Suddenly she’s on her feet and motioning for him to follow. She pauses at the door of the hut, sad and beautiful, her hair bound up in tight corn-row plaits, her eyes like ripe olives. “Go ahead,” she murmurs, and gestures for him to enter.
It is cool and dark inside, a funnel of milky light sifting down from the smoke hole at the top. The floor has been swept clean, the beaten earth smooth as tile. In the center of the hut, a circle of stones and three or four twists of the slow-burning liana the Mandingoes use in place of a lantern at night. To the left, a king-size bed consisting of a bamboo frame and a tightly-stretched bullock’s hide. There are some wicker chairs and a bench, saphies and calabashes dangling from the center pole, a few earthenware vessels grouped in the corner. Just about what you’d expect from any native hut.
But what makes this one different, what makes it extraordinary and special, unlike any other hut in the whole of Africa, what makes it Johnson’s hut, is the bookshelf, bathed in overhead light until it looks ghostly and illusory: the bookshelf neatly constructed of bamboo and hemp and lined with the complete works of Shakespeare, quarto volumes, bound in leather. The sight of it somehow overloads the explorer’s glandular system and he feels like crying, a deep ache in his throat and chest. He takes up one of the volumes at random—Othello—and reads:
If virtue no delighted beauty lack,
Your son-in-law is far more fair than black.
Jolly old Johnson, he thinks, shaking his head slowly and deliberately, as if it suddenly weighed two hundred pounds.
He replaces the volume and then notices Johnson’s writing desk — no more than a leaf really — squeezed up against a square shutter cut into the thatch. Slips of papyrus paper, an earthenware jar of quills and a pot of indigo ink: tools of the trade. Never underestimate the power of the written word, Mr. Park, he would say if he were here now, grinning and shuffling and holding up something for the pot. The explorer idly strokes the ink jar, touches a sharpened quill to the tip of his tongue. Lost in reminiscence, he’s only vaguely aware that Amuta has left him alone in the hut, too preoccupied to give much thought to her odd greeting (“We’ve been expecting you.” We who?), oblivious to everything but the sad sweet sensation of fingering Johnson’s artifacts and resurrecting the past.
When he turns round he is almost startled by the figure in the doorway. Backlit, the face in shadow, too squat and wide for Amuta. A man. The stranger steps forward, light on his feet for so squat a fellow, the botanical fringe of his hair silhouetted in the light from the doorway, and for one wild moment — trompe l’oeil — the explorer thinks it is Johnson himself come back from the grave.
“E ning somo, marhaba,’’ Mungo says, the traditional greeting.
The voice that comes back at him is so hauntingly familiar it makes his scalp creep and his throat go dry: “E ning somo, marhaba Park.’’
Uncanny. The inflection, timbre, tone. But what with the size of the village and all the inbreeding that goes on, who can say? The explorer clears his throat. “Are. . are you a relative of John — I mean of Katunga Oyo’s?”
Black in shadow, black in light, the figure steps deliberately forward until bathed in the golden glow of the smoke hole, at once illuminated and realized, the leading man gliding from the wings to a burst of applause. Suddenly he’s speaking in English: “Relative? No, I wooden say dat.”
Mungo edges closer, the quill still clutched in his hand, blood pounding, adrenalin up, all the voices of rationality, all the sonorous schoolteachers and African Associates and pedantic scientists in safe and sane Great Britain shouting no, no, no. But it is. Yes, yes, yes: it is. Johnson. Johnson in the flesh.
The explorer’s reaction is purely instinctual — he flings himself at the fat little man before him with all the enthusiasm of a freshman home for the holidays. “Johnson!” he cries, vigorously pounding his back and pinching the fleshy shoulders in a crushing embrace, “you should have written, you should have at least. . but you don’t know how good it is to see you, old boy, how good. . but tell me,” stepping back now, “how did you, I mean, I thought—?”
The Mandingo remains perfectly rigid through all of this, making no effort to return the explorer’s embrace, no effort at even the most rudimentary of social signals — he does not smile, he does not offer his hand. He seems so unmoved, so emotionless, that the explorer begins to doubt himself for a minute. Could this be a twin brother? First cousin? But no: it is Johnson. Unmistakably. Past sixty now but looking twenty years younger, his hair sprinkled with salt, fatter than ever. There’s the gold straight pin through his nostril, and there, the look of mock dignity on his face, the look that says you’ve ruffled my feathers, friend, but I’ll consider the case closed if you come up with a calabash of palm wine and maybe a leg of lamb to sweeten my kouskous. He’s seen that look a thousand times. Of course it’s Johnson. “Johnson,” the explorer says, sharp and impatient, as if he were trying to wake someone from a deep sleep, “Johnson: don’t you recognize me?”
The black man looks him dead in the eye. “The name’s Isaaco.”
“Isaaco? What do you mean? Johnson — it’s me, Mungo.” It is then that the explorer realizes what is lacking, the missing element in the composition of Johnson so permanently embedded in his memory: the toga. Spindly-legged and potbellied, his former guide is wearing nothing but a single piece of linen — immaculate as a buck’s neckcloth — swaddled round his loins. Above it — and this is a shock — the great hard ball of his belly is seamed with two ragged horizontal scars, the first clamped across his ribcage like a high-waisted belt, the second obliterating his navel and then skewing off at an angle into the folds of his loincloth, only to reappear, pink and ugly, along the outside of his thigh. Toothy, angular, the scars could have been cut with a stupendous pair of pinking shears.
A wave of pity and revulsion washes over the explorer and he reaches out a tentative consolatory finger, as if to smooth the line of the upper scar.
“I–I didn’t know. I would have done anything, you know that.”
The Mandingo’s eyes are fixed on the smoke hole.
“Johnson—”
The eyes dropping, no hint of amusement, jaw set. “The name is Isaaco.”
♦ FIRST EDITIONS ♦
Johnson/Isaaco is seated on a bullock-hide stool. He is wearing a crimson and indigo toga patterned over with pairs of leering yellow eyes, and he has assumed the lotus position. A cap of the sort worn by British sailors perches on his head. It is made of silk and has been nattily embroidered with gold thread. At his side, Amuta and a steatopygous twelve-year-old in a striped shift. Ranged behind him, alike as bowling pins, a host of retainers and slaves. Johnson, world traveler, wise man and saphie-scribbler, has grown wealthy.
On the other side of the fire, seated in the dirt, are Mungo, Zander, Scott, Martyn — and Ned Rise. The remains of a feast — a rack of lamb, plantain leaves, empty calabashes and yam skins — are scattered round them. Insects and amphibians chirr in the darkness of the surrounding forest, many-voiced, an electric current, and then some higher form of life silences them with a sudden desolate howl. The fire leaps.
“Well, John — er, Isaaco,” Mungo says, hearty as a solicitor with an investment portfolio in his lap, “just what would induce you to come along with us as guide and interpreter?” The explorer raises a cup of hoona tea to his lips. “You can name your price.”