Forever.
Martin had never really considered the word before. To go on forever—but
now?
Did he
want
to go on forever, like this; a sick old man, lying helplessly here in the grass?
No. He couldn't do it. He wouldn't do it. And suddenly he wanted very much to cry, because he knew that somewhere along the line he'd outsmarted himself. And now it was too late. His eyes dimmed, there was a roaring in his ears . . .
He recognized the roaring, of course, and he wasn't at all surprised to see the train come rushing out of the fog up there on the embankment. He wasn't surprised when it stopped, either, or when the Conductor climbed off and walked slowly toward him.
The Conductor hadn't changed a bit. Even his grin was still the same.
"Hello, Martin," he said. "All aboard."
"I know," Martin whispered. "But you'll have to carry me. I can't walk. I'm not even really talking any more, am I?"
"Yes, you are," the Conductor said. "I can hear you fine. And you can walk, too." He leaned down and placed his hand on Martin's chest. There was a moment of icy numbness, and then, sure enough, Martin could walk after all.
He got up and followed the Conductor along the slope, moving to the side of the train.
"In here?" he asked.
"No, the next car," the Conductor murmured. "I guess you're entitled to ride Pullman. After all, you're quite a successful man. You've tasted the joys of wealth and position and prestige. You've known the pleasures of marriage and fatherhood. You've sampled the delights of dining and drinking and debauchery, too, and you traveled high, wide and handsome. So let's not have any last-minute recriminations."
"All right," Martin sighed. "I can't blame you for my mistakes. On the other hand, you can't take credit for what happened, either. I worked for everything I got. I did it all on my own. I didn't even need your watch."
"So you didn't," the Conductor said, smiling. "But would you mind giving it back now?"
"Need it for the next sucker, eh?" Martin muttered.
"Perhaps."
Something about the way he said it made Martin look up. He tried to see the Conductor's eyes, but the brim of his cap cast a shadow. So Martin looked down at the watch instead.
"Tell me something," he said softly. "If I give you the watch, what will you do with it?"
"Why, throw it in the ditch," the Conductor told him. "That's all I'll do with it." And he held out his hand.
"What if somebody comes along and finds it? And twists the stem backward, and stops time?"
"Nobody would do that," the Conductor murmured. "Even if they knew."
"You mean it was all a trick? This is an ordinary, cheap watch?"
"I didn't say that," whispered the Conductor. "I only said that no one has ever twisted the stem backward. They've all been like you, Martin—looking ahead to find the perfect happiness. Waiting for the moment that never comes."
The Conductor held out his hand again.
Martin sighed and shook his head. "You cheated me after all."
"You cheated yourself, Martin. And now you're going to ride that Hell-Bound Train."
He pushed Martin up the steps and into the car ahead. As he entered, the train began to move, and the whistle screamed. And Martin stood there in the swaying Pullman, gazing down the aisle at the other passengers. He could see them sitting there, and somehow it didn't seem strange at all.
Here they were; the drunks and the sinners, the gambling men and the grifters, the big-time spenders, the skirt-chasers, and all the jolly crew. They knew where they were going, of course, but they didn't seem to give a damn. The blinds were drawn on the windows, yet it was light inside, and they were all living it up—singing and passing the bottle and roaring with laughter, throwing the dice and telling their jokes and bragging their big brags, just the way Daddy used to sing about them in the old song.
"Mighty nice traveling companions," Martin said. "Why, I've never seen such a pleasant bunch of people. I mean, they seem to be really enjoying themselves!"
The Conductor shrugged. "I'm afraid things won't be quite so jazzy when we pull into that Depot Way Down Yonder."
For the third time, he held out his hand. "Now, before you sit down, if you'll just give me that watch. A bargain's a bargain—"
Martin smiled. "A bargain's a bargain," he echoed. "I agreed to ride your train if I could stop time when I found the right moment of happiness. And I think I'm about as happy right here as I've ever been."
Very slowly, Martin took hold of the silver watch stem.
"No!" gasped the Conductor. "No!"
But the watch stem turned.
"Do you realize what you've done?" the Conductor yelled. "Now we'll never reach the Depot! We'll just go on riding, all of us—forever!"
Martin grinned. "I know," he said. "But the fun is in the trip, not the destination. You taught me that. And I'm looking forward to a wonderful trip. Look, maybe I can even help. If you were to find me another one of those caps, now, and let me keep this watch—"
And that's the way it finally worked out. Wearing his cap and carrying his battered old silver watch, there's no happier person on or out of this world now and forever—than Martin. Martin, the new brakeman on that Hell-Bound Train.
W
HEN
H
ARVEY
W
OLF
was seven, he met the Black Skelm.
Now "skelm" means rascal, and at his age, Harvey knew nothing of duplicity and the ways of men, so he was not afraid. Nor did the man's skin repel him, for Harvey was ignorant of
apartheid
.
The Basutos on his father's place called him
baas
, but he did not feel that he was their master. Even Jong Kurt, his father's foreman, treated the men of color without contempt. Harvey came to know the Bechuanas, the Kaffirs, the Fingos and the Swazis far better than the
Roinecks
, which was their name for Englishmen.
Harvey knew his own father was a
Roineck
, who owned this place, but that was virtually the extent of his knowledge. His father never visited him; he spent all his time at the Cape, and had ever since Harvey's mother died when he was born. Harvey had been left in care of Jong Kurt and of his wife, whom Harvey learned to call Mama.
"Poor little one," Mama said. "But you are free and happy with us, so
gued geroeg
."
And Harvey was happy. Mama made him
veldschoen
of rawhide, and he roamed at will over the
karroo
beyond the drift where the
fontein
gushed. As he grew older, he sought the
krantz
above the valley where he made his home, and soon he was climbing the great
berg
which towered over all.
Here he found the wild orchids of the upland plateaus, plucked as he wriggled his way through the mimosa, the thornbush and the hartekoal trees where the
aasvogel
perched and preened and peered for prey.
Harvey came to know the beasts of the mountain and the plain—the aard-wolf and the inyala, the oribi and the duiker, the springbok and the kudu. He watched the tall secretary-bird and the waddling kori bustard, and traced the flight of bats from out of the hidden caves on the
berg
above. From time to time he encountered snakes; the
cobra di capello
, the puff adder, and the dreaded mamba.
But nothing that loped or trotted or flew or crawled ever harmed him. He grew bolder and started to explore the caves high upon the faraway
berg
.
That was when Mama warned him about the Black Skelm.
"He is an evil man who eats children," Mama said. "The caves are full of their bones, for on such a diet one lives forever. You are to stay away from the
berg
."
"But Kassie goes to the
berg
at night," Harvey protested. "And Jorl, and Swarte."
"They are black and ignorant," Mama told him. "They seek the Black Skelm for charms and potions. The wicked old man should be in prison. I have told Jong Kurt time and again to take the dogs to the
berg
and hunt him out. But he is too slim, that one, to be easily captured. They say he sleeps in the caves with the bats, who warn him when strangers approach."
"I would like to see such a man," Harvey decided.
"You are to stay away from the
berg
, mind?"
And Mama shook him, and he promised, but Harvey did not mind.
One hot morning he toiled across the
karroo
, slipping out unobserved from the deserted, heat-baked house, and made his way painfully up the
krantz
. The
aasvogels
drooped limply in the trees, their eyes lidded, for nothing moved in the plain below. Even the orchids were wilting.
It was no cooler on the
krantz
, and when Harvey found the winding
pad
which circled the
berg
, he paused, parched and faint, and considered turning back. But the trip would be long, and perhaps he could find a
fontein
up here. There were
pads
he had not yet explored—
He started off at random, and thus it was that he came to the cave of the Black Skelm.
The Black Skelm was a gnarled little monkey-man with a white scraggle of beard wisping from his sunken cheeks. He sat at the mouth of the cave, naked and cross-legged, staring out at the
veldt
below with immobile eyes.
Harvey recognized him at once and put his knuckles to his mouth. He started to edge back, hoping that the old man hadn't observed him, but suddenly the scrawny neck corded and swivelled.
"Greetings,
baas
."
The voice was thin and piping, yet oddly penetrating. It gained resonance from an echo in the cave behind.
"G-greetings," Harvey murmured. He continued to edge away.
"You fear me, boy?"
"You are the Black Skelm. You—"
"Eat children?" The old man cackled abruptly. "Yes, I know the tale. It is nonsense, meant only to deceive fools. But you are not a fool, Harvey Wolf."
"You know my name?"
"Of course. An old man learns many things."
"Then you've come down to the plains?"
"Not for long years. But the bats bear tidings. They are my brothers of the nights, just as the
aasvogels
are my brothers by day." The Black Skelm smiled and gestured. "Sit down. I would invite you inside the cave, but my brothers are sleeping now."
Harvey hesitated, eyeing the little old man. But the man
was
little, and so very old; Harvey couldn't imagine him to be dangerous. He sat down at a discreet distance.
"The bats told you my name?" he ventured.
The wrinkled black man shrugged. "I have learned much of you. I know you seek the
berg
because it is your wish to see what is on the other side."
"But I've never told anyone that."
"It is not necessary. I look into your heart, Harvey Wolf, and it is the heart of a seeker. You think to gaze upon the lands beyond this mountain; to see the
olifant
, the
kameel
, the great black brothers of the rhenoster birds. But to no purpose, my son. The elephant, the giraffe, the rhinoceros are long gone. They have vanished, with my own people."
"Your people?"
"Those you call the Zulus." The old man sighed. "Once, when I was a
jong
, the plains beyond the
berg
were black with game. And beyond the plains the
leegtes
were black with the
kraals
of my people. This was our world."
And the Black Skelm told Harvey about his world; the Zulu empire that existed long before the coming of the
Roinecks
and the Boers. He spoke of Chaka and the other great
indunas
who commanded armies in royal splendor, wearing the leopardskin
kaross
and lifting the knobkerrie of kingly authority to command the
impis
—the regiments of grotesquely painted warriors in kilts of wildcat tails. They would parade by torchlight, the ostrich plumes bobbing like the wild sea, and their voices rose more loudly than the wind in the cry of
"Bayete!"
which was the regal salute. And in return the
induna
chanted but a single response:
"Kill!"
Casting his spear to the north, the south, the east, or the west, he sent the regiments forth. And the
impis
killed. They conquered, or never returned. That was the way of it, in the old days.
Until, finally, none were left to return.
None but the Black Skelm, who sought the caves of the bats and the vultures, to live like a scavenger in a world of death.
"But my people are down there," Harvey protested. "They are not dead. They tell me Cape Town is a great city, and beyond that—"
"Cape Town is a cesspool of civilization," said the Black Skelm. "And beyond that are greater sewers in which men struggle and claw at one another, even as they drown. It is a sickening spectacle, this. The world will soon end, and I would that I could die with it. But, of course, I shall never die."
Harvey's head hurt: the sun was very hot. He wondered if he had heard aright.
"You can't die?"
"It is true,
baas
. Soon, of course, I must decide upon my next move, for this body of mine is no longer suitable. But—"
Harvey rose, reeling a bit, and backed away.
"Don't eat me!" he cried.
The old man crackled again. "Nonsense!" he said. "Sheer, superstitious nonsense. I do not eat children. My brothers feed me." He stretched forth his hand. "Look!"
And the air was filled with the odor of carrion, as the
aasvogels
gathered, fluttering frantically up the face of the sheer cliff and clustering about the bony body of the wizened black. In their beaks they carried bits of rancid flesh, dropping their tribute into the Black Skelm's fingers.
Then Harvey knew that he was very sick indeed; the sun had played tricks. He ran into the cave, and it was dark and musty, and from the twisted caverns beyond welled a terrible odor of decay. The bats hung head downwards, hung in mute millions, and the floor of the cave was not covered with bones, but with whitish droppings. On the walls great eyes winked—eyes that had been painted by hands long dead. The eyes whirled and Harvey felt his kneecaps turn to water. He would have fallen, but the Black Skelm came up behind him and caught him.