168 JOURNEY WITHOUT MAPS way of the compound. He had with him a little olc man with a white goatee beard who wanted us to buy some crude leather pouch. Tes'm/ and 'No'm/ the fat man said at intervals. "And this devil," I said, "why can't I see him?" He laughed evasively and Laminah plucked at my sleeve. He knew who die fat man was and he was scared. The fat man turned and saw him, He became boisterously funny, but without any humour showing in his little sunk eyes. He said, "You want to see devil, eh?" gripping Laminah's arm, and he began to talk to him in his own tongue. When Laminah got away he was stammering with his fear. The fat man, he said, was the devil's head- man and the old man with the goatee beard his medicine man. The headman had frightened him badly in revenge for his bargaining over the sword; he had told him that he would be carried away into the bush for seven years and forcibly initiated into the Bush Society. The thunder rumbled round the hills and the clouds broke up. Amedoo joined us. He said, "England good place. You have one God and no devils. I have one God too but plenty devils." He was a Mohammedan. He began all over again the story about the English B.C. He wanted to prove that it wasn't safe to laugh in private at a Big Bush Devil. They could make themselves invisible; they could hear everything. Then the rain came washing down, a vertical wall of water, while the thunder rumbled. We ran for shelter. Mark met us on the verandah, anxious to impress us, too, with how bad a place it was. The D.C., Amedoo began to tell us all over again, had having dinner. "Mrs. D,C. sat here, Mr. Trout