A Frontier Mystery Part 40
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"That I cannot say, _Nkose_. But I think not. The water torture goes on for days, and the victim is left just as he is until he falls off or room is made for a fresh one, as we saw them so make it there."
"But you. How was it you were doomed to it, and how did you escape?"
asked Kendrew.
"That is a long story, and it will I tell another time. I was living in Pondoland then, not far on the other side of the Umtavuna. Ukozi did that, but now I shall have revenge. Tell me, _Amakosi_, will not your people have him lashed before they hang him? If so I should like to see that."
It was little wonder that this savage should give way to the intensity of his vindictive feeling. We white men both felt that mere hanging was too good for these fiends. But we were obliged to a.s.sure him that such was very unlikely.
"When we returned from the Zulu country," he went on, "I began to put things together. I remembered what we had found up there, and what with Ukozi being in these parts and the sudden disappearance of Nyamaki, a little while before, I felt sure that the Brotherhood of the Dew was at work. I asked you to keep me with you, _Nkose_, because I saw my way now, by striking at it, to revenge myself upon Ukozi for the torture he had made me undergo. _Whau_! and it is torture! That of the fire cannot be worse. I knew that the Brotherhood would be strong, because among the people here there are so many names that have to do with water--from Tyingoza and his son downwards--"
I started. Yes, it was even as he said. There were many names of just that description. But Tyingoza! Could that open-mannered, straightforward chief for whom I had always entertained the highest regard, really be one of that black, devilish murder society!
"Moreover," he went on, "I knew whence they would draw their next victim. I, too, have eyes and ears, _Nkose_, as well as yourself," he said, with a whimsical laugh, "and I used them. The _Abangan 'ema zolweni_ were strong in numbers, but otherwise weak. Their brethren were too young and--they talked--ah--ah--they talked. Hence I was able to follow Atyisayo to where I guided you. The rest was easy."
"Well, Jan Boom," I said seeing he had finished his story. "You will find you have done the very best day's work for yourself as well as for others that you ever did in your life."
"_Nkose_ is my father," he answered with a smile. "I am in his hands."
Neither Kendrew nor I said much as we returned to the house. This hideous tale of a deep and secret superst.i.tion, with its murderous results, existent right in our midst, was too strange, too startling, and yet, every word of it bore infinite evidence of truth. Well, it proved what I have more than once stated, that no white man ever gets to the bottom of a native's innermost ways, however much he may think he does.
CHAPTER THIRTY TWO.
THE LAST PENALTY.
Inspector Manvers was a shrewd as well as a smart officer, and it was not long before he had obtained from the two frightened women who had been made prisoners, sufficient information to warrant him in making several additional arrests. These, which were effected cleverly and quietly, included no less a personage than Ivuzamanzi, the son of Tyingoza. This would have astonished me, I own, but for Jan Boom's narrative; besides after the defection of Ivondwe I was prepared to be astonished at nothing.
An exhaustive search was made of the gruesome den of death, and in the result the ident.i.ty of poor Hensley was established beyond a doubt, as his nephew had said. The police spared no pains. They dragged the bottom of the waterhole with grappling hooks, and brought up a quant.i.ty of human bones, and old tatters of rotted clothing. It was obvious that quite a number of persons had been done to death here.
"The _Abangan 'ema zolweni_ were strong in numbers but otherwise weak.
Their brethren were too young, and--they talked." Such had been Jan Boom's dictum, and now events combined to bear it out. Two of the younger prisoners, fearing for their lives, confessed. This example was followed by others, and soon ample evidence was available to draw the web tight round the witch doctor, Ivondwe, Ivuzamanzi and Atyisayo, as prime movers in the whole diabolical cult. And then, that there could be no further room for doubt, Ukozi himself confessed.
I own that I was somewhat astonished at this. But since his incarceration the witch doctor's spirit seemed completely to fail him, which was strange; for a native, especially one of his age and standing, does not, as a rule, fear death. But fear, abject and unmistakable, had now taken hold of this one. He trembled and muttered, and at times it seemed as if his mind would give way. Then he declared his willingness to make a statement. Perhaps his life would be spared.
But he was given to understand he need entertain no hopes of that kind if he should be convicted at the trial. Even then he persisted. He wanted to throw off the load, he said, for it lay heavy on his heart.
His statement was consistent with that of all the others, moreover it tallied with all that Jan Boom had told me. The part of it that was peculiar was the manner in which they had been able to remove their victims so as to leave no trace. This had been done by means of m.u.f.fled shoes. The drug administered had the effect of putting them into a kind of trance. They had all their faculties about them, save only that of volition, but afterwards they would remember nothing. Nyamaki had been easily removed because he lived alone. He, like Major Sewin, the witch doctor had gradually imbued with a taste for the occult. After that all was easy. It had at first been intended to entrap the Major, then his nephew, but for the reasons that Jan Boom had already given me, this plan was abandoned. Then it was decided to seize his eldest daughter.
Such a sacrifice as that could not fail to move the Spirit of the Dew, and to bring abundant rain.
No, she had in no way been injured. To have injured her would have been to have rendered the whole rite invalid. As for Ivondwe, he had gone to the Major's with the object of forwarding the plan when it was ripe. He was almost as great among the Brethren of the Dew as Ukozi himself.
Ivuzamanzi? Yes, he, too, was among the foremost of them. Tyingoza belonged to the Brotherhood, but he had been enrolled unwillingly, and had never taken part in any of their deeper mysteries: nor indeed, did they come within his knowledge.
Thus ran Ukozi's confession. When it was read out at the trial it created a profound sensation, as, indeed, did the whole case in the columns of the Colonial Press, which clamoured for a signal example to be made of the offenders. And the Court by which they were tried was of the same opinion.
When those who had turned Queen's evidence had been sifted out--of course with the exception of Ukozi--there was still a round dozen for trial. The Court-house at Grey Town was crammed. Natives especially, had mustered in crowds, but so far from there being any turbulence, or tendency to rescue, these were, if anything, considerably awed by the very circ.u.mstances of the case itself. Most of them indeed had never heard of the _Abangan 'ema zolweni_, and a new and stimulating matter of discussion was thus supplied to them.
The confession of Ukozi, and of the others of course went far to simplify the trial. Still, the fairness and impartiality for which British jurisprudence is famous, was fully extended to the accused. I personally can bear witness to a good hour in the box, most of which was spent in cross-examination for the defence. The same held good of Kendrew and Falkner, the latter of whom by the way, drew down upon himself some very nasty remarks from the Bench, by reason of having stated in answer to a question as to whether he had not expressed a wish to see these men hanged--that he would cheerfully see every n.i.g.g.e.r in Natal hanged if he had his way, and they had their deserts. But he didn't care. As he confided to me afterwards, what did it matter what an old fool in a gown said when he knew he couldn't have his head punched for saying it.
Aida, too, was called upon to go through the ordeal, and of course she did it well. In fact a murmur of appreciation ran through the native section of the audience when she emphatically agreed with the defending counsel's suggestion, in cross-examination, that she had not been ill-treated in any way. There was, too, a great cloud of native witnesses. Jan Boom, in particular, had a long and trying time of it, but the Xosa was a man of parts, and a good bit of a lawyer himself in his way. There was no shaking his evidence on any one single point.
Thus, as I have said, in spite of his confession, Ukozi and his fellow accused were given every chance.
The indictment, so far, was confined to the murder of Hensley. Had it broken down--which of course was inconceivable--the prisoners would have been re-indicted for the murder of the native victims, of two, at any rate, whose ident.i.ty could have been easily established. Failing necessity, for the sake of their relatives, in view of possible danger involved to these, it was not deemed expedient to include them in the formal ground of indictment. The verdict of course, could only be "Guilty." The four--viz. Ukozi, Ivuzamanzi, Ivondwe and Atyisayo--were brought in as princ.i.p.als--the others as accessories--some before, some after the fact.
Never shall I forget the scene in court, as they were asked whether they had anything to say why sentence of death should not be pa.s.sed upon them. It was just sundown, and an angry storm had been raging outside for fully an hour. Growling, cracking peals of thunder had interrupted the judge's summing up, and now, during a lull, the glare of a wet sunset came in through the windows, and a few heavy drops of rain still fell like stones on the corrugated iron roof during the tense silence.
They stood in the dock those twelve dark figures, some leaning eagerly forward over the rail, their eyeb.a.l.l.s protruding in the climax of the moment's excitement, others impa.s.sive and statuesque. Amid the public was a subdued, hush. The native public especially seemed turned to stone.
In answer to the appeal the bulk of the prisoners shook their heads.
They had nothing to say, they declared, and then subsided into stolid silence. But when it came to the turn of Ivondwe, he harangued the Court at some length. The white man, he said, professed to be the protector and tolerator of all religions. Now this, for which they stood there, was part of the black man's religion--or at any rate a section of it. Why then, was not that tolerated too? Ivuzamanzi, when it came to his turn, answered with heat, that he was the son of a chief--that he was a Zulu of the tribe of Umtetwa; that he cared nothing for a set of preaching whites and their stupid laws; that he only wished he had crossed the river long ago, and gone to _konza_ to Cetywayo.
There he would have been in a warrior land where the head-ring of his father and chief could not have been insulted with impunity by a swaggering _igcwane_ like the one who sat yonder--pointing to Falkner-- who, however, perhaps fortunately, didn't understand what was being said until the interpreter had rendered it, and then it was too late to kick up a row. Then he might have joined one day in driving the whites into the sea, where sooner or later they would all be driven. He was the son of a chief and could die like one. He was not going to lie down and howl for mercy like a miserable cheat of an _isa.n.u.si_.
This with a savage glare at Ukozi.
The latter said not much. He had confessed. He had done what he could to put right what had been done. His life was in the hands of the Government.
The judge drew on the black cap, and proceeded to pa.s.s formal sentence.
The twelve prisoners before him, he said, after a long and painstaking trial extending over several days, had been convicted of the most heinous crime known to the law, that of murder, the penalty of which was death. They had only been indicted for, and found guilty of one murder, but there was ample evidence that many others had lain at their door.
This murder then, was the outcome of one of the vilest, most benighted forms of superst.i.tion that had ever disgraced our common humanity, whether black or white. As for urging, as one of the prisoners had done, that such murder was part of the black man's religion--or anybody's religion--why he could only say that such a statement was a slander upon the honest, straightforward, native population of the Colony, of whose good and trustworthy qualities he personally had had many years of experience. It was a relic of the blackest and most benighted days of past heathenism, and it was clear that a bold attempt had been made on the part of the prisoner Ukozi, to revive and spread it in the midst of a peaceful and law-abiding native population living contentedly under the Queen's rule and under the Queen's laws. Once these terrible superst.i.tions--and their outcome of foul and mysterious murder--took root, there was no seeing where they would end, therefore it was providential that this wicked and horrible conspiracy against the lives of their fellow subjects had been brought to light, and he would especially urge, and solemnly warn, his native hearers present in court to set their faces resolutely against anything of the kind in their midst. Not for one moment would it be tolerated, nor would any plea of custom, or such a travesty of the sacred name of religion, as had been brought forward by one of the prisoners, be even so much as considered in mitigation of the just doom meted out by the law to all who should be found guilty of such an offence.
Sentence of death was then formally pa.s.sed upon the whole dozen.
There were many influential natives among the audience in court. These, I could see, were impressed, and in the right direction, moreover I gathered from their comments, which I overheard as they dispersed, that to many of them the existence of the Brotherhood of the Dew came as a revelation. And the comments were diverse and instructive.
"_Au_!" one man remarked. "There is but one among the twelve who wears the head-ring, and he is the one that shows fear."
The death sentence in the case of all but three was subsequently commuted to various terms of imprisonment. Those three were Ukozi, Ivondwe and Ivuzamanzi. As for the latter, Tyingoza had got up a large deputation to the Governor, begging that his son's life should be spared, but without avail. Ivuzamanzi had taken an active part in this new outlet of a destructive superst.i.tion, and it was felt that as the son of an influential chief, he of all others should be made an example of.
I don't know how it was--call it morbid curiosity if you like--but anyhow I was there when these three paid the last penalty. I had visited them in the gaol once. Ivondwe had talked as if nothing had happened, about old times and what not. The witch doctor was cowering and piteous. Could _I_ do nothing to save him. He would remember it to the end of his days, and would tell me many things that would be useful to me. I told him plainly I could do nothing, but in consideration did not add that I would not if I could, for if ever miscreant deserved his fate he did. I gave them some tobacco however, poor wretches, and that was all I could do for them. Ivuzamanzi was stormily abusive, so I did not waste time over him. Yet for him, I felt pity, as one led away, and--was not he the son of my old friend?
It had been decided that the execution should, contrary to custom, be a public one. It was reckoned that the opportunity would be a good one for striking terror among the natives, as an example of the fate that would certainly overtake, sooner or later, all who should indulge in similar practices. Rightly it was argued that a terrible superst.i.tion of this nature, fostered by a secret society and finding its logical outcome in barbarous and abominable forms of murder, needed to be sternly stamped out.
On a grey and cloudy morning Ukozi, Ivondwe and Ivuzamanzi were led forth to die. There had been rain in the night, which had left a raw chill in the air; while the wind sang mournfully as it drove the low clouds along the hill tops. A pit had been dug in front of the gaol, to serve as a drop, and over this the gallows had been erected. From an early hour natives had been coming in by twos and threes, and now a crowd of several hundreds of them had a.s.sembled. Their demeanour however was neither turbulent nor defiant, on the contrary it was remarkably subdued, and they conversed in awed undertones. With a view to any possible demonstration a full troop of Mounted Police was disposed around the scaffold, with bandoliers filled, and all ready for action, but the precaution was unnecessary. The temper of the dark crowd was one of subdued awe as it contemplated the preparations for this grim and unaccustomed method of exit from life; in short just the very effect intended to be produced by making the execution a public one.
A hollow murmur ran over the crowd like a wave as the gaol doors swung open and the prisoners appeared, pinioned. Their demeanour was varied.
That of Ukozi showed, unmistakably, fear--shrinking fear. At sight of the scaffold something like a tremor ran through the frame of the witch doctor, and he half stopped instinctively, while his lips moved in piteous protest. Ivondwe was as impa.s.sive as a statue; but the chief's son walked with his head thrown back, his tall form erect, and a bitter scowl of hate and defiance upon his face. Then his glance met mine.
"That is the man through whom I am here," he roared. "Are there none present to whom I may bequeath my vengeance?" And he glared around.
"Yet I saved thy life once, son of Tyingoza," I answered, speaking so that all could hear, and this I did with a purpose.
"Walk on, Ivuzamanzi, and die like the son of a chief," said the sheriff to him in a low tone. And he obeyed.
The Indian hangman and his a.s.sistant did their work quickly and well, and the three disappeared from view, hardly a quiver in the ropes showing that they had met death instantaneously, and in infinitely more merciful fas.h.i.+on than the lingering and horrible manner in which they had meted it out to so many unsuspecting victims sacrificed to their abominable and devilish superst.i.tion; and as I thought of one who came within an ace of adding to the number of such victims I could feel no pity for them now, which may have been wrong, but if it is I can't help it.
A Frontier Mystery Part 40
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A Frontier Mystery Part 40 summary
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