The Seventh Scroll - Smith Wilbur - Страница 67
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dead in hours. It was not in the least surprising that there was so
little permanent human habitation down here in the gorge.
When he backed off the skyline he felt rejuvenated, and set out to cross
the saddle of the mountain. It was less than a mile across, and without
warning he came out on the top of the cliffs on the far side. One more
unwary pace and he would have stepped off into space and plunged down a
thousand feet. Once again he moved along the crest until he found a
concealed vantage point from which to spy the terrain below.
The river was the same - a wide and confused expanse of white-ruffled
rapids, running back towards him as it turned through the leg of the
oxbow. The trail followed the near bank, except where it was forced to
detour inland by the rugged bluffs and stone needles which rose out of
the Nile waters.
In the great desolation of the gorge he could pick out no movement other
than the run of wild waters and the ceaseless dance of the heat mirage.
He knew it was not possible that Mek Nimmur had moved fast enough to
have passed completely ahead of him; therefore he must still be coming
around the bend of the oxbow.
He drank again, and rested for almost half an hour.
At the end of that time he felt strong and fully recovered.
He debated with himself whether to descend immediately and stake out an
ambush on the' trail, but in the end decided to keep to the high ground
until he had his quarry in sight.
He checked his rifle carefully, making sure that the telescopic sight
had not been bumped out of alignment during the climb, and then emptied
the magazine and examined the five cartridges. The brass case of one of
them was dented and discoloured, so he discarded it and reloaded with
another from his belt. He chambered a round and setthe safety-catch.
He set the weapon aside while he changed his sweat, dampened socks with
a fresh dry pair from his pack and retied his bootlaces with care. Only
a novice would risk blistered feet in these conditions, for within hours
they would be infected and festering.
He drank once more, and then stood up and stung the 30/06 on his
shoulder. Ready now for anything that the goddess of the chase could
send his way, he moved off along the crest to intercept the war party.
From every vantage point along the rim he glassed the valley below, each
time without spying his quarry, and the afternoon passed "swiftly. He
was just beginning to worry that Mek Nimmur had somehow managed to slip
past him unseen, that he had crossed the river at some secret ford or
taken another path through a hidden valley, when there came a plaintive
and querulous cry on the heat-hushed air.
He looked up. A pair of kites were circling over one particular clump of
Thorn scrub on the river bank.
The yellow'billed kite is one of the most ubiquitous scavengers in
Africa. It exists in close symbiotic association with man, feeding off
his rubbish, picking up his leavings, soaring and circling over his
villages or his temporary campsites, watching for his scraps or waiting
patiently for him to squat in the bushes and then dropping down
immediately he has finished his private business, acting as a universal
sewage disposal agent.
Boris studied this pair of birds through his binoculars as they sailed
idly in the heated air, always circling directly over that same patch of
river in bush. They had a distinctive manner of steering with their long
bifurcated tails, twisting them from side to side as they flirted with
the breeze. Their bright yellow beaks showed clearly as they turned
their heads to look down at something in the scrub.
He smiled coldly to himself. "Da! Nimmur has gone into camp early.
Perhaps the heat and the pace are too fierce for his new woman, or
perhaps he has stopped to play with her a little."
He moved on along the rim until he could look down directly into the
patch of bush. He studied it through the binoculars, but without picking
out any signs of human presence. After almost two hours he was becoming
uncertain of his original assumption. The only thing that retained his
attention was the pair of kites, which had settled in a treetop
overlooking the patch of scrub. He had to trust that they were watching
the men hidden in the scrub.
He glanced at the sun anxiously. It was sliding down towards the horizon
at last and losing its furious heat. Then he looked down into the valley
again.
Directly below the patch of bush was an indentation in the river bank
that formed a backwater, almost a small lagoon, When the river was in
flood it would be inundated, but now there was a small strip of gravel
bank exposed. On this bank stood a number of boulders that had tumbled
down from the cliff above. Some of them were lying on the beach, while
others had rolled into the river and were half, submerged. The largest
was the size of a cottage, a great round mass of dark rock.
As he watched, a man emerged unexpectedly from the scrub. Boris's pulse
quickened as he watched him scramble down on to one of the smaller
boulders and jump from there on to the gravel bank. He knelt at the
water's edge and filled a canvas bucket -with water, then climbed back
and disappeared into the bush again.
"Ah! The heat is too much even for them. They must drink, and that gives
them away. If it had not been for the birds I would never have known
that they were there." He clucked softly with reluctant admiration.
"Nimmur is a careful man. No wonder he has survived so long. He keeps
tight control. But even he must have water."
Boris kept watching through the glasses as he tried to guess what Mek
Nimmur would do next. "He has lost much time here by sheltering from the
heat. He will march again as soon as it is cooler. He will make a night
march," he decided, as he looked at the sun again. "Three hours until
dark. I must make my move before then. Once it is dark it will be
difficult to pick my targets."
Before he stood up he wriggled back from the skyline.
He retraced his steps back along the Mountainside until a bluff shielded
him from the eyes of Mek Nimmur's sentries.
Then he started down. There was no goat track here and he had to make
his own going, but after a few false starts he discovered an inclined
rock shelf that afforded him a fairly easy path down the face. When he
reached the bottom of the gorge, he took careful stock of the lie and
run of the . stratum so as to be able to find it again in an emergency.
It was a good escape route, and he knew that he might soon be under
pursuit and duress.
It had taken him over an hour to negotiate the descent, and he knew that
he was running out of time. He reached the trail at the water's edge,
and started back along it towards Mek Nimmur's camp. He was in a hurry
now, but even then he was careful to take anti-tracking precautions. He
walked on the edge of the trail, stepping only on the stony ground,
careful to leave no sign of his passing.
But despite his caution, he nearly walked right into them.
He had not covered the first two hundred metres when in the back of his
mind he registered the low, mournful whistle of a pale-winged starting,
and almost ignored it until alarm bells sounded in his mind. The timing
was all wrong. The starling only gave that particular call at dawn when
it left its nesting site high up in the cliffs. This was late afternoon
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