8
Delcarte and Taylor were now in mid-stream,
coming toward us, and I called to them to keep aloof
until I knew whether the intentions of my captors
were friendly or otherwise. My good men wanted
to come on and annihilate the blacks. But there
were upward of a hundred of the latter, all well armed,
and so I commanded Delcarte to keep out of harm’s
way, and stay where he was till I needed him.
A young officer called and beckoned
to them. But they refused to come, and so he
gave orders that resulted in my hands being secured
at my back, after which the company marched away,
straight toward the east.
I noticed that the men wore spurs,
which seemed strange to me. But when, late in
the afternoon, we arrived at their encampment, I discovered
that my captors were cavalrymen.
In the center of a plain stood a log
fort, with a block-house at each of its four corners.
As we approached, I saw a herd of cavalry horses
grazing under guard outside the walls of the post.
They were small, stocky horses, but the telltale
saddle galls proclaimed their calling. The flag
flying from a tall staff inside the palisade was one
which I had never before seen nor heard of.
We marched directly into the compound,
where the company was dismissed, with the exception
of a guard of four privates, who escorted me in the
wake of the young officer. The latter led us
across a small parade ground, where a battery of light
field guns was parked, and toward a log building,
in front of which rose the flagstaff.
I was escorted within the building
into the presence of an old negro, a fine looking
man, with a dignified and military bearing.
He was a colonel, I was to learn later, and to him
I owe the very humane treatment that was accorded me
while I remained his prisoner.
He listened to the report of his junior,
and then turned to question me, but with no better
results than the former had accomplished. Then
he summoned an orderly, and gave some instructions.
The soldier saluted, and left the room, returning
in about five minutes with a hairy old white man—
just such a savage, primeval-looking fellow as I had
discovered in the woods the day that Snider had disappeared
with the launch.
The colonel evidently expected to
use the fellow as interpreter, but when the savage
addressed me it was in a language as foreign to me
as was that of the blacks. At last the old officer
gave it up, and, shaking his head, gave instructions
for my removal.
From his office I was led to a guardhouse,
in which I found about fifty half-naked whites, clad
in the skins of wild beasts. I tried to converse
with them, but not one of them could understand Pan-American,
nor could I make head or tail of their jargon.
For over a month I remained a prisoner
there, working from morning until night at odd jobs
about the headquarters building of the commanding
officer. The other prisoners worked harder than
I did, and I owe my better treatment solely to the
kindliness and discrimination of the old colonel.
What had become of Victory, of Delcarte,
of Taylor I could not know; nor did it seem likely
that I should ever learn. I was most depressed.
But I whiled away my time in performing the duties
given me to the best of my ability and attempting
to learn the language of my captors.
Who they were or where they came from
was a mystery to me. That they were the outpost
of some pow-erful black nation seemed likely, yet
where the seat of that nation lay I could not guess.
They looked upon the whites as their
inferiors, and treated us accordingly. They
had a literature of their own, and many of the men,
even the common soldiers, were omnivorous readers.
Every two weeks a dust-covered trooper would trot
his jaded mount into the post and deliver a bulging
sack of mail at headquarters. The next day he
would be away again upon a fresh horse toward the
south, carrying the soldiers’ letters to friends
in the far off land of mystery from whence they all
had come.
Troops, sometimes mounted and sometimes
afoot, left the post daily for what I assumed to be
patrol duty. I judged the little force of a
thousand men were detailed here to maintain the authority
of a distant government in a conquered country.
Later, I learned that my surmise was correct, and
this was but one of a great chain of similar posts
that dotted the new frontier of the black nation into
whose hands I had fallen.
Slowly I learned their tongue, so
that I could understand what was said before me, and
make myself understood. I had seen from the
first that I was being treated as a slave—
that all whites that fell into the hands of the blacks
were thus treated.
Almost daily new prisoners were brought
in, and about three weeks after I was brought in to
the post a troop of cavalry came from the south to
relieve one of the troops stationed there. There
was great jubilation in the encampment after the arrival
of the newcomers, old friendships were renewed and
new ones made. But the happiest men were those
of the troop that was to be relieved.
The next morning they started away,
and as they were forced upon the parade ground we
prisoners were marched from our quarters and lined
up before them. A couple of long chains were
brought, with rings in the links every few feet.
At first I could not guess the purpose of these chains.
But I was soon to learn.
A couple of soldiers snapped the first
ring around the neck of a powerful white slave, and
one by one the rest of us were herded to our places,
and the work of shackling us neck to neck commenced.
The colonel stood watching the procedure.
Presently his eyes fell upon me, and he spoke to
a young officer at his side. The latter stepped
toward me and motioned me to follow him. I did
so, and was led back to the colonel.
By this time I could understand a
few words of their strange language, and when the
colonel asked me if I would prefer to remain at the
post as his body servant, I signified my willingness
as emphatically as possible, for I had seen enough
of the brutality of the common soldiers toward their
white slaves to have no desire to start out upon a
march of unknown length, chained by the neck, and
driven on by the great whips that a score of the soldiers
carried to accelerate the speed of their charges.
About three hundred prisoners who
had been housed in six prisons at the post marched
out of the gates that morning, toward what fate and
what future I could not guess. Neither had the
poor devils themselves more than the most vague conception
of what lay in store for them, except that they were
going elsewhere to continue in the slavery that they
had known since their capture by their black conquerors—a
slavery that was to continue until death released them.
My position was altered at the post.
From working about the headquarters office, I was
transferred to the colonel’s living quarters.
I had greater freedom, and no longer slept in one
of the prisons, but had a little room to myself off
the kitchen of the colonel’s log house.
My master was always kind to me, and
under him I rapidly learned the language of my captors,
and much concerning them that had been a mystery to
me before. His name was Abu Belik. He
was a colonel in the cavalry of Abyssinia, a country
of which I do not remember ever hearing, but which
Colonel Belik assured me is the oldest civilized country
in the world.
Colonel Belik was born in Adis Abeba,
the capital of the empire, and until recently had
been in command of the emperor’s palace guard.
Jealousy and the ambition and intrigue of another
officer had lost him the favor of his emperor, and
he had been detailed to this frontier post as a mark
of his sovereign’s displeasure.
Some fifty years before, the young
emperor, Menelek XIV, was ambitious. He knew
that a great world lay across the waters far to the
north of his capital. Once he had crossed the
desert and looked out upon the blue sea that was the
northern boundary of his dominions.
There lay another world to conquer.
Menelek busied himself with the building of a great
fleet, though his people were not a maritime race.
His army crossed into Europe. It met with little
resistance, and for fifty years his soldiers had been
pushing his boundaries farther and farther toward the
north.
“The yellow men from the east
and north are contesting our rights here now,”
said the colonel, “but we shall win—we
shall conquer the world, carrying Christianity to all
the benighted heathen of Europe, and Asia as well.”
“You are a Christian people?” I asked.
He looked at me in surprise, nodding his head affirmatively.
“I am a Christian,” I
said. “My people are the most powerful
on earth.”
He smiled, and shook his head indulgently,
as a father to a child who sets up his childish judgment
against that of his elders.
Then I set out to prove my point.
I told him of our cities, of our army, of our great
navy. He came right back at me asking for figures,
and when he was done I had to admit that only in our
navy were we numerically superior.
Menelek XIV is the undisputed ruler
of all the continent of Africa, of all of ancient
Europe except the British Isles, Scandinavia, and
eastern Russia, and has large possessions and prosperous
colonies in what once were Arabia and Turkey in Asia.
He has a standing army of ten million
men, and his people possess slaves—white
slaves—to the number of ten or fifteen
million.
Colonel Belik was much surprised,
however, upon his part to learn of the great nation
which lay across the ocean, and when he found that
I was a naval officer, he was inclined to accord me
even greater consideration than formerly. It
was difficult for him to believe my assertion that
there were but few blacks in my country, and that
these occupied a lower social plane than the whites.
Just the reverse is true in Colonel
Belik’s land. He considered whites inferior
beings, creatures of a lower order, and assuring me
that even the few white freemen of Abyssinia were
never accorded anything approximating a position of
social equality with the blacks. They live in
the poorer districts of the cities, in little white
colonies, and a black who marries a white is socially
ostracized.
The arms and ammunition of the Abyssinians
are greatly inferior to ours, yet they are tremendously
effective against the ill-armed barbarians of Europe.
Their rifles are of a type similar to the magazine
rifles of twentieth century Pan-America, but carrying
only five cartridges in the magazine, in addition
to the one in the chamber. They are of extraordinary
length, even those of the cavalry, and are of extreme
accuracy.
The Abyssinians themselves are a fine
looking race of black men—tall, muscular,
with fine teeth, and regular features, which incline
distinctly toward Semitic mold—I refer to
the full-blooded natives of Abyssinia. They
are the patricians— the aristocracy.
The army is officered almost exclusively by them.
Among the soldiery a lower type of negro predominates,
with thicker lips and broader, flatter noses.
These men are recruited, so the colonel told me, from
among the conquered tribes of Africa. They are
good soldiers— brave and loyal. They
can read and write, and they are endowed with a self-confidence
and pride which, from my readings of the words of
ancient African explorers, must have been wanting
in their earliest progenitors. On the whole,
it is apparent that the black race has thrived far
better in the past two centuries under men of its own
color than it had under the domination of whites during
all previous history.
I had been a prisoner at the little
frontier post for over a month, when orders came to
Colonel Belik to hasten to the eastern frontier with
the major portion of his command, leaving only one
troop to garrison the fort. As his body servant,
I accompanied him mounted upon a fiery little Abyssinian
pony.
We marched rapidly for ten days through
the heart of the ancient German empire, halting when
night found us in proximity to water. Often
we passed small posts similar to that at which the
colonel’s regiment had been quartered, finding
in each instance that only a single company or troop
remained for defence, the balance having been withdrawn
toward the northeast, in the same direction in which
we were moving.
Naturally, the colonel had not confided
to me the nature of his orders. But the rapidity
of our march and the fact that all available troops
were being hastened toward the northeast assured me
that a matter of vital importance to the dominion
of Menelek XIV in that part of Europe was threatening
or had already broken.
I could not believe that a simple
rising of the savage tribes of whites would necessitate
the mobilizing of such a force as we presently met
with converging from the south into our trail.
There were large bodies of cavalry and infantry,
endless streams of artillery wagons and guns, and
countless horse-drawn covered vehicles laden with camp
equipage, munitions, and provisions.
Here, for the first time, I saw camels,
great caravans of them, bearing all sorts of heavy
burdens, and miles upon miles of elephants doing similar
service. It was a scene of wondrous and barbaric
splendor, for the men and beasts from the south were
gaily caparisoned in rich colors, in marked contrast
to the gray uniformed forces of the frontier, with
which I had been familiar.
The rumor reached us that Menelek
himself was coming, and the pitch of excitement to
which this announcement raised the troops was little
short of miraculous—at least, to one of
my race and nationality whose rulers for centuries
had been but ordinary men, holding office at the will
of the people for a few brief years.
As I witnessed it, I could not but
speculate upon the moral effect upon his troops of
a sovereign’s presence in the midst of battle.
All else being equal in war between the troops of
a republic and an empire, could not this exhilarated
mental state, amounting almost to hysteria on the
part of the imperial troops, weigh heavily against
the soldiers of a president? I wonder.
But if the emperor chanced to be absent?
What then? Again I wonder.
On the eleventh day we reached our
destination—a walled frontier city of about
twenty thousand. We passed some lakes, and crossed
some old canals before entering the gates. Within,
beside the frame buildings, were many built of ancient
brick and well-cut stone. These, I was told,
were of material taken from the ruins of the ancient
city which, once, had stood upon the site of the present
town.
The name of the town, translated from
the Abyssinian, is New Gondar. It stands, I
am convinced, upon the ruins of ancient Berlin, the
one time capital of the old German empire, but except
for the old building material used in the new town
there is no sign of the former city.
The day after we arrived, the town
was gaily decorated with flags, streamers, gorgeous
rugs, and banners, for the rumor had proved true—the
emperor was coming.
Colonel Belik had accorded me the
greatest liberty, permitting me to go where I pleased,
after my few duties had been performed. As a
result of his kindness, I spent much time wandering
about New Gondar, talking with the inhabitants, and
exploring the city of black men.
As I had been given a semi-military
uniform which bore insignia indicating that I was
an officer’s body servant, even the blacks treated
me with a species of respect, though I could see by
their manner that I was really as the dirt beneath
their feet. They answered my questions civilly
enough, but they would not enter into conversation
with me. It was from other slaves that I learned
the gossip of the city.
Troops were pouring in from the west
and south, and pouring out toward the east.
I asked an old slave who was sweeping the dirt into
little piles in the gutters of the street where the
soldiers were going. He looked at me in surprise.
“Why, to fight the yellow men,
of course,” he said. “They have
crossed the border, and are marching toward New Gondar.”
“Who will win?” I asked.
He shrugged his shoulders. “Who
knows?” he said. “I hope it will
be the yellow men, but Menelek is powerful—it
will take many yellow men to defeat him.”
Crowds were gathering along the sidewalks
to view the emperor’s entry into the city.
I took my place among them, although I hate crowds,
and I am glad that I did, for I witnessed such a spectacle
of barbaric splendor as no other Pan-American has
ever looked upon.
Down the broad main thoroughfare,
which may once have been the historic Unter den Linden,
came a brilliant cortege. At the head rode a
regiment of red-coated hussars—enormous
men, black as night. There were troops of riflemen
mounted on camels. The emperor rode in a golden
howdah upon the back of a huge elephant so covered
with rich hangings and embellished with scintillating
gems that scarce more than the beast’s eyes
and feet were visible.
Menelek was a rather gross-looking
man, well past middle age, but he carried himself
with an air of dignity befitting one descended in
unbroken line from the Prophet—as was his
claim.
His eyes were bright but crafty, and
his features denoted both sensuality and cruelness.
In his youth he may have been a rather fine looking
black, but when I saw him his appearance was revolting—to
me, at least.
Following the emperor came regiment
after regiment from the various branches of the service,
among them batteries of field guns mounted on elephants.
In the center of the troops following
the imperial elephant marched a great caravan of slaves.
The old street sweeper at my elbow told me that these
were the gifts brought in from the far outlying districts
by the commanding officers of the frontier posts.
The majority of them were women, destined, I was
told, for the harems of the emperor and his favorites.
It made my old companion clench his fists to see
those poor white women marching past to their horrid
fates, and, though I shared his sentiments, I was
as powerless to alter their destinies as he.
For a week the troops kept pouring
in and out of New Gondar— in, always, from
the south and west, but always toward the east.
Each new contingent brought its gifts to the emperor.
From the south they brought rugs and ornaments and
jewels; from the west, slaves; for the commanding
officers of the western frontier posts had naught
else to bring.
From the number of women they brought,
I judged that they knew the weakness of their imperial
master.
And then soldiers commenced coming
in from the east, but not with the gay assurance of
those who came from the south and west—no,
these others came in covered wagons, blood-soaked
and suffering. They came at first in little parties
of eight or ten, and then they came in fifties, in
hundreds, and one day a thousand maimed and dying
men were carted into New Gondar.
It was then that Menelek XIV became
uneasy. For fifty years his armies had conquered
wherever they had marched. At first he had led
them in person, lately his presence within a hundred
miles of the battle line had been sufficient for large
engagements—for minor ones only the knowledge
that they were fighting for the glory of their sovereign
was necessary to win victories.
One morning, New Gondar was awakened
by the booming of cannon. It was the first intimation
that the townspeople had received that the enemy was
forcing the imperial troops back upon the city.
Dust covered couriers galloped in from the front.
Fresh troops hastened from the city, and about noon
Menelek rode out surrounded by his staff.
For three days thereafter we could
hear the cannonading and the spitting of the small
arms, for the battle line was scarce two leagues from
New Gondar. The city was filled with wounded.
Just outside, soldiers were engaged in throwing up
earthworks. It was evident to the least enlightened
that Menelek expected further reverses.
And then the imperial troops fell
back upon these new defenses, or, rather, they were
forced back by the enemy. Shells commenced to
fall within the city. Menelek returned and took
up his headquarters in the stone building that was
called the palace. That night came a lull in
the hostilities—a truce had been arranged.
Colonel Belik summoned me about seven
o’clock to dress him for a function at the palace.
In the midst of death and defeat the emperor was
about to give a great banquet to his officers.
I was to accompany my master and wait upon him—
I, Jefferson Turck, lieutenant in the Pan-American
navy!
In the privacy of the colonel’s
quarters I had become accustomed to my menial duties,
lightened as they were by the natural kindliness of
my master, but the thought of appearing in public
as a common slave revolted every fine instinct within
me. Yet there was nothing for it but to obey.
I cannot, even now, bring myself to
a narration of the humiliation which I experienced
that night as I stood behind my black master in silent
servility, now pouring his wine, now cutting up his
meats for him, now fanning him with a large, plumed
fan of feathers.
As fond as I had grown of him, I could
have thrust a knife into him, so keenly did I feel
the affront that had been put upon me. But at
last the long banquet was concluded. The tables
were removed. The emperor ascended a dais at
one end of the room and seated himself upon a throne,
and the entertainment commenced. It was only
what ancient history might have led me to expect—musicians,
dancing girls, jugglers, and the like.
Near midnight, the master of ceremonies
announced that the slave women who had been presented
to the emperor since his arrival in New Gondar would
be exhibited, that the royal host would select such
as he wished, after which he would present the balance
of them to his guests. Ah, what royal generosity!
A small door at one side of the room
opened, and the poor creatures filed in and were ranged
in a long line before the throne. Their backs
were toward me. I saw only an occasional profile
as now and then a bolder spirit among them turned
to survey the apartment and the gorgeous assemblage
of officers in their brilliant dress uniforms.
They were profiles of young girls, and pretty, but
horror was indelibly stamped upon them all.
I shuddered as I contemplated their sad fate, and
turned my eyes away.
I heard the master of ceremonies command
them to prostrate themselves before the emperor, and
the sounds as they went upon their knees before him,
touching their foreheads to the floor. Then
came the official’s voice again, in sharp and
peremptory command.
“Down, slave!” he cried.
“Make obeisance to your sovereign!”
I looked up, attracted by the tone
of the man’s voice, to see a single, straight,
slim figure standing erect in the center of the line
of prostrate girls, her arms folded across her breast
and little chin in the air. Her back was toward
me—I could not see her face, though I should
like to see the countenance of this savage young lioness,
standing there defiant among that herd of terrified
sheep.
“Down! Down!” shouted
the master of ceremonies, taking a step toward her
and half drawing his sword.
My blood boiled. To stand there,
inactive, while a negro struck down that brave girl
of my own race! Instinctively I took a forward
step to place myself in the man’s path.
But at the same instant Menelek raised his hand in
a gesture that halted the officer. The emperor
seemed interested, but in no way angered at the girl’s
attitude.
“Let us inquire,” he said
in a smooth, pleasant voice, “why this young
woman refuses to do homage to her sovereign,”
and he put the question himself directly to her.
She answered him in Abyssinian, but
brokenly and with an accent that betrayed how recently
she had acquired her slight knowledge of the tongue.
“I go on my knees to no one,”
she said. “I have no sovereign.
I myself am sovereign in my own country.”
Menelek, at her words, leaned back
in his throne and laughed uproariously. Following
his example, which seemed always the correct procedure,
the assembled guests vied with one another in an effort
to laugh more noisily than the emperor.
The girl but tilted her chin a bit
higher in the air—even her back proclaimed
her utter contempt for her captors. Finally Menelek
restored quiet by the simple expedient of a frown,
whereupon each loyal guest exchanged his mirthful
mien for an emulative scowl.
“And who,” asked Menelek,
“are you, and by what name is your country called?”
“I am Victory, Queen of Grabritin,”
replied the girl so quickly and so unexpectedly that
I gasped in astonishment.