BLACK MONXPARNASSE 175 the men reported sick before we started, was paid off and left behind. The number of carriers had now almost reached a minimum. My cousin used a ham- mock and needed four carriers, but I reduced my hammock-men to three: I hadn't used the hammock yet and unless I went sick I saw no reason why I should ever need to use it. The country was stamped as French from the first village we stayed in, which was neither Bamakama nor Jbaiay as I had intended: French in its com- mercial sense, in its baits which I should have believed to be intended for tourists, if there had been any hope of tourists. It was astonishing what a difference the invisible boundary made. You could not have mistaken this land for Liberia. Tourists would have been quite at home here among the round huts and the scarlet fezzes of the Mandingo traders. For these traders were indistinguishable, except that their dignity was less tarnished, from the men who sell carpets in the Dome and the Rotonde. The only difference was we had followed them home. It was as if we had shadowed them all the way from the Boule Miche, sitting in third-class carriages, travelling steerage, riding up the long way from Konakry on horse-back. In Trance' the trouble with the carriers came to a head. Their complaints, the phrase 'too far', 'too far', had got on my nerves. To be deserted altogether, I began to think, might be preferable to this recurrent bickering, this pressure to go more slowly than I could afford. The trouble was I did not know the extent of my authority and I did not know which of them I could trust. Vande I suspected; the head-