102 JOUKJNEY WITHOUT MAPS She ran away to the hut of a younger man, and when the chief sent to him to claim the proper fine, they had gone. This flight, this failure to pay the customary fine, made .the couple guilty, not their adultery. A year later the chief travelled down to Monrovia to a conference with President Kong. He heard that the young people were living in the town with their baby. He was a forbearing man and again he sent to them to demand that the fine be paid, When the young man refused, the chief, who was a member of the Lightning Society, made artificial lightning which struck the hut, killed the man and the woman, but left the baby, who lay in the bed between them, unharmed. This story is believed by everyone in Liberia, white and black. I heard it from several sources, and it never varied. The old chief I did not see, because he was away at Voinjema meet- ing the President. A Liberian District Commissioner is stationed at Zigita: the compound lies up the slope of a hill above the town, above the long field of thatched and pointed huts like stooks of bound bean-stalks. The town chief, who brought to my hut in the com- pound a crowd of men with swords and daggers and jewellery for sale, seemed young and downtrodden. He was ordered about by the D.C/s clerk (the D,C. was away at Voinjema), but if the D.C. had the chief well under this thumb, there was a higher, though more secret, authority than the Commissioner's: the Big Bush Devil, in Dr. Westermann's phrase the Grand Master of a Bush Society, whom it is death or blindness for an uninitiated native so much as to see 'and who must be distinguished from the devils we