The initial disappointment is trifling — the result of a minor accident, unforeseeable, unavoidable — and yet for all that, something of an evil portent, a bringdown, a rotten and insipid way to launch so historic an adventure as this. Even worse, it involves the first death.
Leland Cahill, like most of the men recruited from the garrison, had been drinking heavily in celebration of his reprieve from the certain doom of Goree, drinking to the success of the expedition, the honor of Mungo Park, the courage of his companions and just about anything else he could think of. Cahill was an acne-scarred eighteen-year-old, somewhat below the median in intelligence, who presented an innocuous and winning front, and who had been sentenced to life imprisonment for sacrilege, public micturition and stealing woollen clothes from tenter grounds. Sober, he was a notch above worthless; drunk, he was no more capable of pulling his weight than a cross-eyed catatonic from Bethlehem Hospital. Nonetheless, when the Crescent came to anchor off Pisania it was his task — along with Mitchell Mewshaw — to secure the gangway.
Since the river was running low at this season, the ship’s captain was forced to drop anchor some hundred and twenty yards offshore. Fortunately, Mungo had foreseen this eventuality and had sent ahead to have a raft constructed for the purpose of transporting men, animals and equipment from ship to shore. The raft was waiting for them as they rounded a bend in the river and drew within sight of the outbuildings of the factory.
By unanimous consent of the officers, the asses — whose stench was terrific in such close quarters and high temperatures — were to be evacuated first. As if aware of their prerogative, the asses became increasingly animated as the two sleek Pisanian negroes positioned the raft alongside the ship. Unfortunately, Cahill and Mewshaw, passing a bottle of gin and swapping dirty stories, took no notice of the situation. When the raft was properly secured they merely backed up a step or two, fastened the ropes and guided the wooden gangway over the side of the ship and into position. A mistake. As the gangway breached the bulwarks the asses began to stamp and snort, impatient with the crowding and the swaying of the ship; the instant it touched down they stampeded. A dun blur shot over the rail and down the narrow walkway in a fury of crashing hoofs, pandemonious braying and hellish kicking. Eighteen asses plunged directly into the water. The remainder managed to make the raft — shaken and wild-eyed — scrambling hard to escape the push from behind. Inevitably they spooked the negroes and capsized the raft. In all, six asses were lost. As for Leland Cahill, private first class, he was last seen pitching headlong down the sloping ramp of the gangway, one hundred and eight individual hoofs making their separate imprints in his flesh.
♦ ♦ ♦
The second disappointment is less tangible, more a mental and spiritual letdown than the first. More a disappointment in the true sense of the word — a betrayal of expectation rather than a sudden tragic turn of events.
After the explorer had straightened out his men and asses and assigned a crew to grapple the river for Cahill’s body, his first thought was of Dr. Laidley. It had been nearly eight years. And yet when he thought of Africa, he thought of Laidley. The old man had equipped and instructed him in preparation for that first mission — had taught him Mandingo, filled him in on native customs and introduced him to Johnson. While Mungo lay back in bed, nearly eviscerated from his first bout with jungle fever, Laidley had nursed him, brought him cup after cup of stiff, cleansing native tea, read to him from Donne, Milton and Shakespeare in a voice as serene and assured as the Bank of England. He was the last to see the explorer off and the first to congratulate him on his return — and the first white man to hear the historic news of the Niger. He was the center in a chaos of colors, dialects, tattoos and nose rings, the single fixed point in an ever-shifting pattern of bizarre needs, wants and practices. He was Mungo’s mentor.
As the explorer made his way through the tumble of reed huts — each with its barking dog and naked children framed in the entranceway — and up the dusty street to the doctor’s rambling residence cum fortress cum factory, he broke into an anticipatory grin as he thought of the pleasure of seeing him again, shaking his hand and introducing him to Zander, telling him of the phenomenal success of the book and the effect his discovery was having on the cartographers of Europe. He could already picture the congenitally flushed cheeks, the white tonsure, the nodding head and pursed lips, the sideways contemplative glance of the old man as he sat in his cane rocker absorbing all the news of England before exploding in a flurry of hospitality. “Yes, yes, yes,” he’d say, fatherly, Franklinesque, trotting round the room till the tails of his jacket caught the wind, “but here, have some palm wine, some goat’s cheese, a dish of kouskous. Or how about a steak? Cigar? Brandy?” Mungo would inscribe a copy of his Travels for him, and they’d sit back on the veranda and immerse themselves in a connoisseur’s palaver about the countryside, the flow of words laving him, washing out the lint of seven years’ absence, conjuring up half-forgotten truths about meteorology and geography, about royal succession and tribal boundaries. If the truth be known, the explorer was in sad need of a refresher course.
All this ran through his head as he and Zander ascended the familiar rough-hewn steps of the piazza, but a nagging question kept intruding itself as welclass="underline" why hadn’t the old man come out to greet them as they landed? Was he indisposed? Away in the bush?
The answer waited for him just behind the open door, in the lank-haired, unshaven person of D. K. Crump, the doctor’s former assistant and temporary successor. Crump was slouched in a wicker chair, a bottle of gin on the desk before him and a reefer of mutokuane fuming in his hand. His eyes were latticed with red. Beside him, her heavy lids half shut in ecstasy or stupor, a black woman in a striped shift languidly rotated a fan while Crump, his hand thrust through the armhole of her dress, manipulated her breasts as if they were potatoes in a sack.
It took a moment for the explorer’s eyes to adjust to all this. The factory was dark and immense, strewn with articles for barter. There were knives, muskets, kegs of powder, bolts of cloth, mirrors, demijohns of wine and brandy, kegs of nails, axes, saws, jacks-in-the-box and penny candies by the barrel. And up against these, a mountain of local products taken in exchange — elephant tusks, teeth and feet, amorphous mounds of beeswax, birds’ feathers of every hue and description, baskets of peppercorns and peanuts, great twisted tangles of ebony, the limp pelts of leopard, lion and zebra. It looked like the aftermath of some natural disaster, the leavings of a flood, driftwood and jetsam, piled in a dusty heap that lost itself in the dim reaches of the warehouse. The explorer took in the sweep of it, and then turned back to this bare-chested man with the stringy biceps who seemed to preside over it all.
“I’m Mungo Park,” he said, bowing, “and this is Alexander Anderson, my second-in-command. Is Dr. Laidley about?”
The man looked up at him for a long moment, as insouciant as a lizard on a rock. He took a drag on his reefer, and then laughed, as short and sudden as the single bark of a dog.
Mungo shifted uneasily on his feet. Crump jiggled the black woman’s breasts. Zander took a step forward. “See here,” he said, “you’ve been asked a civil question — do you know the whereabouts of the factor here, or don’t you?”
Crump’s eyes were dead blue, emotionless to the core. He set the reefer on the edge of the desk and took a drink of gin. Then he laughed again. “Ha!” he growled finally. “The old geek’s gone and kicked off then, near a month back.”
Prying the details from him was like drawing splinters from flesh. But after ten minutes of patient questioning, the two geographical missionaries were able to establish that Laidley’s death had been accidental. It seemed that the doctor had just returned from an extended collecting trip in the interior, during which he’d survived the onslaught of a dyspeptic lion, the strike of a black mamba and a Foulah raid, when he strolled out into the courtyard to inspect his roses, was stung in the right nostril by a honeybee and died gasping twenty minutes later. Crump — Dirk Crump, a London lowlife and ne’er-do-well who’d convinced the company he was the man for the job — had been sent out a month earlier to replace Laidley’s former assistant, who had succumbed to the climate. He supervised the funeral arrangements (“a bunch of bollocky wogs muckin’ about in the earth”), said a few words over the mound of yellow clay that swallowed up the good doctor, and notified his superiors in London of the changed circumstances at the factory. It would take four months for the news to reach the offices of the West African Company in London, another six or seven before the company could act on it. Until then, Crump was in charge.