descend until we came to our horses.
Accordingly we stumbled across a mile or so of those round and
rolling stones. Then we found ourselves overlooking a wide flat
or pocket where the
streamvalley widened. It
extended even as
far as the
upward fling of the
barrier ranges. Thick scrub
covered it, but erratically, so that here and there were little
openings or thin places. We sat down, manned our
trusty prism
glasses, and gave ourselves to the
pleasingoccupation of looking
the country over inch by inch.
This is great fun. It is a game a good deal like
puzzle pictures.
Re-examination generally develops new and
unexpected beasts. We
repeated to each other aloud the results of our scrutiny, always
without removing the glasses from our eyes.
"Oryx, one," said F.; "oryx, two."
"Giraffe," reported B., "and a herd of impalla."
I saw another giraffe, and another oryx, then two rhinoceroses.
The three bearers squatted on their heels behind us, their
fierceeyes staring straight ahead,
seeing with the naked eye what we
were
finding with six-power glasses.
We turned to
descend the hill. In the very centre of the deep
shade of a clump of trees, I saw the gleam of a waterbuck's
horns. While I was telling of this, the beast stepped from his
concealment, trotted a short distance up
stream and turned to
climb a little ridge
parallel to that by which we were
descending. About halfway up he stopped, staring in our
direction, his head erect, the slight ruff under his neck
standing forward. He was a good four hundred yards away. B., who
wanted him,
decided the shot too chancy. He and F. slipped
backward until they had gained the cover of the little ridge,
then hastened down the bed of the
ravine. Their purpose was to
follow the course already taken by the waterbuck until they
should have sneaked within better range. In the
meantime I and
the gunbearers sat down in full view of the buck. This was to
keep his attention distracted.
We sat there a long time. The buck never moved but continued to
stare at what
evidentlypuzzled him. Time passes very slowly in
such circumstances, and it seemed
incredible that the beast
should continue much longer to hold his fixed attitude.
Nevertheless B. and F. were
working hard. We caught glimpses of
them
occasionally" target="_blank" title="ad.偶然地;非经常地">
occasionally slipping from bush to bush. Finally B. knelt
and levelled his rifle. At once I turned my glasses on the buck.
Before the sound of the rifle had reached me, I saw him start
convulsively, then make off at the tearing run that indicates a
heart hit. A moment later the crack of the rifle and the dull
plunk of the hitting
bullet struck my ear.
We tracked him fifty yards to where he lay dead. He was a fine
trophy, and we at once set the boys to preparing it and
takingthe meat. In the
meantime we sauntered down to look at the
stream. It was a small rapid affair, but in heavy papyrus, with
sparse trees, and
occasionalthickets, and dry hard banks. The
papyrus should make a good lurking place for almost anything; but
the few points of
access to the water failed to show many
interesting tracks. Nevertheless we
decided to
explore a short
distance.
For an hour we walked among high thornbushes, over
baking hot
earth. We saw two or three dik-dik and one of the giraffes. At
that time it had become very hot, and the sun was
bearing down on
us as with the weight of a heavy hand. The air had the scorching,
blasting quality of an opened
furnace door. Our mouths were
getting dry and
sticky in that
peculiar stage of
thirst on which
no luke-warm canteen water in
necessarilylimited quantity has
any effect. So we turned back, picked up the men with the
waterbuck, and plodded on down the little
stream, or, rather, on
the red-hot dry
valley bottom outside the
stream's course, to
where the syces were
waiting with our horses. We mounted with
great thankfulness. It was now eleven o'clock, and we considered
our day as finished.
The best way for a distance seemed to follow the course of the
tributary
stream to its point of
junction with our river. We rode
along, rather relaxed in the suffocating heat. F. was nearest the
stream. At one point it freed itself of trees and brush and ran
clear, save for low papyrus, ten feet down below a steep eroded
bank. F. looked over and uttered a startled
exclamation. I
spurred my horse forward to see.
Below us, about fifteen yards away, was the
carcass of a
waterbuck half
hidden in the foot-high grass. A lion and two
lionesses stood upon it, staring up at us with great yellow eyes.
That picture is a very vivid one in my memory, for those were the
first wild lions I had ever seen. My most
livelyimpression was
of their
unexpected size. They seemed to bulk fully a third
larger than my expectation.
The
magnificent beasts stood only long enough to see clearly what
had disturbed them, then turned, and in two bounds had gained the
shelter of the
thicket.
Now the habit in Africa is to let your gunbearers carry all your
guns. You yourself
stride along hand free. It is an English idea,
and is pretty generally adopted out there by every one, of
whatever
nationality. They will explain it to you by
saying that
in such a
climate a man should do only necessary
physical work,
and that a good gunbearer will get a
weapon into your hand so
quickly and in so
convenient a position that you will lose no
time. I
acknowledge the gunbearers are sometimes very skilful at
this, but I do deny that there is no loss of time. The
instant of
distracted attention while receiving a
weapon, the necessity of
recollecting the
nervous correlations after the
transfer, very
often mark just the difference between a sure instinctive
snapshot and a lost opportunity. It reasons that the man with the
rifle in his hand reacts
instinctively, in one
motion, to get his
weapon into play. If the gunbearer has the gun, HE must first
react to pass it up, the master must receive it
properly, and
THEN, and not until then, may go on from where the other man
began. As for
physical labour in the tropics: if a grown man
cannot without
discomfort or evil effects carry an eight-pound
rifle, he is too
feeble to go out at all. In a long Western
experience I have
learned never to be separated from my
weapon;
and I believe the
continuance of this habit in Africa saved me a
good number of chances.
At any rate, we all flung ourselves off our horses. I, having my
rifle in my hand, managed to throw a shot after the biggest lion
as he vanished. It was a snap at nothing, and missed. Then in an
opening on the edge a hundred yards away appeared one of the
lionesses. She was trotting slowly, and on her I had time to draw
a hasty aim. At the shot she bounded high in the air, fell,
rolled over, and was up and into the
thicket before I had much
more than time to pump up another shell from the magazine. Memba
Sasa in his
eagerness got in the way-the first and last time he
ever made a mistake in the field.
By this time the others had got hold of their
weapons. We fronted
the blank face of the
thicket.
The wounded animal would stand a little
waiting. We made a wide
circle to the other side of the
stream. There we quickly picked
up the trail of the two uninjured beasts. They had headed
directly over the hill, where we
speedily lost all trace of them
on the flint-like surface of the ground. We saw a big pack of
baboons in the only likely direction for a lion to go. Being thus
thrown back on a choice of a hundred other
unlikely directions,
we gave up that slim chance and returned to the
thicket.
This proved to be a very dense piece of cover. Above the height
of the waist the interlocking branches would
absolutely prevent
any progress, but by stooping low we could see dimly among the
simpler main stems to a distance of perhaps fifteen or twenty
feet. This
combination at once afforded the wounded lioness
plenty of cover in which to hide, plenty of room in which to
charge home, and placed us under the
advantage" target="_blank" title="n.不利(条件);损失">
disadvantage of a
crouched
or crawling attitude with
limitedvision. We talked the matter
over very
thoroughly. There was only one way to get that lioness