However, his own personal magic was embodied in the original statue that his father had discovered, and which throughout his childhood had ridden as ballast over the rear wheel-truck of the family wagon, during their wanderings and travels across the vast African veld. Jordan had slept a thousand nights above the bird, and somehow its spirit had pervaded his own and taken possession of him.
When Zouga at last led the family to the Kimberley diamond-diggings, the bird statue had been unloaded from the wagon and placed under the camel-thorn tree which marked their last camp. When Jordan’s mother, Aletta Ballantyne, had fallen sick with the deadly camp fever, and finally succumbed to the disease, the statue had come to play an even larger place in Jordan’s life.
He had christened the bird Panes, after the goddess of the North American Indian tribes, and later he had avidly studied the lore of the great goddess Panes that Frazer had detailed in his Golden Bough, a study in magic and religion. He learned how Panes was a beautiful woman who had been taken up into the mountains. To the adolescent Jordan, Panes and the bird statue became confused with the image of his dead mother. Secretly he had developed a form of invocation to the goddess, and in the dead of night when all the other members of his family slept, he would creep out to make a small sacrifice of hoarded food to Panes and worship her with his own rituals.
When Zouga, financially reduced, had been forced to sell the bird to Mr Rhodes, the boy had been desolated – until the opportunity to enter Mr Rhodes’ service and follow the goddess replaced the emptiness of his existence with not one but two deities: the goddess Panes and Mr Rhodes. Even after he was grown to manhood in Mr Rhodes’ service, the statue continued to bulk large in Jordan’s consciousness, though it was only very occasionally, in times of deep turmoil of the spirit, that he actually resorted to the childish rituals of worship.
Now he had lost the lodestone of his life, and irresistibly he was drawn towards the statue for the last time. Slowly he descended the curve of the main staircase. As he passed, he caressed the carved balustrades which were worked into faithful copies of the ancient bird.
The lofty entrance hallway below was floored with black and white marble slabs arranged in a chequer-board pattern. The main doors were in massive red teak, and the fittings were of burnished brass. The light of the lantern that Jordan carried sent grotesquely misshapen shadows flowing across the marble or fluttering like gigantic bats against the high carved ceiling. In the centre of the marble floor stood a heavy table, upon which were the silver trays for visiting-cards and mail. Between them was a tall decoration of dried protea blooms which Jordan had arranged with his own hands.
Jordan set the lamp of Sèvres porcelain upon the table like a ritual lantern upon a pagan altar. He stepped back from it and slowly raised his head. The original stone falcon of Zimbabwe stood in its high niche, guarding the entrance to Groote Schuur. Seeing it thus it was not possible to doubt the aura of magical power that invested the graven image. It seemed that the prayers and incantations of the long-dead priests of Zimbabwe still shimmered in the air about it, that the blood of the sacrifices steamed from the wavering shadows upon the marble floor, and that the prophecies of the Umlimo, the Chosen One of the ancient spirits, invested it with separate life.
Zouga Ballantyne had heard the prophecies from the Umlimo’s lips and had faithfully recorded them in his journal. Jordan had re-read them a hundred times and could repeat them by rote, he had made them part of his own personal ritual and invocation to the goddess.
‘There shall be no peace in the kingdom of the Mambos or the Monomatapa until they return. For the white eagle will war with the black bull until the stone falcons return to roost.’
Jordan looked up at the bird’s proud, cruel head, at the sightless eyes which stared blankly towards the north, towards the land of the Mambos and the Monomatapa which men now called Rhodesia, and where the white eagle and the black bull were again locked in mortal conflict, and Jordan felt a sense of helplessness and emptiness, as though he were caught up in the coils of destiny and was unable to break free.
‘Have pity on me, great Panes,’ and he dropped to his knees. ‘I cannot go. I cannot leave you or him. I have no place to go.’
In the lamplight his face was tinged with a faint greenish sheen, as though it had been carved from glacial ice. He lifted the porcelain lamp from the table, and held it high above his head with both hands.
‘Forgive me, great Panes,’ he whispered, and hurled the lamp against the panelled woodwork of the wall.
The lobby was plunged into darkness for a moment, as the flame of the shattered lamp fluttered to the very edge of extinction. Then it sent a ghostly blue light skittering across the surface of the spreading pool of oil. Suddenly the flames burned up strongly and touched the trailing edges of the long velvet drapes that covered the windows.
Still kneeling before the stone statue, Jordan coughed as the first wisps of smoke enveloped him. He was mildly surprised that, after the first burning sting of it in his lungs, there was so very little pain. The image of the falcon high above him slowly receded, dimmed by the tears that filled Jordan’s eyes and by the dense swirling curtains of smoke.
The flames made a low drumming roar as they caught on the wooden panelling and shot to the ceiling. One of the heavy drapes burned through, and as it fell it spread open like the wings of an immense vulture. The fiery wings of thick velvet covered Jordan’s kneeling figure and their weight bore him face down to the marble floor.
Already asphyxiated by the dense blue smoke, he did not even struggle and within seconds the mound of crumpled velvet was transformed into a funeral pyre, and the flames reached up joyously to lick against the base of the stone falcon in its high niche.
‘Bazo has come down from the place of the Umlimo at last,’ Isazi said quietly, and Ralph could not contain himself.
‘Are you sure of this?’ he demanded eagerly, and Isazi nodded.
‘I have sat at the camp-fires of his impi, and with my own eyes have seen him, with the bullet scars shining like medals of silver upon his chest, with my own ears I have heard him harangue his amadoda, steeling them for the fighting which lies ahead.’
‘Where is he, Isazi? Tell me where I can find him.’
‘He is not alone.’ Isazi was not about to spoil the dramatic impact of his report by prematurely divulging the bare bones of fact. ‘Bazo has with him the witch, who is his woman. If Bazo is warlike, then this woman, Tanase, the favourite of the dark spirits, is bold and ruthless, driven by such bloody cruelty that the amadoda when they look upon her beauty shudder as though it is an unspeakable ugliness.’
‘Where are they?’ Ralph repeated.
‘Bazo has with him the wildest and most reckless of the young indunas, Zama and Kamuza, and they have brought their amadoda, three thousand of the fiercest and finest. With Bazo and Tanase at their head, these impis are as dangerous as the gut-stabbed lion, as deadly as the old bull buffalo circling in thick cover to lay for the unwary hunter—’
‘God damn you, Isazi, we have waited long enough.’ Ralph snarled at him. ‘Tell me where he is.’
Isazi looked pained and deliberately took a little snuff. His eyes watered, then he sneezed delectably and wiped his nostrils on the palm of his hand.
‘Gandang and Babiaan and Somabula are not with him.’ Isazi took up his recital precisely at the point where Ralph had so boorishly interrupted him. ‘I listened while the amadoda spoke of an indaba held many weeks back at the valley of the Umlimo. They say that the old indunas decided to wait for the divine intervention of the spirits, to leave the road southwards open for the white men to leave Matabeleland and to sit upon their shields until these things come to pass.’
Ralph made a gesture of disgusted resignation. ‘Do not hurry in your telling of it, wise one,’ he encouraged Isazi with weighted sarcasm. ‘Do not spare us the smallest detail.’
Isazi nodded seriously, but his dark eyes sparkled and he tugged at his little goat
ee beard to prevent himself grinning.
‘The bellies of the old indunas are cooling, they recall the Shangani and Bembesi battlefields. Their spies report that the laager here at Bulawayo is guarded by the three-legged guns. I tell you, Henshaw, that Bazo is the serpent’s head. Cut it off and the body dies.’ Isazi nodded sagely.
‘Now will you tell me where Bazo is, my brave and wise old friend?’
Isazi nodded again in appreciation of Ralph’s change of tone.
‘He is very close,’ Isazi said. ‘Not two hours’ march from where we sit.’ Isazi made a wide gesture that took in the darkened laager about them. ‘He lies with his three thousand amadoda in the Valley of the Goats.’
Ralph looked up at the segment of old moon that hung low down in the sky.
‘Four days to new moon,’ he murmured. ‘If Bazo plans to attack the laager here, then it will be in the dark of the moon.’
‘Three thousand men,’ Harry Mellow murmured. ‘There are fifty of us.’
‘Three thousand. The Moles and the Insukamini and the Swimmers.’ Sergeant Ezra shook his head. ‘As Isazi has said, the fiercest and the finest.’
‘We will take them,’ said Ralph Ballantyne calmly. ‘We will take them in the Valley of the Goats, two nights from now, and here is the way we will do it—’
Bazo, son of Gandang, who had denied his father and defied the greater indunas of Kumalo, passed from one watch-fire to the next and beside him moved the slim and exquisitely graceful figure of his woman, Tanase.
Bazo reached the fire and stood tall above it. The flames lit his features from below, so that the cavities of his eyes were black caverns in the depths of which his eyes glinted like the coils of a deadly reptile. The light of the camp-fire picked out in harsh detail every line and crease that suffering had riven into his face. Around his forehead was bound the simple strip of mole-skin; he did not need the feathers of heron and paradise widowbirds to place the seal upon his majesty. The firelight glinted upon the great muscles of his chest and arms and his scars were the only regalia of honour that he wore.
Tanase’s beauty was even more poignant when seen beside his ravaged features. Her naked breasts were strangely incongruous in these warlike councils, but beneath their satiny swelling they were hard as battle-forged muscle, and the sudden thrust of her nipples puckered and dark, large as the first joint of a man’s little finger, were like the bosses in the centre of a war-shield.
As she stood at Bazo’s shoulder in the firelight, her gaze was as fierce as any warrior there, and she looked up at her husband with a ferocious pride as he began to speak.
‘I offer you a choice,’ Bazo said. ‘You can remain as you are, the dogs of the white men. You can stay as amaholi, the lowliest of slaves, or you can become once again amadoda—’
His voice was not raised, nor strained; it seemed to rumble up out of his throat, but it rang clearly to the highest part of the natural rocky amphitheatre, and the dark masses of warriors that filled the bowl stirred and sighed at the words.
‘The choice is yours, but it must be made swiftly. This morning I have received runners from the south.’ Bazo paused, and his listeners craned forward. There were three thousand of them squatting in massed ranks, but there was no sound from them as they waited for Bazo’s next words.
‘You have heard the fainthearted tell you that if we do not dispute the southern road, then the white men that are in Bulawayo will pack their wagons, take their women and go meekly down that road to the sea.’ Still not a sound from the listening warriors.
‘They were wrong – and now they are proven so. Lodzi has come,’ said Bazo, and there was a sigh like the wind in the grass.
‘Lodzi has come,’ Bazo repeated. ‘And with him the soldiers and the guns. They gather now at the head of the iron road that Henshaw built. Soon, very soon, they will begin the march up the road which we have left open for them. Before the new moon is half grown to its full, they will be in Bulawayo, and then you will truly be amaholi. You and your sons and their sons will toil in the white men’s mines and herd the white men’s herds.’
There was a growl, like a leopard when first it is roused, and it shook the dark ranks until Bazo lifted high the hand that held his silver assegai.
‘That is not to be. The Umlimo has promised us that this land will once again belong to us, but it is our task to make this prophecy into reality. The gods do not favour those who wait for fruit to fall from the tree into their open mouths. My children, we will shake the tree.’
‘Jee!’ said a single voice from the massed ranks, and immediately the humming war chant was taken up by them all.
‘Jee!’ sang Bazo, stamping his right foot and stabbing the broad blade towards the moonless sky, and his men sang with him.
Tanase stood still as an ebony carving beside him, but her lips were parted softly, and her huge slanted eyes glowed like moons in the firelight.
At last Bazo spread his arm again, and waited for their silence. ‘Thus it will be,’ he said, and again the waiting warriors strained for every word. ‘First we will eat up the laager at Bulawayo. It has always been the way of the Matabele to fall upon their enemy at that hour before the dawn, just before the first light of day – ‘ the warriors hummed softly in assent – ‘and the white men know this is our way,’ Bazo went on. ‘Every morning, in the last deep darkness they stand to their guns, waiting for the leopard to walk into their trap. The Matabele always come before the dawn, they tell each other. Always! they say, but I tell you that this time it will be different, my children.’
Bazo paused and looked carefully into the faces of the men who squatted in the front rank.
‘This time it will be in the hour before midnight, at the rise of the white star from the east.’
Standing before them in the old way, Bazo gave them their order of battle, and squatting in the black mass of half-naked bodies, his bare shoulders touching those of the amadoda on each side of him, his hair covered by the feather headdress and his face and body plastered with the mixture of fat and soot, Ralph Ballantyne listened to the detailed instructions.
‘At this season, the wind will rise with the rise of the white star. It will come from the east, so from the east we will come also. Each one of you will carry upon his head a bundle of thatch grass and the green leaves of the msasa trees,’ Bazo told them, and anticipating what was to come, Ralph felt the nerve ends in his fingertips tingle with the shock.
‘A smoke-screen,’ he thought. ‘That’s a naval tactic!’
‘As soon as the wind rises, we will build a great fire.’ Bazo confirmed it immediately. ‘Each of you will throw his bundle upon it as he passes, and we will go forward in the darkness and the smoke. It will avail them not at all to shoot their rockets into the sky, for our smoke will blind the gunners.’
Ralph imagined how it might be, the warriors emerging from the impenetrable rolling bank of smoke, not visible until they were within stabbing range, swarming over the wall of wagons or creeping between the wheels. Three thousand of them coming in silently and relentlessly – even if the laager were warned and alerted, it would be almost impossible to stop them. The Maxims would be almost useless in the smoke, and the broad-bladed assegais the more effective weapon at such close range.
A vivid image of the slaughter burned into his brain, and he remembered Cathy’s corpse, and imagined beside it the mutilated remains of Jonathan and of Elizabeth, her white smooth flesh as cruelly desecrated. His rage came strongly to arm him, and he stared down into the amphitheatre at the tall heroic figure with the ravaged face, laying out the terrible details of the massacre.
‘We must leave not a single one of them. We must destroy the last reason why Lodzi should bring his soldiers. We will offer him only dead bodies, burned buildings and silver steel, if he makes the attempt.’
Then in his rage Ralph shouted with the other amadoda, and hummed the wild war chant, his features as contorted as theirs, and his eyes as wild.
&nbs
p; ‘The indaba is ended,’ Bazo told them at last. ‘Go now to your sleeping-mats to refresh yourself for the morrow. When you rise with the sun, let your first task be to cut, each of you, a bundle of dry grass and green leaves as heavy as you can carry.’
Ralph Ballantyne lay beneath his fur kaross on a sleeping-mat of woven reeds, and listened to the camp settling into sleep about him. They had withdrawn into the narrower reaches of the valley. He saw the watch-fires dwindle, and the circles of their orange light shrink in upon them. He listened to the murmur of voices subside, and the breathing of the warriors near him changing, becoming deeper and more regular.
Here the Valley of the Goats was broken rocky defile, choked with thick thorn scrub, so that the impis could not concentrate in one place. They were spread out in pockets, down the length of the valley, fifty men or so in each small clearing, the narrow twisted paths through the thorn scrub overshadowed by the taller trees, which formed a canopy overhead.
The darkness became more menacing as the last fires died into powdery grey ash, and Ralph, lying beneath the fur blanket, gripped the haft of his assegai and judged his moment.
It came at last, and Ralph drew back the kaross stealthily. On all fours he crept to where the nearest warrior lay, groping gently for him. His fingers touched the bare skin of an arm. The warrior started awake at the touch, and sat bolt upright.
‘Who is it?’ he asked in a thick guttural voice, rough with sleep, and Ralph stabbed him in the stomach.