"What an extraordinary piece of work," he said softly, and went down on one knee to examine the shark-tooth pattern that was carved into the plinth. In that attitude he seemed like a worshipper, a priest conducting some weird rite before the idol.
Again Zouga felt that superstitious flutter of nerves crawl like insects upon his skin, and to break the mood he called loudly for Jan Cheroot to bring a lantern.
In the lantern's beam they scrutinized the polished greenish stone, and as Rhodes ran his big large-knuckled hand over it his expression was rapt, the gaze of those strange pale eyes remote, like a poet hearing words in his head.
Long after Pickering and Zouga had returned to their seats by the log fire, Rhodes stood alone under the camel-thorn tree with the falcon, and when at last he left it to join them once more, his tone was brittle with accusation.
"That thing is a treasure, Ballantyne. It is unforgivable to leave it lying out under a tree."
"It's lain in worse conditions for hundreds, perhaps thousands of years," Zouga replied drily.
"You are right." Rhodes sighed, his attention straying back to the bird. "It's yours to do with as you wish." And then, impulsively, "I wish to purchase it from you. Name a price."
"It's not for sale," Zouga told him".
"Five hundred pounds," said Rhodes.
The sum startled Zouga, but his reply was immediate.
"No., "A thousand., "I say," Pickering intervened. "You can pick up ten claims in number 6 Section for that."
Rhodes did not glance at him, but he nodded. "Yes, you could, or Major Ballantyne could pay for his share of the new stagings with a thousand pounds."
A thousand pounds. Zouga felt himself tempted. A thousand pounds would see him clear.
"No." He shook his head. "I'm sorry." He felt he had to explain. "It has become the household god, my personal good-luck symbol."
"Good luck!" snorted Jan Cheroot from across the fire, and all three of them turned their heads in his direction.
None of them noticed him sitting on the edge of the shadows like a wizened little yellow gnome.
"Good luck!"the Hottentot repeated scornfully. "Since we picked up that verdamned bird we haven't seen a day's good luck." He spat into the fire, and his phlegm sizzled and exploded in a little puff of steam. "That bird has put blisters on our feet and rubbed the skin from our backs, it has broken the axles of our wagons and lamed our horses. It has brought us fever, and sickness and death. Miss Aletta died looking at that bird, and Jordie would have followed her if I hadn't thrown the verdamned thing out."
"That's nonsense," Zouga snapped sharply. "That's an old Hottentot maid's superstition."
"Ja," Jan Cheroot challenged him hotly. "Is it an old Hottentot superstition that we are sitting in the dust of this hell-hole, swatting flies and rubbing empty bellies?
Is it superstition that all around us they are pulling fat diamonds and we find only the droppings and manure?
Is it superstition that the earth has fallen on our claims and that it nearly swallowed Ralph? Is that your good luck that you boast the bird brings you, Master Zouga?
If it is, then hear the words of old Jan Cheroot and take the thousand pounds that mister Rhodes offers you; take it with both hands, and thank him for getting rid of that that -" Jan Cheroot ran out of words and glared across the fire at the birdshape under the thorn tree.
"Damn me," Pickering smiled. "But you nag like a wife."
None of them were surprised at the familiar address between servant and master. In Africa relationships like this were common; the servant considering himself to be part of the family with a voice in the affairs of the family, and his claim was accepted by all.
"Jan Cheroot has hated the idol since the day we discovered it."
"Tell me about that day, Jan Cheroot," ordered Rhodes brusquely; and Jan Cheroot puffed up visibly with selfimportance. There were few things he enjoyed more than an important and attentive audience and a good story to tell them. While he made a show of packing his clay pipe with black Magaliesberg shag tobacco and lighting it with an ember from the fire, the two boys crept out of the tent drawn by the prospect of a story. They glanced cautiously at Zouga and, when he made no move to send them back, they were emboldened.
Jordie sat next to Jan Cheroot and leaned his curly golden head against the Hottentot's shoulder, while Ralph came diffidently to sit with the men beside the fire.
"We had been one year in the bush," Jan Cheroot began, tone year without seeing a civilized man, one year trekking and hunting-" And the boys settled down with delicious anticipation. They had heard the story a hundred times before and enjoyed each telling more than the last.
"We had killed two hundred great elephant since leaving the Zambezi river, and we had fought bad men and savages. Our porters had mostly deserted or died of disease and wild animals, our provisions were long finished, no salt, no tea, no medicine and little gunpowder. Our clothes were rags, our boots worn through and repaired with the wet hide of buffalo.
"It had been a killing journey, over mountains with no passes and rivers with no names " and ordinary men would long ago have fallen and the birds would have picked their bones white. Even we were tired and sick and we were lost. Around us, as far as our eyes could see, there was nothing but wild hills and bad bush through which only the buffalo could pass."
"And you needed honey for your strength," Jordie burst out, unable to contain himself, and knowing the story word perfect. "Otherwise you would have died in the bush."
"And we needed honey for our strength or we would have died in the bush," Jan Cheroot agreed solemnly.
"Out of the bush came a little brown honey guide, and he sang thus -" Jan Cheroot imitated the high-pitched burring call and fluttered his fingers in an uncanny imitation of the bird."
"Come!" he called to us. "Come, follow me, and I will lead you to the hive."
"But he wasn't a real honey-bird, was he, Jan Cheroot?"
Jordie cried excitedly.
"No, Jordie, he wasn't a real honey-bird."
"And you followed him!"
"And we followed him for many days through bad country. Even when Master Zouga, your father, would have turned back, old Jan Cheroot was firm. We must go on, I told him, for by this time I, who have a deep knowledge and understanding of ghosts and spirits, realized that this was not a real honey-bird but a hobgoblin in the guise of a bird."
Zouga smiled softly. He remembered the incident differently. They had followed the bird for some hours, and it was Jan Cheroot who had lost interest in the hunt and had to be prodded and cajoled to continue.
"Then suddenly -" Jan Cheroot paused and flung out both hands theatrically, "- before our eyes, a wall of grey stone rose out of the bush. A wall so high it was like a mountain. With my axe I chopped away the vines and found a great gateway, guarded by fierce spirits "Spirits?" Zouga smiled.
"They were invisible to ordinary eyes," Jan Cheroot explained loftily. "And I put them to flight with a magical sign."
Zouga winked at Pickering, but Jan Cheroot ignored their smiles.
"Beyond the gateway was a temple yard, in which lay the falcon statues, cast down, some of them shattered, but all of them covered with heaps of gold, mountains of gold."
Zouga sighed. "Fifty pounds weight to be exact. Fragments and tiny pieces which we had to sift from the soil.
How I wish it had been a mountain."
"We gathered the gold from where it lay, and we took up that statue on our shoulders and carried it one thousand miles,"
"Complaining every step of the way," Zouga pointed out.
"until we reached Cape Town again."
It was after midnight when Jan Cheroot brought the saddled horses to the camp fire, and as Rhodes took the reins he paused in the act of mounting.
"Tell me, Major, this land to the north, this Zambezia as you call it in your book, what is it that keeps you from it? What are you doing here?"
"I need money," Zouga told him simply. "And somehow I know that the road to the north begins here. The money to take and hold Zambezia will come from the workings of New Rush."