But
My Experience Has Been That It Is Always A Very
Dangerous Thing To Rely On A Borrowed Gun Or
Rifle, Unless It Has Precisely The Same Action As
One's Own; And Certainly In This Instance It Almost
Proved Disastrous.
Having thus seen to our rifles and ammunition
and taken care also that some brandy was put in
the
Luncheon-basket in case of an accident, we
set off early in the afternoon in Spooner's tonga,
which is a two-wheeled cart with a hood over it.
The party consisted of Spooner and myself,
Spooner's Indian shikari Bhoota, my own gun-boy
Mahina, and two other Indians, one of whom,
Imam Din, rode in the tonga, while the other led
a spare horse called "Blazeaway." Now it may
seem a strange plan to go lion-hunting in a tonga,
but there is no better way of getting about country
like the Athi Plains, where - so long as it is dry -
there is little or nothing to obstruct wheeled
traffic. Once started, we rattled over the smooth
expanse at a good rate, and on the way bagged a
hartebeeste and a couple of gazelle, as fresh meat
was badly needed in camp; besides, they offered
most tempting shots, for they stood stock-still
gazing at us, struck no doubt by the novel
appearance of our conveyance. Next we came
upon a herd of wildebeeste, and here we allowed
Bhoota, who was a wary shikari and an old servant
of Spooner's, to stalk a solitary bull.
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