Part 22 (2/2)
”Azinte,” said Harold, rising to a sitting posture.
Kambira sat down, drew up his knees to his chin, and clasped his hands round them.
”Tell me all you know about Azinte,” he said in a low, firm voice.
It was evident that the chief was endeavouring to restrain some powerful feeling, for his face, black though it was, indicated a distinct degree of pallor, and his lips were firmly compressed together. Harold therefore, much surprised as well as interested, related the little he knew about the poor girl,--his meeting with her in Yoosoof's hut; Disco's kindness to her, and her subsequent departure with the Arab.
Kambira sat motionless until he had finished.
”Do you know where she is gone?” he inquired.
”No. I know not; but she was not in the boat with the other slaves when we sailed, from which I think it likely that she remained upon the coast.--But why do you ask, Kambira, why are you so anxious about her?”
”She is my wife,” muttered the chief between his teeth; and, as he said so, a frown that was absolutely diabolical settled down on his features.
For some minutes there was a dead silence, for both Harold and Disco felt intuitively that to offer consolation or hope were out of the question.
Presently Kambira raised his head, and a smile chased the frown away as he said--”You have been kind to Azinte, will you be kind to her husband?”
”We should be indeed unworthy the name of Englishmen if we said no to that,” replied Harold, glancing at Disco, who nodded approval.
”Good. Will you take me with you to the sh.o.r.es of the great salt lake?”
said Kambira, in a low, pathetic tone, ”will you make me your servant, your slave?”
”Most gladly will I take you with me as _a friend_,” returned Harold.
”I need not ask why you wish to go,” he added,--”you go to seek Azinte?”
”Yes,” cried the chief, springing up wildly and drawing himself up to his full height, ”I go to seek Azinte. Ho! up men! up! Ye have feasted enough and slept enough for one night. Who knows but the slavers may be at our huts while we lie idly here? Up! Let us go!”
The ringing tones acted like a magic spell. Savage camps are soon pitched and sooner raised. In a few minutes the obedient hunters had bundled up all their possessions, and in less than a quarter of an hour the whole band was tracking its way by moonlight through the pathless jungle.
The pace at which they travelled home was much more rapid than that at which they had set out on their expedition. Somehow, the vigorous tones in which Kambira had given command to break up the camp, coupled with his words, roused the idea that he must have received information of danger threatening the village, and some of the more anxious husbands and fathers, unable to restrain themselves, left the party altogether and ran back the whole way. To their great relief, however, they found on arriving that all was quiet. The women were singing and at work in the fields, the children shouting at play, and the men at their wonted occupation of weaving cotton cloth, or making nets and bows, under the banyan-trees.
Perplexity is not a pleasant condition of existence, nevertheless, to perplexity mankind is more or less doomed in every period of life and in every mundane scene--particularly in the jungles of central Africa, as Harold and his friends found out many a time to their cost.
On arriving at the native village, the chief point that perplexed our hero there was as to whether he should return to the coast at once, or push on further into the interior. On the one hand he wished very much to see more of the land and its inhabitants; on the other hand, Kambira was painfully anxious to proceed at once to the coast in search, of his lost wife, and pressed him to set off without delay.
The chief was rather an exception in regard to his feelings on this point. Most other African potentates had several wives, and in the event of losing one of them might have found consolation in the others.
But Kambira had never apparently thought of taking another wife after the loss of Azinte, and the only comfort he had was in his little boy, who bore a strong resemblance, in some points, to the mother.
But although Harold felt strong sympathy with the man, and would have gone a long way out of his course to aid him, he could not avoid perceiving that the case was almost, if not altogether, a hopeless one.
He had no idea to what part of the coast Azinte had been taken. For all he knew to the contrary, she might have been long ago s.h.i.+pped off to the northern markets, and probably was, even while he talked of her, the inmate of an Arab harem, or at all events a piece of goods--a ”chattel”--in the absolute possession of an irresponsible master.
Besides the improbability of Kambira ever hearing what had become of his wife, or to what part of the earth she had been transported, there was also the difficulty of devising any definite course of action for the chief himself, because the instant he should venture to leave the protection of the Englishmen he would be certain to fall into the hands of Arabs or Portuguese, and become enslaved.
Much of this Harold had not the heart to explain to him. He dwelt, however, pretty strongly on the latter contingency, though without producing much effect. Death, the chief replied, he did not fear, and slavery could easily be exchanged for death.
<script>