yards.'
        'The hell with  that  four-seventy,'  I said.  'I  can't shoot it.  The
   trigger's like the last turn of the key opening a sardine can.'
        'Come  on,' Pop said.  'We've got  God knows how many  rhino  scattered
   about here.'
        'What about the buff?'
        'Plenty  of time for him later. We must let him stiffen up. Let him get
   sick.'
        'Suppose we'd been down there with all that stuff coming out.'
        'Yes,' said Pop.
        All this in whispers. I looked at P.O.M. She  was like someone enjoying
   a good musical show.
        'Did you see where it hit him?'
        'I couldn't tell?' she whispered. 'Do you suppose there are any more in
   there?'
        'Thousands,' I said. 'What do we do, Pop?'
        'That bull may be just around the bend,' Pop said. 'Come on.'
        We went along the bank, our nerves cocked, and as we came to the narrow
   end of the reeds there was another rush  of something heavy through the tall
   stalks. I had the gun up waiting for whatever  it was to show. But there was
   only the waving of the reeds. M'Cola signalled with his hand not to shoot.
        'The calf,'  Pop said. 'Must have been two  of them. Where's the bloody
   bull?'
        'How the hell do you see them?'
        'Tell by the size.'
        Then  we  were standing  looking  down into the stream  bed,  into  the
   shadows under the branches of the  big trees, and off  ahead down the stream
   when M'Cola pointed up the hill on our right.
        'Faro,' he whispered and reached me the glasses.
        There  on the hillside, head-on, wide, black, looking  straight towards
   us, ears twitching and  head  lifted,  swaying as the nose searched  for the
   wind, was another rhino. He looked huge in the glasses. Pop was studying him
   with his binoculars.
        'He's no better than what you have,' he said softly.
        'I can bust him right in the sticking place,' I whispered.
        'You have only one more,' Pop whispered. 'You want a good one.'
        I offered the glasses to P.O.M.
        'I can see him without,' she said. 'He's huge.'
        'He may charge,' Pop said. 'Then you'll have to take him.'
        Then, as we watched, another rhino  came into sight  from behind a wide
   feathery-topped tree. He was quite a bit smaller.
        'By God,  it's  a calf,' Pop  said. 'That one's  a cow.  Good thing you
   didn't shoot her. She bloody well {may} charge too.'
        'Is it the same cow?' I whispered.
        'No. That other one had a hell of a horn.'
        We  all  had the nervous exhilaration, like a  laughing  drunk,  that a
   sudden over-abundance, idiotic abundance of game makes. It is a feeling that
   can come from  any sort  of game or fish that is  ordinarily  rare and that,
   suddenly, you find in a ridiculously unbelievable abundance.
        'Look  at her. She knows there's something wrong.  But she can't see us
   or smell us.'
        'She heard the shots.'
        'She knows we're here. But she can't make it out.'
        The rhino  looked  so  huge,  so  ridiculous, and so fine to see, and I
   sighted on her chest.
        'It's a nice shot.'
        'Perfect,' Pop said.
        'What are we going to do?' P.O.M. said. She was practical.
        'We'll work around her,' Pop said.
        'If  we keep  low I  don't believe  our scent will carry  up there once
   we're past.'
        'You can't teil,' Pop said. 'We don't want her to charge.'
        She did  not charge, but dropped her  head, finally,  and worked up the
   hill followed by the nearly full-grown calf.
        'Now,' said Pop, 'we'll  let Droop go ahead and see if he can find  the
   bull's tracks. We might as well sit down.'
        We sat in the shade  and Droopy went up  one side of the stream and the
   local guide the other. They came back and said the bull had gone on down.
        'Did any one ever see what son of horn he had?' I asked.
        'Droop said he was good.'
        M'Cola had gone up the hill a little way. Now he crouched and beckoned.
        'Nyati,' he said with his hand up to his face.
        'Where?' Pop asked him. He pointed, crouched down, and as we crawled up
   to him he handed me the  glasses. They were a  long way away  on the jutting
   ridge of one of the steep hillsides on the far side of the canyon, well down
   the stream. We could see six,  then eight buffalo, black, heavy  necked, the
   horns  shining,  standing on  the  point of a  ridge. Some were  grazing and
   others stood, their heads up, watching.
        'That one's a bull, ' Pop said, looking through the glasses.
        'Which one?'
        'Second from the right.'
        'They all look like bulls to me.'
        'They're  a long way away.  That  one's a good bull.  Now  we've got to
   cross the stream and work down toward them and try to get above them.'
        'Will they stay there?'
        'No.  Probably they'll work down into  this  stream bed as soon as it's
   hot.'
        'Let's go.'
        We  crossed  the stream on a log and  then another log and on the other
   side, half  way up  the hillside, there  was  a deeply worn game trail  that
   graded  along the bank  under the heavily  leafed branches  of the trees. We
   went along quite fast,  but walking carefully, and below us, now, the stream
   bed was covered solidly with  foliage. It was still early in the morning but
   the breeze was rising and  the leaves stirred over our heads. We crossed one
   ravine that came down to the stream, going into the thick bush to be out  of
   sight and stooping as we crossed behind trees in the small open place, then,
   using the shoulder of the ravine as protection, we climbed so that we  might
   get high up the hillside above the buffalo and work down to them. We stopped
   in the shelter of the ridge,  me sweating heavily and fixing a  handkerchief
   inside the sweatband of  my Stetson, and sent Droop  ahead to look.  He came
   back to say they were gone. From above we could see nothing  of  them, so we
   cut  across the ravine and the hillside thinking we might intercept  them on
   their way down into the river bed. The next hillside had been burned and  at
   the bottom of the hill there was a burned area of bush. In the ash dust were
   the tracks of the buffalo as they came down and into the thick jungle of the
   stream bed.  Here  it was too overgrown and  there  were too  many vines  to
   follow them. There were no tracks going down the stream so we knew they were
   down in the  part of  the stream bed  we  had looked down  on  from the game
   trail. Pop said there was nothing to do about them in there. It was so thick
   that if we jumped them we could not get a shot. You  could not tell one from
   another, he said. All  you could see  would  be a rush of black. An old bull
   would be grey but a good herd bull might be as black as a cow. It wasn't any
   good to jump them like that.
        It was ten o'clock now and very hot in the open, the sun pegged and the
   breeze lifted the ashes  of the burned-over ground as we  walked. Everything
   would  be in th 
					     					 			e thick cover now. We decided to  find a  shady place and lie
   down and read in the cool; to have lunch and kill the hot part of the day.
        Beyond  the  burned place  we  came  toward  the  stream  and  stopped,
   sweating, in  the shadow of  some very  large trees. We unpacked our leather
   coats  and  our raincoats and spread them  on the  grass at the foot  of the
   trees  so that we  could lean back against the  trunks. P.O.M.  got out  the
   books and M'Cola made a small fire and boiled water for tea.
        The breeze was coming up and we could hear it in the high  branches. It
   was cool  in the shade,  but  if  you stirred into the  sun,  or  as the sun
   shifted the  shadow while you  read  so that any part of you  was out of the
   shadow,  the  sun was heavy.  Droopy had gone on down the stream  to  have a
   look,  and  as we  lay there, reading,  I could smell  the heat  of the  day
   coming,  the drying up of the dew, the heat on the leaves, and the heaviness
   of the sun over the stream.
        P.O.M.  was reading  {Spanish Gold}, by  George A. Birmingham,  and she
   said it was no good. I still  had the Sevastopol  book of Tolstoy and in the
   same volume I was reading a  story called 'The Cossacks' that was very good.
   In  it  were the summer heat, the mosquitoes,  the feel of the forest in the
   different seasons, and that river that the Tartars  crossed, raiding, and  I
   was living in that Russia again.
        I was thinking how real  that Russia of the time of our Civil War  was,
   as real as any other place,  as Michigan, or the prairie  north of  town and
   the woods around Evan's  game farm, of how, through Turgenev,  I knew that I
   had  lived there, as  I had been in the family Buddenbrooks, and had climbed
   in and out of her window in {Le Rouge  et Le Noir},  or  the morning we  had
   come in the gates of Paris and seen Salcede torn apart by the  horses at the
   Place de Greves.  I  saw all  that.  And it was me they did not break on the
   rack that time because I had been polite  to the  executioner the  time they
   killed Coconas and  me, and I remember the Eve of St.  Bartholomew's and how
   we hunted Huguenots that night,  and when they trapped  me at her house that
   time, and  no feeling more true than finding the  gate of  the Louvre  being
   closed, nor of looking down at his body in the  water where he fell from the
   mast, and always, Italy, better than any  book, lying in the chestnut woods,
   and in the fall  mist behind the Duomo going across the town to the Ospedale
   Maggiore,  the  nails  in my boots on the cobbles, and in the spring  sudden
   showers in the mountains and the smell of the regiment like a copper coin in
   your mouth. So in the heat the train stopped at Dezenzano and there was Lago
   de  Garda and those  troops are the  Czech Legion, and the  next time it was
   raining, and the next  time it was in the dark, and the next time you passed
   it riding in a truck, and the next time you were coming from somewhere else,
   and the next  time you walked to it in the dark from Sermione.  For we  have
   been there in the books and out of the  books -- and where we  go, if we are
   any good, there you can go as we have been. A country,  finally, erodes  and
   the  dust  blows  away,  the people  all die and  none of them were  of  any
   importance permanently, except those who practised the  arts, and  these now
   wish to cease their work because it is  too  lonely, too hard to do, and  is
   not fashionable.  A  thousand years makes economics  silly and a work of art
   endures  for  ever, but  it  is  very difficult to  do and  now  it  is  not
   fashionable. People  do not want to do  it any more because they will be out
   of fashion  and  the lice who crawl on literature will not praise them. Also
   it is  very hard  to  do. So what? So I would go on  reading about the river
   that the Tartars  came across  when raiding,  and the drunken old hunter and
   the girl and how it was then in the different seasons.
        Pop was reading {Richard  Carvell}. We had bought what there was to buy
   in Nairobi and we were pretty well to the end of the books.
        'I've read this before,' Pop said. 'But it's a good story.'
        'I can just remember it. But it was a good story then.'
        'It's a jolly good story, but I wish I hadn't read it before.'
        'This is terrible,' P.O.M. said. 'You couldn't read it.'
        'Do you want this one?'
        'Don't be ornamental,' she said. 'No, I'll finish this.'
        'Goon. Take it.'
        'I'll give it right back.'
        'Hey, M'Cola,' I said. 'Beer?'
        'N'Dio,' he  said with great force, and from  the  chop box one  of the
   natives had carried  on his head produced, in  its straw casing, a bottle of
   German beer, one of the sixty-four bottles  Dan had  brought from the German
   trading station. Its  neck  was wrapped  in silver foil and on its black and
   yellow label there  was  a horseman in  armour. It  was still  cool from the
   night and opened by the tin-opener it creamed into three cups, thick-foamed,
   full-bodied.
        'No,' said Pop. 'Very bad for the liver.'
        'Come on.'
        'All right.'
        We  all  drank  and when M'Cola opened  the  second bottle Pop refused,
   firmly.
        'Go on. It means more to you. I'm going to take a nap.'
        'Poor old Mama?'
        'Just a little.'
        'All  for  me,'  I  said.  M'Cola  smiled  and shook his  head  at this
   drinking. I lay back  against  the tree and  watched the  wind  bringing the
   clouds  and drank the beer slowly out of the bottle. It was cooler that  way
   and it was excellent beer. After a while Pop and P.O.M. were both asleep and
   I got  back the Sevastopol book and  read in 'The Cossacks'  again. It was a
   good story.
        When they woke up we had  lunch  of  cold sliced tenderloin, bread, and
   mustard, and  a can of plums, and drank the third, and last, bottle of beer.
   Then we  read again and all went to sleep. I woke thirsty and was unscrewing
   the  top from a water  bottle when I heard  a rhino  snort and crash in  the
   brush of the river bed. Pop was awake and heard it too and we took our guns,
   without speaking, and  started toward where the noise  had come from. M'Cola
   found the tracks. The rhino  had come up the stream, evidently he had winded
   us when he was  only about thirty yards away, and  had gone  on up. We could
   not follow  the tracks the way the wind was  blowing so we circled away from
   the  stream  and back to  the edge of the burned place  to get above him and
   then hunted  very carefully  against the wind along the stream through  very
   thick bush, but we did not find  him. Finally Droopy found where he had gone
   up the other side  and  on into the hills. From the tracks it did not seem a
   particularly large one.
        We were a long way from camp, at least four hours  as we had come,  and
   much of it up-hill going back, certainly there would be that long climb  out
   of the  canyon; we had a wounded buffalo to deal with, and when  we came out
   on the edge of the burned country again, we agreed that we should get P.O.M.
   and get started. It was still hot, but the sun was on its wa 
					     					 			y down and for a
   good way we would be on the heavily shaded game trail on the high bank above
   the stream. When we found P.O.M. she pretended to be  indignant at our going
   off and leaving her alone but she was only teasing us.
        We started off, Droop and his spearsman in the  lead, walking along the
   shadow  of the trail  that was broken by the sun through the leaves. Instead
   of the cool  early morning smell of  the forest there was a nasty stink like
   the mess cats make.
        'What makes the stink?' I whispered to Pop.
        'Baboons,' he said.
        A whole tribe of them had gone  on just ahead of us and their droppings
   were  everywhere. We came up  to the place where the rhinos and the buff had
   come out of the reeds and I located where I thought the buff had been when I
   shot.  M'Cola  and Droopy were casting about like hounds  and I thought they
   were at least fifty yards too high up the bank when Droop held up a leaf.
        'He's  got blood,' Pop said.  We went up to  them.  There  was a  great
   quantity of blood, black now on the grass, and the trail was easy to follow.
   Droop and M'Cola trailed one  on each side, leaving the  trail between them,
   pointing to  each blood spot  formally with a long stem  of  grass. I always
   thought it would be better for one  to trail slowly and the other cast ahead
   but this was the way they trailed, stooped heads, pointing each dried splash
   with their grass  stems and occasionally,  when  they picked  up the  tracks
   after losing  them, stooping to  pluck a  grass blade or a leaf that had the
   black stain on it. I followed them with the Springfield, then came Pop, with
   P.O.M.  behind him. Droop carried  my  big gun  and Pop  had his. M'Cola had
   P.O.M.'s Mannlicher slung over his  shoulder. None of us spoke and  everyone
   seemed  to regard it  as a pretty serious  business.  In some high grass  we
   found blood, at a pretty good height on the  grass leaves on  both sides  of
   the trail where  the buff had gone through the grass. That meant he was shot
   clean through. You could not tell the original colour of the blood  now, but
   I had a moment of hoping he might be shot through the lungs. But farther  on
   we came on  some droppings  in the  rocks with blood in  them and then for a
   while  he  had  dropped  dung  wherever  he  climbed  and   all  of  it  was
   blood-spotted. It looked, now, like a gut shot or one  through the paunch. I
   was more ashamed of it all the time.
        'If he comes don't worry about Droopy  or  the others,'  Pop whispered.
   'They'll get out of his way. Stop him.'
        'Right up the nose,' I said.
        'Don't try anything fancy,' Pop  said. The trail climbed steadily, then
   twice looped back on itself and for a time seemed  to wander, without  plan,
   among some  rocks. Once  it lead down to the stream, crossed a rivulet of it
   and then came back up on the same bank, grading up through the trees.
        'I think we'll find  him dead,' I whispered  to  Pop. That aimless turn
   had made me see him, slow and hard hit, getting ready to go down.
        'I hope so,' Pop said.
        But the trail went on, where there was  little grass now, and  trailing
   was  much slower and  more difficult. There were no tracks  now that I could
   see, only the probable line he would take, verified by a shiny dark splatter
   of dried blood on a stone. Several times we lost it entirely and, the  three
   of us  making casts, one would find  it, point  and  whisper  'Damu', and we
   would go on again. Finally it led down from  a rocky  hillside with the last
   of the  sun on  it, down  into the stream  bed where there was a long,  wide
   patch of  the highest dead  reeds that we  had  seen. These  were higher and
   thicker even than the slough the  buff had  come out of in the  morning  and
   there were several game trails that went into them.
        'Not good enough to take the little Memsahib in there,' Pop said.
        'Let her stay here with M'Cola,' I said.
        'It's not good enough for the  little Memsahib,' Pop repeated. 'I don't
   know why we let her come.'
        'She can wait here. Droop wants to go on.'
        'Right you are. We'll have a look.'