This looked interesting, so we said nothing. Fundi marched the
day through very
proudly. At evening he deposited the rifle in
the proper place, and set to work with a will at raising the big
tent.
The day following he tried it again. It worked. The third day he
marched
deliberately up past the syce to take his place near me.
And the fourth day, as we were going
hunting, Fundi
calmly fell
in with the rest. Nothing had been said, but Fundi had definitely
grasped his chance to rise from the ranks. In this he differed
from his
companion in glory. That
worthy citizen pocketed his five
rupees and was never heard from again; I do not even remember his
name nor how he looked.
I killed a buck of some sort, and Memba Sasa, as usual, stepped
forward to attend to the
trophy. But I stopped him.
"Fundi," said I, "if you are a gun
bearer, prepare this beast."
He stepped up
confidently and set to work. I watched him closely.
He did it very well, without awkwardness, though he made one or
two minor mistakes in method.
"Have you done this before?" I inquired.
"No, bwana."
"How did you learn to do it?"
"I have watched the gun
bearers when I was a
porter bringing in
meat."*
*Except in the greatest emergencies a gun
bearer would never
think of carrying any sort of a burden.
This was
pleasing, but it would never do, at this stage of the
game, to let him think so, neither on his own
account nor that of
the real gun
bearers.
"You will bring in meat today also," said I, for I was indeed a
little shorthanded, "and you will learn how to make the top
incision straighter."
When we had reached camp I handed him the Springfield.
"Clean this," I told him.
He
departed with it, returning it after a time for my inspection.
It looked all right. I catechized him on the method he had
employed-for high velocities require very especial
treatment-and found him letter perfect.
"You
learned this also by watching?"
"Yes, bwana, I watched the gun
bearers by the fire, evenings."
Evidently Fundi had been preparing for his chance.
Next day, as he walked
alongside, I noticed that he had not
removed the leather cap, or sight
protector, that covers the end
of the rifle and is fastened on by a leather thong. Immediately I
called a halt.
"Fundi," said I, "do you know that the cover should be in your
pocket? Suppose a rhinoceros jumps up very near at hand: how can
you get time to unlace the thong and hand me the rifle?"
He
thrust the rifle at me suddenly. In some
magical fashion the
sight cover had disappeared!
"I have thought of this," said he, "and I have tied the thong,
so, in order that it come away with one pull; and I
snatch it
off, so, with my left hand while I am giving you the gun with my
right hand. It seemed good to keep the cover on, for there are
many branches, and the sight is very easy to
injure."
Of course this was good sense, and most
ingenious; Fundi bade
fair to be quite a boy, but the native African is very easily
spoiled. Therefore, although my
inclination was
strongly to
praise him, I did nothing of the sort.
"A gun
bearer carries the gun away from the branches," was my only
comment.
Shortly after occurred an
incident by way of deeper test. We were
all riding rather idly along the easy slope below the foothills.
The grass was short, so we thought we could see easily everything
there was to be seen; but, as we passed some thirty yards from a
small tree, an
unexpected and unnecessary rhinoceros rose from an
equally
unexpected and unnecessary green hollow beneath the tree,
and charged us. He made straight for Billy. Her mule,
panic-stricken, froze with
terror in spite of Billy's attack with
a parasol. I spurred my own animal between her and the charging
brute, with some vague idea of slipping off the other side as the
rhino struck. F. and B. leaped from their own animals, and F.,
with a little .28 calibre rifle, took a hasty shot at the big
brute. Now, of course a .28 calibre rifle would hardly
injure a
rhino, but the
bullet happened to catch his right shoulder just
as he was about to come down on his right foot. The shock tripped
him up as neatly as though he had been upset by a rope. At the
same
instant Billy's mule came to its senses and bolted,
whereupon I too jumped off. The whole thing took about two finger
snaps of time. At the
instant I hit the ground, Fundi passed the
double rifle across the horse's back to me.
Note two things to the credit of Fundi: in the first place, he
had not bolted; in the second place, instead of
running up to the
left side of my mount and perhaps colliding with and certainly
confusing me, he had come up on the right side and passed the
rifle to me ACROSS the horse. I do not know whether or not he had
figured this out
beforehand, but it was cleverly done.
The rhinoceros rolled over and over, like a shot
rabbit, kicked
for a moment, and came to his feet. We were now all ready for
him, in battle array, but he had
evidently had enough. He turned
at right angles and trotted off, apparently-and probably-none
the worse for the little
bullet in his shoulder.
Fundi now began acquiring things that he
supposed befitting to
his
dignity. The first of these matters was a faded fez, in which
he stuck a long
feather. From that he progressed in worldly
wealth. How he got it all, on what credit, or with what hypnotic
power, I do not know. Probably he hypothecated his wages,
certainly he had his five rupees.
At any rate he started out with a
ragged undershirt and a pair of
white, baggy
breeches. He entered Nairobi at the end of the trip
with a cap, a neat khaki shirt, two water bottles, a
cartridgebelt, a sash with a tasseI, a pair of
spiral puttees, an old pair
of shoes, and a personal private small boy, picked up en route
from some of the
savage tribes, to carry his cooking pot, make
his fires, draw his water, and generally perform his lordly
behests. This was indeed "more-than-oriental-splendour!"
>From now on Fundi considered himself my second gun
bearer. I had
no use for him, but Fundi's development interested me, and I
wanted to give him a chance. His main fault at first was
eagerness. He had to be rapped pretty
sharply and a good number
of times before he discovered that he really must walk in the
rear. His habit of
calling my attention to
perfectly obvious
things I cured by
liberal sarcasm. His
intense desire to take his
own line as perhaps opposed to mine when we were casting about on
trail, I abated kindly but
firmly with the toe of my boot. His
evident but
mistakentendency to consider himself on an equality
with Memba Sasa we both squelched by giving him the hard and
dirty work to do. But his faults were never those of voluntary
omission, and he came on
surprisingly; in fact so
surprisinglythat he began to get quite cocky over it. Not that he was ever in
the least
aggressive or disrespectful or neglectful-it would
have been easy to deal with that sort of thing-but he carried
his head pretty high, and
evidently began to have mental
reservations. Fundi needed a little
wholesomediscipline. He was
forgetting his
porter days, and was rapidly coming to consider
himself a full-fledged gun
bearer.
The occasion soon arose. We were returning from a
buffalo hunt
and ran across two rhinoceroses, one of which carried a splendid
horn. B. wanted a well developed
specimen very much, so we took