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    Cruelty of Fate


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      Cruelty of Fate

      The Fight for Khambula

      Book Four of the Anglo-Zulu War

      James Mace

      Electronic Edition Copyright © 2019 by James Mace

      All rights reserved as permitted under the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior permission of the publisher.

      Characters and events portrayed in this book are based on actual persons and events, but are used fictitiously.

      Legionary Books

      Meridian, Idaho 83642, USA

      http://www.legionarybooks.net

      First eBook Edition: 2019

      Published in the United States of America

      Legionary Books

      Cover Images by Radoslav Javor, copyright © 2019 by Radoslav Javor and Legionary Books

      All photography and maps are used with generous permission from the collection of Ian Knight

      Thou great and mighty chief,

      Thou who has an army

      The son of Shepstone sent his forces,

      We destroyed them!

      The red soldiers came,

      We destroyed them!

      The mounted soldiers came,

      We destroyed them!

      The mounted police came,

      We destroyed them!

      The volunteers came,

      We destroyed them!

      The mounted police came,

      We destroyed them!

      Thou the Great Chief!

      Thou who hast an army,

      When will they dare to repeat their attack?

      - Translation of a Zulu war chant, following the Battle of Isandlwana

      The Works of James Mace

      Note: In each series or combination of series’, all works are listed in chronological sequence

      The Artorian Chronicles

      Soldier of Rome: The Legionary

      Soldier of Rome: The Sacrovir Revolt

      Soldier of Rome: Heir to Rebellion

      Soldier of Rome: The Centurion

      *Empire Betrayed: The Fall of Sejanus

      Soldier of Rome: Journey to Judea

      Soldier of Rome: The Last Campaign

      *Centurion Valens and the Empress of Death

      *Slaves of Fear: A Land Unconquered

      The Great Jewish Revolt and Year of the Four Emperors

      Soldier of Rome: Rebellion in Judea

      Soldier of Rome: Vespasian’s Fury

      Soldier of Rome: Reign of the Tyrants

      Soldier of Rome: Rise of the Flavians

      Soldier of Rome: The Fall of Jerusalem

      Napoleonic Era

      Forlorn Hope: The Storming of Badajoz

      I Stood with Wellington

      Courage, Marshal Ney

      The Anglo-Zulu War

      Brutal Valour: The Tragedy of Isandlwana

      Crucible of Honour: The Battle of Rorke’s Drift

      Lost Souls: The Forgotten Heroes of Eshowe

      Cruelty of Fate: The Fight for Khambula

      * Stand-alone novel or novella

      Table of Contents

      Preface

      Cast of Characters

      Prologue: A Prince in Exile

      Chapter I: The Red Soldiers Came

      Chapter II: Time for Initiative

      Chapter III: A Banker’s Son in Zululand

      Chapter IV: A Complicated Situation

      Chapter V: Coordinating the Columns

      Chapter VI: The abaQulusi Problem

      Chapter VII: The Sound of the Guns

      Chapter VIII: Our Greatest Victory

      Chapter IX: Take the Fight to Them

      Chapter X: Disastrous Despatches

      Chapter XI: The Shattered Column

      Chapter XII: Pull Me Out of My Difficulties

      Chapter XIII: A Painful Lull

      Chapter XIV: The Empire’s Resolve

      Chapter XV: Spiritual Purging

      Chapter XVI: Futile Retribution

      Chapter XVII: The Prince’s Treason

      Chapter XVIII: Sons of Zulu

      Chapter XIX: Charlie Harford’s Next Adventure

      Chapter XX: The Mounted Troops Return

      Chapter XXI: A Staffordshire Regiment in Zululand

      Chapter XXII: Flight of the Prince

      Chapter XXIII: A Bitter Slog

      Chapter XXIV: Crush Them in the Open

      Chapter XXV: Traitors to Their King

      Chapter XXVI: The Hyena Hunts

      Chapter XXVII: The Hyena Feasts

      Chapter XXVIII: A Day of Humiliation and Prayer

      Chapter XXIX: Salvage from the Dead

      Chapter XXX: Why We Fight

      Chapter XXXI: Burn them out!

      Chapter XXXII: Blind to Our Enemy’s Intentions

      Chapter XXXIII: Under the Shadow of Death

      Chapter XXXIV: The Vast Plateau

      Chapter XXXV: Chaos Atop the Painted Mountain

      Chapter XXXVI: Nothing Remains but to Die

      Chapter XXXVII: An Ignominious Retreat

      Chapter XXXVIII: It is My Unpleasant Duty

      Chapter XXXIX: We are the Boys of Isandlwana!

      Chapter XL: A Pitiful Foe

      Chapter XLI: Retreat from the Kraal

      Chapter XLII: A Desperate Counterattack

      Chapter XLIII: One Final Push

      Chapter XLIV: A Rough and Tumble

      Chapter XLV: The Butcher’s Bill

      Chapter XLVI: Trail of the Dead

      Epilogue: Hunting the Hyena

      Historical Afterward

      Appendix A: Historical Requiem – The Survivors of Ntombe, Hlobane, and Khambula

      Appendix B: A Zulu Account of the Battle of Khambula

      Appendix C: Historical Accounts of a Turncoat Zulu

      Appendix D: Glossary of Terms

      Further Reading / Bibliography

      Preface

      In late January 1879, following news of the terrible disaster to befall British forces at Isandlwana, Colonel Henry Evelyn Wood, commanding officer of the northern No. 4 Column, withdraws his forces to Khambula, near the Natal and Transvaal borders. Adding to their woes, the southern No. 1 Column finds itself trapped under siege at the abandoned mission station of Eshowe. The General Officer Commanding, Lord Chelmsford, orders Wood to continue harassing the Zulus, keeping the pressure off their central and southern forces while he rallies reinforcements to relieve Eshowe. In light of the disaster at Isandlwana, Wood knows he must temper aggression with caution, as he does not have the numbers necessary to face the entire Zulu amabutho.

      Facing the British in the north are the semi-autonomous abaQulusi tribe and their venerable ally, an exiled Swazi prince named Mbilini. A master of guerrilla warfare, Mbilini harries the British invaders relentlessly while awaiting reinforcements from the Zulu king, Cetshwayo. Fifty miles to the east, at the royal kraal of Ulundi, Cetshwayo’s triumphant albeit terribly bloodied regiments return home to take in the harvest following their victory at Isandlwana. The king’s subsequent overtures of peace are soundly rebuffed by Lord Chelmsford, and he knows he must soon summon his regiments once again. With shouts of ‘We are the boys of Isandlwana!’ the Zulus turn their attention north, seeking to join with Mbilini and send another British invasion column to oblivion.

      Cast of Characters

      The British

      Colonel Henry Evelyn Wood, VC – Commanding Officer, No. 4 Column. A highly experienced officer, having fought in both the Crimea War as well as the Indian Rebellion, where he earned the Victoria Cross in 1858

      Lieutenant Colonel Redvers Buller – A regular army officer from the 60th Regiment, given command of the Frontier Light Horse

      Lieutenant Colonel Philip Gilbert – Commanding
    Officer, 1st Battalion, 13th Somerset Light Infantry

      Major Robert Rogers, VC – Commanding Officer, 90th Regiment, who earned the Victoria Cross during the Second China War in 1861

      Major Edward Tremlett – Office Commanding, 11/7 Battery, Royal Artillery

      Major Robert Hackett – Battalion Major with the 90th Regiment

      Major William Knox Leet – An officer from 2/13th Light Infantry, now assigned to command the indigenous warriors known as ‘Wood’s Irregulars’

      Captain the Honourable Robert Campbell – Wood’s principle staff officer, detached from the Coldstream Guards

      Captain Edward Woodgate – Staff Officer, detached from the 4th Regiment

      Captain Henry Vaughan – Transportation Officer, detached from the Royal Artillery

      Commissary Edward Hughes – Commissary Officer

      Second Lieutenant Henry Lysons – A young officer from the 1st Staffordshire Militia, now serving as Wood’s orderly

      Surgeon Major Charles Cuffe – Senior Medical Officer

      Soldiers of C Company, 1/13th Light Infantry

      Captain George Thurlow – Officer Commanding

      Lieutenant George Pardoe – Subaltern

      Colour Sergeant Arthur Fricker – Senior Non-Commissioned Officer

      Sergeant Lewis Walker – A section leader and career soldier whose seventeen-year-old son is a bandsman serving with the Regiment

      Sergeants Michael Ring, Richard Evans – Section leaders

      Corporal Harry Davies – An assistant section leader under Sergeant Walker, who joined the Army when prospects proved scarce despite his being the son of a prominent banker

      Corporal James Shepard – A friend of Davies and another assistant section leader

      Privates William Grosvenor, Albert Page, George Hill, Jonathan Allen – Enlisted men

      The Garrison at Luneburg

      Major Charles Tucker – Commanding Officer, 80th Staffordshire Regiment

      Captain David Moriarty – Officer Commanding, E Company, 80th Regiment

      Lieutenant Henry Harward – Subaltern, E Company, 80th Regiment

      Colour Sergeant Henry Fredericks – Senior NCO of A Company, 80th Regiment

      Sergeant Anthony Clarke Booth – The former colour sergeant of A Company, recently reverted back to a section leader with E Company

      Lance Corporal William Burgess – Assistant section leader under Sergeant Booth

      Privates John Dodd, William Farrell, John Mace, James Taylor – Enlisted men

      The Zulus

      King Cetshwayo kaMpande – King of the Zulus

      Prince Hamu kaNzibe – Elder brother of the king and one of his chief rivals

      Ntshingwayo kaMahole – Senior inkosi within the Zulu amabutho, and architect of their victory at Isandlwana

      Mandlenkosi kaSiyanda – An induna with the uThulwana Regiment who was wounded during the battle of Rorke’s Drift and whose son was killed at Isandlwana

      Mehlokazulu kaSihayo – An induna with the iNgobamakhosi Regiment and survivor of the Battle of Isandlwana

      Mbilini waMswati – An exiled Swazi prince who allies himself with the Zulus in hopes of gaining their support in his claim to the Swazi throne

      Tshwane kaSihayo – Brother of Mehlokazulu and follower of Mbilini

      The strategic situation at the end of January, 1879, from the collection of Ian Knight

      The events in this story take place simultaneously as those in the third volume of this series, Lost Souls: The Forgotten Heroes of Eshowe

      Prologue: A Prince in Exile

      The Pongola Valley, Southern Africa

      9 October 1878

      Prince Mbilini waMswati (right)

      The sun slowly set in the west, casting its glow upon the idyllic Valley. Lying within the heart of the disputed territories in northern Zululand, ownership was bitterly contested by the Zulu Kingdom and the Dutch Transvaal, which had been recently annexed by the British Empire. The indigenous peoples living within the valley cared little for the perpetual disputes between the white settlers and the Zulu King. Most were descended from migrant cattle farmers from the nearby Swazi Kingdom. These people, who lived scattered about the region in small homesteads, were only concerned about raising their families and tending to their cattle and mealie crops. A group of thatched huts encircled a modest-sized cattle kraal belonging to one such family.

      An older woman stoked the cooking fire as she and her daughters prepared supper. A second, much younger woman carried a large basket full of cabbage and other vegetables. All the while, her toddler son played near her feet. The patriarch of this homestead, accompanied by his elder sons, guided the family’s cattle in from the grazing fields and into the dusty kraal; twenty-two head in all. There was much singing and chanting as they finished their day’s work and looked forward to a hearty supper.

      Watching all of this from a nearby hill was a man who was also of Swazi descent, yet he shared no affinity with the farmer and his family. He knelt behind a large rock outcropping, wearing only his loin covering, while his iklwa spear and knobkerrie club rested easily in his lap. Though a short man of slight build, his eyes told of an inner strength, shrewd intellect, and ruthless ambition.

      His name was Mbilini, eldest son of the late Swazi king, Mswati. Mbilini lived in exile, having been denied what he felt was his birth right. Like their southern neighbours, the Zulus, the Swazi line-of-succession was often convoluted. The heir to the throne was not necessarily the eldest son, but rather the eldest son of the chief wife. The king could change who his chief wife was at his leisure, as King Cetshwayo’s father, Mpande, had been notorious for doing. And while Mbilini was Mswati’s eldest son and a personal favourite, he had two younger brothers from his father’s chief wife, Queen Nandzi. The two young princes, Ludvonga and Mbandzeni, lost their mother when still toddlers and were boys of ten and eleven when their father died.

      At twenty-two, Mbilini was the only potential heir to the Swazi throne who was of age and political strife ensued. Prince Ludvonga was murdered with poison, with many placing the blame on Mbilini. The elder prince subsequently accused another of his father’s wives, Queen Tsandzile, of murdering the boy. Whatever the truth, Tsandzile was a favourite of the people, with a natural charisma that overshadowed Mbilini’s. Stating that Prince Mbandzeni was the sole surviving son of the chief wife, she asserted that this made him the rightful heir to Mswati. With both the people and the royal regiments coming out in support, Mbilini was cast aside, with Queen Tsandzile ruling the kingdom as regent until Mbandzeni came of age.

      Like Cetshwayo of the Zulus, Mbilini had hoped to claim his right as King of Swaziland by force or coercion. However, when it became clear that he lacked the necessary support, Mbilini fled south with most of his followers, subsequently pledging his allegiance to King Cetshwayo.

      “I would rather serve a warrior king than bow before that useless boy who sits upon my throne,” he often said.

      Fourteen years had since passed, with Mbilini now in his mid-thirties, yet no closer to laying claim to the Swazi Kingdom. However, his number of followers and cattle had grown considerably. With Cetshwayo’s blessing, he established his kraal in the northern Ntombe valley near his ancestral homeland. He further managed to align himself with the semi-autonomous abaQulusi and Khubeka tribes, whose formidable strongholds lay near the ominous mountain of Hlobane. Their chief inkosi, Manyanyoba, was fiercely loyal to King Cetshwayo and had forged a long-lasting friendship with Mbilini.

      Though Mbilini remained unmarried, he wore a polished gum ring woven into his hair. His reason for wearing the head ring of a married man was because he considered himself ‘master of his own estates’. He took his wealth building a step further by continuously raiding into the Transvaal and disputed territories to increase his fortunes in cattle. In 1877, just prior to their annexation by the British Empire, the Transvaal Boers complained to King Cetshwayo about the raids. While the king gave the white settlers permission to punish Mbilini, provided they could find
    him, he personally did nothing to stop the Swazi prince from destroying farms and stealing cattle. Secretly, the Zulu king had gone so far as to warn Mbilini of the danger, while encouraging him to continue his efforts to blunt white encroachment into Zulu lands. Ironically, most of the raiding done by Mbilini was against homesteads and kraals belonging to fellow Swazis rather than against the white settlers.

      The sky grew a deep red as Mbilini continued to watch the family go about their supper, complete with singing and dancing. He was joined by one of his youngest followers, who also wore just a loin covering and wielded an iklwa spear.

      “Almost time for the hyena to hunt,” Mbilini said quietly to the young warrior who knelt next to him.

      “Your family calls you ‘hyena’,” the lad, whose name was Tshwane kaSihayo, observed. “They mean it as an insult, yet you wear the name like a crown,”

      “The hyena is a predator who hunts his prey at night,” Mbilini remarked. “He hunts in packs, inflicting terror upon his victims before devouring them. Those that call me ‘hyena’ think they insult me, yet they simply affirm that I am a predator who hunts them in the night, bringing dread just before death.”

      That the Swazi prince was such a small man only made his visage seem fiercer. Rather than being self-conscious about his height and slender build, he used his stature as a weapon, one which allowed him to remain hidden in the shadows until he was ready to strike.

      For this particular foray, he brought with him around fifty warriors, including the young Zulu. As was often the case, he ordered his men to leave their shields and any firearms behind, which he felt were too cumbersome and impractical for this style of warfare. Instead, each warrior carried his iklwa stabbing spear and either a knobkerrie club or a pair of throwing assegai.

     


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