“What do you have to tell me, Wells?”
“I think it best that Baker explains, sir.”
“I don't give two bloody hoots who does the talking, just get on with it!”
Speaking slowly and clearly, Burton told him about Lettow-Vorbeck's A-Bomb.
Moments later, General Aitken collapsed into his chair.
Burton was confined to a cabin with Bertie Wells as his guard. He'd washed, thrown away his prison uniform, and dressed in clean, tick-free battle fatigues. A cup of tea and a plate of sandwiches had been provided.
“They've radioed ahead,” Wells told him. “And so have I.”
“And the city's being evacuated?”
“Evacuated? To where? There's no place to go. Tabora has been under siege for half a century, and all the rest of Africa is under German control. My guess is they'll try to get as many people as possible into underground bunkers. Whether that'll save them or not remains to be seen. If the spore cloud is dense enough, I don't suppose there'll be anywhere safe.”
“Yet we're going back?”
“To rescue the top brass.”
“And take them to-?”
“Your guess is as good as mine. I suppose it's possible there's another British enclave somewhere, a place only the bigwigs know about. Or maybe we'll head into one of Africa's wildernesses and lay low while Crowley experiments on you.”
“I don't like the sound of that.” Burton took a bite out of a sandwich and frowned thoughtfully while he chewed and swallowed. “Who did you radio?”
“I sent a coded message to my editor, told him about the A-Bomb.”
“Will he be able to get to safety?”
“Probably not. As I say, the city is surrounded.”
“Then how do we get in? How does the
“We manage to keep a passage-we call it Hell's Run-open through the besieging German forces to the east of the city. The most ghastly fighting occurs along its borders, but Crowley and our mediums focus their efforts there and have so far prevented the Germans from closing the route.”
A siren started to blare.
“That's the call to battle stations!”
The door opened and an Askari stepped in. “You're both ordered to the bridge,” he said. “Tabora just radioed a message that's put the wind up Aitken. We're approaching the city now.”
“What message?” Wells asked as they followed the African out of the room.
“I don't know the details, Lieutenant.”
They passed along corridors and up stairs, with men rushing around them and the siren howling continuously. The moment they entered the bridge, Aitken rounded on Burton and snapped: “Baker, did Lettow-Vorbeck tell you anything about lurchers? Have the Germans regained control of them?”
“He pointed out a crowd of the plants,” Burton replied, “and said they're most numerous up near the Blood Jungle, but control? No, quite the opposite.”
“Well, that's damned strange. Tabora reports that thousands of them are approaching the city from the north.”
Burton and Wells looked at each other. The explorer shook his head and shrugged, baffled.
“We're currently racing straight down the middle of Hell's Run, well away from German peashooters,” Aitken said. “When was the last time you were here, Baker?”
“I've never been to Tabora, sir.”
“You haven't? Well, take a peek out of the window. We're almost there.”
Burton and Wells stepped over to the glass and looked out across the African landscape. The
“Those are the edges of Hell's Run,” Wells murmured. “As you can see, the Hun weathermen are at work. The storms are more or less constant, as is the fighting beneath them. Tabora is behind the hills you see ahead of us.”
As he examined the terrain, Burton was overcome by a sense of deja vu. He struggled for breath and clutched at Wells's arm.
The
“Kazeh!” Burton croaked. “Tabora is Kazeh!”
“Kazeh is under siege!”
Sir Richard Francis Burton, Algernon Swinburne, and Isabel Arundell had ridden back through the night to where Trounce and the expedition were bivouacked. All three of them were coated with dust and thoroughly exhausted, but there was no time to rest.
Burton fired his rifle into the air to rouse the camp and yelled: “Hopa! Hopa! Pakia!”
Trounce responded to the announcement with: “By the Prussians? Are there that many of them?”
“There's enough! We have to get moving! If they take the town, we won't be able to resupply for the next leg of the safari.”
“But what the blazes are they up to?”
“It's the key to central East Africa, William. Whoever controls Kazeh controls the region all the way from Lake Tanganyika to Zanzibar, and up to the Mountains of the Moon. My guess is they mean to drive the Arabs out and make of it a Prussian base of operations.”
Burton ordered Said bin Salim to have the porters take up their loads. Mirambo silently appeared beside him and asked, “Will the coming day be that in which we fight?”
“Yes. I bid thee prepare thy warriors, O Mirambo.”
“We are always prepared,
The African stalked away.
Krishnamurthy, Spencer, Isabella Mayson, Sister Raghavendra, and Sidi Bombay gathered around the king's agent. He described to them the scene he'd witnessed.
Krishnamurthy asked, “Can we get into the town from the west?”
“Yes,” Burton replied. “If we follow the hills south, remaining on this side of them, then cross when-”
“No. We can't enter the town at all,” Isabel Arundell interrupted.
They all looked at her, surprised.
“It would be suicidal. I have a hundred and twenty fighters and another ninety or so on the way. Mirambo has two hundred boys. The Prussians already greatly outnumber us and there are a thousand more fast approaching. If we're in the town when they arrive, we'll be pinned down and we'll likely never get out again.”
Burton nodded thoughtfully. “You're the expert in guerrilla tactics,” he said, “and I'll bow to your expertise. What do you recommend?”
Isabel positioned herself directly in front of him and placed her hands on his shoulders. “The king made you his agent, Dick, and you have your orders. What is the distance from here to the Mountains of the Moon?”
“Something under two hundred miles.”
“Then go. Forget about resupplying in the town. You and your people take two horses each and the bare essentials in supplies. No porters. Nothing but what you can carry. Travel as fast as you can. It's a race, remember? I have no doubt that John Speke is already on his way.”
“And you?” Burton asked.
“Mirambo and I will lead our forces against the Prussians.”