Hunter Quatermain's Story eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 25 pages of information about Hunter Quatermain's Story.

Hunter Quatermain's Story eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 25 pages of information about Hunter Quatermain's Story.

“‘What’s that, Mashune?’ I asked.

“‘That dam lion; buck smell him,’ replied the Zulu in English, of which he had a very superficial knowledge.

“Scarcely were the words out of his mouth before we heard a sort of whine over the other side of the pool, which was instantly answered by a loud coughing roar close to us.

“‘By Jove!’ I said, ’there are two of them.  They have lost the buck; we must look out they don’t catch us.’  And again we made up the fire, and shouted, with the result that the lions moved off.

“‘Mashune,’ I said, ’do you watch till the moon gets over that tree, when it will be the middle of the night.  Then wake me.  Watch well, now, or the lions will be picking those worthless bones of yours before you are three hours older.  I must rest a little, or I shall die.’

“‘Koos!’ (chief), answered the Zulu.  ’Sleep, my father, sleep in peace; my eyes shall be open as the stars; and like the stars watch over you.’

“Although I was so weak, I could not at once follow his advice.  To begin with, my head ached with fever, and I was torn with anxiety as to the fate of the Hottentot Hans; and, indeed, as to our own fate, left with sore feet, empty stomachs, and two cartridges, to find our way to Bamangwato, forty miles off.  Then the mere sensation of knowing that there are one or more hungry lions prowling round you somewhere in the dark is disquieting, however well one may be used to it, and, by keeping the attention on the stretch, tends to prevent one from sleeping.  In addition to all these troubles, too, I was, I remember, seized with a dreadful longing for a pipe of tobacco, whereas, under the circumstances, I might as well have longed for the moon.

“At last, however, I fell into an uneasy sleep as full of bad dreams as a prickly pear is of points, one of which, I recollect, was that I was setting my naked foot upon a cobra which rose upon its tail and hissed my name, ‘Macumazahn,’ into my ear.  Indeed, the cobra hissed with such persistency that at last I roused myself.

“‘Macumazahn, nanzia, nanzia!’ (there, there!) whispered Mashune’s voice into my drowsy ears.  Raising myself, I opened my eyes, and I saw Mashune kneeling by my side and pointing towards the water.  Following the line of his outstretched hand, my eyes fell upon a sight that made me jump, old hunter as I was even in those days.  About twenty paces from the little skerm was a large ant-heap, and on the summit of the ant-heap, her four feet rather close together, so as to find standing space, stood the massive form of a big lioness.  Her head was towards the skerm, and in the bright moonlight I saw her lower it and lick her paws.

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Hunter Quatermain's Story from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.