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The shot was thunderous, shattering into a thousand echoes against the holes of the fever trees. The elephant died in the fullness of his run. Legs buckled, and he came toppling forward, carried by his own momentum, a loose avalanche of flesh and bone and long ivory.
Fly
Lying face down, Fly
Slowly, pulling himself forward on his elbows so that his legs slithered uselessly after him, he crawled towards the carcass of the old bull.
He reached it, and with one hand stroked the yellowed shaft of ivory that had crippled him.
"Now," he whispered, fondling the smoothly polished tusk the way a man might touch his firstborn son. "Now, at last you are mine." And then the pain started, and he closed his eyes and cowered down, huddled beneath the hillock of dead and cooling flesh that had been Plough the
Earth. The pain buzzed in his ears like cicada beetles, but through it he heard Mohammed's voice.
Fini. It was not wise." He opened his eyes and saw Mohammed's monkey face puckered with concern.
"Call Rosa," he croaked. "Call Little Long Hair. Tell her to come." Then he closed his eyes again, and rode the pain. The tempo of the. pain changed constantly first it was drums, torn-toms that throbbed and beat within him. Then it was the sea, long undulating swells of agony. Then again it was night, cold black night that chilled him so he shivered and moaned and the night gave way to the sun. A great fiery ball of pain that burned and shot out lances of blinding light that burst against his clenched eyelids. Then the drums began again.
Time was of no significance. He rode the pain for a minute and a million years, then through the beat of the drums of agony he heard movement near him. The shuffle of feet through the dead leaves, the murmur of voices that were not part of his consuming anguish.
"Rosa," Fly
Herman Fleischer stood over him. He was gri
breathing quickly and heavily with exertion as though he had been ru
"So!" he wheezed. "So!" The shock of his presence was muted for
Fly
"Herr Fly
Mildly Fly
but what had led him directly to the grove of fever trees?
Then he heard a rustling fluting rush in the air above him, and he looked upwards. Through the lacework of branches he saw the vultures spiralling against the aching blue of the sky. They turned and dipped on spread black wings, cocking their heads sideways in flight to look down with bright beady eyes on the elephant carcass.
"Ja! The birds. We followed the birds."
"Jackals always follow the birds, whispered Fly
"Good. Oh, ja. That is good." And he kicked Fly
Fly
He noticed for the first time how his lower body was grotesquely twisted and distorted. And he dropped to his knees beside him. Gently he touched Fly
"Sergeant!" There was a desperate edge to his voice now.
"This man is badly injured. He will not last long. Be quick!
Get the rope! We must hang him before he loses consciousness."
Rosa awoke in the dawn and found that she was alone. Beside Fly
His rifle was gone.
She was not alarmed, not at first. She guessed that he had gone into the bush on one of his regular excursions to be alone while he drank his breakfast. But an hour later when he had not returned she grew anxious. She sat with her rifle across her lap, and every bird noise or animal scuffle in the ebony thicket jarred her nerves.
Another hour and she was fretting. Every few minutes she stood up and walked to the edge of the clearing to listen. Then she went back to sit and worry.
Where on earth was Fly
Had Fly