"True, O Zikali," I said. "That is so far as I am concerned."

But Saduko answered nothing.

"Well," went on the dwarf, "since I am in the mood I will try to answer

both your questions, for I should be a poor Nyanga" [that is doctor]

"if I did not when you have travelled so far to ask them. Moreover, O

Macumazana, be happy, for I seek no fee who, having made such fortune

as I need long ago, before your father was born across the Black Water,

Macumazahn, no longer work for a reward--unless it be from the hand of

one of the House of Senzangakona--and therefore, as you may guess, work

but seldom."

Then he clapped his hands, and a servant appeared from somewhere behind

the hut, one of those fierce-looking men who had stopped us at the gate.

He saluted the dwarf and stood before him in silence and with bowed

head.

"Make two fires," said Zikali, "and give me my medicine."

The man fetched wood, which he built into two little piles in front of

Zikali. These piles he fired with a brand brought from behind the hut.

Then he handed his master a catskin bag.

"Withdraw," said Zikali, "and return no more till I summon you, for I am

about to prophesy. If, however, I should seem to die, bury me to-morrow

in the place you know of and give this white man a safe-conduct from my

kraal."

The man saluted again and went without a word.

When he had gone the dwarf drew from the bag a bundle of twisted roots,

also some pebbles, from which he selected two, one white and the other

black.

"Into this stone," he said, holding up the white pebble so that the

light from the fire shone on it--since, save for the lingering red

glow, it was now growing dark--"into this stone I am about to draw

your spirit, O Macumazana; and into this one"--and he held up the black

pebble--"yours, O Son of Matiwane. Why do you look frightened, O brave

White Man, who keep saying in your heart, 'He is nothing but an ugly

old Kafir cheat'? If I am a cheat, why do you look frightened? Is your

spirit already in your throat, and does it choke you, as this little

stone might do if you tried to swallow it?" and he burst into one of his

great, uncanny laughs.

I tried to protest that I was not in the least frightened, but failed,

for, in fact, I suppose my nerves were acted on by his suggestion, and

I did feel exactly as though that stone were in my throat, only coming

upwards, not going downwards. "Hysteria," thought I to myself, "the

result of being overtired," and as I could not speak, sat still as

though I treated his gibes with silent contempt.




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