We collected the
remains as well as we could and heaped stones
on them, the head with its fixed, terrified stare
seeming to watch us all the time, for it we did
not bury, but took back to camp for identification
before the Medical Officer.
Thus occurred my first experience of man-eating
lions, and I vowed there and then that
I would spare no pains to rid the neighbourhood
of the brutes. I little knew the trouble that was
in store for me, or how narrow were to be my
own escapes from sharing poor Ungan Singh's
fate.
That same night I sat up in a tree close to
the late jemadar's tent, hoping that the lions
would return to it for another victim. I was
followed to my perch by a few of the more
terrified coolies, who begged to be allowed to sit
up in the tree with me; all the other workmen
remained in their tents, but no more doors were
left open. I had with me my .303 and a 12-bore
shot gun, one barrel loaded with ball and the
other with slug. Shortly after settling down to
my vigil, my hopes of bagging one of the brutes
were raised by the sound of their ominous roaring
coming closer and closer. Presently this ceased,
and quiet reigned for an hour or two, as lions
always stalk their prey in complete silence. All
at once, however, we heard a great uproar and
frenzied cries coming from another camp about
half a mile away; we knew then that the lions
had seized a victim there, and that we should
see or hear nothing further of them that night.
Next morning I found that one of the brutes
had broken into a tent at Railhead Camp - whence
we had heard the commotion during the night - and
had made off with a poor wretch who was lying
there asleep. After a night's rest, therefore, I
took up my position in a suitable tree near this
tent. I did not at all like the idea of walking the
half-mile to the place after dark, but all the same
I felt fairly safe, as one of my men carried a bright
lamp close behind me. He in his turn was followed
by another leading a goat, which I tied under my
tree in the hope that the lion might be tempted to
seize it instead of a coolie. A steady drizzle
commenced shortly after I had settled down to my
night of watching, and I was soon thoroughly
chilled and wet. I stuck to my uncomfortable
post, however, hoping to get a shot, but I well
remember the feeling of impotent disappointment
I experienced when about midnight I heard
screams and cries and a heart-rending shriek, which
told me that the man-eaters had again eluded me
and had claimed another victim elsewhere.
At this time the various camps for the workmen
were very scattered, so that the lions had a range
of some eight miles on either side of Tsavo to
work upon; and as their tactics seemed to be to
break into a different camp each night, it was most
difficult to forestall them.
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