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Then the fat canvas bag was in his hands, the contents crunched nuttily as he tore at the drawstring. Nothing else in the world felt like that.
"Such a diamond as you will never see again." The drawstring was knotted tightly. Johnny ran back to the Land-Rover. Frantically he scrabbled in the seat locker an with the nile . he cut the rawstring an dumpe the contents of the bag on to the bonnet of the Land-Rover.
"Oh G.o.d! Oh sweet G.o.d!" he whispered through cracked lips. His eyesight blurred, and the big blue diamond glowed mistily, distorted by the tears that flooded his vision.
It was a full minute before he could bring himself to touch it.
Then he did so reverently - as though it were a sacred relic.
Johnny Lance had worked all his life to take a stone such as this.
He held it in both hands and sank down into the sc.r.a.p of shade beside the body of the Land-Rover.
It was another five minutes before the hot cloying smell of engine oil reached the conscious level of his mind.
He turned his head and saw the slowly spreading pool of it beneath the Land-Rover cha.s.sis. Quickly he rolled on to his stomach and, still clutching the diamond, crawled under the vehicle. The ironstone boulder had shattered the engine sump. The Land-Rover had bled its lifeblood into the hot sand of the river bed.
He wriggled out from under the body of the Land-Rover and leaned against the front tyre. He looked at his wrist watch and was surprised to see it was already a few minutes after two o'clock in the afternoon.
He was surprised also at the conscious effort it required to focus his eyes on the dial of the watch. Two days and two nights without sleep, the unremitting emotional strain of those days and nights, the battering his body had taken, the long hours in the heat and the soul-corroding desolation of this lunar landscape - all these had taken their toll. He knew he was as light-headed as in the first stages of inebriation, he was beginning to act irrationally. That sudden reckless charge down the boulder-strewn river bed, which had wrecked the Land-Rover, was a symptom of his present instability.
He fondled the great diamond, touching the warm smooth surface to his lips, rubbing it softly between thumb and forefinger, changing it from hand to hand, while every fibre of his muscles and the very marrow of his bones cried out for rest.
A soft and treacherous lethargy spread through his body and reached out to numb his brain. He closed his eyes for a moment to shut out the flare, and when he opened them again with an effort the time was four o'clock. He scrambled to his feet. The shadows in the gully were longer, the breeze had dropped.
Although he moved with the stiffness of an old man, the sleep had cleared his mind and while he wolfed a packet of biscuits spread with meat paste and washed it down with a mugful of lukewarm water he made his decision.
He buried the canvas bag of rough diamonds in the sand beneath the Land-Rover, but he could not bring himself to part with the big blue.
He b.u.t.toned it securely into the back pocket of his slacks. Into the light knapsack from the seat locker he packed the two-pint water bottle, the first aid kit, a small hand-bearing compa.s.s, two of the smoke flares and the knife. He checked his pockets for his cigarette lighter and case.
Then without another glance at the radio set on the dashboard of the Land-Rover he turned away and hobbled up the gully on the spoor of Benedict van der Byl.
Within half a mile he had walked the stiffness out of his body, and he lengthened his stride, going well now. The hatred and hunger for vengeance which had died to smouldering ash since he had found the diamonds now flared up again strongly. It gave power to his legs and sharpened his senses.
The spoor turned abruptly up the side of the gully and he lost it on the black rock of the ridge, but found it again on his first cast.
He was closing fast now. The spoor was running across the grain of the land, and Benedict was clearly weakening rapidly. He had fallen repeatedly, crawled on b.l.o.o.d.y knees over cruel gravel and rock, he had blundered into the scrub bushes and left threads of his clothing on the hooked redtipped thorns.
Then the spoor led out of the ridges and scrub into another area of low orange-coloured sandhills and Johnny broke into a jog trot. The sun was sliding down the sky, throwing blue shades in the hollows of the dunes and the heat abated so that Johnny's sweat was able to cool him before drying.
Johnny was intent on the staggering footprints, beginning to worry now that he would find Benedict already dead. The signs were those of a man in extreme distress, and still he was driving himself on.
Johnny did not notice the other prints that angled in from the dunes and ran parallel to those of Benedict, until they closed in again and began overlaying the human prints.
Johnny stopped and went down on one knee to examine the broad dog-like pug marks.
"Hyena!" He felt the sick little flutter of revulsion in his stomach as he spoke. He glanced around quickly and saw the other set of prints out on the left.
"A pair of them! They've smelt the blood." Johnny began to run on the spoor now. His skin crawled with what he knew could happen when they caught up with a helpless man. The filthiest and most cowardly animals in Africa, but with jaws that could crunch to splinters the thigh bone of a full-grown buffalo, and their thick stubby fangs were coated with such a slime of bacteria from a diet of putrid carrion that their bite was as deadly as that of a black mamba.
"Let me be in time; please G.o.d, let me find him in time." He heard it then. From beyond the crest of the next dune. The horror of the sound stopped him in mid-stride. It was a shrill giggling gibbering cry that sobbed into silence.
Johnny stood listening, panting wildly from his run.
It came again. The laughter of demons, excited, blood-crazy.
"They've got him." Johnny flung himself at the soft slope of sand.
He reached the crest and looked down into the saucer-shaped arena formed by the crescent of the dune.
Benedict lay on his back. His white s.h.i.+rt was open to the waist.
The blue trousers of his suit were ripped and shredded, exposing his knees. One foot was a b.l.o.o.d.y lump of sock and congealed dirt.
The pair of hyenas had trampled a path in the sand around his body. They had been circling him for hours, while greed overcame their cowardice.
One hyena sat ten feet from him, squatting obscenely with its flat snakelike head lowered between humped shoulders. Brown and s.h.a.ggy, spotted with darker brown, its round ears p.r.i.c.ked forward, its black eyes sparkling with greed and excitement as it watched its mate.
The other hyena stood with its front paws on Benedict's chest.
Its head was lowered, and its jaws were locked into Benedict's face.
It was leaning back, bracing its paws on his chest, tugging viciously as it sought to tear off a mouthful of flesh. Benedict's head was jerking and twitching as the hyena worried it. His legs were kicking weakly, and his hands fluttered on the sand like maimed white birds.
The flesh of his face tore. Johnny heard it distinctly in the utter silence of the desert evening. It tore with the soft sound of silk - and Johnny screamed.
Both hyenas bolted at the scream, scrambling over the far crest of the dune in horrible clownish panic, leaving Benedict lying with a b.l.o.o.d.y mask for a face.
Looking down at that face Johnny knew he could not kill him now, perhaps could never have killed him. He could not revenge himself on this broken thing with its ruined face and twisted mind.
He dropped on to his knees beside him, and loosened the flap of the knapsack with clumsy fingers.
Benedict's one ear and cheek were hanging over his mouth in a thick flap of torn flesh. The teeth in the side of his jaw were exposed and the blood dribbled and spurted in fine needle jets.
Johnny tore the paper packaging off an absorbent dressing and with it pressed the flap back into place. Holding it there with the full pressure of his spread fingers. The blood soaked through the dressing, but it was slowing at the pressure.
"It's all right, Benedict. I'm here now. You'll be all right, he whispered hoa.r.s.ely as he worked. With his free hand he stripped the packaging off another dressing, and subst.i.tuted it neatly for the sodden one. He maintained the pressure on the clean dressing while he lifted Benedict's head and cradled it in his lap.
"We'll just dry this bleeding up, then we'll give you a drink." He reached into the first aid kit for a piece of cotton wool and tenderly began to clean the blood and sand from Benedict's nostrils and lips.
Benedict's strangled breathing eased a little but still whistled through the black lips. His tongue was swollen, filling his mouth like a fat purple sponge.
"That's better," Johnny muttered. Still without relaxing pressure on the compress dressing, he got the screw top off the water bottle.
Holding his thumb over the opening to regulate the flow, he let a drop of water fall into the dark dry pit of a mouth.
After another ten drops he propped the water bottle in the sand, and ma.s.sage Benedict's throat gently to stimulate the swallowing reflex.
The unconscious man gulped painfully.
"That's my boy," Johnny encouraged him, and began again feeding him a drop at a time, crooning softly as he did it.
"You're going to be all right. That's it, swallow it down." It took him twenty minutes to administer half a pint of the warm sweet water, and by then the bleeding was negligible. Johnny reached into the kit again and selected two salt and two glucose tablets. He placed them in his own mouth and chewed them to a smooth thin paste then he bent over the mutilated face of the man he had sworn to kill and pressed his own lips against Benedict's swollen dry lips. He injected the solution of salt and glucose into Benedict's mouth, then straightened up and began again dripping the water.
When he had given Benedict another four tablets and half the contents of the water bottle, he stoppered it and returned it to the knapsack. He soaked the compress with bright yellow acriflavine solution, and bandaged it firmly into place. This was a more difficult task than he had antic.i.p.ated and after a few abortive attempts he pa.s.sed the bandage under the jaw an dover the eyes, swathing Benedict's head completely except for the nose and mouth.
By this time the sun was on the horizon. Johnny stood up and stretched his back and shoulders as he watched the splendid gold and red death of another desert day.
He knew he was delaying his next decision. He reckoned it was five miles to where he had abandoned the Landrover in the gully. Five miles of hard going, a round trip of four hours - probably five in the dark. Could he leave Benedict here, get back to the vehicle, radio Cartridge Bay, and return to him?
Johnny swung round and looked up at the dunes. There was his answer. One of the hyenas was squatting on the top of a dune watching him intently. Hunger and the approach of night had made it unnaturally bold.
Johnny shouted an obscenity and made a threatening gesture towards it. The hyena jumped up and loped over the back of the ridge.
"Moon rise at eight tonight. I'll rest until then - and we'll go in the cool," he decided and lay down on the sand beside Benedict. The lump in his back pocket prodded him, and he took the diamond out and held it in his hand.
In the darkness the hyenas began to cackle and shriek, and when the moon rose it silhouetted their evil shapes on the ridge above the saucer.
"Come on, Benedict. We're going home. There are a couple of nice policemen who want to talk to you."Johnny lifted him into a sitting position, draped Benedict's arm over his shoulder and came up under him in a fireman's lift.
Johnny stood like that a moment, sinking ankle deep into the soft sand, dismayed at the dead weight of his burden.
"We'll rest every thousand paces," he promised himself, and began plodding up the dune, counting softly to himself, but knowing that he would not be able to perform that lift again without a rock shelf or some support, against which to brace himself He had to make it out of the sandhills in one go.
" - Nine hundred and ninety nine. One thousand." He was counting in his mind only. Husbanding his strength, bowed under the weight, his shoulders and back locked in straining agony, the sand hampering each pace. "Another five hundred. We'll go another five hundred." Behind him padded the two hyenas. They had gobbled the b.l.o.o.d.y dressings that Johnny had left in the saucer, and the taste of blood was driving them hysterical.
"Right. just another five hundred." And Johnny began the third count, and then the fourth, and the fifth.
Johnny felt the drip, drip on the back of his legs.
Benedict's head-down position had restarted the bleeding, and the hyenas warbled and wailed at the smell.
"Nearly there, Benedict. Stick it out. Nearly there." The first cl.u.s.ter of moon-silver rocks floated towards them and Johnny reeled in amongst them and collapsed face forward. It was a long time before he had regained enough strength to s.h.i.+ft Benedict's weight off his shoulders.
He readjusted Benedict's bandages, and fed him a mouthful of water which he swallowed readily. Then Johnny washed down a handful of salt and glucose tablets with two carefully rationed swallows from the water bottle. He rested for twenty minutes by his watch, then using one of the rocks as an anchor he got Benedict across his shoulder again and they went on.
Johnny rested every hour for ten minutes. At one o'clock in the morning they finished the last of the water, and at two o'clock Johnny knew beyond all possibility of doubt that he had missed the watercourse and that he was lost.
He lay against a slab of ironstone, numb with fatigue and despair, and listened to the cackling chorus of death among the rocks nearby.
He tried to decide where he had gone wrong- Perhaps the watercourse curved away and he was now moving parallel to it, perhaps he had already crossed it without having recognized it. That was possible, he had heard of others stumbling blindly across a tarmac road without realizing it.
How many ridges had they climbed and descended? He could not remember. There was a place where he had stumbled into a scrub thorn and ripped his legs. Perhaps that was the watercourse.
He crawled across to Benedict.
"Brace up, bucko. We're going back." Johnny fell for the last time a little before dawn. When he rolled his head and squinted sideways at his wrist watch it was light enough to read the dial. The time was five o'clock.
He closed his eyes and lay for a long time, he had given up. It had been a good try - but it hadn't worked. In an hour the sun would be up. Then it was finished.
Something was moving near him, soft and stealthyfooted. It was of no interest, he decided. He just wanted to lie here quietly, now that it was finished.
Then he heard the sniffing, the harsh sniffing of a hungry dog.
He opened his eyes. The hyena was ten feet away, watching him. Its bottom jaw hung open, and the pink tongue lolled loosely from the side of its mouth. He could smell it, a stink like an animal cage at the zoo, dung and offal and rotting carrion.
Johnny tried to scream, but no sound came from his mouth. His throat was closed, and his tongue filled. his mouth. He struggled on to his elbows. The hyena drew back, but without the ludicrous panic of before.
Leisurely it trotted away, and then turned to face him again from a distance of twenty yards. It grinned at him, slurping the pink tongue into its mouth as it gulped saliva.
Johnny dragged himself to where Benedict lay, and looked down at him.
Slowly the blind bandaged head turned towards him, the black lips moved.
"Who's there?" A dry husky whisper. Johnny tried to answer but his voice failed him again. He hawked and chewed painfully, working a trace of moisture into his mouth. Now that Benedict was conscious Johnny's hatred flared again.
"Johnny," he croaked. "It's Johnny."
"Johnny?" Benedict's hand came up and he touched the bandages over his eyes.
"What?" Johnny reached across, lying on his side, and untied the knot at Benedict's temple. He peeled the bandages from his eyes, and Benedict blinked at him. The light of dawn was stronger now.
"Water?" Benedict asked.
Johnny shook his head.
"None." Benedict closed his eyes and then opened them, staring in terror at Johnny.
"Ruby! Johnny whispered. "Sergio! Hansie!" A spasm of guilt twisted Benedict's face, and Johnny leaned closer to him to hiss a single word into his ear.
"b.a.s.t.a.r.d!" Johnny rested on his elbows, swallowing thickly, then he spoke again.
"Up!" He crawled behind Benedict and pushed and dragged him into a sitting position.
look." Twenty yards away the two hyenas sat expectantly, leering idiotically and bright-eyed with impatience.
Benedict began to tremble. He made a mewing whimpering sound.
Johnny worked him slowly backwards until he had him propped against a rock.
He rested again, leaning on the rock beside Benedict.
"I'm going," he whispered. "You stay."
Benedict made that mewing sound again, shaking his head weakly, staring at the two s...o...b..ring animals ahead of him.
Johnny slung the knapsack about his neck. He closed his eyes and called upon the last reserves of his strength. With a heave he got to his knees. Darkness and bright lights obscured his vision. They cleared and he heaved again and he was on his feet. His knees buckled and he grabbed at the rock to steady himself "Cheerio!" he whispered.