The Sun Is God

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Authors: Adrian McKinty

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ALSO BY ADRIAN MCKINTY

The Cold Cold Ground
I Hear the Sirens in the Street
In the Morning I'll Be Gone

Published 2014 by Seventh Street Books ®, an imprint of Prometheus Books

The Sun Is God
. Copyright © 2014 by Adrian McKinty. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, digital, electronic, mechanical, photocopy­ing, re­cord­ing, or otherwise, or conveyed via the Internet or a website without prior written permission of the publisher, ex­cept in the case of brief quotations em­bodied in critical articles and reviews.

The characters, organizations, companies, products, and events in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, or organizations or companies, currently or previously existing, or existing product names is coincidental and not intended by the author.

First published in 2014 by Serpent's Tail, an imprint of Profile Books Ltd., 3A Exmouth House, Pine Street, London EC1R 0JH; www.serpentstail.com.

Cover image © 2014 Dreamtime
Cover design by Nicole Sommer-Lecht

Inquiries should be addressed to
Seventh Street Books
59 John Glenn Drive
Amherst, New York 14228
VOICE: 716–691–0133
FAX: 716–691–0137
WWW.SEVENTHSTREETBOOKS.COM

18 17 16 15 14     5 4 3 2 1

The Library of Congress has cataloged the printed edition as follows:

McKinty, Adrian.

The Sun is God / by Adrian McKinty.

pages cm.

ISBN 978-1-61614-068-7 (paperback) — ISBN 978-1-61614-087-8 (ebook)

1. Murder—Investigation—Fiction. I. Title.

PS3563.C38322S86 2014

813'.54—dc23

2014012147

Printed in the United States of America

It is when we try to grapple with another man's intimate needs that we perceive how incomprehensible, wavering and misty are the beings that share with us the sight of the stars and the warmth of the sun.

Joseph Conrad,
Lord Jim
(1900)

The sun is God!

J. M. W. Turner, reputed last words (1851)

AUTHOR'S NOTE

T
he following story is based on true events. Emma Forsayth, Bessie Pullen-Burry, Governor Hahl, Doctor Parkinson, August Engelhardt
et alia
are real individuals who lived in, or, in Miss Pullen-Burry's case, visited, German New Guinea in the years 1906–1907.

Kabakon Island lies in the Duke of York group between the large Papuan islands of New Britain and New Ireland, roughly fifteen hundred miles north of Brisbane and two hundred miles west of the Solomons. In the decade before World War I, Kabakon was the
Heimat
for the extraordinary society who called themselves “Naked Cocovores” or
Sonnenorden
. The mysterious deaths that took place on Kabakon during this time remain unsolved to the present day.

There are several fictional characters and many fictitious elements in this book; where the interests of the novel and strict historical accuracy have collided I have put the demands of the former first.

Contents

1 Massacre on the Groot Hoek River

2 The Duel

3 Captain Kessler's Request

4 The Immortal in the Morgue

5 Queen Emma's Soirée

6 Doctor Parkinson's Request

7 Kabakon

8 Fräulein Herzen

9 Morning in the Augustburg

10 The Sonnenorden

11 The Pilot

12 The Pendulum of Desire

13 Leaving the Garden

14 Sun Bathing

15 The Sausage and the Photograph

16 The Countess, the Russian, and the American

17 Engelhardt

18 The Murder of Max Lutzow

19 Bethman and Engelhardt

20 The Peace that Passeth all Understanding

21 South by the Sickle Moon

22 The Night Witches

Afterword

About the Author

Back Cover

1

MASSACRE ON THE GROOT HOEK RIVER

L
ieutenant William Prior should never have been on duty that night. The war was nearly over and Will and three other officers of the Military Foot Police had been on their way to a saloon in Bloemfontein. On the track down from the camp a starved lioness had launched an attack on Lieutenant Rigby's horse. A shot in the air sent the skinny creature scurrying into the bush, but Rigby fell and broke an ankle. Riding double with Rigby, Will reached the field hospital just after nine where he surrendered his friend to the efficient hands of Harry Douglas of the Royal Army Medical Corps.

A breathless enlisted man ran over to Prior. “Lieutenant Prior, sir, lukin for thissin, sir, trouble at Camp Z. T' kaffirs. Blow up, sir, or as near as makes na matter.”

Sergeant Black was a Yorkshireman from some hamlet in the North Riding and while few in the regiment could follow anything he said, Will could understand him perfectly. Will had grown up in Leeds, and as the son of a popular doctor he had come into contact with every social class in the county.

“Who is supposed to be in charge of Camp Z, Sergeant Black?”

“Lieutenant Ashcroft, sir, but he's legged it, sir. Drunk, sir.”

“What sort of trouble is it?”

“Know nowt, sir. Corporal Townes comes running t' camp, sir, screaming about t' kaffirs and Lieutenant Ashcroft, sir.”

“All right, let's get over there, sergeant, and see if we can't sort this out between us, eh?”

Camp Z was across the valley on the other side of the Vaalkop about three miles from the field hospital. Both men got their horses from the stables and rode together across the barren wasteland that had been rich wheat and barley fields until the previous winter when they'd been torched on the orders of General Kitchener.

The sky was cloudy and moonless and the two men could see virtually nothing. Bats flitted above the horses' ears and great moths the size of small birds collided with man and beast.

As they got closer to the Groot Hoek River they could hear the sound of gunfire and yelling. Will nudged his pony into a canter and Sergeant Black followed suit.

Camp Z was a “concentration camp” for African prisoners who had worked in some capacity for the Boers in the Orange Free State. The condition for most inmates in the British camps had improved since the findings of the Fawcett Commission and the noisy campaigns of Emily Hobhouse and David Lloyd-George. Before Hobhouse's polemics in the liberal press, thousands of Boer women and children had perished from malnutrition and disease while their menfolk were shipped to prison camps overseas. Over the last year however the Boer camps had seen ameliorated food supplies and the establishment of prison hospitals, but the truth was that almost nothing had been done to better the lot of the native African prisoners. No one in England or Germany or anywhere else got terribly worked up about the well-being of inmates in the “kaffir camps.”

As they neared Camp Z, Will and Sergeant Black saw the first escapee, a boy of about eleven, running blindly toward the town with blood pouring from a head wound.

Sergeant Black raised his rifle but Will shook his head. One runaway child didn't amount to much. As they climbed the kop they passed another half dozen boys and one old man jogging up the hill. “Doesn't look good, sergeant,” Will said.

“Nay, sir,” Black agreed.

They followed the curve of the Groot Hoek River and galloped to the camp entrance where they found the situation parlous in the extreme. Seemingly the entire population of around a thousand men, women, and children was attacking the small Military Foot Police garrison who were lined up in two rows in front of the camp gates. Three of the MFP soldiers were already injured but a corporal was holding the nerve of the remaining men. Some of the prisoners were escaping over the barbed wire and others were in the process of ransacking the aid station and supply shed, but by far the biggest danger was the mob at the gate. If the line of a dozen military policemen broke, the entire camp could run off into the South African night.

Will was in his dress uniform, armed with a six-shot revolver and a cavalry sabre. He dismounted, unsheathed the sword, and ran to the camp entrance. “Lieutenant Prior assuming command!” he bellowed.

A terrified private let Sergeant Black and Will inside the gate and it was at that moment that the Africans surged forward again. Two volleys from the soldiers kept them back but Will could see that several dozen African men had ripped the corrugated iron roof from the storage shed and were preparing an assault from behind these improvised barriers. If the prisoners all charged at once they would certainly overrun the position.

“Sergeant Black, go to the guardhouse, find the bloody Maxim gun and bring it back here!”

Sergeant Black saluted and ran to the guardhouse. He did not ask the obvious question: what if Camp Z did not possess a Maxim gun?

“Does anyone know how this kicked off?” Will asked the soldiers.

“They've had no food or medicine for four days. The supplies haven't come through,” a Scottish corporal told him. “We've been taking the dead ones out in carts, sir.”

Will marched in front of the line of military policemen and addressed the mob. “Return to your tents at once! We will not hesitate to shoot if you attempt to escape!”

He was well aware that few if any of them spoke English but he hoped that his uniform and sword would at least have a visual impact. The mob jeered and someone threw an improvised spear at him which missed.

“Return to your tents at once! The food situation cannot be addressed until order has been restored!”

A skeletal woman dressed in rags ran to him from the mob and fell at his feet. He was horrified by her miserable, hollow face and bony outstretched fingers.

My God, were all the prisoners like this?
He looked beyond the woman to the other inmates and from what he could see in the lamplight it was the same story: half dead, naked, brown stick-like figures with weeping sores and great gaping eyes.

For almost his entire time in South Africa he had been on standard policing duties in captured Boer towns or in the British garrison. He had heard the stories, of course, and even read the reports in the
Manchester Guardian
but he had expected nothing like this. He stepped away in horror and backed toward the British line.

“If you return to your tents I will make sure that food arrives tonight from the British commissary!” he yelled, but as he had expected none of the prisoners moved. He could see that many of the young men had armed themselves with rocks, stones, and spears that had been manufactured from wooden joists and sharpened tent pegs. And all at once assorted missiles began to fall among the soldiers.

“Do any of you speak Dutch?” Will asked the men.

One of the privates raised a nervous hand.

“Tell them that I will personally guarantee the arrival of food tonight from the commissary at the Vaalkop!”

The private raised his voice to shout to the mob in Dutch. Although many of the prisoners did understand what he was saying the situation was too far gone for further British promises.

More spears and stones and one of the soldiers went down hurt.

“Sergeant Black, tell me about the Maxim!” Will bellowed.

“Maxim ready to fire, sir!” Black said in the stolid Yorkshire burr that gave Will confidence.

“Excellent. Now, who is the best rider among you men?”

The soldiers looked at a short blonde private at the far end of the line.

“All right, you take my horse, ride over to the Vaalkop, find Major Potter, and briskly apprise him of the situation. Then ride to the field hospital and tell Lieutenant Douglas that we are in need of orderlies and medical assistance.”

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