Sister Conchita steered the Bedford carefully down the hill road from the Catholic mission headquarters building to Mendana Avenue.
âAre we going to visit the cruise ship again?' asked Sister Philomena hopefully at her side.
âI'm afraid not,' said Sister Conchita, flinching at the memory. She had already been reprimanded for her detour to the docks several nights before and her consequent invasion of the cruise ship with her contingent of elderly nuns. Neither had her superiors been over-enamoured when the party had returned later that night accompanied by several noisy police cars.
Sister Conchita feared that she was being confirmed as a nuisance by the local church hierarchy. Again she resolved genuinely to work harder on the twin virtues of humility and obedience.
âThat's a pity,' said Sister Philomena wistfully. She was small and wizened. âIt was a lovely evening.'
âIt wasn't bad, was it?' grinned Sister Conchita.
âI particularly liked the bit when you ordered the police cars to sound their sirens as we approached the mission house. Such a pity the bishop had just gone to sleep.'
âAh well,' said Sister Conchita philosophically, her good intentions receding like the tide. âInto each life a little rain must fall.'
Unexpectedly Sister Philomena began to cackle with maniacal laughter. After a moment the other sister joined in. They were both still giggling when they turned into Mendana Avenue and headed towards the wharf in the centre of the capital.
It was only a little after six o'clock in the morning. The streets of Honiara were almost deserted. Canoes from the fishing village were drifting out to sea. A contingent of prisoners on remand at police headquarters were cutting grass on the roadside verges, watched by a couple of bored policemen. Newly hatched megapode birds flew uncertainly over from their nests in the warm sands of the island of Savo, able to fly within hours of their birth. Sister Conchita concentrated on the road, determined to carry out her present mission efficiently and in a low-key manner.
Back at the mission house the previous evening Father Ignatius, the administrator, had sounded less optimistic. âA box of carvings made by the students will arrive from Ruvabi mission station early tomorrow morning,' he had told her drily. âI want you and Sister Philomena to supervise its unloading, see it through Customs and make sure that the crate is stored in the Customs warehouse to await the next cargo vessel to Australia. Do you think you can accomplish that without any unnecessary detours, sister?'
Sister Conchita had assured the administrator that she could. After all, what could possibly go wrong? she thought as she drove the van on to the wharf. This should be a suitably low-key chore and a fitting starting point on her long overdue road towards her acceptance and redemption.
âDo you know,' said Sister Philomena, âthe other day the radio said that they've discovered a Japanese soldier still surviving in the bush on Rendova island. Apparently he's been there for fifteen years, unaware that the war was over. He's been hiding on a little plot of land barely more than acre square, seeing nobody and doing nothing.' The elderly sister sighed. âAnd I will bet you anything that he's still had a much more interesting life than I have since they brought me back to Honiara!'
âIs it that bad?' asked Sister Conchita.
âI will say just one thing,' replied the old sister. âFor the sake of your immortal soul, keep on doing the wild things they tell me you've been doing lately for as long as you can. Don't let them grind you down, sister!'
The large visiting vessels of a few nights ago were no longer in the harbour. The cruise liner had departed during the night for Port Moresby, while the two cargo vessels had set out on their return voyages the previous day. Only a solitary battered Chinese trading vessel was moored askew in the harbour. Half a dozen Melanesian labourers were unloading the cargo it had picked up on its labyrinthine voyage back from Malaita.
The two sisters descended from the cab and approached the trading ship. One of the labourers saw them coming and manhandled a wooden crate on to a trolley, which he proceeded to wheel towards the Customs shed. The two nuns fell into step beside him and entered the building.
The shed was long and low, with a counter running its length. Standing behind the counter were three Melanesian Customs inspectors wearing uniform grey shorts and shirts and red berets. The labourer came to a halt, waiting for one of the inspectors to check the contents of the crate. Idly Sister Conchita examined the label on the box. It had been dispatched from Ruvabi some time before she had first arrived at the mission station. Heaven only knew how long it had been carried up and down the coast of Malaita before the trading ship had decided to return to Honiara.
One of the Customs inspectors, middle-aged and bespectacled, detached himself from the group and came over to the box. Yawning, he scribbled his initials on the lid with a piece of chalk. Automatically the labourer started to wheel the box towards the warehouse door at the far end of the shed.
âAren't you going to examine the contents?' Sister Conchita asked the inspector.
âOh, they never do,' said Sister Philomena. âWhat's the point?'
âNo examine, no examine,' said the inspector quickly, waving the labourer on. âEverything all right. Plenty good too much.'
Something in the urgency of the official's tone alerted the nun. The man was looking at her with something almost akin to fear in his eyes at her unexpected attention to detail. In spite of all her good intentions Sister Conchita heard herself ordering the labourer to wheel the crate back to the desk.
âI'd feel happier if you were to open the crate and see what's inside,' she said firmly. âAfter all, I am responsible for the contents, and I wasn't at Ruvabi when they were packed.'
The inspector hopped from one foot to another in an agony of indecision. His two companions, alerted by the sudden noise, walked over. As they neared, the first inspector looked as if he wished he were somewhere far away.
âI would like this crate opened and its contents checked, please,' Sister Conchita told the other two inspectors, who were looking on without much interest. She did not know why she was being so persistent but the first Customs man's undisguised air of apprehension alerted her to the fact that something might be wrong.
âOh, sister,' wailed Sister Philomena. âWe'll be late for breakfast!'
Sister Conchita continued to stare down the other two Customs officials. They were looking puzzled. One of them yawned and nodded and said something to the labourer. The Melanesian took a crowbar from a pile of tools in a basket in front of the desk and started to prise open the lid. It took him less than a minute to reveal the contents of the box. Sister Conchita and the others gathered round. She took out several of the carvings and examined them in silence. Then she removed another two carvings and looked at them carefully as well. Finally she replaced them.
âSister Philomena,' she said quietly, âI want you to wait here until I return. Make sure that no one touches this box or its contents. Is that clear?'
The elderly nun blinked in surprise. Then suddenly she looked twenty years younger. After all, she had served in the Sinerango district in 1927, when there had been a tax revolt and District Officer Bell had been murdered. She glanced at the patently sedentary and uneasy Customs officials before her with an expression making it all too clear that if she had outfaced Malaitan rebels these three would present no problems.
âCertainly, Sister Conchita,' she said, throwing back her head with an expression of sheer pleasure. âNothing will be moved, I promise you. Where are you going?'
âTo police headquarters,' said Sister Conchita, hurrying out of the shed.
Just before noon Kella approached the bush village of Nikona, high in the mountains. This was where Sam Beni, fatalistically disposing of ammunition from his barge, had told him he would find Pazabosi.
It was one of the most inaccessible regions of the whole island of Malaita. The highest peak here was marked as Mount Kolovrat, over four thousand feet above sea level. To the bushmen it was known as Tolosoi. Few if any of the names on the white men's maps were used by the islanders.
Even Kella had found the climbing hard. He stopped gratefully to rest on the trunk of a felled tree in a clearing containing gardens reclaimed from the jungle outside the bush village. The collection of huts was on the far side of a wall of trees left standing by the villagers to shield the gardens from the constant winds blowing at this altitude. A number of women, wearing skirts to denote that they were married, were digging in the gardens.
The Tali Kali dialect of this part of the bush area contained enough similarities with the Lau language for Kella to be able to make himself understood. He called across to the women that he was from the artificial island of Sulufou, and that he wanted to see their leader Pazabosi.
At first the women seemed to pay no attention, but after a few minutes, one by one, they put down their wooden digging sticks and drifted unhurriedly away in the direction of the village on the far side of the line of waving trees.
Kella had to wait another quarter of an hour before there was any response. Then three young men came from the village through the trees and swaggered truculently in his direction. They were hard-looking, marked across their faces with savage warrior slashes. They all carried stone-tipped hunting spears.
One walked ahead of the others and addressed Kella curtly. The islander wore a bone through his nose, and in his ears were sticks of cane, dyed red and plaited with yellow fern. In his hair he wore a decorative comb of fine strips of black palm bound together with creepers.
âI am Hita,' he announced bombastically, as if that explained everything.
âIt is Pazabosi I have come to see, not you,' said Kella.
âThere is no point in talking to him. Pazabosi is old and useless. If you seek anything from the Kwaio people talk to me. I am their leader.'
An ambitious young buck on the make, thought Kella. There was often one in a clan, waiting for a propitious moment to take over the leadership. It looked as if Pazabosi had his problems. If so, that would explain a great deal.
âAs long as Pazabosi lives, he is the paramount chieftain of the Kwaio,' said Kella, as if explaining something to a child. âHe has earned his position through deeds, not words.'
He spoke loudly and clearly, so that the other two warriors would hear him. The affronted Hita clutched his spear more firmly. His companions looked surprised at the police sergeant's forthright attitude.
Before Hita could reply, Pazabosi came out of the trees and walked across the garden track to them. The old clan leader was wearing a long
lap-lap
. He surveyed the group calmly. The two warriors seemed uneasy at his presence and looked to Hita for a lead.
âThe white blackman has come into our territory,' growled Hita. âI was about to send him away.'
âI choose who stays and goes in the Kwaio country,' rebuked Pazabosi. âKella and I fought together against the Japani in the war. We were real warriors, not barking young hounds who have never seen battle.'
Hita surged forward furiously, but his two companions held him back. Pazabosi looked on disdainfully. Finally Hita subsided. He turned and stamped away into the trees, followed after a confused moment by the two warriors. Pazabosi stared thoughtfully after the three men.
âI may have to do something about Hita soon,' he said in English.
âOr get someone to do it for you,' suggested Kella.
âIs that what you think I'm doing?' asked the old bushman, a smile dusting his mouth. âDo you imagine,
aofia
, that I am setting up a conflict between Hita and yourself?'
âThe thought had crossed my mind,' said Kella. âYou always were a good plotter. Hita and I are both threats to you in our different ways. Why not get us both to eliminate one another?'
Pazabosi nodded approvingly. âYou always caught on quickly when we were fighting the Japani,' he commented.
âOf course,' Kella told the old man, âyou could always retire and make Hita chief in your place.'
âI took the leadership from Alibaua of the Golobi clan when I was about the same age that Hita is now,' said Pazabosi. âLuckily, I was more intelligent than Hita.'
âNot to mention being a greater warrior,' said Kella.
Pazabosi smiled again. âHave you come all this way from the salt water just to spread your honey, Kella?' he asked.
âNo. I have come to fetch the white man Mallory back.'
âI know nothing of this,' said Pazabosi, no longer smiling.
âOver the last week I have learned things about you and Mallory,' said Kella. âI would like to tell them to you now. Just so that you can correct me if I am wrong.'
Pazabosi sighed. âWhen I first heard that you were back on Malaita, I did my best to make sure that you kept out of the Kwaio high bush,' he said. âI even walked down to the saltwater village to put my bones curse on you, as a sign that you would not be welcome up here.'
âIs that why you did that?' asked the sergeant. âI thought you were warning me off investigating the death of Senda Iabuli.'
âWhy would I be interested in a saltwater man like him?' asked the clan leader indifferently. âNo, I just didn't want you coming up here. It is a difficult time for the Kwaio people at present, and you have a reputation for interfering where you're not wanted, Sergeant Kella.'
âYou saved my life during the war,' Kella told the other man. âBecause of that, bush custom says that you have an obligation to me. How I use the life you gave me must always be of interest to you.'
âAnd sometimes a source of annoyance,' said Pazabosi. âGo on.'
âIt all started when Mendana Gau, or someone connected with the trader, stole the sacred
havu
from the custom temple at the waterfall. Am I right?'
Pazabosi said nothing. Kella went on. âThe
havu
is the most sacred of all the Kwaio relics. Your people were very angry when it was taken. They looked to you to get it back for them.'
âOf course,' said Pazabosi wearily. âThey expect me to do everything.'
âThey thought you would raise a force, track the thieves down and kill them,' said Kella. âOnly you couldn't do that. You had entered your
trochea
, the secret period of contemplation that an old man goes through before his death.'
âYou know about the
trochea
?' asked Pazabosi without emotion. âYes, I suppose you would. You follow the custom ways more than any other young man on Malaita.'
âIt was more than that,' said Kella. âI was meeting more and more people who knew that something had gone wrong up in the high bush, and who were surprised that you had done nothing to remedy it. They thought that you were waiting for a custom sign, but I wondered if perhaps you
couldn't
do anything about it. If you had entered the
trochea
you were bound by custom to spend your time thinking about the past and preparing to meet the spirits in the future.'
âIt would have been an offence against the ghosts if I had taken my mind off them at this time,' acknowledged the old chief. âOnce I had started to prepare for death, I could not fight again. That's why I tried to frighten you away, Kella. I knew that you were the only man on the island who would be likely to guess why I could not respond to the theft of the
havu
with force.'
âWhy didn't you explain that to your people? They would have understood.'
âThe
trochea
had nothing to do with them. It was a matter between me and the ghosts.'
âOf course,' said Kella, understanding. âBut all the same, people were wondering why you had not raised a war party to hunt down Gau and his fellow thieves. I thought about it myself. But when I came up here on several occasions there were no signs of preparations for violence. That got me thinking.'
âYou always were curious,' observed Pazabosi. âIt almost got you killed several times during the war.'
âActually, it was a white man who put me on the track,' Kella said. âA fellow police officer called Lorrimer reminded me that the last uprising on the island, Marching Rule, did not start until there had been the custom sign of black American soldiers sailing away. Once I began thinking about that, things started falling into place.'
âThere are some who believe that you think too much, Sergeant Kella.'
âAfter the
havu
had gone, a story started spreading that the mighty Pazabosi was waiting only for a custom sign from the spirits to go after the men who had stolen the
havu
and then lead a great uprising against the Brits on Malaita.'
âYou should have been a bushman,' said Pazabosi. âYou have the right sort of cunning mind. I would not have minded handing the leadership over to you.'
âNo, thanks, I've already got enough problems,' said Kella. âBut that's where the old saltwater man Senda Iabuli and his grandson Peter Oro came into the matter. Iabuli knew that his days on earth were numbered. He was under sentence of death in his village because the people there believed that he was in league with the devil. He had no money, but he wanted to leave his grandson something when his death came.'
âIabuli was a greedy fool,' said Pazabosi flatly.
âYears before, in 1942, with the imminent arrival of the Japanese, Iabuli and his friend Andu, the ghost-caller, had been deputed by the villagers to murder Lofty Herman, the beachcomber, in case the Japanese troops punished the whole area for harbouring a white man. Iabuli thought you were waiting for a custom sign to start your uprising. He decided to provide you with one. Am I right so far?'
âHe dug up Herman's grave after the earthquake,' agreed the old bushman. âPeter Oro stole some tools from the school and helped his grandfather bring up the white man's skeleton one night.'
âThen Iabuli made sure that everyone thought the body had been brought to the surface by the earthquake,' said Kella. âThat would be regarded as a custom sign, if ever there was one.'
âSenda Iabuli came to me one night and told me what he had done,' said Pazabosi. âHe thought I would be pleased. He told me that he was expecting to be poisoned by his own. He asked me to give him some gold sovereigns for him to hand over to Peter Oro as his last bequest.'
âBut really that was the last thing you wanted.'
âI had to put Iabuli off while I decided what to do. I told him that it would take me some time to gather the gold coins together,' nodded Pazabosi.
âBut why did you kill Senda Iabuli and Peter Oro?'
âI didn't,' said the old man simply. âI had entered my period of contemplation, if you remember. I could harm no one. I sent the bones
tabu
sign to Senda Iabuli, to warn him to keep quiet while I thought the matter through. It was not necessary. By that time his own people had murdered him.'
âAnd Hita then killed Peter Oro?'
âHita was perfectly prepared to use the custom sign of Lofty Herman's body as a signal to lead an uprising and make a name for himself,' said Pazabosi. âI had to tell him that the sign was a false one.'
âSo Hita heard that Peter Oro was hiding in the bush, after you frightened the boy when you pointed the bones
tabu
at me,' mused Kella. âHita and his warriors set out to find him. They murdered Peter Oro, because they knew that he was the only one left who realized that the uprising sign of Herman's skeleton was false. It wasn't a real custom sign. So Oro had to be disposed of.'
âHita left the body by the killing ground to warn you off,' said Pazabosi. âNext he attacked Mendana Gau, to gain face among the bush people as a warrior. He is trying to show the Kwaio people that he is a true leader. As soon as I have gone, he will start the uprising against the whites on the island.'
âHe won't wait for ever,' warned Kella. âIf you look like lasting much longer he'll have to kill you before he can take over the leadership.'
âDo you think I don't know that?' asked Pazabosi.
âThat just leaves Professor Mallory.'
âWhat about him?'
âOh, come on,' said Kella impatiently. âYou know where he is and Hita probably doesn't â yet. This is all a part of your delaying plan, to enable you to see your
trochea
through in peace. You lured Mallory up here by pretending you were prepared to show him the
havu.
When he arrived, you and your men kidnapped him. You've got that American hidden away somewhere, so that you have some sort of insurance in case you have to start negotiating with the authorities one day. It won't work. I have to take Mallory back now.'
âIf I have him,' said Pazabosi steadily, âI will still need him.'
âThe authorities won't bring any charges against you,' argued Kella. âThey'll be so relieved to have Mallory back, if he hasn't been harmed, that they'll leave you alone. I'm going to arrest Hita for the murder of Peter Oro, so you won't have to bother about his challenge to your leadership either. It's all going to come out well for you, just like you've planned.'
Again Pazabosi shook his head. The police sergeant wondered why the old clan leader was being so unwilling to make any concessions when he was in such a strong position. Then he realized why.
âI get it,' he said. âHita doesn't know where Professor Mallory is either. But he's looking for the American. If he can find him and butcher him, it will make Hita an even bigger hero in the eyes of his people.'