Shout at the Devil - Smith Wilbur (лучшие книги .TXT) 📗
Sebastian's first impulse was to hide in one of the huts but he realized this would be futile. At the best it would only delay his capture.
No, he must get out of the village. But the thought of covering the hundred yards of open ground to the shelter of the nearest trees, while a dozen Askari shot at him, was most unattractive.
At this moment Sebastian became aware of an unpleasant warmth in his feet, and he looked down to find that he was standing in the live ashes of a cooking fire. The leather of his jackboots was already beginning to char and smoke. He stepped back hurriedly, and the smell of burning leather acted as a laxative for the constipation of his brain.
From the hut beside him he snatched a handful of thatch and stooped to thrust it into the fire. The dry grass burst into flame, and Sebastian held the torch to the wall of the hut. Instantly fire bloomed and shot upwards. With the torch in his hand, Sebastian ducked across the narrow opening to the next hut and set fire to that also.
"Son of a gun!" exulted Sebastian as great oily billows of smoke obscured the sun and limited his field of vision to ten paces.
Slowly he moved forward in the rolling cloud of smoke, setting fire to each hut he passed, and delighted in the frustrated bellows of Germanic rage he heard behind him.
Occasionally ghostly figures scampered past him in the acrid half-darkness but none of them paid him the slightest attention, and each time Sebastian relaxed the pressure of his forefinger on the trigger of the Mauser, and moved on.
He reached the last hut and paused there to gather himself for the final sprint across open ground to the edge of the millet garden. Through the eddying bank of smoke, the mass of dark green vegetation from which he had fled in terror not many hours before, now seemed as welcoming as the arms of his mother.
Movement near him in the smoke, and he swung the Mauser to cover it; he saw the square outline of a kepi and the sparkle of metal buttons, and his finger tightened on the trigger.
"Manalli!"
"Mohammed! Good God, I nearly killed you." Sebastian threw up the rifle barrel as he recognized him.
"Quickly! They are close behind me." Mohammed snatched at his arm and dragged him forward. The jackboots pinched his toes and thumped like the hooves of a galloping buffalo as Sebastian ran. From the huts behind them a voice shouted urgently and, immediately afterwards, came the vicious crack of a Mauser and the shrill whinny of the ricochet.
Sebastian had ale ad of ten paces on Mohammed as he plunged into the bank of leaves and millet stalks.
What should we do now, Manali?" Mohammed asked, and the expression on the faces of the two other men echoed the question with pathetic trust. A benevolent chance had reunited Sebastian with the remnants of his command. During the flight through the millet gardens, with random rifle-fire clipping the leaves about their heads, Sebastian had literally fallen over these two. At the time they were engaged in pressing their bellies and their faces hard against the earth, and it had taken a number of lusty kicks with the jackboot to get them up and moving.
Since then Sebastian, mindful of Flynn's advice, had cautiously and circuitously led them down to the landing place on the bank of the Rovuma. He arrived to find that Fleischer's Askari, by using the direct route and without the necessity of concealing themselves, had arrived before him.
From the cover of the reed-banks Sebastian watched dejectedly, as they used an axe to knock the bottoms out of the dug-out canoes that were drawn up on the little white beach.
"Can we swim across?" he asked Mohammed in a whisper, and Mohammed's face crumpled with horror, as he considered the suggestion. Both of them peered out through the reeds across a quarter of a mile of deep water that flowed so fast, its surface war-dimpled with tiny whirlpools.
"No,"said Mohammed with finality.
"Too far? "asked Sebastian hopelessly.
"Too far, Too fast. Too deep. Too many crocodiles,"
agreed Mohammed, and in an unspoken but mutual desire to get away from the river and the Askari, they crawled out of the reed-bank and crept away inland.
In the late afternoon they were lying up in a bushy gully about two miles from the river and an equal distance from M'tapa's village.
"What should we do now, Manali?" Mohammed repeated his question, and Sebastian cleared his throat before answering.
"Well..." he said and paused while his wide brow wrinkled in the agony of creative thought. Then it came to him with all the splendour of a sunrise. "We'll just jolly well have to find some other way of getting across the river." He said it with the air of a man well pleased with his own perspicacity. "What do you suggest, Mohammed?"
A little surprised to find the ball returned so neatly into his own court, Mohammed remained silent.
"A raft?" hazarded Sebastian. The lack of tools, material and opportunity to build one was so obvious, that Mohammed did not deign to reply. He shook his head.
"No," agreed Sebastian. "Perhaps you are right." Again the classic beauty of his features was marred by a scowl of concentration. At last he demanded, "There are other villages along the river?"
"Yes," Mohammed conceded. "But the Askari will visit each of them and destroy the canoes. Also they will tell the headmen who we are, and threaten them with the rope."
"But they cannot cover the whole river. It has a frontier of five or six hundred miles. We'll just keep walking until we find a canoe. It may take us a long time but we'll find one eventually."
"If the Askari don't catch us first."