Meridian of Darkness
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About this ebook
When several tourists flee into the vast wilderness they soon learn that the key to survival lies within themselves, as they become pawns in an increasingly deadly tango with ferocious beasts, rebel soldiers, an international poaching syndicate, and evil witchdoctors.
This epic tale has elements of courage, love, loyalty, and haunting heartbreak that shine brightly through the flames of bloody revolution.
Hendrik Erasmus
The author is a South African of European descent. He was drafted into the military in 1974, and after attending law school he backpacked around South America in1986. In the 90’s he taught English in Greece, Korea and Thailand. His travel autobiography; SOARING ON AFRICAN WINGS was published in 2004. His subsequent travelogue DRIFTING INTO A SIDE-STREAM is based on a Cape-to-Cairo trip, and travels through Southeast Asia, Nepal and India. His second travelogue HOBO is based on travels in Korea, Southern Africa, Morocco, Turkey, China, Vietnam, and Southeast Asia. Currently, he is employed at Dongseo University in Busan, South Korea.
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Meridian of Darkness - Hendrik Erasmus
Copyright © 2014 by hendrik erasmus.
ISBN: Softcover 978-1-4931-3626-1
eBook 978-1-4931-3627-8
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the copyright owner.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to any actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Thinkstock are models, and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.
Certain stock imagery © Thinkstock.
Rev. date: 06/11/2014
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Contents
1. Koos:—Bloodshed in the Bushveld
2. Koos:—The Prelude
3. Koos:—Lost in the Wilderness
4. Tihosi:—A Shangaan Warrior
5. Rachel:—Elephant Rage
6. Tihosi:—African Style Revenge
7. Koos:—Baptism into the Wild
8. Tihosi:—Rescue Mission
9. Rachel:—Smoking Guns
10. Koos:—Regrouping
11. Caitlin:—The Shadow of Death
12. Koos:—Poachers
13. Tihosi:—Mission Impossible
14. Koos:—Lions at the Hilton
15. Koos:—Indaba and Hyenna Song
16. Shauna:—Hope
17. Koos:—The Hunt
18. Caitlin:—Horror and Survival
19. Bvekenya:—A Poacher’s Tale
20. Rachel:—Paradise Lost
21. Koos:—High Drama
22. Rachel:—Desolation
23. Koos:—Desperation Trail
24. Rachel:—Fools Gold
25. Koos:—Target Satara
26. Rachel:—Lion Kill
27. Tihosi:—To the Rescue
28. Koos:—Lost and Found
29. Rachel:—A Thunder of Hooves in the Night
30. Koos:—Northward Bound
31. Rachel:—An Exchange of Fire
32. Uta:—Lamentations
33. Koos:—Black Mamba
34. Rachel:—Jungle Justice
35. Xai:—Cold Spoor
36. Philippe:—La Passion
37. Koos:—An African Tragedy
38. Rachel:—Drumbeat in the Darkness
39. Koos:—Violation
40. Rachel: Bvekenya’s Revelation
41. Tihosi:—On the Trail
42. Koos:—Remniscense
43. Rachel:—Thulamela
44. Koos:—Converging Paths
45. Captain Van Wyk:—Mission Extraction
46. Rachel:—Down the Luvuvhu
47. Koos:—Crooks Corner
48. Rachel:—Horror
49. Xai:—The Sacred Land
50. Rachel:—A New Order
51. Koos:—The White Lion
52. Rachel:—Distant Drums
ACKNOWLEGEMENTS:
I would like to thank my girlfriend Jung Eun for all her support while I wrote this book, Paul Forde for creating the Kruger Park map, the artist Mi OK Kim for her sketch of the baobab tree, Dee Norris for his critiques, and all my family and friends for their unstinting support.
LEGEND OF THE BAOBAB TREE
It is said that long, long ago the first baobab grew beside a lake. As it grew taller it noted the colourful flowers, large leaves, and grand trunks of the surrounding trees. On a calm day it finally got to see its own reflection in the lake, and was shocked to see that its flowers lacked bright colours, its leaves were small, its trunk was thick and ungainly, and its bark resembled the wrinkled hide of an old elephant.
The baobab then raised its voice and complained to the creator in the hope of securing a better deal. The creator in turn pointed out that some organisms were purposefully less perfect than others, and asked if the tree found the hippopotamus beautiful, or the hyena’s cry pleasant. Yet even then the barrel-chested tree was not appeased and whined unceasingly, until in exasperation, the creator seized the ingrate by the trunk, plucked it from the ground, turned it over, and replanted it upside down. And ever since, the baobab has been unable to see its reflection or make complaint. For thousands of years it has survived strictly in silence, paying for its ancient indiscretion by doing good deeds for people. Across the African continent there are variations on this story that explain why this species is so unusual and yet so helpful.
BAOBAB%20TREE.jpg1
Koos:—Bloodshed in the Bushveld
DOOMA DOOM DOOM DOOM!
The drumbeats fell like spears through the theatre of darkness, each oblique doom
a quickening of dread in our deepest beings. About us, the African stage lay frozen in its knowing repose; the cricket chirp ceased, the eagle-owl grounded, the black-maned, bass-chested lion silenced in grim abeyance to the sonic purveyors of death. For it is with their guns and their bombs that humans wreak a carnage that no other predator of the wild can even contemplate, and through the primeval throb of their drumbeat they proclaim their superior bestiality.
Earlier, with the savage staccato of death advancing upon us, we fled into the no-man’s-land of chest-high savannah and cat-clawed thorn bush in an adrenalin-charged, frenzy of flight. Our first headlong dash carried us deep into the domain of the untamed, until we came to an involuntary halt before an imposing old baobab that billowed up above us. It stood majestically aloof, with wide, grotesquely twisted limbs silhouetted against a spangled portrait of the night sky. Like a sentient antediluvian entity, its languid, olden days’ language counselled calmness and cautioned against the folly of blundering blindly onward into the African bush. It was there that we held our first impromptu indaba; an important conference in Zulu. In retrospect, it would prove to be the rallying point that would mould us into a team, and thus ensure that some of us survived the coming days.
We were all out of breath, desperately trying to gather ourselves, when the blonde Rachel broke the paralyzing spell of silence, a note of hysteria thickening her Kentuckian drawl into a vestibule of fear, They ain’t coming after us, are they?
Some of us looked back for a long moment, pondering on the unthinkable as we listened the hollow tattoo of drumbeat in the night. Why don’t you ask Koos? He’s from this country, maybe he knows best vats happening,
the portly Bruno finally gasped, his guttural Germanic voice ragged with worry, as he held his wife Uta close to him. The others drew nearer too, until they were all facing me, pale and wild-eyed with their chests heaving from exertion.
I had known all along that it would eventually come to this, and had no reassuring answer. It had been my penchant for late night walks that had saved us from an immediate, violent death. Incredibly, it was only about thirty minutes earlier that I had been approaching the entrance along the perimeter of the bush camp’s thorn-wired fence when a thunder of gunshots shattered the silky equilibrium of the smouldering Lowveld evening. I swung around to see the first of the trucks gunning through the front gate, unleashing a hail of death upon the unsuspecting game rangers on duty. As I fled towards the tented area I glanced back only once; the luxury bungalows were aflame, and a howling mob of African men were pursuing screaming tourists, bayoneting them in a brutal orgy of bloodlust. I had needed no persuasion to convince the terrified group of campers to follow me out the back way, and run through the verdant veldt until we were engulfed within a vast world of thorn-bush thickets and flat-headed acacia trees.
Who ees those peoples? Why ees they doings zose terreeble theengs?
The Frenchman Filippe’s tense voice cut into my thoughts, forcing me to focus on the group of anxious people gathered before me. I don’t know, they may just be bandits, but it is also possible that they are part of a general rebellion against the government. But calm down, they cannot follow us in the dark, so we’re OK for now,
I replied.
The drumming ceased abruptly, leaving in its wake a vacuum of resonant disquiet, punctuated by several ominous bursts of machine-gun fire. What is happening out there? And what are we going to do now?
This time it was the robust Irish girl Shauna who was clutching her diminutive friend Caitlin protectively to her side, her head angled questioningly. I racked my brain for an answer. I think they may be hunting down people who are trying to escape, so it’s probably a good idea to get as far away from the camp as possible before dawn.
"But surely we’ll be rescued in the morning? After all, you can hardly expect us to stay out here in the wild like this. It is dangerous and we have no protection, nor any food or water! Ian bleated plaintively in his prim Queen’s English, Adam’s-apple bobbing, and his narrow face puckered with anxiety.
So solly, no poleesman coming this place, but you no wolly, we all be OK," Sora, the petite Korean artist said, stroking his arm soothingly, her irrepressibly good-humoured face breaking into a warm, reassuring smile. Sesame oil on troubled waters!
It was only then that the full gravity of our situation dawned on me. Our camp had been overrun by a band of blood-thirsty killers, and we were lost somewhere in the centre of South Africa’s Kruger National Park, an area that is larger than the adjacent Kingdom of Swaziland, and almost the size of Israel. We were unarmed and on foot in a terrain that harboured a multitude of ferocious felines, enormous tuskers, monstrous horned beasts, hyenas, deadly snakes, and countless other venomous things that slithered or crawled. The rivers were infested with crocodiles, and hippos, the wild’s chief human killers, roamed the pools and river banks. We were entirely on our own without provisions, and by dawn the forces of darkness could possibly be on our trail.
I listened as each of them voiced their fears and misgivings before coming to a conclusion. The fact that the marauders arrived at our obscure bush camp in trucks and were armed with machine guns probably indicates that they are part of a much bigger group, possibly involved in a general insurrection against the government. This may explain why there has been no recent satellite connection, and other forms of communication have been down too. Also, as nobody knows about our plight it might take days or even weeks before we can even hope to be rescued. If there is a tracker in that group they could catch up with us in the morning. I say that if we want to live we should keep moving and try to conceal our tracks as best we can. I’d rather take my chances with the animals of the wild than be at the mercy of those killers back there!
Koos hees right, let us follow heem,
said Filippe. I looked at him gratefully, and liked the sight of his muscular physique and the steely resolve in his eyes. Yea fuck, going back is no option,
agreed Rachel. Jaa, but how should we walk, vat vill be our plan?
asked Uta, the practical one. And what about the wild animals? We saw lions, buffalo, and many elephants in the vicinity of the camp yesterday,
Shauna said pointedly. Man more dangerous than animal. We use our minds, we think, we act, maybe we live,
said Toshi, the stocky martial artist from Japan, who was the oldest member of our group. I say we should go back and try to reason with them. It is too dangerous to go stumbling off into the wilderness,
Ian persisted. He was beginning to annoy me. "Did you see what they were doing to the other tourists? You are welcome to go back and try to reason with them, but count me out! I replied.
Look, we were in a newly developed bush camp in a remote area somewhere in the east, between Skukuza and Lower Sabie. I think that we should circle back until we reach a major road. We can conceal ourselves near the road, and maybe the nature of the passing traffic will indicate who is in control of the area, I suggested.
Who are you? You do not sound like an ordinary South African, said Caitlin.
I am just one of your co-campers, but I have been involved in military, as well as personal expeditions where I gained some great experience out in the wilds of Africa. But listen, we’ve wasted enough time already! If you’re going to come along, fall in behind me in single file. Don’t talk, and try not to step on any broken branches or make any noise. Filippe, I want you at the back, and drag this branch behind you to wipe out our tracks, I ordered, passing him a leafy branch that had recently been ripped off a tree by an elephant.
If I raise my right hand you must all freeze, and if I indicate like this, move back slowly, but never, never run, that is unless I do!
Ian, are you with us or not? I asked sharply.
Do I have a choice?" he answered sullenly, avoiding my eyes, as though he’d been press-ganged into joining us. Yet it was a decision that would have consequences far beyond the scope of our immediate vision, for nobody could have foreseen the horror that lay ahead.
2
Koos:—The Prelude
Going is the antithesis of staying, and ignorance can be moderated by an awakening; thus it is travelling that inevitably opens one’s mind to reveal the absurdities of your former convictions and fears. To travel is to recreate yourself; for on leaving the shores of your motherland you will undergo a metamorphous through the tumbling turmoil and enlightenment of experience. It is also so, that on your return you might find some bridges burnt, and your former beliefs diminished as you grow to view your world in a proper perspective. Long standing acquaintances will look at you askance, at your differentness, and you may question the relevance of local intrigues in the greater scheme of things. Yet your former comfort bastions will have expanded, and henceforth you’ll belong to the lonely band of eternal wanderers who have compassion and understanding, but are never truly accepted. Though your love will grow and eventually encompass all things, your greatest thrill will remain that vivid, adrenalin-fuelled pre-departure flush of visualization. And to paint a picture, I’ll pick a line from that old song: "Born Under a Wandering Star," that goes; `I’ve never seen a sight that didn’t look better looking back.’ So there’s no saying which way will take you, for you’ll not be stopping any place too long, and will in time, like the evening star, appear eternally through distant horizons.
Welcome back buddy,
I said to myself as I stepped out through the throng of people into the arrivals hall in the O R Tambo Airport near Johannesburg. There was nobody there to meet me, as I had been working my way around the world for the past fifteen years and had lost touch with my South African roots. I withdrew cash from an ATM and walked over to a car rental kiosk.
I turned down the offers of several African taxi operators as I hefted my backpack out into the dry, mid-summer morning heat and made my way to the feisty little Mazda I’d hired from the Rent-a-Wreck guys. Ah, right-hand drive. I’d have to get used to that again. I turned on the GPS and entered Kruger National Park, Paul Kruger Gate,
and soon I was on the road again, with my satellite-brained lady calling out directions to the N4 which led me off in a north-easterly direction.
The road bypassed Witbank and Middelburg, and later plunged down the escarpment into the Lowveld, a bird-watchers’ paradise, with its balmy, sub-tropical ambience. It’s a picturesque world of granite kopjes and thorny bushveld, and is home to the aggressive black mamba, one of the world’s most venomous land snakes. At Nelspruit or Mbombela as it is known these days, I took the turn-off towards Hazyview, via White River, stopping to buy provisions, as well as for beer to fill my cooler box. As I was getting into my car a youthful entrepreneur approached me. He was selling handmade catapults, or catties, as we used to call them. I purchased one and stuffed it into my pocket. It would help keep the monkeys at bay in the camp.
Further on down the road I spotted a roadside café where I treated myself to coffee and rusks. Rusks are a kind of hard-baked, elongated, dried biscuit that is eaten after having been dipped in coffee or tea, and are a big South African favourite.
It had been many years since I last visited the Kruger National Park, and I eagerly anticipated the lazy days of game-viewing that lay ahead. The Kruger is one of the largest game reserves in Africa. It covers an area of over 19,000 square kilometres in north-eastern South Africa, and extends 360km from north to south and 65km from east to west.
To the west and south of the Kruger National Park are the two South African provinces of Limpopo and Mpumalanga. In the north is Zimbabwe, and to the east the Lebombo Mountains separate it from Mozambique. The Kruger is now part of the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park, a peace park that links the Kruger with the Gonarezhou National Park in Zimbabwe, and with the Limpopo National Park in Mozambique.
An hour later I parked at the Kruger Park gate where a smiling, white-toothed African man checked my booking and gave me a great map of the park, as well as directions to the Tambo bush camp where I would be camping.
I’d arrived! It was time to get into a laid-back mode. First, I pulled over and opened the front windows to let a balmy wash of bush-scented air spill through the vehicle. Then I reached for a can of cold Castle beer and let a different force of nature wash down my throat. As I took time off to let my eyes adjust to the natural settings, I knew that it was only my vehicle that elevated me above the diverse, and sometimes fearsome creatures that lurk in the bush. For it is out in the wild that the savage code survival of the fittest
holds sway, and the simmering cauldron of the untamed is spiced by an eternal expectancy of sudden, violent death.
I looked up to see flurries of flamboyant cumulus clouds trailing their foreboding auras across the sombre earth as they traversed the embattled skies to their stations on the electrified horizon. There was the overwhelming cacophony of cicadas clamouring amidst the trees, while an ongoing symphony of exotic bird calls enchanted the senses. On the dizzy outposts of visual acuity, solitary baobab trees, eccentric loners of the continent, gyrated in the dusty haze. It was the broody ambiance of rural Africa.
I drove slowly on through the verdant bushveld with its flat-topped acacias, thorn bush thickets, and chest-high veldt making it more difficult to spot the wild animals. Up ahead a herd of wildebeest crossed the road, bringing me to a halt. I hurriedly closed the windows as a troop of baboons gambolled about my stationary vehicle, and a big, red-arsed male clambered onto the roof. If those guys get into your vehicle they can cause havoc, and you’re lucky if you don’t get bitten. But then, they are generally less harmful than the usual cluster of muggers that hang around some urban intersections in South Africa.
A giraffe peeped through the tree tops, and a small herd of impala grazed in a vale of open veldt. I passed by Skukuza, and later took the turn-off