By Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961)
First published in Cosmopolitan magazine in 1936, and then collected in
The Fifth Column and the First Forty-Nine Stories (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1938)
This text is in the public domain
First published in Cosmopolitan magazine in 1936, and then collected in
The Fifth Column and the First Forty-Nine Stories (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1938)
This text is in the public domain
It
was now lunch time and they were all sitting under the double green fly of the
dining tent pretending that nothing had happened.
"Will you have lime juice or lemon squash?" Macomber asked.
"I'll have a gimlet," Robert Wilson told him.
"I'll have a gimlet too. I need something," Macomber's wife said.
"I suppose it's the thing to do," Macomber agreed. "Tell him
to make three gimlets."
The mess boy had started them already, lifting the bottles out of the
canvas cooling bags that sweated wet in the wind that blew through the trees
that shaded the tents.
"What had I ought to give them?" Macomber asked.
"A quid would be plenty," Wilson told him. "You don't want
to spoil them."
"Will the headman distribute it?"
"Absolutely."
Francis Macomber had, half an hour before, been carried to his tent from
the edge of the camp in triumph on the arms and shoulders of the cook, the
personal boys, the skinner and the porters. The gun-bearers had taken no part
in the demonstration. When the native boys put him down at the door of his
tent, he had shaken all their hands, received their congratulations, and then
gone into the tent and sat on the bed until his wife came in. She did not speak
to him when she came in and he left the tent at once to wash his face and hands
in the portable wash basin outside and go over to the dining tent to sit in a
comfortable canvas chair in the breeze and the shade.
"You've got your lion," Robert Wilson said to him, "and a
damned fine one too."
Mrs. Macomber looked at Wilson quickly. She was an extremely handsome and
well kept woman of the beauty and social position which had, five years before,
commanded five thousand dollars as the price of endorsing, with photographs, a
beauty product which she had never used. She had been married to Francis
Macomber for eleven years.
"He is a good lion, isn't he?" Macomber said. His wife looked at
him now. She looked at both these men as though she had never seen them before.
One, Wilson, the white hunter, she knew she had never truly seen before. He
was about middle height with sandy hair, a stubby mustache, a very red face and
extremely cold blue eyes with faint white wrinkles at the corners that grooved
merrily when he smiled. He smiled at her now and she looked away from his face
at the way his shoulders sloped in the loose tunic he wore with the four big
cartridges held in loops where the left breast pocket should have been, at his
big brown hands, his old slacks, his very dirty boots and back to his red face
again. She noticed where the baked red of his face stopped in a white line that
marked the circle left by his Stetson hat that hung now from one of the pegs of
the tent pole.
"Well, here's to the lion," Robert Wilson said. He smiled at her
again and, not smiling, she looked curiously at her husband.
Francis Macomber was very tall, very well built if you did not mind that
length of bone, dark, his hair cropped like an oarsman, rather thin-lipped, and
was considered handsome. He was dressed in the same sort of safari clothes that
Wilson wore except that his were new, he was thirty-five years old, kept
himself very fit, was good at court games, had a number of big-game fishing
records, and had just shown himself, very publicly, to be a coward.
"Here's to the lion," he said. "I can't ever thank you for
what you did."
Margaret, his wife, looked away from him and back to Wilson.
"Let's not talk about the lion," she said.
Wilson looked over at her without smiling and now she smiled at him.
"It's been a very strange day," she said. "Hadn't you ought
to put your hat on even under the canvas at noon? You told me that, you
know."
"Might put it on," said Wilson.
"You know you have a very red face, Mr. Wilson," she told him and
smiled again.
"Drink," said Wilson.
"I don't think so," she said. "Fran cis drinks a great deal,
but his face is never red."
"It's red today," Macomber tried a joke.
"No," said Margaret. "It's mine that's red today. But Mr.
Wilson's is always red.
"Must be racial," said Wilson. "I say, you wouldn't like to
drop my beauty as a topic, would you?"
"I've just started on it."
"Let's chuck it," said Wilson.
"Conversation is going to be so difficult," Margaret said.
"Don't be silly, Margot," her husband said.
"No difficulty," Wilson said. "Got a damn fine lion."
Margot looked at them both and they both saw that she was going to cry.
Wilson had seen it coming for a long time and he dreaded it. Macomber was past
dreading it.
"I wish it hadn't happened. Oh, I wish it hadn't happened," she
said and started for her tent. She made no noise of crying but they could see
that her shoulders were shaking under the rose-colored, sun-proofed shirt she
wore.
"Women upset," said Wilson to the tall man. "Amounts to
nothing. Strain on the nerves and one thing'n another."
"No," said Macomber. "I suppose that I rate that for the
rest of my life now."
"Nonsense. Let's have a spot of the giant killer," said Wilson.
"Forget the whole thing. Nothing to it anyway."
"We might try," said Macomber. "I won't forget what you did
for me though."
"Nothing," said Wilson. All nonsense."
So they sat there in the shade where the camp was pitched under some
wide-topped acacia trees with a boulder-strewn cliff behind them, and a stretch
of grass that ran to the bank of a boulder-filled stream in front with forest
beyond it, and drank their just-cool lime drinks and avoided one another's eyes
while the boys all knew about it now and when he saw Macomber's personal boy
looking curiously at his master while he was putting dishes on the table he
snapped at him in Swahili. The boy turned away with his face blank.
"What were you telling him?" Macomber asked.
"Nothing. Told him to look alive or I'd see he got about fifteen of
the best."
"What's that? Lashes?"
"It's quite illegal," Wilson said. "You're supposed to fine
them."
"Do you still have them whipped?"
"Oh, yes. They could raise a row if they chose to complain. But they
don't. They prefer it to the fines."
"How strange!" said Macomber.
"Not strange, really," Wilson said. "Which would you rather
do? Take a good birching or lose your pay?"
Then he felt embarrassed at asking it and before Macomber could answer he
went on, "We all take a beating every day, you know, one way or
another."
This was no better. "Good God," he thought. "I am a
diplomat, aren't I?"
"Yes, we take a beating," said Macomber, still not looking at
him. "I'm awfully sorry about that lion business. It doesn't have to go
any further, does it? I mean no one will hear about it, will they?"
"You mean will I tell it at the Mathaiga Club?" Wilson looked at
h im now coldly. He had not expected this. So he's a bloody four-letter man as
well as a bloody coward, he thought. I rather liked him too until today. But
how is one to know abut an American?
"No," said Wilson. "I'm a professional hunter. We never talk
about our clients. You can be quite easy on that. It's supposed to be bad form
to ask us not to talk though."
He had decided now that to break would be much easier. He would eat, then,
by himself and could read a book with his meals. They would eat by themselves.
He would see them through the safari on a very formal basis—what was it the
French called it? Distinguished consideration—and it would be a damn sight
easier than having to go through this emotional trash. He'd insult him and make
a good clean break. Then he could read a book with his meals and he'd still be
drinking their whisky. That was the phrase for it when a safari went bad. You
ran into another while hunter and you asked, "How is everything
going?" and he answered, "Oh, I'm still drinking their whisky,"
and you knew everything had gone to pot.
"I'm sorry," Macomber said and looked at him with his American
face that would stay adolescent until it became middle-aged, and Wilson noted
his crew-cropped hair, fine eyes only faintly shifty, good nose, thin lips and
handsome jaw. "I'm sorry I didn't realize that. There are lots of things I
don't know."
So what could he do, Wilson thought. He was all ready to break it off
quickly and neatly and here the beggar was apologizing after he had just
insulted him. He made one more attempt. "Don't worry about me
talking," he said. "I have a living to make. You know in Africa no
woman ever misses her lion and no white man ever bolts.
"I bolted like a rabbit," Macomber said.
Now what in hell were you going to do about a man who talked like that,
Wilson wondered.
Wilson looked at Macomber with his flat, blue, machinegunner's eyes and the
other smiled back at him . He had a pleasant smile if you did not notice how
his eyes showed when he was hurt.
"Maybe I can fix it up on buffalo," he said. "We're after
them next, aren't we?
"In the morning if you like," Wilson told him. Perhaps he had
been wrong. This was certainly the way to take it. You most certainly could not
tell a damned thing about an American. He was all for Macomber again. If you
could forget the morning. But, of course, you couldn't. The morning had been
about as bad as they come.
"Here comes the Memsahib," he said. She was walking over from her
tent looking refreshed and cheerful and quite lovely. She had a very perfect
oval face, so perfect that you expected her to be stupid. But she wasn't
stupid, Wilson thought, no, not stupid.
"How is the beautiful red-faced Mr. Wilson? Are you feeling better, Francis,
my pearl?"
"Oh, much," said Macomber.
"I've dropped the whole thing," she said, sitting down at the
table. "What importance is the re to whether Francis is any good at
killing lions? That's not his trade. That's Mr. Wilson's trade. Mr. Wilson is really
very impressive killing anything. You do kill anything, don't you?"
"Oh, anything," said Wilson. "Simply anything." They
are, he thought, the hardest in the world; the hardest, the cruelest, the most
predatory and the most attractive and their men have softened or gone to pieces
nervously as they have hardened. Or is it that they pick men they can handle?
They can't know that much at the age they marry, he thought. He was grateful
that he had gone through his education on American women before now because
this was a very attractive one.
"We're going after buff in the morning," he told her.
"I"m coming," she said.
"No, you're not."
"Oh, yes, I am. Mayn't I, Francis?"
"Why not stay in camp"
"Not for anything," she said. "I wouldn't miss something
like today for anything.
When she left, Wilson was thinking, when she went off to cry, she seemed a
hell of a fine woman. She seemed to understand, to realize, to be hurt to him
and for herself and to know how things really stood. She is away for twenty
minutes and now she is back, simply enameled in that American female cruelty.
They are the damnedest women. Really the damnedest.
"We'll put on another show for you tomorrow," Francis Macomber
said.
"You're not coming," Wilson said.
"You're very mistaken," she told him. "And I want so to see
you perform again. You were lovely this morning. That is if blowing things'
heads of is lovely."
"Here's the lunch," said Wilson. "You're very merry, aren't
you?"
"Why not? I didn't come out here to be dull."
"Well, it hasn't been dull," Wilson said. He could see the
boulders in the river and the high bank beyond with the trees and he remembered
the morning.
"Oh, no," she said. "It's been charming. And tomorrow. You don't
know how I look forward to tomorrow."
"That's eland he's offering you," Wilson said.
"They're the big cowy things that jump like hares, aren't they?"
"I suppose that describes them," Wilson said.
"It's very good meat," Macomber said.
"Yes."
They're not dangerous, are they?"
"Only if they fall on you," Wilson told her.
"I'm so glad."
"Why not let up on the bitchery just a little, Margot," Macomber
said, cutting the eland steak and putting some mashed potato, gravy and carrot
on the down=-turned fork that tined through the piece of meat.
"I suppose I could," she said, "since you put it so
prettily."
"Tonight we'll have champagne for the lion," Wilson said.
"It's a bit too hot at noon."
"Oh, the lion," Margot said. "I'd forgotten the lion!"
So, Robert Wilson thought to himself, she is giving him a ride, isn't she?
Or do you suppose that's her idea of putting up a good show? How should a woman
act when she discovers her husband is a bloody coward? She's damn cruel but
they're all cruel. They govern, of course, and to govern one has to be cruel
sometimes. Still, I've seen enough of their damn terrorism.
"Have some more eland," he said to her politely.
That afternoon, late, Wilson and Macomber went out in the motor car with
the native driver and the two gun-bearers. Mrs. Macomber stayed in the camp. It
was too hot to go out, she said, and she was going with them in the early
morning. As they drove off Wilson saw her standing under the the big tree,
looking pretty rather than beautiful in her faintly rosy khaki, her dark hair
drawn back off her forehead and gathered in a knot low on her neck, her face as
fresh, he thought, as though she were in England. She waved to them as the car
went off through the swale of high grass and curved around through the trees
into the small hills of orchard bush.
In the orchard bush they found a herd of impala, and leaving the car they
stalked one old ram with long, wide-spread horns and Macomber killed it with a
very creditable shot that knocked the buck down at a good two hundred yards and
sent the herd off bounding wildly and leaping over one another's backs in long,
leg-drawn-up leaps as unbelievable and as floating as those one makes sometimes
in dreams.
"That was a good shot," Wilson said. "They're a small
target."
"Is it a worth-while head?" Macomber asked.
"It's excellent," Wilson told him. "You shoot like that and
you'll have no trouble."
"Do you think we'll find buffalo tomorrow?"
"There's good chance of it. They feed out early in the morning and
with luck we may catch them in the open."
I'd like to clear away that lion business," Macomber said.
"It's not very pleasant to have your wife see you do something like
that."
I should think it would be even more unpleasant to do it, Wilson thought,
wife or no wife, or the talk about it having done it. But he said, "I
wouldn't think about that any more. Any one could be upset by his first lion.
That's all over."
But that night after dinner and a whisky and soda by the fire before going
to bed, as Francis Macomber lay on his cot with the mosquito bar over him and
listened to the night noises it was not all over. It was neither all over nor
was it beginning. It was there exactly as it happened with some parts of it
indelibly emphasized and he was miserably ashamed at it. But more than shame he
felt cold, hollow fear in him. The fear was still there like a cold slimy
hollow in all the emptiness where once his confidence had been and it made him
feel sick. It was still there with him now.
It had started the night before when he had wakened and heard the lion
roaring somewhere up along the river. It was a deep sound and at the and there
were sort of coughing grunts that made him seem just outside the tent, and when
Francis Macomber woke in the night to hear it he was afraid. He could hear his
wife breathing quietly, asleep. There was no one to tell he was afraid, nor to
be afraid with him, and, lying alone, he did not know the Somali proverb that
says a brave man is always frightened three times by a lion; when he first sees
his track, when he first hears him roar and when he first confronts him. Then
while they were eating breakfast by lantern light out in the dining tent,
before the sun was up, the lion roared again and Francis thought he was just at
the edge of camp.
"Sounds like an old-timer," Robert Wilson said, looking up from
his kippers and coffee. "Listen to him cough."
"Is he very close?"
"A mile or so up the stream."
"Will we see him?"
"We'll have a look."
"Does his roaring carry that far? It sounds as though he were right in
camp."
"Carries a hell of a long way," said Robert Wilson. "It's
strange the way it carries. Hope he's a shootable cat. The boys said there was
a very big one about here."
"If I get a shot, where should I hi t him," Macomber asked.
"to stop him?"
"In the shoulders," Wilson said. "In the neck if you can
make it. Shoot for bone. Break him down."
"I hope I can place it properly," Macomber said.
"You shoot very well, "Wilson told him. "Take your time.
Make sure of him. The first one in is the one that counts."
"What range will it be?"
"Can't tell. Lion has something to say about that. Won't shoot unless
it's close enough so you can make sure."
"At under a hundred yards?" Macomber asked.
Wilson looked at him quickly.
"Hundred's about right. Might have to take him a bit under. Shouldn't
chance a shot at much over that. A hundred's a decent range. You can hit him
wherever you want at that. Here comes the Memsahib."
"Good morning," she said. "Are we going after that
lion?"
"As soon as you deal with your breakfast," Wilson said.
"How are you feeling?"
"Marvelous," she said. "I'm very excited."
"I'll just go a nd see that everything is ready," Wilson went
off. As he left the lion roared again.
"Noisy beggar," Wilson said. "We'll put a stop to
that."
"What's the matter, Francis?" his wife asked him.
"Nothing," Macomber said.
"Yes, there is," she said. "What are you upset about?"
"Nothing," he said.
"Tell me," she looked at him. "Don't you feel well?"
"It's that damned roaring," she said. "It's been going on
all night, you know."
"Why didn't you wake me, she said. I'd love to heard it.
"I've got to kill the damned thing," Macomber said, miserably.
"Well, that's what you're out here for, isn't it?"
"Yes. But I'm nervous. Hearing the thing roar gets on my nerves."
"Well then, as Wilson said, kill him and stop his roaring."
"Yes, darling," said Francis Macomber. "It sounds easy,
doesn't it?"
"You're not afraid, are you?"
"Of course not. But I'm nervous from hearing him roar all night."
"You'll kill him marvelously," she said. "I know you will.
I'm awfully anxious to see it."
"Finish your breakfast and we'll be starting."
It's not light yet," she said. "This is a ridiculous hour."
Just then as the lion roared in a deep-chested moaning, suddenly guttural,
ascending vibration that seemed to shake the air and ended in a sigh and a
heavy, deep-chested grunt.
"He sounds almost here," Macomber's wife said.
"My God," said Macomber. "I hate that damned noise."
"It's very impressive."
"Impressive. It's frightful."
Robert Wilson came up then carrying his short, ugly, shockingly big-bored
.505 Gibbs and grinning.
"Come on," he said. "Your gun-bearer has your Springfield
and the big gun. Everything's in the car. Have you solids?"
"Yes."
"I'm ready," Mrs. Macomber said.
"Must make him stop that racket," Wilson said. "You got in
front. The Memsahib can sit back here with me."
They climbed into the motor car and, in the gray first day-light, moved off
up the river through the trees. Macomber opened the breech of his rifle and saw
had metal-cased bullets, shut the bolt and put the rifle on safety. He saw his
hand was trembling. He felt in his pocket for more cartridges and moved his
fingers over the cartridges in the loops of his tunic front. He turned back to
where Wilson sat in the rear seat of the doorless, box-bodied motor car beside
his wife, them both grinning with excitement, and Wilson leaned forward and
whispered, "See the birds dropping. Means the old boy has left his
kill."
On the far bank of the stream Macomber could see, above the trees, vultures
circling and plummeting down.
"Chances are he'll come to drink along here," Wilson whispered.
Before he goes to lay up. Keep an eye out."
They were driving slowly along the high bank of the stream which here cut
deeply to its boulder-filled bed, and they wound in and o ut through big trees
as they drove. Macomber was watching the opposite bank when he felt Wilson take
hold of his arm. The car stopped.
"There he is," he heard the whisper. "Ahead and to the
right. Get out and take him. He's marvelous lion."
Macomber saw the lion now. He was standing almost broadside, his great head
up and turned toward them. The early morning breeze that blew toward them was
just stirring his dark mane, and the lion looked huge, silhouetted on the rise
of bank in the gray morning light, his shoulders heavy, his barrel of a body
bulking smoothly.
"How far is he?" asked Macomber, raising his rifle.
"About seventy-five. Get out and take him."
"Why not shoot from where I am?"
"You don't shoot them from cars," he heard Wilson saying in his
car. "Get out. He's not going to stay there all day."
Macomber stepped out of the curved opening at the side of the front seat,
onto the step and down onto the ground. The lion still stood looking
majestically and coolly toward this object that his eyes only showed in
silhouette, bulking like some superrhino. There was no man smell carried toward
his and he watched the object, moving his great head a little from side to
side. Then watching the object, not afraid, but hesitating before going down
the bank to drink with such a thing opposite him, he saw a man figure detach
itself from it and he turned his heavy head and swung away toward the cover for
the trees as he heard a cracking crash and felt the slam of a .30-06 220-grain
solid bullet that bit his flank and ripped in sudden hot scalding nausea
through his stomach. He trotted, heavy, big-footed, swinging wounded
lull-bellied, the trees toward the tall grass and cover, and the crash came
again to go past him ripping the air apart. Then it crashed again and he felt
the blow as it hit his lower ribs and ripped on through, blood sudden hot and
frothy in his mouth, and he galloped toward the high grass where he could
crouch and not be seen and make them bring the crashing thing close enough so
he could make a rush and get the man that held it.
Macomber had not thought how the lion felt as he got out of the car. He
only knew his hands were shaking and as he walked away from the car it was
almost impossible for him to make his legs move. They were stiff in the thighs,
but he could feel the muscles fluttering. He raised the rifle, sighted on the
junction of the lion's head and shoulders and pulled the trigger. Nothing
happened though he pulled until he thought his finger would break. Then he knew
he had the safety on and as he lowered the rifle to move the safety over he
moved another frozen pace forward, and the lion seeing his silhouette now clear
of the silhouette of the car, turned an started off at a trot, and, as Macomber
fired, he heard a whunk that meant that the bullet was home; but the lion kept
on going. Macomber shot again and every one saw the bullet throw a spout of
dirt beyond the trotting lion. He shot again, remembering to lower his aim, and
they all heard the bullet hit, and the lion went into a gallop and was in the
tall grass before he had the bolt pushed forward.
Macomber stood there feeling sick at his stomach, his hands that held the
springfield still cocked, shaking, and his wife and Robert Wilson were standing
by him. Beside him too were the two gun-bearers chattering in Wakamba.
"I hit him," Macomber said. "I hit him twice."
"You gut-shot him and you hit him somewhere forward," Wilson said
without enthusiasm. The gun-bearers looked very grave. They were silent now.
"You may have killed him" Wilson went on. "We'll have to
wait a while before we go in to find out."
"What do you mean?"
"Let him get sick before we follow him up."
"Oh," said Macomber.
"He's a hell of a fine lion," Wilson said cheerfully. "He's
gotten into a bad place though."
"Why is it bad?"
"Can't see him until you 're on him."
"Oh," said Macomber.
"Come on," said Wilson. "The Memsahib can stay here in the
car. We'll go to have a look at the blood spoor."
"Stay here, Margot," Macomber said to his wife. His mouth was
very dry and it was hard for him to talk.
"Why?" she asked.
"Wilson says to."
"We're going to have a look," Wilson said. "You stay her.
You can see even better from here."
"All right."
Wilson spoke in Swahili to the driver. He nodded and said, "Yes,
Bwana."
Then they went down the steep bank and across the stream, climbing over and
around the boulders and up the other bank, pulling up by some projecting roots,
and along it until they found where the lion had been trotting when Macomber
first shot. There was dark blood on the short grass that the gun-bearers
pointed out with grass stems, and that ran away behind the river bank trees.
"What do we do?" asked Macomber.
"Not much choice," said Wilson. "We can't br ing the car
over. Bank's too steep. We'll let him stiffen up a bit and then you and I'll go
in and have a look for him."
"Can't we set the grass on fire?" Macomber asked.
"Too green."
"Can't we send beaters?"
Wilson looked at him appraisingly. "Of course
we can," he said. "But it's just a touch murderous. You see we know
the lion's wounded. You can drive an unwounded lion—he'll move on ahead of a
noise—but a wounded lion's going to charge. You can't see him until you're
right on him. He'll make himself perfectly flat in cover you wouldn't think
would hide a hare. You can't very well send boys in there to that sort of a
show. Somebody bound to get mauled."
"What about the
gun-bearers?"
"Oh, they'll go with us. It's
their shauri. You see, they signed on for it. They don't look too happy though,
do they?"
"I don't want to go in
there," said Macomber. It was out before he knew he'd said it.
"Neither do I," said
Wilson very chee rily. "Really no choice though." Then, as an
afterthought, he glanced at Macomber and saw suddenly how he was trembling and
the pitiful look on his face.
"You don't have to go in, of
course," he said. "that's what I'm hired for, you know. That's why
I'm so expensive."
"You mean you'd go in by
yourself? Why not leave him there?"
Robert Wilson, whose entire
occupation had been with the lion ands the problem he presented, and who had
not been thinking about Macomber except to note that he was rather windy,
suddenly felt as though he had opened the wrong door in a hotel and seen
something shameful.
"What do you mean?"
"Why not just leave him?"
"You mean pretend to ourselves
he hasn't been hit?"
"No. Just drop it.
"It isn't done."
"Why not?"
"For one thing, he's certain to
be suffering. For another, some one else might run on to him."
"I see."
"But you don't have to have
anything to do with it."
"I'd like to," Macomber
said. "I'm just scared, you know."
"I'll go ahead when we go
in," Wilson said, "with Kongoni tracking. You keep behind me and a
little to one side. Chances are we'll hear him growl. If we see him we'll both
shoot. Don't worry about anything. I'll keep you backed up. As a matter of
fact, you know, perhaps you'd better not go. It might be much better. Why don't
you go over and join the Memsahib while I just get it over with?"
"No, I want to go."
"All right," said Wilson.
"But don't go in if you don't want to. This is my shauri now, you
know."
"I want to go," said
Macomber.
They sat under a tree and smoked.
"What to go back and speak to
the Memsahib while we're waiting?" Wilson asked.
"No."
"I'll just step back and tell
her to be patient."
"Good," said Macomber. He
sat there, sweating under his arms, his mouth dry, his stomach hollow feeling,
wanting to find courage to tell Wilson to go on and finish off the lion without
him. He could not know that Wilson was furious because he had not noticed the
state he was in earlier and sent him back to his wife. While he sat there
Wilson came up. "I have your big gun," he said. "Take it. We've
given him time, I think. Come on."
Macomber took the big gun and Wilson
said"
"Keep behind me and about five
yards to the right and do exactly as I tell you." Then he spoke in Swahili
to the two gun-bearers who looked the picture of gloom.
"Let's go," he said.
"Could I have a drink of
water?" Macomber asked. Wilson spoke to the older gun-bearer, who wore a
canteen on his belt, and the man unbuckled it, unscrewed the top and handed it
to Macomber, who took it noticing how heavy it seemed and how hairy and shoddy
the felt covering was in his hand. He raised it to drink and looked ahead at
the high grass with the flat-topped trees behind it. A breeze was blowing
toward them and the grass rippled gently in the wind. He looked at the
gun-bearer and he could see the gun-bearer was suffering too with fear.
Thirty-five yards into the grass the
big lion lay flattened out along the ground. His ears where back and his only
movement was a slight twitching up and down of his long, black-tufted tail. He
had turned at bay as soon as he had reached this cover and he was sick with the
wound through his full belly, and weakening with the wound through his lungs
that brought a thin foamy red to his mouth each time he breathed. His flanks
were wet and hot and flies were on the little openings the solid bullets had
made in his tawny hide, and his big yellow eyes, narrowed with hate, looked
straight ahead, only blinking when the pain came as he breathed, and his claws
dug in the soft baked earth. All of him, pain, sickness, hatred and all of his
remaining strength, was tightening into an absolute concentration for a rush.
He could hear the men talking and he waited, gathering all of himself into this
preparation for a charge as soon as the men would come into the grass. As he
heard their voices his tail stiffened to twitch up and down, and, as they came
into the edge of the grass, he made a coughing grunt and charged.
Kongoni, the old gun-bearer, in the
lead watching the blood spoor, Wilson watching the grass for any movement, his
big gun ready, the second gun-bearer looking ahead and listening, Macomber
close to Wilson, his rifle cocked, they had just moved into the grass when
Macomber hear the blood-choked coughing grunt, and saw the swishing rush in the
grass. The next thing he knew he was running; running wildly, in panic in the
open, running toward the stream.
He heard the ca-ra-wong! of Wilson's
big rifle, and again in a second crashing carawong! and turning saw the lion,
horrible-looking now, with half his head seeming to be gone, crawling toward
Wilson in the edge of the tall grass while the red-faced man worked the belt on
the short ugly rifle and aimed carefully as another blasting carawong! came
from the muzzle, and the crawling, heavy, yellow bulk of the lion stiffened and
the huge, mutilated head slid forward and Macomber, standing by himself in the
clearing where he had run, holding a loaded rifle, while two black men and a
white man looked back at him in contempt, knew the lion was dead. He came
toward Wilson, his tallness all seeming a naked reproach, and Wilson looked at
him and said:
"Want to take pictures?"
"No," he said.
That was all any one had said until
they reached the motor car. Then Wilson had said:
"Hell of a fine lion. Boys will
skin him out. We might as well stay here in the shade."
Macomber's wife had not looked at
him nor he at her and he had sat by her in the back seat with Wilson sitting in
the front seat. Once he had reached over and taken his wife's hand without
looking at her and she had removed her hand from his. Looking across the stream
to where the gun-bearers were skinning out the lion he could see that she had
been able to see the whole thing. While they sat there his wife had reached
forward and put her hand on Wilson's shoulder. He turned and she had leaned
forward over the low seat and kissed him on the mouth.
"Oh, I say," said Wilson,
going redder than his natural baked color.
"Mr. Robert Wilson," she
said. "The beautiful red-faced Mr. Robert Wilson."
Then she sat down beside Macomber
again and looked away across the stream to where the lion lay, with uplifted,
white-muscled, tendon-marked naked forearms, and white bloating belly, as the
black men fleshed away the skin. Finally the gun-bearer brought the skin over,
wet and heavy, and climbed in behind with it, rolling it up before they got in,
and the motor car started. No one had said anything more until they were back
in camp.
That was the story of the lion. Macomber
did not know how the lion had felt before he started his rush, nor during it
when the unbelievable smash of the .505 with a muzzle velocity of two tons had
hit him in the mouth, nor what kept him coming after that, when the second
ripping crash had smashed his hind quarters and he had come crawling on toward
the crashing, blasting thing that had destroyed him. Wilson knew something
about it and only expressed it by saying, "Damned fine lion," but
Macomber did not know how Wilson felt abut things either. He did not know how
his wife felt except that she was through with him.
His wife had been through with him
before but it never lasted. He was very wealthy, and would be much wealthier,
and he knew she would not leave him ever now. That was one of the few things
that he really knew. He knew about that, about motorcycles—that was
earliest—about motor cars, about duck-shooting, about fishing, trout, salmon
and big-sea, about sex in books, many books, too many books, about all court
games, about dogs, not much about horses, about hanging on to his money, abut
most of the other things his world dealt in, and about his wife not leaving
him. His wife had been a great beauty and she was still a great beauty in
Africa, but she was not a great enough beauty any more at home to be able to
leave him and better herself and she knew it and he knew it. She had missed the
chance to leave him and he knew it. If he had been better with women she would
probably have started to worry about him getting another new, beautiful wife;
but she knew too much about him to worry about him either. Also he had always
had a great tolerance which seemed the nicest thing about him if it were not
the most sinister.
All in all they were known as a
comparatively happily married couple, one of those whose disruption is often
rumored but never occurs, and as the society columnist put it, they were adding
more than a spice of adventure to their much envied and ever enduring romance
by a Safari in what was known as Darkest Africa until the Martin Johnsons
lighted it on so many silver screens where they were pu rsuing Old Simba the
lion, the buffalo, Tembo the elephant and as well collecting specimens for the
Museum of Natural History. This same columnist had reported them on the verge
as least three times in the past and they had been. But they always made it up.
They had a sound basis of union. Margot was too beautiful for Macomber to
divorce her and Macomber had too much money for Margot ever to leave him.
It was now about three o'clock in
the morning and Francis macomber, who had been asleep a little while after he
had stopped thinking about the lion, wakened and then slept again, woke
suddenly, frightened in a dream of the bloody-headed lion standing over him,
and listening while his heart pounded, he realized that his wife was not in the
other cot in the tent. He lay awake with the knowledge of two hours.
At the end of that time his wife
came into the tent, lifted her mosquito bar and crawled cozily into bed.
"Where have you been?"
Macomber asked in the darkness.
"Hello," she said.
"Are you awake?"
"Where have you been?"
"I just went out to get a
breath of air."
"You did, like hell."
"What do you want me to say,
darling?"
"Where have you been?"
"Out to get a breath of
air."
"That's a new name for it. You
are a bitch."
"Well, you're coward."
"All right," he said.
"What of it?"
"Nothing as far as I'm
concerned. But please let's not talk, darling, because I'm very sleepy."
"You think that I'll take
anything."
"I know you will, sweet."
"Well, I won't."
"Please, darling, let's not
talk. I'm so very sleepy."
"There wasn't going to be any
of that. You promised there wouldn't be."
"Well, there is now," she
said sweetly.
"You said if we made this trip
that there would be none of that. You promised."
"Yes, darling. That's the way I
meant it to be. But the trip was spoiled yesterday. We don't have to talk about
it, do we?"
"You don't wait long when you
have an advantage, do you?"
"Please let's not talk.
I"m so sleepy, darling."
"I'm going to talk."
"Don't mind me then, because
I'm going to sleep." And she did.
At breakfast they were all three at
the table before daylight and Francis Macomber found that, of all the many men
that he had hated, he hated Robert Wilson the most.
"Sleep well?" Wilson asked
in his throaty voice, filling a pipe.
"Did you?"
"Topping," the white
hunter told him.
You bastard, thought Macomber, you
insolent bastard.
So she woke him when she came in,
Wilson thought, looking at them both with his flat, cold eyes. Well, why
doesn't he keep his wife where she belongs?" What does he think I am, a
bloody plaster saint? Let him keep her where she belongs. It's his own fault.
"Do you think we'll find
buffalo?" Margot asked, pushing away a dish of apricots."
"Chance of it," Wilson
said and smiled at her. "Why do n't you stay in camp?"
"Not for anything," she
told him.
"Why not order her to stay in
camp?" Wilson said to Macomber.
"Your order her," said
Macomber coldly.
"Let's not have any ordering,
nor," turning to Macomber, "any silliness, Francis," Margot said
quite pleasantly.
"Are you ready to start?"
Macomber asked.
"Any time," Wilson told
him. "Do you want the Memsahib to go?"
"Does it make any difference
whether I do or not?"
The hell with it, thought Robert
Wilson. The utter complete hell with it. So this is what it's going to be like.
Well, this is what it's going to be like, then.
"Makes no difference," he
said.
"You're sure you wouldn't like
to stay in camp with her yourself and let me go out and hunt the buffalo?
Macomber asked.
"Can't do that," said
Wilson. "Wouldn't talk rot if I were you."
"I'm not talking rot. I'm
disgusted."
"Bad word, disgusted."
"Francis, will you please try
to s peak sensibly!" his wife said.
"I speak too damned
sensibly," Macomber said. "Did you ever eat such filthy food?"
"Something wrong with the
food?" asked Wilson quietly.
"No more than with everything
else."
"I'd pull yourself together,
laddybuck," Wilson said very quietly. "There's a boy waits at table
that understands a little English."
"The hell with him."
Wilson stood up and puffing on his
pipe strolled away, speaking a few words in Swahili to one of the gun-bearers
who was standing waiting for him. Macomber and his wife sat on at the table. He
was staring at his coffee cup.
"If you make a scene I'll leave
you, darling," Margot said quietly.
"No, you won't."
"You can try it and see."
"You won't leave me."
"No," she said. "I
won't leave you and you'll behave yourself."
"Behave myself? That's a way to
talk. Behave myself."
"Yes. Behave yourself."
"Why don't you try
behaving?"
"I've tried it so long. So very
long."
"I hate that red-faced
swine," Macomber said. "I loathe the sight of him."
"He's really very nice."
"Oh, shut up," Macomber
almost shouted. Just then the car came up and stopped in front of the dining
tent and the driver and the two gun-bearers got out. Wilson walked over and
looked at the husband and wife sitting there at the table.
"Going, shooting?" he
asked.
"Yes," said Macomber,
standing up. "Yes."
"Better bring a woolly. It will
be cool in the car," Wilson said.
"I'll get my leather
jacket," Margot said.
"The boy has it," Wilson
told her. He climbed into the front with the driver and Francis Macomber and
his wife sat, not speaking, in the back seat.
Hope the silly beggar doesn't take a
notion to blow the back of my head off, Wilson thought to himself. Women are a
nuisance on safari.
The car was grinding down to cross
the river at a pebbly ford in the gray daylight and then climb ed, angling up
the steep bank, where Wilson had ordered a way shoveled out the day before so
they could reach the parklike wooded rolling country on the far side.
It was a good morning, Wilson
thought. There was a heavy dew and as the wheels went through the grass and low
bushes he could smell the odor of the crushed fronds. It was an odor like
verbena and he liked this early morning smell of the dew, the crushed bracken and
the look of the tree trunks showing black through the early morning mist, as
the car made its way through the untracked, parklike country. He had put the
two in the back seat out of his mind now and was thinking about buffalo. The
buffalo that he was after stayed in the daytime in a thick swamp where it was
impossible to get a shot, but in the night they fed out into an open stretch of
country and if he could come between them and their swamp with the car,
Macomber would have a good chance at them in the open. He did not want to hunt
buff or anything else with Macomber at all, but he was a professional hunter
and he had hunted with some rare ones in his time. If they got buff today there
would only be rhino to come and the poor man would have gone through his
dangerous game and things might pick up. He'd have nothing more to do with the
woman and Macomber would get over that too. He must have gone through plenty of
that before by the look of things. Poor beggar. He must have a way of getting
over it. Well, it was the poor sod's own bloody fault.
He, Robert Wilson, carried a double
size cot on safari to accommodate any windfalls he might receive. He had hunted
for a certain clientele, the international, fast, sporting set, where the women
did not feel they were getting their money's worth unless they had shared that
cot with the white hunter. He despised them when he was away from them although
he liked some of them well enough at the time, but he made his living by them;
and their standards were his standards as long as they were hiring him.
They were his standards in all
except the shooting. He had his own standards about the killing and they could
live up to them or get some one else to hunt them. He knew, too, that they all
respected him for this. This Macomber was an odd one though. Damned if he
wasn't. Now the wife. Well, the wife. Yes, the wife. Hm, the wife. Well he's
dropped all that. He looked around at them. Macomber sat grim and furious.
Margot smiled at him. She looked younger today, more innocent and fresher and
not so professionally beautiful. What's in her heart God knows, Wilson thought.
She hadn't talked much last night. At that it was a pleasure to see her.
The motor car climbed up a slight
rise and went on through the trees and then out into a grassy prairie-like
opening and kept in the shelter of the trees along the edge, the driver going
slowly and Wilson looking carefully out across the prairie and all along its
far side. He stopped the car and studied the opening with his field glasses. Then
he motioned to the driver to go on and the car moved slowly along, the driver
avoiding wart-hog holes and driving around the mud castles ants had built.
Then, looking across the opening, Wilson suddenly turned and said, "By
God, there they are!"
And looking where he pointed, while
the car jumped forward and Wilson spoke in rapid Swahili to the driver,
Macomber saw three huge, black animals looking almost cylindrical in their long
heaviness, like big black tank cars, moving at a gallop across the far edge of
the open prairie. They moved at a stiff-necked, stiff bodied gallop and he
could see the upswept wide black horns on their heads as they galloped heads
out; the heads not moving.
"They're three old bulls,"
Wilson said. "We'll cut them off before they get to the swamp."
The car was going a wild forty-five
miles an hour across the open and as Macomber watched, the buffalo got bigger
and bigger until he could see the gray, hairless, scabby l ook of one huge bull
and how his neck was a part of his shoulders and the shiny black of his horns
as he galloped a little behind the others that were strung out in that steady
plunging gait; and then, the car swaying as though it had just jumped a road,
they drew up close ands he could see the plunging hugeness of the bull, and the
dust in his sparsely haired hide, the wide boss of horn and his outstretched,
wide-nostrilled muzzle, and he was raising his rifle when Wilson shouted,
"Not from the car, you fool!" and he had no fear, only hatred of
Wilson, while the brakes clamped on and the car skidded, plowing sideways to an
almost stop and Wilson was out on one side and he on the other, stumbling as
his feet hit the still speeding-by of the earth, and then he was shooting at
the bull as he moved away, hearing the bullets whunk into him, emptying his
riffle at him as he moved steadily away, finally remembering to get his shots
forward into the shoulder, and as he fumbled to reload, he saw the bull was
down. Down on his knees, his big head tossing, and seeing the other two still
galloping he shot at the leader and hit him. He shot again and missed and he
heard the carawonging roar as Wilson shot and saw the leading bull slide
forward onto his nose.
"Get that other," Wilson
said. "Now you're shooting!"
But the other bull was moving
steadily at the same gallop and he missed, throwing a spout of dirt, and Wilson
missed and the dust rose in a cloud and Wilson shouted, "Come on."
He's too far!" and grabbed his arm and they were in the car again,
Macomber and Wilson hanging on the sides and rocketing swayingly over the
uneven ground, drawing up on the steady, plunging, heavy-necked,
straight-moving gallop of the bull.
They were behind him and Macomber
was filling his rifle, dropping shells onto the ground, jamming it, clearing
the jam, then they were almost up with the bull when Wilson yelled
"Stop," and the car skidded so that it almost swung over and Macomber
fell forward as he aimed into the galloping, rounded black back, aimed and shot
again, then again, then again, and the bullets, all of them hitting, had no
effect on the buffalo that he could see. Then Wilson shot, the roar deafening
him, and he could see the bull stagger. Macomber shot again, aiming carefully,
and down he came, onto his knees.
"All right," Wilson said.
"Nice work. That's the three."
Macomber felt a drunken elation.
"How many times did you
shoot?" he asked.
"Just three," Wilson said.
"You killed the first bull. The biggest one. I helped you finish the other
two. Afraid they might have got into cover. You had them killed. I was just
mopping up a little. You shot damn well.
"Let's go to the car,"
said Macomber. "I want a drink."
"Got to finish off that buff
first," Wilson told him. The buffalo was on his knees and he jerked his
head furiously and bellowed in pig-eyed, roaring rage as they came toward him.
"Watch h e doesn't get
up," Wilson said. Then, "Get a little broadside and take him in the
neck just behind the ear."
Macomber aimed carefully at the
center of the huge, jerking, rage-driven neck and shot. At the shot the head
dropped forward.
"That does it," said
Wilson. "Got the spine. They're a hell of a fine-looking thing, aren't
they?"
"Let's get the drink,"
said Macomber. In his life he had never felt so good.
"In the car Macomber's wife sat
very white-faced. "You were marvelous, darling," she said to
Macomber. "What a ride."
"Was it rough?" Wilson
asked.
"It was frightful. I've never
been more frightened in my life."
"Let's all have a drink,"
Macomber said.
"By all means," said
Wilson. "Give it to the Memsahib." She drank the neat whisky from the
flask and shuddered a little when she swallowed. She handed the flask to
Macomber who handed it to Wilson.
"It was frightfully
exciting," she said. "It's given me a dreadful headache. I didn't
know you were allowed to shoot them from cars though."
"No one shot from cars,"
said Wilson coldly.
"I mean chase them from cars."
"Wouldn't ordinarily,"
Wilson said. "Seemed sporting enough to me though while we were doing it.
Taking more chance driving that way across the plain full of holes and one
thing and another than hunting on foot. Buffalo could have charged us each time
we shot if he liked. Gave him every chance. Wouldn't mention it to anyone
though. It's illegal if that's what you mean."
"It seemed very unfair to
me," Margot said, "chasing those big helpless things in a motor
car."
"Did it?" said Wilson.
"What would happen if they
heard about it in Nairobi?"
"I'd lose my license for one
thing. Other unpleasantnesses," Wilson said, taking a drink from the
flask. "I'd be out of business."
"Really?"
"You have such a pretty way of
putting things, Francis," Margot Macomber said. Wilson looked at them
both. If a four-letter man marries a five-letter woman, he was
thinking, what number of letters would their children be? What
he said was, "We lost a gun-bearer. Did you notice it?"
"My God, no," Macomber
said.
"Here he comes," Wilson
said. "He's all right. He must have fallen off when we left the first
bull."
Approaching them was the middle-aged
gun-bearer, limping along in his knitted cap, khaki tunic, shorts and rubber
sandals, gloomy-faced and disgusted looking. As he came up he called out to
Wilson in Swahili and they all saw the change in the white hunter's face.
"What does he say?" asked
Margot.
"He says the first bull got up
and went into the bush," Wilson said with no expression in his voice.
"Oh," said Macomber
blankly.
"Then it's going to be just
like the lion," said Margot, full of anticipation.
"It's not going to be a dammed
bit like the lion," Wilson told her. "Did you want another drink
Macomber?"
"Thanks, yes, Macomber said. He
expected the feeling he had had about the lion to come back but it did not. For
the first time in his life he rally felt wholly without fear. Instead of fear
he had a feeling of definite elation.
"We'll go and have a look at
the second bull," Wilson said. "I'll tell the driver to put the car
in the shade."
"What are you going to
do?" asked Margaret Macomber.
"Take a look at the buff,"
Wilson said.
"I'll come."
"Come along."
The three of them walked over to
where the second buffalo bulked blackly in the open, head forward on the grass,
the massive horns swung wide.
"He's a very good head,"
Wilson said. "That's close to a fifty-inch spread."
Macomber was looking at him with
delight.
"He's hateful looking,"
said Margot. "Can't we go into the shade?"
"Of course," Wilson said.
"Look," he said to Macomber, and pointed. "See that patch of
bush?"
"Yes."
"That's where the first bull
went in. The gun-bearer said when he fell off the bull was down. He was
watching us helling along and the other two buff galloping. When he looked up
there was the bull up and looking at him. Gun-bearer ran like hell and the bull
went off slowly into the bush."
"Can we go in after him
now?" asked Macomber eagerly.
Wilson looked at him appraisingly.
Damned if this isn't a strange one, he thought. Yesterday he's scared sick and
today he's a ruddy fire eater.
"No, we'll give him a
while."
"Let's please go into the
shade," Margot said. Her face was white and she looked ill.
They made their way to the car where
it stood under a single, wide-spreading tree and all climbed in.
"Chances are he's dead in
there," Wilson remarked. "After a little we'll have a look."
Macomber felt a wild unreasonable
happiness that he h ad never known before.
"By God, that was a
chase," he said. "I've never felt any such feeling. Wasn't it
marvelous, Margot?"
"I hated it."
"Why?"
"I hated it," she said
bitterly. "I loathed it."
"You know I don't think I'd
ever be afraid of anything again," Macomber said to Wilson.
"Something happened in me after we first saw the buff and started after
him. Like a dam bursting. It was pure excitement."
"Cleans out your liver,"
said Wilson." Damn funny things happen to people."
Macomber's face was shining.
"You know something did happen to me," he said. "I feel
absolutely different."
His wife said nothing and eyed him
strangely. She was sitting far back in the seat and Macomber was sitting
forward talking to Wilson who turned sideways talking over the back of the
front seat.
"You know, I'd like to try
another lion," Macomber said. "I'm really not afraid of them now.
After all, what can they do to you?"
"That's it," said Wilson.
"Worst one can do is kill you. How does it go? Shakespeare. Damned good.
See if I can remember. Oh, damned good. Used to quote it to myself at one time.
Let's see. 'By my troth, I care not; a man can die but once; we owe God a death
and let it go which way it will he that dies this year is quit for the next.'
Damned fine, oh?"
He was very embarrassed, having
brought out this thing he had lived by, but he had seen men come of age before
and it always moved him. It was not a matter of their twenty-first birthday.
It had taken a strange chance of
hunting, a sudden precipitation into action without opportunity for worrying
beforehand, to bring this about with Macomber, but regardless of how it had
happened it had most certainly happened. Look at the beggar now, Wilson
thought. It's that some of them stay little boys so long, Wilson thought.
Sometimes all their lives. Their figures stay boyish when they're fifty. The
great American boy-men. Damned strange people. But he like this Macomber now.
Damned strange fellow. Probably meant the end of cuckoldry too. Well, that
would be a damned good thing. Damned good thing. Beggar had probably been
afraid all his life. Don't know what started it. But over now. Hadn't had time
to be afraid with the buff. That and being angry too. Motor car too. Motor cars
made it familiar. Be a damn fire eater now. He'd seen it in the war work the
same way. More of a change than any loss of virginity. Fear gone like an
operation. Something else grew in its place. Main thing a man had. Made him
into a man. Women knew it too. No bloody fear.
From the far corner of the seat
Margaret Macomber looked at the two of them. There was no change in Wilson. She
saw Wilson as she had seen him the day before when she had first realized what
his great talent was. But she saw the change in Francis Macomber now.
"Do you have that feeling of
happiness about what's going to happen?" Macomber asked, still exploring
his new wealth.
"You're not supposed to mention
it," Wilson said, looking in the other's face. "Much more fashionable
to say you're scared. Mind you, you'll be scared too, plenty of times."
But you have a feeling of happiness
about action to come?"
"Yes," said Wilson.
"There's that. Doesn't do to talk too much about all this. Talk the whole
thing away. No pleasure in anything if you mouth it up too much.
"You're both talking rot,"
said Margot. "Just because you've chased some helpless animals in a motor
car you talk like heroes.
"Sorry," said Wilson.
"I have been gassing too much." She's worried about it already, he
thought.
"If you don't know what we're
talking about why not keep out of it?" Macomber asked his wife.
"You've gotten awfully brave,
awfully suddenly," his wife said contemptuously, but her contempt was not
secure. She was very afraid of something.
Macomber laughed, a very natural
hearty laugh. "You know I have," he said. "I really have."
"Isn't it sort of late?"
Margot said bitterly. Because she had done the best she could for many years
back and the way they were together now was no one person's fault.
"Not for me," said
Macomber.
Margot said nothing but sat back in
the corner of the seat.
"Do you think we've given him
time enough?" Macomber asked Wilson cheerfully.
"We might have a look,"
Wilson said. "Have you any solids left?"
"The gun-bearer has some."
Wilson called in Swahili and the
older gun-bearer, who was skinning out one of the heads, straightened up,
pulled a box of solids out of his pocket end brought them over to Macomber, who
filled his magazine and put the remaining shells in his pocket.
"You might as well shoot the
Springfield," Wilson said. "You're used to it. We'll leave the
Mannlicher in the car with the Memsahib. Your gun-bearer can carry your heavy
gun. I've this damned cannon. Now let me tell you about them." He had
saved this until the last because he did not want to worry Macomber. "When
a buff comes he comes with his head high and thrust straight out. The boss of
the horns covers any sort of a brain shot. The only shot is straight into the
nose. The only other shot is into his chest or, if you're to one side, into the
neck or the shoulders. After they've been hit once they take a hell of a lot of
killing. Don't try anything fancy. Take the easiest shot there is. They've
finished skinning out that head now. Should we get started.?"
He called to the gun-bearers, who
came up wiping their hands, and the older one got into the back.
"I'll only take Kongoni,"
Wilson said. "The other can watch to keep the birds away."
As the car moved slowly across the
open space toward the island of brushy trees that ran in a tongue of foliage
along a dry water course that cut the open swale, Macomber felt his heart
pounding and his mouth was dry again, but it was excitement, not fear.
"Here's where he went in,"
Wilson said. Then to the gun-bearer in Swahili, "Take the blood
spoor."
The car was parallel to the patch of
bush. Macomber, Wilson and the gun-bearer got down. Macomber, looking back, saw
his wife, with the rifle by her side, looking at him. He waved to her and she
did not wave back.
The brush was very thick ahead and
the ground was dry. The middle-aged gun-bearer was sweating heavily and Wilson
had his hat down over his eyes and his red neck showed just ahead of Macomber.
Suddenly the gun-bearer said something in Swahili to Wilson and ran forward.
"He's dead in there,"
Wilson said. "Good work," and he turned to grip. Macomber's hand and
as they shook hands, grinning at each other, the gun-bearer shouted wildly and
they saw him coming out of the bush sideways, fast as a crab, and the bull
coming, nose out, mouth tight closed, blood dripping, missive head straight
out, coming in a charge, his little pig eyes bloodshot as he looke d at them.
Wilson who was ahead was kneeling shooting, and Macomber, as he fired,
unhearing his shot in the roaring of Wilson's gun, saw fragments like slate
burst from the huge boss of the horns, and the head jerked, he shot again at
the wide nostrils and saw the horns jolt again and fragment fly, and he did not
see Wilson now and, aiming carefully, shot again with the buffalo's huge bulk
almost on him and his rifle almost level with the on-coming head, nose out, and
he could see the little wicked eyes and the head started to lower and he felt a
sudden white-hot, blinding flash explode inside his head and that was all he
ever felt.
Wilson had ducked to one side to get
in a shoulder shot. Macomber had stood solid and shot for the nose, shooting a
touch high each time and hitting the heavy horns, splintering and chipping them
like hitting a slate roof, and Mrs. Macomber, in the car, had shot at the
buffalo with the 6.5 Mannlicher as it seemed about to gore Macomber and had hit
her husband about two inches up and a little to one side of the base of his
skull.
Francis Macomber lay now, face down,
not two yards from where the buffalo lay on his side and his wife knelt over
him with Wilson beside her.
"I wouldn't turn him
over," Wilson said.
The woman was crying hysterically.
"I'd get back in the car,"
Wilson said. "Where's the rifle?"
She shook her head, her face
contorted. The gun-bearer picked up the rifle.
Leave it as it is," said
Wilson. Then, "Go get Abdulla so that he may witness the manner of the
accident."
He knelt down, took a handkerchief
from his pocket, and spread it over Francis Macomber's crew-cropped head where
it lay. The blood sank into the dry, loose earth.
Wilson stood up and saw the buffalo
on his side, his legs out, his thinly-haired belly crawling with ticks.
"Hell of a good bull," his brain registered automatically. "A
good fifty inches, or better. Better." He called to the driver and told
him to spread a blanket over the body and stay by it. Then he walked over to
the motor car where the woman sat crying in the corner.
"That was a pretty thing to
do," he said in a toneless voice. "He would have left you too."
"Stop it," she said.
"Of course it's an
accident," he said. "I know that."
"Stop it," she said.
"Don't worry," he said. "There will be a certain amount of
unpleasantness but I will have some photographs taken that will be very useful
at the inquest. There's the testimony of the gun-bearer and the driver too.
You're perfectly all right."
"Stop it," she said.
"There's a hell of a lot to be done," he said. "And I'll
have to send a truck off to the lake to wireless for a plane to take the three
of us into Nairobi. Why didn't you poison him? That's what they do in
England."
"Stop it. Stop it. Stop it," the woman cried.
Wilson looked at her with his flat blue eyes.
"I'm through now," he said. "I was a little angry. I'd begun
to like your husband."
"Oh, please stop it," she said. "Please, please stop
it."
"That's better," Wilson said. "Please is much better. Now
I'll stop."
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