He leaned forward and sensed Jenkins's tenseness by his side. âI understand what you say about your loyalty to the Zulus and their king. If I may say so, it does you credit. But . . .' He let his voice fall away. âThere may well come a time, Mr Dunn, when you have to decide what nationality you are.' Simon let the point sink in, but there was no reaction from Dunn. âHeaven forbid that there will be hostilities. But if they do break out, I do not see how you can remain neutral. You will have to make a choice.' He paused for a moment. âI suppose, in a way, we are forcing you to make that choice now. Are you British or Zulu?'
Dunn made no reply but sat puffing his pipe, looking unblinkingly at Simon. Eventually he spoke. âDo you know what the King said when he called me back, just there?'
âNo.'
âHe said that he didn't know what to make of you - whether you were a new kind of trader or army spies. He asked me to find out.' Dunn threw back his head and laughed, although the tension within the hut remained unbroken. âSo he's forcing me to make the same decision. I'm being pressurised from both sides, dammit.'
Suddenly the big man rose to his feet. He seemed twice as tall in the dark hut. âWell,' he said. âI'll tell you one thing. I have absolutely no intention of making that decision until I have to.'
âBut what are you going to tell the King?' asked Simon.
âNothing yet. In any case, he has told me to take you to my kraal because he doesn't want you hanging about Ulundi. So we will start at sun-up tomorrow. It's a good day's ride. You can stay at my place as long as you like but, at least at this stage, I don't feel inclined to feed you information. But we can talk about that later. I've a lot to think about.'
Dunn moved to the door, where he paused. âThe Governor wants me to teach you Zulu and says you have an aptitude for languages. Well, you're going to need it, because I won't have the time to nursemaid you with that. You'll just have to pick it up, like I did.'
âI can teach him, Father.' The quiet tones came from the wall, where Nandi still sat, cross-legged.
âWe'll see about that, too,' said Dunn. âYou can't neglect your work any more than I can.'
Simon stood and smiled at the girl. âThank you. I don't wish to be any trouble.'
âWe could teach you Welsh, in return,' said Jenkins. âWell, at least, Mr Fonthill could.'
Dunn led them to a vacant hut nearby and threw them two sleeping mats. âThere's a well just here for washing and drinking. It's a bit brackish but you'll soon get used to that. Don't get talking to any of the Zulus. You've dressed yourselves as Afrikaaners.
I
don't think you look like Afrikaaners but
they
might - and they don't like Boers. While you are here you are living on a bit of a knife edge. So: take no risks.'
With a nod he was gone. The two soldiers crawled into their hut and found, to their surprise, that their packs and rifles had been placed inside. Nothing seemed to have been taken. While Jenkins fetched water, Simon prepared a little biltoeng for them to eat, and as darkness descended, they settled to sleep.
âWell, bach sir,' said Jenkins, from beneath his blanket. âI have to tell you that I like what you said back there and the way you said it. It doesn't matter about ridin' a horse well, if you can talk like that. Any fool can ride a horse - though it would be nice if you could stay on if we have to gallop, look you.'
âI'll try and remember that, 352. Now shut up.'
Chapter 7
They rose before the sun but Dunn was saddled, loaded and waiting for them as they collected their horses. Nandi was also on horseback, as were the two Zulus, who were clearly part of Dunn's personal bodyguard. They set off to the south-east at a pace that made Simon anxious. This time, however, the going was easier because Dunn seemed to have the knack of picking out trails that were invisible to the others. Not once did he consult a compass. Now they skirted dongas instead of crossing them and Dunn avoided rutted, well-used tracks and the dust clouds their use would have caused. Instead, he picked his way through tussocks of grass at a pace twice as fast as that managed by Simon and Jenkins on their first day in Zululand. The sun was touching the black serrations of the mountains to their right when Dunn stood in his stirrups and gestured ahead.
âThere's home,' he cried.
They cantered through the familiar herds of cattle, taking waved greetings from the black boy tending them, and approached a long, single-storeyed thatched dwelling, looking inviting behind its veranda or stoep, fringed with bougainvillea and clematis. It could have been Kent or Sussex, except for the clusters of typically African round mud huts, also thatched, that meandered in scores behind the main building. They stretched away to a distant cattle pen, and in the other direction, what looked like sugar cane plantations marched away to the blue hills.
As the horses reined in, a platoon of small brown children rushed from the nearby huts crying out greetings and dancing in excitement. Dunn picked up a couple and deposited great kisses on their dusty faces and ran his hands over as many of the other curly heads as he could reach. Nandi did the same. Dunn looked back at Simon with an expression of some embarrassment.
âHell, man,' he said. âThey always make a fuss when I get back.'
âYou're a lucky man, Mr Dunn,' replied Simon. And he meant it.
Zulus took the horses and led them away and Nandi quietly disappeared. Dunn led the two visitors across the stoep into a large room with a polished wood floor, strewn with native mats, and walls covered with trophies: heads of antlered deer, impala, a lion and three huge buffaloes, the horns of the largest of which curled above a long, low stone fireplace. It was a lived-in, welcoming room; that of a countryman of affluence.
âCatherine,' cried Dunn loudly. âWe have guests.'
After a pause, Catherine Dunn came into the room. She was about a foot shorter than Dunn and so thin that he could, it seemed, have picked her up with one hand. The climate and toil of life in Zululand had treated her less well than it had her husband. Her thin hair had turned grey and was pulled back into a bun, and whatever the original colour of her skin, it now looked a sallow yellow, with brown age spots marking her hands and forearms. She was wearing a simple cotton shift and was barefoot. But her eyes were bright blue and shone with interest as she greeted her visitors.
âYou are welcome, gentlemen,' she said, echoing the nasal, clipped speech of her husband. âForgive me for not wearing shoes but I was not expecting John back today. Will you take some beer?'
âI don't think so, my dear,' said Dunn. âWe would all like to eat and, I expect, take a bath first. So would you please see that the boilers are lit straight away.'
He turned with a proprietorial air. âWe have three bathrooms here,' he said, âand they are all piped to individual boilers but they take a little time to heat up and for the boys to pump the water through.'
âThree bathrooms!' exclaimed Simon. âNow that really is luxury. I never expected to find that in Zululand.'
Catherine Dunn looked pleased. âIt's not always been like this,' she smiled. âBut I think we can say now that we are as comfortable as anyone living in Durban.'
âAch, no,' growled Dunn. âBetter.' He shouted commands in Zulu and a native, clad incongruously in what seemed like nothing but an apron, came running. âBenjamin here will show you to your rooms. We will serve dinner in an hour.'
The boy led them along a corridor and gestured to adjoining rooms. Simon's was spartan but made more than adequate by the tin bath set in a little annexe. Two crude clay pipes ran from it through holes punched in the mud wall, and after a few minutes, hissing hot water began to emerge from the first, filling the bath with a brownish liquid. Then clearer cold water poured from the second. In a moment, Benjamin reappeared.
He dipped his finger into the water and looked up. âIs good?' he enquired. Simon tested it. âVery good,' he smiled. Benjamin's face lit up and he was gone, presumably to perform the same service for Jenkins. Simon smiled again as he reflected that this was probably the first time that anyone had ever run a bath for the little Welshman.
Brown or not, the water was magnificently relaxing. He stirred the surface with his toe and his thoughts dwelt on Dunn. He seemed friendly enough - and, more to the point, European enough. But was he playing a double game? How could a man as close to Cetswayo betray the King? - because that was what they were asking him to do. Simon stirred uneasily in the relaxing water. He disliked the fact that the action now lay with Dunn and that all he could do was wait. But what to do? Learn Zulu? The thought of tackling that guttural tongue, with its back-of-the-throat clicks and grunts and impenetrable vocabulary, was daunting, to say the least. Perhaps Nandi really could teach him. Luxuriantly, he let his thoughts dwell upon her. She was pretty, there was no doubt about that, and he mused about her lineage. Was she Catherine's daughter? No, her skin was too dark for that. Her skin . . . He remembered the flash of breast in the darkness of the hut in Ulundi and the firm buttocks undulating through the low entrance. Simon felt arousal in his loins and a rude desire that he had not experienced since he had bought a weird concoction of lemonade and sherry for a tart in a pub near Sandhurst. Almost immediately, he experienced a sense of shame. He had never felt quite that way about Alice. Alice . . . He had not thought about her for weeks! He tried to conjure up her face but it refused to appear; all that he could recall was a montage of white skin and coiled fair hair. Did he love her? He sighed. How could you love someone whom you couldn't recall? He rubbed his body savagely with a coarse sponge in admonishment.
If the bathroom was a surprise, the dinner was a revelation. Simon had put on his best, unworn shirt and he was pleased that Jenkins had similarly changed. In fact, despite his lugubrious moustache, Jenkins looked like a cherubic, well-scrubbed schoolboy. His black hair was plastered down, he had somehow polished his riding boots and his brown face exuded bonhomie and pleasurable anticipation.
âLet's have a drink before we eat,' said Dunn, clapping his hands.
Catherine, now wearing a well-cut gingham dress and laced shoes, joined them around the long fireplace, as, too, did Nandi, looking quite European in a simple white dress which showed off her skin to perfection. She had tucked a white orchid into her hair and was wearing leather sandals. The party was completed by James, a tall, well-built half-caste whom Dunn introduced as his eldest son. Simon looked closely at the boy, who must have been only a year or two younger than himself. There was more of the Zulu in him than was evident in Nandi. They shared the snub nose and the dark eyes, but his skin was darker than his sister's and his limbs had the massiveness of the native. Yet, from the affection with which he was treated by Catherine, he might have been her son.
The ubiquitous Benjamin - this time wearing a loose-fitting white jacket and trousers, with a red sash around his midriff, and looking like a waiter at any of the white man's clubs to be found from Cairo to Singapore - appeared carrying a tray, two bottles and six glasses.
âHave some champagne,' said Dunn gruffly and gestured to Benjamin to open and pour.
Simon stole a glance at the bottle. âGood lord!' he cried involuntarily and lapsed into an embarrassed silence.
âOh, don't worry,' said Dunn with a grin. âAll new visitors are surprised that I serve good champagne. This is Bollinger'65. I get it through a merchant in the Cape. Now, Mr Jenkins, I am told you're an expert on beer. What d'yer think of this stuff, eh?'
Jenkins studiously sniffed the bouquet (Simon could smell nothing), took a sip, rolled it around his tongue and nodded appreciatively. âIt's travelled very well, Mr Dunn,' he said. âThere are them that say that good bottles can't cross the Equator. But it all depends upon how they're packed into the 'old of the ship, look you. If they're right at the bottom, see, right near the keel, so as they don't swing and sway so much, and lain horizontally so that the champagne don't move in the bottle with the pitch of the ship,' he sniffed, âthen they don't get agitated much and they're far enough down to get away from the 'eat and be cooled by the ocean itself, see.' He looked round and, seeing that he had everyone's attention, went on with confidence. âThat means that they 'ave the minimum of disturbance on the journey and, again, if they're laid down properly in a cellar or somewhere when they arrive, they can recover their equil . . . equilaborom, so to speak, before bein' served.'
He held up his flute glass. âAn' another thing. It's good to drink from a proper glass, which keeps the bubbles in - not one of these wide-open things that lets all the fizz out, so to speak.' He took another appreciative sip. âThere's people who think that keepin' good wine is about 'avin' it cool all the time. Now it's true that 'eat doesn't do a bottle any good at all, but it's more important to keep the temperature as even an' unchangin' as possible.' He held up the glass. âI can see that you keep your bottles laid on their sides, like, undisturbed an' probably in a cellar.'
âI do indeed, Mr Jenkins,' said Dunn warmly. âAnd it's rewarding to have good wine properly appreciated. Here, have some more.' And he took the bottle from the tray and filled Jenkins's glass to the brim.
Simon looked on incredulously as Jenkins carefully wiped his moustache and half drained the glass. What sort of man was this who could hardly read but could survive the Glasshouse of Aldershot, ride like a Hussar and discourse knowledgeably on the problems of shipping and laying down champagne? He smiled and nodded courteously as Jenkins raised his glass in approval.