"How did you kill the beast?" Lobengula demanded.
"i stabbed him through the chinks in the wall with my father's assegai." and The boy crept forward and laid the lustrous gold dappled skin at Lobengula's feet.
"Take your choice of three cows from my black royal herds, little one, and drive them to your father's kraal and tell him that the king has given you a praise name. From this day you will be known as "The one who stares into the eyes of the leopard"."
The boy's voice cracked in an adolescent squeak as he backed away gabbling the praises.
Next was a Hollander, a big arrogant white man with a querulous voice.
"I have waited three weeks for the king to decide This was translated for Lobengula, and he mused aloud.
"See how red the man's face becomes when he is angry, like the wattles on the head of the black vulture. Tell him that the king does not count days, perhaps he will have to wait as long again, who knows?"
And he dismissed him with a flirt of the spear.
He took a pull from the bottle of champagne that stood on the wagon seat beside him. The wine fizzed and spilled onto the front of his gold-frogged jacket. Then suddenly his face lit into a beatific smile, but his voice was carping and querulous.
"I sent for you yesterday, Nomusa, Girlchild of Mercy.
I am in great pain; why did you not come sooner?"
"An eagle flies, a cheetah runs, but I am limited to the pace of a mule, oh King," said Robyn Codrington, as she picked her way through the offal that littered the earthen floor of the stockade, and with the, fly switch in her hand cleared a path through the crowd towards the wagon, even dealing a stinging cut to one of the king's black-cloaked executioners.
"Out of my way, eater of human flesh," she told him primly. "Be gone, child stabber." And the man leaped aside nimbly and scowled after her.
"What is it, Lobengula?" she asked as she reached the wagon. "What ails you this time?"
"My feet are filled with burning coals., "Gout," Robyn said as she touched the grotesquely swollen appendages. "You drink too much beer, oh King, you drink too much brandy and champagne., She opened her bag.
"You would have me die of thirst. You are not well named, Nomusa; there is no pity in your heart."
"Nor yours, Lobengula," Robyn snapped. "They tell me you have sent another impi to murder the people of Pemba."
"He is only a Mashona," Lobengula chuckled. "Save your sympathy for a king whose stomach feels as though it is filled with sharp stones."
"Indigestion," Robyn scolded. "Gluttony killed your father, and it is killing you."
"Now you would starve me also. You want me to be a skinny little man of no consequence."
"A thin live one or a fat dead one," Robyn told him.
"Open your mouth."
Lobengula choked on the draught, and rolled his eyes theatrically.
"The pain is better than the taste of your medicine."
"i will leave you five of these pills. Eat one when your feet swell and the pain becomes fierce."
"Twenty," said Lobengula. "A box full. I, Lobengula, King of Matabele, command it. Leave me a box of these little white pills."
"Five," said Robyn firmly. "Or you will eat them all at one time, as you did before."
The king rocked with gargantuan laughter, and almost fell from the wagon seat.
"I think I will command you to leave those little white huts of yours at Khami, and come to live closer to me."
"I should not obey."
"That's why I do not command it," Lobengula agreed, with another shout of laughter.
"This kraal is a disgrace, the dirt, the flies-' "A few old bones and a little dog shit never killed a Matabele," the king told her, and then was serious and motioned her closer, dropping his voice-so that only she could hear.
"The Dutchman with the red face, you know he wishes to build a trade post at the ford of the Hunyani river "The man is a cheat. The goods he brings are shoddy, and he will deceive your people."
"A runner has brought this book." He handed the folded and wafered sheet to Robyn. "Read it for me."
"It is from Sir Francis Good. He wishes--! For almost an hour, whispering hoarsely so that no other could hear, Lobengula consulted Robyn on fifty different matters ranging from the British Commissioner's letter to the menstrual problems of his youngest wife. Then at last he said, "Your coming is like the first sweet rain at the end of the long dry. Is there aught I can do for your happiness?"
"You can let your people come to worship in my church."
This time the king's chuckle was rueful. "Nomusa, you are as persistent as the termites that gnaw away the poles of my hut." He frowned with thought and then smiled again. "Very well, I will let you take one of my people, as long as it is a woman, the wife of an induna of royal blood, and the mother of twelve sons. If you can find one of my people who meets all those conditions, you may take her and splash water on her and make your sign on her forehead; and she may sing songs to your three white gods if she so wishes."
This time Robyn had to answer his sly and mischievous grin. "You are a cruel man, Lobengula, and you eat and drink too much. But I love you."
"And I love you also, Nomusa."
"Then I will ask one more favour."
"Ask it,"he commanded.
"There is a lad, son of my brother "Henshaw."
"The king knows all."
"What of this boy?"
,"will the king listen to his petition?"
"Send him to me."
Even from where he stood Bazo could see that the grain bins were overflowing with corn that had been sundried still on the cob. There was enough to feed an army, he decided bitterly. There was no chance of starving them out.
The grain bins were cylindrical in shape, their walls of plaited green saplings plastered with clay and cow dung. They stood on stilts of mopani poles to allow the air to circulate below them, and to keep out bush rats and other vermin.
They were perched on the very edge of the precipice.
The dog has brought good rains to his own fields," murmured Zama, Bazo's lieutenant. "He is fat with corn.
Rain-doctor as he claims."
Perhaps he is "Water," Bazo mused, staring up the sheer cliff.
Beyond the grain bins he could make out. the thatched roofs of the tribal huts. "Can we drive them out with thirst?" he asked advice, for Zama had been a member of one of the previous abortive raids upon the stronghold. "The three other indunas tried that at first," Zama pointed out. "But then one of the Mashona. that they captured told them that there is a running spring from which they draw all the water they wish."
The sun was beyond the summit of the hill, so Bazo squinted his eyes against it. "There is lush green growth there He pointed to a narrow gulley that cleft the top of the cliff like an axe stroke but was choked with growth. "That would be it."
As if to confirm his words the tiny distant figure of a girl appeared suddenly out of the gulley. She was foreshortened by her height above them, and the ledge along which she climbed was not apparent from where they stood.
She had a calabash gourd balanced on her head, with green leaves stuffed into its mouth to stop the water splashing out of it as she moved.
She disappeared over the top of the cliff.
"So," grunted Bazo. "We must climb up to them., "It would be easier to fly," Zama grunted. "That rock would daunt a baboon, or a klipspringer."
The rock was pearly grey and marble smooth. There were streaks of lichen dashed across it, green and blue and red, like dry paint on an artist's palette.
"Come," Bazo ordered, and they began a slow measured circuit of the hill, and as they went so the armed guards on the clifftop above kept pace with them, watching every move they made, and if they approached too close to the foot of the cliff, a hail of rocks fell upon them, striking sparks from the scree slope and caroming viciously past their heads, forcing them to shelve their dignity as they retired in haste.
"It is always the Mashona. way," Zama grumbled, "Stones instead of spears."