"It is true, O Lion," he said, "that Mameena spread the poison upon my

child's mat. It is true that she set the deadly charms in the doorway of

Nandie's hut. These things she did, not knowing what she did, and it was

I who instructed her to do them. This is the case. From the beginning I

have always loved Mameena as I have loved no other woman and as no other

woman was ever loved. But while I was away with Macumazahn, who sits

yonder, to destroy Bangu, chief of the Amakoba, he who had killed my

father, Umbezi, the father of Mameena, he whom the Prince Cetewayo gave

to the vultures the other day because he had lied as to the death of

Umbelazi, he, I say, forced Mameena, against her will, to marry Masapo

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the Boar, who afterwards was executed for wizardry. Now, here at your

feast, when you reviewed the people of the Zulus, O King, after you had

given me the lady Nandie as wife, Mameena and I met again and loved each

other more than we had ever done before. But, being an upright woman,

Mameena thrust me away from her, saying: "'I have a husband, who, if he is not dear to me, still is my husband,

and while he lives to him I will be true.' Then, O King, I took counsel

with the evil in my heart, and made a plot in myself to be rid of the

Boar, Masapo, so that when he was dead I might marry Mameena. This

was the plot that I made--that my son and Princess Nandie's should be

poisoned, and that Masapo should seem to poison him, so that he might be

killed as a wizard and I marry Mameena."

Now, at this astounding statement, which was something beyond the

experience of the most cunning and cruel savage present there, a gasp of

astonishment went up from the audience; even old Zikali lifted his head

and stared. Nandie, too, shaken out of her usual calm, rose as though

to speak; then, looking first at Saduko and next at Mameena, sat herself

down again and waited. But Saduko went on again in the same cold,

measured voice: "I gave Mameena a powder which I had bought for two heifers from a great

doctor who lived beyond the Tugela, but who is now dead, which powder

I told her was desired by Nandie, my Inkosikazi, to destroy the little

beetles than ran about the hut, and directed her where she was to spread

it. Also, I gave her the bag of medicine, telling her to thrust it into

the doorway of the hut, that it might bring a blessing upon my House.

These things she did ignorantly to please me, not knowing that the

powder was poison, not knowing that the medicine was bewitched. So

my child died, as I wished it to die, and, indeed, I myself fell sick

because by accident I touched the powder.




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