How I Found Livingstone Travels, Adventures And Discoveries In Central Africa Including Four Months Residence With Dr. Livingstone By Sir Henry M. Stanley
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My Two Detectives, Uledi (Grant's Valet), And
Sarmean, Were Immediately Despatched In Pursuit, Both Being Armed
With American Breech-Loaders.
They went about their task with
an adroitness and celerity which augured well for their success.
In an hour
They returned with the runaway, having found him hidden
in the house of a Mseguhha chief called Kigondo, who lived about
a mile from the eastern bank of the river, and who had accompanied
Uledi and Sarmean to receive his reward, and render an account of
the incident.
Kigondo said, when he had been seated, "I saw this man carrying
a bundle, and running hard, by which I knew that he was deserting
you. We (my wife and 1) were sitting in our little watch-hut,
watching our corn; and, as the road runs close by, this man was
obliged to come close to us. We called to him when he was near,
saying, `Master, where are you going so fast? Are you deserting
the Musungu, for we know you belong to him, since you bought from
us yesterday two doti worth of meat?' 'Yes,' said he, 'I am
running away; I want to get to Simbamwenni. If you will take me
there, I will give you a doti.' We said to him then, `Come into
our house, and we will talk it over quietly. When he was in our
house in an inner room, we locked him up, and went out again to
the watch; but leaving word with the women to look out for him.
We knew that, if you wanted him, you would send askari (soldiers)
after him. We had but lit our pipes when we saw two men armed
with short guns, and having no loads, coming along the road,
looking now and then on the ground, as if they were looking at
footmarks. We knew them to be the men we were expecting; so we
hailed them, and said, `Masters, what are ye looking for?' \
They said, 'We are looking for a man who has deserted our master.
Here are his footsteps. If you have been long in your hut you
must have seen him, Can you tell us where he is?' We said,
'yes; he is in our house. If you will come with us, we will
give him up to you; but your master must give us something for
catching him.'"
As Kigondo had promised to deliver Kingaru up, there remained
nothing further to do for Uledi and Sarmean but to take charge of
their prisoner, and bring him and his captors to my camp on the
western bank of the Makata. Kingaru received two dozen lashes,
and was chained; his captor a doti, besides five khete of red
coral beads for his wife.
That down-pour of rain which visited us the day we crossed the
Makata proved the last of the Masika season. As the first rainfall
which we had experienced occurred on the 23rd March, and the last
on the 30th April, its duration was thirty-nine days.
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