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LAYING IT ON THE LINE ♦

Dawn. The sun breaks over the Sahel like a cracked egg and takes up where it left off the day before — scalding, incinerating, searing the life from everything within its compass. Carrion sniffers and night-roving reptiles creep back to their dens, and the big battered Nubian vultures sail out over the plain to check out the leavings. Rocks begin to expand, stunted shrubs dig deeper into the earth, mimosas fold up their leaves like parasols. By eight in the morning the horizon is shirred.

Mungo Park lies motionless on his back, watching a millipede trace a series of blind circles across the roof of his tent. Since the night of his “attempted escape” things have gone hard on him. Six men now doze outside his tent each night, and his food and water ration has been cut by half. It begins to occur to him that he may not make it after all, that he might just lie here and waste away, dauntless discoverer of the interior walls of a Moorish tent. He will join Ledyard, Lucas and Houghton in the ranks of failure and ignominy. He will never again lay eyes on Ailie, nor his mother, nor the bonny banks of the Yarrow. His bones will dry and crack and fall to dust under the alien sun and the wheeling strange colossi of misplaced constellations. He begins to feel daunted.

Suddenly the flaps part and Johnson ducks into the tent. In his hand a goatskin waterbag, known as a guerba in these parts. The explorer lies there, racked with fever, riddled with worms, his stomach shrunken, sphincter open wide, barely able to raise his eyes. He is weak and stinking, tabescent, at the far edge of hope. Johnson kneels beside him and feeds the leather nipple into his mouth. His lips grope, pulse quickens. It is water, cold and clear, water dipped from the shifting porous depths of the earth. It stirs the roots of his hair, firms his toenails, sings to his brittle bones. “I’m saved!” he gasps, and then vomits.

“It’s all right, Mr. Park. Take it easy: you got the whole thing to yourself.”

“Wha?” The explorer’s eyes are crusted and yellow, cheeks drawn, his beard a playground for ticks, fleas, lice and maggots.

“You heard me right. Chief Jackal, he tells me to come in here and give you the waterbag and then a pan of milk and kouskous.”

“Milk? Kouskous?” Johnson might just as well have announced haggis, finnan haddie and sheep’s-head soup. Mungo goes into peristaltic shock, then jerks himself up, clutching at the guerba and ransacking the tent with his eyes. “Where?” he pants, struggling to his feet. “Where? Tell me for God’s sake!”

At that moment a boy enters with a wooden bowl. Milk and kouskous. The boy makes as if to lay it at the explorer’s feet, but Mungo snatches it from him and buries his face in the thick ropy paste with all the desperation of a man stranded on the desert for forty days and forty nights. Which is precisely what he is.

Afterward, he pats his abdomen. “Johnson,” he says. “Oh-ho, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, how I needed that. .” But wait! What has he done? The bowl’s been scraped clean and here’s his faithful guide and interpreter languishing before his eyes! “Johnson,” he stammers, staring down at the ground, “. . can you ever, can you ever forgive me? I’m afraid I went into a bit of a frenzy there. . I–I forgot all about you.”

Johnson holds up his palm. “Oh they been feedin’ me right along, don’t you worry about that. Got to. Else how am I goin’ to bust my ass for them?

Fetch this, mend that. Scrub this pot, milk them goats, oil up Akbar’s sandals and skim some cream for the horses. Shit. It’s like bein’ back on the plantation again. Sometimes I wish they’d just let me lie here and languish along with you.”

Mungo strokes the soggy grain from his beard and systematically licks the kernels from his fingers, then takes a long pull at the waterbag. Color trickles back into his cheeks. “So what’s up?” he says. “What’s made the bloody camel drivers so charitable all of a sudden?”

“Fatima.”

Fatima. The syllables flow like wind on water. First she’d saved his eyes, and now the rest of him. Hope glimmers. “She wants to see me?”

Johnson nods. “Ali says you got to be fed, washed up and made presentable. He won’t have his wife examinin’ a unwashed Christian. And he gave me this too,” handing the explorer a pale folded garment.

“What is it?”

‘‘Jubbah. Ali says you got to cover up your legs — he finds your trousers objectionable, high-quality nankeen or no.” Johnson laughs. “You ever get back to London you can sweep all the beaux and noodles under the table, start a craze: skirts for gentlemen.”

Mungo laughs along with him, drunk on food and water. The two chuckle and wheeze, wiping tears from their eyes. Then Johnson looks up, suddenly serious. “She’ll be here tomorrow night,” he says. “Don’t blow it.”

PLANTATION SONG ♦

On this sub-Saharan evening awash with pale light and tapering shadow, Mungo Park, for the first time in nearly three months, finds himself out of the tent and back in the saddle again. His horse has been restored to him (cachectic as ever, looking like one of the gutted nags the Druids used to impale for decoration), his beard, locks and loins cleansed and anointed, his rags exchanged for a spanking white jubbah. On his head, a battered top hat; round his shoulders, the blue velvet jacket he wore while addressing the African Association at St. Alban’s Tavern, Pall Mall. Ali and Dassoud flank him on their chargers. Ali’s mount is white, Dassoud’s so absolutely black it cuts a hole in the horizon (an illusion he enhances by blackening the animal’s hoofs and anus, and staining its teeth). Johnson brings up the rear on an Abyssinian ass.

They are bound for Fatima’s tent at the far edge of the encampment, a distance of perhaps six or seven hundred yards. Ali and Dassoud are silent, while Mungo, sotto voce, rehearses phrases from his Arabic grammar: “I am honored to bask in your presence.” “Allow me to make obeisance to the undersides of your feet.” “Hot, isn’t it?” As they pass through the heart of the camp, dogs dart out to yap at the Christian’s stirrups, children gather to bombard him with nuggets of camel dung, adults step from their tents to squint up at him and denigrate his race, creed and color. “I piss in your mother’s hole!” a man yells. But then Ali holds up his hand and the voices fall silent, the children run to their mothers, the dogs vanish.

“Thanks,” says Mungo. Ali’s face is impassive. His gesture has had nothing whatever to do with compassion or fellow feeling — he just doesn’t want his wife inspecting a washed Christian in a shit-stained jubbah, that’s all.

♦ ♦ ♦

Fatima’s tent is two or three times the size of any of the others in camp, and distinguished by broad bands of color: gray, beige, indigo. Mungo recognizes the huge Nubian out front. The Nubian stands there, on guard, flexing the black bulges between his elbow and shoulder. Off to the right a woman squats in the dust, busily milking four or five she-goats. The explorer observes the pale soles of her feet, the yellow torpedoes of the goats’ teats. A fly lands on the explorer’s nose. The sun touches the horizon.