Maiwa's Revenge eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 125 pages of information about Maiwa's Revenge.

Maiwa's Revenge eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 125 pages of information about Maiwa's Revenge.
had been so closely eaten off by game that there was scarcely any cover.  Consequently it was necessary to go on to our hands and knees, which in my case involved laying down the eight-bore at every step and then lifting it up again.  However, I wriggled along somehow, and if it had not been for Gobo and his friend no doubt everything would have gone well.  But as you have, I dare say, observed, a native out stalking is always of that mind which is supposed to actuate an ostrich—­so long as his head is hidden he seems to think that nothing else can be seen.  So it was in this instance, Gobo and the other boy crept along on their hands and toes with their heads well down, but, though unfortunately I did not notice it till too late, bearing the fundamental portions of their frames high in the air.  Now all animals are quite as suspicious of this end of mankind as they are of his face, and of that fact I soon had a proof.  Just when we had got within about two hundred yards, and I was congratulating myself that I had not had this long crawl with the sun beating on the back of my neck like a furnace for nothing, I heard the hissing note of the rhinoceros birds, and up flew four or five of them from the brute’s back, where they had been comfortably employed in catching tics.  Now this performance on the part of the birds is to a rhinoceros what the word ‘cave’ is to a schoolboy—­it puts him on the qui vive at once.  Before the birds were well in the air I saw the grass stir.

“‘Down you go,’ I whispered to the boys, and as I did so the rhinoceros got up and glared suspiciously around.  But he could see nothing, indeed if we had been standing up I doubt if he would have seen us at that distance; so he merely gave two or three sniffs and then lay down, his head still down wind, the birds once more settling on his back.

“But it was clear to me that he was sleeping with one eye open, being generally in a suspicious and unchristian frame of mind, and that it was useless to proceed further on this stalk, so we quietly withdrew to consider the position and study the ground.  The results were not satisfactory.  There was absolutely no cover about except the ant-heap, which was some three hundred yards from the rhinoceros upon his up-wind side.  I knew that if I tried to stalk him in front I should fail, and so I should if I attempted to do so from the further side—­he or the birds would see me; so I came to a conclusion:  I would go to the ant-heap, which would give him my wind, and instead of stalking him I would let him stalk me.  It was a bold step, and one which I should never advise a hunter to take, but somehow I felt as though rhino and I must play the hand out.

“I explained my intentions to the men, who both held up their arms in horror.  Their fears for my safety were a little mitigated, however, when I told them that I did not expect them to come with me.

“Gobo breathed a prayer that I might not meet Fate walking about, and the other one sincerely trusted that my spirit might look my way when the rhinoceros charged, and then they both departed to a place of safety.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Maiwa's Revenge from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.