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"He is, sir," replied the butler, stepping aside.
Victor Durnovo thought that a momentary hesitation on the part of the butler was caused by a very natural and proper feeling of admiration for the new clothes and hat which he had purchased out of the money advanced by Jack Meredith for the outfit of the expedition. In reality the man was waiting for the visitor to throw away his cigar before crossing the threshold. But he waited in vain, and Durnovo stood, cigar in mouth, in the dining-room until Guy Oscard came to him.
At first Oscard did not recognise him, and conveyed this fact by a distant bow and an expectant silence.
"You do not seem to recognise me," said Durnovo with a laugh, which lasted until the servant had closed the door. "Victor Durnovo!"
"Oh--yes--how are you?"
Oscard came forward and shook hands. His manner was not exactly effusive. The truth was that their acquaintances.h.i.+p in Africa had been of the slightest, dating from some trivial services which Durnovo had been able and very eager to render to the sportsman.
"I'm all right, thanks," replied Durnovo. "I only landed at Liverpool yesterday. I'm home on business. I'm buying rifles and stores."
Guy Oscard's honest face lighted up at once--the curse of Ishmael was on him in its full force. He was destined to be a wanderer on G.o.d's earth, and all things appertaining to the wild life of the forests were music in his ears.
Durnovo was no mean diplomatist. He had learnt to know man, within a white or coloured skin. The effect of his words was patent to him.
"You remember the Simiacine?" he said abruptly.
"Yes."
"I've found it."
"The devil you have! Sit down."
Durnovo took the chair indicated.
"Yes, sir," he said, "I've got it. I've laid my hand on it at last. I've always been on its track. That has been my little game all the time. I did not tell you when we met out there, because I was afraid I should never find it, and because I wanted to keep quiet about it."
Guy Oscard was looking out of the window across to the dull houses and chimneys that formed his horizon, and in his eyes there was the longing for a vaster horizon, a larger life.
"I have got a partner," continued Durnovo, "a good man--Jack Meredith, son of Sir John Meredith. You have, perhaps, met him."
"No," answered Oscard; "but I have heard his name, and I have met Sir John--the father--once or twice."
"He is out there," went on Durnovo, "getting things together quietly. I have come home to buy rifles, ammunition, and stores."
He paused, watching the eager, simple face.
"We want to know," he said quietly, "if you will organise and lead the fighting men."
Guy Oscard drew a deep breath. There are some Englishmen left, thank Heaven! who love fighting for its own sake, and not only for the gain of it. Such men as this lived in the old days of chivalry, at which modern puny carpet-knights make bold to laugh, while inwardly thanking their stars that they live in the peaceful age of the policeman. Such men as this ran their thick simple heads against many a windmill, couched lance over many a far-fetched insult, and swung a sword in honour of many a worthless maid; but they made England, my masters. Let us remember that they made England.
"Then there is to be fighting?"
"Yes," said Durnovo, "there will be fighting. We must fight our way there, and we must hold it when we get there. But so far as the world is concerned, we are only a private expedition exploring the source of the Ogowe."
"The Ogowe?" and again Guy Oscard's eyes lighted up.
"Yes, I do not mind telling you that much. To begin with, I trust you; secondly, no one could get there without me to lead the way."
Guy Oscard looked at him with some admiration, and that sympathy which exists between the sons of Ishmael. Durnovo looked quite fit for the task he set himself. He had regained his strength on the voyage, and with returning muscular force his moral tone was higher, his influence over men greater. Amidst the pallid sons of the pavement among whom Guy Oscard had moved of late, this African traveller was a man apart--a being much more after his own heart. The brown of the man's face and hands appealed to him--the dark flas.h.i.+ng eyes, the energetic carriage of head and shoulders. Among men of a fairer skin the taint that was in Victor Durnovo's blood became more apparent--the shadow on his finger-nails, the deep olive of his neck against the snowy collar, and the blue tint in the white of his eyes.
But none of these things militated against him in Oscard's mind. They only made him fitter for the work he had undertaken.
"How long will it take?" asked Guy.
Durnovo tugged at his strange, curtain-like moustache. His mouth was hidden; it was quite impossible to divine his thoughts.
"Three months to get there," he answered at length. "One month to pick the leaf, and then you can bring the first crop down to the coast and home, while Meredith and I stay on at the plateau."
"I could be home again in eight months?"
"Certainly! We thought that you might work the sale of the stuff in London, and in a couple of years or so, when the thing is in swing, Meredith will come home. We can safely leave the cultivation in native hands when once we have established ourselves up there, and made ourselves respected among the tribes."
A significance in his tone made Guy Oscard look up inquiringly.
"How?"
"You know my way with the natives," answered Durnovo with a cruel smile.
"It is the only way. There are no laws in Central Africa except the laws of necessity."
Oscard was nothing if not outspoken.
"I do not like your way with the natives," he said, with a pleasant smile.
"That is because you do not know them. But in this affair you are to be the leader of the fighting column. You will, of course, have carte blanche."
Oscard nodded.
"I suppose," he said, after a pause, "that there is the question of money?"
"Yes; Meredith and I have talked that over. The plan we fixed upon was that you and he each put a thousand pounds into it; I put five hundred.
For the first two years we share the profits equally. After that we must come to some fresh arrangement, should you or Meredith wish to give up an active part in the affair. I presume you would not object to coming up at the end of a year, with a handy squad of men to bring down the crop under escort?"
"No," replied Oscard, after a moment's reflection. "I should probably be able to do that."
"I reckon," continued the other, "that the journey down could be accomplished in two months, and each time you do the trip you will reduce your time."
"Yes."
"Of course," Durnovo went on, with the details which he knew were music in Oscard's ears, "of course we shall be a clumsy party going up.
We shall have heavy loads of provisions, ammunition, and seeds for cultivating the land up there."
"Yes," replied Guy Oscard absently. In his ears there rang already the steady plash of the paddle, the weird melancholy song of the boatmen, the music of the wind amidst the forest trees.
Durnovo rose briskly.
"Then," he said, "you will join us? I may telegraph out to Meredith that you will join us?"