An Essay on Tides
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That night they camped by a hedge of ‘wait a minute’ thorn bushes, tethering Khan and the mule by it. As N’debi roasted meat David sat on his bedroll with his back against his saddle, looking contently up at the night sky ablaze with stars.
“It does a man good to get away from the Crater at times,” he murmured.
N’debi chuckled from across the fire, “The Bwana is a warrior who misses the battle.”
David thought before replying, “I don’t miss killing men N’debi. It’s just I’ve always been busy in my life but now there is very little for me to do.”
N’debi smiled, “Some would welcome being able to say that Bwana.”
They spent a night at the Maasi village where David gave the chief a bag of salt as they sat around the council fire. He learnt from him that the slavers had not troubled the area for years since the battle at the river. David put that down to the increased naval presence along the coast due to the war.
They left the next day moving back towards the Crater.
They had ignored game that they passed until they got closer to the crater; not wishing the meat to spoil if it was carried for more than a day in the hot African sun.
N’debi spotted the small herd of Eland near the hills leading to the Crater. David dismounted drawing the .275 from the rifle holster. The two of them stooped low in the tall dry grass, as they began to move slowly towards the herd.
They stopped three hundred yards from it, and David brought up the rifle to his shoulder. The rifle fitted like an extension of his body. He took a breath as he concentrated on a young Eland male and then gently squeezed the trigger.
As the herd scattered the young buck fell; dead before it hit the ground.
David and N’debi stood up. “Good shot Bwana,” N’debi murmured as he moved forward towards the kill.
David sheathed the rifle before mounting Khan, and then leading the mule, rode towards the shade of an acacia tree whilst N’debi skinned and cut up the dead Eland sixty feet away.
He had started to swing his leg over the saddle when he heard the snarl, and was knocked completely from it, as a heavy weight hit him. He felt teeth sinking into his shoulder and claws ripping into his back and then heard the bone break in his leg as he struck the ground.
The leopard was catapulted over his head and landed ten feet away. It crouched preparing to leap; its tail swishing violently as its yellow eyes fixed on David. Agony swept through his body from the bite, claws and broken leg, as he struggled to sit up.
The leopard crouched lower coiling itself ready to spring, when with a snort of rage Khan was rearing in front of it lashing out with his hooves.
The leopard changed its target and sprang; sinking its claws into Khan’s neck as it bit into his throat, the back legs racking his chest. Khan screamed and fell to its front knees from the weight of the cat.
David managed to free his pistol despite the waves of white hot agony that flooded his body and somehow crawled towards the stricken horse.
Khan continued to scream as the leopard racked him; blood was issuing from its nose in a bloody froth as it tried in vain to stand.
“Leave him alone you bastard!” David screamed as he finally reached them. He thrust the barrel of the pistol into the leopard’s ear and pulled the trigger ... once, twice, then three times. The leopard collapsed dead,
N’debi arrived taking in the scene before him.
“Bwana!” he cried looking in horror as David tried to push the leopard from Khan’s head.
“Bwana, I must treat your wounds!”
David wasn’t listening. “Khan, oh God ... Khan,” he sobbed.
N’debi picked up the cat and threw it from them.
The horse lifted his head looking at David; its eyes rolling in pain; the bloody froth issuing from its nose. The horse was in agony from the horrendous wounds inflicted by the leopard.
“It’s all right boy,” David sobbed, “I’ll stop the pain.” His voice breaking as he stroked Khan’s head. Khan tried to whinny but only more of the bloody froth appeared. David lifted the pistol and placed it gently against Khan’s head and pulled the trigger.
David collapsed over Khan’s body; his shoulders heaving from the huge sobs that racked his body.
N’debi had started a fire and had placed his spearhead in it. He moved to lift David from the horse’s body but when he tried David screamed in pain then passed out.
When he came to, he was propped up against the trunk of the tree; the smell of burnt flesh heavy in the air. He noticed from blurred eyes that N’debi had made a large fire close by. White hot pain lanced through him from his shoulder, back, and leg which was now sticking straight out with N’debi’s knobkerrie bound to it. N’debi was pulling his rifle from its saddle holster, and he vaguely noticed his saddlebags and water bottle were by his side.
N’debi turned and carried the rifle towards him.
“You are awake Bwana ... good. I must go for help. You must stay awake now; the hyenas and jackals will smell the blood and come soon.”
David nodded ... his eyes on Khan’s body.
N’debi gave him a drink from his canteen, and at David’s request unfastened the saddlebags, and with his instructions loaded the pistol from the ammunition inside. David put it down within easy reach alongside the other pistol N’debi had taken from the saddle.
“I must go now Bwana, but you must stay awake,” he warned and with that he set off running.
David took another swallow from the canteen before placing a pistol in his lap.
At times the pain almost engulfed him but he fought to stay conscious by thinking of Khan.
The mule had bolted at the first snarl of the leopard. He knew Khan should have too but instead he stayed to protect him. His mind began to wonder thinking back to the days and nights they had been together. He was on the verge of slipping back into unconsciousness when the insane laugh of a hyena pulled him back.
“They were not going to have Khan,” he vowed to himself; forcing himself awake as the pain lanced through him ... again and again.
Patar reined in along with three Gurkhas at the tree, jumping down from his sweat-encrusted horse.
“David!” he cried, rushing over to where David sat against the tree.
David lifted his head, and slowly he smiled. “Don’t let them get Khan,” he said weakly as his head fell forward into unconsciousness.
Patar looked at the dead around the tree; the leopard, the horse and two hyenas.
For two weeks David hung by a thread to life as the fever raged within his body. Sometimes he would see faces above him but they were blurred, and then he would sink back into oblivion.
Finally the day dawned when the fever broke. He was conscious of his leg itching and tried to scratch it but his fingers encountered something stiff covering it. Then suddenly, Susan’s face was above him, her eyes bright with tears as she smiled down at him.
“Susan,” he mumbled. She placed her finger across his lips, “Shush, don’t excite yourself,” she murmured, bending and kissing him.
Over the next few days he learnt that they had arrived back from England over a week ago. Slowly as his strength came back he was allowed to sit up out on the stoop for a few hours each day, whilst Susan changed his dressings with his son Guy watching on.
Chapter 37 The Crater settled into a routine, the months passed into years. Susan gave birth to a son christened Guy Ramage. Martin and Jill had a daughter the same year, Barbara. Sulkie and Tana had foals, and Zeus was trained to the saddle. By the start of 1899 there were over 260 horses and foals out in the crater, and over 300 cattle and calves. People from the surrounding area would come to buy horses or cattle, mainly the Jersey’s for their own dairy needs. Susan had started a...
The Crater settled into a routine and the months passed into years. Susan gave birth to a son christened Guy Ramage. Martin and Jill had a daughter the same year, Barbara. Sulkie and Tana had foals, and Zeus was trained to the saddle. By the start of 1899, there were over two hundred and sixty horses and foals out in the crater, and over three hundred cattle and calves. People from the surrounding area would come to buy horses or cattle, mainly the Jerseys for their own dairy needs. Susan...
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“What’s wrong? What’s wrong?”Anthea looked up at her mum as she sat down at the dining table. “Nothing is wrong,” Anthea responded watching as her mum hurriedly dried her hands with a tea towel.“Is the baby okay? Are you okay? Is Jack okay?” she asked as her husband came into the room and pulled up a seat at the table.“We’re all fine Mum,” she responded exasperated with her mum’s anxiety. “I have something to tell you.”“Sit down Helen,” her dad snapped. “Give the lass a chance to speak.”Anthea...
Uther By Ellie Dauber (c) 2006 Introduction According to the legends of King Arthur, Merlin changed Uther Pendragon into a double for Duke Gorlois, so he could spend the night with Ygraine, the Duke's wife. Ygraine and Gorlois had three daughters: Elaine, Morgause, and Morgan le Faye. During their time together, Ygraine became pregnant with the child who was to become King Arthur. Uther's men killed Gorlois that same night. This is my TG (of course) version of what...
The the wind howled around the quayside as I stepped onto terra firma for the first time in weeks, the wind threw sharp shards of ice to sting our faces as we looked up at the sails as they were finally furled and stowed as our captain grinned at our discomfiture, "Au revoir!" he joked as if he knew we should soon be recalled. Those such as were left, and we were few enough, I shuddered. My best uniform packed securely in my Valise, awaited me, and just a few more duties before I...
Chapter 26 David was arranging his bedroll on a bunk. He’d placed his saddle pistol inside a saddlebag along with the ammunition for the pistols and his telescope. A cloth bag containing forty clips of rifle ammunition hung by it’s strap next to his rifle. All the men had similar bags within arm’s reach. He had almost finished the cup of tea the mortar team had made for the men, when the Havildar report movement along the crest. David rushed back to his position by the rim. Looking...
Part 5.5 Chapter 22 The Officers Call had been delayed until David got back from the Palace. He opened the meeting by telling them a British Army inspection team was coming to Kanda to inspect the ‘Rabble’ that guarded the Pass. The reaction of his officers were what he expected: Anger and disbelief. After they had cooled down, he went on to say the label ‘Rabble’ had been conferred on them by their former General, Sir Reginald Fitzroy. He smiled. ‘The Prince has suggested – and I...
David waited on Khan as Subedar Sultar gave the men waiting alongside their horses the order to mount. They trotted out of the Fort as the first rays of sunlight broke over the far away mountains. David pushed the troop hard, wanting to arrive as soon as possible while the sun lit the valley floor. They arrived just before eleven. Tiger troop already had their horses saddled outside of the brushwood fence. They had their uniforms on but with an Afghan blanket wrapped around them to keep...
Chapter 48 At an Officers Call back at the Crater, David addressed them. ‘Well gentlemen, we have done as much as we can to prepare. We hold strong positions, in that the enemy will find it difficult to climb the flood banks in front of them. Our only weakness is if they get behind us. Their artillery could be a problem but if they are like the needle guns used in India they only have a range of about a mile. Our mortars could give them a nasty surprise so the only real problem will be the...
Part 12 Chapter 45 David decided it was time for action after the seventh day. Leaving their horses in the rift, he took the troop out during the night and arranged them alongside of the track. They waited concealed until the aircraft had returned back to its base before edging closer to the track and taking up positions. The ambush was a complete success, at fifty yards the Ghurkhas couldn’t miss. The carts were checked, provisions and fodder were quickly dispatched to the rift to...
Chapter 1 The look on Andrews face as he came through the door, said it all for him. Removing his hat, he sat down and poured out a drink from the scotch bottle on the table by the side of the bed. He drank it in one swallow, his face lined with suppressed anger. ‘The bastards have blocked any introduction other than the charge of disobeying an order. The Colonel at least had the decency to look embarrassed, but it seems the only charge is that you willfully disobeyed the order. No...
Then suddenly the cleft was filled with screaming men, brandishing swords and rifles as they appeared in the light of the oil lamps. Twenty-two rifles spat out as one and the front rank fell. It was rapid fire now. The bodies of the dead and dying filled the cleft, Afghans were using the bodies as protection as they tried to return fire. Suddenly, first one lamp was shot out and then the second, and the cleft was in darkness. David lit the gunpowder fuse and said a silent prayer. The...
Chapter 19 Two porters were required to assist with their luggage. Susan had three large suitcases, mostly taken up by reference books, she claimed. Their staterooms were port and starboard. David told her to take the starboard one, as she would get more sun that side. His stateroom was bigger than his quarters on the Comet, but he noticed eight years at sea had taken its toil on the furniture and fittings. His steward helped to unpack while he went out to the deck to check the loading of...
David organised training involving setting up and firing the Vickers and Mortars until every man was familiar at doing it. This included their transportation by mules. News filtered in that the Germans were expanding their force and a regiment of German soldiers had arrived from Europe along with artillery. Askari’s were being recruited and trained and tensions were rising all along the eight hundred miles that divided the two countries. Maasi reports came in that Askari’s along with white...
David grew stronger and began to ride around the crater on Zeus. He met up with Martin one day out in the Crater at one off the cattle paddocks. Martin was inspecting some cattle inside off it. ‘Good day Martin, I’ve not seen them before have I?’ Martin spun round smiling, ‘Hello David, of course I haven’t told you have I’ he replied, ‘I brought them from England. Part of my father’s bequeathed, their French Limousine cattle, he left me a bull and six cows. Their hardy cattle with a good...
Chapter 29 Three days later the boarded the Easton Comet. They found out the first night on board that, a Guy Reynolds and his wife Molly had taken the other suite. David and Susan liked them from the moment they were introduced, Guy was in his early thirties and Molly a few years younger. They had been in Bengal hunting Tigers, but prior to that they had been in East Africa after Lion and Elephant. In the long conversations the couples had together, it transpired that Guy’s father had...
Chapter 53 A year later the news came through, the war was over. Three nights later a huge party was organised at the Crater for all the men who had fought for East Africa. Australians, Ghurkhas, Matabele, Home Guard, and Hunters, along with their wives and parents, mixed with each other in celebration of the end to hostilities. Over the next month the Australians and the Ghurkhas returned back to their homes. The Crater seemed somewhat deserted with their going. The Reserve had been...
After their mid-day meal the men lined up on the parade ground standing alongside their horses; Havildar Turin standing a little in front. David mounted the stallion and walked to Turin. “Carry on Havildar Turin,” he ordered. Turin shouted over his shoulder, “Detail; prepare to mount; mount”. The twenty-six men moved as one. “Left by twos; forward,” he cried giving the sign with his arm. David sat on his horse as the men passed; their rifles slung over their shoulders; the last man leading...
The rains came a month later and the hills resounded to the harsh crack of thunder, whilst the night sky was lit with jagged sheets of lightning. The rain came in a downpour that within seconds drenched anyone out in it. The track became a road of cloying mud, which made the use of wagons impossible. The cattle and horses were brought into the paddocks for safety against stampeding. For two weeks the rains never let up by day or night until one day it dawned with clear blue skies, and the...
David was arranging his bedroll on a bunk. He’d placed his saddle pistol inside a saddlebag along with the ammunition for the pistols and his telescope. A cloth bag containing forty clips of rifle ammunition hung by its strap next to his rifle. All the men had similar bags within arm’s reach. He had almost finished the cup of tea the mortar team had made for the men, when the Havildar reported movement along the crest. David rushed back to his position by the rim. Looking through the...
The Officers Call had been delayed until David got back from the Palace. He opened the meeting by telling them a British Army inspection team was coming to Kanda to inspect the ‘Rabble’ that guarded the Pass. The reaction of his officers was what he expected, anger and disbelief. After they had cooled down, he went on to say the label “Rabble” had been conferred on them by their former General, Sir Reginald Fitzroy. He smiled. “The Prince has suggested, and I concur, that the “Rabble” be...
The lights of the Fort reminded him so he told the Lance Naik to draw two oil lamps from the stores for when the returned to the Pass. This was the same four-man detail that had driven the first herd down to the Fort and were anxious to get their own horses back. David smiled at the bond the men had formed with their mounts. He took the ropes of the other three packhorses as the men took the herd to the paddocks. As he reined up inside the gate, Subedar Major Para’s office men were running...
Chapter 35 The next morning David opened the rifle cases that Martin had brought, and gazed at the workmanship off each rifle. Their balance was amazing coming up to his shoulder like an extension off his body. The deep lustre off the figured mahogany furniture with its chequered pistol grip and cheek rest made it a weapon off beauty. David had a gun cabinet already made, his .303 was in it along with the Winchester. He fitted in each rifle, and put the ammunition in the drawers below, along...
It was still dark as he saddled Khan then he trotted out of the Fort. Once on to the road he broke into a gentle canter. Khan’s long legs ate up the miles. The sun was just appearing over the mountains to the east as they trotted through the entrance, the guards surprised to see him. As they came to present arms, he acknowledged with a salute. The wind cut through him as he neared the cleft. When he dismounted, a rifleman led Khan away around the brushwood screen. He walked into the...
David drew Khan to a sudden halt by the gates of the Fort. The entire garrison was drawn up on parade. Turin stood proudly in front of Tiger Company, whilst Sultar stood in front of Cobra Company. A Havildar stood in front of the rest of the men on parade. Subedar Major Para cried out, bringing the men to attention and then to the present arms. He turned, giving David a fierce salute. David returned it, slightly shocked at the transformation of his command. Then Para turned, dismissing the...
A week later, the patrol reported that, although the cleft was still blocked, the buttress camp was now accessible. Turin’s men began loading the heavy wagons, while he and Hagar checked off the items on their lists. Later that night he reported to David that he and the Tigers would be leaving at first light. David told him he would be report to the Prince in Putan, and then join him at the Pass the following day. He stood on the wall of the Fort as the first rays of the sun rose above the...
It was another three days before Susan would let him get out of bed for an hour. As he recuperated, he expressed his alarm about her putting herself so close to the battle by placing the aid station at the entrance to the Pass instead of at the Fort. “If I had,” she replied, sweetly, “You, along with half the wounded, would be dead by now.” On the fifth day, against her protests, he said he was fit enough to return to the Fort and gave the order to prepare to move. The tents were broken down...
David decided it was time for action after the seventh day. Leaving their horses in the rift, he took the troop out during the night and arranged them alongside of the track. They waited concealed until the aircraft had returned back to its base before edging closer to the track and taking up positions. The ambush was a complete success; at fifty yards the Gurkhas couldn’t miss. The carts were checked; provisions and fodder were quickly dispatched to the rift to supplement their own stocks...
A servant conducted him along wide corridors until he reached a door and beckoned David to enter. Candles lit the interior of the spacious room and a large divan bed lay invitingly by the arched windows. There were few items of furniture in the room except for a small table and chair and a cupboard, but numerous large cushions were on display. The servant, dressed in a Mundu, the white sarong favoured for servants and common people, bowed to him, “Sahib, a bath has been prepared for you....
The sun was setting by the time David arrived back. In his absence a room had been cleared for him and furnished with a cot, table, and chairs. An enamel bowl sat on a stand with a large pitcher of water and against one wall was his luggage. The Havildar Major asked if he needed anything else. He thanked him for the room and furniture and requested that the senior NCOs report to him after breakfast the next morning. The next morning with four Havildar’s and the Havildar Major in attendance...
Two porters were required to assist with their luggage. Susan had three large suitcases; mostly taken up by reference books, she claimed. Their staterooms were port and starboard. David told her to take the starboard one, as she would get more sun that side. His stateroom was bigger than his quarters on the Comet, but he noticed eight years at sea had taken its toll on the furniture and fittings. His steward helped to unpack while he went out to the deck to check the loading of the...
Susan departed two days later, escorted by two Riflemen. Their farewell had been hard for both, each making the moment last as long as possible. It was a week after that Para, Hagar, Turin and Sultar unexpectedly entered his office one morning. David frowned seeing the officers. Subedar Major Para broke the silence, “Colonel Sahib, you command the 1st Khana Rifles is this not so?” David nodded. “Is it not also true that the men of the Khana Rifles are Ghurkhas, and that a Ghurkha is not a...
He was shown into the Prince’s presence where he found Turin standing beside him. Turin saluted him smartly with a wide smile on his face. The Prince was still lean but had a few grey hairs in his hair and beard that had not been there before. The Prince gave him a hug. “My son, it has been too long,” he murmured. After telling about Susan and the children and that his daughter now bore Yasmin’s name, David got down to business. Turin insisted that he could have three hundred Gurkhas if he...
Three days later they boarded the Eastern Comet. They found out the first night on board that a Guy Reynolds and his wife Molly had taken the other suite. David and Susan liked them from the moment they were introduced. Guy was in his early thirties and Molly a few years younger. They had been in Bengal hunting tigers but prior to that they had been in East Africa after lion and elephant. In the long conversations the couples had together it transpired that Guy’s father had made a fortune...
It was little after midnight when they reached the ford. David removed his saddlebags, binoculars, Luger and rifle, before Zeus was led away. He dropped them all on his bunk. Bert dropped his then they both rushed out to see that the men were settling into their assigned positions. Shortly after two am they heard the rumble of explosions far of across the river and an orange glow appeared. An hour later the telegraph started chattering and David waited impatiently until it stopped then read...
The next morning after his wash and shave David affixed Colonels rank to the shoulder straps of his new uniform before putting it on. After his breakfast Havildar Major Para reported to him for the approval of his standing orders. He had broken the command down into three groups, two groups of twenty would be either be horse training or on the rifle range, forty-five would be on building duty, and twelve on guard duty. His plan was to rotate the groups each day. David approved and signed, but...
David returned to the Astor. For three weeks he spent his time reading, shopping and going to the theatre. Then, one evening he was sitting in the lounge of the Astor having coffee and a cognac when he struck up a conversation with an elderly man in his sixties who had served in India in the medical corps. The man introduced himself as Major Watson, retired. He told David harrowing stories of the mutiny and of the conditions under which he had conducted surgeries in the field. He said that...
At times he opened his eyes and was dimly aware that he was fastened to the side of a mule on a stretcher. He heard moans coming from the other side of it before the darkness fell again. The mists began to clear and as he opened his eyes one of Yasmin’s helpers was wiping his brow with a cool cloth. Where am I?” His voice croaked. The girl looked alarmed and dashed away to be replaced by Susan’s face. Suppressed tears glazed her eyes, “Hello darling, don’t try to talk, you need rest now,”...
After breakfast a detail of twelve men with a Naik in command went out with a cart containing building materials to start work on the rifle range. David was in his new office writing out the points he wished to raise with the Prince, when he was informed a caravan was approaching from the city. By the time he had finished his notes and started to walk to the paddocks, he found the tailor with his wagon by the gate. Spotting Havildar Turin he ordered him to bring out the men inside the...
It was late Saturday afternoon when the train came to a halt at McLeod Station in Karachi. As David stepped from the train, a Mr. Smithers introduced himself as the Prince’s representative in Karachi. In the carriage taking him to his hotel, Mr. Smithers informed him of the arrangements he had made for him. He was booked into a suite at the Royal Hotel, Karachi’s premiere. A stateroom on the steamer Eastern Comet had also been booked for him. The ship, Mr. Smithers explained, was a fast mail...
Over the next few months the crater settled into a routine. Through their new found friendship with the Maasi, the Gurkhas were able to barter for goats, and soon had a herd of twenty ... goat milk and flesh being a favourite of the Gurkha diet. Susan along with Martin and Jill visited the Maasi to tend to the sick and to check their cattle. The Gurkhas’ wives had taken over the husbandry of the dairy herd and fresh milk, buttermilk and cheese became plentiful. Ali’s hens provided eggs and...
The year dragged to a close and information from across the river started to dry up as the tribes either crossed the river or moved further north. The lack of information was brought up at one of the meetings held with senior officers. It was Sultar who suggested letting some of the Gurkhas cross the river in disguise. “Due to their size and colouring they may be able to avoid detection,” he argued. Rham, along with three of the original Gurkhas who had come with David to the Crater, were...
A lookout warned him of a dust cloud approaching along the track. He sent a runner to stop them a mile from the ford. The chosen men had slowly gathered behind the embankment as their comrades slipped into their vacant rifle and machine gun posts. All the men had filled water bottles and carried rations and extra ammunition in their saddlebags along with their bedrolls. He told them to make their way to the horses but to avoid making too much dust. He remained behind in the command post...
They had a first class compartment to themselves as the train pulled out of the station. Mr. Cox had changed his suit and washed and shaved somewhere in town, David realized when he met the solicitor at the train station. The compartment was typical of the Victorian rail system found in India in 1888: Heavy upholstered seats with brass fittings and velvet curtains. David had never been in first class on the rail journeys he had undertaken in the past, only being able to afford second-class,...
The war dragged on into its second year and the besieged towns were liberated at a high cost of life. The war developed into hit and run by the Boers up against nearly two hundred thousand British and Dominion soldiers. A knock-on effect of the war was beef prices skyrocketed and David was sending thirty head of cattle every three weeks to Mombasa for shipment down to Cape Town. By the end of the second year the British changed their tactics to that of the Boers, using mounted infantry and...
They rode through the gate to the Crater as two of N’debi’s warriors detached themselves from where they were guarding the gate, crowding around N’debi jabbering away in their tongue. They left them behind as they walked the horses up the track by the stream. Someone must have seen them, because the Gurkhas’ wives along with Susan were running down the track towards them. David dismounted as Susan flung herself into his arms, their lips joined as he held her, feeling the tears of joy on his...
The next morning David opened the rifle cases that Martin had brought and gazed at the workmanship of each rifle. Their balance was amazing coming up to his shoulder like an extension of his body. The deep lustre of the figured mahogany furniture with its chequered pistol grip and cheek rest made each weapon a thing of beauty. David had a gun cabinet already made; his .303 was in it along with the Winchester. He fitted in each rifle and put the ammunition in the drawers below, along with the...
The next morning at ten he was shown into the office of Mr. Cartwright who was seated behind an imposing desk with a younger man who looked to be in his mid-thirties standing by his side. He was introduced as Henry Cartwright, his son. David took an immediate liking to the father and son with their bluff and friendly mannerisms. He outlined his requirement for a box magazine fed bolt-action rifle firing a smokeless bullet. Mr. Cartwright sat back in his chair. “Henry is the authority on such...
The news arrived the following June. The war was over. The last commandos had finally surrendered rather than let their families suffer more. There were no celebrations in Nairobi, only a dull acceptance of the news that peace had come at last to South Africa. Even the most diehard of the farmers who had supported the British Army had changed their minds when they realised the terrible sanctions that Kitchener had imposed on Boer families. Not all the Boers had accepted the peace treaty which...
The next day, David, now dressed in a white linen suit and with the Prince at his side, stood in front of a raised dais in the Grand Audience Chamber. He looked behind him at the seated men. In the front row sat his officers, along with Robert, and behind them were the Riflemen who had been lucky enough to win a seat in the drawing. On the other side of the aisle sat the Gurkha families and residents who used the city hospital. When he saw the Reverend suddenly look up and smile, David swung...
That day uniforms and rifles were distributed so men sat round loading clips and putting them into their bandoliers. During the evening David said good-bye to Susan and the children. Hanga had packed his saddlebags and bedroll onto Zeus along with his rifle in its scabbard. One of the .45 Colt Semi-Automatics was put in his saddle holster and he wore the other in his belt holster along with his kukri. Outside he said farewell to Martin and Jill before turning to Sultar, “Keep them safe old...
At an Officers Call back at the Crater, David addressed them. “Well gentlemen, we have done as much as we can to prepare. We hold strong positions in that the enemy will find it difficult to climb the flood banks in front of them. Our only weakness is if they get behind us. Their artillery could be a problem but if they are like the needle guns used in India they only have a range of about a mile. Our mortars could give them a nasty surprise so the only real problem will be the aircraft if...
Two days later Sultar turned up at the house with a notepad in his hand. He followed David into the study and sat down. “As I understand it you wish to keep the statuesque of the land and inhabitants the same. Well, the Maasi and occasional safari are the only human activity that takes place there. The Maasi don’t pose a problem; they don’t hunt for food, and they live off their cattle. The safaris may create a problem. So I would give permits to only professional hunters that we know and...
The years rolled by and the Crater prospered. Nairobi grew larger with new settlers coming from all parts of Europe to find a new life in Africa. Susan had been asking David to take the family back home to England so she could show the children to her parents, but he always found an excuse to put it off. Finally, in late 1911, he took Susan and the children to England to see their grandparents. After an initial stay with them they travelled back to London so Susan could see her old Professor...
It took seven days to transport the guns and weapons along with the ammunition back to Nairobi. The crowds lined the street to cheer as the troops rode by in formation. David was told by the Mayor of Nairobi that troops had arrived from Mombasa. On finding out where they were billeted, David presented himself to a Major Mainwaring, who it seemed was newly arrived from Australia with two companies of Australian Light Horse, to take over the defence of Nairobi. Seated in his makeshift office...
Five weeks later Robert Keeling appeared at the Crater dressed in civilian clothes. Susan hugged him and made him welcome. Over dinner, with Sultar and Yasmin present, he explained his visit. “I’m on a tour of strategic areas where there is likely to be conflict in the event of war. I’ve just been down to Cape Town to see how they are organised. When I leave here I’ll be going around the Horn of Africa and travelling up the Red Sea through to Suez. The Canal is vital to us. But we have...
“Sybil honey? Can you shape shift into something really strange and exotic for me?” Sybil is more interesting and more important than re-floating EROS! “Haven’t you already fucked me, as a mermaid, as a pair of back to back Siamese twins, and as a goatgirl Draenei figure from MMO WOW? Now, you ask for a change, into some REALLY strange and exotic being? Just what, err ahem, just how would you classify those predecessor fantasy manifestations?” Sybil giggles. “Well, some of my fantasies...