KARAMA
        karama: noun (Swahili) 1.a gracious gift from God 2.a high honor bestowed upon one


        PROLOGUE

        The Serengeti, Tanzania 1967


          A Masai warrior in tribal dress, resting in his customary onelegged stance, was
        silhouetted next to the single engine plane as the Hunter walked toward the airstrip. The Hunter pulled his hat down to shield his eyes from the glare of the rising sun, and shifted his suitcase from one hand to the other.
          "You're out and about early, Old Joseph" he said to the Masai, who though only a few years
        older, had the adjective 'old' irrevocably married to his English name. Old Joseph said nothing, but took the suitcase and heaved it into the plane, stowing it behind the pilot's seat.
          The Hunter went over the plane inch by inch, a safety precaution.
        Satisfied that all was well, he turned to his companion.
          "Well, this time it's for two years. Be well, Joseph."
          Old Joseph shook his hand. "Be well, Sahib. Don't come back alone."
          The Hunter looked at Joseph quizzically, then shook his head. He was more than accustomed
        to this old friend's peculiar remarks. He climbed aboard and fired the engine, completing his safety check before he taxied, gathered speed, and became airborne.
          A flicker of light below made the Hunter look down as he banked around and flew toward
        the mountains and the sea beyond. He rolled the airplane in answer, smiling to himself.
          Old Joseph, on the ground, was signaling farewell with his mirror.




        England, 1970


          "I know it's been a terribly confusing day for you, but I'd like to introduce you to just a few
        more people before we have a drink, if you don't mind," Miss Keach prattled on, pushing Theo ahead of her like a shopping cart. "And you'll want to have dinner, and you'll probably be overjoyed to sit down and rest..."
          Miss Keach's one sided conversation flowed on as they traversed a glass walled corridor and
        emerged into a large airy dining area, crowded with more people than one weary young woman wanted to face.
          "Now, just let me introduce you around, and then you can relax," Miss Keach said kindly.
          Oh God, as if I can relax with a million strangers staring at me, Theo moaned inwardly,
        wishing she'd never put on these torturous shoes this morning. She was shivering with fatigue. Why do I have to meet all these people tonight? I just want to soak in a hot bath and then go to bed. She forced a smile.
          Miss Keach was in introduction mode. She'd been introducing Theo to people for the last two
        hours, and was gearing up to start again. Secretaries, security, veterinarians, assistantsnames and faces flew by as Miss Keach hauled her on a whirlwind tour of the room while Theo's weary feet turned into two discrete points of pain. Miss Keach finally settled her in a chair and signaled a waiter, who presented them with imposing menus.
          "Robert, this is the new head of accounting, Theodora Franklin," Miss Keach trumpeted.
          Robert smiled and nodded, and Theo somehow managed to respond civilly. The endless
        stream of faces and words combined with the head knock she'd gotten on the plane already had her nettled, but Miss Keach's continued use of her full name Theodora, which she hated, was the icing on top of a tiring, endless cake.
          "Well, now you've met nearly everyone. Once we're open you won't see nearly as many
        onsite staff. Not everyone will be living here as they are now because the lodge will be open for visitors, naturally. Oh, right now it's chaos, all hands on deck you know. Now, order anything you like, dear, it's complimentary for onsite staff. Do let me run away from you for a just a minute, there's our director. I haven't been able to catch him all day, and I want to introduce you to him..."
          I wonder what she'd do if I ordered a double martini and a tub of water for my feet, Theo
        thought tiredly, slipping her shoes off under the cover of the floor length table cloth. She tried to look at the menu, but her eyes were bleary with a combination of jet lag and the tremendous headknock she'd received.
          "Would you care to order now, Miss, while you're in the eye of the hurricane?" Robert said
        with amusement, returning to her side.
          Theo actually felt a wide monkey grin grow on her face, and she finally relaxed, sinking down
        several notches in her chair.
          "I don't know what to order. Two weeks in Bermuda and a pack of Winstons, I guess," she
        smiled.
          "I can manage the Winstons. Did you run into a door, or did your husband hit you with a
        lamp?" he replied, leaning over her and fingering the lump on her forehead lightly.
          "A fellow traveller pulled his suitcase down on my head this morning," Theo answered,
        blinking a little.
          "And then the Keach has been dragging you around all day? She's a dear, but she gets
        overexcited and never notices that someone's ready to drop. Poor girl, you could have a concussion. You certainly look it." He took the tooled leather menu away from her. "Don't even look at it, all that rich heavy stodge would make you ill with that goose egg. There's a nice light consomme, and I'll throw together a salad in a flash. Do you like spinach and mushroom? Good, I'll make that. And a small glass of rose--very small"
          "Bless you, my child," Theo sighed, and he gave her a funny tender smile, looking at the lump
        on her head in such a way that as soon as he went toward the bar for her wine, she began to rummage in her purse for her compact.
          "Oh my God," she muttered when she'd finally opened it and gotten a good look at herself.
        The mirror reflected a pale greenish face with darkly circled eyes, a purple stoplight on the forehead, framed with wild unruly hair, which was escaping from the French twist she'd skewered it into that morning.
          Robert's hand slid a glass of rose in front of her, and he leaned over to murmur in her ear.
          "You're signaling a Great White Hunter, my dear."
          She stared at him in confusion, and he smilingly pointed behind her.
          Theo craned around in her chair and saw that the mirror of her compact had flashed in the
        face of a tall silhouette standing in the entry of the dining room. She snapped it shut instantly, and stared at the man in the doorway.
          He'd raised his hand to his eyes, startled by the sudden flash, but now he lowered it and
        stepped forward into the room, looking directly at the source of the light.
          Theo couldn't believe what she was seeing. Khaki shorts and bush jacket, boots, a white
        hunter's broad brimmed felt hat? A stern, impassive face punctuated by piercing deep blue eyes that took her in cooly. All the man needed to complete the picture was a native gun boy.
          Theo turned around frantically when the man's rugged face developed an expression of
        concern and he started toward her.
          "Oh Jesus! I must have a concussion," she gasped to Robert. "Is that character really
        dressed like someone in The Snows of Kilimanjaro?"
          "You're saved by the vet," Robert grinned as another man rushed up to the Great White
        Hunter, caught his shoulder and muttered something which made the hunter turn on his heel and stride back out, the vet in his wake.
          I know I wasn't introduced to him , even if I did meet everyone else in England today, Theo
        thought as she stowed the compact and Robert hurried away to the kitchen for her dinner.




        England, 1970


          "...but John, we hardly know each other!"
          He stopped in his tracks and looked down at her again.
          "We know each other. We'll be catching up on the details, but we know each other,
        Theodora."
          "But..."
          "But what, darling?"
          Theo couldn't come up with anything.
          "Oh...you want me to ask you," he said softly, the hardness suddenly leaving his face as it had
        the night before. "I did assume. Well then."
          He took the clothing from her, dumping it on the ground, and then clasped her hands with his.
        "Would you care to marry me, Theodora, and come home to Africa with me when I'm finished here, and perhaps have children, as married people do? I'd give you a longer courtship, but I'm getting close to fifty, and I don't have all the time in the world."
          Theo just gaped up at him, and managed to sputter a few inanities and token protests, which
        he finally brushed aside.
          "Good God, little woman, what do you want to do? Don't worry about everyone else in the
        world, or what you were raised to consider proper. Be sensible, decide what you want, and take it if it's offered."
          "Sensible!" Theo burst out. "This is the craziest thing I ever heard of!"
          "It's crazy for two people who are perfectly matched and madly in love to marry?" he asked,
        lifting his eyebrows. "It seems perfectly sensible to me."
          "I'm beginning to dislike the word sensible," Theo said slowly.
          Suddenly the Great White Hunter and all his majesty was gone, and her lover was
        standing before her, leaning down to kiss her.
          "Did I seem terribly sensible last night, my little darling?" he whispered. "Do let me keep my
        mythologies. Being sensible is one of them. If you want what I'm offering, don't play games. Reach out and take it."
          What do I want? What do I want? Theo thought wildly, intoxicated by his closeness, by his
        clean smell. I don't know him at all, I don't know a damn thing about his family, or his habits or where he lives. Africa? Where in Africa? I don't know anything about Africa. She looked at him in confusion.
          Suddenly the sensible course was right in front of her. Take what I want, Mr. Parker,
        Great White Hunter?
          "Yes," she said emphatically.
          "Good. Now, into the Jeep."




      The Serengeti, Tanzania 1976


          Theo walked along the rim of a precipice, using her field glasses to scan up to the
        horizon. One of the work teams was severely tardy getting back to camp, and Mac had sent her with Old Joseph to take a look for them.
          She and Joseph had cruised in a wide perimeter all morning, trying to spot the missing
        Land Rover and its occupants. She'd finally scaled a rise to get a better view of more area.
          She lowered the field glasses and moved farther along the rise, remembering as always
        the day when John lectured her about running along a cliff edge to him. "Always test every step you take on one of those shelves," he'd scolded, oblivious to the fact that his newlywed bride had come running across the cliff to throw her arms around him. "You take a nasty slide down one of these slopes and you'll stop pouting and listen to me."
          Now she lifted the field glasses and scanned again. Nothing, not a puff of smoke or a
        reflection. Maybe they'd slipped off to Arusha and were drinking beer while she was getting sunstroke looking for them.
          It was her first time back in the Serengeti in years, since she'd first been pregnant with
        Johnny. He was six now, and Roger and Dellie were four and a half. The children were staying with Alice at the big house while she was scheduled for three days in the Park. Mac was short a ranger, and had agreed to give her very short work schedules if she could return and lend a hand. She'd been uneasy over leaving the children, but was able to radio several times a day, and was due to go home tomorrow. And she did love being back in the Serengeti. She'd forgotten how much she missed it.
          Light flickered in her eyes, and she turned back to the Jeep where Joseph was waiting.
        He was twinkling his signal mirror at her. Joseph made no bones about having no intention of keeping up with Theo's energy. Theo had asked John about Joseph's ability to handle a problem if one should arise. John refused to dignify her question with an answer--he thought the sun rose and set on Joseph, so now she was doing the legwork while he sat in the Jeep.
          She waved impatiently to calm Joseph down. He got nervous if she went far from the
        Jeep, and started signaling her with his mirror to come back. Theo looked through the glasses again. Lou and the graduate student who was assisting him were probably on the other side of the park anyway. If the student was navigating, they might even be in Uganda by now.
          A slight shifting under her feet made her move away from the edge, but the entire shelf
        was sliding under her. She went right down with it. It was a slow motion disaster, and it looked as if she would only slide halfway down at a stately pace, scraping her knees and elbows.
          The dust settled and Theo began to stand, halfway down the slope, swearing to herself.
        This would be worth a lecturette from Mac when she got back to camp.
          The entire cliff fell out from under her then, tumbling her to the flat twenty feet below.
        The pain in her right ankle was immense. She didn't think someone belting it with a sledgehammer could hurt that badly. Theo lay still and tried to inventory her body through the pain. She could see, hear, breathe; her arms and one leg moved. She didn't dare move the other. Don't cry, she thought, clenching her teeth and lifting her head to look at the painful ankle.
          Oh no.
          Theo fell back against the dirt. It was broken. Really broken. Jagged bone ends were
        protruding through and above her sock and her foot was twisted at a horrible unnatural angle. Blood pooled below the injured joint, seeping into the ground. To add the finishing touch, she'd fallen where Joseph wouldn't be able to get the Jeep around.
          "Mem Sahib," he said right beside her, making her start, sending jolts of pain up her leg
        that forced wails of pain from her lips. Joseph crouched by her injured leg and held it still while Theo forced herself to stop yelling and looked at him. How the hell could he get here so fast?
          "Poor Mem Sahib," Joseph said cooly, surveying her leg. Theo fumbled with her belt.
        The ankle was still bleeding badly.
          "We'll have to make a tourniquet," she said through clenched teeth.
          "No need," Joseph waved the belt away. He reached over and brushed away the tears
        that trickled back into her ears. "Not that much blood. We must splint it."
          "Don't reduce it," Theo begged. She couldn't bear that.
        "Your ankle is falling out of your skin. I would not even try," Joseph answered. "I will bring the kit." He jogged away and Theo remembered. He was Masai. They jogged enormous distances.
          She fell back against the dirt and gave in briefly to the impulse to cry. Labor pains,
        bruises from conflicts with animals, bites, burns--nothing had ever made her cry. Yell, yes cry, no.
          She wished John was here. She needed those big hands to bind her ghastly ankle up,
        that matter of fact voice to tell her that it didn't matter a bit, that she would be fine.
          A thrumming sound broke through her thoughts, and she jerked upright, oblivious to
        the pain.
          An old lioness was stalking her. Theo could see by the hide and the bone structure that
        she was old, with nursing cubs, the teats hanging low and dark. Probably the last in the pecking order. Probably glad to find something helpless on the ground.
          Something that couldn't run.
          Theo groped for a rock and flung it. She was a lousy shot, the rock thumped down
        past the lioness, which barely blinked, sniffing the air.
          Oh Christ, she smells the blood, Theo thought wildly. Oh Joseph, get back here! The
        lioness went into a crouch, advancing on her belly. Now Theo could smell cat. She grasped another rock.
          She tried to remember what John had told her about lions. Try to avoid them if
        possible, but if confronted, make noise, threaten them, stare into their eyes, try to look bigger by standing tall.
          Stand tall? She couldn't stand or even move. She should be yelling, but her throat
        seemed to be swollen shut.
          Theo flung another rock, missing again, but the lioness, hungry and desperate, never
        flinched. Now she could hear John telling her about lions, and she didn't want to.
          "They generally make a kill by grabbing the throat and shaking, once they bring the
        prey down."
          Theo could hear herself laughing on a high hysterical note. She was already
        down. The lioness was ready to spring any second. At least it would be quick.
          Dellie, Johnny, Roger...
          Oh John. I'm sorry.
          She hitched up and pulled back, mesmerized by the yellow eyes. She stared into them
        in horror. Time clicked to a standstill as she and the lioness stared at each other.
          Theo heard the bullet ricochet and saw the puff of dust from its impact before she
        registered the shot. The lioness jumped back, looking to her left, and Old Joseph was running forward, shouting and waving his medical kit and rifle, making enough noise to wake the Seven Sleepers. The lioness snarled and slunk away.
          Theo was dimly aware of Joseph running to her side. "It's gone, Mem Sahib. You held her
        until I could shoot," he said kindly. Theo just stared at him.
          "You can faint now. I don't need you here," Joseph directed, opening the medical kit.
          "Thank you," Theo gasped, and promptly did as he'd suggested.







        This page hosted by

        Get your own Free Home Page