Online-knigi.org
online-knigi.org » Книги » Приключения » Исторические приключения » Elephant Song - Smith Wilbur (книги бесплатно без онлайн txt) 📗

Elephant Song - Smith Wilbur (книги бесплатно без онлайн txt) 📗

Тут можно читать бесплатно Elephant Song - Smith Wilbur (книги бесплатно без онлайн txt) 📗. Жанр: Исторические приключения. Так же Вы можете читать полную версию (весь текст) онлайн без регистрации и SMS на сайте online-knigi.org (Online knigi) или прочесть краткое содержание, предисловие (аннотацию), описание и ознакомиться с отзывами (комментариями) о произведении.
Перейти на страницу:

They hit heavy clear-air turbulence over the eastern rim of the Great Rift Valley and a corpulent black businessman in one of the front seats entertained them all with a noisy regurgitation of his breakfast.  The air hostess remained ensconced in the rear toilet.

At last they were over the lake.  Although like most names with colonial overtones, its name had been changed, Daniel still preferred Lake Albert to Lake Mobutu.  The waters were pure azure, flecked with white horses and the sails of fishing dhows, and so wide that for a while there was no shore in sight.  Then slowly the western shoreline emerged from the haze.

Ubomo, Daniel whispered, more to himself than to Bonny.

The name had a romance and mystery that made the skin on his forearms tingle.

He would be following in the footsteps of the great African explorers.

Speke had passed this way, and Stanley and ten thousand other hunters and slavers, soldiers and adventurers.

He must try to instil some of that feeling of romance and history into his production.  Across these waters had plied the ancient Arab dhows laden with ivory and slaves, the black and white gold that had once been the continent's major exports.

Some estimates were that five million souls had been captured like animals in the interior and herded down to the coast.  To cross this lake they had been packed like sardines into the dhows, the first layer forced to lie on the bilge deck curled against each other, belly to back, like spoons.  Then the removable deck planks were laid over them giving them eighteen inches of space, and another layer of human beings and another deck, until four decks were in place, crammed with howling, whining slaves.

With fair winds the crossing took two days and three nights.

The Arab slave-masters were satisfied with a fifty percent survival rate.

It was a process of natural selection.  Only the strong came through.

On the eastern shore of the lake the living were lifted out of the holds coated with faeces and vomit.  The dead were tossed overboard to the waiting crocodiles.  The survivors were allowed to rest and gather strength for the last stage of the journey.  When their masters deemed them fit, they were chained and yoked in long lines, each slave carrying a tusk of ivory, and they were marched down to the coast.

Daniel wondered if he could simulate some of the horrors of the trade with actors and a hired dhow.  He anticipated the outcry that this would raise.  So often he had been accused by reviewers and critics of depicting gratuitous violence and savagery in his productions.  There was only one reply: Africa is a savage and violent continent.  Anybody who tries to hide that from you is no true story-teller.  Blood was the fertiliser that made the African soil bloom.

He looked northwards across the shining waters.  Up there where the Nile debauched from the lake there was a triangular wedge of land that fronted on to the river called the Lada Enclave.  It had once been the private estate of the King of Belgium.  The herds of elephant that inhabited those lands were more prolific and prodigiously tusked than anywhere else on the continent, and the Belgians had guarded and cherished them.

By international treaty the ownership of the Lada Enclave passed to the Sudan at the death of the Belgian king.  When this happened the Belgian colonial service withdrew precipitately from the Lada, leaving a power vacuum.  The European ivorypoachers swarmed in to take advantage.  They fell upon the elephant herds and slaughtered them.

Karamojo Bell describes in his autobiography how he followed a Lada herd from dawn until dusk, running to keep pace with them, shooting and running on again.  In that single bloody day be killed twenty-three elephant.

Little had changed in the years since then, Daniel thought sadly.

The slaughter and the rapine continued.  And Africa bled.

Africa cried to the civilised world for help, but what help was there to give?  All the fifty member states of the Organization of African Unity combined were capable of generating only the same gross domestic product as little Belgium in the northern hemisphere.

How could the First World help Africa now?  Daniel wondered.  Aid poured into this vast continent was soaked up like a few raindrops upon the Saharan sands.  A cynic had defined aid as simply the system by which poor white people in rich countries gave money to rich black people in poor countries to put into Swiss bank accounts.  The sad truth was that Africa no longer mattered, particularly since the Berlin Wall had come down and Eastern Europe had started to emerge from the dark age of Communism.  Africa was redundant.  The rest of the world might give it passing sympathy, but Africa was beyond help.  Europe would turn its attention to a more promising subject closer to home.

Daniel sighed and glanced at Bonny in the seat beside him.

He wanted to discuss his thoughts, but she had kicked off her sandals and had her bare knees up against the back of the seat in front of her.

She was chewing gum and reading a trashy science fiction paperback.

Instead Daniel looked out of the window again.  The coast of Ubomo came up to meet them as the pilot began his descent.

The savannah was red-brown as the hide of an impala antelope and studded with acacia trees.  Upon the lakeshore the fishing villages were strung like beads, bound together by the narrow strip of green gardens and shambas that the Lake waters nurtured.  The village children waved as the aircraft passed overhead, and when the pilot turned on to final approach Daniel had a distant view of blue mountains clad with dark forest.

The air hostess re-emerged from the toilet, looking smug and adjusting her long green skirt, and ordered them in English and Swahili to fasten their seat-belts.

The unpainted galvanised roofs of the town flashed beneath them and they touched down heavily on the dusty strip.  They taxied past the skeleton of steel and concrete beams that would have been the grand new Ephrem Taffari airport building if only the money had not run out, and came to a halt in front of the humbler edifice of unburnt brick that was a relic of Victor Omeru's reign.

As the door of the aircraft opened, the Heat pressed in upon them and they were sweating before they reached the airport building.

A Hira officer in camouflage battledress and maroon beret singled Daniel out of the straggling group of passengers and came out on the field to meet him.  Doctor Armstrong?  I recognized you from the photograph on the dust-jacket of your book.  He held out his hand.  I'm Captain Kajo. I will be your guide during your stay.  The president, in person, has asked me to welcome you and assure you of our whole-hearted cooperation. Sir Peter Harrison is a personal friend of his, and President Taffari has expressed the wish to meet you as soon as you have recovered from the illeffects of your journey.  In fact he has arranged a cocktail party to welcome you to Ubomo.  Captain Kajo spoke excellent English. He was a striking young man, slim and -tall in the classical Hita mould. He towered over Daniel by a couple of inches.  His jet eyes began to sparkle as he studied Bonny Mahon.  This is my camera operator, Miss Mahon, Daniel introduced them, and Bonny looked back at Captain Kajo with equal interest.

In the army Landrover, piled with their luggage and video equipment, Bonny leaned close to Daniel and asked, Is it true what they say about Africans being.  . . she sought the adjective, about them being large?

Never made a study of it, Daniel told her.  But I could find out for you, if you'd like.  Don't put yourself out, she grinned.

Перейти на страницу:

Smith Wilbur читать все книги автора по порядку

Smith Wilbur - все книги автора в одном месте читать по порядку полные версии на сайте онлайн библиотеки mir-knigi.info.


Elephant Song отзывы

Отзывы читателей о книге Elephant Song, автор: Smith Wilbur. Читайте комментарии и мнения людей о произведении.


Уважаемые читатели и просто посетители нашей библиотеки! Просим Вас придерживаться определенных правил при комментировании литературных произведений.

  • 1. Просьба отказаться от дискриминационных высказываний. Мы защищаем право наших читателей свободно выражать свою точку зрения. Вместе с тем мы не терпим агрессии. На сайте запрещено оставлять комментарий, который содержит унизительные высказывания или призывы к насилию по отношению к отдельным лицам или группам людей на основании их расы, этнического происхождения, вероисповедания, недееспособности, пола, возраста, статуса ветерана, касты или сексуальной ориентации.
  • 2. Просьба отказаться от оскорблений, угроз и запугиваний.
  • 3. Просьба отказаться от нецензурной лексики.
  • 4. Просьба вести себя максимально корректно как по отношению к авторам, так и по отношению к другим читателям и их комментариям.

Надеемся на Ваше понимание и благоразумие. С уважением, администратор online-knigi.org


Прокомментировать
Подтвердите что вы не робот:*