Green Hills of Africa
            
            
            'You wait here with M'Cola,' I whispered over my shoulder.
        We followed Droopy into the thick, tall grass  that was five feet above
   our  heads, walking carefully on the game trail, stooping forward, trying to
   make  no noise breathing. I was thinking of the buff the way I had seen them
   when we had gotten the three that time, how the old bull had come out of the
   bush, groggy as he was, and I could see the horns, the boss coming far down,
   the  muzzle  out,  the little  eyes, the  roll  of  fat and  muscle  on  his
   thin-haired, grey, scaly-hided  neck, the heavy  power and the rage in  him,
   and  I admired him and respected him, but he was slow, and all the  while we
   shot I felt that it was fixed  and that we had him. This was different, this
   was no rapid fire, no pouring it on him as he comes groggy into the open, if
   he  comes now I  must be quiet inside and put  it down his nose as he  comes
   with the head out. He will have to put the head down to hook, like any bull,
   and that will uncover the old place the  boys  wet their  knuckles on and  I
   will get one in  there and then must go sideways into the grass and he would
   be Pop's from then on  unless I could keep  the  rifle  when I jumped. I was
   sure I could get that one in  and jump  if I could  wait and  watch his head
   come  down. I knew I could do that and that the shot would kill him but  how
   long would it take?  That was the whole thing. How long  would it take? Now,
   going forward, sure  he was in here, I felt the elation, the best elation of
   all, of certain action to come, action in which  you had something to do, in
   which you  can kill  and  come out of  it, doing  something you are ignorant
   about and so not scared, no  one to worry about and no responsibility except
   to perform something you feel sure you can perform, and I was walking softly
   ahead watching Droopy's back  and remembering to keep  the sweat out  of  my
   glasses  when I heard  a  noise behind us and turned my  head. It was P.O.M.
   with M'Cola coming on our tracks.
        'For God's sake,' Pop said. He was furious.
        We  got  her back out of the grass  and up on to the  bank and made her
   realize that she must stay  there. She  had  not understood that she  was to
   stay behind. She had heard me whisper something but thought it was  for  her
   to come behind M'Cola.
        'That spooked me,' I said to Pop.
        'She's like a little terrier,' he said. 'But it's not good enough.'
        We were looking out over that grass.
        'Droop wants to go still,' I said. 'I'll go as far as he will.  When he
   says no that lets us out. After all, I gut-shot the son of a bitch.'
        'Mustn't do anything silly, though.'
        'I can kill the son of a bitch if I get a shot at him. If he comes he's
   got to give me a shot.'
        The fright P.O.M. had given us about herself had made me noisy.
        'Come on,' said Pop. We followed  Droopy back in and  it  got worse and
   worse, and I do not know  about Pop but about half-way I changed to  the big
   gun and kept the safety off and my  hand over the trigger  guard and  I  was
   plenty nervous by the time Droopy stopped and shook  his head  and whispered
   'Hapana'. It  had gotten  so you  could not see a foot ahead  and it was all
   turns  and  twists. It was really bad and the sun  was only  on the hillside
   now.  We both felt good because we had made Droopy do the calling off  and I
   was relieved  as  well. What we  had followed  him  into  had made  my fancy
   shooting plans  seem very silly and I knew all we had in there  was  Pop  to
   blast him  over with the four-fifty number two after I'd maybe miss him with
   that lousy  four-seventy. I had no confidence  in anything but its noise any
   more.
        We were  back trailing when we heard the porters  on the hillside shout
   and we ran crashing through the  grass to try to get a high  enough place to
   see to shoot. They waved their arms and shouted  that the buffalo  had  come
   out  of  the  reeds  and gone  past them and  then  M'Cola  and Droopy  were
   pointing, and  Pop had me by the sleeve trying  to pull me to where I  could
   see  them and  then, in the sunlight,  high up on  the hillside  against the
   rocks I saw two buffalo. They shone very black in  the  sun and one was much
   bigger  than the other and I remember thinking this was our bull and that he
   had picked up  a cow and she had made the pace and kept him going. Droop had
   handed  me  the  Springfield  and  I  slipped my  arm through  the sling and
   sighting, the buff now all seen through the aperture, I froze myself  inside
   and held the bead  on the top of his shoulder and as I started to squeeze he
   started running and I swung ahead of him and loosed off. I saw him lower his
   head and jump like a bucking horse as he comes out  of the  chutes and as  I
   threw the shell, slammed the bolt forward  and  shot again, behind him as he
   went out of sight, I knew  I had him. Droopy and I started  to run and as we
   were running  I heard a low bellow. I stopped  and yelled at Pop, 'Hear him?
   I've got him, I tell you!'
        'You hit him,' said Pop. 'Yes.'
        'Goddamn it, I killed him. Didn't you hear him bellow?'
        'No.'
        'Listen!' We stood listening and there it came, clear, a long, moaning,
   unmistakable bellow.
        'By God,' Pop said. It was a very sad noise.
        M'Cola grabbed my  hand and Droopy  slapped my back and all laughing we
   started on a  running scramble, sweating, rushing,  up the ridge through the
   trees and over rocks. I had to stop for breath, my heart pounding, and wiped
   the sweat off my face and cleaned my glasses.
        'Kufa!'  M'Cola said,  making the word for dead almost explosive in its
   force. 'N'Dio! Kufa!'
        'Kufa!' Droopy said grinning.
        'Kufa!'  M'Cola  repeated  and we  shook hands again before  we went on
   climbing.  Then, ahead of us,  we saw him, on his back, throat stretched out
   to the full, his weight on his  horns, wedged against a tree. M'Cola put his
   finger in  the bullet hole in  the centre of the shoulder and shook his head
   happily.
        Pop and P.O.M. came up, followed by the porters.
        'By God, he's a better bull than we thought,' I said.
        'He's not the same bull. This is a  real bull. That must  have been our
   bull with him.'
        'I thought he was with a cow. It was so far away I couldn't tell.'
        'It  must  have been  four  hundred yards. By God, you {can} shoot that
   little pipsqueak. '
        'When I saw him put  his head down between his legs  and buck I knew we
   had him. The light was wonderful on him.'
        'I  knew  you  had hit  him, and I  knew he wasn't the same bull.  So I
   thought we had  two wounded buffalo to  deal with.  I didn't hear  the first
   bellow.'
        'It was wonderful when we heard  him bellow,' P.O.M. said. 'It's such a
   sad sound. It's like hearing a horn in the woods.'
        'It sounded awfully jolly to me,' Pop said. 'By God, we deserve a drink
   on this. That was a shot. Why didn't you ever tell us you could shoot?'
        'Go to hell.'
        'You know  he's  
					     					 			a damned  good tracker, too,  and  what kind of  a bird
   shot?' he asked P.O.M.
        'Isn't he a beautiful bull?'  P.O.M. asked. 'He's  a fine one. He's not
   old but it's a fine head.'
        We tried to take pictures  but there was only the little box camera and
   the shutter stuck, and there was  a bitter argument about the shutter  while
   the light failed, and I was nervous now, irritable, righteous, pompous about
   the shutter and inclined to be abusive because we could get no  picture. You
   cannot live on a plane of the sort  of elation I had felt  in the  reeds and
   having killed,  even  when it  is only  a buffalo, you  feel  a little quiet
   inside. Killing is not a feeling that you share and I took a  drink of water
   and  told P.O.M. I was sorry I was such a bastard about the camera. She said
   it was all right and we were all right again looking at the buff with M'Cola
   making the cuts for the headskin  and we standing close together and feeling
   fond of each  other and understanding everything, camera and  all. I  took a
   drink of the whisky and it had no taste and I felt no kick from it.
        'Let me have another,' I said. The second one was all right.
        We were going  on ahead to camp with the  chased-by-a-rhino spearman as
   guide and Droop  was  going  to  skin out  the  head and they were going  to
   butcher  and cache  the meat in trees so the hyenas would  not  get it. They
   were afraid to  travel in  the  dark and I told  Droopy he could keep my big
   gun.  He said he knew how  to shoot so I took out the shells  and put on the
   safety and handing it to him told him to  shoot.  He put it to his shoulder,
   shut  the wrong eye, and pulled hard on  the trigger, and again,  and again.
   Then I showed him about the safety and had him put it  on and  off  and snap
   the gun  a couple  of times.  M'Cola  became very  superior during  Droopy's
   struggle to fire with the safety on and Droopy seemed to get much smaller. I
   left him the gun and two cartridges and they were all busy butchering in the
   dusk when we  followed the spearsman  and  the tracks  of the  smaller buff,
   which had no blood on  them, up to the top of the hill and on our way toward
   home. We climbed  around  the tops of valleys, went  across gulches, up  and
   down ravines and  finally came on to the main ridge, it dark and cold in the
   evening, the moon not yet up,  we plodded along, all  tired. Once M'Cola, in
   the dark, loaded  with Pop's heavy gun  and an assortment of  water bottles,
   binoculars, and a musette bag of books,  sung  out a stream of what  sounded
   like curses at the guide who was striding ahead.
        'What's he say?' I asked Pop.
        'He's telling  him not to show off  his speed. That there is an old man
   in the party.'
        'Who does he mean, you or himself?'
        'Both of us.'
        We saw the moon come up,  smoky red over the brown  hills,  and we came
   down through  the chinky  lights of the  village, the mud  houses all closed
   tight, and  the smells of goats and sheep, and then across the stream and up
   the bare slope to where the fire was burning in front of our tents. It was a
   cold night with much wind.
        In the  morning we hunted, picked up a track at  a spring and trailed a
   rhino all over the high orchard country before  he  went down  into a valley
   that led, steeply,  into the  canyon. It was very hot and the tight boots of
   the day before had chafed P.O.M.'s feet. She did not complain about them but
   I could see they hurt her. We were all luxuriantly, restfully tired.
        'The  hell with them,' I said to Pop. 'I don't want to kill another one
   unless he's big. We might hunt a week for a good one. Let's stand on the one
   we have and  pull out and join Karl. We can  hunt  oryx  down there  and get
   those zebra hides and get on after the kudu.'
        We were sitting under a tree on  the summit of a hill and could see off
   over all the country and the canyon running down to the Rift Valley and Lake
   Manyara.
        'It would be  good fun to  take  porters and a light outfit and hunt on
   ahead of them down through that valley and out to the lake,' Pop said.
        'That  would be  swell. We could send the lorries around  to meet us at
   what's the name of the place?'
        'Maji-Moto.'
        'Why don't we do that?' P.O.M. asked.
        'We'll ask Droopy how the valley is.'
        Droopy  didn't know  but the  spearman said it was very rough  and  bad
   going where the stream came down through the rift wall. He did  not think we
   could get the loads through. We gave it up.
        'That's the sort of  trip to  make,  though,'  Pop said. 'Porters don't
   cost as much as petrol.'
        'Can't we make trips like that when we come back?' P.O.M. asked.
        'Yes,' Pop said. 'But for a big rhino you want to go up on Mount Kenya.
   You'll  get a real one there. Kudu's  the prize here. You'd have to go up to
   Kalal to get one in Kenya. Then if we get them we'll have time to go on down
   in that Handeni country for sable.'
        'Let's get going,' I said without moving.
        Since a long time we had all felt good about Karl's rhino. We were glad
   he  had it and all of that had taken on  a correct perspective. Maybe he had
   his oryx by  now. I hoped so. He was a fine fellow, Karl, and it was good he
   got these extra fine heads.
        'How do you feel, poor old Mama?'
        'I'm fine. If we {are} going I'll be just as glad  to rest my feet. But
   I love this kind of hunting.'
        'Let's get back, eat, break camp, and get down there to-night.'
        That night we got into our old camp at M'utu-Umbu, under the big trees,
   not far from the road.  It had been our first  camp  in Africa and the trees
   were  as  big, as  spreading, and as green,  the  stream as clear  and  fast
   flowing, and the  camp  as  fine as when we had first been  there.  The only
   difference was that now it was hotter at night, the road  in was hub-deep in
   dust, and we had seen a lot of country.
   CHAPTER FOUR
        We had come  down to the Rift Valley by a sandy red road  across a high
   plateau,  then  up and down through orchard-bushed hills,  around a slope of
   forest to  the top of  the  rift wall  where we could  look down and see the
   plain, the heavy forest below  the  wall, and the long, dried-up edged shine
   of Lake Manyara rose-coloured at one end with a half million  tiny dots that
   were  flamingoes. From  there the road dropped steeply along the face of the
   wall, down  into the forest,  on to the  flatness  of  the  valley,  through
   cultivated patches of green corn, bananas,  and  trees I  did  not know  the
   names  of, walled thick with forest,  past a Hindu's  trading store and many
   huts,  over two bridges where clear, fast-flowing streams  ran, through more
   forest, thinning now to open glades, and into a dusty turn-off that led into
   a deeply rutted, dust-filled track through bushes to the shade of M'utu-Umbu
   camp.
        That night after dinner we  heard the flamingoes flighting in the dark.
   It was like the sound  the wings  of ducks make as they go over before it is
   light, b 
					     					 			ut slower, with a steady beat, and multiplied  a thousand times. Pop
   and I were a little drunk and P.O.M. was very tired. Karl was gloomy  again.
   We  had taken the edge  from his victories over  rhino and now that was past
   anyway and  he was facing possible defeat by oryx. Then, too, they had found
   not a  leopard but a marvellous lion, a huge, black-maned  lion that did not
   want to leave, on the  rhino  carcass  when they  had gone  there  the  next
   morning  and  could not  shoot  him  because he was in some  sort  of forest
   reserve.
        'That's rotten,' I said and  I tried to feel  bad about  it  but  I was
   still feeling much too good to appreciate any one else's gloom,  and Pop and
   I sat, tired through to our bones, drinking whisky and soda and talking.
        The next  day we  hunted  oryx in the  dried-up dustiness of  the  Rift
   Valley and  finally found a herd way off at the edge  of the wooded hills on
   the far side above a Masai village. They  were like a bunch of Masai donkeys
   except  for the  beautiful  straight-slanting black horns and all  the heads
   looked good. When you looked closely two or three were obviously better than
   the others  and sitting on the  ground I picked what I thought  was the very
   best of the  lot and as they strung out I made sure of this one. I heard the
   bullet  smack and  watched  the  oryx  circle  out away from the others, the
   circle quickening, and knew I had it. So I did not shoot again.
        This was  the one Karl  had picked, too. I  did not know that, but  had
   shot, deliberately selfish, to make sure of the best this time at least, but
   he got another good  one  and they  went off in a wind-lifted  cloud of grey
   dust  as they galloped.  Except for  the miracle of their horns there was no
   more  excitement in shooting  them than if  they had been donkeys, and after
   the lorry came up and M'Cola and Charo had skinned the heads out  and cut up
   the meat we rode home  in the blowing  dust, our faces grey with it, and the
   valley one long heat mirage.
        We stayed at that camp two days. We had to get some zebra hides that we
   had promised friends at home and it needed  time for  the  skinner to handle
   them properly. Getting the zebra  was no fun; the  plain was  dull, now that
   the  grass  had dried, hot and dusty after the  hills, and the picture  that
   remains is of  sitting against an anthill with,  in  the distance, a herd of
   zebra  galloping in  the grey heat haze,  raising  a dust, and on the yellow
   plain, the birds circling over a white patch there, another beyond,  there a
   third, and looking back, the plume  of dust  of  the lorry  coming with  the
   skinners and the  men to  cut up the meat  for the village.  I did  some bad
   shooting in the heat on a Grant's gazelle that the volunteer  skinners asked
   me to kill them for meat,  wounding him in a running  shot after missing him
   three or  four times, and then following him across  the plain  until almost
   noon in that heat until I got within range and killed him.
        But that afternoon we  went out  along  the road  that ran through  the
   settlement and past the corner of the Hindu's general store, where he smiled
   at  us in  well-oiled, unsuccessful-storekeeping,  brotherly  humanity,  and
   hopeful salesmanship, turned the car off to the left on to a track that went
   into  the  deep  forest,  a narrow brush-bordered  track  through the  heavy
   timber, that crossed a stream on an unsound log  and pole bridge and went on
   until  the timber  thinned  and  we  came  out into  a grassy savannah  that
   stretched  ahead to  the  reed-edged,  dried-up  bed of the  lake with,  far
   beyond,  the shine of  the water and the rose-pink  of the flamingoes. There
   were some grass huts of fishermen  in the shade of the last trees and  ahead
   the wind blew across the grass of the savannah and the dried bed of the lake
   showed a white-grey with many small animals humping across its baked surface
   as our car  alarmed  them. They were reed  buck and they  looked strange and
   awkward  as they moved in the distance but trim and graceful as you saw them
   standing close.  We turned the car out through the thick, short grass and on