Read Yesterday's Promise Online

Authors: Linda Lee Chaikin

Yesterday's Promise (36 page)

BOOK: Yesterday's Promise
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He had deliberately mentioned the Shona, hoping to show Jube that the Ndebele too had entered a land not theirs by birth and invaded and cruelly subjugated the Shona, reducing them to Lobengula's slaves.

For a brief moment Jube's eyes appeared to show contempt.

“Cetshwayo was my king. I am Zulu. Lobengula is related. When the white men invaded Ulundi and scattered the mighty Zulu, we went where we could go. Now Zululand is servant of the British queen. Cetshwayo was shamed and carried to a place he did not want to go. They put white man's clothes on him. He died in his heart. Now you want to do the same to the Ndebele.”

Rogan caught the word
Zulu
, but affected no surprise. He measured Jube with a more careful eye.

“Why do you seek me out?”

Jube was silent and motionless for a long moment. “You are of the family of Julien Bley. Unlike him”—he looked over at Peter—“I have heard you are against Julien Bley. I am against him too.”

“Jube is not your name, is it? You must be Dumaka.”

Jube cracked his first smile, and it was unpleasant. “So you guessed. Yes, I am Dumaka. You tell Julien he has taken the bones from my hut at Cape House, but the curse he cannot take away and hide.”

The bones…the bones Henry had written about in his diary. Could that be the cause for the look of consternation Henry had seen on Julien's face that day? Julien had found the bones of witchcraft in Dumaka's hut and taken them. Maybe Julien had understood the devilish belief behind them and recognized that Dumaka wanted to curse him with death.

“Why do you want to kill Julien Bley? The Black Diamond?”

“Yes.”

Dumaka offered no more information. “Did you take the Black Diamond to King Cetshwayo?” Rogan persisted.

“Yes. But it was taken from Zululand the night of the battle.”

“You took it?”

“I took it,” he said proudly. “Now it is gone again, but it must be found. It must be brought to the sacred hills.”

Dumaka looked away into the far distance, and Rogan followed his gaze to the southern end of the Matopos Mountains.
Witchcraft
, Rogan thought. Mornay had told him something about the mountains, which were considered sacred to the Matabele and Zulu, perhaps the Shona as well. There were secret caves there where the Umlimo lived, witch doctors who supposedly prophesied to the tribes. The Umlimo would yield to some sort of demonic oracle, giving forth dark sayings. Lobengula put great trust in the dark sayings, as did all the ruling indunas.

“The white man who once went to the Zambezi, your father, the hunter who drew the map, he told you where the Black Diamond was?”

So that was the reason why Jube—Dumaka—had sought him out at Bulawayo. Dumaka thought he might know who had the diamond. He had mistaken Henry Chantry for his father.

“I travel as a lone rider. It is gold I seek, not the Black Diamond.”

“Hawk has the map?”

Caution…could it be?
Could he possibly think Henry's map in some way led to where the diamond was hidden?

“I do not seek the Black Diamond,” Rogan repeated. “I seek treasure from the earth of another kind, gold. But someone is blamed for
stealing the Black Diamond, and a woman's reputation must be given back to her. She is the daughter of Katie van Buren, the woman your sister Jendaya protected.”

At the mention of Jendaya, his smile left his face.

“Jendaya is cursed by the Umlimo.”

“Where is Jendaya now? At Bulawayo? Bring me to her.”

He shook his head. “She is not at Bulawayo. I will not bring you to her. I do not know where she hides.” He turned to walk away and stopped, looking back at Peter and Captain Retford, then Derwent. “The one who is a friend of Julien, the warning is for him. The white men will die if they intrude into the sacred hold of the Umlimo.”

Rogan was more interested in what he could learn than in responding to his threats.

“Umlimo?” he asked, pretending ignorance.

“The sacred speaker. The one who interprets the oracle. The great warrior spirits warn through the Umlimo that the white man brings a curse.”

“Lobengula has signed with his own elephant seal the paper sent to the British government allowing the white men to come and dig for gold.”

Dumaka's eyes fixed on Rogan, as though holding him responsible. “The doctor lies. Lobengula, he speaks well when he says fat is rubbed on their mouths. Be warned.” He looked deliberately at Rogan's gun belt. “Go back.”

Rogan frowned, holding back harsh words. He held up one hand to silence Dumaka. “Not all white men speak with the same words, but neither does any man welcome threats. Those who are my friends wish you no harm. And there are more like Moffat at Kuruman mission, and Jakob van Buren on the Zambezi, who wish you good from the God over all gods. But the men I travel with—none of us will allow ourselves to be killed. It is better we work together as friends, in peace.”

“Friends? Peace?” Dumaka shook his head. “We are warriors!”

Peter maneuvered his horse closer, raising dust, and said loftily,
“That is a threat. You are a fool if you think we could not kill you now!”

Rogan made a sharp hand gesture to silence Peter, angry he had interrupted. Peter looked startled. Dumaka stared back. There was no hope for peace in his hot gaze. Rogan felt the hatred. Dumaka gestured to his impis to follow him, and like tall, ebony shadows they melted away among the rocks.

Peter now looked furious with Rogan. “I tell you, Rogan. You do not know these savages as we do. You made a grave mistake letting him speak that way to you. He takes your reasonableness for weakness. It only emboldens them to further provocations.”

“If anything goads them to further provocations, it is suspicion and British presumption. I'm not worried about him mistaking my willingness to talk as weakness. He knows better.”

Peter scowled. “Am I assistant commissioner or not?”

Rogan maintained a hard glitter of challenge in his dark eyes.

“I respect the fact that you were chosen to assist Jameson. I'm here willingly to assist you. That means my opinion is worth something if I remember what you told me at the Limpopo camp. If you expect a yes-man, Peter, then you no longer want me.”

Peter's scowl deepened. He started to speak, then apparently changing his mind, he exhaled and paused before answering.

“When I said I respected your opinion, I meant it. I still do. I'll consider what you said. Otherwise, let's forget this dispute. We had better get back before we are missed.”

Rogan turned his horse back toward the river camp. “Are you going to tell Jameson the induna threatened us?”

Peter looked at him as though he were a man with African fever. “But naturally I'll relay his threat. I must. It's my job.”

“Why the need now? Are we not already on guard and expecting trouble?”

“Yes, of course, but Great Scott, man, I can't simply let the induna get away with this.”

“He's getting away with nothing. What he said to me, he said on his own. Those were not the words of Lobengula. If you ride back in a ruddy huff, you'll only give Jameson and the others a reason to attack Bulawayo. Jameson is looking for an excuse. You'll give it to him if you go back there and play Dumaka's words for more than they were.”

Peter's scowl had never diminished, and it didn't now. He said nothing in response and looked at him for a studious moment.

“Let it pass,” Rogan urged quietly. “It's gold we want. Let's worry about finding it. The sooner we cross the river into Mashonaland and get farther from the old king's kraal, the safer we'll be—and the closer to our goal.”

Peter did not reply, but Rogan thought he saw a relinquishing of his adamant mood.

“I'll think it over,” Peter mumbled.

Rogan watched Peter and Retford ride alone back toward camp, dust flying from pounding hooves.

Rogan buried his face in his sleeve, sick of the unrelenting dust. A moment later, coughing, he walked back to where Derwent waited, holding the horses' reins. Derwent was scowling. Rogan knew he did not like the squabbles with Peter. Derwent quickly handed him a skin of water.

Rogan rinsed the dust from his mouth, then mounted and rode slowly across the dry field toward camp, Derwent beside him.

“I think we're making a mistake, Mr. Rogan. I think we ought to pack our bags and head back to Kimberly. The pioneers are as determined as bulls. But so are the king's indunas. I always say that when two determined bulls decide to face each other—”

Rogan pulled his hat lower and cantered a length ahead. At this moment he, like Peter, had little patience for another opposing view. If he was a determined bull, then so be it. He wanted to locate Henry's gold. Nothing was stopping him now, not even the Zulu. Dumaka was making a blunder if he, as Peter had said, mistook Rogan's cooperation for lack of resolve.

C
HAPTER
T
WENTY
-T
WO

Rogan's frown deepened as he rode on, his thoughts swirling. Dumaka was a Zulu induna, so why had he been working on Julien's estate before the Zulu War in 1879? Their king, Cetshwayo, had been alive at that time, strong and greatly feared. No induna of Zulu blood would normally work for Julien at Capetown, yet Dumaka had done so. Strange… considering he hated Sir Julien and anyone now associated with him. What had happened at Cape House so many years ago when Katie van Buren escaped with Jendaya and Henry Chantry?

Could it be Julien hadn't realized who Dumaka really was but had mistaken him for a Bantu? Dumaka could have come to work there in search of the Black Diamond. That would surely suggest a different history for the diamond than what was presently thought. Could the diamond have been stolen from the Umlimo?

“I say, it was a bit strange, how Dumaka talked about Sir Julien and the Black Diamond,” Derwent said.

“I wonder. I'm beginning to worry about its history.”

“You mean, you think there have been some lies about how it was discovered at Kimberly?”

“Look, Derwent, forget everything we've been told. Now think. What if there's another story concerning its origin? One that Julien alone knows about—or maybe Carl van Buren, or even my grandfather, Sir George.”

“You mean one of them could have stolen it—like a temple robber?”

“Something like that. Maybe there was something between the two partners we don't yet know. Van Buren, they say, was killed in a mine explosion at Kimberly.”

“You questioning the report?”

“I don't know…but what if the report is hiding the truth? What if something else happened?”

Derwent pushed his hat back thoughtfully. The wind ruffled his russet hair. “Say, I never thought of that. I wonder. I see what you're thinking, all right. Maybe the two of 'em didn't find the diamond?”

Rogan was silent, thinking.
Or maybe only one of them?

“That would certainly be an evil thing to lie about.” Derwent scratched his long nose. “Your kin may have been thinking the wrong thing for two generations.”

Rogan scowled. “The place to learn about this is Jakob van Buren's mission. I want to talk to him about a few things, including Jendaya and where she could be. Dumaka said he didn't know. He had an unpleasant look in his eyes when I asked him.”

“Doesn't sound a bit good to me. Maybe she's hiding from him?”

Was she even still alive after all these years?

Rogan looked off toward the Matopos. “You see those distant hills?”

“Aye, a beautiful land, Mr. Rogan. Thought so the moment I laid my eyes on it.”

“Somewhere in those hills, there's a secret valley and a cave—more than one, probably—that's considered sacred. It's a stronghold of demonic powers, with an Umlimo speaking all kinds of evil curses.”

Derwent shook his head. “I heard all about the Umlimo. They use witchcraft—that's what it's all about. They seem to have certain powers, but I'm thinking Satan has his way in these parts, Mr. Rogan. It sure makes me feel good in my heart to know Jakob van Buren's a light for truth at his mission station. And Moffat's Kuruman, too. His son runs the station now. And I guess Jendaya is a Christian. Now, would that be enough cause for Dumaka to be angry with his sister?”

“Yes. And I think there could be even more to all this and the diamond than we dreamed of back in Grimston Way.”

“Maybe it took our coming to South Africa to settle it. That would give us another reason for coming all the way on this expedition, wouldn't it? Maybe a more noble reason, I'm beginning to think.”

Rogan looked at him, his serious mood gone, and irritation in his smile.

“Not beginning to feel guilty about getting a little gold in your hands, are you?”

Derwent shifted in his saddle. “No, not if it's all fair and legal. But look here, Mr. Rogan, things are getting a bit troubling. I don't know if I can trust the motives of some of those adventurers.”

BOOK: Yesterday's Promise
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