I am rather, aren't I!  agreed Duff.

The Heyns brothers machinery was on the same ship.

lock and Duff rode down to Port Natal together, hired a hundred wagons
and brought it all back in one load.

I'll tell you what Al do With You, Jock, I'll wager you that we get our
mills producing before you do.  Loser pays for the transport on the
whole shipment, Duff challenged him when they reached Johannesburg
where, in Candy's new bar-room, they Were washing the dust out of their
throats.  You're on!  , I, ll go further, I'll put up a side bet of five
hundred.

Sean prodded Duff in the ribs.

Gently, Duff, we can't afford it.  But Jock had already snapped up the
bet.

What do you mean we cane afford it?  whispered Duff.  We've got nearly
fifteen hundred pounds left on the letter of credit-Sean shook his head.
No, we haven't.  Duff pulled the paper from his inside pocket and taPPed
sean's nose with it.  There, read for yourself.  Sean took it out of
Duff's hand.

Thanks, old chap, I'll go and pay the man now.  What man?  The man with
the wagons.

What wagons?  The wagons that you and Jock hired in Port Natal.  I've
bought them.  The hell you say!  It was your idea to start a transport
business.  just as soon as they've offloaded they'll be on their way
again to pick up a shipment of coal from Dundee.  Duff grinned at him.
Don't you ever forget an idea?  All right, laddie, off you go, we'll
just have to win the bet, that's all.  One of the mills they placed on
the Candy Deep, the other on the new claims beyond the Cousin Jock Mine.

They hired two gangs from among the unemployed in Johannesburg.  Curtis
supervised one of them and Sean the other, while Duff darted back and
forth keeping an eye on both.  Each time he passed the Cousin Jock he
spent a few minutes checking Trevor and Jock's progress.  They've got
the edge on us, Sean; their boilers are up and holding pressure already,
he reported fretfully, but the next day he was smiling again.  They
didn't mix enough cement in the platform, it started to crumble as soon
as they put the crusher on it.

They'll have to cast it again.  That set them back three or four days.
The betting down in the canteens fluctuated sharply with each change of
fortune.  Francois came up to the Candy Deep one Saturday afternoon.  He
watched them work, made a suggestion or two, then remarked, They're
giving three-to-one against you at the Bright Angels; they, reckon the
Heynses, will be finished by next weekend.  Go down and put another five
hundred pounds on for me, Duff told him, and Sean shook his head
despairingly.  Don't worry, laddie, we can't lose, that amateur mining
engineer, Jock Heyns, has assembled his crusher jaws all
arse-about-face.  I only noticed it this morning he's in for a surprise
when he tries to start up.  He'll have to strip the whole damn rig. Duff
was right, they brought both their mills into production a comfortable
fifteen hours before the Heyns brothers. Jock rode over to see them with
his jaw on his chest.  Congratulations. Thanks, Jock, did you bring your
cheque book?

That's what I came to talk about.  Can you give me a little time?  Your
credit's good, Sean assured him, come and have a drink and let me sell
you some cooPAh, yes, I heard your wagons arrived back this morning.
What price are you charging?  Fifteen pounds a hundredweight.  Good God.
You bloody bandit, I bet it cost you less than five shillings a
hundredweight.  A man's entitled to a reasonable profit, protested Sean.

It had been a long hard pull up to the top of the hill but Sean and Duff
had arrived at last and from there it was downhill all the way.  The
money poured in.

The geological freak that had bowed the Leader Reef away from the Main
across the Candy Deep claims had, at the same time, enriched it,
injected it full of the metal.

Francois was there one evening when they put the ball of amalgam into
the retort.  His eyes bulged as the mercury boiled away; he stared at
the gold the way a mAn watches a naked woman.  Gott!  I'm going to have
to call you two thunders "Mister from now on.  Have you ever seen richer
reef, Francois?  Duff gloated.

Francois shook his head slowly.  You know my theory about the reef being
the bed of an old lake, well this bears it out.  The kink in your reef
must have been a deep trench along the bottom of the lake.  It would
have acted as a natural gold trap.  Hell, man, what luck.  With your
eyes closed you have picked the plum out of the pudding.

The Jack and Whistle is half as rich as this.  Their overdraft at the
bank dropped like a barometer in a hurricane; the tradesmen started
greeting them with a smile; they gave Doc Sutherland a cheque which
would have kept even him in whisky for a hundred years.  Candy kissed
them both when they paid her out in full, plus interest at seven percent.  Then she built herself a new Hotel, double storied, with a
crystal chandelier in the dining-room and a magnificent bedroom suite on
the second floor done out in maroon and gold.  Duff and Sean rented it
immediately but with the express understanding that if ever the Queen
visited Johannesburg they would allow her to use it.  In anticipation
Candy called it the Victoria Rooms.

Francois, with a little persuasion, agreed to take over the running of
the Candy Deep.  He moved his possessions, one chest of clothes and four
chests of patent medicines, across from the Jack and Whistle.  Timothy
Curtis was the manager of the mill on the new claims; they named it the
Little Sister Mine.  Although not nearly as rich as the Candy Deep it
was producing a sweet fortune each month, for Curtis worked as well as
he fought.

By the end of August Sean and Duff had no more creditors: the claims
were theirs, the mills were theirs and they had money to invest.  We
need an office of our own here in town. We can't run this show from our
bedrooms complained Sean.  You're right, agreed Duff, we'll build on
that corner plot nearest the market square.  The plan was for a modest
little four-room building, but it finally expanded to two stories,
stinkwood floors, oak panelling and twenty rooms.  What they couldn't
use they rented.  The price of land has trebled in three months, said
Sean, and it's still moving.  You're right, now's the time to buy, Duff
agreed.  You're starting to think along the right lines, It was your
idea.  Was it?  Duff looked surprised.  Don't you remember your "up
where the eagles fly" speech? Don't you forget anything?  asked Duff.

They bought land: one thousand acres at Orange Grove and another
thousand around Hospital Hill.  Their transport wagons, now almost four
hundred strong, plied in daily from Port Natal and Lourenqo Marques.
Their brickfields worked twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week, to
try to meet the demand for building materials.

It took Sean almost a week to dissuade Duff from building an Opera House
but he succeeded and instead they joined most of the other members of
the Diggers Committee in financing a different type of pleasure palace.
At Duff's suggestion they called it the Opera House.  They recruited the
performers not from the great companies of Europe but from the dock
areas of Capetown and Port Natal and chose as the conductor a
Frenchwoman of vast experience named Blue Bessie after the colour of her
hair.

The Opera House provided entertainment on two levels.

For the members of the Committee and the other emergent rich there was a
discreet side entrance, a lavishly furnished lounge where one could buy
the finest champagne and discuss the prices on the Kimberley Stock
Exchange, and beyond the lounge were a series of tastefully decorated
retiring-rooms.  For the workers there was a bare corridor to queue in,
no choice for your money and a five-minute time limit.  In one month the
Opera House produced more gold than the Jack and Whistle mine.

By December there were millionaires in Johannesburg: Hradsky, the Heyns
brothers, Karl Lochtkamper, Duff Charleywood, Sean Courtney and a dozen
others.  They owned the mines, the land, the buildings and the city: the
aristocracy of the Witwatersrand, knighted with money and crowned with
gold.

A week before Christmas, Hradsky, their unacknowledged but undoubted
king, called them all to a meeting in one of the private lounges of
Candy's Hotel.  Who the hell does he think he is, complained Jock Heyns,
ordering us round like a bunch of kaffirs.  Verdammt Juden!  agreed
Lochtkamper.

But they went, every last man of them, for whatever Hradsky did had the
smell of money about it and they could no more resist it than a dog can
resist the smell of a bitch in season.

Duff and Sean were the last to arrive and the room was already hazed
with cigar smoke and tense with expectation.  Hradsky sagged in one of
the polished leather armchairs with Max sitting quietly beside him; his
eyes flickeried when Duff walked in but his expression never changed.
When Duff and Sean had found chairs Max stood up.  Gentlemen, Mr Hradsky
has invited you here to consider a proposition.  They leaned forward
slightly in their chairs and there was a glitter in their eyes like
hounds close upon the fox.  From time to time it is necessary for men in
your position to find capital to finance further ventures and to
consolidate past gains, on the other hand those of us who have money
lying idle will be seeking avenues for investment.  Max cleared his
throat and looked at them with his sad brown eyes.  Up to the present
there has been no meeting-place for these mutual needs such as exists in
the other centres of the financial world.  Our nearest approach to it is
the Stock Exchange at Kimberley which, I'm sure you will agree, is too
far removed to be of practical use to us here at Johannesburg.  Mr
Hradsky has invited you here to consider the possibility of forming our
own Exchange and, if you accept the idea, to elect a chairman and
governing body. Max sat down and in the silence that followed they took
up the idea, each one fitting it into his scheme of thinking, testing it
with the question How will I benefit?  .

Ja, it's darn fine idea.  Lochtkamper spoke first.  Yes, it's what we
needCount me in.  While they schemed and bargained, setting the fees,
the place and the rules, Sean, watched their faces.  The faces of bitter
men, happy men quiet ones and big bull-roarers but all with one common
feature, that greedy glitter in the eyes.  It was midnight before they
finished.

Max stood upGentlemen, Mr Hradsky would like you to join him in a glass
of champagne to celebrate the formation of our new enterprise.  This I
can't believe; the last time he paid for drinks was back in sixty,
declared Duff.  Quickly somebody find a waiter before he changes his
mind.

Hradsky hooded his eyes to bide the hatred in them.

With its own Stock Exchange and bordel Johannesburg became a city.  Even
Kruger recognized it; he deposed the Diggers Committee and sent in his
own police force, sold monopolies for essential mining supplies to
members of his family and Government, and set about revising his tax
laws with special attention to mining profits.  Despite Kruger's efforts
to behead the gold-laying goose, the city grew, and overflowed the
original Government plots and spread brawling and blustering out into
the surrounding veld.

Sean and Duff grew with it.  Their way of life changed swiftly; their
visits to the mines fell to a weekly inspection and they left it to
their hired men.  A steady river of gold poured down from the ridge to
their offices on Eloff Street, for the men they hired were the best that
money could find.

Their horizons closed in to encompass only the two panelled offices, the
Victoria Rooms and the Exchange.

Yet within that world Sean found a thrill that he had never dreamed
existed.  He had been oblivious to it during the first feverish months;
he had been so absorbed in laying the foundations that he could spare no
energy for enjoying or even noticing it.

Then one day he felt the first voluptuous tickle of it.

He had sent to the bank for a land title document he needed, expecting
it to be delivered by a junior clerk but instead the sub-manager and a
senior clerk filed respectfully into his office.  It was an exquisite
physical shock and it gave him a new awareness.  He noticed the way men
looked at him as he passed them on the street.

He realized suddenly that over fifteen hundred human beings depended on
him for their livelihood.

There was satisfaction in the way a path cleared for him and Duff as
they crossed the floor of the Exchange each morning to take their places
in the reserved leather armchairs of the members lounge.  When Duff and
he leaned together and talked quietly before the trading began, even the
other big fish watched them.  Hradsky with his fierce eyes hooded by
sleepy lids, Jock and Trevor Heyns, Karl Lochtkamper, any of them would
have given a day's production from their mines to overhear those
conversations.

Buy!  said Sean.  Buy!  Buy!  Buy!  cUrnoured the pack and the prices
jumped as they hit them, then slumped back as they sucked their money
away and put it to work elsewhere.

Then one March morning in 1886 the thrill became so acute it was almost
an orgasm.  Max left the chair at Norman Hradsky's side and crossed the
lounge towards them.  He stopped in front of them, lifted his sad eyes
off the patterned carpet and almost apologetically proffered a loose
sheaf of papers.  Good morning, Mr Courtney.  Good morning, Mr
Charleywood.  Mr Hradsky has asked me to bring this new share issue to
your attention.  Perhaps you would be interested in these reports, which
are, of course, confidential, but he feels they are worthy of your
support.

You have power when you can force a man who hates you to ask for your
favours.  After the first advance by Hradsky they worked together often.
Hradsky never acknowledged their existence by word or look.  Each
morning Duff called a cheerful greeting across the full width of the
lounge, Hello, chatterbox, or Sing for us, Norman.  Hradsky's eyes would
flicker and he would sag a little lower into his chair, but before the
bell started the day's trading Max would stand up and come across to
them, leaving his master staring into the empty fireplace.  A few soft
sentences exchanged and Max would walk back to Hradsky's side.

Their combined fortunes were irresistible: in one wild morning's trading
alone they added another fifty thousand to their store of pounds.

An untaught boy handles his first rifle like a toy.  Sean was
twenty-two.  The power he held was a more deadly weapon than any rifle,
and much sweeter, more satisfying to use.  It was a game at first with
the Witwatersrand as a chessboard, men and gold for pieces.  A word or a
signature on a slip of paper would set the gold jingling and the men
scampering.  The consequences were remote and all that mattered was the
score, the score chalked up in black figures on a bank statement.  Then
in that same March he was made to realize that a man wiped off the board
could not be laid back in the box with as much compassion as a carved
wooden knight.

Karl Lochtkamper, the German with a big laugh and a happy face, laid
himself open.  He needed money to develop a new property on the east end
of the Rand; he borrowed and signed short-term notes on his loans,
certain that he could extend them if necessary.  He borrowed secretly
from men he thought he could trust.  He was vulnerable and the sharks
smelt him out.

Where is Lochtkamper getting his money?  asked Max.

Do you know?  asked Sean.  No, but I can guess.

Then the next day Max came back to them again.  He has eight notes out.
Here is the list, he whispered sadly.  Mr Hradsky will buy the ones that
have a cross against them.  Can you handle the rest?

Yes, said Sean.

They closed on Karl on the last day of the quarter; they called the
loans and gave him twenty-four hours to meet them.  Karl went to each of
the three banks in turn.  I'm sorry, Mr Lochtkamper, we have loaned over
our budget for this quarter.  liver Hradsky is holding your notes, I'm
sorry.  I'm sorry, Mr Lochtkamper, Mr Charleywood is one of our
directors.  Karl Lochtkamper rode back to the Exchange.  He walked
across the floor and into the lounge for the last time.  He stood in the
centre of the big room, his face grey, his voice bitter and broken.  Let
Jesus have this much mercy on you when your time comes.  Friends!  My
friends!  Sean, how many times have we drunk together?  And you, Duff,
was it yesterday you shook my hand? Then he went back across the floor,
out through the doors.  His suite in the Great North Hotel wasn't fifty
yards from the Exchange.  In the members lounge they heard the pistol
shot quite clearly.

That night Duff and Sean got drunk together in the Victoria rooms.  Why
did he have to do it?  Why did he have to kill himself?  He didn't,
answered Duff.  He was a quitter.  if I'd known he was going to do that,
my God, if only I'd known.  Damn it, man, he took a chance and lost,
it's not our fault.  He would have done the same to us.  I don't like
this, it's dirty.  Let's get out, Duff!  Someone gets knocked down in
the rush and you want to cry "enough!  It's different now somehow, it
wasn't like this at the start.  Yes, and it'll be different in the
morning.  Come on, laddie, I know what you need.  Where are we going? To
the Opera House.  What will Candy say?  Candy doesn't have to know. Duff
was right; it was different in the morning.  There was the usual
hurly-burly of work at the office and some tense action at the Exchange.
He thought about Karl only once during the day and somehow it didn't
seem to matter so much.  They sent him a nice wreath.

He had faced the reality of the game he was playing.  He had considered
the alternative which was to get out with the fortune he had already
made; but to do that would mean giving up the power he held.  The
addiction was already seated too deeply, he could not deny it.  So his
subconscious opened, sucked in his conscience and swallowed it deep down
into its gut.  He could feel it struggling there sometimes, but the
longer it stayed swallowed the more feeble those struggles became.  Duff
comforted him: Duff's words were like a gastric juice that helped to
digest that lump in the gut and he had not yet learned that what Duff
said and what Duff did were not necessarily what Duff believed.

Play the game without mercy, play to win.

Duff stood with his back to the fireplace in Sean's office smoking a
cheroot while they waited for the carriage to take them up to the
Exchange.  The fire behind him silhouetted his slimly tapered legs with
the calves encased in polished black leather.  He still wore his top
coat, for the winter morning was cold.  It fell open at his throat to
show a diamond that sparkled and glowed in his cravat.

you get used to a woman somehow, he was saying.

I've known Candy four years now and yet it seems I've been with her all
my life.  she's a fine- girl Sean agreed absently as he dipped his pen
and scribbled his signature on the document n front of him.  I'm
thirty-five now, Duff went on.  If I'm ever to have a son of my own Sean
laid down the pen deliberately and looked up at Duff. him; he was
starting to grin.  The man said to me once "They take you into their
soft little minds"- and again he said "They don't share, they possess".
Is this a new tune I hear?

Duff shifted uneasily from one foot to the other.  Things change, he
defended himself.  I'm thirty five You're repeating yourself Sean
accused and Duff smiled weakly.

Well, the truth is.

He never finished the sentence; hooves beat urgently in the street
outside and both their faces swung in the direction of the window.  Big
hurry!  said Sean coming quickly to his feet.  Big trouble!  He crossed
to the window.  It's Curtis, and by his face it's not good news he
brings.  There were voices outside the door raised in agitation and the
quick rush of feet, then Timothy Curtis burst into the room without
knocking.  He wore a miner's overall and splattered gumboots.  We've hit
a mud rush on the ninth level.  How bad? Duff snapped.  Bad enough, it's
flooded right back to number eight. Jesus, that will take two months at
least to clear, Sean exclaimed. Does anyone else in town know, have you
told anyone?  I came straight here, Cronje and five men were up at the
face when it blew.  Get back there immediately, ordered Sean, but ride
quietly, we don't want the whole world to know there's trouble.  Don't
let a soul off the property.  We must have time to sell out.  Yes, Mr
Courtney.  Curtis hesitated. Cronje and five others were hit by the
rush.  Shall I send word to their wives.  Can't you understand English?
I don't want a whisper of this to get out before ten o'clock.  We've got
to have time.  But, Mr Courtney! Curtis was appalled.  He stood staring
at Sean and Sean felt the sick little stirring of guilt.

Six men drowned in treacle-thick mud .  .  .  He made an irresolute
gesture with his hands.

We can't -'He stopped and Duff cut in.

they're dead now, and they'll be just as dead when we tell their wives
at ten o'clock.  Get going, Curtis. They sold their shares in the Little
Sister within an hour of the start of trading and a week later they
bought them back at half the price.  Two months later the Little Sister
was back on full production again.

They split their land at Orange Grove into plots and sold them, all but
a hundred acres and on that they started building a house.  Into the
designing of it they poured their combined energy and imagination.  With
money Duff seduced the horticulturist of the Capetown Botanical Gardens
and brought him up by express coach.  They showed him the land.

Make me a garden, said Duff.  The whole hundred acres?  Yes.  It'll cost
a pretty penny.  That is no problem.

The carpets came from Persia, the wood from the Knysna forests and the
marble from Italy.  On the gates at the entrance to the main drive they
engraved the wordsAt xanadu did Kublai Khan a stately pleasure dome
decree.  As the gardener had predicted, it all cost a pretty penny. Each
afternoon when the Exchange closed they would drive up together and
watch the builders at work.

One day Candy came with them and they showed it off to her like two
small boys.

This will be the ballroom.  Sean bowed to her.  May I have the pleasure
of this dance?  Thank you, sir she curtsied, then swept away on his arm
across the unsanded boards.

This will be the staircase, Duff told her, marble black and white
marble, and there on the main landing in a glass case will be Hradsky's
head, beaLififully mounted with an apple in his mouth.  They climbed
laughing up the rough concrete rampThis is Sean's room, the bed is being
made of oak, thick oak to withstand punishment.  They trooped with
linked arms down the passage.  And this is my room, I was thinking of a
solid gold bath but the builder says it's too heavy and Sean says it's
too vulgar.  Look at that view; from here you can see out across the
whole valley.  I could he in bed in the mornings and read the prices on
the Exchange floor with a telescope.  It's lovely, Candy said dreamily.
You like it?

Oh, yes.  It could be your room too.  Candy started to blush and then
her face tightened with annoyance.  He was right, you are vulgar.  She
started for the door and Sean fumbled for his cigars to cover his
embarrassment.  With two quicksteps Duff caught her and turned her to
face him.  You sweet idiot, that was a proposal!  Let me go.  Near to
tears she twisted in his hands.  I don't think you're funny!  Candy, I'm
serious.  Will you marry me?  The cigar dropped out of Sean's mouth but
he caught it before it hit the ground.  Candy was standing very still,
her eyes fastened on Duff's face.  Yes or no, will you marry me?

She nodded once slowly and then twice very fast.

Duff looked at Sean over his shoulder.  Leave us, laddie.

On the way back to town Candy had regained her voice.

She chattered happily and Duff answered her with his lopsided grin. Sean
hunched morosely in one corner of the carriage.  His cigar was burning
unevenly and he threw it out of the window.  You'll let me keep the
Victoria rooms, I hope, Candy There was a silence.

What do you mean?  asked Duff.

Two's company, Sean answered.

Oh, no, Candy exclaimed.  It's your house as well.  Duff spoke sharply,
I give it to you, a wedding present.

Oh, shut up, Duff grinned, it's big enough for all of us.  Candy crossed
quickly to Sean's seat and put her hand on his shoulder.  Please, we've
been together a long time.  We'd be lonely without you.

Sean grunted.  Please!  He'll come, said Duff.  Please.  Oh, well Sean
frowned ungraciously.

They went racing at Milnerton.  Candy with a hat full of ostrich
feathers, Sean and Duff with pearl grey toppers and gold heads on their
canes.  You can pay for your wedding gown by putting fifty guineas on
trade Wind!  She can't lose -'Duff told Candy.  What about Mr Hradsky's
new filly?  I've heard she's a good bet, Candy asked and Duff frowned.
You want to go over to the enemy?  I thought you and Hradsky were almost
partners Candy twirled her parasol.  From the nimours I've heard you
work with him all the time. Mbejane slowed the carriage as they ran into
the crush of pedestrians and coaches outside the Turf Club gates.  Well
you've heard wrong both times.  His Sun Dancer will never hold trade
Wind over the distance, she's bred too light in the legs.  Frenchified
with Huguenot blood; she'll fade within the mile.  And as far as Hradsky
being our partner, we throw him an occasional bone.  Isn't that right,
Sean?  Sean was watching Mbejane's back.  The Zulu, in loin clothes only
and his spears laid carefully on the boards at his feet, was handling
the horses with an easy fan:iiliarity.

They cocked their ears back to catch his voice, deep and soft, as he
talked to them.

Isn't that right, Sean?  Duff repeated.  Of course, agreed Sean vaguely.
You know, I think I'll get Mbejane a livery.  He looks out of place in
those skins.  Well, some of the other horses from the same stud were
stayers.  Sun Honey won the Cape Derby twice and Eclipse showed up the
English stock in the Metropolitan Handicap last year, Candy argued.

i IHuh, Duff smiled his superiority, well, you can take my word for it
that trade Wind will walk the main race today and he'll be back in his
stable before Sun Dancer sees the finishing post.  Maroon and gold, the
same as our racing colours, ean muttered thoughtfully.  That would go
very wel with his black skin, perhaps a turban with an ostrich feather
in it.  What the hell are you talking about?

complained Duff.

livery.  Mbejane They left the carriage in the reserved area and went
through to the members grandstand, Candy sailing prettily between her
escorts.  Well, Duff, we've got the nicest looking woman here today.
Thank you.  Candy smiled up at Sean.

Is that why you keep trying to look down the front of her dress?
challenged Duff.

You filthy-minded beast.  Sean was shocked.  Don't deny, it, I Candy
teased, but I find it very flattering, you're welcome.  They moved
through the throng of butterfly-coloured dresses and stiffly-suited men.
A ripple of greetings moved with them.  Morning, Mr Courtney.  The
accent was on theMister. How's your trade Wind for the big race?  Put
your pants on himHello, Duff, congratulations on your engagement.
Thanks, Jock, it's time you took the plunge as well.  They were rich,
they were young, they were handsome and all the world admired them. Sean
felt good, with a

pretty girl on his arm and a friend walking beside him.  There's
Hradsky, let's go across and engage in a little hog-baiting, Duff
suggested.

Why do you hate him so much?  Candy asked softly.  Look at him and
answer your own question.  Have you ever seen anything more pompous,
joyless and unlovable?  Oh, leave him alone, Duff, don't spoil the day.

Let's go down to the paddock.  Come on" Duff steered them across to
where Hradsky and Max were standing alone by the rail of the track.
Salome, Norman, and peace to you also, Maximilian Hradsky nodded and Max
murmured sadly; his lashes touched his cheeks as he blinked.  I noticed
you two chatting away and thought I would come across and listen to your
stimulating repartee.  He received no answer and went on.  I saw your
new filly exercising on the practice track yesterday evening and I said
to myself, Norman's got a girl friend, that's what it is, he's bought a
hack for his lady.  But now they tell me you are going to race her.  Oh,
Norman, I wish you'd consult me before you do these silly things. You're
an impetuous little devil at times.  Mr Hradsky is confident that Sun
Dancer will make a reasonable showing today, Max murmured.  I was about
to offer you a side bet, but being a naturally kind-hearted person, I
feel it would be taking an unfair advantage.  A small crowd had gathered
round them listening with anticipation.  Candy tugged gently at Duff's
elbow trying to lead him away.  I thought five hundred guineas would be
acceptable to Norman.  Duff shrugged.  But let's forget it Hradsky made
a fierce little sign with his hands and Max interpreted smoothly.  Mr
Hradsky suggests a thousand.  Rash, Norman, extremely rash.  Duff
sighed.

But I suppose I must accommodate you.  They walked down to the
refreshment pavilion.  Candy was quiet awhile, then she said, An enemy
like Mr Hradsky is a luxury that even you two gods can't afford.

Why don't you leave him alone?  It's a hobby of Duff's, explained Sean
as they found seats at one of the tables.  Waiter, bring us a bottle of
Poi Roger.  Before the big race they went down to the paddock.  A
steward opened the wicket gate for them and they passed into the ring of
circling horses.  A gnome in silk of maroon and gold came to meet them
and touched his cap then stood awkwardly, fingering his whip.  He looks
good this morning, sir. The little man nodded at trade Wind.  There was
a dark patch of sweat on the horse's shoulder and he mouthed the
snaffle, lifting his feet delicately.  Once he snorted and rolled his
eyes in mock terror.  He's got an edge on him, sir, eager kind of, if
you follow me.

I want you to win, Harry, said Duff.  So do I, sir, I'll do my best.
There's a thousand guineas for you if you do.  A thousand the jockey
repeated on an outgoing breath.

Duff looked across to where Hradsky and Max were standing talking to
their trainer.  He caught Hradsky's eye glanced significantly at
Hradsky's honey-coloured filly and shook his head sympathetically.

Win for me, Harry, he said softly.

That I will, sir!

The groom led the big stallion across to them and Sean flicked the
jockey up into the saddle.  Good luck.  Harry settled his cap and
gathered up the reins; he winked at Sean, his hobgoblin face wrinkling
in a grin.  There's no better luck than a thousand guineas, sir, if you
follow me.  Come on. Duff caught Candy's arm.  Let's get a place at the
rail.  They hustled her out of the paddock and across the members
enclosure.  The rail was crowded but a place opened for them
respectfully and no one jostled them.  I can't understand you two, Candy
laughed breathlessly.  You make an extravagant bet, then you fix it so
you can get nothing even if you win Money's not the problem, Duff
assured her.  He won that much from me at Klabejas last night, Sean
commented.  If trade Wind beats the filly his prize will be the look on
Hradsky's face, the loss of a thousand guineas will hurt him like a kick
between the legs.  The horses came parading past, stepping high next to
the grooms who held them, then they turned free and cantered back,
dancing sideways, throwing their heads, shining in the sunlight like the
bright silk upon their backs.  They moved away round the curve of the
track.

The crowd rustled with excitement, a bookmaker's voice carried over the
buzz.  Twenty-to-one bar two.  Sun Dancer at fives.  trade Wind even
money.  Duff showed his teeth as he smiled. That's right, you tell the
people.  Candy twisted her gloves nervously and looked up at Sean.  You
there in the grandstand, can you see what they're doing? They're in line
now, moving up together, it looks as though they'll get away first time,
Sean told her without taking his binoculars from his eyes.  Yes, there
they go they're away!  Tell me, tell me, commanded Candy, pounding
Sean's shoulder.

qiarryls showing in front already, can you see the filly, Duff VI saw a
flash of green in the pack, yes, there she is lying sixth or seventh.
What horse is that next to trade Wind?  That's Hamilton's gelding, don't
worry about him, he won't last to the turn.  The frieze of horses, their
heads going like hammers and the dust lifting pale and thin behind them,
were framed by the guide rail and the white mine dumps beyond them. Like
a string of dark beads they moved up the back stretch and then bunched
in the straight.  trade Wind's still there, I think he's making ground
the gelding's finished and no sign of the filly yet.  Yes!  There she
is, Duff, wide on the outside.  She's moving up.  Come on, my darling
-'Duff half whispered.  Let's see you foot it now.  She's clear of the
pack, she's coming up, Duff, she's coming up fast, Sean warned.

Come on, trade Wind, hold her off, Duff pleaded.  Keep her there, boy.
The pounding of the hooves reached them now, a sound like distant surf,
but rising sharply.  The colours showed, emerald green above a honey
skin and maroon and gold leading on the bay.

trade Wind, come on trade Wind, shrieked Candy.

Her hat flopped over her eyes as she hopped; she ripped it off
impatiently and her hair tumbled to her shoulders.  She's catching him,
Duff!  Give him the whip, Harry, for Christ's sake, the whip, man.  The
hoof beats crescendoed, thundered up to them, then passed.  The filly's
nose was at Harry's boot, creeping steadily forward, now level with
trade Wind's heaving shoulder.  The whip, God damn you, screamed Duff,
give him the whip. Harry's right arm moved, fast as a mamba, crack,
crack; they heard the whip above the howling crowd, above the drumming
of hooves and the bay jumped at its sting.  Like a pair in harness the
two horses swept over the finishing line.

Who won?  Candy asked as though she were in pain.

I couldn't see, damn it Duff answered.  Nor could I - Sean took out his
handkerchief and wiped his forehead.  That didn't do my heart any good
as Francois would say.  Have a cigar, Duff.  Thanks, I need one.
Everyone in the crowd was turned to face the board above the judges box
and an uneasy silence held them.  Why do they take such a long time to
make up their minds?  complained Candy.  I'm so upset that I can only
last a minute before I visit the Ladies Room.

The numbers are going up, shouted Sean.  Who is it?  Candy jumped to try
and see over the heads of the crowd then stopped hurriedly with an
expression of alarm on her face.  Number Sixteen, bellowed Duff and Sean
together, it's trade Wind!  Sean punched Duff in the chest and Duff
leaned over and snapped Sean's cigar in half.  Then they caught Candy
between them and hugged her.  She let out a careful shriek and fought
her way out of their arms.  Excuse me, she said and fled.  Let me buy
you a drink.  Sean lit the mutilated stump of his cigar.  No, it's my
honour, I insist.  Duff took his arm and they walked with big satisfied
grins towards the pavilion.

Hradsky was sitting at one of the tables with Max.  Duff walked up
behind him, lifted his top hat off his head with one hand and with the
other ruffled Hradsky's few remaining hairs. Never mind, Norman, you
can't win all the time.  Hradsky turned slowly. He retrieved his hat and
smoothed back his hair, his eyes glittered yellow.

He's going to talk, whispered Duff excitedly.

agree with you, Mr Charleywood, you can't win all the time, said Norman
Hradsky.  It came out quite clearly with only a small catch on the Vs',
they were always difficult letters for him.  He stood up, put his hat
back on his head and walked away.  I will have a cheque delivered to
your office early on Monday morning, Max told them quietly without
taking his eyes off the table.  Then he stood up and followed Hradsky.

Sean came through from the bathroom, his beard in wild disorder and a
bath-towel round his waist.  The famous Duke of York He had ten thousand
men He marched them up to the top of the hill And he marched them down
again.  He sang as he poured bay nirn from a cut-glass bottle into his
cupped hands and rubbed it into his hair.  Duff sat in one of the gilt
chairs watching him.  Sean combed his hair carefully then smiled at
himself in the mirror.

You magnificent creature, Sean told his reflection.

You're getting fat Duff granted.

Sean looked hurt.  It's muscle.  You've got a backside on you like a
hippopotamus Sean removed his towel and turned his back to the mirror;
he surveyed it over his shoulder.

I need a heavy hammer to drive a long nail, he protested.  Oh, no,
groaned Duff.  Your wit at this time of the morning is like pork for
breakfast, heavy on the stomach Sean took a silk shirt out of his
drawer, held it like a toreador's cape, made two passes and swirled it
onto his back with a half veronica.  Ole!  applauded Duff wryly.  Sean
pulled on his trousers and sat to fit his boots.

You're in a nice mood this morning, he told Duff.  I've just come
through an emotional hurricane!  What's the trouble?  Candy wants a
church wedding.  Is that bad?  Well, it's not good.  Why?  Is your
memory so short?  oh, you mean your other wife.  That's right, my other
wife.  Have you told Candy about her?  Good God, no.  Duff looked
horrified.

Yes, I see your problem, what about Candy's husband?

Doesn't that even the score between you?  No, he has gone to his reward.
Well, that's convenient.  Does anyone else know you're married already?
Duff shook his head.

What about Francois?  No, I never told him.  Well, what's your problem
Go down to church and marry her.

Duff looked uncomfortable.

I don't mind marrying a second time in a magistrate's court, it would
only be a couple of old Dutchmen I'd be cheating, but to go into a
church -'Duff shook his head.

I'd be the only one who'd know, said Sean.  You and the headman.  Duff!
Sean beamed at him.  Duff, my boy, you have scruples, this is amazing!

Duff squirmed a little in his chair.

Let me think.  Sean held his forehead dramatically.  Yes, yes, it's
coming to me, that's it.  Come on, tell me.

Duff sat on the edge of his chair.  Go to Candy and tell her it's all
fixed, not only are you prepared to marry her in a church but you're
even going to build your own church.  That's wonderful, Duff murmured
sarcastically, that's the way out of my difficulties all right.  Let me
finish.  Sean started filling his silver cigar case.  You also tell her
that you want a civil ceremony as well believe that's what royalty do.
Tell her that!  it should win her over.  I still don't follow you.  Then
you build your own chapel up at Xanadu, we can find a
distinguished-looking character, dress him up in a dog collar and teach
him the right words.  That keeps Candy happy.  Immediately after the
service the priest takes the coach for Capetown.  You take Candy down to
the magistrate's office and that keeps you happy Duff looked stunned
then slowly his face broke into a great happy smile.  Genius, pure
inspired genius Sean buttoned his waistcoat.  Think nothing of it.  And
now if you'll excuse me I'll go and do some work, one of us has to make
sufficient to allow you to indulge these strange fancies of yours.  Sean
shrugged on his coat, picked up his cane and swung it.  The gold head
gave it a balance like a handmade shotgun.

The silk next to his skin and the halo of bay rum round his head made
him feel good.

He went down the stairs.  Mbejane had the carriage waiting for him in
the Hotel yard.  The body tilted slightly at Sean's weight and the
leather upholstery welcomed him with a yeilding softness.  He lit his
first cigar of the day and Mbejane smiled at him.  I see you, Nkosi.  I
see you also, Mbejane, what is that lump on the side of your head?
Nkosi, I was a little drunk, otherwise that ape of a Basuto would never
have touched me with his fighting stick Mbejane rolled the carriage
smoothly out of the yard and into the street.

What were you fighting aboutV Mbejane shrugged.  Must a man have a
reason to fight?  It is usual.  It is in my memory that there was a
woman, said Mbejane.

That is also usual, who won this fight?  The man bled a little, his
friends took him away.  The woman, when I left, was smiling in her
sleep.  Sean laughed, then ran his eyes over the undulating plain of
Mbejane's bare back.  It was definitely not in keeping.  He hoped his
secretary had remembered to speak to the tailor.  They pulled up in
front of his offices.  One of his clerks hurried down off the veranda
and opened the door of the carriage.  Good morning, Mr Courtney.  Sean
went up the stairs with his clerk running ahead of him like a hunting
dog.  Good morning Mr Courtney, another polite chorus from the row of
desks in the main office.  Sean waved his cane at them and went through
into his own office.  His portrait leered at him from above the
fireplace and he winked at it.  What have we this morning, Johnson?
These requisitions, sir, and the pay cheques, sir, and development
reports from the engineers, sir, and.  .  .  Johnson was a greasy-haired
little man in a greasylooking alpaca coat; with each sir he made a
greasy little bow. He was efficient so Sean hired him, but that didn't
mean he liked him.  You got a stomach ache, Johnson?  No, sir.  Well,
for God's sake, stand up straight, man.

Johnson shot to attention.  Now let's have them one at a time.  Sean
dropped into his chair.  At this time of the day came the grind.  He
hated the paper work and so he tackled it with grim concentration,
making random checks on the long rows of figures, trying to associate
names with faces and querying requisitions that appeared exorbitant
until finally he wrote his signature between the last of Johnson's
carefully pencilled crosses and threw his pen onto the desk.  What else
is there?  Meeting with Mr Maxwell from the Bank at twelvethirty, sirAnd
then?

The agent for Brooke Bros.  at one, and immediately after that Mr
MacDougal, sir, then you're expected up at the Candy Deep mine.  Thank
you, Johnson, I'll be at the Exchange as usual this morning if anything
out of the ordinary comes up.  Very good, Mr Courtney.  just one other
thing.

Johnson pointed at the brown paper parcel on the couch across the room.
From your tailor.  Ah!  Sean smiled.  Send my servant in here.  He
walked across and opened the parcel.  Within a few minutes Mbejane
filled the doorway.  Nkosi?  Mbejane, your new uniform.  Sean pointed at
the clothes laid out on the couch.  Mbejane's eyes switched to the gold
and maroon finery, his expression suddenly dead.  Put it on, come on,
let's see how you look.

Mbejane crossed to the couch and picked up the jacket.  These are for
me?  Yes, come on, put it on.  Sean laughed.

Mbejane hesitated, then slowly he loosened his loin cloth and let it
drop.  Sean watched him impatiently as he buttoned on the jacket and
pantaloons, then he walked in a critical circle around the Zulu.  Not
bad, he muttered, and then in Zulu, Is it not beautiful?  Mbejane
wriggled his shoulders against the unfamiliar feel of the cloth and said
nothing.  Well, Mbejane, do you like it? When I was a child I went with
my father to trade cattle at Port Natal. There was a man who went about
the town with a monkey on a chair, the monkey danced and the people
laughed and threw money to it.  That monkey had such a suit as this.
Nkosi, I do not think he was a very happy monkey. The smile slipped off
Sean's face, You would rather wear your skins?

rwhat I wear is the dress of a warrior of Zululand.

There was still no expression on Mbejane's face.  Sean opened his mouth
to argue with him but before he could speak he lost his temper.  You'll
wear that uniform, he shouted.  You'll wear what I tell you to wear and
you'll do it with a smile, do you hear me?  Nkosi, I hear you.  Mbejane
picked up his loin cloth of leopard tails and left the office.  When
Sean went out to the carriage Mbejane was sitting on the driver's seat
in his new livery.  All the way to the Exchange his back was stiff with
protest and neither of them spoke. Sean glared at the doorman of the
Exchange, drank four brandies during the morning rode back to his office
again at noon scowling at Mbejane's -still protesting back, shouted at
Johnson, snapped at the bank manager, routed the representative from
Brooke Bros.  and drove out to the Candy Deep in a high old rage.  But
Mbejane's silence was impenetrable and Sean couldn't re-open the
argument without sacrifice of pride.  He burst into the new
administrative building of the Candy Deep and threw the staff into
confusion.

Where's Mr du Toit?  he roared.  He's down the Number Three shaft, Mr
Courtney.  What the hell is he doing down there?  He's supposed to be
waiting for me here.  He didn't expect you for another hour, sir.  Well,
get me some overalls and a mining helmet, don't just stand there.  He
clapped the tin hat on his head and stamped his heavy gumboots across to
the Number Three shaft.  The skip dropped him smoothly five hundred feet
into the earth and he climbed out at the tenth level.  Where's Mr du
Toit!  he demanded of the shift boss at the lift station.  He's up at
the face, sir.  The floor of the drive was rough and muddy; his gumboots
squelched as he set off down the tunnel. His carbide lamp lit the uneven
rock walls with a flat white light and he felt himself starting to
sweat.  Two natives pushing a cocopan back along the railway lines
forced him to flatten himself against one wall to allow them to pass and
while he waited he felt inside his overalls for his cigar case.  As he
pulled it out it slipped from his hand and plunked into the mud.  The
cocopan was gone by that time so he stooped to pick up the case.  His
ear came within an inch of the wall and a puzzled expression replaced
his frown of annoyance.  The rock was squeaking.  He laid his ear
against it.  It sounded like someone grinding his teeth.  He listened to
it for a while trying to guess the cause; it wasn't the echo of shovels
or drills, it wasn't water.  He walked another thirty yards or so down
the drive and listened again.

Not so loud here but now the grinding noise was punctuated with an
occasional metallic snap like the breaking of a knife blade.  Strange,
very strange; he had never heard anything like it before.  He walked on
down the drive, his bad mood lost in his preoccupation with this new
problem.  Before he reached the face he met Francois.  Hello, Mr
Courtney.  Sean had long since given up trying to stop Francois calling
him that.  Gott, I'm sorry I wasn't there to meet you.  I thought you
were coming at three.  That's all right, Francois, how are you?  My
rheumatism's been giving me blazes, Mr Courtney, but otherwise I'm all
right.  How's Mr Charleywood?  He's fine.  Sean couldn't restrain his
curiosity any longer.  Tell me something, Franz, just now I put my ear
against the wall of the drive and I heard an odd noise, I couldn't make
out what it was.  What kind of noise?  A sort of grinding, like, like .
.  .  I Sean searched for words to describe it, like two pieces of glass
being rubbed together.  Francois's eyes flew wide open and then began to
bulge, the colour of his face changed to grey and he caught Sean's arm.

, whererBack along the drive.

The breath jammed in Francois's throat and he struggled to speak through
it, shaking Sean's arm desperately.  Cave-in!  he croaked.  Cave-in,
man!

He started to run but Sean grabbed him.  Francois struggled wildly.
Francois, how many men up at the face?  Cave-in.  Francois's voice was
now hysterically shrill.  Cave-in.  He broke Sean's grip and raced away
towards the lift station, the mud flying from his gumboots.  His terror
infected Sean and he ran a dozen paces after Francois before he stopped
himself.  For precious seconds he wavered with fear slithering round
like a reptile in his stomach; go back to call the others and perhaps
die with them or follow Francois and live.  Then the fear in his belly
found a mate, a thing just as slimy and cold; its name was shame, and
shame it was that drove him back towards the face.  There were five
blacks and a white man there, bare-chested and shiny with sweat in the
heat.  Sean shouted those two words at them and they reacted the way
bathers do when someone on the beach shouts shark.  The same moment of
paralysed horror, then the panic.  They came stampeding back along the
tunnel.  Seanran with them, the mud sucked at Ins heavy boots and his
legs were weak with easy living and riding in carriages.  One by one the
others passed him.

"Wait for me, he wanted to scream.  Wait for me.  He slipped on the
greasy footing, scraping his shoulder onthe the rough wall as he fell,
and dragged himself up again, mud plastered in his beard, the blood
burning in his ears.

Alone now he blundered on down the tunnel.  With a crack like a rifle
shot one of the thick shoring timbers broke under the pressure of the
moving rock and dust smoked from the roof of the tunnel in front of him.
He staggered on and all around him the earth was talking, groaning,
protesting, with little muffled shrieks.  The timbers joined in again,
crackling and snapping, and as slowly as a theatre curtain the rock
sagged down from above him.

The tunnel was thick with dust that smothered the beam of his lamp and
rasped his throat.  He knew then that he wasn't going to make it but he
ran on with the loose rock starting to fall about him.  A lump hit his
mining helmet and jarred him so that he nearly fell.  Blinded by the
swirling dust fog he crashed at full run into the abandoned cocopan that
blocked the tunnel, he sprawled over the metal body of the trolley with
his thighs bruised from the collision.  Now I'm finished, he thought,
but instinctively he pulled himself up and started to grope his way
around the cocopan to continue his flight.  With a roar the tunnel in
front of him collapsed.  He dropped on his knees and crawled between the
wheels of the COCOPan, wriggling under the sturdy steel body just an
instant before the roof above him collapsed also.  The noise of the fall
around him seemed to last for ever, but then it was over and the
rustling and grating of the rock as it settled down was almost silence
in comparison.  His lamp was lost and the darkness pressed as heavily on
him as the earth squeezed down on his tiny shelter.  The air was solid
with dust and he coughed; he coughed until his chest ached and he tasted
salty blood in his mouth. There was hardly room to move, the steel body
of the trolley was six inches above him, but he struggled until he
managed to open the front of his overalls and tear a piece off the tail
of his shirt.  He held the silk like a surgical mask across his mouth
and nose.

It strained the dust out of the aft so he could breathe.  The dust
settled; his coughing slowed and finally stopped.  He felt surprise that
he was still alive and cautiously he started exploring.  He tried to
straighten out his legs but his feet touched rock.  He felt with his
hands, six inches of head room and perhaps twelve inches on either side,
warm mud underneath him and rock and steel all around.

He took off his helmet and used it as a pillow.  He was in a steel
coffin buried five hundred feet deep, He felt the first flutter of
panic.  Keep your mind busy, think of something, think of anything but
the rock around you, count your assets, he told himself.  He started to
search his pockets, moving with difficulty in the cramped space.  One
silver cigar case with two Havanas.  He laid it down next to him.  One
box of matches, wet.  He placed it on top of the case.  One pocket
watch.  One handkerchief, Irish linen, monogrammed. One comb,
tortoishell, a man is judged by his appearance.  He started to comb his
beard but found immediately that though this occupied his hands it left
his mind free.  He put the comb down next to his matches.  Twenty-five
pounds in gold sovereigns - He counted them carefully, yes, twenty-five.
I shall order a bottle of good champagne.  The dust was chalky in his
mouth so he went on hurriedly, and a Malay girl from the Opera.

No, why be mean, ten Malay girls.  I'll have them dance for me, that'll
pass the time.  I'll promise them a sovereign each to bolster their
enthusiasm.

He continued the search, but there was nothing else.  Gumboots, socks,
well-cut trousers, shirt torn I'm afraid, overalls, a tin hat, and
that's all.  With his possessions laid out carefully beside him and his
cell explored he had to start thinking.  First he thought about his
thirst.  The mud in which he lay was too thick to yield water.  He tried
straining it through his shirt without success, and then he thought
about air.  It seemed quite A fresh and he decided that sufficient was
filtering in from the loosely packed rock around him to keep him alive.

To keep him alive, alive until the thirst killed.  Until he died curled
up like a foetus in the warm womb of the earth.  He laughed, a worm in a
dark warm womb.  He laughed again and recognized it as the beginnings of
panick!

he thrust his fist into his mouth to stop himself, biting down hard on
his knuckles.  It was very quiet, the rock had stopped moving.  How long
will it take?  Tell me, Doctor.  How long have I got?  I Well, you are
sweating.  You'll lose moisture quite rapidly.  I'd say about four days,
he answered himself.  What about hunger, Doctor?  Oh, no, don't worry
about that, you, will be hungry, of course, but the thirst will kill you
And typhoid, or is it typhus, I can never remember.

What about that, Doctor?  If there were dead men trapped in here with
you there'd be a good chance, but you're alone, you know Do you think
I'll go mad, Doctor, not immediately, of course, but in a few days? Yes,
you'll go mad.  I've never been mad before, not that I know of anyway,
but I think it will help to go mad now, don't you?  If you mean, will it
make it easier, well, I don't know!

now you're being obscure, but I follow you.  You mean in that sleep of
madness what dreams will come?

You mean, will madness be more real than reality?  You mean, will dying
mad be worse than dying thirsty?  But then I may beat the madness.  This
cocoPan might buckle under the strain, after all there must be thousands
of tons of rock bearing down on it.  That's quite clever, you know,
Doctor; as a medical man you should appreciate it.

Mother Earth was saved but, alas, the child was stillborn, she bore down
too hard.  Sean had spoken aloud, and now he felt foolish.  He picked up
a piece of stone and tapped the cocopan with it.  It sounds firm enough.
A most pleasing noise, really.  He beat harder on the metal body, one,
two, three, one, two, three, then dropped the stone.  Soft as an echo,
distant as the moon, he heard his taps repeated.  His whole body
stiffened at the sound, and he started to shiver with excitement.  He
snatched up the stone: three times he rapped, and three times the answer
came back to him.  They heard me, sweet merciful Christ, they heard me.
He laughed breathlessly.  Dear Mother Earth, don't bear down, please
don't bear down.  Just be patient. Wait a few days and by Caesarian
they'll take this child out of your womb.  Mbejane waited until Sean
disappeared down the Number Three shaft before he took off his new
jacket.  He folded it carefully on the driver's seat next to him.  He
sat and enjoyed the feel of the sun on his skinfor a while, then he
climbed off the carriage and went to the horses.  He took them one at a
time to the through for water then returned them to their harnesses,
buckling them in loosely.  He picked up his spears from the footboard
and moved across to a patch of short grass next to the administrative
building.  He sat down and went to work on the blade, humming softly to
himself as he honed.  At last he ran an expert thumb along each edge,
grunted, shaved a few hairs off his forearm, smiled contentedly and laid
his spears beside him in the grass. He lay back and the sun warmed him
to sleep.

The shouting woke him.  He sat up and automatically checked the height
of the sun.  He had slept an hour or more.  Duff was shouting and
Francois, mud-splattered and frightened-looking, was answering him. They
were standing together in front of the administrative building.

Duff's horse was sweating.  Mbejane stood up and went across to them; he
listened closely, trying to understand their staccato voices.  They went
too fast for him, but

something was wrong, that much he knew.  It's caved in almost to the
Number Ten lift station Francois said.

You left him in there, accused Duff.  I thought he was following me, but
he turned back.  What for, why did he turn back?  To call the others
-'Have you started clearing the drive?  No, I was waiting for you You
stupid bloody idiot, he might be alive in there .  .  .

every minute is vital.  But he hasn't a chance, Mr Charleywood, he must
be deadShut up, damn you.  Duff swung away from him and started running
towards the shaft.  There was a crowd gathered beneath the high steel
structure of the head gear, and suddenly Mbejane knew it was Sean.  He
caught up with Duff before he reached the shaft.  Is it the Nkosi?  Yes.
What has happened?  The rock has fallen on him Mbejane pushed his way
into the skip next to Duff and neither of them spoke again until they
reached the tenth level. They went down the drive, only a short way
before they reached the end. There were men there with crowbars and
shovels standing undecided, waiting for orders, and Mbejane shouldered a
path through them.  He and Duff stood together in front of the new wall
of broken rock that sealed the tunnel, and the silence went on and on.
Then Duff turned on the white shift-boss.  Were you at the face? Yes. He
went back to call you, didn't he?  Yes.  And you left him there?  The
min couldn't look at Duff I thought he was following us, he muttered.
You thought only of your own miserable skin, Duff told him, you filthy
little coward, you slimy yellow bastard, you, .

Mbejane caught Duff Is arm and Duff stopped his tirade.

They all heard it then, clink, clink, clink.  It's him, it must be him!
whispered Duff, he's alive!  He snatched a crowbar from one of the
natives and knocked against the side of the tunnel.  They waited, their
breathing the only sound, until the answer came back to them louder and
sharper than before.  Mbejane took the crowbar out of Duff's hands.  He
thrust it into a crack in the rock jam and his back muscles bunched as
he heaved.

The bar bent like a liquorice stick, he threw it away and went at the
stone with his bare hands.  You!  Duff snapped at the shift-boss.  We'll
need timber to shore up as we clear the fall, get it. He turned to the
natives.  Four of you working on the face at one time the rest of you
carry the stone away as we loosen it.

Do you want any dynamite?  asked the shift-boss.  And bring the rock
down a second time?  Use your brains, man.  Go and get that timber and
call Mr du Toit while you're at the surface.  In four hours they cleared
fifteen feet of tunnel, breaking the larger stabs of stone with sledge
hammers and prising the pieces out of the jam.  Duff's body ached and
his hands were raw.  He had to rest.  He walked slowly back to the lift
station and there he found blankets and a huge dish of soup.  Where did
this come from?  Candy's Hotel, sir.  Half Johannesburg is waiting at
the head of the shaft.  Duff huddled into a blanket and drank a little.
of the soup.  Where's du Toit?  I couldn't find him, sir.

Up at the face Mbejane worked on.  The first four natives came back to
rest and fresh men took their place.

Mbejane led them, grunting an order occasionally but otherwise reserving
his strength for the assault on the rock.  For an hour Duff rested and
when he returned to the head of the tunnel Mbejane was still there. Duff
watched him curl his arms round a piece of stone the size of a beer keg,
brace his legs and tear the stone out of the jam.  Earth and loose rock
followed it burying Mbejane's legs to the knees and Duff jumped forward
to help him.

Another two hours and Duff had to rest again.  This time he led Mbejane
back with him, gave him a blanket and made him drink a little soup. They
sat next to each other with their backs against the Wall of the tunnel
and blankets over their shoulders.  The shift-boss came to Duff.  Mrs
Rautenbach sent this down for you, sir It was a half-bottle of brandy.
Tell her, thank you Duff pulled the cork with his teeth and swallowed
twice.  it brought the tears into his eyes, he offered the bottle to
Mbejane.

It is not fittingl Mbejane demurred.

Drink Mbejane drank, wiped the mouth of the bottle carefully on his
blanket and handed it back.  Duff took another swallow and offered it
again but Mbejane shook his head.

A little of that is strength, too much is weakness.

There is work to do now Duff corked the bottle.

How long before we reach him?  asked Mbejane.  Another day, maybe two. A
man can die in two days, mused the Zulu.  Not one with a body like a
bull and a temper like a devil, Duff assured him.  Mbejane smiled and
Duff went on groping for his words in Zulu.

"You love him, Mbejane?  Love is a woman's word Mbejane inspected one of
his thumbs; the nail was torn loose, standing up like a tombstone; he
took it between his teeth, pulled it off and spat it onto the floor of
the drive.  Duff shuddered as he watched.  Those baboons will not work
unless they are driven.  Mbejane stood up.  Are you rested?  Yes, lied
Duff, and they went back to the face.

Sean lay in the mud with his head on the hard pillow of the helmet.  The
darkness was as solid as the rock around him.  He tried to imagine where
the one ended and the other began, by doing that he could stop himself
feeling his thirst so strongly.  He could hear the ring of hammer on
stone and the rattle of rock falling free but it never seemed to come
any closer.  The whole side of his body was stiff and sore but he could
not turn over, his knees caught on the cocopan every time he tried and
the air in his little cave was starting to taste stale, his head ached.

He moved again, restlessly, and his hand brushed the small pile of
sovereigns.  He struck at them, scattering them into the mud.  They were
the bait that had led him into this trap.  Now he would give them, and
all the millions.  of others, for just the feel of the wind in his beard
and the sun in his face.  The darkness clung to him, thick and cloying
as black treacle; it seemed to fill his nose, his throat and eyes,
smothering him.  He groped and found the matchbox.  For a few seconds of
light he would burn up most of the precious oxygen in his cave and call
it fair exchange, but the box was sodden.  He struck match after match
but the wet heads crumbled without a spark and he threw them away and
clenched his eyelids to keep the darkness out.  Bright colours formed in
front of his closed eyes, moving and rearranging themselves until
suddenly and very clearly they formed a picture of Garrick's face.

He hadn't thought about his family for months, he had been too busy
reaping the golden harvest, but now memories crowded back.  There were
so many things he had forgotten.  Everything else had become unimportant
when compared with power and gold, even lives, men's lives, had meant
nothing.  But now it was his own life, teetering on the edge of the
black cliff.

The sound of the sledge-hammers broke into his thoughts again.  There
were men on the other side of the blocked tunnel trying to save him,
working their way into the treacherous rock pile which might collapse
again at any minute.  People were more valuable than the poisonous
metal, the little gold discs that lay smugly beside him in the mud while
men struggled to save him.

He thought of Garry, crippled by his careless shotgun, father to the
bastard he had sired, of Ada whom he had left without a word of goodbye,
of Karl Lochtkamper with the pistol in his hand and half his head
splattered across the floor of his bedroom, of other nameless men dead
or broken because of him.

Sean ran his tongue across his lips and listened to the hammers; he was
certain they were nearer now.  If I get out of here, it'll be different.
I swear it Mbejane rested for four hours in the next thirty-six.  Duff
watched the flesh melt off him in sweat.  He was killing himself, Duff
was worn out; he could no longer work with his hands but he was
directing the teams who were shoring up the reclaimed tunnel.  By the
second evening they had cleared a hundred feet of the drive.  Duff paced
it out and when he reached the face he spoke to Mbejane.  How long since
you last signalled to him?

Mbejane stepped back with a sledge-hammer in his tattered hands; its
shaft was sticky and brown with blood.  An hour ago and even then it
sounded as though there were but the length of a spear between us.  Duff
took a crowbar from one of the other natives and tapped the rock.  The
answer came immediately, He's hitting something made of iron, Duff said.
It sounds as though he's only a few feet away.  Mbejane, let these other
men take over.  If you wish you can stay and watch but you must rest
again now.  For answer Mbejane lifted the hammer and swung it against
the face.  The rock he hit cracked and two of the natives stepped up and
levered it loose with their crowbars.  At the back of the hole it left
in the wall they could see the corner of the cocopan.  Everyone stared
at it, then Duff shouted.  Sean, Sean, can you hear me?  Stop talking
and get me out of here.  Sean's voice was hoarse with thirst and dust,
and muffled by the rock.  He's under the cocopan.  It's him.  Nkosi, are
you all rightVWe've found him.  The shouts were picked up by the men
working behind them in the drive and passed back to those waiting at the
lift station.  They've found him, he's all'right, they've found him.
Duff and Mbejane jumped forward together, their exhaustion completely
forgotten.  They cleared the last few lumps of rock and with their
shoulders touching knelt and peered under the cocopan.  Nkosi, I see
you.  I see you also, Mbejane, what took you so long?

Nkosi, there were a few small stones in the way.  Mbejane reached under
the cocopan and with his hands under Sean's armpits pulled him out.
What a hell of a place you chose to go to ground in, laddie.  How are
you feeling?  Give me some water and I'll be all right Water, bring
water, shouted Duff.

Sean gulped it, trying to drink the whole mug in one mouthful.  He
coughed and it shot out of his nose.  Easy, laddie, easy. Duff thumped
his back.  Sean drank the next mugful more slowly and finished panting
from the effort.  That was good.  Come on, we've got a doctor waiting up
on top.  Duff draped a blanket over his shoulders.  Mbejane picked Sean
up across his chest.  Put me down, damn you, I haven't forgotten how to
walk.  Mbejane set him down gently, but his legs buckled like those of a
man just out of bed from a long illness and he clutched at Mbejane's
arm.  Mbejane picked him up again and carried him down to the lift
station.  They rode up in the skip into the open.  The moon's shining.
And the stars, my God, they're beautiful.  There was wonder in Sean's
voice; he sucked the night air into his lungs but it was too rich for
him and he started coughing again.  There were people waiting at the
head of the shaft and they crowded round them as they stepped out of the
skip.  How is he?  Are you all right, Sean?  Doc Symmonds is waiting in
the office Quickly, Mbejane, said Duff, get him out of the cold.

One on either side of him they hurried Sean across to the administrative
building and laid him on the couch in Francois's office.  Symmonds
checked him over, looked down his throat and felt his pulse.  Have you
got a closed carriage here?  Yes, Duff answered.

Well, wrap him up warmly and get him home to bed.

With the dust and bad air he's been breathing there's serious danger of
pneumonia.  I'll come down with you and give him a sedative.  I won't
need one, Doc, Sean grinned at him.

I think I know what's best for you, Mr Courtne.  Doctor Symmonds was a
young man.  He was the fashionable doctor among the rich of Johannesburg
and he took it very seriously.  Now if you please, we'll get you to your
hotel.  He started to pack, his instruments back into his valise.
You're the doctor, Sean agreed, but before we go will you have a look at
MY servant's hands, they'-re in a hell of a mess.  There's hardly any
meat left on them.  Doctor Symmonds did not look up from what he was
doing. I have no Kaffir practice, Mr Courtney, I'm sure you'll find some
other doctor to attend to him when we get back to town Sean sat up
slowly, he let the blankets slip off his shoulders.  He walked across to
Doctor Symmond held him by the throat against the wall.  The doctor had
a fine pair of waxed moustaches and Sean took one of them between the
thumb and forefinger of his free handhe plucked it out like feathers
from the carcass of a dead fowl and Doctor Symmonds, squealed.  Starting
now, Doctor, you have a Kaffir practice, Sean told him.  He pulled the
handkerchief out of Symmondstop pocket and dabbed at the little drops of
blood on the doctor's bare upper lip.  Be a good fellow, see to my
servant.

When Sean woke the next morning the hands of the grandfather clock
across the bedroom pointed at the top of their dial.  Candy was in the
room opening the curtains and with her were two waiters, each with a
loaded tray.  Good morning, how is our hero this morning?  The waiters
put down their trays and went out as she came across to Sean's bed.

Sean blinked the sleep out of his eyes.  My throat feels as though I've
just finished a meal of broken glassThat's the dust, Candy told him and
laid her hands on his forehead.  Sean's hand sneaked round behind her
and she squeaked as he pinched her.  Standing well away from the bed she
rubbed her bottom and made a face at him.  There's nothing wrong with
you!  Good, then I'll get up.  Sean started to pull back the bedclothes.
Not until the doctor's had a look at you, you won, tCandy, if that
bastard puts one foot in this room I'll punch him so hard in the mouth
his teeth will march out of his backside like soldiers.

Candy turned to the breakfast trays to cover her smile.

That's no way to talk in front of a lady.  But don't worry, it isn't
Symmonds.  Where's Duff?  Sean asked.  He's having a bath, then he's
coming to eat breakfast with you.  I'll wait for him, but give me a cup
of coffee in the meantime, there's a sweetheart.  She brought the coffee
to him.  Your savage has been camping on my trail all morning, he wants
to see you.

I've just about had to put an armed guard on this room to keep him out.
Sean laughed.  Will you send him in, Candy?  She went to the door and
stopped with a hand on the latch.  It's nice to have you back, Sean,
don't do anything silly like that again, will you?  That's a promise,
Sean assured her.

Mbejane came quickly and stood in the doorway.  Nkosi, is it well with
you?  Sean looked at the iodinestained bandages on his hands and the
maroon and gold livery without answering.  Then he rolled on his back
and stared at the ceiling.  I sent for my servant and instead there
comes a monkey on a chain.  Mbejane stood still, his face expressionless
but for the hurt in his eyes.  Go, find my servant.  You will know him
by his dress which is that of a warrior of Zululand.  It took a few
seconds for the laughter to start rolling around in Mbejane's belly; it
shook his shoulders and creased the corners of his mouth.  He closed the
door very softly behind him and when he came back in his loin cloth Sean
grinned at him.  Ah!  I see you, Mbejane.  And I see you also.  He stood
by the bed and they talked.  They spoke little of the cave-in and not at
all of Mbejane's part in the rescue.  Between them it was understood,
words could only damage it.  Perhaps they would talk of it later, but
not now.  Tomorrow, will you need the carriage?  Mbejane asked at last.
Yes _ go now.  Eat and sleep.  Sean reached out and touched Mbejane's
arm.  just that small physical contact that almost guilty touching, and
Mbejane left him.

Then Duff came in in a silk dressing-gown and they ate eggs and steak
from the trays and Duff sent down for a bottle of wine just to rinse the
dust out of their throats once more.  They tell me Francois is still
down at the Bright Angels - he's been on the drunk ever since he got out
of that shaft.  When he sobers up he can come to the office and collect
his pay packet Sean sat up.  You're going to fire him?  I'm going to
fire him so high he'll only touch ground when he reaches Capetown What
the hell for?  demanded Sean. What for?  Duff echoed.  What for?  For
running, that's what for.  Duff, he was in a cave-in at Kimberley,
wasn't he?  Yes, Broke his legs, didn't you say rYes.

Shall I tell you something?  If it were to happen to me a second time
I'd run as well.

Duff filled his wine glass without answering.  Send down to the Bright
Angels, tell him alcohol is bad for the liver, that should sober him,
tell him unless he's back at work by tomorrow morning we'll dock it off
his pay, Sean said.  Duff looked at him with a puzzled expression.  What
is this?  I had some time to think while I was down in that hole.  I
decided that to get to the top you don't have to stamp on everyone you
meet.  Ah, I understand.  Duff gave his lopsided grin.  A good
resolution, New Year in August.  Well, that's all right, you had me
worried there, I thought a rock had fallen on your head.  I also make
good resolutionsDuff, I don't want Francois firedAll right, all right,
he stays on.  If you like we can open a soup kitchen at the office and
turn Xanadu into a home for the aged.  Oh, go and burst.  I just don't
think it's necessary to fire Francois, that's allWho's arguing?  I
agreed with you, didn't I?  I have deep respect for good resolutions.  I
make them all the time.  Duff pulled his chair up to the bed, Quite by
chance I happen to have a pack of cards with me He took them out of his
dressing-gown pocket.  Vould you care for a game of Klabejas?  Sean lost
fifty pounds before he was saved by the arrival of the new doctor.  The
doctor tapped his chest and tu'ttutted, looked down his throat and
tut-tutted, wrote out a prescription and confined him to bed for the
rest of the day.  He was just leaving when Jock and Trevor Heyns
arrived.  Jock had a bunch of flowers which he presented to Sean in an
embarrassed fashion.

Then the room began to fill in earnest: the rest of the crowd from the
Exchange arrived, someone had brought a case of champagne, a poker game
started in one corner and a political meeting in another.

who does this Kruger think he is, anyway, God or something?  You know
what he said last time we went to see him about getting the vote, he
said "Protest, protest I have the guns and you have not!  Three Kings
wins, you are holding cards!  Consolidated Wits.  will hit thirty you
wait and see.

shillings by the end of the month.  and the taxes, theyre putting
another twenty percent on dynamite.  a new piece at the Opera, Jock's
got a season ticket on her, no one else has had a look in yet.  All
right, you two, stop that.  If you want to fight go outside, this is a
sick room.  This bottle's empty, break open a new one, Duff.  Sean lost
another hundred to Duff and then a little after five Candy came in.  She
was horrified.  out, all of you, outV The room emptied as quickly as it
had filled and Candy wandered around picking up cigar butts and empty
glasses.  The vandals!  Someone's burnt a hole in the carpet and look at
this, champagne spilt all over the table.  Duff coughed and started
pouring himself another drink.  Don't you think you've had enough of
that, Dufford?  Duff put down his glass.  And it's time you went and
changed for dinner.  Duff winked sheepishly at Sean, but he went.

Duff and Candy came back to his room after supper and had a liqueur with
him.  Now to sleep, Candy commanded and went across to draw the
curtains.  It's still early, protested Duff with no effect. Candy blew
the lamp out.

Sean was not tired, he had lain in bed all day and now his brain was
overactive.  He lit a cigar and smoked, listening to the street noises
below his window and it was past midnight before he finally drifted off.
When he woke, he woke screaming, for the darkness was on him again and
the blankets pressed down on him suffocating him.  He fought them off
and stumbled blindly across the room.

He had to have air and light.  He ran into the thick velvet curtains and
they closed around his face; he tore himself free and hit the french
windows with his shoulder; they burst open and he was out on the
balcony, out in the cold air with the moon fat and yellow in the sky
above him.

His gasping slowed until he was breathing normally again.  He went back
inside and lit the lamp, then he went through to Duff's empty bedroom.
There was a copy of Twelfth Night on the bedside table and he took it
back to his own room.  He sat with the lamp at his elbow and forced his
eyes to follow the printed words even though they made no sense.  He
read until the dawn showed grey through the open windows, then he put
down the book.

He shaved, dressed and went down the back stairs into the hotel yard.
He found Mbejane in the stables.  Put a saddle on the grey.  Where are
you going, Nkosi?  To the devil.  Then I will come with you.  No, I will
be back before midday.  He rode up to the Candy Deep and tied his horse
outside the administration buildings.  There was a sleepy clerk in the
front offices.

good morning, Mr Courtney.  Can I help you?  Yes.  Get me overalls and a
helmet.  Sean went to the Number Three shaft.  There was a frost on the
ground that crunched as he walked on it and the sun had just cleared the
eastern ridge of the Witwatersrand.  Sean stopped at the hoist shed and
spoke to the driver.  Has the new shift gone on yet?  all an hour ago,
sir!  The man was obviously surprised to see him.  the night shift
finished blasting at five o'clock.  Good, drop me down to the fourteenth
level.  The fourteenth is abandoned now, Mr Courtney, there's no one
working there. yes, i know.  Sean walked across to the head of the
shaft.  He lit his carbide lamp and while he waited for the skip he
looked out across the valley.  The air was clear and the sun threw long
shadows.  Everything stood out in sharp relief.  He had not been up this
early in the morning for many months and he had almost forgotten how
fresh and dehcately coloured a new day was.  The skip stopped in front
of him.  He took a deep breath and stepped into it.  When he reached the
fourteenth level he got out and pushed the recall signal for the skip
and he was alone in the earth again.  He walked up the tunnel and the
echo of his footsteps went with him.  He was sweating and a muscle in
his cheek started to jerk; he reached the face and set the carbide lamp
down on a ledge of rock.  He checked to make sure his matches were in
his pocket, then he blew out the lamp.  The darkness came squeezing down
on him.

The first half hour was the worst.  Twice he had the matches in his hand
ready to strike but he stopped himself.

The sweat formed cold wet patches under his arms and the darkness filled
his open mouth and choked him.  He had to fight for each lungful of air,
suck in, hold it, breathe out.  First he regulated his breathing and
then slowly, slowly his mind came under control and he knew he had won.
He waited another ten minutes breathing easily and sitting relaxed with
his back against the side of the tunnel, then he lit the lamp.  He was
smiling as he went back to the lift station and signalled for the skip.
When he reached the surface he stepped out and lit a cigar; he flicked
the match into the square black opening of the shaft.  So much for you,
little hole.

He walked back towards the administration building.

What he could not know was that the Number Three shaft of the Candy Deep
was to take something from him just as valuable as his courage and that,
next time, what it took it would not give back.  But that was many years
ahead.

By October Xanadu was nearly finished.  The three of them drove out to
it as usual one Saturday afternoon.

"The builder is only six months behind schedule, now he says he'll be
finished by Christmas and I haven't found the courage yet to ask him
which Christmas, Sean remarked.

It's all the alterations Candy has thought up, Duff said.  She's got the
poor man so confused he doesn't know whether he's a boy or a girl. Well,
if you'd consulted me in the first place it would have saved a lot of
trouble, Candy told them.

The carriage turned in through the marble gates and they looked around
them.  Already the lawns were smooth and green and the jacaranda.  trees
lining the drive were shoulder high.  I think it's going to live up to
its name, that gardener's doing a good job, Sean spoke with
satisfaction.  Don't you call him a gardener to his face or we'll have a
strike on our hands.  He's a horticulturist, Duff smiled across at him.
Talking about names, Candy interrupted, don't you think Xanadu is, well,
a bit outlandish?  No, I do not, Sean said.  I picked it myself.  I
think it's a darn good name.  It's not dignified, why don't we call it
Fair Oaks?  Firstly, because there isn't an oak tree within fifty miles
and secondly because it's already called Xanadu. Don't get cross, it was
just a suggestion.  The builder met them at the top of the drive and
they began the tour of the house.  That took an hour, then they left the
builder and went out into the garden.  They found the gardener with a
gang of natives near the north boundary.

How's it going, Joubert?  Duff greeted him.  Not bad, Mr Charleywood,
but it takes time you know.  You've done a damn fine job so far.  It's
kind of you to say so, sir.  When are you going to start laying out my
maze?  The gardener looked surprised; he glanced at Candy, opened his
mouth, closed it again and looked once more at Candy.

oh, I told Joubert not to worry about the maze.  Why did you do that?  I
wanted a maze, ever since I visited Hampton Court as a child I've wanted
my own Maze.  They are silly things, Candy told him.  They just take up
a lot of space and they're not even nice to look at.

Sean thought Duff was going to argue, but he didn't.

They talked to the gardener a little longer, then they walked back
across the lawns in front of the house towards the chapel.  Dufford,
I've left my parasol in the carriage, would you mind getting it for me?
Candy asked.

When Duff was gone Candy took Sean's arm.  It's going to be a lovely
home.  We're going to be very happy here.  Have you two decided on a
date yet?  Sean asked.

We want the house finished first so we can move straight in.  I think
we'll make it some time in February next year.  )

They reached the chapel and stopped in front of it.  It's a sweet little
church.  Candy spoke dreamily.  And such a nice idea of Dufford's, a
special church of our own!  Sean shuffled uncomfortably.  Yes, he
agreed, it's a very romantic idea.  He glanced over his shoulder and saw
Duff coming back with the parasol.  Candy, it's none of my business.  I
don't know anything about marriage, but I know about training horses you
break them to the halter before you put the saddle on their backs.  I
don't follow you.  Candy looked puzzled.  What are you trying to say?
Nothing, just forget it.  Here comes Duff.  When they got back to the
hotel there was a note at the reception desk for Sean.  They went
through into the main lounge and Candy went off to check the menu for
dinner.

Sean opened the envelope and read the note:I should like to meet you and
Mr Charleywood to discuss a matter of some importance.  I will be at my
hotel after dinner this evening and hope that it will be convenient for
you to call on me then.  N.  Hradsky.

Sean passed the note across to Duff.

What do you suppose he wants?  He has heard of your deadly skill as a
Klabejas player.

He wants to take -lessons, Duff answered.  Shall we go?  Of course.  You
know I can't resist Norman's exhilarating company.  It was a superb
dinner.  The crayfish, packed in ice, had come up from Capetown by
express coach.

Candy, Sean and I are going across to see Hradsky.

We might be back a little late, Duff told her when they were finished.
As long as it's Hradsky, Candy smiled at him.  Don't get lost, I have my
spies at the Opera House you know.  Shall we take the carriage?  Duff
asked Sean, and Sean noticed that he hadn't laughed at Candy's joke.
It's only two blocks, we might as well walk.  They walked in silence.
Sean felt his dinner settling down comfortably inside him, he belched
softly and took another puff from his cigar.  When they had almost
reached the Grand National Hotel Duff spoke.

Sean.  .  .  He stopped.

Yes?  Sean prompted him.

About Candy.  .  .  He stopped again.

She's a fine girl, Sean prompted again.  Yes, she's a fine girl.  Is
that all you wanted to say?  Well, oh!

never mind.  Let's go and see what Saul and David want.

Max met them at the door of Hradsky's suite.  Good evening, gentlemen, I
am so pleased you could come.  Hello, Max.  Duff went past him to where
Hradsky was standing in front of the fireplace.  Norman, my dear fellow,
how are you?

Hradsky nodded an acknowledgement and Duff took hold of the lapels of
Hradsky's coat and adjusted them carefully; then he picked an imaginary
piece of fluff off his shoulder.  You have a way with clothes, Norman.
Don't you agree that Norman has a way with clothes, Sean?  I know of no
one else who can put on a twenty-guinea suit and make it look like a
half-filled-bag of oranges.  He patted Hradsky's arm affectionately.
Yes, thank you, I will have a drink.  He went across to the liquor
cabinet and poured one for himself.  Now, what can you gentlemen do for
me?

Max glanced at Hradsky and Hradsky nodded.

I'll will come to the point immediately, said Max.

Duff put his glass back on top of the cabinet and dropped his grin.

Sean sat down in one of the armchairs, his expression also serious; both
of them could guess what was coming.  In the past, continued Max, we
have worked together on numerous occasions and we have both benefited
from it.  The next logical step, of course, is to combine our strength,
pool our resources and go on together to new greatness.  I take it that
you are proposing a merger?  Precisely, Mr Courtney, a merger of these
two vast financial ventures.  Sean leaned back in his chair and started
to whistle softly.  Duff picked up his glass again and took a sip.

Well, gentlemen, what are your feelings on the subject?  asked Max. Have
you got a proposal worked out, Max, something definite for us to think
about!  Yes, Mr Courtney, I have.  Max went to the stinkwood desk which
filled one corner of the room and picked up a sheaf of papers.  He
carried it across to Sean.  Sean scanned through it.  You've done quite
a bit of work here, Max.  It's going to take us a day or two to work out
exactly what you are offering.  I appreciate that, Mr Courtney.  Take as
long as you wish.  We have worked for a month to draw up that scheme and
I hope our labours have not been in vain.  I think you will find our
offer very generous.

Sean stood up.

We'll contact you again in the next few days, Max.

Shall we go, Duff ?

Duff finished his drink.  Goodnight, Max, look after Norman.  He's very
precious to us, you know.  They went to their building on Eloff Street.
Sean let them in through one of the side doors, lit the lamps in his
office and Duff pulled up an extra chair to the desk.

By two o'clock the following morning they understood the essentials of
Hradsky's offer.  Sean stood up and went to open one of the windows, for
the room was thick with cigar smoke.  He came back and flopped onto the
couch, arranged a cushion behind his head and looked at Duff.  Let's
hear what you've got to say Duff tapped his teeth with a pencil while he
arranged his words.  Let's decide first if we want to join with him If
he makes it worth our while, we do!  Sean answered.  I agree with you,
but only if he makes it worth our while.  Duff Laid back in his chair.
Now the next point.

Tell me, laddie, what is the first thing that strikes you about this
scheme of Norman's?  We get nice-sounding titles and fat cash payments
and Hradsky gets control, Sean answered.  You have laid your finger on
the heart of it, Norman wants control.  More than money, Norman wants
control so that he can sit at the top of the pile, look down on everyone
else and say, "All right, you bastards, what if I do stutter?  " Duff
stood up, he walked round the desk and stopped in front of Sean's couch.
Now for my next question.  Do we give him control?

'If he pays our price, then we give him control, Sean answered.  Duff
turned away and went across to the open window.  You know I rather like
the feeling of being top man myself, he said thoughtfully.  Listen,
Duff, we came here to make money. If we go in with Hradsky we'll make
more, Sean said.  Laddie, we've got so much now that we could fill this
room waist deep in sovereigns.  We've got more than we'll ever be able
to spend and I like being top man. Hradsky's more powerful than we are,
let's face up to that.  He's got his diamond interests as well, so
you're not top man even now.  If we join him you still won't be top man
but you'll be a damn sight richer Unassailable logic, Duff nodded.  I
agree with you then.  Hradsky gets control but he pays for it; we'll put
him through the wringer until he's dry.  Sean swung his legs off the
couch.  Agreed, now let's take this scheme of his by the throat, tear it
to pieces and build it up again to suit ourselves.  Duff looked at his
watch.  It's after two o'clock. We'll leave it now and start on it when
we're fresh in the morning. They had their lunch brought down to the
office the next day, and ate it at the desk.  Johnson, who had been sent
up to the Stock Exchange with instructions to keep an eye on prices and
call them immediately anything out of the ordinary happened, reported
back after high change.  It's been as quiet as a graveyard all day, sir,
there's all sorts of rumours flying about.  Seems someone saw the lights
burning in this office at two o'clock this morning.

Then when you didn't come to the Exchange but sent me instead, well, I
can tell you, sir, there were a lot of questions asked.  Johnson
hesitated, then his curiosity got the better of him.  Can I help you at
all, sir?  He started sidling across towards the desk.  I think we can
manage on our own, Johnson.  Shut the door as you go out, please.  At
half-past seven they decided it was enough for one day and they went
back to the hotel.  As they walked into the lobby Sean saw Trevor Heyns
disappear into the lounge and heard his voice.  Here they are!  Almost
immediately Trevor appeared again with his brother.

Hello, boys, Jock appeared surprised to see them.  What are you doing
here?  We live here, said Duff.  Oh, yes, of course.  Well, come and
have a drink with us.  Jock smiled expansively.  And then you can pump
us and find out what we've been doing all day, Duff suggested.

Jock looked embarrassed.  I don't know what you mean, I just thought
we'd have a drink together, that's all.  Thanks all the same, Jock,
we've had a hard day.  I think we'll just go on up to bed, Duff said.
They were halfway across the lobby before Duff turned back to where the
two brothers were standing.

I'll tell you boys something, he said in a stage whisper.

This is really big, it's so big it takes a while for the mind to grasp
it.  When you two realize that it's been right there under your noses
all the time, you're going to kick yourselves They left the Heyns
brothers in the lobby staring after them and went up the stairs.

That wasn't very kind, Sean laughed.  They won't sleep for a week.  When
neither Sean nor Duff put in an appearance at the Exchange the next
morning, the nimours surged round the members lounge and the prices
started running amok.  Reliable information that Sean and Duff had
struck a rich new goldfield across the vaal sent the prices up like
rocketing snipe; then twenty minutes later the denial came in and
clipped fifteen shillings a share off the Courtney-Charleywood stock.
Johnson ran backwards and forwards between the office and the Exchange
all morning.  By eleven he was so tired he could hardly talk.  Don't
worry any more, Johnson, Sean told him.

Here's a sovereign, go down to the Grand National and buy yourself a
drink, you've had a hard morning.  One of Jock.  Heyns's men, who had
been detailed off to watch the Courtney-Charleywood offices, followed
Johnson down to the Grand National and heard him place his order with
the Barman.  He raced back to the Exchange and reported to Jock.  Their
head clerk has just gone and ordered himself a bottle of French
champagne, he panted.  Good God!  Jock nearly jumped out of his chair
and beside him Trevor signalled frantically for his clerk.  Buy, he
whispered in the man's ear.  Buy every scrap of their script you can lay
your hands on.  Across the lounge Hradsky settled down a little further
in his chair; he clasped his hands contentedly over the front of his
stomach and he very nearly smiled.

By midnight Sean and Duff had completed their counter-proposal to
Hradsky's offer.  How do you think Norman will react to it?  asked Sean.
I hope his heart is strong enough to stand the shock, Duff grinned.  The
only reason that his jaw won't hit the floor is that his great gut will
be in the way.  Shall we go down to his hotel now and show him?

suggested Sean.  Laddie, laddie.  Duff shook his head sorrowfully. After
all the time I've spent on your education, and you still haven't
learned.  What do we do then?  We send for him, laddie, we make him come
to us.  We play him on the home ground.  How does that help?  Sean
asked.  It gives us an advantage immediately, it makes him remember that
he's the one doing the asking Hradsky came down to their office at ten
o'clock the next morning; he came in state driven behind a four-inhand
and attended by Max and two secretaries.  Johnson met them at the front
door and ushered them into Sean's office.  Norman, dear old Norman, I'm
delighted to see you, Duff greeted him and, fully aware of the fact that
Hradsky never smoked, Duff thrust a cheroot between his lips.

When everyone was seated Sean opened the meeting.  Gentlemen, we have
spent some time examining your proposition and in the main we find it
just, fair and equitable.  Hear, hear, Duff agreed politely.  At the
outset I want to make it quite clear, Sean went on, that Mr Charleywood
and myself feel strongly that the union of our two ventures is
desirable, nay!  essential.

If you will forgive the quotation, "ex unitate vires".  Hear, hear,
hear, hear.  Duff lit his cigar.  As I was saying we have examined your
proposition and we accept it readily and happily, with the exception of
a few minor details which we have listed.  Sean picked up the thick pile
of paper.  Perhaps you would care to glance through it and then we can
proceed to the drawingup of a formal agreement.  Max accepted the sheaf
gingerly.  If you want privacy, Mr Charleywood's office which adjoins
this room is at your disposal.  Hradsky took his band next door and an
hour later when he led them back again they looked like a party of
pallbearers.  Max was on the verge of tears, he cleared the lump from
his throat.  I think we should examine each item separately, he said
sadly, and three days later they shook hands on the deal.

Duff poured the drinks and gave each man a glass.  To the new company,
Central Rand Consolidated.  It has been a long confinement, gentlemen,
but I think we have given birth to a child of which we can be proud.

Hradsky had control, but it had cost him dearly.

Central Rand Consolidated had its christening party on the main floor of
the Johannesburg Stock Exchange; ten percent of the shares were put out
for sale to the public.

Before the day's dealings began the crowd had overflowed the Stock
Exchange building and jammed in the street for a block in each
direction.  The President of the Exchange read the prospectus of Central
Rand Consolidated; in the cathedral hush his every word carried clearly
to the members lounge.

The bell rang and still the hush persisted.

Hradsky's authorized clerk broke the silence timidly.

sell C.  R.  C.  s.  It was nearly a massacre; two hundred men were
trying to buy shares from him simultaneously.  First his jacket and then
his shirt disintegrated beneath the clutching hands; he lost his
spectacles, crushed to powdered glass beneath the trampling feet.  Ten
minutes later he managed to fight his way out of the crowd and report to
his masters, I was able to sell them, gentlemen.  Sean and Duff laughed.
They had reason to laugh, for in those ten minutes their thirty percent
holding in C.  R.  C.  had appreciate in by half a million pounds.

That year Christmas dinner at Candy's Hotel was considerably better than
it had been five years previously.

Seventy-five people sat down to it at one table and by three o'clock,
when it ended, only half of them were able to stand up.  Sean used the
banisters to get up the stairs and at the top he told Candy and Duff
solemnly, I love you, I love you both desperately, but now I must sleep.
He left them and set off down the corridor bouncing against the walls
like a trick billiard shot until he ricocheted through the door into his
suite.  You'd better make sure he's all right, Dufford.  A case of the
blind drunk leading the blind drunk, said Duff indistinctly, and also
employing the wall to wall route followed Sean down the corridor.  Sean
was sitting on the edge of his bed wrestling with one of his boots.

What you trying to do, laddie, break your ankle?  Sean looked up and
smiled beatifically.  Come in, come in, all four of you.  Have a drink!
Thanks, I brought my own.  Duff closed the door behind him like a
conspirator and produced a bottle from under his coat, She didn't see me
- she didn't know her little Dufford had a big beautiful bottle in his
inside pocket.  Vould you mind helping me with this damn boot?

Sean asked.  That's a very good question, said Duff seriously as he set
a course across the room.

glad you asked it.  He reached the chair and dropped into it.  The
answer, of course, is, Yes!  I would mind.

Sean let his foot drop and lay back on the bed.

Laddie, I want to talk to you, Duff said.  Talk's free, help yourself.
Sean, what do you think of Candy?

Lovely pair of titties, Sean opened.  Sure, but a man cannot live by
titties alone No, but I suppose she's also got the other basic
equipment, Sean said drowsily.

laddie, I'm being serious now, I want your help.  Do you think I am
doing the right thing, this marriage business, I mean.  Don't know much
about marriage.

Sean rolled over on his face.  She's calling me Dufford already, did you
notice that, laddie?  That's an omen, that's an omen of the most
frightful portent.

Did you notice, hey?  Duff waited a second for an answer which he didn't
receive.  That's what the other one used to call me.  dufford, she'd
say, I can hear it now, dufford, you're a pig"!

Duff looked hard at the bed.  Are you still with me?

No answer.  Sean, laddie, I need your help.

Sean snored softly.

oh, you drunken oaf said Duff miserably.

Xanadu was finished by the end of January and the wedding was set for
the twentieth of February.  Duff sent the Commandant and the entire
police force of Johannesburg an invitation: in return they put a
twenty-four hour a day guard on the ballroom of Xanadu where the wedding
gifts were laid out on long trestle tables.  Sean drove up with Duff and
Candy on the afternoon of the tenth, as Duff put it, to make the latest
count of the booty.  Sean gave the constable on duty a cigar and then
they went through into the ballroom.  Look, oh look, squealed Candy.
There's a whole lot of new presents!

one's from Jock and Trevor, Sean read the card.  Open quickly, please,
Dufford, let's see what they've given us.  Duff prised the lid off the
case and Sean whistled softly, A solid gold dinner service, gasped
Candy.  She picked up one of the plates and hugged it to her chest, Oh,
I just don't know what to say.  Sean examined the other boxes.  Hey,
Duff, this one will make you specially happy, "Best wishes, N.

Hradsky".  This I must see, said Duff with the first enthusiasm he had
shown in a month.  He unwrapped the parcel.  A dozen of them! Duff
hooted gleefully.  Norman, you priceless little Israelite, a whole dozen
dish towels.  It's the thought that counts, laughed Sean.  Dear old
Norman, how it must have hurt him to shell out for them!  I'll have him
autograph them and I'll frame them and hang them in the front hall. They
left Candy to arrange the presents and they went out into the garden.

Have you got this mock priest organized?  asked Duff.  Yes, he's at a
hotel in Pretoria.  He's in training now he'll be able to rattle through
the service like an old hand when the time comes.  You don't think that
faking it is just as bad as doing it properly?  asked Duff dubiously.

It's a hell.  of a time to think of that now, said Sean.  Yes, I suppose
it is.  Where are you going for the honeymoon?  Sean asked.  We'll coach
down to Capetown and take the mail boat to London, then a month or so on
the Continent.  Be back here about June.  You should have a good time.
Why don't you get married as well?

What for?  Sean looked surprised.  Well, don't you feel as though you're
letting the old firm down a bit, me going into this alone?  No, said
Sean.  Anyway, who is there to marry?  What about that lass you brought
to the races last Saturday; she's a lovely piece of work.  Sean raised
an eyebrow.  Did you hear her giggle?  Yes, I did, admitted Duff.  You
couldn't very well miss itCan you imagine that giggle coming at you
across the breakfast table?  Sean asked.

Duff shuddered.  Yes, I see your point.  But as soon as we get back I'll
have Candy start picking you out a suitable female.  I've got a better
idea, you let Candy run your life and I'll run my own.  That, laddie, is
what I'm very much afraid is going to happen.  Hradsky reluctantly
agreed that the activities of the group, the mines, the workshops, the
transport companies, all of them - should be suspended on the twentieth
to allow their employees to attend Duff's nuptials.  This meant that
half the businesses on the Witwatersrand would shut down for the day.
Consequently, most of the independent companies decided to close as
well.  On the eighteenth the wagons carrying the food and liquor started
caravanning up the hill to Xanadu.  Sean in a burst of benevolence that
night invited the entire company from the Opera House to the wedding. He
remembered it vaguely the next morning and went down to cancel the
invitation but Blue Bessie told him that most of the girls had already
gone into town to buy new dresses.  The hell with it then, let them
come.  I just hope Candy doesn't guess who they are, that's all On the
night of the nineteenth Candy gave them the use of the dining-room and
all the downstairs lounges of the Hotel for Duffs bachelor party.
Francois arrived with a masterpiece made up in the mine workshops, an
enormous ball and chain.  This was formally locked onto Duff's leg and
the party began.

Afterwards there was a school of thought that maintained that the
building contractor commissioned to repair the damage to the Hotel was a
bandit and that the bill for just under a thousand pounds that he
presented was nothing short of robbery.  However, none of them could
deny that the bok-Bok game in the dining-room, played by a hundred men,
had done a certam amount of damage to the furniture and fittings; nor
that the chandelier had not been able to support Mr Courtney's weight
and on the third swing had come adrift from the ceiling and knocked a
moderately large hole through the floor.

Neither did anyone dispute the fact that after Jock Heyns had tried
unsuccessfully for half an hour to shoot a glass off the top of his
brother's head with champagne Forks, the resulting ankle-deep lake of
wine in the one-lounge made it necessary for the floor to be relaid.
Nevertheless they felt that a thousand was a little bit steep.  On one
point, however, everyone agreed, it was a memorable party.

At the beginning Sean was worried that Duff's heart wasn't in it for
Duff stood by the bar with the metal ball under one arm listening to the
lewd comment, with a lopsided grin fixed on his face.  After seven or
eight drinks Sean stopped worrying about him and went off to have his
way with the chandelier.  At midnight Duff talked Francois into
releasing him from his chains and he slipped out of the room.  No one,
least of all Sean, noticed him go.

Sean could never remember how he got up to bed that night but next
morning he was tactfully awakened by a waiter with a coffee tray and a
note.

What time is it?  asked Sean as he unfolded the note.  Eight o'clock,
baas.  No need to shout, muttered Sean.  His eyes focused with
difficulty for the pain in his head was pushing them out of their
sockets.  Dear Best Man, This serves as a reminder that you and Duff
have an appointment at eleven o'clock.  I am relying on you to get him
there, whole or in pieces.  Love Candy The brandy fumes in the back of
his throat tasted like chloroform, he washed them out with coffee and
lit a cigar which started him coughing, and every cough nearly took the
top off his head.  He stubbed out the cigar and went to the bathroom.
Half an hour later he felt strong enough to wake Duff. He went across
the sitting-room and pushed open Duffs door, the curtains in the room
were still drawn.  He pulled them open and was nearly blinded by the
sunlight that poured in through them.  He turned to the bed and frowned
with surprise.  He walked slowly across and sat on the edge of it.  He
must have slept in Candy's room, Sean muttered as he looked at the
unused pillows and neatly tucked blankets.  it took a few seconds for
him to find the fault in his reasoning.  Then why did she write that
note?  He stood up, feeling the first twinge of alarm.  A picture of
Duff, drunk and helpless lying out in the yard or knocked over the head
by one of the busy Johannesburg footpads; came very clearly to mind.  He
ran across the bedroom and into the sitting-room.  Halfway to the door
he saw the envelope propped up on the mantelpiece and he took it down.
What is this, a meeting of the authors guild?  he muttered.  The place
is thick with letters.  The paper crackled as he opened it and he
recognized Duff's back sloping hand.  The first the worst, the second
the same. I'm not going through with it.  You're the best man so make my
excuses to all the nice people.  I'll be back when the dust has settled
a little.

Sean sat down in one of the armchairs, he read through it twice more-
Then he exploded.  Damn you, Charleywood, "make my excuses".  You craven
bastard.  Walk out and leave me to sweep up the mess.  He rushed across
the room with his dressing-gown flapping furiously round his legs.
You'll make your own damned excuses, even if I have to drag you back on
the end of a rope.  Sean ran down the back stairs.  Mbejane was in the
stable yard talking to three of the grooms.

Where is Nkosi Duff?  Sean roared.

They stared at him blankly.

Where is he?  Sean's beard bristled.  The baas took a horse and went for
a ride, answered one of the grooms nervously.

`When?  bellowed Sean.  In the night, perhaps seven, eight hours ago. He
should be back soon.  Sean stared at the groom, breathing heavily. Which
way did he go?  Baas, he did not say.

Eight hours ago, he could be fifty miles away by now.

Sean turned and went back to his room.  He threw himself on the bed and
poured another cup of coffee.  This is going to break her up badly -'He
imagined the tears and the chaos of undisciplined grief.  Oh, hell, damn
you to hell, Charleywood!  He sipped the coffee and thought about going
as well, taking a horse and getting as far away as possible.  It's no
mess of my making, I want no part of it.  He finished the coffee and
started dressing.  He looked in the mirror to comb his hair and saw
Candy standing alone in the chapel, waiting while the silence turned to
murmuring and then to laughter.  Charleywood, you pig Sean scowled.  I
can't let her there, it'll be bad enough without that.  I'll have to
tell her.  He picked up his watch from the dressing-table, it was past
nine.  Damn you, Charleywood.  He went down the passage and stopped
outside Candy's door.  He could hear women's voices inside and he
knocked before he went in.  There were two of Candy's friends and the
coloured girl Martha.  They stared at him.  Where's Candy?  In the
bedroom, but you mustn't go in.  It's bad luck.  It's the worst bloody
luck in the world, agreed Sean.

He knocked on the bedroom door.

Who is it?  Sean.  You can't come in what do you want?  Are you decent?
Yes, but you mustn't come in.  He opened the door and looked in on a
confusion of squealing females.  Get out of here, , he said harshly, I
have to speak to Candy alone.  They fled and Sean closed the door behind
them.  Candy was in a dressing-gown.  Her face was quick with
anticipation; her hair was pulled back and hung shiny and soft.

She was beautiful, Sean realized.  He looked at the frothy pile of her
wedding-dress on the bed.  Candy, bad news, I'm afraid.  Can you take
it!  He spoke almost roughly, hating it, hating every second of it.

He saw the bloom on her face wither until her expression was dead, blank
and dead as a statue.  He's gone, said Sean. He's run out on you.  Candy
picked up a brush from her dressing-table and started stroking it
listlessly through her hair.  It was very quiet in the room.  I'm sorry,
Candy.  She nodded without looking at him; instead she was looking down
the lonely corridor of the future.  It was worse than tears would have
been, that silent acceptance.

Sean scratched the side of his nose, hating it.  I'm sorry, I wish I
could do something about it He turned to the door.  Sean, thank you for
coming and telling me There was no emotion in her voice; like her face
it was dead.

That's all right Sean said gruffly.

He rode up to Xanadu.  There were people clustered about the marquees on
the lawn; by the quality of their laughter he could tell they were
drinking already.  The sun was bright and as yet not too hot, the band
was playing from the wide veranda of the mansion, the women's dresses
were gay against the green of the lawns.  Gala dayfluttered the flags
above the tents.  Gala day shouted the laughter.

Sean rode up the drive, lifting his hand in brief acknowledgement of the
greetings that were shouted to him.  From the vantage point of his
horse's back he spotted Francois and Martin Curtis, glasses in hand,
standing near the house talking to two of the Opera girls.  He gave his
horse to one of the native grooms and strode across towards them.
Hello, boss, called Curtis.  Why so glum, you're not the one getting
married.  They all laughed.  Francois, Martin, come with me pleaseWhat's
the trouble, Mr Courtney?  Francois asked as he led them aside.  The
party's over, Sean said grimly.  "There'll be no wedding.

They gaped at him.  Go around and tell everybody.  Tell them they'll get
their presents back-, He turned to leave them.

What's happened, boss?  Curtis asked.

tell them that Candy and Duff changed their minds.  Do you want us to
send them home?

Sean hesitated.  Oh, the hell with it, let them stay let them all get
sick drunk.  just tell them there'll be no wedding.

He went up to the house.  He found the pseudo-priest waiting nervously
in the downstairs study.  The man's adam's apple had been rubbed raw by
the starch-stiff dog collar.

We won't need you, Sean told him.

He took out his cheque book, sat down at the desk and filled in a cheque
form.  That's for your trouble.  Now get out of town Thank you, Mr
Courtney, thank you very much.  The man looked mightily relieved; he
started for the door.  My friend, Sean stopped him.  If you ever breathe
a word about what we planned to do today, I'll kill you.  Do I make
myself clear?  Sean went through to the ballroom, he slipped a small
stack of sovereigns into the constable's hand.  Get all these people out
of here.  He gestured with his head at the crowds that were wandering
among the tables looking at the gifts.  Then lock the doors.  He found
the chef in the kitchen.  Take all this food outside, give it to them
now.  Then lock up the kitchens.  He went round the house closing the
doors and drawing the curtains.  When he walked into the study there was
a couple on the big leather couch and the man's hand was under the
girl's skim; she was Oggling.  This isn't a whore house, Sean shouted at
them and they left hurriedly.  He sank into one of the chairs.  He could
hear the voices and the laughter from outside on the lawn, the band was
playing a Strauss waltz.  It irritated him and he scowled at the marble
fireplace.  His head was aching again and the skin of his face felt dry
and tight from the night's debauch.  What a mess, what a bloody mess, he
said aloud After an hour he went out and found his horse.  He rode out
along the Pretoria Road until he had passed the last houses, then he
turned off into the veld.  He cantered into the sea of grass with his
hat pushed back an his head so the sun and the wind could find his face.
He sat relaxed and loose in the saddle and let his horse pick its own
way.

in the late afternoon he came back to Johannesburg and left his horse
with Mbejane in the stableyard.  He felt better; the exercise and the
fresh air had cleared his head and helped him to see things in truer
perspective.  He ran himself a deep hot bath, climbed into it and while
he soaked the last of his anger at Duff smoothed out.  He had control of
himself again.  He got out of the bath and towelled, then he slipped on
his gown and went through to the bedroom.  Candy was sitting on his bed.
Hello, Sean.  She smiled at him, a brittle smile.  Her hair was a little
tangled now, her face was pale and unrouged.  She had not changed from
the dressing-gown he had seen her in that morning.  Hello, Candy!  He
picked up the cut-glass bottle of bay nim and rubbed some into his hair
and beard.  You don't mind me coming to see you, do you?  No, of course
not.  He started combing his hair.  I was about to come and see you
myself.  She drew her legs up under her in the double-jointed manner of
women that is impossible for a man to copy.  Can I have a drink, please?
I'm sorry, I thought you never touched the stuff.  Oh, today is special.
She laughed too gaily.  it's my wedding day, you know.  He poured the
brandy without looking at her.  He hated this suffering and he felt his
anger at Duff coming back strongly.  Candy took the drink and sipped it.
She pulled a face.  it tastes awful.

that'll do you good!

To the bride, she dranc it down quickly.

Another one?  asked Sean.  No thanks She stood up and went across to the
window.  It's getting dark now, I hate the darkness.  Darkness distorts
things so; what is bad in the daylight is unbearable at night.  I'm
sorry, Candy, I wish I could help you She whirled and came to him, her
arms circled tight round his neck and her face pale and frightened
pressed to his chest.

Oh, Sean, please hold me, I'm so afraid!

He held her awkwardly.  I don't want to think about it.  Not now, not
now in the darkness, she whispered.  Please help me.  Please help me not
to think about it I'll stay with you.  Don't get yourself upset.  Come
and sit down.  I'll get you another drink.  No, no, she clung to him
desperately.  I don't want to be alone.  I don't want to think.  Please
help me!  I can't help you, I'll stay with you but that's all I can do.
Anger and pity mixed together in Sean like charcoal and saltpetre; his
fingers tightened hard on her shoulders, digging into the flesh until
they met bone.  Yes, hurt me.  That way I'll forget for a while.  Take
me to the bed and hurt me, Sean, hurt me deep.  Sean caught his breath.
You don't know what you're saying, that's crazy talk.  It's what I want,
to forget for a little.  Please, Sean, please.  I can't do that, Candy,
Duff's my friend.  He's finished with me and I with him.  I'm your
friend too.  Oh, God, I'm so alone. Don't you leave me too.  Help me,
Sean, please help me.  Sean felt his anger slide down from his chest and
flare up, cobra-headed, from his thighs.  She felt it also.  Yes, oh
please, yes.  He picked her up and carried her to the bed.  He stood
over her while he tore off his gown.  She moved on the bed shedding her
clothing and spreading herself to meet him, to take him in and let him
fill the emptiness.  He covered her quickly bayoneting through the soft
veil and into the warmth of her body.  There was no desire in it, it was
cruel and hard drawn out to the frontiers of endurance.  For him an
expression of anger and pity; for her an act of renunciation.  Once was
not enough. Again and yet again he took her, until there were brown
smudges on the bedclothes from his bleeding back, until her body ached
and they lay entwined, wet and tired from the fury of it.

In the quiescence of after-passion Sean spoke softly.  It didn't help,
did it?  Yes, it did.  Physical exhaustion had weakened the barriers
that held back her grief.  Still holding onto him, she started to cry.

A street lamp outside the room threw a silver square of light on the
ceiling.  Sean laid on his back and watched it, listening to Candy's
sobs.  He recognized the moment they reached their climax and followed
their decline into silence.  They slept then and later before the day
woke together as if by arrangement.  You are the only one who can help
him now Candy said.

Help him do what?  asked Sean.  Find what he is looking for.  Peace,
himself, whatever you want to call it.  He's lost, you know, Sean.  He's
lost and lonely, almost as lonely as I am.  I could have helped him, I'm
sure I could.  Duff lost?  Sean asked cynically.  You must be mad! Don't
be so blind, Sean, don't be misled by the big talk and the grand manner.
Look at the other things.  Like what?  asked Sean.

She didn't answer for a while.  He hated his father, you know.  I
guessed as much from the little he told me The way he revolts at any
discipline.  His attitude to Hradsky, to women, to life.  Think about
it, Sean, and then tell me if he acts like a happy man.  Hradsky did him
a disservice once, he just doesn't like him, Sean defended Duff.  Oh,
no, it's much deeper than that.  In a way Hradsky is an image of his
father.  He's so broken up inside, Sean, that's why he clings to you.
You can help him Sean laughed outright. Candy, my dear, we like each
other that's all, there are no deep and dark motives in our friendship.
Don't you start getting jealous of me now Candy sat up and the blankets
slipped down to her waist.  She leaned towards Sean and her breasts
swung forward, heavy, round and silver-white in the half light.

There's a strength in you, Sean, a kind of solid sureness in you that
you haven't discovered yet.  Duff has recognized it and so will other
unhappy people.  He needs you, he needs you very badly.  Look after him
for me, help him to find what he seeks.  Oh!  Nonsense, Candy, Sean
muttered with embarrassIr ment.

Tromise me you'll help him.  It's time you went back to your room, Sean
told her.  People will start talking Promise me, Sean.  All right, I
promise.

Candy slipped out of the bed.  She dressed quickly.  Thank you, Sean,
goodnight.  For Sean, Johannesburg was poorer without Duff: the streets
were not so busy, the Rand Club was drearier and the thrills at the
Stock Exchange not so intense.  However, there was work to do; his share
and Duffs as well.

It was late every evening when the conferences with Hradsky and Max
ended and he went back to the Hotel.

In the reaction from the day's tension, when His brain was numb and his
eyes burned, there was little energy to spare for regret.  Yet he was
lonely.  He went to the Opera House and drank champagne with the crowd
there.  One of the girls did the Can-Can on the big table in the centre
of the room and when she stopped in front of Sean and Trevor Heyns, with
her forehead touching her knees and her petticoats hanging forward over
her shoulders, Sean let Trevor whip her pants down, a week before he
would have punched Trevor in the nose rather than concede the honour.

it wasn't so much fun any more.  He went home early.

The following Saturday noon Curtis and Francois came into the office for
the weekly progress meeting.  When they had finished and Hradsky had
left, Sean suggested, Come along with me, we'll go and have a pot or
twelve at the Grand National Bar, baptize the weekend so to speak.

Curtis and Francois fidgeted in their chairs.

We had arranged to meet some of the other boys down at the Bright
Angels, boss.  That's fine, I'll come along with you, said Sean eagerly,
the prospect of being with ordinary men again was suddenly very
attractive to him.  He felt sickened of the company of those who shook
his hand and smiled at him while they waited for a chance to wipe him
off the board.

It would be good to go along with these two and talk and not stocks and
shares, to laugh with men who didn't give a digginn if C.  R.  C.  s hit
sixty shillings on Monday.  He'd get a little drunk with Francois and
Curtis; later on perhaps he'd have a fight, an honest, snortmig,
stand-up fight.  God, yes, it would be good to be with men who were
clean inside, even if there was dirt under their nails and the armpits
of their shirts were stained with sweat.

Curtis glanced quickly at Francois.  There'll be just a crowd of
roughnecks down there, boss, all the diggers come in on a Saturday.
that's fine, said Sean Let's go.  He stood up and buttoned his dove-grey
coat; the lapels were edged in black watered silk and matched the black
pearl pin in his tie.  He picked up his cane from the desk.

Come on, let's get moving!

They ran into the noise from the Bright Angels a block before they
reached the building.  Sean grimed and quickened his step like an old
gun dog with the scent of the bird in its nostrils again.  Francois and
Curtis hurried along on either side of him.  There was a big digger
standing on the bar counter.  Sean recognized him as one of his men from
the Little Sister Mine the man's body was tilted back to balance the
weight of the demijohn he held to his lips and his throat jerked
regularly as he swallowed.  The crowd around Ins feet were chanting:
Think it, down, down, down, down, down.  The digger finished, he threw
the bottle against the far wall and belched like an air-locked geyser.
He bowed to acknowledge the applause and then he caught sight of Sean
standing in the doorway.  He wiped his mouth guiltily_with the back of
his hand and jumped down off the counter.  The other men in the crowd
turned and saw Sean and the noise tapered off.  They spread out along
the bar in silence.  Sean led Francois and Curtis into the room.  He
placed a pile of sovereigns on the counter.

Set them up, barman, take the orders.  Today is Saturday and it's time
to tie the dog loose.  Cheers, Mr Courtney.  Good luck, sirGezondheid,
Mr Courtney.

Their voices were subdued with respect.

drink up, men, there's plenty more where that came from.  Sean stood
with Francois and Curtis at the bar.

They laughed at his jokes.  His voice was loud with good fellowship and
his face flushed with happiness.  He bought more drinks.  After a while
his bladder started making its presence felt and he went through the
back door into the washrooms.  There were men talking in there; he
stopped before he rounded the edge of the screen into the room.

.  .  .  what's he want to come here for, hey?  This isn't the mucking
Rand Club.  Shh!  He'll hear you, man, do YOU Want to lose your job?  I
don't give a tilmn.  Who does he think he is, "Drink up, boys, there's
plenty more where that came from, I'm the boss, boys, do as you're told,
boys, kiss my arse, boys!  Sean stood paralyzed.  Pipe down, Frank,
he'll go just nowThe sooner the better, say I, the big dandy bastard
with his ten-guinea boots and gold cane.  Let him go back where he
belongsYou're drunk, man, don't talk so loudSure I'm drunk, drunk enough
to go in there and tell him to his face.  .

Sean backed out through the door and walked slowly across the bar to
Francois and Curtis.  I hope you'll excuse me; I've just remembered
there's something I've got to do this afternoon That's too bad, boss.
Curtis looked relieved.  Perhaps some other time, hey? Yes, perhaps some
other time.  They were pleased to see him when he went up to the Rand
Club.  Three men nearly fought one another to buy him a drink.

He had dinner with Candy that night and over the liqueurs he told her
about it.  She listened without interruption until he finished.  They
didn't want me there, I don't see what I've done to them that they
should dislike me that way And it worries you? she asked.  Yes, it
worries me.  I've never had people feel like that towards me before. I'm
glad it worries you.  She smiled gently at him. one day you're going to
grow into quite a nice person.  But why do they hate me?  Sean followed
his original line of thought.

They're jealous of you, you say this man said, "tenguinea boots and gold
cane", that is what's behind it.

YOU are different from them now, you're rich.  You can't expect them to
accept that.  But I've never done anything to them, he protested.  You
don't have to.  One thing I've found in this life for everything you get
you have to pay a price.  This is part of the payment you have to make
for success Hell, I wish Duff was here, said Sean.

Then Duff would explain to you that it doesn't matter, wouldn't he? said
Candy.  "Who gives a damn for them, laddie, the unwashed herd?  We can
do without them, " she mimicked.  Sean scratched the side of his nose
and looked down at the table.  Please, Sean, don't ever let DUff teach
you that people don't matter.  He doesn't believe it himself, but he's
so convincing.  People are important.  They are more important than gold
or places or, or anything Sean looked up at her.  I realized that once;
when I was trapped in the Candy Deep.  I saw it very clearly then in the
darkness and the mud.  I made a resolution.  He grinned sheepishly.

I told myself I'd never hurt anyone again if I could help it.  I really
meant it, Candy.  I felt it so strongly at the time, but, but.  .  Yes,
I think I understand.  That's a big resolution to make and a much bigger
one to keep.  I don't think any single experience is enough to change a
person's way of thinking.  It's like building a wall brick by brick. You
add to it a little at a time until at last it's finished.  I've told you
before, Sean, that you have a strength in you.  I think one day you'll
finish building your wall, and when you do, it will have no weak spots.

The next Tuesday Sean rode up to Xanadu for the first time since Duff
had left.  Johnson and four of the clerks from the office were at work
in the ballroom, packing and labelling the presents.  Nearly finished,
Johnson?  Just about, Mr Courtney, I'll send a couple of wagons up
tomorrow morning to fetch this lot.  Yes, do that.  I don't want them
lying around here any longer.  He went up the marble staircase and stood
on the top landing.  The house had a dead feeling to it: was new and was
waiting for people to come into it and bring it to life.  He went down
the corridor, stopping to look at all the paintings that Candy had
chosen.  They were oils in soft pastels, woman's colours.

We can do without these, I'll get some with fire in them, scarlets and
blacks and bright blues.  He pushed open the door to his own bedroom.
This was better.  vivid Persian rugs on the floor, walls panelled in
dark satiny wood and a bed like a polo field.  He lay on the bed and
looked up at the scrolled ornate plaster ceiling.  I wish Duff were
back, we can do some real living in this house.  He went downstairs
again.

Johnson was waiting at the foot of the stairs.  All finished, sir.  Good
man!  Off you go, then.  He went through into the study and walked
across to the gun rack.  He took down a Purdey shotgun, carried it to
the french windows and looked at it in the light.  His nostrils flared a
little at the nostalgic smell of gun oil.  He brought the gun up to his
shoulder, felt the true exciting balance of it and enjoyed it.  He swung
the barrels in an arc across the room, following the flight of an
imaginary bird, and suddenly Duff's face was in his sights.  Sean was
taken so by surprise that he stood with the gun trained at Duff's head.

Don't shoot, I'll come quietly, said Duff solemnly.

Sean lowered the shotgun and carried it back to the rack.

Hello.

Hello, Duff answered, still standing in the doorway.

Sean made a pretence of fitting the gun into the rack with his back to
DuffHow are you, laddie?  Fine!  Fine!  How's everybody else?  To whom
do you refer, in particular?  Sean asked.  Candy, for one.  Sean
considered the question.  Well, you could have damaged her more by
feeding her into a stamp mill!  Bad, hey?  Bad, agreed Sean.

They stood in silence for a while.

I take it that you are not very well disposed towards me either, Duff
said at last.

Sean shrugged his shoulders and moved across to the fireplace.

Dufford, you're a pig, he said conversationally.

Duff winced.  Well, it was nice knowing you, laddie.  I suppose from
here on our paths diverge?  Don't drivel, Duff, you're wasting; time.
Pour the drinks and then you can tell me what it feels like being a pig.
Also I want to discuss with you those paintings Candy has plastered
along the upstairs corridor.  I don't know whether to give them away or
burn them.  Duff straightened up from leaning against the door jamb, he
tried to stop the relief showing on his face but Sean went on quickly,
Before we close the lid on the subject and bury it, I want to tell you
this.  I don't like what you did.  I can see why you did it, but I don't
like it.

That's my piece said.  Have you got anything to add to it?

No!  said Duff.  All right then.  I think you'll find a bottle of
Courvoisier right at the back of the cabinet behind the whisky decanter
Sean went down to Candy's Hotel that evening and found Candy in her
office.  He's back, Candy.  Oh!  Candy caught her breath. How is he,
Sean?  A little chastened, but not muchI didn't mean that, I meant is he
well?  The same as ever.  He had the grace to ask how you were, said
Sean.

What did you tell him?  asked Candy.

Sean shrugged and sat down in the chair next to her desk.  He looked at
the tall stacks of sovereigns that Candy was counting.

is that last night's bar takings?  he asked, avoiding her question.

Yes, she answered absently.

You're rich, will you marry me?  he smiled.

Candy stood up and walked across to the window.  I suppose you two will
be moving up to Xanadu now, she said.  Sean grunted and she went on
quickly.  The Heyns brothers will take over the Victoria rooms they've
spoken to me about it already, so don't worry about that.  You'll have
fun up there, it will be marvelous for you.  I bet you'll have parties
every night and crowds of people.  I don't mind, I've gotten used to the
idea now Sean stood up and went to her, he took her gently by the elbow
and turned her to face him.  He gave her the silk handkerchief out of
his top pocket to blow her nose.  Do you want to see him again, Candy?

She shook her head, not trusting her voice.

I'll look after him like I promised.  He gave her a hug and turned to
go.

Sean, she called after him.  He looked back.  You'll come to see me
sometimes.  We could have dinner and talk a little.  You'll still be my
friend, won't you?  Of course, Candy, of course, my dear.  She smiled
damply.  If you pack your things and Duff's I'll have them sent up to
Xanadu for you.

Sean looked across the boardroom table at Duff, seeking his support.
Duff blew a thick ring of cigar smoke.  It spun and expanded like a
ripple in a pond before it hit the table top and disintegrated.  Duff
wasn't going; to back him up, Sean realized bitterly.  They had argued
half the previous night.  He had hoped that Duff might still change his
mind.  Now he knew he wouldn't.  He made one last appeal.

They have asked for a ten percent wage increase.  I believe they need
it, prices have soared in this town, but wages have remained the same.
These men have wives and children, gentlemen, can't we take that into
account?  Duff blew another smoke and Hradsky pulled his watch from his
pocket and looked at it pointedly.  Max coughed and interrupted.  I
think we've been over that before, Mr Courtney.  Could we put it to the
vote now?

Sean watched Hradsky's hand go up against him.  He didn't want to look
at Duff.  He didn't want to see him vote with Hradsky, but he forced
himself to turn his head.

Duff's hands were on the table in front of him.  He blew another smoke
ring and watched it hit the table top.

Those in favour of the motion?  asked Max, and Duff and Sean raised
their right hands together.  Sean realized then how much it would have
meant if Duff had voted against him.  Duff winked at him and he couldn't
help grinning.

That is thirty votes for, and sixty against, declared Max.  Therefore Mr
Courtney's motion falls to the ground.  I will inform the Mineworkers,
Union of the decision.  Now is there any other business before we close
the meeting?

Sean walked with Duff back to his own office.  The only reason I
supported you was because I knew Hradsky would win anyway, said Duff
pleasantly.  Sean snorted.  He's right, of course, Duff went on
unperturbed as he held open the door to Sean's office.  A ten percent
wage increase would jump the group working costs up ten thousand a
month.  Sean kicked the door closed behind them and didn't answer.  For
God's sake, Sean, don't carry this goodwilltowards-men attitude to
absurdity.  Hradsky's right Kruger is likely to slap another one of his
taxes on us at any moment and we've got to finance all that new
development on the East Rand.  We can't let production costs creep up
now.  All right, gruffed Sean.  It's all settled.  I just hope we don't
have a strike on our hands.  There are ways of dealing with strikes.
Hradsky has got the police on our side and we can have a couple of
hunched men up from Kimberley in no time at all, Duff told him.

Duff, it's wrong.  You know it's wrong.  That grotesque Buddha with the
little eyes knows it's wrong.

But what can I do?  Damn it, what can I do?  Sean exploded.  I feel so
bloody helpless.  Well, you're the one who wanted to give him control.
Duff laughed at him.  Stop trying to change the world and let's go home.
Max was waiting for them in the outer office.  He looked nervous. Excuse
me, gentlemen, could I have a word with you?  Who's talking, Sean asked
abruptly, you or Hradsky?  It's a private matter, Mr Courtney.  Max
dropped his voice.  Can't it wait until tomorrow?  Sean pushed past him
and kept going for the door.  Please, Mr Courtney, it's of the utmost
importance.

Max plucked desperately at Sean's arm.

What is it, Max?  Duff asked.  I have to speak to you alone, Max dropped
his voice again and glanced unhappily at the street door.

Well, speak then, Duff encouraged him.  We're alone now.  Not here.  Can
you meet me later?  Duff raised an eyebrow.  What is this, Maximilian,
don't tell me you are selling dirty pictures.  Mr Hradsky is waiting for
me at the hotel.  I told him I was coming to find some papers, he'll get
suspicious if I don't go back immediately.  Max was nearly in tears; his
Adam's apple played hide-and-seek behind his high collar, bobbing out
and disappearing again.  Duff was suddenly very interested in what Max
had to say.

You don't want Norm in to know about this?  he asked.

My goodness, no.  Max came closer to tears.  When do you want to meet
us?  Tonight, after ten o'clock when Mr Hradsky has retired Where? asked
Duff.  There's a side road round the east end of the Little Sister Mine
dump.  it's not used any more.  know it, said Duff.  We'll ride along
there about half past ten.  Thank you, Mr Charleywood, you won't regret
it max scampered for the door and disappeared.

Duff adjusted his beaver at the correct angle, then he prodded Sean in
the belly with the point of his cane.  Smell it, suck it in Duff sniffed
appreciatively and Sean did the same.

I don't smell a thing, Sean declared.  The air is thick with it, Duff
told him.  The sweet smell of treachery.  They left Xanadu just after
half past nine.  Duff insisted on wearing a black opera cloak.
Atmosphere is vital, laddie, you can't go to a rendezvous like this
dressed in dirty khaki pants and veldschoen.  it would ruin the whole
thing.  Well, I'm damned if I'm going to get into fancy dress.

This is a very good suit.  it will have to do.  Can't I persuade you to
wear a pistol in Your belt?

asked Duff wistfully.

No, laughed Sean.

No?  Duff shook his head.  You're a barbarian, laddie.

No taste, that's your trouble.  They avoided the main streets on their
way through Johannesburg and met the Cape road half a mile beyond the
town.  There was only a minute slice of moon left in the dark bowl of
the sky.  The stars, however, were big and by their light the white mine
dumps, each the size Of a large hill, stood out like pustules on the
earth's face.

Despite himself, Sean felt a little breathless with excitement, Duff Is
zest was always infectious.  They cantered with their stirrups almost
touching, Duff's cloak billowing out behind him and the breeze of their
passage fanning the tip of Sean's cigar to a fierce red spark.  Slow
down, Duff, the turning's just about here somewhere.  It's overgrown,
well miss it.

They reined to a walk.

what's the timev asked Duff.

Sean drew on his cigar and held his watch close to the glow.  A quarter
after ten.  We're early.  My bet is Maximilian will be there before us,
here's the road Duff turned his horse onto it and Sean followed him. The
Little Sister Mine dump rose up next to them, steep and white in the
starlight.  They skirted it but its bulk threw a shadow over them.
Duff's horse snorted and shied and Sean gripped with his knees as his
own horse danced sideways.  max had stepped out from a scraggy cluster
of bushes next to the road.  Well met by moonlight, Maximilian, Duff
greeted him.  Please bring your horses off the road, gentlemen.  Max was
still showing signs of the afternoon's agitation.  They tied their
horses next to Max's among the bushes and walked across to join him.
Well, Max, what's new?  How are the folks? Duff asked.  Before we go any
further in this matter, I want you gentlemen to give me your word of
honour that, whether anything comes of it or not, you will never say a
word to anybody of what I tell you tonight Max was very pale, Sean
thought, or perhaps it was just the starlight.

I agree to that, said Sean.

Cross my heart, said Duff.

Max opened the front of his coat and brought out a long envelope.  I
think if I show you these first it will make it easier to explain my
proposition.  Sean took the envelope from him.  What are they, Max?  The
latest statements from all four banks at which Mr Hradsky deals.
Matches, Sean, give us a light, laddie, said Duff eagerly.  I have a
lantern with me, Max said and he squatted down to light it.  Sean and
Duff squatted with him and laid the bank statements in the circle of
yellow light.

They examined them in silence until at Last Sean rocked back on his
heels and lit another cigar.

Well, I am glad I don't owe that much money Sean announced.  Sean folded
up the sheets and put them back in the envelope.  He slapped the
envelope into the palm of his free hand and started chuckling.  Max
reached across, took it from him and placed it carefully back inside his
coat.  All right, Max, spell it out for us said Sean.  Max leaned
forward and blew out the lantern.  What he had to say was easier said in
darkness.  The large cash payment that Mr Hradsky had to make to you
gentlemen and the limitation of output from his diamond mines in terms
of the new cartel agreements in the diamond industry have forced him to
borrow heavily on all his banks.  Max stopped and cleared his throat.
The extent of this borrowing you have seen.  Of course, the banks
demanded security for the loans and Mr Hradsky has given them his entire
holding of C.  R.  C.  shares.  The banks have set a limit on the shares
of thirty-five shillings each.  As you know C.  R.  C.  s are currently
quoted at ninety shillings, which leaves a wide margin of safety.
However, if the shares were to suffer a setback and fall in price to
thirty-five shillings the banks would sell.  They would share that Mr
Hradsky owns in dump every single C.  R.  C.  s onto the market. _, Go
on, Max, said Duff.  I'm beginning to like the sound of your voice.  It
occurred to me that if Mr Hradsky were temporarily absent from
Johannesburg, say if he went on a trip to England to buy new machinery
or something of that it would be possible for you gentlemen to force the
price of C.  R.  C.  s down to thirty-five shillings.  Done correctly it
would only take three or four days to accomplish.  You could sell short
and start rumours that the Leader Reef had pinched out at depth.  Mr
Hradsky would not be here to defend his interests.  as soon as C.  R. C.
s hit thirty-five shillings the banks would off-load his shares.  The
price would crash and you, with ready cash available, would be in a
position to buy up C.  R.  C.

shares at a fraction of their actual value.  There is no reason why you
shouldn't gain control of the group and make a couple of million to
boot.  There was another silence.  It lasted a long time before Sean
asked, What do you get out of it, Max?  Your cheque for one hundred
thousand pounds, Mr Courtney.  Wages are going up, remarked Sean.  I
thought the standard pay for this type of work was thirty pieces of
silver.

The rate, I believe, was set by a countryman of yours.  .  Shut up,
snapped Duff, then more pleasantly to Max, Mr Courtney likes his little
jokes.  Tell me, Max, is that all you want, just the money?  I'll be
frank with you, it doesn't ring true.  You must be a moderately rich man
as it is Max stood up quickly and started towards the horses.

He hadn't reached them before he swung around.  His face was in darkness
but his voice was naked as he screamed at them.

Do you think I don't know what they call me, "The Court jester",
"Hradsky's tongue", "Lick-arse".  Do you think I like it?  Do you think
I enjoy crawling to him every minute of every day?  I want to be free
again.  I want to be a man again.  His voice choked off and his hands
came up and covered his face.  He was sobbing.  Sean couldn't watch him
and even Duff looked down at the ground in embarrassment.  When Max
spoke again it was in his usual soft and sad voice.  Mr Courtney, if you
wear your yellow waistcoat to the office tomorrow, I will take it as a
sign that you intend to follow my suggestion and that my terms are
acceptable to you. I will then make the necessary arrangements to ensure
Mr Hradsky's absence from the country.  He untied his horse, mounted and
rode away down the track towards the Cape Road.  Neither Sean nor Duff
moved to stand up.  They listened to the hoof-beats of Max's horse fade
into the darkness, before Duff spoke.  Those bank statements were
genuine, I had a good look at the seals.  And even more genuine was
Max's emotion. Sean flicked his cigar away into the bushes.  No one
could act that well.  it made me feel quite sick listening to him.

Hell, how can a min so cold-bloodedly betray his trust?  Laddie, let's
not turn this into a discussion of Max's morals.  Let's concern
ourselves with the facts.  Norman has been delivered into our hands,
neatly trussed, spiced with garlic and with a sprig of parsley behind
each ear.  I say let's cook him and eat him Sean smiled at him.  Give me
a few good reasons.  I want you to convince me.  The way I feel towards
him after that meeting this afternoon I shouldn't be surprised if I
convince easily.  fOne, Duff held up a finger.  Norman deserves it.

Sean nodded.

TWO, another of Duff's fingers came up.  we gain control we can run
things the way we want.  You can indulge your good resolution and give
everybody a pay rise and I'll be top man again.  Yes!  Sean tugged at
his mustache thoughtfully.

We came here to make money, we'll never get another opportunity like
this.  And my last reason, but the most potent, you look so beautiful in
that yellow waistcoat, laddie, I wouldn't miss seeing you in it tomorrow
morning, not for a thousand C.  R.  C.  shares.  It is rather natty,
admitted Sean.  But listen, Duff, I don't want another Lochtkamper
business.  Messy, you know Duff stood up.  Norman's a big boy, he
wouldn't do that.  Anyway, he'll still be rich, he's got his diamond
mines.  We'll only be relieving him of his responsibilities on the
Witwatersrand.

They walked across to the horses.  Sean had his foot in the stirrup when
he stiffened and exclaimed, My God, I can't do it.  It's all off.  Why?
Duff was alarmed.  I spilt gravy on that waistcoat, I can't possibly
wear it tomorrow.  My tailor would murder me.  There was no problem in
arranging for Hradsky's absence someone had to go to London.  There was
machinery to buy for the new areas on the East Rand and they had to
select two engineers from the hundred or so applicants waiting in
England.  Not ungraciously, Hradsky allowed himself to be elected for
the job.

, well] give him a farewell party, Duff suggested to Sean during dinner
that night.  Well, not really a farewell party but a wake.  Sean started
whistling the Dead Much, and Duff tapped it out on the table with the
handle of his knife.

We'll have it at Candy's Hot, Duff cut himself short.  We'll have it
here.  We'll really laY it on for poor old Norman so afterwards he'll be
able to say, "the bastards may have cleaned me out, but they certainly
gave me a grand party".  He -doesn't like parties, said Sean.

ITha That's an excellent reason why we should give him one, agreed Duff.

A week later when Hradsky and Max left on the morning coach for Port
Natal there were fifty members of the Johannesburg Stock Exchange still
in full evening dress from the night's party to wave him goodbye, Duff
made a touching, if somewhat slurred, little speech and presented
Hradsky with a bouquet of roses.  Nervous of the crowd that milled about
them, the horses bolted when the driver cracked his whip and Max and
Hradsky were thrown together in an undignified heap on the rear seat of
the coach.  The crowd cheered them out of sight.  With an arm around his
shoulder Sean led Duff across the street to the office and deposited him
in one of the deep leather armchairs.

Are you sober enough to talk sense!  Sean asked dubiously.  Sure. Always
at your service as the lady said to the customer.  I managed to have a
word with Max last night, Sean told him.  He will send us a telegram
from Port Natal when he and Hradsky are safely on the mailboat. We won't
start anything until we receive it.  Very wise, you're the wisest chap I
know, Duff grinned happily.

You'd better go to bed, Sean told him.  Too far, mid Duff.  I'll sleep
here It was another ten days before Max's telegram arrived.

Sean and Duff were eating lunch in the Rand Club when it was delivered
to their table.  Sean slit open the envelope and read the message to
Duff.

Sailing four o'clock this afternoon.  Good luck.  Max.

I'll drink to that, Duff lifted his wine glass.  Tomorrow, said Sean,
I'll go up to the Candy Deep and tell Francois to pull all the men out
of the bottom levels of the mine.  No one's to be allowed in.  Put a
guard at the fourteenth level, suggested Duff.  That'l make it more
impressive.  Good idea, agreed Sean.  He looked up as someone passed
their table and suddenly he started to smile.  Duff, do you know who
that is?

Who are you talking about!  Duff looked bewildered.  That chap who's
just gone out into the lounge, there he is, going into the lavatorie.
Isn't that Elliott, the newspaper fellow?  Editor of the Rand Mail,
nodded Sean.  Come with me, DuffWhere are we going?  To get a bit of
cheap publicity Duff followed Sean out of the dining-room, across the
lounge and into the men's lavatories.  The door of one of the closets
was closed and as they walked in someone farted softly behind it.  Sean
winked at Duff and went across to the urinal.  As he addressed himself
to it he said, Well, all we can hope for now, Duff, is that Norman will
be able to work a miracle in England.  Otherwise, He shrugged his
shoulder.  Duff picked up his cue.  We're taking a hell of a chance
relying on that.  I still say we should sell out now.  C.  R. C.  s were
at ninety-one shillings this morning so it's obvious that the story
hasn't leaked out yet.  But when it does you won't be able to give the
bloody shares away.  I say we should get out while the going's good.
Sean disagreed.  Let's wait until we hear from Norman.  It's taking a
bit of a chance, I know, but we have a responsibility to the men working
for us Sean took Duffs arm and led him out of the lavatory again; at the
door he added the cherry to the top of the pie.  If and when C.  R.  C.
collapses there are going to be thousands of men out of work, do you
realize that?

Sean closed the door behind them and they grinned delightedly at each
other.

You're a genius, laddie, whispered Duff.

I'm happy to say I agree with you, Sean whispered back.

The next morning Sean woke with the knowledge that something exciting
was going to happen that day.  He lay and savoured the feeling before he
sent his mind out to hunt for the reason.  Then he sat up suddenly and
reached for the newspaper that lay folded on the coffee tray beside his
bed.  He shook it open and, found what he was looking for on the front
page, big headlines: Is all well with the Central Rand Consolidated?
Norman Hradsky's mystery The story itself was a masterpiece of
journalistic evasion.  Seldom had Sean seen anyone write so fluently or
convincingly on a subject about which he knew nothing.  It is suggested,
Usually reliable sources reported and there is reason to believe', all
the old phrases of no significance.  Sean groped for his slippers and
padded down the corridor to Duffs room.

Duff had all the blankets and most of the bed; the girl was curled up
like a pink anchovy on the outskirts.  Duff was snoring and the girl
whimpered a little in her sleep.

Sean tickled Duffs lips with the tassel of his dressinggown cord, Duff's
nose twitched and his snores gargled into silence.  The girl sat up and
looked at Sean with eyes wide but vacant from sleep.  Quickly, run, Sean
shouted at her, the rebels are coming.  She leapt straight into the air
and landed three feet from the bed quivering with panic.  Sean ran a
critical eye over her.  A pretty filly, he decided, and made a mental
note to take her for a trot just as soon as Duff put her out to grass.
All right, he reassured her, they've gone away now.  She became aware of
her nakedness and Sean's frank appraisal of it.  She tried to cover it
with hands too small for the task.  Sean picked up Duff's gown from the
foot of the bed and handed it to her.  Go and have a bath or somethingg
sweetheart, I want to talk to Mr Charleywood With the gown on she
recovered her composure and told him severely, I didn't have any clothes
on, Mr Courtney.  I would never have guessed, said Sean politely.  It's
not nice.  You are too modest, I thought it was better than average. Off
you go now, there's a good girl.  With a saucy flick of her head she
disappeared into the bathroom and Sean transferred his attention to
Duff.  Duff had held 4 grimly onto the threads of sleep throughout the
exchange but he let go when Sean whacked him across the backside with
the folded newspaper.  Like a tortoise coming out of its shell his head
emerged from the blankets.  Sean handed him the paper and sat down on
the edge of the bed.  He watched Duff's face crease into laughter lines
before he said..

You better get down to the Editor's office and shout at him a little,
just to confirm his suspicions.  I'll go up to the Candy Deep and close
all the bottom levels.  I'll meet you back at the Exchange at opening
time and don't forget to clean that grin off your face before you show
it round town.  Try and look haggard, it shouldn't be difficult for you.

When Sean arrived at the Stock Exchange building the crowd had filled
the street outside.  Mbejane eased the landau into it and it opened to
give them a passage.  Sean scowled straight ahead and ignored the
questions which were shouted at him from all around.  Mbejane stopped
the carriage outside the main entrance and four police constables held
back the mob while Sean hurried across the pavement and through the
double doors.  Duff was there ahead of him, the centre of a turbulent
circle of members and brokers.  He saw Sean and waved frantically over
the heads of his inquisitors.  That was sufficient to switch their
attention from Duff to Sean and they flocked to him, ringing him in with
anxious angry faces.  Sean's hat was knocked forward over his eyes and a
button popped off his coat as one of them caught hold of his lapels.  Is
it true?  the man shouted, spittle flying from his lips into Sean's
face.  We've got a right to know if it's true.  Sean swung his cane in a
full overarm stroke onto the man's head and sent him tottering backwards
into the arms of those behind him.  Back, you bastards, he roared at
them using both the point and the edge of his cane to beat them away,
scattering them across the floor until he stood alone, glowering at them
with the cane still twitching restlessly in his hand.  I'll make a
statement later on.  Until then, behave yourselves. He adjusted his hat,
picked the loose thread where the button had been from his coat and
stalked across to join Duff.  He could see Duff's grin starting to lift
the corner of his mouth and he cautioned him silently with his eyes.
Grim-faced they walked through into the members, lounge.

How's it going your end?  Duff kept his voice low.  Couldn't be better.
Sean contrived a worried expression.  I've got an armed guard on the
fourteenth level.  When this bunch hear about that, they'll really start
frothing at the mouth.  When you make your statement, let it ring with
obvious false confidence, Duff instructed.  If it goes on like this well
have the shares down to thirty-five s.  .  .  .  .  .  .  .

within an hour of opening.  Five minutes before opening time Sean stood
in the President's box and made his address to his fellow members, Duff
listened to him with mounting admiration.

Sean's hearty reassurances and verbal side-stepping were enough to
strike despair into the souls of the most hardened optunists.

Sean finished his speech and climbed down from the box amid a gloomy
lack of applause.  The bell rang and -the brokers stood singly or in
small disconsolate groups about the floor.  The first tentative offer
was made.  11 sell C.  R.  C.  But there was no rush to buy.  Ten
minutes later there was a sale recorded at eighty-five shillings, six
shillings lower than the previous day's closing price.  Duff leaned
across to Sean.  We'll have to start selling some of our own shares to
get things moving, otherwise everybody's going to keep sitting on the
fence.  That's all right, Sean nodded, we'll buy them back later at a
quarter of the price.  But wait until the news about the Candy Deep gets
out.  It was just before ten o'clock when that happened.  The reaction
was sharp.  In one quick burst of selling C.  R.  C.  s dropped to sixty
shillings.  But there they hung, fluctuating nervously in the chaos of
hope and doubt.  We'll have to sell now, whispered Duff, they are short
of script.  We'll have to give it to them otherwise the price will stick
here.  Sean felt his hands trembling and he clenched them in his
pockets.  Duff was showing signs of the strain as well, there was a
nerve jumping in his cheek and his eyes had receded into their sockets a
little.  This was a game with high stakes.  Don't overdo it, sell thirty
thousand The price of C.  R. C.  s sagged under the weight but levelled
out at forty-five shillings. There was still another hour until high
change and Sean's whole body was screwed up tight with tension.  He felt
the cold patches of sweat under his arms.  Sell another thirty thousand,
he ordered his clerk and even to himself his voice sounded wheezy.  He
stubbed out his cigar in the copper ashtray next to his chair; it was
already half full of butts.  It was no longer necessary for either of
them to act worried. This time the price stuck at forty shillings and
the sale of sixty thousand more of their shares failed to move it down
more than a few shillings.

Someone's buying up, muttered Sean uneasily.

It looks like it, agreed Duff.  I'll lay odds it's that bloody Greek
Efthyvoulos.  It looks as if we'll have to sell enough to glut him
before they'll drop any further.  By high change Duff and Sean had sold
three-quarters of their holdings in C.  R.  C.  s and the price still
stood stubbornly at thirty-seven and sixpence.  So tantalizingly close
to the magic figure that would release a flood of Hradsky's shares onto
the unprepared market, but now they were nearing the stage when they
would no longer have any shares with which to force the price down that
last two and sixpence.

The market closed and left Duff and Sean sitting limply in their
armchairs, shaken and tired as prizefighters at the end of the fifteenth
round.  Slowly the lounge emptied but still they sat on.  Sean leaned
across and put his hand on Duffs shoulder.  It's going to be all right,
he said.  Tomorrow it will be all right.  They looked at each other and
they exchanged strength, each of them drawing it from the other until
they were both smiling.  Sean stood up.  Come on, let's go home.

Sean went to bed early and alone.  Although he felt drained of energy,
sleep was a long time coming to him and when it did it was full of
confused dreams and punctuated with sharp jerks back into wakefulness.
it was almost a relief to see the dawn define the windows as grey
squares and to be released from his unrewarding rest.  At breakfast he
drank a cup of coffee and found that his stomach was unable to accept
the plateful of steak and eggs that was offered it for it was already
screwing up tight in anticipation.

of the day ahead.  Duff was edgy and tired-looking as well; they spoke
only a little during the meal and not at all in the carriage when
Mbejane drove them down to the Exchange.

The crowd was outside the Stock Exchange again.  They forced their way
through it and into the building; they took their seats in the lounge
and Sean looked round at the faces of his fellow members.  In each of
them were the marks of worry, the same darkness round the eyes and the
jerkiness in movement.  He watched Jock Heyns yawn extravagantly and had
to do the same; he lifted his hand to cover Ins mouth and found it was
trembling again He left the hand on the arm of Ins chair and kept it
still.

Across the lounge Bonzo Barnes caught Sean's eye and looked away
quickly, then he also gaped into a cavernous yawn.  It was the tension.
In the years ahead Sean would see men yawn like that while they waited
for the dawn to send them against the Boer guns.  Duff leaned across to
him and broke his line of thought.  As soon as the trading starts, we'll
sell.  Try and panic them.  Do you agree?  Sudden death, Sean nodded. He
couldn't face another morning of that mental agony.  Couldn't we offer
shares at thirty-two shillings and sixpence and get it over with?  "
he asked.

Duff grinned at him.  We can't do that, it, is too obvious we'll just
have to go on offering to sell at best and let the price fall on its
own.  suppose you're right, but we'll play our high cards now and dump
the rest of our shares as soon as the market opens.  I don't see how the
price can possibly hold after that Duff nodded.  He beckoned to their
authorized clerk who was waiting patiently at the door of the lounge and
when the man came up to them he told him, Sell one hundred thousand C.
R.  C.  s at best.  The clerk blinked but he jotted the order down on
his pad and went out onto the main floor where the other ebrokers were
gathering.  It was a few Minutes from the bell.

What if it doesn't work?  Sean asked.  The tightness in his belly was
nauseating him.  It must work, it's got to work, Duff whispered as much
to himself as to Sean.  He was twisting his fingers round the head of
his cane and chewing against clenched teeth.  They sat and waited for
the bell and when it rang Sean jumped then reached sheepishly for his
cigar case.

He heard their clerk's voice, raised sharply, I sell C.  R.  C.  Is, and
then the confused mumble of voices as the trading started.  Through the
lounge door he saw the recorder chalk up the first sale.  Thirty-seven
shillings He drew hard on Ins cigar and lay back in his chair forcing
himself to relax, ignoring the restless tapping of Duff Is fingers on
the arm of the chair next to him.  The recorder wiped out the figures
and wrote again.  Thirtysix shillings.  Sean blew out cigar smoke in a
long jet.  It's mavingI he whispered and Duff's hand clenched on the arm
of the chair, his knuckles paling from the pressure of his grip.
Thirty-five. The elusive number at last.  Sean heard Duff sigh next to
him and his voice, Now!  watch it go, laddie, now the banks will come
on.  Get ready, laddie, get ready now.  Thirty-four and six, wrote the
recorder. They must come in now, said Duff again.  Get ready to get
rich, laddie. Their clerk was coming back across the floor and into the
lounge.  He stopped in front of their chairs.  I managed to sell them,
Sir.

Sean straightened up quickly.  So soon?  he asked.  Yes, Sir, three big
sales and I got rid of them all.  I'm afraid the last was only at
thirty-four and sixpence.  Sean stared back at the board.  The figure
was still at thirty-four and sixpence.

Duff, something's going on here.  Why haven't the banks come in yet?
We'll force them to off-load.  Duff's voice was unnaturally hoarse.
We'll force the bastards.  He pulled himself half out of his chair and
snarled at the clerk.

Sell another one hundred thousand at thirty shillings.

The man's face went slack with surprise.  Hurry, man, do you hear me?
What are you waiting for?  The clerk backed away from Duff, then he
turned and scurried out of the lounge.  Duff, for God's sake.  Sean
grabbed his arm.  Have you gone madVWe'll force them, I muttered Duff.
They'll have to seU.  We haven't got another hundred thousand shares.
Sean jumped up.  I'm going to stop him.  He ran across the lounge but
before he reached the door he saw the sale being chalked up on the board
at thirty shfflings.  He pushed his way across the crowded floor until
he reached his clerk.  Don't sell any more, he whispered.

The man looked surprised.  I've sold them already, Sir.  The whole
hundred thousand?  There was horrified disbelief in Sean's voice.  Yes,
Sir, someone took the lot in one batch.  Sean walked back across the
floor in a daze.  He sank into the chair beside Duff.

They re sold already.  He spoke as though he didn't believe himself.

We force them, we'll force them to sell, muttered Duff again and Sean
turned to him with alarm.  Duff was sweating in little dewdrops across
his forehead and his eyes were very bright.  Duff, for God's sake, Sean
whispered to him, steady, man Sean knew that they were watched by
everybody in the lounge. The watching faces seemed as large as those
seen through a telescope and the buzz of their voices echoed strangely
in his ears.  Sean felt confused: everything seemed to be in slow motion
like a bad dream.  He looked through into the trading floor and saw the
crude number thirty still chalked accusingly against C.  R.  C.

Where were the banks?  Why weren't they selling?  We'll force them,
we'll force the bastards, Duff said again Sean tried to answer him but
the words wouldn't come.  He looked back across the trading floor and
now he knew it was a bad dream for Hradsky and Max were there, walking
across the floor towards the members, lounge.  Men were crowding around
them and Hradsky was smiling and holding up his hands as if to fend off
their questions.  They came through into the lounge and Hradsky went to
his chair by the-fireplace.  He lowered himself into it with his
shoulders sagging forward and his waistcoat wrinkled tightly around the
full.  bag of his body.

He was still smiling and Sean thought that his smile was one of the most
unnerving things he had ever seen.  He watched it with flesh-crawling
fascination and beside him Duff was just as stiR and stricken.  Max
spoke quickly to Hradsky and then he stood up and walked across to Sean
and Duff.  He stopped in front of them.  The clerk informs us that you
have contracted to sell to Mr Hradsky five hundred thousand shares in C.
R.  C.  s at an average price of thirty-six shillings.  Max's lashes
drooped sadly onto his cheeks.  The total issue of C.  R.  C.  s, as you
know, is one million shares.  During the last two days Mr Hradsky was
able to purchase another seventy five thousand shares apart from the
ones you sold to him.  This makes his total holdings of C.  R.  C.  s
almost six hundred thousand shares.  It seems therefore that you have
sold shares that don't exist.  Mr Hradsky foresees that you will have
some difficulty in fulfilling your contract.  Sean and Duff went on
staring at him.  He turned to leave them and Duff blurted out.  But the
banks, why didn't the banks sell?  Max smiled a mournful little smile.
The day he reached Port Natal Mr Hradsky transferred sufficient funds
from his accounts there to liquidate his overdrafts in Johannesburg.  He
sent you that telegram and returned here immediately.  We only arrived
an hour ago.  But, but, you lied to us.  You tricked us!  Max inclined
his head.  Mr Charleywood, I will not discuss honesty with a man who
does not understand the meaning of the word.  He went back to Hradsky's
side.

Everyone in the lounge had heard him and while Duff and Sean went on
sitting amongst the ruins of their fortune the struggle to buy C.  R. C.
shares started on the main floor.  in five minutes the price was over
ninety shillings and still climbing.  When it reached one hundred
shillings, Sean touched Duff's arm.  Let's go.  They stood up together
and started for the door of the members lounge.  As they passed
Hradsky's chair he spoke.

Yes, Mr Charleywood, you can't win all the time.  It came out quite
clearly with only a slight catch on the c's - they were always difficult
letters for Norman Hradsky.

Duff stopped, he turned to face Hradsky, his mouth open as he struggled
to find a reply.  His lips moved, groping, groping for words, but there
were none.  His shoulders drooped, he shook his head and turned away.

He stumbled once at the edge of the floor.  Sean held his arm and guided
him through the excited jabber of brokers.

No one took any notice of the two of them.  They were bumped and jostled
before they were through the crush and out onto the pavement.  Sean
signalled Mbejane to bring the carriage.  They climbed into it and
Mbejane drove them up to Xanadu.

They went through into the drawing-room.  Get me a drink, please, Sean.
Duff's face was grey andcrumpi looking.  Sean poured two tumblers half
full of brandy and carried one across to Duff.  Duff drank and then sat
staring into the empty glass.  I'm sorry, I lost my head.  I thought
we'd be able to buy those shares for dirt, when the banks started
sellingIt doesn't matter, Sean's voice was tired.  We were smashed
before that happened.  Christ!  What a well-laid trap it was! we
couldn't have known.  It was so damn cunning, we couldn't have guessed,
could we, Sean?  Duff was trying to excuse himself.

Sean kicked off his boots and loosened his collar.  That night up at the
mine dump, I would have staked my life Max wasn't lying.  He lay back in
the chair and stirred his brandy with a circular movement of his hand,
Christ, how they must have laughed to see us stampede into the pitfall!
But we aren't finished, Sean, we aren't completely finished, are we?

Duff was pleading with him, begging for a peg to hang his hope on. We'll
come out of this all right, you know we will, don't you?  We'll save
enough out of the wreckage to start again.  We'll build it all up again,
won't we, Sean?  Sure, Sean laughed brutally.  You can get a job down at
the Bright Angels cleaning out the spittoons and I'll get one at the
Opera House playing the piano.  aBut, but, there'll be something left. A
couple of thousand even.

We could sell this house.  Don't dream, Duff, this house belongs to
Hradsky.

Everything belongs to him.  Sean flicked the brandy that was left in his
glass into his mouth and swallowed it.  He stood up quickly and went
across to the liquor cabinet.  I'll explain it to you.  We owe Hradsky a
hundred thousand shares that don't exist.  The only way we can deliver
them is to buy them from him first and he can set his own price on them.
We're finished, Duff, do you know what that means?  Smashed!  Broken!
Sean poured brandy into his glass, slopping a little on the sideboard.
Have another drink on Hradsky, it's his brandy now.  Sean swept his arm
round the room, pointing at the rich furniture and heavy curtains.  Take
a last look at this lot.

Tomorrow the Sheriff will be here to attach it; then through the due
processes of the law it will he handed to its rightful owner, Mr Norman
Hradsky.  Sean started back towards his chair and then he stopped.  The
due processes of the law, he repeated softly.  I wonder, it might just
work.  Duff sat up eagerly in his chair.  You've got an idea?  Sean
nodded.  Well, half an idea anyway.  Listen, Duff, if I can save a
couple of thousand out of this do you agree that we get out of here?
Where to, where will we goVWe were facing north when we started.  It's
as good a direction as any.  They say tHere's gold and ivory beyond the
Limpopo for those who want it.  But, why can't we stay here?  We could
play the stock market.  Duff looked uncertain, almost afraid.  Damn it,
Duff, we're finished here.  it's a different story playing the market
when you are paying the fiddler and calling the tune, but with a mere
thousand or so we'd be among the dogs fighting for the scraps under
Hradsky's table. Let's get out and start again.  We'll go north, hunt
ivory and prospect for a new reef.  We'll take a couple of wagons and
find another fortune. I bet you've forgotten how it feels to sit on a
horse and handle a rifle, to have the wind in your face and not a whore
or a stockbroker within five hundred miles.  But it means leaving
everything we've worked for Duff groaned.  Sweet merciful heavens, man,
are you blind or just plain stupid?  Sean stormed at him.  You don't own
anything, so how the hell can you leave something you haven't got?  I'm
going down to see Hradsky and try to make a deal with him.  Are you
coming?

Duff looked at him without seeing him, his lips were trembling and he
was shaking his head.  At last he was realizing the position they were
in and the impact of it had dazed him.  The higher you ride the further
there is to fall.  All right, said Sean.  Wait for me here Hradsky's
suite was full of talking, laughing men.  Sean recognized most of them
as the courtiers who used to cluster round the throne on which he and
Duff had sat.

The King is dead, long live the King!  They saw him standing in the
doorway and the laughter and loud voices fizzled out.  He saw Max take
two quicksteps to the stinkwood desk in the corner, pull open the top
drawer and drop his hand into it.  He stood like that watching Sean.

One by one the courtiers picked up their hats and canes and hurried out
of the room.  Some of them mumbled embarrassed greetings as they brushed
passed Sean.  Then there were only the three of them left: Sean standing
quietly in the doorway, Max behind the desk with his hand on the pistol
and Hradsky in the chair by the fireplace watching through yellow,
half-hooded eyes.  Aren't you going to invite me in, Max?  Sean asked
and Max glanced quickly at Hradsky, saw his barely perceptible nod and
looked back at Sean.  Come in, please, Mr Courtney.

Sean pushed the door shut behind him.  You won't need the gun, Max, the
game is over.  And the score is in our favour, is it not, Mr Courtney?
Sean nodded.  Yes, you've won.  We are prepared to make over to you all
the C.  R.  C.  shares we hold.  Max shook his head unhappily.  I'm
afraid it's not quite as easy as that.  You have undertaken to sell us a
certain number of shares and we must insist upon delivery M full Just
where do you suggest we get them?  Sean asked.  You could buy them on
the Stock Exchange.

NWFrom you?  E

Max shrugged but made no reply.  So you are going to twist the knife,
are you?  "

You put it very poetically, Mr Courtney, agreed Max.  Have you
considered the consequences of forcing us into bankruptcy I will admidt
freely that the consequences to you do not concern us.  Sean smiled.
That was not very nice, Max, but I was talking about it from your point
of view.  Sequestration orders, creditors meetings, you can rest assured
that the liquidator appointed will be a member of the Volksmad or a
relative of one.  There will be court actions and counter actions,
enforced -sale of the shares in the estate and costs to pay.  A
liquidator with any sense at all could string it out for three or four
years, all the time drawing a hand some commission.  Have you thought
about that, Max?

The narrowing of Max's eyes showed that he hadn't.

He looked at Hradsky with a trace of helplessness in his face, and Sean
took a little comfort from that look.  Now what I suggest is this, you
let us draw ten thousand, take our horses and personal belongings.  We
in exchange will give you the rest.  Shares, bank accounts, property,
everything.  You cannot possibly get more out of it if you force us into
bankruptcy.  Hradsky gave Max a message in their private facial code and
Max interpreted it to Sean.  Would you mind waiting outside, please,
while we discuss this offer of yours.  I'll go down and have a drink in
the bar, said Sean.  He pulled his watch from his waistcoat pocket and
checked the time.  Will twenty minutes be enough?  Ample, thank you, Mr
Courtney.  Sean had his drink by himself although the bar was nowhere
near empty.  This was not an arrangement of his own choosing, but he was
flying the fever flag of failure and so he had to take an isolation
berth at one end of the bar while all the other ships steered wide of
him.  No one looked in his direction and the conversation that went on
round him was carefully arranged so as to exclude him.

While he waited out the twenty minutes he amused himself by imagining
the reactions of these his friends if he were to ask them for a loan.
This helped to take the sting out of their snubs but still he felt it
rankling.  He looked at his watch again.  The twenty minutes were up.
Sean walked back along the counter towards the door.  Jock and Trevor
Heyns saw him coming, they turned away abruptly and immediately became
absorbed in staring at the bottle-lined shelves behind the bar counter.
Sean stopped level with Jock and cleared his throat deferentially. Jock,
could you spare a minute?  Jock turned slowly.  Ah, Sean.  Yes, what is
it?  Duff and I are leaving the Rand.  I have something for you, just
something to remember us by.  I know Duff would want you to have it too.

Jock reddened with embarrassment.  That's not necessary, he said and
started to turn back to his drink.  Please, Jock.  Oh all right, Jock's
voice was irritable.  What is it?  This, Sean said and stepped forward,
moving his weight behind the fist.  Jock's Large and whisky-flushed nose
was a target to dream about.  It was not one of Sean's best punches, he
was out of training, but it was good enough to send jock in a
spectacular back-somersault over the counter.  Dreamily Sean picked up
jock's glass and emptied it over Trevor's head.  Next time you meet me
smile and say "Hello", he told Trevor.  Until then, stay out of
mischief.  He went up the stairs to Hradsky's suite in much better
spirits.  They were waiting for him.

Give me the word, Max, Sean could even grin at him.  Mr Hradsky has very
generously How much?  Sean cut him short.  Mr Hradsky will allow you to
take fifteen hundred and your personal effects.  As part of the
agreement you will give an undertaking not to embark on any business
venture on the Witwatersrand for a period of three years.  That will be
too soon, said Sean.  Make it two thousand and you've got a deal.  The
offer is not open to discussion.

Sean could see they meant it.  They didn't have to bargain; it was a
statement.  All right, I accept.  Mr Hradsky has sent for his lawyer to
draw up the agreement.  Would you mind waiting, Mr Courtney?  Not at
all, Max, you forget I am a gentleman of leisure now.  Sean found Duff
still sitting in the chair where he had left him in the drawing-room of
Xanadu.  The bottle clutched in his hand was empty and he was
unconscious.

He had spilt brandy down the front of his waistcoat and three of the
buttons were undone.  Huddled in the big chair, his body seemed to have
shrunk and the curly hair hanging onto his forehead softened the gaunt
lines of his face.  Sean loosened his fingers from the neck of the
bottle and Duff moved restlessly, muttering and twisting his head.
Bedtime for small boys, said Sean.  He lifted him out of the chair and
hung him over one shoulder.

Duff sicked up copiously.  That's the way, show Hradsky what you think
of his bloody carpet, Sean encouraged him.  Give him another one for
luck, but not on my boots Duff did as he was bid and, chuckling, Sean
carried him up the stairs.  At the top he stopped and with Duff still
bundled over one shoulder tried to analyse his own feelings.  Darrin it,
he felt happy.  It was ridiculous to feel so happy in the midst of
disaster.  He went on down the passage still wondering at himself and
into Duff Is room.  He dropped Duff on the bed and stripped his clothes
off, then he rolled him under the blankets.  He brought the enamel wash
basin from the bathroom and placed it next to the bed.  You may need
this, sleep well.  There's a long ride ahead of us tomorrow.  He stopped
again at the top of the stairs and looked down their marble slope into
the splendour of the lobby.

He was leaving all of it and that was nothing to feel happy about.  He
laughed aloud.  Perhaps it was because he had faced complete
:annihilation and at the last instant had changed it into something
less; by avoiding the worst he had made defeat into a victory.  A
pathetic little victory to be sure, but at least they were no worse off
now than they had been when they had arrived on the Rand.  Was that the
reason?  Sean thought about it and found that it wasn't the whole truth.
There was also a feeling of release.  That was another part of it.  To
go on his way:

north to a new land.  He felt the tingle of anticipation.  Not a whore
or a stockbroker within five hundred miles he said aloud and grinned. He
gave up trying to find words for his feeling.  Emotion was so damned
elusive: as soon as you cornered it, it changed its shape and the net of
words which you had ready to throw over it was no longer suitable.  He
let it go free to range through his body, accepting and enjoying it.  He
ran down the stairs, out through the kitchens and into the stable yard.

Mbejane!  he shouted, where the hell are you The clatter of a stool
overturning in the servants quarters and the door of one of the rooms
burst open.  Nkosi, what is it?  The urgency of Sean's voice had alarmed
Mbejane.

Which are the six best horses we have?

Mbejane named them, making no attempt to hide his curiosity.

Are they all salted against the Nagana?  "All of them, Nkosi.  Good,
have them ready before tomorrow's light.  Two with saddles, the others
to carry the packs Mbejane turned on his smile.  Could it be we are
going hunting, Nkosi?

It could easily be, Sean agreed.

Sleeping sickness.  Salting involved deliberate exposure to the sting of
the tsetse fly.  Animals that recovered were then immune.  How long will
we be gone, Nkosi?  How long is for ever?  Take leave of all your women,
bring your kaross and your spears and we will see where the road leads
Sean went back to his bedroom.  It took him half an hour to pack. The
pile of discarded clothing in the centre of the room grew steadily and
what he kept made only half a horseload.  He crammed it into two leather
valises.

He found his sheepskin coat in the back of one of the closets and threw
it over a chair with his leather breeches and slouch hat, ready to wear
in the morning.  He went down to the study and made his selection from
the gun rack, ignoring the fancy doubles and obscure calibres.  He took
down a pair of shotguns and four Mannlichers.

Then he went to tell Candy goodbye.  She was in her suite but she opened
quickly to his knock.

Hav you heard?  he asked her.  Yes, the whole town knows.  Oh!  Sean,
I'm so sorry please come in.

She held the door open for him.  How is Duff?  He'll be all right, right
now he's both drunk and asleep.  I'll go to him, she said quickly. He'll
need me now.

For answer Sean raised an eyebrow and looked at her until she dropped
her eyes.

No, you're right, I suppose.  Perhaps later, when he's got over the
first shock.  She looked up at Sean and smiled.  I suppose you need a
drink.  It must have been hell for you as well.  She went across to the
cabinet.  She had on a blue gown and it clung to the womanish thrust of
her hips and did not go high enough to cover the cleft of her breasts.

Sean watched her pour his drink and bring it to him.  She was lovely, he
thought.

Till we meet again, Candy, Sean lifted his glass.

Her eyes went wide and very blue.  I don't understand.

Why do you say that!

We're going, Candy, first thing tomorrow No, Sean, you're joking.  But
she knew he wasn't.

There wasn't much to say after that.  He finished his drink and they
talked for a while, then he kissed her.

Be happy, please, he ordered her.  I'll try.  Come back one day soon.
Only if you promise to marry me, he smiled at her and she caught hold of
his beard and tugged his head from side to side.  Get away with you,
before I hold you to that.  He left her then because he knew she was
going to weep and he didn't want to watch it.

The next Duff packed his gear under Sean's direction.  He followed each
instruction with a dazed obedience, answering when Sean spoke but
otherwise withdrawn in a protective shell of silence.  When he had
finished Sean made him pick up his bags and marched him down to where
the horses waited in the chill gloom of not-yet day.  With the horses
were men, four shapes in the darkness.  Sean hesitated before going out
into the yard.  Mbejane, he called.  Who are these with you?

They came forward into the light that poured through the doorway and
Sean chuckled.

Hlubi, of the noble belly!  Nonga!  And is it you, Kandhla?  Men who had
worked beside him in the trenches of the Candy Deep, had plied the
spades that had uncovered his fortune, had plied the spears that
protected it from the first predators.  Happy at his recognition of
them, for it had been many years, they crowded forward smiling as widely
and whitely as only a Zulu can.  What brings you three rogues together
so early in the day?  Sean asked, and Hlubi answered for them.  Nkosi,
we heard talk of a trek and our feet burned, we heard talk of hunting
and we could not sleep There is no money for wages, Sean spoke gruffly
to cover the sudden rush of affection he felt for them.  We made no talk
of wages, Hlubi answered with dignity.  Sean nodded, it was the reply he
had expected.  He cleared his throat and went on.  You would come with
me when you know that I have the Tagathi on me?  He used the Zulu word f
or witchcraft.  You would follow me knowing that behind me I leave a
spoor of dead men and sorrow? Nkosi, Hlubi was grave as he answered.
Something always dies when the lion feeds, and yet there is meat for
those that follow him.  I hear the chatter of old women at a beer drink,
Mbejane observed drily.  There is no more to say and the horses grow
restless.  They rode down the driveway of Xanadu between the jacaranda
trees and the smooth wide lawns.  Behind them the mansion was grey and
unlighted in the half darkness.

They took the Pretoria road, climbed to the ridge and checked their
horses at the crest.  Sean and Duff looked back across the valley.  The
valley was filled with early morning mist, and the mine headgears probed
up out of it.  They watched the mists turn to gold as the low sun
touched them and a mine hooter howled dismally.  Couldn't we stay for
just a week longer, perhaps we could work something out?  Duff asked
softly.

Sean sat silently staring at the golden mist.  It was beautiful.  It hid
the scarred earth and it hid the mills, it was a most appropriate cloak
for that evil, greedy city.

Sean turned his horse away towards Pretoria and slapped the loose end of
his reins across its neck.

The Wilderness They stayed five days in Pretoria, just long enough to
buy the wagons and commission them, and when they left on the morning of
the sixth day they went north on the Hunters Road.  The wagons moved in
column urged on by the Zulus and a dozen new servants that Sean had
hired.  They were followed by a mixed bag of black and white urchins and
stray dogs; men called good luck after them and women waved from the
verandas of the houses which lined the road.  Then the town was behind
them and they were out into the veld with only a dozen of the more
adventurous mongrels still following them.

They made fifteen miles the first day and when they camped that night
beside the ford of a small stream, Sean's back and legs ached from his
first full day in the saddle in over five years.  They drank a little
brandy and ate steaks grilled over wood embers, then they let the fire
die and sat and looked at the night.  The sky was a curtain at which a
barrel of grape-shot had been fired, riddling it with the holes through
which the stars shone.  The voices of the servants made a hive murmur as
a background to the wailing of a jackal in the darkness beyond the
firelight.  They went to their living wagon early and for Sean the feel
of rough blankets instead of silk sheets and the hardness of a straw
mattress were not sufficient to keep him long from sleep.

From an early start the following morning they put another twenty miles
behind them before outspan that night and twenty more the next day.  The
push and urgent drive were habits Sean had acquired on the Rand when
every minute was vital and the loss of a day was a disaster.

leisurely turning of wagon-wheels.  Sean's eyes which had been pointing
straight ahead along the line of travel now turned aside to look about
him.  Each morning he and Duff would leave the wagons and wander out
into the bush.

Sometimes they would spend the day panning for gold in the sands of a
stream, another day they would search for the first signs of elephant,
but mostly they just rode and talked or lay hidden and watched the herds
of game that daily became more numerous.  They killed just enough to
feed themselves, their servants and the pack of dogs that had followed
them when they left Pretoria.  They passed the little Boer settlement at
Pietersburg and then the Zoutpansberg climbed up over the horizon, its
sheer sides dark with rain forest and high rock cliffs.  Here under the
mountains they spent a week at Louis Trichardt, the most northerly
permanent habitation of white men.

In the town they spoke with men who had hunted to the north of the
mountains, across the Limpopo.  These were taciturn brown-faced Boers
with tobacco-stained beards, big men with the peace of the bush in their
eyes.

In their courteous, unhurried speech Sean sensed a fierce possessive
love of the animals that they hunted and the land through which they
moved so freely.  They were a different breed from the Natal Afrikanders
and those he had met on the Witwatersrand, and he conceived the respect
for them that would grow stronger in the years ahead when he would have
to fight them.

There was no way through the mountains, they told him, but wagons could
pass around them.  The western passage skirted the edge of the Kalahari
desert and this was bad country where the wagon wheels sank into the
sandy soil and the marches between water became successively longer.

To the east there was good rich forest land, well watered and stocked
with game: low country, hotter the nearer one went to the coast, but the
true bushveld where a man could find elephant.

So Sean and Duff turned east and, holding the mountains always in sight
at their left hand, they went down into the wilderness.

Within a week's trek they saw elephant sign: trees broken and stripped
of their bark.  Although it was months old the trees already dried out,
nevertheless Sean felt the thrill of it and that night spent an hour
cleaning and oiling his rifles.  The forest thickened until the wagons
had to weave continually between the trunks of the trees.  But there
were clearings in the forest, open vleis filled with grass where buffalo
grazed like herds of domestic cattle and white tick birds squawked about
them.  This country was well watered with streams as clear and merry as
a Scottish trout stream, but the water was blood-warm and the banks
thick with bush.  Along the rivers, in the forest and in the open were
the herds of game: impala twisting and leaping away at the first
approach with their crumpled horns laid back, kudu with big ears and
soft eyes, black sable antelope with white bellies and horns curved like
a naval cutlass, zebra trotting with the dignity of fat ponies, while
about them frolicked their companions, the gnu, waterbuck, nyala, roan
antelope and, at last, elephant.

Sean and Mbejane were ranging a mile ahead of the wagons when they found
the spoor.  It was fresh, so fresh that sap still oozed from the
mahoba-hobo tree where the bark had been prised loose with the tip of a
tusk and then stripped off.  The wood beneath was naked and white.
Three bulls, said Mbejane.  One very big.  Wait here, Sean spun his
horse and galloped back to the column.  Duff lay on the driver's seat of
the first wagon rocking gently to its motion, his hat covering his face
and his hands behind his head.

Elephant!  Duff, Sean yelled.  Not an hour ahead of us.

Get saddled up, man!  Duff was ready in five minutes.  Mbejane was
waiting for them; he had already worked the spoor a short distance and
picked up the run of it and now he went away on it, They followed him,
riding slowly side by side.

You've hunted elephant before, laddie?  asked Duff.

Never, said Sean.  Good grief!  Duff looked alarmed.  I thought you were
an expert.  I think I'll go back and finish my sleep, you can call me
when you've had a little more experience.  Don't worry, Sean laughed
with excitement.  I know all about it; I was raised on elephant stories
That sets my heart at ease, Duff murmured sarcastically and Mbejane
glanced over his shoulder at them, not trying to conceal his irritation.
Nkosi, it is not wise to talk now for we will soon come up with them. So
they went on in silence: passing a knee-high pile of yellow dung that
looked like the contents of a coir mattress, following the oval pad
marks in the dust and the trail of torn branches.

It was a good hunt, this first one.  The small breeze held steadily into
their faces and the spoor ran straight and hot.  They closed in, each
minute strengthening the certainty of the kill.  Sean sat stiff and
eager in the saddle Whith his rifle across his lap, his eyes restlessly
moving over the frieze of bush ahead of him.  Mbejane stopped suddenly
and came back to Sean's stirrup.  Here they halted for the first time.
The sun is hot and they will rest but this place was not to their liking
and they have moved on.  We will find them soon now.  The bush becomes
too thick, Sean grunted; he eyed the untidy tangle of catbush into which
the spoor had led them.  We will leave the horses here with Hlubi and go
in on foot.  Laddie, Duff demurred.  I can run much faster on horseback.
, off!  said Sean and nodded to Mbejane to lead.  They moved forward
again.  Sean was sweating and the drops clung heavily to his eyebrows
and trickled down his cheeks; he brushed them away.  The excitement was
an indigestible ball in his stomach and a dryness in his throat.

Duff sauntered casually next to Sean with that small half smile on his
face, but there was a quickness in his breathing.  Mbejane cautioned
them with a gesture of his hand and they stopped.  Minutes passed slowly
and then Mbejane's hand moved again, pink-palmed eloquence.  It was
nothing, said the hand.  Follow me.  They went on again.  There were
Mopani flies swarming at the corners of Sean's eyes, drinking the
moisture, and he blinked them away.  Their bu=ing was so loud in his
ears that he thought it must carry to their quarry.  His every sense was
tuned to its limit: hearing magnified, vision sharp and even his sense
of smell so clear that he could pick up the taint of dust, the scent of
a will, lower and Mbejane's faintly musky body-smell.

Suddenly in front of him Mbejane was still; his hand moved again gently,
unmistakably.

They are here, said the hand.

Sean and Duff crouched behind him, searching with eyes that could see
only brown bush and grey shadows.

The tension coarsened their breathing and Duff was no longer smiling.
Mbejane's hand came up slowly and pointed at the wall of vegetation in
front of them.  The seconds strung together like beads on the string of
time and still they searched.

An ear flapped lazily and instantly the picture jumped into focus.  Bull
elephant, big and very close, grey among grey shadow.  Sean touched
Mbejane's arm.  I had seen it, said that touch.

Slowly Mbejane's hand swivelled and pointed again.

Another wait, another searching and then a belly nimbled, a great grey
belly filled with half-digested leaves.  It was a sound so ridiculous in
the silence that Sean wanted to laugh, a gurgling sloshy sound, and Sean
saw the other bull.  It was standing in shadow also, with long yellow
ivory and small eyes tight-closed.  Sean put his lips to Duff's ear.
This one is yours, he whispered.  Wait until I get into position for the
other, and he began moving out to the side, each step exposing a little
more of the second bull's flank until the shoulder was open to him and
he could see the point of the elbow beneath the baggy, wrhilded skin.
The angle was right; from here he could reach the heart. He nodded at
Duff, brought his rifle up, leaning forward against the recoil, aiming
close behind the massive shoulder, and he fired.

The gunfire was shockingly loud in the confined thorn bush; dust flew in
a spurt from the bull's shoulder and it staggered from the strike of the
bullet.  Beyond it the third elephant burst from sleep into flight and
Sean's hands moved neatly on his weapon, ejecting and reloading,
swinging up and firing again.  He saw the buffet hit and he knew it was
a mortal wound.  The two bulls ran together and the bush opened to them
and swallowed them: they were gone, crashing away wounded, trumpeting in
pain.  Sean ran after them, dodging through the catbush, oblivious to
the sting of the thorns that snatched at him as he passed.

This way, Nkosi, Mbejane shouted beside him.

Quickly or we will lose them.  They sprinted after the sounds of flight,
a hundred yards, two hundred, panting now and sweating in the heat.
Suddenly the catbush ended and in front of them was a wide river-bed
with steep banks.  The river sand was blindingly white and in the middle
was a sluggish trickle of water.  One of the bulls was dead, lying in
the stream with the blood washing off him in a pale brown stain.  The
other bull was trying to climb the far bank; it was too steep for him
and he slid back wearily.  The blood dripped from the tip of his trunk,
and he swung his head to look at Sean and Mbejane.  His ears cocked back
defiantly and he began his charge, blundering towards them through the
soft river sand.

Sean watched him come and there was sadness in him as he brought up his
rifle, but it was the proud regret that a man feels when he watches
hopeless courage.  Sean killed with a brain shot, quickly.

They climbed down the bank into the river-bed and went to the elephant;
it knelt with its legs folded under it and its tusks driven deep into
the sand with the force of its fall.  The flies were already clustering
at the little red mouths of the bullet wounds.  Mbejane touched one of
the tusks and then he looked up at Sean.  It is a good elephant.  He
said no more, for this was not the time to talk.  Sean leaned his rifle
against the bull's shoulder; he felt in his top pocket for a cheroot and
stood with it unlit between his teeth.  He would kill more elephant, he
knew, but always this would be the one he would remember.  He stroked
his hand over the rough skin and the bristles were stiff and sharp.

Where is Nkosi Duff?  Sean remembered him suddenly.  Did he also kill?
He did not shoot, answered Mbejane.  What!  Sean turned quickly to
Mbejane.  Why notV Mbejane sniffed a pinch of snuff and sneezed, then he
shrugged his shoulders.  It is a good elephant, he said again, looking
down at it.  We must go back and find him.  Sean snatched up his rifle
and Mbejane followed him.  They found Duff sitting alone in the catbush
with his rifle propped beside him and a water-bottle to his lips.  He
lowered the bottle as Sean came up and saluted him with it.

Hail!  the conquering hero comes.  There was something in his eyes that
Sean could not read.

Did you miss yours?  Sean asked.  Yes, said Duff, I missed mine.  He
lifted the bottle and drank again.  Suddenly and sickeningly Sean was
ashamed for him.  He dropped his eyes, not wanting to acknowledge Duff's
cowardice.  Let's get back to the wagons, he said. Mbejane can come with
packhorses for the tusks.

They did not ride together on the way home.

It was almost dark when they arrived back at the laager.

They gave their horses to one of the servants and washed in the basin
that Kandh1a had ready for them, then they went to sit by the fire. Sean
poured the drinks, fussing over the glasses to avoid looking at Duff.
He felt awkward.

They'd have to talk about it and he searched his brain for a way to
bring it into the open.  Duff had shown craven and Sean started to find
excuses for him, he may have had a misfire or be may have been unsighted
by Sean's shot.  At all events Sean determined not to let it stay like
this, sour and brooding between them.  They'd talk it out then forget
it.  He carried Duff's glass to him and smiled at him.  That's right,
try and cover it with a grin, Duff lifted his glass.  To our big brave
hunter.  Dammit, laddie, how could you do itV

Sean stared at Duff.  What do you mean?  You know what I mean, you're so
damned guilty you can't even look me in the face.  How could you kill
those bloody great animals, but even worse how could you enjoy doing it?
Sean subsided weakly into his chair.  He Couldn't tell which of his
emotions was uppermost, relief or surprise.

Duff went on quickly.  I know what you're going to say, I've heard the
arguments before, from my dear father.  He explained it to me one
evening after we'd ridden down a fox.  When I say we", I mean twenty
horsemen and forty hounds Sean had not yet rallied from the shock of
finding himself in the dock after preparing himself to play the role of
prosecutor.  Don't you like hunting?  he asked incredulously.  The way
he might have asked, don't you like eating?  .  I'd forgotten what it
was like.  I was carried away by your exitement, but when you started to
kill them it all came back to me.  Duff sipped his brandy and stared
into the fire.  They never had a chance.  One minute they were sleeping
and the next you were ripping them with bullets the way the hounds
ripped that fox.  They didn't have a chance.  But, Duff, it wasn't meant
to be a contest.  Yes, I know, my father explained that to me.  It's a
ritual, a sacred rite to Diana.  He should have explained it to the fox
as well Sean was getting angry now.  We came out here to hunt ivory, and
that's what I'm doing.  Tell me that you killed those elephant only for
their teeth, laddie, and I'll call you a liar.  You loved it.  Christ!

You should have seen your face and the face of your damned heathen.  All
right!  I like hunting and the only other man I ever met who didn't was
a coward, Sean shouted at him.

Duff's face paled and he looked up at Sean.  What are you trying to say?
he whispered.  They stared at each other and in the silence Sean had to
choose between letting his temper run or keeping Duffs friendship, for
the words that would spoil it for ever were crowding into his mouth.  He
made his hands relax their grip on the arms of his chair.

I didn't mean that, he said.  I hoped you didn't, Duff's grin came
precariously back onto his face.  Tell me why you like hunting, laddie.
I'll try and understand but don't expect me to hunt with you again.  It
was like explaining colour to a blind man, describing the lust of the
hunter to someone who was born without it.  Duff listened in agonized
silence as Sean tried to find the words for the excitement that makes a
man's blood sing through his body, that heightens his senses and allows
him to lose himself in an emotion as old as the urge to mate.  Sean
tried to show him how the nobler and more beautiful was the quarry, the
stronger was the compulsion to hunt and kill it, that it had no
conscious cruelty in it but was rather an expression of love: a fierce
possessive love.  A devouring love that needed the complete and
irrevocable act of death for its consummation.

By destroying something, a man could have it always as his own: selfish
perhaps, but then instinct knows no ethics.  It was all very clear to
Sean, so much a part of him that he had never tried to voice it before
and now he stumbled over the words, gesticulating in helpless
inarticulateness, repeating himself, coming at last to the end and
knowing by the look on Duff's face that he had failed to show it -to
him.  And you were the gentleman who fought Hradsky for the rights of
men, Duff said softly, the one who always talked about not hurting
people.

Sean opened his mouth to protest but Duff went on.  You get ivory for us
and I'll look for gold, each of us to what he is best suited.  I'll
forgive you your elephants as you forgave me my Candy, still equal
partners.  Agreed?

Sean nodded and- Duff held up his glass.  It's empty, he said.  Do me a
favour, laddie.  There was never any after-taste to their disputes, no
rankling of unspoken words or lingering of doubt.  What they had in
common they enjoyed, where there were differences they accepted them. So
when after each hunt the packhorses brought the tusks into the camp
there was no trace of censure in Duffs fare or voice; there was only the
genuine pleasure of having Sean back from the bush.

Sometimes it was a good day and Sean would cut the spoor, follow, kill
and be back in the laager the same night.  But more often, when the herd
was moving fast or the ground was hard or he could not kill at the first
approach, he would be gone for a week or more.  Each time he returned
they celebrated, drinking and laughing far into the night, lying late in
bed the next morning, playing Klabejas on the floor of the wagon between
their cots or reading aloud out of the books that Duff had brought with
him from Pretoria.  Then a day or two later Sean would be gone again,
with his dogs and his gunboys trotting behind him.

This was a different Sean from the one who had whored it up at the Opera
House and presided over the panelled offices in Eloff Street.  His
beard, no longer groomed and shaped by a barber, curled onto his chest.
The doughy colour of his face and arms had been turned by the sun to the
rich brown of a newly-baked loaf.  The seat of his pants that had been
stretched to danger point across his rump now hung loosely; his arms
were thicker and the soft swell of fat had given way to the flatness and
bulge of hard muscle.  He walked straighter, moved quicker and laughed
more easily.

in Duff the change was less noticeable.  He was lean and gaunt-faced as
ever, but now there was less of the restlessness in his eyes.  His
speech and movements were slower and the golden beard he was growing had
the strange effect of making him appear younger.  Each morning he left
the wagons, taking one of the servant's with him, and spent the days
wandering in the bush, tapping with his prospecting hammer at the
occasional outcrops of rock or squatting beside a stream and spinning
the gravel in his pan.  Every evening he came back to camp and analysed
the bag of rock samples he had collected during the day; then he threw
them away, bathed and set out a bottle and two glasses on the table
beside the fire.

While he ate his supper he listened and waited for the dogs to bark, for
the sound of horses in the darkness and Sean's voice.  If the night
remained silent he put the bottle away and climbed up into his wagon. He
was lonely then, not with a deep loneliness but just enough to add
relish to Sean's return.

Always they moved east, until gradually the silhouette of the
Zoutpansberg softened as the mountains became less steep and began to
fade into the tail of the range.

Scouting along their edge Sean found a pass and they took the wagons up
and over and down into the Limpopo valley beyond.  Here the country
changed character again; it became flat, the monotony of thorn scrub
relieved only by the baobab trees with their great, swollen trunks
crowned in a little halo of branches.  Water was scarce and Sean rode
ahead from each camp to find the next waterhole before they moved.
However, the hunting was good for the game was concentrated on the
isolated drinking places, and before they were halfway from the
mountains to the Limpopo Sean had filled another wagon with ivory.

We'll be coming back this way, I suppose!  Duff asked.

I suppose so, agreed Sean.  Well then, I don't see any point in carrying
a ton of ivory with us.  Let's bury it and we can pick it up on our way
back Sean looked at him thoughtfully.  About once in every year you come
up with a good idea, we'll do exactly that The next camp was a good one.
There was water, an acre of muddy liquid not as heavily salted with
elephant urine as some of the previous ones had been; there was shade
provided by a grove of wild fig trees and the grazing was of a quality
that promised to restore the condition that the oxen had lost since
crossing the mountains.  They decided to make it a rest camp: bury the
ivory, do some repairs and maintenance on the wagons and let the
servants and animals fatten up a little.  The first task was to dig a
hole large enough to contain all the hundred-odd tusks they had
accumulated and it was evening on the third day before they finished.

Sean and Duff sat together inside the laager and watched the sun go
down, bleeding below the land, and after it had gone the clouds were
oyster and Iflac-coloured in the brief twilight.  Kandhla threw wood on
the fire and it burnt up fiercely.  They ate grilled kudu liver, and
thick steaks with a rind of yellow fat on them, and they drank brandy
with their coffee.  The conversation lagged into contented silence for
they were both tired.  They sat staring into the fire, too lazy to make
the effort required for bed.  Sean watched the fire pictures form in the
coals, the faces and the phantoms flickering and fading.  He saw a tiny
temple have its columns pulled out from under it by a fiery Samson and
collapse in a shower of sparks, a burning horse changed magically into a
dragon of blue flame.  He looked away to rest his eyes and when he
turned back there was a small black scorpion scuttling out from under
the loose bark on one of the logs.  It lifted its tail like the arm of a
flamenco dancer and the flames that ringed it shone on its glossy body
armour.  Duff was also watching it, leaning forward with his elbows on
his knees.  Will he sting himself to death before the flames reach him?
he asked softly.  I have heard that they do.  No, said Sean.  Why not?
Only man has the intelligence to end the inevitable; in all other
creatures the instinct of survival is too strong, Sean answered him, and
the scorpion crabbed sideways from the nearest flames and stopped again
with its raised sting jerking slightly.  Besides he's immune to his own
poison so he has no choice. He could jump down into the fire and get it
over with, murmured Duff, subdued by the little tragedy.

The scorpion started its last desperate circuit of the closing ring. its
tail drooped and the grip of its claws was unsteady on the rough bark;
it was shrivelling with the beat, its legs curling up and its tail
subsiding.  The flames caressed it with swift yellow hands and smeared
its shiny body with the dullness of death.  The log tipped sideways and
the speck was gone.  Would you?  asked Sean.  Would you have jumped?

Duff sighed softly, I don't know, he said and stood up.  I'm going to
pump out my bilges and crawl into bed He walked away and went to stand
at the edge of the circle of firelight.

Since they had left Pretoria the small voices of the jackals had yapped
discreetly around each outspan, they were so much a part of the African
night that they went unnoticed, but now suddenly there was a difference.

Only one jackal spoke, and with a voice that stammered shrilly, a sound
of pain, a crazy hysterical shrieking that made Sean's skin prickle.  He
scrambled to his feet and stood staring undecided into the darkness. The
jackal was coming towards the camp, coming fast, and suddenly Sean knew
what was happening.

Duff!  !  he called.  Come back here!  Run, man, run!

Duff looked back at Sean helplessly, his hands held low in front of him.
and his water arcing down, curving silver in the firelight from Ins body
to the ground.  Duff !  Sean's voice was a shout.  It's a rabid jackal.
Run, damn you, run!  The jackal was close now, very close, but at last
Duff started to move.  He was halfway back to the fire before he
tripped.  He fell and rolled over and brought his feet up under his body
to rise.  His head turned to face the darkness from which it would come.
Then Sean saw it.  It flitted out of the shadows like a grey moth in the
bad light and went straight for where Duff knelt.  Sean saw him try to
cover his face with his hands as the jackal sprang at him.  One of the
dogs twisted out of Mbejane's hand and brushed past Sean's legs.  Sean
snatched up a piece of firewood and sprinted after it, but already Duff
was on his back, his arms flailing frantically as he tried to push away
the terrier-sized animal that was slashing at his face and hands.  The
dog caught it and dragged it off, worrying it, growling through locked
jaws.  Sean hit the jackal with the club, breaking its back.  He swung
again and again, beating its body, into shapelessness before he turned
to Duff.  Duff was on his feet now. He had unwound the scarf from his
neck and was mopping with it at his face but the blood dribbled down his
chin and blotched the front of his shirt.  His hands were trembling.
Sean led him close to the fire, pulled Duff's hands down and examined
the bites.  His nose was torn and the flesh of one cheek hung open in a
flap.  Sit down!  Duff obeyed, holding the scarf to his face again. Sean
went quickly to the fire: with a stick he raked embers into a pile, then
he drew his hunting-knife and thrust the blade into the coals.  Mbejane,
he called, without taking his eyes off the knife.  Throw that jackal
onto the fire.  Put on plenty of wood.  Do not touch its body with your
hands.  When you have done that tie up that dog and keep the others away
from it.  Sean turned the knife in the fire.  Duff, drink as much of
that brandy as you can What are you going to do?  You know what I've got
to do!  He bit my wrist as well.  Duff held up his hand for Sean to see
the punctures, black holes from which the blood oozed watery and slow.
Drink.  Sean pointed at the brandy bottle. For a second they looked at
each other and Sean saw the horror moving in Duffs eyes: horror of the
hot knife and horror of the germs which had been injected into him.  The
germs that must be burnt out before they escaped into his blood, to
breed and ferment there until they ate into his brain and rode him to a
screaming gibbering death.  Drink, said Sean again.  Duff took up the
bottle and lifted it to his mouth.  Sean stooped and pulled the knife
out of the fire.  He held the blade an inch from the back of his hand.
It was not hot enough.  He thrust it back into the coals.

IMbejane, Hlubi, stand on each side of the Nkosi's chair.  Be ready to
hold him.  Sean loosened his belt, doubled the thick leather and handed
it to Duff.  Bite on this.  He turned back to the fire and this time
when he drew the knife its blade was pale pink.  Are you ready?  The
work you are about to do will break the hearts of a million maids.  A
last hoarse attempt at humour from Duff.

Hold him, said Sean.

Duff gasped at the touch of the knife, a great shuddering gasp, and his
back arched but the two Zulus held held him down remorselessly.  The
edges of the wound blackened ened and hissed as Sean ran the blade in
deeper.  The stink of burning brought the vomit into his throat.  He
clenched his teeth.  When he stepped back Duff hung slackly in the
Zulus, hands, sweat had soaked his shirt and wet his hair.

Sean heated the knife again and cleaned the bites in Duff's wrist while
Duff moaned and writhed weakly in the chair.

He smeared axle grease over the burns and bandaged the wrist loosely
with strips torn from a clean shirt.  They lifted Duff into the wagon
and laid him on his cot.  Sean went out to where Mbejane had tied the
dog.  He found scratches beneath the hair on its shoulder.  They put a
sack over its head to stop it biting and Sean cauterized its wounds
also.  Tie it to the far wagon, do not let the other dogs near it, see
it has food and water, .  he told Mbenjane.

Then he went back to Duff.  Delirious with pain and brandy Duff did not
sleep at all that night and Sean stayed by his cot until the morning.

About fifty yards from the laager under one of the wild fig trees the
servants built Duff a hut.  The framework was of poles and over it they
stretched a tarpaulin.  They made a bed for him and brought his mattress
and blankets from the wagon.  Sean joined four trek-chains together,
forging new links and hammering them closed.  He passed one end of the
chain round the base of the fig tree and riveted it back up on itself.
Duff sat in the shade of a wagon and watched them work.  His hurt hand
was in a sling and his face was swollen, the wound crusty-looking and
edged in angry red.  When he was finished with the chain, Sean walked
across to him.  I'm sorry, Duff, we have to do it.  They abolished the
slave trade some time ago, just in case you didn't know. Duff tried to
grin with his distorted face.  He stood up and followed Sean to the hut.
Sean looped the loose end of the chain round Duff's waist.  He locked it
with a bolt through two of the links then flattened the end of the bolt
with a dozen strokes of the hammer.  That should hold you.  An excellent
fit, Duff commended him. Now let us inspect my new quarters.  Sean
followed him into the hut. Duff lay down on the bed.  He looked very
tired and sick.  How long will it take before we know?  he asked
quietly.

Sean shook his head.  I'm not sure.  I think you should stay here at
least a month, after that we'll allow you back into society.  A month,
it's going to be fun.  Lying here expecting any minute to start barking
like a dog and lifting my leg against the nearest tree Sean didn't
laugh.  I did a thorough job with the knife.

It's a thousand to one you'll be all right.  This is just a precaution.
The odds are attractive, I'll put a fiver on it.  Duff crossed his
ankles and stared up at the roof.  Sean sat down on the edge of the bed.
It was a long time before Duff ended the silence.

What will it be like, Sean, have you ever seen someone with rabies?  No.
But you've heard about it, haven't you?  Tell me what you've heard about
it, Duff persisted.  For Chrissake, Duff, you're not going to get it.
Tell me, Sean, tell me what you know about it.  Duff sat up and caught
hold of Sean's arm.

Sean looked steadily at him for a moment before he answered.  You saw
that jackal, didn't you?

Duff sank back onto his pillows.  Oh, my God!  he whispered.

Together they started the long wait.  They used another tarpaulin to
make an open shelter next to the hut and under it they spent the days
that followed.

In the beginning it was very bad.  Sean tried to pull Duff out of the
black despair into which he had slumped, but Duff sat for hours at a
time gazing out into the bush, fingering the scabs on his face and only
occasionally smiling at the banquet of choice stories that Sean spread
for him.  But at last Seans efforts were rewarded, Duff began to talk.
He spoke of things he had never mentioned before and listening to him
Sean learned more about him than he had in the previous five years.
Sometimes Duff paced up and down in front of Sean's chair with the chain
hanging down behind him like a tail; at other times he sat quietly, his
voice filled with longing for the mother he had never known.  , there
was a portrait of her in the upper gallery, I used to spend whole
afternoons in front of it.  it was the kindest face I had ever seen Then
it hardened again as he remembered his father, that old bastard.

He talked of his daughter.  - she had a fat chuckle that would break
your heart.  The snow on her grave made it look like a big sugar-iced
cake, she would have liked that -At other times his voice was puzzled as
he examined some past action of.  his, angry as he remembered a mistake
or a missed opportunity.  Then he would break off and grin
self-consciously.  I say, I am talking a lot of drivel.  The scabs on
his face began to dry up and come away, and more often now his old
gaiety bubbled to the surface.

on one of the poles that supported the tarpaulin roof he started a
calendar, cutting a notch for each day.  it became a daily ceremony.  He
cut each notch with the concentration of a sculptor carving marble and
when he had finished he would stand back and count them aloud as if by
doing so he could force them to add up to thirty, the number that would
allow him to shed his chain.

There were eighteen notches on the pole when the dog went mad.  It was
in the afternoon.  They were playing Klabejas.  Sean had just dealt the
cards when the dog started screaming from among the wagons.  Sean
knocked over his chair as he jumped up.  He snatched his rifle from
where it leaned against the wall and ran down to the laager.

He disappeared behind the wagon to which the dog was tied and almost
immediately Duff heard the shot.  In the abrupt and complete stillness
that followed, Duff slowly lowered his face into his hands.

it was nearly an hour before Sean came back.  He picked up his chair,
set it to the table and sat down.  It's you to call, are you going to
take on?  he asked as he picked up his cards.  They played with grim
intensity, fixing their attention on the cards, but both of them knew
that there was a third person at the table now.  Promise you'll never do
that to me, Duff blurted out at last.

Sean looked up at him.  That I'll never do what to you?  What you did to
that dog.  The dog!  The bloody dog.  He should never have taken a
chance with it, he should have destroyed it that first night, Just
because the dog got it doesn't mean that you Swear to me, Duff
interrupted fiercely, swear you won't bring the rifle to me.  Duff, you
don't know what you're asking.  Once you've got it, Sean stopped;
anything he said would make it worse.

Promise me, Duff repeated.  All right, I swear it then.  It was worse
now than it had been in the beginning.

Duff abandoned his calendar and with it the hope that had been slowly
growing stronger.  If the days were bad then the nights were hell, for
Duff had a dream.  It came to him every night, sometimes two or three
times.  He tried to keep awake after Sean had left, reading by the light
of a lantern; or he lay and listened to the night noises, the splash and
snort of buffalo drinking down at the waterhole, the liquid half-warble
of night birds or the deep drumming of a lion.  But in the end he would
have to sleep and then he dreamed.

He was on horseback riding across a flat brown plain: no hills, no
trees, nothing but lawnlike grass stretching away on all sides to the
horizon.  His horse threw no shadow, he always looked for a shadow and
it worried him that there never was one.  Then he would find the pool,
clear water, blue and strangely shiny.  The pool frightened him but he
could not stop himself going to it.

He would kneel beside it and look into the water; the reflection of his
own face looked up at him, animal-snouted , shaggy-brown with wolf
teeth, white and long.

He would wake then and the horror of that face would last until morning.

Nearly desperate with his own utter helplessness, Sean tried to help
him.  Because of the accord they had established over the years and
because they were so close to each other, Sean had to suffer with him.
He tried to shut himself off from it; sometimes he succeeded for an hour
or even half a morning but then it came back with a stomach-swooping
shock.  Duff was going to die, Duff was going to die an unspeakable
death.  Was it a mistake to let someone get too deep inside you, so that
you must share his agony in every excruciating detail?  Didn't a men
have enough of his own that he must share the full measure of another's
suffering?

By then the October winds had started, the heralds of the rain: hot
winds fall of dust, winds that dried the sweat on a man,'s.  body before
it had time to cool him, thirsty winds that during daylight brought the
game to the waterhole in full view of the camp.

Sean had half a case of wine hoarded under his cot.  That last evening
he cooled four bottles, wrapping them in wet sacking.  He took them up
to Duff's shelter just before supper and set them on the table.  Duff
watched him.  The scars on his face were almost completely healed now,
glassy red marks on his pale skin.

Chateau Olivier, said Sean and Duff nodded.  It's a good wine, most
probably travel-sick.  Well, if you don't want it, I'll take it away
again, said Sean.  I'm sorry, laddie, Duff spoke quickly.  I didn't mean
to he ungrateful.  This wine suits my mood tonight.  Did you know that
wine is a sad drink?  Nonsense!  Sean disagreed as he twisted the
corkscrew into the first cork Wine is gay.  He poured a little into
Duff's glass and Duff picked it up and held it towards the fire so the
light shone through it.  You see only the surface, Sean.  A good wine
has the elements of tragedy within it.  The better the wine the more sad
it is.

Sean snorted.  Explain yourself, he invited.

Duff put his glass down on the table again and stared at it.  How long
do you suppose this wine has taken to reach its present perfection?  Ten
or fifteen years, I suppose, Sean answered.

Duff nodded.  "And now all that remains is to drink it the work of years
destroyed in an instant.  Don't you think that is sad?  Duff asked
softly.  My God, Duff, don't be so damned morbid But Duff wasn't
listening to him.  Wine and mankind have this in common.  They can find
perfection only in age, in a lifetime of seeking. Yet in the finding
they find also their own destruction.  So you think that if a man lives
long enough he will reach perfection?  Sean challenged him, and Duff
answered him still staring at the glass.  Some grapes grew in the wrong
soil, some were diseased before they went to the press and some were
spoiled by a careless vintner, not all grapes make good wine Duff picked
up his glass and tasted from it, then he went on.  A man takes longer
and he must find it not within the quiet confines of the cask but in the
cauldron of life; therefore his is the greater tragedy.  Yes, but no one
can live for ever, Sean protested.

so you think that makes it less sad?  Duff shook his head.  You're wrong
of course.  It does not detract from it, it enhances it.  If only there
were some escape, some way of ensuring that what is good could endure
instead of this complete hopelessness.  Duff lay back in his chair, his
face pale and gaunt-looking.  Even that I could accept, if only they had
given me more time.  I've had enough of this talk.  Let's discuss
something else.  I don't know what you're worrying about.  You're not
fit to drink yet, you've got another twenty or thirty years to go, Sean
said gruffly and Duff looked up at him for the first time.  Have 1,
Sean?  Sean couldn't meet his eyes.  He knew Duff was going to die. Duff
grinned his lopsided grin and looked down again at his glass.  Slowly
the grin disappeared and he spoke again.

if only I had more time, I could have done it.  I could have found the
weak places and fortified them.  I could have seen the answers.  His
voice rose higher.  I could have!  I know I could have!  Oh God, I'm not
ready yet.  I need more time.  His voice was shrill and his eyes wild
and haunted.  It's too soon, it's too soon!

Sean couldn't stand it, he jumped up and caught Duff's shoulders and
shook him.

Shut up, God damn you, shut up, he shouted at him.

Duff was panting, his lips were parted and quivering.  He touched them
with the tips of his fingers as though to stop them.  I'm sorry, laddie,
I didn't mean to let go like that.  Sean dropped his hands from Duffs
shoulders, Both of us are too damned edgy, he said.  It's going to be A
right, you wait and see.  Yes, it will be all right.  Duff ran his
fingers through his hair, combing it back from his eyes.  Open another
bottle, laddie.  That night after Sean had gone to bed, Duff had his
dream again.  The wine he had drunk slowed him down and prevented him
from waking.  He was trapped in his fancy, struggling to escape into
wakefulness but only reaching the surface before he sank back to dream
that dream again.

Sean went up to Duffs shelter the next morning early.

Although the night's coolness still lingered under the spreading
branches of the wild figs the rising day promised to blow dry and burn
hot.  The animals could sense it.  The trek oxen were clustered among
the trees and a small herd of eland was moving from the waterhole, The
bull, with his short thick horns and the dark tuft on his forehead, was
leading his cows away to find shAde.  Sean stood in the doorway of the
hut and waited while his eyes adjusted themselves to its gloom.  Duff
was awake.  Get out of bed or you'll have bed sores to add to your
happiness.

Duff swung his feet off the litter and groaned.

What did you put in that wine last night?  He massaged his temples
gently.  I've got a hundred hobgoblins doing a Cossack dance around the
roof of my skull Sean felt the first twinge of alarm.  He put his hand
on Duff's shoulder feeling for the heat of fever, but Duff was quite
cool.  He relaxed.  Breakfast's ready, said Sean.  Duff played with his
porridge and barely tasted the grilled eland liver.  He kept screwing
his eyes up against the glare of the sun and when they had finished
their coffee he pushed back his chair.  I'm going to take my tender head
to bedAR right.

Sean stood up as well.  We're a bit short of meat.  I'll go and see if I
can get a buck.  No, stay and talk to me, Duff said quickly.  We can
have a few hands of cards.  They hadn't played in days and Sean agreed
readily.  He sat on the end of Duff's bed and within half an hour he had
won thirty-two pounds from him.  You must let me teach you this game
sometime, he gloated.

Petulantly, Duff threw his hand in.  I don't feel like playing any more.
He pressed his fingers to his closed eyelids.  I can't concentrate with
this headache.  Do you want to sleep?  Sean gathered up the cards and
put them in their box.  No.  Why don't you read to me?

Duff picked up a leather-bound copy of Bleak House from the table beside
the bed and tossed it into Sean's lap.

Where shall I start!  Sean asked.  It doesn't matter, I know it almost
by heart.  Duff lay back and closed his eyes.  Start anywhere.  Sean
read aloud.  He stumbled on for half an hour with his tongue never quite
catching the rhythm of the words.

Once or twice he glanced up at Duff, but Duff lay still with a faint
sheen of sweat on his face and the scars very noticeable.  He was
breathing easily.  Dickens is a powerful sleeping-draught for a hot
morning and Sean's eyelids sagged down and his voice slowed and finally
stopped.

The book slid off his lap.

The small tinkle of Duff's chain disturbed him; he awoke and looked at
the bed.  Duff crouched apelike.  The madness was a fire in his eyes and
his cheeks twitched.

A yellowish froth coated his teeth and formed a thin line of scum along
his lips.  Duff, Sean said, and Duff lunged at him with fingers hooked
and a noise in his throat that was not human nor yet animal.  It was a
sound that jellied Sean's stomach and took the strength from his legs.
Don't!  screamed Sean, and the chain caught on one of the posts of the
bed, jerking Duff back sprawling onto the bed before he could sink his
teeth into Sean's paralysed body.

Sean ran.  He ran out of the hut and into the bush.  He ran with terror
trembling in his legs and choking his breath.  He ran with his heart
taking its beat from his racing feet and his lungs pumping in disordered
panic.  A branch ripped across his cheek and the sting of it served to
steady him.  His feet slowed, he stopped and stood gasping, staring back
towards the camp.  He waited while his body settled and he forced his
terror down until it was only a sickening sensation in his stomach. Then
he circled through the Thorn bush and approached the laager from the
side farthest away from Duff's shelter.  The camp was empty, the
servants had fled in the same terror that had driven Sean.  He
remembered that his rifle was still in the hut beside Duff's bed.  He
slipped into his wagon and quickly opened the case of unused rifles. His
hands were unsteady again as he fumbled with the locks, for the chain
might have parted and at every second he expected to hear that inhuman
sound behind him.  He found his bandolier hanging on the end of his cot
and he took cartridges from it.

He loaded the rifle and cocked it.  The weight of steel and wood in his
hands gave him comfort.

It made him a man again.

He jumped down out of the wagon and with the rifle held ready he went
cautiously out of the circle of wagons.

The chain had held.  Duff stood in the shade of the wild fig plucking at
it.  He was making a sound like a new-born puppy.  His back was turned
to Sean and he was naked, his torn clothing scattered about him.  Sean
walked slowly

towards him.  He stopped outside the reach of the chain.

Duffi Sean called uncertainly.  Duff spun and crouched, the froth was
thick in his golden beard; he looked at Sean and his teeth bared.  Then
he charged screaming until the chain caught him and threw him onto his
back once more.  He scrambled to his feet and fought the chain, his eyes
fastened hungrily on Sean.  Sean backed away.  He brought up the rifle
and aimed between Duff's eyes.

Swear to me.  Swear to me you won't bring the rifle to me.

Sean's aim wavered.  He kept moving backwards.  Duff was bleeding now.
The steel links had smeared the skin off his hips, but still he pulled
against them fighting to get at Sean, and Sean was shackled just as
effectively by his promise.  He could not end it.  He lowered the rifle
and watched in impotent pity.

Mbejane came to him at last.

Come away, Nkosi.  If you will not end it, come away.

He no longer has need of you.  The sight of you inflames him.

Duff still struggled and screamed against his chain.

From his torn waist the blood trickled down and clung in the hair of his
legs with the stickiness of molten chocolate.  With each jerk of his
head the froth sprayed from his mouth and splattered his chest and arms.

Mbejane led Sean back into the laager.  The other servants were there
and Sean roused himself to give orders.  I want everyone away from here.
Take blankets and food, go camp on the far side of the water.  I will
send for you when it is over.  He waited until they had gathered their
belongings and as they were leaving he called Mbejane back.  What must I
do?  he asked.  If a horse breaks a leg? Mbejane answered him with a
question.  I gave him my word, Sean shook his head desperately, still
facing towards the sound of Duff's raving.  Only a rogue and a brave man
can break an oath, Mbejane answered simply.  We will wait for you.  He
turned and followed the others.  When they were gone Sean hid in one of
the wagons and through a tear in the canvas he watched Duff. He saw the
idiotic shaking of his head, the curious shambling gait as he moved
around the circle of the chain.  He watched when the pain made him roll
on the ground and claw at his head, tearing out tufts of hair and
leaving long scratches down his face.  He listened to the sounds of
insanity: the bewildered bellows of pain, the senseless giggling and
that growl, that terrible growl.

A dozen times he sighted along the rifle barrel, holding his aim until
the sweat ran into his eyes and blurred them and he had to take the butt
from his shoulder and turn away.

Out there on the end of the chain, its exposed flesh reddening in the
sun a piece of Sean was dying.  Some of his youth, some of his laughter,
some of his carefree love of life, so he had to creep back to the hole
in the canvas and watch.

The sun reached its peak and started down again and the thing on the
chain grew weaker.  It fell and was a long time crawling on its hands
and knees before it regained its feet again.

An hour before sunset Duff had his first convulsion.  He was standing
facing Sean's wagon, swinging his head from side to side, his mouth
working silently.  The convulsion took him and he stiffened; his lips
pulled up grinning, showing his teeth, his eyes rolled back and
disappeared leaving only the whites, and his body started to bend
backwards.  That beautiful body, still slim as a boy's with the long
moulded legs, bending tighter and tighter until with a brittle crack the
spine snapped and he fell.  He lay wriggling, moaning softly and his
trunk was twisted at an impossible angle from the broken spine.

Sean jumped from the wagon and ran to him: standing over him he shot
Duff in the head and turned away.  He flung his rifle from him and heard
it clatter on the hard earth.  He walked back to his wagon and took a
blanket off Duff's cot.  He came back and wrapped Duff in it, averting
his eyes from the mutilated head.  He carried him to the shelter and
laid him on the bed.  The blood soaked through the blanket, spreading on
the cloth, like ink spilled on blotting-paper.  Sean sank down on the
chair beside the bed.

Outside the darkness gathered and became complete.

Once in the night a hyena came and snuffled at the blood outside on the
earth, then it moved away.  There was a pride of lions hunting in the
bush beyond the waterhole; they killed two hours before dawn and Sean
sat in the darkness and listened to their jubilant roaring.

in the morning, Sean stood up stiffly from his chair and went down to
the wagons.  Mbejane was waiting beside the fire in the laager.

Where are the others?  Sean asked.

Mbejane stood up.  They wait where you sent them.  I came alone, knowing
you would need me.  Yes, said Sean.  Get two axes from the wagon.  They
gathered wood, a mountain of dry wood, and packed it around Duff's bed,
then Sean put fire to it.

Mbejane saddled a horse for Sean and he mounted up and looked down at
the Zulu.  Bring the wagons on to the next waterhole.  I will meet you
there.  Sean rode out of the laager.  He looked back only once and saw
that the breeze had spread the smoke from the pyre in a mile long smudge
across the tops of the thorn trees.

Like a bag of pus at the root of an infected tooth the guilt and grief
rotted in Sean's mind.  His guilt was doubleedged.  He had betrayed
Duff's trust, and he had lacked the courage to make the betrayal
worthwhile.  He had waited too long.  He should have done it at the
beginning, cleanly and quickly, or he should not have done it at all.

He longed with every fibre of his body to be given the chance to do it
again, but this time the right way.  He would gladly have lived once
more through all that horror to clear his conscience and clean the stain
from the memory of their friendship.

His grief was a thing of emptiness, an aching void, so that he was lost
in it.  Where before there had been Duff's laughter, his twisted grin
and his infectious zest there was now only a grey nothingness.  No
glimmer of sun penetrated it and there were no solid shapes in it.

The next waterhole was shallow soup in the centre of a flat expanse of
dry mud the size of a polo field.  The mud was cracked in an irregular
chequered pattern forming small brickettes, each the size of a hand.  A
man could have jumped across the water without wetting his feet.

Scattered thickly round its circumference were the droppings of the
animals that had drunk there.  Back and forth across its surface,
changing direction as the wind veered, a few loose feathers sailed.  The
water was brackish and dirty.  It was a bad camp.  On the third day
Mbejane went to Sean's wagon.  Sean lay in his cot.  He had not changed
his clothes since leaving Duff.  His beard was beginning, , to mat,
sticky with sweat for it was hot as an oven under the wagon canvas.

Nkosi, will you come and look at the water.  I do not think we should
stay here What is wrong with it?  Sean asked without interest.  It is
dirty, I think we should go on towards the big river.  Do whatever you
think is right.  Sean rolled away from him, his face towards the side of
the wagon.

So Mbejane took the wagon-train down towards the Limpopo.  It was two
days later that they found the ribbon of dark green trees that lined the
banks.  Sean stayed in his cot throughout the trek, jolting over the
rough ground, sweating in the heat but oblivious to all discomfort.

Mbejane put the wagons into laager on the bank above the river-bed, then
he and all the other servants waited for Sean to come to life again.
Their talk round the fire at nights was baited with worry and they
looked often towards Sean's living wagon, where it stood unlit by
lantem, dark as the mood of the man that lay within.

Like a bear coming out of its cave at the end of winter, Sean came out
of the wagon at last.  His clothes were filthy.  The dogs hurried to
meet him, crowding round his knees, begging for attention and he did not
notice them.

Vaguely he answered the greetings of his servants.  He wandered down the
bank into the river bed.

The summer had shrunk the Limpopo into a sparse line of pools strung out
down the centre of the watercourse.

The pools were dark olive green.  The sand around them was white,
glaring snowfield white, and the boulders that choked the barely moving
river were black and polished smooth.  The banks were steep, half a mile
apart and walled in with trees.  Sean walked through the sand, sinking
to his ankles with each step.  He reached the water and sat down at the
edge, he dabbled his hand in it and found it warm.  as blood.  In the
sand next to him was the long slither mark of a crocodile, and a troop
of monkeys were shaking the branches of a tree on the far bank and
chattering at him.  A pair of Sean's dogs splashed across the narrow
neck between two Pools and went off to chase the monkeys.  They went
halfheartedly with their tongues flapping at the corners of their mouths
for it was very hot in the whiteness of the river-bed.  Sean stared into
the green water.  It was lonely without Duff; he had only his guilt and
his sorrow for company.  One of the dogs that had stayed with him
touched his cheek with its cold nose.

Sean put his arm round its neck and the dog leaned against him.  He
heard footsteps in the sand behind him, he turned and looked up.  It was
Mbejane.  Nkosi, Hlubi has found elephant not an hour's march up stream.
He has counted twenty show good ivory.

Sean looked back at the water.  Go away, he said.

Mbejane squatted down beside him with his elbows on his knees.  For whom
do you mourn?  he asked.  Go away, Mbejane, leave me alone.  Nkosi Duff
does not need your sorrow, therefore I think that you mourn for yourself
Mhejane picked up a pebble and tossed it into the pool.  When a
traveller gets a Thorn in his foot, Mbejane went on softly, and he is
wise he plucks it out, and he is a fool who leaves it and says "I will
keep this thorn to prick me so that I will always remember the road upon
which I have travelled.  " Nkosi, it is better to remember with pleasure
than with pain.  Mbejane lobbed another pebble into the pool, then he
stood up and walked back to the camp.  When Sean followed him ten
minutes later he found a saddle on his horse, his rifle in the scabbard
and Mbejane and Hlubi waiting with their spears.  Kandhla handed him his
hat, he held it by the brim, turning it in his hands.  Then he clapped
it onto his head and swung up onto the horse.

Lead, he ordered.

During the next weeks Sean hunted with a single-mindedness that left no
time for brooding.  His returns to the wagons were short and
intermittent; his only reasons for returning at all were to bring in the
ivory and change his horse.  At the end of one of these brief visits to
camp and as Sean was about to mount up for another hunt, even Mbejane
complained.  Nkosi, there are better ways to die than working too hard.
You look well enough, Sean assured him, although Mbejane was now as lean
as a greyhound and his skin shone like washed anthracite.  Perhaps all
men look healthy to a man on horseback, Mbejane suggested Sean stoppe
with one foot in the stirrup. He looked at Mbejane thoughtfully, then he
lowered his leg again.  We hunt on foot now, Mbejane, and the first to
ask for mercy earns the right to be called woman" by the other.  Mbejane
grinned; the challenge was to his liking.  They crossed the river and
found spoor before midday, a small herd of young bulls.  They followed
it until nightfall and slept huddled together under one blanket, then
they went on again next morning.  on the third day they lost the spoor
in rocky ground and they cast back towards the river.  They picked up
another herd within ten miles of the wagons, went after them and killed
that evening three fine bulls, not a tusk between them under fifty
pounds weight.  A night march back to the wagons, four hours sleep and
they were away again.  Sean was limping a little now and on the second
day out, during one of their infrequent halts, he pulled off his boot.
The blister on his heel had burst and his sock was stiff with dried
blood.

Mbejane looked at him expressionlessly.  How far are we from the wagons?
asked Sean.  We can be back before dark, Nkosi. Mbenjane carried Sean's
rifle for him on the return.  Not once did his mask of solemnity slip.
Back in camp Kandhla brought a basin of hot water and set it in front of
Sean's chair.  While Sean soaked his feet in it his entire following
squatted in a circle about him.  Every face wore an expression of
studied concern and the silence was broken only by the clucking sounds
of Bantu sympathy.  They were loving every minute of it and Mbejane with
the timing of a natural act or was building up the effect, playing to
his audience.

Sean puffed at a cheroot, scowling to stop himself laughing.  Mbejane
cleared his throat and spat into the fire.

Every eye was on him; they waited breathlessly.  Nkosi, said Mbejane, I
would set fifty head of oxen as your marriage price, if you were my
daughter.

One instant more of silence, then a shout of laughter.

Sean laughed with them at first, but after a while when Hlubi had nearly
staggered into the fire and Nonga was sobbing loudly on Mbejaae's
shoulder with tears of mirth streaming down his cheeks, Sean's own
laughter stopped.

It wasn't that funny.

He looked at them sourly, at their wide open pink mouths and their white
teeth, at their shaking shoulders and heaving chests and suddenly it
came to him very clearly that they were no longer laughing at him.  They
were laughing for the joy of it.  They were laughing because they were
alive.  A chuckle rattled up Sean's throat and escaped before he could
stop it, another one bounced around inside his chest and he lay back in
his chair, opened his mouth and let it come.  The hell with it, he was
alive, too.

In the morning when he climbed out of his wagon and limped across to see
what Kandhla was cooking for breakfast, there was a faint excitement in
him again, the excitement of a new day.  He felt good.  Duff's memory
was still with him, it always would be, but now it was not a sickening
ache.  He had plucked out the thorn.

They moved camp three times in November, keeping to the south bank of
the river, following it back towards the west.  Slowly the wagons which
they had emptied of ivory beside the waterhole began to fill again, for
the game was concentrated along the river.  The rest of the land was dry
but now each day there was promise of relief.

The clouds that had been scattered across the sky began to crowd
together, gathering into rounded dark-edged masses or rearing proudly
into thunderheads.  All of nature seemed impressed by their growing
importance.  In the evening the sun dressed them in royal purple and
during the day the whirlwinds did dervish dances for their
entertainment.  The rains were coming.  Sean had to make a decision,
cross the Limpopo and cut himself off from the south when the river
flooded, or stay where he was and leave the land beyond undisturbed.  It
wasn't a difficult decision.

They found a place where the banks flattened out a little on both sides
of the river.  They unloaded the first wagon and double-teamed it; then
with everybody shouting encouragement the oxen galloped down the steep
slope into the river-bed.  The wagon bounced behind them until it hit
the sand where it came to a halt, tilted at an abandoned angle, with its
wheels sunk axledeep into the sand.

onto the spokes, shouted Sean.  They flung themselves on the wheels and
strained to keep them turning, but half the oxen were down on their
knees, powerless in the loose footing.

Damn it to hell.  Sean glared at the wagon.  Outspan the oxen and take
them back.  Get out the axes.  It took them three days to lay a bridge
of corduroyed branches across the river and another two to get all the
wagons and ivory to the far bank.  Sean declared a holiday when the last
wagon was manhandled into the laager and the whole camp slept late the
next morning.  The sun was high by the time Sean descended from his
wagon.  He was still muzzy and a little liverish from lying abed.  He
yawned wide and stretched like a crucifix.  He ran his tongue round his
mouth and gtimaced at the taste, then he scratched his chest and the
hair rasped under his fingers.  Kandhla, where's the coffee?  Don't you
care that I am near dead from thirst? Nkosi, the water will boil very
soon.  Sean grunted and walked across to where Mbejane squatted with the
other servants by the fire watching Kandhla.  This is a good camp,
Mbejane.  Sean looked up at the roof of leaves above them. It was a
place of green shade, cool in the late morning heat.  Christmas beetles
were squealing in the wide stretched branches.  There is good grazing
for the cattle, Mbejane agreed;

he stretched out his hand towards Sean.  I found this in the grass,
someone else has camped here.  Sean took it from him and examined it, a
piece of broken china with a blue fig-leaf pattern.  It was a shock to
Sean, that little fragment of civilization in the wilderness; he turned
it in his fingers and Mbejane went on.  There are the ashes of an old
fire there against the shurna tree and I found the ruts where wagons
climbed the bank at the same place as ours.  How long ago?  Mbejane
shrugged.  A year perhaps.  Grass has grown in the wagon tracks.  Sean
sat down in his chair, he felt disturbed.  He thought about it and
grinned as he realized he was jealous; there were strangers here in the
land he was coming to regard as his own, those year-old tracks gave him
a feeling of being in a crowd.  Also there was the opposite feeling,
that of longing for the company of his own kind.  The sneaking desire to
see a white face again.  It was strange that he could resent something
and yet wish for it simultaneously.  Kandhla, am I to have coffee now or
at supper tonight?  Nkosi, it is done.  Kandhla poured a little brown
sugar into the mug stirred it with a stick and handed it to him.

Sean held the mug in both hands, blowing to cool it, then sipping and
sighing with each mouthful.  The talk of his Zulus passed back and forth
about the circle and the snuff -boxes followed it, each remark of worth
greeted with a solemn chorus of It is true, it is true, and the taking
of snuff.  Small arguments jumped up and fell back again into the
leisurely stream of conversation.  Sean listened to them, occasionally
joining in or contributing a story until his stomach told him it was
time to eat.  Kandhla started to cook, under the critical supervision
and with the helpful suggestions of those whom idleness had made
garrulous.  He had almost succeeded in grilling the carcass of a
guinea-fowl to the satisfaction of the entire company, although Mbejane
felt that he should have added a pinch more salt, when Nonga sitting
across the fire from him jumped to his feet and pointed out towards the
north.  Sean shaded his eyes and looked.

For Chrissake, said Sean.

Ah!  ah!  ah!  said his servants.

A white man rode towards them through the trees; he cantered with long
stirrups, slouched comfortably, close enough already for Sean to make
out the great ginger beard that masked the bottom half of his face.  He
was a big man; the sleeves of his shirt rolled high around thick arms.

Hello, shouted Sean and went eagerly to meet him.

The rider reined in at the edge of the laager.  He climbed stiffly out
of the saddle and grabbed Sean's outstretched hand.  Sean felt his
finger-bones creak in the grip.  Hello, man!  How goes it?  He spoke in
Afrikaans.  His voice matched the size of his body and his eyes were on
a level with Sean's.  They pumped each other's arms mercilessly,
laughing, putting sincerity into the usual inanities of greeting.
Kandhla, get out the brandy bottle, Sean called over his shoulder, then
to the Boer, Come in, you're just in time for lunch. We'll have a dram
to celebrate.  Hell, it's good to see a white man again!  You're on your
own, then?  Yes, come in, man, sit down.

Sean poured drinks and the Boer took one up.

What's your name?  he asked.  Courtney, Sean Courtney.  I'm Jan Paulus
Leroux, glad to meet you, meneer.

Good health, meneer, Sean answered him and they drank.  Jan Paulus wiped
his whiskers on the palm of his hand and breathed out heavily, blowing
the taste of the brandy back into his mouth.  That was good, he said and
held out his mug.  They talked excitedly, tongues loose from loneliness,
trying to say everything and ask all the questions at once, meetings in
the bush are always like this.  Meanwhile the tide was going out in the
bottle and the level dropped quickly, Tell me, where are your wagons?
Sean asked.  An hour or two behind.  I came ahead to find the river. How
many in your party?  Sean watched his face, talking just for the sound
of it.

Ma and Pa, my little sister and my wife, which reminds me, you had
better move your wagons.  What?  Sean looked puzzled.

This is my outspan place, the Boer explained to him.

See, there are the marks of my fire, this is my camp.

The smile went out of Sean's voice.  Look around you, Boer, there is the
whole of Africa.  Take your pick, anywhere except where I am sitting.
But this is my place.  Jan Paulus flushed a little.  I always camp at
the same place when I return along a spoor.

The whole temper of their meeting had changed in a few seconds.  Jan
Paulus stood abruptly and went to his horse.  He stooped and tightened
the girth, hauling so savagely on the strap that the animal staggered
off balance.

He flung himself onto its back and looked down at Sean.

move your wagons he said, I camp here tonight.  Would you like to bet on
that!  Sean asked grimly.

We'll see!  Jan Paulus flashed back.

We certainly shall, agreed Sean.

The Boer wheeled his horse and rode away.  Sean watched his back
disappear among the trees and only then did he let his anger slip.  He
rampaged through the laager working himself into a fury, pacing out
frustrated circles, stopping now and then to glare out in the direction
from which the Boer's wagons would come, but under all the external
signs of indignation was his unholy anticipation of a fight.  Kandhla
brought him food, hurrying along behind him with the plate.  Sean waved
him away impatiently and continued his pugnacious patrol.  At last a
trek whip popped in the distance and an ox lowed faintly, to be answered
immediately by Sean's cattle.  The dogs started barking and Sean crossed
to one of the wagons on the north side of the laager and leaned against
it with assumed nonchalance.  The long line of wagons wound out of the
trees towards him.  There were bright blobs of colour on the high box
seat of the lead wagon.

Women's dresses!  Ordinarily they would have made Sean's nostrils flare
like those of a stud stallion, but now his whole attention was
concentrated on the larger of the two outriders.  Ian Paulus cantered
ahead of his father, and Sean, with his fists clenched into bony hammers
at his sides, watched him come.  Jan Paulus sat straight in the saddle;
he stopped his horse a dozen paces from Sean and shoved his hat onto the
back of his head with a thumb as thick and as brown as a fried sausage;
he tickled his horse a little with his spurs to make it dance and he
asked with mock surprise, What, Rooi Nek, still here?

Sean's dogs had rushed forward to meet the other pack and now they
milled about in a restrained frenzy of mutual bottom-smelling,
stiff-limbed with tension, backs abristle and legs cocking in the formal
act of urination.  Why don't you go and climb a tree?  You'll feel more
at home there, Sean suggested mildly.  Oh!  so?  Jan Paulus reared in
his stirrups.  He kicked loose his right foot, swung it back over his
horse's rump to dismount and Sean jumped at him.  The horse skittered
nervously, throwing the Boer off balance and he clutched at the saddle.
Sean reached up, took a double handful of his ginger beard and leaned
back on it with all his weight.

Jan Paulus came over backwards with his arms windmilling, his foot
caught in the stirrup and he hung suspended like a hammock, held at one
end to the plunging horse and at the other by his chin to Sean's hands.
Sean dug his heels in, revelling in the Boer's bellows.

Galvanized into action by Sean's example, the dogs cut short the
ceremony and went at each other in a snarling snapping shambles; the fur
flew like sand in a Kalahari dust-storm.

The stirrup-leather snapped; Sean fell backwards and rolled to his feet
just in time to meet Ian Paulus's charge.

He smothered the punch that the Boer bowled overarm at him, but the
power behind it shocked him; then they were chest to chest and Sean felt
his own strength matched.  They strained silently with their beards
touching and their eyes inches apart.  Sean shifted his weight quickly
and tried for a fall, but smoothly as a dancer Jan Paulus met and held
him.  Then it was his turn; he twisted in Sean's arms and Sean sobbed
with the effort required to stop him.  Oupa Leroux joined in by driving
his horse at them, scattering the dogs, his hippo-hide sjambok hissing
as he swung it.  Let it stand!  you thunders, give over, hey!  Enough,
let it stand! Sean shouted with pain as the lash cut across his back and
at the next stroke Jan Paulus howled as loudly.  They let go of each
other and massaging their whip-weals retreated before the skinny old
white-beard on the horse.

The first of the wagons had come up now and two hundred pounds of woman,
all in one package, called out from the box seat, Why did you stop them,
Oupa?  No sense in letting them kill each other.  Shame on you, so you
must spoil the boys fun.  Don't you remember how you loved to fight?  Or
are you now so old you forget the pleasures of your youth?  Leave them
alone!

Oupa.  hesitated, swinging the sjamhok and looking from Sean to Jan
Paulus.  Come away from there, you old busybody, his wife ordered him.
She was solid as a granite kopje, her blouse packed full of bosom and
her bare arms brown and thick as a man's.  The wide brim of her bonnet
shaded her face but Sean could see it was pink and pudding-shaped, the
kind of face that smiles more easily than it frowns. There were two
girls on the seat beside her but there was no time to look at them. Oupa
had pulled his horse out of the way and Jan Paulus was moving down on
him.  Sean went up on his toes, crouching a little, preoccupied with the
taste he had just had of the other's strength, watching Jan Paulus close
in for the mAin course and not too certain he was going to be able to
chew this mouthful.

Jan Paulus tested Sean with a long right-hander but Sean rolled his head
with it and the thick pad of his beard cushioned the blow; he hooked Jan
Paulus in the ribs under.  his raised arm and Jan Paulus grunted and
circled awayForgetting his scruples, Oupa Leroux watched them with
rising delight.  It was going to be a good fight.  They were well
matched, both big men, under thirty, quick and smooth on their feet.
Both had fought before and that often; you could tell it by the way they
felt each other out turning just out of reach, moving in to offer an
opening that a less experienced man might have attempted and regretted,
then dropping back.

The fluid, almost leisurely pattern of movement exploded.  Jan Paulus
jumped in, moving left, changed direction like the recoil of a whip lash
and used his right hand again; Sean ducked under it and laid himself
open to Jan Paulus's left.  He staggered back from its kick, bleeding
where it had split the flesh across his cheek-bone, and Jan Paulus
followed him eagerly, Ins hands held ready, searching for the opening.
Sean kept clear, instinct moving his feet until the blackness faded
inside his head and he felt the strength in his arms again.  He saw Jan
Paulus following him and he let his legs stay rubbery; he dropped his
hands and waited for Jan Paulus to commit himself.  Too late Jan Paulus
caught the cunning in Sean's eyes and tried to break from the trap, but
clenched bone raked his face.  He staggered away and now he was bleeding
also.

They fought through the wagons with the advantage changing hands a dozen
times.  They came together and used their heads and their knees, they
broke and used their fists again.  Then locked chest to chest once more
they rolled down the steep bank into the river bed of the Limpopo.  They
fought in the soft sand and it held their legs, it filled their mouths
when they fell and clung like white icing-sugar to their hair and
beards.  They splashed into one of the pools and they fought in the
water, coughing with the agony of it in their lungs, floundering like a
pair of bull hippos, their movements slowing down until they knelt
facing each other, no longer able to rise, the water running from them
and the only sound their gasping for air.

Not sure whether the darkness was actuality or a fantasy of fatigue, for
the sun had set by the time they were finished, Sean watched Jan Paulus
starting to puke, retching with a tearing noise to bring up a small
splash of yellow bile.  Sean crawled to the edge of the pool and lay
with his face in the sand.  There were voices echoing in his ears and
the light of a lantern, the light was red filtered through the blood
that had trickled into his eyes.

His servants lifted him and he hardly felt them.  The light and the
voices faded into blackness as he slipped over the edge of
consciousness.

The sting of iodine woke him and he struggled to sit up but hands pushed
him down.  Gently, gently, the fight is over.  Sean focused his one eye
to find the voice.  The pinkness of Ouma Leroux hung over him.  Her
hands touched his face and the antiseptic stung him again.  He exclaimed
through puffed lips.  So!  just like a man OumA chuckled.  Your head
nearly knocked off without a murmur but one touch of medicine and you
cry like a baby.  Sean ran his tongue round inside his mouth; one tooth
loose but all the others miraculously present.  He started to lift his
hand to touch his closed eye but Ouma slapped it down impatiently and
went on working over him.  Glory, what a fight! She shook her head
happily.  You were good, kerel, - you were very good. Sean looked beyond
her and saw the girl.  She was standing in shadow, a silhouette against
the pale canvas.  She was holding a basin.  Ouma turned and dipped the
cloth in it, washing out the blood before she came back to his face. The
wagon rocked under her weight and the lantern that hung from the roof
swung, lighting the girl's face from the side. Sean's legs straightened
on his cot and he moved his head slightly to see her better.  Be still,
jong, Ouma commanded.  Sean looked past her at the girl at the full
serene line of her lips and the curve of her cheek.  He saw the pile of
her hair fluff up in happy disarray and then, suddenly, penitent, slide
down behind her neck, curl over her shoulder and hang to her waist in a
plait as thick as his wrist.  Katrina, do you expect me to reach right
across to the basin each time?  Stand closer, girl She stepped into the
light and looked at Sean.  Green, laughing almost bubbling green was the
colour of her eyes.  Then she dropped them to the basin.  Sean stared at
her, not wanting to miss the moment when she would look up again.

My big bear, Ouma spoke with grudging approval.

Steal our camp site, fight my son and ogle my daughter.

If you go on like this I might have to knock the thunder out of you
myself.  Glory, but you are a dangerous one!

Katrina, you had better go back to our wagons and help Henrietta see to
your brother.  Leave the basin on the chest there.  She looked at Sean
once more before she left.  There were secret shadows in the green, she
didn't have to smile with her mouth.

Sean woke to the realization that something was wrong.

He started to sit up but the pain checked him: the stiffness of bruised
muscle and the catch of half-dried scab.

He groaned and the movement hurt his lips.  Slowly he swung his legs off
the cot and roused himself to take stock of the damage.  Dark through
the hair of his chest showed a heel imprint of Jan Paulus's boot.  Sean
prodded round it gently, feeling for the give of a broken rib; then,
satisfied with that area, he went on to inspect the raw graze that
wrapped round onto his back, holding his left arm high and peering
closely at the broken skin.  He picked a bit of blanket fluff from the
scab.  He stood up, only to freeze as a torn muscle in his shoulder
knifed him.  He started to swear then softly, monotonously, and he kept
it up all through the painful business of climbing down out of the
wagon.

His entire following watched his descent, even the dogs looked worried.
Sean reached the ground and started to shout.

What the hell!

He stopped hurriedly as he felt his lips crack open again and start to
bleed.

rWhat the hell', he said again, keeping his lips still ,are you doing
standing round like a bunch of women at a beer drink, is there no work
here?  Hlubi, I thought I sent you out to look for elephant Hlubi went.
Kandhla, where's breakfast?  Mbejane, get me a basin of water and my
shaving-mirror.  Sean sat in his chair and morosely inspected his face
in the mirror.

If a herd of buffalo had stampeded across it they would have done less
damage."Nkosi, it is nothing compared to his face, Mbejane assured him.

Is he bad?  Sean looked up.I have spoken to one of his servants.  He has
not left his bed yet and he lies there, growling like a wounded lion in
a thicket; but his eyes are as tightly closed as those of a new
cub."Tell me more, Mbejane.  Say truly, was it a good fight?

Mbejane squatted down next to Sean's chair.  He was silent a moment as
he gathered his words.When the sky sends its cloud impis against the
peaks of the Drakensberg, with thunder and the spears of lightning, it
is a thing to thrill a man.  When two bull elephants fight unto death
there is no braver show in all the veld.

Is this not so?

Sean nodded, his eyes twinkling.Nkosi, hear me when I tell you these
things were as the play of little children beside this fight Sean
listened to the praises.  Mbejane was well versed lkin the oldest art of
Zululand and when he had finished he looked at Sean's face.  It was
happy.  Mbejane smiled and took a fold of paper out of his loin cloth. A
servant from the other camp brought this while you slept Sean read the
note.  It was written in a big round school- girl hand and worded in
High Dutch.  He liked that writing.

It was an invitation to dinner.  Kandhla, get out my suit and my number
one boots.  He picked up the mirror again.  There wasn't very much he
could do about his face, trim the beard, perhaps, but that was all.  He
laid the mirror down and looked up stream to where the Leroux wagons
were half hidden among the trees.

Mbejane carried a lantern in front of Sean.  They walked slowly to
enable Sean to limp with dignity.  When they reached the other laager,
Jan Paulus climbed stiffly out of his chair and nodded an equally still
greeting.  Mbejane had lied, except for a missing tooth there was little
to choose between their faces.  Oupa slapped Sean's back and pressed a
tumbler of brandy into his hand.  He was a tall roan but twenty thousand
suns had burnt away Ins flesh and left only stringy muscle, had faded
his eyes to a pale green and toughened his skin to the texture of a
turkey's neck.  His beard was yellowish-white with still a touch of
ginger round the mouth.  He asked Sean three questions without giving
him time to answer the first, then he led him to a chair.

Oupa talked, Sean listened and Jan Paulus sulked.  Oupa talked of cattle
and hunting and the land to the north.

After a few minutes Sean realized that he was not expected to take part
in the conversation: his few tentative efforts were crushed under Oupa's
verbal avalanche.

So Sean listened half to him and half to the whisper of women's voices
from the cooking fires behind the laager.

Once he heard her laugh.  He knew it was her for it was the rich sound
of the thing that he had seen in her eyes.

At last the women's business with food and pots was finished and Ouma
led the girls to where the men sat.  Sean stood up and saw that Katrina
was tall, with shoulders like a boy.  As she walked towards him the
movement pressed her skirt against her legs, they were long but her feet
were small.  Her hair was red-black and tied behind her head in an
enormous bun.  Ah, my battling bear, Ouma took Sean's arm, let me
present my daughter-in-law, Henrietta, here is the man that nearly
killed your husband.  Jan Paulus snorted from his chair and Ouma
laughed, her bosom wobbling merrily.

Henrietta was a small dark-eyed girl.  She doesn't like me, Sean guessed
instantly.  He bowed slightly and took her hand.  She pulled it away.

This is my youngest daughter, Katrina.  You met her last night.

She does like me.  Her fingers were long and squaretipped in his.

Sean risked his lips with a smile.  Without her ministrations I might
have bled to death, he said.  She smiled straight back at him but not
with her mouth.  You wear your wounds well, maneer, the blue eye has an
air of distinction.  That will be enough from you, girl Oupa spoke
sharply.  Go and sit by your mother He turned to Sean.  I was telling
you about this horse, I said to the fellow, "He's not worth five pounds
let alone fifteen, look at those hocks, thin as sticks.  So he says to
me, trying to get me away, you follow, he says, "Come and look at the
saddle.  " But I can see he's worriede, The thin cotton of the girl's
blouse could hardly contain the impatient push of her breasts, Sean
thought that he had never seen anything so wonderful.

There was a trestle-table next to the cooking fire; they went to it at
last.  Oupa said grace.  Sean watched him through his lashes.  Oupa's
beard waggled as he spoke and at one point he thumped the table to
emphasize the point he was making to the Almighty.  His amen had such an
impressive resonance that Sean had to make an effort to stop himself
applauding and Oupa fell back spent.  Amen, said ouma and ladled stew
from a pot the size of a bucket.  Henrietta added pumpkin fritters and
Katrina stacked slices of fresh meahe bread on each plate. A silence
fell on the table, spoiled only by the clank of metal on china and the
sound of Oupa breathing through his nose.  Mevrouw Leroux, I have waited
a long time to taste food like this again.  Sean mopped up the last bit
of gravy with a piece of mealie bread.  Ouma beamed.

There's plenty more, meneer.  I love to see a man eat.

Oupa used to be a great trencherman.  My father made him take me away
for he could not afford to feed him every time he came courting.  She
took Sean's plate and filled it.  You look to me like a man who can eat
I think.  I'll hold my own in most company Sean agreed.  So?  Jan Paulus
spoke for the first time.  He passed his plate to Ourna.  Fill it up,
please, Mother, tonight I am hungry-Sean's eyes narrowed, he waited
until Jan Paulus had his plate back in front of him, then he took up his
fork deliberately.  Jan Paulus did the same.  Glory, said Ourna happily.
Here we go again.  Oupa, you may have to go out and shoot a couple of
buffalo before dinner is finished tonight!  will bet one sovereign on
Jan Paulus, Oupa challenged his wife.  He is like an army of termites. I
swear that if there was nothing else he'd eat the canvas off the wagons.
All right, agreed Ouma.  I've never seen the Bear eat before, but it
seems to me he has plenty of room to put it!  Your woollen shawl against
my green bonnet that Jan Paulus gives up first, Katrina whispered to her
sister-inlaw.  When Jannie has finished the stew he'll eat the
Englishmin, Henrietta giggled.  But it's a pretty bonnet, I'll take the
wager.  Plateful for plateful, Ouma measuring out each ladle with
scrupulous fairness, they ate against each other.  The talk round the
table dwindled and halted.  More?  asked Ourna each time the plates were
clean, and each time they looked at each other and nodded.  At last the
ladle scraped the bottom of the pot.  That's the end of it, my children,
we will have to call it another draw.  The silence went on after she had
spoken.  Sean and Jan Paulus sat very still looking at their respective
plates.  )an Paulus hiccupped, his expression changed. He stood up and
went into the darkness.  Ah!  listen!  listen!  crowed Ouma.  They,
waited and then she exploded into laughter.  The ungrateful wretch, is
that what he thinks of my food?  Where's your sovereign, Oupa?  Wait,
you greedy old woman, the game's not finished yet.  He turned and stared
at Sean.  To me it looks as though your horse is nearly blown Sean
closed his eyes.  The sounds of Jan Paulus's distress came to him very
clearly. -Thank you for a, He didn't have time to finish.  He wanted to
get far away so the girl couldn't hear him.

The following morning during breakfast Sean thought about his next move.
He would write an invitation to dinner and then he would deliver it
himself.  They would for coffee and then, if he waited, have to ask him
to stay there would be a chance.  Even Oupa would have to stop talking
sometime and Ouma might relax her vigilance.

He was sure there'd be a chance to talk to the girl.  He didn't know
what he would say to her but he'd worry about that when the time came.
He climbed into the wagon and found pencil and paper in his chest.  He
went f back to the table and spread the paper in front of him.  He
chewed the end of the pencil and stared out into the bush.

Something moved against the trees.  Sean put the pencil down and stood
up.  The dogs barked then stopped as they recognized Mubi.  He was
coming at a trot, he was coming with news.  Sean waited for him.

, A big herd, Nkosi, with many showing ivory.  I sawthem drink at the
river and then go back into the bush, feeding quietly.  When?  asked
Sean to gain time.  He was searching for a plausible excuse to stay in
camp, it would have to be good to satisfy Mbejane who was already
saddling one of the horses.  Before the sun this morning, answered Hlubi
and Sean was trying to remember which was his sore shoulder, he couldn't
hunt with a sore shoulder.  Mbejane led the horse into the laager.  Sean
scratched the side of his nose and coughed.  The tracker from the other
camp follows close behind me, Nkosi, he too has seen the herd and brings
the news k I to his master. But 1, being as swift as a springbok when I
run, have outdistanced him, Hlubi ended modestly.  Is that so?  For Sean
it changed the whole problem, he couldn't leave the herd to that
red-headed Dutchman.  He ran across to the wagon and snatched his
bandolier from the foot of the cot.  His rifle was already in the
scabbard.  Are you tired, Hlubi?  Sean buckled the heavy ammunition belt
across his chest. The sweat had run in oily streaks down the Zulu's
body; his breathing was deep and quick.  No, Nkosi.  well, then, lead us
to these elephant of yours, my fleetfooted springbok.  Sean swung up
onto his horse He looked over his shoulder at the other camp.  She would
still be there when he came back.

Sean was limited to the speed of Hlubi's feet while the two Leroux had
only to gallop along the easy spoor left by Sean's party and they caught
up with him before he had gone two miles.  Good morning to you, Oupa
greeted him as he drew level and pulled his horse in to a trot.  Out for
a morning's ride, I see.  Sean made the best of it with a grin.  If we
are all to hunt then we must hunt together.  Do you agree?  Of course,
meneer.  And we must share the bag equally, one third to each man.

That is always the way.  Oupa.  nodded.  Do you agree?  Sean turned in
his -saddle towards Jan Paulus.  Jan Paulus granted.  He showed little
inclination to open his mouth since he'd lost his tooth.

They found the spoor within an hour.  The herd had wrecked a road
through the thick bush along the river.

They had stripped the bark from the saplings and left them naked and
bleeding.  They had knocked down bigger trees to reach the tender top
leaves and they had dropped their great piles of dung in the grass.

We need no trackers to follow this.  Jan Paulus had the first excitement
on him.  Sean looked at him and wondered how many elephant had died in
front of his rifle.  A thousand perhaps, and yet the excitement was on
him again now.  Tell your servants to follow us.  We'll go ahead.  We
catch them within an hour.  He smiled at Sean, gaptoothed, and Sean felt
the excitement lift the hair on his own forearms.  He smiled back.

They cantered in a rough line abreast, slack-reined to let the horses
pick their own way among the fallen trees.

The river bush thinned out as they moved north and soon they were into
parkland.  The grass brushed their stirrups and the ground beneath it
was firm and smooth.

They rode without talking, leaning forward in their saddles, looking
ahead.  The rhythmic beat of hooves was a war drum.  Sean ran his
fingers along the row of bullets strapped across his chest, then he drew
his rifle, checked the load and thrust it back into its scabbard.
There!  said Oupa and Sean saw the herd.  It was massed among a grove of
fever trees a quarter of a mile ahead.  Name of a name, Paulus whistled.
There must be two hundred at least.  Sean heard the first pig-squeal of
alarm, saw ears fan out and trunks lift.  Then the herd bunched together
and ran with their backs humped, a thin screen of dust trailing behind
them.  Paulus take the right flank.  You, meneer, in the middle and I'll
ride left, shouted Oupa.

he jammed his hat down over his ears and his horse jumped under him as
he hit it with his heels.  Like a thrown trident the three horsemen
hurled themselves at the herd.  Sean rode into the dust.  He picked an
old cow elephant from the moving mountain range in front Of him and
pressed Ins horse so close upon her that he could see the bristles in
her tail tuft and the erosion of her skin, wrinkled as an old man's
scrotum.  He touched his hand to his horse's neck and it plunged, from
full gallop to standstill in half a dozen strides.  Sean threw his feet
free of the stirrups and hit the ground, loose-kneed to ride the shock.
The cow's spine was a line of lumps beneath the grey skin, Sean broke it
with his first bullet and she dropped, sliding on her hindquarters like
a dog with worms.  His horse started to run again before he was properly
in the saddle and everything became movement and noise, dust and the
smell of burnt powder.  Chase them, coughing in the dust.  Close with
them.  Off the horse and shoot.  Wet blood on grey skin.  Slam, slam of
the rifle, its barrel hot, recoiling savagely.  Sweat in the eyes,
stinging.

Ride.  Shoot again.  Two more down, screaming, anchored by paralysed
legs.  Blood-red as a flag.  Load, cramming cartridges into the rifle.
Ride.  Chase them, shoot again and again.  The bullets striking on flesh
with a hollow sound, then up and ride again.  Ride, until the horse
could no longer keep up with them and he had to let them go.  He stood
holding his horse's head, the dust and the thirst closed his throat.  He
could not swallow.  His hands trembled in reaction.  His shoulder was
aching again.  He untied his silk scarf, wiped his face with it and blew
the mud out of his nose, then he drank from his water-bottle.  The water
tasted sweet.

The hunt had led from parkland into mopam bush.  It was very thick,
shiny green leaves hanging to the ground and pressing close around him.
The air was still and warm to breathe.  He turned back along the line of
the chase.  He found them by their squealing.  When they saw him they
tried to charge, dragging themselves towards him, using the front legs
only and groping with their dunks.  They sagged into stillness after the
head shot.  This was the bad part.  Sean worked quickly.  He could hear
the other rifles in the mopard forest around him and when he came to one
of the long clearings among the trees he saw Jan Paulus walking towards
him, leading his horse.

How many?  called Sean.  Gott, Man, I didn't count.  What a killing,
hey?  Have you got a drink for me?  I dropped my water-bottle somewhere.
Jan Paulus's rifle was in its saddle scabbard.  The reins were slung
over his shoulder and his horse followed him with its head drooping from
exhaustion.  The clearing was walled in with the dense mopani trees and
a wounded elephant broke into the open.  It was lung shot, the side of
its chest painted with froth, and when it squealed the blood sprayed in
a pink spout from the end of its trunk.

It went for Jan Paulus, streaming the black battle ensigris of its ears.
His horse reared, the reins snapped, it turned free and galloped away,
leaving jan full in the path of the charge.  Sean went up onto his
horse's back without touching stirrups.  His horse threw its head,
dancing in a tight circle, but he dragged it around and drove it to
intercept the charge.  Don't run, for God's sake, don't run!  he shouted
as he cleared his rifle from the scabbard.  Jan Paulus heard him.

He stood with his hands at his sides, his feet apart and his body
braced.  The elephant heard Sean shout also and it swung its head and
Sean saw the first hesitation in its run.  He fired, not trying to pick
his shot, hoping only to hurt it, to bring it away from Jan Paulus.  The
bullet slapped into it with the sound of a wet towel flicked against a
wall.  The elephant turned, clumsy with the weakness of its shattered
lungs.  Sean gathered his horse beneath him and wheeled it away and the
elephant followed him.

Sean fumbled as he reloaded, his hands were slippery with sweat.  One of
the brass shells slipped through his fingers, tapped against his knee
and dropped into the grass under his horse's hooves.  The elephant
gained on him.  He loosened his bed-roll from the saddle and let it
fall, they would sometimes stop to savage even a fallen hat, but not
this one.  He turned in the saddle and fired into it.  It squeled again
so close upon him that the blown blood splattered into his face.  His
horse was almost finished; he could feel its legs flopping with every
stride and they were nearly at the end of the clearing racing towards
the solid wall of green mopani.  He pushed another round into the breech
of his rifle and swung his body across the saddle.

He slid down until his feet touched the ground and he was running next
to his horse.  He let go and was flung forward, but he fought to keep
his balance, his body jarring with the force of his run.  Then, still on
his feet, he turned for his first steady shot.  The elephant was coming
in fast, almost on top of him, hanging over him like a Cliff.  Its trunk
coiled on its chest and the curves of its ivory were lifted high.

it's too close, much too close, I can't hit the brain from here.

He aimed at the hollow in its forehead just above the level of its eyes.
He fired and the elephants legs folded up; its brain burst like an
overripe tomato within the bone castle of its skull.

Sean tried to jump aside as the massive body came skidding down upon
him, but one of its legs hit him and threw him face down into the grass.
He lay there.  He felt sick, for his stomach was still full of warm oily
fear.

After a while he sat up and looked at the elephant.  one of its tusks
had snapped off flush with the lip.  Jan Paulus came, panting from his
run.  He stopped next to the elePhant and touched the wound in its
forehead, then he wiped his fingers on his shirt.  Are you all right,
man?  He took Sean's arm and helped him to his feet; then he picked up
Sean's hat and dusted it carefully before handing it to him.

in the three-sided shelter formed by the belly and outthrust legs of one
of the dead elephants they made their camp that night.  They drank
coffee together and Sean sat between the two Leroux with his back
against the rough skin of the elephants belly.  The silhouettes of the
tree against the night sky were deformed by the shapes of the vultures
that clustered in them and the darkness was ugly with the giggling of
hyena.  They had set a feast for the scavengers.  They spoke little for
they were tired, but Sean could feel the gratitude of the men who sat
beside him and before they rolled into their blankets Jan Paulus said
gruffly, Thank you, kerel.  , You might be able to do the same for me
one day.  I hope so, ja!  I hope so.  In the morning oupa said, It's
going to take us three or four days to cut out all this ivory.  He
looked up at the sky.  I don't like these clouds.  One of us had better
ride.

back to camp to fetch more men and wagons to carry the ivory.

i'll go Sean stood up quickly.  I was thinking of going myself.  But
Sean was already calling to Mbejane to saddle his horse and Oupa
couldn't really argue with him, not after yesterday.

Tell Ourna to take the wagons across the river, he acquiesced.  We don't
want to be caught on this side when the river floods.  Perhaps you
wouldn't mind helping her.  No, Sean assured him.  I don't mind at all.
His horse was still tired from the previous day's hunt and it was three
hours before he reached the river.

He tied his horse on the bank and went down to one of the pools.  He
stripped off his clothes and lowered himself into the water.  He
scrubbed himself with handfuls of the coarse sand and when he waded out
of the pool and dried on his shirt his skin was tingling.  He rode along
the bank and the temptation to gallop his horse was almost unbearable.
He laughed to himself a little.  The field's almost clear, though I
wouldn't put it past that suspicious old Dutchman to follow me He
laughed again and thought about the colour of her eyes, green as
creme-de-menthe in a crystal glass, and the shape of her bosom.  The
muscles in his legs tightened and the horse lengthened its stride in
response to the pressure of his knees.  All right, run then, Sean
encouraged it, I don't insist on it, but I would be grateful.  He went
to his own wagons first and changed his sweaty shirt for a fresh one,
his leather breeches for clean calico and his scuffed boots for soft
pohshed leather.  He scrubbed his teeth with salt and dragged a comb
through his hair and beard.  He saw in the mirror that the battle damage
to his face was fading and he winked at his image.  How can she resist
you?  He gave his mustache one more twirl, climbed out of the wagon and
was immediately aware of a most uncomfortable feeling in his stomach. He
walked towards the Leroux laager thinking about it, and he recognized it
as the same feeling he used to have when Waite Courtney called him to
the study to do penance for his boyhood sins.  That's odd, he muttered.
Why should I feel like that?

His confidence faded and he stopped.  I wonder if my breath smells, I
think I'd better go back and get some cloves He turned with relief, knew
it as cowardice and stopped again.  Get a grip on yourself.  She's only
a girl, an uneducated little Dutch girl.  You've had fifty finer women.
Name me two, he shot back at himself.

Well, there was, Oh!  for Chrissake, come on.  Resolutely he set off for
the Leroux laager again.

She was sitting in the sun within the circle of wagons.

She was leaning forward on the stool and her newlywashed hair fell
thickly over her face almost to the ground.  with each stroke of the
brush it leapt like a live thing and the sun sparkled the red lights in
it.  Sean wanted to touch it, he wanted to twist fistfuls of it round
his hands and he wanted to smell it, it would smell warm and slightly
milky like a puppy's fur.  He stepped softly towards her but before he
reached her she took the shiny mass with both hands and threw it back
over her shoulders, a startled flash of green eyes, one despairing wall,
oh, no!  not with my hair like this A swirl of skirts that sent the
stool flying and she was gone into her wagon- Sean scratched the side of
his nose and stood awkwardly.  Why are you back so soon, meneer?  she
called through the canvas.  Where are the others?  Is everything all
right!  Yes, they're both fine.  I left them and came to fetch wagons to
carry the ivory.  oh, that's good.  Sean tried to interpret the
inflection of her voice: was it good that they were fine, or good that
he had left them?  So far the indications were favourable;

her confusion at seeing him boded well.  What's wrong?  Ouma bellowed
from one of the other wagons.  It's not Oupa, don't tell me something
has happened to him?

The wagon rocked wildly and her pink face, puckered with sleep, popped
out of the opening.

Sean's reassurances were smothered by her voice.  Oh, I knew this would
happen.  I had a feeling.  I shouldn't have let him go!  Paulus, oh, Jan
Paulus, I must go to him.  Where is he?

Henrietta came running" from the cooking fire behind the wagons and then
the dogs started barking and the servants added their chatter to the
confusion.  Sean tried to shout them all down and watch Katrina emerging
from her wagon at the same time.  She had disciplined her hair now, it
had a green ribbon in it and hung down her back.

She was laughing and she helped him to quieten Ouma and Henrietta.

They brought him coffee, then they sat round him and listened to the
story of the hunt.  Sean went into detail on the rescue of Jan Paulus
and was rewarded by a softening of the dislike in Henrietta's eyes.  By
the time Sean had finished talking it was too late to start moving the
wagons across the river.  So he talked some more, it was most agreeable
to have three women as an attentive audience, and then they ate supper.

With ostentatious tact Ouma and Henrietta retired early to their
respective living wagons and left Sean and Katrina sitting by the fire.
At carefullY-spaced intervals there was a stage cough from ouma's wagon,
a reminder that they were not entirely alone.  Sean lit a cheroot and
frowned into the fire searching desperately for something intelligent to
say, but all his brain could dredge up was, Thank God, Oupa isn't here
He sneaked a glance at Katrina: she was staring into the fire as well
and she was blushing.  Instantly Sean felt his own cheeks starting to
heat up.  He opened his mouth to talk and made a squawking noise.  He
shut it again.  We can speak in English if you like, meneer.  You speak
English?  Sean's surprise brought his voice back.

I -Practise every night, I read aloud out of my books Sean grinned at
her delightedly, it was suddenly very important that she could speak his
language.  The dam, holding back all the questions that there were to
ask and all the things there were to Say, burst and the words came
pouring out over each other.  Katrina fluttered her hands when she
couldn't find the word she wanted and then lapsed back into Afrikaans.
They killed the short taut silences with a simultaneous rush of words,
then laughed together in confusion.  They sat on the edges of their
chairs and watched each other's faces as they talked.  The moon came up,
a red rain moon, and the fire faded into a puddle of ashes.  Katrina,
it's long past the time decent people were asleep.  I'm sure Meneer
Courtney is tired.  They dropped their voices to a whisper, drawing out
the last minutes.  In just one minute, girl, I'm coming out to fetch you
to bed They walked to her wagon and with each step her skirts brushed
against his leg.  She stopped with one hand on the wagon step.  She
wasn't as tall as he'd imagined, the top of her head came to his chin.
The seconds slid by as he hesitated, reluctant to touch, strangely
frightened to test the delicate thread they had spun together lest he
destroy it before it became strong.  Slowly he swayed towards her and
something surged up inside him as he saw her chin lift slightly and the
lashes fall over her eyes.  Goodnight, Meneer Courtney.  Ouma's voice
again, loud and with an edge to it.  Sean started guiltily.

, Goodnight, mevrouw.  Katrina touched his arm just above the elbow, her
fingers were warm.

gGoodn ight, meneer, I shall see you in the morning.

She rustled up the steps and slipped through the opening of the canvas.
Sean scowled at ouma's wagon.

'Thanks very much, and if there is ever anything I can do for you,
please don't hesitate to ask.  They started moving the wagons early next
morning.

There was no time to talk to Katrina in the bustle of inspanning and
working the wagons across the corduroy bridge.  Sean spent most of the
morning in the river-bed and the white sand bounced the heat up at him.
He threw off his shirt and sweated like a wrestler.  He trotted beside
Katrina's wagon when they ran it through the river-bed.

She looked once at his naked chest and arms; her cheeks darkened in the
shadow of her bonnet and she dropped her eyes and didn't look at him
again.  With only the two wagons that were going back to fetch the ivory
still on the north bank and the rest safely across, Sean could relax.

He washed in one of the pools, put on his shirt and went across to the
south bank looking forward to a long afternoon of Katrina's company.

Ouma met him.  Thank you, my bear, the girls have made you a parcel of
cold meat and a bottle of coffee to eat on your way.  Sean's face went
slack.  He had forgotten all about that stinking ivory; as far as he was
concerned Oupa and Paulus could keep the lot of it.

Don't worry about us any more now, maneer.  I know how it is with a man
who is a man.  When there's work to do everything else comes after.
Katrina put the food in his hands.  Sean looked for a sign from her.
one sign and he'd defy even Ouma.

Don't be too long, she whispered.  The thought that he might shirk work
had obviously not even occurred to her.

Sean was glad he hadn't suggested it.

It was a long ride back to the elephant.  You've taken your time,
haven't you?  Oupa greeted him with sour suspicion.  You'd better get to
work if you don't want to lose some of your share.  Taking out the tusks
was a delicate task: a slip of the axe would scar the ivory and halve
its value.  They worked in the heat with a blue haze of flies around
their faces, settling on their lips and crawling into their nostrils and
eyes.  The carcases had started to rot and the gases ballooned their
bellies and escaped in posthumous belches.

They sweated as they worked and the blood caked their arms to the
elbows, but each hour the wagons filled higher until on the third day
they loaded the last tusk.

Sean reckoned Ins share at twelve hundred pounds, the equivalent of a
satisfactory day on the Stock Exchange.

He was in a good mood on the morning that they started back to the camp,
but it deteriorated as the day wore on and they struggled with the
heavily-loaded wagons.  The rain seemed to have made up its mind at Last
and now the sky's belly hung down as heavily as that of a pregnant sow.
The clouds trapped the heat beneath them and the men panted and the oxen
complained mournfully.  At midafternoon they heard the first far
thunder.

It will be on us before we pass the river, fretted Oupa.  See if you
can't get some pace out of those oxen.

They reached Sean's camp an hour after dark and threw his share of the
ivory out of the wagons almost without stopping, then they went down to
the river and across the bridge to the south bank.  My mother will have
food ready Jan Paulus called back to Sean.  When you have washed come
across and eat with us. Sean had supper with the Leroux, but his
attempts to get Katrina by herself were neatly countered by Oupa whose
suspicions were now confirmed.  The old man played his trump card
immediately after supper and ordered Katrina to bed.  Sean could only
shrug helplessly in reply to Katrina's appealing little glance.  When
she had gone Sean went back to his own camp.  He was dizzy, with fatigue
and he fell onto his cot without bothering to undress.

The rains opened their annual offensive with a midnight broadside of
thunder.  It startled Sean to his feet before he was awake.  He pulled
open the front of the wagon and heard the wind coming.  Mbejane, get the
cattle into the laager.  Make sure all the canvas is secure.  It is done
already, Nkosi, I have lashed the wagons together so the oxen cannot
stampede and I have Then the wind whipped his voice away.

It came out of the east and it frightened the trees so they thrashed
their branches in panic; it drummed on the wagon canvas and filled the
air with dust and dry leaves.

The oxen turned restlessly within the laager.  Then came the rain:
stinging like hail, drowning the wind and turning the air to water.  It
swamped the sloping ground that could not drain It fast enough, it
blinded and it deafened.

Sean went back to his cot and listened to its fury.  it made him feel
drowsy.  He pulled the blankets up to his chin and slept.

In the morning he found his oilskins in the chest at the foot of his
cot.  They crackled as he pulled them on.  He climbed out of the wagon.
The cattle had churned the inside of the laager to calf-deep mud and
there was no chance of a fire for breakfast.  Although the rain was
still falling the noise was out of proportion to its strength.

Sean paused in his inspection of the camp; he thought about it and
suddenly he knew that it was the flood voice of the Limpopo that he
heard.  Sliding in the mud, he ran out of the laager and stood on the
bank of the river.  He stared at the mad water.  It was so thick with
mud it looked solid and it raced so fast it appeared to be standing
still.  It humped up over piles of submerged rock, guRied through the
deeps and hissed in static waves through the shallows.  The branches and
tree trunks in it whisked past so swiftly that they did little to dispel
the illusion that the river was frozen in this brown convulsion.

Reluctantly Sean lifted his eyes to the far bank.  The Leroux wagons
were gone.  Katrina, he said with the sadness of the might-have been,
then again, Katrina, with the sense of his loss melting in the flame of
his anger, and he knew that his wanting: was not just the itch that is
easily scratched and forgotten, but that it was the true ache, the one
that gets into your hands and your head and your heart as well as your
loins.  He couldn't let her go.  He ran back to his wagon and threw his
clothes onto the cot.

I'll marry her, he said and the words startled him.  He stood naked,
with an awed expression on his face.

I'll marry her!  he said again; it was an original thought and it
frightened him a little.  He took a pair of shorts out of his chest and
put his legs into them; he pulled them up and buttoned the fly.  I'll
marry her!  He grinned at his own daring. I'm damned if I won't!  He
buckled his belt on and tied a pair of veldschoen to it by their laces.
He jumped down into the mud.  The rain was cold on his bare back and he
shivered briefly.

Then he saw Mbejane coming out of one of the other wagons and he ran.
Nkosi, Nkosi, what are you doing?  Sean put his head down and ran faster
with Mbejane chasing him out onto the bank of the river.  It's madness.
.  .  let us talk about it first Mbejane shouted.  Please, Nkosi,
please.  Sean slipped in the mud and slithered down the bank.  Mbejane
jumped down after and caught him at the edge of the water, but the mud
had coated Sean's body like grease and Mbejane couldn't hold him.  Sean
twisted out of his hands and sprang far out.  He hit the water flat and
swam on his back trying to avoid the undertow.  The river swept him
away.  A wave slapped into his mouth and he doubled up to Tough,
immediately the river caught him by the heels and pulled him under the
surface.  It let him go again, just long enough to snatch air then it
stirred him in a whirlpool and sucked him under once more.  He came up
beating at the water with his arms, then it tumbled him over a cascade
and he knew by the pain in his chest that he was drowning.  He swooped
down a chute of swift water between rocks and it didn't matter anymore.
He was too tired.  Something scraped against his chest and he put out
his hand to protect himself; his fingers closed round a branch and his
head lifted out of the water.  He drank air and then he was clinging to
the branch, still alive and wanting to live.  He started kicking, edging
across the current, riding the river with his arms around the log.

One of the eddies beneath the south bank swung the log in, under the
branches of a tree.  He reached up, caught them and dragged himself out.
He knelt in the mud and water came gushing up out of him, half through
his mouth and half through his nose.  He had lost his veldschoen.  He
belched painfully looked at the river.  How fast was it moving, how long
had he been in the water?

he must be fifteen miles below the wagons.  He wiped his face with his
hand.  It was still raining.  He stood shakily and faced upstream.

it took him three hours to reach the spot opposite his wagons.  Mbejane
and the others waved in wild relief when they saw him, but their shouts
could not carry across the river.  Sean was cold now and his feet were
sore.

The tracks of the Leroux wagons were dissolving in the rain.  He
followed them and at last the pain in his feet healed as he saw the
flash of canvas in the rain mist ahead of him.  Name of a name Shouted
Jan Pall us.  How did you cross the river?  I flew, how else?  said
Sean.  Where's Katrina?  Paulus started to laugh, leaning back in the
saddle.  So that's it then, you haven't come all this way to say goodbye
to me.  Sean flushed.  All right, laughing boy.

That's enough merriment for today .  .  .  Where is she?  Oupa came
galloping back towards them.  He asked his first question when he was
fifty yards away and his fifth as he arrived.  From experience Sean knew
there was no point in trying to answer them.  He looked beyond the two
Leroux and saw her coming.  She was running back from the lead wagon,
her bonnet hanging from its ribbon around her throat and her hair
bouncing loosely with each step.  She held her skirts out of the mud,
her cheeks flushed darker than the brown of her face and her eyes were
very green.  Sean ducked under the neck of Oupa's horse and went wet,
muddy and eager to meet her.

Then the shyness stopped them and they stood paces apart.  Katrina, will
you marry me?  She went pale.  She stared at him then turned away, she
was crying and Sean felt the bottom drop out of his stomach.

No, shouted Oupa furiously.  She won't marry you.

Leave her alone, you big baboon.  You've made her cry.

Get out of here.  She's only a baby.  Get out of here.  He forced his
horse between them.  You hold your mouth, you old busybody. Ouma came
panting back to join the discussion.  %, What do you know about it
anyway?  just because she's crying doesn't mean she doesn't want him.  I
thought he was going'to let me go, sobbed Katrina, I thought he didn't
care Sean whooped and tried to dodge around Oupa's horse.  You leave her
alone, shouted Oupa desperately, manoeuvring his horse to cut Sean off.
You made her cry.  I tell you she's crying.  Katrina was-undoubtedly
crying.  She was also trying to get around Oupa's horse.

Vat haar, shouted Jan Paulus.  Get her, man, go and get her!

Ouma caught the horse by the reins and dragged it away: she was a
powerful woman.  Sean and Katrina collided and held tight.  Hey, that's
it, man, Jan Paulus jumped off his horse and pounded Sean's back from
behind.  Unable to protect himself Sean was driven forward a pace with
each blow.

Much later Oupa muttered sulkily.  She can have two wagons for her
dowry.  Three!  said Katrina.

Four!  said Ouma.  Very well, four.  Take your hands off him, girl.
Haven't you any shame?  Hastily Katrina dropped her arm from Sean's
waist.  Sean had borrowed a suit of clothing from Paulus and they were
all standing round the fire.  It had stopped raining but the low clouds
were prematurely bringing on the night.

And four of the horses, Ouma prompted her husband.  Do you want to
beggar me, woman?  Four horses, repeated Ourna.  All right, all right .
.  .  four horses.  Oupa looked at Katrina, his eyes were stricken.
She's only a baby, man she's only fifteen years.  Sixteen, said Ouma.
Nearly seventeen, said Katrina, and anyway you've promised, Pa, you
can't go back on your word now.

Oupa sighed, then he looked at Sean and his face hardened.  Paulus, get
the Bible out of my wagon.  This big baboon is going to swear an oath.

Jan Paulus put the Bible on the tailboard of the wagon.

It was thick and the cover was of black leather, dull with use.  Come
here, Oupa said to Sean.  Put your hand on the book .  .  . don't look
at me.  Look up, man, look up.  Now say after me, "I do most solemnly
swear to look after this woman", don't gobble, speak slower, "until I
can find a priest to say the proper words.  Should I fail in this then I
ask you, God, to blast me with lightning, sting me with serpents, burn
me in eternal fire -j" Oupa completed the list of atrocities, then he
grunted with satisfaction and tucked the Bible under his arm.  He won't
have a chance to do all that to you .  .  .  I'll get you first.  Sean
shared Jan Paulus's wagon that night; he wasn't in a mood for sleep and
anyway Jan Paulus snored.  It was raining again in the morning,
depressing weather for farewells.  Jan Paulus laughed, Henrietta cried
and Ouma did both.  Oupa kissed his daughter.

Be a woman like your mother, he said, then he scowled at Sean.
Remember, just you rememberV Sean and Katrina stood together and watched
the trees and the curtain of ram hide the wagon train.  Sean held
Katrina's hand.  He could feel the sadness on her; he put his arm round
her and her dress was damp and cold.  The last wagon disappeared and
they were alone in a land as vast as solitude.  Katrina shivered and
looked up at the man beside her.  He was so big and overpoweringly male;
he was a stranger.  Suddenly she was frightened.  She wanted to hear her
mother's laugh and see her brother and father riding ahead of her wagon,
the way it had always been.

oh, please, I want.  .  she pulled out from his arm.

She never finished that sentence, for she looked at his mouth and his
lips were full and burnt dark by the sun they were smiling.  Then she
looked at his eyes and her panic smoothed away.  With those eyes
watching over her she was never to feel frightened again, not until the
very end and that was a long time away.  Going into his love was like
going into a castle, a thick-walled place.  A safe place where no one
else could enter.  The first feeling of it was so strong that she could
only stand quietly and let the warmth wrap her.

That evening they outspanned Katrina's wagons back at the south bank of
the river.  It was still raining.  Sean's servants waved and signalled
to them, but the brown water bellowed down between them cutting off all
sound and hope Of passage.  Katrina oo ed at the water.  Did you really
swim that, meneer?  lSo fast that I hardly got wet.  Thank you, she
said.

Despite the rain and smoky fire Katrina served up a meal as good as one
of Ouma's.  They ate it in the shelter of the tarpaulin beside her
wagon.  The wind guttered the hurricane lamp, flogged the canvas and
blew a fine haze of rain in on them.  It was so uncomfortable that when
Sean suggested that they go into the wagon Katrina barely hesitated
before agreeing.  She sat on the edge of her cot and Sean sat on the
chest opposite her.  From an awkward start their conversation was soon
running as fast as the river outside the wagon.  My hair is still wet,
Katrina exclaimed at last.  Do you mind if I dry it while we talk?  Of
course not.  Then let me get my towel out of the chest.  They stood up
at the same time. There was very little space in the wagon.  They
touched.  They were on the cot.

The movement of his mouth on hers, the warm taste of it, the strong
pleading of his fingers at the nape of her neck and along her spine, all
these things were strangely confusing.  She responded slowly at first,
then faster with bewildered movements of her own body and little
graspings at his arms and shoulders.  She did not understand and she did
not care.  The confusion spread through her whole body and she could not
stop it, she did not want to.  She reached up and her fingers went into
his hair.  She pulled his face down on hers.  His teeth crushed her lips
sweet, exciting pain.  His hand came round from her back and enclosed a
fat round breast.  Through the thin cotton he found the erectness of her
nipple and rolled it gently between his fingers.  She reacted like a
filly feeling the whip for the first time.  One instant she lay under
the shock of his touch and then her convulsive heave caught him by
surprise.  He went backwards off the cot and his head cracked against
the wooden chest.  He sat on the floor and stared up at her, too
surprised even to rub the lump on his head.  Her face was flushed and
she pushed the hair back from her forehead with both hands.  She was
shaking her head wildly in her effort to speak through her gasping You
must go now, meneer, the servants have made a bed for you in one of the
other wagons.  Sean scrambled to his feet.  Tut, I thought.  .  . surely
we are .  .  .  well, I mean.  Keep away from me, she warned anxiously.
If you touch me again tonight, I'll .  .  .  I'll bite you. But,
Katrina, please, I can't sleep in the other wagon.

The thought appalled him.

I'll cook your food, mend your clothes .  .  .  everything!

But until you find a priest.  .  .  She didn't go on, but Sean got the
idea.  He started to argue.  It was his introduction to Boer
immovability and at last he went to find his own bed.  One of Katrina's
dogs was there before him, a threequarters-grown brindle hound.  Sean's
attempts to persuade it to leave were as ill-fated as had been his
previous arguments with its mistress.  They shared the bed.  During the
night a difference of opinion arose between them as to what constituted
a half-share of the blankets.  From it the dog earned its name, Thief.

Sean determined to show Katrina just how strongly he resented her
attitude.  He would be polite but distant.  Five minutes after they had
sat down to breakfast the next morning this demonstration of disapproval
had deteriorated to the stage where he was unable to take his eyes off
her face and he was talking so much that breakfast lasted an hour.

The rain held steady for three more days and then it stopped.  The sun
came back, as welcome as an old friend, but it was another ten days
before the river regained its sanity.  Time, rain or river meant very
little to the two of them.  They wandered out into the bush together to
pick mushrooms; they sat in camp and when Katrina was working Sean
followed her around.  Then, of course, they talked.  She listened to
him.  She laughed at the right places and gasped with wonder when she
was meant to.

She was a good listener.  As for Sean, if she had repeated the same word
over and over the sound of her voice alone would have held him
entranced.  The evenings were difficult.  Sean would start getting
restless and make excuses to touch her.  She wanted him to, but she was
frightened of the confusion that had so nearly trapped her the first
night.  So she drew up a set of rules and put them to him.  Do you
promise not to do anything more than kiss me?

Not unless you say I can, Sean agreed readily.

No.  She saw the catch in that.  You mean, I must never do anything but
kiss you even if you say I can!

She started to blush.  If I say so in the daytime, that's different .  .
.  but anything I say at night doesn't count, and if you break your
promise I'll never let you touch me again.

Katrina's rules stood unchanged by the time the river had dropped enough
for the wagons to be taken across to the north bank.  The rains were
resting, gathering their strength, but soon they would set in once more.
The river was full but no longer murderous.  Now was the time to cross.
Sean took the oxen across first, swimming them in a herd.  Holding on to
one of their tails he had a Nantucket sleigh-ride across the river and
when he reached the north bank there was a joyous welcome awaiting him.

They took six thick coils of unused rope from the stores wagon and
joined them together.  With the end of the rope round his waist Sean
made one of his horses tow him back across the river, Mbejane paying out
the line to him as he went.  Then Sean supervised Katrina's servants as
they emptied all the water barrels and lashed them to the sides of the
first wagon to serve as floats.  They ran the wagon into the water, tied
on the rope and adjusted the barrels so that the wagon floated level.
Sean signalled to Mbejane and waited until he had made the other end of
the rope fast to a tree on the north bank.  Then they pushed the wagon
into the current and watched anxious as it swung across the river like a
pendulum, the current driving it but the tree anchoring it.  It hit the
north bank a distance the exact width of the river downstream of the
tree, and Sean's party cheered as Mbejane and the other servants ran
down the bank to retrieve it.  Mbejane had a team of oxen standing ready
and they dragged it out.

Sean's horse towed him across the river again to fetch the rope.

Sean, Katrina and all her servants rode across on the last wagon.  Sean
stood behind Katrina with his arms round her waist, ostensibly to steady
her, and the servants shouted and chattered like children on a picnic.

The water piled up brown against the side of the wagon, tilting it and
making it roll, and with an exhilarating swoop they shot across the
river and crashed into the far bank.  The impact tumbled them overboard,
throwing them into the knee-deep water beside the bank.  They scrambled
ashore.  The water streamed out of Katrina's dress, her hair melted
wetly over her face; she had mud on one cheek and she was gasping with
laughter.  Her sodden petticoats clung to her legs, tripping her, and
Sean picked her up and carried her to his own laager.  His servants
shouted loud encouragement after him and Katrina shrieked genteelly to
be put down, but held tight round his neck with both arms.

Now that the rains had changed every irregularity in the land into a
waterhole and sowed new green grass where before had been dust and dry
earth, the game scattered away from the river.  Every few days Sean's
trackers came into camp to report that there were no elephant.  Sean
condoled with them and sent them out again.  He was well satisfied;
there was a new quarry now, more elusive and therefore more satisfying
than an old bull elephant with a hundred and fifty pounds of ivory on
each side of his face.  Yet to call Katrina his quarry was a lie.  She
was much more than that.

She was a new world, a place of endless mysteries and unexpected
delights, an enchanting mixture of woman and child.  She supervised the
domestic routine with deceptive lack of fuss.  With her there, suddenly
his clothes were clean and had their full complement of buttons; the
stew of boots and books and unwashed socks in his wagon vanished.  There
were fresh bread and fruit preserves on the table; Kandhia's eternal
grilled steaks gave way to a variety of dishes.  Each day she showed a
new accomplishment.  She could ride astride, though Sean had to turn his
back when she mounted and dismounted.  She cut Sean's hair and made as
good a job of it as his barber in Johannesburg.  She had a medicine
chest in her wagon from which she produced remedies for every ailing man
or beast in the company.  She handled a rifle like a man and could strip
and clean Sean's Mannlicher.  She helped him load cartridges, measuring
the charges with a practised eye.

She could discuss birth and procreation with a clinical objectivity and
a minute later blush all over when he looked at her that way.  She was
as stubborn as a mule, haughty when it suited her, serene and
inscrutable at times and at others a little girl.  She would push a
handful of grass down the back of his shirt and run for him to chase
her, giggle for rates at a secret thought, play long imaginative games
in which the dogs were her children and she talked to them and answered
for them.  Sometimes she was so naive that Sean thought she was joking
until he remembered how young she was.  She could drive him from
happiness to spitting anger and back again within the space of an hour.
But, once he had won her confidence and she knew that he would play to
the rules, she responded to his caresses with a violence that startled
them both.  Sean was completely absorbed in her.  She was the most
wonderful thing he had ever found and, best of all, he could talk to
her.  He told her about Duff.  She saw the extra cot in his wagon and
found clothing that was obviously too small for him.  She asked about it
and he told her all of it and she understood.

The days became weeks.  The cattle grew fat, their skins sleek and
tight.  Katrina planted a small vegetable garden and reaped a crop from
it.  Christmas came and Katrina baked a cake.  Sean gave her a kaross of
monkey skins that Mbejane had worked on in secret.  Katrina gave Sean
handsewn shirts, each with his initials embroidered on the top pocket,
and she relaxed the rules a fraction.

Then when the new year had begun and Sean hadn't killed an elephant in
six weeks, Mbejane headed a deputation from the gunboys.  The question
he had to ask, though tactfully disguised, was simply, Did we come here
to hunt, or what?  They broke camp and moved north again and the strain
was showing on Sean at last.  He tried to sweat it out by long days of
hunting but this didn't help for conditions were so bad that they added
to his irritability.  The grass in most places was higher than a mounted
man's head, its sharp edges cut as he passed through it.  But the grass
seeds were the worst: half an inch long and barbed like an arrow they
worked their way quickly through clothing and into the skin.  in the
humid heat the small wounds they made festered within hours.  Then there
were the flies.  Hippo-flies, greenheaded flies, sand-flies all with one
thing in common they stung.  The soft skin behind the ears was their
favourite place.  They'd creep upon him, settle so lightlyy he wouldn't
feel it, then, ping with the red-hot needle.  Always wet, sometimes with
sweat, other times with rain, Sean would close with a herd of elephant.

He would hear them moving in the long grass around him and see the white
canopy of egrets fluttering over them, but it was seldom he could get a
shot at them.  If he did he had to stand in the centre of a storm of
blundering bodies.  Often they would be following a herd, almost upon
them, when Sean would lose interest and they'd all go back to camp.  He
couldn't keep away.

He was miserable, his servants were miserable, and Katrina was happy as
a bird at daybreak.  She had a man, she was mistress of a household
which she ran with confidence and, because her senses were not yet as
seasoned as Sean's, she was physically content.  Even with Sean's strict
adherence to the rules, their evenings in her wagon would end for her
with a sigh and a shudder and she would go dreamy-eyed to bed and leave
Sean with a burning devil inside of him.  The only person Sean could
complain to was Thief.  He would he with his snout buried in Sean's
armpit, with at least his share of the blankets over him, and listen
quietly.

The Zulus could see what the trouble was but they didn't understand it.
They didn't discuss it, of course, but if one of them spread his hands
expressively or coughed in a certain way the others knew what he meant.
Mbejane came closest to actually putting it into words.  Sean had just
thrown a tantrum.  It was a matter of a lost axe and who was
responsible.  Sean lined them up and expressed

doubts as to their ancestry, present worth and future prospects , then
he stormed off to his wagon.  There was a long silence and Mubi offered
his snuff-box to Mbejane.

Mbejane took a pinch and said, It's a stupid stallion that doesn't know
how to kick down a fence!  It is true, it is true, they agreed, and
there the matter rested.

A week later they reached the Sabi river.  The mountains on the far side
were blue-grey with distance and the river was full, brown and full.

The next morning was fresh and cool from the night's rain.  The camp
smelt of wood-smoke, cattle and wild mimosa.  From one of the ostrich
eggs that Mbejane had found the day before, Katrina made an omelette the
size of a soup-plate.  it was flavoured with nutmeg and chunks .

of mushroom, yellow and rich.  Afterwards there were scones and wild
honey, coffee and a cheroot for Sean.

Are you going out today?  Katrina asked.  Uh huh.  oh!  Don't you want
me to?  You haven't stayed in camp for a week.  Don't you want me to go?

she stood up quickly and started clearing the table.  Anyway you won't
find any elephant you haven't found anything for ages.  Do you want me
to stay?  It's such a lovely day.  She signed to Kandhla to take the
plates away.

, If you want me to stay, ask me properly.  We could look for mushrooms.
Say it, said Sean.  All right then, please!

IMbejane!  Take the saddle off that horse, I won't be using him Katrina
laughed.  She ran to her wagon, skirts swirling around her legs, calling
to the dogs.  She came back with her bonnet on and a basket in her hand.
The dogs crowded round them, jumping up and barking.  Go on.  .  .  seek
up then, Sean told them and they raced ahead, circling back barking,
chasing one another.  Sean and Katrina walked holding hands.  The brim
of Katrina's bonnet kept her face in shadow, but even then her eyes when
she looked at him were bright green.  They picked the new mushrooms,
round and hard, brown and slightly sticky on top, fluted underneath
delicately as a lady's fan.

In an hour they had filled the basket and they stopped under a manda
tree.  Sean lay on his back.  Katrina broke off a blade of grass and
tickled his face with it until he caught her wrist and pulled her down
onto his chest.  The dogs watched them, sitting around them in a circle,
their tongues hangin out pink and wet.  There's a place in the Cape,
just outside Paarl.  The mountains stand over it and there's a river . .
. the water's very clear, you can see the fish lying on the bottom, said
Katrina.  Her ear was against his chest and she was listening to his
heart.  Will you buy me a farm there one day?

Yes, said Sean.  We'll build a house with a wide veranda and on Sundays
we'll drive to church with the girls and the little ones in the back and
the bigger boys riding next to the buggy.  How many will there be? asked
Sean.  He lifted the side of her bonnet and looked at her ear.  It was a
very pretty ear, in the sunlight he could see the fine fur on the lobe.
Oh lots .  .  .  boys mostly, but a few girls Ten?  suggested Sean. More
than that.  Fifteen?  Yes, fifteen.  They lay and thought about it.  To
Sean it seemed a fairly well-rounded number.  And I'll keep chickens, I
want lots of chickens Alright, said Sean.  You don't mind?  Should It?
Some people mind chickens, some people don't like them at all, said
Katrina.  I'm glad you don't mind them.

I've always wanted them.  Stealthily Sean advanced his mouth towards her
ear but she felt his move and sat up.  What are you doing?  This, I said
Sean and his arm shot out.  No, Sean, they're watching us.  She waved
her hand at the dogs.  They'll understand, said Sean and then they were
both quiet for a long time.

The dogs burst out together in full hunting chorus.

Katrina sat up and Sean turned his head and saw the leopard.  It stood
fifty yards away on the edge of the thick bush along the river bank
watching them, poised elegantly in tights of black and gold, long and
smallbellied.  It moved then, bluffing with speed, touching the ground
as lightly as a swallow touches the water when it drinks in flight.  The
dogs went after it in a pack, Thief leading them, his voice cracking
with excitement.  Back, come back, shouted Sean.  Leave it, damn you,
come back.  Stop them, Sean, go after them.  We'll lose them all.  Wait
here, Sean told her.

He ran after the sound of the pack.  Not shouting saving his wind.  He
knew what would happen and he listened for it.  He heard the tone of the
hunt change, sharper now.  Sean stopped and stood panting, peering
ahead.  The dogs were not moving.  The sound of their barking was steady
in volume.  The swine has stopped; he's going to take them He started
running again and almost immediately heard the first dog scream. He kept
running.  He found the dog lying where the leopard had flung it, the old
bitch with white ears, her stomach was stripped out.  Sean went on.

The tan ridgeback next, disemboweled, still alive and crawling to meet
him.  He ran on; always the hunt was out of sight ahead of him but he
kept after it.  He no longer stopped to help the dogs that had been
mauled.  Most of them were dead before he reached them.  The saliva
thickened in his mouth, his heart jumped against his ribs and he reeled
as he ran.

Suddenly he was in the open and the hunt was spread out before him.
There were three dogs left.  One of them was Thief.  They were circling
the leopard, belting him, darting in at his back legs, snapping, then
jumping back as the leopard spun snarling.  The grass was short and
green in the clearing.  The sun was directly overhead: it threw no
shadow, it lit everything with a flat, even lightt.

Sean tried to shout but his throat wouldn't let the sound out.  The
leopard dropped onto its back and lay with the sprawled grace of a
sleeping cat, its legs open and its belly exposed.  The dogs hung back,
hesitating.  Sean shouted again but his voice still would not carry.
That creamy yellow belly, soft and fluffy, was too much temptation.

One of the dogs went for it, dipping its head, its mouth open.  The
leopard closed on it like a spring trap.  it caught and held the dog
with its front paws and its back legs worked quickly.  The dog yammered
at the swift surgeon strokes and then it was thrown aside, its bowels
hanging out.  The leopard relaxed again to show the yellow bait of its
belly.  Sean was close now and this time the two dogs heard his shout.
The leopard heard it also.  It flashed to its feet and tried to break
but the instant it turned Thief was at it, slashing at its back legs
forcing it to swing and crouch.  Here, boy, leave him!  Here, Thief,
come here!

Thief took Sean's shout as encouragement.  He danced just out of reach
of the flicking paws, shrilly taunting the leopard.  The hunt was finely
balanced now.  Sean knew if he could get the dogs to slacken their
attack the leopard would run.  He went forward a pace, stooped to pick
up a stone to throw at Thief and his movement tipped the balance.  When
he straightened up the leopard was watching him and he felt the eel of
fear move in his stomach.  It was going to come for him.  He knew it by
the way its ears flattened against its head and its shoulders bunched
like loaded springs.  Sean dropped the stone and reached for the knife
on his belt.

The leopard's lips peeled back.  Its teeth were yellow, its head with
the ears flattened was like a snake's.  It came fast and low against the
ground, brushing the dogs aside.

its run was long-reaching, smoothly beautiful.  It snaked towards him,
fast over the short grass.  It came into the air, lifting high, very
fast and very smoothly.  Sean felt the shock and the pain together.  The
shock threw him backwards and the pain sucked the breath from his lungs.

Its claws hooked into his chest, he felt them scrape his ribs.  He held
its mouth from his face, his forearm against its throat and he smelt the
overripe grave smell of its breath.  They rolled together in the grass,
its front claws still holding in the flesh of his chest, and he felt its
back legs coming up to rake his stomach.  He twisted desperately to keep
clear of them, using his knife at the same time, slipping the blade into
its back.  The leopard screamed, its back legs came up again; he felt
the claws go into his hip and tear down his thigh.  The pain was deep
and strong and he knew he was badly hurt.  The legs came up again.  This
time they would kill him.

Thief locked his teeth in the leopard's leg before the claws could catch
in Sean's flesh, he dragged back, digging in with his front feet,
holding the leopard stretched out across Sean's body.  Sean's vision was
dissolving into blackness and bright lights.  He pushed the knife into
the leopard's back, close to the spine and pulled it down between the
ribs the way a butcher cuts a chop.  The leopard screamed again with its
body shuddering and its claws curling in Sean's flesh.  Sean cut again,
deep and long, and again, then again.  Tearing at it, mad with the pain,
its blood gushed out and mixed with his and he rolled away from it.  The
dogs were worrying it, growling.

It was dead.  Sean let the knife slip out of his hand and touched the
tears in his leg.  The blood was dark red, pouring with the thickness of
treacle, much blood.  He was looking down a funnel of darkness.  The leg
was far away, not his, not his leg.  Garry, he whispered.  Garry, oh
God!  I'm sorry. I slipped, I didn't mean it, I slipped.  The funnel
closed and there was no leg, only darkness.  Time was a liquid thing,
all the world was liquid, moving in darkness.  The sun was dark and only
the pain was steady, steady as a rock in the dark moving sea.  He saw
Katrina's face indistinct in the darkness.  He tried to tell her how
sorry he was.  He tried to tell her it was an accident, but the pain
stopped him.  She was crying.  He knew she would understand so he went
back into the dark sea. Then the surface of the sea boiled and he choked
in the heat, but always the pain was there like a rock to hold onto. The
steam from the sea coiled up around him and it hardened into the shape
of a woman and he thought it was Katrina, then he saw its head was a
leopard's head and its breath stank like the rotting of a gangrenous
leg, I don't want you, know who you are!  he shouted at it.  I don't
want you.  It's not my child, and the thing broke into steam, twisting
grey steam, and came back gibbering at him on a chain that tinkled,
frothing yellow from the grey misty mouth, and terror came with it.  He
twisted and covered his face, holding onto the pain for the pain was
real and steady.

Then after a thousand years the sea froze and he walked on it and the
white ice stretched away wherever he looked.  It was cold and lonely on
the ice.  There was a small wind, a cold small wind, the wind whispered
across the ice and its whispering was a sad sound, and Sean held his
pain, hugging it close to him for he was lonely and only the pain was
real.  Then there were other figures moving around him on the ice, dark
figures all hurrying one way, crowding him, pushing him along with them
and he lost his pain, lost it in the desperate hurrying press.

And though they had no faces, some of the figures wept and others
laughed and they hurried forward until they came to the place where the
crevasse split across the ice in front of them.  The crevasse was wide
and deep and its sides were white, then pale-green shading to blue and
at last to infinite blackness, and some of the figures threw themselves
joyfully into it it singing as they fell.  Others clung to edges, their
formless faces full of fear, and still others stepped off into the void,
tiredly, like travellers at the end of a long journey.  When Sean saw
the crevasse he began to fight, throwing himself back against the crowd
that bore him forward, carrying him to the edge of the pit, and his feet
slid over the edge.  He clawed with his fingers at the slippery edge of
the ice.  He fought and he shouted as he fought for the dark drop sucked
at his legs.

Then he lay quietly and the crevasse had closed and he was alone.  He
was tired, wasted and terribly tired.  He closed his eyes and the pain
came back to him, throbbing softly in his leg.

He opened his eyes and he saw Katrina's face.  She was pale and her eyes
were big and heavily underscored in blue.  He tried to lift his hand to
touch her face but he couldn't move.

Katrina, he said.  He saw her eyes go green with surprise and happiness.
You've come back.  Oh, thank God.  You've come back.  Sean rolled his
head and looked at the canvas of the wagon tent.

How long?  he asked.  His voice was a whisper.  Five days.  Don't talk,
please, don't talk.

Sean closed his eyes.  He was very tired so he slept.

Katrina washed him when he woke.  Mbejane helped her lift and turn him,
his big pink-palmed hands very gentle as he handled the leg.  They
washed the smell of fever off him and changed the dressings.  Sean
watched Katrina as she worked and every time she looked up they smiled
at each other.  Once he used a little of his strength to ask Mbejane,
Where were you when I needed you?  I slept in the sun, Nkosi, like -an
old woman, Mbejane half-laughed, half-apologized.  Katrina brought him
food and when he smelt it he was hungry.  He ate it all and then he
slept Mbejane built a shelter with open sides and a roof of thatch.  He
sited it in the shade on the bank of the Sabi.

Then he made a bed of poles and laced leather thongs.

They carried Sean from the wagon, Katrina fussing around them until they
had laid him in the shelter.  Katrina went back to the wagon for pillows
and when she returned she found Thief and Sean settling down
comfortably.  Sean, get that monster out of there, those blankets have
just been washed.  Thief flattened his body and hid his head in Sean's
armpit.

It's all right, he's quite clean, Sean protected him.  He smells.  He
does not.  Sean sniffed at Thief.  Well, not much anyway!  You two!  She
put the pillows under Sean's head and went round to his leg.  How does
it feel?  It's fine, said Sean.  Thief inched himself up the bed until
he reached the pillows.

In the slow slide of days Sean's body healed and the well of his
strength filled.  The moving air under the shelter dried the scabs off
his chest and leg, but there would be scars.  In the morning, after
breakfast, Sean held court from His couch.  Katrina sat on the end of
the bed and his servants squatted around him.  First they talked over
domestic matters, the health of the oxen, mentioning them by name,
discussing their eyes, hooves and stomachs.  There was a tear in the
canvas of one wagon.

The single remaining bitch was in season, was Thief fit enough for the
job yet?  There was meat to kill perhaps the Nkosikaze would take the
rifle later today.

Mubi had caught four barbel of medium size in his fish trap, and here
the talk turned to the bush around them.

A lion had killed a buffalo below the first bend in the river, there you
could see the vultures.  During the night a herd of cow elephant had
drunk a mile upstream.  Each item was considered by the meeting.
Everyone felt free to comment or argue against any view which conflicted
with his own.  When everything had been said Sean gave them their tasks
for the day and sent them away.  Then he and Katrina could be alone.

From the shelter they could see the full sweep of the river, with the
crocodiles lying on the white sandbars and the kingfishers plopping into
the shallows.  They sat close to each other and they talked of the farm
they would have.  Sean would grow grapes and breed horses and Katrina
would keep chickens.  By the next rainy season they would have filled
all the wagons; one more trip after that and they would have enough to
buy the farm.

Katrina kept him in bed long after he was strong enough to leave it. She
mothered him and he loved it.  Shamelessly, in the fashion of the male,
he accepted her attentions, and even exaggerated his injuries a little.
Finally but reluctantly Katrina let him up.  He stayed in camp a week
more, until his legs stopped wobbling, then one evening he took his
rifle and went with Mhejane to shoot fresh meat.  They went slowly, Sean
favouring his leg and he shot a young eland not far from the laager.
Sean sat against a Hisasa tree and smoked a cheroot while Mbejane went
back to fetch servants to carry the meat.  Sean watched them butcher the
carcass; there were slabs of white fat on the meat.  They slung it on
poles and carried it between them, two men to a pole, and when they got
back to camp Sean found Katrina in one of her inscrutable moods.  When
he talked to her at supper she answered him from far away and afterwards
by the fire she sat detached from him.  She was very lovely and Sean was
puzzled and a little resentful.  At last he stood up.  It's time for
bed, I'll see you to your wagon.  You go.  I'll sit a little longer.
Sean hesitated.  Is there something wrong?  Have I done something wrong?
No!  she said quickly.  No.  I'm all right.  You go to bed.

He kissed her cheek.  If you need me I'll be close.  Goodnight, sleep
sweet!

He straightened up.  Come on, Thief, he said.  Time for bed.  Leave
Thief with me, please.  Katrina caught the skin at the back of the dog's
neck and remained him.  Why?  I just feel like company.  Then I'll stay
as well, Sean moved to sit down again.  No, you go to bed.  She sounded
desperate and Sean looked hard at her.  Are you sure you're all rightV
Yes, please go.  He went to his wagon and looked back at her.  She was
sitting very straight, holding the dog.  He climbed into the wagon.  The
lamp was lit and he stopped in surprise when he saw his cot.  There were
sheets on it, not just the rough blankets.  He ran his hand over the
smooth fabric; it was crisp from new ironing.  He sat on the cot and
pulled off his boots.  He undid his shirt and threw it onto the chest,
then he lay back and looked up at the lamp.  There's something bloody
funny going on here, he said.  Sean!  her voice just outside the wagon.
Sean jumped up and opened the flap.  Can I come in?  Yes, of course.  He
gave her his hand and lifted her into the wagon.  He looked at her face.
She was frightened.

There is something wrong, he said.  No, don't touch me.  There's
something I've got to tell you.  Sit down on the cot Sean watched her
face.  He was worried.  I thought I loved you when I came away with you.
I thought -we had for ever to be together.  She swallowed painfully.
-Then I found you there in the grass, torn and dead.  Before our life
together had begun you were dead.

Sean saw the pain come back into her eyes; she was living it again.  He
put out his hand to her but she held his wrist.  No, wait.  .  .  please
let me finish.  I have to explain to you.  It's very important.  Sean
dropped his hand and she went on speaking quickly.

You were dead and I, too, was dying inside.  I felt empty.

There was nothing left.  Nothing.  .  .  just the hollowness inside and
the dry dead feeling on the outside.  I touched your face and you looked
at me.  I prayed then, Sean, and I prayed through the days when you
fought the rotting of your body!

She knelt in front of him and held him around the waist.  Now we are
alive and together again, but I know that it cannot be for ever.  A day
more, a year, if we are lucky, twenty.  But not for ever.  I see how
small I have been to us.  I want to be your wife!

He bent to her quickly but she pulled away and stood up.  She slipped
the buttons and her clothing fell away.

She loosed her hair and let it drop shiny bright down the whiteness of
her body.  Look at me, Sean, I want you to look at me. This and my love
I can give you .  .  .  is it enough?  There was smoothness, hollow and
swell, hair like black fire and soft light on soft skin.  He saw the
flush from her cheeks spread onto her breasts until they glowed, pink
and shy but proud in their perfection.  He looked no further.  He took
her to him and covered her nakedness with his big body.  She was
trembling and he put her between the sheets and gentled her with his
voice until the trembling stopped and she lay with her face pressed up
under his beard into his neck.

Show me how.  .  .  I want to give everything to you.

Please show me how, she whispered.

So they married each other and their marriage was a comingling of many
things.  There was the softness of the wind in it and wanting, the way
the baked earth wants the rain.  There was pain sharp and swift,
movement like running horses, sound low as voices in the night but glad
as a greeting, joy climbing on eagles wings, the triumphant surge and
burst of wild water on a rock shore and then there was stillness and
warmth within and the snuggling of drowsy puppies, and sleep.  Yet it
did not end in the sleep, it went on to another seeking and finding,
another union and a stranger mystery in the secret depths of her body.

all In the morning she brought her Bible to him.  Hey, hey, protested
Sean, I've already sworn one oath.  Katrina laughed at him, the memory
of the night still warm and happy inside her.  She opened the book at
its fly leaf.  You've got to write your name in it.  .  .  here, next to
mine!

She watched him, standing next to his chair with her hip touching his
shoulder.

And your date of birth, she said.

Sean wrote: Ninth Jan.  1862, .  Then he said: What's this "date of
death".  do you want me to fill that in as well?  Don't talk like that,
she said quickly and touched the wooden table.

Sean was sorry he'd said it.  He tried to cover up.

There's only space for six children!  We can write the others in the
margin.  That's what Ma did.  .  .  .  hers even go over onto the first
page of Genesis.

Do you think we'll get that far, Sean?

Sean smiled at her.  The way I feel now we should reach the New
Testament without much trouble.  They had made a good start.  By June
the rains were over and Katrina walked with her shoulders back to
balance her load.  There was a good feeling in the camp.  Katrina was
more woman than child now.  She was big and radiant, pleased with the
awe her condition inspired in Sean.

She sang to herself often and sometimes in the night she would let him
share in it.  She would let him pull the nightdress back from the mound
of her stomach and lay his ear against the tight-stretched, blue-veined
skin.  He listened to the suck and gurgle and felt the movement against
his cheek.  When he sat up his eyes would be full of the wonder of it
and she would smile proudly at him and take his head on her shoulder and
they would be together quietly.  In the daytime things were right as
well.

Sean laughed with the servants and hunted without the intensity of
before.

They moved north along the Sabi river.  Sometimes they camped for a
month at one place.  The game came back to the rivers as the veld dried
out and once more the ivory started piling up in the wagons.

One afternoon in September Sean and Katrina left the camp and walked
along the bank.  The land was brown again and smelt of dry grass.  The
river was pools and white sand.  Hell, it's hot!  Sean took off his hat
and wiped the sweat off his forehead.  You must be cooking under all
those clothes!

No, I'm all right!  Katrina was holding his arm.  Let's have a swim. You
mean with no clothes on?

Katrina looked shocked.  Yes, why notV It's rude!  Come on!  He took her
down the bank protesting every step and at a place where boulders
screened the water he prised her out of her dress.  She was laughing and
gasping and blushing all at the same time.  He carried her into the pool
and she sat down thankfully with the water up to her chin.

How's that feel?  Sean asked.

She let her hair down and it floated out round her, she wriggled her
toes in the sand and her stomach showed through the water like the back
of a white whale.  It's nice, she admitted.  It feels like silk
underwear against my skin.  Sean stood over her with only his hat on.
She looked at him.  Sit down, she said uncomfortably and looked away
from him.

Why?  he asked.  You know why!  .  .  .  you're rude, that's why!

Sean sat down beside her.  You should be used to me by now.  Well, I'm
not.

Sean put his arm round her under the water.  You're lovely, he said.
You're my fancy.

She let him kiss her ear.

fWhat's it going to be?  He touched the ripe swelling.  Boy or girl?
This was currently the favourite topic of conversation.

She was very definite.  What shall we call him?  Well, if you don't find
a predikant soon we'll have to call him the name you're always giving to
the servants.  Sean stared at her.  What do you mean?  You know what you
call them when you're cross.  Bastard, said Sean, then really concerned,
Hell, I hadn't thought of that!  We'll have to find a priest.  No child
of mine will be a bastard.  We'll have to go back to Louis Trichardt.
You've got about a month, Katrina warned him.  My God, we'll never make
it.  We've left it too late.  Sean's face was ghastly.  Wait, I've got
it.  There are Portuguese settlements across the mountains on the coast.
Oh, Sean, but they're Roman Catholics.  They all work for the same boss.
How long will it take to cross the mountains?  Katrina asked doubtfully.
I don't know.  Perhaps two weeks to reach the coast on horseback.  On
horseback!  Katrina looked still more doubtfully.  Oh hell you can't
ride!  Sean scratched the side of his nose.  I'll have to go and fetch
one.  Will you stay on your own?  I'll leave Mbejane to look after you!
Yes, I'll be all right!  won't go if you don't want me to.  It's not
that important.  It is important, you know it is.  I'll be all right,
truly I Will Before he left the next morning Sean took Mbejane aside.
You know why you're not coming with me, don't YOU?

Mbejane nodded, but Sean answered his own question.  Because there is
more important work for you to do here.  At night, said Mbejane, I will
sleep beneath the Nkosikazils.

wagon.  You'll sleep?  asked Sean threateningly.

only once in a while and then very lightly, Mbejane grinned.  That's
better, said Sean.

Sean said goodbye to Katrina.  There were no tears, she understood
necessity and helped him to a quiet acceptance of it.  They stood a long
while beside their wagon, holding each other, their lips almost touching
as they whispered together and then Sean called for his horse.

Mubi followed him leading the packhorse when he crossed the Saba and
when Sean reached the far bank he turned and looked back.  Katrina was
still standing by their wagon and behind her hovered Mbejane.  In her
bonnet and green dress she looked very young.  Sean waved his hat over
his head and then set off towards the mountains.

The forests dwindled into grassland as they climbed and each night was
colder than the last.  Then, in its turn the grassland conceded to the
sheer bluffs and misty gorges of the mountain back.  Sean and Muhi
struggled upwards, following the game trails, losing them, turning back
from impassable cliffs, scouting for a pass, leading the horses over the
steep pitches and at night sitting close to the fire and listening to
the baboons barking in the kranses around them.  Then suddenly, in the
middle of a Morning that was bright as a cut diamond, they were at the
top.  To the west the land lay spread out like a map and the distance
they had travelled in a week was pathetically small.  By straining his
eyes and his imagination Sean could make out the dark-green belt of the
Sabi watercourse.  To the east the land merged with a blueness that was
not the sky and for a while he failed to recognize it.

Then, the sea, he shouted and Hlubi laughed with him for it was a
godlike feeling to stand above the world.  They found an easier route
down the eastern slopes and followed it onto the coastal plain.  At the
bottom of the mountains they came to a native village.  To see
cultivated lands and human dwellings again was a small shock to Sean. He
had come to accept the fact that he and his retinue were the only people
left on earth.

The entire population of the village fled when they saw him.  Mothers
snatched up a child in each hand and ran as fast as their menfolk,
memories of the slave-traders still persisted in this part of Africa.
Within two minutes of his arrival Sean again had the feeling that he was
the only person left on earth.  With the contempt of the Zulu for every
other tribe in Africa, Hlubi shook his head sadly.

Monkeys, he said.

They dismounted and tied their horses under the big tree that was the
centre of the village.  They sat in the shade and waited.  The huts were
grass beehives, their roofs blackened with smoke, and a few chickens
picked and scratched at the bare earth between them.  Half an hour later
Sean saw a black face watching him from the edge of the bush and he
ignored it.  Slowly the face emerged, followed closely by a reluctant
body.  With a twig, Sean went on drawing patterns in the dust between
his feet.  Out of the corner of his eye he watched the hesitant
approach.  It was an old man with stork thin legs and one eye glazed
into a white jelly by tropical ophthalmic.

Sean concluded that his fellows had picked him to act as ambassador on
the grounds that of all their number he would be the least loss.

Sean looked up and gave him a radiant smile.  The old Man froze and then
his lips twitched into a sickly grin of relief.  Sean stood up, dusted
his hands on the sides of his breeches and went to shake the old man's
hand.  Immediately the bush around them swarmed with people, they poured
back into the village jabbering and laughing: they crowded round Sean
and felt his clothing, peered into his face and exclaimed delightedly.
It was obvious that most of them had never seen a white man before. Sean
was trying to shake off One-Eye, who still had a possessive hold on
Sean's right hand, and Hlubi leaned disdainfully against the tree,
taking no part in the welcome.  One-Eye ended the confusion by
screeching at them in a voice rusty with age.  The courage he had
displayed earlier now earned its reward.  At his command a dozen of the
younger women scampered off and came back with a carved wooden stool and
six earthenware pots of native beer.  By the hand, on which he had not
for an instant relaxed his grip, One-Eye led Sean to the stool and made
him sit; the rest of the villagers squatted in a circle round him and
one of the girls brought the biggest beer-pot to Sean.  The beer was
yellow and it bubbled sullenly, Sean's stomach shied at the sight of it.
He glanced at One-Eye who was watching him anxiously, he lifted the pot
and sipped.

Then he smiled with surprise; it was creamy and pleasantly tart.

Good, he said.

Goat, chorused the villagers.

Your health, said Sean.ealt, said the village as one man, and Sean drank
deep.  One of the girls took another beer-pot to Hlubi.  She knelt in
front of him and shyly offered it.  She had a plaited-grass suing around
her waist from which a small kil hung down in front, but her stern was
completely exposed and her bosoms were the size and shape of ripe
melons.

Mubi looked at them until the girl hung her head, then he lifted the
beer-pot.

Sean wanted a guide to the nearest Portuguese settlement.  He looked at
One-Eye and said, Town?  Portagee?  One-Eye was almost overcome by
Sean's attention.  He grabbed Sean's hand again before he could pull it
away and shook it vigorously.  Stop that, you bloody fool!  said Sean
irritably and OneEye grinned and nodded, then without releasing Sean's
hand he began an impassioned speech to the other villagers.  Sean
meanwhile was searching his memory for the name of one of the Portuguese
ports on this coast.

Nova Sofala, he shouted as he got it.

One-Eye broke off his speech abruptly and stared at Sean.Nova Sofala,
said Sean again pointing vaguely towards the east and One-Eye showed his
gums in his biggest grin yet.Nova Sofala, he agreed pointing with
authority and then it was only a matter of minutes before it was
understood between them that he would act as guide.  Mubi saddled the
horses, One-Eye fetched a grass sleeping mat and a battle-axe from one
of the huts.  Sean mounted and looked at Mubi to do the same but lubi
was acting strangely.  Yes?  Sean asked with resignation.  What is it?

INkosi Mubi was looking at the branches of the tree above them.  The Old
One could lead the packhorse.  You can take it in turns, said Sean.

Hlubi coughed and transferred his eyes to the fingernails of his left
hand.

INkosi, is it possible that you will return to this village on the way
back from the sea?  Yes, of course, said Sean, we'll have to leave the
Old One here.  Why do you ask?  I have a Thorn in my foot, Nkosi, it
gives me pain.  If you do not require me I will wait here for you.
Perhaps the thorn wound will have healed by then Mubi looked up at the
tree again and shuffled his feet with embarrassment.  Sean had not
noticed him limping and he was puzzled as to why Hlubi should start
malingering now.  Then Hlubi could not stop himself from glancing at
where the girl stood in the circle of villagers.  Her kilt was very
small and from the sides gave her no cover at all.  Understanding came
to Sean and he chuckled.The thorn you have is painful, but it's not in
your foot Mubi shuffled his feet again.  You said they were monkeys.  .
.  have you changed your mind?  Sean asked.  Nkosi, they are indeed
monkeys, Wubi sighed.

But very friendly monkeys.  Stay then .  .  .  but do not weaken
yourself too much.

We have mountains to cross on the way home.

One-Eye led the packhorse, this made him very proud.

Through tall grass, mangrove swamp and thick hot jungle, then through
white coral sand and the curving stems of palm trees, they came at last
to the sea.  Nova Sofala was a fort with brass cannon and thick walls.
The sea beyond it was muddy brown from the estuary that flowed into it.

The sentry at the gates said, Madre de Dio'when he saw Sean, and took
him to the Commandant.  The Commandant was a small man with
fever-yellowed face and a tired, sweat-darkened tunic.  The Commandant
said, Madze de Dio, and shot his chair back from his desk.  It took some
time for him to realize that contrary to appearance this dirty, bearded
giant was not dangerous.  The Commandant could speak English and Sean
laid his problem before him.

For a certainty he could be of assistance.  There were three Jesuit
missionaries in the fort, freshly arrived from Portugal and eager for
employment.  Sean could take his pick but first he must bath, eat dinner
with the Commandant and help him sample the wines that had arrived on
the same boat as the missionaries.  Sean thought that was a good idea.

At dinner he met the missionaries.  They were young men, pink-faced
still, for Africa had not yet had a chance to mark them.  All three of
them were willing to go with him and Sean selected the youngest, not for
his appearance but rather for his name.  Father Alphonso had a heroic
ring to it.  The Jesuits went early to bed and left the Commandant, the
four junior officers and Sean to the port.  They drank toasts to Queen
Victoria and her family and to the King of Portugal and his family. This
made them thirsty so they drank to absent friends, then to each other.
The Commandant and Sean swore a mutual oath of friendship and loyalty
and this made the Commandant very sad, he cried and Sean patted his
shoulder and offered to dance the Dashing White Sergeant for him, The
Commandant said that he would esteem it as a very great honour and
furthermore he would be delighted.  He himself did not know this dance
but perhaps Sean would instruct him.  They danced on the table.  The
Commandant was doing very well until in his enthusiasm he misjudged the
size of the table.

Sean helped the junior officers put him to bed and in the morning Sean,
Father Alphonso and One-Eye started back towards the mountains.

Sean was impatient of any delay now; he wanted to get back to Katrina.
Father Alphonso's English was on a par with Sean's Portuguese.  This
made conversation difficult, so Alphonso solved the problem by doing all
the talking.

At first Sean listened but when he decided that the good father was
trying to convert him he no longer bothered.

Alphonso did not seem put out, he just went on talking and clinging to
the horse with both hands while his cassock flapped about his legs and
his face sweated in the shade of his wide-brimmed hat.  One-Eye followed
them like an ancient stork.

It took them two days back to One-Eye's village and their entry was a
triumphal procession.  Father Alphonso's face lit up when he saw so many
prospective converts.

Sean could see him mentally rubbing Ins hands together, and he decided
to keep going before Alphonso forgot the main object of the exrpedition.
He gave One-Eye a hunting-knife in payment for his services.  One-Eye
sat down under the big tree in the centre of the village, his own thin
legs no longer able to support his weight and the knife clutched to his
chest.

lubi, you've had enough of that.  .  .  come on now!  Sean had not
dismounted and was restlessly waiting for Mubi to say his farewells to
three of the village girls.

Mubi had displayed traditional Zulu taste, all three of them were
big-breasted, big-bottomed and young.  They were also crying.  Come on,
Mubi .  .  .  what's the trouble?  Nkosi, they believe that I have taken
them for my wives.  What made them think that?  Nkosi, I do not know
Mubi broke the armhold that the PlumPest and Youngest had around his
neck, he snatched up his spears and fled.  Sean and Alphonso galloped
after him.

The villagers shouted farewells and Sean looked back and saw One-Eye
still sitting at the base of the big tree.

The pace which Sean set was at last telling on Alphonso.  His verbal
spring-tides slackened and he showed a measure of reluctance to let his
backside touch the saddle; he rode crouched forward on his horse's neck
with his buttocks in the air.  They crossed the mountains and went down
the other side; the ground levelled out into the Sabi Valley and they
rode into the forest.  On the ninth day out from Nova Sofala they
reached the Sabi river.  It was late afternoon.  Flocks of guinea-fowl
were drinking in the river-bed, they went up in a blue haze of whirling
wings, as Sean led his Party down the bank.

While the horses watered Sean spoke with Mubi.  Do you recognize this
part of the river?  Yes, Nkosi, we are two hours march upstream from the
wagons .  .  .  we held too far to the north coming through the forest
Sean looked at the sun, it was on the tree-tops.  Half an hour's light
left .  .  .  and there's no moon tonight.  We could wait until morning
Mubi suggested hopefully.  Sean ignored him and motioned to Alphonso to
mount up.  Alphonso was prepared to debate the advisability of moving
on.  Sean took a handful of his cassock and helped him into the saddle.

In the darkness the lantern burning in Katrina's wagon glowed through
the canvas and guided them the last half mile into camp.  Thief bayed
them welcome and Mbejane ran out at the head of the other servants to
take Sean's horse.  His voice was loud with worry and relief.  Nkosi,
there is little time .  .  .  it has begun Sean jumped off his horse and
ran to the wagon.  He tore open the canvas flap.  Sean.  She sat up. Her
eyes were very green in the lantern light, but they were dark-ringed.
Thank God, you've come.

Sean knelt beside her cot and held her.  He said certain things to her
and she clung to him and moved her lips across his face.  The world
receded and left one wagon standing in darkness, lit by a single Lamp
and the love of two people.

Suddenly she stiffened in his arms and gasped.  Sean held her, his face
suddenly helpless and his big hands timid and uncertain on her
shoulders.

What can I do, my fancy?  How can I help you?

Her body relaxed slowly and she whispered, Did you find a priest?  The
priest!  Sean had forgotten about him.  Still holding onto her he turned
his head and bellowed, Alphonso.  .  .

Alphonso.  Hurry, man Father Alphonso'S face in the opening of the wagon
Was pale with fatigue and grimy with dust.  MarrY us, said Sean-
Quickly, man, che-cha, chopchop .  .  .  you savvy! Alphonso climbed
into the wagon.  The skirts of his cassock were torn and his knees were
white and bony through the holes.  He stood over them and opened his
book.  Ring?  he asked in Portuguese.

I do, said Sean.  No!  No!  Ring?  I Alphonso held up a finger and made
an encircling gesture.  Ring?

I think he wants a wedding ring, whispered Katrina.

Oh, my God, said Sean.  i'd forgotten about that- He looked round
desperately.  what can we use?  Haven't you got one in your chest or
something?  Katrina shook her head, opened her lips to answer but closed
them again as another pain took her.  Sean held her while it lasted and
when she relaxed he looked UP angrily at Alpbonso.  Marry us .  .  .
damn you.  Don't you see there's no time for all the trimmings?  Ring?
said Alphonso again.  He looked very unhappy.  all right, I'll get you a
ring Sean leapt out of the wagon and shouted at Mbejane.  Bring my
rifle, quickly-if Sean wanted to shoot the Portuguese that was his
business and Mbejane's duty was to help him.  He brought Sean the rifle.
Sean found a gold sovereign in the pouch on his belt, he threw it on the
ground and held the muzzle of the rifle on it.  The bullet punched a
ragged hole through it.  He tossed the rifle back to Mbejane, picked up
the small gold circle and scrambled back into the wagon.

Three times during the service the pains made Katrina gasp and each time
Sean held her tight and AlPhonso increased the speed of his delivery.
Sean put the punctured sovereign on Katrina's finger and kissed her.

Alphonso gabbled out the last line of Latin and Katrina said, Oh, Sean,
it's coming.  Get out Sean told Alphonso and made an expressive gesture
towards the door, thankfully AlPhonso went.

It did not take long then, but to Sean it was an eternity like that time
when they had taken Garrick's leg.  Then in a slippery rush it was
finished.  Katrina lay very quiet and pale, while on the cot below her,
still linked to her purple-blotched and bloody lay the child that they
had made.  It's dead, croaked Sean.  He was sweating and he had backed
away against the far wall of the wagon.

No Katrina struggled up fiercely.  No, it's not .  .  .

Sean, you must help me.

She told him what to do and at last the child cried.  It's a boy, said
Katrina softly.  Oh, Sean .  .  .  it's a boy.

She was more beautiful than he had ever seen her before;

pale and tired and beautiful.

Sean's protests were in vain, Katrina left her bed the next morning and
squeezed into one of her old dresses.

Sean hovered between her and the child on the cot.

I'm still so fat, she lamented.  Fancy, please stay in bed another day
or two.  She pulled a face at him and went on struggling with the lacing
of her bodice.  Who's going to look after the baby?  I will! said Sean
earnestly.  You can tell me what to do Arguing with Katrina was like
trying to pick up quicksilver with your fingers, not worth the effort.
She finished dressing and took up the child.

You can help me down the steps.  She smiled at him.

Sean and Alphonso set a chair for her in the shade of one of the big
shuma trees and the servants came to see the child.  Katrina held him in
her lap and Sean stood over them in uncertain possession.  For Sean it
seemed unreal yet .  .  .  too much for his mind to digest in so short a
time.

He grinned dazedly at the steady stream of comment from his servants and
his arm was limp when Alphonso shook his hand for the twentieth time
that morning.  Hold your child .  .  .

Nkosi.  Let us see you with him on your arm called mbejane and the other
Zulus took up the cry.  Sean's expression changed slowly to one of
apprehension.  Pick him up, Nkosi Katrina proffered the bundle and a
hunted look came into Sean's eyes.  Have no fear, Nkosi, he has no
teeth, he cannot harm you, Hlubi encouraged him.  Sean held his
first-born awkwardly and assumed the hunchbacked posture of the new
father.  The Zulus cheered him and slowly Sean's face relaxed and his
smile was a glow of pride.  Mbejane, is he not beautiful?  As beautiful
as his father, Mbejane agreed.

Your words are a blade with two edges, laughed Sean.

He looked at the child closely.  It wore a cap of dark hair, its nose
was flat as a bulldog's, its eyes were milky-grey and its legs were
long, skinny and red, How will you name him?  asked Hlubi.  Sean looked
at Katrina.

Tell them, he said.

He shall be called Dirk, she said in Zulu.  What is the meaning?  asked
Hlubi, and Sean answered him.  It means a dagger .  .  .  a sharp knife.
There was immediate nodded approval from all the servants.

Hiubi produced his snuff-box and passed it among them and Mbejane took a
pinch.  That, he said, is a good name. Paternity, the subtle alchemist,
transformed Sean's attitude to life within twelve hours.  Never before
had anything been so utterly dependent upon him, so completely
vulnerable.  That first evening in their wagon he watched katrina
sitting cross-legged on her cot, stooping forward over it to give it her
breast.  Her hair hung in a soft wing across one cheek, her face was
fuller, more matronly and the child in her lap fed with a red face and
small wheezings.  She looked up at him and smiled and the child tugged
her breast with its tiny fists and hunting mouth.

Sean crossed to the cot, sat beside them and put his :arm around them.
Katrina rubbed her cheek against his chest and her hair smelt warm and
clean.  The boy went on feeding noisily.  Sean felt vaguely excited as
though he were on the threshold of a new adventure.

A week later, when the first rain clouds built up in the sky, Sean took
the wagons across the Sabi and onto the slopes of the mountains to
escape the heat of the plains.

There was a valley-he had noticed when he and Mubi had made their
journey to the coast.  The valley bottom was covered with short sweet
grass and cedar trees grew along a stream of clean water.  Sean took
them to this place.

Here they would wait out the rainy season and when it was finished and
the baby was strong enough to travel they could take the ivory south and
sell it in Pretoria.  It was a happy camp.  The oxen spread out along
the valley, filling it with movement and the contented sound of their
lowing; there was laughter among the wagons and at night when the mist
slumped down off the mountains the camp fire was bright and friendly.
Father Alphonso stayed with them for nearly two weeks.  He was a
pleasant young man and although he and Sean never understood what the
other was saying yet they managed well enough with sign language.  He
left at last with Hlubi and one of the other servants to escort him back
over the mountains, but before he did he managed to embarrass Sean by
kissing him goodbye.  Sean and Katrina were sorry to see him go.  They
had grown to like him and Katrina had almost forgiven him his religion.

The rains came with the usual flourish and weeks drifted into months.
Happy months, with life centring around Dirk's cot.  Mbejane had made
the cot for him out of cedarwood and one of Katrina's chests produced
the sheets and blankets for it.  The child grew quickly: each day he
seemed to occupy more of his cot, his legs filled out, his skin lost its
blotchy-purple look and his eyes were no longer a vague milky-blue.
There was green in them now, they would be the same colour as his
mother's.

To fill the long lazy days Sean started to build a cabin beside the
stream.  The servants joined in and from a modest first plan it grew
into a thing of sturdy plastered walls and neatly thatched roof with a
stone fireplace at one end.  When it was finished Sean and Katrina moved
into it.  After their wagon with its thin canvas walls, the cabin gave a
feeling of permanence to their love.  One night, when the rain hissed
down in darkness outside and the wind whined at the door like a dog
wanting to be let in, they spread a mattress in front of the fireplace
and there in the moving firelight they started another baby.

Christmas came, and after it the New Year.  The rains stuttered and
stopped and still they stayed on in their valley.  Then at last they had
to go, for their supplies of basic stores, powder, salt, medicines,
cloth, were nearly finished.  They loaded the wagons, inspanned and left
in the early morning.  As the line of wagons wound down the valley
towards the plains Katrina sat on the box-seat of the lead wagon holding
Dirk on her lap and Sean rode beside her.  She looked back, the roof of
their cabin showed brown through the branches of the cedar trees.  It
seemed forlorn and lonely.  We must come back one day, we've been so
happy here, she said softly.  Sean leaned out of the saddle towards her
and touched her arm.  Happiness isn't a place, my fancy, we aren't
leaving it here, we're taking it with us.  She smiled at him. The second
baby was starting to show already.

They reached the Limpopo river at the end of July and found a place to
cross.  It took three days to unload the wagons, work them through the
soft sand and then carry the ivory and stores across.  They finished in
the late afternoon of the third day and by then everyone was exhausted.
They ate an early supper and an hour after sunset the Zulus were rolled
in their blankets, and Sean and Katrina were sleeping around
head-on-chest in the wagon.  In the morning Katrina was quiet and a
little pale.

Sean didn't notice it until she told him that she felt tired and was
going to lie down, immediately he was all attentive.  He helped her into
the wagon and settled the pillows under her head.

Are you sure you're all right!  he kept asking.  Yes .  .  .  it's
nothing, I'm just a bit tired.  I'll be all right, she assured him.  She
appreciated his concern but was relieved when finally he went to see to
the business of reloading the wagons for Sean's ministrations were
always a little clumsy.  She wanted to be left alone, she felt tired and
cold.

By midday the wagons were loaded to Sean's satisfaction.  He went to
Katrina's wagon, lifted the canvas and peeped in.  He expected her to be
asleep.  She was lying on the cot with her eyes open and two of the
thick grey blankets wrapped around her.  Her face was as pale as a
two-day corpse.  Sean felt the first leap of alarm, he scrambled into
the wagon.  My dear, you look ghastly.  Are you sick?  He put his hand
on her shoulder and she was shivering.  She didn't answer him, instead
her eyes moved from his face to the floor near the foot of the bed and
Sean's eyes followed hers.  Katrina's luxury was her chamber-pot; it was
a massive china thing with red roses hand-painted on it.  She loved it
dearly and Sean used to tease her when she was perched on top of it. Now
the pot stood near the foot of the bed and when Sean saw what was in it
his breathing stopped.  It was half full of a liquid the colour of milk
stout.  oh, my God, he whispered.  He went on staring at it, standing
very still while a gruesome snatch of doggerel he remembered hearing
sung in the canteens of the Witwatersrand began trotting through his
brain like an undertaker's hack.

Black as the Angel, Black as disgrace When the fever waters flow They're
as black as the ace.

Roll him in a blanket Feed him on quinine But all of us we know It's the
end of the line.

Black as the Angel Black as disgrace Soon we'll lay him down below And
chuck dirt in his face.

He raised his head and looked steadily at her, searching for the signs
of fear.  But just as steadily she looked back at him.  Sean, it's
blackwater!  Yes .  .  .  I know, Sean said, for there was nothing to be
gained by denial, no room for extravagant hope. It was blackwater fever:
malaria in its most malignant form, attacking the kidneys and turning
them to fragile sacks of black blood that the slightest movement could
rupture.

Sean knelt by her cot.  You must be very still.  He touched her forehead
lightly with the tips of his fingers and felt the heat of her skin.
Yes, she answered him, but already the expression in her eyes was
blurring and she made the first restless movement of delirium.  Sean put
his arm across her chest to hold her from struggling.

By nightfall Katrina was deep in the nightmare of malaria.  She laughed,
she screamed in senseless terror, she shook her head and fought him when
he tried to make her drink.  But she had to drink, it was her one
chance, to flush out her kidneys that she might live.  Sean held her
head and forced her.

Dirk started crying, hungry and frightened by the sight of his mother.
Mbejane!  shouted Sean, his voice pitched high with desperation. Mbejane
had waited all afternoon at the entrance of the wagon.  Nkosi, what can
I do?  The child .  .  .  can you care for him?

Mbejane picked up the cot with Dirk still in it.

Do not worry about him again.  I will take him to the other wagon. Sean
turned his whole attention back to Katrina.  The fever built up steadily
within her.  Her body was a furnace, her skin was dry and with every
hour she was wilder and her movements more difficult to control.

An hour after dark Kandhla came to the wagon with a pot of steaming
liquid and a cup.  Sean's nose wrinkled as he caught the smell of it.
What the hell is that?

I have stewed the bark from a maiden's breast tree .  .  .

the Nkosikazi must drink it It had the same musty smell as boiling hops
and Sean hesitated.  He knew the tree.  It grew on high ground, it had a
diseased-looking lumpy bark and each lump was the size and shape of a
breast surmounted by a thorn.  Where did you get it?  I have seen none
of these trees near the river.  Sean was marking time while he decided
whether to make Katrina drink the brew.  He knew these Zulu remedies,
what they didn't kill they sometimes cured.

Ifflubi went back to the hills where we camped four days ago .  .  .  be
brought the bark into the camp an hour ago.  A thirty-mile round journey
in something under six hours, even in his distress Sean could smile.
Tell Hlubi the Nkosikazi will drink his medicine.  Kandhla held her head
and Sean forced the evil-smelling liquid between her lips, he made her
finish the whole potful.  The juice of the bark seemed to relieve the
congestion of her kidneys; four times before morning she passed frothy
black water.  Each time Sean held her gently, cushioning her body from
any movement that might have killed her.  Gradually her delirium became
coma; she lay huddled and still in the cot, shaken only by the brief
fits of shivering.  When the morning sun hit the wagon canvas and lit
the interior, Sean saw her face, and he knew that she was dying.  Her
skin was an opaque yellowish white, her hair had lost its glow and was
lifeless as dry grass.

Kandbla brought another pot of the medicine and they fed it to her. When
the pot was empty Kandhla said, Nkosi, let me lay a mattress on the
floor beside the Nkosikazi's bed.  You must sleep and I will stay here
with you and wake you if the Nkosikazi stirs Sean looked at him with
haunted eyes.  There will be time to sleep later, my friend.  He looked
down at Katrina and went on softly.  Perhaps, very soon there will be
time.

Suddenly Katrina's body stiffened and Sean dropped on his knees beside
her cot.  Kandhla hovered anxiously behind him.  It took Sean a while to
understand what was happening and then he looked up at Kandbla.  Go!  go
quickly!  he said and the suffering in his voice sent Kandhla stumbling
blindly from the wagon.  Sean's second son was born that morning and
while Kandhla watched over Katrina Sean wrapped the child in a blanket,
took him into the veld and buried him.  Then he went back to Katrina and
stayed with her while days and nights blended together into a hopeless
muddle of grief.  As near as Katrina was to death, that near was Sean to
insanity.

He never moved out of the wagon, he squatted on the mattress next to her
cot, wiping the perspiration from her face, holding a cup to her lips or
just sitting and watching her.  He had lost his child and before his
eyes Katrina was turning into a wasted yellow skeleton.  Dirk saved him.

Mbejane brought the boy to him and he romped on the mattress, crawling
into Sean's lap and pulling his beard.

It was the one small glimmer of light in the darkness.

Katrina survived.  She came back slowly from the motionless coma that
precedes death and with her hesitant return sean's despair changed to
hope and then to a wonderful relief.

Her water was no longer black but dark pink and thick with sediment. She
was aware of him now and, although she was so weak that she could not
lift her head off the pillow, her eyes followed him as he moved about
the wagon.  It was another week before she learned about the baby.  She
asked him, her voice a tired whisper, and Sean told her with all the
gentleness of which he was capable.  She did not have the strength for
any great show of emotion; she laid quietly staring up at the canvas
above her head and her tears slid down across her yellow cheeks.

The damage that the fever had done to her body was hardly credible.  Her
limbs were so thin that Sean could completely encircle her thigh with
one hand.  Her skin hung in loose yellow folds from her face and body
and pink blood still stained her water.  This was not all.  the fever
had sucked all the strength from her mind.  She had nothing left to
resist the sorrow of her baby's death, and the sorrow encased her in a
shell through which neither Sean nor Dirk could reach her.  Sean
struggled to bring her back to life, to repair the terrible damage to
her mind and body.  Every minute of his time he employed in her service.

He and the servants scoured the veld for thirty miles around the laager
to find delicacies to tempt her appetite, wild fruits, honey, giraffe
marrows, the flesh of a dozen animals: kabobs of elephant heart and
duiker liver, roasted iguana had as white and tender as a plump pullet,
golden fillets of the yellow -mouthed bream from the river.  Katrina
picked at them listlessly then turned away and lay staring at the canvas
wall of the cot.

Sean sat beside her and talked about the farm they would buy, trying
vainly to draw her into a discussion of the house they would build.  He
read to her from Duff's

books and the only reaction he received was a small quivering of her
lips when he read the words death or child.

He talked about the days on the Witwatersrand, searching his mind for
stories that might amuse her.  He broughtDirk to her and let him play
about the wagon.  Dirk was walking now, his dark hair had started to
curl and his eyes were green.  Dirk, however, could not be too long
confined in the wagon.  There was too much to do, too much to explore.
Before long he would stagger to the entrance and issue the imperial
summons: IBejaan!

Bejaan!  Almost immediately Mbejane's head would appear in the opening
and he would glance at Sean for permission.  All right, take him out
then .  .  .  but tell Kandhla not to stuff him full of food. Quickly,
before Sean changed his mind, Mbejane would lift Dirk down and lead him
away.  Dirk had nearly two dozen Zulus to spoil him.  They competed
hotly for his affections, no effort was too much, dignified Mbejane down
on his hands and knees being ridden mercilessly in and out among the
wagons, Hlubi scratching himself under the arms and gibbering insanely
in his celebrated imitation of a baboon while Dirk squealed with
delight, fat Kandhla raiding Katrina's store of fruit preserves to make
sure Dirk was properly fed and the others keeping in the background,
anxious to join the worship but fearful of incurring the jealousy of
Mbejane and Hlubi.  Sean knew what was happening but he was powerless to
prevent it.  His time was completely devoted to Katrina.

For the first time in his LIFE Sean was giving more than just a
superficial part of himself to another human being.

It was not an isolated sacrifice: it went on throughout the months it
took for Katrina to regain sufficient of her strength to enable her to
sit up in bed without assistance; it continued through the months that
she needed before Sean judged it safe to resume the trek towards the
south.

They built a litter for her.  Sean would not risk the jarring of the
wagon, and the first day's trek lasted two hours.

Four of the servants carried the litter and Katrina lay in it, protected
from the sun by a strip of canvas spread above her head.  Despite the
gentleness with which the Zulus handled her, at the end of the two hours
Katrina was exhausted.  Her back ached and she was sweating in small
beads from her yellow skin.  The next week they travelled two hours
daily and then gradually increased the time until they were making a
full day's journey.

They were halfway to the Magahesberg, camped at a muddy waterhole in the
thorn flats, when Mbejane came to Sean.  There is still one wagon empty
of ivory, Nkosi.  The others are full Sean pointed out.  Four hours,
march from this place there is enough ivory buried to fill those wagons.
Sean's mouth twisted with pain.  He looked away towards the south-east
and he spoke softly. Mbejane, I am still a young man and yet already I
have stored UP enough ugly memories to make my old age sad.  Would you
have me steal from a friend not only his life but his share of ivory
also?

Mbejane shook his head.  I asked, that is all.  And I have answered,
Mbejane.  It is his .  .  .  let it he.

They crossed the Magaliesberg and turned west along the mountain range.
Then, two months after they had left the Limpopo river, they reached the
Boer settlement at Louis Trichardt.  Sean left MbeJane to outspan the
wagons on the open square in front of the church and he went to search
for a doctor.  There was only one in the district, Sean found him in his
surgery above the general dealer's store and took him to the wagons.
Sean carried his bag for him and the doctor, a grey-beard and unused to
such hardships, trotted to keep up with Sean.  He was panting and
pouring sweat by the time they arrived.  Sean waited outside while the
doctor completed his examination and when he finally made his descent
from the wagon Sean fell on him impatiently.  What do you think, man?  I
think, meneer, that you should give hourly thanks to your Maker.  The
doctor shook his head in amazement.  It seems hardly possible that your
wife could have survived both the fever and the loss of the childShe is
safe then, there's no chance of a relapse?  Sean asked.

She is safe now .  .  .  but she is still a very sick woman.

It may take a year before her body is fully mended.  There is no
medicine I can give you.  She must be kept quiet, feed her well and wait
for time to cure her.  The doctor hesitated.  There is other damage - he
tapped his forehead with his forefinger.  Grief is a terrible destroyer.
She will need love and gentleness and after another six months she will
need a baby to fill the emptiness left by the one she lost.  Give her
those three things, meneer, but most of all give her love.  The doctor
hauled his watch from his waistcoat and looked at it.  Time!  there is
so little time.  I must go, there are others who need me.  He held out
his hand to Sean.  Go with God, meneer.  Sean shook his hand.  How much
do I owe you?  The doctor smiled, he had a brown face and his eyes were
pale blue; when he smiled he looked like a boy.  I make no charge for
words.  I wish I could have done more.  He hurried away across the
square and when he walked you could see that his smile lied, he was an
old man.

Mbejane!  said Sean.  Get a big tusk out of the wagon and take it to the
doctor's room above the store.  Katrina and Sean went to the morning
service in the church next day.  Katrina could not stand through the
hymns.  She sat quietly in her pew, watching the altar, her lips forming
the words of the hymn and her eyes full of her sorrow.

They stayed on for three more days in Louis Trichardt and they were made
welcome.  Men came to drink coffee with them and see the ivory and the
women brought them eggs and fresh vegetables, but Sean was anxious to
move south.  So on the third day they started the last stage of their
trek.

Katrina regained her strength rapidly now.  She took over the management
of Dirk from the servants, to their ill-concealed disappointment, and
soon she left her litter and rode on the -box seat of the lead wagon
again.  Heir body filled out and there was colour showing once more
through the yellow skin of her cheeks.  Despite the improvement to her
body the depression of her mind still persisted and there was nothing
that Sean could do to lift it.

A month before the Christmas of 1895 Sean's wagon train climbed the low
range of hills above the city and they looked down into Pretoria.  The
jacaranda trees that filled every garden were in bloom, masses of purple
and the busy streets spoke well of the prosperity of the Transvaal
Republic.  Sean outspanned on the outskirts of the city, simply pulling
the wagons off the road and camping beside it, and once the camp was
established and Sean had made certain that Katrina no longer needed his
help he put on his one good suit and called for his horse.  His suit had
been cut to the fashion of four years previously and had been made to
encompass the belly he had acquired on the Witwatersrand.  Now it hung
loosely down his body but bunched tightly around his thickened arms. His
face was burnt black by the sun and his beard bushed down onto his chest
and concealed the fact that the stiff collar of his shirt could no
longer close around his neck.  His boots were scuffed almost through the
uppers, there was not a suspicion of polish on them and they had
completely lost their shape.  Sweat had soaked through his hat around
the level of the hand and left dark greasy marks; the brim drooped down
over his eyes so he had to wear it pushed onto the back of his head.
There was, therefore, some excuse for the curious glances that followed
him that afternoon as he rode down Church Street with a great muscular
savage trotting at his one stirrup and an overgrown brindle hound at the
other.  They pushed their way between the wagons that cluttered the wide
street; they passed the Raadsaal of the Republican Parliament, passed
the houses standing back from the road in their spacious purple and
green gardens and came at last to the business area of the city that
crowded round the railway station.  Sean and Duff had bought their
supplies at a certain general dealer's stores and now Sean went back to
it.  It was hardly changed, the signboard in front had faded a little
but still declared that Goldberg, Importer and Exporter, Dealer in
Mining Machinery, Merchant and Wholesaler, was prepared to consider the
purchase of gold, precious stone, hides and skins, ivory and other
natural produce.  Sean swung down from the saddle and tossed his reins
to Mbejane.  Unsaddle, Mbejane.  This may take time.  Sean stepped up
onto the sidewalk, lifted his hat to two passing ladies and went through
into the building where Mr Goldberg conducted his diverse activities.
one of the assistants hurried to meet him, but Sean shook his head and
the man went back behind the counter.  He had seen Mr Goldberg with two
customers at the far end of the store.  He was -- content to wait.  He
browsed around among the loaded shelves of merchandise, feeling the
quality of a shirt, sniffing at a box of cigars, examining an axe,
lifting a rifle down off the rack and sighting at a spot on the wall,
until Mr Goldberg bowed his customers through the door and turned to
Sean.  Mr Goldberg was short and fat.

His hair was cropped short and his neck bulged over the top of his
collar.  He looked at Sean and his eyes were expressionless while he
riffled through the index cards of his memory for the name.  Then he
beamed like a brilliant burst of sunlight.  Mr Courtney, isn't it?  Sean
grinned.  That's right.  How are you, Izzy?  They shook hands.  How's
business?

Mr Goldberg's face fell.  Terrible, terrible, Mr Courtney.

I'm a worried man.  You look well enough on it, Sean prodded his
stomach.  You've put on weight!  You can joke, Mr Courtney, but I'm
telling you it's terrible.  Taxes and worry, taxes and worry.  Mr
Goldberg sighed, and now there's talk of war.  What's this?  Sean
frowned.  War, Mr Courtney, war between Britain and the Republic. Sean's
frown dissolved and he laughed.  Nonsense, man, not even Kruger could be
such a bloody fool!  Get me a cup of coffee and a cigar and we'll go
through to your office and talk business.  Mr Goldberg's face went blank
and his eyelids drooped almost sleepily.  Business, Mr Courtney?  That's
right, Izzy, this time I'm selling and you're buying.  What are you
selling, Mr Courtney? Ivory.  Ivory?  ?  lTwelve wagon loads of it Mr
Goldberg sighed sadly. Ivory's no good now, the bottom's fallen out of
it.  You can hardly give it away.  It was very well done; if Sean had
not been told the ruling prices two days before he might have been
convinced.  I'm sorry to hear that, he said.  If you're not interested,
I'll see if I can find someone else.  Come along to my office anyway,
said Mr Goldberg.  We can talk about it.  Talk costs nothing.  Two days
later they were still talking about it.  Sean had fetched his wagons and
had off-loaded the ivory in the back yard of the store.  Mr Goldberg had
personally weighed each tusk and written the weights down on a sheet of
paper.  He and Sean had added the columns of figures and agreed on the
total.  Now they were in the last stages of agreeing the price.  Come
on, Izzy, we've wasted two days already.  That's a fair price and you
know it .  .  .  let's get it over with, Sean growled.  I'll lose money
on this, protested Mr Goldberg.  I've got to make a living, every man's
got to live.  Come on, Sean held out his right hand.  Let's call it a
deal.  Mr Goldberg hesitated a second longer, then he put his pudgy hand
in Sean's fist and they grinned at each other, both well satisfied.  One
of Mr Goldberg's assistants counted out the sovereigns, stacking them in
piles of fifty along the counter, then Sean and Mr Goldberg checked them
and agreed once more. Sean filled two canvas bags with the gold, slapped
Mr Goldberg's back, helped himself to another cigar and headed heavily
laden for the bank.  When are you going into the veld again?  Mr
Goldberg called after him.

Soon!  said Sean.

Don't forget to get your supplies here.  I'll be back, Sean assured him.

Mbejane carried one of the bags and Sean the other.

Sean was smiling and streamers of cigar smoke swirled back from his head
as he strode along the sidewalk.

There's something in the weight of a sack of gold that makes the man who
holds it stand eight feet tall.

That night as they lay together in the darkness of the wagon Katrina
asked him.  Have we enough money to buy the farm yet, Sean?  Yes, said
Sean.  We've got enough for the finest farm in the whole Cape
peninsular.  .  .  and, after one more trip, we'll have enough to build
the house and the barns, buy the cattle, lay out the vineyard and still
have some left over.  Katrina was silent for a moment then, So we are
going back into the bushveld again?  One more trip, said Sean.  Another
two years and then we'll go down to the Cape.  He gave her a hug.  You
don't mind, do you?  No, she said.  I think I'd like that.  When will we
leave?  Not just yet awhile, Sean laughed.  First we're going to have
some fun.  He hugged her again, her body was still painfully thin; he
could feel the bones of her hips pressed against him.  Some pretty
clothes for you, my fancy, and a suit for me that doesn't look like a
fancy dress.  Then we'll go out and see what this burg has to offer in
the way of entertainment, He stopped as the idea swelled up in his mind.
Damn it!  I know what we'll do.  We'll hire a carriage and go across to
Johannesburg.  We'll take a suite at the Grand National Hotel and do
some living.  Bath in a china bath, sleep in a real bed; you can have
your hair prettiedup and I'll have my beard trimmed by a barber.  We'll
eat crayfish and penguin eggs.  .  . I can't remember when I last tasted
pork or mutton.  .  .  we'll wash it down with the old bubbling wine and
waltz to a good band - Sean raced on and when he stopped for breath
Katrina asked softly, Isn't the waltz a very sinful dance, Sean?

Sean smiled in the darkness.  It certainly is!  I'd like to be sinful
just once, -, not too much, just a little with you to see what it's
like.  We will be, said Sean as wicked as hell The next day Sean took
Katrina to the most exclusive ladies shop in Pretoria.  He chose the
material of half a dozen dresses.  One of them was to be a ball gown in
canary-yellow silk.  It was extravagance and he knew it, but he didn't
care once he saw the flash of guilty delight in Katrina's cheeks and the
old green sparkle in her eyes.

For the first time since the fever she was living again.

He spilled out his sovereigns with thankful abandon.  The sales girls
were delighted with him, they crowded round him with trays of feminine
accessories.  A dozen of those, said Sean and, yes, those will do.  Then
a flash of green on the racks across the room caught his eye, it was
Katrina's green.

What's that?  He pointed and two sales girls nearly knocked each other
down in the rush to get it for him.

The winner carried the shawl back to him and Sean took it and placed it
around Katrina's shoulders.  It was a beautiful thing.

We'll take it, said Sean and Katrina's lips quivered then suddenly she
was crying, sobbing brokenly.  The excitement had been too much.  There
was immediate consternation among the shop assistants, they flapped
around Sean like hens at feeding time while he picked Katrina up and
carried her out to the hired carriage.  At the door he paused and spoke
over his shoulder.

I want those dresses finished by tomorrow evening.

Can you- do it?  They'll be ready, Mr Courtney, even if my girls have to
work all night on them.  He took Katrina back to the wagons and laid her
on her cot.  Please forgive me, Sean, I've never done that in my life
beforeIt's all right, my fancy, I understand.  Now you just go to sleep
The following day Katrina stayed at the camp resting, while Sean went to
see Mr Goldberg again and buy from him the stores they would need for
the next expedition.  it took another day to load the wagons and by then
Katrina seemed well enough to make the trip to Johannesburg.

They left in the early afternoon.  Mbejane driving, Sean and Katrina
sitting close together on the back seat holding hands under the
travelling rug and Dirk bouncing round the interior of the carriage,
pausing now and then to flatten his face against a window and keeping up
a flow of comment in the peculiar mixture of English, Dutch and Zulu
that Sean called Dirkese.  They reached Johannesburg long before Sean
-expected to.  In four years the town had doubled its size and had
spread out into the veld to meet them.  They followed the main road
through the new areas and came to the centre.  There were changes here
as well but it was, in the main, the way he remembered it.

They threaded their way through the babble of Eloff Street, and around
them, millOwing with the crowds on the sidewalks, were the ghosts of the
past.  He heard Duff laugh and twisted quickly in his seat to place the
sound; a dandy in a boater hat with gold fillings in his teeth laughed
again from a passing carriage and Sean heard that it was not Duff's
laugh.  Very close, but not the same.  All of it was like that, similar
but subtly changed, nostalgic but sad with the knowledge of loss.  The
past was lost and he knew then that you can never go back.  Nothing is
the same, for reality can exist at one time only and in one place only.
Then it dies and you have lost it and you must go on to find it at
another time and in another place.

They took a suite at the Grand National, with a sittingroom and two
bedrooms, a private bathroom and a balcony that looked out over the
street, over the rooftops to where the headgears and white dumps stood
along the ridge.  Katrina was exhausted.  They had supper sent up to the
room early and when they had eaten Katrina went to bed and Sean went
down alone to drink a nightcap at the bar.  The bar-room was crowded.
Sean found a seat in the corner and sat silently in the jabber of
conversation.  In it, but no longer a part of it.

They had changed the picture above the bar, it used to be a hunting
print; but now it was a red-coated general, impressively splattered with
blood, taking leave of his staff in the middle of a battlefield.  The
staff looked bored.

Sean let his eyes wander on along the dark panelled walls.

He remembered, there was so much to remember!  Suddenly he blinked.

Near the side door was a star-shaped crack in the wooden panelling. Sean
started to grin and put down his glass and massaged the knuckles of his
right hand.  If Oakie Henderson hadn't ducked under that punch it would
have taken his head off.

Sean signalled to the barman.  Another brandy, please.  While the man
was pouring Sean asked, What happened to that panel near the door?  The
man glanced up and then back at the bottle.  Some fellow put his fist
through it in the old days.  Boss left it like that, sort of souvenir,
you know.  He must have been quite a fellow .  .  .  that wood's an inch
thick.  Who was he!  Sean asked expectantly.

The man shrugged.  One of the drifters.  They come and they go.  Make a
few pounds, piss it against the wall and then go back where they came
from.  He looked at Sean with bored eyes.  That'll be half a dollar,
mate.  Sean drank the brandy slowly, turning the glass in his hands
between sips and watching the liquor cling to its sides like thin oil.
By a cracked panel in a bar-room they shall remember you.

And now I shall go to bed, he decided, this is no longer my world.  My
world is upstairs sleeping, I hope!  He smiled a little to himself and
finished the brandy in his glass.

Sean?  a voice at his ear and a hand on his shoulder as be turned to
leave.  My God, Sean, is it really you?

Sean stared at the man beside him.  He did not recognize the neatly
clipped beard and the big sun-burned nose with the skin peeling off the
tip, but suddenly he knew the eyes.

Dennis, you old rogue.  Dennis Petersen from Lady-burg.

That's right isn't it?  You didn't recognize me!  laughed Dennis.  So
much for our friendship, you disappear without a word and ten years
later you don't even know me!

Now they were both laughing.  I thought they would have hanged you long
ago.  Sean defended himself.  What on earth are you doing in
Johannesburg?  Selling beef, I'm on the committee of the Beef Growers
Association.

There was pride in Dennis's voice.  I have been up here negotiating the
renewal of our contracts.  When are you going back?  My train leaves in
an hour.  Well, there's time for a drink before you go, what will it be?
I'll have a small brandy, thanks Sean ordered the drinks and they took
them up and stood, suddenly awkward in the awareness that ten years were
between their once complete accord.  so, what have you been doing with
yourself?  Dennis ended the pause.  This and that, you know, a bit of
mining, just come back from the bushveld.  Nothing very exciting.  Well,
it's good to see you again anyway.  Your health.  And yours, said Sean,
and then suddenly he realized that here was news of his family, news he
had been without for many years.  How's everyone at Lady-burg, your
sisters? Both married, so am I with four sons, and the pride was in
Dennis's voice again.

Anyone I know?  asked Sean.  Audrey, you know old Pye's daughter.  No!
Sean ripped out the word, and then quickly, That's wonderful, Dennis.
I'm pleased for you, she was a lovely girl.  The best, agreed Dennis
complacently.  He had the sleek well-fed, well-cared for look of a
married mann, fatter in the face and his stomach starting to show.  I
wonder if I have it yet, Sean thought.  Of course, old man Pye's dead
now, that's one creditor he couldn't buy off.  Ronnie's taken over the
bank and the store.  The bat-eared bush rat, said Sean and knew
immediately that he had said the wrong thing.  Dennis frowned slightly.
He's family now, Sean.  A very decent chap really - and a clever
business man.  I'm sorry, I was joking.  How's my mother?  Sean changed
the subject by asking the question that had been in the forefront of his
mind and he had picked the right topic.  Dennis's expression softened
immediately, you could see the warmth in his eyes.  The same as ever.
She's got a dress shop now, next door to Ronnie's store.  It's a gold
mine, no one would think of buying anywhere else but at Aunt Ada's.
She's godmother to my two eldest, I guess she's godmother to half the
kids in the districts and then his expression hardened again, The least
you could have done was write to her sometime, Sean.  You can't imagine
the pain you have caused her.  There were circumstances.  Sean dropped
his eyes to his glass.

That's no excuse, you have a duty which you neglected.  There is no
excuse for it.  You little man Sean lifted his head and looked at him
without trying to disguise his annoyance.  You pompous, preaching little
man peering out at the world one-eyed through the keyhole of your own
self-importance.  Dennis had not noticed Sean's reaction and he
continued.  That's a lesson a men must learn before he grows up, we all
have our responsibilities and our duties.  A man grows up when he faces
those duties, when he accepts the burdens that society places on him.
Take my own case: despite the vast amount of work I have on the farms, I
now own Mahobals Kloof as well, and despite the demands made on me by my
family, yet I have time to represent the district on the committee of
the Beef Growers Association, I am a member of the Church Council and
the village management board, and I have every reason to believe that
next month I will be asked to accept the office of mayor.  Then he
looked steadily at Sean, What have you done with your life so far?  I've
lived it, Sean answered, and Dennis looked a little perplexed, then he
gathered himself.  Are you married yet?  I was, but I sold her to the
Arab slavers up north.  You did whatV Well, I grinned Sean, she was an
old wife and the price was good!  that's a joke, hey? Ha, ha!  You
couldn't fool good old Dennis, Sean laughed out loud.  This unbelievable
little man!

Have a drink, Dennis, he suggested.  Two is my limit, thanks Sean.
Dennis pulled the goldhunter from his waistcoat pocket and inspected it.
Time to 90, I'm afraid.  Nice seeing you again-Wait, Sean stopped him.
My brother, how's Garry?  Poor old Garry.  Dennis shook his head
solemnly.

What's wrong with him?  Sean's voice was sharp with his sense of dread.
Nothing, Dennis reassured him quickly.  well, I mean nothing more than
ever was.  Why did you say "poor old Garry" then? I don't really know,
except that everybody says it.  It's habit, I suppose, he's just one of
those people you say poor old in front of. Sean suppressed his
irritation, he wanted to know.  He had to know.  You haven't answered
me, how is he?

Dennis made a significant gesture with his right hand.  Looking into the
bottle quite a bit these days, not that I blame him with that woman he
married.  You were well out of it there if I may say so, Sean.  You may,
Sean acquiesced, but is he well?  How are things at Theunis Kraal?  We
all took a bit of a beating with the rindepest, but Garry, well, he lost
over half of his herds.  Poor old Garry, everything happens to him.  My
God, fifty percent!  Yes, but, of course, Ronnie helped him out.  Gave
him a mortgage on the farm to tide him over.  Theunis Kraal bonded
again, groaned Sean.  Oh Garry, Garry.  Yes, well, Dennis coughed
uneasily.  Well, I think I'd better be going.  Totsiens, Sean.  He held
out his hand.  Shall I tell them I saw you?  No, said Sean quickly.

Just leave it stand.  Very well then.  Dennis hesitated.  Are you all
right, Sean?  I mean', he coughed again, are you all right for money?
Sean felt his unhappiness dissolve a little; this pompous little man was
going to offer him a loan.  That's very good of you, Dennis.  But I've
got a couple of pounds saved up enough to eat on for a few days, he
spoke seriously.  All right then. Dennis looked mightily relieved.  All
right then, totsiens, Sean, and he turned and walked quickly out of the
bar.  As he left the room so he went out of Sean's mind, and Sean was
thinking of his brother again.

Then suddenly Sean decided.  I will go back to Lady-burg when this next
trip is over.  The dream farm outside Paarl would not lose anything in
being transplanted to Natal and he suddenly longed to sit in the
panelled study at Theunis Kraal again, and to feel the mist come cold
down the escarpment in the mornings, and see the spray blowing off the
white falls in the wind.  He wanted to hear Ada's voice again and to
explain to her, knowing she would understand and forgive.

But more, much more it was Garry, poor old Garry.  I must go back to
him, ten years is a long time and he will have lost the bitterness.  I
must go, back to him, for his sake and for Theunis Kraal.  With the
decision made, Sean finished his drink and went up the stairs to his
suite.

Katrina was breathing softly in her sleep, the dark mass of her hair
spread out on the pillow.  While he undressed he watched her and slowly
the melancholy dissolved.

Gently he pulled back the blankets on his side of the bed and just then
Dirk whimpered from the next room.  Sean went through to him.  All
right, what's the trouble?  Dirk blinked owlishly and searched for an
excuse, then the relief flooded into his face and he produced the one
that creaked with age.  I want a drink a water.  The delay while Sean
went through to the bathroom gave Dirk an opportunity to rally his
forces and when Sean came back he opened the offensive in earnest.

Tell me a story, Daddy.  He was sitting up now, brighteyed.

I'll tell you a story about Jack and a Nary - said Sean.  Not that one-
protested Dirk.  The saga of Jack and his brother lasted five seconds
and Dirk knew it.  Sean sat down on the edge of the bed and held the
glass for him.  How about this one?  There once was a king who had
everything in the world.  .  .  but when he lost it he found out that he
had never had anything and that he now had more than he ever had before
Dirk looked stunned.

That's not a very good one, he gave his opinion at last.  No, said Sean.
It isn't.  .  .  is it?  But I think we should be charitable and admit
that it's not too bad for this time of night Sean woke feeling happy.
Katrina was sitting up in bed filling cups from a pewter coffee pot and
Dirk was hammering at the door to be let in.  Katrina smiled at him.
Good morning, meneer.  Sean sat up and kissed her.  How did you sleep,
fancy?  Well, thank you, but there were dark rings under her eyes.  Sean
went across to the bedroom door.

Prepare to receive cavalry, he said and swung it open.

Dirk's charge carried him onto the bed and Sean dived after him.  When
two men are evenly matched, weight will usually decide and within
seconds Dirk had straddled Sean's chest, pinning him helplessly and Sean
was pleading for quarter.

After breakfast Mbejane brought the carriage round to the front of the
hotel.  When the three of them were settled in it, Sean opened the small
window behind the driver's seat and told Mbejane, To the office first.
Then we have to be at the Exchange by ten o'clock Mbejane grinned at
him.  Yes, Nkosi, then lunch at the Big House.  Mbejane had never been
able to master the word Xanadu.

They went to all the old places.  Sean and Mbejane laughing and
reminiscing at each other through the window.

There was a panic at the Exchange, crowds on the pavement outside.  The
offices on Eloff Street had been refaced and a brass plate beside the
front door carried the roll of the subsidiaries of Central Rand
Consolidated.  Mbejane stopped the carriage outside and Sean boasted to
Katrina.

She sat silently and listened to him, suddenly feeling inadequate for a
man who had done so much.  She misinterpreted Sean's enthusiasm and
thought he regretted the past and wished he were back.  Mbejane, take us
up to the Candy Deep, Sean called at last.  Let's see what's happening
there.  The last five hundred yards of the road was overgrown and pitted
with disuse.  The administration block had been demolished and grass
grew thick over the foundations. There were new buildings and headgears
half a mile farther along the ridge, but here the reef had been worked
out and abandoned.  Mbejane pulled up the horses in the circular drive
in front of where the offices had stood.  He jumped down and held their
heads while Sean helped Katrina out of the carriage.  Sean lifted Dirk
and sat him on his shoulder and they picked their way through the
waist-high grass and piles of bricks and rubbish towards the Candy Deep
Number Three Shaft.

The bare white concrete blocks that had held the machinery formed a neat
geometrical pattern in the grass.

Beyond them reared the white mine dump; some mineral in the powdered
rock had leaked out in long yellow stains down its sides.  Duff had once
had the mineral identified.

It was of little commercial value, used occasionally in the ceramics
industry.  Sean had forgotten the name of it;

it sounded like the name of a star, Uranus perhaps.

They came to the shaft.  The edges of it had crumbled and the grass hung
into it, the way an unkempt mustache hangs into an old man's mouth. The
headgear was gone and only a rusty barbed-wire fence ringed the shaft.

Sean bent his knees: keeping his back straight for Dirk still sat on his
shoulder, he picked up a lump of rock the size of a man's fist and
tossed it over the fence.  They stood quietly and listened to it clatter
against the sides as it fell.  It fell for a long time and when at last
it hit the bottom the echo rang faintly up from a thousand feet below.
Throw more!  commanded Dirk, but Katrina stopped him.  No, Sean, let's
go.  It's an evil place She shuddered slightly. It looks like a grave.
It very nearly was, said Sean softly, remembering the darkness and the
rock pressing down upon him.  Let's go, she said again, and they went
back to where Mbejane waited with the carriage.

Sean was gay at lunch, he drank a small bottle of wine, but Katrina was
tired and more miserable than she had been since they left Louis
Trichardt.  She had begun to realize the type of life he had led before
she met him and she was frightened that now he wanted to return to it.

She had only known the bush and the life of the Trek.

Boer, she knew she could never learn to live like this.  She watched as
he laughed and joked during the meal, she watched the easy assurance
with which he commanded the white head waiter, the way he picked his way
through the maze of cutlery that was spread out on the table before them
and at last she could hold it in no longer.  Let's go away, let's go
back into the bush Sean stopped with a loaded fork halfway to his mouth.

What?  Please, Sean, the sooner we go the sooner we'll be able to buy
the farm Sean chuckled.  A day or two more won't make any difference.
We're starting to have fun.  Tonight I'll take you dancing, we were
going to be sinful, remember?  Who will look after Dirk?  she asked
weakly.

Mbejane will!  - Sean looked at her closely.  You have a good sleep this
afternoon and tonight we'll go out and tie the dog loose.  He grinned at
the memories that expression invoked.

When Katrina woke from her rest that evening she found the other part of
the reason for her depression.  For the first time since the baby, her
periodic bleeding had started again, the tides of her body and mind were
at their lowest ebb.  She said nothing to Sean, but bathed and put on
the yellow gown.  She brushed her hair furiously, dragging the brush
through it until her scalp tingled, but still it hung dull and lifeless,
as dull as the eyes that looked back at her out of the yellow face in
the mirror.

Sean came up behind her and leaned over her to kiss her cheek.  You
look, said he, like a stack of gold bars five-and-a-half feet high.  But
he realized that the yellow gown had been a mistake: it matched too
closely the fever colour of her skin.  Mbejane was waiting in the
sittingroom when they went through.

We may be late before we return, Sean told him.  That is of no account,
Nkosi, Mbenjane's face was as impassive as ever, but Sean caught a
sparkle of anticipation in his eyes and realized that Mbejane could
hardly wait to get Dirk to himself.

You are not to go into his room, Sean warned.  What if he cries, Nkosi?
He won't.  .  .  but if he does?  see what he wants, give it to him then
leave him to sleep.

Mbejane's face registered his protest.  I'm warning you, Mbejane, if I
come home at midnight and find him riding you round the room I'll have
both your hides for a kaross.

, His sleep shall be unspoiled, Nkosi, lied Mbejane.

In the hotel lobby Sean spoke to the receptionist.

Where can we find the best food in this town?  he asked.  Two blocks
down, sir, the Golden Guinea.  You can't miss it.  It sounds like a gin
palace, Sean was dubious.  I assure you, sir, that you'll have no
complaint when you get there.  Everyone goes there.  Mr Rhodes dines
there when he's in town, Mr Barnato, Mr Hradsky --Dick Turpin, Cesare
Borgla, Benedict Arnold, Sean continued for him.  All right, you have
convinced me.  I'll take a chance on having my throat cut.  Sean went
out through the front entrance with Katrina on his arm.  The splendour
of the Golden Guinea subdued even Sean a little.  A waiter with a
uniform like a majorgeneral's led them down a marble staircase, across
the wide meadow of carpet between the group of elegant men and women to
a table that even in the soft light dazzled with its bright silver and
snowy linen.  Chandeliers of crystal hung from the vaulted ceiling, the
band was good, and the air was rich with the fragrance of perfume and
expensive cigars.

Katrina stared helplessly at the menu until Sean came to her rescue and
ordered the meat in a French accent that impressed her but not the
waiter.  The wine came and with it Sean's high spirits returned. Katrina
sat quietly opposite him and listened.  She tried to think of something
witty to answer him with; in their wagon or alone in the veld they could
talk for hours at a time but here she was dumb.  Shall we dance?  Sean
leaned across the table and squeezed her hand.  She shook her head.

Sean, I couldn't.  Not with all these people watching.

I'd only make a fool of myself.  Come on, I'll show you how .  .  . it's
easy.  No, I couldn't, truly I couldn't.

And to himself Sean had to admit that the dance floor of the Golden
Guinea on a Saturday night was not the best place for a waltz lesson.
The waiter brought the food, great steaming dishes of it.  Sean
addressed himself to it and the one-sided conversation wilted.  Katrina
watched him, picking at the too rich food herself, acutely conscious of
the laughter and voices around them, feeling out of place and
desperately miserable.  Come on, Katrina, Sean smiled at her.  You've
hardly touched your glass.  Be a devil and get a little of that in you
to warm you up.  Obediently she sipped the champagne. She didn't like
the taste.  Sean finished the last of his crayfish thermidor and leaning
back in his chair glowing with wine and good food said, Man .  .  .  I
only pray the chef can keep the rest of the meal up to that standard. He
belched softly behind his fingers and ran his eyes contentedly round the
room.  Duff used to say that a well-cooked crayfish was proof that, Sean
stopped abruptly. He was staring at the head of the marble staircase, a
party of three had appeared there.

Two men in evening dress hovering attentively on each side of a woman.
The woman was Candy Rautenbach.

Candy with her blonde hair piled on top of her head.

Candy with diamonds in her ears and at her throat, her bosom overflowing
her gown as white as the frothy head on a beer tankard.  Candy with
bright blue eyes above a red mouth, Candy poised and lovely.  Laughing,
she glanced towards him and her eyes met his across the room.  She
stared in open disbelief, the laughter frozen on her lips, then suddenly
her poise was gone and she was running down the stairs towards him,
holding her skirts up to her knees, her escorts cantering after her in
alarm, waiters scattering out of her path and every head in the room
turning to watch her.  Sean pushed back his chair, stood up to meet her
and Candy reached him and jumped up to throw her arms around his neck.
There was a long incoherent exchange of greetings and at last Sean
prised her loose from his neck and turned her to face Katrina.

Candy was flushed and panting with excitement; with every breath her
bosom threatened to spring out of her bodice, and she was still holding
on to Sean's arm.  Candy, I want you to meet my wife, Katrina.  My dear,
this is Candy Rautenbach.  How do you do.  Katrina smiled uncertainly
and Candy said the wrong thing.  Sean, you're joking!  You married?
Katrina's smile faded.  Candy noticed the change and went on quickly,
But I must applaud your choice.  I am so pleased to meet you, Katrina.
We must get together sometime and I'll tell you all about Sean's
terrible past. Candy was still holding Sean's arm and Katrina was
watching her hand, the long tapered fingers against the dark cloth of
Sean's suit.  Sean saw the direction of Katrina's eyes and tried
tactfully to disengage himself but Candy held on.  Sean, these are my
two current beaux.  They were standing to heel behind her like
welltrained gundogs.  They are both so nice I can't make up my mind
about them.  Harry Lategaan and Derek Goodman.  Boys, this is Sean
Courtney.  You've heard lots about him They shook hands all round.

Do you mind if we join you?  asked Derek Goodman.  I'd be upset if you
didn't!  said Sean.  The men spread out to find chairs while Candy and
Katrina studied each other.  Is this your first visit to Johannesburg
Mrs Courtney?  Candy smiled sweetly.  I wonder where Sean found her,
she's thin as a stick and that complexion!  that accent!  he could have
done better for himself, he could have had his pick.

Yes, we won't be here very long though.  She's a harlot.

She must be, her breasts half-naked and the paint on her face and they
way she touches Sean.  She must have been his mistress.  if she touches
him again I'll, I'll kill her.

Sean came back to the table carrying a chair and set it down for Candy.
Candy's one of my old friends, my dear, I'm sure you two will like each
otherI'm sure we will, said Candy but Katrina didn't answer and Candy
turned back to him.  Sean, how wonderful it is to see you again.  You
look so well .  .  .  as sunburnt and handsome as the first time I met
you.  Do you remember that day you and Duff came to eat at the Hotel?  A
shadow fell across Sean's face at the mention of Duff's name.  Yes, I
remember.  He looked round and snapped his fingers for the waiter. Let's
have some more champagne.  I'll get it, Candy's escorts cut in
simultaneously and then started wrangling good-naturedly as to whose
turn it was.

Is Duff with you tonight, Sean?  Candy asked.

, candy, didn't Derek get the drinks last time?  It's my turn now. Harry
sought her support.  Candy ignored them and looked at Sean for a reply
but he turned and went round the table to the seat beside Katrina.

I say, old girl, can I have the first dance?  asked Derek.  I'll spin
you for it Derek, winner pays but getsfirst dance Harry suggested.
You're on.  Sean, I said is Duff here tonight? I Candy looked at him
across the table, No, he's not.  Listen, you two, how about letting me
in on this.  Sean avoided her eyes and joined in the haggle with Harry
and Derek.  Candy bit her lip, she wanted to press Sean further.  She
wanted to know about Duff, then suddenly she turned on her smile again.
She wasn't going to plead with him.

What is this?  She tapped Harry's shoulder with her fan.  Am I going to
be the prize in a game of chance!

Derek will pay for the wine and Sean gets first dance.  I say old girl,
that's a bit rough, you know.  But Candy was already standing up.  Come
on, Sean, let's see if you can still tread a stately tneasure.

Sean glanced at Katrina.  You don't mind, do you.  .  .

just one dance!

Katrina shook her head.

I hate her.  She's a harlot.  Katrina had never in her life spoken the
word out loud, she had seen it only in her Bible, but now it gave her a
fierce pleasure to think it.

She watched Sean and Candy walk arm-in-arm to the dance floor.

Would you care to dance, Mrs Courtney?  said Derek.

Katrina shook her head again without looking at him.  She was staring at
Sean and Candy.  She saw Sean take her in his arms and a cold lump
settled in her stomach.  Candy was looking up into Sean's face, laughing
at him, her arm on his shoulder, her hand in his.

She's a harlot.  Katrina felt her tears very near the surface and
thinking that word held them back.  Sean swirled Candy into a turn,
Katrina stiffened in her chair, her hands clenching in her lap, their
legs were touching, she saw Candy arch her back slightly and press her
thighs against Sean.  Katrina felt as though she were suffocating,
jealousy had spread up cold and tight through her chest.

I could go and pull him away, she thought.  I could stop him doing that,
He has no right.  It's as though the two of them are doing, doing it
together.  I know they have before, I know it now, Oh God, make them
stop it.

Please make them stop.

At last Sean and Candy came back to the table.  They were laughing
together and when he reached her chair Sean dropped his hand on
Katrina's shoulder, She moved away from it but Sean seemed not to
notice.  Everybody was having a good time.  Everybody except Katrina.
Harry and Derek were jostling for position.  Sean's big laugh kept
booming out and Candy was sparkling like the diamonds she wore.  Every
few minutes Sean turned to Katrina and tried to draw her into the
conversation but Katrina stubbornly refused to be drawn.  She sat there
hating them and Hating even Sean an, for the first time she was unsure
of him, jealous and frightened for him.  She stared down at her hands on
the tablecloth in front of her and saw how bony they were, chapped and
reddened by the sun and wind, ugly compared to Candy's.  She pulled them
quickly into her lap and leaned across towards Sean.  Please, I want to
go back to the hotel.  I don't feel well.

Sean stopped in the middle of a story and looked at her with a mixture
of concern and dismay.  He didn't want to leave and yet he knew she was
still sick.  He hesitated one second and then he said, Of course, my
fancy, I'm sorry.

I didn't realize, He turned to the others.  We'll have to be going .  .
.  my wife's not too strong.  .  .  she's just had one hell of a go of
blackwater.  Oh, Sean, must you?  Candy couldn't hide her
disappointment.  There's still so much to talk about!  I'm afraid so.
We'll get together another night.  $Yes, agreed Katrina quickly, next
time we come to Johannesburg we'll see you.  Oh, I don't know.  .  ,
perhaps before we go, Sean demurred.  "Some night next week.  How about
Monday?  Before Candy could answer Katrina interrupted.

Please, Sean, can we go now.  I'm very tired.  She started towards the
stairs but looked back to see Candy jump up and take Sean's arm, hold
her lips close to his ear and whisper a question.  Sean answered her
tersely and Candy turned back to the table and sat down.  When they were
out on the street Katrina asked, What did she say to you?  She just said
goodbye, muttered Sean and Katrina knew he was lying.  They didn't talk
again on the way back to the hotel.  Katrina was preoccupied with her
jealousy and Sean was thinking about what Candy had asked and what he
had answered.  Sean, where's Duff?  You must tell me.  He's dead, Candy.
The second before she turned back to the table Sean had seen her eyes.

Sean woke with a headache and Dirk's jumping on his chest did not help
to ease it at all.  Sean had to bribe him off with the promise of
sweets.  Dirk, sensing his advantage, raised his price to a packet of
bull's eyes and two lollipops, the kind with red stripes, before he
allowed Katrina to lead him away to the bathroom.  Sean sighed and
settled back under the blankets.  The pain moved up and crouched just
behind his eyes.  He could taste stale champagne on his own breath and
his skin smelt of cigar smoke.  He drowsed back in half sleep and the
ache faded a little.  Sean, it's Sunday you know.  Are you coming to
church with us?  Katrina asked coldly from the bedroom door.

Sean squeezed his eyelids closed.

Sean!  No answer.

Sean!  He opened one eye.  Are you going to get up?  I don't feel very
well, he croaked.  I think I have a touch of malaria Are you coming?
Katrina demanded remorselessly.

Her feelings towards him had not softened during the night.  I don't
feel up to it this morning, truly I don't.  I'm sure the Good Lord will
understand.  , Thou shalt not take the Lord's name in vain Katrina
warned him with ice in her voice.  I'm sorry.  Sean pulled the blankets
up to his chin defensively.  But truly, fancy, I can't get up for
another couple of hours.  My head would burst.  Katrina turned back into
the sitting-room and Sean heard her speak to Dirk in a voice purposely
pitched to reach him.  Your father's not coming with us.  We will have
to go down to breakfast by ourselves.  Then we will have to go to church
on our own.  But, Dirk pointed out, he's going to buy me a packet of
bull's eyes and two lollipops with red stripes.  In Dirk's opinion that
levelled the score.  Sean heard the door of the suite close and Dirk's
voice receded down the passage.

Sean relaxed slowly and waited for the ache behind his eyes to diminish.
After a while he became aware of the coffee tray on the table beside the
bed and he weighed the additional pain that the effort of sitting up
would involve against the beneficial effect of a large cup of coffee. It
was a difficult decision but in the end he carefully raised his body to
a sitting position and poured a cupful.  There was a small jug of fresh
cream on the tray, he took it in his right hand and was just about to
add a little to the cup when there was a knock on the sitting-room door.
Come in!  called Sean. He supposed it was the waiter coming to collect
the tray.  Sean searched his mind for a really scathing remark to send
him on his way.  He heard the sitting-room door open.  Who is it!  he
asked.  There were quick footsteps and then Sean started so violently
that the cream slopped out of the jug onto his sheets and his new
nightshirt.  Good God, Candy, you shouldn't have come here.  Sean was in
a frenzy of agitation.  He put the jug back on the tray with nervous
haste and wiped ineffectually at the mess on his nightshirt with his
hands.  If my wife.  .  .

Did anyone see you?  You mustn't stay.  If Katrina knows you've been
here she'll .  .  .  well I mean, she won't understand.  Candy's eyes
were puffy and Trimmed with red.  She looked as though she hadn't slept.
It's all right, Sean, I waited across the street until I saw your wife
leave.  One of my servants followed her, she went to the Dutch church on
Commissioner Street and there the service lasts about fifty years She
came into the room and sat down on the edge of his bed.  I had to talk
to you alone.  I couldn't let you go without knowing about Duff.  I want
you to tell me about it .  .  .

everything about it.  I promise not to cry, I know how you hate it
Candy, let's not torture ourselves with it.  He's dead.

Let's remember him alive.  Sean had forgotten his headache for its place
had been taken by pity for her and worry at the position in which she
had placed him.  Tell me, please.  Now. I'd never rest again if I
didn't, she said quietly.  Candy, don't you see that it doesn't matter?
The way in which he went is not important.  All that you need to know is
he's gone.  Sean's voice faded but went on softly, almost to himself,
He's gone, that is the only thing that matters, he's gone and left us
richer for knowing him and a little poorer for having lost him.  Tell
me, she said again and they looked at each other, their emotions locked
behind expressionless faces.  Then Sean told her, his words limping at
first, then faster and stronger as the horror of it came back to him.
When he had finished she said nothing.  She sat on the edge of the bed
staring down at the patterned carpet.  Sean moved closer to her and put
his arm around her.  There is nothing we can do. That's the thing about
death, there is nothing you can do to make it change its mind.  She
leaned against him, against the comfort of his big body and they sat
silently until suddenly Candy pulled away from him and smiled her gay
brittle smile.  And now tell me about you.  Are you happy?  Was that
your son with Katrina?  He's a lovely child With relief Sean followed
her away from the memory Of Duff.  They talked about each other, filling
in the blanks from the time they had last met until suddenly Sean
returned to reality.  Good God, Candy, we've been talking for ages.
Katrina will be back at any moment.  You had better run.  At the door
she turned, buried her fingers in his beard and tugged his head from
side to side.  If she ever throws you out, you magnificent brute, here's
somebody who'll have a place for you.  She stood up on her toes and
kissed him.  Be happy, she commanded and the door closed softly behind
her.

Sean rubbed his chin, then he pulled off his nightshirt, screwed it into
a ball, tossed it through the open door of the bedroom and went to the
bathroom.  He was towelling himself and whistling the waltz that the
band had played the night before, sweating a little in the steamy warmth
of the bathroom when he heard the front door open.  Is that you, Fancy?
Daddy!  Daddy!  Mummy got sweets for me.  Dirk hammered on the bathroom
door, and Sean wrapped the towel round his waist before opening it.
Look!  Look at all my sweets, gloated Dirk.  Do you want one, Pa?  Thank
you, Dirk, Sean put one of the huge striped humbugs in his mouth, moved
it to one side and spoke around it.

where's your Mummy?  There.  Dirk pointed at the bedroom.  He closed the
sweet packet carefully.  I'll keep some for Bejaan, he announced.  He'll
like that, Sean said and went across to the bedroom. Katrina lay on the
bed, as soon as he saw her he knew something was desperately wrong.  She
lay staring up at the ceiling, her eyes unseeing, her face as yellow and
set as that of a corpse.  Two quick strides carried him to her.  He
touched her cheek with his fingers and the sense of dread settled on him
again, heavily, darkly.  Katrina?  There was no response.  She lay still
without a flicker of life in her eyes. Sean swung round and ran out of
the suite, down the corridor to the head of the stairs.

There were people in the lobby below him and he yelled over their heads
to the clerk behind the desk.  Get a doctor!  run!  an as fast as you
can .  .  .  my wife, is dying The man stared UP at him blankly.  He had
a neck too thin for his high stiff collar and his black hair was parted
down the centre and polished with grease.

Hurry, you stupid bastard, get moving, roared Sean.

Everybody in the lobby was looking at him.  He still wore only a small
towel around his waist and, heavy with water, his hair hung down over
his forehead.

Move, man!  Move!  Sean was dancing with impatience.

There was a heavy stone vase on the banister at Sean's side, he picked
it up threateningly and the clerk jerked out of his trance and scuttled
for the front door.  Sean ran back to the suite.

Dirk was standing by Katrina's bed, his face distorted by the humbug it
contained and his eyes large with curiosity.

Sean snatched him up, carried him through to the other bedroom and
locked the door on his outraged howls.  Dirk was unused to being handled
in that manner.  Sean went back to Katrina and knelt beside her bed.  He
was still kneeling there when the doctor arrived.  Tersely Sean
explained about the blackwater, and the doctor listened then sent him to
wait in the sitting-room.  It was a long wait before the doctor came
through to him and Sean sensed that behind his professional poker face
the man was puzzled.

Is it a relapse?  Sean demanded.  No, I don't think so.  I've given her
a sedativeWhat's wrong with her?

What is it?  - Sean pursued him and the doctor hedged.  Has your wife
had some sort of shock .  .  . some bad news, something that could have
alarmed her?  Has she been under nervous strain?  No .  .  .  she's just
come back from church. Why?  What's wrong?  Sean caught the doctor's
lapels and shook him in his agitation.  It appears to be some sort of
paralytic hysteria.  I've given her laudanum.  She'll sleep now and I'll
come back to see her this evening.  The doctor was trying to loosen
Sean's hands from his jacket.  Sean let him go and pushed past him to
the bedroom.

The doctor called again just before dark, Sean had undressed Katrina and
put her into the bed, but apart from that she had not moved.  Her
breathing was shallow and fast despite the drug she had been given.  The
doctor was baffled.

I can't understand it, Mr Courtney.  There is nothing I can find wrong
with her apart from her general run-down condition.  I think we'll just
have to wait and see, I don't want to give her any more drugs.  Sean
knew the man could be of no more help to him and he hardly noticed when
he left with a promise to come again in the morning.  Mbejane gave Dirk
his bath, fed him and put him to bed and then he slipped quietly out of
the suite and left Sean alone with Katrina.  The afternoon of worry had
tired Sean.  He left the gas burning in the sitting-room and stretched
out on his own bed.

After a while he slept.

When the rhythm of Ins breathing changed Katrina looked across at him.
Sean lay fully clothed on top of his blankets, one thickly muscled arm
thrown above his head and his tension betrayed by the twitching of his
lips and the frown that puckered his face.  Katrina stood up and moved
across to stand over him, lonely as she had never been in the solitude
of the bush, hurt beyond the limits of physical pain and with everything
that she believed in destroyed in those few minutes that it had taken
for her to discover the truth.

She looked down at Sean and with surprise realized that she still loved
him, but now the security that she had found with him was gone.  The
walls of her castle had proved paper.  She had felt the first cold
draughts blowing in through them as she watched him reliving his past
and regretting it.  She had felt the walls tremble and the wind howl
stronger outside when he danced with that woman - then, they had
collapsed into rain around her.  Standing in the half-darkened room,
watching the man she trusted so completely and who just as completely
had betrayed her, she went carefully over the ground again to make sure
there was no mistake.

That morning, she and Dirk had stopped at the sweet shop on the way back
from church.  It was almost opposite the hotel.  it had taken Dirk a
long time to select his tuppenny worth.

The profusion of wares on display unmanned him and reduced him to a
state of dithering indecision.  Finally, with the assistance of the
proprietor and a little prompting from Katrina his purchases were made
and packed into a brown paper bag.  They were just about to go when
Katrina looked out through the large front window of the shop and saw
Candy Rautenbach leaving the hotel.  She came quickly down the front
steps, glanced about her, crossed the street to a waiting carriage and
her coachman whisked her away.  Katrina had stopped the instant she
caught sight of her.  A pang of last night's jealousy returned, for
Candy looked very lovely even in the morning sunlight.  It was not until
Candy's carriage disappeared that Katrina began to question her presence
at their hotel at eleven o'clock on a Sunday morning.  Her jealousy was
a bayonet thrust up under her ribs: it made her catch her breath.
Vividly she remembered Candy's whispered question as they left the
Golden Guinea the previous night.  She remembered the way Sean had
answered and the way he had lied about it afterwards.

Sean knew that Katrina would go to church that morning.

How simple it all was!  Sean had arranged to meet her, he had refused to
accompany Katrina and while Katrina was out of the way that harlot had
gone to him.Mummy, you're hurting me. Unconsciously she had tightened
her grip on Dirk's hand.  She hurried out of the shop, dragging Dirk
with her.  She almost ran across the hotel lobby, up the stairs and
along the passage.  The door was closed. She opened it and the smell of
Candy's perfume met her.

Her nostrils flared at it.  There was no mistaking it, she remembered it
from the previous evening the smell of fresh violets.  She heard Sean
call from the bathroom, Dirk ran across the room and hammered on the
door.  Daddy!  Daddy!  Mummy got sweets for me.  She put her Bible down
on top of the writing desk and moved across the thick carpet with the
smell of violets all around her.  She stood in the doorway of the
bedroom.

Sean's nightshirt lay on the floor, there were still damp stains on it.
She felt her legs begin to tremble.  She looked up and saw the stains on
the bed, grey on the white sheets.

She felt giddy, her cheeks burned; she only just managed to reach her
own bed.

She knew there was no mistake.  Sean had taken that woman in such a
casually blatant manner, in their own bedroom, almost before her eyes,
that his rejection of her could hardly have been more final if he had
slapped her face and thrown her into the street.  Weakened by fever,
depressed by the loss of her child and the phase of her cycle, she had
not the resilience to fight against it.  She had loved him but she had
proved insufficient for him.

She could not stay with him: the stubborn pride of her race would not
allow it.  There was only one alternative.

Timidly she bent over him and as she kissed him she smelt the warm
man-smell of his body and felt his beard brush her cheek.  Her
determination wavered; she wanted to throw herself across his chest,
lock her arms around his neck and plead with him.  She wanted to ask for
another chance.  If he could tell her how she had failed him she could
try to change, if only he could show her what she had done wrong.
Perhaps if they went back into the bush again, She dragged herself away
from his bed.  She pressed her knuckles hard against her lips.  It was
no use.  He had decided and even if she begged him to take her back
there would always be this thing between them.  She had lived in a
castle and she would not change it now for a mud hut.  Driven by the
trek whip of her pride she moved quickly across to the wardrobe.  She
put on a coat and buttoned it, it reached to her ankles and covered her
nightdress; she spread the green shawl over her head, winding the loose
end around her throat.  once more she looked across at Sean.  He slept
with his big body sprawled and the frown still on his face.

In the sitting-room.  she stopped beside the writing desk. -Her Bible
lay where she had left it.  She opened the front cover, dipped the pen
and wrote.  She closed the book and went to the door. There she
hesitated once more and looked back at Dirk's bedroom.  She could not
trust herself to see him again.  She lifted an end of the shawl to cover
her mouth, then she went out into the passage and closed the door softly
behind her.

Sean was surprised to find himself fully dressed and lying on top of his
bed when he woke next morning.  It was still half dark outside the hotel
windows and the room was cold.  He propped himself up on one elbow and
rubbed at his eyes with the back of a clenched fist.  Then he remembered
and he swung his legs off the bed and looked at Katrina's bed.  The
blankets were thrown back and it was empty.  Sean's first feeling was
relief, she had recovered enough to get up on her own.  He went through
to the bathroom, stumbling a little from the stiffness of uneasy sleep.
He tapped on the closed door.

Katrina?  he questioned and then again louder.  Katrina, are you in
there?  The handle turned when he tried it and the door swung open
without resistance.  He blinked at the empty room, white tiles
reflecting the uncertain light, a towel thrown across a chair where he
had left it.  He felt the first twinge of alarm.  Dirk's room, the door
was still locked, the key on the outside.  He flung it open.  Dirk sat
up in bed, his face flushed, his curls standing up like the leaves of a
sisal bush.  Sean ran out into the passage, along it and looked down
into the lobby.  There was a light burning behind the reception desk.
The clerk slept with his head on his arms, sitting forward on his chair
snoring Sean went down the stairs three at a time.  He shook the clerk.
Has anybody been out through here during the night?

Sean demanded.  I .  .  .  I don't know.  Is that door locked?  Sean
pointed at the front door.  No, sir, there's a night latch on it.  You
can get out but not in.  Sean ran out onto the pavement.  Which way,
which way to search for her?  Which way had she gone?  Back to Pretoria
to the wagons?  Sean thought not.  She would need transport and she had
no money to hire it.  Why should she leave without waking him, leave
Dirk, leave her clothing and disappear into the night.  She must have
been unbalanced by the drugs the doctor had given her.  Perhaps there
was something in his theory that she had suffered a shock, perhaps she
was wandering in her nightdress through the streets with no memory,
perhaps, Sean stood in the cold grey Transvaal morning, the city
starting to murmur into wakefulness around him, the questions crowding
into his head and finding there no answers with which to mate.

He turned and ran back through the hotel, out of the rear door into the
stable yard.  Mbejane, he shouted, Mbejane, where the hell are you?
Mbejane appeared quickly from the stall where he was currying one of the
hired horses.  Nkosi?  Have you seen the Nkosikazi?

Mbejane's face creased into a puzzled frown.  Yesterday, - No, man,
shouted Sean.  Today, last night .  .  .  have you seen her?

Mbejane's expression was sufficient reply.

Sean brushed impatiently past him and ran into the stable.  He snatched
a saddle off the rack and threw it onto the back of the nearest horse.
While he clinched the girth and forced a bit between its teeth he spoke
to Mbejane.  The Nkosikazi is sick.  She has left during the night.  It
is possible that she walks as one who still sleeps.  Go quickly among
your friends and tell them to search for her, tell them that there's ten
pounds in gold for the one who finds her.  Then come back here and care
for Dirk until I return. Sean led the horse from the stable and Mbejane
hurried off to spread the word.  Sean knew that within minutes half the
Zulus in Johannesburg would be looking for Katrina, tribal loyalty and
ten pounds in gold were strong incentives.  He swung up onto the horse
and galloped out of the yard.  He tried the Pretoria road first.  Three
miles out of town a native herd boy grazing sheep beside the road
convinced him that Katrina did not passed that way.

He turned back.  He paid a visit to the police station at Marshal
Square.  The Kommandant remembered him from the old days; Sean could
rely on his cooperation.

Sean left him and rode fast through the streets that were starting to
fill with the bustle of a working day.  He hitched his horse outside the
hotel and took the front steps three at a time.  The clerk had no news
for him.  He ran up the stairs and along the passage to his suite.
Mbejane was feeding Dirk his breakfast.  Dirk beamed at Sean through a
faceful of egg and spread his arms to be picked up but Sean had no time
for him.  Has she come back?

Mbejane shook his head.  They will find her, Nkosi.

Fifty men are searching for her now.  Stay with the child, said Sean and
went down to his horse.  He stood beside it ready to mount but not
knowing which way to go.  Where the hell has she got to?  he demanded
aloud.  In her night clothes with no money, where the hell had she gone?

He mounted and rode with aimless urgency through the streets, searching
the faces of the people along the sidewalks, turning down the sanitary
lanes and peering into backyards and vacant plots.  By midday he had
tired his horse and worked himself into a ferment of worry and bad
temper.  He had searched every street in Johannesburg, made a nuisance
of himself at the police station and sworn at the hotel clerk, but there
was still no sign of Katrina.  He was riding down Jeppe Street for the
fifth time when the imposing double-storey of Candy's Hotel registered
through his preoccupation.  Candy, he whispered.  She can help.  He
found her in her office among Persian rugs and Ot furniture, walls
covered with pink and blue patterned wallpaper, a mirrored ceiling hung
with six crystal waterfalls of chandeliers and a desk with an Indian
mosaic top.

Sean pushed aside the little man in the black alpaca coat who tried to
stop him entering and burst into the room.

Candy looked up and her small frown of -annoyance smoothed as she saw
who it was.  Sean.  .  .  oh, how nice to see you She came round from
behind the desk, the bell tent of her skirts covering the movement of
her legs so she seemed to float.  Her skin was smooth white and her eyes
were happy blue.  She held out her hand to him, but hesitated as she saw
his face.  What is it, Sean?  He told her in a rush and she listened and
when he had finished she rang the bell on her desk.  There's brandy in
the cabinet by the fireplace, she said, I expect you are in need of one.
The little man in the alpaca coat came quickly to the bell.  Sean poured
himself a large brandy and listened to Candy giving orders.  Check the
railway station.  Telegraph the coach stages on each of the main roads.
Send someone up to the hospital. Check the registers of every hotel and
boarding-house in town.  Very well, madame.  The little man bobbed his
head as he acknowledged each instruction and then he was gone.

Candy turned back to Sean.  You can pour a drink for me also and then
sit down and simmer down.  You're behaving just the way she wanted you
to What do you mean?  demanded Sean.  You are being given a little bit
of wifely discipline, my dear.  Surely you have been married long enough
to recognize thatV Sean carried the glass across to her and Candy patted
the sofa next to her.  Sit down, she said.  We'll find your little
Cinderella for youWhat do you mean wifely discipline?  he demanded
again.  Punishment for bad behaviour.  You may have eaten with your
mouth open, answered back, taken more than your share of the blankets,
not said good morning with the right inflection or committed one of the
other mortal sins of matrimony, but -- Candy sipped her drink and gasped
slightly, I see that time has not given you a lighter hand with the
brandy bottle.  One Courtney tot always did equal an imperial gallon . .
.  but, as I was saying, my guess is that little Katy is having an acute
attack of jealousy.

Probably her first, seeing that the two of you have spent your whole
married life out in the deep sticks and she has never had an opportunity
of watching the Courtney charm work on any other female before.
Nonsense, said Sean.  Who's she got to be jealous of?  Me, said Candy.
Every time she looked at me the other night I felt as though I'd been
hit in the chest with an axe Candy touched her magnificent bosom with
her fingertips, skilfully drawing Sean's attention to it.  Sean looked
at it.  It was deeply cleft and smelt of fresh violets.

He shifted restlessly and looked away.  Nonsense, he said again.  We're
just old friends, almost like - he hesitated.  I hope, my dear, that you
weren't going to say "brother and sister".  .  .  I'll not be party to
any incestuous relationship.  .  .  or had you forgotten about that?

Sean had not forgotten.  Every detail of it was still clear.

He blushed and stood up.  I'd better be going, he said.  I'm going to
keep looking for her.  Thanks for your help, Candy, and for the drink.
Whatever I have is yours, sir, she murmured, lifting an eyebrow at him,
enjoying the way he blushed.  I'll let you know as soon as we hear
anything.  The assurance that Candy had given him wore thinner as the
afternoon went by with no news of Katrina.  By nightfall Sean was again
wild with worry, it had completely swamped his bad temper and even
anaesthetized his fatigue.  One by one Mbejane's tribesmen came in to
report a blank score, one by one the avenues Candy's men were exploring
proved empty, and long before midnight Sean was the only hunter left. He
rode hunched in the saddle, a lantern in his hand, riding the ground
that had already been covered a dozen times, visiting the mining camps
along the ridge, stopping to question late travellers he met along the
network of roads between the mines.

But the answer was always the same.  Some thought he was joking: they
laughed until they saw that his face was haunted and dark-eyed in the
lantern light, then they stopped laughing and moved hurriedly on. Others
had heard about the missing woman; they started to question him, but as
soon as Sean realized they could not help him, he pushed past them and
went on searching.  At dawn he was back at the hotel.  Mbejane was
waiting for him.

Nkosi I have had food ready for you since last night.

Eat now and sleep a little.  I will send the men out to search again
today, they will find her.  Tell them, I will give one hundred pounds to
the one who finds her.  Sean passed his hand wearily across his face.
Tell them to hunt the open veld beyond the ridges, she may not have
followed a road.  I will tell them .  .  .  but now you must eat.

Sean blinked his eyes, they were red-veined and each had a little lump
of yellow mucus in the corner.

Dirk?  he asked.  He is well, Nkosi, I have stayed with him all the
while Mbejane took Sean firmly by the arm.  There is food ready.  You
must eat.  Saddle me another horse, said Sean.  I will eat while you do
it.

Without sleep, unsteady in the saddle as the day wore on, Sean widened
the circle of his search until he was out into the treeless veld and the
mine headgears, were small spidery triangles on the horizon.

A dozen times he met Zulus from the city, big black men in loin cloths,
moving at their businesslike trot, hunting the ground like hounds. There
was a concealed sympathy behind their greetings.  Mbejane has told us,
Nkosi.  We will find her.  And Sean left them and rode on alone, more
alone than he had ever been in his LIFE before.  After dark he rode back
into Johannesburg, the faint flutter of hope inside him stilled as he
limped stiffly into the gas-lit lobby, of the hotel and saw the pity in
the reception clerk's face.  No word, I'm afraid, Mr Courtney Sean
nodded.  Thanks anyway.  is my son all right?  Your servant has taken
good care of him, sir.  I sent dinner up to him an hour ago The stairs
seemed endless as he climbed them.  By God, he was tired, sick-tired and
sick with worry.  He pushed open the door of his suite and Candy stood
up from a chair across the room.  The hope flared up in him again Have
you  he started eagerly.  No, she said quickly. No, Sean, I'm sorry.  He
flopped into one of the chairs and Candy poured a drink for him from a
decanter that was waiting on the writing desk.  He smiled his thanks and
took a big gulp at the glass.  Candy lifted his legs one at a time and
pulled off his boots, ignoring his faint protest. Then she took up her
own glass and went to sit across the room from him.

I'm sorry I joked yesterday, she apologized softly.  I don't think I
realized how much you love her.  She lifted her glass to him.  Here's a
speedy end to the search.

Sean drank again, half a glass at a swallow.

You do love her, don't you?  Candy asked.

Sean answered her sharply.  She's my wife.  But it's not only that,
Candy went on recklessly, knowing his anger was just below the surface
of his fatigue.  Yes, I love her.  I'm just learning how much, I love
her as I'll never be able to love again.  He drained his glass and
stared at it, his face grey under the frown and his eyes dark with
unhappiness.  Love!  he said.  love?  mouthing the word, weighing it.
They've dirtied that word .  .  .

they sell love at the Opera House .  .  .  they have used that word so
much that now when I want to say "I love Katrina" it doesn't sound what
I mean.  Sean hurled the glass against the far wall, it shattered with a
crack and a tingle and Dirk stirred in the bedroom.  Sean dropped his
voice to a fierce whisper.  I love her so it screws my gut, I love her
so that to think of losing her now is like thinking of dying.

He clenched his fists and leaned forward in his chair.  I'll not lose
her now, by Christ, I'll find her and when I do I'll tell her this. I'll
tell her just like I'm telling you.  He stopped and frowned.  I don't
think I've ever said to her "I love you.  " I've never liked using that
word.  I've said "Marry me" and "You're my fancy, " but I've never said
it straight before.  Perhaps that's part of the reason she ran away,
Sean, perhaps because you never said it she thought you never felt it.
Candy was watching him with a strange expression, pity and understanding
and a litlle .  .  - yearning.  I'll find her, said Sean, and this time
I'll tell her.  .  .  if it's not too late.  You'll find her and it
won't be too late.  The earth can't have swallowed her, and she'll be
glad to hear you say it.  Candy stood up. You must rest now, you have a
hard day ahead of you.

Sean slept fully dressed in the chair in the sitting-room.

He slept brokenly, his mind struggling and kicking him back to half
wakefulness every few minutes.  Candy had turned the gas low before she
left and its light fell in a soft pool onto the writing desk beneath it.
Katrina's Bible lay Where she had left it and each time Sean started
awake the fat, leather-covered book caught his eye.  Some time before
dawn he woke for the last time and knew he could not sleep again.

He stood up and his body still ached and his eyes felt gritty.  He moved
across to the gas lamp and turned it up high, he let his hand drop from
the lamp onto the Bible.

its leather was cool and softly polished beneath his fingers.  He opened
the front cover and caught his breath with a hiss.

Beneath Katrina's name, in her carefully rounded writing, the ink still
freshly blue, she had filled in the date of death.

The page magnified slowly in front of his eyes until it filled the whole
field of his vision.  There was a rushing sound in his ears, the sound
of a river in flood, but above it he heard voices, different voices.

Let's go, Sean, it looks like a grave!  But more than anything she needs
love The earth can't have swallowed her.

And his own voice, If it's not too late, if it's not too late The
morning light was gathering strength as he reached the ruins of the old
Candy Deep office block.  He left his horse and ran through the grass
towards the mine dump.

The wind was small and cold; it moved the tops of the grass and went on
to where Katrina's green shawl was caught on the barbed wire fence that
ringed the shaft.  In the wind the shawl flapped its wings like a big
green bird of prey.

Sean reached the fence and looked down into the mouth of the shaft.  At
one place the grass had been torn away from the edge as though someone
had snatched at it as they fell.

Sean loosed the shawl from the spikes of the barbed wire, he balled the
heavy material in his fists, then he held it out over the shaft and let
it drop.  It spread out as it floated down into the blackness, and it
was the bright green of Katrina's eyes.  Why?  whispered Sean.  rWhy
have you done this to us, my fancy?  He turned away and walked back to
his horse, stumbling carelessly in the rough footing.

Mbejane was waiting for him in the hotel suite.

Get the carriage, Sean told him.  The Nkosikazi -TGet the carriage, Sean
repeated.

Sean carried Dirk downstairs.  He paid his bill at the reception desk
and went out to where MbeJane had the carriage ready.  He climbed up
into it and held Dirk on his lap.

Drive back to Pretoria, Sean said.

Where's Mummy?  Dirk demanded.  She's not coming with us.  Are we going
alone?  Dirk insisted and Sean nodded wearily.  Yes, Dirk, we are going
alone.  Is Mummy coming just now?  No, Dirk.  No, she's not.  It was
finished, Sean thought.  It was all over, all the dreams and the
laughter and the love, He was too numbed to feel the pain yet, it would
come later.  Why are you squeezing me so hard, Daddy?  Sean slackened
his grip and looked down at the child on his lap.  it was not finished,
he realized; it was only a new beginning.

But first I must have time for this to heal.  time, and a quiet place to
he up with this wound.  The wagons are waiting and I must go back into
the wilderness.

Perhaps after another year I will have healed sufficiently to start
again, to go back to Lady-burg with my son, back to Lady-burg, and to
Ada and to Garry, he thought.  Then suddenly and sickeningly he felt the
pain again, and the deep raw ache of it frightened him.  Please God,
prayed Sean who had never prayed before, please God give me the strength
to endure it.  Are you going to cry, Daddy? You look like you're going
to cry.  Dirk was watching Sean's face with solemn curiosity.  Sean
pulled the child's head gently against his shoulder and held it there.

If tears could pay both our debts, thought Sean, if with my tears I
could buy for you an indulgence from all pain, if by weeping now I could
do all your weeping for you then I would cry until my eyes were washed
away.  No, Dirk, he answered.  I am not going to cry, crying never helps
very much.  And Mbejane took them to where the wagons waited at
Pretoria.
