By
JS*PH CNR*D
The hut in which slept the white man
was on a clearing between the forest and the river.
Silence, the silence murmurous and unquiet of a tropical
night, brooded over the hut that, baked through by
the sun, sweated a vapour beneath the cynical light
of the stars. Mahamo lay rigid and watchful at
the hut’s mouth. In his upturned eyes, and
along the polished surface of his lean body black
and immobile, the stars were reflected, creating an
illusion of themselves who are illusions.
The roofs of the congested trees,
writhing in some kind of agony private and eternal,
made tenebrous and shifty silhouettes against the
sky, like shapes cut out of black paper by a maniac
who pushes them with his thumb this way and that,
irritably, on a concave surface of blue steel.
Resin oozed unseen from the upper branches to the trunks
swathed in creepers that clutched and interlocked with
tendrils venomous, frantic and faint. Down below,
by force of habit, the lush herbage went through the
farce of growth—that farce old and screaming,
whose trite end is decomposition.
Within the hut the form of the white
man, corpulent and pale, was covered with a mosquito-net
that was itself illusory like everything else, only
more so. Flying squadrons of mosquitoes inside
its meshes flickered and darted over him, working
hard, but keeping silence so as not to excite him
from sleep. Cohorts of yellow ants disputed him
against cohorts of purple ants, the two kinds slaying
one another in thousands. The battle was undecided
when suddenly, with no such warning as it gives in
some parts of the world, the sun blazed up over the
horizon, turning night into day, and the insects vanished
back into their camps.
The white man ground his knuckles
into the corners of his eyes, emitting that snore
final and querulous of a middle-aged man awakened
rudely. With a gesture brusque but flaccid he
plucked aside the net and peered around. The
bales of cotton cloth, the beads, the brass wire,
the bottles of rum, had not been spirited away in the
night. So far so good. The faithful servant
of his employers was now at liberty to care for his
own interests. He regarded himself, passing his
hands over his skin.
“Hi! Mahamo!” he shouted. “I’ve
been eaten up.”
The islander, with one sinuous motion,
sprang from the ground, through the mouth of the hut.
Then, after a glance, he threw high his hands in thanks
to such good and evil spirits as had charge of his
concerns. In a tone half of reproach, half of
apology, he murmured—
“You white men sometimes say
strange things that deceive the heart.”
“Reach me that ammonia bottle,
d’you hear?” answered the white man.
“This is a pretty place you’ve brought
me to!” He took a draught. “Christmas
Day, too! Of all the —— But
I suppose it seems all right to you, you funny blackamoor,
to be here on Christmas Day?”
“We are here on the day appointed,
Mr. Williams. It is a feast-day of your people?”
Mr. Williams had lain back, with closed
eyes, on his mat. Nostalgia was doing duty to
him for imagination. He was wafted to a bedroom
in Marylebone, where in honour of the Day he lay late
dozing, with great contentment; outside, a slush of
snow in the street, the sound of church-bells; from
below a savour of especial cookery. “Yes,”
he said, “it’s a feast-day of my people.”
“Of mine also,” said the islander humbly.
“Is it though? But they’ll do business
first?”
“They must first do that.”
“And they’ll bring their ivory with them?”
“Every man will bring ivory,”
answered the islander, with a smile gleaming and wide.
“How soon’ll they be here?”
“Has not the sun risen? They are on their
way.”
“Well, I hope they’ll
hurry. The sooner we’re off this cursed
island of yours the better. Take all those things
out,” Mr. Williams added, pointing to the merchandise,
“and arrange them—neatly, mind you!”
In certain circumstances it is right
that a man be humoured in trifles. Mahamo, having
borne out the merchandise, arranged it very neatly.
While Mr. Williams made his toilet,
the sun and the forest, careless of the doings of
white and black men alike, waged their warfare implacable
and daily. The forest from its inmost depths sent
forth perpetually its legions of shadows that fell
dead in the instant of exposure to the enemy whose
rays heroic and absurd its outposts annihilated.
There came from those inilluminable depths the equable
rumour of myriads of winged things and crawling things
newly roused to the task of killing and being killed.
Thence detached itself, little by little, an insidious
sound of a drum beaten. This sound drew more
near.
Mr. Williams, issuing from the hut,
heard it, and stood gaping towards it.
“Is that them?” he asked.
“That is they,” the islander
murmured, moving away towards the edge of the forest.
Sounds of chanting were a now audible
accompaniment to the drum.
“What’s that they’re singing?”
asked Mr. Williams.
“They sing of their business,” said Mahamo.
“Oh!” Mr. Williams was
slightly shocked. “I’d have thought
they’d be singing of their feast.”
“It is of their feast they sing.”
It has been stated that Mr. Williams
was not imaginative. But a few years of life
in climates alien and intemperate had disordered his
nerves. There was that in the rhythms of the hymn
which made bristle his flesh.
Suddenly, when they were very near,
the voices ceased, leaving a legacy of silence more
sinister than themselves. And now the black spaces
between the trees were relieved by bits of white that
were the eyeballs and teeth of Mahamo’s brethren.
“It was of their feast, it was
of you, they sang,” said Mahamo.
“Look here,” cried Mr.
Williams in his voice of a man not to be trifled with.
“Look here, if you’ve—”
He was silenced by sight of what seemed
to be a young sapling sprung up from the ground within
a yard of him—a young sapling tremulous,
with a root of steel. Then a thread-like shadow
skimmed the air, and another spear came impinging
the ground within an inch of his feet.
As he turned in his flight he saw
the goods so neatly arranged at his orders, and there
flashed through him, even in the thick of the spears,
the thought that he would be a grave loss to his employers.
This—for Mr. Williams was, not less than
the goods, of a kind easily replaced—was
an illusion. It was the last of Mr. Williams illusions.