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John Wilcox - The Shangani Patrol (Simon Fonthill #7)

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John Wilcox The Shangani Patrol (Simon Fonthill #7)
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The Shangani Patrol

JOHN WILCOX

headline
www.headline.co.uk

Copyright 2010 John Wilcox


The right of John Wilcox to be identified as the Author of the Work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.


Apart from any use permitted under UK copyright law, this publication may only be reproduced, stored, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means, with prior permission in writing of the publishers or, in the case of reprographic production, in accordance with the terms of licences issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency.


First published as an ebook by Headline Publishing Group in 2010


All characters in this publication - apart from the obvious historical figures - are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.


Cataloguing in Publication Data is available from the British Library

eISBN : 978 0 7553 7981 1


This Ebook produced by Jouve Digitalisation des Informations


HEADLINE PUBLISHING GROUP
An Hachette UK Company
338 Euston Road
London NW1 3BH


www.headline.co.uk
www.hachette.co.uk
Table of Contents

John Wilcox was born in Birmingham and was an award-winning journalist for some years before being lured into industry. In the mid-nineties he sold his company in order to devote himself to his first love, writing. His previous Simon Fonthill novels, THE HORNS OF THE BUFFALO, THE ROAD TO KANDAHAR, THE DIAMOND FRONTIER, LAST STAND AT MAJUBA HILL, THE GUNS OF EL KEBIR and SIEGE OF KHARTOUM, were highly acclaimed. He has also published two works of non-fiction, PLAYING ON THE GREEN and MASTERS OF BATTLE. For more information on John Wilcox and his novels, visit www.johnwilcoxauthor.co.uk or www.simonfonthill.co.uk.
Praise for John Wilcoxs Simon Fonthill novels:
Full of action and brave deeds. If you are a fan of Simon Scarrow or Wilbur Smith, then this is for you Historical Novels Review

A hero to match Sharpe or Hornblower... Wilcox shows a genius for bringing to light the heat of battle
Northern Echo

Wilcoxs research gives this super-charged novel a wonderful cloak of authenticity with a large measure of imperial guts and glory
Oxford Times

Wilcox writes with an intimate knowledge of the African continent, an encyclopaedic knowledge of the Victorian era when the British Empire was at its peak, and all the dash of a great adventurer
Nottingham Evening Post

As good as it gets for fans of soldiering in Queen Victorias day Bolton Evening News

A page-turner of a book, action-packed and seamlessly blending fact and fiction. Strap yourselves in for some roller-coaster excitement...
The Bookbag
In memory of my friend Liam Hunter
Acknowledgements
I owe a debt to my editor at Headline, Sherise Hobbs, for her infinite attention to detail and, in particular, her intuitive sense of pace, of knowing where passages need more action and less of my regrettable tendency to let my characters talk too much. I must also thank my copyeditor, Jane Selley, for her care in tidying up my prose. I wouldnt be a writer without my agent, Jane Conway-Gordon, and I appreciate her constant support. As I do that of my wife, Betty, my devoted research assistant, proofreader and first critic of all my work.
These four have been a constant in most of my writings so far, but in the case of this particular book, my biggest vote of thanks must go to Dave Sutcliffe, an ex-Rhodesian now living in Newcastle, KwaZulu Natal, South Africa. For various reasons, I was unable to get into Zimbabwe to carry out basic research, and Dave, ex-surveyor, naturalist, guide and historian in his own right, did not hesitate to fill the gap by supplying detailed maps and local knowledge. Any mistakes that may have crept into the narrative concerning historical events and flora and fauna, however, are mine, not his.
As always, the London Library proved invaluable in supplying books about the period. However, I could find few definitive accounts of Rhodess invasion of Matabeleland and Mashonaland either in the UK or during an all too brief visit to South Africa. Nevertheless, contemporary copies of The Times , kept in a pristine state at the London Library, proved useful, as did the following books:

A Flag for the Matabele by Peter Gibbs, Frederick Muller Ltd., London, 1955

To the Victoria Falls via Matabeleland , the diary of Major Henry Stabb, 1875, edited by Edward C. Tabler, C. Struik (Pty) Ltd, Cape Town, 1967

Rhodes by J. G. Lockhart and the Hon. C. M. Woodhouse, Hodder and Stoughton, London, 1963

Cecil Rhodes by John Flint, Hutchinson, London, 1976

And that great old stand-by, The Colonial Wars Source Book by Philip J. Haythornthwaite, Arms and Armour Press, London, 1995

Alas, many of these books will be out of print, but the London Library and the British Library should be able to help.
Chapter 1
Just inside the southern border of Matabeleland, late 1889

They stood in silence in a rough half-circle on the beaten earth in the centre of the kraal, all eyes on the tall, thin figure of the black man with a long stick on the edge of the circle. It was not yet quite light and the stars were still pricking the indigo blue of the darkness above them. Simon Fonthill, ex-soldier, army scout and leader of the group, shivered - and not just because it was bitterly cold in these few minutes before dawn.
Lion, said Mzingeli, their guide. We go to kill him but he very dangerous animal. He also very shy...
Ah well, murmured 352 Jenkins, then praps it would be rude to bother im, eh? Jenkins, Fonthills long-standing comrade, was the inevitable jester of the group. But this time no one smiled.
... and he run from us in daylight. But at night he can see in dark and we cannot. So he attack us then without fear. That is why we go now, in light, just as sun comes up. The tall man looked at them in turn. We hear him and his ladies roaring in bush last night and we know he make kill. So we follow his spoor now until we find where he lie down to sleep his meal away, and then you, Nkosi, he nodded to Fonthill, or you, Nkosi, he inclined his head towards Jenkins, a touch less deferentially, will kill him.
No one spoke. Mzingeli was their servant, but he spoke with an air of quiet authority that shrugged off questions of rank, class or race, and it would have seemed an act of lesemajesty to have interupted him at this point. His name meant the Hunter, and he looked the part. Some six feet tall, he was slim and probably older than his athletic frame suggested, for the tightly curled hair that lay close to his scalp was now quite grey and his eyes seemed to reflect the sadness of great years. His nose was long, with flared nostrils, and his lips were thin. He wore the dress of the Afrikaner - dirty corduroy trousers and a loose flannel shirt - but his feet were bare, showing white patches between his toes as though from the touch of a paintbrush, and totemic beads hung around his neck. An old Snider rifle was slung across his shoulder, but now he was drawing in the dust with the end of his stick.
This is animal, he said, and suddenly the silhouette of a male lion appeared at their feet. He stabbed at a point just above the left front leg of the animal. Here you shoot. Here is heart and lungs. His stick moved again quickly, and the impressive outline of a charging lion, head on, materialised. Lion can jump twenty feet, he went on, so you do not want to see him like this. Only way to kill him like this is here. He jabbed the stick between the eyes of the animal. No good down here, he gestured at the chest beneath and behind the mane, because chest has about nine inches deep of muscle, and although your bullet may kill charging Zulu, a smile appeared, showing perfect white teeth, it no go through lion chest.
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