Part 22 (1/2)

Isobel said thoughtfully, ”There'd be international advantages. It's always been a galling factor in Africans dealing with Europeans that they had to learn the European language involved. You couldn't expect your white man to learn kitchen kaffir, or Swahili, or whatever, not when you got on the diplomatic level.”

Cliff Jackson was thinking out loud. ”So far, El Ha.s.san is an unknown.

Rumor has it that he's everything from a renegade Egyptian, to an escaped Mau-Mau chief, to a Senegalese sergeant formerly in the French West African forces. But when he starts running into the press and they find that Homer and his closest a.s.sociates all speak English, and most of them with an American accent, there's going to be some fat in the fire.”

”And El Ha.s.san will have lost some of his mysterious glamour,” Homer added thoughtfully.

Even Moroka, the South African, was beginning to accept the idea. ”If El Ha.s.san, himself, refused in the presence of foreigners ever to speak anything but Esperanto, the aura of mystery would continue.”

Jimmy Peters, elaborating and obviously pus.h.i.+ng an opinion he and his brother had already discussed, said, ”We make it a rule that every school, both locally taught and foreign, must teach Esperanto as a required subject. All El Ha.s.san governmental affairs would be conducted in that language. Anybody at all trying to get anywhere in the new regime would have to learn the official inter-African tongue.”

”Oh, brother,” Cliff groaned, ”that means me.” He brightened. ”We haven't any books or anything, as yet.”

Isobel laughed at him. ”I'll take on your studies, Cliff. We have a few books. Those that Homer and his team used to kill time with. And as soon as we're in a position to make requests for foreign aid of the great powers, Esperanto grammars, dictionaries and so forth can be high on the list.”

With a sharp cry, almost a bark, a figure jumped into the entrance and with a bound into the center of the tent, sub-machinegun in hand.

”_All right, everybody. On your feet. The place is raided!_”

Dave Moroka leaped to his feet, his hand tearing with blurring speed for his holstered hand gun. ”Where's that bodyguard?” he yelled.

VII

”Hold it,” Homer Crawford roared, jumping to his own feet and grabbing the South African in his arms. He glared at the newcomer. ”Kenny, you idiot, you're lucky you don't have a couple of holes in you.”

Kenny Ballalou, grinning widely, stared at Dave Moroka. ”Jeepers,” he said, ”you got that gun out fast. Don't you ever stick 'em up when somebody has the drop on you?”

Dave Moroka relaxed, the side arm dropping back into its holster.

Homer Crawford released him and the South African ran a hand over his mouth and shook his head ruefully at Kenny.

Isobel and Cliff crowded up, the one to kiss Kenny happily, the other to pound him on the back.

Homer made introductions to Dave Moroka and the Peters brothers.

”I've told you about Kenny,” he wound it up. ”I sent him over to the west to raise a harka of Nemadi to help in taking Tamanra.s.set.” He joined Cliff Jackson in giving the smaller man an affectionate blow on the shoulder. ”What luck did you have, Kenny?”

Kenny Ballalou rubbed himself ruefully. ”If you two will stop beating, I'll tell you. I didn't recruit a single Nemadi.”

Homer Crawford looked at him.

Kenny said to the tent at large. ”Anybody got a drink around here?

Good grief, have I been covering ground.”

Isobel bustled off to a corner where she'd ama.s.sed most of their remaining European type supplies, but she kept her attention on him.

Dave Moroka said, his voice unbelieving, ”You mean you haven't brought any a.s.sistance _at all_?”

Kenny grinned around at them. ”I didn't say that. I said I didn't recruit any of the Nemadi. I never even got as far as their territory.”

Homer Crawford sank back onto the small crate he'd been using as a chair before Kenny's precipitate entrance. ”O.K.,” he said, ”stop dramatizing and let us know what happened.”