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    Green Hills of Africa

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    'M'Cola's got the old man's coat,' Pop said.

      'He likes to carry things in the game pockets,' I said.

      M'Cola saw we were talking about him. I had forgotten about the

      uncleaned rifle. Now I remembered it and said to Pop, 'Ask him where he got

      the new coat'.

      M'Cola grinned and said something.

      'He says it is his property.'

      I grinned at him and he shook his old bald head and it was understood

      that I had said nothing about the rifle.

      'Where's that bastard Garrick?' I asked.

      Finally he came with his blanket and got in with M'Cola and the old man

      behind. The Wanderobo sat with me in front beside Kamau.

      'That's a lovely-looking friend you have,' P.O.M. said. 'You be good

      too.'

      I kissed her good-bye and we whispered something.

      'Billing and cooing,' Pop said. 'Disgusting.'

      'Good-bye, you old bastard.'

      'Good-bye, you damned bullfighter.'

      'Good-bye, sweet.'

      'Good-bye and good luck.'

      'You've plenty of petrol and we'll leave some here,' Pop called.

      I waved and we were starting down hill through the village on a narrow

      track that led down and on to the scrubby dry plain that spread out below

      the two great blue hills.

      I looked back as we went down the hill and saw the two figures, the

      tall thick one and the small neat one, each wearing big Stetson hats,

      silhouetted on the road as they walked back toward camp, then I looked ahead

      at the dried-up, scrubby plain.

      PART IV

      PURSUIT AS HAPPINESS

      CHAPTER ONE

      The road was only a track and the plain was very discouraging to see.

      As we went on we saw a few thin Grant's gazelles showing white against the

      burnt yellow of the grass and the grey trees. My exhilaration died with the

      stretching out of this plain, the typical poor game country, and it all

      began to {seem}. very impossible and romantic and quite untrue. The

      Wanderobo had a very strong odour and I looked at the way the lobes of his

      ear were stretched and then neatly wrapped on themselves and at his strange

      un-negroid, thin-lipped face. When he saw me studying his face he smiled

      pleasantly and scratched his chest. I looked around at the back of the car.

      M'Cola was asleep. Garrick was sitting straight up, dramatizing his

      awakeness, and the old man was trying to see the road.

      By now there was no more road, only a cattle track, but we were coming

      to the edge of the plain. Then the plain was behind us and ahead there were

      big trees and we were entering a country the loveliest that I had seen in

      Africa. The grass was green and smooth, short as a meadow that has been mown

      and is newly grown, and the trees were big, high-trunked, and old with no

      undergrowth but only the smooth green of the turf like a deer park and we

      drove on through shade and patches of sunlight following a faint trail the

      Wanderobo pointed out. I could not believe we had suddenly come to any such

      wonderful country. It was a country to wake from, happy to have had the

      dream and, seeing if it would clown away, I reached up and touched the

      Wanderobo's ear. He jumped and Kamau snickered. M'Cola nudged me from the

      back seat and pointed and there, standing in an open space between the

      trees, his head up, staring at us, the bristles on his back erect, long,

      thick, white tusks upcurving, his eyes showing bright, was a very large

      wart-hog boar watching us from less than twenty yards. I motioned to Kamau

      to stop and we sat looking at him and he at us. I put the rifle up and

      sighted on his chest. He watched and did not move. Then I motioned to Kamau

      to throw in the clutch and we went on and made a curve to the right and left

      the wart-hog, who had never moved, nor showed any fright at seeing us.

      I could see that Kamau was excited and, looking back, M'Cola nodded his

      head up and down in agreement. None of us had ever seen a wart-hog that

      would not bolt off, fast-trotting, tail in air. This was a virgin country,

      an un-hunted pocket in the million miles of bloody Africa. I was ready to

      stop and make camp anywhere.

      This was the finest country I had seen but we went on, winding along

      through the big trees over the softly rolling grass. Then ahead and to the

      right we saw the high stockade of a Masai village. It was a very large

      village and out of it came running long-legged, brown, smooth-moving men who

      all seemed to be of the same age and who wore their hair in a heavy

      club-like queue that swung against their shoulders as they ran. They came up

      to the car and surrounded it, all laughing and smiling and talking. They all

      were tall, their teeth were white and good, and their hair was stained a red

      brown and arranged in a looped fringe on their foreheads. They carried

      spears and they were very handsome and extremely jolly, not sullen, nor

      contemptuous like the northern Masai, and they wanted to know what we were

      going to do. The Wanderobo evidently said we were hunting kudu and were in a

      hurry. They had the car surrounded so we could not move. One said something

      and three or four others joined in and Kamau explained to me that they had

      seen two kudu bulls go along the trail in the afternoon.

      'It can't be true,' I said to myself. 'It can't be.'

      I told Kamau to start and slowly we pushed through them, they all

      laughing and trying to stop the car, making it all but run over them. They

      were the tallest, best-built, handsomest people I had ever seen and the

      first truly light-hearted happy people I had seen in Africa. Finally, when

      we were moving, they started to run beside the car smiling and laughing and

      showing how easily they could run and then, as the going was better, up the

      smooth valley of a stream, it became a contest and one after another dropped

      out of the running, waving and smiling as they left until there were only

      two still running with us, the finest runners of the lot, who kept pace

      easily with the car as they moved long-legged, smoothly, loosely, and with

      pride. They were running too, at the pace of a fast miler, and carrying

      their spears as well. Then we had to turn to the right and climb out of the

      putting-green smoothness of the valley into a rolling meadow and, as we

      slowed, climbing in first gear, the whole pack came up again, laughing and

      trying not to seem winded. We went through a little knot of brush and a

      small rabbit started out, zigzagging wildly and all the Masai behind now in

      a mad sprint. They caught the rabbit and the tallest runner came up with him

      to the car and handed him to me. I held him and could feel the thumping of

      his heart through the soft, warm, furry body, and as I stroked him the Masai

      patted my arm. Holding him by the ears I handed him back. No, no, he was

      mine. He was a present. I handed him to M'Cola. M'Cola did not take him

      seriously and handed him to one of the Masai. We were moving and they were


      running again now. The Masai stooped and put the rabbit on the ground and as

      he ran free they all laughed. M'Cola shook his head. We were all very

      impressed by these Masai.

      'Good Masai,' M'Cola said, very moved. 'Masai many cattle. Masai no

      kill to eat. Masai kill man.'

      The Wanderobo patted himself on the chest. 'Wanderobo . . . Masai,' he

      said, very proudly, claiming kin. His ears were curled in the same way

      theirs were. Seeing them running and so damned handsome and so happy made us

      all happy. I had never seen such quick disinterested friendliness, nor such

      fine-looking people.

      {'Good} Masai,' M'Cola repeated, nodding his head emphatically. {'Good,

      good} Masai.' Only Garrick seemed impressed in a different way. For all his

      khaki clothes and his letter from B'wana Simba, I believe these Masai

      frightened him in a very old place. They were our friends, not his. They

      certainly were our friends though. They had that attitude that makes

      brothers, that unexpressed but instant and complete acceptance that you must

      be Masai wherever it is you come from. That attitude you only get from the

      best of the English, the best of the Hungarians and the very best Spaniards;

      the thing that used to be the most clear distinction of nobility when there

      was nobility. It is an ignorant attitude and the people who have it do not

      survive, but very few pleasanter things ever happen to you than the

      encountering of it.

      So now there were only the two of them left again, running, and it was

      hard going and the machine was beating them. They were still running well

      and still loose and long but the machine was a cruel pacemaker. So I told

      Kamau to speed it up and get it over with because a sudden burst of speed

      was not the humiliation of a steady using. They sprinted, were beaten,

      laughed, and then we were leaning out, waving, and they stood leaning on

      their spears and waved. We were still great friends but now we were alone

      again and there was no track, only the general direction to follow around

      clumps of trees and along the run of this green valley.

      After a little the trees grew closer and we left the idyllic country

      behind and now were picking our way along a faint trail through thick

      second-growth. Sometimes we came to a dead halt and had to get out and pull

      a log out of the way or cut a tree that blocked the body of the car.

      Sometimes we had to back out of bush and look for a way to circle around and

      come upon the trail again, chopping our way through with the long brush

      knives that are called pangas. The Wanderobo was a pitiful chopper and

      Garrick was little better. M'Cola did everything well in which a knife was

      used and he swung a panga with a fast yet heavy and vindictive stroke. I

      used it badly. There was too much wrist in it to learn it quickly; your

      wrist tired and the blade seemed to have a weight it did not have. I wished

      that I had a Michigan double-bitted axe, honed razor-sharp, to chop with

      instead of this sabring of trees.

      Chopping through when we were stopped, avoiding all we could, Kamau

      driving with intelligence and a sound feeling for the country, we came

      through the difficult going and out into another open-meadow stretch and

      could see a range of hills off to our right. But here there had been a

      recent heavy rain and we had to be very careful about the low parts of the

      meadow where the tyres cut in through the turf to mud and spun in the slick

      greasiness. We cut brush and shovelled out twice and then, having learned

      not to trust any low part, we skirted the high edge of the meadow and then

      were in timber again. As we came out, after several long circles in the

      woods to find places where we could get the car through, we were on the bank

      of a stream, where there was a sort of brushy bridging across the bed built

      like a beaver dam and evidently designed to hold back the water. On the

      other side was a thorn-brush-fenced cornfield, a steep, stump-scattered bank

      with corn planted all over it and some abandoned looking corrals or

      thorn-bush-fenced enclosures with mud and stick buildings and to the right

      there were cone-shaped grass huts projecting above a heavy thorn fence. We

      all got out, for this stream was a problem, and, on the other side, the only

      place we could get up the bank led through the stump-filled maize field.

      The old man said the rain had come that day. There had been no water

      going over the brushy dam when they had passed that morning. I was feeling

      fairly depressed. Here we had come through a beautiful country of virgin

      timber where kudu had been once seen walking along the trail to end up stuck

      on the bank of a little creek in someone's cornfield. I had not expected any

      cornfield and I resented it. I thought we would have to get permission to

      drive through the maize, provided we could make it across the stream and up

      the bank and I took off my shoes and waded across the stream to test it

      underfoot. The brush and saplings on the bottom were packed hard and firm

      and I was sure we could cross if we took it fairly fast. M'Cola and Kamau

      agreed and we walked up the bank to see how it would be. The mud of the bank

      was soft but there was dry earth underneath and I figured we could shovel

      our way up if we could get through the stumps. But we would need to unload

      before we tried it.

      Coming toward us, from the direction of the huts, were two men and a

      boy. I said 'Jambo', as they came up. They answered 'Jambo', and then the

      old man and the Wanderobo talked with them. M'Cola shook his head at me. He

      did not understand a word. I thought we were asking permission to go through

      the corn. When the old man finished talking the two men came closer and we

      shook hands.

      They looked like no negroes I had ever seen. Their faces were a grey

      brown, the oldest looked to be about fifty, had thin lips, an almost Grecian

      nose, rather high cheekbones, and large, intelligent eyes. He had great

      poise and dignity and seemed to be very intelligent. The younger man had the

      same cast of features and I took him for a younger brother. He looked about

      thirty-five. The boy was as pretty as a girl and looked rather shy and

      stupid. I had thought he was a girl from his face for an instant when he

      first came up, as they all wore a sort of Roman toga of unbleached muslin

      gathered at the shoulder that revealed no line of their bodies.

      They were talking with the old man, who, now that I looked at him

      standing with them, seemed to bear a sort of wrinkled and degenerate

      resemblance to the classic-featured owner of the shamba, just as the

      Wanderobo-Masai was a shrivelled caricature of the handsome Masai we had met

      in the forest.

      Then we all went down to the stream and Kamau and I rigged ropes around

      the tyres to act as chains while the Roman elder and the rest unloaded the

      car and carried the heaviest things up the steep bank. The
    n we crossed in a

      wild, water-throwing smash and, all pushing heavily, made it halfway up the

      bank before we stuck. We chopped and dug out and finally made it to the top

      of the bank but ahead was that maize field and I could not figure where we

      were to go from there.

      'Where do we go?' I asked the Roman elder.

      They did not understand Garrick's interpreting and the old man made the

      question clear.

      The Roman pointed toward the heavy thorn-bush fence to the left at the

      edge of the woods.

      'We can't get through there in the car.'

      'Campi,' said M'Cola, meaning we were going to camp there.

      'Hell of a place,' I said.

      'Campi,' M'Cola said firmly and they all nodded.

      'Campi! Campi!' said the old man.

      'There we camp,' Garrick announced pompously.

      'You go to hell,' I told him cheerfully.

      I walked toward the camp site with the Roman who was talking steadily

      in a language I could not understand a word of. M'Cola was with me and the

      others were loading and following with the car. I was remembering that I had

      read you must never camp in abandoned native quarters because of ticks and

      other hazards and I was preparing to hold out against this camp. We entered

      a break in the thorn-bush fence and inside was a building of logs and

      saplings stuck in the ground and crossed with branches. It looked like a big

      chicken coop. The Roman made us free of this and of the enclosure with a

      wave of his hand and kept on talking.

      'Bugs,' I said to M'Cola in Swahili, speaking with strong disapproval.

      'No,' he said, dismissing the idea. 'No bugs.'

      'Bad bugs. Many bugs. Sickness.'

      'No bugs,' he said firmly.

      The no-bugs had it and with the Roman talking steadily, I hoped on some

      congenial topic, the car came up, stopped under a huge tree about fifty

      yards from the thorn-bush fence and they all commenced carrying the

      necessities in for the making of camp. My ground-sheet tent was slung

      between a tree and one side of the chicken coop and I sat down on a petrol

      case to discuss the shooting situation with the Roman, the old man, and

      Garrick, while Kamau and M'Cola fixed up a camp and the Wanderobo-Masai

      stood on one leg and let his mouth hang open.

      'Where were kudu?'

      'Back there,' waving his arm.

      'Big ones?'

      Arms spread to show hugeness of horns and a torrent from the Roman.

      Me, dictionary-ing heavily, 'Where was the one they were watching?'

      No results on this but a long speech from the Roman which I took to

      mean they were watching them all.

      It was late afternoon now and the sky was heavy with clouds. I was wet

      to the waist and my socks were mud soaked. Also I was sweating from pushing

      on the car and from chopping.

      'When do we start?' I asked.

      'To-morrow,' Garrick answered without bothering to question the Roman.

      'No,' I said. To-night.'

      'To-morrow,' Garrick said. 'Late now. One hour light.' He showed me one

      hour on my watch.

      I dictionaried. 'Hunt to-night. Last hour best hour.'

      Garrick implied that the kudu were too far away. That it was impossible

      to hunt and return, all this with gestures, 'Hunt to-morrow'.

      'You bastard,' I said in English. All this time the Roman and the old

      man had been standing saying nothing. I shivered. It was cold with the sun

      under the clouds in spite of the heaviness of the air after rain.

      'Old man,' I said.

      'Yes, Master,' said the old man. Dictionary-ing carefully, I said,

      'Hunt kudu to-night. Last hour best hour. Kudu close?'

      'Maybe.'

      'Hunt now?'

      They talked together.

      'Hunt to-morrow,' Garrick put in.

      'Shut up, you actor,' I said. 'Old man. Little hunt now?'

      'Yes,' said the old man and Roman nodded. 'Little while.'

      'Good,' I said, and went to find a shirt and undershirt and a pair of

     


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