Bones
BonesPROLOGUE SANDERS—C.M.G.CHAPTER ICHAPTER IICHAPTER IIICHAPTER IVCHAPTER VCHAPTER VICHAPTER VIICHAPTER VIIICHAPTER IXCHAPTER XCHAPTER XICHAPTER XIIFOOTNOTESCopyright
Bones
Edgar Wallace
PROLOGUE SANDERS—C.M.G.
IYou will never know from the perusal of the Blue Book the
true inwardness of the happenings in the Ochori country in the
spring of the year of Wish. Nor all the facts associated with the
disappearance of the Rt. Hon. Joseph Blowter, Secretary of State
for the Colonies.We know (though this is not in the Blue Books) that Bosambo
called together all his petty chiefs and his headmen, from one end
of the country to the other, and assembled them squatting
expectantly at the foot of the little hillock, where sat Bosambo in
his robes of office (unauthorized but no less magnificent), their
upturned faces charged with pride and confidence, eloquent of the
hold this sometime Liberian convict had upon the wayward and
fearful folk of the Ochori.Now no man may call a palaver of all small chiefs unless he
notifies the government of his intention, for the government is
jealous of self-appointed parliaments, for when men meet together
in public conference, however innocent may be its first cause, talk
invariably drifts to war, just as when they assemble and talk in
private it drifts womanward.And since a million and odd square miles of territory may
only be governed by a handful of ragged soldiers so long as there
is no concerted action against authority, extemporized and
spontaneous palavers are severely discouraged.But Bosambo was too cheery and optimistic a man to doubt that
his action would incur the censorship of his lord, and, moreover,
he was so filled with his own high plans and so warm and generous
at heart at the thought of the benefits he might be conferring upon
his patron that the illegality of the meeting did not occur to him,
or if it occurred was dismissed as too preposterous for
consideration.And so there had come by the forest paths, by canoe, from
fishing villages, from far-off agricultural lands near by the great
mountains, from timber cuttings in the lower forest, higher chiefs
and little chiefs, headmen and lesser headmen, till they made a
respectable crowd, too vast for the comfort of the Ochori elders
who must needs provide them with food and lodgings."Noble chiefs of the Ochori," began Bosambo, and Notiki
nudged his neighbour with a sharp elbow, for Notiki was an old man
of forty-three, and thin."Our lord desires us to give him something," he
said.He was a bitter man this Notiki, a relative of former chiefs
of the Ochori, and now no more than over-head of four
villages."Wa!" said his neighbour, with his shining face turned to
Bosambo.Notiki grunted but said no more."I have assembled you here," said Bosambo, "because I love to
see you, and because it is good that I should meet those who are in
authority under me to administer the laws which the King my master
has set for your guidance."Word for word it was a paraphrase of an address which Sanders
himself had delivered three months ago. His audience may have
forgotten the fact, but Notiki at least recognized the plagiarism
and said "Oh, ho!" under his breath and made a scornful
noise."Now I must go from you," said Bosambo.There was a little chorus of dismay, but Notiki's voice did
not swell the volume."The King has called me to the coast, and for the space of
two moons I shall be as dead to you, though my fetish will watch
you and my spirit will walk these streets every night with big ears
to listen to evil talk, and great big eyes to see the hearts of
men. Yea, from this city to the very end of my dominions over to
Kalala." His accusing eyes fixed Notiki, and the thin man wriggled
uncomfortably."This man is a devil," he muttered under his breath, "he
hears and sees all things.""And if you ask me why I go," Bosambo went on, "I tell you
this: swearing you all to secrecy that this word shall not go
beyond your huts" (there were some two thousand people present to
share the mystery), "my lord Sandi has great need of me. For who of
us is so wise that he can look into the heart and understand the
sorrow-call which goes from brother to brother and from blood to
blood. I say no more save my lord desires me, and since I am the
King of the Ochori, a nation great amongst all nations, must I go
down to the coast like a dog or like the headman of a
fisher-village?"He paused dramatically, and there was a faint—a very
faint—murmur which he might interpret as an expression of his
people's wish that he should travel in a state bordering upon
magnificence.Faint indeed was that murmur, because there was a hint of
taxation in the business, a promise of levies to be extracted from
an unwilling peasantry; a suggestion of lazy men leaving the
comfortable shade of their huts to hurry perspiring in the forest
that gum and rubber and similar offerings should be laid at the
complacent feet of their overlord.Bosambo heard the murmur and marked its horrid lack of
heartiness and was in no sense put out of countenance."As you say," said he approvingly, "it is proper that I
should journey to my lord and to the strange people beyond the
coast—to the land where even slaves wear trousers—carrying with me
most wonderful presents that the name of the Ochori shall be as
thunder upon the waters and even great kings shall speak in pride
of you," he paused again.Now it was a dead silence which greeted his peroration.
Notably unenthusiastic was this gathering, twiddling its toes and
blandly avoiding his eye. Two moons before he had extracted
something more than his tribute—a tribute which was the prerogative
of government.Yet then, as Notiki said under his breath, or openly, or by
innuendo as the sentiment of his company demanded, four and twenty
canoes laden with the fruits of taxation had come to the Ochori
city, and five only of those partly filled had paddled down to
headquarters to carry the Ochori tribute to the overlord of the
land."I will bring back with me new things," said Bosambo
enticingly; "strange devil boxes, large magics which will entrance
you, things that no common man has seen, such as I and Sandi alone
know in all this land. Go now, I tell thee, to your people in this
country, telling them all that I have spoken to you, and when the
moon is in a certain quarter they will come in joy bearing presents
in both hands, and these ye shall bring to me.""But, lord!" it was the bold Notiki who stood in protest,
"what shall happen to such of us headmen who come without gifts in
our hands for your lordship, saying 'Our people are stubborn and
will give nothing'?""Who knows?" was all the satisfaction he got from Bosambo,
with the additional significant hint, "I shall not blame you,
knowing that it is not because of your fault but because your
people do not love you, and because they desire another chief over
them. The palaver is finished."Finished it was, so far as Bosambo was concerned. He called a
council of his headmen that night in his hut.Bosambo made his preparations at leisure. There was much to
avoid before he took his temporary farewell of the tribe. Not the
least to be counted amongst those things to be done was the
extraction, to its uttermost possibility, of the levy which he had
quite improperly instituted.And of the things to avoid, none was more urgent or called
for greater thought than the necessity for so timing his movements
that he did not come upon Sanders or drift within the range of his
visible and audible influence.Here fortune may have been with Bosambo, but it is more
likely that he had carefully thought out every detail of his
scheme. Sanders at the moment was collecting hut tax along the
Kisai river and there was also, as Bosambo well knew, a murder
trial of great complexity waiting for his decision at Ikan. A
headman was suspected of murdering his chief wife, and the only
evidence against him was that of the under wives to whom she
displayed much hauteur and arrogance.The people of the Ochori might be shocked at the exorbitant
demands which their lord put upon them, but they were too wise to
deny him his wishes. There had been a time in the history of the
Ochori when demands were far heavier, and made with great insolence
by a people who bore the reputation of being immensely fearful. It
had come to be a by-word of the people when they discussed their
lord with greater freedom than he could have wished, the tyranny of
Bosambo was better than the tyranny of Akasava.Amongst the Ochori chiefs, greater and lesser, only one was
conspicuous by his failure to carry proper offerings to his lord.
When all the gifts were laid on sheets of native cloth in the great
space before Bosambo's hut, Notiki's sheet was missing and with
good reason as he sent his son to explain."Lord," said this youth, lank and wild, "my father has
collected for you many beautiful things, such as gum and rubber and
the teeth of elephants. Now he would have brought these and laid
them at your lovely feet, but the roads through the forest are very
evil, and there have been floods in the northern country and he
cannot pass the streams. Also the paths through the forest are
thick and tangled and my father fears for his
carriers."Bosambo looked at him, thoughtfully."Go back to your father, N'gobi," he said gently, "and tell
him that though there come no presents from him to me, I, his
master and chief, knowing he loves me, understand all things
well."N'gobi brightened visibly. He had been ready to bolt,
understanding something of Bosambo's dexterity with a stick and
fearing that the chief would loose upon him the vengeance his
father had called down upon his own hoary head."Of the evil roads I know," said Bosambo; "now this you shall
say to your father: Bosambo the chief goes away from this city and
upon a long journey; for two moons he will be away doing the
business of his cousin and friend Sandi. And when my lord Bim-bi
has bitten once at the third moon I will come back and I will visit
your father. But because the roads are bad," he went on, "and the
floods come even in this dry season," he said significantly, "and
the forest is so entangled that he cannot bring his presents,
sending only the son of his wife to me, he shall make against my
coming such a road as shall be in width, the distance between the
King's hut and the hut of the King's wife; and he shall clear from
this road all there are of trees, and he shall bridge the strong
stream and dig pits for the floods. And to this end he shall take
every man of his kingdom and set them to labour, and as they work
they shall sing a song which goes:"We are doing Notiki's work, The work Notiki set us to do,
Rather than send to the lord his King The presents which Bosambo
demanded."The palaver is finished."This is the history, or the beginning of the history, of the
straight road which cuts through the heart of the Ochori country
from the edge of the river by the cataracts, even to the mountains
of the great King, a road famous throughout Africa and imperishably
associated with Bosambo's name—this by the way.On the first day following the tax palaver Bosambo went down
the river with four canoes, each canoe painted beautifully with
camwood and gum, and with twenty-four paddlers.It was by a fluke that he missed Sanders. As it happened, the
Commissioner had come back to the big river to collect the evidence
of the murdered woman's brother who was a petty headman of an Isisi
fishing village. TheZairecame
into the river almost as the last of Bosambo's canoes went round
the bend out of sight, and since a legend existed on the river, a
legend for the inception of which Bosambo himself was mainly
responsible, that he was in some way related to Mr. Commissioner
Sanders, no man spoke of Bosambo's passing.The chief came to headquarters on the third day after his
departure from his city. His subsequent movements are somewhat
obscure, even to Sanders, who has been at some pains to trace
them.It is known that he drew a hundred and fifty pounds in
English gold from Sanders' storekeeper—he had piled up a fairly
extensive credit during the years of his office—that he embarked
with one headman and his wife on a coasting boat due for Sierra
Leone, and that from that city came a long-winded demand in Arabic
by a ragged messenger for a further instalment of one hundred
pounds. Sanders heard the news on his return to headquarters and
was a little worried."I wonder if the devil is going to desert his people?" he
said.Hamilton the Houssa laughed."He is more likely to desert his people than to desert a
balance of four hundred pounds which now stands to his credit
here," he said. "Bosambo has felt the call of civilization. I
suppose he ought to have secured your permission to leave his
territory?""He has given his people work to keep them busy," Sanders
said a little gravely. "I have had a passionate protest from
Notiki, one of his chiefs in the north. Bosambo has set him to
build a road through the forest, and Notiki objects."The two men were walking across the yellow parade ground past
the Houssas hut in the direction of headquarters'
bungalow."What about your murderer?" asked Hamilton, after a while, as
they mounted the broad wooden steps which led to the bungalow
stoep.Sanders shook his head."Everybody lied," he said briefly. "I can do no less than
send the man to the Village. I could have hung him on clear
evidence, but the lady seemed to have been rather unpopular and the
murderer quite a person to be commended in the eyes of the public.
The devil of it is," he said as he sank into his big chair with a
sigh, "that had I hanged him it would not have been necessary to
write three foolscap sheets of report. I dislike these domestic
murderers intensely—give me a ravaging brigand with the hands of
all people against him.""You'll have one if you don't touch wood," said Hamilton
seriously.Hamilton came of Scottish stock—and the Scots are notorious
prophets.
II
Now the truth may be told of Bosambo, and all his movements may be
explained by this revelation of his benevolence. In the silence of
his hut had he planned his schemes. In the dark aisles of the
forests, under starless skies when his fellow-huntsmen lay deep in
the sleep which the innocent and the barbarian alone enjoy; in
drowsy moments when he sat dispensing justice, what time litigants
had droned monotonously he had perfected his scheme.
Imagination is the first fruit of civilization and when the
reverend fathers of the coast taught Bosambo certain magics, they
were also implanting in him the ability to picture possibilities,
and shape from his knowledge of human affairs the eventual
consequences of his actions. This is imagination somewhat
elaborately and clumsily defined.
To one person only had Bosambo unburdened himself of his
schemes.
In the privacy of his great hut he had sat with his wife, a
steaming dish of fish between them, for however lax Bosambo might
be, his wife was an earnest follower of the Prophet and would
tolerate no such abomination as the flesh of the cloven-hoofed
goat.
He had told her many things.
"Light of my heart," said he, "our lord Sandi is my father and my
mother, a giver of riches, and a plentiful provider of pence. Now
it seems to me, that though he is a just man and great, having
neither fear of his enemies nor soft words for his friends, yet the
lords of his land who live so very far away do him no
honour."
"Master," said the woman quietly, "is it no honour that he should
be placed as a king over us?"
Bosambo beamed approvingly.
"Thou hast spoken the truth, oh my beloved!" said he, in the
extravagance of his admiration. "Yet I know much of the white folk,
for I have lived along this coast from Dacca to Mossomedes. Also I
have sailed to a far place called Madagascar, which is on the other
side of the world, and I know the way of white folk. Even in
Benguella there is a governor who is not so great as Sandi, and
about his breast are all manner of shining stars that glitter most
beautifully in the sun, and he wears ribbons about him and bright
coloured sashes and swords." He wagged his finger impressively.
"Have I not said that he is not so great as Sandi. When saw you my
lord with stars or cross or sash or a sword?
"Also at Decca, where the Frenchi live. At certain places in the
Togo, which is Allamandi,[1] I have seen men with this
same style of ornaments, for thus it is that the white folk do
honour to their kind."
He was silent a long time and his brown-eyed wife looked at him
curiously.
"Yet what can you do, my lord?" she asked. "Although you are very
powerful, and Sandi loves you, this is certain, that none will
listen to you and do honour to Sandi at your word—though I
do not know the ways of the white people, yet of this I am
sure."
Again Bosambo's large mouth stretched from ear to ear, and his two
rows of white teeth gleamed pleasantly.
"You are as the voice of wisdom and the very soul of cleverness,"
he said, "for you speak that which is true. Yet I know ways, for I
am very cunning and wise, being a holy man and acquainted with
blessed apostles such as Paul and the blessed Peter, who had his
ear cut off because a certain dancing woman desired it. Also by
magic it was put on again because he could not hear the cocks crow.
All this and similar things I have here." He touched his
forehead.
Wise woman that she was, she had made no attempt to pry into her
husband's business, but spent the days preparing for the journey,
she and the nut-brown sprawling child of immense girth, who was the
apple of Bosambo's eye.
So Bosambo had passed down the river as has been described, and
four days after he left there disappeared from the Ochori village
ten brothers in blood of his, young hunting men who had faced all
forms of death for the very love of it, and these vanished from the
land and none knew where they went save that they did not follow on
their master's trail.
Tukili, the chief of the powerful eastern island Isisi, or, as it
is contemptuously called, the N'gombi-Isisi by the riverain folk,
went hunting one day, and ill fortune led him to the border of the
Ochori country. Ill fortune was it for one Fimili, a straight maid
of fourteen, beautiful by native standard, who was in the forest
searching for roots which were notorious as a cure for "boils"
which distressed her unamiable father.
Tukili saw the girl and desired her, and that which Tukili desired
he took. She offered little opposition to being carried away to the
Isisi city when she discovered that her life would be spared, and
possibly was no worse off in the harem of Tukili than she would
have been in the hut of the poor fisherman for whom her father had
designed her. A few years before, such an incident would have
passed almost unnoticed.
The Ochori were so used to being robbed of women and of goats, so
meek in their acceptance of wrongs that would have set the spears
of any other nation shining, that they would have accepted the
degradation and preserved a sense of thankfulness that the robber
had limited his raiding to one girl, and that a maid. But with the
coming of Bosambo there had arrived a new spirit in the Ochori.
They had learnt their strength, incidentally they had learnt their
rights. The father of the girl went hot-foot to his over-chief,
Notiki, and covered himself with ashes at the door of the chief's
hut.
"This is a bad palaver," said Notiki, "and since Bosambo has
deserted us and is making our marrows like water that we should
build him a road, and there is none in this land whom I may call
chief or who may speak with authority, it seems by my age and by
relationship to the kings of this land, I must do that which is
desirable."
So he gathered together two thousand men who were working on the
road and were very pleased indeed to carry something lighter than
rocks and felled trees, and with these spears he marched into the
Isisi forest, burning and slaying whenever he came upon a little
village which offered no opposition. Thus he took to himself the
air and title of conqueror with as little excuse as a flamboyant
general ever had.
Had it occurred on the river, this warlike expedition must have
attracted the attention of Sanders. The natural roadway of the
territory is a waterway. It is only when operations are begun
against the internal tribes who inhabit the bush, and whose armies
can move under the cloak of the forest (and none wiser) that
Sanders found himself at a disadvantage.
Tukili himself heard nothing of the army that was being led against
him until it was within a day's march of his gates. Then he sallied
forth with a force skilled in warfare and practised in the hunt.
The combat lasted exactly ten minutes and all that was left of
Notiki's spears made the best of their way homeward, avoiding, as
far as possible, those villages which they had visited en route
with such disastrous results to the unfortunate inhabitants.
Now it is impossible that one conqueror shall be sunk to oblivion
without his victor claiming for himself the style of his victim.
Tukili had defeated his adversary, and Tukili was no exception to
the general rule, and from being a fairly well-disposed king,
amiable—too amiable as we have shown—and kindly, and just, he
became of a sudden a menace to all that part of Sanders' territory
which lies between the French land and the river.
It was such a situation as this as only Bosambo might deal with,
and Sanders heartily cursed his absent chief and might have cursed
him with greater fervour had he had an inkling of the mission to
which Bosambo had appointed himself.III
His Excellency the Administrator of the period had his office at a
prosperous city of stone which we will call Koombooli, though that
is not its name.
He was a stout, florid man, patient and knowledgeable. He had been
sent to clear up the mess which two incompetent administrators
made, who had owed their position rather to the constant appearance
of their friends and patrons in the division lobbies than to their
acquaintance with the native mind, and it is eloquent of the regard
in which His Excellency was held that, although he was a Knight
Commander of St. Michael and St. George, a Companion of a Victorian
Order, a Commander of the Bath, and the son of a noble house, he
was known familiarly along the coast to all administrators,
commissioners, even to the deputy inspectors, as "Bob."
Bosambo came to the presence with an inward quaking. In a sense he
had absconded from his trust, and he did not doubt that Sanders had
made all men acquainted with the suddenness and the suspicious
character of his disappearance.
And the first words of His Excellency the Administrator confirmed
all Bosambo's worst fears.
"O! chief," said Sir Robert with a little twinkle in his eye, "are
you so fearful of your people that you run away from them?"
"Mighty master," answered Bosambo, humbly, "I do not know fear, for
as your honour may have heard, I am a very brave man, fearing
nothing save my lord Sanders' displeasure."
A ghost of a smile played about the corners of Sir Robert's
mouth.
"That you have earned, my friend," said he. "Now you shall tell me
why you came away secretly, also why you desired this palaver with
me. And do not lie, Bosambo," he said, "for I am he who hung three
chiefs on Gallows Hill above Grand Bassam because they spoke
falsely."
This was one of the fictions which was current on the coast, and
was implicitly believed in by the native population. The truth will
be recounted at another time, but it is sufficient to say that
Bosambo was one of those who did not doubt the authenticity of the
legend.
"Now I will speak to you, O my lord," he said earnestly, "and I
speak by all oaths, both the oaths of my own people——"
"Spare me the oaths of the Kroo folk," protested Sir Robert, and
raised a warning hand.
"Then by Markie and Lukie will I swear," said Bosambo, fervently;
"those fine fellows of whom Your Excellency knows. I have sat long
in the country of the Ochori, and I have ruled wisely according to
my abilities. And over me at all times was Sandi, who was a father
to his people and so beautiful of mind and countenance that when he
came to us even the dead folk would rise up to speak to him. This
is a miracle," said Bosambo profoundly but cautiously, "which I
have heard but which I have not seen. Now this I ask you who see
all things, and here is the puzzle which I will set to your honour.
If Sandi is so great and so wise, and is so loved by the greater
King, how comes it that he stays for ever in one place, having no
beautiful stars about his neck nor wonderful ribbons around his
stomach such as the great Frenchiman—and the great Allamandi men,
and even the Portuguesi men wear who are honoured by their
kings?"
It was a staggering question, and Sir Robert Sanleigh sat up and
stared at the solemn face of the man before him.
Bosambo, an unromantic figure in trousers, jacket, and shirt—he was
collarless—had thrust his hands deeply into unaccustomed pockets,
ignorant of the disrespect which such an attitude displayed, and
was staring back at the Administrator.
"O! chief," asked the puzzled Sir Robert, "this is a strange
palaver you make—who gave you these ideas?"
"Lord, none gave me this idea save my own bright mind," said
Bosambo. "Yes, many nights have I laid thinking of these things for
I am just and I have faith."
His Excellency kept his unwavering eye upon the other. He had heard
of Bosambo, knew him as an original, and at this moment was
satisfied in his own mind of the other's sincerity.
A smaller man than he, his predecessor for example, might have
dismissed the preposterous question as an impertinence and given
the questioner short shrift. But Sir Robert understood his
native.
"These are things too high for me, Bosambo," he said. "What dog am
I that I should question the mind of my lords? In their wisdom they
give honour and they punish. It is written."
Bosambo nodded.
"Yet, lord," he persisted, "my own cousin who sweeps your
lordship's stables told me this morning that on the days of big
palavers you also have stars and beautiful things upon your breast,
and noble ribbons about your lordship's stomach. Now your honour
shall tell me by whose favour these things come about."
Sir Robert chuckled.
"Bosambo," he said solemnly, "they gave these things to me because
I am an old man. Now when your lord Sandi becomes old these honours
also will he receive."
He saw Bosambo's face fall and went on:
"Also much may happen that will bring Sandi to their lordships'
eyes, they who sit above us. Some great deed that he may do, some
high service he may offer to his king. All these happenings bring
nobility and honour. Now," he went on kindly, "go back to your
people, remembering that I shall think of you and of Sandi, and
that I shall know that you came because of your love for him, and
that on a day which is written I will send a book to my masters
speaking well of Sandi, for his sake and for the sake of the people
who love him. The palaver is finished."
Bosambo went out of the Presence a dissatisfied man, passed through
the hall where a dozen commissioners and petty chiefs were waiting
audience, skirted the great white building and came in time to his
own cousin, who swept the stables of His Excellency the
Administrator. And here, in the coolness of the stone-walled mews,
he learnt much about the Administrator; little tit-bits of
information which were unlikely to be published in the official
gazette. Also he acquired a considerable amount of data concerning
the giving of honours, and after a long examination and
cross-examination of his wearied relative he left him as dry as a
sucked orange, but happy in the possession of a new five-shilling
piece which Bosambo had magnificently pressed upon him, and which
subsequently proved to be bad.IV
By the River of Spirits is a deep forest which stretches back and
back in a dense and chaotic tangle of strangled sapling and
parasitic weed to the edge of the Pigmy forest. No man—white or
brown or black—has explored the depth of the Forbidden Forest, for
here the wild beasts have their lairs and rear their young; and
here are mosquito in dense clouds. Moreover, and this is important,
a certain potent ghost named Bim-bi stalks restlessly from one
border of the forest to the other. Bim-bi is older than the sun and
more terrible than any other ghost. For he feeds on the moon, and
at nights you may see how the edge of the desert world is bitten by
his great mouth until it becomes, first, the half of a moon, then
the merest slither, and then no moon at all. And on the very dark
nights, when the gods are hastily making him a new meal, the
ravenous Bim-bi calls to his need the stars; and you may watch, as
every little boy of the Akasava has watched, clutching his father's
hand tightly in his fear, the hot rush of meteors across the velvet
sky to the rapacious and open jaws of Bim-bi.
He was a ghost respected by all peoples—Akasava, Ochori, Isisi,
N'gombi, and Bush folk. By the Bolengi, the Bomongo, and even the
distant Upper Congo people feared him. Also all the chiefs for
generations upon generations had sent tribute of corn and salt to
the edge of the forest for his propitiation, and it is a legend
that when the Isisi fought the Akasava in the great war, the envoy
of the Isisi was admitted without molestation to the enemy's lines
in order to lay an offering at Bim-bi's feet. Only one man in the
world, so far as the People of the River know, has ever spoken
slightingly of Bim-bi, and that man was Bosambo of the Ochori, who
had no respect for any ghosts save of his own creation.
It is the custom on the Akasava district to hold a ghost palaver to
which the learned men of all tribes are invited, and the palaver
takes place in the village of Ookos by the edge of the
forest.
On a certain day in the year of the floods and when Bosambo was
gone a month from his land, there came messengers chance-found and
walking in terror to all the principal cities and villages of the
Akasava, of the Isisi, and of the N'gombi-Isisi carrying this
message:
"Mimbimi, son of Simbo Sako, son of Ogi, has opened his house to
his friends on the night when Bim-bi has swallowed the moon."
A summons to such a palaver in the second name of Bim-bi was not
one likely to be ignored, but a summons from Mimbimi was at least
to be wondered at and to be speculated upon, for Mimbimi was an
unknown quantity, though some gossips professed to know him as the
chief of one of the Nomadic tribes which ranged the heart of the
forest, preying on Akasava and Isisi with equal discrimination. But
these gossips were of a mind not peculiar to any nationality or to
any colour. They were those jealous souls who either could not or
would not confess that they were ignorant on the topic of the
moment.
Be he robber chief, or established by law and government, this much
was certain. Mimbimi had called for his secret palaver and the most
noble and arrogant of chiefs must obey, even though the obedience
spelt disaster for the daring man who had summoned them to
conference.
Tuligini, a victorious captain, not lightly to be summoned, might
have ignored the invitation, but for the seriousness of his
eldermen, who, versed in the conventions of Bim-bi and those who
invoked his name, stood aghast at the mere suggestion that this
palaver should be ignored. Tuligini demanded, and with
reason:
"Who was this who dare call the vanquisher of Bosambo to a palaver?
for am I not the great buffalo of the forest? and do not all men
bow down to me in fear?"
"Lord, you speak the truth," said his trembling councillor, "yet
this is a ghost palaver and all manner of evils come to those who
do not obey."
Sanders, through his spies, heard of the summons in the name of
Bim-bi, and was a little troubled. There was nothing too small to
be serious in the land over which he ruled.
As for instance: Some doubt existed in the Lesser N'gombi country
as to whether teeth filed to a point were more becoming than teeth
left as Nature placed them. Tombini, the chief of N'gombi, held the
view that Nature's way was best, whilst B'limbini, his cousin, was
the chief exponent of the sharpened form.