08 Safari Adventure Read online




  Safari Adventure

  By Willard Price

  Chapter 1

  Poachers’ Paradise

  They were heading for trouble. But Hal, nineteen, was too old to show fear and his brother Roger, thirteen, was too young to realize what he was getting into.

  Both felt the tingle of new excitement as the small plane soared above the Mountains of the Moon and pointed its nose east by south-east for Tsavo. Tsavo, home of murder and mystery. Tsavo, Africa’s largest national park, where animals should be safe - but were not.

  Gangs of poachers were killing the elephants, rhinos, giraffes, hippos, and other wild creatures of Tsavo by the hundred.

  What is a poacher? In Africa it means a thief who kills animals without a licence and sells the tusks, horns, or other valuable parts.

  Warden Crosby could not stop the killing. He had a force of only ten rangers. How could ten men hope to patrol eight thousand square miles of jungle?

  Worry had bitten deep furrows into Mark Crosby’s forehead. He sat in the pilot’s seat with his hands on the controls, but he paid slight attention to Lake Victoria slipping by below, the. source of the Nile, the spot where Stanley met Livingstone, the vast Serengeti lion country, the snow-capped Mount Kilimanjaro. His mind was on the land beyond - the scene of blood, horror, torture, and death.

  ‘It’s a war,’ he said, ‘a war against big odds. We’re losing it. We have ten men on our side. Ten men against hundreds of poachers. We no sooner drive them out of one place than they pop up in another. It’s pretty hopeless.’

  ‘Have any of your men been killed?’ Hal asked.

  ‘We had twenty-two rangers. Twelve have been killed.’

  ‘Poison arrows?’

  ‘Yes, all the poachers are armed - most of them with bows and poison arrows, some with spears and bush knives, some with muskets. Two of our men were caught in traps that the poachers had set out to catch animals.

  Those two died a horrible death. We didn’t find their skeletons until a month later.’

  ‘Skeletons?’

  “That’s all that was left of them.’

  ‘I suppose they died of thirst,’ said Hal. Then the hyenas picked their bones.’

  ‘I doubt if it was that comfortable. Hyenas don’t wait till you’re dead. They’re afraid of you as long as you can fight. But if they find you trapped and helpless, they gang up on you. Those two men were eaten alive.’

  Hal winced at the thought of the slow and terrible agony of the two unfortunate rangers. Roger shivered and began to be sorry that he had come.

  ‘Why do you think it was hyenas?’ said Hal. ‘Why not lions or leopards?’

  ‘A lion is usually a good sport. He seldom attacks unless he is attacked. A leopard isn’t such a gentleman. He might attack without provocation. But he has an odd little habit. After he has eaten as much as he can hold, he drags the rest of the carcass up into a tree where it will be safe from other animals until he comes back for another meal. He’s very powerful. He could break a body loose from a trap and carry it up even if it was twice his own weight. But nothing like that happened. No, it must have been the work of hyenas. And perhaps vultures. They usually come round after the hyenas have finished and take any scraps that are left.’

  Hal and Roger exchanged glances. Their enthusiasm for this adventure had suddenly cooled. They had welcomed Warden Crosby when he had flown to the Mountains of the Moon to get their help. It had seemed a good chance to have a lively adventure, and to save wild animals from death at the hands of the poachers.

  Besides, in a way, it was part of their job. Their father, John Hunt, was in the business of collecting wild animals and selling them to zoos where they would have good care and furnish education and entertainment to thousands of spectators. He had taught his sons to love animals and gone with them on their first take-‘emalive journeys. But what would be the use of such journeys if the wild game were all killed off by poachers?

  So when the boys and their thirty black helpers had driven out a gang of killers from their hideout in the Mountains of the Moon, Crosby had come to them for aid in his battle against the poachers of Tsavo. They had phoned their father at his animal farm near New York and gained his consent. Now they began to wonder if they had bitten off more than they could chew.

  Crosby guessed their thoughts.

  ‘I hope I haven’t scared you,’ he said.

  ‘Scared? us? Of course not,’ said Hal stoutly.

  ‘When will your men get here?’

  ‘Well, it’s six hundred miles by road. Our jeeps and Land-Rovers aren’t built for speed. But they should be here by noon tomorrow.’

  ‘I can’t thank you enough for coming in with me on this job.’

  ‘Don’t thank us until you see what we can do - if anything.’

  There it is.’ Crosby pointed past an elbow of the snow mountain. That’s Tsavo.’

  It was a lovely sight. Who could believe that this beautiful land was a valley of death? It seemed a peaceful paradise of forest and plain, gentle hills, silvery rivers, quiet lakes, bright sun, and dreaming shadow.

  Roger, who had a keen appreciation of the beautiful, exclaimed, ‘Man! That’s cool!’

  His older brother said it a little differently. ‘Looks like a bit of heaven.’

  ‘It could be just that,’ said Crosby, ‘if we could get rid of those poachers. It should be a safe refuge for animals and a grand park for visitors. Now it’s a death-trap. Do you see that place where the river widens into a sort of lake? We have an underwater observatory there. You can go down into a submarine chamber and look out through port-holes and see crocodiles swimming under water and hippos walking on the bottom. But recently the poachers slaughtered dozens of the hippos and all you could see through the port-holes was a huge heap of rotting corpses. The decaying carcasses polluted the river, and the smell was terrible. Some hippo babies left alive were nudging their dead mothers and dying of starvation. But they didn’t suffer long - the crocodiles snapped them up.’

  ‘What good did it do the poachers to kill the hippos and then leave them to rot?’ asked Hal.

  ‘Oh, but they got what they wanted. They took the heads - each of them would be worth a couple of thousand dollars. And strips of the hide had been cut off.’

  ‘What could they do with them?’

  ‘Make whips. The hide is very thick. They dry the strips in the shade for several weeks. It becomes as hard as a board. Then each strip is sawed, like wood, into rods about three feet long. These can be used as canes.

  But generally they are shipped to South Africa where the Boers trim the edges to make them sharp and use them as whips, called sjamboks. A sjambok will cut the flesh like a knife. Cattle are afraid of it, and men too. You don’t pick a quarrel with your boss if he’s armed with a sjambok. Many a man has been killed by a hippo whip.’

  ‘It all sounds pretty cruel to me,’ Hal said, ‘murdering a hippo to make a murder weapon.’

  ‘It’s a beastly business. And a big business. Of course poaching is as old as history. But it has always been a small business - until now. A native who needed meat might go out and kill an antelope. But now it’s organized on a big scale. What they’re after now is not just some meat for supper, but millions of dollars, and instead of a lone poacher here or there we now have armies of poachers directed by a man they call Blackbeard - because of his black beard and because he’s a pirate like the original Blackbeard, only he steals tusks and tails, horns and hides, instead of gold. And he’s guilty of more torture and killing than the first Blackbeard ever was.’

  ‘Who is this Blackbeard?’

  ‘I wish I knew. He’s a man of mystery. I don’t believe he’s a native. We’ve done a lot of guessing bu
t we get nowhere. Perhaps you can solve the mystery. We’ve wondered if he might be a big merchant down in Mombasa, the port city. We know great quantities of hippo heads, elephant tusks, rhino horns, valuable skins of leopards, cheetahs, monkeys, pythons, and all that are shipped out from Mombasa to cities all over the world. Somebody is making a fortune out of this racket. Perhaps he’s not a merchant. Perhaps he’s a military man who knows how to rule this army of poachers. Just guesses. We really have no idea who he is. Until he’s caught, this thing will probably go on.’

  Chapter 2

  Poisoned arrows

  The plane was now gliding down towards the troubled paradise. It was a Stork - a German-made four-seater. It had dual controls - one joystick was gripped by the pilot and Hal, sitting in the co-pilot’s seat, watched the other stick moving restlessly in front of him.

  He longed to get his hands on it. But he wasn’t sure that he could fly this crate. He had flown his father’s Navion over Long Island, but that was a quite different machine. Here, every dial on the instrument board seemed to be in the wrong place. And everything was in metres and kilometres and Centigrade and European symbols, and words were in German.

  Besides, every plane handles differently. One will be as steady as a cart-horse, another as skittish as a buck ing bronco. He hoped that some time he would be allowed to pilot the plane, but first he must have full instructions and plenty of practice with Crosby at his

  side.’

  ‘That sharp-pointed hill with the pavilion on top,’ said Crosby, ‘is called Poachers’ Lookout. A telescope is mounted in front of the pavilion. We keep a ranger there all day, every day, watching for poachers.’

  ‘How far can you see from that point?’

  ‘Not far enough. You can spot anything within a few miles but then the hills and forests cut off the view. It would take at least a hundred such lookouts to cover our eight thousand miles of territory, and that would mean a hundred watchers. Of course that’s impossible. So we do what we can with this movable lookout.’

  ‘You mean this plane?’

  ‘Yes. But I’m the only one who can fly it. And I can’t be in the air all the time - I have other things to do. When I locate some poachers I fly back to camp, get together any rangers who are not out on duty and we drive in a Land-Rover to the place where I have seen the poachers. If there are only one or two, we may be able to arrest them. But if it turns out to be a gang, we’re lucky if we can get back to camp with only one or two dead rangers. Now you can see our camp - just beyond Poachers’ Lookout.’

  Hal could make out a cluster of thatch-roofed cabins above five miles ahead. So this was the famous Kitani Safari Lodge where visitors from Europe and America might spend a few days enjoying the thrilling experience of being completely surrounded by wild animals. He was surprised to see that there was no wall or fence around the camp.

  ‘How do you keep the animals out?’

  Crosby laughed. ‘We don’t. We could never afford to build a wall strong enough or high enough. Leopards or lions could scramble over the top of it. Elephants can push down big trees - they could push down a wall. Rhinos are irritated by anything that gets in their way - they would charge a wall and drive a hole straight through it Buffaloes have heads as hard as battering rams. They smash heavy trucks and lorries. A stampede of buffaloes would make short work of a wall if they took a notion to see what was on the other side. No, a wall wouldn’t be practical, and as for a fence, it would be trampled down in one night.’

  ‘So you let the animals come right into the camp?’

  ‘Right. They seldom come in during the day. But every night we have visitors. We advise our guests not to go walking in the moonlight, but stay in their cabins after sunset. And keep their windows closed - leopards like to climb in. Elephants come looking for water. One wily old rascal has learned how to turn on the taps in the garden - but doesn’t bother to turn them off again. He drinks his fill and wanders off and I have to go out and turn off the tap.’

  Roger’s sharp eyes had been scanning the landscape.

  ‘Speaking of fences,’ he said, ‘that looks like one over there - on the left. What could that be?’

  The warden took one look, then swung the plane about and headed for the thing that looked like a fence.

  ‘Nothing the matter with your eyes,’ he said to Roger. ‘You’d make a good ranger. That’s a trap-line.’

  ‘Trap-line?’

  ‘A line of traps set by the poachers.’

  ‘But it looks like a fence or a hedge.’

  ‘Exactly. The poachers pile up thorn bushes to make a fence. This one appears to be about a mile long. But you notice there are gaps in the fence. In every one of those openings they put a trap.’

  ‘What’s the idea?’

  ‘Well, suppose you were an animal. You come up to this fence and you want to get to the other side. It’s too wide to jump over. You don’t wish to plough through it because you know you’d get stuck by thousands of thorns, sharp as needles, each one about three inches long. So you run beside the fence hoping to find a way to get through. You come to one of these gaps. You dash in and suddenly find yourself in trouble. Your head passes through a wire noose that tightens round your neck. The more you pull the tighter it gets. You struggle and twist and the wire cuts deeper and deeper into your throat and the blood attracts the carnivores which proceed to eat you alive.’

  ‘But if I am eaten, then the poachers don’t get anything.’

  ‘Oh yes they do. If you are an elephant, the chances are all they want is your tusks, or perhaps your feet to make waste-paper baskets, or your tail to be sold as a fly switch. The wild beasts don’t eat those parts, So the beast gets its dinner and the poacher gets the rest and they are both satisfied.’

  They were now dropping fast towards the thorn hedge.

  ‘What do you plan to do?’ Hal inquired.

  ‘Just give the poachers a good scare. Let them know that their camp has been located. Sometimes that’s enough to make them pack up and leave. Of course, it may not work. There may be a lot of them and they know we have very few rangers. But they don’t know that tomorrow we are going to have thirty more men -your men. We’ll come out here tomorrow by road, the whole lot of us, and give them the surprise of their lives.

  Now I’m going to give you a good look at this trap-line.’

  The ‘plane swooped lower. The beginning of the hedge was directly underneath. Looking down the line, the boys could see that almost every gap held an animal. Some hung still and lifeless. Some struggled fiercely and their screams could be heard over the roar of the engine. Packs of hyenas, jackals, wild dogs, and other meat-eaters were enjoying a feast. The strange ‘laugh’ of the hyenas, the yapping of the wild dogs, the yipping of the jackals, the occasional rumble of a leopard or roar of a lion added to the general tumult.

  So that the boys could get a good look, the warden had cut the motor down to about thirty miles per hour. The Stork, with its flaps down, was quite capable of staying in the air at this slow speed, though its normal speed was one hundred and forty.

  Now the temporary straw shacks of the poachers could be seen among the trees. Crosby, flying within fifty feet of the ground, examined the camp closely. ‘Bigger than I thought,’ he said.

  Suddenly a swarm of black figures burst out of the forest, armed with bows and spears. A volley of spears and arrows came climbing towards the little plane.

  If this were an ordinary plane, they would harmlessly pepper the bottom of the fuselage. But the cabin of the Stork is enclosed in a bubble of Perspex, which even curves in a little at the bottom towards the floorboards, so that the occupants of the plane Can look straight down to the ground beneath. This is ideal for the purpose of complete visibility but offers little protection against ground fire.

  Since Crosby was gripping the control, his elbow was well out in the bulge of Perspex. Suddenly he jerked it in with a little exclamation of surprise. He dropped the exposed arm beside him
where Hal would not see it and held the stick with his other hand. Sharply he gunned the plane up well out of reach of ground fire, then levelled off straight for Kitani Safari Lodge.

  Chapter 3

  Race with death

  Hal was unaware of what had happened. But Roger, sitting behind the warden, saw the black arrow that had gone through Crosby’s arm just above the elbow. The arrow-head had passed through the fleshy part of the arm and come out on the other side.

  ‘Hal - look,’ Roger said. ‘The warden - his arm …’

  Hal leaned forward so that he could see the half-hidden arm and arrow.

  ‘Never mind it now,’ Crosby said. ‘The important thing is to get you to camp before I go to sleep.’

  ‘You think the arrow was poisoned?’

  ‘Probably.’

  Hal examined the arrow-head, looking for the black, gummy paste made from the highly poisonous Acocanthera plant.

  ‘I don’t see anything - except your own blood.’

  ‘You wouldn’t see anything on the point. They don’t put the poison there.’

  ‘Why not?’

  ‘Because they might prick themselves with it A man tumbling around in the bush with a quiverful of arrows on his back with all the poisoned tips sticking up would be a great danger to himself and to his friends.’

  “Then where do they put the poison?’

  ‘On the shaft, just behind the arrow-head.’

  ‘But that’s the part that’s in your arm. Shouldn’t we get it out of there as quickly as we can?’

  ‘You can’t reach it.’ It was true. The front seats were almost two feet apart. The injured arm was on the warden’s far side. Hal could not get at it without interfering with the control of the plane.

  ‘I can reach it,’ Roger said. ‘Just tell me what to do.’

  Hal thought a moment. The arrow-head was barbed. ‘You can’t pull it back,’ he said. ‘Try to break off the arrow-head. Then pull out the shaft.’

  Roger leaned over the back of the pilot’s seat, gripped the arrow-head and did his best to snap it off. The wood was very tough. He put on more pressure. His hand was wet with blood. Sweat came out on his face and he felt faint - not that the effort hurt him, but he knew he was hurting the warden. Crosby said not a word.